The Tribune F M KIMMELL Publisher MCOOK 3B NEBRASKA MARCH OF THE WHITE GUARD By SIR GILBERT PARKER Copyright 150C oy It K Fenao Co CHAPTER I Ask Mr Hume to come here for a moment Gosse said Field the chief factor as he turned from the frosty window of his office at Fort Providence one of the Hudson Bay companys posts The servant or more properly Orderly Sergeant GoBse late of the Scots Guards de parted on his errand glancing curi ously at his masters face as he did bo The chief factor as he turned round unclasped his hands from be hlnd him took a few steps forward then standing still in the center of the room read carefully through a letter which he had held in the fingers of his right hand for the last ten minutes as he scanned the wastes of snow that stretched away beyond Great Slave lake to the Arctic circle and the Barren Grounds He medi tated a moment went back to the window looked out again shook his head negatively and with a sigh walked over to the huge fireplace He stood thoughtfully considering the floor until the door opened and Sub factor Jaspar Hume entered The fac tor looked up and said Hume Ive something here thats been worrying me a bit This letter came in the monthly hatch this morning It is from a woman The company sends another commending the cause of the woman and urging us to do all that Is possible to meet her wishes It seems that her husband is a civil engineer of considerable fame He had a commission to explore the Copper Mine region and a portion of the Barren Grounds He was to he gone six months He has been gone 3 year He left Fort Good Hope skirted Great Bear Lake and reached the Copper Mine river Then he sent back all of the Indians who accom panied him but two they bearing the message that he would make the Great Fish river and come down by Great Slave lake to Fort Providence That was nine months ago He has not come here nor to any other of the forts nor has any word been re ceived from him His wife backed by the H B C urges that a relief party be sent to look for him They and she forget that this is the Arctic region and that the task is a well nigh hopeless one He ought to have been here six months ago Now how can we do anything Our fort is small and there is always dauger of trouble with the Indians We cant force men to join a relief party like this and who will volunteer Who would lead such a party and who will make up the party to be led The brown face of Jaspar Hume was not mobile It changed in ex pression but seldom it preserved a steady and satisfying character of in telligence and force The eyes how ever were of an inquiring debating kind that moved from one thing to another as if to get a sense of balance before opinion or judgment was ex pressed The face had remained im passive but the eyes had kindled a little as the factor talked To the factors despairing question there was not an immediate reply The eyes were debating But they suddenly steadied and Jaspar Hume said sen tentlously A relief party should go Yes yes but who is to lead them Again the eyes debated Read her letter said the factor handing him it Jaspar Hume took It and mechan ically scanned it The factor had moved toward the table for his pipe or he would have seen the other start and his nostrils slightly quiver as his eyes grew con scious of what they were looking at TUrning quickly Jaspar Hume walked toward the window as if for more light and withhis back to his su perior he read the letter Then he turned and saidt I think this thing should be done The factor shrugged his shoulders slightly Well as to that I think so too but thinking and doing are two dfferent things Hume Will you leave the matter in my hands until the morning Yes of course and glad to do so You are the only man who can ar range the affair if it is to be done at all But I tell you as you know that everything will depend upon a leader even if you secure the men So you had better keep the let ter for to night It may help you to get the men together A womans handwriting will do more than a mans word any time Jasper Humes eyes had been look ing at the Factor but they were studying something else His face seemed not quite so fresh as it was a few minutes before I will see you at ten oclock to morrow morning Mr Field he said quietly Will you let Gosse come to mp In an hour Certainly Good night Jasper Hume let himself out He wallrtd across a small square to a log house and opened the door which created and shrieked with the frost A dog sprang upon him as he did so and rubbed its head against his breast He touched the head as If it had been that of a child and said Lie down Jacques It did so but it watched him as he doffed his dog skin cap and buf falo coat He looked around the room slowly once as if he wished to fix it clearly and deeply in his mind Then he sat down and held near the firelight the letter the factor had given him His features grew set and stern as he read it Once he paused In the reading and looked into the fire drawing his breath sharply between