"The trouble is with us, Mawruss," Abe Potash declared one afternoon in September, "that we ain't in an up-to-date neighborhood. We should get it a loft in one of them buildings up in Seventeenth, Eighteenth or Nineteenth Street, Mawruss. All the trade is up in that neighborhood." "I ain't got such a good head for figures like you got it, Abe," Morris Perlmutter replied, "and so I am content we should stay where we are. We done it always a fair business here, Abe. Ain't it?" "Sure, I know," Abe went on, "but the way it is "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?" "Klinger & Klein already hire it a fine loft on Nineteenth Street," Abe interposed. "Well, Abe," Morris rejoined, "Klinger & Klein, like a whole lot of people what I know, acts like monkeys, Abe. They see somebody doing something and they got to do it too." "If we could do the business what Klinger & Klein done it, Mawruss, I am willing I should act like a monkey." "Another thing, Abe," Morris went on, "Klinger & Klein sends their work out by contractors. We got it operators and machines, Abe, and you can't have a show-room, cutting-room and machines all in one loft. Ain't it?" "Well, then we get it two lofts, Mawruss, and then we could put our workrooms upstairs and our show-room and offices downstairs." "And double our expenses, too, Abe," Morris added. "No, Abe, I don't want to work for no landlord all my life." "But I seen Marks Henochstein yesterday, Mawruss, and he told it me Klinger & Klein ain't paying half the rent what they pay down here. So, if we "Marks Henochstein is a real-estater, Abe," Morris replied, "and when a real-estater tells you something, you got to make allowances fifty per cent. for facts." "I know," Abe cried; "but we don't have to hire no loft what we don't want to, Mawruss. Henochstein can't compel you to pay twicet as much what we're paying now. Ain't it? So what is the harm if we should maybe ask him to find a couple of lofts for us? Ain't it?" "All right, Abe," Morris concluded, "if I must go crazy listening to you talking about it I sooner move first. So go ahead and do what you like." "Well, the fact is," said Abe, "I told Marks Henochstein he should find it a couple lofts for us this morning, Mawruss, agreeing strictly that we should not pay him nothing, as he gets a commission from the landlord already." Morris received this admission with a scowl. "For a feller what's got such a nerve like you got it, Abe," he declared, "I am surprised you should make it such a poor salesman." "When a man's got it a back-number partner, Mawruss, his hands is full inside and outside the store, and so naturally he loses it a few customers oncet in a while," Abe replied. "But, somebody's got to have nerve in a business, Mawruss, and if I Morris searched his mind for an appropriate rejoinder, and had just formulated a particularly bitter jibe when the store door opened to admit two shabbily-dressed females. "Here, you," Abe called, "operators goes around the alley." The elder of the two females drew herself up haughtily. "Operators!" she said with a scornful rising inflection. "Finishers, also," Abe continued. "This here door is for customers." "You don't know me, Potash," she retorted. "Might you don't know this lady neither, maybe?" She indicated her companion, who turned a mournful gaze upon the astonished Abe. "But we know you, Potash," she went on. "We know you already when you didn't have it so much money what you got now." Her companion nodded sadly. "So, Potash," she concluded, "your own wife's people is operators and finishers; what?" Abe looked at Morris, who stood grinning broadly in the show-room doorway. "Give me an introduction once, Abe," Morris said. "He don't have to give us no introduction," the elder female exclaimed. "Me, I am Mrs. Sarah "That ain't my fault that you got them names," Abe said. "I see it now that you're my wife's father's brother's daughter, ain't it? So if you're going to make a touch, make it. I got business to attend to." "We ain't going to make no touch, Potash," Mrs. Mashkowitz declared. "We would rather die first." "All right," Abe replied heartlessly. "Die if you got to. You can't make me mad." Mrs. Mashkowitz ignored Abe's repartee. "We don't ask nothing for ourselves, Potash," she said, "but we got it a sister, your wife's own cousin, Miriam Smolinski. She wants to get married." "I'm agreeable," Abe murmured, "and I'm sure my Rosie ain't got no objections neither." Mrs. Sheikman favored him with a look of contempt. "What chance has a poor girl got it to get married?" she asked. "When she ain't got a dollar in the world," Mrs. Mashkowitz added. "And her own relatives from her own blood is millionaires already." "If you mean me," Abe replied, "I ain't no millionaire, I can