Page 1
, 194;
a
iit Tight" Attitude
The New Canadian
i oung Second Generation
Eye the Eastward Trek’
THE VOICE OF THE SECOND GENERATION
Vol. V, No. 10
VANCOUVER, B. C.
» Today’s
in the;
f coal c; ^HEADLINES
Boston Museum Closes
Japanese Galleries
‘bby fj
.
South Of The Border ;
Alarm in Australia as
same reason, it was an
nounced.
Nisei Reserve Officer
Training Corps youths from
the University of Hawaii
form the nucleus of the Ter
ritorial Guard. The Terri
torials are guarding bridg
es, power stations, and
other public installations
and other public installa
tions and buildings.
* * *
BOSTON—The Museum
of Fine Arts has closed its
galleries devoted to Japan
'inned
JaPanese Endings on New Brit
ese art to protect the ob
ain, the Solomon and Bismark
jects from fanatics, such as
slands, all within bombing range of;
those who chopped down
puzzleAustralia proper sent the island con- I
four
of Washington’s fam
Imond (iHent into a furore today as black-!
ous Japanese cherry trees.
)uts,were ordered in all major cities,!
"Thoughtful
people
nilitia manned the beaches, 1,000,know that there is no con
)00 gas masks were ordered from'
nection
between the be
And Britain, and the national holiday,
haviour of the Japanese to- First Generation Aid
forgo^ustralia Day, January 26, was can-hair g:elled- Appeal for aid were sent! I da^ an^ 4a Japanese Bud- JACL Defence Work
o London and Washington to which)
uhist or “Tosa” painting of
SEATTLE—Over $400 in
me British source replied that the!
^de ^tH Century”, said Dir- cold, hard cash was pour
hate Australians have nothing to worry!
ector G. H. Edgell in his ed out at a meeting last
’ncertanbouf because there was no immin- j I annual report to the trus- Saturday night by first gen- ;
Wor^mf danger of invasion in Australia!
^eS’
eration Japanese in support I
115 aknd that the landings on the Aust-! L.. .
/ * *
of the work being cai’ried
^e«n-alian islands were just a side show) ,. Se’ ^*cers Serve In
out in Seattle by the Em
ied abo the main events in Malay and
*'
"
”
Hawaiian
Territorials
ergency Defence Council of
letter Singapore.
HONOLULU — After a the Japanese American Citi
ituation in Singapore
month of war, Japanese zens’ League.
* * *
^shed rery Serious
Americans in Hawaii are
no more restricted than any Nisei Surrender Swords
In Singapore severe battles were
other residents of the Valued at $35,000
eing fought at all sectors and
islands. There has been no
SAN FRANCISCO — A
Aajor
General Gordon Bennett,
suggestion
of
wholesale
re
$35,000
collection of beau
lustralian commander said that the
moval,
and
some
are
still
tiful but murderous-look
^Atuation "if anything is more seriemployed in defence pro ing swords, spears, daggers
^e'Hus than it was a few days ago.”
jects.
and arrows was turned in
nt 1c"okyo radio was heard to be claim-!
Authorities are showing to police authorities here
t.^re ig that the fall of Singapore was;*
their belief in the loyalty by Albert and Morgan K.
1!(ecear and the naval base was doomof the Japanese popula Yamanaka. They regarded
tion which comprises 36.76 the swords as objects of art,
hinese Guerillas
per cent, of the island total, but yielded to the govern
^e all form Japanese Naval Base
by permitting two Japanese ment’s opinion that they
stran Chinese sources said that Chinnewspapers to publish.
were deadly weapons.
t he^se guerilla troops had crossed the
Officials said that many
Although they are sec
gb ellow Sea and had stormed the
Japanese residents cannot ond generation themselves,
ivcstapanese naval base on Yoko Island
speak English, so they re-. the brothers were required
t’s sJf the coast of Korea.
ceive
military
orders to surrender the valuable
Is. .oronto Foils Sabotage Scheme
through the papers. Radio collection, handed down by
g fro Toronto civic authorities proudstations are expected to be their ancestors, because
[ reported the "nipping in the
allowed to resume broad they live with their alien
is, ytud"’‘ of a sabotage attempt as 391
casts in Japanese for the parents.
t^ d Japanese Land in Vicinity
c is rre hydrants that were so tampered)
Its ’ t?3* tbe water could not be turn- i
nty °? were discovered.
i
Survey Under Way
t re^dtNews "Down Under"Further restrictions on the use of
ie ^astlc In wear'ng apparel which last
>e tl66^ caused a boom in corset sales
hitcu ^oca' downtown stores will now
(See page 4, for P.C. 288, detailing government orders).
re®/e^ fhose parts of the male and'
Japanese Fishing Vessels Disposal Commission is the semi
yoima'e wear known as the "un- * official name given to the three-man committee which will
for ^Ptionables " All clothing with supervise the transfer of Japanese-owned fishing vessels to
i jo^» waistbands will be affected
A. E. McMaster, formerly of the Powell River Company
dir?0?9 those being shorts, panties,
been appointed as secretary of the -committee, and an
do/’a^aS' bathing suits and so on.| °^1C%Ope?ed
the Marine Building, at Burrard and Hasthe big question of the moment is
MArinere?734The telephone number for the Commission is
How're we going to hold them
Fish Vessels Commission Begins Work
Mr. McMaster, it was an-।
~
pposition Attacks Plegiscite
j nounced, will issue all official ?
JnXtfawa, opposition members) Press statements.
™mU
I
“
Kumo Shimizu Joins
loud cries of protest) Meanwhile a voluntary sur-i
{New Canadian Staff
!hLe government's move to vey of all immobilized boats is)
j
X P|eb,scite on the conscription going
.
on, under
direction!
uestion
-x r ।
feuillfi '-'ii,
unuer the
me direction,
E XX E
°f the,r of the Canadian Japanese VeF
J MZ
iticism was ±v
that the ;r“sd Owners’ Association, with'
?ould have acted of its own ac- >rd instead of wasting much valu- the approval of the Commis-’
sion.
|?Jlme in holding the plebiscite.
Owners of boats are asked to?
fAF Beckons to Hollywoodians
complete forms which are now'
!The hearts of local sweet young
available at the offices of the
were Palpitating furiously as Canadian Salt Herring Export
yo ^handsome Hollywood bit players Association, Dunlevy Ave
,s smiled from the pages of the nue. These forms will also bei
jcah daily press. They had come
provided from next week at
P enlist in the Royal Canadian Air
the Commission offices in the
f \ And, girls, reports have it Marine Building, when Mr.
jahthere will be three more HollyKichizo Kimura, representing
’oodians coming up to enlist in the
the owners, takes up duties
jear future.
there.
two distinct official pronouncements. - These are:
16 °n '
(1) That Japanese nationals are to be
protected areas, except under special permit from the R.C.M.P
+
3 v°bmtary civilian corps will be formed
win
Car>-adian-born Japanese, and that the corps
will be put to work on projects of national value
P
Under the circumstances, j
the logical attitude which who welcomes the suggestion
the majority of people are that they go to work in the
holding is simply to “sit j Okanagan
under
military
tight” and wait for further ■ guard, and on the understanddetails. Whatever those de j ing that they will not be per
tails are, they will be accept mitted to settle there as
ed willingly and in good faith citizens if they so desire.
if they are reasonable and Obviously work under such
just.
rp,
.
.
।{conditions
--------- — « equivalent to
1 here are indications, how-1 sugar-coated slavery
according to
dowm
bv
famiiv
racnA^oikn.(
Mayor
Fred
Hume,
Standingdown by family responsibilities a new movement'^v
?e chairman, commitunder
'
aj be tees similar to those in the fish«xxxoxtrxxfexng induxwm be set up’to
second
1 W supervise the removal of naare anxiously wait“n« to dispose । EX .engaged in agricultural
of their boats XXX
industries, in lumbering and
a v"’XJ S™iiorand in retaii trades-
Canada in search of a “souarp* A sP°kesman for the Fed
eral Department of Labor gave
deal.”
a clue as to what policy may
No restraint has been impos- be
u followed, declaring that
ed on any voluntary movement “fh
first we have to find out what
eastward for citizens. Enemy the
men can do. After all, it
aliens, however, must report
wouldn’t be much use to send
toSiy and reCeiVe PermitS a cIerk f™ a Vancouver store
to travel.
or a man who ran a roominguthers at present employed house into a railway camp or
3re leekmg further ^formation! put him at work building
on the civilian corps, so that; roads.”
they may volunteer without!
i
further delay. One case reh
ms most unjust to
case re the average person, citizen or
ported was that of a worker
in the citv on
J
non-citizen- is the fact that the
undecided now whether or no? E “‘tuation is being exploitto return to work
ed b>' other vested interests to
irid themselves of legitimate
mere is no one, howeyer, । competition.
IMtiim Ilonin Oit Powell Street
"Alien . . . hm . . . let’s see . . . A-L-I-E-N . . . doko
n^ aru^a ■ ■ • °h> here it is . . . ali-en . . . gwaikokujin . .
and e-ne-my . . . “E” ka . . . teki . . . so shita ra tekkokujin
ka . . . let’s see what’s next . . . re-gu-la-tions . . . that’s
in the “R’s . . . R-E-G-U-L- . .
And so our older folk are slowly and painfully trying to
and understand the English language papers with the
aid of now well-worn English-Japanese dictionaries.
Uchida’s bookstore, premier bookseller on Powell Street
reports they were virtually mobbed by customers as soon as
the outbreak of the Pacific war brought the suspension of the
Japanese language press. With a reminiscent look in his eye
tOld^this reporter of how there °nce used to be two
full shelves of dictionaries where now the store is reduced to
JTvef lsing /or c°Pies of the precious books, (advt. . . see
this issue of The New Canadian).
At the Minshu bookstore, there are exactly two forlorn
Japanese English dictionaries left of a large pre-war stock
JUHb
in the average local Japanese home
2 a Ramify huddle as with the aid of the dictionary the
ay s news is interpreted by the second-generation to th-m
® The New Canadian IS parents.
pleased to announce the ap
Many "Nisei” report that the war has advanced their
pointment of Kunio Shimizu heretofore meagre knowledge of Japanese by leaps and
as part-time assistant to bounds as they look up the meanings of words in the trusty
Yoshimitsu Higashi, business
Conversely, many Japanese older folks' whose
manager of The New Can Enghsh vocabulary was limited to "hello”, and "yes” and
adian.
and
“y alienS” X
Xoothly
Mr. Shimizu, who is wide and glibly as the newspapers themselves.
ly known in the community
leamtnrr^.rET™1 TS b“” an inereased attention to
for his work with the Can
adian Japanese Association, Powell nniM ri C tSSS fOr1a<ilCS have been formed at the
1^4 b»
’ ^“^ Gwen S“ftf is
a
and as general secretary of das
<4 4. ? g nners' At the same church, Miss Margaret
the Japanese Canadian Citi 5,
McDuffee takes an “advanced” class of eight puoi s Xrv
zens’ League, will continue Monday and Thursday afternoon.
’
'
in the latter capacity, at the
Baldwin
same time assuming duties has EX Jk" lng“T Church' Miss
X
a
1
A
15
members
at
the
Third
Avenue
Church
every
on the staff of this news
T”le Mlss Margaret Cox takes a class of ten
paper.
at the Marpole Anglican Church every Wednesday afternoon
a
iit Tight" Attitude
The New Canadian
i oung Second Generation
Eye the Eastward Trek’
THE VOICE OF THE SECOND GENERATION
Vol. V, No. 10
VANCOUVER, B. C.
