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Lake Sun Leader [97] of Camdenton, Missouri. Lake Area News Focus, weekly, of Osage Beach, Missouri; WestSide Star, weekly, of Laurie, Missouri; The Rolla Daily News [98] of Rolla, Missouri. St. James Leader-Journal, weekly, of St. James, Missouri; Four State Area (Joplin area) The Carthage Press [99] of Carthage, Missouri; The Morning Sun [100 ...
Daily Commercial Bulletin and Missouri Literary Register (1836–1838) [8] Daily Commercial Bulletin (1838–1841) [ 9 ] Die Gasconade Zeitung ( Hermann ) (1873-187?) [ 10 ]
The Carthage Press was an American daily newspaper publisheded in Carthage, Missouri.It was owned by GateHouse Media until August 28, 2018. In September 2018, RH Media Group, a locally owned media company, announced they would be taking over publication of The Carthage Press with the first print issue in October.
Burkburnett Informer Star: Burkburnett: Daniel Walker 1908 Thursday 845 Burnet Bulletin: Burnet: Moser Community Media 1873 Wednesday 4,412 Citizens Gazette: Burnet: 1991 Wednesday 516 Burleson County Tribune: Caldwell: L.M. Preuss III 1884 Thursday 2,688 The Cameron Herald: Cameron: Moser Community Media 1860 Thursday 1,290 The Canadian Record ...
Sep. 11—CARTHAGE, Mo. — An entire generation of people born after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon are becoming adults, and that makes remembering the ...
Samuel Burk Burnett was born on January 1, 1849, in Bates County, Missouri, [1] [2] to parents originally from Virginia. [3] His father, Jeremiah Burnett, was a farmer; his mother was Mary (Turner) Burnett. [2] He had a brother, Bruce Burnett, who later became a rancher in his own right. [4]
The first known African American newspaper in Missouri was the Welcome Friend of St. Louis, which was in circulation by 1870. [1] Yet the first surviving issue of any such newspaper dates from 20 years later in 1890, when the sole surviving issue of The American Negro of Springfield was published. [2]
The Boots Motel, a historic U.S. Route 66 motor hotel in Carthage, Missouri, opened in 1939 as the Boots Court at 107 S. Garrison Avenue.. It served travellers at the "crossroads of America" (US 66 and U.S. Route 71, the major roads of that era) [3] and was built in streamline moderne and art deco architectural style, its roofline and walls accented in black Carrara glass and green neon. [4]