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News and Tribune five days per week (previously two separate dailies) of Jeffersonville, Indiana and New Albany, Indiana; The Goshen News five days per week (previously daily) of Goshen, Indiana; Greensburg Daily News three days per week (previously five) of Greensburg, Indiana; Hancock County Image weekly of Greenfield, Indiana
The News-Herald began as the Willoughby Independent on April 18, 1879, was renamed Willoughby Republican in 1920, and became the Lake County News-Herald in 1935. Its offices moved from downtown Willoughby to 38879 Mentor Avenue (U.S. Route 20) in 1950, then to its current location, 7085 Mentor Avenue, adjacent to Mentor, after 1973. [2]
Several newspapers are named The News Herald or The News-Herald, including: The Marshfield News-Herald; The News Herald (Panama City) The News-Herald (Southgate, Michigan) The News Herald (North Carolina) The News-Herald (Franklin, Pennsylvania) The News-Herald (Vancouver, Canada) The News-Herald – in Lake County, Ohio; News Herald (Ohio ...
Unlike these metropolitan newspapers, a weekly newspaper will cover a smaller area, such as one or more smaller towns or an entire county. Most weekly newspapers follow a similar format as daily newspapers (i.e., news, sports, family news, obituaries). However, the primary focus is on news from the publication's coverage area.
AIM Media Indiana (formerly Home News Enterprises) is an American printer and publisher of daily and weekly newspapers, based in Columbus, Indiana. Its flagship newspaper is The Republic in Columbus, and its other newspaper holdings also cover small cities and counties south and east of Indianapolis .
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The sale included The Winchester Star, Daily News-Record, The Page News and Courier, The Warren Sentinel, The Shenandoah Valley-Herald and The Valley Banner. [ 8 ] On January 1, 2022, Ogden Newspapers took over Swift Communications , which has publications in Colorado, Utah, Nevada, and California.
The newspaper dates back to the founding of the Indiana Herald in 1848. It was renamed to Huntington Herald in 1887, and in 1930 it merged with Huntington Press and became the Huntington Herald-Press. In the early 1960s, Eugene C. Pulliam, owner of Central Newspapers, Inc., sold the paper to his son-in-law James C. Quayle.