Page 1
Trek From CoastTo Camps,
Farms, Inland Gains Volume
*
Vol. V, No. 45
*
New Westminster Soon Complete
Movement To blocan Due Next
VANCOUVER, B. C.
^RER bachelors
of’ 4 2 Sets Record for Grads
$
PATROL AT
VANCOUVER. B. C.. May 14.—Despite minor set-backs
and difficulties, the machinery of evacuation is functioning
steadily, and a regular stream of men, women, and chldren
is proceeding to a number of widely-scattered points. Op
timists indicate that the end of the program may soon be in
sight.
A record graduating class of fourteen second generation
rere awarded degrees from the University of British Colibia at the traditional congregation ceremony this afterWith groups of women and
pon, held in the gymnasium at the University. All faculchildren going both to Kaslo Jackfish Men Will Drive
ies, with the exception of agriculture, were represented in (From the Vancouver Province)
VANCOUVER, B. C„ May 14.— and Greenwood this week, ar
he class of ’42, which surpassed the previous record numLogs On River To Mill
Soldiers
surrounding the immi- rangements for other interor
erof ten graduates in one class.
By Tak Shikatani
gration building, where 130 Jap towns arc almost complete. It
The detailed list of successful students follows:
anese rioted on Wednesday, had is indicated that the first move
CAMP SW 5-3, Schreiber, Ont.
IMMIGRATION
ARTS and SCIENCE
orders today to bar Japanese I
—The wheels of the movement of
inferring the Degree of Bache
visitors from the ramps at the j ment to Sloean would com evacuees in Ontario into private
Takashi Komiyama is
lor of Arts with Honours
foot of Granville and Burrard, toi mence early next week.
industry has started to run, with
prevent recurrence of yesterday’s | The largest single party yet to twenty-five men from Schreiber
Kimimichi Arai, first class honrs in physics and (chemistry; First Nisei Minister
outburst, when the inmates of the (leave, numbering 160, departed Camp SW 5-5 and twenty-five
^ Ryohei Shinobu, second class
The first Canadian-born Nl- ■building broke windows, hurled; from New Westminster Wednes- from Camp SW 5-3 going to work.
sours m chemistry; Kimiko
sei to enter the ranks of tire rubbish to the grounds and played!day night for Kaslo, following the These boys have been employed
akimoto, second class honours ministry will be ordained tomor a fire hose on soldiers.
(first party of 140 who reached by the Austin Lumber (Dalton)
i French.
row at services at the confer The Japanese, who are held inlthere MonQJay' ^0 more are due Ltd. and their pay will be $3 per
Conferring the Degree of Bache
ence church, St. Giles United. the building because thev refusedit0 “° Sunday nlgM complying day with room and board. The
lor of Arts
He is Takashi Komiyama, only to entrain for work camps without!?w Westminster evacuation as first six weeks the work consists
CLASS II
son of Mr. and Mrs. T. Komi then- families, began “yammer-1 fa\ as W Westminster is con of driving the logs down the river
GENERAL COURSE
into the pond, and then into the
yama, 3154 Vanness Avenue, ing” early Wednesday afternoon!ceine“'
Kiichi Noguchi, Katherine s
who graduated this spring from in protest of a new rule barring. City groups are still proceeding sawmill for cutting logs.
aio-Takahara.
With good results and per
Union College.
visitors.
(to Greenwood, and it is indicated
PASSED: Peter F. Yamada.
formance on the drive, they will
Mr. Komiyama graduated
steel-grated window frame'that Valley families from Ruskin
from the University of B. C. in1 was broken loose and dropped to j and Haney would follow- shortly, be offered permanent work in
COMMERCE
the mill. If the company finds
1936, winning his Bachelor of! Ge ground three storeys below'
onferring- the Degree of Bache
the boys satisfactory in tins line
A
Manitoba
representative
is
Arts
in
Economics.
He
entered'
and
lor of Commerce
a fire hose was turned out of । expected here today to choose a
of work, 100 more are expected
theological
college
three
years
;
e
CLASS I
open
window.
Toilet paper I number of selected families, to
to follow.
ago, and for the past several'and newspapers were thrown out!
Frederick Y. Sasaki.
Camp SW 5-3 expresses its hope
fill
definite
positions
on
Mani
years
has
been
actively
engaged
’
^
CLASS II
the Japanese waved and toba farms. Parties of roughly for the success in tills new ad
in work at the Fairview U^
t0 (rimd
th d on
Akira Namba.
70 people leave from Steveston venture into the Ontario logging
m™ and in young peop estlle ,,raterfronl ramp °
PASSED: Shigekazu Okuno,
over
the week-end for Southern industry.
work at the Powell United
,.
avid F. Shiozaki, Peter F. YaAlberta.
Church
i
Ausnn
c
Taylor,
chairman
of
ada, George S. Yamashita.
Thursday morning over 100 peo
ompleted the work of the winter ______ 1; the B. C. Security Commission,
“
more
playple,
including men, left via Union BAGGAGE DETAILS
Session
APPLIED SCIENCE
”
~
r
r
i
than
anything
else.
Steamship and Squamish for the ANNOUNCED BY
CLASS II
Conferring the Degree of Master
"There
was
nothing
malicious
।
Lillooe
and the Minto - Bridge
Kiyoshi Kato.
of Applied Science
i
about
the
trouble,
,:
said
Mr.
Tay(
River
self
- supporting projects. B. C. COMMISSION
FOREST ENGINEERING
i
lor.
"Some
of
the
Japanese
just
;
Speed-up
in
these projects, with .General instructions issued by
CLASS II
i
got
a
little
fed-up
about
being
!
their
completion
before the end Ge British Columbia Seen
Hajime Kagetsu.
hurch Will Follow Ah'
-------- rity
;
kept
in
the
building
and
got
a
:
of
May,
is
indicated
as likely.
APPLIED SCIENCE
Commission in regard to baggage
! little exhuberant. There was more( Monday night last three coach to the various projects are aGfolSIXTH YEAR NURSING
j
yelling than anything else.”
>loads of young and older men left lows:
CLASS II
VANCOUVER. — H. R. McGill,
j
He
denied
that
plaster
had;
via C.P.R. fo the Revelstoke sec- INTERIOR HOUS’G PROJECTS
Michiyo A. Uyede.
,, member of the executive
i
been
pried
loose
from
the
walls
Alon,
and for Schreiber, Ontario,
ARTS and SCIENCE
—1000 pounds of personal ef
Council for Canada of
(and
thrown
out.
He
said
he
had
More
work camp parties are inTHIRD
YEAR
fects per family, including
^United Church, reported
i visited the building and found noidicated for the end of the week.
CLASS I
crated
pedal sewing machine,
Wsday afternoon to the B. C.
! evidence of it.
i — ----------------■ . ■ ----- ——Otsuki.
Shigeyuki
kitchen
utensils, b 1 a n k e t s,
y^ei^nce of tne church that the
! Mr. Taylor said that until Wed-1 with them at a distance through
CLASS II
clothing,
crated bicycles, and
•vCuiive hoped that “concenPASSED: Toshio Hirano, Ma-(nesday Japanese girls and wives' iron-grated windows. Stopping of
mattresses (no spring matcamps for women and riko Uyeda.
(of the men housed in the build-(this practice, he said, was probiresses). BAGGAGE FREE on
A n wou^ not be a permasame
train.
i
Ings
had
been
allowed
to
talk
ably
the
cause
of
the
outburst.
(Continued on Page 3)
P° 1CH that the church
-Small crated cook stove in
A .;° °'v evacuated Japanese
good condition. FREIGHT as
muW; that selected
soon as possible FREE.
ions ? d i be enipIoyed
—30 pounds of hand baggage
ns of ieal economic value.”
per person and food for at
*
*
*
and
candy
J
he
store
Everyleast 3 days, to be taken in
Needed services are being provided
Jas glven Canada a
the passenger car with you.
quite
a
demand
for
writing
KS
tO
ngs
inn
people living in
to 4he “Japanese for
The
Commission will allow
with
members
oi
the
Family
w
supthe type
’ T— ScoW' ordained an
$1.00
per
person to those go
ferent parts of the country,
snoe repairs, ana ;
W?.
today, told the
ing
to
Interior
Housing, and
behind writing supplies in demand
2® iEla.r1’ t0 Grace Hos- put into the former dining
of.
