Mrs. Gloria Driftwood discusses her experiences with electrical heating
"Until we moved into the home we have now," Gloria Driftwood says, "I thought that one heating system was pretty much like any other. But now, let me tell you, my eyes have been opened. Really, they're all unique, and just as valuable as other appliances. We ought not to discriminate. Actually, I'd like the next president of the United States to have an electric heating system. But I understand, that's a long time coming."
Lighting a cigarette, Mrs. Driftwood gathers her thoughts. "My first winter with an electric heater opened my eyes. That's when I discovered the difference* between only being warm and true comfort... (cont. on next page.)
* Difference. The distinction between one thing and another.
(... cont. from last page, won't from last page.) "Even our friends say they feel the difference when they walk through the front door. What the front door has to do with it, I don't know. They could just as well walk in the side door, or indeed the back door, and still feel the difference. The room they enter would be warm all the same. But they insist on feeling the difference when they walk in the front door. They're twits."
Candid opinions like Mrs. Driftwood's explain why over a million families all across America, and a few strange men with Tonka truck collections, have chosen electricity to heat their homes.

Margaret: "Did you boil the water with an electric kettle?"
Joseph: "This is ice tea, dear."
Margaret: "I want a divorce."
We Approve This Message - National Electric Institute.
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