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Suspended in 1843, later revived as the North Arkansas [19] Benton County Gazette: Gravette: 1908 [20] Benton County Journal: Bentonville 1886 1886 [21] Benton County Gazette: Gravette 1911 c. 1922 [20] Benton County Record: Bentonville 1916 [22] Benton County Sun: Bentonville 1890 1921 Merged into the Benton County Record [23] Bentonville ...
Unlike these metropolitan newspapers, a weekly newspaper will cover a smaller area, such as one or more smaller towns or an entire county. Most weekly newspapers follow a similar format as daily newspapers (i.e., news, sports, family news, obituaries). However, the primary focus is on news from the publication's coverage area.
They continued to publish the American in the morning and the Times Record in the evening, maintaining separate editorial staff. On Sundays, the two combined into one edition—the Southwest Times Record. On March 23, 1940, Parks and Carney sold the American and the Times Record to 33-year-old Donald W. Reynolds, owner of the Okmulgee Daily Times.
A 23-year-old nurse, mother to a 10-month-old girl, is among the four people killed in Friday’s mass shooting at an Arkansas grocery store.. Callie Weems died when rounds and fragments from a ...
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 ...
The Northwest Arkansas Times was formerly owned by the Thomson Corporation, who sold it to Hollinger in 1995; Hollinger sold it on to Community Publishers Inc., owned by Jim Walton, in 1999. [1] [2] In 2005, WEHCO Media bought the Northwest Arkansas Times and the Benton County Daily Record from CPI. [3]
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.
Elias Alford Rowan was born on December 31, 1837, near Crystal Springs, in Copiah County, Mississippi. [1] [2] [3] His parents were Samuel Rowan, who was born in Robeson County, North Carolina and was of French ancestry, and Jeannette (Alford) Rowan, of Scottish ancestry. [3] He received his early education in the country schools of Copiah ...