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e
on
label?
your
when
d
u e.
is
there
a
<
Is
address
your
It
show:
subscription
Ao
A ii I ii d e p e n d e n t W e e k 1 y f o r C a n a d i a n s o f J a p a n e s e O r i g i n
little boy when the
teachers left for. Summer
they’ll know
School,
t h r o u g h."
what v
40c per month
10c per copy
July 29. 194-1.
OBJECTIVES IN EDUCATION:
Democratic Interest Focused
On Federal Franchise Bill
Strengthens Nisei Position
HALT REGISTRATION
OF LAND TRANSFERS
Top JNotch Staff Puts
Teachers Through Second
| Annual Training School
VANCOUVER, B. C. — Further
action on the part of the Japanese
property owners will be taken when
protests recorded by owners against
the sale of their property will be i
NEW DENVER, B.C.—-Every morning just before 8 o’clock the usually
By KUNIO HIDAKA
heard in the Vancouver courts.
empty highway from the orchard up through the village is suddenly trans
J.A. MacLennan, counsel for the
Continuing its intensive month- long campaign to resi formed into a procession of moving black and white, pastel shade and vivid
Japanese
Property
Owners'
Asso
tore franchise rights to Canadians of Japanese ancestry
Denverites have once again grown accustomed to
ciation, the members of which are j color.
abrogated by a subsection included in the War
now living in interior housing' cen the sight of the 140 young teachers trooping up the road toward New
tres in B.C. and other parts of Can Denver school Thev’ve been at their classes for a week now, and by the
Electors Bill, the Toronto Jananese Canadian Committee
ada,
launched proceedings here with closing date of August IS, the experienced schoolmarms will lune a stock
for Democracy sent its chairman,
Roger Obata and secretary, George the filing of a “caveat” in the prov of new and refound knowledge to try out on their pupils, while even die
a solid basis for confidence in her
Tanaka, to Ottawa to follow the incial land registry department, re most bashful tyro will at least have
ported The Vancouver Province.
own teaching ability.
House of Commons' debate on the
This
action
would
(forbid
registra
The girls from centres all over,
Senate amendment to the bill on
tion of a transfer of the Japanese
the province are being put through sight, suggests how far W.P. WestMonday, July 17.
Mr. Weston,
property from custodian to pur
a stiff course by the most conipe- on’s influence extends,
Besides attending the House ses
chaser, without the consent of the
tent staff of instructors available .who is attending the ; chool for the
sions the delegates had interviews
'jfirst time, is the art instructor at
registered owner or unless the cus
with ranking Canadian government
this side of the Rockies.
i Van co uve r N o rm a 1. He has a con victodian obtains a court order.
officials and members of parlia
Lord, widely
At the top is
[tion that everyone can lea rn to draw
ment of all major parties 'on the ■ill!nill!lllllill||!lll!llillllllll!ll!llllill!liM
respected principal of the Vancouver J reasonably well.
restricting of voting rights, on
Normal School, who is giving special
*
*
*
Place Manitoba Girls In
racial discrimination and general
attention
to
directors
and
principals
Combat
The 442nd
The student teachers have been
discussion of problems faced by
in the field of school organization and [divided into four groups, seniors, inTeam, composed entirely of American
Positions Through BCSC
persons of Japanese descent.
administration.
soldiers of Japanese ancestry, char
5 termediates, primaries, and beginners
Although
full
franchise
rights
were
It is his idea that the British Col I intermediates. Classes begin at eight
ged 50 miles in four days after going
By H. B. Sasaki
into the Fifth Army line in Italy, Sid not accorded to all persons outside
WINNIPEG, Man.—The policy of umbia school system, of necessity, is ■in the morning, after general assemFeder, Associated Press correspon of British Columbia, it was considered placement of domestic workers here swinging back toward a re-emphafis jbly, and continue until noon, Afteron two chief objectives. These, the noons are free for study and
dent' with the Fifth Army in Italy, significant that the government foun t
reported last week in a delayed dis it advisable to retrace its course of which had been previously handled by principals have learned, call first- for curricular activity, a part of which
patch dated July 9, said the Pacific restriction and restore voting rights the Y.W.C.A. has undergone a slight a more thorough mastering by pupils is expected to take shape in a school
to persons who had lived outside of change it was revealed by B. C. Sec of fundamentals in arithmetic and in
Citizen.
newspaper and preparation for a
the use of the English language. Sec closing concert.
“Built up from a single battalion British Columbia previous to the war. urity Commission officials recently.
ond, for conscious attempts towards
to a full-sized regiment, Japanese PREMIER EMBARRASSED
Classes, courses and activities at
However, this year, according to
The
prime
minister
was
in
an
eminstilling within pupils a higher sense
American doughboys are back - in the
the
school, it was announced, are
word received, there has been a
line operating against the Germans barassing position; he had to be res change in the setup and the jobs are of responsibility, that wall enable
open to any New Denver young
people who wish to participate. An
with the motto, “Go for Broke,” the ponsible for the measure which had arranged through the commission of them to tackle and carry through
with a tough'job.
crapshooter’s equivalent of “shoot the previously been passed yet have it
invitation to join in the school work
appear as non-d i s c r i m i n a t o r y. fice here.
has been extended by the BGS.C.
works” or “bet the roll”, Feder ex
Last
year
’
s
popular
principal,
F.C.
“The girls will be allowed to pick
Members found racial discrimination
of
the
Vancouver
Normal
plained.
Boyes,
their own jobs and settle the wages,
The A.P. correspondent reported inconsistent with democratic govern etc., personally with the employer. School, has returned to follow up this
Opening exercises, which were held
ment and were not satisfied with the
that a group of these Japanese Amer
approach
in
giving
the
technique
of
last
Sunday on the lawn at the New
amendment. The reasons given by the And if fair arrangement cannot be
icans had killed 30 Germans, captured
teaching
social
studies.
Denver
staff house, were under the
come upon, they are free to seen em
46 others and collected a mass of prime minister were far from convin ployment elsewhere. It’s no use stay ENGLISH LANGUAGE
chairmanship of the genial supervi
cing and opposition members had no
enemy material in action around Bolsor, H.P. Lougheed.
To
Miss
Zella
Manning,
principal
ing
in
a
home
where
they
are
not
difficulty in pointing out the errors
J. Draper, representing the Board
gheri.
satisfied
so
we
are
allowing
them
of
the
Provincial
Government
Model
“This is the 442nd Regiment, com .of fact and opinion................................
of Commissioners, extended an offi
freedom
to
change
their
home
where
School,
falls
the
task
of
helping
tea
Opposition to racial discrimination
cial welcome to instructors, teachers
plete with engineers and artillery,
and the depriving of franchise lights thev can be satisfied,” said Mr. F.L. chers to teach their pupils the use of
which was created by a special War
and visitors to the school, and gave
English,
“
pleasingly,
accurately
and
Ernst,
B.
C.
Security
Commission
—as voiced not by one section of the
Department order after selective ser
his assurance that New Denver would
with
facility.
”
That,
as
Stanford
Achrepresentative
for
Manitoba.
House alone, but by Liberal, CCF
be glad to do anything it could to
vice had refused toi induct Americans
Asked
whether
a
girl
could
move
ievement
Tests
have
shown,
and Social Credit members, which
of Japanese ancestry,” the Associated
help.
gave solemn testimony to the deter- as often she wanted to, Mr. Ernst "tough job.”
Press writer said. “The first of these ’mination of a significant section of replied that she was free to do so
of I Thanks to Mr. Draper and New
Miss Velina Campbell, al
soldiers in action was the now-famous
Model School, has a special field. She Denver were voiced by Mrs
;the Canadian population to rout out with a little discretion of course.”
100th battalion, which made the first
has the class of 25 teachers who will Booth, of the BCSC education aepartI all forms of racism. The usually v ocal
actual contact with the enemy in I sections of the Progressive Conser
be returning to school in September ment, who also expressed her appreItaly as part of the 34th Division, vative Party were conspicously silent London Nisei Group Tries
to give the baby classes their intro elation of tho co-operation given by
then distinguished itself at the Anzio
instructors and teachers.
duction to formalized education.
Und one was made to wonder if the
beachhead and had continued the
The instructor in health and physi ■ In the feature address for the
' heart.
■
The Art of Star-Gazing
i
party
had
a
change
of
same sor tof fighting farther north.”
cal education at the Normal School afternoon, A.R. Lord, principal, told
i only* member outside of Liberal min
LONDON,
Ont.
—
Ursa
Major,
Her
the audience of close to 250 persons
The United Press reported on July
isterial benches to support the gov- cules, Cynus, Jupiter, Polaris, light has a similar specialized job. Mrs. Jhat an educated person had to have
20 that the Japanese 100th Infantry
Marjory
Lee
is
anxious
to
get
the
ernments actions was AAV. Neill years etc., the language of the stars
Three things: the ability to earn a
Battalion is .garrisoning the strategic
(Ind. Comox-Alberni) who had no was the order of the evening when teachers so enthusiastic over the Hiving, the ability to actually live, and
Italian port city of Livorno which fell
practice
of
good
health
that
they
will
Mew stories to tell but showed his the London Nisei group had their
The ability to live with others . .
to Allied forces on July 19.
age by repeating the old ones, and monthly meeting with the Middlesex go back to their schools prepared to
i
(See page 7).
It was revealed > by
Headquarters
put
classes
through
a
real,
energetic
34th Division, to :p"otested
USe
hiS
Young People’s group on July 13th at
j
Choral numbers were pleasingly
urogram
of
P.E.,
even
at
the
risk
of
that elements of thAmerican Combat tributions
for
Japanese
piopa the Hume Cronyn Memorial Obserbecoming somewhat hot and mussed : contributed by a chorus of Siocan
which the Japanese
vatory of the University of Western
”
,
teachers, introduced by Kate Oyama,
Team is attached were the first to ganda.
The opinion is held that while the Ontario. It was quite an evening for up.
enter Livorno.
The 34th Division denying of voting rights cannot be
And the sight of teachers, thick while Tak Toyota’s P.A. system supthe Londoners as the meeting was black
claims more days in the line than any .
pencil
in
hand,
earnestly !plied a musical background for the
unique
and out of the ordinary. Aitei sketching away at everything in occasion.
(Please
Turn
to
Page
8)
other American division in the world.
looking at the planet Jupiter and
groups of stars through the huge
telescope, the mysteries of the hea
First Centre To Close Down:
vens were then unfolded to the group
in a very amusing and informative
manner by the lecturer, Rev. W.G.
• where the most executive members of Colgrove through the medium of
KASLO, B. C.—Exploring possibilities of extending boy scout work
By I. Sugiman
the committee transfer. Books will be models.
from
Tashme to other interior towns, Shige E. Yoshida, scoutmaster of the
SANDON, B. C.—The Sandon Jap donated to the centres in the Siocan
anese Committee was formally dis area and the effects in the Buddhist
Adding enjoyment to the evening 1st Tashme Troop.-is visiting the Kootenay settlements.
solved at the last committee meeting
A preliminary meeting was held in
ill be sent to Rev. R. Hira was the softball game played earlier
held on Julv 8. The dissolution of the v huren
New
Denver last Tuesday, and Mr. Since then so successful has been the
on the campus and the cold limeade
Denver.
hara
in
New
committee was necessitated through
where he is work that now over 180 boys make
The Sandon Japanese Committee at refreshment time which made us Yoshida is now in Kaslo
the steady decrease in the population
and older up the group, while 4b younger boys
was organized two years ago at the forget the torrid heat of the pave- meeting with parents
J have also been formed into a cub
in a preview of the closing of that
youths who might lead n tin
time of the evacuation from the ment downtown. .
[pack. Further growth of the* troop at
*
Movement to other inteno
Later he expects to visit
coastal area to Sandon to conduct
’Tashme has been held up only by the
same
purhousig j projects from Sandon is sul social work among the evacuees.
Most of the girls here are volun- the Siocan Valley for the
hack of suitable leadeis.
contim
nose.
Previously on June 22. the Sanson j teer workers of the
i
The scout movement, Mr. Yoshida
Wo?‘ds of uraise
the
attached
to
the
no i
Mr. Yoshida
Jananese Womens Association was ! and were recently complimented on
effort5 Of the committee and the in- also dissolved. The sum of twenty their excellent -work. The boys got
in Tashme, has j said, is non-sectarian. It seeks to
long association with the bo ; give boys training in constructive
>le services they had rendered
ts left in the treasury their share of praise too, for Kumeo
kis own boy- i activity, chiefly in outdoors purSandon Japanese communis.
as evenly do ited to the Red Cross Yoshida formerly of Chemamus, B.C. scout movement
woodcraft. At the
he
supervisor
pre
He suits such
v-'ere delivered b
and to the Nev. Denver Sanatorium. iwas commended in a ney tem in tne hood in the Chemainu s troop.
same
time
it
provides
a code for
he meeting.
,
e
holds a certificate as a
vinz out of Sandon London Free Press for
Transferees
m<
good
conduct
and
provides
an out
ft wa- revealed that a- surplus ox
h blood donation to the Red Cro. [ master from the general council
largest number:
have
resettled
in
let
for
the
high
spirits
of
boys
of
•7100 in rhe treasury was yet to be
Ranch, about a mile out of : Blood Bank. Tam Ozaki is another [the Boy Scouts Association of Can
adolescent
age.
.
deposed of. It was decided at the
: ada.
Denver, with the rest transfer ione of the leading blood donors as
far
He reported that results
that a sum of seventy dol1
activity need realized
to New Denver, Lemon Creek ihas made his 6th donation.
have
been
encouraging,
with
numbers
-e donated through the facilities
not —- .i He explained that ---.
n Roseberv and Greenwood.
evacuees
had
been
settled
in
Tashme,
of
capable
leaders
being
interested in
of
e Spanish Consul to the imerWe in London have been quite ithe need for organized, fruitful acti- possibility of forming troops. The
uses ar the Japanese Internment •
i July 20, records showing the re •active recently on the question of dis -vity among boys of the age group ; Security Commission, he said, Jias
camp and the remaining balance o;
ling population in Sandop re enfranchisement. Contacts have been from 8 to 18 became evident. With ‘been much interested in the work that
thirty dollars to the patients of
■made with the groups in other cenweaieu
these needs in mind, the first unit of [has been done in Tashme, and is cosw Denver Sanatorium.
