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Show WHAT'S SMART IN MEN'S WEAR i ! Keeping quality of your suit in proportion to ! other articles of apparel HOAV much is a good suit of clothes worth '.' j There is a good deal of confu-I confu-I sion about that question those days. A great deal of adver-' adver-' Using has stressed the price appeal alone. The writers all use the same dictionaries and say the same things about cheap clothes and fine clothes so that it isn't any wonder people have j difficulty in telling what priced ! suit really is a good one. In faet "good" is more or ! less of a relative term when applied to clothes. Naturally it doesn't mean the same thing to a millionaire society man and the young clerk who has a hard time .making both ends meet, although both of them want to dress just as well as they can. One of the things a man should do in buying clothes is to keep his suit in proportion to the other things he wears. If yon pay $'-(. 50 for a neck lie. .-k 1 (I or for a hat. for your shirt and .fl'2 to $15 for ghn. you certainly can't expect o get a suit of clothes won by to v go with them for less than ij.'O or If, on the other hand, you've forced to content yonrdf with a $1' tie. $1 .!'IS .sliirl. ." s'oick and a -i") lint, it is reasonable to suppose- that" a .f'io suit mi-rbi he iu keenm" "h tlo-io I I u f If A A I I More and more men. according accord-ing to n; rehnndise espert.s of Hart Schati'nev i .Marx, are feehnir Ibis sense of proportion !i'n! iiei:nf iieeordinsrly. As a result belter eioibes are being told this year (ban Tor a num- |