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Updated: June 1, 2025


"You shouldn't worry yourself, Kleiman," Morris cried, turning around in his chair. "Felix Geigermann ain't going to fail just yet a while." "Me worry?" Kleiman retorted. "For my part, Felix Geigermann could fail to-morrow yet; he don't owe me one cent, nor never would. I ain't looking to sell no goods to fiddlers, Perlmutter. I am dealing only with merchants."

"You stole him back again ain't it?" "Stole him back again!" Morris repeated. "What are you talking nonsense, Kleiman? We wouldn't take that feller back in our store, not if we could get him to come to work for two dollars a week." "Yow!" Kleiman exclaimed skeptically. "I don't suppose you know the feller left us at all?"

"I've got a whole lot to do trying to find a job, Morris, if that's what you mean," Max replied. Morris glanced around the showroom, but both Kleiman and Elenbogen were absent. "Where are they?" Morris asked. "Out to lunch, I guess," Max replied. "Good!" Morris exclaimed. "Them suckers would like to know everybody's business. You got a few minutes' time, Max?"

Klein, who were immediately succeeded by the firm of Kleiman & Elenbogen, H. Rashkin, the coat-pad manufacturer, and Marks Pasinsky. It must be conceded that Leon Sammet comported himself in a highly creditable manner, and he greeted his guests with a cordiality that embraced competitor and customer in one impartial, comprehensive smile. "Why, how do you do, Mr.

It was presented to Karanyi by the late Prince Ludovic Esterhazy, whose collection of Cremona violins, now preserved by his son, is said to be the finest in the world. Mr. Geigermann is the well-known Harlem dry-goods merchant. Louis Kleiman folded the paper and laid it on the table. "That's the way it goes, boys," he said in heightened tones, for by this time he had caught sight of Morris.

Thus there was something doubly irritating in the coincidence which seated him next to Louis Kleiman in the crowded express train he had boarded, and he had made up his mind to ignore his competitor's presence when Louis caught sight of him. "So, Perlmutter," Louis commented, without any introductory greeting, "you are trying to do us again!" Morris turned and stared icily at Kleiman.

Both concerns catered to the same class of trade, and when either of the partners of Klinger & Klein referred in conversation to a member of the firm of Kleiman & Elenbogen, or vice versa, "sucker" was the mildest epithet employed.

"I don't got to tell you what you are, Kleiman," Morris concluded as he opened his evening paper. "You know only too well." "Rosher!" Kleiman hissed as he hurled himself into the mob of passengers that blocked the exit. Morris nodded sardonically and commenced to read his paper. He desisted immediately, however, when his eye fell upon a cut accompanying Felix Geigermann's display advertisement.

"Say, lookyhere, Kirschner," Louis Kleiman called from his office; "leave the girl alone, can't you? She's got enough to do tending to our business." "I'm only asking her if she has any word for me," Max replied. "I don't care what you are asking her," Kleiman said as he came out of his office to confront Max. "You are acting altogether too fresh around here, Kirschner.

"That's all right, Kleiman," Morris said as the train drew into Ninety-sixth Street. "You could easy steal somebody else from another concern." Kleiman glared at Morris and was about to utter a particularly incisive retort when the train stopped. "I got to change here," he announced; "but when I see you again, Perlmutter, I would tell you what you are."

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