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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 ...
In particular, this list considers a newspaper to be a weekly newspaper if the newspaper is published once, twice, or thrice a week. A weekly newspaper is usually a smaller publication than a larger, daily newspaper (such as one that covers a metropolitan area). Unlike these metropolitan newspapers, a weekly newspaper will cover a smaller area ...
Mt. Vernon Register-News - three days per week (previously daily) of Mount Vernon, Illinois, and its sister weekly, McLeansboro Times-Leader weekly of McLeansboro, Illinois, both closed in February 2018
Shaw Media purchased The Herald-News from Sun-Times Media in 2013; [31] The Fontanelle Observer and Adair County Free Press in 2017, [32] The Ottawa Times from Small Newspaper Group in 2018; [33] and the La Salle NewsTribune and Indiana Agri-News in 2019. [34]
The paper was founded in 1904 as the Joliet Herald. In 1913, its founder, Ira Clifton Copley, purchased the Joliet News, a paper that had been founded in 1877. In 1915, the two papers were merged producing the Herald-News. In 2000, Copley Press sold the publication to Hollinger International (later the Sun-Times Media Group).
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.
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]