» Today’s
in the;
f coal c; ^HEADLINES
Boston Museum Closes
Japanese Galleries
‘bby fj
.
South Of The Border ;
Alarm in Australia as
same reason, it was an
nounced.
Nisei Reserve Officer
Training Corps youths from
the University of Hawaii
form the nucleus of the Ter
ritorial Guard. The Terri
torials are guarding bridg
es, power stations, and
other public installations
and other public installa
tions and buildings.
* * *
BOSTON—The Museum
of Fine Arts has closed its
galleries devoted to Japan
'inned
JaPanese Endings on New Brit
ese art to protect the ob
ain, the Solomon and Bismark
jects from fanatics, such as
slands, all within bombing range of;
those who chopped down
puzzleAustralia proper sent the island con- I
four
of Washington’s fam
Imond (iHent into a furore today as black-!
ous Japanese cherry trees.
)uts,were ordered in all major cities,!
"Thoughtful
people
nilitia manned the beaches, 1,000,know that there is no con
)00 gas masks were ordered from'
nection
between the be
And Britain, and the national holiday,
haviour of the Japanese to- First Generation Aid
forgo^ustralia Day, January 26, was can-hair g:elled- Appeal for aid were sent! I da^ an^ 4a Japanese Bud- JACL Defence Work
o London and Washington to which)
uhist or “Tosa” painting of
SEATTLE—Over $400 in
me British source replied that the!
^de ^tH Century”, said Dir- cold, hard cash was pour
hate Australians have nothing to worry!
ector G. H. Edgell in his ed out at a meeting last
’ncertanbouf because there was no immin- j I annual report to the trus- Saturday night by first gen- ;
Wor^mf danger of invasion in Australia!
^eS’
eration Japanese in support I
115 aknd that the landings on the Aust-! L.. .
/ * *
of the work being cai’ried
^e«n-alian islands were just a side show) ,. Se’ ^*cers Serve In
out in Seattle by the Em
ied abo the main events in Malay and
*'
"
”
Hawaiian
Territorials
ergency Defence Council of
letter Singapore.
HONOLULU — After a the Japanese American Citi
ituation in Singapore
month of war, Japanese zens’ League.
* * *
^shed rery Serious
Americans in Hawaii are
no more restricted than any Nisei Surrender Swords
In Singapore severe battles were
other residents of the Valued at $35,000
eing fought at all sectors and
islands. There has been no
SAN FRANCISCO — A
Aajor
General Gordon Bennett,
suggestion
of
wholesale
re
$35,000
collection of beau
lustralian commander said that the
moval,
and
some
are
still
tiful but murderous-look
^Atuation "if anything is more seriemployed in defence pro ing swords, spears, daggers
^e'Hus than it was a few days ago.”
jects.
and arrows was turned in
nt 1c"okyo radio was heard to be claim-!
Authorities are showing to police authorities here
t.^re ig that the fall of Singapore was;*
their belief in the loyalty by Albert and Morgan K.
1!(ecear and the naval base was doomof the Japanese popula Yamanaka. They regarded
tion which comprises 36.76 the swords as objects of art,
hinese Guerillas
per cent, of the island total, but yielded to the govern
^e all form Japanese Naval Base
by permitting two Japanese ment’s opinion that they
stran Chinese sources said that Chinnewspapers to publish.
were deadly weapons.
t he^se guerilla troops had crossed the
Officials said that many
Although they are sec
gb ellow Sea and had stormed the
Japanese residents cannot ond generation themselves,
ivcstapanese naval base on Yoko Island
speak English, so they re-. the brothers were required
t’s sJf the coast of Korea.
ceive
military
orders to surrender the valuable
Is. .oronto Foils Sabotage Scheme
through the papers. Radio collection, handed down by
g fro Toronto civic authorities proudstations are expected to be their ancestors, because
[ reported the "nipping in the
allowed to resume broad they live with their alien
is, ytud"’‘ of a sabotage attempt as 391
casts in Japanese for the parents.
t^ d Japanese Land in Vicinity
c is rre hydrants that were so tampered)
Its ’ t?3* tbe water could not be turn- i
nty °? were discovered.
i
Survey Under Way
t re^dtNews "Down Under"Further restrictions on the use of
ie ^astlc In wear'ng apparel which last
>e tl66^ caused a boom in corset sales
hitcu ^oca' downtown stores will now
(See page 4, for P.C. 288, detailing government orders).
re®/e^ fhose parts of the male and'
Japanese Fishing Vessels Disposal Commission is the semi
yoima'e wear known as the "un- * official name given to the three-man committee which will
for ^Ptionables " All clothing with supervise the transfer of Japanese-owned fishing vessels to
i jo^» waistbands will be affected
A. E. McMaster, formerly of the Powell River Company
dir?0?9 those being shorts, panties,
been appointed as secretary of the -committee, and an
do/’a^aS' bathing suits and so on.| °^1C%Ope?ed
the Marine Building, at Burrard and Hasthe big question of the moment is
MArinere?734The telephone number for the Commission is
How're we going to hold them
Fish Vessels Commission Begins Work
Mr. McMaster, it was an-।
~
pposition Attacks Plegiscite
j nounced, will issue all official ?
JnXtfawa, opposition members) Press statements.
™mU
I
“
Kumo Shimizu Joins
loud cries of protest) Meanwhile a voluntary sur-i
{New Canadian Staff
!hLe government's move to vey of all immobilized boats is)
j
X P|eb,scite on the conscription going
.
on, under
direction!
uestion
-x r ।
feuillfi '-'ii,
unuer the
me direction,
E XX E
°f the,r of the Canadian Japanese VeF
J MZ
iticism was ±v
that the ;r“sd Owners’ Association, with'
?ould have acted of its own ac- >rd instead of wasting much valu- the approval of the Commis-’
sion.
|?Jlme in holding the plebiscite.
Owners of boats are asked to?
fAF Beckons to Hollywoodians
complete forms which are now'
!The hearts of local sweet young
available at the offices of the
were Palpitating furiously as Canadian Salt Herring Export
yo ^handsome Hollywood bit players Association, Dunlevy Ave
,s smiled from the pages of the nue. These forms will also bei
jcah daily press. They had come
provided from next week at
P enlist in the Royal Canadian Air
the Commission offices in the
f \ And, girls, reports have it Marine Building, when Mr.
jahthere will be three more HollyKichizo Kimura, representing
’oodians coming up to enlist in the
the owners, takes up duties
jear future.
there.
two distinct official pronouncements. - These are:
16 °n '
(1) That Japanese nationals are to be
protected areas, except under special permit from the R.C.M.P
+
3 v°bmtary civilian corps will be formed
win
Car>-adian-born Japanese, and that the corps
will be put to work on projects of national value
P
Under the circumstances, j
the logical attitude which who welcomes the suggestion
the majority of people are that they go to work in the
holding is simply to “sit j Okanagan
under
military
tight” and wait for further ■ guard, and on the understanddetails. Whatever those de j ing that they will not be per
tails are, they will be accept mitted to settle there as
ed willingly and in good faith citizens if they so desire.
if they are reasonable and Obviously work under such
just.
rp,
.
.
।{conditions
--------- — « equivalent to
1 here are indications, how-1 sugar-coated slavery
according to
dowm
bv
famiiv
racnA^oikn.(
Mayor
Fred
Hume,
Standingdown by family responsibilities a new movement'^v
?e chairman, commitunder
'
aj be tees similar to those in the fish«xxxoxtrxxfexng induxwm be set up’to
second
1 W supervise the removal of naare anxiously wait“n« to dispose । EX .engaged in agricultural
of their boats XXX
industries, in lumbering and
a v"’XJ S™iiorand in retaii trades-
Canada in search of a “souarp* A sP°kesman for the Fed
eral Department of Labor gave
deal.”
a clue as to what policy may
No restraint has been impos- be
u followed, declaring that
ed on any voluntary movement “fh
first we have to find out what
eastward for citizens. Enemy the
men can do. After all, it
aliens, however, must report
wouldn’t be much use to send
toSiy and reCeiVe PermitS a cIerk f™ a Vancouver store
to travel.
or a man who ran a roominguthers at present employed house into a railway camp or
3re leekmg further ^formation! put him at work building
on the civilian corps, so that; roads.”
they may volunteer without!
i
further delay. One case reh
ms most unjust to
case re the average person, citizen or
ported was that of a worker
in the citv on
J
non-citizen- is the fact that the
undecided now whether or no? E “‘tuation is being exploitto return to work
ed b>' other vested interests to
irid themselves of legitimate
mere is no one, howeyer, । competition.
IMtiim Ilonin Oit Powell Street
"Alien . . . hm . . . let’s see . . . A-L-I-E-N . . . doko
n^ aru^a ■ ■ • °h> here it is . . . ali-en . . . gwaikokujin . .
and e-ne-my . . . “E” ka . . . teki . . . so shita ra tekkokujin
ka . . . let’s see what’s next . . . re-gu-la-tions . . . that’s
in the “R’s . . . R-E-G-U-L- . .
And so our older folk are slowly and painfully trying to
and understand the English language papers with the
aid of now well-worn English-Japanese dictionaries.
Uchida’s bookstore, premier bookseller on Powell Street
reports they were virtually mobbed by customers as soon as
the outbreak of the Pacific war brought the suspension of the
Japanese language press. With a reminiscent look in his eye
tOld^this reporter of how there °nce used to be two
full shelves of dictionaries where now the store is reduced to
JTvef lsing /or c°Pies of the precious books, (advt. . . see
this issue of The New Canadian).
At the Minshu bookstore, there are exactly two forlorn
Japanese English dictionaries left of a large pre-war stock
JUHb
in the average local Japanese home
2 a Ramify huddle as with the aid of the dictionary the
ay s news is interpreted by the second-generation to th-m
® The New Canadian IS parents.
pleased to announce the ap
Many "Nisei” report that the war has advanced their
pointment of Kunio Shimizu heretofore meagre knowledge of Japanese by leaps and
as part-time assistant to bounds as they look up the meanings of words in the trusty
Yoshimitsu Higashi, business
Conversely, many Japanese older folks' whose
manager of The New Can Enghsh vocabulary was limited to "hello”, and "yes” and
adian.
and
“y alienS” X
Xoothly
Mr. Shimizu, who is wide and glibly as the newspapers themselves.
ly known in the community
leamtnrr^.rET™1 TS b“” an inereased attention to
for his work with the Can
adian Japanese Association, Powell nniM ri C tSSS fOr1a<ilCS have been formed at the
1^4 b»
’ ^“^ Gwen S“ftf is
a
and as general secretary of das
<4 4. ? g nners' At the same church, Miss Margaret
the Japanese Canadian Citi 5,
McDuffee takes an “advanced” class of eight puoi s Xrv
zens’ League, will continue Monday and Thursday afternoon.
’
'
in the latter capacity, at the
Baldwin
same time assuming duties has EX Jk" lng“T Church' Miss
X
a
1
A
15
members
at
the
Third
Avenue
Church
every
on the staff of this news
T”le Mlss Margaret Cox takes a class of ten
paper.
at the Marpole Anglican Church every Wednesday afternoon
Page 2
THE NEW CANADIAN
JANUARY 23, 1942
t !
M ^ hi h
5
K >1 3
JANUARY
ymwba
cling,
.•
Hon
" uai
enTemple,
^Declare Confidence in Policy of Governin''
® Nisei Fellowship Meets
Drama Fes-|v. A solution re-affirming their loyalty to His Majestv *
at Maple Ridge
Ki
High School! King, and the British Commonwealth of Nations and N
The Maple Ridge Baptist
A Hi al Meet-ling to do their utmost in the great struggle to the end?
Church will be the meeting The Same Oid Way
ie ri®^eausness °f God may prevail was unanimoushB
Aiumni
Association
place. Saturday, February 7,
ed by loO members of the Japanese Junior United
?
j
their
seventh
a
nnual
meeting
last
Sunday.
'
.
for members of the
EBAT
A-WAKABA
YAS
HI
isei ‘
Y.P.
EUr
Christian Fellowship.
”ub j
The Hompa Buddhist Tempi
Another resolution pasy
arty. Happ
® Japanese Clinic
was the setting Saturday Iasi
expressed
the confidence ,■
T ^kulR-ah-Rah Spirit For
This Friday
; January 17. for the marriage of! 14
the Church in the attitude
The Japanese Social Service Chiyoko, daughter of Mr. and!
^i
Valentine
Dance
.
the Dominion Governmentnail,
p.m.,
Band.
>1.25
Couple.
Clinic will be open as usual ^rs'
Chujiro Wakabayashi.!
their efforts to do justice*
We are! We are! We are NOT
Friday, at 7.30 p.m. with doct- 2^o6 McGill St. to Mr. Genei!
,
all peoples in these diff^
feeling low (or are tee 2)
ors a nd nurses in attendance. Ebata, of 2666 Robson Street. Com 6 To Church
I times.
We can! We can! We cannot let'
The clinic is situated at the
Rev. R. Tatibano performed
! In his report to the meet
that go! (What? . . . the
corner of Pender and Jackson the ceremony, the baishakun{the
minister, Rev. K. Shut
This Sunday
V alentine Dance, of course.)
Streets.
, ins for which were Mr. and
{ revealed that membership'
Come one! Come all!
! Mrs. Sukehaschi Mori. A re-1
® Badminton Club
trie Junior Church now st?
1 o the Brock Memorial Hall,
ception for close friends fol-!® Church of Ascension
Happylahd Party
And dance and sway, your blues at 169, of whom 36 are ?
Don’t forget' to roll awav lowed at the Fuji
resident members.
I Holy Communion in Japanaway.
those war-time nerves at the:
* * *
He paid tribute to the \
I ese at 8.30 a.m. and in English You won't regret it at all!
Y.P.S. Badminton Club roller
NISHI-TERAKITA
| at 9.15; Sunday school and
derful
service rendered b\
(Apologies to the “Engineers")
party, at Happyland, Monday! The
Steveston
Buddhist Junior church at 10; Junior
Church Choir under the lea.
That's
evening, February 9. Three: Temple was the scene of a pret- church committee and Morning miss this right; you should not! ship of Miss Margaret Meh
dance of the spring season. fee
hours of fun and frolic, sweet ty wedding ceremony when prayer at 11; Topic of sermon,
Also revealed was thef
Its going to be colossal, stupendous:
music and smooth gliding, and; Chiyoye, eldest daughter of “Divine Compassion”, by Rev.
that
24
members of the Ju*
words cannot describe it!
good friendship to boot for 35c. | Mrs. Imaye Terakita. 330 E. G. Nakayama; Evening prayer
Church are serving as lead
George Reifel and his eleven-piece
Tickets from Tanaka Bros., Cordova, of Vancouver, was at 7.30 p.m.; Topic of Sermon,
and teachers in various Ch’
New Pier, Ernie’s, or from any given away in marriage by her "Unknown Man”; Rev. G. Varsity Orchestra and the yet un- j fan education groups.
named vocalist, will give ?.ll they've
member.
brother, Mr. Nasao Terakita. Nakayama in charge.
i Concluding his report
got
for music ranging from "sweet
© Missionary Meeting for
। to Mr. Kenichi Nishi of Steveminister declared that “ne
and melodious strains" to Dixie- before has a greater chalk
Powell Young People
:ston, Thursday afternoon, Janu@ Fairview Mission
land hot jives.”
“Hope for the Lepers” will .! ary 22- Rev' D. Katatsu perbeen presented to the Chm
Young People’s Service at 11
Tickets at $1.25 are now availbe the topic for the missionary; formed the ceremony. Some a.m.,
Church than at the pre
"A Day at a Time,” by
meeting of the Powell Young!forty guests attented the re- Mr. Takashi Komiyama, solo able at The New Canadian, mi«. |time. The world darkened
and New Pier: they can also
un
People’s Society, conducted by! ception which followed at the by Miss Aki Goromaru.
be °b-1 war must have the redemo;
tained
from
J.S.C,
members,
oteves- power of the Christian gos ^
Martha Kayahara, missionary j same place,
ton
folk
are
kindly
asked
to
।
Public
Worship
at
2
p.m.,
contact
convenor, this Sunday eve— - - Baishakunins
for the even Ior it must perish. Chris the
Henry Naruse for tickets.
ning at 7.30 p.m.
were Mr. and Mrs. Torajiro "The Proofs of Loyalty” by
the
the wfnr
.And don t forest the
i/r , only
’ hope for
x
A guest soloist. Miss Mar- Nakamura of this city and Mr. Rev. K. Shimizu.
is God’s the
Fttallry l jl%
jorie Russel, will render two anc^ Mrs. K. Hikida of Steveweeks away now.
portunity.
Elections to the Church ^r
© Powell United Church
vocals.
ston.
Dancing
from
8.30
to
12,
* ❖ *
Members of the Camera Club
Morning Public Worship,
™ ecutive were:
kafe
affair will be strictly INFORMAL.
are reminded of the meeting H
“
The
Wings
of
Christian
Faith
”
,
MIYAHARA-NISHI
Board of Session—Hide i the
Brock Hall is west of the Alma!
Sunday at 3.30 p.m. in the gym[ Nuptial rites were performed by Rev. K. Shimizu.
Academy by only a ten-minute ride odo, Hideko Hidaka, Aki ’ stuc
parlour.
last Sunday afternoon at the
odo, Yuki Matsui, Chiyo Hyc citv
Young People s Society meet
wes
^
on
JOrh
and
through
to
the
Takashi
Komiyama “
© Appreciation Night
Hompa Temple, when Mr. Tsu ing, 7.30 p.m., ’‘Hope for the University Bus Terminal; and a late
Eiji 1‘UU1
our.
The regular monthly meet tomu Miyahara and Miss Sumi Lepers.”
bus will be chartered specially
Kondn
? ash™oto’ Tsufor
ing of the ACTS club of the ko Nishi were united in mar
----- ;Kondo.
Kondo, Shotaro Tomita.
Powell Church will be held riage.
। Committee of Stewarcl^sa
Tuesday, January 27, in the
STEVESTON STATIC ■
The groom is the eldest son
Myea Okamura, Norah Fu; livir
Church school, when the men’s of Mrs. Ichisuke Miyahara,
In appreciation of manyiant, Shinichi Nakadp^e’ Kimi Takiro- T
club will be hosts to all the 2323 West 4th, and the late Mr. years of faithful, devoted serDship, Takeshi
Rune
Ankado,
Roy Nose. 1
i
, ship, Takeshi Kobavashi asChurch workers—teachers and Miyahara, while the bride is vice
Shinobu, Kasey Oyama, I •'
t
m the JaPan-distant, Shirley Mom
" ’
leaders in the form of a ’’Night the daughter of
Saiga,
Henry Ide.
^ Umt®d Church Kindergart-{Invitation
of Appreciation.”
Tomegoro Nishi, 8810 Selkirk en m Steveston, Miss Alma!
The
^S^^S^^^^^ ’ 11
The $Society accepted a
Barry was preset„ed with a!
Mr. and Mrs. Ichitaro Ike- gift from the Mothers’ Club and I very gracious invitation fr om
ARMSTRONG S
The New Scientific
the
South
Arm
Young
and ArAXo.
Mrs. Tetsuif^' buchi and Mr. uiivi
IClulll” Women’s
Association.
Best!
and COMPANY
[at 71
People’s Society to attend As
Dental Discovery n chiro Nomi were the baisha- wishes
c
were extended to Miss!
UNDERTAKERS^
kunins and Rev. R. Tatibana of Barry on her approaching mar- their meeting on Sunday,
January
2ath,
at
7.45
p.m.
ficiated. Following the cere- riage.
Members are requested to s
*
mony a reception was held at
Miss
Hanako
Naruse
has
acJ"?^^
Steveston Church
S the Fuji.
i U An Jb 9 X « INJI
■—o—
cepted a position as kindergart- i
( ^
Here is that biggest event in
blished 1912
ODA-SAKAMOTO
en teacher in the United Church |
;Aven
women’s Ready-to-Wear hist 304 Dunlevy Ave.
Rev. R. Tatibana read the kindergarten. All good wishes ory!
High, odurie
i
rites Friday afternoon at the to Hanako.
Hompa Temple for the mar
Henry Kanao Naruse was re
riage of Miss Shizue Sakamoto
,'afteri
Seeking a New Home
?
to Mr. Shigetoshi Oda, both of elected president of the Steve- g
|ber a
* Consult
6
331 Main Street. Mr. Rinsa- ston Young People’s Society,;
Teri, tc
^j Liquid Dentifrice
buro Kagawa is the baishakun- at the annual election meeting' |
H. S. OKUMURA
’Hospi
in.
held on Sunday, January 18.
,
Real Estate Agent
'KEE
Also elected to the executive H 3.•;4 Powell Street
PAcific 8716
Nothing but the Infinite pity is were. Kay Oda, vice-president;
3
249
Powell
St.
2 Z49 Powell St.
PA 3028 £
sufficient for the Infinite pathos of Amy Nakashima, secretary; and 3
Human Life.—John Inglsant.
9
Komei Konishi, treasurer.
i
9
I
. Chosen as convenors were:;
9
9
Missionar
Soft as a fleecy cloud!
-- ry, Shoichi Matsushita !
9
For the BEST IN FOOD
with Miss Neta Sadler assist-! 3
9
9
mg: Literary, Fred Nishi, as-1
9
I?
sistant, Tadao Naruse; Fellow-!
®
There
is
only
or.ei
at the LOWEST PRICES . .
shipNTokiye Tamemoto, assist-1
xrmity
^'aa.
1ft
।
0«»
| Seishindo Co.
* * *
hwiptiw
★
It's The
drug store on Powef
Street qualified tc h 0 >1
your prescriptior g
needs.
9
S. TSURUTA
AGENT FOR
®
9
9
FISH — GROCERIES — PROVISIONS
Highland 0335-6
469 Powell Street
Machine Co.
j
393 Powell St.
PA 7043
30 s 55c
9
^U2
l®l
399 Poweli - Pacific 501
aamEEEEEMEEmEi®98999
1
9 BAcil
9
JANUARY 23, 1942
t !
M ^ hi h
5
K >1 3
JANUARY
ymwba
cling,
.•
Hon
" uai
enTemple,
^Declare Confidence in Policy of Governin''
® Nisei Fellowship Meets
Drama Fes-|v. A solution re-affirming their loyalty to His Majestv *
at Maple Ridge
Ki
High School! King, and the British Commonwealth of Nations and N
The Maple Ridge Baptist
A Hi al Meet-ling to do their utmost in the great struggle to the end?
Church will be the meeting The Same Oid Way
ie ri®^eausness °f God may prevail was unanimoushB
Aiumni
Association
place. Saturday, February 7,
ed by loO members of the Japanese Junior United
?
j
their
seventh
a
nnual
meeting
last
Sunday.
