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The New Canadian — July 25, 1951

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Page 1

^'^rid

No. 57

WEDNESDAY, JULY

JC Sawmills in interior
Hit by Shortage of Labor

i To Admit 100,000

1951

$6 Per Year'—10c Per Copy

Finds Nisei Job Seekers
In Vancouver Up Against
Same Discrimination

j TOKI 0 — Brazil will admit
: 100,000
Japanese
immigrants
!
KAMLOOPS, B. C. — Several : nTTer peaceful relations are re­
sawmills in the Kamloops area * st°red. according to a letter reowned and operated by Japanese i ceived bV the Japan-Brazil SoBy TED OTSU
Canadians are feeling the pinch j c'e^'of labor shortage. These small 1 The Brazilian decision, the letVANCOUVER
By KEN ADACHI
The employment situation for the Nisei here, as far as getting
mills producing- from 30.000 to i ^er revealed.
made, in
statement
by
Brazilian
Minister into so-called better fields, hasn t changed much from the days
40,000
feet
of
lumber
daily,
drew
;
These are notes from my note
w hen Nisei boys out of high schools headed for mill jobs in Wood­
book—half-columns which have its millworkers among the Issei Joao de Fontoura last month at
fibre or Port Alice.
been started and probably would and Nisei living in the B. C. the bao Paulo provincial assem­
bly.
I have now been here in Van- ------—----------- —_________________
It’s an ideal interior but this year this source
stay unfinished.
It was also said immigrants couver close to two years since now assigned to Vancouver and
time of the year to unload them. has about dried up.
I speak New Westminster to work am­
'ork on farm projects in September 1949
The reason is that many of
These, then, are summer trivia . .
Brazil's
from
my
own
experience
as well ong the Japanese people in these
northern provinces. The
them, who during- their enforced
*
*
society
is planning to send a as that of my friends. And the
tenure in the B. C. interior had
concern about
This Stag Stuff
mission
to
Brazil shortly to push situation isn’t any better than employment.
become experienced millworkers,
speaking to
it was in 1949.
1 liave been to several stag­ had now g-one back to the coast the project.
many Niseis, Rev. McWilliam, too
Employment discrimination is has found that they have diffi­
parties recently. These are some where fishing and other oportuRefuses
to
Back
Down
still
very obvious here, there’s culty in finding jobs.
thoughts that occur to me:
nities are greater. Furthermore,
no getting away from that. It’s
Just before they drag off the others who are remaining in the In Housing Race Ban
Rev. McWilliam secs it as a ser­
tough,
often impossible, to find
poor unenlightened fool into the interior have their own farms to
supposed bliss of marriage, thus work on during this time of the Ono, Los Angeles Nisei insurance the kind of job you are looking ious problem and feels somethingshould be done. He is willing in
depriving the girls from one year and are only available dur- agent, whose ouster from a hous­ for. Employers aren’t too intcrested in hiring
Nisei, even his way to do what he can for
more eligible bachelor, his friends ing the winter months.
ing association has been demand­
the Nisei but at the same time,
give the soon-to-be-wedded-fool a
Other workers have been ern ed by a real estate concern, will though the latter is fully quali­ he urges the Nisei to g-o out and
last breath of freedom. A sort ployed but they still lack the not back down on his right to fied for the opening that he has.
‘t
I will say one thing, however, help themselves. Discrimination
of last breath before the third experience and the know-how of build a home in Baldwin Hills,
that opportunities for the Nisei is mainly the result, of ignorance
drop into the water.
mill operation. With the g'reat a Los Angeles suburb.
girl are vastly improved. They and prejudice, he says, and the
The barbaric custom of hold- demand for lumber, operators
Ono is a member of the Uni­
are acquiring positions that Nisei can help combat, tbem with
mg stag-parties is the final rite faced with production schedules versity
Housing
Association
more social intermingling with
before the day when the male are desperately in need of ex­ which purchased a 10-acre site weren’t available to them before other people.
the war. But the same certainly
; loses all sense of independency perienced mill workers.
to build homes but when the real
does not apply to the men.
If this sounding off has SUg; for the (un)happy prospect of
estate firm involved in the deal,
Rev. William R. McWilliam, gested that Vancouver is very
Japan Next to U. K.
marital inter-dependency.
the Baldwin Corp., learned that
hostile to the Nisei and the Ja­
Ono was of Japanese origin, it particularly well-known among
I don t know what Nisei girls In Ship Building
panese,
it is not so intended. And
the evacuees who lived at Tashhold for the feminine side of the
NEW YORK — Japan has re- demanded that the housing asso­ me, who lately was posted at it is not the case.
forthcoming bliss, although I gained her prewar prominence in ciation oust the Nisei because of
Hope and Lillooet, but who is
(Con’t on Page 8)
can easily surmise that talking shipbuilding- by becoming second racial restrictions on the proper­
ty.
The
firm
even
threatened
to
about the lovely presents or just only to Britain as the world’s
plain talking is not the least of ship builder. Japan’s ship build­ cut off water rights if the Nisei
their accomplishments at show­ ing program has doubled since was not ousted.
er-parties.
the beginning of this year with
Private Bills Allow
The male is offered a happy 480,000 tons of merchant vessels
5 Japanese Into U. S.
mght where he can pLy poker, under construction in her yards
By TED OTSU
I 20,000 miles.
WASHINGTON, D. C. — The
guzzle beer, or eat an assortment at the present time.
To
the
Nisei,
the
shores
and
On the Pacific coast, Canada’s
Japan has surged ahead of such House of Representatives last
food that is so varied that it is
week
passed
five
more
private
waters
of
British
Columbia
of
­
large salmon industry yields cat­
enough to dent any cast-iron countries as the United States
bills
unanimously
which
would
fer
lucrative
sources
of
employ
­
ches
running up to 190,000,000
s-tomach. He has a happy time, and Sweden in vessel construc­
permit
Japanese
citizens
to
en
­
ment.
The
fishing
industry
is
pounds a year. Two other im­
on. the surface, puttering around tion.
ter the U.S. permanently.
the magnetic force that is draw­ portant fisheries are those for
enjoying his fast diminishing
Three of the bills were to au­ ing more and more back to the herring and halibut. The salmon
hours of freedom.
Held 3rd Week
thorize the admission of minor west coast.
catch is made up of five species:
J try to see what emotions
7o for Broke!” now Japan-born children. One was to
MGM’s
More than 110,000 Canadians sockeye, spring, coho, pink, and
the male is undergoing—whether playing at Toronto's Loew
allow the entry- of the alien Ja- are finding full and seasonal chum.
Is of anticipation, nervousness, Theatre is being held over for panese wife of a Los Angeles employment either as fishermen,
B. C.’s salmon industry was
happiness, sadness—but he is so the 3rd week.
Nisei, and another to allow the shoreworkers, or in other posi­
started more than 100 years ago
generally preoccupied with poker
This is the longest run of any Japan-born fiancee of an Amer- tions connected with the indus­
‘^at it is impossible to gauge film now playing in Toronto’s ican veteran into the U.S. for try on the Pacific and Atlantic and gradually it has grown to
where its output is first, in dol­
“is state of mind.
purposes of marriage.
downtown theatres.
coastlines which cover
over lar value, among Canadian fish­

