<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>IV</h2>
<h3>THE STORY OF A BOY WHO RAN AWAY IN A BIG BALLOON</h3>
<div class='cap'>ONE of the professor's hobbies is that gas-balloons
are better and safer than the hot-air kind, although
the latter cost less to operate. Your hot-air balloon
goes up with a rush, but comes down again as soon
as it cools; and in the coming down lies the danger. A
gas-balloon, on the other hand, stays up as long as you
keep gas in it, and the professor's secret of varnishing
holds gas like a trap.</div>
<p>As to the ordinary use of hot-air balloons for parachute
dropping, the professor has only condemnation.
A parachute, says he, is a sin and a disgrace—a thing
to be prohibited by law. The parachute kills more people
every year (the professor still is talking) than many
a battle, and kills them in unpleasant ways: drops them
on live electric wires, which shock them to death;
drops them in lakes, where they are drowned, or in the
ocean, where they are eaten by sharks; drops them in
trees, where they catch by their coat-collars and choke
to death; drops them on sharp railings, which spear
them through; drops them—but the professor's list
(backed by statistics, be it said) is too long and gruesome.
It is only fair to add that I have a friend, Leo
Stevens, a professional aëronaut, who has made thousands<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN></span>
of drops from hot-air balloons and claims that
nothing is safer than a parachute, and says he can steer
one in its downward sailing so as to avoid dangerous
landing-places, although he does admit numerous hair-breadth
escapes, as when he dropped from a parachute
two miles out at sea, this at Long Branch in 1898, and
was only saved by his life-preserver and the courage
of some fishermen, or again when De Ive, his partner
in ballooning ventures, dropped with him on one occasion
from a big balloon (one parachute was suspended
on either side), and landed in Lake Canandaigua and
was drowned. "Oh, there's no doubt a man takes
chances on a parachute," said Stevens, "but I like it."</p>
<p>There is a singular thing about parachutes, Stevens
contends, not sufficiently considered by Professor
Myers in his experiments. The professor, with his
usual thoroughness, has tested all shapes and kinds of
parachutes by dropping them from a captive balloon
with a sand-bag hitched on instead of a man. The
dropping was done by a fuse which would burn the
supporting rope and at a given moment set the parachute
free, just as a man under the parachute would
cut it free. And in a large number of cases the parachute
did not open in time to save the sand-bag man
from destruction on the ground.</p>
<p>"That proves," argues the professor, "that parachutes
are extremely dangerous."</p>
<p>"Nothing of the sort," answers Leo Stevens; "it only
proves that there is a big difference between a sand-bag
man and a real man. The sand-bag is dead weight,
and the man is live weight. A parachute will open
for the one where it won't open for the other."</p>
<p>"Why will it," queries the professor, "if the man and
the sand-bag weigh the same?"</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus28.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="378" alt=""STEVENS CAME DOWN ONCE WITH A PARACHUTE TWO MILES OUT IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN—AND WAS PROMPTLY RESCUED."" title="" /> <span class="caption">"STEVENS CAME DOWN ONCE WITH A PARACHUTE TWO MILES OUT IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN—AND WAS PROMPTLY RESCUED."</span></div>
<p>"I don't know why, but it will," Stevens insists.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN></span>
"If what you say were true I'd be dead long ago, and
my wife, and all my assistants."</p>
<p>I well remember my first visit to aëronaut Stevens
at his little balloon establishment on Third Avenue, a
rambling, go-as-you-please attic, with things strewn
about anyhow, lengths of balloon-cloth hanging from
rafters for the varnish to dry, crinkly yellow segments
of balloons heaped near a sewing-machine that was
stitching them into spheres, rows of hot-air balloons
from past seasons ranged along on shelves in tight
bundles, models of flying-machines, all kinds of parachutes,
including one in red, white, and blue, made to
take up a dog, and in various dusty corners photographs
of Leo Stevens walking a tight rope, Leo Stevens
rising to the clouds over waving multitudes, Leo
Stevens (and his big umbrella) soaring down to earth
from the height of twenty steeples, swinging with
dancing-master grace from the bar of his trapeze. I
liked this place for the good-natured faces of "Kid"
Benjamin, who was scooping cold salmon out of a can
when I came in, and a young lady with long eyelashes,
who was running the machine.</p>
<p>Leo Stevens was out, said this young lady; he was
seeing some patent lawyers about his new air-ship, but
she was Mrs. Stevens, and could she do anything for
me? I asked various questions, and she answered
them from a wide practical knowledge. She had made
dozens of balloons and parachutes—yes, and used them,
too. It was "Kid" Benjamin who offered this latter information,
remarking that she was "grand on a parachute."</p>
<p>Mrs. Stevens smiled, and explained that she had
never made an ascension in her life until the previous
summer, and then only because her husband was in a
fix through the failure of another woman to appear. A<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN></span>
balloon race had been advertised between two lady
aëronauts, and when the time came one of them, Miss
Nina Madison, was missing. Rather than have the
thing a failure and a big crowd disappointed, Mrs.
Stevens agreed to go up. She would take Miss Nina's
place and race the professional. And she did it, and
she won the race.</p>
<p>"You see," she said, "I didn't feel nervous as another
woman might, because I'd been living with balloons
for years. Besides they hitched me fast to the
parachute ropes so I couldn't have fallen if I'd wanted
to. It was lovely going up; everybody said we made a
beautiful ascension, and the two balloons kept so close
together that the other lady and I were talking all the
way. At last, when we were up about three thousand
feet, she called out that my balloon was settling and
for me to cut. But I called back: 'Cut yourself,' and,
sure enough, she did in a minute, and I watched her
parachute open out and sink and get smaller and
smaller, until she reached the ground. A few minutes
later, when I saw my balloon had really settled, I cut,
too. H-o-o-o, what a sensation! You know those
awful dreams where you fall and fall? Well, it's just
like that for two or three seconds, until your parachute
fills wide and springs you up against the ropes.
Then you sail down, down, with a lovely easy motion
until you get close to the ground. But look
out for the landing. Once I struck in a treetop.
And you're liable to come down on houses or anything."</p>
<p>"You're liable to come down in the middle of a
lake," put in "Kid" Benjamin.</p>
<p>"Do you go up?" said I to the "Kid," whose hands
and face showed black smears from painting balloon-cloth.
He was certainly not over eighteen.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Do I?" he answered, with a grin. "I made more'n
twenty ascensions and drops last summer."</p>
<p>"He's the one," said Mrs. Stevens, "who carried
that boy up hanging from the parachute ropes. Don't
you remember? At Coney Island? The boy was
helping hold the balloon, and when she started his foot
got caught."</p>
<p>"And he went up hanging by his foot?"</p>
<p>The "Kid" nodded. "Yep, stuck fast in the rigging
by one shoe. As I sat on the trapeze bar there was
that boy forty feet above me kicking and yelling. Say,
you'd never guess what he was yelling about."</p>
<p>"I suppose he was afraid?"</p>
<p>The "Kid" shook his head. "No, sir; he didn't
seem to mind the eight hundred feet we'd gone up, not
a bit. What worried him was sixty cents in pennies
and nickels that had spilled out of his pants pockets
while he was upside down."</p>
<p>Then the "Kid" explained how he postponed his
parachute drop on this occasion and got down safely,
boy and all, by letting the balloon cool off and gradually
settle to the ground.</p>
<p>"Isn't a parachute pretty long when it hangs down?"
I asked.</p>
<p>"Certainly. It's thirty-five feet from where she
hitches on t' the balloon to where you sit on the bar.
That's length o' ropes and length o' cloth both."</p>
<p>"Then, how can you cut her loose from 'way down
on the bar?"</p>
<p>"I'll tell you," put in Mrs. Stevens. "You just
pull a tape that hangs down inside the parachute from
a cutaway-block at the parachute head. The holding-rope
passes through that block, and there's a knife-blade
in the block over the rope. The tape pulls the
knife-blade down, and away you go. It's one of my<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN></span>
husband's inventions." She was plainly very proud of
her husband.</p>
<p>Presently entered Leo Stevens himself, a surprisingly
young man for such a veteran, scarcely over
thirty, the explanation being that he began ballooning
as a mere child. Before he was ten he had gained
some mastery of slack-wire feats, and at thirteen he
was known over the country as Prince Leo, a marvel of
the air, in black and gold, making the fortune of some
gentlemen who exploited him.</p>
<p>His arrival recalled the object of my visit, which was
to get from him some practical ideas for balloon and
parachute experiments on a small scale, the sort of
thing boys might undertake in their own backyards;
and, on learning this, Stevens caught my idea at
once. He knew just what I wanted, and was glad to
help me. He liked boys himself, and we settled down
forthwith to a consideration of segments and materials
and dimensions and, after a little planning and measuring,
he had the problem solved.</p>
<p>"A hot-air balloon is the easiest and cheapest for
boys to make," said Stevens, "and it goes up with more
of a rush than a gas balloon. So we'll tell them how
to make a hot-air balloon. I remember a boys' balloon
picnic that I got up one summer at Chautauqua
Lake while I was making ascensions there. What fun
those boys did have! We sent up a kitten in a strawberry
basket, strapped fast, you know, so she couldn't
fall out, and the basket hung from the parachute by a
time fuse that burned loose about a thousand feet up,
and down came the whole thing, parachute, kitten, and
all, sailing beautifully and landing as easily as you
please. It never hurt the kitten at all. But the
balloon drifted nearly a mile away across a swamp and
stuck in a big tree. What a time those boys had chasing<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN></span>
it and climbing after it and slopping home with it
after dark through the swamp, with lanterns and
torches! I suppose they got well spanked, a good
many of them, but boys don't mind."</p>
<p>"How big was this balloon?"</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus141.png" width-obs="82" height-obs="300" alt="Deflated balloon" title="" /></div>
<p>"About eleven feet high, inflated; that's a good size.
I mean eleven feet high inflated, but the segments must
be cut out eighteen feet long to allow for the curve.
See," and he made a sketch of a single segment.
"There must be fourteen segments like
this, each one eighteen feet long and two
feet wide at the widest part, then tapering
to a point at one end, the top, and to
a width of five inches at the other end,
the mouth, which must be left open.
These segments are made from ordinary
sheets of tissue paper, first pasted into
long sheets (use ordinary starch paste) and
then cut out after the pattern. Then the
fourteen segments must be pasted together
lengthwise along the edges, and they will
form a balloon with enough lifting power
to take up a parachute and small passenger,
say a kitten or a puppy."</p>
<p>"We must tell them how to fill this balloon with
hot air," I suggested.</p>
<p>"That's so," said Stevens. "Well, it's very simple.
They must dig a trench, in the yard or somewhere, five
feet long and one foot deep, with a hole dug at one end
for a fire. Then they must cover over the trench with
pieces of tin and spread dirt over that, and boards over
all; this is for a good draught. Then they must make
a fire in the hole at one end of the trench out of barrel-staves
or anything that will give a hot flame, and
toward the last they might throw on a little kerosene.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></SPAN></span>
That's exactly the way we make our fires for big
ascensions.</p>
<p>"At the other end of the trench they must fix a length
of stove-pipe sticking straight up out of the draught-hole
into the mouth of the balloon and four or five boys
must stand around on fences and boxes to hold the side
of the balloon away from the fire which will shoot high
above the chimney. Many a big hot-air balloon has
been burned up that way on a windy day, and in our
ascensions we have dozens of ropes sewn all over the
balloon sides; we call them wind guys, so that men
can pull the cloth away from the fire while it's filling.
Say, talking about boys getting spanked, I must tell
you a story."</p>
<p>The story was from his own boyish experience—how
he made his first trip to the clouds at the age of twelve,
and set a whole city talking. This was the city of
Cleveland, Ohio, where on a certain Sunday afternoon
there was to be a balloon ascension at the great pleasure
park. Young Stevens, of course, was present, wild
with excitement, for balloons had been in his thoughts
and dreams ever since he could remember. He pressed
forward through the crowd and, with bulging eyes,
watched the aëronaut arrange his barrels and pipes for
the hydrogen-making, danced with delight as the great
bag swelled and struggled, and finally was bitter in disappointment
when the police appeared suddenly with
orders to prevent the ascension, because the day was
Sunday.</p>
<p>Then, while the balloonist was protesting and pleading,
Stevens formed his plan. He would go up himself
instead of the man. There was the balloon all
ready, held by a single rope. There was the basket
swinging impatiently, empty, and he more impatient
than the basket. Quickly he turned to a boy who<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></SPAN></span>
was with him. "Say, I'll tell you what. You get
a knife and cut that rope, and I'll go up." But
the boy demurred. Anyhow, he had no knife. So
away dashed Stevens, and returned in a jiffy with a
knife, taken from his father's shop. It was a sharp
one.</p>
<p>"There," panted the boy. "Now, cut her quick, soon
as I climb in."</p>
<p>The people about were so occupied with the parley
growing warm between balloonist and police that
few paid attention when a little shaver in knickerbockers
crept close to the basket and then slipped over
its side. But the next minute nine thousand people
paid considerable attention and shouted their surprise
and delight as the eager balloon suddenly shot skyward,
a small white face peering down and trying not
to look frightened. The knife had done its work, and
the subject of dispute, abruptly removed, was presently
soaring half a mile above the city, drifting with the
wind.</p>
<p>Meantime little Leo, curled up at the bottom of the
car, was saying over to himself a story he had read of
two little babies who went up once in a balloon and
sailed far, far away and never came back, but they
might have come back if only they had been strong
enough to pull a string that hung over them. Hello!
So there was a string to pull! Well, any boy could
pull a string. He wasn't a baby. But where was the
old string? He must look about and find it. And
sure enough he did find it, only it turned out to be a
stout rope, and he tugged at it valiantly until the valve
opened and the balloon began to descend, just as the
story-book said it would. And so occupied was Leo
with keeping this valve open that he never once looked
at the wide view spread beneath him, nor knew where<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN></span>
he was until he came bumping into a treetop, and found
himself upset among the branches, which first tore his
clothes to tatters and then dropped him into a muddy
canal, whence he emerged a sadly battered and bedraggled
aëronaut, yet happy. And even when his
mother chastised him that evening with a ram-rod (his
father being a gun-maker) he remained serene, for had
he not gone up in a balloon, and was not the whole of
Cleveland admiring him, and would he not go up again
(he knew he would, despite all promises made under
ram-rod stress) as soon as the chance presented?</p>
<p>And within a year the chance did present, a bait of
fifty dollars per ascension being offered the lad, and
the outcome was he ran away from home, and saw no
more of his family until years had passed and he had
grown accustomed to dangers of the air and diamonds
of value in his apparel.</p>
<p>"Isn't it queer," said Stevens, talking it over, "how
a fellow will stay away from his people when everything
is all right, and get back to them through trouble?
After I started in to be a balloonist I never saw
my mother for seven years. Then I came once more
to Cleveland to give an exhibition at the very park
where I first went up—they call it Forest City Park.
I was to perform on a slack wire nine hundred feet
long, stretched between two towers one hundred and
fifty feet high. My wire wasn't long enough to reach
all the way, so they spliced on a length of three hundred
feet more, and before I began my feats I walked
back and forth over the wire to test it. I always do
that. Then I walked to the middle of the wire and
pretended to slip and fall—that's a regular trick to
startle the crowd. You let yourself drop suddenly,
catch on the wire, and spring up again. Well, this
time when I let myself drop I didn't spring up again,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN></span>
and I didn't know anything more for nineteen days,
when I came to myself in the Huron Street Hospital.
Somehow that splice in the wire had broken, and I
went straight to the ground, breaking one arm, both
wrists, and cracking my spinal column in four places.
It's a wonder I lived at all, they say, and during that
hard time my mother came to me, as mothers do. Oh,
she doesn't love the balloon business, I can tell you.
But I love it. I've made over a thousand
ascensions, and never been badly hurt but
once."</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus145.png" width-obs="79" height-obs="300" alt="Shape" title="" /></div>
<p>We were far away now from our balloon-making,
and I reminded Stevens that we had
still to tell the boys how to make a parachute.</p>
<p>"All right," said he; "here you are," and
he gave me the following directions: "The
parachute is made of fourteen segments of
tissue paper, each one like this, measuring
thirty-six inches long, six inches wide at
the base, and tapering like the pattern
up to a point. These segments must be
pasted together lengthwise, the fourteen
points joining at the top of the parachute, and in
each one of the fourteen side-seams a length of
eighty inches of No. 8 thread must be pasted, leaving
two inches sticking out at the top and about four feet
hanging down below. The short ends at the top must
be tied together, and these made fast to a piece of iron
hoop pasted in the mouth of the balloon. Here the
fuse must be placed and lighted just as the balloon is
ready to start. A five-minute fuse will be long enough,
and it must be so placed that when it has burned its
time the parachute will fall from the balloon. The
long ends below must be tied to a curtain ring, from<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN></span>
which the little basket hangs, with the kitten securely
fastened in it by a piece of cloth pierced with four holes
for the four legs. This can be brought up over the
kitten's back and tied to the sides of the basket. In
this way the kitten is in neither danger nor discomfort.
The boys must be careful to make this plain to mothers
and sisters, or their experiments may be stopped by
family orders. I'll guarantee one thing, though, if
they carry out these instructions carefully, your boy
friends will have a fine time."</p>
<p>I certainly hope they will.</p>
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