Page 1
nip-g nursery
r<ro and fou;
’ 3Cl
allots,.
s ]isT- -Mr.
at Gro chu
f P’asriCjas
311 l-1(? don
ed between
,f Ws ani
Hake it a
hildren
s.
' !
the Uifi.
imbia and
Provincial
lvei'- She
‘dergartea
a- and has
ted vith
[amiltons
Vol. X, No. 45
THE NEW CANADIAN
10c per copy
S5 per 1 year
Hew Urgency Felt ffor
Japan Relief Projects
By STAFF WRITER
Reports received this week from TanflnP«
groups scattered across Canada indicated that a new Ind
JXanXeTer8 "
the
of -nt4'ut^
Ask Commissioner
detailed report on the critical con
ditions faced by the people of
Japan was described Oct. 29 at
the Church of All Nations by Pro
fessor Gilbert Ball, who has spent
41 years in Japan, teaching.
Mr. Ball was in Hawaii during
the tvai but returned to Japan
immediately after the war to aid
in the relief work.
To Extend Deadline
He told the Toronto audience
that the Japanese people felt a
relief when the war ended, and
f fun is
■Uiniitou
Unable to Pay
For Imports
TO
2
FE
5.
—4
nii[3
Londoners Meet
§
Saturday, November 8, 1947
For Filing Loss Claims
TORONTO—The national JCCA
is doing its utmost to have the
Commissioner on property- loss in
quiry extend the November 30
deadline for the filing of claims
forms, it was announced by
George Tanaka, executive eecretary.
Recommends Steps to Safeguard
Civil Liberties in United States
Civ^RMAsTG™iteG^'eSident T™man’s Committee oa
described the n"a s evacuation"oT no 000^ WWte .House’
right to physical freedom.
Fundamental to our whole sys
tem Ox law is the belief that guilt
is personal and not a matter of
heredity- or association,” the com
Mr. Tanaka said that in most
mittee
declared, “Yet in this in
cases claimants will find it dit
stance no specific evacuees were
ficult to fill out the required
chaiged with disloyalty, espionage
forms, and that the early deadoi sedition. The evacuation, in
(line places them under unfair
short,
was not a criminal proceed
pressure.
ing
involving
individuals, but a
At least six months time for
sort of mass quarantine measure.”
the filing of claims is asked by
the national JCCA.
The report recommended a re
view of the mass evacuation. ’We
cannot erase all the scars of evac
uation,” it said, “(but) we can re
imburse those who present valid
claims foi' material losses.”
ancestry and others now inelig
ible the right to citizenship.
4. Repeal of the anti-alien land
laws of six western states which
prohibit
agricultural
property
ownership by Japanese aliens.
5. Repeal oi the California Anti
Alien fishing law which prohibits
the issuance of licenses for com
mercial fishing to Japanese aliens.
i
In London, Ont., a special meet
ing was called by- the London
Nisei Organization on Oct. 26 to
■VANCOUVER.—Japan todays is
discuss ways and means of rais
a poor customer for Canada’s ex
ing funds for Japan relief. Over
ports, according to Lt.-Col. Oscar
TORONTO.—Dr. M. C. Shaseventy persons—young and old__
Orr, city prosecutor, who told the
miatcher, barrister, 2060 Rae St.,
were present at the meeting and
Rotary Club, Oct. 28, of his duties
Regina, has been appointed by the
The Civil Rights committee,
!•
they were shown LARA films
at the Japanese war crime trials.
Co-operative
Committee to act as
consisting of 15 distinguished
(Licensed Agencies for Relief in
legal counsel for claimants in
The Japanese need almost
Americans in the fields of business
TORONTO.—The property loss
Asia).
Saskatchewan,
it was disclosed.
every commodity, we manufac
claims forms have now been dis politics, education, labor, religion,
A
committee
of
by
the
national
JCCA office.
ten
persons
ture,” Col. Orr stated, “but the
tributed and are available from
and economies, was appointed by
- *
was
appointed
to
work out a
problem is what they can do to
the following organizations:
President Truman on Dec. 5, last
. method of canvassing for funds
pay for our goods.”
year, to study how civil rights
British Columbia JCCA, Green
and clothing.
The committee
Ihe ruins of Japan’s industry
could be better safeguarded in the
wood, B.C.
consisted of:
were vividly described by Col
United States. Chairman of the
Lethbridge Co-operative Com
Mrs. Obokata, Miss M. Toku
Orr.
committee
is Charles E. Wilson
mittee, c/o W. S. Wallace, Box 629,
naga, r.-.iss K. Kagawa, S. Ka
"Tokyo is little more todays
president
of
the General Electric •
Lethbridge, Alta.
’
gawa, K. Sunahara, Y. Taka
Company.
than brick, mortar and ashes for
Regina Nisei Organization, c/o
shima, S. Yabuki, J. Kumagai,
thirty- miles,” he said. “Even the
TORONTO.—The amount col
The committee’s report, re
George
Tamaki, 1546 Montague
S.
Tsujimoto,
and
F.
Sunahara.
smaller towns and villages have
leased by the White House’ last
lected in Ontario for the JCCA
St., Regina, Sask.
AT:
been gutted by fire bombs. EveryFund Drive stood at $1,414 or
Door-to-Door Canvass
week, noted the abuses against
Manitoba JCCA, c/o Harold
v hei e there are factory chimneys
4 7% of the $3,000 objective on.
the democratic rights of minorUy
The committee planned a doorHirose, 68 Kate St., Winnipeg,
standing, but with no factory- left
WK
Nov.
4, it was revealed by T.
groups
and
urged
the
enactment
to-door canvass to be carried out
Man.
beneath them.”
Sagara,
treasurer
of
the
Ontario,
of Federal and state legislation to
Nov. 8 and 9, and urged LondonOntario JCCA, 84 Gerrard Gt.
Japanese war trials received al
Fund Drive Committee.
outlaw
segregation and discrim
eis to have their old clothing
E., Toronto .2, Ont.
most no attention from the Japa
ination
based
on
race,
color,
creed,
The amounts reported from
ready for collection at that time,
Quebec JCCA, 713 Moffat Ave., • or national origin, in such places
nese people, he said.
y
various districts are as follows;
(See “JAPAN RELIEF,” page 11)
Verdun, P.Q.
Toronto
I.,as trains, buses, schools, hospitals,
5875.oo
Hamilton ___ ___
400.00
theatres, hotels, restaurants, the
Geraldton . ____
65.00
Vineland Station
armed services and private’ em
18.00
Beamsville
's'
15.00
ployment.
Guelph _______ . ~
15.00
Claims Forms
Distributed to
8
—+
Mi. Ball said the relief goods
sent to Japan from various orjous w g p g distributed
among hospitals, orphanages, re
patriate receiving centres, etc.,
and did not reach individual fami
lies.
He stressed the need of
sending individual gift parcels in
addition to organized relief pro
jects. Mr. Ball spoke in fluent
Japanese.
From The Vancouver Sun
: co.
0709
)
that_ they showed no bitterness
towards the victorious Allies.
He praised the courage of those
Japanese who had been placed in
desperate circumstances by the
war and yet who faced the future
without despair.
-—
Review Mass Evacuation
says Truman Committee
its Si20campa’i^%°enuyi0 {apai1 Eelief Committee renewed
No Bitterness
fans are
1S dance,
- Gould’s
-• N, ou
WINNIPEG, MANITOBA
Appoint Lawyei*
In Saskatchewan
Finance Drive
Near Half Mark
In Ontario
The Promised Land off the Mormons
By REVEREND G. G. NAKAYAMA
Salt Lake City, Utah.
The SOO miles which separate
Salt Lake City, Utah, from Los
Angeles can be travelled in 19
hours according to regular train
Schedule, and 15 hours by fast ex
press. But by air, the trip takes
°nly 4y2 hours including a half
houi stop at Las Vegas, Nevada.
Since I had an engagement to
N’eak in Salt Lake City the folo\\ in& day, I took the 27-passenger Western Airlines plane.
Night brings a mantle of quiet
• • en to a city of two million popnation. The sky was bathed in
light of a full moon, while
from below, 1’ed, yellow and blue
Sf?arch-lights
reached
upwards
room amon „ the street lights and
.. e / * *SS C10SS3ng light of moving
<H,c..es. Thus I bid farewell from
<;°0’
to the busy- city of Los
■rogeie-s.
oalt Lake City holds a special
rororest to the people of Alberta.
was the followers of the Mor. jti religion who pioneered
;n,l° Utah and opened up the
■ 5ot-7ches of this area- ft was
Mormons who poured from
this area into southern Alberta
and established the sugar beet
industry.
It proposed that racial segre
gation should be wiped out “now.”
The report made 35 specific
recommendations.
It urged the enactment of federal anti-lynching, anti-poll tax
and fair employment practices
laws.
through the Rocky Mountains,
to finally emerge upon this spot,
and saw a great lake and the
vast plains of Utah open up beBetween speaking engagements.
i ore him, he exclaimed,
I was taken on a tour of this
is
the place.”
city, visiting legislative buildings
It recommended state laws ban
My views differ with the Mor
and sites of historic interest.
ning “restrictive covenants” by
mon religion on the question of
which property owners bind them
The marble interior.of the state
faith, but I cannot help but ad
selves not to sell or lease land or
legislative buildings was strik
mire and respect the fine spirit
homes to persons other than of
ingly beautiful. I was shown the
of their pioneers, arid the practice
Caucasian race. •
usually inaccessible Gold Room
of the principle of brotherly love.
where the walls, table and chairs
To strengthen the “machinery”
I was struck by the awe-inspir
gleamed with gold decorations.
of protecting civil rights, it recom
ing beauty of the Mormon Temple
This lavishness bears testimony
mended a permanent commission
which is said to have one million
to the fact that the state of Utah
on civil rights as a part of the
members. And to make it more
draws its riches not only from
federal government and also a
colorful, it was the 100th anni
sugar beet production but also
joint standing committee on civil
versary since the founding of the
from the mines.
rights in Congress.
Mormon faith. The city was a
The following recommendation
The prosperity- of Salt Lake
scene of joyful celebration, with
dealt
directly with Japanese
City is said to be the result of
countless visitors and followers of
American problems:
the world’s largest copper mine
the faith thronging the streets.
which is situated in this vicinity.
1. A review of the wartime
The museums at the state legis
Not far from the legislative
evacuation
of Japanese Amerlative and the Mormon Temple
icams.
buildings is a place where a large
exhibit relics of the Mormon
memorial tower carries the legend,
2- Setting up of a procedure bv
pioneers. The home of Brigham
which the claims of evacuees for
“THIS IS THE PLACE.’’ The
Aoung, where he lived with his
business and property Josses could
story- behind these words were
still remains.
be
“promptly considered and set
explained to me as follows:
I took color movies of these
tled.
”
When Brigham Young led fol
sites to show my friends in
3. Removal of race restrictions
lowers of the Mormon faith
Canada.
from
the naturalization law to
across
the wilderness
and
(Translated from Japanese)
give resident aliens of Japanese
Gormley
Kingston ____ ___
Brantford
Oakville ..............
Pickering
Jordan ...............
TotalL...
At™
.........
10.00
5.00
5.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
■------------------$1,414.00
many canvassing teams and dis
tricts have not yet- reported their
totals.
Geraldton became one of the
first districts to reach the quota
when the Geraldton Japanese As
sociation chipped in with $9 after
discovering that the total contri
butions received from every fam
ily and single men in the area
fell short of the quota by that
amount.
J
r
T
A
&000
1500
300
375
2256
COD
1G00
Coo
150
1500
400
500
300
115
150
zoo
MAN
ONT) (QUE.
nap
y(aqorta[\
||
!
J
r<ro and fou;
’ 3Cl
allots,.
s ]isT- -Mr.
at Gro chu
f P’asriCjas
311 l-1(? don
ed between
,f Ws ani
Hake it a
hildren
s.
' !
the Uifi.
imbia and
Provincial
lvei'- She
‘dergartea
a- and has
ted vith
[amiltons
Vol. X, No. 45
THE NEW CANADIAN
10c per copy
S5 per 1 year
Hew Urgency Felt ffor
Japan Relief Projects
By STAFF WRITER
Reports received this week from TanflnP«
groups scattered across Canada indicated that a new Ind
JXanXeTer8 "
the
of -nt4'ut^
Ask Commissioner
detailed report on the critical con
ditions faced by the people of
Japan was described Oct. 29 at
the Church of All Nations by Pro
fessor Gilbert Ball, who has spent
41 years in Japan, teaching.
Mr. Ball was in Hawaii during
the tvai but returned to Japan
immediately after the war to aid
in the relief work.
To Extend Deadline
He told the Toronto audience
that the Japanese people felt a
relief when the war ended, and
f fun is
■Uiniitou
Unable to Pay
For Imports
TO
2
FE
5.
—4
nii[3
Londoners Meet
§
Saturday, November 8, 1947
For Filing Loss Claims
TORONTO—The national JCCA
is doing its utmost to have the
Commissioner on property- loss in
quiry extend the November 30
deadline for the filing of claims
forms, it was announced by
George Tanaka, executive eecretary.
Recommends Steps to Safeguard
Civil Liberties in United States
Civ^RMAsTG™iteG^'eSident T™man’s Committee oa
described the n"a s evacuation"oT no 000^ WWte .House’
right to physical freedom.
Fundamental to our whole sys
tem Ox law is the belief that guilt
is personal and not a matter of
heredity- or association,” the com
Mr. Tanaka said that in most
mittee
declared, “Yet in this in
cases claimants will find it dit
stance no specific evacuees were
ficult to fill out the required
chaiged with disloyalty, espionage
forms, and that the early deadoi sedition. The evacuation, in
(line places them under unfair
short,
was not a criminal proceed
pressure.
ing
involving
individuals, but a
At least six months time for
sort of mass quarantine measure.”
the filing of claims is asked by
the national JCCA.
The report recommended a re
view of the mass evacuation. ’We
cannot erase all the scars of evac
uation,” it said, “(but) we can re
imburse those who present valid
claims foi' material losses.”
ancestry and others now inelig
ible the right to citizenship.
4. Repeal of the anti-alien land
laws of six western states which
prohibit
agricultural
property
ownership by Japanese aliens.
5. Repeal oi the California Anti
Alien fishing law which prohibits
the issuance of licenses for com
mercial fishing to Japanese aliens.
i
In London, Ont., a special meet
ing was called by- the London
Nisei Organization on Oct. 26 to
■VANCOUVER.—Japan todays is
discuss ways and means of rais
a poor customer for Canada’s ex
ing funds for Japan relief. Over
ports, according to Lt.-Col. Oscar
TORONTO.—Dr. M. C. Shaseventy persons—young and old__
Orr, city prosecutor, who told the
miatcher, barrister, 2060 Rae St.,
were present at the meeting and
Rotary Club, Oct. 28, of his duties
Regina, has been appointed by the
The Civil Rights committee,
!•
they were shown LARA films
at the Japanese war crime trials.
Co-operative
Committee to act as
consisting of 15 distinguished
(Licensed Agencies for Relief in
legal counsel for claimants in
The Japanese need almost
Americans in the fields of business
TORONTO.—The property loss
Asia).
Saskatchewan,
it was disclosed.
every commodity, we manufac
claims forms have now been dis politics, education, labor, religion,
A
committee
of
by
the
national
JCCA office.
ten
persons
ture,” Col. Orr stated, “but the
tributed and are available from
and economies, was appointed by
- *
was
appointed
to
work out a
problem is what they can do to
the following organizations:
President Truman on Dec. 5, last
. method of canvassing for funds
pay for our goods.”
year, to study how civil rights
British Columbia JCCA, Green
and clothing.
The committee
Ihe ruins of Japan’s industry
could be better safeguarded in the
wood, B.C.
consisted of:
were vividly described by Col
United States. Chairman of the
Lethbridge Co-operative Com
Mrs. Obokata, Miss M. Toku
Orr.
committee
is Charles E. Wilson
mittee, c/o W. S. Wallace, Box 629,
naga, r.-.iss K. Kagawa, S. Ka
"Tokyo is little more todays
president
of
the General Electric •
Lethbridge, Alta.
’
gawa, K. Sunahara, Y. Taka
Company.
than brick, mortar and ashes for
Regina Nisei Organization, c/o
shima, S. Yabuki, J. Kumagai,
thirty- miles,” he said. “Even the
TORONTO.—The amount col
The committee’s report, re
George
Tamaki, 1546 Montague
S.
Tsujimoto,
and
F.
Sunahara.
smaller towns and villages have
leased by the White House’ last
lected in Ontario for the JCCA
St., Regina, Sask.
AT:
been gutted by fire bombs. EveryFund Drive stood at $1,414 or
Door-to-Door Canvass
week, noted the abuses against
Manitoba JCCA, c/o Harold
v hei e there are factory chimneys
4 7% of the $3,000 objective on.
the democratic rights of minorUy
The committee planned a doorHirose, 68 Kate St., Winnipeg,
standing, but with no factory- left
WK
Nov.
4, it was revealed by T.
groups
and
urged
the
enactment
to-door canvass to be carried out
Man.
beneath them.”
Sagara,
treasurer
of
the
Ontario,
of Federal and state legislation to
Nov. 8 and 9, and urged LondonOntario JCCA, 84 Gerrard Gt.
Japanese war trials received al
Fund Drive Committee.
outlaw
segregation and discrim
eis to have their old clothing
E., Toronto .2, Ont.
most no attention from the Japa
ination
based
on
race,
color,
creed,
The amounts reported from
ready for collection at that time,
Quebec JCCA, 713 Moffat Ave., • or national origin, in such places
nese people, he said.
y
various districts are as follows;
(See “JAPAN RELIEF,” page 11)
Verdun, P.Q.
Toronto
I.,as trains, buses, schools, hospitals,
5875.oo
Hamilton ___ ___
400.00
theatres, hotels, restaurants, the
Geraldton . ____
65.00
Vineland Station
armed services and private’ em
18.00
Beamsville
's'
15.00
ployment.
Guelph _______ . ~
15.00
Claims Forms
Distributed to
8
—+
Mi. Ball said the relief goods
sent to Japan from various orjous w g p g distributed
among hospitals, orphanages, re
patriate receiving centres, etc.,
and did not reach individual fami
lies.
He stressed the need of
sending individual gift parcels in
addition to organized relief pro
jects. Mr. Ball spoke in fluent
Japanese.
From The Vancouver Sun
: co.
0709
)
that_ they showed no bitterness
towards the victorious Allies.
He praised the courage of those
Japanese who had been placed in
desperate circumstances by the
war and yet who faced the future
without despair.
-—
Review Mass Evacuation
says Truman Committee
its Si20campa’i^%°enuyi0 {apai1 Eelief Committee renewed
No Bitterness
fans are
1S dance,
- Gould’s
-• N, ou
WINNIPEG, MANITOBA
Appoint Lawyei*
In Saskatchewan
Finance Drive
Near Half Mark
In Ontario
The Promised Land off the Mormons
By REVEREND G. G. NAKAYAMA
Salt Lake City, Utah.
The SOO miles which separate
Salt Lake City, Utah, from Los
Angeles can be travelled in 19
hours according to regular train
Schedule, and 15 hours by fast ex
press. But by air, the trip takes
°nly 4y2 hours including a half
houi stop at Las Vegas, Nevada.
Since I had an engagement to
N’eak in Salt Lake City the folo\\ in& day, I took the 27-passenger Western Airlines plane.
Night brings a mantle of quiet
• • en to a city of two million popnation. The sky was bathed in
light of a full moon, while
from below, 1’ed, yellow and blue
Sf?arch-lights
reached
upwards
room amon „ the street lights and
.. e / * *SS C10SS3ng light of moving
<H,c..es. Thus I bid farewell from
<;°0’
to the busy- city of Los
■rogeie-s.
oalt Lake City holds a special
rororest to the people of Alberta.
was the followers of the Mor. jti religion who pioneered
;n,l° Utah and opened up the
■ 5ot-7ches of this area- ft was
Mormons who poured from
this area into southern Alberta
and established the sugar beet
industry.
It proposed that racial segre
gation should be wiped out “now.”
The report made 35 specific
recommendations.
It urged the enactment of federal anti-lynching, anti-poll tax
and fair employment practices
laws.
through the Rocky Mountains,
to finally emerge upon this spot,
and saw a great lake and the
vast plains of Utah open up beBetween speaking engagements.
i ore him, he exclaimed,
I was taken on a tour of this
is
the place.”
city, visiting legislative buildings
It recommended state laws ban
My views differ with the Mor
and sites of historic interest.
ning “restrictive covenants” by
mon religion on the question of
which property owners bind them
The marble interior.of the state
faith, but I cannot help but ad
selves not to sell or lease land or
legislative buildings was strik
mire and respect the fine spirit
homes to persons other than of
ingly beautiful. I was shown the
of their pioneers, arid the practice
Caucasian race. •
usually inaccessible Gold Room
of the principle of brotherly love.
where the walls, table and chairs
To strengthen the “machinery”
I was struck by the awe-inspir
gleamed with gold decorations.
of protecting civil rights, it recom
ing beauty of the Mormon Temple
This lavishness bears testimony
mended a permanent commission
which is said to have one million
to the fact that the state of Utah
on civil rights as a part of the
members. And to make it more
draws its riches not only from
federal government and also a
colorful, it was the 100th anni
sugar beet production but also
joint standing committee on civil
versary since the founding of the
from the mines.
rights in Congress.
