Page 1
The New Canadian
THE VOICE OF THE SECOND GENERATION
S'
NO. 4
VANCOUVER, B. C
i5J»
Weekly
Stopped On The High Seas
Newsfront
SEA ISLANDERS DOING THEIR BIT
Sea Island Japanese-Canadian women, Niseis and Isseis alike, are
lending full co-operation to the Sea Island Red Cross Unit in their
pursuit for sewn and knitted wear for the men on the front. Four Nisei
faces are also among a large Canadian group receiving training in Home
Nursing at the School Hall.
The Sea Island Women's Auxiliary which was formed in the latter
part of the preceding year with Mrs. C. Gillespie, wife of the manager
of the Imperial Cannery, Steveston at the head, has been active in a
drive to secure donations for the Red Cross.
Canada's War Effort
Below the lofty Peace Tower in
Ottawa this week began one of the
most important sessions of the Cana
an Parliament since Confederation,
a session, caught up in a bewilder
ing array of cross currents, a ses
NISEI NOMINATED TO BOARD
sion which will trace the pattern of
Among the younger Issei leaders and Nisei nominated to the
Canada's political and economic
board
of directors of the Canadian Japanese Association are Dr. G. A.
scene for the next five years, pos
Ishiwara, Edward T. Ouchi, E. N. Yamaoka, S. Maeba, Dr. Miyazaki,
hly for a new era.
and
Z. Kinoshita. Nominated for auditor is E. Kitagata, National
Premier King will give an ac
JCCL treasurer. Balloting proceeds Friday and Saturday.
counting of his stewardship as it
I relates to Canada's war effort, and
MARPOLE CONTRIBUTES TO WAR EFFORT
■ set forth his record for all to read,
Joining the ever increasing number of organizations, the Marpole
I He will make no rash moves, but
Shown above is the 16,795-ton passenger liner, Asama Maru,
money to Mayor Telford, asking"that it be forwarded to Ottawa for use
■ will meet the expected attacks on
which was halted last Sunday by an unnamed British light
in connection with the Dominion's war effort.
I his administration, especially of the
cruiser, near Yokohama en route from San Francisco. TwentyEnclosed with the monetary contribution was a letter which read
■ Hepburn Liberals, with all the strateone German seamen, being sent home by the Standard Oil
in
part:
■ gic finesse of his years of political
Company were seized by a boarding party of armed British
“Since the outbreak of the war it has been our sincere desire to
I experience.
sailors. Japan has lodged strong protests with the British
make some expression of loyalty to our adopted land.
■ He has a record to point to.
Government.
“It has been our privilege to reside in Canada for many years, and
I There are two contingents of the
Tatuta Maru, sister ship of the Asama Maru, was also
we are indeed grateful for the many advantages which this country
I Canadian Active Service Force now
reported as having been stopped by am unidentified warship
has given us. Now that Canada stands in need of support, we feel
I in training in the United Kingdom.
Tuesday, 170 miles from San Francisco.
that we should like to assume some part, no matter how small, of the
I The Dominion is rapidly completing
responsible task which she faces."
preparations for its crucial part in
the Empire Air Scheme, for the
NISEI CHURCfr MEMBERS PLEDGE LOYALTY
training of men and the producMembers of the Junior Powell United Church at their annual
tion of machines. Efforts are un
meeting unanimously adopted a resolution passed by the Vancouver
I der way to swing industry and agriPresbtery that "In the present crisis we reaffirm our loyalty to His
I culture into wartime production
Majesty the King and to the British Commonwealth of Nations, and
I alignment. The recent war loan
call upon our people to pray earnestly that the will of God may be
I proved a great victory, and a sec- Change due to Unexpected Ticket Demand vicorious, that right may triumph in this struggle in this and that lasting
I ond division is now being recruited,
. . . peace with righteousness . . . may come to the world when
do great has been the response of the community to peace
I equipped and trained.
it is ended.
I Nevertheless the record will be the Red Cross Benefit Concert that the concert will be held
The meeting also urged members to stand loyally together with
I severely attacked, because of the in the Empress Theatre, Gore and Hastings, it was announced the Church in its fight against the rising tide of secularism and com
| gravity and importance of the task yesterday by Dr. George A. Ishiwara,, committee chairman. mercialism; for Christian standards of marriage and home life, of
| in hand—the successful prosecution
Sabbath observance, of temperance, of racial, economic and international
Speaking for the Red Cross
I of the war.„ Canada is united in
justice.
| this one desire from coast to coast. Treaty Abrogation
will be Carleton Clay, one of
GOVERNMENT THANKS CLEANERS FOR DONATION
। The opinion of the country on
the city’s best-known elocu
The $300 contribution to the government for war purposes made
I how this must be achieved will detionists, who is active in the
Affects
Japanese
by
the
Vancouver Japanese Cleaners' Association has Peen acknowledged
(ermine when the general election
work of the Society. The con
in a letter from the Hon. J. L. Ralston, Minister of Finance
will come, whether, as is probable,
Merchants
in
U.S
cert
will
begin
at
6.00
p.m.
g the King Government will return to
sharp.
power, or whether the move for a
SAN FRANCISCO. —The im
national government will gain unex“The demand for tickets has
mediate effect of the expiration
I pected strength.
In any event I'd give my eye- of the Japanese-American Trade i far exceeded all our expectations,
-eth to be sitting in the press gal- Treaty will be the depriving of and it will be impossible to ac■ery at Ottawa right now. I still Japanese residents in the United commodate the crowd in the
remember every vivid detail of the States of the right to lease land Japanese Hall,” Dr. Ishiwara defirst and only time I visited the for commercial or residential i dared.
House of Commons and saw our purposes.
For this reason we have se
The- California Land Law gives
Canadian democracy in action.
to the Japanese residents only cured the Empress Theatre at a
Stressing the problem of employment as the crux of
such rights as are provided in the very reduced rate. Seating ac- Nisei problems, and urging the Nisei to rouse themselves
modation will be ample, so that
tar Eastern Front
treaty of 1911:
the audience is assured of com- to take advantage of the opportunities awaiting them, the
m
“
to
enter,
travel
and
reside
Eyes this week, too, are turned
fort throughout the - long pro Japanese consul, Kenji Nakauchi, struck a provocative note
to
the
territories
of
the
other
toward the Orient. Sensational as
in his address to the University Japanese Students' Club
gramme.
a headline, the Asama Maru inci carry on trade, wholesale and
Parent-Student conference at the Nippon Club, January 20.
dent is of but minor importance. retail, to own or lease and
Since no tickets can be sold
Describing the Nisei’s econo
The attitude of the British Govern- occupy houses ... to lease at the gate, they are now on sale
mic problems, Mr. Nakauchi ex prepared for immediate emloywnt has been conciliatory, and the land for residential and com at Yamato Silks, Shibuya’s. T. pressed his belief that the ment and have no ready open
Maikawa, Powell Drug, Nimi
only question at stake is a point of mercial purposes.”
Nisei’s chief weakness lies in ings. But if there is no job
international law. It should be set
The lapsing of the treaty will Shokai, and Takahara Drug.
an “inferiority complex” which waiting, then why not create jobs,
tled shortly.
automatically take away these
blinds him to the opportunities he challenged his listeners.
But Japan's relations with the rights from Japanese residents.
of sharing in the exploitation
In general, after Jan. 26, Ja
He suggested that the Nisei
United States entered a serious
of Canada's vast natural re
panese
now
doing
business
in
the
create first of all an employstage January 26, when the trade
sources.
United
States
under
treaty
pro
ment
agency, and develop new
heaty passed into history. Again
The
Nisei,
he
declared,
have
visions would be regarded as
jobs. Why, he asked, should the
under the guise of crusading
been
sleeping.
They
must
wake
temporary
alien
visitors.
Nisei remain in the same oc
idealism, the richest nation of
up,
act,
and
work,
then
they
would
cupations
as their fathers. Go
the world embarked upon the pro
The Japanese Canadian residents
matic offensive against Japanese
achieve
success.
They
must
have
further into the wilderness, into
tection and expansion of its own
expansion in its history," culmin of Sunbury and Annicis Island a definite purpose in life, kindle other provinces, into new fields,
imperialistic interests.
ating in the Washington Arms Con district, municipality of Delta, have their ambition, and make use of was his advice.
donated the sum of $34 to the all their faculties.
If is no. news that under the cov- ference of 1921-22.
It is in this important field,
Today
with
Europe
again
in
arms,
^r of the Spanish-American war,
Department of National Defence.
.Picking
an
example
close
to
mmer'ca emerged with Guam, the with Britain and France occupied at
The contribution was forwarded to home for the students, he said he charged, that th© Japanese
Phillipines, and a naval stake in’home, the U.S. adopts its power Councillor W. F. Silda, to be. sent
Canadian Citizens League has
to that Nisei students, even after failed.
It is the responsibility of
ihe balance of power 6,000 miles diplomacy in a fresh imperialistic
the Department in Ottawa.
graduation from college are not the Citizens’ League^ he declared,
,r°m the Golden Gate.
expansion.
to create interest in vocational
Again during the world war, the
questions and work out ways and.
।
under. Woodrow— Wilson,
means of solving this vital pro
launched what Griswold, the Yale
blem.
historian, calls "the greatest diplo-
I
5V
'*0®^
F
u
•5
ill
H
£
i
By Popular Demand!
Concert To Be Presented In Empress
1 £?^
iV^r
HU
Hi
Consul’s Speech
Nisei Urged To Seize Chances,
Work Hard, Create Own Employment
Delta Donates
To National Defence
Red Cross Concert — Empress Theatre — January 28, 6:00 p.m
I'
as
W
.te?
w
ter
Bl
1%
THE VOICE OF THE SECOND GENERATION
S'
NO. 4
VANCOUVER, B. C
i5J»
Weekly
Stopped On The High Seas
Newsfront
SEA ISLANDERS DOING THEIR BIT
Sea Island Japanese-Canadian women, Niseis and Isseis alike, are
lending full co-operation to the Sea Island Red Cross Unit in their
pursuit for sewn and knitted wear for the men on the front. Four Nisei
faces are also among a large Canadian group receiving training in Home
Nursing at the School Hall.
The Sea Island Women's Auxiliary which was formed in the latter
part of the preceding year with Mrs. C. Gillespie, wife of the manager
of the Imperial Cannery, Steveston at the head, has been active in a
drive to secure donations for the Red Cross.
Canada's War Effort
Below the lofty Peace Tower in
Ottawa this week began one of the
most important sessions of the Cana
an Parliament since Confederation,
a session, caught up in a bewilder
ing array of cross currents, a ses
NISEI NOMINATED TO BOARD
sion which will trace the pattern of
Among the younger Issei leaders and Nisei nominated to the
Canada's political and economic
board
of directors of the Canadian Japanese Association are Dr. G. A.
scene for the next five years, pos
Ishiwara, Edward T. Ouchi, E. N. Yamaoka, S. Maeba, Dr. Miyazaki,
hly for a new era.
and
Z. Kinoshita. Nominated for auditor is E. Kitagata, National
Premier King will give an ac
JCCL treasurer. Balloting proceeds Friday and Saturday.
counting of his stewardship as it
I relates to Canada's war effort, and
MARPOLE CONTRIBUTES TO WAR EFFORT
■ set forth his record for all to read,
Joining the ever increasing number of organizations, the Marpole
I He will make no rash moves, but
Shown above is the 16,795-ton passenger liner, Asama Maru,
money to Mayor Telford, asking"that it be forwarded to Ottawa for use
■ will meet the expected attacks on
which was halted last Sunday by an unnamed British light
in connection with the Dominion's war effort.
I his administration, especially of the
cruiser, near Yokohama en route from San Francisco. TwentyEnclosed with the monetary contribution was a letter which read
■ Hepburn Liberals, with all the strateone German seamen, being sent home by the Standard Oil
in
part:
■ gic finesse of his years of political
Company were seized by a boarding party of armed British
“Since the outbreak of the war it has been our sincere desire to
I experience.
sailors. Japan has lodged strong protests with the British
make some expression of loyalty to our adopted land.
■ He has a record to point to.
Government.
“It has been our privilege to reside in Canada for many years, and
I There are two contingents of the
Tatuta Maru, sister ship of the Asama Maru, was also
we are indeed grateful for the many advantages which this country
I Canadian Active Service Force now
reported as having been stopped by am unidentified warship
has given us. Now that Canada stands in need of support, we feel
I in training in the United Kingdom.
Tuesday, 170 miles from San Francisco.
that we should like to assume some part, no matter how small, of the
I The Dominion is rapidly completing
responsible task which she faces."
preparations for its crucial part in
the Empire Air Scheme, for the
NISEI CHURCfr MEMBERS PLEDGE LOYALTY
training of men and the producMembers of the Junior Powell United Church at their annual
tion of machines. Efforts are un
meeting unanimously adopted a resolution passed by the Vancouver
I der way to swing industry and agriPresbtery that "In the present crisis we reaffirm our loyalty to His
I culture into wartime production
Majesty the King and to the British Commonwealth of Nations, and
I alignment. The recent war loan
call upon our people to pray earnestly that the will of God may be
I proved a great victory, and a sec- Change due to Unexpected Ticket Demand vicorious, that right may triumph in this struggle in this and that lasting
I ond division is now being recruited,
. . . peace with righteousness . . . may come to the world when
do great has been the response of the community to peace
I equipped and trained.
it is ended.
I Nevertheless the record will be the Red Cross Benefit Concert that the concert will be held
The meeting also urged members to stand loyally together with
I severely attacked, because of the in the Empress Theatre, Gore and Hastings, it was announced the Church in its fight against the rising tide of secularism and com
| gravity and importance of the task yesterday by Dr. George A. Ishiwara,, committee chairman. mercialism; for Christian standards of marriage and home life, of
| in hand—the successful prosecution
Sabbath observance, of temperance, of racial, economic and international
Speaking for the Red Cross
I of the war.„ Canada is united in
justice.
| this one desire from coast to coast. Treaty Abrogation
will be Carleton Clay, one of
GOVERNMENT THANKS CLEANERS FOR DONATION
। The opinion of the country on
the city’s best-known elocu
The $300 contribution to the government for war purposes made
I how this must be achieved will detionists, who is active in the
Affects
Japanese
by
the
Vancouver Japanese Cleaners' Association has Peen acknowledged
(ermine when the general election
work of the Society. The con
in a letter from the Hon. J. L. Ralston, Minister of Finance
will come, whether, as is probable,
Merchants
in
U.S
cert
will
begin
at
6.00
p.m.
g the King Government will return to
sharp.
power, or whether the move for a
SAN FRANCISCO. —The im
national government will gain unex“The demand for tickets has
mediate effect of the expiration
I pected strength.
In any event I'd give my eye- of the Japanese-American Trade i far exceeded all our expectations,
-eth to be sitting in the press gal- Treaty will be the depriving of and it will be impossible to ac■ery at Ottawa right now. I still Japanese residents in the United commodate the crowd in the
remember every vivid detail of the States of the right to lease land Japanese Hall,” Dr. Ishiwara defirst and only time I visited the for commercial or residential i dared.
House of Commons and saw our purposes.
For this reason we have se
The- California Land Law gives
Canadian democracy in action.
to the Japanese residents only cured the Empress Theatre at a
Stressing the problem of employment as the crux of
such rights as are provided in the very reduced rate. Seating ac- Nisei problems, and urging the Nisei to rouse themselves
modation will be ample, so that
tar Eastern Front
treaty of 1911:
the audience is assured of com- to take advantage of the opportunities awaiting them, the
m
“
to
enter,
travel
and
reside
Eyes this week, too, are turned
fort throughout the - long pro Japanese consul, Kenji Nakauchi, struck a provocative note
to
the
territories
of
the
other
toward the Orient. Sensational as
in his address to the University Japanese Students' Club
gramme.
a headline, the Asama Maru inci carry on trade, wholesale and
Parent-Student conference at the Nippon Club, January 20.
dent is of but minor importance. retail, to own or lease and
Since no tickets can be sold
Describing the Nisei’s econo
The attitude of the British Govern- occupy houses ... to lease at the gate, they are now on sale
mic problems, Mr. Nakauchi ex prepared for immediate emloywnt has been conciliatory, and the land for residential and com at Yamato Silks, Shibuya’s. T. pressed his belief that the ment and have no ready open
Maikawa, Powell Drug, Nimi
only question at stake is a point of mercial purposes.”
Nisei’s chief weakness lies in ings. But if there is no job
international law. It should be set
The lapsing of the treaty will Shokai, and Takahara Drug.
an “inferiority complex” which waiting, then why not create jobs,
tled shortly.
automatically take away these
blinds him to the opportunities he challenged his listeners.
But Japan's relations with the rights from Japanese residents.
of sharing in the exploitation
In general, after Jan. 26, Ja
He suggested that the Nisei
United States entered a serious
of Canada's vast natural re
panese
now
doing
business
in
the
create first of all an employstage January 26, when the trade
sources.
United
States
under
treaty
pro
ment
agency, and develop new
heaty passed into history. Again
The
Nisei,
he
declared,
have
visions would be regarded as
jobs. Why, he asked, should the
under the guise of crusading
been
sleeping.
They
must
wake
temporary
alien
visitors.
Nisei remain in the same oc
idealism, the richest nation of
up,
act,
and
work,
then
they
would
cupations
as their fathers. Go
the world embarked upon the pro
The Japanese Canadian residents
matic offensive against Japanese
achieve
success.
They
must
have
further into the wilderness, into
tection and expansion of its own
expansion in its history," culmin of Sunbury and Annicis Island a definite purpose in life, kindle other provinces, into new fields,
imperialistic interests.
ating in the Washington Arms Con district, municipality of Delta, have their ambition, and make use of was his advice.
donated the sum of $34 to the all their faculties.
If is no. news that under the cov- ference of 1921-22.
It is in this important field,
Today
with
Europe
again
in
arms,
^r of the Spanish-American war,
Department of National Defence.
.Picking
an
example
close
to
mmer'ca emerged with Guam, the with Britain and France occupied at
The contribution was forwarded to home for the students, he said he charged, that th© Japanese
Phillipines, and a naval stake in’home, the U.S. adopts its power Councillor W. F. Silda, to be. sent
Canadian Citizens League has
to that Nisei students, even after failed.
It is the responsibility of
ihe balance of power 6,000 miles diplomacy in a fresh imperialistic
the Department in Ottawa.
graduation from college are not the Citizens’ League^ he declared,
,r°m the Golden Gate.
expansion.
to create interest in vocational
Again during the world war, the
questions and work out ways and.
।
under. Woodrow— Wilson,
means of solving this vital pro
launched what Griswold, the Yale
blem.
historian, calls "the greatest diplo-
I
5V
'*0®^
F
u
•5
ill
H
£
i
By Popular Demand!
Concert To Be Presented In Empress
1 £?^
iV^r
HU
Hi
Consul’s Speech
Nisei Urged To Seize Chances,
Work Hard, Create Own Employment
Delta Donates
To National Defence
Red Cross Concert — Empress Theatre — January 28, 6:00 p.m
I'
as
W
.te?
w
ter
Bl
1%
Page 2
feg
w
-’A
ft
THE NEW CANADIAN
JANUARY 26
1a
1940
From The Editors Mail B
The Vanguard of Nisei Opinion
Telephone TR inity 0309
ORIENTAL PROBLEM
TRIBUTE TO MISS HENMI
396 Powell Street
(Editor: The New Canadian)
(Editor, The New Canadian)
Dear
Sir:
...
I
am
immensely!
