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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH Surrender on USS Missouri in TSBa7 shows General MacArthur and his Allied staff looking on a. Gen. Hso aboard the USS Missouri, Yungrhang signs the (d0Cament laying off Tokyo bay. The signatures of all Allied countries M to of JaPanre',a U.r Sl,a,ed fr the Unlted State- - The mni " the surren- - iHaij being put into although It is admitted by military authorities that It willtake months working government is set np In Japan. Six Pairs of Twins in Family The land of the Dlonne quintuplets has produced another marvel: six pairs of twins in the same family. Of these 12 twins, 7 are still living. They were part of a family of 19 children, born In 13 years to farmer Olivier Brault, 42, and his wife Germalne, 39, near Montreal, Canada. The 12 living children are pictured with parents. Regains Court Title MMM - L i After three years of Inaction Sarah Palfrey Cooke came back to regain the National Amateur Worn en's Tennis title from defending champion, Pauline Betz, 3-- 8-- 6, 6--4, The tournament held at Forest Hills, New York, was the first postwar event. M I orld Commercial Problem for Years to Come i in MoKc2IUL, "YT ESP PLANTS IN TOKYO AREA 1 Munition. W 7 3 Mochlne Tooll Steel Mill, YAWATA Ch,mka, : Electrical Equipmtnt gZZM Chmil Woriu Munition, Steal Mill Oil Refinerlei : Mocnins Tooli EE3 fHflll!llll Oil Rer.n.ri., Shipyard, Hodiine Tooli " "" Chemicol, I Electrical S, Mill, Equipment Aircraft Chemicall L ! hTl Munition, 36 K 3113 Z 3W3 Motoriied Equipment (Monti rfii :ieJI I Machln. Tooll Aircraft p Rice frit ifilffP - : Electrical Equipment Steel Mill, iTttdr """"'IlltW " SASAKI : Chemical Work, Shipyard, pT fc- ,- VokOh3m3H Jled' Equipment T --jT Rice J1 IfHT Shipyard, Hiroshima $gJ iMBfc-- V feP Yokohama ks tr Elt - JZ. lJelS " ""ner'e' Mechoniied Equipment ?i3(13S3 j ' Electrical Equipment Munition, wh? jjkK a g oshima K"K M8d,in,Tooi, Munition, .vvVrj' reTool, tt5c Acraft Chemical Work, Steel Mill, jrf Vlf 0rd, Machine Tool, Mhanid Equipment Shipyard, H7 Aircraft ' Monition, Elec,NCal Equipment Oil Reflnene, y Be Japan will be whittled down from a prewar empire of 260,770 square miles to 146,690 square miles, linistration of the islands by the Allies will be a major task. The control of the 72,000,000 Japs on the lands will not be easy for the Allies. Map shows industrial Japan. Many of these industries will be dis-- Boyington-Wainwright-Wermut- h Three outstanding heroes of the war against Japan, MaJ. Gregory Boylngton, marine corps ace, left; Lt. Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright, hero of Corregidor, center; and Capt. Arthur V. Wermuth, "one man army of Bataan," credited with killing 116 Japs singlchanded, were all found alive in prison camps, despite extreme hardships they underwent, Onr Flag Over Japan i i , 4 Proud G.I.s of the 11th airborne watch the American flag flapping in the breeze, soon after their arrival at Atsugi airstrip from Okinawa, as planes in the background wing over the field. The raising of the flag Pete The Pooch Is an Able Seaman marked complete surrender of Japs. eKn ReHhr fjIjI HSI Impatience is the name for Pete, who can't wait for a line to be tossed from the chock, but dives into the sea and swims ashore, guiding the coast gnard cutter to its berth at LeHavre, France. After being lifted out of the water, with the line in his mouth, he sees that it is properly moored to bollard. The wire-haire- fox terrier meets all ships. II MS t By JACK LAIT (Pinch Hitting this week for Walter Winchel!) Memo from Manhattan With my son, paratrooper - wsr correspondent Cieorse I. alt, I saw a private projection of "The Story of (!I Joe," which then had not yet opened In New York. This Is a film centered around some of the famous activities of Ernie I'jie. We both have a sentimental Interest In Krnle. I knew him when he was an Incon-spicuous desk drudge on a Washing-ton newspaper, a nice little guy who pave no Indication of the Immortal-ity he was to attain In our profes-- i slon. Hut (Jeorpe knew him more Intimately than he knows his broth-er. They crossed together In a tiny tub to Lisbon, flew from there to London, shared a little flat during the murderous blitz. They went to-gether to Africa and shared tents, Jeeps nnd foxholes during the ad-versities of the lSrltlsh defeat and retreat and through the triumphs of the allies from El Alameln to con--' quest of the desert and the Med-iterranean. They wer aide by aide In Sicily and In Italy. George had eaught malaria In the desert and came back here for a spell of rest After that he went through campaigns In New Guinea, Sal-pa-through the bitter fighting on Leyte. He made battle Jumps with the Eleventh Airborne Di-vision and was about to go en to Luzon when the malaria caught up with him again. Gen. MacArthur ordered him flown back on sick leave. Meanwhile, Ernie Pyle had come home to rest and recuperate at his house In Albuquerque, N. M. I met George at my Beverly Hills retreat, the day after he landed in San Francisco, and while we were there Ernie visited us. He was now on his way to cover the fighting In the Pacific. By this time, he was the most widely syndicated reporter In the world, the only man in my knowledge who ever had both the top best-selle- on the book market at once, and he could have com- - manded princely prices to lecture, write for magazines or take any of a score of broadcasting offers. . . . Oeorge, who bad been through plenty with him, told him he was bound for stuff much worse and more dan-gerous than he had ever known. George pointed out to him his situa-tion, on top of the world, and liter-ally begged him not to go. But Ernie said the very fact that he had built up so large a following was a mandate and an obligation; he couldn't quit In the middle; he had a hunch he would never come back, but he insisted he should go on. Ernie was a light, slight chap who was always cold wore two suits of long, heavy flannel un. derwear during the earlier cam-paigns. ... As we shook hands with hl and he started off on the journey from which he was never to return, he chuckled and said to George: "Anyway, fellow, down there, I won't freeze to death!" "The Story of Gl Joe" takes him only as far as his turning to the road to Rome Burgess Meredith, who gives an uncanny personifica-tion, studied under George and others who knew Ernie well and acquired his little Intimate manner- - isms; makes even those who knew Pyle think he looks like him. . . . But, though he Is a star and playing a greater one, GI Joe is the hero collectively of this brave film. I call it brave because Lester Cowan put two and a half million dollars Into lt, though he had pledged Ernie not to glorify him, gave his principal character no suggestion of any sort of romance, and contracted to let Ernie throw out any scenes he didn't like. He did discard several, which were quite costly, because they made too much of him and too little of the men he loved and who loved him. . . . Perhaps It was this spirit and faculty that lifted Ernie Pyle above any other reporter of his generation. He was a g little fellow, not physically brave, who sweated and shuddered during action, but who not only never ducked It, but went, weary and woebegone, to seek it . . . George tells me that during the nightly Nazi raids on London, Pyle would be panic-stricke- yet be was the first one at his type-writer when it stopped. ... He had a lot of resistance, as many wiry little men have. . . . With the kind of stuff he wrote, he could have almost as well worked miles back of the front. But the reporter In him drove him right to where things were thickest. , After many long years at every angle of the business, I am scarcely a starry-eye- d worshiper of a man simply because he does a newspaper job well. . . . Devoting all my space this week to Ernie Pyle makes the first time I have done that since, ;!0 years ago this week, I wrote an obituary tribute on Paul Armstrong, who was the exact antithesis of the man I deal with here That bean out a theory which has long seemed sound to me a man Is Judged in th i.llrect ratio of what he accomplishes to what he attempts. Champ Girl Hurler Connie Wisnlcwskl, of Detroit, ace hurler for the Grand Rapids Chicks of the Girls Profession-- ! al Ball league, broke a pitching reo ord with 34 wins for the season, as well as for the three years the league has been in existence. fcioose Up for Boys All-Americ-an ' torth, pilot of the Eastern nine, and Ty Cobb, manager of the mne "choose up" just De-"'- of the Esquire boys, of the Boys East-We- st championship. They took time out IfWl parks for every 1,000 boys in the United States. Ruth and "main heroes to thousands of sand lot players. Japs Starved Yanks This starved, emaciated POW from Aomori, near Yokohama, shows effects of malnutrition at hands of Japs, as he was rescued by U. 8. mercy squadrons. In addition to hu-man torches, other inhuman and barbaric brutal acts were practiced. Hurley Serves as Peace Maker Mao Tse-tun- Communist leader of China, ws eseorted by Mj. Gp-Patr- ick J. Hurley, American ambassador to China, to a meeting with Chiang Kai-she- k. The result of Hurley's efforts was a report. "Now wit the victorious conclusion of the war against Japan, China is about to en ter the stage of peaceful reconstruction." L. to R., Mao, Hurley, Chiang. 4I Did No Wrong' SflL nniiBti ii "Tokyo Rose," did nothing more than entertain G.I.s, which despite her statement, and that of her rela-tives in Chicago, is not what she in-tended. Good-B- y to Fishing Joe Morrison is given his final fishing instructions before he returns to school. Like thousands of other bovs, he spent some" part of the summer fishing and camping. Papers of Historical Importance L BHI lefl f table are the complete Japanese .JZ J surrender. In the background can be C, S 3 he aZCS at lhe PaPrrn for future Ph. Copies of the surrender be Prrser;oa s d as a guide for newer generations |