The Arithmetical Mouse-Trap.
One of the best and most simple mouse-traps in use may be constructed as follows: Get a slip of smooth pine, about the eighth of an inch thick, a quarter of an inch broad, and of sufficient length to cut out the following parts of a trap: First, an upright piece, three or four inches high, which must be square at the bottom, and a small piece to be cut off at the top to fit a notch in No. 2.
The second piece must be of the same length as the first, with the notch cut across nearly at the top of it, to fit the top of No. 1, and the other end of it trimmed to catch the notch in No. 3. The third piece should be twice as long as either of the others; a notch, similar to that in No. 2, must be cut in one end of it to catch the lower end of No. 2. Having proceeded thus far, you must put the pieces together, in order to finish it, by adding another notch in No. 3, the exact situation of which you will discover as follows: Place No. 1 upright, then put the notch of No. 2 in the thinned top of No. 1; then get a flat piece of wood, or a slate, one end of which must rest on the ground, and the center of the edge of the other on the top of No. 2. You will now find the thinned end of No. 2 elevated by the weight of the flat piece of wood or slate; then put the thinned end of it in the notch of No. 3, and draw No. 2 down by it, until the whole forms a resemblance of a figure 4; at the exact place where No. 3 touches the upright, cut a notch, which, by catching the end of No. 1, will keep the trap together. You may now bait the end of No. 3 with pieces of cheese; a mouse, by nibbling the bait, will pull down No. 3, the other pieces immediately separate, and the slate or board falls upon the mouse. We have seen numbers of mice, rats and birds caught by this.