Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
VOL. 15, NO. 42
WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1952
S6 Per Year — 10 c Per Copy
JnpHn Ambassador Arrives
Buddhists To Re-Petition Against
in Vancouver Next Week
The recently-appointed .Japa
nese envoy to Canada, Sadao Igu
chi, will leave Haneda airport in
Tokyo on June 6 to assume his
post in Ottawa, The New Cana
dian was informed this week. He
will be accompanied by his son,
Norio, 19, and two secretaries.
Restrictions, Start $2,000 Drive
In a special message to The
N eAv Canadian, Mr. Iguchi ex
pressed a desire to contribute to
the promotion of friendship bet
Protesting .against the restriction of the right to
ween Japan and Canada, now that Trusting Bride Finds
worship
sty of democratic principles, the
normal relations have been reQuebec Buddhist Church spearheaded by the Eastern.
Money, Hubbv Gone
restored. He said that although
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah. — Canada I oung Buddhists’ League is planning- to re-petthe two countries are separat
The party will arrive in Van ed by a wide stretch of ocean, Story of a slick-talking- Kibei ition for a Church Charter to the Quebec Legislative
couver and remain there over they are in reality closely con (American Nisei educated in Ja Assembly which would give them the privileges de
night before entraining for Ot nected and have a mutual econo pan) who deserted his Nisei prived them by Quebec law.
bride of three days, taking with
tawa. They will reach the capital mic interest in each other.
For this purpose, the ECYBL will conduct an appeal for the
him
$1,000 of her money is told amount of $2,000 which is necessary for financing a petition at
Mr. Iguchi regretted the hard
on June 12 to take over the em
bassy which Japan is establish ship suffered by Japanese Cana by the Utah Nippo.
the next session of the Legislative Assemby which will sit in
Without releasing names, the November, 1952. The appeal for funds will be held from June to
ing for the first time in Canada. dians during the War through no
fault of their own. He hope that paper said that the couple eloped September of this year and will be aimed at all Buddhists in Can
Upon his arrival in Vancouver,
with the development of a new to Los Vegas, then returned to ada and other persons interested in 'correcting a curtailment of
the' ambassador will be greeted
Japan, Japanese Canadians will Salt Lake City to make their the right to worship as one pleases.
by his daughter, Tatsuko, 23, a
help promote better Japan-Can home. The second day home, the
Said the Quebec Buddhist Church, “A principle is at stake.
student, at Stanford University in
Kibei coaxed his new bride to It is no longer a Buddhist problem, impinging only upon a Buddh
ada relations.
Palo Alto, Calif., who is making
buy him a car, and later he ad
ist s peisonal, spiritual life. It is now a problem which concerns
Mr. Iguchi’s wife and other
a special trip to Canada to meet
vised her to draw out $1,000 from all free-thinking, freedom-loving
people in Canada.”
son will join him in Ottawa dur
her account which she did.
her father.
ing the latter part of June.
The first attempt and failure e^---------------------------------------- _____
While she was out shopping
tion of this bill be witheld until
for groceries, he absconded, with in January of 1951 of the peti
tion asking- for incorporation of the next session which might be
the $1,000 and she hasn’t seen
the Buddhist Church of Quebec a more advantageous time for
him since.
still remains vague. What had this matter.”
The girl revealed to the Utah- been regarded as merely a legal
A . Central Committee is pre
Nippo that this was the second formality had broken out into so
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The
sently
planning a course of ac
occasion she has been duped by mething bigger—that strong po
U.S. Senate last week passed the
tion,
led
by Kiyoshi Suga of
a man.
Reject
Proposal
litical
opposition
in
the
legisla
McCarran omnibus immigration
Montreal, president of the ECYture
opposed
the
presentation
of
Favorable
to
JC's
BL. The matter affects about 400
and naturalization bill bringing
Costumed
Nisei
Girls
such
a
bill,
thus
developing
into
Buddhists in Quebec, mostly rethe right to citizenship a step
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Vot
a
bigger
issue
than
what
was
ex
siding
in the Greater Montreal
May Tag for UN Group
closer to approximately 80,000 re
ing on the McCarran Omnibus
pected.
area. It is nf concern to 2,500
sident aliens of Japanese ances
bill, the U.S. Senate last week
Girls of various race and na
The petition, prepared via re- Issei and 1,445 Nisei and Sansei
try and few thousand other U.S.
rejected an amendment which
tionality will appear on Toronto
residents who are still “ineligible
proposed that Asians living
streets on Saturday, May 31 as gular channels for a hearing be- officially registered as Buddhists
to citizenship.”
outside the Orient should have
taggers for the United Nations fore a Private Bills Committee, across Canada. There are appro
Committee. ximately 10,000 Buddhists in
The measure, Which inspired
the same privilege of immigra
Association. Purpose of the tag never reached the
Canada, the total including the
the Senate’s biggest debate of
tion applying to other nation
day is to sustain the work of the Said the barrister- who had been
official numbers.
the year, will revise and codify
als in the lands in which they
UN Association which as the pub acting for the Quebec Buddhist
the nation’s immigration and na
reside.
lic arm of the United Nations, Church, “I have been recently in
turalization laws.
