Canadian grocer April-June 1918 . hat the strike is over, all outgoing freightwill be rushed to destination, and any orders placedwith us will be given extra attention so that deliverywill be made to you at the very earliest moment. Thefirst shipments leaving Winnipeg may be the onlyones that will get through in anywhere near regulartime: authorities say the congestion may be most feltafter the freight service is resumed. At time of writing the freight handlers were stillout. So the need of patience is all the more pro-nounced. May 31, 1918. C A N A D I A N G R O C E R 31 Current Events in Pho

Canadian grocer April-June 1918 . hat the strike is over, all outgoing freightwill be rushed to destination, and any orders placedwith us will be given extra attention so that deliverywill be made to you at the very earliest moment. Thefirst shipments leaving Winnipeg may be the onlyones that will get through in anywhere near regulartime: authorities say the congestion may be most feltafter the freight service is resumed. At time of writing the freight handlers were stillout. So the need of patience is all the more pro-nounced. May 31, 1918. C A N A D I A N G R O C E R 31 Current Events in Pho Stock Photo
Preview

Image details

Contributor:

The Reading Room / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

2AJ2TTN

File size:

7.1 MB (446 KB Compressed download)

Releases:

Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?

Dimensions:

1867 x 1338 px | 31.6 x 22.7 cm | 12.4 x 8.9 inches | 150dpi

More information:

This image is a public domain image, which means either that copyright has expired in the image or the copyright holder has waived their copyright. Alamy charges you a fee for access to the high resolution copy of the image.

This image could have imperfections as it’s either historical or reportage.

Canadian grocer April-June 1918 . hat the strike is over, all outgoing freightwill be rushed to destination, and any orders placedwith us will be given extra attention so that deliverywill be made to you at the very earliest moment. Thefirst shipments leaving Winnipeg may be the onlyones that will get through in anywhere near regulartime: authorities say the congestion may be most feltafter the freight service is resumed. At time of writing the freight handlers were stillout. So the need of patience is all the more pro-nounced. May 31, 1918. C A N A D I A N G R O C E R 31 Current Events in Photograph —No. 22 AN AMMUNITIONDUMP Every now and then in theofficial communications fromthe front comes the wordthat this or that ammunitiondump has been bombed.Very few people have anyidea just what an ammuni-tion dump looks like. In theaccompanying official Cana-dian photograph is seen oneof these dumps behind theCanadian lines. It gives someidea of the havoc that mightresult from high explosivebombs dropped in such alocation.. GIVING THE CUSTOMER A HELPINGHAND (Continued from page 29.) bibe nourishment from the end of thepencil and to gaze vacantly into thestreet. Would he not suggest some-thing ? He would not. Presently the strangers gaze alightedon a basket of eggs. Ah! There wasone of the things he had to order, any-way. A dozen eggs, he said, and thelanguid gentleman added this item to thelist and then waited some more—insilence. I cant think what else it was Iwanted, said the man at last, still fumb-ling for the list and striving to recol-lect. Still the semi-recumbent figureuttered no word—made no suggestion—offered no help. After standing a while longer, cogitat-ing and arriving at no further solu-tion, the visitor asked the clerk to addup the bill and parcel the goods, sayinghe guessed that would be all now, any-way. Which the young gentleman did.And the customer took his departure, together with the package. One hour later the same man mighthave been seen buyi