STAFF
Dear Sir-In the Janna., r
pleased with the' way you are tssue of The New Canad'
Thomas K. Shoyama, Yoshimitsu Higashi, Seiji Onizuka,
ia ri i
carrying out a very difficult pro- read the short storv
Irene Uchida, Minoru Yatabe.
blem. The problem is not only Are So Long,” by ‘The Years
Professor of Economics,
Miss Eiko
Japanese; it concerns all Can- Henmi, and I would like
"to
BUSINESS MANAGER
Keio University
adians oi Oriental parentage.■
PHment both the author andT
Edward T. Ouchi
T. S. Hundal New Canadian for it.
The feasibility of East Asiatic
Sooke
Lake,
B.
C.
unity has already received consider
PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT THE
I won’t stop here to discuss it.
able attention among the intellectual
TAIYO PRINTING CO., 230 ALEXANDER STREET
literary merits. I enjoyed it
circles of Japan and has awakened
(thoroughly. Suffice it for'me tn
Registered as second-class matter at Ottawa, Februa ry 13,
IT'S OUR PLEASURE
no less interest among the intelli
say that its publication is the stem
1939, under the Postal Regulations of Canada.
gentsia of China. With the advent
(Editor: The New Canadian)
forward in the right direction
of the China affair, it emerged from
Dear Sir: At this joyous sea of encouraging a„d developing
the theoretical stage and has asSUBSCRIPTION RATES
Nisei literary talents.
‘ ~
sumed the practical proportions of a son, when all the world thrills to
25c a month, $2.50 a year.
the promise of a New Year, I For I firmly believe that
national policy.
^ould like to extend to you and Japanese Canadians have h we
in actual practice the achieve
^Ur
?half Of the 'mem' thing t0 contribute to
„
what has
ment of this new unity will not bers of the Seikokai A.Y.P.A.,
our
oiten
been
called
the
“
NewTan
only determine Japanese policy best wishes and
success in all adian” literature by tbe noted
toward East Asia, but will de
your endeavours through t h e Canadian writer, Watson Kirktermine attitudes and actions of year.
Japanese Canadian! Be proud today that you are a
connell. Your or rather our newsEast Asia as a whole towards
The
publishing
....
_
&f
our
club
’
s
Paper
provides the ideal medium M
Japanese Canadian?
politics.
activities from time to time has'
Five months ago, when the world still fought
In the old order that prevailed ?el?ed US in S'° many ways we
may we have s™icontributions, perhaps a dedesperately to avert the shadow of a new war, we wrote in a good portion of the Far East has bestow our thanks and hope to
existed
H
the
s
77
“
^at
W
Paper
has
^!
\
Iltera^ »
» a
these columns:
semi-colonies. But Japan was able d°ne
US’
'. . . we know that if the time of testing finally
“Nisei Student”
to resist the pressure exerted by
Aki Kobayashi, (Secretary) City
European and American imperialism,
comes and the Empire is forc'd into war, we Nisei
against which the other East Asiatic
born and bred in Canada and Confident of our place in
countries were helpless.
1^
■t
her future, we shall not be lacking in the fulfillment
of our duty to Canada/'
Today we thank you because, with neither flour
ish of trumpets nor insistence upon your rights, you
have laid aside the quarrel you had with the land of
your birth or adoption, and freely and willingly as
sumed the duties and responsibilities of its citizenship.
Thus Japan has used the technique of the Western powers to check
I their advance. But Japan does not
wish to continue using the tools
of Western imperialism, for she
realizes that to do so would not
only retard her own advancement,
but also the progress of East Asia
generally.
Aiderman Wilson And His
rr
(The. first part of an article which examines Aiderman Wilson's
charges of the “Oriental' Menace” appears below. Owing to space
limitations it will be continued in the next issue.)
By Staff Writer
From scattered farming villages, from distant fishing
been merely trumped up platform
The New Policy
Captain MacGregor Macintosh, s,peechesham.ets, from isolated lumber camps, from cities of the I
The brief, however, is of inprovince, your hard-earne'd dollars have poured in__
Japan must look for new ideas one-armed M.L.A. for the former
voluntary contributions to the nation's war effort.
'___ 1^ ^ policies. Thus the idea of fIslands constituency, has retired terest, for in it Mr. Wilson gives
Asiatic combination has
VTA
4
£
3
s
i
W
°f
1 provincial
----- what he considers adequate
For Mr. Wilson’s brief is filled
graduate of King Edward High
Here, plainly writ in deeds, not words, is your
School, Mr. Wilson is young, with many inaccurate statements,
energetic and ambitious—a n d vague generalizations and illogical
answer to the malicious charges hurled so freely
fortunate to be left in sole posses conclusions. In fact it is strongly
against you. Here, plainly writ, for all who care to
It is only natural that countries sion of the feld of anti-Japanese
observe, is the true temper, the true spirit of your
of kindred relationships, common agitation, a field that has proved suggestive of a schoolboy's essay,
when compared with the scholarly
destinies and geographical pro v e r y profitable for
numerous
th, -He'G V the’ record of y°ur own sincerity and honesty pinquity hould unite to form a young and ambitious politicians study by Dr. Charles H. Young.
(The Japanese Canadians, by
politico-economic structure, under before him.
th» h/1” 0,1 °( y°Ur °Wn Characfer and soul- ls if "oi which they can best realize their
I o u n g , Reid and Carrothers.
date Mr. Wilson has conthe harbinger of more just and tolerant times to come own individuality against the in
published under the auspices of
fined
most
exorable
forces
which
dominate
worlc
of
his
lurid
attacks
promise of the triumph of truth and justice, the
the Canadian Nationl Committee
pro- economics and politics today.
to
meetings
of
the
Vancouver
for Mental Hygiene. and t li e
phecy of your own ultimate victory?
Under Japan's proposed new order City Council and to patriotic Canadian Institute of InternaWe are proud to re-affirm our faith and belief in
five principal considerations will pre and flaming speeches before tional Affairs.)
you. vail.
various political organizations
A comparison of the concluI. The economic structure will in the city.
sions contained in each work
represent economic relations among
I
he
only
available
document
in
InaTime of Lost Faith
is especially revealing. For
geographically contiguous areas.
which he has set forth anything
^- The combination will not be approaching a reasonable exposi where Mr. Wilson has started
Whul though the faiths go don-n beneath the scathe
for one-sided exploitation or profit. tion Oi his view on the Oriental from a political platform and
3. Individualistic capitalism and population in B. C. is the brief then set about it to bolster it
O time, and men. less-laureled. keep an earth ' ■
egotistic centralization will be rec- submitted by himself and Mr. up, Dr. Young has started from
I hat bears no signet from the skies? Why withe
JeGiaies in 1938 to the Board of the foundations and then, and
in self-inflicted pain and fret that worth
4. The process of rectifying the Aemev. Just a year ago this only then, erected his conclu
I
Of man no longer special sanction owns?
old order will be achieved by pro nonth this Board, headed by Dr. sions upon sound foundations.
jects planned and undertaken by the Tugh Keenleyside, investigated
Foi if imagined ties, conjoining this
component members of the economic the sensational charges of the
Dr. Young, of course, brought
Onr clay-born life with one in fairer zones
union.
smuggling of Japanese aliens into to his study the advantages of a
Beyond decay, no more afford us bliss,
5. Following these organizational Canada; and handed down a re University education, years of
Still, still this earth's renewing loveliness
lines, foreign trade, finance, invest port which showed that they had training and study in sociology
ments, and economic development
A usufruct of joy on man bestows;
and social sciences, and a wide
are
to
be
planned
from
a
collective
And loss of godhead we can but redress
standpoint and controlled with re- others. It will be an area in which experience in dealing with pro
With deeper love of life and all it shows.
gard to the major operations of the closely mutual political and economic blems of immigrant groups. And
relations prevail among its com- most important of all he brought
And so from beauties great and small—from these
whole structure.
ponent parts, but at the same time a fine -quality of disinterested
A harvest rich my heart no less shall reap
it will remain freely open to all
Aim of New Order
ed when, all labor done, I gain sweet ease
countries which would participate ness, for he had nothing either to
The new Asiatic combine—Japan, in its trade, enterprise and finance gain or lose from his conclusions.
in endless night. I shall as deeply sleep.
Manchukuo and China—will not aim for the development of the area, In all of these respects Mr. Wilat the formation of an area exclu not as colonies or semi-colonies, but 8011 is, of course, singularly lacksive in purpose or inaccessible to one independent unity.
|ing.
Hug.
it should be recognized that no
country can remain in an isolated
position.
1
I
f 6 ,?eld
tIle duration of the reasons for an attack upon a
When Canada announced its first war loan, no racial emerged, The first postulate set P htlCS
group was more prompt or more enthusiastic in its sub- forth is complete repudiation of AvaT and Harry J. DeGraves, of defenceless minority group, and
colonial or semi-colonial servitude J.
probe iame’ has also re- thus attempts to justify a stand
scriptions.
tired from active civic life.
which, no matter how much he
Then the countries of East
And now, in Vancouver, so great has been your re
This leaves as “anti-Japanese ^ay protest otherwise, is inspired
Asia will enter into a reciprocal
sponse to the Red Cross Benefit Concert, exceeding all and mutual arrangement in which agitator No. 1” Aiderman Halford bT a desire to exploit racial
expectations, that it has necessitated removal to one of no one country will hold others in D. Wilson. Born in Vancouver, prejudice.
he son of an Anglican pastor, a
subjection by might or right, but
the citys largest theatres.
f
<
w
-’A
ft
THE NEW CANADIAN
JANUARY 26
1a
1940
From The Editors Mail B
The Vanguard of Nisei Opinion
Telephone TR inity 0309
ORIENTAL PROBLEM
TRIBUTE TO MISS HENMI
396 Powell Street
(Editor: The New Canadian)
(Editor, The New Canadian)
Dear
Sir:
...
I
am
immensely!
STAFF
Dear Sir-In the Janna., r
pleased with the' way you are tssue of The New Canad'
Thomas K. Shoyama, Yoshimitsu Higashi, Seiji Onizuka,
ia ri i
carrying out a very difficult pro- read the short storv
Irene Uchida, Minoru Yatabe.
blem. The problem is not only Are So Long,” by ‘The Years
Professor of Economics,
Miss Eiko
Japanese; it concerns all Can- Henmi, and I would like
"to
BUSINESS MANAGER
Keio University
adians oi Oriental parentage.■
PHment both the author andT
Edward T. Ouchi
T. S. Hundal New Canadian for it.
The feasibility of East Asiatic
Sooke
Lake,
B.
C.
unity has already received consider
PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT THE
I won’t stop here to discuss it.
able attention among the intellectual
TAIYO PRINTING CO., 230 ALEXANDER STREET
literary merits. I enjoyed it
circles of Japan and has awakened
(thoroughly. Suffice it for'me tn
Registered as second-class matter at Ottawa, Februa ry 13,
IT'S OUR PLEASURE
no less interest among the intelli
say that its publication is the stem
1939, under the Postal Regulations of Canada.
gentsia of China. With the advent
(Editor: The New Canadian)
forward in the right direction
of the China affair, it emerged from
Dear Sir: At this joyous sea of encouraging a„d developing
the theoretical stage and has asSUBSCRIPTION RATES
Nisei literary talents.
‘ ~
sumed the practical proportions of a son, when all the world thrills to
25c a month, $2.50 a year.
the promise of a New Year, I For I firmly believe that
national policy.
^ould like to extend to you and Japanese Canadians have h we
in actual practice the achieve
^Ur
?half Of the 'mem' thing t0 contribute to
„
what has
ment of this new unity will not bers of the Seikokai A.Y.P.A.,
our
oiten
been
called
the
“
NewTan
only determine Japanese policy best wishes and
success in all adian” literature by tbe noted
toward East Asia, but will de
your endeavours through t h e Canadian writer, Watson Kirktermine attitudes and actions of year.
Japanese Canadian! Be proud today that you are a
connell. Your or rather our newsEast Asia as a whole towards
The
publishing
....
_
&f
our
club
’
s
Paper
provides the ideal medium M
Japanese Canadian?
politics.
activities from time to time has'
Five months ago, when the world still fought
In the old order that prevailed ?el?ed US in S'° many ways we
may we have s™icontributions, perhaps a dedesperately to avert the shadow of a new war, we wrote in a good portion of the Far East has bestow our thanks and hope to
existed
H
the
s
77
“
^at
W
Paper
has
^!
\
Iltera^ »
» a
these columns:
semi-colonies. But Japan was able d°ne
US’
'. . . we know that if the time of testing finally
“Nisei Student”
to resist the pressure exerted by
Aki Kobayashi, (Secretary) City
European and American imperialism,
comes and the Empire is forc'd into war, we Nisei
against which the other East Asiatic
born and bred in Canada and Confident of our place in
countries were helpless.
1^
■t
her future, we shall not be lacking in the fulfillment
of our duty to Canada/'
Today we thank you because, with neither flour
ish of trumpets nor insistence upon your rights, you
have laid aside the quarrel you had with the land of
your birth or adoption, and freely and willingly as
sumed the duties and responsibilities of its citizenship.
Thus Japan has used the technique of the Western powers to check
I their advance. But Japan does not
wish to continue using the tools
of Western imperialism, for she
realizes that to do so would not
only retard her own advancement,
but also the progress of East Asia
generally.
Aiderman Wilson And His
rr
(The. first part of an article which examines Aiderman Wilson's
charges of the “Oriental' Menace” appears below. Owing to space
limitations it will be continued in the next issue.)
By Staff Writer
From scattered farming villages, from distant fishing
been merely trumped up platform
The New Policy
Captain MacGregor Macintosh, s,peechesham.ets, from isolated lumber camps, from cities of the I
The brief, however, is of inprovince, your hard-earne'd dollars have poured in__
Japan must look for new ideas one-armed M.L.A. for the former
voluntary contributions to the nation's war effort.
'___ 1^ ^ policies. Thus the idea of fIslands constituency, has retired terest, for in it Mr. Wilson gives
Asiatic combination has
VTA
4
£
3
s
i
W
°f
1 provincial
----- what he considers adequate
For Mr. Wilson’s brief is filled
graduate of King Edward High
Here, plainly writ in deeds, not words, is your
School, Mr. Wilson is young, with many inaccurate statements,
energetic and ambitious—a n d vague generalizations and illogical
answer to the malicious charges hurled so freely
fortunate to be left in sole posses conclusions. In fact it is strongly
against you. Here, plainly writ, for all who care to
It is only natural that countries sion of the feld of anti-Japanese
observe, is the true temper, the true spirit of your
of kindred relationships, common agitation, a field that has proved suggestive of a schoolboy's essay,
when compared with the scholarly
destinies and geographical pro v e r y profitable for
numerous
th, -He'G V the’ record of y°ur own sincerity and honesty pinquity hould unite to form a young and ambitious politicians study by Dr. Charles H. Young.
(The Japanese Canadians, by
politico-economic structure, under before him.
th» h/1” 0,1 °( y°Ur °Wn Characfer and soul- ls if "oi which they can best realize their
I o u n g , Reid and Carrothers.
date Mr. Wilson has conthe harbinger of more just and tolerant times to come own individuality against the in
published under the auspices of
fined
most
exorable
forces
which
dominate
worlc
of
his
lurid
attacks
promise of the triumph of truth and justice, the
the Canadian Nationl Committee
pro- economics and politics today.
to
meetings
of
the
Vancouver
for Mental Hygiene. and t li e
phecy of your own ultimate victory?
Under Japan's proposed new order City Council and to patriotic Canadian Institute of InternaWe are proud to re-affirm our faith and belief in
five principal considerations will pre and flaming speeches before tional Affairs.)
you. vail.
various political organizations
A comparison of the concluI. The economic structure will in the city.
sions contained in each work
represent economic relations among
I
he
only
available
document
in
InaTime of Lost Faith
is especially revealing. For
geographically contiguous areas.
which he has set forth anything
^- The combination will not be approaching a reasonable exposi where Mr. Wilson has started
Whul though the faiths go don-n beneath the scathe
for one-sided exploitation or profit. tion Oi his view on the Oriental from a political platform and
3. Individualistic capitalism and population in B. C. is the brief then set about it to bolster it
O time, and men. less-laureled. keep an earth ' ■
egotistic centralization will be rec- submitted by himself and Mr. up, Dr. Young has started from
I hat bears no signet from the skies? Why withe
JeGiaies in 1938 to the Board of the foundations and then, and
in self-inflicted pain and fret that worth
4. The process of rectifying the Aemev. Just a year ago this only then, erected his conclu
I
Of man no longer special sanction owns?
old order will be achieved by pro nonth this Board, headed by Dr. sions upon sound foundations.
jects planned and undertaken by the Tugh Keenleyside, investigated
Foi if imagined ties, conjoining this
component members of the economic the sensational charges of the
Dr. Young, of course, brought
Onr clay-born life with one in fairer zones
union.
smuggling of Japanese aliens into to his study the advantages of a
Beyond decay, no more afford us bliss,
5. Following these organizational Canada; and handed down a re University education, years of
Still, still this earth's renewing loveliness
lines, foreign trade, finance, invest port which showed that they had training and study in sociology
ments, and economic development
A usufruct of joy on man bestows;
and social sciences, and a wide
are
to
be
planned
from
a
collective
And loss of godhead we can but redress
standpoint and controlled with re- others. It will be an area in which experience in dealing with pro
With deeper love of life and all it shows.
gard to the major operations of the closely mutual political and economic blems of immigrant groups. And
relations prevail among its com- most important of all he brought
And so from beauties great and small—from these
whole structure.
ponent parts, but at the same time a fine -quality of disinterested
A harvest rich my heart no less shall reap
it will remain freely open to all
Aim of New Order
ed when, all labor done, I gain sweet ease
countries which would participate ness, for he had nothing either to
The new Asiatic combine—Japan, in its trade, enterprise and finance gain or lose from his conclusions.
in endless night. I shall as deeply sleep.
Manchukuo and China—will not aim for the development of the area, In all of these respects Mr. Wilat the formation of an area exclu not as colonies or semi-colonies, but 8011 is, of course, singularly lacksive in purpose or inaccessible to one independent unity.
|ing.
Hug.
it should be recognized that no
country can remain in an isolated
position.
