Page 1
I
£
-®Peoj
k
No. 51
Per Copy
Nisei RCAF Photographer
Back in Ottawa Hdqtrs.
j Ont. JCCA To Organize
! Chapter in St. Kitts
One of the out-of-town visitors
A
to the Toronto JCCA’s picnic nt W
Tarmola Grounds on July 1 was
a Nisei who recently flew over
Korea in a C119 Flying Boxx ’
By KEN ADACHI
IX
as a photographer' for the Roym d onii p
Canadian Air- Force.
Toi
I Love Picnics . . .
Leadin Aircraftsman Dick Y
Picnics, I find, are strictly for Nakamura who is public rela
the birds. At least they are im tions photographer for the PC
pervious to the fickle sensibili
in Ottawa says
id 1
ties of rain and mud and mos of his recent junket to HawaL
quitos.
Japan, and Korea that it was a
Nisei groups all ovex' the very worthwhile trip because of
country are holding picnics ar the tremendous experience that
ound this time of the year and he had derived from it. But he
Niseis and Isseis are flocking saw no fighting, only hearing the
o' :
to them, a pastime in which they roai- of guns in the distance.
Fie was unable to see any of
have indulged since time imme
Canada’s Princesss Pats or Mas
morial.
Kawanami of Hamilton who is
I can vaguely remembei' the
with the now famous regiment
last big outing I ventured on. It but he says that he met a Can
n
was about 10 years ago when I adian Nisei sailor from the H.was in knee-pants and going to
M.S. Ontario while he was sta
the Japanese Language school tioned in Hick am Air Field,
in Vancouver—a definite waste
Honolulu.
of time—and the site was an
The Nisei who hails from Mag
' idyllic place across the inlet on rath, Alberta, was deeply' im
Lynn Creek. At that time, pic pressed with ills visit to Japan
nics definitely appealed to me.
ig upo
and Korea. Com me
There was a tremendous sense
there i
Japan, he says th:
of adventure and excitement in
the good an I bad m it but
volved, a tremulous, all-consum
in which
it is
a country
ing feeling of anticipation that
live pormahe wouldn’t like
only kids know.
nently. In Tokyo he met Shinobii
the ;
of The
But then, I started to wear Higashi, former
going
work;ng
long pants. The appeal of pic New Canadian.
ho
nics soon disappeared.
with the Associated Press there.
This story- goes on to its sec Korea is just a barren land. In
ond episode: a couple of days Hawaii, he was impressed with out m tne ;
ago I found myself right in the the great number of Japanese West comp
middle of the JCCA affair. Now living in the islands, especially westen dors
being a member of the high ol in Oahu.
Nakamura has been in the
der—the Toronto JCCA executw
■ve—I suppose I was somewhat RCAF foi’ about three years
committed to go to the picnic. now, having enlisted in Sept
Now all picnic committees have 1947, and is stationed with th
Tn
my deep-felt sympathy for the air- force in Ottawa. Life as
photographer in the RCAF is
eer for him and it is a good
on embarking on such a project
in which everything hinges on one. He was
one thing—the weather. I know, since his weekends are usually
I felt the emotions. Hours of free from RCAF work.
preparation and discussion as
5
"ell as the money involved can
be rubbed out in one fell stroke
r s^
if the weather turns foul.
Oi
passing thru
*
*
Then The Rains Came . . .
The first falling of liquid
misery did not matter too much,
h "as in the morning around
s a.m. and the sights and sounds
of rain was comfortingly shut off
by the exterior of the car. Then
magicaiiy. the sky' opened up and
he sun fell through. This was
"’onderful stuff.
But around 1 p.m. when I was
was
a'ing an interesting talk with
an interesting guy—RCAF phoL°£ Dick Nakamura—the rains
came
typical Southern On‘ario violence.
^^^^^ Canada rain is nothing
"rue home about. It doesn’t
Ss ,down in. refreshing, fine
^rops as should be. It comes
(Con’t on P. S)
Winnipeg
Prej^dices
WINNIPEG, Manitoba — A ; bee
unique organization whose aims
are to combat racial and reli
gious prejudice and to promote ;
inter-faith and inter-race rela
tions is the Crucible Club of the
Winnipeg Young Alen
Its pro m
ian Association (YAi
order
foundation began three years ag
and now its membership vhic
includes about ten different
ial oi’igins is headed by an s:a(c
five comprised of Canadians <
Japanese, Anglm^axmi. Je^j-.
Ukrainian, and Icelandic oi .go
Its Japanese-Canadian reps,
sentative is a Winnipeg
Bill Sasaki, "ho is wm‘a<
chairman of the group. •'.'-..-'-••is also currently serving as p-y
lie relations chairman °t i;Manitoba JCCA and ua^ -
,G. Tanaka To Confer With
• Can. immigration Minister
jOn JC Strandee Problems
V lit?
Tanaka, National JC-
on Thursday. July
5. accompanied by F. Andrew
Brewin. K.C.. legal counsel for
Canadians
of
and ivill meet Hon. Japanese ancestry who were de
Waller E. Harris. Canada’s Min prived of their Canadian citizen
ister of Citizenship and Immi ship at the time when they were,
gration in a personal hearing on of minor age and were forced to
the following day, July 6. on the accompany their parents to Ja
matter of the National JCCA pan under the Wartime Exchange
Canbrief on immigration sent last tgreemeni;
Of ; taiva-bound
r. ci
of the
was
brief
the live-page avow
als with a vital Japanese
alien problem, that of certain
tions of Federal Orders-in-Couneiis barring Japanese Canadians
onto JC- now living in Japan from rcturnCanada and joining- their
mmunitv
ia
11
it fair
since
enough
cd
p
di st
dry of these Japanese
s and lists 15 specific
ire family' hardship and
is created because of
ng prevented from re
in
m-
barred from Canada and where
Tanaka and Brewin hope to
cuss with Mr. Harris are the.
-pcs of cases where
Canadians have been
adians who wwt to Japan on the
repatriation scheme; Naturalborn Canadians who served in
Japan's Armed Forces: Japanese,
nationals with relatives in Can
ada who are barred through immig'ration regulations.
Tanaka and Brewin will be
working o n I half of several
Canadians
hundred
Japanese
who will be affected if the regulations are lifted by the Can
adian government.
The interview with Air. Harris
was granted upon Tanaka’s re
quest on behalf of the JCCA in
a letter which accompanied the
brief.
Dilferent—And Better
coo vsr Film GriticGives
dampen Hu
Good Review
wore carrier ‘Go for Broke’
OUTER — “Go f o r
opened at the. Orpheum Stalls GFB Appearance
: a narrov Theatre i
Vancouver on Fri“The Great Caruso”, the Mario
the game dav. June
!, and movie columVancouver Sun and Lanza-starrer, now in its Sth
noted critic Clyde Gilmour gave i week at Loew’s Theatre prevents
the film about the 442nd Regi Toronto Nisei from seeing “Go
mental Combat learn an enthu- For Broke!” which is scheduled
to show after the musical. “The
Great Caruso’s run at the Loew’s
I Tiie following is his column,
gn
is the longest since “Gone With
■ “Screening- Ihc Tilms’ , in which
fir
The Wind” played there.
। Gilmour reviewed the film.
I
One of the most interesting
Japanese ancestry adopted with
I war movies of the year is an
grim humor the nickname “boodai unusual
Hollywood product
i called Go for Broke! Let me | heads”.
! warmly- commend it to your I
But they bitterly and justifi
B
ably resented being called “Japs”.
attention, even if you are
|
And they could never forget
among the customers who ordinarilv stay away from mili- I that their families back home
I in the good old U.S.A, were be
car tary epics.
Go For Broke! gets its odd hind the barbed wire of intern
InC
title from a pidgin-English dice- ment camps while they were
defending democracy
expression meaning, bloodily
short lec i throwing
“Shoot the works!” This became against Hitler.
All of. this is presented with
in the unit’s battle-cry- throughout
me
the fierce fighting in France and clarity, honesty and vigor in Go
For Broke which was produced
to
This is a story- about the loyal by Dore Schary and written by
cd
Japanese-Arnericans, or Nisei, Robert Pirosh.
These same men joined for
who volunteered for combat duty
ces last year in making anoand served with immense distinc
*
ther war picture called “Bataecia! unit in the U.S
tom a
p
Army during t he Second Worid i tieground” which was ecstatid9
cally acclaimed in some quar
'Udv War.
ters. Go For Broke in my
of their nona
1
opinion,
is at least twice as
were in the
j oanese
good a movie—more adult,
ali habit of lumping all of them tomore exciting, more amusing
gether as exotic followers
(Cont. on Page 7)
Buddha, these Americans ol
on
<:
A
?u
5;a
Ph
1
£
-®Peoj
k
No. 51
Per Copy
Nisei RCAF Photographer
Back in Ottawa Hdqtrs.
j Ont. JCCA To Organize
! Chapter in St. Kitts
One of the out-of-town visitors
A
to the Toronto JCCA’s picnic nt W
Tarmola Grounds on July 1 was
a Nisei who recently flew over
Korea in a C119 Flying Boxx ’
By KEN ADACHI
IX
as a photographer' for the Roym d onii p
Canadian Air- Force.
Toi
I Love Picnics . . .
Leadin Aircraftsman Dick Y
Picnics, I find, are strictly for Nakamura who is public rela
the birds. At least they are im tions photographer for the PC
pervious to the fickle sensibili
in Ottawa says
id 1
ties of rain and mud and mos of his recent junket to HawaL
quitos.
Japan, and Korea that it was a
Nisei groups all ovex' the very worthwhile trip because of
country are holding picnics ar the tremendous experience that
ound this time of the year and he had derived from it. But he
Niseis and Isseis are flocking saw no fighting, only hearing the
o' :
to them, a pastime in which they roai- of guns in the distance.
Fie was unable to see any of
have indulged since time imme
Canada’s Princesss Pats or Mas
morial.
Kawanami of Hamilton who is
I can vaguely remembei' the
with the now famous regiment
last big outing I ventured on. It but he says that he met a Can
n
was about 10 years ago when I adian Nisei sailor from the H.was in knee-pants and going to
M.S. Ontario while he was sta
the Japanese Language school tioned in Hick am Air Field,
in Vancouver—a definite waste
Honolulu.
of time—and the site was an
The Nisei who hails from Mag
' idyllic place across the inlet on rath, Alberta, was deeply' im
Lynn Creek. At that time, pic pressed with ills visit to Japan
nics definitely appealed to me.
ig upo
and Korea. Com me
There was a tremendous sense
there i
Japan, he says th:
of adventure and excitement in
the good an I bad m it but
volved, a tremulous, all-consum
in which
it is
a country
ing feeling of anticipation that
live pormahe wouldn’t like
only kids know.
nently. In Tokyo he met Shinobii
the ;
of The
But then, I started to wear Higashi, former
going
work;ng
long pants. The appeal of pic New Canadian.
ho
nics soon disappeared.
with the Associated Press there.
