WEE QUESTION OF FORTUNE—FOUR-FIFTY A WEEK
Once across the river and into the
wholesale district, she glanced about her for some
likely door at which to apply. As she contemplated
the wide windows and imposing signs, she became conscious
of being gazed upon and understood for what she was—a
wage-seeker. She had never done this thing before,
and lacked courage. To avoid a certain indefinable
shame she felt at being caught spying about for a
position, she quickened her steps and assumed an air
of indifference supposedly common to one upon an errand.
In this way she passed many manufacturing and wholesale
houses without once glancing in. At last, after
several blocks of walking, she felt that this would
not do, and began to look about again, though without
relaxing her pace. A little way on she saw a
great door which, for some reason, attracted her attention.
It was ornamented by a small brass sign, and seemed
to be the entrance to a vast hive of six or seven floors.
“Perhaps,” she thought, “they may
want some one,” and crossed over to enter.
When she came within a score of feet of the desired
goal, she saw through the window a young man in a grey
checked suit. That he had anything to do with
the concern, she could not tell, but because he happened
to be looking in her direction her weakening heart
misgave her and she hurried by, too overcome with
shame to enter. Over the way stood a great six-story
structure, labelled Storm and King, which she viewed
with rising hope. It was a wholesale dry goods
concern and employed women. She could see them
moving about now and then upon the upper floors.
This place she decided to enter, no matter what.
She crossed over and walked directly toward the entrance.
As she did so, two men came out and paused in the
door. A telegraph messenger in blue dashed past
her and up the few steps that led to the entrance
and disappeared. Several pedestrians out of the
hurrying throng which filled the sidewalks passed about
her as she paused, hesitating. She looked helplessly
around, and then, seeing herself observed, retreated.
It was too difficult a task. She could not go
past them.
So severe a defeat told sadly upon
her nerves. Her feet carried her mechanically
forward, every foot of her progress being a satisfactory
portion of a flight which she gladly made. Block
after block passed by. Upon streetlamps at the
various corners she read names such as Madison, Monroe,
La Salle, Clark, Dearborn, State, and still she went,
her feet beginning to tire upon the broad stone flagging.
She was pleased in part that the streets were bright
and clean. The morning sun, shining down with
steadily increasing warmth, made the shady side of
the streets pleasantly cool. She looked at the
blue sky overhead with more realisation of its charm
than had ever come to her before.
Her cowardice began to trouble her
in a way. She turned back, resolving to hunt
up Storm and King and enter. On the way, she
encountered a great wholesale shoe company, through
the broad plate windows of which she saw an enclosed
executive department, hidden by frosted glass.
Without this enclosure, but just within the street
entrance, sat a grey-haired gentleman at a small table,
with a large open ledger before him. She walked
by this institution several times hesitating, but,
finding herself unobserved, faltered past the screen
door and stood humble waiting.
“Well, young lady,” observed
the old gentleman, looking at her somewhat kindly,
“what is it you wish?”
“I am, that is, do you—I
mean, do you need any help?” she stammered.
“Not just at present,”
he answered smiling. “Not just at present.
Come in some time next week. Occasionally we
need some one.”
She received the answer in silence
and backed awkwardly out. The pleasant nature
of her reception rather astonished her. She had
expected that it would be more difficult, that something
cold and harsh would be said—she knew not
what. That she had not been put to shame and
made to feel her unfortunate position, seemed remarkable.
Somewhat encouraged, she ventured
into another large structure. It was a clothing
company, and more people were in evidence—
well-dressed men of forty and more, surrounded by brass
railings.
An office boy approached her.
“Who is it you wish to see?” he asked.
“I want to see the manager,” she said.
He ran away and spoke to one of a group of three men
who were
conferring together. One of these came towards
her.
“Well?” he said coldly.
The greeting drove all courage from her at once.
“Do you need any help?” she stammered.
“No,” he replied abruptly, and turned
upon his heel.
She went foolishly out, the office
boy deferentially swinging the door for her, and gladly
sank into the obscuring crowd. It was a severe
setback to her recently pleased mental state.
Now she walked quite aimlessly for
a time, turning here and there, seeing one great company
after another, but finding no courage to prosecute
her single inquiry. High noon came, and with
it hunger. She hunted out an unassuming restaurant
and entered, but was disturbed to find that the prices
were exorbitant for the size of her purse. A
bowl of soup was all that she could afford, and, with
this quickly eaten, she went out again. It restored
her strength somewhat and made her moderately bold
to pursue the search.
