CAVE DWELLERS ALL BLIND. Animals That Live Underground Have Sensitive Organs of Hearing. The underlife of the caves has a world of its own. Animals are born in subterranean caverns hollowed out by streams, develop, reproduce and die while forever deprived of the sun light. There is no cave mammal ex cept a rat nor is there a cave bird. There are no animals that require much nourishment. Grottos with underground rivers have the most life. Usually the sub terranean life resembles the general types Of the country. It has entered the cave and become acclimated there, undergoing divers adaptive modifica tions. So we generally find, in modified forms, the life of our time. But in some caverns there seem to be the re mains of an ancient animal life that has everywhere else disappeared from terrestrial rivers and lives only in cer tain caverns. The creatures of modern species that have adapted themselves to un derground conditions are sharply sep arated from the light dwellers. Their skin is whitish or transparent. The eye atrophies or disappears altogeth er. The optic nerve and the optic lobe disappear, leaving the brain pro foundly modified. Other organs de velop in proportion. Those of hear ing. smell and touch become large. Sensitive hairs, long and coarse, ap pear all over the body. The Doctor Outdone. Scottish shrewdness is occasionally overmatched by Irish wit. The hand ful of people who inhabit a certain lit tie island in the Atlantic, oft' the coast of Donegal, enjoy so much health and so little wealth that there is no doc tor on the spot. In rare cases of emergency n physician is brought in a boat from the nearest village on the mainland. On one occasion some islanders who were obliged to summon the doc tor found that lie had gone to Dub lin on business. As the case was ur gent, they invoked the services of an other practitioner. This gentleman was a Scotsman, with the proverbial canniness of his race, and he declined to undertake the voyage unless he re ceived his fee a golden sovereign— in advance. There was no help for it, and the money was paid. The physician went to the island and attended to the case. But when he inquired for a boat to take him away lie found that not a boatman on the island would ferry him back again for any less considera tion than two pounds, paid in advance. The doctor had to part with the two sovereigns and to admit that he had been beaten at his own game. How Lightning Kills. The cause of death by lightning is the midden absorption of the electric current. When a thundercloud which is highly charged with positive elec tricity hangs over a certain place, the earth beneath it becomes abnormally charged with the negative electric current, and a man, animal or other object standing or lying directly be neath, also partakes of the last men tioned influence. If, while the man, animal or other object is in this con dition, a discharge takes place from the cloud above the restoration of the equilibrium will be sudden and violent, or, in language that we can all understand, the negative current from the earth will rush up to join the posi tive cloud current, and in passing through the object which separates the two currents, if it be an animate thing, will do so with such force as to almost invariably produce instant death. According to the above, which seems a tenable hypothesis, to say the least, a person is really "struck" by the ground current and not by the forked fury from above at all. Disliked Publicity. "Young man,"the rising statesman said to the reporter, "newspaper notor iety is exceedingly distasteful to me, but since you have asked me to give you some of the particulars of the leading events in my life I will comply. I do so, however, with great reluctance." Here lie took a type written sheet from a drawer in his desk and banded it to the reporter. "I suppose, of course," he added, "you will want my portrait, and, although I dislike anything that savours of undue publicity, I can do no less than comply with your wish." Here he took a large photograph from a pile in another drawer and gave it to the reporter. "Anecdotal matter concerning my self," he added, "you will find in this printed leaflet, as well as particulars of my hobbies and tastes, When this appears in print you may send me two hundred and fifty copies of the paper." Children and Fools. The boy was an idiot. His head was twice the normal size, and lie would sit for hours without speaking. How ever, when he did emit a remark, it was sure to be startling, and couched in apt language. One day, an ex tremely "plain" old maid was calling on ills mother. After a long period of apparently thoughtless silence, the idiot remarked suddenly, "Do you know, Miss Perkins, you are absolute ly the homeliest woman I ever laid my eyes upon?" In agony, the mother turned to him: "Charlie, do not let me ever hear you make such a remark again," she cried, severely. "Mother," quoth the idiot, "I never shall have occasion to." St. Bernard Monastery. At present the monastery of St. Bernard costs about S9OO a year to keep up. This money is partly col lected in Switzerland and partly de rived from the revenue of the mon astic order. mi—mi—mi—mi—mi—>n[? I I j Burning the j Mortgage j li.ii——mi— mi—mi—mi— Ml® At exactly 11 o'cloek on New Year's morning there was a curious cere mony at "the old Edwards place" in Maine. The word ceremony, in fact, but faintly describes what happened. It was more like a jubilee, with the semblance of a barbaric rite added. All the Edwards kith and kin were there,' with a goodly number of< their friends and neighbors. At the further end of the garden, in front of the farmhouse, there is a knoll, at the top of which a mossy ledge crops out. On this ledge there was a pyre erected of dry wood, pitch and rolls of curvey birch bark- a fine pile of it. At the centre stood an iron rod, set in a hole, drilled in the ledge, and here an old oppressor of the Edwards homesteam was burned at the stake! This sounds so savage that I make haste to say that the o'd oppressor was not an animate form of flesh and blood, but merely an effigy. The effigy was a masterpiece in its way, the very simulacrum of rapacity, with a face like the fabled Harpies and hands like talons, hugging to its breast a folded, yellowed paper. That yellowed paper was a mort gage, which had rested on the heme farm for one entire generation. The history of that mortgage is so much like thousands of others that it would hardly be worth relating if, at the last moment, a noble effort to lift it had not been crowned by suc cess. The Edwards farm adjoins the one where I lived when a boy. There were three hundred acres of tillage, pasture and woodland, with a well built two-story house and two large barns. The Edwards children Ches ter, Thomas, Catherine, Eunice—were my youthful neighbors. In those days the farm was well tilled, unencumbered and prosperous; but in an evil hour a traveling agent caioled Jonas Edwards, the father, into buying the State right to make and sell a certain newly patented au to.natic farm gate, for the sum of two thousand dollars. Edwards had a thousand dollars in the savings bank; he drew out this and raised the other thousand by mortgaging the home stead. It was the old story. The much vaunted gate proved a gite to trouble for Edwards. lie was never able to sell it. But if the gate proved illusory, the mortgage was tangible. The farm er spent the remaining fifteen years of his life paying interest on it. After his father's death Chester Ed wards "went home to live," as peo ple say in Maine. The family then consisted of his mother, his sister Eunice, who was an invalid from spinal curvature, and his mother's brother, Uncle Horace, who had lost a leg in the Civil War, but for some reason did not draw a pension. Ches ter began by selling off the wood and timber on the old farm, thereby pay ing the accumulated interest. He then embarked in the dairy business, but did not prove a successful farmer, and during the fifth season lost almost his entire herd of cows from tubercu losis. Becoming discouraged, he gave up and set off suddenly for the Klon dike gold region. A nephew then carried on the farm for a year, but did not remain. Meanwhile Thomas, the younger foil, had become a Methodist minister. He was unable to do anything toward reducing the mortgage. "The mortgage will get the old place now, and no help for it,"the neighbors said. But there was still another mem ber of the family to he heard from — Catherine, the younger daughter. Largely by her own efforts, Cath erine Edwards had g aduated from the State normal school, and obtained a position as instructor in another normal school at a good salary. We imagined that Catherine would aid her mother and sister, but never sup posed that she would come home to care for them there. But after Chester left, Catherine never hesitated for a moment. She resigned her position, bade farewell to all prospects of advancement as a teacher, and came home. She had saved seven hundred dol lars. With this she paid a year's in terest, had the leaky roofs repaired, and hired such help as was necessary, indoors and out. Yet what could she do with that old farm and its mort gage? That season, however 1003 the old place quietly put forward one of its natural assets. Our county is in what is known as "the apple belt" of New England. Ap ple trees spring up everywhere here, and if grafted and trimmed, soon bear well. Although a cripple, Uncle Hor ace Flint had been in the habit every spring of hobbling about from one young apple tree to another, set ting Baldwin scions and trimming the trees. He had not thought his work amounted to much, but he liked to be doing something. The year 1903 was an "apple year." Every young tree on the farm was bending down under its load. A crop with the farmers of the apple belt is far from being an unmixed blessing, however. They rarely gut more than a dollar a barrel for their apples. The barrels cost them thirty live cents each, and as the expense of hauling them is ten or fifteen cents a barrel more, there remains bit fifty cents to pay for picking, sorting and barreling. If the farmer does this by hired labor he may clear ten (cuts a barrel, or he may not. For Cath erine, therefore, a crop of seven or eight hundred barrels of apples on Ihp trees meant little if gathered, barrel ed and sold in the usual way. "It seems a shame," one neighbor said to her, "but it will be about as. well for you to let those apples har vest themselves." Against such waste of nature's bounty, however, Catherine's New England thrift revolted. She began to look into the apple problem; and the result of her study of it is worth recording. She purchased no barrels, and the only help she hired was a boy to push a wheelbarrow. She herself, with Uncle Horace and Eunice, went out to the trees to gather up the fruit. The boy wheeled the apples in, two bushels at a load, and stowed them in bins, built up in two rooms In the house, where, later, they could be kept from freezing by means of a stove in the cellar beneath. Catherine had thought this all out in advance, and she had sent off for four "evaporators," payment for which used nearly all her remaining money. Carelessly dried apples, on strings, brings no more than six or eight cents a pound, but nicely sliced, "evaporat ed" apple always commands a much better price. She had resolved to put the whole crop of Baldwins into evaporated apple. In almost every rural neighborhood, village or small town there is sure to be some old "aunty," "grandma" or widow in Indigent circumstances, who has outlived the most of her earthly ties, and must goto the "town farm," or subsist on sufferance with some grudging relative. Life grows very dreary to these old per sons. There seems to be no place for them. In cases where a few hundred dollars can be raised for them, they sometimes goto an "old ladies' home." Within three miles of the Edwards homestead there were two of these old souls, "Aunt Netty" Stiles and "Grandma" Frost, who were by no means helpless or feeble, but had merely outlived their welcome on the earth. Catherine first made the old farm house dining room cozy and warm, and then invited Aunt Netty and Grandma Frost to come and sit with her mother and Eunice and slice ap ples. She offered them seventy-five cents a week and board. Moreover, she took them all into her confidence, and told them her plans for saving the old homestead. Uncle Horace peeled the apples on a paring machine, and the old women sliced them. Their tongues ran; they were as chipper as crickets. They had not had so good a time for years. Catherine had to look to it that they did not overwork. They produced more sliced apple than the four evap orators would dry. Uncle Horace had to contrive a fifth drier over a large stove out in the woodhouse. Two more forlorn old women from the town farm came on foot, begging for work. They were taken in. Apple drying went on from the first of October till the middle of January, and the whole crop was dried. liefore the first of March Catherine had sold the entire output at eleven cents a pound. The result was an object les son to every apple farmer in that lo cality. She received fifteen hundred and sixty dollars; and owing to the skill with which she had managed the entire expenses of drying the apples were less than a hundred and seventy dollars. There was also this otlier curious result: The old women did not want togo home! In fact, the two from the town farm cried when the last of the apples were cut. Then Catherine determined to keep them all over for the next season. She bought a lot of yarn and set them to knitting socks and woolen gloves. In fact, she had started a happy old worn en's home before she knew it! And the number of applications which came to her from homeless old wom en and from those who had aged rela tives on their hands whom they wish ed to be rid of would have been laugh able, if it had not been pathetic. But for the time being Catherine could do no more than keep those whom she had. The year 1904 also proved to be an apple year; and again the whole crop was put into evaporated apple, two other old women having been ad mitted to the "circle of slicers." By this time, too, Catherine had come to realize the possibilities of her new business. All the apple trees were carefully looked after, and two hundred young trees set out. Sue planted, too, a hundred and fifty plum and pear trees, and an acre of black berry shrubs; for now her design was to make a new venture, canning pears, plums and berries in glass jars. In fact, it would not surprise me if a few years hence this neglected old homestead were producing five thou sand dollars' worth of fruit annually. Catherine appears to have solved two important problems in social economy; First, how to make a run out farm pay a handsome profit; and, second, how to utilize and make happy a class of homeless and forlorn old women who seem to have no place in the world. With their wages in their pockets, and the prospect of home and companionship ahead, it is quite remarkable how these old wom en have cheered up. Of course there were many ex penses for the first two years. The house and outbuildings had to be re paired and repainted; and it was r.'t until this present autumn three years from the time she came ho.ncs —that Catherine saw her way ele-ir to pay off the mortgage and free the old place from its twenty years of bondage.—C. A. Stephens, in Youth's Companion. WORLD NEWS OF THE WEEK. Covering Minor Happenings From All Over the Globe DOMESTIC. C. M. Schwab advanced the wagea of laborers at the Bethlehem Steel Co. Dr. S. J. Essenson urges State su pervision of the milk supply and de clares the pasteurization process robs food of its value. Reports from big Industrial centers tell of Improved conditions of working men, many increases in wages being received. The reduced duty on Canadian cream will result in much cheaper butter for New YorkersS. The Governors of the New York Stock Exchange adopted resolutions that deal a hard blow at gamblers whose wash sales and manipulation have caused a series of scandals. Edward Fay, the yeggman reputed to be worth $300,000, was one of the two men captured as the robbers of the Richmond postoflice. David O. Ives, now head of the Transportation Board of the Boston Merchants' Association, but formerly traffic manager of the Wabash Rail road, pleaded guilty to rebating and was fined SI,OOO. Many stories of girls who have been insulted in New York when an swering calls for stenographers are told by heads of big agencies. The Aldermen have called for a law de signed to safeguard the young women. Edgar D. Crumpacker was renomi nated for Congress by the Republicans of the Tenth District of Indiana at La fayette. A janitress carried $2,400 in a scrub pail from the vault of the First Na tional Bank of Belleville, N. J., con fessed and returned the money. Every demand of the Brotherhoods of Trainmen, Conductors, and Yard men of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad has been granted by the road at New Haven, Conn. WASHINGTON. Republican leaders plan an aggres sive campaign to defend the Taft Ad ministration from the criticism to which it has been subjected. The President himself will take part. It became known that evidence of violations of the Sherman law by the combination of Atlantic steamship lines was laid before President Roose velt, who failed to act. The Hobson bill to contribute funds equalling a certain per cent, of the cost of warships built or purchased to the cause of international peace, was decisively defeated in the House. The Department of Justice, it was learned in Washington, will substitute suit in equity under the Sherman law against the "European shipping pool." The House decided to investigate the alleged ship subsidy lobby. President Taft requested the Re publican members of the House to get together and caucus on the Adminis tration's legislative programme. President Taft appointed Maurice H. Thatcher, of Kentucky, a member of the Isthmian Canal Commission. Attorney General Wickersham, in a letter to Representative Bennet, de nies he ever acted as attorney for the Sugar Trust. The United States Senate delayed action on the administration railroad bill. FOREIGN. Thomas B. Jeffery, of Kenosha, Wis. a prominent manufacturer of bicycles, automobiles and pneumatic tires, died suddenly in Pompeii, Italy. Followers of"The Mad Mullah" have kitted eight hundred natives of Somaliland; have laid waste wide areas and razed many towns; Great Britain may take steps to stop the out rages. John Redmond, the Nationalist leader, addressed a large meeting at Tipperary; he insisted iliat the party must break the veto power of the Lords before the budget was taken up. Theodore Roosevelt and members of his family sailed from Alexandria for Naples; they were cheered by crowds at the pier. The opinion was generally express ed in London after the debate between Messrs. Asquith and Balfour that the government would have a goodly coali tion majority for the vote resolution and carry the budget to a second read ing without the aid of the Irish. Eight men were killed in gun prac tice on the cruiser Charleston off Lu zon, a breech block of a 3-inch gun blowing out. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt deliv ered an address in the university at Cairo, Egypt, which conferred on him the degree of Doctor of Literature. NO CLEW TO MURDERER. Dogs Fail to Find Man Who Killed Miss Blackstone in Springfield. Springfield, Mass., April 5. —The ef fort to trace the murderer of Miss Martha B. Blackstone and the assail ant of Miss Harriet Dow at the hitter's home last Thursday night by the use of bioodhounds having resulted in fail ure, the police are all at sea over the case.* Meanwhile citizens are becoming aroused over the inability of the de tectives to find the murderer and criticism is heard. Much Unused Water Power. Germany utilizes 20 per cent, of her water power; Switzerland, 25 per cent.; France only 11 per cent. Home Consumption. If music hath charms to soothe the sage breast, let her try them on her own wishbones. fcGYPTIANS MENACE ROOSEVELT. Angry Demonstrations Before Ex- President"s 'Hotel in Cairo. Cairo, April 4. Ex-I'resident Roosevelt's speech before the Univers ity of Egypt has aroused the extreme Nationalists to a state of fury. Seven hundred students marched to his hotel I and made a demonstration against l him, shouting in Arabic: "Down with autocracy! Give us a constitution!" The students were applauded by many spectators, and some of the guests left the hotel, fearing violence. Mr. Roosevelt was not in the hotel at ' the time, but drove ujp soon afterward. MINIMUM RAT2S TO WORLD. Tariff Agreement with Canada—Presl ; dent Taft Signs Proclamations. I Washington, April 4.—President Taft signed proclamations granting the minimum rates under the Payne- Aldrich tariff law to Canada, Australia I and several less important countries. These proclamations, with a few which will be signed complete the extension of minimum rates to the whole world. 112 About one hundred and thirty nations 1 and dependencies are included in the list. Huntsville, Ala., Mar. 30. —John G. Hambrick, of New York City, was ar rested here charged with having sent a challenge to fight a duel with John Begenshott, of Cuerley. The men had trouble over a division of property. I /ISfVIBTFBiS MF?! & ® Enid £Ffe» SH >S?4 isi\ I*4® 5$ S rule .mi» xi.ibit I wl Latest Model h ' D/EhERi ML I>AYS' 1 *A J. tlufin.!,' which ilm- von m•/ riil - aiil K antte behind your i'O AOT ISIJY a bicycle or a p..ir ot tires: fr. m anyone YOt! WILL'BE ASTQHISKEO Si^'SrS St/lr '\ B Prices we ran make you th ; year. Wcr.ell the J ii;.;host grade bicycles for Its ;m. ../ uRI ill m BICYCLE lililALl!)KS« y i can sell our bicycles under your own naiue plate at W& I \ ljHf prices. Orders filled the <' y received. rai w BKCOND HAND IIItYCLIiS., We do not regularly handle second band bicycles, but I r usually have a number on hand taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores. Tlies.- we clear out at prices ranging from t&',\ to tb'.X or s*l O. Descriptive bargain lists mailed tree. Tro Blnfflo wlioela. Imported roller <haiim and pedaia, parts, repair; and v 'KC' I Lti'tftMiitw} equipment of all .kinds at Jiaif t.\e usual retail frius. HES6ETHORN PBMCTBBE-PBMF *jfl IS || SEUHEAUBBi TIRES UESUSS £| sell you a sample pair for s4.Bo{cash :vit/i order $4.55). ■■ " --".rii I NO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES ' / / if ¥ NAILS, Tacks or Glass will not let the ■. -r* j p - *" ift&j air out. Sixty tkoti#an<l pairs sold ln.st year. MMW** ' 1 "niaßteftfett*". ! 112 •' ' Over two hundred thousand pairs now in use. <y. y. I DESCRIPTION/ Made in nil sizes. It islively V fcgP«BaHHß&l.>,3 / and easy riding,very durablennd lined inside with y—/ a special Quality ox rubber, which never becomes |i 'MM** J porous and which closes up small punctures without nllow- Lif„ ~ t ho thl-Ic rtilihcr t--c 1 Ing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from sat is- Mil «v- Ccdcustoraers staling that their tires have only been pumped 9jSd . 110 rllll a t r lt» •• II * up once or twice in a whole season. They weigh no more than t,. i,reV.w,t l.: J Th - an ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given t , » ~, oatlaMt ail ~ oth ,: r bv several layers of thin, specially prepared fabticonthe mH-o-s-HT n AST lis -n. I tread. The regular price of these tires is£3.«soper pair,bnt for 1| ■ vsv IUDING advertising: purposes we are making a special factory price to u the rider of only £4.80 per pair. All orders shipped 6ame <1 y letter is received. We ship C O. I"), oti approval. You uo not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented. We will allow n cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price ** -l.ttli per pair) if yoa send 1-X'L£j CASH WITH OKDKIS. and enclose this advertisement. You run 110 risk in Rwiidiu£ us an order as the tires may be returned at OUU expense if foi any reason thev are not satisfactory on examination. We are perfectly reliable a :d money sent to us is n sal'«- as in a bank. If you order a pair of these tires, you will find that t'.icy will ride easier, run f.-.t wear better, last longer and look finer than any tire you have eve r tine \ or s« eu at any price. \\ j know that you will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle yo.t w ill give us your ordev. We want you to send us a trial order at or.ce, hence this remarkable tire oiTer. m 112 IF YOU KfcKSJ TffFftlcS 1 jethorti Puncture-Proof tires on approval &ud trial at the special introductory price quoted abov«.; or write for our bit? 'l ire and Sundry Catalogue which describes and quotes all makes and kinds of tires at about half the usual t •»s --riflfifiy lA#'/I FT but write v.s a postal today. DO NOT 'l'll INK OL' IJUYINO u bTcyclo tJ€/ FavJ 0 UT£4J aor app.'r of tir s from anyone until yo i know the new and woudeiful offers we are making. It only coots a to learn cverytliiaj. Wiite il NOV/. A L MEAB CYCLE CIIPfiBY, CfISCASO, ILL 1 urn 1 iiii mi BMaMimMMi Don't Buy a Doped Horse and don't let yourself he swindled by a crooked horse dealer on any of the score of tricks he has up his sleeve. The "gyp" is abroad in the land. Every day buyers of horses are shamefully fleeced. DON'T BE ONE OF THE VICTIMS. Learn how to protect yourself in buying, selling or trading. Get the sensational new book "Horse Secrets' 5 by Dr. A. S. Alexander, and make yourself horse-wise and crook-proof. Learn how " bishoping " is done —ho.w a " heaver " is "shut" —a roarer "plugged " —how lameness, spavins, and sweeny are temporarily hidden —the "burglar" dodge —the horsehair trick —cocaine and gasoline doping —the ginger trick —the loose shoe trick —in short how to beat ALL the games of crooked auctioneers and dealers. It is all in the " Horse Secrets " hook, and if you ever buy or sell a horse you need just this knowledge to protect yourself from being swindled. Read Our Remarkable Offer Below A WORD ABOUT THE FARM JOURNAL : This is Ihe fortmo.i farm and home monthly in the world ; 33 years old ; 650,000 subscribers from Maine to California. Cheerful, quaint, clc\cr, intensely p/actical, well printed and illustrated. Is for everybody, town, village, suburbs, or country; -nen, women, boys, C'Ha. - the ! whole family; absolutely clean and pure; 24 to 60 pages monthly. W- r. commcn !it absolutely t.j rvery reader ' of this paper; you will find it unlike any other in the world. , OUR OFFER:{£g"S| AM 3for sl-25 (We cmiiiot Hell 44 Horne Secret*" by itarlf— only in thiu Combination.) SUBSCB: 188 COSTOE. I NEW YORK MARKETS. Wholesale Prices of Farm Product* Quoted for the Week. MILK—Per quart, 3%c. BUTTER Western extra, 33%® i 34M.C.; State dairy, 24@28c. CHEESE State. Pull cream, special, 17 V2 @lßc. EG(iS State. Fair to choice, 21 Vi <3> 22 Vfec.; do, western firsts, 24@25c. APPLES—Baldwin, per bbl., $3.00© 4.00. DRESSED POULTRY Chickens, per i lb., 16@24c.; Cocks, per lb., 14c.; Squabs, per dozen, $2.00® 4.25. HAY —Prime, per 100 lbs., $1.17%. STRAW Long Rye, per 100 lbs., 70 I @77 V2C. 1 POTATOES State, per bbl., sl.oo® 1.25. ONIONS —White, per crate, 50 c.@ SI.OO. FLOUR- Winter patents, $5.60@6.10; Spring patents, $5.00@6.55. WHEAT—No. 2, red, $1.25; No. 1, i Northern Duluth, $1.24%. CORN—No. 2, 60c. OATS-Natural white, 40@51c.; Clip ped white, 50 V2 @s3c. BEEVES —City Dressed, ll@l2V£c. ; SHEEP—Per 100 lbs., $6.00@8.00. I CALVICS - City Dressed, 11 @l6 %c. HOGS Live, per 100' lb3„ $11.25; Country IJressed_, jnir lb., 13® 15c. Army Crossed Frozen River. The Danube river was frozen over so lliat an army crossed it on the ice ! in the year 462.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers