Page 1
I
I
R
Vs
SA!
3 Vol. 13—Vo- 9?
TORONTO, ONT. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 22. 1950
jaka Family Wins California Test Case;
jay Have Effect Of Changing Alien Land Law
||ffl|[ll!lfflllllll!lliW
LOi ANGELES. — California’s
37-year old Alien Land law which
just Passing Through prohibits
aliens fron
|
KEX ADACHI
owning, acquiring or holding: mterest in real prop
in that
state,
declared
unconstitu^SPRING IS HERE (said the
ispaper clipping
I found tional by Superior Court Judge
’crumped between other not so Thurmond Clarke on March 1(1
e.
wceles; bric-a-brac in my coat
pocket),
febe
pring-of-the-lastfelf-of-the-century is here ofE*C!a^'
KCrows, cardinals,
starlings
other specimens of the feafeed kingdom are now7 congrein the backvards to herald
of
^the awesome
spectacle
gspring’s ;arrival according to this
Kipping.
EjSpimg
Judge Clarke’s opinion, brush
ing aside legal precedence and
enactments established during
the 37 years in which the Alien
the state, was presented in a two
paragraph memorandum decision.
He declared the Alien Land law
to be “directed against persons
of Japanese ancestry solely be
cause of race” and to be in direct
violation of the 14th Amendment
of the United States constitution.
ABC May Remove
White Males Onlv"
MILWAUKEE. Wis. — The
American Bowling Congress
is reported to be considering
the. removal of the “white
males only” membership re
striction from its constitution,
the Milwaukee Journal report
ed last week.
The Journal said the recom
mendation will be made at the
ABC convention in Columbus,
Ohio, to be held in May.
The matter of membership
eligibility will be turned over
to the league, the Journal added. and all references to
‘white’ race will be stricken
front its constituition and bylaw
league will be
given local option as to whom
it could accept as members.
$6 Per Year—10c Per Copy
JO04 Invited To Join
4.
In Civil Rights Action
By Tosh Tanaka
&
VANCOUVER. — Activities of the committee on
civil rights were fully endorsed by representatives and
observers attending the second conference on Bill of
Rights on March 15 at the Jewish Community7 Centre.
Headed by a motion calling for1®'
the continuance of the recently Optometrist Opens
formed action committee, and the Practice In Toronto
enlargement of same, a proposal
tered optometrist, w’ho for the
Labor groups should be asked to past four years has been prac
join in the fight for passage of a ticing in Lindsay. Ont.. 70 miles
unanimouslv northeast of Toronto, is opening
her office in Toronto.
In suggesting the inclusion of
After taking- a. pre-medical
the A. F. L. groups in this cam course at the University of Bri
paign, Vancouver Labor Council tish Columbia, she -went to the
secretary Jim Bury pointed out University of California where
the necessity of having the sup she studied optometry and re
port of all major organizations ceived a bachelor of science de
Montreal Fire Victims
which will represent “a cross gree in 1942.
Following- her
Identified At Inquest
section of the people of B. C.”
graduation she came east to Tor
The Action Committee should onto where she received hetAt a coronMONTREAL.
er’s inquest held on March 16, invite groups such as the Jewish license to practice optometry in
the eight who lost their lives in Community Executive Committee, Ontario.
the fire in Montreal’s Chinatown the Junior Chamber of Com curbing all unjustifiable dis
on March 2 were positively iden merce, the Chinese Benevolent crimination.
tified. Among the victims were Association, and the Japanese
The Action Committee has no
two persons of Japanese ances Canadian Citizens’ Association, means, financially, to pursue its
Bury said.
try, Teruo Machida, 35, and Pe
present job,” Charlton stated.
ter Yasuto Uyeda, 49.
It is believed that the Action
This committee, in which the
The third, Mike Koga, was in JCCA is already represented, re Committee resolution will be
jured.
ported to the Conference that a viewed by the Legislature in con
resolution for the enactment of junction with that of Frank
Among the other five victims
a Bill of Rights has now been Calder, which was first introducwere two Chinese and three Cau
presented to the provincial Legis ed in Victoria in the latter part
casians, one Chinese and two of
lature.
of February.
the latter being -women.
Chaired by Darwin Charlton
First Conference
on
civil
Memorial service for the late of the VLC Racial Discrimina rights, sponsored by the VLC
Yasuto Uyeda and Teruo Machi tion Committee, the Conference Committee to Combat Racial Dis
da will be held at Christensen adopted a motion to solicit finan crimination, was held on March
Funeral Service in Lethbridge, cial assistance from organiza 3, at which time the Action ComAlta., on March 28 at 1 o’clock. tions interested in the work of mitee was formed.
was once the season
then the thoughts of man lightfly turned to love. If you saw
The case, involved the efforts
J,auj heavy-lidded, sleepy-looking
tchamcicrs wandering around of citizen sons to buy a home
|making like sleepwalking actors for their Japanese, alien mother
California.
brothers
'm an Shakespearian epic, they in
sought
to
make
a.
gift
of
a home
swere drunk. Intoxicated with
Bat four-lettered word that pal- to their widowed mother, Mrs.
Imitated the hearts of all males Haruye Masaoka, who was born
saround this season. That was in Japan but who has lived in the
supposed to be the first unde- United States continuously since
Kmably sure sign of spring, But 1905. Five of her six sons serv
agut-of-season hunting is . ...now ed in the United States army in
World War II. One was killed
^fashionable.
MXow this annual season that and the other four were wounded,
^nds its way to the lore after two seriously.
doldrums of winter comes
It is believed that attorneys
||||ther like a hangover after an
B^'^sht session with the boys for the Masaoka family may
^e back room. This is tile move to take the case directly to
®3r of Flying Saucers and Cry the State Supreme Court on the
the Wild Goose and the cora- ground that a constitutional
gg of spring is hardly a world- question is involved.
®attering event. Nothing short
W an exPlosion in Russia is capTRUE ISSEI PIONEERS
of lifting the eyebrow7 of
man on the street.
^The Cry of the Wild Goose is
;^^rtainly an inanity but rather
^^mbolizes the restlessness of
Japanese. From its pages, some in Canada today.
By Staff Writer
^an in the half-century. The
Others followed soon after,
Did you know that the first of the musty past is brought
San s”^s breathless w7ords
but
much of this story is lost
Japanese woman ever to set foot back.
“Tonight I heard the wild
Majority of the first-comers forever. The earliest known Ja
^°Se Cry’ ringing north in the on Canadian soil came from Ja were seafarers, members of the panese to be buried in Canada is
^neh’ sky, I tried to sleep but pan in 1887 and the first Nisei
ships which plied between North known only by his nickname and
Mi weren’t no use for I’m the was born in the following year ?
America and the Orient and when he died oi' when he came to
t J*F°ther of the old wild goose . . . Or that an Issei named Ichitaro
Canada is not known.
^ heart knows what the wMld Fujii became the first Japanese called at New7 'Westminster which
One of the most well-known
three-quarters of a century ago,
°se knows and I must go ever to take a Caucasian bride
for his wife in Canada, when w7as Canada’s Pacific port while of the early arrivals is Yasukiere the wild goose goes. . .”
chi Foshizawa. He was known
The uninspiring poetry stops he was married at Union, B. C., Vancouver was still a collection
of shacks and it passed off by by his nickname Indian Yasu be®u. It’s unpretentious to say on January 7, 1887 ?
The saga of the first Japanese the undignified name of Gas cause of his knowledge of the
e most but this chant of a restto land on Canada’s Pacific town. They were a rough, tough Indian language and was reman is symbolic.
Relot, practically illiterate who spected by the Indians.
what about those people shores, the true sourdough Issei
fortune in membered as a soft-spoken mildkeep on seeing that Flying pioneers, may not be as colorful jumped ship to seek
mannered man, he was sympa
ucei . it used to be red balls and turbulent as the Daniel the new land.
Names of many of these men thetic towards the natives of
-Lire but the script has been Boone pattern of trail-blazing
their nick- Canada and frequently he serv
fitter and the F. C. is an- with covered wagon and warring are unknown or only
names are remembered but the ed them as an interpreter in. their
ei
of this first spring of Indians nor the gold-rushes, but
dealings w’ith whites. It is even
- -alf-century which goes to nevertheless it is an interesting first Japanese to set foot in Can
said-that on one occasion, he was
^ that people always find one and the same adventurous ada is believed to be a sailor
offered
the daughter of a chief
named Manzo Nagano who first
Lig to get intoxicated and impetuous spirit that typi
tain as a bride.
fied the men of the frontier days came to Canada in 1877, left his
come spring.
Yoshizawa was employed at
And
Lanning back to my coat must have kindled within them. ; ship at New Westminster to en
the
Hastings Sawmill jji Van
:>ckc-t 1 round several interestMuch of the history of the ; gage in fishing. He moved i
couver.
This mill was in the
-?..s one old shoe lace, a early Japanese must have passed । around and even returned to the
early
days
one of the first em
game stub of which the into oblivion and lost forever. I Far East, then settled down in
Victoria where he opened a shop ployers of Japanese labor and it
'I £rS‘ designating the, But back in 1921, one Jinshiro :
hired Japanese help as early'as
1 °s«- pews of an arena Nakayama collected some of the j dealing in Japanese wares, and
£ make more business for { story of the early pioneers to be ; finally went back again to Japan, j 1889. Together with four other
t-ontmued on page 2)
I preserved in a book published in 7 Some of his descendants still live ' Japanese, he left Vancouver on
AA
’J
-3
It;
«fA
8
W
History Of The First Arrivals To Canada From Japan
a small boat in 1889 to head
northward up the narrow, stormy
straits between Vancouver Island
and the mainland to investigate
the fishing in northern B. C.
waters. The arduous sea journey
took then nearly tw7o months, but
they became the first Japanese
to engage in fishing in northern
waters.
His story, of which there is
much more is well-known among
the older Issei.
Perhaps one of the first Ja
panese to engage in business was
a man who in 1890 opened a
cigar stand on Cordova Street in
Vancouver. First to work as
domestics were two brothers who
in 1891 became houseboys. The
first to ever go to Alberta was
one named Tsuchiya wTho went to
Raymond to work on the sugar
beet fields.
And there were others, fore
runners of the several thousand
who entered the country before
and at the turn of the century.
These men, most of whom are
no longer living, belong to the
rank of Canadian far west pio
neers.
£
A
■w
'Av I
/I
6
ft;
fl-
Ml
I
R
Vs
SA!
3 Vol. 13—Vo- 9?
TORONTO, ONT. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 22. 1950
jaka Family Wins California Test Case;
jay Have Effect Of Changing Alien Land Law
||ffl|[ll!lfflllllll!lliW
LOi ANGELES. — California’s
37-year old Alien Land law which
just Passing Through prohibits
aliens fron
|
KEX ADACHI
owning, acquiring or holding: mterest in real prop
in that
state,
declared
unconstitu^SPRING IS HERE (said the
ispaper clipping
I found tional by Superior Court Judge
’crumped between other not so Thurmond Clarke on March 1(1
e.
wceles; bric-a-brac in my coat
pocket),
febe
pring-of-the-lastfelf-of-the-century is here ofE*C!a^'
KCrows, cardinals,
starlings
other specimens of the feafeed kingdom are now7 congrein the backvards to herald
of
^the awesome
spectacle
gspring’s ;arrival according to this
Kipping.
EjSpimg
Judge Clarke’s opinion, brush
ing aside legal precedence and
enactments established during
the 37 years in which the Alien
the state, was presented in a two
paragraph memorandum decision.
He declared the Alien Land law
to be “directed against persons
of Japanese ancestry solely be
cause of race” and to be in direct
violation of the 14th Amendment
of the United States constitution.
ABC May Remove
White Males Onlv"
MILWAUKEE. Wis. — The
American Bowling Congress
is reported to be considering
the. removal of the “white
males only” membership re
striction from its constitution,
the Milwaukee Journal report
ed last week.
The Journal said the recom
mendation will be made at the
ABC convention in Columbus,
Ohio, to be held in May.
The matter of membership
eligibility will be turned over
to the league, the Journal added. and all references to
‘white’ race will be stricken
front its constituition and bylaw
league will be
given local option as to whom
it could accept as members.
$6 Per Year—10c Per Copy
JO04 Invited To Join
4.
In Civil Rights Action
By Tosh Tanaka
&
VANCOUVER. — Activities of the committee on
civil rights were fully endorsed by representatives and
observers attending the second conference on Bill of
Rights on March 15 at the Jewish Community7 Centre.
Headed by a motion calling for1®'
the continuance of the recently Optometrist Opens
formed action committee, and the Practice In Toronto
enlargement of same, a proposal
tered optometrist, w’ho for the
Labor groups should be asked to past four years has been prac
join in the fight for passage of a ticing in Lindsay. Ont.. 70 miles
unanimouslv northeast of Toronto, is opening
her office in Toronto.
In suggesting the inclusion of
After taking- a. pre-medical
the A. F. L. groups in this cam course at the University of Bri
paign, Vancouver Labor Council tish Columbia, she -went to the
secretary Jim Bury pointed out University of California where
the necessity of having the sup she studied optometry and re
port of all major organizations ceived a bachelor of science de
Montreal Fire Victims
which will represent “a cross gree in 1942.
Following- her
Identified At Inquest
section of the people of B. C.”
graduation she came east to Tor
The Action Committee should onto where she received hetAt a coronMONTREAL.
er’s inquest held on March 16, invite groups such as the Jewish license to practice optometry in
the eight who lost their lives in Community Executive Committee, Ontario.
the fire in Montreal’s Chinatown the Junior Chamber of Com curbing all unjustifiable dis
on March 2 were positively iden merce, the Chinese Benevolent crimination.
tified. Among the victims were Association, and the Japanese
The Action Committee has no
two persons of Japanese ances Canadian Citizens’ Association, means, financially, to pursue its
Bury said.
try, Teruo Machida, 35, and Pe
present job,” Charlton stated.
ter Yasuto Uyeda, 49.
