THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 18, 1904. 'Wb March of the White Guard, by Sir Gilbert Parker A Moving Story Whose Scene Is Laid in the Far North i One Brave Man's Devotion. SK Mr. Hume to come here for a moment, Gosse," said Field, the Chfef Factor, as he turned from the frosty window of his office at Fort Providence, one of .the Hud son's Bay Company's posts. The serv ant, or more properly. Orderly Sergeant Gosse, late of the Scots Guards, de parted on his errand, glancing: curious ly at his master's face as he did so. The 'Chief Factor, as he turned round, un clasped his hands from behind him, took a few stops forward, then standing: tetlll 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 ho Ecanned the wastes of snow that stretched away beyond Great Slave Lake to the Arctic Circle and the Bar ren Grounds. He meditated 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 consid ering the floor until the door opened and Sub-factor Jaspar Hume entered. 'The Factor looked up and said: "Hume, I've something here that's been worry ing me a bit. This letter came in the 'monthly batch this morning. It Is from c 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 consider able fame. He had a commission to ex plore the Copper Mine region and a por tion of the Barren Grounds. He was to be gone six months. He has been gone a year. He left Fort Good Hope, skirt ed Great Bear Lake, and reached the Copper Mine River. Then he sent back all of the Indians who accompanied him but two, they bearing the mes eage that he would make the Great Fish River and come down by Great Blave 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 received from him. His wife, backed by the H. B. C, urges that a relief party be sent to look for hlm. They and she forget that this Is sthe Arctic region, and that the task lis a well-nigh hopeless one. He ought Ito have been here six months ago. Now, rhow can we do anything? Our fort is email, and there Is always danger of trouble with the Indians. We can't 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 expression but seldom: it preserved a steady and satisfying character of intelligence and force. The eyes, however, were of an Inquiring, debating kind, that moved from one thing to another as if to get a sense of balance before opinion or Judg ment was expressed. The face had re mained impassive, but the eyes had kindled a little as the Factor talked. To the factor's despairing question there -was not an immediate reply. The eves were debating. But they suddenly Bteadicd and Jaspar Hume said sen tentiously. "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 mechanically scanned It. , x A . , 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 conscious of what they were looking at. Turning quickly, Jaspar Hume walked toward the window as if for more light, and with his back to his superior he read 'the letter Then he turned and said, "I think this thing should be done." The Factor shrugged his shoulders Bllghtly: "WelL as to that, I think so too, but thinking and doing are two dif ferent things, Hume." "Will you leave the matter in my hands until the morning?" "Yes, of course; and glad to do so. You tare the only man who can arrange 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 bet ter keep the letter for tonight. It may help you to get the men together. A woman's handwriting will do more than a man's word any time." Jaspar Hume's eyes had been looking at the Factor, but they were studying Bomethlng else. His face seemed not 'quite bo fresh as it was a few minutes before. "I will see you at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning, Mr. Field," he said quietly. "Will you let Gosse come to me in an bour?" "Certainly. Good-night." Jaspar Hume let himself out. He walked across a small square to a loghouse and opened the door, which creaked 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, L!e down, Jacques." It did so, but it watched him as he doffed his dogskin cap and buffalo coat. He looked round 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!" Ho read the last sentence of the letter aloud: In the hoDe that you may soon give mo rood news of my husband, I am. with alf respect. Sincerely yours, ROSE LEPAGE. Again he repeated, "With all respect, sincerely yours. Rose Lepage." The. dog Jacques looked up. Perhaps it delected something unusual in the voice. It rose, came over, and laid its head on its master's knee. Jaspar Hume's 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,' hut not, 'With all respect. " He folded the letter and put it in his pocket. Then he took the dog's head be tween his hands and said: "Listen, Jacques, and