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The Daily Courier is a newspaper for Yavapai County, Arizona, [2] owned by Western News & Info. [3]It has been in existence since 1882. [3] Western News & Info, Inc. publishes both print and online editions of The Daily Courier, featuring local, regional, national, and international news and opinions.
Arizona Citizen – Tucson 1870s – 1880s [18] See also: Arizona Weekly Citizen, Tucson Citizen, Arizona Daily Citizen. Arizona Copper Camp – Ray in the 1910s and 1920s [19] Arizona Daily Citizen – Tucson 1880s – 1900s [20] See also: Arizona Citizen, Tucson Citizen, Arizona Weekly Citizen. The Arizona Daily Orb – Bisbee 1890s – 1900s ...
First Prescott Courthouse, c. 1885 "Execution of a soldier of the 8th Infantry in Prescott, Arizona 1877" is the caption. In fact, it is the execution of Private James Malone of Company K 12th US Infantry in Prescott Arizona March 15, 1878, for his part in a January 1876 murder. [12]
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The station is owned by Sanford and Terry Cohen d/b/a Arizona's Hometown Radio Group and licensed to Prescott Valley Broadcasting Co. Inc. [1] [4] Its coverage area spans the Prescott/Prescott Valley/Chino Valley/Dewey-Humboldt Quad Cities area. KPPV is also heard via licensed FM booster on 106.9 in Cottonwood and Clarkdale, Arizona and via FM ...
Heliograph signaling. Prescott Valley (locally, PV) is located in central Arizona approximately 85 miles (137 km) north of Phoenix at 5,100 feet (1,600 m). elevation. PV has good access to Arizona State Route 89, SR-89A and SR-69, connecting to Interstates 17 and 40.
The Daily Courier or Daily Courier is the common name for a number of newspapers, including: Grants Pass Daily Courier; The Daily Courier; The Daily Courier in British Columbia; The Daily Courier (North Carolina) Daily Courier, of Connellsville, Pennsylvania, an edition of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
In 1975, Gila Printing, owned by Louis F. Long, sold the Graham County Guardian to Robert G. Gentry, who had published the Eastern Arizona Courier of Safford since 1967. [9] Gentry merged the two papers together to form the Eastern Arizona Courier and Graham County Guardian and then sold them in 1983 [10] to Wick Communications. [11]