Page 1
Named Branch Manager
Of Largest Hawaii Bank
passing thru
By KEN ADACHI
Variations on a theme . . .
A few columns back, I wrote
an effort, on The Ideal (Nisei)
Girl—a thing that could obvi
ously only exist in fairy-tale
books, technicolour movies, and
popular song’s, and, rarely in the
unappealing black and white re
ality of everyday life. I said
that, one has to be able to com
promise and be philosophical ab
out the whole thing.
Now comes a letter from a
Nisei Joe who admits to be the
type who regularly and desperat
ely form the stag-line at the Ni
sei dances—this type is always
on the look-out for a girl. The
Nisei Joe, I’m afraid is quite
frustrated and melancholy about
Nisei girls. I quote:
“ . . . About the ideal girl—
looks and figure are just corne
ous, they’re important but not
as important as other things
such as understanding. A girl
doesn’t have to be well-read, see
the latest movies, and know the
latest gossips to be understand
ing. If they have a little patience,
and if they remember the cold
you had last week—that’s under
standing and thoughtfulness . . .
“ ... It pains me to see well
shaped, good-looking girls flout
ing in vain and abusing their
beauty. I admit a beautiful girl
can haunt you night and day,
just like the song, but no male
has any use for beauty with a
cold heart. It’s easy to see that
most Nisei girls possess more
that theii' share of beauty. Now if
they would use a little of their
common sense and. discard their
vanity for understanding, I would
be greatly pleased.”
Now this Nisei Joe who selfadmittedly says that he is a mem
ber of the stag-line type who
stand in line and hold up the
wall while discussing girls and
ogling at them without doing
anything about the unhappy situ
ation, seems to me to be almost
a hopeless case. The disillusion
ment resulting from the fallen
pedestal upon which he has per
haps put a Nisei girl has left
him a sadly shattered and deso
late man. I hope some sweet
young-thing will bouy up his ego
again.
*
*
*
The feminine rebuttal . . .
I pass on to another letter,
this time from a Nisei girl . . .
“ . . . Got a great kick out of
the column about the ideal girl
• . . but you fail to mention that
the girl is probably going to be
the mother of your children. You
tail to realize that the girl must
(Con’t on P. 8)
HONOLULU — The Bishop
National Bank, Hawaii's largest
banking organization, last week
named a Nisei as manager to its
newest branch being opened in
Honolulu.
Ted Imamoto, after more than
20 years of service with the
Bishop Bank, was chosen to head
its 21st branch. All the directors
of the bank are Caucasians.
To observers here, the appoint
ment of a Nisei branch manager
by the Bishop Bank had the ear
marks of having been motivated,
in part at least, by business
competition. Two years ago.
Bishop’s chief competitor, the
Bank of Hawaii, selected a Ni
sei, Gus Yamagata, to head a
downtown Honolulu branch where
he is still the manager.
The cases of Yamagata and
Imamoto have served to demon
strate the gradual promotions
and prestige which have come to
aspiring Japanese Americans in
Hawaii’s business life. For a
long time, Nisei have complained
of so-called dual standards of
pay and promotions, under which
they emerged “second best” in
competition with Caucasians.
Of late, however, Caucasian di
rectors and executives of many
of the larger' establishments have
begun to seek out promising Ni
sei for- more important posts in
their organizations. This change
in attitude is believed to
stem from two considerations:
First, the rising economic status
of the Japanese buying clientele,
and second, the increasing com
petence of Nisei employes, espe
cially the younger men and wo
men who enter the labor market
more qualified by training and
education than their predeces
sors of years past.
Developed New Variety
Of Berryz Passes Away
NEW WESTMINISTER, B. C.
— Senjuro Saito, an Issei fruit
grower formerly of Pitt Mea
dows, B. C., who developed a
new variety of strawberry which
became known as the Saito ber
ry, passed away at his home
here on June 27.
"Go for Broke!”
Finally Opens
In Toronto
After several postponements
caused by the popularity of
“The Great Caruso”, IMG M's
442nd Combat Regiment sto
ry. “Go for Broke”’ opened
its regular Toronto engage
ment today at Loew’s Theatre.
“Go for Broke!” played as
a special midnight feature on
Monday, July 2. Young Niseis
made a good share of the wee
hour audience. It’s also report
ed that some Nisei youngsters
getting into the mood of the
war film were heard yelling
“Go for broke!” after the per
formance.
Issei Fire-Fighting
Near Hope, Drowns
VANCOUVER — Funeral ser
vices for Yoshikuni Adachi, whose
body was found in a river near
Hope, B. C., where he had been
fire-fighting, was held on July
6.
According to the report, the
late Mr. Adachi, an Issei who
had been employed as a carpen
ter in the Hope area, had gone
out to fight a forest fire and
had been missing for several
days prior to the recovery of his
body. No word has been received
as to the cause of his death,
but it is believed that he fell in
to the river and drowned.
Ex-Vancouver Priest
To Visit B. C., Alta.
VANCOUVER, B. C. — Rev.
Z. Kawasaki, formerly of the
Hompa Buddhist Church of Van
couver. is to visit Alberta and
B.C. points, it was learned from
Rev. Y. Kawamura of Alberta,
who is presently in Vancouver.
Rev. Kawasaki is expected to
reach Alberta on July 11, and
after touring that province, he
will enter B.C. He will be in B.
C. until July 17.
Rev. Kawasaki, who was in
Vancouver 15 years ago, is the
resident minister of the Visalia
Buddhist Church in Visalia, Calif.
Hamilton Nisei is Elected
Prexy of YMCA Committee
At Cleveland Convention
CLEVELAND — Two Niseis^
from Canada took part in the
Young Mission Couple
Centennial International Young
Mens’ Christian Association Con Leaving for Japan
vention in Cleveland, Ohio, cele
Rev. F. L. Pickering, B.A., M.
brating the 100th anniversary of Th., who is assistant minister at
the Y.M.C.A. in North America a Baptist church in Toronto, and
as well as other Niseis from the his wife, Rev. Marion Pickering,
United States, the Territory of B.A., B.D., arc leaving later this
Hawaii, and delegates from Ja year for Japan where they will
pan. who gathered last week in go into missionary work.
the American city.
The couple will be the first
Along with the 7,000 dele from the Baptist Church of
gates, they listened to such noted Canada to go to Japan. Mrs.
speakers as Dr. Ralph Bunehe, Pickering’ was born in China of
Paul Hoffman and Dr. Ralph missionary parents.
Sockman during the celebration.
The two Niseis wearing Can
Young Adult Assembly, a Ha
adian capers—smartly designed
waiian Nisei girl, now living in
caps made especially for Can
Cleveland, entertained the dele
adian delegates—were Gus Oki
gates with a colorful performance
and Jack Takayesu, both from
of a Hawaiian Hula Dance.
the Hamilton YMCA.
Over twenty delegates came
Gus Oki who is studying at
from
Japan to join in the cele
the George Williams College in
Montreal, joined the Student brations and attend the various
YMCA Conference while Jack group conferences. The Japanese
Takayesu, Fast-Chairman of the registered in the International
Hamilton So-Ed Club, attended Y’smen Convention, the Trienni
the North American Young Adult al Conference of Association of
Secretaries, 6th Hi-Y' Congress,
Assembly and the 6th National
Y'oung
Adult Conference, as well
Young Adult Conference.
as others.
Takayesu who was one of a
Plans for the next North Am
total delegation of 48 from Ha
milton, Ont., came away with a erican Y'oung Adult Assembly
national appointment when he are well underway with Canada
was elected President of the slated as host in 1954 to young
National So-Ed Committee of adults from all over the conti
Canada at the biennial meeting nent.
The Japanese Canadians who
held at the Cleveland YMCA. The
National So-Ed is a body serv were present at the Centennial
ing more than 55 So-Ed clubs, Celebrations were just one of the
whose memberships total well ov examples of the different races
from the 27 of the 76 nations
er 10,000 across Canada.
served
by the YMCA who gath
Although American Nisei were
not seen, it was believed that ered in Cleveland.
a few had registered for the
Cecil L. Brown, general secre
Centennial Celebration.
tary of the Hamilton YMCA,
Nine Nisei teenagers from all said, “There was no evidence of
parts of Hawaii attended the In any boundary lines of race,
ternational Hi-Y Congress and at creed, or color. All sat and plan
least two Nisei couples attended ned together, all spoke with one
the International Y’smen Con voice in open forums and shared
vention. In the North American the speakers rostrum.
Contest Has 42 Girls
LOS ANGELES — The Queen
Race of the 11th amiual Nisei
Week Festival officially got un
der way last week with 42 girls
in the running. Of the 42 candi
dates, so far only 10 have offi
During the war he relocated to cially registered as contestants
Kamloops, B. C., and returned for the Queen title.
Nisei Week Festival this year
to the coast recently. He was 65
is to take place Aug. 18-26.
years of age.
Sally Nakamura Signed Again
To 2nd Film Role in Tokyo
TOKYO — Vancouver-born Girl”, a Breakston-Stahl produc
Satoshi “Sally” Nakamura who tion, now being made in Tokyo.
appeared in Nisei concerts in His first role was that of a vil
Vancouver before the war and
lain in “Tokyo File 212”, which
cavorted in the outfield for the
Asahis has been assigned to his ! is being released throug RKO.
| (Ed. Note: Film has not been
second American film role.
He is to appear in “Geisha I shown in Canada as yet.)
U.S. Congress Restores
Citizenship to Two Niseis
WASHINGTON, D. C. — Pre
sident Truman last week signed
two private bills restoring citi
zenship to two Nisei girls who
were expatriated by voting in
postwar Japanese elections. They
are the first bills of their kind
affecting Japanese Americans to
be approved by Congress since
World War II.
The bills would permit Shizue
Sakurada and Dorothy Maeda
who each admitted voting under
pressure in the Japanese elec
tions of 1946-47, to regain Amer
ican citizenship by taking the
oath of naturalization.
These bills are the first ever
approved to restore citizenship to
expatriated Nisei, although such
private bills are not at all un
common involving persons of
other nationalities.