passing thru

B. C.’s Fishing Industry
Lure for Return of Niseis

*

*

s

The Lost Generation” is a
nra5e coined by the writing
rtelligentsia to describe a gene.auonmf writers in America—
trues' Hemingway, John dos
Lssos,
scott Fitzgerald, for ex­
■..'^e some of whose books are
ouehold standbys. Farewell to
Tfp*- Hanhatten Transfer, the
~Fai Gatsby, to name several.
.fj' "ere a generation of writ^'ho ro^e to fame after World
L and wr°te of the Amer-Z^orh the fat and lean
01 Prosperity and depres^!laSe‘ I think, could be
^. ? deScribe another lost
^e Tssei. Counteru
with the growing list
(Con’t on P. 8)

ery products.

Across fifty fiftind

It was with reminiscence as well as amuse­
ment that I saw that delightful picture, ’Go
for Broke!" W'ben the members of the 442nd
Regimental Combat Team tried desperately to
run and climb over the high wooden barricade
of an obstacle course during a training period,
I began to remember my Army days, and bow.
owing to my midget height I also could not
scale the barricade, which was a brick wall
over 10’ high. Like those Nisei who cleverly
managed to overcome this by means of scamp­
ering on the backs of two men who formed
human steps at the foot of Use obstacle, I bad
had a six-foot friend who jerked me up as I
jumped o his shoulders to leap over the wall.
•lied by virtue
'ironicall
Tiny
easy-going sort
j grinning to himself. W hen it
came to yield craft training. no wel eh he aw «
complete dud. Il e would dash into Use fields,

by Jack Nakamoto

but he would lag behind us, running a little,
walking most of the time because he was too
lazy to exert himself. On few occasions when
tee were going uphill 'on the double’ he would
start to pant and, exclaiming with a grin: ’Ah,
I give up!’, be would simply squat down on the
ground like Chief Sitting Bull and stay there.
Subsequently, some of us were ordered to go
and help him up the hill which, it developed,
was like a .group of pygmies trying to lift and
drag out an elephant. W^e towed him up till he
began to feel sorry for us and decided to go
on bis own steam the rest of the way.
I learned a few years later that he was
killed in Holland. It is said that even while
dying bis lips were curled up in an usual im­
pish smile and that be had seemed resigned to
bis fate, willing to ‘give up’ and remain lying
on the ground peacefully forever.

Salmon canneries dot the B.C.
coast in the area called the "In­
side Passage”. This passage is
sheltered from the heavy roll of
the ocean by islands which act
as breakwaters.
Most familiar to Nisei and Is­
sei is Steveston wherein lies one
of the largest salmon canneries
in the world and Prince Rupert
where there is the world’s larg­
est cold storage fish plant.
Other than salmon, herring and
halibut, the fishing boats reap
a harvest of sealife such as
grayfish, dogfish, oysters, clams,
lingcods, crabs, sharks and
whales.
The Canadian fish industry- is
rated high in world trade but
Canadians themselves are not
considered great fish-eaters.

Page 2

PAGE TWO

The New Canadian
An 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.

THE

NEW

CANADIAN

On Finding a Place
To Feel at Home . . .

Wednesday,

July

Letters To The Editor
Editor, The New Canadian:

Is there any way by which v.v
can persuade the education ch'
mittee of the JCCA or get th
support of your readers so rh£
we will be able to have an Ora
torical contest -not only for ^
high school students but for air
Nisei or Issei? I am sure then
are many fine orators amom
the Issei and Nisei who are no­
attending high school, and w;
certainly would like to hear then]
If there are many applkart
or contestants, we can easily di
vide-the contestants into two or
three groups such as (i) puyt
and high school students; p ,
university students and older
Niseis; (iii) Isseis.

7where all hell might break loose
A Nisei family’s efforts to ; in the dark of the night?
So the Nisei in Los Angeles
Toyo Takata_______________________ Editor.
build a home in a new housing |
development in Los Angeles is I had to rest content a decade ago
Takaichi Umezuki
Japanese Section Editor
currently being fought by some with a triumph of principle—and
Ken Mori_________________________ Advertising
Caucasian people who think the then look for decent housing
Office Hours:
elsewhere.
Nisei ought to be kept out.
8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Subscription, in Advance:
There’s tragic irony in the par­
The case is getting daily-com­
Monday to Friday.
$3.00 for six months
munique coverage in the Los adox. But that’s the way this
9:00 a.m.-12 noon,
$6.00 per one year
messy business usually works.
Angeles Japanese press.
Saturday.
Sometimes it can be far
Among the pressures being479 Queen St. W. — PLaza 5005 — Toronto, OnL
wielded by the “anti” people is worse than what the Nisei en­
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Dept., Ottawa
the threat to cut off the avail­ counter in Los Angeles.
Take for example the case of
able water supply to the deve­
Wednesday, July 25, 1951
lopment if it permits the pres­ a Negro bus driver who tried
to move with his family into an
ence of one lone Nisei family.
A POINT HAS BEEN WON
all-Caucasian
neighborhood in
The Nisei family momentarily
Cicero, a village near Chicago.
A Subscriber.
Although the submission of the brief and the meeting has decided not to turn and go
First the local police man­
'elsewhere, but to hold firm. The
Toronto.
with the cabinet minister failed to produce an optimistic issue has been joined, but the handled him, he claimed, in suing
outlook for former residents of Canada now in Japan who outcome is in doubt.
them for $200,000.
A few nights later, a mob of you do? Bear silent witness to
are declared ineligible for re-entry, they did win an admis­
On a bigger scale, the same
such outrageous behavior and
sion from Mr. Harris that the legal point brought up in the incident occured eleven years ago 3,000 surged around his flat, turn the other cheek ?
broke in, smashed the place, tore
brief, and by Mr. Brewin at the meeting required further study when the Jefferson Park HousingOi’ rise in righteous indigna­
project was fought out in the out the stove and toilet and fix­ tion and retaliate ? And retaliate
before a ruling can be made.
tures, and burned his furniture.
Los Angeles City Council.
—how ?
Nobody was arrested by the
This means that there is some hope for the naturalized
Jefferson Park was planned as
Here in these threats and a.-'
police.
Issei who returned to Japan under the repatriation scheme .a Nisei housing development.
of
violence, you have the patten
The natives of Cicero don’t
It raised a monstrous fear in
in 1946 ond consequently were deemed to have lost their
of human behavior which, on a
the minds of the race-conscious want any Negroes in their peace­
status as Canadians. The Canadian Government's present
larger
scale, produces war bet­
Caucasian natives who countered ful little village, and this was
stand is that by virtue of their loss of citizenship, these peo­ with all the threats of violence the way of expressing their wish­ ween nations.
Except for obvious differenceple, some 600 in all, cannot return to Canada.
in the book. This was implement­ es. This is the village that wel­
comed the Capone mob in the in the„.scale of destruction, howMr. Brewin, who is the legal counsel for the JCCA, has ed by pressures in the City heyday of Prohibition.
little do such incidents differ
Council.
introduced the contention that these "former" Canadians
You won’t get many people from actual war itself ? They are
The Council was divided on the
by naturalization have not really been deprived of their question of approving the tract either in Cicero or Los Angeles as damaging to the human spirit
citizenship.
map—necessary to the projects to agree on what is at the root as anything that comes with
war.
of these racial outbreaks.
His point is a simple one. Tne Government, he says, construction.
In Los Angeles, for example,
The Nisei in Los Angeles who
Finally, the Council capitulat­
bases its ruling on P. C. 7356 of December 15, 1945, which
the
Caucasians
who
tell
the
Nisei
stands up and fights for what
ed and approved the map because
provides that: "Any persons, who, being a British subject as the white supremacist Los An­ family to stay .out will point to he believes is right—just as the
by naturalization........... is deported from Canada under the
geles Times
sourly acknow­ the Nisei and say, “trouble­ Negro in Cicero who suffered
makers I”
the indignities of mob violenceprovisions of Order-in-Council P. C. 7355 of 15th December, ledged:
In
Cicero,
the
Caucasians
who
are carrying the burden for
You couldn’t deny a. citizen the
1945, shall, as and from the date upon which he leaves Can­
right to make a home in your resorted to mob violence are everyone who has ever been the
ada in the course of such deportation, cease to be either a
neighbourhood just because you saying- the same tiling about the involuntary recipient of racial
British subject or a Canadian national." Then Mr. Brewin didn’t like the fact he was a per­ hapless Negro whose home was bigotry in America.
smashed and whose furniture
points out that no Orders for the deportation of these people son of Japanese ancestry.
The affair in Los Angeles—as
was
burned.
But no Nisei ever moved into
in Cicero—is a disgrace to the
were given, adding that no one can be deported unless
To
moralize
about
such
atti
­
country and makes a mockery oi
they are required by Order to leave Canada. He also brings Jefferson Park, because the vic
toiw in the City Council was an tudes seems extremely unreward­ our pretensions to the world a.'
to attention certain sections of P. C. 7355 which refer to people empty one.
ing and futile.
we find printed every day in the
who proceeded to Japan, having made a request for repat­
The victory looked good for- the
When you are on the receiving Congressional Record. And who
riation and further states that a person voluntarily going out record. But who wants to live end of such treatment, what can among us can deny it ?
By Togo Tanaka

