The little man unfolded himself, galloped down the aisle, seized the

first garment that came to hand, and came back to lay it against Milt's

uncomfortable frame, bumbling, "Fine, mister, fy-en!"

Milt studied the shiny-seamed, worn-buttonholed, limp object with

dislike. Its personality was disintegrated. The only thing he liked

about it was the good garage stink of gasoline.

"That's almost worn out," he growled.

At this sacrilege Mr. Silberfarb threw up his hands, with the dingy suit

flapping in them like a bed-quilt shaken from a tenement window. He

looked Milt all over, coldly. His red but shining eyes hinted that Milt

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was a clodhopper and no honest wearer of evening clothes. Milt felt

humble, but he snapped, "No good. Want something with class."

"Vell, that was good enough for a university professor at the big dance,

but if you say so----"

In the manner of one who is being put to an unfair amount of trouble,

Mr. Silberfarb returned the paranoiac dress-suit to the rack, sighing

patiently as he laboriously draped it on a hanger. He peered and pawed.

He crowed with throaty triumph and brought back a rich ripe thing of

velvet collar and cuffs. He fixed Milt with eyes that had become as

sulky as the eyes of a dog in August dust.

"Now that--you can't beat that, if you vant class, and it'll fit you

like a glove. Oh, that's an ellllegant garment!"

Shaking himself out of the spell of those contemptuous eyes Milt opened

his brochure, studied the chart, and in a footnote found, "Never wear

velvet collars or cuffs with evening coat."

"Nope. Nix on the velvet," he remarked.

Then the little man went mad and ran around in circles. He flung the

ellllegant garment on the table. He flapped his arms, and wailed, "What

do you vant? What do you vannnnt? That's a hundred-and-fifty-dollar

dress-suit! That belonged to one of the richest men in the city. He sold

it to me because he was going to Japan."

"Well, you can send it to Japan after him. I want something decent. Have

you got it--or shall I go some place else?"

The tailor instantly became affectionate. "How about a nice Tuxedo?" he

coaxed.

"Nope. It says here--let me see--oh yes, here it is--it says here in the

book that for the theater-with-ladies, should not wear 'dinner-coat or

so-called Tuxedo, but----'"

"Oh, dem fellows what writes books they don't know nothing. Absolute!

They make it up."

"Huh! Well, I guess I'll take my chance on them. The factory knows the

ignition better 'n any repair-man."

"Vell say, you're a hard fellow to please. I'll give you one of my

reserve stock, but you got to leave me ten dollars deposit instead of

five."

Mr. Silberfarb quite cheerfully unlocked a glass case behind the racked

and ghostly dead; he brought out a suit that seemed to Milt almost

decent. And it almost fitted when, after changing clothes in a broiling,

boiling, reeking, gasoline-pulsing hole behind the racks, he examined it

before a pier-glass. But he caught the tailor assisting the fit by

bunching up a roll of cloth at the shoulder. Again Milt snapped, and

again the tailor suffered and died, and to a doubting heathen world

maintained the true gospel of "What do you vannnnt? It ain't stylish to

have the dress-suit too tight! All the gents is wearing 'em loose and

graceful." But in the end, after Milt had gone as far as the door, Mr.

Silberfarb admitted that one dress-coat wouldn't always fit all persons

without some alterations.