Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Weekly For Canadians of Japanese Origin
10c PER COPY
Wednesday. July 14. 1948
EXTEND. C.AT.E. TO JAPAN
i Relief Official Asks Assistance
Of Japanese Canadians in Alberta
■
LETHBRIDGE, Alta.—Japanese Canadians in Western
J Canada are being asked to help in the greatly needed Japan
j relief by Breen Melvin, Canadian representative of the Co
operative for American Remittances to Europe.
Answers Call
VALUATION WORK BEGUN
Ontario JCCA to Form Committee
For Purpose of Aiding Claimants
TORONTO.—A special committee on property claims
will be organized by the Ontario JCCA for the purpose of
providing systematic and individual assistance to the claim
ants when the hearings are resumed here in November.
Mr. Breen, who is touring the
Jack Gilbert of the law firm,
west, spent a few days in Leth
of Cameron, Weldon and Brebridge last week. He said that
win,
will work in co-operation
plans are being made to extend
C.A.R.E. services to Japan on
with the JCCA committee, and
the request of occupational
will interview the claimants
By K.D.
forces there.
prior to the hearings. These
C.A.R.E. is an entirely non
preliminary interviews will be
In an unusually informative profit organization thaf takes
held in the evenings, beginning
book “Newspaper
Reporting charge of sending parcels over
Today,'’ author Charles Clay seas, and which considerably re
in October.
VANCOUVER, B.C.— Prelim
ton, a newspaperman, discusses duces the cost of articles and
inary report of the new Fraser
George
Tanaka,
executive
sec
.w
what readers want to read most handling. It has sent over $1.retary of the National JCCA, Valley Rehabilitation Commis
500,000 worth of parcels over
in a newspaper.
explained
to claimants at a sion shows that 1973 homes in
BECOMES MISSIONARY
seas since its formation in 1945.
meeting
on
July 10 that work the Fraser Valley suffered flood
Clayton comes to the conclu
Persons wishing to send over Jeaunne Xwaasa, 35, of Ray had been started by a group of damage, reported the Vancou
sion that there are four essen seas parcels, Mr. Melvin exver Sun on July 5.
tial considerations in determin plained, send $10 to C.A.R.E. mond, Alta., recently left for valuators in British Columbia
The
division
of damaged
in
preparation
for
the
second
ing what is news.
specifying to whom they wish Salt Lake City, Utah, where he round of hearings which are to homes, by areas, according to
the unconfirmed tabulation, is
1. It must be new and timely, the parcel to reach, and C.A.- will train to become a mission be held in Vancouver.
R.E. sees that a suitable parcel ary for the Latter Day Saints
The Issei Property Committee as follows: Popkum-Lytton. 30;
2. It
includes
everything is sent. There are many types church. He will later proceed will be dissolved upon the for Chilliwack, 340; Matsqui, 355;
of parcels specialized to meet to Hawaii and Japan to preach mation of the JCCA’s special Langley, 130; Surrey, 15; Agas
which does interest people.
the various needs.
Christianity.
property
claims
committee, siz, 375; Harrison Hot Springs,
3. The news value depends
which is expected to arrange 125; Mission (from Slave River
upon the number of persons it
for Nisei interpreters for the to Harrison River, 500; Maple
interests, and the extent of their
preliminary interviews with Mr. Ridge, 48; Pitt Meadows. 2;
interest.
Coquitlam, 3; Port Coquitlam,
Gilbert.
5; Burnaby, 45.
Au important point stressed
by the author is that “home in
terest” is stronger than essen
WINNIPEG PIANIST
HONOLULU. — Through the j Senaga, 26, of Shimajira.
tially bigger happenings in
Undergraduate
students
are
SAN FRANCISCO.— Yoshiko APPOINTED TO STAFF
some distant spot. An earth Okinawa Relief & Rehabilita
Tashitsune
Hayama,
25,
Itoman
Kawabe who went to Japan in OF GIRLS’ SCHOOL
quake in South America is oi tion Foundation, Inc., of Hono
district;
Ryokan
Igei,
21,
of
1940 and was stranded there by
WINNIPEG.—Alice Nakauchi,
far less- concern to us than i lulu, five students from Okin
our house burned down. For awa will soon have the chance Ginoza-chiku, and Fumio Naga the war will arrive in San Fran A.T.C.M., A.M.M., L.R.S,M„ has
this reason, newspapers usually to study in mainland American mine, 21, of Ishikawa. Each has cisco on August 18 on the Gen been appointed to a position on
served as an interpreter and eral Gordon, according to noti the music staff of the Riverbend
play up local news on their schools.
language
instructor for the oc fication received by Ichiro Ka School for Girls in Winnipeg.
front pages.
The Okinawa Foundation is cupation forces.
* * *
taoka, proprietor of Aki Hotel, She will begin teaching when
providing scholarships and the
from
the Canadian Liaison Mis the school reopens in Septem
The five students were select
The amazing increase in popu Far East Command headquar
sion
in
Tokyo.
ber.
larity of the Vancouver Sun is ters in Tokyo is arranging for ed by a committee of represen
Miss
Kawabe
will
proceed
to
Miss Nakauchi, a pupil of
due to an editorial policy dir their entry into the United tatives of Okinawa Civilian
her
parents
’
home
at
105
Craw
Eva
Clare, is expected to con
Administration and the Military
ected squarely^- at reader inter
States.
ford
St.,
Toronto.
tinue
with her piano studies.
government.
est. The success of Toronto
They
will
pass
through
Hono
Star too. is in no small measure
due to sticking up for the read lulu soon but their date of ar
ers. or for the majority of them rival is not definite at this time.
They will then continue to their
at least.
On the other hand, we have respective colleges and univer
newspapers like the Winnipeg sities.
Two of the five will be gradu
Lse Tress which gets its solate
students. They are Bunichi
^ity from the editorial page,
Shimabukuro,
40, of Maehara
PLEADS NOT GUILTY
The
war
over,
Kawakita
By STAFF WRITER
this is somewhat unusual, but
district,
Okinawa,
and
Hiroshi
Kawakita
’
s
lawyer,
Morris
die fact may be partially ac
turned
up
before
the
U.S.
Con
LOS ANGELES, j Calix.—In a
Lavine,
had
mapped
out
two
counted for by the greater in
Los Angeles courtroom, Tomoya
sul at Yokohama. He blandly
terest of farmers in more seri
Kawakita is on trial for trea lines of defence: (1) that the asked for and received a pas>
ous discussions. A recent Galson. If convicted the minimum accounts of beatings were exag
port to take him back to th®
kp Poll indicated that more
sentence is five years’ imprison gerated and Kawakita was not
guilty
of
brutalities,
and
(2)
United
States.
warmers knew about the Han
ment and $10,000 fine:, the
that
Kawakita
had
“
elected
”
to
sard (a record of the debates in
maximum sentence is death.
A year and a half later, Will*
become a Japanese national in
ne House of Commons) than
iam
L. Bruce, a native of Cali
Neatly attired in a double- 1943 and he thus owed his alSAN FRANCISCO. — Etsuko
Cky dwellers.
fornia
’ and former prisoner at
What are people interested in Arikawa, 22, who is being per breasted suit, wearing spec legiance to Japan.
Oeyama
camp, recognized Kaw«
Lavine was also trying to
t^ln°’ , Clayton points out mitted to return to the United tacles, his hands handcuffed be
akita
on
a Los Angeles street.
show that the accused was only
l“at reader interest is always States under a Federal court or fore him, the 27-year-old Cali
onanging. There has been a der permitting her appearance fornia-born Nisei sits gloomily a “small, unimportant little em
The California press eagerlyployee” of the civilian firm, Nip
followed the Kawakita cas§
grooving interest lately in sport at hearings on her attempt to in the prisoner’s dock.
Metallurgical
Industries
In the jury of three men and pon
Ux 50n?ics’ Hollywood and re-establish her American citi
which threatened to tarnish thfe
Co.,
which
operated
the
nickel
nine
women
assigned
to
pass
brilliant record of the Japanese
"X? 01 scientific interest, while zenship, arrived in San Fran
mine and smelter at Oeyama.
xouune^ crime, the financial and cisco on June 30 on the General judgment on Kawakita is anoth
Americans in World War BL
and where American prisoners Editor Tajiri of the Pacifi c Citier
Nisei,
stenographer
Susan
*•05 editorial pages are on a de- Gordon from Japan.
Miss Arikawa will go to Los Nagumo, who had previously worked.
zen added an acute observation
The accused had been drafted j which
babl
sworn that neither - her visit to
So
came pretty
of the elements which Angeles where her case has
for
the
work
>n
p
ace
of
m.li-!
close
to
the
t L.
Japan
nor
her
evacuation
exinter
oeen
filed
in
Federal
coui
i.
readers most are listed
Her return to America was oeriences would be allowed to tary service, ana the govern
author in order of relament of Japan didn’t even know
permitted under a provision in sway her judgment.
tcportance.
A THIN EDGE
Somewhere in the courtroom, Tomoya Kawakita existed,” he
se are:
:he Nationality Act _ of 19^0
argued.
Said Tajiri in an article for
'elf preservation and per which permits American-born sits Mrs. Tose Kawakita, the de
TO LEARN JAPANESE
]
his weekly: “There is some
persons who have forfeited their fendant’s bewildered mother. |
appeal.
Back in
1939,
Kawakita’s; times only a thin edge of cir
citizenship to come to the Unfl who had been swept unwitting- I
Gossip.
ed States to testify in trials to lv into the drama which was; parents had sent their 18-year-1 cumstances and opportunism be
fet off one day in a Los Angeles * old boy to Japan where he j tween loyalty and treason. If
Sex and romance.
establish their citizen rights.
reet when a former prisoner-1 might learn the Japanese lan-! Tomoya Kawakita had not been
_• ama and susnense.
Miss Arikawa reportedly lost
'-war
recognized Kawakita as j guage and thus qualify for the! sent to Japan at the age of 18.
ier American citizenship by
foreman
at the Oeyama prison i few white-collar jobs open to; it is quite possible that he would
^oveltv.
voting in the 1946 Japanese
Niseis in America. But soon af- ' have served honorably in the
camp in japan.
Smence.
elections.
The trial is now in its fourth ter, Kawakita was swept into armed forces of United States.
^uman interest and
attorney the vortex of Japan’s war activi- | Eighteen is an impressionable
t
week.
Prosecuting
promised ties. As an employee of an es- • age and Tomoya Kawakita ar
Xr’° back to the home RETURNS WITH
45 witnesses to swear- to the ac- i sential industry, he had escaped ’ rived in Japan at the time war
S Ye can now understand ITALIAN BRIDE
cused’s brutalities, and many I military conscription, but as i makers of Nippon were flexing
^sh interest of New CanaMost a foreman of a prisoners-of-war j
1-3 marry have already testified.
triers in the personal
camp. J
had allegedly shown'
told
of
beatings
of
the
weakened
ecently re- j
oiumn. It combines eleAmerican prisoners, and in one sadistic tendencies, a streak I But it will be up to the jury
ted above in 1, 3 4. 6 turned home from Trieste. Italy)
a prisoner had alleged! । that was not uncommon in Ja- ’ in the final analysis, to determ
a.- m the case of mar- i' with his Italian war brine, tne i case
! pan’s v/ar-pitched fanaticism.
I ine Kawakita’s guilt.
former Edda Rizza of Rome.
j med
Flood Damages
1900 Homes
In Fraser Valley
ABOUT TOWN
Five Okinawa Students Selected
To Study in American Universities Yoshiko Kawabe
Leaving Japan Soon
Tomoya Kawakita Faces Treason Trial in Los Angeles
Charged with Brutal Treatment of Prisoners of War
Lost Citizenship
By Voting, Plans
Appeal to Court
An Independent Weekly For Canadians of Japanese Origin
10c PER COPY
Wednesday. July 14. 1948
EXTEND. C.AT.E. TO JAPAN
i Relief Official Asks Assistance
Of Japanese Canadians in Alberta
■
LETHBRIDGE, Alta.—Japanese Canadians in Western
J Canada are being asked to help in the greatly needed Japan
j relief by Breen Melvin, Canadian representative of the Co
operative for American Remittances to Europe.
Answers Call
VALUATION WORK BEGUN
Ontario JCCA to Form Committee
For Purpose of Aiding Claimants
TORONTO.—A special committee on property claims
will be organized by the Ontario JCCA for the purpose of
providing systematic and individual assistance to the claim
ants when the hearings are resumed here in November.
Mr. Breen, who is touring the
Jack Gilbert of the law firm,
west, spent a few days in Leth
of Cameron, Weldon and Brebridge last week. He said that
win,
will work in co-operation
plans are being made to extend
C.A.R.E. services to Japan on
with the JCCA committee, and
the request of occupational
will interview the claimants
By K.D.
forces there.
prior to the hearings. These
C.A.R.E. is an entirely non
preliminary interviews will be
In an unusually informative profit organization thaf takes
held in the evenings, beginning
book “Newspaper
Reporting charge of sending parcels over
Today,'’ author Charles Clay seas, and which considerably re
in October.
VANCOUVER, B.C.— Prelim
ton, a newspaperman, discusses duces the cost of articles and
inary report of the new Fraser
George
Tanaka,
executive
sec
.w
what readers want to read most handling. It has sent over $1.retary of the National JCCA, Valley Rehabilitation Commis
500,000 worth of parcels over
in a newspaper.
explained
to claimants at a sion shows that 1973 homes in
BECOMES MISSIONARY
seas since its formation in 1945.
meeting
on
July 10 that work the Fraser Valley suffered flood
Clayton comes to the conclu
Persons wishing to send over Jeaunne Xwaasa, 35, of Ray had been started by a group of damage, reported the Vancou
sion that there are four essen seas parcels, Mr. Melvin exver Sun on July 5.
tial considerations in determin plained, send $10 to C.A.R.E. mond, Alta., recently left for valuators in British Columbia
The
division
of damaged
in
preparation
for
the
second
ing what is news.
specifying to whom they wish Salt Lake City, Utah, where he round of hearings which are to homes, by areas, according to
the unconfirmed tabulation, is
1. It must be new and timely, the parcel to reach, and C.A.- will train to become a mission be held in Vancouver.
R.E. sees that a suitable parcel ary for the Latter Day Saints
The Issei Property Committee as follows: Popkum-Lytton. 30;
2. It
includes
everything is sent. There are many types church. He will later proceed will be dissolved upon the for Chilliwack, 340; Matsqui, 355;
of parcels specialized to meet to Hawaii and Japan to preach mation of the JCCA’s special Langley, 130; Surrey, 15; Agas
which does interest people.
the various needs.
Christianity.
property
claims
committee, siz, 375; Harrison Hot Springs,
3. The news value depends
which is expected to arrange 125; Mission (from Slave River
upon the number of persons it
for Nisei interpreters for the to Harrison River, 500; Maple
interests, and the extent of their
preliminary interviews with Mr. Ridge, 48; Pitt Meadows. 2;
interest.
Coquitlam, 3; Port Coquitlam,
Gilbert.
5; Burnaby, 45.
Au important point stressed
by the author is that “home in
terest” is stronger than essen
WINNIPEG PIANIST
HONOLULU. — Through the j Senaga, 26, of Shimajira.
tially bigger happenings in
Undergraduate
students
are
SAN FRANCISCO.— Yoshiko APPOINTED TO STAFF
some distant spot. An earth Okinawa Relief & Rehabilita
Tashitsune
Hayama,
25,
Itoman
Kawabe who went to Japan in OF GIRLS’ SCHOOL
quake in South America is oi tion Foundation, Inc., of Hono
district;
Ryokan
Igei,
21,
of
1940 and was stranded there by
WINNIPEG.—Alice Nakauchi,
far less- concern to us than i lulu, five students from Okin
our house burned down. For awa will soon have the chance Ginoza-chiku, and Fumio Naga the war will arrive in San Fran A.T.C.M., A.M.M., L.R.S,M„ has
this reason, newspapers usually to study in mainland American mine, 21, of Ishikawa. Each has cisco on August 18 on the Gen been appointed to a position on
served as an interpreter and eral Gordon, according to noti the music staff of the Riverbend
play up local news on their schools.
language
instructor for the oc fication received by Ichiro Ka School for Girls in Winnipeg.
front pages.
The Okinawa Foundation is cupation forces.
* * *
taoka, proprietor of Aki Hotel, She will begin teaching when
providing scholarships and the
from
the Canadian Liaison Mis the school reopens in Septem
The five students were select
The amazing increase in popu Far East Command headquar
sion
in
Tokyo.
ber.
larity of the Vancouver Sun is ters in Tokyo is arranging for ed by a committee of represen
Miss
Kawabe
will
proceed
to
Miss Nakauchi, a pupil of
due to an editorial policy dir their entry into the United tatives of Okinawa Civilian
her
parents
’
home
at
105
Craw
Eva
Clare, is expected to con
Administration and the Military
ected squarely^- at reader inter
States.
ford
St.,
Toronto.
tinue
with her piano studies.
government.
est. The success of Toronto
They
will
pass
through
Hono
Star too. is in no small measure
due to sticking up for the read lulu soon but their date of ar
ers. or for the majority of them rival is not definite at this time.
They will then continue to their
at least.
On the other hand, we have respective colleges and univer
newspapers like the Winnipeg sities.
Two of the five will be gradu
Lse Tress which gets its solate
students. They are Bunichi
^ity from the editorial page,
Shimabukuro,
40, of Maehara
PLEADS NOT GUILTY
The
war
over,
Kawakita
By STAFF WRITER
this is somewhat unusual, but
district,
Okinawa,
and
Hiroshi
Kawakita
’
s
lawyer,
Morris
die fact may be partially ac
turned
up
before
the
U.S.
Con
LOS ANGELES, j Calix.—In a
Lavine,
had
mapped
out
two
counted for by the greater in
Los Angeles courtroom, Tomoya
sul at Yokohama. He blandly
terest of farmers in more seri
Kawakita is on trial for trea lines of defence: (1) that the asked for and received a pas>
ous discussions. A recent Galson. If convicted the minimum accounts of beatings were exag
port to take him back to th®
kp Poll indicated that more
sentence is five years’ imprison gerated and Kawakita was not
guilty
of
brutalities,
and
(2)
United
States.
warmers knew about the Han
ment and $10,000 fine:, the
that
Kawakita
had
“
elected
”
to
sard (a record of the debates in
maximum sentence is death.
A year and a half later, Will*
become a Japanese national in
ne House of Commons) than
iam
L. Bruce, a native of Cali
Neatly attired in a double- 1943 and he thus owed his alSAN FRANCISCO. — Etsuko
Cky dwellers.
fornia
’ and former prisoner at
What are people interested in Arikawa, 22, who is being per breasted suit, wearing spec legiance to Japan.
Oeyama
camp, recognized Kaw«
Lavine was also trying to
t^ln°’ , Clayton points out mitted to return to the United tacles, his hands handcuffed be
akita
on
a Los Angeles street.
show that the accused was only
l“at reader interest is always States under a Federal court or fore him, the 27-year-old Cali
onanging. There has been a der permitting her appearance fornia-born Nisei sits gloomily a “small, unimportant little em
The California press eagerlyployee” of the civilian firm, Nip
followed the Kawakita cas§
grooving interest lately in sport at hearings on her attempt to in the prisoner’s dock.
Metallurgical
Industries
In the jury of three men and pon
Ux 50n?ics’ Hollywood and re-establish her American citi
which threatened to tarnish thfe
Co.,
which
operated
the
nickel
nine
women
assigned
to
pass
brilliant record of the Japanese
"X? 01 scientific interest, while zenship, arrived in San Fran
mine and smelter at Oeyama.
xouune^ crime, the financial and cisco on June 30 on the General judgment on Kawakita is anoth
Americans in World War BL
and where American prisoners Editor Tajiri of the Pacifi c Citier
Nisei,
stenographer
Susan
*•05 editorial pages are on a de- Gordon from Japan.
Miss Arikawa will go to Los Nagumo, who had previously worked.
zen added an acute observation
The accused had been drafted j which
babl
sworn that neither - her visit to
So
came pretty
of the elements which Angeles where her case has
for
the
work
>n
p
ace
of
m.li-!
close
to
the
t L.
Japan
nor
her
evacuation
exinter
oeen
filed
in
Federal
coui
i.
readers most are listed
Her return to America was oeriences would be allowed to tary service, ana the govern
author in order of relament of Japan didn’t even know
permitted under a provision in sway her judgment.
tcportance.
A THIN EDGE
Somewhere in the courtroom, Tomoya Kawakita existed,” he
se are:
:he Nationality Act _ of 19^0
argued.
Said Tajiri in an article for
'elf preservation and per which permits American-born sits Mrs. Tose Kawakita, the de
TO LEARN JAPANESE
]
his weekly: “There is some
persons who have forfeited their fendant’s bewildered mother. |
appeal.
Back in
1939,
Kawakita’s; times only a thin edge of cir
citizenship to come to the Unfl who had been swept unwitting- I
Gossip.
ed States to testify in trials to lv into the drama which was; parents had sent their 18-year-1 cumstances and opportunism be
fet off one day in a Los Angeles * old boy to Japan where he j tween loyalty and treason. If
Sex and romance.
establish their citizen rights.
reet when a former prisoner-1 might learn the Japanese lan-! Tomoya Kawakita had not been
_• ama and susnense.
Miss Arikawa reportedly lost
'-war
recognized Kawakita as j guage and thus qualify for the! sent to Japan at the age of 18.
ier American citizenship by
foreman
at the Oeyama prison i few white-collar jobs open to; it is quite possible that he would
^oveltv.
voting in the 1946 Japanese
Niseis in America. But soon af- ' have served honorably in the
camp in japan.
Smence.
elections.
The trial is now in its fourth ter, Kawakita was swept into armed forces of United States.
^uman interest and
attorney the vortex of Japan’s war activi- | Eighteen is an impressionable
t
week.
