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Pages in category "Defunct newspapers published in Illinois" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Naujienos (socialist newspaper) (Lithuanian Daily News) – Chicago Nedelni Hlasatel (formerly Denni Hlasatel ) – Berwyn Sonntagpost und Milwaukee deutsche Zeitung – Chicago
Daily American (Illinois) Daily Chronicle (Illinois) Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, Illinois) Daily Journal (Illinois) The Daily Leader; The Daily Ledger; The Daily Register; The Daily Republican; Daily Review Atlas; Den Danske Pioneer; The Day Book; Decatur Tribune; Desplaines Valley News; The Dispatch / The Rock Island Argus; Du Quoin ...
Guitarist Freddie Salem, who was best known for his tenure with the Southern rock band Outlaws, has died. He was 70. Salem died of complications due to cancer, Outlaws announced in a Facebook post ...
Salem is located in central Marion County. U.S. Route 50 passes through the city center as Main Street, leading east 26 miles (42 km) to Flora and west 23 miles (37 km) to Carlyle.
The Register-News traced its origin back to 1884, when the Mt. Vernon Daily Register was launched. The Mt. Vernon Daily News was founded in 1891, and the two papers merged in 1920 to create the Register-News, which published six days a week until cost-saving measures were employed in 2017 that reduced the newspaper to printing just three days a ...
In 2005, Hollinger merged the 80-year-old Lerner Newspapers chain into Pioneer Press, Pioneer's first real inroads into the city of Chicago. Despite announcements by Publisher Larry Green that Pioneer intended to "grow" the Lerner Papers, over the course of the next six months, Pioneer dumped the venerable Lerner name, shut down most of its editions and laid off most of its employees.
The newspaper was founded in 1831 as the Sangamo Journal by William Bailhache and Edward Baker, and describes itself as "the oldest newspaper in Illinois". As such, it and its editor, Edward L. Baker, supported the political career of the Springfield-based Abraham Lincoln in the years before the American Civil War; in fact, it was in the Journal ' s office that Lincoln and his friends waited ...