;tres in regard to their stand and with
a troop of scouts was organized, i operating 'n his organization efforts.
Documents and records of the com
influential people.
230 to 240 people.
mittee are to be sent to the centre; i
Sew Battie Laurels
In Livorno Drive
Sandon Winds Up Community Affairs
Seek Extension Of Tashme Boy Scout
Movement To Kootenay Centres
on
label?
your
when
d
u e.
is
there
a
<
Is
address
your
It
show:
subscription
Ao
A ii I ii d e p e n d e n t W e e k 1 y f o r C a n a d i a n s o f J a p a n e s e O r i g i n
little boy when the
teachers left for. Summer
they’ll know
School,
t h r o u g h."
what v
40c per month
10c per copy
July 29. 194-1.
OBJECTIVES IN EDUCATION:
Democratic Interest Focused
On Federal Franchise Bill
Strengthens Nisei Position
HALT REGISTRATION
OF LAND TRANSFERS
Top JNotch Staff Puts
Teachers Through Second
| Annual Training School
VANCOUVER, B. C. — Further
action on the part of the Japanese
property owners will be taken when
protests recorded by owners against
the sale of their property will be i
NEW DENVER, B.C.—-Every morning just before 8 o’clock the usually
By KUNIO HIDAKA
heard in the Vancouver courts.
empty highway from the orchard up through the village is suddenly trans
J.A. MacLennan, counsel for the
Continuing its intensive month- long campaign to resi formed into a procession of moving black and white, pastel shade and vivid
Japanese
Property
Owners'
Asso
tore franchise rights to Canadians of Japanese ancestry
Denverites have once again grown accustomed to
ciation, the members of which are j color.
abrogated by a subsection included in the War
now living in interior housing' cen the sight of the 140 young teachers trooping up the road toward New
tres in B.C. and other parts of Can Denver school Thev’ve been at their classes for a week now, and by the
Electors Bill, the Toronto Jananese Canadian Committee
ada,
launched proceedings here with closing date of August IS, the experienced schoolmarms will lune a stock
for Democracy sent its chairman,
Roger Obata and secretary, George the filing of a “caveat” in the prov of new and refound knowledge to try out on their pupils, while even die
a solid basis for confidence in her
Tanaka, to Ottawa to follow the incial land registry department, re most bashful tyro will at least have
ported The Vancouver Province.
own teaching ability.
House of Commons' debate on the
This
action
would
(forbid
registra
The girls from centres all over,
Senate amendment to the bill on
tion of a transfer of the Japanese
the province are being put through sight, suggests how far W.P. WestMonday, July 17.
Mr. Weston,
property from custodian to pur
a stiff course by the most conipe- on’s influence extends,
Besides attending the House ses
chaser, without the consent of the
tent staff of instructors available .who is attending the ; chool for the
sions the delegates had interviews
'jfirst time, is the art instructor at
registered owner or unless the cus
with ranking Canadian government
this side of the Rockies.
i Van co uve r N o rm a 1. He has a con victodian obtains a court order.
officials and members of parlia
Lord, widely
At the top is
[tion that everyone can lea rn to draw
ment of all major parties 'on the ■ill!nill!lllllill||!lll!llillllllll!ll!llllill!liM
respected principal of the Vancouver J reasonably well.
restricting of voting rights, on
Normal School, who is giving special
*
*
*
Place Manitoba Girls In
racial discrimination and general
attention
to
directors
and
principals
Combat
The 442nd
The student teachers have been
discussion of problems faced by
in the field of school organization and [divided into four groups, seniors, inTeam, composed entirely of American
Positions Through BCSC
persons of Japanese descent.
administration.
soldiers of Japanese ancestry, char
5 termediates, primaries, and beginners
Although
full
franchise
rights
were
It is his idea that the British Col I intermediates. Classes begin at eight
ged 50 miles in four days after going
By H. B. Sasaki
into the Fifth Army line in Italy, Sid not accorded to all persons outside
WINNIPEG, Man.—The policy of umbia school system, of necessity, is ■in the morning, after general assemFeder, Associated Press correspon of British Columbia, it was considered placement of domestic workers here swinging back toward a re-emphafis jbly, and continue until noon, Afteron two chief objectives. These, the noons are free for study and
dent' with the Fifth Army in Italy, significant that the government foun t
reported last week in a delayed dis it advisable to retrace its course of which had been previously handled by principals have learned, call first- for curricular activity, a part of which
patch dated July 9, said the Pacific restriction and restore voting rights the Y.W.C.A. has undergone a slight a more thorough mastering by pupils is expected to take shape in a school
to persons who had lived outside of change it was revealed by B. C. Sec of fundamentals in arithmetic and in
Citizen.
newspaper and preparation for a
the use of the English language. Sec closing concert.
“Built up from a single battalion British Columbia previous to the war. urity Commission officials recently.
ond, for conscious attempts towards
to a full-sized regiment, Japanese PREMIER EMBARRASSED
Classes, courses and activities at
However, this year, according to
The
prime
minister
was
in
an
eminstilling within pupils a higher sense
American doughboys are back - in the
the
school, it was announced, are
word received, there has been a
line operating against the Germans barassing position; he had to be res change in the setup and the jobs are of responsibility, that wall enable
open to any New Denver young
people who wish to participate. An
with the motto, “Go for Broke,” the ponsible for the measure which had arranged through the commission of them to tackle and carry through
with a tough'job.
crapshooter’s equivalent of “shoot the previously been passed yet have it
invitation to join in the school work
appear as non-d i s c r i m i n a t o r y. fice here.
has been extended by the BGS.C.
works” or “bet the roll”, Feder ex
Last
year
’
s
popular
principal,
F.C.
“The girls will be allowed to pick
Members found racial discrimination
of
the
Vancouver
Normal
plained.
Boyes,
their own jobs and settle the wages,
The A.P. correspondent reported inconsistent with democratic govern etc., personally with the employer. School, has returned to follow up this
Opening exercises, which were held
ment and were not satisfied with the
that a group of these Japanese Amer
approach
in
giving
the
technique
of
last
Sunday on the lawn at the New
amendment. The reasons given by the And if fair arrangement cannot be
icans had killed 30 Germans, captured
teaching
social
studies.
Denver
staff house, were under the
come upon, they are free to seen em
46 others and collected a mass of prime minister were far from convin ployment elsewhere. It’s no use stay ENGLISH LANGUAGE
chairmanship of the genial supervi
cing and opposition members had no
enemy material in action around Bolsor, H.P. Lougheed.
To
Miss
Zella
Manning,
principal
ing
in
a
home
where
they
are
not
difficulty in pointing out the errors
J. Draper, representing the Board
gheri.
satisfied
so
we
are
allowing
them
of
the
Provincial
Government
Model
“This is the 442nd Regiment, com .of fact and opinion................................
of Commissioners, extended an offi
freedom
to
change
their
home
where
School,
falls
the
task
of
helping
tea
Opposition to racial discrimination
cial welcome to instructors, teachers
plete with engineers and artillery,
and the depriving of franchise lights thev can be satisfied,” said Mr. F.L. chers to teach their pupils the use of
which was created by a special War
and visitors to the school, and gave
English,
“
pleasingly,
accurately
and
Ernst,
B.
C.
Security
Commission
—as voiced not by one section of the
Department order after selective ser
his assurance that New Denver would
with
facility.
”
That,
as
Stanford
Achrepresentative
for
Manitoba.
House alone, but by Liberal, CCF
be glad to do anything it could to
vice had refused toi induct Americans
Asked
whether
a
girl
could
move
ievement
Tests
have
shown,
and Social Credit members, which
of Japanese ancestry,” the Associated
help.
gave solemn testimony to the deter- as often she wanted to, Mr. Ernst "tough job.”
Press writer said. “The first of these ’mination of a significant section of replied that she was free to do so
of I Thanks to Mr. Draper and New
Miss Velina Campbell, al
soldiers in action was the now-famous
Model School, has a special field. She Denver were voiced by Mrs
;the Canadian population to rout out with a little discretion of course.”
100th battalion, which made the first
has the class of 25 teachers who will Booth, of the BCSC education aepartI all forms of racism. The usually v ocal
actual contact with the enemy in I sections of the Progressive Conser
be returning to school in September ment, who also expressed her appreItaly as part of the 34th Division, vative Party were conspicously silent London Nisei Group Tries
to give the baby classes their intro elation of tho co-operation given by
then distinguished itself at the Anzio
instructors and teachers.
duction to formalized education.
Und one was made to wonder if the
beachhead and had continued the
The instructor in health and physi ■ In the feature address for the
' heart.
■
The Art of Star-Gazing
i
party
had
a
change
of
same sor tof fighting farther north.”
cal education at the Normal School afternoon, A.R. Lord, principal, told
i only* member outside of Liberal min
LONDON,
Ont.
—
Ursa
Major,
Her
the audience of close to 250 persons
The United Press reported on July
isterial benches to support the gov- cules, Cynus, Jupiter, Polaris, light has a similar specialized job. Mrs. Jhat an educated person had to have
20 that the Japanese 100th Infantry
Marjory
Lee
is
anxious
to
get
the
ernments actions was AAV. Neill years etc., the language of the stars
Three things: the ability to earn a
Battalion is .garrisoning the strategic
(Ind. Comox-Alberni) who had no was the order of the evening when teachers so enthusiastic over the Hiving, the ability to actually live, and
Italian port city of Livorno which fell
practice
of
good
health
that
they
will
Mew stories to tell but showed his the London Nisei group had their
The ability to live with others . .
to Allied forces on July 19.
age by repeating the old ones, and monthly meeting with the Middlesex go back to their schools prepared to
i
(See page 7).
It was revealed > by
Headquarters
put
classes
through
a
real,
energetic
34th Division, to :p"otested
USe
hiS
Young People’s group on July 13th at
j
Choral numbers were pleasingly
urogram
of
P.E.,
even
at
the
risk
of
that elements of thAmerican Combat tributions
for
Japanese
piopa the Hume Cronyn Memorial Obserbecoming somewhat hot and mussed : contributed by a chorus of Siocan
which the Japanese
vatory of the University of Western
”
,
teachers, introduced by Kate Oyama,
Team is attached were the first to ganda.
The opinion is held that while the Ontario. It was quite an evening for up.
enter Livorno.
The 34th Division denying of voting rights cannot be
And the sight of teachers, thick while Tak Toyota’s P.A. system supthe Londoners as the meeting was black
claims more days in the line than any .
pencil
in
hand,
earnestly !plied a musical background for the
unique
and out of the ordinary. Aitei sketching away at everything in occasion.
(Please
Turn
to
Page
8)
other American division in the world.
looking at the planet Jupiter and
groups of stars through the huge
telescope, the mysteries of the hea
First Centre To Close Down:
vens were then unfolded to the group
in a very amusing and informative
manner by the lecturer, Rev. W.G.
• where the most executive members of Colgrove through the medium of
KASLO, B. C.—Exploring possibilities of extending boy scout work
By I. Sugiman
the committee transfer. Books will be models.
from
Tashme to other interior towns, Shige E. Yoshida, scoutmaster of the
SANDON, B. C.—The Sandon Jap donated to the centres in the Siocan
anese Committee was formally dis area and the effects in the Buddhist
Adding enjoyment to the evening 1st Tashme Troop.-is visiting the Kootenay settlements.
solved at the last committee meeting
A preliminary meeting was held in
ill be sent to Rev. R. Hira was the softball game played earlier
held on Julv 8. The dissolution of the v huren
New
Denver last Tuesday, and Mr. Since then so successful has been the
on the campus and the cold limeade
Denver.
hara
in
New
committee was necessitated through
where he is work that now over 180 boys make
The Sandon Japanese Committee at refreshment time which made us Yoshida is now in Kaslo
the steady decrease in the population
and older up the group, while 4b younger boys
was organized two years ago at the forget the torrid heat of the pave- meeting with parents
J have also been formed into a cub
in a preview of the closing of that
youths who might lead n tin
time of the evacuation from the ment downtown. .
[pack. Further growth of the* troop at
*
Movement to other inteno
Later he expects to visit
coastal area to Sandon to conduct
’Tashme has been held up only by the
same
purhousig j projects from Sandon is sul social work among the evacuees.
Most of the girls here are volun- the Siocan Valley for the
hack of suitable leadeis.
contim
nose.
Previously on June 22. the Sanson j teer workers of the
i
The scout movement, Mr. Yoshida
Wo?‘ds of uraise
the
attached
to
the
no i
Mr. Yoshida
Jananese Womens Association was ! and were recently complimented on
effort5 Of the committee and the in- also dissolved. The sum of twenty their excellent -work. The boys got
in Tashme, has j said, is non-sectarian. It seeks to
long association with the bo ; give boys training in constructive
>le services they had rendered
ts left in the treasury their share of praise too, for Kumeo
kis own boy- i activity, chiefly in outdoors purSandon Japanese communis.
as evenly do ited to the Red Cross Yoshida formerly of Chemamus, B.C. scout movement
woodcraft. At the
he
supervisor
pre
He suits such
v-'ere delivered b
and to the Nev. Denver Sanatorium. iwas commended in a ney tem in tne hood in the Chemainu s troop.
same
time
it
provides
a code for
he meeting.
,
e
holds a certificate as a
vinz out of Sandon London Free Press for
Transferees
m<
good
conduct
and
provides
an out
ft wa- revealed that a- surplus ox
h blood donation to the Red Cro. [ master from the general council
largest number:
have
resettled
in
let
for
the
high
spirits
of
boys
of
•7100 in rhe treasury was yet to be
Ranch, about a mile out of : Blood Bank. Tam Ozaki is another [the Boy Scouts Association of Can
adolescent
age.
.
deposed of. It was decided at the
: ada.
