Page 1
Il
il
II
H
I’-
f
WYA/Ma TAXI
Evmour 1414
!f
5
The
Mew
Canadian
™E?.OICE of the second generation
MARCH 2°
^ eekly
Welfare Unit Has
JCCL SPEAKER
Newsfront
Vancouver Branch of
iss the organization or a
Council ot all British
fishermen. .March 2> n
Calgary Silk Firm
tic
Credit Unions ... In the tditor s '
- morning I found a very inc letter from our old friend i
attempt n
^evakawa, Vancouver-born Ni- j
a full time
<w professor of English at the ।
Institute in Chicago. Manyyhe emplovnlent pf
met him personally. I Canadian mrse
^^
,T ' " Japanese Contribution
H open .
।Honorary President
k
'Hospital highlighted the annual
with interest your report < general meeting of the Japanese I
ch S issue on a talk on ! Division ot the Vancouver Wel-iH
k-eperative Credit Unions, given tare Federation. March 21. ;
a pmfessor Norman Mackenzie of Nippon Club.
I
With Y. Uchida, president, in I
'Do
"As a member of two credit the chair, successful reports |
ior: and of several co-operative were heard from the treasurer :
j Moeres, I should like to urge the and on the many services pro- !
\ sei to follow Professor Macken- vided at the Japanese Clinic. I
aped
i s suggestion that you set up
Delegates
from
twenty-five 1
d\ groups and start such an or- community
organizations
win;
; amizstion. In fact, I think The New comprise the division for this I a ecu
J
Acadian might very well espouse year, it was decided at the meet
not only Credit Unions, but conIn addition a
com
.ers' co-operatives in general as mittee of eleven members
a means by which the Niseis may elected. The special commit lee
achieve a certain amount of eco includes B. Hisaoka. Dr. K. Shiumn
nomic self-determination and self- motakahara. Y. Uchida. S. Uchi
help.
da. J. M atanabe. R. Kuramitsu.
point
I’
'If 1 can help from this distance, Rev. K. Shimizu. E. Moriee. K.
Perhaps r
nny
let me know. There's a tremendous Goto, Y. Nakazawa. Mrs. T. Hylot to be gained, not only in eco- odo and a representative from
Japane
lass
wc advantages, but in increasing the JCCL.
ne received a cert it tea
ung
Executive Elected
fraternal relations with your fellowirst
The Japanese consul. Kenji Na I- itkushtma Society in
Canadians in the co-operative move
'ed.
kauchi was elected honorarv ot his splendid icork.
ment."
president, and E. Kaget.su presi
Ofien
’he idea of a credit union or con
iub
dent. Others on the executive are
sumers co-operative is no new thing
mht and ideals. I:
among us. Co-operative exchanges, ■ y. Uchida, Mrs. T. Hyodo. and
K. Kuramitsu, vice-presidents: Y.
en tor one goal':
combining the features of both, have
Nakazawa, treasurer; T. Hara, may becom good C
been highly developed among the .
farmers m the Fraser Valley. In the auditor: aand the JCCL repre tens—a ba
mopohtan c
nshtp.
See "WELFARE," Page 4
Citv itself, among the first genera
tion, we have the "tanomoshi"
cased upon similar principles.
Now, however, the problem is
one of organization among the
second generation. Their youth
and inexperience may make the
problem more difficult, yet this
AouM be more than offset by en
thusiasm and ambition.
4ome time ago'the National JCCL
•announced the formation of a comn!!uSe to undertake research into
3 mutual benefit savings plan. Here
yy genuinely constructive job for
yLjc.m a committee and for such an
-ation as the JCCL to under-
it
was To Canada
mej this week from Mr. Sugiura, ■
o will be in charge. The store, to '
be located in the Vancouver Block I
on Granville Street, will probably be;
pas
.in
pamphlet
is
'A Summary
the
Role
Placed
by
the Japanese in
Fishermen Center
the Development of the Canadian
On Policy
Commonwealth,"
the
pamphlet
Important questions of policy I traces in a concise manner the highconsidered by delegates fromJDbfs
over toe province at a general puh, pointing to the significant conmeeting of the Amalgamated /Asso jtributions on the part of this im
ciation of B. C. Fishermen, in Van- migrant group.
March
Present were
delegates from every fishing centre Visit Pacific Coast
in the province except the west
Bearing several hundred midshipcoast of Vancouver Island. Ques
tions of price bargaining, co-oper men of the naval academy at Euation with other unions, and organ jima in Hiroshima prefecture, the
"Katori" and "Kashima," two new
ization for the present season re
cruisers of the Japanese Im;
ceived consideration.
naval training squadron are expect
Delegates from the Amalgamated ed to arrive early this autumn on
Union including R. Ide, M. Noguchi,
the annual training cruise to Pacific
Hideo Onotera and Tatsuro Suzuki, Coast ports. Seattle, San Francisco
'attended the meeting called by the and San Pedro are included among
Pacific Coast fishermen's Union to the ports of call.
Sockeye Fishing Prospects Bright
According To Pre-Season Reports
, even optimistically to ;
\car.
nort hern
'OU them..... Strait
Juan —
ant rances to t he
met. at the mouth of the Fraser.
At The Second Annual B, C. Youth Congress
Delegates Discuss Problems Facing The Youth Of Canada
Accordingly, although those en
gaged in the industry are not ex
pecting a bumper catch, they are
of the opinion that 1940 should
be a good year, especially in view
of
tiie poor run last year.
remarkable unanimity
Advocate Citizenship, Equal Opportunity For The Nisei
nIatlt'rs yet a
on issues' of
a ton1 member-hinGf^"1'
d C C®al
rW'.’seHting 72 youth organizations with
LCAM™^^
Ibe Vancouver Normal School last
week-end for a four-dav
problems common to all Canadian Youth.
Dividing- tip into four
. Yp^Tmissions on World Affairs, Economic Problems, Social Problems
Community and Cultural Problems, the delegates went into the details of maitv
However, unless fishermen
get an increase in the price of
fish in proportion to the recent
increase in the price of gear
and equipment, even a good run
will not help them materially.
knotty questions and presented
I At present, the steelhead sal
their findings to the Congress at specify any aggressor state.
way of Canadian citizens of mon season is waning fast. Spring
Golden Mean . . . Trade Union- large in the plenary session.
5. Congress firmly believed that I ?‘,enta* Parenta9e in civil serv- sR111011 ’s .still providing good
Among
the
findings
were:
the suppression of prostitution ilces’ the teacDing, legal and phar- fishing. The season for sockeye,
eyen the most intelligent of
did
not stop the spread of social jmaceutical professions.
the most valuable of the species’
1.
Economic
motives
were
para
I
h^655 me 3S ^e'n9 guilty of
r' Ewing In his speech at the mount in the causes of war.
disease! and that economic fac-i* ^ Recognizing economic ills as will set in about the third week
I MR ^ngrEss, describes as "ar2. The congress was unanimous tors formed the root of the evil.Hle diiet causes of delinquency. of July and be over by the middle
1RveDpment." Their ideologi in its opposition to conscription
6. It was agreed that the fran-.!ll° congress believed that the of August.
es absorb so much of their at this time: a substantial ma chise should be extended to in J extension of community organizene
What they seem to have only jority was opposed to conscrip elude all Canadian citizens ofRations providing recreational, so-ulook on life, they see things tion under any circumstances.
i cial and cultural activities would I
Oriental parentage.
smv one point of view
of
ibe ai vital factor in preventing
3. The Youth Congress Move
7. The Congress felt that the (such delinquency.
A three square meals a day.
ment must continue to be a pillar
Notices of the expiration of
regulations made under the War!
Nisei, on the other hand, upholding
democratic
freedom
OPENING SPEECH
subscriptions have been mailed
Measures Act are excessively re-1
W RUally 3S guiiE except that and liberties in Canada.
A speech opening the dramapressive and that they strike at!
to all out-of-town subscribers of
development has been along
if
4. In passing the recommenda- the very foundations of Canadian packed four-day session was
The New Canadian. March 31
I RR o. athletics and social relaxa- tion that ‘-Canada should boycott
made by guest speaker Mayor
democracy.
Popular
movements
M and they look at life only from and
marks the end of our first fiscal
should place an embargo on must not be restrained in the dis Telford who exhorted t’ne young
My onlV h°Pe Dr the all products from aggressor states
year, and it is necessary to col
people not to underrate them
and ifs a very strong and supplies of war materials to such cussion of matters of public con
lect all past due subscription fees
selves and to think out the prob
cern.
Va
L ^nope, is that increasing years states.”, the delegates were al
immediately in order to close our
8. It recorded its opposition to lems of life for themselves by
-r,n9 maturity, whether they most unanimous in refusing to
books. Please mail your fees to
the barriers now placed in the!
See "CONGRESS," Page 4
or not, and its quite imposisi!
The New Canadian, 396 Powell
Ve matUrity' witho”t some
Street as soon as possible. Our
1 A? t ” *i«tem- But rhen | won.
..ow many Nisei wan, ,Q be
continued
publication
depends
8 wise
To Our Subscribers’
Your Nisei Paper Depends Upon Your Subscription
upon your subscription fee more
than upon anything else.
il
II
H
I’-
f
WYA/Ma TAXI
Evmour 1414
!f
5
The
Mew
Canadian
™E?.OICE of the second generation
MARCH 2°
^ eekly
Welfare Unit Has
JCCL SPEAKER
Newsfront
Vancouver Branch of
iss the organization or a
Council ot all British
fishermen. .March 2> n
Calgary Silk Firm
tic
Credit Unions ... In the tditor s '
- morning I found a very inc letter from our old friend i
attempt n
^evakawa, Vancouver-born Ni- j
a full time
<w professor of English at the ।
Institute in Chicago. Manyyhe emplovnlent pf
met him personally. I Canadian mrse
^^
,T ' " Japanese Contribution
H open .
।Honorary President
k
'Hospital highlighted the annual
with interest your report < general meeting of the Japanese I
ch S issue on a talk on ! Division ot the Vancouver Wel-iH
k-eperative Credit Unions, given tare Federation. March 21. ;
a pmfessor Norman Mackenzie of Nippon Club.
I
With Y. Uchida, president, in I
'Do
"As a member of two credit the chair, successful reports |
ior: and of several co-operative were heard from the treasurer :
j Moeres, I should like to urge the and on the many services pro- !
\ sei to follow Professor Macken- vided at the Japanese Clinic. I
aped
i s suggestion that you set up
Delegates
from
twenty-five 1
d\ groups and start such an or- community
organizations
win;
; amizstion. In fact, I think The New comprise the division for this I a ecu
J
Acadian might very well espouse year, it was decided at the meet
not only Credit Unions, but conIn addition a
com
.ers' co-operatives in general as mittee of eleven members
a means by which the Niseis may elected. The special commit lee
achieve a certain amount of eco includes B. Hisaoka. Dr. K. Shiumn
nomic self-determination and self- motakahara. Y. Uchida. S. Uchi
help.
da. J. M atanabe. R. Kuramitsu.
point
I’
'If 1 can help from this distance, Rev. K. Shimizu. E. Moriee. K.
Perhaps r
nny
let me know. There's a tremendous Goto, Y. Nakazawa. Mrs. T. Hylot to be gained, not only in eco- odo and a representative from
Japane
lass
wc advantages, but in increasing the JCCL.
ne received a cert it tea
ung
Executive Elected
fraternal relations with your fellowirst
The Japanese consul. Kenji Na I- itkushtma Society in
Canadians in the co-operative move
'ed.
kauchi was elected honorarv ot his splendid icork.
ment."
president, and E. Kaget.su presi
Ofien
’he idea of a credit union or con
iub
dent. Others on the executive are
sumers co-operative is no new thing
mht and ideals. I:
among us. Co-operative exchanges, ■ y. Uchida, Mrs. T. Hyodo. and
K. Kuramitsu, vice-presidents: Y.
en tor one goal':
combining the features of both, have
Nakazawa, treasurer; T. Hara, may becom good C
been highly developed among the .
farmers m the Fraser Valley. In the auditor: aand the JCCL repre tens—a ba
mopohtan c
nshtp.
See "WELFARE," Page 4
Citv itself, among the first genera
tion, we have the "tanomoshi"
cased upon similar principles.
Now, however, the problem is
one of organization among the
second generation. Their youth
and inexperience may make the
problem more difficult, yet this
AouM be more than offset by en
thusiasm and ambition.
4ome time ago'the National JCCL
•announced the formation of a comn!!uSe to undertake research into
3 mutual benefit savings plan. Here
yy genuinely constructive job for
yLjc.m a committee and for such an
-ation as the JCCL to under-
it
was To Canada
mej this week from Mr. Sugiura, ■
o will be in charge. The store, to '
be located in the Vancouver Block I
on Granville Street, will probably be;
pas
.in
pamphlet
is
'A Summary
the
Role
Placed
by
the Japanese in
Fishermen Center
the Development of the Canadian
On Policy
Commonwealth,"
the
pamphlet
Important questions of policy I traces in a concise manner the highconsidered by delegates fromJDbfs
over toe province at a general puh, pointing to the significant conmeeting of the Amalgamated /Asso jtributions on the part of this im
ciation of B. C. Fishermen, in Van- migrant group.
March
Present were
delegates from every fishing centre Visit Pacific Coast
in the province except the west
Bearing several hundred midshipcoast of Vancouver Island. Ques
tions of price bargaining, co-oper men of the naval academy at Euation with other unions, and organ jima in Hiroshima prefecture, the
"Katori" and "Kashima," two new
ization for the present season re
cruisers of the Japanese Im;
ceived consideration.
naval training squadron are expect
Delegates from the Amalgamated ed to arrive early this autumn on
Union including R. Ide, M. Noguchi,
the annual training cruise to Pacific
Hideo Onotera and Tatsuro Suzuki, Coast ports. Seattle, San Francisco
'attended the meeting called by the and San Pedro are included among
Pacific Coast fishermen's Union to the ports of call.
Sockeye Fishing Prospects Bright
According To Pre-Season Reports
, even optimistically to ;
\car.
nort hern
'OU them..... Strait
Juan —
ant rances to t he
met. at the mouth of the Fraser.
At The Second Annual B, C. Youth Congress
Delegates Discuss Problems Facing The Youth Of Canada
Accordingly, although those en
gaged in the industry are not ex
pecting a bumper catch, they are
of the opinion that 1940 should
be a good year, especially in view
of
tiie poor run last year.
remarkable unanimity
Advocate Citizenship, Equal Opportunity For The Nisei
nIatlt'rs yet a
on issues' of
a ton1 member-hinGf^"1'
d C C®al
rW'.’seHting 72 youth organizations with
LCAM™^^
Ibe Vancouver Normal School last
week-end for a four-dav
problems common to all Canadian Youth.
Dividing- tip into four
. Yp^Tmissions on World Affairs, Economic Problems, Social Problems
Community and Cultural Problems, the delegates went into the details of maitv
However, unless fishermen
get an increase in the price of
fish in proportion to the recent
increase in the price of gear
and equipment, even a good run
will not help them materially.
knotty questions and presented
I At present, the steelhead sal
their findings to the Congress at specify any aggressor state.
way of Canadian citizens of mon season is waning fast. Spring
Golden Mean . . . Trade Union- large in the plenary session.
5. Congress firmly believed that I ?‘,enta* Parenta9e in civil serv- sR111011 ’s .still providing good
Among
the
findings
were:
the suppression of prostitution ilces’ the teacDing, legal and phar- fishing. The season for sockeye,
eyen the most intelligent of
did
not stop the spread of social jmaceutical professions.
the most valuable of the species’
1.
Economic
motives
were
para
I
h^655 me 3S ^e'n9 guilty of
r' Ewing In his speech at the mount in the causes of war.
disease! and that economic fac-i* ^ Recognizing economic ills as will set in about the third week
I MR ^ngrEss, describes as "ar2. The congress was unanimous tors formed the root of the evil.Hle diiet causes of delinquency. of July and be over by the middle
1RveDpment." Their ideologi in its opposition to conscription
6. It was agreed that the fran-.!ll° congress believed that the of August.
es absorb so much of their at this time: a substantial ma chise should be extended to in J extension of community organizene
What they seem to have only jority was opposed to conscrip elude all Canadian citizens ofRations providing recreational, so-ulook on life, they see things tion under any circumstances.
i cial and cultural activities would I
Oriental parentage.
smv one point of view
of
ibe ai vital factor in preventing
3. The Youth Congress Move
7. The Congress felt that the (such delinquency.
A three square meals a day.
ment must continue to be a pillar
Notices of the expiration of
regulations made under the War!
Nisei, on the other hand, upholding
democratic
freedom
OPENING SPEECH
subscriptions have been mailed
Measures Act are excessively re-1
W RUally 3S guiiE except that and liberties in Canada.
A speech opening the dramapressive and that they strike at!
to all out-of-town subscribers of
development has been along
if
4. In passing the recommenda- the very foundations of Canadian packed four-day session was
The New Canadian. March 31
I RR o. athletics and social relaxa- tion that ‘-Canada should boycott
made by guest speaker Mayor
democracy.
Popular
movements
M and they look at life only from and
marks the end of our first fiscal
should place an embargo on must not be restrained in the dis Telford who exhorted t’ne young
My onlV h°Pe Dr the all products from aggressor states
year, and it is necessary to col
people not to underrate them
and ifs a very strong and supplies of war materials to such cussion of matters of public con
lect all past due subscription fees
selves and to think out the prob
cern.
Va
L ^nope, is that increasing years states.”, the delegates were al
immediately in order to close our
8. It recorded its opposition to lems of life for themselves by
-r,n9 maturity, whether they most unanimous in refusing to
books. Please mail your fees to
the barriers now placed in the!
See "CONGRESS," Page 4
or not, and its quite imposisi!
The New Canadian, 396 Powell
Ve matUrity' witho”t some
Street as soon as possible. Our
1 A? t ” *i«tem- But rhen | won.
..ow many Nisei wan, ,Q be
continued
publication
depends
8 wise
To Our Subscribers’
Your Nisei Paper Depends Upon Your Subscription
upon your subscription fee more
than upon anything else.