Mormon faith. The city was a
The following recommendation
The prosperity- of Salt Lake
scene of joyful celebration, with
dealt
directly with Japanese
City is said to be the result of
countless visitors and followers of
American problems:
the world’s largest copper mine
the faith thronging the streets.
which is situated in this vicinity.
1. A review of the wartime
The museums at the state legis
Not far from the legislative
evacuation
of Japanese Amerlative and the Mormon Temple
icams.
buildings is a place where a large
exhibit relics of the Mormon
memorial tower carries the legend,
2- Setting up of a procedure bv
pioneers. The home of Brigham
which the claims of evacuees for
“THIS IS THE PLACE.’’ The
Aoung, where he lived with his
business and property Josses could
story- behind these words were
still remains.
be
“promptly considered and set
explained to me as follows:
I took color movies of these
tled.
”
When Brigham Young led fol
sites to show my friends in
3. Removal of race restrictions
lowers of the Mormon faith
Canada.
from
the naturalization law to
across
the wilderness
and
(Translated from Japanese)
give resident aliens of Japanese
Gormley
Kingston ____ ___
Brantford
Oakville ..............
Pickering
Jordan ...............
TotalL...
At™
.........
10.00
5.00
5.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
■------------------$1,414.00
many canvassing teams and dis
tricts have not yet- reported their
totals.
Geraldton became one of the
first districts to reach the quota
when the Geraldton Japanese As
sociation chipped in with $9 after
discovering that the total contri
butions received from every fam
ily and single men in the area
fell short of the quota by that
amount.
J
r
T
A
&000
1500
300
375
2256
COD
1G00
Coo
150
1500
400
500
300
115
150
zoo
MAN
ONT) (QUE.
nap
y(aqorta[\
||
!
J
Page 2
Pag
A
a
the NEW CANADIAN
IB
li'4~1N
Winnipeg, Man.
* medium of
p.
_
504 T,albot Avenue
Ah lnV
05
ezprS“ 7thek,y °rgan PUW13hed
Saturday, November 8, 194
g.1*-
CC~—flB.
The storm has died down and
had had no
the last lingerin, = thunderclaps
application
from
Takaichi Umezuki
———
-........... Editor
Negro
girls.
Hi
grow
faint. The Marisse Scott
Tsukane Mayeda ’ 7.7, 7 7,
apanese Section Editor
By AKI SATO
Pltals avoided the question ho$Rates: In AdvaL ’^ank Moritsugu - Sab Watanabe
case is over. That is as far as
acceptance
by sayIng si jboi,!
There seems to be an awful lot the daily
Advance—$2.00 for 20 weeks, $2.50 for six months,
papers are concerned,
or controversy pro and con about It’s news
applications had been recw,f°
no more.
the current trend towards longer
PO POJie-v
been laid down
But it was news to manv Cana
-kii ts in women’s fashions
In
Seventeen hospita|s r
dians apparently, when the young
XOWniBER S, 1947
an attempt to dear this all um
no discrimination and 13
colored girl applied for training
temporarily if not permanently, a
they
had graduated Negro
at the hospital in her own home
pull was taken anion the local
as nurses or had them as
town and found the door nrmlv
teen-agers.
dents
now. Four had accent.tu-■
closed in her face. It was news
The “people’s voices" in this
Negro students with
to many Canadians that Canada
’ Toronto
and ths case were members of Winnipeg's also
tions,
while two had sought
suffers from that shameful.
-Pegs Club, a Nisei mixed club
soften refusals by advising th'°
sickness that -we are always
with an age range of 15-21 vears
9>rls
to try American hospdals.
blaming our southern neighbors
inclusive.
The question put to
for: race and color prejudice.
TORONTO UNIVERSITY
the November 30 deadhne fo^ the^fi^VSlle'cia'^;"8' them individually was:
SCHOOL WANTS NEGROES
All m all, .the plight in which
Do you like the present trrend
3
ilarisse
Scott
innocently
.
found
One of the best reports cam'
towards longer skirts?
^onthrtbS eXtended several
nerself
turned
out
to
have
sev
fiom
the University of Tn
Results obtained and
calculated eral good results.
The
young
nurelng
school. There,
xe°j“
1
after some intricate
formation and to
algebraic
mayor of Owen Sound, Ed Sara
gn’1 was enrolled, and the schoN
work were as follows:
^ent, lose to the occasion and
j
This i equest is not fin unreasonnl-Jci
was trying to get another,
Yes
No
showed that there are still, in
granted, will faciiitntp
Ribie one, and one. if
-school
was willing to lower The
Club Total
this
68%
day
of
fear,
men
who
have
educational requirements to admits
Jatei- stages. ^fess ot the inquiry in its
Girls ............
the
100%
0%
strength of their convictions and
Negro girls.
u
Boys
22%
78%
the
belief in what is just and
eern" g
notice eonwhen asked why they liked the
"They find the hospita|s are
right.
longer skirt trend, most girls
the stumbling blocks,” said the
<h-an for the firsY
Cana. seemed rather lost.. “Doin’ what _ Then coinciding with the Marreport. “At first the hospitals
isse Scott uproar, the National
comes naturally," and “Because I
। efused to take them (Negro
Council of the YWCA released a
incidentally,0 weVad'hopld" thanraid C'ai“S form—"’hieh, like them,” was about all they had iepoit of a survey made
graduates) but the u. of T has
to say until one popular miss,
earlier
att1t
nudndeaVOrin9 tO Chan9e this
^.lde-—the Toronto'orga'nizatioii^started'work'6' r"M P™- "hose brother is well-known to this year of Canadian
nursing
attitude and they are gradually
ta do HU‘ dUe t0 the
that some hnpoXt”1 PrePara’ Nisei Canada as one of the top schools. With SO many
being worked in.”
Z
whose
minds
Vancouver Asahi pitch
turn t o
Only one Toronto hospital di.details were
ers in that
S ^dTnd“dtime e,aPS6d
thoughts of Florence N.
team’s hey-day, came up with an
closed
a hostile stand agah^
ing for a cai eer, among us. the
forms could excellent reason.
1 eg! o trainees, saying they would
YWCA eport of the intolerance
“It’s safer to walk up the
berTn-P1 '
f°rmS Were sent 0Llt hv express
St-it?
aiMler traiuinHniUd
record of training hospitais is of
stairs," said she with a look of
-fates
Negro
hospitals.
The
sam?
on
Novemkeen interest.
The disXttonnof the t7™n™provinci£i1 °r:
relief.
hospital
had
rejected
Indian
appli
'ganizations.
'‘There was a real tendency
Being a nmle, this pollster had
cants but accepted Chinese
i
and
to discriminate against Negro
toons to.the individual claimants is the provincial organiza- never taken such an angle into
Japanese girls.
underway
as
this
issue
g<r s, ’ said the report. A little
account.
.goes to press.
HospiMs with good reco,.ds 0_.
loser to home, and a bit more
/I he boys were more co-opera
aeceptmg Negro girls for trahu,,,
Now it is readily seen that the
heerful, was that Indian and
tive and their arguments in favor
claimants are left with ot shorter skirts seemed more Chinese girls were more readily
"ere two at Victoria, B.C.. one w
very little time in which to
Halifax (another refused), one agather
necessary
information
acceptable and “there were
or to get legal consultation i
o»ica . Freezing European child
Windsor with two girls h. trai„:
m completing the forms
signs of a softening of the open
ren so that nature’s creations mav
B,f. <a’'o“>«' refused two a1)pj.
discnmination practised against
tion
^X^St toCted br a NiSei
be hidden was attacked. The club'7
cations), an
Ottawa hospital
Japanese Canadian girls during
op Jitterbug was worried about
"•hmh had six colored student
the war.”
a
need assistance in filling out forms'of’th’0"?''’ of c,aimants the ong skirt’s effect on the male
tiorn the West Indies, and one at
nm^SSe SCOtt aa^ ^ny Nisei
. Canadian organizations in rb»
■ f thlS tyPe- Japanese fashions:
New Waterford,
ta’icts are prepared ‘ o 'ms t f
W‘°"S
a”d dis
Nova Scotia,
nuisetb now in training have
•’ don’t like these changes
a lot
On
the
debit
more m common than just
side, Winnipe,
'cause they might turn
their
claim forms—but now tune is I'mming’out." C°mplet“®'tlle
hospitals oeemed
around
ambition
for an R.N.
to think it wise
and make our trousers' shortthat Negro gjrjs
er! ”
should train h
Negro
hospitals,
accurate^- X
bVi°US'y to detei™ine as
while a SaskaAnother male teener was a
CERTAIN REGION
toon hospital admitted
little
more
philosophical
about
the
laid down in the terms ol' XTiX1 Xn 7°f the type
down a Negro applicant. turning
Anti-Xegro discrimination
was
feeling
vhole thing. He sniu
/>•, ■
not concentrated in anv
-rie said he didn t
le WOUld 110t be happy there.
a time lor the filing of claims fh» 1 ■J plovldln8 too short mind longer° skirts
region
as
and said:
111 the United States. ~
require some form" of assistanc • a,mants- ll10-st of whom
Hospitals
f°r VaPiety they're oRav.
willing to accept colored girls and
are placed in an
10’™S' Short skirts will come back. don’t ■ospilois hostile to the idea wZ HAPPY ENDING
worry."
FOR MARISSE
HosuZ'r-"5
Parts °f CanadaIt
was
interesting
to
note
Tlye was. as you know. aUnited State?Xn?ment7XhS ,.P'al1, proposed N" the
that
CatboH.
dberated by Homan
of all the women queried
>S Seemed ®“eralbbtmv T
S l° Marisse Scott's
only t-eZo „
bjr the House of Representative
passed unanimously one indicated any worry ’about
stoiy.
Last month, she
m ,C,'m"’atiOa' the rePort
■was acapproval in the neTJ set^n
' and?'hich awaits Senate economy. <«Not enough monev "
cepted as a “probie” at
: St. Joseph’s in Guelph, Ontario
has been allowed the claimant-' Peil.°d ,of ei8'hteen months said the lass frankly and sadlv.
and so
has started on her nursing career.
r.
,
"ts m winch to file the claims
ZZeZeZytlX ?V1'"nS '°
slmr everyoue else ^till wears
shoiter ones." she brightened
(Blit she says rather wistfully that
Canada has allowed two months for the same n
medical staff objected^
she would have liked to train near
■ The Commissioner is resnectfnP
P,U’P0SeTurning to this writer's own
home m Owen Sound.
58 renJ1'6
hospitals questioned
consideration to the plea tlftUi fre(,uested to give his opinions.
Ion. skirts look good on
1 hed. Of these, 24 said thev
Many Nisei girls are training
”
claims be extended.
d^line for the filing some girls .
it depends on the
Canadian hospitals today,
girls themselve,
ven last September, several
and the skirt,
^ed • - - Christian Dior is a
too. Some skirt
rirst year “probies” started the
make the wearnenclimau. He lias eyes. He is a
ers look as if they were wrapped
initial stages of the hard ihreedress designer
Wo i
year grind
up in sacks. Times the kind that's moils.
H® t”’i5K tato their prized
Editor, The Nev, Canadian:
made ot heavy material and
“R.N.”
But happily, for the
rehcation has aroused me sufficiencquires a slit at the bottom so that
/ I have been reading The New
Nisei, things
th
w
ecomes famous: and
are much Jbetter
l.v to raise
Sk,rts sl»wly but surely are
’he wearer can hobble
today
as far
rri
1 ^maH cry of protest
.Canadian ever since its th-.;around
as acceptance in
Um two articles I refer to are
more comfortably.
Before the girls had to
hospitals is concerned.
assue and have noted the evolu
A Xiseiette Divorces" bv Pe»
Xryhab0Ut Sa^ng slips.
-.lethmks that the discoverv of
tion it has undergone from a
epenk lag ot Cnrcer Wonien'.,
hy have to make their slip7
i-iese latest fashions came as an
monthly published and edited bv
'°nPer
^eir skirts.
w-i.to. Heaven help the Nisei
ace:aent. Valentina. Russian-born
young u.B.C - ’
’
Women
its present
they
must
eontiniie'to
fullt
56
da>,S
'
be flight,
fw-eigner who is one of New York's
ftday form of tt national weekly. I
fully
naughty
to
get
a giimpse
against such 1910 ideas
.have
su-le$ COmniented “PM the
, usually enjoyed the articles
expressed bv pecr
.y°.Un9 lat|y’’
Male
- •
Hua Ivayo.
?and editorials and many times I
especially
both authors appear
imaginations are sure going
Now that November’s here,
"The Bozoom ees half-exposed
-have felt that it was a paper to
to
be
over-worked.
llmukfnl
o„iv
,
UU
eI
'
es
'
1
™
you
writers and correspondents
just enoff to cover the — you
be proud of.
There have been
All because of
Dior.
know."
with
"
a
1
nm
‘
i
cquainted
are really going to bwn on that
times when I felt some editorial
umnj AlseiS
ir
s'
™
U
‘
.'
se
Dior
is
making
llp
whose
actions
Which
leads
me
to
s °ry- that poem, that article or
, or some article to be superb
the followbelie the attitudes
forK
J C bv
°"Ti Jn er ^4
other contribution you’re sending theory. Christian
. k^-iouing- dresses that
expressed
bv
articles of penmanship and vital
Dior, the
the above two writers.
"o f ont or backs on X.'^is b ?
Fienchman who takes
ity and there have been tinier
HnrnUS f°r the k'9 year-end
credit for
,ts P^santer aspects
F" m !
M. W. Fujiwara.
the trend. was walking in
Holiday |SSue, aren’t you? We
- when the contents of your paper
the
"Xpeering Poi„?
Toronto, Ont.
treets of Paris when he saw
,qu“anaI1'tfrUel^in Htera;y
°pe so, because we plan to
Pitiful sight. tn the city su(f-; make the 1947 special number
Still from the ravages of war'
even better than the great ones
arucles published in your
in A\v-he- IateSt S°ciaI affair held
°<
former years.
women
were
shabbily
dressed
l„
th?
'SS“e P’Omp' me “> ">lte
betac'hSd
The J0"0" "'? are clotlung twice too large and too
m
vvmnineoit
.this letter. The immaturity dis.
are S,ow,y being laid
office:
t'"' Canadian
often their dresses
out
by
our
board of strategy
.Played by. the authors
'
slipped off
Judgment of The~ Xi^
their shoulders to
M.
Kumagawa
(from
a
and we have lots of white space
tachi).
urom a Kamiohe stopped
bungrlIy waiting fOr your liter
rom
slipping
further
onlv
bv
ihe
w • Jn c°nsidering them for.pub-'
Air. Robert Ito
7\nrurtOI'thefemaleaaa;<>7'
from the ground.
ary work. If you haven’t started,
M. Tom Seki.
But, I’m afraid it won't be Ion•^turally,
the
hemlines
also
how about now? Let’s make the
now berore they're all Iong.
.
1947 issue YOUR issue,
1
Kasey Oyama °
S PeOpIe of JaPanese origin in Canada
O1L„.
sasgj.*;
A Letter to the Editor
ONLY 38 SHOPPING
DAYS TILL NOEL
.
■
A
a
the NEW CANADIAN
IB
li'4~1N
Winnipeg, Man.
* medium of
p.
_
504 T,albot Avenue
Ah lnV
05
ezprS“ 7thek,y °rgan PUW13hed
Saturday, November 8, 194
g.1*-
CC~—flB.
The storm has died down and
had had no
the last lingerin, = thunderclaps
application
from
Takaichi Umezuki
———
-........... Editor
Negro
girls.
Hi
grow
faint. The Marisse Scott
Tsukane Mayeda ’ 7.7, 7 7,
apanese Section Editor
By AKI SATO
Pltals avoided the question ho$Rates: In AdvaL ’^ank Moritsugu - Sab Watanabe
case is over. That is as far as
acceptance
by sayIng si jboi,!
There seems to be an awful lot the daily
Advance—$2.00 for 20 weeks, $2.50 for six months,
papers are concerned,
or controversy pro and con about It’s news
applications had been recw,f°
no more.
the current trend towards longer
PO POJie-v
been laid down
But it was news to manv Cana
-kii ts in women’s fashions
In
Seventeen hospita|s r
dians apparently, when the young
XOWniBER S, 1947
an attempt to dear this all um
no discrimination and 13
colored girl applied for training
temporarily if not permanently, a
they
had graduated Negro
at the hospital in her own home
pull was taken anion the local
as nurses or had them as
town and found the door nrmlv
teen-agers.
dents
now. Four had accent.tu-■
closed in her face. It was news
The “people’s voices" in this
Negro students with
to many Canadians that Canada
’ Toronto
and ths case were members of Winnipeg's also
tions,
while two had sought
suffers from that shameful.
-Pegs Club, a Nisei mixed club
soften refusals by advising th'°
sickness that -we are always
with an age range of 15-21 vears
9>rls
to try American hospdals.
blaming our southern neighbors
inclusive.
The question put to
for: race and color prejudice.
TORONTO UNIVERSITY
the November 30 deadhne fo^ the^fi^VSlle'cia'^;"8' them individually was:
SCHOOL WANTS NEGROES
All m all, .the plight in which
Do you like the present trrend
3
ilarisse
Scott
innocently
.
found
One of the best reports cam'
towards longer skirts?
^onthrtbS eXtended several
nerself
turned
out
to
have
sev
fiom
the University of Tn
Results obtained and
calculated eral good results.
The
young
nurelng
school. There,
xe°j“
1
after some intricate
formation and to
algebraic
mayor of Owen Sound, Ed Sara
gn’1 was enrolled, and the schoN
work were as follows:
^ent, lose to the occasion and
j
This i equest is not fin unreasonnl-Jci
was trying to get another,
Yes
No
showed that there are still, in
granted, will faciiitntp
Ribie one, and one. if
-school
was willing to lower The
Club Total
this
68%
day
of
fear,
men
who
have
educational requirements to admits
Jatei- stages. ^fess ot the inquiry in its
Girls ............
the
100%
0%
strength of their convictions and
Negro girls.
u
Boys
22%
78%
the
belief in what is just and
eern" g
notice eonwhen asked why they liked the
"They find the hospita|s are
right.
longer skirt trend, most girls
the stumbling blocks,” said the
<h-an for the firsY
Cana. seemed rather lost.. “Doin’ what _ Then coinciding with the Marreport. “At first the hospitals
isse Scott uproar, the National
comes naturally," and “Because I
। efused to take them (Negro
Council of the YWCA released a
incidentally,0 weVad'hopld" thanraid C'ai“S form—"’hieh, like them,” was about all they had iepoit of a survey made
graduates) but the u. of T has
to say until one popular miss,
earlier
att1t
nudndeaVOrin9 tO Chan9e this
^.lde-—the Toronto'orga'nizatioii^started'work'6' r"M P™- "hose brother is well-known to this year of Canadian
nursing
attitude and they are gradually
ta do HU‘ dUe t0 the
that some hnpoXt”1 PrePara’ Nisei Canada as one of the top schools. With SO many
being worked in.”
Z
whose
minds
Vancouver Asahi pitch
turn t o
Only one Toronto hospital di.details were
ers in that
S ^dTnd“dtime e,aPS6d
thoughts of Florence N.
team’s hey-day, came up with an
closed
a hostile stand agah^
ing for a cai eer, among us. the
forms could excellent reason.
1 eg! o trainees, saying they would
YWCA eport of the intolerance
“It’s safer to walk up the
berTn-P1 '
f°rmS Were sent 0Llt hv express
St-it?
aiMler traiuinHniUd
record of training hospitais is of
stairs," said she with a look of
-fates
Negro
hospitals.
The
sam?
on
Novemkeen interest.
The disXttonnof the t7™n™provinci£i1 °r:
relief.
hospital
had
rejected
Indian
appli
'ganizations.
'‘There was a real tendency
Being a nmle, this pollster had
cants but accepted Chinese
i
and
to discriminate against Negro
toons to.the individual claimants is the provincial organiza- never taken such an angle into
Japanese girls.
underway
as
this
issue
g<r s, ’ said the report. A little
account.
.goes to press.
