Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
e.
10c per copy
Winnipeg, Manitoba
O’^ys
I oh -,• McD'
I Reviewing
| The News
f
~
M
” 5 Justice^
By K.D.
Saturday. July 26. 1947
Chosen Commissioner
Grand Forks^ubileTEntH^s
■hie Division
Kn Europe
Will Only Consider Losses On
Property Under Custodian Can
■ United States Secretary of State
■George C. Marshall’s announced
Bpian for European recovery raised
Briportam questions: Would RusBia co-operate? Could the United
fciaies afford and would the United
(States Congress approve the huge
Lipenditure involved in the plan?
Thomas
July
fining j->
had b?
a fare;eietr?3
commissioner to investigate claims of
0.^ Japanese Canadians who were
y.
^week°
VtS aPpojPted under the Inquiries Act
British Cohnnbia SupVenieUCourtHeniy IVVnie Bird °f the
1 These questions are now being
J ne commissioner’s
ment by
~
'
■ Mr. Marshall’s proposal said in
■th’ect: Europe needs extended aid
■ia order to recover from her pres|ent difficulties, and the United
Jnt
1. That by reason of failure of the
custodian of enemy
.0 exerc-Ue r«lsonable rare ia !he disposition or rhe
'al and
pupeitj cested m him. the amount he
received from sue
property
"as less than market value at the time
ot the disposition,
2. That by reason of the failure of the
able care in the management of personal custodian to exere:
t, .«»«, or destroyed. b„lUim'|P'°Pert’' »«
...
" a
be considered in respect
to oroneriv 'n,-r i
maiiasremenr' or
of '01*? "l"!e ul"lc''' 11,e
control
or
iw ihe owner ot the'property.'' “
^pointed
ISiaies is willing to give- that asListance; but the European nations
Inust first work out among them
*' and
selves a plan of co-operation and
| recovery.
^Russia Invited
: Immediately, Mitain and France
Invited Russia to
the
■Marshall plan. But the meeting
Boi the three foreign ministers endBfi m failure. Russia insisted that
Bthe loan should have no strings
JAf
■attached, that there should be no
■questions asked as to how the
flvn 'Quid be spent. Britain and
■Fruiie could not agree to this
f Ru^iau proposal under which cot-opeiauon would have been made
^impossible.
It Russia then used her influence
Band pressure to prevent her eight
^satellite nations from participat
id j
d
s
ing ia the conference on the Mar
shall plan. One country, CzechoSlovakia, accepted the invitation
to the conference
and
later
changed her mind, clearly under
i pressure from Russia.
f Iettrence according to the announeewere defined under two he.ad-
i^Ii. Gibson said the eommis
mis ueen authorized to examine
into all such claims and ma
report to the governor-iii-rnnTu.;)
(the cabinet) setting forth the
dm? which. in his opinion. Lire well
founded and the amount whi
in his opinion. would
tnd
reasonable compensate the claimant
for failure of the
cns
todian
to
exercise reasonable care."
CLAIMS TO BE SENT
parade of thPriy^lo^wa^the" GrJnJpo^ksf'jCCA^pon
“Fnendship” (pictured above)
JCCA-sponsored entry,
m ^°x^r::;z^^sei^:sg^^pict-e> — —
---------- :------------------------ ------------- ..
VANCOUVER
The Canadian Press report said:
.
,
■ ‘‘The Japanese now scat
tered across Canada, would be required to submit
all claims in
writing, verified By statutory declaration, to the
office of ths
custodian, 506 Royal Bank Building, Vancouver
‘and in due
course the commissioner will give public notice of
the time fo r
i ing claims and for the hearing of evidence.’ ”
______________________ —Grand Forks JCCA Photos.
~ ~~~
In Slocan Valley
Ghost Town Houses Now Surplus
And Will Be Sold by War Assets
The rest of Europe—16 nations-
Canadian Nisei Gi Wives
Now Allowed to Enter U.S.
1
mall—was left with no alternative
i
to go it by themselves
A
I conference on European Economic
A four-year
Iy^covery
was called in Faris with
out representation from Russia or
y satellites. But eagerness and
fen-e tor co-operation was mark
ed among the
participating nations.
SENATE PASSES AMENDMENT TO
te ,hIlTAhA'-7The hundreds of houses which were built
to sheltei the Japanese evacuees near Slocan-Citv, Lemon
SOLDIER BRIDES ACT JULY 16
vf4neik’ ard Ro®ebJ17’ RC’’ are bein§' declared surplus and
nvill be disposed of by the War Assets Corporation, Recon
struction Minister C. D. Howe said in the House of Commons
.ThisJVi happ-v.?veek for three Nisei counts
Exon July lo.
p*S<ta u. Bob. kltaBma of Alameda, Calif., ex-Sero-eant
“I have no doubt that local pur
I*lank Kawag’oe of Los Aiweles Calif -mH it tA e
R.mura, presently in Tokyo. ^now'tokeXr
they would make satisfactory
chasers will be given considera
quarters.
born Nisei wives with them to homes in the UnitedI Stitts'
tion,” the minister added.
plan of recovery
drawn up at the conference.
A committee was set up to inves-
The statement was made in
reply to H. W. Herridge (Ind. CCF.
Kootenay West) who urged that
these houses be made available to
people living within “twenty or
thirty miles" of where those
houses are located.
I?0 Jhat eXtent Production
hov n aeveloped hl Europe, and
,
aid would
required
± the United States before
^Ptember i, 1947.
^aat was the reason for Rusletusal to co-operate? Some
o‘r‘™rS Stafe lhat the Tecoverv
r iS against Elia's long
^dfn?e7~a PO,iey direct*‘l at
°
hlflUen^
Comlhey su£gest that Rus-
■ Kill be am-6 "'e‘bIern ^mocracies
e
wif“ld growing inZtern p! RUSSian satellites of
1'" Un=t 'Jt°Pe ,f they are a-ided
’
states credit.
*"«ia Offers An
R.Sat?Ve Plan
CiinaHd’ howeveD has not reItS*de the conference doJ-ttinP mf’ She 3S beHeve<l to be
the ib
operation an alternalht! Marshall proposal.
Offerin^ the eastern
dn* tratle concessions
?^sia r'?1*51115 °n a barter basis.
-22?2rv--n ,Oi^er Poland’s coal,
oil, Ukraine’s grain—
^taliv
needed products. And
ia’.
°^tr is far from unat-
$ -all dH
nioment when the
a PromG J6™31115 littIe more
{^fcREViEvviNG;” page 12)
“These houses are, on the aver
age. 14 feet wide and 24 feet long,
and are quite well constructed.”
Mr. Herridge said.
MAKE EXCELLENT HOMES
“They would make excellent
homes for many people, and in
some cases if two of these
houses were joined together
Masaoka Invited
To National Confab
In Toronto
TORONTO. — Mike M. Ma
saoka, national legislative di
rector of the JACL Anti-Dis
crimination
Committee, has
been invited to address the
forthcoming national
confer
ence of Japanese Canadian
organizations in Toronto on
Aug. 30-31 and Sept. 1.
The invitation was extended
to the JACL leader by Roger
Obata, educational director of
the JCCD.
“A good many people in my
riding would like to purchase
these houses, and have been wait
ing two years lor Mar Assets
to dispose • of them. . . . They
could arrange for their transpor
tation bjr road or have them taken
down and hauled to their small
holdin ?s or homesites in the vil-
Brid/S Act'
Th,- a^endnfeni openeTthe'
£.UHler the
facially
inadmissible
’ l(li
CIerswives
to enter thpehw
TT
originai
act. only s„
'
BeeX'ot‘"C’"':'"™"1'1’ "■,,re
"“o <>■« country,
ecause of the racial restrictions in the American immigraton and.
natuialization laws. Gi brides of Japanese, Korean. Guamian or Siamese
ancestry were barred from entry. The Canadian Nisei wivesTml
undei the ‘Japanese” category, even if they were of Canadian citizen-
Gfs Planning to
Marry Not Helped
By Amendment
WASHINGTON. — About 100 to
150 Gl’s in Japan who' are
ported to have been waiting for
the passing of the bill amending
the Soldiers Brides Act so that
they might marry Japanese girls
are out of luck because of a 30-dav
clause inserted in the bill.
The 30-day provision inserted
by the House Judiciary Commit
tee states "only soldiers who
were married prior to or within
30 days of the enactment of the
Soldiers
Brides
Act amendment” would be permitted to
bring
racially inadmissible”
wives into the U.S.
According to a recent Tokyo
report, only one-half of these
American soldiers who wished to
marry Japanese girls were of
Japanese ancestry.
7he three couples were all married in Canada in 1946. The Kita
Jimas and the Kimuras, in February and the Kawagoes in June
of last
year. Because of the ’bar against their
wives’ entry into America. Bob
Kitajima was forced to live in Windsor. Ont..
with his wife, Maty
Molly Enta Kitajima formerly of Winnipeg, and
commute to a job in.
Detroit. Mich. Frank Masao Kawagoe had to live with his
wife’s
in Westwold, B.C after di sc liar
army, being unable
to take his wife 'The former Edith Nishikawa of Vancou
ver) to Lays
A ngeles.
Lt. Makoto Kimura, on occupation
d to get
pei mission for his wire, the former Lucky Seiko Inamoto
o f Vancouver and Montreal, to join him in Tokyo, while a waitins'
congressional action on the entry legislation.
Following repeated representations by Mike M. Masaoka
national
director of the'JACL' Anti-Discrimination Committe.
H.R.
introduced by Rep. Frank Fellows. Rep.-Maine, on
amendment bill has now passed both the full House and the fuiJ
Senate and only waits the President's .signature.
. According to JACL figures, there now are approximately 50 cases
ot marriages between American servicemen and foreign wom^n of
Japanese, ancestry.
These included the three with Canadian Nfs-i
One couple also affected by the bill is the Lt. Clarke Kawakamis. The
Washington. D.C.. Nisei officer married a prominent Japanese mov?e
star in Japan last year.
The three private bills providing for the entry of Mrs. Kitt
Mrs. Kawagoe and Mrs. Kimura, will be dropped since HR
3119
covers the whole situation.
I
1
e.
10c per copy
Winnipeg, Manitoba
O’^ys
I oh -,• McD'
I Reviewing
| The News
f
~
M
” 5 Justice^
By K.D.
Saturday. July 26. 1947
Chosen Commissioner
Grand Forks^ubileTEntH^s
■hie Division
Kn Europe
Will Only Consider Losses On
Property Under Custodian Can
■ United States Secretary of State
■George C. Marshall’s announced
Bpian for European recovery raised
Briportam questions: Would RusBia co-operate? Could the United
fciaies afford and would the United
(States Congress approve the huge
Lipenditure involved in the plan?
Thomas
July
fining j->
had b?
a fare;eietr?3
commissioner to investigate claims of
0.^ Japanese Canadians who were
y.
^week°
VtS aPpojPted under the Inquiries Act
British Cohnnbia SupVenieUCourtHeniy IVVnie Bird °f the
1 These questions are now being
J ne commissioner’s
ment by
~
'
■ Mr. Marshall’s proposal said in
■th’ect: Europe needs extended aid
■ia order to recover from her pres|ent difficulties, and the United
Jnt
1. That by reason of failure of the
custodian of enemy
.0 exerc-Ue r«lsonable rare ia !he disposition or rhe
'al and
pupeitj cested m him. the amount he
received from sue
property
"as less than market value at the time
ot the disposition,
2. That by reason of the failure of the
able care in the management of personal custodian to exere:
t, .«»«, or destroyed. b„lUim'|P'°Pert’' »«
...
" a
be considered in respect
to oroneriv 'n,-r i
maiiasremenr' or
of '01*? "l"!e ul"lc''' 11,e
control
or
iw ihe owner ot the'property.'' “
^pointed
ISiaies is willing to give- that asListance; but the European nations
Inust first work out among them
*' and
selves a plan of co-operation and
| recovery.
^Russia Invited
: Immediately, Mitain and France
Invited Russia to
the
■Marshall plan. But the meeting
Boi the three foreign ministers endBfi m failure. Russia insisted that
Bthe loan should have no strings
JAf
■attached, that there should be no
■questions asked as to how the
flvn 'Quid be spent. Britain and
■Fruiie could not agree to this
f Ru^iau proposal under which cot-opeiauon would have been made
^impossible.
It Russia then used her influence
Band pressure to prevent her eight
^satellite nations from participat
id j
d
s
ing ia the conference on the Mar
shall plan. One country, CzechoSlovakia, accepted the invitation
to the conference
and
later
changed her mind, clearly under
i pressure from Russia.
f Iettrence according to the announeewere defined under two he.ad-
i^Ii. Gibson said the eommis
mis ueen authorized to examine
into all such claims and ma
report to the governor-iii-rnnTu.;)
(the cabinet) setting forth the
dm? which. in his opinion. Lire well
founded and the amount whi
in his opinion. would
tnd
reasonable compensate the claimant
for failure of the
cns
todian
to
exercise reasonable care."
CLAIMS TO BE SENT
parade of thPriy^lo^wa^the" GrJnJpo^ksf'jCCA^pon
“Fnendship” (pictured above)
JCCA-sponsored entry,
m ^°x^r::;z^^sei^:sg^^pict-e> — —
---------- :------------------------ ------------- ..
VANCOUVER
The Canadian Press report said:
.
,
■ ‘‘The Japanese now scat
tered across Canada, would be required to submit
all claims in
writing, verified By statutory declaration, to the
office of ths
custodian, 506 Royal Bank Building, Vancouver
‘and in due
course the commissioner will give public notice of
the time fo r
i ing claims and for the hearing of evidence.’ ”
______________________ —Grand Forks JCCA Photos.
~ ~~~
In Slocan Valley
Ghost Town Houses Now Surplus
And Will Be Sold by War Assets
The rest of Europe—16 nations-
Canadian Nisei Gi Wives
Now Allowed to Enter U.S.
1
mall—was left with no alternative
i
to go it by themselves
A
I conference on European Economic
A four-year
Iy^covery
was called in Faris with
out representation from Russia or
y satellites. But eagerness and
fen-e tor co-operation was mark
ed among the
participating nations.
SENATE PASSES AMENDMENT TO
te ,hIlTAhA'-7The hundreds of houses which were built
to sheltei the Japanese evacuees near Slocan-Citv, Lemon
SOLDIER BRIDES ACT JULY 16
vf4neik’ ard Ro®ebJ17’ RC’’ are bein§' declared surplus and
nvill be disposed of by the War Assets Corporation, Recon
struction Minister C. D. Howe said in the House of Commons
.ThisJVi happ-v.?veek for three Nisei counts
Exon July lo.
p*S<ta u. Bob. kltaBma of Alameda, Calif., ex-Sero-eant
“I have no doubt that local pur
I*lank Kawag’oe of Los Aiweles Calif -mH it tA e
R.mura, presently in Tokyo. ^now'tokeXr
they would make satisfactory
chasers will be given considera
quarters.
born Nisei wives with them to homes in the UnitedI Stitts'
tion,” the minister added.
plan of recovery
drawn up at the conference.
A committee was set up to inves-
The statement was made in
reply to H. W. Herridge (Ind. CCF.
Kootenay West) who urged that
these houses be made available to
people living within “twenty or
thirty miles" of where those
houses are located.
I?0 Jhat eXtent Production
hov n aeveloped hl Europe, and
,
aid would
required
± the United States before
^Ptember i, 1947.
^aat was the reason for Rusletusal to co-operate? Some
o‘r‘™rS Stafe lhat the Tecoverv
r iS against Elia's long
^dfn?e7~a PO,iey direct*‘l at
°
hlflUen^
Comlhey su£gest that Rus-
■ Kill be am-6 "'e‘bIern ^mocracies
e
wif“ld growing inZtern p! RUSSian satellites of
1'" Un=t 'Jt°Pe ,f they are a-ided
’
states credit.
*"«ia Offers An
R.Sat?Ve Plan
CiinaHd’ howeveD has not reItS*de the conference doJ-ttinP mf’ She 3S beHeve<l to be
the ib
operation an alternalht! Marshall proposal.
Offerin^ the eastern
dn* tratle concessions
?^sia r'?1*51115 °n a barter basis.
-22?2rv--n ,Oi^er Poland’s coal,
oil, Ukraine’s grain—
^taliv
needed products. And
ia’.
°^tr is far from unat-
$ -all dH
nioment when the
a PromG J6™31115 littIe more
{^fcREViEvviNG;” page 12)
“These houses are, on the aver
age. 14 feet wide and 24 feet long,
and are quite well constructed.”
Mr. Herridge said.
MAKE EXCELLENT HOMES
“They would make excellent
homes for many people, and in
some cases if two of these
houses were joined together
Masaoka Invited
To National Confab
In Toronto
TORONTO. — Mike M. Ma
saoka, national legislative di
rector of the JACL Anti-Dis
crimination
Committee, has
been invited to address the
forthcoming national
confer
ence of Japanese Canadian
organizations in Toronto on
Aug. 30-31 and Sept. 1.
The invitation was extended
to the JACL leader by Roger
Obata, educational director of
the JCCD.
“A good many people in my
riding would like to purchase
these houses, and have been wait
ing two years lor Mar Assets
to dispose • of them. . . . They
could arrange for their transpor
tation bjr road or have them taken
down and hauled to their small
holdin ?s or homesites in the vil-
Brid/S Act'
Th,- a^endnfeni openeTthe'
£.UHler the
facially
inadmissible
’ l(li
CIerswives
to enter thpehw
TT
originai
act. only s„
'
BeeX'ot‘"C’"':'"™"1'1’ "■,,re
"“o <>■« country,
ecause of the racial restrictions in the American immigraton and.
natuialization laws. Gi brides of Japanese, Korean. Guamian or Siamese
ancestry were barred from entry. The Canadian Nisei wivesTml
undei the ‘Japanese” category, even if they were of Canadian citizen-
Gfs Planning to
Marry Not Helped
By Amendment
WASHINGTON. — About 100 to
150 Gl’s in Japan who' are
ported to have been waiting for
the passing of the bill amending
the Soldiers Brides Act so that
they might marry Japanese girls
are out of luck because of a 30-dav
clause inserted in the bill.
The 30-day provision inserted
by the House Judiciary Commit
tee states "only soldiers who
were married prior to or within
30 days of the enactment of the
Soldiers
Brides
Act amendment” would be permitted to
bring
racially inadmissible”
wives into the U.S.
According to a recent Tokyo
report, only one-half of these
American soldiers who wished to
marry Japanese girls were of
Japanese ancestry.
7he three couples were all married in Canada in 1946. The Kita
Jimas and the Kimuras, in February and the Kawagoes in June
of last
year. Because of the ’bar against their
wives’ entry into America. Bob
Kitajima was forced to live in Windsor. Ont..
with his wife, Maty
Molly Enta Kitajima formerly of Winnipeg, and
commute to a job in.
Detroit. Mich. Frank Masao Kawagoe had to live with his
wife’s
in Westwold, B.C after di sc liar
army, being unable
to take his wife 'The former Edith Nishikawa of Vancou
ver) to Lays
A ngeles.
Lt. Makoto Kimura, on occupation
d to get
pei mission for his wire, the former Lucky Seiko Inamoto
o f Vancouver and Montreal, to join him in Tokyo, while a waitins'
congressional action on the entry legislation.
Following repeated representations by Mike M. Masaoka
national
director of the'JACL' Anti-Discrimination Committe.
H.R.
introduced by Rep. Frank Fellows. Rep.-Maine, on
amendment bill has now passed both the full House and the fuiJ
Senate and only waits the President's .signature.
. According to JACL figures, there now are approximately 50 cases
ot marriages between American servicemen and foreign wom^n of
Japanese, ancestry.
