OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 8, 1923. The successful handshaker Is a very buoyant person ality. Always 'banding around business car dsiacase.v some one forgets his telephone number. Altera busy-da- y of and Well, Hel lo, Eddie Well,! well, well, bow's the old kid! etc. the buoyant per--i tonality is all used up.' Home for the night with the wife and kiddies, the handshaker becomes just a tired business man. , back-slappi- desk locking busy only at those times when the bos eomw through. At other time, he is a typical T. B. M. Robert's duty is to come back and tell the appli- cant that so and so is at a conference and can't see no one. Occasionally when the boss needs to make an extra impression on a visiting client he wiU open do?r leading into Robert's anteroom and say. This is our- reimbursement department Robert has adenoids i. ' ' - . 'If. .:: t . 'I V - . -J ' 5 AffeaW, ?." s v V p ,W t , . . V - The regIar feller a big. strong, silent man and a little cutup all rolled into, one, is the automobile salesman. ' I ' A " , tf 'a? f V H .f ; y g I A li t iI j.-- fid f .'f'.lAj'A 1 V? J V, f ih I 1j 1 tyf ,1 V;J : V- -i Yf rfSW ' : ; '' ;V JA: ' y . fC ' What makes the tired business man so tired? That's what hit wife would bke to know once and for all. Well, for one thing, entertaining, ,lle out f town chenta at the Club Petite cabaret or the Onepnta Room of the Hotel Ruggles, has a lot to do with that tired feeling. Clients on a party never want to go home sober.' Or go home at ail for that matter. (This is the third time these past two weeks Mr.Craus has had to do the honors with out of town clients. It is near closing time at the dance palace and yet neither Mr. Maginnis-no- r Mr- - Schwarts wants to go home. They are trying to annex the cost- room girl to their party and goover to Stauchs.) S " ' - The broker With the weak atomsch and numerous, clients who hive to be taken to lunch is a tragic figure in the business world. The ktenogs in tbe office are - afraid of their lives from 2:30 F. M. on. , r |