He had just opened a store on our street and in a Lady Bountiful spirit
of helping him out, I went in to do a little trading. I told him I would
like a can of baked beans. Baked beans, but he didn't seem to
understand. So pointing over the counter where they were in plain sight,
I said with all my teeth and tongue: "Baaked Beens." He followed my
finger. "Oh," he said correcting me, "You min Purrk ind Bins."
That was the beginning and for weeks that Greek has been correcting my
pronunciation. There is no use to argue about it. The fellow has no
reverence for Noah Webster and besides there are more Greeks, nowadays,
than Yankees, and their way is probably getting to be the right way.
Sometimes I think it is we who are the "foreigners."
Once it was cauliflower. Now, I say cauliflower exactly as it is spelled
but that isn't right. It is "Culliefleur," said staccato. And honey--one
day I wanted honey and after I had sung "Hunnie, hunnie" in high C,
and he didn't understand, I went around and picked out a jar of it.
"Oh," he said reproachfully, "you min hawney."
A Scotch woman had a scene with him the other day over some "paeper."
There is no way of spelling it as she said it. She kept repeating it and
he kept getting the wrong thing. No, she didn't want paper but
"paeper"--seasoning for the table--salt and "paeper." The more excited
she got, the more Scotch she got and the more confused he. Then, when
they were both fairly hysterical, I discovered that it was pepper.
Then you should have heard that Greek scold. He told her that it was
"Pip-RR."
And she said back, "Paeper."
Then they argued and never once did either one of them get it "Pepper."
"Paeper."
"Pip-RR."
"Paeper."
"Pip-RR."
One day I heard him laying down the law to a woman who had dared
question his price of "Rust Bif." He told her what he had to pay for it
in "Cash Mawney" and asked her if she could do so, to explain.
"Explin--you kin explin--explin." But she couldn't explain. So,
chastened, she meekly bought the roast beef at his price.
Yesterday a U. C. girl was in and asked, "You are a Greek, are you not?"
"Naw," he answered, "you min Grrik."
Billboards or Art
If you like billboards you are not artistic. Take it or leave it. That's
the criterion. It's not my verdict. Ask those who know, the literary
clubs, the art clubs and our distinguished guests from Europe. I can
remember away back when Pierre Loti visited this co
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