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The North Adams Transcript from North Adams, Massachusetts • Page 3

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THE NORTH ADAMS TRANSCRIPT. SATURDAY. DECEMBER 12, 1042. THREE Or. Harry A.

Garfield, 79, Ninth tes Noted Educator Succumbs at Williams Inn Apartment at 3 o'Clock This as Fuel Administrator in First World of 20th President of United Institute of Politics -at Services Tomorrow Afternoon at 2,30. Dr. Harry A. Garfield, former president of Williams college, United wa Ich passed States fuel administrator during thci on prices for all basic materials ex- first World war. and son of the 20thj ce 00 gi lf i'fi, i President of the United States, The Institute of Politics ordinal James A Garfield, died today In his; wl ln (hl deslre Dl Garn ltl to apartment at the Williams Inn in' nRk Williams college a more eflec- Wllliamstown.

He was 79 years old. I tive instrument of education. The A native of Hiram, Ohio, Dr. Gar- 10 ye ar annual Institute grew out field was graduated from Williams 1 0 mclnoran(lum to the trustees college in 1885 and became its ninth wn)cl) he wrote ln i ns ti president in 1908, holding that po- plans look snape in after in sitlon for 26 years durins which the ler rupUoii by the war. and the first institution saw one of its greatest SC5Sioi convened in 1921, to con- periods of growth and advancement, tinue annua un tii 1932 He retired from (he presidency at, Du ring its career, the Institute tne close of the college year in 1934.

gnve college an international Died at 3 O'clock reputation through the scholars and He had been in failing health statesmen of international Import- since last summer and death came, ance who gathered in Williamstown. at 3 o'clock this morning. HU witeiattractms audiences from many and a brother, James, were at his states. First institution of its kind, bedside. many Kiich conventions have been Dr.

Garfleld leaves his wife, the patterned from it. former Belle Hartford Mason of In his quarter-century of occupy-j u. I Cleveland, Ohio; three sons, James ln the administration building at rlcttrl auu 10 LO- BLACKOUT PERIOD STARTSTOJORROW State-Wide Test Sometime After Sunday Midnight DURING WEEK Dr. Hurry A. Garfleld.

former President of Williams eollece and son of former President of the United States James A. Garfield, who died today at I he age of 79. MARTIN T. MULLEN DIES AT AGE OF 44 lilding Garfleld "of Cambridge, Ma- Hopkins hall in Williamstown, he son Garfield of Concord, and Dr. served longer as president than any Stanton Garficlrt of Concord; one predecessor, except Mark Hopkins, daughter, Mrs.

John Preston Comer: His record contains many effective, of South street, williamstown; some brilliant, reforms. The honors three brothers, former Secretary of i work system the Interior James R. Garfleld of students ar cal Trucker Martin Thomas Mullen, 44. 8.30 Cleveland, Irving MacDowell Gar- requirements and given the aca-! He hid to his field of Boston, and Abram Gar- i dcm i freedom of European univer- home foi the pS two but his ividiLiu j. iiuiii.i.s iviujitrii, it.

nt, reforms. Ihe honors ing business proprietor, died slid in which exceptional denh mls morn ng about 8 3 freed from technical at hi 100 Porte Local Officials Feel City is Better Instruction Cards Distributed. More than 5,000 cards bearinp in- jstrtictions on air raid alarm will be distributed to homes in North Adams before midnight tomorrow night by district and post wardens of the civilian defense organization here in preparation for the surprise blackout for the entire state of Massachusetts which wil! come sometime between midnight tomorrow night and midnight one week from tonight. Final on the coming test were given to the wardens last i night by Chief Air Raid Warden Al- Iphonsus Merrigan at a meet- iing. Tile instruction cards were placed in thp hands of the warden? i at the meeting.

Local civilian defense officials are hopeful that the coming blackout will po off more smoothly in Nor! Adams than was the case last week a general misunderstanding of the various signals caused no end of confusion. Blackout Instructibns (The North Adams Committee on Public Safely has issued (he following Instructions tor the guidance of citizens and civilian defense workers during the test blackout schcdiiii-d for some night next week.) 1 KIKST ALARM: Moblliwilion Unnecessary to darken home. Disregard street lights. SECOND ALARM: Blp.rkout home. Entire city blacked out.

