EHBHEa !" 13 V&f' - yvf Mi -5W - s.t " i WV EVENING POTLI ? M. nmrnw- mmmr rJ i, w-i vaHGUt, i. ; ' &' j-'v &-wrfiU MPJBPf j MIL ID AlSLhF tl " J' ?& m ' i. maavn .ViJf 'V. -ti 4' . a.: " jua&r. x rr r43V WHOSE LIFE BOTCHKAREVA SAVED : RESCUES HER FROM BLOODTHIRSTY REDS fced Atvav From Place of jEnxcution as Nineteen of Ht r ' A after ijompamoiis n re 'iFirst Shot and Then Bay- konetcd and Trampled 'fflMBJBr j"J3fKvm-, it.- WjJn WWWWMBiW . im,n- " t i, tr J iWTiLi , T . f iv, ; " wWh. . J ' i t &X r5 ,y,n$!fBpSfl(t!wF 'n appearance of this man Psler war truiy miraculous. In spite of au my tWpon trutal Bolshevist Leader $$?? Orders His Soldiers to , Fire at the Knees of His H Unfortunate Victims to ?.?. tar Prolong Their Agony H inttmurlaht. 109 hi J red rt.t:Jc A Rtakrm I n i (This tor. told by Maria HotchkarMA itina pmif iiiiu vj nana nuiLiiitni'in . .nd trsnttat.d and trnnKt.rihtrl ltv limi Tinn ' Vvin, la cutiiisntd by the Frederick A stones company aanKft "l d by undei (he title of NL3ffSh sWii THIS STARTS THE STOItY tfF'fMi ln lne summer of 1917 Maria efjjWBotchkarova formed the Battalion ot i &VIJeath, a woman s fishtlng unit In feWIX" Russian army, and a peasant wB'ifelrl thus stennpri Intn tho Inlorim K tlnnnl hnll nf famn ThU fa hoi ' .r,v. . ., . . .. . ".' fm, -; niory. in earner lnsiaiimdnis n tWi:Jtol& of the hardshlns of hr child H hood, of the brutalities of hor mar- f rled life and of the realization of her desire to become n soldier. Sh p,-4..t.a i.-i. .- j. . Rrf v t-uiu ui uttiima louKnc x.nn won ana Ri nr tha diimnriillTfi tin. f tt. . .nMIni. IaV fotlMM.In. ,Ua n. A.Un n It. ..i. M, " witaiii wna luillicu 1UI lllf C nt.fMnBA n l.n.lMH. - T, H.. I..,.. paction, but In this was only par : tially successful and only foi a S time. The soldiers at last forced the members of the battalion to disband --.j --i . . i F k i iio iQicxmareva returnen to ner (jjVi, "WIIDt WWW T0 Jll CICUliJ C1UIIIII1UIICU ,SI nArn Hlsftntlflflpd with thft unv thA !ii a Ttnlafanvlcta uprA fimnlnf. 1 1 A cynv. ' ernment and was sent on a secret mission to General Kornllov. On her way back to Petrograd. havlnsr suc cessfully carried out her mission, she Is captured by Reds, who sen tenco her to die AND HERE IT CONTINUES t "Don't cry, my child," the general bent over me, patting me "They ate savages. Their hearts aro of stone They would not even let us rccele the last sacrament. Let us die like heroes, c nevertheless " His words gave me strength. I cot up, stranghtened myself out and said: "All right, I will die as a hero." Then for about ten minutes I (razed p at the faces of.our executioners scru- fAW tlnlzlnc thplr tVnttlrp It wnq linrrl v tn rftatfniritlah In tinn B!i.n. .? tin j HIV ir -.... .o-. ." ....... o.,.o ui 1.1. I. SJ' manlty. They were Russian soldiers mff turned Inhuman. The lines in their lr vfaces were those of brutal apes. , . ' J i.im'TT-i .M1UIIM LBHflHvriiflltfSiiHyiO vJE jitaBAflKSiHMaHlI SK'SlflMHaBil'B4HIUBVAHB9HHIBBl the Almlxhty for his, boundless kind Mesa and vowed , to have a public iruiy mucuiuu. in spue 01 u in iv; " - w ...... ,.-.. efforts, you would hae been executed prayer offered at the Moscow Cathe- out rornim." i'And hdw are my chances of escap ing death now?" I asked. "They are still verv arrtall." he an- BiTcrcu. drAl of Christ the Savior at the first opportunity. In commemoration of His miraculous message to me. Then I tell nslecn. and rested calmlv I till the arrival of Petrukhin. His face nrered. "Your iWkm u nlr.ln.t vou. "" ",0 arrival or i-eiruanin. mis lace Y6tt do not dehy belnt T friend of WM wreathed in smiles, he clasped my Tfnfnitxt,'. -v...,- .1.1.7 ji.