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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1928-01-26, Page 3.......-x.,.�ea' e Reasons Why we Should' Buy Canadian Coal: }' ul stayed in Canada, it dollars `hill.lCreight, IG S rtty f r nton pyis the spent'.ten times: during a ^lihch we'"iii'Ontario, pay every year ;would be foEt• the coal we buY Atom the United ed Yoar, in other Words, 'the' total a - States' to scat cin".homes ^This in- mount of money which- circulated' in '.'wott] be to d to than 00 Onto h Q - S 00 5L U freight charges' to l rlttg it up lit;te. (tel vel been if � ''ma4' 11'ae-: tel t pT' a p roz,x There aro i Ip " er • year and very little, , . of Garlada. every S t _ ai. Zcl, comes ba eh, that"ev 'e we see err simple arithmetic . :eta , BY p Canada io 1. ani and child in Ontario 'woman ' , possible or Q 4 er man v ll it were poi, f Y2 '' .s ibstitute our own Alberta domestic: spends, on the average, about $54.0 r fuel for that which we now buy Croat 'Tess in a year than he or she would this money would,. have spent if Ontario'bought aucl ''nr- iru2° neighlior`S,'all P ,of course, Stay in Canada. ` • ned Canadian coal. intpresting �� very ani. • ve a very,anothero S i ; would have There t.. UnciouUtedly, t _ .., he country's look at-it.`_Sisppcse that Ont - eludes effect 'on: i way to 1 he coal and the Canada during h year cost e1 t Glades the o. would Have it ad imported'.oar l out. ''� nnOtle JCS sada of _ y g This huge Canal ci sons In h•ilf million •md a1 of it ever prosperity, The : money which goes tc to pay for a ton of coal is split up in : a' dozen different ways. Part of it would go to the dealer who sold it and he, in tur•n,,would divide up his el -lore Cod• wages and similar items. Part of it would go to the railroads to pay the freight charges on brig ing,g.,,it ,, from theins es This would ed dwidcd 013 n ._ et mean e wn s dist t largo iiia greet s }. Y part of 'this shareavoiild be ,used to pay railroad men's wages along the entire line over which the coal was hauled. Finally, part of -it would 'go. to the mines in Alberta from which it was originally bought. So that the money which. ')ntario people used to buy Canadion coal would be spread out all over the Dom- inion in a very short time. It would be kept in circulation and add an im- portant sum,to the amotint of .money in general', circulation. ' There, is -' another very important thing for consider, just at this point. Tho people of the west bay a great -deal of_ 'their manufactured goods froin Ontario and the east. If they had more money, they would buy moreggods..And if Ontario. bought western' 'coal they would have more money in the west to buy Ontario • goods. When Cee pay 352,000,000 a year as a result of our coal.,leelll�. k i?eans much more: than simply -es -eliding that liege suns of medey to a neighboring country.. If that money lied stayed in Canad,r. & ,et would be in general cir- •culation, ,' Economics have figured that on an average, a dollar changes hands ten times in a Year. Yon spend it and the man -to whom you paid it,spends it again. It goes to someone else and he spends it. Here ie another endless chain, as a .matter of 'fact. So that if . that $52,000,000 which we spend every' year on coal and away from our own development. .otic bought, ou •ht, tons sr a at coal. from Alberta a year. ear'.: If we also ", :. suppose that, the :averagecost is'tor• - dollars' a ton this means ten million dollars. dollars of slew That, is ten million business in Canada. T1,nat would mean '1,800 -a -year ;obs .tor ,6,066 more men in thie'country, Let usc see what .would happen to the money these men would eagn. Suppose that the economists are ex - aggregating when they say, thata dol- Iar would turn over ten, timers in a year—and it is most unlikely that they are over -rating it. Bet let us be very conservative -and say that it only changes hands three' times.' Then, as e result of these 6,660 new jobs, there would be twice tette moony -mere 'men needed in Canadai ,n indus- tries and in agriculture to :supply the things this first' group would need. That is, 'one million tone of coal would tne:in'19,998'new jobs." But a million tons of domestic coal is .only a quarter of the 'amount cen- tral Canada uses every year. So that- if we bought oiir entire simply . at honie, it would mean.jobs,for almost 80,000 men, Statisticians tell us that the aver- age family in Canada is foss persons. Thatwould mean, as far as tliis'dis- cueeion is concerned, that every one of these • new,jobs'would stanch for a new fancily of four people. In other words, if we bought our coal in Canada, we would be building a city of 320,000 people in thitrcottn- try. If all the results were confided to one spot, that is exactly what it would'. !bean. h Cattle 'Prices Have Advanced. J Sitileii nt by''W.