Kingsport, Tenn., Thursday, August 23,
1945
Japan, Allies
To Sign PactAt Tokyo Bay
By The
Associated Press
Manila—Conquered Japan and the
conquering Allies will formally end the war Aug. 31 by
signing the surrender document on Tokyo Bay aboard the superbattleship
Missouri, which only a month ago was hurling 16-inch shells into the Japanese
homeland.
General MacArthur announced these
final details today, while his headquarters disclosed actual
capitulation in the field proceeding
in advance of the official ceremony.
Surrender
of several thousand Japanese in northern Luzon was arranged yesterday despite
"adamant" opposition
of their commander, and similar negotiations weremoving ahead on Mindanao and Cebu.
To
Visit CampsJapan meanwhile appealed for permission to send ships to ill and starving garrisons on Marcus Island and "various isolated Islands in the south," adding that food on Marcus, 1,200 miles southeast of Tokyo, would be exhausted In two more days.
War Souvenirs
With 38th Division, Luzon, P. I.—AP—Surrender of Japanese mountain
forces in Northern Luzon, several thousand strong, was arranged yesterday in one of the war's
strangest peace parleys. It-took-a worn copy of a G. I.
newspaper, containing an Associated Press surrender story, to
convince the Japanese the war was over.
A group of five 38th Division
officers and 20 enlisted men hiked deep Into the Madre Mountains to confer with
the enemy at a previously- designated spot. Under a Japanese battle flag on a
hillside, officers sat around the edge of a specially dug pit, legs dangling,
discussing the capitulation while American
and Japanese enlisted men traded pistols, sabers,
watches and personal items for souvenirs.
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