The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 1, 1944, Page 3

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* - S They make slaves of children! They manh 'NORTHWEST PREMIERE ATURDAY, JULY 1, 1944 GIGANTIC 50-CITY OF THE DYNAMITE DRAMA THAT BLASTS JAP IIH(MRV//KI Sponsored by RADIO STATIONS ' v " THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE JUNEAU, ALASKA _ ~ CAPITOL THEATRE T0 SHOW 'BEHIND THE RISING SUN" | Bringing American film audiences | the first glimpse of the real Japan | | | | FORMOSA IS RAIDED BY LIBERATORS |and its people to reach the speak- |ing screen, RKO Radio’s “Behind the Rising Sun” reveals the hidden motives and insane ambitions of the | Jap war lords in sensational fash- ion. The film opens Sunday at the | Capitol Theatre. For the first time the reason for | the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor is | explained, and the psychology of a | nation which coolly plans on taking Important J;;Shipping Center Smashed in Nim- itz's Pacific Campaign CHUNGKING, July l.—American Liberators, joining Admiral Chester |a hundred years, if necessary, to win mastery over the rest of the| | world is convincingly disclosed | The story begins in 1936 when the |last of the great liberal Japanese W. Nimitz' Central Pacific cam- paign, smashed at the docks and harbor of Takao, important Jap shipping center on the southwest- A force thej gilded ce,-;',":p":, g::f,hters (ERS! They for into - ... Sensational scenesthatwill % : T} make you mad ’ andle captive women: ¥ enough towant \;ah'\es‘ to smash them on - with your bare fists! o P They - 7 T~ e war e‘e“ Sensational picture that tells the whole truth about the “Sons of Heaven"..exposing their awful ambitions even more ruthlessly than “Hitler's Children” bared the shame of the Nazis. with MARGO - TOM NEAL J.CARROL NAISH - ROBERT RYAN - GLORIA HOLDEN 4byEDWARD DMYTRYK nPlayby Emmet Lavery Diree presents =1 ). GOVERYMENT PLUS——LATEST NEWS EVENTS PREVUE TONIGHT ——————————————————————————— ENDS “FOLLOW THE BAND" TONIGHT! “Affairs of Jimmy Valentine” T T S R U VI SUNDAY—FEATURE: 2:35 — 4:35 — 6:35 — 8:35 — 10:35 HEATRE THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES! ern point of Formosa. A’ communique from General Joseph Stilwell's headquarters said the attack was made during a sea sweep on Thursday night, and in- stallations wi damaged, but gave OTICE TO PAY SCHOOL TAX| In Accordance with Chapter 38, Session Laws of Alaska, 1943 ilpaders were assassinated by radical Jap army men and the way was | cleared to prepare for war with this | country as the first step in the pro- 1(1mm of world conquest. A young | Cornell - cducated Japanese, Taro; s fiancee, Tama; his father, Ryo | i, a prominent newspaper pub-| {lisher; and an American engineer, | |Clancy O'Hara, have the principal | roles in the absorbing tale. | s Sy y | Home from Americagund eager to| WHO MUST PAY SCHOOL TAX: L Hora develop Japanese in. | All male and female persons between stry, Taro is opposed by his fath- ysars, Of Age | HUER TS ler, who sadly foresees the course female person who Japan is taking and insists on the | * 1 : 1d who depends. fo boy's going into the army and be- | [¢F SuPport entirely on her husband | coming a part of the Jap New Order. | - o required to pay the tax; per- ‘T'dl'D obeys, and in action in China | ns in the active military or naval He changes from a likeable, sensitive | S°TVice Of the United States, paupers, youngster into a stern militarist,. | o0n¢ PErsons and those cared for " Tom Neal plays Taro, and Margo ‘ By the Territory or who are perma- |is cast as the heroine, Tama, while | nanently injured, infirm, maimed | J, carrol Naish portrays Seki nndi‘"v:,” ippled are “ls?_ exempts, Don Douglas the part of . O'Hara. HEN PAYABLE: The taxis pay= Mnamet Lavery wrote:the dramatic | *oie atfer tae first of Jenruary in screen play, which is based on James | €ach year. It must be paid to the B, Young’s book, “Behind the Rising | *hool tax collector upon demand. |Sun," dealing with his newspaper | 1 0 demand is made for payment, | experiences in Japan. Edward Dmy- it must, nevertheles, be paid to the e rentod. Fegbert Ryan, Glorta | 5chool tax collector or to the Terri- Holden, George Givot and Adeline torial Treasurer on or before the DeWalt Reynolds also have featured | first day of December in each year. o Please remember that no demand roles in the unusual film. | or notice is required to be made or . — given; but, as indicated, if such de- | mand is made, the tax must be paid immediately to the sollector. If | payment is not made, a penalty of H H each of them to the collector, and | Japs Stage Harassing Raids fmis: %o bay “the tax due rrom each of them. When such payment G. G. BROWN, | Tax Collector. Box 2596 First publication, July 1, 1944, $2.50 attaches and both are collect- on Yank Positions— e by ne empioyer, the col- ‘La.sl publication, July 8, 1944. | is unemplo; | able by suit. {lector must give him a receipt for 1 Plane Downed EMPLOYER MUST FURNISH | LIST OF EMPLOYEES AND PAY TAX. Whenever requested by the |school tax collector any employer who has people working for him |who are subject to the payment of | the tax, must furnish a list of his employees together with the age of each tax paid and the amount By REMBERT JAMES | thereof may be deducted from the Representing Cembined American |employee's wages. Press