r - UPPER’ LEFT*EDGI VOLUME 5 7J\~ NUMBER. >JQ J A M im W 7 O m R U T T CQtoT PRODUCTIONS-PO 60X11U COMMON BENCH OR T7IIO • 503~436~Z7JS From Beasties and Grumplies and Things that go Bump in the Night, Dear Lord Protect Us. "Wayside tavern window light Beckons unto me. ’Tarry by the liearthside bright And seek good company*. I stepped in to join tlie din So carefree and so loud Just to lose Old Mr. Blues And mingle with the crowd." *Peter Rowan As titular mayor of Bill’s Tavern and its longest constant, extant patron, tire duty and moral obligation devolves on me to eulogize its passing and reflect, in brief, on its memory. In announcing its demise to the public, I feel like a military officer charged with tlie responsibility o f notifying a mother or young wife o f the death of a beloved son, father, or husband Bill’s served long and valorously and will not soon be forgotten In its seventy-odd years as tlie Imperial Cafe and Bill’s Tavern, the public house has opened its humble doors to as scattered an assemblage o f paupers and kings as any venue on earth. Mayors, congressmen, starlets, poets, loggers, fishermen, trappers, sages, and fools have dangled on its barstools and spilled tlieir joys and agony into the cracks on tlie bar. Billy Hults calls tlie window in tlie front door o f Bill’s, "tlie Window o f a Thousand Wonders," and tlie appellation is fit. Like a kaleidoscope, this portal lias admitted a shifting melange o f diameters that unsettles the imagination: a giant with a dwarf on liis shoulders, Gypsy people, a Welsh choir, Olympic medalists, a Russian general in a cape, a mayor that whooped A scant, and dwindling, register of taverns share its lineage and a time- burnished patina of saltiness and good fellow-ship: The Goose Hollow Inn. Maxie’s, Tlie Desdemona, Tlie TownTaverri in Port Townsend, The Marshall Tavern on Tomales Bay, and San Francisco's Buena Vista. Cast your eyes around tlie interior. The northeast ceiling remains charred from a '30s fire. The oil-sealed, clear- fir flooring tears tlie pocks and stipples of countless caulk boots back in the days of rough and tumble. Bill’s was a harder place then, a place we children were counselled to avoid. Beargrease hung out there, a swarthy man fresh out o f prison, who ran off with the Baptist minister's 16-year old daughter. The red-haired Olson Brothers downed a schooner or two from time to tim e-B ud Olson's Harley motorcycle h a d " killed eight people..." we were told. A shingle-weaver called Preach frequently screwed up lus courage over dime beers at tlie bar. He specialized in courting recently bereaved widows, and tlie beer salved liis troubled conscience. The air was deliciously thick with smoke and stories. Glance at tlie old photograph that still hangs near the front door. Tlie '47 Plymouth coupe in tlie plioto belonged to a squat, tubercular man, an afternoon regular. He called the car "Honey Pot." In die early Fifties, he would exit Bill's at dinnertime and yell to passersby to help him find liis lost car, die car lie parked every day in die same spot one finds it in the photo-right at the tavern door. In the last twenty years, die old place lias been civilized and gentrified. Hamburgers and shrimp sandwiches have replaced die jar o f hard-boiled eggs soaked in Polish sausage brine. Nike executives, fraternity boys, and snooty attorneys elbow die bar and nng die pool table. I doubt diey hear die murmurs I liear, diose spirit voices from a time gone by. On a quiet night in late January, when the wind and rain "come in over die Rock," if