Page 2
MARCH
D-
Jim* J^ew
C«HMMiiaii
The Vanguard of Nisei Opinion
f t
! 1
STAFF
'CCS
lira. Yoshimirsu Hinns
ip Uchida. Minoru Yai:
b
BUSINESS MANAGER
Edward T. Ouchi
. rohiMi expediency as
Self-Interest Agree
(An editorial in the S. C. Teacher,
Teachers' Federation, March
1940.)
off
:iped
ha nets
BrWte CotemRip
Tvn Fas not as vet
n'lv committed its
Fed-
or our o
!these sar
TAIYO PRINTING CO.. 230 ALEXANDER STREET
p
ro any cen- were pu
■' c s
Registered as second-class matter at Ottawa, February 13,
ns
relabve to,, that mus
1939, under the Postal Regulations of Canada.
duates of our schools who ;
^1-JI. M.
ETHICAL QUESTION
are of Oriental
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In rhe opin- ,
ion of the Ed
25c per month; One year S2.50 in advance
ume is fast m crion °r ■
should
puti^
’
^^eplac.
approaching v.
t
we
ourselves on record and bring such ' 9rH 3 ,r' 15
influence to bear as may hasten the ' ,noe'ensible. Cn.
' er is
solution of this difficult problem,
n9,llt'
"Aha
Japan is now faced with the
we u
solution that will be at once fai/to'hat men should
inosi
critical
problems
she ever
Canada has emerged united as never before in the
Canadians as a whole and fair to ^M S° S° them;
tackled. She must not only dis"C
these cur fellow countrymen who, °' fhe ProPNts/'
gravest election our nation has faced in many years. pose of ilie China affair.
^ybe
must through no fault of their own find 'S nOt yet reaA
Democracy again has had its day, and spoke out strongly also adjust her relations but
with the memselves unwelcome aliens in the. %ee °^ COnsonance j
in favour of the administration in whose hands have lain foreign powers. If the government
land of their birth. At present their! etP'CS °f Jesus and a j
the reins of government during the past five years. The adheres strictly to the principles
position appears to be worsenina
। 'Ve to the 0nen is
press throughout the country has related the significance and the spirit of the Remove rather than bettering and unques-!m’CSt'
statement, the Chinese will real tionably there is peril, accentuated^
The Oriental question i„ Brill
of the election to Canada.
ize the futility of keeping up its by unhappy world conditions, that! T, Ef^kia 'nvolves East lndlan
But wherein lies the particular significance of
ami-Japanese resistance, while social tensions may result in an in-I
the election to Canadian-born Chinese and Japanese,
the United States will undoubtedcreasing sense of grievance on thej Canadran-born children, but it „
ly reconsider its attitude toward □art of a perplexed and powerless, c acf.y 2 matter of vhaf
m
who, through no fault of their own, were denied the
the
treatyless
situation
with minority and a decreasing capacity! to co as regards second 9fflM.
right to share in entrusting this mandate to their gov
Japan.
for disinterested judgment on the bon Japanese Canadians.
ernment? Wherein is the result of the election par
Territorial Integrity
. .
Neither those who are nerve<
part of an equally. perplexed
but!
If
Japan
’
s
fundamental
attitude
ticularly significant to this unique group of citizens
powerful majority.
i
pmut
Japanese infhTraticn nor tr^
toward C( hina contains nothing
Last month "The B. C. Teach- !
atude toward the OrM
who followed the electon campaign with keenest per
designed io compromise the iner
published a rather remark I is either more sympathetic
sonal interest?
dependen e and territorial integ- able essay by a brilliant Victoria ; more indifferent will
The election demonstrated that we, as a nation in irity of that country, her claim to schoolgirl, Miss Mavis Yuasa, that j nor—which is much more1 impor
Canada, are rising above the difficulties which history and priority in the management of must have evoked the sympathy jant will Canada gain, ।bv the
■prises will be of sec- and respect of all its readers. | ignoring relevant evidence,
geography have placed in the realization of a democratic
importance and will hard- jMess Yausa's message to her fel j minded people are to come I
nation. It demonstrated that as Canadians we are surely
y the existence of a non- low Japanese Canadians is that । ment, they must lav asid ma
Hsing to the' task of building a nation, of overcoming the treaty situation between Japan they must become increasingly prejudice, whether favo
economic, racial and geographical differences that impede and the United Slates. Moreover, Canadian and decreasingly Japan I favourable, and give rreal studv
11 relations with China are adese.
If that objective is to be i this serious problem; rnot see ini
our progress toward the realization of that task.
justed amicably. Great Britain and attained, contribution must be j? it rthings that are not there and nr
And it re-affirms the firm belief of the Canadian France. now
Yed in the made by Canadians of Occidental ? re US'n9 tO see anytbing that is
people in the principles of government that must accept Europea'n war. wi
! point of fact involved.
e content to origin.
every citizen as an integral part of the nation, that must leave the Far Er
The Editor is well aware that this!
FOLD ICS AND ECONOMICS
as such for
deny every form of discrimination whether based upon the present time.
,S fuH of dynamite and)
As one of the powers bordemf
Japan
may
find
..at
he
will
be
adversely
criticised
He
Pacific, thee home
’
a good lesson
race, creed, or class, if our unity is to grow even stronoer
of an Occ-t
in an article by Walter Lippman by some for attempting to bring it dental people fate..,
J
than it has today.
cing
Oriental
neic:
which points out that rapproche- into the open.
However, he, like bours, Canada occupie
ment with the Soviet Union would others, must do his duty as he sees world
world importance.
importance. Or
prove a dangerous policy for Jap- it; and he finds it no part of that! serious danger threatening the woA
pm Mr. Lippman also states that{ to maintain unbroken silence is the development of unfriendly
| “Japan would find a more at- in the face of wrong. And wrong is ।lations between the. White Race art
In a iecent issue of the Saanich news, a publication!Hractive and safer alternative bv being done. It may have been an the peoples of the East'
8HG TA
issued to,- the benefit of residents in the Saanich district turning to the United States who error to admit as immigrants the geographical position i.H
involves Car
adjacent to Victoria, appears an article with the bitter undoubtedly would be willing- to parents of these unhappy young ada in a grave responsibility for
meet Japan halfway in the gem Canadians; it may with possible jus prevention of such a calamity.
complaint that competition from Japanese fai
has oral ettorts to establish a genuine tice be argued that they should be
That the economic prosperity t
taken export and domestic markets from thermers
Saanich
new order in Asia. Though some honestly indemnified for the econ British Columbia is dependent upcfarmers.
' - mm leans would object, the ma omic loss incidental to exile and
good relations with Oriental people!
The writer the manager of a Saanich co-operative jority would support, a project of should be shipped overseas to who in general and with the Japanese
peace in China, which. while ^ will have them; but the writer does
in particular, all serious students cf
suggests that The government should subsidize the white
not feel called upon here and now
storing China’s sovereign tv
commerce
recognize and, to put the
would
producer to a certain price level, especially when this new
,n^jcate in anV detail how he
Japan’s special
thing on the lowest grounds, ary
Posi- himself at present thinks the riddle
TT TT9 H th!S T'rCe ,S a" Spmt in thi9 country tion.”
default of courtesy and friendliness
could best be solved; but he is contn h T T T'^U whose Tear'S could be expended
If the United States is
on our part toward the Japanese;
pre- vmced beyond appeal that policies
r.o
r . IE, Brlf,sh nav>' ,rom convoyrng our fruit to pared to make mutual
within our gates will inevitably ecT
and a^iti°n and rightly militate to our disadvantac^’4
sions and co-operate in
era! efforts toward the
° domest,c Happiness and
in dealing with the Japanese ovei-||
h is just this vicious type of war-mongering that
struction of the new
7
f°r honest W°H, first seas.
ia
|
order and is wiHino t
' chHdren of Oriental imhas done so much to rouse racial feeling and ill-will
Ethics, political expediency d ij
i ognize Japan's special^
m'9rantS as hke as Possible to those
self-interest
for once agree.
”“3
in British Columbia, and one who attempts to bolster
! in China with S^^
JAPAN, CHINA and
NATIONAL UNITY
UNITED STATES
ORIENTAL COMPETITION
ft
an untenable position with an appeal to prejudice in
this manner is doing his country a grave disservice.
Especially is this true in times like the present, when
Canada has a need for friend's in Asia rather than
^9nty restored, as stated by
Mr. L.ppman, much can’be ex
pected.
I
a mutter
m
T
। Editoig The New Canadian —.
Editor,.
The New
Canadian
(wants only -i
Ct' Japan Dear Sir: Your article on page tea
Q,
(position neeetj ^ special seven of your issue of March B i°“r S"':.W 1
enemies, and a need for national unity and goodwill
i cere thanks to you for
Kher natiX^
^ Eliminates
rather than for national unity and ill-will.
iarticle in “The New Can ii T
in th^smilff °ff the imPortance' of the Japanese farmer (m.dXtandiJiU Jb^jU' uda" ™ a““ud<T0»
Can Men’s Lives Be Cha1
, ' sn’aH-f|ru,ts industry ,s admittedly true. But it is al8t«« may tent* >J
'lted L T "ew*w>*r for some time I This is a forward step in <
position that has been won by dint of hard and enduring te Bni "'hat is especially reach' It . . .
i nalism in which 1 will back
a
labour, of unceasing pioneering and battle against the j" at "le pD’sent moment
s when those ’ a hundred per cent.
I
am
most
grateful
that
vagar.es of nature; of constant fortitude in the face ofm^J" M°"'aBt" of iKtN«St™etif *J vote can get
have access to a program oi mo XtaW'”'^
dTOpmnt Of ^*nced|the kX^1?6
of Hates and do not confine
J re-armament, through listening^
T'f1 k
'"
6 P
0,1 °f 3 hi9hly retable-United slmes oTT '^
'God, which can unite us al! abte
PrOdUCt
Tottld abandon
« LT ^LK ““ 1*“ ^rows, the tind ,I party, race or creed.
f„rmPT= r0Th f??'"* PF^f T °" the part of -teanese prejudices and A.?! Japa,’ML K®™^^^
Yours for this new
y’l'mtheticR- Ideals that we ought to up- jCanada. Best wishes to •'The >'J
.consideration
to
rim
u^e tOta . wfa*^°^ the province has been in- ^‘fe^5 t?1-Se "“ Hone /‘hold
hen be
will prevail, and we shall L
I Canadian.”
creased, the standard of Jiving of domestic and prairie
fit for the lasting peace
j
(Miss) Marion Watson
in
'
consumers has been raised, and benefits brought to the -Pacific. piomise or ppeace
at
home
Le ln Cue
and abroad that we all
J 2689 Mathers Ave.,
desire.
consumers in export markets.
Id
Contemporary Japan.
i West Vancouver.
A. B. Carev.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
nmiiimiiitiwi',1
D-
Jim* J^ew
C«HMMiiaii
The Vanguard of Nisei Opinion
f t
! 1
STAFF
'CCS
lira. Yoshimirsu Hinns
ip Uchida. Minoru Yai:
b
BUSINESS MANAGER
Edward T. Ouchi
. rohiMi expediency as
Self-Interest Agree
(An editorial in the S. C. Teacher,
Teachers' Federation, March
1940.)
off
:iped
ha nets
BrWte CotemRip
Tvn Fas not as vet
n'lv committed its
Fed-
or our o
!these sar
TAIYO PRINTING CO.. 230 ALEXANDER STREET
p
ro any cen- were pu
■' c s
Registered as second-class matter at Ottawa, February 13,
ns
relabve to,, that mus
1939, under the Postal Regulations of Canada.
duates of our schools who ;
^1-JI. M.
ETHICAL QUESTION
are of Oriental
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In rhe opin- ,
ion of the Ed
25c per month; One year S2.50 in advance
ume is fast m crion °r ■
should
puti^
’
^^eplac.
approaching v.
t
we
ourselves on record and bring such ' 9rH 3 ,r' 15
influence to bear as may hasten the ' ,noe'ensible. Cn.
' er is
solution of this difficult problem,
n9,llt'
"Aha
Japan is now faced with the
we u
solution that will be at once fai/to'hat men should
inosi
critical
problems
she ever
Canada has emerged united as never before in the
Canadians as a whole and fair to ^M S° S° them;
tackled. She must not only dis"C
these cur fellow countrymen who, °' fhe ProPNts/'
gravest election our nation has faced in many years. pose of ilie China affair.
^ybe
must through no fault of their own find 'S nOt yet reaA
Democracy again has had its day, and spoke out strongly also adjust her relations but
with the memselves unwelcome aliens in the. %ee °^ COnsonance j
in favour of the administration in whose hands have lain foreign powers. If the government
land of their birth. At present their! etP'CS °f Jesus and a j
the reins of government during the past five years. The adheres strictly to the principles
position appears to be worsenina
। 'Ve to the 0nen is
press throughout the country has related the significance and the spirit of the Remove rather than bettering and unques-!m’CSt'
statement, the Chinese will real tionably there is peril, accentuated^
The Oriental question i„ Brill
of the election to Canada.
ize the futility of keeping up its by unhappy world conditions, that! T, Ef^kia 'nvolves East lndlan
But wherein lies the particular significance of
ami-Japanese resistance, while social tensions may result in an in-I
the election to Canadian-born Chinese and Japanese,
the United States will undoubtedcreasing sense of grievance on thej Canadran-born children, but it „
ly reconsider its attitude toward □art of a perplexed and powerless, c acf.y 2 matter of vhaf
m
who, through no fault of their own, were denied the
the
treatyless
situation
with minority and a decreasing capacity! to co as regards second 9fflM.
right to share in entrusting this mandate to their gov
Japan.
for disinterested judgment on the bon Japanese Canadians.
ernment? Wherein is the result of the election par
Territorial Integrity
. .
Neither those who are nerve<
part of an equally. perplexed
but!
If
Japan
’
s
fundamental
attitude
ticularly significant to this unique group of citizens
powerful majority.
i
pmut
Japanese infhTraticn nor tr^
toward C( hina contains nothing
Last month "The B. C. Teach- !
atude toward the OrM
who followed the electon campaign with keenest per
designed io compromise the iner
published a rather remark I is either more sympathetic
sonal interest?
dependen e and territorial integ- able essay by a brilliant Victoria ; more indifferent will
The election demonstrated that we, as a nation in irity of that country, her claim to schoolgirl, Miss Mavis Yuasa, that j nor—which is much more1 impor
Canada, are rising above the difficulties which history and priority in the management of must have evoked the sympathy jant will Canada gain, ।bv the
■prises will be of sec- and respect of all its readers. | ignoring relevant evidence,
geography have placed in the realization of a democratic
importance and will hard- jMess Yausa's message to her fel j minded people are to come I
nation. It demonstrated that as Canadians we are surely
y the existence of a non- low Japanese Canadians is that । ment, they must lav asid ma
Hsing to the' task of building a nation, of overcoming the treaty situation between Japan they must become increasingly prejudice, whether favo
economic, racial and geographical differences that impede and the United Slates. Moreover, Canadian and decreasingly Japan I favourable, and give rreal studv
11 relations with China are adese.
If that objective is to be i this serious problem; rnot see ini
our progress toward the realization of that task.
justed amicably. Great Britain and attained, contribution must be j? it rthings that are not there and nr
And it re-affirms the firm belief of the Canadian France. now
Yed in the made by Canadians of Occidental ? re US'n9 tO see anytbing that is
people in the principles of government that must accept Europea'n war. wi
! point of fact involved.
e content to origin.
every citizen as an integral part of the nation, that must leave the Far Er
The Editor is well aware that this!
FOLD ICS AND ECONOMICS
as such for
deny every form of discrimination whether based upon the present time.
,S fuH of dynamite and)
As one of the powers bordemf
Japan
may
find
..at
he
will
be
adversely
criticised
He
Pacific, thee home
’
a good lesson
race, creed, or class, if our unity is to grow even stronoer
of an Occ-t
in an article by Walter Lippman by some for attempting to bring it dental people fate..,
J
than it has today.
cing
Oriental
neic:
which points out that rapproche- into the open.
However, he, like bours, Canada occupie
ment with the Soviet Union would others, must do his duty as he sees world
world importance.
importance. Or
prove a dangerous policy for Jap- it; and he finds it no part of that! serious danger threatening the woA
pm Mr. Lippman also states that{ to maintain unbroken silence is the development of unfriendly
| “Japan would find a more at- in the face of wrong. And wrong is ।lations between the. White Race art
In a iecent issue of the Saanich news, a publication!Hractive and safer alternative bv being done. It may have been an the peoples of the East'
8HG TA
issued to,- the benefit of residents in the Saanich district turning to the United States who error to admit as immigrants the geographical position i.H
involves Car
adjacent to Victoria, appears an article with the bitter undoubtedly would be willing- to parents of these unhappy young ada in a grave responsibility for
meet Japan halfway in the gem Canadians; it may with possible jus prevention of such a calamity.
complaint that competition from Japanese fai
has oral ettorts to establish a genuine tice be argued that they should be
That the economic prosperity t
taken export and domestic markets from thermers
Saanich
new order in Asia. Though some honestly indemnified for the econ British Columbia is dependent upcfarmers.
' - mm leans would object, the ma omic loss incidental to exile and
good relations with Oriental people!
The writer the manager of a Saanich co-operative jority would support, a project of should be shipped overseas to who in general and with the Japanese
peace in China, which. while ^ will have them; but the writer does
in particular, all serious students cf
suggests that The government should subsidize the white
not feel called upon here and now
storing China’s sovereign tv
commerce
recognize and, to put the
would
producer to a certain price level, especially when this new
,n^jcate in anV detail how he
Japan’s special
thing on the lowest grounds, ary
Posi- himself at present thinks the riddle
TT TT9 H th!S T'rCe ,S a" Spmt in thi9 country tion.”
default of courtesy and friendliness
could best be solved; but he is contn h T T T'^U whose Tear'S could be expended
If the United States is
on our part toward the Japanese;
pre- vmced beyond appeal that policies
r.o
r . IE, Brlf,sh nav>' ,rom convoyrng our fruit to pared to make mutual
within our gates will inevitably ecT
and a^iti°n and rightly militate to our disadvantac^’4
sions and co-operate in
era! efforts toward the
° domest,c Happiness and
in dealing with the Japanese ovei-||
h is just this vicious type of war-mongering that
struction of the new
7
f°r honest W°H, first seas.
ia
|
order and is wiHino t
' chHdren of Oriental imhas done so much to rouse racial feeling and ill-will
Ethics, political expediency d ij
i ognize Japan's special^
m'9rantS as hke as Possible to those
self-interest
for once agree.
”“3
in British Columbia, and one who attempts to bolster
! in China with S^^
JAPAN, CHINA and
NATIONAL UNITY
UNITED STATES
ORIENTAL COMPETITION
ft
an untenable position with an appeal to prejudice in
this manner is doing his country a grave disservice.
Especially is this true in times like the present, when
Canada has a need for friend's in Asia rather than
^9nty restored, as stated by
Mr. L.ppman, much can’be ex
pected.
I
a mutter
m
T
। Editoig The New Canadian —.
Editor,.
The New
Canadian
(wants only -i
Ct' Japan Dear Sir: Your article on page tea
Q,
(position neeetj ^ special seven of your issue of March B i°“r S"':.W 1
enemies, and a need for national unity and goodwill
i cere thanks to you for
Kher natiX^
^ Eliminates
rather than for national unity and ill-will.
iarticle in “The New Can ii T
in th^smilff °ff the imPortance' of the Japanese farmer (m.dXtandiJiU Jb^jU' uda" ™ a““ud<T0»
Can Men’s Lives Be Cha1
, ' sn’aH-f|ru,ts industry ,s admittedly true. But it is al8t«« may tent* >J
'lted L T "ew*w>*r for some time I This is a forward step in <
position that has been won by dint of hard and enduring te Bni "'hat is especially reach' It . . .
i nalism in which 1 will back
a
labour, of unceasing pioneering and battle against the j" at "le pD’sent moment
s when those ’ a hundred per cent.
I
am
most
grateful
that
vagar.es of nature; of constant fortitude in the face ofm^J" M°"'aBt" of iKtN«St™etif *J vote can get
have access to a program oi mo XtaW'”'^
dTOpmnt Of ^*nced|the kX^1?6
of Hates and do not confine
J re-armament, through listening^
T'f1 k
'"
6 P
0,1 °f 3 hi9hly retable-United slmes oTT '^
'God, which can unite us al! abte
PrOdUCt
Tottld abandon
« LT ^LK ““ 1*“ ^rows, the tind ,I party, race or creed.
f„rmPT= r0Th f??'"* PF^f T °" the part of -teanese prejudices and A.?! Japa,’ML K®™^^^
Yours for this new
y’l'mtheticR- Ideals that we ought to up- jCanada. Best wishes to •'The >'J
.consideration
to
rim
u^e tOta . wfa*^°^ the province has been in- ^‘fe^5 t?1-Se "“ Hone /‘hold
hen be
will prevail, and we shall L
I Canadian.”
creased, the standard of Jiving of domestic and prairie
fit for the lasting peace
j
(Miss) Marion Watson
in
'
consumers has been raised, and benefits brought to the -Pacific. piomise or ppeace
at
home
Le ln Cue
and abroad that we all
J 2689 Mathers Ave.,
desire.
consumers in export markets.
Id
Contemporary Japan.
i West Vancouver.
A. B. Carev.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
nmiiimiiitiwi',1
Page 3
l
'6
1940
THE NEW CANADIAN
Problems Discussed At First
ho w
vv Conference in C«
ide Local J apanese School
WINS TRIUMPH
Eighty-two Graduates Win Diplomas
c
I apanes
w
! heir
y Discussions
In addition, one hundred one
boys and girls received recogn it ion for finishing the pres-
:i i t h e
X nple. when both first
a generation joined in
Since 1936-37. Japanese im-mens on Nisei prob- ports into China
have more
m nl speaker was .Rev. than doubled. Japan is
now
^i 'tile, while Tom Ina- easily that country's largest
• '' i ^denr of the Vancou- supplier, latest trade figures
1 ’ p’efaeed the delibera- disclose. She overtook the Unitwna a speech on "What the ed States in this respect in
Do." Many varied. 1938.
heard on problems
In 1936. America furnished
, ’"-hip war and peace, lan19.6 per cent of China's total
„ ’nd so forth.
imports. In 1937 this percentn
In me morning, Mr. S. Aoki,
age was maintained, but in 1938
or incipal of the Meiwa Language . it dropped to 16.9 per cent and
is
i PRIME MINISTER KING
School. addressed the confer
latest calculations show that
ence. stressing the contribution
for 1939 America provided only I
Returned to office with a
mat
the
second
generation
15.9 per cent of imports into
sweeping majority, the Rt. Hon,
could make to the culture of
China.
William Lyon Mackenzie King
western countries, and urging
I
above)
won a great triumph in
Japan in 1936 furnished 16.3
them to be on the alert to fulper cent of Chinese imports. In i the Federal election, that saw
fill this task.
the record of his war admin
1937 this figure declined to 15.7
Social Enjoyed
istration completely vindicated
per cent. But in 1938, her grip
in
a Liberal landslide that sur
I'he conference began Friday. beginning to be established.
prised the country.
i'll a welcome supper at the ; Japan suddenly rose to 23.5 per
Fuji.
by the local Nichiren ; cent, and 1939 showed a closelv
Among the older first genera
Church. Visiting delegates. led by : similar figure of 23.3 per cent.
tion Japanese residents there
Miss Alice Kawasaki of Portland
are many who still remember
Miss Miyoko
the
Prime Minister, when he
of'
attle. presented group skits and
came out to British Columbia
; in the social which followed
over thirty years ago, a young
a: the Temple.
man just starting out in his
career, to investigate the antiVancouver's team of Miss HaTOKA 0.—Due to lack of suitruKo Inaba. Tose Watanabe, and'able housing facilities for the in- Oriental riots in September,
Miisuye Inaba, won their own cup creasing number of Nisei stud- 1907. It was due in large part to
t le meal club in the table'ents who are studying in this ‘‘the great skill, unvarying pa
tience and urbanity” of the Mr.
ms tournament.. In the indivCcity, the American bureau of the
Dual matches Geotge Isosnima Foreign Office is planning to King of those days, that the
"'ii the championship, followed build a large dormitory with an serious affair was brought to a
T \atherme Oka, Mr. Hachiya, estimated expenditure of 500.000 satisfactory settlement, with
damages being awarded to Jap
■<”tland. and Alice Kawasaki, ven.
anese and Chinese who had sufinland.
j
e
’ ,
.
Mr- Hshizawa. chief of the fured property damage in the
^atmuax evening a banquet and ^American Bureau is now working riots.
a.uacted main friends, and mii the details of the project,
eu Sunday the visitors were con-Avhich would make the dormitory
an extensive tour of a centre for the 3000 Nisei estie city.
mated to be in the city.
Into China Doubled
Tokyo To Build
Dormitory For Nisei
and
Research Meetings
won
somation. supplement members) desiring (o mal
e the
ed with the practical experience
(rip must register with Mr. Anzai
of (he members. Experienced and (BAy. SUM,) nr Shekel
Sumi.
noted
will
secretary (BAy. OSBL) not later
lectures on various phases
than April la. Details of the trip
profession.
annuals may be obtained from these two
will he compiled by Hoy Matsu
executives or from other execu
moto and Bob Kamino to assist tive members of the Association.
Victoria Trip
The meeting also decided that
the first research trip will be
made to Victoria over the Do
minion week-end, leaving Sat
urday. June 29 at 11:45 p.m.
and returning July 1.
All
(including non-
5. Uchida
Books and Stationery
SEymour
347 Powell St.
4230
Vancouver, B. C
..............................................................................
The New Canadian
Japanese Renew
^5W
Granby Mine Copper
HAJIME SUZUKI
Optometrist
577 Powell St.
Sey. 1185
Better to have Insurance for a Lifetime and not
need it than need it for a day and not have it."
MAM INSURANCE AGENCY
J
415 POWELL ST.
Highland 2571
I
V
Japanese interests have extend
ed for another three years their
agreement to purchase [he cop- ;
per concentrate output, of Granbv
Consolidated Mining, Smelting &
Power Co. Ltd. Conferences for
the extension of the agreement,
which was to expire in July of die
current, year, were started during
the latter part of 1939 and suc
cessfully concluded this month.
These negotiations were carried
on with the full approval of the
Canadian authorities. Julian S.
Beatty, president, stated.
1 he negotiation of the contract
two years ago enabled the com
pany to re-open its operations at j
Allenby, B. C., alter being shut
down for some years because of
the low world price for copper.
LEADING THE WAY
In the Field of Nisei Journalism.
In Significant, Interesting Articles.
In Graphic Presentation of News Highlights.
Ar, independent Nisei paper pledged Io uphold truth,
uske'and freedom and to advance the cause of Second
Generation Japanese in Canada.
:Hs is your Nisei paper.
nd financial support.
It depends upon your moral
The New Canadian,
JAPAN AND CANADA
TRUST SAVINGS COMPANY
Announcing Opening of
New Funeral Chapel
Armstrong
396 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.
Please enter the following subscription to The New Canadian for
S
Name
and COMPANY
SAVINGS DEPOSITS, REMITTANCES
398 Powell St.
TRinity 0400
Undertakers
Established 1912
Address.
25c per month; One year $2.50 in advance
J
f 304 Dunlevy Ave.
High. 0141^
WVWSA.VWWW
‘I
dip-
lomas certifying completion of
studies in the Japanese lan
guage equivalent to middle
school education in Japan.
Seventy-eight
pupils in
the
numerous grade's who showed
paiticiilar aptitude and diligence
in (heir work during the past year
attempts
provide practical 'ruining
the;"'^' awarded honor rolls
uion will begin next
VALEDICTORIAN
month when (he Japanese ' Cana-1 lumixo Ogawa, one of (he outdian Gardeners Associat ion in.Mending students, presented the
gubr monthly csearch valedictorian message.
mud study
Iwo pupils with exceptional at
tor the ben-:
IeIit oi Xu
;(omlauee records
Tadashi OgaThis decision was reached at pui with a perfect attendance' for
and Kikue Machida
a well-attended meeting of Ni I nine
sei gardeners called together
March 24 at the Kitsilano Japan |cial awards.
ese School by the Nisei Divis- i In his opening speech. Mr. Sato
ipointed ou! (he value of Japanese
ion of the Association.
^language studies-in the practical,
Research will be ba
upon
books and magazines subscribed international and cultural aspects.
Tmi'U'pmiMimii-innmmu'Pii'innm ’iHj'pmpmpu'iHnHrpu'iHrimmipptHHpmi
'6
1940
THE NEW CANADIAN
Problems Discussed At First
ho w
vv Conference in C«
ide Local J apanese School
WINS TRIUMPH
Eighty-two Graduates Win Diplomas
c
I apanes
w
! heir
y Discussions
In addition, one hundred one
boys and girls received recogn it ion for finishing the pres-
:i i t h e
X nple. when both first
a generation joined in
Since 1936-37. Japanese im-mens on Nisei prob- ports into China
have more
m nl speaker was .Rev. than doubled. Japan is
now
^i 'tile, while Tom Ina- easily that country's largest
• '' i ^denr of the Vancou- supplier, latest trade figures
1 ’ p’efaeed the delibera- disclose. She overtook the Unitwna a speech on "What the ed States in this respect in
Do." Many varied. 1938.
heard on problems
In 1936. America furnished
, ’"-hip war and peace, lan19.6 per cent of China's total
„ ’nd so forth.
imports. In 1937 this percentn
In me morning, Mr. S. Aoki,
age was maintained, but in 1938
or incipal of the Meiwa Language . it dropped to 16.9 per cent and
is
i PRIME MINISTER KING
School. addressed the confer
latest calculations show that
ence. stressing the contribution
for 1939 America provided only I
Returned to office with a
mat
the
second
generation
15.9 per cent of imports into
sweeping majority, the Rt. Hon,
could make to the culture of
China.
William Lyon Mackenzie King
western countries, and urging
I
above)
won a great triumph in
Japan in 1936 furnished 16.3
them to be on the alert to fulper cent of Chinese imports. In i the Federal election, that saw
fill this task.
the record of his war admin
1937 this figure declined to 15.7
Social Enjoyed
istration completely vindicated
per cent. But in 1938, her grip
in
a Liberal landslide that sur
I'he conference began Friday. beginning to be established.
prised the country.
i'll a welcome supper at the ; Japan suddenly rose to 23.5 per
Fuji.
by the local Nichiren ; cent, and 1939 showed a closelv
Among the older first genera
Church. Visiting delegates. led by : similar figure of 23.3 per cent.
tion Japanese residents there
Miss Alice Kawasaki of Portland
are many who still remember
Miss Miyoko
the
Prime Minister, when he
of'
attle. presented group skits and
came out to British Columbia
; in the social which followed
over thirty years ago, a young
a: the Temple.
man just starting out in his
career, to investigate the antiVancouver's team of Miss HaTOKA 0.—Due to lack of suitruKo Inaba. Tose Watanabe, and'able housing facilities for the in- Oriental riots in September,
Miisuye Inaba, won their own cup creasing number of Nisei stud- 1907. It was due in large part to
t le meal club in the table'ents who are studying in this ‘‘the great skill, unvarying pa
tience and urbanity” of the Mr.
ms tournament.. In the indivCcity, the American bureau of the
Dual matches Geotge Isosnima Foreign Office is planning to King of those days, that the
"'ii the championship, followed build a large dormitory with an serious affair was brought to a
T \atherme Oka, Mr. Hachiya, estimated expenditure of 500.000 satisfactory settlement, with
damages being awarded to Jap
■<”tland. and Alice Kawasaki, ven.
anese and Chinese who had sufinland.
j
e
’ ,
.
Mr- Hshizawa. chief of the fured property damage in the
^atmuax evening a banquet and ^American Bureau is now working riots.
a.uacted main friends, and mii the details of the project,
eu Sunday the visitors were con-Avhich would make the dormitory
an extensive tour of a centre for the 3000 Nisei estie city.
mated to be in the city.
Into China Doubled
Tokyo To Build
Dormitory For Nisei
and
Research Meetings
won
somation. supplement members) desiring (o mal
e the
ed with the practical experience
(rip must register with Mr. Anzai
of (he members. Experienced and (BAy. SUM,) nr Shekel
Sumi.
noted
will
secretary (BAy. OSBL) not later
lectures on various phases
than April la. Details of the trip
profession.
annuals may be obtained from these two
will he compiled by Hoy Matsu
executives or from other execu
moto and Bob Kamino to assist tive members of the Association.
Victoria Trip
The meeting also decided that
the first research trip will be
made to Victoria over the Do
minion week-end, leaving Sat
urday. June 29 at 11:45 p.m.
and returning July 1.
All
(including non-
5. Uchida
Books and Stationery
SEymour
347 Powell St.
4230
Vancouver, B. C
..............................................................................
The New Canadian
Japanese Renew
^5W
Granby Mine Copper
HAJIME SUZUKI
Optometrist
577 Powell St.
Sey. 1185
Better to have Insurance for a Lifetime and not
need it than need it for a day and not have it."
MAM INSURANCE AGENCY
J
415 POWELL ST.
Highland 2571
I
V
Japanese interests have extend
ed for another three years their
agreement to purchase [he cop- ;
per concentrate output, of Granbv
Consolidated Mining, Smelting &
Power Co. Ltd. Conferences for
the extension of the agreement,
which was to expire in July of die
current, year, were started during
the latter part of 1939 and suc
cessfully concluded this month.
These negotiations were carried
on with the full approval of the
Canadian authorities. Julian S.
Beatty, president, stated.
1 he negotiation of the contract
two years ago enabled the com
pany to re-open its operations at j
Allenby, B. C., alter being shut
down for some years because of
the low world price for copper.
LEADING THE WAY
In the Field of Nisei Journalism.
In Significant, Interesting Articles.
In Graphic Presentation of News Highlights.
Ar, independent Nisei paper pledged Io uphold truth,
uske'and freedom and to advance the cause of Second
Generation Japanese in Canada.
:Hs is your Nisei paper.
nd financial support.
It depends upon your moral
The New Canadian,
JAPAN AND CANADA
TRUST SAVINGS COMPANY
Announcing Opening of
New Funeral Chapel
Armstrong
396 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.
Please enter the following subscription to The New Canadian for
S
Name
and COMPANY
SAVINGS DEPOSITS, REMITTANCES
398 Powell St.
TRinity 0400
Undertakers
Established 1912
Address.
25c per month; One year $2.50 in advance
J
f 304 Dunlevy Ave.
High. 0141^
WVWSA.VWWW
‘I
dip-
lomas certifying completion of
studies in the Japanese lan
guage equivalent to middle
school education in Japan.
Seventy-eight
pupils in
the
numerous grade's who showed
paiticiilar aptitude and diligence
in (heir work during the past year
attempts
provide practical 'ruining
the;"'^' awarded honor rolls
uion will begin next
VALEDICTORIAN
month when (he Japanese ' Cana-1 lumixo Ogawa, one of (he outdian Gardeners Associat ion in.Mending students, presented the
gubr monthly csearch valedictorian message.
mud study
Iwo pupils with exceptional at
tor the ben-:
IeIit oi Xu
;(omlauee records
Tadashi OgaThis decision was reached at pui with a perfect attendance' for
and Kikue Machida
a well-attended meeting of Ni I nine
sei gardeners called together
March 24 at the Kitsilano Japan |cial awards.
ese School by the Nisei Divis- i In his opening speech. Mr. Sato
ipointed ou! (he value of Japanese
ion of the Association.
^language studies-in the practical,
Research will be ba
upon
books and magazines subscribed international and cultural aspects.
Tmi'U'pmiMimii-innmmu'Pii'innm ’iHj'pmpmpu'iHnHrpu'iHrimmipptHHpmi
Page 4
J
THE NEW CANADIAN
WiMMIM
Nisei Alt School
R
f-i t? «®.
U4
h
Britannia Answers Kits Challenge
BRITANNIA
BULLETIN
A
Ncwscttes . . .