of the country cannot be said to be deported.

It might be said that there appears to be a convincing
case that these people were not deprived of their citizenship
although no favorable reversal of decision should be immed­
iately contemplated from the assurance that the legal point
will be reconsidered. However, there is no doubt that Mr.
Brewin has raised a strong argument that should be pursued
even, if necessary and desirable, to the extent of seeking a
judicial decision.

Colorado Times

lesson from here and seek representative candidates from
clubs, schools or districts.

Advice to
.Ability to speak to an audience, to communicate audibly
NEW IMMIGRANTS
and accurately to a group of people, is an immeasurable
asset that too tew Nisei possess. It can only be gained through
training and experience such as that offered by oratorical
contests. This might be more emphatically stressed in sound­
ing out likely candidates.

We cannot overlook the possibility of a test case on this
point.

ON ORATORICAL CONTESTS

The Omit Is 1@O

A reader wonders if it would be possible to encourage
People are funny. (As if you ! step aside to let someone off,
the sponsorship of oratorical contests which would be open didn’t already know).
J and what a deathly silence! Why
On a crowded streetcar they j
not only to high school students, but also to others, including
is it that people are so hushed
break all the codes of social :
Issei.
on elevators ?

ethics. They fight to get on and *
Supposing there was a Japa­
will squeeze ahead to beat the ■
next poor unfortunate, block the 1 nese movie or shibai on. People
entrance, refuse to budge for; file in well before starting time
someone wanting to get off, read to start filling up the seats
somebody else’s paper, listen in i from the front.
to somebody else’s conversation i
Suppose the next night there
and the noisier ones will talk at ' was a meeting or a religious
the top of their voices.
i service, they just make it or
Put these, same people and ' worse still arrive late, and all the
On tne other hand the one held last spring by the Alberta
pack them even tighter on an j trout seats are empty. Yet back
JCCA chapter came off successfully. It would appear that in
elevator and what happens ? i seats; are always better to see
this case with local chapters sponsoring a contestant, com­ They obey the operator’s request j
movies while it’s easier to hear
petitive spirit in the form of district rivalry was aroused to to move to the back, stand on; sermons or speeches when your’e
produce enthusiasm for the contest. Sponsors might learn a their toes to get everyone on,: closer to the speaker.

Merits of such educational projects are recognized by
organizations but they are hesitant about undertaking them
because they fear a lack of sufficient response. The hard
part about these speechfests is not the sponsoring or organiz­
ing, it's getting the participants. In the past year and a half,
at least two oratorical contests had to be abandoned because
of the lack of entries.

Occasionally it may happen
that recent immigrants and th^r
employers run into serious a '
understandings. A variety
causes may bring these abou^
among them language chit am ties, a lack of knowledge of Can­
adian customs and methods v
the part of the immigrant, oi lack of understanding
*
part of the employer.
It is the desire of the 1 aiadian Government to acme'the integration of immigrants nCanadian life as smoothly am
as quickly as possible, and n.isunderstandings between
rants and their employers
this process.
Immigrants who find via ser­
ious misunderstandings are a—ing between themselves am
employers should therenuv hesitate to get in touch v.. ; •■nearest
Immigration
da.;which could be of assi;-;^ overcoming the difficult <•-■?.
Canadian Citizenship

Bulletin.

