An independent journal devoted to the interests of Heynoldsvillc. Published weekly. One Dollar per year strictly in advance. volume n: REYNOLDSVILLE, FENN'A., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1905. NUMBEB 14. 7iw Benefits of One of the nost generally approv tnodcvn pluuK u t'....t of intal!;-.: s'.ipp'ici'. with hot and cold nr.ir.'r;.; lavatories i and dressing chambers At first though; ti ls idea may (Si fVv houScIlC, I L t- ' r ' ill ' ' 1 '..it ; car's.'. I ' I, r fcr,' $ Cecond,they direct SB 1'-Av : 'yLV''iil constant attention 21 WvVWlflTl to the toilet and Promote c!ea,li- venience of having to dress in order to reach the bathroom, possibly to find it already occupied. Call, write or phone for a copy of booklet "Modern Lavatories" which s':ows t':c complete line i.f "ptan.fa'r One-piece Lavatories, wl.li approxinu, l- prices in detail. There arc none as good. B 1 The Union Plumbum-Co. Aut'iits for ( hi Ki PUVUKKVIW.K IM. .NR. L. M. SNYDER Practical Horseshocr and Gen eral Blacksmith. Ropnlrlnff of all kind promptly tintl careful ly done. Wood shop tn connection. When you need your tire set call and hiive It done with the Seliim Tiro Hotter, "the mitchlne til lit does It rlfflit. Remember the phice JACKSON ST., NEAR FIFTH. ft AT- I Leech Bros. Planing Mill, West Reyn oldsville, you will find Window Sash, Doohs, Frames, Flooring, STAIR WORK j Rough and Dressed Lumhkr. Etc., Etc. ft Hlvo. iia vnur nrdor. Our rtrioos i are reasonable. ; I LEECH BROS., I ROI'Rietors. JEFFERSOX I MACARONI I FACTORY KEYNOLnVlI.I.E, PENN'A. One of the lurtrest mucaroui factories In the state. Orders ent C. O. I), or on food reference anywhere in the intted Htates. Also wliolesule agents fur the well known brand of Premium Flour. C. & .T. MAUIN AUO, 1'roprietors eg WANTED: Boy about 1G years of age to do clerical work, Must be good at figures. , Address in own hand writing : BOX 357, Reynoldsville, Pa. I I Modern Plumbing of the indv appear to be luxurious to some persons but when its b e n e fi t s are made apparent, it will le found necessary to nod cm living. One piece lavatories throughout the hotv.e are in the ""ml firr.t place, a mark ncES t:.ira, they avoid the incon wiir.et! Wat or Svsttm. KF.YNOLDSVILLK. PA The Cure that Cures Coughs, s Colds, Grippe, Whooping Cough, Asthma' Bronchitis and Incipient Consumption Is For alo by Uoylu-Woodward Drug Co JOHN C. HIRST, CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEEK, Surveyor and Prauehtsman. Office in Syi dieate buildiuK, Main st reet. L. JOHNSTON, JUSTICE OF THE TEACE. OHlce four doors from Uoss House, Wesi Reynoldsville, I'a. pRIESTER BROS., UNDERTAKERS. Black and white funeral care. Mian street Reynoldsville, I'a. J H. HUGHES, UNDERTAKING and picture framing The U. 8. Burial League has been testeci and found all rlirhu Cheapest form of in surance, hocure a contract. Near Publli Fountain, Reynoldsville Fa. H. YOUNG, ARCHITECT. Corner Grant and Fifth sts., Reynolds ville, I'a. c ENTRAT. RTATP. NORMAL SCHOOL. LOCK HAVEN, PA. J. R. Fllcklnnor, Principal. Fall term of 15 weeks begins September 11. Tho facilities at this Important school for dolus llrst-class work, professional and acad emic, were never better than now. Its irtad uates are required to do a full year's teach In In the tralnlnn school. Its faculty has the best American and European tralnlnii. HulldliiKs modern. College preparatory de partment. Location unexcelled Fineirym naslum. Expenses moderate. Free tuition to prospective teachers. Address for illus trat ed cataloKue, I ho Principal. FLIES The best thing for get ting rid of flies is GOOD FLY PAPER. We have a fresh lot of "Tanglefoot," the best STICKY FLY PAPER, and also plenty of the best poison fly papers at low prices. Reynolds Drug Co. cd i.lcas ot Njf a 3 onc-px-ce water, in the sl.-cping YsJ idual members of t'lC I AMUSING JOKES. Home Thnt Ifnre Tlppn rinyrd on Members of Selit tile Snrlellpa. Nothing Is so funny- to tho Joker ns tho development of a praclicul Joke or hoax, n nd tho most learned arc some time fooled In this way, to their great discotiilltnro. An nimisinK hoax iwas loi'ielnt(d on the learned members of Ihp Dumfries Antiquarian society of London, when an alletred Greek eharm, said to have been taken from the dead body of a lledouln, was presented for their Inspection and iidmiratlon. It was said to have been an heirloom In the ltedonln's family for ninny centu ries and consisted of a scrap of skin on which was transcribed a mysterious Ienend. It was circulated among the members of tho august body of the An tiquarian society until it fell into tho