In walking a few blocks to fix upon
some probable place, she again encountered the firm
of Storm and King, and this time managed to get in.
Some gentlemen were conferring close at hand, but
took no notice of her. She was left standing,
gazing nervously upon the floor. When the limit
of her distress had been nearly reached, she was beckoned
to by a man at one of the many desks within the near-by
railing.
“Who is it you wish to see?” he required.
“Why, any one, if you please,”
she answered. “I am looking for something
to do.”
“Oh, you want to see Mr. McManus,”
he returned. “Sit down,” and he
pointed to a chair against the neighbouring wall.
He went on leisurely writing, until after a time
a short, stout gentleman came in from the street.
“Mr. McManus,” called
the man at the desk, “this young woman wants
to see you.”
The short gentleman turned about towards
Carrie, and she arose and came forward.
“What can I do for you, miss?”
he inquired, surveying her curiously.
“I want to know if I can get
a position,” she inquired.
“As what?” he asked.
“Not as anything in particular,” she faltered.
“Have you ever had any experience
in the wholesale dry goods business?” he questioned.
“No, sir,” she replied.
“Are you a stenographer or typewriter?”
“No, sir.”
“Well, we haven’t anything here,”
he said. “We employ only
experienced help.”
She began to step backward toward
the door, when something about her plaintive face
attracted him.
“Have you ever worked at anything before?”
he inquired.
“No, sir,” she said.
“Well, now, it’s hardly
possible that you would get anything to do in a wholesale
house of this kind. Have you tried the department
stores?”
She acknowledged that she had not.
“Well, if I were you,”
he said, looking at her rather genially, “I
would try the department stores. They often need
young women as clerks.”
“Thank you,” she said,
her whole nature relieved by this spark of friendly
interest.
“Yes,” he said, as she
moved toward the door, “you try the department
stores,” and off he went.
At that time the department store
was in its earliest form of successful operation,
and there were not many. The first three in the
United States, established about 1884, were in Chicago.
Carrie was familiar with the names of several through
the advertisements in the “Daily News,”
and now proceeded to seek them. The words of
Mr. McManus had somehow managed to restore her courage,
which had fallen low, and she dared to hope that this
new line would offer her something. Some time
she spent in wandering up and down, thinking to encounter
the buildings by chance, so readily is the mind, bent
upon prosecuting a hard but needful errand, eased
by that self-deception which the semblance of search,
without the reality, gives. At last she inquired
of a police officer, and was directed to proceed “two
blocks up,” where she would find “The
Fair.”
The nature of these vast retail combinations,
should they ever permanently disappear, will form
an interesting chapter in the commercial history of
our nation. Such a flowering out of a modest
trade principle the world had never witnessed up to
that time. They were along the line of the most
effective retail organisation, with hundreds of stores
coordinated into one and laid out upon the most imposing
and economic basis. They were handsome, bustling,
successful affairs, with a host of clerks and a swarm
of patrons. Carrie passed along the busy aisles,
much affected by the remarkable displays of trinkets,
dress goods, stationery, and jewelry. Each separate
counter was a show place of dazzling interest and
attraction. She could not help feeling the claim
of each trinket and valuable upon her personally, and
yet she did not stop. There was nothing there
which she could not have used—nothing which
she did not long to own. The dainty slippers
and stockings, the delicately frilled skirts and petticoats,
the laces, ribbons, hair-combs, purses, all touched
her with individual desire, and she felt keenly the
fact that not any of these things were in the range
of her purchase. She was a work-seeker, an outcast
without employment, one whom the average employee
could tell at a glance was poor and in need of a situation.
It must not be thought that any one
could have mistaken her for a nervous, sensitive,
high-strung nature, cast unduly upon a cold, calculating,
and unpoetic world. Such certainly she was not.
But women are peculiarly sensitive to their adornment.
Not only did Carrie feel the drag
of desire for all which was new and pleasing in apparel
for women, but she noticed too, with a touch at the
heart, the fine ladies who elbowed and ignored her,
brushing past in utter disregard of her presence, themselves
eagerly enlisted in the materials which the store contained.
Carrie was not familiar with the appearance of her
more fortunate sisters of the city. Neither
had she before known the nature and appearance of
the shop girls with whom she now compared poorly.
They were pretty in the main, some even handsome, with
an air of independence and indifference which added,
in the case of the more favoured, a certain piquancy.