Ai$2.00 per person to those go
ire the varieties of ’aundr
n F:
Goon 311 address Wednesday
i 10. nil
ing to the Sugar Beet Pro
raduate and following are aspirins,
jects,
for the purchase of this
Inside
doorways
w
and
donuts.
Wk of the B- O.
note,
and
GCMter
o
food.
' in4C°T1Ssion’ under Ma-' "Grandview. United . ‘■Vancouver; in
lakashima. in i ormer
with a professional SUGAR BEET PROJECTS
«
?ylor- Mr. Scotti Heights United No. 9
—All of the above, BUT no
smile
expert
sei
cJciws:
G
j 'certain individu-j other purposes in former days is the’d?-ys proprietor of Snow
no stove is needed.
: to ria. Esth- WORK CAMP PROJECTS
§°ne behind tile! Park laundry. Women do their! Cleaners on West Broadway.
er Kuwabara formerly A 'he city,
dining hallsiCowD. Cobbler
‘■Silence
aCK and tried toi laundry in these
—100 pounds of baggage FREE
ossiblv the most essential
and Penny Fukakusa nA D mean.
wa 111 re=ard to the remodc'led with drains and rows of;
(baggage car same train).
which
—
30
pounds of hand baggage
shops
is
the
shoe
repairs.
wash tubs wth hot and cold water, i the
A Barber Shop
and
blankets FREE (in the
taken
of Persons who
is now in the former C.C.F. hall,
pg to
dvanta&e of the situa- Every Day Is Wash Day
Ver;
shortly.
on
information
passenger
car with you).
the guidance of T. Kadonapa
' “Those GP ,racial Prejudice.
Baggage
is
to
be taken to the
from
a
Park
official,
a
barber shop
Every day is wash day for these .^ pr{r ce Rupert, the shop has taken
east
end
of
the
C.P.R. platform
^Panese
wTl° say the
vears
;e well known slogan. "Pro- is to be opened, The prospective between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. on the
spy in
°u dn 1 treat us this people and where in former
person knows ail the angles on the
when in the carnival spirit we u^‘(iuctjon for use and not for profi
day of leaving.
11
°r Who urg,e us
♦
*
*
Pan, or in Japanese back to Ja- to see portly and pious members of,^S;
a him are Sukeo Sameshima ton so ria! art arid can make an
them tn . any event’ not aU°w :he Ladies' Aid serving hamburgers; Qf
aimo and SI. Sameshima of verted onion look like either Micke
The Security Commission deme,”
c^a baek here, annoy and hot-dogs, we now see stolid daP', Victori. both old hands at shoe rc- Rooney or Charles Boyer, whic
dared that it washed it to be tho"IhY Scott saidis oraerea.
roughly understood that all peranese matrons doing their day’s
!'£!a. I
so^u^on to oui’ pro- washing. It's no longer. "Gimme. ^E prcsent they are having a boom
This yea
the early summer sons may follow their own relithat the hamaneggs", but the latest news trom . ;n cbeir business with forty to fift quiet of the fair grounds has been gious inclinations in any of the
H One solution—we Camp No. 2 at Red Pass or from(pajrs coming in a day. Being open- interrupted ; the dining hall s usually Commission Projects.
Canada ?e Japanese out
i
time are servi
MISS FURUSE SOUGHT
' hi? comm' T' dlere the danger the bov friend ar Schreiber. ‘Moun-;ej orjv a wce they have to take deserted at this
new
usefulness,
tain
View
United"
has
now
become,
From them
dog" of shoes but
ot
An inquiry as to the where
R
would be reW be m/G'lere the Japanese the laundry boiler house.
get this cleared up hear the swish of women ai
abouts of Miss Kanaye Furuse,
I they expec
•^•er Si
useful.
Another dining hall sponsored by; soon. Comments Sukco Sameshima, washing, the hiss of the boiler, the formerly of R. R. No. 1, Ham
Pat- they1
must recognize
‘Kids and women's shoes, almost no rush of the clerks in the stores and mond, and at present believed
mad?
h?re and that they a "united'’ organization,
supplies, the pounding of shoe re to have gone to the beet fields
is taken i gents' at all ■looks like."
in /Alberta has been received by
0 ^a&anGF6^ contribution adian Congress of labour.
sign "Christian Psy- pairing. and small children bargain
over by the stores and supplies de-1
fe ® S ?e- We must
The New Canadian. Anyone
he Park ing to get ten varieties of candy for knowing her address is asked to
SeeA but Gias Pe°P^e of another partment. This department is the > chological Fellowship”,
1 *s human beings.”
■ center that sends out all materials ■ small fry imbibe thtir quo a of soft
send it to The New Canadian.
'AT YOUR STRVICEOHASTINGS PK
site
Farms, Inland Gains Volume
*
Vol. V, No. 45
*
New Westminster Soon Complete
Movement To blocan Due Next
VANCOUVER, B. C.
^RER bachelors
of’ 4 2 Sets Record for Grads
$
PATROL AT
VANCOUVER. B. C.. May 14.—Despite minor set-backs
and difficulties, the machinery of evacuation is functioning
steadily, and a regular stream of men, women, and chldren
is proceeding to a number of widely-scattered points. Op
timists indicate that the end of the program may soon be in
sight.
A record graduating class of fourteen second generation
rere awarded degrees from the University of British Colibia at the traditional congregation ceremony this afterWith groups of women and
pon, held in the gymnasium at the University. All faculchildren going both to Kaslo Jackfish Men Will Drive
ies, with the exception of agriculture, were represented in (From the Vancouver Province)
VANCOUVER, B. C„ May 14.— and Greenwood this week, ar
he class of ’42, which surpassed the previous record numLogs On River To Mill
Soldiers
surrounding the immi- rangements for other interor
erof ten graduates in one class.
By Tak Shikatani
gration building, where 130 Jap towns arc almost complete. It
The detailed list of successful students follows:
anese rioted on Wednesday, had is indicated that the first move
CAMP SW 5-3, Schreiber, Ont.
IMMIGRATION
ARTS and SCIENCE
orders today to bar Japanese I
—The wheels of the movement of
inferring the Degree of Bache
visitors from the ramps at the j ment to Sloean would com evacuees in Ontario into private
Takashi Komiyama is
lor of Arts with Honours
foot of Granville and Burrard, toi mence early next week.
industry has started to run, with
prevent recurrence of yesterday’s | The largest single party yet to twenty-five men from Schreiber
Kimimichi Arai, first class honrs in physics and (chemistry; First Nisei Minister
outburst, when the inmates of the (leave, numbering 160, departed Camp SW 5-5 and twenty-five
^ Ryohei Shinobu, second class
The first Canadian-born Nl- ■building broke windows, hurled; from New Westminster Wednes- from Camp SW 5-3 going to work.
sours m chemistry; Kimiko
sei to enter the ranks of tire rubbish to the grounds and played!day night for Kaslo, following the These boys have been employed
akimoto, second class honours ministry will be ordained tomor a fire hose on soldiers.
(first party of 140 who reached by the Austin Lumber (Dalton)
i French.
row at services at the confer The Japanese, who are held inlthere MonQJay' ^0 more are due Ltd. and their pay will be $3 per
Conferring the Degree of Bache
ence church, St. Giles United. the building because thev refusedit0 “° Sunday nlgM complying day with room and board. The
lor of Arts
He is Takashi Komiyama, only to entrain for work camps without!?w Westminster evacuation as first six weeks the work consists
CLASS II
son of Mr. and Mrs. T. Komi then- families, began “yammer-1 fa\ as W Westminster is con of driving the logs down the river
GENERAL COURSE
into the pond, and then into the
yama, 3154 Vanness Avenue, ing” early Wednesday afternoon!ceine“'
Kiichi Noguchi, Katherine s
who graduated this spring from in protest of a new rule barring. City groups are still proceeding sawmill for cutting logs.
aio-Takahara.