'
.
for members of the
EBAT
A-WAKABA
YAS
HI
isei ‘
Y.P.
EUr
Christian Fellowship.
”ub j
The Hompa Buddhist Tempi
Another resolution pasy
arty. Happ
® Japanese Clinic
was the setting Saturday Iasi
expressed
the confidence ,■
T ^kulR-ah-Rah Spirit For
This Friday
; January 17. for the marriage of! 14
the Church in the attitude
The Japanese Social Service Chiyoko, daughter of Mr. and!
^i
Valentine
Dance
.
the Dominion Governmentnail,
p.m.,
Band.
>1.25
Couple.
Clinic will be open as usual ^rs'
Chujiro Wakabayashi.!
their efforts to do justice*
We are! We are! We are NOT
Friday, at 7.30 p.m. with doct- 2^o6 McGill St. to Mr. Genei!
,
all peoples in these diff^
feeling low (or are tee 2)
ors a nd nurses in attendance. Ebata, of 2666 Robson Street. Com 6 To Church
I times.
We can! We can! We cannot let'
The clinic is situated at the
Rev. R. Tatibano performed
! In his report to the meet
that go! (What? . . . the
corner of Pender and Jackson the ceremony, the baishakun{the
minister, Rev. K. Shut
This Sunday
V alentine Dance, of course.)
Streets.
, ins for which were Mr. and
{ revealed that membership'
Come one! Come all!
! Mrs. Sukehaschi Mori. A re-1
® Badminton Club
trie Junior Church now st?
1 o the Brock Memorial Hall,
ception for close friends fol-!® Church of Ascension
Happylahd Party
And dance and sway, your blues at 169, of whom 36 are ?
Don’t forget' to roll awav lowed at the Fuji
resident members.
I Holy Communion in Japanaway.
those war-time nerves at the:
* * *
He paid tribute to the \
I ese at 8.30 a.m. and in English You won't regret it at all!
Y.P.S. Badminton Club roller
NISHI-TERAKITA
| at 9.15; Sunday school and
derful
service rendered b\
(Apologies to the “Engineers")
party, at Happyland, Monday! The
Steveston
Buddhist Junior church at 10; Junior
Church Choir under the lea.
That's
evening, February 9. Three: Temple was the scene of a pret- church committee and Morning miss this right; you should not! ship of Miss Margaret Meh
dance of the spring season. fee
hours of fun and frolic, sweet ty wedding ceremony when prayer at 11; Topic of sermon,
Also revealed was thef
Its going to be colossal, stupendous:
music and smooth gliding, and; Chiyoye, eldest daughter of “Divine Compassion”, by Rev.
that
24
members of the Ju*
words cannot describe it!
good friendship to boot for 35c. | Mrs. Imaye Terakita. 330 E. G. Nakayama; Evening prayer
Church are serving as lead
George Reifel and his eleven-piece
Tickets from Tanaka Bros., Cordova, of Vancouver, was at 7.30 p.m.; Topic of Sermon,
and teachers in various Ch’
New Pier, Ernie’s, or from any given away in marriage by her "Unknown Man”; Rev. G. Varsity Orchestra and the yet un- j fan education groups.
named vocalist, will give ?.ll they've
member.
brother, Mr. Nasao Terakita. Nakayama in charge.
i Concluding his report
got
for music ranging from "sweet
© Missionary Meeting for
। to Mr. Kenichi Nishi of Steveminister declared that “ne
and melodious strains" to Dixie- before has a greater chalk
Powell Young People
:ston, Thursday afternoon, Janu@ Fairview Mission
land hot jives.”
“Hope for the Lepers” will .! ary 22- Rev' D. Katatsu perbeen presented to the Chm
Young People’s Service at 11
Tickets at $1.25 are now availbe the topic for the missionary; formed the ceremony. Some a.m.,
Church than at the pre
"A Day at a Time,” by
meeting of the Powell Young!forty guests attented the re- Mr. Takashi Komiyama, solo able at The New Canadian, mi«. |time. The world darkened
and New Pier: they can also
un
People’s Society, conducted by! ception which followed at the by Miss Aki Goromaru.
be °b-1 war must have the redemo;
tained
from
J.S.C,
members,
oteves- power of the Christian gos ^
Martha Kayahara, missionary j same place,
ton
folk
are
kindly
asked
to
।
Public
Worship
at
2
p.m.,
contact
convenor, this Sunday eve— - - Baishakunins
for the even Ior it must perish. Chris the
Henry Naruse for tickets.
ning at 7.30 p.m.
were Mr. and Mrs. Torajiro "The Proofs of Loyalty” by
the
the wfnr
.And don t forest the
i/r , only
’ hope for
x
A guest soloist. Miss Mar- Nakamura of this city and Mr. Rev. K. Shimizu.
is God’s the
Fttallry l jl%
jorie Russel, will render two anc^ Mrs. K. Hikida of Steveweeks away now.
portunity.
Elections to the Church ^r
© Powell United Church
vocals.
ston.
Dancing
from
8.30
to
12,
* ❖ *
Members of the Camera Club
Morning Public Worship,
™ ecutive were:
kafe
affair will be strictly INFORMAL.
are reminded of the meeting H
“
The
Wings
of
Christian
Faith
”
,
MIYAHARA-NISHI
Board of Session—Hide i the
Brock Hall is west of the Alma!
Sunday at 3.30 p.m. in the gym[ Nuptial rites were performed by Rev. K. Shimizu.
Academy by only a ten-minute ride odo, Hideko Hidaka, Aki ’ stuc
parlour.
last Sunday afternoon at the
odo, Yuki Matsui, Chiyo Hyc citv
Young People s Society meet
wes
^
on
JOrh
and
through
to
the
Takashi
Komiyama “
© Appreciation Night
Hompa Temple, when Mr. Tsu ing, 7.30 p.m., ’‘Hope for the University Bus Terminal; and a late
Eiji 1‘UU1
our.
The regular monthly meet tomu Miyahara and Miss Sumi Lepers.”
bus will be chartered specially
Kondn
? ash™oto’ Tsufor
ing of the ACTS club of the ko Nishi were united in mar
----- ;Kondo.
Kondo, Shotaro Tomita.
Powell Church will be held riage.
। Committee of Stewarcl^sa
Tuesday, January 27, in the
STEVESTON STATIC ■
The groom is the eldest son
Myea Okamura, Norah Fu; livir
Church school, when the men’s of Mrs. Ichisuke Miyahara,
In appreciation of manyiant, Shinichi Nakadp^e’ Kimi Takiro- T
club will be hosts to all the 2323 West 4th, and the late Mr. years of faithful, devoted serDship, Takeshi
Rune
Ankado,
Roy Nose. 1
i
, ship, Takeshi Kobavashi asChurch workers—teachers and Miyahara, while the bride is vice
Shinobu, Kasey Oyama, I •'
t
m the JaPan-distant, Shirley Mom
" ’
leaders in the form of a ’’Night the daughter of
Saiga,
Henry Ide.
^ Umt®d Church Kindergart-{Invitation
of Appreciation.”
Tomegoro Nishi, 8810 Selkirk en m Steveston, Miss Alma!
The
^S^^S^^^^^ ’ 11
The $Society accepted a
Barry was preset„ed with a!
Mr. and Mrs. Ichitaro Ike- gift from the Mothers’ Club and I very gracious invitation fr om
ARMSTRONG S
The New Scientific
the
South
Arm
Young
and ArAXo.
Mrs. Tetsuif^' buchi and Mr. uiivi
IClulll” Women’s
Association.
Best!
and COMPANY
[at 71
People’s Society to attend As
Dental Discovery n chiro Nomi were the baisha- wishes
c
were extended to Miss!
UNDERTAKERS^
kunins and Rev. R. Tatibana of Barry on her approaching mar- their meeting on Sunday,
January
2ath,
at
7.45
p.m.
ficiated. Following the cere- riage.
Members are requested to s
*
mony a reception was held at
Miss
Hanako
Naruse
has
acJ"?^^
Steveston Church
S the Fuji.
i U An Jb 9 X « INJI
■—o—
cepted a position as kindergart- i
( ^
Here is that biggest event in
blished 1912
ODA-SAKAMOTO
en teacher in the United Church |
;Aven
women’s Ready-to-Wear hist 304 Dunlevy Ave.
Rev. R. Tatibana read the kindergarten. All good wishes ory!
High, odurie
i
rites Friday afternoon at the to Hanako.
Hompa Temple for the mar
Henry Kanao Naruse was re
riage of Miss Shizue Sakamoto
,'afteri
Seeking a New Home
?
to Mr. Shigetoshi Oda, both of elected president of the Steve- g
|ber a
* Consult
6
331 Main Street. Mr. Rinsa- ston Young People’s Society,;
Teri, tc
^j Liquid Dentifrice
buro Kagawa is the baishakun- at the annual election meeting' |
H. S. OKUMURA
’Hospi
in.
held on Sunday, January 18.
,
Real Estate Agent
'KEE
Also elected to the executive H 3.•;4 Powell Street
PAcific 8716
Nothing but the Infinite pity is were. Kay Oda, vice-president;
3
249
Powell
St.
2 Z49 Powell St.
PA 3028 £
sufficient for the Infinite pathos of Amy Nakashima, secretary; and 3
Human Life.—John Inglsant.
9
Komei Konishi, treasurer.
i
9
I
. Chosen as convenors were:;
9
9
Missionar
Soft as a fleecy cloud!
-- ry, Shoichi Matsushita !
9
For the BEST IN FOOD
with Miss Neta Sadler assist-! 3
9
9
mg: Literary, Fred Nishi, as-1
9
I?
sistant, Tadao Naruse; Fellow-!
®
There
is
only
or.ei
at the LOWEST PRICES . .
shipNTokiye Tamemoto, assist-1
xrmity
^'aa.
1ft
।
0«»
| Seishindo Co.
* * *
hwiptiw
★
It's The
drug store on Powef
Street qualified tc h 0 >1
your prescriptior g
needs.
9
S. TSURUTA
AGENT FOR
®
9
9
FISH — GROCERIES — PROVISIONS
Highland 0335-6
469 Powell Street
Machine Co.
j
393 Powell St.
PA 7043
30 s 55c
9
^U2
l®l
399 Poweli - Pacific 501
aamEEEEEMEEmEi®98999
1
9 BAcil
9
Page 3
93S
..r.,p..™«.
THE NEW CANADIAN
SEMI-ANNUAL
ernm'i
^7
ajeslv. ••
‘nd pie?
- end tm
sly ad<
Church.
NOW ON
W
l° cleHr.*ur Geeks for the NEW SPF
Ri pas?
idence,
ttituder
mment;
justice;
> diffici
? SSXrme and k'&k —a-
ASSORTED WOOLENS
’Stripes, plaids, etc.. suitable for
-.; sports coats or j
All
British woolens. •54 ins. wide.
'Regular to $3.10 yard.
ie mee:.
• Shintv
Tership y
ow sta: • .SOUTH SEA SUITING
are o YA' practical, durable fabric for
the
ed by:
he lest
it McD .
is the?
he JuiV
IS leacg
us Chtl
MER
LE of
H repaid in
s'XPur Spring skirt or jacket.
AH colors and it is a4 inches
-wide.
WOOL CREPE SUPREMACY
n!Ossy finish crepe in
A,1
latest colors and shades
me, beauty of it is that it
ramies. ;>4 inches wide.