Prosecuting
promised ties. As an employee of an es- • age and Tomoya Kawakita ar
Xr’° back to the home RETURNS WITH
45 witnesses to swear- to the ac- i sential industry, he had escaped ’ rived in Japan at the time war
S Ye can now understand ITALIAN BRIDE
cused’s brutalities, and many I military conscription, but as i makers of Nippon were flexing
^sh interest of New CanaMost a foreman of a prisoners-of-war j
1-3 marry have already testified.
triers in the personal
camp. J
had allegedly shown'
told
of
beatings
of
the
weakened
ecently re- j
oiumn. It combines eleAmerican prisoners, and in one sadistic tendencies, a streak I But it will be up to the jury
ted above in 1, 3 4. 6 turned home from Trieste. Italy)
a prisoner had alleged! । that was not uncommon in Ja- ’ in the final analysis, to determ
a.- m the case of mar- i' with his Italian war brine, tne i case
! pan’s v/ar-pitched fanaticism.
I ine Kawakita’s guilt.
former Edda Rizza of Rome.
j med
Flood Damages
1900 Homes
In Fraser Valley
ABOUT TOWN
Five Okinawa Students Selected
To Study in American Universities Yoshiko Kawabe
Leaving Japan Soon
Tomoya Kawakita Faces Treason Trial in Los Angeles
Charged with Brutal Treatment of Prisoners of War
Lost Citizenship
By Voting, Plans
Appeal to Court
Page 2
w
THE NEW CANADIAN
2493 Yonge St.
ptae Mo
^io™™XkliOrPn^
Toronto> Ont.
“ a medium of
Wednesday, Tuh
ATLANTIC VOYAGE
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
. among the people or Japanese origin in Canada
. (On Friday, June 18, the SS Kota Inten
i
1
Kasey Oyama..............
harbor and started to steam down the Gulf of St r
°r W Qu"
Takaichi Lmezuki............. Japanese Section Editor
for Rotterdam, Holland. On board the Dutch
Rates: In Advance-32 00 for 20 weeks, 32.50 for six months,
Editor, The New Canadian:
party of Canadian students representing univer*;w
^as
3a.00 for one year.
The weather here at Long parts of the Dominion bound for a summer seminar or!
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa Beach is very pleasant. Nothing Trenos m Thougnt” at Schloss-Ploen, Germanv. One 0 ‘i
but California sunshine day in Margaret Inouye of McMaster University, Hamilton
’
and day out. I have been here below an exclusive account of the Atlantic trip.) " n "r;!
eleven months now but still get
lonesome for B.C. at times.
By MARGARET INOUYE
California is nice but there is
ON THE NORTH SEA (Tune
.
he source of reliable and fairly comprehensive infor no place like home.
oreakfast!” blares the loudspeaker in my ears A ^
mation on the history of Japanese immigrants in Canada
There are many places to go out of, °,"r. tbird storey bunks to make a mad dish fol
and
see out here, and never a mess nail oeiore the steward clangs the heavy
is at present limited to a book written by Young, Reid and
door in om
dull moment. The only.film cel- faces.
PUHiShed by thS University °f Toronto Press ebrity I’ve seen so far is Harry
The
i
7 ' bO°k’ tItl£d “The J^anese Canadians,” draws Ja®es> when I went dancing Inten oi t meal, on the SS Kota bole, but describe t
L — Dutch Majesty’s:curately.
xactual information on a. survey directed by with my husband at the famous merchant fleet is guaranteed "to
Cabins are ror the off
Palladium.
igenda Sumida, N. Yamaoka, and other Niseis.
have
international
unappeal.
for
students th e are onh-1
But I ve seen (from the out Into army mess trays we are
Much has happened during the evacuation from the
dormitories
with no Pi '
side, of course) the homes of given a gruel made of every
coast and since. The period has been the subject of "um- Bing Crosby, Virginia Bruce. variety of cereal known and a This makes all the girl s e:
eious short reports and articles, but no attempt has b-en Joan Bennett, and such other few' others, a few slices of pro got up before 8 so they
be caught ip them.
.
made to prepare a factual and detailed study of this most notable spots as the Brown cessed meat of some kind and the Dutch student
janitors r
Derby, Earl Carroll’s Cocoanut always strong Dutch cheese. I ]ose
unusual and interesting period in the lives of a minority Grove, ..Slapsie Maxie’s, 20th This is padded into the queasy I
interes t and sleep unt
noon. group.
7 Century Fox Studios, etc.
stomach with plenty of bread, I
go
When one reads about Holly margarine and jam. If there is
, Lights
. .
- off
. at 11 ana on st 6
Six years has passed since the evacuation.
Memories wood in movie magazines, you’d still room left then there is al- wnicn explains why so Wc"are growing dim, and information is becomin g increasingly
think this city is something ways a mug of lukewarm coffee people sleep in the daytime °esdifficult to gather.
specially when we lost a half ai
out of this world”. But I don’t too heavily sugared.
hour
nightly because we Vj
find
it
so
fantastic
or
superb.
We believe that the story of th
The bunks, of course, must be
vacuation should not
However the residential dis- made. On land this would be
be left unrecorded. It will afford a rich study for sociologists'
The bathroom is also built or
trict is verv beautiful with just too mundane to mention
It >s vitally important to the future welfare of Japanese lovely gardens and huge palm but on ship it i
.
- feat mass lines. With extreme coris quite
a
Canadians. The spotlight of public attention may yet return trees outlining the broad side- when you are not five feet tall servation of space, coarse sack
to the implication of evacuation and the 4,000 repatriates walks. Especially beautiful is your bed is above your eye cloth at strategic places gives s
the Bel-Air district, the home of level, and you do not want to semblance of modesty, but ofv
and yield half-truths for the use of racialists.
the cream of Hollywood societv j Push your feet in the faces of serves to hamper proceedings.
.We believe that the recording of the evacuation is a But
The basin is replaced by a lor.;
°"+ to
+„ tell you the
..
.
.. j fejtitwo other girls
truth.
girls below
below you.
you.
trough
exactly like those used
^.jeCt WjAh shouId be Vitiated by the Japanese Canadian out of place going through the
It is jollier when there is a
to
water
horses back home. The
district
in
our
little
Pontiac
good
heav
roll on the sea, you
Citizens Association.
since all the other cars were merely slide down the iron salt water in the showers gives
The existence of JCCA chapters across Canada offers Cadillacs, Buicks and Packards. "ladder” becaus
you a well-scrubbed feelir
you
„ . - miss
---- - the
scrubbed
with sandpape:
an ideal means for the gathering of information, and the
I follow your paper with keen fust step, push your sacroiliac
All
our
quarters are belov
into position, bark your
conducting of a detailed survey. In order that the effort interest, as it is a good source of
deck,
the
sleeping
quarters, the
shins several times on the lugWill not be dissipated in the pursuit of useless facts, we be Canadian Nisei gossip. I look gage
Rec
Hall
.
and
the
Mess Hall.
forward to each edition.
which fills the two-foot
lieve that a qualified sociologist of economist should be
The
Rec
Hall
has
a canteen
Mrs. Edith Kawagoe, aisle, duck the drying lingerie
which
sells
Canadian
ice cream,
asked to assist and even participate in the project.
Long Beach, Calif. and when you reach your bunk
American
cigarettes
and
inter
you are raring to go . . . back to
A grant may be offered to some outstanding student
national
Cokes
—
only
for
guil
the rail on deck, that is.
who will aid in the conducting of the survey and undertake
ders. The piano is usually being
NOT VERY FUNNY
THANKS JCCA
beaten, some group is learning
the compilation of the information as a basis for thesis.
CLAIMS ASSISTANCE
Stories of seasickness are too a square dance to drown out the
We think that such a worthwhile and well-planned pro Editor, The New Canadian:
many to be funny any longer noise, student correspondents
ject will attract the interest of other organizations and insti
As one of the property loss but it can be safely reported (like me) barig out their stories,
claimants numbering more than that a nauseous stomach is not some anti-Deweyites are organtutions which may be persuaded to share in the cost.
fifty in Montreal, I wish to ex meiely a product of the mind. izirig a fourth partv to be called
press my sincere thanks to the On the third day out. the water a VERZAMELPLATS party to
JCCA for taking up the matter was as blue as and calmer than represent the people (the word
But it is not to be expected
of the property claims and giv Lake Erie at its best but break is merely Dutch for "boat sta
that the left wing opinion which ing us very valuable assistance, fast was harder to get down tion”), arid in the midst of all
(From Toronto Saturday Night) must be pretty
-strong in Al
than uSual arid came up
this hullaballoo are always th,
It will be extremely surpris berta will continue to be satis- whereby we were able to pre amazing speed and ease. with
The blissful letter-writers and scru
sent our cases to the Inquiry
ing if the C.C.F. does not show ^'^ with the Manning governCommission. Without the JCCA rest of the day, I grimly determ pulous diary-keepers.
considerable gains in Alberta in ment now that it can no longer assistance we would have been ined not to hog the rail but had
The Mess Hall brings me back
the next provincial elections, be denied that it (1) has made helpless, individually.
to lean daintily seaward once orice more to the subject of food,
.for reasons which are entirely terms with the orthodox econI also w ish to express very more. I prefer to think that the which is always plentiful and
peculiar to the province. In Al omics in business, and (2) cansincere thanks to Mr. Rosie second trip was caused by the substantial and "fabricated with
berta the anti-St. James Street not possibly enact any unortho
orientation lecture I was listen more, fats than you are accus
sentiment, which is just as pre dox economics in finance. The Okuda, local JCCA president ing to—it was that kind of talk' tomed to” as the Dutch orienta
valent there as in any other Liberals are continuing to act and national treasurer, for his
To keep the students enter tion speaker described his na
part of Canada where the deb as if the Social Crediters were untiring and unselfish devotion tained, the whole day is filled tive tastes. The meals are dom
tor
interest
politically
out their enemies, but Mr. Bracken to the business of the local with lariguage lessons of almost inated by soups, potatoes and
weighs the creditor interest, and other Conservatives have chapter in general, and to the any European variety, orienta bread, and lack fresh fruits and
liappened by chance to get it been notably friendly to them, property claims in particular. tion lectures of almost all re vegetables. The soups are de
He has given so much of his
self canalized in a different di and Mrs. Bracken in an inter
valuable
time and energy in this gions, discussions and educa licious when one has skimmed
rection from that which it took view the other day in Winnipeg
tional movies. One could be the fat off the tbp. I almost for
in Saskatchewan and in Mani said: "The Social Credit party matter of property claims alone. come’ dis'gustingly well-educat got the cheese which is served
toba. Under the persuasive in in Alberta are much like the I noticed that he was in attend - ed if one attended them all but three times a day every day.
Commissioner’s
fluence of the late Mr. Aberhart. Conservatives, and. I feel, will ance at the
However, we don’t starve, we
hearings every day, and more only a few scabs do.
work
along
with
us.
’
the Albertans were convinced
The C.C.F.
A
warm
day
finds
most
pass
merely
dream of oranges and
that salvation lay in monetary is playing up this utterance. over. he spent many nights till engers asleep on the decks un tall glasses of milk.
very late hours, acting as inter
and currency reform rather and there is likely to be a conROTTERDAM TOMORROW
aware of peeling noses; rainy
preter
in preparation of the
§iderable
leftward
breakaway
j
— days it is too crowded and noisy
than in the elimination of the
Having passed the V- ^
exploiting
class'
by public from the Social Credit ranks
in
any
closed
place
and
the
Cliffs
of Dover, the captain e?
| I also, wish to thank Mr. Gilownership ’of the equipment of
bi
idge
and
chess
tournaments
pects
the Kota Inten to be :
I bert, who came from Toronto to
industry. Mr. Aberhart spank
occupy a few more.
Rotterdam
tomorrow mornrr
i assist us in preparing the cases.
ed the vested interests just ;as j ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
| H- too had
a-------- a
—
Of the 720 students aboard There, we will be welcomed r
hard as Mr. Coldwell or Mr.
GJ
The New Canadian acknowl- ni4t -- ■ Y and less than
even on holidays and _— -----1 seventy are Canadians. a member of the Royal fannt
Douglas ever could, and in! edges with thanks generous
It becomes tiresome after a and all the other trimmings. I
many ways the Social Credit i donations from the following*: Sundavs.
while to reply:
preparation for this we are a
kind of spanking was much bet-L ^r- ^- Tsuji and Mr. and
Last
learning the Dutch Nation?
—» but not least, thanks to
No, I am not an .America
ter adapted to please the West-j rls- T. Tanaka
.
----- of
- - Toronto,
----------- on
Koger Ouimet. K.C.. . for the I Mv college
’ "In Hamilton. On- Anthem which exalts the Hous
—. ’ -----e> occasion of the marriage of i able manner i
' ?> he
_ ?re- I tarioi—, -that
'
,.1C
’s near
Buffalo, you of Orange, the ridders of it
kind. But Social Credit iFnoti^
" , j rented our cases to the’Com-1 know
------ ----- .., to Americans who nat Spaniards, etc.
vWiy incom^UMe with
So with tomorrow,
urally assume that all the stuu usl.ness enterprise (es-j tor’s marriage.
" j. 1 am sure that I am express- dients must -be their comoatriot* our jeans which has o
pecial.y when the Social Credit-;
Anonymous. Toronto.
;inS the sentiments of all the! Some of the groups are plain uniform for the trip,
ers cannot do anything to put: ^ mnipeg Nisei Spring Bowling ’ Montreal claimants.
j tourists, others "service person more try to appear c
'L
A
ONE OF THE CLAIMANTS, jnel, and some are even studv • ambassadors from Ame
of the con !
I
Montreal.! groups like ou =- They range
- in
- • ^^^
^P
of the trip to G
ti tut ion) . and wl
j age from the Putney Prep ‘is over.
Mr. I. Yamamoto. 19 Victor!
if priv;
I School to Ph.D.’ s from Harvard j_____________
might, w ith reuse
J and Princeton. In seriousness !
e encouiMr. and Mr: N. Takimoto. To- ; KUROKI AUTHOR
put a Io;
I of purpose, they range
aoney m- ronto. on the occasion of their:
SAN FRANCISCO
Ralph G. Martin, who wrote
n
----- ”
-----■
to AR
.-leait daughter’s wedding,
ithe story of Ben Kuroki. "The
d%erm1^ to do i EnrFO Shigefuji of Fresr
immediately made
ihe New Canad n acknowl-. Boy from Nebraska." is now in :
a?le, Eur°Pe in tne ; named recently to succe
with it. ay mg the prov- edges
un tnanks generous do i Europe where he will write a A ° ^‘°nihs lO those who intend j late Bishop Ryotei Mats
credito :
almost
the ‘ natio
from the following:
f novel about GI expatriate* One : AAhX m °ne communitF and i head bishop of the Bt
whole of what they wer e enThe Iqc Family, m memorv ? GI who might be able to supply i language '™S’ -’° a -Study °f j CHurdHes of America.
titled
their deft
-ATTT
._ ■ and philosophies.
the late Mr. Rokutaro Ide.
The selection of a oi
; material tor the author is a i
C
contracts.
CATTLE
CLASS TRAVEL
Mr. Sataro Shikatani. 27
the
priests of the
; Nisei veteran of the 442nd Conassurance.
Now -or a picture of the ship. church in the United
orthodox; consfield Ave Toronto.
i bat Team who married a Fr
. ,; Some
.
disgruntled boy called a precedent as all
tne fu-; Mr. Eijiro Shishido, Kelowna : girl and is now living in P, rch
* re.
aris. i this _ "travelling cattle class" heads of the church
‘ —Pacific Citizen.
1 which may be a slight hyper- pointed from Japan.
P
Documenting the Evacuation
C.C.F. in Alberta
THE NEW CANADIAN
2493 Yonge St.
ptae Mo
^io™™XkliOrPn^
Toronto> Ont.
“ a medium of
Wednesday, Tuh
ATLANTIC VOYAGE
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
. among the people or Japanese origin in Canada
. (On Friday, June 18, the SS Kota Inten
i
1
Kasey Oyama..............
harbor and started to steam down the Gulf of St r
°r W Qu"
Takaichi Lmezuki............. Japanese Section Editor
for Rotterdam, Holland. On board the Dutch
Rates: In Advance-32 00 for 20 weeks, 32.50 for six months,
Editor, The New Canadian:
party of Canadian students representing univer*;w
^as
3a.00 for one year.
The weather here at Long parts of the Dominion bound for a summer seminar or!
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa Beach is very pleasant. Nothing Trenos m Thougnt” at Schloss-Ploen, Germanv. One 0 ‘i
but California sunshine day in Margaret Inouye of McMaster University, Hamilton
’
and day out. I have been here below an exclusive account of the Atlantic trip.) " n "r;!
eleven months now but still get
lonesome for B.C. at times.
By MARGARET INOUYE
California is nice but there is
ON THE NORTH SEA (Tune
.
he source of reliable and fairly comprehensive infor no place like home.
oreakfast!” blares the loudspeaker in my ears A ^
mation on the history of Japanese immigrants in Canada
There are many places to go out of, °,"r. tbird storey bunks to make a mad dish fol
and
see out here, and never a mess nail oeiore the steward clangs the heavy
is at present limited to a book written by Young, Reid and
door in om
dull moment. The only.film cel- faces.
PUHiShed by thS University °f Toronto Press ebrity I’ve seen so far is Harry
The
i
7 ' bO°k’ tItl£d “The J^anese Canadians,” draws Ja®es> when I went dancing Inten oi t meal, on the SS Kota bole, but describe t
L — Dutch Majesty’s:curately.
xactual information on a. survey directed by with my husband at the famous merchant fleet is guaranteed "to
Cabins are ror the off
Palladium.
igenda Sumida, N. Yamaoka, and other Niseis.
have
international
unappeal.
for
students th e are onh-1
But I ve seen (from the out Into army mess trays we are
Much has happened during the evacuation from the
dormitories
with no Pi '
side, of course) the homes of given a gruel made of every
coast and since. The period has been the subject of "um- Bing Crosby, Virginia Bruce. variety of cereal known and a This makes all the girl s e:
eious short reports and articles, but no attempt has b-en Joan Bennett, and such other few' others, a few slices of pro got up before 8 so they
be caught ip them.
.
made to prepare a factual and detailed study of this most notable spots as the Brown cessed meat of some kind and the Dutch student
janitors r
Derby, Earl Carroll’s Cocoanut always strong Dutch cheese. I ]ose
unusual and interesting period in the lives of a minority Grove, ..Slapsie Maxie’s, 20th This is padded into the queasy I
interes t and sleep unt
noon. group.
7 Century Fox Studios, etc.
stomach with plenty of bread, I
go
When one reads about Holly margarine and jam. If there is
, Lights
. .
- off
. at 11 ana on st 6
Six years has passed since the evacuation.
Memories wood in movie magazines, you’d still room left then there is al- wnicn explains why so Wc"are growing dim, and information is becomin g increasingly
think this city is something ways a mug of lukewarm coffee people sleep in the daytime °esdifficult to gather.
specially when we lost a half ai
out of this world”. But I don’t too heavily sugared.
hour
nightly because we Vj
find
it
so
fantastic
or
superb.
We believe that the story of th
The bunks, of course, must be
vacuation should not
However the residential dis- made. On land this would be
be left unrecorded. It will afford a rich study for sociologists'
The bathroom is also built or
trict is verv beautiful with just too mundane to mention
It >s vitally important to the future welfare of Japanese lovely gardens and huge palm but on ship it i
.
- feat mass lines. With extreme coris quite
a
Canadians. The spotlight of public attention may yet return trees outlining the broad side- when you are not five feet tall servation of space, coarse sack
to the implication of evacuation and the 4,000 repatriates walks. Especially beautiful is your bed is above your eye cloth at strategic places gives s
the Bel-Air district, the home of level, and you do not want to semblance of modesty, but ofv
and yield half-truths for the use of racialists.
the cream of Hollywood societv j Push your feet in the faces of serves to hamper proceedings.
.We believe that the recording of the evacuation is a But
The basin is replaced by a lor.;
°"+ to
+„ tell you the
..
.
.. j fejtitwo other girls
truth.
girls below
below you.
you.
trough
exactly like those used
^.jeCt WjAh shouId be Vitiated by the Japanese Canadian out of place going through the
It is jollier when there is a
to
water
horses back home. The
district
in
our
little
Pontiac
good
heav
roll on the sea, you
Citizens Association.
since all the other cars were merely slide down the iron salt water in the showers gives
The existence of JCCA chapters across Canada offers Cadillacs, Buicks and Packards. "ladder” becaus
you a well-scrubbed feelir
you
„ . - miss
---- - the
scrubbed
with sandpape:
an ideal means for the gathering of information, and the
I follow your paper with keen fust step, push your sacroiliac
All
our
quarters are belov
into position, bark your
conducting of a detailed survey. In order that the effort interest, as it is a good source of
deck,
the
sleeping
quarters, the
shins several times on the lugWill not be dissipated in the pursuit of useless facts, we be Canadian Nisei gossip. I look gage
Rec
Hall
.
and
the
Mess Hall.
forward to each edition.
which fills the two-foot
lieve that a qualified sociologist of economist should be
The
Rec
Hall
has
a canteen
Mrs. Edith Kawagoe, aisle, duck the drying lingerie
which
sells
Canadian
ice cream,
asked to assist and even participate in the project.
Long Beach, Calif. and when you reach your bunk
American
cigarettes
and
inter
you are raring to go . . . back to
A grant may be offered to some outstanding student
national
Cokes
—
only
for
guil
the rail on deck, that is.
who will aid in the conducting of the survey and undertake
ders. The piano is usually being
NOT VERY FUNNY
THANKS JCCA
beaten, some group is learning
the compilation of the information as a basis for thesis.