THIHI) ALARM: All clear signal. Return to normal. SUMMON CAB DRIVER AFTER HITTING MAN Accident Said to Have Occurred Thursday Night PREDICT MEATLESS DAYS NEXT WEEK Some Dealers Describe Situation as "Famine" MANY SOLD OUT field of Cleveland; Mrs. Mary Garfield of New York city. Williams college In his notable-administration, his administration efforts resulted in increasing the and faculty will turn out in a body'endowment fund from $1,500,000, to for the final rites as well as many: the $7,700,000.

Thc college plant of the students. i improved vastly during the Gar- Funeral Tomorrow neld administration, also. About Funeral services will be conduct-' 193" the president personally headed at the Thompson Memorial led a $2,000,000 fund drive which chapel tomorrow afternoon at 2.30 lw 1 ed out deficits, increased sal- o'clock by Rev Raymond B. Blak- lyrics, and enlarged Lasell gymna- ney of the Williamstown sium and added to the Physical tional church, assisted by Rev. Plant.

I Franklin r-nrter rpnlnr pnipritits After teaching at St. Paul's School i it. iHiir.iiii LCI JtCLOl-eillcilLUh nesses th nnrl nf thp itp He for a year alter graduating from nesscs VV pan OI Ine iarc Williams iii 1885, he studied law at nfi a World WRr veteran, a member pronounced death due to heart attack. the son of Mullen. Mr.

Mullen had spent practically his life in this city. He was proprietor ot the Mullen Bros. trucking firm, which he took over on the deatli of his father several years ago. Under his active direction the firm became one of the leading interstate trucking' bu.si- BLOODY STRUGGLE LOOMS IN TUNISIA (Continued from Page One) of St. Episcopal church of i Williamstown.

All members of the Garfield family will attend, relatives here believed today. Honorary bearers at the services. will be the board of trustees, in ses-. sion today nt the rarnpus. Active bearers will be brother members of of the North Adams lodge of Elks and the Berkshire Traffic association.

He was a graduate of St. Joseph's high school, Mr. Mullen is survived by his wife, the former Gertrude Ryan: a Columbia university for two yea and then read law at All Soul's college, Oxford, England, without matriculation, and at Inn's Court. Lon- He returned to Ohio and enter- his college fraternity, Alpha cT presidents of the college have been tol th a hewis prof tracts at Western Reserve university for five years. laid to rest.

Dr. Garfield had Intended to return to his home In Washington. but his Illness had prevented his yearly customary return to the winter home. Headed War Fuel Program The noted educator and founder of the Institute of Politics at Williams college, which brought International figures to the campus each summer for 10 years and did much to make the college The body is at his home. 10(1 Porter street, where it will remain until the funeral Monday morning at 9 o'clock at St.

Francis church. "It has hampered movement on both sides, but helps the Allies to I some extent by civinp them a chance to build up strength," the spokesman said. The Morocco radio broadcast a communique from French general headquarters in North Africa claim- ling the Germans suffered heavy i losses in infantry in the Medjez El fighting. About half o( I he 15 tanks employed by the Germans damaged, the communique Another French communique reported that offensive reconnais- sances west of Kairouan ''progressed as planned." Kairouan is v.bout 28 miles west of the main road hr- Uvcen Sousse and Sfax and 35 miles from the Mediterranean const. jGASLESS SUNDAY VOLUNTARJ HERE Police Chief Does Not Plan to Enforce Salton- slall Request State I Guard Urged to Walk.

The governor's gnslcss Sunday tomorrow will probably be purely vol- untary here because Police Chief M. W. conlon said today that he received instructions from governor and does not plan 10 enforce the unless he receives definite instructions to do Chief Conlon said the only thing he about tomorrow a Sunday was what he read in the morning's papers. I One of the first effects of the I proposal was the request made by ICapt. Samuel Lcvcnson of Co.

k. State Guard to mem- of the company, urging them attend the weekly drill at the state armory cither by loot or public comcyancc instead of using their own cars. Capt. Lcvcnson also revealed that of the governor's request, a nice-ling of battalion officers scheduled for tomorrow in North Adams been postponed. Two Sign for Army, I One for Navy Service Two local men and one former 'resident of North Adams have enlisted in the armed forces, according to word received today by (he local draft board.