With good results and per
Union College.
visitors.
(to Greenwood, and it is indicated
PASSED: Peter F. Yamada.
formance on the drive, they will
Mr. Komiyama graduated
steel-grated window frame'that Valley families from Ruskin
from the University of B. C. in1 was broken loose and dropped to j and Haney would follow- shortly, be offered permanent work in
COMMERCE
the mill. If the company finds
1936, winning his Bachelor of! Ge ground three storeys below'
onferring- the Degree of Bache
the boys satisfactory in tins line
A
Manitoba
representative
is
Arts
in
Economics.
He
entered'
and
lor of Commerce
a fire hose was turned out of । expected here today to choose a
of work, 100 more are expected
theological
college
three
years
;
e
CLASS I
open
window.
Toilet paper I number of selected families, to
to follow.
ago, and for the past several'and newspapers were thrown out!
Frederick Y. Sasaki.
Camp SW 5-3 expresses its hope
fill
definite
positions
on
Mani
years
has
been
actively
engaged
’
^
CLASS II
the Japanese waved and toba farms. Parties of roughly for the success in tills new ad
in work at the Fairview U^
t0 (rimd
th d on
Akira Namba.
70 people leave from Steveston venture into the Ontario logging
m™ and in young peop estlle ,,raterfronl ramp °
PASSED: Shigekazu Okuno,
over
the week-end for Southern industry.
work at the Powell United
,.
avid F. Shiozaki, Peter F. YaAlberta.
Church
i
Ausnn
c
Taylor,
chairman
of
ada, George S. Yamashita.
Thursday morning over 100 peo
ompleted the work of the winter ______ 1; the B. C. Security Commission,
“
more
playple,
including men, left via Union BAGGAGE DETAILS
Session
APPLIED SCIENCE
”
~
r
r
i
than
anything
else.
Steamship and Squamish for the ANNOUNCED BY
CLASS II
Conferring the Degree of Master
"There
was
nothing
malicious
।
Lillooe
and the Minto - Bridge
Kiyoshi Kato.
of Applied Science
i
about
the
trouble,
,:
said
Mr.
Tay(
River
self
- supporting projects. B. C. COMMISSION
FOREST ENGINEERING
i
lor.
"Some
of
the
Japanese
just
;
Speed-up
in
these projects, with .General instructions issued by
CLASS II
i
got
a
little
fed-up
about
being
!
their
completion
before the end Ge British Columbia Seen
Hajime Kagetsu.
hurch Will Follow Ah'
-------- rity
;
kept
in
the
building
and
got
a
:
of
May,
is
indicated
as likely.
APPLIED SCIENCE
Commission in regard to baggage
! little exhuberant. There was more( Monday night last three coach to the various projects are aGfolSIXTH YEAR NURSING
j
yelling than anything else.”
>loads of young and older men left lows:
CLASS II
VANCOUVER. — H. R. McGill,
j
He
denied
that
plaster
had;
via C.P.R. fo the Revelstoke sec- INTERIOR HOUS’G PROJECTS
Michiyo A. Uyede.
,, member of the executive
i
been
pried
loose
from
the
walls
Alon,
and for Schreiber, Ontario,
ARTS and SCIENCE
—1000 pounds of personal ef
Council for Canada of
(and
thrown
out.
He
said
he
had
More
work camp parties are inTHIRD
YEAR
fects per family, including
^United Church, reported
i visited the building and found noidicated for the end of the week.
CLASS I
crated
pedal sewing machine,
Wsday afternoon to the B. C.
! evidence of it.
i — ----------------■ . ■ ----- ——Otsuki.
Shigeyuki
kitchen
utensils, b 1 a n k e t s,
y^ei^nce of tne church that the
! Mr. Taylor said that until Wed-1 with them at a distance through
CLASS II
clothing,
crated bicycles, and
•vCuiive hoped that “concenPASSED: Toshio Hirano, Ma-(nesday Japanese girls and wives' iron-grated windows. Stopping of
mattresses (no spring matcamps for women and riko Uyeda.
(of the men housed in the build-(this practice, he said, was probiresses). BAGGAGE FREE on
A n wou^ not be a permasame
train.
i
Ings
had
been
allowed
to
talk
ably
the
cause
of
the
outburst.
(Continued on Page 3)
P° 1CH that the church
-Small crated cook stove in
A .;° °'v evacuated Japanese
good condition. FREIGHT as
muW; that selected
soon as possible FREE.
ions ? d i be enipIoyed
—30 pounds of hand baggage
ns of ieal economic value.”
per person and food for at
*
*
*
and
candy
J
he
store
Everyleast 3 days, to be taken in
Needed services are being provided
Jas glven Canada a
the passenger car with you.
quite
a
demand
for
writing
KS
tO
ngs
inn
people living in
to 4he “Japanese for
The
Commission will allow
with
members
oi
the
Family
w
supthe type
’ T— ScoW' ordained an
$1.00
per
person to those go
ferent parts of the country,
snoe repairs, ana ;
W?.
today, told the
ing
to
Interior
Housing, and
behind writing supplies in demand
2® iEla.r1’ t0 Grace Hos- put into the former dining
of.
Ai$2.00 per person to those go
ire the varieties of ’aundr
n F:
Goon 311 address Wednesday
i 10. nil
ing to the Sugar Beet Pro
raduate and following are aspirins,
jects,
for the purchase of this
Inside
doorways
w
and
donuts.
Wk of the B- O.
note,
and
GCMter
o
food.
' in4C°T1Ssion’ under Ma-' "Grandview. United . ‘■Vancouver; in
lakashima. in i ormer
with a professional SUGAR BEET PROJECTS
«
?ylor- Mr. Scotti Heights United No. 9
—All of the above, BUT no
smile
expert
sei
cJciws:
G
j 'certain individu-j other purposes in former days is the’d?-ys proprietor of Snow
no stove is needed.
: to ria. Esth- WORK CAMP PROJECTS
§°ne behind tile! Park laundry. Women do their! Cleaners on West Broadway.
er Kuwabara formerly A 'he city,
dining hallsiCowD. Cobbler
‘■Silence
aCK and tried toi laundry in these
—100 pounds of baggage FREE
ossiblv the most essential
and Penny Fukakusa nA D mean.
wa 111 re=ard to the remodc'led with drains and rows of;
(baggage car same train).
which
—
30
pounds of hand baggage
shops
is
the
shoe
repairs.
wash tubs wth hot and cold water, i the
A Barber Shop
and
blankets FREE (in the
taken
of Persons who
is now in the former C.C.F. hall,
pg to
dvanta&e of the situa- Every Day Is Wash Day
Ver;
shortly.
on
information
passenger
car with you).
the guidance of T. Kadonapa
' “Those GP ,racial Prejudice.
Baggage
is
to
be taken to the
from
a
Park
official,
a
barber shop
Every day is wash day for these .^ pr{r ce Rupert, the shop has taken
east
end
of
the
C.P.R. platform
^Panese
wTl° say the
vears
;e well known slogan. "Pro- is to be opened, The prospective between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. on the
spy in
°u dn 1 treat us this people and where in former
person knows ail the angles on the
when in the carnival spirit we u^‘(iuctjon for use and not for profi
day of leaving.
11
°r Who urg,e us
♦
*
*
Pan, or in Japanese back to Ja- to see portly and pious members of,^S;
a him are Sukeo Sameshima ton so ria! art arid can make an
them tn . any event’ not aU°w :he Ladies' Aid serving hamburgers; Qf
aimo and SI. Sameshima of verted onion look like either Micke
The Security Commission deme,”
c^a baek here, annoy and hot-dogs, we now see stolid daP', Victori. both old hands at shoe rc- Rooney or Charles Boyer, whic
dared that it washed it to be tho"IhY Scott saidis oraerea.
roughly understood that all peranese matrons doing their day’s
!'£!a. I
so^u^on to oui’ pro- washing. It's no longer. "Gimme. ^E prcsent they are having a boom
This yea
the early summer sons may follow their own relithat the hamaneggs", but the latest news trom . ;n cbeir business with forty to fift quiet of the fair grounds has been gious inclinations in any of the
H One solution—we Camp No. 2 at Red Pass or from(pajrs coming in a day. Being open- interrupted ; the dining hall s usually Commission Projects.