Their clothes were neat, in many instances fine,
and wherever she encountered the eye of one it was
only to recognise in it a keen analysis of her own
position—her individual shortcomings of
dress and that shadow of manner which she thought
must hang about her and make clear to all who and
what she was. A flame of envy lighted in her
heart. She realised in a dim way how much the
city held—wealth, fashion, ease—every
adornment for women, and she longed for dress and
beauty with a whole heart.
On the second floor were the managerial
offices, to which, after some inquiry, she was now
directed. There she found other girls ahead of
her, applicants like herself, but with more of that
self-satisfied and independent air which experience
of the city lends; girls who scrutinised her in a
painful manner. After a wait of perhaps three-quarters
of an hour, she was called in turn.
“Now,” said a sharp, quick-mannered
Jew, who was sitting at a roll-top desk near the window,
“have you ever worked in any other store?”
“No, sir,” said Carrie.
“Oh, you haven’t,” he said, eyeing
her keenly.
“No, sir,” she replied.
“Well, we prefer young women
just now with some experience. I guess we can’t
use you.”
Carrie stood waiting a moment, hardly
certain whether the interview had terminated.
“Don’t wait!” he
exclaimed. “Remember we are very busy here.”
Carrie began to move quickly to the door.
“Hold on,” he said, calling
her back. “Give me your name and address.
We want girls occasionally.”
When she had gotten safely into the
street, she could scarcely restrain the tears.
It was not so much the particular rebuff which she
had just experienced, but the whole abashing trend
of the day. She was tired and nervous.
She abandoned the thought of appealing to the other
department stores and now wandered on, feeling a certain
safety and relief in mingling with the crowd.
In her indifferent wandering she turned
into Jackson Street, not far from the river, and was
keeping her way along the south side of that imposing
thoroughfare, when a piece of wrapping paper, written
on with marking ink and tacked up on the door, attracted
her attention. It read, “Girls wanted—wrappers
& stitchers.” She hesitated a moment, then
entered.
The firm of Speigelheim & Co., makers
of boys’ caps, occupied one floor of the building,
fifty feet in width and some eighty feet in depth.
It was a place rather dingily lighted, the darkest
portions having incandescent lights, filled with machines
and work benches. At the latter laboured quite
a company of girls and some men. The former
were drabby-looking creatures, stained in face with
oil and dust, clad in thin, shapeless, cotton dresses
and shod with more or less worn shoes. Many of
them had their sleeves rolled up, revealing bare arms,
and in some cases, owing to the heat, their dresses
were open at the neck. They were a fair type
of nearly the lowest order of shop-girls—
careless, slouchy, and more or less pale from confinement.
They were not timid, however; were rich in curiosity,
and strong in daring and slang.
Carrie looked about her, very much
disturbed and quite sure that she did not want to
work here. Aside from making her uncomfortable
by sidelong glances, no one paid her the least attention.
She waited until the whole department was aware of
her presence. Then some word was sent around,
and a foreman, in an apron and shirt sleeves, the
latter rolled up to his shoulders, approached.
“Do you want to see me?” he asked.
“Do you need any help?”
said Carrie, already learning directness of address.
“Do you know how to stitch caps?” he returned.
“No, sir,” she replied.
“Have you ever had any experience
at this kind of work?” he inquired.
She answered that she had not.
“Well,” said the foreman,
scratching his ear meditatively, “we do need
a stitcher. We like experienced help, though.
We’ve hardly got time to break people in.”
He paused and looked away out of the window.
“We might, though, put you at finishing,”
he concluded reflectively.
“How much do you pay a week?”
ventured Carrie, emboldened by a certain softness
in the man’s manner and his simplicity of address.
“Three and a half,” he answered.
“Oh,” she was about to
exclaim, but checked herself and allowed her thoughts
to die without expression.
“We’re not exactly in
need of anybody,” he went on vaguely, looking
her over as one would a package. “You can
come on Monday morning, though,” he added, “and
I’ll put you to work.”
“Thank you,” said Carrie weakly.
“If you come, bring an apron,” he added.
He walked away and left her standing
by the elevator, never so much as inquiring her name.
While the appearance of the shop and
the announcement of the price paid per week operated
very much as a blow to Carrie’s fancy, the fact
that work of any kind was offered after so rude a
round of experience was gratifying. She could
not begin to believe that she would take the place,
modest as her aspirations were. She had been
used to better than that. Her mere experience
and the free out-of-door life of the country caused
her nature to revolt at such confinement. Dirt
had never been her share. Her sister’s
flat was clean. This place was grimy and low,
the girls were careless and hardened. They must
be bad-minded and hearted, she imagined. Still,
a place had been offered her. Surely Chicago
was not so bad if she could find one place in one day.
She might find another and better later.
Her subsequent experiences were not
of a reassuring nature, however. From all the
more pleasing or imposing places she was turned away
abruptly with the most chilling formality. In
others where she applied only the experienced were
required. She met with painful rebuffs, the
most trying of which had been in a manufacturing cloak
house, where she had gone to the fourth floor to inquire.
“No, no,” said the foreman,
a rough, heavily built individual, who looked after
a miserably lighted workshop, “we don’t
want any one. Don’t come here.”
With the wane of the afternoon went
her hopes, her courage, and her strength. She
had been astonishingly persistent. So earnest
an effort was well deserving of a better reward.
On every hand, to her fatigued senses, the great
business portion grew larger, harder, more stolid
in its indifference. It seemed as if it was
all closed to her, that the struggle was too fierce
for her to hope to do anything at all. Men and
women hurried by in long, shifting lines. She
felt the flow of the tide of effort and interest—felt
her own helplessness without quite realising the wisp
on the tide that she was. She cast about vainly
for some possible place to apply, but found no door
which she had the courage to enter. It would
be the same thing all over. The old humiliation
of her plea, rewarded by curt denial. Sick at
heart and in body, she turned to the west, the direction
of Minnie’s flat, which she had now fixed in
mind, and began that wearisome, baffled retreat which
the seeker for employment at nightfall too often makes.
In passing through Fifth Avenue, south towards Van
Buren Street, where she intended to take a car, she
passed the door of a large wholesale shoe house, through
the plate-glass windows of which she could see a middle-aged
gentleman sitting at a small desk. One of those
forlorn impulses which often grow out of a fixed sense
of defeat, the last sprouting of a baffled and uprooted
growth of ideas, seized upon her. She walked
deliberately through the door and up to the gentleman,
who looked at her weary face with partially awakened
interest.
“What is it?” he said.
“Can you give me something to do?” said
Carrie.
“Now, I really don’t know,”
he said kindly. “What kind of work is
it you want—you’re not a typewriter,
are you?”
“Oh, no,” answered Carrie.
“Well, we only employ book-keepers
and typewriters here. You might go around to
the side and inquire upstairs. They did want
some help upstairs a few days ago. Ask for Mr.
Brown.”
She hastened around to the side entrance
and was taken up by the elevator to the fourth floor.
“Call Mr. Brown, Willie,”
said the elevator man to a boy near by.
Willie went off and presently returned
with the information that Mr. Brown said she should
sit down and that he would be around in a little while.
It was a portion of the stock room
which gave no idea of the general character of the
place, and Carrie could form no opinion of the nature
of the work.
“So you want something to do,”
said Mr. Brown, after he inquired concerning the nature
of her errand. “Have you ever been employed
in a shoe factory before?”
“No, sir,” said Carrie.
“What is your name?” he
inquired, and being informed, “Well, I don’t
know as I have anything for you. Would you work
for four and a half a week?”
Carrie was too worn by defeat not
to feel that it was considerable. She had not
expected that he would offer her less than six.
She acquiesced, however, and he took her name and
address.
“Well,” he said, finally,
“you report here at eight o’clock Monday
morning. I think I can find something for you
to do.”
He left her revived by the possibilities,
sure that she had found something at last. Instantly
the blood crept warmly over her body. Her nervous
tension relaxed. She walked out into the busy
street and discovered a new atmosphere. Behold,
the throng was moving with a lightsome step.
She noticed that men and women were smiling.
Scraps of conversation and notes of laughter floated
to her. The air was light. People were
already pouring out of the buildings, their labour
ended for the day. She noticed that they were
pleased, and thoughts of her sister’s home and
the meal that would be awaiting her quickened her steps.
She hurried on, tired perhaps, but no longer weary
of foot. What would not Minnie say! Ah,
the long winter in Chicago—the lights,
the crowd, the amusement! This was a great, pleasing
metropolis after all. Her new firm was a goodly
institution. Its windows were of huge plate glass.
She could probably do well there. Thoughts
of Drouet returned—of the things he had
told her. She now felt that life was better,
that it was livelier, sprightlier. She boarded
a car in the best of spirits, feeling her blood still
flowing pleasantly. She would live in Chicago,
her mind kept saying to itself. She would have
a better time than she had ever had before—she
would be happy.