1
I
f 6 ,?eld
tIle duration of the reasons for an attack upon a
When Canada announced its first war loan, no racial emerged, The first postulate set P htlCS
group was more prompt or more enthusiastic in its sub- forth is complete repudiation of AvaT and Harry J. DeGraves, of defenceless minority group, and
colonial or semi-colonial servitude J.
probe iame’ has also re- thus attempts to justify a stand
scriptions.
tired from active civic life.
which, no matter how much he
Then the countries of East
And now, in Vancouver, so great has been your re
This leaves as “anti-Japanese ^ay protest otherwise, is inspired
Asia will enter into a reciprocal
sponse to the Red Cross Benefit Concert, exceeding all and mutual arrangement in which agitator No. 1” Aiderman Halford bT a desire to exploit racial
expectations, that it has necessitated removal to one of no one country will hold others in D. Wilson. Born in Vancouver, prejudice.
he son of an Anglican pastor, a
subjection by might or right, but
the citys largest theatres.
f
<
Page 3
JANUARY 26
IMl .
n I
a Ko
our
its
it
to
tep
iop
in?
we
neias
tri
ed
A^
aile
ft
THE NEW CANADIAN
Japan Nets Trade increase in Past Agency Provides
\ “No Smoking” Signs (
Year: Gains Favourable Balance
Aew Tro.de. Minister
Expected To Adopt
i
JSC Invites Niseis To Annual Contest
• In. k^Ping with its policy off
i service to the community the;
By Staff Writer
a reward for your enthus- be a bl o to expound your pet ideas
i
Tokyo.—Preliminary reports of Japan's foreign trade for the lauaka Insurance Agencv is now J
you the to ran audience. Your enthusiasm
year 1939 disclosed a marked improvement,of the country's inter i distributing “No Smoking"
i
school
students
national position, despite the emergency conditions occasioned bv (printed both in Japanese nnci Vancouver and vicinity will ng of, ha
sh.” These are available
.auiden is Club to
the international situation.
our
(
free
{Third
Annual Oral
of
charge
to
a.ny
Conditions over the year gave
business
Japan a favourable trade bal (over one million yen in the total | man or organization desiring
Frankly we do not expect all
Generally speaking the im- i them for use on their premises
ance for the first time in many ;
Eiji
Tdnabe
z
President
of you who take part as con
provement in the foreign trade I{They
They may be obtained at any time
years. Much of this was due to
testants will become future
situation can be attributed to I; at the office of the Agency. 4151
the favourable balance with the
orators but we do know that
the recent expansion in the out- {P°weL
yen-bloc countries.
you will acquire self-confidence
With a revival of exports to going shipments of Japanese
lu his business contacts, Fuji
gradually by facing an audience.
those countries other than in the merchandise to the yen-bloc I Tanaka. well-known Nisei insurSuch self-confidence will help
yen-bloc area following the out area and to appropriate control ! ance agent, has found an evident
to
give you that poise or
break of the European war, in of the export and import busi- need for this type of sign.
‘‘oomph” which “puts you over”
ternational merchandise business ; ness. Improvement has been
in your social and later on in
One of the few Nisei success
made rapid strides forward.
( especially marked since the
your
business affairs.
ful
instituting
their
own
busi
outbreak in Europe.
Trade Returns
Rapid increases in exports toj nesses, Mr. Tanaka started his
The prizes, rules and location
According to trade returns America in
recent months too own agency some four years
ire similar to those of last year.
Liven out by the Finance Ministry, have been
ago. after gaining a wide ex
attributed
to
heavy
Japan’s exports for the first 11,speculate
The main prize is the Nemichi
>;e buying by American perience in all different kinds
months and ten days of 1939
of
insurance.
Since
then
his
donated by the
amounted to 3,555.000 yen and traders, with the approach of a up-to-date policies and efficient
popular Hon. Mr, Nemichi, late
tieatyless
situation
between
Jaimports to 2.885.000,000 yen, to- pan and the U.S.
service have won him a host
Japanese Consul in Vancouver.
tailing 6.440,000,000 yen and balof
clients
and
helped
him
to
This prize will be■ supplemented
Canadian business firms are
I favourable at 670,000,000
compete
against
well-establish
by three medals which will be
a en
.watching the situation closely, ed firms.
appropriately engraved. The rules
' Compared with the si mil areas' soM^ “ ^ DOmM“
Although his
handles
stipulate
for twelve speakers and
period ot the previous year, both | worth of ■
'
bllllon dollars
goods to Japan since IpraCticaIIy every kind of i^sura time limit of ten minutes for
export, and imports moved up- the last war, and has iMn"i ance. he specializes in fire, autoeach speaker. The location is (he
ward, resulting in a &am of well joyed a tremendous favourable mobile, accident
and sickness
Japanese Hall on Saturday eveninsurance.
------------------ balance.
NISEI COLLEGE GIRL
GRADS TO TOUR JAPAN
Sponsored by the “Shufo no
Tomo,” one of Japan’s leading
magazines for women, five
American Nisei girls will tour
Japan to arrive at an under
standing of conditions in both
the U. S. and Japan and there
by “serve the best interests of
Japanese-American relations.”
The party which sails from
Seattle, Feb. 15, includes Mae
Shimizu. Stella Yorozu and
vhiye Horiuchi, all University
of Washington graduates, and
well-known in Vancouver.
Of interest to Canadian Niseis
come the new of the inspiring
work carried on by the JACL.
the American counterpart of the
JCCL.
UI
Rules and entry forms may be
obtained from Roy Shinobu
(136 Garden Drive) and must be
i etui ned to him with informa
tion indictative of Name, Ad
dress, Phone Number, High
School, Grade and Topic of
Speech.
Under the vigorous leadership
I Tokyo.—Outstanding as an inof President Eiji Tanabe, above,
;dustrial and financial leader, the
the Los Angeles Chapter of the
।newly appointed Minister of ComJACL, the largest in the Lea- io Ihe Club urges all contestants
morce and Industry, Ginjiro Fuji
act promptly because prefercue, set out with renewed, vi
hara, is expected to adopt aggres
ence
will be shown to the first
gour and optimism on a banner
sive measures in meeting Japan’s
twelve entries when the contestterm, at a semi-formal dinner ants
political and economic problems.
being chosen.
dance installation of the new
His appointment to the cabinet
executive. January 20.
aburo Takamashi
has been heartily welcomed by
business circles, who feel that his
! wide business experience and
; knowledge will provide
conAFTER THE SHOW VISIT—
Jstructive administration.
( President of the Oji Paper
^OLLEI FLEX
Manufacturing Co. and several
other firms, and Chairman of the
$134.40
All-Japan Industrial Federation,
Fujiwara
started his career as a
AT THE GIRLS' COFFEE SHOP
Rolleicord
newspaperman. Later he joined
the staff of the Mitsui Bank. He
Breakfast
Light Lunches
Afternoon Tea
accomplished notable successes
Hot
Dogs
Fountain Service
(in the reorganization of a number
The 5th annual general meeting
। of industrial firms which were on of the Steveston association of
954 Granville St.
B
I the verge of collapse, and donated the JCCL was held at the Dantai
Opposite Dominion Theatre
Hall;
January
21.
eight
million
yen
to
found
the
3 90 POWELL ST.
Engineering College at Keio
3831
Election of officers for the
University.
coming year was the big item on
the afternoon’s program.
Hirsohi Nishi was entrusted i
with the position of guiding the
TRinity 2899
i^
new executive. Assisting him will
> be Mamoru Nishi and Kay Oda,
vice-presidents; Tadao Naruse,
BY HELPING
treasurer; Shigeru Hirayama,
assistant treasurer; Itsuji Hamade, chairman; Minoru Nishi,
► vice-chairman; secretaries, Fumihiko Mori (Japanese) and Sa
PRESENT YOUR CASE
buro Hayashi (English) and a
host of convenors.
TO CANADIAN SOCIETY
Mr. Fumio Kajiro has been
chosen as advisor to the or
ganization while Mitsunobu
Owned and Published by Niseis
Kuba
and
Ichiro
Hirayama
have
FOR BETTER TRADE RELATIONS
i
been appointed counsellors.
BUY JAPANESE GOODS
Tetsuo Tamemoto, Kichiji Ni- The New Canadian
sliii and Tadao Naruse will be reCanadian,
presentatives to the District No. 1 396 Powell Sh, Vancouver, B C
Fishermen’s Association.
?J4..
^'('-^I'A
w®
AMY OKI
o
HELP YOURSELF!
3i
8
THE NEW CANADIAN
PROGRAMME
Direct Importers of Japanese Provisions and Curios
§
Seymour 2933
109 Powell Street
VANCOUVER, B. C.
Please enter the following subscription to The New Canadian for:
Special plans of the year are
centred around an exhibition, the Name....
Dantai Hall, oratoricals, debates,
the lodging of a protest against Address
the reduction of Nisei boat-puller
fishing licences and numerous
sport activities.
Rate/ 25c per month, one year $2.50,
I
fit
IMl .
n I
a Ko
our
its
it
to
tep
iop
in?
we
neias
tri
ed
A^
aile
ft
THE NEW CANADIAN
Japan Nets Trade increase in Past Agency Provides
\ “No Smoking” Signs (
Year: Gains Favourable Balance
Aew Tro.de. Minister
Expected To Adopt
i
JSC Invites Niseis To Annual Contest
• In. k^Ping with its policy off
i service to the community the;
By Staff Writer
a reward for your enthus- be a bl o to expound your pet ideas
i
Tokyo.—Preliminary reports of Japan's foreign trade for the lauaka Insurance Agencv is now J
you the to ran audience. Your enthusiasm
year 1939 disclosed a marked improvement,of the country's inter i distributing “No Smoking"
i
school
students
national position, despite the emergency conditions occasioned bv (printed both in Japanese nnci Vancouver and vicinity will ng of, ha
sh.” These are available
.auiden is Club to
the international situation.
our
(
free
{Third
Annual Oral
of
charge
to
a.ny
Conditions over the year gave
business
Japan a favourable trade bal (over one million yen in the total | man or organization desiring
Frankly we do not expect all
Generally speaking the im- i them for use on their premises
ance for the first time in many ;
Eiji
Tdnabe
z
President
of you who take part as con
provement in the foreign trade I{They
They may be obtained at any time
years. Much of this was due to
testants will become future
situation can be attributed to I; at the office of the Agency. 4151
the favourable balance with the
orators but we do know that
the recent expansion in the out- {P°weL
yen-bloc countries.
you will acquire self-confidence
With a revival of exports to going shipments of Japanese
lu his business contacts, Fuji
gradually by facing an audience.
those countries other than in the merchandise to the yen-bloc I Tanaka. well-known Nisei insurSuch self-confidence will help
yen-bloc area following the out area and to appropriate control ! ance agent, has found an evident
to
give you that poise or
break of the European war, in of the export and import busi- need for this type of sign.
‘‘oomph” which “puts you over”
ternational merchandise business ; ness. Improvement has been
in your social and later on in
One of the few Nisei success
made rapid strides forward.
( especially marked since the
your
business affairs.
ful
instituting
their
own
busi
outbreak in Europe.
Trade Returns
Rapid increases in exports toj nesses, Mr. Tanaka started his
The prizes, rules and location
According to trade returns America in
recent months too own agency some four years
ire similar to those of last year.
Liven out by the Finance Ministry, have been
ago. after gaining a wide ex
attributed
to
heavy
Japan’s exports for the first 11,speculate
The main prize is the Nemichi
>;e buying by American perience in all different kinds
months and ten days of 1939
of
insurance.
Since
then
his
donated by the
amounted to 3,555.000 yen and traders, with the approach of a up-to-date policies and efficient
popular Hon. Mr, Nemichi, late
tieatyless
situation
between
Jaimports to 2.885.000,000 yen, to- pan and the U.S.
service have won him a host
Japanese Consul in Vancouver.
tailing 6.440,000,000 yen and balof
clients
and
helped
him
to
This prize will be■ supplemented
Canadian business firms are
I favourable at 670,000,000
compete
against
well-establish
by three medals which will be
a en
.watching the situation closely, ed firms.
appropriately engraved. The rules
' Compared with the si mil areas' soM^ “ ^ DOmM“
Although his
handles
stipulate
for twelve speakers and
period ot the previous year, both | worth of ■
'
bllllon dollars
goods to Japan since IpraCticaIIy every kind of i^sura time limit of ten minutes for
export, and imports moved up- the last war, and has iMn"i ance. he specializes in fire, autoeach speaker. The location is (he
ward, resulting in a &am of well joyed a tremendous favourable mobile, accident
and sickness
Japanese Hall on Saturday eveninsurance.
------------------ balance.
NISEI COLLEGE GIRL
GRADS TO TOUR JAPAN
Sponsored by the “Shufo no
Tomo,” one of Japan’s leading
magazines for women, five
American Nisei girls will tour
Japan to arrive at an under
standing of conditions in both
the U. S. and Japan and there
by “serve the best interests of
Japanese-American relations.”
The party which sails from
Seattle, Feb. 15, includes Mae
Shimizu. Stella Yorozu and
vhiye Horiuchi, all University
of Washington graduates, and
well-known in Vancouver.
Of interest to Canadian Niseis
come the new of the inspiring
work carried on by the JACL.
the American counterpart of the
JCCL.
UI
Rules and entry forms may be
obtained from Roy Shinobu
(136 Garden Drive) and must be
i etui ned to him with informa
tion indictative of Name, Ad
dress, Phone Number, High
School, Grade and Topic of
Speech.
Under the vigorous leadership
I Tokyo.—Outstanding as an inof President Eiji Tanabe, above,
;dustrial and financial leader, the
the Los Angeles Chapter of the
।newly appointed Minister of ComJACL, the largest in the Lea- io Ihe Club urges all contestants
morce and Industry, Ginjiro Fuji
act promptly because prefercue, set out with renewed, vi
hara, is expected to adopt aggres
ence
will be shown to the first
gour and optimism on a banner
sive measures in meeting Japan’s
twelve entries when the contestterm, at a semi-formal dinner ants
political and economic problems.
being chosen.
dance installation of the new
His appointment to the cabinet
executive. January 20.
aburo Takamashi
has been heartily welcomed by
business circles, who feel that his
! wide business experience and
; knowledge will provide
conAFTER THE SHOW VISIT—
Jstructive administration.
( President of the Oji Paper
^OLLEI FLEX
Manufacturing Co. and several
other firms, and Chairman of the
$134.40
All-Japan Industrial Federation,
Fujiwara
started his career as a
AT THE GIRLS' COFFEE SHOP
Rolleicord
newspaperman. Later he joined
the staff of the Mitsui Bank. He
Breakfast
Light Lunches
Afternoon Tea
accomplished notable successes
Hot
Dogs
Fountain Service
(in the reorganization of a number
The 5th annual general meeting
। of industrial firms which were on of the Steveston association of
954 Granville St.
B
I the verge of collapse, and donated the JCCL was held at the Dantai
Opposite Dominion Theatre
Hall;
January
21.
eight
million
yen
to
found
the
3 90 POWELL ST.
Engineering College at Keio
3831
Election of officers for the
University.
coming year was the big item on
the afternoon’s program.
Hirsohi Nishi was entrusted i
with the position of guiding the
TRinity 2899
i^
new executive. Assisting him will
> be Mamoru Nishi and Kay Oda,
vice-presidents; Tadao Naruse,
BY HELPING
treasurer; Shigeru Hirayama,
assistant treasurer; Itsuji Hamade, chairman; Minoru Nishi,
► vice-chairman; secretaries, Fumihiko Mori (Japanese) and Sa
PRESENT YOUR CASE
buro Hayashi (English) and a
host of convenors.
TO CANADIAN SOCIETY
Mr. Fumio Kajiro has been
chosen as advisor to the or
ganization while Mitsunobu
Owned and Published by Niseis
Kuba
and
Ichiro
Hirayama
have
FOR BETTER TRADE RELATIONS
i
been appointed counsellors.
BUY JAPANESE GOODS
Tetsuo Tamemoto, Kichiji Ni- The New Canadian
sliii and Tadao Naruse will be reCanadian,
presentatives to the District No. 1 396 Powell Sh, Vancouver, B C
Fishermen’s Association.
?J4..
^'('-^I'A
w®
AMY OKI
o
HELP YOURSELF!
3i
8
THE NEW CANADIAN
PROGRAMME
Direct Importers of Japanese Provisions and Curios
§
Seymour 2933
109 Powell Street
VANCOUVER, B. C.
Please enter the following subscription to The New Canadian for:
Special plans of the year are
centred around an exhibition, the Name....
Dantai Hall, oratoricals, debates,
the lodging of a protest against Address
the reduction of Nisei boat-puller
fishing licences and numerous
sport activities.
Rate/ 25c per month, one year $2.50,
I
fit
Page 4
1
"ri'
ft
THE NEW CANADIAN
KITSILANO
!Ve5AFJ.
Frank Moritsugu of Grade XII j
He
chemistry, but not
was recently appointed to the posi-1 physics, because the latter course
tion ot Editor-in-Oicf of the school'does not treat radio quire enough i
i Thirteen plays, a dance revue,
paper, the K.H.S. Life. He is a: ("Paging the Hon. n w
u
I
orchestra selections and the ad-i
member of the journalism class.
7. o
”C"°nS 6 ° fen handl«! indicators’ remarks will mark the I
f
er bOmO3n‘
Sy
'
I eigHtn annual drama festival of ।
>ngly few Nise. athletes when last- On the personal side his favouritej the Greater Vancouver Youn-I
week
Kato of Grade X
Xi sports are skating and jiving; his | Peoples and the Provincial DraQ
ipike
Kato
trans ferred to Britannia High.
recreation: P.A. systems and jiving.! matic Festival of the United!
TO GIVE YOU PROMPT
Quite openly this jumping Japanese! Church of Canada, which are to!
Tonight's the Night! The out- jitterbug admits he is an addict of I be held concurrently at the Kitsi-J
AND PERSONAL SERVICE
standing social event of the Grade the "agony
ag°ny pipe" and "licorice lano High School on Tuesday and
IX'ers will be ushered in tonight, Sfl(-L
Wednesday, Jan. 30, 31 and Friday
when the Annual Mixer will be held,
and Saturday, Feb. 2, 3 commenc
FAIRVIEW
garnished this year with a promised
ing at 8.15 each evening. In all
larger Nisei attendance.
Charley Shimizu, Grade X, was eight different trophies will be
As modern and up-to-date as any store
* * *
;crowned champion table tennis ace, competed for.
Matric Vignette . . . To be a ^n ^e recent tournament held by
in the city, our facilities have been de
VARIETY IN PLAYS
technician in the field of electonics, |^e Table Tennis Club. Yozy YaListed among the plays that
veloped to meet your special needs.
with public address systems as a pU1' President, directed the tournaare to be presented are ones
sideline, is the future aim of Jack'mentH. Kobayashi, radio amateur!
T^e Niseiettes too are holding up with fanciful titles such as '‘A
Quality and Style in Apparel for Nisei
'their athletic laurels, with Fusako i Unicorn and a Fish/7 “The Mon
Children, Ladies and Gentlemen.
jWJWMX\VZW
anc] Marie Akiyama entered! key’s Paw” and “The Man Who
Wouldn’t Go to Heaven/’
f
YOSHINO
5 in the Girls' Badminton Tourney. I
Distant climes supply the setComplete lines in Dry Goods —
t
■■ Ayako Okura, too, is joining the ski tin?
of “The Chinese Water
club now being formed
| Sukiyaki |
Wheel,” “The Last Frontier” and
Japanese Provisions and Curios.
scenes
from
“
Ebb
Tide.
”
The
BRITANNIA
f
362 ALEXANDER ST.
$
The recent House programme in talented Belmont Y.P.S. will try
*
PHONE TRI. 0723
J
cluded among its participants three their hand at a Shakespearian
■/WWVWWVW^WWtW^W Niseiettes: Margaret Nishikawara, classic, “As You Like It.”
e
As previously announced the
Shinko Nagata and Sachiko Taki
moto, all of blouse 2. Margaret Powell Y. P. are producing “First
369 POWELL STREET
VANCOUVER. B. C.
sang in a trio, Shinko in the en Class Matter.”
POWELL LUMBER semble, while Sachiko, as well as While the pupils of Miss Beth
appearing in the ensemble, took > Lockhart are presenting a dance
revue at the conclusion of the
part
in a group Spanish dance.
& FUEL CO., LTD.
The cover design of the Decem plays Saturday evening, the ad
ber issue of the School paper was judicators will prepare their final
HIGH. 4567
the product of our Tatsuro Utsuno marks prior to the awarding of
1 355 POWELL ST
miya. Other Nisei lino-gouging i the trophies.
BY SO-NE HEN-NE
artists doing useful work around the j She finds Latin Odious, but dotes
Fire water isn’t exactly the best thing for a stunning figure,
school are Lucy Aikata and Susako on English literature. Her Social
so the jolly baritone ruefully discovered.. “I’ll be too ashamed to
FOR THAT
Nagata.
