nTTBMn THE PITT DISPATC PAGES 17 TO 24. THIRD PART. SBURG WOIDERMPIMS, The Splendid Object Lesson Mr. Phipps Has Placed in the Allegheny Parks. LILIES OF THE AMAZON .And the Lotus of Esjypt Placed Side by Side for rnblic Education. THE BENEFITS TO BE DEKIYED. IIotv Philanthropic Millionaires Keap From Such Investments. ilXTEKLST 31AXT TIMES COMPOUNDED 'TTFITTE2J TOE THE DISrATClI.2 WAS curious to know how much interest Henry Phipps Jr., is earning on his invest ment in the conserva tories of Allegheny Park-. He put f40,000 into them. Business men seldom spend money without th e hope of securing some 'Mil j 1 " ' ' is one of the most suc cessful business men in this part of the State. What, therefore, has been his re muneration for the expenditure? He cer tainly expects payment of some sort. It was a new field of philanthropy. When Andrew Carnegie put up a magnificent Among the Park Chrysanthemums. library and burrendered its golden key to the public, or when the late William Thaw donated his frequent $23,000 packages to public charities, the public became accus tomed to regarding that as the end of Mr. Carnegie's part or Mr. Thaw's part in the matter. The money had left their hands. Judged by the sordid instincts of too many o! vi, it bore no hope ol an) return, and so we have always supposed that rich men of such generous characteristics as the persons named practically looked upon the money as gone from them forever as thrown awav, in a business sense. They weald simply enter it up in tbeir day books and ledgers as so much cash utterly given away. out or inc usual like. In the case of Mr. Phipps there would be all the more excuse for deductions such as these. When a man's chanties take some peculiar turn, or are distributed along a particular line, wc assume that that indi cates his personal tate. People became fa miliar with Mr. Tnaw as a trustee ana thinker in hospital work. Although Mr. Carnegie is an iron manufacturer, Fitts riurgers know how little personal attention lie gives to his office, and they have grown used to thinking ot Andrew Carnegie as an author and a book man. His hobby is libraries. Hut Mr. rhipp; was not a botanist He was always a lover ot flowers, but never a gardener. From what 1 have heard, it is no harsh thing to say that the average citi zen who hesitates over half the botanical names on the palms, trees and plants inside the conservatories, Knows as much about the technical part of horticulture as Mr. Phipps himselt did when he sent his dona tions to Allegheny Councils. Of course his interest in such matters since then has made him quite a savaut in flowers, but at that time what could have been his hope of remuneration m a line of investment so un like him? Axswr.i-XD i;y two tots. Well, my curios ty was easily satisfied. Two little tots of girls unconsciously answered all these questions one day last treek. They knew nothing about philan thropy, interest-bearing investments, or botany either, yet they demonstrated, fully and complete, all that I wanted to know. It was one of those bright, sunshiny days, when a vague suspicion comes over you that November is not so near winter alter all. On such days the promenades .of Alle gheny parks are always full. Women, coming troni their shopping, slacken their speed, and enjoy the leisurely walk acioss the hazy green. Men rest awnile on the hencl.es. You could scarcely count the taby buggies in all directions nurses giv ing the Utile ones a late fall airing. Two little misses had been allowed by their mothers to go out walking for the afternoon. They decided to go down to the green houses in the parks. I overheard their plans, and Sadie was telling Bertie that she was, oh, so anxious to see those lily leaves in the water garden. orr ron the cncnxjiocsES. "Dia you hear Mattie Brown tell me the oilier day at school that there were lily leaves down here big enough to cover all her bed?" inquired Sadie. Tnen, without wait ing for an answer she continued. "I wasn't so green as all that, though, and I told Mat tie so. Whr, I have seen whole ponds of water lilies out at Uncle Josh's in Ohio, and th; leaves there are not as big as cabbage leives. So, wc will just slip in, and to morrow we will give Mattie a shame face for hTfibs." Bertie was as incredulous as Sadie, and in this indignant frame of mind ther told all sorts of secrets to one another about the story-telling Mattie Brown. Mattie's repu tation was all torn to tatters. I, too, was bound tor the conservatories. I was curi ous to see the effect of the afternoon's sight seeing on the two little school girls. They entered the little low-roofed buildings of brick and glass. Timidly they asked one of the workmen about the door if they were allowed to go auj where they wanted. TUET tVEKE ASTOUNDED. Chance took them first into the chrysan