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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 1926. i C}'/;“ZWV | mu - 4o “Well, there’s one thing sure, it didn’t cost me exactly three dollars and eighty-nine nearly as much as you think it did—in fact, cents.” as far as you're concerned, it didn’t cost a The clever household ‘purchasing agent penny. I've been reading The Star ads reads the ads in The Star BEFORE lately and making my purchases accord- she starts on her shopping trip, for in no ingly. Asaresult, I have saved more than other way can she so easily keep posted on enough on my household allowance to pay the offerings of the various stores and for this bonnet. Furthermore, I bought shops. She knows when and where to buy this hat because of an ad I read in yester- the hundred and one things she needs in day’s Star, and this ‘very pretty hat’ cost her household. The shopper who reads the ads secures money than the uninformed shopper who buys here and there and everywhere. The Clever Buyer When you make a purchase--ANY pur- Reads The Ads chase--read the ads in The Star FIRST. ( Last month local merchants used | more space in The Star to inform The Star’s readers of their store news than they used in all other Washington papers combined.