1 THE 8EMLWEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE, NEDRA8KA. WEB OF :By CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY and CYRUS TOWNSEND B&ADY, Jr. Author and Clergymnn Civil Engineer Copyright by Fleming II. Kevell Co. TRY AS HE WILL TO CONCEAL HIS EXPERT KNOWLEDGE OF ENGINEERING MEADE FAILS AND PROMOTION COMES TO HIM RAPIDLY AT THE DAM Following the collnpse of n Brent bridge which hla father, n noted engineer, had plnnned, nnd the old man's sudden death from disgrace and shock, Bertram Mendo takes the blumo for the disaster which cost many lives nnd disappears from his homo In New York. He goes to the Southwest, gets n Job under the name of Itoborts on an Irrigation dam project and mnkes good. Mennwhllo Ilclon Illlngworth, Meade's sweetheart, and Itodnoy, an old friend, are quietly working to elenr the young man's namo and to lenrn his whereabouts. They are par ticularly anxious to get possession of a letter written by tho elder Mcado to assume responsibility for tho accident. This paper Is secret ly held by Shurtllff, who had been tho old man's devoted private sec retary for many years. CHAPTER XII Continued. "I bellovo you are right," said Itod noy, leaning back In his chair and staring at her through his glasses. "If we can only mako him speak But whero Is ho?" "Working for my father." "What do you mean?" "I mean that I suspected him from tho first, nnd ns there was an opening for a prlvato confidential man, who un derstood engineering a vacancy made by tho promotion of my father's prl vato secretary I prevailed upon him to give tho position to Shurtllff. Fa ther hates tho namo of Meade, but ho worships efficiency and ho knows that ghurtllff Is tho very Incarnation of tho particular kind of ability that ho de sires, so ho la with my father con otantly nnd I have him nlwnys under ray eyo. When wo go nwny In tho car, ho goes along." "What aro you going to do?" "Win his confidence, his nffectlon If I can, appeal to him, and" "By Jove," said Itodnoy, "I bellovo you can do It You can't drlvo that old nan." "I know It," said tho woman. "You haven't told him that you thought It was hi fault?" "No." "I couldn't do anything with a innn llko Shurtllff. You can. You can win his devotion, you can let him see how much tho reinstatement of Bert Meado In honor again means to you. You can do it." "Moanwhllo you will help mo, won't you?" "In any way, in ovcry way. Do you know whero ho has gonoY" "I haven't tho slightest idea, no might be in Afrlcn, or South America, or out West, or up North. Do you sco thoso flowors?" sho pointed to a great bunch of American Beauty roses, which had been forced for her appar ently, and which she had received on that very day "Dards, you know, tho Madison nvenuo florist, sends mo a box of magnificent blossoms roses, vlo lots, orchids, always different overy week. Thoy speak to mo of him." "Ilnvo you ever tried to traco them?" "No. I know whenco thoy como and Mint Is all. Wo will hear from him omo day, Bomowhcro, somehow. Ht Had a Natural Instinct for Topog raphy. Meanwhllo wo will work, work, work I" "And you will allow mo to say bo foro I go that Blnco I have had this conversation with you I do not aco kew even love for his father or his family name would have led Mcado to olt" "Don't say anything against him,' Mid Helen Illlngworth quickly, "Ho vtm mad with anxiety, shamo, regret. Whatever he did, I lovo him just tho Mine." CHAPTER XIII. Working Up. The autumn went by as a dream, Winter, warm and mild 1b that far southern clime, was at hand before Jkcodo realized lb An ordinary eatf- eer of half the ability oi Bertram Mcnde, so suddenly reduced to the ranks, would have chafed against tho position of subordination nnd would liavo resented tho humblo duties with which ho was charged. But Meudo was happy to bo following, oven in tills extremely modest way, the profession that ho loved. And ho did Ills unim portant work with zeal and care. It Is not much to say, but ho was tho most efficient of tho Junior engineering force on tho dam. It was not becauso Mcado was un social that ho kept to himself not at nil. From his own galvanlzcd-lron quarters ho used to staro longingly at tho men grouped around tho big camp fires, for tho nights wero growing chill, smoking and laughing, exchanging ex periences nnd telling stories. Nothing would hnvo pleased him better than to hnvo Joined In, and ho could havo told stories and related experiences that would have been uniquo even In that gay crowd of young adventurers. But lie did not dare. IIo feared to betray himself. What ho