PURPOSE FOR WHICH TAX IS ABOARD JO'NT EXPEDITION-| LEVIED. This tax is collected to ARY FORCE FLAGSHIP OFF assist in the education of the chil- SAIPAN. July 1 The . hardest | dren of the Territory of Alaska. battle of the Pacific war moved to-| Your cooperation is appreciated. ward a climax as the American in- vaders of Saipan drove ahead through tropical heat to a new line {of ridges above the city of Gara- |pan, where they expected to gain! jumping-off places for an attack on the remaining major enemy po- sitions in the northern half of the island. . The Japs gathered their scatter- ed air strength in this area and | staged a number of harassing night | raids on the American positions and shipping. In nine separate raids last night they dropped a few bombs, and at least one of the Jap planes was shot down. Sixty percent of the island is under American control. .- — | Mrs. C. A. Clark of Fairbanks is in Juneau and a guest at the Gastineau Hotel. ."-S'fiogai/g"/oza \ fome Baranof | Beauty Salon|| Alaska Federal Savings & Loan Association r details. ]' 1] iy in Jap operations, following the fleet and a OUnited States task | force when the Japs lost six ships sunk and nine damaged. The Nip! AI onH (EN'URY, fleet fled to the waters between Formosa and the Philippines.) A story of violence and high ad- RERE T venture, “Manila Calling,” the 20th ARRIVAL FROM SITKA Century-Fox film opening Sunday at the 20th Century, is geared for C. W. Tucker rived here | action and suspense. And it should from Sitka and is 1 ered at the provide both in abundance, judging Gastineau from the nature of the tale it tells - A lost battalion is the hero of | IN FROM GUSTAVUS this picture — a lost battalion of Mr. and Mrs. O. A. McMickle fierce fighting men stranded in a| are here from Gustavus and are jungle clearing by the withdrawa | Biccts at the Jineaotiabte from the Philippines of American | armed forces and socking at the| R R AT Japs whenever the opportunity | CARD AND WIFE HERE 4 5 «Manila Calling’ is the first L. W. Card and wife are herc ., gjorifying the missing handful | from Skagway and staying at the who became America’s guerrilla | Juncau Hotel siariieta [ Py A Led by Lloyd Nolan, Cornel wnm-.‘ ® o o o o o & o o jymesGleason and a spirited young e WEATHER REPORT o iady named Catole Landis, the guer- | . (U. S. Bureau) ® rillas in this particular instan \ e Temp. Friday, June 30. @ happen to be communications men, ® Maximum 58, minimum 5 . se anonymous stalwarts whose e o o o o o 5 o o e e hazardous work lets the right hand | lof Uncle Sam’s Army know what | the left is doing. Their work is vital They know it . But the Japs know |it, too. As a result, though they | stand alone, the Americans resort to | guerrilla tactics, maintaining our communications and disrupting the | Japs’ | Because there is more serious work | afoot, Lloyd Nolan and Carole Lan- dis find it necessary to postpone romance for the time being. And| James Gleason'’s temper is said to | get the best of him again, whi equivalent to saying that th some rollicking laughter ahead. In- | teresting, too, is the important role | assigned to Cornel Wilde. This relative newcomer to the screen is from the Broadway stage and is known also as an ex-Olympic ath- | lete. | | > MOTHER NE SSITY AGAIN | : | WASHINGTON~Yankee ingenu- |ity is being demonstrated daily on the Ttalian front. Cpl. Jesse F. Hawkins, of Somerset, Ky, a mas- ter mechanic with the Third Infan- try Division, tells of using mess kits to make inserts for bearings and old papers for gaskets. WAC — pvt. Doris Stewart, Verona, N. J., currently assigned to the AAF technical school at Boca Raton Army air field in Florida, wears the new off-duty uniform of Women's Army Corps. THEATRE Special DINNER | BOILED BEEF ‘z ALL DAY | 50c Plate | Opening Introduction to the NEWLY Renovated Enlarged TROPICS CAFE Featuring All Styles Chinese and American Cooked Meals Opposite Juneau Cold Storage PAGE THREE "CHINA GIRL" LAST TIME TONIGHT STARTS TOOMENTURY ] v N o A MATINEEat 2:00P. M. OWL SHOW TONIGHT 12:30 A. M. \ THEY FOUND A NEW WAY TO FIGHT! OUT OF FOX-HOLES...OUT OF THE HILLS... OUT OF THE COURAGE OF THEIR HEARTS! The turbulent story of a lost battalion who became America's first guerrilla fighters... and a girl who fought fearlessly at their side! " CALLING) 4 ) : Lloyd Nolan - Carole Landis f o, Comel Wilde - James Gleason Executive Producer Sol M. Wurtzel - Directed by Herbert I. Loeds Original Screen Play by John Larkin Verd-A=-Ray | LAMP BULBS The Standard Eye Comfort Lamp Alaska Eleciric Light and Power Company JUNEAU DOUGLAS Phone No. 616 Phone No. 18 WHERE SATISFACTION and SERVICE are SYNONYMOUS SMART HAIRDOS Reap Compliments A full staff of experienced operators to satisfy your every wish in hair styling. . SHOP HOURS There Is No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising! 9A.M.TOGP. M. OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT PHONE 538 e | BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH HAW HAW--WHEN YE WARPED THAT JAP ON HIS PUNKIN HAD PSST-- LOOKY = THAR'S THREE MORE OF 'EM - " By BILLY DeBECK Broiled Steak and Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME —————————— T ——————— B DINE AND DANCE The Derby Inn L AR DINE AND DANCE SKAGWAY'S ONLY DINE AND DANCE ocated at SKAGWAY PLACE SINCE THE GOLD RUSH!

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