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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 24, SO VO SEE GENERAL SULLY-? WAT HE SAY ? SPIK OP — VEH - YEH- I SAW HIM--- BUT- BUT--- NO BASEBALL, ~ MAJOR PARKS No games were played yesterday in the two major baseball leagues. Games scheduled were postponed either on account of cold or rain.| PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE | P TRAVELS; WEEK'S SCHEDULE No games were played in the Pa- cific Coast League yesterday as the | teams were traveling to open this afternoon on the following sched- | ule for this week: Mission at Seattle . Hollywood at Portland. Oakland at San Francisco. Sacramento at Los Angeles. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won LO:E Pet. | BY GOLLY --- RUN AROUND T'M GIVIN’ ‘EM AN’ THE MEN WIiLL SCATTER LIKE BUCK-SHQT- BARNEY G()GGLE AND SPARK PLUG JUS’ ONE MORE DAY O' THIS I GOTTA DO SUMP'N TO GET PEPITA OFFA SULLYWS NECK OR THIS REVOLUTION'S GONNAUEE ) @T\—a- Those “B” Horses Threaten to Run Bradley String to Five Derby Wins The colonel says his thorough-)L€Masters, Arletta Carter Los Angeles 17 810 Missions 14 7 867 San Francisco 11 9 550 | Sacramento 10 10 500 | Oakland 9 13 . 439/ * Seattle 8 13 381 Hollywood 8 13 381 ! Portland 6 15 286 i ). National League Won Lost Pet.| Chicago 5 0 1000 New York 5 1 833 Brooklyn 4 1 800 Pittsburgh 3 3 500 | Col. Edward R. Bradley, whese claim to the title of “Americ¥s premier- turfman” is' backed by Boston 2 3 400 g vietories, three second places, a third and a fourth in Kentucky Derby competition, is accorded 3 ok Touls B "‘;%\ an cxcellent chance of seeing at least one of his Idle Hour farm rcpresentatives finish in the money g;;f;’;:f;)‘l‘m (1) ; : again this year, with four of them nominated forthe classic at Churchill Downs May 5. 4 League S R R AR | Amped WD‘n‘ Lost - Pet. . LoU?syvl(!;L‘E?f)BlngT :f::; 94 | B” stable because of his habit. of * Detroit 3 1 750 Col. E. R. Bradley has taken $215,- | giving his horses names beginning New York 3 2 '600. 800 and four gold trophies out ,‘leth the letter B, won small an- Cleveland 2 2 2500 imr Kentucky Derby pot. Will he | nual amounts until 1910, when its Boston 3 b o0 GnAGHlNG B B | be in on the pay-off this year? | carning began increasing rapidly Philadelphia 3 3 figg With four nominees — Bazaar 1;13d2 passed the $2,000,000 mark in v Louls L 3 24— | Boy Valet, Blue Again and Baker's ‘Washington 3 4 ‘:'z; A':bisnfiimm S:.b,mimc.;mfirflm :r Dozen—training micely, he is con- | High Cost of Tnoroughbred Racing e 5 -‘.1 _7 " Whitworth, was a football star dur- an (xi:“:q\,.:).:.!:.z:“f: fghpl?); vred operations cause him a net ing his college days. It was he who kicked the field goal that helped | Alabama defeat Washington State CNE-ARM DRIVING » IS NOW TABGO FOR | THIS 1 SPEEDSTER Cobb | in the Rose Bowl game of D - KETCHIKAN FIREMEN HOLD ANNUAL ELECTION which would net him $1,000 Bradley won the 1921 derby with | Behave Yourself, the 1926 event | with Bubbling Over, and his Bur- | goo King and Broker's Tip were | victorious in 1932 and 1933. In ad- derby, the 1930. loss of $30,000 annually, because of maintenance expense of his magnificent Idle Hour farm near Lexington. His philanthropies have been legion. Donations to orphan- ages are his principal contributions to charity, and he has presented ' LONDON, April 24.—John dition, three of his horses have run " really had his hands “glued” t3| A¢ 5 recent meeting of [he:.