Denver, with the rest transfer ione of the leading blood donors as
far
He reported that results
that a sum of seventy dol1
activity need realized
to New Denver, Lemon Creek ihas made his 6th donation.
have
been
encouraging,
with
numbers
-e donated through the facilities
not —- .i He explained that ---.
n Roseberv and Greenwood.
evacuees
had
been
settled
in
Tashme,
of
capable
leaders
being
interested in
of
e Spanish Consul to the imerWe in London have been quite ithe need for organized, fruitful acti- possibility of forming troops. The
uses ar the Japanese Internment •
i July 20, records showing the re •active recently on the question of dis -vity among boys of the age group ; Security Commission, he said, Jias
camp and the remaining balance o;
ling population in Sandop re enfranchisement. Contacts have been from 8 to 18 became evident. With ‘been much interested in the work that
thirty dollars to the patients of
■made with the groups in other cenweaieu
these needs in mind, the first unit of [has been done in Tashme, and is cosw Denver Sanatorium.
;tres in regard to their stand and with
a troop of scouts was organized, i operating 'n his organization efforts.
Documents and records of the com
influential people.
230 to 240 people.
mittee are to be sent to the centre; i
Sew Battie Laurels
In Livorno Drive
Sandon Winds Up Community Affairs
Seek Extension Of Tashme Boy Scout
Movement To Kootenay Centres
Page 2
;4
P. O. Drawer A
Kaslo, B. C.
An Independent Weekly7 Organ Published
as a Medium of Expression Among the
People of Japanese Origin in Canada.
Tom Shoyama
Editor & Publisher
Takaichi Umezuki
Japanese Section Editor
Rates: 40c per Month *$2.00 for Six Months in Advance
Fraser Valley Boom
Among the many hundreds of proper
ty owners whose land has been sold by
tender through the Custodian’s office, there
is the impression that disposal prices have
been very low. True, this is a reaction' both
natural and expected; but though no reli
able survey is available, a sample number
of owners tends to bear out this impression.
They base this opinion upon an un
questioned discrepancy between the sale
price and the original cost of their property
plus the various improvements and natural
increase in value. This resulting dissatisfac
tion, in fact, has been one factor motivating
tion in the courts of law.
A report from the farm editor of the
aneouver
Provi n ce, therefore.
past two and a half years particularly, en
joys neither the’ understanding nor the ap
preciation it so urgently needs- among the
people and the children of the interior
(from the W innipeg Free Press)
towns.
The net effect of the govern
the vote those thousands of c^iment
’
s
latest
amendment
to
the
AFi*. Lord put that urgent need into Dominion Elections Act is to re zens of Japanese origin whoss norchallenging terms to the young teachers, on store the iranchise to some few mai home was in British Coin toia
but who were dispersed into other
whose shoulders rests so great a weight of hundreds
Canadian citizens of
provinces for security reasons in
‘
21
moulding and shaping the beliefs and atti Japanese origin who would have 1942.
been disfranchised for the first
This will not meet with univer
tudes of the growing generation of our time hac( the original amendments
sal approval bur, on balance, the-e
school children. Fie said we might have hope been left as they were. This seems may be a _ case not to extend"the
for a peace of a permanent nature if tea like a small g’ain, but it is an im vote, at this time and in the midst
portant one. The whole country
of a war, to any group that did
chers everywhere could start imparting this has
had a sharp lesson in what can
not normally possess it, especially
“business of democracy” early and seriously happen, if racialists are allowed to when the group’s claim to a vote
enough in the schools. But they need to have their own way, and it will be is only a result of its enforced
hoped the lesson has been thor
evacuation for security reasons
teach democracy —'which, he thought, is oughly
learned. Racial discrimina
But, the matter having been
only the ability and the willingness to get tion is something Canada must do thus
sharply raised, we invite our
along co-operatively and tolerantly with ■without if it wants to continue and readers to consider whether the
to improve the strength and char
one’s neighbours, either next door or in acter
historic discrimination invoked by
of its democracy.
British
Columbia should be allowed
Moscow-^—not by lecturing about it or read
The history of events is as fol
to persist when the war is over.
ing of it in books, but by actually living it lows: There has been for half a It is bad enough in itself, but the
century or more a provision in the
in the classroom and the school.
racialists who sponsored it and
Elections Act which deprives citi
today strongly defend it have im
Our interior schools have a rather zens of Japanese origin living in prudently revealed their hand.
abnoimal set of circumstances to grapple B.C. of the franchise. The wording They are prepared, as the record
of the act meant that, if a provwith in, any attempt to teach ‘‘democracy.” ■ ince disfranchises any group, the now clearly shows,‘to pursue cer
tain groups of citizens beyond the
But if. as Mr. Lord suggests, that vague Dominion accepts that disfran limits
of their own province and to
chisement
in
drawing
up
its
term can be translated into concrete atti
open to the virtual destruction of
voters’ lists in that province. But
the generally universal nature of
tudes and habits among the school children, the
racialists, seizing the oppor
the Dominion franchise. They con
the schools will be doing their small, but tunity given. by the need now of sider
it quite proper that, if any
nonetheless important part, towards the arranging for a soldier vote, slip provinces takes a dislike to any
ped in a new amendment which
group inside its own borders, it
establishment of an enduring peace.
took the Dominion vote away from
difficulties of labor shortages and ceiling
prices, the report tells of a minor land boom
The current effort under wav bv the
under way in the Fraser Valiev, where a
very targe proportion of evacuee-owned
lands are located. Farms
:e said to be ocout troop to organize similar troops
selling at high prices, with private buyers among our young boys in Kootenay settle
competing to boost prices.
which ments is deserving of the widest possible
have been out of cultivation for some time response.
I he success that has greeted the move
arc being snapped up, and even uncleared
land is said to be hr demand.
ment in Tashme centre is a reflection both
activity
Nor is this combination of contrary
among
boys
of
adolescent"
age
and
of the
factors tlie only interesting thing revealed
by the report. A part of the boom says the adequacy of scouting to meet that verv
Province editor, is due to the “infiltration” need.
myself physical ly strong
of a new minority group, the Mennonites
men tall v
and morallv
from the prairie provinces. This group, ac
cording to report, is taking the place of stuns up the objectives and program of the
, movement. Its system of training
Japanese farmers who were evacuated from ,Scout
homes of long establishment just two years has been carefully developed to bring out
ago. The)- are being held partially respon the best traits of young manhood among
boys of a certain age group. And the grow
sible for the minor boom.
h i$ significant that opinion seems to th on an international scale of the organbe singling out new land buyers from the
prairies as belonging to a particular racial maintained since its 'foundins? bv Lord
Baden-Powell in 1908 indicates the inkerP’roun. nn
I here is a suggestion, in the report,
fixed pattern of mind is now locating a new
object for its antipathies in these newcomers. As such it throws some interesting
light upon the precise nature of the forced
which lead or direct anti-evacuee feelimn
Business of Democracy
Lord, principal of the Provincial Normal
School at A aneouver touched upon the one
most disturbing questions evident in the
evacuation settlements todav.
generally, he pointed to the fact that over
has been growing in importance as an edu
cational force, even while the church and
The home have been dcchinna’ in influenc
’rhe
in its three
of training people how to make a livin
'Uih o.hers, takes on a responsibility of un
limited importance.
*
Our schools in the interior settlements
have been performing a very creditable job
Liu it is doubtful it as yet sufficient serious
and considered attention has been given to
the hist, this has been due in certain res
pects to the fact that this portion of the
task is essentially, training in the wav of
life tabbed by the name, “democracy." And
that word, owing to the experiences of the
progra m may indeed have a special appeal
to boys living under the special conditions’
of the evacuee towns. The troop there has
received the august blessing of the Security
Commission authorities and the approval of
the whole community. It is to be hoped that
^Vmsion of 'the work mav receive unquali
fied support throughout the Kootenav
towns as well.
It’s Reported Good
One of the most important news
stories to break since Pearl Harbor is rei ealed by a small advertisement on page 7
of this issue. A limited quantity of shoyu,
or soy bean sauce, has been produced in a
Security Commission plant at Tashme. and
^ uas been brewed under the direction
of a skilled, professional hand and from all
qua non
of Japanese cooking. Miile
no connoisseur in that field, having been
.e^ fMher than born to an appreciation of
it. this writer is happily able to confirm that
shovu.
able bv
afterthought.
ought to be equally enjoyor
democrat
can so legislate as to deprive the
very racial group with which we
members of .that group of the
are now at war, no matter where
franchise no matter whether they
they lived in Canada provided that
live in the disci'iminating province
one province decided to disfran
or not.
chise that group provincially. This
_ This fragmentation of Canadian
would have involved German, Ita
citizenship
would carry7 us a long
lian, Hungarian, Bulgarian, Rom
step
forward
to the destruction of
anian and Finnish groups, had any
the unity of the state -and should
province acted, and very properly
not be tolerated in any form. When
a storm of protest arose.
the ~ war is over a most suitable
The bill slipped through the
project for liberal-minded men and
House of Commons, the members
■women everywhere would be to
apparently dozing peacefully. It
advocate and support the exten
was in the Senate that a group of
sion of the Dominion franchise to
real Liberal senators took up
every citizen of Canada regardless
arms, and it is to .the Senate that
of race and regardless of any
the credit for change must now
provincial
disqualifications
that
go. In the upper chamber the gov
exist.
?
ernment proposed certain amend
ments -which limited the disfranHitherto, birth has been the one
chisemeht to citizens of Japanese
sure and certain basis of citizen
racial origin and to the duration
ship in Canada. People born within
of the war; but the Senate amend
Canada have been citizens of Can
ments left unchallenged the' exten
ada. That is the proper basis, the
sion of discrimination beyond the
democratic foundation. Now we
borders of the province in which
have changed it and for no good
.the discrimination originated.
reason that will satisfy any intel
The House of Commons has now
ligent person who looks at the
received, a further amendment.
situation objectively. The change
The government decided that citi
is serious becaus it strikes directzens of Japanese origin who had
ly at the things for which our own
the vote prior to 1939 should still
men at this time are fighting and
vote. This re-opened the franchise
dying — those Ion g-established
to Japanese who were living out
rights, privileges and freedoms
side British Columbia at that
that go with and belong to the
date — a
comparatively small
■way of living which we call demogroup. But it leaves deprived of
cracy.
—London Free Press
(The following is an excerpt
from a letter to the Pacific Citi
zen written by a sergeant in the
IMeriill s Marauders, the famed
American fighting force which
has hacked its way behind Japa
nese lines in Burma. The letter
rev eals that Japanese American
soldiers are fighting shoulder to
shoulder with their occidental
buddies on the Burma front and
cites the courage and bravery, of
a Nisei GI whom the Marauders
nicknamed “Horizontal Hank”.)
the hospital, being his first time in
battle, if be was scared or not. He
answered, ‘You’re darn rights I
was scared.’ That’s Horizontal
Hank all over, always humorous
And
and a smile for every
yet while the other boys boast of
the number of Japs they got, he
doesn’t talk verv much about the
three he has to his account. He
usually changes the subject by
saying, ‘Honorable ancestors much
regret meeting Merrill’s Marau
ders,” the letter continued.
^ e, of the Merrill’s Marauders
“I hope I haven’t given the im
(or otherwise known as the Burma
pression that I’m trying to glorify
Raiders) wish to boast of the Jap
him,” the sergeant said. “Many
anese Americans fighting in our
of the boys, and myself especially,
outfit and _the swell job that they
never knew a Japanese American
put up. tvery Marauder knows
or
one was like—now we
these boys by name if they don’t
know and the Marauders want you
know ours—that is due to the ’ to know that they are backing rhe
courage and bravery shown by
Nisei 100 per cent. It makes the
them,” the letter said.
boys and mvself raging mad to
One or our platoons owes their
read about movements against
lives? to Sgt. Henry G., a Japanese
Japanese
Americans
by
th ose
American of Seattle, Wash. Hank
4 F ers back home. We would d:
(we call him Horizontal Hank be
them to say things like they h: e
cause he s been pinned down so
wut of us.
many times by Jap machine-gun
“
At
one time during battle when
fire) guided the machine-gun fire
our platoon was assigned to the
on our side which killed everv Jan
Chinese.
Hemw
G
on that side. The boys who fought
always
surrounded by the Chinese
alongside of Hank agree that thev
who insisted he was Chinese and
have never seen a more calm, cool
not Japanese. Many a humorous
and collected man under fire. He
tale is told by Horizontal Hank on
was always so eager to be where
that
point—the boys then just step
he could be of most use and effectFL
an
$ pointing to him would say,
iveness and that
most alw.
Tie's
an American!’ and no truer
the hot snot. V
P. O. Drawer A
Kaslo, B. C.
An Independent Weekly7 Organ Published
as a Medium of Expression Among the
People of Japanese Origin in Canada.
Tom Shoyama
Editor & Publisher
Takaichi Umezuki
Japanese Section Editor
Rates: 40c per Month *$2.00 for Six Months in Advance
Fraser Valley Boom
Among the many hundreds of proper
ty owners whose land has been sold by
tender through the Custodian’s office, there
is the impression that disposal prices have
been very low. True, this is a reaction' both
natural and expected; but though no reli
able survey is available, a sample number
of owners tends to bear out this impression.
They base this opinion upon an un
questioned discrepancy between the sale
price and the original cost of their property
plus the various improvements and natural
increase in value. This resulting dissatisfac
tion, in fact, has been one factor motivating
tion in the courts of law.
A report from the farm editor of the
aneouver
Provi n ce, therefore.
past two and a half years particularly, en
joys neither the’ understanding nor the ap
preciation it so urgently needs- among the
people and the children of the interior
(from the W innipeg Free Press)
towns.
The net effect of the govern
the vote those thousands of c^iment
’
s
latest
amendment
to
the
AFi*. Lord put that urgent need into Dominion Elections Act is to re zens of Japanese origin whoss norchallenging terms to the young teachers, on store the iranchise to some few mai home was in British Coin toia
but who were dispersed into other
whose shoulders rests so great a weight of hundreds
Canadian citizens of
provinces for security reasons in
‘
21
moulding and shaping the beliefs and atti Japanese origin who would have 1942.
been disfranchised for the first
This will not meet with univer
tudes of the growing generation of our time hac( the original amendments
sal approval bur, on balance, the-e
school children. Fie said we might have hope been left as they were. This seems may be a _ case not to extend"the
for a peace of a permanent nature if tea like a small g’ain, but it is an im vote, at this time and in the midst
portant one. The whole country
of a war, to any group that did
chers everywhere could start imparting this has
had a sharp lesson in what can
not normally possess it, especially
“business of democracy” early and seriously happen, if racialists are allowed to when the group’s claim to a vote
enough in the schools. But they need to have their own way, and it will be is only a result of its enforced
hoped the lesson has been thor
evacuation for security reasons
teach democracy —'which, he thought, is oughly
learned. Racial discrimina
But, the matter having been
only the ability and the willingness to get tion is something Canada must do thus
sharply raised, we invite our
along co-operatively and tolerantly with ■without if it wants to continue and readers to consider whether the
to improve the strength and char
one’s neighbours, either next door or in acter
historic discrimination invoked by
of its democracy.
