Just in time for Halloween come boxelder bug zombies
Published 10:23 am Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Echoes from the Loafers’ Club Meeting:
“I went to the eye doctor. He said that I need glasses.”
“He could tell that from an eye test?”
“No, he based it on the fact that I thought I was in the dentist’s office.”
I’ve learned
1. I love Halloween because it turns the cobwebs in the corners of my office into decorations.
2. You know you’re getting older when you start saying your bedtime prayers at noon so you won’t fall asleep before you finish them.
3. You’re getting older if you think instant messaging is passing notes in class.
Ask Al
“Why are businesses more likely to hear from unhappy customers than happy ones?” Because the happy ones are at home clapping their hands and singing, “If you’re happy and you know it, clap your hands.”
“Did you ever intercept a pass during a football game?” Once. It was the last game I ever refereed.
“Why do wives correct their husbands so often?” Because their husbands are wrong so often.
Scenes from a car
Family car trips involve family and a car. There is usually too much of one and an excess of the other. Conversations such as this one are repeated.
“Are we there yet?”
“Is the car still moving? If it is, that means we’re not there yet.”
“How many more towns?”
“Ask your mother.”
Cafe chronicles
Sue Stadelman lives in Shawano, Wis. Her maiden name was True. Her brother married a woman named Sue. Occasionally her brother runs into someone in the course of his employment who asks him if he ever knew Sue True. He replies, “Yes. She used to be my sister. Now she’s my wife.”
The language
When people ask me how I am, I tend to reply, “Swell.”
A former schoolmate, Georgia Dinneen of New Richland, responds in similar fashion, but adds, “If I were any sweller, I’d be swollen.”
A traveling man
I drove into Oshkosh, Wis., a city with numerous roundabouts. They were slightly reminiscent of the roundabout that foiled the Griswold family in National Lampoon’s European Vacation. I traveled in the best of circles. I didn’t get lost in Oshkosh, but I did become dizzy.
Bug zombies
My wife found her workplace invaded by boxelder bugs. Some of bugs assumed positions on the floor. Each was on its back with its legs crossed as if it were in a casket. There they remained unmoving for a long time. She swept up the dead insects and placed them into a wastebasket. It wasn’t long before the dead boxelder bugs began crawling out of the dustbin. They were boxelder bug zombies.
The windshield fairy
A Hartland resident had a cracked car windshield. She called a windshield replacement company that agreed to send a van to her residence. The windshield would be replaced right there on the street in front of her house. The van arrived and the new windshield was installed — in a neighbor’s car parked nearby.
Nature notes
Wild turkeys are omnivores. Their main source of food is plant material — grasses, green leaves, and seeds. Acorns, fruits, and berries are important during fall and winter. They eat grasshoppers, dragonflies, snails, beetles, and salamanders. Young turkeys (poults) consume large amounts of insects for protein. Wild turkeys nearly always feed on the ground, rarely feeding while roosting in trees.
Meeting adjourned
“The greatest degree of inner tranquility comes from the development of love and compassion. The more we care for the happiness of others, the greater is our own sense of well-being.”
— The Dalai Lama