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Appleton, Victor [pseud.]

"Tom Swift and His Air Glider, or Seeking the Platinum Treasure"

Damon. "I hope we don't have to walk
very far in such a deserted country as this, Tom Swift."
"We'll have to walk a little way, Mr. Damon," replied the young
inventor. "If I go too close to the hut they'll see the airship, and as
those spies probably know that Mr. Petrofsky has been dealing with me,
They'd smell a rat at once, and run away, taking him with them, and we'd
have all our work to do over again."
"That's right," agreed Detective Trivett, who was one of the four in the
airship that was now hovering over the Atlantic coast, about ten miles
below the summer resorts of which Asbury Park was one.
It was only a few hours after Tom had received the letter from Russia
informing him of the whereabouts of the kidnapped Russian, and he had
acted at once.
His father sanctioned the plan of going to the rescue in one of Tom's
several airships and, Mr. Damon, having been on hand, at once agreed to
go. Of course Ned went along, and they had picked up the private
detective in New York, where he was vainly seeking a clew to the
whereabouts of Mr. Petrofsky.
Now the young inventor and his friends were hovering over the sandy
stretch of coast that extends from Sandy Hook down the Atlantic
seaboard. They were looking for a small fishing hamlet on the outskirts
of which, so the Russian letter stated, was situated the lonely hut in
which Mr.


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