Page 1
945
Is
there
a da t e
on
your
add r ess
label?
It
shows
when
your
subscription
d u e.
;M Ms
Ont.
If you
notice
about your subscription after
r e m i t t i n g your renews],
please disregard the postcard.
n dent
Vol. VIII. No. 30
copy
c°!Jp!e5
the
le Plan
hter of
toto of
Furuh place
! Budd,
u Off].
tOc per month
Pvt, Obokata Reports
Mcie Japanese Americans
tied Flying i
^eiayea oy me Censors) In a special letter to the New
, Nisei Private who was with the first group of Japanese )ana^ “
unteers to go overseas reports the warm
England.
weicome
accorded
tX
to
Comba
_
V YORK — TWo Americans
oi Japanese ancestry are fivino- ir
comoat agAnst the Japanese en-nw, according ro a UK Army Air
forces photo published on June II
Saturday. June
B^O^ELCOMESTAS hmeites
j First Non Kepat Group Arrives
In Initial Segregation transfer
^?_^f_^£(ED TO BE TRANSFERRED
KASLO, B. C.—Th
received the best of trea
The photo showed Sgt. M-imT-m ! thirty families which v first contingent of five families, a fraction of the
ments both on the ship and at all the . reaHy fall three or four mikGT^
’ mated to be transferred here, arrived late
UiKawa and Staff Spro-pnni
places, in. England where we have : SAW WESTMINSTER ABBEY'
: Tuesday night this week
Kamoto showing the
been stationed, he, writes. Both
Air Med.:1s
- the
— 'i ■ One
, Sunday
-■
e went to the West- i
On Wednesday, only one i a
to Capt. Richard E Windier, a
civilians and meimbers of the armed w^^rAbbey for church service, and
B-29 pilo I, at a 20th Bomb
There
forces have welcomed us very warmly. ' Played near the remains of
(nee
Dia
nd bas?e in India.
movement out from this ct
V A{-BERTANS.FORM
Coining
across
the
Atlantic,
practi;
figures.
The
service
TAd
Proud
tiie Air Force caption
cally all of us got seasick and missed :
thjs huge structure is imm-s■ girl
"J YOUTH COUNCIL
Greenwood and the other
•■he
two were the first
one or two meals. In the daytime it ; 31ve'
,
Japanese
Americ ds to fly
was common sight to see soldiers ly- ^ maoe us fee] small and inMo-m'fiin
! LETHBRIDGE Alta. With attaincombat J
hash!
against
■
nere
are
indications
that
many
the
Japanese
I
ment of full citizenship as the chief
ing
in
every
conceivable
place.
(We
:
Ca
N
’
f
nd
at
th
©
same
time
it
m4
presumable
baby
in B-29
.aniues are remaining in centres : objective, the Southern Alberta Youth
slept
m
hammocks
which
have
to
be
:
iSei
we
wers
a
part
of
someth^
Torawaiting direct relocation to easirailed up in the mornings.)
i Council was formed on May 26, folen Kuroki has pree«n placements instead of transferWe were all glad to s:
! lowing a conference which was atland i
r Visited the St ^uPs
reporied flying in
combat
again after rhe weary days spent on TowpF
-29 over Japan.
! tended by upwards of .160 representato See Hle famous
Eight familie
approxi ma tely fifty , byes f rom various districts in South
saipboaxd. After re-ching England, xowet of London and recalled all tm
inpeople.
lie boarded the toylike English trains ramous people who had b-en
tor S.oca: i Alberta on April 28.
his
y
a
rex
next
wed
’
within
those
a
the C.P.R !
which travelled- with amazing speed.
The Youth Council will strive to
Ave spent a whole
nto,
line by way of
i
afternoon
at
ew
Denver
REMINDED OF FRASER VALLEY
promote goodwill among occidentals
mugroup consists of
Jhe Spring is early in England. seum of wax figures.
who jand enueavor to become good Canasigned up for repatriation
J dians.
Vhen we left Canada there was still So-n^-p b-d n- around Picadillv
equal
number
of
evaonpp
snow on the ground, but here
^ 111 " daz?- The huge
. con-Leming the Youth Council is Win'Oike,
cd
trees and the plants were in bloom. - come XX d^ ^^ ^ taxi
tOl’ relocation
is
exi
mu
Fujiki with, the noHowung on the
LONDON,
Ont.
—
“
Blackie
”
Okuno.
of
■ovu io arrive here next week.
1
The English countryside, with cattle
,doun on you on the
Norman Ikcbuchi, vice^lsei President of the Local
As? a result of the housing shortage ! presid
grazing peacefully in the green roll-L/nZ^'0
fne street We travel!federal
Founderies
Takada, secretarv
^ pastures, and the pksX k ^ss J ^
and
about 650 ev 'e-i Kyoto
and the presence of
Company, a local of the United
sec re ta r y -treasurer'
nee
dependents
, efficiency-. We thought Workers of America, was show
to take up tern- ; Sumi
Steel high-tension power lines re. corresponding secrere- porary residence
-o mnn should -onv this.
Kaslo and New tarv
minded us very much
- of B.C.’s Fraser
’
g the charte from District 6 Denver. In moj
'or
cases the waaeValley.
Director John Mitchell, in tlie June earning r
The
places
whore
we
liked
hanrin?
'Mes
hve
preceded
.
London, England, is an amazing
edition of the Steel Labor, official or- families to
in
around
most
were
the
Beaver
C
’
uK
city. We gazed in wonder at the
n H^sttogetestab.^^
I ohno Wants Expulsion
gan of the union.
in
rapoits the Vancouver Province.
marks left by Nazi bombs. The bombs Ontario Club, and B.C. Club. The B.C.
■^4^fl^0> B. C.—One of the reAlso pictured in the group receiv
Mub serves the best meals. Here we
had
not
stopped
falling
when
we
ar
ing
the
charter
were
"
George
Ide,
i
presente^ ^ the Island
)f
rived. At first we were scared stiff met many of our Chinese friends from secretary and K. Y’anagisawa, execu
I Affiliated Boards of Trade Wednes(though we didn’t like to admit it) J C' ®(1 Ve dlscuss*M old school tive board member.
। cay was the repatriation of all Japa
Evacuation Days
by the crash of bombs, but the Bri days. We also went to the stage door
nese, Cauadian-boin or otherwise in.
KASLO, B. C.—A small throng of a meeting held here.
tish people merely shrugged it off. canteen where we spent many plea 442nd Combat Team Guards
What appears like very close ones sant hours dancing and drinkino- ho'ncurious people gathered to see' th"
The Tofino district asked for the
est-to-goodness “cokes”.
new- arrivals from Tashme as the big exclusion of the Japanese.
Greynound bus roared up the Front '
WITH THE FIFTH ARMY’. ITALY”
Tuct Power Camps
^ > “ , . 3"e2d Of
i,n
they were to Moy to
—merman war prisoners in the Fifth til
nT ;ad'no! besn expeded un-Ahe Kas|o Hotel. He smiled rueful!v
Army's Enemy Concentration Area in W 11 o clock so that the B.C.S.C. of- ;
he looked at the bni
r
northern Italy are being guarded by ac.als and the R.C.M.P. constable ar-Ndded that he had expected
troops of the 442rd Infantry Kegi- nved on the scene a- few minutes Ho a furnished hoU ’
l°
*
FANCOLVER, B. C.—Removal of ment composed
of
Americans
of
Japlate.
There
was
only
a
small
number
Two- Siocan Merchants
NO COOKING
। Japanese evacuees now settled in the anese ancestry, according
। fridge River district will be effected. Army Headquarters on Ma to Fifth ! oi people to welcome the transferee';
The fannhes had not brought any
! tne Vancouver Province
cooking
utensils with them beeausreported
Although die area is not thorough-' . ‘ he "-’hole scene had a touch remiJune
14.
they
haa
heard they would be staving
Evacuees in Interior B. C
m.i^F0' ,n' Here have been few niscent; of evacuation days three years
;n « hw a!s„ Iwc;iuse in ^^^
The B. C. Security Commission, AAOu-S, mid these have been apnre- ago.
-JkJl'i'
"W !™sss- wl(en they
SLOGAN, B. C.
which
has
lea
sed premises at the foot nended. The concentration area is
that the
Twenty-one travel-weary passenpolicy oi subtle intimidation conti- I
ved here, they had nothin^ to cook
Mission Mountain on a year-to oemg operated by the 71st AAA
gers came off the bus. One worn a,n i mi
with. Arrangements, however have
Hues with marvelous success,” with ' year basis, has been given notice thai gade unler the command of Brig
held a sleeping child in her arms
heon made with the B.C.S.C. to proregard to the repatriation signup of the area will be required for con- General Aaron Bradshaw, Jr.
Two bewildered looking
little
girls
1
1G Va,’Sferees with utensils unevacuees in B. C., two prominent Slo- struction of p o w e r construction
More than 1,000.000 Germans with clung to their mother’s
while I til their freight arrive
;'a^m“’chants have sent a telegram camps.
the
male
a sprinkling of Fascist Italians and
members of the arrivals i
to the Prime Minister and the Labor
were busil engaged in carrying suit- ren win'™' °"C fsm'ly of r'w childEvacueek "'ho were settled in this other nationalities, have been
-Wister asking for fair play.
dis.net three years ago are self--sup- into the concentration area moved cases and boxes up to their assi-nel tl„,.,,„' •,? immediate prospects to
on a rooms m the Kaslo Hotel. One fami v tn k^-J ?
U '"'nsfer
Grief show-ed abundantly for days porting.
sprawling airfield.
from Vancouver. They
nfter ^V’66 weeks each one was
Apout 1000 men are expected to be
wa.s taken to the Langham Hotel two ‘
blocks away.
-Mildly handled to the border of in- employed in Bridge River power deve
VTV aro a"" ’ting for furimiGaiion so that an absurdedlv lopment camps in a year’s time, ac/o of Relocees Since
T fF?r the readers, the Kask and
jrge percentage signed for repatriacrding to Thomas Ingledcw. chief
Lr i d ,
n
Langham Hotels are old buildings in jmsoion. The five children range in
u°n, the merchants charged.
wgineer of the B.C.E.R.
Ja.1. i Return to Co?.st
whlch families are assigned one or
Gibing- a brief review of the segreSeveral million feet of lumber wil1
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah-Thirtymanj would come to Kaslo.
A
£i011 Jpl’OgKm situation, the mer-1 '•e required for making the dam, and
wants declared that “this order was | ■•nwmills erected during the war mav
,jFIen^U issued by a Government •ontribute.
departures have resettled | Tl.ov qi
,
T
A report from Lillooet states a 011
i?r who but by He fortune of
on the Pacific Coast, according to Rav j 1 ^^ Showed Keen Interest .
syndicate is planned to attempt cem- Haight,
might have been a Jap.”
Salt Lake City represents- j
'
ent manufacture for the dam. It
Thus inhuman order
uve
of
the
War
Relocation
Authority.
J
CpT
now being states coal from Hat Creek Coal Comis causinS untold
uKtuia pain
Air. Haight’s figures covered 10.2SS i
-y.n.,a^ei'ln^ H these people who pany and lime and marl from the terminal departures from all centres’
vicinity would be used. It adds a road
M
do fault of their own are in through' the canyon of Bridge Rive:
present position,” said the wire.
will be needed.
t0 p?iC of the wire have been sent
mr this group were given as the
BRANTFORD. Ont. _ with (he
Herridge, Roman Catholic
fc Coast 2? ■7 per
d Committees and the
Plains
men o, tne No. 20 Canadian I.-fanStates,
mi
Conti
Chur
try -Basic Training Centre here in
ps, 20.1: eastern tat os, 22
England in Toornto.
-ka. .4
ys NSS
?r cent reported the
oned
at
cut™
vent on s
Hot
B. C. — The
on Jure 1st to vote in the provi
iceton Roadwork
f
jiuorma leads the
VERNON, B. C.
>a
in a special
- bruit growers
"nd federal elections.
r elocation since the
here
are beginnin
Ottawa on June 19
Next Summer
to seek pickers
West Cna.?t with 9
They voted to elec
esentatjves
o
d work as the
-182 and Washing^
ElA. B. C.—Works Mini
i their Ontario pro
1 a mi Ont- thinning of tree
on-1 ne
underway early
Anscomb just back from
"o t ePeral ridin a-s
bu of men this month
noads in the interior. saj
om other provir.ee
Workers
i Canada
L
H
C
?
ur
franchise
fo
r
six survey parties noe
corning .L the orJapan at
o*
aces or residence,
mo
Princeton Job would •
r♦ - 1.
" expected to come
y in
cm, it was their fij
°-k mere by Sente?
17
r nousing centres.
in
ting and inf-re^ i
ar and the contract
ar
». v.—Two Nis*
' high -s shown b
tne orchards aumated to cost S2,600,000
*O
--'•g in the work
attending the Urdver-b
cn
were
much
in
still more lab
of Alberta • ere awarded prizes at
- as soon as the survey
erum
s are needed, it
is Ii
y d been correlated and
convocation exercises held here re
Pacifi
IS
v.
^ns drawn up, the CP re.
'xii^ne.-e Canadian citizens went to
will
They are, Henry Hasegawa, wlm • tee poIlson^Monday, June 4 to vote in
Poss
ne more than welcome
the
contract
would
be
let
Mr.
MKcNamara
said.
E"^
b?
°
‘
incia]
.
election.
Although
de^ F
won the honor prize for first v«ar
In the fields, phntino
x"^ Spring so work
He added that it would probably b
■ barred by legislation from voting- in
Engineering and Roy Saito
of cabbages
nave
.fust oeen completed. Field
s^a3"L^b next Summer, he three weeks before the check-up i
j
the
feaera]
election,
Japanese
Canawa., awarded a scholarship in fir-t
। dian names have appeared on the fed tomatoes have flowered and it is ex■‘
• completed.
year Agriculture.
pected that tl
eral voting lists.
be ready to b
picked in Augus
tee in
011 in
Bridge River Evacuees to be Evicted
Xp:
wV*«
J
federal Elections
Is
there
a da t e
on
your
add r ess
label?
It
shows
when
your
subscription
d u e.
;M Ms
Ont.