I close my eyes and rest quiedy on the first stool, I can see the shade o f Kathy Henricksen perched across from me, sipping beer from her old coffee cup. Tlie ghost o f Happy Moore, an earlier owner, bellows out to her patrons from her impregnable position beliind the bar. A wake will lie held before the tavern’s final passing. On die day the pincers dig into die shingled flanks o f the old structure, the wailing and keening o f die lads will near rend your heart We sliall not know its like again. To Ken Campbell and die new Bill’s, my very best in the coming years. Gentlemen, 1 propose a round on die house. r ¡ r r AMI M IA I* 'IRK I M AM >A«I I I IMI w i AMtHMA IM'IRM I M A M iM W illM I \ \i p \|| 1 ? 3 4 5 6 7 nine W ort Thu rn S al Son Mon Toe 7 fi 9 K) 1 I 12 1 J 14 15 16 17 IP 19 20 21 W ed Thu F ri Sal Sun M< »n Tue W ed Thu Fri Sat So n Mon Toe * « 21 I 1 1 I I 1 22 23 24 25 26 27 20 29 30 3’ W ed Thu F ri Sat Son M on Tue W ed Thu F ri a 6 21 7 OR 7 57 8 48 9 39 10 2 9 0 04 11 18 0 54 1 41 2 26 3 10 3 55 4 40 5 27 6 17 7 11 fl 0 8 9 04 9 58 10 4 7 0 11 11 32 0 55 1 35 2 ,1 2 45 3 16 3 45 4 14 4 45 5 20 6 03 > Rrt h 80 8 ? 8 4 8 7 9 1 9 5 7 4 9 8 7 9 8 2 8 5 8 8 9 0 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 0 9 0 90 9 1 9 1 7 5 9 1 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 ? 8 3 8 3 8 3 8 4 5 J a n uar y - Low Tides J anuary - High Tides "I.u »' 6 24 7 44 9 02 10 11 1 1 :1 0 6 5 6 2 6 3 66 7 .0 I IM I 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 12 0 7 1 2 :5 7 1:47 2 38 3 31 4 28 5:31 6 42 8 00 9 16 10 2 3 11:22 10 1 102 10 1 9 8 93 8 6 7.8 7 1 6 7 67 6 9 7 .2 12 14 1 2 :5 3 1:31 2 :0 7 2 44 3:21 4 02 4 50 5 49 7 05 9 0 9 0 8 8 8 7 8 4 8 1 7 .6 7.1 6 6 6 2 9 10 11 1? 1.3 14 15 16 1 7 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 k W ed Thu Fn S at Sun M en Tue W ed Thu Fri S al Sun M on Tue W ed Thu Fri S al Sun M on Toe W ed Thu Fn S al Son M on Toe W ed Thu Fri I.IIH II > 0 25 1 21 2 23 3 26 4 26 5 22 6 16 7 08 * fi 0 0 8 9 10 11 52 45 4, 42 22 26 30 32 3 2 3 1 2 9 2 7 2 4 2 2 2 0 1 9 1 fi « © 0 41 1 41 2 45 3 48 4 46 5 38 6 25 7 09 7 49 8 28 9 05 9 42 10 20 11 0 3 11 5 4 9 1 7 2 4 2 8 30 3 1 30 2 9 2 9 2 8 2 7 2 6 2 5 2 4 2 3 2 2 __ I'M " U ll 12 45 1 52 2 59 4 00 4 54 5 44 6 31 7 :1 7 8 01 0 45 9 79 10 12 10 58 11:47 12 49 2 00 3 11 4 15 5 10 5 58 6 40 7 18 7 :5 3 8 25 0 55 9 23 9 51 10 20 10 54 11 35 12 5 7 2 9 2 6 2 0 1.3 0 .5 •0.1 -0 7 -1 1 1 3 1 2 1 0 0 5 0 2 0 9 1 7 1 5 1 1 0 6 0 .2 0 1 0 3 0 3 0 2 0 1 0 2 0 4 0 0 12 1 6 2 2 2 1 BASEBALL Though the dark winds and rains are still with ns here on the edge, soon in Honda and Arizona, the pitchers and catchers will start showing up tor Spring Training. And the cycle continues. Baseball has reached an agreement on labor issues mid inter league play Baseball is still exempt from the Taft-Hartley Act Baseball still has no commissioner. We think baseball Ians should write to their representatives in Congress and demand that baseball either find a |K*nnancn( commissioner, or give up the exemption. We find the tactics ol the owners of the Mariners outrageous, the White Sox ownership duplicitous, and the Reds owner's behavior, well, pathetic This alone cries for someone to take control of these spoiled children with millions But more importantly for the sake ol the game and those who love it .uni still respect it as a special part of what is truly \menca. and for those ow ners w ho still have the res|rect lor anil the res|K‘cl of the players and the Ians CIO Cl BBlIiSI! fins is next year!! UEfTK IEH EbGÌ 3M1VARV ff A