British
Columbia should be allowed
Moscow-^—not by lecturing about it or read
The history of events is as fol
to persist when the war is over.
ing of it in books, but by actually living it lows: There has been for half a It is bad enough in itself, but the
century or more a provision in the
in the classroom and the school.
racialists who sponsored it and
Elections Act which deprives citi
today strongly defend it have im
Our interior schools have a rather zens of Japanese origin living in prudently revealed their hand.
abnoimal set of circumstances to grapple B.C. of the franchise. The wording They are prepared, as the record
of the act meant that, if a provwith in, any attempt to teach ‘‘democracy.” ■ ince disfranchises any group, the now clearly shows,‘to pursue cer
tain groups of citizens beyond the
But if. as Mr. Lord suggests, that vague Dominion accepts that disfran limits
of their own province and to
chisement
in
drawing
up
its
term can be translated into concrete atti
open to the virtual destruction of
voters’ lists in that province. But
the generally universal nature of
tudes and habits among the school children, the
racialists, seizing the oppor
the Dominion franchise. They con
the schools will be doing their small, but tunity given. by the need now of sider
it quite proper that, if any
nonetheless important part, towards the arranging for a soldier vote, slip provinces takes a dislike to any
ped in a new amendment which
group inside its own borders, it
establishment of an enduring peace.
took the Dominion vote away from
difficulties of labor shortages and ceiling
prices, the report tells of a minor land boom
The current effort under wav bv the
under way in the Fraser Valiev, where a
very targe proportion of evacuee-owned
lands are located. Farms
:e said to be ocout troop to organize similar troops
selling at high prices, with private buyers among our young boys in Kootenay settle
competing to boost prices.
which ments is deserving of the widest possible
have been out of cultivation for some time response.
I he success that has greeted the move
arc being snapped up, and even uncleared
land is said to be hr demand.
ment in Tashme centre is a reflection both
activity
Nor is this combination of contrary
among
boys
of
adolescent"
age
and
of the
factors tlie only interesting thing revealed
by the report. A part of the boom says the adequacy of scouting to meet that verv
Province editor, is due to the “infiltration” need.
myself physical ly strong
of a new minority group, the Mennonites
men tall v
and morallv
from the prairie provinces. This group, ac
cording to report, is taking the place of stuns up the objectives and program of the
, movement. Its system of training
Japanese farmers who were evacuated from ,Scout
homes of long establishment just two years has been carefully developed to bring out
ago. The)- are being held partially respon the best traits of young manhood among
boys of a certain age group. And the grow
sible for the minor boom.
h i$ significant that opinion seems to th on an international scale of the organbe singling out new land buyers from the
prairies as belonging to a particular racial maintained since its 'foundins? bv Lord
Baden-Powell in 1908 indicates the inkerP’roun. nn
I here is a suggestion, in the report,
fixed pattern of mind is now locating a new
object for its antipathies in these newcomers. As such it throws some interesting
light upon the precise nature of the forced
which lead or direct anti-evacuee feelimn
Business of Democracy
Lord, principal of the Provincial Normal
School at A aneouver touched upon the one
most disturbing questions evident in the
evacuation settlements todav.
generally, he pointed to the fact that over
has been growing in importance as an edu
cational force, even while the church and
The home have been dcchinna’ in influenc
’rhe
in its three
of training people how to make a livin
'Uih o.hers, takes on a responsibility of un
limited importance.
*
Our schools in the interior settlements
have been performing a very creditable job
Liu it is doubtful it as yet sufficient serious
and considered attention has been given to
the hist, this has been due in certain res
pects to the fact that this portion of the
task is essentially, training in the wav of
life tabbed by the name, “democracy." And
that word, owing to the experiences of the
progra m may indeed have a special appeal
to boys living under the special conditions’
of the evacuee towns. The troop there has
received the august blessing of the Security
Commission authorities and the approval of
the whole community. It is to be hoped that
^Vmsion of 'the work mav receive unquali
fied support throughout the Kootenav
towns as well.
It’s Reported Good
One of the most important news
stories to break since Pearl Harbor is rei ealed by a small advertisement on page 7
of this issue. A limited quantity of shoyu,
or soy bean sauce, has been produced in a
Security Commission plant at Tashme. and
^ uas been brewed under the direction
of a skilled, professional hand and from all
qua non
of Japanese cooking. Miile
no connoisseur in that field, having been
.e^ fMher than born to an appreciation of
it. this writer is happily able to confirm that
shovu.
able bv
afterthought.
ought to be equally enjoyor
democrat
can so legislate as to deprive the
very racial group with which we
members of .that group of the
are now at war, no matter where
franchise no matter whether they
they lived in Canada provided that
live in the disci'iminating province
one province decided to disfran
or not.
chise that group provincially. This
_ This fragmentation of Canadian
would have involved German, Ita
citizenship
would carry7 us a long
lian, Hungarian, Bulgarian, Rom
step
forward
to the destruction of
anian and Finnish groups, had any
the unity of the state -and should
province acted, and very properly
not be tolerated in any form. When
a storm of protest arose.
the ~ war is over a most suitable
The bill slipped through the
project for liberal-minded men and
House of Commons, the members
■women everywhere would be to
apparently dozing peacefully. It
advocate and support the exten
was in the Senate that a group of
sion of the Dominion franchise to
real Liberal senators took up
every citizen of Canada regardless
arms, and it is to .the Senate that
of race and regardless of any
the credit for change must now
provincial
disqualifications
that
go. In the upper chamber the gov
exist.
?
ernment proposed certain amend
ments -which limited the disfranHitherto, birth has been the one
chisemeht to citizens of Japanese
sure and certain basis of citizen
racial origin and to the duration
ship in Canada. People born within
of the war; but the Senate amend
Canada have been citizens of Can
ments left unchallenged the' exten
ada. That is the proper basis, the
sion of discrimination beyond the
democratic foundation. Now we
borders of the province in which
have changed it and for no good
.the discrimination originated.
reason that will satisfy any intel
The House of Commons has now
ligent person who looks at the
received, a further amendment.
situation objectively. The change
The government decided that citi
is serious becaus it strikes directzens of Japanese origin who had
ly at the things for which our own
the vote prior to 1939 should still
men at this time are fighting and
vote. This re-opened the franchise
dying — those Ion g-established
to Japanese who were living out
rights, privileges and freedoms
side British Columbia at that
that go with and belong to the
date — a
comparatively small
■way of living which we call demogroup. But it leaves deprived of
cracy.
—London Free Press
(The following is an excerpt
from a letter to the Pacific Citi
zen written by a sergeant in the
IMeriill s Marauders, the famed
American fighting force which
has hacked its way behind Japa
nese lines in Burma. The letter
rev eals that Japanese American
soldiers are fighting shoulder to
shoulder with their occidental
buddies on the Burma front and
cites the courage and bravery, of
a Nisei GI whom the Marauders
nicknamed “Horizontal Hank”.)
the hospital, being his first time in
battle, if be was scared or not. He
answered, ‘You’re darn rights I
was scared.’ That’s Horizontal
Hank all over, always humorous
And
and a smile for every
yet while the other boys boast of
the number of Japs they got, he
doesn’t talk verv much about the
three he has to his account. He
usually changes the subject by
saying, ‘Honorable ancestors much
regret meeting Merrill’s Marau
ders,” the letter continued.
^ e, of the Merrill’s Marauders
“I hope I haven’t given the im
(or otherwise known as the Burma
pression that I’m trying to glorify
Raiders) wish to boast of the Jap
him,” the sergeant said. “Many
anese Americans fighting in our
of the boys, and myself especially,
outfit and _the swell job that they
never knew a Japanese American
put up. tvery Marauder knows
or
one was like—now we
these boys by name if they don’t
know and the Marauders want you
know ours—that is due to the ’ to know that they are backing rhe
courage and bravery shown by
Nisei 100 per cent. It makes the
them,” the letter said.
boys and mvself raging mad to
One or our platoons owes their
read about movements against
lives? to Sgt. Henry G., a Japanese
Japanese
Americans
by
th ose
American of Seattle, Wash. Hank
4 F ers back home. We would d:
(we call him Horizontal Hank be
them to say things like they h: e
cause he s been pinned down so
wut of us.
many times by Jap machine-gun
“
At
one time during battle when
fire) guided the machine-gun fire
our platoon was assigned to the
on our side which killed everv Jan
Chinese.
Hemw
G
on that side. The boys who fought
always
surrounded by the Chinese
alongside of Hank agree that thev
who insisted he was Chinese and
have never seen a more calm, cool
not Japanese. Many a humorous
and collected man under fire. He
tale is told by Horizontal Hank on
was always so eager to be where
that
point—the boys then just step
he could be of most use and effectFL
an
$ pointing to him would say,
iveness and that
most alw.
Tie's
an American!’ and no truer
the hot snot. V
Page 3
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Page 7
July 29. 1944.
THE NEW CANADIAN
Page 7
Three Requisites of Good Education
(Excepts from an address
by Mr. A.R. Lord, principal of
the Provincial Normal School al
Vancouver, at the opening of the
Teacher’s Summer Training
School at New Denver).
To me an educated person has
to have three things.
1. He has to have, the ability to
make a living.
2. He must be able to live—not
merely exist.
3. He must be able to live with
other people.
The first essential is the ability
to get a job and to hold it; making
a living for yourself and those who
are dependent upon you. The sec
ond, to actually enjoy life day by
day, to get something out of life
more than merely bread and but
ter. The third requirement is the
ability to live with other people,
on terms of tolerance and good
will. May I enlarge on each of
these? The ability to live, that is,
to earn a living was a relatively
simple thing 'n my younger days.
There were few kinds- of occupa
tions to which a person could go if
he -were brought up in a small vil
lage in those days; probably farm
ing, a carpenter, or a blacksmith
or working as a clerk in a general
store. Youngsters were trained in
all of these occupations by their
parents or by being apprenticed to
an artisan or in a store. The
school had no share in this train
ing nor did it need to.
Today, industry is intricate and
diversified. There are hundreds of
occupations and for many of these
special training must be provided.
Parents have not the necessary
knowledge so this form of educa
tion must be taken over by the
schools probably along with some
form of apprenticeship system in
industry.
SPIRITUAL VALUES
Secondly, we must have the abi
lity actually to live, to get more
out of courtesy and consideration
of other people; the little daily
acts which make life happier and
easier for both you and for those
with whom you come in contact.
Standards
of
thorougimess,
to take your place in the commu
nity doing with all your might at
which your hands find to do; the
desire to tackle a difficult job and
carry it through. The standard of
young people today is not as high
as it was perhaps .thirty or forty
years ago in these matters.
I want to emphasize that, taken
all in all, the youth of today and
the schools of today are better,
more worthwhile than those of a
generation ago. But they are not
good enough. Standards of thor
oughness, of effort, of integrty
are too low.
There is another phase. To
really live we must have spiritual
values — an inner strength on
which we may fall back on in
times of stress.
I am not talking about church.
I am not specifically talking about
religion, though both of these are
helpful. I remember the day when
this war was declared all of us in
school were seated in the auditor
ium listening to the radio. These
words came over: “a state of war
exists between this government
and Germany”. Somebody slipped
over to the organ and struck up
“O God Our Help In Ages Past.”
We were all “down” but our
spirits were lifted by those words.
*
*
*
I am just wondering what is
going to happen to the boys and
girls m our schools, your schools
as well as our schools, who just do
not know the meaning of “O God
Our Help In Ages Past” and who
haven t anything- to take its plaie.
Well, that is the second thing. The
ability to get more out of our life.
TO LIVE WITH OTHERS
The third is the ability to live
with other people. Forty years ago
my neighbor was the person who
lived in the farm next to mine or
in the house next door. The man"
who lived in Quebec was as remote
in time and distance and under
standing as the man today who
lives in China or Russia.
It was not such a difficult thing
to understand your neighbors in
those days. You pretty well knew
what he was like, what his ideas
were, what he liked and what no
did not like, You learned to be
tolerant of his weaknesses and of
his peculiarities and to work along
with him for the common good of
your community. It was not so
hard to employ these two essential
qualities of tolerance and coopera
tion, to have a certain amount of
give and take to alter a point of
view and perhaps to compromise
with a neighbor whom you could
see and know. Today your neigh
bor is a French Canadian in Que
bec or he is in Moscow or he is
in Italy. Perhaps in a year or two
he will be living in Germany or
in Japan.
The German in Germany is no
longer one in a distant and remote
place with whom we have no dir-ect contact. Things that happen to
our neighbours concern our own
living whether we like it or whe
ther we do not. Our future life is
going to be affected by this. We
must have an understanding of
their problems and their difficul
ties and of their lives. That is not
to say that we have to concede to
them and give in to them, but it
does mean that we have to learn
of their difficulties in a spirit of
sympathetic understanding rather
than to learn of them through the
prejudices which in so many cases
we show only too clearly.
We are governed very largely in
our treatment of the people of
other countries by our own back
ground and by the ideas that were
given to us sometime in schools
and sometimes in our homes. It
seems to me that the work- of edu
cation today is to develop toler
ance instead of prejudice.
*
*
*
The essence of this business of
democracy is the ability to live
with other people.
If we start developing it pretty
low down in the schools not by
living it, then I think there -is
some reasonable hope that our
pupils will carry with them certain
ideals which will overcome any
fear. If the boys and girls leave
school and go out into the world
with certain habits of tolerance
and cooperation established, then
perhaps they will become men and
women with a real belief in democracy, which, after all, is a thing
of the spirit and the emotion
rather than of the intellect.
