20 THE MODEL STOCK PLAN have been at the very lowest price levels, where every kind of hindrance to the full development of the Model Stock Plan is met with and where the development of the possibilities of this plan is hampered and diminished. The lines of merchandise at levels above five- and ten-cent retail levels have never had the benefit of one-tenth the effort that has for years been devoted by manufacturers and producers to getting their goods into mass production at the prices that Woolworth’s can afford to pay. The opportunity that awaits us when we apply the same process to our higher-priced lines is proportionately ten times greater than Woolworth’s. There is, as yet, no real competition of mass distribution in the higher-priced fields. Our dress department buyer will employ his ability and skill to devise ways to buy a dress intended to retail for $30 or even $35 at a cost—through cooperating with the manufacturer, probably by a bulk order—so that he can retail it for $25. The great power of the Model Stock Plan is that the buyer must use all his ability and experience to get these better goods at his three full-line prices. From experience I know that for the highest-priced full line we can obtain almost all goods above the highest full-line price that can be sold in large quantities. But just when the store owner or department buyer who has been doing things in the old way believes he is convinced that he should have only three full-line prices at, say, $15, $25, and $35, into his mind will come something like this: “I shall get a dress offered me at wholesale for $15 or $16 and, therefore, I shall need a price at $22.50. Or goods will be offered me at $12 that my competitor will probably sell at $18. Therefore I must have in-between prices.” He does not need any in-between prices. Neither do we. Let us assume that in our store, before applying the Model Stock Plan to one of the three price levels, we had six prices including $15 and up to but not including $25. At these six prices we regularly sold a total of 1,200 dresses per season, so we bought an average of 200 dresses at each of these prices. But when we applied the Model Stock Plan we eliminated five