Herbert
Goldstein died Tuesday, November 28th, just three days before his 94th
birthday. He was one of downtown
Marietta's most interesting person, if not the wealthiest. He was a retail merchant and property
investor. We saw him in a doctors'
waiting room with his daughter probably less than a year ago and he did not
look well.
I have two
Herbert Goldstein encounters to tell:
First: Years
ago, we took our boys to Chattanooga to the Railroad Museum. At the gift shop we bought our sons gray
striped railroad engineers hats. After
we were back home, I decided I wanted on too.
I called around to various local clothing stores asking if they had the
hats. Goldstein's had them. Of course.
Goldstein's
Department Store was in the place the old McLlellan's 5₵ and 10₵ store was.
When I called and Herbert said they
had them I asked how much and he instantly said something like $4.99.
The next day I went to Goldstein's to
buy the railroad hat. I heard that price
tags were not visible. You had to ask
Mr. Goldstein the price and he looked at you not the item when he said the
price.
I selected my hat and asked Mrs.
Goldstein the price, who you think was a clerk there, not the owner's
wife. She said she would check. Herbert was a good 30 feet away, she held up
the hat and called out, "Mr. Goldstein, how much is this hat?"
And sure'nuff, he looked at me, not
the hat, and said $3.99.
That was a dollar cheaper than he told
me on the phone. He either judged me to
be a wise shopper or was too poor to pay more.
I did not know whether to feel insulted or complemented.
Encounter two: My sister gave me an overcoat as a gift. I think she included the sales receipt in
case it did not fit. It did not
fit. It came from Goldstein's.
Then, Goldstein's Department Store was
in the lobby of the old First National Bank Building, which he owned the
building. He was also the only employee
there.
Mr.
Goldstein was very cordial and hinted strongly that I should pick out
something I liked and swap evenly. He
hustled around picking out shirts, ties, gloves, handkerchiefs, and whatever else he had a hand-held
calculator that he kept a running total.
He came within 25€.
He opened his cash register. I thought he was going to hand me a
quarter. I was wrong. He handed me a Wendy's coupon with a 25 cent
value.