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The New Canadian — February 28, 1948

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Page 1

An Independent Weekly For Canadians of Japanese Origin
ED

HE NEW CANADIAN

d
^ At

" to 1!

10c per copy

$5 per 1 year
I H:
A St

| Cables Message to Vancouver

Constitution, Budget Are
Main Issues at Conference

MacArthur Welcomes
e;
d ^Canada-Japan Trade
A

- Office

VANCOUVER, B.C.—General Douglas MacArthur in a
cabled message to the Vancouver Province, said his head
quarters will “exert its fullest energies” to developing Cana'
da-Japan trade relations “to or beyond historic proportions'”

e CM
kea-l

In a news story
story on Feb. 20, the
Vancouver
newspaper reported
how it had tried to reach General
MacArthur by Trans-Pacific teleall one onk to discover that the
general was not at the headquar­
ters io answer the call.

hi

Phone Service Restored
Telephone service between-Can­
J,w
Cis», ada and Tokyo was re-established
° 4 • • ® on Feb. 16.

General MacArthur cabled a re­
ply to the Province, however, ex­
plaining that he had been unable
to participate in- the telephone
conversation and answering in de­
tail the questions put to him by
i holfAi the newspaper.
The general denied in his messag that Japanese exports were
Ha'S?,®!
being channeled into United
^ Mates to pay tor occupation costs.
Any limitations which existed
were those imposed by negotiatingAllied and neutral nations and not
to
due to policy of the occupation
311. !
headquarters.
four

Private Trade
He also stated that the
opening of private trade between Japan and the rest of the
world places trade primarily on

tai
ers.

pane

a

to

seHer-to-buyer

than on

toll
st®

rath er
govemment-to-gov-

ernment level.

iheie is definitely no action be
tiK^l
lakeu
present to utilize
i^OPr0ceeds frjm exports to defray
SC°?tS °f ,JCCUPation,” the general
iit ®

the Vancouver paper.
All foreign exchan ge income is
be in devoted to the purchase of
Oimports To prevent disease and un­
to raise the level of the
suibma Tial Japanese industry so
it can contribute an increased
vohi in? of
commodities to the exPort channels
The
Tai called attention to

S-------------- -------------------- 1

the fact, that any shortage of de­
sired merchandise or the “tempor­
arily higher costs” of products
were due to underproduction and
the many handicaps still faced by
the Japanese industry.

WINNIPEG.—It is now possible
t,o place a telephone call to Japan,
according to the local Manitoba
Telephone System,
Charges are §12 f-or the first
three minutes and S4 for each ad­
ditional minute on weekdays, and
on Sundays, §9 for the first three
minutes and $3 for each additional
minute.
The rates are the same anywhere, in Canada.

oi Trad
Tile ; solution was
written and

t
F

'V Fred Aydon to the
‘r<t of Trade on Feb. 1.9
On a
motion by Mr. Aydon.
s
T the resolution have

primrose Club
r-R. E.C. — Primrose
’sed to granting the
Japanese in British
‘her than those who
‘ armed forces of the
ted the Vancouver
>- 21.
ition opposing the
sed Feb. 19 folby members of
of B-C.’s parlia? '^'“m on the question of
' •*anchise. Clifford Greer
eHk> took the affirmRoss and Peter Mcne=ative. Aid. Hal' b^on was chairman.

In Saanich constituency, on Van­
couver Island, a 40-year-old gro­
cer, Arthur J. R. Ash. coalition,
beat Colin Cameron, CCF. and
three other candidates. In the Car­
iboo riding. Walter Hogg. 60-yearold retired rancher, topped the
CCF nominee, Charles A. Thomas.
Private enterprise vs. public
ownership was the chief election
issue.

The standing in the J8-seat B.C.
legislature is: Coalition 35, CCF
10, Labor one, and Independents
two.

Hamilton Players Show Talent in
Original Plays by Hugo Yamamoto

Th permanent abolition of the law which prohibits
>-''■ Japanese origin from being employed on crown limber
TC. has been
uibej in a i evolution passed by the Kaslo Board

been sent to all.members of the
Associated Boards of Trade of
British Columbia and also to the
premier and the minister of
lands.
R. Harding. ‘VILA for KasUSlocan -riding, and Cap:. C. S. Leary,
or Nakusp. have been requested to
every prssure” on the legistature to have the law rescinded,
resolution declares: “This
restriction
persons
of
Japanese origin will greatl.v hamper the growth and economic
structure of the logging industry
n the interior of this province and
vili deprive approximatelp SOO
persons of their livelihood . . .”

It urged that the law be per­
manently rescinded as being
•■discriminatory and contrary to
the democratic principles of this
province and the country as a
whole.”

Eight Organizations Invited
To Send Official Delegates

\ ICT0R1A. B.C.—Chinese Cana­
dians and Hindus voted for the
first time in British Columbia’s
provincial elections when two by­
elections were held on Feb. 23.

Pleases Capacity Crowd

Kas!© Trade Board Hits
Law Against Japanese
’ersor

Chinese and Hindus
Vote for First Time
In B.C. Elections

Coalition candidates took both
seats by a decisive margin.

May Place Phone Call

HAMILTON, Ont. — “The Hen­
Pecked Husband.” a farce. and
‘■'Diamonds Are Trumps.” a mystery, the two Hugo Yamamoto
plays with Which the Hamilton
Nisei Players Club made its debut
, February 21, were favorably re­
ceived by a capacity audience in
Casa Romana Hall.
In “The Hen-Pecked Husband."
Susie Oikawa, as the domineering
Hattie, has Horatio (Hugo Yama­
moto) securely under her rhumb
until Dudley Giggles (Mark Ko­
yanagi), a rakish roommate of the
hen-pecked husband, pitying the
lowered condition -of his formerly

February 28. 1948

wolfish pal, gives him a powerful
potion. When Hattie returns to
find her spouse rebellious, she is
indignant at first but quickly de­
cides that she is not so emanci­
pated after all. and that she loves
her Horatio in his new authoritarian glory.
Edna Hayashi very ably created
the illusion of Betty Van Plump,
a gossiping society matron, while
Tosh Goto was the sleek Judith
Prinkle.

Murder Mystery
The second play, •‘Diamonds are
Trumps.” was the story of Johnny
Farrow, a reporter with a shady
past played by Chester Kariatsumari. Farrow is innocently entangled in a murder involving
some diamond
To clear himself.
he attempts to force the hand of
Glen Davis, a
nightclub
owner 'Mickey Takeda). Throwing
the audience sleuths off track is
the deliberately menacing Hoffman (Frank Idenouye). Another
suspect is the slinky torch singer.
Ann Williams (Eileen Snure). who
rolls her eyes at every male on
the s
and irritates Valerie
Miller Johnny’s girl, played by
Juby Matsuoka.

The Nisei actors were assisted
in the direction and production by
Eileen Snure and John Miller of
the local Players Club.

WINNIPEG.—What type of an organization the Nation­
al Japanese Canadian Citizens Association is going to be
will be decided when -delegates from the various provinces
meet in Winnipeg at the second national convention on
March 26.
The National JCCA. which was
J—
--------------------- —-----------------formed
the first national conorganization is adopted in the
ference in Toronto last fall is with­ draft, constitution. Local organi­
out a constitution. But now. the
zations (but not provincial chap­
provincial representatives will be
ters 1 are allowed, however, to reasked to consider for revision and
tain local autonomy for a spectapproval
a
draft
constitution
lied period of time in which it is
which has been prepared by the ■expected io become a true local
national executive committee.
chapter.
While the policies and the ge li­
The question of national bud­
eral program of the JCCA will be
get is expected to receive special attention due to the fact
(Continued on page 11)
that difficulty was experienced
by some provinces in meeting
the quota set at the Toronto
conference.

Invitations

have

been sent

to

delegates). Alberta JCCA (2 dele­
gates). Southern Alberta Joint
Committee (2 delegates). Regina
Nisei Club (one delegate). Moose
Jaw JCCA (one delegate). Ontario
JCCA (3 delegates), Quebec JCCA
(3 delegates). Manitoba is expect­
ed to have three delegtaes too. •

The national president, the national treasurer and- the exeeti­
live secretary will also attend the
conference.

Draft Constitution
The draft constitution covers
nine mimeographed pages and sets
forth the aims, the organization,
the activities, etc., of the •ICC A,
in detail.
The primary aim of the JCCA
is- given in the preamble which
reads: “This national or
lion is formed with the primary
aim to enable Japanese Canadian
organizations throughout Canada
to work together
unified
whole and undertake collective ac­
tion for the betterment of the po­
litical. social, moral and economic
welfare of Canadians of Japanese
ancestry who are desirous of liv­
ing in Canada as full-Hedged Ca­
nadian citizens, and who shall con­
scientiously discharge the duties
and responsibilties inherent in Ca­
nadian citizenship and shall thereby be in a better position to merit
the privileges thereof.”
Chapter System
A provincial chapter system ot

I

1

Two Judo Artists
Give Demonstration
In Edmonton

f

? f

EDMONTON, Alla.—Five hundre'd Edmontonians gave a tremen­
dous ovation on Feb. 13 to Yoshio
Katsuta of Raymond and Yoshio
Senda of Lethbridge, who gave
what was probably the first judo
demonstration ever to be seen in
this city.

t J, V
bl Fl ^l

hr N

s ip^;
<31

The two judo experts were in­
vited by the University of Alberta
in connection with the university’s
elimination bouts for the inter­
collegiate “Assault at Arms," a
contest of boxing, wrestling, and
fencing, to be held at Saskatoon.
Sask., in March.

Katsuta
and
Senda
were
mobbed at the end of their demonstrations by admiring students and fans, Larry Edwards,
president of the Varsity Wrestling Club, hoped that judo could
be taught at the university in
conjunction with wrestling.

bi

I

f

i>

It is fast and teaches co-ordina­
tion—something that all sports de­
mand,” .Edwards said.
The demonstrations began with
examples of various judo holds
and throws, and was climaxed bv
a genuine match between the two
judoists.
Mr.
Katsuta,
formerly
of
Ocean Falls, and who is now
teaching judo at Raymond, is in
the “yo-dan” class, while Mr.
Senda,
formerly
of
Mission
City, is a “ni-dan'.”

it

I

I

’ll

Tokyo Radio Interview Changes
Life of 19-Year-Old Street Girl

Sprinkled in between acts were
songs by Oscar Kawai, Ken Ha­
shimoto and Katie Oyama, odoris
by Nana Hashimoto. Michi Hashimcto. Keiko Kitagawa and Alice
Tabata, while Mits Shimoda
emceed the evening.

