[1] At launch the proprietor was Edgar Sydney Hall of the Narrogin Observer.
[2][3][4] Of the initial release, the Northam Courier remarked that the paper was "a creditable one, and bids fair to prove a promising addition to the ranks of our country journals".
[5] The Collie Miner also praised the first issue, saying it was "a creditable one suggesting the immediate probability of it fulfilling its avowed mission.
"[6] In January 1911, soon after its launch, there was some acrimony between the Wickepin Argus and the Great Southern Leader.
It was alleged that the proprietor of the Argus had employed "despicable methods" to lure advertisers away from the Leader.