Posts tagged ‘silver earrings’

Supermarkets battle for Christmas shoppers

By admin, 24 November, 2009, No Comment

Supermarkets are embarking on record levels of promotions as they battle to tiffany persuade cash-strapped shoppers to part with their money in the crucial run-up to Christmas.

At the checkouts of the big supermarkets, 35 per cent of all sales by value are on promotion, compared with 26 per cent a year ago, according to Nielsen, the market research group.

Mike Watkins, a senior manager at Nielsen, said this was a record high for promotions. “Typically promotions peak around the end of November every year. They peaked a long time ago and are remaining high,” he added.

Supermarkets are ramping up offers, often part-funded by their suppliers, as they fight the effects silver money clips of falling food price inflation, which means they must work harder to drive sales. They are also expanding rapidly into areas such as clothing, entertainment and electronics in an effort to capture a bigger slice of these markets.

Judith McKenna, finance director of Asda, has predicted this year will be the “most competitive Christmas for a decade”.

Asda is expanding its promotional offerings this year, with deals on toys and electronics as well as on food.

Tesco said it was concentrating on delivering products for clear low prices such as 1, 2 or 3. But this week alone it was running 3,200 promotions in its stores and more than 250 half-price offers.

“Whether you call it a promotion or a price cut, it is going to be a bumper Christmas for consumers being able to buy food more affordably,” said one person familiar with the retailer.

Wm Morrison has in recent weeks been offering half-price deals on meat and fish among its promotions. From Monday it will begin a “price crunch week”, with further Christmas offers.

J Sainsbury, which has also been running a series of offers, said its level of promotions was about the same as silver pendants last year, at 30-33 per cent, just below the industry average, but higher than two years ago, when the proportion of sales on promotion was about 20 per cent.

Tesco, Sainsbury and Morrison are slugging it out with loyalty or voucher schemes.

Angus Maciver, Morrison’s group marketing director, said: “This year we have seen more investment in promotions but at the same time big investment in loyalty. Both have gone up.”

Even Marks and Spencer is promoting its party food and champagne, while Waitrose, its upmarket rival, will run 40 per cent more offers this December than last.

“The food market has become far more promotional than it has been for many years, and I don’t see that Christmas silver earrings could possibly be any less so,” said Richard Hyman, strategic retail adviser to Deloitte.

Some retail watchers are sceptical at the overall value of the promotional bonanza to consumers, amid concerns supermarkets may be putting up prices of other goods to compensate.

It has also raised fears among analysts and investors that the promotional war will infect other parts of the high street.

According to a survey of 100 retailers by PwC, the professional services firm, about half of high street shops were offering discounts or promotions, such as three products for the price of two. This is a similar level to last year, when the economy was lurching downwards.

However, executives and analysts hope the heavy discounting and one-off sales days seen last year will be avoided. “Against silver key rings last year when there was a bloodbath, you would expect less discounting and clearance,” said Tony Shiret, analyst at Credit Suisse.

Retailers are considering whether to pass on the higher rate of value added tax on January 1, when it returns to 17.5 per cent from 15 per cent, or absorb this cost themselves.

HOW TO GIVE SERVING PERSONNEL MERRY CHRISTMAS

By admin, 22 November, 2009, No Comment

The government of United Kingdom’s Ministry of Defence issued the following news release:

As the season of good will is nearly upon us, the British public are being urged christmas gift to help the forces as much as possible by refraining from sending Christmas parcels to troops in Afghanistan.

Soldiers serving in theatre are literally being overwhelmed by support from the British public who generously post unsolicited parcels, putting a massive strain on the Forces Post Office in Camp Bastion, resulting in packages from friends and family taking longer to reach the intended recipients.

Many of the parcels are addressed to chaplains who have long left theatre, but whose legacy continues. The intention is that the current generation of padres will distribute the parcels to troops on the front line.

Padre Richard Downes, who is the British chaplain at Camp Bastion, said:

“The Enduring Families Free Mail Service enables families and close friends of Service silver money clips personnel to send packages out to theatre. While such unsolicited parcels are without doubt popular with recipients, the all-important personal mail from soldiers’ families becomes significantly delayed.

“Occasionally the perceived needs of recipients have become somewhat confused, as one chaplain discovered to his dismay when he opened a welfare parcel addressed to him personally, but which contained amongst other things a glossy pin-up calendar!”

Only a small fraction of the unsolicited parcels make it to the front line, the rest are processed by staff in Camp Bastion and the contents held in storage in welfare rest areas and churches until they can be sent on.

Some of the contents, including toiletry items, lie untouched for months at a time and one chaplain silver pendants reported that he had 70 brand new toothbrushes in the back of his church in a Forward Operating Base (FOB).

In response to the growing problem, the Ministry of Defence is working with the forces charity SSAFA to enable generous members of the public to donate money to the charity as an alternative to sending parcels.

The Operational Welfare Fund is focused on providing support direct to the front line and enables commanders on the ground to bid for those items which they know will boost the troops’ morale.

Padre Downes said:

“The postal service puts on a massive extra push at Christmas and put extra flights on to get the stuff here. But getting the mail out to the FOBs also takes longer, as mail must fit in around operational transport priorities.

“I thank the British public for their support but I would ask that they keep the pressure off the postal system silver earrings over the Christmas period. The British military are a generous bunch and the troops will always share with those whose parcels may have been held up.”For more information please contact: Sarabjit Jagirdar, Email:- htsyndication@hindustantimes.com.

Nation’s Best Christmas Event Begins Nov. 7 with Dollywood’s Smoky Mountain Christmas Presented by Humana

By admin, 17 November, 2009, No Comment

Dollywood unwraps its 20th anniversary holiday season on Nov. 7 with the opening of its tiffany award-winning festival Smoky Mountain Christmas presented by Humana, which continues through Jan. 2, 2010.

Dollywood’s Smoky Mountain Christmas festival recently won its second consecutive Golden Ticket Award for Best Christmas Event. The awards are presented annually to the “best of the best” in the amusement industry by Amusement Today magazine from an international poll.

“I just love spending the holidays with family and friends, so I hope my Smoky Mountain Christmas silver earrings festival brings families closer together this time of year,” Dolly Parton said. “My wish is for everyone to be wrapped in warm holiday memories, just like the ones of my family that I cherish and hold so dear.”

The Golden Tickets also honored Dollywood for Best Shows, which includes the park’s lineup of holiday entertainment. Dollywood’s live stage shows feature Dollywood’s Babes in Toyland, Christmas in the Smokies, O’ Holy Night, ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas, Christmas with the Kingdom Heirs, and An Appalachian Christmas. Multiple performances are featured each day, and all shows are included with park admission.

Set amid a colorful display of four million holiday lights, Dollywood also offers guests more than 20 rides silver key rings and attractions, including The Polar Express 4-D ExperienceTM which takes guests on a magical journey to the North Pole. Guests can enjoy the world-renowned Thunderhead and Mystery Mine coasters, as well as the Dollywood Express, a 110-ton steam engine that takes a nostalgic railroad journey into the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains.

Santa’s Workshop is Santa’s home-away-from-home at Dollywood where a larger-than-life-sized silver necklaces display of toys awaits visitors. Santa also appears twice each evening in the Parade of Lights, joined by a cast of fun characters and brightly colored floats. Breakfast with Santa is featured from 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. each Saturday during the festival. Seating is first-come, first-served for the meal which includes bacon, sausage, eggs, sausage gravy and grits. Prices are $15.99 for adults, $7.99 for children ages 4-11. Dollywood admission is required.

Seasonal favorites and special recipes from Dollywood’s best chefs are on the menu at the park’s bangles many restaurants. Endless buffets featuring oven-roasted turkey and dressing with all of the trimmings are holiday favorites. Each year welcomes new additions, like this year’s chicken pot pie served at Backstage restaurant, all sure to become classic dishes offered for years to come.

Dollywood is a 150-acre family adventure park in Pigeon Forge, Tenn. For more information, call 1-800-DOLLYWOOD or visit dollywood.com. Operating days and hours vary.

RINGS of GOLD

By admin, 16 November, 2009, No Comment

At the center of the AKCs 1 25 years is the tumultuous 20th century silver jewelry. The period between 1 899 and 1 999, often referred to as the “American Century” ushered in a breathtaking acceleration in the rate of change, not just in the general culture but also in our various niche occupations and pastimes.

The rapid evolution of the sport of purebred dogs during this whirlwind century coincided- not so coincidently – with an unprecedented growth in wealth, technology, and science. A hundred years of world wars, population shifts, social upheavals, and great movements like suffrage and civil rights similarly reshaped the sport as they reshaped the nation.

PRELUDE

In the beginning, there were sporting-dog and pack-hound trials. Soon silver pendants after America won its independence, gentlemen (and not-such-gentlemen) sportsmen were testing the skill of their field dogs in rudimentary competitive trials. As early as the 1830s there was a lively market for sporting periodicals. By the 1870s entire books on the subject, Arnold Burgee’s landmark The American Kennel and Sporting Field comes to mind, were deemed necessary.

It is hardly surprising that trialing would take off so quickly in America. Hardy souls fiving on the frontier depended on shooting irons for sustenance and protection. The colonies relied on these adventurers, farmers, and professional hunters to form the citizen militias that were the backbone of the Revolutionary fighting force.

By 1791, when ratification of the Bill of Rights guaranteed the right to bear arms,silver earrings the gun and the gundog were already cherished staples of American life. In Britain, by contrast, with its rigid class system and punitive laws dictating who could and could not own weapons-and even certain breeds of dog-the right to bear arms was, and remains, a rather exotic concept.

The growth of conformation shows was n貌 less meteoric. 1859 is the generally accepted birth date of dog shows in England, and by the 1870s all-breed shows had taken root in America. These were crude affairs by today’s standards. Without the guiding hand of a central regulatory body, the results were wildly inconsistent-that’s where the AKC came in. But these early events were crucially important to the sport’s development. It was at such embryonic shows, staged by sportsmen obsessed with the performance ability of their dogs, that “Form follows function” became the unofficial motto of the sport.

DOG YEARS

By the dawn of the 20th century, the stage was set for the golden age of American dog sports immortalized in the photos on these pages. This age can be roughly divided into two eras.

First came the era of large-scale kennels, when pre-income tax millionaires engaged in spending silver key rings wars in their attempt to dominate the sport as they had dominated business and finance. When J. P. Morgan, for instance, decided he would like to show Collies, he didn’t import a mere foundation pair; he brought the entire Cragston Kennel over from England, and even induced the great kennel master and handler Alf Blewitt to relocate as well.

It was during this era, too, that competitive obethence became an AKC event, thanks in great part to the evangelizing of obethence gurus Helene Whitehouse Walker and Blanche Saunders.

As life in the 20th century became increasingly less formal and more self-involved, what would come to be called “companion events” followed suit. In chronological order of introduction came obethence, tracking, agility, rally-each a little freer and more individualistic than what came before.

The second half of the 20th century can be called the era of democratization. The late- 1940s postwar boom in income and leisure time gave just plain folks the means to keep small-scale kennels and make enduring contributions to the sport, and the large kennels gave way to middle-class “weekend warriors.” The advent of televised dog shows at this time brought die glamour and excitement of big events into living rooms nationwide, inspiring people from all walks of life to get into the game.

The 1957 demise of the original Morris & Essex show, in all its genteel old-money glory, is a convenient dividing line between the two eras.

ALWAYS

Much has changed since the days when such giants as Mrs. Dodge, Alva Rosenberg, and Percy Roberts silver necklaces cast their imposing shadows in the ring. But at its core, in its heart of hearts, the sport holds values that are ever constant. An exhibitor will always beam with pride as she stacks her dog for a big win shot. A good retrieve has always been a good retrieve, and the soulful gaze of a trusty gundog will always be die sportsman’s sweetest reward. The deep satisfaction handlers will derive from a flawless obethence routine this weekend is the same as it was in the early ’30s, when the event was new.

Of course, die point of it all- past and presenthas been to produce good dogs, sound of mind and body. This will always be so.

And the AKC itself, despite many superficial changes, remains true to the core mission set forth by its founders on a September day in 1884. It was put well by an AKC president of the mid-20th century, William E. Buckley, who once assembled the staff to remind them, “Always remember: We are a service organization. The dogs are not here for us, we are here for die dogs.”