CLAIMS ASSISTANCE
Stories of seasickness are too a square dance to drown out the
We think that such a worthwhile and well-planned pro Editor, The New Canadian:
many to be funny any longer noise, student correspondents
ject will attract the interest of other organizations and insti
As one of the property loss but it can be safely reported (like me) barig out their stories,
claimants numbering more than that a nauseous stomach is not some anti-Deweyites are organtutions which may be persuaded to share in the cost.
fifty in Montreal, I wish to ex meiely a product of the mind. izirig a fourth partv to be called
press my sincere thanks to the On the third day out. the water a VERZAMELPLATS party to
JCCA for taking up the matter was as blue as and calmer than represent the people (the word
But it is not to be expected
of the property claims and giv Lake Erie at its best but break is merely Dutch for "boat sta
that the left wing opinion which ing us very valuable assistance, fast was harder to get down tion”), arid in the midst of all
(From Toronto Saturday Night) must be pretty
-strong in Al
than uSual arid came up
this hullaballoo are always th,
It will be extremely surpris berta will continue to be satis- whereby we were able to pre amazing speed and ease. with
The blissful letter-writers and scru
sent our cases to the Inquiry
ing if the C.C.F. does not show ^'^ with the Manning governCommission. Without the JCCA rest of the day, I grimly determ pulous diary-keepers.
considerable gains in Alberta in ment now that it can no longer assistance we would have been ined not to hog the rail but had
The Mess Hall brings me back
the next provincial elections, be denied that it (1) has made helpless, individually.
to lean daintily seaward once orice more to the subject of food,
.for reasons which are entirely terms with the orthodox econI also w ish to express very more. I prefer to think that the which is always plentiful and
peculiar to the province. In Al omics in business, and (2) cansincere thanks to Mr. Rosie second trip was caused by the substantial and "fabricated with
berta the anti-St. James Street not possibly enact any unortho
orientation lecture I was listen more, fats than you are accus
sentiment, which is just as pre dox economics in finance. The Okuda, local JCCA president ing to—it was that kind of talk' tomed to” as the Dutch orienta
valent there as in any other Liberals are continuing to act and national treasurer, for his
To keep the students enter tion speaker described his na
part of Canada where the deb as if the Social Crediters were untiring and unselfish devotion tained, the whole day is filled tive tastes. The meals are dom
tor
interest
politically
out their enemies, but Mr. Bracken to the business of the local with lariguage lessons of almost inated by soups, potatoes and
weighs the creditor interest, and other Conservatives have chapter in general, and to the any European variety, orienta bread, and lack fresh fruits and
liappened by chance to get it been notably friendly to them, property claims in particular. tion lectures of almost all re vegetables. The soups are de
He has given so much of his
self canalized in a different di and Mrs. Bracken in an inter
valuable
time and energy in this gions, discussions and educa licious when one has skimmed
rection from that which it took view the other day in Winnipeg
tional movies. One could be the fat off the tbp. I almost for
in Saskatchewan and in Mani said: "The Social Credit party matter of property claims alone. come’ dis'gustingly well-educat got the cheese which is served
toba. Under the persuasive in in Alberta are much like the I noticed that he was in attend - ed if one attended them all but three times a day every day.
Commissioner’s
fluence of the late Mr. Aberhart. Conservatives, and. I feel, will ance at the
However, we don’t starve, we
hearings every day, and more only a few scabs do.
work
along
with
us.
’
the Albertans were convinced
The C.C.F.
A
warm
day
finds
most
pass
merely
dream of oranges and
that salvation lay in monetary is playing up this utterance. over. he spent many nights till engers asleep on the decks un tall glasses of milk.
very late hours, acting as inter
and currency reform rather and there is likely to be a conROTTERDAM TOMORROW
aware of peeling noses; rainy
preter
in preparation of the
§iderable
leftward
breakaway
j
— days it is too crowded and noisy
than in the elimination of the
Having passed the V- ^
exploiting
class'
by public from the Social Credit ranks
in
any
closed
place
and
the
Cliffs
of Dover, the captain e?
| I also, wish to thank Mr. Gilownership ’of the equipment of
bi
idge
and
chess
tournaments
pects
the Kota Inten to be :
I bert, who came from Toronto to
industry. Mr. Aberhart spank
occupy a few more.
Rotterdam
tomorrow mornrr
i assist us in preparing the cases.
ed the vested interests just ;as j ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
| H- too had
a-------- a
—
Of the 720 students aboard There, we will be welcomed r
hard as Mr. Coldwell or Mr.
GJ
The New Canadian acknowl- ni4t -- ■ Y and less than
even on holidays and _— -----1 seventy are Canadians. a member of the Royal fannt
Douglas ever could, and in! edges with thanks generous
It becomes tiresome after a and all the other trimmings. I
many ways the Social Credit i donations from the following*: Sundavs.
while to reply:
preparation for this we are a
kind of spanking was much bet-L ^r- ^- Tsuji and Mr. and
Last
learning the Dutch Nation?
—» but not least, thanks to
No, I am not an .America
ter adapted to please the West-j rls- T. Tanaka
.
----- of
- - Toronto,
----------- on
Koger Ouimet. K.C.. . for the I Mv college
’ "In Hamilton. On- Anthem which exalts the Hous
—. ’ -----e> occasion of the marriage of i able manner i
' ?> he
_ ?re- I tarioi—, -that
'
,.1C
’s near
Buffalo, you of Orange, the ridders of it
kind. But Social Credit iFnoti^
" , j rented our cases to the’Com-1 know
------ ----- .., to Americans who nat Spaniards, etc.
vWiy incom^UMe with
So with tomorrow,
urally assume that all the stuu usl.ness enterprise (es-j tor’s marriage.
" j. 1 am sure that I am express- dients must -be their comoatriot* our jeans which has o
pecial.y when the Social Credit-;
Anonymous. Toronto.
;inS the sentiments of all the! Some of the groups are plain uniform for the trip,
ers cannot do anything to put: ^ mnipeg Nisei Spring Bowling ’ Montreal claimants.
j tourists, others "service person more try to appear c
'L
A
ONE OF THE CLAIMANTS, jnel, and some are even studv • ambassadors from Ame
of the con !
I
Montreal.! groups like ou =- They range
- in
- • ^^^
^P
of the trip to G
ti tut ion) . and wl
j age from the Putney Prep ‘is over.
Mr. I. Yamamoto. 19 Victor!
if priv;
I School to Ph.D.’ s from Harvard j_____________
might, w ith reuse
J and Princeton. In seriousness !
e encouiMr. and Mr: N. Takimoto. To- ; KUROKI AUTHOR
put a Io;
I of purpose, they range
aoney m- ronto. on the occasion of their:
SAN FRANCISCO
Ralph G. Martin, who wrote
n
----- ”
-----■
to AR
.-leait daughter’s wedding,
ithe story of Ben Kuroki. "The
d%erm1^ to do i EnrFO Shigefuji of Fresr
immediately made
ihe New Canad n acknowl-. Boy from Nebraska." is now in :
a?le, Eur°Pe in tne ; named recently to succe
with it. ay mg the prov- edges
un tnanks generous do i Europe where he will write a A ° ^‘°nihs lO those who intend j late Bishop Ryotei Mats
credito :
almost
the ‘ natio
from the following:
f novel about GI expatriate* One : AAhX m °ne communitF and i head bishop of the Bt
whole of what they wer e enThe Iqc Family, m memorv ? GI who might be able to supply i language '™S’ -’° a -Study °f j CHurdHes of America.
titled
their deft
-ATTT
._ ■ and philosophies.
the late Mr. Rokutaro Ide.
The selection of a oi
; material tor the author is a i
C
contracts.
CATTLE
CLASS TRAVEL
Mr. Sataro Shikatani. 27
the
priests of the
; Nisei veteran of the 442nd Conassurance.
Now -or a picture of the ship. church in the United
orthodox; consfield Ave Toronto.
i bat Team who married a Fr
. ,; Some
.
disgruntled boy called a precedent as all
tne fu-; Mr. Eijiro Shishido, Kelowna : girl and is now living in P, rch
* re.
aris. i this _ "travelling cattle class" heads of the church
‘ —Pacific Citizen.
1 which may be a slight hyper- pointed from Japan.
P
Documenting the Evacuation
C.C.F. in Alberta
Page 3
t POKING
UP
HOW TO HANDLE,
It’s Magic When Doris Day Sings ABIGOT
| Did Christ Live and Die in Japan?}!
It you talk back to a race-:
'
F ■
.j(
qur?,rner's here (No!), and ■ lights and lovely lass. I put this
him A
TOKYO.—Christ fled from his persecutors in Palestine
■e local cinemas are featuring j Day record with my Ella Fitz*
,
‘
'
to
J
a
Pan' hved, died and was buried there, so claim the villrhv Hollywood masterpieces j gerald ones, and no higher
That's
che
word
irom
the
j
agers
of Herai in Aomori-Ken, in northern Japan, reports
2)1 critical
critics
laoel: praise can I bestow.
American
Jewish
Congress'j
UP
staff
correspondent Earnest Hoberecht
rimer entertainment”.
! In Romance on the High
commission
on
community
in-:
Herai-mura
folk also claim. sato, Aomori Prefecture, from
vOu know, the type which is! Seas, not only is she on . the
terrelations,
which
recently i that
irgin
Mary is buried Alaska.
Yble. doesn't tax your imag-!screen
Percent of the time, studied a
scientific
study
of
;
at
Herai.
along
with the hair
Aon or induce any heavy j sa7'nS Natch' and calling peo bigotry.
"After coming to Japan again.
and
an
ea
r
of
Christ's
brother Christ
nkins—the type you go to see i P^e
Schmoe , but she sings
again
called
himself
Here are the figures: the race- i who . disguised himself and was
— Tenku Taro Jurai and lived in
ids hot outside and you’ve > and sings and sings. You have
to do and the theatre i heard most of the songs by now baiter shouting off in public! crucified in place of Christ who I the village of Herai. He died at
causes his listeners to shift । fled through Siberia and Alaska the age of 108 and is buried in
rested sign screaming —they're juke box and Hit Parhome
Herai hill of Herai village
ade fodder. It’s Magic and Put! their opinions 14 per cent in before making
■Cooler
Herai.
favor
of
his
bias;
if
he
is
an
’Em in a Box are the better 1
ke the other night wo went
The “graves''
about two
ones. In two songs she is accom- | swered. the shift is less or noth
e a film with the trite title,
miles
outside
the
village.
ing;
and
if
he
is
put
in
his
place,
The
peopl
panied by the Page (All of Me) i
a
Seas
on the I
between
two
low
hills.
they
ar<
the
bias
is
counteracted
6
per
pong which they say sounds like
Cavanaugh Trio, and that's good
story behind the title is I too.
aoout 24 feet auart. and art : ancient Hebrew music. Hobercent.
commentary on the •
re pole, ; echt reports. Even though they
So. if you ever run up against marked by two
Nothing much happens that
vwood opinion of the mov- i
about
10
feet
high.
, sing it. they do not claim to
you don’t expect—but Oscar Le- a race-baiter in public, don't
Moviegoer
goers' intellect,
LEGEND
HANDED
DOWN
!
know the meaning of t
Ivant and S. Z. (Twinkletoes) think that being meek and mild
ipfs you and me;
story of Christ's life in : They said ancient cook
fh j Sakall hover about, and lor is the best way to handle him.
Originally, they called
nearbv
,71 musical
variety
there
are > The public sometimes likes best Japan is a legend that the peo- i sils have been found at
film “Romance in High C”. oepie of this village have handed ‘
where Christ's house
calypso singer Sir Lancelot, and the guy who can take it. but
cause it is a musical. But the Avon Long.
down from generation to gen- ;
Members of the Sawaguchi
dish it out. too.
eration.
guys who know decided that
familv.
dairv
farmers hevc,
It's a swell summer picture,
According
to
Joe and Jessie in Runtville, On
the
legend,
;
claim
thev
direct
deseendespecially to take a pretty maid
tario. wouldn’t savvy this “High
Christ first visited Japan when ! ants of Christ,
to.
he was
C business, so they changed it
years old and re say that the S;
ami) v
mained there until he was 33 i members do not look like Japto Romance on the High Seas.
After a long wait, we got
He is said to have assumed the inese but have feature
Even a moron could understand
around to seeing New Orleans
Japanese name
Tenku Taro ! foreigners". Hoberecht. howit then.
when it • hit the neighborhood
Jurai” and to have learned how : eve found it difficult to detect
As might be expected ‘.'Robeanery the other week. This
TORONTO. — Rev. Gyodo to speak and -write the Japanese j anv diif er.e nce between mentmance on the High Seas’’ is in
was the jazz picture, with Louis
The villagers said j bers of this family- and the
Kono of the Chicago Midwest language.
too-good-to-be-true Technicolor.
Armstrong and Billie Holliday
Buddhist Church and Stephen that Christ travelled all over ! other people in this area.
Everything looks gorgeous and
and the Woody Herman band. B. Renovitch of the San Fran Japan, stopping for periods at
| This family claims to have
unreal. The dresses and the
But it left me with mixed re cisco YBA will be the guest various shrines and offeringbes wearing them are! out of
! “documentary . evidence”
to
actions.
speakers at the O-bon service prayers.
world, and the scenery
i
back
up
its
claims
but
it
is
"top
My squawk was that the
When Christ was 34,^he went |secret”.
aussi. And there’s the usual whole proceedings are marred at the Ukrainian Labor Temple.
n'Hss- scenes in the carnival- by a pretty patronizing attitude 300 Bathurst Street, on Sunday, back to Palestine, says the legGARDEN OF EDEN
Mardi Gras manner where the towards Negroes which may be July 18, commencing from 2 end. He is supposed to have
Tire peasants have another intold his followers about “the teresting story.
p.m.
whole population of Los An
say tht
calculated to sell the film down
geles ti,504,277—1940 census) in the Solid Sbuth, but leaves a
Mr. Renovitch, 26. born of sacred heaven of Japan".
Garden of Eden was near here.
“Christ's teachings at that There was a volcanic eruption
was probably pushed into bright
bad taste in your mouth up Hungarian parents in New York time were not welcomed," savs
costumery just to prance abcut
that covered up the original
City, is a civil engineer with the
here.
a written account of the story site, but even today the spot is
and fill the screen with mus-c,
Union
Pacific
Railway.
His
first
There have been too many
noise, and vivid color.
contact with Buddhism goes which has been prepared by nnore beautiful than the
pictures that “we just went for
Big reason for my seeing this
back 10 years when, during his local authorities. “The scholars rounding area, they claim.
the music, oh, the rest was
In the vicinity, according to
flick was a beauteous blonde
course of studies, he accidentally especially were opposed to his
lousy”. Usually this badness
thrush named Doris Day. .Miss
came across Buddhist literature. teachings, and at last he was to the peasants, the Japanese use
resulted from story trouble. In
a
corruption
of
the
word
• He became deeply interested in be crucified.”
Day wasn’t billed as prominent
New Orleans, the whole film
MANAGED to escape
“Adam” to mean husband and
ly as Jack Carson. Janis Paige
Buddhism- and eventually was
abounds with rotten distinctions
“However, Christ’s brother a corruption of the word "Eve”
converted into a follower.
or Don DeFore, but happily,.the
between the “superior” white
disguised
himself as Christ and
whole picture is. devoted to her.
After graduation from the was crucified on the cross. Thus, to mean wife.
and the “inferior” Negro. To
And as a clincher, people say
This was her first pic and
anyone sensitive to race dis University of California in 1944, Jesus Christ managed to escape that the “forbidden fruit" still
seemed ample proof that we’ll
crimination ,the net result is with the degree of B.Sc. in civil and took refuge in Siberia from grows in the Herai area. They
be seeing more of her.
engineering, he joined the San whence his whereabouts became
pretty sour.
have named it “Koka" and say
Besides her ' rather peachy
Francisco Church and the YBA. unknown.
But for musical kicks, New
that it is the only place in Japan,
physical assets which seem even
During the war, he served with
“Just before He left Pales where it can be found.
has
plenty.
When the U.S. Army Air Force.
more so in Technicolor, Doris Orleans
Day sings. Formerly with the Louis sings and plays his golden , In keeping with the popular tine, Jesus said ‘Soon thou shalt
not see me any more. I shall
topnotch Les Brown band, she horn, when Billie sings, the O-bon tradition, a short pro
be going to my father’. These
screen
.gives
something
wonder
has made some good records,
gram of entertainment has been words are in The Bible also.
one of which, My Number One ful and once-in-a-lifetime. It is arranged by the Toronto YBS.
By ‘father’, he meant Japan.
Dream Came True, is perfect amazing how Billie, despite a to follow the service.
When
he fled from Palestine, he
for the kind of evening when lousy makeup job and tawdry
had
made
up his mind to come
By BILL HOSOKAWA
you are equipped with soft costumes, looks beautiful when
to
Japan
again.
After roaming
Another Nisei milestone was
she
moans
in
her
tortured
jazz
couch, moon-filled sky,
Mw
around various countries, passed in Los Angeles last
accents.
Kent
Box
Social
Christ, four years later, on Feb month when Fresno-born Susan
Perhaps we should be less
ruary
26, landed at Kaigurano- Nagumo, evacuated during the
quibbly and take our little bit Huge Success
war, was chosen to serve on the
of gold where we find it. But
CHATHAM, Ont.—On July 1,
jury which is hearing the treawhen you rake about a garbage
son trial of Tomoya Kawakita,
(From The Vancouver Sun pile, you pick up a lot of the Kent JCCA held a very success LILLOOET CO-OP
ful
box
social
at
the
Kenisley
J
oseph
’
LILLOOET,
B.C.
In empanelling Miss Nagumo,
“Letters to the Editor” section.) stink.
Hall
to
raise
club
funds.
Fred
local
well-known
Russell,
concerned recognized Dm
all
JAPANESE BENEVOLENCE
Nogami
acted
as
auctioneer,
was
elected
chairman
rancher
that she is an individual
fact
Editor, The Sun: Sir:—A re
assisted
by
Frank
Uchiyama,
of
the
board
of
directors
of
the
capable
of individual judgand
cent news item deserves very erty was looted. And also re
and
coaxed
the
men
to
con
Lillooet
Co-operative
Growers
’
ment.
She
was
picked for jury
wide publicity, not only for it member that these people are
tribute
their
money
to
a
good
Association
at
a
recent
meeting
duty
on
her
merits
as a person,
self but because it tells of an not yet allowed to return to. the
cause.
The
girls
were
seen
sit
of
the
board.
and
not
because
she
is, or Is
outstanding example of Chris coast district where many of
ting
on
the
edge
of
their
seats,
A
building
committee
was
not,
a
member
of
a
particular
tian practice. The item tells of them were born. Now, but of
how Canadians of Japanese an their slender resources, they waiting to see who their supper formed, including K. S. Yasu- racial group.
ura, to handle construction of a
This concept is a far cry from
cestry contributed $1000 to the are aiding those who live on partners would be. *
Dancing was a part of the temporary structure to use as a the philosophy of one General
flood fund—$500 from those in some of their old home farms.
DeWitt who chose officially to
interior B.C. and $500 from oth
Tf circumstances were re evening’s fun, and during the packing house.
judge a people as a group in
ers in Eastern Canada. More versed. could you do it? Could intermission, a gift was present
ed to Frank Uchiyama from the JCCA ISSEI
stead of as individuals. There in
has been promised from other I do it?
On Saturday no reason to expect Susan
TORONTO.
Canadian Japanese.
ALLEN ROY EVANS club for the loan of his records
July 17, a Toronto JCCA Issei Nagumo to be any mo?e biased.
817 Granville St. these ,many years.
^ hy is this item so signifi'Welcome visitors were Nobby; executive meeting will be held I one way or another, in passing
Vancouver, B.C
Remember that these
Yano and Memie Kudo from ; a^ the home of Mr. T. Kameoka, judgment on the case of the
Japanese are giving to flood
Toronto. Memie was a member! U3 McCaul, from 8 p.m. All United States vs. Tomoya Kawa
victims who, in some cases, are MYSTERY WRITING
of the Kent group before mov ’ executive members are asked to kita, than an American of any
“vlnS on the very farms owned
Ozaki, Chicago
Milton
other racial extraction.
! be present.
A' these same Japanese. Re- Mystery Writers of America, is ing to Toronto.—H.K.
Miss Nagumo is doing her
A-ember also that these farms the topic of an article on mys
। duty as an American by taking
•■-re snatched from their own tery writing by Maude I. G.
LETTERS
ers at a small fraction of their Oliver in the July issue of the Hamilton YBS To
Letters for the following are •her seat on the jury. Her comi munity will be the better for
in The New Canadian offices:
;crue- whicIh in effect, was little Writer’s Journal.
i her having participated in one
Miss
Hidy
Arai
(from
Tokyo
Honor
California
~\-;yr ^Uan confiscation.
Ozaki is a former beauty
Japan),
Mrs.
Kaneko
Matsuo
! of its functions.
„ "en ^ey were herded into parlor operator who has writ
(formerly of PO Box 107, Port! The same could be said of
pAcentration camps, their fur- ten many successful mystery
K. Aikawa, a University
^--'ure and other movable prop- novels including “The Cuckoo
Mr. Hammond. B.C.—from Mrs.
HAMILTON, Ont.
I
of
California
student who was
Clock." “A Friend in Need,’ i Stephen Renovitch of San Fran- Homma, Tokyo, Japan).
■
named
one
of
three UC men to
i cisco YBS will be the guest of
Diamond Engagement
and "The Ram of Aries."
* be granted research fellowships
honor at the Hamilton YBS CARD OF THANKS
Dings, Birthstones
The
Ide
family
of
Hamilton
; by the Atomic Energy Commiswindup
social
and
! combined
for rent
and
Toronto,
and
relatives,
; -ion. It is conceivable that un
party
on
Saturday,
; welcome
j-olex and Hamilton Watches
wish to thank their friends for j der other circumstances, Aikj
FURNISHED
Room.
