Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Figures from the Cabinet’s Kentucky Center for Statistics show nearly 2.1 million residents are in the workforce, up more than 4,700 from New job opportunities lead to slight uptick in Kentucky ...
Kentucky Publishing, Inc. The Advocate-Messenger: Danville: 1940 Tue–Sat Boone Newspapers: Created by merger of The Kentucky Advocate and The Danville Daily–Messenger: The Anderson News: Lawrenceburg: 1877 Weekly Paxton Media Group: The Banner–Republic: Morgantown: 1885 Weekly Jobe Publishing, Inc. Barren County Progress: Glasgow: 1882 ...
The Mountain Eagle is a local weekly newspaper published in Whitesburg, Kentucky. It is the main newspaper of Letcher County, Kentucky and one of the primary newspapers of the Eastern Kentucky Coalfield. It was published by Thomas E. Gish until his death in November 2008, and edited by his son, Benjamin T. Gish.
Paxton Media Group of Paducah, Kentucky, is a privately held media company with holdings that include newspapers and a TV station, WPSD-TV in Paducah. David M. Paxton is president and CEO.
The Anderson News is a weekly newspaper, founded in 1877, serving Lawrenceburg, Kentucky and the rest of Anderson County, Kentucky. [1]It is published on Wednesdays and has a circulation of approximately 6,000, with a Monday advertising supplement called The Anderson News Extra, featuring display advertising and local and syndicated news content, with a circulation of 11,500.
The Messenger (Madisonville, Kentucky) Middlesboro Daily News; Monroe County Citizen; The Mountain Eagle (newspaper) N. News-Democrat & Leader; News Journal (Kentucky) O.
March 22, 1902 issue of the Kentucky Reporter of Owensville. Alice Allison Dunnigan, pioneering journalist whose newspaper career began at the Rising Sun and Globe Journal in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. [1] This is a list of African American newspapers that have been published in Kentucky. It includes both current and historical newspapers.
The 1920s began with the Herald's founder remaining in control as publisher.John B. Horton had been serving as the editor, and the Herald had also carried over from the previous decade a habit of weekly printing "The Herald's Platform for Hazard," still keeping in line with the publishing every Thursday, the Herald remained the county's main source of information, and in 1922 moved into a new ...