themum room, and from that they "wan dered through thr other wings ot earth plants, at last coming in upon the huge tropical palms under the central dome. Trom the southern end of that a door leads directly into the aquatit conservatory. The first room of this is occupied by the aquari um, in which are kept all sorts of fish. After that they came to the main water con servatory, in which is constructed the arti ficial pond, er great stone basin. And there Sadie discovered that she was woefully wrong herself. In the basin were " t it ti"n . i I V J a number of lily leaves the like of which she had never seen nor dreamed of. They were in truth large enough to take the place of a pair o! blankets on any bed. And they were real live leaves, the shape, color and flower being perfect. The two children stood aghast. They read the sign which swung over the water, "Victoria Begin; Brazil," but that gave them no light on such a sur prise. UMBKELXAS TOR CROCODILES. "Well, I declare, Uncle Josh has nothing in his ponds like these "eiaculated Sidie. "Big enough for umbrellas over the croco dile, if he wanted any to keep the rain off him," said Bertie. "Yes, but rain would keep these leaves smaller," interrupted Superintendent Will iam Hamilton, who had been a silent specta tor of the youthful amazement "Let me tell you something about these lilies, and then you will know whv your Uncle Josh does not grow them on his ponds in Ohio. These gigantic water lilies come from South America. They inhabit the tranquil rivers that aretributarv to the great Amazon river, which your geographies tell you of. In botany, or the study of flowers, we would say that it belongs to the genius of nymphoe acaoe, or water lily family. The earliest record of the flower is by ilaenke in 1801, and the first specimen seut out of South America lor exhibit was to Paris in 1823." SOME GIGANTIC LEAVES. Superintendent Hamilton smiled as he noticed the perplexed expressions on the faces of his little hearers, aud reaching out into the basin, he showed them the seed por tion of the flowers. "The Spaniards collect this seed," he ex plained, knowing he could interest them now, "and eat them roasted. For that rea son they call the lily and its seed 'water maize. They still use the seed for food. Even in the southern part of the United States the Indians used the seed of a water lilv for food. "These leaves you see, when well grown, as they are this summer and fall, reaeh the dimensions of G) ieet in diameter, with a rim 4 inches thicc and a flower 12 inches across its top " "Oh," exclaimed the girls both at once. "For a good while now," continued the Superintendent, "we have been getting three flowers a wetk from this lily. With each flower comes a new leaf. LIKE FAIItr BOATS. "The leaves grow in size very rapidly, beginning small, and gradually reaching the huge sizes I told you. One day this summer 1 timed the growth of a leaf bv marks, and I found that it grew exactly IS inches in diameter in 21 hours." "You could almost see it grow," spoke up one of the girls now deeply interested in the talk. "Yes, you could actually see these leaves grow," replied Mr. Hamilton. "Fifteen inches in 21 hours is more than half an inch an hour. Place on a leaf any instrument of precision, or even fasten to it a small stick, and then watch the leaf getting bigger around every hour. The leaf will- sustain a remarkable weight. Place on one which is full grown a circle of quarter-inch boards, and upon them I couid stand a child.weigh ing 50 pounds. I am going to do that here next year, and you must be sure to come and see what will be a fairy boat made out of a lily leaf." BOSIE SUEPRISIXG FACTS. "Oh, you think that so many leaves in this basin means a number of plants. No, there is just one plant in the water here, and from it comes all these leaves. I bought this single plant from Mr. Sturtevant, of Bordentown, 2f. J., for 515. He makes a business of nurturing Soutn American flowers. I put the plant in the water here last June. It was then only 30 inches in. diameter. Xow look at it. This stone basin is 28 feet wide and 48 feet long. Jjast week when we took out some of the dying leave, there were so many of them and they had become so large that they forced each other un over the curbstone of the basin's edge. The plant which I had put iii-in June had grown out 14 ieet Jrom the center on each side and filled two-thirds of the basin GIANT LEAVES OP lengthwise. And all that came from a seed not any larger than a pea." "I wouldn't like to go skiff riding in those South American rivers," obssrved Bertie, sagely. "It would be too hard to row the skiff through such awfully large leaves. Why. sir, if they grow so large, don't they fill the rivers from shore to shore?" THE BEAUTIFUL FLOWER. "I was never on those rivers," replied the genial superintendent, feeling himself a little stumped for a time, "but as the seeds are constantly falling out of the flowers into the water they in turn grow, and thus the 1 streams must grow very fuu of plants and big leaves. Yes, it might be pretty hard work rowing a skiff toward the Amazon, The Aquarium Room. especially if the tributary is as narrow as this pond here. "The flower opens about G o'clock in the evening. The color then is pure white. About 9 o'clock that night the whole house here is filled with the odor of pineapple. The flower continues white on the following day, but without any perceptible fragrance. At 6 o'clock r. M. that day it will change to a pink color, and the next morning wiil be found lying on the surface of the water ready to go under and perfect its seed. It is an annual plant, and the time is now drawing near when it will go to rest for a period. Of course if I had other plants sufficiently grown they would bloom while this one is sleeping. PROTECTED FROSI ASSAULT. "When the plant begins to wither, the leaves gradually grow smaller, .every day they are a little' smaller, until finally they dwindle into nothing. It is just as interest- I i j) ,11 A it ' l ux -a ing to watch them do this as to see them growlarge little by little. The seeds arc now in the water here for more plants next summer. The under side of these leives is wonderful. They are not only arched in their construction, but are trussed, and so full of sharp spines, just like sharp needles, that there is no danger of their" being at tacked even by the larger insects." "But vou said rain would make them smaller," said one of the urchins, now quite unwilling to leave the subject. "Well, that is for this reason: What we must be very careful about in growing these great lilies is the warmth of the air and ftffMBMr 111 111 I IN THE 'WATER TLANT CONSERVATORY. water. Both must be kept at the tempera ture of 75. That corresponds nearly with the average temperature of their native home. WARM WATER NEEDED. "Now, they can be grown out of doors here in warm summer weather, but the pond must be so made that the water in it can be beaten artificially if all the surroundings are not favorable. But if thus grown out of doors in the summer months, the rain falling into the pool changes the tempera ture of the water, tho air is either cooler or hotter on different days, and the result is Superintendent Hamilton that we could not get the flower to grow so perfect, or the leaves so large. That is why very few persons undertake to grow this kind of a water lily here in the North. The price is not so much, but it is the necessity for plenty of room in the hothouse to let them grow and spread." "But, come over to this room and see the lots of lotus that are here. They are, too, the most beautiful of all water lilies." And then Mr. Hamilton explained all about the charming flower; from the stories of the Lotus eaters and Xiotut -worshipers down to the later theory that although called THE BRAZILIAN LILY. the Egyptian Lotus it is doubtful whether it was a native of the river Nile. Tne girls were thoroughly interested, especially in the curious fact about the leaves of the lotus rising out of the water, and shedding the fluid; the globules remaining on them quivering and sparkling like quicksilver. ARE EASILY CULTIVATED. The superintendent told them that it was a mistaken idea that the lotus was hard to raise. He says it is hardy, and mav be grown as easily out of doors in this climate as tho ordinary pond lilies. They were much impressed with what Mr. Hamilton told them about the sacred traditions of the lotus, but laughed heartily when he con cluded with the statement that they had large families, increasing with their seed at the rate of 1,000 per cent per year. In Bordentown, N. J., Mr. Hamilton has seen two acres of ponds grown so thick with lotus that he could scarcely see the water. One of the lotus which is here planted has a personal interest from tho fact that Mr. Phipps sent it to Mr. Hamilton from Cairo, Egypt, when he was there last year. In the aquarium room are beautiful pol ished slate and silver-mounted tanks in which are some of the finer and more deli cate water plants upon which fish thrive. While showing the little girls these Mr. Hamilton explained that all the fish had been eaueht in the Ohio, Allegheny and Monongahela rivers. There were the jack salmon, river herring, drum fish, carp, sev eral varieties of suckers, sturgeon, sunfish, German carp, black bass, spoon fish, etc. THE PITTSBURG' ALLIGATORS. "And here are to two alligators which were caught in the Monongahela river near Lock No. 1. They look awlully ugly, don't they? Well, now here is something to remember about these peculiar reptiles. They are what naturalists call 'Salamander-Menopo-na-Allcghanienses.' They are a species of the real alligator, but are sometimes called 'dog-fish,' and the remarkable fact that per haps Jew people are aware of, is that no where else in the world are they found ex cept in the Ohio river, and its tributaries. It is estimated by Pittsburg fishermen that that there are tens of thonsands of these little alligators in the rivers about this city. You see they are overa foot long." Presently the two little girls left the con servatories enthusiastic over what they have seen and heard. How do yon think you would have felt had you furnished the money that placed this course of amusement within the reach of those children? Especially had von stood close by and witnessed the Interest they evinced In all they saw? And what a nucleus of genuine study may perhaps hare PITTSBUE&, SUNDAY, een at the time planted within their minds? Would you not feel in this a profit on your investment? THKT ARE IOrULAK. Superintendent Hamilton informs me that one day last week fully 2,500 people passed through the conservatories. Every hour of every day in the year it is well filled with visitors. Its fame has gone abroad, and strangers stopping over in the city for a day invariably visit the greenhouses. School children, especially, and the little inmates of public institutions come to the houses by hundreds. There is nothing of a public character in the two cities that seems to furnish the same amount of enjoyment and pleasure and instruction to all classes of the people as the park conservatories. To see children aiid grown people thor oughly enjoy the fruit of his money is no doubtwhat Mr. Phipps calculates as inter est accruing on the amount of his invest ment. That investment itself is more valu able now than it ever was. For instance the plants with which Superintendent Hamilton stocked the aquatic department a short time ago cost $400. So large have they multiplied and bo well have they thrived that there is now at least $1,600 worth of water plants under the glass roofs. THE DONORS TROFIT. But that enhancement of the money value goes into the luller enjoyment of the people, and, seeing this, the original donor of it all finds his own profit tnat of pleasure in see ing mankind enjoy his wcrk increased pro portionately. Mr. Phipps visits the con servatories frequently, I am told, hut it is not to see how some plaut is thriving, but to iearn if there is anything else that would make more complete the common enjoyment of the people. Here, doubtless, is the source of satisfac tion, the promise of compound interest which millionaires expect to realize in their liberal investments lor the benefit of the public around Pittsburg the past two or three years. L. E. Stofiel. ELECTBICITY TS THE HOMES. A Itegular House to House Service Neces sary to Popularize It. T. C. Martin, editor of the New York Electrical Engineer, makes a suggestion in the columns of that journal, which, if acted upon, would remove a considerable amount of prejudice, as well as obviate a great deal of inconvenience which now attaches to the use of electric batteries for domestic pur poses. Mr. Martin's idea is that a regular house-to-house service should be undertaken by the local -tlrctrteinBy-trho would under take for a small fixed sum per month, or per quarter, to keep bells, batteries and circuits in order, calling to make necessary repairs and renewals. Such a service, diligently and honestly rendered, would pay hand somely. The average resident in a citv is too busy to bother with his bells, and seldom has either the time or the inclination to go out of his way to hunt up the local electrician. Hence the bells, once out of order, often stay so, as many a caller knows to his or her cost. Fans, motors for sewing machines, annunciators, floor and table pushes, bur glar alarms, electric clocks, electric time and date stamp;, small incandescent lamps for decorative as well as uselul purposes, would soon come into much more general use if the inconvenience attendant on the use of batteries were reduced to a minimum. Bad workmen and worse work have done a great deal to prejudice the public against the domestic application of electricity, but a better state oi things is at hand. The ad vance which will surely come must evi dently begin with improved work, so that electric bells may cease to be an "unmiti gated nuisance" to the architect, who is already inclined to make use of electric devices and appliances, if trustworthy. Mr. Martin says: "Life is too short, anyway, lor poor work, and if an electrician's pros perity depends, as it must largely, on the esteem in which his installations are held, it is the worst folly to use rotten material, scamp a job, and then ask a low price be cause it has been cheaply done. The public is ready to pay a fair price for electrical work when assured of honest material and skilled workmanship; and it will be the readier to believe in electrical engineering as a profession when its front doorbell rings regularly. HIS STOCK COST HOI LITTLE. now a Club Barkeeper Managed to Got Wliisky for Nothing. A short time ago, says a liquor dealer through the medium of the Louisville Courier-Journal, I received a letter from a Boston concern. Here is the letterhead: "Castroni Fencing Club, 9 Boylston place, Boston, Mass. Prof. O. M. Castroni, Technical Director. Article XI, section 3, of bylaws: Every member will be required to pay as dues 25 annually, payable quarterly in advance." Accompanying this wasan order for a sample of good whisky. I thought it was some aristocratic club, and sent the sample. In a day or two I received two orders from the same concern, addressed to people who do business through ns, each requesting samples. Then I began to investigate, and found that every dealer in town had received a similar letter, and if they all sent samples, that fellow barkeeper for the club, per haps got enough good whisky to last him through the winter. It made me feel a lit tle mad at being taken in, and I wrote a pretty strong letter to the concern, bnt be fore I received an auswer I got an order for one barrel of whisky on four months' time. Ot course that gave the snap away, even if we hadn't known it. I didn't send it. Some of the others may have done so, but in a day or two I received a letter inclosing 25 cents for "eight inches of whisky," and countermanding the order lor one barrel at four months. Pretty cheap whisky, I should say, and a slick scheme. If every body had honored those orders, that fellow could have started in the wholesale business himself. Strong Attachments. .Boston Herald. "It's strange," remarked the tramp, ex amining the rents In his garments, "I never felt any liking for dogs whatever, ret they nearly all become strongly attached to me as soon as they see me." Going to Help Sitting Bull. Six scouts and as many Indians passed through the city yesterday bound for Standing Bock Agency to jon Buffalo B1H, J-ucy were going nt nig oraers. NOVEMBER 30, 189a A NOVEL DEALING WITH LIFE IN LONDON AND EGYPT, WRITTEN FOB ME DISPATCU1 BY EUDYABD KIPLING, Being the First Serial Story From the Pen of the Gifted Youiif. Author of "Soldiers Three," and Many Other Fopxdar Sketches of Army Experiences in India. STNOFSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS. Tho story opens with a picture ot the life or two orphin. Dick and Maisie. with Mrs. Jen nett in London Many were their hardships ana a plighted troth was tho resnlt of their com panionship in misery. The scene then shifts to Egvpt during tho time Chinese Gordon was shut up In Khartoum. The hero Is now an artist, skorchlne the scenes for European illustrated jour nals, and his fast friend is Gilbert 13. Torpenhow. Tho column Is attacked br Arab, Uick is wounded and in his delirium calls for Maisie. llutlie recovers In dne time. Torpenhow returns to London and Dick sends on his sketches. JSy and by, Torpenhow telegraphs Dick to come to London, that his work has caught on. Dick lands in London penniless, has a bard tune for awhile bnt atlast gets on the crest of the wave of success. Accidentally he meets Malsip. Soon he finds his way to her little studio, there to admire and instruct her. MalMe in too much in love with her art to reciprocate his affection. Maisie has a roommate and she and Dick do not agree exactly. CHAPTER VI. And you may lead a thousand men, Nor ever draw tho rein. But ere ye lead the Faery Queen 'Twill burst your heart in twain. He has sHppedhisfoot from the stirrup bar, The bridle from bis hand, And he is bound by hand and foot To the Queen o' Kaeryland. Sir Hoggie and the Fairies. Torpenhow had been moved to lecture Dick more than once lately on the sin of levity, and Dick had listened and replied not a word. In the weeks between the first few Sundays of his discipline he had flung himself savagely into his work, resolved that Maisie should at least know the full stretch of his powers. Then he had taught Maisie that she must not pay the least atten tion to any work outside her own, and Maisie had obeyed him all too well. She took his counsels, but was not interested in his pictures. "Your things smellof tobacco and blood," she said, once. "Can't you do anything except soldiers?" "I could do a head of you that would startle you," thought Dick this was before the red-haired girl had brought him under the guillotine but he only said, "I am very sorry," and harrowed Torpenhow's soul that evening with blasphemies against art. Later, insensibly and to a large ex tent against his own will, he ceased to interest himself in his own work. For Maisie's sake, and to soothe the self respect that, it seemed to him, he lost each Sunday, he would not consciously turn out bad stuff, hnt. since Maisie did not care even for his best, it were better not to do anything at all J save wait and mark time between Sunday and Sunday. Torpenhow was disgusted as the weeks went by fruitless, and then at tacked him one Sunday evening when Dick felt utterly exhausted alter three hours' biting self-restraint in Maisie's presence. There was language, and Torpenhow with drew to consult the Nilghai, who had come in to talk Continental politics. "Bone-idle, is be? Careless and touched in the temper?" said the Nilghai. "It isn't worth worrying, over-. Dick. is. probably ploying the fool with a woman." "Isn't that bad enough?" "No. She may throw him out of gear and (Our Own Make), In Tapestry, Plushes. Brocatelle and Odd pieces a specialty. Platform Rockers and Recep tion Chairs. A large variety. A handsome selection of Parlor Tables, "Wood, Marble and Onyx Tops, Oak, "Walnut and Mahogany Woods. Screens and Easels, Mahogany and Bamboo. Oak, A large assortment of Illus trated Subjects in Engravings, Photo Graveurs, Artotypes, etc., etc. Ohenille Portieres and Lace Curtains. Rugs in Daghestan, Moquet, Smyrna and Animal Fur. Tapestry and Body Brussels, Moquet and Velvet Carpets. Fancy Japanese and Ruga Mattings Fancy kinds. Table Covers of all Mantel Walnut. Cabinets, Oak and Dinner and Tea Sets. Chamber Toilet Sets, selection. A large Silverware and Glassware. Children's Rockers and High Chaira Children's Fancy Up holstered Platform Rookers, Something nice. Etc., Eta, Etc Cash-or-Credit. Par Fnrim knock his work to pieces for a while. She may even turn up here some day and make a scene on the staircase. One never knows. But until Dick speaks of his own accord you had better not touch him. He is no easy-tempered man to handle." "No; I wish he were. He is such an ag gressive, cocksure, you be , fellow." "He'll get that knocked out of him in time. He must learn that he can't storm up and down the world with a box of moist tubes and a slick brush. You're fond of him?" "I'd take any punishment that's in store for him if I could; but the worst of it is, no man can save his brother." "No, and the worser of it is, there is no discharge in this war. Dick must learn his lesson like the rest of us. Talking of war, there'll be trouble in the Balkans in the spring." "That trouble is long coming. I wonder if we could drag Dick out there when it comes oil?" Dick entered the room shortly afterward, and the question was put to him. "Not good enough," he said, shortly. "I'm too comfy wnere I am." "Surely you aren't taking all the stuff in the papers seriously." said the Nilghai. "Your vogue will be ended in less than six months the public will know your touch and go on to something new and where will you be then?" "Here, in England." "When you might bo doing decent work among us out there! Nonsense! I shall go; the Keneu will be there; Torp will be there; Cassavetti will be there, and the whole lot of us will be there, and we shall have as much as ever we can do, with unlimited fighting, and the chance for you of seeing things that would make the reputation of three Verestchagins." "TJm!" said Dick, pulling at his pine. "iou preier to stay here and imagine that . all the world is gaping at your pictures? j Just think how full an average man's life is of his own pursuits and pleasures. When 20,000 of him find time to look up between mouthfuls and grunt something about some thing that they aren't the least interested in, the result is called fame, reputation, or notoriety, according to the taste and fancy of the speller my lord!" "I know that as well as you do. Give me credit for a little gumption." JBe haugedifldo!" A "Be hanged, then; you probibly will be, for & spy, by excited Turks. Heighol I'm weary, dead weary, and virtue has gone TO WE SHALL GIVE Special Attention the Probably no other house in the. city can show as complete a line of goods suit able for Xmas Gifts as ours. Some very nice gifts have been sold so far, but the line is unbroken. Come early and get the choice. We shall distinguish ourselves particu larly this and next Aveek on a line of Parlor Furniture of our own make. The like for variety has not its equal in the two cities. Remember that Ave cannot take orders for made to order goods, for Xmas delivery, later than December 15, so get your order in early g We carry a very large variety of Bed Room Furniture, every grade and quality. Also Bedding in all its different varieties. A splendid opportunity is here offered you to do yourself proud in gift giving. Take advantage of our Credit System and buy something worth having. Something that will do the home good. In the side columns you will notice a few of the many articles kept by us suitable for the Holidays, Cash or Credit in Every Department. PIONEERS OF 307 WOOD iioiti;i: bros. & t, i . m out of me " Dick dropped into a chair and was asleep in a minute. 'That's a bad sign," said the Nilghai, in an undertone. Torpenhow picked the pipe from the waistcoat where it was beginning to bnrn, and put a pillow behind the head. "We cin't help; we can't help," he said. "It's a good ugly sort of old cocoinut. and I'm londofit. There's the soar of the wipe he got when he was'cut over in the square." "Shouldn't wonder if that has made him a trifle mad," "I should. He's a most business-like madman." Then Dick began to snore furiously. "Oh, here, no affection can stand this sort of thing. Woke up. Dieu, and go and sleep somewhere else, if you intend to make a noise about it." "When a cat has been out on the tiles all night." said the Nilghai in his beard, "I notice that she usu-illy sleeps all day. This is natural history." Diek staggered away rubbing his eyes and yawnin?. lie did no work of any kind for a week. Then came another Sunday. He dreaded and longed for the day nlwavs, but since the reiMinired girl had sketched him there was rather more dread than desire in his mind. He discovered that Maisie had entirely neglected his suggestions about line-work. She had gone (ill at score filled with some absurd notion tor a "lancy head." It cost Dick something to command his temper. I I 'M ON TORPENHOW'S SOFA "What's the good of suggesting any thing?" he said, pointedly. "Ah, but this will be a picture a real picture; and I know that Kami will let me send it to the Salon. You don't mind, do you?" "I suppose not. But you won't have time for the Salon." Maisie hesitated a little. She even felt uncomfortable. "We're going over to France a month sooner because of it. I shall get the idea sketched out here and work it np at Kami's." Dick's heart stood still, and he came very near to being disgusted with his queen who could do no wrong. "Just when I thought I had made some headway, she goes off chasing butterflies. It's too maddening." There -was no possibility of arguing, for the red-baired girl was in the studio. Dick could only look unutterable reproach. "I'm sorry," he said, "and I think you Rest of the Year. LOW PRICES, STREET, iiwmw i! sn in ts r JAiIfIWta GOODS what's the idea of your new picture?" "I took it from a book." "That's bad to begin with. Books aren't the places for pictures. And ?" "It's this," said the red-haired girl be hind him. "I was reading it to Maisie the other day from the 'City of Dreadfnl Night.' D'you know the book?" "A little. I am sorry I spoke. There are pictures in it. What has taken her fancy7" "The description of the Melancolia: Her folded wings as of a mighty eagle. But all too impotent to life the regal Robustness of her earth-born strength and pride. And here again. Maisie, get the tea, dear. The forehead charged with baleful thoughts and dreams. The household buncn of keys, tho housewife's gown. Voluminous Indented, and yet rigid As though a shell ot burnished metal frigid. Her feet thick-shod to tread all weakness down. There was no attempt to conceal the scorn of the lazy voice. Dick winced. "But that has been done already by an obscure artist of the name of Durer,"said he. "How does the poem run? Three centuries and threescore years ago With phantasies ot bis pecnlar thought You might justas well try to rewrite 'Ham let.' It will be waste of time." "No, it won't," said Maisie, puttiug down the teacups with clatter to reassure herself. LAY A GIRL ASLEEP. "And I mean to do it. Can't you see what a beautiful thing it would make?" "How in perdition can one do work when one hasn't had the proper training? Any fool can get a notion. It needs training to drive the thing through training and con viction; not rushing after the first fancy." Dick spoke between his teeth. "Yon don't understand," said Maisie. "I think I can do it." Again the voice of the girl behind him: Baffled and beaten back, she works on still; Weary and sick of soul, she works the more. Sustained by tier indomitable will. The hands shall fashion, and the brain shall pore. And all her sorrow shall be turned to labor I fancy Maisie means to embody herself in the picture." "Sitting on a throne of rejected pictures? 3 English Oak, XVL Century. Antique and Wardrobes. Single and Double. Oak and Walnut Wardrobe Fold Beds. Our specialty, weights or springs. Without Bedroom Furniture. The largest varietyinthe city. Ash. Oak, Walnut, Cherry -and Mahogany. Odd Bedsteads-- Single.Child'a Crib and full sice. Odd Dressers Wood and Marble Tops, in all varieties of wood. Odd Washstands variety. in large Wood, Cane, Perforated and Leather Chairs, in Oak and Walnut. Rockers to match all Chairs. A large stock of fancy Rock ers in Tapestry, Silk, Flush and Brocatelle. 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