They are Charlc-, E. Stein, of 220 North firret and John Gattuso of 455 Walnut street, both of whom enlisted in Ihc army, and Lawrence J. Daignault nf Worcester, formerly of this city, who has enlisted in the nru v. 12-WAY BOMBING Francis Harrington, 31. a taxi driver of 20 Bank street has been summoned to appear in District Court on a charge of operating negligently as the result of an ac-' cldent at 6:20 Thursday night in which an automobile driven by him Expect Next allegedly struck Joseph Clrone.

63, of 224 witt street. Into City on Thursday According to the police report of i the accident, Mr. Harrington said. that Clrone walked out in the road in front of his car while he was. ATTAPIf flW TTAT idrivin Walnut street and he ft! II JlLl was unable to avoid hitting the Near Blows for Hamburg Stock, There was every indication this man.

Clrone was knocked to the morning lhat North Adams resi- pavement and Harrington said would observe, whether they took him to thc office of Dr. to or not, a succession of Italian rommuniaue acknowMtwi' Rosmthal xvil treated him for; meatless days next week. Supplies uanan on hjs hands hm SQ yhm hls mo )g lh(n Dr. Rosenthal said today that the dealers described the situation as (Continued from Page One) heavy damage at Naples and were 57 dead and 138 Injured. On Dec.

4. great armada of four-cnglncd United States bombers loosed tons of bombs on Naples, sinking one Italian cruiser, crippling a battleship and scoring nils on another cruiser. The Italian high command said 10 American fliers. I he crew of one bomber shot down, had been taken prisoner. Although neither the Rome i nor the Cairo communiques idcnti- ified the raiders, the fliers' nationnl- ily and the of the crew indicated that Naples again had been man's condition was not serious.

DECISIVE BATTLE OF WAR hit by the bin B-24 Liberalor bomb- "famininc" rather than the custom- jary "shortage." i Cold cuts, hamburg and frankfurls be pone before nijihl," one re! taller reported and meagre supplies of beef were oui early this morning in the smaller few stores had small supplies of lamb and pork. Unlil this week-end there has been no of prepare! meats here. Wholesale meat deliveries to North Adams usur.lly are made on Thurs- Hitler undoubtedly will manage day and. if the practice is continued, to send more help to both these thc city probably will be without theaters, especially in air power, but meat on Monday. Tuesday nnd Wed- (Continued from Page One) aid.

mainly by air. and so are the Axis forces in Tunisia. fr.rccs. In all. the Italian communique, said five of the Naples raidfr.s were shot down, two of them by effective 1 nnti-aircrnft fire.

ac a No details were given in the brief; British communique issued at Cairo concernine the attack, but it assumed that United States had a hand in ycstcrdav's raid. The previous assault on Naples was made at dusk. Th" communique reported that yesterday's raid started fires alonq the entire waterfront. Hits were scored on merchant vessels in thr hm'bor; the communique said. the dangers which beset him on thc'nesriay next week.

Several re- continent both by land and air are'tailers agreed thnl their stock would compelling him to keep strong be wiped nut when their stores forces there. closed tonight. If it were possible for him to de- A near fist over the pur- arge proportion of his luft-'chase of 50 pounds of hamburg waffe for use in Africa his chances steak developed this morning at one jof keeping a toehold on the dark wholesale establishment. Dealers. i continent would be improved anxious to keep their trade as well but he dares not strip Europe of air as protect their customers, almost power.

'came to blows over purchases. British and American bombers 1 There is still a good supply of are pouring destruction on Ger- poultry on hnnd and some native many and the Hitlerian depend-'mcnt mey come into the market, encies. The Russians arc tearing at'Monday, it was said. Tripe and salt. Nazi lines and a potential Allied in- fat pork is plentiful if buyers can vasion of the continent menaces work up an interest in it.

him from divers directions. He Only few hours after thr altark be mad denude Europe on Naples, bis- RAP bombers roared away from their nses. Therefore we see the Nan all, 10 dvbM" a rr in pc Hc consolidate his position in an Italy whicd, so to speak, sits under the the All'es and would RED ARMY HALTS ATTACKS ON FUNERAL Stock Market-Financia (Continued from Page One) Foster P. Lew'is I'al services for Foster Powis of 36 Richview avenue, who died on Wednesday, were held yesterday afternoon at 2.30 o'clock at his home and were attended by Trend of the Market service In the first World war as "Mng attack planes had destroyed tery with Rev. Mr.