5
G
8
8
8
9
11
10
11
14
4
Men
’
s
Doubles
MONDAY
’
S
SCHEDULE
Our Vegas boys failed to
Karkness-B Kennedy bt Mad (15-16)
singers vs. Kick Eacks
shine last night as they ab Matsui-E. Arikado (15-9)' .51____
213 R. Fujimoto..,, 200
Arikado
bt.
B.
Klein5
Russel; Eukui
sorbed another terrific shel- ’ ia-12): .1. Tanaka-Mas I
-163 Tots Mori ...... 1S2
Matsui bt.l Ramakaw
lacking by the second-place
Klein-Russel (15-121
177 T. Fujimot o... 184
Sparlings. The exact score Harkness-B. Kennedy (15
Sugamori -.... 204
Ladies’ Doubles
was somewhere in the vicin -‘ uj 1 magari-Fumi Deshima;
- 965
bt. Ter
ity of 43-17.
Kennedy lingers-;—Handicap 3.3 Pins,
(.17-15)>. and Mad .’ Bussell-Miss
(17-18) E. Enders vs. Ducky Strike
Sparlings piled up 15
ter
(15Miss Russell- Kamishiro .......166
Miss Browater
points in the first canto with Marv
Hide Hyodo- Kitamura. . .....174 T. Kntsu’ke 197
Saegusa
):
Miss Klein- M. Sugie .........175 (Gkawara ___ 18ft
only feeble returns from Miss Kennedv bt. 1H ide
Kutsu’ke ...174
HyodoH.
Kutsu
’ke .168
(15-9).
Tosh Tashimoto and Satoshi
Tsujikawa ......202
Mixed Doubles
Yamabe. Details of the re
Brewster bt. J
$68
921
maining quarters are none Tanaka-Lucy Pujimagari n(15-12)
, .
. East Enders—Handicap 37 pins
and
Mat
Matsui-Fumi
(i9.20)
too cheerful for Mi’s boys so (la-<); Tanaka-FujimagariDeshima;
Giants vs. Tanaka Bros.
bt. H
197 Kozai
"
........
i~>
this scribe shall remain muf iyamedy-Mrs. T. Klein (15-6F Yamashita
Wakaba’s hi ...157 Goroma.ru
172
fled.
r
Kennedy-Klein
B. Tanaka .
184
' l>’. Klein-Mrs. Russel bt. A. Kutsu’ke
-194
-'UlS
MUlSUl-Alnyv
Snovncu
fir. lox.
Tosh Hashimoto scored six
. 1S9
Hide Hyodo-E. Arikado (15-3)- Isoshima
....186
points while “Mush" Fuku- and
M. Russell-Miss Kennedv bt: ff
938
moto and Sub Miike Un- Hyodo Matsui (15-5): Mas MatsuK
902
Tanaka
Bros.
—
Hrindicap 25 Pins.
Mary
Saegusa
bt.
Russell-Miss
corked four apiece.
1(21-22)
Asahi vs. Maple Leafs
j Yamamura ....194 Mas
"
Endo ...... 178
K. Kutsu’ke . 179
Kubota ..153
Shishido ......... 186 Al Sonoda ...173
Kaminishi .......194 T. Tanaka
204
K. Suga ____ 178 T. Ono
......... .195
HEAVY DRAPERY SATIN
Almost all color* for cushions.
T, ‘h.MV’ies. or for lining, etc.
guaranteed for two
seasons tvear. 54 inches wide.
^ it su al.83 ^ ® :U
730 GranviHe Street
.-uatncona tailed to boost Lucy Fujimagari and Fumi
their lead in the G.V.A.A. bird Deshima-Mat
Matsu,
the
1?a§'ue iast niS'ht when the de cream of Strathcona’s duos
V
fending champion, Die Hards, Incidentally this was Tanakaheld them to a 8-all draw.
Die Hards high-ranking
the current season.
i
mixed duo, S. Harkness and
Die Hards nad the edge in !
STANDING
Miss A. Brewster, proved to
the mixed doubles and split the! Kick Eacks
be a hard nut to crack, up
ladies doubles, but the Nisei! Sing-ers
12
setting both Johnny TanakaTanaka Eros.
io
male crews amply redeemed.' Giants
.
io
themselves by taking three out! Maple Leafs
io
Strike
9
of the four games. Tanaka! Lucky
Sparlings Spank
Five Aces
7
Asahi
.
partnered with Mas Matsui!
S
East Enders
7
took a clean sweep.
Our Vegas, 43-17
i Screwballs .
MArine 7437
port, '
WOODFIBRE WHISPERS
y
it “ne
chalk , -WOODFfBRE-A very Jbe- Red Cross Club held a success^eW Year Greetings from ful party on the night of Satur
■
™ f°lkS °Ut in this PulP town. day, January7 17. Owing to
kpnP/T^ New Year came hi in an short notice, games that were
i-USUally Quief fashion, but
' ” nevertheless everybody seemed previously arranged could not
be held. Nonetheless a good The Cage Courts . .
whave enjoyed it, forgetting time was had by all.
, ,
Bingo
the'worries of the critical times
proved to be tops, but dancing
day’ ^ seems most of to the rhythm of the Merry
931
003
ra - the, folks spent the day with
Maple Leafs—Ila ndicap 20 Pins.
makers was still a bigger hit. s
-their families in the city.
(23-24) Five Aces vs. Screwballs
urch -Glad to have seen Miss Ta- Many of the Nisei students
Koyama _____ 209 Ty Nose.
Smg
Hank
Ashikawa,
tops
among
local
melon-marveKy eie seen on the floor, includ
Geo. Salo ___ 175
, kako Kaye back home during
w
V°
meWh
^
?
f
a
Shadow
of
his
former
Phenomenal
self
lasf
S.
Kubota ...166
ing our ever-famous "Jitter
- ^holidays. She is at present bug Queen” Sadie and her pal, V ednesday night when he led M. & N. to a 62-30 win over Nosuye ...... ...178 G. Nishino ...153
Aki: studying dressmaking in the "Casanova.”
Shibuya s. “Hank” did his little bit by contributing 97 points Tad Kondo ....224 Roy Masui ...160
° ?.‘ ci§ • • • where also glad to see
M. & N. led all the way and
$52
7B0
A box of chocolates raffled
Screwballs—Handicap 141 Rins/'
uji lour old pal Joe Koyanagi back
were
going
away
by
the
secFor
your
entertainment
limpse of the old town; on^tA^^X"^^
1, TscfoKa g”
d quarter as Tosh Tashimoto Vegas and the ex-Nippons will
' :’ialr)en^ 0Ut -^isst°n way] amount collected during the and Sakai Tsukamoto worked settle a long-debated issue of
T ivS
to write to his friend J night, some §14. will be turned nicely in a razzle-dazzle fash who’s the better team. Ink
i Fu^ving out here.
lUlned ion with Ashikawa.
Spots and Steveston tangle in
akin) <®s local High School Junior lerT
'
d,Uart'
Al Tokawa, long-shot artist a sure-thriller at 8.00. At 7.00
S. Sasaki
was good for 11 points and Nomads vs. Marpole in a junior
ose, i^)^t
Tosh Hashimoto for 10. Kawa- game.
la, I ’
DIS'N DAT—SPOTLITE
hara led the thoroughly chas- M. & N. Hashimoto (1ft); Ashi
OKASHI
kawa
(27);
Tokawa
(II);
tr
.
tised
Shibuya’s with 11.
"^iS ^’Z^^J11™1 01 baI1 this Sunday, Exand
The junior tilt, Hurricans vs. (-). Machida (9)—62. HR Takada
replay the first; Nippons are going to have a
Shibuya
—
Nishio
(4);
id
e
(4)30 a m
thlS SundayitouSh time winning the champ- Monachs, was an unexpected
CONFECTIONERY
—
ol’ok;Ra (6): Hirano
thriller as the Hurricans stag (1). XiKaido:
Kawahara (in- YaBC^W ""rpuut! were not hitting
ed a belated rally, extended ma da (4)—30.
357 Powell
^®F stride
MA. 2036
the game into an overtime and
o e last
aS Sunday
Sunday and!
and!Tanaka Bros Cun
Ignorance
ts
not
tnnocence.
»^.should they play the samej There will be only one senior finally nosed out the Monarchs
42-40 in the overtime.
table tennis game to-night.
to-night
T [INJURED IN FALL
To-morrow night is the "nite”
The scheduled game between
we want all casaba fans to turn
Caterers to ©©
out and support, "FUJIOKA
G.Y.K. and Unions NITE.
” Every little bit helps
Banquets ©©
Chinese
so
come
out
and
do
your
share.
1 of a -50-foot sawdust bunkThis Sunday the juniors will
0
GES.e
and
during work Thursday go into the third week of the
Next
Week
’
s
Schedule
Dishes
3lnoon at the Powell Lum- second half schedule. Teams
Weddings
Tuesday
CHOP SUEY
[&^r mid Fuel Co. He was tak- meeting are: Mikado vs. New
Z’£2—Ink Spots vs- Tammy’S.
gi,to the Vancouver General Team; Union.vs. Maikawa; Kit- 8.00
252 Powell Street
—Tuxis vs. Comets.
Hospital.
PAcsfic 9610
9.OO
—
Vanettes
vs.
Acettes.
teg:
silano vs. Meiwa Gakuen.
Suzuki Kashiten
&“iJMkson “^ a"“ ^
aSs ± i"? * -".Sj
Wednesday
7.30—Celtics vs. Steveston.
8.30—Maikawa vs. Marpole.
!8g>a6i
i
ne
V
3L 1
KEEP WARM THIS WINTER
TOH C. C. m. HEADQUARTERS
L
Wagons
Map!e Ridge Prove
® Skates
| Strathcona
j ■ Mayle Ridge
I TMOIV BICYCLE SHOP
.tPAcific 8653
TWO STORES
2415 £
2415 Burrard
TO SERVE YOU
BAyyiew 2046
9
9
• RUBBER HOT
Perfect Shuttle Hosts 9 WATER BOTTLES
1 49c, 75c, 85c, 90c
W
. 2 o 1
I G.Y.K. .
$1.00, $1.25, $2.00
1 o 2
and other Sporting Goods
* * *
I’^V2 Main Sh
PEKIN
s
1
0
i
0
1
3
Maple Ridge Shuttle Club
was a gracious host to the; Japanese Shuttle League last Wed'
nesday night at the Hammond
High School, but that didn’t
stop the toughened Strathconians from walloping their
hosts 8-2.
The Gakuyukai-Y.P.S. was a
। hard and evenly fought melee
s
j ending in a 5-all draw.
Famous "VICEROY" Bottles
Empress, Countess, Clipper
Hospital
e STONE PIG
(Stevens Comfort)
With Warmth from
0. KONDO COMPANY
©
V
*
*
KAIRO ...
Pocket Warmer 50c
©
©
SHINRO . ..
Bed Warmer
KAIRO-BAI
$1.25, $1.50
ELECTRIC
HEATING PADS
3.95, 5.45, 6.50 up
75c
SHINRO-BA5
10c
10c
0. KODDO (0.
390 Powell
PAcific 4516
9
9
9
9.
9
M
IS
t
..r.,p..™«.
THE NEW CANADIAN
SEMI-ANNUAL
ernm'i
^7
ajeslv. ••
‘nd pie?
- end tm
sly ad<
Church.
NOW ON
W
l° cleHr.*ur Geeks for the NEW SPF
Ri pas?
idence,
ttituder
mment;
justice;
> diffici
? SSXrme and k'&k —a-
ASSORTED WOOLENS
’Stripes, plaids, etc.. suitable for
-.; sports coats or j
All
British woolens. •54 ins. wide.
