Mary Louise and Josie 
O'Gorman, by Emma Speed 
 
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Title: Mary Louise and Josie O'Gorman 
Author: Emma Speed Sampson 
 
Release Date: September 7, 2007 [eBook #22532] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) 
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LOUISE AND JOSIE O'GORMAN*** 
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The Bluebird Books 
MARY LOUISE AND JOSIE O'GORMAN 
[Frontispiece] Josie gets a job as a maid.--Chapter XII 
MARY LOUISE AND JOSIE O'GORMAN 
by 
EDITH VAN DYNE 
Author of "Mary Louise", "Mary Louise in the Country", "Mary Louise 
Solves a Mystery", "Mary Louise and the Liberty Girls", "Mary Louise 
Adopts a Soldier", "Mary Louise at Dorfield", "Mary Louise Stands the 
Test" 
Frontispiece by Harry W. Armstrong 
 
The Reilly & Lee Co. Chicago 
Printed in the United States of America 
Copyright, 1922 by The Reilly & Britton Co. All Rights Reserved 
 
Mary Louise and Josie O'Gorman 
 
CONTENTS
I MARY LOUISE MAKES AN INVESTMENT II THE BOARD ELECTS 
NEW MEMBERS III MARY LOUISE TELLS A STORY IV JOSIE DONS 
A HENNA WIG V BREAKFAST FOR TWO VI A SUCCESSFUL 
DISGUISE VII JOSIE GETS A JOB VIII PETER REFUSES NEW 
PARENTS IX JOSIE GETS HER BEARINGS X AT MISS DENTON'S 
DINNER TABLE XI JOSIE ENGAGES AN ASSISTANT XII CHESTER 
HUNT'S NEW MAID XIII A NEW BROOM SWEEPS CLEAN XIV 
JOSIE JUMPS HER JOB XV JOSIE VISITS INDIANA XVI JOSIE 
GETS A RIDE XVII HUSBAND AND WIFE XVIII CHESTER HUNT 
CONFESSES XIX A HAPPY REUNION 
 
Mary Louise and Josie O'Gorman 
CHAPTER I 
MARY LOUISE MAKES AN INVESTMENT 
Mary Louise had stood the test of being rich and beloved, and envied 
by all the daughters of Dorfield; and then of being poor and bereft, 
pitied by all who had formerly envied her. Soon after the death of her 
grandfather, Colonel Hathaway, had come the news of her husband's 
shipwreck. Hope of Danny Dexter's survival was finally abandoned by 
his sorrowing little wife and his many friends. Colonel Hathaway's 
comfortable fortune had mysteriously disappeared and Mary Louise 
faced a future of poverty. With native pluck she arose to the occasion. 
In spite of her sad heart she showed a cheerful spirit. Joining forces 
with Josie O'Gorman and Elizabeth Wright in the quaint 
Higgledy-Piggledy Shop, she opened a millinery department and was 
soon swamped with orders for smart hats by the elite of Dorfield and 
old-fashioned bonnets for the ancient ladies who refused to wear hats. 
When Danny came back, not having gone to a watery grave after all, 
and the lost fortune was found, Mary Louise again stood the test of 
being rich and beloved. 
"Nothing can spoil our Mary Louise," Josie O'Gorman declared, and 
Irene Macfarlane smiled from her wheel chair.
"That is because she is pure gold, through and through," said the lame 
girl as she deftly plied her needle in the cobwebby lace collar she was 
mending. 
"We certainly shall miss her here at the Higgledy-Piggledy," put in 
Elizabeth Wright. "It doesn't seem like the same place with Mary 
Louise gone. I wonder what the old ladies who still wear bonnets will 
do now. There is no other milliner in Dorfield who can fashion an 
old-time bonnet like our Mary Louise. She did them as though she 
loved them and the old ladies for whom they were intended." 
"Well, every old woman in town has had Mary Louise make her a 
bonnet 'exactly like Jane's and Susan's and Martha's and Matilda's'," 
laughed Josie, "and they don't change their bonnets oftener than every 
seven years, so we needn't worry about them just yet. Speaking of 
angels! Here she is!" 
Mary Louise literally danced into the shop. Ever since Danny returned 
her feet seemed to have wings. 
"I didn't know how miserable I had been until I had my present 
happiness with which to compare my former sorrow," she had told 
Josie O'Gorman shortly after Danny got back. 
"You were too busy to be altogether unhappy," spake the wise Josie. 
"Being poor enough to have to make one's living is not so bad as it is 
cracked up to be. It was certainly a blessing in your case." 
As we have said, Mary Louise danced into the shop. Then she breezed 
over and kissed the three friends in turn. 
"It's sad no longer to be a