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PAGE SIX ™ Juneau Public Schools Open Next Tuesday Merning; Here's Information for Entire Day All schools in the Juneau Inde- pendent School District will open on September 6. This includes the Juneau Elementary School, Wil- loughby Avenue School, Tee Har- bor School and Juneau High School. As in the past year, fifth grade students will attend the Willoughby Avenue School ATTENDANCE HOURS The followipg are the hours of attendance for the varioud age levels of the Elementary School: Grades 1 and 2 start at 9 in the morning and close at 11:30 a.m. | They reconvene at 1 p.m. and close at 3 in the afternoon. Grade 3 opens at 9 in the morn- ing; closes at 11:45; reconvenes at| 1 in the afternoon and closes at 3:15. Grade 4 begins at 9 in the morn- ing; closes at 12 noon; opens at 1 pam. and closes at 3:42. Grades 5, 6, 7, and 8 begin at 8:45 am.; close at 12 noon; recon- vene at 1 pm. and close at 3:42. The Tee Harbor School opens at 9 in the morning; closes at 12; re- convenes at 1 and will close at 3:40 ———————————— Home Repair and Remodeling of Anv Kind and Size Is My Interest CALL OVE HANSON Douglas 352 Immediate Relief from SINUSITIS e HAY FEVER RESPIRATORY DISORDERS Under the care of Doctor Montgomery you may now obtain fast and I sting relief from the discomforts of Sinus, Hay Fever and Respiratory Disorders. Short W most modern, We use the best ave Therapy and Syfogen equipment to help make you well and keep you well. Come in now for a complete physical examination. mary concern. Your good health is our pri- Dr. John M. Monigomery, D. C. Main and Front Streets Phone 477 'Refreshment and Movies Go Hand-in-Hand 'Ask for it either way «. . both trade-marks . mean the same thing. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY JUNEAU COLD STORAGE CO. e —————y © 1949, The Coca-Cola Company | Schools. | turned o THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE —JUNEAU, ALASKA ' in the afternoon, with the younger children leaving earlier at appro- priate times. The Juneau High School opens at 8:45 in the morning; closes at 12 ncon; reopens at 1 pm. and closes at 3:42. This time schedule will be in effect on opening day and a full day's program will be run. BUS SCHEDULES School bus route No. 1 will leave |the 15 mile marker at 7:35 am. and will leave from the school at 3:45. Bus route No. 2 will leave Fritz Cove at 7:40 am. and will leave from the school at 3:45. Bus route No. 3 will leave Thane at 8:15 am. and will leave from the school at 3:45. The School Oity Bus to serve | those residing between the city limits and the Johnson Home will | leave the Johnson Home at 8:25} am.; will leave from the Grade School at 11:15 am. and again at 3:45 pm. Children riding this bus must purchase tickets at the oftice of the Superintendent of ENROLLMENT All students entering the Juneau Schools for the first time or those who were not enrolled at the close | gistration of all elementary school pupils will be held in the elemen- | tary school building and all high| | school students in the High School | | building. All such students should take with them a reoprt card. or transcript of their credits from the| last school attended Children enrolling in the first grade must be 6 years of age on or before November 1, 1949, in order | to be eligible. i Textbooks are furnished free to| | all pupils, but each pupil is required ! to deposit $1.50 at the time of regis- tration for the use of the books.| This deposit is returned at the end of the year if all books are re- in satisfactory condition. Students withdrawing during the year will also be refunded their took deposit. Students takng chemistry, bi- | ology, physics or other laboratory courses must deposit $1 as a break- I’ into fifth place, the Philadelphia age fee. This deposit is also re- fundable less any deductions for| damage caused by the student. \Students whose parents maintain | legal residence in other indepen- dent school districts of Alaska will Directors of the school district in which they are legal residents. In addition, such students must pay a tuition fee in the amount of $62.50 | per semester. KINDERGARTEN Registration for kindergarten chidren will be open from 9 to 11:30 on the first day of school jand also from 1:30 to 3:15 in the } afternoon of the same day. A par- | ent must accompany his child to school and must take the child’s birth certificate it the child is to enroll in the kindergarten. Child- ren enrolling in the kindergarten must be 5 years of age on or before November 1, 1949 in order to be eligible. Kindergarten children will register at either the Church of Christ located across the highway from the Waynor Tract or at the Lutheran Church located on third and Main. They may enroll at the Church which is closest to