Show efcy ehrl Th rl the man who buys shoestring shoeB tring ans other small articles from falan always so because be geb them or thinks ha gets them cheaper it is chiefly because men engaged ia business are usually so that trifles of everyday ua ara thought of they ara joshed right under the nose aal a role th boight of street tenders coats tw to five times as much aa it would in tei dimate store but it u on of mankind that the barsot fakir lives and thrives A man will fed with a broken shoestring a dozea monk inga before he will remember to year a new pair then suddenly during a busy day he runs against a peddled and buys a pair on the spot paying double price for what his atler would sive him for nothing the baldra thrive best in th closest and most busy centers down in wall and broad and new and af among the bankers and brokars and law who are too busy to think of BU penders and and led etc the street fakiri fakirs fare well for asaf l the roar of clashing minded man clutches hastily on writt cornea uppermost knowing taftt wide hell forget ill about it stew york herald |