THE COURIER. Y life without his knowledge, loved his very uncoiuliness, and now sees at last another woman brought into the place denied to her, and makes ominous prophecies of this union. When Giovanni reproaches uer with her "old bitterness," she breaks out, in a passage of remarkable beauty and power, the like of which no other living Englishman could do. "Bitterness am I bitter? Strange, O strange! How else ? My husband dead and child less left, My thwarted woman thoughts have in ward turned, And that vain milk like add in me eats. Have I not in my thought trained little feet To venture, and taught little lips to move Until they shaped the wonder of a word? I am long practised. O those children, mine! Mine doubly mine: and yet I cannot touch them, I cannot see them, hear them Does great God ' Expect I shall clasp air and kiss the wind For ever ? And the budding Cometh on, The burgeoning, the cruel flowering: At night the quickening splash of rain, at dawn That muffled call of birds how like to babes; And I amid these sights and sounds must starve I, with so much to give, perish of thrift! Omitted by His casual dew!" This is, on the whole, the noblest of the many tine passages in the play, and at tirst glance it might seem strange that it is given to one of the unimportant characters. Unimpor tant? no, there is the error of mod ern taste and tradition. Here again Mr. Phillips' Greek manner is ap parent. Lucrezia, though she is nothing in herself, is everything in the drama. It is she who betrays to Giovanni the love or bis brother for his wife. This dark, disappointed woman is the embodiment of fate, she is to the play what the chorus was in the Greek tragedies. In the second act Giovanni goes to an apothecary to get a love potion to give his wife, and hears Paola who comes for poison, confess his love for Francesca and his determination to die. In the third act Paola goes to walk in the garden outside Francesca's window. She has been unable to sleep from loneliness and comes out, book in hand. They sit down under the vines to read the story of Lan celot and Guinevere, and the scene which precedes the kiss is one of ex quisite beauty, suggestion and repres sion. It has been a long time since anything so simple, so impassioned, so pitiful has been done in English verse. In the last, act Francesca, overcome by the nameless powers that have laid hold on her soul, afraid of her self, tlees to Lucrezia with "O woman, woman, take me to you and hold me!" and then Lucrezia, out of her great pity feels that at last her maternity has come to her and catching the girl to her breast cries "Close! I hold you dose: it was not all in vain, The holy babble and pillow kissed all oer! O my embodied dream with eyes and hair! Visible aspirations with soft hands; Tangible vision! .... And now I have concaved and have brought forth; And I exult in front of the great sun: And I laugh out with riches in my lap!" But it is too late to turn back the purposes of destiny. Francesca again encounters Paola, after a scene which must be read to be understood and which is above any description in prose, they go out together, drawn, Paola says, by the same power that draws the tides to the moon and holds the star dust together. The tragedy occurs off the stage, in the Greek manner, and the two bodies are brought in on a bier. Mr. Phillips has written a dramatic poem of great beauty, but it docs not, I think, till all the requirements of a great play, and it is too early to as sert that he is one of the men who writes for all time. A dearth of great poetry has blunted the edge of criticism. This play is in no respect equal to "A Blot on the Scutcheon" for instance. The most beautiful phrasing, the most fervid language, the most delicate fancy cannot in themselves make a great drama. Certainly a man who can say: The Carnegie Institute of Pittsburg. In the sixties Pittsburg was just bo ginning to acquire fame as an iron man ufacturing center, lis only claimant to fame, aside from the historic interest connected with old Fort Duquesne, was its emoke-laden atmosphere, which still surrounds it. There were then no parks, no public library nor public conservatories; noih- expect symphonies." tutuo has provided accommodation for what hs loDgbeen desirod, it permanent Pittsburg orchestra. The present sea son is the fifth and I'ittshurgers feol justly proud of this organization, which, under the leadership ot Victor Herbert, has won laurols, not only at homo, but in New York as well. One of the Now York papors said: "Wo expect tine steel rails from Pittsburg, but wo didn't "All Asia at my feet spread out In indolent magnificence of bloom." or "That face that might indeed provoke Invasion of old dties," Is a true son of Apollo and of the Royal House of Song. It is in beauty of phrase that Mr. Phillips excels. The melody of his phrases, the joyous union of his words. Is perhaps equal to Tennyson's, and there is about his verse a more spontaneous and uncon scious quality, a wilder, sweeter and sadder music. This it Is that some thing savors of Keats, but the warm, sensuous joyousness of Keats is not there. After reading Mr. Phillips' "Marpessa" I took down my Keats and read "Lamia" over again and thought the hand had not yet been made that could erase that, great name writ in water Alas! the water of our tears it was, for that untimely end. ADD OBSERVATIONS. The Library Site. The location selected by the library board for the new library may just at present be the centre of population but it does not please a great many people. It is of course impossible to please everyone but, the one selected does not accomplish the satisfaction of a respectable minority. This new building presented to the city by a stranger should, at least, be erected on as sightly a spot as that of any other public building. The capi tol, the university, the court house, the post office are erected on sites that are at once dignified and im pressive. The one selected for the library is just off the main street. It is a pleasant residence part, but en tirely unsuitable for a public build ing of any size and stateliness. The generosity and public spirit shown