Chester Chronicle

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The Chester Chronicle is a British newspaper for the Chester and Cheshire area , first introduced in the 18th century. It is one of the best-selling British newspapers and is published on Fridays.

structure

The newspaper has several editions. These are Chester City , Chester Country , Frodham & Helsby and Flintshire . In June 2006 the Wirral edition was discontinued, in July 2006 the editions Deeside, Mold & Buckley and Flint & Holywell were combined into the Flintshire edition. While the Flintshire Chronicle is part of the Chester Chronical in terms of advertising and sales, it is editorially independent. Since June 2006, the city edition no longer has the word "City" in the imprint. The newspaper was originally printed as a flat sheet. More recently she switched to the tabloid format. The newspaper is owned by Trinity Mirror . It has a free sister publication, the Midweek Chronicle .

Others

In February 2003, the newspaper ran a false ethical campaign against a website that had the hilariously crude article Chester's guide to: Picking up little girls on its pages. Many readers and politicians uncritically followed the call to protest and urged the Google search engine to temporarily censor the site.

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