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Mount Pulaski Weekly News (Weekly News, pub.; 1988−1988) – Mt. Pulaski [64] Hometown Weekly News (Michael Lakin, pub.; 1988−1988) – Mt. Pulaski [65] Independent Free Press (Michael Lakin, pub.; 1988−1988) – Mt. Pulaski [66] Weekly Merchant (1987−1987) – Mt. Pulaski [67] Times News (Harry J. Wible, pub.; 1961−1988) – Mt ...
The Aspen Weekly Times' first issue was published April 23, 1881 when Aspen was a silver mining town, and the purpose of the newspaper was to bring news about the outside world to miners. The original owner was D.H. Waite & Co under the leadership of Davis Hanson Waite who sold the paper to B. Clark Wheeler in 1885 and later became Governor of ...
North Loop News; Northside News (1930s) Near North News; New Metro News; Norwood Review; Brookfield Enterprise / The Times (1932–1985) Residents' Journal; River North News; The Skeleton News; Times (1950s–2005) Uptown Action (1980–1985) Westside Journal; West Town Chicago Journal; West Town Free Press (1997–2002) Voice
GateHouse's largest weekly newspaper market is Massachusetts, where it owns more than 100 titles in and around Boston. Several of these newspapers cover more than one town, and WickedLocal maintains separate websites for each town.
The paper covers news of Berwyn, Cicero, Forest View and Stickney in western Cook County. The Berwyn Suburban Life is published by Suburban Life Media and owned by Shaw Media . Shaw Media's suburban group includes the Northwest Herald , Kane County Chronicle , Daily Chronicle of DeKalb, and The Herald-News of Joliet.
Greenup County News-Times weekly of Greenup, Kentucky, closed and merged with The Daily Independent in May 2020; Olive Hill Times weekly of Olive Hill, Kentucky, closed and merged with The Daily Independent in May 2020; Morehead News weekly of Morehead, Kentucky, closed and merged with The Daily Independent in May 2020
This newspaper's title and publishers changed several times before finally being bought by Judge S. W. Randall and renamed the Juliet Signal. [2] When, in 1845, local residents changed the spelling of Juliet, Ill. to Joliet, Randall changed the Juliet Signal's name to Joliet Signal. The last known issue of the Signal is dated April 7, 1893. [2]
In 2005, Hollinger merged the 80-year-old Lerner Newspapers chain into Pioneer Press, Pioneer's first real inroads into the city of Chicago. Despite announcements by Publisher Larry Green that Pioneer intended to "grow" the Lerner Papers, over the course of the next six months, Pioneer dumped the venerable Lerner name, shut down most of its editions and laid off most of its employees.