HospiMs with good reco,.ds 0_.
loser to home, and a bit more
/I he boys were more co-opera
aeceptmg Negro girls for trahu,,,
Now it is readily seen that the
heerful, was that Indian and
tive and their arguments in favor
claimants are left with ot shorter skirts seemed more Chinese girls were more readily
"ere two at Victoria, B.C.. one w
very little time in which to
Halifax (another refused), one agather
necessary
information
acceptable and “there were
or to get legal consultation i
o»ica . Freezing European child
Windsor with two girls h. trai„:
m completing the forms
signs of a softening of the open
ren so that nature’s creations mav
B,f. <a’'o“>«' refused two a1)pj.
discnmination practised against
tion
^X^St toCted br a NiSei
be hidden was attacked. The club'7
cations), an
Ottawa hospital
Japanese Canadian girls during
op Jitterbug was worried about
"•hmh had six colored student
the war.”
a
need assistance in filling out forms'of’th’0"?''’ of c,aimants the ong skirt’s effect on the male
tiorn the West Indies, and one at
nm^SSe SCOtt aa^ ^ny Nisei
. Canadian organizations in rb»
■ f thlS tyPe- Japanese fashions:
New Waterford,
ta’icts are prepared ‘ o 'ms t f
W‘°"S
a”d dis
Nova Scotia,
nuisetb now in training have
•’ don’t like these changes
a lot
On
the
debit
more m common than just
side, Winnipe,
'cause they might turn
their
claim forms—but now tune is I'mming’out." C°mplet“®'tlle
hospitals oeemed
around
ambition
for an R.N.
to think it wise
and make our trousers' shortthat Negro gjrjs
er! ”
should train h
Negro
hospitals,
accurate^- X
bVi°US'y to detei™ine as
while a SaskaAnother male teener was a
CERTAIN REGION
toon hospital admitted
little
more
philosophical
about
the
laid down in the terms ol' XTiX1 Xn 7°f the type
down a Negro applicant. turning
Anti-Xegro discrimination
was
feeling
vhole thing. He sniu
/>•, ■
not concentrated in anv
-rie said he didn t
le WOUld 110t be happy there.
a time lor the filing of claims fh» 1 ■J plovldln8 too short mind longer° skirts
region
as
and said:
111 the United States. ~
require some form" of assistanc • a,mants- ll10-st of whom
Hospitals
f°r VaPiety they're oRav.
willing to accept colored girls and
are placed in an
10’™S' Short skirts will come back. don’t ■ospilois hostile to the idea wZ HAPPY ENDING
worry."
FOR MARISSE
HosuZ'r-"5
Parts °f CanadaIt
was
interesting
to
note
Tlye was. as you know. aUnited State?Xn?ment7XhS ,.P'al1, proposed N" the
that
CatboH.
dberated by Homan
of all the women queried
>S Seemed ®“eralbbtmv T
S l° Marisse Scott's
only t-eZo „
bjr the House of Representative
passed unanimously one indicated any worry ’about
stoiy.
Last month, she
m ,C,'m"’atiOa' the rePort
■was acapproval in the neTJ set^n
' and?'hich awaits Senate economy. <«Not enough monev "
cepted as a “probie” at
: St. Joseph’s in Guelph, Ontario
has been allowed the claimant-' Peil.°d ,of ei8'hteen months said the lass frankly and sadlv.
and so
has started on her nursing career.
r.
,
"ts m winch to file the claims
ZZeZeZytlX ?V1'"nS '°
slmr everyoue else ^till wears
shoiter ones." she brightened
(Blit she says rather wistfully that
Canada has allowed two months for the same n
medical staff objected^
she would have liked to train near
■ The Commissioner is resnectfnP
P,U’P0SeTurning to this writer's own
home m Owen Sound.
58 renJ1'6
hospitals questioned
consideration to the plea tlftUi fre(,uested to give his opinions.
Ion. skirts look good on
1 hed. Of these, 24 said thev
Many Nisei girls are training
”
claims be extended.
d^line for the filing some girls .
it depends on the
Canadian hospitals today,
girls themselve,
ven last September, several
and the skirt,
^ed • - - Christian Dior is a
too. Some skirt
rirst year “probies” started the
make the wearnenclimau. He lias eyes. He is a
ers look as if they were wrapped
initial stages of the hard ihreedress designer
Wo i
year grind
up in sacks. Times the kind that's moils.
H® t”’i5K tato their prized
Editor, The Nev, Canadian:
made ot heavy material and
“R.N.”
But happily, for the
rehcation has aroused me sufficiencquires a slit at the bottom so that
/ I have been reading The New
Nisei, things
th
w
ecomes famous: and
are much Jbetter
l.v to raise
Sk,rts sl»wly but surely are
’he wearer can hobble
today
as far
rri
1 ^maH cry of protest
.Canadian ever since its th-.;around
as acceptance in
Um two articles I refer to are
more comfortably.
Before the girls had to
hospitals is concerned.
assue and have noted the evolu
A Xiseiette Divorces" bv Pe»
Xryhab0Ut Sa^ng slips.
-.lethmks that the discoverv of
tion it has undergone from a
epenk lag ot Cnrcer Wonien'.,
hy have to make their slip7
i-iese latest fashions came as an
monthly published and edited bv
'°nPer
^eir skirts.
w-i.to. Heaven help the Nisei
ace:aent. Valentina. Russian-born
young u.B.C - ’
’
Women
its present
they
must
eontiniie'to
fullt
56
da>,S
'
be flight,
fw-eigner who is one of New York's
ftday form of tt national weekly. I
fully
naughty
to
get
a giimpse
against such 1910 ideas
.have
su-le$ COmniented “PM the
, usually enjoyed the articles
expressed bv pecr
.y°.Un9 lat|y’’
Male
- •
Hua Ivayo.
?and editorials and many times I
especially
both authors appear
imaginations are sure going
Now that November’s here,
"The Bozoom ees half-exposed
-have felt that it was a paper to
to
be
over-worked.
llmukfnl
o„iv
,
UU
eI
'
es
'
1
™
you
writers and correspondents
just enoff to cover the — you
be proud of.
There have been
All because of
Dior.
know."
with
"
a
1
nm
‘
i
cquainted
are really going to bwn on that
times when I felt some editorial
umnj AlseiS
ir
s'
™
U
‘
.'
se
Dior
is
making
llp
whose
actions
Which
leads
me
to
s °ry- that poem, that article or
, or some article to be superb
the followbelie the attitudes
forK
J C bv
°"Ti Jn er ^4
other contribution you’re sending theory. Christian
. k^-iouing- dresses that
expressed
bv
articles of penmanship and vital
Dior, the
the above two writers.
"o f ont or backs on X.'^is b ?
Fienchman who takes
ity and there have been tinier
HnrnUS f°r the k'9 year-end
credit for
,ts P^santer aspects
F" m !
M. W. Fujiwara.
the trend. was walking in
Holiday |SSue, aren’t you? We
- when the contents of your paper
the
"Xpeering Poi„?
Toronto, Ont.
treets of Paris when he saw
,qu“anaI1'tfrUel^in Htera;y
°pe so, because we plan to
Pitiful sight. tn the city su(f-; make the 1947 special number
Still from the ravages of war'
even better than the great ones
arucles published in your
in A\v-he- IateSt S°ciaI affair held
°<
former years.
women
were
shabbily
dressed
l„
th?
'SS“e P’Omp' me “> ">lte
betac'hSd
The J0"0" "'? are clotlung twice too large and too
m
vvmnineoit
.this letter. The immaturity dis.
are S,ow,y being laid
office:
t'"' Canadian
often their dresses
out
by
our
board of strategy
.Played by. the authors
'
slipped off
Judgment of The~ Xi^
their shoulders to
M.
Kumagawa
(from
a
and we have lots of white space
tachi).
urom a Kamiohe stopped
bungrlIy waiting fOr your liter
rom
slipping
further
onlv
bv
ihe
w • Jn c°nsidering them for.pub-'
Air. Robert Ito
7\nrurtOI'thefemaleaaa;<>7'
from the ground.
ary work. If you haven’t started,
M. Tom Seki.
But, I’m afraid it won't be Ion•^turally,
the
hemlines
also
how about now? Let’s make the
now berore they're all Iong.
.
1947 issue YOUR issue,
1
Kasey Oyama °
S PeOpIe of JaPanese origin in Canada
O1L„.
sasgj.*;
A Letter to the Editor
ONLY 38 SHOPPING
DAYS TILL NOEL
.
■
Page 3
Japanese Wives Have Know-How
Of Pleasing Husbands Down Pat
Page Three
A CHICAGO SKETCH
£jcue (boost.
NEW YORK (By Robert Richards of the Tini Jp
—American women could learn a lot from R ted Press) •
When
■■
,
By JOBO NAKAMURA
« hen it comes to pleasing men, says Ernest Hoberecht®11’'3
man seek., yjriousT^
and P^lems become too difficult to
Hobeiecht, Enited Press correspondent, in tai l"
resolve,
men.
maoAmerica for a holiday, said he knew Im JL Iln by and unshaved, who drift aimles^ly^n(and1 dowiP'xr°Uotten,and friendless men.
shabneck out but the truth was the truth.
'S °nc*nn8’ llls
01’ CIal’k “
“There’s no woman in the
world who worries more about
her man’s comfort,” Ernie ex
plained, “and it’s pretty won
derful for the pampered hus
band. The average Japanese
girl could take lessons from an
American when it comes to per
sonality, or making converse,
tion, bi as an everyday houseM rs. Japan
wife,
is miles
ahead. ”
to join these sad-eyed gentlemen of‘the Streets1
IM’ * Saturday ni=ht date, we decide
about a. last minute snack,
Hoberecht is the author’of ,b
apan's best - seller, “Tok.vo
Romance,” xvhich has sold 300,000
copies. There is a Hoberecht fan
club in Tokyo xvith 20,000 bobbysoxers cheering his name.
The -darkness of the
on
near-North Clark is sympathetic
men xvho have come to watch the
dice for high stakes. His face is
and at once xve lose our identity girls dance.
serious for he is losing money.
and xvander along with men xvho
Daring; Interpretation
But
he stands there not betraying
also have lost the stars in their
A delightfully plump lady with
his-plight; like Thurber's Walter
eyes. There are rows and roxvs of xeij fluffy blonde hair presents
Mitty. he is proud and disdainful,
seedy-lookiug tiny hotels, inter an interesting dance series xvhich
inscrutable and undefeated to the
FAILED ONLY ONCE
spersed between honky-tonks and
not only combines the freedom of
last.
old hotels are Japanese food tne Martha Graham school and
“The women of Japan have
We spy some Nisei in a booth.
failed me only once,” Ernie said,
shops, xvhich are lit to the wee the aestheticism of the Ballet
Hoberecht,. to support his theoOne of them speaks xvith a red
"and that was at our first fan
Hours of the night, catering to the Russe. but ventures into a daring
head who has purplish lipstick on
ry. says he knows “about 900”
club meeting. Aly publishers hired
ill-clothed xvives and bachelors of interpretation of an old theme.
Americans xvho have married
her mouth and long shiny black
'the tenement area.
thirty girls to put on a real show.
After the blonde lady has de
eyelashes He looks like a guy
Japanese xvomen “and they’re all
Thex- were supposed to yell, toss
parted to her sanctity, retrieving
xvho might have sxveated out pay
extiemely satisfied. They wouldn’t
flowers at me, and finally faint.”
bg-? filamentous coverings on the
Casablanca
checks from the A and P ware
exchange their xvives for a state
The girls did everything as or
xvax back, x huge Negro felloxv house hauling- and heaving crates
side counterpart if you tossed in a
After walking up and down the
dered, but they couldn’t faint.
with a big gentle smile entertains
off and on trucks. She xvhispers
new car to boot.”
sti-eet
a
couple
of
times,
we
pause
“They got stage fright at the
the motley croxvd with a fexx- ditin
his ear. He buys her a drink
SLIPPERS AND COCKTAILS
under a flickering arclight on a
ties, He is so big his guitar looks
iast minute and just couldn’t
and they talk some more.
The Japanese housewife meets
Gusty street corner. We screw up like a ukulele. His songs are sad
pull it off. They said that faint
Beer chokes in our throat. We
her husband at the door xvith his
enough courage to xvade into a
and sympathetic, telling the men
ing was too ‘democratic’.”
order ginger ale; it also chokes
slippers. Before he can pick up
Hoberecht’s novel is based on place called the “Casablanca,” an xv ho are now crying into their
in
our throat. We push the stuff
his evening nexvspaper, she has a
the love troubles of a Japanese ticipating a Lauren Bacall draped beer that in each life. some rain
aside
and walk outside xvhere the
cocktail in his hand.
actress and an American war cor over a piano.
must fall . . . but too much has
air is relatixrely clear, but the sad
“If the husband wishes to
respondent.
fallen in theirs.
Trails
of
blue
smoke
thread
the
ditties
that the big Negro felloxv
talk, his wife sits down and
TOOK IT TOO SERIOUSLY
Walter
Mitty
uark
room
like
a
spider
xveb,
and
sang
xvith
his guitar still cling
talks
Hoberecht said. “But if
The Japanese xvomen readers men sit around a U-shaped bar
A meek-looking man stands at
moistily to us like the smoky mist
he indicates that he’s busy or
took it too seriously though,” drinking their stuff like poison in
the cashier’s counter and shoots
of
the streets.—Pacific Citizen.
worried, she scrams right out
Hoberecht said. "One girl from one hurried gulp, wiping their
to the kitchen without a word.”
Hiroshima came to my door xvith mouths with the back of their
If the husband wishes to xvork
her baggage. She claimed that the hands.
after dinner, the Japanese wife
book was about her and that her
Along with the usual quota of
knows just when to bring him a
GI boy friend had skipped.
painted
bar-flies, there are tiredfresh can of beer. And it’s never
‘ “If you don’t tell me where he
lookingWhat Is a boy? The following
factory girls xvho have
too cold or too warm. She keeps
is, I’m going to commit suicide
deuce that God is not yet dis
definition is from a greeting card
come to forget the heaviness of
on your doorstep,’ she told me.”
couraged of man.
used by Grand Chancellor Tuggle
their feet and heart. Nattily
“And even if he doesn’t go to
Hoberecht finally bought, her off dressed men are perched on high
Were it not for boys, the nexvsof the Knights of Pythias of Il
bed until 3 a.m.. she will
by promising her six autographed
linois:
papers
xvould go unread and a
chrome stools; a few are gigolos
around in the kitchen ready to see
copies of his next book.
thousand
picture shoxvs xvould go
Aftei <1 male baby lias groxx-n
and pimps and some are business
bankrupt. Boys are useful in runout of long clothes and triangles
ning errands. A box- can do the
ami has acquired pants, freckles
family errands xvith the aid of
ami so much dirt that relatives
five or- six adults. The zest, with
do not dare kiss it betxveen meals,
which
a boy does an errand is
it becomes a boy.
•
equalled
only by the speed of ;
Some Criticisms
A boy is nature's answer to that
And I do not try to say Artistry
xvonderful.
The
bands
behind
her
turtle
on
a July day.
Summer visitors from the east
false belief that there is no such
Jumps is better than Trumpet No
go
piactically nothing except gix-e
have reported my earlier columns
The boy is a natural spec
thing as perpetual motion. A boy
End. I hat s silly. I may like one
her a rhythm background xvhile
on jazz have not quite jived xvith
tator.
He watches parades,
can swim like a fish, run like a
better than the other. That’s my
she makes all kinds of jazz
some addicts out that-axvay. The
fires,
fights,
ball games, auto
taste.
deer, climb like a squirrel, balk
sounds.
Mama,
give
me
some
information
is
quite
vague,
mobiles, boats and planes with
like a mule, belloxx- like a bull, oat
I think Chattanooga is jazz, be
more of that.
though, and there is room for
equal
fervor, but will not watch
like a pig, or act like a jackass,
cause I like having a broad com
wore meaty comments against my
a '-lock. The man who invents
according to climatic conditions.
pass for my oxvn vague definition
Be Bop Singing
a clock that will stand on its
of jazz. Chattanooga is jar
He is a piece of skin over an
Although Be Bop, which a de
One thing xvas that a Toronto
head and sing a song, when it
cause it sxvings.
And I think
appetite, A noise covered with
riding
pal
calls
“
Bo
Beep
”
music,
fioup didn’t like my mentioning
strikes, will win the undying
anything that swings is jazz. But
smudges.
He is called a torappeals to me a lot now after
Chattanooga Choo Choo as jazz.
gratitude
of millions of families
that’s my opinion.
il ado because he comes at •-he
repeated listenings to the 52nd
‘Mliat does this character knoxv
whose boys are forever coming
! like Ellington-s overt ure to a
most unexpected times, hits '.he
Street Album, the Dial Be Bop
cbout jazz anyxvay?” is the reto dinner about supper time.
Jam
Session
in
his
most unexpected places and
Hall
Album and some great stuff put
ported comment
Boys faithfully imitate their
album. It doesn’t sXVing—but I
leaves everything a wreck beout by -small Kenton and Herman
But ihen. it’s said the group
dads despite all efforts to teach
hind him.
think it is jazz. That doesn't mean
groups (Kai Winding, Neil Hefti
iavors New Orleans Dixieland as
them good manners. A boy, if
I like all this modern so-called
Sonny Berman, etc.) the Be Bop
Hie only jazz. In that case, their
He is a growing animal
not xvashed too often and if .kept
Stravinsky-inspired stuff. Some of
school of singing is something
in a coo], quiet place after each
superlative promise, to be fed,
reaction is very natural. It won’t
Boyd
Raeburn's
stuff
falls
flat
else
again.
xvatered
accident,
will survive broken
be that they object only to Chat
and kept warm, a joy
xvith
me.
But
Tonsillectomy
ami
anooga.- they probably don’t like
bones, hornets. sxvimming holes,
This all started xx'lien two char forever, । periodic nuisance.
the mad band playing behind
problem
of
our
time.
Ken ion or Herman or Gillespie or
acters named Dave Lambert and
nd helpings of pie.
the hope of
Ginny Poxvell’s singing of TemptBuddy Stexvart made a record
a nation. Every boy born is ovi- aikei, oj Goodman, or Dorsey of
tation is fine.
Lie thirties for that matter, To
xvith Gene Krupa’s ork called
backs up Ella Fitzgerald in Im:
But
I
could
go
on
all
night.
Still
a llows who insist on Bunk JohnWhat’s This? As far as II know
version of That's My Desire.
its good to know that mv
Columoia hasn’t released it in
son and Johnny Dodds and Art
There is. no room in the rendition
opinions
are
making
some
charCanada (just like the way the
nodes, there is no talking xvith.
ot a comparatively sloxx- and sul
acters
mutter
in
their
beards.
Ihat-s xvhat seems to be~xvrong
much-talked of Harry James SexSquare dancing is being used in
try ballad for bebopping vocals.
It xvould be even better if
itli jazz lovers. Our prejudices
te Confessing wasn’t pressed up
i agasaki to break down the traThrows the Fitz singing right ofc.
they’d mutter loud enough so it
here) but it has turned up on
are so keen and strong, that jazz
cntional
Japanese ban on minglinDirty shame.
could be printed in these columns.
transcripts on the air.
a'ldicts seem to spend more time
of sexes. Winfield P. Niblo, ’
Lambert, xv ho wears a beard
m taking potshots at what others
•school teacher from Denver. Colo
Scat Singing
like Diz, is the influence. Stewart
.
*Iazz, rather than sitting
rado. and education officer of the
To round off talk about
Ella Fitzgerald’s record of Flvwas the Krupa ballad singer at
'‘nun and enjoying the stuff.
Military Government
ers, there's another Frankie Oil
ing Home and Lady Be Good has
the time, but for a swooner he
1 J’fle listening to many kinds
Team,
is
responsible for this atthe scene. A hip one. This
been released, and for my money.
•shows a commendable versatility.
tempt.
jazz myself. Ellington gives
is not getting as much alter
it is THE Fitzgerald rec
My
Anyway, these txvo guys sing
most of the time
-o old and young are prancing
I
as
young Alel Torme and hi
favorite
female
singer
has
done
like the great Goodman
against the band and all they
about the dance floors to the tune
Velvet Fogging, but for me
something that I hope will start a
band of the late 30
make is riff-like sounds. It is not
of
Turkey in the Straw and other
: the Sy
trend.
got more feeling and beat in his
Oliver SIUff Dorsey ha
as
commercial
as
the
Fitzgerald
oldtime
American favorites.
done; the
singing than anyone that has
There xvas -a trade magazine
stuff, but it's an indication of hoxxKenton stuff. Herman's
Overcoming the taboo against
come along (male) since Nat C
criticism of Ella'-s interpolation of
things are pointing.