his teeth Then he read it to the end without a sign A pause and he said So this is how the lines meet again Varre Lepage He read the last sen tence of the letter aloud In the hope that you may soon clve me good news of my husband I am with all respect Sincerely yours ROSE LEPAGE Again he repeated With all re spect sincerely yours Rose Lepage The dog Jacques looked up Per haps It detected something unusual in the voice It rose came over and laid its head on its masters knee Jasper Humes hand fell gently on the head and he said to the fire Rose Lepage you can write to Factor Field what you dare not write to your husband if you knew You might say to him then With all love but not With all re spect He folded the letter and put it in his pocket Then he took the dogs head between his hands and said Listen Jacques and I will tell you a story The dog blinked and BiiSMba many days but had never heard him talk so much at time as he had done this last ten minutes JaBpar Hume was generally a silent man decisive even to severity careless carriers and shirking under offlcers thought Yet none could complain that he was unjust He was simply straightforward and he had no sym pathy with those who were not the same He had carried a drunken Indian on his back for miles and from a certain death by frost Ho had for want of a more convenient punishment promptly knocked down Jeff Hyde the sometime bully of the Fort for appropriating a bundle of furs belonging to a French half breed Gaspe Toujours But he nursed Jeff Hyde through an attack of pneumonia insisting at the same time that Gaspe Toujours should help him The result of it all was that Jeff Hyde and Gaspe Toujours became constant allies They both formulated their oaths by Jaspar Hume The Indian Cloud-in-the Sky though by word never thanking his rescuer could not be induced to leave the Fort except on some mis sion with which Jaspar Hume was connected He preferred living an undignified an un Indian life and earning his food and shelter by coarsely laboring with his hands He came at least twice a week to Jasper Humes log house and sit ting down silent and cross legged before the fire watched the Sub factor working at his drawings and calculations Sitting so for perhaps an hour or more and smoking all the time he would rise and with a grunt which was answered by a kindly nod would pass out as silently as he came And now as Jasper Hume stood looking at his Idea Cloud-in-the-Sky entered let his blanket fall by the hearthstone and sat down upon it If Jasper Hume saw him or heard him he at least gave no sign at first He said in a low tone to With His Back to His Superior He Read the Letter pushed its nose against its masters arm Ten years ago two young men who had studied and graduated to gether at the same college were struggling together in their profes sion as civil engineers One was Varre Lepage and the other was Jaspar Hume The one was bril liant and persuasive the other was persistent and studious Varre Le page could have succeeded in any profession Jaspar Hume had only heart and mind for one Only for one Jacques you understand He lived in it he loved it he saw great things to be achieved in It He had got an idea He worked at it night and day he thought it out he de veloped it he perfected it he was ready to give it to the world But he was seized with illness became blind and was ordered to a warm climate for a year He left his idea his invention behind him his com plete idea While he was gone his bosom frend stole his perfected idea yes stole his perfected idea and sold it for twenty thousand dollars He was called a genius a great in ventor And then he married her You dont know her Jacques You never saw pretty Rose Varcoe who liking two men chose the one who was handsome and brilliant and whom the world called a genius Why didnt Jaspar Hume expose him Jacques Proof is not always easy and then he had to think of her One has to think of a woman in such a case Jacques Even a dog can see that He was silent for a moment and then he said Come Jacques You will keep secret what I show you He went to a large box in the corner unlocked it and took out a model made of brass and copper and smooth but unpolished wood After ten years of banishment Jacques he has worked out another idea yju see It should be worth ten times the other and the world called the other the work of a genius dog Then he became silent the animal watching him the while It had scon him working at his model for the dog It is finished Jacques it is ready for the world Then he put it back locked the bpx and turned toward Cloud-in-the-Sky and the fireplace The Indian grunted the other nodded with the debating look again dominant in his eyes The Indian met the look with stoic calm There was something in Jasper Humes habitual reticence and decisiveness in action which ap pealed more to Cloud-in-the-Sky than any freedom of speech could possibly have done Jasper Hume sat down handed the Indian a pipe and tobacco and with arms folded watched the fire For half an hour they sat so white man Indian and dog Then Jaspar Hume rose went to a cupboard took out some sealing wax and matches and in a moment melted wax was dropping upon the lock of the box containing his Idea He had just fin ished this as Sergeant Gosse knocked at the door and immediately after entered the room Gosse said the sub factor find Jeff Hyde Gaspe Toujours and Lata Carsallen and bring them here Sergeant Gosse immediately depart ed upon this errand Jaspar Hume then turned to Cloud-in-the-Sky and said Cloud-in-the-Sky I want you to go a long journey hereaway to the Barren Grounds Have twelve dogs ready by nine oclock to morrow morn ing Cloud-in-the-Sky shook his head thoughtfully and then after a pause said Strong back go too Strong back was his name for Jaspar Hume But the other either did nor or would not hear The Indian however ap peared satisfied for he smoked harder afterward and grunted to himself many times A few moments passed and then Sergeant Gosse entered fol lowed by Jeff Hyde Gaspe Toujours and Late Carscallen Late Carscallen haur got his name Late from having been called The Late Mr Carscal len by the Chief Factor because of his slowness Slow as he was however the stout Scotsman had more than once proved himself sound and true according to Jaspar Humes ideas TO BE CONTINUED FOR THE fiOME MAKER 1 Right Way to Live Comfortably on Limited Income The increased cost of living all over this country especially in the largo cities has not been accompanied by a similar rise in the income for most wage earners and the already busy housemother finds additional responsi bility in contriving to make ends meet How to live comfortably lay by a little against the day of need and at the same time live honestly in the sight of all men to ones own con science is a problem that it takes brains to solve In the majority of homes praise be the husband is still by the laws of nature therefore divine appointment wage earner but upon the woman rests the equal 01 greater responsibility of making the best possible use of the funds handed over to her for disbursement With the same amount of money to draw upon one woman who is a good man ager may evolve a comfortable homey home for her family while another without taking proper thought for her part of the housekeeping proposition has everything running at sixes and sevens In managing well on a limited in come there are several donts worth memorizing Dont go in debt never spend a dol lar until you have it in hand Dont waste it is the little leaks that count more than the big outlays Dont pattern your living after some one whose income is twice yours They dont pay your bills Dont be afraid of what the neigh bors will say Be sure you are right then go ahead Dont lose sight of the true propor tion of things Good food values there must be ditto warm clothing com fortable bedding tools to work with but never mind the silks and satins that oft put out the kitchen fire nor indulge in ruffles when wanting a skirt Dont think if you are a young housekeeper that you must begin where your mother left off Dont shirk When industry goes out of the door poverty comes in at the window CARE IN BOILING RICE Things to Remember if You Would Get the Best Results Never set rice to cook in cold water or you will hve a thick mushy dish most unpleasant to the sight and equally so to the taste Always use boiling water Boil rap idly from the time you cover the pot until you take it off Constant motion of water allowing each grain to swell to three times its size prevents stick ing together Do not stir from the moment it be gins to boil for it will be noticed that when first rice is put into the water the water will cease boiling until the rice is heated Stir occasionally dur ing this period to keep from sinking to the bottom and burning but do not touch with a spoon fork or anything once it has commenced boiling Follow implicitly the directions about setting in oven and allowing rice to sweat as the old Creoles say You will then have a dish that is not only very beautiful and tempting to the sight but most delectable to the taste Plants in Living Room In the living room the air is gen erally very dry because we keep it tit such a high temperature that mois Jture is burned out of it Plants will not do well m a dry air Those who love plants and desire to grow them will therefore try to counteract the evil effect of dry air by taking steps to impart a necessary degree of mois ture to it They will shower their plants They will keep water evap orating constantly on stove or regis tetr Plants like fresh air and fail to flourish in rooms where the proper proportion of oxygen is not found The plant owner will arrange for ven tilation and the admission of as much pure air as her pets need By work ing all along this line she will have her efforts crowned with success while those who do not study their plants and their needs and try to make unfavorable conditions favora ble will fail with them From the Winter Window Garden in the Home Magazine Preserved Grapes Grapes are too seedy as well as rich in juices to be preserved excepting in the form of jam either plain or spiced To prepare the grapes for these forms of preserving pick from the stems wash and press the pulp out of the skins Put skins in one preserving kettle and the pulp in an other together with any juice that has run from the grapes Let them cock 15 or 20 minutes stirring often strain the pulp through a puree sieve to re move the seeds Add the cooked skins to the strained pulp then measure To every pint of the fruit allow a pound of sugar Cook until quite thick stirring often Turn into small jars or glasses and seal Laundry Bag Is Handy Bachelor girls who run about much will have to thank a fastidious bach elor for inventing a traveling laundry bag which spares them the disagree able necessity of packing soiled linen in their trunks The new device is a bag of brown canvas somewhat like a mail bag It fastens with a patent brass lock and has initials painted on it in trunk style It goes empty but it returns from the week end or other visit with the linen which is ready to go to the laundress LIKE A FAIRY TALE The Story of Postum Cereal In Words and Pictures The growth of the Postum Cereal Co Is like a fairy tale but it is true every word of it The Door Unbolted is the title of a charming little booklet just issued by the Company which tells and il lustrates the story of this remark able growth It takes the reader from the little white barn in which the business was started Jan 1 1S95 through the palatial offices and great factory buildings of the White City that comprise Postumville Battle Creek Mich The little white barn so carefully preserved is a most interesting build ing for it represents the humble be ginning of one of tho countrys great est manufacturing enterprises of to day an enterprise that has grown from this little barn to a whole city of factory buildings within but little more than ten years No less interesting Is the quaint of ficial home of the Postum Cereal Co The general office building of Mr Post and his associates is a reproduction of tho Shakespeare house at Stratford-on-Avon and upon the house and its furnishings has been expended vast sums of money until the rooms are more like the drawing rooms of the mansions of our multi millionaires than like offices That Mr Post has believed thor oughly in tho Idea -of giving to his employes attractive and healthful work rooms is proven not only by the general office building of the Company and its furnishings but by his fac tories as well and of all of these things this beautiful little booklet tells the interesting story It will be sent to anyone on request HIS TROUBLE WAS INTERNAL Indian Chief Had Peculiar Ideas About Hydrophobia Mayor Stoy of Atlantic City was describing the cosmopolitan throngs that visit his famous and gay resort Every nationality comes here he said Greeks Turks Hindoos Chi nese Moors they all come I was talking the other day to one of the physicians of the Pasteur In stitute the hospital you know for the prevention and cure of hydropho bia The Pasteur Institute reminded me of Atlantic City its visitors seemed to be of such a diversified character The physician told me about an In dian chief who had come to him for treatment last year My name said the chief is War Eagle Please take me in hand I fear I am getting hydrophobia Have you been bitten the physic ian asked by a mad dog Not exactly bitten War Eagle answered but I have the gravest sus picions about a black poodle that was served to me in a ragout last Friday afternoon TEN YEARS OF PAIN Unable to Do Even Housework Be cause of Kidney Troubles Mrs Margaret Emmerich of Clinton street Napoleon O says For fif teen years I was a great sufferer from kidney troubles My back pained me ter ribly Every turn or move caused Y jfiM f Pains My eyesight was poor dark spots appeared be fore me and I had dizzy spells For ten years I could not do housework and for two years did not get out of the house The kidney secretions were irregular and doctors were not helping me Doans Kidney Pills brought me quick relief and finally cured me They saved my life Sold by all dealers 50 cents a box Foster Milburn Co Buffalo N Y Lord Rothschilds Tart Reply Lord Rothschild who is taking a prominent part in the commission which is considering as to the best territory for Jewish colonization is the wealthiest member of the wealth iest and most famous banking house In the world His monetary and social Influence suggest the monarch rather than the financier There is a story that Jay Gould once called upon him on business Lord Rothschild sent out word that he was loo busy to see the caller Mr Gould not accustomed to being denied audience by anyone sent back rather a tart repetition of his re quest After an interval the attendant returned with this reply from Lord Rothschild Tell Mr Gould that Eu rope is not for sale The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great im portance Defiance Starch being free from all injurious chemicals is the only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics Its great strength as a stiff ener makes half the usual quantity of Starch necessary with the result of perfect finish equal to that when the goods were new Mix Soap With Dough From a communication read to the Association of Belgian Chemists it seems that continental bakers are in the habit of mixing soap with their dough to make their bread and pastry nice and light The quantity of soap varies greatly In fancy articles lirte waffles and fritters it is much larger than in bread The man who sits down and waits fo something to turn up will get his reward sooner or later His toes will turn uy wire is a balloon a A man without without an anchor Lewis Slnirlo Binder not so good x pay 10c for cigars orletvis Factors Peoria HI of himself doesnt a mansopinIon netesdy increase tho circumference of his headgear Deafness Cannot Be Cured cannot reach tho d Is- b7 local applications m they Mml or Imperfect tate is innamed you have a rumbling perfect hearing and when It I entirely closed Uear S8 la the resultand unle o Inflammation can bo taken out and thU tubb restored to W normal condi tion hearing will bo destroyed forecr nlna casts out of ten aro caused by Catarrh which is nothing but an inflamed condition of tho mucous Wo will clvo One Hundred Dollars for any case i or Deifness caused by catarrh that cannot he curea by Halls Catarrh Cure Smid for circulars free KJ CHENEY CO Toledo O- Sold by Drncslsts 73c Take Halls Family Pills for constipation Officers of New York Police New York city has one captain or 20 members of tne sergeant for every police force GAIMHMJi POUNDS Persistent Anaemia Cured by Dr- Williams Pink Pills After Other Remedies Had Failed When I began taking Dr Williams Pink Pills says Mrs Nathaniel Field of Sfc Albans Somerset county Maine I was the palest most bloodless person you could imagine My tongue and gums wero colorless and my fingers aud ears were like wax I had two doctors aud they pronounced my trouble anomifru I had spells of vomiting could not eat in fact did not dare to I had such dis tress after eating My stomach was filled with ga3 which caused me nwf ul agouy The backache I suffered was at times almost unbearable and the least exertion made my heart beat so fast that I could hardly breathe Bnfc the worst of all way the splitting neuralgia headache which never lef tine for seven weeks About this time I had had several numb spells My limbs would bo cold and without any feeling and the most deathly sensations would come over me Nothing hadhclpcd meuiitil I began taking Dr Williams Pink Pills in fact I had grown worse every day After I had taken the pills a short time I could see that they were benefiting me and one morning I awoke entirely free from pain Tho distress after eating disap peared and iu three weeks I conld eat anything I wanted and suffer no incon venience I also slept soundly I have taken several boxes of the pills and luive gained iu weight from 120 to 154 pounds and am perfectly well now Dr Williams Pink Pills cure anaemia because they actually mako new blood For rheumatism iudigestiou nervous--headaches and many forms of weakness they are recommended even if ordinary medicines have failed They are sold by all druggists or will be sent postpaid on receipt of price 50 cents per box sis boxes for 250 by tho Dr Williams Medicine Company Schenectady N Y ae CARTERS BlTTLE llVER I PILLS MAKES BEAUTY Among the ladies no other medi cine has ever had so strong a fol lowing because excepting pure air and exercise it is the source of more beautiful complexions than any other agency as Lanes Family the tonic laxative It puts pure blood in the veins and no woman can be homely when the rich red blood of health courses in her veins Sold by all dealers at 25c and 50c SOiiaiii CARTERS BlTTLE YlVER 1 WHS Positively cured by these Iiittle Fills They also relieve Dis tress frosaDyspepslala digestion aad Too Hearty Eating A perfect rem edy for Dizziness Nausea Drowsiness Bad Taste hi the Mouth Coated Tongue Pain In tho Side TORPID LIVER They regulate tho Bowels Purely Vegetable SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE SMALL PRICE Genuine Must Bear Fac Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES L DOUftl Afi 3H5 30 Shoes t n nURLO WLUouglaa 54 Gilt Edge lino uannoiaBBquaitBaaianjpriOa Tn KSnm W U DonclM Job blag House la the most complete In this country Send for Catalog l iE PSttKkl 7 k m jAj I r i v T cJ ly J Wf 5H0ES POE EYEKYBODi AT ALL PBJCFL Km Shoo 3 to Sl50 lioofCss Iil33S8 Childrens Shoes 285 to ItoSI nV IDVUKa3 Somens Blissc and Childrens hHa for style at anda If I could take you into my largo factories at Brockton Alaasanshw you how carefully WL DouglasshoS are made you would then understand why they hold their shape fit better wear longer and are of greater valu than any other make dS IwTuhVvc y a obtalo w L A v - 9 r 9 a I