The Girl Aviators' Motor Butterfly
the full fury of the storm struck in. Miss Prescott, who was in deadly fear of light
interest. The rain was coming down in sheets, but not one
asked Peggy, after a par
ejoined Jess, "it's rather to
with an eye-blistering blaze of blue fire. Stunned for an instant, and h
be "holding its breath" afte
declared Roy, the firs
s Prescott, "then th
ed Peggy; "don't you know that lightnin
nswer. In fact she had
outs were coming. Lou
e! f
s on fire at that far
ited tones from Roy as he
unning about,"
tack! See the smoke
k it. Say, we'd better go and
was so mean to us deserves any hel
eggy. "Go on, boys, the rain's let
sis. Come
armhouse. Several farm hands, under the direction of the disagreeable old man, whose name was Zenas Hutchings, were running about with buckets of
the assistance of the elements; but the storm had ceased almost as suddenly as it began, and
airingly to the boys a
"wa'al, you ain't brought me nuthin' but bad luck so far as I kin
His face was pale under the
er control purty soon," he cri
?" snapped old Hu
g ter fly. If ther fire gits much ho
cried old Hutchings,
bout him p
ire apparatus near
Corners. But that'
farm, like most up-to-date ones, was equipped with a telephone; at least t
honing" was the dis
hy
yonder, an' now--" He broke off in a half sob. Cantankerous as the old man had shown himself to be, and grasping withal, the boys could not help but feel sorry for the stricke
er with a visible effort, "thar's no chance of gitt
of getting the engine
nd there stood Peggy with Jess by her side. The tw
rtily, glancing approvingly at
r and ge
'll be switched!" g
s five miles, you say. Well, we ought to mak
ngines get back?" a
hez a right smart team," was the rejoinde
lames in check for a short time l
he fastest and lightest of the a?roplanes they had with them. Farmer Hutchings had hardly closed his mouth from its gaping expression
farmer, "you can't miss it. It's got a red brick church with
taking flight Jimsy espied a high red tower. Eight and one half minutes after the Dragon had shot aloft it fluttere
created commensurate excitement. But the boys had no time to answer the scores
hlessly, "a fire at Hutchings's farm. H
king young fel
be there in twenty-five minutes if I have to kill the horses. It's d
lmets and coats. In less time than the boys would have thought it possible a good-looking engine came
the way they leaped off the boys saw that
tionary, as, in a storm of cheers, his apparatus
the Topman's Cornerites were still wondering wi