The Girls of Central High on the Stage
and gone her homeward way, too, had she not heard a cackling little "
ery fortunate escape, in
y. "I might have gone farther and
-and her mother. Of course, they've got nothing, and had
ade a person with a thinner skin writhe a little.
about those people?" s
But rents are going up in this neighborhood and-
m out of the cottage?" ask
ginary cake of soap between them and was busily washing the Morse affair from his pal
they pay
renting of that particular piece of property. In a business way, he wa
the same sort of a cottage in this v
they should for an owner. I found that out long ago. If I was a younger man, Mrs. Prenti
dy. "And you intend to rais
an alone ain't good pay," said Chumley. "And they're likely
Mrs. Morse writ
g, or go out to day's work-that's what she'd better do," snarled the old man. "This messin'
nd potatoes, my friend," laughed the
man's withered cheek again. He wa
the world for-to work. There's too many of 'em trying to keep their hands clean, an' livin' above their means. Mary Morse is
rites sil
r Morse wants to ape these well-to-do folks that live 'tother end o' Whiffle Street. Keeps her gal
y to bring up girls-letting th
schoolin' is bad for gals. They don't need it, anyway. And all the fal-lals and di-does the
g along?" asked Mrs. Prentice, trying to bring th
t the gal pay the rent for December; it'll be due in a day or two. And she didn't have it. They're often late with
in need of sympat
th his cupped hand to his ear as thoug
repeated
e. I could see that by your keerless handlin' of money," croaked Mr.
Mr. Chumley?" asked the lady,
eh
Mr. Chumley," she added, and turned off through the side street toward her own home, leaving the old man
y years for that. She was not given to charities of any kind. But the thought of Jess Morse and her widowed
se had been really lost I might have made that young girl a lot of tr
ight kind. Somehow-yes-I must