Canada ?e Japanese out
i
time are servi
MISS FURUSE SOUGHT
' hi? comm' T' dlere the danger the bov friend ar Schreiber. ‘Moun-;ej orjv a wce they have to take deserted at this
new
usefulness,
tain
View
United"
has
now
become,
From them
dog" of shoes but
ot
An inquiry as to the where
R
would be reW be m/G'lere the Japanese the laundry boiler house.
get this cleared up hear the swish of women ai
abouts of Miss Kanaye Furuse,
I they expec
•^•er Si
useful.
Another dining hall sponsored by; soon. Comments Sukco Sameshima, washing, the hiss of the boiler, the formerly of R. R. No. 1, Ham
Pat- they1
must recognize
‘Kids and women's shoes, almost no rush of the clerks in the stores and mond, and at present believed
mad?
h?re and that they a "united'’ organization,
supplies, the pounding of shoe re to have gone to the beet fields
is taken i gents' at all ■looks like."
in /Alberta has been received by
0 ^a&anGF6^ contribution adian Congress of labour.
sign "Christian Psy- pairing. and small children bargain
over by the stores and supplies de-1
fe ® S ?e- We must
The New Canadian. Anyone
he Park ing to get ten varieties of candy for knowing her address is asked to
SeeA but Gias Pe°P^e of another partment. This department is the > chological Fellowship”,
1 *s human beings.”
■ center that sends out all materials ■ small fry imbibe thtir quo a of soft
send it to The New Canadian.
'AT YOUR STRVICEOHASTINGS PK
site
Page 2
THE NEW CANADIAN
Musclemen To Move
Heavy Goods At
as an o aan
th
inrormatmn and expression amo
in the Dominion of Canada.
ese on at
PAcific 8-131
215 EAST CORDOVA
Vancouver, B. C.
4
J
it
£
£
*
s
X's'?
-.G
4 C iQ fj
Hurons
i-
13
i 1
mice
MAY j 4, 1942
u trom 'he
r mW c.m.e
mis loneiy cold moon
Hon. Humphrey Mitchell, federal minister of labor, told the
TM’
HH
-URDS OF
Ladies, Mothers, kiddies...do Vancouver
Vancouver flihCity Onimnii
Council in a re s '?V-S
you need any help moving the ply Monday to the Council’s re- BOATS TRANSFERRED
furniture?
quest for a seat upon the British
With more than 700
Just ring PAcific
and Columbia Security Commission vessels formerly owned bv VS
ask for the "Bull
that he doubted the “wisdom of
Canadian fishermen
And two or three husky, such ar
appointment because ese
ed
to
Occidental owp^ S
cheerful, smiling young men other B. C. municipalities would transferred
to the ‘ go^J
will be there to pinch-hit for probably apply for
same aoout two-thirds of the 3
your husbands or sons, if they thing."
Ged ?°ats have now
d’d
have gone away to a road camp.
minister said the Securi of, rhe Fishing Vessel Did
''° story is too hjgh, nor piano ty The
Commission is operating un Commission announced wPX|
for the J.C.C.C. mus
‘
der a general federal order "to dav.
clemen
only reward they remove Japanese immediately
About 400 boats rema^- -J
from
the
dangerous
and
vulner
good
condition. raiGrG/M
But
able
points
and.
as
soon
as
it
is
seiners
to trollers aM5.Gl
tone
,
- advance, since P^G1'ab^e’ to find locations on
Itis
believed that atGGI
tne number of men is limited, which they can be suitably be more will
be sold to bo^d
amp if is necessary to plan the placed for duration of the war.
psaermen,
and
that snchGJl
worn well ahead. PAcific 8431
as
are
left
will
be
sold fo^q
is the number.
purposes.
" 5"""i
Nonce of the firs: step in
campaign to bar return of*Japan- A. a. McMaster, manager of s
ese .to Vancouver and B. clhe’' Commission office, said&U
a ..unction of the C.N.R. mainline and the Prince Huperi Hi;?,
wwailcd mu? of Ped
ss
beer yay'-:
eneral store, and a new’ built I me Wwt Office, a
espital. Last week
the head; win.
f the Japanese Nationals Hi nway Camps moved
the war was given Monday at a cases completion of ^e^
into om : own from Jasper, Alberta.
meeting of the council bv Aid reached through free nego^
By “Three Valiev
o
,
’VW-— —
• Wilson, who said he
would re oeuween owners or their renrJ
are working
commend
:
tatives and buyers.
‘ ""1
others arm;1. Cancellation of all Japanese
SEE— - “S= m "5
trade licences.
Nisei Arrive in Onto*
2. Request to the Provincial
(i(haf v-™’!1 of the ».' ■!
Vancouver '
“ M *md ® ^ department stares b !”ort "'here we used to resVancouver.
Government for a city charter a- fifty Niseis from the citv, ^1
mendment giving_ the council
manning pool and Woodfibre
power to refuse licences to Jap who left Monday via C.PR ?
anese at any time.
reported in a wire this mornug
ess> rather than ’
we would be
from Kunio Shimizu, formed a
ithinkm and recalling the value
future for fishing, but with a general secretary of the Japan
i ^na goodness of our mothers "
■^SL fTTMtime the condition strict regulation forbidding us to ese Canadian Citizens Council!
-0 teams
fish in any way at all we are and business manager of The I
n mk^f PmZ^
? Hfe has ^ cha^
□
Sn aQC^ to eGry^
somewhat downhearted. But at New Canadian, who was al
every walk of least we can possess and use long member of the party. The latest I
the Occidental team from Red
' the cXntry^To creed wave radios.
group is being settled at Black! E
some
I
ing our teams th* Red Piss°
We’re thinkin= of nam-jhard ?Sfhasbeen an experience
The . officials, including the River Camp SW 5-4.
A
KISHIUCHI
—
MATSUBA
bits, etc
* fact probabIv mounties and the foreman, are
Tire Steveston United Church;
Yam-EToof TeE’E’5 V'n1 Join
hUr rK
'c‘ers- re^
”
f^Qt-fen. And'Wt
leaders,
to °
oee foro-nhnn
„.t kind and sympathetic, for which
tmrd« ^^^
the best vegetable EX6™'
alld » we are thankful. The meals are on May 2 at 3 o’clock was the set-j I?
[Ch
ting for the marriage of Dors
good
and
plentiful,
and
we
wonder
co
team. HoWs
if any of us will ever be able to eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. & Oh
gether, happy and content?
° slenderize ’. Some days we have Matsuba, to Mr. John Kishiuchi ho
eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Kishi
To the mothers of the world lice served in a western manner, uchi.
Rev. K. Nomoto performed] P.
whose boys are in the army to but some of us yearn for “takuthe ceremony, the baishate
i hah ”,° T "’hose h u s b a n d s wan” and “ochazuke’’. As for the ior which was Mr. S. Mayegad
Pj
m°‘™ rs whoS S “ta" work—we find it suitable, with cf Steveston.
*
I
On behalf of cw Nationals Camp here at Red Sands I am writing
most of the men arranged for
EC
to let you and our friends know how things arerth W
with sadness.
t^l their capacity and ability.