McColhim offi- luel administrator under President 1 Junkel 5 52 a11 Bearers were SterliiiR E. Woodrow Wilson ports in raids on airdromes. i Smith. Harry A Powell. Harold Virtually dictator of the nation's battlegrounds near Cooper and Anthony C.

Cermcnaro. fuel resources, he was appointed by i ev an Vel Lukl Red Sla President Wilson In 1917 to obtain'f ld onc Na battalion brought up rdtnnT Ttn an adequate supply and equlUblc a 5 Wedllesda was mi cil -i MIT IlftW QI1RPTI1Q distribution of fuel He built a ed direc ly lnl battle IfULLlUW OUllrLUlj new governmental agency which sen losses Generally, German became one of the five most lm counterattacks In Ihe area were portant war organizations during! rovln futile, Red Star said. the national emergency At the i (The German radio broadcast a New York, Dec. 12 stock market maintained its equilibrium fairly well in early proceed-' ings, Up fraclions at a quiet" opening were Chrysler, Boeing, Southern Pacific, Northern Pacific, Montgomery Ward and United Aircraft. U.

S. Steel nnd Radio Corp. dipped shade. Stock Quotations imuiuiini dlld lilt I r-tvm height of Its activities his admin-! DNB report that Russian forces istration employed 1.000 persons commanded by Gen. Gregory Zhu- Washington and 18,000 throughout' hBd ciriven lo Bel yi- 60 miles the United States.

Production Upped Under his charge, coal production during the first year of fuel administration southwest of Rzhev and in the di- a German i recuon of Smolensk, oint 75 The Russian front thus continued ta ooo accomplished tills through decrees for neatless days and "gasless 1 I ay and sougnt to stcm the outcrop- all of which met with; mei end general voluntary compliance. First called into government war Peer's I osr service by Herbert. Hoover, then reers Lost oe chairman of the U. S. food commit- Recalled By Memorial tee, he was named chairman of the price-fixing committee of the u.

S. food administration. The committee 1 Gravesend, England In Cob- del ermincd a fair basis price for the! ham park stands Britain's quaint-lest a lost on that spot 101 years ago the Earl of Darnley became TIRES SUBMITTED Boston. Dec. 12 i ly 1.000,000 surplus tires have been turned in by New England automo- bile owners under the idle tire pur- chase plan, John Hagerty, re-' gional director of the Defense Supplies corporation, estimated today.

The deadline for turning in extra tires, as well as for registering the i five tires being retained, including i one spare, is midnight tonight. After midnight, it will be illegal' for a motorist to drive his car unless he has tunied in his extra tires and registered the remainder, said Eldon C. Shoup, regional rationing executive. I Furnished by Goodbody Com! pany, members of the New York Stock and Curb Exchanges with branch offices In the Berkshire Life i insurance building, 7 North street Pittsfield. 11 The School Kids Hit The Scrap Jackpot the Earl of Darnley became I Washington (m Two public! dissatisfied with the way a wood-l scho children in St.

Louis un-; cutter was wielding an axe. The 1 ed a long-unusued slot ma- Earl took the axe and lunged at the tree, but the blade struck a glancing blow and severed one of his toes. A few days later the Earl died of blood poisoning from the injury and the family mausoleum which has never been used -was erected on the spot in hi memory. chine in a neighbor's attic and' persuaded him to donate it to the i scrap drive. When the machine! was deposited in the school scrapl pile it yielded a jackpot of $5.80,1 according to salvage drive Quotations at American Can American Smelt Ref American Tel Tel American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Atch Top Santa Fe Bendix Aviation Bethlehem Steel Chesapeake Ohio Chrysler Corporation Consolidated Edison Corn Products Curtiss-Wright du Pont de Nemours First Nat Stores General Electric General Foods Corp General Motors Goodrich (BF) Goodyear Tire Rubber Great Northern pfd Greyhound Corp.