If that happens perhaps we may
look forward to a thousand years
of peace and the eternal brother
hood of man.
soya sauce:
OR
SHOYU
NOW READY FOR SHIPMENT
The B. C. Securi y Commission can now supply limited quanti
ties of SOYA SAUGf; or SHOYU from their Soya Bean Product
Factory at Tashme, B. Cprice __ $3.75 per Imperial Gallon. ff.o.b. Hope. B. C.
- .
Sales Tax Included
(Packed in one gallon and twelve gallon containers.)
Attach money orders to your order for cost of sauce
freight or express to destination, and mail direct to Le B. C.
URITY COMMISSION>3360 Homer Street, VANCOUVER, B. C.
and
Ml il^l ®O 5„m pAw^afea
By K. O.
*‘«J’ll„|A^'^.,',V,'‘lM-/V>..<.'l, ‘l^ZVll»MA.X«^\,‘41|..C‘V'^«»»V‘H1„«*VV«.»h.<h,1-A^...C\'-«lll-Z*V'S<,
LETTER FROM TORONTO
"I witnessed a remarkable scene
on D-day. The milkman was going
about his business early in rhe
morning. I met him as he was
coming up to the- kitchen. He
paused and said in a serious tone
of voice, ‘Well, it has started’ —
nothing more. That is how I got
■the news.”
HOME
He came in roaring with laugh
ter showing us his bandaged hand.
“I cut my hand . . . nine stitches
... maybe two weeks holiday,” he
said, and laughed as though at a
tremendous joke.
“Crazy, eh?” said someone.
“Maybe too much last night.
Couldn’t see nothing this morning.
Two weeks holiday very good,” he
said again, roaring with laughter.
TORONTO
“That evening I was walking up
Young Street and to my surprise
the street was deserted. So was
Bloor Street. There was no sign of
hilarity or silliness. I pictured the
people staying home listening to
the invasion news, and praying for
those who were over there, fight
ing.”
HOME
“I’ll get by as long as I—hav^
you,”
“Do you know what? You go
off key when you say ‘have you’.”
“That’s to make it sound more
melancholy.”
“Go on, you’re just tone silly.”
TORONTO
“The other day I saw one of the
nurses crying over the loss of her
younger brother who had been
killed in Normandy, fighting. I felt
very sorry for her. A kind of sad
ness and loneliness crept into my
heart and made me cry inside.”
HOME
“Tell me, does it really bother
you if they take away our votes?”
“No.”
Wartime Transportation
“Some sat, some stood, some
slowly strayed.” The foregoing
lines might be modified as follows
—“some sat, some stood, some
pushed or pulled” to give a fairly
accurate picture of the early morn
ing streetcar travellers. The daily
ride to work via the Westdale
Burlington Route is generally a
somewhat
tedious,
monotonous
routine. There is the usual horde
of workers painfully eager to oc
cupy every available cubic inch of
space. People walk on your feet,
elbows stick into your back and
paunch, and strange odours assail
your nose as the dense mass of
humanity on the move begins to
ferment.
On the other hand there are
amusing sidelights such as the last
minute rushers who specialize in
catching street cars on the fly and
charge puffing and gasping into
the vestibule, the dignified busi
ness man with tell-tale egg stains
at the corners of his mouth, the
adolescent
female
war-workers
who titter self-consciously in the
midst of a decidedly male major
ity.
Hot summer days .... fruits
ripening .... young school boys
and girls picking cherries .... re
minds one of the summer holidays
spent by coast evacuees in pre-war
days on the berry farms in the
Lower Fraser Alainland.
Not to be outdone by their older
bi others and sisters who often
times in their reminiscences of
berry picking days say “ah yes,
those were the days when before
this war we etc...............” the fast
growing- younger Niseis in the In
terior towns are not letting grass
grow under their feet.
The older high school students
have already gone to Vernon to
pick the fruit crop there, while the
girls and the elementary school
students are picking cherries in
the nearby and surrounding dis
tricts.
Starting- work at all hours of
the morning, (anytime from 4 a.m.
on) and quitting at about lunch
time, and beginning again in the
cool evenings until ' dusk, the
youngsters are earning- a substan
tial sum during their school holi
days.
A typical scene in a cherry or
chard is that of agile boys clam
bering to dangerously thin bran
ches ‘ and nonchalantly picking
away while the more timid girls
stay close to the lower boughs.
Laughter and gay banter fill the
air and occasionally from the tree
tops a curse as a foot slips or
a scream from a insect-hating girl
—“look an ant!”
Or the relieved “ohs and ahs!”
as a ladder leaning against a
■branch with its human burden
stops in its downward fall: the oc
casional outburst of profanity as
pailfuls of cherries come hurtling
down ....
*
*
*
Glimpses of both strange and
familiar faces — mostly girls •—
walking the streets of this centre
is quite common these days. They
(the girls) arrive here with their
hair in shoulder lengths and when
they leave, their hair is all piled
up in tight little curls after spend
ing a couple of hours at a hair
dresser’s. This in itself draws more
visitors from all the other centres
than any other, business or plea
sure commitments.
Last night I met Miyeko who
was here for that very purpose—
of getting her hair “doneup”.
Miyeko is a petite miss from
Lemon Creek who .teaches kinder
garten during the afternoons and
attends night school during the
evenings. She is now taking her
summer holidays and is here for
her annual ‘permanent wave”.
Since we had nothing better to
do, Sam and I were chewing the
rag in the coffee shop when
Miyeko and Kimi came in. Kimi is
the hairdresser who at present has
was an appreciative way and de
posited my bulk between the boy’s
grandmother and a grizzled, veter
an commuter. “Say,” I reflected to
myself, “this coming generation
shows promise.”
—Hamilton Sophy-Ed Bulletin
THE NEW CANADIAN
, for which
Please find enclosed $
© Renew my subscription to The New Canadian
© Enter my subscription to The New Canadian
(Please check.)
In the matter of streetcar eti
quette, especially as applied to
seating priorities, the niceties of
Emily Post’s declarations seem to
be suspended. It's definitely a case
of every man for himself. More
than once I have found myself
languishing against the last post
by the rear door clutching and
reading the morning paper while
desperately trying to maintain
body equilibrium.
The other morning I received a
rather pleasant surprise. It was
the usual situation—jammed car,
last post, newspaper. Suddenly my
attention was diverted from the an
tics of Dagwood by a timid tug in
the rear. Turning I beheld a ten
year old carrying regulation picnic
equipment who piped up in a boy
ish treble, “Sir, would you like to
.have a seat?” It took me a
moment or two, to digest the im
port of this unusual offer. “Thank
you”, I replied in what I hoped
her hands full trying to keep up
with appointments.
We ordered tea.
Over tea we
talked about this and that and the
conversation drifted to hairdress
ing.
“Don’t see how the girls stand
it,” 1 remarked.
“Stand what?”
“Oh, sitting there hours on end
under one of those dome-snaped
doodads on a hot day. Don’t see
why they have to spend so much
money on it either. Women sure
are vain.” 1 said.
WHO SPENDS .MORE?
That started something. Sparks
began to fly.
“What about men?” Miyeko
asked. “How often do you get a
haircut?” How much do you pay
for it? How long does it take to
get one ?”
“About once in three weeks,
fifty cents a haircut and about half
an hour.”
“There you are. We get a ’perm’
once a year but you boys have to
get a haircut once in three weeks
and which takes a half an hour
each time. Figure it out, the boys
spend twice as much time and
money in a year on their hair
than girls do.”
That had me stumped but not
Sam.
‘Yeah but there’s a difference
though. We do things in moder
ation. We get a haircut for fifty
cents, sit for a half an hour once
every three weeks. But the girls
spend a lump sum of four or five
dollars and a whole afternoon get
ting their hair set. Then look at
the time they have to spend on it
every night. Putting curlers in
their hair and all that. You can’t
fool me, I’ve seen my sisters doing
it and they sure take time. At
least we don’t take that long.”
“Oh so you think girls take a
lot of time fixing their hair do
you? Well, my hubby takes longer
than I do to fix my hair.- He puts
some Vitalis on, slicks his hair,
parts it, reparts it and still isn’t
satisfied. Oh, you don’t know the
half of it,” said Kimi.
Sam and I were taking a verbal
beating. We both knew it. How
can you expect to win when you’re
arguing against women. But then
it was our fault, we stuck our
necks out.
CHANGE OF SUBJECT
“I read somewhere once that the
reason more men are bald than
women is because the women wear
their hair longer. Is there any
truth in that?” I asked trying to
change the subject.
“Could be, although I think it’s
because the men wear hats all the
time and don’t get the proper
nourishment for their hair.”
“Well, what about the women?
They wear hats too don’t they?
Or is it because they wear such
crazy creations with flowers on it
that it stimulates the hair into
getting the proper nourishment?”
I gave as a parting crack before I
dodged out of the shop.
And if looks could kill I’d be
flat on my back with my toes
curled up.
A
m)
Name ..
(9urw)
Address -
Former Address
3
Subscription Rate: 40c per month
$2 for six months, S4 per year in advance
THE NEW CANADIAN
Page 7
Three Requisites of Good Education
(Excepts from an address
by Mr. A.R. Lord, principal of
the Provincial Normal School al
Vancouver, at the opening of the
Teacher’s Summer Training
School at New Denver).
To me an educated person has
to have three things.
1. He has to have, the ability to
make a living.
2. He must be able to live—not
merely exist.
3. He must be able to live with
other people.
The first essential is the ability
to get a job and to hold it; making
a living for yourself and those who
are dependent upon you. The sec
ond, to actually enjoy life day by
day, to get something out of life
more than merely bread and but
ter. The third requirement is the
ability to live with other people,
on terms of tolerance and good
will. May I enlarge on each of
these? The ability to live, that is,
to earn a living was a relatively
simple thing 'n my younger days.
There were few kinds- of occupa
tions to which a person could go if
he -were brought up in a small vil
lage in those days; probably farm
ing, a carpenter, or a blacksmith
or working as a clerk in a general
store. Youngsters were trained in
all of these occupations by their
parents or by being apprenticed to
an artisan or in a store. The
school had no share in this train
ing nor did it need to.
Today, industry is intricate and
diversified. There are hundreds of
occupations and for many of these
special training must be provided.
Parents have not the necessary
knowledge so this form of educa
tion must be taken over by the
schools probably along with some
form of apprenticeship system in
industry.
SPIRITUAL VALUES
Secondly, we must have the abi
lity actually to live, to get more
out of courtesy and consideration
of other people; the little daily
acts which make life happier and
easier for both you and for those
with whom you come in contact.
Standards
of
thorougimess,
to take your place in the commu
nity doing with all your might at
which your hands find to do; the
desire to tackle a difficult job and
carry it through. The standard of
young people today is not as high
as it was perhaps .thirty or forty
years ago in these matters.
I want to emphasize that, taken
all in all, the youth of today and
the schools of today are better,
more worthwhile than those of a
generation ago. But they are not
good enough. Standards of thor
oughness, of effort, of integrty
are too low.
There is another phase. To
really live we must have spiritual
values — an inner strength on
which we may fall back on in
times of stress.
I am not talking about church.
I am not specifically talking about
religion, though both of these are
helpful. I remember the day when
this war was declared all of us in
school were seated in the auditor
ium listening to the radio. These
words came over: “a state of war
exists between this government
and Germany”. Somebody slipped
over to the organ and struck up
“O God Our Help In Ages Past.”
We were all “down” but our
spirits were lifted by those words.
*
*
*
I am just wondering what is
going to happen to the boys and
girls m our schools, your schools
as well as our schools, who just do
not know the meaning of “O God
Our Help In Ages Past” and who
haven t anything- to take its plaie.
Well, that is the second thing. The
ability to get more out of our life.
TO LIVE WITH OTHERS
The third is the ability to live
with other people. Forty years ago
my neighbor was the person who
lived in the farm next to mine or
in the house next door. The man"
who lived in Quebec was as remote
in time and distance and under
standing as the man today who
lives in China or Russia.
It was not such a difficult thing
to understand your neighbors in
those days. You pretty well knew
what he was like, what his ideas
were, what he liked and what no
did not like, You learned to be
tolerant of his weaknesses and of
his peculiarities and to work along
with him for the common good of
your community. It was not so
hard to employ these two essential
qualities of tolerance and coopera
tion, to have a certain amount of
give and take to alter a point of
view and perhaps to compromise
with a neighbor whom you could
see and know. Today your neigh
bor is a French Canadian in Que
bec or he is in Moscow or he is
in Italy. Perhaps in a year or two
he will be living in Germany or
in Japan.
The German in Germany is no
longer one in a distant and remote
place with whom we have no dir-ect contact. Things that happen to
our neighbours concern our own
living whether we like it or whe
ther we do not. Our future life is
going to be affected by this. We
must have an understanding of
their problems and their difficul
ties and of their lives. That is not
to say that we have to concede to
them and give in to them, but it
does mean that we have to learn
of their difficulties in a spirit of
sympathetic understanding rather
than to learn of them through the
prejudices which in so many cases
we show only too clearly.
We are governed very largely in
our treatment of the people of
other countries by our own back
ground and by the ideas that were
given to us sometime in schools
and sometimes in our homes. It
seems to me that the work- of edu
cation today is to develop toler
ance instead of prejudice.
*
*
*
The essence of this business of
democracy is the ability to live
with other people.
If we start developing it pretty
low down in the schools not by
living it, then I think there -is
some reasonable hope that our
pupils will carry with them certain
ideals which will overcome any
fear. If the boys and girls leave
school and go out into the world
with certain habits of tolerance
and cooperation established, then
perhaps they will become men and
women with a real belief in democracy, which, after all, is a thing
of the spirit and the emotion
rather than of the intellect.
If that happens perhaps we may
look forward to a thousand years
of peace and the eternal brother
hood of man.
soya sauce:
OR
SHOYU
NOW READY FOR SHIPMENT
The B. C. Securi y Commission can now supply limited quanti
ties of SOYA SAUGf; or SHOYU from their Soya Bean Product
Factory at Tashme, B. Cprice __ $3.75 per Imperial Gallon. ff.o.b. Hope. B. C.
- .
Sales Tax Included
(Packed in one gallon and twelve gallon containers.)
Attach money orders to your order for cost of sauce
freight or express to destination, and mail direct to Le B. C.