Page 3

July

25,

1951
PAGE THREE

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Page 5

July

25,

1951
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NEW

Westerns Best Bests
As Over 1,500 Watch
Tor. Congress Opener

CANADIAN

Look at any Box-score
And you will find Nisei

PAGE SEVEN

I A Movie Review

Tokyo File’ off the Cob

-OOK at any box-s
in
and you may find:
0 ud-leokin ? Japane
lit
ng with rhe Occidental.
champion
of®

camera, howBest
V c.»>e in point is the Interior
"Tokyo File 212” to put it
Toronto > intermediate leagues I Cub R t
is
it
;hrough some
C. baseball league where in a simply, is corn off the cob.
led themselves into a 7-2
outfunwle
ones will be
ent game between SummerThe lirst joint Japanese and
:t«s against Westerns of the Spot at Crow's Nest
quite
intere
i land Merchants and Princeton American ir ide movie, filmed
West Toronto Senior League in
post-war Tokyo,
COLEMAN, Alta. — Two easy I Royals, six N i s;eis involved entirely in
3n opening round of the Toronto
ed stalls on the Ginza
j
themselves
in
the
opened
in
a
summer
maddowntown
Toront o
Senior Baseball Congress Tour­ victories last week for the Cole­
theatre last week. Its place as
nament at Viaduct Park on July man Cubs brought, them back to
Most
prominent
of
these
was
•’2. A crowd of 1,500 watched the their usual first-place perch atou
of all, a tour through
the ageless it is second-rate stuff. A script
the
Crow

s
Nest
Bass
Senior
proceedings, of which over 1,000
Tokyo’s fabulous night
that is thin and flimsy fails to
Baseball League :after journeys
were Japanese-Canadians.
A frenetic, weird
first base, stepped to the mound provide camouflage, for the total
to
Macleod
in
the
afternoon
and
The odd twist to the game was
in the ninth inning’ in time to inadequacy of the acto
both
that both teams were composed Pincher Creek in the evening. absorb the loss for Princeton,
a buxom Japanese woman dances,
American
and
Japanese.
The Cubs now
half.
of Nisei players although the
and through which permeates the
and also rapped out two hits, to
Robert Peyton and Florence
game
lead
over
Blairmore
bests belonged to a lower calibre
ikt
keep up the belief that old Asahi Marly, the latter of “Tokyo Joe"
league. Some of the players on ticks. Fernie and Hillcrest com- players neither die nor fade
mosphere. Glimpses of
dance
fame, play the lead roles while
plete
the
first
division.
the Bests roster, however, have
number by “Ichimaru’’
away.
“Sally” Nakamura, former Van­
A
1
-run
sixth
inning
topped
b.ad trials with the Westerns
Also on the roster for Prince- couver, B. C., baseball player “number one” geisha girl and
the
Cubs

