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  2. Petfinder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petfinder

    Petfinder operates the largest online pet adoption website serving all of North America. [2] [3] The company reports that it currently lists “more than 315,000 adoptable pets from nearly 14,000 animal shelters and rescue groups.” [2] A commercial enterprise founded in 1996, it is now owned by Nestlé Purina PetCare Company and reports that it has facilitated more than 22 million pet ...

  3. Caskets, headstones and love: These 50 acres in Kansas City ...

    www.aol.com/caskets-headstones-love-50-acres...

    Wayside is one of two pet cemeteries in Kansas City. Rolling Acres opened in October 1973 and now has two locations, in the Northland and in south Kansas City. They are just two of some 700 pet ...

  4. Pet adoption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pet_adoption

    Online pet adoption sites have databases, searchable by the public, of pets being housed by thousands of animal shelters and rescue groups. A black cat waiting to be adopted. Because of the superstitions surrounding black cats, they are disproportionately more common in shelters than in the general population and less likely to be adopted than ...

  5. Kansas City Times - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_City_Times

    The Kansas City Times was a morning newspaper in Kansas City, Missouri, published from 1867 to 1990. The morning Kansas City Times , under ownership of the afternoon Kansas City Star , won two Pulitzer Prizes and was bigger than its parent when it was renamed Kansas City Star .

  6. Houston Post - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Houston_Post

    Despite their efforts, the original publication ceased in October 1884. The Houston Post was re-established with the merger of the Houston Morning Chronicle and the Houston Evening Journal on April 5, 1885. J. L. Watson was the business manager and Rienzi M. Johnston was the editor. Watson implemented the use of linotype machines to replace the ...

  7. Mary Hanford Ford - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Hanford_Ford

    The Kansas City Times obituary noted she had a brother, A.M. Finney, known from Charleston, West Virginia. [7] That would make her father Asahel Clark Finney, who spent the last working decade of his life as a partner in a Pennsylvania lumber company before moving to Kansas City. [5] Ford's mother was Elizabeth Mary Hanford Edson.