To
River
'hues ens^ cf Blue t SitM 5?“"“ fw
This Is Our Aim
pan
Classified Ads
^^ we ^00^ a'oout this bedimmed
LOST
world, we find ourselves confused PHOTOGRAPHS of JAPANESE
(Our Camp
and almost lost as to what to do. children in an envelope from I h
f
' r3?m yenrs ag0 tWs site ^as a relief road c-imp From here 1■ o J~ was on the morning of Anril Too many of us are unwilling to from Murray’s,
dost between E PA
to Blue Liver the road has been cleared ar id levelled. Some shert '8: ,G *en. some 24 young men ar- cooperate, too many are indiffer
Campbell and Hastings and Po hi
.sciuL-cy bushes have grown up here and there
ent,
and
too
many
individualistic
well
cn rne road, so it is not
ab Three Valley station
and■ Main
about one wet
yet onen for traffic. We are doing om- best
Despite
the
---difficulty of liveli- ago. Envelope has owner’s na®
to
clear
the
bushes
to
say.
it
is
a
little
village
trm xs may travel to and from Blue Riv
r' ,
-vnie lo nines west of Revelstoke hood, there is at least one thing Bob Hunt. Please phone KEr
In the opposite direction from our camo ■to
Thunder River, the' To m°sE of us everythin^ was we can learn from this present 0265, 3830 W. 37th.
i |Ali
icaaway n cleared, but net levelled, so thy
experience: to forget our differitwill
take
some
time
j
n
,
ew
'
s
°
few
houses,
the
air
be:ore it can lie used.
girl wanted
wr,-)the lake 50 beautiful.'and ences and live a life of co-opera- girl to help with clean- Pau
Our camp comprises nine wn houses
tion and har:monv. How much
include kitchen and; le ^tte-mantled mountains
ing and sewing for short time
the mess house. About twelve nersons
in each >f the tent- ; r We lived in box and coach cars better we would be if we would only ah the West End Community] ■umi
houses.
weld ourselves into one mighty
pop several weeks, but the se’etton- strength to attain
Centre, Phone Mrs. Fahrni. Mt
TRIP DOWN THE LINE
a higher level
I PA
rine
3498.
in life. This can only be attained
The m >1 gioup of 06 men here came
oS
com
Albreda
a
week
ahead
,
an
an
inconvenience
DurinoBOYS WANTED
j l
lPA
ot us. Our group of 40 were transferred
s.acrifice on our part. And if
, Is
aim' to better ourselves TWO CARRIER BOYS WITH P
and io help others to become bet- Bicycles to deliver The New Can
adian. Apply’- at the office of Th? I®'
Ssk ™ild“have°S X™ toZ^ 215 “
I^
1 1“TG 11 *ine
tne line on the freight car At Lempriere Tamp was almost readv
m
the men
their bunkhouses when the,stverjfe' StE.'®'
RT
" fc'v mmutesUtmnmE-' rW 'rerf Quartered in'the’new
Tr«hot
“ “ sr?s
I
It is a Sight for sore eyes to see a bunch of our own men at these
umrs. and to have a chance to talk to them. You're sure to bump ’
into someone you have known before at home
P ■
Most of the men here at Red Sands are from Woodfibre Port Al- '
bein’. Pimce Rupert. Seymour Logging site, and other coastal points ■
SSS." 10 63
orl°1daVT?ing is in Pr°Per '
ordei. xhe bathouse is the only j
oinp:
pieuci. The supervisor is o-nod ;
enough to supply all the materi- j
ab for a Japanese bath. Our J
The food bore isn't too bad. but could be better. The worm pinch own boys are doing the carpen- ;
gfiand ae Ilope to ^mp’ete j
we ever lem is in sugar rationing. Most of the time we hive to be T4eibv
bv
the end of the week.
contented with corn svrup for our tea.
f^*-? haw v^ers!
A VISIT FROM THREE BEARS
?ur neighboring camus !
The Otiier night we had an iweresting experience. Three ^’szlv 3
S°me °f the b°W
bears, a mother and two cubs, came and ransacked our much-rationed hiked
hiked all die way from Taft a-‘
meat house, ana got away with most of it. <If this keeps up. we'll for^bm^ "^^S trek’ ^-Stepped;
have to set a trap, and have bear meat for a changel
10 luncheon. From Cambie Sid-One of our fellows here is Ken Saito of Fraser^lills. and we
W. another camp west of Wt i
proud of his artistic ability. He's a handy man. does the barberi® have come a number of visitorswriting, sketching and so forth. No one has a camera, but- he make? Bnoie long we expect to make a’
up for it by drawing excellent sketches of us.
Cal 10 Sols?ua. farthest of;
We understand that we are not likelv to swv here for the winter i- e camps on this section. Half ’
They say it snows about six or seven feet, and’in that ease our J “nt the men here are young, the other'
houses will oe squashed as flat as a pancake. Possible we mnv Z aa.i getting on in years. The for- ’
further south to a place called Birch Island for the winter We shall met are endeavouring to form be glad to go. to see different places and counteract the monotonvo? some sort of sport activities at'
existence in a road camp. We're all hoping -hat the dav will com* once, and hope to challenge the
soon when we will be able to go back home to Vancouver again Wh*n other camps.
"
I
that day comes, we'll be the first to reach there........
Until recently we had a bright’
Xiy<
f CH
^77 PcweH St.
PAcific 3016
I him
8 hEX
Hoei
The ( athohe Japanese
A-?
L&bun
Mission is still taking appli
cations for Greewood. There
H ?
I?~ PAS;
(y -.
]S loom for about 300 more
people. Come to 381 Cor-
5
Hear
=be, (
ear):
^- 3
Musclemen To Move
Heavy Goods At
as an o aan
th
inrormatmn and expression amo
in the Dominion of Canada.
ese on at
PAcific 8-131
215 EAST CORDOVA
Vancouver, B. C.
4
J
it
£
£
*
s
X's'?
-.G
4 C iQ fj
Hurons
i-
13
i 1
mice
MAY j 4, 1942
u trom 'he
r mW c.m.e
mis loneiy cold moon
Hon. Humphrey Mitchell, federal minister of labor, told the
TM’
HH
-URDS OF
Ladies, Mothers, kiddies...do Vancouver
Vancouver flihCity Onimnii
Council in a re s '?V-S
you need any help moving the ply Monday to the Council’s re- BOATS TRANSFERRED
furniture?
quest for a seat upon the British
With more than 700
Just ring PAcific
and Columbia Security Commission vessels formerly owned bv VS
ask for the "Bull
that he doubted the “wisdom of
Canadian fishermen
And two or three husky, such ar
appointment because ese
ed
to
Occidental owp^ S
cheerful, smiling young men other B. C. municipalities would transferred
to the ‘ go^J
will be there to pinch-hit for probably apply for
same aoout two-thirds of the 3
your husbands or sons, if they thing."
Ged ?°ats have now
d’d
have gone away to a road camp.
minister said the Securi of, rhe Fishing Vessel Did
''° story is too hjgh, nor piano ty The
Commission is operating un Commission announced wPX|
for the J.C.C.C. mus
‘
der a general federal order "to dav.
clemen
only reward they remove Japanese immediately
About 400 boats rema^- -J
from
the
dangerous
and
vulner
good
condition. raiGrG/M
But
able
points
and.
as
soon
as
it
is
seiners
to trollers aM5.Gl
tone
,
- advance, since P^G1'ab^e’ to find locations on
Itis
believed that atGGI
tne number of men is limited, which they can be suitably be more will
be sold to bo^d
amp if is necessary to plan the placed for duration of the war.
psaermen,
and
that snchGJl
worn well ahead. PAcific 8431
as
are
left
will
be
sold fo^q
is the number.
purposes.
" 5"""i
Nonce of the firs: step in
campaign to bar return of*Japan- A. a. McMaster, manager of s
ese .to Vancouver and B. clhe’' Commission office, said&U
a ..unction of the C.N.R. mainline and the Prince Huperi Hi;?,
wwailcd mu? of Ped
ss
beer yay'-:
eneral store, and a new’ built I me Wwt Office, a
espital. Last week
the head; win.
f the Japanese Nationals Hi nway Camps moved
the war was given Monday at a cases completion of ^e^
into om : own from Jasper, Alberta.
meeting of the council bv Aid reached through free nego^
By “Three Valiev
o
,
’VW-— —
• Wilson, who said he
would re oeuween owners or their renrJ
are working
commend
:
tatives and buyers.
‘ ""1
others arm;1. Cancellation of all Japanese
SEE— - “S= m "5
trade licences.
Nisei Arrive in Onto*
2. Request to the Provincial
(i(haf v-™’!1 of the ».' ■!
Vancouver '
“ M *md ® ^ department stares b !”ort "'here we used to resVancouver.