the child’s residence, Some adjustment on the place of attendance may ce made at a later date. Kindergarten children will be divided into two groups at each Church.'One group will attend from 9 to 11 in the morning and the second group will attend from 1 to 3 in the afternoon. FREE MATERIALS Following the policy adopted last year by the Juneau Board of Di- rectors, all materials actually used by pupils will be furnished by the o g o g Needed every minute W HETHER YOU drive one mile or many miles and whether you drive once a week ‘or every day, your car may cause you a crippling fi- nancial loss. Carry complete Auto- mobile Insurance. Then wherever you go or what- ever happens you'll be protected. Shattuck Agency Seward Street Juneau Phone 248 of school last year must report lor| registration on the first day of | | school Tuesday, Septemizer 6. Re-| not be admitted to the Juneauj Schools unless they first have & written release from the Board of | schools. This includes such items as paste, ink, art paper, pencils, construction paper and work books. In the case of work &ooks, one copy will be furnished to each pupil but remains the property of the school. If the pupil leaves the school, the work book remains, with the school. If the pupil loses or destroys his work book, he will have to replace it at his own expense. Materials such as paper, pencils and blotters will be provided on a [kasis deemed adequate to meet the needs of the pupils. If a stu- ent is extravagant or wasteful with his materials, he will be required to purchase additional material at his own expense, 'NEWCOMBE HURLS DODGERS TO 8-0 WIN OVER GIANTS By RALPH RODEN The baseball world laughed when Branch Rickey hung a $500,000 price tag on Don Newcombe be- fore the big Negro righthander eyer donned a major league uniform. Laughter turned to snickers when the head man of the Dodgers “slashed” the price to $300,000 this spring. Today they're not even smil- ing, just wishing that they owned Fort Knox and its gold. Newcombe is the “solid” member of an otherwise shaky Brooklyn pitching staff. The husky Negro hasn't any trick pitches, no sliders, screwballs or junk. Just a hopping fast ball, sharp l:reaking curve and a change of pace. Newcombe looked like a millon dollars last night as he pitched the Dodgers to an 8-0 five-hit triumph over the New York Giants in the Polo Grounds. The victory was his third straight shutout and his 14th of the season against six defeats. The triumph also moved the second place Dod- gers to within a game and a half of the idle front-running St. Louis Cardinals. The defeat dumped the Giants Phillies taking over fourth as a re- sult of their 6-3 victory over the Boston Braves. The Phils won the game in the eighth inning, scoring three runs to snap a 3-3 tie. Willie Jones stngled across two of the runs. AMERICAN LEAGUE Meanwhile, the Boston Red Sox made hay in the American League pennant chase, crushing the Phila- idelphia Athletics, 8-4 under the lights in Boston. The victory cut the New York Yankees' lead ovey the runner-up Sox to two and one half games. The Yanks were idle. The Sox jumped on Phil Mar: inning. Bobby Doerr keynoted the uprising with a three run homer. Virgil Trucks pitched the Detroit Tigers .to an 8-0 triumph over the Chicago White Sox in the major’s lone day game. Trucks yielded ten singles but kept them well scattered to gain his 16th victory. Besides the Yanks and Cards, the Cleveland Indians, St. Louis Browns, ‘Washington Senators, Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and Chicago Cubs were idle. childon for five runs in the first RAINIERS BEAT BEAVERS BY FIVE 10 FOUR SCORING (By the Associated Press) The Hollywood Stars now have both Oakland and Sacramento breathing down their necks in the steadily tightening Pacific Coast League race. L Even though the Oaks lost to San Diego, 7-4, last night, they re- mained only two games behind the pace setting Stars because Holly- wood lost, too, and to third place Sacramento, 4-1.. The Solons now are only three games back. Hollywood came back home after | two and one-half weeks on the| road but the hometown fans had little to cheer about. The Stars and Solons each scored in the third inning, Sacramento went ahead 2-1 in the fourth and added two more left the lcases full, in the third and seventh innings. Jess Flores. went the route for San Diego and drove in two runs in the eighth, putting the Padres out ahead of Oakland after a 4-4 tie. Oakland’s Dick Kryhoski hit two of the game’s four homers. Seattle trimmed Portland 5-4 by virtue of Tony York’s pinth inning ! triple with the bases loaded. York was a one-man team, practically, getting another triple and a double. He scored two and drove in the other three of Seattle’s runs. Los Angeles and San Francisco were not scheduled. STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS Pacific Coast League L 2 4 5 8 80 84 86 98 Pct 556 543 537 519 | 50| 478 466 395 | Hollywood Oakland . Sacramento San Diego .. Seattle . San Francisco . Portland . Los Angeles .. 