TOKYO. — The Tokyo radio
scored a sensation last year
with a novel and literal "Wo­
man in the Street” program. An
announcer interviewed 19-yearold Tokiko Nishida in a dark
underpass in the squalid heart
of Tokyo:

The players. moved with composure on the stage for a first
performance and showed prom­
ise of dramatic ability. There
was room, however, for improve­
ment in diction, especially in
the articulation of words and in
correct pronunciation.^

The girl, not knowing her answers were "ecorded, talked freely
of her promiscuous underworld
life. of the men she met. of her
1.500-yen income.
Millions heard the broadcast
It inspired newspaper and magaizne articles on the social prob-

I

3t -v *

G'> ' g
*

lems presented, Five film companies started novies on the
theme.
Many listeners
letters containim
sums
money or Bibles.
Recently, the i
published an int
with the
girl. She. too. had heard the broad­
cast, had recognized with dismay
the brittle voice so lightly discus­
sing sordid affairs.

She left her haunts in the
amusement district and got a
job as a shoe clerk. The pay is
1,500 yen a month.

^i r i*

3

Page 2

Page-10'

-Page 2
CAI

THE NEW CANADIAN
Tol Mr.Galman Avenue

Phone 501
w
none ou i jog
Winnipeg, Man.
eAxU7l^7m^
°?" miblisbed as a medium of
Pi esmon among the people ot Japanse origin in Canada
Kasey Oyama.......... .............

Ra es.

In Advance—Joo for 20 weeks, $2.50 Tor six months,

oo.UO for one year.
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.

A Memo for Ottawa
Parliament will shortly be aSk«l w revi„ two anachronls.
u Otc ers-m-council. One denies Japanese Canadians the risht to
to « i^we
^^ the °ther denies ^^ bright

We'e PaSSed dUring the war and ke-M alive through
*
SG ° special emergency powers of the government. These
- emergency powers are due to expire on March 31, and the restricZm erS r11 IaPSe tO° UnleSS they are ^“^ ^
Parlia­
ment thiough special legislation.

' «J^
.go™r"Tt
8iven
insist■Z
Br“W* ColumW« MPs to keep the evacuees
.tom the coast and the fishing industry at all costs. Lacking good
'Z!~ ^ B’C’ lu-mb^s ^e '^y maintained their potion
- thtotigh a smear campaign against Japanese Canadians.
noi'^T'! !he-Pai'llame“t Will have the final say in whether or
- I1> 7

tlons are t0 continue after March 31. the outcome
’"X^T!
f™" dea' °“ the PO8*"O“ “'" by the government
<ma its Liberal supporters.
We wish to brio g to their attention
several sound arguments
■why th e restrictions should go:

;«1mJ?*lr“7e.“,m* are fu'»lamcntally wrong. They have long
tended M1'’iH’'r'7'
to " hich they were in­
ended. Mi. H. F. Anca, a welbknown political scientist and former
.korernment advise,-, has denounced the orders as -an abuse o
constitutional powers."

2. The government has sacrificed principle to expediency in
attempting to make the dispersal of the evacuees slick by mainaining tie restrictions longer thqn warranted by the original
emergency.
even this Questionable sacrifice has no point.
1 he dispersal has been achieved, and
we cannot visualize a large.scale return to the coast
x years after the evacuation.
4
3. The Parliament was not Very happy when askeil a year a-o
‘? ‘ll)pi^e.lhe continuation of restrictions against the Japanese
1 he enthusiasm will likely be even less today. There will be more’
™ from, the liberal and Progressive-ConsBa^e Z7

-XT
year“- I °of“
' ■
the 11“'T
“"

, °
"'
the restrictions have received
a
™,™ ot number and i„ morale, by the removal of the former
affairs minister and the current trend of public opinion
in B.C.

4. As long as the federal
government maintains restrictions
against a racial minority, they
ofter indirect encouragement to the
provincial governments to do
likewise.
Alberta denies citizenship rights to
the evacuees. British
Columbia has long
w done so. but has now come to the cross roads
and must decide whether to treat her
Japanese as equals or
interior citizens.
..... ^,1Mr .""!’« lhat
federal government win maintain the»b o r^
?"* “'“ CO,UmWa
“ re«*ore citizen-j> a ™n
10 J'
lD “lat evenL 0
"i" f“d Stseu.11 a tamer embarrass,ng position of receiving a lesson in racial
equality from a long anti-Japanese province.
Canada’s treatment of Japanese Canadians has aroused some

-

SCene- The ^'^tUmn Science Monitor
d the I tme Magazine have kept their readers informed on the

.question, while Canada’s attempt to deport Japanese Canadians
mas von honorable condemnation in the Washington Post
It continued in the crucial year ahead. Canada’s racial laws
W not escape the attention of the United Nations and those coun-nes x/ho are looking ior propaganda fodder to be used against
.the western democracies.
In any event, Canada’s voice v ill sound more convincing before
rhe other nations and her conscience will be clearer, if her back
yard were in order.

'

Bill Hosokawa
The High Cost of Leeks
Rakkyo
Japanese pickled
leek which, according to unbiased
observers ought to be spelled
“reek.” It looks like the root end
of a green onion. Strangers have
been known to leave that part of
a street car occupied by persons
taking rakkyo home for the eve­
ning meal.

During the war, rakkyo was ab­
sent.
Domestic imitations some­
how didn't measure up to the
flavor of the imported product.
Now rakkyo is back, at §1.29 a
pound (Denver). This seems ex­
orbitant, even though it has come
across the world’s largest, ocean
and a couple of mountain ranges.
Rakkyo was one of the favor­
ites in childhood. Even then it
wasn’t cheap, so each little
pickled leek had to be nursed
along, It was eaten layer by
layer, each carefully skinned
until only the slender heart re­
mained. It was a sign of adult­
hood when one no longer had to
skin
his
rakkyo, but could
crunch through it in one tasty
bite.

Few people have had their per­
sonal problems settled by the
President of the United States,
but a quiet little woman living in
Philadelphia has claim to that
distinction.
She is Mrs. Fuku Kurokawa
Thurn, Japanese widow of an
American engineer, who last
ye^r faced deportation as an
enemy lien, but now, thanks to
special legislation passed by
Congress for her sole benefit
.and signed by President Tru­
man, she may remain in Ameri' ca.

wire and guards- of th^
camps from which ibex
One day in the city.
Thurn was visiting a
tended by Nisei children
suddenly -asked:
‘Way is. it Japanese
girls do not laugh?"
Mrs. Thum was astonish^
“ChUdhood is always a time f0-' F i
laughter,’-J she said, “and that is
for the Japanese children -M'
Nowhere do children have morC
beaming faces than
'" Japan. I
If a Japanese boy or
not laugh, something is w rong,! f f

^1

America Her Land Now

Children With Fear

Airs. Thum is likely to become
emotional if you discuss with her
this land of America, for it is her
land, too, now.
“My husband’s people are my
people,
she says with sincerity,
“and my honie will always be in
America.”

„ Something
was wro
again it was fear. The
childrc
were timid about their
•and afraid of their tea eh er. q
small girl in particula
is ad be.
y ordered awa
from
barbed wire fence at a relocating
camp when she had only meant J
be friendly with a guard
s^

Im?

t

-J 1

I
i

■3

Mrs, Thurn was married in
1905 .to American-born Leopold
never forgot the experience
When Mrs. Thurn explained whyi
Thurn when the latter was liv­
the Japanese children brought'roj
ing in Yokohama and employed laughter to Philadelphia
by the General Electric Co.
c
teacher was quick .to understand^!
In 1922, while on. a round-theIll use a different approach UP?
world tour, Mr. Thurn passed
- La-st week we invested in a half
she
said, “and lots of kindness’’^ la
pound Gt rakkyo. It was still good,
away' in
Switzerland.
Fifteen
It worked wonders.
'J^t an
and it brought back memories of
years later, Mrs. Thurn and her
roi
At the war’s end. Mi- ThunA?
long । ago. Pacific Citizen.
son, John Alexander, now a mech­
an
was still busy with het- volunteer
anical engineer with the Sperry
work. By that time
Gyroscope Co. in Brooklyn, came
ABOUT THE COLUMNIST __
e was a.
rs
member
of
the
to America. Two daughter wed
Bill Hosokawa is well-known to
International^
VI
Women’s Council of the Interna-fe
abroad.
' these pages. One of the top Jap­
ei
tional Institute and one of s niosi#"
anese American journalists, this
'U
“Enemy Alien” Offered Aid
indefatigable workers.
32-year-old
native
of
Seattle,
sn
Early in World War II, laws
Wash., has touched some of the
Must Leave Country
; Ar
were passed that classified Airs.
farther corners of the globe in
In
1946,
she
was
notified
by
I
A
Thurn as an enemy alien. Howhis job.as newspaperman. Right
i
den
the
U.S.
Bureau
of
I
min
igrauon
fe
ever,' she gave generously of hei
now he is Sunday section editor
: mar
and
Naturalization that she
time and money to aid this coun­
tor the Denver ((Colo.) Post,
must leave the United States. | new
try. She became an ardent volun­
leading daily iu the Mountain
Friends soon rallied to her aft
teer worker of the Community
State.
Robert
E. Moore, business mana-Q ed.
War Chest, and gave her automo­
Jean
Graduating from the University
ger of the Community Chest;
bile to that organization.
of Washington school of journal­
Clai ence E. Pickett,-executwe sec­
Through the International In­
ism in 1937, Hosokawa continued
was
retary of the American Friends
stitute, Mrs. Thurn aided in the
his work on James Sakamoto’s
often
Service Committee; Miss Marian :
readjustment of Japanese Nisei
Japanese American Courier until
the
Lantz, director of the Interna nonwho came to the Philadelphia
A ;
1939 when he 'went to Singapore
al Institute; Earl G. Harrison, ^
area from the West Coast. Many
of 01
and then later to Shanghai to
Dean of the University ot Penn- i
of the older Japanese, straight
be r
work on dailies there. He returnS-Lania Law School, and Repu'ofrom
farms
or
from
purely
Jap
­
Alter
ed to the U.S. fiye weeks before
lical Representative Hardie Scoff r ^nl
anese business houses, could
Pearl Harbor.
all backed up Mrs. Thurn. A Wl^
speak no English.
to bo
Evacuated to the Heart Mounintroduced in Congress by Rfiv-f
To
them,
Airs.
Thurn
patiently
"It
tain, Wyo.,
relocation
centre.
tentative Scott in January iWi.
to se;
interpreted
the
restrictions
under
Hosokawa edited the camp week­
which they were obliged to live, was passed through to be .-> igned * min j
ly, Heart Mountain Sentinel. He
.by the President on June 3ft
and stood as a buffer between
left the camp in* 1943 for Des
them and a new and strange Japan’s Great Opportunity ^.0 A s
Moines, Iowa, to join the copydesk
Now that she is going to round ^^ r°om
world.
staff of the Des Moines Register.
out her years in the land of de-^^bi
In 1946 he joined the Denver Post
The Fight Against Fear
mocracy, Mrs. Thum’s fondest 0 {eiW
staff. He is a weekly columnist
Hei hardest fight with them was hope is that Japan may find ? ^ Sca«e
for tlie Pacific Citizen.
against fear. Most of the Nisei similar way of life. She beliefs |M]j- Ba
He is married and has two chilcame to the East sickened with that Japan has its greatest oppoi-FHop-v <
dren, a boy of seven and a girl,
fright. They were terribly afraid tunity now to become a denw-|itj^^
about four years old.—F.
and shrank from every white per­ cratic nation, and now that Japan-HU CaUle
son they met. In some cases, Mrs.
ese women can play a major P^^j "
Thui n said, that fear was nurtured in their country’s affairs. — Thr^l^ e‘'
and heightened by the barbed Christian Science Monitor.
r : the po

