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The Daily Echo is the name of two daily tabloid newspapers in southern England owned by Newsquest. Bournemouth Daily Echo , covers south-east Dorset Southern Daily Echo , covers Southampton and Hampshire, excluding Portsmouth
The Southern Daily Echo, more commonly known as the Daily Echo or simply The Echo, is a regional tabloid newspaper based in Southampton, covering the county of Hampshire in the United Kingdom. The newspaper is owned by Newsquest, one of the largest publishers of local newspapers in the country, which is in turn owned by Gannett.
The Bournemouth Daily Echo, commonly known as the Daily Echo (a.k.a. the Bournemouth Echo), is a local newspaper that covers the area of southeast Dorset, England, including the towns Poole, Bournemouth and Christchurch.
The Moundsville Echo is a weekly newspaper serving Moundsville, West Virginia and surrounding Marshall County since 1891. [1] The paper had a circulation of 2,750 in 2016. It is owned by Moundsville Echo, LLC [2] and published by Charles M. Walton. [3] In 2024, the daily newspaper briefly closed and relaunched as a weekly published on Thursdays ...
The Sofia Echo, Bulgaria's national English-language newspaper; South Wales Echo, based in Cardiff, Wales; Echo Weekly, an alternative weekly newspaper based in Kitchener, Ontario; Bournemouth Daily Echo, based in Bournemouth, England; The Irish Echo, based in New York City; Southern Daily Echo, based in Hampshire, England; Echo (Azerbaijani ...
Described as "a well built man and appeared to be between 75 and 80 years of age, having an intelligent look, and a well-shaped head"; Daily Echo, 1912 Jerome (also spelled Jérôme) (c. 1830s – April 15, 1912) was the name given to an unidentified man discovered on the beach of Sandy Cove, Nova Scotia, on September 8, 1863. [1]
Bolton News; Bradford Telegraph & Argus; Colchester Evening Gazette; Daily Echo, Bournemouth; Dorset Echo; Eastern Daily Press, Norfolk; Echo, Essex; Evening Times ...
The Echo-News was bought by Boone Newspapers in 1990 and American Consolidated Media in 2000. ACM bought the free semiweekly Alice Journal in 2002 and renamed the paper the Alice Echo-News Journal. [2] In 2010, the paper switched to a tabloid format and reduced its output to three days a week (Wednesday, Friday, Sunday).