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A pennysaver (or free ads paper, Friday ad or shopper) is a free community periodical available in North America (typically weekly or monthly publications) that advertises items for sale. Frequently pennysavers are actually called The Pennysaver (variants include Penny Saver , Penny-saver , PennySaver ).
Trade Lines is a pennysaver-style free weekly newspaper consisting exclusively of classified and display advertising. It has been serving selected markets in Berrien and Van Buren counties in southwestern Michigan since 1949.
Harte Hanks was formerly associated with the publication of weekly shopper publications, [15] with a circulation at one time of 13 million weekly in 1,100 separate editions of The PennySaver and The Flyer in California and Florida, respectively. [16] [17] The company sold The Flyer to Coda Media in 2012, [18] having owned it since 1983. [19]
A few years later Art and Dorothy Mazenauer started the Grand Island PennySaver in 1950. At some point the couple sold the paper to their son Skip Mazenauer who went on to buy the Island Dispatch in 1978. At that time the company Niagara Frontier Publications began. Mazenauer created the Niagara-Wheatfield Tribune in 1985. [1]
A total market coverage, or TMC, is a piece of advertising that reaches all households in a market. Traditionally in most of North America newspapers provided total market coverage, as almost all households would subscribe to the main local paper.
This is a list of newspapers published by Digital First Media, the successor to 21st Century Media.. The company owns daily and weekly newspapers, and other print media properties and newspaper-affiliated local Websites in the U.S. states of Connecticut, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey, organized in six geographic "clusters": [1]
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The Dresdner Anzeiger was probably the oldest, and in any case the longest (1730–1945) existing daily newspaper in Dresden.. The intellectual originator was the council auctioneer Johann Christian Crell [], who on 30 March 1730 petitioned the king and elector Augustus II the Strong to give him the privilege for a weekly pennysaver, a "Frage- und Antwort-Zettul". [1]