Yesterday I saw Herbert Goldstein in the doctor's
office. Like us all, age is taking a
toll.
It brought back memories of he and his men's clothing store
on the Square. I have two stories.
One story is my sister gave me a raincoat for
Christmas. It did not fit. My sister gave me the sales slip, from where
she bought it, Goldstein's. I carried it back to the store and told
Herbert Goldstein the coat did not fit.
I tried it on to show him and he agreed.
He was very courteous.
He went right to work focused on finding clothing
merchandise that would equal out the amount paid for the rain coat. He found maybe a pair of pants, shirts, and
socks that as he asked me did I like what he just picked out, some I did and
some I didn't. If I said I did, he added
it to his running total on the adding
machine. He had to add and take back
stuff until he got the running total just 25₵ short.
He opened his cash register drawer and started moving things
around and found what he was looking for: a coupon for either McDonald's or
Wendy's for 25 cents. He put that in the
pile.
Even Steven!
Once an observant co-worker asked me have I ever noticed
that there are no prices on merchandise at Goldstein's . He looks at you and not the product when he
tells you the price of it. I suppose he
judges just how much you can afford or willing to pay for the item.
After I heard and forgot that we went to Chattanooga one day to the Train Museum. At the
museum gift shop we bought our boys railroad engineer's caps. They are light gray with dark blue stripes,
the kind I saw Donald Duck wearing once.
A few days later I wanted one just like theirs. I called Goldstein's and asked a lady did
they have the railroad engineers caps and described it. She said they did. I asked t her how much and she said $3.95.
The next day or so I went to
Goldstein's to buy that engineers hat or cap. I went into the store, found the hats, found
my size and carried it to the cash register, planning on spending $3.95 plus
tax.
Mrs. Goldstein was at the cash register. The railroad hat or cap did not have a
price. She held it up and asked Mr. Goldstein, who was at a table about 20 feet over straightening out the
merchandise
"How much are these hats?"
Then I remember what I was told.
He looked up and looked at me, not what she was holding, and
said, "$2.95".
I wasn't sure if should be complemented or insulted.
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