-in. in i nana jovousiv. savine: . w, d, .vik BVIlUk lueuiiruiiQ .. ""It is ' unlikely," he said to me, that you would be punished with death on the strength ot bucIi evidence. I should expect our release sooner or later. But In any event, here Is a poison pill. I prepared It for you originally to take In case the mob i vs ' 1. t- v 0tthY Uplpe'hnd,o'thar you c&vM escape torttire At the hand ot these savages. I hope you Will no;. haV to resort to It ln Moscow." r still carry with me that pill of poison wherever T go. (CONTINUED TOMORROW) Trotsltj and members of the Ilnlslietlk Uoernmcnt oideM like tint' A e will shoot her' with him to Sablln and petition the I Cnough words' ' I commandei -In chief lo send me to At this Tnomnt I became awaro or i Moscow for trial bv a military iri' otip of the two newh armed lommlt tptmm staring at me intently. He took u couple of steps towaitl me, bent his head on the side and nailed his ees on me Theie was something about that look that electrified me As the man, who was a common soldier, craned his neck forward and stepped out of the group a stiange silence gripped ecijbod, so affected were all by the painful expression on his facp "A l e you Yashka?" ho sang out slowly. "How do ou know me'" I asked iulckl, almost overpowered bv a pre monition ot salvation. "Don't vou remember how vou saved my life In that March offensive, when T nn wounded in the lee and vou iiincircd me out of the mud under lire' My inme Is Peter I would have per ished there, in the vvatci, and many othei s like me. It not for ou Why do they want to shoot vou now?' "Because I nm an o(llt.er," I replied "Wl-at conversation ate vou holding here-' ' Pugatchov thundered "She will have to be shot, and no argu ments'" . "And I won't allow her to be shot! God appointed savior answeren Kirk flrmlv. and walked up lo me, selred my arm. pulled me out of my place, occupj lng It himself. nrsu no px bunal. About fifty soldiers were also won over to my side by Peter's ac counts of Yashka's work ln the trenches and No Man's Iand, and my reputation among all men Petiukhln had lemnlned at my bedside till I re covered consciousness, but ho now de sired to Join the deputation. I grate fully thanked him for his humane at tltude toward me and his desperate efforts to save my Hfo. Before he loft woid reached him that Pugatchov had Incited some of the men agnlns me, threatening to kid nap mo fiom my friends and lynch me. Petrukhin placed five of his loval friends at my compartment, with or ders not to surrender me at any cost, I praved to God for Petrukhin, and hearing my prajer, he said: Now, I, too, believe In God. The (he battalion and voUf fftrhtlnir the Germans at a time fyhen the whole front was fraternizing are known here. Besides, the death penalty has become so custorrinry hefe that It wouid'be very unusual for one to es cape lb Only the other day a physi cian and his wife, on their why to Kislovodsk to the springs, somehow landed In 55vorevo. They were ar. reeled, attached to a party ready for shooting and without any Investiga tion were executed, Afterward there were found in their clothes papers' from their local Soviet, certifying that they were actually 111. the physician suffering from a cancer and request ing that they be passed to Kislo vodsk." Petrukhin kissed my hand and left, warning me! , "Walt here till I return. Nobody will harm you In my absence," . He locked the door behind him, I took out the little bottle of holy water. given to me by my yongest sister, Nadla, and drank It. On my knees before the little Icon I prayed long and devoutly to God, Jesus, and the Holy Mother. My ears caught a noise outside the car; It came from several menacing soldiers, who wanted to get ln and kill me on the spot. I prayed with greater fervor than before, beg ging for my life ln the name of my mother, my father and my little slsteiV My heart was heavy with sorrow and despair. As I was Hugging the little Icon,, tears streaming from my