•lyi.:Jardine ,-See-` !sand and the largest potential pro- otary of 1gr colt ec ure. •duction capacity in the.hirtory.of the , r country—both much nil excess; o% , or - The ptcsnt 'prices' for beef which dinary peacetine requirements/ at nuc causing con lainte and. threats, remunerative prices. This situation had to be liquidated of • bgycrxtt in Some places, seem= un- duly high ibh oi. l :i ec a uscthey a re corn- .and as cattle rmbers can be ine r oasae- il`vith prices olthe hast few eder decreased- only gradually it took tearl which were ruinously IOW to 6 years tp complete this liquidation. the cattle grower.Tlis year lot -the During 1920 and 1921 there was first time since 1920 cattlemen as a decline }n cattle prices of over 00Pm' whole have received fairly remunera- tive emunera- Live:'pricey for their cattle. Di the ' oilier six .years cattle 'pr iCeS wereso loiv most of the time'tliat large miun- bers ofp roducer's, were forced' cat. of business and cattle number's have been 1 reduced.' drastically, At, .various tunes. in the past two years when". ii I• have addressed -gather- ings- of gather-ings-of eattlen en 1 have called a.ttet.- 'Lion oil the Public to the fact, that the present resent situation was; almost cei't`tiir. develop. department also has the next •t and tor U months, cent in 16 ti?on liquidation held prices, enforced ,rears q 1 ��- actually ) low.:els < at extremely levels, a rices: ever a consider- ablepre-war p. period of 'times During this per- iod cattle slaughter . gee c .v exceeded production and cattle numbers de- clined dined' 11,000,000 head! 07• ]:7 per cent in seven, years. advanced While v cattle prices' have tiihrle 1 almost continuously during 1927 the sharp advance came' after the middle, the year,)articularly in the. better to -c eve op. _ 'Inc 01 L 1 , out g rades of'cattle .'end beef, which, how - that n issued many' s1aegtements pointinga minor proportion . to • its greatly' ex- ever, make sip but proportion cattle dungh , t w of the total supply. The shortage of production avid that' sooner ceeding prthese better grades this fall is,clirect- ly traceable to.blie situation in the rat - when ' the mar'l:et ter half of 1926, was overloaded with supplies oi. well finished cattle, with . resulting 1oev P rices:and hegvy losses to cattle feed- ers of the Corn Belt States who 'i>xo- duce practically all of these high grades of cattle, For example, the supply. of choice, and prime„cattle at Chicago during' September, October, and November last year was only 00 per cent as large as for the period a year ago and only.: 50 per, 'cent of the 5 -year average for these menthe. It looks very touch as if cattle sup-' plies during the first half” of 1928 last years cattle be, smaller than in 1927 or in any other year in the last five 15115 - to be reestablished .on abasia ivhe're is slaughtered much as shipments of stocker' and does dumber ed anima s R feeder. cattle into the Corn Belt' since. Animals sedd the mimber of young. July 1 last yeae over 16 per cent animals raised. smaller than in 1920 and 28 - percent. Another factor in the situation is a for thethin distribution costs axe much high -:,below the 5 -year avet;ag per- er than; before the. war. This in- cod• It .is during these latter months ` tie to a very considerable of the year that cattle feeders buy extent is d and salaries their supplies of unfinished cattle for' extent to increased wages i i Barring abnormal coedit- {n-tlie, various industries and trades . feed(} g . g read draughts interestedeitt this distribution. Even ions, such as widesp t, when cattle ,prices in recent "years supplies of all cattle ;for slaughter e actually belhw pre-war p,•'e r awing each of the next two were beef'to the cousmrer''iv•:ears will probably be small, as corn- hihegh„ compared t of 'th°are-war prices pared with any of; the last four years. nnigh, twz .the. rices of cattle iiohir•lt- Incidentally the situation in the er tl with p • ecessary to insure reasonable. hog snorkel is almost the reverse of reurZn o: the- �indiistry:. and; insure that.in the cattle market. Prices of aeturns t ode nate future snppli'es; .,this the hogs and pork products are nowAthe q crease inthecost' of cattle slaughter= lowest in fiver three years. 6 pre - ed must be paid by the. consumers of sent prices hogs'ar•e not paying for beef. the corn led to them. Unless this sit - Here is what has taken niece in the:, nasion is improved'shortiy, a substan- cattle indastry in the host ten years;• tial reduction in hog production with Cattle production was greatly ex -in a year. or two may be expected, paraded' daring the war in rea»onse With the probable reduced supplies of to dencanrls for.'aclnryuatc putt»lies of • beef during the next two years. con - beef Inc the allied forces When they Somers have an interest in seeing to War .closeel the thd'+atry enned iteelf it that hog production is -not also situ= With the largest number of cattle on ilarly reduced. pr later a sharp reduction in slaugh�. Prices must result. ter and higher:• p?'rc i ould' This was a situation that sh have been of vital interest to the eon'-' sunning public.' .As long as cattle. rices- were low and, beef cheap, how-. p But as long as we are buying our' coal' outside Canada, on the other hand, we are building up this city somewhere else dad taking the -money Canada's Duty .to Herself. Editor The News-Reeogd: Dear Sir:—I tin glad the Depart- ment : of the Interior is realizing the terribly .rapiddepletion of our rayq :forest products, and is becoming al - lamed about Canada's future supply for hell own industries. T trust this alarm will bring definite restraining actin' on the general export of our raw natural eesottrces ' at the ap- proaehing Session of Parliament. The export of 1,500,000, cords of raw pulpwood during the last year "brought us $15,000,000,- which "pro- bably went to apply on our, National 'Debt reduction of $66,000,000 in 9 months, or 082,000,000 for the year. Now if the same ,pulp wood bad been manufactured inteefinished pap- er products in Canada, it would have brought .390,000,000,at least, and for. higher grjsdes of finished products it would have brought. towards $150,- 000,000 which source alone would even', consumer's were. unconcerned as to the hardships pf the cattle ndus- try'or as'to -the future of the beef supply: Consequently the situation was alloyed to work itself ' out through the'.the iihcgntrolled action' of economic forces with the .result that the reduction in herds_ probably went too far', and cattle; slaughter for the next few years must be reduced much below the average of that of the 5if 'thethe business i5 titres of raw materials and finished products -from the U. S. when we' have a super abundance of both at home?. If the $7,000,000 worth of raw As- bestos the shipped to the U. 0. last year had been manufactured' into finiehed products in Canada before being shipped, we would have receiv- ed $77,000,000 for it, the difference would have been spent • in Canada, largely in wages, etc., and its extra money products alone would have paid off , that $66,000,000 of our National Debt. a; 111111111111111S 11111 A Column ,Prepared Especially for Women rlhi den to Men But Not Fo d it is curious how superstitions -perms a. per- sist, in spite of the: advance in educes SI. i tion. Oro>of the proofs of this is the. periodical reeurr'anee of the chain 1 '1>'a chain let- ter a ve � ��.little a letter. L ry 4 ' written usu- ally a letter • colved trrsie e in youdonot know. one some, ally by s thename' a strange town, sonietimeS �01 the town is not given and no nanhe. is signed, asking you to ,copy the let- ter and send it on to one,: two or some - tame' more of your . friends, •a'fter which some great happiness, er some extra good luck will befall you. And there is usually a threat, more or less. a if oii.fail, in'this request` veiled, that y e. uall unfortunate will something equally Happen to you. >s of t c n h o A, Chilton lady received o e letters the other day. It satire from e teem' it an adjacent county. It was unsigned and contained nothing in the it .had way of information except that been started after the war' by a sol- diez' and was to go around the world three times. Like the man who •was making. a , speech and'who failed to say' what his speech Was about, this letter failed to inform the recipient what would happen when the chain had made a triple circle' of the globe. If our raw material shipped to the United States last year had been man ufactured in Canada, it would have necessitated an adidtional $100,000,- 000 being expended in wages,: etc here, and neeessitated our having an additional million population, Ii our nickel matteee capper ones other minerals had been; converted in- to finished products in -Canada last year, it would have brought us Many have more than provided the e82,- millions of dollars a large per .cent _ 000,000 reduction of -our -National of 'which would have been spent in Debt this year, as well as distributing wages here. an additional $100,000,000, largely in wagesWilly not double our. population wages in Canada. Our forestproducts last, year quickly in this way, rather than eon - amounted to ' $475,000,000, of which tinue 06'pursue our usual immigra- we exported :$283,000,000, which, if tion policy, ,with small results. all were manufactureder , "In here, Q) X14/flCl� •men and terotnenw'ho would! be a credit „teethe good old school where they re- ceived . their - education. Mr, Doig in commenting on the changes in this seetion, pointed out that cme hundred and twenty-five were enroleld fifty years ago; now there are but thirteen, and in the (natter of teachers' salar ies, he' received $375 per year, and tite present teacher receives $1000, but living was vory much cheaper in those days than it is now. At the conclusion of the exercises, all joined in singing the National Anthem, and dispersed to their hones well pleased with the afternoon spent in the old school, Fifty years ago, on the 2n0 day of January, a stripling eighteen years of age, left his home on the 'fatan in Tuckersmith .township, and ,came up to HOwiek to begin. his career AS. a public school teacher. He had neves 'attended tiny sebdol except S. S. No, 2, Tuckersmith, 'except for: eight Weeks' attendance at the Clin, ton Model School just proir to.•this time. Cn the 3rd day of January, 1878, he opened school in. Union P. S. No, X6, Howiek and Grey, and found a large attendance present, quite a number of pupils,': both boys anel girls, being older than then" teacher, and during the first three months one hundred and twenty-five pupils were enrolled and the daily attendance was nearly one hundred. The school house ryas. an old frame ramshackle Mind poorly `equipped, and ncueh • crowded during the first winter; but the pres- ent school house was built that sum- mer and the new school was opened after the midsummer holidays. Dur- ing the past half century many pupils have been taught by different teeth- ers, On January Ord this year, or just fifty, years since this teacher op- poned school he again appeared at the sande school with a few of his pupils who were present'with him' when he canned. school half a century ago He rang the dell, opened sehooi by read- ing the same Scripture and using the sante prayer ice had used fifty years; ago. Ile then called the roll of 'fifty years ago, and of the' one hiantired end twenty-five pupils w,ho then attended school, only . about a dozen now re- main 'in the,locelity, , .A. number of ,thein aro sleeping their last':sleen in the cemetery adjoining the - school which theyattendedduring childhood, others have gone to different parts of : Canada and United States, abd some of these have .also gone to their, reeemad.' Some of those Petite of . 50 pears ago have,,distinguished! them- selves in varie,us' walks of life. Doc- tor George F. Belden is practising his profession in Toronto; Dr: Thomas Ball is practising in farriston, and would fact, if our raw materials wilier! have b;'ought m sufficient additionalDebt are now exported were man ufactttred money to pay off our National Debt in Canada "'for the next 10 years it in a few years, - would easily pay 'off our National I,,note the Algoma Steel Co. TiroDebt •rnd`.double our population. poses to again use Canadian Iron Oree the -Government. will 1eec which used i hope to be so popular in Can-. ada, but in• recent years Canada has cast. their: intention of doing 'Some1 not used a tote of Canadian Ore, ox- thing along this line ;ilt the, ,apeeoh cent any small; quantity that Besco .from the Throne,- a font days hence, might have used, running in a semi- but if they don't,..then I. hope the op - idle way. Why °thee disuse of Cana- position will propose an amendment dian'Ore of which we have More `add embodyingthese 'principles• do they better quality than any, other country will be discussed; and.thatmeet nim- bi. the world? Do freight rates have bers will pronouce either for ee. -any bearing, or effect on this? - (against then. If neither party'inoves - Why haul United ' States ore 200 l ,in the matter, e lope en independent miles at 50c a ton and charge Alberta d `b 'it todi'scue coal 511.50 a ton for a 2600 mile haul which should'be 60 per cent less pee net ton. • Why should Canada buy such quan- Soft, - Coo ns Money Back if 'Sloone's Emerald Oil Doesn't Do Away 'Wish All Sore- '''., ness and' Pain in' 24 Tours., Get a bottle of 111'oonp s Emerald Oil with'the: .inderstanding that if it clogs not .'rut ,an end to the ('110115 and. soreness your money • will - be promptly returned. Don't worry,' about how long you've had it, or how many-,. othbr prepara- tions you have tried. -This powerful penetrating oil 15 one' preparation that will helji, to shake; your painful, aching feet so healthy and free from corn and bunion soreness that;'you'll be able 06 go anywhere and def any. thing' in absolute foot comfort. S. o marvelously powerful 1 s • liloorxe's, Emerald Oil that thousands have :found it gives wonderful re- sults In the „treatment. of dana;orous ewollep of varicose veins, 1irug- ••l;ists- are selling lots of ;it 11 the chain was to bind the w orl C But1 -with unbroken links this hard t�rouinda a lime -arT hearted Clintona i v broke by 14 >s •] * flinging; this letter into the ruthlessly g <, t. t Do. .you dare waste paper; baslce . Y s e ?" I:as'ked. her. "Oh brealc'tlae errand. shesaid d n< ' a before," a and I v„, done it bu e, nothing 'very terrible has happened to are get. 1'11- rick it again.” ht it nest be . I've always thous z somebody oe unbalanced mind who -started these things in the first place and it certainly must be silly people, who' have little to occupy their minds and hands who keep then going'. 'N0- body benefits; so'far asI carr see, ex- cept the,postoffice department, who sells stamps, and the :dealer who sells stationery. IT the . women who re- ceive `.these: letters, (sometimes men 3o, too,), would sit down 'and write a letber- to,some' absent member of -her ' f family or a friend; who or 11S, cwt Y had not liad a letter for some time ,his effort would be much marc worth-' while„ than in wasting; time, energy, stationery- and postage in chain - let- ters. Surely.we are grown-up enough to' have got beyond such foolishness.. REBEKAHI CA.NADA'S SEED GRADING . . SYSTEM Commerce in seeds in Canada is conducted on a -heels of 'legally defin- ed grades, and the -quality 2f seed sold must•confoxm to prescribed grade definitions. This involves responsible duties for the inspectors of the Do,' minion Seed Branch, Department of 'Agriculture, who grade all -. agricul- tural seed and a 'large partof the field root and garden vegetable.' seeds required for domestic use and,for ex- port. According to the latest annual report of the Minister of Agriculture 32,617 control samples were examined and graded. at laboratory points dur- ing the fiscal year 1925-26. The -tot- al quantity of seed represented by these samples amounted to several millions of bushels. That the system followed he this country is sound is • IT SOMETIMES :HAPPENS Customer (in haberdashery) — "I -wish to see a tic in which blue pre- dombiates." Cleric: ``Here's one in 'which blue predominates, but the purple in it predominates even more, I think "— Boston Transcript, will move an ring . a sion; as 1111 seems verysingular that t , Graham McDonald is Principal o 75 per cent' of the people should be opposed to Canada's export of, her rgw =Aerials, and yet can't. get any effective action on tthe(natter.. Canada needs the Great LakeS—St:. Lawrence 'Water Ways Constfuction at- the earliest possible date, and she needs perhaps more immediately the T-fydo Electric Power Development that must accompany .this great work which should be done on the Public Ownership and Oneration 'plan, for the good of, the whole people, espec dally that nation in Canadian Terri, tore as well'as Canada's share, of thop resent teacher; .and het pupils were Thter national Section. which -sh n'es p ' present, •and r; ansa the upils were of the weather and the bad,rolds the' people of the Section ttu'nedout and framished an abuncltinee of` refresh- ments for both yotmg and end The teacher, whose 'name is William ee. Dong, itt closing, thankedhis old pup- ils' Cor coming out' o mett and greet him after.. SO many years, .a 1d Was vory mach pleased also to meet the school officers and others who were Listowel Public School; Peter "1`. Doig!" another old boy arid a former Reeve of ITowisk and, ex -Warden.. of. iluron County, was present on' this occasion and was sent to the blackboard by his old teacher to solve a problem arithmetic. The teacher began the exercises by going to the board, took the chalk and taught his old pupils a lesson in fractierns, after eselech he gave them sante old time bs.°Ltie twist- ers to solve. Ile then took tip Goog•r'anhy and history, after' which aekleesses were made by the old pup- ils and others. Weise Sperling the Should be 'definitely defined before. be- . ginning, e.grinning, without ,any Chicago diver- sion methods being permitted.__ Y'oin'l 'evilly, We 0, Staley, TIE'S TO BE TRtlS'lED He may have a greasy hat and the seat aF his pants may lie shiny, but if his children have their notes' flattened against the window,. Ilene a half -heat' before he is due home for supper, you can Lrult'him with anything you have,.-lvew River ltagtzine. present on this occasion,, and hoped tlaat this old school section, where he taught -his first lesson and'sarned !osis, first dollar, would still • coniine to 'presper.;and send out to the world -Birthday or 'anniversary greetings- cby telepbohe • When 'a birthday or anniver• - sary comes ,around, and you warit,to`congrat-urate a die . tont relative or friend, what that you could buy would mean so much tb the recipi- ent as the cheerful sound of your voice over the tele- phone? Witli the first words of your. . gt eeting by Long . Distance, • memories: of days spent to- gether flash before the mind ' and the moments glow with these share 'recollections. of the past. One of the greatest blessings Long5Distance confers is the opportunity for renewing and strengthening the Lies of friendship and affection be tween triose who are Separ- ated by distance. Try it. CAelliee eieveo'y L;el( Telephone is ic' Long Distance Sta{ion." 707 a itt ta1txon to the, farmer' ixr i'ecent: l(0 TI ifireel:ols met, 17cce,nber 20th ao 22nd, and decided re t51 each . county 10 send a repro _tative to confer with the Company directors in 7 oronto ,on January 24th. In the elicit time that remains before the conference it. will be impossible to give assistance to all counties, Ar I ran(omertt' :are being' made, however,' for meetings in Dazfferin, Grey and Simcoe at which to discuss this' meth - od of marketing, and answer ues b, s q s €ivies. Leaders of the farmer luove- t I7 Bounties' ate t rgeu i other a e i>.ged to v.. 'h :h.'e' county i5 ' see that tici y represented delegate at the To rya strong Toronto, meetingon Saniiar 24t1i, Details Y )e worked out for lova will there l t z l meetings' and a canipaig'n for ;mem- ber'shf t. p TIIE TWO DOLLS One reclined at her' ease on the little doh''s' cotaeh, ” ter dris ray ori the floor, The other o n , 3 And one she was clad in s4 dress •o$ the. best, That the Tittle to trunk held Tl, y z. in . store. The other; was crs'essed in an old ging-. ham gown, ugly • was -terrible u„1y and old, • It was wprn at the sleeves and the . neck end the hear, It was bought before Janie was g' sotet. . For Jane,' was the: dolly that lay on the floor; • She was awfully broken and shown bythe rpcogni.tion given on m and a le .,he was. minus one art i d foreign markets t9 Canadian seed ef- — a half, fered .under• official 'sale`antl grade • I or Iter, wigs only twopene names. spent: LIVESTOCK MARKETJNG CONTRACT Farmers .throughout : Ontario will be given en opportunity of marketing their cattle, sheep., and hogs on a strictly co-operative basis. 'Tice share - Golders of -.The United Farmers Co- operative Company, Limited, at their A'{r'heedeiGIee7 ing• a few weeks ago, gave the directors authority to ar- range for meetings at which to dis- cuss 'the Hoge Pool and Live Stock -Contract, and then to organize, if those Who sell their live stock ap- prove of this new system of market- ing which has been adopted with sue bent, g and e was But in spite of this Jane had a feeling of pride, That Clarrisabelle never could feel, Por her mother had whispered, "I love . you the most, And for joy Janie s cracked head did reel. For 'twas baby whced dressed her in her gingham gown, And who'd thrown her upon the hard floor, And under that gingham, n doll's heart did beat, ,That was faithful' and true, and lots morel Constance Mary Baird, age 10, (granddaughter of the late W. R. It Lough of Clinton.) F .. he Tra tele.-- -<.reee'o Ralf To get steady sales in satisfactory' Volume, you must build up confidence iu your store and its service, Advertising in he Glint, e ta'a, spRee will lay the foundation of such cotifi deuce. Advertising slew, the spade, work that leads to bigger sales. It tad11 tell people about your stare, its service, It will tell them about the goods you have to offer. Let your advertising iia The Clinton News -Record be a standing invitation to the folk around here. As a rule, People Shop Where They .Feel Welcome "An Advertisement is an .Invitation79'