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Booker News: Booker: 1927 Thursday 497 Borger News-Herald: Borger: Horizon Publications, Inc. 1926 Daily (ex Mon Sat) 435 The Bowie News: Bowie: 1922 Wednesday / Saturday 3,717 Kinney County Post: Brackettville: 2010 Thursday 957 Brady Standard-Herald: Brady: 1909 Wednesday 1,460 Breckenridge American: Breckenridge: Moser Community Media 1920 ...
1949 Became daily newspaper, name changes to "The Kerrville Daily Times" 1976 Weekend edition begins print; 2004 Sam P. Braswell, who spent much of his life working in the newspaper business and co–owned and operated the Kerrville Daily Times from 1948 to 1955, has died. He was 93. [2]
The newspaper published its first daily edition on Aug. 3, 1903. It dropped “and” from its name in 1915. [4] Edwards, who served one term in the Texas House of Representatives (1922-24) and ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor, was a president of the Texas Press Association.
The paper's focus is on local news in Marion County, Texas. [2] On August 21, 2020, it was announced that V. Hugh Lewis, publisher of the Marion County Herald, and Austin Lewter, a community newspaper publisher, purchased the Jefferson Jimplecute from Strube-Palmer Media. Lewis and Lewter, both having been editors of the Jimplecute at varying ...
The Herald Democrat is a daily newspaper located in the twin cities of Sherman and Denison, Texas, in the United States.The Herald Democrat serves all of Grayson and Fannin County, Texas; parts of Collin, Cooke, Denton, Delta, Lamar and Hunt County, Texas; and part of Bryan County, Oklahoma.
A Lehigh County judge on Wednesday sentenced 46-year-old Bryan Freeman and 45-year-old David Freeman to terms of 60 years to life. Bryan and David were 17 and 16, respectively, and authorities ...
Lilly Lawrence/Getty Images for The Artists Project Melanie Wilking was hopeful about where she stood with sister Miranda Derrick before she slammed the documentary Dancing for the Devil: The 7M ...
As the Kerrville Times exclaimed in 1933: "Who said that a woman could not edit an interesting, up-to-the-minute newspaper!" [4] Emma Belsey sold her financial interest in the paper to her son, George Belsey, in 1953, [3] but remained connected with the publication until the early 1960s. [5]