Under such a proposal which
strives for a better understand formed from Quebec that it would Quebec Law Denies
be rather inadvisable to present
A companion bill, known as the
was introduced by Sen. Benton
ing of the UN.
our petition at the present ses Religious Egualitv
Walter Bill was passed last
of Connecticut, a Democrat,
Among the taggel's will be a
In Quebec, Buddhists have car
month by the House of Repre
Japanese residing in Canada
number of Nisei girls who are sion. It is not felt that it would
meet
with
any
degree
of
success
ried
on their own religion with
sentatives. Differences between
would not come under a restric
volunteering their services. The
if introduced at the moment for in their rights as Canadian citi
the two bills, which are of a mi
tive quota as Canada is a non
plan calls for the girls to be
hearing
before the Private Bills zens, but have been deprived cer
nor nature, will be ironed out by - quota country.
dressed in their native costumes.
Committee. In the circumstances, tain official rights because Budd
a joint Senate-House Committee.
I would urge that the presenta- hism is not officially recognized.
Once the compromise is reach
Quebec law recognizes only Cath
ed and the changed are approved,
olicism, Protestantism and Juda
the bill would go to President
U.S. Nisei Engineer
ism. All other religions seeking
Truman for his signature. Pos
Working in Regina
recognition, must present a peti
sibility of a presidential veto
REGINA,
Sask.
—
A
Nisei
ention for a Church Charter to the
still exists as the President is
Senior
Isseis
of Toronto,
Of the guests, five have -eunderstood to look with disfavor among them 12 persons over 80 sided in Canada for 58 year-, and gineer from Denver, Colo., Hen Legislative Assembly.
ry Nogami is presently working
The Quebec Buddhist Church,
on certain restrictive features of years of age, were guests of the 49 for at least 50 years.
in Saskatchewan in oil develop therefore, while morally sanction
the McCarran-Walter Bills.
Toronto JCCA Keiro-kai held on
Having the most number of ment for the Atlantic Refinement ed within the province, has no
Indeed, the strongest opposition May 25 at the Canadian Legion grandchildren were Mrs. Kuma
to the McCarran measure came Hall, attended by some 350 per Sumi and Mr. Yasutaro Morika Co. He is expected to be in the legal status and is deprived of
Regina., area for some time with certain privileges accorded the
not from Senators opposed to the sons.
wa, each with 21. Ten represented an oil exploration party of the three recognized faiths. Without
principle of eliminating race dis
Ninety-two persons, out of 119 the largest number of great
a charter, they are deprived of
crimination from U.S. immigra invited who are 70 years or over grandchildren, claimed by Mrs. Atlantic Co.
His wife and children are the right to carry on its religi
tion and naturalization laws, but were present at a box-supper and Kame Nitta.
planning to join him during the ous work, the right to acquire
from those who favor more libe entertainment program planned
property, the legal right to per
Flowers
for
the
occasion
were
summer.
ral amendments.
in their honor. Included were se
form acts of civil status, such
This group, led by Sen. Hubert ven couples. Men outnumbered donated by Mr. M. Moritsugu of
as
baptism and marriages, and
St.
Thomas,
Ont.
Donations
were
Humphrey, Minnesota, and Sen. the women guests by about two
1st Nisei to Receive
to keep registers of such acts.
received from the Toronto BuddRobert Lehman, Now York, both to one.
Ph.
D.
at
Western
Church,
Toronto
Sangha
Democrats, are proposing a mea
This state of affairs is what
Paying tribute to the elderly hist
LONDON, Ont. — Joining the the Quebec Buddhist Church call
sure which would actually tend to people were E. Nobuoka, Ken Ho and from many of the guests.
still very few but slowly increas a violation of one of the Four
improve the quota system in fa- ri and Mikio Nakamura. Tokue
ing list of Nisei Doctors of Phi Freedoms — Freedom of Wor
Vor of the Japanese and other Kameoka introducted the guests Envoy to U.S.
losophy is Fred A. Sunahara of ship — incorporated in the “Unipresently non-eligible groups.
and Tammy Marubashi acted as
TOKYO — Eikichi Araki, first London, Ont.
