Canadian grocer January-June 1910 . Canada. Both these Chi-cago concerns recognize the superiorityof Canadian bacon and while their hams and beef do compete with similarCanadian products abroad and even insome Canadian points, officers of boththe Swift and Armour companies havepublicly acknowledged the superiorityof Canadian bacon lines, especiallyWiltshire and Cumberland cuts. A Hundred and Fifty Dollars Found Beneath Till Had Been in Use Over Half a Century—Finally Replaced byModern Cash Machine—The Trend of Modern Merchandising. The accompanying illustrations are re-production of photograph
Canadian grocer January-June 1910 . Canada. Both these Chi-cago concerns recognize the superiorityof Canadian bacon and while their hams and beef do compete with similarCanadian products abroad and even insome Canadian points, officers of boththe Swift and Armour companies havepublicly acknowledged the superiorityof Canadian bacon lines, especiallyWiltshire and Cumberland cuts. A Hundred and Fifty Dollars Found Beneath Till Had Been in Use Over Half a Century—Finally Replaced byModern Cash Machine—The Trend of Modern Merchandising. The accompanying illustrations are re-production of photographs of an oldcash till taken a few years ago in Ham-ilton, Ont., where the till was in use ina grocery store for fifty-one years. For the first twenty-five years of itshistory it was used under the counterfrom which each clerk made change. antique to modern methods in merchan-dising. Grocers are fast recognizing thefact that up-to-date systems and appli-ances are the cheaper in the end—thatmoney is actually saved by their An Interior View of Old Cash Box. During the following twenty-six years itwas installed in the centre of the storeand operated by a cashier. When, however, it became so ricketythat it would scarcely hold cash it wasdispensed with and a modern cash ma-chine was installed in its place. An interesting story is told of howthe dust accumulated under it during AN END-OF-THE-YEAR WINDOW. Face of a Clock With Hands Near theMidnight Hour Made of Groceries. Chatham, Ont., .Ian. 7.—AttractiveChristmas and New Years window dis-plays were put on last year by the localbranch of Bradley & Son, grocers. The Christmas display represented thearrival of Santa Claus. The windowshowed a drawing room with a ;arge,old fashioned fireplace and oak collection of stockings were hung fromthe edge of the mantel above ^lie fireplace, in which an incandescent bulb,shining through red tissue paper, bore acomfortable resemblance to a hearth. Inthe middle of the room stoo
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidcangrocerjan, bookyear1910