hands of Dr. Semple, who, amid much amusement, deciphered the hieroglyph ics as "Old Hob Ridley, O," the rofrain of an old song. One of the best of these iokes was practiced with considerable, success by an eighteenth century wit. who nro fessed to have unearthed an ancient memorial slab on which this epitaph was just decipherable: RENE A. TIT. TIL 1SST. ON ft RE. POS. ICT. II. CLAI'I). COS TF.R. TRIP E. SEI.ERO, F. IMP. IN. (IT. UNAS. DO. Til. HI. B.C. ON. SOR. T. J. A. N. E. In vain did archaeologists and lin guists nick their brains to find a solu tion of this cryptic inscription, which its discoverer "humbly dedicated to the penetrating geniuses of Oxford, Cambridge, Kton anil tho learned So ciety of Antiquaries," and it was only when it had driven tho cleverest men In England almost out of their wits that tlie following reading was sug gested by the hoaxer: "Peneatli this stone reposeth Claud Coster, tripe sell er, of Implngton, as doth his consort Jane." Thai, ton, was a clever, If rather heartless, joke which Steevens, the Shakespeare scholar, played on Gougb, known to posterity as the author of "Sepulchral Monuments." Cough had criticised a drawing by Stcevens ra ther mercilessly, and the latter forth with planned a revenge which should hold up antiquity to ridicule. Procur ing n flat piece of stone, he scratched on it, In Anglo-Saxon characters, the inscription, "Here Ilardenut drank n wlnohorn dry, stared about him and died," and had It exposed In a shop which Cough was In the habit of visit ing. A few days later Cough called at the shop, saw the : :::!). which, ho was told. had been f :und in Kennington lane on the supposed site of Ilardioanute's pal ace, and, overjoyed at his good fortune, carried It off in triumph ns a discovery of rare antiquarian value. He showed 1t with pride to his fellow members of the Society of Antiquaries, a paper wns written on it, a learned discussion followed and the Inscription was pub lished In the Centleman's Magazine. Steevens triumph was complete when he took the public Into his secret and laughed wilh them, but what his vic tim's feelings and language were It would not have been possible to ex press in print. Something over fifty years ago the Ingenuity of antiquarians was tested by a legend faintly traced on a time worn slab of stone which, so its dis coverer said, had been unearthed dur ing some excavations In Cumberland. This was the Inscription: TIL ISI. SAHAR. DNU. TOC. RA C. K. But what language was It and what could It' mean? The accepted opinion was that the legend referred In some way to Ilardicanuto or Ilardnut, but beyond that speculation' even was dumb, until the wicked joker had the effrontery to confess that he himself had chiseled the Inscription, of which tho true translation waR: "This Is a hard nut to crack." And so It was. London Answers. Jenlons of Imaginary Ilia. "Talk of a woman's jealousy of her husband," said a physician of long experience In New York. "It Is noth ing compared to her jealousy o an other woman's chronic ailments. Half the doctors would starve If It were not for the prevalence of illnesses that are purely imaginary. Of course, It does not do for us to tell a woman w ho has firmly made up her mind that she Is ill that she Is not 111. In nine cases out of ten she would lose her temper and consult another doctor. Among certain women invalidism gives them a distinction which Is gratifying to their self love. Thoy may literally be suld to 'enjoy poor health. They look for the doctor's visit to them or their call at his office as the most exciting event of the day. If they know him well enough, they lrri plore him to waive professional eti quette and tell them about aliments of other women who consult him. Wo men of this description and they are legion have a vnvlng for martyrdom, which doctoring an Imaginary illness seems to satisfy." New York Times. How He Saved Him. Hewitt That fellow saved me from bankruptcy. Jewitt How was thatT Hewitt He married the extravagant girl I was engaged to. Straage Reward For Life Savera, "I have seen a good many drowning tridents," said an old sea captain, and I have seen a good many queer rewards. Once a young man rescued a young widow's little sou from tho sea. The widow, in her gratitude. asked for the young man's photogriqili He sent It to her, and two months later he received a maguiticent painting, by Smith, that showed the scene of tho rescue accurately, with the little boy and him, both perfect likenesses, strug gling like mad In the water. "A farmer, one of the Plnkertons told me, came from the west to meet a gold brick man. As the