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Special Underwear Sale $1.25 values . .. . . entire lot at 69c. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx You've a b0c them. great chance in this offering of all-wool ribbed underwear garments that are considered good values at $1, during this sale the Boy’s “Best Ever” clothes to be a rem $20 at . . ; 32y " The Great Suit Sal Money Cheerfully Refunded Mail Orders Filled A Significant Date NOVEMBER Friday, the 18th. Significant because you can share with us the bene- fits of a big purchase of surplus over-lots of mens’ and young mens’ suits; the extra lots left after the great wholesale season is over, bought to great advantage by us for the benefit of our customers, We're going to sell the goods as we bought thém; a much under the real value. This is not the ordinary sale you are invited to; you know Hart Schaffner & Marx; you know just what you're getting when you get goods with their names on The lot includes every size and all the best colorings and patterns of the season; grays,” browns, tans and “stone colors. One Great Lot e 9 e o o o o o e e e o Exira Gap Values at ] ] | ] [ ] | ] | ] $1.15 e o o o 8 e e o e s o We've bunched these suits into one big Iot. Any of them will prove arkable bargain, Suits worth $24, $22 and $14.75 Frankly this is the best cap proposition you'll encounter. Just when you want it too. Serges, cassimeres, homespuns, worsteds in a dozen differ- ent styles, with fur in-band, cap values up to $2 at $1.15. Clothing House The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes Florsheim Shoes How to Open a Can of Corn. One of the smallest of the little girls in a West Philadelphia family had of- ten assisted her mother in preparing the meals. She obsarved that her mother, who was rather hasty, always talked to herself when she had any difficulty in opening cans of vegetables. The little girl thought that the hasti- ness was a part of the operation. “One day she was visiting a neigh- bor and went into the kitchen to help prepare a meal. . She watched the neighbor take a can of corn, apply the opener and remove S E————— - — " the top. “That’s not the way to open a can of" corn,” said the little girl. “Why, what other way is there?’ asked the neighbor. “Well, you take the can of corn and start to open it, and then you bear down and the opener slips. Then you say ‘Darn this can!” and finish it. That’s the way my mother opens a can of corn.”—Philadelphia Times. Diamonds to Lampblack. You may purchase equal quantities 1 of carbon for 5 cents or a million dol- — . — lars. A bargain hunter might invest a nickel and get a package of pure lampblack. The million would secure a blazing diamond. easily turned into lampblack; not so easily—intense heat would be required. However, coal and wood are really more valuable than diamonds. They surrender life giving heat, while the only use so far discovered for diamonds is to cut glass, and for this carborundum is a good substitute. All diamonds in ex- istence could be annihilated without loss to mankind; but, then, to vapor- 1ze diamonds would be costly, as the enormous heat of 12,632 degrees F T — e e e . in the concentration of an electric fur- nace would be required, and then you might get enough graphite to make a lead pencil or a little fine stove polish. —Edgar Lucien Larkin in Nautilus. Mystery of the Egg. An egg for one thing is a succession of bags, bagged up in one another, a series of envelopes enveloped in one another, bags and envelopes without Joints, seams or: openings. Puzzles, ships built up and full rigged in bot- tles, flies in amber, are simply simplic- ity itself as puzzles when it comes to how these bags wrap one another up, bag in bag. In a hen’s egg there are eight or nine or ten of the sacks in sacks ensacked. Everybody thinks he knows what an egg is, and after weary reading and study in many languages he only begins to learn that nobody knows a tiny fraction of all the world of secrets and mysteries hidden in an egg. “As full of meat as an egg” is not the true comparison, but “as full of mystery as an egg” is nearer the truth. Eggs are the greatest puzzle in all nations.—New York Press. KU Pretty Healthful. The Stranger—Is this a pretty healthy. neighborhood ? The Native—You bet it is. Thar ain’t bin a death here in years, ’ceptin’ the undertaker. an’ he died o’ starvation.— Harper's Weekly. Good Luck. “What luck did that sheriff who went out after Stagecoach Charley have?” “Purty good.” replied Three Finger Sam. “Charley didn't ketch him.”— Washington Star. i ]