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 come and expenditure, and she will work out her splendid salvation. Throw light on food values, on fabrics and their adulteration. Teach the woman how to buy as well as how to utilize what she buys, and she will be able to solve, in her own way, the much discussed problem of the high cost of living. She will know what to do with father's money.

"It is not possible in one short afternoon to discuss food values and modern methods of marketing, but when you have heard what these ladies and gentlemen have to say," indicating the buyers in charge of their respective exhibits, "you will realize what you can save by knowing more about what you buy. I take pleasure in introducing Mr. Jones, the linen buyer."

Mr. Jones, an elderly man, took his place beside a table piled high with towels, table and bed linen.

"As each one of us is limited to a few minutes," he explained, while the more experienced women in the audience opened their note-books, "I will take up just one point in the buying of linens, the difference between real linen and