The Young Engineers in Nevada; Or, Seeking Fortune on the Turn of a Pick
ot the
Reade, glancing up
e thin dough-faced lad of fourt
, if you mean that you're hungry," Tom re
d the youngster. "That'
un to dawn upon the bronzed, athletic young engineer, but
arry the makings?
" Tom retorted. "Just what are yo
fting uneasily to the other foot. "You said you'd pay me f
t is necessary to li
re necessary to me,
ening his eyes wider. "Wh
moker," returned the b
m. "At your age? Why
ded the younger American. "Just pass over the papers and the
ny boy with that low-down habit, and I'm glad that I'm not in position t
ted once more
year," he
a whole year? No; I won't say 'lived,' but you've kept pretty nearly al
makings?" wh
e he
rather timidly,
m not going to spank you, though so
rist between his thumb and f
doctor?" sn
nce enough to know whether a puls
ut
face expressed nothing in particular as he kept the tip of
gineer, a few moments later, a
eh?" questi
n authority on such subjects, but I believe a boy of your age ought to have a norm
hurt me,"
g himself up to his full height of five-feet-eleven
revealed, and the bronze on his face seemingly inches deep, Tom Rea
ook as healthy as I
tted Alf. "But y
on with your cigarettes you'll be an old man before I get through wi
est Reade looked a go
an a twentieth cent
med in his efforts t
dily. Draw in your stomach and expand your chest. Fill up the upper pa
t development that young Reade displayed so easily. Then the boy tried to fill the uppe
are affected already, and you'll carry the work of destruction on rapidly. Alf
d folks say so,
idn't beli
don't
u ever take
oke," argue
t I think I catch the drift of your idea. If you smoke you th
ly, if men do i
men see you smoking cigarettes, they immediately imagine you to be one of them? C
with intense enjoyment. At las
t question, Drew, I
rry them and n
en?" queried Alf, in
er. I don't use tobacco. For you
oke," argued Alf. "Jim
your part if a 'kid' like you would call him 'Mr. Ferrers.' But
bet he
ll s
of the tent, Alf making way
Oh, Mr.
e of a man who was invisible o
ase," Tom c
much bronzed, rather thin man of middle age. Ferrers had always worked hard, and his b
now what ails this
"You hired him for a chore-boy, to help m
solemnly. "I've just heard the youngster's sad st
d Ferrers disgustedly. "Th
y, "just what men think of a lad who tri
s, with a guffaw. "Men don't smoke cigar
n smoking, Jim Ferrers?" dem
uested Tom, when he saw t
wenty-four years old. Hang the stuff, I wish I had never begun, either. But I didn't smoke at your age, papoose. If I had done so, the men in the camps would
rers, we'll have to take young Drew in hand and try
I'm going to like th
be pulling my freig
u'll have to go some distance to find other human
f scorn Ferrer
ternoon, take a walk with me, in this fresh air and the good old sunshine. Let's drop all talk of cigarettes, and give a little thought to brains and a strong body. They
him start. But Reade had no intention of
long this mountain tr
Nevada. Soon the puls
in great breaths of t
soon p
ter you've rested a couple of minutes I'm going to show
nt." Alf, however, didn't succeed very well.
m gravely. "Alf, you've simply got to turn over a new
ellow consumption!" retort
rms take hold best in a weakened part of the body, and your lungs, Alf, are weak enough for any germ to fi
k like a
never allowed any white-papered little 'coffin-nails' to fool around me. Bad as your lungs are, Alf, they're not one whit worse than your nerv
e it," muttered t
now me yet. You haven't any idea how I can hang to a thing until I win. I'm
m," retorted Drew. "There wouldn't
ready sympathy. "Then all the more reason
o down and through that
slowing
y n
ake
fraid of s
e ki
t ki
tlers, f'r
hat kind on this par
ejoined. "Come
rew went along, though he didn't wish to. The two were just at the fringe
cl-cl
, going whiter than ever as he turned
matter?" dem
cl-cl-
again," cried
e you talking abo
dread sound
perspiring from fear. "
trong clutch on the boy's shoulder, thoug
ted. "You just imagine such things. Th
ou hear the
ing sound rose clearly on the air. "See here, Alf, rattlers, whatever t
Alf easily until he could clutc
" Reade ordered. Drew sat on
hat clump of brush," Tom proposed, and forthwith stepped i
shivered Drew. "
igarettes are destroying 'em. There! I've beaten up every bit of this brush and you see that I've not bee
und. No sooner, however, had his feet touched the
iot!" howled Alf.
. "They're so bad that I'll overlook yo
m?" asked Drew, sullenly. "I was almost bitten b
ry nervous about them, especially in a part of the country whe
ne now," sighed
e?" Tom inqui
rse not! A
rget those soul-destroy
're going to become a
how much more fun it
r instead of stifli
m!" mutter
re of it," said
-cl-c
led Alf, jumping
with you?" inquired Tom
dn't hear the rattler
fie
re? We're crossing open ground now. There is no place within three h
-cl-c
eld back,
er step," he insisted. "This
mp, then, if your ne
prop
tle sounded, seemingly just in front of Alf, though t
and started off at right angles to his
ake?" demande
u be so foolish--so nervous? In other words, why do you
l-cl
embling so that he
is place," he shivered. "The ground is full of
ly. The disturbing
ange," Alf all but sobbed, his breath catchi
a store where you ca
e qu
" moaned the young vict
young engineer retorted. "Just see how unstrung you are. Every st
," proposed Alf, "that you haven't he
ke off the trembles. Let me take your arm. Now, walk briskly with me. Inflate your chest with all the air you
ew obey. Tom put him over the ground at as good a gait as
to Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton. Our readers of the "Grammar School Series" know Tom and Harry as two of the member
fortunes of Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton, through all their triumphs
tments to the United States military Academy, and their a
Naval Academy at Annapolis, and what befell them ther
the extraordinary work of these young men at railroad building through the mountains wilds. In "The Young Engineers in Arizona" we h
urroundings in which their professional lives had been passed had been such as to sup
y had come ere solely in search of a few weeks of rest. Rest? There was anything but
f Gridley. While there they had encountered Dick Prescott and Greg Holmes, their old school chums, at that time cadets at the United States
r first steps in the study of metallurgy. They had succeed in ma
t in Nevada, taking a little more rest just because no new e
gh, Harry, we simply must know a good deal aboit, they had brought with them a small furnace and the re
r breakfast Harry Hazelton had borrowed the only horse in camp, belongi
d happened along. He asked for "a job." There really wasn't one for him, b
, how long the job wil
hour break camp
til after the noon meal had the little fellow re
up that habit, Alf" Tom u
retorted young Drew.
ghts over you I'm afraid I'd turn you over my knee and spank
to bounce me, ar
mehow, and before very long, I'm going to break you from your cigarettes.
commonly solemn, b
t from under a line of trees and stood at the edge of a low
-" began Tom Rea
ulously. "There's going to be
nly looke
d close together. More than a dozen people, all but two of whom were dressed in "eastern
tern," had drawn revolvers, and now stood facing four sullen-looking
g with women and children standing a