assure you. Far from it." "Plenty of money you got it, Potash," Mrs. Mashkowitz said. "Five hundred dollars to you is to me like ten cents." "He don't think no more of five hundred dollars "Do me the favor, Mawruss," Abe cried, "and tend to your own business." "Sure," Morris replied, as he turned to go. "I thought I was helping you out, Abe, that's all." He repaired to the rear of the store, while Abe piloted his two visitors into the show-room. "Now what is it you want from me?" he asked. "Not a penny she got it," Mrs. Mashkowitz declared, breaking into tears. "And she got a fine young feller what is willing to marry her and wants it only five hundred dollars." "Only five hundred dollars," Mrs. Sheikman moaned. "Only five hundred dollars. Ai vai!" "Five hundred dollars!" Abe exclaimed. "If you think you should cry till you get five hundred dollars out of me, you got a long wet spell ahead of you. That's all I got to say." "Might he would take two hundred and fifty dollars, maybe," Mrs. Sheikman suggested hopefully through her tears. "Don't let him do no favors on my account," Abe said; "because, if it was two hundred and fifty buttons it wouldn't make no difference to me." "A fine young feller," Mrs. Mashkowitz sobbed. "He got six machines and two hundred dollars saved up and wants to go into the cloak and suit contracting business." "Only a hundred dollars if the poor girl had it," "S'enough!" Abe roared. "I heard enough already." He banged a sample table with his fist and Mrs. Sheikman jumped in her seat. "That's a heart what you got it," she said bitterly, "like Haman." "Haman was a pretty good feller already compared to me," Abe declared; "and also I got business to attend to." "Come, Sarah," Mrs. Sheikman cried. "What's the use talking to a bloodsucker like him!" "Wait!" Mrs. Mashkowitz pleaded; "I want to ask him one thing more. If Miriam got it this young feller for a husband, might you would give him some of your work, maybe?" "Bloodsuckers don't give no work to nobody," Abe replied firmly. "And also will you get out of my store, or will you be put out?" He turned on his heel without waiting for an answer and joined Morris in the rear of the store. Ten minutes later he was approached by Jake, the shipping-clerk. "Mr.Potash," Jake said, "them two ladies in the show-room wants to know if you would maybe give that party they was talking about a recommendation to the President of the Kosciusko Bank?" "Tell 'em," Abe said, "I'll give 'em a recommendation to a policeman if they don't get right out In matters pertaining to real estate Marks Henochstein held himself to be a virtuoso. "If anyone can put it through, I can," was his motto, and he tackled the job of procuring an uptown loft for Potash & Perlmutter with the utmost confidence. "In the first place," he said when he called the next day, "you boys has got too much room." "Boys!" Morris exclaimed. "Since when did we go to school together, Henochstein?" "Anyhow, you got too much room, ain't yer?" Henochstein continued, his confidence somewhat diminished by the rebuff. "You could get your workrooms and show-rooms all on one floor, and besides——" Morris raised his hand like a traffic policeman halting an obstreperous truckman. "S'enough, Henochstein," he said. "S'enough about that. We ain't giving you no pointers in the real-estate business, and we don't want no suggestions about the cloak and suit business neither. We asked it you to get us two lofts on Seventeenth, Eighteenth or Nineteenth Street, the same size as here and for the same what we pay it here rent. If you can't do it let us know, that's all, and we get somebody else to do it. Y'understand?" "Oh, "Sure he can do it," Abe said encouragingly. "And I'll bring you a list as big as the telephone directory to-morrow," Henochstein added as he went out. "But all the same, boys—I mean Mr.Perlmutter—I don't think you need it all that space." "That's a fresh real-estater for you, Abe," Morris said after Henochstein left. "Wants to tell it us our business and calls us boys yet, like we was friends from the old country already." "Oh, I don't know, Mawruss," Abe replied. "He means it good, I guess; and anyway, Mawruss, we give so much of our work out by contractors, we might as well give the whole thing out and be done with it. We might as well have one loft with the cutting-room in the back and a rack for piece goods. Then the whole front we could fit it up as an office and show-room yet, and we would have no noise of the machines and no more trouble with garment-makers' unions nor nothing. I think it's a good idee sending out all the work." "Them contractors makes enough already on what we give them, Abe," Morris replied. "I bet yer Satinstein buys real estate on what he makes from us, Abe, and Ginsburg & Kaplan also." "Well, the fact is, Mawruss," Abe went on, "I ain't at all satisfied with the way what Satinstein treats us, Mawruss, nor Ginsburg & Kaplan neither. I got an idee, Mawruss: we should give all our work to a decent, respectable young feller what is going to "So, Abe," he said, "you squashed it in the bud!" "Well, them two women goes right up and sees my Rosie yesterday, Mawruss," Abe admitted; "and so my Rosie thinks it wouldn't do us no harm that we should maybe give the young feller a show." "Is your wife Rosie running this business, Abe, or are we?" Morris asked. "It ain't a question what Rosie thinks, Mawruss," Abe explained; "it's what I think, too. I think we should give the young feller a show. He's a decent, respectable young feller, Mawruss." "How do I know that, Abe?" Morris replied. "I ain't never seen him, Abe; I don't even know his name." "What difference does that make it, Mawruss?" said Abe. "I ain't never seen him neither, Mawruss, and I don't know his name, too; but he could make up our line just as good, whether his name was Thomassheffsky or Murphy. Also, what good would it do us if we did see him first? I'm sure, Mawruss, we ain't giving out our work to Satinstein because he's a good-looking feller, and Ginsburg & Kaplan ain't no John Drews neither, so far what I hear it, Mawruss." "That ain't the idee, Abe," Morris broke in; "the idee is that we got to give up doing our work in our "Who says that, Mawruss?" Abe interposed. "I didn't say it." "You didn't say it, Abe," Morris went on, "but you think it just the same, and I'm going to show you differencely. I am content that we move, Abe, only we ain't going to move unless we can find it two lofts for the same rent what we pay it here. And we ain't going to have less room than we got it here neither, Abe, because if we move we're going to do our own business just the same like we do it here, and that's flat." For the remainder of the day Abe avoided any reference to their impending removal, and it was not until Henochstein entered the show-room the following morning that the discussion was renewed. "Well, boys," he said in greeting, "I got it a fine loft for you on Nineteenth Street with twicet as much floor space what you got here." "A loft!" Morris cried. "A loft," Henochstein repeated. "One loft?" Morris asked. "That's what I said," Henochstein replied, Morris waved his hand for silence. "Abe," he said, "this here Henochstein is a friend of yours; ain't it?" Abe nodded sulkily. "Well, take him out of here," Morris advised, "before I kick him out." He banged the show-room door behind him and repaired to Wasserbauer's CafÉ and Restaurant across the street to await Henochstein's departure. "Mawruss is right," Abe declared. "You was told distinctively we wanted it two lofts, not one, and here you come back with a one-loft proposition." Henochstein rose to leave. "If you think it you could get two up-to-date lofts on Seventeenth, Eighteenth or Nineteenth Street, Abe, for what you pay it here in this dinky place," he said, "you got another think coming." He opened the show-room door. "And also, Abe," he concluded, "if I got it a partner what made it a slave of me, like Perlmutter does you, I'd go it alone, that's all I got to say." After Henochstein left, Abe was a prey to bitter reflections, which were only interrupted by his partner's return to the show-room a quarter of an hour later. "Well, Abe," Morris cried, "you got your turn at this here moving business; let me try a hand at it once." Morris shrugged. "That's something what is past already, Abe," he replied. "I was just talking to Wasserbauer, and he says he got it a friend what is a sort of a real-estater, a smart young feller by the name Sam Slotkin. He says if Slotkin couldn't find it us a couple of lofts, nobody couldn't." "I'm satisfied, Mawruss," Abe said. "If Slotkin can get us lofts we move, otherwise we stay here. So far we made it always a living here, Mawruss, and I guess we ain't going to lose all our customers even if we don't move; and that's all there is to it." Mr.Sam Slotkin was doubtless his own ideal of a well-dressed man. All the contestants in a chess tournament could have played on his clothes at one time, and the ox-blood stripes on his shirt exactly matched the color of his necktie and socks. He had concluded his interview with Morris on the morning following Henochstein's fiasco, before Abe's arrival at the office, and he was just leaving as Abe came in. "Who's that, Mawruss?" Abe asked, staring after the departing figure. "That's Sam Slotkin," Morris replied. "He looks like a bright young feller." "I bet yer he looks bright," Abe commented. "He "Sure," Morris answered; "he says he can fix us up all right." "I hope so," Abe said skeptically, and