88 .. 87 84 82 LT 5 64 National League w .19 St. Louis % .8 Brooklyn Philadelphia ... New York .. Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago New York ... Boston Cleveland Detrolt ............... | Philadelphia Chicago St. Louis Washingten WIL BASEBALL Final scores of WIL games night are as follows: Spokane 7, Yakima 5. Bremerton 8, Vancouver 6. Salem 5, Wenatchee 3, } Tacoma 10, Victoria 2. LARRY .. OPENING Phone 581 Congratulations and Best Wishes Larry De Boise ALL THE SUCCESS IN THE WORLD . .. NEW BAR . . . DON ABEL Builder and Contractor SKOAL! to Lorry De Boise And Wishing You Continued SUCCESS in Your NEW and LONGEST BAR in JUNEAU WALTER D. FIELD Painting and Decorating . ON THE OF YOUR in the seventh. Twice the Stars| . BOB SCOTT, JUNEAU BORN, HERE WITH SHATTUCK AGENCY Robert M. Scott, formerly of Juneau and more recently of Kel- logg, Idaho, has returned to Ju- neau and will be associated with the pioneer insurauce firm of Shat- tuck Agency, it was announced by that office today. Expansion of the personnel of Shattuck Agency, its owners said, is in line with their policy of keeping abreast of the increasing demands made upon the agency by the growth of the Juneau area. “Bob” Scott was born and raised in Juneau. After his graduation from Juneau High School in 1941 he attended Washington State Co]- lege for a little more than a year and then entered the armed forc- His father, Walter P. Scott,!| meanwhile left the superintendency of the Alaska Juneau mine to ac- cept a position with the Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mining Co. and| moved to Kellogg, pccompanied by, Mrs. Scott. Following three years in the ser- vice, during which he saw action {in France as an airborne infantry- man, Bob returned to college. He completed his education in 1948, when he graduated from the school ! of business administration with a major in insurance. During the lat- ter part of his co]lege career, and sirice graduation, he has been a representative of the New York Life Insurance Co., in Walla Walla, Wash., and Kellogg. Having had a desire to return to Alaska for a long time, Scott made a short visi{ here early last month, when tentative arrange- ments were made for his associa- tion with the Shattuck Agency. He arrived here Monday, after driving to Haines over the Alaska High- way. B.B.STARS Stars of games played yesterday in the major baseball leagues are: Batting—BobBy Doerr, Red Sox, homered, doubled and singled and drove home three runs to lead Bos- ton to an 8-4 triumph over Phila- delphia, Pitching — Don Newcombe, Dod- gers—Pitched Brooklyn to an 8-0 five hit triumph over New York to run consecutive scoreless inning skein to 80, ¥ LEADERS IN B. 8. Leaders in the National and American Leagues through games of Friday are as follows: | NATIONAL LEAGUE . Batting — Robinson, Brooklyn, .351; Slaughter, St. Louis, .331. Runs Batted In — Robinson, Brooklyn, 110; Kiner, Pittsburgh, 98. Home Runs — Kiner, Pittsburgh, 39; Musial, St. Louis, 27. Pitching—Wilks, St. Louis, 11-3, 186; Roe, Brooklyn, 11-4, .733. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Williams, - Boston, .352; Kell, Detroit, .342. Runs Batted In—Stephens, Bos- ton, 140; Willlams, Boston, 139. Home Runs — Williams, Boston, 36; Stephens, Boston, 35. Pitching — Kinder, Boston, 17-5, 13; Parnell, Boston, 20-7, .741. FATHER HUBBARD LECTURE PARISH HALL Sunday - - 8 P. M. Adm. - - $1.00 Flus Tax SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1949 ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO0 KETCHIKAN via Pelersburg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. FOR RFESERVATIONS PHONE 612 FURNITURE MART “Walk a few blocks and SAVE MONEY !’ SPECIAL Goodyear “Airfoam” rubber matiress with maiching box spring OUR PRICE $145.00 (Seattle Price $165.00) W DAVENOS — $117.00 vp In Friezes and Tapestry YA OCCASIONAL CHAIRS $25.00 up w Swing Rockers — $41.00 v 0 Bedroom Sets — $145.00 up w Daveno and Davenport Sets in foam rubber $200,00 up W Occasional Tables — $13.50 u C % And many pther values! Room Size Rugs In a variety of colors from $57.50 vp Fi-om Factory . . . To Warchouse.. . To Your House! The Furniture Mart Lucas Warehouse Three Phones 9th and Capital Ave. 36—707—789 Announcement In line with our policy of expanding our service to the public to meet the growing demands of Juneau and its surrounding territory, we have added Robert M. Scott to our staff. With this addition we now have five full- time personnel, devoted entirely to giving you the best possible insurance service. Shattuck Agency Insurance - Bonds