Puslapio vaizdai
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the corner of his mouth. Still busily agitating his tooth-brush, so as not to waste any time, he paddled to the dumbwaiter and called: "He'o! Whash you wa'?"

"Garbage!" replied a gruff voice. A rattling of ropes announced that the car was on its way.

Mr. Blodger opened the "sanitary garbage closet," and, screwing up his face and tooth-brush, seized something that was mighty unlike a rose. He held the pail out at arm's-length as he carried it to the dumb-waiter.

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Buzz, buzz, buzz, went the buzzer. "Huh?" gurgled Mr. Blodger, nervously swallowing a generous amount of tooth-paste.

"Garbage!" repeated the voice.

Mr. Blodger looked helplessly at the can on the dumb-waiter and then at his incapacitated hands.

"Put your garbage on!" roared the voice.

Mr. Blodger sputtered; then, extracting the tooth-brush with the fourth and fifth knuckles of his left hand, he shouted back indignantly:

"I 'id!"

"Then why did n't you say so?" And down went the dumb-waiter with a jerk.

Mr. Blodger returned to the bathroom. As he was in the midst of shaving, the buzzer sounded again. This time he was on the alert and ready for any argu

ment.

Leaving his razor, but not his lather, he hurried back to the kitchen in a combative mood.

"What do you want?" he yelled defiantly as he opened the door of the dumbwaiter. There was no answer; but facing him on the shelf of the car stood his empty pail, silent, stolid, indifferent to his bravado. He snatched it off and returned to his ablutions.

On account of the extreme lateness of the hour, he decided to finish off with a quick shower-bath, first hot and then cold. Just as he had removed his last garment, the buzzer sounded again.

As he stepped into the hot downpour, the door-bell rang.

"Whoever that is can wait."

But apparently the person in question had no desire to do so, for the bell sounded again and again. To complete the symphony, the telephone chimed in with its. merry tune.

"Gwendolyn!" called Mr. Blodger, distractedly amid the roar of waters.

But she, having fallen into a pleasant doze while waiting for her breakfast, did not hear him. The bells and buzzer had by this time settled into a sustained chord like that of the whistles at New-year's.

Bounding out of the tub to the mat, Mr. Blodger wrapped his form, which still glistened with pearly drops, in his bath-robe, and clattered frigidly down the hall.

"Hello!" he cried, snatching off the telephone-receiver. "No, this is is not Schmittberger the butcher!" Then he darted to the front door. Opening it, he found the postman waiting with a letter. "Two cents due, please."

The buzzer continued its heavy droning, and the telephone started up again. "Two cents, two cents," repeated Mr. Blodger in befuddlement.

The postman stared.

"Two cents; yes, two cents," reiterated Mr. Blodger, groping immodestly for pockets where there were none.

"You said that before."

"Oh, excuse me! I'll get it right off. Now, where did I put that purse? Let me think." But thinking in the neighborhood of that telephone was an impossibility. He would have to quiet the thing. So, clapping the receiver to his ear, he protested, "Hello! hello!"

"Will you kindly give me Schmittberger's butcher shop?"

"Good grief!" he exclaimed, letting the receiver fall. It swung by its tail, pendulum-wise, barking infuriated clicks.

Mr. Blodger staggered to the bedroom. With reeling brain, he ransacked all his chiffonier drawers for the purse which was

"Aw, go ahead and buzz!" he said be- lying in plain view on top. By the time tween his teeth. he had discovered it and started back to

the door, the buzzer in the kitchen was having delirium tremens. Floundering to the spot, he gasped:

"What do you want?"

"Ice!" was the husky reply.

against the side of the doorway. In so doing, his eye fell upon a collection of objects that had been deposited in front of the sill-the morning newspaper, a bottle of milk, one of cream, and a bag con

"All right, I'll send it down. No, I taining a long loaf of bread. He stooped mean, you send it up.”

As the dumb-waiter rose, the temperature fell, and Mr. Blodger soon found himself in the presence of a beautiful blue berg. With chattering teeth, he reached forward and drew it to him. The door of the dumb-waiter closed automatically, and he was left alone in the kitchen with the iceberg in his arms.

How to open the ice-box was a problem. After attempting unsuccessfully to cajole the catch by fondling it with the corner of the berg, he tried nudging it with his elbow. It would not take the hint. Indeed, it refused utterly to move until he got down on his knees before it and rubbed it with his shoulder.

Finally, however, the door opened, disclosing a rival berg, attended by a throng of bottles, siphons, and butter-crocks. A cold, inhospitable crowd they were, resenting any intrusion.

Thus rebuffed, Mr. Blodger, who felt as though he were being frozen and cauterized at the same time, deposited the berg upon the cover of the wash-tubs. It coasted forward, threatening an avalanche. Clutching it at the brink, he paused, and wondered what he would do next.

The door-bell saved him the trouble of deciding. He had entirely forgotten the postman! Setting the berg upon a chair, he scurried out, and offered him a dollar bill, chattering apologies for the delay.

"Have n't you anything smaller?" asked the postman, impatiently.

"N-no, I d-don't think so."

"Then why did you keep me here all this time? I'll have to come back later." He started off.

"Stop! Wait a moment! I'd rather make you a present of the ninety-eight cents. Oh, glory! that 'll have to be gone through with all over again!"

Discouraged and shivering, he leaned

over and gathered them up carefully one by one. Just as he had stowed away the newspaper under one arm and gripped the bag with his left hand and the two bottles with his right, the chilliness in him culminated in a sneeze, and everything fell. Both bottles smashed. Landing just on the sill, they distributed their contents impartially outside and inside.

Finding that the proportion of the flood that the bread and the newspaper were able to sop up was small, though they did what they could, Mr. Blodger hastily procured a bucket and rag from the kitchen, where the ice was indulging in a flood of its own, and set to work mopping. As he sprawled out into the hallway, gingerly squeezing out ragfuls of cream and broken. glass, the door opposite was opened and a handsome woman appeared, attired in fashionable street dress. She looked him straight in the eye.

Mr. Blodger clasped his bath-robe to him, made a frenzied recoil, slammed the door, and collapsed into the pool of milk. "Henry dear, is breakfast nearly ready?" called his loving wife.

Enraged and dripping, he leaped up with sudden strength, and started for the bedroom, spluttering incoherent expostulations as he went.

At that moment there was heard the sound of a latch-key, and a grinning black face appeared.

"Good mawnin', sah. Somefin' seems to be spilt heah."

Fetching a large cloth, she set to work with easy dexterity.

Mr. Blodger, fascinated, watched the lake disappear.

"You bes' get dress', sah. Ah 'll have yo' breakfas' ready in a couple o' minutes."

"Thank Heaven you 're here, Maria!" he said fervently. "I was almost afraid you were n't coming."

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