21-6
splurge
over
Mac
­
seniors.
ton
the: energetic Koga and singer, plays the villain.
Troupe can be briefly
But
It pointed up to a tense game leod as the sluggers blasted the brothers, Mits and Mori, formerReiko Otani, a U.S. Nisei, and
unfortunately
camera (Iocs
between the two rivals but un- offerings of three pitchers, and ly of Rutland Adanacs, and who
Hawaiian-born Katsuhiko Haida not delav on
outjittered them- coasted to the win behind the have come to
? scent's but
derdog
the mining centre play the. principals in the movie’s
3-hit
pitching
of
Charlie
Kita
­
selves right out of Congress play
to work.
love affair.
the
the
when they committed six errors. guchi and M. Kimoto.
Left-fielder Kuroda of the
Of their acting, little that is
Alec
Jovaeik
with
four
hits,
movie may prove quite entcrtainWesterns who trotted out most
Summerland club proved to be recommendable can be said. The
and
Dave
Tow,
Charlie
Kitaguchi
of their second-string players,
the fair-haired lad, starting 3 RKO film adds up to another
•the highly refined type
breezed to the win on southpaw and George Yoshinaka with three rallies in all. Fred Kato, thirdcops-and-robbers stylet I opera, quite
hits
each,
furnished
the
power.
Ken Ikeda's 2-hit hurling. Jun­
base, and S. Jomori. shortstop, without the benefit of a Hum­
9-hittcr
and vcrv diffiLeftv Kimoto
ior star Major Fukumoto took
also added to the festivities. Ku­ phrey Bogart or even an Alan
was
enough to give the Cubs a
over shortstop chores for the
roda walked in the 9th, stole two Ladd.
may
9-6
win
over Tincher Creek al­
Westerns.
bases and came home on an error
The plot is concerned with heTucker Uchikura, ace pitcher though the Nisei team’s power to knot up the score, and then ro Robert Peyton’s efforts in un­
ot Bests, went five innings be­ was comparatively slowed down Kato promptly flied. out to score covering a diabolical Communist thc amateurish acting should not.
of a runner and the winning run.
fore yielding to Basil Cormier ■ by Bill Bu image’s
movement in Tokyo of which ilar to that of the imported sa­
with Bob Ohashi behind the eight hits.
The score, by the way if Sally Nakamura portrays the
murai films of pre-war days.
The typical Cubs’ big inning you’re interested, was 9-8.
plate. Westerns managed only
leader. Nakamura proves him­
But the death kpell of “Tokyo
live hits but ran up a 5-0 score came in the sixth when they
self quite adept in playing’ the Tile 212” is its much too obin five innings before Bests dent- tallied six times to ice the game.
Oriental stereotype—inscrutable, vious off the
All-Around Player
ed the plate with two runs in the
mysterious, and sly. And if you
LETHBRIDGE, Alta.
In
mxth.
TNT, Bests Awarded
9-8 triumph over Gyro Tigers, manage to linger until the end,
Hitting stars were
a voting Nisei provided the you will find out that justice,
The middleman in the surrend­
nasri for Westerns with two hits Defaulted Games
punch for the winning Lions naturally, prevails over all and er of Japanese holdouts on Anaand Tad Miura for- Best Clean­
The picnic bug and the sticky Giants in the opening game of villain Nakamura is carried off
ers with a triple.
tahan Island to the U.S. Navy
weather, among other things, the Lethbridge midget baseball in irons.
Westerns now meet Mahers on played havoc with the Toronto
The role of Sally Nakamura as was a Nisei interpreter Ken Akaleague recently.
Thursday, July 26, at St. Clair Nisei Sunday Baseball League as
Sam Kitagawa not only hurled Oyama the villain may provide tani who did the interpreting
bladium, in another round of both Busseis and Robbies failed
the complete game for the the chief source of interest to between Lt. Commdr. Robert
longress play.
to come up with enough players Giants, limiting the opposition Canadian Nisei who may remem­
Shannon and Capt. Katsusaburo
and defaulted their games to to two hits, while hitting a ber him in pre-war Vancouver
In a
West Toronto
Club TNT and Best Cleaners, home-run, but also struck out 11 days when he played the outfield Usui of the surrendering group.
loop encounter on July 21, West­
for the Asahis and sang in con­
respectively, on July 22.
batters.
erns behind a newly acquired
certs.
In the Tokyo premiere of
Both games were recorded as
Pal ionize
player, won a 3-1 verdict over
the film earlier this year which
technical 7-0 wins for TNT and Hiroshima Ball Park
Icict Pan Cleaners, to creep up Bests. There was no report of
Onr Ad veriis ers
was presented with all the glit­
to \\uhin a game of the fifth
ter and colour of a Hollywood
the results of the game between Is Japan's Flatbush
piace team.
Hurricanes and Pearl’s Credit
TOKYO — The most rabid premiere, Nakamura was report­
Hurler or the Westerns, Sevpress-time.
baseball fans in Japan are those ed to have sang “Old Man River”
ernuck. ■who had been pitching
in the pre-show ceremonies to
The TNBL schedule for next in atom-bombed Hiroshima.
-"i Staffords of the Viaduct
Chop Suey House
29, is as follows:
Although the Hiroshima Carps
League, threw a nifty 4-hitter Sunday, July
92-A Elizabeth St, Toronto
Hurricanes vs. Best Cleaners, are in last place in the Central St. Louis Browns Mav
ioi the triumph.
TNT vs. Robbies, Trofe s s i o n a 1 League, some
BANQUETS AND FAMTLI
Although pitcher* Ken Ohara 9 a.m.; Club
Sign Nisei Pitcher
DINNERS
25,000
fans
pack
the
stands
for
allowed but three hits, five er- 11 a.m.. at Christie Pits. Busseis
9 each game to root for the home
ST. LOUIS, Mo. — Abe SaperHours: 12 Noon to 4 *jn.
Credit
^is behind him cost the West
Reservations: EM4-9035
stein, owner of the Harlem I
club.
vrns a o-3 ball game played this a.m.
“A visiting club dislikes play­ Globetrotters who is now asso- i
^veek on July 93.
ing in the atom-bombed city be­ ciated with Bill Veeck in the
NOT TOO FAT
! JOHNNY NAKASHIMA)
Chinese or Canadian
fOKYO — 40 ladies answered cause of the fanatic demonstra­ ownership of the St. Louis
tions
by
the
spectators
in
favor
Browns
is
reported
to
have
made
Oil Burners, Roofing,
) an
“Wanted: Ladies
Foods
of
their
team
and
fierce
oppo
­
an
offer
to
a
Nisei
hurler
in
Rock Wool Insulation,
)
more than 150 lbs."
RICKSHA'
Gurney Furnaces.
) Eight were selected to play cab- sition to the opposing squad,” Hawaii.
B/ Alton Ave.,
Toronto.
i
says a radio sports announcer.
The pitcher was not identified
RESTAURANT
j aret dancers in a musical com­
Japanese
fans
tend
to
be
but
is
believed
to
be

Bill
Nishi2^NE
ha. 5550 |
83 Lagauchetiere St. W.
edy.
undemonstrative and this is true ta, who this season was the ace
t

Hamilton JCCA a- Kyowa Club

First Joint Annual Picnic
Near Ryckman's Corner
<CING

— 75c
Adul

everybody welcomed

FREE DRAW

in other cities in the country.
Except for applause when their
favorites pull off a fine play or
pole out a long hit, they rarely
exhibit their enthusiasm, or de­
rision towards an umpire.
But 1the Hiroshima fans are
i differenit, They aren’t “gentlemanlv” at ail in he opinion of
■ sports writers. They will yell at
: each delivery of the opposing
; pitcher in an effort to unnerve
; him. and the behavior and the
‘ support that the bomb survivors
I cive their lowly Carps have
; turned many lost causes into
i victories.

of the University of California’s
mound staff and is regarded as
the outstanding young player developed in Hawaii in recent
vears.
Now pitching for the Honolulu
Braves in the Hawaii Baseball
League which he joined in mid­ x
June, Nishita has won three vic- X
tories.
If he should sign with the
x
Browns, it would be of interest T
to Niseis in Ontario as Toronto
Maple Leafs have a working
agreement with the Browns and
he might be assigned to the
Brown’s only triple A affiliate.

