Slim Randles' Home Country
The appurtenance relegated to me
Send a link to a friend
[September 14, 2015]
Mrs.
Doc (we know she must have a first name, but keeps it a secret)
joined the other ladies in the quilting tent at the state fair. It
was so exciting. It was the first time she’d ever entered a quilt in
the competition, and she was nervous. |
There was a lot of competition this year. The quilts didn’t carry
the maker’s name, of course. For the purposes of judging, each was
assigned a number. Her number was 536. It was pieced together
flawlessly, she thought. It was a double wedding ring pattern, and
any quilter knows how hard that one is to make. The quilting
competition is judged on three things: originality, how well it’s
sewn, and difficulty.
Finally the judges carried out a folded quilt and were about to name
the blue ribbon winner.
They opened it up and held it up for everyone to see, and there were
both groans (as the ladies realized it wasn’t theirs) and little
gasps of astonishment (when they saw how pretty it was). The quilt
had a ranch scene on it. A bunkhouse, corrals, a mesa in the
background, and white and grey fluffy clouds. A tree filled one
corner.
“That’s amazing,” Mrs. Doc whispered to the lady next to her. Her
neighbor nodded.
“The winner of the blue ribbon for best quilt this year,” said the
judge, “is this picture quilt … number 207. Sewn by Alphonse
Wilson.”
There was applause, of course, and Mrs. Doc turned to Anita Campbell
and said, “Windy?”
She nodded. Alphonse is Windy Wilson’s real name.
[to
top of second column] |
The old cowboy philosopher and butcher of the English language
smiled and waved and walked up to get his ribbon.
“Mr. Wilson,” said the judge, “this is a great quilt. How did you
find time to do this?”
“Wellsir,” Windy said, “I seized the appurtenance relegated to me
between plays of football on the television.”
[Text from file received from
Slim Randles]
Ol' Jimmy Dollar
is Slim Randles' first children's book. The book is for kids
K-3rd grades and is even better when parents read it with children.
Ol' Jimmy Dollar makes for sweet dreams and if you have a dog
even better. Available now on Amazon. |