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Allentown Chronicle and News and Evening Item (1921–1923) [15] Allentown ... Gazette of the United States and Daily Evening Advertiser. D., June 12, 1794 – June ...
By 1996, the Daily Evening Item was the last family-owned newspaper on the North Shore, its chief competitor, The Salem Evening News, having been bought the year before by Essex County Newspapers, part of the Ottaway division of Dow Jones & Company, which already published four other dailies up the coast.
By 1947 the Bulletin was the nation's biggest evening daily, with 761,000 readers. [2] Along with the Record , it also acquired the rights to buy Philadelphia's third-oldest radio station, WCAU . In a complex deal, the Bulletin sold off WPEN and WCAU's FM sister, changed WPEN-FM's call letters to WCAU-FM , and the calls for its under ...
This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf, gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.
Allentown Evening Item (1915–1921) [446] Allied Mercury: or The Independent Intelligencer (Philadelphia) ... Daily Evening Mercury (Harrisburg) (1873–1874) [559]
The Daily Item is the name of the following American newspapers: The Daily Item, Clinton, Massachusetts; The Daily Item, Lynn, Massachusetts; The Wakefield Daily Item, Wakefield, Massachusetts; The Daily Item (Port Chester), Port Chester, New York; The Daily Item, Sunbury, Pennsylvania; The Daily Item, Sumter, South Carolina
The Sunbury Daily (founded 1872) and The Evening Item (1893) merged July 1, 1936. Publishing five afternoons per week, The Daily Item was owned by the Dewart family and other local investors until April 15, 1970, when Ottaway Community Newspapers purchased it. Ottaway streamlined and upgraded the newspaper.
On October 7, 1845, Huse, Joseph Bragdon, and Alfred M. Berry began publishing the Newburyport Advertiser, a semi-weekly newspaper.Berry left the paper on January 1, 1847 and Hues and Bragdon continued to publish it until July 10, 1849 when they discontinued the paper in favor of the Daily Evening Union, a daily evening journal published by Huse, Bragdon, Charles Nason, and James C. Peabody.