'Regular to $3.10 yard.
ie mee:.
• Shintv
Tership y
ow sta: • .SOUTH SEA SUITING
are o YA' practical, durable fabric for
the
ed by:
he lest
it McD .
is the?
he JuiV
IS leacg
us Chtl
MER
LE of
H repaid in
s'XPur Spring skirt or jacket.
AH colors and it is a4 inches
-wide.
WOOL CREPE SUPREMACY
n!Ossy finish crepe in
A,1
latest colors and shades
me, beauty of it is that it
ramies. ;>4 inches wide.
5
G
8
8
8
9
11
10
11
14
4
Men
’
s
Doubles
MONDAY
’
S
SCHEDULE
Our Vegas boys failed to
Karkness-B Kennedy bt Mad (15-16)
singers vs. Kick Eacks
shine last night as they ab Matsui-E. Arikado (15-9)' .51____
213 R. Fujimoto..,, 200
Arikado
bt.
B.
Klein5
Russel; Eukui
sorbed another terrific shel- ’ ia-12): .1. Tanaka-Mas I
-163 Tots Mori ...... 1S2
Matsui bt.l Ramakaw
lacking by the second-place
Klein-Russel (15-121
177 T. Fujimot o... 184
Sparlings. The exact score Harkness-B. Kennedy (15
Sugamori -.... 204
Ladies’ Doubles
was somewhere in the vicin -‘ uj 1 magari-Fumi Deshima;
- 965
bt. Ter
ity of 43-17.
Kennedy lingers-;—Handicap 3.3 Pins,
(.17-15)>. and Mad .’ Bussell-Miss
(17-18) E. Enders vs. Ducky Strike
Sparlings piled up 15
ter
(15Miss Russell- Kamishiro .......166
Miss Browater
points in the first canto with Marv
Hide Hyodo- Kitamura. . .....174 T. Kntsu’ke 197
Saegusa
):
Miss Klein- M. Sugie .........175 (Gkawara ___ 18ft
only feeble returns from Miss Kennedv bt. 1H ide
Kutsu’ke ...174
HyodoH.
Kutsu
’ke .168
(15-9).
Tosh Tashimoto and Satoshi
Tsujikawa ......202
Mixed Doubles
Yamabe. Details of the re
Brewster bt. J
$68
921
maining quarters are none Tanaka-Lucy Pujimagari n(15-12)
, .
. East Enders—Handicap 37 pins
and
Mat
Matsui-Fumi
(i9.20)
too cheerful for Mi’s boys so (la-<); Tanaka-FujimagariDeshima;
Giants vs. Tanaka Bros.
bt. H
197 Kozai
"
........
i~>
this scribe shall remain muf iyamedy-Mrs. T. Klein (15-6F Yamashita
Wakaba’s hi ...157 Goroma.ru
172
fled.
r
Kennedy-Klein
B. Tanaka .
184
' l>’. Klein-Mrs. Russel bt. A. Kutsu’ke
-194
-'UlS
MUlSUl-Alnyv
Snovncu
fir. lox.
Tosh Hashimoto scored six
. 1S9
Hide Hyodo-E. Arikado (15-3)- Isoshima
....186
points while “Mush" Fuku- and
M. Russell-Miss Kennedv bt: ff
938
moto and Sub Miike Un- Hyodo Matsui (15-5): Mas MatsuK
902
Tanaka
Bros.
—
Hrindicap 25 Pins.
Mary
Saegusa
bt.
Russell-Miss
corked four apiece.
1(21-22)
Asahi vs. Maple Leafs
j Yamamura ....194 Mas
"
Endo ...... 178
K. Kutsu’ke . 179
Kubota ..153
Shishido ......... 186 Al Sonoda ...173
Kaminishi .......194 T. Tanaka
204
K. Suga ____ 178 T. Ono
......... .195
HEAVY DRAPERY SATIN
Almost all color* for cushions.
T, ‘h.MV’ies. or for lining, etc.
guaranteed for two
seasons tvear. 54 inches wide.
^ it su al.83 ^ ® :U
730 GranviHe Street
.-uatncona tailed to boost Lucy Fujimagari and Fumi
their lead in the G.V.A.A. bird Deshima-Mat
Matsu,
the
1?a§'ue iast niS'ht when the de cream of Strathcona’s duos
V
fending champion, Die Hards, Incidentally this was Tanakaheld them to a 8-all draw.
Die Hards high-ranking
the current season.
i
mixed duo, S. Harkness and
Die Hards nad the edge in !
STANDING
Miss A. Brewster, proved to
the mixed doubles and split the! Kick Eacks
be a hard nut to crack, up
ladies doubles, but the Nisei! Sing-ers
12
setting both Johnny TanakaTanaka Eros.
io
male crews amply redeemed.' Giants
.
io
themselves by taking three out! Maple Leafs
io
Strike
9
of the four games. Tanaka! Lucky
Sparlings Spank
Five Aces
7
Asahi
.
partnered with Mas Matsui!
S
East Enders
7
took a clean sweep.
Our Vegas, 43-17
i Screwballs .
MArine 7437
port, '
WOODFIBRE WHISPERS
y
it “ne
chalk , -WOODFfBRE-A very Jbe- Red Cross Club held a success^eW Year Greetings from ful party on the night of Satur
■
™ f°lkS °Ut in this PulP town. day, January7 17. Owing to
kpnP/T^ New Year came hi in an short notice, games that were
i-USUally Quief fashion, but
' ” nevertheless everybody seemed previously arranged could not
be held. Nonetheless a good The Cage Courts . .
whave enjoyed it, forgetting time was had by all.
, ,
Bingo
the'worries of the critical times
proved to be tops, but dancing
day’ ^ seems most of to the rhythm of the Merry
931
003
ra - the, folks spent the day with
Maple Leafs—Ila ndicap 20 Pins.
makers was still a bigger hit. s
-their families in the city.
(23-24) Five Aces vs. Screwballs
urch -Glad to have seen Miss Ta- Many of the Nisei students
Koyama _____ 209 Ty Nose.
Smg
Hank
Ashikawa,
tops
among
local
melon-marveKy eie seen on the floor, includ
Geo. Salo ___ 175
, kako Kaye back home during
w
V°
meWh
^
?
f
a
Shadow
of
his
former
Phenomenal
self
lasf
S.
Kubota ...166
ing our ever-famous "Jitter
- ^holidays. She is at present bug Queen” Sadie and her pal, V ednesday night when he led M. & N. to a 62-30 win over Nosuye ...... ...178 G. Nishino ...153
Aki: studying dressmaking in the "Casanova.”
Shibuya s. “Hank” did his little bit by contributing 97 points Tad Kondo ....224 Roy Masui ...160
° ?.‘ ci§ • • • where also glad to see
M. & N. led all the way and
$52
7B0
A box of chocolates raffled
Screwballs—Handicap 141 Rins/'
uji lour old pal Joe Koyanagi back
were
going
away
by
the
secFor
your
entertainment
limpse of the old town; on^tA^^X"^^
1, TscfoKa g”
d quarter as Tosh Tashimoto Vegas and the ex-Nippons will
' :’ialr)en^ 0Ut -^isst°n way] amount collected during the and Sakai Tsukamoto worked settle a long-debated issue of
T ivS
to write to his friend J night, some §14. will be turned nicely in a razzle-dazzle fash who’s the better team. Ink
i Fu^ving out here.
lUlned ion with Ashikawa.
Spots and Steveston tangle in
akin) <®s local High School Junior lerT
'
d,Uart'
Al Tokawa, long-shot artist a sure-thriller at 8.00. At 7.00
S. Sasaki
was good for 11 points and Nomads vs. Marpole in a junior
ose, i^)^t
Tosh Hashimoto for 10. Kawa- game.
la, I ’
DIS'N DAT—SPOTLITE
hara led the thoroughly chas- M. & N. Hashimoto (1ft); Ashi
OKASHI
kawa
(27);
Tokawa
(II);
tr
.
tised
Shibuya’s with 11.
"^iS ^’Z^^J11™1 01 baI1 this Sunday, Exand
The junior tilt, Hurricans vs. (-). Machida (9)—62. HR Takada
replay the first; Nippons are going to have a
Shibuya
—
Nishio
(4);
id
e
(4)30 a m
thlS SundayitouSh time winning the champ- Monachs, was an unexpected
CONFECTIONERY
—
ol’ok;Ra (6): Hirano
thriller as the Hurricans stag (1). XiKaido:
Kawahara (in- YaBC^W ""rpuut! were not hitting
ed a belated rally, extended ma da (4)—30.
357 Powell
^®F stride
MA. 2036
the game into an overtime and
o e last
aS Sunday
Sunday and!
and!Tanaka Bros Cun
Ignorance
ts
not
tnnocence.
»^.should they play the samej There will be only one senior finally nosed out the Monarchs
42-40 in the overtime.
table tennis game to-night.
to-night
T [INJURED IN FALL
To-morrow night is the "nite”
The scheduled game between
we want all casaba fans to turn
Caterers to ©©
out and support, "FUJIOKA
G.Y.K. and Unions NITE.
” Every little bit helps
Banquets ©©
Chinese
so
come
out
and
do
your
share.
1 of a -50-foot sawdust bunkThis Sunday the juniors will
0
GES.e
and
during work Thursday go into the third week of the
Next
Week
’
s
Schedule
Dishes
3lnoon at the Powell Lum- second half schedule. Teams
Weddings
Tuesday
CHOP SUEY
[&^r mid Fuel Co. He was tak- meeting are: Mikado vs. New
Z’£2—Ink Spots vs- Tammy’S.
gi,to the Vancouver General Team; Union.vs. Maikawa; Kit- 8.00
252 Powell Street
—Tuxis vs. Comets.
Hospital.
PAcsfic 9610
9.OO
—
Vanettes
vs.
Acettes.
teg:
silano vs. Meiwa Gakuen.
Suzuki Kashiten
&“iJMkson “^ a"“ ^
aSs ± i"? * -".Sj
Wednesday
7.30—Celtics vs. Steveston.
8.30—Maikawa vs. Marpole.
!8g>a6i
i
ne
V
3L 1
KEEP WARM THIS WINTER
TOH C. C. m. HEADQUARTERS
L
Wagons
Map!e Ridge Prove
® Skates
| Strathcona
j ■ Mayle Ridge
I TMOIV BICYCLE SHOP
.tPAcific 8653
TWO STORES
2415 £
2415 Burrard
TO SERVE YOU
BAyyiew 2046
9
9
• RUBBER HOT
Perfect Shuttle Hosts 9 WATER BOTTLES
1 49c, 75c, 85c, 90c
W
. 2 o 1
I G.Y.K. .
$1.00, $1.25, $2.00
1 o 2
and other Sporting Goods
* * *
I’^V2 Main Sh
PEKIN
s
1
0
i
0
1
3
Maple Ridge Shuttle Club
was a gracious host to the; Japanese Shuttle League last Wed'
nesday night at the Hammond
High School, but that didn’t
stop the toughened Strathconians from walloping their
hosts 8-2.
The Gakuyukai-Y.P.S. was a
। hard and evenly fought melee
s
j ending in a 5-all draw.
Famous "VICEROY" Bottles
Empress, Countess, Clipper
Hospital
e STONE PIG
(Stevens Comfort)
With Warmth from
0. KONDO COMPANY
©
V
*
*
KAIRO ...
Pocket Warmer 50c
©
©
SHINRO . ..
Bed Warmer
KAIRO-BAI
$1.25, $1.50
ELECTRIC
HEATING PADS
3.95, 5.45, 6.50 up
75c
SHINRO-BA5
10c
10c
0. KODDO (0.
390 Powell
PAcific 4516
9
9
9
9.
9
M
IS
t
Page 4
PAGE 4
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAcific 8431
Vancouver, B. C.
,
A paper pushed bp and for second generation Japanese in Canada,
an,, ducted to them welfare as citizens of Canada.
Business Manager—Yoshimitsu Higashi
Editor—Thomas Shoyama
Published tri-weekly at the Taiyo Printing Company
JANUARY 23, 194?
| Los Angeles Folk
SHANGHAI
CKOSSBOAJ
I Take It On the Chin j QLD CHINA HAND mopped his forehead. He tightened the belt aF
the now unsettled paunch that lent form and substance to his fR
|
LOS ANGELES—A staggerstarched
linen suit. He blinked his pale oleaginous eyes
I ing number of destitutes, in
and breai
noisily
through
a generous nose—rose-tinted by years of H .
nocent victims of the Japan
nskey. His moustache twitched.
ese mitary’s treacherous “coup”
"Boy, one whiskey stengah."
upon United States territory,
ad-a"^; One year: $4.00 in advance.
First - came
was released by Roku Suga
•
ithe Japs, and now' the Jew's. Poor devils.They ten®
hara, publicity chairman of the some of cm had to live on the open sea for months at times vis^B
Official Details On Fish Boat Transfer
Anti-Axig Committee, says the almost every port from Hamburg through Port Said, Bombay’
lead story in the current issue and to Shanghai. Sure, the captain of the ship that evacuated chemi :
H^J 1Pri^' Co^cil have had before them a report of the Nisei vernacular, “Do- in a frenzy, but could he dump them overboard like a sack of potato ■ '
^! We- xx^ ^ci ^~
ho , published in Los Angeles. So, everyone passed the buck till finally Shanghai was "took.” yl
These include 800 families Jews^ settled themselves along a strip of road extending from BroadtS
by
Japanese origin (3,000 persons) in the fishing io Vangtzepoo Road on the Hongkew side. The last time I D^
and canning industries on Ter through Yiddish Village, they were making enormous progress.' sini
minal Island.
* * *
isei
300 families (800 persons) in
No matter who won this war, it was the white man's exit c^ser
Prince feXdleTT ^'"^ a"d fc —-der
at exporting, importing and allied
Say the Japs won. Sound logical. They would take over the cuscakir
o • :J f
°7erS °f. these vessels, though being of Japanese
businesses.
or more precisely speaking, they will take over completely what theylRal
origin, are Canadian cozens whose productive power, by virtue
300 families (1,000 persons) not taken over already, issue more military yen and replace the fapjrth:
of this ownership, contributed significantly to the fishing industry;
teaching the Japanese' langu it. They would push you off your own sidewalk, if they felt like'gel
age.
camp m your godown and if you squawked to your consul about ma
D
|a
been held between the Standing Committee
290 families (1,450 persons) he 11 just wring his hand. It’s nor a pretty picture to see the wtustn
? \'nkB-ltlSh C° Umbia and the interested government depart
ments at which it was considered that the war neeck of (groat
•
in groceries, hotels and room being Pushed, about by squat, bandy-legged little ochre men from 3 hi
Coh the
in?perat've that the production of the British ing houses, bars and liquor land of the Rising Sun.• You don>t nke that? Neither do j sQ .f Th£
L ?l3n f,sbmg industry be maintained and increased and that there
stores, fruitstands, and miscel- whites win the war, that also sounds reasonable. Do you think tj.y '
fore, a way should be found of putting these vessels
a
laneous retail trades and pro that matters might be eased? My lad, Shanghai's 99 years’ lease to -the
LX ^V^TT tb“e
Japanese oX nd" ,
con
fessions.
sistent with the needs of national defence and security as S os »il
dominating western power in Shanghai is up and out. And ano^s, a
due regard to the equity of the Japanese Canadian owners;
Most of the Japanese
thing, no little oiling of the palms is going to renew that lease, s a
stores in downtown LiT
When Old China Hand s ancestors in 1842 opened a mere overgrclease
..
T IS' ’o'A' deemed desirable to implement the
release of
?
f
kyo
have
b
een
drastically
fishing village to foreign trade and proclaimed it an open port, bsulti
.Aa a|?nCSe Canadian fishing vessels in accordance with the above
considerations; and
affected.
Restrictions on
did tney visualze the Shanghai of today. No, they didn’t know i pane
f?at SUCh a.purP°se cou|d best be accomplished by the establish
travel as well as the need to
Shanghai was to be the outlet of approximately 42 per cent of Ch^adqi
ment of a committee to consist of three persons with a jurist tn ?
conserve rubber, has resulted
foreign trade.
tack:
in almost complete loss of the
Old China Hand's ancestors toiled hard to build this Far Eamdini
large trade from customers
metropolis but with rhe mechanized era came the symbol of the JeijE.I.,
in
rural
districts.
PUblic utiIicies* So cven if the Japs lose the war, here «re s
COMMITTEE APPOINTED
It is reported that various John Chinaman s cue to get in there and take back what is rightfares c
r
MTister' therefore, with the concurrence of the Minister of retail businesses, such as groc theirs. ) up, the Chinese are too smart to issue a new lease
of Shanj- In /
eries, laundries, cleaning etc
for a mere pocketful of gold. From now on, it’s going to be a strnhiT I
which depend almost wholly on private affair.
day
DHo"°urab e SJdney A' Smith' Puisne Judge of the Supreme American patronage, have sufAlready, white shopkeepers are feeling the presence of keen Japice i
B' C'; Commander B. L JohnVanc°uver, B. C.; and Kishizo Kimura, Vancouver B C rered a 50 per ’bent, loss of esc competition affecting their business. For instance, the Municipal Couthw
custom since the start of the
C , a”d the telephone company employees having tiffin at in r
vfsseTs^
°n the d^posal of Japanese fishing war.
ChoC
°lat,e
on Stinking Road are naturally attracted toward.
vessels, me duties of the said committee to be:
a
newly-built
Tncolore
” restaurant across the street. Reliable soty^i
Some white competitors of
(1) To make such arrangements as will make it possible for
the present owners of detained vessels to freely negotiate for charters Japanese businessmen have al- say although "Tricolore” sounds Frenchy, the restaurant is operated^
leases, or sales of such vessels as they own to persons other than those
T
s^ar^e^ 1° take advantage the Kimura Coffee Company of Yokohama.
of Japanese ongin, provided that the committee approve of such charters of the situation. A. move to k j ThC
WaS being slammed on that rambling building in
n W 6 TC!SSary' tO arbitrate disagreements on price between squeeze out the Japanese is shadows of Kiukiang Road where the Old China Hand presided
N-4
.JAe^
SW1 be a
for foe S o? already under way, to wit: enlightened despotism over the complicated business rigamarole 01^
veoiei unoer risning license.
°Z“,Chincse clerks- Every day for twelve years he had gone do^Lif
among the nurserymen and in
owners and intending purchasers with a view to
to
find ms letters neatly piled, face down, on the side of hi desk be
preventing
advantage
the
wholesale
produce
business.
being taken of duress.
MERELY REPORT
(3)
To REPORT on claims which may be
ernment for damage to, or deterioration of, the
ment while under detentioin.
made on the govvessels and equip-
(5) By consultation with the Department of
ments to be put back into production.
j
t
”
°n StepS ^^ Should be *aken to dispose of
Wh.,ch thePresent owners are unable to sell, charter, lease
or otherwise transfer.
ofoerlXa^t'^ be ^thorfoed to employ stenographic and
F£AT;u^
KOMURA BROS. LTD.
Store-Wide!
ample, best quality Harris
Tweed coats are selling at less
than $20.00. Reversibles start
from $7.95 ... and so on down
the line.
You’ve been waiting for this
eyen^' Visit Modiste’s today
while the choices are still good.
Classified Ads
TRANS PORTATION
Groceries and fill Kinds of Merchandise
Marine 3655
a cup of tea. He hated tea.
'
r?JT
It’s no damn use trying to change these people. They’ve been dc'"^'
things backward ever since Adam woke up in Eden, and that wasnt^terday! They write backward, read backward, and, by gad they tHModiste is clearing
clearin out all backward. And another thing: Face is everything with these ocom9,;
juuuisie
their winter coats, as well as Face means yow fire a person by asking him to stay. It means you* .’^^
reversibles, dresses, jackets, call a chap a thief, except over a cup of tea. It means a banished w ln??'
blouses, skirts, etc. in their lord, who ought to have his head chopped off, is sent on an "invA^
.. is sent on an ‘
store-wide Clearance Sale,
gation
hnnrc for
f., hs
l... or,3nadiai
. abroad.” It1 means
means vou
you take
take rum
two hours
tiffin- ...
when
;ime' 'A
he prices are so low, you sufficient to down and digest the food. Six servants when you
can' „
wouldn’t believe it. For ex- only two; ride one block to the club instead of walking.
te tod.
PAST COURTEOUS SERVICE
Nabata Taxi, Highland 076b'
269 Powell Street
Experienced
*
)uncen
lenew
Old Chtna Hand had the mind of a real Shanghailander.
ittmg back comfortably in the lounge chair with a glass . st of t
hand and a pipe in the other, O.C.H. had it all planned—maybe ,in med P.
his,a. . ,
glimpse of Shanghai—as he knew' it. Straight down Nanking Rod/inC l
would go, past Sassoon House, drop i at Jean
sntry
M- of lace from the mtreior, then to Kelly's for some reading maZS
and across the street to Ingenohi's tobacconists to replace his smelly ;'ln:W
Boy, one stengah.”
hiry-hi
Old China Hand was licked and he knew it. Yup coin? b^of
meant going home BROKE. Maybe, if the home office was in a kf A^i
mood maybe, there's a clerks job in Chicago or New York. TheA"^the other hand . . . age; 47. Type of work desired; Executive. Qu^rUHa
ficarions: 20-years in China anJ the employment office bloke would P°wed him over with fishy eyes,
up, all this the Old China Hand saw laHan X
he gazed into his Hass.
r ,.'h3d
JAPAN*
*
ea k,Ha
ese girl or woman to help
cyanic the morning
with light housework.
All from the Island Empire when the squat, bandy-legged little ochre i:a\!tta
f
*
tramped in a victory march up Bubbling
Wat '
modern conveniences. Hours Read and from
across Garden Bridge. Ew straight ahead, they cU'M *
9 to 5 Monday to Fridav, 9 to
tr°n hac
1 Saturdays. $15.00 per month. p^r the rows ot empty buildings on the Bund.
SUn WaS mdtin8 int0 lhc mountains on
>?udd
Phone KErrisdale 2978-R.
WANTED!! — DICTIONARIES!!
Japanese-English or English-Japanese
New, Second-hand, or otherwise
YAMA TAXI
OUR STOCK IS LOW
347 Powell Street
*
&
PAcific 5454
H
G '
^ liner, Ranpura, several kilometers downstahGthe L
on the Whangpoo gave a mournful toot. A glass shooed from ‘ L •
S.° 7^ “d
eUt ^“^ J1
the bar was deserted. -rates, t;
Farewell, let there be no moaning at the bar, gentlemen.
^Joh
Coiporal Takahashi sounded his buH?
^.poh
San oL "T.“F Y ''Honsfooatd down the Grand CatS
T?
M iac ‘14Uld
tbe Cicadas singing in the l^arie‘s (
T/T J CYC
“r ">•
shall roe®®'
Till Ear.h Md Sky stand presently, at God's great Judgment S^K
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAcific 8431
Vancouver, B. C.
,
A paper pushed bp and for second generation Japanese in Canada,
an,, ducted to them welfare as citizens of Canada.
Business Manager—Yoshimitsu Higashi
Editor—Thomas Shoyama
Published tri-weekly at the Taiyo Printing Company
JANUARY 23, 194?
| Los Angeles Folk
SHANGHAI
CKOSSBOAJ
I Take It On the Chin j QLD CHINA HAND mopped his forehead. He tightened the belt aF
the now unsettled paunch that lent form and substance to his fR
|
LOS ANGELES—A staggerstarched
linen suit. He blinked his pale oleaginous eyes
I ing number of destitutes, in
and breai
noisily
through
a generous nose—rose-tinted by years of H .
nocent victims of the Japan
nskey. His moustache twitched.
ese mitary’s treacherous “coup”
"Boy, one whiskey stengah."
upon United States territory,
ad-a"^; One year: $4.00 in advance.
First - came
was released by Roku Suga
•
ithe Japs, and now' the Jew's. Poor devils.They ten®
hara, publicity chairman of the some of cm had to live on the open sea for months at times vis^B
Official Details On Fish Boat Transfer
Anti-Axig Committee, says the almost every port from Hamburg through Port Said, Bombay’
lead story in the current issue and to Shanghai. Sure, the captain of the ship that evacuated chemi :
H^J 1Pri^' Co^cil have had before them a report of the Nisei vernacular, “Do- in a frenzy, but could he dump them overboard like a sack of potato ■ '
^! We- xx^ ^ci ^~
ho , published in Los Angeles. So, everyone passed the buck till finally Shanghai was "took.” yl
These include 800 families Jews^ settled themselves along a strip of road extending from BroadtS
by
Japanese origin (3,000 persons) in the fishing io Vangtzepoo Road on the Hongkew side. The last time I D^
and canning industries on Ter through Yiddish Village, they were making enormous progress.' sini
minal Island.
* * *
isei
300 families (800 persons) in
No matter who won this war, it was the white man's exit c^ser
Prince feXdleTT ^'"^ a"d fc —-der
at exporting, importing and allied
Say the Japs won. Sound logical. They would take over the cuscakir
o • :J f
°7erS °f. these vessels, though being of Japanese
businesses.
or more precisely speaking, they will take over completely what theylRal
origin, are Canadian cozens whose productive power, by virtue
300 families (1,000 persons) not taken over already, issue more military yen and replace the fapjrth:
of this ownership, contributed significantly to the fishing industry;
teaching the Japanese' langu it. They would push you off your own sidewalk, if they felt like'gel
age.
camp m your godown and if you squawked to your consul about ma
D
|a
been held between the Standing Committee
290 families (1,450 persons) he 11 just wring his hand. It’s nor a pretty picture to see the wtustn
? \'nkB-ltlSh C° Umbia and the interested government depart
ments at which it was considered that the war neeck of (groat
•
in groceries, hotels and room being Pushed, about by squat, bandy-legged little ochre men from 3 hi
Coh the
in?perat've that the production of the British ing houses, bars and liquor land of the Rising Sun.• You don>t nke that? Neither do j sQ .f Th£
L ?l3n f,sbmg industry be maintained and increased and that there
stores, fruitstands, and miscel- whites win the war, that also sounds reasonable. Do you think tj.y '
fore, a way should be found of putting these vessels
a
laneous retail trades and pro that matters might be eased? My lad, Shanghai's 99 years’ lease to -the
LX ^V^TT tb“e
Japanese oX nd" ,
con
fessions.
sistent with the needs of national defence and security as S os »il
dominating western power in Shanghai is up and out. And ano^s, a
due regard to the equity of the Japanese Canadian owners;
Most of the Japanese
thing, no little oiling of the palms is going to renew that lease, s a
stores in downtown LiT
When Old China Hand s ancestors in 1842 opened a mere overgrclease
..
T IS' ’o'A' deemed desirable to implement the
release of
?
f
kyo
have
b
een
drastically
fishing village to foreign trade and proclaimed it an open port, bsulti
.Aa a|?nCSe Canadian fishing vessels in accordance with the above
considerations; and
affected.
Restrictions on
did tney visualze the Shanghai of today. No, they didn’t know i pane
f?at SUCh a.purP°se cou|d best be accomplished by the establish
travel as well as the need to
Shanghai was to be the outlet of approximately 42 per cent of Ch^adqi
ment of a committee to consist of three persons with a jurist tn ?
conserve rubber, has resulted
foreign trade.
tack:
in almost complete loss of the
Old China Hand's ancestors toiled hard to build this Far Eamdini
large trade from customers
metropolis but with rhe mechanized era came the symbol of the JeijE.I.,
in
rural
districts.
PUblic utiIicies* So cven if the Japs lose the war, here «re s
COMMITTEE APPOINTED
It is reported that various John Chinaman s cue to get in there and take back what is rightfares c
r
MTister' therefore, with the concurrence of the Minister of retail businesses, such as groc theirs. ) up, the Chinese are too smart to issue a new lease
of Shanj- In /
eries, laundries, cleaning etc
for a mere pocketful of gold. From now on, it’s going to be a strnhiT I
which depend almost wholly on private affair.
day
DHo"°urab e SJdney A' Smith' Puisne Judge of the Supreme American patronage, have sufAlready, white shopkeepers are feeling the presence of keen Japice i
B' C'; Commander B. L JohnVanc°uver, B. C.; and Kishizo Kimura, Vancouver B C rered a 50 per ’bent, loss of esc competition affecting their business. For instance, the Municipal Couthw
custom since the start of the
C , a”d the telephone company employees having tiffin at in r
vfsseTs^
°n the d^posal of Japanese fishing war.
ChoC
°lat,e
on Stinking Road are naturally attracted toward.
vessels, me duties of the said committee to be:
a
newly-built
Tncolore
” restaurant across the street. Reliable soty^i
Some white competitors of
(1) To make such arrangements as will make it possible for
the present owners of detained vessels to freely negotiate for charters Japanese businessmen have al- say although "Tricolore” sounds Frenchy, the restaurant is operated^
leases, or sales of such vessels as they own to persons other than those
T
s^ar^e^ 1° take advantage the Kimura Coffee Company of Yokohama.
of Japanese ongin, provided that the committee approve of such charters of the situation. A. move to k j ThC
WaS being slammed on that rambling building in
n W 6 TC!SSary' tO arbitrate disagreements on price between squeeze out the Japanese is shadows of Kiukiang Road where the Old China Hand presided
N-4
.JAe^
SW1 be a
for foe S o? already under way, to wit: enlightened despotism over the complicated business rigamarole 01^
veoiei unoer risning license.
°Z“,Chincse clerks- Every day for twelve years he had gone do^Lif
among the nurserymen and in
owners and intending purchasers with a view to
to
find ms letters neatly piled, face down, on the side of hi desk be
preventing
advantage
the
wholesale
produce
business.
being taken of duress.
MERELY REPORT
(3)
To REPORT on claims which may be
ernment for damage to, or deterioration of, the
ment while under detentioin.
made on the govvessels and equip-
(5) By consultation with the Department of
ments to be put back into production.
j
t
”
°n StepS ^^ Should be *aken to dispose of
Wh.,ch thePresent owners are unable to sell, charter, lease
or otherwise transfer.
ofoerlXa^t'^ be ^thorfoed to employ stenographic and
F£AT;u^
KOMURA BROS. LTD.
Store-Wide!
ample, best quality Harris
Tweed coats are selling at less
than $20.00. Reversibles start
from $7.95 ... and so on down
the line.
You’ve been waiting for this
eyen^' Visit Modiste’s today
while the choices are still good.
Classified Ads
TRANS PORTATION
Groceries and fill Kinds of Merchandise
Marine 3655
a cup of tea. He hated tea.
'
r?JT
It’s no damn use trying to change these people. They’ve been dc'"^'
things backward ever since Adam woke up in Eden, and that wasnt^terday! They write backward, read backward, and, by gad they tHModiste is clearing
clearin out all backward. And another thing: Face is everything with these ocom9,;
juuuisie
their winter coats, as well as Face means yow fire a person by asking him to stay. It means you* .’^^
reversibles, dresses, jackets, call a chap a thief, except over a cup of tea. It means a banished w ln??'
blouses, skirts, etc. in their lord, who ought to have his head chopped off, is sent on an "invA^
.. is sent on an ‘
store-wide Clearance Sale,
gation
hnnrc for
f., hs
l... or,3nadiai
. abroad.” It1 means
means vou
you take
take rum
two hours
tiffin- ...
when
;ime' 'A
he prices are so low, you sufficient to down and digest the food. Six servants when you
can' „
wouldn’t believe it. For ex- only two; ride one block to the club instead of walking.
te tod.
PAST COURTEOUS SERVICE
Nabata Taxi, Highland 076b'
269 Powell Street
Experienced
*
)uncen
lenew
Old Chtna Hand had the mind of a real Shanghailander.
ittmg back comfortably in the lounge chair with a glass . st of t
hand and a pipe in the other, O.C.H. had it all planned—maybe ,in med P.
his,a. . ,
glimpse of Shanghai—as he knew' it. Straight down Nanking Rod/inC l
would go, past Sassoon House, drop i at Jean
sntry
M- of lace from the mtreior, then to Kelly's for some reading maZS
and across the street to Ingenohi's tobacconists to replace his smelly ;'ln:W
Boy, one stengah.”
hiry-hi
Old China Hand was licked and he knew it. Yup coin? b^of
meant going home BROKE. Maybe, if the home office was in a kf A^i
mood maybe, there's a clerks job in Chicago or New York. TheA"^the other hand . . . age; 47. Type of work desired; Executive. Qu^rUHa
ficarions: 20-years in China anJ the employment office bloke would P°wed him over with fishy eyes,
up, all this the Old China Hand saw laHan X
he gazed into his Hass.
r ,.'h3d
JAPAN*
*
ea k,Ha
ese girl or woman to help
cyanic the morning
with light housework.
All from the Island Empire when the squat, bandy-legged little ochre i:a\!tta
f
*
tramped in a victory march up Bubbling
Wat '
modern conveniences. Hours Read and from
across Garden Bridge. Ew straight ahead, they cU'M *
9 to 5 Monday to Fridav, 9 to
tr°n hac
1 Saturdays. $15.00 per month. p^r the rows ot empty buildings on the Bund.
SUn WaS mdtin8 int0 lhc mountains on
>?udd
Phone KErrisdale 2978-R.
WANTED!! — DICTIONARIES!!
Japanese-English or English-Japanese
New, Second-hand, or otherwise
YAMA TAXI
OUR STOCK IS LOW
347 Powell Street
*
&
PAcific 5454
H
G '
^ liner, Ranpura, several kilometers downstahGthe L
on the Whangpoo gave a mournful toot. A glass shooed from ‘ L •
S.° 7^ “d
eUt ^“^ J1
the bar was deserted. -rates, t;
Farewell, let there be no moaning at the bar, gentlemen.
^Joh
Coiporal Takahashi sounded his buH?
^.poh
San oL "T.“F Y ''Honsfooatd down the Grand CatS
T?
M iac ‘14Uld
tbe Cicadas singing in the l^arie‘s (
T/T J CYC
“r ">•
shall roe®®'
Till Ear.h Md Sky stand presently, at God's great Judgment S^K