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<h1> PERKINS OF PORTLAND </h1>
<h2> PERKINS THE GREAT </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Ellis Parker Butler </h2>
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<h2> I. MR. PERKINS OF PORTLAND </h2>
<p class="pfirst"><span>T</span>HERE was very little about Perkins that was not peculiar. To mention his
peculiarities would be a long task; he was peculiar from the ground up.
His shoes had rubber soles, his hat had peculiar mansard ventilators on
each side, his garments were vile as to fit, and altogether he had the
appearance of being a composite picture.</p>
<p>We first met in the Golden Hotel office in Cleveland, Ohio. I was reading
a late copy of a morning paper and smoking a very fairish sort of cigar,
when a hand was laid on my arm. I turned and saw in the chair beside me a
beaming face.</p>
<p>“Just read that!” he said, poking an envelope under my nose. “No, no!” he
cried; “on the back of it.”</p>
<p>What I read was:</p>
<p>“Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster Makes all pains and aches fly faster.”</p>
<p>“Great, isn't it?” he asked, before I could express myself. “That first
line, 'Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster,' just takes the cake. And the last
line! That is a gem, if I do say it myself. Has the whole story in seven
words. 'All pains and aches!' Everything from sore feet to backache; all
the way from A to Z in the dictionary of diseases. Comprehensive as a
presidential message. Full of meat as a refrigerator- car. 'Fly faster!'
Faster than any other patent med. or dope would make them fly. 'Makes!'
They've got to fly! See? 'Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster MAKES all pains
and aches fly faster,' 'makes ALL pains and aches fly faster,' 'makes all
pains and aches fly FASTER.' Isn't she a beaut.? Say, you can't forget
that in a thousand years. You'll find yourself saying it on your
death-bed:</p>
<p>“'Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster<br/>
Makes all pains and aches fly faster.'”<br/></p>
<p>I held the envelope toward him, but he only tapped it with his finger.</p>
<p>“There is a fortune in those two lines,” he said. “I know it I'm Perkins,
known from Maine to California as Perkins of Portland, Perkins the
Originator. I have originated more ads. than any man living. See that
shoe? It's the 'Go-lightly' kind. I originated the term. See this hat?
It's Pratt's. 'Pratt's Hats Air the Hair.' I originated that ad. Result,
six million pair of the Go-lightly kind of shoes sold the first year.
Eight million Pratt's Hats sold on the strength of 'Air-the-Hair.' See
this suit? I originated the term 'Ready-tailored.' Result, a boom for the
concern. Everybody crazy for Ready-tailored clothes. It's all in the ad.
The ad.'s the thing. Say, who originated 'up-to-date in style,
down-to-date in price?' I did. Made half a million for a collar concern on
that. See that fringe on those pants? And to think that the man who's
wearing them has made millions! Yes, millions—for other guys. But
he's done. It's all off with Willie. Now Willie is going to make money for
himself. Mr. Perkins of Portland is going to get rich. Are you with him?”</p>
<p>“How is the plaster?” I asked, for there was something taking about
Perkins. “Is it good for anything?”</p>
<p>“Plaster!” he said. “Bother the plaster! The ad.'s all right, and that's
the main thing. Give me a good ad., and I'll sell lead bullets for liver
pills. Display 'Perkins's Bullets Kill the Disease' in all the magazines,
and in a year every person with or without a liver would be as full of
lead as a printer's case. Paint it on ten thousand barns, and the
inhabitants of these glorious States would be plugged up like Mark Twain's
frog. Now I have here an ad. that is a winner. Give me fifty thousand
dollars, and we will have every man, woman, and child in America dreaming,
thinking, and wearing Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster. We will have it in
every magazine, on every barn, fence, and rock, in the street-cars, on
highways and byways, until the refrain will ring in sixty million American
heads—</p>
<p>“'Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster<br/>
Makes all pains and aches fly faster.”<br/></p>
<p>“But, my dear sir,” I said, “is the plaster good?”</p>
<p>Mr. Perkins of Portland leaned over and whispered in my ear, “There is no
plaster.”</p>
<p>“What?” I cried.</p>
<p>“Not yet,” he said, “that will come later. We will get that later. Law of
supply and demand, you know. When there is a demand, there always turns up
a supply to fill it. See the point? You look bright. See this. We
advertise. Get, say, fifty thousand orders at ten dollars each; total,
five hundred thousand dollars. What next? We sell out. We go to some big
concern. 'Here,' we say—'Here is an article advertised up to the
handle. Here are orders for five hundred thousand dollars' worth. Thing on
the boom. Give us two hundred thousand cash, and get up your old plaster,
and fill the orders. Thanks. Good day.' See? They get a well-established
business. We get a clear profit of one hundred and fifty thousand. What
next? We get up another ad. Invest our whole capital. Sell out for a
million. Invest again, sell out again. In ten years we can buy Manhattan
Island for our town-seat and Chicago for our country-seat. The richest
firm in the world—Perkins and—”</p>
<p>“Brown,” I said, supplying the blank; “but I haven't fifty thousand
dollars, nor yet ten thousand.”</p>
<p>“What have you got?” he asked, eagerly. “Just five thousand.”</p>
<p>“Done!” Perkins cried.</p>
<p>And the next day we had the trade-mark registered, and had made contracts
with all the Cleveland papers.</p>
<p>“You see,” said Perkins, “we are shy of money. We can't bill the universe
with a measly little five thou. We've got to begin small. Our territory is
Ohio. Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster shall be known to every Buckeye, and
we will sell out for twenty thousand.”</p>
<p>So we soon had the words,</p>
<p>“Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster<br/>
Makes all pains and aches fly faster,”<br/></p>
<p>on the fences and walls throughout Ohio. Every paper proclaimed the same
