1 i i The Tribune F M KIMMELL Publisher MCOOK NEBRASKA - - - MARCH OF THE WHITE GUARD -By SIR GILBERT PARKER Copy ight 1902 by It F Fcnno Co CHAPTER 111 Continued The cups were passed round The Sub factor measured out a very small portion to each They were not men of uncommon sentiment their lives were rigid and isolated and Before Fireside comforts under fortunate conditions they saw but seldom and they were not given to expressing their feelings demonstra tively But each man then save Cloud-in-the-Sky had some memory worth a resurrection and hearts are hearts even under all uncouthness Jasper Hume raised his cup the rest followed his example To absent friends and the day when we see them again he said and they all drank Gaspe Toujours solemnly and as if no one was near made the sign of the cross for his mem ory was with a dark eyed soft cheeked peasant giil of the parish of Saint Gabrielle whom he had left behind five years before and had never seen since Word had come from the parish priest that she was dying and though he wrote back in his homely patois of his grief and begged that the good father would write again no word had ever come and he thought of her now as one of whom the candles had been lighted and masses had been said But Jeff Hydes eyes were bright and suffering as he was the heart in him was brave and hopeful He was thinking of a glorious Christmas day upon the Madawaska river three years agone of Adam Henry the blind fiddler of bright warm hearted Pattie Chown the belle of the ball and the long drive home in the frosty night Late Carscallen was thinking of a brother whom he had heard preach his- first sermon in Edinburgh ten years before And Late Carscallen slow of speech and thought had been full of pride and love of that brilliant brother But they in the natural course of things drifted apart the slow and uncouth one to make his home at last not far from the arctic circle and to be this night on his way to the Barren Grounds But as he stood with the cup to his iips he recalled the words of a newspaper paragraph of a few months before It made reference to the fact that the Rev James Carscallen D D preached before her majesty on Whitsunday and had the honor of lunching with her majesty afterward And Late Car scallen rubbed his left hand joyfully against his blanketed leg and drank thoughts were with the present and his Ugh of approvaltwas one of the senses pure ly Instead of drinking to absent friends he looked at the Sub factor and said How -- -mw TV- He drank to the Sub factor And Jasper Hume the Sub factor what were his thoughts His was a memory of childhood of a house besides a swift flowing river where a gentle widowed mother braced her heart against misfortune and denied herself and slaved that her son might be edu cated He had said to her that some day he would be a great man and she would be paid back- a hundred Told And he worked hard at school very hard But one cold day of spring a message came to the school and he sped homeward to the hocse beside the dark river down which the ice was floating he would re member that floating ice to his dying day and entered a quiet roon where a white faced woman was breathing away her life And he fell at her side and kissed her hand and called to her and she waked for a moment only and smiled on him and said Be good my boy and God will make you great And then she said she was cold And some one felt her feet a kind old soul who shook her head sadly at the mother and looked pityingly at him and a voice rising out of a strange smiling languor murmured Ill away Ill away to the Promised Land to the Promised Land It is cold so cold God keep my boyi And the voice ceased and the kind old soul who had looked at him pityingly folded her arms about him and drew his brown head to her breast and kissed him with flowing eyes and whispered Come away dear come away But he came back in the night and sat beside her and would not go away but remained there till the sun grew bright and then through another day and night until they bore her out of the little Jiouse -by 1 the river to the frozen hillside And the world was empty and the icy river seemed warmer than his heart And sitting here in this winter des olation Jasper Hume beholds these scenes of 20 vears before and 52 mfrtW8aaegg3BiB follows himself a poor dispensing clerk in a doctors office work ing for that dream of achievement in which his mother believed for which she hoped And- following further the boy that was himself he saw a friendless first year man at college soon however to make a friend of Varre Lepage and to see always the best of that friend being himself