Tn the past the only Nisei ex
patriates who have regained
citizenship where the only factor
was voting in postwar elections,
have done so in court cases. Ap
proximately 20 such cases have
been brought in American courts
by Nisei strandees. All but one
case has resulted in restoration
of citizenship.
.Meanwhile, the JACL is spon
soring general legislation which
would permit Nisei expatriates to
regain citizenship by taking the
oath of naturalization.
Of Largest Hawaii Bank
passing thru
By KEN ADACHI
Variations on a theme . . .
A few columns back, I wrote
an effort, on The Ideal (Nisei)
Girl—a thing that could obvi
ously only exist in fairy-tale
books, technicolour movies, and
popular song’s, and, rarely in the
unappealing black and white re
ality of everyday life. I said
that, one has to be able to com
promise and be philosophical ab
out the whole thing.
Now comes a letter from a
Nisei Joe who admits to be the
type who regularly and desperat
ely form the stag-line at the Ni
sei dances—this type is always
on the look-out for a girl. The
Nisei Joe, I’m afraid is quite
frustrated and melancholy about
Nisei girls. I quote:
“ . . . About the ideal girl—
looks and figure are just corne
ous, they’re important but not
as important as other things
such as understanding. A girl
doesn’t have to be well-read, see
the latest movies, and know the
latest gossips to be understand
ing. If they have a little patience,
and if they remember the cold
you had last week—that’s under
standing and thoughtfulness . . .
“ ... It pains me to see well
shaped, good-looking girls flout
ing in vain and abusing their
beauty. I admit a beautiful girl
can haunt you night and day,
just like the song, but no male
has any use for beauty with a
cold heart. It’s easy to see that
most Nisei girls possess more
that theii' share of beauty. Now if
they would use a little of their
common sense and. discard their
vanity for understanding, I would
be greatly pleased.”
Now this Nisei Joe who selfadmittedly says that he is a mem
ber of the stag-line type who
stand in line and hold up the
wall while discussing girls and
ogling at them without doing
anything about the unhappy situ
ation, seems to me to be almost
a hopeless case. The disillusion
ment resulting from the fallen
pedestal upon which he has per
haps put a Nisei girl has left
him a sadly shattered and deso
late man. I hope some sweet
young-thing will bouy up his ego
again.
*
*
*
The feminine rebuttal . . .
I pass on to another letter,
this time from a Nisei girl . . .
“ . . . Got a great kick out of
the column about the ideal girl
• . . but you fail to mention that
the girl is probably going to be
the mother of your children. You
tail to realize that the girl must
(Con’t on P. 8)
HONOLULU — The Bishop
National Bank, Hawaii's largest
banking organization, last week
named a Nisei as manager to its
newest branch being opened in
Honolulu.
Ted Imamoto, after more than
20 years of service with the
Bishop Bank, was chosen to head
its 21st branch. All the directors
of the bank are Caucasians.
To observers here, the appoint
ment of a Nisei branch manager
by the Bishop Bank had the ear
marks of having been motivated,
in part at least, by business
competition. Two years ago.
Bishop’s chief competitor, the
Bank of Hawaii, selected a Ni
sei, Gus Yamagata, to head a
downtown Honolulu branch where
he is still the manager.
The cases of Yamagata and
Imamoto have served to demon
strate the gradual promotions
and prestige which have come to
aspiring Japanese Americans in
Hawaii’s business life. For a
long time, Nisei have complained
of so-called dual standards of
pay and promotions, under which
they emerged “second best” in
competition with Caucasians.
Of late, however, Caucasian di
rectors and executives of many
of the larger' establishments have
begun to seek out promising Ni
sei for- more important posts in
their organizations. This change
in attitude is believed to
stem from two considerations:
First, the rising economic status
of the Japanese buying clientele,
and second, the increasing com
petence of Nisei employes, espe
cially the younger men and wo
men who enter the labor market
more qualified by training and
education than their predeces
sors of years past.
Developed New Variety
Of Berryz Passes Away
NEW WESTMINISTER, B. C.
— Senjuro Saito, an Issei fruit
grower formerly of Pitt Mea
dows, B. C., who developed a
new variety of strawberry which
became known as the Saito ber
ry, passed away at his home
here on June 27.
"Go for Broke!”
Finally Opens
In Toronto
After several postponements
caused by the popularity of
“The Great Caruso”, IMG M's
442nd Combat Regiment sto
ry. “Go for Broke”’ opened
its regular Toronto engage
ment today at Loew’s Theatre.
“Go for Broke!” played as
a special midnight feature on
Monday, July 2. Young Niseis
made a good share of the wee
hour audience. It’s also report
ed that some Nisei youngsters
getting into the mood of the
war film were heard yelling
“Go for broke!” after the per
formance.
Issei Fire-Fighting
Near Hope, Drowns
VANCOUVER — Funeral ser
vices for Yoshikuni Adachi, whose
body was found in a river near
Hope, B. C., where he had been
fire-fighting, was held on July
6.
According to the report, the
late Mr. Adachi, an Issei who
had been employed as a carpen
ter in the Hope area, had gone
out to fight a forest fire and
had been missing for several
days prior to the recovery of his
body. No word has been received
as to the cause of his death,
but it is believed that he fell in
to the river and drowned.
Ex-Vancouver Priest
To Visit B. C., Alta.
VANCOUVER, B. C. — Rev.
Z. Kawasaki, formerly of the
Hompa Buddhist Church of Van
couver. is to visit Alberta and
B.C. points, it was learned from
Rev. Y. Kawamura of Alberta,
who is presently in Vancouver.
Rev. Kawasaki is expected to
reach Alberta on July 11, and
after touring that province, he
will enter B.C. He will be in B.
C. until July 17.
Rev. Kawasaki, who was in
Vancouver 15 years ago, is the
resident minister of the Visalia
Buddhist Church in Visalia, Calif.
Hamilton Nisei is Elected
Prexy of YMCA Committee
At Cleveland Convention
CLEVELAND — Two Niseis^
from Canada took part in the
Young Mission Couple
Centennial International Young
Mens’ Christian Association Con Leaving for Japan
vention in Cleveland, Ohio, cele
Rev. F. L. Pickering, B.A., M.
brating the 100th anniversary of Th., who is assistant minister at
the Y.M.C.A. in North America a Baptist church in Toronto, and
as well as other Niseis from the his wife, Rev. Marion Pickering,
United States, the Territory of B.A., B.D., arc leaving later this
Hawaii, and delegates from Ja year for Japan where they will
pan. who gathered last week in go into missionary work.
the American city.
The couple will be the first
Along with the 7,000 dele from the Baptist Church of
gates, they listened to such noted Canada to go to Japan. Mrs.
speakers as Dr. Ralph Bunehe, Pickering’ was born in China of
Paul Hoffman and Dr. Ralph missionary parents.
Sockman during the celebration.
The two Niseis wearing Can
Young Adult Assembly, a Ha
adian capers—smartly designed
waiian Nisei girl, now living in
caps made especially for Can
Cleveland, entertained the dele
adian delegates—were Gus Oki
gates with a colorful performance
and Jack Takayesu, both from
of a Hawaiian Hula Dance.
the Hamilton YMCA.
Over twenty delegates came
Gus Oki who is studying at
from
Japan to join in the cele
the George Williams College in
Montreal, joined the Student brations and attend the various
YMCA Conference while Jack group conferences. The Japanese
Takayesu, Fast-Chairman of the registered in the International
Hamilton So-Ed Club, attended Y’smen Convention, the Trienni
the North American Young Adult al Conference of Association of
Secretaries, 6th Hi-Y' Congress,
Assembly and the 6th National
Y'oung
Adult Conference, as well
Young Adult Conference.
as others.
Takayesu who was one of a
Plans for the next North Am
total delegation of 48 from Ha
milton, Ont., came away with a erican Y'oung Adult Assembly
national appointment when he are well underway with Canada
was elected President of the slated as host in 1954 to young
National So-Ed Committee of adults from all over the conti
Canada at the biennial meeting nent.
The Japanese Canadians who
held at the Cleveland YMCA. The
National So-Ed is a body serv were present at the Centennial
ing more than 55 So-Ed clubs, Celebrations were just one of the
whose memberships total well ov examples of the different races
from the 27 of the 76 nations
er 10,000 across Canada.
served
by the YMCA who gath
Although American Nisei were
not seen, it was believed that ered in Cleveland.
a few had registered for the
Cecil L. Brown, general secre
Centennial Celebration.
tary of the Hamilton YMCA,
Nine Nisei teenagers from all said, “There was no evidence of
parts of Hawaii attended the In any boundary lines of race,
ternational Hi-Y Congress and at creed, or color. All sat and plan
least two Nisei couples attended ned together, all spoke with one
the International Y’smen Con voice in open forums and shared
vention. In the North American the speakers rostrum.
Contest Has 42 Girls
LOS ANGELES — The Queen
Race of the 11th amiual Nisei
Week Festival officially got un
der way last week with 42 girls
in the running. Of the 42 candi
dates, so far only 10 have offi
During the war he relocated to cially registered as contestants
Kamloops, B. C., and returned for the Queen title.
Nisei Week Festival this year
to the coast recently. He was 65
is to take place Aug. 18-26.
years of age.
Sally Nakamura Signed Again
To 2nd Film Role in Tokyo
TOKYO — Vancouver-born Girl”, a Breakston-Stahl produc
Satoshi “Sally” Nakamura who tion, now being made in Tokyo.
appeared in Nisei concerts in His first role was that of a vil
Vancouver before the war and
lain in “Tokyo File 212”, which
cavorted in the outfield for the
Asahis has been assigned to his ! is being released throug RKO.
| (Ed. Note: Film has not been
second American film role.
He is to appear in “Geisha I shown in Canada as yet.)
U.S. Congress Restores
Citizenship to Two Niseis
WASHINGTON, D. C. — Pre
sident Truman last week signed
two private bills restoring citi
zenship to two Nisei girls who
were expatriated by voting in
postwar Japanese elections. They
are the first bills of their kind
affecting Japanese Americans to
be approved by Congress since
World War II.
The bills would permit Shizue
Sakurada and Dorothy Maeda
who each admitted voting under
pressure in the Japanese elec
tions of 1946-47, to regain Amer
ican citizenship by taking the
oath of naturalization.
These bills are the first ever
approved to restore citizenship to
expatriated Nisei, although such
private bills are not at all un
common involving persons of
other nationalities.
Tn the past the only Nisei ex
patriates who have regained
citizenship where the only factor
was voting in postwar elections,
have done so in court cases. Ap
proximately 20 such cases have
been brought in American courts
by Nisei strandees. All but one
case has resulted in restoration
of citizenship.
.Meanwhile, the JACL is spon
soring general legislation which
would permit Nisei expatriates to
regain citizenship by taking the
oath of naturalization.
Page 2
IS
£■!
PAGE TWO
The New Canadian
NEW CANADIAN
produced a number
which
spread
La sei
spawned at the tir
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
By LARRY TAJIRI
Typical of this sort of product Harbor about NjSe
oisioy
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
To paraphrase xvhat is by noxx- xvas “'Let’s Get Tough,” one of There was Univen s “L
as a medium of expression and news outlet
a tired> cliche, old movies never the Eastside Boys pictures pro Tokyo, USA” in w}among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
die—you can see them every duced by Sam Katzman xvhich Anti-Axis Committe- (there
utilized the talents of Leo Gor- a JACL-sponsored co?
night on television.
Toyo Takata
.Editor.
Video’s use of decade-old mo cey, Bobby Jordan, Huntz Hall, that, name in Lo«
Takaichi Umezuki
Japanese Section Editor
11942) is depicted as rhe f
tion pictures for much of their Gabriel Dell and other members
Ken Mori
Advertising
programming means that a lot of the snarling, roxvdy gang for pro-Japanese esuio^o/
Office Hours:
of hate films, produced in the xvhich skyrocketed to prominence sabotage. There was RKn <
8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m,
Subscription, in Advance:
months following Pearl Harbor, in the stage play, “Dead End.” trayal frOm the East" h ^
Monday to Friday.
$3.00 for six months
may come back to haunt the They xvere the “Dead End Kids” a yell leader at Stanford
9:00 a.m.-12 noon,
$6.00 per one year
until they became the “Eastside shown to be a Japanese n
Saturday.
One such film, titled appropri Boys” and they are still on the officer( played by Richard I
479 Queen St. W. - PLaza 5005
Toronto, Ont.
ately enough, “Let’s Get Tough,” screen in Monogram’s “Boxvery a specialist in Nisei spv n
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa
who is the same
«
shouted its racist message the Boys” films.
played
the
brave
442nd
x
other night in our living room.
“Let’s Get Tough” tells how
Wednesday, July 11, 1951
Both of the Salt Lake stations the gang frustrates the attempts in Samuel Fuller’s
shoxv old movies late at night of a group of saboteurs of Ja met” last year.)
OUR FOREMOST PROBLEM
Two major films whidi
after the network kinescopes have panese ancestry, all members of
In submitting the National JCCA brief outlining the severe been unreeled. These film s, the Black Dragon Society, to de of Japanese American disloyal
(which never really occur!
restrictions placed against the re-entry and immigration into draxvn from the bottomless pit stroy American -war industries.
of cheap Hollyxvood features, are One of the saboteurs, a sneaky were made by Warner Brothel lih
sMu
Canada of persons of Japanese ancestry and in preparing
usually at least ten years old. character at best, is identified as One, “Air Force,” starring jJ
to meet with the Minister of Immigration to discuss this None are less than five years Joe Matsui, who went to high Garfield and written by Dudl|
last major Japanese Canadian political problem, the first old since pictures produced since school in New Tork. Although Nichols, spread lies about M
firm step towards attempting to do away with certain racial 1946 cannot be shoxvn on televi Joe poses as an American he xvaiians of Japanese ancestry Hi
features in Canada’s present immigration policy has been sion xvithout the approval of Pet turns out to be as dastardly a the time of Pearl Harbor, j I
rillo’s American Federation of member of the Black Dragon colonel^ in this film explains th!
taken.
Musicians.
Society as any of the alien Ja none of the planes could get J
The major film producing panese who are portrayed in the the ground when Hickan? Fid
For some time, this publication has pointed out these
inconsistencies that work hardships on many Japanese Can- companies so far have resisted film. The writing is shoddy and was attacked on Dec. 7th hecaj B
].
r
-i.
,
. ,
,
l the urge to coin a fast dollar
refers to Issei and Nisei alike the “Honolulu Japs” had cut J
udian families ana narped with almost monotonous regular- Sei];no- thpir
‘
, . . .
,
I SclJm8 their old pictures to tele- as “Japs” or as Skibbies,” a the tails from the planes and d
ity that we must initiate the action ourselves if we are to vision but pictures produced on derogatory racial term which so blocked the highways wi|
theii cars to obstruct milira] Bl
achieve any abrogation of these racially restrictive laws. Poverty Row and by some of the Danioii Runyonsought to popuft
How stringent these restrictions are as applied against per- hrger
independent
producers tarize in his Hearst columns traffic. This film also showi
sons of Japanese ancestry can be readily seen by the cdses have been bought up for xideo. which calledattention
to the I American soldiers being fired c
cited in the National JCCA brief where admittance has been Teleyisi™ ®tation’ some with
J?°ast “menace" back in ™
saboteulA- Brumal
^
. .
I really 100 hours of prog-ram- I
The creator of the Lemon b local Japanese. The secou I
I ming a xx-eek, use up more cellu- j bi’op Kid and Nicely Nicely ^^m’ Across the Pacific,” shows
In each of these cases with the possible exception of
in seven daTs hxan Holly- Jones was not above a little race- Sen Tung as a glib-talking Nisi s
those where service in the Japanese forces is admitted entry n
producer! in a month, baiting- on occasion.
saboteur who attempts to des
m
o
1
,
'
^ There are stations in the Los
“Let’s Get Tough” xvas a 105 t le Fnnama Canal. This pic I
9
o re-entry rnto Canada has been reacted either by an effect Angeles area which show more cheap picture and did no! have ture
'
was written by Howard KocB
oi an Crder-m-Council or by government policy which are ap- | than 20 features a week, mainly | a wide audience. It was destined and directed by John Huston wlj
plicable to persons of Japanese ancestry-. No consideration has westerns and crime melodramas. to molder in some Hollyxvood has made such memorable piJ
been given to the compassionate nature or the individual This means that nearly every j vault until TV’s demand for tures as “Maltese Falcon," “Th|
motion pictuie produced in Hol- I films resulted in its resurrection, Asphalt Jungle” and “Treasur
merit of these cases.
lyxvood since the first 100 percent This film, and others like it, al- of Sierra Madre” and who shouH
The right to live together in family units, to share and I talkie,
xvhich was
Warner’s ready have been shoxvn in most have known better.
enjoy the companionship of loved ones, is a basic one. I “Lights of Nexx- York” produced TV areas, undercutting xvith its
The problem of how to g
Indeed, an article of the United Nations Universal Declara'
abou^ 19-9, is going to falsehoods about xvar-time sabo- about discouraging TV station*
shoxv up on the home television ta?e by persons of Japanese an- from screening motion picture
tion of Human Rights states:
i
i
j
a
i™ u
I screen and xxill find potential I vestry, some of the affirmative w h i c h incite race prejudio
"The family is the natural and fundamental group unit audimces in the millions.
public relations resultin. from through ignorance or deliberat®
of society and is entitled to protection by society and the
. M°St of the fiIms produced tbe sh°wing of “Go for Broke!” I falsehoods is a delicate one sinc^
State.”
smee Pearl Harbor, xvhich are
The point, and one xvhich con- U^e practices of outright censor-1
. ,
I being- shoxvn over TV xvere pro- cerns the JACL and other mino- S^P are abhorrent in a demen
Yet, we find many Japanese Canadian families, as a drreed in Hollyxvood by Mono- dty group organizations inter- cracFI
result of Canadian government policy, are denied of what ( gran}: Producers Releasing Cor- ested in public relations, is that
It is obvious that the problem
poration,
Alhed
Arts
and
other
many
more
films
containing
racI
is
one which" the JACL as a
we accept as being natural and inviolable. As Canadians I smaII companies. These filmmak
g‘ rac
o Japanese ancestry, participating in the full responsibilities era were not immune from tee ist poison may be presented on watchdog for the Nisei, must
the screens of America’s ten-mil face. The JACL has been respon
of citizenship, we are seeking this basic right xvhich would “hate-the-Japs” cycle through
lion TV set-owners in months to
sible, in at least one case, for
grant us equal treatment as that accorded citizens of other I "ddch Hollyxvood passed in the come.
discouraging a Hollyxvood produ
first years of World War II.
national origins.
In 1942 and 1943 Hollywood cer from making a motion picture.
based on a book writim
While it remains to be seen what effect the submission
ist propaganda against
and the meeting witli the Immigration Minister will have, it
Ur
of Japanese ancestry in
is too optimistic to expect any immediate achievement as
ted States (Peter B.
the outcome. W e should consider this as the initial round
“Pride of Palomar.”) Now ' :
of a long battle, and we must prepare for successive steos I
At schooL '^en things were
And four out of five Japanese pears that the JACL mus:
that must be taken. Nor is it just a JCCA task, it is a job Ln ge”erally don® in alphabetical names have a letter A some- backward as well as forward
its public relations program.
Mv T^J^
ThS ^ ICCA hQS made a ^^^^
where.
Pacific Citizen
The ax erage name has sex*en
y ana an iiuponani opening, now we must keep pres- I be or Yoshida (the Japanese
letters.. The shortest on our files
■ to stop or slacken.
Smiths, Joneses and Broxvns)
no names could be shorter Peace Exposition
d
x
f were always the last ones to get than that. The longest is Shimo7
?
aS°n *° SXpeC{ of out. That’s the trouble with JaTOKYO — Tlxe city of b>y:
takahara.
a neecuul and sympathetic hearing panese surnames, they xvere Con
plans to hold an exhibubw
The most common ending or the spring of 1953 to which Ju
or re-entry and immigration into Can- centrated doxvn the xvrong end.
in a Japanese surname panese commercial. i’>TiWi
y anadians’ We are n€?Rher reA study of Japanese names is
(or “da”) such as in and other organizations as
nor 0^
avorea treatment, but only that shows that the letters K. M, T Ikeda or Hirota, while other popas foreign nations will be izvitu
x.
S and M start more than half of ular endings are “moto” *murato
participate, the newspape:
i
। ah Japanese surnames, and the and ■guchi”. “Yama
“
Mori,
”
Yomiuri reported.
inmigration ot Asiatics to
,
x
, ,
rate of frequency is in that or- and 1 Matsu” are the more favAccording to tentative
riier mis year, Mr. Harris der xvith K accounting for one orite “prefixes.”
said that
the exposition, xvhich
?a
ips caused to Can- ^it of eight Japanese family
By the way, if all Japanese
memorate the signing of Fw Ja I'
separation.”
I names. In fact 95 percent of all
is in Canada were listed
Japanese names begins with a alphabetically. Abe xvould prob panese peace treaty, wm cw
1 -i,;
the exte:
approximately S.OOO.OO*'.11^1 A-"
Lillian consideration I voxxel, w H,
w xi
1, or one or- these
ably be the first name and Yu —$22,000,000 at the curie v ex
| five most frequent letters.
asa, the last.
change rate.
Hate Films on Television
ft
The Limit Is ZOO
£■!
PAGE TWO
The New Canadian
NEW CANADIAN
produced a number
which
spread
La sei
spawned at the tir
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
By LARRY TAJIRI
Typical of this sort of product Harbor about NjSe
oisioy
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
To paraphrase xvhat is by noxx- xvas “'Let’s Get Tough,” one of There was Univen s “L
as a medium of expression and news outlet
a tired> cliche, old movies never the Eastside Boys pictures pro Tokyo, USA” in w}among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
die—you can see them every duced by Sam Katzman xvhich Anti-Axis Committe- (there
utilized the talents of Leo Gor- a JACL-sponsored co?
night on television.
Toyo Takata
.Editor.
Video’s use of decade-old mo cey, Bobby Jordan, Huntz Hall, that, name in Lo«
Takaichi Umezuki
Japanese Section Editor
11942) is depicted as rhe f
tion pictures for much of their Gabriel Dell and other members
Ken Mori
Advertising
programming means that a lot of the snarling, roxvdy gang for pro-Japanese esuio^o/
Office Hours:
of hate films, produced in the xvhich skyrocketed to prominence sabotage. There was RKn <
8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m,
Subscription, in Advance:
months following Pearl Harbor, in the stage play, “Dead End.” trayal frOm the East" h ^
Monday to Friday.
$3.00 for six months
may come back to haunt the They xvere the “Dead End Kids” a yell leader at Stanford
9:00 a.m.-12 noon,
$6.00 per one year
until they became the “Eastside shown to be a Japanese n
Saturday.
One such film, titled appropri Boys” and they are still on the officer( played by Richard I
479 Queen St. W. - PLaza 5005
Toronto, Ont.
ately enough, “Let’s Get Tough,” screen in Monogram’s “Boxvery a specialist in Nisei spv n
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa
who is the same
«
shouted its racist message the Boys” films.
played
the
brave
442nd
x
other night in our living room.
“Let’s Get Tough” tells how
Wednesday, July 11, 1951
Both of the Salt Lake stations the gang frustrates the attempts in Samuel Fuller’s
shoxv old movies late at night of a group of saboteurs of Ja met” last year.)
OUR FOREMOST PROBLEM
Two major films whidi
after the network kinescopes have panese ancestry, all members of
In submitting the National JCCA brief outlining the severe been unreeled. These film s, the Black Dragon Society, to de of Japanese American disloyal
(which never really occur!
restrictions placed against the re-entry and immigration into draxvn from the bottomless pit stroy American -war industries.
of cheap Hollyxvood features, are One of the saboteurs, a sneaky were made by Warner Brothel lih
sMu
Canada of persons of Japanese ancestry and in preparing
usually at least ten years old. character at best, is identified as One, “Air Force,” starring jJ
to meet with the Minister of Immigration to discuss this None are less than five years Joe Matsui, who went to high Garfield and written by Dudl|
last major Japanese Canadian political problem, the first old since pictures produced since school in New Tork. Although Nichols, spread lies about M
firm step towards attempting to do away with certain racial 1946 cannot be shoxvn on televi Joe poses as an American he xvaiians of Japanese ancestry Hi
features in Canada’s present immigration policy has been sion xvithout the approval of Pet turns out to be as dastardly a the time of Pearl Harbor, j I
rillo’s American Federation of member of the Black Dragon colonel^ in this film explains th!
taken.
Musicians.
Society as any of the alien Ja none of the planes could get J
The major film producing panese who are portrayed in the the ground when Hickan? Fid
For some time, this publication has pointed out these
inconsistencies that work hardships on many Japanese Can- companies so far have resisted film. The writing is shoddy and was attacked on Dec. 7th hecaj B
].
r
-i.
,
. ,
,
l the urge to coin a fast dollar
refers to Issei and Nisei alike the “Honolulu Japs” had cut J
udian families ana narped with almost monotonous regular- Sei];no- thpir
‘
, . . .
,
I SclJm8 their old pictures to tele- as “Japs” or as Skibbies,” a the tails from the planes and d
ity that we must initiate the action ourselves if we are to vision but pictures produced on derogatory racial term which so blocked the highways wi|
theii cars to obstruct milira] Bl
achieve any abrogation of these racially restrictive laws. Poverty Row and by some of the Danioii Runyonsought to popuft
How stringent these restrictions are as applied against per- hrger
independent
producers tarize in his Hearst columns traffic. This film also showi
sons of Japanese ancestry can be readily seen by the cdses have been bought up for xideo. which calledattention
to the I American soldiers being fired c
cited in the National JCCA brief where admittance has been Teleyisi™ ®tation’ some with
J?°ast “menace" back in ™
saboteulA- Brumal
^
. .
I really 100 hours of prog-ram- I
The creator of the Lemon b local Japanese. The secou I
I ming a xx-eek, use up more cellu- j bi’op Kid and Nicely Nicely ^^m’ Across the Pacific,” shows
In each of these cases with the possible exception of
in seven daTs hxan Holly- Jones was not above a little race- Sen Tung as a glib-talking Nisi s
those where service in the Japanese forces is admitted entry n
producer! in a month, baiting- on occasion.
saboteur who attempts to des
m
o
1
,
'
^ There are stations in the Los
“Let’s Get Tough” xvas a 105 t le Fnnama Canal. This pic I
9
o re-entry rnto Canada has been reacted either by an effect Angeles area which show more cheap picture and did no! have ture
'
was written by Howard KocB
oi an Crder-m-Council or by government policy which are ap- | than 20 features a week, mainly | a wide audience. It was destined and directed by John Huston wlj
plicable to persons of Japanese ancestry-. No consideration has westerns and crime melodramas. to molder in some Hollyxvood has made such memorable piJ
been given to the compassionate nature or the individual This means that nearly every j vault until TV’s demand for tures as “Maltese Falcon," “Th|
motion pictuie produced in Hol- I films resulted in its resurrection, Asphalt Jungle” and “Treasur
merit of these cases.
lyxvood since the first 100 percent This film, and others like it, al- of Sierra Madre” and who shouH
The right to live together in family units, to share and I talkie,
xvhich was
Warner’s ready have been shoxvn in most have known better.
enjoy the companionship of loved ones, is a basic one. I “Lights of Nexx- York” produced TV areas, undercutting xvith its
The problem of how to g
Indeed, an article of the United Nations Universal Declara'
abou^ 19-9, is going to falsehoods about xvar-time sabo- about discouraging TV station*
shoxv up on the home television ta?e by persons of Japanese an- from screening motion picture
tion of Human Rights states:
i
i
j
a
i™ u
I screen and xxill find potential I vestry, some of the affirmative w h i c h incite race prejudio
"The family is the natural and fundamental group unit audimces in the millions.
public relations resultin. from through ignorance or deliberat®
of society and is entitled to protection by society and the
. M°St of the fiIms produced tbe sh°wing of “Go for Broke!” I falsehoods is a delicate one sinc^
State.”
smee Pearl Harbor, xvhich are
The point, and one xvhich con- U^e practices of outright censor-1
. ,
I being- shoxvn over TV xvere pro- cerns the JACL and other mino- S^P are abhorrent in a demen
Yet, we find many Japanese Canadian families, as a drreed in Hollyxvood by Mono- dty group organizations inter- cracFI
result of Canadian government policy, are denied of what ( gran}: Producers Releasing Cor- ested in public relations, is that
It is obvious that the problem
poration,
Alhed
Arts
and
other
many
more
films
containing
racI
is
one which" the JACL as a
we accept as being natural and inviolable. As Canadians I smaII companies. These filmmak
g‘ rac
o Japanese ancestry, participating in the full responsibilities era were not immune from tee ist poison may be presented on watchdog for the Nisei, must
the screens of America’s ten-mil face. The JACL has been respon
of citizenship, we are seeking this basic right xvhich would “hate-the-Japs” cycle through
lion TV set-owners in months to
sible, in at least one case, for
grant us equal treatment as that accorded citizens of other I "ddch Hollyxvood passed in the come.
discouraging a Hollyxvood produ
first years of World War II.
national origins.
In 1942 and 1943 Hollywood cer from making a motion picture.
based on a book writim
While it remains to be seen what effect the submission
ist propaganda against
and the meeting witli the Immigration Minister will have, it
Ur
of Japanese ancestry in
is too optimistic to expect any immediate achievement as
ted States (Peter B.
the outcome. W e should consider this as the initial round
“Pride of Palomar.”) Now ' :
of a long battle, and we must prepare for successive steos I
At schooL '^en things were
And four out of five Japanese pears that the JACL mus:
that must be taken. Nor is it just a JCCA task, it is a job Ln ge”erally don® in alphabetical names have a letter A some- backward as well as forward
its public relations program.
Mv T^J^
ThS ^ ICCA hQS made a ^^^^
where.
Pacific Citizen
The ax erage name has sex*en
y ana an iiuponani opening, now we must keep pres- I be or Yoshida (the Japanese
letters.. The shortest on our files
■ to stop or slacken.
