ha M'GRATH'S TRAP SYNOPSIS. —Lee Anderson, Roy- al Canadian Mounted Police ser- geant, Is sent to Stony Range to arrest a man named Pelly for murder. He is also instructed to look after Jim Rathway, reputed head of the "Free Traders,” illicit liguor runners. At Little Falls he finds Pelly is credited with having found a gold mine, and is missing. At the hotel appears a girl, obviously out of place In the rough surroundings. A half- breed, Plerre, and a companion, “Shorty,” annoy the girl An- derson interferes in her behalf. The girl sets out for Siston Lake, which is also Anderson's objec- tive. He overtakes her and the two men with whom he had trou- ble the night before. She is sus- plcious of him and the two men are hostile, Plerre and Shorty ride on, Anderson and the girl following. In the hills the road is blown up before and behind the Lwo. Anderson, with his horse, is hurled down the moun- taln side, senseless. Recovering consciousness, Anderson finds the xirl has disappeared, but he concludes she is alive and prob- ably in the power of Plerre and Shorty. On foot he makes his way to Siston Lake. There he finds his companion of the day before, and Rathway, with a girl, Estelle, a former sweetheart of Anderson's, who had abused his confidence and almost wrecked his life. Rathway strikes Estelle, and after a fight Anderson, with Estelle’'s help, escapes with the girl Anderson's companion’s mind is clouded and she ix suf- fering with a dislocated kneas Anderson sets the knee and makes the girl as comfortable as possible. He has a broken rib. The two plan to make their way to a Moravian mission, of which Father McGrath has charge Their acquaintance ripens Into love, The girl remembers that her is Joyce Pelly She is daughter of the man Anderson has been sent to arrest Torn between her love for her father and her regard for Anderson, the girl practically drives hi b the forest name her In stumbles upon the entrance gorge and is convinced he located Pelly's mine. In the nel he is attacked by an adversary, whom he takes Pelly. A knife thrust by the girl's hair In Escaping, he cabin, to find Joyce gone. He llows her trall to the mi Father McGrath The but Joy and welcom has been In Lee visits finding there yman, marked and the skeleton hing a revolve the letters has tun- unseen be is turned his to to aside louse returns ) of repulses him, return remory restored again, grave of a w lena Pelly.” a man clute which wove Her n ure mine are { doubt Jo Anderson breaks tl father's death to Jo McGrath agrees to ouple rout CHAPTER XII—Continued see Oe sun rose high, It descend, It Lee was nearing sapling. He would hat was passed, and then each of each incredible labor. His of bruised flesh. He was conscious what doing must reach the second sap The ning was to ceased to xq Core - ©. wR + i now step hands he was He passed it. A scended over his the declining day staggering ‘round for other For forty feet there were footholds in- in the lower part of cliffs: above them the hard surface bulged Inward. handhold for an ape. gered from one end the other, ‘round 'ronnd-—an in a He dropped upon the ground utterly worn out, utterly hopeless. A respite, and then he would arise, struggle again, a short sleep— He had ind sort of film de consciousness, he the CUTER, himself seeking saw gorge, some numerable Fryer SIO8- And he of the gorge and ‘round ape cage— Respite? slept, that him pate in time—just in time to aatici that shadow stealing down the toward him. A missbapen, gross thing that leaped forward, snarl: ing, and then leaped back as Lee struck at it. Lee was alert on the Instant. In that thing alone lay his chance of es- And, as it vanished into the ghadows, Lee went blundering after it in darkness, finding it, losing it. He saw it in every moon-shadow among the rocks. He heard it jeering at him. Then stones began to fiy. One grazed his cheek, one struck him in the chest, Now the thing was in front of him, and when he rushed, it was not there, and a shower of stones from an unexpected quarter cut his lip and chin. Thus tortured, maddened, Lee was baited till the second dawn filtered into the gorge. There was no respite, All the while Lee struggled against the bonds of sleep. He would rest, his eyes closing for an Instant—it was upon him again, a stone would hurtie past him; another rush would follow, and again the thiag was gone in the dark. Down-—daylight-sunlight. Crouched behind a ridge or rock above him, Lee saw the misshapen figure with the massive shoulders and the long, furred arms. And, yielding to the elemental rage that was in him, Lee whipped out his an omatic and fired two bullets. They dhivped fragments of stone from be. Bice the face, which continued to Watch him unmoved. That face, i)- ‘wmined by the sunlight In the gorge, appeared so human, so Intelligent, so mich at variance with the misshapen gorge cape, the By (Copyright by W. GQ. Chapman.) WNU Bervice, Lee was shocked at the that of It. It was only a A gorilla, all such an human man—hut but the face. Lee had already pulled the trigger a third time, but there was no third shot, Then he remembered that he had had only two cartridges remaining. He sprang and a stone struck him in the chest and hurled him backward, Like two baboons they bombarded each other with stones; but at last, as a fortunate shot sent the other staggering, Lee managed to close with him. The face, brulsed and battered from the encounter In the tunnel, looked impassively into his. Lee struck, and quickly discovered that he had not strength enough left to administer a knockout blow : while at'close quarters he was decidedly at a disadvantage. On the other hand his opponent was equally unable to overcome him, for he could not stand up against Lee's fists at short range long enough to allow him time to get the gripping power of those shoulders Into action, At last, bleeding and bruised, they the gorge. ook stock lke of the an Indian, The other, but lee f time, “What is It that vou want? The pected answer—[Lee that was in a tone singularly had hardly ex- would be an an soft, in. there SWer ance of that grossa body, “You find the never find the way out, and I fight yon and I you When you fight 1 fight, and when stop I stop, and so we walt until you sleep. And then ‘le grand mort’ come.” This devilish conception made Lee's in. But you You fight me 3 way sit down here beside 0 you For even now his eye irooping, cunnin ’ streagth to lids were drooping with find teeth ther watched He or id rena eyes tried t and nails {f his and weakened But other, t passgl In his mind, ready for him, Lee shot an arrow at a venture, boeuf!" The learn him the reading “Lo he sald softly. other started “Ich, my name? That makes no dif n ference “Why do you weuf? Is it wish kill me, Le here to ‘Listen, then, $1 ad he died that no one shall take erefore, since the the gold away. TI found the never “Suppose | am a “No, no friend. the gold. You ter, who is dead, away. have way into ft." friend 7" You |Ha mye you to take till Al, must not be buried never have his goid.” “Listen, Lebhoeuf! other—" ON ms —————————————————_ A SAD AAI w—o—— Next moment a cry broke from Le- boeuf’'s lips. He was fingering the colls of Joyce's halr, He knew them, perhaps by the faint odor of her that clung to them. He fell upon his knees, “Monsieur, it is hers{ Forgive! Forgive! I am an old fool! So among my people the | maidens give thelr halr as tokens of love! Ah, Monsleur, Monsikur—see, I will show you the entrance, and you shall take the gold for her. So my master spoke in a dream—but I did not know youl” And, darting from Lee's side, he serambled straight up the face of the cliff between the saplings. He dragged away a stone, fitting so closely into the tunnel’'s mouth that Lee had never guessed it had been placed there, disappeared within the tunnel. Lee staggered to the cliff beneath in a moment was fast asleep upon the bottom of the gorge. CHAPTER XIII And on the Day After Tomorrow he awoke, refreshed and restored, cept for his bruised and hands, the sun was in the same part of the sky as when he had gone to sleep, 1 For a few | that grotesque ox moments the struggle memory seemed Then, bit by bit, It began to a part of memory's records. But It not until, saw entrance to | plainly in the cliff that he realized the I \ whole epis had not heen a disordered was look the visible tunnel overh { he the E 1 yf his frantic, futile struggles, And then vince himself until he had te Pelly's ton and that It there, the the beglde even I#¢ could gone skel was really and initials on stood butt of the re the | at | volver, grave, and painfully, for his hands “hen, very were skinned and raw, Lee clambered ——————— mee of the children, who siared at large, black eyes, “It is strange, the house” the mine being so near sald, "You know Mother and 1 were never quite con vinced that there was a mine, We were never quite sure that my father hadn't a delusion on that subject, and that Leboeuf, who was devoted to him, wasn't humoring him “Old Leboedf must have heen living there for n long time, He grudge against Rathway, you He would have killed him once, If my father hadn't intervenéd.” She reverted to her father's death, and Lee was reluctantly compelled to give her the particulars, Joyce had some know, fallen any have “At over he sald, his the cliff,” rate, death was suffer.” It was covery of his grave when he spoke of dis- her - mother's “She was {ll such a long time,” she snld, “She was paralyzed, and there wns nothing that could done her. When she died my father carried her body away into the forest by night. They would never had buried, be me where she been the house, always hoping to discover I suppose that was a part her to be near him where he wns working.” It was after dinner that Lee opened know what 1 “Will you with me “Dear, 1 Hue vou want sald let south ask.” before the Father start? vol And snows? you let McGrath hefore we spend house, just ogether it I awakened in the forest Or have you idden somet it would make no difference, not hear her in the house, telling you, { Go!" No, you shall never take hier gold” Lee He strove sheer weariness, in his mind, desisted from desperately thia madman--but his and suddenly, with a convince eyelids closed, could his throat. Lee shook himself free, He sprang put forth. Lea's fists beat against the bruised face, drawing. fresh. blood. Leboeuaf released him, but springing to a dis tance, began hurling stones at him, cursing him, Then he sat down and waited, Lee must stay awake till nightfall. He would find some way out of the gorge. He would cut footsteps in the granite with a stone—wild and impos sible thoughts ran through his mind He strode to and fro beside the river bank. Some little distance away Leboeuf sat watching him. Lee's. hatred for that bruised, Impassive face was ele- mental. He flung a stone. The aim was true; It ent Leboeuf's lip open Blood began to drip, but Leboeuf never stirred. Lee sat down. He must conserve He had slept for a moment, and Leboeuf was creeping toward him. The sun blazed over the edge of the gorge. Leboeuf squatted down nearer Lee, watching him as a vulture might watch a dying animal A moment later Leboeuf was almost at his side, yet he was not conschus of his having moved, or of having closed his eyes. He got tp wear ily, picked up a stone, and flung it into Leboeuf's face, gashing his cheek. Leboeuf never moved, Lee looked about him for a larger stone, He was lying upon his back, and Le- boeuf was kneeling on him gripping his throat, He tried to struggle. The wiry fingers ripped the tatters of his shirt away. And There in the Entrance Joyce Was Standing, Watching Them-—and Him, Approaching. the tunnel ever want agaln, He had suspected all the while that the mine was a myth, and even now he was not convinced that there was gold in it. 3ut joy was in his heart, joy over. flowing, for all his troubles were at an.end. He was going to Joyce, to make her his wife, to take her away. And his heart thumped at the antic ipation of that Incredible dream, and he trod the trill toward the log house like a boy. He broke his long fast with a moderate meal and started for the mission. As he went up the ascenit a mob of half-breed and In Man children came pouring out of the gchoothonse, And there in the en- trance Joyce was standing, watching them-—and him, approaching. She looked up at him gravely as he drew near, and she knew at once from the look on his face enough to make the breaking of the news less of a shock to her. But the tears rolled down her cheeks as he told her of her father's death, “Joyce, darling, T can’t help feeling that it's the best thing-—in the end” sald Lee. "At least his sufferings are at an end” “1 think so, i00, Lee,” she answered calmly. “And now I know thet-—some- how=-1 have always known my father was no longer alive, The bond be tween us was very close, though I was away from him so many years” fee told her about the discovery of the mine and his encounter with Le boouf, slurring over the story of the Indian's attack on him. Then Joyce enught sight of his hands, and was all sympathy and disgay, and took him into a hut and bat them and ban. daged them, py Father McGrath had gone to visit an old Indian in the neighborhood, and the two talked a long time, and then ate u simple meal together in the pres to visit Pelly's gold mine J should yee | have a don’t want went on thon her t affair In all but its He said nothing shout his Free Tra told had th the fers, but kidnaped by men and taken to in the absence of the her, was Und how she wen the two tathway's camp, and how had “And you say 1 time? asked Joyce could understand It, could remember. It that part of my memory should come back to me, and not all of it. Who were those and what did they want of me? men? And what did he want?” “I think the explanation is simple, dear,” Lee answered the secret of your father's mine, way be must have learned that were coming back the range. sent his men to Intercept you. rescued mscions all “I wish 1 and 1 wish 1 SACIne 80 strange men fome you He to is why you proposed fo accompany them, and why you didn’t want me.” “Not want you, Lee? Well—J-1 the hotel, and I've been In love with you ever since. There! “But why was I riding In the range?” she resumed. “What was it on my mind eo terrible that there seems a sort of blackness there? 1 felt that you could save me” She shook her head. “No, there's more to it than that, my dear. And—1 don't know--perhaps 1 shall never know” lee slipped hiz arm about her, “Joyce, dear, don't try to think. It doesn't matter. Nothing is going to matter any more. You are no longer the unknown girl, traveling alone through a wilderness, whose disap- pearance would arouse no suspicions, Once you are my wife, Rathway can- not harm you. And then you have Father McGrath behind you, and the church that he represents, and the mis- sionary societies behind that. Rath- way's not fool enough to buck a power ful organization by any crime—his cue Is to lie low and sell ail the liquor he can before we put him out of busi ness, Tell me you'll marry me soon.” “But thé mine, Lee? And poor Le boeuf?" “We'll look into thoce matters dur. ing our little honeymoon. Tell me that it shall be tomorrow.” Joyce hesitated ; and while she hes. tated they heard the tinkle of bells, and Father McGrath appeared in his horse sleigh, coming up the hill, They went to the door. The jolly priest waved his hand and pulled in, “Well, Meestalr Anderson, and so yeo're back again!” he cried heartily, gripping Lee's hand with a fist of fron. "Tis harrd going wi' the horse through the snaw, and I reckon Tl have to tak’ to the dogs mighty soon This Is winter for sure Inst!” He scrutinized the pair keenly, “Ye havna of your queek hie inquired, with an absurd affectation of archness that set thes both laughing. “No; I've that swered, fit made another changes™™ fulfilled Imposed on und with that adventures in the mine, “And Miss Pelly has marry tamorrow,” he the conditions me.” narrated were Lee an nis to ended men promised me daciously, “N-—not tomorrow, Lee” And Father McGrath, listening to Lee's gald Joyce had with heen many who story had a sudden terror that he would re- to perform the ceremony. “The. day after, then, Joyce?” pleaded. Joyce interposed no veto this time, Lee ing adorably confused, “Weel began the father. “Weel, not In favor of such queeckness. the awful consequences of matreemony, the and inevitable Have ye thocht ¢' the horror o sitting doon opposite each ither at the break- fast table mornin’ mornin’ for Have responsibili- consequsners? i : after ye thocht o' the stunning ties of the married state? Lee was beginning to grow alarmed in the » denly Father lently upon t “I'R orthy father's eves MeGrath he back. mon !” he “Tis the one practica And sud smote Lee vio “i Joke that 1 be- the grrand Lord ime I've hummed na to he come to he thinking he's got by shouted. 3 do it, is permeesible tp a meenister, matreemony, ‘Tis the deespensations lieve In est 0 of Our and hawed and when a me to marry them pretended £11 willin young pair's the wurrids desire * her mon, that I'm married them long, marrk to me wi io that, an sh wiina « bey nor sha BW n to do And tominer emper me, as no sure she loves it's 0, Father, my de'il mon's it a hissalf, and the Turk) Jealousy the grrane ‘y VOrra wumman,' f l-agsor he sorrt! And wi’ that nantly in srrm together, iI hope you myself in mind laughing frap tomorrow to step into | MeGrath “Weel 5 or fomorrow, looked we'll Just Y Anderson,” said. "For ye ken, Anderson, a wum man wants a leetle time to picture her bride in her mind's eye bef becomes ‘one. CT he Kitchen Cabinet HAI AK AAAI III TST IA IAIND (@, 1946, Western Newspaper Union. ) : I LAARARKAXR) The intel low pomp and ig threshold high enough to turn deceit aside; The door band sire robbers to This door will open at a touch welcome every friend Heury Dyke enough to keep out A ride; ine ng enough from defend, 10 Van LABOR.SAVING EQUIPMENT It Is not extravagance to purchase #cod household equipment, The house- mother is the most vaiu- of humzn machin. ery and wili wear out if not carefully saved from overwork, Machinery can be replaced, but a mother, never, A good rule to observ: in purchasing labor-sav- ing devices Ig to give preference to those which are often- eet used and most DECESSAry. A cherry-pitter is a great convenience if one puts up many cherries; but it Is used only a short season, while a ment grinder, used nearly every day, is a necessary utensil, . Women who make large quantities of bread find the bread-mixer a neces sity, while the washing machine saves bodily energy and time; it, too, Is a labor-saver, The question of space, as well as the amount of care and expense need- ed to operate them, is a point to con- sider. The price is able net always high for artistic china; the golor and design be good, though cheap. Dishes may “And so they are married and live happily ever afterward” Not at all. With their marriage their troubles begin again. (10 BE CONTINUED.) When the F aay Wauzzies “Crumpled Up the Square” It was ut the battle of Taal in the Sudan. on March 13, 1884, that the Wuzzies “broke the British square.” The tribesmen, utterly reck- less of death, charged an angle of the square in the face of what seemed an annihilating fire, They threw them- selves on the bayonets, and used their spears In the death agony before the bayonets could be withdrawn. They came over the bodies of their own dead, and crawling on hands and knees, under the muzzles of the guns, they gained the inside of the square, and stabbed and slashed until one bri gade gave way In confusion, and ite guns were captured The other bri gades closed In, the guns were re taken, and the Fuzzies were chased far past the scene of this momentary triumph, but they had “crumpled up the square,” and the exploit caught the British imagination and put Fozzy Wuzzy into English literature. The Fuzzies themselves belonged to the Hadendowa tribe and were command ed by Osman Digna, although the lat ter generally kept himself in a place of safety during the fighting, The Fuzzies got their name owing to the peculiar manner in waich they wore their hair. The Biack Watch formed part of the “square,” and fought with the utmost bravery during the whole of the campaiffn agalvst the Mahal, Made Name Immortal In 1807 8. A. Andree stirred the imagination of the world by starting from Spitzbergen for the North pole in a balloon, and, though he perished in the attempt, made the recond of 47 hours’ sustained flight, as proved by the message brought back by » ear rier pigeon, and became the piotieer of polar exploration through the alr light, easy to handle, are best. Alum- not difficult sanitary. the necessity one of the best; A i to keep bright and very in- and three It serve its purpose efficiently. choice of furniture best convenience, mi when it incl Ces the study for her Taste may be ad, but good or t what is best to buy we »" oo =O which the general "sr ivy erg 1ife—things 10, in correspond or We must not im- especially very point equiy king is beauty. ful an 3 be useful beautiful, | dishes and cox utensils, may has little bri housekeeper (who « wise who avoids wa-hrac and carved siture, elal der "ace | step-eaving, cupboards See that the sink and sink, table and a reasonable space hat there aches afte The height that table, too, the at It homes which cannot be i study, observa planning, jean in working DE little n sense in grrangement. Some Sandwiches. shonld not too let the slices lle matching slices. For a sandwich crusts should be removed and the sandwiches may be after they are prepared Cream the butter to soften sp that It will spread better, {then add any Slling desired Egg Sandwiches.—Chop the whites | of hard cooked eggs untill fine. Mix { the yolks with softened butter or with | mayonnaise dressing, add the whites | and spread on the buttered bread Deviled Ham Sandwiches. — Take ane cupful of cold bolled ham chopped fine, rub yolks of two hard rocked eggs until smooth with three teaspoonfuls of melted butter, mix the ham with a teaspoonful of lemon fuice and one-fourth teaspoonful of mustard, season to taste and mix all together, Spread on thin slices of but. tered bread. Cheese Sandwiches.—(Grate cheese fine, mix with cream or melted but- ter, add salt and cayenne, and spread sn buttered bread Water cress and lettuce are both very good in sandwiches; shred both, mix with mayonmise dressing and piace on buttered bread. Scraped mion for flavor may be added. Chopped green peppers and onion nixed with mayonnaise makes another appetizing salad. Sliced tomatoes and cucumbers with a salad dressing are good. Chopped meat, nuts, with season- ings, make good filling. Sweet Sandwiches. Chopped slanched almonds with scraped maple ggar, softened with cream. Marma- nde, jelly or preserves, any of which will spread without running. Cottage cheese and chopped preserved cher ries, Salmon Sandwiches Shred a cup. ful of salmon, add a tablespoonful of chopped] capers, a tablespoonful of shopped sour pickles and four table. spoonfuls of mayonnaise. Cut into shapes and wrap each In waxed paper Bacon and Egg Sandwiches. — Chop pe many hardweooked eggs as will be needml, adding a tablespoonful of mayonnaise for each egg. Spread on suttered bread and top with a thin slice ‘of cooked bacon, Cover with another slice of bread and wrap in paraffin paper, fresh to as cut, the nice the he shaped the