Suitable
;
j
u
jy
17.
Rev.
Tak
Tsuji
of
Tovonsmunity and International
their kind expressions of sym-jswa, because of his ancestry,
’ for one or two. 136 Grange Ave., ! ronto will also be present.
Silverware
pathy
and beautiful floral trib- • would have been denied the
PL.
1755.
j
The
place
is
the
home
of
Mr.
ompt Attention to Mail
utes
at
the time of the passing ' chance to undertake researc
-------------:
_
______
_____
_
___
'
-,z.^-.
T'and
Mrs.
Hashimoto,
574
James
„-r
.Order Repairs
LARGE FURM-hr-D ROOM. j ^ Xorth: and the time is 7 p.m. of Mr. Rokutaro Ide.
I The nation will benefit oy
■’•-n m Chinatown—It will
> making use of his aptitude in.
suitable for two young men. 38a , Qames and dancing will be
psy you to visit us
—
t
■
—
j the atomic field. It will be the
King St. ^., Toronto.
_ j featured. Refreshments will be
Subscribe
to
; rjcijer because it is using the
• served. All Hamilton Busseis,
ONE ROOM for
talents of every citizen regard’’atchmakers & Jewellers
‘ and non-members are asked to •
anese home. $12.50
1
, less of antecedents. — Pacific
! make every effort to attend this ।
t^£LTZABETH street
70.
365 King St. W., T(
citizen.
Toronto
el. 58io
i social.
।
American Guests
Service Sunday
il
Trial By Jury
LOWE BROS.
THE
NEW CANADIAN
t
UP
HOW TO HANDLE,
It’s Magic When Doris Day Sings ABIGOT
| Did Christ Live and Die in Japan?}!
It you talk back to a race-:
'
F ■
.j(
qur?,rner's here (No!), and ■ lights and lovely lass. I put this
him A
TOKYO.—Christ fled from his persecutors in Palestine
■e local cinemas are featuring j Day record with my Ella Fitz*
,
‘
'
to
J
a
Pan' hved, died and was buried there, so claim the villrhv Hollywood masterpieces j gerald ones, and no higher
That's
che
word
irom
the
j
agers
of Herai in Aomori-Ken, in northern Japan, reports
2)1 critical
critics
laoel: praise can I bestow.
American
Jewish
Congress'j
UP
staff
correspondent Earnest Hoberecht
rimer entertainment”.
! In Romance on the High
commission
on
community
in-:
Herai-mura
folk also claim. sato, Aomori Prefecture, from
vOu know, the type which is! Seas, not only is she on . the
terrelations,
which
recently i that
irgin
Mary is buried Alaska.
Yble. doesn't tax your imag-!screen
Percent of the time, studied a
scientific
study
of
;
at
Herai.
along
with the hair
Aon or induce any heavy j sa7'nS Natch' and calling peo bigotry.
"After coming to Japan again.
and
an
ea
r
of
Christ's
brother Christ
nkins—the type you go to see i P^e
Schmoe , but she sings
again
called
himself
Here are the figures: the race- i who . disguised himself and was
— Tenku Taro Jurai and lived in
ids hot outside and you’ve > and sings and sings. You have
to do and the theatre i heard most of the songs by now baiter shouting off in public! crucified in place of Christ who I the village of Herai. He died at
causes his listeners to shift । fled through Siberia and Alaska the age of 108 and is buried in
rested sign screaming —they're juke box and Hit Parhome
Herai hill of Herai village
ade fodder. It’s Magic and Put! their opinions 14 per cent in before making
■Cooler
Herai.
favor
of
his
bias;
if
he
is
an
’Em in a Box are the better 1
ke the other night wo went
The “graves''
about two
ones. In two songs she is accom- | swered. the shift is less or noth
e a film with the trite title,
miles
outside
the
village.
ing;
and
if
he
is
put
in
his
place,
The
peopl
panied by the Page (All of Me) i
a
Seas
on the I
between
two
low
hills.
they
ar<
the
bias
is
counteracted
6
per
pong which they say sounds like
Cavanaugh Trio, and that's good
story behind the title is I too.
aoout 24 feet auart. and art : ancient Hebrew music. Hobercent.
commentary on the •
re pole, ; echt reports. Even though they
So. if you ever run up against marked by two
Nothing much happens that
vwood opinion of the mov- i
about
10
feet
high.
, sing it. they do not claim to
you don’t expect—but Oscar Le- a race-baiter in public, don't
Moviegoer
goers' intellect,
LEGEND
HANDED
DOWN
!
know the meaning of t
Ivant and S. Z. (Twinkletoes) think that being meek and mild
ipfs you and me;
story of Christ's life in : They said ancient cook
fh j Sakall hover about, and lor is the best way to handle him.
Originally, they called
nearbv
,71 musical
variety
there
are > The public sometimes likes best Japan is a legend that the peo- i sils have been found at
film “Romance in High C”. oepie of this village have handed ‘
where Christ's house
calypso singer Sir Lancelot, and the guy who can take it. but
cause it is a musical. But the Avon Long.
down from generation to gen- ;
Members of the Sawaguchi
dish it out. too.
eration.
guys who know decided that
familv.
dairv
farmers hevc,
It's a swell summer picture,
According
to
Joe and Jessie in Runtville, On
the
legend,
;
claim
thev
direct
deseendespecially to take a pretty maid
tario. wouldn’t savvy this “High
Christ first visited Japan when ! ants of Christ,
to.
he was
C business, so they changed it
years old and re say that the S;
ami) v
mained there until he was 33 i members do not look like Japto Romance on the High Seas.
After a long wait, we got
He is said to have assumed the inese but have feature
Even a moron could understand
around to seeing New Orleans
Japanese name
Tenku Taro ! foreigners". Hoberecht. howit then.
when it • hit the neighborhood
Jurai” and to have learned how : eve found it difficult to detect
As might be expected ‘.'Robeanery the other week. This
TORONTO. — Rev. Gyodo to speak and -write the Japanese j anv diif er.e nce between mentmance on the High Seas’’ is in
was the jazz picture, with Louis
The villagers said j bers of this family- and the
Kono of the Chicago Midwest language.
too-good-to-be-true Technicolor.
Armstrong and Billie Holliday
Buddhist Church and Stephen that Christ travelled all over ! other people in this area.
Everything looks gorgeous and
and the Woody Herman band. B. Renovitch of the San Fran Japan, stopping for periods at
| This family claims to have
unreal. The dresses and the
But it left me with mixed re cisco YBA will be the guest various shrines and offeringbes wearing them are! out of
! “documentary . evidence”
to
actions.
speakers at the O-bon service prayers.
world, and the scenery
i
back
up
its
claims
but
it
is
"top
My squawk was that the
When Christ was 34,^he went |secret”.
aussi. And there’s the usual whole proceedings are marred at the Ukrainian Labor Temple.
n'Hss- scenes in the carnival- by a pretty patronizing attitude 300 Bathurst Street, on Sunday, back to Palestine, says the legGARDEN OF EDEN
Mardi Gras manner where the towards Negroes which may be July 18, commencing from 2 end. He is supposed to have
Tire peasants have another intold his followers about “the teresting story.
p.m.
whole population of Los An
say tht
calculated to sell the film down
geles ti,504,277—1940 census) in the Solid Sbuth, but leaves a
Mr. Renovitch, 26. born of sacred heaven of Japan".
Garden of Eden was near here.
“Christ's teachings at that There was a volcanic eruption
was probably pushed into bright
bad taste in your mouth up Hungarian parents in New York time were not welcomed," savs
costumery just to prance abcut
that covered up the original
City, is a civil engineer with the
here.
a written account of the story site, but even today the spot is
and fill the screen with mus-c,
Union
Pacific
Railway.
His
first
There have been too many
noise, and vivid color.
contact with Buddhism goes which has been prepared by nnore beautiful than the
pictures that “we just went for
Big reason for my seeing this
back 10 years when, during his local authorities. “The scholars rounding area, they claim.
the music, oh, the rest was
In the vicinity, according to
flick was a beauteous blonde
course of studies, he accidentally especially were opposed to his
lousy”. Usually this badness
thrush named Doris Day. .Miss
came across Buddhist literature. teachings, and at last he was to the peasants, the Japanese use
resulted from story trouble. In
a
corruption
of
the
word
• He became deeply interested in be crucified.”
Day wasn’t billed as prominent
New Orleans, the whole film
MANAGED to escape
“Adam” to mean husband and
ly as Jack Carson. Janis Paige
Buddhism- and eventually was
abounds with rotten distinctions
“However, Christ’s brother a corruption of the word "Eve”
converted into a follower.
or Don DeFore, but happily,.the
between the “superior” white
disguised
himself as Christ and
whole picture is. devoted to her.
After graduation from the was crucified on the cross. Thus, to mean wife.
and the “inferior” Negro. To
And as a clincher, people say
This was her first pic and
anyone sensitive to race dis University of California in 1944, Jesus Christ managed to escape that the “forbidden fruit" still
seemed ample proof that we’ll
crimination ,the net result is with the degree of B.Sc. in civil and took refuge in Siberia from grows in the Herai area. They
be seeing more of her.
engineering, he joined the San whence his whereabouts became
pretty sour.
have named it “Koka" and say
Besides her ' rather peachy
Francisco Church and the YBA. unknown.
But for musical kicks, New
that it is the only place in Japan,
physical assets which seem even
During the war, he served with
“Just before He left Pales where it can be found.
has
plenty.
When the U.S. Army Air Force.
more so in Technicolor, Doris Orleans
Day sings. Formerly with the Louis sings and plays his golden , In keeping with the popular tine, Jesus said ‘Soon thou shalt
not see me any more. I shall
topnotch Les Brown band, she horn, when Billie sings, the O-bon tradition, a short pro
be going to my father’. These
screen
.gives
something
wonder
has made some good records,
gram of entertainment has been words are in The Bible also.
one of which, My Number One ful and once-in-a-lifetime. It is arranged by the Toronto YBS.
By ‘father’, he meant Japan.
Dream Came True, is perfect amazing how Billie, despite a to follow the service.
When
he fled from Palestine, he
for the kind of evening when lousy makeup job and tawdry
had
made
up his mind to come
By BILL HOSOKAWA
you are equipped with soft costumes, looks beautiful when
to
Japan
again.
After roaming
Another Nisei milestone was
she
moans
in
her
tortured
jazz
couch, moon-filled sky,
Mw
around various countries, passed in Los Angeles last
accents.
Kent
Box
Social
Christ, four years later, on Feb month when Fresno-born Susan
Perhaps we should be less
ruary
26, landed at Kaigurano- Nagumo, evacuated during the
quibbly and take our little bit Huge Success
war, was chosen to serve on the
of gold where we find it. But
CHATHAM, Ont.—On July 1,
jury which is hearing the treawhen you rake about a garbage
son trial of Tomoya Kawakita,
(From The Vancouver Sun pile, you pick up a lot of the Kent JCCA held a very success LILLOOET CO-OP
ful
box
social
at
the
Kenisley
J
oseph
’
LILLOOET,
B.C.
In empanelling Miss Nagumo,
“Letters to the Editor” section.) stink.
Hall
to
raise
club
funds.
Fred
local
well-known
Russell,
concerned recognized Dm
all
JAPANESE BENEVOLENCE
Nogami
acted
as
auctioneer,
was
elected
chairman
rancher
that she is an individual
fact
Editor, The Sun: Sir:—A re
assisted
by
Frank
Uchiyama,
of
the
board
of
directors
of
the
capable
of individual judgand
cent news item deserves very erty was looted. And also re
and
coaxed
the
men
to
con
Lillooet
Co-operative
Growers
’
ment.
She
was
picked for jury
wide publicity, not only for it member that these people are
tribute
their
money
to
a
good
Association
at
a
recent
meeting
duty
on
her
merits
as a person,
self but because it tells of an not yet allowed to return to. the
cause.
The
girls
were
seen
sit
of
the
board.
and
not
because
she
is, or Is
outstanding example of Chris coast district where many of
ting
on
the
edge
of
their
seats,
A
building
committee
was
not,
a
member
of
a
particular
tian practice. The item tells of them were born. Now, but of
how Canadians of Japanese an their slender resources, they waiting to see who their supper formed, including K. S. Yasu- racial group.
ura, to handle construction of a
This concept is a far cry from
cestry contributed $1000 to the are aiding those who live on partners would be. *
Dancing was a part of the temporary structure to use as a the philosophy of one General
flood fund—$500 from those in some of their old home farms.
DeWitt who chose officially to
interior B.C. and $500 from oth
Tf circumstances were re evening’s fun, and during the packing house.
judge a people as a group in
ers in Eastern Canada. More versed. could you do it? Could intermission, a gift was present
ed to Frank Uchiyama from the JCCA ISSEI
stead of as individuals. There in
has been promised from other I do it?
On Saturday no reason to expect Susan
TORONTO.
Canadian Japanese.
ALLEN ROY EVANS club for the loan of his records
July 17, a Toronto JCCA Issei Nagumo to be any mo?e biased.
817 Granville St. these ,many years.
^ hy is this item so signifi'Welcome visitors were Nobby; executive meeting will be held I one way or another, in passing
Vancouver, B.C
Remember that these
Yano and Memie Kudo from ; a^ the home of Mr. T. Kameoka, judgment on the case of the
Japanese are giving to flood
Toronto. Memie was a member! U3 McCaul, from 8 p.m. All United States vs. Tomoya Kawa
victims who, in some cases, are MYSTERY WRITING
of the Kent group before mov ’ executive members are asked to kita, than an American of any
“vlnS on the very farms owned
Ozaki, Chicago
Milton
other racial extraction.
! be present.
A' these same Japanese. Re- Mystery Writers of America, is ing to Toronto.—H.K.
Miss Nagumo is doing her
A-ember also that these farms the topic of an article on mys
। duty as an American by taking
•■-re snatched from their own tery writing by Maude I. G.
LETTERS
ers at a small fraction of their Oliver in the July issue of the Hamilton YBS To
Letters for the following are •her seat on the jury. Her comi munity will be the better for
in The New Canadian offices:
;crue- whicIh in effect, was little Writer’s Journal.
i her having participated in one
Miss
Hidy
Arai
(from
Tokyo
Honor
California
~\-;yr ^Uan confiscation.
Ozaki is a former beauty
Japan),
Mrs.
Kaneko
Matsuo
! of its functions.
„ "en ^ey were herded into parlor operator who has writ
(formerly of PO Box 107, Port! The same could be said of
pAcentration camps, their fur- ten many successful mystery
K. Aikawa, a University
^--'ure and other movable prop- novels including “The Cuckoo
Mr. Hammond. B.C.—from Mrs.
HAMILTON, Ont.
I
of
California
student who was
Clock." “A Friend in Need,’ i Stephen Renovitch of San Fran- Homma, Tokyo, Japan).
■
named
one
of
three UC men to
i cisco YBS will be the guest of
Diamond Engagement
and "The Ram of Aries."
* be granted research fellowships
honor at the Hamilton YBS CARD OF THANKS
Dings, Birthstones
The
Ide
family
of
Hamilton
; by the Atomic Energy Commiswindup
social
and
! combined
for rent
and
Toronto,
and
relatives,
; -ion. It is conceivable that un
party
on
Saturday,
; welcome
j-olex and Hamilton Watches
wish to thank their friends for j der other circumstances, Aikj
FURNISHED
Room.
Suitable
;
j
u
jy
17.
Rev.
Tak
Tsuji
of
Tovonsmunity and International
their kind expressions of sym-jswa, because of his ancestry,
’ for one or two. 136 Grange Ave., ! ronto will also be present.
Silverware
pathy
and beautiful floral trib- • would have been denied the
PL.
1755.
j
The
place
is
the
home
of
Mr.
ompt Attention to Mail
utes
at
the time of the passing ' chance to undertake researc
-------------:
_
______
_____
_
___
'
-,z.^-.
T'and
Mrs.
Hashimoto,
574
James
„-r
.Order Repairs
LARGE FURM-hr-D ROOM. j ^ Xorth: and the time is 7 p.m. of Mr. Rokutaro Ide.
I The nation will benefit oy
■’•-n m Chinatown—It will
> making use of his aptitude in.
suitable for two young men. 38a , Qames and dancing will be
psy you to visit us
—
t
■
—
j the atomic field. It will be the
King St. ^., Toronto.
_ j featured. Refreshments will be
Subscribe
to
; rjcijer because it is using the
• served. All Hamilton Busseis,
ONE ROOM for
talents of every citizen regard’’atchmakers & Jewellers
‘ and non-members are asked to •
anese home. $12.50
1
, less of antecedents. — Pacific
! make every effort to attend this ।
t^£LTZABETH street
70.
365 King St. W., T(
citizen.
Toronto
el. 58io
i social.
।
American Guests
Service Sunday
il
Trial By Jury
LOWE BROS.
THE
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T. EDAMURA
I. Yonemitsu
385 King St. W.
Toronto, Ont.
Watches & Jeweiiery
Butte, Alta.
if /^
5
Heigoro Tanabe
Watchmaker and Jeweller
P.O. Bex 2S8 - 160 Seymour
KAMLOOPS, B.C.
St.
SLOGAN -TAILOR
P.O. BOX 37
SLOGAN CITY, B.C.
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I. Yonemitsu
385 King St. W.
Toronto, Ont.
Watches & Jeweiiery
Butte, Alta.
if /^
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Heigoro Tanabe
Watchmaker and Jeweller
P.O. Bex 2S8 - 160 Seymour
KAMLOOPS, B.C.
St.
SLOGAN -TAILOR
P.O. BOX 37
SLOGAN CITY, B.C.
i:^^l$
1
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Page 10
Page 10
YOUNG ROOKIES STAR
T
Maroons Take Two in Row to Top
Diamond Sox in Winnipeg Ball
Hamilton Rec Nine
Six Nations
Bad Week As Westerns Drop Two
To Remain in Third-Place Rut
HAMILTON, Ont.—On SunTORONTO. — With Toronto erns tallied
■
^
’ July 18, the Hamilton right in the middle of a heat final run in
Matsuo ^IPiEG—With pitchers Sosh Miyata and Sammy
Second
-----run
in
the
6th
iS^
Nisei Rec baseball team will wave and sufferin
SoxS
f°™, Maroons walloped Diamond
from mid- Tsukamoto whacked^
nosse^tn
tWO weeks to take over undisputed travel to the Six Nations In summer doldrums. Westerns of home run, Scattalon ’^ 'Q
Reserve to take part in j the West Toronto Senior Base
P On ?™ 2°7f &H4%^
L'a^ leadership, adian
hiseis well in check bad
*
big field day.
----------- ip.
ball League are reacting in the
taking Kayos fox' a 9-4 ride.
Bill Patterson, Mayfair
The
Nisei
team
will
play
an
convincing 10-4 thrashing on Player-coach Frank
Yahiro’s exhibition with a nine from the same sluggish way, dropping sacker, had 4 singles for - - / 'a'
Diamond Sox. Even Sox
their last two games to retain times up to boost Ms' <
firebailer
ace grand-slam homex* sent bespec- Six Nations Reserve.
their
third place in the league average into second D]s? J
was helpless tacled Yas Tomihiro to early
Cars will leave Hamilton at standings.
against the 12-hit Maroon on- showers.
Benny
placing Koei Mitsui, idv^’
M
Hashimoto- 2 p.m. Anyone wishing to
slaught. Error’s in the usually
As the torrid sun bleached
took over but allowed 5 more make the trip is asked to conthe Earlscourt Park field and °uye and Baron Wakaba
air-tight
infield
didn’t
help i uns and / hits. Kayo captain
are still with Mitsu-: in
tact
an
executive
member
either* and big Ike was in one Frank Kika finished the game,
the panting fans in the stands league
top ten.
immediately.
spot after another.
on Saturday, ^uly 10, Lefty Joe
taking over in the 7th to blank
WA? Koyanagi startec’
The
scheduled
Nisei
League
Slim Sosh Miyata kept the the Maroons for the remainder.
Scattalon worked a beautiful
game between Aces and Cards 4-hit pitching job on the Nisei S e°S,f“‘ ran iM“ considerstinging Sox sluggers well un
Sammy Matsuo held the eyes
able txouble and
der control in a great comeback of the crowd with his masterful will be played at 11 a.m. on the nine, to give the league-leading Ohara took over in X X ”
same
day
at
Eastwood
Park.
performance. Miyata, a big fac pitching, allowing 7 scattered
Mayfairs a smart 7-2 victory.
mg.
~....... ’
tor in.ti^e Maroon capture of the hits, but whiffing 8, for his third
Lead-off batter Nobby TanBLUEBIRDS, EAGLES
aka whacked a hard-hit left
Winnipeg
championship
last straight win of the season.
On Tuesday night, jpIv ,
OPEN
LEAGUE
WITH
field
year, had failed to go the route
bingle that eluded the
Young second-string catcher
Mahers,
second-place West’ To
in his try against the same team Doug. Tomihiro’s spectacular VICTORIES
fieldex* arid went in for a home
x
onto
squad
hung a close 7-6 rip.
earlier this season.
run to start off the Westerns’
stopping and throwing impress
TORONTO.
—
Bluebirds
and
Stars of the game, however, ed. Without doubt he is the
first inning, but Scattalon al cxsxon oxx Westerns. Westerns’
were a pair of young rookies’ strongest-armed catcher in the and Eagles marked up wins as lowed no more hits until the ig batters, Koei Mitsui, kw
Idenouye and Baron WakabaToronto
Girls’
Softball
Bill Koga thrilled the crowd loop. Miyata, Yahiro, Gin Suz the
5th while Mayfairs tied it up in
League opened warfare on the
^ the Nisei hit parade.
with a diving snag of a sure uki, and Taxie Takada collected
the 3rd on a triple by Scattalon
hot Sunday of July 11 at Chris
Mitsui
and Wakabayashi collect
triple off Mak Otsu’ potent bat. 2 hits each to lead the 11-hit tie Pits.
and an error by Sock Tsuka
ing
two
safeties apiece and
Fox* the Soxes, San Ariza was a Maroon barage.
moto on Red Gilbert’s kicked
Nobby
Kukumoto
and
Tixie
Idenouye
knocking
out a triple.
grounder.
stonewall in the outer defences.
