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The Herald debuted its Sunday edition on 12 April 1992. In 1995, The Lethbridge Herald was the first Alberta newspaper to introduce an Internet edition. On 6 September 1996, it switched to full morning delivery. [2] In 2011, Alta Newspaper Group published the biweekly Lethbridge Journal. [4]
Carberry – Carberry News Express; Dauphin – Dauphin Herald; Flin Flon – The Reminder; Gimli – The Express Weekly News; Minnedosa – The Minnedosa Tribune; Neepawa – Neepawa Banner, Neepawa Press; Portage la Prairie – Central Plains Herald-Leader; Powerview-Pine Falls – Winnipeg River Echo; Richer – Dawson Trail Dispatch; Rivers ...
As such, deaths that lack documentation such as numerous law enforcement deaths prior to Confederation, and those police officers who died in the Halifax Explosion and Lower Canada Rebellion cannot be included. Additionally, due to the dynamic nature of this list, it requires regular edits to keep it up to date.
Includes: The Calgary Herald & Calgary Daily Herald, Calgary Eye Opener (1902–1922), Edmonton Bulletin & Edmonton Daily Bulletin, The Morning Albertan, The Camrose Canadian, The Olds Gazette, Claresholm Local Press, Nanton News, Lethbridge Herald & Lethbridge Daily Herald, The Morning Bulletin, The Plain Dealer and others.
Lethbridge Sun Times is a weekly paper in the Lethbridge, Alberta, area, with a circulation of 24,000 in 2007. The paper is part of Alta Newspaper Group , the same company that publishes and distributes the daily Lethbridge Herald .
The following notable deaths occurred in 2025. Names are reported under the date of death, in alphabetical order. A typical entry reports information in the following sequence: Name, age, country of citizenship at birth, subsequent nationality (if applicable), what subject was noted for, cause of death (if known), and a reference.
However, he arrived in Lethbridge by plane on the morning of the first game, [3] and scored four goals and an assist, as his heads-up hockey and "fast break-aways kept the crowd in a dither." [ 4 ] The Monarchs won the series in two games, and McMillan was the high scorer with six goals and an assist. [ 5 ]
Crawford was sentenced in 1981 to ten years' imprisonment for manslaughter in the killing of Mary Jane Serloin, in Lethbridge, Alberta. He was released from prison in 1989. [2] While under police surveillance, Crawford sexually assaulted Theresa Kematch, [3] who was herself arrested, while Crawford was not. [2]