When the Saturday morning came on
which Margaret was to learn how to take care of the
bathroom, and clean grates, and do other such things,
she groaned out loud. So far her lessons had been
delightful, but this one sounded as though it would
be work instead of fun. However, she put on her
long-sleeved apron and out of the little bathroom cupboard
she took the flannel cloth, the cotton cloth, the
sapolio, the metal polish, a queer little brush of
twigs with a long handle and a bottle of disinfectant,
all of which stood ready there in a neat row.
Then her Other Aunt came into the room, with a big
apron on just like Margaret’s, and began:
“The bathtub, luckily for us,”
she said, “is of white enamel, so it is easy
to keep clean. But see, all around it there is
a streak where the top of the water came after somebody’s
bath this morning. Now, of course, every single
person who uses a bathtub ought to wipe it out afterward;
but men don’t take the trouble, and women sometimes
forget; little girls never do, of course! So
the tub has to be washed and wiped out every morning.”
“Every single morning?”
Margaret asked, grumblingly. “It seems as
if that would be too often; it must wear the nice
enamel off to wash it so much.”
“Not at all,” said her
aunt; “it is good for it! Get the nice white
cloth and a cake of soap, not the sapolio,
because that would scratch it, and roll
up your sleeves. Kneel down by the tub, put in
the stopper, and draw a little warm water; wring out
your cloth in it, rub it well on the soap, and scrub
off the greasy mark first, and afterward wash the
tub all over; rinse out your cloth, let out the water,
and wash the tub again and wipe it dry. Sometimes,
perhaps twice a week, put a little ammonia in the
first water so that the tub will have an extra cleaning.
If ever you have a really dirty tub to scrub, take
gasoline on a flannel cloth and wash with that, and
it will be like new; but tubs which are washed out
every day never need gasoline.
“If you have a tub lined with
zinc remember that needs even more care than a white
one, if it is to be kept shining bright. You can
scrub it out with gasoline if it seems greasy, then
with vinegar, if it is dark, then with metal polish,
and so on; zinc tubs are really difficult to care
for. A better way is to paint it all over with
two coats of white paint and when it is dry enamel
it. It costs only a dollar to do it, and it does
save so much work; besides, a white tub always looks
best of all. Now we will do the wash-stand.”
They took off the soap-dish and tooth-brush
mug and bottles of tooth powder, because, as the aunt
explained, one must always wipe under things, not
around them. The marble slab and bowl were scrubbed
and dried, and the mugs and soap-dish washed, wiped,
and replaced. After this they cleaned the closet
by pulling the handle and letting the water run while
they put in the long-handled brush of twigs and brushed
out every inch of china, even down into the pipe as
far as possible. Margaret was told that when
she used ammonia in the tub she must put some in the
closet, too, and once or twice a week a little disinfectant
must be poured down to keep the pipe perfectly clean.
The woodwork was wiped off with a cloth kept for that
purpose, and then they turned to the polishing of
the faucets and pipes.
This was hard, but as Margaret and
her aunt both worked it made it easier. They
put some polishing paste on a flannel and rubbed and
rubbed till they could see the metal shining through
the paste; then they wiped it off with a dry cloth.
“If this was all rubbed a little every single
day,” said the aunt, “it would never be
such hard work. I should say that this nickel
had been just a little bit neglected lately, but see
how bright we have made it! Now for the oilcloth
on the floor.”
They set the hamper and a chair out
into the hall, and Margaret went to the kitchen for
a basin of milk with a little warm water in it.
Out of the cupboard she brought the Japanese seat
she had learned she must always use when she got down
on the floor, partly to save her dress, and partly
because there was a painful disease called sometimes
“housemaid’s knee,” which one could
get by kneeling and working on a hard floor with nothing
underneath one. When she was all ready her aunt
wrung out the cloth for her in the milk, and told
her to begin at one edge and work straight across
the floor, wiping every part well, but especially under
the tub and wash-stand, because those were likely to
need it most. “The milk will freshen the
oilcloth and make it shine,” she said. “Always
try and have some when you wipe up an oilcloth, for
water alone is not good for it.”
When the floor was dry they set in
the hamper again, folded the towels neatly, and hung
them straight on the rack, and dusted around the window
and the wood around the sides of the room. “We
are done here,” the aunt said, as they put away
all the things they had been using, “but the
lesson isn’t over yet, for while we are in the
scrubbing business you may as well learn how to take
care of steps and vestibule. You may get the
old broom from the kitchen Bridget keeps for this,
and ask her to bring a pail of water; you will need
the scrubbing-brush, too, and the sapolio, and two
cloths; the Japanese seat, some more metal polish,
a flannel, and a duster.”
Margaret got them all, and brought
them out to the vestibule. The door-mat was taken
up, shaken well, and hung over the balustrade outside,
and, after sweeping out the vestibule, Margaret knelt
on the seat and scrubbed the marble floor, especially
in the corners, and then wiped them dry. The
steps had already been swept once that morning, so
all they needed was a good bath. A little water
at a time was poured over them and swept off with
the broom, and while they dried in the sunshine, she
rubbed the door handles and bell with polish, and gave
them a beautiful finish with chamois leather.
The woodwork of the doors was pretty dusty, and before
it could be made to look just right it had to be rubbed
off with a damp duster and a little stick used in the
cracks of the wood. When the rug was laid down
once more Margaret and her Other Aunt stood and admired
their work.
“A good housekeeper always has
nice, clean steps and a well-cared-for vestibule,”
said the aunt. “They are like a sign-board
on the front of a house, telling the sort of people
who live inside. That thought ought to make you
keep your vestibule in nice order.”
“Yes, indeed,” said Margaret.
“I’d be ashamed to have a sign-board in
front of my steps, saying, ‘An untidy girl lives
here!’ Now what do we do?”
“Well, let us see if we can
find any brass to polish. There are the andirons
in the hall, for instance, and the shovel and tongs.”
So out came the metal polish once more, and, after
putting down a newspaper, they rubbed them all well.
They found out, however, that some of the brass about
the house had an enamel finish over it to keep out
the air, and all this needed was wiping off with a
cloth instead of rubbing, which was a great saving
of time; though this brass was not quite as nice looking
as that which they rubbed till it shone like a mirror,
in the old-fashioned way. It happened that the
chandelier in the hall was covered with the enamel,
and here her aunt told Margaret she did not dislike
it, because it would have been nearly impossible to
rub a chandelier clear up to the ceiling every week.
They brought out the step-ladder and wiped it off
with a dry duster, however, and then they washed the
globes nicely in warm water, and dried them. Globes
often got very dusty, the aunt said, and nobody remembered
to wash them off instead of merely dusting them once
in awhile, and then the family thought the gas must
be very poor because the light was dim.
“Now, auntie, what next?”
Margaret asked, when this work was done.
“The sitting-room fireplace,”
her aunt replied. “It is full of wood ashes.”
Margaret went once more to the broom
closet and got a shovel, a dust-pan, a whisk-broom,
a damp cloth, and a newspaper.
There were andirons in the fireplace
and the ashes lay all over and around them, so her
aunt first helped her lift these heavy things out on
the newspaper at one side. Then she told her to
sweep most of the ashes into a small pile right in
the centre of the hearth, at the back.
“But, auntie, they won’t
burn any more; why don’t I take them right out!”
asked Margaret.
“Because they make the fire
burn better and last longer. You can take up
part of them and put them in the scuttle, but leave
some, and especially all the bits of charred wood;
it would be wasteful to take those away.”
Margaret carefully swept up the greater
part of the ashes, working from the edges of the hearth
toward the middle, and put them into the scuttle.
Once she spilled a shovelful, but as a newspaper was
spread on the carpet it did not matter. Her aunt
told her to be sure and always have plenty of papers
ready to use in housework, because in the end they
saved so much work. “Suppose you had to
sweep up those ashes,” she said, “and
clean the carpet, too, would not that be a bother!
Now if the hearth is clean, wipe it with the damp
cloth, and dust off the andirons well. If there
had been a grate here you would have had to polish
it with the blacking from the kitchen stove.
When you have finished you can get more paper and
kindling and lay a fire.”
They put crumpled paper between the
andirons, covering all the ashes which lay there so
they did not show. On this they laid kindling,
crossed, and then some pieces of wood. When they
gathered up the newspaper there was nothing to brush
from the carpet, and everything was neat.
“There,” said her aunt,
“that’s all for to-day. Run and wash
your face and hands, they need it!”