. Canadian grocer January-June 1908. - windows when theystarted in to do their work of selectionlast week. And quite a task it were big photos and little photos,some mounted and some prints all cordingly the prizes have been awardedas follows : Class prize—Window dressed by J. , clerk with J. Blood, 419 Yongestreet, First Prize Window, Class I., Dressed by J. C. Ecklin, Toronto. ed up. There were some taken by thebest photographers in the various townsfrom which they came, and some, andnot the worst ones, either, snap shotsby amateurs. There were window


. Canadian grocer January-June 1908. - windows when theystarted in to do their work of selectionlast week. And quite a task it were big photos and little photos,some mounted and some prints all cordingly the prizes have been awardedas follows : Class prize—Window dressed by J. , clerk with J. Blood, 419 Yongestreet, First Prize Window, Class I., Dressed by J. C. Ecklin, Toronto. ed up. There were some taken by thebest photographers in the various townsfrom which they came, and some, andnot the worst ones, either, snap shotsby amateurs. There were windows fill-ed with candy, and windows filled withfruit, some with goods all enclosed .inglass cases-, some where the currantsand raisins and nuts and figs and datesand oranges, and etc., etc., all lay inheaps or in boxes. Some windows wereexclusively displays of groceries. Othershad Santa Clauses with fat packs ontheir backs, or chimneys with sugges-tive-looking bulging stockings of bothlong and short variety, hung in frontto attract and were incidental displaysof the good things in the store as sug-gestions. The windows here reproduced,which, by the way, are very different innature, are good representations of fourof these styles. The judging was done on a basis asfollows : The first consideration wasthe real attractive power of the win-dow, which, af


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksub, booksubjectsupermarkets