Smiths, Joneses and Broxvns)
no names could be shorter Peace Exposition
d
x
f were always the last ones to get than that. The longest is Shimo7
?
aS°n *° SXpeC{ of out. That’s the trouble with JaTOKYO — Tlxe city of b>y:
takahara.
a neecuul and sympathetic hearing panese surnames, they xvere Con
plans to hold an exhibubw
The most common ending or the spring of 1953 to which Ju
or re-entry and immigration into Can- centrated doxvn the xvrong end.
in a Japanese surname panese commercial. i’>TiWi
y anadians’ We are n€?Rher reA study of Japanese names is
(or “da”) such as in and other organizations as
nor 0^
avorea treatment, but only that shows that the letters K. M, T Ikeda or Hirota, while other popas foreign nations will be izvitu
x.
S and M start more than half of ular endings are “moto” *murato
participate, the newspape:
i
। ah Japanese surnames, and the and ■guchi”. “Yama
“
Mori,
”
Yomiuri reported.
inmigration ot Asiatics to
,
x
, ,
rate of frequency is in that or- and 1 Matsu” are the more favAccording to tentative
riier mis year, Mr. Harris der xvith K accounting for one orite “prefixes.”
said that
the exposition, xvhich
?a
ips caused to Can- ^it of eight Japanese family
By the way, if all Japanese
memorate the signing of Fw Ja I'
separation.”
I names. In fact 95 percent of all
is in Canada were listed
Japanese names begins with a alphabetically. Abe xvould prob panese peace treaty, wm cw
1 -i,;
the exte:
approximately S.OOO.OO*'.11^1 A-"
Lillian consideration I voxxel, w H,
w xi
1, or one or- these
ably be the first name and Yu —$22,000,000 at the curie v ex
| five most frequent letters.
asa, the last.
change rate.
Hate Films on Television
ft
The Limit Is ZOO
Page 3
Wednesday,
July
I ly
1951
NEW CANADIAN
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Page 7
Wednesday,
______ I ■ ^
*'
July
—
11,
I ■
1951
^—^
THE
JL
—
-
■
PAGE SEVEN
NEW CANADIAN
■I
Potent Best Cleaners Enter
Toronto Congress Tourney
Cliffords Down Nisei
Lethbridge. Alta.
The Best Cleaners baseball^
iwns What It
dub continued to romp through
The band played “O Canada.' to tell the new
10-S by Clifford's Grill in an In
uadi an.
Meant to bo A
the Toronto Intermediate “A”
xi R.C.M.F
The scarh
dustrial Union Leabue baseball
Baseball League with three more
stood ramrod tiff at
wins in recent games to further
between the
Tumpy Hinada who tarted on
cement their clutch on first
Men in sober garb and gown mounted the
EDMONTON, Alta. — A two the mound for the
e»>ne. Their last win, a 12-9 verspoke of a great nation, of
belted
earlyfor
and
four
under
par
net
effort,
by
Ben
boundless opportunities and of
diet over Toppers, advanced them
four runs bv th grillmen and
Shikaze
won
the
Alberta
Japaof aI it the
the
Congress
Tournament,
info
nese
Golf
Association
First
of
|
Lire
big
righthander
g:
of
The cleanermen will now meet
They ;
July
tournament
and
also
copped
|
George
Fukuyama
wh
from
Canadian
the winners of the Etobicoke
him
the
Silk-O-Lina
Trophy
for
1
perienced
difficulty
a
League to represent the Inter
entails.
mediate leagues in the Toronto the second year1 in a row. Low up eight hits and six more runs
People, 26 of them, of many
went, to to the opponents. The Cliffords
Senior Congress Baseball Tour gross honors aga
took an 8-0 bulge before the tor(*ues. laced hands upon the
George
Matsuba.
nament.
column Hole Bible handed
Although Shikaze <36 handicap
who
On Friday, June 29, Best
: third riff J. II. Fooks and all swore mura ot "v,ethhri<
in
with which he won the trophy ■with three
Cleaners really laid into the op
allegiance to the eountrv called Canadian-born but
last year was slashed to a 24, he frame from which point they
marriage
Our Lady of the Sum s." Then,
position with a vengeance, wal
defeated veteran Hiroshi Kuwa slowly whittled down the imposwith
the
hey
took
their
placet
an
loping the defending champs,
hara of Calgary by two strokes
rest of the audience—Canadians
DeFoe Motors, 22-3, with last
over the Edmonton Municipal and
Sixteen men were left stranded
Mrs. Iku Kitagawa
i u re
all.
year’s ace pitcher Tucker Uchi
Riverside golf courses.
on
the
base-paths
by
the
Nisei
and Fusagoro bn
and in the writIt
kura making his Intermediate
Runner-up Don Matsuba
which tells the story of their ten words of Citizenship
league debut with a neat 6-hitoutpaced by three strokes by oldter Walter Harris it was :i
ter.
er brother George who won the defeat. Catcher Azu Oikawa and
The team backed him up with a low gross department for three outfielder Tanaka garnered two emn occasion” at the. Civic Sports
Centre. It was not only a special
lusty- 15-hit attack against three successive years.
to
and three hits
sitting of district court to grant
DeFoe pitchers with Hiro Kawa
Following the strenuous rounds lead the 8-hit attack upon Joe
citizenship certificates but it was
guchi sparking the hitters with of golf, a banquet was held at
Eng, Dick Phipps, and Eddy Leo a way of making the Dominion
three hits, good for five rbi’s. the Lingnan Cuisine where Mr.
i speGeorge Inata was another big Inouye of the Silk-O-Lina. Co. pold, Cliffords’ trio of hurlers. Day holiday stand out as
M rs.
cial
24
hours
—
a
day
for
Matsuzaki’s
twobase
gun, driving home four runs. in Edmonton presented the tro Hubbo
Uchikura helped his own cause phies to the successful candi blow was the onlv extra-base hit dians.
9 at
The event began with a m 11 i t a with two hits.
were
dates.
ry parade. Guest speaki r was home
The Nisei team won another
Buchanan who held
W,
easy game on Friday, July 6,
with a 10-3 bopping of Tigers.
Flyweight Champ Assists
Rookie Ken Nakamichi, although
Japanese Boxer's Wife
lacking in experience, had his
.... Mr. S;
fast ball hopping as he pitched
—
World
flyweight
58, died
TOKYO
With the half-way mark in the cleanermen, striking out eight
‘6-hit ball to come through with
Dado
Marino
presentchampion
home
10-game schedule of the Toronto batsmen while Elmer Harafuji
the win. Shortstop Art Watanabe
yen
($150)
to
the
wiFuneral sered
50,000
B. C.
sparked
the
attack
with
three
Nisei Sunday Baseball League
had a perfect day7 at bat with
dow
of
Tsuneo
“
Piston
”
Hori
at
held on July
the main hits in three attempts. For the
reached last July
two hits while veteran Tom Ka
liter Funeral
feature of the carded triple bill Busseis, Roy Inamoto hit a guchi wlio was in financial dif
mino garnered two hits in three
ficulty since Horiguchi’s death
was TNT’s moving into second double.
in a train accident last October.
9
place tie with Robbies.
Best Cleaners
The cleanermen’s 12*9 triumph
Marino has fought three HoriIn the lone game at Stanley
Busseis ...........
5 6
over Toppers on July 7 was a
Motoji
guchi
brothers,
Park, TNT behind the 3-hit hurlC -... Mr
Harold Miwa and Boh Ohashi;
free-scoring game in which Basil
and
Hiroshi.
Sakamoto, copped Min Nagata Mako Uyeda (5) and
’5,
passed
Cormier was hit hard but man ing of Dave
over
Pearl's
Credit
Maw Uyenaka.
away on Jinn
aged to hurl the distance in re a 3-1 verdict
Mac
Honorary
Referee
notching his third
were
Jewellers.
In
The schedule for next Sunday,
cording his fourth win in five
season, Sakamoto July 15, is as follows:
For Davis Cup Matches
starts with Bill Aoki behind the win of the
struck out five and walked four
Best
Cleaners
vs.
TNT,
9
a.m.;
Kawa
plate. _
LOUISVILLE, KY. — Serving
while loser Bob Maeda whiffed Robbies vs. Pearl’s Credit Jewel
Bob Ohashi was the big noise
six and walked only one.
lers, 11 a.m., at Christie Pits. as honorary referee of the Japan
as he came through with three
Joe Motokado’s fifth inning Hurricanes vs. Busseis, 9 a.m. at vs. United States Davis Cup
timely hits while George Inata
double staked TNT to their lead either Riverdale or Stanley Park. matches will be General Douglas
Chinese or Canadian
got two blows. Elmer Harafuji
MacArthur. He was reported to
and also broke the non-scoring
Foods
was a threat on the basepaths
have accepted the invitation of
string- which had existed until
STREET
NAME
as he pilfered five bases.
the United States and Japan
RICKSHA1
that point. Fred Kinoshita stole
Their record now reads 6 wins,
LOS
ANGELES
—
Probably
Lawn Tennis associations to act
home in the sixth frame to add
RESTAURANT
1 tie. and 1 loss.
an insurance run for the win the only street in the U.S. as an official at the matches
83 Lagauchotiere St. W.
ners. For the Jewellers. George named after a Japanese is Ka which are to be played at the
.Montreal, P. Q.
P 0 R I R A 11 - COMMERCIAL • COLOUR
Tanaka shone defensively around gawa Street in fashionable Pa Louisville Boat Club on July 20For Reservations
first-base as well as collecting a cific Palisades, a Los Angeles 21-22.
Phone HA. 4998
When MacArthur was supreme
suburb.
TOWIW JTUDIO
single.
commander for the Allied powers
•?
2
FDSTRllTS 91
Pearls’ Jewellers .... 1
i
in Japan, he encouraged the re
/
TNT ............ —....... - 3 6 0
storation of the functions of the
III 0UX04S St
W
TORONTO
POU H«*
Bob Maeda and Nobby FujiJapan Lawn Tennis association
moto; Dave Sakamoto and Doc
and its re-affiliation in 1950 with
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
Chop Suey House
Tomihiro, Joe Motokado (5), Rai
GIRL OR WOMAN for friend the International Lawn Tennis
92-A Elizabeth St., Toronto
Adachi (7).
ly home, private room, weekly Federation.
