I was sittin’ and tootin’ on my old ceramic jug one day not too very long ago and contemplatin’ and a-fixatin’ on how jug-tootin’ is hardly ever taught in our schools anymore. What a shame.
But like my old grandpap used to say, “Moanin’ and complainin’ does about as much good as a three-legged skunk with a busted stink-hole in a textile mill tryin’ to get romantic with a half-frayed spool of defective rayon-based yarn scheduled for immediate shippin’ to a once-prosperin’ perfumery that’s already been shut down due to a labor dispute and everybody says it’s haunted and you can hear the ol’ duchess carryin’ her head around in a basket on certain moonless nights, and the yarn was originally intended for costumin’ their elaborate annual talent show that ain’t even goin’ to happen, in fact some disgruntled ex-employees are thinkin’ of burnin’ down the whole shebang that night in protest over their poor treatment at the hands of management. I mean, why are they spendin’ all this money on a supposedly morale-boostin’ talent show when they dock Bill Tutweiler’s pay just ’cause he messed up his expense report? He went up there to the capitol with the VP of marketing because that dude don’t know a blessed thing about extractin’ botanical oils. Old Bill was doin’ him a favor, and this is the thanks he gets. He’d a-rather been workin’ the line any day. And his youngest, Molly, has that problem with her foot.”
Takin’ that sage advice to heart, I sought out our superintendent of schools, Mort Mortimer, in the big metal drum where he lives, under some mattresses at the junkyard. These bureaucratic fat cats sure do know how to get under a fella’s skin! First thing he started in to askin’ me to do was to stop a-droppin’ my gs and a-puttin’ the suffix a- in front of stuff. In the interest of compromise, I agreed.
Mort appeared to listen thoughtfully as I outlined my comprehensive plan for returning jug-tooting to the countywide curriculum. My astonishment was immense when he rubbed his pimpled chin for no more than a moment and said, “I’ll do it!”
Alas, my triumph was short-lived.
“I’ll do it… on one condition,” Mort said. “
You come back here to the old junkyard at midnight and face off in a jug-tooting contest against a jug-tooter of my choosing. As long as you can outplay him, I’ll bring up your plan for consideration at the next board meeting. And I can call in a few favors to line up those votes.”
With a haughty snap of my fingers, I showed him I had nothing to fear from any...
You have reached your article limit
Sign up for a digital subscription and continue reading all new issues, plus our entire archives, for just $1.50/month.
Already a subscriber? Sign in