.Montreal, P. Q.

For Reservations
Phone HA. 4998

I* H*milto>, It’i

LUCK INN
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
21 JOHN 8T.

NORTH

For Fine Chinese Food

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PARTIES & BANQUETS

Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE

SOCIAL CALENDAR

NEW

CANADIAN

Credit Union Meeting

SILK RHW

erd on a

DISCRIMINATION
1

For Busseis July 27
The Vancouver

old

T

29—Hamilton,
and Kyov
Picni
near Rycki
29—Fort William. Lakehead •
nic, at Chippewa Park.

L

: 250

factories, win largt
vhich produce exclu
G IT' C? t V

o
11,000,000
was 70% of Japan’s
sent to Yokohama
1948 to be shipped
abroad. Before
exam
hinoed it recei

About

nic, at Lakeview Park, Oshawa.
an
18—Toronto.
at
Tne
Mossington Park, Lal
coe.

n the two cities.
30 per cent is
the people at home.

SEPTEMBER
I which hav< been laid on conven
28—Toronto. Toronto YBS Sixth • lent card- and
at preserved over the winter, are
A nni versa ry Fall
U.N.F. Hall.
placed in an iticubator late in
the earlv part
April or <

PERSONS SOUGHT
Japanese
Government
The
Agency,
Room
194,
Overseas
Chateau Laurier. Ottawa. Ont.,
is seeking the following persons:
SHOSO KAWAHARA — born
June 25, 1882. Domicile in Japan
was Okagaki-mura, Yoshiki Onga-gun,
Fukuoka-ken,
Japan.
Used to live in Dawson, Yukon,
around 1941.
TED MORIMOTO — Domicile
in Japan
was Saikawa-machi,
Matsuye, Miyako-gun, Fukuokaken, Japan. Used to live on 637
East 8th Ave., Calgary. Alta.
Anyone who knows their pre­
sent addresses is requested to
The New Canadian.
notify the Japanese Agency or

SiSftl*^

Three or four days alter the
Ik-worms are hatched they cease
p for several
feedim and
hours in
i preparation for casting
off their skins. Silk-worms pas;
through four periods of ecdysit
e intervals of which the;
very rapidly until they fin
ally cease feeding entirely.
The intervals between tne
“sleeping” period cover from

days, varying according to the
temperature. It is in the fifth
age, after “sleeping” four times,
that the silk-worms attain the
peak of their growth and stop
eating to begin spinning the co­
coon. This is roughly the thir­
tieth dav after emerging from the

WINNIPEG — Kazuye Kay
third daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Menizo Hisai aga, was married
to Mr. Joe Y'oshiaki Konishi,
eldest son of Mr. R. Konishi of
Steveston, B. C., at the Ladv’s
Chapel, AU
Church on July 5. Canon Findlay
officiated.
Reception was held at the
Shangai Chop Suey House, Following a honeymoon trip to Ghicago, the couple is now residing
at 70 Isabel St., Winnipeg, Man.

Guests at Hamilton Pic
HAMILTON — The Hamilton
JCGA and the Kyowa Club are
welcoming all to their first joint
picnic. Special complimentary' in­
vitations will be sent to those 70
years of age or over.

CLASSIFIED SECTION

Phone LA. 2662
Toronto

>

FOR RENT

:
ONE ROOM, suitable for cou? pie. Phone PL. 67S4. Toronto.
THREE ROOM FLAT with
nk, suitable for adult family
ill 624 Crawford St., anytime.

CROWN Uri INSURANCE CO.
Office: 21 Dundas Square
Phone EM. 3-0076-7
Res.: 526 Manning Avenue
TORONTO, ONT.
Res. ME. 6072

70 or Over, Special

It’s possible that some of these
people may be overlooked al­
though every attempt is being
made to ensure that they will all
Offers Japanese Flower receive invitations. However,
with or without invitations, these
Arrangement Courses
j people will be welcomed as speLONDON, Ont. — London’s i cial guests.
J. H. S.
first Japanese flower arranging
courses were started earlier this
PASSING THRU
month at the Elsie Perrin Wil­
liams Memorial Library. Mrs.
(Continued from Page 1)
Miyo Obokata is instructing the
class which meets every Tuesday of engagements and marriages
of Nisei and the birth of the
evening.
Later this month, an exhibit­ Sansei is the sobering tone of the
ion made by her students will be obituary columns from which
can be noted a slow demise of a
given.
generation.
The tragic note is that in this
age, the cocoons are smothered
passing generation, so many of
and then dried.
Cocoons inspected and ap- them never get to know their
proved at the Cocoon Inspection children as well as they should.
Office are sold to silk filatures
and reelers. At the filature, co­
coons are first boiled in hot wat­
News Report: The Gusii tribe
er until silk fibres are loosened.
in East Africa have a new prob­
The boiling is technically one of
lem. Marriage has become a lux­
the most difficult, as well as the
ury item because of inflation.
most important steps in the en­
Up until 1942. a man could
tire process of silk-reeling. Then
operatives find the end of each get a grade A bride for six
fibre in each cocoon and after cows, one bull and ten goats. But
gathering a number of these civilization and inflation raised
ends, according to the denier of the price to 16 cows, one bull
the yarn to be made, they place and 20 goats.
Only the idealistic can now
them on the reeling machine.
The raw silk removed from the cling to the idea that love is the
reel is coiled in a fixed shape basis for marriage. ,
in order to be easily transported.
That’s thirty, brother.