so true And the day come when they both graduated together In science a bright and happy day succeeded by one still brighter when they both entered a great firm as junior partners Then came the meeting with Rose Varcoe and he thought of how he praised his friend Varre Lepage to her anU brought that friend to be introduced to her He recalled all those visions that came to him when his professional triumphs achieved he should have a happy home and a happy face and faces by his fireside And the face was to be that of Rose Varcoe and the others faces of those who should be like her and like himself He saw or rathe felt that face clouded and anxious when he went away ill and blind for healths sake He did not write The doctors forbade him that He did not ask her to write for his was so strong and steadfast a nature that he did not need letters to keep him true and he thought if shecared for him she must be the same He did not understand a womans heart how it needs remem brances and needs to give remem brances Looking at- Jasper Humes face in the light of this fire it seems calm and cold yet behind it is an agony of memory the memory of the day when he discovered that Varre Le page was married to Rose Varcoe and that the trusted friend had grown famous and well-to-do on the cifully look upon the infirmities ot men and to stetch forth His hand to keep and defend them in all dangers and necessities Late Carscallen after a long pause said Amen and Jeff Hyde said in a whisper to Gaspo Toujours Thats to the point In firmities and dangers and necessities is what troubles us Immediately after at a sign from the Sub factor Cloud-in-the-Sky be gan to transfer the burning wood from one fire to the other until only hot ashes were left where a great blaze had been Over these ashes pine twigs and branches were spread and over them again blankets The word was then given to turn in and Jeff Hyde Gaspe Toujours and Late Carscallen lay down in this comfort able bed Each wished to give way to their captain but he would not con sent and he and wrapped themselves in their blankets like mummies covering their heads completely and under the arctic sky they slept alone in an austere and ten antless world They never know how loftily sardonic Nature can be who have not seen that land where the mercury freezes in the tubes and there is light but no warmth in the smile of the sun Xot Sturt in the heart of Australia with the mercury bursting the fevered tubes with the finger nails breaking like brittle glass with the ink drying instantly on the pen with the hair falling off and fad ing would if he could have ex changed his lot for that of the White Guard They are in a frozen endless ness that stretches away to a world where never voice of man or clip of wing or tread of animal is heard It is the threshold to the undiscovered country to that untouched north whose fields of white are only fur rowed by the giant forces of the ele ments on whose frigid hearthstone ra ijsaacCTimimiffirrirMMiry iaitt ifipH fillfn IIP if lilt S v If wMw He ReacAhe First Four Vcses of the Thirty First Psalm offspring of his brain His first thought had been one of fierce anger and determination to expose this man who had falsified all trust But then came the thought of the girl and most of all there came the words of his dying mother Be good my boy and God will make you great and for Jiis mothers sake he had com passion on the girl and sought no re venge upon her husband Rare type of man in a sordid unchivalric world And now ten years later he did not regret that he had stayed his hand The world had ceased to call Varre Lepage a genius He had not fulfilled the hope that was held of him This Jaspar Hume knew from occasional references in scientific journals And he was making this journey to save if he could Varre Lepagejs life And he has no regret Though juet on the verge of a new eia in his ca rser to give to the world the fruit of ten years thought and labor he had set all behind him that he might be true to the friendship of his youth that he might be loyal to his manhood that he might be clear of the strokes of conscience to the last hour of his life Looking around him now the debat ing look conies again into his eyes He places his hand in his breast and lets it rest there for a moment The look becomes certain and steady the hand is drawn out and in it is a Book cf Common Prayer Upon the flyleaf is written Jane Hume to her dear son Jaspar on his twelfth birthday These men of the White Guard are not used to religious practices wbat ever their past has been in that re gard and at any other time they might have been surprised at this action of Jaspar Hums Under some circumstances it might have lessened their opinion of him but his influence over them now was complete They knew they were getting nearer to him than they had ever done even Cloud-in-the-Sky appreciated that Ho spoke no word to them but looKed at them and stood up They all did the same Jeff Hyde leaning on the shoulders of Gaspe Toujours He read first four verses of the Thirty first Psalm then followed the of St Chry sostom and the beautiful collect which appeals to the Almighty to i no fire is ever lit a place where the electric phantoms of a nightless land pass and repass and are never still where the magic needle points not toward the north but darkly down ward downward where the sun never stretches warm hands to him who dares confront the terrors of eternal snow The White Guard sleeps CHAPTFR IV No Captain leave me here and push on to the Manitou Mountain You ought to make it in two days Im just as safe here as on the sleds and less trouble a blind mans no good Ill have a good rest while youre gone and then perhaps my eyes will come out right My foot is nearly well now Yes Jeff Hyde was snow blind This the giant of the party had suffered most But Jaspar Hume said I wonc leave you alone my man The dogs can carry you as theyve done for the last ten days But Jeff replied Im as safe here as marching and safer When the dogs are not carrying me nor any one leading me you can get on faster and that means everything to us now dont it Jaspar Hume met the eyes of Gaspe Toujours He read them Then he said to Jeff Hyde It shall be as you wish Late Carscallen Cloud-in-the-Sky and myself will push on to Man itou Mountain You and Gaspe Tou jours will remain here Jeff Hydes blind eyes turned to ward Gaspe Toujours and Gaspe Tou jours said Yes We have plenty of tabac TO BE COXTIXUED The Superior American Workman Notwithstanding that he has to pay more for his clothes than the English workman the American dresses him self and his famiv fai netr and more tastefully than his English -cousin The American also spends more money on luxuries and legitimate i pleasure and the food he eats is more I varied and of better quality Worlds Work JACKS DELINQUENCY Mary do you think I look as if I had been crying Well I suppose the wind jias made my eyes a little red Jack Mr Harris didnt meet me t that tearoom downtown as he prom ised But I dont care at all not in the least I had rather an unpleasant ime and couldnt eat anything Its all Jacks Mr Harris fault too You need not make coffee for his dinner No nor tea Well have justj milk Oh I know he doesnt drink milk but we cant always be considV ring what he likes By the way you aeed not fry the chicken either Well have creamed codfish Jack detests it If you can think of anything else that ae doesnt eat you may as well cook that too No Im not in the least angry No indeed I never get angry with my hus band I merely cant always be think ing of his dislikes and likes He didnti remember his engagement with me to day and I I dont care if I never never see him again No I dont I suppose Id get along equally well without him So Mary you may as well get the dinner at once I wont wait for him he can eat it cold though perhaps it would be better to have dinner very late for he always comes home so hungry Why its after five oclock now What do you suppose is the reason he doesnt come Oh can anything have happened to him You say he may have been struck by an automobile Mary how can you suggest such a thing You had a friend who was smashed to pieces by one Oh oh If they are bringing Jack home in pieces Ill love every little tiny piece Oh some one is coming Its Jack But I Didnt Stop Hes whistling How can he when Im anourning him for dead Oh Jack Im so glad to see you 1 cant even think It it was such a surprise to to open the door and find you here I felt sure you were coming to me dead so I told Mary to put on the hot water - John Vincent Harris why didnt you meet your little wire in the south west corner of the lunchroom as you promised Yes it was the southwest corner I remember distinctly be cause I kept saying s for soup and w for fish fish you know Are you sure Maybe it was north west n and w soup and fish noodle soup of course Yes that was it I was there promptly at two oclock Well if -you think I could do all that shopping and get there at 12 oclock you never were more mistak en in your life Now John Vincent Harris do you mean to say that you think more of your business than of your own wife so that you could not wait two hours for her Oh about the lunch I ordered for you too because I knew you would be so hungry Jack the waiter had such handsome eyes I think he rath er liked to look at me so I ordered more than I wanted and all the things you liked When you disappointed me I couldnt eat a thing I gave the waiter 50 cents he had been so kind But I nearly fainted when I looked at the bill and discovered that I hadnt money enough I didnt know things cost so much I wanted to be brave and dash out without paying and then send the cashier postage stamps but I was afraid the patrol wagon would come after me and if the police got me you never never would know where I was would your Jack dear So I counted my pennies pretended that I was in an awful hurry and fair ly threw the money at the cashier Yes some of the money rolled on the floor but I didnt stop Now Jack dear please pay me for 3 our lunch and send the cashier a check for seven cents and youd better make it anonymous so so that waiter wont know Chicago Daily News Lewis Single Binder straight 5c cigar Made of extra quality tobacco our dealer or Lewis Factory Peoria 111 Unearthing the Briber During a recent campaign in Eng land a certain woman called on a la borers wife and asked if her husband would vote for Lord Blank No he wont was the reply But remem ber the blankets and coals you got from the clergyman Never mind them Hes been promised a new air of trousers if he votes for Mr Dash Suspecting that this was a case of bribery that must be outdor the woman canvasser gffered a sovereign if the woman would tell her who had promised the trousers The money paid over the woman smiled I promised them she said and Ill buy them out of your sovereign A New Sleeping Car Story Among the railroad visitors in town yesterday was F A Miller general passenger agent of the Chicago Mil waukee St Paul Railway He vl ited all of the general offices in to and at the Hollenden Hotel yesterday told a story of one of the sleeping car porters who was recently found asleep while on duty This is con trary to the rules of The St Paul Road and the negro man was in trouble when found by the inspector on -The Pioneer Limited He had his wits about him however and In re sponse to the inspectors inquiry as to what he was doing asleep he said Ill tell you how it was boss I have only been with the company a short time and before coming here I was working on such and such a railroad The line was so rough that I could not get any sleep Since I have been working for the The St Paul the road has been so smooth that I just could not keep awake Mr Miller says that while the ne gro had violated the rules he was permitted to keep his job on account of his wit Cleveland Leader BIRD TRAVELS WITH GIRAFFE Red Billed Weaver Constant Compan ion of Animal Skyscraper The red billed weaver bird Is a con stant companion of the giraffe perch ing itself upon the withers and flying along when its host takes to flight and immediately alighting again on its back at the first opportunity The only means of defense or offense by the giraffe is by means of its hoofs and the blows it can deliver by kick ing are of tremendous power The old males during the breeding season fight in this manner a good deal and the female employs the same means in defending her young against car nivorous animals Giraffes are very swift of foot and it requires a very fleet horse to run them down Experienced hunters however charge them at full speed and by this means are often able to run into them and if the giraffes are fat they will soon become blown When running the tail is twisted in a corkscrew fashion over the back and the hind legs at each step are thrown on the outside of the forelegs giving a very grotesque straddling appear ance The giraffe is mute but he has a very keen sense of hearing and of jmell Museum Gets Fine Pulpit King Friederich August of Saxony has given to the Germanic museum at Harvard a full size reproduction of the sandstone pulpit of the Church of Wechselburg near Leipsic This gift is regarded as the most important made to the museum since the fine collection of casts was sent by the German emperor The pulpit be longs to the beginning of the thir teenth century and Is a massive struc ture 15 feet high resting on Roman esque columnj NO MEDICINE But Change of Food Gave Final Relief Most diseases start in the aliment ary canal stomach and bowels A great deal of our stomach and bowel troubles come from eating too much starchy and greasy food The stomach does not digest any of the starchy food we eat white bread pastry potatoes oats etc these things are digested in the small intes tines and if we eat too much as most of us do the organs that should di gest this kind of food are overcome by excess of work so that fermenta tion indigestion and a long train of ails result Too much fat also is hard to digest and this is changed into acids sour stomach belching gas and a bloaty heavy feeling In these conditions a change from indigestible foods to Grape Nuts will work wonders in not only relieving the distress but in building up a strong digestion clear brain and steady nerves A Wash woman writes About five years ago I suffered with bad stomach dyspepsia indigestion constipation caused I know now from eating starchy and greasy food I doctored for two years without any benefit The doctor told me there was no cure for me I could not eat anything without suffering severe pain in my back and sides and I be came discouraged A friend recommended Grape Nuts and I began to use it In less than two weeks I began to feel better and inside of two months I was a well woman and have been ever since I can eat anything I wish with pleasure We eat GrapeNuts and cream for breakfast and are very fond of it Name given by Postum Co Battle Creek Mich Read the little book The Road to Wellville In pkgs Theres a reason BACK ACHE DOES YOUR trams0 James B Keeler rotlreO 1 f 21 jiV ago I sufferea wiu my back and kid neys I doctored and used many remedies without getting re lief Beginning with Doans Kidney PiUs I found relief from the first box and j vrvoc restored1 imr tuv -wife me to good souna cuuujuuu -- mlnyof have used friends nd my j Doans Kidney Pills with good results recommend them and I can earnestly Sold by all dealers 50 cents a box Foster Milburn Co Buffalo N Y Sympathy Not Needed famous Norways Dr Frldtjof Nansen mous arctic explorer now minister to Gerat Britain makes light of the sympathy expressed by many persons anent the hardships of travelers He misplaced says There never was such placed sympathy as commiserating a man who has lived in the wilds Most men who travel in out-of-the-way parts of the world do so because they like it People who live in the center of what is called civilization do not un derstand cannot realize the spell that getting close to nature battling with nature has on the heart He does not believe in the use of alcoholic bev erages holding that while liquor will raise the temperature for a few min utes after that It falls lower than before LIMB RAW AS PIECE OF BEEF Suffered for Three Years with Itching Humor Cruiser Newark U S N Man Cured by Cuticura I suffered with humor for about three years off and on I finally saw a doctor and he gave me remedies that did me no good so I tried Cuticura when my limb below the knee to the ankle was as raw as a piece of beef All I used was the Cuticura Ssap and the Ointment I bathed with Cuticura Soap every day and used about six or seven boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was thoroughly cured of the humor in three weeks and havent been af fected with it since I use no other Soap than Cuticura now H J Myers U S N U S S Newark New York Julys 1905 Rich Prize for Scientists The person who discovers a method of communication between planets will receive 20000 from the French Acad emy of Science Worth Knowing That Allcocks Plasters are the highest result of medical science and skill and in ingredients and method have never been equaled That they are the original and gen uine porous plasters upon whose rep utation imitators trade That Allcocks Plasters never fail to perform their remedial work quickly and effectually That for Weak Back Rheumatism Colds Lung Trouble Strains and all Local Pains they are invaluable That when you buy Allcocks Plas ters you obtain the best plasters made A kiss in time is fine STOVE POLISH ALWAYS READY TO USE NO DIRT DUST SMOKE OR SMELL NO MORE STOVE POLISH TROUBLES - IGK HEADACHE CARTERS WlTTLE llVER GARTERS ITTI P IVER WlTTL WlVE PILLS Positively enred by these Iiittle Pills They also relieve Dis tress from Dyspepsia In digestion and Too Hearty Eating A perfect rem edy lor Dizziness Kausea Drowsiness Bad Ta3te In the Mouth Coated Tongue Pain In the Slds TYYODTTk TTTI ii rrr miu regulate the Bowel3 Purely Vegetable SHALL PILL SMALL DOSE SMALL PRICE Genuine Must Bear Fac Simile Signature LJ REFUSE SUBSTITUTES THE CANADIAN WEST IS THE BEST WEST mm The testimony or thou sands dunnic tho past r par la that the Canadian Went is the best AVesu lear by year the ajtn cniuiralreturns uiivo in- increased creased n volume and In jalue and still thetJana dlan Government offers ICO ucrti FJXEE to uuud sag settler Some of the Advantages The phenomenal Increase main lines and branches has tSifni r miIeaKe tion of the conntiy wlihin ray ASphSTerr por Sdle 8SSK SiiS V TV y v V vl f k i L 1 X A t