Then, when you got to Camp Borden, they started teaching
you. It's only one man that I still remember, and he was a
colonel. And he'd have thin clothes on, bare skin and shorts
on, and you're doing your best to carry that old rifle, and it's
heavy. And the CO just lived a short ways from the parade
square, looking down on us. I forget his name though, colonel
somebody. If I went back far enough, I could find it all
right. And you're trying to hold your rifle, not like that, not
like that, not up like that, marching along. And he ran over
to me and jammed that piece of wood on my clavicle. Well, I
nearly went to the ground, and I told my sergeant about it after,
but nothing became of it. And that bone, right there . . . and
he, he was a big tall man, like that. Well, that scared the life
out of me, and that ruined my day, that day there. But I got
over it. It prepared us for war. I remember one man and, and he's
just south side of Picton, Ontario, Bath, Ontario, and he
was teaching us how to use the rifle to kill people. Well, you
had to start off here, "On guard!" you know. And then you
had to go from there. You had to go and come to these straw packs
ahead, how to knock that down, and how to continue on running,
fighting. And I thought, "I'll be the best one when they get me
out there." And I used to be the first one. I can see the old
sergeant major, and he's still living down in Bath, Ontario. He
said, "My God," he said, "You're, you're just great," you know.
"We'll have you." He said, "We'll have you." Didn't realize in
the end, for war, as well . . . and, so then the day
went on. They took you, and they lined you up and said, "Well,
now, this is your vehicle." And they give me a vehicle, and they
gave John a vehicle, and they gave Bill a vehicle. Everybody
had a vehicle and oh, everything that went with it, all the tools
And at that time, they were waterproofing trucks, never heard
tell of it. And when they waterproofed them, they showed
you how to waterproof them right from the wheels, right up, and
sit in water right up to your ears, right up to your ears, and
keep on going. So, we had to learn how to do that, teaching
how to waterproof the vehicles. Right through the roof a big
thing down and went on to the carburetor and all waterproofed
and drive. But I never made it to the water . . . to the, off the
boat to the . . . I didn't have to. They made a dry landing.
All the driving was done at night, after you learn how to
drive. That was another thing, a driving school. I even see the
Queen there she was learning how to drive a jeep, you know,
you know. She was down the road, and I was in front with a man
beside me. I was the instructor teaching them how to drive and
enjoyed that immensely. I enjoyed that and everybody gave me such
a great name.