*
BANQUETS AND F AMPLY
wages. Call in the morning. MA.
The Davis Cup match will be
DINNERS
The first Same at Christie 5404, Toronto.
the first between the U.S. and
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 un.
technical
Pits turned into a
Japan since 1937 when the two
FEMALE HELP WANTED
(I
Reservations: E M 4 -9035
win for Hurricanes over Rob
Y'OUNG GIRL for receiving nations met at San Francisco.
bies who defaulted the game.
a 84.A YONGE STREET, TORONTO, O
office in laundry shop. Phone
The top and the bottom of the RA. 8316, Vogue Cleaners, Tor
Patronize
league met in the second sched onto.
____ _
HamiltOB, Ift
Lucien C. Kurata
Our
uled game and the inevitable oc- “"YOUNG SALES GIRL for
Barrister and Solicitor
Advertisers
t
cured when the strong Best grocery store, immed i a t e 1 y.
1 Adelaide St. E.. Toronto
I
i 1st and 2nd Mortgage Loans
Cleaners team racked up a 9-2 Phone MI. 5356, Toronto.
EM4-0508
Residence:
x
win over the winless Busseis.
*
arranged
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
HELP WANTED
2 Vesta Drive
j Office EM-4 5259 Res. LY.3427
Harold Miwa went the route for
DRIVER-G A R D E N E R. 39
MAfair 1365.
21 JOHN 8L NORTH
Grant St., GE. 7911, ask for Mr.
Andrew
E.
McKague,
Sano, Toronto.
JOHNNY NAKASHIMA
For Fiac Chinese Food
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Oil Burners, Roofing,
Public.
FOR RENT
F»cilitiM for
Rock Wool Insulation.
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
1OV/Z QUEEN ST. w.
’
TMO
ROOMS
with
sink,
up
Gurney Furnaces.
330 Bay St.
PARTIES & BANQUETS
For Pick-up and Deliverystairs. Suitable for couple, Duf
117 Alton Ave.,
Toronto.
(Cornsr Adelaida & Bay SU.)
Phone
TORONTO
ferin and Dundas district. Phone
PHONE
HA. 5550
KE.
5243,
Toronto.
WA. 6953
Shikaze Again Wins
Alta, Golf Tourney
TNT Climbs Into 2nd Place
As Halfway Point Reached
CLASSIFIED
Ib
LUCK INN
0. K. CLEANERS
2
______ I ■ ^
*'
July
—
11,
I ■
1951
^—^
THE
JL
—
-
■
PAGE SEVEN
NEW CANADIAN
■I
Potent Best Cleaners Enter
Toronto Congress Tourney
Cliffords Down Nisei
Lethbridge. Alta.
The Best Cleaners baseball^
iwns What It
dub continued to romp through
The band played “O Canada.' to tell the new
10-S by Clifford's Grill in an In
uadi an.
Meant to bo A
the Toronto Intermediate “A”
xi R.C.M.F
The scarh
dustrial Union Leabue baseball
Baseball League with three more
stood ramrod tiff at
wins in recent games to further
between the
Tumpy Hinada who tarted on
cement their clutch on first
Men in sober garb and gown mounted the
EDMONTON, Alta. — A two the mound for the
e»>ne. Their last win, a 12-9 verspoke of a great nation, of
belted
earlyfor
and
four
under
par
net
effort,
by
Ben
boundless opportunities and of
diet over Toppers, advanced them
four runs bv th grillmen and
Shikaze
won
the
Alberta
Japaof aI it the
the
Congress
Tournament,
info
nese
Golf
Association
First
of
|
Lire
big
righthander
g:
of
The cleanermen will now meet
They ;
July
tournament
and
also
copped
|
George
Fukuyama
wh
from
Canadian
the winners of the Etobicoke
him
the
Silk-O-Lina
Trophy
for
1
perienced
difficulty
a
League to represent the Inter
entails.
mediate leagues in the Toronto the second year1 in a row. Low up eight hits and six more runs
People, 26 of them, of many
went, to to the opponents. The Cliffords
Senior Congress Baseball Tour gross honors aga
took an 8-0 bulge before the tor(*ues. laced hands upon the
George
Matsuba.
nament.
column Hole Bible handed
Although Shikaze <36 handicap
who
On Friday, June 29, Best
: third riff J. II. Fooks and all swore mura ot "v,ethhri<
in
with which he won the trophy ■with three
Cleaners really laid into the op
allegiance to the eountrv called Canadian-born but
last year was slashed to a 24, he frame from which point they
marriage
Our Lady of the Sum s." Then,
position with a vengeance, wal
defeated veteran Hiroshi Kuwa slowly whittled down the imposwith
the
hey
took
their
placet
an
loping the defending champs,
hara of Calgary by two strokes
rest of the audience—Canadians
DeFoe Motors, 22-3, with last
over the Edmonton Municipal and
Sixteen men were left stranded
Mrs. Iku Kitagawa
i u re
all.
year’s ace pitcher Tucker Uchi
Riverside golf courses.
on
the
base-paths
by
the
Nisei
and Fusagoro bn
and in the writIt
kura making his Intermediate
Runner-up Don Matsuba
which tells the story of their ten words of Citizenship
league debut with a neat 6-hitoutpaced by three strokes by oldter Walter Harris it was :i
ter.
er brother George who won the defeat. Catcher Azu Oikawa and
The team backed him up with a low gross department for three outfielder Tanaka garnered two emn occasion” at the. Civic Sports
Centre. It was not only a special
lusty- 15-hit attack against three successive years.
to
and three hits
sitting of district court to grant
DeFoe pitchers with Hiro Kawa
Following the strenuous rounds lead the 8-hit attack upon Joe
citizenship certificates but it was
guchi sparking the hitters with of golf, a banquet was held at
Eng, Dick Phipps, and Eddy Leo a way of making the Dominion
three hits, good for five rbi’s. the Lingnan Cuisine where Mr.
i speGeorge Inata was another big Inouye of the Silk-O-Lina. Co. pold, Cliffords’ trio of hurlers. Day holiday stand out as
M rs.
cial
24
hours
—
a
day
for
Matsuzaki’s
twobase
gun, driving home four runs. in Edmonton presented the tro Hubbo
Uchikura helped his own cause phies to the successful candi blow was the onlv extra-base hit dians.
9 at
The event began with a m 11 i t a with two hits.
were
dates.
ry parade. Guest speaki r was home
The Nisei team won another
Buchanan who held
W,
easy game on Friday, July 6,
with a 10-3 bopping of Tigers.
Flyweight Champ Assists
Rookie Ken Nakamichi, although
Japanese Boxer's Wife
lacking in experience, had his
.... Mr. S;
fast ball hopping as he pitched
—
World
flyweight
58, died
TOKYO
With the half-way mark in the cleanermen, striking out eight
‘6-hit ball to come through with
Dado
Marino
presentchampion
home
10-game schedule of the Toronto batsmen while Elmer Harafuji
the win. Shortstop Art Watanabe
yen
($150)
to
the
wiFuneral sered
50,000
B. C.
sparked
the
attack
with
three
Nisei Sunday Baseball League
had a perfect day7 at bat with
dow
of
Tsuneo
“
Piston
”
Hori
at
held on July
the main hits in three attempts. For the
reached last July
two hits while veteran Tom Ka
liter Funeral
feature of the carded triple bill Busseis, Roy Inamoto hit a guchi wlio was in financial dif
mino garnered two hits in three
ficulty since Horiguchi’s death
was TNT’s moving into second double.
in a train accident last October.
9
place tie with Robbies.
Best Cleaners
The cleanermen’s 12*9 triumph
Marino has fought three HoriIn the lone game at Stanley
Busseis ...........
5 6
over Toppers on July 7 was a
Motoji
guchi
brothers,
Park, TNT behind the 3-hit hurlC -... Mr
Harold Miwa and Boh Ohashi;
free-scoring game in which Basil
and
Hiroshi.
Sakamoto, copped Min Nagata Mako Uyeda (5) and
’5,
passed
Cormier was hit hard but man ing of Dave
over
Pearl's
Credit
Maw Uyenaka.
away on Jinn
aged to hurl the distance in re a 3-1 verdict
Mac
Honorary
Referee
notching his third
were
Jewellers.
In
The schedule for next Sunday,
cording his fourth win in five
season, Sakamoto July 15, is as follows:
For Davis Cup Matches
starts with Bill Aoki behind the win of the
struck out five and walked four
Best
Cleaners
vs.
TNT,
9
a.m.;
Kawa
plate. _
LOUISVILLE, KY. — Serving
while loser Bob Maeda whiffed Robbies vs. Pearl’s Credit Jewel
Bob Ohashi was the big noise
six and walked only one.
lers, 11 a.m., at Christie Pits. as honorary referee of the Japan
as he came through with three
Joe Motokado’s fifth inning Hurricanes vs. Busseis, 9 a.m. at vs. United States Davis Cup
timely hits while George Inata
double staked TNT to their lead either Riverdale or Stanley Park. matches will be General Douglas
Chinese or Canadian
got two blows. Elmer Harafuji
MacArthur. He was reported to
and also broke the non-scoring
Foods
was a threat on the basepaths
have accepted the invitation of
string- which had existed until
STREET
NAME
as he pilfered five bases.
the United States and Japan
RICKSHA1
that point. Fred Kinoshita stole
Their record now reads 6 wins,
LOS
ANGELES
—
Probably
Lawn Tennis associations to act
home in the sixth frame to add
RESTAURANT
1 tie. and 1 loss.
an insurance run for the win the only street in the U.S. as an official at the matches
83 Lagauchotiere St. W.
ners. For the Jewellers. George named after a Japanese is Ka which are to be played at the
.Montreal, P. Q.
P 0 R I R A 11 - COMMERCIAL • COLOUR
Tanaka shone defensively around gawa Street in fashionable Pa Louisville Boat Club on July 20For Reservations
first-base as well as collecting a cific Palisades, a Los Angeles 21-22.
Phone HA. 4998
When MacArthur was supreme
suburb.
TOWIW JTUDIO
single.
commander for the Allied powers
•?