URITY COMMISSION>3360 Homer Street, VANCOUVER, B. C.
and
Ml il^l ®O 5„m pAw^afea
By K. O.
*‘«J’ll„|A^'^.,',V,'‘lM-/V>..<.'l, ‘l^ZVll»MA.X«^\,‘41|..C‘V'^«»»V‘H1„«*VV«.»h.<h,1-A^...C\'-«lll-Z*V'S<,
LETTER FROM TORONTO
"I witnessed a remarkable scene
on D-day. The milkman was going
about his business early in rhe
morning. I met him as he was
coming up to the- kitchen. He
paused and said in a serious tone
of voice, ‘Well, it has started’ —
nothing more. That is how I got
■the news.”
HOME
He came in roaring with laugh
ter showing us his bandaged hand.
“I cut my hand . . . nine stitches
... maybe two weeks holiday,” he
said, and laughed as though at a
tremendous joke.
“Crazy, eh?” said someone.
“Maybe too much last night.
Couldn’t see nothing this morning.
Two weeks holiday very good,” he
said again, roaring with laughter.
TORONTO
“That evening I was walking up
Young Street and to my surprise
the street was deserted. So was
Bloor Street. There was no sign of
hilarity or silliness. I pictured the
people staying home listening to
the invasion news, and praying for
those who were over there, fight
ing.”
HOME
“I’ll get by as long as I—hav^
you,”
“Do you know what? You go
off key when you say ‘have you’.”
“That’s to make it sound more
melancholy.”
“Go on, you’re just tone silly.”
TORONTO
“The other day I saw one of the
nurses crying over the loss of her
younger brother who had been
killed in Normandy, fighting. I felt
very sorry for her. A kind of sad
ness and loneliness crept into my
heart and made me cry inside.”
HOME
“Tell me, does it really bother
you if they take away our votes?”
“No.”
Wartime Transportation
“Some sat, some stood, some
slowly strayed.” The foregoing
lines might be modified as follows
—“some sat, some stood, some
pushed or pulled” to give a fairly
accurate picture of the early morn
ing streetcar travellers. The daily
ride to work via the Westdale
Burlington Route is generally a
somewhat
tedious,
monotonous
routine. There is the usual horde
of workers painfully eager to oc
cupy every available cubic inch of
space. People walk on your feet,
elbows stick into your back and
paunch, and strange odours assail
your nose as the dense mass of
humanity on the move begins to
ferment.
On the other hand there are
amusing sidelights such as the last
minute rushers who specialize in
catching street cars on the fly and
charge puffing and gasping into
the vestibule, the dignified busi
ness man with tell-tale egg stains
at the corners of his mouth, the
adolescent
female
war-workers
who titter self-consciously in the
midst of a decidedly male major
ity.
Hot summer days .... fruits
ripening .... young school boys
and girls picking cherries .... re
minds one of the summer holidays
spent by coast evacuees in pre-war
days on the berry farms in the
Lower Fraser Alainland.
Not to be outdone by their older
bi others and sisters who often
times in their reminiscences of
berry picking days say “ah yes,
those were the days when before
this war we etc...............” the fast
growing- younger Niseis in the In
terior towns are not letting grass
grow under their feet.
The older high school students
have already gone to Vernon to
pick the fruit crop there, while the
girls and the elementary school
students are picking cherries in
the nearby and surrounding dis
tricts.
Starting- work at all hours of
the morning, (anytime from 4 a.m.
on) and quitting at about lunch
time, and beginning again in the
cool evenings until ' dusk, the
youngsters are earning- a substan
tial sum during their school holi
days.
A typical scene in a cherry or
chard is that of agile boys clam
bering to dangerously thin bran
ches ‘ and nonchalantly picking
away while the more timid girls
stay close to the lower boughs.
Laughter and gay banter fill the
air and occasionally from the tree
tops a curse as a foot slips or
a scream from a insect-hating girl
—“look an ant!”
Or the relieved “ohs and ahs!”
as a ladder leaning against a
■branch with its human burden
stops in its downward fall: the oc
casional outburst of profanity as
pailfuls of cherries come hurtling
down ....
*
*
*
Glimpses of both strange and
familiar faces — mostly girls •—
walking the streets of this centre
is quite common these days. They
(the girls) arrive here with their
hair in shoulder lengths and when
they leave, their hair is all piled
up in tight little curls after spend
ing a couple of hours at a hair
dresser’s. This in itself draws more
visitors from all the other centres
than any other, business or plea
sure commitments.
Last night I met Miyeko who
was here for that very purpose—
of getting her hair “doneup”.
Miyeko is a petite miss from
Lemon Creek who .teaches kinder
garten during the afternoons and
attends night school during the
evenings. She is now taking her
summer holidays and is here for
her annual ‘permanent wave”.
Since we had nothing better to
do, Sam and I were chewing the
rag in the coffee shop when
Miyeko and Kimi came in. Kimi is
the hairdresser who at present has
was an appreciative way and de
posited my bulk between the boy’s
grandmother and a grizzled, veter
an commuter. “Say,” I reflected to
myself, “this coming generation
shows promise.”
—Hamilton Sophy-Ed Bulletin
THE NEW CANADIAN
, for which
Please find enclosed $
© Renew my subscription to The New Canadian
© Enter my subscription to The New Canadian
(Please check.)
In the matter of streetcar eti
quette, especially as applied to
seating priorities, the niceties of
Emily Post’s declarations seem to
be suspended. It's definitely a case
of every man for himself. More
than once I have found myself
languishing against the last post
by the rear door clutching and
reading the morning paper while
desperately trying to maintain
body equilibrium.
The other morning I received a
rather pleasant surprise. It was
the usual situation—jammed car,
last post, newspaper. Suddenly my
attention was diverted from the an
tics of Dagwood by a timid tug in
the rear. Turning I beheld a ten
year old carrying regulation picnic
equipment who piped up in a boy
ish treble, “Sir, would you like to
.have a seat?” It took me a
moment or two, to digest the im
port of this unusual offer. “Thank
you”, I replied in what I hoped
her hands full trying to keep up
with appointments.
We ordered tea.
Over tea we
talked about this and that and the
conversation drifted to hairdress
ing.
“Don’t see how the girls stand
it,” 1 remarked.
“Stand what?”
“Oh, sitting there hours on end
under one of those dome-snaped
doodads on a hot day. Don’t see
why they have to spend so much
money on it either. Women sure
are vain.” 1 said.
WHO SPENDS .MORE?
That started something. Sparks
began to fly.
“What about men?” Miyeko
asked. “How often do you get a
haircut?” How much do you pay
for it? How long does it take to
get one ?”
“About once in three weeks,
fifty cents a haircut and about half
an hour.”
“There you are. We get a ’perm’
once a year but you boys have to
get a haircut once in three weeks
and which takes a half an hour
each time. Figure it out, the boys
spend twice as much time and
money in a year on their hair
than girls do.”
That had me stumped but not
Sam.
‘Yeah but there’s a difference
though. We do things in moder
ation. We get a haircut for fifty
cents, sit for a half an hour once
every three weeks. But the girls
spend a lump sum of four or five
dollars and a whole afternoon get
ting their hair set. Then look at
the time they have to spend on it
every night. Putting curlers in
their hair and all that. You can’t
fool me, I’ve seen my sisters doing
it and they sure take time. At
least we don’t take that long.”
“Oh so you think girls take a
lot of time fixing their hair do
you? Well, my hubby takes longer
than I do to fix my hair.- He puts
some Vitalis on, slicks his hair,
parts it, reparts it and still isn’t
satisfied. Oh, you don’t know the
half of it,” said Kimi.
Sam and I were taking a verbal
beating. We both knew it. How
can you expect to win when you’re
arguing against women. But then
it was our fault, we stuck our
necks out.
CHANGE OF SUBJECT
“I read somewhere once that the
reason more men are bald than
women is because the women wear
their hair longer. Is there any
truth in that?” I asked trying to
change the subject.
“Could be, although I think it’s
because the men wear hats all the
time and don’t get the proper
nourishment for their hair.”
“Well, what about the women?
They wear hats too don’t they?
Or is it because they wear such
crazy creations with flowers on it
that it stimulates the hair into
getting the proper nourishment?”
I gave as a parting crack before I
dodged out of the shop.
And if looks could kill I’d be
flat on my back with my toes
curled up.
A
m)
Name ..
(9urw)
Address -
Former Address
3
Subscription Rate: 40c per month
$2 for six months, S4 per year in advance
Page 8
Page 8
THE NEW CANADIAN
July 29. 1944.
Continued from Page 1.
Urge Political Education for Nisei)
^ o cz> O <ZZ5 o c^
NEW DENVER, B. C. — Regis
Tashme, business
and
The
betrothal
tration
figures show that Tashme
was
announced
of
Fumi Okura, New Denver, hou^e
condoned in a democratic country the month has great significance in clear
! Kimiko, sect i
centre has the largest bloc of tea
ughter of Mr. anc
representative.
precipitating of the campaign to in- -ing away the muddled, vacillating and
Airs. Sukesab
chers at the school, followed close
Suzuki
of
New
Denfluence the government and the four - opportunist political thinking of the
'ver to
ly, however, by Lemon Creek and
Masav■• shi Nagai, eldest
TAPS TILL REVEILLE
hour debate in the House has certain- -past and substituting a determined
Bay Farm. Figures correspond
son
of
Air.
and
Mrs.
Shoichi
Nagai
At 10 o’clock nightly, Pacific
ly heightened public interest in the-and progressive leadership who are
also
of
New
Denver
on
July
23
roughly
to
the
volume
of
sound
at
War
Time, the curfew tolls the
problems of the Japanese. Persons-interested in a well-planned program
the
home
of
the
bride
elect.
produced
by
the
teachers
singing
lights
out signal. And anxious
who were previously vaguely aware 'of political action. This is the first
i Baishakunins for the occasion were
their
school
anthems
at
morning
mothers from Minto to Kaslo
of a Japanese racial minority in Can- Time close contact has been estabassemblies:
should sleep a little better know
ada have now had the matter ; fished with a wide section of the gen- Mr. and Mrs. A.‘ Miyamoto of Rose
bery.
Tashme, 30; Lemon Creek, 26
ing that Nisei house mothers at
brought to their focus of attention Aral population who are of like mind
Bay Farm, 24; Kaslo. 11; Sandon,
Mr.and Mrs. R. Ide of Hamilton
that moment are checking over
and found out how it measured up to -and purpose, interested in the deve11; New Denver,' s
Popoff, 8;
their brood to make sure that none
democratic principles. Repeated com- Gopment and extension of democratic wish to announce the recent engage
Rosebery,
7;
ment
of
their
youngest
daughter
Minto
4;
Taylor
have been lost to the wolves.
parison was made in debate to the'government in Canada. This issue has
Lake-Flying U, 4; E. Lillooet, 2;
six a.m. rising bell is, perhaps, a
American treatment of her citizens -crystallized and consolidated around Teiko to Mr. Yoshio Kishimoto of
Toronto.
and Monte Lake, 1.
more practical reason for the ’10
of Japanese ancestry and favourable 'the central core of democracy the
WAISTLINES SAFE
The wedding will be held in Sept
p.m. deadline, than any existing
comment was given to the stand of ; political thinking of an increasing
ember.
Food
in
the
messhall
is
reported
manpower situation in the centre
Secretary of the Interior ,Ickes con •number of Japanese Canadians.
to be better this year, according
New Denver Orchard School
demning racial prejudice in forth i Fully aware of the political impli- DONATION .....
The
New
Canadian
gratefully
ack
to
a
random
.
sampling
of
teachers.
classrooms
—converted Commission
right language. A similar statement j cations and causes of problems met
nowledges
the
-very
generous
donation
A
new
cookhouse
and
improved
housing units—provide the sleep
from the Prime Minister would be in ; by persons of Japanese descent in
meal-planning contribute to this
ing quarters for the teachers, with
order to absolve any thought that he i Canada, Roger Obata, chairman of by Mr. Toyomatsu Kimura of Opal,
result. But this observer, after one
twelve of them squeezed into the
may be at variance with the Ameri the Committee for Democrat stres Alta.
*
*
experience with the hamburger
eleven houses along School Rd.
can intentions.
sed the need for political education
A baby girl, Bonnie Hideko, was
and potatoes in the mess, is glad
Teachers
have been quartered ac
This increased interest, it is be and participation in trade unions: born to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Yamamura
to report that there is little dancording
to
grades they teach, in
lieved, has strengthened the position “We must become more and more of Hamilton on June 21.
ger of any expansion on the collecorder,
it
is
said, that they might
of Japanese Canadians and hereafter politically conscious of our problems;
tive waistline.
Mr. and Mrs. Torao Shimizu of
study together.
*
6
the government will be more reluc this is the forerunner of many more Kaslo became the proud parents of
Teachers have received a $25
Of
the
136
registered
teachers,
tant to
undertake discriminatory similar issues.
subsistence allo'wance, of which
a baby girl, Ruriya Julie, July 13.
all but two-belong to the feminine
measures for it knows that the public
“A national organization is to be The baby was born at the Victorian
$18 has been ear-marked to cover
“
gender.”
Two
exceptions are
are now placed on the alert to con encouraged, our committee has this General Hospital.
food costs for the four-week, per
Takashi Tsuji, principal from Bay
demn any undemocratic act. With the as a major part of its program.
iod.
Farm;
Fred Okimura from Taylor
franchise yet to be won the public
NEW STUDENTS COUNCIL
‘Tn listening to the debates of the
Lake.
Color,
Romantic
Interest
in
will not be too easily lulled back to House of Commons the sincere sup
Ayako Atagi of Kaslo was elect
Dr. F. LaViolette, of McGill
complacency but will bring the mach port we have been getting shoe’s that “West of the Rockies” —
ed president of a bashful, but
University,
told the opening meet
inery organized into operation to as J there is a considerable number of
promising Students’ Council, at an
ing
tnat
scientific
surveys show
sure the practice of democratic pro jliberal-minded people in our govern- ^Corp. Farrar’s New Film
open-aii' general meeting Tuesday
tnat
teachers
rank
high
among the
cedures should the need arise.
jment and it is up to us to show that
The poet records for us in words
evening. Serving with her on the
professions in the probability of
For persons of Japanese ancestry j we have a keen interest in all that his own personal experience and the
executive are Amy Uchida, Minto,
making successful marriages —
vice-president; Hideko Yamashita,
artist in his work conveys to us a
themselves, the campaign of the past Jhey do.”
particularly if they teach home
personal interpretation of what he
Bay Farm, secretary; May Inata,
economics.
sees. Through such lips and eyes the
inarticulate among us find expres
sion; the unobservant can be made
to see.
