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The Lunenburg Progress Enterprise was a weekly community newspaper published on Nova Scotia’s South Shore by Lighthouse Publishing Ltd, one of the last family-owned newspapers in Canada. On May 3, 2011, the Bridgewater Bulletin and the Progress Enterprise merged to become one single paper, the Lunenburg County Progress Bulletin. [1]
Only The Progress Enterprise in Lunenburg, founded by E.I. Nash in 1876, and The Bulletin in Bridgewater, founded by C.J. Cragg in 1888, survived. Margaret and Ralph Hennigar purchased the newspapers and printing business in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Lighthouse Publishing is one of the few remaining family-owned newspaper operations in ...
He became the publisher of the Bridgewater Enterprise and then the Lunenburg Progress, later amalgamating the two newspapers as the Lunenburg Progress-Enterprise. Duff was also involved in fishing and was president of the Lunenburg Marine Railway Company and the Lunenburg Mutual Marine Insurance Company. He was mayor of Lunenburg from 1916 to ...
Lunenburg – The Progress Enterprise; Middleton – The Annapolis County Spectator; Parrsboro – The Citizen-Record; Pictou – The Advocate; Port Hawkesbury – The Reporter; Shelburne – The Coast Guard; Springhill – The Record; Tatamagouche – The Light; Windsor – The Hants Journal; Yarmouth – The Sou'Wester, Nova News Now
He said the disruption to the community risks setting back academic progress made since the pandemic, and laughed at the suggestion violent gang members are somehow sitting "criss-cross applesauce ...
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After the storm, Lunenburg Progress Enterprise publisher William Duff was one of few people calling for schooners to be supplied with transmission and receiving radio equipment, while there were a few requests for a rescue ship to be stationed at the fishing banks on standby should other ships become distressed. However, little was done to ...
The president's mass deportation plans could funnel huge profits to private prison companies like Geo and CoreCivic.