The Banner Boy Scouts in the Air. George A. Warren

The Banner Boy Scouts in the Air - George A. Warren


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a few minutes later. “Already to go up?” he asked. They answered eagerly that they were and he said, “Then let’s go.”

      The two boys fell in alongside of him with the three others trailing behind. At the hangar, one of the mechanics helped the major wheel out the plane. Then the mechanic hunted up a couple of jackets and goggles for the boys. When everything was ready, the major said, “All right, boys, climb into the observer’s seat. If you make yourselves small enough, there will be plenty of room for both of you.”

      They climbed in. The other three boys were told to retreat about a hundred yards away. Finally the major got into the cockpit. Turning to the boys, he asked them, “Everything all right? Not frightened?”

      They shook their heads and assured him that they felt perfectly at ease. The mechanic grasped hold of the propeller. “Ready! Switch off! Suck in!” he shouted.

      “Switch off! Suck in!” answered the pilot.

      The boys leaned over to watch what the pilot was doing. As the mechanic turned the propeller over about half a dozen times, the pilot, with a few strokes of the doping pump, sprayed gasoline vapor into the cylinders. “Contact!” cried the mechanic.

      “Contact!” replied the major. He pressed down the switches and quickly turned the handle of the starting magneto. Brrr … brrrr … went the engine. The mechanic sprang away. The mechanic made as though to bound forward but was checked by the wooden chocks, placed in front of the under-carriage wheels.

      Just as he was ready, he turned back and asked, “Are you ready boys?”

      “Yes, sir,” they replied.

      “Very well, then, we’re off.”

      The three boys at the sheds cheered lustily as the machine began to move and Paul and Jack waved to them. And before they realized it the machine was about six feet off the ground which seemed to be falling away beneath them. The plane kept climbing steadily upwards. The boys leaned forward. They saw that the air-speed indicator registered a little over a hundred miles an hour, and they wondered because they couldn’t feel the machine traveling at such a rate of speed. As they continued to climb, the boys looked over the side at the scene below them. The earth now appeared like a great colored map, with fields showing up in different shades of green and brown. The airport which they had only shortly left, was a little to the left of them. Sheds and houses and barns appeared as very small rectangular blocks. As they climbed still higher, things took on yet smaller proportions. Major McCarthy spoke to them through the telephone. “Well, how do you like it?” he asked.

      Paul answered for both of them. “Marvelous!” he cried.

      The pilot banked the machine and it steeped over on one side so sharply that the boys instinctively clutched for support. McCarthy’s voice came over the telephone “Don’t be alarmed,” he said, “there’s no danger and you can’t fall out.” He straightened out the machine. Again they heard his voice. “Feel a little giddy?” he asked. “If you do,” he cried, “look down upon some fixed object on the ground and you’ll feel all right.”

      Both boys complied with his instructions and they soon got over their giddiness. The pilot kept the machine sailing at an even keel. Soon they were flying over a small town and they saw what appeared to them as ants scurrying along. They knew that the ants were really men and women and they marveled how small they appeared. As a matter of fact, everything looked like toys from that distance and flying above a railroad, the track seemed to be two thin lines drawn with a pencil. Major McCarthy’s voice came over the telephone. “How would you boys like some stunts?” he asked.

      The boys grinned at each other. Paul answered for both of them. “Very much,” he said.

      “All right,” he said, “we’ll have to be satisfied with only one today. Just to see how you fellows take it. First we’ll bank and turn around. Ready!”

      But before they could answer the pilot already had the machine keeled over on one side. On an even keel again, the major asked them, “How about your safety belts.” They adjusted their safety belts and told him so. “Very well,” he said, “here goes.” And so saying, he opened the throttle and the plane bounded forward. In a few seconds the nose sprang upward. As it rose the forward speed decreased, yet the engine continued to run at the maximum revolutions. The machine was not pointing vertically upwards. For a moment the plane appeared to hang on the revolving propeller and it felt as though the machine must inevitably drop tail foremost. But right away the nose fell over to one side and dropped and the tail shot up and the machine was shooting sharply downward. For some distance they continued to dive, then the pilot shut off the throttle and pulled back the elevator lever and brought the plane again on an even keel. However, they were now flying in the opposite direction. McCarthy asked, “How was it?”

      The boys were thrilled. “Fine!” cried Paul.

      “Were you afraid?”

      “No, not in the least.”

      “Well, that was an easy one, but the next time we’ll try a harder one.”

      Jack couldn’t contain himself, so he cried, “How about now?”

      Major McCarthy shook his head. “Enough for today,” he told them.

      They were now flying over the airport and a minute later they landed. The three waiting boys sent up a couple of greeting cheers and ran over to meet the grinning two who were tumbling out of the plane. “How was it?” demanded Nuthin’.

      William was impatient. “Tell us about it, quick,” he cried.

      Paul nudged his chum in the ribs and asked, “Do you think we ought to tell them?”

      Jack smiled and wiggled his head. “I don’t know,” he said. “I think we ought to consider it.”

      William was impatient. “Hey, come on,” he cried. “No stalling now.”

      The major joined the group and the two boys thanked him. He said, “It’s quite all right, boys, I’m only too glad to do it. And by the way, I heard all about what happened yesterday. You tell that fellow, what’s his name—”

      “Bobolink,” cried Nuthin’.

      “Bobolink,” repeated the major. “He’s a friend of yours, isn’t he?”

      Wallace interjected, “He certainly is. He is a grand fellow, too.”

      “I’m glad to hear it,” said the major. “So you tell him that just as soon as he’s recovered, to come over here and I’ll take him up for a ride.”

      “Yea!” cried Nuthin’, “hooray for Major McCarthy!”

      They gave the major three cheers. But William wanted to know something else. “How about us?”

      “Well,” he said, “I’ll think it over.” They were now at the door of the office building. Entering, he turned around and said, “Don’t go away, now. I’ll be out right away.”

      The boys squatted on the ground, with Paul and Jack in the center and the two boys were obliged to tell every detail of their experience. It took about fifteen to twenty minutes to narrate the story and when finally it was told, the boys sat back, speechless and lost in thought. William said, “Gee, I hope the major gives me a ride. I’d do anything.”

      Wallace said, “Getting a ride is all very well, but what I really am interested in is to learn how to fly. I wonder if it’s hard to learn.”

      “No, I don’t think so,” replied Paul. “Major McCarthy told us yesterday that it was easy to learn.”

      Jack said, “I was watching him all the time and it looks very simple. But we could ask him.”

      “Yes, we could do that,” remarked Wallace, “but what we want to know is whether he would teach us.”

      William spoke up, saying, “All of us.”

      “Of course, all of us,” agreed Paul.

      Just then the major came out and they called him over. He seated himself on the


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