So, too, can an artist with a camera
TASHME, B. C.—Another baseball
—sensitive to aesthetic values and
Outside Employment Lures
season is in full swing here with
employing no less technical skills— three
leagues keeping baseball-con- Four Southern Alberta
Workers from Roadcamp
bring to us a deeper and more con scious
youngsters and oldsters active
PRINCETON. B. C. — A farewell
scious appraisal of the natural grace everv
Nisei Teams Vie for
evening
of the week.
TORONTO, Ont.—Participatin
in and beauty all about us.
party sponsored by the baseball club
The senior loop games is the chief
for the men who are leaving the the Round Table discussion on Race
This is a personal reaction to
attraction
of the summer sports sea District Championship
Princeton No. 2 roadcamp was held Relations at the first National Confer “West of the Rockies,” the amateur
on July .12, Mr. H. Nishiyama was the ence of the Fellowship of Reconcilia moving picture film being photogra son drawing over half of the Tashme
PICTURE BUTTE, Alta. — The
tion was Kunio Shimizu, well known phed and produced by Corporal F. S. population to the grounds on Wed first baseball of the recently organacting chairman for the occasion.
nesdays
Speeches were delivered by Mr. former Victoria Nisei and active ex- Farrar of the RCMP.
„
, and Sundays.
i
Uzed four team Japanese league in
Two packed
Shiraishi fleet footed leit jthe Southern Alberta district were
Kumagai who represented the base secretary of the J.C.C.L. He presented houses greeted the preview showing ~
ball club and Mr. T. Watanabe who an outline of problems confronted by of the film at Kaslo this week, and fielder for the Vancouver Asahi in ! played here recentlv with the Picture
spoke on behalf of the camp workers. the Japanese people to the delegates. though it is as yet only partially pie-evacuation days is still active in ।Butte Bukkyo and Coaldale Y.P.A.
A well arranged programme was en
Over one hundred delegates from complete, with many additions and this sport alternately playing short ; battling to a draw in the first game.
joyed by all the men.
Vancouver, Toronto, Hamilton, Owen a good deal of editing yet to be done, stop and pitching for the Tashme The Coaldale Bukkyo were the victors
A number of men have accepted Sound, Smith Falls, Ottawa, Montreal even in its present stage the film is Asahi team.
in the second game over the Iron
The junior circuit play league Springs Y.P.A. with a close score of
the oiler of the C.P.R. and C.N.R. and other centres across Canada at a rare treat.
games three times a week and these 10-9 in a slugging match.
com, anies for jobs on section work. tended the conference which was held COLOR AND ROMANCE
youngsters
take baseball seriously
Among the men who submitted appli at the Carlton Street United Church
The first game was featured by
Photographed entirely in
koda- and show promise of becoming future
cation for this work were Mr. Wata- in Toronto July 7 to 9.
heavy hitting by both teams and at
chrome, so vivid is the color that it diamond stars.
nabe. chairman for the No. 2 camp
the end of the regulation innings was
Included in
report from the is difficult to believe _it can be wholly
The. “hage” or baldheaded” league tied at 12 runs each.
committee and Mr. Kitagawa.
The Round Table discussion group to the natural. And-the romantic interest of
camp will carry on temporarily with- conference was a request foi- imme so much of the film—the story sug whi-h is composed of picked teams
Six errors by the Iron Springs
out a chairman after Mr. Watanabe diate action with regard to Section 5 gested rather than told by an aged from among married _ men, liven up I nine proved costly as the Coaldale
Monday and Tuesday evenings with ■ Bukkyo team pushed across eightof Bill 135. This move was passed un hermit, a pipe-smoking female grave
their
antics on the diamond. What ; runs in the first two innings. The
The baseball team disbanded owing animously by the delegates. This re digger, a
cool-nerved
high-rigger
baseball
they don’t play is made up jY.P.A.’s made a strong comeback in
to lack of players due to the steady quest included the sending of a tele skillfully topping the spar tree, Nisei
for
in
the
noise they make.
movement out of the camp for other gram from the conference to Prime girls dancing “odori” and Nisei child
| the latter part of the game but the
Officials
for the senior league are i early lead built up by the opponents
outside employment.
Minister-King with a copy to Mr. M. ren around the maypole—has an apMr. Shiozaki left camp to join J. Coldwell, M.P., leader of the CCF. | peal set entirely apart from Holly Giichi Nakayama, scorekeeper; Fred ■proved too much.
Kato, Sho Okawara, Bob Kmi.no and
his family in Rosebery and Mr. Tera The delegates were also asked to send wood make-believe.
The four teams will compete for
Shige Yoshida, umpires.
saka left for Kamloops.
the Southern Alberta district pennant
letters to their members- of parlia
“West of the Rockies,” when com
Sports convenors for the Shinwakai 'donated by the Lethbridge Northern
ment and note paper and envelopes
pleted, says Corp. Farrar, will be a
which
sponsors the leagues are K. i Mutual Assistance Association.
Edmonton Refuses Entry - were ■ supplied in order that they procession of life in the Kootenays.
Nishihara, Ken Yamasaki and John
The league, the first to operate
A large part of it will tell the story ny Nihei.
EDMONTON. Alta.—The Edmon might take such action immediately.
among
the Niseis in this district, has
Another
request
from
this
Round
of Japanese evacuation, with, a her
ton City Council turned down an ap
Teams in the leagues with their approximately eight games scheduled
oine whose grace and charm mer
plication of a Japanese resident on Table group was that the churches be
respective managers are:
for each team. The top team at the
ges with complete satisfaction into
a district farm to enter the city and roused to further action.
Senior league: Wakaba, Johnny end of the season will be awarded
the natural beauty of her back
reserved for further study a request
When the aforesaid bill was before
Nihei;
Hayabusa,
George
Aoki; the pennant.
ground.
by a Japanese resident in Edmonton the Senate, the National Council of
Asahi, K. Nishihara; Yamato, Mitsuo
A serious student, perhaps, would Oikawa.
The late start in the league games
for permission to bring his family the F.O.R. and two of the local com
into the city.
prefer
to
see
a
more
accurate
docu
necessitated
the short schedule.
mittees working in the field of race
Junior league: Wakagusa, Chic
mentary
on
this
part
of
the
film.
But
S. Tsukishinia, a Japanese Cana relatinos sent telegrams of protest to
Kageyama; Hinode, Mickey Haya
with his camera. Corp. Farrar is an kawa; Tsubame, Shoji Nakashima; Kaslo All Stars To Meet
dian student of Stirling requested for Senator Cairine Wilson.
permission to reside temporarily in
A letter dealing with the problems artist, not an historian. It is the Taiyo, Thomas Hatashita.
appeal
and
suggested
the city to attend a three months’ jof the Japanese is being drafted by aesthetic
Old Men’s league: Satsuki; Sumire; I Rossland in Return Match
course at a city vocational school but ■ the F.O.R. to be presented to the romance which concern him, not poli- Ayame; Sakura.
I KASLO, B. C.—The Rossland base
was .irned down by the city council I Prime Minister.
I tical or economic factors. Those who
-ball
team will be out for vengeance
at a recent meeting.
-appreciate the words of the poet,
|
The
Fellowship
of
Reconciliation
Coaldale
Nine
Hands
Out
(when
they again invade Kaslo for a
A •equest from Sampei Sugiurt
- “Beauty is truth, truth beauty”, will
-organization
promised
full
support
to
eadilv acknowledge the soundness 13-2 Defeat To Nokais
-return match against the Kaslo Japanow esident in Edmonton for per
he Japanese Canadians to acmeve joy hi;
-nese All Stars for a return march
mission
approach.
ing his family to th
I COALDALE Alta. — The Alberta ; tomorrow. Reinforcements with ploy*
reierrec sack to city comzed
Canadians.
- Nokai basebal' team suffered a lop- : er from Trail will bolster the Ro
mis.
■ for further information
Sandon Subscriber.? NoIe
It
mphlet
of
some
months
ago.
1 sided 13-2 trouncing on
Sundav j land nine and the game should prove
inere was no discussion on th^
1 devoted entirely to a consideration
Break up of the community at j handed out by the Coaldale Nine.
.to be a thriller.
motion of reference with the appli
Sandon.
B.C.
has
already
resulted
Japanese
Canadian
question,
|
Pitcher
T
o
Nishimura
of
the
Coalcation from the resident Japanese to
i The .-. 11 Stars will field the same
in the transfer of R. Miyake and -dale Nine showed good form and was team as in the previous
i re-edited and re-published
send for his family from B. C.
family to Bay Farm and I. Sugi- -well supported by his teammates to they eked out a narrow
lie
I* was charged that they would in response to the demand for copie
man
will
also
move
to
a
new
centre
j
allow
only
two
runs.
have a small Japanese colony if per
visiting team.
shortly.
- The team line up was as follows: nniiiiiritiinHninHinniHiHHnHh'Hiiniii
mission had been granted to all who
These two gentlemen have been , Coaldale Nine:—George Oshiro, rf.;
had applied to enter the city premises
' flELP WANTED
4 — Japanese
acting
as representatives for The J Mas Matsumoto, c:
Yosh Matsus:............... f " <' .. ...... w
«i?Br™
in Hawaii were recently
New Canadian since the establish imoto, c.: Toonev
ihoji.
CARD OF THANKS
Push
MRS. J.R. WILSON WHO OPERi praised as proving to be “good eitiment of the community, and up to Matsumiva
b.: Bob ^enda, 2nd b
ates; the? Ferry Hotel at Cambria.
Mr. Sukegorp Mori who had served rzens in ;ht ? war efio:
the present have kept this office in
To Nishimura, u
Aita^l wishes to employ a girl as a
the position of chairman for • three ; B. Holcomb
torial director of t
formed as to the whereabouts of ■ Michi Kishiuchi. 3rd b.;
cook. The hotel is very quiet and
successive terms, recently relocated -War Manpower Commission.
i subscribers.
J
Alberta
Nokai
mostSif the boarders have been 1U*
:
—
Sam
Tamagi
c
to Hamilton. Ont. with his family. He | H'.s report to V MC chairman Paul ?
They ask. however, that in the ;M. Mitsui, rf.: Fat Nakama
ing there .for the past 20 years.
cf
extends his sincere thanks to the D- McNutt reviewed the manpower
future, any subscriber moving from j Eddy Matsumura
Rooms
wfll be provided.
,
ss.:
Jimmy
T;
many friends for the many acts of -situation in Hawaii and noted the;
Sandon communicate his or her gi, 1st. b.;
Miki. 3rd b.:
kindnesses shown him during his stay j contributions of Japanese Americans Anyone interested is requested to
new address directly
Goshimon, If Fritz Tamagi, 2nd b
at Sandon.
< - i to war production.
J.R. Wilson, Ferry
I Canadian at Kaslo. IB. C,
Hotel Cambria, P.O„ Alta.
Tashme Ball Players Have 3 Leagues
THE NEW CANADIAN
July 29. 1944.
Continued from Page 1.
Urge Political Education for Nisei)
^ o cz> O <ZZ5 o c^
NEW DENVER, B. C. — Regis
Tashme, business
and
The
betrothal
tration
figures show that Tashme
was
announced
of
Fumi Okura, New Denver, hou^e
condoned in a democratic country the month has great significance in clear
! Kimiko, sect i
centre has the largest bloc of tea
ughter of Mr. anc
representative.
precipitating of the campaign to in- -ing away the muddled, vacillating and
Airs. Sukesab
chers at the school, followed close
Suzuki
of
New
Denfluence the government and the four - opportunist political thinking of the
'ver to
ly, however, by Lemon Creek and
Masav■• shi Nagai, eldest
TAPS TILL REVEILLE
hour debate in the House has certain- -past and substituting a determined
Bay Farm. Figures correspond
son
of
Air.
and
Mrs.
Shoichi
Nagai
At 10 o’clock nightly, Pacific
ly heightened public interest in the-and progressive leadership who are
also
of
New
Denver
on
July
23
roughly
to
the
volume
of
sound
at
War
Time, the curfew tolls the
problems of the Japanese. Persons-interested in a well-planned program
the
home
of
the
bride
elect.
produced
by
the
teachers
singing
lights
out signal. And anxious
who were previously vaguely aware 'of political action. This is the first
i Baishakunins for the occasion were
their
school
anthems
at
morning
mothers from Minto to Kaslo
of a Japanese racial minority in Can- Time close contact has been estabassemblies:
should sleep a little better know
ada have now had the matter ; fished with a wide section of the gen- Mr. and Mrs. A.‘ Miyamoto of Rose
bery.
Tashme, 30; Lemon Creek, 26
ing that Nisei house mothers at
brought to their focus of attention Aral population who are of like mind
Bay Farm, 24; Kaslo. 11; Sandon,
Mr.and Mrs. R. Ide of Hamilton
that moment are checking over
and found out how it measured up to -and purpose, interested in the deve11; New Denver,' s
Popoff, 8;
their brood to make sure that none
democratic principles. Repeated com- Gopment and extension of democratic wish to announce the recent engage
Rosebery,
7;
ment
of
their
youngest
daughter
Minto
4;
Taylor
have been lost to the wolves.
parison was made in debate to the'government in Canada. This issue has
Lake-Flying U, 4; E. Lillooet, 2;
six a.m. rising bell is, perhaps, a
American treatment of her citizens -crystallized and consolidated around Teiko to Mr. Yoshio Kishimoto of
Toronto.
and Monte Lake, 1.
more practical reason for the ’10
of Japanese ancestry and favourable 'the central core of democracy the
WAISTLINES SAFE
The wedding will be held in Sept
p.m. deadline, than any existing
comment was given to the stand of ; political thinking of an increasing
ember.