They’ve
• ild racket, and be bop by Dizzy
males
and females getting to
Frankie Laine’s the name and
theme from Dardanella. imitation
made other records xvith a be bop
Charlie Parker and Howard
gether was hard since the aver
you should listen in on his That’s
of Slam Stexvart. etc., in the discs,
unit headed by trumpeter Red
age
Japanese couple was might
My
Desire
which
he
re-i
but I thought it xvas great fun.
Produced.
Rodney.
favorite Band
ily
embarrassed
by physical con
his Sunday Kind of Love and
She includes many of the familiar
One is called Gussie G and it
omehody aske(i me the othpr
tact in public places.
Sunny Side of the Stree
sxving riffs used by saxes and
sounds very much like What’s
i
• v io my favorite band xvas. I
A Nagasaki policeman wrote to :
boy, he's nearly 40 and he’s
trumpets in her ail-scat vocal of
This?
There
have
been
others
in
!
t
t
know.
fK...
1 like Ellington, but
Niblo that when he first grasped
bald as Crosby, has got it. InFlying Home and it’s amazing
the same vein.
bin, t°e5n t mean rd rather hear
his
partner “he was overcome’
tense
and
meaningful.
With
how much variety she can get
And noxv many vocal groups are
v--., IThTan anyone else. The same
jazz
beat.
xvith
mortification”
but after:
with her voice.
using the same sounds. One negaHermgn, or Kenton.
struggling
with
his
shame,
the '
This
Frankie
can
send
me
any
And the drive on both
tix e example is the group that
“democratic” spirit won out
time. Anywhere.
•
WHAT IS A BOY?
THIS THING CALLED JAZZ
Turkey in the Straw
Delights Nagasaki
a
Of Pleasing Husbands Down Pat
Page Three
A CHICAGO SKETCH
£jcue (boost.
NEW YORK (By Robert Richards of the Tini Jp
—American women could learn a lot from R ted Press) •
When
■■
,
By JOBO NAKAMURA
« hen it comes to pleasing men, says Ernest Hoberecht®11’'3
man seek., yjriousT^
and P^lems become too difficult to
Hobeiecht, Enited Press correspondent, in tai l"
resolve,
men.
maoAmerica for a holiday, said he knew Im JL Iln by and unshaved, who drift aimles^ly^n(and1 dowiP'xr°Uotten,and friendless men.
shabneck out but the truth was the truth.
'S °nc*nn8’ llls
01’ CIal’k “
“There’s no woman in the
world who worries more about
her man’s comfort,” Ernie ex
plained, “and it’s pretty won
derful for the pampered hus
band. The average Japanese
girl could take lessons from an
American when it comes to per
sonality, or making converse,
tion, bi as an everyday houseM rs. Japan
wife,
is miles
ahead. ”
to join these sad-eyed gentlemen of‘the Streets1
IM’ * Saturday ni=ht date, we decide
about a. last minute snack,
Hoberecht is the author’of ,b
apan's best - seller, “Tok.vo
Romance,” xvhich has sold 300,000
copies. There is a Hoberecht fan
club in Tokyo xvith 20,000 bobbysoxers cheering his name.
The -darkness of the
on
near-North Clark is sympathetic
men xvho have come to watch the
dice for high stakes. His face is
and at once xve lose our identity girls dance.
serious for he is losing money.
and xvander along with men xvho
Daring; Interpretation
But
he stands there not betraying
also have lost the stars in their
A delightfully plump lady with
his-plight; like Thurber's Walter
eyes. There are rows and roxvs of xeij fluffy blonde hair presents
Mitty. he is proud and disdainful,
seedy-lookiug tiny hotels, inter an interesting dance series xvhich
inscrutable and undefeated to the
FAILED ONLY ONCE
spersed between honky-tonks and
not only combines the freedom of
last.
old hotels are Japanese food tne Martha Graham school and
“The women of Japan have
We spy some Nisei in a booth.
failed me only once,” Ernie said,
shops, xvhich are lit to the wee the aestheticism of the Ballet
Hoberecht,. to support his theoOne of them speaks xvith a red
"and that was at our first fan
Hours of the night, catering to the Russe. but ventures into a daring
head who has purplish lipstick on
ry. says he knows “about 900”
club meeting. Aly publishers hired
ill-clothed xvives and bachelors of interpretation of an old theme.
Americans xvho have married
her mouth and long shiny black
'the tenement area.
thirty girls to put on a real show.
After the blonde lady has de
eyelashes He looks like a guy
Japanese xvomen “and they’re all
Thex- were supposed to yell, toss
parted to her sanctity, retrieving
xvho might have sxveated out pay
extiemely satisfied. They wouldn’t
flowers at me, and finally faint.”
bg-? filamentous coverings on the
Casablanca
checks from the A and P ware
exchange their xvives for a state
The girls did everything as or
xvax back, x huge Negro felloxv house hauling- and heaving crates
side counterpart if you tossed in a
After walking up and down the
dered, but they couldn’t faint.
with a big gentle smile entertains
off and on trucks. She xvhispers
new car to boot.”
sti-eet
a
couple
of
times,
we
pause
“They got stage fright at the
the motley croxvd with a fexx- ditin
his ear. He buys her a drink
SLIPPERS AND COCKTAILS
under a flickering arclight on a
ties, He is so big his guitar looks
iast minute and just couldn’t
and they talk some more.
The Japanese housewife meets
Gusty street corner. We screw up like a ukulele. His songs are sad
pull it off. They said that faint
Beer chokes in our throat. We
her husband at the door xvith his
enough courage to xvade into a
and sympathetic, telling the men
ing was too ‘democratic’.”
order ginger ale; it also chokes
slippers. Before he can pick up
Hoberecht’s novel is based on place called the “Casablanca,” an xv ho are now crying into their
in
our throat. We push the stuff
his evening nexvspaper, she has a
the love troubles of a Japanese ticipating a Lauren Bacall draped beer that in each life. some rain
aside
and walk outside xvhere the
cocktail in his hand.
actress and an American war cor over a piano.
must fall . . . but too much has
air is relatixrely clear, but the sad
“If the husband wishes to
respondent.
fallen in theirs.
Trails
of
blue
smoke
thread
the
ditties
that the big Negro felloxv
talk, his wife sits down and
TOOK IT TOO SERIOUSLY
Walter
Mitty
uark
room
like
a
spider
xveb,
and
sang
xvith
his guitar still cling
talks
Hoberecht said. “But if
The Japanese xvomen readers men sit around a U-shaped bar
A meek-looking man stands at
moistily to us like the smoky mist
he indicates that he’s busy or
took it too seriously though,” drinking their stuff like poison in
the cashier’s counter and shoots
of
the streets.—Pacific Citizen.
worried, she scrams right out
Hoberecht said. "One girl from one hurried gulp, wiping their
to the kitchen without a word.”
Hiroshima came to my door xvith mouths with the back of their
If the husband wishes to xvork
her baggage. She claimed that the hands.
after dinner, the Japanese wife
book was about her and that her
Along with the usual quota of
knows just when to bring him a
GI boy friend had skipped.
painted
bar-flies, there are tiredfresh can of beer. And it’s never
‘ “If you don’t tell me where he
lookingWhat Is a boy? The following
factory girls xvho have
too cold or too warm. She keeps
is, I’m going to commit suicide
deuce that God is not yet dis
definition is from a greeting card
come to forget the heaviness of
on your doorstep,’ she told me.”
couraged of man.
used by Grand Chancellor Tuggle
their feet and heart. Nattily
“And even if he doesn’t go to
Hoberecht finally bought, her off dressed men are perched on high
Were it not for boys, the nexvsof the Knights of Pythias of Il
bed until 3 a.m.. she will
by promising her six autographed
linois:
papers
xvould go unread and a
chrome stools; a few are gigolos
around in the kitchen ready to see
copies of his next book.
thousand
picture shoxvs xvould go
Aftei <1 male baby lias groxx-n
and pimps and some are business
bankrupt. Boys are useful in runout of long clothes and triangles
ning errands. A box- can do the
ami has acquired pants, freckles
family errands xvith the aid of
ami so much dirt that relatives
five or- six adults. The zest, with
do not dare kiss it betxveen meals,
which
a boy does an errand is
it becomes a boy.
•
equalled
only by the speed of ;
Some Criticisms
A boy is nature's answer to that
And I do not try to say Artistry
xvonderful.
The
bands
behind
her
turtle
on
a July day.
Summer visitors from the east
false belief that there is no such
Jumps is better than Trumpet No
go
piactically nothing except gix-e
have reported my earlier columns
The boy is a natural spec
thing as perpetual motion. A boy
End. I hat s silly. I may like one
her a rhythm background xvhile
on jazz have not quite jived xvith
tator.
He watches parades,
can swim like a fish, run like a
better than the other. That’s my
she makes all kinds of jazz
some addicts out that-axvay. The
fires,
fights,
ball games, auto
taste.
deer, climb like a squirrel, balk
sounds.
Mama,
give
me
some
information
is
quite
vague,
mobiles, boats and planes with
like a mule, belloxx- like a bull, oat
I think Chattanooga is jazz, be
more of that.
though, and there is room for
equal
fervor, but will not watch
like a pig, or act like a jackass,
cause I like having a broad com
wore meaty comments against my
a '-lock. The man who invents
according to climatic conditions.
pass for my oxvn vague definition
Be Bop Singing
a clock that will stand on its
of jazz. Chattanooga is jar
He is a piece of skin over an
Although Be Bop, which a de
One thing xvas that a Toronto
head and sing a song, when it
cause it sxvings.
And I think
appetite, A noise covered with
riding
pal
calls
“
Bo
Beep
”
music,
fioup didn’t like my mentioning
strikes, will win the undying
anything that swings is jazz. But
smudges.
He is called a torappeals to me a lot now after
Chattanooga Choo Choo as jazz.
gratitude
of millions of families
that’s my opinion.
il ado because he comes at •-he
repeated listenings to the 52nd
‘Mliat does this character knoxv
whose boys are forever coming
! like Ellington-s overt ure to a
most unexpected times, hits '.he
Street Album, the Dial Be Bop
cbout jazz anyxvay?” is the reto dinner about supper time.
Jam
Session
in
his
most unexpected places and
Hall
Album and some great stuff put
ported comment
Boys faithfully imitate their
album. It doesn’t sXVing—but I
leaves everything a wreck beout by -small Kenton and Herman
But ihen. it’s said the group
dads despite all efforts to teach
hind him.
think it is jazz. That doesn't mean
groups (Kai Winding, Neil Hefti
iavors New Orleans Dixieland as
them good manners. A boy, if
I like all this modern so-called
Sonny Berman, etc.) the Be Bop
Hie only jazz. In that case, their
He is a growing animal
not xvashed too often and if .kept
Stravinsky-inspired stuff. Some of
school of singing is something
in a coo], quiet place after each
superlative promise, to be fed,
reaction is very natural. It won’t
Boyd
Raeburn's
stuff
falls
flat
else
again.
xvatered
accident,
will survive broken
be that they object only to Chat
and kept warm, a joy
xvith
me.
But
Tonsillectomy
ami
anooga.- they probably don’t like
bones, hornets. sxvimming holes,
This all started xx'lien two char forever, । periodic nuisance.
the mad band playing behind
problem
of
our
time.
Ken ion or Herman or Gillespie or
acters named Dave Lambert and
nd helpings of pie.
the hope of
Ginny Poxvell’s singing of TemptBuddy Stexvart made a record
a nation. Every boy born is ovi- aikei, oj Goodman, or Dorsey of
tation is fine.
Lie thirties for that matter, To
xvith Gene Krupa’s ork called
backs up Ella Fitzgerald in Im:
But
I
could
go
on
all
night.
Still
a llows who insist on Bunk JohnWhat’s This? As far as II know
version of That's My Desire.
its good to know that mv
Columoia hasn’t released it in
son and Johnny Dodds and Art
There is. no room in the rendition
opinions
are
making
some
charCanada (just like the way the
nodes, there is no talking xvith.
ot a comparatively sloxx- and sul
acters
mutter
in
their
beards.
Ihat-s xvhat seems to be~xvrong
much-talked of Harry James SexSquare dancing is being used in
try ballad for bebopping vocals.
It xvould be even better if
itli jazz lovers. Our prejudices
te Confessing wasn’t pressed up
i agasaki to break down the traThrows the Fitz singing right ofc.
they’d mutter loud enough so it
here) but it has turned up on
are so keen and strong, that jazz
cntional
Japanese ban on minglinDirty shame.
could be printed in these columns.
transcripts on the air.
a'ldicts seem to spend more time
of sexes. Winfield P. Niblo, ’
Lambert, xv ho wears a beard
m taking potshots at what others
•school teacher from Denver. Colo
Scat Singing
like Diz, is the influence. Stewart
.
*Iazz, rather than sitting
rado. and education officer of the
To round off talk about
Ella Fitzgerald’s record of Flvwas the Krupa ballad singer at
'‘nun and enjoying the stuff.
Military Government
ers, there's another Frankie Oil
ing Home and Lady Be Good has
the time, but for a swooner he
1 J’fle listening to many kinds
Team,
is
responsible for this atthe scene. A hip one. This
been released, and for my money.
•shows a commendable versatility.
tempt.
jazz myself. Ellington gives
is not getting as much alter
it is THE Fitzgerald rec
My
Anyway, these txvo guys sing
most of the time
-o old and young are prancing
I
as
young Alel Torme and hi
favorite
female
singer
has
done
like the great Goodman
against the band and all they
about the dance floors to the tune
Velvet Fogging, but for me
something that I hope will start a
band of the late 30
make is riff-like sounds. It is not
of
Turkey in the Straw and other
: the Sy
trend.
got more feeling and beat in his
Oliver SIUff Dorsey ha
as
commercial
as
the
Fitzgerald
oldtime
American favorites.
done; the
singing than anyone that has
There xvas -a trade magazine
stuff, but it's an indication of hoxxKenton stuff. Herman's
Overcoming the taboo against
come along (male) since Nat C
criticism of Ella'-s interpolation of
things are pointing.
They’ve
• ild racket, and be bop by Dizzy
males
and females getting to
Frankie Laine’s the name and
theme from Dardanella. imitation
made other records xvith a be bop
Charlie Parker and Howard
gether was hard since the aver
you should listen in on his That’s
of Slam Stexvart. etc., in the discs,
unit headed by trumpeter Red
age
Japanese couple was might
My
Desire
which
he
re-i
but I thought it xvas great fun.
Produced.
Rodney.
favorite Band
ily
embarrassed
by physical con
his Sunday Kind of Love and
She includes many of the familiar
One is called Gussie G and it
omehody aske(i me the othpr
tact in public places.
Sunny Side of the Stree
sxving riffs used by saxes and
sounds very much like What’s
i
• v io my favorite band xvas. I
A Nagasaki policeman wrote to :
boy, he's nearly 40 and he’s
trumpets in her ail-scat vocal of
This?
There
have
been
others
in
!
t
t
know.
fK...
1 like Ellington, but
Niblo that when he first grasped
bald as Crosby, has got it. InFlying Home and it’s amazing
the same vein.
bin, t°e5n t mean rd rather hear
his
partner “he was overcome’
tense
and
meaningful.
With
how much variety she can get
And noxv many vocal groups are
v--., IThTan anyone else. The same
jazz
beat.
xvith
mortification”
but after:
with her voice.
using the same sounds. One negaHermgn, or Kenton.
struggling
with
his
shame,
the '
This
Frankie
can
send
me
any
And the drive on both
tix e example is the group that
“democratic” spirit won out
time. Anywhere.
•
WHAT IS A BOY?
THIS THING CALLED JAZZ
Turkey in the Straw
Delights Nagasaki
a
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Page 10
Page Ten
How to Write Mysteries
1947
Toron to Basketball
Mustangs Nose Out Bomb
Red Herrings in Whodunits
w
IF
i S3 ■
a’-
B
•T.f
I' • • TA'
- ffl.
■
<
1
<0
s
-7’ '
S
By HYA1ER YONKER
too is shy of the do-ray-me. so
you can see she can be considered
a potential suspect also.
Creeping Butler
v
and Banco soles—the Inspector
Gumshoes, a maid and last but
not least, a bum that com es
around the back door.
So with all the suspects gath
ered in this one room, with In
spector Gumshoes all ready to
make the arrest, the hawkshaw
announces very dramatically;
“The murderer is in this very
‘room!”
__ Jfil'S*
WUI8|||
Rebels Top Nomads in Debut
—
-
-
—
TORONTO.—Last year’s championship final
Naturally, there’s butler thrown
again when the Mustangs and Bombers met in
in that goes creeping around from
game of the new season on Friday, October 31 nhetl'.ft'si
chapter one to chapter eleven,
point gave victory to the Mustangs 41-40 after ° eJ11!gle y
peeking through keyholes and
clash that went to a 5-minute overtime and saw
lei
hiding behind doors, doing every
banished on penalties.
saA' ^Ve Payers
There’s another type of mys
thing that makes him look like a
So hotly contested was the <®>______ '
a pi
tery writer too who insists in
very suspicious character.
You
game that a total of 41 penalties
ear
having the dead guy knocked
Naturally
everybody
Makimoto
alscleft
th°
can consider him as a queer char
is surwere collected by the two teams.
■□<3.1118 via
prised and everybodj- looks at
off in a room with all the doors
acter.
the five personals route, a
Four Bombers and one Mustang; time
T
each other and as a result they
and windows locked, bolted’and
So. with three potential sus
was called. Bombers were
were ejected on personals in the
st-ii
3-11
get
fidgety.
Now
comes
the
n.
nailed down from the inside.
fighting hard but Mustangs
pects, the author starts throwing
short overtime period as the two
had
Now the mystery in this case is
payoff. Everybody is sitting or
B‘
in herrings after herrings. Not
the
vital one-point margin
teams fought over a game-end tie
41-40.
standing
like
statues
as
Ira.
not who killed Mortimer Jones
In
i
he
onlj- red ones but in all colors
i opening- game,
of 33-all.
9
Knowall sweeps a grimy accusing
with a hatchet, but how did the
made a successful
and shapes. There’s the fat lady
debut
in
th
e
guy do it?
Mustangs led. through the early league
unger around the group.
Sud
on the third floor with her son
;as
they clawed airj aps
denly
he
stops
in
front
of
the
fat
part
of
the
game
with
Ken
MiyaW
Today, we’ll go into a rough
Junior, a regular nuisance. As a
scratcned their way to a 34-23 win
lady on the third floor and says
saki and Roy Miyasaki piling up
sketch of the former type of mys
matter of fact it is Junior’s bat
lorne
over the hapless Nomads. Thank<
she is the one who does awav
big torals. The Bombers crept up
tery novel. For the benefit of the
that knocks off Ezra Jone-s. The
Io a last minute scoring splurae i>res.
with old Ezra and the gardener'
ni the third quarter and both
readers I’]] sum up with the
gaidener, is a guy that keeps runTh
ny Roy Kurita and Curlv \v-l
Everybody is surprised to ■ see
teams traded goal tor goal in the
trivial evidences and tracks that
ning out in the middle Of the night
gawa Rebels came out from be he s]
the results including the reader,
final period.
to water dahlias in chapter three.
crop up from chapter one to chan
pecta
hind to take the tilt.
because,
how
could
such
ter thirteen.
Of course, you don’t have to
With
40
seconds
remaining
in
, , , ,
------- a nice
lay b
First Game: Mustangs 41. Bombers -n
Bony about him because in chap tat lady do such a dastardly deed?
the game, and Bombers trailingLea
MUSTANGS—K. Mivasaki io «
But Ira Knowall has all the
Ezra Jones, the corpse in this
ter four he is slapped over the
33-32, Shige Ashikawa was awartl- Miyasaki 10, Makimoto 3, H Mivasik’i iraw £
MB.s’ Koy“asi
bean with a shovel, which ends
answers, the motive and such.
story, is an old geezer pushing
ed a penalty shot.
Merly
Ashikawa
The motive, you ask? Well, it’s
eighty with about 40 million
his career for the remainder of
swished in a clean basket to tie
BOMBERS—Idenouye 1°
a chibvery simple.
the story.
ducats piled up. - How he man
21'wfiyra yKup the score. In the close and
HiraL ” y‘" 2’ Ts“k“'™ 1. 0
ages to gather so much green
short, scuffle that followed, Mucka
The
fat
lady
’
s
son
is
the hidbacks is a mystery in itself but
* *
Makimoto of the Mustangs was
den son of old Ezra. The fat
Just
about
chapter
nine,
old
've are not concerned about that
Second Game: Rebels 34, Nomads 23
also given a Rm' shot. With the
lady wants some of his ducats
man Ezra’s shyster comes in the
Me are only concerned with the
REBELS—Kurita 11 V-ikv/a-r, „
T0R(
game point in his hands. Makimo- Fukumoto
but Ezra does not wish to have
5, loi 4, Ide 2 Sora I'
front door to read the will. Here
fact that old man Ezra is bounced
Yoneyama 2, Maikawa, Sato
he yea
to let go, the ball hit the rim,
is where a bit of fireworks starts
any scandal brought out about
cuei toe noggin with a baseball
rolled
around
it
ellows
his doings in his younger days.
because, in this chapter the lead
and then fell outbat
He is found, of course,
side.
nnual (
M.
