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Village Squire, 1978-11, Page 50McGILLICUDDY'S DIARY Village Squire presents the exclusive feature: the diary of Ezeklal 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 previous month. OCTOBER 2: That new young reporter at the Hamhocks Herald has been at it again. She did a public poll one of those man in the street interviews in the paper last week about what people felt about law and order in Hamhocks. Nearly everybody said they were paying too much money and weren't getting much law as their order. She followed it up with an editorial in the paper talking about the need to tighten belts at the town hall. I told her that if they cut the budget for the police department any more it had better be a wide belt they bought to tighten because the police chief wouldn't be able to afford to buy pants. She didn't think it was funny. I bet she didn't think it was too funny today when I gave her parking tickets in three different places in town because she forgot to put money in the parking meters. OCTOBER 8: Thanksgiving Day, but I could be a lot more thankful if I could have come up with an excuse not to have gone over to Cindy Lou's for dinner. (Make a note to dream up a dear old aunt living in Talbot that I can go visit on such occasions). Cindy Lou tries her best but whoever told her the way to a man's heart is through his stomach should also have told her that the way to warm up a man isn't through giving him heartburn. She had a real turkey of a turkey. Actually, 1 think it was an Old buzzard that somebody shot and pawned off on her. I think even the buzzards would have passed up that bird if they found it lying dead in a field. Her pumpkin pie tasted like she left the seeds in it. I wonder if I could book off sick tomorrow? OCTOBER 11: Had to pick up Harvey Malcolmson again today. With the price of booze the way it is these days it's hard to make ends meet for somebody who should get volume discounts like Harvey. He decided to go into production for himself to cut corners. He even checked with me to make sure it was allright. I told him as long as it was beer or wine and as long as it was less than 40 gallons he was all right. He said that wine was fine by him and even he should be able to get by on 40 gallons. So everything seemed to be nice and legal. But yesterday morning I got a call from Harriett Moneybank. Like a lot of the bigwigs up on Golden Row, she and her 48 The Village Squire November 1978 husband Herbert had gotten into the hobby of winemaking. Not for them your ordinary local grapes, of course, they'd imported special vines and cared for them for the last three years like they were firstborn children. This was the year when they were to get their first bumper crop. They were pretty proud of those grapes and were leaving them out just a bit longer to ripen to the fullest before picking. Well it seems that although Harvey had the idea for making wine and even bought a book about it. he didn't have any grapes. He started prowling around and saw these grapes growing over the backyard fence at the Moneybanks and thought those would be great. The Moneybanks are demanding he be given a life in prison sentence. OCTOBER 18: I see the police chief down in Toronto says he won't have any part of arresting people if they don't go back to work at the post office now that the government's passed a law making the postal strike illegal. I don't blame him. I'm lucky in that all our postal workers realize they've got a pretty good thing here and got back to work pretty quick but 1 remember a few years ago when I got caught in the middle of a strike. It was down at the Hamhocks turnip waxing plant and some health inspector, a new guy on the job and hell bent for leather he was going to leave his mark. told the men that they just weren't clean enough to be handling food. He told them they had to year white clothing and hair nets. Hairnets! Well that did it. If the boys down at the Lamplighter Hotel ever found out that these guys wore hairnets, they'd never hear the end of it. No sir! They'd go on strike first! Well poor Joe McKay who owned the plant was in a heck of a mess. It wasn't his fault that their men had to wear hairnets. He wasn't to crazy about the idea anyway (he asked the inspector if they should also get manicures.) Still it was him that was lossing out if the men were on strike. The plant couldn't be opened unless the men wore hairnets and the men wouldn't change their minds and the inspector wouldn't change his mind so Joe gave an ultimatum: either the guys wore the nets or he'd bring in people who would. They still refused and so he went downtown and rounded up a bunch of women who weren't afraid of hairnets to work in the plant. The girls, however. took one look at the size of some of those guys on the picket line outside the plant and said that there was no way they'd go into that plant without some protection. So as usual when there's a nasty situation I got called. I took a look at the size of some of the guys in that picket line and I wished I could go on strike immediately. Well I tried to talk nice and calmly to the guys. explain the logic of the whole situation and they seemed to be taking it all quite calmly. Relieved. 1 turned and told the girls to come on in. That was when the guys didn't like the idea so much anymore. One of the biggest picked me up and threw me into this big hole outside that contained the remains of some of the old turnips from last year's crops. You ever smelled old turnips? I smelled them for the next two months before I got so tired of people making funny remarks every time they passed me on the street that I burned the uniform. u„ pa as flo is the time Z., to Iayafflay for Christmas t '.V BRING IN THIS AD t AND SAVE 10% til ll ON LAYAWAYS & PURCHASES. t. t STANFORD ti JEWELLERS 187 MAIN ST. LISTOWEL PHONE 291-4561