This story- goes on to its sec Korea is just a barren land. In
ond episode: a couple of days Hawaii, he was impressed with out m tne ;
ago I found myself right in the the great number of Japanese West comp
middle of the JCCA affair. Now living in the islands, especially westen dors
being a member of the high ol in Oahu.
Nakamura has been in the
der—the Toronto JCCA executw
■ve—I suppose I was somewhat RCAF foi’ about three years
committed to go to the picnic. now, having enlisted in Sept
Now all picnic committees have 1947, and is stationed with th
Tn
my deep-felt sympathy for the air- force in Ottawa. Life as
photographer in the RCAF is
eer for him and it is a good
on embarking on such a project
in which everything hinges on one. He was
one thing—the weather. I know, since his weekends are usually
I felt the emotions. Hours of free from RCAF work.
preparation and discussion as
5
"ell as the money involved can
be rubbed out in one fell stroke
r s^
if the weather turns foul.
Oi
passing thru
*
*
Then The Rains Came . . .
The first falling of liquid
misery did not matter too much,
h "as in the morning around
s a.m. and the sights and sounds
of rain was comfortingly shut off
by the exterior of the car. Then
magicaiiy. the sky' opened up and
he sun fell through. This was
"’onderful stuff.
But around 1 p.m. when I was
was
a'ing an interesting talk with
an interesting guy—RCAF phoL°£ Dick Nakamura—the rains
came
typical Southern On‘ario violence.
^^^^^ Canada rain is nothing
"rue home about. It doesn’t
Ss ,down in. refreshing, fine
^rops as should be. It comes
(Con’t on P. S)
Winnipeg
Prej^dices
WINNIPEG, Manitoba — A ; bee
unique organization whose aims
are to combat racial and reli
gious prejudice and to promote ;
inter-faith and inter-race rela
tions is the Crucible Club of the
Winnipeg Young Alen
Its pro m
ian Association (YAi
order
foundation began three years ag
and now its membership vhic
includes about ten different
ial oi’igins is headed by an s:a(c
five comprised of Canadians <
Japanese, Anglm^axmi. Je^j-.
Ukrainian, and Icelandic oi .go
Its Japanese-Canadian reps,
sentative is a Winnipeg
Bill Sasaki, "ho is wm‘a<
chairman of the group. •'.'-..-'-••is also currently serving as p-y
lie relations chairman °t i;Manitoba JCCA and ua^ -
,G. Tanaka To Confer With
• Can. immigration Minister
jOn JC Strandee Problems
V lit?
Tanaka, National JC-
on Thursday. July
5. accompanied by F. Andrew
Brewin. K.C.. legal counsel for
Canadians
of
and ivill meet Hon. Japanese ancestry who were de
Waller E. Harris. Canada’s Min prived of their Canadian citizen
ister of Citizenship and Immi ship at the time when they were,
gration in a personal hearing on of minor age and were forced to
the following day, July 6. on the accompany their parents to Ja
matter of the National JCCA pan under the Wartime Exchange
Canbrief on immigration sent last tgreemeni;
Of ; taiva-bound
r. ci
of the
was
brief
the live-page avow
als with a vital Japanese
alien problem, that of certain
tions of Federal Orders-in-Couneiis barring Japanese Canadians
onto JC- now living in Japan from rcturnCanada and joining- their
mmunitv
ia
11
it fair
since
enough
cd
p
di st
dry of these Japanese
s and lists 15 specific
ire family' hardship and
is created because of
ng prevented from re
in
m-
barred from Canada and where
Tanaka and Brewin hope to
cuss with Mr. Harris are the.
-pcs of cases where
Canadians have been
adians who wwt to Japan on the
repatriation scheme; Naturalborn Canadians who served in
Japan's Armed Forces: Japanese,
nationals with relatives in Can
ada who are barred through immig'ration regulations.
Tanaka and Brewin will be
working o n I half of several
Canadians
hundred
Japanese
who will be affected if the regulations are lifted by the Can
adian government.
The interview with Air. Harris
was granted upon Tanaka’s re
quest on behalf of the JCCA in
a letter which accompanied the
brief.
Dilferent—And Better
coo vsr Film GriticGives
dampen Hu
Good Review
wore carrier ‘Go for Broke’
OUTER — “Go f o r
opened at the. Orpheum Stalls GFB Appearance
: a narrov Theatre i
Vancouver on Fri“The Great Caruso”, the Mario
the game dav. June
!, and movie columVancouver Sun and Lanza-starrer, now in its Sth
noted critic Clyde Gilmour gave i week at Loew’s Theatre prevents
the film about the 442nd Regi Toronto Nisei from seeing “Go
mental Combat learn an enthu- For Broke!” which is scheduled
to show after the musical. “The
Great Caruso’s run at the Loew’s
I Tiie following is his column,
gn
is the longest since “Gone With
■ “Screening- Ihc Tilms’ , in which
fir
The Wind” played there.
। Gilmour reviewed the film.
I
One of the most interesting
Japanese ancestry adopted with
I war movies of the year is an
grim humor the nickname “boodai unusual
Hollywood product
i called Go for Broke! Let me | heads”.
! warmly- commend it to your I
But they bitterly and justifi
B
ably resented being called “Japs”.
attention, even if you are
|
And they could never forget
among the customers who ordinarilv stay away from mili- I that their families back home
I in the good old U.S.A, were be
car tary epics.
Go For Broke! gets its odd hind the barbed wire of intern
InC
title from a pidgin-English dice- ment camps while they were
defending democracy
expression meaning, bloodily
short lec i throwing
“Shoot the works!” This became against Hitler.
All of. this is presented with
in the unit’s battle-cry- throughout
me
the fierce fighting in France and clarity, honesty and vigor in Go
For Broke which was produced
to
This is a story- about the loyal by Dore Schary and written by
cd
Japanese-Arnericans, or Nisei, Robert Pirosh.
These same men joined for
who volunteered for combat duty
ces last year in making anoand served with immense distinc
*
ther war picture called “Bataecia! unit in the U.S
tom a
p
Army during t he Second Worid i tieground” which was ecstatid9
cally acclaimed in some quar
'Udv War.
ters. Go For Broke in my
of their nona
1
opinion,
is at least twice as
were in the
j oanese
good a movie—more adult,
ali habit of lumping all of them tomore exciting, more amusing
gether as exotic followers
(Cont. on Page 7)
Buddha, these Americans ol
on
<:
A
?u
5;a
Ph
1
Page 2
PAGE TWO
The New Canadian
ri/? Independent Japanese-English Organ.
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
3
THE
NEW
CANADIAN
Wednesday, J
Here Comes Mr. Moto
By LARRY TAJIRI
in the late 1920, probab-v
much to set the mold for ••
anese ’ on the radio. Hoi
oen
Watanabe was not a wal co
caricature but it wa
stereo
type on the order of v
win’s Hashimura To
the Japanese schoolboy who had such
.trouble with the English
guage.
> British agents arrived.
Most of the film scripts used
It’s been a long time but net
the
Moto character and went on
work radio now has a Nisei hero.
He is a smooth-talking San from there to the sort of lowToyo Takata
------------- Editor.
Francisco-born Nisei named Mr. grade melodramatics common in
479 Queen St. W.
Moto and he may be heard Sun- Hollywood B pictures. The films
PLaza 5005 — Toronto, Ont.
days during the summer on were a long way from the Mar
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Dept., Ottawa
The portrayals of Nisei in a
quand character and the present
NBC.
Wednesday, July 4, 1951
This latest of ether-wave pri- radio version, initiated in this number of radio programs durvate-eyes, who probably will turn summer of 1951, has nothing to ing and after World War II have
out to be a veteran of the 442nd do with the original Marquand helped to destroy the former
Combat Team, is
same Mr. Moto except for the name. Simi breath-sucking, hissing stereoof a “Japanese” on rhe
Moto who was created as a Sat larly the scores of Charlie Chan type
,
urday Evening Post serial char films which have been produced radio. When Elliot Lewis played
acter by J. P. Marquand. Mr. have shown little likeness to the the 442nd veteran in Arch OboMarquand’s Moto was a creature character as originally conceived ler’s “The Family Nagashi” over
Population Only a Guess and So Is
the Mutual network in 1946, he
of the nervous 193C)'s and was an by Earl Derr Biggers.
Oriental sharpie whose ways
Depth of Sincerity of Friendliness
The field of entertainment, de sounded just like Elliot Lews
were dark and devious at times. pending as it does on the pub Now Mr. Moto speaks his King's
He was the protagonist in the lic’s will, is a sensitive barometer English like a man just out of *
JOKTO, Occupied Japan — When I flitted through Japan a story but he
not exactly of public attitudes. The renais Harvard.
ivhile ago on my way to Korea, I was too busy getting myself offi east in the usual proportions of sance of Mr. Moto has been acAlthough Nisei and Japanese <
cially accredited as a short-term war correspondent to take a really magazine story heroes. Mr. Moto, companied by the decline of characters have been created, cm
good look at this big Oriental city.
m those days, reflected the nat- Charlie Chan, even though the radio, no Nisei have been used $
I did pause long enough to admire the Japanese girls in their tional / - .rican attitude toward latter was a Hawaiian-born de to portray these roles. The fen
beautiful kimonos and obis, to gape
- - at the- taxi
----- cabs
------ with
------ a coke Japan in the 1930s. In other tective of Chinese ancestry in artists of Japanese ancestry who ■
burning engine sticking out the back, and to look in amazement at words, unlike the wise and lov the Biggers novels. On the have worked in network radio
the many Japanese men and women who go around this big city able Charlie Chan with his many screen, however, as portrayed by have played other roles, such as
wearing the type of white mouth and nose mask that doctors and sons, the bachelor Mr. Moto was Sojin Kamiyama, Warner Oland, the various Bronx and Brooklyn <
nurses don during operations.
not wholly to be trusted.