I will tell you a story." The dog blinked, and pushed Its nose against its master's arm. "Ten years- ago two young men who had studied and graduated together at the same college were struggling together in their profession as civil engineers. One was Varre Lepage and the other was Jaspar Hume. The one was brilliant and persuasive, the other was persistent and studious, varre Lepage could nave succcded 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 developed 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 inven tion, behind him his complete Idea. While he was gone his bosom friend stole his perfected idea yes, stole his perfected idea, and sold it for $20,000. He was called a genius, a great inventor. And then he married her. You don't 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 "A didn't Jaspar Hume expose him. Jacques ?4&nd 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 JEFF HYDE. he said, "Come, Jacques. You will keep secret what I show you." He went to a large box in the corner, unlocked itf and took out a model made of brass and copper and smooth but un polished wood. "After 10 years of banishment, Jacques, he has worked out another idea, you see. It should be worth ten tlmea 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 seen him working at this model for many a day, but had never heard him talk so much at a time as he had done this last ten minutes. Jaspar Hume was generally a silent man; decisive even to severity, careless car riers and shirking under-offlcers thought. Yet none could complain that he was un just He was simply straightforward, and he had no "sympathy 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 He had, for want of a more convenient punishment, prompt ly knocked down Jeff Hyde, the sometime bully of the fort, for appropriating a bun dle of furs belonging to a French half breed, Gaspe Toujours. But he nursed Jeff Hyde through an attack of pneu monia, insisting at the same time that Gaspe Toujours should help him. The re sult of It all was that Jeff Hyde and Gaspe Toujours became constant allies. They both formulated their oaths by Jas par Hume. The Indian, Cloud-ln-the-Sky, though "by word never thanking his res cuer, could not be Induced to leave the fort, except on some mission with which Jaspar Hume was connected. He pre ferred living an undignified, an un-Indlan life, and earning his food and shelter by coarsely laboring with his hands. He came at least twice a week to Jaspar Hume's log-house, and, setting 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 Jaspar Hume stood looking at his "Idea," Cloud-ln-the-Sky entered, let his blanket fall by the hearthstone and sat down upon It If Jaspar Hume saw him or heard him, he at least gave no sign at first He said In a low tone to the dog, "It Is finished, Jacques; It is ready for the world." Then he put it back, locked the box. and turned toward Cloud-ln-the-Sky and the fireplace. The Indian grunted; the other nodded with the debating look again dominant lh his eyes. The Indian met the look with stoic calm. There was some thing in Jaspar Hume's habitual reticence and decisiveness In action which appealed more to Cloud-ln-the-Sky than any free dom of speech could possibly have done. Jaspar Hume sat down, handed the In dian 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 cup board, 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 finished 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 Late Carscal-. len, and bring them here." Sergeant Gosse immediately departed upon this er rand. Jaspar Hume then turned to Cloud-ln-the-Sky, and said, "Cloud-In-the-Sky, I want you to go a long journey hereaway to the Barren Grounds. Have 12 dogs ready by 9 o'clock tomorrow morn ing." Cloud-in-tho-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 not or would not hear. The Indian, however, appeared satisfied, for he smoked harder afterward, and grunted to himself many times. A few moments passed, and then Sergeant Gosse entered, followed by Jeff Hyde, Gaspe Toujours and Late Carscallen. Late Carscallen had got his name "Late" from having been called "The Late Mr. Carscallen" by the Chief Fac tor because of his slowness. Slow as he was, however, the stout Scotsman had more than once proved himself sound and true according to Jasper Hume's ideas. He was, of course, the last to enter. The men grouped themselves about the fire. Late Carscallen getting 'the coldest corner. Each man drew his to bacco from his pocket, and, cutting it, waited for Sub-factor Hume to speak. His eyes were debating as they rested on the four Then he took out Rose Lepage's letter, and, with the group looking at him now, he