Government for a city charter a- fifty Niseis from the citv, ^1
mendment giving_ the council
manning pool and Woodfibre
power to refuse licences to Jap who left Monday via C.PR ?
anese at any time.
reported in a wire this mornug
ess> rather than ’
we would be
from Kunio Shimizu, formed a
ithinkm and recalling the value
future for fishing, but with a general secretary of the Japan
i ^na goodness of our mothers "
■^SL fTTMtime the condition strict regulation forbidding us to ese Canadian Citizens Council!
-0 teams
fish in any way at all we are and business manager of The I
n mk^f PmZ^
? Hfe has ^ cha^
□
Sn aQC^ to eGry^
somewhat downhearted. But at New Canadian, who was al
every walk of least we can possess and use long member of the party. The latest I
the Occidental team from Red
' the cXntry^To creed wave radios.
group is being settled at Black! E
some
I
ing our teams th* Red Piss°
We’re thinkin= of nam-jhard ?Sfhasbeen an experience
The . officials, including the River Camp SW 5-4.
A
KISHIUCHI
—
MATSUBA
bits, etc
* fact probabIv mounties and the foreman, are
Tire Steveston United Church;
Yam-EToof TeE’E’5 V'n1 Join
hUr rK
'c‘ers- re^
”
f^Qt-fen. And'Wt
leaders,
to °
oee foro-nhnn
„.t kind and sympathetic, for which
tmrd« ^^^
the best vegetable EX6™'
alld » we are thankful. The meals are on May 2 at 3 o’clock was the set-j I?
[Ch
ting for the marriage of Dors
good
and
plentiful,
and
we
wonder
co
team. HoWs
if any of us will ever be able to eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. & Oh
gether, happy and content?
° slenderize ’. Some days we have Matsuba, to Mr. John Kishiuchi ho
eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Kishi
To the mothers of the world lice served in a western manner, uchi.
Rev. K. Nomoto performed] P.
whose boys are in the army to but some of us yearn for “takuthe ceremony, the baishate
i hah ”,° T "’hose h u s b a n d s wan” and “ochazuke’’. As for the ior which was Mr. S. Mayegad
Pj
m°‘™ rs whoS S “ta" work—we find it suitable, with cf Steveston.
*
I
On behalf of cw Nationals Camp here at Red Sands I am writing
most of the men arranged for
EC
to let you and our friends know how things arerth W
with sadness.
t^l their capacity and ability.
To
River
'hues ens^ cf Blue t SitM 5?“"“ fw
This Is Our Aim
pan
Classified Ads
^^ we ^00^ a'oout this bedimmed
LOST
world, we find ourselves confused PHOTOGRAPHS of JAPANESE
(Our Camp
and almost lost as to what to do. children in an envelope from I h
f
' r3?m yenrs ag0 tWs site ^as a relief road c-imp From here 1■ o J~ was on the morning of Anril Too many of us are unwilling to from Murray’s,
dost between E PA
to Blue Liver the road has been cleared ar id levelled. Some shert '8: ,G *en. some 24 young men ar- cooperate, too many are indiffer
Campbell and Hastings and Po hi
.sciuL-cy bushes have grown up here and there
ent,
and
too
many
individualistic
well
cn rne road, so it is not
ab Three Valley station
and■ Main
about one wet
yet onen for traffic. We are doing om- best
Despite
the
---difficulty of liveli- ago. Envelope has owner’s na®
to
clear
the
bushes
to
say.
it
is
a
little
village
trm xs may travel to and from Blue Riv
r' ,
-vnie lo nines west of Revelstoke hood, there is at least one thing Bob Hunt. Please phone KEr
In the opposite direction from our camo ■to
Thunder River, the' To m°sE of us everythin^ was we can learn from this present 0265, 3830 W. 37th.
i |Ali
icaaway n cleared, but net levelled, so thy
experience: to forget our differitwill
take
some
time
j
n
,
ew
'
s
°
few
houses,
the
air
be:ore it can lie used.
girl wanted
wr,-)the lake 50 beautiful.'and ences and live a life of co-opera- girl to help with clean- Pau
Our camp comprises nine wn houses
tion and har:monv. How much
include kitchen and; le ^tte-mantled mountains
ing and sewing for short time
the mess house. About twelve nersons
in each >f the tent- ; r We lived in box and coach cars better we would be if we would only ah the West End Community] ■umi
houses.
weld ourselves into one mighty
pop several weeks, but the se’etton- strength to attain
Centre, Phone Mrs. Fahrni. Mt
TRIP DOWN THE LINE
a higher level
I PA
rine
3498.
in life. This can only be attained
The m >1 gioup of 06 men here came
oS
com
Albreda
a
week
ahead
,
an
an
inconvenience
DurinoBOYS WANTED
j l
lPA
ot us. Our group of 40 were transferred
s.acrifice on our part. And if
, Is
aim' to better ourselves TWO CARRIER BOYS WITH P
and io help others to become bet- Bicycles to deliver The New Can
adian. Apply’- at the office of Th? I®'
Ssk ™ild“have°S X™ toZ^ 215 “
I^
1 1“TG 11 *ine
tne line on the freight car At Lempriere Tamp was almost readv
m
the men
their bunkhouses when the,stverjfe' StE.'®'
RT
" fc'v mmutesUtmnmE-' rW 'rerf Quartered in'the’new
Tr«hot
“ “ sr?s
I
It is a Sight for sore eyes to see a bunch of our own men at these
umrs. and to have a chance to talk to them. You're sure to bump ’
into someone you have known before at home
P ■
Most of the men here at Red Sands are from Woodfibre Port Al- '
bein’. Pimce Rupert. Seymour Logging site, and other coastal points ■
SSS." 10 63
orl°1daVT?ing is in Pr°Per '
ordei. xhe bathouse is the only j
oinp:
pieuci. The supervisor is o-nod ;
enough to supply all the materi- j
ab for a Japanese bath. Our J
The food bore isn't too bad. but could be better. The worm pinch own boys are doing the carpen- ;
gfiand ae Ilope to ^mp’ete j
we ever lem is in sugar rationing. Most of the time we hive to be T4eibv
bv
the end of the week.
contented with corn svrup for our tea.
f^*-? haw v^ers!
A VISIT FROM THREE BEARS
?ur neighboring camus !
The Otiier night we had an iweresting experience. Three ^’szlv 3
S°me °f the b°W
bears, a mother and two cubs, came and ransacked our much-rationed hiked
hiked all die way from Taft a-‘
meat house, ana got away with most of it. <If this keeps up. we'll for^bm^ "^^S trek’ ^-Stepped;
have to set a trap, and have bear meat for a changel
10 luncheon. From Cambie Sid-One of our fellows here is Ken Saito of Fraser^lills. and we
W. another camp west of Wt i
proud of his artistic ability. He's a handy man. does the barberi® have come a number of visitorswriting, sketching and so forth. No one has a camera, but- he make? Bnoie long we expect to make a’
up for it by drawing excellent sketches of us.
Cal 10 Sols?ua. farthest of;
We understand that we are not likelv to swv here for the winter i- e camps on this section. Half ’
They say it snows about six or seven feet, and’in that ease our J “nt the men here are young, the other'
houses will oe squashed as flat as a pancake. Possible we mnv Z aa.i getting on in years. The for- ’
further south to a place called Birch Island for the winter We shall met are endeavouring to form be glad to go. to see different places and counteract the monotonvo? some sort of sport activities at'
existence in a road camp. We're all hoping -hat the dav will com* once, and hope to challenge the
soon when we will be able to go back home to Vancouver again Wh*n other camps.
"
I
that day comes, we'll be the first to reach there........
Until recently we had a bright’
Xiy<
f CH
^77 PcweH St.
PAcific 3016
I him
8 hEX
Hoei
The ( athohe Japanese
A-?
L&bun
Mission is still taking appli
cations for Greewood. There
H ?
I?~ PAS;
(y -.
]S loom for about 300 more
people. Come to 381 Cor-
5
Hear
=be, (
ear):
^- 3
Page 3
2
may 14, 1942
THE NEW CANADIAN
o
nflux of Evacuees Gives Impetus
ft Business In Kootenay District
iishji
danaj
EansfH
and 3
mined
LTobj
iisood
M
fftM
^- I]
■ •’d
Settlement of several thousand women, children, and aged men
'■■flETii nom the coast into Kaslo, Sanderf, Slocan, and Greenwood
fted as giving an impetus to business and trade generally in die
ivi Kootenay.
Delivery of necessary supplies,
Ocularly foodstuffs, is ’having
pi--rked efiect upon distributing
ft "such as Nelson and other
i
7ft'This same effect is noted
"ft building repair and confton being pushed in the
Is "ghost towns”, which are
7ft to new life as a result of
n ®8 7
e
o
ft
7
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HI
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Nelson indicates |
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(Continued from Page 1)
UH..'
’ibrej
ML
ft’
COMMERCE
1. id
CLASS II
nii»
0
PASSED WITH SUPPLEMENT
0
ill 'j
Alice M. Uyede
rmer I [ALS: Hideo Kawahara, Eng. 19 ;i
0
ll^ 5
Only prize-winner among
pan- 2deo Shigei, Eng. 19.
FH ^
0
0
sei
students
tliis
year
at
’
t
0
the
MIX
lc H
infill
ARTS and SCIENCE
o
University
of
British
Columbia
The
i5
0
SECOND YEAR
was Alice “Mikkie” Uyede. who
0
CLASS I
vim
received her degree of Bachelor
lest | Edward S. Yoshioka.
ft)
5
b
0
wJ
hi
of Applied Science in nursing
lack]
CLASS II
ft
at graduation exercises today,
6
Illi
3
I Akiko Kagetsu, Takako Nikaio
•0^
0
completing a six-year course. 0
0
A'
$
&l
Ma
80. Samuel G. Toguri.
She
received
a
Provincial
Board
urchj
7 •5
0
I PASSED: Richard Matsui
TH 0
0 in 5
IL SI It
si-j
of Health award for public
IChem. 2, Extra-Repeat), Shin health.
E
ft
£
/ft
(£7 %
0
te.j
.-n &
to AI. Nagata, George Nishioka
7’
4" IP
-r
0
s. S. them. 3, Extra—Supp.),
ft 5
Arthur I"
e
o
ichil
»t4 V
o
ff $ I:
t
I HASTINGS PARK
0
0<
$
Maia.
shio
b
7
0 ±m
II
inedl I PASSED .WITH SUPPLEMENI ft? S5
EALS: Hideaki R. Hikida, Eng. 2, SOFTBALL LOOP
miHl
rsyc. A; Lily Y. Uyeda, Phil. 1.
GETS UNDER WAY
J
a Au I
IZ
6 Z ft
3
kt
JPASSED IN CERTAIN SUBftS: L. Y. Shimo-Takahara,
HASTINGS PARK.—The Hast
0
10 ft
54-1:
p subjects written; Tliomas I. ings Park Softball League got a|amashita. all subjects written. way to a flying start last Satin’-j
i5
M- ■
Zi
day, May 9, with |the Senior!
|
COMMERCE
0
0 IL
I
CLASS II
i> ii
llj" -^
Division opening fire on the ball;
h
I Teruo Harada.
Mt*
front. In the first game of thej
0
IH h hl;.
Uli ’
c£l | PASSED WITH SUPPLEMEN- schedule, the strong entry from!
7
Bl
0 M’j
pLS; Tomitaro Nishio, Ger. lb. the Baggage Crew defeated Crew
i 7)
47 0
I
arts and SCIENCE
No. 5, 23-16.
C> 9
0
The Hastings Park League is
FIRST YEAR
ft
divided
into
four
divisions,
Sen
IL
0
01
CLASS II
^L
I Alice C. Kudo, Mitsuo G. Naka- ior, Junior, Juvenile and Girls.
O
ft
|W Henry Y. Okada. Shigeharu' Entered in the Senior Loop are!
o
ft
b
1^
pumura, Roy Oshiro, Mitsuru Iteams from the Baggage Crew,!
7
0
psaki, Lloyd H. Shimo-Takahara | Crew No. 5, the Cook House, Staff 0
0
if
Miharu R. Shiozaki, Michiyo- and Cumberland.
p
i?l'
BP
ft
H
Sumiya, Fred S. Yano.
The Junior Loop is a Vancouver
^Sumiya,
Phi V
-T- 'X
I PASSED; Lucy M. Ikata, Fusa- Island, Upcoast set-up, with
ft
IC
I®
R. Nagata.
’
I Prince Rupert Beavers, Royston.
[PASSED WITH SUPPLEMEN-1Victoria, Chemainus, Alberni and n.
ZHi 5
4
[AIS: Hisatoshi Moriya|ma, Cumberland Fujis set to battling
O
'M H
0
-J-7
3
Phvs. 1; Norikazu Ni- it out.
SI £
ph,, Phys. 1.
0 7
il
6
lb
0
Cumberland-Fanny
Bay, Lower tH”
A
p.
sip
7
^
SED
K
CERTAIN
SUBIsland
and
Chemainus
are
enter
7
fo
Ma 7
George R. Ide, Eng. la, ed in the Juvenile division, with
0
a
117 0
A/
IT
o. neon. 2. .
more teams expected to be formM 0 0
0
|L
ed. Three teams comprise the
ARTS and SCIENCE
IJ^
PH t Si
Girls’ League.
■)
SOCIAL WORK
Sharing mound duties for the 6 0
Iwpleted the work of the Winter
O
victorious baggage team, compos
o
Session
7
r
fib
ed
mostly
of
Alberni
Niseis,
were
|
CLASS II
0
0
5
0
15
Hideo Iida and Jimmy Kitamura,
g Kiyoshi Kato.
^ ft Oh <
with Nibby Fujimoto beliind the
7
is x
It
I om^PLIED SCIENCE
plate.
Hurling
for.
the
Crew-men
Ma
I CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
(£7
® Zb z ft-' 0
was Tak Yamada, with Doc Yasui
7<
'
3
|,
CLASS II
It
0
5
jn. ill l:
m ^ 7
ft rS’5 ill)
Iftf °1U Tabata’ Koichi Tsuji- receiving his pitches.
$ ft
IL 0
League games schedule for Suno
® ffiB^HANtcal FNrTiTOiroTMr day were washed out, and games
I
CIAsVt?
billed between Vancouver and
^
0 Zd
W #7
I -Joei Mitsui, Yoshito Takahashi Hastings All-Stars had to be canhr
7
piMAHoss dmS?.' celled. These games will be played
w
0
' ft
f*» Takahashi
DEKEBRED' off next Sunday.
7
ilr
3
7
b
7
■
-APPLIED SCIENCE
fix J^r~
ffir
ft I
St Joseph's Hospital
■ Dic, third year
< fl
Jft ^. WJTH SUPPLEMENThe Missionary Sisters of the
1r
£
4
0
Immaculate Co n c e pt ion
ftft Kat0’ Chui 31.
7
7
0
iidi
□5
-APPLIED SCIENCE
through the medium of The
t
’
I
SECOND YEAR.
7
New Canadian, are pleased to
o
I
- HONOURS
3
7'
ft
acknowledge receipt of the kind
O
J. Miura.
donation of seventy-two dollars
b
A
0 Ze
b £
n
cP
f FP1,. „ CLASS II
and ninety-nine cents (S72.99)
o
0
M
a
Mi
Sn°ft Saburo Wata- from the Woodfibre Isshinkai,
ft
ft
George K. Wate.
It
0
1^
hr
to St. Joseph’s Oriental Hospi
ft
o 7
0 ^
tal, 236. Campbell Avenue, and
I PASSFnGRlCULTURE
e
har) •
’Completed First offer their most grateful thanks
Ely ^ 0
to
the
members
of
the
aboveta< o
Ikebuchi (Supp.
7t
0 0 L
5
|
o. 2nd year).
named Association.
II
i
I
I*
may 14, 1942
THE NEW CANADIAN
o
nflux of Evacuees Gives Impetus
ft Business In Kootenay District
iishji
danaj
EansfH
and 3
mined
LTobj
iisood
M
fftM
^- I]
■ •’d
Settlement of several thousand women, children, and aged men
'■■flETii nom the coast into Kaslo, Sanderf, Slocan, and Greenwood
fted as giving an impetus to business and trade generally in die
ivi Kootenay.
Delivery of necessary supplies,
Ocularly foodstuffs, is ’having
pi--rked efiect upon distributing
ft "such as Nelson and other
i
7ft'This same effect is noted
"ft building repair and confton being pushed in the
Is "ghost towns”, which are
7ft to new life as a result of
n ®8 7
e
o
ft
7
;X A
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oi
^i: #s +: ftg ft
cnees will be i
the local I
that i
m Nisei girls |
private busi-1
.A*
HI
h
^^
rn
fe
JK
A
IB 1ft
Nelson indicates |
he war-time de-|
etals. the Koote-I
area is being roused from the i
•ession it has suffered for the i
iZ
'3
ft
ft
ft
ft
ip 0
X
university
0
y oil
'rr
1X7
the]
ft
(Continued from Page 1)
UH..'
’ibrej
ML
ft’
COMMERCE
1. id
CLASS II
nii»
0
PASSED WITH SUPPLEMENT
0
ill 'j
Alice M. Uyede
rmer I [ALS: Hideo Kawahara, Eng. 19 ;i
0
ll^ 5
Only prize-winner among
pan- 2deo Shigei, Eng. 19.
FH ^
0
0
sei
students
tliis
year
at
’
t
0
the
MIX
lc H
infill
ARTS and SCIENCE
o
University
of
British
Columbia
The
i5
0
SECOND YEAR
was Alice “Mikkie” Uyede. who
0
CLASS I
vim
received her degree of Bachelor
lest | Edward S. Yoshioka.
ft)
5
b
0
wJ
hi
of Applied Science in nursing
lack]
CLASS II
ft
at graduation exercises today,
6
Illi
3
I Akiko Kagetsu, Takako Nikaio
•0^
0
completing a six-year course. 0
0
A'
$
&l
Ma
80. Samuel G. Toguri.
She
received
a
Provincial
Board
urchj
7 •5
0
I PASSED: Richard Matsui
TH 0
0 in 5
IL SI It
si-j
of Health award for public
IChem. 2, Extra-Repeat), Shin health.
E
ft
£
/ft
(£7 %
0
te.j
.-n &
to AI. Nagata, George Nishioka
7’
4" IP
-r
0
s. S. them. 3, Extra—Supp.),
ft 5
Arthur I"
e
o
ichil
»t4 V
o
ff $ I:
t
I HASTINGS PARK
0
0<
$
Maia.
shio
b
7
0 ±m
II
inedl I PASSED .WITH SUPPLEMENI ft? S5
EALS: Hideaki R. Hikida, Eng. 2, SOFTBALL LOOP
miHl
rsyc. A; Lily Y. Uyeda, Phil. 1.
GETS UNDER WAY
J
a Au I
IZ
6 Z ft
3
kt
JPASSED IN CERTAIN SUBftS: L. Y. Shimo-Takahara,
HASTINGS PARK.—The Hast
0
10 ft
54-1:
p subjects written; Tliomas I. ings Park Softball League got a|amashita. all subjects written. way to a flying start last Satin’-j
i5
M- ■
Zi
day, May 9, with |the Senior!
|
COMMERCE
0
0 IL
I
CLASS II
i> ii
llj" -^
Division opening fire on the ball;
h
I Teruo Harada.
Mt*
front. In the first game of thej
0
IH h hl;.
Uli ’
c£l | PASSED WITH SUPPLEMEN- schedule, the strong entry from!
7
Bl
0 M’j
pLS; Tomitaro Nishio, Ger. lb. the Baggage Crew defeated Crew
i 7)
47 0
I
arts and SCIENCE
No. 5, 23-16.
C> 9
0
The Hastings Park League is
FIRST YEAR
ft
divided
into
four
divisions,
Sen
IL
0
01
CLASS II
^L
I Alice C. Kudo, Mitsuo G. Naka- ior, Junior, Juvenile and Girls.
O
ft
|W Henry Y. Okada. Shigeharu' Entered in the Senior Loop are!
o
ft
b
1^
pumura, Roy Oshiro, Mitsuru Iteams from the Baggage Crew,!
7
0
psaki, Lloyd H. Shimo-Takahara | Crew No. 5, the Cook House, Staff 0
0
if
Miharu R. Shiozaki, Michiyo- and Cumberland.
p
i?l'
BP
ft
H
Sumiya, Fred S. Yano.
The Junior Loop is a Vancouver
^Sumiya,
Phi V
-T- 'X
I PASSED; Lucy M. Ikata, Fusa- Island, Upcoast set-up, with
ft
IC
I®
R. Nagata.
’
I Prince Rupert Beavers, Royston.
[PASSED WITH SUPPLEMEN-1Victoria, Chemainus, Alberni and n.
ZHi 5
4
[AIS: Hisatoshi Moriya|ma, Cumberland Fujis set to battling
O
'M H
0
-J-7
3
Phvs. 1; Norikazu Ni- it out.
SI £
ph,, Phys. 1.
0 7
il
6
lb
0
Cumberland-Fanny
Bay, Lower tH”
A
p.
sip
7
^
SED
K
CERTAIN
SUBIsland
and
Chemainus
are
enter
7
fo
Ma 7
George R. Ide, Eng. la, ed in the Juvenile division, with
0
a
117 0
A/
IT
o. neon. 2. .
more teams expected to be formM 0 0
0
|L
ed. Three teams comprise the
ARTS and SCIENCE
IJ^
PH t Si
Girls’ League.
■)
SOCIAL WORK
Sharing mound duties for the 6 0
Iwpleted the work of the Winter
O
victorious baggage team, compos
o
Session
7
r
fib
ed
mostly
of
Alberni
Niseis,
were
|
CLASS II
0
0
5
0
15
Hideo Iida and Jimmy Kitamura,
g Kiyoshi Kato.
^ ft Oh <
with Nibby Fujimoto beliind the
7
is x
It
I om^PLIED SCIENCE
plate.
Hurling
for.
the
Crew-men
Ma
I CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
(£7
® Zb z ft-' 0
was Tak Yamada, with Doc Yasui
7<
'
3
|,
CLASS II
It
0
5
jn. ill l:
m ^ 7
ft rS’5 ill)
Iftf °1U Tabata’ Koichi Tsuji- receiving his pitches.
$ ft
IL 0
League games schedule for Suno
® ffiB^HANtcal FNrTiTOiroTMr day were washed out, and games
I
CIAsVt?
billed between Vancouver and
^
0 Zd
W #7
I -Joei Mitsui, Yoshito Takahashi Hastings All-Stars had to be canhr
7
piMAHoss dmS?.' celled. These games will be played
w
0
' ft
f*» Takahashi
DEKEBRED' off next Sunday.
7
ilr
3
7
b
7
■
-APPLIED SCIENCE
fix J^r~
ffir
ft I
St Joseph's Hospital
■ Dic, third year
< fl
Jft ^. WJTH SUPPLEMENThe Missionary Sisters of the
1r
£
4
0
Immaculate Co n c e pt ion
ftft Kat0’ Chui 31.
7
7
0
iidi
□5
-APPLIED SCIENCE
through the medium of The
t
’
I
SECOND YEAR.
7
New Canadian, are pleased to
o
I
- HONOURS
3
7'
ft
acknowledge receipt of the kind
O
J. Miura.
donation of seventy-two dollars
b
A
0 Ze
b £
n
cP
f FP1,. „ CLASS II
and ninety-nine cents (S72.99)
o
0
M
a
Mi
Sn°ft Saburo Wata- from the Woodfibre Isshinkai,
ft
ft
George K. Wate.
It
0
1^
hr
to St. Joseph’s Oriental Hospi
ft
o 7
0 ^
tal, 236. Campbell Avenue, and
I PASSFnGRlCULTURE
e
har) •
’Completed First offer their most grateful thanks
Ely ^ 0
to
the
members
of
the
aboveta< o
Ikebuchi (Supp.
7t
0 0 L
5
|
o. 2nd year).
named Association.
II
i
I
I*
Page 4
Page 4
THE NEV/ CANADIAN
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