Sidney Toler and others, Charlie dialects which Hizi Koyke spoke '
Now I am here for a few davs having* my own little spot of
The bombs which the Japanese Chan became a Chinese of inde on NBC dramas in the days be
R <tnd R (thats for Rest and Relaxation, remember?) and seeing dropped on Pearl Harbor on Dec. terminate origin, ageless and as fore her emergence as San Car
as much of everythin g as I can before I head for home and Whole- 7 also dropped on Mr.. Moto. wise as all of the oracles. Since lo’s “Madame Butterfly.” Betti
sale Row once more.
Writer Marquand stopped writing the Korean war there have not Ito played the girl friend of
Although I had always read that the majority of Japanese wo the Moto stories, which were pot been any Charlie Chan films pro Jack Armstrong, the All-Ameri
men wear kimonos at home and on the streets, it was nevertheless boilers at best, and went on to duced in Hollywood.
can Boy for years on CBS from
greater
things,
including
such
a surprise to me to find them actually doing so, and looking (for
The reception accorded to Chicago but has not done a Jap
the most part) just about as cute as the ear of any bug vou might novels as “Point of No Return.”
MGM’s “Go for Broke!” which anese role.
care to produce.
Mr. Marquand already had won
is one of the successes of the
If Mr. Moto gets a good rating J
The younger the girl, the brighter and gayer the kimono. I the Pulitzer Prize in 1938 for year in
a time of lean cash-boxes on radio this summer, the char- j
soon discovered; the grannies and great grannies go around in dark his portrait of a Boston Brah
proves that a story about Nisei acter probably will wind up on I
greys and other dull. u neyecatching colors.
min, “The Late George Apley.”
is not box-office poison. The television, necessitating the use I
In the 1930s 20th Century Fox
emergence of the Nisei Mr. Moto of a player of Japanese descent 1
Japanese Fear TB
also made a series of B pictures
on the NBC network in a detec for the role.. Such an eventuality J
It surprised me, too, to see taxis with,
1 said, coke-burning around Mr. Marquand’s Moto. tive story program which also would create an opportunity for a
engines built into their lu^'£wr6 curriers
The filmmakers, giving the role
|
crusades for racial democracy is an actor like Teru Shimada,
That’s to help out the
shortage, but it means that every to Peter Lorre, did not bother additional proof that another of probably the most accomplished I
cab (except those, for use of foreigners only) has to pack around with character shadings and Mr.
the taboos of entertainment has of U.S. actors of Japanese an- 1
its own big, black sack of fuel too/
Moto, the Japanese detective,
been breached. NBS’s Mr. Moto cestry, or for a new face like I
It means. also- that ’f your cab stops in the middle of the street, emerged as more of a hero and show, incidentally, was in
pre that of Henry Nakamura of “Go a
le driver has to get out. stoke up, and fiddle with the engine while with a more pleasant personality. paration long before “Go
I
fer for Broke!”
The film company naturally did
the inside of the cab gets blue-thick with coke fumes.
Broke!” was released.
The success of “Go for Broke'” |
And now about those white masks. Very, verv manv Japanese not want to offend the Japanese,
since doing so would mean the I
It is interesting to note that and the popularization of the 1
wear them.
I soon saw. and I found out they do so because the Japs are loss of a considerable portion of the Nisei Mr. Moto, in contrast weekly adventures of Mr. Moto 1
augur well for the future of Ni- I
supposed to fall- easy victims to tuberculosis. So they figure that the Far Eastern market. We re to this previous magazine and
by breathing the none-too-clean Tokyo air through a ga/ze mask call one of the last of the Moto film counterpart, speaks good sei in entertainment.
— Pacific Citizen
films which showed him holding English and is not cast in the
they can kcvp the dreaded germs away.
stereotype
once
associated
with
,
Thls ,s a very bi" cit>> Lr. far reaching, and with few, if any off an unnamed enemy with a
nit dings taller than seven or eight stories, and most of them one machine-gun from an Oriental “Japanese” characters on the
temple until the American and radio. .
or a peculiar one-and-a-half size. Earthquakes, you know!
LOS ANGELES — The 11th
Ask anybody the population of it. and they’ll look at
Eddie
Holden
’
s
Frank
Wata
Annual Nisei Week Festival
you as if :
be, and quick moving'.
you’d asked them what was going to happen in Korea.
nabe, a comedy character popular queen contest started June 2d
\-ey even have a S‘aK answer to*the question, saving:
And they scuttle around with on West Coast radio since the with the first entry of a candi‘London.
New York, Canada and Tokvo.”
a horn continuously warning days of the Blue Monday Jam date. The 1951 Nisei Week is
But the population incn
so quickly that no one can keep everything out of their way in boree on San Francisco’s KFRC । slated for Aug. 18-26.
tab on how manv of these .
cluding rickshaws, three-wheeled
are, apparently.
vehicles. jeeps,
trucks. cars,
Bomb Ruins in Cities
horse-drawn wagons, man-pulled
7 here is very little evidence of the war over here.
carts and hordes of scuttling
Travelling between Tokyo and Yokohama, which are
public.
both so
ng that no one knows where one stops and the other starts
Dominatin everything in the
you see
About this time, ten years Niseis who have married
ihe occasional bombed-out spot.
city, of coi
is the g'reat wide
ago, most of us were spending 1941 didn’t know or hadn’
But apart from Hiroshin
high, stone wall
aki which were *A-bombed moat and
our
last “free” summer on the
to smithereens, very little of Japan was
destroyed in comparison that keeps the Emperor’s palace west coast. If you could carry heard of their mates ten
"with other aggressor countries.
aloof from curious passer-by.
a tune. you were humming
And to all intents and purposes the peopl
That’s a fact! For out of fu
And visible everywhere are sol- 1 “Maria Elena” or “Green Eyes”.
seem to have
Nisei
couples who have yet t1
were their conquerors diers from the Occupation, who And those of you who were al
have been there since the sum ready on the wrong side of 16 celebrate their tenth anniversan
They couldn’t be more courteo
and triendly. judgi
mer of 1945, and the soldiers of years of age, you were just get didn’t know each other back i”
trom outward appearances, thoug
the Japanese have long been the Korean war either on duty in ting used to packing your picture 1941. Just ask all your marked
noted for a superficial politeness which you an
friends. Ainu evacuation
left to your own Japan, enroute to Korea, or back and thumb print on a telltale re
integrity to interpret.
derful 1
gistration
card.
Can
you
still
re
The American-Aust wian occr
When they
■‘time ii
'Ui m this c
town. with member what your number was?
poi tedlj done much to restore indu;
they
’
re
underestimating
its speen
and commerc
But J gather streets never quite deserted at.
that the country was getting aloi
We were still “innocent” those i ^ decade has just zipped b
we that and any one of the 24 hours of the
boasted one of the finest railway
days. N
ever heard of I thatin the
ntry. among
other things.
radar. atom bomb .or video.
Do you realize we've j^?It has the smells and noises Where’s Kapuskasiug.
New Den- passed the halfway mark in
pecuiiar to the Orient, also the ver and Yonge St
Both Charm and Disgust
W ho knew 1951?
the
dirt and the color, the charm
The street cars heref ahhmm
what
a
sugar-beet
looked
like
And it’s only 145 shopping dayjammed io bulging a
and the
er how mushrooms were cultivat to Christmas.
ante
o have
uve
ed 1 V hat's more, most of uj
Tokyo Fascinating
With Ch arm3 Disgust.
The Limit Is 200
2
1
The New Canadian
ri/? Independent Japanese-English Organ.
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
3
THE
NEW
CANADIAN
Wednesday, J
Here Comes Mr. Moto
By LARRY TAJIRI
in the late 1920, probab-v
much to set the mold for ••
anese ’ on the radio. Hoi
oen
Watanabe was not a wal co
caricature but it wa
stereo
type on the order of v
win’s Hashimura To
the Japanese schoolboy who had such
.trouble with the English
guage.
> British agents arrived.
Most of the film scripts used
It’s been a long time but net
the
Moto character and went on
work radio now has a Nisei hero.
He is a smooth-talking San from there to the sort of lowToyo Takata
------------- Editor.
Francisco-born Nisei named Mr. grade melodramatics common in
479 Queen St. W.
Moto and he may be heard Sun- Hollywood B pictures. The films
PLaza 5005 — Toronto, Ont.
days during the summer on were a long way from the Mar
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Dept., Ottawa
The portrayals of Nisei in a
quand character and the present
NBC.
Wednesday, July 4, 1951
This latest of ether-wave pri- radio version, initiated in this number of radio programs durvate-eyes, who probably will turn summer of 1951, has nothing to ing and after World War II have
out to be a veteran of the 442nd do with the original Marquand helped to destroy the former
Combat Team, is
same Mr. Moto except for the name. Simi breath-sucking, hissing stereoof a “Japanese” on rhe
Moto who was created as a Sat larly the scores of Charlie Chan type
,
urday Evening Post serial char films which have been produced radio. When Elliot Lewis played
acter by J. P. Marquand. Mr. have shown little likeness to the the 442nd veteran in Arch OboMarquand’s Moto was a creature character as originally conceived ler’s “The Family Nagashi” over
Population Only a Guess and So Is
the Mutual network in 1946, he
of the nervous 193C)'s and was an by Earl Derr Biggers.
Oriental sharpie whose ways
Depth of Sincerity of Friendliness
The field of entertainment, de sounded just like Elliot Lews
were dark and devious at times. pending as it does on the pub Now Mr. Moto speaks his King's
He was the protagonist in the lic’s will, is a sensitive barometer English like a man just out of *
JOKTO, Occupied Japan — When I flitted through Japan a story but he
not exactly of public attitudes. The renais Harvard.
ivhile ago on my way to Korea, I was too busy getting myself offi east in the usual proportions of sance of Mr. Moto has been acAlthough Nisei and Japanese <
cially accredited as a short-term war correspondent to take a really magazine story heroes. Mr. Moto, companied by the decline of characters have been created, cm
good look at this big Oriental city.
m those days, reflected the nat- Charlie Chan, even though the radio, no Nisei have been used $
I did pause long enough to admire the Japanese girls in their tional / - .rican attitude toward latter was a Hawaiian-born de to portray these roles. The fen
beautiful kimonos and obis, to gape
- - at the- taxi
----- cabs
------ with
------ a coke Japan in the 1930s. In other tective of Chinese ancestry in artists of Japanese ancestry who ■
burning engine sticking out the back, and to look in amazement at words, unlike the wise and lov the Biggers novels. On the have worked in network radio
the many Japanese men and women who go around this big city able Charlie Chan with his many screen, however, as portrayed by have played other roles, such as
wearing the type of white mouth and nose mask that doctors and sons, the bachelor Mr. Moto was Sojin Kamiyama, Warner Oland, the various Bronx and Brooklyn <
nurses don during operations.
not wholly to be trusted.