by the members of the Round Table is doubly commendable when it is con sidered that the majority does not approve the site insisted upon by the library board. To raise money to buy land when the city already possesses the sightliest site in the city is a stumbling block to many who have the interests of the library and the city at heart. First M. D. What a lot of things have been found in the vermiform ap pendix." Second M. D. And look at the money that's been taken out of it. Life. What a beautiful complexion Mrs. Gayboy has. Yes; that's something new; the drug gist has not had it over a week. Town Topics. ing to minister to the artistic neeJs of a growing population. In this last decade of the nineteenth century what a change has come over Pittsburg! And the change is largely duo to the generosity of one man, whoso struggling boyhood was passed in Pittsburg, where he has since gained his large fortune. Andrew Carnegie began to be known as a donor of libraries in the early eighties. His first gifts were made to the town of Braddock, where one of his largest mills is located, and to the city 01 Allegheny. This last has also a music hall connected with it. Nearly two years later the city of Pittsburg was offered one million dol lars to build a library, museum, art gal lery and music hall, all to be under one roof, and in return the city should pro vide a site and funds for the mainten ance of the library. A few yarB be fore this, Mrs. Mary Schenley presented the city with a large tract ot land for a park: she now presented a site for the library at the entrance to the park. It remained for the city to make provision for an annual appropriation. This was speedily done. In the fall ot 1895 the library was formally opened aud presented to the city. On that occasion Mr. Carnegie delivered his now famous prediction that "it would some day bo considered a disgrace for a man to die rich." At the time he announced his determination to give a million dollars, in addition to his original gift, for the endowment of the art gallery and museum. At that time this sum was considered ample. But it was soon found that more room was needed, A commissioner from the mu seum found a mammoth in Wyoming too big for any part of the museum. Mr. Carnegie met the difficulty by a larger gift. He has given in dl a sum between three and four million dollars. Plans for the addition have been made and work will begin soon. The library has established two branches in different parts of the city, and a third branch is proposed. The museum will soon take its place with other important collections of the coun try. At the time of the endowment of the art gallery certain conditions were agreed to. An annual exhibition must be held to which all artists may contribute. Pictures entered for a prize must have been painted within the preceding year; a jury voted for by the exhibitors them selves acts as judges and awards three annual prizes; the prize pictures are bought by the Carnegie institute for its permanent collection. The jury must consist of ten artists, two of whom xust be from Europe. This system ot award ing prizes is considered the fairest pos sible, as favoritism under these condi tions is difficult. The first exhibition opened in Octo ber, 1895, the fourth being held in the fall ot 1899. This is the only interna tional exhibition in America, and artists agree that it is the most important and representative of the year. None but masterpieces are admitted. The prizes go to foreigners ami Americans alike. In 1897 a Scotchman took the first prize, in 189S an American and this last year a Pennsylvania woman, Miss Cecelia Beaux, of. whom William C. Chase said: "She is not only the greatest living wo man painter, but the greatest woman painter that has ever lived.' The music hall of the Carnegie insti- So out of the smoko and doom ot Pittsburg has emorged this sign thut In the midst of an unparalleled muturial prospeiity, her citizens care also for the things ot the spirit. A woman of seventy, who does not look forty, and whose youngost child was born only eight yours ago, has in ;i few weeks won herself an enormous fol lowing among the women ot New York and of some of our adjoining towns. She carries the secret of psrpetual youth with her, and as it lies largely in a question of hygienic living, she has not yet antagonized tho doctors. She rec ommends, among other things, the drinking of a goodly supply of water daily, and the eating of a grated carrot before breakfast. The effect of tho carrots may not be visible at once, but in a few weeks ono will notico a certain captivating gloss on the hair and a clear ness in the eye and complexion altogeth er new. She is absolutely without em barrassment in her criticisms ot her pupils, no matter how largo tho audi ence. When one meek little woman ventured to suggest that her husband liked her as she was, the lady on the platform answered, in brnxen English, "Impozeeble." She is most amusing in her caricatures of certain clubwomen who walk on the lecture platform hold iog themselves eo badly that their avoir dupois becomes the must conspicuous thing about them. "I would like," she says, "to teach ze American vimen not to hold zero prayer-books on ze'e stomak.'' She recommends, among other thingp, the use of cucumber juice not tho pre pared cream, but the juice itself as a tonic for the complexion, soap being in jurious, water only cooling, and most preparations pernicious for the skin, and she experimented on certain faces be fore her to prove how cleansing the juico was. A soft cloth dipped in the juice and applied to the face will be sufficient to prove to anyone else the value of her suggestion as a cleansing process. The Bazar. Baggs Jobleigh's tickled to death with his new flat. Faggs What's the special joy in it ? Baggs Why, it's so commodious ho can let the folding bed down nights without moving the dressing case into the parlor. Town Topics. J. F. HARRIS, No. I, Board of Trade, CHICAGO. S5 STOGKS -AND BONDS. Grain, Provisions, Cotton. ana G2 Private Wires to New York Gty Many Cities cast and West. MEMBER New York Stock Exchange Chicago Stock Exchange. Cbicago Board of Tiad