at once repaired to the office. It was the tail-end of a busy season and Abe and Morris found no time to renew the topic of their forthcoming removal until two days later when Sam Slotkin again interviewed Morris. The result was communicated to Abe by Morris after Slotkin's departure. "He says, Abe, that he thinks he's got the very place for us," Morris said. "He thinks he got it, Mawruss," Abe exclaimed. "Well, we can't rip out our store here on the strength of a think, Mawruss. When will he know if he's got it?" "To-morrow morning," Morris replied, and went upstairs to the workroom, where the humming of many machines testified to the last rush of the season's work. Abe joined him there a few minutes later. "Believe me, Mawruss," he said, "I'll be glad when this here order for the Fashion Store is out." "It takes a week yet, Goldman tells me," Morris replied, "and I guess we might have to work nights if they don't make it a hurry-up." "Well, we're pretty late with that Fashion Store delivery as it is, Mawruss," Abe replied. "It "You speak to 'em, Abe," Morris retorted, indicating the working force by a wave of his hand. "What have I got to do with it?" Abe asked. "You're the inside man, Mawruss." "To my sorrow, Abe," said Morris, "and if you was the inside man you would know it that if I told 'em they was working on a rush order they'd strike for more money already." "And yet, Mawruss, you ain't in favor of giving out our work by contractors," Abe cried as he walked away. The next morning Sam Slotkin was waiting in the show-room before Abe or Morris arrived. When they entered he advanced to meet them with a confident smile. "I got it the very thing what you want, Mr.Perlmutter," he said. "A fine loft on Nineteenth Street." "A loft!" Abe exclaimed. "A fine loft," Slotkin corrected. "How big a loft?" Morris asked. "Well, it is maybe twicet as big as this here," Slotkin replied. "You could get into it all your machines and have a cutting-room and show-room and office besides." "That sounds pretty good, Abe," Morris commented. "Don't you think so, Abe?" "What are you doing," he demanded, "making jokes with me?" "And it's only twenty dollars more a month as you're paying here," Slotkin concluded. "Twenty dollars a month won't make us or break us, Abe," Morris said. "It won't, hey?" Abe roared. "Well, that don't make no difference, Mawruss. You said you wanted it two lofts, and we got to have it two lofts. How do you think we're going to sell goods and keep our books, Mawruss, if we have all them machines kicking up a racket on the same floor?" "Well, Abe, might we could send our work out by contractors, maybe," Morris answered with all the vivacity of a man suggesting a new and brilliant idea. Abe stared at his partner for a minute. "What's the matter with you, Morris, anyway?" he asked at length. "First you say it we must have two lofts and keep our work in our own shop, and now you turn right around again." "I got to talking it over with Minnie last night," Morris replied, "and she thinks maybe if we give our work out by contractors we wouldn't need it to stay down so late, and then I wouldn't keep the dinner waiting an hour or so every other night. We lose it two good girls already by it in six months." Sam Slotkin listened with a slightly bored air. "Gentlemen, gentlemen," he said, "what's the use of it you make all this disturbance? The loft is light on all four sides, with two elevators. Also, it is already big enough for——" "What are you butting in for?" Abe shouted. "What business is it of yours, anyhow?" "I am the broker," Sam Slotkin replied with simple dignity. "And also you're going to take that loft. Otherwise I lose it three hundred dollars' commission, and besides——" "My partner is right," Morris interrupted. "You ain't got no business to say what we will or will not do. If we want to take it we will take it, otherwise not." "Don't worry," Sam Slotkin cried, "you will take it all right and I'll be back this afternoon for an answer." He put on his hat and left without another word, while Abe and Morris looked at each other in blank amazement. "That's a real-estater for you," Abe said. "Henochstein's got it pretty good nerve, Mawruss, but this feller acts so independent like a doctor or a lawyer." Morris nodded and started to hang up his hat and coat, but even as his hand was poised half-way to the hook it became paralyzed. Simultaneously Abe looked up from the column of the Daily Cloak and Abe and Morris took the stairs leading to the upper floor three at a jump, and arrived breathlessly in the workroom just as fifty-odd employees were putting on their coats preparatory to leaving. "What's the matter?" Abe gasped. "Strike," Goldman, the foreman, replied. "A strike!" Morris cried. "What for a