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"Look--that's Miss McDonald," Guy's friend said to hireatest
heiress in New York, and I reckon the one who does the ood Why,
she supports ed schools
than any half-dozen men in the city, and I don't suppose there's a den
in New York where she has not been, and never once, I'm told, was she
insulted, for the vilest of them stand between her and harm Once a
miscreant on Avenue A knocked a boy down for accidentally stepping in a
pool of water and sprinkling her white dress in passing Friday nights
she has a reception for these people, and you ought to see hoell they
behave At first they were noisy and rough, and she had to have the
police, but now they are quiet and orderly as you please Perhaps you'd
like to go to one I know Miss McDonald, and will take you with me"
Guy said he should not be in town on Friday, as hehe could not quite analyze,
he turned to look at the turnout which always excited so much attention
But it was not sochildren he gazed as at the little lady in theirwhite feather falling aht hair When Daisy first entered upon her new life she
had affected a nun-like garb as one most appropriate, but after a little
child said to her once, "I'se don't like your black gown all the tied her ood taste and love of as becoe, for the children and inmates of
the dens she visited, accustos, hailed her more rapturously than they had done