5 party poker

5 party poker Mobile Register is a daily newspaper serving the southwest Alabama counties of Mobile County and Baldwin County continuing its on-going mission to be "a better newspaper everyday" since its first incarnation in 1813, making it Alabamas oldest newspaper. The Nineteenth Century: Evolution and PurchasesThe Mobile Gazette was founded and began publication shortly after Mobile, Alabama

was captured by North American troops in April 1813 after 33 years under the Spanish. Another Mobile-based newspaper would begin publishing on December 10th, 1821 as The Mobile Commercial Register by former Boston, Massachusetts resident and Savannah, Georgia merchant Jonathan Battelle, along with John W. Townsend of a Montgomery, Alabama newspaper. One year later, the Gazette was taken over by the Register, making it a good purchase for one Thaddeus Sanford in 1828.

Under Sanford, the Mobile Patriot newspaper was bought out and became part of the daily Mobile Daily Commercial Register and Patriot in 1832. The Register is sold yet again in 1837, this time to Epapheas Kibby and Mobile attorney John Forsyth Jr, who would have a 40-year relationship with the paper until his death in 1877. The New York Times York Times eulogy for Forsyth included the phrase, "most

important Democratic editor of the South". Mobiles yellow fever epidemic would force the Register to publish only three times a week in 1839. Once Sanford took back what he purchased years before, he combined the Register with the Merchants and Planters Journal, thus becoming The Mobile Register and Journal in 1841. Communications latest innovation the telegraph became the Registers mean of receiving news in 1848. Shortly after this milestone, as a result of the

Bradfords purchase of the Registers one-half interest, the paper was renamed The Mobile Register Daily Register. Forsyth would again take the Register out of Sanfords hands in 1854. Future Confederate States of America colonel and Kentucky poet Theodore OHara joined the Register shortly before the War Between the States Civil War.It would take this particular war beginning in 1861 to combine the Mobile Daily Register and competitor The Mobile Daily Advertiser to form The Mobile Daily Advertiser and Register. About three years after the

war, the Register is sold and combined again, this time to William DAlton of The Mobile Times and The Mobile Daily Register. Isaac Donovans arrival as the Registers new owner in 1871 marked the beginning of a new era for the stable newspaper, including a new position for editor Charles Carter Langdon. Langdon would become the Registers agricultural editor, giving him the opportunity to promote scientific approaches in the field. In life, Langdon served as mayor 5 party poker of Mobile, an Alabama state legislator, and a trustee

of the Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical College in Auburn, Alabama Today Langdons contributions to what would be Auburn University are honored at the hall named for him in 1846. In 1872, the Register incorporates as The Register Printing association. During John Forsyth, Jr.s final years, he along with John L. Rapier formed a partnership to operate the Register. After Forsyths death, Rapier became principal owner. Telephones would become available at the Register in 1883, along with electric light a year later. Rapier organized the stock company The Register Co. to publish the paper in 1889. Erwin S. Craighead, who would

later be known as "Mobiles newspaperman" began his long career at the Register as the city editor in 1884 before earning the position of editor in chief in 1892. During Craigheads tenure until retirement in 1927, he was supportive of the former Confederacy and the Union reconciling, along with economic and commercical development. As the nineteenth century

was coming to a close, the Register began using six Linotype typesetting machines in 1893, which were used for many decades until the "cold type" age began in 1974. Last of all, photographs began appearing in the Register during the 1890s.The Twentieth Century: A Modern JourneyIn 1905, company president John L. Rapier dies, allowing his son Paul to take that high position at Rapier and Company, leading up to the next name change from The Daily Register to The Mobile Register. Five years later, Frederick I. Thompson

became the new owner of the Register. The Mobile Item would be the next newspaper to operate under Thompson, but it would remain an afternoon paper under the name The Mobile News-Item starting in 1916. Publisher Ralph B. Chandler founded afternoon newspaper The Mobile Press in 1929 before going after Thompsons Mobile Register in 1932. The Mobile Daily Newspapers Incorporated is now in existence to publish the Register as a morning paper, the Press as an 5 party poker afternoon paper, and both papers are combined as the weekend paper The Mobile Press Register. For the Mobile Press to continue, the Mobile News-Item had to end publication.

The year 1944 was a big one for the Press Register as a fire managed to stop the presses for a brief period of time, but with help from the Army Air Corps and a New Orleans printing facility, the newspaper kept on going. On October 1st of that year, the Mobile Press Register began publication in its new home on 304 Government Street in downtown Mobile after years on St. Louis and Hamilton, which are also downtown. "No effort has been spared to make it 100% efficient", as the front page article stated that day. George M. Cox was the first Press Register editor

to work in the building. From 1948 to the end of the 1950s, the Press Register owned radio station WABB. During the Fifties, the Press Register started its own photograph department under chief photographer Billy Lavender, who used the large Speed Graphic press camera. The Honolulu Advertiser received the Press Registers old press machines in 1955, as the press machine commonly referred to as "the most modern to be found anywhere in the world", better known as the Goss Headliner began operation within the Press Register building for the next 47 years. This was

also the year the papers long time television station partner WKRG went on the air. Newspaper group S.I. Newhouse bought out the Mobile Press Register in 1966. Mobile Press founder and Press Register publisher Ralph Chandler would die in 1970, giving William J. Hearin the position of president and publisher. In 1978, video display terminals became a fixture in the Press Registers newsroom. Hurricane Frederic made its arrival on the Gulf Coast Gulf Coast on September 12th, 1979, stopping the Press

Register from publication for two days. Baldwin Countys own paper The Baldwin Press Register began publication in 1988.In Recent TimesHoward Bronson became publisher of the Mobile Press Register in 1992 with a mission for the paper to "reinvent itself as one of the most well-written, high profile news sources in the South". Stan Tiner became the new editor and vice president of news that year until 1999, when managing editor Michael Marshall succeeded him. One year after Bronsons arrival, sports editor Ben Nolan retired after over 45 years in the sports department. Nolan would pass on in 2001, so did long time manager William Hearin.

Three members of the Press Register staff were named finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in 1995 after a series of editorials on reforming the Alabama Constitution. In 1997, the afternoon Mobile Press ended publication, but the name lives in both The Mobile Press Register Inc. and the weekly "Suburban" section of the Register. After almost 58 years on Government 5 party poker Street, the Mobile

Register moved to its current and modern facility on Water Street in June 2002. Days before the big move, the Register switched to the new MAN Roland AG printing press, which is viewable from large windows stretching from top to bottom on the new building. This location within historic DeTonti Square and the City of Mobiles business district was chosen for both the sake of revitalizing the downtown area and southwest Alabama. Also that summer, the Register printed ballots for its first ever Readers Choice Awards, where readers can choose their favorite local attractions, food, people,

and much more. In September 2004, the Registers new found strength within its 2-year-old building was put to the test, when a storm named Hurricane Ivan rolled across the Gulf Coast and into the northeast. Unlike "Frederic", the Register continued operation during and after the storms arrival.External Links The Mobile Register Alabama Lives Register SiteNewspapers of AlabamaBaldwin County, AlabamaMobile County, Alabama