Demonic iatdpuan. Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 6, 1899. FARM NOTES. —Best of all coverings for ordinary pur- poses for wounds and bare places on trees is common linseed oil paint, according to an Orange Judd Farmer writer. It is the eas- iest of all in application, it lasts for years on the dead wood, it does not kill the tend- er bark or check its growing. “The turnip flea is still alive and shows this season that he has tastes for all sorts of meat, although henbane (Hyoscyamus niger) is his favorite food. The leaves of young sugar corn he attacked this season, in force, causing the young plants to grow slowly and the outer ends of the leaves to turn brown. I used a dilution of whale oil soap, but found that frequent stirring of the soil every day or two and one or two visits a day and brushing them from the leaves were of the most service. This in- sect is very fond of tobacco leaves all through the growing season, from the small plants in the bed until frost comes in the fall. All plants of the night shade family, this insect is found feeding on; and is al- most impossible to grow the egg-plant in this neighborhood without using paris green freely,’’ writesa Missouri gardener to Meehan’s Monthly. —If onion sets are put on in October, they will furnish slender white stems for the table about two weeks from the hegin- ning of growth in the spring. One-third ounces of seed or quart of sets goes to 100 feet of row. Parsley is a biennial. If wanted in early spring, parsley may be sowed in September in moderately fertile soil. During the cold weather the plants should be covered nearly to the top with leaves, held in place by brush. One-fourth of one ounce of seed will sow 100 feet of drill. If sowed in the fall, spinach can usually be wintered under a mulch, which should be removed early in the spring. The drills should be a foot apart and the seed covered about an inch deep. Thin to 6 inches apart and finally, as the plants grow, to 12 inches in the row. New Zealand is a new variety quite different from the common, and the plants should stand three feet apart. Per- petual spinach is sown in rows a foot apart, in very rich soil and thinned to give room. Half an ounce of ordinary seed is right for 100 feet of drill. Twenty-five plants of New Zealand are enough for a family. —The old method of tying out cattle and horses by a rope attached to a stake driven in the ground has many disadvantages. The rope is not always liable to tangle, but the animal is liable at any time to get fast in the rope and become injured and some- times killed. The ground grazed over, too, is of a circular shape, and the creature staked out on this plan must leave pieces of the ground untouched or work over a por- tion of the old browsing place. By using the trolley all these are done away with. A large sized wire of any desired length, with a stake at each end, is used for this trolley. A ring 2 or 3 inches in diameter is strung on this. Into this tie a rope, which is also attached to the halter. The length of this rope regulates the width of the ground the animal can pick over. A 5 foot rope will allow the grazing of a strip 10 feet wide and as long as the trolly wire, as the ring slips readily on the wire: When it is desirable to move the animal, pull the stakes and set them ahead twice the length of the rope attached to the ring. It is not necessary to have the rope free of the ground. It is well to have the wire taut. This will be found a most satisfactory way of lariating.— Ohio Farmer. —A correspondent of the Stockman and Farmer says: A vegetable that I trench for winter use is cabbage. The process of trenching cabbage is very simple. A trench is made about 18 inches deep and the cab- bages pulled and placed in the trench, leav- ing on all the loose leaves. If the cabbages are hard put the heads down and roots up. If they are loose put the roots down and shingle them ini. e., lean them partly over so as to keep the water out of them. When the cabbages are trenched shovel an inch or two of earth over them, then just hefore the ground freezes put on six or eight inches more. Cabbages will stand hard freezing if they are allowed tothaw out in the earth. Openings in the trench should be left for ventilation and filled with straw. If the heads of cabbages are a little loose they will grow in the ground so as to make solid heads. I have had them grow after trench- ing them so that they would crack open. The quality of the cabbage is improved by burying itin the earth. I have buried many thousand cabbages in this way, and with only a small loss. —The same correspondent writes as