If you
notice
about your subscription after
r e m i t t i n g your renews],
please disregard the postcard.
n dent
Vol. VIII. No. 30
copy
c°!Jp!e5
the
le Plan
hter of
toto of
Furuh place
! Budd,
u Off].
tOc per month
Pvt, Obokata Reports
Mcie Japanese Americans
tied Flying i
^eiayea oy me Censors) In a special letter to the New
, Nisei Private who was with the first group of Japanese )ana^ “
unteers to go overseas reports the warm
England.
weicome
accorded
tX
to
Comba
_
V YORK — TWo Americans
oi Japanese ancestry are fivino- ir
comoat agAnst the Japanese en-nw, according ro a UK Army Air
forces photo published on June II
Saturday. June
B^O^ELCOMESTAS hmeites
j First Non Kepat Group Arrives
In Initial Segregation transfer
^?_^f_^£(ED TO BE TRANSFERRED
KASLO, B. C.—Th
received the best of trea
The photo showed Sgt. M-imT-m ! thirty families which v first contingent of five families, a fraction of the
ments both on the ship and at all the . reaHy fall three or four mikGT^
’ mated to be transferred here, arrived late
UiKawa and Staff Spro-pnni
places, in. England where we have : SAW WESTMINSTER ABBEY'
: Tuesday night this week
Kamoto showing the
been stationed, he, writes. Both
Air Med.:1s
- the
— 'i ■ One
, Sunday
-■
e went to the West- i
On Wednesday, only one i a
to Capt. Richard E Windier, a
civilians and meimbers of the armed w^^rAbbey for church service, and
B-29 pilo I, at a 20th Bomb
There
forces have welcomed us very warmly. ' Played near the remains of
(nee
Dia
nd bas?e in India.
movement out from this ct
V A{-BERTANS.FORM
Coining
across
the
Atlantic,
practi;
figures.
The
service
TAd
Proud
tiie Air Force caption
cally all of us got seasick and missed :
thjs huge structure is imm-s■ girl
"J YOUTH COUNCIL
Greenwood and the other
•■he
two were the first
one or two meals. In the daytime it ; 31ve'
,
Japanese
Americ ds to fly
was common sight to see soldiers ly- ^ maoe us fee] small and inMo-m'fiin
! LETHBRIDGE Alta. With attaincombat J
hash!
against
■
nere
are
indications
that
many
the
Japanese
I
ment of full citizenship as the chief
ing
in
every
conceivable
place.
(We
:
Ca
N
’
f
nd
at
th
©
same
time
it
m4
presumable
baby
in B-29
.aniues are remaining in centres : objective, the Southern Alberta Youth
slept
m
hammocks
which
have
to
be
:
iSei
we
wers
a
part
of
someth^
Torawaiting direct relocation to easirailed up in the mornings.)
i Council was formed on May 26, folen Kuroki has pree«n placements instead of transferWe were all glad to s:
! lowing a conference which was atland i
r Visited the St ^uPs
reporied flying in
combat
again after rhe weary days spent on TowpF
-29 over Japan.
! tended by upwards of .160 representato See Hle famous
Eight familie
approxi ma tely fifty , byes f rom various districts in South
saipboaxd. After re-ching England, xowet of London and recalled all tm
inpeople.
lie boarded the toylike English trains ramous people who had b-en
tor S.oca: i Alberta on April 28.
his
y
a
rex
next
wed
’
within
those
a
the C.P.R !
which travelled- with amazing speed.
The Youth Council will strive to
Ave spent a whole
nto,
line by way of
i
afternoon
at
ew
Denver
REMINDED OF FRASER VALLEY
promote goodwill among occidentals
mugroup consists of
Jhe Spring is early in England. seum of wax figures.
who jand enueavor to become good Canasigned up for repatriation
J dians.
Vhen we left Canada there was still So-n^-p b-d n- around Picadillv
equal
number
of
evaonpp
snow on the ground, but here
^ 111 " daz?- The huge
. con-Leming the Youth Council is Win'Oike,
cd
trees and the plants were in bloom. - come XX d^ ^^ ^ taxi
tOl’ relocation
is
exi
mu
Fujiki with, the noHowung on the
LONDON,
Ont.
—
“
Blackie
”
Okuno.
of
■ovu io arrive here next week.
1
The English countryside, with cattle
,doun on you on the
Norman Ikcbuchi, vice^lsei President of the Local
As? a result of the housing shortage ! presid
grazing peacefully in the green roll-L/nZ^'0
fne street We travel!federal
Founderies
Takada, secretarv
^ pastures, and the pksX k ^ss J ^
and
about 650 ev 'e-i Kyoto
and the presence of
Company, a local of the United
sec re ta r y -treasurer'
nee
dependents
, efficiency-. We thought Workers of America, was show
to take up tern- ; Sumi
Steel high-tension power lines re. corresponding secrere- porary residence
-o mnn should -onv this.
Kaslo and New tarv
minded us very much
- of B.C.’s Fraser
’
g the charte from District 6 Denver. In moj
'or
cases the waaeValley.
Director John Mitchell, in tlie June earning r
The
places
whore
we
liked
hanrin?
'Mes
hve
preceded
.
London, England, is an amazing
edition of the Steel Labor, official or- families to
in
around
most
were
the
Beaver
C
’
uK
city. We gazed in wonder at the
n H^sttogetestab.^^
I ohno Wants Expulsion
gan of the union.
in
rapoits the Vancouver Province.
marks left by Nazi bombs. The bombs Ontario Club, and B.C. Club. The B.C.
■^4^fl^0> B. C.—One of the reAlso pictured in the group receiv
Mub serves the best meals. Here we
had
not
stopped
falling
when
we
ar
ing
the
charter
were
"
George
Ide,
i
presente^ ^ the Island
)f
rived. At first we were scared stiff met many of our Chinese friends from secretary and K. Y’anagisawa, execu
I Affiliated Boards of Trade Wednes(though we didn’t like to admit it) J C' ®(1 Ve dlscuss*M old school tive board member.
। cay was the repatriation of all Japa
Evacuation Days
by the crash of bombs, but the Bri days. We also went to the stage door
nese, Cauadian-boin or otherwise in.
KASLO, B. C.—A small throng of a meeting held here.
tish people merely shrugged it off. canteen where we spent many plea 442nd Combat Team Guards
What appears like very close ones sant hours dancing and drinkino- ho'ncurious people gathered to see' th"
The Tofino district asked for the
est-to-goodness “cokes”.
new- arrivals from Tashme as the big exclusion of the Japanese.
Greynound bus roared up the Front '
WITH THE FIFTH ARMY’. ITALY”
Tuct Power Camps
^ > “ , . 3"e2d Of
i,n
they were to Moy to
—merman war prisoners in the Fifth til
nT ;ad'no! besn expeded un-Ahe Kas|o Hotel. He smiled rueful!v
Army's Enemy Concentration Area in W 11 o clock so that the B.C.S.C. of- ;
he looked at the bni
r
northern Italy are being guarded by ac.als and the R.C.M.P. constable ar-Ndded that he had expected
troops of the 442rd Infantry Kegi- nved on the scene a- few minutes Ho a furnished hoU ’
l°
*
FANCOLVER, B. C.—Removal of ment composed
of
Americans
of
Japlate.
There
was
only
a
small
number
Two- Siocan Merchants
NO COOKING
। Japanese evacuees now settled in the anese ancestry, according
। fridge River district will be effected. Army Headquarters on Ma to Fifth ! oi people to welcome the transferee';
The fannhes had not brought any
! tne Vancouver Province
cooking
utensils with them beeausreported
Although die area is not thorough-' . ‘ he "-’hole scene had a touch remiJune
14.
they
haa
heard they would be staving
Evacuees in Interior B. C
m.i^F0' ,n' Here have been few niscent; of evacuation days three years
;n « hw a!s„ Iwc;iuse in ^^^
The B. C. Security Commission, AAOu-S, mid these have been apnre- ago.
-JkJl'i'
"W !™sss- wl(en they
SLOGAN, B. C.
which
has
lea
sed premises at the foot nended. The concentration area is
that the
Twenty-one travel-weary passenpolicy oi subtle intimidation conti- I
ved here, they had nothin^ to cook
Mission Mountain on a year-to oemg operated by the 71st AAA
gers came off the bus. One worn a,n i mi
with. Arrangements, however have
Hues with marvelous success,” with ' year basis, has been given notice thai gade unler the command of Brig
held a sleeping child in her arms
heon made with the B.C.S.C. to proregard to the repatriation signup of the area will be required for con- General Aaron Bradshaw, Jr.
Two bewildered looking
little
girls
1
1G Va,’Sferees with utensils unevacuees in B. C., two prominent Slo- struction of p o w e r construction
More than 1,000.000 Germans with clung to their mother’s
while I til their freight arrive
;'a^m“’chants have sent a telegram camps.
the
male
a sprinkling of Fascist Italians and
members of the arrivals i
to the Prime Minister and the Labor
were busil engaged in carrying suit- ren win'™' °"C fsm'ly of r'w childEvacueek "'ho were settled in this other nationalities, have been
-Wister asking for fair play.
dis.net three years ago are self--sup- into the concentration area moved cases and boxes up to their assi-nel tl„,.,,„' •,? immediate prospects to
on a rooms m the Kaslo Hotel. One fami v tn k^-J ?
U '"'nsfer
Grief show-ed abundantly for days porting.
sprawling airfield.
from Vancouver. They
nfter ^V’66 weeks each one was
Apout 1000 men are expected to be
wa.s taken to the Langham Hotel two ‘
blocks away.
-Mildly handled to the border of in- employed in Bridge River power deve
VTV aro a"" ’ting for furimiGaiion so that an absurdedlv lopment camps in a year’s time, ac/o of Relocees Since
T fF?r the readers, the Kask and
jrge percentage signed for repatriacrding to Thomas Ingledcw. chief
Lr i d ,
n
Langham Hotels are old buildings in jmsoion. The five children range in
u°n, the merchants charged.
wgineer of the B.C.E.R.
Ja.1. i Return to Co?.st
whlch families are assigned one or
Gibing- a brief review of the segreSeveral million feet of lumber wil1
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah-Thirtymanj would come to Kaslo.
A
£i011 Jpl’OgKm situation, the mer-1 '•e required for making the dam, and
wants declared that “this order was | ■•nwmills erected during the war mav
,jFIen^U issued by a Government •ontribute.
departures have resettled | Tl.ov qi
,
T
A report from Lillooet states a 011
i?r who but by He fortune of
on the Pacific Coast, according to Rav j 1 ^^ Showed Keen Interest .
syndicate is planned to attempt cem- Haight,
might have been a Jap.”
Salt Lake City represents- j
'
ent manufacture for the dam. It
Thus inhuman order
uve
of
the
War
Relocation
Authority.
J
CpT
now being states coal from Hat Creek Coal Comis causinS untold
uKtuia pain
Air. Haight’s figures covered 10.2SS i
-y.n.,a^ei'ln^ H these people who pany and lime and marl from the terminal departures from all centres’
vicinity would be used. It adds a road
M
do fault of their own are in through' the canyon of Bridge Rive:
present position,” said the wire.
will be needed.
t0 p?iC of the wire have been sent
mr this group were given as the
BRANTFORD. Ont. _ with (he
Herridge, Roman Catholic
fc Coast 2? ■7 per
d Committees and the
Plains
men o, tne No. 20 Canadian I.-fanStates,
mi
Conti
Chur
try -Basic Training Centre here in
ps, 20.1: eastern tat os, 22
England in Toornto.
-ka. .4
ys NSS
?r cent reported the
oned
at
cut™
vent on s
Hot
B. C. — The
on Jure 1st to vote in the provi
iceton Roadwork
f
jiuorma leads the
VERNON, B. C.
>a
in a special
- bruit growers
"nd federal elections.
r elocation since the
here
are beginnin
Ottawa on June 19
Next Summer
to seek pickers
West Cna.?t with 9
They voted to elec
esentatjves
o
d work as the
-182 and Washing^
ElA. B. C.—Works Mini
i their Ontario pro
1 a mi Ont- thinning of tree
on-1 ne
underway early
Anscomb just back from
"o t ePeral ridin a-s
bu of men this month
noads in the interior. saj
om other provir.ee
Workers
i Canada
L
H
C
?
ur
franchise
fo
r
six survey parties noe
corning .L the orJapan at
o*
aces or residence,
mo
Princeton Job would •
r♦ - 1.
" expected to come
y in
cm, it was their fij
°-k mere by Sente?
17
r nousing centres.
in
ting and inf-re^ i
ar and the contract
ar
». v.—Two Nis*
' high -s shown b
tne orchards aumated to cost S2,600,000
*O
--'•g in the work
attending the Urdver-b
cn
were
much
in
still more lab
of Alberta • ere awarded prizes at
- as soon as the survey
erum
s are needed, it
is Ii
y d been correlated and
convocation exercises held here re
Pacifi
IS
v.
^ns drawn up, the CP re.
'xii^ne.-e Canadian citizens went to
will
They are, Henry Hasegawa, wlm • tee poIlson^Monday, June 4 to vote in
Poss
ne more than welcome
the
contract
would
be
let
Mr.
MKcNamara
said.
E"^
b?
°
‘
incia]
.
election.
Although
de^ F
won the honor prize for first v«ar
In the fields, phntino
x"^ Spring so work
He added that it would probably b
■ barred by legislation from voting- in
Engineering and Roy Saito
of cabbages
nave
.fust oeen completed. Field
s^a3"L^b next Summer, he three weeks before the check-up i
j
the
feaera]
election,
Japanese
Canawa., awarded a scholarship in fir-t
। dian names have appeared on the fed tomatoes have flowered and it is ex■‘
• completed.
year Agriculture.
pected that tl
eral voting lists.
be ready to b
picked in Augus
tee in
011 in
Bridge River Evacuees to be Evicted
Xp:
wV*«
J
federal Elections
Page 2
Page 2
tneie v. as no assurance that the>
houIq not oe asked to move again
P. O. Drawer A
Kaslo, B. C.
An Independent Weekly Organ Published
as a Medium of
Expression Among the People of Japanese
Origin in Canada.