eyes, I sud denly heard a voice, a very tender voice, say' to me: , "Your life will bo saved." T was alone In the compartment. I realize that It Is an audacious state ment to mnke. I do not seek to make any ono believe It. One may nccept It or not. But I am satisfied that I did hear the voice of a divine messenger. It was soothing, elevating. Suddenly I felt happy and calm. I thanked hand Joyously, saying "Thank Oodl Thank God! You are at leaat saved from he mob. Sablln ordered you sent to Moscow. The necessary bapers are being prepared now," At this point Peter came In, followed by some members of tho Investigation committee. All vvero happy, It was such a .wonderful moment. How nn ict of humanity does transform men's countenances! Peter and his comrades congratulated me, and I was too over come to express all the gratefulness that I felt toward these men. Petrukhin then narrated how he hnd disposed ot tho Incited soldtets Who clamored for my life. He told them that I was being led away to Moscow In' the hope that I would de liver there several counter-revolu-tlonary generals, associated with Kor nllov. "Will she be shot afterward?" they Inquired. "Sure," Petrukhin declared. The lynchers went away satisfied. I was curious to know what would be done to me in Moscow. Petruk hin, In reply to my Inquiries, satd that among the papers relating to my case, which my convoys would take to Mos cow, the chief document was the protocol. That protocol had been drawn up by himself, in the capacity of chairman of the -Investigation com mlttee. He described ln It how I had lo'st my way while going to Kislovodsk, getting stranded nt Zverevo and how I had reported or my own iree win to the authorities, adding that I had with me a ticket to Kislovodsk, an In vltatlon from Princess Tatuyeva to oome to the Caucasus, and a state ment from a physician certifying to my III health. The latter was, of course, an Invention. Petruhkln sent along the ticket and the letter from Tlflls, adding that he had misplaced the physician's certificate and would send it on later, Jr I " 1 fill UI 1 HIIUUL uie iw "My Gd! What hast Thou done i rtnimp.i -she saved my life She H. ' wmuteii. i i..,:u. isaved n iS& n a '0nR "'e t"e numerous events ot my me passed oeiore me. .viy childhood, those years ot hard labor the little grocery store of Nastasla .Leon tie vna; tne atiair with Lazov, many of our lives The entire Fifth Corps knows Yashka. She is a common peasant like myself and understands no politics If you shoot hei. you will have to shoot me first!' ThlB tirade had a rematkably whole- mv marrlaire to Botchkarev : Yasha: some effect on me. It also strucK the thieo years of vvai; they all i home ln the hearts of many in tne passed tnrougn my imagination some crowd Kb raH incidents strangely gripping my ln rv tarpfit for a moment or two. ntheis -flitting by hastily. Somehow that Km j episode of my early life, when I quar SS '" reled with the little boy placed ln my VP 1 ,. - . 1 , T it'T . . ..rmT-i n i, ma in. iiniiKSHriPii nun k n tr . HQ$ go from his mother stood out very I, 5 pt eminently ln my mind. It wa3 ;' "my first act ot self assertion. I re- ffi Celled and escaped. Then there was that jump Into the Ob. It almost Anemfiil thnt it niu not T who Roucht ft- f V.llpf In Mn rnlrt. rippn waters from m ftiA iiflv Afanajtl. Rut T wished that ktlh That! been drowned then rather than tS, k Idle such a death. t - ... . ifh nave iiv a .Hir&r.ie " nrlHB Investigation committee nnally gL' JL appeared ln the distance Petruk- &&. hln, was leading them. There were &J 'tueKn mainWi tirpunnt tha Iwn nh. eentees apparently having Joined the other ten. t? "You see how kind we are." some nf thA lanlrilera unlet. MVp nrp. havinir Elf the committee present at jour execu Kt tlonV ew Nbne of us answered rWe were all to see Sablln, the com- Lnder-ln chief," Petrukhin announced soon as he approached near enough Pugatchov. "Ho said that liotcn- Jwliareva would have to be shbt, but not tipnAnKjirilv nnw nnd with this srroUD " Eli "A ray of hope was lit In my soul. W i "Nothing of the sot tl " Pugatchov sy , uawieu unxriiv. 