OCR Text |
Show WANTED NO PRINTED LETTER Kentucky Dealer Wrote a Scathing Letter to Jobbing House That Dared to Send Him a Typewritten Type-written Epistle on Receipt of First Order. A Gncinnati commission house had sold a bill of goods to a new customer custom-er in the interior of Kentucky who was not rated iby Dun or Bradstrect, says the American Pressman. The goods went C. 0.D. and a typewritten typewrit-ten letter advising the country merchant mer-chant that the goods had been sent was mailed to him. This the country merchant acknowledged in the following follow-ing letter, in which he makes some highly original objections to the business busi-ness methods of the commission house: "Jcntlemcn -I want you to under stand sur that I ain't no dam fool when I bort that Bill from that Tcao Headed Agent of yores he tole me that you sent him all the way from cyncynita to git that order. I thot he was lying and I bort all my goods from the jersey and he tole me he sold the jersey and would sell me just like he sole the jersey, now you writes me a printed letter and scz if I send you the munncy you will send me the goods, i rccon you Will', most enny durn fool ud .do that. 1 would not mind a Bit send in the munncy and risk gittin the goods but when i recollect how you and yor cagent done me i refuse to do it if you would of treted me right and rit me letters In ritin and not of sent me that newspaper printed letter like i was a. dam fool andi could not read ritin I would a tuck the gooda and pade the cash. "now I dont wont no more of yore printed letters i wont stand sich from no house i am fifty six year ole the Hast of next comin jinuwary and the fust man has got to put my back on the ground yit. a may not have as much larnin in gramma as you got but i can whip you or enny other dam yanky that wants to try ritin me a printed letter." |