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Village Squire, 1978-03, Page 11These two foot -powered sewing machines (the one on the right is over 80 years oldl still see service at Young The Tailor. done. If the measurements aren't given properly the suit doesn't always turn out the way it should. One of Jack's plusses is that if problems arise. he's able to correct them himself because of his training. He does. for instance. a good deal of altering of clothing for his customers, people who have bought a suit from him and gained weight or lost weight. He can, he says, take a jacket apart and make complicated alternations that others would be unable to undertake. Back in the days when he was working with his father, he learned to draft a pattern for trousers after taking the measurements and make the pants from scratch. He worked on pants, vests and sleeves, while his father concentrated on the jackets. The day of the small tailer shop is pretty much at an end. When John Young opened his shop in 1902 there were many like him in towns all over Ontario. Today, Jack says, there are about two tailers in the city of London and very few even in Toronto. And the skills that went with a suit prepared by a tailor have also been disappearing. Many stock suits are now made using a fuse process, a way of fusing the material to canvass which Jack says is not a sign of good tailoring. Such suits are impossible to alter. But quality lingers in the made to measure suit though even here, there are three grades of clothing sold under the made to measure system. Jack deals with a company that has a jacket that is 90 percent hand made, though there is little hand work on the trousers and vests. His experience, the fact he sells top quality and his nearness to a city have combined to make him one of the three biggest customers the made -to -measure factory has, he's been told. Toronto and Montreal are the headquarters for the clothing industry these days. The smaller plants making made to measure suits may have only a couple of hundred employees. The large companies may have 800-1200 workers. Imports have effected the Canadian clothing industry in the ready-to-wear suit business. Labour costs are cheaper in the far eastern companies that produce most of this clothing. There have been problems Jack says with some imported clothing that doesn't meet Canadian needs, that aren't cut right. One dealer, he knows got a shipment with jackets that all had coats with the armholes too small. If you buy a suit in Western Ontario, however, you're likely buying a Canadian -made suit, he says. Most local dealers like to stock Canadian -made suits, particularly if the suits are of the better quality kind. • For over forty years Welcome Wagon hostesses have been making calls on newcomers - whether they be within our own nation or in a foreign country. If you are a newcomer, know of one, or are a businessman desiring representation in the newcomer's home, call your local representative listed below for WELCOME WAGON LIMITED. • 604 Call your Welcome Wagon Hostess now. WINGHAM 357-3349 EXETER 235-2870 MITCHELL 348-8925 GODERICH 524-6654 STRATFORD 271-5856 VILLAGE SQUIRE/MARCH 1978, PG. 9.