These included the three with Canadian Nfs-i
One couple also affected by the bill is the Lt. Clarke Kawakamis. The
Washington. D.C.. Nisei officer married a prominent Japanese mov?e
star in Japan last year.
The three private bills providing for the entry of Mrs. Kitt
Mrs. Kawagoe and Mrs. Kimura, will be dropped since HR
3119
covers the whole situation.
I
1
Page 2
Pag
EL,THE
J
1
avenue
.
H
CANADIAN
A Conference of Teen-Aaei
Winnipeg, Man.
Phone 5Q
.
£
ETaIjKO ICHIKA\v^
Takaichi Umezaki
।
.......
”” editor
Rates;
Adeanee-HT'H Edi“”
(Etsuko Ichikawa was one of sever
a
.
S-00
one year
S‘X m°MhS’
Authonzed as second class mail Fo«t o/re ->
—------------------------------- V ro..t Onice Department, Ottawa.
tl
k
tc
rv
•vno ex.-endea the national Y-Teen and
College. Grinnei, Iowa, recently. The Gsr‘''’f
On Wars
ccmeretice !n Gr
high schcc
'Sst Times,*) senior
wntten.impressions cf her trip for The
W hat do soldiers die for?
i
Or me riot and humid night of JHWINN1PHC
non t know, and I sometimes wonder if they know.
nain-u-,
mgl1 schooJ teen-agers alias w
telega non to the National YM-YW ca
This happened during the war.
Pl
Gunnel two Hours overdue
I got into a conversation with a
i b ed ]]} If";
I was on
PJ
We tried to slink inconspicu
rneni
soldier on a train.
The
news
that
houses
built
in-th»
□c
ously into the fieldhouse where
porting back from hi s last leave.
Japanese evacuees are to be sold strit-es Slocan valley for He
m
me
first meeting was well on its
was going overseas and
COMPl
I
a
nostalgic
chord
way, but without much success
could tee than he was scared.
m *nany ex-ghost-towners.
I
m
All eyes turned toward “the H
didn’t blame him. '
. Ihe evacuee population in the
1-^
do
v
latecomers
who stalked into the
°f on.
He was .with some other solferjo
ptoperly,
the
interior
housino°
?
tov,ns
—
or
more
cor
I
sc
diers. They were all a little tight.
room and onto the empty bleach
darned
i
one time, numbering over
000^prerty Iarg‘e at They
yXX?* thiEk
ers. That was how we made our
talked noisily about how
us
tuuned as follows; i 7m
'Vas
*
♦
grand entrance.
I \VP*>
\ve'>
they had spent the last leave; and
in Taslune, 4,800 in sioe^f
.as Nisei, it Is
2.6SC)
they were singing “The Yanks Are
tc us ro
During the following five days ' ’'veil-informed
about our 0--^
c
n, and 1,200 i„ Greenwood.
’ 9o° 111 Coming.’’
I learned and experienced more
problems
rest of the" wou” dS7/kose of -h?
->3
than I have ever done in such a
these centres. only xev,. Denver .,,,d Greeil.vood re_
The soldier I talked with beiC
understand the problem'
snort time, a good part of the
main -s substantial
came very intimate under the mel
t!
°f other
—■G
other evacuees have centres or evacuee population. The lowing influence of the alcohol. He conference was spent, in listening race groups,
’ve muer know Q.,?
to speakers who were experts in
scattered
-i
first.
said he didn’t know what he was
Ew
Japan.
or gone to fighting
tneir
special
field
of
work,
ami
for.
I
wondered
o
if he
I but
hadn t read the newspapers. They -discussing their topics later in the
fro
exhoitcd to Piove'e-^t to'se^k^^ eVa-Pees were constantly
deadly
sert
’
OUs
ha
“
hem
50
cay in smaller work groups.
were full of Iaik about the fight
I COE
— ! worked
d,dX^ th^nd’ ';illia^"?3?inX. And m°St foi freedom and democracy.
o
DIFFERENT accents
I ces
ence.
1 hey talked on religiori,
12
The first thing I noticed about
Rei
A long time after that I'learned
the atomic bomb
lr
tovners is what if anythh^ d^Tthev
ex'«hosfr’
my
fellow
conferees
were
the
dif
by accident that the soldier I
tee:
and other
han
world problems, l certaini
ferent accents.
The honey-driptalked with ’ on the train
। mat
Heve mrormal discussions like
.>eais;].ent in those makeshift
SOTal
t
j be
killed in action.
pmg drawl of the South was just
h£sew;i|fceagreaiassetto
e
as fascinating to me as the short
Left
in the gtost to«m7hff i^er\--fbeaSe
the d*ys spent
-een-age-s in presarm„ +u._.
s
and wed-clipped accent of New
selves for future duties in their
7
-cn bitterness, seifirii^s’"Xw
We
^ork and Canada. Beyond this
aga:
During the first world war,
community.
the
and
the
difference
in
styJes
of
Allies
said
it
was
a
war
to
end
ment, hatred
We It^vp i’ ""
’ cnJudfeness, bewildera;i
ideal LIFE
comige, ambni^i dXrX
«hy’
t’ thos
uancmg, the kids were alike in
wars; it was a war to make the
Life at Grinnel was an ideal on.
chat
they
had
the
same
problems
world safe for'democracy—not for
It
-w
1
'' ,
and mdustrv
wnere
someone’s friends was
and were eager to accomplish the
h
hypocrisy’’ as Thomas Wolfe
^WC-C’XfouvIXhou
-Stri?Sd SUfc^of our
everyone’s friend, where peork
same things.
l€
selle
later suggested.
"ere
genuinely interested in each
my ]
n
ciiss ..hich hefe?f us w- °\xeigiied indn^rence by the
BQY-QIRL relations other and what was going 0D
And after eight million soldiers
Stocl
pietiv „ell d—b-nas M I
S°- T° KP*°W our nei£’h'bours were dead and buried, some guy
a ne first subject to be tackled
tne -world.
W!
,
— *«Pb to become
-v’-g
<ViiU Muri
was that of boy-girl relaxionship.
Perhaps
the
ideas
of
youth
are
to
aisrJe
them
~
'
v
^
n
^e.m,
perhaps"
started
to
sav
T
h»t
I
war Was all
This turned out to be one of the
too idealistic as many adults say
wrong and that the dead soldiers
I<
Inose
interesting
subjects,
but
one
but neither are they anything to
wouldn’t get a grand welcome in
o
how
^■hich had the least satisfy
be
laughed at.
heaven.
Foremost
among
them
o
versa
8et cl-n^ with ail sorts of people.
,eMn htw to was Beverley Nichols, who wrote answers. And in my opinion a
TWO RESOLUTIONS
Pi oolem which will continue as
a series of articles for Maclean’s
it's
resolutions were passed
that cm sojourn in the
J
’
We Can be assul'ec Magazine titled ”Cry Havoc.” The long as there is a boy and a sriri
boy
at
the
However, this much we agreed ’
conference, which I sin■
j
Ilie ghost towns was well worth tile time. newspapers in the early thirties
cereiy hope will have effect
upon. Too often young people
tried their best to deglamorize war.
sooner or later. One was a bid
Iook for romantic interest in
by showing war horror pictures cf
t distu
for
world peace by making the
the oppOSi’te sex rather than
■■'the starved and the dead
and the
, ask ।
UN stronger, and the other to
-nendshlp. It always appeared
maimed.
of ea
encourage s< x education
Japanese CanhimXgm^XL^^^8t i0CaI
in
me that Nisei teen-agers
:
■
work,
*
schools and community agencies.
were inclined to be too quick in
I Funn;
the Grinnel conference was an
■Erding evacuation losses to
egging a couple as “ooing
Ihen it became time
for the
experience I shall never forget. E *er pi
steady” after they had had a
■>n«mry commission. The edito.-i-Ym ”
Promised second war and all the
I only wish that more teen-agers E
Hew
ti
<ew dates together.
| learned
Japanese Canadian Committee fl ■ r>S°
that the talk became unpopular. pacifist
I the bi;
could
have
nan
the
chance
I
had.
-T
soon enough that others had the
Ihns time they didn’t say it was
sent- Of a national council sbolm jeill0“'acj'> hi the abI have returned with a stronger I but the
same problem.
I of yell I
gTODpscn the mutter of
wlve ,arrecti<^ to local u war to stop wars since thev said
faith m the youth of America.
that the first time. But they sale
I everyth
Yuluaole time may not be v.msted"tlic ln<lini’y so that
n
H was a fight for freedom.
I vhlsuei
a.
1 hey said the war was all HwI As for
h.
ler’s fault, and I was convinced
r
attention
the
fact
that
regret
8;
that it was Hitler’s fault, and I’m
es
your paper. I do wish you every
[ Freddy.'
still convinced.
success in the future. You de
Speak
: ammiii-y m..ds knowi1.
'
and tne details of the
'Dear
Friends:
serve.
it.
But
they
said
that
the
first
war
to
be h
a
As I am reaving fcr England and
Nellie
McCay.
ierent
1
v.as
all
Germany
’
s
fault/foo.
That
o
wnl
be
away
from
America
for
(Mrs.
John
T.
McCay),
Canada.
wasn’t the way I read it in the
it
some time, I wish you to cancel
history book, so I looked it un
Cowboy
C8 Japanese Canadians f
Cc-operawve Com- m a high school history by Scha Hi., paper delivery until I return.
Pen Pa.Is Column
e stern;
.1
^ou know, I thoroughly enjoy
Brooklyn
piro, Morris and Soward.
Editor, The New Canadian:
A Lesson in Humanity
£
12
I
s®
I
r
Preparation for the Inquiry
NX'S/”" j T ”
i
0 :
sa
1
latiZof
t0 the 5“-
1
the terms of reference publiS1TXW B apP°int^- and
1
f
£
S
i
h
I
,'Jia prooi required denend so co-^q’wL,' ’’’Y 01 the cIalms
some way or other to the a J-' Z’’ ?°'v the-v
in
ever, tn? Co-operative Con-nW-Titt
*e.ierence. Howtar.’o. .M;;;iiiobo. and British <■ M*5 , ?’Ve raa8e pIans in On3 Janane-e C r-tHh-n'
"
”aVe a
ters just as soon as 'possible h p ,Wect t0 these mateach of the ra.iin
; ’ - -;
PWosed also that in
Presentation of
Z,regard to
available to ah claintanj who^vish to'rJ °h’d
made
ln. Presenting their cbu’nw
“
Lhese services
I read there that the
causes o
the first world
war were as iollows:
1. Aggressive' nationalism
that
s'" ept over Europe.
2. Colonial imperialism.
3. The armament race.
4. Existence of autocratic
sor
eminent in Russia.
5. Dispute of terri-orio<.
cion International fe£~ and susp:-
Somebody was kidding me. .
1 .
>i; ■
■r
P^blieatih'Of\he temj'ol iSeXfX-ait the
discussion with the Drone-pH r
^0SfcIDjy some
Of obtr ation, itin^' t C”SJ0“- his methods
€
r
the iM-oStaSn’XVnXi^To0-'6-^) °f “ims «ettinS Put
alf who wish to make claims
to instruct
centres in
s>hou1^ be completed by
tnese forms can be used
- «>e various
So when i heard tbat the so!dier
° ‘*e ,r“in baa died. I beaar. to
won'll1' "hat the hiStOr’’
war
ab?Ut
sec°na ^)d
'a .
j. wondered if fnture Ws.
joluns would put down the eauies
like this:
3- Germany’s’ fault.
2, .Hitler’s fault.
• - - and‘.leave it at
-cause that’s the way
- ve
b een -
ARE AMERICANS
i
DIFFERENT?
nJhe articI- '‘Americans Are
Liferent,” in the June 21 jssue of
J ne New Canadian has received
some interesting reactions from
the ‘different’’ Americans:
The Northwest Times. Seattle’s
Mi-Enghsh Nisei paper, printed the
article with an editorial note:
Opinions expressed by the
writer are her own and not
. .ose of The Northwest Times.”
An editor of a Chicago Nisei
v-cek.y remarks:
'Peg’s article in the June 21
I would say your proposed PenPa’ Section :n your paper would i
be a. super idea. I sure would like i
to see it star:. Furthermore, how
about including the l.S. and Ha- j
waii?
. 1
Albert Higano, I
P.O. Box 1639. Merritt, B.C. I
Hath
the Groa
~~prefera
charine
Lonibardi
Ffiughn 1
Third
J=zz nur
bn. Gua
Arrnstrot
owes hi,
th£se i5j
(Another letter favoring a pen fl
pal column has been received from I
Kelowna, B.C. It is not published ■
because there is no identification fl
of
except “A New
-'-st ima
Canadian Reader.’' All letters to
ec-und af
the Editor must be signed by the
secutive
writer’s name as a sign of good
faith. Any wish to use a pen
1m a l
name when the letter is published
will be honored, but the New
go
Canadian staff must know the
'-•‘g
source of the letter.)
^ccrcs. :-
‘ssue which discovered that
Americans Are Different/' is
Ack“cw’edgments
’ m'£,e-ding. : The lack of self.
- The New Canadian acknow^ I
- consciousness which .-€he claims . edges with thanks generous don^ |
o have found is, I’m afraid, a
tions from the following.’
j
r-nfred state of being found
Mr. Y. Hashino. RR 1, Kais- |
among only very, very few. Our
. loops. E.C., on the occasion of his |
v?rnaou|ar;press In this.country
daughter’s marriage.
. j
Hamilton Nisei Bowling
. 1
exemplify the general attitude.”
Hamiltc’n, Gut./per M, -Goto.
I
<:-s- I ha
-sc: the. ■
■ T?1e ci.1C.’-'
■'*
eScV$_
~y sie
th£ South
£ys and (
lJl= 1 ssv
EL,THE
J
1
avenue
.
H
CANADIAN
A Conference of Teen-Aaei
Winnipeg, Man.
Phone 5Q
.
£
ETaIjKO ICHIKA\v^
Takaichi Umezaki
।
.......
”” editor
Rates;
Adeanee-HT'H Edi“”
(Etsuko Ichikawa was one of sever
a
.
S-00
one year
S‘X m°MhS’
Authonzed as second class mail Fo«t o/re ->
—------------------------------- V ro..t Onice Department, Ottawa.
tl
k
tc
rv
•vno ex.-endea the national Y-Teen and
College. Grinnei, Iowa, recently. The Gsr‘''’f
On Wars
ccmeretice !n Gr
high schcc
'Sst Times,*) senior
wntten.impressions cf her trip for The
W hat do soldiers die for?
i
Or me riot and humid night of JHWINN1PHC
non t know, and I sometimes wonder if they know.
nain-u-,
mgl1 schooJ teen-agers alias w
telega non to the National YM-YW ca
This happened during the war.
Pl
Gunnel two Hours overdue
I got into a conversation with a
i b ed ]]} If";
I was on
PJ
We tried to slink inconspicu
rneni
soldier on a train.
The
news
that
houses
built
in-th»
□c
ously into the fieldhouse where
porting back from hi s last leave.
Japanese evacuees are to be sold strit-es Slocan valley for He
m
me
first meeting was well on its
was going overseas and
COMPl
I
a
nostalgic
chord
way, but without much success
could tee than he was scared.
m *nany ex-ghost-towners.
I
m
All eyes turned toward “the H
didn’t blame him. '
. Ihe evacuee population in the
1-^
do
v
latecomers
who stalked into the
°f on.
He was .with some other solferjo
ptoperly,
the
interior
housino°
?
tov,ns
—
or
more
cor
I
sc
diers. They were all a little tight.
room and onto the empty bleach
darned
i
one time, numbering over
000^prerty Iarg‘e at They
yXX?* thiEk
ers. That was how we made our
talked noisily about how
us
tuuned as follows; i 7m
'Vas
*
♦
grand entrance.
I \VP*>
\ve'>
they had spent the last leave; and
in Taslune, 4,800 in sioe^f
.as Nisei, it Is
2.6SC)
they were singing “The Yanks Are
tc us ro
During the following five days ' ’'veil-informed
about our 0--^
c
n, and 1,200 i„ Greenwood.
’ 9o° 111 Coming.’’
I learned and experienced more
problems
rest of the" wou” dS7/kose of -h?
->3
than I have ever done in such a
these centres. only xev,. Denver .,,,d Greeil.vood re_
The soldier I talked with beiC
understand the problem'
snort time, a good part of the
main -s substantial
came very intimate under the mel
t!
°f other
—■G
other evacuees have centres or evacuee population. The lowing influence of the alcohol. He conference was spent, in listening race groups,
’ve muer know Q.,?
to speakers who were experts in
scattered
-i
first.
said he didn’t know what he was
Ew
Japan.
or gone to fighting
tneir
special
field
of
work,
ami
for.
I
wondered
o
if he
I but
hadn t read the newspapers. They -discussing their topics later in the
fro
exhoitcd to Piove'e-^t to'se^k^^ eVa-Pees were constantly
deadly
sert
’
OUs
ha
“
hem
50
cay in smaller work groups.
were full of Iaik about the fight
I COE
— ! worked
d,dX^ th^nd’ ';illia^"?3?inX. And m°St foi freedom and democracy.
o
DIFFERENT accents
I ces
ence.
1 hey talked on religiori,
12
The first thing I noticed about
Rei
A long time after that I'learned
the atomic bomb
lr
tovners is what if anythh^ d^Tthev
ex'«hosfr’
my
fellow
conferees
were
the
dif
by accident that the soldier I
tee:
and other
han
world problems, l certaini
ferent accents.
The honey-driptalked with ’ on the train
। mat
Heve mrormal discussions like
.>eais;].ent in those makeshift
SOTal
t
j be
killed in action.
pmg drawl of the South was just
h£sew;i|fceagreaiassetto
e
as fascinating to me as the short
Left
in the gtost to«m7hff i^er\--fbeaSe
the d*ys spent
-een-age-s in presarm„ +u._.
s
and wed-clipped accent of New
selves for future duties in their
7
-cn bitterness, seifirii^s’"Xw
We
^ork and Canada. Beyond this
aga:
During the first world war,
community.
the
and
the
difference
in
styJes
of
Allies
said
it
was
a
war
to
end
ment, hatred
We It^vp i’ ""
’ cnJudfeness, bewildera;i
ideal LIFE
comige, ambni^i dXrX
«hy’
t’ thos
uancmg, the kids were alike in
wars; it was a war to make the
Life at Grinnel was an ideal on.
chat
they
had
the
same
problems
world safe for'democracy—not for
It
-w
1
'' ,
and mdustrv
wnere
someone’s friends was
and were eager to accomplish the
h
hypocrisy’’ as Thomas Wolfe
^WC-C’XfouvIXhou
-Stri?Sd SUfc^of our
everyone’s friend, where peork
same things.
l€
selle
later suggested.
"ere
genuinely interested in each
my ]
n
ciiss ..hich hefe?f us w- °\xeigiied indn^rence by the
BQY-QIRL relations other and what was going 0D
And after eight million soldiers
Stocl
pietiv „ell d—b-nas M I
S°- T° KP*°W our nei£’h'bours were dead and buried, some guy
a ne first subject to be tackled
tne -world.
W!
,
— *«Pb to become
-v’-g
<ViiU Muri
was that of boy-girl relaxionship.
Perhaps
the
ideas
of
youth
are
to
aisrJe
them
~
'
v
^
n
^e.m,
perhaps"
started
to
sav
T
h»t
I
war Was all
This turned out to be one of the
too idealistic as many adults say
wrong and that the dead soldiers
I<
Inose
interesting
subjects,
but
one
but neither are they anything to
wouldn’t get a grand welcome in
o
how
^■hich had the least satisfy
be
laughed at.
heaven.