catchy couplet. One or two magazines informed the world of it. The
bill-boards heralded it. In fact, Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster was in
everybody's mouth, and bade fair to be on everybody's back as soon as
there was a Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster to put on those same backs.</p>
<p>For Perkins was right. The backs seemed fairly to ache for plasters of our
making. From all over the State druggists wrote for terms; and we soon
kept two typewriters busy informing the anxious pharmacists that, owing to
the unprecedented demand, our factory was two months behind on orders, and
that “your esteemed favor will have our earliest attention, and all orders
will be filled in rotation at the earliest possible moment.” Each day
brought a deluge of letters, and we received several quite unsolicited
testimonials to the merits of Perkins's Patent Porous Plaster. Perkins was
radiant.</p>
<p>Then he faded.</p>
<p>He set out to sell the trade-mark, and failed! No one wanted it. Money was
tight, and patent medicines were a drug.</p>
<p>Porous Plasters were dead. Perkins was worried. Day followed day; and the
orders began to decrease, while countermands began to arrive. We had just
two hundred dollars left, and bills for four thousand dollars' worth of
advertisements on our file. At last Perkins gave up. He came in, and
leaned despondently against my desk. Sorrow marked every feature.</p>
<p>“No use,” he said, dolefully, “they won't bite. We have to do it.”</p>
<p>“What?” I asked; “make an assignment?”</p>
<p>“Nonsense!” cried Perkins. “Fill those orders ourselves!”</p>
<p>“But where can we get—”</p>
<p>“The plasters?” Perkins scratched his head. He repeated softly, “Makes all
pains and aches fly faster,” and swung one foot sadly. “That's it,” he
said; “where?”</p>
<p>The situation was becoming acute. We must have plasters quickly or fail. A
look of sadness settled on his face, and he dropped limply into a chair.
Instantly he sprang to his feet with a yell. He grasped the tail of his
coat and tugged and struggled. He had sat on a sheet of sticky fly-paper,
and he was mad, but even while he struggled with it, his eyes brightened,
and he suddenly darted out of the office door, with the fly-paper rattling
behind him.</p>
<p>In two hours he returned. He had a punch such as harness-makers use to
punch holes in straps, a pair of scissors, and a smile as broad as his
face was long.</p>
<p>“They will be here in ten minutes!” he cried. “Sit right down and write to
all of our ad. mediums to hold that ad. for a change. In one year we will
buy the soldiers' monument for a paper-weight, and purchase Euclid Avenue
for a bowling-alley! Get off your coat. I've ordered fifty thousand paper
boxes, one hundred thousand labels, and two hundred thousand plasters. The
first lot of boxes will be here to-morrow, and the first batch of labels
to-night. The plasters will be here in five minutes. It's a wonder I
didn't think of it when I wrote the ad. The new ad. will sell two plasters
to every one the old one sold.”</p>
<p>“Where in thunder—” I began.</p>
<p>“At the grocery, of course,” he cried, as if it were the most natural
place to find porous plasters. “I bought every wholesale grocer in town
out of 'em. Cleaned them plump up. I've got enough to fill all orders, and
some over. The finest in the land. Stick closer than a brother, 'feel
good, are good,' as I wrote for a stocking concern. Stay on until they
wear off.”</p>
<p>He was right. The trucks soon began to arrive with the cases. They were
piled on the walk twenty high, they were piled in the street, we piled our
office full, and put some in the vacant room across the hall. There were
over a thousand cases of sticky fly-paper.</p>
<p>We cut the sheets into thirds, and sprinkled a little cayenne pepper on
the sticky side with a pepper-shaker, and then punched holes in them.
Later we got a rubber stamp, and printed the directions for use on each;
but we had no time for that then. When the boxes began to arrive, Perkins
ran down and gathered in three newsboys, and constituted them our packing
force. By the end of the week we had our orders all filled.</p>
<p>And our plasters stuck! None ever stuck better. They stuck forever. They
wouldn't peel off, they wouldn't wash off, they wouldn't scrape off. When
one wore off, it left the stickiness there; and the victim had to buy
another to paste on top of the old one before he could put on a shirt. It
was a huge success.</p>
<p>We changed our ad. to read:</p>
<p>“Perkins's Paper Porous Plaster<br/>
Makes all pains and aches fly faster,”<br/></p>
<p>and branched out into the magazines. We sent a to Europe, and now some of
the crowned heads are wearing our plasters. You all remember Stoneley's
account of meeting a tribe of natives in the wilds of Africa wearing
nothing but Perkins's Paper Porous Plasters, and recall the celebrated
words of Rodriguez Velos, second understudy to the Premier of Spain,
“America is like Perkins's Paper Porous Plasters—a thing not to be
sat on.”</p>
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<p>Five months ago we completed our ten-story factory, and increased our
capital stock to two millions; and those to whom we offered the trade-mark
in our early days are green with regret. Perkins is abroad now in his
private yacht. Queer old fellow, too, for he still insists on wearing the
Go-lightly shoes and the Air-the-Hair hat, in spite of the fact that he
hasn't enough hair left to make a miniature paint-brush.</p>
<p>I asked him before he left for his cruise when he was from,—Portland,
Me., or Portland, Oreg.,—and he laughed.</p>
<p>“My dear boy,” he said, “it's all in the ad. 'Mr. Perkins of Portland' is
a phrase to draw dollars. I'm from Chicago. Get a phrase built like a
watch, press the button, and the babies cry for it.”</p>
<p>That's all. But in closing I might remark that if you ever have any
trouble with a weak back, pain in the side, varicose veins, heavy
sensation in the chest, or, in fact, any ailment whatever, just remember
that</p>
<p>Perkins's Paper Porous Plaster<br/>
Make all pains and aches fly faster.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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