Studies class doesn't seem to get put in an apearance at the beach this summer. With a bay window
Roy Oshiro of Grade XI was along well without her—whether for
like this my manly physique won't stand half a chance with the
Sparkling Smile
elected "Primus" (Boy President)
her knowledge or for her noise, we
of his class.
don't know.
USE
ROLL ALONG
She is an intensive reader and an
Roller skatin proved to be more than its usual success last
KING GEORGE
excellent sketcher. If she is not Sunday. The tiny Hi-Y girl, however, was
overheard expressing
Matric Vignette . .
I taken up with either of these hob- her discontent: “heck, daytime’s no good, ’cause it isn't dark
Taka Nikaido . . . she of
the;bies or her piano and voice lessons,
We all noticed a winstudious countenance and yet so । she may be trying out her dance enough when we’re skating in couples.’’ .
some
pair
of
love-birds
arrayed
in
matching
sweaters of delicate
paradoxical. Her present ambi tion steps in preparation for the coming
had
is to get through high school with graduation banquet, or may ever powder-blue. I wonder what would have happened
insisted
on
baby
pink
.
.
.
That
southpaw
pitcher
has
an
original
out recourse to those hated "supps be watching a casaba-toss-fest.
method of getting ahead in this world. He was one of the first
io get bis skates: “1 just ])ut on my gaudiest tie and then every
body is hypnotized into making room for me.” . . . Then there’* the
Special—
sad case of the dreamer who, lost in fantastic reveries, forgot
to get on the car at Kelson Street and finally jolted out o: her
trance by the sight of the cool waters of English Bay.
.ffi
Fil
ill
1; A’
Department Store
i
1
J
sm
MAIKAWA
i
san'
pi2
civ
col
tht
edi
wr
tht
Kolynos
il
nf
*f
(Reg. 50c)
at
4
Sey. 7 502
4
I
<
<
£
221 Main St.
“The best loved piano duettists | There are many reasons foi
m the world, is the verdict, of j the success of Bartlett and
the boston Transcript on Ethel, Robertson, who after having had
Bartlett and Rae Robertson, the enviable individual careers.
now
3 99 Powell St. internationally famous piano duo win triumphs together in recitals
who play here on Jan. 31 at the of music for two pianos. Ethel
Another example of how vicious an aroused woman can be
Auditorium.
Bartlett, a native of London, has
is given by Eddie, who was seen recently nursing a black eye.
•been called “one of England’s
Of ccurse Eddie says that a car door hit him but other sources
most beautiful women.” Rae Ro
vow that his irate bundle of dynamite blew up and led with an
it bertson is a Scotsman and an
upper cut.
M.A. of Edinburgh University.
*
Iheie \\as quite a big pow-wow at the telephone exchange
As students under Tobias
® HOME PORTRAITS
when the operators tuned into some crooning over the wires. It
Matthay in London they fell in
• AMATEUR FINISHING
love and married: As rising
seems that, an enterprising miss had entered a bookstore sieging
• COMMERCIAL PICTURES
young pianists they found setne hit Mj Prayer. When she returned to her store she received
parate achievements incompat- an .U1Sent callover the phone: “Please sing that song for ne
(c/'o Maple Cafe)
SE ymour-4570 £
They
<U‘bn, came 7. 1. s pleading voice over the wire. “You thri cd
solved their problem
or ask for Joe Seko, TR-0794-Y
if
ible with mutual happiness, me so that I can't serve my customers until I hear vour ravisi
c brilliantly
voice again.”
and permanently,
Their first joint concert was a
sensation. Since then their
names have been interntaionally famous.
Bartlett and Robertson play
»
Rose Miyasak
►
over a hundred concerts every
►year. Recently South America
Permanent Waves & all Branches of
and South African triumphs were
Beauty Culture done in the most upto-date methods.
added to their laurels. In the
United States and Canada the
The Palomar Beauty Shop is Equipped
I Robertsons are particularly be
with the most Modern and the very
SE-ymour 1728
735 Granville St.
loved. playing sold-out tours every
Latest Machinery.
season.
Hl ghland 6205-R
776 E. Cordova
Phone SEy. 1936
Res. High. 2132
Tickets are now on sale at
293 r * Hastings St.
(I
Kelly's on Seymour St.
OS
Ns
New York Life Insurance Co
4
fl
Palomar Beauty Shop
<<
Roy Yamamura
w
WA
^S ^
ft
ev«
ro
of
t0S
CO'
vic
to
ma
firs
On
kni
JO SEKO
t
J
£
up
Otl
these two stories of the month came to my rather belated
attention, but they haven’t lost any of their spicy flavour.
FEMININE FURY
Did you notice the husky manager of the Asahi Giants with a
suspicious-looking cold-sore just a while back? He said that in
a clinch his girl got so passionate that she bit him.
Powell Drug Co.
; 4
£
Brilliant Bartlett - Robertson
Piano Duo In Recital At Auditorium
fas
Office
Home
'WW?
be
5
wit
gla
ser
St
wa
be
"ri'
ft
THE NEW CANADIAN
KITSILANO
!Ve5AFJ.
Frank Moritsugu of Grade XII j
He
chemistry, but not
was recently appointed to the posi-1 physics, because the latter course
tion ot Editor-in-Oicf of the school'does not treat radio quire enough i
i Thirteen plays, a dance revue,
paper, the K.H.S. Life. He is a: ("Paging the Hon. n w
u
I
orchestra selections and the ad-i
member of the journalism class.
7. o
”C"°nS 6 ° fen handl«! indicators’ remarks will mark the I
f
er bOmO3n‘
Sy
'
I eigHtn annual drama festival of ।
>ngly few Nise. athletes when last- On the personal side his favouritej the Greater Vancouver Youn-I
week
Kato of Grade X
Xi sports are skating and jiving; his | Peoples and the Provincial DraQ
ipike
Kato
trans ferred to Britannia High.
recreation: P.A. systems and jiving.! matic Festival of the United!
TO GIVE YOU PROMPT
Quite openly this jumping Japanese! Church of Canada, which are to!
Tonight's the Night! The out- jitterbug admits he is an addict of I be held concurrently at the Kitsi-J
AND PERSONAL SERVICE
standing social event of the Grade the "agony
ag°ny pipe" and "licorice lano High School on Tuesday and
IX'ers will be ushered in tonight, Sfl(-L
Wednesday, Jan. 30, 31 and Friday
when the Annual Mixer will be held,
and Saturday, Feb. 2, 3 commenc
FAIRVIEW
garnished this year with a promised
ing at 8.15 each evening. In all
larger Nisei attendance.
Charley Shimizu, Grade X, was eight different trophies will be
As modern and up-to-date as any store
* * *
;crowned champion table tennis ace, competed for.
Matric Vignette . . . To be a ^n ^e recent tournament held by
in the city, our facilities have been de
VARIETY IN PLAYS
technician in the field of electonics, |^e Table Tennis Club. Yozy YaListed among the plays that
veloped to meet your special needs.
with public address systems as a pU1' President, directed the tournaare to be presented are ones
sideline, is the future aim of Jack'mentH. Kobayashi, radio amateur!
T^e Niseiettes too are holding up with fanciful titles such as '‘A
Quality and Style in Apparel for Nisei
'their athletic laurels, with Fusako i Unicorn and a Fish/7 “The Mon
Children, Ladies and Gentlemen.
jWJWMX\VZW
anc] Marie Akiyama entered! key’s Paw” and “The Man Who
Wouldn’t Go to Heaven/’
f
YOSHINO
5 in the Girls' Badminton Tourney. I
Distant climes supply the setComplete lines in Dry Goods —
t
■■ Ayako Okura, too, is joining the ski tin?
of “The Chinese Water
club now being formed
| Sukiyaki |
Wheel,” “The Last Frontier” and
Japanese Provisions and Curios.
scenes
from
“
Ebb
Tide.
”
The
BRITANNIA
f
362 ALEXANDER ST.
$
The recent House programme in talented Belmont Y.P.S. will try
*
PHONE TRI. 0723
J
cluded among its participants three their hand at a Shakespearian
■/WWVWWVW^WWtW^W Niseiettes: Margaret Nishikawara, classic, “As You Like It.”
e
As previously announced the
Shinko Nagata and Sachiko Taki
moto, all of blouse 2. Margaret Powell Y. P. are producing “First
369 POWELL STREET
VANCOUVER. B. C.
sang in a trio, Shinko in the en Class Matter.”
POWELL LUMBER semble, while Sachiko, as well as While the pupils of Miss Beth
appearing in the ensemble, took > Lockhart are presenting a dance
revue at the conclusion of the
part
in a group Spanish dance.
& FUEL CO., LTD.
The cover design of the Decem plays Saturday evening, the ad
ber issue of the School paper was judicators will prepare their final
HIGH. 4567
the product of our Tatsuro Utsuno marks prior to the awarding of
1 355 POWELL ST
miya. Other Nisei lino-gouging i the trophies.
BY SO-NE HEN-NE
artists doing useful work around the j She finds Latin Odious, but dotes
Fire water isn’t exactly the best thing for a stunning figure,
school are Lucy Aikata and Susako on English literature. Her Social
so the jolly baritone ruefully discovered.. “I’ll be too ashamed to
FOR THAT
Nagata.
Studies class doesn't seem to get put in an apearance at the beach this summer. With a bay window
Roy Oshiro of Grade XI was along well without her—whether for
like this my manly physique won't stand half a chance with the
Sparkling Smile
elected "Primus" (Boy President)
her knowledge or for her noise, we
of his class.
don't know.
USE
ROLL ALONG
She is an intensive reader and an
Roller skatin proved to be more than its usual success last
KING GEORGE
excellent sketcher. If she is not Sunday. The tiny Hi-Y girl, however, was
overheard expressing
Matric Vignette . .
I taken up with either of these hob- her discontent: “heck, daytime’s no good, ’cause it isn't dark
Taka Nikaido . . . she of
the;bies or her piano and voice lessons,
We all noticed a winstudious countenance and yet so । she may be trying out her dance enough when we’re skating in couples.’’ .
some
pair
of
love-birds
arrayed
in
matching
sweaters of delicate
paradoxical. Her present ambi tion steps in preparation for the coming
had
is to get through high school with graduation banquet, or may ever powder-blue. I wonder what would have happened
insisted
on
baby
pink
.
.
.
That
southpaw
pitcher
has
an
original
out recourse to those hated "supps be watching a casaba-toss-fest.
method of getting ahead in this world. He was one of the first
io get bis skates: “1 just ])ut on my gaudiest tie and then every
body is hypnotized into making room for me.” . . . Then there’* the
Special—
sad case of the dreamer who, lost in fantastic reveries, forgot
to get on the car at Kelson Street and finally jolted out o: her
trance by the sight of the cool waters of English Bay.
.ffi
Fil
ill
1; A’
Department Store
i
1
J
sm
MAIKAWA
i
san'
pi2
civ
col
tht
edi
wr
tht
Kolynos
il
nf
*f
(Reg. 50c)
at
4
Sey. 7 502
4
I
<
<
£
221 Main St.
“The best loved piano duettists | There are many reasons foi
m the world, is the verdict, of j the success of Bartlett and
the boston Transcript on Ethel, Robertson, who after having had
Bartlett and Rae Robertson, the enviable individual careers.
now
3 99 Powell St. internationally famous piano duo win triumphs together in recitals
who play here on Jan. 31 at the of music for two pianos. Ethel
Another example of how vicious an aroused woman can be
Auditorium.
Bartlett, a native of London, has
is given by Eddie, who was seen recently nursing a black eye.
•been called “one of England’s
Of ccurse Eddie says that a car door hit him but other sources
most beautiful women.” Rae Ro
vow that his irate bundle of dynamite blew up and led with an
it bertson is a Scotsman and an
upper cut.
M.A. of Edinburgh University.
*
Iheie \\as quite a big pow-wow at the telephone exchange
As students under Tobias
® HOME PORTRAITS
when the operators tuned into some crooning over the wires. It
Matthay in London they fell in
• AMATEUR FINISHING
love and married: As rising
seems that, an enterprising miss had entered a bookstore sieging
• COMMERCIAL PICTURES
young pianists they found setne hit Mj Prayer. When she returned to her store she received
parate achievements incompat- an .U1Sent callover the phone: “Please sing that song for ne
(c/'o Maple Cafe)
SE ymour-4570 £
They
<U‘bn, came 7. 1. s pleading voice over the wire. “You thri cd
solved their problem
or ask for Joe Seko, TR-0794-Y
if
ible with mutual happiness, me so that I can't serve my customers until I hear vour ravisi
c brilliantly
voice again.”
and permanently,
Their first joint concert was a
sensation. Since then their
names have been interntaionally famous.
Bartlett and Robertson play
»
Rose Miyasak
►
over a hundred concerts every
►year. Recently South America
Permanent Waves & all Branches of
and South African triumphs were
Beauty Culture done in the most upto-date methods.
added to their laurels. In the
United States and Canada the
The Palomar Beauty Shop is Equipped
I Robertsons are particularly be
with the most Modern and the very
SE-ymour 1728
735 Granville St.
loved. playing sold-out tours every
Latest Machinery.
season.
Hl ghland 6205-R
776 E. Cordova
Phone SEy. 1936
Res. High. 2132
Tickets are now on sale at
293 r * Hastings St.
(I
Kelly's on Seymour St.
OS
Ns
New York Life Insurance Co
4
fl
Palomar Beauty Shop
<<
Roy Yamamura
w
WA
^S ^
ft
ev«
ro
of
t0S
CO'
vic
to
ma
firs
On
kni
JO SEKO
t
J
£
up
Otl
these two stories of the month came to my rather belated
attention, but they haven’t lost any of their spicy flavour.
FEMININE FURY
Did you notice the husky manager of the Asahi Giants with a
suspicious-looking cold-sore just a while back? He said that in
a clinch his girl got so passionate that she bit him.
Powell Drug Co.
; 4
£
Brilliant Bartlett - Robertson
Piano Duo In Recital At Auditorium
fas
Office
Home
'WW?
be
5
wit
gla
ser
St
wa
be
Page 5
JANUARY 26
O
.1940
THE NEW CANADIAN
I CanMelijht
Wine
I
I
BEAUTY AND BRAINS
evening saw many Ki tailaw YM8A
tons swing into
labs and organi
s with their an- Tifsilano YMBA took place at the
Titsilano, Buddhist Temple with
its at various city cent tvs.
jShotaro Fukuhara presiding.
At the Fuji three
|Ot the many topics under discussion
; clubs gathered to carry out their
eas placed upon tentative
I business and elections.
plans for a grand concert, Proceeds
*
*
of which will go to the Sunday
School treasury in commemoration
At the Shiscikai's 7 th annual of the 15th anniversary of the
meeting Shigc Okumura was re YMBA.
t§y Biana
What though on namely fare we dine,
Wear hodden grey an' a' that;
I
Gio fools their silks, and knaves their wine,
A Man's a Man for a' that!
J
Wil! he heard all over the Empire as proud Scotsmen gather in
J . -’’^s to do homage to their peasant poet. For this is January and
I ' AU in ail rights a Scottish month with the birthday of Bobbie
IWWo on the 25th.
I
I
5
’
"HAMELY SCOTCH FARE"
I
To get fully into the spirit of the celebration in honour of this
I humble song writer, let's try some "hamely Scotch fare" in our
I baking this week.
I
<;r?nes. pronounced with a
I . Wand as hot biscuits are
,
„
,
Clubs and Societies
*
elected to guide the activities ot the
The rest of the executive
of: Vice-president,
S. dent. Kanichi Mori: recording sec
consists
Okuno: secretaries, L. Sato, F. De- rotary. Y. Nishimura: corresponding
SHIZUKO NARAHARA
aagtzawa; treasurer, secretaries. 11. toshid
shima, k.
Shizuko Narahara, lovely Nisei
Fukumura: and a board of ex Y. Terada (English) : treasurers
miss, who was crowned Queen in ecu live members.
Tanabe, J. Kojima: 8
the Les Angeles Nisei Festival
+
i
*
Nishizaki: auditors. T. Yoshida.
Week last summer, discredits the Kokikai
Shimizu; convenors, S. Fuku
short o please, are just as popular
over here. They can be served with
LjFon tea or, when served with jam or marmalade, take the place
jU'essert at luncheon or supper.
I
y^^-o are many kinds of scones—oven scones, tatie (potato)
I ,nAS r-tmeal scones, gridle scones, and many others. The favourite
I ^id is the bran scone.
old adage “beautiful but dumb.’'
With 46 members present the 5th
I U Cream 1 cup of shortening and V? cup of brown sugar together. This year her many friends and
H. Yamada: and four councillors.
Lj 4 CUps of bread flour, 5 tsps, of baking powder, and 2 tsps, of salt supporters entrusted her with the annual meeting of the Kokikai en
The success ot (he New Year so
Fifed together, and 2 cups of bran flour. Add enough milk to give position of corresponding secre joyed a bang-up success.
cial which followed with Tokuzo
, rather soft dough. Divide into 4 or 5 equal portions, roll each into tary in the big Angel City JACL.
Hajime Horiuchi was re-elected to
Wakabayashi as MC was attributed
. round E an inch thick and cut across so as to form 4 triangularthe position of presidency for 1940.
to the hard working membets of
ishaoed cakes. Bake for 15-20 minutes on a slightly oiled hot griddle
Other officers include: Vice-president,
the YWBA.
■-r in a moderate oven. Split, butter and serve while still hot.
Haruko Maruno; secretary, G, To-
Still on the topic of the thrifty clans—I row the niftiest little
Maid outfit worn by the "personality girl" at the roller skating party.
The skirt was fashioned of gay plaid in a huge flare, perfect for skating,
and topped with a bright crimson jacket trimmed with gold buttons.
Buttoned on the back of the costume was a red hood lined with matching
plaid.
1
All she should do to complete the outfit, suggested an awed in
dividual, is to knit a pair of those new knee-high socks in harmonizing
colours. And we suggest for an extra gay novelty tiny bells tied to
the garter cords. And won't the boys be in a dither!
WOOLIES WANTED
Woolen knee-length stockings are the big news these days.
Fur trimming makes them especially warm and cozy on those
extra cold days. And woolen mitts to match are right smart.
Talking of warmth, those old-fashioned red flannels are making
their debut. You'll soon be wearing red flannel panties and petticoats
edged with ruffles and lace, and you won't be called a sissy because
everybody else will be wearing them too. Fashion, 'tis said, is a despot
whom the wise ridicule and obgy mostly at great inconvenience to
themselves, but in cases like these woolies we feel grateful to the
fashion gods.
"DINNER IS SERVED"
"And covers were laid for six."
Dinner parties are always interesting affairs. They are looked
upon by some as something mentioned only on the society page, and by
others with fear and dread. But dinners can be easy pleasant affairs for
everyone because the keynote of the successful dinner of today depends
not upon pomp and ostentation but upon simplicity, upon the charm
of the hostess, her skill in selecting guests who can mingle freely
together and her knowledge of the why's and wherefore's of laying the
cover.
First and foremost, be sure that the silver is well polished, the
linen white and smooth, and all glasses sparkling. In planning the
centre piece remember that the beauty of the central ornament
should dominate the entire table, but it should not be so tall as to
obstruct the view of the guests.
Each cover, allowed about 16-20 inches, is marked with a ser
vice plate. The napkin folded either in a square or an ablong goes
to the left of the cover or on the service plate. Place cards, if used,
may go on the service plate or just beyond its rim.
