- It looks as though the heroine's father is in league with fur thieves, but he is not and he emerges with a clean bill of health at the end. Also the chief villain, not content with robbing the old man of his furs, has also plotted the theft of his fair daughter. He nearly succeeds, but the resourceful Martin blocks both games.—Motion Picture News, November 27, 1926
- Constable Martin jails a fur thief and his accomplice, after catching one of the men with a remnant of a large haul. The bulk of the stolen pelts, bearing the trademark of The Monopoly Company are still cached. Andre Beaupre, an honest old trader who lives with his daughter Marie, employs Louis, another member of the gang headed by Red Burke. The gang sets a trap for Martin. One of the prisoners tips him off that Andre is "the man higher up'' and that he has in his fur store a whole bale of the trade-marked furs. Martin verifies this and arrests Andre, whom he takes away handcuffed. As soon as they have ridden beyond the clearing the Mountie sets the old man free, telling him that he fell for the hoax to snare the gang. Under cover of night, Martin and the old man return to find the gang at work on Andre's store, preparing to steal his most valuable pelts. Martin gets the drop on the gang, with the exception of Red, who has induced Marie to ride with him on a pretext of freeing her father, but who intends to force the girl to marry him. Old Andre, watching outside, tries to stop them, but Burke takes the girl's bridle and makes her go with him. Andre alarms Martin, who leaves his prisoners in charge of the old man while he rides after Burke and brings him down. Marie falls into Martin's arms.—Universal Weekly (1927-1930)
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