The opening day of the annual county
fair was always a hectic one for Gus Wilson and Stan Hicks in the Model
Garage. The town's merchants were busy arranging booths to display their
products. Farmers and ranchers brought in their prize livestock and
produce, their wives and daughters entering their choicest cookery.
Competition was keen for the various blue ribbons and other awards of
merit. On this day the county really hummed.
The day started off badly for the
Model Garage.
The telephone was ringing when Gus
opened for business at eight o'clock. A customer had wrecked his car 20
miles up the highway and needed a tow truck. Not wanting to leave the
garage for any length of time, Gus sent his helper, Stan Hicks, to bring in
the wreck. Stan had just pulled out when Barney Overboltz, the newspaper
route boy, drove up to the pumps.
"George Fraser wants you to come out
on the Big Hill road right away," Barney told Gus. "He thinks that Mike
Treadway has jammed his truck in some way, so that he can't enter his prize
bull in the livestock show. He seemed awfully excited about it."
Gus chuckled. "Treadway and Fraser
are always excited on opening day of the county fair. Since Stan's away
with the tow truck, I can't leave the garage - that is unless you'd be
willing to handle the pumps while I'm gone."
"Sure thing," Barney said. "My
newspapers are all delivered."
With Barney taking care of the Model
Garage, Gus tossed his tool kit into his light service car and headed out on
the Big Hill. It was considerably overloaded with the largest
shiniest-coated Holstein bull that Gus had ever seen, together with a Poland
China boar and now, some enormous pumpkins and squashes, and other products
of the field. George, his comely wife and their pretty, teen-age daughter,
Sally, were peering anxiously beneath the truck, to the accompaniment of
assorted bull bellows and pig protest.
"Morning, folks," Gus greeted them as
he pulled up and got out his heavy tool kit. "What seems to be the
trouble?"
"The motor runs," Fraser said
worriedly, glancing at his watch, "but the rig won't turn a wheel. It's
eight thirty now and the deadline for entering stock in the livestock show
at the county fair is 10 o'clock sharp. This bull of mine is going to take
the blue ribbon this year, for sure, if I can get him there in time."
"And," Mrs. Fraser declared, "my
upside-down cake has a mighty good chance of winning first place in the cake
baking contest."
Sally Fraser turned her big eyes on
Gus. "Just wait until Freddy Treadway sees me walk off with blue ribbon for
homemade bread. He'll sit up and take notice then."
"With those eyes, Sally," Gus said,
"you don't need to know how to cook. Start her up, Fraser. We'll see how
she acts."
Fraser started the motor and put the
truck in gear, but the vehicle didn't move.
"Probably a broken axle," Gus said,
"but it could be anywhere in the drive line. Shut off the motor and I'll
see."
With the motor stopped, but the truck
left in gear, Gus jacked up one rear wheel. He turned it by hand, let it
down and jacked up the other. Finding that he could rotate both wheels
without turning over the motor, and doubting that the vehicle would have two
broken axles, he dismissed broken axles from his mind to turn his attention
elsewhere.
"It just might be a stripped
differential," he said. "Start her up and try it in gear again, Fraser,
while I check underneath."
Fraser was running the motor in gear
with Gus underneath with his hand on the torque tube containing the drive
shaft, when Mike Treadway pulled alongside in a three-quarter-ton pickup
truck. It contained, as far as Gus could make out, a bull that was a mate
to Fraser's. Treadway, a long, lean, cadaverous man, thrust his craggy
features out the pickup window and spat in the road.
"Having trouble, George?" he inquired.
"Trouble!" Fraser exclaimed. He shut
off the motor to get down and move over to Treadway with his thumbs hooked
belligerently in the bib of his overalls.
"It seems to me, Treadway, that I
hired your sprout, Freddy, to grease this truck only yesterday. The rig was
in good shape then. You don't suppose, Treadway, that the fact that my bull
is due to beat yours at the fair has anything to do with my truck's rear end
being ripped out now?"
"Your bull beat mine!" Treadway cried,
peering at Fraser's animal curiously, as though he'd never won it before.'
Now, you wouldn't be planning to enter an animal like that in the fair,
would you, George?"
"You know I am," Fraser retorted. "In
fact, you've been leaning over my fence, ogling the critter all summer,
Treadway, trying to figure out some way to beat him.
If Gus finds a handful of your old
bolts and nuts in my differential, I'll come looking for you."
Looking up at young Freddy Treadway,
who sat beside his father, Sally Fraser protested. "Pa, Freddy wouldn't do
that. He wouldn't do anything to hurt me."
"Hurt you?" Fraser grumbled. "It's
my bull that's hurt, not you. With my truck shot, how am I going to get the
bull to the fair in time?"
"And then," Mrs. Fraser said, "there's
my upside-down cake."
"Upside-down cake!" Mrs. Treadway
exclaimed. "My goodness, Sarah, are you going to enter an upside-down cake
too?"
"Since Mrs. Treadway could hardly have
put bolts in my differential," Fraser said dryly, "let's forget the cakes,
shall we?"
"I didn't put anything in your
differential but grease," Freddy Treadway protested.
"Maybe your grease isn't any better
than your bull, George," Treadway said, grinning.
"Well, we'll be getting on. I
wouldn't want to be too late to enter the best bull in the county."
Treadway drove off, leaving Fraser
standing in a cloud of dust, muttering threats.
Gus thrust his head out from beneath
the truck. "The rear end isn't torn out, Fraser. I had my hand on the
drive shaft torque tube when you ran the rig in gear. If the drive shaft
had been turning inside the torque tube I'd have felt the vibration. It
wasn't turning, so I know that your trouble is ahead of the drive shaft,
either in the universal joint, transmission or clutch. Run it in gear again
and I'm pretty sure I can locate it."
With the motor turning over in gear,
Gus had one hand on the drive-shaft torque tube, feeling for inner
vibration, his ear cocked for any sound that might indicate a stripped
universal joint, stripped gears in the transmission, or a broken clutch
spine shaft. Suddenly a familiar odor smote his nostrils.
"Shut it off, Fraser!" he yelled above
the around of the motor.
Gus came out from beneath the truck,
took up the floorboards and removed the clutch inspection plate. Peering
into the interior with his flashlight, he saw that the uppermost stud bolt,
which held the clutch pressure plate to the flywheel, was backed off and
loose. He touched the starter button off and on, to turn the motor one
complete revolution. It showed him that all the stud bolts, which held the
vital clutch pressure plate to the flywheel, were very loose. Using an
extension spin wrench, he carefully tightened each bolt, replaced the
floorboards, checked the clutch pedal threw for floorboard clearance.
"Try it now, Fraser," Gus said. "That
loose pressure plate had your clutch slipping so much that I could smell hot
clutch lining. Maybe it won't pull this hill now with this load. The
clutch facings may be too glazed and worn from slippage to do the job."
"It had better," Fraser said grimly,
"Or I'll go over to Treadway's place and wring his neck. You can bet your
bottom dollar that he had Freddy back those bolts off."
Gus shook his head. "I'll admit that
the loosening of the stud bolts holding a clutch pressure plate is something
that doesn't happen very often, but I'm sure that Freddy didn't loosen
these. The dirt on the bolt heads showed that they hadn't had a wrench on
them in a long time. Probably the fault lies with the mechanic who
installed the clutch. When tightening those bolts against clutch spring
pressure a man can be fooled into thinking that they're tight when they're
not. Try it and see if it will pull the hill. If you drive as fast as the
law allows you'll have time to enter your bull at the fair. It's just a
little after nine."
When the truck lunged into the pull,
Fraser didn't even look back. He went barreling up Big Hill, while the
magnificent bull in the back bellowed tremendously at a comely cow it had
spotted in a nearby pasture, no doubt wishing that Gus Wilson had kept his
grease-smeared nose out of George Fraser's faulty truck transmission.
Strolling through the county fair with
Stan Hicks a couple of evenings later, Gus smiled to himself when he saw the
Treadways and the Frasers standing together in the livestock show admiring
the blue ribbon that decorated Fraser's bull. They were talking amiably.
Freddy Treadway was laughing and Sally was using her big eyes on him.
"If you hadn't proved Treadway's
innocence," Stan Hicks said, "those folks would have been enemies from here
on out."
"I doubt it," Gus replied, grinning.
"For them, the county fair comes but
once a year. Within a month they'd have been leaning over the fence,
laughing about it, each one figuring how he could beat the other at the next
livestock show."