Citation, Documentation of Sources

Q. In the citation of the following newspaper showing various issues and page numbers, would it be written like this?

Southern Patriot, 20 January 1835, 3, 27 January 1835, 3, 30 January 1835, 3, 2 February 1835, 3, 3 February 1835, 3, 3 March 1835, 3, and 19 March 1835, 3.

A. No. I’m afraid my vision began to blur when I came to “1835, 3, 27.” This calls for the deployment of what Lynne Truss calls “a kind of Special Policeman in the event of comma fights,” that is, the semicolon (Eats, Shoots & Leaves [New York: Gotham Books, 2004], 125):

Southern Patriot, 20 January 1835, 3; 27 January 1835, 3; 30 January 1835, 3; 2 February 1835, 3; 3 February 1835, 3; 3 March 1835, 3; and 19 March 1835, 3.

An alternative is to omit the page numbers, as is often done in newspaper citations, since articles may migrate from one page to another in different editions of the same paper.

[This answer relies on the 17th edition of CMOS (2017) unless otherwise noted.]