Fusako Inos
favoured subjec
of the
I
FT T-
j
I
i
r
*
i
FAIRVIEW FANFARE
c Vignette
By Martha Kayahara and Roy Oshiro
In an LT'ifuiidl in tnc Easter issue
I
Ut
B-Hi-Scw’p:1 ' Kuni Noguchi
APRIL
-I os
!Tpm ted
mm
holism of Easter
. The cover for position to her is horrible. Anyway,
—<
loorung. vmcgar
spv:
he
is
well
liked
by
rhe
teachers
the issue was I
th
designed
7—Mei
omc in handy now and then.
Fusako s treasurer of the Music
and executed I.:
Utsunoput .1 hllh vinegar m vour
miya ... On March 10 Shinko Na Club and in addition creator of
the
water
when
w
Ting
vour windows. ST
posters
advertising
club
functions.
gata, taking part in a debate sponperson
PIA
______
Being of the athletic type this!14
s should be sponged with hot vinegar be for.
sored by the debating society, sought
to establish the rightful position of Ovia* miss plays ping-pong and badHammond
।
mixing pie erust, one reaspoonful of vine—- i,
woman as being in the home, but
and is one of those six-in
me trust more flaky. and a fcw drops in
a nit-, ix
lost by the slimmest margin. (May- the-morning tennis players.
I hen yr—Animal Fuji
torn brewing when cut. Meat wiped with a e|OIh
C1 a b M
be she didn't .seek enough male dae is unravelling the music
move- =z—---------'■■ Keep fresh longer, while
while wilted vegetables win
counsel --Ed. Note.) . . . The pro- ments of dancing through the tutor
ill" a little vinegar is added
"WELFARE"
to rhe water in which it i
gram cover for the spring production ship of the Four Nuts Club (an ex
There are oodles more uses for this spic
of the school dramatic society was I clusive organization of four certain
(Continued from Page 1)
Hquid.
Nisei
gadabouts)
.
bottle
handy.
designed by Lucy Ikuta . . . Repre- '
sentative, secretary.
She has not quite decided what
renting Britannia on the High School
A committee including Dr. Shito
become, but she cherishes fond
Hockey Rep team is Amy Iwasaki.
"JAPANESE TIME"
motakahara. Rev. Shimizu ami Y.
■ • • Jo wind up the year, the girls' hopes of working in a lawyer's Kawata will apply to the City
I as he a one of the Seattle raiders what i.
gym club put on a display for the office.
Health Department, requesting
Lis trip, and this is what I got.
*
teachers, the student council, and n ,
that a Japanese nurse be em•, Mhat ^pressed m most lL,as th<! Amrkan.'
other
nos. taking part were; Debate
ployed at the Oriental Hospital.
The negative of the resolution,
0/ Japanese Fimp, • he said. "When a nn,;,
■ '
Marie Iwasaki and Martha KayaIt is felt that since half the pa
"That
Instalment Buying is Detri- tients are Japanese, this will be
hara_.Accompanying on the piano
.he Seattle pints duxty,
fwe mm
mental
was Shinko Nagata.
to the Interests of the Pub- of great help to attending physinor t^ minutes lc,e but exactly m ,he dot. The
* * *
Large was successfully up ians.
her hand hnger around and come staaaerina
held by Fairview last week, when
Answer to Kitsilano
m at a
at pcinaps ice mere lucky and mere muh an
Masako
Miyazaki
and
her
colleague
"Action be louder than words."
"CONGRESS"
group. "
' ‘
This is the motto of Britannia stud- defeated a debating
team from
(Continued from Page 1)
ents. Anyone going through the Prince of Wales supporting the afAt the final gathering, Dr. J.
-n Lady Meets A Gentleman
corridors of Britannia can't fail to firmative.
*
wisicning
throwing
off
the
shackles
of
the
*
*
to a group of girls discussing one of
see the number of picture frames
of social usme
past.
.1
•
.
6
^onvc
adorning the walls. On closer in
K w
/
llu, 1,1 sP,tc °f ^l this talk of
in-
ha cqu
A smashing hit was the school M. Ewing, member of the Provin■
still uxtam t|„t wom
spection one sees the number of
miner Pa\c me
™' X1"'",al Sch00i s,i'(l' sPoKe initiative.
concert presented in the HA
in
the field
of M Scl™' "erditorium recentb." ™ "The -Miatomy of Wisdom."
bantam
rugby
sports. Junior and
.
. 9b> the operetta, "The Magic Rub" .. ■ ' ■ '! '"“ "•'Sdom us the of etiquette. Cohere i^onc rule^tha'^
teams are especially peculiar in the
“
^P^’W"^ in relief of women. It R
lrmCn could overlook to d
great predominance of Nisei lads. Marie Akiyama shone in the girls' T'18'’01",118
and
declared
stands,
when
a
lady
and
Cm
°
wbo should Tcik first.
'V
chorus and Fusako Inose excelled in ,
H '
'’°"S '
Challenge
’
•
'
a
Si
’
ntlcnrm
meet.
rctomYor,
'
to
wisdom was to ■n
from
the -slady
A challenge to other schools' T air-for« chorus. But it was Jiro Xinw
a mjn
yU^ °f"'"
priv^
-owt the number of Britannia en' M'y3Im '" his role of the villain- f
“T S Pers0""i conceit,
wo
'■«5 in the J.S.C. oratoncal‘conRa'ah "'ho simply stole the show MkVdT’rl JeCtlVT°'nt
T"
W Of
women Tsai
to date. Can you do bet- c ^^T S“”'
”
interest of
” hve bcen ^“^ i”
■u? We may not always win, but “' Kled V“V convincingly Chinese
A JI
'
desired acquaintances. ' Bur At,. ’ “ procccr 'hemselves against
w have the fighting spirit in us m her role of a Chinese father in a
ELECTIONS
smTrra'TEd' N°'e'’ And wt
"™b<?r entitled "Dancing
Re-elected to the post of presi by her manner whether in acouw'i a"y "°mJn "ho “’“W 1 i™
he were to make the first advance■
And T5’1^ °'
il,C
-nail part of our enthusiasm is due eac^ers Dream."
dent of the Provincial Commitmetaiw to be aggressive by speaking first “
“ hcr “
Io our principal, Mr. E. A
i
1
~---------------------------------tee of the Youth Congress
her
whom you met as the chairman of
We>e determ'Ted to win Movement was John Prior who
As th,„9s are. momen are often afmd to speak to .
man
the judges at the recent J S C fest I
En9|ish Rugby cham-■ will be assisted this year by Vai
N,T,‘
' r-mcnAn fcfr™
.
4
fest, pionship. Beware,- all
hioh
schnnIN
all high schools.'! Bjarnason, vice-president, Don
think her
Around thc Sports Map
Two of our Nisei matric studMcBean, secretary - treasurer,
rathe „sk be* called a snob and yiitc no sin of ML,
Rugby! The very word "rugbv"!{ ents have been phying on fhe
and the four regional directors.
nay untortunate slate of affairs
'
!""”1
^guests Bmannia's championship {I Canadian football team, those two
In the Greater Vancouver Youth
'h'k “bS'mi'M « *
L^ od .HI ,he Nisei on themPj -n "Who can take it," Frank Council elections. John Jopson of rule. fomna“ fo’"™' ThAT'rJ 'X
first advance. There are
hesitate, in spite of it. to make th
but bus year, luck musf have been ।{
a aesu and "Hank" Okada.
put A.ki.A. was acclaimed presi- ■
, ,
----- - - a others however who are so boneless
ynsf us, and w ^ ^^j Frank played all season for the pleat tor the third year. Capable tlona that they Htere
would
r ,
never- drcam of speaking first.
'
" liieauong a championship team.! semors who lost to Byng in the (Nigel Morgan will be vice-presi
■his strict rule8 I
C°Untri” ” ab°“r t,K ™h'
v.
Rein tantom a„d jlmior tHmj
; senn-finals.
{dent and May Isenor general
XX
"'■
jBSt
kf
'f
fingers
crossed,
girls,
and
it
will
I
nosed out in fhe finals by Close bovT ^.wT.!#me H ^king the'retard
niodia
open table
Other h
tennis tournaincluded
symposium. ‘‘Towards a
" long
{o Septem ■ ment championship.
‘^Ore
c .
Rosvs Have Thorns
I Tons >LJSe i " 1
'n W°n ^1e inter-I Cultured Community,“
the
IjtAhe XXXXXX'XpX"
“ ’°U'' '° 1116
■ —N'T
”™8 (ku r?l“"t '" 111 Iovc- ’"d^i- « is ■be
its thorn, andTrinTi
b'8i"S
rose
^OWa R. Oshiro. D. Weu“F------ ------- time, and cleaning rina° cxscPtlon. for spring time mea:
------- It'S theXd T f
"loons work with plenty of good S
P"d G "a ano. Many other Njsej|
T'N for the different houses, in-!
d«l of ho’t sadly »"SdX°"
b™Sb '’nd m°P’ '
AT1® M. Ochiai, T. Takaesu, G I
Oshtro, M. Sugiyama, S. MatsuguJ
°W rOUtinc m“hod of work. If v.
Ai the edge of a pool
as
th
□□
■
”
' try
« kind of work each
Sugiyama. Machida and Igashiraj
An emerald frog:
me X° X
etc. Bur rhe
groceries and
J
Spring is here and with it, grand!
A flash,
limit for , Js' T "■"h thc dock' G"'S ''ourself a 0
PROVISIONS
track. This year
we
have
I
/
n c
i Id Vc
to hew
i°rL SCL thc alarm' and thcn Clio in. li
A splash—
m
L^any promising track stars who wild
done
nc
i
tiy
°
f
—
A Pattapating ip the 3nnua| |n .
Au empty lOg:
353 Powell St
fnd it'll all be don't in n0 "X ' 8'“‘ k‘d
We
briefly and calmly
Hon in X 5atO' "'ho CM« '°!
from kits. Kits' loss, but
I
never
Grou' wide.
s gain.
STAR MARKET
Journal Ite
Subside-—
7 his free 1
DOMINION LIFE
no talc.
ASSURANCE COMPANY
l>
won OTTO 5UPPLV CO.
l>
A
as
fe
1
V
AGENT FOR
K
b
ured
s. TSURUTA
linger Sewing
Machine Co.
393 Powell
SEy.
EDWARD T. OUCHI
1326
iift#^
c
V,^#
1831 Marine Building
SEymour 9370
THE NEW CANADIAN
WiMMIM
Nisei Alt School
R
f-i t? «®.
U4
h
Britannia Answers Kits Challenge
BRITANNIA
BULLETIN
A
Ncwscttes . . .
Fusako Inos
favoured subjec
of the
I
FT T-
j
I
i
r
*
i
FAIRVIEW FANFARE
c Vignette
By Martha Kayahara and Roy Oshiro
In an LT'ifuiidl in tnc Easter issue
I
Ut
B-Hi-Scw’p:1 ' Kuni Noguchi
APRIL
-I os
!Tpm ted
mm
holism of Easter
. The cover for position to her is horrible. Anyway,
—<
loorung. vmcgar
spv:
he
is
well
liked
by
rhe
teachers
the issue was I
th
designed
7—Mei
omc in handy now and then.
Fusako s treasurer of the Music
and executed I.:
Utsunoput .1 hllh vinegar m vour
miya ... On March 10 Shinko Na Club and in addition creator of
the
water
when
w
Ting
vour windows. ST
posters
advertising
club
functions.
gata, taking part in a debate sponperson
PIA
______
Being of the athletic type this!14
s should be sponged with hot vinegar be for.
sored by the debating society, sought
to establish the rightful position of Ovia* miss plays ping-pong and badHammond
।
mixing pie erust, one reaspoonful of vine—- i,
woman as being in the home, but
and is one of those six-in
me trust more flaky. and a fcw drops in
a nit-, ix
lost by the slimmest margin. (May- the-morning tennis players.
I hen yr—Animal Fuji
torn brewing when cut. Meat wiped with a e|OIh
C1 a b M
be she didn't .seek enough male dae is unravelling the music
move- =z—---------'■■ Keep fresh longer, while
while wilted vegetables win
counsel --Ed. Note.) . . . The pro- ments of dancing through the tutor
ill" a little vinegar is added
"WELFARE"
to rhe water in which it i
gram cover for the spring production ship of the Four Nuts Club (an ex
There are oodles more uses for this spic
of the school dramatic society was I clusive organization of four certain
(Continued from Page 1)
Hquid.
Nisei
gadabouts)
.
bottle
handy.
designed by Lucy Ikuta . . . Repre- '
sentative, secretary.
She has not quite decided what
renting Britannia on the High School
A committee including Dr. Shito
become, but she cherishes fond
Hockey Rep team is Amy Iwasaki.
"JAPANESE TIME"
motakahara. Rev. Shimizu ami Y.
■ • • Jo wind up the year, the girls' hopes of working in a lawyer's Kawata will apply to the City
I as he a one of the Seattle raiders what i.
gym club put on a display for the office.
Health Department, requesting
Lis trip, and this is what I got.
*
teachers, the student council, and n ,
that a Japanese nurse be em•, Mhat ^pressed m most lL,as th<! Amrkan.'
other
nos. taking part were; Debate
ployed at the Oriental Hospital.
The negative of the resolution,
0/ Japanese Fimp, • he said. "When a nn,;,
■ '
Marie Iwasaki and Martha KayaIt is felt that since half the pa
"That
Instalment Buying is Detri- tients are Japanese, this will be
hara_.Accompanying on the piano
.he Seattle pints duxty,
fwe mm
mental
was Shinko Nagata.
to the Interests of the Pub- of great help to attending physinor t^ minutes lc,e but exactly m ,he dot. The
* * *
Large was successfully up ians.
her hand hnger around and come staaaerina
held by Fairview last week, when
Answer to Kitsilano
m at a
at pcinaps ice mere lucky and mere muh an
Masako
Miyazaki
and
her
colleague
"Action be louder than words."
"CONGRESS"
group. "
' ‘
This is the motto of Britannia stud- defeated a debating
team from
(Continued from Page 1)
ents. Anyone going through the Prince of Wales supporting the afAt the final gathering, Dr. J.
-n Lady Meets A Gentleman
corridors of Britannia can't fail to firmative.
*
wisicning
throwing
off
the
shackles
of
the
*
*
to a group of girls discussing one of
see the number of picture frames
of social usme
past.
.1
•
.
6
^onvc
adorning the walls. On closer in
K w
/
llu, 1,1 sP,tc °f ^l this talk of
in-
ha cqu
A smashing hit was the school M. Ewing, member of the Provin■
still uxtam t|„t wom
spection one sees the number of
miner Pa\c me
™' X1"'",al Sch00i s,i'(l' sPoKe initiative.
concert presented in the HA
in
the field
of M Scl™' "erditorium recentb." ™ "The -Miatomy of Wisdom."
bantam
rugby
sports. Junior and
.
. 9b> the operetta, "The Magic Rub" .. ■ ' ■ '! '"“ "•'Sdom us the of etiquette. Cohere i^onc rule^tha'^
teams are especially peculiar in the
“
^P^’W"^ in relief of women. It R
lrmCn could overlook to d
great predominance of Nisei lads. Marie Akiyama shone in the girls' T'18'’01",118
and
declared
stands,
when
a
lady
and
Cm
°
wbo should Tcik first.
'V
chorus and Fusako Inose excelled in ,
H '
'’°"S '
Challenge
’
•
'
a
Si
’
ntlcnrm
meet.
rctomYor,
'
to
wisdom was to ■n
from
the -slady
A challenge to other schools' T air-for« chorus. But it was Jiro Xinw
a mjn
yU^ °f"'"
priv^
-owt the number of Britannia en' M'y3Im '" his role of the villain- f
“T S Pers0""i conceit,
wo
'■«5 in the J.S.C. oratoncal‘conRa'ah "'ho simply stole the show MkVdT’rl JeCtlVT°'nt
T"
W Of
women Tsai
to date. Can you do bet- c ^^T S“”'
”
interest of
” hve bcen ^“^ i”
■u? We may not always win, but “' Kled V“V convincingly Chinese
A JI
'
desired acquaintances. ' Bur At,. ’ “ procccr 'hemselves against
w have the fighting spirit in us m her role of a Chinese father in a
ELECTIONS
smTrra'TEd' N°'e'’ And wt
"™b<?r entitled "Dancing
Re-elected to the post of presi by her manner whether in acouw'i a"y "°mJn "ho “’“W 1 i™
he were to make the first advance■
And T5’1^ °'
il,C
-nail part of our enthusiasm is due eac^ers Dream."
dent of the Provincial Commitmetaiw to be aggressive by speaking first “
“ hcr “
Io our principal, Mr. E. A
i
1
~---------------------------------tee of the Youth Congress
her
whom you met as the chairman of
We>e determ'Ted to win Movement was John Prior who
As th,„9s are. momen are often afmd to speak to .
man
the judges at the recent J S C fest I
En9|ish Rugby cham-■ will be assisted this year by Vai
N,T,‘
' r-mcnAn fcfr™
.
4
fest, pionship. Beware,- all
hioh
schnnIN
all high schools.'! Bjarnason, vice-president, Don
think her
Around thc Sports Map
Two of our Nisei matric studMcBean, secretary - treasurer,
rathe „sk be* called a snob and yiitc no sin of ML,
Rugby! The very word "rugbv"!{ ents have been phying on fhe
and the four regional directors.
nay untortunate slate of affairs
'
!""”1
^guests Bmannia's championship {I Canadian football team, those two
In the Greater Vancouver Youth
'h'k “bS'mi'M « *
L^ od .HI ,he Nisei on themPj -n "Who can take it," Frank Council elections. John Jopson of rule. fomna“ fo’"™' ThAT'rJ 'X
first advance. There are
hesitate, in spite of it. to make th
but bus year, luck musf have been ।{
a aesu and "Hank" Okada.
put A.ki.A. was acclaimed presi- ■
, ,
----- - - a others however who are so boneless
ynsf us, and w ^ ^^j Frank played all season for the pleat tor the third year. Capable tlona that they Htere
would
r ,
never- drcam of speaking first.