Fei

The Best is None
Too Good

... is the title of’ a new book
by Ralph G. Martin, who wrote
’The Boy From Nebraska," the
hory of Ben Kuroki. To be published by Farrar,
this
month, the latest Martin book in­
cludes two pieces. “Hood River
Odyssey,” which was published
in the New Republic, and “Return
of a Hero,” another story about
Ben Kuroki.

citizeiis of Japanese origin as
Americans will Live t,o be ashamed
of dropping that atom bomb on
90.000 citizens. (.Elmore Philpott in
One victim of arthritis who has ■ The Vancouver Sun.)
spent 11 of his 42 years in bed
writes me that there are compen“ Democratic Hypocrisy”
sat ions; in all things. He writes:
The treatment of Japanese Ca*T spent 13 wonder-months in Van­
n-adians since 1941 by our so-called
couver General and made many
democratic
Government
warm friendships with nurses aud
interfurnishes an instance of injustice the shoulder
aud racial discrimination unique
Then he tells me how. after
That at least was the theme of
in Canadian history. And just now.
Pearl Harbor, the four nurses of
a
new idea m fashion shows pre­
when
the
western democratic
Japanese racial ancestry were
sented recently by the Internaworld is loudly championing her
shipped oft' to internment camps.
donal
Finishing School of San
way.,of life" in United Nations
He tells how one girl's picture apconferences, a study of this case Francisco at the famous Omar
peared in the I^ispital Nurses' An­
is simply revolting to an unpreju­ Khayyam restaurant.
nual with wording “We regret that
The models included Chinese
diced person: and it will unques­
Miss
was unable to comand
Negro American girls, the au­
tionably be singled out by clever
plete her studies.”
dience was as inter-racial an audi­
exponents of the Soviet system,
She had two more months to get
ence
as could be found anywhere.
.as an example of democratic hy­
her R.N. degree. She wept when
The girls were all tall, siini and
pocrisy.— (The Kootenaian.)
my friend thanked her for her
wasp waisted. The inter-racial
kindly care.
look, it seems, is just the good
Tnter-racial Look
Canada will live to be as
The New Look isn't just long
ole American look. (The Pacific
jashamed of, our brutal treatment of, in the skirt and narrow through
Citizen.)

What Others Say

Un
go-



Saturday, February 93. 19i?

THE CHALLENGE IS SOBER
First issue of “The Challenge."
the Ontario JCCA bulletin, made
its appearance this mouth, as a
product of the London Nisei Organization members, with assistance from the St. Thomas Nisei
Club.
The first JCCA publication of it
kind, the mimeographed magazine
contains
pages of messages
from
club
presidents,
reports
from various> Ontario prganizations and the Manitoba and Quebee chapte ; of the JCCA.
Keynote of the magazine is
sounded by Mariko Tokunaga', of
the LNO in her article, “The Challense":

in majority. are
young. We have all the facilities
and capabilities to further -and to
develop -our ideas and ideals. The
JCCA is a challenge directed at

“Are yve going to accept this
challenge or are. we going to sit
back in utter complacency now
^at> tbings( are looking a bit

more settled with us? Is it that
we have now wrapped ourselves
too closely within all the cleats
of our self-interests—our wort.
oUr friends', our homes?

“The events of the past sev­
eral years are still here witn us
and we cannot erase them. Nor
can we erase the fact that, un­
avoidably, there is a world wait
ing for our children and cu'
grandchildren. It depends or. ~=
today—now—what kinder worthey will have to face."
*

c

The. most striking point at’--'
This well-printed, compel end?'-ed publication is the absent ^
any form of lightness or per^-'
ality.
Somewhat similar to ’-'
effect often caused by the JCL"
organization itself, the maga^-almost seems to bend over h-^

ward to guarantee not to be
j3
with a smile on its face, especk5-1

not in times so portentous, or
4 the presence of words so pro'oM

very
mana
Thev’

sin
yours

Ib

1cI

Othe

loir
4O’>
th?.r
the ■

starts

a”ci nar
bd mcr
wnats

Page 3

“Batu ret ayu

Page 3

Uhomw'i-)
By Kayo

Chance is a Vagabond
Some time ago a tetter wooed
in -nith a Aancity postmark and
unfamiliaT writing, it was the fiX’
interim report from
my world-iT
eiling friend, “Chance." fom
of Toronto and now
of point
west.

thing I noticed was that, the Bea-

con vaudeville show is no more.
In its place s lands. Odeon's

By F.A.M.
bound,
me."

that’s

good

(no stage nor strip-

enough

fer

again whatta life.
Ala de a hasty exit from M.H. the

Met a few Japanese acquaints, beware! Leap Year
ances. They have their families
Sat
next morning and hightailed for
;t in.
s ne
'Me. too. i'ni heading
ueie
and seem to be doing okav
Lethbridge. We
ears, by the way, are
dull two
Le:
>e’s Jem
h or now adieu.
weeks t li e r e—w e w ork e d.
30 s
s in which a woman has
'Chance.”
Fortuneately

J
we latched onto a rood conege of proposing marger: •■How’s that?"
lou
will
surely
recall
readin
tract
i
CHANCE.
job
and amassed a mall forHonisne: I
Me:
e openly and brazenly
CHANCE. You know, ‘tal
*
about
"Chance

last
summer
^
tune
in
that
period.
t’me lCJ
twisting the man's arm
mste;
e ami so forth."
There
to be a few
'd that i$&
the
socket. A Leap Year ■ Hus journal. He passed through
The capital
Jerry; -q yeah
lo r e
ity of Alberta,
Helluva
iffs at This letter.
Winnipeg
on
the
Dst
lap
■nf
c
s divisible by four, which
Q ueer handle, huh
Edmonton, was a goodI go. We
®
responsibility .
hitch-hiking, rod-riding adventure
«ve more
us that a bachelor can
kibitzed around there a
M e shake hands
. couple
youth
. . . "ill leadi to a bad .end
trip through Canada and foreign
iys be drawn and quarof days before going to Banff.
n Japan,*eiling by yourself
• . . our Miissus Grundys will
parts. It took the young iaj a
Me: ‘Yeah, and 1 think
Ahh’ sweet memories at the
hl docs*^
chances
sourly
opine. But. I wonder.
r
months to get back to Vancouver for a lift’ll be betit
Yu emergency, meeting of the
rong.
mere mention of that wondrous
if
we
spli
To think that from the Nisei
for his first visit since evacuation What say
BUT was called
night.
name. That little tourists’ mecca
we toss? Doser walk
sSS
from
the inhibited, complex-sadand
his
letter
was
a
hitch-bv-hitch
fess BMIT
stands for “Bachelors’
in the Rockies cleaned our pockon ahead -a couple hundred
died.
f o Jhitual Protective Union.”
self-conscious mouses that
account of his travels.
The
ets out COMPLETELY but gave
Jerry: "Okay by me.’’
ch ia

—has sprung a brash young
meeting was addressed, by
Jerry and me a helluva good
We hip a coin,
I thought you’d be interested in
i
Heads. I win.
1 president, a nervous, man
kid
who
wants to spend some time
with
Jerry walks on.
the letter, and so here are parts
time in the process. The travel­
m
adventure:
: hunted eyes!
to knock about
folder scenes come to life!
of it, with his previously granted
had Dees
learning what
is planet is like:
‘•Gentlemen and fellow bache­
permission:
1 he first car I thumbed
From the terrace of the Banff
from 7
picked
just
that
thought
[
gives me a haplors. you, who are to suffer un­
Springs li-otel we gazed upon the
me up. We passed Jerry trudging
elocaunj
py sense of pride.
told agonies this year, I salute
along, thumb up and trying hard.
grand panorama of the surroundmeant p
The best laid plans of mice
you! The crisis is here! Our
J" (delicious naivete). is
mountains and rivers. Quite
My
ride
was
good
to
Moose
Jaw.
and
men
gang
aft
a-gley
.
.
defying
possibly
99 out of the 10l>
union suffered dreadful losses
an awesome spectacle.
Hopping off, I thanked the lady
That
s
a
quotation
from
one
of
rules of convention we have learnt
m 1947. What the perilous 1948
Financial embarrassment comand went for a coke. Coming out
in eel why
the poems I took when learning
will bring—only heaven and the
Horn our stern parents about how
pelled us to leave after- ten
of the snack-bar. who do I see hop
my ABCs. And I'll be damned
clerk in the Bureau of' Vital
a
“respectable” citizen should
off
a
car?
of
bliss. The westward trek to my
Aou guessed it—none
if it ain’t So I Remember me tellStatistics know.”
lead his life. But what is Respect­
destination in British1 Columbia
other than, Air. Jerry Hitch-hiker.
ersunc^ /
ing you I’d be leaving for Edability What is Convention? Just
Ai this point, the president col­
r4
ended the following night. A fort­
Hello
again.”
Proach t M
monton with a guy named Johncloaks we quivering Milquetoasts
adnes' ’?^ lapsed with a terrifying shriek
night there and my toes got itchy
Me: “Yeah, hello.”
ny?
Cripes,
I
had
my
journey
use
to guard our small vanities.
anti had to be assisted out of the
again.

