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ng, his ax over his shoulder, stepping proudly out in the consciousness that he had done a memorable thing. Up the stairs went Will and his companion, the smoke thickening about them. Reaching the second floor and pushing open the door of the adjoining room, they saw--was it a boy on the floor? He had evidently striven to gain the door, but when he had almost reached it, had succumbed to the suffocating smoke, falling with arms stretched out toward the goal he desired to secure. And who was it running toward them, boy or man, the smoke parting about him as he advanced, then closing up again? It was a boy rushing for the door, trying to make his way through the smoke which, light as it was, proved too heavy a burden for him, for down he dropped, felling flat upon his face. It was the work of a moment apparently to seize the boys and carry them out into the entry. "Thank God for strong arms!" said Will Somers, lifting one boy and starting off with him. "Yes, thank Him for every thing good," answered his companion, shouldering the other prize. They descended the stairs. How the smoke had increased! They had been absent longer than they thought, and in that time the fire was rapidly advancing toward them. They heard a loud noise without, a shout rising above the crackle and roar of the flames. Then voices were heard at the foot of the stairs: "Come this way! Quick! Hurry!" As Will passed through the lower entry, he chanced to glance into the room whose door had been left open by the knight of the ax. A draft had been created, and Will could see that the flames were springing toward the outer air. "This way! Hurry!" people were shouting, and through the almost blinding, bewildering, suffocating smoke, Will and his companion bore the trophies they had snatched from the flames. "Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!" went up heartily from the dense, black crowd below. The rescued boys were laid upon the grass at a safe distance from the burning mill. The people began to gather about them. "Ah, poor Tim, poor Tim!" said a woman, bending over one of the boys. "That's Ann there with Tim Tyler," said Charlie to Sid Waters, these two enterprising knights having made good use of their legs and quickly reached the spot. "Who's Ann?" "It is Tim's mother." "I recognize the other boy. It's Bob Landers." "Will Somers, this you?" asked Charlie. "It will be when my face is washed. Dirty work at fires." "Why, Mr. Walton, is this
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