It is believed that the Action
This committee, in which the
The third, Mike Koga, was in JCCA is already represented, re Committee resolution will be
jured.
ported to the Conference that a viewed by the Legislature in con
resolution for the enactment of junction with that of Frank
Among the other five victims
a Bill of Rights has now been Calder, which was first introducwere two Chinese and three Cau
presented to the provincial Legis ed in Victoria in the latter part
casians, one Chinese and two of
lature.
of February.
the latter being -women.
Chaired by Darwin Charlton
First Conference
on
civil
Memorial service for the late of the VLC Racial Discrimina rights, sponsored by the VLC
Yasuto Uyeda and Teruo Machi tion Committee, the Conference Committee to Combat Racial Dis
da will be held at Christensen adopted a motion to solicit finan crimination, was held on March
Funeral Service in Lethbridge, cial assistance from organiza 3, at which time the Action ComAlta., on March 28 at 1 o’clock. tions interested in the work of mitee was formed.
was once the season
then the thoughts of man lightfly turned to love. If you saw
The case, involved the efforts
J,auj heavy-lidded, sleepy-looking
tchamcicrs wandering around of citizen sons to buy a home
|making like sleepwalking actors for their Japanese, alien mother
California.
brothers
'm an Shakespearian epic, they in
sought
to
make
a.
gift
of
a home
swere drunk. Intoxicated with
Bat four-lettered word that pal- to their widowed mother, Mrs.
Imitated the hearts of all males Haruye Masaoka, who was born
saround this season. That was in Japan but who has lived in the
supposed to be the first unde- United States continuously since
Kmably sure sign of spring, But 1905. Five of her six sons serv
agut-of-season hunting is . ...now ed in the United States army in
World War II. One was killed
^fashionable.
MXow this annual season that and the other four were wounded,
^nds its way to the lore after two seriously.
doldrums of winter comes
It is believed that attorneys
||||ther like a hangover after an
B^'^sht session with the boys for the Masaoka family may
^e back room. This is tile move to take the case directly to
®3r of Flying Saucers and Cry the State Supreme Court on the
the Wild Goose and the cora- ground that a constitutional
gg of spring is hardly a world- question is involved.
®attering event. Nothing short
W an exPlosion in Russia is capTRUE ISSEI PIONEERS
of lifting the eyebrow7 of
man on the street.
^The Cry of the Wild Goose is
;^^rtainly an inanity but rather
^^mbolizes the restlessness of
Japanese. From its pages, some in Canada today.
By Staff Writer
^an in the half-century. The
Others followed soon after,
Did you know that the first of the musty past is brought
San s”^s breathless w7ords
but
much of this story is lost
Japanese woman ever to set foot back.
“Tonight I heard the wild
Majority of the first-comers forever. The earliest known Ja
^°Se Cry’ ringing north in the on Canadian soil came from Ja were seafarers, members of the panese to be buried in Canada is
^neh’ sky, I tried to sleep but pan in 1887 and the first Nisei
ships which plied between North known only by his nickname and
Mi weren’t no use for I’m the was born in the following year ?
America and the Orient and when he died oi' when he came to
t J*F°ther of the old wild goose . . . Or that an Issei named Ichitaro
Canada is not known.
^ heart knows what the wMld Fujii became the first Japanese called at New7 'Westminster which
One of the most well-known
three-quarters of a century ago,
°se knows and I must go ever to take a Caucasian bride
for his wife in Canada, when w7as Canada’s Pacific port while of the early arrivals is Yasukiere the wild goose goes. . .”
chi Foshizawa. He was known
The uninspiring poetry stops he was married at Union, B. C., Vancouver was still a collection
of shacks and it passed off by by his nickname Indian Yasu be®u. It’s unpretentious to say on January 7, 1887 ?
The saga of the first Japanese the undignified name of Gas cause of his knowledge of the
e most but this chant of a restto land on Canada’s Pacific town. They were a rough, tough Indian language and was reman is symbolic.
Relot, practically illiterate who spected by the Indians.
what about those people shores, the true sourdough Issei
fortune in membered as a soft-spoken mildkeep on seeing that Flying pioneers, may not be as colorful jumped ship to seek
mannered man, he was sympa
ucei . it used to be red balls and turbulent as the Daniel the new land.
Names of many of these men thetic towards the natives of
-Lire but the script has been Boone pattern of trail-blazing
their nick- Canada and frequently he serv
fitter and the F. C. is an- with covered wagon and warring are unknown or only
names are remembered but the ed them as an interpreter in. their
ei
of this first spring of Indians nor the gold-rushes, but
dealings w’ith whites. It is even
- -alf-century which goes to nevertheless it is an interesting first Japanese to set foot in Can
said-that on one occasion, he was
^ that people always find one and the same adventurous ada is believed to be a sailor
offered
the daughter of a chief
named Manzo Nagano who first
Lig to get intoxicated and impetuous spirit that typi
tain as a bride.
fied the men of the frontier days came to Canada in 1877, left his
come spring.
Yoshizawa was employed at
And
Lanning back to my coat must have kindled within them. ; ship at New Westminster to en
the
Hastings Sawmill jji Van
:>ckc-t 1 round several interestMuch of the history of the ; gage in fishing. He moved i
couver.
This mill was in the
-?..s one old shoe lace, a early Japanese must have passed । around and even returned to the
early
days
one of the first em
game stub of which the into oblivion and lost forever. I Far East, then settled down in
Victoria where he opened a shop ployers of Japanese labor and it
'I £rS‘ designating the, But back in 1921, one Jinshiro :
hired Japanese help as early'as
1 °s«- pews of an arena Nakayama collected some of the j dealing in Japanese wares, and
£ make more business for { story of the early pioneers to be ; finally went back again to Japan, j 1889. Together with four other
t-ontmued on page 2)
I preserved in a book published in 7 Some of his descendants still live ' Japanese, he left Vancouver on
AA
’J
-3
It;
«fA
8
W
History Of The First Arrivals To Canada From Japan
a small boat in 1889 to head
northward up the narrow, stormy
straits between Vancouver Island
and the mainland to investigate
the fishing in northern B. C.
waters. The arduous sea journey
took then nearly tw7o months, but
they became the first Japanese
to engage in fishing in northern
waters.
His story, of which there is
much more is well-known among
the older Issei.
Perhaps one of the first Ja
panese to engage in business was
a man who in 1890 opened a
cigar stand on Cordova Street in
Vancouver. First to work as
domestics were two brothers who
in 1891 became houseboys. The
first to ever go to Alberta was
one named Tsuchiya wTho went to
Raymond to work on the sugar
beet fields.
And there were others, fore
runners of the several thousand
who entered the country before
and at the turn of the century.
These men, most of whom are
no longer living, belong to the
rank of Canadian far west pio
neers.
£
A
■w
'Av I
/I
6
ft;
fl-
Ml
Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE NEW CANADIAN
-____________ ______ —___ Wednesday, Mareh ,, v
A National JCCA Report
x
■ For Widowed Mother
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those or Japanese origin in Canadi
|
HAMILTON. —
recentlyI widowed mother of
The United Nations Inter
ing in the vicinity of Hamilton national Children’s Emergency
has been given notice of im- Fund (UNICEF) is*now conduct
UNICEF aid began
mediate removal from their
on
October 1st, 1949 a I
ing a campaign on behalf of the
ent home. It is reported that millions of children in the war- 000 sweated fw ^ ^
Toyo Takata _______
....Editor.
| they have up until the end'of this devastated areas of Europe and fund is now being used ^
Takaichi Umezuki_
....Japanese Section iMitor
60 000 children ^'^
l week to find another home. They Asia who suffer
Ken Mori _________
most ap
> have been trying desperately to palling lack of food, clothing and j vidmg them with a J 1
\¥
PLaza 5005
Toronto, Ont.
™lk etc. In addition,* I
j find even tempdrary quarters medical supplies.
Office Hours:
i
without
success.
. The National JCCA has re ton has been provided fe ^
Subscrij
m
their
frantic
effort
to
se
!
111
ceived an appeal from the Can- ing that is reaching 2j)f,1
$3.00
j
cure
>w
quarters,
they
put
their
adian
office of UNICEF for the panese children and thiC
$6.00 per one year
9:00 a.m.-12 noon,
; trust n a person who deceived financial support of Canadians of Sh(?y be expanded to J
j them into handing over to him Japanese ancestry to this worthy clothing to 300,000 ehildr^
i a large portion of their immediUNICEF in the best sen-T.
ate savings by7 promising to
In support- of the work ’ of the word •'‘charity”, j, ^J
find them a home. The plight of UNICEF, the National JCCA is charity—it is self-heh. n11
authorized
mail
this unfortunate family7 has been presently7 distributing informa UNICEF dollar is matchiDept., Ottawa.
brought to the attention of the tive material on the nature and more than matched by tip aH
Hamilton "JCCA who wishes to work of UNICEF to all local ed country itself h^^
make an urgent appeal to the JCCA Chapters. It is suggested : Ox services.
In addition ek
readers of this paper.
UNICEF AND ITS WORK
that individuals who desire to । country pays for the coi
Anyone knowing of accommo- make
. transportation and distribute
may do
Although nearly five years have elapsed since the dation at a reasonable rental to throughcontributions,
their local JCCA Chap as well as the housing of feeJ
cessation of the world’s
its effect this family within or near Ham- ters.
centres and training of pj
neL
It means that five time?
ilton
is
required
to
notify
imin misery and suffering in the people of the war-wrought
mediately7 Mr. Mits Nakashiba About UNICEF
many children will be saved fd
countries is still sadly evident.
Phone 7-2523 or Mr. Oscar Kathe ravages of hunger and c] Si
Hardest hit were the children of these nations, the wai, Phone 3-9b69, Hamilton.
UNICEF is the International ease.
Children’s Emergency Fund of
hungry, the homeless, the ailing and the orphaned that
Hamilton JCCA
In supporting this worthyp?
the United Nations. It provides
are counted in millions in Europe and in Asia.
jecR the National JCCA is d
6,000,000 children with supple- serving, in practical effon J
In December 11, 1946. the General ssembly of the
mentary meals daily and mediconstituted aim to regard 1
United Nations unanimously approved the establish- Critically Injured
for the sick. It works
LAKEVIEW,
Ont.
While through a United Nations agency work as a contribution to a 18
ment of the United Nations International Children’s
work of the United Nations™
Emergency Fund (UNICEF) in which was entrusted the crossing . the Queen Elizabeth with a Canadian representative the well-being and happiness®
Highway here on March 19, Hi
I
problem of caring for the needs of the world’s children yoshi Ikuta, 60, of Clarkson, an and government agencies in 56 future generations.
countries.
It is financed by
especially in view of the dire conditions which exist in employee of a mushroom farm government contributions and
Speaker On "UNICEF")
those countries devastated by the war.
j at Port Credit, was critically in- public subscriptions.
All Can
Piimarily, UNICEF is a world-wide co-operative- ! jured when he was struck down adian money is spent in Canada, At Toronto JCCA Meell
by Howard Brig- plus many7 millions more in funds
set up to caie for the world s children. They assist in the
The next general meetings® I
gs of Toronto.
for the purchase of Canadian
piovision of food, clothing, medicine and other essentials
s
He was taken to St. Joseph’s food. UNICEF has spent $13,- the Toronto JCCA will b
at
the
Canadian
Legion
Hall,
il
■
to children and expectant mothers. In this manner they Hospital in Toronto where his 500.000 in Canada last year, in
have given assistance to 13 countries in Europe. 18 condition was reported as being cluding 3.5 millions in U. S. College St. on Sunday. March
The work and the orgaiiizariffft.il
1 Funds.
countries, colonies and settlements in Asia, as well as to poor.
of the United Nations teit
Palestine in the Middle East.
tional
Children’s Emerger®
f
^le. 11101711 Principle on which its work is carried ;
Fund (UNICEF) will bediscE|
sed by7 a speaker from the To: |
°P ^S. Uisci ibution will be on the basis of need, without '
By Staff Writer
i vague problems of dispersal and onto division of UNICEF. i g s
disciimination because of race, creed, nationality, or 1 A new set of problems
"were J assimilation. About assimilation addition, a 30-minute film
political belief.”
born for the Nisei around 1942. a few7 Nisei writers have exerted UNICEF provided by that C ^ I
The UNICEF is financed by contributions from The war affected the more than ‘ their literary efforts into sta ganization will be shown. y I
The meeting will start at PH
governments, voluntary agencies, individuals and other 20,000 Japanese in Canada to ; ing that it is the most difficult
the extent that a newr set of : phase of the train of rapid events
sources.
values in their general pattern i that
coursed through the
r® I*
Today, the need continues. The work of UNICES of life had to be adopted.
lives of the Nisei since the war.
Persons
Sought
is far from over. In order to maintain its aid to the
Evacuation was an immediate
But actually7 it is a confusing
_ and Katheri©!
Misses Mavis
problem.
Uprooted
from
their
problem. To achieve complete
needy children of the world, it depends entirely upon
formerlv of Hamilton, cm |
homes in 1942., a new vista ap assimilation, it is thought that
donations.
peared for the evacuees—the it is necessary to be regarded as anyone knowing their iv^i® S
The UNICEF is appealing to the generosity of all rather bleak one of calling a a Canadian and not as a Japan abouts, are requested to coi®
gnost-town their home for sev ese and that is a process that Miss Grace Shintani, c/o Hannw §
people to give them the funds to continue their work
eral years. So to the thousands only7 the passing of time could ton JCCA Chapter, 209
I North, Hamilton, Ont.
pt
of Issei and Nisei, life stood still bring about.
And it can be
PASSING THRU
in this case the teen agyr for two or
years in the argued that complete assimila
Mr. Shigeki Ando, formerly e g M
a
regular
allotment
of
that
winters
and
summers
of
Tashme,
B. C., by Mr. K. 1® j |
tion
is
not
a
necessary
7
factor
in
(Continued from page 1)
rcer
Kaslo, Tashme, New being a Canadian, for Canada is c/o New Citizen, 417 Hoka ^ J
the optometrists, a ticket stub
For
in this Spring of the Half- Den v< r, Sandon and other lone
land of different national Bldg., 16 E. Hastings St., k f |
from the local burlesque house
spots in the interior of B. C.
Century,
the
teen-ager
certainly
(steady, steady), a wad of coun
couver. B. C.
.a^
And there were others who '
The only7 race which has been
terfeit ten dollar bills, several needs a suitcase of money if they
mpletely assimilated is the Niseis have acouired better?-"
cigarette butts, poker chips, one are to keep up the pace. The ventured out to the hardships on
back-breaking’
A egro.
t they had 1* g
And they find themvery7 small baseball bat for hit boys have to glut the appetite of the
an the one
their fair-eyed companions whose farms on the praia
and
the
lacking any heritage or fore the war and in aN 01f‘ |
ting’ old ladies on the head in the
figures frequently do not belie very few who man
culture
street, car to get a seat—that's the
that of their aforementioned cities there - |>
with which they7 into the cities in Eas :ern Canada
the only way to get that priceless
likelihood of there ^ g
xhau was evacuation,
mana splits or
Next
commodity, all others ha'
Dispersal was the least of the
a “nihonmachF.
_ . ^
me relocation.
failed.
problems for after the evacuaresult
of
the
reheat:^
g
The
Relocation was a transi tion for mn there isn’t a single city in
recompense, the fairAnd last and certainlv not the
the scattering o
t of the evacuees from the Canada that has any resembmions adorn themCanaas >■ V
from B. C. aero
< Hl,
in
.esses which usually west coast
Eastern cities. ance of a Japanese quarter.
columnists . did not 1
their
dispersal
ii
easy c
tor
king- resemblance to It was not
clippings from which
owell
and rf
in Vancou
potato
r
who
;. But the comparitheir ideas and
before the war was distinctly7 Ja any7 one solid area.
. y
son s
tne
■> ^
- with
to
there.
Instead of
that yawning pace under
panese and now it is a mere col- :
And except for the
a s
to
original potato sacks
line, there j
veticn ot idle shops and houses. of racial discrimination, ■h would
paycheck wa
Foronto, Montreal, Hamilton and little problems for ^ll\^
The fi
me
satisfy an am
cd
>> mmpeg took the brunt of the seewL to have subsided and ’J
et-I
Tore
rather
T emcees yet there doesn’t seem
assumed an even tenor.
.
1- ; rv
ton, Montreal and points East. A
thirst for
oe
■y
trend
toward
a
Ja
And
there
may
con*
"
“
year or so later the floodtide
This p
cm ar cuppm
hetto.
■ when there would be ^ ;
swai
nped the cities in a big wave
cerns itse if
1 f
•
is
a
iactor
in
tormina
" uy mere s an
Icms for Nisei writers >°
and then slowly subsided
i
TPs
a
quarter
since
they
usually
7
about,
perhaps snoruy
-•Fot for T. A.
ame
Pen
inter-planetary travel c®
came
lun
Certainly the to effect.
THE NEW CANADIAN
-____________ ______ —___ Wednesday, Mareh ,, v
A National JCCA Report
x
■ For Widowed Mother
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those or Japanese origin in Canadi
|
HAMILTON. —
recentlyI widowed mother of
The United Nations Inter
ing in the vicinity of Hamilton national Children’s Emergency
has been given notice of im- Fund (UNICEF) is*now conduct
UNICEF aid began
mediate removal from their
on
October 1st, 1949 a I
ing a campaign on behalf of the
ent home. It is reported that millions of children in the war- 000 sweated fw ^ ^
Toyo Takata _______
....Editor.
| they have up until the end'of this devastated areas of Europe and fund is now being used ^
Takaichi Umezuki_
....Japanese Section iMitor
60 000 children ^'^
l week to find another home. They Asia who suffer
Ken Mori _________
most ap
> have been trying desperately to palling lack of food, clothing and j vidmg them with a J 1
\¥
PLaza 5005
Toronto, Ont.
™lk etc. In addition,* I
j find even tempdrary quarters medical supplies.
Office Hours:
i
without
success.
. The National JCCA has re ton has been provided fe ^
Subscrij
m
their
frantic
effort
to
se
!
111
ceived an appeal from the Can- ing that is reaching 2j)f,1
$3.00
j
cure
>w
quarters,
they
put
their
adian
office of UNICEF for the panese children and thiC
$6.00 per one year
9:00 a.m.-12 noon,
; trust n a person who deceived financial support of Canadians of Sh(?y be expanded to J
j them into handing over to him Japanese ancestry to this worthy clothing to 300,000 ehildr^
i a large portion of their immediUNICEF in the best sen-T.
ate savings by7 promising to
In support- of the work ’ of the word •'‘charity”, j, ^J
find them a home. The plight of UNICEF, the National JCCA is charity—it is self-heh. n11
authorized
this unfortunate family7 has been presently7 distributing informa UNICEF dollar is matchiDept., Ottawa.
brought to the attention of the tive material on the nature and more than matched by tip aH
Hamilton "JCCA who wishes to work of UNICEF to all local ed country itself h^^
make an urgent appeal to the JCCA Chapters. It is suggested : Ox services.
In addition ek
readers of this paper.
UNICEF AND ITS WORK
that individuals who desire to । country pays for the coi
Anyone knowing of accommo- make
. transportation and distribute
may do
Although nearly five years have elapsed since the dation at a reasonable rental to throughcontributions,
their local JCCA Chap as well as the housing of feeJ
cessation of the world’s
its effect this family within or near Ham- ters.
centres and training of pj
neL
It means that five time?
ilton
is
required
to
notify
imin misery and suffering in the people of the war-wrought
mediately7 Mr. Mits Nakashiba About UNICEF
many children will be saved fd
countries is still sadly evident.
Phone 7-2523 or Mr. Oscar Kathe ravages of hunger and c] Si
Hardest hit were the children of these nations, the wai, Phone 3-9b69, Hamilton.
UNICEF is the International ease.
Children’s Emergency Fund of
hungry, the homeless, the ailing and the orphaned that
Hamilton JCCA
In supporting this worthyp?
the United Nations. It provides
are counted in millions in Europe and in Asia.
jecR the National JCCA is d
6,000,000 children with supple- serving, in practical effon J
In December 11, 1946. the General ssembly of the
mentary meals daily and mediconstituted aim to regard 1
United Nations unanimously approved the establish- Critically Injured
for the sick. It works
LAKEVIEW,
Ont.
While through a United Nations agency work as a contribution to a 18
ment of the United Nations International Children’s
work of the United Nations™
Emergency Fund (UNICEF) in which was entrusted the crossing . the Queen Elizabeth with a Canadian representative the well-being and happiness®
Highway here on March 19, Hi
I
problem of caring for the needs of the world’s children yoshi Ikuta, 60, of Clarkson, an and government agencies in 56 future generations.
countries.
It is financed by
especially in view of the dire conditions which exist in employee of a mushroom farm government contributions and
Speaker On "UNICEF")
those countries devastated by the war.
j at Port Credit, was critically in- public subscriptions.
All Can
Piimarily, UNICEF is a world-wide co-operative- ! jured when he was struck down adian money is spent in Canada, At Toronto JCCA Meell
by Howard Brig- plus many7 millions more in funds
set up to caie for the world s children. They assist in the
The next general meetings® I
gs of Toronto.
for the purchase of Canadian
piovision of food, clothing, medicine and other essentials
s
He was taken to St. Joseph’s food. UNICEF has spent $13,- the Toronto JCCA will b
at
the
Canadian
Legion
Hall,
il
■
to children and expectant mothers. In this manner they Hospital in Toronto where his 500.000 in Canada last year, in
have given assistance to 13 countries in Europe. 18 condition was reported as being cluding 3.5 millions in U. S. College St. on Sunday. March
The work and the orgaiiizariffft.il
1 Funds.
countries, colonies and settlements in Asia, as well as to poor.
of the United Nations teit
Palestine in the Middle East.
tional
Children’s Emerger®
f
^le. 11101711 Principle on which its work is carried ;
Fund (UNICEF) will bediscE|
sed by7 a speaker from the To: |
°P ^S. Uisci ibution will be on the basis of need, without '
By Staff Writer
i vague problems of dispersal and onto division of UNICEF. i g s
disciimination because of race, creed, nationality, or 1 A new set of problems
"were J assimilation. About assimilation addition, a 30-minute film
political belief.”
born for the Nisei around 1942. a few7 Nisei writers have exerted UNICEF provided by that C ^ I
The UNICEF is financed by contributions from The war affected the more than ‘ their literary efforts into sta ganization will be shown. y I
The meeting will start at PH
governments, voluntary agencies, individuals and other 20,000 Japanese in Canada to ; ing that it is the most difficult
the extent that a newr set of : phase of the train of rapid events
sources.
values in their general pattern i that
coursed through the
r® I*
Today, the need continues. The work of UNICES of life had to be adopted.
lives of the Nisei since the war.
Persons
Sought
is far from over. In order to maintain its aid to the
Evacuation was an immediate
But actually7 it is a confusing
_ and Katheri©!
Misses Mavis
problem.
Uprooted
from
their
problem. To achieve complete
needy children of the world, it depends entirely upon
formerlv of Hamilton, cm |
homes in 1942., a new vista ap assimilation, it is thought that
donations.
peared for the evacuees—the it is necessary to be regarded as anyone knowing their iv^i® S
The UNICEF is appealing to the generosity of all rather bleak one of calling a a Canadian and not as a Japan abouts, are requested to coi®
gnost-town their home for sev ese and that is a process that Miss Grace Shintani, c/o Hannw §
people to give them the funds to continue their work
eral years. So to the thousands only7 the passing of time could ton JCCA Chapter, 209
I North, Hamilton, Ont.
pt
of Issei and Nisei, life stood still bring about.
And it can be
PASSING THRU
in this case the teen agyr for two or
years in the argued that complete assimila
Mr. Shigeki Ando, formerly e g M
a
regular
allotment
of
that
winters
and
summers
of
Tashme,
B. C., by Mr. K. 1® j |
tion
is
not
a
necessary
7
factor
in
(Continued from page 1)
rcer
Kaslo, Tashme, New being a Canadian, for Canada is c/o New Citizen, 417 Hoka ^ J
the optometrists, a ticket stub
For
in this Spring of the Half- Den v< r, Sandon and other lone
land of different national Bldg., 16 E. Hastings St., k f |
from the local burlesque house
spots in the interior of B. C.
Century,
the
teen-ager
certainly
(steady, steady), a wad of coun
couver. B. C.
.a^
And there were others who '
The only7 race which has been
terfeit ten dollar bills, several needs a suitcase of money if they
mpletely assimilated is the Niseis have acouired better?-"
cigarette butts, poker chips, one are to keep up the pace. The ventured out to the hardships on
back-breaking’
A egro.
t they had 1* g
And they find themvery7 small baseball bat for hit boys have to glut the appetite of the
an the one
their fair-eyed companions whose farms on the praia
and
the
lacking any heritage or fore the war and in aN 01f‘ |
ting’ old ladies on the head in the
figures frequently do not belie very few who man
culture
street, car to get a seat—that's the
that of their aforementioned cities there - |>
with which they7 into the cities in Eas :ern Canada
the only way to get that priceless
likelihood of there ^ g
xhau was evacuation,
mana splits or
Next
commodity, all others ha'
Dispersal was the least of the
a “nihonmachF.
_ . ^
me relocation.
failed.
problems for after the evacuaresult
of
the
reheat:^
g
The
Relocation was a transi tion for mn there isn’t a single city in
recompense, the fairAnd last and certainlv not the
the scattering o
t of the evacuees from the Canada that has any resembmions adorn themCanaas >■ V
from B. C. aero
< Hl,
in
.esses which usually west coast
Eastern cities. ance of a Japanese quarter.
columnists . did not 1
their
dispersal
ii
easy c
tor
king- resemblance to It was not
clippings from which
owell
and rf
in Vancou
potato
r
who
;. But the comparitheir ideas and
before the war was distinctly7 Ja any7 one solid area.
. y
son s
tne
■> ^
- with
to
there.
Instead of
that yawning pace under
panese and now it is a mere col- :
And except for the
a s
to
original potato sacks
line, there j
veticn ot idle shops and houses. of racial discrimination, ■h would
paycheck wa
Foronto, Montreal, Hamilton and little problems for ^ll\^
The fi
me
satisfy an am
cd
>> mmpeg took the brunt of the seewL to have subsided and ’J
et-I
Tore
rather
T emcees yet there doesn’t seem
assumed an even tenor.
.
1- ; rv
ton, Montreal and points East. A
thirst for
oe
■y
trend
toward
a
Ja
And
there
may
con*
"
“
year or so later the floodtide
This p
cm ar cuppm
hetto.