2
FDSTRllTS 91
Pearls’ Jewellers .... 1
i
in Japan, he encouraged the re
/
TNT ............ —....... - 3 6 0
storation of the functions of the
III 0UX04S St
W
TORONTO
POU H«*
Bob Maeda and Nobby FujiJapan Lawn Tennis association
moto; Dave Sakamoto and Doc
and its re-affiliation in 1950 with
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
Chop Suey House
Tomihiro, Joe Motokado (5), Rai
GIRL OR WOMAN for friend the International Lawn Tennis
92-A Elizabeth St., Toronto
Adachi (7).
ly home, private room, weekly Federation.
*
BANQUETS AND F AMPLY
wages. Call in the morning. MA.
The Davis Cup match will be
DINNERS
The first Same at Christie 5404, Toronto.
the first between the U.S. and
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 un.
technical
Pits turned into a
Japan since 1937 when the two
FEMALE HELP WANTED
(I
Reservations: E M 4 -9035
win for Hurricanes over Rob
Y'OUNG GIRL for receiving nations met at San Francisco.
bies who defaulted the game.
a 84.A YONGE STREET, TORONTO, O
office in laundry shop. Phone
The top and the bottom of the RA. 8316, Vogue Cleaners, Tor
Patronize
league met in the second sched onto.
____ _
HamiltOB, Ift
Lucien C. Kurata
Our
uled game and the inevitable oc- “"YOUNG SALES GIRL for
Barrister and Solicitor
Advertisers
t
cured when the strong Best grocery store, immed i a t e 1 y.
1 Adelaide St. E.. Toronto
I
i 1st and 2nd Mortgage Loans
Cleaners team racked up a 9-2 Phone MI. 5356, Toronto.
EM4-0508
Residence:
x
win over the winless Busseis.
*
arranged
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
HELP WANTED
2 Vesta Drive
j Office EM-4 5259 Res. LY.3427
Harold Miwa went the route for
DRIVER-G A R D E N E R. 39
MAfair 1365.
21 JOHN 8L NORTH
Grant St., GE. 7911, ask for Mr.
Andrew
E.
McKague,
Sano, Toronto.
JOHNNY NAKASHIMA
For Fiac Chinese Food
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Oil Burners, Roofing,
Public.
FOR RENT
F»cilitiM for
Rock Wool Insulation.
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
1OV/Z QUEEN ST. w.
’
TMO
ROOMS
with
sink,
up
Gurney Furnaces.
330 Bay St.
PARTIES & BANQUETS
For Pick-up and Deliverystairs. Suitable for couple, Duf
117 Alton Ave.,
Toronto.
(Cornsr Adelaida & Bay SU.)
Phone
TORONTO
ferin and Dundas district. Phone
PHONE
HA. 5550
KE.
5243,
Toronto.
WA. 6953
Shikaze Again Wins
Alta, Golf Tourney
TNT Climbs Into 2nd Place
As Halfway Point Reached
CLASSIFIED
Ib
LUCK INN
0. K. CLEANERS
2
Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE
PAC
SOCIAL CALENDAR
8
5
ft
C
}
Wednesday,
July
How far can
JULY
li
NEW CANADIAN
Reservation Deadline
erJonci
cro35
a
Go?
Everyone is urged to get their
14—Vancouver. Vancouver Nisei
HACHIHONE, Japan — Am- ENGAGEMENTS
reservations early -for the
I MARRIAGES
Baseball Club’s Dance, at
eiican
habit,
like
coco
cola
and
to
Nisei Students’ Club outm- at
Ukrainian Hall, corner Prin
KAMLOOPS, B. C. — Mrs.
HEIKE — NAGASUYE
baseball, are community proper
Mossington Park, Jackson's J
cess and Cordova.
Tsuyo Harada of Kamloops wishTORONTO _ Holy Tri
y on Sunday, July 22. The deaX
ty with the Japanese. That’s
15—Montreal. Montreal G. A. C.
fine, usually, but Maj. Gean C. es to announce the formal en- Church was the settin- for the for reservations ha^ beer -aand N. Y. O. Bicycle Outing Peterson, of the 40th Infantry gagement of her youngest daugh- marriage of Miss Joyce Akiko Tuesday, Julv
July
because -or
of
to Ideal Beach, starts at 9 Diii sion, thinks American influ ‘er> Jea" y^hiko, and Mr. Dick NagasUye, second daughter of
transportation
difficulties;
a.m .
Tosheo iMtamura, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaburo Nagasuye
ence can go too far.
The buses leave the University
tam"’a °f Kel°"’- a^d Mr. R°y Akio Heike, second
21—Montreal. Quebec JCCA’s An
Maj. Peterson had to attend na^ a"’0
°. Toronto back campus (semi,
I son of Mr. and Mrs. Muneharu tQ^o*7 Stadium> on Sundav
nual Picnic, at Cap. St. Jac the grand opening and dedica
The wedding will take place Heike, on June 30. Rev. W. H. •oly 22, at S> a.m. The fee 4
ques, buses leave 9 a.m.
tion of a new Japanese railroad
at
tne Calvary Temple, Kamloops, I Gale officiated.
?2.00 with a ?1.00 deposit pav
22—Toronto. U. of T. Nisei station in northern Japan.
payon
Sept.
15.
Following the reception at ab ®
The ceremony was more imadvance. A nominal fa
Students’ Club’s picnic, at"
Great China Chop Suey the Will be charged for thos
Mossington Park, Jackson’s pressive than most with the
a going
MONTREAL
—
The
engagecouple went to New York Ha by carleading lights of the district
Point.
speaking long and eloquently. ment of Aiko, second daughter plane for their honeymoon.
Final arrangements are beiiw
They will reside at 37 Ber
The whole affair was conducted of Mrs. Moto Hashimoto of Monironed out to insure a good time
ti eal, and Mr. Akihiko Nishi, nard Ave., Toronto.
with great dignity.
for all Included on the prog
Finally, the high spot arrived. second son of Mr. Hikojiro Nishi I
6—Toronto. — Nisei AYPA picram will be softball, novelty
nic, at Lakeview Park, Osha- A Japanese girl, garbed in rich of Japan, was announced on July iiniiniiiiiiiininiiiin. ’Hiiiiniiiiiimi races, weiner roast, sing-son^
PASSING THRU
ancestral robes, her kimono a 4 at the home of the Hashimoto’s.
wa.
swimming, and boating. Every
Sewanins are Mr. and Mrs.
captured rainbow of silk, bowed
one is welcome to come.
18—Toronto. Metropolitan Nisei low to the silent crowd.
Hikotaro Shiomi of Montreal.
(contd from P. 1)
|
For further information and
Fellowship’s annual picnic, at
Maj. Peterson strained his ears
,‘
“
--------------------be
nursemaid,
cook, hostess, and
Mossington Park, Lake Sim
to hear an ancient Japanese mel PICI DRE BUTTE GRADUATES a dozen other things. All you reservations, contact the follow
coe.
ing' persons: Rickey Nishikawa.
PICTURE BUTTE
Alta
loomed concerned with are
ody, rich in tradition and beauty.
her
LT'. 0405; George Hiraki, MO
Alta. —
Music started. The girl opened
’
*
’
Physical
attributes,
her
ability
to
4500;
Mickey Matsubayashi or
Seven Nisei students were am
her mouth to sing.
I converse intelligently, her insight Dick Kuwahara, KI. 3442- Tats
ACK X 0 W L E D G M E N T
But what came out was no an- ong the 14 graduates of Picture on human beings. What you want
Hori, GL. 8914; Flo Watanabe.
Butte High School who were
The Vernon Chapter of the
cient Japanese melody, Out the
feted at a graduation banquet is not a wife but a mistress ...” LA. 9528; Arn Arai, GR. 1244lyrics came, “I’ve been working
acknow led
w i (h
(Touche, young lady, touche. I and Ken Mitsui, GL. 9163.
recently. The seven were Shirley
on
the railroad........... ”
am
speechless).
thanks the donation of $12.69
Miyagawa, Aki Sato, Emy To“Next come pyramid club
The Nisei girl who is really
from the residents and for
kitsu, Hiroshi Urano, Minoru
the major was heard to mutter as
full
of interesting ideas on the
T oshida, Joe Yukawa, and Ted
mer residents of Lumby.
London-St. Thomas
he walked away.
subject, tells me a few of the
things she wants in The Ideal ICC A Draw Winners
Man.
Yonge at Queen
“ • . . The Ideal Man has to be . LONDON, Ont. — The follow
Open 9:15 a.m.
interested in life in g-eneral, po ing are the winners of the Lon
litics, good music, books, etc. don-St. Thomas JCCA Sports
Physically I’d like him to be tal- Club draw held on June 30.
ler than me. He doesn’t have to I Liane Nagata, London, radio;
be good-looking although it helps. D°n Tuckwood, London, blanket;
I’d like him to be more intelli- Mary TicHourne, London, clock;
gent than I am so be can feel David Azuma, Toronto, wallet;
COOL
superior in some respects. I de- ®’ Nakabayashi, Chatham, ladies
finitely will not tolerate muscle- klt’ M' Mackenzie, London, 0.
fit’
bound idiots no matter how much Hewmaster, London, and G. Ni<1money he has! He should have |
izaki, Chatham, gift certifi“savoire-faire”, good manners, cates’
a sense of humour, ambition, and
The chapter would like to exbe capable of loving.”
press their thanks to all their
*
*
*
supporters for their kind coA mythical thing?
| operation which made the draw
a success.
In short, her stiff qualifications demand a virile, mature,
intelligent,
man-o f-the-w o r 1 d'
MICKEY s. SATO
type. It coincides with my hazy
crown life Insurance co.
bird of paradise—a feminine,
M-G-M’s
®^e! 21 Dundas Square
Phone EM. 3-0076-7
somewhat sophisticated, intelli- I
^eS"-£Z® Manning Avenue
gent g-irl. Now I can see at this ;
TORONTO, ONT.
Res. ME. 6072
point that a lot of compromising I
has to be done since such products of wishful thinking are al
most nil.
General Insurance
, Over-feminine girls with soft
224 Delhi Ave. Phone RE. 2385
dark eyes and appetizing curves
Wilson Heights P. O.f Ont.
starring
but with the tragic lack of any
r 4utom°Wle, Fire, Burglary
basic mental quality are apt to
J-Ae, Accident & Sickness, etc.
become boring while over-mascu
line girls with lots of know-how
and
and a tweedy look about them
nn
may become unappealing.
HU
And on this basis, the eternal
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
n.n
seanh winch has been instigat
COMPANY OF CANADA
ed since Eve took a bite at the
WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY
' ’*
Box 149 Kamloops, B. C.
apple in the Garden of Eden,
goes on and on. In the end, the
helpless male is usually hog-tied
by some sweet-young-thing with
It's a gallant and wonderful stor^
the scent of peaches and cream
of a handful of Nisei, the r
and a look of innocence about I
daring, the most decorated
Agent
her, and who appeals to his sense I
most unusual bunch of guys ,
of paternal masculinity.
MONARCH LIFE
sin - and shii it
‘ < "ay mto hist
I m afraid, therefore, in the I
Backed "ith drania. h
ASSURANCE CO.
long run. the Ideal. Nisei Girl
heroism and hearty
ghter.’ It
66 King St E., — Tel. 2-2594
or the Ideal Nisei Man is simptculy GREAT
entertainment'
Hamilton
ly Just a mythical thing with
" hich hungry typewriter-pushers. I Residence:
I *uch at mvself, like to make ai 59 Oxford St, — Tel. 7-1960
। column of copy.
I
STARTS
TODAY
1
i
ROBERT PIRQSH- DORE SCHARY
K. GOTO
I
I
I
lfI
1
THE
PAC
SOCIAL CALENDAR
8
5
ft
C
}
Wednesday,
July
How far can
JULY
li
NEW CANADIAN
Reservation Deadline
erJonci
cro35
a
Go?
Everyone is urged to get their
14—Vancouver. Vancouver Nisei
HACHIHONE, Japan — Am- ENGAGEMENTS
reservations early -for the
I MARRIAGES
Baseball Club’s Dance, at
eiican
habit,
like
coco
cola
and
to
Nisei Students’ Club outm- at
Ukrainian Hall, corner Prin
KAMLOOPS, B. C. — Mrs.
HEIKE — NAGASUYE
baseball, are community proper
Mossington Park, Jackson's J
cess and Cordova.
Tsuyo Harada of Kamloops wishTORONTO _ Holy Tri
y on Sunday, July 22. The deaX
ty with the Japanese. That’s
15—Montreal. Montreal G. A. C.
fine, usually, but Maj. Gean C. es to announce the formal en- Church was the settin- for the for reservations ha^ beer -aand N. Y. O. Bicycle Outing Peterson, of the 40th Infantry gagement of her youngest daugh- marriage of Miss Joyce Akiko Tuesday, Julv
July
because -or
of
to Ideal Beach, starts at 9 Diii sion, thinks American influ ‘er> Jea" y^hiko, and Mr. Dick NagasUye, second daughter of
transportation
difficulties;
a.m .
Tosheo iMtamura, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaburo Nagasuye
ence can go too far.
The buses leave the University
tam"’a °f Kel°"’- a^d Mr. R°y Akio Heike, second
21—Montreal. Quebec JCCA’s An
Maj. Peterson had to attend na^ a"’0
°. Toronto back campus (semi,
I son of Mr. and Mrs. Muneharu tQ^o*7 Stadium> on Sundav
nual Picnic, at Cap. St. Jac the grand opening and dedica
The wedding will take place Heike, on June 30. Rev. W. H. •oly 22, at S> a.m. The fee 4
ques, buses leave 9 a.m.
tion of a new Japanese railroad
at
tne Calvary Temple, Kamloops, I Gale officiated.
?2.00 with a ?1.00 deposit pav
22—Toronto. U. of T. Nisei station in northern Japan.
payon
Sept.
15.
Following the reception at ab ®
The ceremony was more imadvance. A nominal fa
Students’ Club’s picnic, at"
Great China Chop Suey the Will be charged for thos
Mossington Park, Jackson’s pressive than most with the
a going
MONTREAL
—
The
engagecouple went to New York Ha by carleading lights of the district
Point.
speaking long and eloquently. ment of Aiko, second daughter plane for their honeymoon.
Final arrangements are beiiw
They will reside at 37 Ber
The whole affair was conducted of Mrs. Moto Hashimoto of Monironed out to insure a good time
ti eal, and Mr. Akihiko Nishi, nard Ave., Toronto.
with great dignity.
for all Included on the prog
Finally, the high spot arrived. second son of Mr. Hikojiro Nishi I
6—Toronto. — Nisei AYPA picram will be softball, novelty
nic, at Lakeview Park, Osha- A Japanese girl, garbed in rich of Japan, was announced on July iiniiniiiiiiiininiiiin. ’Hiiiiniiiiiimi races, weiner roast, sing-son^
PASSING THRU
ancestral robes, her kimono a 4 at the home of the Hashimoto’s.
wa.
swimming, and boating. Every
Sewanins are Mr. and Mrs.
captured rainbow of silk, bowed
one is welcome to come.
18—Toronto. Metropolitan Nisei low to the silent crowd.
Hikotaro Shiomi of Montreal.
(contd from P. 1)
|
For further information and
Fellowship’s annual picnic, at
Maj. Peterson strained his ears
,‘
“
--------------------be
nursemaid,
cook, hostess, and
Mossington Park, Lake Sim
to hear an ancient Japanese mel PICI DRE BUTTE GRADUATES a dozen other things. All you reservations, contact the follow
coe.
ing' persons: Rickey Nishikawa.
PICTURE BUTTE
Alta
loomed concerned with are
ody, rich in tradition and beauty.
her
LT'. 0405; George Hiraki, MO
Alta. —
Music started. The girl opened
’
*
’
Physical
attributes,
her
ability
to
4500;
Mickey Matsubayashi or
Seven Nisei students were am
her mouth to sing.
I converse intelligently, her insight Dick Kuwahara, KI. 3442- Tats
ACK X 0 W L E D G M E N T
But what came out was no an- ong the 14 graduates of Picture on human beings. What you want
Hori, GL. 8914; Flo Watanabe.
Butte High School who were
The Vernon Chapter of the
cient Japanese melody, Out the
feted at a graduation banquet is not a wife but a mistress ...” LA. 9528; Arn Arai, GR. 1244lyrics came, “I’ve been working
acknow led
w i (h
(Touche, young lady, touche. I and Ken Mitsui, GL. 9163.
recently. The seven were Shirley
on
the railroad........... ”
am
speechless).
thanks the donation of $12.69
Miyagawa, Aki Sato, Emy To“Next come pyramid club
The Nisei girl who is really
from the residents and for
kitsu, Hiroshi Urano, Minoru
the major was heard to mutter as
full
of interesting ideas on the
T oshida, Joe Yukawa, and Ted
mer residents of Lumby.
London-St. Thomas
he walked away.
subject, tells me a few of the
things she wants in The Ideal ICC A Draw Winners
Man.
Yonge at Queen
“ • . . The Ideal Man has to be . LONDON, Ont. — The follow
Open 9:15 a.m.
interested in life in g-eneral, po ing are the winners of the Lon
litics, good music, books, etc. don-St. Thomas JCCA Sports
Physically I’d like him to be tal- Club draw held on June 30.
ler than me. He doesn’t have to I Liane Nagata, London, radio;
be good-looking although it helps. D°n Tuckwood, London, blanket;
I’d like him to be more intelli- Mary TicHourne, London, clock;
gent than I am so be can feel David Azuma, Toronto, wallet;
COOL
superior in some respects. I de- ®’ Nakabayashi, Chatham, ladies
finitely will not tolerate muscle- klt’ M' Mackenzie, London, 0.
fit’
bound idiots no matter how much Hewmaster, London, and G. Ni<1money he has! He should have |
izaki, Chatham, gift certifi“savoire-faire”, good manners, cates’
a sense of humour, ambition, and
The chapter would like to exbe capable of loving.”
press their thanks to all their
*
*
*
supporters for their kind coA mythical thing?
| operation which made the draw
a success.
In short, her stiff qualifications demand a virile, mature,
intelligent,
man-o f-the-w o r 1 d'
MICKEY s. SATO
type. It coincides with my hazy
crown life Insurance co.
bird of paradise—a feminine,
M-G-M’s
®^e! 21 Dundas Square
Phone EM. 3-0076-7
somewhat sophisticated, intelli- I
^eS"-£Z® Manning Avenue
gent g-irl. Now I can see at this ;
TORONTO, ONT.
Res. ME. 6072
point that a lot of compromising I
has to be done since such products of wishful thinking are al
most nil.
General Insurance
, Over-feminine girls with soft
224 Delhi Ave. Phone RE. 2385
dark eyes and appetizing curves
Wilson Heights P. O.f Ont.
starring
but with the tragic lack of any
r 4utom°Wle, Fire, Burglary
basic mental quality are apt to
J-Ae, Accident & Sickness, etc.
become boring while over-mascu
line girls with lots of know-how
and
and a tweedy look about them
nn
may become unappealing.
HU
And on this basis, the eternal
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
n.n
seanh winch has been instigat
COMPANY OF CANADA
ed since Eve took a bite at the
WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY
' ’*
Box 149 Kamloops, B. C.
apple in the Garden of Eden,
goes on and on. In the end, the
helpless male is usually hog-tied
by some sweet-young-thing with
It's a gallant and wonderful stor^
the scent of peaches and cream
of a handful of Nisei, the r
and a look of innocence about I
daring, the most decorated
Agent
her, and who appeals to his sense I
most unusual bunch of guys ,
of paternal masculinity.
MONARCH LIFE
sin - and shii it
‘ < "ay mto hist
I m afraid, therefore, in the I
Backed "ith drania. h
ASSURANCE CO.
long run. the Ideal. Nisei Girl
heroism and hearty
ghter.’ It
66 King St E., — Tel. 2-2594
or the Ideal Nisei Man is simptculy GREAT
entertainment'
Hamilton
ly Just a mythical thing with
" hich hungry typewriter-pushers. I Residence:
I *uch at mvself, like to make ai 59 Oxford St, — Tel. 7-1960
। column of copy.
I
STARTS
TODAY
1
i
ROBERT PIRQSH- DORE SCHARY
K. GOTO
I
I
I
lfI
1