Sunday, January 23, 2022

Uncle Bill ‘s Practical Jokes I

      Bill apparently always had an ability to annoy or provoke.  I wasn’t around for his childhood, but the story I heard a few times was once when he was  just a kid, he found his way to a roof where a crew was shingling.  When he failed to show up for dinner, his father set out to find him.   Bill was spread-eagled on the roof with nails through his shirt sleeves and pant cuffs, where the roofers left him when they left for their noon break.  I don’t think they did that so he would be sure to be there when they got back.

     His childhood is filled with such stories.  The only other one I can think of was when he got tired of someone getting into his locker at school and taking stuff out of it.  Somehow, he smuggled an automobile battery and horn (readily available at his Dad’s garage) into school and into his locker.  He wired it so when the locker door was opened, a switch connected the battery and the horn.  He had some way of disarming the alarm when he opened the door, but an unsuspecting burglar would not know how to do that. 

      Sure enough, during class time, somebody got excused from  class and went into the hall and opened Bill’s locker.  The auto horn blaring continuously in the hall would have been hard to ignore.  Bill got into some trouble over that one.

      There were other stories, such as hoisting an outhouse to the top of a building in the center of town on Halloween, or cutting kitties with his car on the ice of Lake Atwood, that I don’t know enough about to tell.  But I am quite familiar with his shenanigans as a teacher at the high school.  One I have already recounted: (https://50farm.blogspot.com/2020/01/flatulence.html) 

      Another one already recounted was the story of installing his vent pipe in his remodeled utility room.    http://50farm.blogspot.com/2017/02/bills-vent-pipe.html

      One that I shared at the funeral involved a weight-loss contest between Bill and another teacher.  They both wanted to lose weight, so somehow it evolved into a bet on who could lose the most in something like three months.

     They agreed to weigh in every so often to see how they were doing.  They would meet before school in the wrestling room and use the official scale the wrestlers use to qualify in their weight bracket.  Bill always got there first.  Tom didn’t think much about that until one day he arrived earlier than Bill was expecting him.

     He caught Bill in the act of dropping bags of shotgun pellets into his boot tops.  Why would he do that?  Why would he want to weigh more if the contest was to weigh less? 

     Bill always said “Never play the other guy’s game.  You can’t win at that.”  He certainly had different rules for this contest.  The idea was to give Tom a false sense of security.  Then, towards the end, Bill could gradually make the contest look closer, until the last day when he could jettison all the ballast and win hands down.  I think.

       When Bill had to weigh with the lead out, he was actually ahead.  The contest then kicked into high gear.  Bill eventually won.

     The stakes in the bet were a dinner for four, spouses included, paid for by the loser, which in this case was not the biggest loser.  Arrangements were made and the four of them travelled together to a nice restaurant.

       As the hostess led them to their table, Tom slapped Bill on the back and said, “Congratulations, Bill.  You won.”  What he really did was stick a piece of paper on Bill’s back.  The waitstaff had been alerted to this whole thing, so nobody said anything as they walked to and were seated at their table.

     As the meal came towards an end, a waitress came up to Bill and said, “Sir, you have something stuck to the back of your shirt.  May I remove it?”  Bill readily agreed.  The waitress pulled the sign off his shirt and handed it to Bill.

      The paper said, “I Did It With an Enema.”

   

     

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