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Village Squire, 1978-02, Page 417 McGillicuddy' s Diary Village Squire presents the exclusive feature: the diary of Ezekial McGillicuddy, police chief of the village of Hamhocks, Ontario. Well known for his courageous battle against the forces of evil, Chief McGillicuddy has agreed to give exclusive rights to his diary to Village Squire...for a princely sum of course. Each month we publish a selection of entries from the pre%ious month. JAN.1: I feel absolutely miserable this morning. What a headache. 1 guess I'm right in there with everybody else in town that way, but at least they had fun getting their hangovers. 1 got my headache from trying to keep them all from killing themselves on their way home from their parties. Most of them are. all right giving me a bit of a hard time but nothing serious. But when I stopped Hank Wilson after he nearly drove through the front door of the town hall. he got mad and said I was crazy because 1 thought he'd been drinking. I just asked him to let his wife drive him home but he kept insisting that he hadn't touched a drop and I was infringing on his rights. When I insisted he couldn't drive he really got mad and hit me over the head with his empty Black Velvet bottle. By the time I came to, he'd driven off right through the hedge by the cenotaph. 1 really wonder why I worry about these guys' satety year atter year. I'd be better off to leave them alone and hope they drive quietly into a tree so I won't have to worry about dealing with them next year. JAN. 4: I decided to take back Cindy Lou's Christmas present today. I figured by now she's have stopped spying on me to make sure I didn't take it back. I sneaked it out in a garbage bag just in case she was watching out her front window. 1 know the thought was nice but somehow I really don't think I want a pair of red silk pygamas. "1'm ready when you are" written across the front. especially when it's Cindy Lou who gives them to me with this devilish look in her eye. 1 think I'll use the money to get a new hacksaw I need. JAN.9: The Hill Street Gang has been at it again. Seems some of the boys were watching a movie the other night about highjacking a truckload of furs and it gave them an idea. When Eddie Murphy parked his ice cream truck outside the Buttercup Cafe to go in for a coffee, they hot-wired it and drove it off to an old barn at the back of one of the boy's property. Eddie didn't know what was going on when he came out and the truck was gone. He thought at first it had rolled down the hill and into the river but when we checked the river there wasn't even a crack in the ice. I must say it had me completely stumped. 1 called in the provincials and they couldn't figure it out either. I got my first clue the next day though. Mr. Treadmire, the public school principal reported that mysteriously, half the boys in the grade seven and eight classes missed school on account of sickness. Moreover when I checked it out, all those missing came from the Hill Street area of town and most were on my list of known associates of the Hill Street Gang. I visited a few of the homes and found all the boys had a bad case of green around the gills and none of their parents had any idea where they could have caught it. Then I got a tip that somebody was fencing ice cream at half price, door to door no less. The boys made a mistake though when one of them showed up at Cindy Lou's to try to sell her some ice cream. She would have bought too but she didn't have any change so asked me to lend her some. That's how I caught on. The kid was one of the younger members of the gang and he soon spilled the beans. Another case solved by the intrepid Chief McGillicuddy. JAN. 12: Councillor Sally Hemple was giving me a rough time again today. She came into the office and I was looking at a copy of Playboy. She got all huffy and wouldn't believe me when I told her I'd confiscated the magazine from a 12 -year- old kid I'd caught shoplifting and I was just looking through it to be familiar with the evidence. She said that as a symbol of law and order in the community I should be ashamed of myself. Besides, she said, what did a grown man see in those things anyway. I said that I didn't lead an exciting life like say the provincial police (you'll remember the story 1 mentioned a couple of months back about Sally and her goose pimples being uncovered at a, beach party the provincials had to break up a while back). so I just had to get my jollies from paper, not in person. She blushed a little and I think maybe she's suspicious that I know something. This could be the break I've been waiting for. JAN. 20: Cindy Lou's birthday is coming up on the 23rd. Make a note to have a very important assignment booked that evening so 191 have to be out of town. JAN.27: A big wind blew through today (no I don't mean the council meeting this evening, I mean the big storm). They say it was a corker down in the city though it didn't do much here. They said there was glass falling out of the big buildings and everything. The only falling glass here was at the hotel where the wind blew open the door and knocked Harvey Malcolmson off his feet. beer glass and all. Of course there's nothing unusual about Harvey lying on the floor, beer glass and all. Actually, I felt left out. Everybody was talking on the radio about this being the storm of the century and all the heck, it was just an ordinary everyday storm here in the snow belt. Nothing like the big blow we had last January. Or the one in 1971 either. This was just a minor inconvenience. Of course I've noticed down in Toronto anything with more than an inch and a half of snow qualifies as a storm of the century. The rest of the province may be buried in snow but it's not called a storm unless Toronto gets its two inches of snow. Then it's a blizzard. 0 Yoast�ce � Up The gift for all seasons... ono *40 the gift of life Be a RED CROSS Blood Donor VILLAGE SQUIRE/FEBRUARY 1978, 39.