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The Heroes of the School Part 25

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"I guess so," replied Ned.

"Interested in balloons; eh?"

"Sure thing," replied Bart. "Have you been running 'em long?"

"Fifteen years. Ain't much I don't know about 'em, though I don't go up very often. I won't do the parachute business, and they want a man who does that now-a-days. I'm getting too old for that."

By this time the ballast had been deposited where the man in charge wanted it.



"Hook it into the cordage now," he ordered to the little man, "and you take charge around here, Bill. She's filling now and I'm going to breakfast."

"All right," responded Bill, the newly-made acquaintance of the chums.

The boys wanted to ask him more questions, but he saved them the trouble.

"Ever see a balloon fill?" he inquired.

"No. How do they do it?" asked Frank.

"First we spread the bag out on the ground," the little man explained.

"Then we see to the top valve. That's to let the gas out when it's up in the air. There's a cord runs from the valve down to the basket. You pull it a little bit and two little trap doors, worked by springs open, and the vapor escapes from the top. Then we have what's called the 'ripping cord.' That's colored red. It hangs down just as the other one does.

Only if you yank that it tears a strip out of the balloon and lets the gas out in a hurry."

"What happens then?" asked Ned.

"You come down in a hurry, that's all. It's only used for emergency.

Well, after we get the bag laid out the way we want it, and the gas pipes connected, we lay the cordage or net over it. Then the balloon begins to fill. We hook on the sand bags, all round the edge of the netting, so's to keep her steady as she fills. When the gas begins to lift the bags a bit we hook 'em on lower down in the netting, and so on, until the balloon is full. Then we hitch on the basket, put in the proper amount of ballast, and it's all ready to go up."

"You let it go up a thousand feet and then pull it down by the wire cable?" asked Bart.

"That's it. It can make a lot of trips during a day with one filling of gas. When it begins to collapse we put in more."

"Suppose it should break away?" asked Ned.

"It never has happened with this outfit, though of course it might. I had one get away once."

"What happened?"

"Why my a.s.sistant and myself were in it. We didn't get scared, as we were old hands at the business. We just pulled the valve cord and let ourselves down easy. The bad part of it was it was at the seash.o.r.e and we came down in the ocean. We lost the balloon but we saved our lives."

"Did you ever have to pull the ripping cord?" asked Bart.

"Once. You see that's to use when you want to land in a hurry. I was up in the balloon once and it began to descend. Gas leaked out and I didn't know it. There was a strong wind and I was being blown out across Lake Michigan that time. It was a case of coming down quick and hard on dry land or being blown out over the lake. I yanked the ripping cord."

"What happened?" asked Fenn, as the little man stopped.

"Broke both legs," he replied. "Laid up two months. That sort of discouraged me and I haven't gone up much since. Make enough money as a helper and I sleep better nights."

"Is there much danger in a captive balloon?" asked Ned.

"Hardly any. In fact none to speak of," was the answer. "We've got a tested wire cable. It winds over a drum and when the drum is turned it winds the cable up and the balloon comes down."

"I guess we'll risk it," said Ned. "Eh, fellows."

"You can't leave me behind," said Bart, and the others agreed they would take a chance in the balloon.

All this while the big bag had been filling. The man and several others who were a.s.sisting, kept hooking the ballast lower in the cordage loops as the balloon arose in the air. It was over half full now.

The boys took a look at the square basket, or car, that was to be attached to the airs.h.i.+p, and at the windla.s.s which brought the captive balloon back to earth.

"Let's go home and get breakfast and come back," suggested Bart, as the boys had arisen early that morning. "We'll take the trip this afternoon."

The boys returned to the grounds about nine o'clock. It was after ten o'clock before the first ascension was made. Four young men from town went up, that being all the car would hold. The manager cautioned them about touching the cords and then, while the anxious throng watched and waited, the cable began to unwind and the balloon went up.

"That looks easy enough," declared Bart. "Us for the trip next time."

Up and up the balloon went until it looked about the size of an apple.

It remained up about ten minutes and then the windla.s.s was turned by the steam engine, which was part of the outfit, and the airs.h.i.+p came slowly down.

"How'd you like it?" asked the manager as the young men got out.

"Fine!" they exclaimed as one. "It was great. I could see clear to Woodport."

"Now who's going to be the next?" asked the manager in his professional voice. "Try a trip in the airs.h.i.+p! View the earth spread out like a map beneath you, the fields mere patches of green, the river a silver ribbon and the forest a mere bit of fuzz like the wool on Mary's little lamb.

Who's next?"

"We are!" cried Bart, and he and his chums paid their money and took their places in the basket.

"Let her go," cried the manager, and the boys, looking over the edge of the car, saw the earth dropping away below them.

CHAPTER XXIII

ABOVE THE CLOUDS

"What's the matter?" called Fenn, his voice trembling a little.

"The matter with what?" asked Bart, whose tones were not overly strong just then.

"Why we seem to be standing still and the earth is going down."

"That's always the way in a balloon, I've read," spoke Frank. "We can't see ourselves move as there's nothing to judge it by. You can't see the air, and that's what we're moving through."

"Well, it's a little more scary than I thought it was," came from Ned.

"Still I guess we can get used to it."

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