gles! Fureksa ve ©x- out of 256 per rly. MILL. -Weber ; ply, to ad 1 thor- ER, R.D. 1. 1ts! his slip, ey Co., ume and eive in contain. ir Com- | croup, ley Oa- in your ere. ad ‘s daily ’)s sore ess—Dr. ousehold ad Ne — cere CHAPTER IL The Crime at Big Tree Portage. HAVE sometimes wondered wheth- er he was not irked at the pros pect of my proffered companion- ship and whether he did not at first intend to shake me off by obvious and primitive methods. I had my work, and more than my work, cut out. for me in keeping up with November, who, al- though he was carrying a pack while I was unloaded, traveled through the woods at an astonishing pace. / He moved from the thighs, bending a little forward. However thick the un- derbrush and the trees, he never once Halted or even wavered, but passed on- ward with neither check nor pause. Meanwhile, I blundered in his tracks until at last, when we came out on the bank of a strong and swiftly flowing river. I was fairly done and felt that had the journey continued much longer 1 must have | been forced to give in. "November threw down his pack and signed to me to remain beside it, while ,he walked off downstream, only to re- appear with a canoe. The rustle of the water as it hissed against our stem and the wind in the birches and junipers on the banks soon lulled me. I was only awakened by the canoe touching the bank at Big Tree. Big Tree portage is a recognized camping place situated between the great main lumber camp of Briston and Harpur and the settlement of St. Amiel, and it lies about equidistant from both. A small shelter of boughs stood beneath the spreading branches ' of a large fir; the ground all about was = gtrewn with tins and debris. On a bare space in front of the shelter, beside the charred logs of a campfire, a patch of blue caught my eye. This, as my sight grew accustomed to the light, resolved itself Into the shape of a huge man. He lay upon his face, and the wind flut- tered the blue blouse which he was wearing. It came upon me with a shock that I was looking at the body of Henry Lyon, the murdered man. November, standing up in the canoe, a wood picture in his buckskin shirt and jeans, surveyed the scene in si lence, tlten pushed off again and pad- dled up and down, staring at the bank. After a bit he put in and waded ashore. In obedience to a sign I stayed in the canoe, from which -I watched the movements of my companion. First he went to the body and examined it with minute care; next he disappeared within the shelter, came out and stood for a minute staring toward the riv- er; finally he called to me to come ashore. + I Dad seefi Novem tirn fhe body over, and as I came up I was aware of a great ginger bearded face, horri bly pale, confronting the sky. It was easy td feo ‘how the man had died, for the b had torn a hole at the base of the neck. The ground beside him ‘was torn up as if by some small sharp ents. The idea occurred to me that I woul. try my hand at detection. I went inte the shelter. There I found a blanket two freshly flayed bearskins and a -pack, which lay open. I came oul again and carefully examined the ground in all directions. Suddenly looking up, I saw November Joe watching me with a kind of grim and covert amusement. “What are you looking for?” said he “Tuo tracks of the murderer.” “He didn’t make none.” I pointed out the spot where the ground was torn. “The lumberman that found him— spiked boots,” said November. ¥How do you know he was not the murderer?’ “He didn’t get here" till Lyon had been dead for hours. Compare his tracks with Lyon’s—much fresher. No, Mr. Sport, that cock won’t fight. Lyon reached here in the afternoon of the day before yesterday. He'd been visit ing his traps upstream. He hadn’t been here more’'n a few ‘minutes and was lighting his pipe in the shelter there when he hears a voice hail him. He comes out and sees a man in a canoe shoved into the bank. That man shot him dead and cleared off—without leaving a trace.” “How can you be sure of all this?” “Because 1 found a pipe of tobacco not rightly lit, but just charred on top, beside Lyon's body, and a newly used match in t shack. The man that killed '1 1e downstream and sur- . Q “Because, if he’d come upstream Lyon would ’a’ seen him from the shack,” said November with admirable patience, “You say the shot was fired from a canoe?” “The river’s too wide to shoot across, and, anyway, there's the mark of where the canoe rested again the bank. No, this is the work of a right smart woodsman, and he’s not left me one clew as to who he is, But I'm not through with him, mister. Such men as he needs catching—let’s boil the kettle.” We laid the dead man inside the shack, and sat down beside a fire which we built among the stones on the bank of the river. Here November made tea in true woods fashion, draw- ing all the strength and bitterness from the leaves by boiling them. I was ‘wondering what he would do next, for it appeared that our chance of cateh- ing the murderer was infinitesimal, since he had left no clew save the mark on the bank where his canoe had rested among the reeds while he fired his deadly bullet. I put my thoughts into words. “You're right,” said November. “When a chap who's used to the woods life takes to crime, he’s harder to lay | hands on than a lynx in a alder patch.” “Why did not the murderer sink Lyon’s body in the water? It would have been well hidden there.” ‘““He couldn’t trust her; the current's sharp and would put the dead man ashore as like as not,” he replied. “And if he’d landed to carry it down to his canoe, he’d have left tracks, And more’n that, Lyon might ‘a’ laid in that clearing till he was a skeleton, but for the chance of that lumberjack hap- pening along. There's one fact you haven’t given much weight to. This shooting was premeditated. The mur- derer knew that Lyon would camp here. The chances are a hundred toc one against their having met by ac- cident. The chap that killed him fol- lowed him downstream. Now, suppose I can find Lyon’s last camp, 1 may learn something more. It can’t be very far off, for he had a tidy sized pack to carry, besides those green skins, which loaded him a bit. And, anyway, it's my only chance.” So we set out upon our walk. No- vember soon picked up Lyon’s trail, leading from Big Tree portage to a disused tote road, which again led us due west between the aisles of the for- est. From midday on through the whole of the afternoon we traveled un- til Joe found the deserted camp. The very first thing my eye lit upon caused me to cry out in excitement, for side by side were two beds of bal- sam branches that had evidently been placed under the shelter of the same tent cover. November, then, was right, Lyon had camped with some one on the night before he died. I called out to him. His quiet pa- tience and an attitude as if rather de- tached from events fell away from him like a cloak, and with almost uncanny swiftness he was making his examina- tion of the camp. But I was destined to disappointment, for, as far as I could see, Joe discovered neither clew nor anything unusual. To begin with, he took up and sifted through the layers of balsam boughs which had composed the beds, but ap- parently made no find. From them he turned quickly to kneel down by the ashy remains of the fire and to ex- amine the charred logs one by one. After that he followed a well marked trail that led away from the lake fo a small marsh in the farther part of which masts of dead timber were standing in great profusion. Nearer at hand a number of stumps showed where the campers had chopped the wood for their fire. After looking closely at these stumps November went swiftly back to the camp and spent the next ten minutes in following the tracks which led in all directions. Then once more he came back to the fire and methodically lifted off one charred stick after an- other. Aft the time I could not imagine why he did this, but when I under- stood it the reason was simple and ob- vious as was that of his every action when once it was explained. Before men leave camp they seem instinctively to throw such trifles as they do not require or wish to carry on re, W is general- iom of the is never to m in case forest ly expiring, for a t camper in ti i | men had all been away three weeks or “Why did not the murderer sink Lyon's body in the water?” In this case Novemper fad taken oir nearly every bit of wood before I heard him utter a smothered exclama- tion as he held up a piece of stick. I took it into my own hands and looked it over. It was charred, but I saw that one end had been split and the other end sharpened. “What in the world is it?” I asked, puzzled. November smiled. he answered. I was glad he had at last found something to go upon, for, so far, the camp had appeared to produce parsi- moniously little that was suggestive. Nevertheless, I did not see how this little bit of spruce, crudely fashioned and split as it was, would lead us very far. November spent another few min- utes in looking everything over a sec- ond time, then he took up his ax and split a couple of logs and lit the fire. Over it he hung his inevitable kettle ‘and boiled up the leaves of our morn- ing brew with a liberal handful fresh- ly added. | “Well,” 1 said. as he touched the end of a burning ember to his pipe, “has this camp helped you?” : - “Some,” said November. And you?’ He put the question quite seriously, though I suspect not without some in- ward irony. “I can see-that-two men slept under “Just evidence,” one tent cover, that they eut the wood. for their fire in that marsh we visited and that they were here fer a day, perhaps two.” “One was here for three days, the other one night,” corrected November. “How can you tell that?” November pointed to the ground at the far side of the fire. “To begin with, No. 1 had his camp | pitched over there,” said he; Hee ing my look of perplexity, he adde pityingly: “We've a wester win these last two days, but before wind was east, and he camped the first night with. i back to it.. Abd: in the | new camp ‘one bed o’ boughs 18 fresher than the other.” The thing seemed so absurdly ‘ob- vious that I was nettled. . © 0 [ig “I suppose there are other indications 1 haven't noticed,” I said. “There might be some you haven't mentioned,” he answered warily. “What are they?” ; J “That the man who killed Lyon is thick set and very strong; that he has been a good while in the woods with- out having gone to a settlement; that he owns a blunt hatchet such as we wood chaps call ‘tomahawk No. 3; that he killed a moose last week; that he can read; that he spent the night before the murder in great tromble of mind and that likely he was a religious kind o’ chap.” As November reeled off these details in his quiet, low keyed voice I stared at bim in amazement. “But how can you have found out ail that?” I said at last. “If it's correct it’s wonderful!” “I'll tell you, if you want to hed, when I’ve got my man—if I ever do get him. One thing more is sure, he is a chap who knew Lyon well. The rest of the job lies in the settlement of St. Amiel, where Lyon lived.” ¢ We walked back to Big Tree portage and from there ran down in the canoe to St. Amiel, arriving the following evening. About half a mile short of the settlement November landed and set up our camp. Afterward we went on. I had never before visited the place, and I found it to be a little col- ony of scattered houses straggling be- side the river. It possessed two stores and one of the smallest churches 1 have ever seen. “You can help me here if you will,” said November as we paused before ‘the larger of the stores. “Of course I will. How?” | “By letting ’em think you've engaged me as your guide, and we've come in to St. Amiel to buy some grub and gear we've run short of.” “All right.” And with this arrange- ment we entered the store. I will not make any attempt to de- scribe by what roundabout courses of talk November learned all the n ‘Bank of Buffalo to Cook’s Mill Clay | Emanuele, Windber, $1,000. at e © pt = WwW Cunt Lut arvull oi for the time at leas (U0 MUMDEr ICR as no hint of Lyon’s death bad yet drifted back to his native piace Little by little it came out that only five men were absent from the set'le ment. Two of these, Fitz and Baxter Gurd. were brothers: who had cone on an extended trapping expedition. The other absentees were Highamson, Lyon’s father-in-law; Thomas Miller, a professional guide and hunter. and. lastly, Henry Lyon himself. who had gone up river to visit his traps, start ing on the previous Friday. The other more, and all had started in canoes. except Lyon, who, having sold his. went on foot. Next, by imperceptible degrees, the talk slid round to the. subject of Lyon’s wife. They had been married four Years and had no child. She had been the belle of St. Amiel, and there had been no small competition for her hand. Of the absent men both Miller and Fitz Gurd had been her suitors, and the former and Lyon had never been on good terms since the marriage. The younger Gurd was a wild fellow. and only his brother's influence kept him straight. COURT NEWS. REAL ESTATE. Charles Zimmerman to W. Harry Lafeure, Southampton twp., $1. Simon H. Marteeney to Elias Mar- teeny, Summit twp., $3,500 Delilah Emerick to Benjamin Luth- er, Southampton twp., $1,500. E. 0. Dinges to Wm. Farnsworth, Jenner twp., $700. Harry Horner to Jenner twp., school directors, Jenner twp., $100. Levi Long to, Irenius Pile, Middle- creek twp., $1,500. Mae Miller to Lemanual Dixon, Shade twp., $125. Richard Carson to E. G. Lohr, Shade twp., $150. Nelson Sanner to Dinah Heining, Summit Trust Co., to N. T. Boose, Somerset borough, $7,000. Boswell Improvement Co., to Ruth Moore, Boswell, $30. Manufacturers & Traders National and Coal Oo., Southampton, $32,500. Samuel Berklev, to £mma Berkley, Somerset twp., $4,200. Christian Holsopple to Eash, Cone- maugh, twp., $1,500. John Bishof to Mary Stammler, Conemaugh twp., $400. A. A. Diggett to Fannie Eicher, Somerset twp., $4,150. Alyin Knepper to Wm. Ringler, Stonycreek twp., $2,425.. Wm. Farnsworth to D. B. Rienzo, Jenner twp., $820. Frank Lowry to Millard Bowman, Elk Lick twp., $630. Zenus Hollada to Sarah Folk, Elk | Lick twp., $50. Dell Arciprete Miceal to Vittoria Mike Ross to Dell Arciprete Mich- ael, Widdber, $1,000. ts pr ere, Gore, Ga., P. A, Morgan had oc- ‘casion recently to use a liver medi- cine and says of Foley Cathartic Tablets: ‘‘They thoroughly cleansed my system and I felt like a new man —Ilight and free. They are the best medicine I have ever taken for con- stipation. They keep the stomach sweet, liver actiye, bowels regular. 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