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LITTLE HOUSE PROJECT
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| GUS MEETS AN
INVASION by Martin Bunn
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Taming old Ezra's tractor in time to save
his hay from the hoppers has Gus hopping, too.
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Business was rather quiet around Gus
Wilson's Model Garage when that hot east wind started blowing. The rush of
the harvest season was still more than a month away. But with that wind
came the grasshoppers - and action aplenty.
The hoppers swept over the countryside. Up to
two inches in length, they had been appearing periodically in the area, but
the oldest residents declared that they had never before seen such hordes of
the pests as now invaded the fields.
Farmers sprang into frenzied activity moving
into the fields to cut the green grain and stack it for hay, before the
hoppers ate it to the ground. Cars skidded into ditches on the highway,
radiators boiled from becoming clogged with crushed grasshoppers.
Gus Wilson and his helper Stan Hicks, found
themselves busier than apple pickers in a hailstorm.
In the midst of the confusion came an urgent
telephone call from Ezra Hendricks, who ran a farm a few miles out of town.
Ezra was an irascible old character who with his close neighbors, Pete
Blinstock and Tom Hanratty, was often a source of amusement to Gus.
Gus Gets a Call for Help
"Get on out here, Gus," Ezra Hendricks yelled
over the telephone. "The danged hoppers are eating my place bare to the
bone, right before my eyes."
Gus grinned at Stan Hicks, brushed a grasshopper
from the back of his neck.
"You don't tell me!" he roared. "What do you
want me to do, Ezra? Come out and shoo 'em away?"
"No, you lantern-jawed idiot," Ezra howled.
"I'm cutting my grain and the tractor won't run."
The grin left Gus's features. This could be
serious. Gus had put that queer old tractor - a converted auto - in shape
for harvest hardly two months back. A balky tractor at this time, with
every rig in the country busy, could cost Ezra tons of valuable hay.
Gus tossed his field kit into his car and took
off for the Hendricks farm. When he arrived he found not only Hendricks but
also his two neighbors, Pete Blinstock and Tom Hanratty, buckled around the
tractor. A hayrake and a hayrack, both horse-drawn, stood close by.
Friends in Need
Despite their constant wrangling, these three
old codgers were the best of friends. Blinstock and Hanratty had rushed to
aid Ezra in putting up his threatened hay.
"You old goat," Hanratty was yelling, shoving
his round, florid features within inches of Ezra's gray, bristling beard.
"I tell you the whole shebang's haywire, from
stem to stern. I could cut more hay with a dull scythe."
"The gas tank's full of water," Pete Blinstock
insisted. "Old Ezra's so tight that he cuts his gasoline half and half with
water."
"Bah!" Ezra exploded, his tattered hat crawling
with grasshoppers as long as a man's finger. "Here comes Gus Wilson.
He'll have this thing perking like a kitten in no
time."
"She'd better perk," Gus said grimly, jerking his
kit from the car and preparing to go into action. "How's she act, Ezra?"
"Won't pull the hat off your head," Ezra
grumbled, "Jerks along, backfiring to beat the band. Sounds like a Gatling
gun."
"Backfiring, eh!"
Gus grunted, stuffing tools into the capacious
pockets of his coveralls. "Ignition trouble."
The cover for one side of the tractor's hood had
been removed to let the engine run cooler in the stifling weather.
Swiftly, Gus checked the distributor cap for
cracks, the primary and secondary wiring for breaks.
"Let's try her now, Ezra," he said, stepping
back.
Motor Runs - but Gus Isn't Happy
Ezra stepped on the starter. The motor ran
smoothly. This might be one of those jobs that haunt garagemen. You have a
balky engine, go over it, finding nothing wrong, yet in some puzzling,
mysterious manner you have corrected the trouble. But Gus didn't like it.
It was too easy.
"I'd better ride around the field with you
once," he told Hendricks, climbing onto the step behind the right front
wheel, bracing himself on the frame with a knee.
Gus squatted down as they got under way, his ear
attuned to the motor, feeling the shower of grasshoppers on his back as they
came from the falling and disturbed grain.
As they completed a circuit of the field, Gus
dropped off before the farmhouse, waved Ezra on Blinstock and Hanratty
picked up the reins of their teams and began raking and forking hay into the
rack for stacking. Mrs. Hendricks, a buxom, gray-haired woman, emerged from
the house to greet him.
"The only time that you ever come to see us,
Gus, is when we're in trouble," she said. "Now, you come right up to the
house and have a snack before you go back to town."
Trouble in the Air
"Now, don't you go to tempting me, Ma
Hendricks," Gus protested, thinking of Stan Hicks all alone at the garage.
"And don't you try to dodge me, Gus Wilson,"
Mrs. Hendricks said firmly, and she took Gus by the arm and urged him toward
the house.
In the cool, high-ceilinged kitchen, facing pie
and milk that had his mouth watering. Gus paused with his first bite in
mid-air. Borne on the wind came the sounds of distant explosions and loud
voices raised in wrath. He got up, rammed his hat down on his head and made
for the door.
"Excuse me, ma'am," he said. "Sounds like we
got trouble again."
At the corner of the field he waited for the
tractor, which was coming on slowly, bucking and backfiring. There was a
note to the motor that had a familiar ring to Gus, yet still seemed somehow
different. He couldn't quite pin it down.
The engine seemed to run on all cylinders, then
miss on one, clear up, miss on two. At times it seemed to be running on
only three of the six cylinders.
Gases from unfired charges gathered in the
upright exhaust stack, exploding with a belching of black smoke. It sounded
not like one loose ignition wire making and breaking contact, but like two
or three. Beside the tractor ran Hanratty and Blinstock, yelling varied
instructions to Ezra.
"Pull out the choke, you blue-faced walrus,"
Hanratty screamed. "She ain't getting enough gas."
Check and Double-Check
Ezra stood up on the tractor, shaking his fist
as he yelled back. Gus ducked his head under the instrument panel. He
began checking the wires in front of Ezra's quivering and bony knees. A
loose ammeter or ignition-switch wire, bouncing around, could be causing the
missing. But why hadn't it missed, Gus asked himself when he rode the
tractor around the field? Gus couldn't find any loose wires, but just for
luck he tightened the connections on the instrument panel with a deep-socketed
spin driver. Then he jammed his hand down on the starter button. The motor
broke into a smooth, even song.
"Now," Gus declared straightening up to look
into three pairs of cagey eyes, "what do you know about that?"
"I only know that she's hitting and I'm
cutting," Ezra said excitedly. "Stand back, Gus."
It's Easy When You Know the Answer
As the old man shifted and then eased up on the
clutch, the motor took hold smoothly, then missed. Gus walked along the
side, peering in at the motor through the open side of the hood. Suddenly
he signaled Ezra to kill it, worked on the engine a few moments with both
hands, then dragged the side of the hood out from behind the tractor. He
clamped it firmly in place.
He walked off down the field in a cloud of
hoppers, chuckling to himself.
In Mrs. Hendricks' kitchen he ate his pie and drank
his cold milk.
"Don't you dare tell those boys what was really
wrong, unless it happens again," he told Mrs. Hendricks with a grin. "Then
you go out and show them up by fixing it yourself. It was the darndest
thing I ever saw, for a fact. With one side of the hood off, those big
grasshoppers were getting in there on the motor, and actually shorting out
the plugs by standing on the tops of them with their forefeet, their hind
kickers on the block. The shock of the juice passing through their bodies
held them there. It didn't seem to cripple them a bit, either. When the
motor stopped they hopped off the plugs, spry as you please.
When I rode the tractor around the field I had my
shoulders in the hood opening so they couldn't jump in."
Mrs. Hendricks had a happy gleam in her eye.
"Gus," she said fervently, "I'd get a store of
enjoyment out of making them three look like even worse monkeys then they
act - the poor dears. I surely would. Here, you'd better have another
piece of pie."
END
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