Foremost
among
them
o
versa
8et cl-n^ with ail sorts of people.
,eMn htw to was Beverley Nichols, who wrote answers. And in my opinion a
TWO RESOLUTIONS
Pi oolem which will continue as
a series of articles for Maclean’s
it's
resolutions were passed
that cm sojourn in the
J
’
We Can be assul'ec Magazine titled ”Cry Havoc.” The long as there is a boy and a sriri
boy
at
the
However, this much we agreed ’
conference, which I sin■
j
Ilie ghost towns was well worth tile time. newspapers in the early thirties
cereiy hope will have effect
upon. Too often young people
tried their best to deglamorize war.
sooner or later. One was a bid
Iook for romantic interest in
by showing war horror pictures cf
t distu
for
world peace by making the
the oppOSi’te sex rather than
■■'the starved and the dead
and the
, ask ।
UN stronger, and the other to
-nendshlp. It always appeared
maimed.
of ea
encourage s< x education
Japanese CanhimXgm^XL^^^8t i0CaI
in
me that Nisei teen-agers
:
■
work,
*
schools and community agencies.
were inclined to be too quick in
I Funn;
the Grinnel conference was an
■Erding evacuation losses to
egging a couple as “ooing
Ihen it became time
for the
experience I shall never forget. E *er pi
steady” after they had had a
■>n«mry commission. The edito.-i-Ym ”
Promised second war and all the
I only wish that more teen-agers E
Hew
ti
<ew dates together.
| learned
Japanese Canadian Committee fl ■ r>S°
that the talk became unpopular. pacifist
I the bi;
could
have
nan
the
chance
I
had.
-T
soon enough that others had the
Ihns time they didn’t say it was
sent- Of a national council sbolm jeill0“'acj'> hi the abI have returned with a stronger I but the
same problem.
I of yell I
gTODpscn the mutter of
wlve ,arrecti<^ to local u war to stop wars since thev said
faith m the youth of America.
that the first time. But they sale
I everyth
Yuluaole time may not be v.msted"tlic ln<lini’y so that
n
H was a fight for freedom.
I vhlsuei
a.
1 hey said the war was all HwI As for
h.
ler’s fault, and I was convinced
r
attention
the
fact
that
regret
8;
that it was Hitler’s fault, and I’m
es
your paper. I do wish you every
[ Freddy.'
still convinced.
success in the future. You de
Speak
: ammiii-y m..ds knowi1.
'
and tne details of the
'Dear
Friends:
serve.
it.
But
they
said
that
the
first
war
to
be h
a
As I am reaving fcr England and
Nellie
McCay.
ierent
1
v.as
all
Germany
’
s
fault/foo.
That
o
wnl
be
away
from
America
for
(Mrs.
John
T.
McCay),
Canada.
wasn’t the way I read it in the
it
some time, I wish you to cancel
history book, so I looked it un
Cowboy
C8 Japanese Canadians f
Cc-operawve Com- m a high school history by Scha Hi., paper delivery until I return.
Pen Pa.Is Column
e stern;
.1
^ou know, I thoroughly enjoy
Brooklyn
piro, Morris and Soward.
Editor, The New Canadian:
A Lesson in Humanity
£
12
I
s®
I
r
Preparation for the Inquiry
NX'S/”" j T ”
i
0 :
sa
1
latiZof
t0 the 5“-
1
the terms of reference publiS1TXW B apP°int^- and
1
f
£
S
i
h
I
,'Jia prooi required denend so co-^q’wL,' ’’’Y 01 the cIalms
some way or other to the a J-' Z’’ ?°'v the-v
in
ever, tn? Co-operative Con-nW-Titt
*e.ierence. Howtar.’o. .M;;;iiiobo. and British <■ M*5 , ?’Ve raa8e pIans in On3 Janane-e C r-tHh-n'
"
”aVe a
ters just as soon as 'possible h p ,Wect t0 these mateach of the ra.iin
; ’ - -;
PWosed also that in
Presentation of
Z,regard to
available to ah claintanj who^vish to'rJ °h’d
made
ln. Presenting their cbu’nw
“
Lhese services
I read there that the
causes o
the first world
war were as iollows:
1. Aggressive' nationalism
that
s'" ept over Europe.
2. Colonial imperialism.
3. The armament race.
4. Existence of autocratic
sor
eminent in Russia.
5. Dispute of terri-orio<.
cion International fe£~ and susp:-
Somebody was kidding me. .
1 .
>i; ■
■r
P^blieatih'Of\he temj'ol iSeXfX-ait the
discussion with the Drone-pH r
^0SfcIDjy some
Of obtr ation, itin^' t C”SJ0“- his methods
€
r
the iM-oStaSn’XVnXi^To0-'6-^) °f “ims «ettinS Put
alf who wish to make claims
to instruct
centres in
s>hou1^ be completed by
tnese forms can be used
- «>e various
So when i heard tbat the so!dier
° ‘*e ,r“in baa died. I beaar. to
won'll1' "hat the hiStOr’’
war
ab?Ut
sec°na ^)d
'a .
j. wondered if fnture Ws.
joluns would put down the eauies
like this:
3- Germany’s’ fault.
2, .Hitler’s fault.
• - - and‘.leave it at
-cause that’s the way
- ve
b een -
ARE AMERICANS
i
DIFFERENT?
nJhe articI- '‘Americans Are
Liferent,” in the June 21 jssue of
J ne New Canadian has received
some interesting reactions from
the ‘different’’ Americans:
The Northwest Times. Seattle’s
Mi-Enghsh Nisei paper, printed the
article with an editorial note:
Opinions expressed by the
writer are her own and not
. .ose of The Northwest Times.”
An editor of a Chicago Nisei
v-cek.y remarks:
'Peg’s article in the June 21
I would say your proposed PenPa’ Section :n your paper would i
be a. super idea. I sure would like i
to see it star:. Furthermore, how
about including the l.S. and Ha- j
waii?
. 1
Albert Higano, I
P.O. Box 1639. Merritt, B.C. I
Hath
the Groa
~~prefera
charine
Lonibardi
Ffiughn 1
Third
J=zz nur
bn. Gua
Arrnstrot
owes hi,
th£se i5j
(Another letter favoring a pen fl
pal column has been received from I
Kelowna, B.C. It is not published ■
because there is no identification fl
of
except “A New
-'-st ima
Canadian Reader.’' All letters to
ec-und af
the Editor must be signed by the
secutive
writer’s name as a sign of good
faith. Any wish to use a pen
1m a l
name when the letter is published
will be honored, but the New
go
Canadian staff must know the
'-•‘g
source of the letter.)
^ccrcs. :-
‘ssue which discovered that
Americans Are Different/' is
Ack“cw’edgments
’ m'£,e-ding. : The lack of self.
- The New Canadian acknow^ I
- consciousness which .-€he claims . edges with thanks generous don^ |
o have found is, I’m afraid, a
tions from the following.’
j
r-nfred state of being found
Mr. Y. Hashino. RR 1, Kais- |
among only very, very few. Our
. loops. E.C., on the occasion of his |
v?rnaou|ar;press In this.country
daughter’s marriage.
. j
Hamilton Nisei Bowling
. 1
exemplify the general attitude.”
Hamiltc’n, Gut./per M, -Goto.
I
<:-s- I ha
-sc: the. ■
■ T?1e ci.1C.’-'
■'*
eScV$_
~y sie
th£ South
£ys and (
lJl= 1 ssv
Page 3
ahH’d^y. Jul}7 26, 1947
Page Three
rize For Pinching
Ickei ... 1 wonoer
readers actually
it behind chose
course, Sinatra
nd it all for candy
but how
i few years back,
-e gained pleasant
eriing by casually
■cent piece into a
>ack. and waiting
tsic to start.
must
’ wferiorjy
anied
.
3t think us
' we'’
0 Us ro bs°ur o-vzj
05e of -h?
'6
-0
of <?ther
know q-?
= anyone thought of
that goes into giving
usic? The wear and
teSr of hair, the groans of the
mechanics, the frustration of all
connected with the business,
snd the pile of broken-down
records gene to a “better place
get the idea that “your
as Jim Coleman would
moaning the blues, far
from
Your agent has been
■ connected with this jukebox busi
ness as of graduation from ' a
kebab Business Course.
That
seems to be. in my mind, many.
many recoros ago.
jIn fact, I’d
be willing to wager that
i
it was
before our company- started to
get those slugs over“ and over
/fng fun?
them so
nes with
! conferreligion,
i other
tinly be.
>ns like
■t to the
Now, everywhere I go, I hear
those ridiculous songs in my ear
—“Across the Alley’ from the
Kal oncAlamo." "A small cafe, Mam'ls was
selle," “Down by the River and
people
my
little Pinto Pony,” “Red Silk
in each
Jock
s and Green. Perfume.’7
t on in.
Whatever faith I had in song-ith are
widers has long since gone the
Its say,
way that all good “faiths” go—
ling to
how did Faith get into this conf versation?
assed
I sina bid
;r to
in
cies.
?.s an
irget.
?.gers
had.
inset
ery
y)
?D!ld
Le
a-
o
Everyday; morning to night,
hs the same old story.
Cow
boy songs, witty ditties, musical
missterpieces, and what have
yee—they all ring forth with
disturbing clarity. Some people
ask me why don't I get a pair
of earmuffs, and if that doesn’t
work, why not shoot myself,
i-unny, they al| stress the lat
te,- procedure quite strongly.
However, neither of these .fits
5,111 • • ■ I tried the earmuffs,
but the Boss doesn’t like the idea
of yehiug at the top of his lungs
ererytinie he has something to
■whisper into these tender ears.
As for
second suggestion, I
regret ito
ay, “Not reddy for
Frecdy."
,
sei iously*. this seems
/
how
Popularitv of dif™t kinds of
music ranges in
Canada.
First on the list are
Cowboy
those
“sweet
Tf sterns
manufactured by some
Brooklyn
company’ with a studio
tToc2tbUSh Avenue' Second on
’7°“n“2S' Poll is sweet music
Played by- .some sac"c,Ju€> orchestra, such as Guy
-onibarGo.
SammyKaye
or
'aughn Monroe.
T.Mrd
and
last
come
those
5
= 2 numbers featuring Elling;r;±anier’’ B^as’ Safranskl,
n
d
owes
7
/
OnS, etc.
Your agent
h’s mental stability to
latter artists.
>
You can
imagine
.
how good they
c
2Tter ab°ut twenty conbev e(Ve 7C°rdS Such “ “Cow, ; - t-es by Finger Boike and
'm 5
Lonely Little Petunia”
cy Plow srs Dahlia.
oes on day after day,
from week unto week.
deccrds
records. and more rec<-K. j
nightmares. dreamhe ci ;
t day’s work.
- 1 he ether
n:gh
my brother
~e from my slumber.
"Hey, you're talking
>- ;
e-D1" I gently blinl<
ine Scut.5
corner of
right
eye and
quietly croak. ‘What
did
Th,.„
.
«
J
Citizen
■llllOUgh tllG etTOT’’’*: rvf Atw,. _ A
rOKYO.—Japan's drive
lias been in progress for sorne^timo ~ma ^IiTrwe^
others. ;
cers in making a film about a Ni^ei L° lnteresT Hollywood story editors and film nroduune reason for the hpcitanAv L7
Until recently pictures with a
purpose about prejudice were
taboo in Holly-wood. That was be
fore
Samuel
Goldwyn
bought
“Earth and High Heaven.” the
love story- about anti-Semitism in
Canada, and announced plans for
its production. Now a
cycle of pictures about race preju
dice are in prospect although all
these films carefully- ignore anv
specific treatment of’ the t
Question of race relations jr
America, the problem of ;
Under Hollywood's
cinematic
double standard, non-Caucasians
rarely are treated with dignity,
There always are exceptions and
“Anna and the King of Sia.m” was
one of them, but generally C-rientals are pictured as
servants.
coolies or as comic relief.
Nisei in War Films
Duiing the war Holly’wood pre
sented a distorted portrayal of the
Nisei in such films as “Air Force,”
Little Tokyo, U.S.A.,” “Across
the Pacific,” and “Betrayal From
the East.
Most of the Nisei who
were pictured in these films were
traitors and saboteurs and this
treatment by- Holly’wood undoubt
edly contributed much to the fact
that a large majority of the Ameri
can people, when quizzed in a
public opinion survey, expressed
their belief that Japanese Ameri
cans had been guilty of traitorous
acts during the war.
“Never mind, just
some sleep,” and
shakes his head.
try to get
hopelessly
This is not a plea for aid from,
or a note of censure for those
who play cowboy songs,
It is
just the sad story of one who
has the misfortune to try- to make
a living in the “If I had a nickel
business.
Any contributions will be glad
ly accepted Please address them
in care of Bats Belfry Incorporated,
334
Lombardo
Square,
Freddy's City . ’ As a last resort,
I am attempting to make a few
shekels at the race-tracks—enough
to live quietly in some nice se
cluded Sanatorium for the rest of
my few years left.
the editor
doesn't mind. I'd like to leave a
note for Joe the Bookie:
Dear Joe: Thanks for tel ling
me it’s Dandruff in the Third.
I’ll keep it under my hat.— R.
The creation of a false con
ception that many Nisei were
traitors, although there is no
record of any such activity in
Hawaii or the mainland, may
account for the lack of pub
lic reaction over the Tomoya
Kawakita case, which shocked
the Nisei but apparently surprised few others.
Geographically Anti
The fact that Hollywood was
located geographically in an area
in
which
activities
flourished1 during the
f un
doubtedly
contributed
to
ilie
screen's <distortion in its
treatment of the Nisei. The Hollywood
line.
as
displayed
in
Tokyo. U.S.A.,'7 and in ‘'Betrayal
From the East,' was to present a
i who was killed in
the first reel, leaving the screen
clear for the villainous Nisei characters. In this way the writer
Audrey Wisberg was one of them,
were free of any fear of confusion among the audience as to
which Nisei was "good” and which
was “bad.”
In "Little Tokyo,”
the picture starts as the "loyal”
Nisei is found decapitated, while
tn Betrayal ’ he is shot.
Detective Novelette
This same device also was used
by’ Dorothy’ Hughes, one of the
best mystery story writers and
author or "The Fallen Sparrow”
and “The Delicate Ape,” in a
novelette called "The Spitting
Tongue.” The latter story start
ed with the murder of a “loyal'’
Nisei, one Juan Yano, in Los Angeles. His murderers are evacuated with others of Japanese an
cestry to the Manzanar relocation
center.
The two men then escape from
Manzanar and make their way
thiough the Sierras to Yosemite,
where they’ seek to contact enemy
agents of Caucasian ancestrv. a
glance at a map of California will
show that the two Japanese agents
who escape from Manzanar in the
Dorothy Hughes story faced a
“walk” of nearly 2C»0 miles by the
nearest highway, no mean feat.
Commercially Dud
-1 he motion picture industry,
which devoted several full-length
features to the anti-Nisei cam
paign during the war, has found
it inexpedient to produce any pic
ture to dispel the false informa
tion it propagated. The argument
is that a film such as that on the
442nd Combat Team, would not be
commercially- feasible. The atti
tude apparently is that hate films
pay, particularly- during a war, but
films against that same hate do
The
pockets ha s taken on all the
of a • cap wrapper con-
police ar.
one point
for each
pickpocket arrested, wi h a prize
going io the detective with the
highest score at the end of the
nationwide drive.
stories.. Another is the screen’s record
discrimination.
_
Taboo ■ -
egro prejudice and Jim Crow
conditions, Studios which now
are’ makin
hard-hittin
films
about anti-Semitism are fearful
of losing a substantial section of
the American film market, below
the Mason-Dixon line, if thev make
a picture in which Negroes t
treated as ordinary human bein
t
TAJIRI in
87
question
whether movies
DOKIE
against prejudice will be suceesstul at the box office will be test
ed soon in a number of pictures
which are now in production and
which mark the first breach in
Hollywood’s long taboo against
such subjects.
Anti-Semitism Filmed
KKO is beating the other studios
to the theatres with the first of
these films, “Crossfire," starring
Kobert Young and Robert Mitehum. and taken from' Richard
Brooks
ry novel. “The Brick
F oxhole.'7
20th Century-Fox is
producing
ment," the novel by Laura Z. Hobson about how it feels to be a J ew
in America. Gregory- Feck will
play the part of the writer who
poses as a Jew, and Dorothy M cGuire is the girl. The picture is
being directed by Eliza Kazan,
who did “Boomerang,
1 he King Brothers , an tndependent outfit, has bought Arthur
Miller's “Focus,” a story of anti
Semitism and Christian Frontiers.
Robert Montgomery will direct
Bayard
McKendrick's
eights
Out.” David O. Selznick and
Lesser also are reported to be
preparing similar picture
Still Skittish
It may be noted that most of
these films are about what is basireligious prejudice. Hollywood is still a little skittish about
films on race prejudice. As far
as the film industry is concerned
these will provide a test of the
public's receptivity to motion pict tires which have something to
Those av ho oppose ideas in
films declare that people who
have paid 75 cents at the box
office do not want to listen to a
lecture.
But this argument is based on
the premise that such films are
necessarily dull. The opportu
nity presented in the forthcom
ing films on prejudice is a chal
lenge to the writer and director
to produce pictures which will
entertain and hold the theatre
goer's interest.
The test of
public reaction will not be a
valid one unless the pictures
themselves are good films from
every angle.
The Lost Weekend
It may have been argued that a
film about a drunkard would not
acceptable, yet, “The Lost
M* eekend was a box office suc
cess and won the Academy Award.
English. French and Russians con
sistently produce films which do
not flinch from ideas nor from
discussions of problems other
than
the perennial
query Of
whether the boy gets the girl.
Hollywood never has dared to
i rear
with such ordinaiy dignity- as in "Song of Free
dom, a British film of some years
back which starred Raul Robeson.
Motion pictures of courage and
compassion about human problems
can be produced in America as
Paul Strand proved in "Native
Land.” a picture about civil liber
ties which has been virtually boy
cotted and has been shown in few
cities outside of
fork. A li
other such film
the John
cican eoiumunity.“Forgotten Villa
w hi ch
was directed by Herbert Klein
and which is one of the finest piclures of the last 10 years.
House I Live In
On the other hand, one of the
few Hollywood ventures to date,
the much-publicized Frank Sinatra
short, “The House I Live In." was
so generalized and over-simplified
that ii missed its point. Even the
more telling lines of Karl Robin
son's song about “My neighbors
white and black” were deleted.
If M arner Brothers, who were
the worst offenders with their
anti-Nazi propaganda in their war
films, were interested. there are
a number of stories which would
make splendid material for the
screen. John MacManus, the New
Y ork film critic, once commented
that the story’ of the 442nd Co in
bat Team was one of the most
dramatic, of the year.
Ralph
Martin's fine bio
raphy of Ben Kuroki has been con
sidered by John Garfield and by
several story editors, but the fact
that the central character is a
Nisei makes the story, in Holly
wood's opinion, limited in appeal.
Karen Kehoe's “City in the Sun”
and Joseph Anthony's unproduced
Play, “Some of the Sky," are two
other stories which would make
splendid movie material.
The
Anthony play, which Larney Goodk i n d hopes to produce on Broadconcerns a GI who returns
to a western town with a Nisei
bride from Hawaii. One of the
main characters is
the girl’s
brother, a veteran of
442nd
Combat Team.
7-25
WHAT
ACE VOU DOING
OVEK
LOOK AT ,POO^
HERCULES TAIL J
C<A3S
A
■
f\
i
!
i
th
Star System Obstacle
One of the obstacles to the pro
duction of a Nisei story- in Holly
wood is the film industry’s star
system under which stories are
tailored for individual stars in the
belief that the general public goes
to the theatre to see the stars and
not the stories.
