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December 20, 2021 at QZVX
Peter says:
$4 for hours old news I could read on poorly maintained blogs? Wow! What a steal!
December 20, 2021 at QZVX
Jason Remington says:
Anything in today’s newspaper is old news, sometimes several days old. A story in yesterday’s News Tribune, the new Tacoma police chief is from Dallas. This is news released last week. It’s not worth 25 cents, let alone $4.
December 21, 2021 at QZVX
Louis says:
I believe the typeset is on the press for print media.
December 25, 2021 at QZVX
Bruce Caplan says:
Back in the late 1940’s the daily Seattle Times was a nickel and the Sunday edition was an exorbitant 15 cents!
December 25, 2021 at QZVX
Dick Ellingson says:
I remember it well, Bruce. I was a Times paper boy in the early fifties. Subscriptions were 60¢ Sunday only, $1.25 Daily only, and $1.75 Daily and Sunday.
The Times (“Today’s News Today”) had three daily editions: the Sunset Final, the Night Final, and, at news stands only, the Night Sports Final. There was also a Bulldog, the Sunday paper published on Saturday.
We lived on E. 90th off Roosevelt Way and the closest news stand was on E. 45th & University Way. Every Saturday about 5:45 P. M., my dad, a true news junkie before the term was invented, would flip me a nickel (or was it a dime by then?) and the keys to his ’55 Olds Super 88 and send me on my way. That newspaper probably cost him eighteen cents by the time you figured in the cost of gas.
Hearst’s Seattle Pee-Eye (known for its yellow journalism) also had three editions: the Sunrise Edition, the Sunrise Final, and the 6:00 A. M. Final. Its Sunday-on-Saturday paper was called a Raven.
December 25, 2021 at QZVX
Jason Remington says:
Those Sunday on Saturday editions were available in the 70s and I picked it up to get an early read on Victor Stredicke’s column. The Sunday paper was worth what we paid for it. Not so, these days.