Food
in
the
messhall
is
reported
manpower situation in the centre
Secretary of the Interior ,Ickes con •number of Japanese Canadians.
to be better this year, according
New Denver Orchard School
demning racial prejudice in forth i Fully aware of the political impli- DONATION .....
The
New
Canadian
gratefully
ack
to
a
random
.
sampling
of
teachers.
classrooms
—converted Commission
right language. A similar statement j cations and causes of problems met
nowledges
the
-very
generous
donation
A
new
cookhouse
and
improved
housing units—provide the sleep
from the Prime Minister would be in ; by persons of Japanese descent in
meal-planning contribute to this
ing quarters for the teachers, with
order to absolve any thought that he i Canada, Roger Obata, chairman of by Mr. Toyomatsu Kimura of Opal,
result. But this observer, after one
twelve of them squeezed into the
may be at variance with the Ameri the Committee for Democrat stres Alta.
*
*
experience with the hamburger
eleven houses along School Rd.
can intentions.
sed the need for political education
A baby girl, Bonnie Hideko, was
and potatoes in the mess, is glad
Teachers
have been quartered ac
This increased interest, it is be and participation in trade unions: born to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Yamamura
to report that there is little dancording
to
grades they teach, in
lieved, has strengthened the position “We must become more and more of Hamilton on June 21.
ger of any expansion on the collecorder,
it
is
said, that they might
of Japanese Canadians and hereafter politically conscious of our problems;
tive waistline.
Mr. and Mrs. Torao Shimizu of
study together.
*
6
the government will be more reluc this is the forerunner of many more Kaslo became the proud parents of
Teachers have received a $25
Of
the
136
registered
teachers,
tant to
undertake discriminatory similar issues.
subsistence allo'wance, of which
a baby girl, Ruriya Julie, July 13.
all but two-belong to the feminine
measures for it knows that the public
“A national organization is to be The baby was born at the Victorian
$18 has been ear-marked to cover
“
gender.”
Two
exceptions are
are now placed on the alert to con encouraged, our committee has this General Hospital.
food costs for the four-week, per
Takashi Tsuji, principal from Bay
demn any undemocratic act. With the as a major part of its program.
iod.
Farm;
Fred Okimura from Taylor
franchise yet to be won the public
NEW STUDENTS COUNCIL
‘Tn listening to the debates of the
Lake.
Color,
Romantic
Interest
in
will not be too easily lulled back to House of Commons the sincere sup
Ayako Atagi of Kaslo was elect
Dr. F. LaViolette, of McGill
complacency but will bring the mach port we have been getting shoe’s that “West of the Rockies” —
ed president of a bashful, but
University,
told the opening meet
inery organized into operation to as J there is a considerable number of
promising Students’ Council, at an
ing
tnat
scientific
surveys show
sure the practice of democratic pro jliberal-minded people in our govern- ^Corp. Farrar’s New Film
open-aii' general meeting Tuesday
tnat
teachers
rank
high
among the
cedures should the need arise.
jment and it is up to us to show that
The poet records for us in words
evening. Serving with her on the
professions in the probability of
For persons of Japanese ancestry j we have a keen interest in all that his own personal experience and the
executive are Amy Uchida, Minto,
making successful marriages —
vice-president; Hideko Yamashita,
artist in his work conveys to us a
themselves, the campaign of the past Jhey do.”
particularly if they teach home
personal interpretation of what he
Bay Farm, secretary; May Inata,
economics.
sees. Through such lips and eyes the
inarticulate among us find expres
sion; the unobservant can be made
to see.
So, too, can an artist with a camera
TASHME, B. C.—Another baseball
—sensitive to aesthetic values and
Outside Employment Lures
season is in full swing here with
employing no less technical skills— three
leagues keeping baseball-con- Four Southern Alberta
Workers from Roadcamp
bring to us a deeper and more con scious
youngsters and oldsters active
PRINCETON. B. C. — A farewell
scious appraisal of the natural grace everv
Nisei Teams Vie for
evening
of the week.
TORONTO, Ont.—Participatin
in and beauty all about us.
party sponsored by the baseball club
The senior loop games is the chief
for the men who are leaving the the Round Table discussion on Race
This is a personal reaction to
attraction
of the summer sports sea District Championship
Princeton No. 2 roadcamp was held Relations at the first National Confer “West of the Rockies,” the amateur
on July .12, Mr. H. Nishiyama was the ence of the Fellowship of Reconcilia moving picture film being photogra son drawing over half of the Tashme
PICTURE BUTTE, Alta. — The
tion was Kunio Shimizu, well known phed and produced by Corporal F. S. population to the grounds on Wed first baseball of the recently organacting chairman for the occasion.
nesdays
Speeches were delivered by Mr. former Victoria Nisei and active ex- Farrar of the RCMP.
„
, and Sundays.
i
Uzed four team Japanese league in
Two packed
Shiraishi fleet footed leit jthe Southern Alberta district were
Kumagai who represented the base secretary of the J.C.C.L. He presented houses greeted the preview showing ~
ball club and Mr. T. Watanabe who an outline of problems confronted by of the film at Kaslo this week, and fielder for the Vancouver Asahi in ! played here recentlv with the Picture
spoke on behalf of the camp workers. the Japanese people to the delegates. though it is as yet only partially pie-evacuation days is still active in ।Butte Bukkyo and Coaldale Y.P.A.
A well arranged programme was en
Over one hundred delegates from complete, with many additions and this sport alternately playing short ; battling to a draw in the first game.
joyed by all the men.
Vancouver, Toronto, Hamilton, Owen a good deal of editing yet to be done, stop and pitching for the Tashme The Coaldale Bukkyo were the victors
A number of men have accepted Sound, Smith Falls, Ottawa, Montreal even in its present stage the film is Asahi team.
in the second game over the Iron
The junior circuit play league Springs Y.P.A. with a close score of
the oiler of the C.P.R. and C.N.R. and other centres across Canada at a rare treat.
games three times a week and these 10-9 in a slugging match.
com, anies for jobs on section work. tended the conference which was held COLOR AND ROMANCE
youngsters
take baseball seriously
Among the men who submitted appli at the Carlton Street United Church
The first game was featured by
Photographed entirely in
koda- and show promise of becoming future
cation for this work were Mr. Wata- in Toronto July 7 to 9.
heavy hitting by both teams and at
chrome, so vivid is the color that it diamond stars.
nabe. chairman for the No. 2 camp
the end of the regulation innings was
Included in
report from the is difficult to believe _it can be wholly
The. “hage” or baldheaded” league tied at 12 runs each.
committee and Mr. Kitagawa.
The Round Table discussion group to the natural. And-the romantic interest of
camp will carry on temporarily with- conference was a request foi- imme so much of the film—the story sug whi-h is composed of picked teams
Six errors by the Iron Springs
out a chairman after Mr. Watanabe diate action with regard to Section 5 gested rather than told by an aged from among married _ men, liven up I nine proved costly as the Coaldale
Monday and Tuesday evenings with ■ Bukkyo team pushed across eightof Bill 135. This move was passed un hermit, a pipe-smoking female grave
their
antics on the diamond. What ; runs in the first two innings. The
The baseball team disbanded owing animously by the delegates. This re digger, a
cool-nerved
high-rigger
baseball
they don’t play is made up jY.P.A.’s made a strong comeback in
to lack of players due to the steady quest included the sending of a tele skillfully topping the spar tree, Nisei
for
in
the
noise they make.
movement out of the camp for other gram from the conference to Prime girls dancing “odori” and Nisei child
| the latter part of the game but the
Officials
for the senior league are i early lead built up by the opponents
outside employment.
Minister-King with a copy to Mr. M. ren around the maypole—has an apMr. Shiozaki left camp to join J. Coldwell, M.P., leader of the CCF. | peal set entirely apart from Holly Giichi Nakayama, scorekeeper; Fred ■proved too much.
Kato, Sho Okawara, Bob Kmi.no and
his family in Rosebery and Mr. Tera The delegates were also asked to send wood make-believe.
The four teams will compete for
Shige Yoshida, umpires.
saka left for Kamloops.
the Southern Alberta district pennant
letters to their members- of parlia
“West of the Rockies,” when com
Sports convenors for the Shinwakai 'donated by the Lethbridge Northern
ment and note paper and envelopes
pleted, says Corp. Farrar, will be a
which
sponsors the leagues are K. i Mutual Assistance Association.
Edmonton Refuses Entry - were ■ supplied in order that they procession of life in the Kootenays.
Nishihara, Ken Yamasaki and John
The league, the first to operate
A large part of it will tell the story ny Nihei.
EDMONTON. Alta.—The Edmon might take such action immediately.
among
the Niseis in this district, has
Another
request
from
this
Round
of Japanese evacuation, with, a her
ton City Council turned down an ap
Teams in the leagues with their approximately eight games scheduled
oine whose grace and charm mer
plication of a Japanese resident on Table group was that the churches be
respective managers are:
for each team. The top team at the
ges with complete satisfaction into
a district farm to enter the city and roused to further action.
Senior league: Wakaba, Johnny end of the season will be awarded
the natural beauty of her back
reserved for further study a request
When the aforesaid bill was before
Nihei;
Hayabusa,
George
Aoki; the pennant.
ground.
by a Japanese resident in Edmonton the Senate, the National Council of
Asahi, K. Nishihara; Yamato, Mitsuo
A serious student, perhaps, would Oikawa.
The late start in the league games
for permission to bring his family the F.O.R. and two of the local com
into the city.
prefer
to
see
a
more
accurate
docu
necessitated
the short schedule.
mittees working in the field of race
Junior league: Wakagusa, Chic
mentary
on
this
part
of
the
film.
But
S. Tsukishinia, a Japanese Cana relatinos sent telegrams of protest to
Kageyama; Hinode, Mickey Haya
with his camera. Corp. Farrar is an kawa; Tsubame, Shoji Nakashima; Kaslo All Stars To Meet
dian student of Stirling requested for Senator Cairine Wilson.
permission to reside temporarily in
A letter dealing with the problems artist, not an historian. It is the Taiyo, Thomas Hatashita.
appeal
and
suggested
the city to attend a three months’ jof the Japanese is being drafted by aesthetic
Old Men’s league: Satsuki; Sumire; I Rossland in Return Match
course at a city vocational school but ■ the F.O.R. to be presented to the romance which concern him, not poli- Ayame; Sakura.
I KASLO, B. C.—The Rossland base
was .irned down by the city council I Prime Minister.
I tical or economic factors. Those who
-ball
team will be out for vengeance
at a recent meeting.
-appreciate the words of the poet,
|
The
Fellowship
of
Reconciliation
Coaldale
Nine
Hands
Out
(when
they again invade Kaslo for a
A •equest from Sampei Sugiurt
- “Beauty is truth, truth beauty”, will
-organization
promised
full
support
to
eadilv acknowledge the soundness 13-2 Defeat To Nokais
-return match against the Kaslo Japanow esident in Edmonton for per
he Japanese Canadians to acmeve joy hi;
-nese All Stars for a return march
mission
approach.
ing his family to th
I COALDALE Alta. — The Alberta ; tomorrow. Reinforcements with ploy*
reierrec sack to city comzed
Canadians.
- Nokai basebal' team suffered a lop- : er from Trail will bolster the Ro
mis.
■ for further information
Sandon Subscriber.? NoIe
It
mphlet
of
some
months
ago.
1 sided 13-2 trouncing on
Sundav j land nine and the game should prove
inere was no discussion on th^
1 devoted entirely to a consideration
Break up of the community at j handed out by the Coaldale Nine.
.to be a thriller.
motion of reference with the appli
Sandon.
B.C.
has
already
resulted
Japanese
Canadian
question,
|
Pitcher
T
o
Nishimura
of
the
Coalcation from the resident Japanese to
i The .-. 11 Stars will field the same
in the transfer of R. Miyake and -dale Nine showed good form and was team as in the previous
i re-edited and re-published
send for his family from B. C.
family to Bay Farm and I. Sugi- -well supported by his teammates to they eked out a narrow
lie
I* was charged that they would in response to the demand for copie
man
will
also
move
to
a
new
centre
j
allow
only
two
runs.
have a small Japanese colony if per
visiting team.
shortly.
- The team line up was as follows: nniiiiiritiinHninHinniHiHHnHh'Hiiniii
mission had been granted to all who
These two gentlemen have been , Coaldale Nine:—George Oshiro, rf.;
had applied to enter the city premises
' flELP WANTED
4 — Japanese
acting
as representatives for The J Mas Matsumoto, c:
Yosh Matsus:............... f " <' .. ...... w
«i?Br™
in Hawaii were recently
New Canadian since the establish imoto, c.: Toonev
ihoji.
CARD OF THANKS
Push
MRS. J.R. WILSON WHO OPERi praised as proving to be “good eitiment of the community, and up to Matsumiva
b.: Bob ^enda, 2nd b
ates; the? Ferry Hotel at Cambria.
Mr. Sukegorp Mori who had served rzens in ;ht ? war efio:
the present have kept this office in
To Nishimura, u
Aita^l wishes to employ a girl as a
the position of chairman for • three ; B. Holcomb
torial director of t
formed as to the whereabouts of ■ Michi Kishiuchi. 3rd b.;
cook. The hotel is very quiet and
successive terms, recently relocated -War Manpower Commission.
i subscribers.
J
Alberta
Nokai
mostSif the boarders have been 1U*
:
—
Sam
Tamagi
c
to Hamilton. Ont. with his family. He | H'.s report to V MC chairman Paul ?
They ask. however, that in the ;M. Mitsui, rf.: Fat Nakama
ing there .for the past 20 years.
cf
extends his sincere thanks to the D- McNutt reviewed the manpower
future, any subscriber moving from j Eddy Matsumura
Rooms
wfll be provided.
,
ss.:
Jimmy
T;
many friends for the many acts of -situation in Hawaii and noted the;
Sandon communicate his or her gi, 1st. b.;
Miki. 3rd b.:
kindnesses shown him during his stay j contributions of Japanese Americans Anyone interested is requested to
new address directly
Goshimon, If Fritz Tamagi, 2nd b
at Sandon.
< - i to war production.
J.R. Wilson, Ferry
I Canadian at Kaslo. IB. C,
Hotel Cambria, P.O„ Alta.
Tashme Ball Players Have 3 Leagues