farmer and the swindler crossed on the ferry the swindler fell overboard, and the farmer rescued him. He was so grateful that he gave the farmer a brick of solid silver. "I saved a pretty girl from drowning In my youth," the captain ended. "She gave me a present that weighed 130 pounds. She gave me herself, and I've still got her. She may not be In as good condition now as she was then, but In my eyes somehow she Is as sweet and pretty ns she ever was." Philadelphia Bulletin. Koran and Illble, Concerning the alleged resemblance between Christianity and Mohammed anism Itev. Napier Malcolm, in "Five Years In a Persian Town," says "There are really not many resem blances to note. An officer of Indian troops replied to a Mussulman's sug gestion1 that there were resemblances between the two religions, 'There is hardly a single practical point where Mussulmans and Christians are not en tirely at issue,' whereupon the Mus sulman said: 'Sahib, you have read your Bible and have also read the Koran. I always make that remark to Christians. I made It to a padre the other day, and they almost always say: "Very true. Mohammedanism has a great deal in common with Chris tianity." Well, sahib, when they say that, I know that they have not read the Koran and that they have not read their Bibles.' " From Jail to the Bench, Francis Pomberton (1(125-07) was Im prisoned In the Fleet for debts con tracted during a period of youthful ex travagance. While In jail he applied himself to the study of law and came to be regarded as a klud of legal oracle by his fellow prisoners, who nicknamed him Counselor. With the fees they gave him for legal advice he bought books to continue his studies. He then prevailed upon his creditors to grant his release from prison that he might the sooner earn money to pay off his debts. Called to the bar In 1064, after a brilliant career In the palace court at Westminster and subsequently In the house of lords, he became a puisne Judge. He was knighted In 1075 and ultimately, on tho dismissal of Scroggs, was made lord chief Justice in 1081. The Uldent Paper Books. What is believed by antiquaries to be the oldest paper book In existence is tho "Hod Book of Lynn," an ancient register belonging to the corporation of King's Lynn, England. This vol ume Is known as the "Red Book" from its original binding having been of that color. The first entry is a tran script of tho will of Peter de Thorndon, burgess of Lynn, dated 1309. The lat est entry Is dated In the fifteenth year of King Richard II. Fifty years ago the book was repaired and rebound, and the loaves, which ago had reduced to a loose, fibrous substance, were carefully resized as an aid to preser vation. Tarn Abont. An Irish doctor was asked to attend a patient on Tory island, off the Irish mainland. The doctor said that be was willing to go, but that the fee would be 2 ($10), payable in advance. The Tory islander paid the money and fer ried the doctor over from the main land himself. The physician finished his duties and wished to start back. The only way to get back was to be rowed back by the same man who had carried him over. The doctor asked what the charge was. "Two pounds," said the Tory island man, "payable In advance." It was paid. The Pnranlt of Man. Directly or indirectly we are all in terested in the pursuit of the desirable male, for whom every function is real ly arranged whatever be the ostensible reason. When one sees on all sides how eligible men are run after, fawned upon, flattered, cajoled and hum bugged, can the truth of It be denied 7 Ladies' Field. An I'nfalr Fling;. Mrs. Wick wire If woman were given the credit she deserves, I don't think man would be quite so prominent In the world's history. Mr. Wickwlre I expect you are right. If she could get all the credit she wanted, he'd be In the poorhouse. Like Father, Like Son. Mr. Ootrox When I was your age, sir, I didn't have a dollar. Cholly Got- rox Well, dad, when I am your age t probably won't have a dollar. Puck. That virtue which requires to be ever guarded Is scarcely worth the sentinel. Goldsmith. THE HOTEL CHILD. Dana-era That Ileiiet the Lnekleu Off- prlnK of nentlcua Parent. It is not the material aids to ex istence which are the bane of the hotel child; it Is the mental and spiritual at titude accompanying this life which Is to be deprecated. It destroys a democratic spirit through emphasizing the difference between tho servant and the served, It exaggerates the power of money, fosters a spirit of depend ence and unfits the pampered Individ ual for any ether kind of life, and, worst of all, In a child so brought