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CHAPTER SEVEN
SWEET AND SOUR
ARE THE USES OF COMPEt.i.tIVE SALESMANs.h.i.+P
"_Aber_ me and Yetta is got it all fixed up we would go to Mrs. Kotlin's already," Elkan Lubliner protested as he mopped his forehead one hot Tuesday morning in July. "The board there is something elegant, Mr.
Scheikowitz. Everybody says so."
"_Yow!_ everybody!" Philip Scheikowitz retorted. "Who is everybody, Elkan? A couple drummers like Marks Pasinsky, one or two real estaters, understand me, and the rest of 'em is wives from J to L retailers, third credit, which every time their husbands comes down to spend Sunday with 'em, y'understand, he must pretty near got to p.a.w.n the s.h.i.+rt from his back for car fare already."
"Scheikowitz is right, Elkan," Marcus Polatkin joined in. "A feller shouldn't make a G.o.d from his stomach, Elkan, especially when money don't figure at all, so if you would be going down to Egremont Beach, understand me, there's only one place you should stay, y'understand, and that's the New Salisbury."
"Which if you wouldn't take our word for it, Elkan," Scheikowitz added, "just give a look here."
He drew from his coat pocket the summer resort section of the previous day's paper and thrust it toward his junior partner, indicating as he did so a half column headed:
MIDSEASON GAIETY AT EGREMONT BEACH
which reads as follows:
The season is in full swing here.
On Sat.u.r.day night Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Gans gave a Chinese Lantern Dinner in the Hanging Gardens at which were present Mr. and Mrs. Sam Feder, Mr. and Mrs. Max Koblin, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry D. Feldman, Mr. Jacob Scharley and Miss Hortense Feldman.
Among those who registered Friday at the New Salisbury were Mr. Jacob Scharley of San Francisco, Mr. and Mrs. Sol Klinger, Mr. Leon Sammet and his mother, Mrs. Leah Sammet.
"I thought that Leon's brother Barney was staying down at Egremont,"
Polatkin said after he and Elkan had read the item.
"Barney is at Mrs. Kotlin's," Scheikowitz explained, "because _mit_ Leon Sammet, Polatkin, nothing is too rotten for Barney to stay at, and besides he thinks Barney would get a little _small_ business there, which the way Sammet Brothers figures, understand me, if they could stick a feller with three bills of goods for a couple hundred dollars apiece, y'understand, so long as he pays up on the first two, he couldn't eat up their profits if he would bust up on 'em _mit_ the third."
"Sure I know," Elkan said, "_aber_ I ain't going down to Egremont for business, Mr. Scheikowitz, I'm going because it ain't so warm down there."
"_Schmooes_, Elkan!" Scheikowitz retorted. "It wouldn't make it not one degrees warmer in Egremont supposing you could get a couple new accounts down there."
"B. Gans don't take it so particular about the weather," Polatkin commented. "I bet yer he would a whole lot sooner take off his coat and s.h.i.+rt and _spiel_ a little auction pinocle _mit_ Sol Klinger and Leon Sammet and all them fellers as be giving dinners already in a tuxedo suit to Sam Feder. I bet yer he gets a fine accommodation from the Koscius...o...b..nk out of that dinner yet."
"The other people also he ain't _schencking_ no dinners to 'em for nothing neither," Scheikowitz declared. "Every one of 'em means something to B. Gans, I bet yer."
Elkan nodded.
"Particularly Scharley," he said.
"What d'ye mean, particularly Scharley?" Polatkin and Scheikowitz inquired with one voice.
"Why, ain't you heard about Scharley?" Elkan asked. "It's right there in the _Daily Cloak and Suit Journal_."
He indicated the front sheet of that newsy trade paper, where under the heading of "Incorporations" appeared the following item:
The Scharley, Oderburg Drygoods Company, San Francisco, Cal., has filed articles of incorporation, giving its capital stock as $500,000, and expects to open its new store in September next.
"And you are talking about staying by Mrs. Kotlin's!" Scheikowitz exclaimed in injured tones. "You should ought to be ashamed of yourself, Elkan."
Elkan received his senior partner's upbraiding with a patient smile.
"What show do we stand against a concern like B. Gans?" he asked.
"B. Gans sells him only highgrade goods, Elkan," Scheikowitz declared.
"I bet yer the least the feller buys is for twenty thousand dollars garments here, and a good half would be popular price lines, which if we would get busy, we stand an elegant show there, Elkan."
"You should ought to go down there to-morrow yet," Polatkin cried, "because the first thing you know Leon Sammet would entertain him _mit_ oitermobiles yet, and Sol Klinger gets also busy, understand me, and the consequences is we wouldn't be in it at all."
"Next Sat.u.r.day is the earliest Yetta could get ready," Elkan replied positively, and Polatkin strode up and down the floor in an access of despair.
"All right, Elkan," he said, "if you want to let such an opportunity slip down your fingers, y'understand, all right. _Aber_ if I would be you, Elkan, I would go down there to-night yet."
Elkan shrugged his shoulders.
"I couldn't get Yetta she should close up the flat under the very least _two_ days, Mr. Polatkin," he said. "She must got to fix everything just right, _mit_ moth-camphor and _Gott weisst was nach_, otherwise she wouldn't go at all. The rugs alone takes a whole day to fix."
"Do as you like, Elkan," Polatkin declared, "_aber_ you mark my words, if Leon Sammet ain't shoving heaven and earth right now, y'understand, I don't know nothing about the garment business at all."
In fulfilment of this prophecy, when Elkan entered his office the following morning Polatkin waved in his face a copy of the morning paper.
"Well," he said, "what did I told you, Elkan?"
Scheikowitz nodded slowly.
"My partner is right, Elkan," he added, "so stubborn you are."
"What's the matter now?" Elkan asked, and for answer Polatkin handed him the paper with his thumb pressed against a paragraph as follows:
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Feder, Mr. and Mrs. Max Koblin, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry D. Feldman, Miss Hortense Feldman, and Mr. Jacob Scharley were guests of Mr. Leon Sammet at a Chinese Lantern Dinner this evening given in the Hanging Gardens of the New Salisbury.
"I thought it would be at the least an oitermobile ride," Polatkin said in melancholy tones, "but with that sucker all he could do is stealing a compet.i.tor's idees. B. Gans gives Scharley a dinner and Leon Sammet is got to do it, too, _mit_ the same guests and everything."
"Even to Feldman's sister already," Scheikowitz added, "which it must be that Feldman is trying to marry her off to Scharley even if he would be a widower _mit_ two sons in college. She's a highly educated young lady, too."
"Young she ain't no longer," Polatkin interrupted, "and if a girl couldn't cook even a pertater, understand me, it don't make no difference if she couldn't cook it in six languages, y'understand, Feldman would got a hard job marrying her off _anyhow_."
Scheikowitz made an impatient gesture with both hands, suggestive of a dog swimming.
"That's neither here or there, Polatkin," he said. "The point is Elkan should go right uptown and _geschwind_ pack his grip and be down at the Salisbury this afternoon yet, if Yetta would be ready _oder_ not. We couldn't afford to let the ground grow under our feet and that's all there is _to_ it."
Thus, shortly after six o'clock that evening, Elkan and Yetta alighted from the 5:10 special from Flatbush Avenue and picked their way through a marital throng that kissed and embraced with as much ardour as though the reunion had concluded a parting of ten years instead of ten hours.