The movies probably need an
other Sessue Hayakawa before
they will be interested in a Nisei
film.
By Eddie Sato
DOKIE
i
l-J'i
Page Three
rize For Pinching
Ickei ... 1 wonoer
readers actually
it behind chose
course, Sinatra
nd it all for candy
but how
i few years back,
-e gained pleasant
eriing by casually
■cent piece into a
>ack. and waiting
tsic to start.
must
’ wferiorjy
anied
.
3t think us
' we'’
0 Us ro bs°ur o-vzj
05e of -h?
'6
-0
of <?ther
know q-?
= anyone thought of
that goes into giving
usic? The wear and
teSr of hair, the groans of the
mechanics, the frustration of all
connected with the business,
snd the pile of broken-down
records gene to a “better place
get the idea that “your
as Jim Coleman would
moaning the blues, far
from
Your agent has been
■ connected with this jukebox busi
ness as of graduation from ' a
kebab Business Course.
That
seems to be. in my mind, many.
many recoros ago.
jIn fact, I’d
be willing to wager that
i
it was
before our company- started to
get those slugs over“ and over
/fng fun?
them so
nes with
! conferreligion,
i other
tinly be.
>ns like
■t to the
Now, everywhere I go, I hear
those ridiculous songs in my ear
—“Across the Alley’ from the
Kal oncAlamo." "A small cafe, Mam'ls was
selle," “Down by the River and
people
my
little Pinto Pony,” “Red Silk
in each
Jock
s and Green. Perfume.’7
t on in.
Whatever faith I had in song-ith are
widers has long since gone the
Its say,
way that all good “faiths” go—
ling to
how did Faith get into this conf versation?
assed
I sina bid
;r to
in
cies.
?.s an
irget.
?.gers
had.
inset
ery
y)
?D!ld
Le
a-
o
Everyday; morning to night,
hs the same old story.
Cow
boy songs, witty ditties, musical
missterpieces, and what have
yee—they all ring forth with
disturbing clarity. Some people
ask me why don't I get a pair
of earmuffs, and if that doesn’t
work, why not shoot myself,
i-unny, they al| stress the lat
te,- procedure quite strongly.
However, neither of these .fits
5,111 • • ■ I tried the earmuffs,
but the Boss doesn’t like the idea
of yehiug at the top of his lungs
ererytinie he has something to
■whisper into these tender ears.
As for
second suggestion, I
regret ito
ay, “Not reddy for
Frecdy."
,
sei iously*. this seems
/
how
Popularitv of dif™t kinds of
music ranges in
Canada.
First on the list are
Cowboy
those
“sweet
Tf sterns
manufactured by some
Brooklyn
company’ with a studio
tToc2tbUSh Avenue' Second on
’7°“n“2S' Poll is sweet music
Played by- .some sac"c,Ju€> orchestra, such as Guy
-onibarGo.
SammyKaye
or
'aughn Monroe.
T.Mrd
and
last
come
those
5
= 2 numbers featuring Elling;r;±anier’’ B^as’ Safranskl,
n
d
owes
7
/
OnS, etc.
Your agent
h’s mental stability to
latter artists.
>
You can
imagine
.
how good they
c
2Tter ab°ut twenty conbev e(Ve 7C°rdS Such “ “Cow, ; - t-es by Finger Boike and
'm 5
Lonely Little Petunia”
cy Plow srs Dahlia.
oes on day after day,
from week unto week.
deccrds
records. and more rec<-K. j
nightmares. dreamhe ci ;
t day’s work.
- 1 he ether
n:gh
my brother
~e from my slumber.
"Hey, you're talking
>- ;
e-D1" I gently blinl<
ine Scut.5
corner of
right
eye and
quietly croak. ‘What
did
Th,.„
.
«
J
Citizen
■llllOUgh tllG etTOT’’’*: rvf Atw,. _ A
rOKYO.—Japan's drive
lias been in progress for sorne^timo ~ma ^IiTrwe^
others. ;
cers in making a film about a Ni^ei L° lnteresT Hollywood story editors and film nroduune reason for the hpcitanAv L7
Until recently pictures with a
purpose about prejudice were
taboo in Holly-wood. That was be
fore
Samuel
Goldwyn
bought
“Earth and High Heaven.” the
love story- about anti-Semitism in
Canada, and announced plans for
its production. Now a
cycle of pictures about race preju
dice are in prospect although all
these films carefully- ignore anv
specific treatment of’ the t
Question of race relations jr
America, the problem of ;
Under Hollywood's
cinematic
double standard, non-Caucasians
rarely are treated with dignity,
There always are exceptions and
“Anna and the King of Sia.m” was
one of them, but generally C-rientals are pictured as
servants.
coolies or as comic relief.
Nisei in War Films
Duiing the war Holly’wood pre
sented a distorted portrayal of the
Nisei in such films as “Air Force,”
Little Tokyo, U.S.A.,” “Across
the Pacific,” and “Betrayal From
the East.
Most of the Nisei who
were pictured in these films were
traitors and saboteurs and this
treatment by- Holly’wood undoubt
edly contributed much to the fact
that a large majority of the Ameri
can people, when quizzed in a
public opinion survey, expressed
their belief that Japanese Ameri
cans had been guilty of traitorous
acts during the war.
“Never mind, just
some sleep,” and
shakes his head.
try to get
hopelessly
This is not a plea for aid from,
or a note of censure for those
who play cowboy songs,
It is
just the sad story of one who
has the misfortune to try- to make
a living in the “If I had a nickel
business.
Any contributions will be glad
ly accepted Please address them
in care of Bats Belfry Incorporated,
334
Lombardo
Square,
Freddy's City . ’ As a last resort,
I am attempting to make a few
shekels at the race-tracks—enough
to live quietly in some nice se
cluded Sanatorium for the rest of
my few years left.
the editor
doesn't mind. I'd like to leave a
note for Joe the Bookie:
Dear Joe: Thanks for tel ling
me it’s Dandruff in the Third.
I’ll keep it under my hat.— R.
The creation of a false con
ception that many Nisei were
traitors, although there is no
record of any such activity in
Hawaii or the mainland, may
account for the lack of pub
lic reaction over the Tomoya
Kawakita case, which shocked
the Nisei but apparently surprised few others.
Geographically Anti
The fact that Hollywood was
located geographically in an area
in
which
activities
flourished1 during the
f un
doubtedly
contributed
to
ilie
screen's <distortion in its
treatment of the Nisei. The Hollywood
line.
as
displayed
in
Tokyo. U.S.A.,'7 and in ‘'Betrayal
From the East,' was to present a
i who was killed in
the first reel, leaving the screen
clear for the villainous Nisei characters. In this way the writer
Audrey Wisberg was one of them,
were free of any fear of confusion among the audience as to
which Nisei was "good” and which
was “bad.”
In "Little Tokyo,”
the picture starts as the "loyal”
Nisei is found decapitated, while
tn Betrayal ’ he is shot.
Detective Novelette
This same device also was used
by’ Dorothy’ Hughes, one of the
best mystery story writers and
author or "The Fallen Sparrow”
and “The Delicate Ape,” in a
novelette called "The Spitting
Tongue.” The latter story start
ed with the murder of a “loyal'’
Nisei, one Juan Yano, in Los Angeles. His murderers are evacuated with others of Japanese an
cestry to the Manzanar relocation
center.
The two men then escape from
Manzanar and make their way
thiough the Sierras to Yosemite,
where they’ seek to contact enemy
agents of Caucasian ancestrv. a
glance at a map of California will
show that the two Japanese agents
who escape from Manzanar in the
Dorothy Hughes story faced a
“walk” of nearly 2C»0 miles by the
nearest highway, no mean feat.
Commercially Dud
-1 he motion picture industry,
which devoted several full-length
features to the anti-Nisei cam
paign during the war, has found
it inexpedient to produce any pic
ture to dispel the false informa
tion it propagated. The argument
is that a film such as that on the
442nd Combat Team, would not be
commercially- feasible. The atti
tude apparently is that hate films
pay, particularly- during a war, but
films against that same hate do
The
pockets ha s taken on all the
of a • cap wrapper con-
police ar.
one point
for each
pickpocket arrested, wi h a prize
going io the detective with the
highest score at the end of the
nationwide drive.
stories.. Another is the screen’s record
discrimination.
_
Taboo ■ -
egro prejudice and Jim Crow
conditions, Studios which now
are’ makin
hard-hittin
films
about anti-Semitism are fearful
of losing a substantial section of
the American film market, below
the Mason-Dixon line, if thev make
a picture in which Negroes t
treated as ordinary human bein
t
TAJIRI in
87
question
whether movies
DOKIE
against prejudice will be suceesstul at the box office will be test
ed soon in a number of pictures
which are now in production and
which mark the first breach in
Hollywood’s long taboo against
such subjects.
Anti-Semitism Filmed
KKO is beating the other studios
to the theatres with the first of
these films, “Crossfire," starring
Kobert Young and Robert Mitehum. and taken from' Richard
Brooks
ry novel. “The Brick
F oxhole.'7
20th Century-Fox is
producing
ment," the novel by Laura Z. Hobson about how it feels to be a J ew
in America. Gregory- Feck will
play the part of the writer who
poses as a Jew, and Dorothy M cGuire is the girl. The picture is
being directed by Eliza Kazan,
who did “Boomerang,
1 he King Brothers , an tndependent outfit, has bought Arthur
Miller's “Focus,” a story of anti
Semitism and Christian Frontiers.
Robert Montgomery will direct
Bayard
McKendrick's
eights
Out.” David O. Selznick and
Lesser also are reported to be
preparing similar picture
Still Skittish
It may be noted that most of
these films are about what is basireligious prejudice. Hollywood is still a little skittish about
films on race prejudice. As far
as the film industry is concerned
these will provide a test of the
public's receptivity to motion pict tires which have something to
Those av ho oppose ideas in
films declare that people who
have paid 75 cents at the box
office do not want to listen to a
lecture.
But this argument is based on
the premise that such films are
necessarily dull. The opportu
nity presented in the forthcom
ing films on prejudice is a chal
lenge to the writer and director
to produce pictures which will
entertain and hold the theatre
goer's interest.
The test of
public reaction will not be a
valid one unless the pictures
themselves are good films from
every angle.
The Lost Weekend
It may have been argued that a
film about a drunkard would not
acceptable, yet, “The Lost
M* eekend was a box office suc
cess and won the Academy Award.
English. French and Russians con
sistently produce films which do
not flinch from ideas nor from
discussions of problems other
than
the perennial
query Of
whether the boy gets the girl.
Hollywood never has dared to
i rear
with such ordinaiy dignity- as in "Song of Free
dom, a British film of some years
back which starred Raul Robeson.
Motion pictures of courage and
compassion about human problems
can be produced in America as
Paul Strand proved in "Native
Land.” a picture about civil liber
ties which has been virtually boy
cotted and has been shown in few
cities outside of
fork. A li
other such film
the John
cican eoiumunity.“Forgotten Villa
w hi ch
was directed by Herbert Klein
and which is one of the finest piclures of the last 10 years.
House I Live In
On the other hand, one of the
few Hollywood ventures to date,
the much-publicized Frank Sinatra
short, “The House I Live In." was
so generalized and over-simplified
that ii missed its point. Even the
more telling lines of Karl Robin
son's song about “My neighbors
white and black” were deleted.
If M arner Brothers, who were
the worst offenders with their
anti-Nazi propaganda in their war
films, were interested. there are
a number of stories which would
make splendid material for the
screen. John MacManus, the New
Y ork film critic, once commented
that the story’ of the 442nd Co in
bat Team was one of the most
dramatic, of the year.
Ralph
Martin's fine bio
raphy of Ben Kuroki has been con
sidered by John Garfield and by
several story editors, but the fact
that the central character is a
Nisei makes the story, in Holly
wood's opinion, limited in appeal.
Karen Kehoe's “City in the Sun”
and Joseph Anthony's unproduced
Play, “Some of the Sky," are two
other stories which would make
splendid movie material.
The
Anthony play, which Larney Goodk i n d hopes to produce on Broadconcerns a GI who returns
to a western town with a Nisei
bride from Hawaii. One of the
main characters is
the girl’s
brother, a veteran of
442nd
Combat Team.
7-25
WHAT
ACE VOU DOING
OVEK
LOOK AT ,POO^
HERCULES TAIL J
C<A3S
A
■
f\
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!
i
th
Star System Obstacle
One of the obstacles to the pro
duction of a Nisei story- in Holly
wood is the film industry’s star
system under which stories are
tailored for individual stars in the
belief that the general public goes
to the theatre to see the stars and
not the stories.
The movies probably need an
other Sessue Hayakawa before
they will be interested in a Nisei
film.
By Eddie Sato
DOKIE
i
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Page 4
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T. KAMEOKA
113 McCaul St.
Toronto 2-B. Ont.
113 McCaul St.
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20
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Page 10
Pag-e Ten
One Killed, Other Badly Hurt in
Two Weekend Accidents in Alberta
^atui'day, Jn'v -b,
9c I94y
,A
_ _________ -g
Pigs With Win gs
Race Bar From
Naturalization
a'
U
rt
p.
o
r
Yoshida suffered a badly-frac
tured skull and cuts from the acci
dent and was still reported in a
dangerous” condition in Taber
Hospital, Monday.
MIRACLE TO SURVIVE
Survnal of the victim was con
sidered almost -miraculous” bv
Dam Tunnel Kills
Tractor Operator
Wanted: A ScribblerTtiKle
WASHINGTON.—a bill to elimi
nate race restrictions from the
for the Nisei Novel.” Tajiri recalls t?e d-? !
United States Nationality Act has
been introduced in the Senate- by
embryo second generation writers talked of the v
Senators James H. McGrath and
that cued out to be written.
In the days before the war, theTheodore G. Green, both Demo
life
of the Japanese American
crats, of Rhode Island. The anpression applies equal
minority in America was one of
nouncement was made July 21 by
There is less frust"-frustration
and
discrimination,
the Anti-Discrimination Commit
Ployment opportunism
tee 01 the Japanese American Citi
economic and otherwise. The life
confinement ju
zens’ League.
of the Japanese Canadians in Can
worlds than there us
ada
was a parallel on a smaller
The bill would amend the Act
fore the evacuation u
scale.
so that “the right to become a
coast.
erican
T
n niany
i -Novels
?cr
u
,5
LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — James
Ono, 31-year-old Taber resident,
B.C.
□;
died in Cardston municipal hos
,v
The
Japanese
Americans
were
naturalized
citizen . . . shall
pital early Tuesday morning withSome say that the 1
forced to live in communities of
not be denied or abridged he
out regainin g consciousness from
busy with the makins
their own—Little Tokyos—partly
cause of race.”
Ol tneir ova
The entire motor of the
the time he suffered a fractun
present
individual ways in ti
e at
because
of
a
need
for
economic
e new world
Nationality Act declares Orien
Vehicle was carried some 20 feet
the base of the skull while workof opportunity that
self-protection,
partly'
because
re
CaS
been open,
tal
aliens,
with
the
exception
of
ii
[TuVOi
mg inside the river diversion tun
anead of the main motor por
ed for them to take
pari
in extraChinese,
Filipinos
and
East
In
strictions
on
real
estate
would
not
ing st
tion of the wreck.
The front
nel at the St. Mary River dam site
curricular activities.
allow them to live elsewhere.
s expiSrs
dians, ineligible for naturaliza
r
whi-'c
wheels were knocked loose from
last Saturday morning. Julv 19
tion has been used fee
tion.
Kinds of work that the Japanese
the lacs
A
the body, while the entire side
Ono is the only person to suffer
of stronger Nisei leads
Americans
could
take
up
were
hip in The
,1
of the car struck by the train
fatal injuries on the large dam
Commenting on the measure,
political activities c
limited
because
of
prejudice
and
Japare
A
building
project
since
Mike
Masaoka,
was ripped off. The seats were
national ABC
Canadians today.
work startPerhaps
legal
discrimination.
knocked out of the vehicle.
ed a year ago.
legislative
director,
declared :
would apply to writer
as web.
“
This
is
the
major
naturalization
Yoshida was lying inside the
JOMBS
While there were no eyeWHY A NISEI NOVEL?
diamonds'in the ROUGH
bill advocated by the JACL Anti[wzeck of the body of the auto
witnesses to the accident,, it is
K, K'JThe importance of the Nisei
Discrimination Committee.
when the train crew investigated
But this does not
believed a fragment of’
seem to be
Novel was that byT drawing a pic
rock
0
pe accident. He was placed on
“Under its provisions, all per
sufficient explanation
about 30 inches square Ibroke
for the curture of the situation and showing
the tiain to be taken to Taber.
sons of Japanese ancestry, now
rent lull in Nisei wr hig. “There
away from the roof of the tun
the underlying causes, a means
11
bested
ineligible because of race, would
_ When a doctor and nurse ar
ai e lots of Nisei who
nel and struck Ono on the head
f'e talented;
could be provided for the Japa
be given the right to become
diamonds in the rot;
rived at the scene of the accident
as he operated a caterpillar trac
a; all you
nese Americans to gain identity
naturalized
t
land noted the complete destruc
have
to do is find them,”
citizens of the Unittor being used as a pusher
is a,
as a group and emerge from the
ed States, providing they can
£
tion cf the car they were thorough
thought often expressed when a
unit.
The. accident occurred
confines of the life they were
meet other provisions of citiS
ly convinced that the accident
vailing session about Canadian
about 9.15 a.m. about 50q Peet
forced to lead.
zenship.”
Nisei
writers is on. Could thA^
1
victim must be dead.
inside the outlet end of the tun
Making
But with the outbreak-of war,
with a :
possible or is this just an aJtemw
The bill is based on drafts sub
every effort to investigate, hownel, according to engineers on
everythin
With
iv
was changed, Evacuamitted by the ADC in conjunction
ro draw a merciful blind over a i
every, they sped after the train
the project.
tion
from
the
west
coast
and
sub
with Edward J. Ennis, acting
sterile state? .
and overtook it at Barnwell.
As soon as the accident was dis
sequent dispersal of large num
on a don
chairman of the National Com"
t
Making an examination of the
There is nothing to wri;.e about I
covered the victim was rushed to
bers
of
Japanese
Americans
open
mittee for Equality in NaturalizaAici.m, the doctor discovered to
say some. To take this in a nar- I
Cardston hospital.
He passed
ed up a new world of opportunity
tion,
it was reported.
r
row
sense, the statement is true— I
ms amazement that Yoshida sufaway at five o'clock Tuesdav
for them. And the sacrifices of
ieied only two small cuts on the
morning.
there is much less to write about
their men in uniform made the
side of his face, in
concerning the -Niseis than
Niseis as well known and respect
addition to the
r
fractured skull.
was
five years ago. But a
ed a.s any other group in America.
of the railroad track before
a
writer does not hav-a to write
bad crossing
clear view is available.
Tajiri suggests that this result
With a
o
about .the Nisei and the Japanese
The
Lethbridge
*
*
*
has
decreased
the
need
for
a
Nisei
o
Herald said a
WINNIPEG. — Several
solely.
main
very poor view of the tracks is
Novel. He cites a list of writers
(A report from Barn well said
points in the negotiations for a
[the stror
afforded “nwho at one time were prominent
that Frank Yoshida resided on
I
automobile driver
SCRIBBLERS CIRCLE
renewal of agreement between the
comine from the north at the
either
on.