strike?" Goldman shrugged his shoulders. "Comes a walking delegate by the opposite side of the street and makes with his hands motions," he explained. "So they goes out on strike." Few of the striking operators could speak English, but those that did nodded their corroboration. "For what you strike?" Morris asked them. "Moost strike," one of them replied. "Ven varking delegate say moost strike, ve moost strike." Sadly Abe and Morris watched their employees leave the building, and then they repaired to the show-room. "There goes two thousand dollars, Mawruss," Abe said. "For so sure as you live, Mawruss, if we don't make that delivery to the Fashion Store inside of a week we get a cancelation by the next day's mail; ain't it?" Morris nodded gloomily, and they both remained silent for a few minutes. "What do you want to know for?" "I'm going right up to have a look at it," Abe replied. "I'm sick and tired of this here strike business." Morris heaved a great sigh. "I believe you, Abe," he said. "The way I feel it now we will sell for junk every machine what we got." Forthwith Abe boarded a car for uptown, and when he returned two hours later he found Goldman discussing ways and means with Morris in the show-room. "Well, Abe," Morris cried, "what for a loft you seen it?" Abe hung up his hat deliberately. "I tell you the truth, Mawruss," he said, turning around, "the loft ain't bad. It's a good-looking loft, Mawruss, only it's certain sure we couldn't have no machines in that loft." "Ai vai!" Goldman exclaimed, rocking to and fro in his chair and striking his head with his clenched fist. "Nu Goldman?" Morris asked. "What's the trouble with you?" "Troubles enough he got it, Mawruss," Abe said, as he watched Goldman's evolutions of woe. "If we do away with our machines he loses his job; ain't it?" "Better than that he should make me dizzy at my stomach to watch him, Abe," Morris said. "I got a suggestion." Goldman ceased rocking and looked up. "I got a suggestion, Abe," Morris went on, "that we sell it our machines on long terms of credit to Goldman, and he should go into the contracting business; ain't it?" "Ai vai!" Goldman cried again, and commenced to rock anew. "Stop it, Goldman," Abe yelled. "What's the trouble now?" "What show does a feller got it what starts as a new beginner in cloak contracting already?" Goldman wailed. "Well," Abe replied, "you could get our work." Morris seized on this as a happy compromise between his own advocacy of Ginsburg & Kaplan and the rival claims of Abe's wife's relations. "Sure," he agreed. "We will give him the work what we give now to Satinstein and Ginsburg & Kaplan." Goldman's face spread into a thousand wrinkles of joy. "You save my life!" he exclaimed. "Only he got to agree by a lawyer he should make it up our work a whole lot cheaper as they did," Morris concluded. "Sure, sure," he said. "And also he got to help us call off this here strike," Abe added. "I do my bestest," Goldman replied. "Only we got to see it the varking delegate first and fix it up with him." "Who is this walking delegate, anyhow?" Morris asked. Goldman scratched his head to aid his memory. "I remember it now," he said at last. "It's a feller by the name Sam Slotkin." When Abe and Morris recovered from the shock of Goldman's disclosure they vied with each other in the strength of their resolutions not to move into Sam Slotkin's loft. "I wouldn't pay it not one cent blackmail neither," Abe declared, "not if they kept it up the strike for a year." "Better as we should let that sucker do us, Abe," Morris declared, "I would go out of the business first; ain't it?" Abe nodded and, after a few more defiant sentiments, they went upstairs with Goldman to estimate the amount of work undone on the Fashion Store order. "Them Fashion people was always good customers of ours, too, Mawruss," Abe commented, "and we couldn't send the work out by contractors in this shape. It would ruin the whole job." Morris nodded sadly. "But I wouldn't pay one cent to that sucker, Slotkin, Mawruss," Abe added. "Sure not," Morris agreed. "Might you wouldn't have to pay him nothing, maybe," Goldman suggested. "What d'ye mean?" Abe cried. "Might if you would take it the loft he would call off the strike," said Goldman. "That's so, Mawruss," Abe murmured, as though this phase of the matter had just occurred to him for the first time. "Maybe Goldman is right, Abe," Morris replied. "Maybe if we took it the loft Slotkin would call off the strike." "After all, Mawruss," Abe said, "the loft ain't a bad loft, Mawruss. If it wasn't such a good loft, Mawruss, I would say it no, Mawruss, we shouldn't take the loft; but the loft is a first-class A Number One loft." "S'enough, Abe," Morris replied. "You don't have to tell it me a hundred times