Canadian grocer April-June 1918 . le against the business housesfrom which the vegetables, fruits or other goods havegone to the incinerator. The Toronto Globe has been one of the most in-dustrious disseminators of this misinformation. Notunnaturally perhaps they buried this justification ofthe business man at the foot of a somewhat lengthystory, with no hint in head or subhead that any suchjustification was to be found therein. The newspapers of the country are serving theirreaders ill and doing their reputation for honesty awrong in this settled campaign of misinformation. May 24, 1918. CANA


Canadian grocer April-June 1918 . le against the business housesfrom which the vegetables, fruits or other goods havegone to the incinerator. The Toronto Globe has been one of the most in-dustrious disseminators of this misinformation. Notunnaturally perhaps they buried this justification ofthe business man at the foot of a somewhat lengthystory, with no hint in head or subhead that any suchjustification was to be found therein. The newspapers of the country are serving theirreaders ill and doing their reputation for honesty awrong in this settled campaign of misinformation. May 24, 1918. CANADIAN GROCER 55 Current Events in Photograph —No. 21 THE GALLANTVINDICTIVE A WEEK or so ago came theword that the Vindictivehad completed the work at Os-tend that she had tried at TheMole, and that she now blocksthe entrance of that port ofmarauding submarines. The photo shows some of thesurvivors of the Mole fightstanding on the deck of the bat-tered but still ready Vindictivejust before she started on her lastglorious Nuts, Figs and Dates Will Probably be Scarce Outlook Not Encouraging—Many Points of Production Cut Off by Lack of Shipping Must Depend on Nearby Sources —Stocks Will be Light and Prices High 1; (HERE is every probability thatwalnuts will be from fifteen totwenty cents a pound higherthan at present during the present was the opinion of E. B. Hutchinsonwith Birdsong Brothers, importers ofnuts, dates and figs, Washington St.,New York City, when interviewed thisweek by a representative of CANADIANGROCER. Mr. Hutchinson continued to point outthe very great difficulty of securing sup-plies of any of the varieties of nuts im-ported from abroad. The embargoagainst the export of walnuts fromFrance will prohibit the procuring fromthere of usual supplies and in addition tothis the supplies there are short if shipping should be availablethere would be none from there until lateNovember or early December, when thenew crop will be availabl


Size: 1851px × 1350px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidcangroceraprjune1918toro