The simple rule for placing the silver is in order of use with the
lirst piece placed farthest from the plate, knives and spoons always
on the right and forks on the left. No more than three forks and two
knives should be placed at each cover. If more silver is needed, it should
be brought in at the appointed time.
Bread and butter plates, if used, are placed just above the forks
with the butter knife laid horizontally across the lower edge. The water
glass goes at the tip of the dinner knife, and if other beverages are
served the glasses for these are placed to the right, slightly below the
water goblet. Water glasses, never more than three-quarters full, should
e filled just before dinner is announced.
MODISTE FASHION SHOP
Chic and Charm
IN LADIES WEAR
DESIGNED FOR NISEIS
Exclusive Styles and Fabrics
at Prices that cannot be duplicated
Prop. T. Shimotakahara
431 Granville St.
cniEnoRR
Forty members attended the Zbth
annual meeting of the Mikado Club
held at the Fairview Japanese School,
JANUARY
Election results
folio
2 6—Lily
Wash knot o
P resident. Hid co Ta k a ha s h i: sec i v •
ever CBR, 9.30 p.m
27—Nippons vs. Hornet;
tary, Y. Kato: treasurer, S. Nishi
Gym, 7.30 p.m., 15c
kawa: convenors, G. Noshinaka. K.
*
*
Ya ma mo io, Y. Arai. Y. Yasui,
S—.1CCL Concert, Empress Theatee, 6.00 p.m.
* * $
Chichibukai
FEBRUARY
Heading the Chichibukai lor this Poivell Junior Church
1—Seikokai AYPA Anniv
Church of Ascension. S.00 p.m. year will be Rinzo A memori.
He
J 'he J a pa nese U nitcc Church JuFukuoka Seinenkai, I'u^
p’m‘lwill be supported by S. Kawasaki. nior Church held its 4 th annual
Hall. 4.00 p.m.
ii. Nishimura, vice-presidents;
1. meeting with various reports show
3—Maple Ridge JCCL Concert, I Morito. M. Hirota, treasurers:
ing notable progress in all depart
Haney Agricultural Hall. r 'n Okukawa, secretary: K. Suga, soments
of the Church.
p.m.
Ikeda.
11—Fuyokai Roller Party. Happy- cial convenor; K. Saito, M.
The members for the Board for
land. 2-5 p.m.
sports convenors.
the year were elected as follows, the
IS—Young Buddhists’ Associatior
The general meetings closed with various officers to be chosen among
Oratorical Contest, Hompa Hall
i the three clubs joining for their New them at the first meeting of the
I Year social.
Board:
CLASSIFIED ADS
TRANSPORTATION
mita: treasurer, Mi Taguchi; and
board of twelve councillors.
The meeting was closed with
stirring comments given by (he honoured guest, Mr. Akiyama, upon
the second issue of the Kokikai
^
^
if
5
'«■ Ai
^
The session:
fl. Kyodo, H.
Hidaka, A. Yoshida, A. Hyodo, K.
was the Fujiwara, T Komiyama
The New Pier
Maeda,
pEPENDABLE SERVICE. ANY- scene chosen by the Sanichikai for E. Yatabe, T. Kondo, Y. Korenaga
time, anywhere, Takata Taxi, their general meeting and Nhv Year
Committee of Stewards: T. Ide,
party. Elected into the executive of- C. Hyodo, K. Takimoto. Y, Suzuki,
325 Powell. TR inity-0836.
ifices were president, Masako Iguchi;
Sasaki,
Shi motaka hara.
PAST COURTEOUS SERVICE, !vice-president. K. Oyama; secretary, Saito, M. Fujita, Y. Matsui and 8Nabata. Taxi, Highland-0765. iM. Tsukamoto; treasurer, N. Ikeda. Tomita.
Sanichikai
*
*
+
Japanese Alumni Association
The Japanese Alumni Association
held its postponed annual mectng at
the home of Dr. M. Miyazaki last
Saturday.
Copies of the recently
tie Cagettes, The Girls’ Auxiliary issued were graduates' directory
Thank You
Club will hold an informal din passed around the members.
The members of the Strathcona
ner.
Badminton League wish to ex
This year’s executive is composed
Later in the evening a private
tend their heartfelt appreciation
of: Dr. M. Miyazaki, president;
for the enthusiastic support given party with all the visitors as Rev. K. Shimizu, Miss Chitose
to the roller skating party held guests of the GAC and the Bask Uchida, honorary vice-presidents;
last Sunday. The frolic was one etball League will be held at the corresponding secretary, Dr. E. C.
of the most successful to date. FIastings Anditorium immediately Banno; recording secretary, Y. Hi
following the games. Invitation
Cagette Dinner
'cards must be shown at the door. gashi; treasurer. E. Yatabe.
In honour of the visiting Seat- !
*
$
*
(AYPA Fellowship
I The regular Anglican English
i Service will be held this Sunday.
IJ an nary 28, from 4 p.m. at the
SEymour 4230
Holy Cross Mission, The meeting will be followed by the Fel347 Powell St. Vancouver, B. C
5
p.m.
All
lowship
and
Tea
at
Members of the Steveston Japanese United Church and the AYPA members and young people
I Steveston United Church ga.th- are invited to attend.
* * *
lered at the church of the latter
last Sunday, January 21, for a Engagement
joint communion service. Dr. Os- Mr. and Mrs. A. Abe announce
RADIOS
iterhout. retired Superintendent of the engagement of their eldest
REFRIGERATORS
Oriental Missions, was the spe daughter, Kinuko, to Mr. Ken
cial speaker.
taro Ebisuzaki, eldest son. of Mr.
323 Powell Street
and
Mrs. M. Ebisuzaki. The wed
The Steveston Japanese United
SE ymour 4121
' Church will form the setting for ding date has not been set.
la wedding of note when Miss
Fumi Nishimura becomes the
i bride of Mr. Kiyoshi Murakami.
Fountain
service
: son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Murakami,
ion Thursday. February 1, at 3
SEY. 01 24
220 MAIN STREET
|p.m. A reception will be held at
I the Fuji after the ceremony.
whs
?w
isi
I#
I ST
1
1
5. Uchida
Steveston United
Church Service
5. Hayami^ssA
TAS
I
i
«s
to
New Pier Cafe
wawtesRWsw
:jA®5
*®W*Oi®l
O
.1940
THE NEW CANADIAN
I CanMelijht
Wine
I
I
BEAUTY AND BRAINS
evening saw many Ki tailaw YM8A
tons swing into
labs and organi
s with their an- Tifsilano YMBA took place at the
Titsilano, Buddhist Temple with
its at various city cent tvs.
jShotaro Fukuhara presiding.
At the Fuji three
|Ot the many topics under discussion
; clubs gathered to carry out their
eas placed upon tentative
I business and elections.
plans for a grand concert, Proceeds
*
*
of which will go to the Sunday
School treasury in commemoration
At the Shiscikai's 7 th annual of the 15th anniversary of the
meeting Shigc Okumura was re YMBA.
t§y Biana
What though on namely fare we dine,
Wear hodden grey an' a' that;
I
Gio fools their silks, and knaves their wine,
A Man's a Man for a' that!
J
Wil! he heard all over the Empire as proud Scotsmen gather in
J . -’’^s to do homage to their peasant poet. For this is January and
I ' AU in ail rights a Scottish month with the birthday of Bobbie
IWWo on the 25th.
I
I
5
’
"HAMELY SCOTCH FARE"
I
To get fully into the spirit of the celebration in honour of this
I humble song writer, let's try some "hamely Scotch fare" in our
I baking this week.
I
<;r?nes. pronounced with a
I . Wand as hot biscuits are
,
„
,
Clubs and Societies
*
elected to guide the activities ot the
The rest of the executive
of: Vice-president,
S. dent. Kanichi Mori: recording sec
consists
Okuno: secretaries, L. Sato, F. De- rotary. Y. Nishimura: corresponding
SHIZUKO NARAHARA
aagtzawa; treasurer, secretaries. 11. toshid
shima, k.
Shizuko Narahara, lovely Nisei
Fukumura: and a board of ex Y. Terada (English) : treasurers
miss, who was crowned Queen in ecu live members.
Tanabe, J. Kojima: 8
the Les Angeles Nisei Festival
+
i
*
Nishizaki: auditors. T. Yoshida.
Week last summer, discredits the Kokikai
Shimizu; convenors, S. Fuku
short o please, are just as popular
over here. They can be served with
LjFon tea or, when served with jam or marmalade, take the place
jU'essert at luncheon or supper.
I
y^^-o are many kinds of scones—oven scones, tatie (potato)
I ,nAS r-tmeal scones, gridle scones, and many others. The favourite
I ^id is the bran scone.
old adage “beautiful but dumb.’'
With 46 members present the 5th
I U Cream 1 cup of shortening and V? cup of brown sugar together. This year her many friends and
H. Yamada: and four councillors.
Lj 4 CUps of bread flour, 5 tsps, of baking powder, and 2 tsps, of salt supporters entrusted her with the annual meeting of the Kokikai en
The success ot (he New Year so
Fifed together, and 2 cups of bran flour. Add enough milk to give position of corresponding secre joyed a bang-up success.
cial which followed with Tokuzo
, rather soft dough. Divide into 4 or 5 equal portions, roll each into tary in the big Angel City JACL.
Hajime Horiuchi was re-elected to
Wakabayashi as MC was attributed
. round E an inch thick and cut across so as to form 4 triangularthe position of presidency for 1940.
to the hard working membets of
ishaoed cakes. Bake for 15-20 minutes on a slightly oiled hot griddle
Other officers include: Vice-president,
the YWBA.
■-r in a moderate oven. Split, butter and serve while still hot.
Haruko Maruno; secretary, G, To-
Still on the topic of the thrifty clans—I row the niftiest little
Maid outfit worn by the "personality girl" at the roller skating party.
The skirt was fashioned of gay plaid in a huge flare, perfect for skating,
and topped with a bright crimson jacket trimmed with gold buttons.
Buttoned on the back of the costume was a red hood lined with matching
plaid.
1
All she should do to complete the outfit, suggested an awed in
dividual, is to knit a pair of those new knee-high socks in harmonizing
colours. And we suggest for an extra gay novelty tiny bells tied to
the garter cords. And won't the boys be in a dither!
WOOLIES WANTED
Woolen knee-length stockings are the big news these days.
Fur trimming makes them especially warm and cozy on those
extra cold days. And woolen mitts to match are right smart.
Talking of warmth, those old-fashioned red flannels are making
their debut. You'll soon be wearing red flannel panties and petticoats
edged with ruffles and lace, and you won't be called a sissy because
everybody else will be wearing them too. Fashion, 'tis said, is a despot
whom the wise ridicule and obgy mostly at great inconvenience to
themselves, but in cases like these woolies we feel grateful to the
fashion gods.
"DINNER IS SERVED"
"And covers were laid for six."
Dinner parties are always interesting affairs. They are looked
upon by some as something mentioned only on the society page, and by
others with fear and dread. But dinners can be easy pleasant affairs for
everyone because the keynote of the successful dinner of today depends
not upon pomp and ostentation but upon simplicity, upon the charm
of the hostess, her skill in selecting guests who can mingle freely
together and her knowledge of the why's and wherefore's of laying the
cover.
First and foremost, be sure that the silver is well polished, the
linen white and smooth, and all glasses sparkling. In planning the
centre piece remember that the beauty of the central ornament
should dominate the entire table, but it should not be so tall as to
obstruct the view of the guests.
Each cover, allowed about 16-20 inches, is marked with a ser
vice plate. The napkin folded either in a square or an ablong goes
to the left of the cover or on the service plate. Place cards, if used,
may go on the service plate or just beyond its rim.
The simple rule for placing the silver is in order of use with the
lirst piece placed farthest from the plate, knives and spoons always
on the right and forks on the left. No more than three forks and two
knives should be placed at each cover. If more silver is needed, it should
be brought in at the appointed time.
Bread and butter plates, if used, are placed just above the forks
with the butter knife laid horizontally across the lower edge. The water
glass goes at the tip of the dinner knife, and if other beverages are
served the glasses for these are placed to the right, slightly below the
water goblet. Water glasses, never more than three-quarters full, should
e filled just before dinner is announced.
MODISTE FASHION SHOP
Chic and Charm
IN LADIES WEAR
DESIGNED FOR NISEIS
Exclusive Styles and Fabrics
at Prices that cannot be duplicated
Prop. T. Shimotakahara
431 Granville St.
cniEnoRR
Forty members attended the Zbth
annual meeting of the Mikado Club
held at the Fairview Japanese School,
JANUARY
Election results
folio
2 6—Lily
Wash knot o
P resident. Hid co Ta k a ha s h i: sec i v •
ever CBR, 9.30 p.m
27—Nippons vs. Hornet;
tary, Y. Kato: treasurer, S. Nishi
Gym, 7.30 p.m., 15c
kawa: convenors, G. Noshinaka. K.
*
*
Ya ma mo io, Y. Arai. Y. Yasui,
S—.1CCL Concert, Empress Theatee, 6.00 p.m.
* * $
Chichibukai
FEBRUARY
Heading the Chichibukai lor this Poivell Junior Church
1—Seikokai AYPA Anniv
Church of Ascension. S.00 p.m. year will be Rinzo A memori.
He
J 'he J a pa nese U nitcc Church JuFukuoka Seinenkai, I'u^
p’m‘lwill be supported by S. Kawasaki. nior Church held its 4 th annual
Hall. 4.00 p.m.
ii. Nishimura, vice-presidents;
1. meeting with various reports show
3—Maple Ridge JCCL Concert, I Morito. M. Hirota, treasurers:
ing notable progress in all depart
Haney Agricultural Hall. r 'n Okukawa, secretary: K. Suga, soments
of the Church.
p.m.
Ikeda.
11—Fuyokai Roller Party. Happy- cial convenor; K. Saito, M.
The members for the Board for
land. 2-5 p.m.
sports convenors.
the year were elected as follows, the
IS—Young Buddhists’ Associatior
The general meetings closed with various officers to be chosen among
Oratorical Contest, Hompa Hall
i the three clubs joining for their New them at the first meeting of the
I Year social.
Board:
CLASSIFIED ADS
TRANSPORTATION
mita: treasurer, Mi Taguchi; and
board of twelve councillors.
The meeting was closed with
stirring comments given by (he honoured guest, Mr. Akiyama, upon
the second issue of the Kokikai
^
^
if
5
'«■ Ai
^
The session:
fl. Kyodo, H.
Hidaka, A. Yoshida, A. Hyodo, K.
was the Fujiwara, T Komiyama
The New Pier
Maeda,
pEPENDABLE SERVICE. ANY- scene chosen by the Sanichikai for E. Yatabe, T. Kondo, Y. Korenaga
time, anywhere, Takata Taxi, their general meeting and Nhv Year
Committee of Stewards: T. Ide,
party. Elected into the executive of- C. Hyodo, K. Takimoto. Y, Suzuki,
325 Powell. TR inity-0836.
ifices were president, Masako Iguchi;
Sasaki,
Shi motaka hara.
PAST COURTEOUS SERVICE, !vice-president. K. Oyama; secretary, Saito, M. Fujita, Y. Matsui and 8Nabata. Taxi, Highland-0765. iM. Tsukamoto; treasurer, N. Ikeda. Tomita.
Sanichikai
*
*
+
Japanese Alumni Association
The Japanese Alumni Association
held its postponed annual mectng at
the home of Dr. M. Miyazaki last
Saturday.
Copies of the recently
tie Cagettes, The Girls’ Auxiliary issued were graduates' directory
Thank You
Club will hold an informal din passed around the members.
The members of the Strathcona
ner.
Badminton League wish to ex
This year’s executive is composed
Later in the evening a private
tend their heartfelt appreciation
of: Dr. M. Miyazaki, president;
for the enthusiastic support given party with all the visitors as Rev. K. Shimizu, Miss Chitose
to the roller skating party held guests of the GAC and the Bask Uchida, honorary vice-presidents;
last Sunday. The frolic was one etball League will be held at the corresponding secretary, Dr. E. C.
of the most successful to date. FIastings Anditorium immediately Banno; recording secretary, Y. Hi
following the games. Invitation
Cagette Dinner
'cards must be shown at the door. gashi; treasurer. E. Yatabe.
In honour of the visiting Seat- !
*
$
*
(AYPA Fellowship
I The regular Anglican English
i Service will be held this Sunday.
IJ an nary 28, from 4 p.m. at the
SEymour 4230
Holy Cross Mission, The meeting will be followed by the Fel347 Powell St. Vancouver, B. C
5
p.m.
All
lowship
and
Tea
at
Members of the Steveston Japanese United Church and the AYPA members and young people
I Steveston United Church ga.th- are invited to attend.
* * *
lered at the church of the latter
last Sunday, January 21, for a Engagement
joint communion service. Dr. Os- Mr. and Mrs. A. Abe announce
RADIOS
iterhout. retired Superintendent of the engagement of their eldest
REFRIGERATORS
Oriental Missions, was the spe daughter, Kinuko, to Mr. Ken
cial speaker.
taro Ebisuzaki, eldest son. of Mr.
323 Powell Street
and
Mrs. M. Ebisuzaki. The wed
The Steveston Japanese United
SE ymour 4121
' Church will form the setting for ding date has not been set.
la wedding of note when Miss
Fumi Nishimura becomes the
i bride of Mr. Kiyoshi Murakami.
Fountain
service
: son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Murakami,
ion Thursday. February 1, at 3
SEY. 01 24
220 MAIN STREET
|p.m. A reception will be held at
I the Fuji after the ceremony.
whs
?w
isi
I#
I ST
1
1
5. Uchida
Steveston United
Church Service
5. Hayami^ssA
TAS
I
i
«s
to
New Pier Cafe
wawtesRWsw
:jA®5
*®W*Oi®l
Page 6
THE NEW CANADIAN
JANUARY 26
i940
NISEI NEWS FROM FAR FLUNG CORNERS IN B. C
Summerland Sallies
“Somewhere in The United Kingd
By Amari J h a be ru
here. Many of the local citizens J
Old Man Ogo- are trying to do their bit in the!
cor
out. ot hibernation. war by knitting or contributing!
it seems fhai it’s high time for money io the local Red Cross!
this correspondent to cover the
Pasi lew weeks in Summerland.
Summerland Farmer Injured
East Richochats i
Rinuary 13 Mr. Kuroda, wellBy “Chatter”
{
known locnl pioneer met with al
tainment for the evening con Passed Away
{
painiul accident while working in!
S. Chiba of East Richmond!
bus orchard, lie slipped from his {Passed away on January 13. Ai
ladder, and as a result of the fall J veferan of the last world war he!
sustained two fractured wrists, pvas a resident of East Richmond {
He is now recuperating in thejr°r many years and liked very!
Vancouver General Hospital. andDUimh by many friends. He is!
his many triends wish him a | survived by his wife and three!
speedy recovery.
| children. The funeral was held
nit
the Buddhist Temple in New
Nisei Club Holds Dance
I Westminster, January 16.
'Hm holiday spirit still
vniirn
m
■ Concert
1 1 a at the Nisei Club dance,
L<n. 12. After games and re‘Bayview Hall. January 13, was;
freshments. dancing was enjoyed Phe SCene of the Finnish Red i
Symbolic of the unity of purpose of the three nations.
until a late hour.
{Cross concert.