Inspiration Copper International Nickel Can Kennecott Copper Kresge (SJS.) Co. Kroger Grocery Liggett Myers CB) Loew's Incorporated Lone Star Cement 72.4 36.2 120.7 41.S 24.5 44.2 32.4 53.6 33.6 66.1 14.6 54.4 G.5 .129.6 32 29 34.2 42 24.5 22 7 20 14.1 9.7 19.4 27.2 13.4 25.2 60 46.1 37.7 Lorillard (P) 16.2 Mack Trucks 28.4 Montgomery Ward 32.5 Nash-Kelvinator S.7 National Biscuit. 15.2 New York Central 10.1 North Amer Aviation 10 Otis Elevator 17 Paramount Piclurcs Pennsylvania Railroad 21.6 Phillips ftroleum 43 Pullman Incontor.ited 2i.6 Radio Corporation 4.3 Republic Steel 13.7 Sears Roebuck 60.6 Southern Pacific 14.7 Sperry Corporation 22.1 Standard Oil of'N 44.2 Standard Brands 3.7 Studebaker Corp 5.3 Texas Corporation 39.2 Union Carbide 77.7 Union Pacific 77 United Aircraft 24.2 United Fruit 62.7 United States Rubber 24.3 United Stales Steel 46.5 Westinghouse El Mfg 77.6 Woolworth Co 29.3 Yellow Truck Coach 12.2 Curb Quotations Amer Cyanamid 36.1 Cities Service 3.1 El Bond Share 1.5 Niagara Hud Power 1.2 Treasury Balance rd Turin with nnother load of ex- nlr-ives. The clouds wore so mirk that thp Ol results nf dm raid could not be determined. The Rome coinmuniriur- Mic dnmapp was Despite thr flyinc conditions.

however, only three British nlanes were rrMorled lost on the "iKsinn. Turin, home of the Fiat works "nd other war indu ws heiiv- II'- bombed Tuesday and Wednesday nir-hts. Reports from th" Ensrlish south favlnpr that the orar of east- hnund planes wn auclib'e for morr than on hour last eveninc; made it "lear that a Ir.ree force had set out the loner iaunt across the the raiders were said In have encountered almost unbelievably weather imirc-dist-ly after Ihe channel. Dense cloud bfinks more than four mile.s thick forced the nlanes to a hich altitude, where they encountered intrnse rold which routed thrir with a dangerously 'hcnvy lond of ice. BATTLE SCARRED CRUISER IS HOME (Continued from Page One) Flowers on Guadalcanal and desert him if it had the physical i cln islands of the Solomons send strength to throw him out of Uie' lhcir fragrance far to sea.) country Lieut.

R. W. Tucker of Chicago He must halt that Russian often- "Called 'that some aspects of the sive if he is to prevent it from ba(tle in the moonless tropical night crashing through his eastern fenses. He must avert an through southern and France and other points. And must maintain large forces in occupied countries to prevent de- were beautiful, but he said there invasion i w8S 1 mllcl1 beauty in the sight of western tne 1 4 a shells coming O'f the bombers which cot through to the tarpet, a few were fnid to h.ivr found cans in the rlouri? through which they nosed down to loose their bombs.

Despite all this I believe we must i right at the cruiser, from a a mile "We could see Uiem coming," said I Tucker. "They looked like a bla. -jdo; in the middle of a red ball. "The i Naples is Blasted Cairo, Dec. 12 planes ihe middle ep.st command raided Naples again yesterday, starting fires along the entire waterfront and scoring hits on merchant vessels, the British announced today.

It was the second Allied smash at the south Italian port in a week. Big de grace. American bombers attacked the i port, from -which supplies and men D- were sent to Africa just a week be- Inds Bright fore, sinking a cruiser, crippling a i.battleship and scoring square hits on a second cruiser. I No details about yesterday's raid were given immediately. expect fating in the African 50un and 1s tu 0 brn reSstlnce oT Axis forces in Tunisia indicates aj The San Francisco crept into the detennination to hang on to thc; bay shortly before dawn almost last and at least fulfill the mission After daylight came and of standlns off the Allies while Hit- the navy permitted an announce- ler consolidates his defenses at' mc iit of the hero hip's arrival from nome iihe Solomom, the waterfront was Heavy resistance is fully with cheering people, ed by the British, but so confident; Mayor Anyelo Rossi ordered flags are the troops they're anxious to get flown throughout the city.