Sidney Toler and others, Charlie dialects which Hizi Koyke spoke '
Now I am here for a few davs having* my own little spot of
The bombs which the Japanese Chan became a Chinese of inde on NBC dramas in the days be
R <tnd R (thats for Rest and Relaxation, remember?) and seeing dropped on Pearl Harbor on Dec. terminate origin, ageless and as fore her emergence as San Car
as much of everythin g as I can before I head for home and Whole- 7 also dropped on Mr.. Moto. wise as all of the oracles. Since lo’s “Madame Butterfly.” Betti
sale Row once more.
Writer Marquand stopped writing the Korean war there have not Ito played the girl friend of
Although I had always read that the majority of Japanese wo the Moto stories, which were pot been any Charlie Chan films pro Jack Armstrong, the All-Ameri
men wear kimonos at home and on the streets, it was nevertheless boilers at best, and went on to duced in Hollywood.
can Boy for years on CBS from
greater
things,
including
such
a surprise to me to find them actually doing so, and looking (for
The reception accorded to Chicago but has not done a Jap
the most part) just about as cute as the ear of any bug vou might novels as “Point of No Return.”
MGM’s “Go for Broke!” which anese role.
care to produce.
Mr. Marquand already had won
is one of the successes of the
If Mr. Moto gets a good rating J
The younger the girl, the brighter and gayer the kimono. I the Pulitzer Prize in 1938 for year in
a time of lean cash-boxes on radio this summer, the char- j
soon discovered; the grannies and great grannies go around in dark his portrait of a Boston Brah
proves that a story about Nisei acter probably will wind up on I
greys and other dull. u neyecatching colors.
min, “The Late George Apley.”
is not box-office poison. The television, necessitating the use I
In the 1930s 20th Century Fox
emergence of the Nisei Mr. Moto of a player of Japanese descent 1
Japanese Fear TB
also made a series of B pictures
on the NBC network in a detec for the role.. Such an eventuality J
It surprised me, too, to see taxis with,
1 said, coke-burning around Mr. Marquand’s Moto. tive story program which also would create an opportunity for a
engines built into their lu^'£wr6 curriers
The filmmakers, giving the role
|
crusades for racial democracy is an actor like Teru Shimada,
That’s to help out the
shortage, but it means that every to Peter Lorre, did not bother additional proof that another of probably the most accomplished I
cab (except those, for use of foreigners only) has to pack around with character shadings and Mr.
the taboos of entertainment has of U.S. actors of Japanese an- 1
its own big, black sack of fuel too/
Moto, the Japanese detective,
been breached. NBS’s Mr. Moto cestry, or for a new face like I
It means. also- that ’f your cab stops in the middle of the street, emerged as more of a hero and show, incidentally, was in
pre that of Henry Nakamura of “Go a
le driver has to get out. stoke up, and fiddle with the engine while with a more pleasant personality. paration long before “Go
I
fer for Broke!”
The film company naturally did
the inside of the cab gets blue-thick with coke fumes.
Broke!” was released.
The success of “Go for Broke'” |
And now about those white masks. Very, verv manv Japanese not want to offend the Japanese,
since doing so would mean the I
It is interesting to note that and the popularization of the 1
wear them.
I soon saw. and I found out they do so because the Japs are loss of a considerable portion of the Nisei Mr. Moto, in contrast weekly adventures of Mr. Moto 1
augur well for the future of Ni- I
supposed to fall- easy victims to tuberculosis. So they figure that the Far Eastern market. We re to this previous magazine and
by breathing the none-too-clean Tokyo air through a ga/ze mask call one of the last of the Moto film counterpart, speaks good sei in entertainment.
— Pacific Citizen
films which showed him holding English and is not cast in the
they can kcvp the dreaded germs away.
stereotype
once
associated
with
,
Thls ,s a very bi" cit>> Lr. far reaching, and with few, if any off an unnamed enemy with a
nit dings taller than seven or eight stories, and most of them one machine-gun from an Oriental “Japanese” characters on the
temple until the American and radio. .
or a peculiar one-and-a-half size. Earthquakes, you know!
LOS ANGELES — The 11th
Ask anybody the population of it. and they’ll look at
Eddie
Holden
’
s
Frank
Wata
Annual Nisei Week Festival
you as if :
be, and quick moving'.
you’d asked them what was going to happen in Korea.
nabe, a comedy character popular queen contest started June 2d
\-ey even have a S‘aK answer to*the question, saving:
And they scuttle around with on West Coast radio since the with the first entry of a candi‘London.
New York, Canada and Tokvo.”
a horn continuously warning days of the Blue Monday Jam date. The 1951 Nisei Week is
But the population incn
so quickly that no one can keep everything out of their way in boree on San Francisco’s KFRC । slated for Aug. 18-26.
tab on how manv of these .
cluding rickshaws, three-wheeled
are, apparently.
vehicles. jeeps,
trucks. cars,
Bomb Ruins in Cities
horse-drawn wagons, man-pulled
7 here is very little evidence of the war over here.
carts and hordes of scuttling
Travelling between Tokyo and Yokohama, which are
public.
both so
ng that no one knows where one stops and the other starts
Dominatin everything in the
you see
About this time, ten years Niseis who have married
ihe occasional bombed-out spot.
city, of coi
is the g'reat wide
ago, most of us were spending 1941 didn’t know or hadn’
But apart from Hiroshin
high, stone wall
aki which were *A-bombed moat and
our
last “free” summer on the
to smithereens, very little of Japan was
destroyed in comparison that keeps the Emperor’s palace west coast. If you could carry heard of their mates ten
"with other aggressor countries.
aloof from curious passer-by.
a tune. you were humming
And to all intents and purposes the peopl
That’s a fact! For out of fu
And visible everywhere are sol- 1 “Maria Elena” or “Green Eyes”.
seem to have
Nisei
couples who have yet t1
were their conquerors diers from the Occupation, who And those of you who were al
have been there since the sum ready on the wrong side of 16 celebrate their tenth anniversan
They couldn’t be more courteo
and triendly. judgi
mer of 1945, and the soldiers of years of age, you were just get didn’t know each other back i”
trom outward appearances, thoug
the Japanese have long been the Korean war either on duty in ting used to packing your picture 1941. Just ask all your marked
noted for a superficial politeness which you an
friends. Ainu evacuation
left to your own Japan, enroute to Korea, or back and thumb print on a telltale re
integrity to interpret.
derful 1
gistration
card.
Can
you
still
re
The American-Aust wian occr
When they
■‘time ii
'Ui m this c
town. with member what your number was?
poi tedlj done much to restore indu;
they
’
re
underestimating
its speen
and commerc
But J gather streets never quite deserted at.
that the country was getting aloi
We were still “innocent” those i ^ decade has just zipped b
we that and any one of the 24 hours of the
boasted one of the finest railway
days. N
ever heard of I thatin the
ntry. among
other things.
radar. atom bomb .or video.
Do you realize we've j^?It has the smells and noises Where’s Kapuskasiug.
New Den- passed the halfway mark in
pecuiiar to the Orient, also the ver and Yonge St
Both Charm and Disgust
W ho knew 1951?
the
dirt and the color, the charm
The street cars heref ahhmm
what
a
sugar-beet
looked
like
And it’s only 145 shopping dayjammed io bulging a
and the
er how mushrooms were cultivat to Christmas.
ante
o have
uve
ed 1 V hat's more, most of uj
Tokyo Fascinating
With Ch arm3 Disgust.
The Limit Is 200
2
1
Page 3
sday, I^Y 4, 1951
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THE
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CRUCIBLE CLUB
Westerns Statistics
PAGE SEVEN
CANADIAN
S, Tsukamoto Leads Team
winch
Hitting, Also League Thefts to-day
in
on
Japanese Ship’s Bali Team
Wanted ilt in Vancouver
Cowan
san Maru' baseball team had an ges{ Cleaners Win Again
cupancy of first place in
scheduled
exhibition
WT Jr. League, is one of
ot re club is to
May Play Westerns Jrs.
brightest prospects.
aces of racial last week in Vancouver, but pit ■
team expects to place Ikeda in ana
and individu- cher Tad Kanayama came up
Best Cleaners behind the bril
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with
two more games bet ore J
iese differenliant 3-hit pitching ot Basu Cor
4
since an appearance in
mier. strengthened their hold on
for
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before that date is re
y . . . Diversity of memberfirst place in the Toronto Intelquired fer eligibility in the play
unitv
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mediate
"A" Baseball League by
hip contributes to tl
ge
to
Yokohama,
offs.
lie whole”.
an Maru is a fre
Another new player with the
fourth wit
Apart from lecture and pan
she
was
Mitsui
Line
of
tile year,
Soc Tsukamoto also leads the
Lapointe
ing
climb.
Sheldon
Childerhouse
hewing of docked last
low-hit hurting chore
team as well as the league in who patrols the outfield, started
coat of
in
Pier, gleam
nine
thefts
to
the
stolen bases with
season with the Western brates” depicting various Jewish leaf-green and white paint and
Offen his credit. He is followed by Aki the
tiles but since then has religious festivals and ceremon manned by the politest crew of
of
the.
game
was
leftivo star
Koyanagi with five.
a sports writer
and ies: it sponsored a public lecture ball
Inata who drove
Other .300 hitters are Mac Oi- has now shown in a Sr. suit. Chil
could never expect to meet.
by
Emerie
Sala,
author
of
“
This
home two runs with a smash to
8, Ken Ohara .337, Yuki derhouse is also noted for his
The
sailors
were
especially
in
Earth One Country" on the Ba
left field while the other runs
Kameok i .318, and Aki Koyana- wintrv activities as a defenseterested
in
Canada's
national
hai World Faith. Members of the
wore scored on some loose plays
gi .313. Manager Joe Koyanagi
games,
hockey
and
lacrosse,
the
boasts a .333 mark in his appear- hockey team in the Toronto Club contributed greatly- to the latter being completely unknown by the Tigers.
to Nisei baseball
ances as ; pinMi-hitter in two Hockey- League.
held in May- in which 24 ethnic to them.
i
proposed game
games.