1XWT "txrhnf 1 VA mnhi- hoi p "WhV ISlNthls postponement'.' The list Is al K?ready made up" glWSready made up" E5t J Tho soldiers supported Pugatchov fis3?6 ''Shoot hef! rinlsh her now' What's EJfifrttho use ot botnermg vvun ner again. Eft; Jw'qried the men. p?T vBut jUBt as Pugatchov sensed that a'&i,zrTiiitYin nnrt nntaineti tne aeiny $bsijJhop!ng to save me, so the latter rea-W-S..: ir,. that wnrdH would not be sufficient B1!... ...., t.tfl orviimAtil tTa hnd Tlrfl- r-vtlHlded himself with a note from Sablln. M jtiander ln-chlef," Petrukhin declared. ; C "' ... . . .n ..f, mvi tnnt ) . DUllinK QUI u. liayci. i "j ... . 3f Botchkarev a shall be taKen to my i fuj The moans ;P .omnnrtment in the rallwav carriage bloodcurdling. I Pife'i.i'.iwi t,pn thorn under ituard " the irround my B 4f.Titr9tchov lumped up a If bitten. I swooned. RL"nnt tha committee here nllled to the For four hours C i..fcT.'" - " . - -.... , ....!. tha . T MV.tT.,nrt Af l'pirUKnin. HIKUIIIK itii '.fj'i,xi .aJl..ii i,nt-A nrilp BiSrbe executed later. &rj,'r v IVi. lon.t tr Pptrukhln went up. took a place be side Peter and me, and declared: "You will shoot me, too, before you execute an Innocent, sick woman'" Tho soldiers were now divided Snmn nhniitpd. "IjPt's shoot- her and make an end of this squabble! What's the use of arguments" Others were more human. She Is not of the bourgeoisie, but a common peasant like ourselves," thoy argued "And Khe does not understand politics Perhaps she really was going to seek a cure She was not captured, but came to us herself, we muBt not for get " For some time the place turned Into a meeting ground It was a weird situation for a debate There were the hundreds of bodies scattered around us. There were the twenty of us In our undergarments awaiting death. Ot the twenty only I had a chance for life. 'The remaining nine teen, stoically kept themselves on their feet No hone heaved their breasts No miracle could save them. And amidst all this a hundred Russian sol diers, a quarter of an hour before all Kinases now half of them with a spark of humanity in their veins, were deliberating! The committee finally found their wits and took charge of the situation. Turning to Pugatchov, they declared: "Now, we have an order here from the commander ln-chlef, and it shall be obeved AVe will take her awaj." I They closed about me and I was marched out of the line and off the field. Pugatchov was ln a wnue rage, raving like a madman, grinding his teeth As we walked away, his inhu man voice i oared: "Fire at the knees!" A volley rang out. Immediately pries and Kroans filled the air. Turn ing mv head about, I saw the savages tush the heap of victims with their bayonets, digging them deep Into the I bodies of my companions of a few minutes nrevloua andcrushlng the last signs of life out of them with their heels . . it was frightful. Indescribably rneni' were penetrating, staggered, fell to , iuii lengiii mm SSxaZk wpre orders, and that I would if,f1be executed later. Mfh -Not the least interested spectator of & the 'heated discussion was myself. The oJBCers followed the argument breath- r hours 1 remainea uncon KrlniiR. "When I came to I was ln a compartment of a railway coach Petrukhin sat near me holding my hands and weeping. As I thought of the circumstances that led -to my fainting the figure of -i.. . Thn ammprft Erumoeu. . nffaicnav Httmii uu uciuie ii; wi She forces' of life and death struggled and I took an oath there and then to :'i ui.1. . -NTmir tho nrnt wouia in- Kin mm uc tne iirsi uuyui lumv. .1 PiuniDh now the second, depending on escaped from the Bolshevik trap. SHSELh of the nuarrel. , Petrukhin then told me that Peter RSfBfliJi "Nothing doing'" shouted Puga- had moused the investigation commit l&3.vikt, thrii.tlnir aside the order of the tee to such a state, of compasslon for ifefennimander-ln chief. "It's too late for yrsasae m fi Buy Now! And insist that your Dealer gives you FapSite All Sizes for Immediate Delivery' Standard for Nearly 100 Years TKe Philadelphia and Reading rCoal and Iron Company Business Ideas Found on a Newsstan i2 s I TOP at the first newsstand. There you will find a vast fund of busi ness ideas. Ideas for expanding your business; ideas for increasing your sales; ideas for cutting costs; ideas for making collections; ideas for handling men? ideas gleaned from a thousand sources covering every phase of business. Not theories but ideas from the grist mill of experi ence. Merely apply them to your problems! For one cent a day you can have this storehouse of ideas, any one of which may solve a problem which is now costing you hundreds of dollars. You will find SYSTEM, The Magazine of Business, at all principal newsstands. Here is just a glimpse of what the April number contains: Actual Experiences of Successful Men Making Borrowed Ideas Work READY-TO-WEAR plans that can be applied to your business just as they ore don't grow on every bush. But wherever you go, each experi ence you have contains tho germ of an idea you could very likely use. A certain Chicago hardware man traces an Increase of (0 In his sales to applying borrowed Ideas As he tells it himself. "Carrjlng a notebook Is the part of my work that J lelds the biggest share of profit " Into his notebook go ideas that other men have worked out or adapted. And ln almost all of them Is a susgestloh that makes his organization run more smoothlv and promote"! hlB sales Wal lace J. StebblnB, of the Stehbln Hard ware Co, tells in April SYSTEM what hi notebook of borrowed Ideas has done for his business Is This the Best Management Policy? HOW would Jesus run my busi ness?" An odd question for a successful business man to ask, you'll agree. But Harry N. Clarke insisted upon getting an answer in the two businesses he is operating, and tells about his success in his ar ticle, "Is This the Best Manage ment Policy?' ln the April SYSTEM Some ot tne plain precepts mat jesui Bava men almost two thousand jears How the Other Fellow Got There HOLD a ror to mir-your own policies as you read the April SYSTEM. For instance, stand yourself up beside Frank M. Wicks He will re- . mind vou of a power ful, noiseless dynamo He Is tho persontflca non ot speeo. wunout waste Starting as an it I t 'irBBBr4BjysBr electrician in the Westlnghouse rank and file, he has remodelle? every plant his firm owns alone the lines that ha originated and developed His methods can be applied to your bustne s Oenrjre M. Verity of the American Roll. In Mill Co la a dreamer. Bv dream ing along the right lines and keeping his feet nn the ground he boosted his company s sies irom lKHi.isi.iz to sza -000 000 Fellows like these are worth evtmlav business affairs today. All religion ago In can well be applied Clarke, has proved that It pavs lo aitlrin. do It! There's something fundamental to this article Head It and apply some of the Ideas It contains. England Our Customer and Competitor what commercially in WHAT'S W ftin RfifUh Talna theft Hnvt? SYSTEM wanted to know, so sent its financial editor straight to Lon don to get the facts. Is England a market for us7 What will Brit ish firms buy? And do we need to fear them in the race for world wide commerce? In the first ot a series nf articles appearing in the April SYSTEM jou'll nn the answers to these and a doien other tiuestion Just remember this English buelness Is neither to be feared nor n Isregaraea reading about. nes Make Your Competitors Boost Your Sales pERTAINLY it can be done. Jt " has been done! A salesman of a hustling young company turned the trick, with tho result that in two years the firm's business doubled and in the third year topped the million mark. He had a real idea and it is handed on to ou In the April SYSTEM under the title "Why We Hell More at High Prices," by C O Alexander, President of Alexander Bros This same firm has hit upon a lot of other wrinkles that .will put ginger Into the marketing methods of any business. It hn never had a "comehnck" frnn the dealer, and has capitalised the fset In such a wav that when It entered the Boston field tho Jobber who Is now one of their largest distributors closed the deal before he rnllced that no samples had been shown hltrj. Wrong Methods Made Right Make Friends With the Trade Acceptance MOST df us have only shaken hands with the Trade Accept ance so far. We ought to take it into the. front office and make a friend of it. r Juat as sure as we don't get ac quainted with this newcomer in busi ness we're goingt to be left far be hind In the race. If you've ever been hampered by act ing aa banksf for ydur customers If you hsve ever lamented over thn amount of money you had tied up at Just tho time you needed It for BomMhing special, you 11 read and reivad "More BuslnehM on the Same Capital." hv William A. Ijiw, Prsiant.of the First National Bank of Phlladulplila, In the April lvsue of SYSTEM. H,e (ells Just v hat the trad acceptance Is. how to use It, how It helps In big and little huMnesr and how vou're going to make more money be cause of it. Putting the Handclasp in Your Letters THE Ingersoll Watch folks have a' way pf making letters bring home the bacon. Every letter they send does what It's aimed to , e6 : sells, watches, w 1 p e b out mlsunder Htandlnirs. makes a friend of a debtor and at the sam'e time promptshim to,put a check' In the return mall. .Every letter Is a, handclasp and a friendly "Hello, there '' Business these days rlfes on the post age stamp , If your everyday letters ale not Improving they are losing ln effec tiveness. In the April Issue of SYSTEM, under the title "Making the Even day Letters Better," ram Kearney tens a score or .ClaJiK. Quick Answers to your own problems How to Keep Up with Rising Costs How to Speed Deliveries How to Locate Stocks Easily How to Trade with China Hew to Pick the Right Workers How to Find Jobs for the Fighters How to Buy and What to Buy How to Write a Frltndly Sales Letter How to Increase Your Rats ot Turnover How to Invest Your Sur plus How to Enlarge Your Trad ing Capacity How to Use the Trade Acceptance How Statistics Can Be Put to Work How a New House Policy Was Started How to get Their Best from Employees How to Cut Down Office Friction How to Get Quick Long Distance Connections Prlntar Judges Saved Labor Trouble How Square Dealing Meth ods Win Out How a Esper How to Keep tha Mailing List "Live" How to Pick Executives from the Ranks How to Give the Salesman Mere Time to Sell How to Simplify the Office Memo. How a Removal Was Capi talised How to Apply Other Men's Idess How to Gain the Farmer's Interest How to Boost Your Town How to Get In To See The Right Man How to Save tha Presi dent's Time How to Train Salespeople How a Man-to-Man Talk How to Keep On Work" "Caught Up How Big Men Play How to Cut Down "Dealer Literature" Waste How to Check on Your Third-Class Mall How to Beat Old Man Schedule How to Encourage Saving Among Your Employsss How to Cure Bad Temper How to Meet the Recon struction Period first Ideas. nroved-out. batter letter They are ypurs for the reading EVERY business has mfithftHs. How to There Is a blr op portunity here for ''hand across the sea" If