Failure of their pitching to Watanabe slammed out home
Westerns
collected
5 runs in
Maroons were spirited by the stop the Maroon attack was a
Another triple by Babe Gres- the fourth to make it hard for
runs in the 3rd inning to bring
return of hustling catcher ~Sueo blow to the Kayos. Tomihiro
Bluebirds from behind a 12-10 ko in the 4th inning with bases Mahers who came back with a
Takeuchi. With Takeuchi back had held Maroons to a measlv 2
margin by Club TNT. When filled gave Mayfairs’ all the lead
r Lin rally in the 6th to pin
in the fold, and young Doug. hits in the previous game. Un
the smoke had cleared, Blue they wanted and although West- sway the game.
Tomihiro. to back him, the less the Okumura brothers.
birds had gone ahead 15-12.
Maroon backstop setup lips been Shig and Dick, can take the
Emiko Nishizaki hurled for
greatly strengthened.
mound more often, Kayos will Bluebirds, while Toshiko KutsuTak Hirose, Sam Matsuo, have a rough time ahead. Starry
kake was the Club TNT pitcher.
Frank Yahiro and Ebony Ko outfieldex' Tucker- Y’amane, Toru
Eagles had an easy time of it,
jima all got 2 bingles apiece for ;Suzuki and veteran Sam Yosh
walloping the disorganized Bea
Maroons, x red Matsuo was the ino led the Kayo hitters with 2
vers, 26-11, in the second game.
Ione Sox to solve Miyata’s Jhits each.—Y.T.
In the absence of ace pitcher
MONTREAL.— Winning two1
Ten solid Nisei hits counted
slants, nicking him for 2 sharp
Toby Harris, coach Tomi Naka and losing two in the past two fox' the one-sided score with
singles.
,
mura toed the Beaver mounc weeks, the Montreal Niseis have Shig Sakauye collecting 2 dou
Veteran Sox catcher Nobbybut could not hold back the dropped to a third-place tie in bles, and catcher Kiyoshi Suga
Shimizu was in great form vviin Lemonage in
Eagles. Tomoko Goto was win the City Intermediate A Base who returned to the fold after
throwing out 3 runners at sec
ning pitcher.
ball .League. The Niseis and several games’ layoff with an in
ond. The fast Maroons just Exhibition Ball
Fils dTtalie have 9 wins and 4 jured finger, making a double
couldn’t shake him off.
Next Sunday, July 18, Club losses apiece, one game off the and a single. Pitcher Kobayashi
Lethbridge, Alta. — In an
* * * ■TNT takes on Beavers at 9 a.m., pace; the leaders, Belmont Tav- banked out a home run.
exhibition
doubleheader
at
On July 4, Maroons increased
the Henderson baseball park followed by Eagles vs. Blue erne having 10 wins and 3
their lead over Diamond Sox by
On July 7 at Beaubien,
losses.
a.m.
on Sunday, July .4, between birds at 10:30
Niseis
licked St. Michael Lum
*
*
*
*
*
*
A
Lethbridge Purity 99 of the
ber,
16-2,
for another lopsided
Mary Ebata’s base-stealing
Daley Kobayashi, Nisei ace,
Southern Alberta A Baseball
win.
Every
Nisei batter came
League and Coleman Cubs of was something to watch in the received his first defeat on Sun
through
with
a hit, Carl Matthe Crpwsnest Pass League, first day’s play. Chic Inamoto, day, June 27, when Ste. Marie spmiya leading with a homer
the teams split one each, with Sunnyside Stadium Duvals In won out 7-6 in a heart-breaking arid a single, and Nobby Ogura
Lethbridge
taking the first termediates player, is coaching game. Leading 6-3 going into with a double and a single to
BASEBALLS TO JAPAN
the last inning, two Nisei errors
tilt,
7-6,
to
give
Coleman the the young Club TNT nine.
A shipment of 12 dozen base
and
3 Ste. Marie hits, including account for 2 more of the 12
nightcap.
8-4.
balls went to Japan on July 3
hits.
a costly homer, turned a win
Lefty Kimoto allowed only 6 ROY OSHIRO
by plane. The baseballs were a
Nobby Ogura gave a fine per
ning game into a tough defeat.
gift of the International Base hits in the hot afternoon game TOPS CHINOOK
formance
allowing only 4 hits
Yo Hayashi with a triple and
ball League and will be given io but just missed the winning LOOP BATTING
and
striking
put 14 batters.
Kats Nakashima with a homer
high school and college teams margin. Catchex* George YoshL
COALDALE,
Alta. — paced Nisei batting.
naka banged out a triple fox* one
COMMENT—Helped along bv
in Japan.
(Adapted
from
The
Coaldale
Belmont Taverne, top team in the expert tutelage of coach Ty
* * *
of the few long distance clouts.
In the second gariie. brother News)—-Roy Oshiro, Coaldale the Intermediate League, hung Suga, Daley Kobayashi and
HONOLULU HA WAILINS
school teacher_ and
_— veteran a 5-3 win on the Nisei on-Wed Nobby
Ogura
are
coming
Currently on a barnstorming Stumpo Kimoto worked well,
athlete, was top batter in the nesday, June 30. Fox; the second through with brilliant pitching
allowing
only
4
hits
till
the
toux* through Western U.S. and
Southern
Alberta
Chinook straight game, a home run performances . . . The Niseis are
Although
Lethbridge
Canada, the Honolulu Hawaii 8th.
Baseball
League
at
the July spelled defeat for the Niseis. one of the fastest, if not the
ans, many- of whom are N’sei staged a 3-run rally in that
1
week, as
the
Chinook Third sacker Hank Kimura with fastest team in the league . . .
inning,
the
Coleman
bats
had
players, have been battling rhe
League neared the schedule two doubles and a single, and the infield has been strength
piled
up
a
forbidding
lead,
classy Harlem Globe Trottex*
end.
Shig Sakauye with a double and ened by the addition of Yuki
baseball squad. Captained bv and Kimoto allowed only
Oshiro. batting
a fat .404, a single led the batting. Nobby Uno for the Wednesday night
-------- o „
three
Purify
men
to
face
him
second baseman Jimmy Wasa
headed Pickett of Taber Maple Ogura whiffed 9 and allowed games . . . Uno plays for Ville
who has a ,325 average in the in the last stanza.
Leafs who boasted a .400 aver- only 2 hits but to no avail.
Sinard in-the Senior* Independ
Hawaiian Winter* League, the
age. The Coaldale squad, which
ent League on Sundays . - •
team carries 10 Nisei on its 15- KIYO MORIYAMA HITS
includes several Niseis, was also
Over 4000, the largest crowd Slugger ’Kaz Suga is not avail
man roster.
BUT BUTTE ROYALS LOSE
on the top of league standing of the season, filled Lafontaine able'fox* the Niseis since he plays
These are top Japanese Amer
PICTURE BUTTE. Alta.— with 11 wins and 2 losses. Other Park to watch the Niseis wallop ’ox* St. Ann in the City Senior
ican ball players in Hawaii. Kiyo “ Moriyama’s
thundering teams in Chinook League, be Sfe. Bernadette 16-1.
Daley League bn week-day
nd for
Jun Marumoto, veteran centre- bat scorched out a triple and a sides the Coaldale Pirates, are
Kobayashi
5-hit ball
ball and Mont Joli, about 400 mil s from
Aopay
asni
pitched
a-hit
fielder,
is
considered major- double in the Picture Butte the Taber. Leafs, Readymade
league calibre.
Larry Kami Royals - Wrentham Red Sox Royals, Taber CYO and Mc- fanned 10. allowing blit 2 walks. I Montreal, on Sundays.
shima. hard-hitting first-sacker, doubleheader on Sunday, July Nallv.
is one of the few Nisei players 4, but the Butte squad dropped
Niseis on
the
Coaldale
who have poled home runs con both ends of the bill, 5-4 and Pirate lineup are Joe Toyama
sistently. Wasa impressed Lefty
ss,
Toki Toyama c, Aki
O Doul. San ^Francisco Seals
Oshiro 2b, Jimmy Kanashiro
mentor, with his ability at the
PICTURE BUTTE. Alta.—Roy 2b sub, and Roy Oshiro If.
FORT WILLIAM. Ont.—Tall । Taxi, 7-6, in the second.
plate and around the keystone
Coaldale Pirates are entered
idie Mochizuki XX
” 53 0 the hero First team to be decked cat
was
sack. Jyun Hirota, an outfielder, Hayashi’s ninth inning hit with in the' Albertan provincial in Eddie
two
out
scored
the
run
which
of the day as M. Shiozaki Jewel uniforms, the Joe’s Taxi squad
is star halfback of the Univer
termediate A playoffs.
lers handed the embarrassed had to disappoint their genero
sity of Hawaii Rainbows. Oth tied the Picture Butte RoyalsChicken Coop Inn nine a 23-6 sponsor, Joe Mastrangelo.
ers on the team are Bill Yasui. New Day ton game, 1-1. in a
shi
’ghter in the first game of a pite their attractive red
Lefty* Higuchi, Dick Kitamura’ re.Sul3r Southern Alberta A
Scores at a Glance double-header
on Sunday, July blue getups.
Harry Kitamura, Kats Kojima Division League game recently.
4, in the Lakehead N;sei Base
and Masa Morita.
A series of pitchers, st;
WEST TORONTO SENIOR BALL
ball League.
COALDALE, Alta.—Walking j July 6—Western# 6. Mahers 7.
The Hawaiians will enter the
with Yosh Tatebe, Harold I
The slim Jeweller first base- Marchy Taniwa ana
national semi-pro baseball tour off with seven trophies at the July 10—Westerns 2. Mavfairs 7.
Picture
Butte track meet on
man
whacked out two round Tatebe, worked hard
nament at Wichita, Kansas, next
MONTREAL INTERMEDIATE BALL
Saturday,
June
19,
the
Coaldale
June
nippers,
one in Jhe.third, and x Joe’s Taxi ahead by 1
month.. Last year they finished
6, Ste. Harte 7.
grand-slam
homer in the 4ih, the.7th inning.
squad
of
26
athletes
led
by
Roy
June
SO
—
Niseis
3.
Belmont
Taverne
5.
sixth in the national tourney
July
-—Niseis 16. Ste. Bernadette 1.
to become the first man to clout
Oshiro
made
an
impressive
and jWOn dle sportsmanship
July
7—Niseis 16. St. .Michel Lbr. 2.
Frank Hoshizaki whacked out
two circuit blows in a single
showing.
award.
Jun Marumoto was
a
timely single with two men
game.
HAMILTON NISEI BASEBALL
Of the 40 track and field
rated the individual star of the
on
to score a Chicken Coop ran
events in the meet. Coaldale July 4—Aces IS. Cubs S.
Chicken Coop huHers Isa and.tie up the ball game. 6-aU
tournament.
took 16 firsts. Winners in
Sunohara and Mas Kumabe
WINNIPEG NISEI BASEBALL
Recently the Honolulu HawPaul Oda, usually cool sue
tine 2, Msrocns 10, Diamond Sox A
cluded Sumiko Furuse ' (13 JJuly
vere
helpless in face of the
-^—Maroons 9, Kayos 4.
anans and the Harlem Globe ‘ year old race), Keiko Okaliable
Joe's Taxi backstop- ~
Dooming Shiozaki bats which
Trotters visited Vancouver. B.C. ^?s^^
too
hard
to catch a runner
LAKEHEAD
NISEI
BASEBALL
year olds race and
collectea 1/ runs in the 2nd and
on their tour, and for the first high jump—-girls under 16). j my
second,
threw
the ball a",
niozaki
4th innings. The losers manI
Coop 6.
time in years, a Nisei ball
allowing
a
final
Chicken C
Aki Oshiro was a member of
to muster only 4 hits off
Joe s Tax: o. Chicken Coop 7. a?e.players phiz appeared in the the victorious boys’ 440-yd. I
run
for
the
game.
|ALBERTA EXHIBITION BASEBALL bri^ "Deke's sizzling speedDaily Province
sport pages relay squad, while* Miss Oka
Lethbridge Purity 7. Cc’e—an
when a full figure cut of Jimmy hashi ran on the winning 1i July 4—Cubs
THE NEW CANADLAN
c.
Wasa was printed.
* I girls
.
J
Lethbridge
Puritv
-.
uhone is
Chicken Coop Inn redeemed
’ 440-yd. relay team.
1
themselves by nosing out Joe’s
As Montreal Niseis Lose Pace
f
I
i
cheering section
fl
uut
T1
I
MOCHIZUKI SLAMS TWO HOMERS
FOR LAKEHEAD BALL RECORD
I
£
'A
4
^i
4
nic^
>ve^^
1
1
$f
- s'
MOhawk 7679
t
e
v
f:
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n
II
01
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YOUNG ROOKIES STAR
T
Maroons Take Two in Row to Top
Diamond Sox in Winnipeg Ball
Hamilton Rec Nine
Six Nations
Bad Week As Westerns Drop Two
To Remain in Third-Place Rut
HAMILTON, Ont.—On SunTORONTO. — With Toronto erns tallied
■
^
’ July 18, the Hamilton right in the middle of a heat final run in
Matsuo ^IPiEG—With pitchers Sosh Miyata and Sammy
Second
-----run
in
the
6th
iS^
Nisei Rec baseball team will wave and sufferin
SoxS
f°™, Maroons walloped Diamond
from mid- Tsukamoto whacked^
nosse^tn
tWO weeks to take over undisputed travel to the Six Nations In summer doldrums. Westerns of home run, Scattalon ’^ 'Q
Reserve to take part in j the West Toronto Senior Base
P On ?™ 2°7f &H4%^
L'a^ leadership, adian
hiseis well in check bad
*
big field day.
----------- ip.
ball League are reacting in the
taking Kayos fox' a 9-4 ride.
Bill Patterson, Mayfair
The
Nisei
team
will
play
an
convincing 10-4 thrashing on Player-coach Frank
Yahiro’s exhibition with a nine from the same sluggish way, dropping sacker, had 4 singles for - - / 'a'
Diamond Sox. Even Sox
their last two games to retain times up to boost Ms' <
firebailer
ace grand-slam homex* sent bespec- Six Nations Reserve.
their
third place in the league average into second D]s? J
was helpless tacled Yas Tomihiro to early
Cars will leave Hamilton at standings.
against the 12-hit Maroon on- showers.
Benny
placing Koei Mitsui, idv^’
M
Hashimoto- 2 p.m. Anyone wishing to
slaught. Error’s in the usually
As the torrid sun bleached
took over but allowed 5 more make the trip is asked to conthe Earlscourt Park field and °uye and Baron Wakaba
air-tight
infield
didn’t
help i uns and / hits. Kayo captain
are still with Mitsu-: in
tact
an
executive
member
either* and big Ike was in one Frank Kika finished the game,
the panting fans in the stands league
top ten.
immediately.
spot after another.
on Saturday, ^uly 10, Lefty Joe
taking over in the 7th to blank
WA? Koyanagi startec’
The
scheduled
Nisei
League
Slim Sosh Miyata kept the the Maroons for the remainder.
Scattalon worked a beautiful
game between Aces and Cards 4-hit pitching job on the Nisei S e°S,f“‘ ran iM“ considerstinging Sox sluggers well un
Sammy Matsuo held the eyes
able txouble and
der control in a great comeback of the crowd with his masterful will be played at 11 a.m. on the nine, to give the league-leading Ohara took over in X X ”
same
day
at
Eastwood
Park.
performance. Miyata, a big fac pitching, allowing 7 scattered
Mayfairs a smart 7-2 victory.
mg.
~....... ’
tor in.ti^e Maroon capture of the hits, but whiffing 8, for his third
Lead-off batter Nobby TanBLUEBIRDS, EAGLES
aka whacked a hard-hit left
Winnipeg
championship
last straight win of the season.
On Tuesday night, jpIv ,
OPEN
LEAGUE
WITH
field
year, had failed to go the route
bingle that eluded the
Young second-string catcher
Mahers,
second-place West’ To
in his try against the same team Doug. Tomihiro’s spectacular VICTORIES
fieldex* arid went in for a home
x
onto
squad
hung a close 7-6 rip.
earlier this season.
run to start off the Westerns’
stopping and throwing impress
TORONTO.
—
Bluebirds
and
Stars of the game, however, ed. Without doubt he is the
first inning, but Scattalon al cxsxon oxx Westerns. Westerns’
were a pair of young rookies’ strongest-armed catcher in the and Eagles marked up wins as lowed no more hits until the ig batters, Koei Mitsui, kw
Idenouye and Baron WakabaToronto
Girls’
Softball
Bill Koga thrilled the crowd loop. Miyata, Yahiro, Gin Suz the
5th while Mayfairs tied it up in
League opened warfare on the
^ the Nisei hit parade.
with a diving snag of a sure uki, and Taxie Takada collected
the 3rd on a triple by Scattalon
hot Sunday of July 11 at Chris
Mitsui
and Wakabayashi collect
triple off Mak Otsu’ potent bat. 2 hits each to lead the 11-hit tie Pits.
and an error by Sock Tsuka
ing
two
safeties apiece and
Fox* the Soxes, San Ariza was a Maroon barage.
moto on Red Gilbert’s kicked
Nobby
Kukumoto
and
Tixie
Idenouye
knocking
out a triple.
grounder.
stonewall in the outer defences.
Failure of their pitching to Watanabe slammed out home
Westerns
collected
5 runs in
Maroons were spirited by the stop the Maroon attack was a
Another triple by Babe Gres- the fourth to make it hard for
runs in the 3rd inning to bring
return of hustling catcher ~Sueo blow to the Kayos. Tomihiro
Bluebirds from behind a 12-10 ko in the 4th inning with bases Mahers who came back with a
Takeuchi. With Takeuchi back had held Maroons to a measlv 2
margin by Club TNT. When filled gave Mayfairs’ all the lead
r Lin rally in the 6th to pin
in the fold, and young Doug. hits in the previous game. Un
the smoke had cleared, Blue they wanted and although West- sway the game.
Tomihiro. to back him, the less the Okumura brothers.
birds had gone ahead 15-12.
Maroon backstop setup lips been Shig and Dick, can take the
Emiko Nishizaki hurled for
greatly strengthened.
mound more often, Kayos will Bluebirds, while Toshiko KutsuTak Hirose, Sam Matsuo, have a rough time ahead. Starry
kake was the Club TNT pitcher.
Frank Yahiro and Ebony Ko outfieldex' Tucker- Y’amane, Toru
Eagles had an easy time of it,
jima all got 2 bingles apiece for ;Suzuki and veteran Sam Yosh
walloping the disorganized Bea
Maroons, x red Matsuo was the ino led the Kayo hitters with 2
vers, 26-11, in the second game.
Ione Sox to solve Miyata’s Jhits each.—Y.T.
In the absence of ace pitcher
MONTREAL.— Winning two1
Ten solid Nisei hits counted
slants, nicking him for 2 sharp
Toby Harris, coach Tomi Naka and losing two in the past two fox' the one-sided score with
singles.
,
mura toed the Beaver mounc weeks, the Montreal Niseis have Shig Sakauye collecting 2 dou
Veteran Sox catcher Nobbybut could not hold back the dropped to a third-place tie in bles, and catcher Kiyoshi Suga
Shimizu was in great form vviin Lemonage in
Eagles. Tomoko Goto was win the City Intermediate A Base who returned to the fold after
throwing out 3 runners at sec
ning pitcher.
ball .League. The Niseis and several games’ layoff with an in
ond. The fast Maroons just Exhibition Ball
Fils dTtalie have 9 wins and 4 jured finger, making a double
couldn’t shake him off.
Next Sunday, July 18, Club losses apiece, one game off the and a single. Pitcher Kobayashi
Lethbridge, Alta. — In an
* * * ■TNT takes on Beavers at 9 a.m., pace; the leaders, Belmont Tav- banked out a home run.
exhibition
doubleheader
at
On July 4, Maroons increased
the Henderson baseball park followed by Eagles vs. Blue erne having 10 wins and 3
their lead over Diamond Sox by
On July 7 at Beaubien,
losses.
a.m.
on Sunday, July .4, between birds at 10:30
Niseis
licked St. Michael Lum
*
*
*
*
*
*
A
Lethbridge Purity 99 of the
ber,
16-2,
for another lopsided
Mary Ebata’s base-stealing
Daley Kobayashi, Nisei ace,
Southern Alberta A Baseball
win.
Every
Nisei batter came
League and Coleman Cubs of was something to watch in the received his first defeat on Sun
through
with
a hit, Carl Matthe Crpwsnest Pass League, first day’s play. Chic Inamoto, day, June 27, when Ste. Marie spmiya leading with a homer
the teams split one each, with Sunnyside Stadium Duvals In won out 7-6 in a heart-breaking arid a single, and Nobby Ogura
Lethbridge
taking the first termediates player, is coaching game. Leading 6-3 going into with a double and a single to
BASEBALLS TO JAPAN
the last inning, two Nisei errors
tilt,
7-6,
to
give
Coleman the the young Club TNT nine.
A shipment of 12 dozen base
and
3 Ste. Marie hits, including account for 2 more of the 12
nightcap.
8-4.
balls went to Japan on July 3
hits.
a costly homer, turned a win
Lefty Kimoto allowed only 6 ROY OSHIRO
by plane. The baseballs were a
Nobby Ogura gave a fine per
ning game into a tough defeat.
gift of the International Base hits in the hot afternoon game TOPS CHINOOK
formance
allowing only 4 hits
Yo Hayashi with a triple and
ball League and will be given io but just missed the winning LOOP BATTING
and
striking
put 14 batters.
