0 TTTR OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 24, 1P07. 5 F V l Ihsa late 1 Winter Joys and Sorrows of NNAPOLI3, N. S . March 21. Tha old trapper, romantic figure, tho Joy of my yuuth, has never left rny mind's eye-the tall, spare but sinewy frame dressed In fringed buckskin and leaning lightly tin Inn truiity end unerring Brown Bess, the clear blue eye flashing over the aqulllno none, the sliver locks flowing profusely from Under the coonskln rup. The picture Is completed by the faithful hound, which Invariably looks up Into his master's fare with an expression of devotion and "al most human Intelligence!" At last I could b. ar It no longer. "Go to!" I said to myself. "I will also be the old trapper!" and straightway I consulted, I'ncle Ned Buckshaw. The old fellow was sluing In front of his big cabin fireplace, upon which blazed a pllo of four-foot maple logs, and greeted me with a nod and a hearty "Howdy?'" with a Jerk of the thumb toward a home made rocking chair at his side. I at once plunged Into the middle of things and explained what was on my mind and heart. The old man slowly took his corncob from his lips and turned a glinting eye upon me. "Showl Ooln' to' stay down and see the now fly, eh? Ever done any trappln'?" I explained that I had snared the savage cottontail and trapped an occasional Mephitis mephltlra over on the black lots, long ago In old Massachusetts. "Hm!" replied the ancient. "Pretty cold Work. Real work, too. If you want to get any fur. Well, yes, the moose season will be on for a month yet. Might pick one up on an odd day. You weren't thlnkln' o" goln' off alone. You s'rpose? Wouldn't do that If I were you. Me? Well, I dunno! Tou see every trapper has his country that sort o' belongs to him, and when you have to divide up on the catch" "There won't bo much dividing, Uno Ned. I'll contribute four dozen brand new traps and leave you all the fur except one set of mink and anything in the moose line we may get." The upshot of It was that, as his regular partner had decided to cook for a gang of lumbermen In another country, t'nele Ned concluded to take me In his place, no doubt reckoning on the cheap acquisition of those traps when we had finished our labors. As we were to be gone a couple of months and to work over a rather wide territory, there wa a good deal of duffle and pro visions, which we loaded In two canoes, one canvas covered and the other a birch bark. The flotilla set sail one morning In early November as the leaves were 'rustling to enrth. for, as the Indians say, "When leaves fall fur good." At the foot of the chain of Liverpool lakes, where the big river makes out, stands the comfortable log cabin belonging to Pel Thomas, and of this we took pos session as home camp. From here our trap lines were to stretch eastward to Frog and Bear lakes and north up the Oull lnke branch, forming about a right angle with the cabin. The Trapper's Equipment. For footwear we had moccasins, besides which Uncle Ned wore his favorite moose hanks, while I aroused his envy with a pair of knee moccasins with double soles. These I found excellent for canoe work, as one has frequently to step out Into shal low water. Not that they keep your feet dry for any length of time; no footwear jret Invented will do that, nor any costume short of Captain Boynton's swimming suit. Wet feet are part of the game. During the last year, spent nearly all In the wIK. "rness, I don't believe that I have had dry feet more than a fourth of the time. One doesn't mind It as long as soft and thick wool socks are worn. Cold seldom persecutes a man In the woods If he keeps moving, and there Is the camp fire at the end. Uncle Ned and I wore three pairs of socks, or rather two pairs and a pair of long stockings that came up to our knees and were tied there with thongs. Sweaters and old coats completed our out aide dress, while next the skin we wore wool. I boasted a yachting oilskin coat which saved me many a drenching and was not heavy. For weapons we carried a shotgun and a rifle, the latter because we hoped to do a little still hunting for moose If occasion THE PRODUCT OF THE AILSCLIFFE GANG A Double Theft from a Brokers Safe and the De ductions of Cronkhite Therefrom. IM.1 T IS a most Infernal mix up!" groaned Austin Allls, the eminent broker. Judge Marcellua looked over his notes and pursed his lips. FA-' trv. "Quits so," at length he said, "uet ms proceed then to evolve order out of chaos, ubject to your right to add and to amend. "A year ago then, you, your widowed daughter, Mrs. Emily Grout, and your Blece, Miss Paulina Frame, while traveling In Europe met Reginald Broil, a young gentleman of some fortune and much leis ure. Mrs. Grout and Brail becams en gaged with your consent. "It was agreed that he should join you In this very month, when the inarrlag would take place. Meanwhile he turned , over to you his fortune of I100.0W for In vestment at your discretion." "Reserving sufficient for his care and comfort during the year while he continued his art studies abroad," Interposed Mr. Allls "Precisely. A week ago you received word that Brail would arrive on the Prln tanla, which was due yesterday. At your daughter's solicitation you sold out his se curities and brought, the cash proceeds, amounting to tluO.OOO a neat profit that, Allls to your country seat at Byredalo " "Ha is a dilettante sort of a chap," ex plained Allls apologetically, "Ignorant cf business, and It was Emily who persuaded Mm to entrust his affairs to ma Naturally she was anxious to give him a pleasant surprise In the most striking way. "Of course It was lax on my part, but you know, Judge. Rmlly's misf. rtunes 1m posed a sacred duty on me to Indulge her vlii every way. It has been such a comfort ) for me feel that a bright future Is dawn ing for her and that the past Is burled aa deep "As that good for nothing rascal Jack Grout, her late husband, hey?" suggested the Judge. "It was very natural, at all events. Your house Is wired, your library safe. Impregnable. If you hadn't been so careless. Allis " "But It was a secret between Endly and ms "And consequently you felt that evil doers couldn't be tempted by what they didn't know. Nevertheless, you shouldn't hava left tha library even tor a moment a you did this morning, tha aafa unlocked, tha windows open " "It waa only for a moment there was nobody around 1 trust our servants like members of the family." There must hava been somebody around, alnoe tha package waa taken." 1 UU ! Eiuily wm there reading all presented Itself. The shotgun was usej l pick up anything In the line of bait, such as rabbits (varying hsres), muskrats or squirrels, as well as blark ducks ant part ridges (ruffed grouse) for our birder, or even a stray mink or otter, for the Nov Scotia trappers assert that shot holes do not lessen the value of the pelt. The In dians use BB shot Indiscriminately on any thing larger than grouse, as they want to kill when they hit. It Is the same with rllle, b!g calibers being the favorites. Wln fhester .45-70, .403 or .35. , Traps and Halt. The old fashioned backwoods trappei, with which species we mostly have to do In the Maritime Provinces, Is generally not very well off In regard to steel traps. In the first place they are rather expensive and much' heavier than the dead falls, which are made on the spot with hatchet and kn !.'(. Nevertheless It Is recognized that the steel trap does Its work mure surely than the dead fall. In the provinces there Is one bull that Is favurite over all other, the flesh of the muskrat, and for this reason we had done, preliminary trapping and our haversack were well filled with the strong smelling ment, as we had taken tho trouble to rup ture the scent bags. Tou could have smelleif us a mile at the very least. Hut that was not nil. I was determined to take every chance offered by science and was therefore provided with vials of several varieties of scent, each guaranteed Irresistible to nil furry folk. If unspeak able fetidness had anything to do with li I have no doubt they Were, though trappers differ widely In their views as to the ef ficacy of scents, many eschewing them en tirely. My experience goes to Indicate that they are not necessary If the bait Is of the right kind, but are good to smear over poor bait.. In any case scent can do no harm, and may help when rubbed on the traper's moccasins, thus making a trail from trap to trap. For Mink. On our way down the lakes a couple of dozen traps of different kinds were set. The first were for mink and was placed at the foot of a large spruce within a yard of the shore of a narrow run between two lakes. . Using the tree for a back, a pen eight Inches wide was made by thrusting pointed sticks about a foot long into the ground and covering the top with sheets of spruce bark and sticks. At the Inner end of this pen the bait, usually a piece of muskrat flesh, a trout or sucker or a bird's head, well seasoned with dope. Is placed, im paled upon a sharp stick. A steel trap Is then laid at the entrance of the pen, so that the mink must step on the pan In going Inside for the bait. The trap and chain are carefully but very lightly covered with chaff, dry moss, little sticks, pine needles, etc., and the chain ring fastened to a b'ush or the pin driven Into a tree. During this operation the trapper moves about as little as possible, wears gloves, in order not to leave human scent on the trap, and covers his footprints with moss and chaff. A few drops of dope are then sprinkled about the scene and the deadly steel left to do Its cruel work. Snares far Wildcat and Otter. Next we came to a big log that con nected the mainland with an Island. In the middle of the log was a dead branch sticking up, and from this a noose of twisted brass wires, eight Inches in diame ter, was so suspended that a passing wild catfor this snare was meant for kitty would be sure to stick his head through It with dire consequences to himself. A few rods further on Uncle Ned brought the canoe to the bank, up which a kind of path seemed to lead, vague but yet dis tinct. We disembarked and followed this path, which led across a little landsplt into the lake beyond. "Get out two otter traps," said Uncle Ned, proceeding to cut and trim two stout poles about ten feet long and three or four inches thick at the big ends. , The ring of a trap chain was then passed over one of these big ends, which was split and wedged so that the ring could tha time. Who would dream that a thief could be so deft and noiseless as to sneak In and out without attracting her notice? "When I discovered the loss I thought she would die. She la subject to heart failure, you know. "And so, to quiet her, I promised to bring home tonight a like amount, so that Brail would never even know of the occurrence. Luckily his ship has been delayed by storms." "Tou should have sounded an Instant alarm." I didn't dare, judge," again groaned Al lls. "Talk about the devil and the deep sea why, that would be an Elysium for me. "My financing of the Ruthven Branch ralrroad is Just on the edge; one evil rumor would send It Into the pit. Let such a loss be known, and goodby to the whole output. "The world thinks I am a multimillionaire and yet I can no more raise that sum to day than I can fly to the moon. If I don't and Brail finds Emily In hysterics, he will suspect something wrong sure. "And worse than all, the thief, whoever ha is, la getting off scot free, meanwhile, with his vitally Important money. Don't you see. Judge, it Is Its absence and not Its amount that Is agitating me. I am per fectly sound,' if I can only have a chance to turn myself." "That is the point," said a somewhat stolid looking, mlddleaged man, who had been sitting In the recess. "By replacing the money you remove sorrow from your home and risk from your office. "More than this; It may well be that the way to catch the thief Is to subject him again to the same temptation. Noi wlthsandlng your faith In your servants, Mr. Allls, this theft has all the murks of an Inside Job. "If so, the thief may have heard your promise to your daughter. Greed is uevr satisfied; Immunity la tha mother of rash ness. Ha will try again." "Then you advise my client to fly to the moon, do you Cronkite?" "Not at all. Judge." answered the detec tive. "That stuff I. recovered from the Allscllffe gang Is still available. We'll bundle up $150,000 of It for Mr. Allis. "That will satisfy Mrs. Grout, and dor rumor's mouth. It will be two daa or more, according to my reckoning, be fore the Prlntanta limps Into port. If Mr. Allls will accept ms aa his guest for that period I think I caa gat back the moatf tor him," i fit ill Ml : JNK w I .Ml i 'iBfe it iiliftttepi ilfe. - " -"'' PWiia not be pulled off. The pole was thrust lightly Into the ground out of sight and the trnp set directly In the other path, well concealed. At the other end of tha path the other trap and pole were placed. These paths, which are habitually used by otters on their Journeys from point to point, are always loosely called slides, but the real slide is a path running down a declivity and is actually used by the otters to slide down, probably In play, as they haA'e been observed to repeat the slide time after time with no other apparent purpose. No bait is used with otter traps. Next was observed on the bank a large hollow log and well Inside of this a mink trap was set, as Uncle Ned ' said a mink never missed passing through It If he came that way. At each end of the log a foot Inside a small piece of bait was left. The Deadfall. The next morning after arriving at the home camp we took the tent and canoe across the carry to Frog lake, In the vicin ity of which we set some fifty traps of dif ferent kinds. . Among them were a dozen deadfalls, the original trap of the wilder ness, and a few nail and hole traps for the benVftt of mink. The deadfall as used for small animals consists of a pen, at the entrance to which two stout poles are laid at right angles, but parallel to each other and one on top of the other, being held in this position by a pair of stakes at each side of the en trance. The lower pole is fixed, while the upper one can move up and down between v.- j I. .v, ,1 IUO Dmnt;Oi ttnu is unit ui l in: nau . . ....... ..... This upper log Is held in position, about seven or eight inches above tho other, for mink, by a vertical prop, slender but strong. This Is wedged between the upper pole and the lower, but at this latter point a spindle, flattened slightly at the butt end, Is interposed in such a manner that, though the upper polo is held securely enough if not tampered with, the slightest Jarring of the spindle will work It loose, When Mr. Allls. with his guest, alighted at the little suburban station that night, a tall and elegant young woman, whose handsome face wns feverishly lighted, sprang forward with hands extended. "Oh, papa " she began. "This Is my friend. Mr. Rufus Blount, Emily, the chief engineer of the lluthven system, of whom you have heard me speak," said Mr. Allls, somewhat reprov ingly. "He Is going to be so good as to put up with us for a few days." "Oh, papa, did you bring It; have you got It?" Mrs. Grout ran on, unheeding, save for the shortest of nods. "Of course, I did; you're the same Im patient, Impulsive child, Emily, that you were twenty " "Tut, tut, you mustn't mention ages, or you will make yourself an old, old man, papa. Instead of the dearest of dears. And he is a dear, isn't ho, Mr. Blount? always doing the most wonderful of things as if they were tha merest trifles." "All things are trifles to limitless wealth, you must remember, Mrs. Grout," re marked the heavy Mr. Blount. Whereupon the lady looked upon him with more favor, as If, iierhaps, something of the complete relief her face and manner be trayed was due to his words. A complete relief, indeed. With the cast ing aside of the mask of anxiety there ap peared the sparkle of a sweet and simple nature, loving pleasure, yet loving It as Innocently, as Intuitively, as the birds love the air; loving It as her habitat, her heri tage, her kingdom. And yet the shadows are never remote from the sunshine. With the deadly desire of the dull to be entertaining, Mr. Blount began to prose along about a curious Enoch Arden case which had lately come to light In hla neighborhood the return of a hus band long believed to be dead and the dis tress arising from the premature marriage of his reputed widow. Suddenly he stopped short and made some Irrelevant reference to the weather, for the lady by his side was haggard and pale; while her father opposite was looking out of the carriage window aa if selecting a soft spot on which to jump. "That was a fool yarn of yours. Cronkite, I must say," snapped Mr. Allis when ha and his guest were alone In the library. "Didn't the Judge tell you that my late un lamented, confounded son-in-law, Jack Grout, was lost at sea?" There must have been a mental reserva tion behind tha detective's embarrassed plea of Ignorance, for this had bten one X the pertinent facta with which Judge a Trapper in the with the result that the prop i. knoch., Wi A F . out and the upper pole falls on the back Iff MfW PW" W ilflHWlllii of the game. WW'?1 T&l li " i J W A J W-LW i K j lUl'f kW'IlW The spindle extends Into the pen about MWOT six or eight Inches and the bait is fixed to ! ft Kt tRifji W'i il f J tHWiitXvlJA WUHW ilWj-O V IATi the Inside end, so that the victim must put Its head and part of Its body between the poles In order to get at it. The upper pole is then weighted heavily with rocks or logs and the trap is finished, The deadfall is an excellent trap and has tho very great merit of being humane. In that It kills practically instantly. There Is no limit to the varieties of triggers used In deadfalls. A Cruel Plan. I well remember the first tran I vlsltod near Frog lake, two or three days after setting. It wns a steel trap set In a pen, and ns the canoe neared. the shore I saw at once, by the manner In which the ground was torn up, that there was something doing. The chain was stretched out to its fullest limit and In the trap Itself, still faintly struggling, was a small-sized mink. It had evidently been caught sori after the trap was set and was dying a slow and cruel death. I rapped It on the head, threw It Into the canoe and reset the trap, but my natural feeling of elation at having bagged the first fur of the trip was very seriously alloyed by the cruelty of the game. Uncle Ned had once told me that at first he never set a steel trap without fastening It either to a twitchup or, better, to a long, slender t.lo hr,c Inln V h,mn nf the ilnnni , " ' w " ' -' " . . . . . - - - - - i i or lake, so that, when caught, the animal, taking refuge Invariably in the water, will Immediately be drowned. Familiarity breeds Contempt and also cal lousness to the feelings nf animals, and few trappers stop to consider them. It Is a remarkable fact, and one not calculated to Increase our respect for the hearts of man kind, that In not a single book on trapping that I can rccull, and I own a great many of the best known, is the cruelty of steel Marcellus had coached him for the part of Mr. Blount. Cronkite wished, however, that the judge had been more comprehensive In his In formation when presently dinner was served. There he met Mr. Allls' niece. Pauline Frame, oa personality so slight and a disposition so retiring that It was no wonder the Judge had sllsthted her. Nevertheless It wns through little things that the detective formed his deductions, and now a number of them warned him that he had to deal with a complex charac ter. Miss Frame had undoubtedly ' adapted herself thoroughly to a dependent position. She exercised a supervision over the meal, as nuiet as It was effective. The very rervants hud a way of looking over their shoulders, as If In fear of her espionage and no wonder. In the midst of a conversation she would fade from the table, glide here and there nnd be back again taking part In it before one was conscious that Its thread had been in terrupted. She had a dependent's adaptability, too. Whatever her uncle thought she thought. Her cousin's hopes and feurs, anticipa tions and dreads, were her own. Phe was nble to anticipate them, and thus direct when she seemed to lead. Over all her words and actions there was the gloss of amiability, unvarying in sheen and substance. Yet sometimes in tha dull shallowness of her gaze and In the precise platitudes of her l!ps there came a gleam, a tinge, like the whisk of an Imp. indicating possible bitterness within. Has she a dependent's vices ns well ns virtues? Cronkite nsked himself, uneasily conscious that his study of her lacked the assurance which had marked his study of Mrs. Grout, and that therefore his de ductions regarding the latter must yield simewhat. to his doubts of the former. This consciousness, VEgue during Its growth, became a conviction when the un expected happened. The talk had floated sluggishly from young Brail's artistic toste to paintings In general, then to portraits, then to photographs, thence to daguerreo types, and the rather crude devices )n likenesses which had prevailed In earlier days; yet when Cronkite recalled It all. In bitter reflection afterward, he could dls. cern the pulsation of a word now and again breathed rather than uttered by the demure Pauline. Was It she who had sniffed Incredulously when Mr. Allis de. clared that no modern miniatures equalled those made when he was a young man? "Wall a moment, Blount." the broker cried, pushing back his chair, us If to knswer to a challenge, "and I will shjw these young folks a model of beauty yes, and of deportment." "He has gone for the porcelain of poor, dear mamma," explained Mrs. Grout softly. "It hasn't be. n out of the safe since I was a child" "If I m'Rht also be excused for a mo ment," said Cronkite, rising fully as hastily. There was something" He was gone, even aa he spoke; and yet too late. On hurrying to the library, there mm f i f ry fir niir m n f I m t mr. j irv.. tv .1 t. .... i n 1 l-'itib: 7t m i'i wmmmm V 111 - A f J itt.v ,11 , 7-. ..'... 1 Aff C, tmns lrbnn itseil Trlthnnt Vi slldlncf COlel. - i ....... .. . - b - v. ...,! even so much as commented on. For myself, I denounce the method as worthy of the savagery of central Africa, and call on the "society with the long name" to take some stops to prevent It. If .we are not to have furs without causing Innocent animals to dlo lingering deaths by torture and starvation, It's high time we got on without them. It is true that the limb caught in the cruel Jaws is soon benumbed, so that the he found Mr. Allls's unconscious form in front of the opened safe. One glance Into the interior showed that the second pack age, placed there but an hour before, was missing. III. No time at Tlrst for bitter reflection. It required all of Cronklte's authority, as guest and friend In the guise of Mr. Blount, to prevent an alarm spreading with all Its consequent Imperilling of Mr. Allis' fortunes. Luckily. Miss Frame expressed the ut most reliance In his Judgment of what the stricken man would have done. Luckily, the physician, as discreet as he was skilled, d-clared that but a few hours rest would suffice for Mr. Allls' recovery from a blow benumbing but not dangerous. Luckily, too. this physician had at once sequestrated Mrs. Grout, prostrated and hysterical. In her cousin s charge, ad ministering sedatives which he said would have thtlr full effect by midnight. And so the servants, falthfulln their fright, promised to keep the matter secret, and quiet, if not tranquillity, brooded over the house. In the guest chamber Cronkite reflected the better for his chagrin. It had seemed to him on hearing Mr. Allls' story to the judge that Mrs. Grout must be the thief. When tho Judge had afterward told him how Jack Grout had incontinently fled on a vessel never reported and officially declared lost he had reasoned thut this dreaded husband might have returned to life and forced his wife to steal for him as the price of his remaining dead to the world. And the effect of his Enoch Arden tale had dsns murh to strengthen his faith in this working- plan. Did he believe In it now? Only In sundry details, not In the deduction from them, for that Mrs. Grout's character, aa he read It, contravened. She was not the sort of woman to rob the father she loved for the husband she loathed. She was not the sort of woman to dream even of marrying again, no mat ter how complete the Immunity, while that husband waa alive. No, no, he had been led astray by the commonest of errors In detecting, that of suiting facts to the the ory Instead of the theory to the facta. But yet his Enoch Arden shaft had struck the mark. Mrs. Grout had winced; there had been more to her agitation than the disagreeable association of ideas. She had been grlefstrlcken by the first loss, she was despalrstrlcken by this sec ond. What did such symptoms of an un derlying agony Indicate? Thla much, perhaps. She might hava had reason from a sound or a glimpse to auapect vaguely rather than to fear really that Jack Grout hud returned. Her griet at the first theft, natural enough consid ering her affection for Brail, would then have been Intensified by the possibility that Gnut bad committed It. In the Joy of having the money replaced by her father and the whole Incident treated as trifling, one cf her buoyant disposition would be apt to put aside the supposition Great North Woods animal even occasionally (rtiaws It off be low the steel, but the nuns In tlio boly must be terrible and the starvation remains to be ai-oliKtcd for. It Is the les to be cotHloncd. as the sliding pi!e may be useil In most cas, and the dejulfall can be chosen In place of the steel trap. Nell and Hole Trap Worse. Almost wvrse Is the nnll and hole trap doriloed and rt commended with' unctl-n In many books of some renown. Tills trnp consists of a hole bored In the trunk of a tree, a log or a block of wood, and three or four sharpened nails, which are hammerod uV-wnvviird and diagonally Into the wood so that the i.ints will protrude for half an Inch. A plere of ba:t Is placed In tho bot tom of the hole. When the mink endeavors to get the bnlt he pushes his head st the null with case, but upon trying to withdraw it t!n cruol points hold hint fast and lie dies m'serably with the nails alternately plcrclnir his neck, and with his nose In the bait ho coveted. How anybody with the slightest prelensh ns to siortmanshlp can condone such a method Is a mystery. I icjolco to say that when I ventured to suggest this to good old Uncle Ned. he looked at me a moment nnd then gave mo a hrruiy slap on the buck. "Hy pirry, youngster, you're Just as rllit as you can be. I used to feel exactly that way, and I'll be darned If I don't yet! A fellow (rets Into the hnblt of doln' these cruel things, and I'm obliged to you for stirring up my callous conscience Wo won't set any more steel traps unless t I'll' - H.." ' Can USB a Slldln' pole. . , . n , , , We took a few god mink at first, but then our cruelty Kceined to give us bad luck, for all the other birds and beasts of tho forest seemed to league together to persecute us. There was one trap that contained the feathers of bluejays and mooso birds (Canada Jays) for throe days In succession, the birds having helped themselves to the bnlt and got caught, and then being devoured by tho mink, that probably would have laughed in their as unreal. But the second theft, linked with a brutality almost tragic, must have come as a confirmation, Irreparable and changeless. Who then was the thief? Grout, In the second Instance? It was the work of a man acquainted with the house, the family life, the family secrets. He knew that the money had been replaced; he knew that Allls would come during the dinner to open the safe; because the woman, who was hla accom plice, had told him. It was at this juncture In his reflections that Cronkite, recalling that Miss France would be free to relinquish her watch over her cousin at midnight without "its being thought strange by the nurse and servants also in attendance, put out his light, drew his shades and opened his window so as to give the appearance thut he had retired, and then resumed his cogitations. The woman who was his accomplice? Yes. Pauline Frame: no one else. Who else could have called Mr. Allls out from the library In the first case but the one who had sent him In there by trick and device In the second? Who else could have crept to the safe In the first case so noiselessly as rot to attract the attention of her reading cousin but the one whose shadowy glide was the most usual Incident of the household? Cronklte's senses must have been un usually acute; for he suddenly sprang In tent to the door. Yes. there was that same shadowy sweep, dnscendlng the stairs from the sick room, passing by his door no, stopping there to listen and then proceed ing, somewhat more confidently, as If re assured. Like another shade, Cronkite was out and down the back stairs. In the base ment hall, by the rear door, he confronted a woman, dressed for travel, her left arm hugging a package to her flattened bosom. It was Pauline Frame. IV. "Why didn't you hold her?" asked Mr. Allls. the next afternoon, as with bandaged head, but yet not very much the worse for hard usage, he talked with his guest, the slolld Mr. Blount. Cronkite laughed despite hla plastered cheek. "I told you that she whipped out a knife and flew at me like a wildcat," he an swered. "Yes, but a man like you wouldn't mind such a prick as that. Besides, you took the package of money from her." "Yes. the first package of money, which she had been walttrg her opportunity to remove from the house. That was all I wanted to recoup your loss. As for her. I thought It more satisfactory to have ber arrested in Jack Grout's company." "Hush!" warned Allls hastily; yet too late. For even with the sound the door opened and Emily Grout came wearily in, as If from the Inquisition. ' Is it really ao?" she inked In a mono tone that waa ita own answer. "Oh, papa, think what agonlea of suspenae, hopes, fears, dreads and rebellious denials cf the sleeves If they had any. Then the ry.!!r''et wnn t.i spr n th traps, and twice wildcats tore our dcadfnra to pieces. Three wildcat snares ili? ap peared from one place, but the next day I'ncle Ned made one especially strong and set It In the same runway. Next morning as we approached the place we began to hoar yells fur nway, which Increased In violence as we got near. This seemed odd. as the noose generally gets ths cat around the neck. When we came within sight there wns A most tremendous int with tho nrose arounl Its body, rplttlng like fury nnd clutching and tenting at the wire In desperation. How It got Into such a predicament ve could not tell, but probably by getting 11 paw In. side the noose when first caught around the neck. When it saw us lis back went up a foot and It let out n yell. Then It Jumped for a neighboring tree, but was Jerked back by tho wire in midair and came to the ground with ft thud. Heforo It could re cover I put n Charge of HH shot Into Its head and It straightened out. It was a beauty, measuring three and a . half feet from nose to tall, a fine example of the Lynx gigns, only found In the Maritime provinces. Peld Storm In the Wood. I remember one trip up the Oull I .alt branch ns a chapter of accidents. It wl qulto a warm day when we started out, with not a breath of air stirring. A light m'.st lay over the placid waters and the sun promised soon to break through. Wo therefore left our extra tarpaulin, used for a shelter tent In case of getting caught !n a storm, at home, and prepared for n.', easy time. nut hardly had we landed A' the end of the first carry whpn an ur.frralded but violent storm of sleet arid bull blew up that coated everything wtlo Ico. 1 and the canoe nnd I shall never forget that carry ns long as I live. Part of It was over an untlmbered hill, whli'h wns oh slippery as greased glass, and the wind did Its very best to put both me ard the cano" flat on tho ground. How I yearned. In my smooth moccasins, for a good pair of hobnailed shoes. Arriving at the other side of the carry we were both coated with freezing glass, and had to stamp on our mittens to render them flexible. In that condition we reset a dozen steel traps and deadfalls, hut only after sore trials, for our fingers wero stiff and almost senseless. Neither of us lot out a word of complaint, but at lost, as a No. H sprung on me for the fifth time, I rtppod out tin expletive of such lurid character that the very lco might have been melted with It. This was too much for the old man, who let out a p;u flaw that nearly drowned the shrieking wind. "Great fun trappln", eh?" ho said. "Well, never mind, tho worst Is yet to como for sur?, 'cause this wind Is goln' to bo quite able bodied nlong In the afternoon and we ain't goln' to got home tonight, that's sure!" I replied that It didn't matter much, ns I didn't expect to llvo so long as that any how, and then asked about plans for ,th night. The upshot of It was that after looli'ng after a few more traps In the vi cinity, but without trying to cross the next lake on account of the high sea, we started down a side stream for a small pond whera Uncle Ned knew of a dilapidated lumber men's cabin. The water was high and the galo directly In our faces as we started to run tho short but dangerous rapid, and luck wasn't with us at all. In trying to force the bow off a sharp rock my paddle got between two boulders and I was forced to let It go In order not to be left with the bare handla In my hands. This caused a careen of tha canoe, we struck another rock and were literally thrown up onto a flat reef on our side so that part of the duffel, Including a dozen traps, was cast Into the stream. Angry clean through, I Jumped Into tha shallow part of the river and had the luck to retrieve the blankets, which, however, were soaked. The traps we found a week later. I will spare the reader a description of our sojourn In that leaky shuck with wet blankets and clothes. It is not all of trap ping to trapl evidences of my aenses I must hava en dured now to find relief in such a cer tainty! "It was a week ago, while walking in the garden, thinking, dreaming of Reg inald, coming nearer and nearer with every brave pulsation of the great ship through the ocean, I caught a glimpse, the merest glimpse of a man, hiding among the trees. In an Instant he wiu gone, ,nnd yet that Instant was longer, more horrible, than the years of torture I endured with him. "You must aee Reginald when he arrives, papa, and tell him all. I am glad at least that his fortune hasn't also been taken from him." She turned to go, apathetic; then, as fol lowing a smart rap, a soldierly looking man entered the room and stood at baJute she hesitatingly took a seat at one side. "Ah, Magdon, is that you?" said Cronkite. "I thought it was about your apt time t appear on the scene. Mr. Allis, thla la Capt. Magdon won his bars as a volunteer in the civil war. Since Its close he has been employed In the treasury secret ser vice." "With counterfeiters aa a specialty, air," said the captain. "Well, I fancy some of those well exe cuted thousands of the Allscllffe gang have come to the surface again," continued Cronkite. "Yes," replied Magdon. "Blnce I got that tip from you yesterday I have been watcbe Ing sharp. m "Thla morning one of tho downtow banks telephoned that they had Just broken one of them for a likely looking chap, so likely looking that they didn't suspect until ho was gone. However, I had no troub'.e In trailing him. "You never saw such a front when I ac cused him of passing the queer. You'd say he was fully as surprised aa the bank teller had been. "By the way. Allls, there was a young woman with this man Grout that's his name, so his papers showed, Jack Grout there was a young woman who said she was a connection of yours. There Is no charge against her, but she waa In such, pitiable shape I left her In the matron's charge. "I will see that she Is cared for, now and always," eatd the broker, much affected. "And Grout, what of him?" "He's dead: didn't I say? Made a break to escape and I had to shoot I never have to twice" There waa a low, horrified moan and) Emily Grout tottered tow-ard the door. She would have fallen aa she passed out like one spent from a burden's weight had not a young man, eomewhat travel worn, caught her In his arma. She looked In quiringly, doubtlngly at hltn and the bur den fell from her. "Reginald, my Reg inald!" she murmured. Unes to a Polat. Poverty haa taken many a hard fall out of ambition. An easy mark by any other name would be just as foolish. Women learn more aa they grow olderj it's different with men.