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 try eggs when only the dealers in certified eggs can furnish them, and so we get cold storage eggs labeled 'country,' We demand Long Island potatoes when the market is sold out, and we get Maine potatoes at a slightly higher figure than they should bring, because the dealer does not dare tell us the truth. If he does, we go to another dealer who knows us better."

"In Boston," remarked Mrs. Gregory, "we have a little marketing club and study prices and market conditions. It takes time, but it saves us all quite a little."

Mrs. Larry ate mechanically, hardly knowing what was served. This was what the lecturer had meant about studying food values—what Larry had meant by finding a new market. But both of them had missed the mark. She would combine the two, study the old markets and find new ones.

Mrs. Moore was warming up to the topic and everybody was interested. "New York is headquarters for the National Housewives' League. We have district branches and leaders, and we are shaking up the dealers just beautifully. Last week our district leader an-