Tom Shoyania
Kasey Oyama
Takaichi Emezuki
Kates: 40c per Month
Publisher
Editor
Japanese Section Editor
S2.00 for Six .Months in Advance
the registration of persons of Japanese ancestry
F«"ei£,ntf r^^
to -Japan is nearing completion
C., and a movement is underway to segregate per
sons lequestmg repatriation in certain centres, and per
sons not requesting repatriation in other centres 1
It Jias been estimated tint 70% of tha population in
T
”l r "Sl"°' Ce"trCS have Slgnc(l for repatriation, and
rt^ H 'gUrC 15 “Tech;d to ™» as high as 10.000 (incudmg Japanese nationals, naturalized persons of Japa
nese ancestry, and Canadian.),,,,.,, T......Lw
l‘l
M’°uld mean that out of a total of
ooo per
r
« Canada- 10.000 or mT
I van 43/o, have chosen' to return to bomb-devastated
prt'ofttfelOMi'"111" significant fact is that a large'
Stktffr I l
«f «K«e persons who have
ai^er the war. Furthermore, there
v as no assurance that the present
restrictions on their purchase or
lease of r^ni
lifted. The last mentioned point is
especially important because these
people, constantly subject to race
discrimination, have alwavs s
a tendency' to seek shelter from
economic insecuritv through the
purchase
or through
ownership of small businesses.
A further factor which may have
influenced them to sign the forms
ivas a wide spread belief, based
largely on wishful thinking, that
this registration was a wartime
measure, and that decisions made
could be annulled after the hostili
ties cease.
It appears, therefore, that the
effect of the repatriation survey
H—s not been to determine the
section of the persons of Japanese
origin in B. C. who, for various
reasons, were not prepared to ac
cept the alternative to signing the
repatriation forms.
A Challenging Problem
(The Winnipeg Free Press)
Canada is
In answer to a letter
eyes wide open to the probable c
sequences of our choice.
Aly Dear Air. Pickersgil.:
Are we not afraid of the futu
Though we have not, at anv
the ■'‘future"’ yon mention in yo
time, made any application for re
letrer? Yes
sometimes we 31’6
moval to Japan now or after the
afraid. When there are children
war, nevertheless, we received,
depending on us, there is fear. Bu;
through the mails, a letter from
char xear does not lessen cur love
you accompanied by a notice from
for our country. Perhaps because
the Department of Labor concernof that very fear, and because we
oluntary
“repatriation
to
are dispossessed and fenced in we
Japan.” The last paragraph on
cling to our last reality, our native
your letter reads:
Canada1. Perhaps because events
“This assured assistance from
have made our choice conspicuous,
the government, as out-lined in
and because you have never been
the notice, will mean to many who
asked to choose, our claim to Can
desire repatriation, relief from un
ada has a deeper, more undernecessary anxiety and it will allows
standing love of country than
them to plan for their future, and
yours.
that of their children, along eco
In your letter you hold out hone
nomic, social and cultural lines
of material benefits for those who
which they fear may be denied
choose Japan. Is there any consithem were they to remain in
ueiation or bargaining for mater
Canada.”
ial benefits in one’s loyalty to a
A very revealing paragraph th?t
country? In choosing Canady we
is another drop in the depth of our
take the evil with the goo-d, and in
disillusion.
taking the good we share the res
We do not ask why you should
ponsibility to eradicate the evil. As
send such a letter to those who
long as there is left one minority
have not applied for “repatria
without full equality of the rights
tion.” Every effort and devious
and responsibilities of citizenship,
method tries to persuade us that
there is neither a just nor an equi
Canada- is no place for us, that we
table government. This is one of
would be better off in Japan.
the evils against which we strug
Temptation is thrust into lives al
gle, Hampered as we are by res
ready uncertain and fearful of the
trictions and prejudice.
future for which no definite hope,
^ y°ur letter is a not-so-subtle
only generalities, has come from
invitation to us to give up the
Ottawa; temptation to give up the
fight.
weary struggle for equality; temp
Our forces are pitiful and inade
tation to take the easier way out
quate, and we may be fools to keep
of a seemingly hopeless situation.
on fighting, but what kind of Cana
Me chose Canada long before
dians would we be if we succumbed
you ever thought to ask us to
now ?
choose. We chose Canada then, and
^r' and Airs. E. Kitagawa
ve choose Canada now, with our
loronto, Ont.
One of the challenging problems
of our civilization is that overcomlng racial distinctions and anti
pathies. In Chicago there is a
Council Against Racial and Reli
feniifeik
to Japan’ TG delude
gious Discrimination, which ac
fan Is -i "ore anade deshtute through evacuation,
cording to the Chicago Sun, has
done
an excellent year’s work to
sick ran
, earning power, and faiililies
families with
ward
extending unity and expos
tn»S Vd " ho tor these reasons have hesitated
ing
hatred
and hate-mongers. Ip
x - considei eastern resettlemen
t
resettlement.
recent months the organization
presented testimony before eight
policy-making commissions, in Chi
^ntd l,"ltal SHirs- ""b- WOO outitofis aestimated
total of
cago, Springfield and Washington,
inf ’r '’T’"8 °* Ja|M"Cst’ ancestry have expressed their
accomplished a considerable edu
intention of returning to •Tapan.
cational and research job and
worked vigorously for state and
Tn other words, more than 43 GA
t
national fair employment practice
Tt'1 fOT'repatriation »seZ
legislation.
Th speaks out with candor
I wish the skies would always
against
anti-Semitism and discrito her shoulders. Her twinkling
many requested repatriation in Canada?
stay
like this, bright and clear.”
initiations aimed at Negroes. Nisei
of her nose was thin and straight
Indeed, it was a grand day. The
and
other
minority
groups,
”
the
— truly aristocratic — and her
aim is Simpm. in Canada, the majority
brilliant July sun wavered over the
Sun says. “Its activities are those
of those who
carriage
too. I, “browned to a
^ 1he W^riation forms do not wish
hills v.nd mountains above us, and
of democracy protecting itself.”
crisp
”
practically,
had thrown
glinted on the narrow ribbon wind
'
-Y
SI
^
ne(1
for
repatriation
because
Racial dislikes and discrimina
myself
on
the
cool
patch
of grass,
thev "me not prepared to accept the “alternative- to
ing through the gorge far below
tion are prevalent in the United
with
my
chin
cupped
in
mv
hands,
us. The country-side looked flatten
Sta.es, but they are strong enough
looking
out
to
the
sea.
ed out, the trees stunted, the onein Canada, ami the only way in
I. mean both literally and fig
What then was that “alternative?
log “bridge” over the river which
which they may be overcome is
uratively,
” she continued, “but
alternafive - as understood at the time of the
we crossed looked like a match
through the activity of organiza
particularly
figuratively.”
:>n. was
stick. The air was golden and lazy,
tions like that formed in Chicago.
that
This
was
the summer of 1941.
but not absolutely silent. The
sign the forms would' more
These may be able, in time, to
The
situation
in the Orient was
sharp, staccato winging of the
secuie lesults by driving’ home the
coming to a head. We felt the
grasshoppers and an occasional
fact 'ihht racial discrimination is
bate. 1 hey were told that pers dus working on
clouds were gathering fast in that
song of a bird deep among the
entirely
contrary
to
our
ideals
of
direction
too. A cloudburst was im
mission fuel projects, in the offices, in the
trees broke the silence.
justice and of regard for human
pending. Would it burst? SupposWe had just finished lunch. The
in the hospitals, and in other
^'s cannot keep to those
irtments of
1M^ ''. ’ ’ ^u^ c°uld it be possible ?
Chief and his second son, Tom,
ideals and also retain prejudice
employment would be cut oft' th c payroll as
“Whatever happens, let’s prewere ■hmiclmd over a log, silent,
and distinctions against people of
seive our beautiful friendship. You
lHnaccmenrs could be toundj (from those persons
their large eyes, warm and friendother races. A clear choice must be
^ Isavin° us once again soon.
resting repatriation). They were tolT that they would
Y
upon the hazV blue patch
made, and the object of an organ
Will you come back again? Sup
o Johnston . Straits ten miles be
ized movement would be to influ
1,
-Y lH'rmitte(I lo seek other employment in B. C„ and
posing
that our paths might diver
yond. Lorraine ,our plant fore
ence an increasing number of peo
that it unemployed, they would not be eligible for mainge,
let
’
s
mak
pact. Let’s always
man’s daughter, blond, ponk and in
ple to make the right choice.
remember
our relationship, our
tenanee al owanees. This meant simplv that those who did
places painfully red, was’ curled up
love for each other, Wherever
in a shade, her head cradled: in her
not sign the repatriation forms were to be deprived of
Although Brazil declared war on
future
may take us, let return to
arms, sound asleep. The long hike
Japan last week it’s unlikely that
then means of sustenance if they remained in B. C.
Campbell
River on Ji. ■ 1. WhO,
up the Island Range from the
theie will be any change in the re
nine years from now
forms1
yeaSGGs for signing the repatriation
coast, ten miles and over of track
public’s treatment of its 300,000
sible, for a trvst. All right?”
less
brambles,
dust
and
sun,
but
residents of Japanese ancestry.
ra h,
FT T
' in Or*r that
“''M
I agreed.
with refreshing springs here and
Brazil
took measures against Jap
re main n, 1>. C and be allowed to work there: and seeond
That
was my last holidays up
there trickling from dank, rockv
anese aliens equal to those im
the
coast
prior to the war and
sides,
1
—
3
t
—
in t le case ol families requiring assistance, in order that
had fatigued her. And the
posed on German and Italian na
subsequent
evacuation. Somehow
lunch had been satiating.
tionals at the beginning of the
nVai1Ce WOllId be ^tinned and the
The soft murmur of handsome,
en we felt that we may not see
wan These Japanese aliens need
_ mih be a loved to remain in the "ghost” towns where
each other again for a long, long
dark-haired Herman, first son of
special permits for travel and
m%And So we made the Pact
t-ieir immediate future at least would be secure.
he Chief,~ and his fiancee, a beauareas with a large concentration
Today, we had blackberry jam,
. ul and fair Swedish girl, Hillive.
of .Japanese are guarded . . . It’s
/
^aiding the second reason, if now appears that
-t
ostalgic
memories of nearly four
reached us from their sanctuary a
estimated that nearly 200,000* per
mmlms who have not requested repatriation and who are
few trees beyond us. And deep in
years ago flooded back to me in
sons of Japanese ancestry live in
^aves. I remembered the time the
the
woods
somewhere
a
bird
called
burtiX-^
y-inmaintained in one centre,
Sao Paulo province. Brazilian cit
Indian Chief and his familv had
to its mate.
izens of. Japanese ancestry are
it the time of the remstaken my friend and me on an aliM e hart chosen a spot on a pro
seiwing in the republic’s "armed
tuition.
w black-berry picking hike on
montory
overlooking
the
valley
far
forces.
below us. A pine tree, tail and
ancouxer Island to his favorite
or tlie desi
pa.ch. I remembered Edna. I re
stately, growing from the very
Readers Across
membered the promise we made.
edge, offered a cool shade. Prinn fiont of me now is an article
pointed out in
Canada Say . .
P°?\a newspaper some week ; Old.
le<meo ner graceful, supple figure
It hit me hard between the eves
ogams, the trunk. She was golden
Edkor. The New Canadian . .
tor a minute. Edna’s uncle
brown. Amber. Her glossv chocoaie uoing a fine job. Keen
ASSU, IS at the head of
co-operation with the Canadian government”" ' '
jate-Drown hair rippled abundantly
it up. There are plenty of us bat
Japanese move me:
among me
There were many reasons. Sonu though real enough
ting tor you ail. however discourcoast fisherman.
up tr
rgea y ou may tell sometimes.
At noma e,Hounded, such as fear of the unknown country
How doe
i^iuugn tne vear
Chief
Gretta Haworth
man
?
Edna
?
Ocean Falls. B. C.
G. H. Hamasaki
ar is being
Toronto. Ont.
Lives are
given. For
tin cause
Editor. The New Canadian
Editor,
• • •. ior certain ideak
Once a week
an . . .
Peace
jor "justice .
.
• . . . . ±
^ew Cana^or security.
After all
Wok forward to
other baud, howet
hen some
can
racism
and
pettiness I
a number
a
boring
recause it give;
erhaus. if
ot
led reasons. There
Place in postwar Canada?
you spread the butter
1 kiiOj, iknT thev rsTicric
from the fret
hi ore evenly . .
or one. who u
I
know
tha
d.
coined in cert
cent res. and once in the
B. C. before
Brantford, Ont.
use I have fai
still.
3
3 '
§ :
3
8 /
B i
t:
tneie v. as no assurance that the>
houIq not oe asked to move again
P. O. Drawer A
Kaslo, B. C.
An Independent Weekly Organ Published
as a Medium of
Expression Among the People of Japanese
Origin in Canada.
Tom Shoyania
Kasey Oyama
Takaichi Emezuki
Kates: 40c per Month
Publisher
Editor
Japanese Section Editor
S2.00 for Six .Months in Advance
the registration of persons of Japanese ancestry
F«"ei£,ntf r^^
to -Japan is nearing completion
C., and a movement is underway to segregate per
sons lequestmg repatriation in certain centres, and per
sons not requesting repatriation in other centres 1
It Jias been estimated tint 70% of tha population in
T
”l r "Sl"°' Ce"trCS have Slgnc(l for repatriation, and
rt^ H 'gUrC 15 “Tech;d to ™» as high as 10.000 (incudmg Japanese nationals, naturalized persons of Japa
nese ancestry, and Canadian.),,,,.,, T......Lw
l‘l
M’°uld mean that out of a total of
ooo per
r
« Canada- 10.000 or mT
I van 43/o, have chosen' to return to bomb-devastated
prt'ofttfelOMi'"111" significant fact is that a large'
Stktffr I l
«f «K«e persons who have
ai^er the war. Furthermore, there
v as no assurance that the present
restrictions on their purchase or
lease of r^ni
lifted. The last mentioned point is
especially important because these
people, constantly subject to race
discrimination, have alwavs s
a tendency' to seek shelter from
economic insecuritv through the
purchase
or through
ownership of small businesses.
A further factor which may have
influenced them to sign the forms
ivas a wide spread belief, based
largely on wishful thinking, that
this registration was a wartime
measure, and that decisions made
could be annulled after the hostili
ties cease.
It appears, therefore, that the
effect of the repatriation survey
H—s not been to determine the
section of the persons of Japanese
origin in B. C. who, for various
reasons, were not prepared to ac
cept the alternative to signing the
repatriation forms.
A Challenging Problem
(The Winnipeg Free Press)
Canada is
In answer to a letter
eyes wide open to the probable c
sequences of our choice.
Aly Dear Air. Pickersgil.:
Are we not afraid of the futu
Though we have not, at anv
the ■'‘future"’ yon mention in yo
time, made any application for re
letrer? Yes
sometimes we 31’6
moval to Japan now or after the
afraid. When there are children
war, nevertheless, we received,
depending on us, there is fear. Bu;
through the mails, a letter from
char xear does not lessen cur love
you accompanied by a notice from
for our country. Perhaps because
the Department of Labor concernof that very fear, and because we
oluntary
“repatriation
to
are dispossessed and fenced in we
Japan.” The last paragraph on
cling to our last reality, our native
your letter reads:
Canada1. Perhaps because events
“This assured assistance from
have made our choice conspicuous,
the government, as out-lined in
and because you have never been
the notice, will mean to many who
asked to choose, our claim to Can
desire repatriation, relief from un
ada has a deeper, more undernecessary anxiety and it will allows
standing love of country than
them to plan for their future, and
yours.
that of their children, along eco
In your letter you hold out hone
nomic, social and cultural lines
of material benefits for those who
which they fear may be denied
choose Japan. Is there any consithem were they to remain in
ueiation or bargaining for mater
Canada.”
ial benefits in one’s loyalty to a
A very revealing paragraph th?t
country? In choosing Canady we
is another drop in the depth of our
take the evil with the goo-d, and in
disillusion.
taking the good we share the res
We do not ask why you should
ponsibility to eradicate the evil. As
send such a letter to those who
long as there is left one minority
have not applied for “repatria
without full equality of the rights
tion.” Every effort and devious
and responsibilities of citizenship,
method tries to persuade us that
there is neither a just nor an equi
Canada- is no place for us, that we
table government. This is one of
would be better off in Japan.
the evils against which we strug
Temptation is thrust into lives al
gle, Hampered as we are by res
ready uncertain and fearful of the
trictions and prejudice.
future for which no definite hope,
^ y°ur letter is a not-so-subtle
only generalities, has come from
invitation to us to give up the
Ottawa; temptation to give up the
fight.
weary struggle for equality; temp
Our forces are pitiful and inade
tation to take the easier way out
quate, and we may be fools to keep
of a seemingly hopeless situation.
on fighting, but what kind of Cana
Me chose Canada long before
dians would we be if we succumbed
you ever thought to ask us to
now ?
choose. We chose Canada then, and
^r' and Airs. E. Kitagawa
ve choose Canada now, with our
loronto, Ont.
One of the challenging problems
of our civilization is that overcomlng racial distinctions and anti
pathies. In Chicago there is a
Council Against Racial and Reli
feniifeik
to Japan’ TG delude
gious Discrimination, which ac
fan Is -i "ore anade deshtute through evacuation,
cording to the Chicago Sun, has
done
an excellent year’s work to
sick ran
, earning power, and faiililies
families with
ward
extending unity and expos
tn»S Vd " ho tor these reasons have hesitated
ing
hatred
and hate-mongers. Ip
x - considei eastern resettlemen
t
resettlement.
recent months the organization
presented testimony before eight
policy-making commissions, in Chi
^ntd l,"ltal SHirs- ""b- WOO outitofis aestimated
total of
cago, Springfield and Washington,
inf ’r '’T’"8 °* Ja|M"Cst’ ancestry have expressed their
accomplished a considerable edu
intention of returning to •Tapan.
cational and research job and
worked vigorously for state and
Tn other words, more than 43 GA
t
national fair employment practice
Tt'1 fOT'repatriation »seZ
legislation.
Th speaks out with candor
I wish the skies would always
against
anti-Semitism and discrito her shoulders. Her twinkling
many requested repatriation in Canada?
stay
like this, bright and clear.”
initiations aimed at Negroes. Nisei
of her nose was thin and straight
Indeed, it was a grand day. The
and
other
minority
groups,
”
the
— truly aristocratic — and her
aim is Simpm. in Canada, the majority
brilliant July sun wavered over the
Sun says. “Its activities are those
of those who
carriage
too. I, “browned to a
^ 1he W^riation forms do not wish
hills v.nd mountains above us, and
of democracy protecting itself.”
crisp
”
practically,
had thrown
glinted on the narrow ribbon wind
'
-Y
SI
^
ne(1
for
repatriation
because
Racial dislikes and discrimina
myself
on
the
cool
patch
of grass,
thev "me not prepared to accept the “alternative- to
ing through the gorge far below
tion are prevalent in the United
with
my
chin
cupped
in
mv
hands,
us. The country-side looked flatten
Sta.es, but they are strong enough
looking
out
to
the
sea.
ed out, the trees stunted, the onein Canada, ami the only way in
I. mean both literally and fig
What then was that “alternative?
log “bridge” over the river which
which they may be overcome is
uratively,
” she continued, “but
alternafive - as understood at the time of the
we crossed looked like a match
through the activity of organiza
particularly
figuratively.”
:>n. was
stick. The air was golden and lazy,
tions like that formed in Chicago.
that
This
was
the summer of 1941.
but not absolutely silent. The
sign the forms would' more
These may be able, in time, to
The
situation
in the Orient was
sharp, staccato winging of the
secuie lesults by driving’ home the
coming to a head. We felt the
grasshoppers and an occasional
fact 'ihht racial discrimination is
bate. 1 hey were told that pers dus working on
clouds were gathering fast in that
song of a bird deep among the
entirely
contrary
to
our
ideals
of
direction
too. A cloudburst was im
mission fuel projects, in the offices, in the
trees broke the silence.
justice and of regard for human
pending. Would it burst? SupposWe had just finished lunch. The
in the hospitals, and in other
^'s cannot keep to those
irtments of
1M^ ''. ’ ’ ^u^ c°uld it be possible ?
Chief and his second son, Tom,
ideals and also retain prejudice
employment would be cut oft' th c payroll as
“Whatever happens, let’s prewere ■hmiclmd over a log, silent,
and distinctions against people of
seive our beautiful friendship. You
lHnaccmenrs could be toundj (from those persons
their large eyes, warm and friendother races. A clear choice must be
^ Isavin° us once again soon.
resting repatriation). They were tolT that they would
Y
upon the hazV blue patch
made, and the object of an organ
Will you come back again? Sup
o Johnston . Straits ten miles be
ized movement would be to influ
1,
-Y lH'rmitte(I lo seek other employment in B. C„ and
posing
that our paths might diver
yond. Lorraine ,our plant fore
ence an increasing number of peo
that it unemployed, they would not be eligible for mainge,
let
’
s
mak
pact. Let’s always
man’s daughter, blond, ponk and in
ple to make the right choice.
remember
our relationship, our
tenanee al owanees. This meant simplv that those who did
places painfully red, was’ curled up
love for each other, Wherever
in a shade, her head cradled: in her
not sign the repatriation forms were to be deprived of
Although Brazil declared war on
future
may take us, let return to
arms, sound asleep. The long hike
Japan last week it’s unlikely that
then means of sustenance if they remained in B. C.
Campbell
River on Ji. ■ 1. WhO,
up the Island Range from the
theie will be any change in the re
nine years from now
forms1
yeaSGGs for signing the repatriation
coast, ten miles and over of track
public’s treatment of its 300,000
sible, for a trvst. All right?”
less
brambles,
dust
and
sun,
but
residents of Japanese ancestry.
ra h,
FT T
' in Or*r that
“''M
I agreed.
with refreshing springs here and
Brazil
took measures against Jap
re main n, 1>. C and be allowed to work there: and seeond
That
was my last holidays up
there trickling from dank, rockv
anese aliens equal to those im
the
coast
prior to the war and
sides,
1
—
3
t
—
in t le case ol families requiring assistance, in order that
had fatigued her. And the
posed on German and Italian na
subsequent
evacuation. Somehow
lunch had been satiating.
tionals at the beginning of the
nVai1Ce WOllId be ^tinned and the
The soft murmur of handsome,
en we felt that we may not see
wan These Japanese aliens need
_ mih be a loved to remain in the "ghost” towns where
each other again for a long, long
dark-haired Herman, first son of
special permits for travel and
m%And So we made the Pact
t-ieir immediate future at least would be secure.
he Chief,~ and his fiancee, a beauareas with a large concentration
Today, we had blackberry jam,
. ul and fair Swedish girl, Hillive.
of .Japanese are guarded . . . It’s
/
^aiding the second reason, if now appears that
-t
ostalgic
memories of nearly four
reached us from their sanctuary a
estimated that nearly 200,000* per
mmlms who have not requested repatriation and who are
few trees beyond us. And deep in
years ago flooded back to me in
sons of Japanese ancestry live in
^aves. I remembered the time the
the
woods
somewhere
a
bird
called
burtiX-^
y-inmaintained in one centre,
Sao Paulo province. Brazilian cit
Indian Chief and his familv had
to its mate.
izens of. Japanese ancestry are
it the time of the remstaken my friend and me on an aliM e hart chosen a spot on a pro
seiwing in the republic’s "armed
tuition.
w black-berry picking hike on
montory
overlooking
the
valley
far
forces.
below us. A pine tree, tail and
ancouxer Island to his favorite
or tlie desi
pa.ch. I remembered Edna. I re
stately, growing from the very
Readers Across
membered the promise we made.
edge, offered a cool shade. Prinn fiont of me now is an article
pointed out in
Canada Say . .
P°?\a newspaper some week ; Old.
le<meo ner graceful, supple figure
It hit me hard between the eves
ogams, the trunk. She was golden
Edkor. The New Canadian . .
tor a minute. Edna’s uncle
brown. Amber. Her glossv chocoaie uoing a fine job. Keen
ASSU, IS at the head of
co-operation with the Canadian government”" ' '
jate-Drown hair rippled abundantly
it up. There are plenty of us bat
Japanese move me:
among me
There were many reasons. Sonu though real enough
ting tor you ail. however discourcoast fisherman.
up tr
rgea y ou may tell sometimes.
At noma e,Hounded, such as fear of the unknown country
How doe
i^iuugn tne vear
Chief
Gretta Haworth
man
?
Edna
?
Ocean Falls. B. C.
G. H. Hamasaki
ar is being
Toronto. Ont.
Lives are
given. For
tin cause
Editor. The New Canadian
Editor,
• • •. ior certain ideak
Once a week
an . . .
Peace
jor "justice .
.
• . . . . ±
^ew Cana^or security.
After all
Wok forward to
other baud, howet
hen some
can
racism
and
pettiness I
a number
a
boring
recause it give;
erhaus. if
ot
led reasons. There
Place in postwar Canada?
you spread the butter
1 kiiOj, iknT thev rsTicric
from the fret
hi ore evenly . .
or one. who u
I
know
tha
d.
coined in cert
cent res. and once in the
B. C. before
Brantford, Ont.
use I have fai
still.
3
3 '
§ :
3
8 /
B i
t:
Page 3
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Page 7
June 23, 1945
H’ rniHi
By R. H. MARKHAM
An encouraging current develop
gerly lookin
onward to the end
ment is the beginning of fairer
of rhe war ana nis retu
Treatment for Americans of Japachurch horn - It was an
nese origin.. even
■he United
moving 1lett■er such as manv
by 1
Stares is devoting ail its energies
from-lme oriier in loneline
ana
to the defeat of the Japanese
A new chapter was written to
danger h;
written. It wa: sent
state.
mon history today. Toearly- in April and bore the
day, rhe machinerv of the 'A c
Before going to St. Louis. I visi
ox hivate Haruo Kawamoto.
Security
ted Detroit and happened to be
m ssi on
Began
to
A few days later Private Kawa
By BOBO
Superman. One of Frank's catches
work
an
there over a week end. Sunday
first
step
toward
moto’s brother, also a soldier in
was
spectacular. He ran back deep
GP W L Pt
morning I wandered down Woodrepatriates from
Italy, wrote the pastor a shorter,
into
lett
field lor "Logger”
Kelowna
4 4 0 8
non-reptnates was begun
ward Avenue, on which many
simpler, starker note in which he
Inouye
’
s
long
smash, made a oneVernon
-1
Outside, the crowd has
churches are situated, and visited
said something like this: “I am behanded
stab,
tell
over, but came up
OK Centre
1
1
People have come clumping into
one of them. It was filled with
wildered and confused and don’t
with
the
ball.
Slv.ge
Kawahara gets
Summerland
4 0 4 0
the apartment, some doieiully
quiet, reverent men and women,
know what to say. Haruo was kill
the third star for his good hitting
shaking their heads . some quiet
On May 21 the luckle
Sumwell dressed and prosperous ap
ed yesterday in a terrible battle. I
of
three for five including a double
and pensive, other; chattering anti
merland crew travelled to Afernon
pearing as are most Americans at
don’t know why he went, for he
which drove in a: couple of runs.
a few wiping tears from their eves.
and were swamped by the terrific
the present time. On receiving an
was the best boy in our company.”
For
friends
have
left
this
cen
score of 26 to 8. Four Summermnd
order of service, I noticed with in
and S. Matsuba, M. Koga. Sum
As the pastor read this letter,
tre today. People who were consi
chuckers were unable to stop the
terest that it seemed to be dedi
merland—H. Furuya, Min Kita and
his
voice
broke
and
for
a
moment
dered suitable for relocation were
Vernon sluggers.
cated to a Japanese boy, or at
Min Kita, H. Furuya. Note: the
he could not speak. A large part of
moved to Kaslo.
Chuck Terada who took over he
least a boy with a Japanese name.
Summerland
s battery is queer but
the. congregation was in tears.
I hurried home from the bus
pitching chores from R. Mende in
When time came for the sermon,
correct.
Umpires:
N. “Poki” Aoki,
PL.inly, they deeply loved their
stop where all the people were saythe fourth inning for Vernon,
the preacher began by reading let
behind
the
plate
and
Tom Shimizu.
fellow Christian and their fellow
hig g'oodoyes with my vision blur
struck out 11 opponents and slug
ters from two church members in
American, even though some of
red with a few unshed tears before
ged out three hits, two' of which
the armed forces. Both missives
The Kelowna Nisei Ball Club
them probably had relatives on
the contingent of five families left.
were triples, at six trips to the
had come from Italy. The writer
travelled
to Vernon on June 10 and
Okinawa. They pictured the distant
Because there were only 21 people
plate.
of the first told of his joy on think
won
the
game
by default as the
battle field and with mud-covered
and not 120 as expected, they left
Starry Vernon second sacker, M.
ing about the church, of his grati
Vernon
Club
was
unable to secure
battle field and with reverent de
on two passenger cars.
