Daily circulation for the 593 U.S. newspapers reporting figures to the Alliance for Audited Media posted a 0.7 dip for the six-month period ended March.

Sunday circulation for 519 papers fell 1.4 percent.

The AAM, once known as the Audit Bureau of Circulations, found that digital editions of the papers accounted for 19.3 of total circulation, up from 14.2 percent last year.

The Wall Street Journal remained the No. 1 paper as circulation—spurred by its digital edition, rose 12.3 percent to 2.4M. Its digital version accounted for 38 percent of total circulation.

The New York Times was up 17.6 percent to 1.9M total circulation. Digital was 61 percent of circulation.

Among the Top Ten, the Chicago Sun-Times (+11.6% to 262,461), Los Angeles Times (6% to 610,593), Denver Post (+3.9 percent) and Chicago Tribune (0.1 percent to 414,930) clocked gains in overall circulation.

USA Today (-7.9 percent to 1.7M), New York Daily News (-11% to 516,165), New York Post (9.9 percent to 500,521) abd Washington Post (-6.5 percent to 473,313) logged loses.