MS rey om- out Sco, ow- last an ing was the that hree ears etly im’s ber- 1top- * the the ert’s ially left life ess. ND sked abor hich aign. 0,000 ntri- sons 1g to State Con- of la- cued, Con- d. ected e for nmit- |. dis- lared randi- strict. atally y road Val- steal- dden- 1y, at 50,000 r fire. 0 and about 2 pro- have epart- rry at struc- has rs AS- borers work of the tment , 1906, from ter of rifesto ce the issued ‘ed at 2d and rowd- houses 5 were tempt- ile the bloody epoval killed le city ges of of ad- turned Ten indict- e ice ted are attend- a gen- lecided ved. ‘easury canal 2 open- scribed ount of sum of others on, O., on: the hooting wd on ESTER BEB OES SO ORO . metives and, HIS ONE WEAK SPOT. Prominent Minnesota Merchant Cured to Stay Cured. 0. C. Hayden, of O. C. Hayden & Co., dry goods merchants, of Albert Lea, Minn,, says: “I was so lame that I could hardly walk. There was an unacs countable weakness of theback, and constant. pain and aching. I could find no rest and was very uncomforta- ble at night. As my health was good in ¥ every other way 1 / slik could not understand t! is traoplo It was just as if all the strength had gone from my back. After suffering for some time I be- gan using Doan’s Kidney Pilis. The remedy acted at once upon the kid- neys, and when normal action was restored ‘the trouble with my back disappeared. I have not had any re- turn of it.” For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-MilburnCo., Buffalo, N.Y. . A New Alloy. Two parts of aluminum and one part of zine form an alloy to which has been given the name ‘‘alzene.’”’ It is equal in strength to good cast- iron and superior to it in the matter of elastic limit. It takes ‘a fine, smooth finish and does not readily oxidize. The color is white. It melts at a low red heat and is very fluid, running freely to the extremities of the mold and filling small or thin parts. Great care must be exercised in melting it, particularly when mix- ing the two metals, in order to pre- serve its smooth working qualities. It is somewhat Drittle, and hence unsuited to such pieces as require the toughness possessed by brass. The tensile strength is approximately 22,000 pounds per square inch and 3.3 is the specific gravity. Exercise for Business Men. The average city business man without physical impediments to fight against can grobably get along suc- cessfully on such an exercise schedule as the following: 1. Five minutes each day of pure- ly muscular exercise, such as can be ken perfectly well in one’s room without any special apparatus. 2. Short intervals during the day of fresh air, brisk walking, deep breath- ing. This can all be secured in the regular order of the day’s business. A man can easily spend as much as half an hour walking out of doors every day. This is for heart, lungs and digestion. > a 3. The reservation of at least cne day a week for rest and recreation, for being out of doors, for playing games, etc. This is essential. This is for both body and mind. A man who thinks he can get along with- out at least-one vacation time a week simply proves his ignorance.—World’s Work. Call That Britain Fears. King Edward’s Mohammedan sub- jects many times outnumber his Christian subjects. In that fact lies England’s chief difficulty in dealing with the recalcitrant Turk. The Sul- tan is the official earthly head of the Moslem faith. In political deal- ings with him extreme care has to be taken that the peculiarly sensitive Mohammendans throughout the east. are not offended. A call from Con- stantinople in the name of Allah and his prophet would summon the faith- ful to arms throughout half the world. Such a call has not been given in our time; for the welfare of hu- manity way it never be given; but its possibilty always confronts the rul- ers of the = British Empire.—Boston Herald. Science Notes. When filling nail holes in yellow pine use beeswax instead of putty, as it matches the color well. The Boston & Maine Railway is trying peat fuel in one of its loco- it is said, with good re- sults. Maine has vast peat bogs. Rust spots on marble may be re- moved by applying a mixture of one part nitric acid and 25 parts water, then rinsing it off with three parts water and one part ammonia. When glass is in the lens of a mi- croscope it is more valuable than gold, its value then being 50,000,000 times greater than when in the raw state. There are over 7,000 parts in a well known 24-horsepower motor car. HANDS RAW WITH E ECZEMA - Suffered For Ten Years—Spread to Body and Limbs—Cured by the