Kawaguchi hit three for five ami
tude for letters he had received
a playing field.
votion envisaged Private Kawa
picked up three assists without an
*
*
♦
It is rumoured that the segre
and of the help that had come to
error.
Star
for
moto
offering
the
supreme
sacri
the
losers
was
gation program is expected to be
come to him from Christian faith
On the same date, with the lea
speedy Alf Kit; who hit a double
fice for America. I was glad cir
completed by the end of August
and fellowship.
gue leading Kelowna team looking
which he stretched into a home
this year. This program is not
cumstances had brought me to
on, the Hinodes from Summerland
Due to that strength, the young
run. He played a steady game in
without complications.
dropped another tough game to
that First Baptist Church and its
soldier said, he had been able to
the hot corner.
There has been a case where a
Okanagan Centre at the latter’s
resist the many temptations with
demonstration of noble American
Batteries: Vernon—R. Mende, C.
family
split
has
occurred.
Both
the
Mountain-View
grounds. The score
which he was surrounded. He was
unity.
Terada and C. Terada, S. Miike.
parents and an only daughter have
was 11-6.
Summerland — H. Furuya, Chu
expressed the desire to remain in
Americans Are Vigorously Defending Minorities
Min Kita made the most hits in
Tada,
R. Kuroda, K. Furuya and
Canada. The daughter has received
the
game batting three for five
M. Kita, H. Furuya. Umpires:
Such fellowship between Japa
notice to leave for Kaslo. The par
of the churches from which most
and
knocking- home three of Hino
Kiyoshi Suga and Toshi Yamaoka.
nese American and Americans of
ents are to be sent to New Den
de’s six runs. OK’s speedy firstof them come, the problem of
ver.
other origins is steadily growing
cruel discrimination against Jape..*sacker, A. Hickichi, a local boy*,
The Okanagan
Centre team
There has
throughout America, in spite of
been a case
nese Americans is on the way to
played
a nifty game. Another
which made a belated entry into
some cases of brutal intolerance.
where an old couple who were sent
home
town
boy who starred in the
a definite solution. This, in its nar
the league took a 21-1 shellacking
At any ratey it is growing in most
out from Kaslo are returning to
rower aspects, is one of our easi
game
was
Matt
Kobayashi of OK
in their debut played against Ver
areas east of the Mississippi River.
that centre after being given a
Centre,
who
took
over on the
est problems, because it concerns a
non on June 3.
notice
to
relocate
or
transfer
back
Our relations with fellow citizens
mound
after
A.
’
Mende
lost control.
very limited number of people
of Japanese origin bring into
to
the
Kootenay
ghosttown.
They
In
the
six
innings
of
relief
pitchagaiinst whom most Americans are
On the same date the Kelowna
have
decided
to
move
dramatic clarity two mighty forces
bro
k
to
hig,
Matt
struck
out
10
Hinodeites.
not prejudiced. At the beginning
team visited Summerland’s famous
Kaslo. Both are old agi pension
working among Americans, one
" Batteries: OK Centre— A. Menof the war there were in the Uni
Crescemt Beach baseball grounds
cases.
provoking tensions and the other
de, M. Kobayashi and Tommy
ted States about 130,000 Japanese
and came home victorious with a
It is also understood that
promoting hagmony.
Sawayama. Summerland — Min
or Americans of Japanese origin.
neat
10-4 win. Except for one internee
families
will
be
left
alone
Kita, H. Furuya and H. Furuya,
Never, it seems to me, were so
Of the 110,000 on the West Coast,
ning the fourth—the game was
for the time being until such time
Min
Kita.
many Americans so vigorously en
all were removed.
very close.
that
most
of
the
segregation
of
Following this game, the Hinode
gaged in defending minorities. I am
Many Americans have challeng
KOGA WIFFS FOURTEEN
those who have signed repatriation
team hopped down to Kelowna to
not saying they all operate wisely.
ed the justice and even the wisdom
Suey Koga pitched a brilliant
papers have been completed.
get mixed up in a fastball game
Frequently they stir up more
of that drastic measure. Two
game, striking out 14 batters and
with
the Kelowna Girl Blondes
hatred than they allay, and pro
I am writing this in Tashme. We
thirds of the “Japanese” who were
had the game well in hand all the
team.
The Blues (Bobo’s team)
voke more enmity than they disdid not come here through choice.
torn from their homes and put in
way through.
won
over
the Reds 10-8. The Reds
sipfite. A few of them are so fur
I am here because our family was
detention camps were AmericanSummerland’s fleet-footed out
v
ere
coached
by Moto Kawahara.
iously intolerant against tolerance
marked as one of the first group
born American citizens, guLty of
fielder Frank Kuroda made 6 difiThe
no-hit
pitching
effort by Clara
that they increase intolerance.
to be shipped here from Kaslo in
no offense of any kind. And not
cult catches with the ease of
Bow won the game for the Blues.
However, such bellicose pacifiers
the initial move to close that cen
only were they herded into uncom
tre.
Vve
protested
that
we
wished
are the exception ami one is
fortable enclosures but most of
Raymond Y.M.B.A. Overwhelm Coaldale Cubs 19—8
to relocate to the east but it was
pleased to find in every part of
them lost most of their property.
useless. So now I am here in Ta
the United States large numbers
One cannot deny that fellow
Raymond A. C.s Nose Out Coaldale Busseis 2—1
shme, seeing people going back to
of earnest, active gracious peace
Americans of Japanese descent
makers.
Kaslo, the centre which they said
were subjected to bitter humiiiaIn scheduled games of the
the 5th inning on a timely bingle
was
closing.
As a result of their- activity and
tion and many hardships.
Southern Alberta Baseball League,
bV slugging, first baseman, big
It is three months now since I
Southern
Division,
Coaldale
Bus
Push
Matsumiya. Raymond scored
War Measures Necessitated Evacuation
arrived here. The people have ail
their
lone
run in the 7th frame.
seis won a close 2—1 contest over
been nice to us. We have taken
However, such a measure was
In Raymond, the Raymond Y.M.
cans by the millions to distant
the Raymond A. C. in Coaldale,
part in all social and sports acti
B.A.
overwhelmed the Coaldale
understandable. Pearl Harbor was
lands. The moving of 110,000 Japwhile at Raymond the Raymond
vities that are held here from time
Cubs,
scoring
19 runs off 3 Coal
a horribly treacherous sneak at
anese and Japanese Americans
Y.M.B.A. defeated Coaldale Cubs
to time. But we are waiting for
dale
hurlers.
The
hapless Coaldale
tack. As a result of it, United
was a similar coercive war mea19—8.
the day when we will be able to
chuckers
were
touched
for 21 hits.
States Pacific fleet was largely in
sure which at the time seemed es
pack up and leave for the east. A
The best game of the season was
Raymond
scored
9
of
their
runs in
capacitated and the United States
sential.
place has been found for us in the
witnessed as the Coaldale Busseis
the
“
lucky
”
7th.
Cubs
scored
8
was placed in grave danger. An
In view of these facts, I am not
east but we have yet to receive
nosed out the Raymond A. C. in
runs
off
10
hits.
attempt by Japan to land forces on
inclined to reproach the United
our release from this centre.
an exciting contest which saw T.
the West Coast was by no means
States Army for removing JapaMeanwhile, we can only wait and
Hori of Coaldale and Y. Tamura
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unthinkable. It is not fair or gal
ese from a very vital area at an
hope.........
of Raymond yield only 4 hits each.
lant to reproach Americans there,
THE NEW CANADIAN
extremely critical time. Now, how
Coaldale scored both their runs in
if some of them allowed their ima
ever, the situation has entirely
was an enemy and so was Hun
ginations to conjure up cruel Jap
changed, due to three vital factors.
gary, but not Americans of Slovak
anese troops landing in their comOne is that all our shores are * and Hungarian origin; they are the
€
THE NEW CANADIAN
munities and joining up with local
heavily defended. Even more im
most useful citizens.
e
Japanese in acts of mass cruelty.
KASLO, B. C.
portant, most Japanese in Ameri
Likewise, even though at war
£
A few Japanese in the United
€
ca and in Hawaii have proved com
with Japan, the United States is
Please
find
enclosed
$
e
for which
States sympathized with America’s
pletely loyal. Thirdly, Americans
not at war with Americans of Jap
0
€
•
Renew
my
subscription
to
The
New
Canadian
enemy. And it is. not a myth that
of Japanese origin have been and
anese descent. The Japanese state,
€
armies are cruel in war or that
are exceedingly brave soldiers in
Army and Navy are causing Allies
® Enter my subscription to The New Canadian
the Japanese have been among the
the United States Army. Most
terrible suffering and bereavement,
(Please check.)
cruelest. It is also true that in war
Japanese Americans have proven
but that does not reflect upon fela
commander
responsible for
themselves to be very good Ameri
low citizens of Japanese origin.
national safety is wise, at crucial
® I ill o ? pf pH......... [j
Practically all of them
cans. They have made a record of
just as
Wnu
moments, to take the risk of going
loyal as the rest of the United
which all American should be
too far, rather than not far
proud. It is a proof of the power
.States citizens and have proved it.
enough. The
'
To distrust or humiliate a fellow
of American democracy.
fate of 140,000,000
outAmerican with yellow skin is not
It should be remem oere
Americani citizens tends
M)
Americans of Japanese origin
an indication of robust -American
veigh the convenience or rights of
verv
much
like
other
A
meric
ism,
but
just
the
opposite.
It
shows
110,000.
in
one has forgotten the true mean
It also deserves to be pointed
(«ft)t)
ing of Americanism. If one allows
United States is a minority
out and emphasized that the V> ar
Address _
i Anglo-Saxons are a- minor
to hate
Department, on the whole, has
Millions of men in the armeslanted eyes because r ew own son
taken a lenient attitude toward the
suffered on Two Ji
;es
a
that one is
internees, has provided them with
giving
wa-to
az
:
tra
:'
d
sufficient food and modest tunas,
Io
America
and has heartilv co-operated in
3
loving
one’
a:
their relocation. V
Former Address
Americans
memie^; they
ere
<hat in this war
origin. Italy, too,
are
friend
eat Japanese
me
with full right,
but not Amerian
merely being
was
ens
rarms and homes oi
Subscription Rate: 40c per month
of
Italian
to
neighbors.
can:
or war purpose
S2for
six months, S4 per year in advance
Slovakia
and are gooa
Christian Science Monitor
them to move, and h
GGEEGB>egee€>g8iSE3figeggg©®®*
Kelowna Leads in OK League
H’ rniHi
By R. H. MARKHAM
An encouraging current develop
gerly lookin
onward to the end
ment is the beginning of fairer
of rhe war ana nis retu
Treatment for Americans of Japachurch horn - It was an
nese origin.. even
■he United
moving 1lett■er such as manv
by 1
Stares is devoting ail its energies
from-lme oriier in loneline
ana
to the defeat of the Japanese
A new chapter was written to
danger h;
written. It wa: sent
state.
mon history today. Toearly- in April and bore the
day, rhe machinerv of the 'A c
Before going to St. Louis. I visi
ox hivate Haruo Kawamoto.
Security
ted Detroit and happened to be
m ssi on
Began
to
A few days later Private Kawa
By BOBO
Superman. One of Frank's catches
work
an
there over a week end. Sunday
first
step
toward
moto’s brother, also a soldier in
was
spectacular. He ran back deep
GP W L Pt
morning I wandered down Woodrepatriates from
Italy, wrote the pastor a shorter,
into
lett
field lor "Logger”
Kelowna
4 4 0 8
non-reptnates was begun
ward Avenue, on which many
simpler, starker note in which he
Inouye
’
s
long
smash, made a oneVernon
-1
Outside, the crowd has
churches are situated, and visited
said something like this: “I am behanded
stab,
tell
over, but came up
OK Centre
1
1
People have come clumping into
one of them. It was filled with
wildered and confused and don’t
with
the
ball.
Slv.ge
Kawahara gets
Summerland
4 0 4 0
the apartment, some doieiully
quiet, reverent men and women,
know what to say. Haruo was kill
the third star for his good hitting
shaking their heads . some quiet
On May 21 the luckle
Sumwell dressed and prosperous ap
ed yesterday in a terrible battle. I
of
three for five including a double
and pensive, other; chattering anti
merland crew travelled to Afernon
pearing as are most Americans at
don’t know why he went, for he
which drove in a: couple of runs.
a few wiping tears from their eves.
and were swamped by the terrific
the present time. On receiving an
was the best boy in our company.”
For
friends
have
left
this
cen
score of 26 to 8. Four Summermnd
order of service, I noticed with in
and S. Matsuba, M. Koga. Sum
As the pastor read this letter,
tre today. People who were consi
chuckers were unable to stop the
terest that it seemed to be dedi
merland—H. Furuya, Min Kita and
his
voice
broke
and
for
a
moment
dered suitable for relocation were
Vernon sluggers.
cated to a Japanese boy, or at
Min Kita, H. Furuya. Note: the
he could not speak. A large part of
moved to Kaslo.
Chuck Terada who took over he
least a boy with a Japanese name.
Summerland
s battery is queer but
the. congregation was in tears.
I hurried home from the bus
pitching chores from R. Mende in
When time came for the sermon,
correct.
Umpires:
N. “Poki” Aoki,
PL.inly, they deeply loved their
stop where all the people were saythe fourth inning for Vernon,
the preacher began by reading let
behind
the
plate
and
Tom Shimizu.
fellow Christian and their fellow
hig g'oodoyes with my vision blur
struck out 11 opponents and slug
ters from two church members in
American, even though some of
red with a few unshed tears before
ged out three hits, two' of which
the armed forces. Both missives
The Kelowna Nisei Ball Club
them probably had relatives on
the contingent of five families left.
were triples, at six trips to the
had come from Italy. The writer
travelled
to Vernon on June 10 and
Okinawa. They pictured the distant
Because there were only 21 people
plate.
of the first told of his joy on think
won
the
game
by default as the
battle field and with mud-covered
and not 120 as expected, they left
Starry Vernon second sacker, M.
ing about the church, of his grati
Vernon
Club
was
unable to secure
battle field and with reverent de
on two passenger cars.