you'll make the effort. John Bull 1 a customer and alsu a competitor TV It- ...ItU . nv ' nniiuie win, . Find out what the English business man U thinking about you. Its well worth while. its wrong find thrm and fix them is the everlasting iob of the business man. The purchas ing agent of a rri&il order house dis covered that the combination en velope order blanks they had sent out were not being used. He in vestigated, and "doped" out a plan that resulted in a tidy Increase In sales, Broken promises hurl a firm's reputa tion and put a wet blanket un sales. A general manager devised a way of re- ,WJL,.wm . , minding employes oc tneir promises ut mslvVjpJ the proper time.. and saved hi firm tho ., o8 of mAny justdmera These and other workable Ideas are uescriued in tne seetion neaceu -wrong, sibtnoas BBBVSaBBBBBBBB Made Itlght" In SYSTEM forx April. "The, Listening Post" THE veteran realty man admitted that it) was "bad business" not to pension off old Otis. "But I just haven't the heart to do it," he de clared, and his decision won him the biggest deal he had swung in years. The Borden Tract was the finest melon in the local real estate field, Otls's chief and Cortwrlght, , head of a rival firm, were both determined to sell iti When the buyer called , on both firms It was old Otis that tipped the scales f0r his employer and cllnchec the uu 'ThA Llatenlna Post" a busl. ness story Toy Camlllus Phillips is in ril issue nr BXHiaiu. ii win neip eart to help your, head. the April jour in I ""-" fBBBBMBBBlBW BW BBBBBBVti I d TjbflSCxSBBBSSSB aaakljS a TBJBJBjaL,4 I --"''"'sr'r'LMsssssssssHsT bb OIssbsb aw A sssssVM JsajS-TaiSasssssMsssssa'ir swggm H '1 ssssfll 'JbbsVs V MssssV sssssh ssssaSasV .asaasssBssssssssEssssBssflsssssssssssssssssssssssa VvBBBBBBBBBBBBk. BBsB BBaJMaBBBBBnBBBSRaBBBMBi!BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBTC I VBBBBBBBBBBBBBBbVkIvBBBBBBBM W'jkKtEBBBBBBBBBBBBBBV.. BM rVBljkaBBBNBBBBBBBBBBBmM t?SaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBF4 BBBBBBBT - SeBfi BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBIW SgS. 1 lB MBBBB, MVVsHHBaBBBBK-,J YaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB&WQlHaBB&e'jSSBBBBBHBBBslBBBBBBrc VBBBBBBBBBBBBBBHVBBBBBHBBBBBBBBBBBsHHwTiBBBCalBBBBBBBSBVH 1 llBBBBBBBBBBBBlllsmBBBBBBBMBBWP?ft. jSf BbVmPTOSsBBBBWBMbBBBBBBBTM tXl!BBBBBBBBBBBHKSK39BBBB!BSc?i-''Cr OHuNBHHsBBBBBnBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB&A thUJBBBBBBBBBBBnsSSsiHlKMMTZNH " SrffaBBBWBBBBBBBBEBBBBBBBKl 1 Bt BBBBBBBBBBBBBBB VHfflAaSsSBBn&SWlBMjmJfVaaBBBBSBBBBBBBBBB BSSBBBBBBBBBmevSflBSBUBVBlBBBBBWBMMvV XyBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBsBMiMMBBTrfflrTEB I lBBBBBB$BBBlBBBBBB9BBBHBBHBBHMBBna3!lsBBBSBB lflBBBBBBBBBHSBBBBBBBBfliSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaBSaKU nSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBHflBRDnBP'' 1 MSBBBBBBBBBBPe lBBBBBBBBy?-i-' I, . " '' 1 "IlBIIMMaMBaaaaSBiaBaBMaaBaaaaaBBBW 9,WW 9etbo6o It 1 jO . ty ' turn M iWatarisI Wf, 'I $250 Imw&i I ofitienvholHrik Bt IM & andjnmitisheMng "& Im f eatlyto solve the flLr v t reconstruction sj&r pioblems of the T world. rS' 1 JSeadyto write instantly Jrj&LJi., anywhere 'mmBKMmtntjj0i , . L.E.Waterman Co. Wa . J 9i Buoadway New York W II b Chicago. Boston San Francisco V II mmm ""5tj d S A t, j i ffil m I O Qalia TflflaV at All lf your dealer hM tky W hi supply, ask him to order a copy for you, or write direct to the publishers 11 Oftie UUay a l 1 1 A w sh y eilher Wabash Avenue and Madison Street, Chicago, or 299 Madison Avenue, New Principal NeWSStahdS York, and ask to receive SYSTEM regularly. It wU be WUed you at 25c a copy or $3.M) for a full year. HI l l m J&M fcU ., T'. lA atW -" . Jr$ W .il lim , ) $$& m,'H iHlnflHiktK:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers