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they gave up the idea. With this flight Fowler gained the distinction of being the first aviator to fly from coast-to-coast for the second time. 

Fowler then returned to the United States and began preparing for the summer exhibition season. He also appeared at various theaters in San Francisco and vicinity showing the Panama aerial movies with his personal commentary. Through July and August he was at Overland Park, Kansas City, Missouri, for an extended engagement giving exhibitions and carrying passengers. While there, on August 9th he made a balloon ascension as a passenger with Capt. H.E. Honeywell, and enjoyed it. At Kansas City Fowler reportedly operated the first airport established in that city. In mid-September he flew at the McPherson County Fair, McPherson, Kansas, for one week, and after an active exhibition season returned to San Francisco in December for the winter. In November Fowler contracted to fly periodic aerial inspection patrols of electric power lines between Oakland and Oroville, California, for the Great Western Power Company, a new use for aviation at that time. The distance was about 70 miles and he carried a company inspector who noted from the air where line repairs were needed. Reportedly Fowler did a very creditable job of demonstrating the early commercial possibility of such a service during the course of this contract. On December 24th he delivered several sacks of Christmas mail by air to Sacramento, Califronia [[California]], as a stunt. 

During the spring of 1914 Fowler sold his transcontinental Model B Wright to Walter Brookins and Ralph Newcomb, his former machanic, who overhauled and rebuilt it with ailerons instead of the original warp, and they did considerable flying with it for sport and movie contracts. That season Fowler did some exhibition work, conducted a flying school, carried passengers, and for a time was again on a vaudeville circuit showing the movies of his Panama flight and giving lectures at several theaters in California. 

In the spring of 1915 he and Silas Christofferson operated flying boats, carrying passengers at the Panama Pacific Exposition. He had just completed a flying boat of his own, with a Hall-Scott engine known as the "Fowler Flyer." That

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