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Pekin Daily Times [36] of Pekin; TimesNewspapers weeklies: Chillicothe Times-Bulletin [37] of Chillicothe and Dunlap; Washington Times-Reporter [38] of Washington; Woodford Times [39] of Woodford County; East Peoria Times-Courier [40] of East Peoria; Morton Times-News [41] of Morton; Western Illinois (Forgottonia) The McDonough County Voice [42 ...
In fact, it’s a business the Carius family has known for over 70 years – over a decade longer than the Morton Pumpkin Festival has existed. Al and Salome Carius began business in 1951, and as ...
Austin Weekly News – Oak Park; Berwyn Suburban Life – Berwyn and Cicero; Bridgeport News – Chicago; The Chicago Crusader – Chicago; The Chicago Jewish Home – Chicago; Chicago Jewish News – Skokie
The Morton Pumpkin Festival is an annual four-day festival held in mid-September in Morton, Illinois since 1967. The event now draws more than 75,000 attendees annually. [ 1 ] It is organized and sponsored by the Morton Chamber of Commerce.
Morton is a village in Tazewell County, Illinois, United States. The population was 17,117 at the 2020 census . Morton is a suburb of Peoria , located southeast of Peoria, and is part of the Peoria Metropolitan Statistical Area .
Illinois Times is a weekly free newspaper (distributed every Thursday) based in Springfield, Illinois, United States. [1] Founded in 1975, the newspaper was acquired in 1977 by Fletcher Farrar Sr., a Mount Vernon businessman who employed his son, Fletcher, Jr. (Bud), as editor. The senior Farrar died in 1995; his son sold the paper two years later.
Morton Township is located in Tazewell County, Illinois, at T25N R3W. It is traversed by Interstate Routes 74 and 155, about 15 km (10 mi) southeast of Peoria, Illinois . As of the 2010 census, its population was 17,036 and it contained 7,246 housing units.
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.