Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
It was known as the Reedley Exponent until July, 2019, when it merged with the Dinuba Sentinel and the Sanger Herald. At the time of the merger, the Herald was the oldest business in Sanger. The Sanger Herald was founded in 1889, the Reedley Exponent was founded in 1891. It has a current circulation of 3,400 copies and it is edited by Jon Earnest.
Alcona County Herald: On March 10, 1910, the newspaper changed its name to the Alcona County Herald, with Rola E. Prescott as the publisher. Interestingly, it was the only country weekly in the United States to have its own cartoonist, providing readers with lively cartoons on county subjects in every issue.
Los Angeles Herald-Examiner (1962–1989) [12] Los Angeles Herald Express (1931–1962) [13] Los Angeles Mirror; Los Angeles Record [14] Los Angeles Saturday Night (1920–1934, illustrated weekly by Samuel Travers Clover) Los Angeles Star / La Estrella de Los Ángeles (Bilingual English/Spanish, 1851–1879) Napa Sentinel; The Nevada Journal ...
Tri-City Herald staff. October 15, 2024 at 3:00 AM. Jordan C. Bernard. Jordan Chase Bernard, 27, of Kennewick, died Sept. 28 in Kennewick. He was born in Vancouver, and lived in the Tri-Cities for ...
Waters was born in Sanger, California on 8 September 1922. [1] He graduated with honors from Sanger High School, winning the Bausch+Lomb Honorary Science Award for chemistry. [2] Waters joined the U.S. Army in 1942 and trained to be a pilot during World War II. He was later deployed to the 386th Infantry division in northern France. [1]
Francis Robicsek (July 4, 1925 – April 3, 2020) was a Hungarian- American cardio-thoracic surgeon in Charlotte, North Carolina. [1] Before moving to America, he was one of the surgeons to perform Hungary’s first heart valve replacement surgeries in 1954.
Angela Hutchinson Hammer (Nov. 30, 1870 – April 9, 1952) was an American newspaperwoman. She was born in 1870, and entered the newspaper industry in the late 1890s. Hammer founded several newspapers, the most prominent being the Casa Grande Di
The Sanger Lumber Company built an incline hoist to transport lumber from the Converse Basin mill to the 6,700 foot summit of Hoist Ridge. [23] The hoist lifted railroad cars loaded with lumber out of the Converse Basin and up to the summit. From there, the cable was transferred to the opposite end of the train.