![]() ![]() Adams Kitchens provide fresh salad bars, soup stations and hot food bars stocked daily with homemade food to go as well as extensive options for holiday catering and corporate catering. Our Flower Shops create beautiful arrangements with many hard-to-find flowers and the Houseplant departments carry a large array of indoor and tropical plants. There’s so much to explore at all the Adams stores. Today, all Adams stores in Poughkeepsie, Kingston, Newburgh and Wappinger offer a Garden Center and as well as grocery shopping. Because they grew their own produce and had access to farm supplies, people started asking for fertilizer and plants from Adams, leading to the addition of a garden center. At first, they were selling fruits and vegetables, but soon their customers requested cheese, meats and then deli. By 1933 they had four children and a successful farmstand. They worked the land, selling fresh produce to area retailers from a farmstand. “Our commitment to local news remains steadfast,” Dolan said.Īnyone with questions about the change can access their account at /subscription-services or call customer service at 1-87.In 1919, Ralph and Mary Adams purchased 50 acres of farmland in Poughkeepsie, New York. Subscribers also have 24/7 access to obituaries, legal notices, and classifieds on. The Poughkeepsie Journal is part of the USA TODAY Network, and the change being announced today also is taking place at more than 130 other publications in the network.Īll print subscribers have full digital access, meaning they may read news updates throughout the day, subscriber-only stories, watch videos and listen to audio features, among other benefits. These include the ability to clip and share articles and to adjust the text size.Īs a bonus, Poughkeepsie Journal subscribers will also now have access to the USA TODAY’s network of e-Editions of newspapers from across the country, plus ad-free access to the USA TODAY crossword puzzle. It has the same look as the printed newspaper, along with some features possible only on digital devices. The E-newspaper, or E-edition, has existed seven days a week for many years. News and sales staffing at the Poughkeepsie Journal will not change. “We’ve taken care to ensure that our subscribers will continue to be provided with the content that they look forward to every day, and that we remain a vital part of the fabric of our community.” “We appreciate that for many of our readers print is a cherished tradition, but it is time to make a strategic change that reflects the new ways most of customers and advertisers access media,” Dolan said. ![]() “For some time now, in addition to being a daily newspaper, has been a digital site, a mobile app, social media service, multimedia provider and more,” Executive Editor Mary Dolan said, noting that with each passing year more subscribers have accessed news content on mobile phones and other digital devices. Newsstand sales will be offered daily Sundays through Fridays. Home-delivery customers will continue to receive newspapers delivered to their homes all other days for which they subscribe. This E-newspaper will be filled with the same local, regional and national news, high school and professional sports, advertising and features such as comics and puzzles that you would find in print on Saturdays. Instead, we will provide subscribers with a full digital replica of the newspaper on Saturdays. The Poughkeepsie Journal in March will cease print publication on Saturdays - for our home delivery and single-copy editions. ![]()
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