LizzieMaine
Bartender
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- 33,732
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- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
("Well," sighs Joe, "t'at's t'at. Not much'va season, eh?" ""Sawlat Rickey's fawlt," growls Sally. "An' awlso Lewis J. Hoishey, it's his fawlt too! How come non'a t'em Cawrdnals got drafted, huh? We lose Reiseh, we lose Reese right off t'top, but do t'ey lose Musial? NO. Do t'ey lose Coopeh? NO. Do t'ey lose Kurowski? NO. T'draft is unfaieh t' Brooklyn." "T'ey los' Slaughteh t'ough," points out Joe. "An' y'can't say t'at wasn' a big lawss." "Yeh," huffs Sally. "But how come t'ey didn't lose Slaughteh LAS' yeeh, huh? Answeh me T'AT! You realize if Slaughteh wen' inna Awrmy las' yeeh when he was s'posta, Reiseh wouldn'a hit t'at wawl, you realize t'at? An' if Reiseh don' hit t'at wawl, we winna pennant las' yeeh, an' if we winna pennant, MacPhail don' quit t'go inna soivice, an' Rickey neveh comes heeh, an' we neveh get ridda Camilli an' Fitz an' Medwick an' Bobo, an' we winna pennant T'IS yeeh too! Y'see how it awl fits t'getta?" "Basebawl's a funneh game," sighs Joe. "Yeh," sighs Sally. "An' I ain' laughin'." "Hey Sal," interjects Joe after a long and awkward pause. "Less go out'n see t' Bushwicks." "Yeh," nods Sally. "Now ya tawkin'. Les' go see'm befoeh Rickey figgehs out howta roon'nem too."....)
Defeat of the Wheeler Bill to defer the drafting of pre-Pearl Harbor fathers until 1944 appeared likely last night, as senators shied from the appearance of telling Army and Navy authorities how to run the armed forces. That was the general view in Washington, despite the view of some prominent senators that the impending start of drafting of fathers after October 1st is being planned more to force men into essential industrial work than to bolster military strength. Three leading senators hinted at that purpose in comments suggesting that the Administration is pursuing such a goal thru such means rather than pressing for national-service legislation that would draft workers in non-essential occupations into war jobs. Indications are now that the Senate will not vote on the Wheeler Bill until late next week, with prominent military leaders scheduled to testify before the Senate Military Affairs Committee starting tomorrow.
Germany was reported tonight to have sent four more reserve divisions into the Adriatic coastal region of Yugoslavia in an effort to beat down mounting guerilla resistance and tighten the Axis grip on the invasion threshold of the Balkans. Yugoslav partisans were said to be stepping up their attacks on German positions all along the Adriatic coast, spearheaded by bold incursions at key points. Despite the apparent strength of the guerilla operations, reliable Allied quarters viewed with skepticism reports that patriots had been able to take and hold any major objectives along the shore.
A report filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission in Manhattan Federal Court yesterday on the sales -- including short sales -- of securities of the Childs Company, restaurant chain operator, documented a series of sales between 10 AM and noon on August 26th by persons "who are, or who have been officers, directors, or employees of the company, or who sold it supplies and services." The report, filed as part of the reorganization record for the firm, noted that the company's involuntary petition for reorganization was dismissed at 12:12 PM on August 26th, and the company filed a voluntary petition before the same judge seventeen minutes later. The reports notes that the flurry of selling occured just before news of the reorganization petitions broke on the stock ticker, causing a sharp decline in the market price of Childs securities.
("T'ideeh!" snorts Alice, sitting on the stoop with the newspaper as Krause the Super methodically applies concrete patch to cracks in the steps. "Imagine keep'n a blackjack inna baby's crib! If I hadda baby, y'know one t'ing I would NEVEH do is leave a blackjack inna baby's crib!" "Neh," agrees Krause, exhaling an acrid puff from his cigar as he works. "No!" reiterates Alice with great emphasis. "A blackjack ya keep in ya nightstand!")
A drive to reduce Brooklyn's gasoline consumption by 25 percent across the board begins tomorrow under the direction of local war price and rationing chairman William Jagger. The first local group to pledge compliance with the campaign is Brooklyn's 2400 doctors, who, thru the Kings County Medical Society, will be requested to reduce their requests for gasoline coupons up to the stated quota. "There will soon be another epidemic of gasless stations," warned Jagger, "unless Brooklyn gets behind the drive to conserve gasoline."
Members of the Kings County Grand Jury declined an invitation to tour the Bedford-Stuyvesant district last month because they were frightened to visit the neighborhood after dark. Despite repeated requests for such a tour, grand jurors are said to have repeatedly declined out of concern for their personal safety. Yesterday, grand jurors heard testimony from an unnamed police official who acknowledged that he, too, is unwilling to walk certain streets in Bedford-Stuyvesant at night unarmed.
(Less than 8000 cash customers at the Polo Grounds for a Dodger-Giant game? Is ANYBODY still in the league???)
Former Yankee Lefty Gomez will face off against former Dodger Larry French in a highly-touted mound tilt at Dexter Park this afternoon, as the Bushwicks host the South Orange Legionnaires. French, now a Navy lieutenant at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, has been pitching for the South Orange club on weekends to keep his arm in trim, will also deliver an appeal for war bonds before the game, following a fungo-hitting contest between himself and Senor Gomez.
(A young man who clearly gets a BANG out of life.)
Cheeta the Chimp, Hollywood film favorite, has been elected to honorary membership in the National Dunking Association, federation dedicated to the promotion of coffee-and-doughnut breakfasts. Cheeta is seen to indulge himself in the habit every morning before beginning his daily show at the New Jersey State Fair, and also takes time for a cup and a sinker between performances.
Bert Wheeler is back in vaudeville after a long hiatus in Hollywood, and is glad of it. The vaude stage is Bert's favorite form of entertainment, and is happy to be recreating his old act at the Shubert Theatre in Broadway's new revue "Laugh Times." Bert spent eight years as a screen star working opposite Robert Woolsey in the famous team of Wheeler and Woolsey, but has been little seen since his partner's untimely death in 1938. It took five years of small-time personal appearances in movie theatres, nightclubbing, and other such dates in order to build himself back up as a stage star, and he's happy of it. "On the screen you've got to play a part, and play it as written," he observes. "But, after all, you have so much more freedom in vaudeville! There's a warmth about vaudeville, a personal contact with your audience, that defies any other type of entertainment."
Old Timer Robert Ryder remembers like it was yesterday the day Steve Brodie jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge. It was July 223, 1886, and Brodie's successful leap followed an unsuccessful attempt by a swimming instructor named Robert Odlum, who, on the night of May 19, 1885, attempted the leap as a publicity stunt, and drowned. Brodie's jump seemed to have been made on a sudden impulse, and ended up making him a wealthy man, driving a steady stream of customers to the saloon he ran on the Bowery.
(Hey Red, ever try jumping off the Brooklyn Bridge?)
(FINE cat)
(Careful, Scarlet. You're no Polly Adler!)
(Fritzi and Phil have the most passive-aggressive relationship in the comics. And why aren't we putting these torpedo fish to use in the war!)
(All Sunday strips from now on should end with BANG BANG)