West
Coast
publications
the N. J. Anderson place
■ femes,
management of the Dominion Tan
in
Maybe what is needed
Barnwell, was unmarried
by ex-Ass
or
on
relocation
center
papers.
where the accident took
ners Ltd. and the International
and
thing hke the £-cribble ■s Circle
place
Few
of
them
are
left
now
to
take'
112
re ore
respected and well liked by al!
Fur and Leather Workers’ Union,
which flourished in Vancouver un
up the pen or pound the type
who knew him.
Keen anxiety
Heavy bush in the vicinity made
Local 430, have been agreed upon
der the guidance of Mrs. T. Muriel
writer.
' *
was
held
regarding
his
condi
.it necess ary to be within 50 feet
by both parties concerned, accord
Kitagawa. Among the alumni of
| Bay Ku
tion.)
The Nisei Nove] seems consign
ing to a union statement given
this group were the late .Mark I to bc.’si
ed to oblivion and “the Nisei no
late last week.
Toyama, surely the greatest Cana
| includes
longer are starved for identity or
The
negotiations
dian Nisei wielder of the “human
c
concerned
yoMsstc
frustrated for expression.” con
pay increases, and vacation and
touch” we have had; Eiko Henmi,
Y
cludes
Tajiri.
overtime agreements. One of the
whose polished columns will al
So much for the Americans, but.
four members of the union’s nego
ways
be remembered with afiec- ,
5
what about Canadian Nisei wri
tiating committee was Thomas
tion; earthy Roy Ito. whose years |
ters?
have Mitani.
away at the wars has deprived the I
repreNisei
of much refreshing pros
A
FOUL
RUMOR
i
down
and
Miyo
Ishiwata, whose
There has been a foul rumor
1 -e next
Summerland Slants
delights us no more. And too. ins
shunting about that the day of the
dispatch from Ottawa.
’
C01dln® to Vancouver Sun's
J-Emie (
guide of the circle, TMK herself
Canadian Nisei writers is past.
By KUTCH
Lfed
v,-j;h
, These applications are now beis a Nisei writer who is near-pro
Critics who sneer at the current
3
SUMMERLAND, B.C.__ So far,
fessional in technique.
of Nisei rep
Jng processed, for Canada has
vith the Asia section of the
output point fondly to the Van
a
Summerland
Niseis
ha\"e’
Lsoon
ir ]
been allowed a quota of eight rep
This
writer
iortur.? couver and Kaslo days of The
oreign trade service in the De
not
i
formed a ball team becau
enough to get inside the Circle,
New Canadian when the feature
resentatives who will be allowed
partment of Trade and Commerce
se three
c
of
the
-1 days in Japan, with a possibil
but
the impression received of the
team members are playin
oj vith the foreign trade commispages were often highlighted with
on
the
procedure
was that ways and
ity that the time limit mav be ex
a loner in Vancouver.
local hakujin team playin
the work of names like
Eiko
World
in
tended.
the South Okanagan League.
techniques of writing were dis
Henmi, TMK, the late Mark
ToRaw
The Kelowna team (Nisei) i
cussed, an occasional literary
cotton textiles and
Any firm wanting to do business
yama, Diana, Miyo Ishiwata and
.the 194 7 tea crop will not be avail
also
in
guest invited (like Vancouver
Wth Japan without sending a
the league and making ;
a
able because of prior commitwriter Allan Roy Evans who
c
good showing.
trade representative need "not
Part of the
enthusiasm
men is.
for
planned
to
write
a
Canadian
?
Hiro
Furuya
is
back
in
<
register, but registered or unredays of yore may be colored
bumby
Novel),
and
homework
as;
merland
after
completing
gistered. actual trade cannot stai t
GOODS AVAILABLE
nostalgia and the usual glossingthird
s raid
o
ments given for the member
Until Sept. 1.
J
ear
at
the
University
of
o\ei
that comes with time. Still
However, trade
ManiThe following goods
complete before the next met
toba.
are avail
representative, can
it must be admitted that the pres
Is Dave W
to Japan
able for export at
wherein these results would
Recently ordained Rev. Edward
present:
on August 15.
ent
crop
of
columnists
and
story
Bamboo products, ceramics and
examined and mauled over by he
Yoshmka of Kelowna preached at
tellers, judging from The New Ca
chmaware,
glassware, chemiMOST FROM B.C.
Circle.
he Summerland Japanese Church
nadians of these last two years,
cals and pharmaceuticals, cos
Most ot the registrations fo”
-J rc-cc
hist month, and later spoke at the
does not often come up to the
WRITERS OF TOMORROW
metics, health supplies, electri■"-c and is
Canada are from British Colum
Penacton United Chur'ch.
He
standards set by the original NC
cal
suppHes
and
materials
bia. The factors which will de
e
There are many yo
left for Toronto and London. Ont.
group.
Why is this?
measuring and testing equ.p.
cide who gets the first eight regis
■who are interested it. Li
around the end of June.
rn ent, m
trations will depend on date of
business.
Some
v, ho.
e-rs and gauges, fish
LESS
WRITERS
TODAY
The Summerland Nisei Club is
and fish products, foods and
application, amount of busines
efforts
have
appeared
one thing, the number of
seriously considering takin£- over
of c?
beverages.
aquatic
products,
done with Japan, and how the,
New Canadians shoe;- it
-jset
writers
seems to have gone
the local Japanese Hall from the
busine,
ousenold goods, surgical and
fits in with SCAB policy.
of a. bright future.
aown quite a bit. None of the
Isseis. Also on the club
denLcxl
instruments.
agenda
As each of the eight return
oldsters produce much now. and
musical inark
Perhaps
Ca
Die discussion on
anstrumen .
ani nation
laboratory
other 5rm may £
the new crop that has come up to
instruWriters'
Group,
on
the
Yarn
trat ion to
men's.
ather goods, sca I es.
take over the hard-to-fit shoes
send a represei
Scribblers Circle format, co
The Sum merland
ei
Chrisindustrial
belting and
When busine‘ss ueals are comformed with someone like
me> not always seem as enthused
tian Fellowship group wa
hoses
lioh
host to
bulbs, ria rd wa re.
pleted in Japan - details will have,
or as prolific as the masters.
at the helm, to guarantee
the Kelowna group foi a
linen good
social
in
lotions
Perhaps
Tajiri
’
s
and novelto be submitted to SCAP at Washthe Canadian Nisei writers
ls te June.
thesis that
ties, office supplies. paper
ir
there is less need
ington in order to get a check on.
and
for Nisei ev-l.‘COer‘ Take
A If Kita is doing a good job
pape- prcducts. pearls
tiie exchan e rate and the necesstart toda
f u rs.
• -2"
teen-town major of
. ' '■iobie oi
fabrics
-sary letter; of' credit.
and
finished
are
Richard
Yamabe.
Alfred
Kita
land.
,w°
^rino. h
rubber and rubber
p ro
J-irrns planning to do business
anc
perhaps
yours
truly.
Junior
Matric
cs’ucts. silk fabrics.
Britisl
gra du a t es a re
STth- Japan should communicate
wool yarns
Mo<.y Tcsuwa. a welcome visitor
Th
eb0.
and finished goods.Michiko Imato Summerland, left in Februarv
yoshi,
Matric graduate.
xor Toronto.the Gc-od.
jj
persons v ho visited the scene of
the accident, for the 1939 Chevro
let ■ as Jeduced almost to matchw ood as a result of the impact,
1
Mitani One of
Union Reps in
Wage Talks
Ke-opening of Trade With
Japan Attracts B.C. Firms
Subscribe to
The New Canadian j
icfrU
s
ttirrjr„
figt
One Killed, Other Badly Hurt in
Two Weekend Accidents in Alberta
^atui'day, Jn'v -b,
9c I94y
,A
_ _________ -g
Pigs With Win gs
Race Bar From
Naturalization
a'
U
rt
p.
o
r
Yoshida suffered a badly-frac
tured skull and cuts from the acci
dent and was still reported in a
dangerous” condition in Taber
Hospital, Monday.
MIRACLE TO SURVIVE
Survnal of the victim was con
sidered almost -miraculous” bv
Dam Tunnel Kills
Tractor Operator
Wanted: A ScribblerTtiKle
WASHINGTON.—a bill to elimi
nate race restrictions from the
for the Nisei Novel.” Tajiri recalls t?e d-? !
United States Nationality Act has
been introduced in the Senate- by
embryo second generation writers talked of the v
Senators James H. McGrath and
that cued out to be written.
In the days before the war, theTheodore G. Green, both Demo
life
of the Japanese American
crats, of Rhode Island. The anpression applies equal
minority in America was one of
nouncement was made July 21 by
There is less frust"-frustration
and
discrimination,
the Anti-Discrimination Commit
Ployment opportunism
tee 01 the Japanese American Citi
economic and otherwise. The life
confinement ju
zens’ League.
of the Japanese Canadians in Can
worlds than there us
ada
was a parallel on a smaller
The bill would amend the Act
fore the evacuation u
scale.
so that “the right to become a
coast.
erican
T
n niany
i -Novels
?cr
u
,5
LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — James
Ono, 31-year-old Taber resident,
B.C.
□;
died in Cardston municipal hos
,v
The
Japanese
Americans
were
naturalized
citizen . . . shall
pital early Tuesday morning withSome say that the 1
forced to live in communities of
not be denied or abridged he
out regainin g consciousness from
busy with the makins
their own—Little Tokyos—partly
cause of race.”
Ol tneir ova
The entire motor of the
the time he suffered a fractun
present
individual ways in ti
e at
because
of
a
need
for
economic
e new world
Nationality Act declares Orien
Vehicle was carried some 20 feet
the base of the skull while workof opportunity that
self-protection,
partly'
because
re
CaS
been open,
tal
aliens,
with
the
exception
of
ii
[TuVOi
mg inside the river diversion tun
anead of the main motor por
ed for them to take
pari
in extraChinese,
Filipinos
and
East
In
strictions
on
real
estate
would
not
ing st
tion of the wreck.
The front
nel at the St. Mary River dam site
curricular activities.
allow them to live elsewhere.
s expiSrs
dians, ineligible for naturaliza
r
whi-'c
wheels were knocked loose from
last Saturday morning. Julv 19
tion has been used fee
tion.
Kinds of work that the Japanese
the lacs
A
the body, while the entire side
Ono is the only person to suffer
of stronger Nisei leads
Americans
could
take
up
were
hip in The
,1
of the car struck by the train
fatal injuries on the large dam
Commenting on the measure,
political activities c
limited
because
of
prejudice
and
Japare
A
building
project
since
Mike
Masaoka,
was ripped off. The seats were
national ABC
Canadians today.
work startPerhaps
legal
discrimination.
knocked out of the vehicle.
ed a year ago.
legislative
director,
declared :
would apply to writer
as web.
“
This
is
the
major
naturalization
Yoshida was lying inside the
JOMBS
While there were no eyeWHY A NISEI NOVEL?
diamonds'in the ROUGH
bill advocated by the JACL Anti[wzeck of the body of the auto
witnesses to the accident,, it is
K, K'JThe importance of the Nisei
Discrimination Committee.
when the train crew investigated
But this does not
believed a fragment of’
seem to be
Novel was that byT drawing a pic
rock
0
pe accident. He was placed on
“Under its provisions, all per
sufficient explanation
about 30 inches square Ibroke
for the curture of the situation and showing
the tiain to be taken to Taber.
sons of Japanese ancestry, now
rent lull in Nisei wr hig. “There
away from the roof of the tun
the underlying causes, a means
11
bested
ineligible because of race, would
_ When a doctor and nurse ar
ai e lots of Nisei who
nel and struck Ono on the head
f'e talented;
could be provided for the Japa
be given the right to become
diamonds in the rot;
rived at the scene of the accident
as he operated a caterpillar trac
a; all you
nese Americans to gain identity
naturalized
t
land noted the complete destruc
have
to do is find them,”
citizens of the Unittor being used as a pusher
is a,
as a group and emerge from the
ed States, providing they can
£
tion cf the car they were thorough
thought often expressed when a
unit.
The. accident occurred
confines of the life they were
meet other provisions of citiS
ly convinced that the accident
vailing session about Canadian
about 9.15 a.m. about 50q Peet
forced to lead.
zenship.”
Nisei
writers is on. Could thA^
1
victim must be dead.
inside the outlet end of the tun
Making
But with the outbreak-of war,
with a :
possible or is this just an aJtemw
The bill is based on drafts sub
every effort to investigate, hownel, according to engineers on
everythin
With
iv
was changed, Evacuamitted by the ADC in conjunction
ro draw a merciful blind over a i
every, they sped after the train
the project.
tion
from
the
west
coast
and
sub
with Edward J. Ennis, acting
sterile state? .
and overtook it at Barnwell.
As soon as the accident was dis
sequent dispersal of large num
on a don
chairman of the National Com"
t
Making an examination of the
There is nothing to wri;.e about I
covered the victim was rushed to
bers
of
Japanese
Americans
open
mittee for Equality in NaturalizaAici.m, the doctor discovered to
say some. To take this in a nar- I
Cardston hospital.
He passed
ed up a new world of opportunity
tion,
it was reported.
r
row
sense, the statement is true— I
ms amazement that Yoshida sufaway at five o'clock Tuesdav
for them. And the sacrifices of
ieied only two small cuts on the
morning.
there is much less to write about
their men in uniform made the
side of his face, in
concerning the -Niseis than
Niseis as well known and respect
addition to the
r
fractured skull.
was
five years ago. But a
ed a.s any other group in America.
of the railroad track before
a
writer does not hav-a to write
bad crossing
clear view is available.
Tajiri suggests that this result
With a
o
about .the Nisei and the Japanese
The
Lethbridge
*
*
*
has
decreased
the
need
for
a
Nisei
o
Herald said a
WINNIPEG. — Several
solely.
main
very poor view of the tracks is
Novel. He cites a list of writers
(A report from Barn well said
points in the negotiations for a
[the stror
afforded “nwho at one time were prominent
that Frank Yoshida resided on
I
automobile driver
SCRIBBLERS CIRCLE
renewal of agreement between the
comine from the north at the
either
on.
West
Coast
publications
the N. J. Anderson place
■ femes,
management of the Dominion Tan
in
Maybe what is needed
Barnwell, was unmarried
by ex-Ass
or
on
relocation
center
papers.
where the accident took
ners Ltd. and the International
and
thing hke the £-cribble ■s Circle
place
Few
of
them
are
left
now
to
take'
112
re ore
respected and well liked by al!
Fur and Leather Workers’ Union,
which flourished in Vancouver un
up the pen or pound the type
who knew him.
Keen anxiety
Heavy bush in the vicinity made
Local 430, have been agreed upon
der the guidance of Mrs. T. Muriel
writer.
' *
was
held
regarding
his
condi
.it necess ary to be within 50 feet
by both parties concerned, accord
Kitagawa. Among the alumni of
| Bay Ku
tion.)
The Nisei Nove] seems consign
ing to a union statement given
this group were the late .Mark I to bc.’si
ed to oblivion and “the Nisei no
late last week.
Toyama, surely the greatest Cana
| includes
longer are starved for identity or
The
negotiations
dian Nisei wielder of the “human
c
concerned
yoMsstc
frustrated for expression.” con
pay increases, and vacation and
touch” we have had; Eiko Henmi,
Y
cludes
Tajiri.
overtime agreements. One of the
whose polished columns will al
So much for the Americans, but.
four members of the union’s nego
ways
be remembered with afiec- ,
5
what about Canadian Nisei wri
tiating committee was Thomas
tion; earthy Roy Ito. whose years |
ters?
have Mitani.
away at the wars has deprived the I
repreNisei
of much refreshing pros
A
FOUL
RUMOR
i
down
and
Miyo
Ishiwata, whose
There has been a foul rumor
1 -e next
Summerland Slants
delights us no more. And too. ins
shunting about that the day of the
dispatch from Ottawa.
’
C01dln® to Vancouver Sun's
J-Emie (
guide of the circle, TMK herself
Canadian Nisei writers is past.
By KUTCH
Lfed
v,-j;h
, These applications are now beis a Nisei writer who is near-pro
Critics who sneer at the current
3
SUMMERLAND, B.C.__ So far,
fessional in technique.
of Nisei rep
Jng processed, for Canada has
vith the Asia section of the
output point fondly to the Van
a
Summerland
Niseis
ha\"e’
Lsoon
ir ]
been allowed a quota of eight rep
This
writer
iortur.? couver and Kaslo days of The
oreign trade service in the De
not
i
formed a ball team becau
enough to get inside the Circle,
New Canadian when the feature
resentatives who will be allowed
partment of Trade and Commerce
se three
c
of
the
-1 days in Japan, with a possibil
but
the impression received of the
team members are playin
oj vith the foreign trade commispages were often highlighted with
on
the
procedure
was that ways and
ity that the time limit mav be ex
a loner in Vancouver.
local hakujin team playin
the work of names like
Eiko
World
in
tended.
the South Okanagan League.
techniques of writing were dis
Henmi, TMK, the late Mark
ToRaw
The Kelowna team (Nisei) i
cussed, an occasional literary
cotton textiles and
Any firm wanting to do business
yama, Diana, Miyo Ishiwata and
.the 194 7 tea crop will not be avail
also
in
guest invited (like Vancouver
Wth Japan without sending a
the league and making ;
a
able because of prior commitwriter Allan Roy Evans who
c
good showing.
trade representative need "not
Part of the
enthusiasm
men is.
for
planned
to
write
a
Canadian
?
Hiro
Furuya
is
back
in
<
register, but registered or unredays of yore may be colored
bumby
Novel),
and
homework
as;
merland
after
completing
gistered. actual trade cannot stai t
GOODS AVAILABLE
nostalgia and the usual glossingthird
s raid
o
ments given for the member
Until Sept. 1.
J
ear
at
the
University
of
o\ei
that comes with time. Still
However, trade
ManiThe following goods
complete before the next met
toba.
are avail
representative, can
it must be admitted that the pres
Is Dave W
to Japan
able for export at
wherein these results would
Recently ordained Rev. Edward
present:
on August 15.
ent
crop
of
columnists
and
story
Bamboo products, ceramics and
examined and mauled over by he
Yoshmka of Kelowna preached at
tellers, judging from The New Ca
chmaware,
glassware, chemiMOST FROM B.C.
Circle.
he Summerland Japanese Church
nadians of these last two years,
cals and pharmaceuticals, cos
Most ot the registrations fo”
-J rc-cc
hist month, and later spoke at the
does not often come up to the
WRITERS OF TOMORROW
metics, health supplies, electri■"-c and is
Canada are from British Colum
Penacton United Chur'ch.
He
standards set by the original NC
cal
suppHes
and
materials
bia. The factors which will de
e
There are many yo
left for Toronto and London. Ont.
group.
Why is this?
measuring and testing equ.p.
cide who gets the first eight regis
■who are interested it. Li
around the end of June.
rn ent, m
trations will depend on date of
business.
Some
v, ho.
e-rs and gauges, fish
LESS
WRITERS
TODAY
The Summerland Nisei Club is
and fish products, foods and
application, amount of busines
efforts
have
appeared
one thing, the number of
seriously considering takin£- over
of c?
beverages.
aquatic
products,
done with Japan, and how the,
New Canadians shoe;- it
-jset
writers
seems to have gone
the local Japanese Hall from the
busine,
ousenold goods, surgical and
fits in with SCAB policy.
of a. bright future.
aown quite a bit. None of the
Isseis. Also on the club
denLcxl
instruments.
agenda
As each of the eight return
oldsters produce much now. and
musical inark
Perhaps
Ca
Die discussion on
anstrumen .
ani nation
laboratory
other 5rm may £
the new crop that has come up to
instruWriters'
Group,
on
the
Yarn
trat ion to
men's.
ather goods, sca I es.
take over the hard-to-fit shoes
send a represei
Scribblers Circle format, co
The Sum merland
ei
Chrisindustrial
belting and
When busine‘ss ueals are comformed with someone like
me> not always seem as enthused
tian Fellowship group wa
hoses
lioh
host to
bulbs, ria rd wa re.
pleted in Japan - details will have,
or as prolific as the masters.
at the helm, to guarantee
the Kelowna group foi a
linen good
social
in
lotions
Perhaps
Tajiri
’
s
and novelto be submitted to SCAP at Washthe Canadian Nisei writers
ls te June.
thesis that
ties, office supplies. paper
ir
there is less need
ington in order to get a check on.
and
for Nisei ev-l.‘COer‘ Take
A If Kita is doing a good job
pape- prcducts. pearls
tiie exchan e rate and the necesstart toda
f u rs.
• -2"
teen-town major of
. ' '■iobie oi
fabrics
-sary letter; of' credit.
and
finished
are
Richard
Yamabe.
Alfred
Kita
land.
,w°
^rino. h
rubber and rubber
p ro
J-irrns planning to do business
anc
perhaps
yours
truly.
Junior
Matric
cs’ucts. silk fabrics.
Britisl
gra du a t es a re
STth- Japan should communicate
wool yarns
Mo<.y Tcsuwa. a welcome visitor
Th
eb0.
and finished goods.Michiko Imato Summerland, left in Februarv
yoshi,
Matric graduate.
xor Toronto.the Gc-od.
jj
persons v ho visited the scene of
the accident, for the 1939 Chevro
let ■ as Jeduced almost to matchw ood as a result of the impact,
1
Mitani One of
Union Reps in
Wage Talks
Ke-opening of Trade With
Japan Attracts B.C. Firms
Subscribe to
The New Canadian j
icfrU
s
ttirrjr„
figt
Page 11
26, 1?4,
ythias
fo 26, 1947
Toronto Baseball
Circle
Page Eleven
Hattori Wins Cup
Manitoba Golf
\ Lpitapij
'ne« nisny
•v ■'’ell her;
Von in 6a.
Midway Drops One to 5ransf Foife
Making Three-Way Tie For First
To Be Top Canadian Nisei Loop
TORONTO.—A five-team Nisei howi-n
—j
Aei
league has be^
C’AMbwec m Toronto, and lias been nl
.-i. ■,rea]I1
t- bail at VWiw'
v>e every wee send.
btanaings on July 13 -vV/;;
ihe
Makoto
v-v--w-,
• ’ • - - . - . . ? r-— -•
Lmirr.ament he’d o:!
Grand Fork.* City ij/ihe
do"’n i!1 defeat to'
2S- aT fhe Windsor
JT 'hy'y!! League. 5-1. oiTsundtiY Tuh-’’-- 'A.the B«und5
Sixd less
1
.333
Scxcers -*;;uo"an courses.
3
.500 Vyk
ya-,ie,s |fa!ited rhe X;S(,W- ■- ■ • "W
Jack Maine
best-organized
team.
t
One st '°He behind wp< w-- ;.
■ mitoriiy
2
.500
striking'
Breeders, which include
4
.333
foashiia 01
4
onion, in thirp
i:es
Grand
Forks,
ex-Vanconver Islanders, t*
reinforced witn
22 r-he B.C.
la
n
s
'rophy
w>nseveral
Co-on
players,
^Sa is -1^’ Egging firsi A
-\a
wrier, wit a
]3 tie firs: July 13 game. Bombe■mra. Takaichi
Mathers wonderful support playout. Nakatsu and
r
mezuxi
iian
v%
ho
pulls
frs
.
consisting
of
vas
fotr
t la shimoto came through with
experienced
ex
are too
h.
along the
George
ing errorless ball. and scored
left-field fom ]jne.
Ogino had low gross
■ their c»a
Vancouver players,
smothered
A. Koyacore of 760.
- ILat Mathers struck
<heir rive runs in
.. ?rizes
awarded ;o
the second
nagi. brother of j0o; is t]
new world
Xf2 Kutsukakes -Aces, 7-3. Mus
the nox 1 bailor ai5d forced
the
firsi
inning
giving
him
versatile P;ayer,
;
a good lead
nve ot the field.
Cue last man to fly to second..
oeen openToyota, backed up by great fieldto work with.
capably
on
the
P
R
ching
he
: In extrasupport* yielded only 4 hits:
was held in
Losing pitcher "';is Toru Ov
•'G; it was
c.nd m uie infield.
tong], lor Toru Ove
s expiSrs.
while Bombers shelled starting
and a-ternoon of jyiy
"who pitched only i j y innings,
to lose this
Danforth Clean
game. but he must
the lack
Ace piicher. Seiji Takata. in the
but allowed three runs to score
P-ayeu at
have been
managed
b
the Windsor course
tough
hip in the
Quite
third inning. Koei Mitsui’s 3-run
b.aki Matsi’m-om
lie
on
two
walk:
had
just
and
the
include
and two hits, before
mostly boy
Japanese
d IS at Kiirc.,,an
iomer clinching the ball game.
turned
from
fighting
.
i-om Kitsilan-;
A field of
a forest fire
J relieved.
Homma
e competed for -0rhaps it
the night before,
“‘osr Promising p]ayei. i.
goi rhe third out after two more
K H E
Midway's loss
Vian:
to
ba
001 200
is wefi.
Japanese golfing hone
4
3
lieu three teams tor top spot so
Tad
wto
scored on a fielder’s
.025 000
-S
2
s—S iSKSta. G. Takata- and
bye spot in rhe n-n;ll< wm bQ
SCOP.es__Sr=!,nd
a tMt. add is ha,j
choice
hi an error
UGH
H. Miyashita *16* ATA’3 m 170-lP-i 32.
M. Toyota
and
and
then
1£3-13-1S7
4: T' Xakaa!a«
most likely decided by the flip of
Out at the n’ate
to pitch a steady
■m to be
G.
*•- . y=e3UKi I7O-15-’4O.
a
coin. N.F.
game,
rm
experience and ba^’wi]
2g.sS^e M. Havas^j 179.
owing only five more
the cur1S4-17-150.
TstivS.
Sea Breezers
^stle. Bombets seem to surpass
hits.
Fukm^’o*;. Tttw^tnV fSS'n r2; Jinl
14-159.
lb , "There
listed 1the Bums, L2, in a tight
?b. 0-4; Na’k^u'cf
The
„
Ct-sr teams.
They inc
e Midway
alented;
run
was
ctntesr in the second July 13
Baron
Wakabayashi
n the sixth when. Hito
and
all you
C
game. The Breezers’ fi reball er
Idenouye and Lelty
Mukai go; ‘ n e li ’-’st h i t o ff 1\ [ a t h ei s
TO?
’
Mori, all
L” is a,
Aki Koyanagi was the outstand
hustling outfielders. '
ar.-.l
then
sonoa
2b.
1.
3:
A.
Kishi
cf
San
’
stole home.
Midway
when a
In the
Muka1 ss. 1-3; j Kishi 3b ' 0-4;. S.
ing performer., striking out 9
field is^ Sockeye Tsukamoto,
threatened
Scott
again in the ninth
anadian
one
IT.,1’21 Arai !f- 0-1; Hlady
rf. 0-2;
Buw.?. and winning his own game
juathers p.
ci
we
best
all-around
athletes
fo
this be
HANiY ■
i'
—-o parti
vfiih a
an Romer in tne sixth
^wia Combining wjtb excellent
attempt
osed
body,
belie
With two out in1 the seventh
to
h
°f tne- team. .Mus Toyota.
over a
cf
a
17-year-old
insing. Bums made? a 2-run rally
their sole pit ch er.
has held bis
crowned
on a double and a itriple to avoid
opposition down to
Jiry S, -„-as j.
a
few
measly
1 about,
being shut cut.
overed
tingles.
foe
waters of lbe
a narH
E
F
The league is m
rczs
l ■:
T-Wu. Thursdm
4
3
its
Jlliv
uiA £>iix.iZSB-S G01
ifo
second half
3
1
Batteries—Hiro rud
of the
Haney, reporte
1 about
anagi and K.
P! ay offs '■m’II be based
Sun.
i there
on th;
By JAY’EM
si’ghr.essy sys+srn;
or lose, the girl stars
a vc xsnermen who discovered
MORE ABOUT THE LEAGUE:
who com*
fourth; s=cond and third teams
write
pcted in I he Hamilton
HAMILTON. OnL—This eitv has
Aky notified Browmtial Police
With an abundance of good baseNiseiettes
battling, in sudden death sem'Softball League's first game of the
panese
2 ae remains were taken to Sava two-team Niseiettes softball
tail jaient. the Toronto Nisei
finals; ;and
the
winners
then
loop.
^In
L
he
recent
opening
game.
wrignt's Funeral Home.
season, proved that the organiza-•
Easels’! j>eague
appears to be
engaging in a Lest two out of
Kim
Takeda's
Bunnies
beat,
out
non is io become one of the ’
the strongest Nisei- league in
three series.
Juby
.Matsuoka's
Bambinos,
21-l.x
worthiest
additions to Hamilton's
faz-ca. The Bums are managed
sctnein
an
An All-Star Hamilton team voi]]
athletii- cricles. . . . Many girls
abbreviated
11
b ex-Asahi. Mickey Sato, and
tour-inning
game,
Circle
be
playing
All-Star
Toronto
Played
like
veterans
and
won
Captain
^ve ore promising pitcher in
Takeda of the
on
er unwinners held the Bambinos down
Augc.st 2 tor a return match.
many rounds of applause for their
Iwt-i-ander Maw Mori.
he
You are invited to send in
to nine hits .while Bunny Edna
Itt ri el
stellar perf o rm a n ees.
game is at 'Willowvale Park at
Veteran
■ • fAO 1
persona! notes. No charge for
Kutsukake has
mi of
Hayashi
5:30
p.m.
a
Dance
will
foim
thrilled
the
crowd
«n noun cements: of marriages,
W Kuisukake and Joe Koyanagi
w i t li
Backetl by the Hamilton Nisei
.Mark
the only home run of the game,
I engagements, ibirths or obitire
game
at
S:30
p.m.
The
t
liecrea
i ion Society. rhe Bunnies
infiiX\
ie
‘
the
A<?eS
team
v.
’
hich
I uaries.
CanaLongest hit by the Bambinos was
ronto Nisei Baseball League w:
and the Bambinos form the nu
a. r-unpJer of promising
.iman
Susie Oikawa’s triph
which ar
J otngsters.
epprectaie a. big turn-out at irse
cleus
of ihe league. . . . Team spirit
mini,
counted for two runs.
&ame and at the dance.
Engagement
Tsugi Iwas. has Probab]y thi
uns
high
among i he members and
il alResults of the recent election
JABER, Alta.— The engagement
— K. Mitsui,
competition heightens interest all
mector the softball league <
is announced ot Miss Yoshiko
around, except lor the Cmpire,.
ears
Oxaaoto, second daughter of 31 r.
who grows meeker
amidst the
’ the
Kim Takeda, president; Juby
Ratsutaro Okamoto of Taber, to
protest ing
females.
• • Incidgn•ose,
Matsuoka, secretary, and Kim
Mr. Goro Omotani, fifth son of .Mr.
girls have not as yet
Shimoda,
treasurer;
West
Hyodo
tvianatsd Omotani of Cranford.
been able to induce
pics
each male'
the
and Aki Idenouye, coaches,
Alta., on July 20. The ceremony
limp; re to
eat
perfor-’
TT,
fe
i
;,ra
SMmpo
Etslisb
self,
COMMENT: Good sports, win
uoh place at the Okamoto home.
„
fee lion columnist, recentlv
c re
.<ii giee ihe fac ...
^aishakunms a.re Mi. and Nirs,
cf Nisei representation t mat for the first time there was a ehsme-tiatsutaro Nakamura and Mr. and
on the U.S. Olympic team which competes in
ate
tosaon in 1945:.
Mrs. Hideo Imano.
cle,
the
athletes are Olympic possibilities.
Birth
Two are weigh (.nd
WINNIPEG
Born. a son. Garrv
World
aEd The fifth a tr-oadjumpar.
.sTadaaki, tc Mr. and Mrs. f .’dney
cn foe 2m^?nr!^n°3der Emerieh
* cinch rm
Shigeaki
Komsm
(nee
Yasuifl*g record as P
: ^’.Sa>S Onrdra- Ishikawa, set his weighter
mat su) at Grace Hospital. on
2 member cf tb«
C?. the New York Bar Sel1 Club- He
ee
Tuesday, July 75.
^raationaj
tourname-^
mT deIegati:n whicb competed in
ei
.
l in Moscow.
.
:iObituary
1
Drowning Victim
Found Near Haney
fn Hamilton
Bunnies Romp Over Bambinos
As Niseiettes' Softball Opens
Personal Notes
411 '
A&gflOJ'L.
Kootenay-Slocan Bali
New Denver Drops One to Slocan
And Noses Out Nelson Seniors
10
He .hlTJLl'Tl, J”EiOr AAU c»an:p.
T;
ie
'-11
IT.
is Dav,. v.-B:a.,a,c !i“XV?rW reC°r‘i
!“e
is
t!>e other wf:-s
Mvisto.
The L'.s ,*
*
' -T records fo^rb-^V- 3nclude two Nisei aquafic aces who hav
-c
is con-foerefl
Take° Hirose is still swimming ic
---6ued a sure shot for the Olympics
’vas alread- X
tO the great Keo
Cmm-a.
tt3ODeI, f;ee*style champ before going to Ohio
t'iste.‘ The EE] «
item5 Of
eo Nasama one-two combination broke foe
' CGdches al] over in wartime swim meets.
£;*
yef*1?V“oUler Hawaiian Nisei, George Uyeda.
His
1 -‘■-^’’'ati, ],£, h
*-ei % inch. A freshman at the University
fo5 c-w fexceEent chance for the Olympic track team.
' - handfuj of 25-foot jumpers.
MOTOZO ISHIDA
TORONTO.—Mr. Motozo Ishida
( *j >• formerly of Victoria, B.U..
died on July 75. Funeral
were held at Thomson Funeral
Parlors on July IS, with Rev. T.
Tsuji in charge.
MRS. SUGI
MURATA
TORONTO.—Mrs. Sugi Murata,
.'who had been confined to the Fin
gal Hospital for some time, died
in a Toronto hospital on July 14.
Funeral services were held on
July 17 at Thomson Funeral Par
lors.
•CHANGE OF ADDRESS
.Britain -.
-C’ih:
Marino. ba^
Okamoto and Tommy Blondin, members
.ch:nose, manager of world flyweight challenger
the Brft]-ab
Proposed bouts in Scotland called off recently'
,
boxing board or control refused to sanction the
tC:-oree figr-6-- /
contro] follows a color line and has not allowed .
Yv hen sending in notice of your
change cf address, please include
■the ’ former address.
This will
greatly ease the work cf our cir
culation department. Thank you’
±-iease notify the New Canadian
■immediately if . there are any re
peated delays"in -delivery. Give us
s ProSAc, V?"-“ii'bOrn and former. AAU champions .. lull particulars so that we.may be
nimim
BPder Icmnoee.
.
.
able to dear up ilk trouble.
3n a Brit.sh
fQr ma^
•
Bob McAskill pitched the full
nine innings for the visitors and
allowed but five bingles. Cen terfielder Forsythe of the Denver
team rapped out a double in the
third inning to bring in two run
ners and made three smart catches
out in the garden.
Third-sacker Willie Tateishi also
crew a hand for his spearing of
a Texas leaguer in short left field
that seemed ticketed to fall for a
single.
Prominent in the New Denver
team were G. Hayashi, C. Yamada
and W. j akahashi
we]] as
Tateishi.
NEW
DENVER,
B.C. — The
league-leading Slocan ball club,
hitting hard and often and led by
the four-hit hurling of Ted Gra
ham, smashed out a 8-1 win over
the cellar-dwelling New Denver
club on Sunday,. July g.
NY illie Tatei&hi. Denver checker,
: was coasting nicely on a 1-0 lead
until the fifth inning, when Slo-
suddenly came to life and
rapped out six hits for five ru*s
Three more hits in
sixth in
' drove Tateishi to the show
I
1
“Cuts Haya-Shi, P.int-sized hurier, took ov<er. holding Slocan to
two hits for the rest of the game.
Les Hufry and Johnny Inouye
were the Slocan heavy hitters. Les
pettmg four for five and Johnny
thre-e. tor three.
i
On the New Denver line-up was
M. Yamada. W. Takahashi and Hl
Ikeda. Inouye v'as the sole Nisei
piayer on the Slocan squad.
For her first post-war fair, Van
couver has renamed the Canadian
Pacific Exhibition which
.
.
. .
brings
back nostaligic memories to for^Jer
coast Niseis, the Pacific
National Exhibition.
i i.e PNE wjl] bfe held from.
At4g. 25 to Sept. 1 this- year at
Hastings Park.
' " ‘ "
J
I
ythias
fo 26, 1947
Toronto Baseball
Circle
Page Eleven
Hattori Wins Cup
Manitoba Golf
\ Lpitapij
'ne« nisny
•v ■'’ell her;
Von in 6a.
Midway Drops One to 5ransf Foife
Making Three-Way Tie For First
To Be Top Canadian Nisei Loop
TORONTO.—A five-team Nisei howi-n
—j
Aei
league has be^
C’AMbwec m Toronto, and lias been nl
.-i. ■,rea]I1
t- bail at VWiw'
v>e every wee send.
btanaings on July 13 -vV/;;
ihe
Makoto
v-v--w-,
• ’ • - - . - . . ? r-— -•
Lmirr.ament he’d o:!
Grand Fork.* City ij/ihe
do"’n i!1 defeat to'
2S- aT fhe Windsor
JT 'hy'y!! League. 5-1. oiTsundtiY Tuh-’’-- 'A.the B«und5
Sixd less
1
.333
Scxcers -*;;uo"an courses.
3
.500 Vyk
ya-,ie,s |fa!ited rhe X;S(,W- ■- ■ • "W
Jack Maine
best-organized
team.
t
One st '°He behind wp< w-- ;.
■ mitoriiy
2
.500
striking'
Breeders, which include
4
.333
foashiia 01
4
onion, in thirp
i:es
Grand
Forks,
ex-Vanconver Islanders, t*
reinforced witn
22 r-he B.C.
la
n
s
'rophy
w>nseveral
Co-on
players,
^Sa is -1^’ Egging firsi A
-\a
wrier, wit a
]3 tie firs: July 13 game. Bombe■mra. Takaichi
Mathers wonderful support playout. Nakatsu and
r
mezuxi
iian
v%
ho
pulls
frs
.
consisting
of
vas
fotr
t la shimoto came through with
experienced
ex
are too
h.
along the
George
ing errorless ball. and scored
left-field fom ]jne.
Ogino had low gross
■ their c»a
Vancouver players,
smothered
A. Koyacore of 760.
- ILat Mathers struck
<heir rive runs in
.. ?rizes
awarded ;o
the second
nagi. brother of j0o; is t]
new world
Xf2 Kutsukakes -Aces, 7-3. Mus
the nox 1 bailor ai5d forced
the
firsi
inning
giving
him
versatile P;ayer,
;
a good lead
nve ot the field.
Cue last man to fly to second..
oeen openToyota, backed up by great fieldto work with.
capably
on
the
P
R
ching
he
: In extrasupport* yielded only 4 hits:
was held in
Losing pitcher "';is Toru Ov
•'G; it was
c.nd m uie infield.
tong], lor Toru Ove
s expiSrs.
while Bombers shelled starting
and a-ternoon of jyiy
"who pitched only i j y innings,
to lose this
Danforth Clean
game. but he must
the lack
Ace piicher. Seiji Takata. in the
but allowed three runs to score
P-ayeu at
have been
managed
b
the Windsor course
tough
hip in the
Quite
third inning. Koei Mitsui’s 3-run
b.aki Matsi’m-om
lie
on
two
walk:
had
just
and
the
include
and two hits, before
mostly boy
Japanese
d IS at Kiirc.,,an
iomer clinching the ball game.
turned
from
fighting
.
i-om Kitsilan-;
A field of
a forest fire
J relieved.
Homma
e competed for -0rhaps it
the night before,
“‘osr Promising p]ayei. i.
goi rhe third out after two more
K H E
Midway's loss
Vian:
to
ba
001 200
is wefi.
Japanese golfing hone
4
3
lieu three teams tor top spot so
Tad
wto
scored on a fielder’s
.025 000
-S
2
s—S iSKSta. G. Takata- and
bye spot in rhe n-n;ll< wm bQ
SCOP.es__Sr=!,nd
a tMt. add is ha,j
choice
hi an error
UGH
H. Miyashita *16* ATA’3 m 170-lP-i 32.
M. Toyota
and
and
then
1£3-13-1S7
4: T' Xakaa!a«
most likely decided by the flip of
Out at the n’ate
to pitch a steady
■m to be
G.
*•- . y=e3UKi I7O-15-’4O.
a
coin. N.F.
game,
rm
experience and ba^’wi]
2g.sS^e M. Havas^j 179.
owing only five more
the cur1S4-17-150.
TstivS.
Sea Breezers
^stle. Bombets seem to surpass
hits.
Fukm^’o*;. Tttw^tnV fSS'n r2; Jinl
14-159.
lb , "There
listed 1the Bums, L2, in a tight
?b. 0-4; Na’k^u'cf
The
„
Ct-sr teams.
They inc
e Midway
alented;
run
was
ctntesr in the second July 13
Baron
Wakabayashi
n the sixth when. Hito
and
all you
C
game. The Breezers’ fi reball er
Idenouye and Lelty
Mukai go; ‘ n e li ’-’st h i t o ff 1\ [ a t h ei s
TO?
’
Mori, all
L” is a,
Aki Koyanagi was the outstand
hustling outfielders. '
ar.-.l
then
sonoa
2b.
1.
3:
A.
Kishi
cf
San
’
stole home.
Midway
when a
In the
Muka1 ss. 1-3; j Kishi 3b ' 0-4;. S.
ing performer., striking out 9
field is^ Sockeye Tsukamoto,
threatened
Scott
again in the ninth
anadian
one
IT.,1’21 Arai !f- 0-1; Hlady
rf. 0-2;
Buw.?. and winning his own game
juathers p.
ci
we
best
all-around
athletes
fo
this be
HANiY ■
i'
—-o parti
vfiih a
an Romer in tne sixth
^wia Combining wjtb excellent
attempt
osed
body,
belie
With two out in1 the seventh
to
h
°f tne- team. .Mus Toyota.
over a
cf
a
17-year-old
insing. Bums made? a 2-run rally
their sole pit ch er.
has held bis
crowned
on a double and a itriple to avoid
opposition down to
Jiry S, -„-as j.
a
few
measly
1 about,
being shut cut.
overed
tingles.
foe
waters of lbe
a narH
E
F
The league is m
rczs
l ■:
T-Wu. Thursdm
4
3
its
Jlliv
uiA £>iix.iZSB-S G01
ifo
second half
3
1
Batteries—Hiro rud
of the
Haney, reporte
1 about
anagi and K.
P! ay offs '■m’II be based
Sun.
i there
on th;
By JAY’EM
si’ghr.essy sys+srn;
or lose, the girl stars
a vc xsnermen who discovered
MORE ABOUT THE LEAGUE:
who com*
fourth; s=cond and third teams
write
pcted in I he Hamilton
HAMILTON. OnL—This eitv has
Aky notified Browmtial Police
With an abundance of good baseNiseiettes
battling, in sudden death sem'Softball League's first game of the
panese
2 ae remains were taken to Sava two-team Niseiettes softball
tail jaient. the Toronto Nisei
finals; ;and
the
winners
then
loop.
^In
L
he
recent
opening
game.
wrignt's Funeral Home.
season, proved that the organiza-•
Easels’! j>eague
appears to be
engaging in a Lest two out of
Kim
Takeda's
Bunnies
beat,
out
non is io become one of the ’
the strongest Nisei- league in
three series.
Juby
.Matsuoka's
Bambinos,
21-l.x
worthiest
additions to Hamilton's
faz-ca. The Bums are managed
sctnein
an
An All-Star Hamilton team voi]]
athletii- cricles. . . . Many girls
abbreviated
11
b ex-Asahi. Mickey Sato, and
tour-inning
game,
Circle
be
playing
All-Star
Toronto
Played
like
veterans
and
won
Captain
^ve ore promising pitcher in
Takeda of the
on
er unwinners held the Bambinos down
Augc.st 2 tor a return match.
many rounds of applause for their
Iwt-i-ander Maw Mori.
he
You are invited to send in
to nine hits .while Bunny Edna
Itt ri el
stellar perf o rm a n ees.
game is at 'Willowvale Park at
Veteran
■ • fAO 1
persona! notes. No charge for
Kutsukake has
mi of
Hayashi
5:30
p.m.
a
Dance
will
foim
thrilled
the
crowd
«n noun cements: of marriages,
W Kuisukake and Joe Koyanagi
w i t li
Backetl by the Hamilton Nisei
.Mark
the only home run of the game,
I engagements, ibirths or obitire
game
at
S:30
p.m.
The
t
liecrea
i ion Society. rhe Bunnies
infiiX\
ie
‘
the
A<?eS
team
v.
’
hich
I uaries.
CanaLongest hit by the Bambinos was
ronto Nisei Baseball League w:
and the Bambinos form the nu
a. r-unpJer of promising
.iman
Susie Oikawa’s triph
which ar
J otngsters.
epprectaie a. big turn-out at irse
cleus
of ihe league. . . . Team spirit
mini,
counted for two runs.
&ame and at the dance.
Engagement
Tsugi Iwas. has Probab]y thi
uns
high
among i he members and
il alResults of the recent election
JABER, Alta.— The engagement
— K. Mitsui,
competition heightens interest all
mector the softball league <
is announced ot Miss Yoshiko
around, except lor the Cmpire,.
ears
Oxaaoto, second daughter of 31 r.
who grows meeker
amidst the
’ the
Kim Takeda, president; Juby
Ratsutaro Okamoto of Taber, to
protest ing
females.
• • Incidgn•ose,
Matsuoka, secretary, and Kim
Mr. Goro Omotani, fifth son of .Mr.
girls have not as yet
Shimoda,
treasurer;
West
Hyodo
tvianatsd Omotani of Cranford.
been able to induce
pics
each male'
the
and Aki Idenouye, coaches,
Alta., on July 20. The ceremony
limp; re to
eat
perfor-’
TT,
fe
i
;,ra
SMmpo
Etslisb
self,
COMMENT: Good sports, win
uoh place at the Okamoto home.
„
fee lion columnist, recentlv
c re
.<ii giee ihe fac ...
^aishakunms a.re Mi. and Nirs,
cf Nisei representation t mat for the first time there was a ehsme-tiatsutaro Nakamura and Mr. and
on the U.S. Olympic team which competes in
ate
tosaon in 1945:.
Mrs. Hideo Imano.
cle,
the
athletes are Olympic possibilities.
Birth
Two are weigh (.nd
WINNIPEG
Born. a son. Garrv
World
aEd The fifth a tr-oadjumpar.
.sTadaaki, tc Mr. and Mrs. f .’dney
cn foe 2m^?nr!^n°3der Emerieh
* cinch rm
Shigeaki
Komsm
(nee
Yasuifl*g record as P
: ^’.Sa>S Onrdra- Ishikawa, set his weighter
mat su) at Grace Hospital. on
2 member cf tb«
C?. the New York Bar Sel1 Club- He
ee
Tuesday, July 75.
^raationaj
tourname-^
mT deIegati:n whicb competed in
ei
.
l in Moscow.
.
:iObituary
1
Drowning Victim
Found Near Haney
fn Hamilton
Bunnies Romp Over Bambinos
As Niseiettes' Softball Opens
Personal Notes
411 '
A&gflOJ'L.
Kootenay-Slocan Bali
New Denver Drops One to Slocan
And Noses Out Nelson Seniors
10
He .hlTJLl'Tl, J”EiOr AAU c»an:p.
T;
ie
'-11
IT.
is Dav,. v.-B:a.,a,c !i“XV?rW reC°r‘i
!“e
is
t!>e other wf:-s
Mvisto.
The L'.s ,*
*
' -T records fo^rb-^V- 3nclude two Nisei aquafic aces who hav
-c
is con-foerefl
Take° Hirose is still swimming ic
---6ued a sure shot for the Olympics
’vas alread- X
tO the great Keo
Cmm-a.
tt3ODeI, f;ee*style champ before going to Ohio
t'iste.‘ The EE] «
item5 Of
eo Nasama one-two combination broke foe
' CGdches al] over in wartime swim meets.
£;*
yef*1?V“oUler Hawaiian Nisei, George Uyeda.
His
1 -‘■-^’’'ati, ],£, h
*-ei % inch. A freshman at the University
fo5 c-w fexceEent chance for the Olympic track team.
' - handfuj of 25-foot jumpers.
MOTOZO ISHIDA
TORONTO.—Mr. Motozo Ishida
( *j >• formerly of Victoria, B.U..
died on July 75. Funeral
were held at Thomson Funeral
Parlors on July IS, with Rev. T.
Tsuji in charge.
MRS. SUGI
MURATA
TORONTO.—Mrs. Sugi Murata,
.'who had been confined to the Fin
gal Hospital for some time, died
in a Toronto hospital on July 14.
Funeral services were held on
July 17 at Thomson Funeral Par
lors.
•CHANGE OF ADDRESS
.Britain -.
-C’ih:
Marino. ba^
Okamoto and Tommy Blondin, members
.ch:nose, manager of world flyweight challenger
the Brft]-ab
Proposed bouts in Scotland called off recently'
,
boxing board or control refused to sanction the
tC:-oree figr-6-- /
contro] follows a color line and has not allowed .
Yv hen sending in notice of your
change cf address, please include
■the ’ former address.
This will
greatly ease the work cf our cir
culation department. Thank you’
±-iease notify the New Canadian
■immediately if . there are any re
peated delays"in -delivery. Give us
s ProSAc, V?"-“ii'bOrn and former. AAU champions .. lull particulars so that we.may be
nimim
BPder Icmnoee.
.
.
able to dear up ilk trouble.
3n a Brit.sh
fQr ma^
•
Bob McAskill pitched the full
nine innings for the visitors and
allowed but five bingles. Cen terfielder Forsythe of the Denver
team rapped out a double in the
third inning to bring in two run
ners and made three smart catches
out in the garden.
Third-sacker Willie Tateishi also
crew a hand for his spearing of
a Texas leaguer in short left field
that seemed ticketed to fall for a
single.
Prominent in the New Denver
team were G. Hayashi, C. Yamada
and W. j akahashi
we]] as
Tateishi.
NEW
DENVER,
B.C. — The
league-leading Slocan ball club,
hitting hard and often and led by
the four-hit hurling of Ted Gra
ham, smashed out a 8-1 win over
the cellar-dwelling New Denver
club on Sunday,. July g.
NY illie Tatei&hi. Denver checker,
: was coasting nicely on a 1-0 lead
until the fifth inning, when Slo-
suddenly came to life and
rapped out six hits for five ru*s
Three more hits in
sixth in
' drove Tateishi to the show
I
1
“Cuts Haya-Shi, P.int-sized hurier, took ov<er. holding Slocan to
two hits for the rest of the game.
Les Hufry and Johnny Inouye
were the Slocan heavy hitters. Les
pettmg four for five and Johnny
thre-e. tor three.
i
On the New Denver line-up was
M. Yamada. W. Takahashi and Hl
Ikeda. Inouye v'as the sole Nisei
piayer on the Slocan squad.
For her first post-war fair, Van
couver has renamed the Canadian
Pacific Exhibition which
.
.
. .
brings
back nostaligic memories to for^Jer
coast Niseis, the Pacific
National Exhibition.
i i.e PNE wjl] bfe held from.
At4g. 25 to Sept. 1 this- year at
Hastings Park.
' " ‘ "
J
I
Page 12
Page Twelve
Saturday, j
Grand Forks J CCA Branch Share
In Gty's Golden Jubilee Fete
a
C
t<
n.
P'
P’
31
.1
3.
a
Si.3
5(
j)
-a •>
aS
fl
C
0
t
e
Mo "'nt-kv 4UJ
-B'C-—When Grand Forks celebrated
its aOth birthday on June 29, 30, and Julv 1 the local Jana
PopAuIation’ under the JCCA banner, volunteered
some ihiltv tUU,tJ?CA float’ ente,'ed
a field oi
some thntj others, sailed its way to first prize honors -mH
the congratulations of the citizenry.
nonoic, and
t\V
The float, a product of the ingenuity of all the club members,
was complete in every outward
detail and represented, a ship,
the best of all ships, “Friendship.’’
On boaid she carried several girls
in their national costume, represen ting- the various national origins of the residents of Grand
_____ *
______ ____________
>e Nakade, Nobby Tonogai.
and the committee headed by
Ken
Yoshida,
Kaye
Sugimoto.
Sam Mukai and Takeo Tonogai.
ODORIS LIKED
The odoris by ten young Niseiettes received high ovation from
the huge crowd that gathered to
These girls; Tanis Verisee the open-air show on the
gin (Russia); Pam Mills (Ireschool grounds on the night of
land); Maureen Newbauer (Scot
Mon da j- . June 30.
The dances
land); Kaoru Yoshida (Japan);
occupied 15 .minutes of a 2^4 hour
Rose Chahley (Ukraine): Sheila
progiam. depicting the colorful
Furusho
(China)
and
Doreen
history of the incorporated city.
Moore * (Canada) ;
were circled
Mrs. Sumie Tanaka,- instruc
abput a globe of more than seven
tress, and Fumi Arai were re
feet in diameter representing the
sponsible for the odoris’ success.
World.
Expenses of the Nisei contribu
Behind-the-scenes workers who
tion to the jubilee were met by
deserve a generous share of the
generous
donations
from।
the
credit for the prize-winning float
Japanese
Canadians
in
i
Gran
d
are Yosh
Yosh Tonogai,
F. Sugimoto.
To Sell Haney Buddhist Tenple
corner otEUth'CAUThe Jal>a’lese Buddhist Temple at the
1
sale of
t
i(
r
j
4
T
1,
O
o
tl^ te^CtT^X?0 ££*
new temple m Picture Butte, Alta.
The Province report told of
the complaints received by the
enemy property custodian from’
scores of irate citizens during
the past seven years concerning
PRINTING
OF
ALL
DESCRIPTIONS
i
u
I.
Consult HARRY S. KONDO
201 >/g Revet ley St.. Toronto. AD5031
[SIMON GOTTLIEB, B.A. I
BARRISTER-AT-LAW
394 Bay Street
Toronto 1. Ontario
f Ortice: EL 7090
Fes. JU 6119
mortgage loans arranged
reasonable rates
a
3
.1
GIRLS AND MEN WANTED
FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS
o
---- Apply —
PARISIAN LAUNDRY
241 Bathurst St.. Toronto. Ont.
WA-S492
a
i-
5
i
ATTENTION
NISEI
VETERANS!
A picnic will be held at
LAKE SIMCOE
a
n
J
i
a
Saturday. August 23
be announced at a later date
I
Watch for it!
I
I Get Your New C.C.M.
Now in
Stock.........$47.50
charges paid anvwher
Enquire About the New
’WHIZZER’ BICYCLE MOTOR
t
e
n
I
Time and transportation will !
(Delivery
e
SOCIAL CALENDAR
TENNIS
RACQUETS
Dunlop ••5" and Fred Perry. SIS.50
Others st
-----$12.75 and S11.25 I
Bestriugm^ from......
.
S4.50 up j
Dunlop Balls Special Price. 45c
GROVE CYCLE
< y335 CoHega*St*. ^Toronto"1 MI. <
1
3
5 P
the swastika
otera.
painted
b - d
on
the
Ihe swastika used as a symbol
by Japanese Buddhist Churches
superseded in the Nazi symbol by
many years. It also differs from
the German one in that the arms
of the cross broke to the left
rather than to the right.
Both
the Buddhist symbol and the
Japanese symbol were adapted
from a Chinese good luck
Shortly after the war broke out.
the Kitsilano Japanese Buddhist
Church which
■situated adjacent to the Seaforth Armouries
in A ancouver, had its wooden
swastikas ripped off the high bell
tower by some enterprising van
dal.
"REVIEWING"
AUGUST
2—Toronto, Return All-Star Baseball
Game, Hamilton vs. Toronto
at
Willowvale Park. 5:30 p.m.
’
2—Toronto,
Nisei
Baseball
League
Dance, Labor Lyceum, at 8 f>.m.
Big League baseball movies to* be
shown.
8-9—-Montreal, Missionary Sisters of
CLrist the King Hostel, Benefit
Card Parties. 8 u.m.
F’P*egS’
o
Ball, Y.W.C.A.
gym., 8 -Midsummer
p.m. Enter
tainment,
refreshments,
baseball
rafrle draw.
10—Toronto.
Buddhist
Church
Bon
.Ype“°ny’ luovies’ 404 Parliament,
23—Winnipeg,
Coed
Canteen
Barn
Dance, YWCA auditorium
3-30
p.m.
Costumes,
blue jeans for
men, dirndls for girls.
Toronto, Nisei Veterans’
Outinvallj Ficnic, Lake Simcoe.
Time
and meeting place to be announced.
SEPTEMBER
Dance
leaves
At Winnipeg Co-op Union PUnL
WINNIPEG.—Board! g seven re
served CNR coaches, employees
of the Canadian Co-op Implements
Ltd. (Local 3,960—U.S.WEA.), and
their families and friends number
ing 400, visited Grand Beach on
Saturday, July 19, for their annual
picnic. Many Co-op employees are
Japanese.
Variety races, including many
novelty events, were held in front
of the grandstand with-young and
old (3 to 50 years) participating.
Highlight of the day's events was
the
Tug-o-War
between
the
blacksmith and woodshop boys.
The smithies avenged last year’s
defeat, winning two pulls to one.
Ice cream and pop was served to
all who attended.
Manitoba JCCA
TORONTO. — Fast despatches
from the Committee for Nisei Vet
erans’ Picnic reveal that the forth
coming
ex-servicemen’s
outing
will take place on Saturday. Aug.
23, at Lake Simcoe.
The CNVP announcement re
veals that transportation to the
lake will be by bus and time and
meeting place, probably the bus
jstation, will be announced when
it is 'known how many will attend.
vets are invited to bring
their favorite girl friends, or
their wives if forced to, or come
stag. The CNVP warns that no
one will be allowed to pull a
Garbo act and “vant to be alone”
since the committee will provide feminine companionship
for all stags.
Lunches are to be brought.
The CNVP will provide
ice
cream, hot dogs and coffee.
Berets are to be worn, “if you
want to recapture nostalgia of
your former army life.” Bathing
trunks are also on the day's
orders.
Rev. Akagawa On
Saskatchewan Visit
Japanese I nited Church minister
The Marshall plan is expected
left
this city Thursday,
to cost the United States about $5
. . July 24,
for
a
short trip to Saskatchewan
billion a year. Can she afford this
points. His itinerary included Re
expenditure? Special committees
gina,
Saskatoon. Moose Jaw and
have been appointed by President
the Moose Jaw hostel.
Iruman to find out. Their re
He is to return to Winnipeg on
port, it is believed, will be favorTuesday,
July 29.
able.
In tact, since the United
States government's ,current in
come
s so much in excess of
expected expenditure
the con ti
Help Wanted
tiv is hardly likely to feel the
effect of a $5 . billion aid during
WANTED; Women and girls for
the first year at any rate,
S?rta4°B ,-Ai>I,ly toHal«S-0" Hot
The
Congress, too. is gradually coming around -to a realization
that HELP WANTED—FEMALE
aid to European recovery is necescHiMPERAEtT,CED SEW,NG ma
chine
OPERATORS
FOR
sary to America's self interest.
BLOUSES AND HOUSECOATS
There is one hitch however.
APPLY
ROBINSON
SPORTS'
hile the economic cri s in EurWEAR INC., 1231 ST. CATHER
ope mounts
the U nited
FU ST' WEST, MONTREAL
States seems in no hurry lo pin
P.Q., FIFTH FLOOR.
the Marshall plan into operation:
WAN TED;
while Europe’s needs are felt now'.
skilled power machine operator.
• ne Initeti States has no intention
Steady employment. Applv Braeof implementing the plan until
\n°re Upholstering. 21 Ossington
A Ye.. Toronto.
"'ell into next year. Many state
men are beginning’ to wonder if
house
FOR SALE
the United States <can move fast
fo.T^NT\ Houses and FaU^
enough to prevent the decline in
.
Uale'
Immediate occupation.
her prestige which reached a high
-JPPly G. Shirakawa. 69 Isabel Si
level with the announcement of
M innipeg.
the Marshall plan.
MICKEY s. SATO
Agent
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Office: 21 Dundas Square
Rhone AD-0076-7
Bas.: 696 Richmond St. W
TORONTO. ONT.
t,_ AjIH
WTVVtd:?,--
Seautifuf babiss
years) contest
f0l
Prizes concluded the d=we
gram. Winner Of
girls’ prizes was Vir-;_^
daughter of Mr. and
Omori; and one
boy” winners was Den--^
™a’ SOn of Mr. ano Mr;
Oyama. J. a. 0Wb>mw^
« th. three J„does
test.
Many picnickers e-'-'ov
ming and boat riding^
and everyone had a woad
at Grand Beach.__ j
CHAS. W. ELLIOTT
Subscription Agency
Vets Will Frolic Executives Meet
At Lake Simcoe Tuesday, July 29
WINNIPEG. — A joint meeting
Come Aug. 23
of the recently-elected executives
(Continued From Page One)
Support
New Canadian
Advertisers
Two Sansei Kids Win Baby Coni
2 9— Wiiinip eg.
x>ba JCCA .’O,
Nisei and Issei Division. executive
meeting.
Winnipeg
CCF
Clubrooms, 1170 Main St.
(be
tween College- and Mountain), 8
27—Winnipeg,
Coed
Canteen
VTxroe\2Vr?US’ iocfeport? bus
x w CA 7 p.m.
> 1947
of the Nisei and Issei Divisions of
the Manitoba JCCA will be held
next Tuesday, July 29, in the
Noith Winnipeg CCF clubrooms,
1110 Main St. (between College
and Mountain). Starting time will
be 8 p.m. sharp.
37 Grange Ave.,
°ronro. Q:
Phone AD
Fully authorized Renewal subst-rin>
T1
Agent
SUN LIFE
COMPANY OF CAXA
Program for the coming year,
the forthcoming- national confer-
Toronto Buddhists
Hold Bon Service
On August 10
Kamloops, B.C.
AUTO MECHANIC
WANTED
TORONTO. - On Sunday, Aug.
iO, the Toronto Buddhist Church
xvill hold a Bon Ceremony, at
404 Parliament St., from 2 p.m.
The ceremony is under the co
sponsorship
of
the
Church and the TYBS.
pre
B
niej
P.O. Box 14?
ence, and many other matters are
to be discussed.
9 Must have experien
own
work
qood
an d
College Auto Service
Buddhist
401 College St
Toronto, Ont.
After the ceremony, movies will
be shown and refreshments will
be served.
FINE WEDDING PORTRAIT
and
CANDID WEDDING PICTUR
Mail May Be Sent
To Okinawa Now
by
TED HAYASHI
a
Mail service has been resumed
to the southern islands of the
Ryukyu chain. including Okinawa
and Kuchinoshima, it
aiinounced recently. Previously mail
service had been permitted only
to the northern islands of the
Ryukyus.
PHOTO
STUDIO
DUNDAS
1500 Dundas St. W.
Toronto, Ont.
PHONE LA-65
BENEFIT DANCE
at the
Saturday, August 2, 1947
Added Attraction; One HoUr Baseball Motion
'Ted Williams’ Swinging Stance"
“Baseball Fundamentals”
8-9 P.M.
DANCING:
9-12
P.M.
ORIGINAL FURNITURE CO.
438 Queen Street AVest, Toronto
T!
out
cuti<
ter.
for i
La
awaj
form
shoul
goods
beliei
belon
Tin
terite.
tongu
is Gi
place
forced
count!'
finally
Atlant
South
Th ex
the v
duriiig
cause- t
The
Cana di;
tam-c- j
TORONTO NISEI BASEBALL LEAGUE
MOVIE:
cha
den
and
coir
wor
His
tools.
® Steady
wages.
ac<
no;
no
mu
be!
c
Promise
and tin
exempt,
x$r ;> p,
Stroiisx
tne g0A
cancel
I oday
Hilli Pr > r
Phone WA-5612
Japanese Representative; HARRY KUMANO
Phone AD-9240
M e Carry a Complete Line of Home Furniture . BEDROOM SUITES . . . KITCHEN SUITES . - -BED:
■ • - SPRINGS . . . MATTRESSES . . . CHESTER
FIELDS . . . STUDIO COUCHES, etc
Also—ELECTRIC and GAS STOVES . . . ICE BOXES
and REFRIGERATORS . . . RADIOS and ELECTRICAL
APPLIANCES of every description.
colonies.
Frimarip
Causes
Whv ■
i
2P.= :
— TERMS IF DESIRED —
VISIT OUR MODERN RECORD RA
eg ai
(See “Ej
Saturday, j
Grand Forks J CCA Branch Share
In Gty's Golden Jubilee Fete
a
C
t<
n.
P'
P’
31
.1
3.
a
Si.3
5(
j)
-a •>
aS
fl
C
0
t
e
Mo "'nt-kv 4UJ
-B'C-—When Grand Forks celebrated
its aOth birthday on June 29, 30, and Julv 1 the local Jana
PopAuIation’ under the JCCA banner, volunteered
some ihiltv tUU,tJ?CA float’ ente,'ed
a field oi
some thntj others, sailed its way to first prize honors -mH
the congratulations of the citizenry.
nonoic, and
t\V
The float, a product of the ingenuity of all the club members,
was complete in every outward
detail and represented, a ship,
the best of all ships, “Friendship.’’
On boaid she carried several girls
in their national costume, represen ting- the various national origins of the residents of Grand
_____ *
______ ____________
>e Nakade, Nobby Tonogai.
and the committee headed by
Ken
Yoshida,
Kaye
Sugimoto.
Sam Mukai and Takeo Tonogai.
ODORIS LIKED
The odoris by ten young Niseiettes received high ovation from
the huge crowd that gathered to
These girls; Tanis Verisee the open-air show on the
gin (Russia); Pam Mills (Ireschool grounds on the night of
land); Maureen Newbauer (Scot
Mon da j- . June 30.
The dances
land); Kaoru Yoshida (Japan);
occupied 15 .minutes of a 2^4 hour
Rose Chahley (Ukraine): Sheila
progiam. depicting the colorful
Furusho
(China)
and
Doreen
history of the incorporated city.
Moore * (Canada) ;
were circled
Mrs. Sumie Tanaka,- instruc
abput a globe of more than seven
tress, and Fumi Arai were re
feet in diameter representing the
sponsible for the odoris’ success.
World.
Expenses of the Nisei contribu
Behind-the-scenes workers who
tion to the jubilee were met by
deserve a generous share of the
generous
donations
from।
the
credit for the prize-winning float
Japanese
Canadians
in
i
Gran
d
are Yosh
Yosh Tonogai,
F. Sugimoto.
To Sell Haney Buddhist Tenple
corner otEUth'CAUThe Jal>a’lese Buddhist Temple at the
1
sale of
t
i(
r
j
4
T
1,
O
o
tl^ te^CtT^X?0 ££*
new temple m Picture Butte, Alta.
The Province report told of
the complaints received by the
enemy property custodian from’
scores of irate citizens during
the past seven years concerning
PRINTING
OF
ALL
DESCRIPTIONS
i
u
I.
Consult HARRY S. KONDO
201 >/g Revet ley St.. Toronto. AD5031
[SIMON GOTTLIEB, B.A. I
BARRISTER-AT-LAW
394 Bay Street
Toronto 1. Ontario
f Ortice: EL 7090
Fes. JU 6119
mortgage loans arranged
reasonable rates
a
3
.1
GIRLS AND MEN WANTED
FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS
o
---- Apply —
PARISIAN LAUNDRY
241 Bathurst St.. Toronto. Ont.
WA-S492
a
i-
5
i
ATTENTION
NISEI
VETERANS!
A picnic will be held at
LAKE SIMCOE
a
n
J
i
a
Saturday. August 23
be announced at a later date
I
Watch for it!
I
I Get Your New C.C.M.
Now in
Stock.........$47.50
charges paid anvwher
Enquire About the New
’WHIZZER’ BICYCLE MOTOR
t
e
n
I
Time and transportation will !
(Delivery
e
SOCIAL CALENDAR
TENNIS
RACQUETS
Dunlop ••5" and Fred Perry. SIS.50
Others st
-----$12.75 and S11.25 I
Bestriugm^ from......
.
S4.50 up j
Dunlop Balls Special Price. 45c
GROVE CYCLE
< y335 CoHega*St*. ^Toronto"1 MI. <
1
3
5 P
the swastika
otera.
painted
b - d
on
the
Ihe swastika used as a symbol
by Japanese Buddhist Churches
superseded in the Nazi symbol by
many years. It also differs from
the German one in that the arms
of the cross broke to the left
rather than to the right.
Both
the Buddhist symbol and the
Japanese symbol were adapted
from a Chinese good luck
Shortly after the war broke out.
the Kitsilano Japanese Buddhist
Church which
■situated adjacent to the Seaforth Armouries
in A ancouver, had its wooden
swastikas ripped off the high bell
tower by some enterprising van
dal.
"REVIEWING"
AUGUST
2—Toronto, Return All-Star Baseball
Game, Hamilton vs. Toronto
at
Willowvale Park. 5:30 p.m.
’
2—Toronto,
Nisei
Baseball
League
Dance, Labor Lyceum, at 8 f>.m.
Big League baseball movies to* be
shown.
8-9—-Montreal, Missionary Sisters of
CLrist the King Hostel, Benefit
Card Parties. 8 u.m.
F’P*egS’
o
Ball, Y.W.C.A.
gym., 8 -Midsummer
p.m. Enter
tainment,
refreshments,
baseball
rafrle draw.
10—Toronto.
Buddhist
Church
Bon
.Ype“°ny’ luovies’ 404 Parliament,
23—Winnipeg,
Coed
Canteen
Barn
Dance, YWCA auditorium
3-30
p.m.
Costumes,
blue jeans for
men, dirndls for girls.
Toronto, Nisei Veterans’
Outinvallj Ficnic, Lake Simcoe.
Time
and meeting place to be announced.
SEPTEMBER
Dance
leaves
At Winnipeg Co-op Union PUnL
WINNIPEG.—Board! g seven re
served CNR coaches, employees
of the Canadian Co-op Implements
Ltd. (Local 3,960—U.S.WEA.), and
their families and friends number
ing 400, visited Grand Beach on
Saturday, July 19, for their annual
picnic. Many Co-op employees are
Japanese.
Variety races, including many
novelty events, were held in front
of the grandstand with-young and
old (3 to 50 years) participating.
Highlight of the day's events was
the
Tug-o-War
between
the
blacksmith and woodshop boys.
The smithies avenged last year’s
defeat, winning two pulls to one.
Ice cream and pop was served to
all who attended.
Manitoba JCCA
TORONTO. — Fast despatches
from the Committee for Nisei Vet
erans’ Picnic reveal that the forth
coming
ex-servicemen’s
outing
will take place on Saturday. Aug.
23, at Lake Simcoe.
The CNVP announcement re
veals that transportation to the
lake will be by bus and time and
meeting place, probably the bus
jstation, will be announced when
it is 'known how many will attend.
vets are invited to bring
their favorite girl friends, or
their wives if forced to, or come
stag. The CNVP warns that no
one will be allowed to pull a
Garbo act and “vant to be alone”
since the committee will provide feminine companionship
for all stags.
Lunches are to be brought.
The CNVP will provide
ice
cream, hot dogs and coffee.
Berets are to be worn, “if you
want to recapture nostalgia of
your former army life.” Bathing
trunks are also on the day's
orders.
Rev. Akagawa On
Saskatchewan Visit
Japanese I nited Church minister
The Marshall plan is expected
left
this city Thursday,
to cost the United States about $5
. . July 24,
for
a
short trip to Saskatchewan
billion a year. Can she afford this
points. His itinerary included Re
expenditure? Special committees
gina,
Saskatoon. Moose Jaw and
have been appointed by President
the Moose Jaw hostel.
Iruman to find out. Their re
He is to return to Winnipeg on
port, it is believed, will be favorTuesday,
July 29.
able.
In tact, since the United
States government's ,current in
come
s so much in excess of
expected expenditure
the con ti
Help Wanted
tiv is hardly likely to feel the
effect of a $5 . billion aid during
WANTED; Women and girls for
the first year at any rate,
S?rta4°B ,-Ai>I,ly toHal«S-0" Hot
The
Congress, too. is gradually coming around -to a realization
that HELP WANTED—FEMALE
aid to European recovery is necescHiMPERAEtT,CED SEW,NG ma
chine
OPERATORS
FOR
sary to America's self interest.
BLOUSES AND HOUSECOATS
There is one hitch however.
APPLY
ROBINSON
SPORTS'
hile the economic cri s in EurWEAR INC., 1231 ST. CATHER
ope mounts
the U nited
FU ST' WEST, MONTREAL
States seems in no hurry lo pin
P.Q., FIFTH FLOOR.
the Marshall plan into operation:
WAN TED;
while Europe’s needs are felt now'.
skilled power machine operator.
• ne Initeti States has no intention
Steady employment. Applv Braeof implementing the plan until
\n°re Upholstering. 21 Ossington
A Ye.. Toronto.
"'ell into next year. Many state
men are beginning’ to wonder if
house
FOR SALE
the United States <can move fast
fo.T^NT\ Houses and FaU^
enough to prevent the decline in
.
Uale'
Immediate occupation.
her prestige which reached a high
-JPPly G. Shirakawa. 69 Isabel Si
level with the announcement of
M innipeg.
the Marshall plan.
MICKEY s. SATO
Agent
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Office: 21 Dundas Square
Rhone AD-0076-7
Bas.: 696 Richmond St. W
TORONTO. ONT.
t,_ AjIH
WTVVtd:?,--
Seautifuf babiss
years) contest
f0l
Prizes concluded the d=we
gram. Winner Of
girls’ prizes was Vir-;_^
daughter of Mr. and
Omori; and one
boy” winners was Den--^
™a’ SOn of Mr. ano Mr;
Oyama. J. a. 0Wb>mw^
« th. three J„does
test.
Many picnickers e-'-'ov
ming and boat riding^
and everyone had a woad
at Grand Beach.__ j
CHAS. W. ELLIOTT
Subscription Agency
Vets Will Frolic Executives Meet
At Lake Simcoe Tuesday, July 29
WINNIPEG. — A joint meeting
Come Aug. 23
of the recently-elected executives
(Continued From Page One)
Support
New Canadian
Advertisers
Two Sansei Kids Win Baby Coni
2 9— Wiiinip eg.
x>ba JCCA .’O,
Nisei and Issei Division. executive
meeting.
Winnipeg
CCF
Clubrooms, 1170 Main St.
(be
tween College- and Mountain), 8
27—Winnipeg,
Coed
Canteen
VTxroe\2Vr?US’ iocfeport? bus
x w CA 7 p.m.
> 1947
of the Nisei and Issei Divisions of
the Manitoba JCCA will be held
next Tuesday, July 29, in the
Noith Winnipeg CCF clubrooms,
1110 Main St. (between College
and Mountain). Starting time will
be 8 p.m. sharp.
37 Grange Ave.,
°ronro. Q:
Phone AD
Fully authorized Renewal subst-rin>
T1
Agent
SUN LIFE
COMPANY OF CAXA
Program for the coming year,
the forthcoming- national confer-
Toronto Buddhists
Hold Bon Service
On August 10
Kamloops, B.C.
AUTO MECHANIC
WANTED
TORONTO. - On Sunday, Aug.
iO, the Toronto Buddhist Church
xvill hold a Bon Ceremony, at
404 Parliament St., from 2 p.m.
The ceremony is under the co
sponsorship
of
the
Church and the TYBS.
pre
B
niej
P.O. Box 14?
ence, and many other matters are
to be discussed.
9 Must have experien
own
work
qood
an d
College Auto Service
Buddhist
401 College St
Toronto, Ont.
After the ceremony, movies will
be shown and refreshments will
be served.
FINE WEDDING PORTRAIT
and
CANDID WEDDING PICTUR
Mail May Be Sent
To Okinawa Now
by
TED HAYASHI
a
Mail service has been resumed
to the southern islands of the
Ryukyu chain. including Okinawa
and Kuchinoshima, it
aiinounced recently. Previously mail
service had been permitted only
to the northern islands of the
Ryukyus.
PHOTO
STUDIO
DUNDAS
1500 Dundas St. W.
Toronto, Ont.
PHONE LA-65
BENEFIT DANCE
at the
Saturday, August 2, 1947
Added Attraction; One HoUr Baseball Motion
'Ted Williams’ Swinging Stance"
“Baseball Fundamentals”
8-9 P.M.
DANCING:
9-12
P.M.
ORIGINAL FURNITURE CO.
438 Queen Street AVest, Toronto
T!
out
cuti<
ter.
for i
La
awaj
form
shoul
goods
beliei
belon
Tin
terite.
tongu
is Gi
place
forced
count!'
finally
Atlant
South
Th ex
the v
duriiig
cause- t
The
Cana di;
tam-c- j
TORONTO NISEI BASEBALL LEAGUE
MOVIE:
cha
den
and
coir
wor
His
tools.
® Steady
wages.
ac<
no;
no
mu
be!
c
Promise
and tin
exempt,
x$r ;> p,
Stroiisx
tne g0A
cancel
I oday
Hilli Pr > r
Phone WA-5612
Japanese Representative; HARRY KUMANO
Phone AD-9240
M e Carry a Complete Line of Home Furniture . BEDROOM SUITES . . . KITCHEN SUITES . - -BED:
■ • - SPRINGS . . . MATTRESSES . . . CHESTER
FIELDS . . . STUDIO COUCHES, etc
Also—ELECTRIC and GAS STOVES . . . ICE BOXES
and REFRIGERATORS . . . RADIOS and ELECTRICAL
APPLIANCES of every description.
colonies.
Frimarip
Causes
Whv ■
i
2P.= :
— TERMS IF DESIRED —
VISIT OUR MODERN RECORD RA
eg ai
(See “Ej