Jerry: “rm dry. Let’s go for a
from
Winnipeg
to
the
aforemenC’mon. admit it now, don’t you
room. The vice-president stood up
coke . . . on me.”
And now here 1 am back to the
Tliuru ' and bravely carried on.
tioned city all planned and what
feel some envy at the freedom of
But naturally • we went
•old haunts of Powell street. Van­
Huiute ’ ’
for a
the hell happens? This pretzel
spirit that young
• Leap Year madness has alcarcoke.
couver's changed quite a’bit since
Johnny
doesn

t
show
up
at
our
ries with him? Isn’t that “don’treaay started and
is more
pro-evacuation days.
1a tion th J vicious than ever. We must be
fi rst
pre-destined place at date of degH e^a-uamn spirit, refreshing?
We
pertormed
our
coin
Interna
itual
paruure. And to think I trusted
ever mindful of our motto:
again outside Moose Jaw.
is mo- p ‘United we stand and "remain
This
that blankety-blank such-andtime I walked on.
such with 12[/2 bucks of my
J single. Divided we’re hooked!'
It was suppertime when . I hit
1 Amen!”
hard-earned
money!
Yeah, I
Swift‘Current, r knew ’cuz 1 was'
agree with the age-old saying
ea bv j i A 1 eport was given by two unBy MONICA
so
hungry my belly-button was
idercoier
agents
who
had
braved
that experience is the best
ration I
TORONTO.
Oh. my hair is getting grey. My’ back i-s all
scratching my backbone . . . What
she I , manyv dangers to bring back the
teacher.
Damn
creaky.
My les
tough
tutor.
oh I could go on and on, ad infinitum.
a small world! Who should be
■’f nens to us.
For security reasons,
though, tough to the tune of
parked in that restaurant whetWhat’s wrong? Well, it’s all because of this
|hen names shall remain conceal­
1250 pennies’
er arc
lair city’s transportation.
Let s start in the morning,
ting his appetite with a fruit cocked. From these two men it was
One hardly gets out of bed than or
mana
Anyway I left (some say ’good
has to go out into the cold air.
tail but Jerry.
Jeanied that our arch-enemy, The
Then one must wait for a street ca
Chest;
old’)
Winnipeg. The motorists
tei pushing and pulling, being pushed and pulled, one finally gets on
Me: “Sonufagun if we don’t •
Association
of
Unmarried
Ladies,
re secalong the Manitoba-Saskatchewanmeet again."
,eU;ne
°neself wed^ between an irate wonmn and a
*as planning an early spring
riends
Alberta
highways
were
exceedingci«bb
3
old
male.
The.
conductor yells a few encouraging or otherwise
Jerry:

Yeah.,
Seems
offensive. They were counting on
this part
Jarian :
ly
generous
words at us ana away we go.
of the country is lousy with
• • a hitch-hiker
the element of surprise.
lationparadise.
So
w
TIn
is when a
polite young lady wants to get out
Chances
much
so
that
-you
.
- j A ?asp 01 horror arose. Three
. and Jerrys—
[•risen,
M e all take deep breaths, get squeezed a bit while a yet polite^ young
We
thumbed
only
the
cars
of
newest
me."
.- -4 ol our staunch members had to
Pennman holds the door for her by stepping on the step.
vintage—to heck with jalopies.
Don’t ask me why but we
be revived with smelling salts.
The polite young
Lepublady
manages to wrench herself out and on goes the
la
ughed
-After a decent interval, one of the
Since I left (and everybody
heartily over that one.
Scott ■
th. rondm-ior rolls
the who|
I Wl^mTb!1S St°Od UP and attemPted
says ■good old’) Toronto—I had
ores
lorward
,vH
h
bul
ollo
lllought
,
, ,]avei].i u.s'™^
After supper we booked in a
travelled by my lonesome. But on
sagging morale bv
M "='«'U>elK find myself pulled to the door. -I doflantly say. “Tho.
Jt may be a woman's business
hotel and took in a cinema. The
the outskirts of Regina I chanced
iWi.
isn
t mj stop! a-nd immediately,
to get married as soon as possible.
next morning, we set out together.
across a. fellow hitch-hiker (hakuignea
Well, why are you standing here for then?” vehemently retorts the
“an it $ ours
buddies now.
jin). Here’s an idea of our conto keep unmarried
a» long as we can.”
the PUSherS- 1 C°Ullt S1OW,y’ ^”™* "P to ten
Jerry’s a good companion.
versation:
itv I 4 - Sigh Of reassurance filled the
din- m
1
3nt A IUUChbaS iU my faCG’ a s'-hoolbook prodAdonis - handsome features.
fella do you
a
mj
stomach,
a
very
well proportioned lady on mv toe. I mana-e
thi? lhUe- FilianD after all
broad - shoulder, athletic hips,
know if this
joes to
to
keep
alive
until
my
own
stop,
knowing not how. Then, yelling "Out”’
t Or ^ *
een revived and brought totand carries 165 pounds on his
Moose Jaw?”
I dash to the door. Somebody mutters. "This
idest b !‘e™g {0 their feet, the members
six-foot frame. Has a nice per­
younger generation with
Ale: “Jeez. I dunno. bud. 1 just
no respect for their elders . . . etc., etc
' k
f0‘ h°me’ Smilin? bravesonality
plus
a
way
with
the
fair
know it goes west."
I manage to get pushed out and propeller]
e' ts J
to the curb. I murmur a
Carn’ed a ^vised
sex. Hubba! Hubba! And here’s
Stranger:
thankful
"Deo gratias” add shudder on the

How
far
west
ya
ipo? I*
I le ofliciaI international
thought, of going hom^
something for the ladies—he’s
goin'?”
Thus I limp from the street car and out into the world on a biting
enin- si
i ^'‘Wial. "Handbook for
20 years old and unattached,
; Uehemrs-or How tQ Give the
Me: “I ain’t fussy
long
iVT^rc^^
U’ying tO C°U1,t my bleSSings aiK1 ,indin* “O”o
~
The
things
we talk about.
yiirMP"1 a Jhin for H
the car that picks ihe up is west—er Monev.”
Aeowie! Our favorite theme was
T'fa
'eW excerPts from
and
still is two beautiful women,
I ' ’he ponderous volume:
v
• Webster says: “The act of transporting- a conyoung -and attractive. 1 suggested
ve a„ce Iron, one-place to another.” The first is right, but tlm seZ
verv'ikV°id w°men who use each would have -a couple thoiis’ ’ ’ .’
get DusDed to school not “conveyed.” Thinking oveman? makeUp and always
and dollars. Je’rry insisted nothmv
experiences
I’ve my own .definition for Transportation:
6 t0 l00k fresh ^ daisies.
Hawaii’s case for adoption
cheap about him) they have
'A form of twentieth century torture. A mode of travel fitted
,
re most dangerous!”
the 49th state is presented in a
fi ft
millions apiece.
only
for those in hardened physical condition.”
13-page pictorial report in the
you enjoy the com' women but want to stay
February 9 issue of Life magazine.
SI
The going got kinda tough
a girl friend who
U f
Featured in the section comment­
around
Maple Creek—bad weath­
’ is
•■WO feet taller th
ing
on
Hawaii's
heterogeneous
yourseb
er and no cars along, the high­
/The f°llowi”S is the final list of Toronto donors
hi the National
population are pictures of Nisei
Japanese Canadian Citizens’ Association
I b ; ,-1
way. There’s always a way out,
Fund Drive.)
battering loudly
officers in the National guard.
F.A.M. The conventional style
Mr. and Mrs. S.
Mrs. M. Teramura
3.00 Y. Madokoro
University of Hawaii students,
Onizuka ____
5.00 T. Kozai
of
travel
is
via
bus
3.00
or
CP
or
ls s cross
Mrs.
H.
Sora
&
between Lena
K. Uchiniaru
2.00
and a group of Honolulu profes­
2.00 M. Yamashita
Family
. .....
CN. IBut we’re kinda unortho10.00 Y. Goryo
. ____
Ken Sugamori
and a Jackass.
3.00
2.00
Mr.
fc
Mrs.
Y.
sional
men
who
include
Chinese.
r-oii
Kenji Yamamura ..
2.00 M. Shintani
dox . . . we hopped the first
Hayashi ............
■ you’re •safe! ”
10.00 Terry Tsuji
2.00 K. Igashira
Japanese. Koreans and Hawaiians.
Mr. Mori ______
Other
2.00 Matsujiro Yamada
westbound freight. Jeez, colder’n
3.00
& Family
ints were:
Mr. fc Mrs. Kondo
4.00
2.00 M. Ishida ____ ,........ .
3.00 T. Fukumoto
of hell!
Says Life: “ 1 here are . . .
Mrs. Nishimoto
5.00
'H notices a rip.
3.00
Jo,
& Family
Mrs. E. Yonekura 2.00 Mitsuzo Shiga
6.00
coai ar
Toichi Nakao
no communities restricted to
1.00 T. Ohara &
We got into Medicine Hat about Mrs. T. Okada
goffers to mend it,
6.00 Joe Yamada
’10 i
2.09
Family ....
Miss R. Morita__
members of one race or nation­
iter. J <11 her
4.00
2.00 Masami Fukakusa..." 2.00
midnight and there’s where our
S. Takayama
Mr. T. Takenaka .... 5.00 Seitaro Nishimura
you like it
2.00
2.00
ality and no unwritten law of
s. Tsuchiya
troubles started. Eluding the yardT. Fujishige 2.00 Hiroshi Akase
1.00
prove it by making
1.00
Miike ......
Mrs. Okura ......
Dies
1.00
10.00 Mrs. B. Uyeda
gentleman’s agreements which
bulls was easy enough but the Mr.
2.00
Fujioka ...
& Mrs. Sak
1.00
Mrs. Tsune Tahara 2.00 Mr. Suzuki________
• as so°n as
prevent either whites or Oriennashi __
sonufagun
if
we
could
find
a
hotel
3.00
5.00
Ssdaichi
Morito
Starts
5.00
the
girl
L.
Suzuki
..
______

Kinzie Tanaka
2.00
cm T'
5.00 Seitaro Ohashi
tai s’ from entering any profesroom. No alternative but to pay a
2.00 Miss Agnes Suzuki,. 2.00
Terry Tanaka .
3 Possessive, tell h
5.00 Seize Ohashi
2.00
S.
Sasaki
_________
sion.
Mr. and Mrs. Tsunc5.00
Lines of social demarcavisit to the local cops. Yeah, we
Geo. Nishimura
you are already
3.00 Fred Sasaki .
hichi Matsuoka
5.00
3.00 Mr. Takahashi
= • ■ iso
tion
3.00
are
drawn
almost
entirely
spent the night in the ho-osegow.
Miss Sumi Sasaki..’.’ 2.00
10 two other
Minoru Matsuoka ' 2.00 Sab Takahashi
women
3.00 J. Samejima ______
ani have
Harold Kawasoe
on
<
2.00
S2.00
and
intellectual

Twasn

t
comfy.
me
lad,
Shinichi
Shimada
5.00 Miss June
children, but you
il
. Tom Miyashita
"=n'i mi:
Tokichi
Ohi
levels.
islands' contribuHasegawa _______
Ken Okura
'twasn’t comfy. But at that.
2.00
2.00
leaking the law a
Sr Family
h't
6.00 K. Hamawaki
Henry Ide ____ __
2.00
5.00
tion
to
the
U.S.
will
be
an
ex
­
Takaaki
Kitamura
Jerry and I v/ere fortunate; we
3.00
■ = id^y r°°n’ f” hOrMr.
fc
Mrs.
T.
Maeda
Kiyo Gbokata ____
2.00 Nihei Otsuki
5.00
fc Family ____
ample of warm tolerance and un­
George Kadota ____
5.00
5.00 Miss Penny
each had a nice cold, private
b'9amy now and
ins- •>
Phono Motors
Shosaku Ozawa ___
25.00
3.00
Fukakusa
..
derstanding almost unknown in
2.00
n= - II do it’”
cell. The latecomers (and there
Yee Oh Trading ... ' 5.00
Mitsuo Nakashima... 2.00 Messrs. Kameoka
Chunking Chop
Mr. & Mrs.
the 48 states now considering
were plenty) had to sleep on the
aren't you. girls?
15.00
Suey ------------------- 5 00
Doug Fujiwara
2.00 s. Kishi ______
1.00 ■Mrs. fc Mrs. Yoneyama
Hawaii’s bid to join them.”
Sam Yamamoto
floor in the courtroom. I say
2.00 M. Tagami ___
2.00
oo.

8

s
3s

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THE 49TH STATE

I

I 1
I

TORONTO DONORS LIST

Tadashi Muromoto_

2.00

Kinukasa ...

i

2.00

Familr ----------- 25.00
Kill Takeda _______
5.09

i

<,fAl

,4y

Page 4

Page IQ

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Page 10

Page 10

BASKETBALL DANCE
DATE CHANGED TO
THURS., MARCH 25
TORONTO BASKETBATT,

Mustangs, Bombers Ahead in

SxX^wjt^

iORONTO.—The date of the
Toronto Nisei Basketball League
Windup Dance has been changed
from
Friday,
March
26,
to
Thursday, March 25. This will
make it th
night befor,- Good
be a half

By T.F.
TORONTO.—Bombers and Mustangs, amidst Jack Hen
nil’s popping flashbulbs, came through with their fn st il v
V the T<“ Nisei basketball League opened its’
playoff series on the night of Febru­
ary 20, at the Church of All Nations.

dozen
of then
be girei away to holders t.f luckv
dance ticket numbers. The date
change was made to enable local
teams taking part in the Montreal
Intel national tourney to get start­
ed on their trip with ample time

Both victors finished with con­
So remember, everybody, the
vincing margins although they
V?
Herby Miyasaki assisted with 5
were hard-pushed all the way. Top
new
date
is
Thursday,
March
and 1 points.
thrill of the night was the fast.
25, the night before Good Fri­
Herby Miyasaki, Toki Toyama
WINNIPEG BOWLERS BANQUET—The a„
close first half of the Bombersday. Held at the Labor Lyceum,
award winners are»i>
anti. Mush Fukumoto were involved
G. Aki-Oka (High sw
dancing will be from 8 to 1, and
Aces game.
(capt..
Lonwhots).
George
Fukumura
(Lon^hots)
H

^

Se)
'
Hank
°^ok
m -an unusual occurrence when
everyone is invited—T.F.
Paul Hirano, with a fine scar
R
they were given: technical fouls
t Ladies
Ti
across his right eyelid from the
foi­ protesting too violently to
—Photo by Pat’s Phot
fibuo.
unfortunate
playing
accident
referee Chuck Oda.
tr
last week, led the Aces’ attack
and kept the team in the fight
•Ad Ot
until the vetrans began to run
BOMBERS 55 — ACES 34
Al
away with the game. Hirano’s
LETHBRIDGE,Alta,-A Picture, iWinning NW J^^
Aki
y
a
®a
IL
K.
Mitsui
ft?
su
shooting eye was “on” and he

"■ Hirano S. Idepouye 7. M. Mitsui
10!
0 Jf^™?10 51 Tuskamoto 3, Ashikawa
swished through 8 out of 10 foul
2, Wakabayashi.
shots to swell his over-all total
oAoES:.P- Hirano 18- Oda L Ouishi
~, S. Takata. 2, Matsui 2, Miyashita 2.
FehPuary U, at Shanghai Ch^eV"^ °n ^^
to 18 points. Able and depend­
-Nakamura- 2 G. Takata .2.
He
able captain Joe Akiyama led
.. Longshot
who were presented
rut
the local EME Fraternity, and the
MUSTANGS 55 — REBELS 24
the Bombers’ combined offense
with individual cups. were captain
Tsi
trophy with a 215 mark. Sabs
MUSTANGS:
Butte
High School girls lost to
with a 14-point pace, while
H. Miyasaki 1G. K. MiOzamoto,
Pans
y
yasaki
13,
R.
doi
Fukumura,
„ „

- Miyasaki 12. MakimotoSakamoto
of
Kingpins took
the Y Gagers, 27-8.
young Koch “Ken” Mitsui was
9'
Koyanagi 2, Sumi.
George ;Fukumura., Frank Kika
Go
j
.. REBELS: loi 7. Sora 5, Morita 4
home two awards, the I adies'
The Butte Junior Men's team,
sharp enough for another 10
ibllrlta 3- Maikawa 2, Nakagawa 2,’
and Happy Hirayama. After start­
Ho:
high average with 158 anti high
Fukomoto 1 Ide..
.
points.
composed mostly of Niseis, trailed
ing off the league in a cellar, spot,
Di£eHTHE
triple with 603. Captain Aki Oka
in the first half, 25-14, but.came
the. quintet staged a roaring finish
Placed, no .team will be able to beat
of Kingpins also snared two
back
fighting
in
the
second
half
to
Mustangs displayed classy pow­
drive to end up in top position in
S'1'' ' ' \Til8 0)111 me» J°st the (fine
cups,, for his .near-perfect high
jnake the final tally,.43-35.
he
M°ri f°r tllC ^ason «i
er which coupledwith their.height
the league schedule, in a fourwh
the reliable reserve was seriously insingle
mark - of 431 and high
K.
Moriyama
was
high
man
and rqach was too much-;for the
^ a £kl!rg. accident about a monthteani playoff they again came-out .
Bp
. three of 861, both:made on the
for the Butte visitors with 20
‘2S .7
C0111sl0n with another skiier'
Rebels. The handsome Rebels,
(os
on top, paced by George Fuku­
. split, ski pie.ced Mori.’s right thigli
points, followed by S. Miyashita
same night. Betty Kanna of Roll
only team to always give the pen­
^MMtion with the allage
mura’s splendid 671 and Ozamoto's
colced Hornets didn't come“ to nass
Your Owns set the ladies’ high
with 8. Other Butte Ipayers were
when the . Hornets failed to show P
nant winners a close tussle, fought
lea
624. Pro Sumida's Roll Your Owns
single mark’for- 256, which was
M. Miyashita (5), H. Moriyama
lk? everyone is scared to tackle
h^d/Pai’k-Phigged by Mush Fukuute
came within 11 points of tying the
Rpbo£ Stan4S
' The - good-looking
' (2), K. Ichino, K. Oikawa, M.
/ .also made by-Martha Ichiiwa of
mot.-6 and Kiyoshi Maikawa but
Ucl
H18 plck of the femme fans,
winners, but Sumida's final frame
Kingpins. :
Yoshida A. Hrnchiar and R.
the ^mV'sex
'5 ^oral support from
Sur
were checked too tightly by the
headpin sealed the championship
Clark,
C. Mukaido, H. Kurio
Hirano of Aces stands out uu. thin men this time and ended up
. to s
The two rolled a game on the
for Longshots.
Questionably as the fastest player hi
and R. Kawamura were on the
M or
final league night to decide the
the loop. Hirano will join Rebels nett
very much on the short end of the
Tad Tanabe of Roll Your
High School girls' lineup.
^on which should boost the --good,
star
winner,with
Mrs.
Kanna
rolling
Owns cinched the high average
lookers
considerably . . . A
MXi ‘° thClP1?OAj ^ g6niaI ^att
put
Herby Miyasaki, shooting the
a 201 game to get the cup.
Ma.sui .. . Chuck Oda is the most im­
Dai
ball like a quick boxer's jab.
pressive and efficient referee in the
George,Fukumura MC'd iM ban
league, in my opinion . . .
by Y
led the Mustang scoring with 16
Hn^'^3^ $ tile idea- of Joe Akiyama menquet which was attended by over
t"°o ^twement? He’s good for at
points. Captain Kenny Miyasaki
thirty league members and friends,
least
more seasons and right now
n a
' ' Coach B^ron
tallied 13 while brother Roy and
•loe Konishi gave the treasurer's
OKhi
wak. baj ashi is confident that his Bonih
Mucka Makimoto rung up 12 and
report -and then assisted Fukumu­
ers will successfully defend the champ­
•very
ionship and also take the Montreal tour9, respectively. Makimoto and
ra- in presenting the trophies.
tea lie
the^l have a good
Ken
Miyasaki worked
some
Planed
A ^^ ^'^ is ^Quxrec£ as
tricky plays on throw-ins from
mi pen
Eonibers t0 reacli
the side which netted 2 or 3
A spring league is to be ‘a rtea
nnais wuh - games straight over
aged
111 the first games of the 2-out-of-S semifinals
8ym’
goals.
Phv Pr°MnU3 ^On Shimizu doesn’t
early in Marell, playing Sa* : relays
lore t
P
Mnst«“g’s to sweep the series
Central,
weak sister of the
Hidy loi. who .pops np in xhe
at Central .Bowling Alleys it the
e -S 3nest£°” Mark is—how strong
shot
i
league, edged a tight 31-30 win
t*eal
1
in the coming Mon“
Bebel lineup with uncertain reguusual
time
of
6-S
p.nf.
Tea:
of official figures ret-eal tournament?
“The
oka
ij
over the favored North End
is
Johnrv
.Elmwood’s sharpshooting
lai.t\, led the losers with 7 points,
mi“ht
■Ofg beM “Khnauied',
to be made up completely tor the
goahm
o

aDe cas^Y walked
away
with
Aces
to score a minor upset.
treal
a
°

E
Wlth
thc
teaMs
to
Monhonors.
Antral
while reserves Sumi Sora and
X »SK“! Mi iB™“ ■■>•
new
setup
which
is
to
law
until
Captain Tak Hirose led his
North End rWn?^Faa runner-up with
'third J^/L Z1138 Otsn coming uu
warm weather sets in.
green shirts with 14 points, fol­

GAME RESULTS

K. Moriyama
Standout in
Butte Caging

Longshots, Individual Winners
Awarded at Big Windup Banquet

Central, 5l7er$ Take Lead in
Winnipeg Cage Playoff Semis

s ssSSS^gB5

;

ad Kondo Sets High Triple Mark
Of 897 in Hamilton 5-Pin Loop
HAMILTON. Ont.—Tad Kondo
set a new Hamilton Nisei Bowl­
ing League record by roiling an
S97 triple with 3S2 as Comets
downed Bluebirds, 3-1. recently.
Comet captain Tets Seki's 675
triple also helped the winners.

Head-pins added 4 more points
to their big lead by blanking Aces.
and are running
with the
second half race having lost only
points out of the possible 20.
Yuriko Izumi's
boosted t h c
Head-pin win. Acquisition of Hits
Sonoda seems to have been the
spark the leaders needed and so
far no team has been able to stop
them.

pro''
mat

gin.-.A
the •
Un:
gov

Sammy Sonoda's 664 highlighted Dominos' 4-0 win over
Wildcats. Sam Kondo rolled a
713 triple as his Lucky Stars
earned an easy 4 points with a
default by Silhouettes tn the ab­
sence of some players. The
once-powerhouse Sils have spi­
ralled to the cellar now.
Gyros decisioned Dynamos 3-1.
Buddy Yaguchi and George Kosu-

rhe

ion d

a

Queezed

Mot-shots
rs. Hevbv

three off the Debonair

In the previous week. Hot-shots
<ook all tour from Dominos with
Honda's 705 and Ida Uyenaka s Gib’. Head-pms were again in
the limelight as
they took 3 from
Silhouettes. Kay Kakuno bowled a
splendid 664 for rhe losers, just 3
pins short of the ladies' high mark
she set rack ill
Tad
Kondo's 696 won t wo ga m e<
for
Comets as they split with No-i.s.t.

Rebels Invade
Hamilton On
Hamilton

Out. — Basketball
invasion ot
my by a Toronto
team for
t time this year—
that'll be the
me on Saturday.
March 6. when the flashy Rebels
of the Toronto Nisei league face
the Hamilton t-ophy-Ed squad.

lowed by burly Hippo Shimoda's
9 points. The game margin was
Shimoda’s foul shot point in the
second quarter which put Central ahead 13-12. In the last two
stanzas both teams traded basket for basket to keep even
pace. Ace captain Mac Otsu
with 14 headed North End.
Elmwood started -off last to
lead the league - leader 51 Fers
in the early minutes. The students
tied it up at the end of the first
quarter. 12-12. After a bask etscanty second quarter. 517'ers Jed
11-12 at the half. In the latter half.
Elmwood s speed and combination
faltered under the steady student
pace, to give the favorites tor
the title a D’-point win.
Sam Fujii showed his basket
eye with 12 p^rnts to pace thc
winners. Captain Hiro Furuya's
/ points also helped. Nobby Shi­
mizu kept up his current hot
rate for S points to top Elmwood.
with
Johnny Yamabe
snagging only 6 points.
As the official schedule ended with
tie February 16 games. the Winnipeg
Nisei nBasketball
•-------- League wound up in
»he tollowing order:
FINAL STANDING
GP W
9 3
North End
6 5
Elmwood
12
Central
12
S

T
0
1
1

ls
is
9

“ - spur? P- t v ^C°nd round s*ootk Tahiro. who ended up
in the v
big ten played only 7
for Central before leaving .the city°

INDIVIDUAL HIGH SCORERS

J. Yamabe (Elmwood)
T. Hirose (Central)
|!
M. Otsu (North End)
f
T. Takada (NE)
S. Fujii (517ers)

1S6

'

101
90
85
83
55
49
4G

F. Yahiro (C)
H. Sugiyama (517)
H. Furuya (517)
S.

fo-EJi7'°0<1 Ck”d out Forth End
Aces
ElmwAnrrSOnal’gatheri1^ totals by four.

?£maSb9';. ^5 '■ 7 .«

KSS* —™ «“ ?
Bud nian oi the lesmA

a

5

_

(North Ena). Trank KikfTw Mtc Ot!n

mo...n Ena) picked up 19.

ly a hundred dancer
made
merry in the YWCA. JUd
no ri uni
for the M innipeg Basketball loop's

annual Cupid's Crawl on Friday.
February 13. Entertainment
provided

who

by

rendered

April Shower
and "California. Here I Come." a
la Jolson. League prexy Mush Sai­
to and Hiro Furuya shared
MCing.

the

P'i ,,«t-.
^'ii^w.

All those interested are ssked
to get in touch with George Fu­
kumura, 447
Pacific
(Phone
24 792), or Butch Hamaowa.
70 1 Flora, or the team ca: a i ns
8
of the . past league, before Sati
urday, March 6.

X

E

-vona

Foi
Cons

BOMBERS ENTRY IN
MONTREAL CASABA
TOURNEY HELD UP?

? o.

TORONTO.— (By T.F.).
possibility that two Toron?
may travel to Montreal ■
Easter weekend
Tri-city
Basketball Tournament. wa~
this week.
Mustangs. T
league winners, have been er.
1? invited and will definit
take part in the Montreal
Boston tourney.
Bombers will most HkeK nta!
the trip as the second T “r
team, although all teams na’
— hown willingness to take 23Sole handicap right now a*e h
accommodation, and transect
lion problems. Bombers sa v *n*
ns
if Montreal can help ths
places to stay in that citj
O
will be able to handle the
portation difficulties.

o

N'OC
i

C
ORI
DRI

rol

C

Page 11

Saturday. February 28, 1948

Page ID

TORONTO HOCKEY FINALS

Yeung Rovers Take Matsui Cup
By 24 Victory Over TNT Club
TORONTO.—Young Rovers defeated TNT Club for th
e Matt Matsui
up. symbolic of the Toronto Nisei Hockey League
championship on
February 22. according to press'time reports. A complete story of the
Pinal playoff game will be printed next week.

Rovers eliminated
strong second-place Saint Fran­
cis Xaviers, 3-1, on February 9
at Alexander Park in the roughest game of the year, 12 penaicies were handed out, mostly to
the Saints.
Yuki
Kameoka,
Herbie Miyasaki, an*' Mas Kawaguchi
scored
for
Rovers,
while Jim Nasu made the Saints
Young

lone tally.

high
amoto
■ladies

the
and
iCT
at
ibs
ok
es
gh
ka
yo

Jh
Jh
ic

shoved out the winless
5-3 on February 10 at
Park, with defenseman
wen Auachi performing the hat
mek iOi the teeners and Yano
also tallying two for the losers.
Other scorers were Doc Hayashi,
Aki Kuwahara, and Shig Nagasuye tor TNT and Tak Towata
ior Rockets.
,
.
In me second game of the eveung. Daniouh Cleaners removed
Homestead Restaurant from the
running 3-1 with Joe Takashima,
Lujadu Takahashi and Kaz Aoki
doing the Danforth scoring, while
GOidie Mori netted the only
homestead goal.

TNT

On February 12, at Alexander

the biggest upset came
when the unbeaten first-place
Spadina Bowling Alley squad
lost out to TNT, 2-1. The teen­
agers played a strong 'game,
leading till the last three 'min­
utes by 2-0 on goals by Carl
Uchikura arid D." Aoki, when
bums Mutt Mutsunaga managed
uo score.,one. High scorer Maw
Mori was helpless with the con­
stant check that the youngsters
put on him.
Danforth Cleaners were ousted
oy Young Rovers 1-0 on FebrunlJ 15 at the Catholic Seminary
■Ji a heart-breaking game. DanYi’tbs out played the Rovers in
verv

but found the Rover
Bob Ohashi, who starred
on-New Denver’s hockey squad
-^penetrable. Rovers just man«get. io score seven minutes be­
fore time when Herbie Miyasaki
ni a pass from Yuki Kame^•'a m a pile-up in front of the
goalmouth.

P'ii’?tH.
^'ii^W.

i. KOBAYASHI

X
8

Agent
covrJS assurance
COMPANY OF CANADA
ATso Ueaitii & Accident,
Automobile Insurance
Bo; 149
Kamloops, B.C.

i
6

: ^^^LTflTsjURANCE

CO.

Consult our EM*RepresS

Mr. Joe T. Oikawa
—-g-rgO-K 182

KAMLOOPS, B.C.

E

SEIJI HOMMA
Manufacturers Life
Insurance Co.

Flashy 22 Points
WINNIPEG.—Small, slim and
fast Sam.rujii. Third Year Sci­
ence student, garnered 22 points
to spark
Sciencemen to a

t3-37 win over the Engineers in
a recent University of Manitoba
inter-faculty basketbali tilt. Fuan under-the-basket exper
also stars for the league leader
517ers of the local Nisei loops.
Other steady players in inter­
faculty cage this year have been
Mush S-aito. Engineers, and Henry
Sugit ama. Medicine. Johnny Ya­
mabe also’stripped for Architect­
ure in. a recent game.

Vernon Basketball

WANTED: Girl who can type,
for factory work at Oakville. 26
miles from Toronto. Fare naid
Apply in writing to Mr. Benson.
-20 Shaw St., Toronto.
WANTED: Man to learn stuff­
ing of toys, in Oakville. 20 miles
from Toronto. Fare paid. Apply in
writing to Mr. Benson. 220 Shaw
St,. Toronto.

URGENTLY WANTED

STENOGRAPHER for four (4)
months. March-June inclusive. $30
per week. Qualifications: short­
hand. _ typing. stencilling, mimeo­
graphing, and general office du­
nes. Applicant with executive expeiience preferred. State qualifica­
tions and experience in letter to
^e^aDona1 JCCA, St Gerrard St.
E.. Toronto.

Eor Rent

Thunderbirds
Win 5 Straight

Total 26.

In the second tilt, the Comets
won
their fourth
victory
by
humbling the Raiders 28-12. This
game was the cleanest yet, with
only six personals being handed
out. S. Yamasaki and J. Kawa­
guchi were missing from the
Comets’ lineup, but Natsuhara’s
•one h-anded set shots sparked
them with six neat baskets.
The Raiders were minus captain George Nishihata and' sharpshooter T. Kitagawa. but Butch
Sato in his best game of the season netted 8 points.
COMETS—K. Katsuhara. 12, K. Hmiazaki 2, B. Inouye, T. Yamamoto 6, K.
Kawaguchi S. Total 28.
RAIDERS-:—B. Sato 8. K. Asai.. K.
Masuda 4^K. Isobe, S. Teraguchi. Total

r—

——-

--

I SPECIAL OFFER of

j

READER’S DIGEST;
(English Edition)
j
7 Months’ subscription for SI.00
;
For New Subscribers only. ’
j
Special Offer ends March 31. 1948 i
Subscribe now through Agent
i

H. TAMAKI
Box 19, Lorette, Man.
J

Oriental Food Products and Novelties

INLAND importing co
°da Street
h,'°r DLES~'5’lb- package
D^?ots <5O ibs.)

Kamloops, B.C.
S .So

“^S^irf/r cr’p,’T

‘nOYU, per gallon ..’’”"/

WANTED:
Girl
for
genera!
housework;
sleep
in;
private
room; bath and 7 adio: evenings
free. Good wages, HU-8625 (Toromo).

ROOM for a married couple. Can
use owner's kitchen, and u room
(on third_floor) for single person.
Apply 35< Ossington Ave.. Toron­
to. OL-4891.

FRED URABE

............
. .........
v...... ""

............................. 2.35
..................... — 1.20
................. ................ 80
—.85
$2.35, $2.75, $3.50

and many other item*

MAIL ORDER SERVICE

Rev. Kawamura
Visits Vernon
VERNON, B.C. — A capacity
crowd attended a memorial service and Ho-on-ko at the Nokai
Hall oh Feb. 15, at 2 p.m.. when
Rev. Y. Kawamura of Picture
Butte, Alta., conducted the service.

KONDO—TANAKA
GRAND FORKS. B.C.—The mar­
riage of Mr. Fujikazu Kondo, eld­
est ton of Mr. Tokuichi Kondo of
Grand Forks, to Miss Yoneko Ta­
naka. daughter of Mr. Yonekiehi
Tanaka
o of Grand Forks, was
solemnized at the local Vailed
Church on Jan. 31
Ogura officiated.
Baishakunins wer ? Mr. and Mrs.
and

Mr.

and

(Continued from page 1)
formulated by the National Coun­
cil—composed of official delegates
to the national conference and the
elected officers—the legislative
powers-will be in the hands of the
National
Executive
Committee
which is appointed by the Council
at the conference.
An annual national conference
is stipulated in the draft consti­
tution “unless otherwise decided
by the National Council.’’
The National JCCA will publish
an ofticial organ at regular inter­

Conference Agenda
The conference agenda is crowd­
ed with reports from various officers and provinces, The work on
the property losses claims
to
be reviewed as well as the ques­
tions of federal-and provincial re­
strictions.
Projects to be discussed for
the future are a national re­
settlement survey, and commun­
ity welfare projects such as
group insurance, credit unions.
labor unions, and co-operatives,
The conference is to take place
at the Marlborough Hotel in Winhipeg and
- March 26-29

MICKEY S. SATO
Agent
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Office: 21 Dundas Square
Phone AD-0076-7
Kes.: 526 Manning Avenue
TORONTO, ONT.

BILL TAKEDA

c

Mrs.

YOSHI DA—KOYANAGI
OMI TA CITY. Japan. — Th o
marriage of Miss Tsuyuko (Suki)
Koyanagi to Mr. Tsutomu (Toots)
Yoshida took place on Dec. 1-1.
194 7, in Omuia City. The couple
was well known iu Lemon Creek
ps members of the public school
staff.
They have taken up resident
in Fukuoka City.

OKADA—ISHI KAWA
RAYMOND,
Alm.—The
mariage of Miss Ayako Ishikawa,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Yoshiye
Ishikawa, to Mr. Shigeji Okada
son of Mr. and Mrs. Kiwazo
Okada, took place
the Ray­

S6 GAMBLE AVE.
Toronto, Ont.
Automobile,
Fire.
Burglary,
Life, Accident & Sickness, etc.
General Insurance Phone GL 8077

PETER Y. KARATSU
AGENT
MONARCH LIFE ASSURANCE CO.
SO King St. W., Toronto

Res:
Phone

2 Mputray Street
LLoydbrook 4869

£

T

GOOD HOMES AT LOW
PRICES

(

William Bendena
Real Estate X- Business Broker
.Japanese Patronage Appreciated

OFFICE

1555 DUNDAS W. 5
TORONTO, ONT. j

r
J

PRINTING

f

wj^q^iweb t5H

t

ALL

OF

DESCRIPTIONS
I r
I

Consult HARRY S. KONDO
201Y Beverley St.. Toronto. AD5081
j

3

! f

l®S. SHINOBU I
Agent
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
Insurance Co.
Home: 198 Albany Ave.
Toronto, Ont.

I

dy -al

t

1^1

Smart Lounge Suits
Engagements
TORONTO—Tlie engagement of
Miss Rose Tsuruko Tanaka, eldest
daughter of Mr. Tatsuya Tanaka,
to Mr. Johnny Yoshiteru Tsuji,
second son of Mr. Ryutaro Tsuji,
was announced on Feb. 14.

English WooI Ga bardin es

^

4VW
tv J?J
i

I

1

1’^ i^
UL . «4

178 Beverley St.
Toronto

-J
Mail Your Films For

Quality Work
Fast Service
Any 6-8 Exposure Roll

Developed and Printed
JURO YOSHIKAWA
GREENWOOD. B.C.—Mr. Juro
Yoshikawa passd away on Feb. 12.
I he funeral service was held at
Japanese Committee hall on Feb
IS.
.

fw
«4

HARRY
MIYASAKI

and
son,

TORONTO—Born to Mr. and
Mrs. Masaichi Shimoda, a daugh­
ter. Irene Sachiko (8 lbs. 3 ozs.).
on Feb. 2.

MW/®

1 •

— AD Shades —

I WA 5342

TORONTO—Born to Mr.
^rs: Kiyomi Kobayashi, a.
George, on Jan. 12.

MM

r ■

Phone LA 9332

Iailo?3d to Your Measure
in

Births

CONFERENCE

Eastern Represcnta11ve
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
21 Dundas Square
Toronto
Phone AD 0076-7
1117 St. Catharine St. W.
Montreal. F.Q.
MA. 6818
3543 Lorne Ave,. PL, 5328

Marriages

VERNON, B.C.
The Vernon
Nisei Basketball League swung
mond Buddhist Church on Feb.
Real Estate
into its seventh week of league
14. the Rev. S . Ikuta, officiatin
S5,000. Bungalow (full basement)
play on Feb. 21. In the first game,
Baishakunins were Mr.
and
and
9
lots
(13h
acres
cleared)
in
the
undefeated
Thunderbirds
Mrs. Masao Matsuki and MT. and
bt. Vital. Man. House is 22x32.
made it five straight by trouncing
Also chicken house 14x24. Applv Mts. Shinichi Kawade.
the Athletes 55-26. A close .check­
1615 St. Mary's Rd.. St. Vital.
YAMAMOTO—OHTA
ing.affair the score stood at 2U1S
OYAMA.
B.C.- -The St. Mary’
' $7,250. Very good buy. Duplex.
in favor of., the Thunderbirds at
Upper, tour rooms, three-piece Anglican Church of Oyama. B.C
hath,, hardwood floors throughout,
the end of the first half.-in- the
hot
water heating separate en- was the scene of a quiet wedding
second half the-Birds’ Hast break
Saturday,‘Feb. 7 at 3 p.ni., when
trance, garage. lot
Lower
kg. plays, began to click, outscor­
duplex - possession by
Haruko
June Ohta, second daugh­
iril 1.
ing the opponents, 34 to S. Terms arranged. Apply 106 West ter of Mr. and Mrs. Takezo Ohta-.
Ave. South. Hamilton. Ont.
Mits Tahara, Thunderbirds, set
united in marriage to Isamu
a new league record by netting 27
Sam
$4500 Tor - 8-room house. large
Yamamoto, eldest son* of
points;; while S-. Tahara contribu­ barn and 3 acres of land. In Tux­ Mrs.
Yasu Yamamoto. The Rev.
edo at foot of Block St. 'near
ted with 18. High for the Athletes
A. R. Lett officiated.
Winnipeg).
Can lease 6 acres
were N. Hayashi, 15; and George
A reception was held after the
cleared and 4 acres grass land in
Ikeda, 9. ' •’
addition. Suitable for market gard­ ceremony at the Oyama Com­
ening. Telephone and electricitv. munity Hal] with about 60 guests
THUNDERBIRDS —S. Tabara. 18. M.
Tahara 27, E. Minatogawa 1, T. Tan­
Apply Mr. Markell. 151 Machray
aka 8, Y. Hamakawa-1. Total-55.
present. The go-betweens were
St., Wpg. Phone 51 979.
ATHLETES —G. Ikeda 9 L Hayashi
Mr.
and Mrs. M. Bando of Vernon,
15, K. Sakakibara, Y. Ouchi. 2. S. Ouchi

P-O. Box 519
HEENwood, B.C.

K.^n
^>RO GOMa

, WANTtD: Young Man to lea
nwelet and jewellery makh;
someone interested and
m small work. Harold
Mfg. dwellers. 138 Dunda
Toronto. Phone EL. 7646.

Personal Notes
Across Canada

h

'V

j.
l1

30c

if >• T(i
1 El”
D

V4’ ’v^

CRYSTAL PHOTO
SERVICE
1500 Dundas W., Toronto, Ont.
Phone LA-6378

if '

4$

WHO?

QUALITY

SERVICE

- O CHARGE

THRIFT

. b-M.
i

guarantee of
p^T-OMER OR ABSOLUTELY
.HAKES OURS INDEED A

4C

I

“UNIQUE SERVICE”

4 to 6 Dky ~Pick-Up and Delivery Servia

CENTURY CLEANERS LTD
MA. 1186 - 7

3 Sherwood Ave.

SILK DRESSES' SCIENTIFIC ALLY
HANDLED BY

ROY KAMINO

Pl

t
F r

i:
*

Page 12

Saturday. February 28. ku

SOCIAL CALENDAR

j NEWS OF ORGANIZATIONS

■Montreal,
fellowship Sadie
- --------- , NDGY, 8:30 p.m.
HanuAou, Rec Anniversary Dance
at Casa Romana. 20 Murray St.,
8:30 p.m.
KAMLOOPS. B.C. The Kamloops JCCA is sponsoring its
6 T—Kelowna, KYJCA’s Shibai Concert
mini "Spring Froli
at Buddhist Mission.
at the Masonic Hall on Friday. March 1
Sojijy-Ed Club meeting-,
Tomoda and his oi ^stra will furnish the music for the 9 to i
YMCA.
p.m.
■Toronto
session.
Chapter JCCA general
meeting with musical program. La­
A welcome mar is out for the out-of-towner
bor Lyceum. 8 p.m.
'
Toronto. Junior YES first meeting
TORONTO.- Io cl feei. a better
at 134 Huron St.
accord among the Bussei group-.:
Hiroshi Hamaguchi, Joe Miy­
of
"
Hamilton, Intercity Basketball, ToCanada
were winners of the spot
Bebels vs. Hamilton Souhv‘s and advaut
azawa
and Kar Kobayashi will be
of
forming
;
three-chapter
—ds, church gym. King and Welling­
corn prising Montreal.
Kar Kobayashi and Yosi
Toronto and Hamilton
ton. 7:30 p.ni.
delegates to the JCCA convention
studied by a provisional
winners in the elimination
10 —Toronto. Metropolitan Nisei Fellow­
committee.
to be held in Greenwood. Feb. 2Sship meeting, Church house.
eague is ratified. : it
11—Toronto, Junior YBS Boiler Skat­
29, it was decided at the executive
1 meeting of repr
ing at Mutual Arena.
NEWS BRIEFS: Air. Han
(OL 1641) before March 7.
meeting held at the Masonic Hall
sentative: ls planned for Toronto
12 Toronto. JCCA Badminton Club An­
chi.
formerly of Taylor Lak
nual Dance, at Labour Lvceum o
on Feb. 16.
to con cut­ with the Hana Matsuri
course will commence durin
to 1.


now operating the New York
22 Montreal, Nisei Fellowship meeting.
second week of March
services, with a Buddhist ministe
ket on Victoria St. . . . Most >
Church of All Nations
I nder Lble leadership or Amy
Jrom the I’nited States invited a
29-—Knoops, JCCA’s Spring Frolic at
are closed down now and the
the Masonic Hall, 9 to 1,
Kato
and Hitoshi
Teenguest speaker for the occasion.
20—Toronto Metropolitan Nisei Fellow­
employment office is sure a bi
agers “Cupid’s Crawl” on Feb. 14
ship Group’s sleigh-ride (hay ride
place
these days
if no snow). Fantasy Farm in Don
•success attracting a large
Valley, 8-12 p.m.
Widening Activities
loops is getting to Ite Quite 29’2^~Montreal, Tri City Basketball
tuinout. Musicians or the club,
Eyen widening the scope of accentie for the evacuee new
Tournament and Dance, Gaines at
Tosh
Omoto, trumpet. E. Takah­
rities. the Toronto YBS has
Falestre Nationale,
Cherrier st.
with a number of houses bei
(east of St. Hubert.)
ashi. clarinet, and Ken Adachi,
undertaken ; t number ol projects,
built recently . . . Most of
26-29—Winnipeg. National JCCA ConWINNIPEG.—Ty Minamide was
t He
sax,
gave a. few selections during
"With the gu idance ol Rev. Tsuji
Terence, Marlborough Hotel.
property loss claims are io
elected president and Grace Tera“7 Hamilton, Rec Spring Frolic at Cen­
intermission.
and Charlie
tral Hall.213
--------James
*
heard at the county’ court
- a SundaySt. N.. 8:30
kita vice-president at the organ­
ter
p.ni.
school was ;
Bob
Kashino
and
Jean
Harada
the Commissioner moves on
inaugurated
izational meeting of the Winnipeg ' 28—-Hamilton, Easter Sunrise Service
to
w i th T YBS m em bers; conducting
YMCA, S a.iu.
were winners of the spot dance.
Vernon.
I BS held at the North Main CCF
APRIL
the classes.
Kar Kobayashi and Yosh Aura,
3—Montreal,
....
JCCY-MNAC Badminton
Hall on Feb. 22.
Windup Dance.
winners in the elimination.
In conjunction with

Toronto YBS News

Bussei Groups in Eastern Canada
May Form Three-Chapter League

Elect Minamide
President of
Winnipeg YBS

the Sunday
school. a weekly Dharma class is
held for ihe study of intrinsic
principles of Buddhism. A Bud­
dhist choir is also contemplated.
Lnder the leadership of
Kawasaki, a Junior YBS is being
organized lor the teen-age Busseis. Its first meeting will
2 at the church, .134 Huron
on the evening of March 7.
Phi's will be a
gathering
with the showi;
a timely
sports film. Ain interested person between the iges of 1-1 and
19 are invited.

Roller Skating
To mark the' incept ion of the
Junior Yl’S
ihe management of
the Mutual Arena has granted ;i
special club rate for roller skating
on Thursday, March Tl. Free do
kets. which may be secured from
TYBS members, will qualify the
ticket holder tor a 25c admis-sioii
charge at (he door. A private
room is available for dancing.
A

First-Aid Class
six weeks’ course in first-aid

in co-operation with the St.
Ambulance
Assoeiat ion.
T h e
course is open to any person ovetthe age of 17 and will be held

a

The only o b 1 i at tendance and
intended u > enattendance. In-

one-dollar

teiested persons
1 larry Terakawa

Others elected to rhe executive

Chairman. Tai
recording
secretary, May Watanabe; corres­
ponding secretary. Elsie Hinatsu;
Leasurer, Barbara Sakamoto: au­
(Hors. Kaz Sawada and Saburo
Nishimura; social conveners. Amv
Sawada and Miyoko Sakiyama';

sports end recreation. Bob Ito and
Hank Gzamoto: dramatic. Terry
Sawa; educational. Marge
shima craft works, Tomiko

Musical Program,
Films, Arranged
For JCCA Meeting
1 ORON 1'0. — The delegates to
the provincial conference at. Lon­
don will give their report to the
first general meeting of the To­
ronto Chapter JCCA to be held on
Sunday March 7, S p.m. at the
Labour Lyceum.

from the business
ton. an ent e rta i n i ng progra m
asked to become honorary mem­
bers of the executive
Ol’S will be Mataichiro Doi and
Vnosuke Hamade.

Buddhist Church
Organized
In Kamloops
KAMLOOPS. B.C. —- The
loops Bukkyo-kai was forme
result of a general meeting of
Buddhists held at the L.P.P. Hall
on Feb. 15.
Mr. H. Tanabe outlined the need
for a Buddhist church, while Mr.
1. Hiiowatari acted as chairman.
following

executive was
and nominal director. Heigoro Tana
man. I'so Hi rowatari:

contact

ty-ama.

Anniversary Dance
THE CASA ROMANA
0 MURRAY ST.

Bob Kashino and Jean Harada

been arranged. Two short films
one of which is Frank

-House 1 Live In," will be shown.

In addition, there will be a musi­
cal program with Ritsu Kameda.
Sachi Kagetsu. Chuck Uyeno and
many other talented Niseis partici pa ting.

Calgary Niseis

Alberta JCCA
CALGARY Alta.
The Nisei
Organization in Calgary voted to
become affiliated with the Alberta Chapter of the JCCA. following
meeting at
Paul’s
Church where George Tanaka,
national •KCA executive secretary. wa

The meeting, held on Feb. Ik.
was attended chiefly by Niseis.

Mr. Tanaka spoke in detail of
the work beim done by the JCCA.
Mr.
Hi rusk
Kuwahara
was
chairma n^

Following tl

i
meeting
s gathered at the home of
Mr. S. Kuwahara and discussed
the JCCA problems with the exe-

general agreement that the Isseis
should support the Nisei organiza­
tion.

W., HAMILTON

On Saturday, March 6

Card of i hanks
girls

rhank
friend
.11 tlo

Majority Think
JCCA Organization
Is Desirable

pressed the opinion th-at the JCCA
was a desirable organization at
the present time.

’ expt ess our sincere
to
all
our
relatives,
and neighbours for their
s of ympathy and beauti■ings tendered during

EDMONTON. Alta.-A banquet
in honor of Mr. George Tanaka,
executive secretary of the nation­
al JCCA. was held at the New
Pacific Chop Suey Parlour. Ed­
monton. on Feb. 17. Both Isseis
and Niseis were present.
Mr. Tanaka spoke briefly and
effectively on the aims of the Na­
tional JCCA and some of the work
it had accomplished.

He stressed the importance of
working together as a unified body
in meeting of the problems which
still confronted us and urged the
Edmontonians to do th&~ share
for t
National
Fund
Drive.
The following night, Mr. Tana। conferred with executive memrs of the Edmonton New
ins Fellowship Club and other
interested persons at a dinner
the Lingnan Chop Suey—Y.J.

it betoved husband

Start Second Drive
For Japan Relief
In Alberta
COALDALE, Alta. — As in
past year. Buddhist priestChristian ministers will woik
gether in the Japan Relief Ci
mittee for Alberta.
At a general meeting at ( cal­
dale Buddhist Church on Ja
a new executive was electee
plans formed for the second
cial drive for Japan relief
April 14 as; deadline.

Members ■of the executiv
Rev. Ikuta. Rev. Kawamura,
Kabayama, and Rev. Naka)
as special executive mem
chairman, Mr.
j
Saruwatari:
chairman. Mr. Aoki: treas
Mr. Fujita; secretary. Mr.
matsu: auditors, Mr. Miy;
and Mr. Sato.

RAYMOND. Alta. — The G
mond Buddhist church, whb 1.
damaged by fire on Jan. 2 •
been completely repaired ’
ameer workers.

ANNUAL dance
on Friday, March 12, 1948
on March 7, at S p.m.
ANDREW, TORONTO

Films

Time: 9.00 -1.00
j

<

1
t
t
s
t

Pi
oi
tn
he
wi
boi
cot
a c
am
uni
if 1
for:
ua t
pay

13
wa ,
th a I
com

t

Lah

T.
the .
Kani

Complete Repairs
On Buddhist Church

PRESENTS

Saturday. March 6. from 6 p.m.
Sunday. March 7. from 5 p.m.

r

District committee membei
be the same persons as to

na .oiins Japanese Canadian Association

OKANAGAN BUDDHIST MISSION

f

Sports Club Formed
In Kamloops

HAMILTON. Ont.—A panel dismission on the aims and policies
of the Japanese Canadian Citizens
An entry fee of $1 and monthlr
Association was held by
fee of 50 cents was approved. The
phy-Bd Club on Feb. 22. Taking
following were elected to the ex­
part were Jack Oki of the
ecutive:
al JCCA, Geri Nikaid-a of the ToChaiiman. Joe Oikawa: viceronto JCCA, and Roy Ito and Mar­
chairman,
Harry Tanaka: secre­
garet Inouye of the Sophy-Ed
tary. Slim Shoyama; and Treasur­
Club. Chairman for the discussion
er,
Shigeo Kamachi.
was Bob Oikawa.
The Sports Club is expected to
Following the discussion, a vote
sponsor a dance at an early dai
was taken from the well-attended
—F.M.
meeting and the majority ex­

Edmonton Group
Holds Banquet

a

KAMLOOPS, B.C.—Ovr 5(1 Nisei
sports enthusiasts gathered at the
P.P. Hall on Feb. 14, and agreed
unanimously to form a club for
the purpose of enbbu raging and
arranging sports activities.

Ju by Matsuoka
named
the third Sophy-Ed delegate to the
Loudon conference.
The others
are Roy Ito and Katie Oyama.

pro
ma.
T
CC
tin
he
_n
ov

Kamloops JCCA Sponsors Frolic
Choose Delegates For Conferen

Admission: 75c

o>