The Juveniles are having- a g roups participated.
About baseball, though, they
hyama’s Westerns
Players dipping below the poor start this year currentlyneeded
no
instruction.
Accord
For
the
comingyear,
the
Club
led as one of the
Juniors, ret
.300 mark are Sub Miike .294, tenanting last place while Mid
has
planned
a
monthlycultural
ns in the city of
ing
to
first
officer
S.
Oguri.
Maw Mori .276, Frank Mulligan gets and Bantams are in third
education
program
in
which
each
o, and
Best Cleaners,
Japan's
.273, Fred Tanaka .250. Aki Ha- place in their respective leagues.
month a different ethnic group
leaders
of
the Toronto
Benefit Dance
ahead of
yashi .240, Joe Howe .238.
The
will be invited as guests of honor. game, ran
ediate League. If this game
Extra-base hits have been few on June 29 turned out to be a Thev
I continue to provide ball, swin
for the Westerns so far this huge success with one of the
and panels for all inbrand of baseball
in
season with no home-runs being- biggest attendances at a
Nisei teams.
recorded. Mac Oikawa has hit dance. Big moment of the evenThe ship’s team had hoped to
The Crucible. Club is just one
two triples and Sub Miike and ing was the drawing of raffle
arrange
an exhibition game
of
the
YMtook his barnstormAki Hayashi two doubles apiece ■ prizes with Stan Nishimura or of 9665 associations
while
Amagisan
Maru
was
in
CA
in
82
countries
with
a
mem
;h
Vancouver
and
to lead in the long-ball hitting. • Cedar- Springs, Ont., winning j
Vancouver,
but
as
mentioned
million.
bership
of
Pacific, baseball was,
Aki Koyanagi has proven him the first prize television set.
earlier, pitcher Tad Kanayama
self the most adept in coaxing
of course already immensely
wasn’t ready to fire.
opposing pitchers for free trips
When time and weather per popular in Japan. Ami since the
to first base with a total of
has bo
mit on the high seas, the boys American
eight. Maw Mori follows with
play- catch and practice bunting, come
the country’s il a tional
seven walks.
a recreation in which they- are game by adoption.
Pitchers and their hurling re
their
for
encouraged
by first officer Ogu
a
run
the
Americans
NAW YORK, N. Y. — Can a
?d that in
cords are as follows: Aki Koya
ri and captain Shigeo Koriyama.
money.”
275-lb.
Japanese
“
sumotori
”
who
of Amernagi 1-0, Mac Oikawa 1-1, Ken
Joe “Toots” Mondt, the local
The break in this routine is
guzzles
20
to
30
bottles
of
Jap
the
tradiicanization, many of
Ohara 1-4, Al Kelly .0-3, and
promoter who negotiated the especially welcome, since mem
anese
beer
with
every
meal,
beat
havc been
Uchikura • 0-1. Since last week,
deal that will bring Japanese bers of the Japanese merchant
Primo
Camera
in
an
American
eliminated.
another pitcher has entered the
men to the U.S. for the marine serve two solid years at virtu
ample
is
Judo
wrestling, now de
win column for the Westerns in
first time in history, promises a stretch, seeing their families
The
beery,
beedy
question
may
em p h a s i z e d, presu m ab Iy, bcca use
the person of Ken Ikeda of the
a New York appearance.
days or even its practice smacks of dark
a
for
only
be
answered
this
summer
when
Juniors who made his debut a
Mondt says the four won’t hours between voyages. At the
four Nipponese sumo wrestlers
Oriental intrigue.
winning one.
make an exhibition tour of the wrestle on American food. He end of each two-year stint comes
Westerns although they occu
will have to supply- full logis a 45-day vacation.
py the cellar in the WT League
They left Tokyo recently on tical support for them, which
Chinese or Canadian
Captain of Amagisan Maru's
with a 3 win, 9 loss, 1 tie re
the President Wilson for Hono means importing- vast quantities team is senior first engineer T.
Foods
cord, have lost several of their lulu where matches are scheduled of Japanese rice, fish, feer, and
recent games by one-run margins for July 6. On July 12, they con- according to the press agent. Yashimoto.
RICKSHA’
Over two decades ago, when
and expect to come out on the ■ tinue on to the mainland foi a seaweed.
RESTAURANT
long end of the scores in the rest
cross-country tour.
83 Lagauchetiere St- W.
of the 36-game season which has
The combined weight of the
Montreal, P. Q.
GFB IN VANCOUVER
still two-thirds to go.
four sumo artists is an elephan
For Reservations
Southpaw Ken Ikeda who is tine 1,185 lbs.
Phone HA. 4998
(Cow'd from Page 1)
one of the main reasons for man
One of the foursome, Takatalot.
ager Joe Akiyama’s Juniors oc- yama breaks the scales at 360 in
funny moments, and
I think you’ll be glad to notice
lbs. Maedyama, a Yokozuna or more likely to leave you with
that writer-director Pirosh, an
grand champion, packs 280 lbs. a lift in the heart and a clean
ex-GI type himself, does not set
Patronize
Fujitayama is a 270-pounder and taste in the mouth.
That erstwhile celluloid play out to distort reality by depictOnoumi, the beer nibbier, weighs
Our Advertisers
Chop Suey House
boy. Van Johnson, appears as a ing all his Nisei as dedicated {
in at 275.
92-A Elizabeth St., Toronto
new lieutenant from Texas who idealists and saviors of humanity,
They
hope
to
meet
Camera.
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
JOHNNY NAKASHIMA
is disgusted and rebellious on
There are squawkers and belDINNERS
the mountainous former heavy|
Oil Burners, Roofing,
Go
For
Broke!
the
;
learning
that
the
first
soldiers
]v-achers
in
|
Rock Wool Insulation,
weight boxer;
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 us.
under his command are livcle men same as in every group of fight
4
Gurney Furnaces.
Gene Stanlee a nd Don
Reservations: EMI-9035
with politely hissing voices and ing men since the invention of
I
117 Alton Ave.,
Toronto.
the bow-and-arrow and that, of
i PHONE
HA. 5550
formal - slanted eyes.
Sumo bein
The ever-boyisn Mr. J. is a course, is precisely as it should
ized, almost ritualistic sport with
be, in any motion picture about
la Hamiltoi, It’s
contestants often taking no more convincing actor, when he gets
warriors
in
action.
”
a
decent
opportunity,
and
his
steps in rhe ring t an can be
err adual change in outlook in
counted on the fm; ers of one
this story is a believable and
hand, the visiting Nipponese
te predictable Personal Tour
t h: n
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
beef trust may be at a disadvany
experienced
TOBA,
Japan
—
Ninety-three
tage agaiTisi me oi ig. gouging
21 JOHN 8T, NORTH
tar old Kokichi Mikimoto perand clouting that passes for
Fisher, Gordon & Co.
onally guided General and Mrs.
the Nise:
The
For Fine Chinen® Food
wrestling in commei
Chartered Accountants
Matthew
Ridgway through his
auplayed
by
“rassling" circle;
!
“1
Facilities for
cultured
pearl
farms,
the
most
Temple Building
Eut the press mnl says h
PARTIES & BANQUETS
them actually veterans famous in Japan, when they ar
rong and q
62 Richmond St. W.
boys are very
:„
?as army service, and rived recently for a one-day
‘x.
tnev
re
Toronto, Ont. EM. 3-8877
a nlausible and likeable
Batting statistics of the Westems Seniors as computed up to
games of June 23 in the West
Toronto league reveal shortstop
Soc Tsukamoto leading the Nisei
stickmen with a lofty .400 aver
age although Buzz Ogaki's cur
rent hitting streak has lifted his
then .391 mark to approximately
Will Japanese 'Sumo’ Beat
American 'Rassling’ Tactics ?
4, S. TAKIMOTO,
LUCK INN
SOS
J
i
t
i
4
THE
NEW
Keen Baseball Fans
CRUCIBLE CLUB
Westerns Statistics
PAGE SEVEN
CANADIAN
S, Tsukamoto Leads Team
winch
Hitting, Also League Thefts to-day
in
on
Japanese Ship’s Bali Team
Wanted ilt in Vancouver
Cowan
san Maru' baseball team had an ges{ Cleaners Win Again
cupancy of first place in
scheduled
exhibition
WT Jr. League, is one of
ot re club is to
May Play Westerns Jrs.
brightest prospects.
aces of racial last week in Vancouver, but pit ■
team expects to place Ikeda in ana
and individu- cher Tad Kanayama came up
Best Cleaners behind the bril
will
a
inn
with
two more games bet ore J
iese differenliant 3-hit pitching ot Basu Cor
4
since an appearance in
mier. strengthened their hold on
for
a
more
effective
democe
before that date is re
y . . . Diversity of memberfirst place in the Toronto Intelquired fer eligibility in the play
unitv
of
mediate
"A" Baseball League by
hip contributes to tl
ge
to
Yokohama,
offs.
lie whole”.
an Maru is a fre
Another new player with the
fourth wit
Apart from lecture and pan
she
was
Mitsui
Line
of
tile year,
Soc Tsukamoto also leads the
Lapointe
ing
climb.
Sheldon
Childerhouse
hewing of docked last
low-hit hurting chore
team as well as the league in who patrols the outfield, started
coat of
in
Pier, gleam
nine
thefts
to
the
stolen bases with
season with the Western brates” depicting various Jewish leaf-green and white paint and
Offen his credit. He is followed by Aki the
tiles but since then has religious festivals and ceremon manned by the politest crew of
of
the.
game
was
leftivo star
Koyanagi with five.
a sports writer
and ies: it sponsored a public lecture ball
Inata who drove
Other .300 hitters are Mac Oi- has now shown in a Sr. suit. Chil
could never expect to meet.
by
Emerie
Sala,
author
of
“
This
home two runs with a smash to
8, Ken Ohara .337, Yuki derhouse is also noted for his
The
sailors
were
especially
in
Earth One Country" on the Ba
left field while the other runs
Kameok i .318, and Aki Koyana- wintrv activities as a defenseterested
in
Canada's
national
hai World Faith. Members of the
wore scored on some loose plays
gi .313. Manager Joe Koyanagi
games,
hockey
and
lacrosse,
the
boasts a .333 mark in his appear- hockey team in the Toronto Club contributed greatly- to the latter being completely unknown by the Tigers.
to Nisei baseball
ances as ; pinMi-hitter in two Hockey- League.
held in May- in which 24 ethnic to them.
i
proposed game
games.
The Juveniles are having- a g roups participated.
About baseball, though, they
hyama’s Westerns
Players dipping below the poor start this year currentlyneeded
no
instruction.
Accord
For
the
comingyear,
the
Club
led as one of the
Juniors, ret
.300 mark are Sub Miike .294, tenanting last place while Mid
has
planned
a
monthlycultural
ns in the city of
ing
to
first
officer
S.
Oguri.
Maw Mori .276, Frank Mulligan gets and Bantams are in third
education
program
in
which
each
o, and
Best Cleaners,
Japan's
.273, Fred Tanaka .250. Aki Ha- place in their respective leagues.
month a different ethnic group
leaders
of
the Toronto
Benefit Dance
ahead of
yashi .240, Joe Howe .238.
The
will be invited as guests of honor. game, ran
ediate League. If this game
Extra-base hits have been few on June 29 turned out to be a Thev
I continue to provide ball, swin
for the Westerns so far this huge success with one of the
and panels for all inbrand of baseball
in
season with no home-runs being- biggest attendances at a
Nisei teams.
recorded. Mac Oikawa has hit dance. Big moment of the evenThe ship’s team had hoped to
The Crucible. Club is just one
two triples and Sub Miike and ing was the drawing of raffle
arrange
an exhibition game
of
the
YMtook his barnstormAki Hayashi two doubles apiece ■ prizes with Stan Nishimura or of 9665 associations
while
Amagisan
Maru
was
in
CA
in
82
countries
with
a
mem
;h
Vancouver
and
to lead in the long-ball hitting. • Cedar- Springs, Ont., winning j
Vancouver,
but
as
mentioned
million.
bership
of
Pacific, baseball was,
Aki Koyanagi has proven him the first prize television set.
earlier, pitcher Tad Kanayama
self the most adept in coaxing
of course already immensely
wasn’t ready to fire.
opposing pitchers for free trips
When time and weather per popular in Japan. Ami since the
to first base with a total of
has bo
mit on the high seas, the boys American
eight. Maw Mori follows with
play- catch and practice bunting, come
the country’s il a tional
seven walks.
a recreation in which they- are game by adoption.
Pitchers and their hurling re
their
for
encouraged
by first officer Ogu
a
run
the
Americans
NAW YORK, N. Y. — Can a
?d that in
cords are as follows: Aki Koya
ri and captain Shigeo Koriyama.
money.”
275-lb.
Japanese
“
sumotori
”
who
of Amernagi 1-0, Mac Oikawa 1-1, Ken
Joe “Toots” Mondt, the local
The break in this routine is
guzzles
20
to
30
bottles
of
Jap
the
tradiicanization, many of
Ohara 1-4, Al Kelly .0-3, and
promoter who negotiated the especially welcome, since mem
anese
beer
with
every
meal,
beat
havc been
Uchikura • 0-1. Since last week,
deal that will bring Japanese bers of the Japanese merchant
Primo
Camera
in
an
American
eliminated.
another pitcher has entered the
men to the U.S. for the marine serve two solid years at virtu
ample
is
Judo
wrestling, now de
win column for the Westerns in
first time in history, promises a stretch, seeing their families
The
beery,
beedy
question
may
em p h a s i z e d, presu m ab Iy, bcca use
the person of Ken Ikeda of the
a New York appearance.
days or even its practice smacks of dark
a
for
only
be
answered
this
summer
when
Juniors who made his debut a
Mondt says the four won’t hours between voyages. At the
four Nipponese sumo wrestlers
Oriental intrigue.
winning one.
make an exhibition tour of the wrestle on American food. He end of each two-year stint comes
Westerns although they occu
will have to supply- full logis a 45-day vacation.
py the cellar in the WT League
They left Tokyo recently on tical support for them, which
Chinese or Canadian
Captain of Amagisan Maru's
with a 3 win, 9 loss, 1 tie re
the President Wilson for Hono means importing- vast quantities team is senior first engineer T.
Foods
cord, have lost several of their lulu where matches are scheduled of Japanese rice, fish, feer, and
recent games by one-run margins for July 6. On July 12, they con- according to the press agent. Yashimoto.
RICKSHA’
Over two decades ago, when
and expect to come out on the ■ tinue on to the mainland foi a seaweed.
RESTAURANT
long end of the scores in the rest
cross-country tour.
83 Lagauchetiere St- W.
of the 36-game season which has
The combined weight of the
Montreal, P. Q.
GFB IN VANCOUVER
still two-thirds to go.
four sumo artists is an elephan
For Reservations
Southpaw Ken Ikeda who is tine 1,185 lbs.
Phone HA. 4998
(Cow'd from Page 1)
one of the main reasons for man
One of the foursome, Takatalot.
ager Joe Akiyama’s Juniors oc- yama breaks the scales at 360 in
funny moments, and
I think you’ll be glad to notice
lbs. Maedyama, a Yokozuna or more likely to leave you with
that writer-director Pirosh, an
grand champion, packs 280 lbs. a lift in the heart and a clean
ex-GI type himself, does not set
Patronize
Fujitayama is a 270-pounder and taste in the mouth.
That erstwhile celluloid play out to distort reality by depictOnoumi, the beer nibbier, weighs
Our Advertisers
Chop Suey House
boy. Van Johnson, appears as a ing all his Nisei as dedicated {
in at 275.
92-A Elizabeth St., Toronto
new lieutenant from Texas who idealists and saviors of humanity,
They
hope
to
meet
Camera.
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
JOHNNY NAKASHIMA
is disgusted and rebellious on
There are squawkers and belDINNERS
the mountainous former heavy|
Oil Burners, Roofing,
Go
For
Broke!
the
;
learning
that
the
first
soldiers
]v-achers
in
|
Rock Wool Insulation,
weight boxer;
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 us.
under his command are livcle men same as in every group of fight
4
Gurney Furnaces.
Gene Stanlee a nd Don
Reservations: EMI-9035
with politely hissing voices and ing men since the invention of
I
117 Alton Ave.,
Toronto.
the bow-and-arrow and that, of
i PHONE
HA. 5550
formal - slanted eyes.
Sumo bein
The ever-boyisn Mr. J. is a course, is precisely as it should
ized, almost ritualistic sport with
be, in any motion picture about
la Hamiltoi, It’s
contestants often taking no more convincing actor, when he gets
warriors
in
action.
”
a
decent
opportunity,
and
his
steps in rhe ring t an can be
err adual change in outlook in
counted on the fm; ers of one
this story is a believable and
hand, the visiting Nipponese
te predictable Personal Tour
t h: n
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
beef trust may be at a disadvany
experienced
TOBA,
Japan
—
Ninety-three
tage agaiTisi me oi ig. gouging
21 JOHN 8T, NORTH
tar old Kokichi Mikimoto perand clouting that passes for
Fisher, Gordon & Co.
onally guided General and Mrs.
the Nise:
The
For Fine Chinen® Food
wrestling in commei
Chartered Accountants
Matthew
Ridgway through his
auplayed
by
“rassling" circle;
!
“1
Facilities for
cultured
pearl
farms,
the
most
Temple Building
Eut the press mnl says h
PARTIES & BANQUETS
them actually veterans famous in Japan, when they ar
rong and q
62 Richmond St. W.
boys are very
:„
?as army service, and rived recently for a one-day
‘x.
tnev
re
Toronto, Ont. EM. 3-8877
a nlausible and likeable
Batting statistics of the Westems Seniors as computed up to
games of June 23 in the West
Toronto league reveal shortstop
Soc Tsukamoto leading the Nisei
stickmen with a lofty .400 aver
age although Buzz Ogaki's cur
rent hitting streak has lifted his
then .391 mark to approximately
Will Japanese 'Sumo’ Beat
American 'Rassling’ Tactics ?
4, S. TAKIMOTO,
LUCK INN
SOS
J
i
t
i
4
Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE
NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, Juh,
Tokyo Billboards Set
To Reduce Suicides
erJonct
(cant'd from P. 1}
cro65
TOKYO — Tokyo’s city fa
thers plan a billboard campaign
14—Vancouver. Vancouver Nisei to combat the rising number of
down like all the supposed fun
Baseball Club’s Dance, at suicides.
MARRIAGES
KAMLOOPS, B. C. — The en in hell with the same effect of
Ukrainian Hall, corner Prin
gagement of Miss Sadie Sadae, having someone throwing a full
The metropolitan office (city
TANO UYE — NAKASHIMA
cess and Cordova.
hall) announced it soon woulc
TORONTO — The marriage of eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. bucket of water right overVour
15—Montreal. Montreal G. A. C. erect billboards at “suitable’ Mickey Mitsuko, third daughter Yoji Adachi, and Mr. Kar Kaoru head. It’s not the type of rain
and N. Y. O. Bicycle Outing places, such as railroad crossings of Mr. and Mrs. E. Nakashima Kobayashi, second son of Mr. and that people stand around in ut
to Ideal Beach, starts at 9 and banks of canals. The signs to Harry Haruyoshi Tanouyg Mrs. Teiji Kobayashi, was an tering poetic things, and general
read:
a.m .
eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. E. nounced on June 23 at the home
“Those wishing to commit sui- Tannouye, took place at the of the Adachi’s.
21—Montreal. Quebec JCCA’s AnBut the weather, like a woman
side, just a minute. Come and Queen Street United Church or
Sewanins for the occasion are
nual Picnic, at Cap. St. Jaccan
change. I think the rain that
have a heart to heart chat at June 16. Rev. K. Shimizu offici Mr. and Mrs. Yoshio Nishimura.
ques, buses leave 9 a.m.
fell, produced the effect of beyour public welfare office.”
*
*
*
ated.
ing
able to appreciate the sunny
22—Toronto. U. of T. Nisei
Reception took place at the BIRTHS
stuff that followed.
Students’ Club’s picnic, at
Japanese Tribal Woman Great China Chop Suey.
*
*
*
Jackson’s
TORONTO
—
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Following
a
honeymoon
trip
to
Dances for Ridgways
Where or When . . .
Point.
Muskoka, the couple is residing Jack J. Asano (nee Betty Shino
TOKYO
wrinkled old at 106 Markham St.
hara) announce the birth of a
I found
J I • enjoyed this piCIliC
lady, wife of a tribal chieftain
daughter on June 15 at the though despite the showers and
Sewanins are Mr. and Mrs. M.
6 Toronto. — Nisei AYPA pic on the village of Shiraoi on the
Women’s College Hospital.
the mud. I found myself won
Yamada
and Mr. and Mrs.
nic, at Lakeview Park, Osha- Island of Hokkaido, wearing nat
*
*
*
dering where all the upwards of
Usukawa.
wa.
ive costume of the hairy Ainus
*
*
*
TORONTO — Born to Mr. 1300 people came from. I saw
18—Toronto. Metropolitan Nisei tribe of Northern Japan danced
and Mrs. Y. E. Oikawa (nee Sal- lots of interesting Nisei faces,
ENGAGEMENTS
an
ancient
ritual
in
the
home
of
Fellowship's annual picnic, at
ly Eguchi) on June 8 at the St. fascinating ones too, although
CHATHAM, Ont. — The en- Michael’s Hospital, a daughter, most of them were unfamiliar
Mossmgton Park, Lake Sim- General and Mrs. Matthew Ridg
way, UN commander, last week. gagement was announced of Ta- Diane Louise.
coe.
to me.
Mrs.
Saki
Miyamoto
made
the
<eko,
second
daughter
of
Mr.
and
uiiiiiiHnHimniiiiinuimiiiiiiniiiij
*
*
*
Especially the Nisei girls who
trip from Northern Japan to Mrs. F. Fujimagari of Taber,
ST. VITAL, Man. — Mr. and certainly know how to dress be
Three B.C. Issei Get
wish good fortune to the general Alta., and Mr. Harry Noboru
'
and gave him a carved bear, a 3aba of Chatham, Ont., on June Mrs. S. Sakiyama are happy to comingly and who have an ap
Canadian Citizenship
announce the birth of a son, pealing freslmess about them,
goodwill gift from the 600 villag 23 at the home of Mr. Yagi.
Kenji
Grant, on June 13, at the particularly at an affair like
-\nd forks, b. c. — ers and danced for them. At the
Sewanins
are
Mr.
and
Mrs. Maternity Pavilion, "Winnipeg this, unlike on the city streets
Three Issei district residents end of the performance, Gen.
Watanabe and Mr. and Mrs. General Hospital., a brother for where it seems that Niseis wear
were awarded Canadian Citizen- Ridgway shook her hand.
Kudo, both of Chatham.
Rodney.
ship papers by Judge M. M. Cola somewhat shut-in, “I don’t
Mrs. Miyamoto’s mouth is a
quhoun and applications for dark circle which at an earlier
know, you” look on their faces.
Canadian Citizenship of two oth- age made her more attractive to
ers were approved recently.
ainu men. It is a tribal custom
Getting their papers were Mrs where at the age of 11, all girls
■
—pinning ribbons on to the babes
Hiroye Madokoro. Greenwood cut the surface of the skin away
who crossed the finish-line in
Mrs. Miyoko Mitsui. Greenwood, from around the mouth and keep
MONTREAL — Details of the Sunday.
‘he ’”S'
and Shigeo Hama, Christina rubbing charcoal into the flesh.
Memberchin
+
Picnics are all right—if it
Hideo Miyamoto, Gram Ihose who didn’t were considered Annual Quebec JCCA Picnic on I
Forks,
lazy and couldn’t get husbands.
wood, 1
applications apsummer projects, were settled "at '„ cont^tte txe^ttve^"1^
FL0WER ARRANGEMENT
proved.
8 Denver Kids Rob
I’PCMlt meeting
mcphncr a
Maza body.
kArl.,
I .
.
.
’
LONDON, Ollt.
To Op^H
a recent
of-F the
fees having been set at $3.00
Nisei Of $1,800
pei the three-week exhibition of floThe picnic site is to be at Cap. season plus a monthly levy
Patronize
th
1 ra^ Pa^n^n^s by prominent CanDENVER, Colo. — Local de- St. Jacques where the grounds member for the upkeep of
Our
e adian artists which was spontectives who investigated the are favourable for baseball and tennis balls,
Iduerfisers
sored by the London Horticulburglary of $1,800 and several g-ames, and also ideal for swim—- ---------------------- —
4
and the L°nd°n
$50 shirts and $40 trousers from ming. Tickets
Tickets are
are $1.50
$1.50 for
for adad- I Wins Scholastic Award
ults,
75
cents
for
students,
and
S
bcholc£Sllc
Award
Art
Gallery,
two
Japanese-CanP 0 R I R A I T • COMMERCIAL • COLOUR
the apartment of a Los Angeles
GRAND FORKS, B. C. — One a,
'vomeiW Mrs. Sue Nunoda
Nisei chick-sexor visiting Denver 45 cents for persons going bv
Obokata .vere
located eight children—aged 11 private car. For those who are of 34 graduates from the Grand ™
70
years
and
over,
no
admission
F
orks
Hi
„h
School
of
V
^^
!pr
®
Sent
a dispiay
to 15—who admitted stealing- the
will
be
charged
'
School
last
month,
[
of
Japanese
floral
arrangements.
loot.
r
'
Blanche Kimura received the
Also in the city jail was Mrs.
hour
buses
have
been
reserved
“
SrhnhcHp
,
>n dunoas si w Toronto
Jennie Lucero whose three child- for the picnickers; two buses
MICKEY S. SATO
ren were among the vountr juve- leaving the Sun Life Building at | sistent hl°h academic standing.
„
Agent
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
nile delinquents.
^S
9 a.m. harp which will meet the
Office: 21 Dundas Square
The children
climbed into
aS?
Phone EM. 3-0076-7
other two vehicles leaving the Acknowledgements
Res.: 526 Manning Avenue
Charles Aoki’s apartment from C.P.R. Station at Jean Talon and
* raw?
TORONTO, ONT.
the roof and threw out the loot Park Avenue, from where they
Res. ME. 6072
NeW Canadian acknow
onto
the
ground.
They
then
took
a
will proceed to the picnic grounds, hedges with thanks generous dothe booty to Mrs. Lucero's home
Everyone is cordially invited I nations from the following:
BILL TAKEDA
V284.A YONGE STREET, TORONTO, ONT.
where she divided the clothes
General Insurance
to
come
to
this
picnic
where
among them and also gave them
———————---224 Delhi Ave. Phone RE. 2385
there will be games, refresh
each one $100 bill.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Uchimam,
Tor
Lucien
C.
Kurata
j
Wilson Heights P. O., Ont.
ments and prizes. If the day
I
onto,
on
the
occasion
of
their
Barrister and Solicitor
I
Automobile, Fire, Burglary
turns out to be dull and rainy,
Fuku-biki Winners
I
1 Adelaide St. E.> Toronto
daughter
’
s
marriage.
Eire,
Accident & Sickness, etc.
the picnic will be postponed until
I
To Be Announced
t 1st «uul -2nd Jlortgugc Losns
Mrs.
Masa
Teramura,
Toronto,
a future date which will be set
I
arranged
on the occasion of her daughter’s
Circumstances did not allow the by the Picnic Committee.
Office EM-4 5259 Res. LY.3427 i
marriage.
I
T. Kobayashi
i fuku-biki to take place but the
The executive committee for
Mr. Kiyoshi Inouye, Winnipeg,
Agent
•
winners will be announced when the JCCA’s other* project—■the
and Mrs. Kato Kenno.
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
Montreal JCCA Tennis Club- Fort William Ont., on recent
a later drawing takes place.
COMPANY OF CANADA
chosen with Doug Inose : birth of son.
WU~ QUEEN ST. W.
Box 149 Kamloops, B. C.
elected to head the newly formed
Nichiren-shu members, TorFor Pick-up and Del tvary
club. Assisting him on the slate onto.
Phone
are John Shintani, vice-presiand Mrs. S. Sakiyama, St.
WA. 6953
dent;
Sheila
Kosaka.
secretary;
FOR RENT
Man.', on birth of son.
Tom Enta. treasurer : Shirley
and Mrs. Enjiro Naka^''$ BOOMS, upstairs, and Tanaka and Gabby Inamoto. shima
Residence:
EM4-050S
Toronto, on marriage of
share kitchen. Owner not home coaches.
Agent
2 Vesta Drivi
daughter.
during
summer.
Adult
preferred.
MAfair 1365.
o00< Quebec St., phone FAirmonarch life
Mx. and Mrs. Eitaro Tanouye.
The Club will have the use
mount 1840M, Vancouver.
Andrew E, McKague,
of four courts at the Montreal Toronto, on marriage of son.
ASSURANCE CO.
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jack
Asano,
TorCollege
on
the
corner
of
Guy
and
__ business_for_sale
Public66 King St. E., — Tel. 2-2594
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
i
GROCERY with living quart- Sherbrooke Sts. Playing dates °?°’ °n the occasion of the birth
Hamilton
330 Bay St.
i ers. for sale snap for cash. Anton have been set on Tuesdays and of their daughter.
(Comer Adelaide & Bay Sts.)
Kapusskasmg J CCA Chapter, in
Residence:
i Dlugon. 600 Steveston Highway. Fridays in the evenings, and Sat
TORONTO
memory of the late Mr. Yasu59 Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960
urdays from 1'2 noon and all dav taro Takenaka.
Quebec JCCA Sets Annual
icnic, Forms Tennis Club
0. K. CLEANERS
K. GOTO
THE
NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, Juh,
Tokyo Billboards Set
To Reduce Suicides
erJonct
(cant'd from P. 1}
cro65
TOKYO — Tokyo’s city fa
thers plan a billboard campaign
14—Vancouver. Vancouver Nisei to combat the rising number of
down like all the supposed fun
Baseball Club’s Dance, at suicides.
MARRIAGES
KAMLOOPS, B. C. — The en in hell with the same effect of
Ukrainian Hall, corner Prin
gagement of Miss Sadie Sadae, having someone throwing a full
The metropolitan office (city
TANO UYE — NAKASHIMA
cess and Cordova.
hall) announced it soon woulc
TORONTO — The marriage of eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. bucket of water right overVour
15—Montreal. Montreal G. A. C. erect billboards at “suitable’ Mickey Mitsuko, third daughter Yoji Adachi, and Mr. Kar Kaoru head. It’s not the type of rain
and N. Y. O. Bicycle Outing places, such as railroad crossings of Mr. and Mrs. E. Nakashima Kobayashi, second son of Mr. and that people stand around in ut
to Ideal Beach, starts at 9 and banks of canals. The signs to Harry Haruyoshi Tanouyg Mrs. Teiji Kobayashi, was an tering poetic things, and general
read:
a.m .
eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. E. nounced on June 23 at the home
“Those wishing to commit sui- Tannouye, took place at the of the Adachi’s.
21—Montreal. Quebec JCCA’s AnBut the weather, like a woman
side, just a minute. Come and Queen Street United Church or
Sewanins for the occasion are
nual Picnic, at Cap. St. Jaccan
change. I think the rain that
have a heart to heart chat at June 16. Rev. K. Shimizu offici Mr. and Mrs. Yoshio Nishimura.
ques, buses leave 9 a.m.
fell, produced the effect of beyour public welfare office.”
*
*
*
ated.
ing
able to appreciate the sunny
22—Toronto. U. of T. Nisei
Reception took place at the BIRTHS
stuff that followed.
Students’ Club’s picnic, at
Japanese Tribal Woman Great China Chop Suey.
*
*
*
Jackson’s
TORONTO
—
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Following
a
honeymoon
trip
to
Dances for Ridgways
Where or When . . .
Point.
Muskoka, the couple is residing Jack J. Asano (nee Betty Shino
TOKYO
wrinkled old at 106 Markham St.
hara) announce the birth of a
I found
J I • enjoyed this piCIliC
lady, wife of a tribal chieftain
daughter on June 15 at the though despite the showers and
Sewanins are Mr. and Mrs. M.
6 Toronto. — Nisei AYPA pic on the village of Shiraoi on the
Women’s College Hospital.
the mud. I found myself won
Yamada
and Mr. and Mrs.
nic, at Lakeview Park, Osha- Island of Hokkaido, wearing nat
*
*
*
dering where all the upwards of
Usukawa.
wa.
ive costume of the hairy Ainus
*
*
*
TORONTO — Born to Mr. 1300 people came from. I saw
18—Toronto. Metropolitan Nisei tribe of Northern Japan danced
and Mrs. Y. E. Oikawa (nee Sal- lots of interesting Nisei faces,
ENGAGEMENTS
an
ancient
ritual
in
the
home
of
Fellowship's annual picnic, at
ly Eguchi) on June 8 at the St. fascinating ones too, although
CHATHAM, Ont. — The en- Michael’s Hospital, a daughter, most of them were unfamiliar
Mossmgton Park, Lake Sim- General and Mrs. Matthew Ridg
way, UN commander, last week. gagement was announced of Ta- Diane Louise.
coe.
to me.
Mrs.
Saki
Miyamoto
made
the
<eko,
second
daughter
of
Mr.
and
uiiiiiiHnHimniiiiinuimiiiiiiniiiij
*
*
*
Especially the Nisei girls who
trip from Northern Japan to Mrs. F. Fujimagari of Taber,
ST. VITAL, Man. — Mr. and certainly know how to dress be
Three B.C. Issei Get
wish good fortune to the general Alta., and Mr. Harry Noboru
'
and gave him a carved bear, a 3aba of Chatham, Ont., on June Mrs. S. Sakiyama are happy to comingly and who have an ap
Canadian Citizenship
announce the birth of a son, pealing freslmess about them,
goodwill gift from the 600 villag 23 at the home of Mr. Yagi.
Kenji
Grant, on June 13, at the particularly at an affair like
-\nd forks, b. c. — ers and danced for them. At the
Sewanins
are
Mr.
and
Mrs. Maternity Pavilion, "Winnipeg this, unlike on the city streets
Three Issei district residents end of the performance, Gen.
Watanabe and Mr. and Mrs. General Hospital., a brother for where it seems that Niseis wear
were awarded Canadian Citizen- Ridgway shook her hand.
Kudo, both of Chatham.
Rodney.
ship papers by Judge M. M. Cola somewhat shut-in, “I don’t
Mrs. Miyamoto’s mouth is a
quhoun and applications for dark circle which at an earlier
know, you” look on their faces.
Canadian Citizenship of two oth- age made her more attractive to
ers were approved recently.
ainu men. It is a tribal custom
Getting their papers were Mrs where at the age of 11, all girls
■
—pinning ribbons on to the babes
Hiroye Madokoro. Greenwood cut the surface of the skin away
who crossed the finish-line in
Mrs. Miyoko Mitsui. Greenwood, from around the mouth and keep
MONTREAL — Details of the Sunday.
‘he ’”S'
and Shigeo Hama, Christina rubbing charcoal into the flesh.
Memberchin
+
Picnics are all right—if it
Hideo Miyamoto, Gram Ihose who didn’t were considered Annual Quebec JCCA Picnic on I
Forks,
lazy and couldn’t get husbands.
wood, 1
applications apsummer projects, were settled "at '„ cont^tte txe^ttve^"1^
FL0WER ARRANGEMENT
proved.
8 Denver Kids Rob
I’PCMlt meeting
mcphncr a
Maza body.
kArl.,
I .
.
.
’
LONDON, Ollt.
To Op^H
a recent
of-F the
fees having been set at $3.00
Nisei Of $1,800
pei the three-week exhibition of floThe picnic site is to be at Cap. season plus a monthly levy
Patronize
th
1 ra^ Pa^n^n^s by prominent CanDENVER, Colo. — Local de- St. Jacques where the grounds member for the upkeep of
Our
e adian artists which was spontectives who investigated the are favourable for baseball and tennis balls,
Iduerfisers
sored by the London Horticulburglary of $1,800 and several g-ames, and also ideal for swim—- ---------------------- —
4
and the L°nd°n
$50 shirts and $40 trousers from ming. Tickets
Tickets are
are $1.50
$1.50 for
for adad- I Wins Scholastic Award
ults,
75
cents
for
students,
and
S
bcholc£Sllc
Award
Art
Gallery,
two
Japanese-CanP 0 R I R A I T • COMMERCIAL • COLOUR
the apartment of a Los Angeles
GRAND FORKS, B. C. — One a,
'vomeiW Mrs. Sue Nunoda
Nisei chick-sexor visiting Denver 45 cents for persons going bv
Obokata .vere
located eight children—aged 11 private car. For those who are of 34 graduates from the Grand ™
70
years
and
over,
no
admission
F
orks
Hi
„h
School
of
V
^^
!pr
®
Sent
a dispiay
to 15—who admitted stealing- the
will
be
charged
'
School
last
month,
[
of
Japanese
floral
arrangements.
loot.
r
'
Blanche Kimura received the
Also in the city jail was Mrs.
hour
buses
have
been
reserved
“
SrhnhcHp
,
>n dunoas si w Toronto
Jennie Lucero whose three child- for the picnickers; two buses
MICKEY S. SATO
ren were among the vountr juve- leaving the Sun Life Building at | sistent hl°h academic standing.
„
Agent
CROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
nile delinquents.
^S
9 a.m. harp which will meet the
Office: 21 Dundas Square
The children
climbed into
aS?
Phone EM. 3-0076-7
other two vehicles leaving the Acknowledgements
Res.: 526 Manning Avenue
Charles Aoki’s apartment from C.P.R. Station at Jean Talon and
* raw?
TORONTO, ONT.
the roof and threw out the loot Park Avenue, from where they
Res. ME. 6072
NeW Canadian acknow
onto
the
ground.
They
then
took
a
will proceed to the picnic grounds, hedges with thanks generous dothe booty to Mrs. Lucero's home
Everyone is cordially invited I nations from the following:
BILL TAKEDA
V284.A YONGE STREET, TORONTO, ONT.
where she divided the clothes
General Insurance
to
come
to
this
picnic
where
among them and also gave them
———————---224 Delhi Ave. Phone RE. 2385
there will be games, refresh
each one $100 bill.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Uchimam,
Tor
Lucien
C.
Kurata
j
Wilson Heights P. O., Ont.
ments and prizes. If the day
I
onto,
on
the
occasion
of
their
Barrister and Solicitor
I
Automobile, Fire, Burglary
turns out to be dull and rainy,
Fuku-biki Winners
I
1 Adelaide St. E.> Toronto
daughter
’
s
marriage.
Eire,
Accident & Sickness, etc.
the picnic will be postponed until
I
To Be Announced
t 1st «uul -2nd Jlortgugc Losns
Mrs.
Masa
Teramura,
Toronto,
a future date which will be set
I
arranged
on the occasion of her daughter’s
Circumstances did not allow the by the Picnic Committee.
Office EM-4 5259 Res. LY.3427 i
marriage.
I
T. Kobayashi
i fuku-biki to take place but the
The executive committee for
Mr. Kiyoshi Inouye, Winnipeg,
Agent
•
winners will be announced when the JCCA’s other* project—■the
and Mrs. Kato Kenno.
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
Montreal JCCA Tennis Club- Fort William Ont., on recent
a later drawing takes place.
COMPANY OF CANADA
chosen with Doug Inose : birth of son.
WU~ QUEEN ST. W.
Box 149 Kamloops, B. C.
elected to head the newly formed
Nichiren-shu members, TorFor Pick-up and Del tvary
club. Assisting him on the slate onto.
Phone
are John Shintani, vice-presiand Mrs. S. Sakiyama, St.
WA. 6953
dent;
Sheila
Kosaka.
secretary;
FOR RENT
Man.', on birth of son.
Tom Enta. treasurer : Shirley
and Mrs. Enjiro Naka^''$ BOOMS, upstairs, and Tanaka and Gabby Inamoto. shima
Residence:
EM4-050S
Toronto, on marriage of
share kitchen. Owner not home coaches.
Agent
2 Vesta Drivi
daughter.
during
summer.
Adult
preferred.
MAfair 1365.
o00< Quebec St., phone FAirmonarch life
Mx. and Mrs. Eitaro Tanouye.
The Club will have the use
mount 1840M, Vancouver.
Andrew E, McKague,
of four courts at the Montreal Toronto, on marriage of son.
ASSURANCE CO.
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jack
Asano,
TorCollege
on
the
corner
of
Guy
and
__ business_for_sale
Public66 King St. E., — Tel. 2-2594
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
i
GROCERY with living quart- Sherbrooke Sts. Playing dates °?°’ °n the occasion of the birth
Hamilton
330 Bay St.
i ers. for sale snap for cash. Anton have been set on Tuesdays and of their daughter.
(Comer Adelaide & Bay Sts.)
Kapusskasmg J CCA Chapter, in
Residence:
i Dlugon. 600 Steveston Highway. Fridays in the evenings, and Sat
TORONTO
memory of the late Mr. Yasu59 Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960
urdays from 1'2 noon and all dav taro Takenaka.
Quebec JCCA Sets Annual
icnic, Forms Tennis Club
0. K. CLEANERS
K. GOTO