\sfzmd in the derby, one has come ‘;’i‘]':mll_{sl?:ngr;?ceégfdéfigs a;bkfif the wheel when #e drove his 500 Ketchikan Fire Department, the |in third and one has taken fourth never hears ‘of r‘nan of fmpgm; horsepower Napier-Railton t0 a new| fficars were re-elected as follows; | blace. Vo wortng caniied T [ lap record of 139.71 miles an hour| ;' gy gypley, Chief; Stanley | X In 1982 |to stranded ‘turfmien ) e ! Adams, Assistant’ Chiet; “”“”1 xPpfls;’;dbfz'oooyuoo M‘rbt\l[:m this He is unquestionably the cham- A 40-mile an hour cross-wind yyjecerand, Fire Hall Chief; Joe | 1t Will be many years pion Kentucky Derby winner, put such a tremendous stra‘n on s the driver that at the conclusion Dismond;pire ‘Bosk Ohlets - Y | orionss of Lis green and white silks the following recapitulation of his Bryant, Lieutenant; George H. | record in that event will show: of the trial his fingers had to be| in other rich events is considered, oW Beck. Secretary; K. Jessen, Txeas-\ Year Entry Place Prize slowly and gently pried loose from the genial blue grass turfman and 04 . urer and Hugo Schmolk, Geurge\ . im 1921 Behave Yourself 1lst $38,450 the wheel. The muscles of Cobb's Morri a1 Erickson philanthropist’ has a firm claim p pt +" forearms had set so solidly i; was/ o con and Lawrence "on the title of “America’s premier 1921 Black Servant 2nd 10,000 necessary to massage them before I'I‘rustees. | turfman.” 1922 Bet Mosie 2nd 6,000 he could usc his hands. Bradley, a native Pennsylvanian, 192¢ Beau Butler 3rd 3,000 .- - { ATTENTION RAINBOW GIRLS |went west as a youth, laid the 1926 Bubbling Over 1st 50,000 TiON P2STPONED !/ All officers and members are | foundation of his fortune, returned 1926 Baggenbaggage 2nd = 6,000 e Demonstration 'asked to be at the Temple at 8 |to Chicago several years later and 1929 Blue Larkspur 4th 1,000 auspics J u Woman's - Club 'o'clock tonight for Exemplification | increased his wealth, and entered | 1932 Burgoq King 1st 52,350 posipensd until Wednesday, May 2.|at Eastern Star. | racing in the '90's. 1933 Broker's Tip 1st 48,925 —adv. | adv, By MOTHER ADVISOR. ' His stable, known as the “Lucky et -— ————— _— R - Total Kentucky Derby » stakes winnings $215,800 The real “class” of this year's HE HELD THE AMERICAN JAELIN RECORD AT ONE TINE — AND CAPTAINED TE FOOTBALL, BASEBALL, [i BASKETBALL (1 25 AND TRACK i TEAMS WHILE f AT ST. STAMSLAUS | TWO- HUNDRED fouNDs OF “pze” - HE'LL KEEP THE WHITE SOX INFIELD OB Ts Toes. DAILY SPORTS C4RTO0N- r\1ccoxd is matched, and when the (to Blue Larkspur, | Boy Valet, campaign; later. this afternoon, dewey, BONOKA - | plreofllee as Bradley derby quartet, so far as breeding is concerned, is Blue Again (a colt by Black Servant-Blossom Time, and therefore a full brother which placed fourth in the 1929 Derby but which proved to be Bradley's best money- winner, acquiring $272,000. by Black Servant- Beach Talk, has had a fine winter Bazaar is one of the star fillies entered and was Brad-| 1eys best two-year-old money win- |ner last year, and Baker's Dozen !is the Bradley “dark horse,” with- drawn from racing last year after “one start in which he ran second., 'SEAPLANE - BARANOF | MAKES CHARTER AND ' | " SCHEDULED 'TRIPS ¢To bring L. J. Hull, | teéndént of the Icy Straits Salmon Company, of Hoonah, to Juneau, the seaplane Baranof, of the Alas- ka Southern Airways, pilot Gene Meyring, Lloyd Jarman, mechanic, left Juneau at:8 o'clock this morn- ing and returned here an hour superin- | At 11:15 o'clock the Baranof took off for its weekly trip to Sitka and |way points. Round t gers from here were K. O. Scribner and A. E. Karnes, Territorial Com- | missioner of Education. From Sitka Mr. Karnes has chartered the plane for a trip to Port Alexander and back to Sitka where it will pick up Mr. Scribner and return to Juneau passen- Tomorrow morning the seaplane will leave here on its regular week- 1y trip to Chichagof and way points. e e Mining Location Notices at Em- 1934. By BILLEDE BEGK [~ AFTER ALL -+ T AINIT THE E OF A GUY -~ ‘TS WS PERSONALITY - Pm.,..m-,”m”' LA BRI B B I ) l AT THE HOTELS L4 @ 00000000000 PRINCESS NORAH: - DUE SOUTHBOUND . .. == i J. Heller, Los Angeles; E. E. ¢ Mead, Pt. Retreat; L. W. Chisholm, ‘Wrangell; Sam Baker, San Fran- | cisco; Ed E. Berndt; L. J. Hull, Front St. $4.50 IN SILVE{{WARE BEING GIVEN AWAY! GUY L. SMITH’S DRUG STORE Phone 97 Allen Shattuck, Inc. Eetablished 1898 Juneau, Alaska Hoonah; K. O. Scribner, Seattle; Baxter Felch, Seattle; Emil Olson, At 5 o'clock yesterday B"flr"seame, R. F. Lewis, San Fran- noon the Princess Norah, Capt. W.!cisco; N. A. McEachran, Seattle; Q. Palmer, commander and P. A.