■ when there would be ^ ;
swai
nped the cities in a big wave
cerns itse if
1 f
•
is
a
iactor
in
tormina
" uy mere s an
Icms for Nisei writers >°
and then slowly subsided
i
TPs
a
quarter
since
they
usually
7
about,
perhaps snoruy
-•Fot for T. A.
ame
Pen
inter-planetary travel c®
came
lun
Certainly the to effect.
Page 3
#
dnesday, March 22 1950
A
p
5’
3)
ft
fe
&
$
W
BO
i-
3
b
T
0
? 7
I
7
L
1
I
0
1
T
0
o
Pi
o
ft
7
I
1
o
u
V
o
'a
7
11
0
o
7
o
& 11
0
Ytr
b
ill
7
5
ns
o
to
©
ms
0
tn
mru
rift
b
11
©
L
A
ti
MS
^ —
VW -- -
ft
C-
a
1
7?
4r
IT
11
T
0 0
Si]
15
0
2
J
ft
e
0
0
ft.
c
0
H
if
{^
0J ft
ni 0
G
P
d
ft
i
£-d
?J
0
0 a
n
7)
L
7;
.0
c
0
Bl
0
i
11
11
L
t
‘9
ft
JH
0 ❖
?
nr.
ri
0
0
lift
77
o
o
*7
»
I nJ
0
71*
7
/i"
L<
6
i
£>
0
8
a
T
L
3
77
Sa
r
■3
b
0
4
L
9
Ell
0
4
0
©
o
li
0
0
b
o
(Z
0
0
Bl^’
6
9
ft
9
1
-7'
?V
0'
M —
41-'
5
a
yn
a
11
: ft
' TZ
ni
>45
ft
0
0 H
0 0
i
0
0
4
'7-
ft
0 ^
IK ^ I'
®
0
o
i IWt
c
K
0
I
7
0
ft
;&
0
XL
0
b
©
(1
^-
R
^Ij
o
ft'
i
(1
n
1g
72
pp
4
T
11
;PP
8!
a
ft
ft
^1
»1
0
^
M
0
0
0
^
nj
O
C’
/
a
<2
L U
©
1
r,t
l
<j
a.
is
^ iw
0
0
U
C"
a 5'
(1
c
9
h
ft
^
>
i'
0
1
31
&
c
c
9
»
m 0
?
A
M
J
L
L
£n
it
K
o
n*
I *o
iG
i
0
o
fe
* '
V
7
6
©
w
§ 0 (1
2
0 0
n
0
1
®
'C
IM
f
^J o
#
co a
W S
L % K
0 sh
J
ra WJ
H
M H O ft/. ©
o ^
N
H ■
^ Bi i$
W0
Kf
~ti
4»
it
£0 # 1
«J ^
JR
1’,
4T
oo
!?!?s
o
X
S
■ L
®ffm
0'^
w
00
M
CD
0
Jr,
1W
7
I
/j
£
(5
CD
9
0
■i*
111
ns
3
/^ 1 ©
S pu
■Jiii
3‘ i^
0
hS
jui.
§ U §
o f
I
i
b
id
©Zc.
'B
ft ffj
UH
a
u^i
4 Hl
IMPERIAL
BANK
CANADA
[
ih
ELIZABETH & DUNDAS STS.
(116 Elizabeth St.)
TORONTO
!PJ
L. J. WALKER, Manager
0
H 0
a5
7r 0J
CH
o
co
ex
F
OOP
Q C
c
m® 2
? ’ &*
o?2B5
35
in
tn
P
5
m
0
IS
fr
0^
nnf<
0
- 71
00
ft®
co
oo
P
p
3
5 o
o s O
©
M
u
। ten
p
r KI
Q co w
dnesday, March 22 1950
A
p
5’
3)
ft
fe
&
$
W
BO
i-
3
b
T
0
? 7
I
7
L
1
I
0
1
T
0
o
Pi
o
ft
7
I
1
o
u
V
o
'a
7
11
0
o
7
o
& 11
0
Ytr
b
ill
7
5
ns
o
to
©
ms
0
tn
mru
rift
b
11
©
L
A
ti
MS
^ —
VW -- -
ft
C-
a
1
7?
4r
IT
11
T
0 0
Si]
15
0
2
J
ft
e
0
0
ft.
c
0
H
if
{^
0J ft
ni 0
G
P
d
ft
i
£-d
?J
0
0 a
n
7)
L
7;
.0
c
0
Bl
0
i
11
11
L
t
‘9
ft
JH
0 ❖
?
nr.
ri
0
0
lift
77
o
o
*7
»
I nJ
0
71*
7
/i"
L<
6
i
£>
0
8
a
T
L
3
77
Sa
r
■3
b
0
4
L
9
Ell
0
4
0
©
o
li
0
0
b
o
(Z
0
0
Bl^’
6
9
ft
9
1
-7'
?V
0'
M —
41-'
5
a
yn
a
11
: ft
' TZ
ni
>45
ft
0
0 H
0 0
i
0
0
4
'7-
ft
0 ^
IK ^ I'
®
0
o
i IWt
c
K
0
I
7
0
ft
;&
0
XL
0
b
©
(1
^-
R
^Ij
o
ft'
i
(1
n
1g
72
pp
4
T
11
;PP
8!
a
ft
ft
^1
»1
0
^
M
0
0
0
^
nj
O
C’
/
a
<2
L U
©
1
r,t
l
<j
a.
is
^ iw
0
0
U
C"
a 5'
(1
c
9
h
ft
^
>
i'
0
1
31
&
c
c
9
»
m 0
?
A
M
J
L
L
£n
it
K
o
n*
I *o
iG
i
0
o
fe
* '
V
7
6
©
w
§ 0 (1
2
0 0
n
0
1
®
'C
IM
f
^J o
#
co a
W S
L % K
0 sh
J
ra WJ
H
M H O ft/. ©
o ^
N
H ■
^ Bi i$
W0
Kf
~ti
4»
it
£0 # 1
«J ^
JR
1’,
4T
oo
!?!?s
o
X
S
■ L
®ffm
0'^
w
00
M
CD
0
Jr,
1W
7
I
/j
£
(5
CD
9
0
■i*
111
ns
3
/^ 1 ©
S pu
■Jiii
3‘ i^
0
hS
jui.
§ U §
o f
I
i
b
id
©Zc.
'B
ft ffj
UH
a
u^i
4 Hl
IMPERIAL
BANK
CANADA
[
ih
ELIZABETH & DUNDAS STS.
(116 Elizabeth St.)
TORONTO
!PJ
L. J. WALKER, Manager
0
H 0
a5
7r 0J
CH
o
co
ex
F
OOP
Q C
c
m® 2
? ’ &*
o?2B5
35
in
tn
P
5
m
0
IS
fr
0^
nnf<
0
- 71
00
ft®
co
oo
P
p
3
5 o
o s O
©
M
u
। ten
p
r KI
Q co w
Page 4
JADIAN
PAGE FOUR
77
U
tz
1^1
o
y
UK,
rb' U
tz
y
0
0
3
71
T
iw
£
18
ii
o
u
0
tz
£ #
£
o
U 4
(1
?I]
tz
>4
O
ti
?
5s?!.*'
i'«
0
0 0
h>
F
6
6
tz
T
tz
ip
6
0
fW
0
4
u
n
7
5
u
£
5
£
n
tz PI
£
L
tz
0
4
Ji
Wj
w
5
n
0
ill I.
7 £ c
o
n
0 4 .
Ji
X
In
5 #
n
A
n
iz
Ji
tz
u
0
0
5
6
T
o
tz
5
*>
5
tz
n
nK
t£
£
5
1=
9
tz
TOWNE STUDIO
‘Z
Sadao Nikaido
111 Dundas St. W., Toronto
(Phone: PLaza 3884)
o
ft# f^ «6
M
* 3
7
b 4)
U 5
tz
DORELLE FLORISTS
&
£
tz
SI
IX
u
II
1171 Danforth Ave. Toronto
(at Greenwo od)
Open Evenings GE. 5010
0 #
^3
£
£ co
JP
o c
O')
I' '
#
i
«$
tz
o
A
£
oui
o
0
b
V
0
n b
5
L
0
9
K
7
^
tz
BiJ
5
0
iz
W
7u
£
4*
0
tz
tz
It
it
tf
n
?
•6
0
IS
Ji
tz
Ji
r
{1
o
®
tz
I'
o
a t ^
An#
5
n
r
%
o
"S
ja
fl
o
0
u li
u
&
^s'^"/
W
4
0
7
0
^ 7
$^4 W
o
Ji
K
fl
6
W
-)3 w
HS
o ® ^ (111 ® A 1
w
00
; £A g n s g
QO
oo
■3
W
CL
>-»«
3
DO
MS
is
W
P
H
«
#
A, ^> ^^
*tiQ
tr:
3 H
<9 o
•• ’1
f-w
0^^
H ^J
n
£)
I'
CA N
fl\ J
9
0
KD *
fill
4?
co J ? S3
to
iO
m
O <5 □ 2 B
a
9
no
C SB
<°
A
* fill fill {ill {ill {ill {III {ill {|I| {ill {ill {ill fill
PAGE FOUR
77
U
tz
1^1
o
y
UK,
rb' U
tz
y
0
0
3
71
T
iw
£
18
ii
o
u
0
tz
£ #
£
o
U 4
(1
?I]
tz
>4
O
ti
?
5s?!.*'
i'«
0
0 0
h>
F
6
6
tz
T
tz
ip
6
0
fW
0
4
u
n
7
5
u
£
5
£
n
tz PI
£
L
tz
0
4
Ji
Wj
w
5
n
0
ill I.
7 £ c
o
n
0 4 .
Ji
X
In
5 #
n
A
n
iz
Ji
tz
u
0
0
5
6
T
o
tz
5
*>
5
tz
n
nK
t£
£
5
1=
9
tz
TOWNE STUDIO
‘Z
Sadao Nikaido
111 Dundas St. W., Toronto
(Phone: PLaza 3884)
o
ft# f^ «6
M
* 3
7
b 4)
U 5
tz
DORELLE FLORISTS
&
£
tz
SI
IX
u
II
1171 Danforth Ave. Toronto
(at Greenwo od)
Open Evenings GE. 5010
0 #
^3
£
£ co
JP
o c
O')
I' '
#
i
«$
tz
o
A
£
oui
o
0
b
V
0
n b
5
L
0
9
K
7
^
tz
BiJ
5
0
iz
W
7u
£
4*
0
tz
tz
It
it
tf
n
?
•6
0
IS
Ji
tz
Ji
r
{1
o
®
tz
I'
o
a t ^
An#
5
n
r
%
o
"S
ja
fl
o
0
u li
u
&
^s'^"/
W
4
0
7
0
^ 7
$^4 W
o
Ji
K
fl
6
W
-)3 w
HS
o ® ^ (111 ® A 1
w
00
; £A g n s g
QO
oo
■3
W
CL
>-»«
3
DO
MS
is
W
P
H
«
#
A, ^> ^^
*tiQ
tr:
3 H
<9 o
•• ’1
f-w
0^^
H ^J
n
£)
I'
CA N
fl\ J
9
0
KD *
fill
4?
co J ? S3
to
iO
m
O <5 □ 2 B
a
9
no
C SB
<°
A
* fill fill {ill {ill {ill {III {ill {|I| {ill {ill {ill fill
Page 5
PAGE FIVE
l*
tH t
(X
b gx {3 M
^
i L
\Z :/ 0 tz 0
b ®
s 9
[A
A
0 w
#
^
O
x?
.0
PR
0 0
'b
0
i
0
2c
0
i~
®£
11
I #
T 6
a
9
i
T
o
AX
SA 6
i TO
a
0'
0
6
fig
0
sa
0’
1 b
9
0
51
b
5
9
n
/?
1
c
JIS
0
(1
b
7^
n
p£’
9
n 0
Jit.
Ab
1
tz
h 0
&
11
12
L
o
t t R
SU
n
i
11
ii
JIS
b'
I
L
l^
6
0
6
/)>
72 (1 X
9
If 0
©
3
i
Ab
I)
0
(1
*>
o
ll
io
fa
5
Z> tz
o
t
(1
(X
& IX fa 0
fl n
(1 b4 2b
&
IX'
4
fa
b
2H
Ii
RS
fit
0
1
10
RS
k
0
tt
b
I'
c
K
®
4
fa
sSJ
HL
0
0
o
'b
0
3
o
i &
Mj
0 0
fl
Ab
0
i
0 n
9
^t£
to
0 I
11
ph
0
0
fS
Ab ^
11 1
Ab
Z>
1
L
w
o
0
i
o
P9
.b
n
o
SO
&
IX
M
i ck
0
fit
L>
0
i
I"
ta
B?
o ic
5
ii
# 1$
SA
AX
9
0
O
£
o
t
ix
c
IX
A
rn
t
fa o
9
6
J
fl
IX'
A
n
IX' tz
Hi
fl
R
fa
ZP
BJ3
jul
i-
i
6
T
^-sj
6
11
tz
o
R
lb
i
ft
ft
1
Ab
fa
^J
ft
tx
fM
6
p
tz
n
6
0
11
R
9
6
u®
3 ~
0
IB
CC
® © w
Ji
o
*
7ft
PC
o
A£
^J
J
6
i
tz
l& 6
£
1
I
0 IX
6
1
l«!ffl$
T
9
9
SA
IX
0
#
a x ^^^eim^BH
ftAA^A#
^Ag WA
0
in r AJ^®^tt»JU
t^^FA^SlWA
i^^T^^S&Ai
IAKA^ffi#2®^g
#0
U^^t’> t
i
b
^iffl#^fi 'iW&?t
i^#^®±t±A
A®
c
ft
9
£
i ( iK 5€T t^> k +0 t b ^^
cn
Sia
o
3
ft
tz
& tz
0 V)
b
ii
o
II
®
1
HU
J
0 IX
y fl ^ 3PA
(X AX
0
&
5
6
11
A£
B
A
11
SA
0
0
9o
o
A
0 0
Tty
0
L
6
1
tz
b
0
& fa
IS
^3
H 7<
iv
I
i
7
t
6
11
s
®
11
tz
6
11
0
fa
9
[10
o
0
o
7fU (X
0
©
o
to
SA
11
fl
IX'
k
9
G
t'^A^JLf^^l^ 1 °83W!>T
? m?^ fzmsM
01 1 fE^‘
0 W 0 -4
l*
tH t
(X
b gx {3 M
^
i L
\Z :/ 0 tz 0
b ®
s 9
[A
A
0 w
#
^
O
x?