'
" liieauong a championship team.! semors who lost to Byng in the (Nigel Morgan will be vice-presi
■his strict rule8 I
C°Untri” ” ab°“r t,K ™h'
v.
Rein tantom a„d jlmior tHmj
; senn-finals.
{dent and May Isenor general
XX
"'■
jBSt
kf
'f
fingers
crossed,
girls,
and
it
will
I
nosed out in fhe finals by Close bovT ^.wT.!#me H ^king the'retard
niodia
open table
Other h
tennis tournaincluded
symposium. ‘‘Towards a
" long
{o Septem ■ ment championship.
‘^Ore
c .
Rosvs Have Thorns
I Tons >LJSe i " 1
'n W°n ^1e inter-I Cultured Community,“
the
IjtAhe XXXXXX'XpX"
“ ’°U'' '° 1116
■ —N'T
”™8 (ku r?l“"t '" 111 Iovc- ’"d^i- « is ■be
its thorn, andTrinTi
b'8i"S
rose
^OWa R. Oshiro. D. Weu“F------ ------- time, and cleaning rina° cxscPtlon. for spring time mea:
------- It'S theXd T f
"loons work with plenty of good S
P"d G "a ano. Many other Njsej|
T'N for the different houses, in-!
d«l of ho’t sadly »"SdX°"
b™Sb '’nd m°P’ '
AT1® M. Ochiai, T. Takaesu, G I
Oshtro, M. Sugiyama, S. MatsuguJ
°W rOUtinc m“hod of work. If v.
Ai the edge of a pool
as
th
□□
■
”
' try
« kind of work each
Sugiyama. Machida and Igashiraj
An emerald frog:
me X° X
etc. Bur rhe
groceries and
J
Spring is here and with it, grand!
A flash,
limit for , Js' T "■"h thc dock' G"'S ''ourself a 0
PROVISIONS
track. This year
we
have
I
/
n c
i Id Vc
to hew
i°rL SCL thc alarm' and thcn Clio in. li
A splash—
m
L^any promising track stars who wild
done
nc
i
tiy
°
f
—
A Pattapating ip the 3nnua| |n .
Au empty lOg:
353 Powell St
fnd it'll all be don't in n0 "X ' 8'“‘ k‘d
We
briefly and calmly
Hon in X 5atO' "'ho CM« '°!
from kits. Kits' loss, but
I
never
Grou' wide.
s gain.
STAR MARKET
Journal Ite
Subside-—
7 his free 1
DOMINION LIFE
no talc.
ASSURANCE COMPANY
l>
won OTTO 5UPPLV CO.
l>
A
as
fe
1
V
AGENT FOR
K
b
ured
s. TSURUTA
linger Sewing
Machine Co.
393 Powell
SEy.
EDWARD T. OUCHI
1326
iift#^
c
V,^#
1831 Marine Building
SEymour 9370
Page 5
2 a a a ni e 15 utter fl
*
H5 71 K /
11 mi IM
1
IDEAL
TLr
mus mo
so w<
nd her
re timed
reimmdous
the
i
,i limited amoun daug
vours at once a ■ kocia
pan v
Mr.
tv i m i
S11 z u k i.
Ikeda.
com
w vu
and
. The wedH E‘ L P W A N T E
: mer.
*
*
*
iroduc: inn
Miss Yuki Watanabe, who ;
tied to Mr. Masayuki Mat- ;
rhursday. March 28, Miss
uki was hostess to manv -°:m
t a cup and saucer shower ^l!n<^
last Monday. March 25. : Hvoc
* * *
opera
d
n ic Hall in Grandview
resounded
to the beany applause of some hun
War T i m e
p.m. Only 2 5c each, and dred sports enthusiasts as presentaThe tipsy printer is smilingh
invited. There will bciIJMS were made to winning teams
. Only five miuand players at the Japanese Basket-i.complacent
nes’ra in attendance.
dashed into dm
Tall League windup social last Wed-I
PU ed a
ihe Iasi nearest si
and
'rim was the setting, to say
mesday. March 2 7.
jtollei parts
without first sport
YOSHINO
st. oi the Fairview Buddhist i
t lor
a
I lit
w
i
t
Micke s on Sundav Im hoard hit
M»n<P him- Odamxed husky rugby player. Was he mm
which enjoyed a brilliant suc- wAZY -Ah C™PM”I'I"I
titled when he discovered dial i:
i Saturday and Sunday. The.TnP i up was die Marpole team, "lie breezed,
into Happywhich took place at the Fair- w^‘'e l^e Sfn'Or championship was
was
"size IT" You’ll now see that
land, and had the time of his. life
I empk' was under the joint icl"'mc<^ ^V Maikawa. Persona] prizes
362 ALEXANDER ST
J
same shirt being daunted by his >
jiUerbugging
in
one
corner.
J
PHONE TRI. 0723
J
petite niece . . . The bin Overt
'sorsmp ot the Fairview Fujin to the cleanest player, highest scorer, "Imagine.'’ he exd
“I atYWBA and YMBA.
and most valuable player were a ward- tended a dance al
’.TVVWVWWSArV^
the
swanky
*
*
,cd to Y. Fujioka. J. Miike, and K.
lasted
the
wrath
of,jealous
women
Happyland for exa
7c car- that you
just can’t eai your cuke
Air. and. Mrs. G. Ta- : Koyanagi of the Jnior League and fare! ”
KKato.
S.
Ashikawa,
and
G.
Suit- 'This quiet little town
" V ancouver General
*
is fairlv seething with lovers’
on Thursday, March 14, zuki of the senior league. A special Love Walked In
Pet refrain these da vs:
cs. Takino is the former .award was presented to Kiyoshi Suga
One blissful pair is o.tvrmg up
.for the highest scoring average. Airs.
i tea auchi.
tou
double-crossed
me for ;
Shaeffer Pen Agents'
prayers of ihanks to the Youth
W. Jshiwara made the presentations J Congress for 1 heir
row (I
Latest Japanese Recordings
present rap- iest bunch that I’v
special token oi appreciation ! turous state. She
i.’iVi by George Tsushima the
’
handled.'
walked into the
TRinity 31 12 331 PoneH St.
tO MLAkiyama by the Nippon Club caucus meeting that says Fa pa Mi, sh
0. graduates of the local Japan
school formed the “Taiwakai" Basketball League for his untiring first evening, totally ignorant
VANCOUVER, B. C
war first meeting held last Sun- work throughout the entin season that she was walking into dm him
■H die school. This coming Sun- 1
moment of her life. T
KITSILANO RAFFLE
ri
saw him, that innocent you tl
hPT
The Kitsilano Y.M.B.A. Athironi Si eves ton. Bang'
etic Club Benefit Raffle tickets
two souls met - love at I
@ If you have your eyes
are now on sale with three desk
carefully examined and
radio sets to be given away to
Whenever you put on
proper glasses made for
the holders of lucky tickets. If
Seattle
Sighs
and
Shrieks!
you, you will be able to
the raffle continues its brisk
your best clothes to find
The wild doh * of the Sumit
see clearly and think
sale, the club will add at least Invasion are
still resounding u[
more clearly.
that they don't fit vour
one if not two more similar and down tin
prizes.
loday's frames are very
Seven dandies were: almost
figure or your personality.
stylish and good-looking.
iracised when th eV were
Make your appointment
stru t ting through Ilie ma
PIONEER REPRESENTATIVE
munching
oarrots and
for
granges in their hands, a brilliant
^ If you wear T. Maikawa
W. B. PITMAN
M
on
their
lapel
r and a
R. S. RHODES
Clothes—fitted as we fit
suspicious 1 ookinn hot th’ in
their hip pockets . • • Oh win
them — you can rest as
ind oh where has our link Swede
io?” chorused the
sured that your appear
a banquet in iheir honour. So j
exhausted
was t he illimitable
ance will definitely count
NO OBLIGATION FOR
Loch invar i roni the thrills oil
in your favour.
Lake Washington the night
FREE SERVICE
Sukiyaki £
;
:
'
!
■Bi
' 'Of
SOS
O-7
B
Li
'41
Optical House
W5 W. Hastings
Vancouver
»Y&«gt£
1766 Franklin St. High. 5978-R
Stock
Bobby Ito Stars At
$15.50 to $35.00
modiste fashion shop
CHIC and CHARM
IN LADIES' WEAR
DESIGNED FOR NISEIS
|
4
' ‘ fl
Exclusive Styles and Fabrics
3t Prices that cannot be duplicated
Pr°P. T. Shimotakahara
431 Granville St.
Diminutive Bobby Ito, eight- ;
year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. I
Ito, stole the hearts of over 300 i
people attending the 10th an- :
nual Cambrian Festival held in !
the Cambrian Hall, 17th and i
Main street, on Good Friday, j
The dancing and singing star
Of local circles, Bobby won second place in the competition
for boys, twelve years and un
der; and third place in the chil
dren's class, eight years and
under, with the high marks of
85 and 86.
Ma de-to-Measure
$19.50 to $50.00
We attend to all alterations conscientiuosly and
expertly.
*
H5 71 K /
11 mi IM
1
IDEAL
TLr
mus mo
so w<
nd her
re timed
reimmdous
the
i
,i limited amoun daug
vours at once a ■ kocia
pan v
Mr.
tv i m i
S11 z u k i.
Ikeda.
com
w vu
and
. The wedH E‘ L P W A N T E
: mer.
*
*
*
iroduc: inn
Miss Yuki Watanabe, who ;
tied to Mr. Masayuki Mat- ;
rhursday. March 28, Miss
uki was hostess to manv -°:m
t a cup and saucer shower ^l!n<^
last Monday. March 25. : Hvoc
* * *
opera
d
n ic Hall in Grandview
resounded
to the beany applause of some hun
War T i m e
p.m. Only 2 5c each, and dred sports enthusiasts as presentaThe tipsy printer is smilingh
invited. There will bciIJMS were made to winning teams
. Only five miuand players at the Japanese Basket-i.complacent
nes’ra in attendance.
dashed into dm
Tall League windup social last Wed-I
PU ed a
ihe Iasi nearest si
and
'rim was the setting, to say
mesday. March 2 7.
jtollei parts
without first sport
YOSHINO
st. oi the Fairview Buddhist i
t lor
a
I lit
w
i
t
Micke s on Sundav Im hoard hit
M»n<P him- Odamxed husky rugby player. Was he mm
which enjoyed a brilliant suc- wAZY -Ah C™PM”I'I"I
titled when he discovered dial i:
i Saturday and Sunday. The.TnP i up was die Marpole team, "lie breezed,
into Happywhich took place at the Fair- w^‘'e l^e Sfn'Or championship was
was
"size IT" You’ll now see that
land, and had the time of his. life
I empk' was under the joint icl"'mc<^ ^V Maikawa. Persona] prizes
362 ALEXANDER ST
J
same shirt being daunted by his >
jiUerbugging
in
one
corner.
J
PHONE TRI. 0723
J
petite niece . . . The bin Overt
'sorsmp ot the Fairview Fujin to the cleanest player, highest scorer, "Imagine.'’ he exd
“I atYWBA and YMBA.
and most valuable player were a ward- tended a dance al
’.TVVWVWWSArV^
the
swanky
*
*
,cd to Y. Fujioka. J. Miike, and K.
lasted
the
wrath
of,jealous
women
Happyland for exa
7c car- that you
just can’t eai your cuke
Air. and. Mrs. G. Ta- : Koyanagi of the Jnior League and fare! ”
KKato.
S.
Ashikawa,
and
G.
Suit- 'This quiet little town
" V ancouver General
*
is fairlv seething with lovers’
on Thursday, March 14, zuki of the senior league. A special Love Walked In
Pet refrain these da vs:
cs. Takino is the former .award was presented to Kiyoshi Suga
One blissful pair is o.tvrmg up
.for the highest scoring average. Airs.
i tea auchi.
tou
double-crossed
me for ;
Shaeffer Pen Agents'
prayers of ihanks to the Youth
W. Jshiwara made the presentations J Congress for 1 heir
row (I
Latest Japanese Recordings
present rap- iest bunch that I’v
special token oi appreciation ! turous state. She
i.’iVi by George Tsushima the
’
handled.'
walked into the
TRinity 31 12 331 PoneH St.
tO MLAkiyama by the Nippon Club caucus meeting that says Fa pa Mi, sh
0. graduates of the local Japan
school formed the “Taiwakai" Basketball League for his untiring first evening, totally ignorant
VANCOUVER, B. C
war first meeting held last Sun- work throughout the entin season that she was walking into dm him
■H die school. This coming Sun- 1
moment of her life. T
KITSILANO RAFFLE
ri
saw him, that innocent you tl
hPT
The Kitsilano Y.M.B.A. Athironi Si eves ton. Bang'
etic Club Benefit Raffle tickets
two souls met - love at I
@ If you have your eyes
are now on sale with three desk
carefully examined and
radio sets to be given away to
Whenever you put on
proper glasses made for
the holders of lucky tickets. If
Seattle
Sighs
and
Shrieks!
you, you will be able to
the raffle continues its brisk
your best clothes to find
The wild doh * of the Sumit
see clearly and think
sale, the club will add at least Invasion are
still resounding u[
more clearly.
that they don't fit vour
one if not two more similar and down tin
prizes.
loday's frames are very
Seven dandies were: almost
figure or your personality.
stylish and good-looking.
iracised when th eV were
Make your appointment
stru t ting through Ilie ma
PIONEER REPRESENTATIVE
munching
oarrots and
for
granges in their hands, a brilliant
^ If you wear T. Maikawa
W. B. PITMAN
M
on
their
lapel
r and a
R. S. RHODES
Clothes—fitted as we fit
suspicious 1 ookinn hot th’ in
their hip pockets . • • Oh win
them — you can rest as
ind oh where has our link Swede
io?” chorused the
sured that your appear
a banquet in iheir honour. So j
exhausted
was t he illimitable
ance will definitely count
NO OBLIGATION FOR
Loch invar i roni the thrills oil
in your favour.
Lake Washington the night
FREE SERVICE
Sukiyaki £
;
:
'
!
■Bi
' 'Of
SOS
O-7
B
Li
'41
Optical House
W5 W. Hastings
Vancouver
»Y&«gt£
1766 Franklin St. High. 5978-R
Stock
Bobby Ito Stars At
$15.50 to $35.00
modiste fashion shop
CHIC and CHARM
IN LADIES' WEAR
DESIGNED FOR NISEIS
|
4
' ‘ fl
Exclusive Styles and Fabrics
3t Prices that cannot be duplicated
Pr°P. T. Shimotakahara
431 Granville St.
Diminutive Bobby Ito, eight- ;
year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. I
Ito, stole the hearts of over 300 i
people attending the 10th an- :
nual Cambrian Festival held in !
the Cambrian Hall, 17th and i
Main street, on Good Friday, j
The dancing and singing star
Of local circles, Bobby won second place in the competition
for boys, twelve years and un
der; and third place in the chil
dren's class, eight years and
under, with the high marks of
85 and 86.
Ma de-to-Measure
$19.50 to $50.00
We attend to all alterations conscientiuosly and
expertly.
Page 6
march
1940
THE NEW CANADIAN
L A
HM
Community Boosis Red C
■'By ‘'‘Chatter”
Play Attracts Many
Kelowna's Kolum
Capital Citv
By Staff Correspondent
Miscellaneous ar; id
<> one
da ace
mas
c V/ r n
Y.W.B.A. Bazaar
.
C. ORa w-i
KU’U :
I tall T' pupil:
A.
miinr
1 for
succv
im-mib-ws
wear will be cm display when ihe
teen tly. Re
Gcal A WRA opens the doors of
stressed c
ihe Maple Ridge Buddhis ; Temple
mport
admit patrons
to mi
{huh- annual bazaar. Edon.
on
Pio low Canadians and become mm'
and othe delicacies
. need I
acquainted with their ideas an
boys!
customs.
।
*
*
*
'■vo or' ।
OU
ssed Event
’Da' one
Mr. and Mr
cirwd
bi
Mloasi ing ; community became the proud
Hird in parents of a bouncing baby boy
In all I he ■ recently.
i Baseball Beginnings
"I realize the problems the
"’^'Um-cs of the third cast ini
Tb.e Whonnock Seinenkai mem- JaPaness Canadians are
. r ii a i c
■Timv ihenT;
WHr pu( ()n
Return Horne
commencing their baseball ' today," he stated. "But you must
,n<‘ PmTwm.-ume. laHmled among!
lro,H tne woods of p;tIdi
turned our for a ‘'warm-up''. Narn to mingle more with the
, .
Hire
Hiroshi S Kakl
i prior to games with other valley ■ white people. I have talked to
- "-’’Oireart
ishe men rite a;!
Veil
1() join in the
'ole id ihe J1"l;nv.
?„,ss
prams. They extend an invitation' them about you. They are willRecalling h'
in 1 he productions 1
ihood >
■to. rhe Shown Baseball Club of! 'ng to accept you."
Mary ■Aakamtira as score-i Wedding Bells
! Mission to contact, them.
good wallop
Yumiko Krowi Conmiuhuhw
uHi." Harrv.* * *
went on to say Riat in tin
JCCL
Alias
ConMe
et
fntm
cured
Properlies, and Yoshiko Ra
ihe problem.-; existing to
pie Sasaki of this
nmchi. promising.
communit v.
March
meeting
of
the
local
!
da
y
will
be complerely
so
j whose man age to M r.
IJ en i
Aorma Rannerim
JCCL will be held at the Ham-!ten' The Jr
i young
lArikado tak
in A ancon- ; mond Hall, March 30. from 7:3olmariT Wth theanese will i n 19
'h" ““k^l> mu.rtmeui impark W,- March
white people and
at a w
d I hat professional touch, and i
pan. Guest speaker for the
/heie will be no race distinctions. tism
*
Before
Mug will be Mr. Y. Yamaga who !BlIt someone
well J Big Fish
?ced
to
[rv
: 11
musr
tackle
doin'.
pvill bo giving an account of hisj^'^b^m and lav
’
i
’
two
for
Mr. ;
claims a 500-600. jrecent trip to Japan.