He set ahead with the job. As I've already next Wednesday as the date for a reported to you. General Montgom- giant welcome in Civic auditorium, cry, the commander-in-chief of the navy permitted a radio broad- British Eighth flrmy. has assured' cast from the decks of the ship at me the Axis will be ousted from officers and members of the Africa, and there's not the slightest 1 crew were interviewed. Vice Ad- doubt that he believes this.

imiral John Willis Greenslade, corn- General Montgomery said too in; inander of the western sea fron- one of his messages to the troops tier, added his tribute, that this will be the decisive battle; The cruiser that licked a battle- of the war. However that may be. It ship wa.s home and the town went certainly is true that the ousting of wild. the Axis from Africa and the conse- i The vessel wa.s the flagship of a quent breaking of its purchase on lai forcp which sailed out to op- the Mediterranean will go far to-j" 056 a Japanese Armada attempt- wards preparing Hitler for the coup to land reinforcements on Guadalcanal. It led the American ships between two groups of Japanese fighting vessels, both of which outweighed the task force in num- Washington, Dec.

12 po- isition of the Treasury I Receipts S55.388.065.81: expenditures S160.392.271.51; net balance S530S.160.0BS.78: working balance i included S4.545.623.046.13; customs receipts for month S7.391,675.42-, (receipts fiscal year (July 1) expenditures fiscal year S30.704.721.439.71; excess of expenditures total debt increase over previous day S12B.763.735.27; gold (assets In addition to the attack on Naples, long-range Allied fighters, ranging over the Mediterranean, in- Just 119 Years Old Helena, Mont. George Leach says the fellow who owned the 50 cent piece that he found recently on a street was no spendthrift. The coin was dated years old Axis African Desert Christmas Shopping Timely Warning for Everyone To Heed Don't get so busy doing your Christmas shopping that you will neglect the cold which you are very likely to take among the crowds and hurrying from heated interiors to outdoors. For 85 years, Father John's Medicine has been in use to relieve coughs due to colds by soothing the throat. It also builds resistance to colds when vitamin A Is needed, because it is rich In vitamin vitamin D.

Its reputation is built on years of success. For COUGHS DUE TO COLDS lake tercepted a northbound convoy of Axis transport planes south of Lampedusa island and -shot down at i least, eight transport planes, one bomber nnd four twin-engined fighters. Lampedusia Island is about midi way between the British island of Malta and the Tunisian coast. The night previously bombers, presumably from Malta airfields, raided the Tunis docks again and started a fire at the entrance to the canal, the British communique said. On the El Agheila battleground where Field Marshal Erwin Rommel's forces are awaiting a blow from the British Eighth army, Allied planes raided concentrations of Axis tanks, trucks and other motorized equipment, it was reported.

Th6 Nofilia landing ground, about 90 miles west of El Agheila, was successfully attacked by Allied fighter-bombers, but no indication was given as to thc strength of the Axis air forces found there. Of thc ground activity, the com- munique reported only that "developments in the El Agheila area are proceeding according to plan with-' out interference from the enemy." Three enemy fighters were reported shot down and others damaged during the operations over El Ag- heila and the Nofilia landing field. bers and fire power. The San Francisco alone destroyed a cruiser nnd a destroyer and so crippled a battleship that other American forces later sank it. Washington announced that 23 Japanese ships sunk and seven damaged in the battle.

The ships sunk were yet it showed hardly any the battleship, three heavy cruisers, wear from circulation. How it en me two liaht cruisers, five destroyers, to be on a sidewalk Leach was transports and four cargo able to guess. ships. Announced American losses Ultraviolet are' known a and infra-red rays "invisible light." were two light cruisers and six destroyers sunk, and 13 or 14 ships damaged. Inatntt iff PHONE 700 i Rome Reports Raids Rome (Prom Italian Broadcasts), Dec.

12 damage was caused in an Allied air raid on Naples late yesterday afternoon but a night raid on third of the week on the northern arsenal only slight the high command said today. New Axis air raids were reported on Bone and Phillppeville, Allied in Algeria. The war bulletin said the Germans and Italians extended the holding! in Tunisia in an eruption of renewed local fighting. The cdmmunkiue said a Britlah deitroyer had been torpedoed in the MtdlUrranetii, kut failed to ay the exttnt tt wkttiMr It Saturday Shopping Hours 9 a. m.

to 9 p. m. Candy for Christmas Mayflower Sweets IN FANCY CHRISTMAS BOXES 1 lb. Assorted Chocolates 49c lb. Assorted Chocolates $1.19 Vermont Maple Candies JTRESH SHIPMENT JUST RECEIVED 8 oz.

Butternut Fudge 69c 16 oz. Butternut Fudge $1.00 Maple Butter 29c and 39c jar.

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About The North Adams Transcript Archive

Pages Available:
449,695
Years Available:
1895-1976