Cuti- cura Remedies. “] had eczema on my hands for ten years. At first it would break out only in winter. Then it finally came to stay. I had three good doctors to do all they could, but none of them did any good. I then used one box of Cuticura Ointment and three bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, and was completely cured. My hands were raw all over, inside and out, and the ec- gema was spreading all over my body and limbs. Before I had used one bottle of Cuticura Resolvent, together with the Qintment, my sores were nearly healed over, and by the time I had used the third bottle | was entirely well. 1 had a good appétite and was Heshier than I ever was. To any one who has any skin or blood discase 1 would honestly advise them to get the Cuticura Remedies, and get well quicker than all the dcctors in the State could cure you. Mrs. II. E. Falin, Speers Ferry, Va., May 19, 1905.” Length of Working Day, Most of the larger mines in Ala- ama are operated on a 10-hour day. Sixty-two mines employing 10,809 men, or considerably more than half the total number, as the length of the working day; 30 3 reported Ants Live on Lice. In their migration from plant to plant the lice are often aided by their foster-mothers, the ants, for many species are carefully cared for and guarded by the ever diligent ants. A peculiar, sweetish liquid called “hon- ey dew,” is secreted by the aphides of which the ants are extremely fold. To secure this they herd the aphides, much as if they were little green cat- tle. Frequently an ant may be seen tapping 2a aphid with her antennae, upon which a drop of the honey dew is exuded and quickly lapped up. Thus, the ants are probably entirely responsible for darrying the young aphides which affect the strawberry roots in Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey and elsewhere, from the fo- liage down to the roots, and for car- rying them from plant to plant, as the plants wither from their injury. The melon louse is similarly carried py ‘the ants f morilhl283945908P by the ants from hill to hill. But most remarkable of all is the gase of the corn-root aphis, which lays its eggs in ants’ nests in the fall, where they are carefully guarded all winter and in the spring the young aphides are carried by the aunts to the roots of ‘heir favorite food piants.—E. D. Sanderson, in Garden Magazine. CWE ~ To Confine Hogs in Pasture. Can you give a plan for a movable fence 0 use in confining hogs while pasturing? Answer—\Wherc lumber is avail- ah'e, a triangle of four-inch hoards may be made for footings, and three feet or three and one-half feet fence paneis piaced in them. The bottom boards of panel might be seven inches ind Piece. wide. It and the top boards shonld be six inches longer than the middle boards, which may inches apart. The panels may be made ten or twelve feet long, two- inch notcnes are sawed in the centre of the botto- board of the triangle \ i Conmiplete Panel. ’ and the top of it to receive the panels. The triangles or foot holders of the panels may be anchored by stakes it the bottom and long poles wired on the panels along the bottom to prevent the pigs moving it out of line. Care of Creamery Milk. In response to the Produce Re- view’s request for instructions to pa- trons as to the best care of milk from the stable to the creamery, the following directions were prepared: This is a very important question, and every farmer and butter or cheesemaker should give it his ut- most attention. If the milk comes from a healthy cow, and is: kept in a clean.and sanitary place and given proper care, then every graduate of any dairy school is able to make good butter or cheese to grade extra. This very subject came up in this factory three vears ago, and I wrote out the following rules, which I handed to the patrons, and the result was a success: Remove the milk of every cow at once from the stable to a clean, dry rooni, where theairispure and sweet. Do not allow cans to remain in sta- bles while they are being filled. Strain the milk through a metal gauze and a flannel cloth or layer of cotton as soon as it is drawn. Aerate and cool the milk as soon as strained. The milk should be aired first. This must be done in pure air, and it should then be cooled to about sixty degrees Fahrenheit, or temperature of the water. Never close a can containing warm milk which has been aerated. Tf cover is left off the can, a piece of cloth or mosquito netting should be used to keep out the insects. Milk should be held in tanks of fresh, cold water (flowing water pre- ferred) in a clean, dry, cold room. 1t should be stirred with a tin stirrer often enough to prevent forming a thick cream layer. Keep the night milk. under shel- ter, so rain cannot get into the cans. In warm weather hold it in a tank of fresh water. Never mix fresh, warm milk with that which has been cooled. Do not allow milk to freeze. Cleanliness and cold are the only preventives needed in the milk for this purpose. All milk should he in good condi- tion when delivered. When cans are + hauled far reported 10 hours. they should be full, and carried in a spring wagon. In hot weatner cover the cans, when moved in a wagon, with a clean, wet blank- mines, employing 3,320 men, nine hours and 24 mines, employing | et or canvass. 1,069 men, reported eight hours. These directions might be used to Three mines work their men nine and | good advantage by those who are a half hours and two mines work | occupied in making dairy products at them eight and a half hours. | home, for .we all realize that Al — be placed four only be made dairy from milk that has been taken the products can best care of from the moment it leaves the cow. . ampere Suggestions About Dairying. It is a mistake to let milk cool be= fore separating, as it invariably en- tails a ‘oss of butter fat. Separation should take place immediately after milking. On the ‘sland of Jersey, the home of the Jersey cattle, no attention is 2:1 to the color of the animal, the great aim of the best breeders being a graceful form and grand milking qualities. There are many colors ‘there, from the silver gray down to the common red and white and a few, very few, black. * Now is the time to decide what shall be grown for the late summer feeding to keep up the flow of milk. In estimating the value of a given food, take into consideration the di- gestible part only. The share of the protein for instance that, under or- dinary circumstances, passes through the cow undigested, is of no value so far as she is concerned and should not be counted upon in calculating the amount of material she would receive in her daily ration. Aside from alfalfa, corn of course is among the best forage plants, but cow peas, kaffir corn, sorghum and millet are worthy of attention. The dairy cow should be bred for generation in milking lines; she should be of a typical dairy tpye and a strong vigorous constitution and milking capacity which are nearly always inherited qualities. Wherever cows are kept, the cream is regarded as the important part of the milk, while the skim milk goes to the pigs or poultry. Of course, it is utilized and ultimately comes around as food, but it may be better to make a more direct use of it. The skim milk contains a valuable portion of the most nutritious food. In taking the cream, only a portion of thenutri- ment is removed. The skim milk is allowed to become slightly sour, or clabbered. The pan is then set on a cool part of the stove to warm gently, or on the top of a kettle of boiling water. It should get no warmer than the heat of new milk, when the whey will appear clear and separate from the curd. When repa- ration takes place, pour the whole into a bag of thin material and hang to drain. When it ceases to drip, turn the curd from the bag and mix with salt and a little cream.—The Epitomist. Suggestions to Farmers. It pays to be amiable in the cow stable. Never strike a cow. roughly to her. ‘ Anything irregular affects the per- centage of butter fats. Pet the cows; pet the heifers; give them a little sugar with the salt. Sugar will help to gentle any cow that is inclined to be nervous and wild: "Try it. A new milker will at first get less milk from a cow than one to whom the animal is accustomed. In no section of the country should a poultry house be so constructed that fowls in it will be subjected to draughts. In. buying a horse reject one with scraggy hips. They never do credit to feeding, particularly if also slick in the loins. The larger the animal the larger must be the sustenance ration, which must be deducted from the feed be- fore the profit begins. After the harvest work is finished up is a good time to put in a drain- age where needed. This is some- thing that should be done thoroughly and well, and not hurriedly. In order to keep poultry, it is not necessary that they be allowed to run around the kitchen door. They will do just as well if the table scraps are carried to them elsewhere. Reject a horse with forelegs not straight. ‘They will not stand wear. Stand behind the horse as he walks away from you and you will be able to notice these defects if they exist. Good profit can be made on poul- try raising as an independent enter- prise, but up to a certain limit poul- try meat and eggs can be produced more cheaply on the farm than any place else. Oatmeal, boiled and madc iric a gruel and added to the sweet skimmed milk, is one of the best foods for calves. Add a little flax- seed jelly, and your calves wiil grow like weeds. The draft horse has been in de- mand in our wi.rket for many years and will centizue to bring good prices when other breeds are down in price. The amateur horseman will do well to bear this point in mind in starting in thesbusiness of horse breeding. According to a Californian profes- sor, fowls can be fattened rapidly through the agency of electric light. Every three hours during the night the light is turned on, causing the misguided fowls to come off their perches and eat a hearty breakfast. This seems to be forcing matters a little too strong. Never speak eee rete itish officers report from Zululand that the 1iental use of camels in transportation far, a gratifying experin Success service is, thus | An FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’'S WEEKLY SUMMARY. Semi-Annual Statements Show First Half of 1906 Most Prosperous in Nation's History. R. G. Dun. & Co.’s weekly of Trade’ to-morrow savs: “Comparisons of the volume of cur- rent business with results at the cor- responding date in previous years are so uniformly favorable that the outlook can only be regarded with confidence. Semi-annual statements are now sufficiently complete to make it certain that the first half of 1906 was the most prosperous six-month period in the Nation's history, and, unless heavy cancellations occur, the last half of the. year will establish a still higher record. ¥ “Contracts come forward freely ‘in the iron and steel industry, the only idleness being due to repairs neces- sitated by the vigor with which pro- duction has been pushed, and foot- wear factories are receiving orders for delivery next February, while even the textile mills report that pur- chasers have ceased efforts to secure more attractive terms. “Complaints of inadequate labor sunply are universal. Building oper- ations are extensive, and would be much greater if the cost of labor and materials had not caused the aban- donmmyent of many plans. “Aside from .a little too much rain in some cotton States the week’s crop news is -encouraging, and - grain will soon be out of danger. Buyers are arriving in the primary market in large number, placing orders freely and often urging quick delivery, which substantiates the claim that stocks are low in all positions.’ “Railway earnings in July thus far surpass corresponding reports fr last vear by 8.5 per cent, and foreign com- merce at New York alone for the last week shows gains of $2,110,472 in exports and $1,589,518 in imports. “Failures for the week numbered 216 in the United States, against 214 last year, and 15 in Canada, compared with 27 a year ago.” “Review MARKETS. PITTSBURG. : Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red re irae strani ny 80 R2 Rye—Ne.2...i....o.. 7 73 Corn—No 2 4 ear 61 62 No. 2 yellow, shelled....... . 60 61 . 60 61 44 45 3 Ww 43 44 Flour—Winter patent......... 4 10 415 ancy straight Ty 4 00 410 Hay—No. 1 Timothy........... «- 1500 1522 Clover No.1... 0... «107 11% Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton........ 2250 230) Brown middlings........ . i950 200) Brian, bulk,..v.... ... 0... «2200 2135) 8.raw—Wheat i aired « 784 75) OR ee A cee. 75) 80) Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery 2 3 Ohio creamery......... 20 2], Fancy country roll...... 19 20 Cheese—Ohio, neW........... 12 13 Now York. DoW. ver oeri ores 12 13 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b............0veeeo es 11 15 Chickens—dressed w 18 18 Eggs—Pa..and Ohio, fregh......... 19 20 Frults and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fandy white per bu.... 85 80 ‘Cabbage—per ton. ........... «sr 1300 BW Onions—per barrel............ dies 200 2D : . BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent.............! 3: 5 25 Wheat—No. 2 red. pram Dorn Mire. 2ideticd 5 16 47 I “ee 16 20 Butter—Ohio Creamery. coecieenss 24 <8 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent. $ 505 5 Wheat—No. 2 red.. 84 85 Corn—No. 2 mixed 85 54 Oats—No. 2 Sige 85 36 Butter—Creamery......... 29 32 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. . 16 2 NEW YCRK. Flour—Patents. $500 51 Wheat—No.2red. 89 90 Corn—No. ¥ 67 68 Oats—No. 2 white. 36 38 Butter -Creamery . 28 2 Eggs—State and Pen: 16 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Exua,) 2480 10 1,600 Ibs. ..... .... $70 i ood I 10 A Ibs. Fair, £00 to 1,100 1bs. Common, “00 10 £00 1bs. . : ommon to good 1at oxe n $'ommon to good fat bulls ri Ae “ Evan ha doi TOC Or Seeeenis > finn, to good 1at cows 0) leiters, 700 tol, 100 1bs,... 0 J 1esh cows and springers,....... 450) ! Sheep rrimewethers..................... $540 5 50 Good mized... .,,.....0 eet 0:00 5H 25 Fair mixed ewes and wethers 425 47 Cullsana common 2 50 4 (0 Culls to choice lambs 50 79 Jrimeheavy hogs ................. 6 95 Yrime medium weights. 710 best heavy Yorkers. . v2) Good light Yorkers 6 90 Pigs, as 10 quality... 6 70 Common to good rou 5 40 Brags... Le kG 4 00 Veal Calves...... os Heavy and thin calves. Oil Markets. The following are the quotations for credit balances in the different fields: Pennsylvania, $1 64 Tiona, $1 74; Second S8dnd, $1 4; North Lima, 98¢: South Lima $3c; Indiana. 0c; Somerset, le; Ragland, 62¢; Can- ada, ¥1.38. In Siam the number of rooms in a house, of windows or doors in a room, even of rungs on a ladder, must al- ways be odd. Even numbers are con- sidered unlucky. It does a large salary indice: or legitimate New Haven Register. The great in sident received enormous , and the investigation reveal- or of instances an agg not necessarily follow that tes commensurate suggests the service, surance pre dge of the very busine 1 to khow and direc! The fact that nearly one-half of the hij 1g traffic to and from Antwerp ~ Drill Testand BlastHoles. INDIAN EARTHQUAKE IDEA The Course of Seismic Disturbances as Accounted for by the Original American. “When I lived among the Dakotas,” said an old army officer, ‘I found men who, like Buddha, gave seven years of their lives to prayer and fasting, that they might become pure in the sight of God, or the Great Spirt, as they call that being,” says the Seattle Times. “After they have proved themselves before their people by performing so-called miracles, such as holding the hands and arms in boil- ing water and not being burned, shot with poisoned arrows and not being harmed, bitten by rattlesnakes and not poisoned and many other tests that I have witnessed, they are ac- cepted as holy or wise men. The Indians believe that they- can- get the word direct from God, or the Great Spirit, the same as the-* wise men and seers of old used to do. I have asked these intelligences to tell me about the cause of earth- quakes and tidal waves, and they ex- plain it like this: “They say volcanoes are the safety valves of the earth; that the rim of the earth is gradually cooling. As it cools it contracts, making the pres- sure on the hot lava in the interior greater. At last something must give | way, the rim must crack open, or the volcanoes must burst forth and emit | this compressed lava. “Sometimes it is relieved way, sometimes in another. the -earth crack in midocean, where! the crust is usually thinner, then the | waters of the ocean fill in, and there | is a great ‘exposion as the water | strikes the great bed of hot lava, large masses of the rim are thrown up, the islands appear. Sometimes they stay on the surface of the ocean, sometimes they fall back and are agan covered with water, but wnat | upheavel so lifts the water that a great wave is started for the shore that carries death and destruction in its way. “Many the earth are a few remain. in one! Should ! now closing up; The crust of the old safety valves nl only | is becom- | ing so thick that the cooling process | is more slow.” Oil Finish for Wood. A good, durable finish for can be obtained by ticle in linseed oil then rubbing with an cloth a few minutes cach day for about two weeks. This solidifies and preserves the work, and gives a much more durable finish than French polishing. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per- maneutly cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila, Pa. An English newspaper had this death notice the other day: FAL Stratford-on+sAvon, age 751 William Shakespeare. At rest.” for a week and | oil-soaked | wood | soaking the ar- | | Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens theguias.reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain, cur’ es wind ¢ -olic. : 5 256 a bottle The electric {trolley company of Genoa, paid 6 per cent dividends for 1905, against 5 per cent the previous year. and. 4 per cent in 1903. The ne covers 45 miles, and is capitalized at $5,000,000. admitted their Afghan soldiers are not as witnesses in law courts of own country. The Greatest Boarding College the World. University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. We guarantee two : Our students study and our students behave themselves. 18 Buildings. 75 Professors. 800 Students. Courses in Ancient and Modern Languages, English History and Economics, Chemistry, Biology, Pharmacy, Civil, Electrical and Me- chanical Engineering, Architecture, Law, Short- hand, Book-keeping, Type-writing. SPECIAL DEPARTMENT FOR BOYS UNDER THIRTEEN. TERMS: Board. Tuition and Laundry, $400. Send ten cenis to the Secretary for Catalogue. Brill for Water Prospect for Minerals ‘We make DRILLING MACHINES For Horse, Steam or Gasoline Power. atest Traction Machine. LOOMIS MACHINE CO., TIFFIN, OHIO. FERTILIZER LIME OW WALTON QUARRIES, Harrisburg, 1 a. Ghickens Earn Money ! If You Know How to Handle Them Properly. - Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the best results. is to profit by the experience of others. all you need to know on the subject-—a book written by a man who made his living for 25 years in raising know onthe subject to make a success. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. ———EEEREEERRRERNLE BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 792 Leoniry ST, N. y. Give. p € Poultry, and in that time necessarily had 25¢ to experiment and spent much money to learn in .the best way to conduct the business—for the & Stamps. § nail sum of 25 cents in postage stamps. SA It tells you how to Detect and Cure Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save for Breeding Purposes and indeed about everything you must TO HOLDERS of U. S. 4s of 1907 Your bonds will be paid off by the tiov- ernment at par on July 1, 1907, or less than one year from now. Owing to the demand for Government bonds, due to the appointment at the press ent time of a large number of temporary public depositaries, we are in position te bonds almost as mach pay you for your | as you will receive from the Government in principal and interest, even thou! should hold them to maturity. We can pay 1021, or at the rate of $1032.50, for a £1000 bond. To retain your bonds when you can sell them at this price is equivalent to your investing your funds at a rate of less than three-fourths of one per cent. per annum. Conditions are unusually favorable io the reinvestment of your funds. Railroad bonds of the highest type are much lower than they have ruled for several years. If you are interested in taking advantage, of the peculiarly favorable opportunity to sell your maturing Government bonds, we shall be pleased to have you write us. In | you | case you have $5000 or more of bonds, we shall be glad to have you wire us at our | expense. THE NATIONAL CITY BANK 52 WALL STREET NEW YORK To treat Pimples and Barns, Red, Rough, Oily Complexions, gently smear the face with Cuti= cura Ointment, the Great Skin Cure, but do not rub. Wash off the Ointment i in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water, and bathe freely for some minutes. Repeat morning and evening, At other times use Cuticura Soap for bathing the face as often as agree- able. No other Skin Soap so pure, so sweet, so speedily effective. Cuticura Soon, combines delicate medicin n, lent properties derived from Cuticura, ipat a Cure, with the purest of cleansin ingredient s and the most refreshing of flower odors. Two Soaps in oneal ove rice, viz., & Medicinal rod Toilet Soep. Depo! on, 27 ious Sq.; Paris, 5 Rue de la Petes Bor! ton, 137 Columbus Are. Potter Drug & Chem. Co ; Frops. GPM eed o ae. ew to Ceautify eine 60 Bushels Winter Wheat Per Acre That's the yield of Saizer’s Red Cross Hybrid Winter Wheat, Send 2¢ in stamps for free sample of same, as also catalogue of Winter Wheats, Rye, Barley, Clovers, Dao, Grasse % artes Trees, ete., for fall plantirg BALZER S D CO., Box A.C. LaCr osse, Wis, |] J W] ENSI ON Washington b.¢ Successful ly Prosecutes CI aims. ate Prin al BExLmi nsion Bureau. yraiu ov Shi war, 15 adj adicating claims, atty since P. N. U. 31, 1%. | N Vv. 48 p. bok free. Highest refs, | D R Oo SY Bw B1300V Fay PATENTS Loug experience. Fitrgeraid | ref o &Co.Dept hi, Washington, D.C | ref. Dr. Rives quick relief and cares Book of testimonials and 1@ Pays’ treatment H. HM. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, 6a. worst cases, The way to do this We offer a book telling | TA 5 Ee
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers