Reports of the exports of domestic products show that this country will lie depended on more than ever this winter to feed the world. 'I'ha demnnd for Southern pine in creases and it is already shipped to nil parts of the world. The extent of the lumber export tra lo of the South Is Mot gonorolly appreciated, declares tha Atlanta Journal. More than one Invader of the Klon dike region will he ready, before spring, to paraphrase tho cry of the ocean castaway. With them it will be, "Gold, gold everywhere but riot a loaf of bread I" A Maine man says he will try to cross the Atlantic in a barrel. Many a man has succeeded in getting "half fleas over" by sticking to a barrel, but this is the first time that the second half has been attempted, observes the Chicago Times-Herald. To facilitate the transportation and preservation of hoy, an apparatus has been devised at Buenos Ayre9 for compressing it to one-tength its nor mal bulk. In this form, as "hiy bis cuits," it can be preserved dry and sound an indefinite period, without losing its flavor or value as food. Adirondack "camps" are not as primitive as the name would imply, some of them, on the contrary, being as costly and as elegant as Newport cottages. H. McK. Twombly owns one in the St. Regis region, which is . said to have cost not less than $00,000. Collis P. Huntington fitted tip a camp in the same region a few years ago which cost about $3o,000, and White law Rcid has a camp constructed on the same expensive scale. As a result of some experiments on eows supposed to be infected with tuberculosis, Director Thelps, of the Storrs (Conn.) Agricultural Experi ment Station, says: ''Abovoall things, the experiments mado by this station show that we are deplorably in the dark regarding this disease and its danger to our herds, and through thorn, to the humnn family, and that there is need of further study and re search before we can deal with tuber culosis wisely, either as individual farmers or as a State." According to tho New York Lodger reconstructed adage reads, Eternal vigilance is the price of safety of val uable property, and in pursuance of this idea an ingenious inventor has devised an electrio safe, which is made with an eleotrio lining, consisting of thin metal sheets and strips of such delicacy that the slightest rnptnre will close the circuit and give the alarm. The thrust of a pin point will pene trate this metal. The casing is of steel and is built inside of a cover, which is also lined with thin metal. There are several sets of bolts, which are so ar ranged that a considerable length of time is required to move them. The slightest displacement starts off the alarm and long before the burglar can get to the treasure in the heart of the safe the neighborhood gets altogether too warm for him. "The growth of the iron industry in the South during the past few years has been truly phenomenal. For the year 1896 the total output of iron in this section amounted to 1,833,233 tons; for the current year it will ex teed 2,000,000 tons. When the South ern iron manufacturers first sent their produot to Pennsylvania," says the New Orleans Times-Democrat, "it was thought most extraordinary that they should be able to invade that territory. At the present time, however, they hip to England at least ten per cent, f their produot. Southern iron, like Southern cotton, now finds its way to 11 parts of the globe, and some of it has recently been used in the manu facture of basio steel by the Martin prooess. It has been possible to lay it down in England at $7.50 per ton, and it can be manufactured for even less, as the cost of production in the Birm ingham district is reduced from year to year. The chances are that nearly one-third of the total iron product of the country will come this year from the South, the largest share of this in dustry it bus ever had. Nor will its teld be limited to iron, for the metal Is now being extensively oonverted into steel, and it is predicted that the South will ultimately furnish the steel plates for our men of war, whiob it has been found impossible to get in the East on reasonable terms. Much of the Southern iron is being con verted elsewhere into steel, and the new steel mill at Birmingham, Ala., is now operating ten revolving steel furnaoes, turning out 1000 tons of steel ingots per day, tho latter being oon verted at once into billets, steel rails ox bar steel." BRETHREN. After nil, wo re brethren no matter where I menn, while we're n-llvln' here' on till wo lie here mortnl side We folks tlmt onnt the loll to life, or you And so, when nljtlit Ih fnllln', let's throw tho tlmt mill the sen t windows wide Pon't tniittnr where tlmy ilnne u don't And let the Ininpa shine nut! Becntise, mutter where wn ronm. wherever we mny ronm, Till:) world-for nil Its trials Is still our Till world, until we much the next, Is still homo our home I our home our honml F, Ij. Htnnton, lu Atlanta Constitution. 3 "It's you that's cruel, Tcddie Blake I " "Cruel, Nellie, denr Nellie, you littlo demon 1 Why, I wouldn't touch a bnir of yotir bond, barring the bit I want to cut on" to carry with me to Imliii) ami you're teasing the life nut of mo with your contrariness an I making it much harder for me to go thnn even you dream of!" "And what do you want to go for? leaving your home and your regiment that you were so proud of and the peo ple that know you and the gill " here Miss Nellie breaks down with a little sob, and it is all Teddie enn do to remember his promise to her father and keep his two arms from going round her. "And the girl what?" he says, huskily; for the life of him he can't resist that much. "That was brought up with you and has been a sister to you all your life," chokes Nellio O'Mallcv. "I'll tell you what it is, Nellio, "the poor, young soldier says, pulling him self together and speaking much more severely than ho really feels, "you must try to understand my position, and then we'll say no more about It, if you please, onco and for nil. My uncle's dead (heaven rest his soul), and he's left the old place to me, but it's up to the chimney pots in debt, and unless I let it to this English fel low I'll never bo able to clear it all my life. Thou, if I don't exchange for India, I can't keep my place in the service at all, and besides, Nellic.with tho old regiment quartered at Thomas town, it would be mighty hard for me to see another man fishing my salmon and shooting my birds and sitting in .my chimney cornor every day of the week, with his great ugly face look ing over the pew at you on Sundays! I couldn't do it, Nellie.not even to re main near near the friends I've known ever since I wns a baby. So that's all about it, and you musu't make it harder for me than I can bear do you see?" It was a good thing that Aunt Ellen called them in to supper at this ino mont. Nellie had one of her teasing fits on hor, trying by this means to hide her heart-break at Teddie's de parture, and hor perversity tried poor young Blnke sorely. He had prom ised her father, the rector, that he would not, by word or act, reveal his feelings toward her. They had bcon children together, almost brother and sister.for nearly 20 years.since Teddie first came to Moyliscallan, and this state of things must be maintained, Mr. O'Malley decidod, till Toddio's fortunes should bear closer and more satisfactory inspection. Perhaps a few years of Indian soldiering, while the old castle was let to a rich Eng lish tenant, might put the said fortunes on their foet; meanwhile, lingering in the old rectory garden was a danger ous occupation, and Aunt Ellen did wisoly to ring the supper bell out of the window. Presently the parting came. It was Sunday evening, and the rectory kept early hours. 8 upper was over, and the O'Malleys were making their fare wells to Teddie, the almost son of the house, for ho had to get back to Thom as town that night and start for Eng land next morning. "Thore's something I want to take with me," he announced, stoutly, be fore them all, "a lock of your hair, Aunt Ellen, and another of Nellie's. You know you two are the only wom ankind I have or ever have had. Give me each a bit of a curl, and I'll have thorn put iu a locket together and wear it on my chain, and you won't be sorry to think I've got it when I'm way from you." He looked at the rector as he spoke. It was all open and above board, and the old gentleman uodded and reached down a pair of scissors from the man telsholf, which be handed to his sis ter. Aunt Ellon cut her little lock carefully, as befits a lady of five-and-forty, whose hair is still abundant and ornamental, if not so bright as it has been. Nellie whisked her bunch of curls over hor shoulders and snipped off a thick brown ringlet. Teddie twisted them together iu bis pocket book and Baid, with a feeble attempt at a joke: "They'll go with me every where and bring me back to Moylis callan. Don't let me find you've been, either of you, flirting with Strange ways while I'm away, or putting him in my place." Then he kissed the two ladies,as he had always done on great occasions, at New Year or on birthdays, ever since he was three years old, shook hands with the rector twice over and hurried off to Thoumstowu and thence to In dia. Ami, oh dear! it wasdull at Moy liscallan without him. Five years lator Captain Edward Blake was coming home on sick leave. It had been a "near squeak," as he said himself. That wound on the bead, at the Burroo Pass affair, had set all Europe talking about him, but hud nearly done for him all the same. Then came weeks of fever and tho weary jouruey to Bombay; the re lapse on the road, which, but for Mrs. Diamond's nursing.inust have finished him; the almost miraculously accom plished move on to shipboard, which the doctor allowed was an experience of kill or cure, ' And now he was steaming home as fast a the P. & Q.liue could do it, and every day somo fresh sense of power in mind or body was reborn in him; one dny he could nrrange his own pil low, the next ho could read a few lines of the paper. A little later he asked Mrs. Diamond if she could find him paper and pencil, ns he wanted to write a note "home." Life was worth living again with Moyliscallan drawing nearer day by day. Mrs. Diamond was a little widow lady.who, since her husband's death, had been keeping house for a brother in the civil service. "Tho Judge," as she called him, had fallen a victim to the chnrins of an lH-yenr-old schoolgirl, fresh from Englnnd, and Mrs. Dia mond's services were required no longer. Coming down country she hud stumbled upon Teddie Blake, fever-stricken and virtually nlono, and it wns undoubtedly to her core that he owed his recovery from the re lapse, which hod been worse thnn the originnl attack. Hbo had deferred her own plans to the convenience of the patient, had superintended his trans fer to the steamship from the Bom bay hotel, which she hod hardly dared to hope ho would reach alive, and was a witness of his convalescence on bonrd ship, as day by dny his s'rength and spirits returned. Ho it wns not wonderful that Teddie turned to her for pnper and pencil on the very first occasion that he felt he could scrawl a lino, and imperiously demanded that he be allowed to writo "to his peo ple." "Are you snro yon can do it?" Mrs. Diamond nsked, producing her writing board, but not giving it over to him unconditionally. "Quite sure that is, not a bit of it but I'll try." "I thought you said you hnd nobody belonging to you?" "No more I have no real relations but nn adopted family that is the dearest in the world not a mere ac cident of birth like other people's families. I must write thorn just a few words to sny I'm alive ami coming homo, and it'll bd ready when an op portunity comes for posting it, though it can't reach Moyliscallan more than an hour or two before I do myself." "Moyliscallan," repeated Mrs. Din mond, "whnt do you know of Moylis cnllau? I only heard of the place for the first time n mouth ago, and now it turns up again!" "It's my homo," Blnke said, pain fully scrawling the date at the top of his sheet of pupor. "Tho cnstle be longs to me, only I've never been able to livo in it. My people live at the rectory it is to Mr. O'Malley.the rector, that I'm writing. And what did you hear about Moyliscnllan, tho sweetest place on all the earth?" "Why," cried Mrs. Diamond, ex citedly, "this is the oddest thing! My cousin, George Strangewnys, rented the castlo from some ono some years ago from you it appears and now he is engaged, married probably by this time, to one of tho rector's girls, Ellen O'Malley, a daughter, I suppose, of this very old goutleninn you're writ ing to. I hnd the letter just before I met you nt Rnhmednugnr and had scarcely given it a thought since." One of tho rector's girls! Teddie Bluke had soon death glaring at him from a wall of black Afghan faces; ho had looked fever in the eyes more than once; but ho had never known whnt despair meant till Mnrcia Diamond told him her little story of odd coincidences sitting on the steam ship deck, halfway through thoir homeward voyage. For a moment ho repeated the words, "Ellon O'Malley; there is only one daughter at the rec tory;" and Mrs. Diamond, whose eyes were on the silk sock she was knitting, went on cheerfully: "Oh, then, that's the girl. I did not hear from George Strange ways direct; the' news came through my brother, but, of course, it is the same the young ludy at the rectory. Fancy old George succumb ing to an Irish girl's fascinations after going all over the habitable world unscathed till now!" "Is be a good fellow ?" Teddie asked. Something in his voice made Mrs.. Diamond give a swift glance at her com panion, and in that glunce she under stood everything. , "He is a very good follow," she answered, a little more seriously than she had hitherto spoken; "any girl will be happy and tenderly treated by him, though he is an elderly man 5"), I should think and a little eccen trio and old-fushioned in his ways. You will find letters telling you all about it wheu you reach England, you may be sure. Don't you think you had better let mo take that writing board downsta'rs again? It will be time euough to write when there IB a chance cf posting your letter." He let her lift the writing things away, only putting out a feeble hand to crumple up the sheet on which he had begun his ' letter. Then he lay back with his eyes shut, and her tact took her a little apart, for the struggle which he hud to go through now must be fought out alone. By and by his servunt came and helped him down stairs, and Mrs. Diamond saw him again no more that day. Moyliscallan woods in September! How often Teddie Blake had pictured his home-coming through the green glades that stretched between the cas tle and the rectory. Those sylvan aisles were the rally place of all his favorite dreams, for did not Nellie cross them day by day, end would it not be here that he would bring her to tell her the secret which he thought she must have guessed long ago. Rec tor O'Malley would lot him speak nt Inst, for the long waiting had borne its fruit iu recouping tho Blake coders, while Teddie knew that the Burroo Pass nll'iiir,of which he himself thought and spoke so modestly, was not likely to be forgotton when his name came up nt the Horse Guards. A thousand times he hnd gone over all this iu im agination, fingering, meanwhile, the little flat locket that hungnt his watch chain nnd now and now, be was creeping back to Moyliscnllan like a thief, having given no word of warn ing either to the rector or to his agent nt the castlo creeping home just to see Nellie's face ngnin once more and then to go away anyw here and dio. He was still weak mid won from the fever. Mrs. Diamond had tried hard to per suade him to remain a little time in London for a consultation with a first rate doctor, but tho determination to nee Nellie at Moyliscnllan once more wa the only desire that remained to him in life, and till it wns accom plished his shrewd little friend saw that there was no good talking of any thing else. . So he hurried over to Ireluud nnd hod reached Thomastown the evening before. Today he hnd tnkon a car over to the village (in the old days it was the shortest aild pleas nntest four miles ever known) and, leaving the driver asleep in the sun at the cross roads, had turned into the wood that is a short cut to the two principal houses in the parish. He hnd no very definite idea of the plan to pursue. Now tlmt he had reached his journey's end, it seemed as if all power hod left him. Perhnps some where ninong the trees, crossing from the castle grounds to the rectory side, ho should see Nellie pa-sing by, and be would slip down upon his knees among the fern and look at her George Strangewnys' wife nnd oh, this fnintuess! Merciful God! is that Nellie? "feddie.is it really you?" Teddie was on the moss, stretched flat, save that Nellie's arm was under his head;Xc llio's little, barc.siinburncd hand unfastened his collar ho could only look und smile. The green Moy liscallan loaves were overhead, dancing against the blue, Nellio's face was very close, and ho thought he must bo in heaven. "How could yon conic like this nnd take us by surprise, nnd you so ill, Teddie," tho girl went on, reproach fully; "if I hadn't been going across to tho castlo this morning early nnd come on you lying here in a heap " "Going across to tho castle?" Ted dio found timo to utter, his eyes on Nellie's left bond. "Dou't you live nt the cnstle now altogether?" "And what should I go and live at the castle for, when I've a good home of iny own, intruding on newly mar ried people, as if I didn't know better? Besides, Aunt Ellen isn't home from her honeymoon yot.nnd Uncle George what, are you uble to sit up? Take care or you'll " She could not finish the sentence, for Captain Blake was sitting up with a vengeance, and to steady himself he had got his arm around her waist. "Ho you never thought of Aunt El len?" said Nellie, by ami by; "well, you wouldn't have been an Irishman if you hadn't made a mistake some where! Ouly if you'd ever seen Undo Goorge I don't think you'd have doubted me, Teddie denr. Oh! they have been so funny courting one another these five years and if I hadn't been no well amused I think I must have died, for you kept me a long time waiting without a word !" Boston (England) Guurdian. Gold Is Not Kverywhere. His poor.work-callonsed hands were despairingly entwined; his emaciated form was bowed down with woe, and the hollows in his care-worn, cheeks were slowly filling up with tears that ran down from dull, tired eyes. He was a young man whose early life bad been spent amid careful home surroundings under the influence of Christian teachings, and now in this hour of dark despair and deep dejec tion, when reason tottered on her throne and fierce pain pangs assailed his flesh, the habits of his youth were strong upon him. With weary foot steps he crossod the floor, and from an oilskin pouch drew a Bible. "The last gift of my mother," he muttered ; "before I came to this ac cursed place." As ho looked at it in his hand he noticed a certain bulkiuess about it and felt a heaviness he had never felt before. A thousand wild conjectures flashed through his mind and many instances of where fond niothors hnd secreted treasures in the Bible pre sented to their departing sou came to him at memory's beck. "Dear mother t" he murmured ; "a big fat bunch of cnrrency.I suppose I" and with a half-smile he opened the bulging Bible. An hour ufterward he recovered con sciousness. "Thank heaven," he cried. "Joy does not kill I Mother, dear old mother by what divine inspiration did she gaze into the future and see my hour of bitterest need, I'll just send her a million dollars by the next mail." And with a ravenous, running gulp the young Klondike miner devoured one of the throe apple fritters he had fouud in the Bible. San Francisco Examiner. l'ollle flforvls. "Georgie, I'm glad to see that you are polite and offer sister the orauges first." "Yes'm, 'cause then she has to be polite au' take tV little one," Advertised for Homely lllrls. A telephone exchange mannger in Htnunton, Vn., recently advertised for "ngly girls, who would nttend to busi ness." There were actually 25 who applied for tho positions nnd confessed themselves qualified to fill the bill. A Titled Woman Itngplper. Invernry Pipe Band, the distin guished combination of bagpipes which created a sensation by'prom cnading Glencoe in charge of Lord Archibald Campbell, wnlked abroad in Inverary the other day, headed by a young lady, who blow the piob mohr with all the dextority and success of a pri.e bagpiper at Oban Highland gnuios. This wns lady Elspeth Camp bell, Lord Archibald's handsome daughter. She is nn expert player nnd has done a good deal to make the dreaded instrument popular in fash ionable circles. Westminster Ga zette. Vor Wheeling skirts. There is a new arrangement gain ing favor among woman cyclists which helps not ouly iu keeping the short skirt from blowing back in the wind, but also keeps it from dragging heav ily across the knees after a long ride. This invention is a keep cap of venti lated cloth three or four inches wide, worn just below the knee; this bears a tiny fastener. Iu tha skirt, on the under side, is a corresponding fastener, which mny be clasped into the knee band by n sinqfle pressure on the out side of tho skirt. When the rider nlights a mere twitch releases the fastening. llrilllittit Colors the Itnffe, The summer fad for dashing colors hns overlapped the foil fashions, and brilliant reds, greens and blues are shown iu plain goods nnd in checks nnd stripes. A shephnrd's plaid skirt in lnrgo red nnd white checks, with a box-plaited waist of all red wool, is a new nnd pretty design for a child's school frock or a young girl's morning dress. Checks are fur more fashion able than either stripes or plain mate rial; bnt they are invariably combined with plain silk or wool goods. A touch of black is considered indispensable with these suits, either in the soft col lar and crush belt, which fastens nt the buck with flaring bows, or in the cuffs, collar and vest. The black goods may be either satin, moire or faille Francaise. Demorest's Magazine. Tyrolean ltrlilsl Handkerchiefs. A touching and poetical custom pre vails in the Welsch-Tyrol. When a young maiden is about to be married, immediately before she steps across the threshold of her old home, on her way to the church, her mother sol emnly gives her a new pocket hand kerchief. The bride holds it in her hand thoughout the marriage cere mony, using it to wipe away her tears. So soon as the marriage festivities are ended the young wife lays the hand korchief aside in her linen closet, and there it remains while Bhe lives. Noth ing could induce a Tyroleso wife touse this sacred handkerchief. It may be half a century, or longer, before it is taken from its place to fulfil the sec ond and Inst part of its mission. When tho wife dies, perhnps as a gray old grandmother, the loving hands of the next of kin plnce the bridal handker chief over the face of the dead and it is buried with her in the grave. , Ifemftltchlnn'. In London hemstitching is having qnite a revival. It is being adapted not only to muslin, Boft silk and soft fabrics for trimmings, bnt also to glace, and even to velvet, the frillings being hemmed and then headed by these open stitchings. This work adds a good deal to the expense of dresses, because for Bitch materials it must be baud drawn, and in velvet it has to be punctured by a stiletto. Some charm ing sashes are made in pure white silk with open hemstitching on either side, the hems two or three inches broad. These are most effective with white gowns, and are employed a good deal for children as well as grown np people; but perhaps the charm of this hemstitching is best seen on the new Paris skirts, which have graduated flounces from the hem to the waist, each one treated in this way. An en terprising dressmaker has the hem stitching in a different oolor, but it has not beou altogether a success. It looks unlike the real thing. A New Builnes fur Women. And now a woman is running a trolley cur. This new fiold for woman kind may strike the casual observer ns somewhat peculiar, but the young lady who has taken it np says that it is much easier than housework and a great deal more agreeable than a good many other things that women are called upon to do. There is a great deal of nonsensical talk about tho necousity for strength in the ordinary pursuits of lifo. As a matter of fact brute force or what we cull physical strength is one of the minor items in the success which people meet with in almost all of the ordinary occupations by which men and women earn their bread. It does not require physioal strength to command a ship or to fill the posi tion of conductor; indeed, some of the most successful men in the world have been physical weaklings; but they had, brains, tact, nerve and alertness, which goes a very long ways in making np the sum total of elements that con duce to success. New York Lodger, l'oke lints In Srnson. Tho poke hat is becoming to so few faces that it is with much hesitation that the style is adopted. Milliners,' however, declare that the poke hat will be the hat of the season, and it certainly will if they have their way. One seen was of light gray chip, can ght np in front with pale yellow crepe rosettes. Long black feathers drooped down over the sides, giving it extra breadth. The dress worn with thin was of gray striped cheviot, trimmed with blue braid nnd made with a natty cutaway jacket effect that was very be coming. A stock of the dress goods was worn, and the same goods was made into a fichu for the finishing of the sailor collar. The sleeves were double balloons, set over a very tight fitting cont sleeve. ,, Pearl gray gloves matched the hat, and a stiff white linen shirt front gave a decidedly tailor made finish to this neatest and latest of gowns. In place of the parasol n smnll nmbrella is now carried, rolled tight around its stick nnd finished with a niching of black satin ribbon, which is tied around the handle of the umbrella. , Fnshlon Notes. The Russian blouse craze is likely to continue through the full and win ter seasons. , A smart hat is composed entirely of red currants, with a blackbird nestling in the midst of them, ; The lnrge black velvet hat, with its drooping plumes, is the most favored style in feminine head wear. Black silk stockings have medallions of fine blnck lace set over the instep. They are for wear with fancy slippers, and are very smart and dainty. , Princess Beatrice, who still wears deep mourning for her husband.Henry of Battenburg, always wears the usual widow's bonnet, with its Marie Stuart point in white and a long crepe veil. , The military effect on the tight-fitting coat is good this season, especially where the garment is all black, though we Bee tan, green, blue and violet com bined with the black ornamentation in this way. Bauds of embroidered velvet are worn as trimming for gowns and coats; some of these in black, with steel pailletes or with golden thread and tiny colored beads, are very rich and handsome. A cloth dress is made with a skirt iu about thirty tucks. The waist and sleeves are similarly tucked. The effect is dosirable enough, but the weight of the garment is simply past enduring. The lody for whom it ftt made finds it impossible to wear it without great fatigue. Corduroy waists are making their appearance. Homo of them are made entirely of corduroy, with plaits at the trout and back, and a high rolled back collar, inside of which is collar of silk of the same color. Other models have belt, collar and cuffs of plain vel vet of the same shade as the goods of which the waist is made. A stylish dress of dark blue broad cloth is made with a plain skirt trimmed with rather an elaborate pat tern of the finest military braid and fine cord. The waist is in Eton jaoket fashion and is almost covered with a handsome design in cord and braid. i, -.in. . ..i;.... i i : ,, . i i.i i. i i taffeta. Prettiest among the street oostnmes are the cloth gowns, made with braided skirt and blouse jacket, with little basques. The braided design is in tricate, bnt light in effect, and covers the whole of the skirt in the front and back of the jacket. Sometimes the jackets have tiny revers of embroidered velvet or astrukan, or of the cloth braided. The basques are very short and are very jaunty aud becoming. The fronts of most jackets are to be adorued with military frogs and braid ing; a style very becoming to those who dreu 1 the severity of a tight fit ting jucket. Elizabeth collars and belts of embroidered velvet are to be worn. A handsome coat of dark pur ple cloth has two bauds of jetted black in front; an Elizabeth collar of black velvet jetted and a bow of black velvet under the chin give a very rich effect to this winter garment. Poplins are "coming in," and both pluiu and figured putterns are to be seen. Bright plaids, checks and stripes are exceedingly effective, and look as though they might be very durable. All the Scotch plaids are fashioiiable.und many new plaids have been recently designed, On a dark brown, blue or black background the bright colors stand out clear and sharp. They will be made up in skirts to wear with plain short coats, for school frocks, and will be greatly used for combining with other mate rials for vests, sleeves and trimmings.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers