Yu Rong-hsin (余榮信), a proprietor of a major chain of steak houses in the Taichung area, is a five-year customer of Lonmen. When Yu first bought a lucky seal, he was worried about his business in China. He asked advice on many aspects of his home and business life. "My investments have since paid off and my son, a nine-year-old, now plays the guitar quite well. I think the seals did help my family," Yu said "I think people always need something to rely on psychologically."
On the right side of fifty, Yang said he can handle the seal-cutting job on his own and has no need for apprentices until he knows there are "not many days remaining for me on Earth."
"Maybe in generations afterwards, seals will disappear from people's lives. I would like them to remember me as the man who pioneered [lucky seal enterprises]. Maybe they will give me some kind of title, something like `the great general of luck,' a title by which people call their prominent ancestors. Then I would have a place in the history of seals," Yang said.