W
" ’
/lie- future
generations.
oour five o'clock th
pound
•sturgeon ripped i h rough
’oss Dance Success
Delegates
to
the
Second
Frovin
.
I
unceremoniously
Bev.
McWilliams.
net
a native
'Pile Ti1""1 rai" a"(l
«i>„i
Mmth Congress. Teruko m i Ontario, ha s been in Japan for 0G rheir host. "Co'
pile ou
your
reporter
has
seen
F""' I.'UM io S|n|, |oral „..„„„. J |,„|(,
daka. Doug Dike and Bob Oikawa. Wars
engaged
in
missionar 11remem be
'ere
going
fishh
iToin nt tending the
-foot square, in the net.
Mil also report briefly.
(work. His chief hueresrdu-^H
whist drive i
crowd was heard
-ud dance held for the Red C
ross j
pus long stay in Japan was in the)
iuni eel over for a
u! Hamilton School two w
minutes of shu
poung people's movement. At
t>
don't have to sneak up
i eop e from Sunbury. Kennedy i
jWestminster, attacking
we
the probQueens H,mngh. Slmton alu| I , Once in the dim past durin
a bulging in some sort of game. Fur-j
J
Japanese Cm
ians. and A
T''?'"'"''’'1’ in Rich,no,u| turned j'p
us
them d°Pmg to assist, them to establish
disclosed
vws Leisure. 1
unt to support the affair
’
s i o w i n g: away hot dogs a la Blondie tln<?r and better foundations.
almost
For Oeal Japanese Dishes >
me. especially th opening lines4
Cana"Gentle? Bah!"
>
dians.
‘AVhat is ■ Gs Efe If, fltii of
>
in v verdict.
Then what did !
>
We hare oo time to stand
Proceeds from the dancte
.
‘
,n
^°;
They
quietly
but prompt
SAY YOU SAW IT IN
were
?
•
•
4
stare
handed over to Mrs. May,
ly got m touch with the local Red
253 POWELL ST.
4
THE NEW CANADIAN
deni of (he Red (
Cross
Chapter
and
diligently
b
the
TRINITY 0561
H*
.
'-‘''OQ
mUvKIV
1
a
eg an
' ^''"H Branch. 10 |,uy ,,.,^1 deeper meaning than meets the
Smiling and sewing.
Their un_>
but lor the past lew months. I've! ammous desire to help in this
ficld
warmed
this
old
heart
of
mine.
following
the
words
literally
|
!‘uzes ter the Whist Drive’
a nd physa-ally.
This accounts tori
^re won by Mrs. KiRharn amH
(.(demans Comments
(he unaccustomed quiet in this ceil, i
M's. Tilsori. consolation, for Hud
Bike pedalling is the latest rage
* *
*
LT; L"1 T'- «■ Thomas ami '
in
Skinned legs, aching
RADIOS
wiJ
n F Hkenaka. consolation. Mr. !
9
rinses, hanging tongues and flushed I
can't quite it pure out '
a M Queensborough “copped”'
reign wildly as the girls trv I
HIGH. 4567
REFRIGERATORS
this
• Just when!
<o oust their brothers in exercising j
323 Powell Street
ibis pastime.
mv conclusion bv
WHEN ORDERING your toilet tissue
SE ymour 41
Thal
about face. Take. for instance
‘‘ speed demon '
' that Sunday when the Girls’ Club
ALWAYS SPECIFY
u on the roads j
la lei
Akira Hirose of Near
wris holding its meeting, there pour«w»w«’bawkiwsr
a deafening crescendo in i Wes
■'r. here to visit his old
fortissimo drumming of soprano i
IT i-, SOrF. SANIIARY ft SOLUBLE
s at Nupra speed that would
of Spri,
nr was |
AT
obliterated >hc combined efa wekc before [raster
rv and v'ben Shigie. Shori. Kay and Eiichi
"Hi-ho । horned forth in classy jackets of
A squint through the key I wmc. grey and emm i
red the voting ladies in
tn vou certainly put the girls in
6L
IV
fl
Til
cdy, j frequent
\V patron of rhe Ilo-T. who. during
flowers for every occasion
xP
h.ur raising hero-to-1 he-rcscurc
W p
'
,;
!
A w
on
F*
much to the unconcealed amuse-!
(1/ i
il/ ;
of her neighbour and to the!
ji
For Niseis
a; ;
a
nue; msgusr of her younger sister? i
COALDUST FROM CUMBERLAND
v>
i TSUBAME
wat
«es it u.,Mi
Cl
of
& FUEL CO., LTD
to
i
»», OWiDS^ &
WRIGHT GO, LTD.
4)
til
®
4)
4)
Shigematsu ■ Floris
3 10 Powell St.
.
IL , .
MArine 1417
FOR BETTER TRADE RELATIONS
I*' i
il/ ;
' V
ever forget that ecstatic!
beam on lanky's smiling face when 1
il/ ! oc Drought home that 26-inch trout?!
Io prove to skeptical -friends his'
M/ 1
prize was no mirage, snapping cam■ eras recorded, the beauty phis that
I wondcri u I grin.
i
*
*
*
BUY JAPANESE GOODS
Si 5
3* I
Direct Importers of Japanese Provisions and Curios
B Seymour 2933
109 Powell Street
VANCOUVER, B. C.
out
<oys long tor the wide.
rcs: Alpinists sigh for sky
summits: Isaac Waltons
tor congested streets, but
the unchartcred roadside
retth tranquil
and bright yellow arums
cabbages to you. and I do
countless frogs
the balmy spring air with
it major symphonies. Which
me. it's time for me to go
to commune with AI other
again. Isn't it a relief f
■'W“<MJ>IJl»;.S
io
icur
We
worn
Any
make
of
radio
serviced with the lat
est factory equipment.
Unconditionally
guaranteed
for 90 days
Ape
Member of the
Associated Radio
Technicians of B. C.
The public's
guarantee of hone;
and efficient rad>o
HIVEH HABI® SERVICE
4S Moncton St.
Steveston, B. C.
Phone Steveston 91
TR inity-0055 1
gur
ae <
1940
THE NEW CANADIAN
L A
HM
Community Boosis Red C
■'By ‘'‘Chatter”
Play Attracts Many
Kelowna's Kolum
Capital Citv
By Staff Correspondent
Miscellaneous ar; id
<> one
da ace
mas
c V/ r n
Y.W.B.A. Bazaar
.
C. ORa w-i
KU’U :
I tall T' pupil:
A.
miinr
1 for
succv
im-mib-ws
wear will be cm display when ihe
teen tly. Re
Gcal A WRA opens the doors of
stressed c
ihe Maple Ridge Buddhis ; Temple
mport
admit patrons
to mi
{huh- annual bazaar. Edon.
on
Pio low Canadians and become mm'
and othe delicacies
. need I
acquainted with their ideas an
boys!
customs.
।
*
*
*
'■vo or' ।
OU
ssed Event
’Da' one
Mr. and Mr
cirwd
bi
Mloasi ing ; community became the proud
Hird in parents of a bouncing baby boy
In all I he ■ recently.
i Baseball Beginnings
"I realize the problems the
"’^'Um-cs of the third cast ini
Tb.e Whonnock Seinenkai mem- JaPaness Canadians are
. r ii a i c
■Timv ihenT;
WHr pu( ()n
Return Horne
commencing their baseball ' today," he stated. "But you must
,n<‘ PmTwm.-ume. laHmled among!
lro,H tne woods of p;tIdi
turned our for a ‘'warm-up''. Narn to mingle more with the
, .
Hire
Hiroshi S Kakl
i prior to games with other valley ■ white people. I have talked to
- "-’’Oireart
ishe men rite a;!
Veil
1() join in the
'ole id ihe J1"l;nv.
?„,ss
prams. They extend an invitation' them about you. They are willRecalling h'
in 1 he productions 1
ihood >
■to. rhe Shown Baseball Club of! 'ng to accept you."
Mary ■Aakamtira as score-i Wedding Bells
! Mission to contact, them.
good wallop
Yumiko Krowi Conmiuhuhw
uHi." Harrv.* * *
went on to say Riat in tin
JCCL
Alias
ConMe
et
fntm
cured
Properlies, and Yoshiko Ra
ihe problem.-; existing to
pie Sasaki of this
nmchi. promising.
communit v.
March
meeting
of
the
local
!
da
y
will
be complerely
so
j whose man age to M r.
IJ en i
Aorma Rannerim
JCCL will be held at the Ham-!ten' The Jr
i young
lArikado tak
in A ancon- ; mond Hall, March 30. from 7:3olmariT Wth theanese will i n 19
'h" ““k^l> mu.rtmeui impark W,- March
white people and
at a w
d I hat professional touch, and i
pan. Guest speaker for the
/heie will be no race distinctions. tism
*
Before
Mug will be Mr. Y. Yamaga who !BlIt someone
well J Big Fish
?ced
to
[rv
: 11
musr
tackle
doin'.
pvill bo giving an account of hisj^'^b^m and lav
’
i
’
two
for
Mr. ;
claims a 500-600. jrecent trip to Japan.
W
" ’
/lie- future
generations.
oour five o'clock th
pound
•sturgeon ripped i h rough
’oss Dance Success
Delegates
to
the
Second
Frovin
.
I
unceremoniously
Bev.
McWilliams.
net
a native
'Pile Ti1""1 rai" a"(l
«i>„i
Mmth Congress. Teruko m i Ontario, ha s been in Japan for 0G rheir host. "Co'
pile ou
your
reporter
has
seen
F""' I.'UM io S|n|, |oral „..„„„. J |,„|(,
daka. Doug Dike and Bob Oikawa. Wars
engaged
in
missionar 11remem be
'ere
going
fishh
iToin nt tending the
-foot square, in the net.
Mil also report briefly.
(work. His chief hueresrdu-^H
whist drive i
crowd was heard
-ud dance held for the Red C
ross j
pus long stay in Japan was in the)
iuni eel over for a
u! Hamilton School two w
minutes of shu
poung people's movement. At
t>
don't have to sneak up
i eop e from Sunbury. Kennedy i
jWestminster, attacking
we
the probQueens H,mngh. Slmton alu| I , Once in the dim past durin
a bulging in some sort of game. Fur-j
J
Japanese Cm
ians. and A
T''?'"'"''’'1’ in Rich,no,u| turned j'p
us
them d°Pmg to assist, them to establish
disclosed
vws Leisure. 1
unt to support the affair
’
s i o w i n g: away hot dogs a la Blondie tln<?r and better foundations.
almost
For Oeal Japanese Dishes >
me. especially th opening lines4
Cana"Gentle? Bah!"
>
dians.
‘AVhat is ■ Gs Efe If, fltii of
>
in v verdict.
Then what did !
>
We hare oo time to stand
Proceeds from the dancte
.
‘
,n
^°;
They
quietly
but prompt
SAY YOU SAW IT IN
were
?
•
•
4
stare
handed over to Mrs. May,
ly got m touch with the local Red
253 POWELL ST.
4
THE NEW CANADIAN
deni of (he Red (
Cross
Chapter
and
diligently
b
the
TRINITY 0561
H*
.
'-‘''OQ
mUvKIV
1
a
eg an
' ^''"H Branch. 10 |,uy ,,.,^1 deeper meaning than meets the
Smiling and sewing.
Their un_>
but lor the past lew months. I've! ammous desire to help in this
ficld
warmed
this
old
heart
of
mine.
following
the
words
literally
|
!‘uzes ter the Whist Drive’
a nd physa-ally.
This accounts tori
^re won by Mrs. KiRharn amH
(.(demans Comments
(he unaccustomed quiet in this ceil, i
M's. Tilsori. consolation, for Hud
Bike pedalling is the latest rage
* *
*
LT; L"1 T'- «■ Thomas ami '
in
Skinned legs, aching
RADIOS
wiJ
n F Hkenaka. consolation. Mr. !
9
rinses, hanging tongues and flushed I
can't quite it pure out '
a M Queensborough “copped”'
reign wildly as the girls trv I
HIGH. 4567
REFRIGERATORS
this
• Just when!
<o oust their brothers in exercising j
323 Powell Street
ibis pastime.
mv conclusion bv
WHEN ORDERING your toilet tissue
SE ymour 41
Thal
about face. Take. for instance
‘‘ speed demon '
' that Sunday when the Girls’ Club
ALWAYS SPECIFY
u on the roads j
la lei
Akira Hirose of Near
wris holding its meeting, there pour«w»w«’bawkiwsr
a deafening crescendo in i Wes
■'r. here to visit his old
fortissimo drumming of soprano i
IT i-, SOrF. SANIIARY ft SOLUBLE
s at Nupra speed that would
of Spri,
nr was |
AT
obliterated >hc combined efa wekc before [raster
rv and v'ben Shigie. Shori. Kay and Eiichi
"Hi-ho । horned forth in classy jackets of
A squint through the key I wmc. grey and emm i
red the voting ladies in
tn vou certainly put the girls in
6L
IV
fl
Til
cdy, j frequent
\V patron of rhe Ilo-T. who. during
flowers for every occasion
xP
h.ur raising hero-to-1 he-rcscurc
W p
'
,;
!
A w
on
F*
much to the unconcealed amuse-!
(1/ i
il/ ;
of her neighbour and to the!
ji
For Niseis
a; ;
a
nue; msgusr of her younger sister? i
COALDUST FROM CUMBERLAND
v>
i TSUBAME
wat
«es it u.,Mi
Cl
of
& FUEL CO., LTD
to
i
»», OWiDS^ &
WRIGHT GO, LTD.
4)
til
®
4)
4)
Shigematsu ■ Floris
3 10 Powell St.
.
IL , .
MArine 1417
FOR BETTER TRADE RELATIONS
I*' i
il/ ;
' V
ever forget that ecstatic!
beam on lanky's smiling face when 1
il/ ! oc Drought home that 26-inch trout?!
Io prove to skeptical -friends his'
M/ 1
prize was no mirage, snapping cam■ eras recorded, the beauty phis that
I wondcri u I grin.
i
*
*
*
BUY JAPANESE GOODS
Si 5
3* I
Direct Importers of Japanese Provisions and Curios
B Seymour 2933
109 Powell Street
VANCOUVER, B. C.
out
<oys long tor the wide.
rcs: Alpinists sigh for sky
summits: Isaac Waltons
tor congested streets, but
the unchartcred roadside
retth tranquil
and bright yellow arums
cabbages to you. and I do
countless frogs
the balmy spring air with
it major symphonies. Which
me. it's time for me to go
to commune with AI other
again. Isn't it a relief f
■'W“<MJ>IJl»;.S
io
icur
We
worn
Any
make
of
radio
serviced with the lat
est factory equipment.
Unconditionally
guaranteed
for 90 days
Ape
Member of the
Associated Radio
Technicians of B. C.
The public's
guarantee of hone;
and efficient rad>o
HIVEH HABI® SERVICE
4S Moncton St.
Steveston, B. C.
Phone Steveston 91
TR inity-0055 1
gur
ae <
Page 7
By Staff Writer
Miros Dust Off Beavers Io lake
Lead For Victoria Championship
w
mur
t mere
m has d
C.
sm. ii
Bussei leMue Sei
\
t
t
bneuld be worn.
i.noerstanding of trie language and an appreciation for r\
ous beiiets. Many have ceen the influences which have
msmrmation, but of these it is probably true that some
iiZc education in scnools has been the most important
11
t'a
me
Today, ironically enough, the process of history seems to have
reversed itself in the course of a single generation, and now the
hundreds of Nisei who emigrate from Canada and America to Japan
find the same influence most important in assisting their adaptation
ro a new life in the land of their ancestors.
•\W"®
^.S’S
1 rophy Donated To
--ending Hitter
im
The Taiyos
in 'hi- openii
never headed.
t up a 20can to and
ory won
17 poin
whih
Shimizu
with 6. and
;
Hide loi with 5. wer
* t 1) 1 L i'! 1' ,1
By Yoshio T. Terada
Known to many friends and
Die Bussei League wi
J he majority go with the definite intention of studying, but the I; acquaintances throughout the
o action
min this year with
Taiyos:
■ ev renductea by the Keisen Girls' School, indicates that many who)[ province as the “eternal youth.” : the opening
tame scheduled for
intending to study actually end up that wav. Thus of the cases!: but nevertheless a veteran of
Hl!
iwa
■April 14. with Kitsilano mooting
ereo, while 73 per cent had gone to Japan to study, actually SO per i fifteen years' experience in the
(i. Mi
Jhe perennial champion Hompa
t were thus occupied either in schools or under private tutors They ! life insurance profession, Roy
nhie. it was decided when sport
-c, enrolled in 14 men's universities, 6 women's colleges 16 boys'! Yamamura, above, has onen^d
opened
Hompa, Ki: L Hide h
'CX7CO1S' j7 9JHs' hi9h schools, and a number of special schools. ) up his own agency, a branch of
Y. Shimizu
and Fairview met Sumi..
Hasegawa,
.ne men, 89 per cent, it was found, were enrobed as ordinary ) the Mutual Life Assurance ComKuwabara
cents, expected to keep up with the regular Japan-bom students' ’ pany.
;
Because
of
the
shortage
of
or tne women, 24 per cent were enrolled in courses or divisions in !
rnor in t he wet k
Assisting him at the agency
cn special consideration is given to the Nisei.
'
! is Kiyoshi Suga, another up-and- ; players during the . summer took the JCCL miiiiB
i months, the schedule has been
When Should the Nisei Go?
! coming Nisei of today.
The • shortened, with each team play- by a .“ti-LO score, ;n<
Ui
the questions most frequently asked is, how much educaJ agency marks another addition [ ing four games each. The teams the two-game scries
' should a N.sei have ^before going to Japan to study? In the survey! to the increasing ranks of inwount. The J(■ C l. team, without
l emerging first and second in
-■asi found ? ,3t °V6r 2)0 per cent- both men
women, were high dependent Nisei business ven- j the pennant race will clash in (lie services '5 i
H. E
Kondo
soncoi graduates.
tures.
