FOOTNOTE:
[1] "The Church and Social Problems," by Rev. Washington Gladden, D.D. ("International Quarterly.")
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A young woman leaves a rural life for New York and records the daily struggle to secure shelter and low-paid work. She navigates boarding houses, nights of homelessness, a destructive fire, and a succession of precarious jobs including box-making, artificial-flower work, and steam-laundry labor. Along the way she forms friendships with other working women, experiences both patronizing charity and practical solidarity, spends time in a shelter for workers, and endures tragic losses among acquaintances. The account emphasizes the routines, hardships, small skills learned, and the hard-won resilience that allow her to persist toward a cautious sense of hope.
[1] "The Church and Social Problems," by Rev. Washington Gladden, D.D. ("International Quarterly.")