Canada, Great Britain and France, this flag flies over head
On the seventh, former presi-j
*n resP°nse to a request that
quarters of Canadas first division, somewhere in the United
dent Nobukatsu Aoki was elected ! bie JaPanese do something to
Kingdom. It was designed by Col. A. Fortesaue Duouid. director
to the position of secretary, left; hefp out’ five Nisei girls staged
a wonderful “odori” a'nd a few
of this historical section of the department of national defence.
vacant by the resignation of Mis
Shima Kuroda.
boys showed the audience the
art of fencing or “kendo.” The
A
uric cuppings
success to Miss IL Inaba , audience enthusiastically show
in mr studies al art school is the: ed their approval by their hand
By M. N. C. Pator
visa from all of us.
i clapping.
v.
Ganges Granary I
At the annual meeting „•' r>Canges C.J.Y.p.a. ffhifh ' jj
p!ace at the club house on J!1
'day. January 13. VictA oC I
was elected to the helm of ai.T
He is supported by an re±'
consisting of Gordon XltT;
Xice-president; Edward
Hnnao, Refreshment Convenor'"!
A service to mark the 49th
I
since the passing of Miss SavoA I
Okano was held at the home 'll I
ei patents, Mr. and Mr, K I
Ouano, on Monday evening j,„, I
ary 15, Rev. Nakayama oi^
Wedding Bells Peal
I
January 20 was a happy Har|
for at Rast one of our young men I
WilliamtNakamura- wbo bag serv-1
e^^1? Q PA- very faithfully
united in marriage to Miss YaeCj
|l Goto of Kennedy. Although
veren t all able to be out in
couver to bid you good sailing on I
the high seas of matrimony psr I
( Saturday, we now take the o^ I
! J^1 Hmity of wishing you the bev I
। of luck, William
11
Woodfibre Japanese Buy War Bonds
. Honour and Obey
{Bird’s-Eye View
!
n a s an cl New Year
On Saturday. Jan. 20. MissjWar SuPP°rt
| three or lour local boys were!
I
Christinas was cc
in '■luglu in the act of nodding! wamiye Miki of Celtic Cannery! Woodfibre Japanese Canadians War Bonds.
tine style at the .Japanese Hall.
At a gathering at the Mess Hall I
mMeep and snoring in the Colum-! and Mr. Bunji Ogata were united poined in en masse to support
Tinka officiating at
January 16. Ralph Killam, son of I
ihe opening ceremonies. Enier- ; bia theatre during the showing I in marriage by Rev. Tachibana | Cap-a^a’s War Effort by buying the president of the B. C. Pulp I
aisled of i) a y s a n d s o n g s oi [he motion picture. “The Cat! at the Hompa Buddhist Temple. ic!ose H $10,000 worth of Canada’s and Paper Company, and Epi
pre ''nhil by the local Japanesi and i he t anray. Were we sur-1
This column joins with the;
mised to hear that! Remember to! whole village in bidding the new-! reporter mustn't forget to con Brennan, manager of the plant' I
keep your mouth closed the next; ly-weds many, many years of hap- gratulate the members of the gave a talk on the war bonds I
A cw Year brought new
tail asleep "Mustache” I piness together. The pair will I 1940 executive upon their elec woy Sora interpreted for the I
to many Nisei, and new or it ‘-’on
I
good for your health. And ! shortly take up residence in the! tion to their respective offices. benefit ol the Isseis present.
s- But this correspond,
K
?Iu'?. treasure was expressed |
B’u had better hold on city.
I They are Miyoko Masuda, presi
ent
ed some of the gam:
Gill
by officials at the unexpected re- I
tor some people
igain.
All Celtic will miss the petite: dent: Sumiko Kadonaga,
spouse
of the Japanese in rallyin? '
the- idea of and smiling Mrs. Ogata but no! treasurer and Chiyeko Yoshi
“iI celebration was held elding it tot wish
you.
to the cause of their adopted
one more than the local Young' hara, secretary.
country.
Societv which seems tO;We Wish Quick Recovery
have ths misiortune of Iosin I We . all hope that Yoshiko Wedding March
members through marriage.
Adachi who is recovering from a
A wedding of unusual interest
very
unfortunate
accident
will
be
for Woodfibre Japanese took
1940 Officers
The following
able
to
leave
the
General
Hospital
tor
place
in Vancouver when Fuwhich was coni riIncidentally, while on the shortly and once more take her
let tor was received by y
by rhe Members of the
deko Sato, daughter of Mr. and
subject of the Girls’ Club this place in the society.
ol the Surrey Barniers
Mrs. T. Sato, was married to
Hon from the Nmiomv .woiid-^sunvy Nokai. to be used in coni e.ence mewieii with the National Defence
^(‘ '■ Uchida, well-known J
arrived of Cauadn
Ocean Fails citizen.
?
kite for publication in la s t
k's issue
the
Another Woodfibre Nisei, Wil
j May J assure you that I deeply
liam
Nakamura, who has been
I
appreciate
the
spirit
of
loyalty
Hear Mr. ■Sato:
employed in Woodfibre since last
l his will acknowledge receipt ;land co-operation which the Mcmy on r As soc iat ion have
- an executive meeting of the local JCCL chapter Jgnuarr ST^’™’ i’iIle(, “ wedlock *i
of your letter
d
?° tbe An pressed in such a tangible manouLYrr"e,‘‘ S"’01'n
dUty” and a IWwim for the rear wiC- I- ’ Goto of •Strawberr
Honourable I
^■^ ■™,,’eils“l:y tvith the 1939 agenda, educational guid- H “ ^““^
i
fi
will be mrYuod m
objectives. Japanese language study Tough Luck
"ill ne pu,sued to encourage appreciation of as well as the
. with the request that it
of Surrey together with a money
si
used
^fiusmon
t,: an understanding of Japanese culture A Xttn Li
sympathiess to Jimmy Nt
tor some purpose in conwas atso instituted to sponsor a “Hanashi Kai- in the’new tutm-J?’”’ "h° *»“«»»« a. broken
, meet ion with Canada’s war effort,
but was laid aside for further discussion.
‘
UlU,e bnger in an accident while load1
letter has also b e e n
Since its inception as a JCCL Chapter thp
mg pulp. He went home out
brought
has been duly augmented in membership Xilh
3
™
*
„
to the attention of my
Ladner way last Thursday’ to re
an
initiation
of
% { Colleagues
cuperate.
twelve new members.
the Government,
^ laud on their behalf, as well as
We Gratefully Acknowledge
• m\ own. 1 am anxious that you
A donation by Mr. Kamitakahara to defer the costs of a
SUBSCRIBE TO
S;convey to each of your members
‘
‘
a
donation
by
Mrs
Yoneda,
nee Tomiko Koyanagi,
.iwho have, contributed my sincerTHE NEW CANADIAN
^tev'Vt^
’ ' ’ a C°Py of the “Citizen
Undertakers
: m-d thanks tor this generous gift.
from the
ueu.bton JCL^. Our congratulations, Steveston, for,, your
i
jourYours sincerely,
nalistic success!
?
5
^gnea) Norman M. L. Rogers
On January 13. members of the lacrosse team
x
For Real Japanese Dishes J
with
(.Minister of National Defence’)
to’ X
To
L
Gov't Acknowledges Surrey Donation
Acme Cannery JCCL Faces Busy Year
(Armstrong and Co
5
moa
QUALITY,
ECONOMY AND SERVICE
Union Fish Company
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS
w
at a party held at the M
8
616 »u&sts of th® »««r
This is The House That Jack Built
Appears to me that we have a 'large aggregate of amat
eur
TSUBAME
258 POWELL ST.
TRINITY 0561
s
tore of buHding aJYZ h^y p^LizeYhalfs
IF
What s your opinion, dear readers?
a"d Syms’
Sas^tballers Refuse To Be Stumped
WHEN ORDERING YOUR TOILET TISSUE
ALWAYS SPECIFY
FREE DELIVERY SERVICE
IT IS SOFT, SANITARY £ SOLUBLE
Highland 0335-6
469 Powell Street
weakening ntorallv '<;.)Mi. . „
ge Same and show no sign of
and theyil come 'gL' '. V
Y the none too happy situation
“Wait till the boxla'IAso'n'sherer11111^^
the r™lk’
SMITH, DAVIDSON &
WRIGHT GO. LTD.
JANUARY 26
i940
NISEI NEWS FROM FAR FLUNG CORNERS IN B. C
Summerland Sallies
“Somewhere in The United Kingd
By Amari J h a be ru
here. Many of the local citizens J
Old Man Ogo- are trying to do their bit in the!
cor
out. ot hibernation. war by knitting or contributing!
it seems fhai it’s high time for money io the local Red Cross!
this correspondent to cover the
Pasi lew weeks in Summerland.
Summerland Farmer Injured
East Richochats i
Rinuary 13 Mr. Kuroda, wellBy “Chatter”
{
known locnl pioneer met with al
tainment for the evening con Passed Away
{
painiul accident while working in!
S. Chiba of East Richmond!
bus orchard, lie slipped from his {Passed away on January 13. Ai
ladder, and as a result of the fall J veferan of the last world war he!
sustained two fractured wrists, pvas a resident of East Richmond {
He is now recuperating in thejr°r many years and liked very!
Vancouver General Hospital. andDUimh by many friends. He is!
his many triends wish him a | survived by his wife and three!
speedy recovery.
| children. The funeral was held
nit
the Buddhist Temple in New
Nisei Club Holds Dance
I Westminster, January 16.
'Hm holiday spirit still
vniirn
m
■ Concert
1 1 a at the Nisei Club dance,
L<n. 12. After games and re‘Bayview Hall. January 13, was;
freshments. dancing was enjoyed Phe SCene of the Finnish Red i
Symbolic of the unity of purpose of the three nations.
until a late hour.
{Cross concert.
Canada, Great Britain and France, this flag flies over head
On the seventh, former presi-j
*n resP°nse to a request that
quarters of Canadas first division, somewhere in the United
dent Nobukatsu Aoki was elected ! bie JaPanese do something to
Kingdom. It was designed by Col. A. Fortesaue Duouid. director
to the position of secretary, left; hefp out’ five Nisei girls staged
a wonderful “odori” a'nd a few
of this historical section of the department of national defence.
vacant by the resignation of Mis
Shima Kuroda.
boys showed the audience the
art of fencing or “kendo.” The
A
uric cuppings
success to Miss IL Inaba , audience enthusiastically show
in mr studies al art school is the: ed their approval by their hand
By M. N. C. Pator
visa from all of us.
i clapping.
v.
Ganges Granary I
At the annual meeting „•' r>Canges C.J.Y.p.a. ffhifh ' jj
p!ace at the club house on J!1
'day. January 13. VictA oC I
was elected to the helm of ai.T
He is supported by an re±'
consisting of Gordon XltT;
Xice-president; Edward
Hnnao, Refreshment Convenor'"!
A service to mark the 49th
I
since the passing of Miss SavoA I
Okano was held at the home 'll I
ei patents, Mr. and Mr, K I
Ouano, on Monday evening j,„, I
ary 15, Rev. Nakayama oi^
Wedding Bells Peal
I
January 20 was a happy Har|
for at Rast one of our young men I
WilliamtNakamura- wbo bag serv-1
e^^1? Q PA- very faithfully
united in marriage to Miss YaeCj
|l Goto of Kennedy. Although
veren t all able to be out in
couver to bid you good sailing on I
the high seas of matrimony psr I
( Saturday, we now take the o^ I
! J^1 Hmity of wishing you the bev I
। of luck, William
11
Woodfibre Japanese Buy War Bonds
. Honour and Obey
{Bird’s-Eye View
!
n a s an cl New Year
On Saturday. Jan. 20. MissjWar SuPP°rt
| three or lour local boys were!
I
Christinas was cc
in '■luglu in the act of nodding! wamiye Miki of Celtic Cannery! Woodfibre Japanese Canadians War Bonds.
tine style at the .Japanese Hall.
At a gathering at the Mess Hall I
mMeep and snoring in the Colum-! and Mr. Bunji Ogata were united poined in en masse to support
Tinka officiating at
January 16. Ralph Killam, son of I
ihe opening ceremonies. Enier- ; bia theatre during the showing I in marriage by Rev. Tachibana | Cap-a^a’s War Effort by buying the president of the B. C. Pulp I
aisled of i) a y s a n d s o n g s oi [he motion picture. “The Cat! at the Hompa Buddhist Temple. ic!ose H $10,000 worth of Canada’s and Paper Company, and Epi
pre ''nhil by the local Japanesi and i he t anray. Were we sur-1
This column joins with the;
mised to hear that! Remember to! whole village in bidding the new-! reporter mustn't forget to con Brennan, manager of the plant' I
keep your mouth closed the next; ly-weds many, many years of hap- gratulate the members of the gave a talk on the war bonds I
A cw Year brought new
tail asleep "Mustache” I piness together. The pair will I 1940 executive upon their elec woy Sora interpreted for the I
to many Nisei, and new or it ‘-’on
I
good for your health. And ! shortly take up residence in the! tion to their respective offices. benefit ol the Isseis present.
s- But this correspond,
K
?Iu'?. treasure was expressed |
B’u had better hold on city.
I They are Miyoko Masuda, presi
ent
ed some of the gam:
Gill
by officials at the unexpected re- I
tor some people
igain.
All Celtic will miss the petite: dent: Sumiko Kadonaga,
spouse
of the Japanese in rallyin? '
the- idea of and smiling Mrs. Ogata but no! treasurer and Chiyeko Yoshi
“iI celebration was held elding it tot wish
you.
to the cause of their adopted
one more than the local Young' hara, secretary.
country.
Societv which seems tO;We Wish Quick Recovery
have ths misiortune of Iosin I We . all hope that Yoshiko Wedding March
members through marriage.
Adachi who is recovering from a
A wedding of unusual interest
very
unfortunate
accident
will
be
for Woodfibre Japanese took
1940 Officers
The following
able
to
leave
the
General
Hospital
tor
place
in Vancouver when Fuwhich was coni riIncidentally, while on the shortly and once more take her
let tor was received by y
by rhe Members of the
deko Sato, daughter of Mr. and
subject of the Girls’ Club this place in the society.
ol the Surrey Barniers
Mrs. T. Sato, was married to
Hon from the Nmiomv .woiid-^sunvy Nokai. to be used in coni e.ence mewieii with the National Defence
^(‘ '■ Uchida, well-known J
arrived of Cauadn
Ocean Fails citizen.
?
kite for publication in la s t
k's issue
the
Another Woodfibre Nisei, Wil
j May J assure you that I deeply
liam
Nakamura, who has been
I
appreciate
the
spirit
of
loyalty
Hear Mr. ■Sato:
employed in Woodfibre since last
l his will acknowledge receipt ;land co-operation which the Mcmy on r As soc iat ion have
- an executive meeting of the local JCCL chapter Jgnuarr ST^’™’ i’iIle(, “ wedlock *i
of your letter
d
?° tbe An pressed in such a tangible manouLYrr"e,‘‘ S"’01'n
dUty” and a IWwim for the rear wiC- I- ’ Goto of •Strawberr
Honourable I
^■^ ■™,,’eils“l:y tvith the 1939 agenda, educational guid- H “ ^““^
i
fi
will be mrYuod m
objectives. Japanese language study Tough Luck
"ill ne pu,sued to encourage appreciation of as well as the
. with the request that it
of Surrey together with a money
si
used
^fiusmon
t,: an understanding of Japanese culture A Xttn Li
sympathiess to Jimmy Nt
tor some purpose in conwas atso instituted to sponsor a “Hanashi Kai- in the’new tutm-J?’”’ "h° *»“«»»« a. broken
, meet ion with Canada’s war effort,
but was laid aside for further discussion.
‘
UlU,e bnger in an accident while load1
letter has also b e e n
Since its inception as a JCCL Chapter thp
mg pulp. He went home out
brought
has been duly augmented in membership Xilh
3
™
*
„
to the attention of my
Ladner way last Thursday’ to re
an
initiation
of
% { Colleagues
cuperate.
twelve new members.
the Government,
^ laud on their behalf, as well as
We Gratefully Acknowledge
• m\ own. 1 am anxious that you
A donation by Mr. Kamitakahara to defer the costs of a
SUBSCRIBE TO
S;convey to each of your members
‘
‘
a
donation
by
Mrs
Yoneda,
nee Tomiko Koyanagi,
.iwho have, contributed my sincerTHE NEW CANADIAN
^tev'Vt^
’ ' ’ a C°Py of the “Citizen
Undertakers
: m-d thanks tor this generous gift.
from the
ueu.bton JCL^. Our congratulations, Steveston, for,, your
i
jourYours sincerely,
nalistic success!
?
5
^gnea) Norman M. L. Rogers
On January 13. members of the lacrosse team
x
For Real Japanese Dishes J
with
(.Minister of National Defence’)
to’ X
To
L
Gov't Acknowledges Surrey Donation
Acme Cannery JCCL Faces Busy Year
(Armstrong and Co
5
moa
QUALITY,
ECONOMY AND SERVICE
Union Fish Company
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS
w
at a party held at the M
8
616 »u&sts of th® »««r
This is The House That Jack Built
Appears to me that we have a 'large aggregate of amat
eur
TSUBAME
258 POWELL ST.
TRINITY 0561
s
tore of buHding aJYZ h^y p^LizeYhalfs
IF
What s your opinion, dear readers?
a"d Syms’
Sas^tballers Refuse To Be Stumped
WHEN ORDERING YOUR TOILET TISSUE
ALWAYS SPECIFY
FREE DELIVERY SERVICE
IT IS SOFT, SANITARY £ SOLUBLE
Highland 0335-6
469 Powell Street
weakening ntorallv '<;.)Mi. . „
ge Same and show no sign of
and theyil come 'gL' '. V
Y the none too happy situation
“Wait till the boxla'IAso'n'sherer11111^^
the r™lk’
SMITH, DAVIDSON &
WRIGHT GO. LTD.
Page 7
3
JANUARY 26
THE NEW CANADIAN
This World of Ours
Win Over Steveston gives YP League Lead
Here is an article taken from a recent issue of the Seattle
Pest-lntelligencer that may interest you readers:
Who's going to stop the Suna-V
Hi combinaton? Twice Lst year's dctoh chan
Tommy Iwasaki, came against them
withered before the hard smashes of Baron Wakabavishi
By News and Views
and the smart net playing of Ka: Suoa. While their crL
Fave you seen the programme double were being humbled, Strathcona's produced their
tlie Maple Ridge JCCL con
ace-in-the-hoIe in the mixed division as Matt Matsui and
cert? You can
them i’ram
umi ,DeSmma scored another decisive victory over the '39
your district chairman together
with your’.' tickets. Just in case mixed champs Shige Okumura and Lucy Koyanagi.
JCCL Concert
WASHINGTON.—The most dramatic incident at the White
House diplomatic reception was the unrecorded meeting between
Aini'assadoi Hu Shih of China and Ambassador Kensuke Horinouchi
of Japan.
The encounter occurred shortly after each separately had
paid his respects to the President. The scholarly, genial Dr Hu
Shih was leaving the, reception line when he noticed Horinouchi
chatting with some friends. For a moment he paused, then turned
you can’t wait. I’ll give you a few
In the Powell Y.P.S,, Steveston ‘ight anu
and walked to the group, extending his hand to Horinouchi.
preview flashes.
the local society win 15-9. smashed through to
If the Japanese ambassador was surprised, he save no outward
First, thanks to our Vancou
grip on the first Akiyama L. the third game Mi
sign of it. With an exclamation of pleasure he cordially returned
ver
friends
who
have
consented
bowling over the and gave completely lost I;is form
the welcome
the GYK another victory
to assist us. They include Fumi Steveston crew 6-2.
Ohori, Lily Ide, Grace Terakita,
MRA AND DIPLOMATS
The potential champs Suga and
Y.P.S. scores easy win
Roy
Kumano and Sam Yamada. I Wakabayashi
One of the few who witnessed the incident was lovely Helen
vanquished
their
To Mr. C. McDougal, Mr. G,
Although Steveston strove hard
Lombai J, wife Oi the French military attache. Later in the eveir'in
first game opponents Sam Hagino
Filer,
Mr.
S.
Monstrenko
and
Mr.
when she was introduced to the Chinese ambassador she enquired?
and H. Machida in an easy two they could do anything against
K.
Munskow
our
appreciation
for
“Mr. Ambassador, I noticed you speaking to the Japanese
set match. In their crucial tussle the Y.P.S.'s hard smashing Ari
their
assistance.
Ambassanoi and I think that was one of the most civilized things
with Mi Akiyama and Tommy kado brothers and Mas Matsui.
The
program
will
I've seen in a long time.”
be opened by
J. Tanaka, and Mary experienced
the singing of "0 Canada” fol- Iwasaki the GYK's team shel some difficulty when M. Soyawn
"Thank you,” replied Dr. Hu Shih, “but it not I who should
lowed by a piano solo by Miss lacked their opposition 15-1 in the and IL Hamade extended them to
be commended. On the contrary, it was most civilized of the
first set, ’but in the next Mi and
Hanako
Kanzaki.
Then
there
’
s
an
three sets, but they had full conJapanese ambassador to acknowledge such an unworthy in
Tommy
came
right
back
into
the
“odori” by Miss Rieko Nishikawa,
trol again when they vanquished
dividual as myself. The distinguished Mr. Horinouchi is a mem
who
has
heen
termed
“
colossal.
”
S.
Matsuba and S Kochi in
ber of the Oxford Movement and an advocate fo peace and moral
and just before intermission, a HOMICIDE HAL SCORES
re-armament. I would not want him to think me a barbarian/’
solo by "Mitts” Hayashi, our
GYK vs. Strathcona
friend from our Mission way, who FIFTH STRAIGHT KO
K. Suga-B. Wnkabavm li bt s.
MRA AND A HOLD-UP M.AN
Hagino-H.
Machida lAH, 15-7: M.
,
StH1 anOther accountW. Amps of the United States has been with us for several
Akiyama-T. Iwasaki bt.
MuikaSacramento, Calif. — Harold
builder of the largest bank in the Far East, the Hong Kong-Shanghai months.
"Homicide Hal” Hoshino con
It all adds up to the musical
(. N. Ikeda-M.
Bank, reported the story of a recent adventure with a hold-up man
Toyota 15-9.
Suga-Wakaba
tinued
living
up
to
his
name
concert
sponsored
by
the
local
on an American highway.
vasaki
15-1,
fl.
here, scoring a kayo victory off
JCCL, Feb. 3 at the Haney Agri
-Mai sui-Deshima bt.
I gave the man a lift,” said Mr. Amps, without knowing who cultural 'Hall, from 7.30 p.m.
Ernie Roybal in the third round yanagi-Okumura >-11, (-15, 15-10;
ne was or what he wanted of me. I had guidance to tell him how
Ma ikawa-Oshimo bt.
Haginu-Maof a scheduled six round bout.
Believe it or not . . . number
my hie had been changed through Moral Re-Armament, Th e fourteen
The Nisei boxer gave Roybal Powell Y.P.S. vs Steveston J.C.C.L.
gangstei turned to me and handed over his gun. He said 'If you listed as on the programme is
an
odori
by
what
apa
terrific beat i ng to win a
D. Arikado-ll. Arikado lit. T. Maliadn t. told me that I'd have stuck you up. As it is you’ve stuck
pears
to
be
four
girls,
but
a
technical
kayo.
It
was
Ho
: E. Arikndo-M.
n.e up. How do you get changed anyway?’
Matsui bt. S
"reliable source” informs me
shino’s fifth straight knockout J. Tanaka-M
bt. M So
. Dunng the rest of the ride ray racketeer, hitch-hiking com that four boys will do the dancwin since he came to Northern gawa-ll. Unmade 15-10, s-1 5, 15-10:
panion was turned into spiritual 'G-Man/ It certainly eliminated ing . . . Am 1 right . . . Don’t
S. Kochi-T. Matsuba bt. J , KlimaCalifornia.
one more factor in the country’s .crime problem.”
gai-C. Hynde 17-1(1, 1S-17; Arikadotell them, Kay.
Arikado bt. Sogawa-Yoshi
What is Moral Re-Armament that it has such an influence
A fashion parade by the JCCL Live are to be the models and highover men s lives and what does it offer Niseis?
is the last it/sm on the program h eeled shoes, cosmetics and
Matsuba-Kochi 15-3,
SogawaP0Wer Of God t0 change men’s lives accord and promises to be thoroughly flower-garden hats have not been Hamade bt. Kumaer
ing to the standards of the four absolutes: absolute honesty. amusing . .i. especially for the forgotten. Watch for trim ankles,
absolute purity, absolute unselfishness and absolute love. It is ladies. Gentlemen on the execu- especially the mnstached one.
claimed that it each jperson as a unit in societv would live accordwould
?ldarJ a,nd thus moraUy re-arm himself, the world
0Uld be like the individual—pure, honest, peaceful and clean.
First-Half Schedule Finished
MRA AND NISEIS
^.JY. XT® haS WOn ”'My 8,n,e‘'««» among Um Japanese
Coast
h
V'dnger generations up and down the Pacific
coast. One thing aoout it stated a prominent American Nisei,
Tho L-sei and Nisei are working together as they never have
before.”
‘’The
n Japanese.
.
especially the Nisei, have much to sain
IwXhlk T V’/ ?Ioral S^'WW would aid them to break
iiew' cou/L /^
complex.' MRa would give them
friends m /
ASPmt W get out of their slle!1 a'ld «ke
purpose of /ni"8' W ” ™St '”t be f0r8°tten that the main
Ipm/ibility.18 ' " W°rld brothei-h°°d a»d individual re-
TRINITY
'putltcA
4822
^VdliA
314 POWELL STREET
Beavers Nose Out JCCL To Cause
Thre^Way Tie In Victoria Cage Loop
328
POWEL
ST.,
SEym C853
Nimi Shokai
Shaeffer Pen Agents
Tfie final game of the first half in the. Victoria Ja
panese/ Commuity Basketball League was finally played last Latest Japanese Recordings
week with the Beavers taking the measure of the JCCL TRinity3112
331 Powell St.
squad/by a close 22-21 decision, just managing to stave
VANCOUVER, B. C.
off a /desperate last-minute rally of the losers.
Th J photo-finish win put the
Beavers on even terms with the “Personals’’:
REAL CHINESE DISHES
other/ two teams "leaving the
“Bad Alan” H. E. Kondo with
league standings deadlocked at 21 personals chalked up against
SERVED AT
five /wins and five losses for all him led the JCCL to the top of
thre^ quintets at the end of the the league in the way of fouls.
first; half of the league schedule. No less than eighty were called
Tho JCCLers missed a grand against them while the Beavers
252 POWELL ST.
change of tieing up the game and Taiyo had sixty and fifty-one
SEY. 3517 - 5774
when Muss Okamoto potted only j^Pmce.
one of the two free shots awarded '
«'>:< ;«^®^
him ; just at the toot of the final i P
whistle.
i
The first half score was 13-6 in i $
V
favour of the eventual winnersip
I
with Terry Uyede collecting allj$
Optometrist
8
his ten points in this half. Harold I
Kawasoe led the losers with 12 ‘ ?
markers.
^77 Powell St.
&
FIRST HALF STATISTICS
High Scorers:
^ * * 3 “ A^u??//,\\v(v//rB/AWi7c%W«7«V.^W»ViWMW/
Thomas Kuwabara, Taiyo . ...94
Terry Uyede, Beavers ... ...... ..88
Eichi Kondo, JCCL .......
..70
Harold Kawasoe, JCCL
..51
5
Jimmie Shimizu, JCCL
..40
Muneo Kawasoe, Taiyo
..37
General Merchants
?
/
Team Totals:
/
Trinity 0092
Beavers .................
226
269 Powell St.
JCCL
214
Taiyo ..............
208
I
SUN PEKIN
HAJIME SUZUKI
ANY RADIO, ANY MAKE, ANYWHERE
Satisfaction Guaranteed
KOMURA BROS. LTD.
Home RflDiOEnGinE€Rs
605E. Hastings St.
Highland 1660
*"
JANUARY 26
THE NEW CANADIAN
This World of Ours
Win Over Steveston gives YP League Lead
Here is an article taken from a recent issue of the Seattle
Pest-lntelligencer that may interest you readers:
Who's going to stop the Suna-V
Hi combinaton? Twice Lst year's dctoh chan
Tommy Iwasaki, came against them
withered before the hard smashes of Baron Wakabavishi
By News and Views
and the smart net playing of Ka: Suoa. While their crL
Fave you seen the programme double were being humbled, Strathcona's produced their
tlie Maple Ridge JCCL con
ace-in-the-hoIe in the mixed division as Matt Matsui and
cert? You can
them i’ram
umi ,DeSmma scored another decisive victory over the '39
your district chairman together
with your’.' tickets. Just in case mixed champs Shige Okumura and Lucy Koyanagi.
JCCL Concert
WASHINGTON.—The most dramatic incident at the White
House diplomatic reception was the unrecorded meeting between
Aini'assadoi Hu Shih of China and Ambassador Kensuke Horinouchi
of Japan.
The encounter occurred shortly after each separately had
paid his respects to the President. The scholarly, genial Dr Hu
Shih was leaving the, reception line when he noticed Horinouchi
chatting with some friends. For a moment he paused, then turned
you can’t wait. I’ll give you a few
In the Powell Y.P.S,, Steveston ‘ight anu
and walked to the group, extending his hand to Horinouchi.
preview flashes.
the local society win 15-9. smashed through to
If the Japanese ambassador was surprised, he save no outward
First, thanks to our Vancou
grip on the first Akiyama L. the third game Mi
sign of it. With an exclamation of pleasure he cordially returned
ver
friends
who
have
consented
bowling over the and gave completely lost I;is form
the welcome
the GYK another victory
to assist us. They include Fumi Steveston crew 6-2.
Ohori, Lily Ide, Grace Terakita,
MRA AND DIPLOMATS
The potential champs Suga and
Y.P.S. scores easy win
Roy
Kumano and Sam Yamada. I Wakabayashi
One of the few who witnessed the incident was lovely Helen
vanquished
their
To Mr. C. McDougal, Mr. G,
Although Steveston strove hard
Lombai J, wife Oi the French military attache. Later in the eveir'in
first game opponents Sam Hagino
Filer,
Mr.
S.
Monstrenko
and
Mr.
when she was introduced to the Chinese ambassador she enquired?
and H. Machida in an easy two they could do anything against
K.
Munskow
our
appreciation
for
“Mr. Ambassador, I noticed you speaking to the Japanese
set match. In their crucial tussle the Y.P.S.'s hard smashing Ari
their
assistance.
Ambassanoi and I think that was one of the most civilized things
with Mi Akiyama and Tommy kado brothers and Mas Matsui.
The
program
will
I've seen in a long time.”
be opened by
J. Tanaka, and Mary experienced
the singing of "0 Canada” fol- Iwasaki the GYK's team shel some difficulty when M. Soyawn
"Thank you,” replied Dr. Hu Shih, “but it not I who should
lowed by a piano solo by Miss lacked their opposition 15-1 in the and IL Hamade extended them to
be commended. On the contrary, it was most civilized of the
first set, ’but in the next Mi and
Hanako
Kanzaki.
Then
there
’
s
an
three sets, but they had full conJapanese ambassador to acknowledge such an unworthy in
Tommy
came
right
back
into
the
“odori” by Miss Rieko Nishikawa,
trol again when they vanquished
dividual as myself. The distinguished Mr. Horinouchi is a mem
who
has
heen
termed
“
colossal.
”
S.
Matsuba and S Kochi in
ber of the Oxford Movement and an advocate fo peace and moral
and just before intermission, a HOMICIDE HAL SCORES
re-armament. I would not want him to think me a barbarian/’
solo by "Mitts” Hayashi, our
GYK vs. Strathcona
friend from our Mission way, who FIFTH STRAIGHT KO
K. Suga-B. Wnkabavm li bt s.
MRA AND A HOLD-UP M.AN
Hagino-H.
Machida lAH, 15-7: M.
,
StH1 anOther accountW. Amps of the United States has been with us for several
Akiyama-T. Iwasaki bt.
MuikaSacramento, Calif. — Harold
builder of the largest bank in the Far East, the Hong Kong-Shanghai months.
"Homicide Hal” Hoshino con
It all adds up to the musical
(. N. Ikeda-M.
Bank, reported the story of a recent adventure with a hold-up man
Toyota 15-9.
Suga-Wakaba
tinued
living
up
to
his
name
concert
sponsored
by
the
local
on an American highway.
vasaki
15-1,
fl.
here, scoring a kayo victory off
JCCL, Feb. 3 at the Haney Agri
-Mai sui-Deshima bt.
I gave the man a lift,” said Mr. Amps, without knowing who cultural 'Hall, from 7.30 p.m.
Ernie Roybal in the third round yanagi-Okumura >-11, (-15, 15-10;
ne was or what he wanted of me. I had guidance to tell him how
Ma ikawa-Oshimo bt.
Haginu-Maof a scheduled six round bout.
Believe it or not . . . number
my hie had been changed through Moral Re-Armament, Th e fourteen
The Nisei boxer gave Roybal Powell Y.P.S. vs Steveston J.C.C.L.
gangstei turned to me and handed over his gun. He said 'If you listed as on the programme is
an
odori
by
what
apa
terrific beat i ng to win a
D. Arikado-ll. Arikado lit. T. Maliadn t. told me that I'd have stuck you up. As it is you’ve stuck
pears
to
be
four
girls,
but
a
technical
kayo.
It
was
Ho
: E. Arikndo-M.
n.e up. How do you get changed anyway?’
Matsui bt. S
"reliable source” informs me
shino’s fifth straight knockout J. Tanaka-M
bt. M So
. Dunng the rest of the ride ray racketeer, hitch-hiking com that four boys will do the dancwin since he came to Northern gawa-ll. Unmade 15-10, s-1 5, 15-10:
panion was turned into spiritual 'G-Man/ It certainly eliminated ing . . . Am 1 right . . . Don’t
S. Kochi-T. Matsuba bt. J , KlimaCalifornia.
one more factor in the country’s .crime problem.”
gai-C. Hynde 17-1(1, 1S-17; Arikadotell them, Kay.
Arikado bt. Sogawa-Yoshi
What is Moral Re-Armament that it has such an influence
A fashion parade by the JCCL Live are to be the models and highover men s lives and what does it offer Niseis?
is the last it/sm on the program h eeled shoes, cosmetics and
Matsuba-Kochi 15-3,
SogawaP0Wer Of God t0 change men’s lives accord and promises to be thoroughly flower-garden hats have not been Hamade bt. Kumaer
ing to the standards of the four absolutes: absolute honesty. amusing . .i. especially for the forgotten. Watch for trim ankles,
absolute purity, absolute unselfishness and absolute love. It is ladies. Gentlemen on the execu- especially the mnstached one.
claimed that it each jperson as a unit in societv would live accordwould
?ldarJ a,nd thus moraUy re-arm himself, the world
0Uld be like the individual—pure, honest, peaceful and clean.
First-Half Schedule Finished
MRA AND NISEIS
^.JY. XT® haS WOn ”'My 8,n,e‘'««» among Um Japanese
Coast
h
V'dnger generations up and down the Pacific
coast. One thing aoout it stated a prominent American Nisei,
Tho L-sei and Nisei are working together as they never have
before.”
‘’The
n Japanese.
.
especially the Nisei, have much to sain
IwXhlk T V’/ ?Ioral S^'WW would aid them to break
iiew' cou/L /^
complex.' MRa would give them
friends m /
ASPmt W get out of their slle!1 a'ld «ke
purpose of /ni"8' W ” ™St '”t be f0r8°tten that the main
Ipm/ibility.18 ' " W°rld brothei-h°°d a»d individual re-
TRINITY
'putltcA
4822
^VdliA
314 POWELL STREET
Beavers Nose Out JCCL To Cause
Thre^Way Tie In Victoria Cage Loop
328
POWEL
ST.,
SEym C853
Nimi Shokai
Shaeffer Pen Agents
Tfie final game of the first half in the. Victoria Ja
panese/ Commuity Basketball League was finally played last Latest Japanese Recordings
week with the Beavers taking the measure of the JCCL TRinity3112
331 Powell St.
squad/by a close 22-21 decision, just managing to stave
VANCOUVER, B. C.
off a /desperate last-minute rally of the losers.
Th J photo-finish win put the
Beavers on even terms with the “Personals’’:
REAL CHINESE DISHES
other/ two teams "leaving the
“Bad Alan” H. E. Kondo with
league standings deadlocked at 21 personals chalked up against
SERVED AT
five /wins and five losses for all him led the JCCL to the top of
thre^ quintets at the end of the the league in the way of fouls.
first; half of the league schedule. No less than eighty were called
Tho JCCLers missed a grand against them while the Beavers
252 POWELL ST.
change of tieing up the game and Taiyo had sixty and fifty-one
SEY. 3517 - 5774
when Muss Okamoto potted only j^Pmce.
one of the two free shots awarded '
«'>:< ;«^®^
him ; just at the toot of the final i P
whistle.
i
The first half score was 13-6 in i $
V
favour of the eventual winnersip
I
with Terry Uyede collecting allj$
Optometrist
8
his ten points in this half. Harold I
Kawasoe led the losers with 12 ‘ ?
markers.
^77 Powell St.
&
FIRST HALF STATISTICS
High Scorers:
^ * * 3 “ A^u??//,\\v(v//rB/AWi7c%W«7«V.^W»ViWMW/
Thomas Kuwabara, Taiyo . ...94
Terry Uyede, Beavers ... ...... ..88
Eichi Kondo, JCCL .......
..70
Harold Kawasoe, JCCL
..51
5
Jimmie Shimizu, JCCL
..40
Muneo Kawasoe, Taiyo
..37
General Merchants
?
/
Team Totals:
/
Trinity 0092
Beavers .................
226
269 Powell St.
JCCL
214
Taiyo ..............
208
I
SUN PEKIN
HAJIME SUZUKI
ANY RADIO, ANY MAKE, ANYWHERE
Satisfaction Guaranteed
KOMURA BROS. LTD.
Home RflDiOEnGinE€Rs
605E. Hastings St.
Highland 1660
*"
Page 8
Page 8
THE NEW CANADIAN
Hoopla Leaders
Drop Second lilt
JANUARY' 26
I94Q
Scorekeeper Scans The Scrolls
SENIOR
Won Lost Percent'.
10
2
.850
A
7
.636
6
5
.545
2
4
.333
1
9
.100
The Sports Clothesline
For
420
372
355
184
251
Against Fouls
332
150
By WASHEE
285
90
276
90
Y es, the missiles and bombs did fly in my direction and I
Maikawa, Harry’s
233
55 they planned to gang up on me. but I’m here again as guest column
429
80 ist to ask for more. My last effort was good reading for evervonn
V/in To Keep in Step
except tne basketbailers; this one ought to be good reading
JUNIORS
everyone,
except
the badmintonites.
" 1
A strengthened squad of Wai Shorthanded Nomad
Won
Lost
*
*
bow.i players led by larruping!
7
0
Code of Sportsmanship
’Hank’’ Ashikawa definitely es-’
Pull Surprise Win Steveston
Marpole __
5
1
labLiMit d themselves as strongs
This world is full of strange happenings. It's no wonder peoLp
Nomads ....
5
3
a
re
‘■••menders for the championship
superstitious. For instance take this strange story
Ernie's
4
4
Nie Powell Gym last
The Badminton League, since it opened this season.’ ha’s
Monarchs .
4
6
day by handing the off-form leaplenty of competition and hot contests. So much so that die.
The juniors dished out. two of Celtics ....
3
5
cue leading M & N quintet their
has had injected into it all the stuff that used to be part
Acme .........
0
8
nccond defeat of the season 35-23. Dim most thrilling games ever witwrestling—bad talk, petty disputes, frayed tempers and so
# * *
ui Gm ciirlain raiser the Powell pwssN this season as East End
. . . you know.
1 Ul 111
.Moarchc
nosed
out
Acme
’
s
by
a
SHARPSHOOTING
SIX
Drug five held Harry’s for three
And <now, in utter despair, upon the south wall of Strathcona
'.imi tors (hen blew sky-high to be narrow margin of one point, while
Games Points
gym, for all to read, some mystic power has pasted up a “code
.‘.nowed under a 13-20 avalanche. Nomads pulled a. surprise over Ashikawa (M)
8
' 160
of sportsmanship.” Believe it or not, but it’s worth passing on:
;the strong Ernie quintet by com&
N)
....
12
111
The M & N—.Maikawa tangle ing from behind to win 31-30.
issu'd
1. Keep the rule.
I OUZUKI
& N) .... 9
97
started slowly with M & N tak ;
2. Keep faith with your comrades.
Enders took a 10-4 lead..|Asano (H)
10
89
ing an early lead only to have ; in East
the first half, but Acme came T. Shimizu (PD)
Keep your temper,
10
91
the department store boys whit- I right back in the third quarter
Keep yourself fit.
11
80
Ue it down to one point. In • to deuce the game. In the nip- Suga (H) .
a. Keep a stout heart in defeat.
the tragic second quarter the J and-tuck last quarter Monarch’s
JUNIORS
6. Keep your pride under victory,
M & N team stopped to watch ; outscored Acme’s 5-4 to give Kadonaga (C)
8
93
7. Keep a sound soul, a clean mind, and a healthy body.
a parade of yellow shirt baskets ' them the close decision.
T. Tokawa (M) ...
10
87
go by to a 16-8 lead.
;
LAY THE GAME!
Suga (E) .......
8
86
NOMADS RALLY CLICKS
•Tanaka (’
MAIKAWA RECRUITS
8
79
Corrugated Brows
In the exciting Nomad-Ernie j K. Koyanagi (A)
8
76
With score
in the
Speaking to Mogul Matsui, I learned the reason why he °oes
tussle it looked like a walk-away J. Miike (M)
6
65 about 2vVh a corrugated brow. “Players don’t arrive, on time, so we
miaHer, George Suzuki went on for
rnie’s when they took a comthe floor to assistance of his teammanding lead in the first half, but! Larfooted and when the smoke can’t finish our matches in one night,” he sighs. “We didn't finish
mates. but the damage was too in the third quarter they kept Er-'cleared Joe Akiyama’s boys held our Strathcona-Steveston match the week before, and last Mon
D” gone for him to remedy. Ex nie.’s Sharpshooter down to one sun
day. we couldn’t complete the Steveston-Gakuyukai match”
8-pomt lead. It looked bad
mum
an ad- solitary basket, while they work-Tor Nomads when George YoshinFor a change 4 agree with Matsui. Well, how about’it? His
His
mil ige with the addition of their cd themselves in to score 9 points,! aka
job as secretary is a tough one any way you look at it, and without
H
recruits, the Ishida bro- bringing them within one basket; route as showered via the foul the necessary co-operation, I wouldn’t blame him if he gave it up
with five minutes yet to n favour of six-day bike racing.
dirs, Maikawa’s held off the of the leadens.
\
play
but
the Nomads hung dogDr-',nening M & n raj|y and ■
A Good System and No Goose Pimples
Again after rest time Nomad’s'godly•' to their lead playing only
c. .iJed tn to n 35-23 victory
(‘aught the ice-cream parlor boys four ;men to come out on top 34-30.
While Im. on the subject I might as well give it the works
With luck Shimizu making* his
and ask why the League games aren’t run off more systematicallv.
pot shots count. Powell Drug
Lore s what I would like—a list of the players and the order of thZ
tin
on doggedly to the heels of
matc‘ae^ mixed, doubles and men’s doubles played alternatelyI ho Harry boys allowing only a
- any s the time I’ve seen the same team go right back on the
point lead. 25-20 at the end
<looi right alter finishing a gruelling match. Other times I’ve seen
f the third quarter. But in the
gir.s play one game at the beginning of the evening, then sit
is'”al last frame. Harry’s broke
around gathering goose pimples, waiting until quitting
time to
h their defence Io pile up
play a second game.
*
’
*
holdin
opHoopla
history
will
be
made!
"txpe
admits
manager
Seiji
■nt ton sec
I’m Picking ? ? ?
Saturday night at the Jackson Onizuka, ’'May be lacking, but have
hdy two
Who
’
s
going
to
win
Tuck Shimi- Avenue gvm. Nine Seattle Nisei
our Takuwan Bowl cage
Seattl
"is or the Native Sons o
cagettes will prance out on tne I
That
’
s
easy!
it'll be
Hornet Hints
1 'rug’s counters
a walkaway. a mere warming-up for
maple floor to take on Vancouver,
Nippons. Fooled you
ie invading Hornets, last year's I lhat ^Tme Be seeing you at the game.
Amazons in the first recorded in
/. Courier Consolation champs, |h
ternational Nisei girls basket til
under playing manager Kenny KaIl ought to be good
Nine of them—ranging in age pvcuchi, Wid field a tough team,
from a mere 15 to sweet 18, and (despite some, crocked men. Willie
COFFEE SHOPPE
in height from five feet to 5-4— । Tahara, Roy Kurimura and oneunder the watchful eye of May | hand shot artist Tom Kubota, who
EVERYTHING TO EAT”
Daty, the manager, and Coaches I is Holding down the second slot in j
Roy Kurimura and Tom Kubota I in individual scoring in the Courier
l AA league, will start on the forward
FOUNTA IN SERVICE
of the Hornets.
,.
,, .
lime- Average height, >5.
Hot oft the press wires is the I c
t
.’Aunce dope on »-ho to look for ^"“Y
Y’11 D^Y a"d
AN IDEAL GARMENT
thedummutuebuth.ahscoungD
Y"?9
' make up
FOR SPRING WEAR
;**>il,(>ilJii|.l>il.l>(l.||l|,|n:,fl(),|u)jijj) )
Marv Tsuda and the steady play-ph°
string defence.
maker, Hideko Tsuboi, veteran for- ! Hornets called on their farm
@ For a
to Japan
wards at the game ,
Workina ।system t0 bring in reserves, Bryan
© For Outdoor Sports
with them is Mary Iwasaki, 5,4 i Honkawa, D-S, from Montana, a
zes on neat ''under i ^P^her from Wyoming, for
Wear
Footwear
And 3icentre, George Ono, only 18 but
bucket tricks .
stonewall defence of Renko FujiiJS!X feet m his socksT and Ed MuneWe have just received from
5 un Nakamura and Carol Daty , . J ^W/ flashy player from Yakima.
the East a large shipment
Carol, they say, has Kiide Shimizu I Look out' Canada, here come the
762 Granville St
of the very latest models
beat for coolness under fire . . j')ar|hs!
528 W. Hastings St
such as:
On the reserve line are Tomoko i The wise money boys ,though are
u')'mrim’im,im’j,tm'i'l’'i'i'u,imTu<ri
Shioto, Mane Aoki and Taeko Kun- i laying their bets on the local NipRAGLANS
mura ... |t all adds up to a team' P°ns. Lining up for Vancouver
; to watch from anv point of view
i will be Shige Ashikawa, flanked by
FINEST CAKES
GUARDS
I George Suzuki and Joe Akiyama,
"We've Got Oomph"
TUBES
, But Local experts have the situa- j Kiide Shimizu and Harry Nikaido
i
will
fill
in
the
guard
positions.
and up
• bon al Idoped out in favour of Van
SLIP-ONS
couver Amazons, whose first string
392 Powell St.
lot Marge Kusakabe, May Yoshinaka, George Ide, Kay Hirano and Jean
‘Mwe Nishikaze, Sallv Knaguchi and Inamoto.
Electric Blue, Teal, Light
Sey. 3933
They've
been
playing
together
all
Captain Akiko Yoshinaka average /
. ,
and Dark Greens, etc.
5-5, and tips the beam at ? . . s season in the Intermediate A league,
• and look like winners in a walk.
; Don't forget, Girls game at 7.30,
! price I De. In addition there are 40
preserved tickets at 25c on sale at
:Akiyama Hardware store, 368 Powell
CLOTHES SHOP
Y & 5
Harry's
Maikawa
Steveston
j
°~!
5
Locals Favoured Over Visiting
ALL WOOL
--
YA •
$19.50
Ssmdwg&i
ft-’r
HAIS BI VS
459 E. Hastings St,
High. 2132
TOP COAT
PRO-REC
NIPPONS WIN
Pro-Rec Nippons chalked up their
fourth win Wednesday night, when
Normal defaulted.
MATSUMIYA
AND NOSE
229 Powell St.
THE NEW CANADIAN
Hoopla Leaders
Drop Second lilt
JANUARY' 26
I94Q
Scorekeeper Scans The Scrolls
SENIOR
Won Lost Percent'.
10
2
.850
A
7
.636
6
5
.545
2
4
.333
1
9
.100
The Sports Clothesline
For
420
372
355
184
251
Against Fouls
332
150
By WASHEE
285
90
276
90
Y es, the missiles and bombs did fly in my direction and I
Maikawa, Harry’s
233
55 they planned to gang up on me. but I’m here again as guest column
429
80 ist to ask for more. My last effort was good reading for evervonn
V/in To Keep in Step
except tne basketbailers; this one ought to be good reading
JUNIORS
everyone,
except
the badmintonites.
" 1
A strengthened squad of Wai Shorthanded Nomad
Won
Lost
*
*
bow.i players led by larruping!
7
0
Code of Sportsmanship
’Hank’’ Ashikawa definitely es-’
Pull Surprise Win Steveston
Marpole __
5
1
labLiMit d themselves as strongs
This world is full of strange happenings. It's no wonder peoLp
Nomads ....
5
3
a
re
‘■••menders for the championship
superstitious. For instance take this strange story
Ernie's
4
4
Nie Powell Gym last
The Badminton League, since it opened this season.’ ha’s
Monarchs .
4
6
day by handing the off-form leaplenty of competition and hot contests. So much so that die.
The juniors dished out. two of Celtics ....
3
5
cue leading M & N quintet their
has had injected into it all the stuff that used to be part
Acme .........
0
8
nccond defeat of the season 35-23. Dim most thrilling games ever witwrestling—bad talk, petty disputes, frayed tempers and so
# * *
ui Gm ciirlain raiser the Powell pwssN this season as East End
. . . you know.
1 Ul 111
.Moarchc
nosed
out
Acme
’
s
by
a
SHARPSHOOTING
SIX
Drug five held Harry’s for three
And <now, in utter despair, upon the south wall of Strathcona
'.imi tors (hen blew sky-high to be narrow margin of one point, while
Games Points
gym, for all to read, some mystic power has pasted up a “code
.‘.nowed under a 13-20 avalanche. Nomads pulled a. surprise over Ashikawa (M)
8
' 160
of sportsmanship.” Believe it or not, but it’s worth passing on:
;the strong Ernie quintet by com&
N)
....
12
111
The M & N—.Maikawa tangle ing from behind to win 31-30.
issu'd
1. Keep the rule.
I OUZUKI
& N) .... 9
97
started slowly with M & N tak ;
2. Keep faith with your comrades.
Enders took a 10-4 lead..|Asano (H)
10
89
ing an early lead only to have ; in East
the first half, but Acme came T. Shimizu (PD)
Keep your temper,
10
91
the department store boys whit- I right back in the third quarter
Keep yourself fit.
11
80
Ue it down to one point. In • to deuce the game. In the nip- Suga (H) .
a. Keep a stout heart in defeat.
the tragic second quarter the J and-tuck last quarter Monarch’s
JUNIORS
6. Keep your pride under victory,
M & N team stopped to watch ; outscored Acme’s 5-4 to give Kadonaga (C)
8
93
7. Keep a sound soul, a clean mind, and a healthy body.
a parade of yellow shirt baskets ' them the close decision.
T. Tokawa (M) ...
10
87
go by to a 16-8 lead.
;
LAY THE GAME!
Suga (E) .......
8
86
NOMADS RALLY CLICKS
•Tanaka (’
MAIKAWA RECRUITS
8
79
Corrugated Brows
In the exciting Nomad-Ernie j K. Koyanagi (A)
8
76
With score
in the
Speaking to Mogul Matsui, I learned the reason why he °oes
tussle it looked like a walk-away J. Miike (M)
6
65 about 2vVh a corrugated brow. “Players don’t arrive, on time, so we
miaHer, George Suzuki went on for
rnie’s when they took a comthe floor to assistance of his teammanding lead in the first half, but! Larfooted and when the smoke can’t finish our matches in one night,” he sighs. “We didn't finish
mates. but the damage was too in the third quarter they kept Er-'cleared Joe Akiyama’s boys held our Strathcona-Steveston match the week before, and last Mon
D” gone for him to remedy. Ex nie.’s Sharpshooter down to one sun
day. we couldn’t complete the Steveston-Gakuyukai match”
8-pomt lead. It looked bad
mum
an ad- solitary basket, while they work-Tor Nomads when George YoshinFor a change 4 agree with Matsui. Well, how about’it? His
His
mil ige with the addition of their cd themselves in to score 9 points,! aka
job as secretary is a tough one any way you look at it, and without
H
recruits, the Ishida bro- bringing them within one basket; route as showered via the foul the necessary co-operation, I wouldn’t blame him if he gave it up
with five minutes yet to n favour of six-day bike racing.
dirs, Maikawa’s held off the of the leadens.
\
play
but
the Nomads hung dogDr-',nening M & n raj|y and ■
A Good System and No Goose Pimples
Again after rest time Nomad’s'godly•' to their lead playing only
c. .iJed tn to n 35-23 victory
(‘aught the ice-cream parlor boys four ;men to come out on top 34-30.
While Im. on the subject I might as well give it the works
With luck Shimizu making* his
and ask why the League games aren’t run off more systematicallv.
pot shots count. Powell Drug
Lore s what I would like—a list of the players and the order of thZ
tin
on doggedly to the heels of
matc‘ae^ mixed, doubles and men’s doubles played alternatelyI ho Harry boys allowing only a
- any s the time I’ve seen the same team go right back on the
point lead. 25-20 at the end
<looi right alter finishing a gruelling match. Other times I’ve seen
f the third quarter. But in the
gir.s play one game at the beginning of the evening, then sit
is'”al last frame. Harry’s broke
around gathering goose pimples, waiting until quitting
time to
h their defence Io pile up
play a second game.
*
’
*
holdin
opHoopla
history
will
be
made!
"txpe
admits
manager
Seiji
■nt ton sec
I’m Picking ? ? ?
Saturday night at the Jackson Onizuka, ’'May be lacking, but have
hdy two
Who
’
s
going
to
win
Tuck Shimi- Avenue gvm. Nine Seattle Nisei
our Takuwan Bowl cage
Seattl
"is or the Native Sons o
cagettes will prance out on tne I
That
’
s
easy!
it'll be
Hornet Hints
1 'rug’s counters
a walkaway. a mere warming-up for
maple floor to take on Vancouver,
Nippons. Fooled you
ie invading Hornets, last year's I lhat ^Tme Be seeing you at the game.
Amazons in the first recorded in
/. Courier Consolation champs, |h
ternational Nisei girls basket til
under playing manager Kenny KaIl ought to be good
Nine of them—ranging in age pvcuchi, Wid field a tough team,
from a mere 15 to sweet 18, and (despite some, crocked men. Willie
COFFEE SHOPPE
in height from five feet to 5-4— । Tahara, Roy Kurimura and oneunder the watchful eye of May | hand shot artist Tom Kubota, who
EVERYTHING TO EAT”
Daty, the manager, and Coaches I is Holding down the second slot in j
Roy Kurimura and Tom Kubota I in individual scoring in the Courier
l AA league, will start on the forward
FOUNTA IN SERVICE
of the Hornets.
,.
,, .
lime- Average height, >5.
Hot oft the press wires is the I c
t
.’Aunce dope on »-ho to look for ^"“Y
Y’11 D^Y a"d
AN IDEAL GARMENT
thedummutuebuth.ahscoungD
Y"?9
' make up
FOR SPRING WEAR
;**>il,(>ilJii|.l>il.l>(l.||l|,|n:,fl(),|u)jijj) )
Marv Tsuda and the steady play-ph°
string defence.
maker, Hideko Tsuboi, veteran for- ! Hornets called on their farm
@ For a
to Japan
wards at the game ,
Workina ।system t0 bring in reserves, Bryan
© For Outdoor Sports
with them is Mary Iwasaki, 5,4 i Honkawa, D-S, from Montana, a
zes on neat ''under i ^P^her from Wyoming, for
Wear
Footwear
And 3icentre, George Ono, only 18 but
bucket tricks .
stonewall defence of Renko FujiiJS!X feet m his socksT and Ed MuneWe have just received from
5 un Nakamura and Carol Daty , . J ^W/ flashy player from Yakima.
the East a large shipment
Carol, they say, has Kiide Shimizu I Look out' Canada, here come the
762 Granville St
of the very latest models
beat for coolness under fire . . j')ar|hs!
528 W. Hastings St
such as:
On the reserve line are Tomoko i The wise money boys ,though are
u')'mrim’im,im’j,tm'i'l’'i'i'u,imTu<ri
Shioto, Mane Aoki and Taeko Kun- i laying their bets on the local NipRAGLANS
mura ... |t all adds up to a team' P°ns. Lining up for Vancouver
; to watch from anv point of view
i will be Shige Ashikawa, flanked by
FINEST CAKES
GUARDS
I George Suzuki and Joe Akiyama,
"We've Got Oomph"
TUBES
, But Local experts have the situa- j Kiide Shimizu and Harry Nikaido
i
will
fill
in
the
guard
positions.
and up
• bon al Idoped out in favour of Van
SLIP-ONS
couver Amazons, whose first string
392 Powell St.
lot Marge Kusakabe, May Yoshinaka, George Ide, Kay Hirano and Jean
‘Mwe Nishikaze, Sallv Knaguchi and Inamoto.
Electric Blue, Teal, Light
Sey. 3933
They've
been
playing
together
all
Captain Akiko Yoshinaka average /
. ,
and Dark Greens, etc.
5-5, and tips the beam at ? . . s season in the Intermediate A league,
• and look like winners in a walk.
; Don't forget, Girls game at 7.30,
! price I De. In addition there are 40
preserved tickets at 25c on sale at
:Akiyama Hardware store, 368 Powell
CLOTHES SHOP
Y & 5
Harry's
Maikawa
Steveston
j
°~!
5
Locals Favoured Over Visiting
ALL WOOL
--
YA •
$19.50
Ssmdwg&i
ft-’r
HAIS BI VS
459 E. Hastings St,
High. 2132
TOP COAT
PRO-REC
NIPPONS WIN
Pro-Rec Nippons chalked up their
fourth win Wednesday night, when
Normal defaulted.
MATSUMIYA
AND NOSE
229 Powell St.