read it aloud. When it was finished Cloud-ln-the-Sky gave a guttural assent, and Gaspe Tou jours, looking at Jeff Hyde, said: "It is cold in the Barren Grounds. We shall need much tabac" These men could read without difficulty Jasper Hume's reason for summoning them. To Gaspe Toujours' remark Jeff Hyde nodded affirmatively, and then all looked at Late Carscallen. He opened his heavy jaws once or twice with an animal-like sound, and then he said, in a general kind of way: "To the Barren Grounds. But who leads?" Jaspar Hume was writing on a slip of paper, and he did not reply. The fatfes of three of the men showed lust a shade of anxiety. They had their opinions, but they were not sure. Cloud-in-the-Sky. however, grunted at them, and raised the bowl of his dIdo toward the Sub-factor. The anxiety then seemed to oe dispelled. For 10 minutes more they sat so, all silent. Then Jaspar Hume rose, hand ed the slip of paper to Sergeant Gosse, said: "Attend to that at once. Gosse. Examine the food and blankets closely. The five were left alone Then Jaspar Hume spoke: "Jeff Hyde, Gaspe Toujour. Late "With His Sack to Hi Superior, ha , Read the Letter." and Cloud-in-the-Sky, this man, alive or dead. Is between hero and the Bar ren Grounds. He must be found for his wife's sake." He handed Jeff Hyde her letter. Jeff Hyde rubbed, his fingers before he touched the delicate and perfumed missive. Its delicacy seemed to bewilder him. He said in a rough but kindly way," "Hope to die if I don't and passed it on to Gaspe Tou jours, who did not find it necessary to speak. His comrade had answered for him. Late Carscallen held It Inquis itively for a moment, and then his Jaws opened and shut as If he were about to speak. But before he did so the Sub-factor said: "It Is a long journey and a hard one.. Those who go may never come back. But this man was working for his country, and ho has got a wife a good wife!" He held up the letter. "Late Carscallen wants to know who will lead you. Can you trust me? I will give you a leader that you will follow to the Barren Grounds. Tomorrow you will know who he -is. Men, are you satisfied? Will you do it?" The four rose, and Cloud-in-the-Sky nodded approvingly many times. The Sub-factor held out his hand Each man shook it Jeff Hyde first; and ho said: ''Close up ranks for the H. B. C!" (IL B. C meaning, of course, Hud son's Bay Company.) With a good man to lead them they would have stormed, alone, the Heights of Balaklava. Once more Jaspar Hume spoke: "Go to Gosse and get your outfits at 9 to morrow morning. Cloud-in-the-Sky, havo your sleds at the store at 8 o'clock to be loaded. Then all meet me at 10:15 at the office of the Chief Factor. Good night" As they passed out Into the semi Arctic night Late Carscallen with an unreal obstinacy said: "Slow march to the Barren Grounds but who leads?" Left alone, the Sub-factor sat down to the pine table at one end of tho room, and after a short hesitation be gan to write. For hours he sat there, rising only to put wood on the fire. The result was three letters the larg est addressed to a famous society in London, one to a solicitor in Montreal, and one to Mr. Field, the Chief Factor. They were all sealed carefully Then Jaspar Hume rose, took out his knife and went over to the box as if to break the red seal. He paused, howev er, sighed, and put the knife back again. As he did so he felt something touch his leg. It was the dog. Jaspar Hume drew In a sharp breath and said: "It was all ready, Jacques; and in another three months I should have been in London with It But it will go whether I go or not whether I go or not, Jacques." The dog sprang up and put his head against his master's breast "Good dog! good dog! It's all right, Jacques; however, it goes, it's all fight!" ' Then the dog lay down and watched the man until he drew the blankets to his chin, and sleep drew oblivion over a fighting but masterly soul. II. AT 10 o'clock next morning Jaspar Hume presented himself at the Chief Factor's office. He bore with him the letters he had written the night before. The Factor said, "Well, Hume, I am glad to see you. The woman's letter was on my mind all night Have you Mr. Dooley it ELL, Charles Wagner has been havln' th' fine old time over here," said Mr. Dooley. "Is that th' man that wrote th music?" asked Mr. Hennessy. "No," said Mr. Dooley, "that was Cai. This Is Charles Wagner an he's th' au thor Iv th' two hundherd thousandth book that Prisldlnt Rosenfelt had read since th first iv Novimber. 