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Village Squire, 1980-08, Page 45McGILLICUDDY'S DIARY Village Squire presents the exclusive feature: the diary of Ezeldal McGWlcuddy, 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 Sguire...for a princely sum of course. Each month we publish a selection of entries from the previous month, JULY 3: Went out to see if the cherries on my cherry tree were ripe last week. Knew at a glance they weren't: no birds. Went out to check again tonight to see; knew at a glance they were now ripe. The birds had eaten every one. Seems I can either have sour cherries or no cherries. Life's like that sometimes. JULY 5: Had some parents come to me yesterday with complaints. Seemed they were the victims of an extortion attempt (that's blackmail if you haven't been watching any lawyer shows on television). Seems they were getting letters threaten- ing to let out some embarrassing inform- ation if they didn't come across with some substantial amounts of cash. Well whenever something like this comes up I know just where to head. I made a raid on the clubhouse of the Hill Street Gang on the little island down the river. I'm afraid I made an illegal entry: I cut the bindei-wine that was holding the door shut even though I didn't have a search warrant. (They deserved it though for bobbytrapping the foot bridge to the island. I'm not in very good humour when I fall through loose boards and get all wet in the river.) Anyway, I found the information they were holding against people. You see in grade two or three at the school they have this writing project in which the students are supposed to bring some bit of news from home and write it in a book. On the last day of school some of the Hill Street gang offered a nickel apiece to the kids to buy the books. Naturally the kids went for it and the Gang had their ammunition. And pretty high calibre ammunition it was too. If I was some of those parents reading some of those tidbits in the books I'd have paid up fast. I wonder if this could be part of a plot on the part of the teachers for the next time they want a pay raise. They'll have enough dirt on enough members of the population by then that they won't have to threaten strike at all: just threaten to tell all. Heck, the Mounties keeping files on people is nothing compared to this. Darnit, I wish the Mayor had a kid in grade three. JULY 8: Tried to talk the town council into doing something about trading in the Cockroach for a bigger police cruiser tonight. I pointed out that with the crisis in the auto industry it would be an act of patriotism to trade in that little European mini -car for a big North American one: say a Chrysler or something like that. Think of how it would stimulate the national economy, I said. That argument got Councillor Hemple thinking. It was terrible that the big car makers were on the verge of bankruptcy all right. But bringing the argument even closer to home, she said, she knew of the case of her next door neighbour Ham Flynn who's also on the verge of bankruptcy. Maybe the council should be thinking instead of helping local business. I knew enough to quit while I was ahead. Ham runs a bicycle stop. JULY 11: This recession is starting to have its effect locally. Some of the merchants are complaining at coffee break about how tough times are. That's nothing new of course but they seem to be complaining a lot more this summer because they haven't been able to take a month off and go to the cottage so the rest of us haven't had a vacation from their complaining. We'll be as glad as them when things improve. Anyway the bad times have had their good effect too. All of a sudden the government is getting worried and starting to spend money. They've been fixing the bridge on the edge of town, for instance, the one we've been afraid was going to fall down for the last 10 years but the province said would last as long as the country (some of us really wondered if it would a couple of months back at referendum time.) Anyway they say these projects have spinoff effects through the whole economy and we've certainly seen that here. Bill Michaels who owns the drive-in restaurant on that side of town was all smiles at coffee break today as he's been a regulat thundercloud in recent weeks. Cec Lander asked him if the construction crews were helping his business and he sort of smiled and said "In a manner of speaking," and left it at that. Now I know that these construction men get pretty hungry but there's only about 10 of them working down there and I didn't think they could eat that much so I decided I'd take a drive down and have a look. I soon knew why Bill was smiling. See they had to build this detour when they closed the highway right? And they had to find some convenient place for the detour, right? So they picked Bill's parking lot. Seems though that nobody got Bill's permission for all this. So Bill put up a toll booth the other morning and wouldn't let anybody through unless they dropped a quarter in the bucket. Now Hamhocks isn't exactly on a throughway but there's enough traffic to keep Bill smiling for weeks to come no matter if he never sells another ice cream sundae. It was ingenious, I had to hand it to him ... A quarter I mean. In fact two. He caught me on the way through and on the way back and charged me both times. All I can say is he'd better never forget to put a dime in the meter any time he's in town in the next 10 years. "The place to shop in the Festival City." Authentic Tartans •Woollens• •Silks• *Cottons* Many fine fabrics Come in and browse at your leisure. sew w 1ta t 88 Ontario st 271.8500 open Pally . epee. . /:,.,w frU.y, ,,,.. ., VILLAGE SQUIRE/AUGUST 1980 PG. 39