«■ FThe fat iady does not like the
ing ol the will ends with every
deader n a mackerel in his room
ay,
De<
*
*
*
•
quick brushoff and gets very
body not satisfied except the iawOvertime saw both fives going
-\ow from here on to chapter
angry. As a result, she picks
allroon
into high gear. Fouls began to
• ei himself. In fact it seems that
T1FOFFS—Here’s a real tin for vou
thnteen, the story is filled with
re., o
sports
fans:
Discard
all
your'thou-h
’
s
the shyster manages to collect a
up Junior’s bat and conks Ezra
pile up as play got hectic in the
suspects and suspicious action-s
Sv’n2rOfeSSiOnal > hockey, boxing° or
iallroontidy sum for himself and rhe
and lays him out for good. The
any other game and come to see Bomh.
small All Nations gym. Bombers
from the different characters in
rnJem?
Mustangs
play
basketball.
They
Music
nephew who expects around 20
gardener sees this and tries io
Joe Akiyama, Ken and Mossy Mit meet three more times in the season and
the tale.
ortcli a
blackmail the poor fat lady so
the excitement and thrills you get from
million ducats finds he i
sui and Idy Idenouye were waved
shy
their games will out-rival others. This
Potential- Subjects
iece ba
about IS million. Likewis
naturally,
not
wanting
to
be
out
of
the
the game one by one by
pubHcitV S^S. A real honest-toyom
Ezra Jones has a nephew who
goodness tip.
All for free too . .'
blackmailed, she clouts him
niece, gets nicked with the chips.
referee
Chuck
Oda.
Bombers
Locks like a three-way fight in th?
nown in
Ira Knowall, the hawkshaw in
Obes a few thousand gees in the
over the bean with a ohovel.
played one man short after los- WnTrh 7ith-?’CeS beins the third
th-o
h
for
aud
when
any
of
thes»
fine art of tossing the bone-s. J-fe
)r
the
tlre case, pops in and out asking
ing so many of their
s taiwarts. th,ee squads play together . . , rm ancing—
Ion can see how simple it is
a potential suspect because ne
que-stions and looking under rugs
thnlly r OO1 °ad the gym is so small. An
Veteran Ashikawa kept Bombers
to write a mystery novel. In rmif therl°U1S wouId not have been mads s Dancin.
ns embarrassed financially and js
all through the story. Then in
in the game by matching . the if th.re .vas more space for the player
next article, well take up a mo7e
to move around in . . . Shio-e Ashiklwwaiting anxiously for his rich
chapter thirteen the grand climax
dmissioi
young Mustangs Makimoto and toeT“iyUn°h-n’l 10°k as
intriguing
subject,
Love
Stories.
he
'
s
read
*
is reached.
uncle to kick off. Naturally, wlmn
1.00 per
Roy Miyasaki basket far basket
n<= ,UP his hooping shoes vet. His
old Ezra gets bounced on ule
It will I
I’-7-11® 'S .lust as good as ever ' . . That
in the overtime scoring spree. Mustang-Bomber brawl — •’What a
nmax
bean with a blunt object, nephew
game! ’
3 vent of •
DO YOU SNORE?
Knowall gathers all tlm <msJones is not feeling altogether
is early
Snoring can be cured, govern
pects into one room. Niece. neph'sorrowful at the loss.
urther p;
ment health experts say. it js
ew, butler, the fat lady on the
Then there’s Ezra’s. niece, a
an John
not inevitable and can be cured
third floor, Junior th
lawyer, \by medical attention. Snoring js
cate chicken indeed. She loves
acted.—J.
some queer that entered
the sight of parses a.I1(1 new
into the
common among sufferers from
in chapter five, the plumber
clothes, as a matter of fact anvsome form of nose blockage and
that
c
nquiri
tune in on the same chapter,
thmg that ducats can buv. Sh\
those who
continually snore
the guy with the Cais Paw heel’
ec. 3
should see their familv doctor
VANCOL
THIS Ol'T
basketbM?1^™.-0?611"18' a, new season of Winnipeg Nisei aims hav
unleash^ \ w n”° '
L'nkn0'VI1 Quantity till gametime, astice H.
CLIP this OUT
scheduled o-nnl £P?^er to oveTcome Central in the first .quire in 1
or
hr
■1
U
The trouble with a lot of these
guys and gals that write the who
dunit type of story is that they
diaw too many red herrings across
the pages. Of course, I haven’t
anything against these guys and
gals doing these things^ only
everything gets go confusing by
the middle of the book that you
don’t know what is what.
Through the Key-hole
By HOOPER
Elmwood, 517 ers Victorious in
Peg Basketball Opening Clashes
How to Become a Canadian Citizen
.. ■ ..... * B"’f
»« CanadaA
V,,Men
Aithou-h Ce,Xi -r 7 yX 011 Monday night. Nov. 3.
tlW could not A “splayed smooth dribbling and passimt,
attaclA oWIn vooT U>Ze.a Xense a*ajnst the persistent
shoot n° E,m"°od which utilized Johnny Yamabe’s slw-
HAT
1
(The fifth
HOSE I
Citizensh.p
a Canadian Cit ^..^■es of excerpts from the
"Put in ra
Branch Manual, ‘-How to Become
In is70 tilt? Province of Maniina toes
toba was admitted to the Confed tederation in 1905. Some idea of
In the second game. 517ers outroked or
minions within the British Comthe rapidity of the development of
eration. Manitoba had prospered
scored North End 28-15.
This
l’ered par
monwealth of Nations were inde
Nakagawa 2, A. Okumura 1.
smoe IS i2 "hen the origi- ’he West is gleaned from the fact
game,
although
equallv
excitineot
or cold
pendent sovereign states bound
m
—Hirose 10, Yahiro 5. Y.
that V miiipeg grew from. 218 in
mi! settlement
was
sprinkled
liberally
with
fouls
’
Tomihiro , Miyata 1. Hashimoto. 3.
oi
S
tile.
”
t
,
Scottish immitogether only by bonds of sentiTomihiro, Shimoda.
ts !<■„ 1„.
to
120.000
in
1911
Ibis
was
due
to
the
customary
?alth authoi
Lord
Edmonton
nient and loyalty to
common
.he Iied ltiv(,r Co!onv rose from 4,000 to 31.000 in th
eagerness
and
tension
accompany
take out
King.
b-17ers 28, NORTH ENDERS 15
space of ten vears
ing
a
first
game.
Nearlv
all
of
an just sa
sent site of the City
517ers—Saito 6, Fujii 8. Fir
,of Winnipeg, I he following vear
■n. Sugiyama 5. Fukuyama 3. J Sug
the winning team picked up
riety is
The Second World Wa r
gie"' from 113 to o'ver
yama 2. Tamura 1. G. Sugivama
--.000 in the same period.
the Province of British Columbia
Canada take her place at the side
points, led by Sam FuiTt’s S.
°d
value to
NORTH ENDERS—Kika 4. 1
ad.A
4.
O
lsu 1,
Hosaki
2,
Tanabe
I.
entered the I’m'on on the under
On
the
whole,
both
games
of the other nations of the British
were
The outbreak of the First Great
Yamane 2, Ariza. M. Yamane.
well-played.
The league looks
Co
mm onAvea 1th and the world at
transcontinental
of T1
Mai in 1914 brought immieratio’i
veil-balanced and should
would be completed v
the defence of freedom
t o a halt, since many of the naWe wish to
and the liberation of
ten years. In 1873 the Brovin
some tight games before plavoff
lions from
the
op°ur friend
which immigrants
tmm. Said one cute little specpressed.
Prince Edward Island entered came
From
that
were embroiled
perilous
-- Iron Sprj
the
tatoi. I flon t care who wins
4
Confederation
C cl 11 cl (J
113S S 111 Or Si'g ri
rhe sevenih
during c
.
it
m
worthy
of
note
that
•lust like to see them run aiournt "
province.
nation. Her vast rethe immigrants remained loyal to
M INNIPEG.—Aki Oka and Bar- 11 10r gifts
HOT STOVE CHATTPP v>
The building oi the' Canadian the
sources, her agricultural and in shows
bara Sakamoto were the in uividu- en We mov
fine team work—-vW CT
7°°,d
land of their adoption with
team
to beat
h ~c a tougli
dustrial capacity, exercise
Pacific Railway. which was comal stars of the
the Wina pro start but wiil recover1 aS °? to a, bad
tew exceptions. The conti ibution
wish to
plered in 1SS5. led to th e rapid de- ot Canada in the war made it ap found influence on world affairs.
reserve strength
L ' ’ ' bas Plenty
uipeg
Nisei
Bowling r>ved safely
Mixed
Enders, the
n!er°?S'
North
Her people, drawn from eve re of
leiopnient and settlement of tlm parent to the world that the coun
soeed andfirt/
1 5s show Plenty
League played its weekly matches ®ber 2.
potential powe-° " =?20d' material and
Canadian West. An extensive pro ty had achieved the status of nalacial group, are welded in to a
on
Saturday, November 1. at d’-5
Pass-ability—wii
haVe greafc
mighty democratic force through
gramme of colonization in the last tionhood. In
threat.
give competition a
Central Bowling Alleys.
recognition of this
decade of the nineteenth century fact. Canada
their love of freedom. hatred of
del'ay oT*deHvlry1UfOrXUS
0WiuS to
Oka, who captains secondsigned the Treaty of
oppression. and the steadfast
and early years of the twentieth 'ersaiHes in
displayed’ ’ colored jerseys
Central
defrom-last
Kingpins, rolled 331
her own behalf.
though
led to an influx of thousands of
termination that the powers of
8 Larch St.
see
nio
e
ne
‘
Xt
Monda
>"5
graines
should
and
851
for
high single and high
The final step in the developgovernment shall be exercised bl
colors
ieams 0Ut in their
hardy settlers from European
$
three honors. Miss Sakamoto,
meat of the
The
and through the people for the
and 517ers° clash^n^'-teams- Elmwood
countries and the United States
Tish to ex
also of Kingpins, piled up 22i
taken in 1931. with the passage of
day. November 10 "±^7“" °U ^On‘
common benefit of all.
So great was this influx that two
delation
to
and 530 to top the ladies.
Enders in the serwd ''dl'rai Pxays North
the statute of Westminster by the
good games
secoi-d ^me. Should be
kindness
th
new provinces.--Alberta and Sas British Parliament. By this Act it
(The end of a Brief History
We Fix Ems. who took over to?
of Canada.
katchewan. were admitted to Con*
Ee seeing you.
Next — Canada’s
spot in the second week of pl3-7. nn$ my Gtav
was recognized that all the DoGeography.)
are still in number one place. •> '^address
ELMWOOD 26. CENTRAL 16
in Toronto.
points ahead of the zooming Ri’
Your Owns.
* • _ iilori tsugu
We Fix Ems Hold Lead
In Winnipeg Bowling
’*1
How to Write Mysteries
1947
Toron to Basketball
Mustangs Nose Out Bomb
Red Herrings in Whodunits
w
IF
i S3 ■
a’-
B
•T.f
I' • • TA'
- ffl.
■
<
1
<0
s
-7’ '
S
By HYA1ER YONKER
too is shy of the do-ray-me. so
you can see she can be considered
a potential suspect also.
Creeping Butler
v
and Banco soles—the Inspector
Gumshoes, a maid and last but
not least, a bum that com es
around the back door.
So with all the suspects gath
ered in this one room, with In
spector Gumshoes all ready to
make the arrest, the hawkshaw
announces very dramatically;
“The murderer is in this very
‘room!”
__ Jfil'S*
WUI8|||
Rebels Top Nomads in Debut
—
-
-
—
TORONTO.—Last year’s championship final
Naturally, there’s butler thrown
again when the Mustangs and Bombers met in
in that goes creeping around from
game of the new season on Friday, October 31 nhetl'.ft'si
chapter one to chapter eleven,
point gave victory to the Mustangs 41-40 after ° eJ11!gle y
peeking through keyholes and
clash that went to a 5-minute overtime and saw
lei
hiding behind doors, doing every
banished on penalties.
saA' ^Ve Payers
There’s another type of mys
thing that makes him look like a
So hotly contested was the <®>______ '
a pi
tery writer too who insists in
very suspicious character.
You
game that a total of 41 penalties
ear
having the dead guy knocked
Naturally
everybody
Makimoto
alscleft
th°
can consider him as a queer char
is surwere collected by the two teams.
■□<3.1118 via
prised and everybodj- looks at
off in a room with all the doors
acter.
the five personals route, a
Four Bombers and one Mustang; time
T
each other and as a result they
and windows locked, bolted’and
So. with three potential sus
was called. Bombers were
were ejected on personals in the
st-ii
3-11
get
fidgety.
Now
comes
the
n.
nailed down from the inside.
fighting hard but Mustangs
pects, the author starts throwing
short overtime period as the two
had
Now the mystery in this case is
payoff. Everybody is sitting or
B‘
in herrings after herrings. Not
the
vital one-point margin
teams fought over a game-end tie
41-40.
standing
like
statues
as
Ira.
not who killed Mortimer Jones
In
i
he
onlj- red ones but in all colors
i opening- game,
of 33-all.
9
Knowall sweeps a grimy accusing
with a hatchet, but how did the
made a successful
and shapes. There’s the fat lady
debut
in
th
e
guy do it?
Mustangs led. through the early league
unger around the group.
Sud
on the third floor with her son
;as
they clawed airj aps
denly
he
stops
in
front
of
the
fat
part
of
the
game
with
Ken
MiyaW
Today, we’ll go into a rough
Junior, a regular nuisance. As a
scratcned their way to a 34-23 win
lady on the third floor and says
saki and Roy Miyasaki piling up
sketch of the former type of mys
matter of fact it is Junior’s bat
lorne
over the hapless Nomads. Thank<
she is the one who does awav
big torals. The Bombers crept up
tery novel. For the benefit of the
that knocks off Ezra Jone-s. The
Io a last minute scoring splurae i>res.
with old Ezra and the gardener'
ni the third quarter and both
readers I’]] sum up with the
gaidener, is a guy that keeps runTh
ny Roy Kurita and Curlv \v-l
Everybody is surprised to ■ see
teams traded goal tor goal in the
trivial evidences and tracks that
ning out in the middle Of the night
gawa Rebels came out from be he s]
the results including the reader,
final period.
to water dahlias in chapter three.
crop up from chapter one to chan
pecta
hind to take the tilt.
because,
how
could
such
ter thirteen.
Of course, you don’t have to
With
40
seconds
remaining
in
, , , ,
------- a nice
lay b
First Game: Mustangs 41. Bombers -n
Bony about him because in chap tat lady do such a dastardly deed?
the game, and Bombers trailingLea
MUSTANGS—K. Mivasaki io «
But Ira Knowall has all the
Ezra Jones, the corpse in this
ter four he is slapped over the
33-32, Shige Ashikawa was awartl- Miyasaki 10, Makimoto 3, H Mivasik’i iraw £
MB.s’ Koy“asi
bean with a shovel, which ends
answers, the motive and such.
story, is an old geezer pushing
ed a penalty shot.
Merly
Ashikawa
The motive, you ask? Well, it’s
eighty with about 40 million
his career for the remainder of
swished in a clean basket to tie
BOMBERS—Idenouye 1°
a chibvery simple.
the story.
ducats piled up. - How he man
21'wfiyra yKup the score. In the close and
HiraL ” y‘" 2’ Ts“k“'™ 1. 0
ages to gather so much green
short, scuffle that followed, Mucka
The
fat
lady
’
s
son
is
the hidbacks is a mystery in itself but
* *
Makimoto of the Mustangs was
den son of old Ezra. The fat
Just
about
chapter
nine,
old
've are not concerned about that
Second Game: Rebels 34, Nomads 23
also given a Rm' shot. With the
lady wants some of his ducats
man Ezra’s shyster comes in the
Me are only concerned with the
REBELS—Kurita 11 V-ikv/a-r, „
T0R(
game point in his hands. Makimo- Fukumoto
but Ezra does not wish to have
5, loi 4, Ide 2 Sora I'
front door to read the will. Here
fact that old man Ezra is bounced
Yoneyama 2, Maikawa, Sato
he yea
to let go, the ball hit the rim,
is where a bit of fireworks starts
any scandal brought out about
cuei toe noggin with a baseball
rolled
around
it
ellows
his doings in his younger days.
because, in this chapter the lead
and then fell outbat
He is found, of course,
side.
nnual (
M.
«■ FThe fat iady does not like the
ing ol the will ends with every
deader n a mackerel in his room
ay,
De<
*
*
*
•
quick brushoff and gets very
body not satisfied except the iawOvertime saw both fives going
-\ow from here on to chapter
angry. As a result, she picks
allroon
into high gear. Fouls began to
• ei himself. In fact it seems that
T1FOFFS—Here’s a real tin for vou
thnteen, the story is filled with
re., o
sports
fans:
Discard
all
your'thou-h
’
s
the shyster manages to collect a
up Junior’s bat and conks Ezra
pile up as play got hectic in the
suspects and suspicious action-s
Sv’n2rOfeSSiOnal > hockey, boxing° or
iallroontidy sum for himself and rhe
and lays him out for good. The
any other game and come to see Bomh.
small All Nations gym. Bombers
from the different characters in
rnJem?
Mustangs
play
basketball.
They
Music
nephew who expects around 20
gardener sees this and tries io
Joe Akiyama, Ken and Mossy Mit meet three more times in the season and
the tale.
ortcli a
blackmail the poor fat lady so
the excitement and thrills you get from
million ducats finds he i
sui and Idy Idenouye were waved
shy
their games will out-rival others. This
Potential- Subjects
iece ba
about IS million. Likewis
naturally,
not
wanting
to
be
out
of
the
the game one by one by
pubHcitV S^S. A real honest-toyom
Ezra Jones has a nephew who
goodness tip.
All for free too . .'
blackmailed, she clouts him
niece, gets nicked with the chips.
referee
Chuck
Oda.
Bombers
Locks like a three-way fight in th?
nown in
Ira Knowall, the hawkshaw in
Obes a few thousand gees in the
over the bean with a ohovel.
played one man short after los- WnTrh 7ith-?’CeS beins the third
th-o
h
for
aud
when
any
of
thes»
fine art of tossing the bone-s. J-fe
)r
the
tlre case, pops in and out asking
ing so many of their
s taiwarts. th,ee squads play together . . , rm ancing—
Ion can see how simple it is
a potential suspect because ne
que-stions and looking under rugs
thnlly r OO1 °ad the gym is so small. An
Veteran Ashikawa kept Bombers
to write a mystery novel. In rmif therl°U1S wouId not have been mads s Dancin.
ns embarrassed financially and js
all through the story. Then in
in the game by matching . the if th.re .vas more space for the player
next article, well take up a mo7e
to move around in . . . Shio-e Ashiklwwaiting anxiously for his rich
chapter thirteen the grand climax
dmissioi
young Mustangs Makimoto and toeT“iyUn°h-n’l 10°k as
intriguing
subject,
Love
Stories.
he
'
s
read
*
is reached.
uncle to kick off. Naturally, wlmn
1.00 per
Roy Miyasaki basket far basket
n<= ,UP his hooping shoes vet. His
old Ezra gets bounced on ule
It will I
I’-7-11® 'S .lust as good as ever ' . . That
in the overtime scoring spree. Mustang-Bomber brawl — •’What a
nmax
bean with a blunt object, nephew
game! ’
3 vent of •
DO YOU SNORE?
Knowall gathers all tlm <msJones is not feeling altogether
is early
Snoring can be cured, govern
pects into one room. Niece. neph'sorrowful at the loss.
urther p;
ment health experts say. it js
ew, butler, the fat lady on the
Then there’s Ezra’s. niece, a
an John
not inevitable and can be cured
third floor, Junior th
lawyer, \by medical attention. Snoring js
cate chicken indeed. She loves
acted.—J.
some queer that entered
the sight of parses a.I1(1 new
into the
common among sufferers from
in chapter five, the plumber
clothes, as a matter of fact anvsome form of nose blockage and
that
c
nquiri
tune in on the same chapter,
thmg that ducats can buv. Sh\
those who
continually snore
the guy with the Cais Paw heel’
ec. 3
should see their familv doctor
VANCOL
THIS Ol'T
basketbM?1^™.-0?611"18' a, new season of Winnipeg Nisei aims hav
unleash^ \ w n”° '
L'nkn0'VI1 Quantity till gametime, astice H.