'TIs called 'Th' Simple Life.' He cudden't find it In France so he come lookin' f'r-it among th' simple an pastbral people In this counthry. Ho found it He come over in a large but simple ship Iv twinty thousan' . simple horse power an landed in th simple vil lage iv New York, where he was met by a comity iv simple little village lads an lasses an' escorted to th' simple Wal dorf an Installed In a room simply deco rated in purple plush. That avenln he attlnded a meetln iv th' Fifth-Avnoo Fe male Simplicity Club. A lady wearln a collar iv dimon's whose value was simply fabulous recited passages fr'm 'Th Sim ple Life. Afther this a simple supper iv terrapin an champagne was served. He thin took a simple Pullman thrafca to Wash'nton where he attlnded a rayclp tlon at which a lady iv th diplomatic core, which is all that Is left iv diplo jnacy nowadays, poked th' wife lv a Con gressman with a lorgnette f'r goln into supper ahead iv her. Later he was ray celved be th simple Prlsidint, who said to him: 'Charles, he says, Tve been preachln ye'er book to me counthrymen,' he says. 'Simplicity an a sthrong navy is th' watchword iv this Administration," he says. "Since thin Charles has been whoopln up th simple life. They've showed him Ivrythlng simple we have. He's seen th' subway, th dhralnage canal, th stock exchange. Tom Lawson. Jawn D. Rocke fellar an Mrs. Chadwick. He's looped th loops, shot th shoots, bad a ride in a pathrol wagon, played th races an met Dave Hill. Th las seen iv him ho was anything to propose? I suppose noj," he added despairingly, as he looked j closely Into, the face of the other. "Yes, Mr' Field, I propose this: that i the expedition shall start at noon to- ; day." "Shall start at noon today?" "In two hours." "But, who are the party?" "Jeff Hyde, Gaspe Toujours, Lato ; Carscallen and Cloud-in-the-Sky." "And who leads them, Hume? Who i leads?" "With your permission, sir, I do." "You, Hume! You! But man, con sider the danger! And then there is there is, your invention. "I have considered all. Here are three letters. If we do not come back in three months, you will please send this one, with the box in my room, to the address on the envelope; this is for a solicitor In Montreal, which you will also forward as soon as possible; this last one Is for yourself; but you will not open It until the three months have passed. Have I your permission to lead these men? They would not go with out me." "I know that, I know that, Hume. I hate to have you go, but I can't say no. Go, and good luck go with you." Here the manly old Factor turned his head. He knew that Jaspar Hume had done right He knew the possible sacrifice this man was making of all his hopes, of his very life; and his sound Scotch heart appreciated the act to the fulL But he .did not know all. He did not know that Jaspar Hume was starting to look for the man who had robbed him of youth and hope and genius and home. "Here is a letter that the wife has written to her husband In the hope that he Is alive. You will take it with you, Hume. And the other she wrote to me, shall I keep it?" He held out his hand. "No. sir, I will keep it, if you will allow me. It Is my commission, you know." And the shadow of a smile hovered about Jaspar Hume's lips. The Factor smiled kindly as he re plied, "Ah, yes. your commission Cap tain Jaspar Hume of of what, Hume?" Just then the door opened and there entered the four men whom we saw around the Sub-factor's fire the night before. They were dressed in white blanket costumes from head to foot white woolen capotes covering the gray fur caps they wore. Jaspar Hume ran his eye over them and then answered the Factor's question: "Of the White Guard, sir." "Good," was the reply. "Men, you are going on a relief expedition one in which there Is danger. You need a good leader. You have one In Captain Jaspar Hume." Jeff Hyde shook his head at the others with a pleased I-told-you-so expression; Cloud-in-the-Sky grunted his deep ap proval; and Late Carscallen smacked his lips In a satisfied manner and rubbed his leg with a schoolboy sense of enjoyment The Factor continued: "In the name of the Hudson's Bay Company I will say that If you come back, having done your duty faithfully, you shall be well re warded. And I believe you will come back, if it is in human power to do so." Here Jeff Hyde said: "It. isn't for re ward we're doln' it Mr. Field, but be cause Captain Hume wished It because we bellevd he'd lead us; and for the lost fellow's wife. We wouldn't have said, we'd do it If It wasn't for him that's just called us the White Guard." Under the bronze of the Sub-factor's face there spread a glow more red than brown, and he said simply: "Thank you. Remarks on Dooley "He's th' author iv trie two hundred thousandth hook that Prlsidint Rosenfelt has Tead since th' first iv November." " They've showed "Wagner ivry thing simple we have. He's seen the subway, the stock exchange, Tom Lawson, Jawn D. Rockefeller an' Mrs. Chadwick. Whin he goes home to his simple life in Paris, he's goin' to have a ticker put in his study. He is undherstood to favor sellui' copper on bulges." "Was the wurruld iver anny more simple thin it is today? IJjet ye there was a good dale iv talk about Adam an' Eve dhressin.' os tentatiously an' havin' th' King iv Belgim's ancestor to supper with thim." climbln Into a private car in a fur-lined coat an' a plug hat Whin he goes home to his simple life In Paris, he's goin to have a ticker put In hlsstudy. He i3 undershtud to favor sellln copper on bulges. "I haven't read his book, but Hogan says it's a good wan an I'm goin' to read it afther Tve read th Bible an Emerson, which Mike Ah earn rlcommended to me th. year lv th big fire. Th Idee is that -no matther what ye ar-re, ye must be simple . If ye're rich, be simply rich; If ye're poor, be simply poor; If ye're nay ther, be nayther, but be simple about It Ye don't have to be gln'rous to be simple. He makes a sthrong pint lv that (Re gards to Russell Sage.) It isn't nlclssary to open ye'er purse, says Charles. If ye're a miser, be a simple miser. It ain't tsslntlal to be poor to be simple. A poor man walkln th sthreet is far less simple thin a rich man lollla back In his car riage an' flgurln' out simple inthrest on his cuff. Th' poor man is envious iv th' rich man, but th' rich man Is not envious iv th' poor man. If ye're a flower, says he, be a flower; if ye're a bur-rd, bo a bur-rd; if a horse, a horse; If a mule, a mule; If a hummin' bur-rd, a hummln' bur-rd; if a polecat, a polecat; If a man, a man. But always be simple, be it aver so complex. ' "Th on'y thing Hogan an I can't make GLOUD-Df-THE-SKY. men" for they had all nodded assent to Jeff Hyde's words "Come with me to the store. We will start at noon." And at noon the White Guard stood in front of tho store on which the Brit ish flag was hoisted with another under It bearing the magic letters, H. B. C: magic, because they have opened to the world regions that seemed destined never to know the touch of civilization. The few Inhabitants of the Fort had gath-, ered; the dogs and loaded sleds were at the door. The White Guard were there too all but their leader. It lacked but two minutes to 12 when Jaspar Hume came from his house, dressed also in the white blanket costume, and followed by his dog, Jacques. In a moment more he had placed Jacques at the head of the first team of dogs. They were to havo their leader too; and they testified to the fact by a bark of approval. Punctually at noon, Jaspar Hume shook hands with the Factor, said a quick good-bye to tho rest, called out a friendly "How!" to the Indians standing near, and to the sound of a hearty cheer, heartier perhaps be cause none had a confident hope that the five would come back, the March of the White Guard began. III. IT IS 18 days after. In the shadow of a little island of. pines, that lies in a shivering waste of ice and snow, the White Guard camp. They are able to do this night what they have-not done for days dig a great grave of snow, and building a fire of plno wood at each end of this strange house, get protection and something like comfort They sit close to the fires. Jaspar Hume Is writing with numbed fingers. The extract that fol lows is taken from hl3 diary. It tells that day s life, and so gives an Idea of harder. sterner days that they have spent and win spena, on tni3 weary journey. "December 25 This Is Christmas day and Camp Twenty-seven. We have marched only five miles today. We are SO miles from Great Fish River, and the worst yet to do. We have discovered no signs. Jeff Hyde has had a bad two days with his frozen foot Gaspe Tou Jours helps him nobly. Ono of the dogs died this morning. Jacques is a great leader. This night's shelter is a god send. Cloud-ln-the-Sky has a plan where by some of us will sleep well. We are In latitude 63 deg. 47 mln., and longitude 112 deg. 32 mln. 14 sec. Have worked out lunar observations. Have- marked a tree JH-27, and raised cairn No. 3. We are able to celebrate Christmas day jvith a good basin of tea, and our standby of beans cooked In fat I was right about them; they have great sustaining power. Tomorrow we will start at 10 o'clock." The writing done. Jaspar Hume puts his book away and turns toward the rest Cloud-ln-the-Sky and Late Carscallen are smoking. Little can be seen of their faces; they are muffled to the eyes. Gaspe Toujours Is drinking a basin of tea, and Jeff Hyde is fitfully dozing by tho fire. The dogs are above In the tent, all but Jacques, who tonight is permitted to be near his master.. The Sub-factor rises, takes from a knapsack a small tin pall, and puts It near the fire. This, ope ration Is watched, by the others. Then he takes five little cups that fit snugly Into each other, separates them, and puts them also near the fire. None of tho party speaks. A change seems to pass over the faces of all except Cloud-In-the-Sky. He smokes on unmoved. At length the Sub-factor speaks cheerily: "Now, men, before we turn In we'll do some thing in honor of the day. Liquor we none of us have touched since we started; the Simple Life out fr'm th' book is what Is simplicity. I may be a simpleton. Hinnlssy, but I don't know. Father Tom Burke was 40 years wrltln a book on 'Simplicity,' an' he nlver got beyond th' first slntlnce, which was: It Is simply Impossible to de fine simplicity.' It ain't simple to-be poor; it ain't simple to be without clothes; It ain't simple to be pious or sober. Ye're pretty simple to believe all I tell ye, but ye may not be as simple as I think an' hope. A lie may be as simple as th thruth. Th' fact lv th' matther is that th' rale thruth is nlver simple. What wo call thruth an' pass around fr'm hand to hand Is on'y a kind iv a currency that we use f'r convanlence. There are a good manny counterfeiters an a lot Iv th counterfeits mus' be In circulation. I haven't anny question that I take in manny iv thim over me intellechool bar ivry day an pass out riot a few. Some iv th' counterfeits has as much precious metal In thim as th' rale goods, on'y they don't bear th Govermlnt stamp. "What th dlvvle is simplicity, anny how? Simple is a foolish worrud whin ye come to think it over. Simple, sim ple, simple. It's a kind lv a mixture iv silly an dimple. I don't know how to go about bein simple. Th Lord didn't make me that way. I can imagine sim plicity, but I can't just put me hand on but back there In tho fort, and maybe In other places too, they will be think ing of us; so we'll drink a health to them, though it's but a spoonful, and to the day when we see them again W The cups were passed around, xne Sub-factor measured out a very small portion to each. They were not men of uncommon sentiment; their lives were rigid and Isolated and .severe. Fireside comforts under fortunate conditions tnej saw but seldom, and they were not given to expressing their feelings demonstra tively. But each man then, save Cloud- ln-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 ex ample. "To absent friends and the day when we see them again!" ho said; and they all drank. Gaspe Toujours solemnly. and as if no one was near, made the sign of the cross: for his memory was with a dark-eyed, soit-cheeKea peasant girl of the parish of Saint Gabrlelle, whom he had left behind five years before, and had never seen since. Word had come from the parish priest that she was dy ing, 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 ho thought of her now as one for whom the candles had been lighted and masses had been said. But Jeff Hyde's eyes were bright, and, suffering as he was the heart In him was Drave ana nopeiui. ne wus uuuwas j a glorious Christmas day upon the Mada waska River three years agone; of Adam Henry, the blind fiddler; of bright, warm hearted Pattie Chown, the hlle of tho 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 be fore. 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 lips ho recalled the words of a newspaper paragraph of a few months before. It made reference to the fact that "the Reverend James Carscal len, D. D., preached before Her Majesty on Whitsunday, and had the honor of lunching with Her Majesty afterward." And Late Carscallen rubbed his left hand Joyfully against his blanketed leg and drank. Cloud-ln-the-Skys thoughts were with the present, and his "Ugh!" of approval was one of tho senses purely. Instead of drinking to absent friends he looked at the Sub-factor and said "How!" He drank to the Sub-factor. And Jaspar Hume, the Sub-factor, what were his thoughts? His was a memory of childhood; of a house beside a swift-flowing river, where a gentle widowed mother braced her heart against misfortune and denied her self and slaved that her son might bo educated. He had said to her that some day he would be a great man, and she would be paid back a hundred-fold. And he worked hard at school, very hard. But one cold day of Spring a message came to the school, and he sped home ward to the house beside the dark river down which the ice was floating he would remember that floating ice to his dying day and entered a quiet room where a white-faced woman was breath ing 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 sald:r "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 langour murmured "I'll away, I'll away to the Promised Land to tho Promised Land! It is cold so cold God keep my boy!" 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 house by the riyer to the frozen hill-side. And the world was empty and the Icy river seemed warmer than his heart And sitting here in this Winter desola tion Jaspar Hume beholds these scenes of twenty years before and follows himself, a poor dispensing clerk in a doctor's of fice, working for that dream of achieve ment 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 Le page, and to see always the best of that friend, being himself so true. And the day came when they both graduated to gether in science, a bright and happy day, succeeded by one still brighter, when they b'oth entered a great firm as junior part ners. Then came the meeting with Rose Varcoe; and he thought of how he praised his friend Varre Lepage to her, and brought that friend to be introduced to her. He recalled all those visions that came to him when, his professional Some Confusion in the Irish Philosopher's Mind as to the Exact Meaning of Simplicity. It No more can Charles Wagner. -Tell me, Charles, how to lead th simple life. Tell me. Thaydore Rosenfelt, simple sowl, what I must do. I'll go as far as ye like. Hand out th raycelpt I'll make mesllf a simple man if I have to balce in a slow oven to do it What'll I do? Throw away th superfiooitles, says Hogan, out lv Charles, his book. But what ar-re th superflooties? Til turn out th' lllcthric light, shut off th' furnace an' desthroy th cash raygls ter be which complex roacheen I keep mesllf fr'm robbln mesilf. But am I anny moro simple because I'm holding' out on mesilf with frozen fingers be a tallow dip? Was the worruld iver anny more simple than it is today? I doubt It I bet ye there was a good dale iv talk about Adam an' Eve dhressin os tentatiously an' havin' th King iv Beljlum's ancesthor to supper with thim. Hogan was readin me out iv a book th' other day about th' simple fathers lv th' counthry. It was a tur rblo shock to me. This fellow says that Robert Morris, who I supposed sacri ficed his fortune fr liberty, injooced th Govermlnt to pay good money f'r bad; Jawn Adams wanted to make a kingdom iv th' counthry; while as f'r Georgo Wash'nton, he acted like a coal oil Jawnny whin he wint to th' White House, an' his wife put on insuffrable airs an' had such bad table manners that this here pathrlte was compelled to leave th room an run home to put It down in his diary. "An there ye ar-re. Th' more I think th less simple simplicity becomes. Says Wagner, via Hogan, a man shud bo like a lamp, an' th more light he sheds th betther man he Is. That's th throuble with lvrybody that thrios to advise mo to bo" something I ain't Whin I run him into a corner an' say: 'Com on, now, an make good-' 'Show me th way, he tells mo I'm a lamp, or a three, or a snowflake blown be th' winds, or a bur-rd in a gilded cage, or a paint brush or a ship, or something else. Bu says I: 'I'm none iv these fine thing. I'm a kind iv a man an' I'm not min tioned in th botany or th mail ordnor list Tell me what I must do. An' h looks me in th' eye anr says he: 2e a man.' And' there ye ar-re. If a man' 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,f or rather felt, that face clouded and anxious when he went away ill and blind for health's 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 she cared for him sho must be the same. He did not under stand a woman's heart how it needs re membrances and needs to give remem brances. Looking at Jaspar Hume's faco in tho light of this fire It seems calm and cold, yet behind it is an agony of memory, the memory of tho day when ho discovered that Varre Lepage was married to Rose Varcoe, and that tho trusted friend had grown famous and well-to-do on the off spring of his brain. His first thought had ,been ono of fierce anger and determina tion to expose this man who had falsified all trust But then came tho thought of the girl, and, most of all, there came tho words of his dying mother: "Bo good, my boy, and God will make you great," and for his mother's sake ho had compassion on the girl, and sought no revenge upon her husband. Rare type of man, in a sordid, unchlvalrlc 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 oc casional references in scientific journals. And he was making this journey to save, if he could, Varre Lepage's life. And he has no regret Though Just on the verge of a new era in his career to give to the world the fruit of ten years thought and la bor, he had set all behind him that he might be true to tho 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 round him now, the debating look comes again into his eyes. He places his hand in his breast and lots it rest there for a moment, the look be comes certain and steady, the hand Is drawn out, and In it Is a Book of Com mon Prayer. Upon the fly-leaf Is writ ten, "Jane Hume, to her dear son Jaspar, on his 12th birthday." These men of the White Guard are not used to religious practices whatever their past has been in that regard, and at any other time they might have been sur prised at this action of Jaspar Hume. Under some circumstances it might have lessened their opinion of him, but his in fluence over them now was complete. They knew they were getting nearer to him than they had ever done; even Cloud-ln-the-Sky appreciated that He spoke no word to them, but looked at them and stood up. They all did the same. Jeff Hyde, leaning on the shoulders of Gaspo Toujours. He read first, four verses of tho 31st Psalm, then followed the prayer of St Chrysostom, and the beautiful col lect which appeals to the Almighty to mercifully look upon the infirmities of men, and to stretch forth his hand to keep and defend them all In dangers and necessities. Lato Carscallen, after a long pause, said "Amen," and Jeff Hyde said in a whisper to Gaspo Toujours, "That's to thex point Infirmities and dan gers and necessities is what troubles us." Immediately after, at a sign from tho Sub-factor, Cloud-ln-the-Sky began 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 twig3 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 m this comfortable bed. Each wished to give way to their Captain, but he would not consent and ho and Cloud-in-the-Sky wrapped them selves In their blankets like mummies, covering their heads completely, and under the arctic sky they -slept alone in an astuere and tenantless world. They never knew 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. Not Sturt in the heart of Australia with the mer cury bursting the fevered tubes, with the finger-nails breaking like brittle glass, with the Ink drying constantly on the pen, with the hair falling off and fading, would, If he could, have exchanged his lot for that of the White Guard. They are in a frozen end lessness that stretches away to a world where never vdice of man or clip of wing or trend of animal Is heard. It is the threshold to the undiscovered country, to that untouched north whose fields of white arc only furrowed by the giant forces of the elements; on whose frigid hearthstone 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 tho north, but darkly downward, down ward! where the sun never stretches warm hands to him who dares confront the terrors of eternal snow. The White Guard sleeps! (To be continued.) (Thl3 story will be concluded in the next two Issues of The Sunday Oregonlan.) a lamp, it's because he smokes, don't show up well in th' sunlight, an will wan day be blown out There ar-r other simple uses f'r lamps besided glvin light, which is wan iv th poor est things they do nowadays. Roths child thrades in thim, th German Im pror thinks, thoy ar-re on'y useful tt throw at hi s lnimies, an' my business is to fill thlrri with karosene. ".No, sir, they ain't anny simple life. There's on'y life. It's a kind iv an ob stacle race. Slnnin', repintln', slnn in repintln. Some can jump hi?h; some can't jump at all. Thim that jump highest have farthest to fall. Thosa that go farthest are ruled off f'r foulin'. A man's no more thin a man an' h has as manny things in him, anny wan iv thim liable to go wrong without a mo ment's notice, as all th' lnjlnes, tools, lamps an other hardware figures lv speech in a prize pome. He has to make his clumsy repairs while undher full headway. Lucky man If he stag gers into port without havin caused too manny shipwrecks on th way over. It Isn't th' most succissf ul passage that has caused th most shipwrecks. Ye see, Hinnlssy, I'm a kind iv a Charle3 Wagner mesllf, on'y betther. He gets his out iv a Fr-ronch head an' I got mine out iv th third reader that a little boy left in here who come f'r a pint iv simple refrishmint fr his fath er's complex thirst" "I ,don't think ye know such a lot about it" said Mr. Hennessy. "I know more about th' simple life." said Mr. Dooley. (Copyright, 1904, by McClure, Phillips & Co.) A Convenient Memory. Mrs. B., who has passed the meridian of life and Is ambling down its western slope, had occasion to consult her doctor. Before he diagnosed her illness he asked her age. "Doctor," said the old lady, with some asperity. "I am just one year older than I was this time last year when you vis ited me professionally and asked the same question." "How old were you then?" asked the doctor, "I have forgotten." "So have L"