ice tenement on the East Side. In one
of the flats lived the Schaibles, a young couple not long in the country.
He was a music teacher. Believing that money was found in the streets of
America, they furnished their flat finely on the installment plan,
expecting that he would have many pupils, but none came. A baby did
instead, and when they were three, what with doctor and nurse, their money
went fast. Now it was all gone; the installment collector was about to
seize their furniture for failure to pay, and they would lose all. The
baby was sick and going to die. It would have to be buried in "the
trench," for the father and mother were utterly friendless and penniless.
She told the story dispassionately, as one reciting an every-day event in
tenement-house life, until she came to the sick baby. Then her soul was
stirred.
"I couldn't take no money out of that house," she said. She gave her day's
pay for scrubbing to the poor young couple and came straight to Miss Wald
to ask her to send a priest to them. She had little ones herself, and she
knew that the mother's heart was grieved because she couldn't meet the
baby in her heaven if it died and was buried like a dog.
"'Tain't mine," she added with a little conscious blush at Miss Wald's
curious scrutiny; "but it wouldn't be heaven to her without her child,
would it?"
They are not Roman Catholics at the Nurses' Settlement, either, as it
happens, but they know the way well to the priest's door. Before the night
was an hour older a priest was in the home of the young people, and with
him came a sister of charity. Save the baby they could not, but keep it
from the Potter's Field they could and did. It died, and was buried with
all the comforting blessings of the Church, and the poor young parents
were no longer friendless. The installment collector, met by Miss Wald in
person, ceased to be a terror.
"And to think," said that lady indignantly from behind the coffee urn in
the morning, "to think that they don't have a pupil, not a single one!"
The residenters seated at the breakfast table laid down their spoons with
a common accord and gazed imploringly at her. They were used to having
their heads shampooed for the cause by unskilled hands, to have their dry
goods spoiled by tyros at dressmaking, and they knew the signs.
"Leading lady," they chorused, "oh, leading lady! _Have_ we got to take
music lessons?"
WHERE HE FOUND HIS NEIGHBOR
"Go quickly, ple
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