|T. A, Thatcher, Ketchikan; Mont- Hole, purser, docked here nm'bh-uomery B. Melford, San Francisco. bound and sailed at 7:15 ocluckf Alaskan for Skagway. There were 4 passen-{ wnf, Kerry, Taku Harbor; A. Mil- gers aboard for Juneau, 100 forijer Killisnoo; G. B. Phillips, Scw Skagway and the Interior and 5 arq; Fred Ness, Yakutat; round trippers. The Princess Norslu(;mner_ Yakutat; C. W. Johnscm had 75 tons of freight for the In-|G. G, Henry, Seattle; John Dyck, terior. | Seattle; C. Gronseth, Petersburg. Arriving here on the Canadian Zynda Pacific Steamer were, Wilford L. SEED POTATOES CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY A. B. Haydon and son, Annex Ward, Axel V. Johnson, Tom Mc-|Greek; Tom dJones, City; Arletta Gahn and 'W. McAlister. Carter, Kashega, Alaska; C, A. > | The Princess Norah is due in Ju- Shonacker, Seattle. [O— ————, neau southbound tonight at 10 i SBNGD v o'clock and will sail aty1 o'clock in gl ¥ ceseeearaiaas Juneau Cash Grocery Ny e POLLS OPEN TO 7 PM. o ¥ © Hundreds of voters, ap- ® CASH GROCERS ' | ¢ ® parently indifferent to the e Corner Second and Seward e outcome of the primary e Free Delivery Phone 68 | X4 PN © election, had not cast their e | SDUTHBUUND ® ballots here at 3 o'clock this e afternoon. The polls will re- e | ! ' 4 e main open until 7 oclock. ® e Everyone who is qualified ® LAST N'GHT © should vote before that hour. e . At 12:30 o'clock tnis morning the steamer Yukon, @apt. H. Anderson, commander, M. J, Wilcox, purser. dacked here southbourc from the Westward. It sailed directly for the south at 1:30 o'clock. Arriving here on the Yukon were: from Seward—E. E. Bundt, Ropert D. Livie, C. A. Shonacker; from Valdez—George B. Phillips, Annie Beyer; from Cordova—Sam Baker, Iris J. Dennis; from Yaku- tat—Fred Ness, J. H. Scriver, Alice Those who took passage for Southeast Alaska points were: for Petersburg — Peter Paulson, Otto Johansen; for Wrangell—A. Van Mavern, Joseph Acton, Everett Nowell; for Ketchikan—M. Birke- land, Mrs. D, Armstrong, D: Arm- strong, Oscar Jeman, Henry C. Gorham, M. D. Willlams, E. E. Hetfrick, L. E. Hebert, J. J. Meherin. Seattle-bound passengers were: Irene Burke, Walter J. Paulsen, Andrew Hermle, R. Flakstad, J. C. Brownfield, Clara Slumberger, Jac- queline Slumberger, Mr. and Mrs. L. 'W. Baker, Louis Steraus. . for ‘We carry ah the new colors mmm introduced at the recent and. workmanship. auto shows. Cpmgg;;s Motor Co., Inc. The White Ray r " "'FOR STOVES AND “mm’d . Will positively burn oil' with ‘a*eléan white flame. = Absolutely no soot.” * <% i See This Burner fn Opera:wn % i PIONEER CAFE T l | J. K. Paul ¢ ] i “THE HOME OF = - | | GOOD EATS” BUILDERS SUPPLIES PLASTERBOARD 4x6, 4x7, 4x8, 4x9 1 and 4x10 10 Fir Veneer Panels Celotex Prepared ' Shingles Rool Roofing: Building Paper Doors, Windows and Glass Corrugated Iron Roofing Paint, Oil; Turpentine White Lead Builders Hardware Everything the home bpilder or carpenter needs (o construct a new home or repair the old one—carried in stock for im- mediate In.llnry TR St b3 LET US JUNEAU. . YOUNG Hardware Co. Sold on Convenient Terms—Liberal Trade-in Allowasics Alaska Electric Light and Power ‘JUNEAU—Phone 6 ' i CALROD (]OQ“ERY Controlled Heat ! 4 Eflwtency Speed D;pemfabimy ! Cleanlimzss Long Ltfe ¥ Only Hotpomt Gencnl 24 CALROD EQUIPPED CALKH Lt E SHOW YOU THESE RANGES Harss gasees Fu. DOUGLAS—le % ¥ WY H