Sam's Chance And How He Improved It
fice I'll have to buy s
Ba
was not extremely bad. He liked fun, even if it involved mischief; and he could not be called strictly truthful nor honest. But he would not wantonly injure or tyrannize over a smaller boy, and there was nothing mean or malicious about him. Still he was hardly the sort of boy a merchant would be likely to select as an office boy, and but for a lucky cha
onsisted of a ragged shirt, and a pair of equally ragged pantaloons. Both were of unknown antiquity, and had
. Somewhere in the neighborhood of Baxter Street there was a second-hand clothing establishment, which he had patro
ers-by. If any one paused to examine his stock, he was immediately assailed by voluble
d not suspect that the ragged street boy was likely to become a c
him with a busi
ave you got any tiptop
red the old man, wit
t your son, and I wouldn't be. M
o buy clo'es?" asked th
aid you'd let me h
This is the cheapest
your best suits. I want '
old man, a grin illumining his wrinkled
best clo'es is to home in the wardr
was displayed; but Sam
fashionabl
ue one," sai
e like, how
ty c
to ruin me? I won't give n
ore. It cost
ve thirt
rice was accepted, and th
s," said Sam. "I've got a place, an
he momentary suspicion that he might be throwing hi
m. "What do yo
h have y
ou want to
ow what clo'e
e dollars, when a shrewd th
our dollars
ond the expectati
id. "I'll give you some ni
nt me to come here agai
all my cl
ly, or with an air of greater importance than Sam. He was right
als will look at you as you g
o your best by me, and I
thing to his satisfaction except a coat. Here he was rather particular.
t," he said, "I gue
give you that and the rest o
can't
ose to
ed Sam in his dete
e; I'll try i
, cracked mirror. True, it was about two sizes too large, but Sa
he said. "Don't I
y-five cents more for that
you w
t. I ought
he rest of the clo'e
ment as if to l
nty cents mo
ive you no twenty cents, but I'll tell you what
looked at th
worth much
t but they're wor
ical inspection, and t
s fa
s," said the old man. "
ed a five-
dollar back
m with the expression of
only four dollar
d I had four. I didn
s are worth
it from me. Do you think I'm going
atisfied. "I'm losin' money o
you needn't," said Sam, independently.
e four
dollars and these clo'es I have on. A bargain's a bargain. If
t, and received back
round to my hotel-I'll chan
tely well, but the blue coat-of the kind popularly called a swallow-tail-nearly trailed upon the ground.
id to himself, complacently,