wanted nbovo ev erything was to prcsorvo his Incognito. It would bo fatal to his chances of over working up to anything worth while if they found out who ho was. And ho had n tremendous prldo to sustain him. They respected him now. As a matter of fact, thoy put his with' drnwal of himself down to vagaries of temperament or causes thoy could not Imagine, and they grew rather to llko him even ns they left him alone. And a few of tho men of tho humbler sort to whom ho had been kind on occasion, nnd helpful, wero stoutly devoted to him. Tho Idleness of nn nimlcss life did not appeal to him oven in his off-duty periods. Doing nothing had no attrac tion. Ho could not got relief that way. Even rambling nlono about tho hills would not servo. So quick nnd nctlvo a man, so vigorous and buoyant n spirit, so strong a body nnd mind wero not calculated for aimless wandering. Mcado was a very accomplished en gineer indeed. Thcro was no branch of tho art about which ho did not know a little, although hydraulics and struc tural Btecl wero tho things that most appealed to him. Ho got relief in tho duality of his affections for theso branches of his profession. Neither ono of tlicra ever palled on him becauso ho did not work monotonously at cither of them. Ho had .a natural Instinct for topography, and instead of purpose lessly strolling about tho country, ho mado a careful inspection of tho valley which was to bo converted into a hugo reservoir by tho dam. tho uam useir was, perhaps, an eighth of a mllo long at tho bottom and touched tho receding hill on ono sldo nnd tho spur of Spanish mesa on tho othor at tho ton a hugo mound of earth with n clay coro extending from sldo to Bldo at tho narrowest part of tho valley. When completed It would bo 125 feet high abovo tho old river bed, with n roadway 20 feet broad on top of It Below tho (lam and on tho low ground between tho mesa nnd Baldwin's knob tho camp, with its gal vatdzed lrou shops, bunkhouscs, dining halls, kitchens and officers' quarters, had been erected. Tho configuration of tho ground was such Unit, although It was unusual to put them there, con vcnlcnco had rendered It dcslrnblo la tills case. It was Intended to complcto tho dnm beforo tho curly spring of next year, which was, If any tlmo In tho country could bo so chuructorlzcd, tho rainy senson. Of course, Just as booh as tho dam had begun to rlso, tho flow of tho Picket Wlro below it had boeu stopped, except when nn occasional freshot had been allowed to pass the undcrslulce. It wna known Unit tho run-off of tho river in tho rainy season of somo years was so small as scarcely to fill tho rca crvolr, and It had been decided to storo all tho flow of tho autumn and winter so that oven If tho spring rainy season were deficient, tho beginning of tho next summer would And tho reservoir full and tho now Irrigation system could coiumenca operations success fully. Vnndevcnter, llko tho lost Abbott of tho International, was also a driver, who spared neither his men nor him self. Tho work had proceeded with as tonishing rapidity, although this wus partially accounted for by Uio fact that tho spillway, which should havo occupied their attention, had fia jet been only partially excavnted. Now, to thoso ignorant of engineering, nn earth dam may seem a temporary ex pedient, although most of tho great Ir rigation dnms of tho world aro of that character; and everybody knows that If the water should rlso high cuough to overflow an earth dam It would not Inst longer than it takes to describe Its utter giving way. A flood would sweep It out of the way at once. The device whereby posslblo floods are controlled and such dangers avert ed, consists of a brond channel at ono side of tho dam, id at such n dis tance below Its crest that If, through any mischance or natural happening, such as tho failure of the sluice gates, excess! vo rains, cloudbursts, or floods, tho height of tho water is increased until It promises to overflow tho dam, this opening will enrry off tho surplus harmlessly. An earth dam without a spillway would presage almost certain destruction to all who lived In tho val ley below It In tho enso of the Picket Wire dnm, tho spillway had to be cut and, In part, blasted out of the mountain side that Is, through the spur of the mesa, which reached down from Its high wall towurds the narrows. There had been series of blunders and mlshnps, which Included tho explosion of a ship mcnt of dynamite on the railroad, with Very disastrous consequences to accom punying rock crushers and mixers, and othor machinery. Tho spillway hud not been completed. Its opening should have been about twelvo feet below the level of the dam. Vandcventcr was not responsible, of course. Tho chief cngl nccr had fumed and protested, but had been directed by headquarters to go nhcad with tho other work nnd tncklo tho spillway later. There was, Indeed, llttlo reason to hold up tho building of that particular dam becauso of tho noncomplctlon of tho spillway. That was a country, so tho most de voted inhabitants freely admitted, in which it was always safo to bot that it would not rain, no matter how threatening might bo tho appcaranco of tho sky ; for In nlncty-nlno times out of a hundred tho ncgatlvo would win tho bet. Said Inhabitants did not say tho hundredth tlmo might compensato for all tho other failures. Tho weather was llko the llttlo girl with tho pro verblal curl when it did rain thcro was no doubt in anybody's mind ns to tho fact Sometimes the fountains of tho great deep, which, in Holy Scrip turo nt least, extended overhead, would bo broken open nnd tho vlolenco of tho fall nnd tho quantity of it, and sudden ncss of It, would bo such that tho West crncrs would graphically can it a cloudburst," which, Indeed, It seemed to be. Outside tho rainy season cloudbursts wero unheard of, and even in that sea' son extremely rnre. For tho valley of the Picket Wiro and. in tho plain beneath carefully tabulated reports of tho rainfall for years had been consid ered by tho engineers. They had cho sen tho right season for the building of tho dam, but when Its crest begun to rlso nbovo tho designed level of tho spillway the delay In opening tho chan nel gnvo causo for somo alarm. It Is not tho probable or certain that la feared. An old version that, of "omno Ignotum pro mngniflco" It is only tho unknown of which men aro afraid, or only the unknown to bo feared I Still Uicro was nothing Vnndevcnter could do but obey orders nnd go nhcad. Tho dnngcr, after nil, wns trifling. Another conscqucnco of the wnltlng wns that in his inability to work on tho spill way, hp had moro hands to devoto to tho dam und It roso tho quicker, Tho shapo of the country behind It was such that when tho Picket Wlro flowed with sufficient volume to fill It, a long lake going back through tho val ley, or canyon, and twisting among tho hills for somo miles would result. In othor words, the dnm would mako a beautiful artificial sheet of water bor dered on ono side by a high rnngo of hills, on tho other by tho dam, and on tho third by tho hills and tho low hog back nbovo Spanish mesa, which scpa rated tho Picket Wlro valley from tho Kicking Horso gorgo up which tho rali- roud run. Burled In hla own thoughts, com' munlng with himself, considering cease lessly his position, dreaming of tho woman he loved, planning a new ca rccr, Mcado yet explored overy foot of tho valley nud ravine. Ho climbed to tho top of Spanish mesa, and from Its height tho whole country clear up tho vnlloy to tho main rnngo was vlslblo to him. He could look down into tho holiday to go out and Inspect the hog back and ascertain Its elevation with relation to the dam. 'Of courso the en gineers who planned tho grent irriga tion works had done thnt, but ho want ed to do It for himself. At ono place, whero tho dlstanco betweon what might be called tho edge of the valley nnd the head of the ravine was narrow est Indeed, he estimated nftcr pacing It that It measured not over twenty feet across ho discovered that tne rounded earth crest wns slightly lower than tho Intended level of the top of the dnm. When ho returned to tho office, ho found on examining tho construction drawings that an earth dike wns plnnned to run along tho hogbnek so thnt the top level should bo higher thnn thnt of tho dam. This dike would bo only a hundred and fifty feet long nnd a few feet high, and could bo built In a few days' time. Work on tho main dnm being more importnnt, nothing hud as yet been dono on the dike. Mendo had been promoted toward the end of the fall nnd in n rather unusual way. Ono of tho transit men, n young engineer, got n better Job nnd left his Instrument Vandeventer called Mcado beforo him. "Roberts," he snld, "there's a vn- enncy for a transit mnn. You've dono such good work so fnr nnd shown such familiarity with flcldwork, that I'd give It to you If I had any idea that you knew anything about handling In strumcnts." "I think I mny bo trusted with one, sir." nuswercd Meade, his eyes bright ening. "Yes, perhaps; but I havo watched you in odd hours, a no young men around hero nro constantly practicing with tho transits. I've never seen you put a hnnd to one. How about It?" "I'm not exactly a youngster, Mr. Vandeventer," returned Meade, "and I really didn't think It necessary to practice, but If you trust mo with ono I believe I can manage it" Old Vandeventer leaned back in his chair in the office nnd looked enre- lessly away from Meade to nil nppear ances. Ho clasped Ills hands back of his head and seemed lost In thought Suddenly ho began humming a little scrap of verso about anotner conego which Cambridge men sing with zest: "Good; tho instrument Is yours." That was tho first step and the next step enmo very shortly nftcr, when, having further demonstrated his ca pacity In other ways, Mcado was giv en charge of tho work on tho cast end. of tho dam. "I don't care who ho Is," said Van deventer to his chief subordinate, "ho knows what ho's nbout, nnd If you wntch him you'll see. He's keen on hnndllng men. Tho other section fore men will bo hnrd put to keep up with him. lie keeps wntch on himself. Ho's got somo secret ho won't betray. Ho doesn't mingle with tho crowd, but every onco In n while something slips out Whnt ho doesn't know nbout en gineering nobody needs to know, I'll wngcr." "now-do you account for his being out hero?" "Oh, It's the old story, I suppose; he's como n cropper somewhere down and out nnd wants to begin ngnln, and enn't do anything but this. It's not our business, Stafford ; ho does good work for us and we're sntlsflcd." CHAPTER XIV. The Former and tne Latter Rain. Tho work on the dnm wus progress ing splendidly. Vnndeventcr, driving his men hnrd, shared in all their furi ous efforts. Ho was not only their leader, but their Inspiration. Ho had surrounded himself with a body of able assistants, and his teamsters and workmen had been culled until they had becomo a small army of picked men of which to bo proud. Among nil tneso Meaue stoou very high. In the four months he had been with Vnndevcnter ho had Bhown such a grasp of tilings, such nn ability to handle men, In one or two instances when, with intention to try him, tho resident engineer had given him deep ravlno of tho Kicking Horso, nnd noto tho marvelous beauty and airiness of tho arch bridge for all it so solidly carried tho heavy freight trains of tho railway. Ho could sco far up and around tho crooked courso of tho Picket Wlro. Tho big grass-covered, but otherwise baro nnd treeless hogback, that ran from tho upper end of the stono island of tho mesa wus equally vlslblo to him. As It was the low tide of the new res ervoir, ho descended to It and studied It carefully. On anothor occasion, hav ing said nothing to nnyono about his excursion, ho took advantago of a half- I'm a physical wreck. From the gratia old Tech', Dut a h of an englneerl Ho stopped abruptly, whirled about In his swingchalr, and shot a quick glance at Meade. It was a trap. And as he sprang it Vandeventer surprised the ghost of a smile, repressed quickly but there, on Meade's lips. The chief engineer was sutlsfled. Beforo this llttlo things had betrayed a follow nlumnus, or at least a fellow student of tho old Lawrence Scientific school Vandeventer was pleased at his adroit ness. He did not, however, refer to It "There's a new transit In that box on tho floor there," ho said, resuming hlB Indifferent manner. "I've had tho caso opened, but I haven't taken It out Get It and we'll go outside and see what you can do with It" Now a transit, for all It Is used in rough flcldwork, Is ono of tho most expensive nnd dellcnto of instruments. It is capable of tho most accurate ad justment, and if it Is to bo of any renl use, tho refinement of theso adjustments-must not be Impaired In any degreo by unskilled nnd reckless pack ing. Tho boxes In which tho Instru ments nro shipped nro very carefully constructed in accordance with tho principles which experience hns shown to bo necessary, and each ono Is espe cially fitted to tho particular Instru ment to bo contained therein. Tho box Is a complicated thing and the transit cannot bo taken out or replaced except In ono way. With a knowledge of tho combination, so to speak, It Is comparatively slraplo to take a transit from tho box; without that knowledge, which none but an expert transltmnn, or tho packer himself can have, It is rather difficult without running a risk of ruining tho Instrument Tills command was another of Vnn- deventer's tests, therefore. Meade knew this as well as his superior. In splto of himself, ho would havo to be tray his familiarity. Well, ho had brought himself to the conclusion that ho could not continue his work with out very soon disclosing tho fact that ho had been an engineer. And in caso of tho Inevitable, the sooner tho bet ter. So long as ho hnd to betray him self, ho would havo all tho advantages as well as the disadvantages, no un locked tho door of tho box, slid tho Instrument out quickly, nccurntcly, without a moment's hesitation, nnd rapidly unscrewed the head from the slide-board, and scrowed it carefully on tho tripod. Vandeventer's eyes sparkled. "Como outside," ho said, leading tho way to tho side of tho hill, "nnd set It up thcro over tho tack in that stako and level It" Beglnucrs hnvo been known to tnko ten minutes to get a transit set up, leveled and centered. It Is good work If It Is dono lnsldo of a minute; thirty seconds Is very fast In forty-flvo sec onds Mcado reported, "all ready, sir.' Ho could havo dono It in less, but ho was a llttlo out of practice, ho said Ho Had Accompanied the Younger Man on One of His Rambles. to himself. "Look here," Bald vnnueventer, "you can't pull any moro bluff on me, Rob orts; you'ro an engineer, nil right" "I know something about tho practl cal sldo of It, sir," answered Meade, turning n llttlo pnlo nnd wondering how far Vandeventer would press his questions and what ho would learn. But tho engineer was a man. "Practical, yes, and theoretical too ril bo bound, but I don't seek to pry into your nntccedonts. It's enough for me If you do good work for mo hero." Til do my best sir." charge of some special work, that Vandeventer unconsciously looked to him In any emergency. He nctually found himself consulting Meado on occasion. Ho had accompanied tho younger man on one of thoso rambles which ho had hitherto taken alone. Ho had not broken down Meade's reserve, but ho had won his admiration and regard. Vandeventer was not unknown In en- glneering circles. In earthwork ho was by way of being an authority. His experience had been varied and extensive. Meade's reserve and reti cence rather hurt the older engineer, He hnd Invited confldenco und had even given his nffectlon. Ho Intlmnt- delicately that If tho other wero under a cloud Vandeventer might bo In a position to help him. It was fortunate for Meade's pur pose of concealment, for his Incognito that most of his engineering work had been dbno nbroad and that ho had been out of touch with American en glneering for practically tho whole of his career. Vandeventer was a Har vard man, too, and that mado It espe cially hard for Meado to keep from betraying himself. As a matter of fact tho younger man actually longed to mako a clean breast c It, but ho could not quite bring himself to do It yet. That might come later. Three months ought to see the com pletion of tho dam and tho long cunul, which was to carry tho stored water to tho Irrigation ditches below. Van deventer was already making plana for another big Job, and ho hud de cided, In his own mind, that amoug tho subordinates whom ho would tako with him tho newcomer should have tho first chnncc. Vandeventer felt proud and satisfied when ho surveyed tho work that had been accomplished In tho six months of labor. To be sure tho delay In tho completion of tho spillway disquieted him a little. Tho dam had reached Uio spillway level a fortnight before, and had now passed It Indeed, on tho fifth of Jan uary tho dam builders wero within five feet of tho top; thnt is, tho crest of tho dnm wus 120 feet ubove the lovel of tho vulloy. They iud plnnned to run tbo spillway around the east ern end of tho dnm. Tho rock drills and dynnmlto which had been ordered had finally arrived in December, and by putting as many as posslblo to work on tho spillway Vandeventer had succeeded In opening It for Its entire width to un average depth of about soven feet below the Intended top of tho dam; that Is, It was now about two feet deeper thnn the nctunl crest of tho dum, but It still lacked flvo feet of its designed depth. The rulny senson, nn inspection of tho rpcords bad shown, wus not duo for a month and a half yet That would give him ample tlmo to com plete tho dnm nnd tho splllwny. This yenr, however, thcro hnd been some very unusual ruins during tho full and tho water hack of the dam was now 08 feet deep, which mado It 22- feet below tho level to which the dam had risen nnd 20 feet below tho splllwny. This wns much moro wnter thnn nnyone hud drenmed would bo In tho reser voir at thnt time, nnd wns perhnps more thnn should hnvo been allowed. Still there wns a safety margin of -4 2 feet, which Vandeventer was sure would be ample. Tho financial promo ters of the project wero very anxious to linve tho reservoir full when tho Irrigating senson opened, and the en gineer's. Judgment had been influenced by their eugerness to get it working. The brond sheet of wnter ran back into the valley for muny miles. In fuct the dum hud transformed .the country Into n bcnutlful lnke. Some times it ruined in the mountains when it did not rain down in the vnlley, und thcro wns a constant, If very small, rise in tho level. Vandeventer personally carefully gauged the water every day. Naturally he had noted that It roso gradually, but as the dam roso proportionately more rupldly, ho was not uneasy. Yet, ns a good en gineer, ho wus wntchful nnd lurgely becnusc of the unfinished splllwny he urged tho men to tho very limit. Tho wentherwlse from tho town, who sometimes rode up to Inspect the work, nssured Vnndeventer that It could not possibly rain before March, and the mere fnct thnt so much wntei hud fallen rendered It more lmprob nblo that uny more would come down But ut three on the afternoon of Jun- unry sixth It suddenly begnn to ruin hnrd without wurntng nnd with no premonition on the purt of anybody, It was not ono of those terrible down pours known as cloudbursts, but It wus nn excessively hurd, steudy rain. The heavens over the range were bluck with clouds nnd so fur us any one nt the dum could see, It wns raln- ing from the crest of the mountains down. There were somo anxious dis cussions in the dining room of the res ident engineer and his American assistants. At four o'clock It was decided to open tho underslulce gate about half- way, but when this was done tho vol ume of water It was capuble of dis charging wns too small to help very much, and on opening It to its fullest extent the velocity of the wnter rush ing through wns so grent thnt the river bed wus rupldly scoured out Foi feur of undermining the toe of the dum It wns necessury purtinlly to closo tho sluice once more. Tho wnter wns rising, first at th rate of threo or four inches nn hour, then half a foot, and finally nenrly a foot. By six o'clock that night 11 had risen two feet. It was still rain ing hard at thnt hour, nlthough not quite so furiously ns It hnd been. Ii( It did rain until morning at the pres- ent rate, there would still be a mar gin of snfety of perhups fourteen oi fifteen feet nt duwn. Although the situation required watchfulness and wns somewhat alarming, it was not desperate. Tho men wero advised tc put In all tho time In their bunks so as to bo good and ready for the hard battle which might como in the morn ing, nnd as they wero nil tired out with their dny's work the llttlo group soon broke up nnd cuch mnn went to his quurtcrs. Vnndeventer, however, could not sleep. The ruin kept up stendlly all night The resident engineer finally got up and dressed himself, and pro tected by high rubber boots and a cowboy slicker and a sou'wester, left his quarters nnd went out to Inspect tho dnm. He enrried a lantern, of course, for it was pitch dark and, 11 possible, the rain dropping from tha black sky mnde It more difficult to see. He wns surprised when ho got to the dam to see on tho other side another lantern. Closing tho slide of his own lantern to prevent observation, and be ing on fnmlllnr ground, ho went ! straight towurd tho other side. The nolso of tho rain subdued nny sound thnt he mnde, and he wns nble to coma quite close to the other light without being noticed. How young Roberts, the mys terious engineer, uses hla talents and knowledge to good advan tage Is told In the next Install ment ho gets the opportunity to wipe out all disgrace, real or fancied. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Alexandria. Thero aro few cities that can look back to n past llko that of Alexandria, nnd fewer still with such a past that can contrive to keep up with tho times and look forwnrd to tho future. Tho relics of 25. deud centuries of Alex, undrlnn history huve to bo looked fot In tho guldo books. In tho city Itself they tiro covered up by tho lntost mod ern Improvements. A few erudite Alexnndrlnns muy nrguo about tho real nationality of Cleoputra, but most of them aro talking about the prlco of cotton nnd tho lntest project for dredg. Ing tho harbor. Wanted Joy Distributed. Mnrion wns given a beautiful ring Christmas eve. Sho wus overjoyed, but chnnged It from ono finger to tho other nil evening. No one noticed It thnt evening, but sho kept It up tho next morning. Her mother, fearing Marlon would loso tho ring, said: "Why don't you put your ring on ono finger nnd keep It thero, Marlon " Well, I don't llko to bo mean. When I keep It on one finger I pity tho others."