Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Arkansas News: Mountain Home 1897 [3] The Arkansas Traveler: Wittsburg: c. 1853: c. 1854 [30] The Arkansawyer: Stuttgart 1906 1915 Successor to Stuttgart Chronicle [48] The Arkansawyer: Stuttgart 1920 Combination of The Stuttgart Booster and Stuttgart Republican [51] The Ashley County Times: Hamburg 1865 1873 [38] The Ashley County Times ...
Mountain Home, Arkansas ... OCLC number: 1058046191 : Website: baxterbulletin.com: The Baxter Bulletin is a twice-weekly newspaper serving Mountain Home, Arkansas and ...
The Hot Springs Sentinel-Record is a newspaper in Hot Springs, Arkansas, currently privately owned by WEHCO Media, Inc.. Known often and/or historically as Sentinel-Record, or S-R, it emerged as the survivor as a daily newspaper out of multiple newspapers competing in Hot Springs in the late 1800s, which eventually merged in effect; the paper's lineage can be traced to the Daily Sentinel ...
Obituary of artist Thomas W. Bankes in the Gazette on 29 March 1906. During Reconstruction, a competitor arose by various names, under various editors, and with several different owners. In 1878, J.N. Smithee bought the newspaper, changed its name to the Arkansas Democrat, and went after lucrative state printing contracts held by the Gazette.
Mansfield is a city in Scott and Sebastian counties Arkansas, United States. The Sebastian County portion of the city is part of the Fort Smith, Arkansas - Oklahoma Metropolitan Statistical Area . As of the 2010 Census , the population was 1,139. [ 4 ]
Sometimes the prewritten obituary's subject outlives its author. One example is The New York Times' obituary of Taylor, written by the newspaper's theater critic Mel Gussow, who died in 2005. [7] The 2023 obituary of Henry Kissinger featured reporting by Michael T. Kaufman, who died almost 14 years earlier in 2010. [8]
The Arkansas Supreme Court rejected Vance's appeal on June 2, 2011. [22] Vance was also charged with the kidnapping and rape of Kristen Edwards on April 21, 2008, at her home in Marianna, Arkansas. [23] Before he fled with Edwards, the rapist stole her cell phone and charger, a video and $3 – all the cash she had with her at the time.
William Edward Woodruff (December 24, 1795 – June 19, 1885) was an American politician and publisher who served as the first state treasurer of Arkansas from 1836 to 1838. He also served as the 10th postmaster of Little Rock from 1845 to 1846. Woodruff was the first publisher of a major Arkansas newspaper. [1]