ORIGIN OF THE UNION 57
The local organs of the Zemstvo Union were the provincial and
district committees. Their organization and procedure were left to
the discretion of the provincial zemstvo. Funds appropriated by the
provincial zemstvos for the relief of sick and wounded soldiers were
paid into the central treasury of the Union. The latter then allo-
cated them to the provincial committees, and these, in turn, to the
district committees. Very soon, the central treasury began to re-
ceive donations and contributions from all over Russia, partly in
cash and partly in kind (linen, warm clothing, etc.). Later, the Gov-
ernment, availing itself of the resources of the Union, gave it
steadily increasing orders to supply the army with equipment and
provisions, placing at the disposal of the Union large sums to enable
it to carry out these orders.
Prince Lvov was elected President of the Union. M. Shlippe,
chairman of the Moscow provincial zemstvo board. was chosen to act
in his absence.
About a week after the organization of the Union, Prince Lvov
had an audience with the Emperor. In the course of the conversa-
tion, Prince Lvov thus explained the aims of the new Union:
The All-Russian Union of Zemstvos was formed only about a week
ago. Its organization is of the simplest. A Central Committee has been
formed at Moscow, and provincial and district committees locally. The
whole organization has been built, not according to rigid and elaborate
statutes, but on a basis of a powerful desire for collaboration. Out of
their own resources, the zemstvos have been able to assign 12,000,000
rubles for the relief of the wounded. Our function is to receive the
wounded from the army, transfer them to the hospitals, equip hospital
trains and hospitals, heal our wounded soldiers and then send them
hack to their homes.*
The Emperor received this report with the same sympathy he had
shown for the similar zemstvo organization in 1904. But among the
higher government officials, the reaction to the Emperor’s expression
of pleasure with the zemstvo enterprise was now quite different from
what it had been ten years earlier. The events that were taking
place seemed far too grave and ominous to admit of opposition to
this useful enterprise, and, moreover, there had been a change in the
meantime in the relations between the Government and the public.
'* Report (Obzor Deyatelnosti) of the Central Committee, p. 80.