I find it pretty difficult to determine a newspaper's location based on its title and front page.  This is especially true with online versions of newspapers.  An actual paper newspaper is usually pretty easy to figure out because you normally wouldn't be reading it unless you were from that area.  But with newspaper-article-sharing sites like Obscure Store, it's often hard to figure out where a particular online newspaper is from.  For example, take the Sun-Herald.  They couldn't have come up with a less descriptive name.  Going to the website doesn't really shed any light on the matter either.  There's no mention of "the newspaper for Stupidsville, TN" or anything like that.  A few city names near the top of the page give us a hint:  Charlotte, Englewood, North Port.  Charlotte is in North Carolina, so that would be my guess.  But I'm wrong.  The newspaper is actually for a region in Florida. 

It's the same with Woonsocket Call, Mining Gazette, York Dispatch, and many others.  The only semi-useful location indicator on any of those newspapers is for the Mining Gazette:  "Serving Houghton, Keweenaw, Baraga and Ontonagon Counties Since 1858."  While that's probably great for the 6 people who read that paper, it doesn't help people like me, who've never heard of those counties and couldn't even come up with a wild guess as to where they are. 

My advice to newspapers is to mention a specific geographic location on the top of every page or at least on the front page.  It makes things that much easier for people like me who don't know the difference between Charlotte, FL and Charlotte, NC. #entertainment