Page:American Journal of Sociology Volume 2.djvu/647

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A DAY AT HULL HOUSE

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the most vexing questions of cooperative living to their own social and economic satisfaction.

Across the street to the north is the pleasant two-story frame building of the Phalanx Club, where the same plan of living,

except for the cares of the kitchen, is carried on by the young men. Just north of this is the model lodging house for women, where any dependent woman may have the wise encouragement of a bed and a breakfast. Some thousand feet toward the run is the public playground, safely guarded by its iron fence and closed until after school hours. This piece of land, cursed by a bunch of miserable and criminal tenements and an absentee landlord, came finally by strange and picturesque ways into the hands of the settlement, and now clean and clear and whole- some, it has seen many a good time\ May poles and singing children and flowers and music have surprised its sandy surface and in winter it gets a coating of ice for the skaters. And