already. I ain't disputing it's a good loft; and so if Slotkin calls off the strike we take the loft." At this juncture the store door opened and Slotkin himself entered. "Good afternoon, gents," he said. Morris and Abe greeted him with a scowl. Slotkin stared at Abe indignantly. "Excuse me, Mr.Perlmutter," he said, "I ain't here as broker. I'll see you later about that already. I come here now as varking delegate." "Sure, I know," Abe replied. "When you call it a strike on us this morning, that ain't got nothing to do with our taking the loft. We believe that, Slotkin; so go ahead and tell us something else." "It makes me no difference whether you believe it or you don't believe it, Mr.Potash," Slotkin went on. "All I got to say is that you signed it an agreement with the union; ain't it?" "Sure, we signed it," said Abe, "and we kept it, too. We pay 'em always union prices and we keep it union hours." "Prices and hours is all right," Slotkin said, "but in the agreement stands it you should give 'em a proper place to work in it." "Well," Morris cried, "ain't it a proper place here to work in it?" Slotkin shook his head. "As varking delegate I seen it already. I seen it your shop where your operators work," he commenced, "and——" "Why, you ain't never been inside our shop," Goldman cried. "I seen it from the outside—from the street "What's the matter with the workroom?" Abe asked. "Well, the neighborhood ain't right," Slotkin explained. "It's a narrow street already. It should be on a wider street like Nineteenth Street." He paused to note the effect and Morris grunted involuntarily. "Also," Slotkin continued, "it needs it light on four sides, and two elevators." "And I suppose if we hire it such a loft, Slotkin," Abe broke in, "you will call off the strike." "Sure I will call it off the strike," he declared. "It would be my duty as varking delegate. I moost call it off the strike." "All right, then," Abe said; "call off the strike. We made up our mind we will take the loft." "You mean you will take such a loft what the union agreement calls for and which I just described it to you," Slotkin corrected in his quality of walking delegate. "That's what we mean," Abe replied. "Why, then, that loft what I called to your attention, as broker, this morning would be exactly what you would need it!" Slotkin exclaimed, in the hearty tones of a conscientious man, glad that for once the performance of his official duty redounded to clean-handed personal profit. "Sure," Abe grunted. "Where are you going to have it your shop, Goldman?" Morris asked, after they had returned from Feldman's. "That I couldn't tell it you just yet," Goldman replied. "We ain't quite decided yet." "We!" Abe cried excitedly. "Who's we?" "Well, I expect to get it a partner with a couple of hundred dollars," Goldman said; "but, anyhow, Mr.Potash, I get some cards printed next week and I send you one." "All right," Abe replied. "Only let me give it you a piece of advice, Goldman: If you get it a partner, don't make no mistake and have some feller what wants to run you and the business and everybody else, Goldman." The thrust went home and Morris stared fiercely at his partner. "And you should see it also that his wife ain't got no relations, Goldman," he added, "otherwise he'll Goldman nodded. "Oh, I got a good, smart feller picked out, and his wife's relations will be all right, too," he said, as he started to leave. "But, anyhow, Mr.Perlmutter, I let you know next week." About ten days afterward, while Morris and Abe were in the throes of packing, prior to the removal of their business, the letter-carrier entered with a batch of mail, and Morris immediately took it into the show-room. "Here, Abe," he said, as he glanced at the first envelope, "this is for you." Then he proceeded to go through the remainder of the pile. "Holy smokes!" he cried, as he opened the next envelope. "What's the matter?" Abe asked. "Is it a failure?" He had read his own letter and held it between trembling fingers as he inquired. "Look at this," Morris said, handing him a card. It was a fragment of cheap pasteboard and bore the following legend:
"Well, Abe," Morris cried, "that's a fine piece of business. We not only got to take it the loft what Slotkin picks out for us, but we also got to give Slotkin our work also." Abe shrugged his shoulders in an indifferent manner. "You always got to run things your way, Mawruss," he said. "If you let me do it my way, Mawruss, we wouldn't of had no strike nor trouble nor nothing, and it would of been the same in the end." "What d'ye mean?" Morris exclaimed. "Look at this here," Abe replied, handing him the letter. It was printed in script on heavily-coated paper and read as follows:
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