to celery: One of the vegetables which I have had a large experience in storing for mar- keting in winteris celery. Every fall I get a good many orders for celery put up in boxes so that they can be stored in the cel- lar. Thecelery is put up without being blanched, in tight boxes eight to twelve inches deep. Several holes should be bored in the side of the box four or five inches from the bottom to pour water through. The rule to be observed in keeping celery is to keep the roots moist and the stalks and leaves dry; so do not pour water on top of the celery when watering it in the cellar. I put about two inches of earth in the bot- tom of the box, then lift the celery with a fork, and set it rather loosely in the box,as packing it close will cause it to heat and rot sooner. A good way is to put in two boxes of celery in the cellar for family use, then put one box in a dark place, or cover it with a cloth and give it plenty of water and you will have celery ready for use in two or three weeks. If you wish to keep the other box until later in the winter keep it in a lighter place and give it less water: for the longer you can keep it green the longer it will keep without rotting. If you have a moist cellar bottom you can keep celery with less work by setting it on the cellar bottom in rows twelve to fifteen inches wide with boards between. Begin on the side of the cellar and set up a row of celery, scatter a little soil around the roots, then set up two or three more rows in the same way, then set up a hoard and so on until the celery is stored. The part of my celery that I want for marketing before Christmas for the holiday trade I store in the cellar, and commence to put it in about October 15th, so as to get it blanched by Thanksgiving. I have some- times found it necessary to hurry the blanching to get it ready for market. This I have done by elevating a barrel a little above the celery, attaching a hose to it,and laying one end of it down on the roots of the celery. This plan does not wet the stalks, and the water starts a new growth, which when the cellar is made dark, causes the celery to blanch in a few days. The part of the celery which I market late in the winter or in the spring is trenched out of doors. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. One of the most satisfactory investments a woman can make isa good tailor made suit. So far they have not altered much from those of last winter. The loose box coat is new, but will be worn only by the sonspic- uous few. The skirts are still three and five-gored, with strapped seams if the cloth is heavy, the lining made to the skirt and not separate. Double-breasted short jackets are to be stylish and Etons with the long round fronts are in very good taste. They area little more dressy than any other jacket. The revers will continue to be small, and made of black satin and black silk, in- stead of black velvet. But preferably the cloth with several rows of stitching is used. The fastening is usually under a fly but in a $90 black tailor suit the cloth buttons were visible, and looked very stylish. The buttonholes were very heavily stitched with black silk thread and made an elaborate note down the front of the jacket. Braid is still in use, but there is a tendency among the best tailors not to braid everyday gowns. A new trimming which is allowed on the plainest skirts is the series of ten or twelve small bands, rounded at each end and placed down the front of the skirt in the middle of the front gore. These bands follow one after the other like stepping stones. They are exactly the same length, and are heavily stitched with black silk thread. It is allowable to put a black cloth button at the left end of the tab, but this button is not wise. In the coats this fall there is no half- way business; they are either long or short; medium lengths are not recognized. One of the jauntiest of the short jackets is.built of bright red cloth. It fits close to the figure at the back and extends just to the waist line. The front, which is a bit longer, laps over to the left side, where it fastens with two large black bone buttons. A broad strap of the cloth stitched with several rows of black floss gives a finish to the bottom of the back. This stitched strap 1s repeated again at the bust line and passes around the tops of the close fitting plain sleeves. The broad revers and collar were of black velvet. “I have very little patience,’’ said a doc- tor, ‘‘with the mothers who lose their first babies with brain disorders because of im- proper feeding, and then talk of the little darling being too smart to live.”” They might feel differently if they could be brought to believe that the brain trouble came from their own carelessness in feed- ing instead of trom any inherited ‘smart- ness.’ ”’ ‘‘Many young mothers make the mistake of beginning to feed their babies too early, but when a year old a child should have bread and milk, hominy, oatmeal, por- ridge, a soft-hoiled egg occasionally, cracked wheat or any of the cereals, bread and butter, or a little molasses or honey. ‘“When the double teeth are through it may have beefsteak, tender mutton chops or chicken finely minced. The juice from rare beef, or mutton broth, will also be ex- cellent. Baked or stewed apples, boiled custard, stewed prunes, rice pudding, ete., may he gradually added. But before the teeth come through there is not sufficient saliva in the mouth to combine with these foods. : “Mashed potatoes are especially harmful for a very young child, as they contain too much starch, and yet they are usually about the first solid food offered the baby. A baby that is fed at the table soon devel- ops into a cross, peevish, fretful child, as its food d:.es not agree with it, and as the child grows older this fretfulness—caused by indigestion—is increased rather than diminished because of want of judgment on the part of some mothers, who insist upon the little one eating what is repulsive to it, so that it will not form ‘“‘finicky”’ habits. The parents should not try to in- sist upon their own likes and dislikes too much. Some constitutions inherit dis- likes to certain foods, also disagreements of other kinds, and this should be respected; children will seldom crave what will dis- agree with them, and on the other hand, the food that is repulsive to the child will in almost every case prove indigestible.”’ A woman afflicted with round shoulders may benefit herself considerably by sleeping with one small, flat pillow, and being careful to walk as erect as possible, keeping the head up and expanding the chest. A exercise said to be efficacious is to walk about the room with a book on the head. If the chin can be kept up the stoop will gradually disappear. It was an unique style of decoration, but no one could say it was not pretty, and it could not have been expensive if the girl had been spending her summer in the pine woods. She was a nice-looking girl and apparently in half mourning, and in her black hat she had standing at one side a large pine cone on a long stem, while on the other side, a little further back and drooping, was a cluster of small pine cones. ‘‘My,”’ exclaimed the girl who saw the hat on the street car, in tones of admiration. “I don’t know as I exactly like the cones on black, but they would be stunning on a brown velvet hat for fall, and if I don’t have one it will be because I can’t get the cones. I brought some beauties home this year, but I bought soft round baskets of brown straw of a course weave, put brown satin, deep rich green and deep yellow tops on them, gathered them up like a bag, and fastened the cones on the sides of the baskets, and they make the prettiest presents imaginable.”’ Cotton shirt waists for winter wear are being brought out by manufacturers. The wearing of cotton waists, through the cold season, is a French fashion which has for some time found favor here with women who are not susceptible to cold and who were loath to relinquish the freshness of the laundered waists. The new French models are in cotton corduroy, thick Mar- seilles and embroidered heavy linen duck; the colored figures ornamented with heavy rows of machine stitching will be very pop- ular. The grasshopper as a mascot is really a craze just now. This insect jewel comes in different sizes, beautifully initialed in enamel of shining green, with feet of gold and large ruby eyes. Itis worn asacharm, a belt buckle and a bracelet. It is seen on the umbrella handle, on paper-cutters, ete. It is even printed on letter paper when one’s intimate friends are being writ- ten to. Children’s teeth require special atten- tion. A spool of dental floss should be kept in a convenient place, and a piece of the silk passed between the teeth after eating. If the first teeth are defective, or decay quickly, a dentist should be con- sulted and his advice followed in the hope that the permanent set may be benefited by it. Colonel Ingersoll’s Speech to the Jury. I am aware there is a prejudice against any man engaged in the manufacture of alcohol. I believe from the time it issues from the coiled and poisonous worm in the distillery until it empties into the hell of death, that it is demoralizing from the source to where it ends. I do not believe that any body can con- template the subject without being preju- diced against the crime. All they have to do is to think of the wrecks along the stream of death, of suicides, of the insanity, of the poverty, of the destitution, of the little children tugging at the breast, of weeping and despairing wives asking for bread, of the man struggling with imagin- ary serpents produced by this devilish thing; and when you think of the jails, of the almshouses, of the asylums, of the prisons and scaffolds on either bank, I do not wonder that every thoughtful man is prejudiced against this vile stuff called aleohol. Intemperance cuts down youth in its vigor, manhood 1n its strength, and age in its weakness, bereaves the doting mother, extinguishes natural affection, blights pa- rental hope and brings premature age in sorrow to the grave. It produces weakness, not strength; sickness, not health; death not life. It makes wives widows, children orphans, fathers fiends, and all paupers. It feeds rheumatism, nurses gout, wel- comes epidemics, invites cholera, imports pestilence and embraces consumption, and covers the land with misery, idleness and crime. If engenders controversies, fosters quarrels and cherishes riots. It crowds your penitentiaries and furnishes victims for the scaffold. It is the blood of the gambler, the element of the burglar, the prop of the highwayman and the support of the midnight incendiary. It counte- nances the liar, respects the thief and es- teems the blasphemer. It violates obliga- tions, reverences fraud, hates love, scorns virtue and innocence. It incites the father to butcher his helpless offspring, and the child to grind the parental ax. It burns up men, consumes women, detests life, curses God and despises heaven. It suborns witnesses, nurses perfidy, de- files the jury box and stains the judicial ermine. It bribes voters, disqualifies votes, corrupts elections, pollutes our in- stitutions and deranges the government. It degrades the citizen, debases the legis- lator, dishonors the statesman and disarms the patriot. It brings shame, not honor; terror, not safety; despair, not hope; mis- ery, not happiness, and with the malevo- lence of a fiend calmly surveys its frightful desolation, and unsustained with havoc, it poisons felicity, kills peace, ruins morals, wiges out national honor, then curses the world and laughs at its ruin. It does that and more—it murders the soul. It is the sum of all villanies, the father of crimes, the mother of all abominations, the devil's best friend and God’s worst enemy. Some Receipts Worth Trying. Chocolate Custard.—Dissolve one and one-half ounces of grated chocolate over the fire in a little milk, add enough to make a pint in all, and let it boil up. Remove the pan to the side of the fire, cover and let the contents steep for ten minutes. Beat to- gether two eggs, pour slowly into the choc- olate, sweeten to taste, stir while the mixt- ure simmers, add a few drops of vanilla flavoring, pour into glasses and leave until cold. Just before serving pilea little whip- ped cream on each. Chocolate Mousse.—Melt one and one- half squares of chocolate, and one and one- half cupful powdered sugar, and as soon as the sugar is melted add gradually one cup- ful cream. Stir over the fire until boiling point is reached, then add three-quarters teaspoonful of gelatine dissolved in three tablespoonfuls hoiling water, three-quarters cupful sugar and one teaspoonful of vanilla. Combine mixtures, strain into a bowl plac- ed in a pan of ice water and stir constantly until mixtures begin to thicken. Fold in the whip from one quart thin cream. Mould, pack in salt and ice and let stand four hours. Griddle Cakes With Bread Crumbs.— Soak bits of bread in water, then put them in a cloth and wring out the moisture. To two cups of crumbs add one cup of flour and one pint of sour milk, heat together thoroughly, and let stand over night. In the morning add one egg, beaten lightly, half a teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of soda dissolved in a little cold water, and if necessary, sweet milk to make a thin bat- ter. Kite-flyer Fatally Injured. Earl Arkless, the ten-year-old son of William Arkless, manager of the Norris- town Wire works, died Friday evening of injuries received while flying a kite. The boy and several companions climbed to the -roof of a freight car to enjoy the sport. While interested in watching the kite the boy missed his footing and fell off the car. He landed upon his head and suffered con- cussion of the brain. BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALVE.—The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chap- ped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by F. Potts Green. ——You ought to take the WATCHMAN A — we Landslide Crashes Down a Hill Wrecking A Store and Factory. Tons of Rock and Earth, Loosened by Heavy Rains, Overwhelmed a Manufacturing Plant in Pottsville— Employes, Who Were at Dinner, Escaped Injury. With a thundering crash, heard for squares away, tons of rock and earth, loos- ened by the recent heavy rains, rushed some forty feet down the side of Prospect Hill and into and upon the residence and carpet weaving establishment of R. Rees, at 804 and 806 West Market street, Potts- ville, causing great damage to the property and looms. Fortunately, the employes were ahsentat dinner, or many lives might have been lost. One huge boulder, weighing a half ton, crashed through the building and landed beneath one of the looms, wrecking it. Tons of rock and earth crashed into the warehouse and weaving establishment, crushing the roof and sides in many places. ——Little three year old Bessie was try- ing to dress herself one morning and man- aged to get her clothes badly mixed. Call- ing to her mother, she said: ‘‘Oh, mamma, come up and help me; I’m all upside out !"’ ——I guess that ain’t me,’’ said little Ralph as he gazed earnestly ata photo- graph of himself. ‘‘What makes you think it isn’t 2’? asked his mother. ‘Cause it’s standin’ still too long to be me,’’ was the reply. ——Edith (aged three)—What are hus- bands ? Ethel (aged five)—Why, husbands are things you tie strings onto to make them remember to buy things! Many People Cannot Drink Coffee at night. It spoils their sleep. You can drink Grain-O when you please and sleep like a top. For Grain-O does not stimulate ; it nourish- es, cheers-and feeds. Yet it looks and tastes like the best coffee. For nervous persons, young peo- ple and children Grain-O is the perfect drink. Made from pure grains. Get a package from your grocer to-day. Try it in place of coffee. 15 and 25¢. 41-1-1y Business Notice. Castoria Bears the signature of Cuas. H. FLETCHER. In use for more than thirty years, and The Kind You have Always Bought Castoria. A 8. T 0 RB 1 A cC A 8 T 6 2 1 A C A'S TORI A C A's TT 0 BI A C A gine mip A crc The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘‘Just-as-good’ are but Ex- periments, and endanger the health of Children— Experience against Experiment WHAT IS CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Cas- tor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neith- er Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. It re- lieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipa- tion and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving ;healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—-The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. IN USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS. The Centaur Company, New York City. New Advertisements. ANTED-—Several bright and honest persons to represent us as Managers in this and close by counties. Salary $900 a year and expenses. Straight, bona-fide, no more, no less salary. Position permanent. Our reference, any bank in any town. It is mainly office work conducted at home. Reference. Enclose self- addressed stamped envelope. Tur DomiNION Coxraxy, Dept 3, Chicago. 44-37-16w. Roofing. A LEAKING ROOF IS A PESKY NUISANCE. W. H Miller, Allegheny Street, Bellefonte, Pa., puts on new or repairs old slate roofs at the lowest prices. Estimates on new work gladly fuar- nished. 42-38 ——————————— — GT ——— Montgomery Ward & Co. W HOLESALE PRICES TO CONSUMERS 44-32 How we sell goods to consumers at wholesale prices is shown in OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE............... seasiteisinives ard BUYERS’ GUIDE A book of 1,000 pages, 16,000 illustrations, and 60,000 descriptions of the things you eat and use and wear. THE BOOK IS FREE TO YOU It costs 72 cents a copy to print and send it. want you to have one. Seud 15 cents to partly pay postage or expressage, and we'll send you a copy, all charges prepaid. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. 111 to 120 Michigan Ave., Cor. Madison Street, CHICAGO. weve. Originators of the Mail Order Business......... We McCalmont & Co. NV CALMOXNT & CO.———m——— 0 ———HAVE THE—— 0): 000s innireeiniacsarascrsienninii tian STITT EIN 0 yr’ 2 N—— { LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } (QF rere eneererartetttiittitatitiitatiientesttsttianatiies 0 —N— CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. Their prices are right and their guarantee is behind the goods, which means many a dollar to the farmer. The more conservative farmer wants to see the goods before he buys, and buy where he can get repairs when needed, for he knows that the best machinery will wear out in time. Goods well bought is money saved. Money saved is money earned. Buy from the largest house, biggest stock lowest prices ; where the guarantee is as good as a bond; where you can sell your corn, oats, wheat hay and straw for cash, at the highest market prices, and get time on what you buy. All who know the house know the high standard of the goods, and what their guarantee means to them. Standard ar Manilla “ ‘ ce “ 5-Tooth Cultivator............ 16-Tooth Perry Harrows 12-inch Cut Lawn Mowers. Top Buggy.... Open Buggy..... With Long- y South Carolina Rock Phosphate, per MeCalmont & Co’s Champion Ammoniated Bone Super Phosphate... SEE HOW THE PRICES RUN : Sisal Binder Twine, per Ib......cooceeunnee The man who pays for what he gets wants the best his money will buy. There is no place on earth where one can do better than at McCALMONT & CO’S. 44-19-3m * BELLEFONTE, PA Fine Groceries New Advertisements. Pree GROCERIES......... NM ozEY TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. ARE CONDUCIVE GOOD HEALTH ONLY THE PUREST AND FRESHEST GOODS are to be had at SECHLER & CO’S BELLEFONTE, PA. Fine Coffees, Fine Syrups, Fine Confectianery, Fine Canned Goods, Fine Eried Fruits, Fine Bacon, Fine Pickles, Fine Oil, Fine Oranges, Fine Bananas. Fine Teas, Fine Spices, Fine Fruits, Fine Cheese, Fine Syrups, Fine Ham, Fine Olives, Fine Sardines, Fine Ketchups, Fine Lemons, But all these can talk for themselves if you give them a fair chance. NEW FISH, Bright Handsome New Mackeral, Ciscoes,} New Caught Lake Fish, Herring, White Fish, Lake Trout, New Map! Sugar and Syrup, Fine CannedSoups, Bouillion, Oxtail, Mock Turtle, Vegetable, Consomme, Mulligatawney, Tomato, Chicken, Gumbo, Queensware, Enameled Ware, Tin Ware, and Brushes. Brooms Best place to bring your produce and best place to buy your goods. SECHLER & CO. 42-1 BELLEFONTE, PA. Insurance. A CCIDENT —AND— AEALTH INSURANCE. THE FIDELITY MUTUAL AID ASSO- CIATION WILL PAY YOU If disabled by an accident $30 to $100 per month If you lose two limbs, $208 to $5,000, If you lose your eye sight, $208 to $5,000, If you lose one limb, $83 to $2,000, If In are ill $40 per month, If killed, will pay your heirs, $208 to $5,000, If you die from natural cause, $100. IF INSURED, You cannot lose all your income when you are sick or disabled by accident. Absolute protection at a cost of $1.00 to $2.25 per month. The Fidelity Mutual Aid association is pre- eminently the largest and strongest accident and health association in the United States. It has $6,000.00 cash deposits with the States of California and Missouri, which, together, with an ample reserve fund and large assets, make its certificate an absolute guarantee of the solidity of protection to its members. For particulars address J. L. M. SHETTERLEY, Secretary and General Manager, 42-19-1-y. San Francisco, Cal. J. M. KEICHLINE, 44-14-1yr*. Att'y at Law. Roofing. NN IS THE TIME TO EXAMINE YOUR ROOF. During the Rough Weather that will be experienced from now until Spring you will have a chance to Examine your Roof and see if it is in good condition. If you need a new one or an old one repaired I am equipped to give you the best at reasonable rices. The Celebrated Courtright Tin Shingles and all kinds of tin and iron roofing. W. H. MILLER, 42:38 BELLEFONTE, PA. Allegheny St. Herman & Co. Nomce ! DEFECTIVE - EYES Can be made to see perfectly and the trouble entirely removed by prop- erly fitted glasses. Our specialist isa graduate and Jiipqusjifed in his pro- fession. His knowledge and experi- Sse is at your command. He will e a FRANK GALBRAITH’S, JEWELER, ——BELLEFONTE, PA.— TUESDAY, OCT. 24th, 1899, H. E. HERMAN & CO. Consultation Free. 44-19-1y Wax Candles. NHADOW AND LIGHT Blend most softly and play most effectively over a fes- tive scene when thrown by waxen candles. The light that heightens beauty’s charm, that gives the finished touch to the drawing room or dining room, is the mellow glow of BANQUET WAX CANDLES, Sold in all colors and shades to harmonize with any interior hangings or decorations. Manufactured by STANDARD OIL CO. For sale everywhere. 39-37-1y Jewelry. \ A TEDDING GIFTS. ——STERLING SILVER— is the most appropriate thing to give. It is useful, has beauty, and lasts a life time. OUR STOCK INCLUDES EVERYTHING for the table, and prices are Jey little more than is asked for the plated ware. COME AND LOOK AT IT. ns [ (ee a F. C. RICHARD’S SONS, 41-46 High St. BELLEFONTE, PA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers