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Greetings from the Laugh Letter staff! We hope you enjoy this
newest member of our newsletter "family"--you won't find any meal
plans or yard and garden tips here, but you will find
plenty of grins (or groans) and some good hearty laughs. Ready to
feel good? Read on!
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It's About Time...
Neither
Hear Nor There
TWO retired
gentlemen were having coffee at the town diner. The first man
spoke up, "I just bought the best hearing aid money can buy."
The second man
asked, "What kind is it?"
The first man,
looking at his watch, replied, "It's 2:30."
Keeping
Watch
THE OWNER of a
large lumber mill needed to have the correct time to blow the
whistle at each shift change.
At about 4 a.m.
on his way to work, he would stop at the jewelry store to set his
watch. In order to see the clock inside the store, he had to press
his hands and face up against the window glass. This always left
smudges on the window.
For 20 years, the
jeweler had to wash that window every morning, and he was getting
tired of it. One day, he decided to stay at the store all night
and see who was doing that to his window.
Early the next
morning, there was that face looking in his window. He ran out and
caught the mill owner and said, "For 20 years, I've been washing
that window every morning to get the smudges off. Why are
you doing that?"
The mill owner
replied, "For 20 years, I've set my watch by your clock so I can
blow the mill whistle at the correct time."
"Oh my!"
exclaimed the jeweler. "For 20 years, I've been setting that clock
by your mill whistle." |
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Small Talk
WHEN my daughter Katrina was 3, she
stood against a doorjamb and put her hand on top of her head.
"See how much I growed," she
exclaimed. "I'm all the way up to my hand!"
--Shari S., Sutton, Vermont
ONE EVENING as I hurriedly
slathered on some facial cream, my daughter, who was 3 at the
time, asked, "What is that for?"
To avoid a lengthy explanation, I
answered, "To make me look pretty."
She looked up at me and said very
seriously, "It isn't working very good, is it?"
--Zelma D., Holden, Missouri
MY HUSBAND, Adrian, was snoring
loudly on our davenport. I remarked to our grandson Jack, "Boy,
Grandpa sure is sawing logs."
"Grandma, why do they say ‘sawing
logs'?" Jack asked. I explained the concept to him until I was
certain he understood.
About 2 hours later, Adrian was
still snoring loudly. "Look, Grandma," Jack finally pointed out.
"Grandpa is still chopping wood!"
--Tillie F., Appleton, Wisconsin
A SLICK SPOT threw our car into a
360-degree spin. After stopping, I turned to the backseat to check
our 5-year-old.
"Mommy!" she exclaimed, "I didn't
know you could drive like they do on TV!"
--Isabel R., Columbia Falls, Montana |
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Shaky Situation
WHAT'S this
curly topped toddler gotten into?
Click here to find out! |
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Blushing Blunders
Should Have Ducked
"ONE cold winter day, I was driving
my 85-year-old father home from the doctor's office," relates Mary
B. of Corfu, New York.
"As we passed a small farm pond, I
saw a duck seemingly frozen in the ice. I was very upset to see
such an unsettling sight--all I could think about was the poor
duck freezing to death.
"I turned the car around and went
up to the farmhouse, but there was no one around. Father, who grew
up trapping, hunting and fishing, didn't seem nearly as concerned
as I was, which surprised me.
"When we got home, I immediately
told my husband about the terrible sight I had seen. He chuckled
and said, 'Don't worry--it was just a duck decoy frozen in the
ice.'
"I turned to look at my father, and
he had a silly smile on his face. I felt so foolish!" |
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Not-So-Deep Subject
WHEN WE needed a
new well last summer, it was right in the middle of a terrible hot
spell. The afternoon the well digger arrived and set up his rig,
the temperature was over 100 degrees.
After just a
short time on the job, the well digger got in his truck and
started to drive away. When I walked up, he stopped and leaned out
of the cab. "Half done," he said.
Knowing that he
had to go down several hundred feet, I looked at the well and saw
he'd only gone about 6 feet. When he noticed the perplexed look on
my face, he grinned and said, "Well begun is half done."
--Robert R., Austin, Texas |
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Some Smiley Photos...With Heart
WITH Valentine's
Day this month, Mother Nature has gone to great lengths to remind
us that love, indeed, is in the air.
For photo
evidence, just look at these cacti showing the thorny side of
pitching woo!
For more photos
with heart,
click here. |
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Animal Antics
As A Rooster, He Laid an Egg
I GREW UP on a small farm in
Oregon. To make a little extra money, I sometimes gave horseback
riding lessons.
Once when a neighbor boy wanted a
lesson but didn't have the $2 I charged, he offered a rooster with
a floppy red comb.
Mom and I quickly realized that
chicken preferred people to other chickens, so we often let it
come into the kitchen, especially during cold spells.
One day, it hopped up onto the
stove, where it settled down on one of the burners. Next thing we
knew, our "rooster" had laid an egg!
Mother got out the frying pan, and
we shared the freshest egg we'd ever had! After that, we kept a
basket in the kitchen, and every so often, that bird would come in
and provide us with another fresh egg.
The hen lived to a ripe old age.
Over the years, we enjoyed the convenience of not having to go
hunt for eggs--thanks to a horse...and a rooster that wasn't!
--Rosemary H., Roseburg, Oregon |
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