You're wrong my dear, I'm not taking anything out of this bottle; I'm only putting something into it.
You're not taking a drink at ten o'clock in the morning, are you?
Judson!
RISING ACTION
And how! At least no one  has found an antidote: once it's down, it's the end.
Don't do it, Judson, it's horrible - it's murder.
What are they? Something to make him sick?
In the clear October morning, Judson stood in his cabin ready to leave for the winter.
CLIMAX
Okay , my dear, and don't worry about your poor little burglar. No one is going to get hurt who hasn't got it coming to him.
When he entered his closet filled with liquor, guns, and fishing equipment, he realized that his whiskey was half dranken.This story is a Man vs. Man conflict because Judson has to deal with people robbing him and his liquor. Mabel enters their room and notices that Judson has a liquor bottle in his hand; Judson specificies that he isn't drinking, but actually putting pills into it.
FALLING ACTION
As Judson puts the white tablets in the half dranken whiskey bottle, Mabel worries if the tablets are to make people sick. Judson tells her that there is no cure, and once someone drinks it, they're dead. She encourages Judson not to because it is murder and it is not fair to kill when the police wouldn't have done that for burglary.
RESOLUTION
Mabel knew that Judson's actions weren't right, someone had to know. So, she planned to tell Alec's wife - the caretakers wife - about what Judson was doing. 
I'll walk down the road and say goodbye at the farmhouse, you can pick me up there.
Judson remembered that he left his boots out on the porch, where they belonged in the closet. He decided to get them, but when a squirrel heard his footsteps, he dropped his acorn and ran. Soon after, Judson slipped on the acorn hitting the work table, and got knocked out.
Alec sees that Judson is lying on the patio, unconscious. He quickly grabs a bottle of whiskey not knowing that Judson had poisoned it for future purposes. He gives it to Judson; and Judson drinks it, not knowing what's to come.