gummy
originally
fluid contained in two ducts un­
2«4-A YONG! STREIT, TORONTO, ONT.
der the stomach of the silkworm.
The ducts are. known by the name

silk g ands.” Silk-worms feed
P 0 SIRA I I • COMMERCIAL • COLOUR
on the leaves of the mulberry
tree. They eat no other leaves
T0WM STUDIO
Consequently, the process begins
minus it
in spring when the tender leaves
to appear on the
are beg
H » t «
tree.
When the silk-worm reaches
it is
Lucien C. Kurata
pecial nest made
removed to
Barrister and Solicitor
of dried straw, where it seeks
1 Adelaide St. E.. Toronto
I a spot which suits
best fo
1st and 2nd Mortgage Loans
spinning
its
cocoon.
When
it suc­
arranged
Office EM-4 5259 Res. LY.3427
ceeds in finding the desired spot,
it emits a fine thread from its
mouth and begins to spin its coctirst making the tramework.
0. K. CLEANERS ;• oon:
and within a day or two comp101 LA QUEEN ST. W.
i letes the work.
For Pick-up and Delivery

After four or five days the
Phone
; silk-worm undergoes another ecWA. 6953
i dysis in the cocoon and turns inThen, the cocoons
a chr
EM4-050S
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
uwed from, the straw nest
Residence:
2 Vosta Drive
MARRIED COUPLE to live in.
fibre has the
MAfair 1365.
North
Toronto home. Light duties
ft. and
ne
as
housework
and man as handy­
Andrew E. McKague
f
four or man: able to drive car. Private
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
quarters, duties to commence
Public.
Aug. 15. For further informa­
will
be
th
201 Northern Ontario Bldstion
apply JI. Nakamura, 121
the altitude of
330 Bay St.
McCormack
Ave., Toronto.
(Corner Adelaide & Bay Sts.)
M
capa'ble girl. or woman,
TORONTO
of
light housekeeping, small home.
EM .3-5002, Toronto.
Ji
BUSINESS GIRL given free
a I room and board in exchange for
^ j light duties. Bathurst and St.
S' i Clair. Phone LO. 0532, Toronto.

Ballroom Danciiwinstructions

B

: Club serves to illustrate th
Buddhist membe:
j point. The first Japanese Ca
be neld on. Friday, July O
YOKOYAMA — TAKATA
; a di an ball team to plav in Vap.m.. at he Bukkyo-kai Hal on I■ couver since 1941
TORONTO — The
134
i a favorite among
o Miss Toshiy
Guest speaker will be
nas a large Caucasian loiicwi
of Mr. and
Hugh who is representing the ; which, flocks to Powell Str?
Toronto, and Mr. Toshiji Yo
Ontario Credit Union. Thos e in [ Grounds on nights when Ni
ot
attendance can ask questions and 1 games are scheduled.
Yokoyama of
discuss any of the points
But the Nisei still find
place at
Mr. Hugh brings up.
tough on the employment fro:
Julv
Rev. J. Fim
The Toronto Buddhists recent i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniimnHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
lay officiated.
ly
received their charter and
Reception followed at the Ce­
have been formed into an orga­
lestial Gardens.
Out
*
*
*
nization called the Toronto Budd­
Advertisers
hist Church Credit Union LimKONISHI — HISANAGA

FEMALE HELP WANTED

STORE GIRL. Apply Danforth
.Cleaners, 300 Jones Ave., Tor­
onto.

experienced, good
wages.
chartered
accountant’s office. 342 Richmond
St. W.4 top floor. EM. 3-6304,
Toronto.
HELP WANTED

PAINTER’S HELPER, exper­
ience not necessary. Kaz Kato,
LL. 4697, Toronto.

DRIVER-G A R D E N E R, 39
Grant St., GE. 7911, ask for Mr.
Sano, Toronto.

EXPERIENCED
short-order
ok, good wastes. 4 p.m. to 1
a.m. Apply Don's
Bloor St. W., Toronto.

General Insurance
224 Delhi Ave, Phone RE. 2385
Wilson Heights P. O.. Ont.
Automobile, Fire. Burglary
Life, Accident & Sickness, etc.

Agent
COMPANY OF CANADA

Box 149

Kamloops, B. C.

K.GOTO
Agent

MONARCH LIFE
ASSURANCE CO.
66 Kling St. E., — Tel. 2-2594
Hamilton
Residence:
59 Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960

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tations of national and interna­
tional news, there is no substitute
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