CLIP this OUT
scheduled o-nnl £P?^er to oveTcome Central in the first .quire in 1
or
hr
■1
U
The trouble with a lot of these
guys and gals that write the who
dunit type of story is that they
diaw too many red herrings across
the pages. Of course, I haven’t
anything against these guys and
gals doing these things^ only
everything gets go confusing by
the middle of the book that you
don’t know what is what.
Through the Key-hole
By HOOPER
Elmwood, 517 ers Victorious in
Peg Basketball Opening Clashes
How to Become a Canadian Citizen
.. ■ ..... * B"’f
»« CanadaA
V,,Men
Aithou-h Ce,Xi -r 7 yX 011 Monday night. Nov. 3.
tlW could not A “splayed smooth dribbling and passimt,
attaclA oWIn vooT U>Ze.a Xense a*ajnst the persistent
shoot n° E,m"°od which utilized Johnny Yamabe’s slw-
HAT
1
(The fifth
HOSE I
Citizensh.p
a Canadian Cit ^..^■es of excerpts from the
"Put in ra
Branch Manual, ‘-How to Become
In is70 tilt? Province of Maniina toes
toba was admitted to the Confed tederation in 1905. Some idea of
In the second game. 517ers outroked or
minions within the British Comthe rapidity of the development of
eration. Manitoba had prospered
scored North End 28-15.
This
l’ered par
monwealth of Nations were inde
Nakagawa 2, A. Okumura 1.
smoe IS i2 "hen the origi- ’he West is gleaned from the fact
game,
although
equallv
excitineot
or cold
pendent sovereign states bound
m
—Hirose 10, Yahiro 5. Y.
that V miiipeg grew from. 218 in
mi! settlement
was
sprinkled
liberally
with
fouls
’
Tomihiro , Miyata 1. Hashimoto. 3.
oi
S
tile.
”
t
,
Scottish immitogether only by bonds of sentiTomihiro, Shimoda.
ts !<■„ 1„.
to
120.000
in
1911
Ibis
was
due
to
the
customary
?alth authoi
Lord
Edmonton
nient and loyalty to
common
.he Iied ltiv(,r Co!onv rose from 4,000 to 31.000 in th
eagerness
and
tension
accompany
take out
King.
b-17ers 28, NORTH ENDERS 15
space of ten vears
ing
a
first
game.
Nearlv
all
of
an just sa
sent site of the City
517ers—Saito 6, Fujii 8. Fir
,of Winnipeg, I he following vear
■n. Sugiyama 5. Fukuyama 3. J Sug
the winning team picked up
riety is
The Second World Wa r
gie"' from 113 to o'ver
yama 2. Tamura 1. G. Sugivama
--.000 in the same period.
the Province of British Columbia
Canada take her place at the side
points, led by Sam FuiTt’s S.
°d
value to
NORTH ENDERS—Kika 4. 1
ad.A
4.
O
lsu 1,
Hosaki
2,
Tanabe
I.
entered the I’m'on on the under
On
the
whole,
both
games
of the other nations of the British
were
The outbreak of the First Great
Yamane 2, Ariza. M. Yamane.
well-played.
The league looks
Co
mm onAvea 1th and the world at
transcontinental
of T1
Mai in 1914 brought immieratio’i
veil-balanced and should
would be completed v
the defence of freedom
t o a halt, since many of the naWe wish to
and the liberation of
ten years. In 1873 the Brovin
some tight games before plavoff
lions from
the
op°ur friend
which immigrants
tmm. Said one cute little specpressed.
Prince Edward Island entered came
From
that
were embroiled
perilous
-- Iron Sprj
the
tatoi. I flon t care who wins
4
Confederation
C cl 11 cl (J
113S S 111 Or Si'g ri
rhe sevenih
during c
.
it
m
worthy
of
note
that
•lust like to see them run aiournt "
province.
nation. Her vast rethe immigrants remained loyal to
M INNIPEG.—Aki Oka and Bar- 11 10r gifts
HOT STOVE CHATTPP v>
The building oi the' Canadian the
sources, her agricultural and in shows
bara Sakamoto were the in uividu- en We mov
fine team work—-vW CT
7°°,d
land of their adoption with
team
to beat
h ~c a tougli
dustrial capacity, exercise
Pacific Railway. which was comal stars of the
the Wina pro start but wiil recover1 aS °? to a, bad
tew exceptions. The conti ibution
wish to
plered in 1SS5. led to th e rapid de- ot Canada in the war made it ap found influence on world affairs.
reserve strength
L ' ’ ' bas Plenty
uipeg
Nisei
Bowling r>ved safely
Mixed
Enders, the
n!er°?S'
North
Her people, drawn from eve re of
leiopnient and settlement of tlm parent to the world that the coun
soeed andfirt/
1 5s show Plenty
League played its weekly matches ®ber 2.
potential powe-° " =?20d' material and
Canadian West. An extensive pro ty had achieved the status of nalacial group, are welded in to a
on
Saturday, November 1. at d’-5
Pass-ability—wii
haVe greafc
mighty democratic force through
gramme of colonization in the last tionhood. In
threat.
give competition a
Central Bowling Alleys.
recognition of this
decade of the nineteenth century fact. Canada
their love of freedom. hatred of
del'ay oT*deHvlry1UfOrXUS
0WiuS to
Oka, who captains secondsigned the Treaty of
oppression. and the steadfast
and early years of the twentieth 'ersaiHes in
displayed’ ’ colored jerseys
Central
defrom-last
Kingpins, rolled 331
her own behalf.
though
led to an influx of thousands of
termination that the powers of
8 Larch St.
see
nio
e
ne
‘
Xt
Monda
>"5
graines
should
and
851
for
high single and high
The final step in the developgovernment shall be exercised bl
colors
ieams 0Ut in their
hardy settlers from European
$
three honors. Miss Sakamoto,
meat of the
The
and through the people for the
and 517ers° clash^n^'-teams- Elmwood
countries and the United States
Tish to ex
also of Kingpins, piled up 22i
taken in 1931. with the passage of
day. November 10 "±^7“" °U ^On‘
common benefit of all.
So great was this influx that two
delation
to
and 530 to top the ladies.
Enders in the serwd ''dl'rai Pxays North
the statute of Westminster by the
good games
secoi-d ^me. Should be
kindness
th
new provinces.--Alberta and Sas British Parliament. By this Act it
(The end of a Brief History
We Fix Ems. who took over to?
of Canada.
katchewan. were admitted to Con*
Ee seeing you.
Next — Canada’s
spot in the second week of pl3-7. nn$ my Gtav
was recognized that all the DoGeography.)
are still in number one place. •> '^address
ELMWOOD 26. CENTRAL 16
in Toronto.
points ahead of the zooming Ri’
Your Owns.
* • _ iilori tsugu
We Fix Ems Hold Lead
In Winnipeg Bowling
’*1
Page 11
er
1947.
i-tfui'day. November 8, 1947
Page
bers;
tebut
is re-live^
(help first
hie singie
i stirring
e Payers
■□<3.1118 via
; time
were st-ii
tansq had
41-40.
e- Rebels
nt in the
red
an J
--.vm
’• Thanks
? splurge
McLaglen to Speak
At Y.B.S. Meet
By BLEACHERITE
Berry Blossom Baseball in Brazil
They play baseball now down South America wav i„
3Zil, the city sports department has made it an offim^ 2
In Fresno
,
t
eminent newspaper, A Gazeta, has joined in the carnnfi^rn
irize baseball. Till now soccer is Brazil’s Number Oue eanie
P°PU'
Baseball was brought to Brazil, not from the US 7/" ’
tnrt from Japan by Brazil's Urge Japanese eolonv'seve^'l "’S'
kias ago. so. as might be expected, baseball is pia;.e(?
*
leiji Stadium style than in the Ebbets Field manner'
’
Two leagues have been organized in Sao Faulo Thev include w
bpanese. two American and three Brazilian teams. The Janane'e
earns are reported to have trounced the newcomer
by top-heavy
.•■ores.
'
■
The Japanese play seriously, but they play fast, and
they play to
in.
■Before the game, Japanese players march around the
bases followig the umpires. (Can you see this happening at Toronto’
Christie
,irs?) It both teams are Japanese, they meet at home plate doff thebaps and bow. (Maido arigato!)
’ 'OIt riiei-
When the first player comes to bat he doits his cap once over
idine p-are as his teammates give a yell from a huddle on the Mde
i_n.es. Then the umpire calls “Blay Ball”—and the game is on
"
The Japanese never argue with the umpire. Neither the plavers nohe spectators make audible comment on the ump’s decision
The
pectators, mostly intent Japanese, occasionally applaud a ‘meetacuBr
lay but rarely burst into cheering. (Sounds like English cricket)
League games are played on Sunday (this sounds like honm)\ml
haw sizeable crowds. The local soft drink concession has
~
gone to an
Merly and toothless Japanese who sells tangerines from
an oxcart.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kawagoe
FRESNO, Calif. — Victor MeLaglen. noted Hollywood neto;.
V1H be one of rhe featured sneak
ers ar the conference of the Cential California Young Buddhism
Association on Nov. 9 in Fresno
according ro YBA leaders here.
Mr. AlcLaglen was described as
one of rhe persons who active’v
supported the right of Japanese
Americans to return to the area
after the evacuation.
At present he is operating an
w-aere ranch in Clovis on which
he has employed many returned
Japanese evacuees.
The actor is reported to ha\
traveled extensively in Asia.
Born to
was amended to permit entry of
Mr. and Alr s. Frau k K a w a gi
Soldiers’ brides ineligible
(formerly Edith Nishikawa
of
zenship.
Vancouver und Westwold), a 6
Mrs.
from beborn in
lbs. 9 oz. son, Randall Fatri
Tokyo. Her father. L
Bryan, at the Seaside Memoria
kawa, 6/,
a naturalized Cana
KAMLOOBS, B.C.—When Jap Hospital on Sept 10, 194 7
ambers 40
dian
citizen,
a
Canadian resident
anese movies were shown for the
■ 12. E.
Mr. and Mrs. Kaw;
were
Miyasakt
for fifty- years, and was a captain
first time here, „ the hall was
married in Kamloops.
uanioto 2.
. on
in the Boer war.
Packed to the doorway.
June 26. 1946. but Mrs.
Frank Kawagoe, a veteran, is
The show was sponsored by the
Ashikawa
was barred entry into the United
M. Mitsui
JCCA for the purpose of raising
at,
present attending school and
States because of her racial ori
to 1. G.
training
to become a diesel en gine
Japanese Relief funds. Films
gin.
mechanic. The couple reside a;
were brought by Mr. Okabe of
The barrier was finally lifted
mads 23
K-642 Truman Boyd Manor, Lott
Raymond, Alta.
when the U.S. Soldier Brides Act
igawa .8,
Beach.
TORONTO. It’s the Dance of
losses bv
innanaco
__
CHATTER
by Japanese
Sora 2,
Canadians
he year! The Metropolitan Nisei
Kamloops wolves are all lost
evacuated from British Columbia
Nagasuye
Fellowship Group plan their fifth
since
the cannery
coastal areas during the war. reijioka 2,
iris said an
innual Christmas dance for ThursHayashi,
revoir
ported the Vancouver Sun on
to the town. Minoru Nishi’s
Marriages
ay, Dec. 25, 1947, at the Masaryk
ladies’ ready-to-wear shop is reNov. 1.
logical College. Aliss Joy Bowies
NISHIMOTO—HIRAYAMA ’
allrooms, Queen West on Cowan
ported
sang
during the signing
doin
“
Preliminaries
of
the
well . . . this is the
for you
investigaMONTREAL. B.Q.-In St. Mar.
re., one of Toronto’s largest
thoughts
first business to be established bv
tion will be held here and the
xing otin's Anglican Church. Montreal
iallrooms.
A reception was held in the
commission will move to Kam- an evacuee here.
e Bombon
October IS. the marriage took
i Music will be supplied by Stan
11. They
Parish
Hall following the cereKen Kashino brought a new
loops, where it is expected the
ison and
Place of Miss Molly Hiravama
ortcli
and
his
sensational
elevenmony.
The couple will reside in
jet from
first claims will be ready for pres 3-ton Reo truck from Vancouver.
daughter of Mrs. Sode Hiravama
s. This
Toronto.
iece band and two vocalists, and
He s now using it to cart Christ
entation,” the Sun said.
onest-toof Montreal and the late Kihachi
The bride is the holder of art
your
added
enjoyment
—
well
o . . ,
mas trees. Jiro Miyazawa is down Hirayama, to Mr. Harumi Nishi
in the inown in Canadian dancing circles
A.T.C.M.
degree in piano, while
at Nicola Valley to look into the
d teaiii.
moto,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kisaku
the groom, a graduate of Central
their delightful
ballroom
f these
walk-out at the mills there. They
Nishimoto of Toronto. The Rev.
. It’s
Theological
ancing
—
Sandy
and
Lyn.
Seminary,
Kobe,
ill. All
say Kamloops Bakery has a good
Stanley Andrews officiated.
Japan, and of Montreal Diocesan
ti made sDancing will be from 9 to 12.45.
assortment of Christmas cards.
players
The bride was attended b.v her
I heological College, has an L. Th
LONDON, Ont.—Many persons
dmission is $1.50 per person,
liikawi
degree.
scoter,,Aliss
Rosy
Hiravama
Tim
; ready
turned
out
to
a
meeting
arranged
3.00 per couple. Dress optional.
t. His
best man was Mr. Edmund Mrby the London Nisei Organization
Ht will be the most talked about
. That
Coll
of Montreal Diocesan Theoaat .a
OBANA—TAKASAKI
vent of the year. Get your tick in honor of Rev. G. G. Nakayama
on
Nov.
1.
-NEW
DENVER, B.C.-The marets early and avoid the rush. For
Rev. Nakayama showed beauti
nage of Miss Matsuye Takasaki,
iirther particulars, dance chairGREENWOOD,B.C.-The
Green
(eldest
daughter of Mr. and Airs.’
ful
scenes
which
he
took
in
Van
an John Onodera may be con ■
wood
Women
’
s
Institute
will
start
•Riknnatsu
Takasaki of New Den
couver, bringing back pleasant
acted.—J. h
a
drive
for
Japan
relief,
it
was
ver to Air. Harry Eiichi Obana,
sentimental memories to the older
decided at its meeting on Oct. 27.
folks.
eldest son of Air. and Airs. KameConcrete plans are now being
jiio
Obana ot Arrow Bark. B C
TOKYO.—Iva Toguri Daquino,
made to start collecting money California - born
took place at Knox Bresbyterian
Rev. Edward Yoshioka was the
who• has
Church at New Denver on Oct. 25
and
goods
for
relief
purposes.
The
guest
preacher
a.t the King St.
VANCOUVER. — Although no
gained notoriety as “Tokv Rose”
1 he Reverend Hanson officiated.
Institute
hopes
that
those
who
re
United Church on Sunday7 evenexpressed surprise at a recent
asei aims have yet been filed, Mr.
located east from Greenwood will U.S. news
A reception followed at the
ing, Nov. 2. The guests and the
dispatch that the
iine, listice H. I. Bird will open his
Japanese
Hall, with Air. Kyusuke
support this drive. Greenwood's American Legion wants her
congregation gathered for an in
first tquiry in Vancouver, Dec. 3, into
tried
Kasui
acting
as master of cere
Japanese relief headquarters may
formal fireside program after tl
o
at the earliest opportunity to fore
. d.
meeting.-—F.S.
monies. After the honeymoon to
be reached at, the following adstall her reported attempt to take
hat to put in
ing,
Inui and Rossland, the couple
di ess. Japan Relief Dept.. Green
HOSE LUNCHES
up residence in the United States.
:ent
will reside at Arrow Bark.
wood Women’s Institute, Green
Put in raw carrot sticks, fresh
Mrs. Daquino. who is expecting
Baishakunins were Air. and Airs
irpwood, B.C.
matoes, tender celery Maiks,
early next year, told Leslie NakaK. Yasui.
Successful Bazaar
joked or prepared fruit, in a
shima, United Press Tokyo CorGREENWOOD, B.C. — A veryWd paper container, and a
respondent, that she was released
FUJ1OKA—SANO
successful “Thanksgiving Bazaar”
ot oi( cold drink in a thermos
TORONTO.—St. Francis Xnv
. Y.
one
year
ago
from
Sugamo
prison
I
ORONTO,
Ont.—The marriage
a
was held by the Catholics here at
club has held two successful
That’s what Ottawa
because
of
“
insufficient
evidence
Aliss Emiko Sano, daughter of
the Institute Hall.
Many came
-aith authorities advise. Lunches
events since it was organized in
of treason.”
Mr.
Jujn-o Sano of Toronto, to
out from neighbouring towns for
take out” should have more
October.
15
Mr.
Joshiaki Fujioka, son of Mr
‘I have relatives in Chicago
the occasion.
an just sandwiches, because a
The showing of Japanese moand
Mrs. Yonesaku Fujioka, was
and
I
want
to
see them,” Airs,
ugir’ety is needed and will add
tion pictures in October attracted
held
at Um Church of All Nations
Daquino said. She contended she
ad.’> °u value to the lunch.
235
persons.
Door
prizes
were
won
on Oct. 2b.
The Reverend K.
T.
never
“identified”
herself
as
b.v the following persons:
Shimizu officiated.
Tokyo Rose.
ard Of Thanks
1, Mrs. H. Kiyonaga; 2, Air.
A reception was held at Canton
Shedishi;
3,
Y.
Wakisaka:
4,
N.
Chop Suey following the cerev,lsb to express our thanks
VERNON. B.C.—Say, did’you
Alaeda; 5. Noriko Morishi.
mony.
our friends in Bicture Butte
Iron Springs for their kindThe Niseis dance held in No ask where all the guys and gals
vember at the Spadina and Dun were on Hallowe’en night? Whv.
p durmg our stay in Alberta.
Engafje merits
where else but the Nisei Bowling
(Continued from page 1)
das Hall drew a capacity crowd.
Or gifts and seeing us off
TORONTO, Ont.—M
Club Dance at the U.K. Hall!
or in case a canvasser fails to call
Brizes of merchandise donated by
)«e moved to Toronto.
Kosaburo Takahashi announce
Yes, the newly formed Bowling . to notify any of the committee
Toronto firms such as Simpson’s
ri,eo?'1Sh to inform you that we
the
engagement of their only
Club
really
put
up
a
bang-up
members.
and Birks-Ellis-Ryrie Ltd., .etc.,
safely in Toronto on Nodaughter,
Masa, to Dr. Yoshitaro
dance that night. Over 70 Niseis
®ber 2.
were won by the folowilng:
In Winnipeg, the Manitoba
V oneda, eldest son of Air. and
from Summerland, Okanagan
Mas Isojima. Sue Tsujimoto.
JCCA established a sub-committee,
Seitaro Sugamori
Mrs. Tomotaro Yoneda of Regina.
Centre.
Oyama,
Salmon
Arm.
and
Tsugi Iwasa, Benny Nakamachi.
to take charge of Japan relief.
Yae Sugamori
, The wedding win take place on
other places, decided to make an Tamotsu Alitani, 577 Stella Ave.,
Sayoko
Nasu,
Steve
Sano,
Irene
Mas Sugamori
Saturday evening, November 15,
Hashimoto. Roy Ushijima, Toky evening of it at this social. They
was appointed to take care of
Sumi Sugamori
3947. at 8:00 p.m.. at Carlton
danced from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. to
donation receipts, and Toru Naka
Aonemitsu. Joe Nakamura, and
St., Toronto, Ont.
street United Church, Toronto.
“swoonful” music in a lovely
*
*
Aliyo Fujita.
mura and King Enta were also
decorated
hall.
wish to
appointed to work on the sub
Dreoia+eXpress my deepest
Niseis who won prizes during
; Ration
all my friends for
committee.
the evening were Cookie Inouye.
- kindn
OPASATIKA, Ont.—Mrs. Kim
rine rn/ ’ lhey have sb°wn me
Reports from Greenwood indiMr. Kamakichi Nagasaka and
Hap Kawamoto, Ala-ssey Hikichi,
iko Tsuyuki passed away Oct. 18
cated that the B.C. JCCA was giv
ta Port
family wish to inform their friends
and Joe Oikawa.
at the Kapuska-sing Hospital.
ing full support to the Japan Re
.that they have moved from St.
in t
ess wi" be 121 Huron
And of course, we can’t forget
J uneral services were held on
-Toronto.
lief
drive initiated by the local ’
Pierre, Man., to 276 McKenzie St.,
that efficient p.a. system provided
Oct. 20th with the Reverend StanWomen’s Institute, while in Kam
Mike Kokubo,
Winnipeg, Man.
through the kindness of Air. F.
loops
a special movie was held
Araki.
■
. ..
The deceased is survived by hetto raise funds for Japan relief.
husband, Mr. Itaro Tsuyuki.
Kamloops News
Japanese Movies
Draws Full House
oronto Fellowship Group Plans
Christmas Dance at the Masaryk
Personal Notes Across Canada !
Londoners Shown
Films of Vancouver
Greenwood Women
To Start Drive
For lapan Relief
Iva Toguri Hopes
To Visit Relatives
In Chicago
.
nquiry to Open
ec. 3 Says Sun
Many Attracted to
St. Francis Xavier
Club Activities
Bowling League
Organized in
Okanagan Valley
JAPAN RELIEF
Change of Address
„
1947.
i-tfui'day. November 8, 1947
Page
bers;
tebut
is re-live^
(help first
hie singie
i stirring
e Payers
■□<3.1118 via
; time
were st-ii
tansq had
41-40.
e- Rebels
nt in the
red
an J
--.vm
’• Thanks
? splurge
McLaglen to Speak
At Y.B.S. Meet
By BLEACHERITE
Berry Blossom Baseball in Brazil
They play baseball now down South America wav i„
3Zil, the city sports department has made it an offim^ 2
In Fresno
,
t
eminent newspaper, A Gazeta, has joined in the carnnfi^rn
irize baseball. Till now soccer is Brazil’s Number Oue eanie
P°PU'
Baseball was brought to Brazil, not from the US 7/" ’
tnrt from Japan by Brazil's Urge Japanese eolonv'seve^'l "’S'
kias ago. so. as might be expected, baseball is pia;.e(?
*
leiji Stadium style than in the Ebbets Field manner'
’
Two leagues have been organized in Sao Faulo Thev include w
bpanese. two American and three Brazilian teams. The Janane'e
earns are reported to have trounced the newcomer
by top-heavy
.•■ores.
'
■
The Japanese play seriously, but they play fast, and
they play to
in.
■Before the game, Japanese players march around the
bases followig the umpires. (Can you see this happening at Toronto’
Christie
,irs?) It both teams are Japanese, they meet at home plate doff thebaps and bow. (Maido arigato!)
’ 'OIt riiei-
When the first player comes to bat he doits his cap once over
idine p-are as his teammates give a yell from a huddle on the Mde
i_n.es. Then the umpire calls “Blay Ball”—and the game is on
"
The Japanese never argue with the umpire. Neither the plavers nohe spectators make audible comment on the ump’s decision
The
pectators, mostly intent Japanese, occasionally applaud a ‘meetacuBr
lay but rarely burst into cheering. (Sounds like English cricket)
League games are played on Sunday (this sounds like honm)\ml
haw sizeable crowds. The local soft drink concession has
~
gone to an
Merly and toothless Japanese who sells tangerines from
an oxcart.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kawagoe
FRESNO, Calif. — Victor MeLaglen. noted Hollywood neto;.
V1H be one of rhe featured sneak
ers ar the conference of the Cential California Young Buddhism
Association on Nov. 9 in Fresno
according ro YBA leaders here.
Mr. AlcLaglen was described as
one of rhe persons who active’v
supported the right of Japanese
Americans to return to the area
after the evacuation.
At present he is operating an
w-aere ranch in Clovis on which
he has employed many returned
Japanese evacuees.
The actor is reported to ha\
traveled extensively in Asia.
Born to
was amended to permit entry of
Mr. and Alr s. Frau k K a w a gi
Soldiers’ brides ineligible
(formerly Edith Nishikawa
of
zenship.
Vancouver und Westwold), a 6
Mrs.
from beborn in
lbs. 9 oz. son, Randall Fatri
Tokyo. Her father. L
Bryan, at the Seaside Memoria
kawa, 6/,
a naturalized Cana
KAMLOOBS, B.C.—When Jap Hospital on Sept 10, 194 7
ambers 40
dian
citizen,
a
Canadian resident
anese movies were shown for the
■ 12. E.
Mr. and Mrs. Kaw;
were
Miyasakt
for fifty- years, and was a captain
first time here, „ the hall was
married in Kamloops.
uanioto 2.
. on
in the Boer war.
Packed to the doorway.
June 26. 1946. but Mrs.
Frank Kawagoe, a veteran, is
The show was sponsored by the
Ashikawa
was barred entry into the United
M. Mitsui
JCCA for the purpose of raising
at,
present attending school and
States because of her racial ori
to 1. G.
training
to become a diesel en gine
Japanese Relief funds. Films
gin.
mechanic. The couple reside a;
were brought by Mr. Okabe of
The barrier was finally lifted
mads 23
K-642 Truman Boyd Manor, Lott
Raymond, Alta.
when the U.S. Soldier Brides Act
igawa .8,
Beach.
TORONTO. It’s the Dance of
losses bv
innanaco
__
CHATTER
by Japanese
Sora 2,
Canadians
he year! The Metropolitan Nisei
Kamloops wolves are all lost
evacuated from British Columbia
Nagasuye
Fellowship Group plan their fifth
since
the cannery
coastal areas during the war. reijioka 2,
iris said an
innual Christmas dance for ThursHayashi,
revoir
ported the Vancouver Sun on
to the town. Minoru Nishi’s
Marriages
ay, Dec. 25, 1947, at the Masaryk
ladies’ ready-to-wear shop is reNov. 1.
logical College. Aliss Joy Bowies
NISHIMOTO—HIRAYAMA ’
allrooms, Queen West on Cowan
ported
sang
during the signing
doin
“
Preliminaries
of
the
well . . . this is the
for you
investigaMONTREAL. B.Q.-In St. Mar.
re., one of Toronto’s largest
thoughts
first business to be established bv
tion will be held here and the
xing otin's Anglican Church. Montreal
iallrooms.
A reception was held in the
commission will move to Kam- an evacuee here.
e Bombon
October IS. the marriage took
i Music will be supplied by Stan
11. They
Parish
Hall following the cereKen Kashino brought a new
loops, where it is expected the
ison and
Place of Miss Molly Hiravama
ortcli
and
his
sensational
elevenmony.
The couple will reside in
jet from
first claims will be ready for pres 3-ton Reo truck from Vancouver.
daughter of Mrs. Sode Hiravama
s. This
Toronto.
iece band and two vocalists, and
He s now using it to cart Christ
entation,” the Sun said.
onest-toof Montreal and the late Kihachi
The bride is the holder of art
your
added
enjoyment
—
well
o . . ,
mas trees. Jiro Miyazawa is down Hirayama, to Mr. Harumi Nishi
in the inown in Canadian dancing circles
A.T.C.M.
degree in piano, while
at Nicola Valley to look into the
d teaiii.
moto,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kisaku
the groom, a graduate of Central
their delightful
ballroom
f these
walk-out at the mills there. They
Nishimoto of Toronto. The Rev.
. It’s
Theological
ancing
—
Sandy
and
Lyn.
Seminary,
Kobe,
ill. All
say Kamloops Bakery has a good
Stanley Andrews officiated.
Japan, and of Montreal Diocesan
ti made sDancing will be from 9 to 12.45.
assortment of Christmas cards.
players
The bride was attended b.v her
I heological College, has an L. Th
LONDON, Ont.—Many persons
dmission is $1.50 per person,
liikawi
degree.
scoter,,Aliss
Rosy
Hiravama
Tim
; ready
turned
out
to
a
meeting
arranged
3.00 per couple. Dress optional.
t. His
best man was Mr. Edmund Mrby the London Nisei Organization
Ht will be the most talked about
. That
Coll
of Montreal Diocesan Theoaat .a
OBANA—TAKASAKI
vent of the year. Get your tick in honor of Rev. G. G. Nakayama
on
Nov.
1.
-NEW
DENVER, B.C.-The marets early and avoid the rush. For
Rev. Nakayama showed beauti
nage of Miss Matsuye Takasaki,
iirther particulars, dance chairGREENWOOD,B.C.-The
Green
(eldest
daughter of Mr. and Airs.’
ful
scenes
which
he
took
in
Van
an John Onodera may be con ■
wood
Women
’
s
Institute
will
start
•Riknnatsu
Takasaki of New Den
couver, bringing back pleasant
acted.—J. h
a
drive
for
Japan
relief,
it
was
ver to Air. Harry Eiichi Obana,
sentimental memories to the older
decided at its meeting on Oct. 27.
folks.
eldest son of Air. and Airs. KameConcrete plans are now being
jiio
Obana ot Arrow Bark. B C
TOKYO.—Iva Toguri Daquino,
made to start collecting money California - born
took place at Knox Bresbyterian
Rev. Edward Yoshioka was the
who• has
Church at New Denver on Oct. 25
and
goods
for
relief
purposes.
The
guest
preacher
a.t the King St.
VANCOUVER. — Although no
gained notoriety as “Tokv Rose”
1 he Reverend Hanson officiated.
Institute
hopes
that
those
who
re
United Church on Sunday7 evenexpressed surprise at a recent
asei aims have yet been filed, Mr.
located east from Greenwood will U.S. news
A reception followed at the
ing, Nov. 2. The guests and the
dispatch that the
iine, listice H. I. Bird will open his
Japanese
Hall, with Air. Kyusuke
support this drive. Greenwood's American Legion wants her
congregation gathered for an in
first tquiry in Vancouver, Dec. 3, into
tried
Kasui
acting
as master of cere
Japanese relief headquarters may
formal fireside program after tl
o
at the earliest opportunity to fore
. d.
meeting.-—F.S.
monies. After the honeymoon to
be reached at, the following adstall her reported attempt to take
hat to put in
ing,
Inui and Rossland, the couple
di ess. Japan Relief Dept.. Green
HOSE LUNCHES
up residence in the United States.
:ent
will reside at Arrow Bark.
wood Women’s Institute, Green
Put in raw carrot sticks, fresh
Mrs. Daquino. who is expecting
Baishakunins were Air. and Airs
irpwood, B.C.
matoes, tender celery Maiks,
early next year, told Leslie NakaK. Yasui.
Successful Bazaar
joked or prepared fruit, in a
shima, United Press Tokyo CorGREENWOOD, B.C. — A veryWd paper container, and a
respondent, that she was released
FUJ1OKA—SANO
successful “Thanksgiving Bazaar”
ot oi( cold drink in a thermos
TORONTO.—St. Francis Xnv
. Y.
one
year
ago
from
Sugamo
prison
I
ORONTO,
Ont.—The marriage
a
was held by the Catholics here at
club has held two successful
That’s what Ottawa
because
of
“
insufficient
evidence
Aliss Emiko Sano, daughter of
the Institute Hall.
Many came
-aith authorities advise. Lunches
events since it was organized in
of treason.”
Mr.
Jujn-o Sano of Toronto, to
out from neighbouring towns for
take out” should have more
October.
15
Mr.
Joshiaki Fujioka, son of Mr
‘I have relatives in Chicago
the occasion.
an just sandwiches, because a
The showing of Japanese moand
Mrs. Yonesaku Fujioka, was
and
I
want
to
see them,” Airs,
ugir’ety is needed and will add
tion pictures in October attracted
held
at Um Church of All Nations
Daquino said. She contended she
ad.’> °u value to the lunch.
235
persons.
Door
prizes
were
won
on Oct. 2b.
The Reverend K.
T.
never
“identified”
herself
as
b.v the following persons:
Shimizu officiated.
Tokyo Rose.
ard Of Thanks
1, Mrs. H. Kiyonaga; 2, Air.
A reception was held at Canton
Shedishi;
3,
Y.
Wakisaka:
4,
N.
Chop Suey following the cerev,lsb to express our thanks
VERNON. B.C.—Say, did’you
Alaeda; 5. Noriko Morishi.
mony.
our friends in Bicture Butte
Iron Springs for their kindThe Niseis dance held in No ask where all the guys and gals
vember at the Spadina and Dun were on Hallowe’en night? Whv.
p durmg our stay in Alberta.
Engafje merits
where else but the Nisei Bowling
(Continued from page 1)
das Hall drew a capacity crowd.
Or gifts and seeing us off
TORONTO, Ont.—M
Club Dance at the U.K. Hall!
or in case a canvasser fails to call
Brizes of merchandise donated by
)«e moved to Toronto.
Kosaburo Takahashi announce
Yes, the newly formed Bowling . to notify any of the committee
Toronto firms such as Simpson’s
ri,eo?'1Sh to inform you that we
the
engagement of their only
Club
really
put
up
a
bang-up
members.
and Birks-Ellis-Ryrie Ltd., .etc.,
safely in Toronto on Nodaughter,
Masa, to Dr. Yoshitaro
dance that night. Over 70 Niseis
®ber 2.
were won by the folowilng:
In Winnipeg, the Manitoba
V oneda, eldest son of Air. and
from Summerland, Okanagan
Mas Isojima. Sue Tsujimoto.
JCCA established a sub-committee,
Seitaro Sugamori
Mrs. Tomotaro Yoneda of Regina.
Centre.
Oyama,
Salmon
Arm.
and
Tsugi Iwasa, Benny Nakamachi.
to take charge of Japan relief.
Yae Sugamori
, The wedding win take place on
other places, decided to make an Tamotsu Alitani, 577 Stella Ave.,
Sayoko
Nasu,
Steve
Sano,
Irene
Mas Sugamori
Saturday evening, November 15,
Hashimoto. Roy Ushijima, Toky evening of it at this social. They
was appointed to take care of
Sumi Sugamori
3947. at 8:00 p.m.. at Carlton
danced from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. to
donation receipts, and Toru Naka
Aonemitsu. Joe Nakamura, and
St., Toronto, Ont.
street United Church, Toronto.
“swoonful” music in a lovely
*
*
Aliyo Fujita.
mura and King Enta were also
decorated
hall.
wish to
appointed to work on the sub
Dreoia+eXpress my deepest
Niseis who won prizes during
; Ration
all my friends for
committee.
the evening were Cookie Inouye.
- kindn
OPASATIKA, Ont.—Mrs. Kim
rine rn/ ’ lhey have sb°wn me
Reports from Greenwood indiMr. Kamakichi Nagasaka and
Hap Kawamoto, Ala-ssey Hikichi,
iko Tsuyuki passed away Oct. 18
cated that the B.C. JCCA was giv
ta Port
family wish to inform their friends
and Joe Oikawa.
at the Kapuska-sing Hospital.
ing full support to the Japan Re
.that they have moved from St.
in t
ess wi" be 121 Huron
And of course, we can’t forget
J uneral services were held on
-Toronto.
lief
drive initiated by the local ’
Pierre, Man., to 276 McKenzie St.,
that efficient p.a. system provided
Oct. 20th with the Reverend StanWomen’s Institute, while in Kam
Mike Kokubo,
Winnipeg, Man.
through the kindness of Air. F.
loops
a special movie was held
Araki.
■
. ..
The deceased is survived by hetto raise funds for Japan relief.
husband, Mr. Itaro Tsuyuki.
Kamloops News
Japanese Movies
Draws Full House
oronto Fellowship Group Plans
Christmas Dance at the Masaryk
Personal Notes Across Canada !
Londoners Shown
Films of Vancouver
Greenwood Women
To Start Drive
For lapan Relief
Iva Toguri Hopes
To Visit Relatives
In Chicago
.
nquiry to Open
ec. 3 Says Sun
Many Attracted to
St. Francis Xavier
Club Activities
Bowling League
Organized in
Okanagan Valley
JAPAN RELIEF
Change of Address
„
Page 12
Saturday, November §
Kent Niseis Follow Busy Program
Of Sports and Social Activities
CHATHAM, Ont.—The KNFG
basketball club got under way a
few weeks ago with Mas Uchi
yama at the helm and Mr. Jack
Foy Jr. of the Chatham cityleague as the capable coach. At
present the average attendance of
the boys’ division is approximately
15, and there is a possibility of a
three-team league being formed
soon.
SOCIAL CALENDAR
Hallowe’en Dance
Members of the KNFG thor
oughly enjoyed themselves at the
Hallowe'en Dance held on Nov.
1st at Kemsley Hall.
NOVEMBER
1-—Chatham, KNFG general meeting,
Park St. Church, 8:00 p.m.
12—Winnipeg, Rev. Nakayama speaks
at Knox United Church, Banquet
Hall, Edmonton and Qu’Appelle,
8 p.m.
12—Toronto, Metropolitan Nisei Fellow
ship meeting.
14—Magrath, Alta.,. Evaks Baseball
Club’s
Baseball Booster Dance,
Magrath Assembly Hall, 9 p.m.
Everybody welcome.
14—Toronto, Nisei Girls’ Softball Club’s
Sadie Hawkins dance, at Labour
Lyceum, 8:30 p.m.
14 Hamilton, Hy-noter’s Sadie Haw
kins dance, at Gould’s Hall 242
James St. N., 8 p.m.
Hamilton, B C. Girls’ Club Christ
mas Cheer Fund dance, YWCA 8
p.m.
’
15—Chatham, Sadie Hawkins
— Dance,
Kemsley Hall, £,*
’ 2' King St. W„
2011/
oo 8:30.P-m. sharp.
Hamilton Nisei Bowling League
Mid-season Frolic, Gould’s Audi
torium, 242 James St. N.
Gay Costumes
Highlight Teg
Masquerade
To Award Prizes
For Best Costum,
A.
iu uili ON.—Dance L,Ver(,
W INNIPEG.—Extravagant cosfellow Dogpatchers are romi “ntf
tumes in the colorful fashion of
that the Hynoter-s Sadie a .?
Hollywood, highlighted the Y-Peg dance win be a cost
'
About 60 Niseis attended the
Club’s much-enjoyed Hallowe’en
Prues will be awariJe(i
a"'!social with a few making the trip
Masquerade on Friday, October
f°i’ the
best
costume
and
for
the
from Leamington.
•31, at the YWCA. Over 30 club
best jiv.
ing couple.
The social was started off with
members were present, all but five
The dance will be held
a series of games, including musi
in costume.
at 8 p.m., at the Gould’s
cal chairs, biting the apple and
Ruth Sasaki and Tak Tanabe
Hall.
This year, the boys will have
There is also an open house o, I
doughnuts,
etc.
The
feature
event
were
chosen
as
first
prize
win
the Christ Church gym from 7:30the loth at Hy-noter-s re ™
of the evening was a skit, with
ners for the girls’ and boys’ cos
10:00, while the girls will use the
meeting
piaoe.
An
-"I®
four teams of boys participating
tumes, respectively. Ruth was
Dark St. gym- two times a month
Church on Sherman St. N
S |
in imitating women making prep
dressed as Miss Arabian Nights,
from 9:00-10:30 p.m.
arations prior to “Catching the
DECEMBER
So for big doings, “out-of-town.
complete with veil; while lanky
n
*
6—Hamilton
the
“Rec”
Novelty
Train.” This consisted of put
Tak
twirled
his
baton
and
short
ers ar* invited to Hamilton 01.
V
Dance, Polish Hall, Sanford at Barting on a skirt, blouse and hat,
ton £L
the
Sadie
Hawkins
weekend.
skirt
as
Miss
Drum
Majorette
o.
KNFG Executive Meetingtaking them off, and then repeat/he “Eec” Christmas
1950. Second prize winners were
.. All persons trying- Out for
? exrBa11’ CentraI Hall, 231 James
An executive meeting was held
iu& the procedure over and over
i* the
£>t. .N.
Joanne Shigeta, in a cowgirl
Jiving contest are asked to
again.'”
on Sunday, Nov. 2, at 71 Emma
send
getup as The Lady F no m 29
their names to Raymond Morivfl I
St., and discussions were held on
Lumie Ryoji was awarded a
01
Palms, and Mac Otsu as a Prisma 67 Jackson St., Hamilton
hall accommodation for the comprize for collecting the most
at
oner in Skirts.
Ont.
’
mg socials, Issei entertainment
pumpkins, and a box of choco
ca
Turning in a superb job as MC
(tea parties, movies), rice distri
lates went to the “green” team.
cia
was
personality man George Fu
bution, and the affiliation of the
Special congratulations go to
DiWINNIPEG.—Rev. G. G. Naka kumura. Unsung heroes for the
KNBL with the KNFG.
Social Conveners, whose untiring
affair were Tak Tanabe, Ruth
86 GAMBLE AVE,
j I
yama, who has just completed an
It was
decided that
effoits made the dance a very
a Sadie
.
-—- Sasaki
and
Joanne
Shigeta
in
Toronto,
Ont.
S
|
extensive tour of the United
successful one.
Dawkms Dance was to be held
charge
of
decorations
and
food.
Automobile,
Fire.
Bur-larv
I
States, will speak at the. Banquet
on Nov 15 with the boys’ and
Life, Accident & Sickness” etc'
|
PERSONALITIES:
Hall
of
the
Knox
United
Church,
General Insurance Fhone GL 8077 = I
girls’ basketball teams acting as
Former Y-Pegs, Masako Hikida
Edmonton
and
Qu
’
Appelle,
on
co-sponsors, the proceeds of the
and Sumi Kakimasu are in train
|
---------- ---------------Wednesday, Nov. 12, at S p.m.
social going towards the purchase
ing
at
Grace
Hospital
...
Amie
His talk will be preceded by the
of basketball equipment for both
GOOD HOMES AT LOW
LA
Sato is one of the sopranos in the
showing
of
motion
pictures
taken
teams.
PRICES
VANCOUVER. — East Indians
s
CONSULT
by Rev. Nakayama while in Van Harstone Memorial Church Choir
The dance was set for Nov. 15
who are Canadian citizens will be
to t
- . . Y-Peg varsity fugitives are:
couver area.
and will be held at Kemsley Hall
given the right of voting in civic
an
scholarship winner Sab Morita,
s
Real Estate & Business Rmt
I ’
The meeting is sponsored by the
starting 8:30 sharp. Tickets will
elections if a city charter amend
JapaneSe Fatn>Mte AppJS"
j I
and
first
year
engineering;
Harry
Ta
Manitoba JCCA.
be sold by the basketball com
ment is granted by the provincial
tens
1555
DUNDAS
W
“
niguchi arid Aki Sato, second year
I LA 7570
mittee. Girls are expected to “get
tobonto, ont.’I
government, the Vancouver Sun
“kai
■ail——HU—0H, • an-»-i! - «—....____
science;
Roy
Kunimoto
and
Mac
their men” and come in either
reported last week.
ever
Otsu, second year engineering —
sknts or plaid shirts and jeans.
^Representations made by Dr. D.
But
A.S.
D- Pandia, Indian Progressive So
educ
WINNIPEG. — The Manitoba
ciety, and the Union of B. C
the
JCCA will hold a variety concert
Municipalities, to extend the fran
Agent
pear
on Saturday, December 13.
Agent
Eastern Representative
chise co East Indians, were apnews
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
The program will include vocal
Monarch Life Assurance
pioved by city council, Oct. 23.
21 Dundas Square
'
Toronto
and instrumental numbers as well
Phone AD 0076-7
No
Company
— NH—-T— n.. ---_ ---- ---- ----- - ---- .
as Japanese plays.
__
1117 St. Catharine St. W
The
kamloops
c
Montreal, p.Q.
MA. 6318
80 King St West
Toronto
4, Res. 3543 Lorne Ave., PL. 5328
tion
Res.-—2 Moutray st., Toronto
•nil—nti—_ __
.»—„„——>H—_____
reforj
the n
in conjunction with
Agent
will
TORONTO.—The general meet
Agent
New Method of Cooking
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
Japan
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
ing of the Japanese Canadian
Sets now available
Insurance Co.
59 Oxford St.
And (
Hamilton
Committee
on
Democracy
(Issei
Office: 21 Dundas Square
j
Agent: Mas Toyota
Home: 198 Albany Ave.
Phone
AD-0076-7
that
t
Division) will be held at the
i evenings hl To^S^ o°9^ f
Toronto, Ont.
Res.: 526 Manning Avenue
will
1
Chui ch of All Nations on Nov. is
TORONTO, ONT.
— M..—
I
Phone LA 9332
with
i
The formation of the
• nn——— ।
—________at 8 p.m.
on
paj
Toronto chapter of the JCCA will
be discussed.
SPECIALIZED
The
been
n
SUIT & EXTRA trousers
got a cold
and
thinkir
and ODD TROUSERS
Ayoid “talking at” people then.
outstar
from
I hats the easiest way a cold is
Fast Dependable Service
tellecti:
ENGLISH WOOLLENS
through THE NEW CANADIAN
spread, say Ottawa health authoriPICKUP alld DELIVERY
been h
ies. If another person has a cold
hi any
1< MAY SEEM kin<1 ot e.„.]Vi bM
Get out of the line of :dre.”
with th
Hands should be washed carefully
113 McCaul St., Toronto, Ont.
WA. 5342
menA
".i™
S,,"1”'"";
disappoint178
Beverley
St.
One
before meals and general persona*!
Phone: WA-9934
Toronto,
Ont.
gitls antI all tlw
““ CardS
for
thif
hygiene should be watched
to
guage.
ward off the cold menace.
asking vot
‘«’•«»» TO NEW CANADIAN isis
The e
!Un to put out a huge Christinas edition.
g
the Jap;
You can do so by
1 -y uuuy welcome
in our special issue.
been
si
perS01^ Christmas Greetings
fl
to the
one of the nicest wavs*in whL fc
^me you will be choosing
°ut hai
of Canada.
'
'1Rh to ^l eet your friends in all parti
Magrath Evaks’
f
Help Wanted
despatel
■ke^pe^T^r- ComPetent houseAn application form i- V’hy thf
ZS
'f'
0
"'
*'
Or
•
V
0ur
convenience.
*e~pei,
Japanese
preferred fn,
We hope you will fill jr iu
doetors residence. Hljhest 1’ale?
reform a
- and mail it to us today.
at the
“The
and private quarters. A?„k m
magrath assembly hall
13Id?kew‘e’ .n,orninSS. 701’ Bovd
written
leWpho"en"7?I:
din— on —
One-half inch space
cessfull
One inch space
--------------------------------- SI.00
Friday, November 14th
not so n
(The above rates
---------1.50
Rev. Nakayama
To Give Talk
In Winnipeg
BILL TAKEDA
j
William Bendena
T11
sj
11
1
Civic Franchise
For East Indians
I
To Hold Concert
On December 13
hu
T. KOBAYASHI
FRED URABE
Poter Y. Karatsu
T
OX ?49 B.
I « S. SHINOBUS
"WEAR EVER"
JCCD Isseis Hold
General Meeting
MICKEY S. SATO
K. Goto
YOU CAN ORDER
NOW
?
isittto!
A Mmrj
Harry Miyasaki
ROY MASUI
.
J
baseball booster dance
’J
xy,NGs
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
25 cents for each extra name^o^ti,01
nlarried couple. Add
IN ENGLISH AND JAPANESE LETTERs' phrasc “and family.”)
One-halt inch space
One inch sp
£“**“*««*
MAID WANTED for general
housework, family of three. Live
Win r nUtr°PdO“aL Appl>”
q•South.
i Chatham. 143
Si
Ont. William b
si
^’•>Se--SaPlk!^d
3 U SIN ESS
The New Canadian.
504 Talbot Avenue,
Winnipeg, Man.
lam enclosing the sum of (....
publish my Greetings as checked
In English ................
In Japanese ..................
In English and Japanes
'/2 inch
quality
SERVICE
THRIFT
A° SATISFIED TCUSTOAIERAOR UfEfNTEE 0F
-NO CHARGE”
_________ “UNIQUE SERVICE”
or which
below:
£to 6 Day Pick-Up and Delivery SP.rvicP
1 inch
I
I
Additional Names .
”—:—
Good >\ ages paid. Replv; Mrc
Cal^AitL K1’aft the Furrie^
Name .
Address
COUpTf
Admission 50c
BOARDING HOUSE in cle-n
de'S dor YUit11™16 fOr S"“:
Rnsholme Rd.. Torogg pnj. 22:>
Real Estate
‘OUSE FOR RAl
o
and sun room, hardwood floor^
S’ ^-r-angAe‘ Pe°PIe having for
States. *,.O00. Substantial down
Payment. Phone ME-7479 (To?on
CENTURY CLEANERS LTD.
MA. 1186.7
,
j a
o bherwood Ave
HANDLED BY ~
ROY KAMINO
|
g
I1
ii
BF
iI
attitude
Instead
thought,
d it ion h
fetish o
was moi
or perha
rather t
in the J,
which m
arati ape
tlcism o!
style an
ants, whi
large ni
freed froi
cial style,
C8sses be
pret«ntiov
becomes ।
*s nothing
SUage itse
of drastic'
Kent Niseis Follow Busy Program
Of Sports and Social Activities
CHATHAM, Ont.—The KNFG
basketball club got under way a
few weeks ago with Mas Uchi
yama at the helm and Mr. Jack
Foy Jr. of the Chatham cityleague as the capable coach. At
present the average attendance of
the boys’ division is approximately
15, and there is a possibility of a
three-team league being formed
soon.
SOCIAL CALENDAR
Hallowe’en Dance
Members of the KNFG thor
oughly enjoyed themselves at the
Hallowe'en Dance held on Nov.
1st at Kemsley Hall.
NOVEMBER
1-—Chatham, KNFG general meeting,
Park St. Church, 8:00 p.m.
12—Winnipeg, Rev. Nakayama speaks
at Knox United Church, Banquet
Hall, Edmonton and Qu’Appelle,
8 p.m.
12—Toronto, Metropolitan Nisei Fellow
ship meeting.
14—Magrath, Alta.,. Evaks Baseball
Club’s
Baseball Booster Dance,
Magrath Assembly Hall, 9 p.m.
Everybody welcome.
14—Toronto, Nisei Girls’ Softball Club’s
Sadie Hawkins dance, at Labour
Lyceum, 8:30 p.m.
14 Hamilton, Hy-noter’s Sadie Haw
kins dance, at Gould’s Hall 242
James St. N., 8 p.m.
Hamilton, B C. Girls’ Club Christ
mas Cheer Fund dance, YWCA 8
p.m.
’
15—Chatham, Sadie Hawkins
— Dance,
Kemsley Hall, £,*
’ 2' King St. W„
2011/
oo 8:30.P-m. sharp.
Hamilton Nisei Bowling League
Mid-season Frolic, Gould’s Audi
torium, 242 James St. N.
Gay Costumes
Highlight Teg
Masquerade
To Award Prizes
For Best Costum,
A.
iu uili ON.—Dance L,Ver(,
W INNIPEG.—Extravagant cosfellow Dogpatchers are romi “ntf
tumes in the colorful fashion of
that the Hynoter-s Sadie a .?
Hollywood, highlighted the Y-Peg dance win be a cost
'
About 60 Niseis attended the
Club’s much-enjoyed Hallowe’en
Prues will be awariJe(i
a"'!social with a few making the trip
Masquerade on Friday, October
f°i’ the
best
costume
and
for
the
from Leamington.
•31, at the YWCA. Over 30 club
best jiv.
ing couple.
The social was started off with
members were present, all but five
The dance will be held
a series of games, including musi
in costume.
at 8 p.m., at the Gould’s
cal chairs, biting the apple and
Ruth Sasaki and Tak Tanabe
Hall.
This year, the boys will have
There is also an open house o, I
doughnuts,
etc.
The
feature
event
were
chosen
as
first
prize
win
the Christ Church gym from 7:30the loth at Hy-noter-s re ™
of the evening was a skit, with
ners for the girls’ and boys’ cos
10:00, while the girls will use the
meeting
piaoe.
An
-"I®
four teams of boys participating
tumes, respectively. Ruth was
Dark St. gym- two times a month
Church on Sherman St. N
S |
in imitating women making prep
dressed as Miss Arabian Nights,
from 9:00-10:30 p.m.
arations prior to “Catching the
DECEMBER
So for big doings, “out-of-town.
complete with veil; while lanky
n
*
6—Hamilton
the
“Rec”
Novelty
Train.” This consisted of put
Tak
twirled
his
baton
and
short
ers ar* invited to Hamilton 01.
V
Dance, Polish Hall, Sanford at Barting on a skirt, blouse and hat,
ton £L
the
Sadie
Hawkins
weekend.
skirt
as
Miss
Drum
Majorette
o.
KNFG Executive Meetingtaking them off, and then repeat/he “Eec” Christmas
1950. Second prize winners were
.. All persons trying- Out for
? exrBa11’ CentraI Hall, 231 James
An executive meeting was held
iu& the procedure over and over
i* the
£>t. .N.
Joanne Shigeta, in a cowgirl
Jiving contest are asked to
again.'”
on Sunday, Nov. 2, at 71 Emma
send
getup as The Lady F no m 29
their names to Raymond Morivfl I
St., and discussions were held on
Lumie Ryoji was awarded a
01
Palms, and Mac Otsu as a Prisma 67 Jackson St., Hamilton
hall accommodation for the comprize for collecting the most
at
oner in Skirts.
Ont.
’
mg socials, Issei entertainment
pumpkins, and a box of choco
ca
Turning in a superb job as MC
(tea parties, movies), rice distri
lates went to the “green” team.
cia
was
personality man George Fu
bution, and the affiliation of the
Special congratulations go to
DiWINNIPEG.—Rev. G. G. Naka kumura. Unsung heroes for the
KNBL with the KNFG.
Social Conveners, whose untiring
affair were Tak Tanabe, Ruth
86 GAMBLE AVE,
j I
yama, who has just completed an
It was
decided that
effoits made the dance a very
a Sadie
.
-—- Sasaki
and
Joanne
Shigeta
in
Toronto,
Ont.
S
|
extensive tour of the United
successful one.
Dawkms Dance was to be held
charge
of
decorations
and
food.
Automobile,
Fire.
Bur-larv
I
States, will speak at the. Banquet
on Nov 15 with the boys’ and
Life, Accident & Sickness” etc'
|
PERSONALITIES:
Hall
of
the
Knox
United
Church,
General Insurance Fhone GL 8077 = I
girls’ basketball teams acting as
Former Y-Pegs, Masako Hikida
Edmonton
and
Qu
’
Appelle,
on
co-sponsors, the proceeds of the
and Sumi Kakimasu are in train
|
---------- ---------------Wednesday, Nov. 12, at S p.m.
social going towards the purchase
ing
at
Grace
Hospital
...
Amie
His talk will be preceded by the
of basketball equipment for both
GOOD HOMES AT LOW
LA
Sato is one of the sopranos in the
showing
of
motion
pictures
taken
teams.
PRICES
VANCOUVER. — East Indians
s
CONSULT
by Rev. Nakayama while in Van Harstone Memorial Church Choir
The dance was set for Nov. 15
who are Canadian citizens will be
to t
- . . Y-Peg varsity fugitives are:
couver area.
and will be held at Kemsley Hall
given the right of voting in civic
an
scholarship winner Sab Morita,
s
Real Estate & Business Rmt
I ’
The meeting is sponsored by the
starting 8:30 sharp. Tickets will
elections if a city charter amend
JapaneSe Fatn>Mte AppJS"
j I
and
first
year
engineering;
Harry
Ta
Manitoba JCCA.
be sold by the basketball com
ment is granted by the provincial
tens
1555
DUNDAS
W
“
niguchi arid Aki Sato, second year
I LA 7570
mittee. Girls are expected to “get
tobonto, ont.’I
government, the Vancouver Sun
“kai
■ail——HU—0H, • an-»-i! - «—....____
science;
Roy
Kunimoto
and
Mac
their men” and come in either
reported last week.
ever
Otsu, second year engineering —
sknts or plaid shirts and jeans.
^Representations made by Dr. D.
But
A.S.
D- Pandia, Indian Progressive So
educ
WINNIPEG. — The Manitoba
ciety, and the Union of B. C
the
JCCA will hold a variety concert
Municipalities, to extend the fran
Agent
pear
on Saturday, December 13.
Agent
Eastern Representative
chise co East Indians, were apnews
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
The program will include vocal
Monarch Life Assurance
pioved by city council, Oct. 23.
21 Dundas Square
'
Toronto
and instrumental numbers as well
Phone AD 0076-7
No
Company
— NH—-T— n.. ---_ ---- ---- ----- - ---- .
as Japanese plays.
__
1117 St. Catharine St. W
The
kamloops
c
Montreal, p.Q.
MA. 6318
80 King St West
Toronto
4, Res. 3543 Lorne Ave., PL. 5328
tion
Res.-—2 Moutray st., Toronto
•nil—nti—_ __
.»—„„——>H—_____
reforj
the n
in conjunction with
Agent
will
TORONTO.—The general meet
Agent
New Method of Cooking
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
Japan
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
ing of the Japanese Canadian
Sets now available
Insurance Co.
59 Oxford St.
And (
Hamilton
Committee
on
Democracy
(Issei
Office: 21 Dundas Square
j
Agent: Mas Toyota
Home: 198 Albany Ave.
Phone
AD-0076-7
that
t
Division) will be held at the
i evenings hl To^S^ o°9^ f
Toronto, Ont.
Res.: 526 Manning Avenue
will
1
Chui ch of All Nations on Nov. is
TORONTO, ONT.
— M..—
I
Phone LA 9332
with
i
The formation of the
• nn——— ।
—________at 8 p.m.
on
paj
Toronto chapter of the JCCA will
be discussed.
SPECIALIZED
The
been
n
SUIT & EXTRA trousers
got a cold
and
thinkir
and ODD TROUSERS
Ayoid “talking at” people then.
outstar
from
I hats the easiest way a cold is
Fast Dependable Service
tellecti:
ENGLISH WOOLLENS
through THE NEW CANADIAN
spread, say Ottawa health authoriPICKUP alld DELIVERY
been h
ies. If another person has a cold
hi any
1< MAY SEEM kin<1 ot e.„.]Vi bM
Get out of the line of :dre.”
with th
Hands should be washed carefully
113 McCaul St., Toronto, Ont.
WA. 5342
menA
".i™
S,,"1”'"";
disappoint178
Beverley
St.
One
before meals and general persona*!
Phone: WA-9934
Toronto,
Ont.
gitls antI all tlw
““ CardS
for
thif
hygiene should be watched
to
guage.
ward off the cold menace.
asking vot
‘«’•«»» TO NEW CANADIAN isis
The e
!Un to put out a huge Christinas edition.
g
the Jap;
You can do so by
1 -y uuuy welcome
in our special issue.
been
si
perS01^ Christmas Greetings
fl
to the
one of the nicest wavs*in whL fc
^me you will be choosing
°ut hai
of Canada.
'
'1Rh to ^l eet your friends in all parti
Magrath Evaks’
f
Help Wanted
despatel
■ke^pe^T^r- ComPetent houseAn application form i- V’hy thf
ZS
'f'
0
"'
*'
Or
•
V
0ur
convenience.
*e~pei,
Japanese
preferred fn,
We hope you will fill jr iu
doetors residence. Hljhest 1’ale?
reform a
- and mail it to us today.
at the
“The
and private quarters. A?„k m
magrath assembly hall
13Id?kew‘e’ .n,orninSS. 701’ Bovd
written
leWpho"en"7?I:
din— on —
One-half inch space
cessfull
One inch space
--------------------------------- SI.00
Friday, November 14th
not so n
(The above rates
---------1.50
Rev. Nakayama
To Give Talk
In Winnipeg
BILL TAKEDA
j
William Bendena
T11
sj
11
1
Civic Franchise
For East Indians
I
To Hold Concert
On December 13
hu
T. KOBAYASHI
FRED URABE
Poter Y. Karatsu
T
OX ?49 B.
I « S. SHINOBUS
"WEAR EVER"
JCCD Isseis Hold
General Meeting
MICKEY S. SATO
K. Goto
YOU CAN ORDER
NOW
?
isittto!
A Mmrj
Harry Miyasaki
ROY MASUI
.
J
baseball booster dance
’J
xy,NGs
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
25 cents for each extra name^o^ti,01
nlarried couple. Add
IN ENGLISH AND JAPANESE LETTERs' phrasc “and family.”)
One-halt inch space
One inch sp
£“**“*««*
MAID WANTED for general
housework, family of three. Live
Win r nUtr°PdO“aL Appl>”
q•South.
i Chatham. 143
Si
Ont. William b
si
^’•>Se--SaPlk!^d
3 U SIN ESS
The New Canadian.
504 Talbot Avenue,
Winnipeg, Man.
lam enclosing the sum of (....
publish my Greetings as checked
In English ................
In Japanese ..................
In English and Japanes
'/2 inch
quality
SERVICE
THRIFT
A° SATISFIED TCUSTOAIERAOR UfEfNTEE 0F
-NO CHARGE”
_________ “UNIQUE SERVICE”
or which
below:
£to 6 Day Pick-Up and Delivery SP.rvicP
1 inch
I
I
Additional Names .
”—:—
Good >\ ages paid. Replv; Mrc
Cal^AitL K1’aft the Furrie^
Name .
Address
COUpTf
Admission 50c
BOARDING HOUSE in cle-n
de'S dor YUit11™16 fOr S"“:
Rnsholme Rd.. Torogg pnj. 22:>
Real Estate
‘OUSE FOR RAl
o
and sun room, hardwood floor^
S’ ^-r-angAe‘ Pe°PIe having for
States. *,.O00. Substantial down
Payment. Phone ME-7479 (To?on
CENTURY CLEANERS LTD.
MA. 1186.7
,
j a
o bherwood Ave
HANDLED BY ~
ROY KAMINO
|
g
I1
ii
BF
iI
attitude
Instead
thought,
d it ion h
fetish o
was moi
or perha
rather t
in the J,
which m
arati ape
tlcism o!
style an
ants, whi
large ni
freed froi
cial style,
C8sses be
pret«ntiov
becomes ।
*s nothing
SUage itse
of drastic'