Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Times was sold to the owners of the Warren Sheaf later that year who had printed The Times for a short time after the second fire. In 1927, The Times was consolidated with rival paper, The Tribune. Former owner of The Tribune, William Dahlquist, stayed on as editor and part owner of The Times.
Even more elaborate, was an article entitled "Aged Buzzard Thought Dead" by the Warren Sheaf that not only claimed that the belled buzzard was thought to have died after escaping entanglement from its leather strap, which a sleigh bell had been affixed, but added that the belled buzzard had been belled during the War of 1812 and was "present at ...
In an effort to attract customers and challenge the competition, store managers changed the display windows weekly. Furthermore, the Taralseths relied heavily on advertising through mailings and advertisements in newspapers. The local newspaper Warren Sheaf boasted that the store was the equal of any in the Twin Cities. [4]
Warren is a city in and the county seat of Marshall County, ... A Story of 75 Eventful Years, Warren, Minn: Sheaf Printing, 1956. External links. City of Warren;
In 1913, French coincidentally ran into Joe Eversole's widow, Susan Combs Eversole, in the lobby of a hotel in Elkatawa, Kentucky (near Jackson, Kentucky).With Mrs. Eversole was her youngest son, Harry C. Eversole, then 28 years old.
The French–Eversole feud was a long-running dispute between two American families which occurred primarily from 1887 to 1894 in the mountains of southeastern Kentucky, mainly in the town of Hazard in Perry County.
Frederick John Bahr (1837–1885) was a German inventor who purchased Lover's Leap on Wills Mountain, in Cumberland, Maryland, in 1860.He is best remembered for his paddle-wheel-powered blimps he attempted to fly in the mountains.
Josiah Henry Combs was a lawyer and judge in Perry County, Kentucky.He was one of the central players involved in the French–Eversole Feud from 1887 to 1894 in Perry County.