PLANNING A BIG GUN
“But, Tom, I don’t
see how in the world you can ever hope to make a bigger
gun than that.”
“I think it can be done, Ned,”
was the quiet answer of the young inventor. He
looked up from some drawings on the table in the office
of one of his shops. “Now I’ll just
show you—”
“Hold on, Tom. You know
I have a very poor head for figures, even if I do
help you out once in a while on some of your work.
Skip the technical details, and give me the main facts.”
The two young men—Ned Newton
being Tom’s special chum—were talking
together over Tom’s latest scheme.
It was several days after Tom’s
accident in the airship, when he had been saved by
the prompt action of Mr. Peterson. That fortune-hunter,
once he had the promise of Mr. Swift to invest in
his somewhat visionary plan of locating a lost opal
mine near the Panama Canal, had left the Swift homestead
to arrange for fitting out the expedition of discovery.
He had tried to prevail on Tom to accompany him, and,
failing in that, tried to work on Mr. Damon.
“Bless my watch chain!”
exclaimed that odd gentleman. “I would
like to go with you first rate. But I’m
so busy—so very busy— that I
can’t think of it. I have simply neglected
all my affairs, chasing around the country with Tom
Swift. But if Tom goes I— ahem!
I think perhaps I could manage it—ahem!”
“I thought you were busy,” laughed Tom.
“Oh, well, perhaps I could get
a few weeks off. But I’m not going—no,
bless my check book, I must get back to business!”
But as Mr. Damon was a retired gentleman
of wealth, his “business” was more or
less of a joke among his friends.
So then, a few days after the departure
of Mr. Peterson, Tom and Ned sat in the former’s
office, discussing the young inventor’s latest
scheme.
“How big is the biggest gun
ever made, Tom?” asked his chum. “I
mean in feet, in inches, or in muzzle diameter, however
they are measured.”
“Well,” began Tom, “of
course some nation may, in secret, be making a bigger
gun than any I have ever heard of. As far as I
know, however, the largest one ever made for the United
States was a sixteen-inch rifled cannon—that
is, it was sixteen inches across at the muzzle, and
I forget just how long. It weighed many tons,
however, and it now lies, or did a few years ago, in
a ditch at the Sandy Hook proving grounds. It
was a failure.”
“And yet you are figuring on
making a cannon with a muzzle thirty inches across—almost
a yard—and fifty feet long and to weigh—”
“No one can tell exactly how
much it will weigh,” interrupted Tom. “And
I’m not altogether certain about the muzzle
measurement, nor of the length. It’s sort
of in the air at present. Only I don’t
see why a larger gun than any that has yet been made,
can’t be constructed.”
“If anybody can invent one,
you can, Tom Swift!” exclaimed Ned, admiringly.
“You flatter me!” exclaimed
his chum, with a mock bow.
“But what good will it be?”
went on Ned. “Making big guns doesn’t
help any in war, that I can see.”
“Ned!” exclaimed Tom,
“you don’t look far enough ahead.
Now here’s my scheme in a nutshell. You
know what Uncle Sam is doing down in his big ditch;
don’t you?”
“You mean digging the Panama Canal?”
Yes, the greatest engineering feat
of centuries. It is going to make a big change
in the whole world, and the United States is going
to become—if she is not already—a
world-power. Now that canal has to be protected—I
mean against the possibility of war. For, though
it may never come, and the chances are it never will,
still it may.
“Uncle Sam has to be ready for
it. There never was a more true saying than ‘in
time of peace prepare for war.’ Preparing
for war is, in my opinion, the best way not to have
one.
“Once the Panama Canal is in
operation, and the world-changes incidental to it
have been made, if it should pass into the hands of
some foreign country—as it very possibly
might do—the United States would not only
be the laughing-stock of the world, but she would
lose the high place she holds.
“Now, then, to protect the canal,
several things are necessary. Among them are
big guns—cannon that can shoot a long distance—
for if a foreign nation should send some of their new
dreadnaughts over here—vessels with guns
that can shoot many miles—where would the
canal be once a bombardment was opened? It would
be ruined in a day—the immense lock-gates
would be destroyed. And, not only from the guns
aboard ships would there be danger, but from siege
cannon planted in Costa Rica, or some South American
country below the canal zone.
“Now, to protect the canal against
such an attack we need guns that can shoot farther,
straighter and more powerfully than any at present
in use, and we’ve got to have the most powerful
explosive. In other words, we’ve got to
beat the biggest guns that are now in existence.
And I’m going to do it, Ned!”
“You are?”
“Yes, I’m going to invent
a cannon that will make the longest shots on record.
I’m going to make a world-beater gun; or, rather,
I’m going to invent it, and have it made, for
I guess it would tax this place to the limit.
“I’ve been thinking of
this for some time, Ned. I’ve been puttering
around inventing new magnetos, potato-parers and the
like, but this is my latest hobby. The Panama
Canal is a big thing—one of the biggest
things in the world. We need the biggest guns
in the world to protect it.
“And, listen: Uncle Sam
thinks the same way. I understand that the best
men in the service—at West Point, Annapolis
and Sandy Hook, as well as elsewhere—are
working in the interest of the United States to perfect
a bigger cannon than any ever before made. In
fact, one has just been constructed, and is going to
be tried at the Sandy Hook proving grounds soon.
I’m going to see the test if I can.
“And here’s another thing.
Foreign nations are trying to steal Uncle Sam’s
secrets. If this country gets a big cannon, some
other nation will want a bigger one. It’s
a constant warfare. I’m going to devote
my talents—such as they are—to
Uncle Sam. I’m going to make the biggest
cannon in the world—the one that will shoot
the farthest and knock into smithereens all the other
big guns. That’s the only way to protect
the canal. Do you understand, Ned?”
“Somewhat, Tom. Since I
gave up my place in the bank, and became a sort of
handy-lad for you, I know more about your work.
But isn’t it going to be dangerous to make a
cannon like that?”
“Well, in a way, yes, Ned.
But we’ve got to take chances, just as father
did when he invested ten thousand dollars in that opal
mine. He’ll never see his money again.”
“Don’t you think so?”
“No, Ned.”
“And when do you expect to start on your gun,
Tom?”
“Right away. I’m
making some plans now. I’m going down to
Sandy Hook and witness the test of this new big cannon.
You can come along, if you like.”
“Well, I sure will like. When is it?”
“Oh, in about a week. I’ll have to
look—”
“’Scuse me, Massa Tom,”
broke in Eradicate, as he put his head through the
half-opened office door. “’Scuse me, but
dere’s a express gen’men outside, wif
his auto truck, an’ he’s got some packages
fo’ yo’ all, marked ‘dangerous—explosive—an’
keep away fom de fire.’ He want t’
know what he all gwine t’ do wif ’em,
Massa Tom?”
“Do with ’em? Oh,
I guess it’s that new giant powder I sent for.
Why, Eradicate, have him bring ’em right in here.”
“Yais, sah, Massa Tom.
Dat’s all right; but he jest can’t bring
’em in,” and Eradicate looked behind him
somewhat apprehensively.
“Can’t bring ’em
in? Why not, I’d like to know?” exclaimed
Tom. “He’s paid for it.”
“’Scuse me, Massa Tom,”
said the colored man, “but dat express gen’men
can’t bring dem explosive powder boxes in heah,
’case as how his autermobile hab done ketched
fire an’ he cain’t get near it nohow.
Dat’s why, Massa Tom!”
“Caesar’s ghost!”
yelled the young inventor. “The auto on
fire, and that powder in it! Come on Ned!”
and he made a rush for the door.