Mary Louise and Josie OGorman | Page 2

Emma Speed Sampson
partner here," she said, "but it is nice to be
able to kiss all of you dear old girls. A business footing does not permit
of the familiarity of embraces between partners. I've just got lots to tell
all of you!"
"Fire away," commanded Josie, "but you must excuse me if I go on
ironing the fine linen of the wealthy."

Among the many industries the Higgledy-Piggledy Shop boasted was
that of laundering fine linen and laces. It was not known in Dorfield
except by a select few that Josie O'Gorman was a detective in high
standing with the chief, but everybody who had laces or linen too fine
to trust to the doubtful ministrations of an ordinary laundress knew that
the girl was a magician with suds and a flatiron. Josie declared washing
and ironing helped her to work out knotty problems and there was
nothing like having your arms in suds up to the elbows to give you an
insight into who did what and why.
The girls settled themselves to listen to Mary Louise's news, whatever
it was. Elizabeth Wright closed her typewriter on which she had been
copying some manuscript for a budding author; Irene Macfarlane stuck
her needle in the pin-cushion hanging from her tidy work-basket and
folded the lace collar. Only Josie went on with her work, testing her
electric iron with a professional sizzle.
"Well, you see it's this way," continued Mary Louise, settling herself on
an antique Windsor chair that the Higgledy-Piggledies were trying to
sell on commission. "Danny and I are going to have plenty of money to
live on, with what he earns. I know how Danny feels about my being an
heiress; not that he ever says a word about it, but he has a good job and
there is a chance of steady advancement and I have decided to do
something for somebody who needs it more than I do with all that gold
Grandpa Jim left me and the old house which is too huge for Danny
and me to live in, and too sad somehow for me just yet."
"I'm glad you feel that way about the house," put in Josie, shaking out
another damask napkin. "It's a bully old house but too big for a young
couple who don't need much room to be happy in."
"What is your plan, dear?" asked Irene, her sweet eyes misting a little.
The thought of Mary Louise quitting the old house which was next to
Uncle Peter Conant's, where Irene made her home, caused her to be
sad.
"Danny and I are going into an apartment for the time being and later
on will build a house more suitable to our needs. I am going to give the

old home to the Children's Home Society and make an endowment with
a part of my gold, so the society can begin operations at once in their
new quarters. They have a miserable place now, with not near enough
room."
"What a corking plan!" cried Josie. "I know of no charity that appeals
to one as this business of getting homes for poor little waifs. It helps
the poor little kiddies and it helps the childless persons who want to
adopt them. I'm with you, Mrs. Danny Dexter!"
"And I! And I!" came in a chorus from Elizabeth and Irene.
"The old house is more fitted for an institution than a private home. The
rooms are so huge, at least most of them are, and still it is homelike.
Only think how lovely it will be for the children to have the pretty yard
and old garden to play in. Dr. Weston, the dear old gentleman who is in
charge of the home now, says there is so little room and so little money
that they can't care for the children properly and the people who come
to see about adopting them are afraid to take them sometimes because
they don't look healthy enough."
"Poor little things!" murmured Irene.
"I'm wondering if your Uncle Peter and Aunt Hannah would mind
having a children's home next door to them," Mary Louise asked.
"I'm sure they wouldn't," said Irene. "I heard Uncle Peter say only last
night that he'd like to see the old place occupied again even if it were
by noisy boarders, and you know Aunt Hannah loves company and
she's so deaf that the noise the children make won't affect her in the
least."
"And you?" asked Mary Louise. "How will you like it?"
"I want what you want, dear. You must call on me to help in any way I
can."
"Indeed I will! We hope to make a very active society of this Children's

Home. I have talked to Dr. Weston, but have not told him about making
the endowment
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