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What Class Are You In?

What Class Are You In? image
Parent Issue
Day
4
Month
September
Year
1895
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

There is probably no place in the world wliere tlie real person creeps out so niuch as in a store, and the clerks therein soon "size a person up" íor what they are. A Courier scribe overheard a couple of lady clerks talking the otherday, and in tlie conversation they expressed their admiratiou in warm terins för a certain ladj' because she was so nice to sell goods to. Upon farther inquiry we ascertained that tliere are a number of ladies in the city who are universally known among the cltrks and admired because they are so pleasant andj courteous to the saleslady when they do shopping ;it the stores. These ladiea do not real ze how popular they are, and how ïnuch they are liked, and that all of the clerks in the city always spenk a good word for them. On the other hand there are a host of women who are so disagreeable that their entrance into the door of a store is like an iceberg floating in, and no one likes to wait upon them. They do not realize how disagreeable they are, and if they could "see theinselves as others see them," they would go off j[somevhere and bate themselves to deathSoineöf these same women imagine that they abound in Christian graces. Say, lady, of those mentioned above, witli whicb crowd 3 your name connected? Stop and think that it is just as easy to be agreeable and pleasant with clerks as it is to be uncivil and fault-finding, and gain a reputation for being a disagreeable, obnoxions person, that will make you notorious throughout tlie city.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Courier