Abe's working up in NanainmL
I a two-out-of-three playoff series
were no mate'h lor the smooth_w'th teachers it was discovered that this is conBest known for his prowess j for the championship.
to be the best stage for the Nisei to qo to Japan Gramn-rfunctioning BSeavers and were
on the baseball diamond, where
Labour Day will ; 1111 he .'I big
Meld to a 22-ti sieiw in (he firm
-!™° i
SC^°0! 9raduates are
Young to have any definite he has established himself as
day, with the Lean
sending an hal:.
777
^Studying m Japan, and tend to be indifferent to their studies
one of the “Asahi Greats” of all
HLStar squad to Seattle.
G
M COmPD ab°Ut
L’Ck °f
comfor s to time. Mr. Yamamura began his
Beaver
The leu di n
A.vcr. <ney were accustomed at home.
this,
year -I. Hide loi Kb K. Kuwab
career as an office boy with the
will receive a
..
*77 Other 2treme' if was considered that college and univer; Shimizu
Sun Life over fifteen years ago.
r.YFXa,e °ften too setjn American ways and opinions and tend Since then his salesmanship ed by Mr. Kaniehi Mori, presiJCCL: J, Shimizu up j[ Kawadent of the Kitsilano Y.M j?
n JapaY
' necessity
adjustment to the altogether different life ability has brought him recog
. Sam Okamoto a. (J. Kuwa
and a cap to the runner-up team
nition as one of the ablest
been donated by “Yanmsan,"
i”e Of the most important problems the Nisei hc» agents in life insurance circles
(The League acknowledges t
d.fGekes A
indi“tetl t0° in ’ ,3bb showing the throughout the province.
i kind donations with thanks.
REAL CHINESE DISHES
H
curses studied at home and in Japan. For instance
SERVED AT
hcme's^^as^/ir' ha° taken 3ny interest in Japanese cultural arts
i me League- schedule 1ms been ■
I drawn up as follows:
and kiea
am"Sem“'' iudo- kando
-modems in Japam
'"^ ,,,W,e11 * '”* "umber * Nisei
11oil)pg vs. (eq
fion I^d rY ^ TO' ” the case of !Kial lienees, transhIn th
evious columns w hav
Fairview vs. Kitsilano
252 POWELL ST.
howber was"th7 2,
Cla!S'“' Most significant of. all,
.May
SEY. 3517 - 5774
biddable and
Hompa vs. Kitsilano
rebiddabl
study Of the I
P
"e ed “mp '" the n“nber faking up the
Fairview vs. Hompa
.1II
bid.
Kitsilano vs. Fair view
must have at least:
Hompa vs. Fairview
'-thin emits, but
-i biddable i J tine
Fairview A
k fellow the .«CoteY 'f’^V^fe courses at home, elected suit, o r
Kitsilano
!)
Ki
tsi
la
no
Ine bic dron in
!
’ hpan' ^restingly enough, though . was ,
b‘’"hi
Fairview
Hompa
",e number taxing secretarial courses.
oi a a ante sun.
Kitsi la no
Fair vie w
,
How Mucfi Money Will You Need?
Exam
Hompa
vs.
Kitsilano
bas.c (Lct^Ube^
the state of one's pocketbook is ak '7
^S1
to be
need to Study ,„ |Y 72 How much, then, does the average Nisei lit—A
Cdubs. then Hearts.
Hcommittee. ' ' ' °' ' ' “3‘S quest,on W3S fu7 explored by the survey
(b)
J 10
Dper >2'."X|TSe ran"d from m,hm9 UP fe as high as 700 ven'
D- K
Cem 50 io 200 yenD'X^r etStl)|aen,S found it necessary to pay)
Bid one Club !
C -K Qc
7
of
— andj S—
® COSMETICS
Spades, then Diamonds.
yen, while 19 per cent IHBoaDYY ^ Per Cent °f ,be n,en went “P to 200 yen
@DRUGS
H Q ,J | q xxx
IDmonth W Y ™
noting to .
HD-A
10 x
@ SUNDRIES
over ] 00 yen per f..
toaeke't. Dus 29^ c^
9r°UP
,hp 20
D-30 yen
'Bid one Diamond
pond if necessary7 7
. ' “me" and 42 P^ cent of the men
d one Heart
Holding the requirements for m
Bid blear (s’. i hen Diamonds.
’MPfesrx per cenfh w
a™“n' for monthly board and room
^ween BoDTo yen
"^h "d '9 P"
°f 'ba men pa.d opening one-bid. a phver mav bid I
regarckss^of position (first, second.’
oexi week: Responses
part
249 Powell
SEymour 4884
I
expected, Cokvan'ed very widely, as may be tmid or t on rth) .
ncr s opening one-bid (the
Study Needed by Nisei
Let's Play Bridge
SON PEKIN
Seishindo Co.
"omen spent between IO » d -n ye" P? month. 60 per cent of the
"hhin the same bracket FiDD'DA ^Y' Hnt “' fhe men fell j
—ver, needed between - nd TY ""7' b°,h ™ and -men,
expenses.
30 Yen for miscellaneous monthly
"Sores
k-^5e rate may be
I
neo biddable
bid Hrst;
(a) the lower-ranking suit will J
two tour-card suits.
i
(b) (he longer suit reyard I ess- of!
” take
' honor .strength with
two suits od
Xl^ even though I unequal length.
7’ the higher-ranking suit re-j
gaidles's of honor-strength with t wo J
five or six-card suits.
Examples:
KOMURA BROS. LTD.
55
Merchants
TRinity 0092
9 Powell St.
H-
Fountain
220
f^
MAIN
STREET
SEY. 0 12/t
TRINITY
FUJI CHOP SUSY
«•
«»
s»
Clubs, then Spades.
(b) S—x.
H—K Q x x.
D—A K.
Semes
tf^aud
314
POWELL
STREET
Miros Dust Off Beavers Io lake
Lead For Victoria Championship
w
mur
t mere
m has d
C.
sm. ii
Bussei leMue Sei
\
t
t
bneuld be worn.
i.noerstanding of trie language and an appreciation for r\
ous beiiets. Many have ceen the influences which have
msmrmation, but of these it is probably true that some
iiZc education in scnools has been the most important
11
t'a
me
Today, ironically enough, the process of history seems to have
reversed itself in the course of a single generation, and now the
hundreds of Nisei who emigrate from Canada and America to Japan
find the same influence most important in assisting their adaptation
ro a new life in the land of their ancestors.
•\W"®
^.S’S
1 rophy Donated To
--ending Hitter
im
The Taiyos
in 'hi- openii
never headed.
t up a 20can to and
ory won
17 poin
whih
Shimizu
with 6. and
;
Hide loi with 5. wer
* t 1) 1 L i'! 1' ,1
By Yoshio T. Terada
Known to many friends and
Die Bussei League wi
J he majority go with the definite intention of studying, but the I; acquaintances throughout the
o action
min this year with
Taiyos:
■ ev renductea by the Keisen Girls' School, indicates that many who)[ province as the “eternal youth.” : the opening
tame scheduled for
intending to study actually end up that wav. Thus of the cases!: but nevertheless a veteran of
Hl!
iwa
■April 14. with Kitsilano mooting
ereo, while 73 per cent had gone to Japan to study, actually SO per i fifteen years' experience in the
(i. Mi
Jhe perennial champion Hompa
t were thus occupied either in schools or under private tutors They ! life insurance profession, Roy
nhie. it was decided when sport
-c, enrolled in 14 men's universities, 6 women's colleges 16 boys'! Yamamura, above, has onen^d
opened
Hompa, Ki: L Hide h
'CX7CO1S' j7 9JHs' hi9h schools, and a number of special schools. ) up his own agency, a branch of
Y. Shimizu
and Fairview met Sumi..
Hasegawa,
.ne men, 89 per cent, it was found, were enrobed as ordinary ) the Mutual Life Assurance ComKuwabara
cents, expected to keep up with the regular Japan-bom students' ’ pany.
;
Because
of
the
shortage
of
or tne women, 24 per cent were enrolled in courses or divisions in !
rnor in t he wet k
Assisting him at the agency
cn special consideration is given to the Nisei.
'
! is Kiyoshi Suga, another up-and- ; players during the . summer took the JCCL miiiiB
i months, the schedule has been
When Should the Nisei Go?
! coming Nisei of today.
The • shortened, with each team play- by a .“ti-LO score, ;n<
Ui
the questions most frequently asked is, how much educaJ agency marks another addition [ ing four games each. The teams the two-game scries
' should a N.sei have ^before going to Japan to study? In the survey! to the increasing ranks of inwount. The J(■ C l. team, without
l emerging first and second in
-■asi found ? ,3t °V6r 2)0 per cent- both men
women, were high dependent Nisei business ven- j the pennant race will clash in (lie services '5 i
H. E
Kondo
soncoi graduates.
tures.
Abe's working up in NanainmL
I a two-out-of-three playoff series
were no mate'h lor the smooth_w'th teachers it was discovered that this is conBest known for his prowess j for the championship.
to be the best stage for the Nisei to qo to Japan Gramn-rfunctioning BSeavers and were
on the baseball diamond, where
Labour Day will ; 1111 he .'I big
Meld to a 22-ti sieiw in (he firm
-!™° i
SC^°0! 9raduates are
Young to have any definite he has established himself as
day, with the Lean
sending an hal:.
777
^Studying m Japan, and tend to be indifferent to their studies
one of the “Asahi Greats” of all
HLStar squad to Seattle.
G
M COmPD ab°Ut
L’Ck °f
comfor s to time. Mr. Yamamura began his
Beaver
The leu di n
A.vcr. <ney were accustomed at home.
this,
year -I. Hide loi Kb K. Kuwab
career as an office boy with the
will receive a
..
*77 Other 2treme' if was considered that college and univer; Shimizu
Sun Life over fifteen years ago.
r.YFXa,e °ften too setjn American ways and opinions and tend Since then his salesmanship ed by Mr. Kaniehi Mori, presiJCCL: J, Shimizu up j[ Kawadent of the Kitsilano Y.M j?
n JapaY
' necessity
adjustment to the altogether different life ability has brought him recog
. Sam Okamoto a. (J. Kuwa
and a cap to the runner-up team
nition as one of the ablest
been donated by “Yanmsan,"
i”e Of the most important problems the Nisei hc» agents in life insurance circles
(The League acknowledges t
d.fGekes A
indi“tetl t0° in ’ ,3bb showing the throughout the province.
i kind donations with thanks.
REAL CHINESE DISHES
H
curses studied at home and in Japan. For instance
SERVED AT
hcme's^^as^/ir' ha° taken 3ny interest in Japanese cultural arts
i me League- schedule 1ms been ■
I drawn up as follows:
and kiea
am"Sem“'' iudo- kando
-modems in Japam
'"^ ,,,W,e11 * '”* "umber * Nisei
11oil)pg vs. (eq
fion I^d rY ^ TO' ” the case of !Kial lienees, transhIn th
evious columns w hav
Fairview vs. Kitsilano
252 POWELL ST.
howber was"th7 2,
Cla!S'“' Most significant of. all,
.May
SEY. 3517 - 5774
biddable and
Hompa vs. Kitsilano
rebiddabl
study Of the I
P
"e ed “mp '" the n“nber faking up the
Fairview vs. Hompa
.1II
bid.
Kitsilano vs. Fair view
must have at least:
Hompa vs. Fairview
'-thin emits, but
-i biddable i J tine
Fairview A
k fellow the .«CoteY 'f’^V^fe courses at home, elected suit, o r
Kitsilano
!)
Ki
tsi
la
no
Ine bic dron in
!
’ hpan' ^restingly enough, though . was ,
b‘’"hi
Fairview
Hompa
",e number taxing secretarial courses.
oi a a ante sun.
Kitsi la no
Fair vie w
,
How Mucfi Money Will You Need?
Exam
Hompa
vs.
Kitsilano
bas.c (Lct^Ube^
the state of one's pocketbook is ak '7
^S1
to be
need to Study ,„ |Y 72 How much, then, does the average Nisei lit—A
Cdubs. then Hearts.
Hcommittee. ' ' ' °' ' ' “3‘S quest,on W3S fu7 explored by the survey
(b)
J 10
Dper >2'."X|TSe ran"d from m,hm9 UP fe as high as 700 ven'
D- K
Cem 50 io 200 yenD'X^r etStl)|aen,S found it necessary to pay)
Bid one Club !
C -K Qc
7
of
— andj S—
® COSMETICS
Spades, then Diamonds.
yen, while 19 per cent IHBoaDYY ^ Per Cent °f ,be n,en went “P to 200 yen
@DRUGS
H Q ,J | q xxx
IDmonth W Y ™
noting to .
HD-A
10 x
@ SUNDRIES
over ] 00 yen per f..
toaeke't. Dus 29^ c^
9r°UP
,hp 20
D-30 yen
'Bid one Diamond
pond if necessary7 7
. ' “me" and 42 P^ cent of the men
d one Heart
Holding the requirements for m
Bid blear (s’. i hen Diamonds.
’MPfesrx per cenfh w
a™“n' for monthly board and room
^ween BoDTo yen
"^h "d '9 P"
°f 'ba men pa.d opening one-bid. a phver mav bid I
regarckss^of position (first, second.’
oexi week: Responses
part
249 Powell
SEymour 4884
I
expected, Cokvan'ed very widely, as may be tmid or t on rth) .
ncr s opening one-bid (the
Study Needed by Nisei
Let's Play Bridge
SON PEKIN
Seishindo Co.
"omen spent between IO » d -n ye" P? month. 60 per cent of the
"hhin the same bracket FiDD'DA ^Y' Hnt “' fhe men fell j
—ver, needed between - nd TY ""7' b°,h ™ and -men,
expenses.
30 Yen for miscellaneous monthly
"Sores
k-^5e rate may be
I
neo biddable
bid Hrst;
(a) the lower-ranking suit will J
two tour-card suits.
i
(b) (he longer suit reyard I ess- of!
” take
' honor .strength with
two suits od
Xl^ even though I unequal length.
7’ the higher-ranking suit re-j
gaidles's of honor-strength with t wo J
five or six-card suits.
Examples:
KOMURA BROS. LTD.
55
Merchants
TRinity 0092
9 Powell St.
H-
Fountain
220
f^
MAIN
STREET
SEY. 0 12/t
TRINITY
FUJI CHOP SUSY
«•
«»
s»
Clubs, then Spades.
(b) S—x.
H—K Q x x.
D—A K.
Semes
tf^aud
314
POWELL
STREET
Page 8
Page 8
‘ -i i- r v wn, \
vAARCH :
o '
u
I V HU
I a
2 I *
JHi
in 1
By
Cccc
uy
I ourney
0 kawara
at tie inva
of al
• idvantagc of the pc
eno to jaunt across t
border to retain pos ssion of
the Nishihama tr
against the favor
Under the bright retrosh:no
Wial Internati nal Northwest Japanese Ski To sormgkkc weather, our
urnament proved a huge
of 1
minute 25.4 seconds.
ra
lot
For Handicap In
Faster Tourney
r
• . < i 'j Huw ^b a r a, who really
Packs a prodigious tee wallop,
^nougn an extreme unorthodox
ownger, came home with a 4und^j 58 to cop the opening
tournament of the Nippon Golf
Club at Langara. Good Friday.
•he Marpole medico sports
The Mutual Life Assurance
Company of Canada
Established 1869
H Head Off:
'
’
Waterier CW
Announces the Appointment of
ROY YAMAMURA
'■'i Seattle late Friday afternoon and
eat tie that
spent the evening touring and danc- we wer
once
rng. Saturday morning we were tak- rhe Re
British Columbia
at the banquet i,n ourl ful of scorn, hurriedly retired
lo Snoqualmie Mountain Ski honour
when ,presentations
:. Phone: Office—MArine 1746
39g
' Q I ) i d 1 |(Jn S V/e r£ j to the committee room for a
Ground, a distance of 80 miles from made,
Powell St., Vancouver
Nishihama returned his’
J
Residence—Highland 6205-R
775
cattle, and spent the afternoon at dip to
^ Cordova, Vancouver
Fuji Ski Cblub, Ami Oki urore reasonable revision of
handicaps. As night fell, it was
fie king of winter sports. Saturday
I Company's Vancouver Branch Office
402 W. Pender St.
evening we wore guests of the Rok‘P • Bus Ohori, while our Hannah ! reported still in secret session.
Kuwabara was blessed with a
J at the
Vancouver Hop."
fc PM'1'^1
Shi9e Okada i
magic putter with seven or
Paradise Valley
ophv
another Pawmoont- eight one-putt greens. Reggie
^amc the day of the tournament, XYMT'’yin9 h'S '^'Vidual'
f^ TUSl< Oyama Were
np at- o:uu a.m., we headed for combing championship for 194Q.
deadlocked
for the runner-up
famous Mount Raimer, and after a
th7 unfor9cftable position with a net 72.
Mree-hour drive through thrilling days'G5
he favourite picked by the
of
d
visrf
(0
Arne,ica-s famous
scenery, arrived at lovely Paradise
Vai ley.
foT
a"d Our Club Wf the conductor of this column a week
Ho Hum, back at the old type- :
As for the Ni
„(
following dav for honw
^° ^Aed t0 a mediocre golf.
we:!
No time was lost in putting on bearinq
proudly
jthe
L
writer again. What a week-end! To since | was fingered to troc
3ann
0
three-putted
many
championship
,
the manacerour skis and hiking to the course them.
with To card a 77, and Frank Miya
Seattle we went, we saw, but
were pal post it entitles me to make co■wove Ai ta Vista. The trickiest
conquered. Yes siree, completely 'ments, but this time I'm speechlZ
zaki
S3 erratic to score a 76.
course that any of the Japanese runconquered. This scribe, under theP've got nothing to say Yes siH
'•eis had ever faced w'as set
guise of manager
= of the girls' team. Iwas that
men bad!
uaa: The
i ne Seattle
beatt
kind co-operation of Jack Kep(followed tne trail of '99 (U.S. 99), jhad the local girls comp
and Andy Reynolds of Seattle
not in an old-time horse carriage, ; fled and outclassed. Ev
— - -«en with the
engum. The slalom course especially
but in a mooem tour-seat jalopy , great Nishikaze and
Mav YoshinaU
the trickiest with two flushes
owned by one Roy Yamamura and j playing for us we still would hm
3nd fourteen gates.
forth we went to spend a quiet । been no match for th* Yanke- " ' •
t(,()
l<
Vancouver's
Seattle skiers took the thrilling
week-end m Seattle. Whether itj
Taking a hasty glance at YY ।
'lll<
iH f(’"’’ straight for precious tallies.
was quiet
opening downhill event with vet_
Sanies wini
■ ^‘'T fhe score tied at
We|,
7 TeSt'°n'
’" ^ s'deHnes durlno fe f
half•\'Wr ail iJ J J s^^
cron ace Shige Okada making the
I'HT Hornets broke loose
Well
anynow
Seattle
is
some
(game
I
could plainly see the^word
Ion rhe
. !” < -aino publicity 1
record run in 33.2 seconds.
written all over K '
■'''"’•id half, to outscore 7^.- Cab e Cars keeP y°u awake I "impossible"
i
Pons and th
Vancouver Triumphs
m^X16*10- and take the aH night, a regularhike if you want- 'face as he watched the humdi^iF ^
U*0 per
iniprominent of
ed to walk through the town and massacre of the Vancouver caoHte" 1
the Ni
Kip skiers outdistanced the Rokb>ur strafe hf losses was all w
Girls
the easy consumption of 3.2. Well Jf I don't miss my guess the YM I
Outclassed
'ms in an after lunch slalom race,
could get
Nipponeues
dropped
their
‘ first ^°U Can f blame the Vancouver cag will have to do some fast talking ir J
<^d making up the total best averOiicount
and their second game erS for dr°PPing their games.
they wish to continue girls' activ- I
f90, re!iained the T- Nishihama ChalOf Uli ®»n to Seattle's Belize,
•enge Trophy for the second conities
next season.
?
Ymons suffered their first f
^-11.
Plain Disgusted
oi
the
iir
sl
quarter
the
3 narrow margin 1*1 nsniw Johnston Drug at
^marched Seattle jn a ri(d
It looked very much as if basket- i ^ac^ 'n Town
o
°Ur club
won
won TO|""S Pilous... In th„ „
good., excuse
excuse to
to take
take |
Irony . . . at Sunday's
—
ne’ but when
Belle ball was13 ljust
a
ParamOL"^ Trophy donat
•me of (he series, dropping
vue .
nen BelleUiI aa good
Tony
'
wtes
cWmX
the
Steam
^l^
011
fu
6
^F
south.
^
bra
'
ld
°
f
ba
"
meehng
' Badminton Big ShoV
ed by Miss Yukiko Yoshijima
••counter
7
Uu
Mat
. _ •
"mei'stonied to
.
they
olaved W^R a way off par. Tl
_ ILi
। choke
y^played'Was
Their: SU| will probably
P-wk Hatanaka, Vancouver's
death
°"?. with the
^?!!LW
« m maxing his
; when he comes to making I
see, made thc best time in the Exception of the
Vancouver
eirk
sharpshooting
•ng was missing and their shooting speech congratulating the Gakuvukai
two slalom events, leading a s|ose_
"Y »"e point in the first half
hut
r uSt S °PP/- On the Other hand leam of Lucy Koyanagi and Shig
:'J"nl '>>e S«iUIei|(s luu,,,,
ly packed field in the brilliant time
ikying under the
the Hornets, fired with the come- Okumura who
won the mixer!
last
quarter
through
trk
'
ky
p
"dge
Fuiii
-md
I lour
spirit,
having
lost
ingloriously
doulbes
championship
for the second
the sfclolfaeM^ Ml rhe Seattle) R "T
SAY YOU SAW IT IN
to the Canucks in a tussle two time, by defeating the same Matsui
l; or«l8e
।
months ago, laid bare all the hoopla and his partner, Fumi Deshima
THE NEW CANADIAN
Ad""Ston football and
"’rest-1
mens rules in the See. strategy they had in store and really Jimmie" Togawa's long face these
star. Johnston Drug brolm ।
aucouver was still out- went to town. Summing it all up, days is accounted for by bad news
ln(o
lead, and tr
1
as xVippons
Mmg down to utter de- Director Mi Akiyama was just plainly on the lacrosse front. Marpole, so
disgusted with the Vancouver show- far, have given no intention of formr h /MH.trortu,,. defence of 7, ; —
•ng.
a„d Hack
ing a team this year, which means Q
Maybe the whitewash can be
the league may not see action this ^
attributed to the huge American
f
Footwear
? smooth trickYYsma W
year, unless another team can be I
floors. Anyway nothing worked
E Seattle u
Passing plays of
formed to fill in.
Sports Sukiyaki:
We Went, We Saw, Were Conquered,<
*
ies
wef™^S ^ Colled Headaches
j Bike Classic Calling
Nisei Speedsters
3
|
762 Granville St.
528 W. Hastings St.
mo
j
defend Va"couver piayed “«
f
«C the ‘^ ^‘H b°yS
JO SEKO
® HOME
PORTRAITS
© AMATEUR
; 221 Main St.
2
FINISHING
® COMMERCIAL PICTURES
Anytime, Anywhere
<c o Maple Cafe)
SE ymour-4570
or ask for Joe Seko, TR-0794-Y
or Fla and Grippe
TRY
A
to
Powell Drug's
Prescription T-144
or Stubborn Coughs
Prescription 399
SEymour 7502
399 Powell St.
4
>
p
it
p
T
it
!►
^
for the Canadian team. Their zone
defence didn't click, Shig Ashi
kawa was missing them, George
Suzuki, Harry Nikaido, Kiide Shi
J
in
ng
sun
N
ret
tra,
see
era:
For
star
of 5
Bu
by
RENT A
touTT
on by the success of
^. Nra, entrants last year in
/V
raL 7 Ca"ada's biggest bike
mizu were way off form and the
’ «ce, tn ~
imports from Woodfibre, Mike
annual Daily Province
Classic around Stanley Park
Tobo and Idy Idenouye didn't
help the team a bit.
l'”r^ aspiring Nisei pedal)
*
pushe
are expected
lf basketball wants to make c
—
•
any
their luck and skill this
headway in Vancouver's Li'l Tokio
year
^e shop again o^X the eagers should start bellowing
for a new gym big enough to start
entire resources of the shop to some plays instead of charqing up
d r,S Wh° enter the «e, and down the floor in one-man
25c per hour, plus mileag
rs "PK '° S" nia"y '’tore rushes and then be completely lost
entrants out there on May 15. on a visiting gym.
MArine 331 1
901 Seymour
The usual five classes for
“ and boys have been forced.
It win bc the sp««i
QUALITY, ECONOMY AND SERVICE
bY
W0"’en racers- Entry
blanks may be obtained from
the Daily Province or Tammv'e
ew Mercury Car ‘
e
fume
argon
min । a
swolle
the tracing
VANCOUVER 14
MOTORS
U-DRIVE
a
Union Fish Company
FINEST
cakes
l^Bii
Siuuiyoslii
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS
392 Powell St.
Sey. 3933
FREE DELIVERY SERVICE
tW^v 4
Highland 0335-6
469 Powell Street
Sue
heart
two de
I ' InF
Tok^
speech
■Japan
est it a
"The
'S inter
*ith w
st
to
s;
Th.
meats
Been fc
‘ -i i- r v wn, \
vAARCH :
o '
u
I V HU
I a
2 I *
JHi
in 1
By
Cccc
uy
I ourney
0 kawara
at tie inva
of al
• idvantagc of the pc
eno to jaunt across t
border to retain pos ssion of
the Nishihama tr
against the favor
Under the bright retrosh:no
Wial Internati nal Northwest Japanese Ski To sormgkkc weather, our
urnament proved a huge
of 1
minute 25.4 seconds.
ra
lot
For Handicap In
Faster Tourney
r
• . < i 'j Huw ^b a r a, who really
Packs a prodigious tee wallop,
^nougn an extreme unorthodox
ownger, came home with a 4und^j 58 to cop the opening
tournament of the Nippon Golf
Club at Langara. Good Friday.
•he Marpole medico sports
The Mutual Life Assurance
Company of Canada
Established 1869
H Head Off:
'
’
Waterier CW
Announces the Appointment of
ROY YAMAMURA
'■'i Seattle late Friday afternoon and
eat tie that
spent the evening touring and danc- we wer
once
rng. Saturday morning we were tak- rhe Re
British Columbia
at the banquet i,n ourl ful of scorn, hurriedly retired
lo Snoqualmie Mountain Ski honour
when ,presentations
:. Phone: Office—MArine 1746
39g
' Q I ) i d 1 |(Jn S V/e r£ j to the committee room for a
Ground, a distance of 80 miles from made,
Powell St., Vancouver
Nishihama returned his’
J
Residence—Highland 6205-R
775
cattle, and spent the afternoon at dip to
^ Cordova, Vancouver
Fuji Ski Cblub, Ami Oki urore reasonable revision of
handicaps. As night fell, it was
fie king of winter sports. Saturday
I Company's Vancouver Branch Office
402 W. Pender St.
evening we wore guests of the Rok‘P • Bus Ohori, while our Hannah ! reported still in secret session.
Kuwabara was blessed with a
J at the
Vancouver Hop."
fc PM'1'^1
Shi9e Okada i
magic putter with seven or
Paradise Valley
ophv
another Pawmoont- eight one-putt greens. Reggie
^amc the day of the tournament, XYMT'’yin9 h'S '^'Vidual'
f^ TUSl< Oyama Were
np at- o:uu a.m., we headed for combing championship for 194Q.
deadlocked
for the runner-up
famous Mount Raimer, and after a
th7 unfor9cftable position with a net 72.
Mree-hour drive through thrilling days'G5
he favourite picked by the
of
d
visrf
(0
Arne,ica-s famous
scenery, arrived at lovely Paradise
Vai ley.
foT
a"d Our Club Wf the conductor of this column a week
Ho Hum, back at the old type- :
As for the Ni
„(
following dav for honw
^° ^Aed t0 a mediocre golf.
we:!
No time was lost in putting on bearinq
proudly
jthe
L
writer again. What a week-end! To since | was fingered to troc
3ann
0
three-putted
many
championship
,
the manacerour skis and hiking to the course them.
with To card a 77, and Frank Miya
Seattle we went, we saw, but
were pal post it entitles me to make co■wove Ai ta Vista. The trickiest
conquered. Yes siree, completely 'ments, but this time I'm speechlZ
zaki
S3 erratic to score a 76.
course that any of the Japanese runconquered. This scribe, under theP've got nothing to say Yes siH
'•eis had ever faced w'as set
guise of manager
= of the girls' team. Iwas that
men bad!
uaa: The
i ne Seattle
beatt
kind co-operation of Jack Kep(followed tne trail of '99 (U.S. 99), jhad the local girls comp
and Andy Reynolds of Seattle
not in an old-time horse carriage, ; fled and outclassed. Ev
— - -«en with the
engum. The slalom course especially
but in a mooem tour-seat jalopy , great Nishikaze and
Mav YoshinaU
the trickiest with two flushes
owned by one Roy Yamamura and j playing for us we still would hm
3nd fourteen gates.
forth we went to spend a quiet । been no match for th* Yanke- " ' •
t(,()
l<
Vancouver's
Seattle skiers took the thrilling
week-end m Seattle. Whether itj
Taking a hasty glance at YY ।
'lll<
iH f(’"’’ straight for precious tallies.
was quiet
opening downhill event with vet_
Sanies wini
■ ^‘'T fhe score tied at
We|,
7 TeSt'°n'
’" ^ s'deHnes durlno fe f
half•\'Wr ail iJ J J s^^
cron ace Shige Okada making the
I'HT Hornets broke loose
Well
anynow
Seattle
is
some
(game
I
could plainly see the^word
Ion rhe
. !” < -aino publicity 1
record run in 33.2 seconds.
written all over K '
■'''"’•id half, to outscore 7^.- Cab e Cars keeP y°u awake I "impossible"
i
Pons and th
Vancouver Triumphs
m^X16*10- and take the aH night, a regularhike if you want- 'face as he watched the humdi^iF ^
U*0 per
iniprominent of
ed to walk through the town and massacre of the Vancouver caoHte" 1
the Ni
Kip skiers outdistanced the Rokb>ur strafe hf losses was all w
Girls
the easy consumption of 3.2. Well Jf I don't miss my guess the YM I
Outclassed
'ms in an after lunch slalom race,
could get
Nipponeues
dropped
their
‘ first ^°U Can f blame the Vancouver cag will have to do some fast talking ir J
<^d making up the total best averOiicount
and their second game erS for dr°PPing their games.
they wish to continue girls' activ- I
f90, re!iained the T- Nishihama ChalOf Uli ®»n to Seattle's Belize,
•enge Trophy for the second conities
next season.
?
Ymons suffered their first f
^-11.
Plain Disgusted
oi
the
iir
sl
quarter
the
3 narrow margin 1*1 nsniw Johnston Drug at
^marched Seattle jn a ri(d
It looked very much as if basket- i ^ac^ 'n Town
o
°Ur club
won
won TO|""S Pilous... In th„ „
good., excuse
excuse to
to take
take |
Irony . . . at Sunday's
—
ne’ but when
Belle ball was13 ljust
a
ParamOL"^ Trophy donat
•me of (he series, dropping
vue .
nen BelleUiI aa good
Tony
'
wtes
cWmX
the
Steam
^l^
011
fu
6
^F
south.
^
bra
'
ld
°
f
ba
"
meehng
' Badminton Big ShoV
ed by Miss Yukiko Yoshijima
••counter
7
Uu
Mat
. _ •
"mei'stonied to
.
they
olaved W^R a way off par. Tl
_ ILi
। choke
y^played'Was
Their: SU| will probably
P-wk Hatanaka, Vancouver's
death
°"?. with the
^?!!LW
« m maxing his
; when he comes to making I
see, made thc best time in the Exception of the
Vancouver
eirk
sharpshooting
•ng was missing and their shooting speech congratulating the Gakuvukai
two slalom events, leading a s|ose_
"Y »"e point in the first half
hut
r uSt S °PP/- On the Other hand leam of Lucy Koyanagi and Shig
:'J"nl '>>e S«iUIei|(s luu,,,,
ly packed field in the brilliant time
ikying under the
the Hornets, fired with the come- Okumura who
won the mixer!
last
quarter
through
trk
'
ky
p
"dge
Fuiii
-md
I lour
spirit,
having
lost
ingloriously
doulbes
championship
for the second
the sfclolfaeM^ Ml rhe Seattle) R "T
SAY YOU SAW IT IN
to the Canucks in a tussle two time, by defeating the same Matsui
l; or«l8e
।
months ago, laid bare all the hoopla and his partner, Fumi Deshima
THE NEW CANADIAN
Ad""Ston football and
"’rest-1
mens rules in the See. strategy they had in store and really Jimmie" Togawa's long face these
star. Johnston Drug brolm ।
aucouver was still out- went to town. Summing it all up, days is accounted for by bad news
ln(o
lead, and tr
1
as xVippons
Mmg down to utter de- Director Mi Akiyama was just plainly on the lacrosse front. Marpole, so
disgusted with the Vancouver show- far, have given no intention of formr h /MH.trortu,,. defence of 7, ; —
•ng.
a„d Hack
ing a team this year, which means Q
Maybe the whitewash can be
the league may not see action this ^
attributed to the huge American
f
Footwear
? smooth trickYYsma W
year, unless another team can be I
floors. Anyway nothing worked
E Seattle u
Passing plays of
formed to fill in.
Sports Sukiyaki:
We Went, We Saw, Were Conquered,<
*
ies
wef™^S ^ Colled Headaches
j Bike Classic Calling
Nisei Speedsters
3
|
762 Granville St.
528 W. Hastings St.
mo
j
defend Va"couver piayed “«
f
«C the ‘^ ^‘H b°yS
JO SEKO
® HOME
PORTRAITS
© AMATEUR
; 221 Main St.
2
FINISHING
® COMMERCIAL PICTURES
Anytime, Anywhere
<c o Maple Cafe)
SE ymour-4570
or ask for Joe Seko, TR-0794-Y
or Fla and Grippe
TRY
A
to
Powell Drug's
Prescription T-144
or Stubborn Coughs
Prescription 399
SEymour 7502
399 Powell St.
4
>
p
it
p
T
it
!►
^
for the Canadian team. Their zone
defence didn't click, Shig Ashi
kawa was missing them, George
Suzuki, Harry Nikaido, Kiide Shi
J
in
ng
sun
N
ret
tra,
see
era:
For
star
of 5
Bu
by
RENT A
touTT
on by the success of
^. Nra, entrants last year in
/V
raL 7 Ca"ada's biggest bike
mizu were way off form and the
’ «ce, tn ~
imports from Woodfibre, Mike
annual Daily Province
Classic around Stanley Park
Tobo and Idy Idenouye didn't
help the team a bit.
l'”r^ aspiring Nisei pedal)
*
pushe
are expected
lf basketball wants to make c
—
•
any
their luck and skill this
headway in Vancouver's Li'l Tokio
year
^e shop again o^X the eagers should start bellowing
for a new gym big enough to start
entire resources of the shop to some plays instead of charqing up
d r,S Wh° enter the «e, and down the floor in one-man
25c per hour, plus mileag
rs "PK '° S" nia"y '’tore rushes and then be completely lost
entrants out there on May 15. on a visiting gym.
MArine 331 1
901 Seymour
The usual five classes for
“ and boys have been forced.
It win bc the sp««i
QUALITY, ECONOMY AND SERVICE
bY
W0"’en racers- Entry
blanks may be obtained from
the Daily Province or Tammv'e
ew Mercury Car ‘
e
fume
argon
min । a
swolle
the tracing
VANCOUVER 14
MOTORS
U-DRIVE
a
Union Fish Company
FINEST
cakes
l^Bii
Siuuiyoslii
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS
392 Powell St.
Sey. 3933
FREE DELIVERY SERVICE
tW^v 4
Highland 0335-6
469 Powell Street
Sue
heart
two de
I ' InF
Tok^
speech
■Japan
est it a
"The
'S inter
*ith w
st
to
s;
Th.
meats
Been fc