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Allegheny Mountain Echo and Johnstown Commercial Advertiser and Intelligencer (Johnstown) (1853–1861) [14] Allentown Chronicle and News and Evening Item (1921–1923) [15] Allentown Critic (1884–1889) [16] Allentown Daily Leader (1893–1903) [17] Allentown Evening Item (1915–1921) [18]
The Almanac is a weekly newspaper in the South Hills region of Pittsburgh and northern Washington County, Pennsylvania, USA. It is published by the Observer Publishing Company of Washington, Pennsylvania. It is delivered free of charge to most houses in its distribution area.
In 1967, the newspapers merged into the Observer–Reporter. In 1981, the two newspapers merged into a morning-only paper. Also in 1981, the company bought controlling interest in The Advertiser and The Almanac from Richard Barnes and formed Cornerstone Publishing Co. In 1982, Eleanor Vosburg sold The Burgettstown Enterprise to the company.
McMurray is a census-designated place (CDP) in Peters Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania. The population was 4,736 at the 2020 census. The population was 4,736 at the 2020 census. It is part of the Pittsburgh metropolitan area .
To this day, the Star-Bulletin's Dec. 7, 1941, "WAR" edition remains among the most famous front pages in American newspaper history. In today's announcement, Star-Advertiser publisher Francis ...
Founded by M.A. Foltz, Public Opinion remained in the Foltz family until 1964, when it was purchased by McClure Newspapers. In 1971, Public Opinion became the twenty-seventh newspaper owned by Gannett, [1] which publishes USA Today and the weekly newspaper magazine USA Weekend, will be replaced by Parade (magazine).
This newspaper subsequently underwent additional name changes, dropping the Pennsylvania Packet prefix in 1791 and becoming Dunlap's American Daily Advertiser (1791–1793), Dunlap and Claypoole's American Daily Advertiser (1793–1795), and Claypoole's American Daily Advertiser (1796-1800).
The newspaper started in 1804 as the Pennsylvania Correspondent and Farmers' Advertiser, a weekly newspaper in Doylestown. In 1876, the Bucks County Intelligencer moved to an ornate building at 10 E. Court St. in Doylestown, where it was located until 1973. In 1886, the newspaper became a daily, which called itself The Doylestown Daily ...