.0
PR
0 0
'b
0
i
0
2c
0
i~
®£
11
I #
T 6
a
9
i
T
o
AX
SA 6
i TO
a
0'
0
6
fig
0
sa
0’
1 b
9
0
51
b
5
9
n
/?
1
c
JIS
0
(1
b
7^
n
p£’
9
n 0
Jit.
Ab
1
tz
h 0
&
11
12
L
o
t t R
SU
n
i
11
ii
JIS
b'
I
L
l^
6
0
6
/)>
72 (1 X
9
If 0
©
3
i
Ab
I)
0
(1
*>
o
ll
io
fa
5
Z> tz
o
t
(1
(X
& IX fa 0
fl n
(1 b4 2b
&
IX'
4
fa
b
2H
Ii
RS
fit
0
1
10
RS
k
0
tt
b
I'
c
K
®
4
fa
sSJ
HL
0
0
o
'b
0
3
o
i &
Mj
0 0
fl
Ab
0
i
0 n
9
^t£
to
0 I
11
ph
0
0
fS
Ab ^
11 1
Ab
Z>
1
L
w
o
0
i
o
P9
.b
n
o
SO
&
IX
M
i ck
0
fit
L>
0
i
I"
ta
B?
o ic
5
ii
# 1$
SA
AX
9
0
O
£
o
t
ix
c
IX
A
rn
t
fa o
9
6
J
fl
IX'
A
n
IX' tz
Hi
fl
R
fa
ZP
BJ3
jul
i-
i
6
T
^-sj
6
11
tz
o
R
lb
i
ft
ft
1
Ab
fa
^J
ft
tx
fM
6
p
tz
n
6
0
11
R
9
6
u®
3 ~
0
IB
CC
® © w
Ji
o
*
7ft
PC
o
A£
^J
J
6
i
tz
l& 6
£
1
I
0 IX
6
1
l«!ffl$
T
9
9
SA
IX
0
#
a x ^^^eim^BH
ftAA^A#
^Ag WA
0
in r AJ^®^tt»JU
t^^FA^SlWA
i^^T^^S&Ai
IAKA^ffi#2®^g
#0
U^^t’> t
i
b
^iffl#^fi 'iW&?t
i^#^®±t±A
A®
c
ft
9
£
i ( iK 5€T t^> k +0 t b ^^
cn
Sia
o
3
ft
tz
& tz
0 V)
b
ii
o
II
®
1
HU
J
0 IX
y fl ^ 3PA
(X AX
0
&
5
6
11
A£
B
A
11
SA
0
0
9o
o
A
0 0
Tty
0
L
6
1
tz
b
0
& fa
IS
^3
H 7<
iv
I
i
7
t
6
11
s
®
11
tz
6
11
0
fa
9
[10
o
0
o
7fU (X
0
©
o
to
SA
11
fl
IX'
k
9
G
t'^A^JLf^^l^ 1 °83W!>T
? m?^ fzmsM
01 1 fE^‘
0 W 0 -4
Page 6
THE
PAGE SIX
fl Tf
Zp*
iH
n,
(X.
© <9
A
Zp
#
7J<
-It
n ?
0
1
>7
o
7
£
S
6 4s
7
2
j
tz
#J
^!
IS
9
0
7
5
I
s-
fE
B
+
Zp
11
7
?6
0
wk
n
r
^J
bl
ft
6
o
n
W
b
?i
01
•B
i
&5
n
^
*
7
It
6
0
L
0
©
o
i
5
I
b
7
B
§
in
o 0
C lb]
A i Zp • c
¥
Zp
■5
7
A
n
i
z?> 0
77
L
© £ dr
ay fa
0
(T
IT
1
*%c
9
6
T
A ©
0
#
^J
2
H
i
©
fl
A
Zp
o
TO
7
0
Zp 0 Rai
0
W &
f®
2
c
I1
4T
Wednesday,. March 22 1950
CANADIAN
NEW
ft it
T ft
©
<)
43
&j
b
©
w
V
di
nW
lih’
6
o
6
IT
Tt
h?d
b
I’f]
rif
IT
b
© it
4b
iff!
i
;t
(T if
c
I?
Seed
ft
_L
hit
Zp
if
o
©
©
^^ ?K
0
6
>j%
IT
5
IT
13
A
M ft
5
TO
d
fi
ll
HU
#1
0 Sit
o
F
I. >
0
0
fi
IT
0 A
0 IT a
BF
dllE
u
i
IT
O
K
"T IT
»
Zp
ft
I1
ft
0
1 .
'I?
fi
fit
fa
IT
I'
2
ft
b
Pn
0
H 2
ft
%
u
-t
Zp 77
7
©
Zp
G
1
fit 0
&
7
i
c
FpI 0
« ft f S
0 & f: t ^ h
2
c
0
O
o
O
0
iW
ZP
6
ft e
fa £
7.
6
IT
ft
T in
j? C '
o
A
11
6
U
A
i
0
2
IP
>jd
0
o
FA
©
Zp*
ti?
7
0
L
0
0
^
'ft
IM
Zp*
hK
r 0
20
©
b
li
(u
©
I
Zp’
I
IT
0
ft
Irai
tei
9
O
0
0
0
•Sc
b
2
r
o
IT
F
tZ
&5
ill i
7
6
6
o
i’
©
>
ft
ft 9 2O
0
IT
Zp
9
Zp
O
©
L
A Til
a
2
U
L
6 it
|tua
6
T
0
0
ft
u.
ip
6
b
0
T€ © B&Zp^
tiii
ra
0
ft
M ® ft
B A ©
H
3 &
Zp' ^
2 q
Zp
T IT
© ^
ft
tb
Fl
rlf
()
0
©
0 U u
PH
b
ti
0
C
b
M
6
^iJ
0 ©
Zp
77
©
0
rtf
A
2
7
Zp 0
© Zp
#
(T
A’ Zl>
7l
3£
B
7?
©
n
0
0
>
b
Zp*
d
^
L
Zp
Zp
A
b
o
Zp
I'
£
I’
I-
Zp*
IE
fri T 7
n ii
i
b
IT
vW
(nil
b
'L
0
0
IT
-Y
0
t'
aL
1
®
it
ft
2B
0
iifi
20
6
&
©
©
T
IT
b
L
a
I'
Z p' 0
IT n
. n
4i
IB
iM
M
A f
b
7
4
i
6
20
Ft
Zp
9
'^Jj
6
iW
ill 0- I
6 0
-u
ft
#
L
nJb
0
i
Ht 133 Til
12
-T
©
fi
rfa
B
0
7
®B ^
ft
K
IT
5
T
1'
Zp
IT
c
J3
sy
6
C
Is
©
V ck
r b
®
nil
a.
Bi lii
7
50
J0.
nd
T 7b
L
9
d
st
.HL7?
P
si
PAGE SIX
fl Tf
Zp*
iH
n,
(X.
© <9
A
Zp
#
7J<
-It
n ?
0
1
>7
o
7
£
S
6 4s
7
2
j
tz
#J
^!
IS
9
0
7
5
I
s-
fE
B
+
Zp
11
7
?6
0
wk
n
r
^J
bl
ft
6
o
n
W
b
?i
01
•B
i
&5
n
^
*
7
It
6
0
L
0
©
o
i
5
I
b
7
B
§
in
o 0
C lb]
A i Zp • c
¥
Zp
■5
7
A
n
i
z?> 0
77
L
© £ dr
ay fa
0
(T
IT
1
*%c
9
6
T
A ©
0
#
^J
2
H
i
©
fl
A
Zp
o
TO
7
0
Zp 0 Rai
0
W &
f®
2
c
I1
4T
Wednesday,. March 22 1950
CANADIAN
NEW
ft it
T ft
©
<)
43
&j
b
©
w
V
di
nW
lih’
6
o
6
IT
Tt
h?d
b
I’f]
rif
IT
b
© it
4b
iff!
i
;t
(T if
c
I?
Seed
ft
_L
hit
Zp
if
o
©
©
^^ ?K
0
6
>j%
IT
5
IT
13
A
M ft
5
TO
d
fi
ll
HU
#1
0 Sit
o
F
I. >
0
0
fi
IT
0 A
0 IT a
BF
dllE
u
i
IT
O
K
"T IT
»
Zp
ft
I1
ft
0
1 .
'I?
fi
fit
fa
IT
I'
2
ft
b
Pn
0
H 2
ft
%
u
-t
Zp 77
7
©
Zp
G
1
fit 0
&
7
i
c
FpI 0
« ft f S
0 & f: t ^ h
2
c
0
O
o
O
0
iW
ZP
6
ft e
fa £
7.
6
IT
ft
T in
j? C '
o
A
11
6
U
A
i
0
2
IP
>jd
0
o
FA
©
Zp*
ti?
7
0
L
0
0
^
'ft
IM
Zp*
hK
r 0
20
©
b
li
(u
©
I
Zp’
I
IT
0
ft
Irai
tei
9
O
0
0
0
•Sc
b
2
r
o
IT
F
tZ
&5
ill i
7
6
6
o
i’
©
>
ft
ft 9 2O
0
IT
Zp
9
Zp
O
©
L
A Til
a
2
U
L
6 it
|tua
6
T
0
0
ft
u.
ip
6
b
0
T€ © B&Zp^
tiii
ra
0
ft
M ® ft
B A ©
H
3 &
Zp' ^
2 q
Zp
T IT
© ^
ft
tb
Fl
rlf
()
0
©
0 U u
PH
b
ti
0
C
b
M
6
^iJ
0 ©
Zp
77
©
0
rtf
A
2
7
Zp 0
© Zp
#
(T
A’ Zl>
7l
3£
B
7?
©
n
0
0
>
b
Zp*
d
^
L
Zp
Zp
A
b
o
Zp
I'
£
I’
I-
Zp*
IE
fri T 7
n ii
i
b
IT
vW
(nil
b
'L
0
0
IT
-Y
0
t'
aL
1
®
it
ft
2B
0
iifi
20
6
&
©
©
T
IT
b
L
a
I'
Z p' 0
IT n
. n
4i
IB
iM
M
A f
b
7
4
i
6
20
Ft
Zp
9
'^Jj
6
iW
ill 0- I
6 0
-u
ft
#
L
nJb
0
i
Ht 133 Til
12
-T
©
fi
rfa
B
0
7
®B ^
ft
K
IT
5
T
1'
Zp
IT
c
J3
sy
6
C
Is
©
V ck
r b
®
nil
a.
Bi lii
7
50
J0.
nd
T 7b
L
9
d
st
.HL7?
P
si
Page 7
Wednesday. March 22 19-50
the new canadia
Mustangs Gain Verdict In Opening Game
PAGE SEVEN
Battle For Top Close
In Toronto Bowling
I amadas and Takeda Insur
ance kept pace with each other
rs won their 13th gained
31
HAMILTON. — Toronto
in
the struggle for first
ison without defeat by | Visitors Gain Easy
ety
Grill, winners of th TNH1 !
Bowling' Leahe Rebels on March IS I Win In Junior Finals
2S4-A YONGE STREET. TORONTO
2 games from Championship, will inv
a one-game lead in the i
The visiting Han ton Alphas
nd Star Clean- Hamilton Barton Street
d of the Toronto
had no difficulty in wallopingto battle the leaders of the
ague playdowns,
Toronto TNT bv a convincing
A cent
HNHL on Sat., March 25., at
i the first half was GO-24 margin, Th
the Ham li
Ph?
the other games resulted 5:45 p.m.
Office: 21 Dundas Squars
;e with Mustangs hold- ton team gains d a one-game lead
Phone AD-0076-7
scores, Variety, Team
the first inter
Res.:
52c Manning Avenue
advantage. Toki To- in the playoff finals.
Nine, Best Cleaners and Sora
TORONTO, ONT.
Maying the best game or
The rirst half of the game
Res. ME. 60'2
ous
beatingQueen
eason. and Ken Mivasaki which was played as a preliminedmans. OK Cleaners game is
forecast.
Although
trough with 10 points arv to the senior final
slow
Hamilton is the underdog, ob
d M Mustangs to a 36-29 with both teams playing- it close. lively.
servers believe the powerhouse '
Smooth
Sock Paced by brilliant Wes Hyodo
ad.
101‘A QUEEN ST. W.
Toronto Variety Grill crew is up j
The highest score for the night
and Paul Hirano and Jack Yokoyama, the smooth
Tsukamou
Phone
;amst a strong opposition.
was
registered
by
M.
Isoshima
guns
for
the
Rebels
were the I
working Hamilton quintet took
WA. 6953
All indications point io a
with 846-309.
L B.
if die hal.
a 20-11 lead by halftime.
For
Pick-up
and Delivery
Tanaka 764-31 J. Takeda 741- ‘‘game of the year” and many j
lackened in the
Alphas opened up its throttle
fans from both Toronto and ;
M
li 741-325
K,
avers became cau- in the second half
ompletely
Hamilton are expected to attend, j
710Lucien C. Kurata
tious of being banished on per- dominated the game as they be bora 739-300, !
Following the game, the Hamil- I
1
Adelaide St. E., Toronto
J. Tahara 708-289 and S. ton Hockey Wind-Up Dance will j
sonals. The usually high-scor- wildered their taller adversaries
Barrister
and Solicitor
Herby Miyasaki, who was with speed and pattern plays.
701-257 ' sre other high be held at Gould’s Hall. 242 |
1st and 2nd Mortgage Loans
oints in the first half
Like the senior game, the of bowlers
James St. North, S-12 p.m.
•
arranged
by the effe five checking of Mush ficials used their whistles freOffice EL. 5259 Res. LY. 3427
Fukumoto, saw little
action quently, a total of 41 fouls were
sather, being called
after the
out on pet
AJ pitas: Hyodo 27, Yokoyama
mote and Sock Tsukamoto took 17, Fukumoto 13, J. Tamane 2,
over the scoring chores for their K. Tamane 1, Mototsune.
VERNON, B. C.— The Vernon । loops boys, 19-3, it jumped to a
respective teams as they fought
Chop Suey House
TNT: Kamino 7, F. Idenouye
Casaba Club again played host fast tempo in the second half
score of 65-53.
to
92-A
Elizabeth St., Toronto
7, Yatabe 5, Uyede 3, Ogaki 3,
when the visiting quintet caught
last
month
to
three
teams
from
shikawa and Mush Kitazaki 2, Ishii 2, M. Idenouye,
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
Kamloops and flouting Emily fire and tied the score in the
DINNERS
r ukumoto fouled out for the Fukakusa.
last minute.
j
Post,
trounced
the
Junior
boys,
sers m the last minute of play
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 a.m.
In the overtime, Kamloops |
Senior Women and Men's teams
a game marred by 46 infrac- son will take place.
Reservations: EL. 9035
Miyasaki 14, T. to the scores of 25-24, 20-6 and muffed a gift shot while Yosh
Mustangs:
ms. The contest was handled
Ouchi, Vernon's star guard, made
• luck Harvey and George Sei Toyama 14, Makimoto 13, H. MiELgin 0508
good his shot during the last 10
Overtime
Win
is of the Toronto and District •■asaki 12, R. Miyasaki 6, Mori 4,
2 Vesta Drive
The Junior Boys; game stole seconds to give his teammates a
Inamoto 2, J. Toyama, Ohara.
Longue.
MAfair 1365.
Rebels: Tsukamoto 18, Hirano the night's show. From a slow 1-point victory.
The second game of the series
Andrew E. McKague,
Girls Beat Visitors
is tentatively set for Friday. 13, Fukumoto 6, loi 6, Ashikawa waltz in the first half when the
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Vernon five outscored the KamThe girls’ game proved to be
Public,
March 24 at the Church of All 4, Mitsui 4, Izukawa 2.
a repitition of their previous
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
330 Bay St.
meeting. Condition and practice
p.m. If however, a larger floor
(Corner Adelaide & Bay Sts.)
paid double as the Vernon Hor
is available the game will be re
TORONTO
nets smothered the Kamloops
scheduled.
lasses 13-4 in the first half and
The executive of the Basketball
Nisei Flyers, otherwise known in a cab by Tin Goto who re- 7-2 in the second. Final score
League has anounced that a
v, md-ap dance will be held on as Arcade Grill in the THL, lost placed Nobby Fujimoto plus his was 20-6.
Srs. Trample Opposition
Thursday. April 6 at Labor the golden opportunity of having spectacular' performance between
k'- i;^ when the. presentation of their names written in the THL the pipes saved the day for the
Right from the tipoff, the Bel
’’ o' for the 1949-50 sea- record book when they went down Nisei Stars, the all-star aggre la Vista Comets gave no doubt as
J. MIZuHARA
3-1 in the second and last game gation of the TNHL, in their to the outcome of the game.
Allard Ave., Montreal
with Willow Snack Bar in the first game in the THL Inter Checked effectively by a condi
finals at Stoufville Arena last mediate King Clancy Series last tioned Vernon five and hamper
Friday. They would have won ed by lack of practice, the Kam
week.
Flyers got off to a bad start the game but for a fluke shot by loops quintet wilted under the
— 1-1 ^ h^ Lj) H !t<
in
Lenese-Andreole_
forward
a
when they were penalized for
surging Comets’ attack.
late arrival.
During the game the dying seconds and had to be
Sparked by Yamasaki’s long fCTaMSBmscassrazmzc^^^
ana KouniwiH'wnnuMi'i.’wiTwiH'KiipM iiuMWi i » u.ifflimwwfc—»w
contented
with
a
3-3
tie.
they were hampered by several
shots and Mitz Tahara’s hand
dubious penalties and poor ice
Yuki Kameoka was the big flips under the basket, the
conditions.
The .three goals gun, coming through with a hat- Comets never looked back and
scored against Paul Nivens all trick. The first came on a solo overwhelmed the Railroad boys,
I ^arne from scrambles which gave effort and the second after a 29-7, in the first half.
In the second half, the re
| him little chance.
break-through by Fred Kinoshita
I
Once more hardworking de- who left a trailer pass when juvenated Kamloops five spear
I fenseman Joe Wani who has hemmed in by two defensemen. headed by the sensational shoot
j scored the only two Flyer goals Tosh Sakura, Tad Miura and ing of Tosh Omoto, outscored the
Two-needle
and
Onej in this series, gave them the lead Kameoka combined well for the Comets in the third but the ball
savvy of the Kawaguchi brothers needle Operators for Brasi with his 15-footer from a scram- third.
i hie.
Despite frantic pleas by
and the experience-wise
Can earn as
With the game apparently in Natsuhara soon knocked the siere Plant.
coach Jim Nasu, the backchecking of the forwards disintegrated the bag and Goto blocking mar props from under the attack.
high as $80 a week.
velously,
the
Stars
let
down
a
of
th
quarter
was
hi
gh
The
last
before the swift trusts 1
trifle and that was enough for lighted by a display of ball*
*
Barmen.
the
Andreoles
who
scored
their
hawking tactics by Seichi Tahara
Flyers now turn over a new
tallies
within
the
last
eight
in
the
Only Experienced Need Apply
as he stole the ball three times
leaf in a quest for a cup
a
minutes, the tying goal with sec- and scored six points in a minute.
Clancy
THL
Juvenile
King
1
Life Insurance Com- series.
' ends remaining.
154 Pearl St
I
The Stars play their third
1 forma.
PERSON SOUGHT
Stars Held to Draw
i
Unionville this Friday
zes in
A last minute cross-town dash ; game at
Toronto
G. Suzuki of Croton, Ont., is
protecseeking Suyeo Suzuki (Miyagiken).
"Welcome to the Lethbriogo Nortnern JCCA
urn ns Jap
offering
Ids tier Pond
Petter Sendee
ium Dollar
MICKEY S. SATO
0. K. CLEANERS
'S'
Flyers Ousted By Willows Io THL Plasms;
M
■y
Vs
'5 t<
i
’ft
i
* * Q^'
hl
Operators Wanted
J
3
•4
W
4
tsi
TALENT CONCERT
@!St®
Kawasoe
Special
turao
Picture B
2-5059
Advt
t
Alberta
PRIZES
Manager: David Kong — (Residence) Phone: IIO. 4033
11 Elizabeth St.
—
Toronto, Ont
— OdorK -— Instrumental Number
?
>X'4‘4’t<
New Private Room Upstairs
For reservations phone TR 0851 or WA 9974
ar
&
4
4
B
Si
i - <
is
the new canadia
Mustangs Gain Verdict In Opening Game
PAGE SEVEN
Battle For Top Close
In Toronto Bowling
I amadas and Takeda Insur
ance kept pace with each other
rs won their 13th gained
31
HAMILTON. — Toronto
in
the struggle for first
ison without defeat by | Visitors Gain Easy
ety
Grill, winners of th TNH1 !
Bowling' Leahe Rebels on March IS I Win In Junior Finals
2S4-A YONGE STREET. TORONTO
2 games from Championship, will inv
a one-game lead in the i
The visiting Han ton Alphas
nd Star Clean- Hamilton Barton Street
d of the Toronto
had no difficulty in wallopingto battle the leaders of the
ague playdowns,
Toronto TNT bv a convincing
A cent
HNHL on Sat., March 25., at
i the first half was GO-24 margin, Th
the Ham li
Ph?
the other games resulted 5:45 p.m.
Office: 21 Dundas Squars
;e with Mustangs hold- ton team gains d a one-game lead
Phone AD-0076-7
scores, Variety, Team
the first inter
Res.:
52c Manning Avenue
advantage. Toki To- in the playoff finals.
Nine, Best Cleaners and Sora
TORONTO, ONT.
Maying the best game or
The rirst half of the game
Res. ME. 60'2
ous
beatingQueen
eason. and Ken Mivasaki which was played as a preliminedmans. OK Cleaners game is
forecast.
Although
trough with 10 points arv to the senior final
slow
Hamilton is the underdog, ob
d M Mustangs to a 36-29 with both teams playing- it close. lively.
servers believe the powerhouse '
Smooth
Sock Paced by brilliant Wes Hyodo
ad.
101‘A QUEEN ST. W.
Toronto Variety Grill crew is up j
The highest score for the night
and Paul Hirano and Jack Yokoyama, the smooth
Tsukamou
Phone
;amst a strong opposition.
was
registered
by
M.
Isoshima
guns
for
the
Rebels
were the I
working Hamilton quintet took
WA. 6953
All indications point io a
with 846-309.
L B.
if die hal.
a 20-11 lead by halftime.
For
Pick-up
and Delivery
Tanaka 764-31 J. Takeda 741- ‘‘game of the year” and many j
lackened in the
Alphas opened up its throttle
fans from both Toronto and ;
M
li 741-325
K,
avers became cau- in the second half
ompletely
Hamilton are expected to attend, j
710Lucien C. Kurata
tious of being banished on per- dominated the game as they be bora 739-300, !
Following the game, the Hamil- I
1
Adelaide St. E., Toronto
J. Tahara 708-289 and S. ton Hockey Wind-Up Dance will j
sonals. The usually high-scor- wildered their taller adversaries
Barrister
and Solicitor
Herby Miyasaki, who was with speed and pattern plays.
701-257 ' sre other high be held at Gould’s Hall. 242 |
1st and 2nd Mortgage Loans
oints in the first half
Like the senior game, the of bowlers
James St. North, S-12 p.m.
•
arranged
by the effe five checking of Mush ficials used their whistles freOffice EL. 5259 Res. LY. 3427
Fukumoto, saw little
action quently, a total of 41 fouls were
sather, being called
after the
out on pet
AJ pitas: Hyodo 27, Yokoyama
mote and Sock Tsukamoto took 17, Fukumoto 13, J. Tamane 2,
over the scoring chores for their K. Tamane 1, Mototsune.
VERNON, B. C.— The Vernon । loops boys, 19-3, it jumped to a
respective teams as they fought
Chop Suey House
TNT: Kamino 7, F. Idenouye
Casaba Club again played host fast tempo in the second half
score of 65-53.
to
92-A
Elizabeth St., Toronto
7, Yatabe 5, Uyede 3, Ogaki 3,
when the visiting quintet caught
last
month
to
three
teams
from
shikawa and Mush Kitazaki 2, Ishii 2, M. Idenouye,
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
Kamloops and flouting Emily fire and tied the score in the
DINNERS
r ukumoto fouled out for the Fukakusa.
last minute.
j
Post,
trounced
the
Junior
boys,
sers m the last minute of play
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 a.m.
In the overtime, Kamloops |
Senior Women and Men's teams
a game marred by 46 infrac- son will take place.
Reservations: EL. 9035
Miyasaki 14, T. to the scores of 25-24, 20-6 and muffed a gift shot while Yosh
Mustangs:
ms. The contest was handled
Ouchi, Vernon's star guard, made
• luck Harvey and George Sei Toyama 14, Makimoto 13, H. MiELgin 0508
good his shot during the last 10
Overtime
Win
is of the Toronto and District •■asaki 12, R. Miyasaki 6, Mori 4,
2 Vesta Drive
The Junior Boys; game stole seconds to give his teammates a
Inamoto 2, J. Toyama, Ohara.
Longue.
MAfair 1365.
Rebels: Tsukamoto 18, Hirano the night's show. From a slow 1-point victory.
The second game of the series
Andrew E. McKague,
Girls Beat Visitors
is tentatively set for Friday. 13, Fukumoto 6, loi 6, Ashikawa waltz in the first half when the
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Vernon five outscored the KamThe girls’ game proved to be
Public,
March 24 at the Church of All 4, Mitsui 4, Izukawa 2.
a repitition of their previous
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
330 Bay St.
meeting. Condition and practice
p.m. If however, a larger floor
(Corner Adelaide & Bay Sts.)
paid double as the Vernon Hor
is available the game will be re
TORONTO
nets smothered the Kamloops
scheduled.
lasses 13-4 in the first half and
The executive of the Basketball
Nisei Flyers, otherwise known in a cab by Tin Goto who re- 7-2 in the second. Final score
League has anounced that a
v, md-ap dance will be held on as Arcade Grill in the THL, lost placed Nobby Fujimoto plus his was 20-6.
Srs. Trample Opposition
Thursday. April 6 at Labor the golden opportunity of having spectacular' performance between
k'- i;^ when the. presentation of their names written in the THL the pipes saved the day for the
Right from the tipoff, the Bel
’’ o' for the 1949-50 sea- record book when they went down Nisei Stars, the all-star aggre la Vista Comets gave no doubt as
J. MIZuHARA
3-1 in the second and last game gation of the TNHL, in their to the outcome of the game.
Allard Ave., Montreal
with Willow Snack Bar in the first game in the THL Inter Checked effectively by a condi
finals at Stoufville Arena last mediate King Clancy Series last tioned Vernon five and hamper
Friday. They would have won ed by lack of practice, the Kam
week.
Flyers got off to a bad start the game but for a fluke shot by loops quintet wilted under the
— 1-1 ^ h^ Lj) H !t<
in
Lenese-Andreole_
forward
a
when they were penalized for
surging Comets’ attack.
late arrival.
During the game the dying seconds and had to be
Sparked by Yamasaki’s long fCTaMSBmscassrazmzc^^^
ana KouniwiH'wnnuMi'i.’wiTwiH'KiipM iiuMWi i » u.ifflimwwfc—»w
contented
with
a
3-3
tie.
they were hampered by several
shots and Mitz Tahara’s hand
dubious penalties and poor ice
Yuki Kameoka was the big flips under the basket, the
conditions.
The .three goals gun, coming through with a hat- Comets never looked back and
scored against Paul Nivens all trick. The first came on a solo overwhelmed the Railroad boys,
I ^arne from scrambles which gave effort and the second after a 29-7, in the first half.
In the second half, the re
| him little chance.
break-through by Fred Kinoshita
I
Once more hardworking de- who left a trailer pass when juvenated Kamloops five spear
I fenseman Joe Wani who has hemmed in by two defensemen. headed by the sensational shoot
j scored the only two Flyer goals Tosh Sakura, Tad Miura and ing of Tosh Omoto, outscored the
Two-needle
and
Onej in this series, gave them the lead Kameoka combined well for the Comets in the third but the ball
savvy of the Kawaguchi brothers needle Operators for Brasi with his 15-footer from a scram- third.
i hie.
Despite frantic pleas by
and the experience-wise
Can earn as
With the game apparently in Natsuhara soon knocked the siere Plant.
coach Jim Nasu, the backchecking of the forwards disintegrated the bag and Goto blocking mar props from under the attack.
high as $80 a week.
velously,
the
Stars
let
down
a
of
th
quarter
was
hi
gh
The
last
before the swift trusts 1
trifle and that was enough for lighted by a display of ball*
*
Barmen.
the
Andreoles
who
scored
their
hawking tactics by Seichi Tahara
Flyers now turn over a new
tallies
within
the
last
eight
in
the
Only Experienced Need Apply
as he stole the ball three times
leaf in a quest for a cup
a
minutes, the tying goal with sec- and scored six points in a minute.
Clancy
THL
Juvenile
King
1
Life Insurance Com- series.
' ends remaining.
154 Pearl St
I
The Stars play their third
1 forma.
PERSON SOUGHT
Stars Held to Draw
i
Unionville this Friday
zes in
A last minute cross-town dash ; game at
Toronto
G. Suzuki of Croton, Ont., is
protecseeking Suyeo Suzuki (Miyagiken).
"Welcome to the Lethbriogo Nortnern JCCA
urn ns Jap
offering
Ids tier Pond
Petter Sendee
ium Dollar
MICKEY S. SATO
0. K. CLEANERS
'S'
Flyers Ousted By Willows Io THL Plasms;
M
■y
Vs
'5 t<
i
’ft
i
* * Q^'
hl
Operators Wanted
J
3
•4
W
4
tsi
TALENT CONCERT
@!St®
Kawasoe
Special
turao
Picture B
2-5059
Advt
t
Alberta
PRIZES
Manager: David Kong — (Residence) Phone: IIO. 4033
11 Elizabeth St.
—
Toronto, Ont
— OdorK -— Instrumental Number
?
>X'4‘4’t<
New Private Room Upstairs
For reservations phone TR 0851 or WA 9974
ar
&
4
4
B
Si
i - <
is
Page 8
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE EIGHT
Sk
1950
-Jk-^.
FELLOWSHIP MEETING
SOCIAL CALENDAR
At the Toronto Metropolitan
Nisei Fellowship meeting on
crodd ^anacLa
erd on a.
Wed., March 22 will be guest
MARCH
speakers, Mr. and Mrs. Alan
and Mrs. B. Fujino, and Mr. Eizo Newcombe, who are experts in
Spring ENGAGEMENTS
24—Winnipeg. Y.B.S.
Tsujimoto, third son of Mr. O. : the field of politics.
Frolic, at Ukrainian Labor
DIAMOND CITY, Alta. — Tsujimoto, were engaged at the i This will be an ideal opportuni
Temple, 8:30-12 p.m.
Miss
Shizuko
Uyeno, eldest home of the Fujino’s on March ty to clarify and catch up on
25—Hamilton. Hamilton Nisei
Hockey
League
Wind-Up daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Toke- 18.
■world events. Ray Morita is in
Dance, at Gould’s Hall, 242 zo Uyeno, and Mr. Yasuyuki YaSewanins are Mr. and Mrs. C. charge as citizenship convenor.
maura, eldest son of Mrs. Kinoye ■ ^Q
James St. N., 8-12 p.m.
Everyone is welcome to attend
Yamaura,
announced their en25—Montreal. Montreal Teenwhat should be an interesting
Agers Dance, 2000 Dorchester gagement on March 5 at the BIRTHS
and informative evening.
home of the Uyeno’s.
St., 8-12 p.m.
HAMILTON. — Born to Mr.
Sewanins are Mr. and Mrs.
25—Toronto. Metropolitan Nisei
and Mrs. M. Kawasaki of Hamil- Hamilton JCCA
Mission Circle Variety Con Eigoro Hiraga and Rev. and Mrs. ton, a son, Mitchell Akira, on
Community Campaign
cert, at Church House, 51 Kawamura.
March 14, at the Mountain HosBond St., 8:30 p.m.
1.00
Mr. T. Fujino
pital.
engageTORONTO, — The
31—Raymond. Raymond Y.B.A.
1.00
*
*
Mr. S. Fujino
2.00
Mr. C. Aoyama
Annual ‘Miss Sunny Alta.’ ment of Miss Haruko Tanouye,
PICTURE BUTTE, Alta. — Mr. K. Morino
3.00
Dance, at Opera House, 9-1 second daughter of Mr. Jutaro Born to Mr. and Mrs. Metorima,
2.00
Mr.
T.
Watanabe
■
Tanouye, and Mr. Tadashi Mori
a.m.
2.00
a
daughter, Nobuko, on Feb. 5. Mr. & Mrs. K. Goto
shita, eldest son of Mr. Umezo
Mr. & Mrs. G. Miki
*
2.00
APRIL
Morishita, was announced on
Mr. Y. Tabata
2.00
CITY, Alto. — Mr. & Mrs. Tom Yoshida
DIAMOND
1.00
March
11.
1—Picture Butte, Alta. North
and Mrs. Chuta Mr. & Mrs. Tomikichi
Sewanin are Mr. and Mrs. No- Born to Mr.
ern Lethbridge JCCA Talent
Ebata,
a daughter, Mitsuko Jean
Yoshida
3.00
Mr.
&
Mrs.
M.
Miyasaki
2.00
Concert, Keopke’s Hall, 6 boru Koyama.
on Feb. 11.
*
*
Mr.
&
Mrs.
T.
Tanaka
2.00
*
*
p.m.
LILLOOET, B. C. — Miss FuMrs. N. Takaoka & family 2.00
IRONSPRINGS, Alta. — Born Mr. & Mrs. U. Yanagawa
7—Winnipeg.
Y.B.S.
Annual miye Yoneda, daughter of Mrs.
and family
2.00
Concert, at Ukrainian Labor Haru Yoneda, and Mr. Kenichi to Mr. and Mrs. Yoshichika Noda,
Mr.
I.
Inouye
2.00
Temple, Main Hall.
Honkawa, eldest son of Mr. and a daughter, Keiko Violet, on Mr. & Mrs. F. Fukushima 3.00
Feb. 17.
Mr. & Mrs. S. Kanemoto
3.00
14—Winnipeg.
Nisei
Young Mrs. Suyekichi Honkawa of LilMr
H.
Tsuji
1.00
looet,
announced
their
engage
Women’s Club Spring Variety
Mr.
Sawada
1.00
Canadians
Hold
Lead
ment
on
March
12
at
the
home
of
Concert, at YWCA auditorium,
Mr. S. Nishikawa
2.00
the Yoneda’s.
In Mixed Bowling Loop Mr. Mrs. R. Yamamura. 3.00
8 p.m.
Baishakunins are Mr.‘ and Mrs.
Mr.
Mrs. N. Nishimura 5.00
Canadiens still top the Toronto Mr.
15—Taber. Taber YBA Variety K. Shoji and Mr. T. Tsuyuki.
Fukumoto
3.00
Nisei Mixed Bowling League Mr. & Mrs. N. Moriyama
2.00
Concert, at Social Hall, 3 p.m.
*
*
2.00
with 112 pts., a bare one-point Mr. & Mrs. Sawada
WINNIPEG. — The engage
& Mrs. Hatanaka
28—Taber. Taber YBA Dance,
5.00
margin over - their nearest com Mr.
ment
of
Miss
Hanaye
Eyemoto,
Mrs.
K. Kitagawa
2.00
at Taber Legion Hall, 9-1 a.m.
“
H. Yoshimochi 2.00
fifth daughter of the late Mr. petitors, the Dead Pigeons with Mr. ‘ Mrs.
111 pts.
Mr.
Mrs.
H.
Ui
2.00
and Mrs. M. Eyemoto, to Mr.
Mr.
Mrs. K. Tabata
2.00
Rounding
out
the
field
are
Tadashi Nagamori, third son of
Mr. and Mrs. M. Nagamori of St. Larks, 98, Unknowns 93, MediToronto JCCA
Charles, was announced at the ocres 81, Hurricanes 79, Clippers
78, Suchcrusts, Lightings and Community Campaign
20 Years of Experienced
Ricksha Gardens on March 11.
Alleycats
75, Alouettes 74 and
Service
Baishakunins are Mr. and Mrs.
Previously received $3,364.08
198 Albany Ave. Toronto
Sky-Hi 57.
S. Tatsumi of Headingly.
Chungking Chop Suey
25.00
Phone: Home, LA. 9332
Best scores were marked up. R. Uyeno
3.00
Office, EL. 1315
*
*
♦
by Tosh Fujioka 829-287, Tak John Nojima
3.00
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
TORONTO. — Miss Yayeko Nishino 823-287, Joe Nishizaki Mrs. Morio Sanmiya
2.00
Insurance Company
K.
Sugiyama
10.00
Fujino, second daughter of Mr. 816-319, Moza Matsumoto 743* Mrs. Yei Hotta
10.00
360 and Charlie Ozaki 598-310.
Total to date
$3,417.08
Among the ladies Ginger Te* In memory of her late husband.
rakita 874-339, Kay Mitsuhashi
This is a paid advertisement
J ^jcisu
pya.ma.oka
669-235, Mary Ebata 664-268,
Chic Yanagisawa 647-271, and inserted by the Toronto JCCA.
Reg. Optometrist
Kim Nobuto 627-242 were the
DISTRIBUTORS OF SCENE
high bowlers.
announces the opening of an office for the practice of
Furuya Trading Co. Ltd., of
Toronto, are the sole Canadian
distributors of the monthly Ja
panese-American pictorial mag
in Suite 204 — 310 Bloor Street IF., near Spadina Are.
azine Scene which is published
_______ HELP WANTED
Toronto, Ontario
EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEP^ by the Chicago Publishing Cor
Office Honrs'. ^R ednesdays 9 a.m. to 9 pan.
ER, male or female, with good poration. of Chicago.
character reference. ’ Apply The
Telephone RAndolpb SI 37
Top Restaurant, Mr. Michael
Please telephone any day for appointment
Firestone, 317 Yonge St., Toron
to.
S. Shinobu
CLASSIFIED
TWO MIGHTY STAGE PRODUCTIONS
Presented By The
JEWISH FOLK CHOIR
Emil Gartner, Conductor
“THE LONESOME TRAIN”
(Earl Robinsons Jamons Lincoln Pageant)
and
“THE GLORY OF THE WARSAW GHETTO
by Max Helfman
FEMALE HELP WANTED
GIRL for dry-cleaning shop to
press dresses. Experience not
necessary. Steadv work, good
conditions, LO 6141, Toronto.
GIRL HELP for snack baP
Phone ME. 9413, Toronto.
STENOGRAPHER fSr law office, short-hand necessarv WA
5552, Toronto.
‘’
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
YOUNG GIRL to assist in
household
duties,
Congenial
family, good home and good
wages, OR. 1296, Toronto.
HOUSEKEEPER for pleasant
small family.
Private room
good pay, ask for Mrs. Cubner
OR. 0430, Toronto.
’
Earl Robinson and Saida Gerrard
120 Singers. 50 Dancers, Symphony Orchestra
Thursdav and Saturday, March 2 and 25
8:15 p.m.
Attention’
BRIDES-TO-BE
MASSEY HALL
81.50. $2.00 (no
ristie, 501 College. 7P Bathu
000 Eglinion W.
1
We specialize in Society
Printing — Wedding '
Invitations, plain or Raised
MU. 9271 — LY. 2663
Toronto
PORTRAIT - COMMERCIAL • COLOUR
/WWfW studio)
s st
1
DUX DAS ST
W
IDS GN TO
BILL TAKEDA
General Insurance
Phone GL-S0’7
86 GAMBLE AVE.
Toronto, Ont.
Automobile, Fire, Burglary,
Life. Accident & Sickness, etc.
T. Kobayashi
Agent
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA
Box 149
Kamloops, B.c,
Diamond Engagement
Rings, Birthstones
And Jewellery . . .
Rolex, Elgin and Hamilton
Watches
Community and International
Silverware
Prompt Attention to Mail
Order Repairs
When in Chinatown—It will
pay you to visit us
LOWE BROS.
Watchmakers & Jewellers
55 ELIZABETH STREET
TORONTO
EL. 5810
Agent
MONARCH LIFE
ASSURANCE CO.
66 King St. E., — Tel. 2-2594
- Hamilton
Residence:
59. Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960
TOGO PAINTERS
Decorators, Plasterers
and
Stucco Works
KANSHIRO OMOTO
219 Dunlevy Ave.
Vancouver, B. C.
Phone MArine 3459
For Tasty Chinese Dishes
Dine With Your Friends at
CATHAY GARDEN
21-A ELIZABETH ST.
TORONTO, ONT.
Phone EL-gin 7698
Quick, Quality Service
DANFORTH CLEANERS
Toronto, Ontario
Ten Stores to Serve You
300 Jones Avenue ............. .........................
... Phone
270 Danforth Avenue ... ......................
„ phone
1010 Shaw Street ...........................
..Phone
1432 Danforth Avenue ... .............. ........ .............. .. Phone
55S Dundas St. W..... . ........... ................................. Phone
2156 Queen St. E.................... ........ ............. ......... _ Phone
1218 Kingston Road ... ......... .................
Phone
2116 Danforth Avenue ... .............
’.... 11.’.. .. Phone
700 Pape Avenue..................... ............
Phone
3218 Danforth Ave...........................
..phone
Saul S. Kadonaga
GL. 54S1
GL. 6774
LA. 9203
GL. 2052
WA. 6698
8825
8682
GR 7275
GE 1223
9691
PAGE EIGHT
Sk
1950
-Jk-^.
FELLOWSHIP MEETING
SOCIAL CALENDAR
At the Toronto Metropolitan
Nisei Fellowship meeting on
crodd ^anacLa
erd on a.
Wed., March 22 will be guest
MARCH
speakers, Mr. and Mrs. Alan
and Mrs. B. Fujino, and Mr. Eizo Newcombe, who are experts in
Spring ENGAGEMENTS
24—Winnipeg. Y.B.S.
Tsujimoto, third son of Mr. O. : the field of politics.
Frolic, at Ukrainian Labor
DIAMOND CITY, Alta. — Tsujimoto, were engaged at the i This will be an ideal opportuni
Temple, 8:30-12 p.m.
Miss
Shizuko
Uyeno, eldest home of the Fujino’s on March ty to clarify and catch up on
25—Hamilton. Hamilton Nisei
Hockey
League
Wind-Up daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Toke- 18.
■world events. Ray Morita is in
Dance, at Gould’s Hall, 242 zo Uyeno, and Mr. Yasuyuki YaSewanins are Mr. and Mrs. C. charge as citizenship convenor.
maura, eldest son of Mrs. Kinoye ■ ^Q
James St. N., 8-12 p.m.
Everyone is welcome to attend
Yamaura,
announced their en25—Montreal. Montreal Teenwhat should be an interesting
Agers Dance, 2000 Dorchester gagement on March 5 at the BIRTHS
and informative evening.
home of the Uyeno’s.
St., 8-12 p.m.
HAMILTON. — Born to Mr.
Sewanins are Mr. and Mrs.
25—Toronto. Metropolitan Nisei
and Mrs. M. Kawasaki of Hamil- Hamilton JCCA
Mission Circle Variety Con Eigoro Hiraga and Rev. and Mrs. ton, a son, Mitchell Akira, on
Community Campaign
cert, at Church House, 51 Kawamura.
March 14, at the Mountain HosBond St., 8:30 p.m.
1.00
Mr. T. Fujino
pital.
engageTORONTO, — The
31—Raymond. Raymond Y.B.A.
1.00
*
*
Mr. S. Fujino
2.00
Mr. C. Aoyama
Annual ‘Miss Sunny Alta.’ ment of Miss Haruko Tanouye,
PICTURE BUTTE, Alta. — Mr. K. Morino
3.00
Dance, at Opera House, 9-1 second daughter of Mr. Jutaro Born to Mr. and Mrs. Metorima,
2.00
Mr.
T.
Watanabe
■
Tanouye, and Mr. Tadashi Mori
a.m.
2.00
a
daughter, Nobuko, on Feb. 5. Mr. & Mrs. K. Goto
shita, eldest son of Mr. Umezo
Mr. & Mrs. G. Miki
*
2.00
APRIL
Morishita, was announced on
Mr. Y. Tabata
2.00
CITY, Alto. — Mr. & Mrs. Tom Yoshida
DIAMOND
1.00
March
11.
1—Picture Butte, Alta. North
and Mrs. Chuta Mr. & Mrs. Tomikichi
Sewanin are Mr. and Mrs. No- Born to Mr.
ern Lethbridge JCCA Talent
Ebata,
a daughter, Mitsuko Jean
Yoshida
3.00
Mr.
&
Mrs.
M.
Miyasaki
2.00
Concert, Keopke’s Hall, 6 boru Koyama.
on Feb. 11.
*
*
Mr.
&
Mrs.
T.
Tanaka
2.00
*
*
p.m.
LILLOOET, B. C. — Miss FuMrs. N. Takaoka & family 2.00
IRONSPRINGS, Alta. — Born Mr. & Mrs. U. Yanagawa
7—Winnipeg.
Y.B.S.
Annual miye Yoneda, daughter of Mrs.
and family
2.00
Concert, at Ukrainian Labor Haru Yoneda, and Mr. Kenichi to Mr. and Mrs. Yoshichika Noda,
Mr.
I.
Inouye
2.00
Temple, Main Hall.
Honkawa, eldest son of Mr. and a daughter, Keiko Violet, on Mr. & Mrs. F. Fukushima 3.00
Feb. 17.
Mr. & Mrs. S. Kanemoto
3.00
14—Winnipeg.
Nisei
Young Mrs. Suyekichi Honkawa of LilMr
H.
Tsuji
1.00
looet,
announced
their
engage
Women’s Club Spring Variety
Mr.
Sawada
1.00
Canadians
Hold
Lead
ment
on
March
12
at
the
home
of
Concert, at YWCA auditorium,
Mr. S. Nishikawa
2.00
the Yoneda’s.
In Mixed Bowling Loop Mr. Mrs. R. Yamamura. 3.00
8 p.m.
Baishakunins are Mr.‘ and Mrs.
Mr.
Mrs. N. Nishimura 5.00
Canadiens still top the Toronto Mr.
15—Taber. Taber YBA Variety K. Shoji and Mr. T. Tsuyuki.
Fukumoto
3.00
Nisei Mixed Bowling League Mr. & Mrs. N. Moriyama
2.00
Concert, at Social Hall, 3 p.m.
*
*
2.00
with 112 pts., a bare one-point Mr. & Mrs. Sawada
WINNIPEG. — The engage
& Mrs. Hatanaka
28—Taber. Taber YBA Dance,
5.00
margin over - their nearest com Mr.
ment
of
Miss
Hanaye
Eyemoto,
Mrs.
K. Kitagawa
2.00
at Taber Legion Hall, 9-1 a.m.
“
H. Yoshimochi 2.00
fifth daughter of the late Mr. petitors, the Dead Pigeons with Mr. ‘ Mrs.
111 pts.
Mr.
Mrs.
H.
Ui
2.00
and Mrs. M. Eyemoto, to Mr.
Mr.
Mrs. K. Tabata
2.00
Rounding
out
the
field
are
Tadashi Nagamori, third son of
Mr. and Mrs. M. Nagamori of St. Larks, 98, Unknowns 93, MediToronto JCCA
Charles, was announced at the ocres 81, Hurricanes 79, Clippers
78, Suchcrusts, Lightings and Community Campaign
20 Years of Experienced
Ricksha Gardens on March 11.
Alleycats
75, Alouettes 74 and
Service
Baishakunins are Mr. and Mrs.
Previously received $3,364.08
198 Albany Ave. Toronto
Sky-Hi 57.
S. Tatsumi of Headingly.
Chungking Chop Suey
25.00
Phone: Home, LA. 9332
Best scores were marked up. R. Uyeno
3.00
Office, EL. 1315
*
*
♦
by Tosh Fujioka 829-287, Tak John Nojima
3.00
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
TORONTO. — Miss Yayeko Nishino 823-287, Joe Nishizaki Mrs. Morio Sanmiya
2.00
Insurance Company
K.
Sugiyama
10.00
Fujino, second daughter of Mr. 816-319, Moza Matsumoto 743* Mrs. Yei Hotta
10.00
360 and Charlie Ozaki 598-310.
Total to date
$3,417.08
Among the ladies Ginger Te* In memory of her late husband.
rakita 874-339, Kay Mitsuhashi
This is a paid advertisement
J ^jcisu
pya.ma.oka
669-235, Mary Ebata 664-268,
Chic Yanagisawa 647-271, and inserted by the Toronto JCCA.
Reg. Optometrist
Kim Nobuto 627-242 were the
DISTRIBUTORS OF SCENE
high bowlers.
announces the opening of an office for the practice of
Furuya Trading Co. Ltd., of
Toronto, are the sole Canadian
distributors of the monthly Ja
panese-American pictorial mag
in Suite 204 — 310 Bloor Street IF., near Spadina Are.
azine Scene which is published
_______ HELP WANTED
Toronto, Ontario
EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEP^ by the Chicago Publishing Cor
Office Honrs'. ^R ednesdays 9 a.m. to 9 pan.
ER, male or female, with good poration. of Chicago.
character reference. ’ Apply The
Telephone RAndolpb SI 37
Top Restaurant, Mr. Michael
Please telephone any day for appointment
Firestone, 317 Yonge St., Toron
to.
S. Shinobu
CLASSIFIED
TWO MIGHTY STAGE PRODUCTIONS
Presented By The
JEWISH FOLK CHOIR
Emil Gartner, Conductor
“THE LONESOME TRAIN”
(Earl Robinsons Jamons Lincoln Pageant)
and
“THE GLORY OF THE WARSAW GHETTO
by Max Helfman
FEMALE HELP WANTED
GIRL for dry-cleaning shop to
press dresses. Experience not
necessary. Steadv work, good
conditions, LO 6141, Toronto.
GIRL HELP for snack baP
Phone ME. 9413, Toronto.
STENOGRAPHER fSr law office, short-hand necessarv WA
5552, Toronto.
‘’
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
YOUNG GIRL to assist in
household
duties,
Congenial
family, good home and good
wages, OR. 1296, Toronto.
HOUSEKEEPER for pleasant
small family.
Private room
good pay, ask for Mrs. Cubner
OR. 0430, Toronto.
’
Earl Robinson and Saida Gerrard
120 Singers. 50 Dancers, Symphony Orchestra
Thursdav and Saturday, March 2 and 25
8:15 p.m.
Attention’
BRIDES-TO-BE
MASSEY HALL
81.50. $2.00 (no
ristie, 501 College. 7P Bathu
000 Eglinion W.
1
We specialize in Society
Printing — Wedding '
Invitations, plain or Raised
MU. 9271 — LY. 2663
Toronto
PORTRAIT - COMMERCIAL • COLOUR
/WWfW studio)
s st
1
DUX DAS ST
W
IDS GN TO
BILL TAKEDA
General Insurance
Phone GL-S0’7
86 GAMBLE AVE.
Toronto, Ont.
Automobile, Fire, Burglary,
Life. Accident & Sickness, etc.
T. Kobayashi
Agent
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA
Box 149
Kamloops, B.c,
Diamond Engagement
Rings, Birthstones
And Jewellery . . .
Rolex, Elgin and Hamilton
Watches
Community and International
Silverware
Prompt Attention to Mail
Order Repairs
When in Chinatown—It will
pay you to visit us
LOWE BROS.
Watchmakers & Jewellers
55 ELIZABETH STREET
TORONTO
EL. 5810
Agent
MONARCH LIFE
ASSURANCE CO.
66 King St. E., — Tel. 2-2594
- Hamilton
Residence:
59. Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960
TOGO PAINTERS
Decorators, Plasterers
and
Stucco Works
KANSHIRO OMOTO
219 Dunlevy Ave.
Vancouver, B. C.
Phone MArine 3459
For Tasty Chinese Dishes
Dine With Your Friends at
CATHAY GARDEN
21-A ELIZABETH ST.
TORONTO, ONT.
Phone EL-gin 7698
Quick, Quality Service
DANFORTH CLEANERS
Toronto, Ontario
Ten Stores to Serve You
300 Jones Avenue ............. .........................
... Phone
270 Danforth Avenue ... ......................
„ phone
1010 Shaw Street ...........................
..Phone
1432 Danforth Avenue ... .............. ........ .............. .. Phone
55S Dundas St. W..... . ........... ................................. Phone
2156 Queen St. E.................... ........ ............. ......... _ Phone
1218 Kingston Road ... ......... .................
Phone
2116 Danforth Avenue ... .............
’.... 11.’.. .. Phone
700 Pape Avenue..................... ............
Phone
3218 Danforth Ave...........................
..phone
Saul S. Kadonaga
GL. 54S1
GL. 6774
LA. 9203
GL. 2052
WA. 6698
8825
8682
GR 7275
GE 1223
9691