Kats Nakashima with a homer
high school and college teams margin. Catchex* George YoshL
COALDALE,
Alta. — paced Nisei batting.
naka banged out a triple fox* one
COMMENT—Helped along bv
in Japan.
(Adapted
from
The
Coaldale
Belmont Taverne, top team in the expert tutelage of coach Ty
* * *
of the few long distance clouts.
In the second gariie. brother News)—-Roy Oshiro, Coaldale the Intermediate League, hung Suga, Daley Kobayashi and
HONOLULU HA WAILINS
school teacher_ and
_— veteran a 5-3 win on the Nisei on-Wed Nobby
Ogura
are
coming
Currently on a barnstorming Stumpo Kimoto worked well,
athlete, was top batter in the nesday, June 30. Fox; the second through with brilliant pitching
allowing
only
4
hits
till
the
toux* through Western U.S. and
Southern
Alberta
Chinook straight game, a home run performances . . . The Niseis are
Although
Lethbridge
Canada, the Honolulu Hawaii 8th.
Baseball
League
at
the July spelled defeat for the Niseis. one of the fastest, if not the
ans, many- of whom are N’sei staged a 3-run rally in that
1
week, as
the
Chinook Third sacker Hank Kimura with fastest team in the league . . .
inning,
the
Coleman
bats
had
players, have been battling rhe
League neared the schedule two doubles and a single, and the infield has been strength
piled
up
a
forbidding
lead,
classy Harlem Globe Trottex*
end.
Shig Sakauye with a double and ened by the addition of Yuki
baseball squad. Captained bv and Kimoto allowed only
Oshiro. batting
a fat .404, a single led the batting. Nobby Uno for the Wednesday night
-------- o „
three
Purify
men
to
face
him
second baseman Jimmy Wasa
headed Pickett of Taber Maple Ogura whiffed 9 and allowed games . . . Uno plays for Ville
who has a ,325 average in the in the last stanza.
Leafs who boasted a .400 aver- only 2 hits but to no avail.
Sinard in-the Senior* Independ
Hawaiian Winter* League, the
age. The Coaldale squad, which
ent League on Sundays . - •
team carries 10 Nisei on its 15- KIYO MORIYAMA HITS
includes several Niseis, was also
Over 4000, the largest crowd Slugger ’Kaz Suga is not avail
man roster.
BUT BUTTE ROYALS LOSE
on the top of league standing of the season, filled Lafontaine able'fox* the Niseis since he plays
These are top Japanese Amer
PICTURE BUTTE. Alta.— with 11 wins and 2 losses. Other Park to watch the Niseis wallop ’ox* St. Ann in the City Senior
ican ball players in Hawaii. Kiyo “ Moriyama’s
thundering teams in Chinook League, be Sfe. Bernadette 16-1.
Daley League bn week-day
nd for
Jun Marumoto, veteran centre- bat scorched out a triple and a sides the Coaldale Pirates, are
Kobayashi
5-hit ball
ball and Mont Joli, about 400 mil s from
Aopay
asni
pitched
a-hit
fielder,
is
considered major- double in the Picture Butte the Taber. Leafs, Readymade
league calibre.
Larry Kami Royals - Wrentham Red Sox Royals, Taber CYO and Mc- fanned 10. allowing blit 2 walks. I Montreal, on Sundays.
shima. hard-hitting first-sacker, doubleheader on Sunday, July Nallv.
is one of the few Nisei players 4, but the Butte squad dropped
Niseis on
the
Coaldale
who have poled home runs con both ends of the bill, 5-4 and Pirate lineup are Joe Toyama
sistently. Wasa impressed Lefty
ss,
Toki Toyama c, Aki
O Doul. San ^Francisco Seals
Oshiro 2b, Jimmy Kanashiro
mentor, with his ability at the
PICTURE BUTTE. Alta.—Roy 2b sub, and Roy Oshiro If.
FORT WILLIAM. Ont.—Tall । Taxi, 7-6, in the second.
plate and around the keystone
Coaldale Pirates are entered
idie Mochizuki XX
” 53 0 the hero First team to be decked cat
was
sack. Jyun Hirota, an outfielder, Hayashi’s ninth inning hit with in the' Albertan provincial in Eddie
two
out
scored
the
run
which
of the day as M. Shiozaki Jewel uniforms, the Joe’s Taxi squad
is star halfback of the Univer
termediate A playoffs.
lers handed the embarrassed had to disappoint their genero
sity of Hawaii Rainbows. Oth tied the Picture Butte RoyalsChicken Coop Inn nine a 23-6 sponsor, Joe Mastrangelo.
ers on the team are Bill Yasui. New Day ton game, 1-1. in a
shi
’ghter in the first game of a pite their attractive red
Lefty* Higuchi, Dick Kitamura’ re.Sul3r Southern Alberta A
Scores at a Glance double-header
on Sunday, July blue getups.
Harry Kitamura, Kats Kojima Division League game recently.
4, in the Lakehead N;sei Base
and Masa Morita.
A series of pitchers, st;
WEST TORONTO SENIOR BALL
ball League.
COALDALE, Alta.—Walking j July 6—Western# 6. Mahers 7.
The Hawaiians will enter the
with Yosh Tatebe, Harold I
The slim Jeweller first base- Marchy Taniwa ana
national semi-pro baseball tour off with seven trophies at the July 10—Westerns 2. Mavfairs 7.
Picture
Butte track meet on
man
whacked out two round Tatebe, worked hard
nament at Wichita, Kansas, next
MONTREAL INTERMEDIATE BALL
Saturday,
June
19,
the
Coaldale
June
nippers,
one in Jhe.third, and x Joe’s Taxi ahead by 1
month.. Last year they finished
6, Ste. Harte 7.
grand-slam
homer in the 4ih, the.7th inning.
squad
of
26
athletes
led
by
Roy
June
SO
—
Niseis
3.
Belmont
Taverne
5.
sixth in the national tourney
July
-—Niseis 16. Ste. Bernadette 1.
to become the first man to clout
Oshiro
made
an
impressive
and jWOn dle sportsmanship
July
7—Niseis 16. St. .Michel Lbr. 2.
Frank Hoshizaki whacked out
two circuit blows in a single
showing.
award.
Jun Marumoto was
a
timely single with two men
game.
HAMILTON NISEI BASEBALL
Of the 40 track and field
rated the individual star of the
on
to score a Chicken Coop ran
events in the meet. Coaldale July 4—Aces IS. Cubs S.
Chicken Coop huHers Isa and.tie up the ball game. 6-aU
tournament.
took 16 firsts. Winners in
Sunohara and Mas Kumabe
WINNIPEG NISEI BASEBALL
Recently the Honolulu HawPaul Oda, usually cool sue
tine 2, Msrocns 10, Diamond Sox A
cluded Sumiko Furuse ' (13 JJuly
vere
helpless in face of the
-^—Maroons 9, Kayos 4.
anans and the Harlem Globe ‘ year old race), Keiko Okaliable
Joe's Taxi backstop- ~
Dooming Shiozaki bats which
Trotters visited Vancouver. B.C. ^?s^^
too
hard
to catch a runner
LAKEHEAD
NISEI
BASEBALL
year olds race and
collectea 1/ runs in the 2nd and
on their tour, and for the first high jump—-girls under 16). j my
second,
threw
the ball a",
niozaki
4th innings. The losers manI
Coop 6.
time in years, a Nisei ball
allowing
a
final
Chicken C
Aki Oshiro was a member of
to muster only 4 hits off
Joe s Tax: o. Chicken Coop 7. a?e.players phiz appeared in the the victorious boys’ 440-yd. I
run
for
the
game.
|ALBERTA EXHIBITION BASEBALL bri^ "Deke's sizzling speedDaily Province
sport pages relay squad, while* Miss Oka
Lethbridge Purity 7. Cc’e—an
when a full figure cut of Jimmy hashi ran on the winning 1i July 4—Cubs
THE NEW CANADLAN
c.
Wasa was printed.
* I girls
.
J
Lethbridge
Puritv
-.
uhone is
Chicken Coop Inn redeemed
’ 440-yd. relay team.
1
themselves by nosing out Joe’s
As Montreal Niseis Lose Pace
f
I
i
cheering section
fl
uut
T1
I
MOCHIZUKI SLAMS TWO HOMERS
FOR LAKEHEAD BALL RECORD
I
£
'A
4
^i
4
nic^
>ve^^
1
1
$f
- s'
MOhawk 7679
t
e
v
f:
h
o
y
p
si
S
n
II
01
b<
0
H
C
st
a;
F03
O]
K<
Page 11
more
N’ basebael
By STOQT
Vets Will Picnic
Aces Cel Their First Win This Year wS5‘
Setting Back Cubs for Big 18-8 Upset
Personal Notes Across Canada
ko; his mother, two
.TORONTO. — Frenchman’s ENGAGEMENTS
TORONTO.—Ai a double
Bay will be the place, arid Sat
clary and Mav; six 5
urday, August 21, the date for j gagement party on Sun
Albert
HAMILTON, Ont.—Hear ye!: POST-MORTEMS: Aces
the Annual Nisei Veterans’ Pic- j June 27. 1the announcem
f
Hear ye! This Town Crier ; cidedly threw a bomb into
me. a representative meeting of
Ikuta
blends his shouts /with other | league ball grinding Ci
into I veterans decided on Fridav. j Yuriko May Shikatani.
Burial
Hamilton baseball followers in: the dirt so decisivelv Willie * Julv 9
i daughter of Mr. and Mr
:
was
the
Rainie
hailing the Aces for their initial | Tateishi, called uoop to relieve
Stum
! buro Shikatani. to Mr
ana
i terv
T
T ^Oikawa in the otn
5th. responded' Nishio were chosen eo^h^' i ; Hironobu Moriyama, ri
But the Cubs are not so happy,; well, striking out 9 in the 5 in-iof the uicnk
t? u
> of Mr. Ujiro Moriyama.
being on the receiving end of an; nings, as well » throwing a includes SliM“b K
'. Dan Ragan. :
j And I he engagement oi
Yosir Fujimoto
IS-S sheltaekmj. Sox handed ; wet rag on all Cub threats. Cubs i Obata. Ken Nozaki
j Miisue Sh katani. third d
i
Or
and Butch Mur
Caras taeir second set-back of ; played erratic ball throughout- • dota. Louis Suzuki' KU j ler of Mr. and Mrs. Tas;
the year to nose past_ che losers for a total of 12 miscues, and; aide. George TanU
nW
to Mr. Frank
j-no a half-game lead.
tomu Sumi
even captain Mac Oikawa was' Shintani. >rank
of Mr. •
,
,
_ _
seen drooping at the corners. I Yosh Hvodo Ed'
i.
The ’
iwa u’Ol°; j partv was hole
iONTREAL. — Mr. Seihei
tne omy Sunaay July 4:
A Side Issue—The answer to * Sid Sakanishi S^
Ove ^Vhome. with m
mkashi cried at home on July
. .-ices finally nt a ary tuse ; the Cubs’ poor show this season ; Jack Oki.
Funeral services were held
: ent.
,an ,18’8
OI? a !—after taking the league chain- 9 Various
committees
July
,. with Rev. T. Tsuji of
^ Cuo nt—' /eira?S
? pionship this year—is the ban- lined up. and plans were ,^;MARPIAGE
.7nle
J
CUf ASat I nin“ of Mac ,9ikawa as a pitch- ; to contact veterans in other On-'
to wait foi trie usual Ace । er. I would like to hear an un-; tario centres and Eastern Doints. ■
____ .
TORONTO.
etown.
±his time, iheie ; biased, unselfish, reasonable and! Frenchman’s Bay is the same'^w' ‘^' ‘^K’ wedding took plac>
no breakdown.
| practical reason for this unjust: site used last year for the first ■ °^ ^'?s ^aomi Tanaka, daugh
\'
, ®s j move. This does not involve 5 veterans' picnic, and has fine! ter °^
an^ Nirs. Tokikazi
rampage in their • only Oikawa. By successfully i swimming facilities, as well as ^Tanaka oi Toronto, and Mr
. their
,
FEMALE HELP AY ANTED
i tne second jto mark up • barring him as a pitcher, the ! ball ground. Efforts are being = — n^ - ^Edwa”^ Chiba, son o
on two eiiors and sin- | league has unconsciously endan-1 made to arrange lunches for!
by Ken Hashimoto and : gered the freedom and rights ! out-of-town veterans so that *
the C
of
nor
Tateishi.
Wil
z
cai?e ,
i of all outstanding players be- ; they will not have to bring their J
iaren ana willing to spend
The reception was held at
ore twice in the third on i sides threatening to stifle furth ; own.
y
and August at quiet sume i s. and twice in the fourth : er improvement and advance j For
information,
veterans
!
r
resort.
Highest wages and
Shores Kondo’s single and ment of all players in the loop.
an
I should contact Tom Sagar
•ellent
living
quarters. RefKa /amoto’s sacrifice to again go
Why discriminate against Mac j 572A College St Toronto CH
nces
from
any
Japanese
he lead, 6-5.
Mr. and Mrs.
Oikawa only? If he is refused
Indians
in
Regina
if
nocesConiihuing the see-saw race,!
trip to Northern Ontario
right to pitch, why can Ken !
y.
Write
to
J.
M.
Wessel,
Aces got a more on an error, a • Hashimoto retain his position at ;
their honey moon.
5 Rae Street. Regina.
and singles by Hideo I first, both in the all-stars and;YP„n.o LUU Q
1
°S *lola oecODCl j BIRTHS
Tanaka and Kaye Inouye. Cubs ; the leaguei games,
games'. or
C the
CI Shim-;.
GIRL WANTED
j TORONTO. — Born
pushed one across in the 7th on|odas
at
second
and
shor
son
----- -------------------- „„rt. etc.?; Midsummer Ball
i Johnny Thomas. to M
Ace errors, but Tosh Hashimoto Why should am- player be re- j
ancl ■ On or two days a week,
evened that one up with a long fused the privilege to play any ;
Thomas Hoita of Toronto.^,.. bly two days. Salary
I on June 16.
homer to centre for Aces. one position? Very little has j
* * £
iI ranged. Please phone WA. 4383,
WINNIPEG—Saturday, Aug !
Yickey Takeda's single drove in been said about this issue to
ust 7. will be the date of the OBITUARIES
) i Mrs. Hanaford.
the last Cub fun in the 8th.
date and we all hope to be en Y-Peg' Club Second Annual
And then the fun started. In lightened on the hows and whys
ROKUTARO IDE
I
WANTED:
Domestic __heip.
Midsummer Ball, to be held
the last of the Sth, Aces hit the by the executive body soon.
HAMILTON. Ont.—Mr. Roku-1 must be able to cook. $<o per
again
at
the
YWCA
gym,
from
jackpot and tallied 9 James on
taro Ide passed away on Sun-! month. Lovely suburban home
8:30 p.m. sharp.
two walks, five errors and five
day. June 27. at the home of his I with modern conveniences. Ap
All Winnipeggers will remem daughter, Mrs. Sueji KoyamaJ ply Mrs. DePalma, Zone 9-540.
hits.
PERSON SOUGHT
A cheque for Matsu Sugiura ber the huge success of the ! 138 Victoria Ave. N„ Hamilton ! (Toronto.)
George Masuda of Aces top
ped batting for the day with 4 (Reg. No. 01046) is being held । First Midsummer Ball last year. Mr. Ide who was born in Japan |
WANTED:
Girl
for
for 6. T. Oikawa and Willie Tate for her at the Department of This year, the Y-Pegs are plan 78 years ago, had been in Can- i
grocery store,
44-hour week
ning
an
even
better
dance
with
ishi hurled for Aces, Wes Hyodo Labor office, 24 Adelaide St. E.,
ada for over half a century. He with good pay
Cecil Grocery.
a short but varied program.
Toronto.
was losing pitcher.
was one of the founders of the- Apply
Trading
Furuya
Co.
With summer’s coming, club Powell United Church in Van- Ltd., 381 Spadina Ave., Toi
activities have been suspended couver, B.C., and till his death ronto.
but Y’-Peg members have still a faithful member of All Peo
HELP WANTED
managed to keep their names ple’s United Church in Hamil
in the limelight. Sab Morita ton.
25 PRESSERS & operators,
B.C.—Two of- the i June 24 were persons of Jap- has again won a scholarship at
Surviving are three sons. experienced on blouses and
eleven
new Canadian citizens !anese
------ —
;
-'origin.
the University’ of Manitoba. Joseph of Hamilton, Jin and housecoats,
required
immed
vho received their certificates
They included the following And Joanne Shigeta walked off Henry of Toronto; four daugh iately at 7044 St. Urbain St.,
from Judge J. Ross Archibald from Raymond:
Ben-Rose
Sports
with the Commercial Prize for ters, Mrs. Koyama, with whom Montreal.
here recently were Genichi Chiba
Tsunesaku Kimura, Takeshi being the top ranking commer he resided, Mrs. Y. Shiraishi and wear Inc.
ot Vernon, and Kinzo Wakaba- Nishida, Ichisaburo Ito, Mrs.
cial student at Daniel McIntyre Miss Michi Ide, both of HamiT
j ashi of Oyama.
WANTED IMMEDIATELY —
Masa Ito, Jutaro Nakamura. Collegiate.
ton, and Mrs. Y. Kishimoto of
Experienced
presser on Hoff
On Mrs. Nobuko Nakamura, Jiro
LETHBRIDGE,
Ata.
Y-Peg high grads were Ruth Toronto; and one brother in man machine. Apply Christie
Monday afternoon, June 21, ap Iwasa, Mrs. Masuko Kado, Mrs. Sasaki
(Gordon
Ball),
San Japan.
Cleaners Ltd., 798 Old Weston
plications for Canadian citizen Akiko Moriyama, .Mrs. Kimi Ariza, Margaret Chow. Sam
The funeral was held at All
Rd.,
Toronto. JU. 4194.
snip came before Judge J. H. Takaguchi, Masao Matsugi, Mrs. Matsuo, Joanne Shigeta and People’s United Church on Wed
Sissons in district court from 32 Soma Kitagawa, Reizo Kita Sachi Nishihara (all of Daniel nesday. June 30, at 3:30 p.m.
PRESSERS: male or female,
residents of Southern Alberta, gawa, Miss Teruko Ikeda, Heiy- McIntyre) and Sakave Tanabe Rev. K. Shimizu officiated, aswanted
full-time. Linen supmostly' persons
of
Japanese emon Kitagawa, Mrs. Kimi Kit (St. John’s Tech).—A-J.S.
sisted by Rev. G. D. McLeod, j pHed. Experienced workers, 65
origin. They included:
agawa, Iwao Masuda, Mrs. K.
SeVT; Kon^iyam„a and Rev- E-i cents per-hour, Toronto. KE.
Shigeru Kinoshita, Seiichi To- Masuda, Mrs. Ayano Ikeda,
Yoshioka.
Interment was lni4236
bo. Mitsuno Oka and Takumo Torao Amemori, Mrs. Asa AmeWoodland cemetery.
Oka of Stirling; Noriyasu Higa, mori, Shigeichi Shigehiro, Mrs.
REAL ESTATE
South Albertans
Matsu Higa
and
Mrs. Tomi Shizue Shigehiro, Yotaro KamiCHARLES OHAMA
Higa of Taber; Sato Uyeno and tomo, Mrs. Aiko Kamitomo. Mrs. Camp at Water ton
FOR SALE, 50-acre farm, 20
RAINIER. Alta. — Over 200 acres of sandy loam. AsparaSoshichi Tanaka
of Diamond
friends of the late Mr. Charlie bus, berries and fruit trees. Good
City: Kumejiro Matsumoto, Ma- Seitaro Yatani, and Mrs. Utano July 23-26
Ohama, 32, who was fatally for market garden.
^Zj Okahashi, Gichi Fujikawa, Osaka.
Chicken
LETHBRIDGE Alta. — Come
Also included were the folMrs. Yoshiye Kitamura, Shinzo
burned Saturday evening. June house with 2,500 chickens. 8
to
the
Southern.
Alberta
JCCA
Kitamura, Mrs. Chiya Tanaka, lowing:
19, attended funeral services in
Mrs. Haruo Tomita. Noble- summer camp for one glorious the Rainier Community Hall. room brick house, running wat
loshitaro Tanaka, all of Coalrfe' Kiyuji Nashiy'ama, Mrs. ford: Mrs. Tomi Miyauchi, Kun- week-end, July 23-26 inclusive, Tuesday, June 22. Friends and er and hydro. 10 acres fall
Sameshima,
Tomosada ichi Fukumoto, Mrs. Yukiyo at the Canyon Church Camp in relatives from Raymond, Ma- wheat and 15 acres hay. Full
^-Utake. Mrs. Mary Masako Fukurhoto, Shizuo Kado and Waterton Park. Canyon Church grath. Rosemary, and many price $10,500; $6,500 down pay
Cautake. Yoshio Okano, Yukio Mrs. Tokuyo Kado of Welling; Camp is 5 miles up the Red other points attended to pay ment. . Balance on mortgage at
4%. Taxes $91 yearly. Apply
yjj-.no, ~ Chokei
Nishimazuru,
Umeo Luke Murakami. Mor- Rock Canyon Road.
last respects.
^r5. Ushi Nishimazuru. all of ihei Murakami, Katsuyori Mur-] Registration must be made
John Pump, R.R. No. 2, Free
Surviving are his widow, man, Ont. (28 miles from To
Letnbridge.
akami. Masaichi Kunimoto. Sho-1 immediately. All those wishing j
Mrs.
Kay Ohama; two daugh- ronto. 12 miles from Hamilton,
ji Saga and Mrs. Midori Saga I to attend the camp should send J
ters,
Rayko
Maureen and Kun- close to Queen Elizabeth HighAlta.—Most of of Magrath: Mrs. Maki Nishi-j the following information to j
e;< Southern Albertans who |mura and Yosaburo Nishimura j Mary Okamoto, Box 545, Tabei, j
way.)
appi o for Canadian citizenship i
KAZUO OKANO
of
Coaldale:
Kahichi
Hori.
Mrs.
|
Alta.,
right
now:
■
~
ACCOMMODATION
in
Uhbridge, on Thursday, I Namiye Fukunaga and Gonpei ।
Name: address; whether comSUN LIFE OF CANADA
TWO ROOMS available to
Fukunaga of Taber.
; ing by bus or private car (if by
car. expected time of arrival).
OFFICE: 903 LINDSAY BLDG.
.
party
who will agree to oper
X£T CANADIAN AGENTS
ate rooming house. Apply after
Things to bring: Tick bedTelephone: 97-257
5:30 p.m. to 219 Jarvis St.. ToLETHBRIDGE, Alta.—Receiv-; djng_ warm clothes, towels,
Res.: Box 20-B. R.R. No. i
SLIM SHOYAMA
j
ronto.
Phone TR. 0940. Other
ing their certificates of Cana- j [OOth brush, hiking shoes, bathWINNIPEG. MAN.
C/O Kamloops Bakery
;
rooms
also
available.
dian
citizenship
at
the
district
;
n
g
su
jt.
and
$7.50.
which
in
°’la St.
Kamloops, B.C.
court
on
Tuesday
morning,
eludes
the
S3
registration
fee.
ED. OUCHI
1670
The bus will leave the Leth
on. B.C. । June 29, were the following;
I Southern Albertans:
c:: -; J?1N KAT SU KUNIMOTO
bridge Y on Friday, July 23, at
Keiji Yamanouchi and DenB.C.
jiro Okabe of Picture Butte.
SEIICHI YOSHIDA
Greenwood. B.C.
Wakaichi Itaya of Iron Springs,
Taking part in the camp are
TAKESHI UCHIDA.
and Masaru Okamura of Noble . Miss Buddy Latter of the EdNew Denver, B.C,
• WATCHES AND JEWELLERY OF ALL TYPES
: monton YPU who will be camp I
ford.
Watches Repaired
ELMER OIKE
director, and Miss H. Bartling i
^Central Family Co-c
© EYES EXAMINED—GLASSES REPAIRED
will
lead
discussions,
Applying for Canadiar citi-' who
Winnia
(Phone 26-905)
were:
Games,
skits,
songs,
swimming,
zenship at the same time
Open Evenings By Appointment
j
mits goto
Mrs. Shimo Matsugi of Ray- ; dancing—everything is in store
XT. ci 111-11»
O
MANAGER:
PHONE:
Ot Coal- for everyone who attends this
' mond,
T. KAMEOKA
CoalWaterton
week-end.
of
Kaoru
511A ST. CLAIR AVE. W. Store: ME. 9953
ioronto. Or ; hurst,
Come one, come all. well see
(WA. 9934)
of Jaux-1
dale, and Juro ia.
AKAMURA
(St. Clair at Bathurst)
Home: OX. 4203
5 vou there!
*
CLASSIFIED
MORE NEW CANADIANS
CLAIR CREDIT JEWELLERS
and OPTOMETRISTS
N’ basebael
By STOQT
Vets Will Picnic
Aces Cel Their First Win This Year wS5‘
Setting Back Cubs for Big 18-8 Upset
Personal Notes Across Canada
ko; his mother, two
.TORONTO. — Frenchman’s ENGAGEMENTS
TORONTO.—Ai a double
Bay will be the place, arid Sat
clary and Mav; six 5
urday, August 21, the date for j gagement party on Sun
Albert
HAMILTON, Ont.—Hear ye!: POST-MORTEMS: Aces
the Annual Nisei Veterans’ Pic- j June 27. 1the announcem
f
Hear ye! This Town Crier ; cidedly threw a bomb into
me. a representative meeting of
Ikuta
blends his shouts /with other | league ball grinding Ci
into I veterans decided on Fridav. j Yuriko May Shikatani.
Burial
Hamilton baseball followers in: the dirt so decisivelv Willie * Julv 9
i daughter of Mr. and Mr
:
was
the
Rainie
hailing the Aces for their initial | Tateishi, called uoop to relieve
Stum
! buro Shikatani. to Mr
ana
i terv
T
T ^Oikawa in the otn
5th. responded' Nishio were chosen eo^h^' i ; Hironobu Moriyama, ri
But the Cubs are not so happy,; well, striking out 9 in the 5 in-iof the uicnk
t? u
> of Mr. Ujiro Moriyama.
being on the receiving end of an; nings, as well » throwing a includes SliM“b K
'. Dan Ragan. :
j And I he engagement oi
Yosir Fujimoto
IS-S sheltaekmj. Sox handed ; wet rag on all Cub threats. Cubs i Obata. Ken Nozaki
j Miisue Sh katani. third d
i
Or
and Butch Mur
Caras taeir second set-back of ; played erratic ball throughout- • dota. Louis Suzuki' KU j ler of Mr. and Mrs. Tas;
the year to nose past_ che losers for a total of 12 miscues, and; aide. George TanU
nW
to Mr. Frank
j-no a half-game lead.
tomu Sumi
even captain Mac Oikawa was' Shintani. >rank
of Mr. •
,
,
_ _
seen drooping at the corners. I Yosh Hvodo Ed'
i.
The ’
iwa u’Ol°; j partv was hole
iONTREAL. — Mr. Seihei
tne omy Sunaay July 4:
A Side Issue—The answer to * Sid Sakanishi S^
Ove ^Vhome. with m
mkashi cried at home on July
. .-ices finally nt a ary tuse ; the Cubs’ poor show this season ; Jack Oki.
Funeral services were held
: ent.
,an ,18’8
OI? a !—after taking the league chain- 9 Various
committees
July
,. with Rev. T. Tsuji of
^ Cuo nt—' /eira?S
? pionship this year—is the ban- lined up. and plans were ,^;MARPIAGE
.7nle
J
CUf ASat I nin“ of Mac ,9ikawa as a pitch- ; to contact veterans in other On-'
to wait foi trie usual Ace । er. I would like to hear an un-; tario centres and Eastern Doints. ■
____ .
TORONTO.
etown.
±his time, iheie ; biased, unselfish, reasonable and! Frenchman’s Bay is the same'^w' ‘^' ‘^K’ wedding took plac>
no breakdown.
| practical reason for this unjust: site used last year for the first ■ °^ ^'?s ^aomi Tanaka, daugh
\'
, ®s j move. This does not involve 5 veterans' picnic, and has fine! ter °^
an^ Nirs. Tokikazi
rampage in their • only Oikawa. By successfully i swimming facilities, as well as ^Tanaka oi Toronto, and Mr
. their
,
FEMALE HELP AY ANTED
i tne second jto mark up • barring him as a pitcher, the ! ball ground. Efforts are being = — n^ - ^Edwa”^ Chiba, son o
on two eiiors and sin- | league has unconsciously endan-1 made to arrange lunches for!
by Ken Hashimoto and : gered the freedom and rights ! out-of-town veterans so that *
the C
of
nor
Tateishi.
Wil
z
cai?e ,
i of all outstanding players be- ; they will not have to bring their J
iaren ana willing to spend
The reception was held at
ore twice in the third on i sides threatening to stifle furth ; own.
y
and August at quiet sume i s. and twice in the fourth : er improvement and advance j For
information,
veterans
!
r
resort.
Highest wages and
Shores Kondo’s single and ment of all players in the loop.
an
I should contact Tom Sagar
•ellent
living
quarters. RefKa /amoto’s sacrifice to again go
Why discriminate against Mac j 572A College St Toronto CH
nces
from
any
Japanese
he lead, 6-5.
Mr. and Mrs.
Oikawa only? If he is refused
Indians
in
Regina
if
nocesConiihuing the see-saw race,!
trip to Northern Ontario
right to pitch, why can Ken !
y.
Write
to
J.
M.
Wessel,
Aces got a more on an error, a • Hashimoto retain his position at ;
their honey moon.
5 Rae Street. Regina.
and singles by Hideo I first, both in the all-stars and;YP„n.o LUU Q
1
°S *lola oecODCl j BIRTHS
Tanaka and Kaye Inouye. Cubs ; the leaguei games,
games'. or
C the
CI Shim-;.
GIRL WANTED
j TORONTO. — Born
pushed one across in the 7th on|odas
at
second
and
shor
son
----- -------------------- „„rt. etc.?; Midsummer Ball
i Johnny Thomas. to M
Ace errors, but Tosh Hashimoto Why should am- player be re- j
ancl ■ On or two days a week,
evened that one up with a long fused the privilege to play any ;
Thomas Hoita of Toronto.^,.. bly two days. Salary
I on June 16.
homer to centre for Aces. one position? Very little has j
* * £
iI ranged. Please phone WA. 4383,
WINNIPEG—Saturday, Aug !
Yickey Takeda's single drove in been said about this issue to
ust 7. will be the date of the OBITUARIES
) i Mrs. Hanaford.
the last Cub fun in the 8th.
date and we all hope to be en Y-Peg' Club Second Annual
And then the fun started. In lightened on the hows and whys
ROKUTARO IDE
I
WANTED:
Domestic __heip.
Midsummer Ball, to be held
the last of the Sth, Aces hit the by the executive body soon.
HAMILTON. Ont.—Mr. Roku-1 must be able to cook. $<o per
again
at
the
YWCA
gym,
from
jackpot and tallied 9 James on
taro Ide passed away on Sun-! month. Lovely suburban home
8:30 p.m. sharp.
two walks, five errors and five
day. June 27. at the home of his I with modern conveniences. Ap
All Winnipeggers will remem daughter, Mrs. Sueji KoyamaJ ply Mrs. DePalma, Zone 9-540.
hits.
PERSON SOUGHT
A cheque for Matsu Sugiura ber the huge success of the ! 138 Victoria Ave. N„ Hamilton ! (Toronto.)
George Masuda of Aces top
ped batting for the day with 4 (Reg. No. 01046) is being held । First Midsummer Ball last year. Mr. Ide who was born in Japan |
WANTED:
Girl
for
for 6. T. Oikawa and Willie Tate for her at the Department of This year, the Y-Pegs are plan 78 years ago, had been in Can- i
grocery store,
44-hour week
ning
an
even
better
dance
with
ishi hurled for Aces, Wes Hyodo Labor office, 24 Adelaide St. E.,
ada for over half a century. He with good pay
Cecil Grocery.
a short but varied program.
Toronto.
was losing pitcher.
was one of the founders of the- Apply
Trading
Furuya
Co.
With summer’s coming, club Powell United Church in Van- Ltd., 381 Spadina Ave., Toi
activities have been suspended couver, B.C., and till his death ronto.
but Y’-Peg members have still a faithful member of All Peo
HELP WANTED
managed to keep their names ple’s United Church in Hamil
in the limelight. Sab Morita ton.
25 PRESSERS & operators,
B.C.—Two of- the i June 24 were persons of Jap- has again won a scholarship at
Surviving are three sons. experienced on blouses and
eleven
new Canadian citizens !anese
------ —
;
-'origin.
the University’ of Manitoba. Joseph of Hamilton, Jin and housecoats,
required
immed
vho received their certificates
They included the following And Joanne Shigeta walked off Henry of Toronto; four daugh iately at 7044 St. Urbain St.,
from Judge J. Ross Archibald from Raymond:
Ben-Rose
Sports
with the Commercial Prize for ters, Mrs. Koyama, with whom Montreal.
here recently were Genichi Chiba
Tsunesaku Kimura, Takeshi being the top ranking commer he resided, Mrs. Y. Shiraishi and wear Inc.
ot Vernon, and Kinzo Wakaba- Nishida, Ichisaburo Ito, Mrs.
cial student at Daniel McIntyre Miss Michi Ide, both of HamiT
j ashi of Oyama.
WANTED IMMEDIATELY —
Masa Ito, Jutaro Nakamura. Collegiate.
ton, and Mrs. Y. Kishimoto of
Experienced
presser on Hoff
On Mrs. Nobuko Nakamura, Jiro
LETHBRIDGE,
Ata.
Y-Peg high grads were Ruth Toronto; and one brother in man machine. Apply Christie
Monday afternoon, June 21, ap Iwasa, Mrs. Masuko Kado, Mrs. Sasaki
(Gordon
Ball),
San Japan.
Cleaners Ltd., 798 Old Weston
plications for Canadian citizen Akiko Moriyama, .Mrs. Kimi Ariza, Margaret Chow. Sam
The funeral was held at All
Rd.,
Toronto. JU. 4194.
snip came before Judge J. H. Takaguchi, Masao Matsugi, Mrs. Matsuo, Joanne Shigeta and People’s United Church on Wed
Sissons in district court from 32 Soma Kitagawa, Reizo Kita Sachi Nishihara (all of Daniel nesday. June 30, at 3:30 p.m.
PRESSERS: male or female,
residents of Southern Alberta, gawa, Miss Teruko Ikeda, Heiy- McIntyre) and Sakave Tanabe Rev. K. Shimizu officiated, aswanted
full-time. Linen supmostly' persons
of
Japanese emon Kitagawa, Mrs. Kimi Kit (St. John’s Tech).—A-J.S.
sisted by Rev. G. D. McLeod, j pHed. Experienced workers, 65
origin. They included:
agawa, Iwao Masuda, Mrs. K.
SeVT; Kon^iyam„a and Rev- E-i cents per-hour, Toronto. KE.
Shigeru Kinoshita, Seiichi To- Masuda, Mrs. Ayano Ikeda,
Yoshioka.
Interment was lni4236
bo. Mitsuno Oka and Takumo Torao Amemori, Mrs. Asa AmeWoodland cemetery.
Oka of Stirling; Noriyasu Higa, mori, Shigeichi Shigehiro, Mrs.
REAL ESTATE
South Albertans
Matsu Higa
and
Mrs. Tomi Shizue Shigehiro, Yotaro KamiCHARLES OHAMA
Higa of Taber; Sato Uyeno and tomo, Mrs. Aiko Kamitomo. Mrs. Camp at Water ton
FOR SALE, 50-acre farm, 20
RAINIER. Alta. — Over 200 acres of sandy loam. AsparaSoshichi Tanaka
of Diamond
friends of the late Mr. Charlie bus, berries and fruit trees. Good
City: Kumejiro Matsumoto, Ma- Seitaro Yatani, and Mrs. Utano July 23-26
Ohama, 32, who was fatally for market garden.
^Zj Okahashi, Gichi Fujikawa, Osaka.
Chicken
LETHBRIDGE Alta. — Come
Also included were the folMrs. Yoshiye Kitamura, Shinzo
burned Saturday evening. June house with 2,500 chickens. 8
to
the
Southern.
Alberta
JCCA
Kitamura, Mrs. Chiya Tanaka, lowing:
19, attended funeral services in
Mrs. Haruo Tomita. Noble- summer camp for one glorious the Rainier Community Hall. room brick house, running wat
loshitaro Tanaka, all of Coalrfe' Kiyuji Nashiy'ama, Mrs. ford: Mrs. Tomi Miyauchi, Kun- week-end, July 23-26 inclusive, Tuesday, June 22. Friends and er and hydro. 10 acres fall
Sameshima,
Tomosada ichi Fukumoto, Mrs. Yukiyo at the Canyon Church Camp in relatives from Raymond, Ma- wheat and 15 acres hay. Full
^-Utake. Mrs. Mary Masako Fukurhoto, Shizuo Kado and Waterton Park. Canyon Church grath. Rosemary, and many price $10,500; $6,500 down pay
Cautake. Yoshio Okano, Yukio Mrs. Tokuyo Kado of Welling; Camp is 5 miles up the Red other points attended to pay ment. . Balance on mortgage at
4%. Taxes $91 yearly. Apply
yjj-.no, ~ Chokei
Nishimazuru,
Umeo Luke Murakami. Mor- Rock Canyon Road.
last respects.
^r5. Ushi Nishimazuru. all of ihei Murakami, Katsuyori Mur-] Registration must be made
John Pump, R.R. No. 2, Free
Surviving are his widow, man, Ont. (28 miles from To
Letnbridge.
akami. Masaichi Kunimoto. Sho-1 immediately. All those wishing j
Mrs.
Kay Ohama; two daugh- ronto. 12 miles from Hamilton,
ji Saga and Mrs. Midori Saga I to attend the camp should send J
ters,
Rayko
Maureen and Kun- close to Queen Elizabeth HighAlta.—Most of of Magrath: Mrs. Maki Nishi-j the following information to j
e;< Southern Albertans who |mura and Yosaburo Nishimura j Mary Okamoto, Box 545, Tabei, j
way.)
appi o for Canadian citizenship i
KAZUO OKANO
of
Coaldale:
Kahichi
Hori.
Mrs.
|
Alta.,
right
now:
■
~
ACCOMMODATION
in
Uhbridge, on Thursday, I Namiye Fukunaga and Gonpei ।
Name: address; whether comSUN LIFE OF CANADA
TWO ROOMS available to
Fukunaga of Taber.
; ing by bus or private car (if by
car. expected time of arrival).
OFFICE: 903 LINDSAY BLDG.
.
party
who will agree to oper
X£T CANADIAN AGENTS
ate rooming house. Apply after
Things to bring: Tick bedTelephone: 97-257
5:30 p.m. to 219 Jarvis St.. ToLETHBRIDGE, Alta.—Receiv-; djng_ warm clothes, towels,
Res.: Box 20-B. R.R. No. i
SLIM SHOYAMA
j
ronto.
Phone TR. 0940. Other
ing their certificates of Cana- j [OOth brush, hiking shoes, bathWINNIPEG. MAN.
C/O Kamloops Bakery
;
rooms
also
available.
dian
citizenship
at
the
district
;
n
g
su
jt.
and
$7.50.
which
in
°’la St.
Kamloops, B.C.
court
on
Tuesday
morning,
eludes
the
S3
registration
fee.
ED. OUCHI
1670
The bus will leave the Leth
on. B.C. । June 29, were the following;
I Southern Albertans:
c:: -; J?1N KAT SU KUNIMOTO
bridge Y on Friday, July 23, at
Keiji Yamanouchi and DenB.C.
jiro Okabe of Picture Butte.
SEIICHI YOSHIDA
Greenwood. B.C.
Wakaichi Itaya of Iron Springs,
Taking part in the camp are
TAKESHI UCHIDA.
and Masaru Okamura of Noble . Miss Buddy Latter of the EdNew Denver, B.C,
• WATCHES AND JEWELLERY OF ALL TYPES
: monton YPU who will be camp I
ford.
Watches Repaired
ELMER OIKE
director, and Miss H. Bartling i
^Central Family Co-c
© EYES EXAMINED—GLASSES REPAIRED
will
lead
discussions,
Applying for Canadiar citi-' who
Winnia
(Phone 26-905)
were:
Games,
skits,
songs,
swimming,
zenship at the same time
Open Evenings By Appointment
j
mits goto
Mrs. Shimo Matsugi of Ray- ; dancing—everything is in store
XT. ci 111-11»
O
MANAGER:
PHONE:
Ot Coal- for everyone who attends this
' mond,
T. KAMEOKA
CoalWaterton
week-end.
of
Kaoru
511A ST. CLAIR AVE. W. Store: ME. 9953
ioronto. Or ; hurst,
Come one, come all. well see
(WA. 9934)
of Jaux-1
dale, and Juro ia.
AKAMURA
(St. Clair at Bathurst)
Home: OX. 4203
5 vou there!
*
CLASSIFIED
MORE NEW CANADIANS
CLAIR CREDIT JEWELLERS
and OPTOMETRISTS
Page 12
Page 10
Montreal Splash
Dance Date Now
Social Calendar
Give Fun to. Young and Old
/. KLurlNA,
RETINA, bask.
Sask.—
—-On
On Domin
Dornin-
Isspi mon
JULY
Issei
men led a3 more strenuMONTREAL. — Seventy-five
ion Day, Regina’s Japanese
OUS day. Mr. Nakamura won 16—Montreal, Nisei Fellowship Splash
community visited King’s Park the dash, and then combined
5?d Pance, n.d.g.y. Pool, 8-9 p.m. Montreal Nisei Fellowship
for their annual picnic. Base with Leo Tanouye to take th^L . Danctn^ “ ^ 9 p.m.
Group members entrained to St.
ball games and many races and 3-legged race.
Mr. Tanouye I p.—Toronto, West Toronto Senior Ball— Felix on July 1 to enjoy a gala
other events, for both young copped the men’s throwing con-vs' Earlscourt -Park 2:30 picnic with swimming, fishing
and old highlighted the day. . test, while Mr. Kato and Mr J . _
and boating in the Laurentian
Before dinner, Bobby Yone O’Hashi got together to win the ] ^ Haiuiiton, Ont., ybs windup social mountains pleasing all.
i
rr
I ■
and welcome partv for Mr. Steuben
da s ball team was victorious obstacle relay. Ken Sa.no
won
Renovitch of San Francisco, P574
A change has been made in
over a less experienced squad the ball throw.
.
James St. N., '’ p.m.
the
date of the Fellowship
with- Leo Tanouye at the helm.
In the youths’ events, Bobby 18—Hamilton, Ont., Nisei Rec Baseball
Splash
and Dance from July 17
Niseis defeated Isseis in a tug- Yoneda won the dash; Roy
t?3® visks -Sloe’ Nations Indian Keof-war, 2 to 1.
Cars
leaving
city
at
to
Friday,
July 16. The place is
O’Hashi the ball throw, -Roy
'2^“ day
the NDG “Y” which offers the
Marion - Tanouye, Agnes Ka- Nakagawa and Sonny Tanouye
lo. Terry Tanouye and Sonny the jousting contest.
, Nisei Baseball, Ace: pool and novelty games from 8
IS—Hamilton. Ont,
Eastwood Park, Il a.m.
to 10 and the gym and youth
Tanouye were winners in the
After supper, the Old Men
children’s races. In the girls’ challenged the young ladies to 18—Toronto Buddhist annual Obon serv- hall all night for dancing and
300 ping pong. Don’t miss it!
events Vivian Yoneda took top a ball game from which the
Bathurst. 2 p.m.
p ’
honors winning the dash and weaker sex emerged triumph- ,0-,.T
c .
— ,
r\ ri
i
I
Moose Taw, Sask., Moose Jaw Japthe ball throw, while Francine ant
L 7 9-5. The Niseis played a
anese
Canadian
Association,
Bus
Watson won the obstacle race. nakujin team and won 23-6.
leaves Sunrise Room, 12 noon.
In the older ladies’ contests,
Tanouye’s curves, . Willie 18—Montreal, Catholic Church and JCCA
AGENT
Mis. Ohashi won the rolling- U Hash is straight balls, and
picnic, Virchere Beach. Buses leave
MONARCH LIFE ASSURANCE Co.
pin throwing contest for the powerhouse hitting by Frank
^°use- Y30 am” resi"
80 King St. W., Toronto
• .second successive year. Mrs. Hori and Roy O’Hashi high- 22—Toronto. West T^nto Sem’or Ball,
Kobayashi won the balloon lighted the game. ’
W esterns vs. Mayfair, Earlscourt Pk.’
Res: - - - 2 Moutray Street
6:4o p.m.
blowing competition.
Phone: - - LLoydbrook 4869
23-26—Southern Alberta, Alberta JCCA
Peter Y. Karatsu
’
1
I
RADUATION DAY in Western Canadajj)
AUGUST
SIX GRADUATE FROM
merland High School graduates
RAYMOND HIGH
this year, was awarded the 7~vYipeg' ynPegs Second Annual
-Midsummer Ball, YWCA gvm, S-30
RAYMOND, Alta.—Six Niseis Verrier Trophy for sportsman
p.m. sharp.
wore among the 22 graduates of ship, school'spirit and co-opera 21 Toronto, Nisei Veterans' Picnic
hrenchmans Bay, further details to
the Raymond High School who tion at the graduation exercises
be announced. .
were honored at the graduation recently.
exercises in the 2nd ward chapel
His brother, the late Alfred
last month.
Kita, was the first and only
Misae Hironaka took part in
Nisei to win the Verrier trophy
the program ronlying for the
LOCAL NEWS
till this year. Edward Kita also
graduates to an address by M.
accepted the interhouse athletic
T. King. The Nisei graduates
were Eiko Fukumoto, Misae trophy, as representative o: WIN ROWBOAT RACE
House 2.
Hironaka, Kyoko Ikuta, Ray,
IN OKANAGAN
Iwaasa,
Fujiko
Kosaka and
Marjorie Yamabe was an
SUMMERLAND, B.C. — Sam
Susumu Karaki.
other Summerland High School Imayoshi and Frank Kuroda
graduate.
teamed up to entei' the threeSUMMERLAND STUDENT
mile
rowboat race at the Sum
*
*
G
WINS VERRIER TROPHY
merland
Fish and Game Asso
SUMMERLAND, B.C. — Ed TERRY SAKAI TOP
ciation
first
annual field day,
'Ward Kita, one of the 15 Sum LILLOOET STUDENT
and came out the winners in
LILLOOET, B.C. — Terry the rowing contest. Two occu
Sakai of the 1948 graduating pants and only one set of oars
JCCY PICNIC
in each boat.
MONTREAL.—A reminder to class of Lillooet High School, were allowed
*
* *
all Montreal JCCYers that the won a major share of awards
Annual JCCY Picnic will be at the L.H.S. graduation exer WEEK-END BERRY
held at Verchere Beach next cises in the Community Hall on PICKING IN B.C.
VANCOUVER. — On Sunday,
Sunday. July 18. One bus will Friday, June 11.
June 27, hundreds of Vancouver
leave St. Raphael House at 9:30
Sakai won the Legion Cup,
a.m. while two buses will leave and a statuette, a scholarship families swarmed into the Lulu
| om Mr. H. Shiomi’s residence, and a crown in the block letter Island berry fields and the Fra
79 St. Urbain St., at 10 a.m. awards. He also gave the vale ser Valley areas, to pick strawIn case of rain, the picnic will dictory address at the exercises. benies fox' themselves at any
thing from 11 to 20 cents per
be postponed until the next
Other award winners includ pound.
Sunday. July 25.
ed Mary Mochizuki and Shar
In cai s, and by bus, they
key Kobayashi (senior high
descended
on the farms, some
citizenship awards), Oscar Yam
DOMINION LIFE
ping as far as Abbotsford. The
anaka (junior high citizenship
ASSURANCE COMPANY
:armers. were reported very
award).
happy in getting city help to
Block letters—Miki Tanaka, complete their strawberry harAkira Horii (crowns). Mary
Mochizuki. Sue Tateishi, Rosa
* .* *
Box 1670
Vernon, B.C.
lie Nakashima, Roy Kariatsu- LILLOOET .VISITORS
mari, Sharkey Kobayashi, Tad
LILLOOET, B.C.—Two East
Tsuyuki. Oscar Yamanaka, and erners here in Lillooet during
MONARCH LIFE ASSURANCE Co.
Minato Mitsushio (large “L’s”), June for short visits were Jim
Betty Miyasaki (small “L”).
For your insurance problems.
mie Hasegawa and Miss Kav
Consult our B.C. Representative,
At a farewell party for teach Yamanaka.
er Mr. Hibberd who is leaving
for further studies at U.B.C.,
Telephone: 1241 Yl
Terry Sakai was master of cere
P.O. BOX 182
KAMLOOPS. B.C.
monies. On behalf of grade 7.
86 GAMBLE AVE.
Oscar Yamanaka presented a
Toronto, Ont.
gift to Mr. Hibberd.
4
s
1 •'■£
i
I
S’
weekend
summer
camp,
Canyon
Lnurch Camp, Waterton Park.
25—Vernon. B.C., Vernon Youth Organization oratorical contest, Nokai Hall
/ p.m.
JOE T. OIKAWA
3
1
•*
4
v
t’
Manufacturers Life
Insurance Co.
KUNIO HIDAKA
P.O. Box 519
GREENWOOD. B.C.
61 Avenue Rd.
Toronto
Office: Kingsdale 5926
Res.: Randolph 2851
Telephone 2-5714
Agent
Lucie’s Beauty Salon
Box 149
Kamloops, B.C.
Lucy Mitsui. Proprietress
490 York Street
(Cor. Inchburv St.)
HAMILTON, ONT.
an
TL1
Oriental Food Products and Novelties
Tlt4KS
ve^(4
w
INLAND IMPORTING CO
149 Victoria Street
Automobile, Fire, Burglary,
Life. Accident & Sickness, etc.
General Insurance
Phone GL-S077
CONSULTANT
T. Kobayashi
COMPANY OF CANADA
„
(At Dundasi
1Or°ato
MITZI and MARIon
Ikeda
WA. 6252
for.repairs to radio.
.
aPP^nces
Also sales of radios,
electncal.appliances and ^
juke box records.
138
^Gcorje Kakino
KcpresentHtjve for
McKinnon fuels ltd
All domestic fuels scienti
fically dust treated.
City Wide Delivery
Phone GR 1237
Res. - KE. 8393
Young Men’s Su
Made to Individt
Style and Taste .
20 Years of Experienced
Service
198 Albany Ave. Toronto
Phone: Home, LA. 9332
Office, EL. 1315
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
Insurance Company
Two weeks’ delivery.
Wide, choice of styles
and materials.
PARAGON
TAILORING COMPANY
95-A King- St. W., Toronto
WA. 2459—Ask for
Jerry Lambert
/^k of this Clean, Family Newspaper ?
YUpHE Christian Science Monitor
^F^T®®^ s“s.ati°nal news
Free from political J
' •• Treefrom special interest” control . . Free to tell von 24
XSafc°rld eve°ts. Its own world-wide staff of corre- ^
S va t ?.g you on-the-spot news and its meaning to yon
todfpMd^’ ^ 1$SU<! ^ ^ ““^ ^^^ ^
‘X! Chriittan Scienee PubHshinr Society
Ono. Norway Street, Boston M, Mw
of The Christian Sclent:#
Monitor.
Nome.
Street
|
I
U»y.
PB-3
Z«a».............State
trial subscrifftioet, I mdote SI
Getting Married?
. . . If you are, we would like to know
about it, and so would the thousands of
New Canadian readers.
:
Don t forget to send in notices of engace-
meats, marriages, births, and deaths for
the Personal Notes Column.
There is no
charge.
BILL TAKEDA
SEIJI HOMMA
|
160 Palmerston Ave Tn™ /
S. Shinobu
Edward T. Ouchi
a
GAIETY
Beauty Shoppy
Kamloops, B.C.
MAUL ORDER SERVICE—WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
MICKEY S. SATO
Agent
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Office: 21 Dundas Square
Phone AD-0076-7
Res. ME. 6072
Res.: 525 Manning Avenue
TORONTO, ONT.
GOOD HOMES AT LOW
PRICES
Use this form for your marriage notice in
PERSONAL NOTES COLUMN
Miss
(1st, 2nd, or ...........) daughter of
(Parents’ address) ........................
was married to Mr.
) son of
(Parents’ address)
Date of marriage
CONSULT
\Villiam
Bendena
Real Estate & Business Broker
Japanese Patronage Appreciated
OFFICE
1555 DUNDAS W.
TORONTO. ONT.
Citv and Church
‘fficiated by
sn.
FRED URABE
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
'^ Dund«s SQuare
Toror*o
in
St. w.
sheet
additional information on
uch as all names in Japanese characters (f
Ox notice in Japanese section), names of bridt
m<xn. etc., description of wedding, recention and
i
1
5
Montreal Splash
Dance Date Now
Social Calendar
Give Fun to. Young and Old
/. KLurlNA,
RETINA, bask.
Sask.—
—-On
On Domin
Dornin-
Isspi mon
JULY
Issei
men led a3 more strenuMONTREAL. — Seventy-five
ion Day, Regina’s Japanese
OUS day. Mr. Nakamura won 16—Montreal, Nisei Fellowship Splash
community visited King’s Park the dash, and then combined
5?d Pance, n.d.g.y. Pool, 8-9 p.m. Montreal Nisei Fellowship
for their annual picnic. Base with Leo Tanouye to take th^L . Danctn^ “ ^ 9 p.m.
Group members entrained to St.
ball games and many races and 3-legged race.
Mr. Tanouye I p.—Toronto, West Toronto Senior Ball— Felix on July 1 to enjoy a gala
other events, for both young copped the men’s throwing con-vs' Earlscourt -Park 2:30 picnic with swimming, fishing
and old highlighted the day. . test, while Mr. Kato and Mr J . _
and boating in the Laurentian
Before dinner, Bobby Yone O’Hashi got together to win the ] ^ Haiuiiton, Ont., ybs windup social mountains pleasing all.
i
rr
I ■
and welcome partv for Mr. Steuben
da s ball team was victorious obstacle relay. Ken Sa.no
won
Renovitch of San Francisco, P574
A change has been made in
over a less experienced squad the ball throw.
.
James St. N., '’ p.m.
the
date of the Fellowship
with- Leo Tanouye at the helm.
In the youths’ events, Bobby 18—Hamilton, Ont., Nisei Rec Baseball
Splash
and Dance from July 17
Niseis defeated Isseis in a tug- Yoneda won the dash; Roy
t?3® visks -Sloe’ Nations Indian Keof-war, 2 to 1.
Cars
leaving
city
at
to
Friday,
July 16. The place is
O’Hashi the ball throw, -Roy
'2^“ day
the NDG “Y” which offers the
Marion - Tanouye, Agnes Ka- Nakagawa and Sonny Tanouye
lo. Terry Tanouye and Sonny the jousting contest.
, Nisei Baseball, Ace: pool and novelty games from 8
IS—Hamilton. Ont,
Eastwood Park, Il a.m.
to 10 and the gym and youth
Tanouye were winners in the
After supper, the Old Men
children’s races. In the girls’ challenged the young ladies to 18—Toronto Buddhist annual Obon serv- hall all night for dancing and
300 ping pong. Don’t miss it!
events Vivian Yoneda took top a ball game from which the
Bathurst. 2 p.m.
p ’
honors winning the dash and weaker sex emerged triumph- ,0-,.T
c .
— ,
r\ ri
i
I
Moose Taw, Sask., Moose Jaw Japthe ball throw, while Francine ant
L 7 9-5. The Niseis played a
anese
Canadian
Association,
Bus
Watson won the obstacle race. nakujin team and won 23-6.
leaves Sunrise Room, 12 noon.
In the older ladies’ contests,
Tanouye’s curves, . Willie 18—Montreal, Catholic Church and JCCA
AGENT
Mis. Ohashi won the rolling- U Hash is straight balls, and
picnic, Virchere Beach. Buses leave
MONARCH LIFE ASSURANCE Co.
pin throwing contest for the powerhouse hitting by Frank
^°use- Y30 am” resi"
80 King St. W., Toronto
• .second successive year. Mrs. Hori and Roy O’Hashi high- 22—Toronto. West T^nto Sem’or Ball,
Kobayashi won the balloon lighted the game. ’
W esterns vs. Mayfair, Earlscourt Pk.’
Res: - - - 2 Moutray Street
6:4o p.m.
blowing competition.
Phone: - - LLoydbrook 4869
23-26—Southern Alberta, Alberta JCCA
Peter Y. Karatsu
’
1
I
RADUATION DAY in Western Canadajj)
AUGUST
SIX GRADUATE FROM
merland High School graduates
RAYMOND HIGH
this year, was awarded the 7~vYipeg' ynPegs Second Annual
-Midsummer Ball, YWCA gvm, S-30
RAYMOND, Alta.—Six Niseis Verrier Trophy for sportsman
p.m. sharp.
wore among the 22 graduates of ship, school'spirit and co-opera 21 Toronto, Nisei Veterans' Picnic
hrenchmans Bay, further details to
the Raymond High School who tion at the graduation exercises
be announced. .
were honored at the graduation recently.
exercises in the 2nd ward chapel
His brother, the late Alfred
last month.
Kita, was the first and only
Misae Hironaka took part in
Nisei to win the Verrier trophy
the program ronlying for the
LOCAL NEWS
till this year. Edward Kita also
graduates to an address by M.
accepted the interhouse athletic
T. King. The Nisei graduates
were Eiko Fukumoto, Misae trophy, as representative o: WIN ROWBOAT RACE
House 2.
Hironaka, Kyoko Ikuta, Ray,
IN OKANAGAN
Iwaasa,
Fujiko
Kosaka and
Marjorie Yamabe was an
SUMMERLAND, B.C. — Sam
Susumu Karaki.
other Summerland High School Imayoshi and Frank Kuroda
graduate.
teamed up to entei' the threeSUMMERLAND STUDENT
mile
rowboat race at the Sum
*
*
G
WINS VERRIER TROPHY
merland
Fish and Game Asso
SUMMERLAND, B.C. — Ed TERRY SAKAI TOP
ciation
first
annual field day,
'Ward Kita, one of the 15 Sum LILLOOET STUDENT
and came out the winners in
LILLOOET, B.C. — Terry the rowing contest. Two occu
Sakai of the 1948 graduating pants and only one set of oars
JCCY PICNIC
in each boat.
MONTREAL.—A reminder to class of Lillooet High School, were allowed
*
* *
all Montreal JCCYers that the won a major share of awards
Annual JCCY Picnic will be at the L.H.S. graduation exer WEEK-END BERRY
held at Verchere Beach next cises in the Community Hall on PICKING IN B.C.
VANCOUVER. — On Sunday,
Sunday. July 18. One bus will Friday, June 11.
June 27, hundreds of Vancouver
leave St. Raphael House at 9:30
Sakai won the Legion Cup,
a.m. while two buses will leave and a statuette, a scholarship families swarmed into the Lulu
| om Mr. H. Shiomi’s residence, and a crown in the block letter Island berry fields and the Fra
79 St. Urbain St., at 10 a.m. awards. He also gave the vale ser Valley areas, to pick strawIn case of rain, the picnic will dictory address at the exercises. benies fox' themselves at any
thing from 11 to 20 cents per
be postponed until the next
Other award winners includ pound.
Sunday. July 25.
ed Mary Mochizuki and Shar
In cai s, and by bus, they
key Kobayashi (senior high
descended
on the farms, some
citizenship awards), Oscar Yam
DOMINION LIFE
ping as far as Abbotsford. The
anaka (junior high citizenship
ASSURANCE COMPANY
:armers. were reported very
award).
happy in getting city help to
Block letters—Miki Tanaka, complete their strawberry harAkira Horii (crowns). Mary
Mochizuki. Sue Tateishi, Rosa
* .* *
Box 1670
Vernon, B.C.
lie Nakashima, Roy Kariatsu- LILLOOET .VISITORS
mari, Sharkey Kobayashi, Tad
LILLOOET, B.C.—Two East
Tsuyuki. Oscar Yamanaka, and erners here in Lillooet during
MONARCH LIFE ASSURANCE Co.
Minato Mitsushio (large “L’s”), June for short visits were Jim
Betty Miyasaki (small “L”).
For your insurance problems.
mie Hasegawa and Miss Kav
Consult our B.C. Representative,
At a farewell party for teach Yamanaka.
er Mr. Hibberd who is leaving
for further studies at U.B.C.,
Telephone: 1241 Yl
Terry Sakai was master of cere
P.O. BOX 182
KAMLOOPS. B.C.
monies. On behalf of grade 7.
86 GAMBLE AVE.
Oscar Yamanaka presented a
Toronto, Ont.
gift to Mr. Hibberd.
4
s
1 •'■£
i
I
S’
weekend
summer
camp,
Canyon
Lnurch Camp, Waterton Park.
25—Vernon. B.C., Vernon Youth Organization oratorical contest, Nokai Hall
/ p.m.
JOE T. OIKAWA
3
1
•*
4
v
t’
Manufacturers Life
Insurance Co.
KUNIO HIDAKA
P.O. Box 519
GREENWOOD. B.C.
61 Avenue Rd.
Toronto
Office: Kingsdale 5926
Res.: Randolph 2851
Telephone 2-5714
Agent
Lucie’s Beauty Salon
Box 149
Kamloops, B.C.
Lucy Mitsui. Proprietress
490 York Street
(Cor. Inchburv St.)
HAMILTON, ONT.
an
TL1
Oriental Food Products and Novelties
Tlt4KS
ve^(4
w
INLAND IMPORTING CO
149 Victoria Street
Automobile, Fire, Burglary,
Life. Accident & Sickness, etc.
General Insurance
Phone GL-S077
CONSULTANT
T. Kobayashi
COMPANY OF CANADA
„
(At Dundasi
1Or°ato
MITZI and MARIon
Ikeda
WA. 6252
for.repairs to radio.
.
aPP^nces
Also sales of radios,
electncal.appliances and ^
juke box records.
138
^Gcorje Kakino
KcpresentHtjve for
McKinnon fuels ltd
All domestic fuels scienti
fically dust treated.
City Wide Delivery
Phone GR 1237
Res. - KE. 8393
Young Men’s Su
Made to Individt
Style and Taste .
20 Years of Experienced
Service
198 Albany Ave. Toronto
Phone: Home, LA. 9332
Office, EL. 1315
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
Insurance Company
Two weeks’ delivery.
Wide, choice of styles
and materials.
PARAGON
TAILORING COMPANY
95-A King- St. W., Toronto
WA. 2459—Ask for
Jerry Lambert
/^k of this Clean, Family Newspaper ?
YUpHE Christian Science Monitor
^F^T®®^ s“s.ati°nal news
Free from political J
' •• Treefrom special interest” control . . Free to tell von 24
XSafc°rld eve°ts. Its own world-wide staff of corre- ^
S va t ?.g you on-the-spot news and its meaning to yon
todfpMd^’ ^ 1$SU<! ^ ^ ““^ ^^^ ^
‘X! Chriittan Scienee PubHshinr Society
Ono. Norway Street, Boston M, Mw
of The Christian Sclent:#
Monitor.
Nome.
Street
|
I
U»y.
PB-3
Z«a».............State
trial subscrifftioet, I mdote SI
Getting Married?
. . . If you are, we would like to know
about it, and so would the thousands of
New Canadian readers.
:
Don t forget to send in notices of engace-
meats, marriages, births, and deaths for
the Personal Notes Column.
There is no
charge.
BILL TAKEDA
SEIJI HOMMA
|
160 Palmerston Ave Tn™ /
S. Shinobu
Edward T. Ouchi
a
GAIETY
Beauty Shoppy
Kamloops, B.C.
MAUL ORDER SERVICE—WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
MICKEY S. SATO
Agent
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Office: 21 Dundas Square
Phone AD-0076-7
Res. ME. 6072
Res.: 525 Manning Avenue
TORONTO, ONT.
GOOD HOMES AT LOW
PRICES
Use this form for your marriage notice in
PERSONAL NOTES COLUMN
Miss
(1st, 2nd, or ...........) daughter of
(Parents’ address) ........................
was married to Mr.
) son of
(Parents’ address)
Date of marriage
CONSULT
\Villiam
Bendena
Real Estate & Business Broker
Japanese Patronage Appreciated
OFFICE
1555 DUNDAS W.
TORONTO. ONT.
Citv and Church
‘fficiated by
sn.
FRED URABE
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
'^ Dund«s SQuare
Toror*o
in
St. w.
sheet
additional information on
uch as all names in Japanese characters (f
Ox notice in Japanese section), names of bridt
m<xn. etc., description of wedding, recention and
i
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