Kawaguchi hit three for five ami
tude for letters he had received
a playing field.
votion envisaged Private Kawa
picked up three assists without an
*
*
♦
It is rumoured that the segre
and of the help that had come to
error.
Star
for
moto
offering
the
supreme
sacri
the
losers
was
gation program is expected to be
come to him from Christian faith
On the same date, with the lea
speedy Alf Kit; who hit a double
fice for America. I was glad cir
completed by the end of August
and fellowship.
gue leading Kelowna team looking
which he stretched into a home
this year. This program is not
cumstances had brought me to
on, the Hinodes from Summerland
Due to that strength, the young
run. He played a steady game in
without complications.
dropped another tough game to
that First Baptist Church and its
soldier said, he had been able to
the hot corner.
There has been a case where a
Okanagan Centre at the latter’s
resist the many temptations with
demonstration of noble American
Batteries: Vernon—R. Mende, C.
family
split
has
occurred.
Both
the
Mountain-View
grounds. The score
which he was surrounded. He was
unity.
Terada and C. Terada, S. Miike.
parents and an only daughter have
was 11-6.
Summerland — H. Furuya, Chu
expressed the desire to remain in
Americans Are Vigorously Defending Minorities
Min Kita made the most hits in
Tada,
R. Kuroda, K. Furuya and
Canada. The daughter has received
the
game batting three for five
M. Kita, H. Furuya. Umpires:
Such fellowship between Japa
notice to leave for Kaslo. The par
of the churches from which most
and
knocking- home three of Hino
Kiyoshi Suga and Toshi Yamaoka.
nese American and Americans of
ents are to be sent to New Den
de’s six runs. OK’s speedy firstof them come, the problem of
ver.
other origins is steadily growing
cruel discrimination against Jape..*sacker, A. Hickichi, a local boy*,
The Okanagan
Centre team
There has
throughout America, in spite of
been a case
nese Americans is on the way to
played
a nifty game. Another
which made a belated entry into
some cases of brutal intolerance.
where an old couple who were sent
home
town
boy who starred in the
a definite solution. This, in its nar
the league took a 21-1 shellacking
At any ratey it is growing in most
out from Kaslo are returning to
rower aspects, is one of our easi
game
was
Matt
Kobayashi of OK
in their debut played against Ver
areas east of the Mississippi River.
that centre after being given a
Centre,
who
took
over on the
est problems, because it concerns a
non on June 3.
notice
to
relocate
or
transfer
back
Our relations with fellow citizens
mound
after
A.
’
Mende
lost control.
very limited number of people
of Japanese origin bring into
to
the
Kootenay
ghosttown.
They
In
the
six
innings
of
relief
pitchagaiinst whom most Americans are
On the same date the Kelowna
have
decided
to
move
dramatic clarity two mighty forces
bro
k
to
hig,
Matt
struck
out
10
Hinodeites.
not prejudiced. At the beginning
team visited Summerland’s famous
Kaslo. Both are old agi pension
working among Americans, one
" Batteries: OK Centre— A. Menof the war there were in the Uni
Crescemt Beach baseball grounds
cases.
provoking tensions and the other
de, M. Kobayashi and Tommy
ted States about 130,000 Japanese
and came home victorious with a
It is also understood that
promoting hagmony.
Sawayama. Summerland — Min
or Americans of Japanese origin.
neat
10-4 win. Except for one internee
families
will
be
left
alone
Kita, H. Furuya and H. Furuya,
Never, it seems to me, were so
Of the 110,000 on the West Coast,
ning the fourth—the game was
for the time being until such time
Min
Kita.
many Americans so vigorously en
all were removed.
very close.
that
most
of
the
segregation
of
Following this game, the Hinode
gaged in defending minorities. I am
Many Americans have challeng
KOGA WIFFS FOURTEEN
those who have signed repatriation
team hopped down to Kelowna to
not saying they all operate wisely.
ed the justice and even the wisdom
Suey Koga pitched a brilliant
papers have been completed.
get mixed up in a fastball game
Frequently they stir up more
of that drastic measure. Two
game, striking out 14 batters and
with
the Kelowna Girl Blondes
hatred than they allay, and pro
I am writing this in Tashme. We
thirds of the “Japanese” who were
had the game well in hand all the
team.
The Blues (Bobo’s team)
voke more enmity than they disdid not come here through choice.
torn from their homes and put in
way through.
won
over
the Reds 10-8. The Reds
sipfite. A few of them are so fur
I am here because our family was
detention camps were AmericanSummerland’s fleet-footed out
v
ere
coached
by Moto Kawahara.
iously intolerant against tolerance
marked as one of the first group
born American citizens, guLty of
fielder Frank Kuroda made 6 difiThe
no-hit
pitching
effort by Clara
that they increase intolerance.
to be shipped here from Kaslo in
no offense of any kind. And not
cult catches with the ease of
Bow won the game for the Blues.
However, such bellicose pacifiers
the initial move to close that cen
only were they herded into uncom
tre.
Vve
protested
that
we
wished
are the exception ami one is
fortable enclosures but most of
Raymond Y.M.B.A. Overwhelm Coaldale Cubs 19—8
to relocate to the east but it was
pleased to find in every part of
them lost most of their property.
useless. So now I am here in Ta
the United States large numbers
One cannot deny that fellow
Raymond A. C.s Nose Out Coaldale Busseis 2—1
shme, seeing people going back to
of earnest, active gracious peace
Americans of Japanese descent
makers.
Kaslo, the centre which they said
were subjected to bitter humiiiaIn scheduled games of the
the 5th inning on a timely bingle
was
closing.
As a result of their- activity and
tion and many hardships.
Southern Alberta Baseball League,
bV slugging, first baseman, big
It is three months now since I
Southern
Division,
Coaldale
Bus
Push
Matsumiya. Raymond scored
War Measures Necessitated Evacuation
arrived here. The people have ail
their
lone
run in the 7th frame.
seis won a close 2—1 contest over
been nice to us. We have taken
However, such a measure was
In Raymond, the Raymond Y.M.
cans by the millions to distant
the Raymond A. C. in Coaldale,
part in all social and sports acti
B.A.
overwhelmed the Coaldale
understandable. Pearl Harbor was
lands. The moving of 110,000 Japwhile at Raymond the Raymond
vities that are held here from time
Cubs,
scoring
19 runs off 3 Coal
a horribly treacherous sneak at
anese and Japanese Americans
Y.M.B.A. defeated Coaldale Cubs
to time. But we are waiting for
dale
hurlers.
The
hapless Coaldale
tack. As a result of it, United
was a similar coercive war mea19—8.
the day when we will be able to
chuckers
were
touched
for 21 hits.
States Pacific fleet was largely in
sure which at the time seemed es
pack up and leave for the east. A
The best game of the season was
Raymond
scored
9
of
their
runs in
capacitated and the United States
sential.
place has been found for us in the
witnessed as the Coaldale Busseis
the
“
lucky
”
7th.
Cubs
scored
8
was placed in grave danger. An
In view of these facts, I am not
east but we have yet to receive
nosed out the Raymond A. C. in
runs
off
10
hits.
attempt by Japan to land forces on
inclined to reproach the United
our release from this centre.
an exciting contest which saw T.
the West Coast was by no means
States Army for removing JapaMeanwhile, we can only wait and
Hori of Coaldale and Y. Tamura
SUBSCRIBE NOW TO
unthinkable. It is not fair or gal
ese from a very vital area at an
hope.........
of Raymond yield only 4 hits each.
lant to reproach Americans there,
THE NEW CANADIAN
extremely critical time. Now, how
Coaldale scored both their runs in
if some of them allowed their ima
ever, the situation has entirely
was an enemy and so was Hun
ginations to conjure up cruel Jap
changed, due to three vital factors.
gary, but not Americans of Slovak
anese troops landing in their comOne is that all our shores are * and Hungarian origin; they are the
€
THE NEW CANADIAN
munities and joining up with local
heavily defended. Even more im
most useful citizens.
e
Japanese in acts of mass cruelty.
KASLO, B. C.
portant, most Japanese in Ameri
Likewise, even though at war
£
A few Japanese in the United
€
ca and in Hawaii have proved com
with Japan, the United States is
Please
find
enclosed
$
e
for which
States sympathized with America’s
pletely loyal. Thirdly, Americans
not at war with Americans of Jap
0
€
•
Renew
my
subscription
to
The
New
Canadian
enemy. And it is. not a myth that
of Japanese origin have been and
anese descent. The Japanese state,
€
armies are cruel in war or that
are exceedingly brave soldiers in
Army and Navy are causing Allies
® Enter my subscription to The New Canadian
the Japanese have been among the
the United States Army. Most
terrible suffering and bereavement,
(Please check.)
cruelest. It is also true that in war
Japanese Americans have proven
but that does not reflect upon fela
commander
responsible for
themselves to be very good Ameri
low citizens of Japanese origin.
national safety is wise, at crucial
® I ill o ? pf pH......... [j
Practically all of them
cans. They have made a record of
just as
Wnu
moments, to take the risk of going
loyal as the rest of the United
which all American should be
too far, rather than not far
proud. It is a proof of the power
.States citizens and have proved it.
enough. The
'
To distrust or humiliate a fellow
of American democracy.
fate of 140,000,000
outAmerican with yellow skin is not
It should be remem oere
Americani citizens tends
M)
Americans of Japanese origin
an indication of robust -American
veigh the convenience or rights of
verv
much
like
other
A
meric
ism,
but
just
the
opposite.
It
shows
110,000.
in
one has forgotten the true mean
It also deserves to be pointed
(«ft)t)
ing of Americanism. If one allows
United States is a minority
out and emphasized that the V> ar
Address _
i Anglo-Saxons are a- minor
to hate
Department, on the whole, has
Millions of men in the armeslanted eyes because r ew own son
taken a lenient attitude toward the
suffered on Two Ji
;es
a
that one is
internees, has provided them with
giving
wa-to
az
:
tra
:'
d
sufficient food and modest tunas,
Io
America
and has heartilv co-operated in
3
loving
one’
a:
their relocation. V
Former Address
Americans
memie^; they
ere
<hat in this war
origin. Italy, too,
are
friend
eat Japanese
me
with full right,
but not Amerian
merely being
was
ens
rarms and homes oi
Subscription Rate: 40c per month
of
Italian
to
neighbors.
can:
or war purpose
S2for
six months, S4 per year in advance
Slovakia
and are gooa
Christian Science Monitor
them to move, and h
GGEEGB>egee€>g8iSE3figeggg©®®*
Kelowna Leads in OK League
Page 8
MynaMg
a
J Etsuko Toguri Graduates
\ Hr cm Alma College
io Rev. Tillman
I . ^T\ THOMAS, Ont.—The convoca
ours Southern Ontario Centres
Ontarioites Welcome Rev. Shimi
tion exercise of rhe Anna College
HAMILTON, Ont.—The Hamilton..
TABER, Alta. — A farewell party
■weie neld in the Garden Theatre here
couver on Aiay 27 on the first leg o
sei
Organization,
the
"Kyowa
sponsored by the Taber X-B. C. Club a journey which will take them to i on June 12.
■
to I Lbab, held a welcome meeting for ; JACL Publishes Pamphlet
was held on May 17 to honor Rev. and take up post with the World’s Feder-I Nice’s to le-J
Mr*. R. B. Tillman who left for VanT' Shimizu at the Redeemer
Sl/'st? M7r?‘ “ “ fie‘d “ Sradmtes' ' ’no
■" ””W the 66
“They Work for Victory”
United
Church here on June 8.
of them
s Miss
Gorld Student Relief under U.N.R. -Etsuko
~
Toguri, who completed her
Upwards of 90 people, both relocees ’
“They Work
V
New Denverites Enjoy
R-A. in Europe.
senior
matriculation
here.
anG
occidental
friends,
attended
to
i
pam
phlet
descrihirV
jT ’ a S2^e
Rev. Tillman who resigned his posiAIiss Toguri who isthe daughter near Kev‘ ^Hrmizu speak. In his au- ; Japa^ese
American?
W°4 oi
rwU tS Pastor of the Taber United of
" Mr. and- Airs. Toguri of Bay Farm, aiess^ Rev. ^mniizu stressed the im* 2
111 the wa?
Church, nas been active for the past
portance of faith in acnievmg a ]
Published iast week by Lb
NEW DENVER, B. C..—A gay picR. L, has been carrying on with her brighter
future in spite ox ad Hfi- J Japan£Se American Citizens Le^
two years in encouraging
nic sponsored bv -ne F-T. A., Japanese of the Tuber X-B C Club activities studies at the College since the evacee
the Wo™^’s AssoThe memories ’ of t£‘
nation.
mines. He spoKe in English and japa- I
Th® profusely-illustrated ... „
1
18
«« into sections deal ,?*
hilarious
She
is
planning
to
enter
one
of
the
pa;k o,“V the OrChard W1 Xs’ W^>Wed with
-mes
• P°Pular e2sttero university in the fall.
. loshiaa, secretary of the organ-j Nlsei in tne armed forces in ^.- ^
! ture, in government work’ h 'U§VCUN
the 25 yop^p^
Siris a^ still ization, introduced the guest.
One of the highlights in a variety minds
n
At
J?
e
conc
Uasion
of
the
meeting,
’
'™rk, and in other work esii J?26
program which listed almost 100 Amiable Ken: y Sakamoto emceed.
1
Rev.
Shimizu
showed
movies
of
the
bie
war effort.
6 HIa^ 10
ltemsj. was„ Aliss Alargaret Rempel’s
iU-CkTLF?ze*™ners in Bingo were
interior
housing
centres
in
B.
C.
ReFeatured
e
rendition of a popular Japanese song. ' Mitzi Ishida
V Airs. Tillman, Walter
ireshments were served.
work a *
. ,
S,Cti011 011 d^’e
Miss. Rempel is the United Church : Koyanagi
■B
yyoik aie photos and a story on y
nd Mush Uyesugi.
Alissionary here.
'Nisei at the Tooele Orinam. U
• i
a Perplexing quiz contest conivo dais previously, Rev. Shinii- a!e uas' fhoto^‘aPhs were tafeX
^Another item which was well reby the emcee, Eikichi Ishida
^.u was a guest of a "welcome” ban ! the U.S. Army Signal Corps.
nCnt u byv I audience was Mrs. Ban . and neroy Alatsui stumped all the
‘ :
quet held in his honor at the Aletro- ।
and Airs. Nakahara’s duet of a Japa- i ^-rostants but Mary Okamoto. “InWhile
the majority
of the
politan Church Hall in Toronto. Ap,
nese song-.
] dicatmns” was the last game before
proximately 140 people were present. SWhs were supplied by the War RP’
School children enjoyed a
H
ayashi
—
hirosb
a day of
of । F ”eS TT11^3 Fere served' and memMiss Florence Bird presided in the 1
Authority and the U.S. Wm,
- quiet wending was solemnized on
games and races with the older’folk!061'3.,
the inning team received a
chair.
Words
of
welcome
were
ex;
f^
1
,
C
1orps> others are credited to
the Knox United Church in
also participating in many
events on pencil apiece.
J
Winnipeg,
the program.
setc
Diav. ing much attention
n i tt,
* “j Man., by Dr. Crossley pressed by Dr. Peter Bryce: Mrs J ;^Sel Ad^
and Equal,” and ElisoiC
The picnic was held as
J^8 cake Presented to Rev. and Airsa j Humer when Yoshiko “Betty”, onw Roveys of the W.M.S.; Mr. E.' True- I E°m
Mrs-' Tok-Ji I man, placement officer: Rev. Percy ■ naU°naby known photographer.
gesture for the many friends who will
il man. Rev. Tillman cut the cak^
|uoj
be parting company
i»j
“
XS
»Te
s ”iie? ?! I trice Irene Uchida, representing- the i,, ^Uoductory sections of the pam- Ishi
and
everyone
received
a
huge
following the
Joionto Nisei and S. Sasaki, reprediscuss “Who and What arP Hori;
Duung- the intermission, the
segregation program.
gifts to tteKS’^.Jfl!^’ younges: smcf
seating
the
Issei.
j
^
lse
R
”
a:rM “These are the Faces of
Sp°"sors expressed their I presented < ’"
!
Hayashi,
formerly
of
Barnwell
Alta
”
Rev.
Shimizu
completed
a
tour
of
1
Jie
biisei.
”
<-^ xor rhe co-operation of the on behalf of the Club. He ^^
|
and
rhe
lute
Mr.
Senjiro
Havashi.
Thsouthern Ontario cities prior to ar2P.l 111
picnic a success lhe Club s gratitude of Rev. Tillman’s
Copies of the pamphlet are awiil Ic0
and also to the local merchants
^thpTT'vas hekl at the borne of aung in Hamilton for the welcome ab.e u the National Japanese aS I
untiring
efforts
in
support
of
the
orfor
meeting.
their generous donations.
ganizaiion and wished him success in i the brides parents.
_an Citizens League headouarters in
the United L
~
—
his new assignment with
■
g couple left for Kenora
®!a^n BuHding, Salt Lake Citv
Wo,, Rehabilitation in Eur- ।
spend a honeymoon.
Nations War
^XSsle (“pies ae p*ed at
ope.
th Alherta Busseis
^ds Honor Soldiers
twenty-five cents.
Rev. Tillman spoke a few words of nakatsl’—oaiori
tne two pl.®SXSZ fr CW|:i HAMILTON,
«“ S°Pliy-EdOnt.■—Special guests
1O nold July 1 Outing
t.ianks and felt confident that the
Pacific Citizen hppPICTURE BUTTE, Alta. I pi,™ years’ experience gleaned i
through h Miss hX oVi iN“? a‘ ““J'3'™' ” SaMdov,
J
Can
close
contact
with
the
X-B.
c
C
ub
Ar
i
p
C
..
.
«fttSS
’
S'
NY
3
।
^?^
,T
“
al
stationed
A
h“.besl"n“’n,pletal v the Southern
Stars
and
Stripes
to
t
- berty Busseis League to hold a would greatly enlighten the duties of
Asaka J ioiomto and Brantford.
his new post overseas.
officiated.
Dominion Day picnic on July } from
r
J
4 ^ood crowd attended and the
Reception was held at Greenwood cool weather made it a very enjoy! Scores Intolerance
ar™HjO>Catnn f°^' the picnic wiH be
Rk
Delegates who represented the X-1i on June 3.
h
“Stars and Stripes” official
able affair. Crowned queen ~
,
{ a‘e’ Everybody is welcomed B. C. Club at the Southern Alberta '
tne U.S. army publication of ato attend.
dr’nce bJr Judge Jack T. Oki
army news
I Res
Nisei Federation meeting in Leth-I Kitade and Air. and Airs. 1. Aliyata. Alarg,—1 T
bridge were Mary Okamoto and Kenn/rdid by
by S. Kuwabara ny Sakamoto.
with a box of chocolates by Airs R
Allen.
. tolerance against Niseis in the United ■ note
Wedding bells chimed
tom, the^Hc^
u^oA*^’6? °f aUPredation for the,
I “Bia
States.
in Picture
ement. the club : j^J^^
of |
■ recei
mTTjh^'^”1'1 M". SnyekiclLSi
■was join Z™ON LEAGUE begins campaign
i ' ,
,-v ^Mth Air. Denzo
■ retui
n Seerie, janitor TY^
of Mr’ F®
E
-"
PULSION
THR
O
UGH
RADIO
AND
pres
ti»LK^' AU --'‘-h- i
- «tH1.l service. '
ta^eda of Shaughfnessv, Alta
on
H Cons
tit™?™8, B-c- C. Adachi ^Church.3t ^ PiCture Butte Buddhist.
VolH
ertain
V0Ice
Our
Pegram
cal's
for
I
“11
xhe Japanese Menace” iuc
-he | the use of the press, extensive use I migr
Baishakunins wer's Messrs. K. Ono
Japanese Americans Home F rem Europe
.™e RaUio and the circulation of ■ popu.
Uied a 12 page pamphlet urginoand S. Nakamura.
.
petitions.
These are now being sent ■ of fu
deportation of aP of
“ -°
over the province for signature.’’ ■ deela
iioin Canada.
J^bKe Canada League formed ■ used
The engagements
-he extent, to which the Repatria .
were announced
was recently re-organized I popul
NEW 1 ORK—Alany J a p a n e ? e
recently at Tashme of Miss Yoshino tion League is going in an effort to 111 ,
Kvwamoto to Air. K
C^u? a!1 °f Ja?anese ancestry from unacr the name “Japanese Repatria ■ situa:
Americans were among the 1,802 sol-'
tion League.” A Charter is held under ■ him
diers who drived home on June 7 on l ^AbLO KLIPPINGS
M Kamloops, B. C.; and of Mis. ®^1J
in tlK
I Th(
i ie Societies Act, the pamphlet said.
board the
Namixo Koyanagi io Mr. Yoshio
i
t 2/°00 ton Hoopship Gen--------------------■ board
eral W. P. Richardson.
wumano of Hamilton, Ont.
A section in the publication de- +K-One °^ bhe articles published in I Counc
Miss Sadler Departs
clares:
Many of rhe soldiers aboard were
Ihe Legaue is non-partisan this pamphlet is the hoax letter
and
Ron-sectarian. Membership is Rhich was allegedly written by five
I6??’8 of SaIer”o> Cassino. Anzio For Post in Winnipeg
The
New
Canadian
gratefully
acki a,nd Patriotic” Japanese and
am. the winter war in the Italian I
XX"1;,""™ n»» ®f Japanese
? nowledges the generous
donation extraction. The sole
,
pu
,is
led in .the Vancouver Sun in
mountains.
I
Miss Neta Sadler,
purpose
of
the
1942
?Irs* Mitsuo “Mickey” ^g"fe
the Japs. — - _ objecting against ridicule of
W contingent included men of the
Misssionarv
’’here lefi M0™
•
Sh’of Winnipeg, Man., i„ com To .’eh ere this desirable end. the a Caricature of Prince. Chichibu.
Fifteenth Air Force, the Japanese 01 ^VlnmPeg on Tuesday
of ’ this |E
memoration of their marriage.
In the
article
Sam Willeague has launched a campaign in r ~
' . feature
— by
-- —
American 442nd Infantry Regiment, Week’
LJ
Sincere thanks are extended bv The arouse and crystallize public opinion
’S char°ed that Japanese
|
of
th
Up tIle Positioi! of New Canadian to Mr. AI. Kudo of o the point that we can make our !
aie generally unassimilible
I
Begi
Raymond, Alta., for his generous demands heard at Ottawa in no
I ?nd that the immigrants were sent
Soldiers of ihc B4th DWsi„
I repk
donation.
work with reio------------ --------- -------------------- for Japan.
*
*
*
J. . 1x1 the Richardson, lauded i ce®s in that citv.
I Arne
the aghting qualities of the Japanese
e’I after
8he was stationed
do for- rhe
Americans. Some told reporters that ;
I ment
past two years and
the Japane
in charge
A n i e ri c ar, s compris ed of the kindergart
I ciate
Mr and Mrs. Harry Tsuchiva (nee
EON DON, Ont.—Dr. Mamoru
C.G.I.T. an
n the Army.
lasuko
Aamazaki)
o
f
Winnipeg.
Man
Saturday school he:
I mittee
became the proud parents of a b-bv
:i Kawaguchi. 27 forer in Hawaii aid he was Graduation Ex
SMu—biaomi Elaine—on June 9. ~ ‘ A,
| soldier
Sanatorium in his 29th i v he deatb is reported of Yoshiaki
ercises
“d ^n proud ami harrow”
| the na
to have
ea1
’
*
V^
’
Vho
P^d
away
on
June
10
a Visit to JI1' and
the Kootenay Lake Mis. Shoichi Sakurai of Kaslo, B
| nth \
Ur. Sanmiya was born
’^Shaughnessy, Alta. Final funeral
is ;
rS
J
^-Kanako-oiJune
raduarion
exercises
’
made,
of com
yer and lived in Edmonton*
v
p^l1Ces were held on June 13 at the
ba:
• on Monday,
25.
j
? l“e ka$l° Victorian Hospital.
-iwo years ago he graduated -^V'] Plcture Bnitte Buddhist Church,
I place
i
Although
- n addition to the familv was welas
! sion h
i.eirupten with con
ymcil doctor and spent a veh A YOICHI minaaiiye
n
Haw
<
comeu
by
Air.
and
Airs.
Takeo"
ne
ye pathological department 'of the' T *°^‘^ Minamiye passed
Greenwood. B. C., on AI?. fi
ietters
on
or stud
r.dnwnton
General Hospital He
ll
troops.
:
in
mecl by princ
1 A
Funeral services were held on June
t :; successful
| ""^"nnnnninniinMmiHHinHmimun ?
iininii
or
•
Less
«
Rev. R. R. Tatibana officiated.
1
1
e e
Dea?
° visit hi: m
urowns
K
two
broth
A
i
nge Nelson
Ml funeral rites were m
is mcthe” • he too
W’< A
by
tl
ill for Gennosuke Ko.iima at
St.
T^shn
thron
B.t
ms pi
“. Alta, on June 3.
are ;
esi
on of Mr
1asuye Iw;
6 f-mfiy of the deceased
editor
ummo
a rc
i cohvs
■ m the
errh Them:
The pre-funt
sincere thanks
o
foil'd
the
held ■ frien
mining wit
o. B.C
on June 11 at
wno expressed
'll
corre^
n
George
i
ottered
condolences
at
f,f!,,"’'!'ll]||iniIIII1I|Iifl!!,niII!I[I!I![11|ll| :
t unerai Chapel
contri
K. Sh •2u v. as -heir bereavement
io:
CHANGE IN ADDRESS
1
1 cron to_______
a
Th
M
o.
'0 held
the
:
Vemon
Judo
oi
the
dece.
and
and o,
he
e
o
i*- ‘<incr2] f°wice was held in th- J'ERXOX- B' C.—Harold T kairin.
attend
e
We
1 chapel with Rev. WasNa^^
teach3^ judo here kit Mx
o
tree
Ont. Thev 1
their
' Montreal on June 11
were
me manv fr ■nd? Rev. Key. Shimizu joints- OxHc.ating.
!
pro „ ,
centre
B. C.
the p
^
a:in;zu
gave
an address in
En^una several other teachers have
of condolence. and : lisfc
in
Engcon tin
and iead the committal at thP
teaching the scientific art of
at
rhe
itture
time of interment.
> ^-protection to many of the young
ooys here.
IIc0ag
! ir
IE
:
Nisei G
sing Ovation
Sm P°Ct°r Passes AwaT in London
a
J Etsuko Toguri Graduates
\ Hr cm Alma College
io Rev. Tillman
I . ^T\ THOMAS, Ont.—The convoca
ours Southern Ontario Centres
Ontarioites Welcome Rev. Shimi
tion exercise of rhe Anna College
HAMILTON, Ont.—The Hamilton..
TABER, Alta. — A farewell party
■weie neld in the Garden Theatre here
couver on Aiay 27 on the first leg o
sei
Organization,
the
"Kyowa
sponsored by the Taber X-B. C. Club a journey which will take them to i on June 12.
■
to I Lbab, held a welcome meeting for ; JACL Publishes Pamphlet
was held on May 17 to honor Rev. and take up post with the World’s Feder-I Nice’s to le-J
Mr*. R. B. Tillman who left for VanT' Shimizu at the Redeemer
Sl/'st? M7r?‘ “ “ fie‘d “ Sradmtes' ' ’no
■" ””W the 66
“They Work for Victory”
United
Church here on June 8.
of them
s Miss
Gorld Student Relief under U.N.R. -Etsuko
~
Toguri, who completed her
Upwards of 90 people, both relocees ’
“They Work
V
New Denverites Enjoy
R-A. in Europe.
senior
matriculation
here.
anG
occidental
friends,
attended
to
i
pam
phlet
descrihirV
jT ’ a S2^e
Rev. Tillman who resigned his posiAIiss Toguri who isthe daughter near Kev‘ ^Hrmizu speak. In his au- ; Japa^ese
American?
W°4 oi
rwU tS Pastor of the Taber United of
" Mr. and- Airs. Toguri of Bay Farm, aiess^ Rev. ^mniizu stressed the im* 2
111 the wa?
Church, nas been active for the past
portance of faith in acnievmg a ]
Published iast week by Lb
NEW DENVER, B. C..—A gay picR. L, has been carrying on with her brighter
future in spite ox ad Hfi- J Japan£Se American Citizens Le^
two years in encouraging
nic sponsored bv -ne F-T. A., Japanese of the Tuber X-B C Club activities studies at the College since the evacee
the Wo™^’s AssoThe memories ’ of t£‘
nation.
mines. He spoKe in English and japa- I
Th® profusely-illustrated ... „
1
18
«« into sections deal ,?*
hilarious
She
is
planning
to
enter
one
of
the
pa;k o,“V the OrChard W1 Xs’ W^>Wed with
-mes
• P°Pular e2sttero university in the fall.
. loshiaa, secretary of the organ-j Nlsei in tne armed forces in ^.- ^
! ture, in government work’ h 'U§VCUN
the 25 yop^p^
Siris a^ still ization, introduced the guest.
One of the highlights in a variety minds
n
At
J?
e
conc
Uasion
of
the
meeting,
’
'™rk, and in other work esii J?26
program which listed almost 100 Amiable Ken: y Sakamoto emceed.
1
Rev.
Shimizu
showed
movies
of
the
bie
war effort.
6 HIa^ 10
ltemsj. was„ Aliss Alargaret Rempel’s
iU-CkTLF?ze*™ners in Bingo were
interior
housing
centres
in
B.
C.
ReFeatured
e
rendition of a popular Japanese song. ' Mitzi Ishida
V Airs. Tillman, Walter
ireshments were served.
work a *
. ,
S,Cti011 011 d^’e
Miss. Rempel is the United Church : Koyanagi
■B
yyoik aie photos and a story on y
nd Mush Uyesugi.
Alissionary here.
'Nisei at the Tooele Orinam. U
• i
a Perplexing quiz contest conivo dais previously, Rev. Shinii- a!e uas' fhoto^‘aPhs were tafeX
^Another item which was well reby the emcee, Eikichi Ishida
^.u was a guest of a "welcome” ban ! the U.S. Army Signal Corps.
nCnt u byv I audience was Mrs. Ban . and neroy Alatsui stumped all the
‘ :
quet held in his honor at the Aletro- ।
and Airs. Nakahara’s duet of a Japa- i ^-rostants but Mary Okamoto. “InWhile
the majority
of the
politan Church Hall in Toronto. Ap,
nese song-.
] dicatmns” was the last game before
proximately 140 people were present. SWhs were supplied by the War RP’
School children enjoyed a
H
ayashi
—
hirosb
a day of
of । F ”eS TT11^3 Fere served' and memMiss Florence Bird presided in the 1
Authority and the U.S. Wm,
- quiet wending was solemnized on
games and races with the older’folk!061'3.,
the inning team received a
chair.
Words
of
welcome
were
ex;
f^
1
,
C
1orps> others are credited to
the Knox United Church in
also participating in many
events on pencil apiece.
J
Winnipeg,
the program.
setc
Diav. ing much attention
n i tt,
* “j Man., by Dr. Crossley pressed by Dr. Peter Bryce: Mrs J ;^Sel Ad^
and Equal,” and ElisoiC
The picnic was held as
J^8 cake Presented to Rev. and Airsa j Humer when Yoshiko “Betty”, onw Roveys of the W.M.S.; Mr. E.' True- I E°m
Mrs-' Tok-Ji I man, placement officer: Rev. Percy ■ naU°naby known photographer.
gesture for the many friends who will
il man. Rev. Tillman cut the cak^
|uoj
be parting company
i»j
“
XS
»Te
s ”iie? ?! I trice Irene Uchida, representing- the i,, ^Uoductory sections of the pam- Ishi
and
everyone
received
a
huge
following the
Joionto Nisei and S. Sasaki, reprediscuss “Who and What arP Hori;
Duung- the intermission, the
segregation program.
gifts to tteKS’^.Jfl!^’ younges: smcf
seating
the
Issei.
j
^
lse
R
”
a:rM “These are the Faces of
Sp°"sors expressed their I presented < ’"
!
Hayashi,
formerly
of
Barnwell
Alta
”
Rev.
Shimizu
completed
a
tour
of
1
Jie
biisei.
”
<-^ xor rhe co-operation of the on behalf of the Club. He ^^
|
and
rhe
lute
Mr.
Senjiro
Havashi.
Thsouthern Ontario cities prior to ar2P.l 111
picnic a success lhe Club s gratitude of Rev. Tillman’s
Copies of the pamphlet are awiil Ic0
and also to the local merchants
^thpTT'vas hekl at the borne of aung in Hamilton for the welcome ab.e u the National Japanese aS I
untiring
efforts
in
support
of
the
orfor
meeting.
their generous donations.
ganizaiion and wished him success in i the brides parents.
_an Citizens League headouarters in
the United L
~
—
his new assignment with
■
g couple left for Kenora
®!a^n BuHding, Salt Lake Citv
Wo,, Rehabilitation in Eur- ।
spend a honeymoon.
Nations War
^XSsle (“pies ae p*ed at
ope.
th Alherta Busseis
^ds Honor Soldiers
twenty-five cents.
Rev. Tillman spoke a few words of nakatsl’—oaiori
tne two pl.®SXSZ fr CW|:i HAMILTON,
«“ S°Pliy-EdOnt.■—Special guests
1O nold July 1 Outing
t.ianks and felt confident that the
Pacific Citizen hppPICTURE BUTTE, Alta. I pi,™ years’ experience gleaned i
through h Miss hX oVi iN“? a‘ ““J'3'™' ” SaMdov,
J
Can
close
contact
with
the
X-B.
c
C
ub
Ar
i
p
C
..
.
«fttSS
’
S'
NY
3
।
^?^
,T
“
al
stationed
A
h“.besl"n“’n,pletal v the Southern
Stars
and
Stripes
to
t
- berty Busseis League to hold a would greatly enlighten the duties of
Asaka J ioiomto and Brantford.
his new post overseas.
officiated.
Dominion Day picnic on July } from
r
J
4 ^ood crowd attended and the
Reception was held at Greenwood cool weather made it a very enjoy! Scores Intolerance
ar™HjO>Catnn f°^' the picnic wiH be
Rk
Delegates who represented the X-1i on June 3.
h
“Stars and Stripes” official
able affair. Crowned queen ~
,
{ a‘e’ Everybody is welcomed B. C. Club at the Southern Alberta '
tne U.S. army publication of ato attend.
dr’nce bJr Judge Jack T. Oki
army news
I Res
Nisei Federation meeting in Leth-I Kitade and Air. and Airs. 1. Aliyata. Alarg,—1 T
bridge were Mary Okamoto and Kenn/rdid by
by S. Kuwabara ny Sakamoto.
with a box of chocolates by Airs R
Allen.
. tolerance against Niseis in the United ■ note
Wedding bells chimed
tom, the^Hc^
u^oA*^’6? °f aUPredation for the,
I “Bia
States.
in Picture
ement. the club : j^J^^
of |
■ recei
mTTjh^'^”1'1 M". SnyekiclLSi
■was join Z™ON LEAGUE begins campaign
i ' ,
,-v ^Mth Air. Denzo
■ retui
n Seerie, janitor TY^
of Mr’ F®
E
-"
PULSION
THR
O
UGH
RADIO
AND
pres
ti»LK^' AU --'‘-h- i
- «tH1.l service. '
ta^eda of Shaughfnessv, Alta
on
H Cons
tit™?™8, B-c- C. Adachi ^Church.3t ^ PiCture Butte Buddhist.
VolH
ertain
V0Ice
Our
Pegram
cal's
for
I
“11
xhe Japanese Menace” iuc
-he | the use of the press, extensive use I migr
Baishakunins wer's Messrs. K. Ono
Japanese Americans Home F rem Europe
.™e RaUio and the circulation of ■ popu.
Uied a 12 page pamphlet urginoand S. Nakamura.
.
petitions.
These are now being sent ■ of fu
deportation of aP of
“ -°
over the province for signature.’’ ■ deela
iioin Canada.
J^bKe Canada League formed ■ used
The engagements
-he extent, to which the Repatria .
were announced
was recently re-organized I popul
NEW 1 ORK—Alany J a p a n e ? e
recently at Tashme of Miss Yoshino tion League is going in an effort to 111 ,
Kvwamoto to Air. K
C^u? a!1 °f Ja?anese ancestry from unacr the name “Japanese Repatria ■ situa:
Americans were among the 1,802 sol-'
tion League.” A Charter is held under ■ him
diers who drived home on June 7 on l ^AbLO KLIPPINGS
M Kamloops, B. C.; and of Mis. ®^1J
in tlK
I Th(
i ie Societies Act, the pamphlet said.
board the
Namixo Koyanagi io Mr. Yoshio
i
t 2/°00 ton Hoopship Gen--------------------■ board
eral W. P. Richardson.
wumano of Hamilton, Ont.
A section in the publication de- +K-One °^ bhe articles published in I Counc
Miss Sadler Departs
clares:
Many of rhe soldiers aboard were
Ihe Legaue is non-partisan this pamphlet is the hoax letter
and
Ron-sectarian. Membership is Rhich was allegedly written by five
I6??’8 of SaIer”o> Cassino. Anzio For Post in Winnipeg
The
New
Canadian
gratefully
acki a,nd Patriotic” Japanese and
am. the winter war in the Italian I
XX"1;,""™ n»» ®f Japanese
? nowledges the generous
donation extraction. The sole
,
pu
,is
led in .the Vancouver Sun in
mountains.
I
Miss Neta Sadler,
purpose
of
the
1942
?Irs* Mitsuo “Mickey” ^g"fe
the Japs. — - _ objecting against ridicule of
W contingent included men of the
Misssionarv
’’here lefi M0™
•
Sh’of Winnipeg, Man., i„ com To .’eh ere this desirable end. the a Caricature of Prince. Chichibu.
Fifteenth Air Force, the Japanese 01 ^VlnmPeg on Tuesday
of ’ this |E
memoration of their marriage.
In the
article
Sam Willeague has launched a campaign in r ~
' . feature
— by
-- —
American 442nd Infantry Regiment, Week’
LJ
Sincere thanks are extended bv The arouse and crystallize public opinion
’S char°ed that Japanese
|
of
th
Up tIle Positioi! of New Canadian to Mr. AI. Kudo of o the point that we can make our !
aie generally unassimilible
I
Begi
Raymond, Alta., for his generous demands heard at Ottawa in no
I ?nd that the immigrants were sent
Soldiers of ihc B4th DWsi„
I repk
donation.
work with reio------------ --------- -------------------- for Japan.
*
*
*
J. . 1x1 the Richardson, lauded i ce®s in that citv.
I Arne
the aghting qualities of the Japanese
e’I after
8he was stationed
do for- rhe
Americans. Some told reporters that ;
I ment
past two years and
the Japane
in charge
A n i e ri c ar, s compris ed of the kindergart
I ciate
Mr and Mrs. Harry Tsuchiva (nee
EON DON, Ont.—Dr. Mamoru
C.G.I.T. an
n the Army.
lasuko
Aamazaki)
o
f
Winnipeg.
Man
Saturday school he:
I mittee
became the proud parents of a b-bv
:i Kawaguchi. 27 forer in Hawaii aid he was Graduation Ex
SMu—biaomi Elaine—on June 9. ~ ‘ A,
| soldier
Sanatorium in his 29th i v he deatb is reported of Yoshiaki
ercises
“d ^n proud ami harrow”
| the na
to have
ea1
’
*
V^
’
Vho
P^d
away
on
June
10
a Visit to JI1' and
the Kootenay Lake Mis. Shoichi Sakurai of Kaslo, B
| nth \
Ur. Sanmiya was born
’^Shaughnessy, Alta. Final funeral
is ;
rS
J
^-Kanako-oiJune
raduarion
exercises
’
made,
of com
yer and lived in Edmonton*
v
p^l1Ces were held on June 13 at the
ba:
• on Monday,
25.
j
? l“e ka$l° Victorian Hospital.
-iwo years ago he graduated -^V'] Plcture Bnitte Buddhist Church,
I place
i
Although
- n addition to the familv was welas
! sion h
i.eirupten with con
ymcil doctor and spent a veh A YOICHI minaaiiye
n
Haw
<
comeu
by
Air.
and
Airs.
Takeo"
ne
ye pathological department 'of the' T *°^‘^ Minamiye passed
Greenwood. B. C., on AI?. fi
ietters
on
or stud
r.dnwnton
General Hospital He
ll
troops.
:
in
mecl by princ
1 A
Funeral services were held on June
t :; successful
| ""^"nnnnninniinMmiHHinHmimun ?
iininii
or
•
Less
«
Rev. R. R. Tatibana officiated.
1
1
e e
Dea?
° visit hi: m
urowns
K
two
broth
A
i
nge Nelson
Ml funeral rites were m
is mcthe” • he too
W’< A
by
tl
ill for Gennosuke Ko.iima at
St.
T^shn
thron
B.t
ms pi
“. Alta, on June 3.
are ;
esi
on of Mr
1asuye Iw;
6 f-mfiy of the deceased
editor
ummo
a rc
i cohvs
■ m the
errh Them:
The pre-funt
sincere thanks
o
foil'd
the
held ■ frien
mining wit
o. B.C
on June 11 at
wno expressed
'll
corre^
n
George
i
ottered
condolences
at
f,f!,,"’'!'ll]||iniIIII1I|Iifl!!,niII!I[I!I![11|ll| :
t unerai Chapel
contri
K. Sh •2u v. as -heir bereavement
io:
CHANGE IN ADDRESS
1
1 cron to_______
a
Th
M
o.
'0 held
the
:
Vemon
Judo
oi
the
dece.
and
and o,
he
e
o
i*- ‘<incr2] f°wice was held in th- J'ERXOX- B' C.—Harold T kairin.
attend
e
We
1 chapel with Rev. WasNa^^
teach3^ judo here kit Mx
o
tree
Ont. Thev 1
their
' Montreal on June 11
were
me manv fr ■nd? Rev. Key. Shimizu joints- OxHc.ating.
!
pro „ ,
centre
B. C.
the p
^
a:in;zu
gave
an address in
En^una several other teachers have
of condolence. and : lisfc
in
Engcon tin
and iead the committal at thP
teaching the scientific art of
at
rhe
itture
time of interment.
> ^-protection to many of the young
ooys here.
IIc0ag
! ir
IE
:
Nisei G
sing Ovation
Sm P°Ct°r Passes AwaT in London