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Updated: June 18, 2025
Abe asked. "Scared, Abe? Why should the feller be scared? Not only he wasn't scared yet, Abe, but he took up Kleebaum's offer for a ride down to Coney Island yet. Kleebaum said they'd be back by ten o'clock and so Klinger asks me to telephone over to Klein that he would be a little late this morning." "That's a fine way for a feller to neglect his business, Mawruss," Abe commented.
"A man only gets married, for the first time, once." Morris shrugged. "For my part, Abe, I ain't in no hurry," he said. "If you could see the way Leon Sammet gives me a look this morning when I seen him on the subway y'understand, it would be worth to you a hundred and fifty dollars. Sol Klinger is feeling sore too, Abe.
Klinger?" he exclaimed, and then he turned to Mrs. Leah Sammet, who stood beside him. "Mommer," he said, "I want you to know Mr. Klinger. Him and me has been competitors for twenty years already." Mrs. Sammet nodded and smiled. "For my part twenty years longer," she murmured, as she grasped Sol's hand. "At a time like this, Mrs.
"I heard it what you tell me now several times before already, Abe," he said; "and if you want it that Max Tuchman or Klinger & Klein or some of them other fellers should cop out a good customer of ours like Marcus Bramson, Abe, maybe you'll hang around here a little longer."
"Oser a Stück," Griesman declared. "I done enough for that feller when I got him a three years' contract with Klinger & Klein." "Well, Abe," Morris Perlmutter declared, one morning in midwinter, "you look like you had a pretty lively session last night." Abe nodded slowly. "I want to tell you something, Mawruss," he said solemnly; "I would do anything at all to hold a customer's trade, Mawruss.
"Certainly, when a feller gets together a little money, y'understand, always there is somebody what knocks him, Abe. Who told you all this about Fixman, Abe?" "A feller by the name Sol Klinger, Mawruss," Abe replied, "and if you don't believe me you could "
"Sure, I know," Abe went on, "but the way it is with out-of-town buyers, Mawruss, they goes where the crowd is, and they ain't going to be bothered to come way downtown for us, Mawruss." "Well, how about Klinger & Klein, Lapidus & Elenbogen, and all them people, Abe?" Morris asked. "Ain't them out-of-town buyers going to buy goods off of them neither?"
Abe shook his head and was about to reply when the telephone bell rang. "That's Sol Klinger," Morris exclaimed. "He said he would let me know at ten o'clock what this Interstate Copper opened at." He darted for the telephone in the rear of the store, and when he returned his face was wreathed in smiles. "It has come up to five already," he cried. "We make it twenty-five hundred dollars."
"That's a hard blow to Kleebaum and old man Pfingst, Abe," he said. "I bet yer," Abe replied, "but it ain't near the hard blow it's going to be to a couple of concerns what you and me know, Mawruss. Klinger told me only yesterday that Kleebaum would get twenty thousand with that girl, Mawruss, and I guess he needed it, Mawruss.
I just seen Sol Klinger over to Hammersmith's and he tells me that in six weeks yet Max Kirschner falls down on three orders. Four thousand dollars that sucker, Leon Sammet, cops out on 'em; and Sol couldn't help himself, Abe. Either they got to fire Max oder they got to go out of business." Abe nodded slowly.
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