up there can be no understanding or love of home. There may be some future for the child who knows nothing of art, some function for the one to whom literature makes no appeal and who is not sensitive to music, but there is no place In the state for the man who has neither Initiative, self reliance, patriot ism nor love of home. He Is a social menace, a disease. The community Is better off without this satellite of the manager, parasite of tho hell boy and source of supply for the waiter. If there Is one child in our communi ty who Is superfluous It Is the hotel child. As places for temporary occu pation by homeless nud childless adults hotels are to be tolerated, but as resi dences for children they are without the possibility of excuse. Miss Martha S. Bensley In Everybody's Magazine. FIVE MINUTES. Under Some ClrcnmNtanoea It Seema a Verr Lonar Time. In a murder trial fcefore a western court the prisoner was able to account for the whole of his time except five minutes on tho evening when the crime was committed. His counsel argued that It was Impossible for him to have killed the man under the circumstances In so brief a period, and on that plea largely based his defense, tho other testimony being strongly against his client. When tho prosecuting attorney re plied, ho said: "How long a time really is five minutes? Let us see. Will his honor command absolute silence in the courtroom for that space?" The Judge graciously complied. There was a clock on the wall. Every eye In the courtroom was fixed upon It as the pendulum ticked off the seconds. There was a breathless silence. We nil know how time which lu waited for creeps and halts and at last does not seem to move at all. The keen witted counsel waited until the tired audience gave a sigh of relief at tho close of the period, and thou asked quietly: "Could ho not have struck ouo fatal blow in all that time?" - The prisoner was found guilty, and, ns it was proved afterward, Justly. THE DOG'S COAT. Drnah It, but Do Not Wnuli It, If Yon Want It Perfect. In tho Country Calendar Reginald F. Mahew writes: "Even careful feeding will not give a dog's coat that glow which Is such a sure sign of hearth if he Is continually, washed with soap and water. Owners who allow their dogs to live In the house are forever wash ing the wretched animal and forever complain thnt his coat Is coming out. The oftencr the dog Is washed and scrubbed tho more will his cont, leave Its trail and the deader and duller will It look. The health and growth of a dog's coat depend entirely on a natu ral oil from tho skin. As often as the dog Is washed so often Is the oil wash ed out and so much more Is the de struction of tho coat. If a dog were brushed every day for five or ten min utes against as well as with the grain his coat would not only havo a luster, but would cease to distribute itself all over the place except for a very short time once or twice a year. Besides this, brushing has a stimulating ef fect on the whole system, helps tho blood circulation; by tills the digestion, and so the general health." MacMaaoa'a Epigram. When Marshal MacMahon in the Crimean campaign took the Malakoff by storm and wrote his celebrated dis patch. "J'y suis, J'y reste" ("Here I am; here I stay"), those words made him famous all over tho world. Tet his friends said that tho worthy soldier had written them in the most matter of fact manner, with no thonolit of phrase making. The most surprised person over the success of thin onl- gram was MacMahon himself. Ancient Jewelry. The Jewelry found In nn excavation near one of the pyramids of old Mom- phls, Egypt exhibits about as ruuoh skill in working gold and nrecious stones as now 'exists, although the ar ticles found were mode 4.300 years aco. Tho figures cut on amethyst and cor nelian are described as exquisite and anatomically correct. The gold la skill fully worked, and precious stones are let Into it so as to give the effect of enameling. Quite Apparent. She You know,, judge, our charac ters are different, and I don't want to be in his way He Yes, your honor, she Is peculiar, and I don't want to In terfere Judge I understand. You ask for a divorce out of pure love. Meggendorfer Blatter. Lljrht and Sound. ' Light travels so vastly much faster f.iuu sound that there Is no compan ion between their velocities. The ve locity of light is about 190,000 miles a second. At this speed light will travel about eight times around the earth In a second, and light starting from the sun will traverse the 03,000,000 miles of space Intervening between, the sun nud tlie earth In eight minutes. So It Is seen light flashes from one part of the earth to another, even the most re mote. Instantaneously, or practically eo. Sound travels worse than a snail's pace as compared with light, going only about 1,100 feet In a second, or about a mllu In five seconds, or twelve miles In a minute. These facts are no ticed, though not always understood, by any one who sees a gun fired only a few hundred yards away. The flash and the puff of smoke are seen Instan taneously; the report of the gun al ways conies perceptibly later, the time Intervening being greater or less, ac cording to the distance. Cntchlnnr the Harlr Spider. One must be nn early riser If he would photograph a spider's web, for the delicate fabric must be taken when the dew is yet on it, so that the out lines will be In sharp relief. The best success Is obtained when the webs are on pine trees, and spiders seem to favor those trees because of the shel ter they afford. Look on the leaBt ex posed side of the tree for your web, for Instinct teaches the little creatures to make their homes where the strong winds do not strike. In taking the picture the lens should be brought very near the web, In order to make the threads as large as possible. I have photographed a spider's web with a 4 by G camera and with n 04 by 8Vi Instrument, having equally good suc cess In each case. It Is well to have a rubber focusing clotli and to keep it over the camera all the time, for the person who hunts spiders' webs early In the morning must be prepared for dampness. Suburban Life. The Term "Greenhorn." The term "greenhorn" originated lu this way: The pioneers of the west were much given to hunting deer. It was n fact known to early settlors that when tho horn of a fawn began to grow there was a ring of green hair around tho spot. It was considered a disgraceful thing for a hunter to kill n fawn, a cruel uct, and the killing time was regulated by the growth of the horn. There was a sort of unwritten law that no one should kill a male fawn before Its horn could be seen. A person who was so unthoughtful as to kill a deer under the proper ago was called a "greenhorn." He was so named because the young horn of the deer and the hair around It were still groeu. The use of the appellation gradually spread until It was applied to all raw or inexperienced youths or persons easily Imposed upon. I'epya and the Cook Maid. There was a servant problem in the seventeenth century, but It was solved in a rough and ready fashion. Tepys records on April 12, 10C7, that he came home, "saw my door and hatch open, left so by Luce, our cook maid, which so vexed mo thnt I did give her a kick in our entry and offered a blow nt her." Two days afterward (Lord's day) Tcpys writes this: "Took out my wife and the two Morcers and two of our maids, Barker and Jane, and over the water to the Jamaica house, where I never was before, and there the girls did run for wagers over the bowling green, and there with much pleasure spent little, and so home." Luce was not there, but tho other maids were treated as members of the family. Small Colon. The nutives of the Malay peninsula have in use tlie very smallest current coin In the world. It Is a sort of wafer made from the resinous juice of a tree and Is worth about one ten thousandth of a penny. The smallest metal coin In circulation at the present day Is the Portuguese three rein piece, worth twelve oue-hundredths of a pen ny. Tho smallest coin circulating of ficially in any part of the British em pire is the fivo millcsima piece of Gibraltar, worth about half a farthing. Saved Hla Own Name. After a recent bank holiday lu Lon don one ot the police courts the next morning had among its "drunk and disorderly" prisoners a man who said he was William Shakespeare. "Is that your real name," asked the Judge, "or Just your nom de guerre?" "Well, your honor," replied the prisoner, "It is true that I was not christened William Shakespeare, but, you see, I hated to bring dishonor and disgrace upon a re spected name." How She Gneaned. Landlady That new boarder is either married or a widower. Daugh terWhy, mamma, he says he is a bachelor. Landlady Don't you believe it. When he opens his pocketbook to pay his bill he always turns bis back to me. Disappointed. Newed Alas, I am a disappointed man. My wlfo cannot sing. Oldwed Cnu't slug! Why, man, that ought to be a cause for rejoicing. You are to bo congratulated. Newed Yes; but "io trouble is she thinks she can. YOUTH IS CONTAGIOUS. And YonnB Wives, It la Calmed, Be Jnvenate Old llnnbanda. "Strange statistics," said an insur ance agent, "are collected in my busi ness. "I havo found that tlie more times n man marries tlie younger In comparison with himself ho wantB his wlfo to be. For instance, his first wife on the aver age Is four years younger than ho. Ills Hocond is ten. His third Is twenty or thirty. "What do these statistics prove? Do thoy prove that as a man gains In years and experience he finds that It is best, for many reasons, to be almost as old as his wife's father, or do they only prove that as men approach old ago they aro more foolish than they were In youth? "Old X., aged seventy, with a third wife of twenty-three, said on this head the other day: " 'You can't marry a girl too young. Tho younger slio Is the longer she'll keep her henlth and strength and beauty. Furthermore, the older you aro the more respect she'll have for you. She'll reverence you and obey you as she would her own father or grand father.' "Young wives rejuvenate old hus bands," tho Insurance agent ended. "Thoy make these old follows dress younger, talk younger, act younger and feel younger. Youth Is contagious. A young wife Is believed to prolong an old husband's life. If a man of seventy insured lu my company should marry a girl of twenty, I'd consider him n bet ter risk by 8 per cent than ho had been before." Philadelphia Bulletin. A CAUTIOUS ELEPHANT. The Sitancltr I)IniIi: nl hy the Ani mal When ur (( iilkH nil. One elephant which nn ollicer of the Royal artillery lent to ns:ist In extri cating some camels which were being engulfed In the quicksands showed nil amount of sagacity which was positive ly marvelous. It was with tho utmost difficulty that we could get him to go near enough to attach a drag rope to oue camel 1 wanted to rescue. In splto of our being about fifty yards from tho bank of the river, ho evinced the great est anxiety, while his movements wero made with extreme caution. Despite coaxing, per.iuaslve remon strance and at last a sluwer of heavy blows dealt upon his head by tho exas perated mahout, this elephant stub bornly refused to go where he wns wanted, but with his trunk shoved out In front of him kept feeling his way with his ponderous feet, placing them before him slowly, deliberately and me thodically, treading all the while with the velvety softness of a cat and tak ing only one step at a time. Then sud denly he would break out Into a sup pressed kind of shriek and retreat backward In great haste. When tlie animal had nearly complet ed a circuit of the ground with tho same caution and deliberation, he ad vanced to within ten yards of tho poor camel, but not another Inch would ho move, though several men were walk ing between him and the camel with out any signs of the ground giving way.-"The Camel," Major A. O. Leon ard. A Dnllr MyBtery. A man whose income Is JfoO a day lunching alone In a fifteen cent restau rant and a clerk whose income is $30 -a mouth lunching with a young woman In a restaurant where the cash register doesn't ring up anything under $1. Which Is causo .nnd which is effect? Does the flfty-doilar-a-day man lunch thus cheaply that he may be reminded of troubles on earth, or does the fifty-doliar-a-montli mnn dine thus expen sively because he wants to forget? Or Is the one a fifty-dollar-n-dny nan be cause ho Is careful ami the other a fifty-dollar-a-month man because he is a spendthrift?-St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Senltlvenefi of Plant. Dnrwln gave It as his opinion, that some plants can see, and an Indian botanist relates some curious Incidents which tend to verify the belief. Ob serving one morning thnt the tendrils of a convolvulus on his veranda had decidedly leaned over toward his leg as he lay In an attitude of repose, he tried a series of experiments with a long pole, placing it in such a position' that the leaves would have to tarn away from the light In order to reach It. In every case ho found that the tendrils set themselves visibly toward the pole and in a few hours had twined themselves closely around it. Animals and Flesh Eating. Arguing agaiust tlie eating of meat. an English writer remarks: "Almost. any animal can be made to eat flesh, The kangaroo has canine teeth. Horses, inen nnd sheep may be taught to eat ilesh. Norwegian cows have been known to eat lie.;h. Goldsmith saw a sheep eat flesh. A ca.'nlvor sheep Is now In Loudon. Spallanzanl has shown that a pigeon may be made to live on flesh and an eagle on bread." Xothlns Left bat the Bark. "lie belongs to one of our oldest families, but he Is a consumptive. He coughs dreadfully." "les, he says all he ever got from the family tree was the bark." I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers