SE A LPs ea mares mt nt mr eam ess, “Kind of cold, sonny?” asked the man, one of the shoals that crawled snake-like | same sticks of candy that he had so often FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN FARM NOTES. i ’ 1 behind barrier of sand that shut off ' seen the boys buying at the grocery-| — — {pusklly, nodded and moved restiessly the bay from the open ougan, Store. He had never dreamed before hor | DAILY THOUGHT. oi houses are the greatest pro- “Never » said the man; “we'll| He staggered to the it where | delicious sticks of candy were, how great- | moters of disease among fowls. a some birds to-morrow. This gale "li | the stern of the boat was heavi- | ly to be desired, how much better than | So what is there to frown or smile at? “It isnot sb much in: the breed in Bellefonte, Pa., lanuary 5, 1912. | Set Somme II er ly on the shoal. He how long | anything else. Half-consciously he reached | What is left for us, save in growth poultey 25 in he ome and fern mae tr . === | Then he moved forward under the deck little craft could stand those jarring above and broke one off, putting it to his Oh soul. to rise up, far past both, . — g on | and felt in the darkness around the step | shocks. The water that had swept in | mouth. But it was salt, and he sickened | From the gift, looking to the giver, —Good horse blankets are savers of POOR ME! of the mast. His hand came in contact | until it covered the flooring was now | at the taste. The wet contact suggested | And from the cistern tothe river. valuable horseflesh and high-priced feed. — with a cylindrical object. It was a can. | frozen solid clear to the i . another idea. He crept forward to the And from the finite to infinity, More fowls die: # - lati Poor Me! 1 have done the best I could, He drew it toward him. As he did so the | Below in the arctic cold of the cabin | water-cooler and turned the tap. A And from man's dust to God'sdivinity: | 700 i Tom | ay atun Oh I think I have done the best— | odor of kerosene came to his nostrils. He | the boy lay huddled on the locker topsthat | single drop oozed out of the spigot and | ~Brouming. | Co NeTcruweIng y Which means, that my will to do was good, ' held the can before him and shook it, | were built out from under the bilge. He | fell on the ice-coated flooring. He beat | — > But the deed scarce stands the test, | then shook it agin. The cork was out. | was awake, but he did not move. The | the cold. ro body of the cooler with | yo. hart gowns have appeared for | —It is practically impossible to store As only too clearly I now can see | It was empty. pitching of the boat | ice-stiffened blankets were twisted tightly | his hands. A dull, heavy sound came . C0'C Clo." mourning. The severe | fertility in soils deficient in carbonate of Poor Me! | had overturned it, and the oil had gone | about him. He was moaning with the | back to his ears. Then he realized Il | jojemyss, once so favored, no longer | lime. to mingle with the freezing bilge, wate: pain of his frozen hand. The man bent | the water in it was frozen. His cold-dried {5070 000" “This does not mean that —Study the effects of amd fouling Poor Me! | have gone about, about, ' the deck dur- | over him unsteadily, the gaunt seams of | lips writhed in the semblance of 2 grin. : HCUODE: : : care : | that had beaten in through | IPS . the present gown is conspicuous. A little | with your poultry to work out some poul- And run in a little round. | ing the night. suffering deepening on his face. ; Suddenly he bent close to the flooring. | trimming has been introduced to give | try problems for yourself. ¥ thought I moved in the world without, man carried the stove forward of | “Never mind, sonny. We're all right A gentle, sucking murmur came UP p,cacter to the dress. Heavy fringes in : . And I laughed at bar and bound; the trunk and set it down. The boy had | now,” he said. “We'll get some birds to- i through the planking to him. It was the silk, wool or chenille look extremely weil —The man who said “the best poultry I boasted of freedom—who never was free | dropped back in the blanket and was | morrow—gale ‘ll drive 'em in for shel- | same sound he had heard for hours. It | o 4a Sn oiiet taste. Ruchings, pleat | men on most farms are women” knew Poor Me! sleeping again. The man took the other oaied weak) had, not changed, 29. increased, not | ings and puffings of soft crepe are always | What he was talking about. ’ wed anket spread it over him. The boy m weakly. | diminished. It was , ve. - 2 : : ; eo ie Soved te veel i Blake Ta droga on. One by one| Noon pi B The sun was a tiny white | He tried to reason how long a time had | ele. beads and buttons of the un- | pe wAS wilh othet ghiale, Chickens mus. TE Oe es Batic: and would not tel | the drops of spray drenched throuh the | point of frigid fire. The climbing seas elapsed since he began to count the ici- | polished jet may be used. tae mai ho. Som ies Whergfore their wrath I served! i top of the cabin and became tiny icicles, Rad lost some of their height. The sky | cles. Three hours, four, six hours at "rp coo oo ond cuffs of finely tucked av =. Among themselves could neither agree— | until the whole roof was covered with | was very blue and very cold. From the | least. He went back over the time he = oon "0 tc esh and dainty. Some-| -—Have the drinking trough deep, so Poor Me! | them. Once the man crept past the frozen | deck the man could see the gray finger | had spent watching the grains in the times these may be finished with a fine | the duck can get its head in the water, : t tarpaulin to the cockpit and started | of the beach plainly now. Near its point | wood of the combing—stove to reduce it | pleating. neglect of this will result in sore eyes. Poor Me! And, always, I fondly deemed, southward into the haze of wind | a single shadow crouched. It was the !to minutes. It seemed very long, as|™ oles with sash ends of lusteriess The tiny mite becomes a mighty factor Spite of each frustrate deed, ai and mist that walled them in from which | life-saving station. The man’s face work- ' though it had covered ges. The tide | satin are permitted. These may be em- |i reducing the egg supply unless it is Just one,at the end. would show what I'd dreamed. | oop 0 on dlessly upon them the procession | ed with agony as he thought of the red- | must have set in flood before foe € | Lroidered in dull, black silks. constantly kept down, Halfway measures And, after—my part might plead. . . . of gray-crested seas. Carefully he work- | hot stove within its walls. | thought. He struggled to whip his idea | "op "000 Corn” during mourning are Sonstan x . But now I know this never will be— ed his way forward over the decks that| He dragged himself aft on hands and | of time into action. Yes, surely the tide | . Poor Me! 3 : | usually small. They may be trimmed i il he the stern he peered down must be sweeping in. Then why was _ : : . The bulk of the voultsv. comes from By Edith M. Thomas, were oa ated with glass i eld the BE Ove 4 “Ihe shocks decreased as there no diminishing in that gurgling at | with siee, Sn > faffeta «ye of the farm and not ay a the bes: cable. Throwing his weight on the fray- | the falling sea dropped the keel of the the keel? Why did the same gentle © Te a -. ii Plea 20d falls ouitry xacally Comes from the fancier or : ing hemp, he tried to heave the boat up | craft on the bar more gently. From the | sucking whisper creep up through the . > i e wit small farmer. THE TIDE'S FOOLS. shorter so that he could get a bend | dull color of the water he knew they bottom planks? A Sn i ee oe ha Butl . en around the mast below the place that was | were resting on a mud bottom. This! He went out on deck, found the boat- co : nis £ it or county, gi Celebrates i the frozen | being slowly chewed th by the | told him why the boat had not broken hook, and sounded over the side. The Very little jewelry is worn with a this all t . Zoning O more t an 10 ’ We Say Hem Re storm, the chock, but the force of ps and sea|yp. Her keel had been pounding into water came scarcely two feetup the pole. | | Loco ime but pins and brooches Sek. of 2 r corn, much of whic! fields that gray day be pip dandy tautened the rope like a bar of steel. | the soft black ooze of a bay bar. There should have been three feet of of black enamel come many pretty went ushels to the acre. man, big and gaunt n that had | A flock of brant flying low swept with- | He listened in the cold to the sounds | water under the boat at least now. designs ~The most successful people to han- never g ith te rusty. , thin | in a dozen yards of him, driving before | as the seas humped the vessel on the! Quietly the man sat down on the ice- 5 5 ! : These may be inset with pearls, in| dle domestic animals of any kind are and pale, a mere wisp of a lad, ng in | the wind back into the bay for shelter. | mud. The shocks were certainly not as | glazed deck. He struggled hard lo Sink, fact, pearls may be worn during the | those who make a careful beni of their 2 A ast of the dunnage. From the gray haze to windward they | heavy as they had been an hour before. | and slowly the light of understanding eads when the came like drunken phantoms. and like | He attributed this partly to the fact that came to him. He remembered that the pelicd of hal favouring. are not quite snimals ynder all conditions, We shook of b ih the canvas cabin, | spectres they vanished in the scud astern. | the sea was going down, partly to some- | boat had come ashore in a gale blowing |; vioid as heretofore ft a costume is| —If you have hens with little chicks do the little catboat wi San us Id | The man moved back to the cabin and | thing else—that the tide was rising. in from sea, that she must have come in,» quiet and subdued, it may be re- | not put the coops near the ones where Even up in the sheltsred a per gale | rummaged in alocker. Then he cut the | The thought gave him new strength. on the high tide, a tide that was unusual- 004 by trimming ? : { the chicks will kill little turkeys. A hen Jeet She Jores of 8 the gt £4 pr rth, rat- | quarter loat of bread remaining and gave | Once the boat was clear of the bar, even | ly high because of the heavy onshore! . | with turkeys will likewise kill the chick- tink the § oten grass on the shore and the boy half. There were three thin | though not a rag of ice-encrusted sail blow. But now the storm had gone and | po A ! ens. wetting its lips on the white water. We | slices of dried ham and a paper of raw | was set, the breeze that still blew in from the high water had d , leaving him | 0 tmea e locker. He ate one slice | sea could carry her across to the main- | above the aid of the ordinary tides. That Sl for rimki 2 Se0y Sat te a — games] in the is the other to the boy. | Jand. For a long time the man listened, | first one just after the gale had dropped a font i song they hoisted sail with | The oatmeal he put back. his body cramped to the icy deck, his | might have floated him, but he had been ad y single reef we expostulated. It was now noon and there were no | head turned sideways to catch the sound ' asleep. ny of course we might have known it | signs of the gales abating. Once the boy | of the blows. At the end of that time he | He looked over the water westwa : r 't d good, for we had expos- that they cut the cable and let | knew the tide was gathering under his along the faint path of light left by the | given by the deft fingers of the gir] who | potash they contain and should not be wouidus do guy i But we tried | the boat run before the wind without | craft. He crawled forward of the cabin | departing day. It was smooth and ripple | jg cultivating a sense of artistic effect as | used as a source of lime, except in cases ulated on Strat ur h 3 we failed | canvas, but the haze about them shut! for the sixteen-foot oar that was always less. Then he knew that the skim ice regards her own clothes. where this element is also needed. again Just the Hg ph Ae creek | out from view the buoys that marked the | carried on deck. It had gone overboard | was claiming it, but the knowledge left | e exquisite and dainty neckware and : Ee aE Dog Shoal with the | shoals and islands behind them and the | jn the storm. There was nothing to pole | him upmvel It would ave tgken mote | sash effects give many Sppurtunities for oy SUE week before anng the ; i * wirld- A i at hook and that was too | than fate to move him then. He crawled | ackneved and original ways of bring- : ¢ ver- Bitle eat poking her nse te he i Hr as of the cable SIH Sav0 3 None wait until the tide car- | back into the ice-bound cabin, and the i po YS note of Er Of g worked. It is a mistake to select sires jashod sem, 2) - od Man's | held them to their anchor. At midnight | ried them free. | winter night, merciless and black. closed | Jength of lusterous crepe de chine, hem. | that carry so much flesh that their defects a and re gray distance of they divided the last slice of ham. Then, | He crept below. The boy was sleeping, | him in with despair. | stitched with heavy silk in a contrasting | 27¢ covered up. If proper care is exer ’ wi they Nine times out of ten itis the littie : touch of clear, vivid color, used exactly | —l.eached hardwood ashes contain 65 in the right piace, that will give the note | to 70 per cent. of calcium carbonate, and of individuality toa gown as nothing | under favorable conditions may be used else will. And this color touch—also | as a substitute for commercial lime. Un. i nine times out of ten is a thing to be | leached ashes are more valuable for the 2 y * 3 3 , : ihe, | aks 3 ; . i» | cised in the matter of mating the per: scuddi i er was' the blood congealing in their veins, | writhing uneasily and mumbling inco- | The power-skiff from the lifesaving sta- | color all the way around and pressed in ny. oy BN). (SEEING: Vater { lay down on the lockers. An hour | herently. The man's frostblackened face The rest of it—well, we didn’t hear that | later the cable parted. worked convulsively. An Hour dragg, ed till afterward, till they came back; but The man did not wake. Once the boy by and the man sat on the lockers Pi it seemed they rounded the point and roused to the tumbling roll of the boat as | his head sunken forward. He ws asleep. trimmed their sheet to lay a course for | she wallowed in the trough, but he was | Little by little the force f the blows on tion, breaking her way at dawn across to | tiny even pleats, a jabot of most attrac- centage of colts will be much larger, and the Hainland through fhe Jardening skim, ony sort can be de. Alter pleating it they will be of much better quality. came upon a stra | is simply fol engthwise, not quitein| __ a J 1 . n ice from magehead to waterline, ‘The | rie ividkile, soitligt Me hand Work onthe IIL i, Mgt captain Joo h | longer under plaits can seen. To : i islands f t where the | too cold and exhausted to get up. It was | the keel of the craft diminished. At last| “Dragged her anchor from the other ! ss this a girl of clever facility made Showing 3, er UOMmber oi Jotses the sand isl a Out has ffshoe bar | three in the morning or thereabouts when | they ceased. Outside the wind had drop- | side,” he grunted. “Landsman’s trick to | for" herself the prettiest of jabot trifles AS urges yan ever a big combers break a e its vague | the shock came. Reeling to his feet, the | ped flat and a gripping. still cold had set- | go short on ground tackle this time o | by making the hem of a contrasting tint. | graft animal. at a So MO at good othe 2 a oe eastward, | man pitched forward at the first heavy | tled over the water. There was a long | year." | She had one of white and pinky lavender | 5 years mio. when he price, ian jt wes expanse a tho g Sie brant and | blow as the vessel struck. Steadying him- | pause—perhaps an hour, and then up| The mate pointed to the frayed ends | with a baby Irish butterfly to fasten the A te A $100 to $125 i Bi ire defied alter it out there on | self against the shocks that shook the | through the ice-coated planking of the | of an ice-encrusted rope hanging stiffly top, and yh had another of black crepe | yo cannot get horses of the. sane lind i wi Bh hey had picked | craft to her keel, he dragged himself to | hull came a faint grating sound steadily, | over the bows. | de chine with a hem of golden brown in | fu. ‘$500 or 8250. : The Geog g f th ih SyIRY the tarpaulin. It ‘was frozen to thestanch- | insistently growing. The man woke—| “Guess she chewed her cable,” he re- | which the faggoting stitch joining hem to , The worst little difference how they got | ions of the cabin by a sheetof ragged ice | woke with his blood thickening in his | marked. “Shall we go aboard?” ' body of the jabot was of gold. ~The actual feeding value of roots is I vase Mite I ee the other part | that had walled across the gap. is the | body and his muscles so stiffened that he For on instant the captain hesitated. | Opa jabot of soft ecru lace this same | not very large, because of their large con A De oe co after | man broke away and he crept out. The | cried with pain when he moved. The | Then he put the helm hard down and | giv) gave “the color touch” by two tiny | tent of moisture, there being only from that counted—the part that camk SEE | Hk tilted to port at sharp angle. The | sound leaped to his ears. He placed his | ran alongside. He climbed aboard, steady. | hows of dark green velvet, ribbon and a | 9 to 13 per cent. of dry matter in the oots. ward, 1%pose fo + th 3 couldn't | boat had struck on a bar and thesea was | head against the center-board trunk and | ing himself on the slippery decks, jerked hand of the same which po the | They have a much greater feeding value chaser WHER Sy Hy peak, and | breaking over her quarter. Somehow | Jistened. Then he flung himself on deck. aside a stiffened tarpaulin across the | tw, one of them being at the top of the | than their content of nutrients would in- 1d h it. When night settled ‘down | she had swung around and was lying | But he was too late—the flood tide had | break of the cabin, and, with a rough ex- abhor and the other about five inches be- | dicate, where there is no other factor in held or BN of red + the west they | almost stern to it, with the gale, which | come and gone, and the falling water | clamation, stepped quickly inside. low it. In the centre of each bow | anch keel of the boat firmly | A grotesque creature was kneeling | studded along the ribbo but the Fakion which yi supply a needed itchi ir t filled with dry snow, sweeping | was settling the of te ait 9 stu along the ribbon were square but- | succulency to produce the best results in vs Weigh Bh o : bi steaight Ito her ay into the ) again. _ | stiffly before a heap of blankets on the | tons of steel. digestion. of an oval of barren sand that was re-| The man stared vaguely into the ren. He choked Jueka Aegis oy ot Qespak docker ope. One ng wih lay across the = ag Oe (hee oe faint es aie, —r out, any J eS on against the cabin, he | aloft in ludicrous gesture, the fingers | If you desire to follow the very latest rd the unded and crashed on the | glowed again. It was the Yevalving lamp | plunged it into the murky water. It | touching the ice-sprinkled roof of the | fad of fashion, invest in one of the Joo by on of the flat and they were wet to the | of the lighthouse. But the man id not | sank scarcely two feet, then it brought | cabin. They were frozen there. The | cinating embroidered net blouses. These kin and shiverin; know whether he was offshore or inshore | yp in the soft mud. ; | frost-blackened lips were working con- are of a pale shade of ecru, lavishly han > The 1 a furled the sail clumsily and | of it. The man went back to the cabin. He | vulsively. The captain bent his face to | embroidered in white or ecru and trim- ached it "They boy, struggling to keep | He could not tell how far away it was | knew that he must wait twelve hours them. . ; med with real laces, Ryery stitch Placed his footing in the heaving cabin, lighted | on account of the gloom 2nd Stofik le for the next tietvaive hours of isuller. i ———et ig SORRY mblrdge IS money i these dainty wai Jp done bY fone, i i i t i e . J , : Be pe re ge he Snr h rio iy ig Mg A anchor had De a oe on” the Jokers, Shivering. Cushing, in Harper's Weekly. ang fit perfectly, which ordinary blouses ) i inshore of it, but his brain 0 n RE —— seldom do. Ce oe Sable to the renin XO ae Ey che The is ae rd features was filled Scarcely one woman in a thousand | Many models have groups of tiny pinch coming below, drew a rotten tarpaulin| His attention went back to the boat. | with ice where moisture from his | LT n ates the influence of her | tucks inset with lace medallions. Others over the break of the cabin to keep out | She was in grave peril. The heavy seas | skin had frozen. His eyes were sunken, | 0°) organism over her whole life. It | are braided in dainty RUNS. a 3 the wind. And the night closed them in. | were pounding her on the bar, raising | his cheeks sagged from the bones like | {500 aan skilled physician who has| The colored blouses of mo ne de They went to sleep. Rather they lay | her in their arms and crashing her | loose leather over a frame. The weak- | 2 WY og vn n the ularity. down on the reeling locker-tops and nst the bottom with a force . that | ness of starvation held him in its clutch. along the ra nerves to the sensitive | Stunning new mi are ntly tried to sleep. The man -dozed off at agen her timbers. The cockpit was half | He fought to maintain his balance up- womanly organs, who understands how appearing. One attractive chiffon blouse times, but the boy lay awake. The long, full of water from the crests that smoth- | right on the lockers. He must take no closely related are those organs to every | °f § | of the boat as she rushed | ered foaming over her quarter. The |chance of missing the next tide. With |} yp "anction and attribute of the wide to finish the neck with its low-cut down'a ‘sea, the staggering jar as she | cabin floor was awash. How long she | grim resolution he set himself to the |p q0™ wor" Who “have used Dr. |Y infront. A frill of th f brought up on her cable, and the quiver- | would last no one could tell, but the man | twelve hour vigil. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for diseases | the sleeves. A girdle of folded Mack ing, straining heave as she yawned her | went into the cabin to wait. The boy woke occassionally, whimpered, | oc“ (dei nee” organs understand the | Yet caught with a flat bow at the left way out from the trough made him sick. | The boy was moaning in the darkness. | and sank back into lethargy. At times | © nS lief miven to overstrung the The whipping of the halyards nst | The man bent over him. the man roused him, for he feared the | oo.“ r irritability, hysteria, She, ple the mast sounded shaip and 2a “Never mind, sonny,” he said, thickly; | power of the cold now that their vitality depression, bi 5 and various other | chiffon. A chemisette of white was i A thawing. “it's all right—and we'll get some birds | was sapped by hunger and exhaustion. | ¢ © te vous diseases because these | Worn with this blouse. ceduilksvaied All the while the gale freshened. Once | tomorrow. This gale 'll drive "em in for St other tues he Tells coum the inate in a diseased condition of the alse ot striped ped 02 figure Bgl veiled the man awoke and went on deck and ' shelter. toy wis i on rive and ie. vomanly organs. Favorite bit diss hie Ay Beg mpl ble. mist them The man did not He gown again. He on upto the fifties he counted aloud. Prescri special remedy Niakes hy !Chinging to Ah Hn bundled. the two blankets and his coat | Then he began anew. Time passed. Woe eal iments. sick women | Plain colors are used for blouses to be canvas cabin, he worked his way forward | close about the figure, pulled the | Presently he started at the monotony of | 1} worn with tailored suits. Covered but- through walls of hissing spray to the | ice-crusted tarpaulin ter across the | his own voice. One—two—three, one— _— mm {onsen pleatinge usally trim these. chock through which the cable led. Bend- break of the cabin, sat down on the.| two—three, it was repeating, over and — Be > ing over, he felt the rope. It was rough Je Te hetoys Sas un over again. y of terror rushed mbles. bristle of dripping hemp h t t. one loose in many little threads. The man | in both his own did not—and when the | himself o sleep! red —Thumps is an ailment so common to young pigs that # knowledge of is pre vention or cure should be underst by all swine breeders. The jerking of the flanks is often so severe at times that it moves the entire body to and fro. Usua!- ly there is a derangement of the diges- tive organs and nerves, commonly be- lieved to be caused by overfeeding and lack of exercise. It is best to give each animal a half-ounce of castor oil once as a purge and one grain of digitalis three times a day as a sedative. If the pigs refuse to move force them to take ex- ercise. Mix limewater in the slop at the rate of one ounce per quart. Feed roots a aa —The Maryland Station allowed 30 tons of manure to lie to the weather for one year and found that the amount was reduced to 27 tons at the end of that period. Professor Shutt, of allowed two tons of manure, con- i t id months from April 29 to August 29, and found the amount reduced to 655 pounds, the nitrogen was reduced from 48.1 pounds to 27.7 pounds, or almost one-half lost. The experiments em i the necessity of putting the manure on the land as soon as possible. It is some- times piled up and allowed to heat, thus : g 3 2 : : : g : groped in his pocket for a bit of canvas | dawn came the gale had broken. The thimble is a Dutch invention, and | attendant styles in Susme is a handkerchief. It was empty. Then| For the first time the sun, lifting £53 : E E £ : : H i 1 1H i : cold wind sifted through the can- Jas fone, 2ad the boat, though filled Ag Yalogi the chien, 4 the ple was No- oreS, Ban le gether Ya» ice. man a y a . . his d face. From the starboard locker the man| A tin clock hung from a hook on a . : ” | took the sage of Tay Satmedl and jod stanchion. The man looked at it. It had | Formerly thimbles were made of brass ie rs all sight, sonny, we're doing fue; the boy nd hime, Then he ent on stopped, He figured that four hours ountainous gray water, a oy pulled. the. bjanket wp. orlis climbing upward, it seemed, for miles | eight more the t still | glass, “It's cold,” he murmured. and hissing away in bottomless chasms, | that soft, grinding sound—that sound The man groped forward of the center- barred out the horizon. Far off the star- | faint that he could detect it pel #17 25% g : 3 iH if I 22% H g SEE § 1 Big Res g Hl Bes g : = 3 1 g 5 g £ : : 3 g f - | than as articles of real utility, by however the sail that might | reason of the extreme brittleness of the | IéPresented in the lines, v 23 lava, very easily broken. shorter lengths lave {hus fa wie with . ——— inboth three-quarter and full-lengths, and Smooth od Given Away. oo half way from t 83559 Spon B i Jair 2? 2% : 358 § an 5h: I Lit Sh Bes il “sf di: Ser TET] Hike BF 5 4 § IF : i : g58 af 222 iis al 1 HE TH : si f 1 : ; : gE i : ! z 2 : 8 : i g¥ i g : g : fl in | g 2 ® | { ? t i i ; 75 : iin i ga3 i HH hs ali 2 8 i HL I i] § i Is Jl £13 Hi i i Hi 2 : i : y i g § is g 7 i : g i : § g g g F 3 g : 3 ; | : it ge g Bes : ! 52 ; 7 i : g : g
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers