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 will get its full value of seventy-five cents a yard.

"The real linen sells at one dollar and fifty cents per yard, in our linen department on the second floor. If you want to spend a dollar and a half a yard for table linen, just make sure that you are getting linen and not mercerized cotton, that you are getting a dollar in fabric value for every dollar of father's money."

Several clerks started to carry the bolts of linen through the audience. Instantly an eager woman was on her feet.

"But how are we to know the difference between mercerized cotton and linen, if your own clerks do not recognize it?" she demanded.

"By asking the clerk to test what you are buying, in front of your eyes. Have the material moistened on the right side. If the moisture shows almost immediately on the wrong side you may be reasonably sure that it is linen damask. If, however, the moisture does not show quickly on the wrong side, you may be pretty sure that it is cotton so highly mercerized or finished that the polish or finish withstands moisture. Or you can have it rub-