He received his versal Declaration of Human
Their measure, however, was chairman. Entertainment includ
Japanese ambassador to the Unit post-graduate degree in physio
Rights” on Dec. 10, 1948, by the
mmed back by the Senate. 51 to ed songs, odoris and films.
ed States since World War II, left logy, last week.
General
Assebly of the United
Mrs. Tsuruyo Oka, 86, was the last week for Washington.
Sunahara,
an
active
member
of
Nations, and to which Prime Min
oldest of the guests. She has a
PIGEONS TO RACE IN U.S.
“
The
promotion
of
goodwill
and
the
London-St.
Thomas
JCCA,
is
ister
St. Louis Laurent placed
Tokyo — The Japanese Pigeon son, 62. grandson, 39 and great
friendship
between
the
two
coun
the
first
Nisei
to
be
conferred
his signature on behalf of the Ca
society will enter 35 homing p- grandson, 10. Found to be the old
tries
will
be
my
first
and
last
with
the
Ph.
D.
degree
at
the
nadian
Gov’t, and the Canadian
geons in the races in Denver and est couple were Mr. and Mr?.
I
task
always.
”
Araki
said.
University
of
Western
Ontario.
people.
Genya Yasui, 83 and 77.
San Antonio this fall.
Citizenship for U. S. Issei
Step Closer As Senate Acts
92 Elderly Guests Honored
At Keiro-Kai Oldest Is 86
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
VOL. 15, NO. 42
WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1952
S6 Per Year — 10 c Per Copy
JnpHn Ambassador Arrives
Buddhists To Re-Petition Against
in Vancouver Next Week
The recently-appointed .Japa
nese envoy to Canada, Sadao Igu
chi, will leave Haneda airport in
Tokyo on June 6 to assume his
post in Ottawa, The New Cana
dian was informed this week. He
will be accompanied by his son,
Norio, 19, and two secretaries.
Restrictions, Start $2,000 Drive
In a special message to The
N eAv Canadian, Mr. Iguchi ex
pressed a desire to contribute to
the promotion of friendship bet
Protesting .against the restriction of the right to
ween Japan and Canada, now that Trusting Bride Finds
worship
sty of democratic principles, the
normal relations have been reQuebec Buddhist Church spearheaded by the Eastern.
Money, Hubbv Gone
restored. He said that although
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah. — Canada I oung Buddhists’ League is planning- to re-petthe two countries are separat
The party will arrive in Van ed by a wide stretch of ocean, Story of a slick-talking- Kibei ition for a Church Charter to the Quebec Legislative
couver and remain there over they are in reality closely con (American Nisei educated in Ja Assembly which would give them the privileges de
night before entraining for Ot nected and have a mutual econo pan) who deserted his Nisei prived them by Quebec law.
bride of three days, taking with
tawa. They will reach the capital mic interest in each other.
For this purpose, the ECYBL will conduct an appeal for the
him
$1,000 of her money is told amount of $2,000 which is necessary for financing a petition at
Mr. Iguchi regretted the hard
on June 12 to take over the em
bassy which Japan is establish ship suffered by Japanese Cana by the Utah Nippo.
the next session of the Legislative Assemby which will sit in
Without releasing names, the November, 1952. The appeal for funds will be held from June to
ing for the first time in Canada. dians during the War through no
fault of their own. He hope that paper said that the couple eloped September of this year and will be aimed at all Buddhists in Can
Upon his arrival in Vancouver,
with the development of a new to Los Vegas, then returned to ada and other persons interested in 'correcting a curtailment of
the' ambassador will be greeted
Japan, Japanese Canadians will Salt Lake City to make their the right to worship as one pleases.
by his daughter, Tatsuko, 23, a
help promote better Japan-Can home. The second day home, the
Said the Quebec Buddhist Church, “A principle is at stake.
student, at Stanford University in
Kibei coaxed his new bride to It is no longer a Buddhist problem, impinging only upon a Buddh
ada relations.
Palo Alto, Calif., who is making
buy him a car, and later he ad
ist s peisonal, spiritual life. It is now a problem which concerns
Mr. Iguchi’s wife and other
a special trip to Canada to meet
vised her to draw out $1,000 from all free-thinking, freedom-loving
people in Canada.”
son will join him in Ottawa dur
her account which she did.
her father.
ing the latter part of June.
The first attempt and failure e^---------------------------------------- _____
While she was out shopping
tion of this bill be witheld until
for groceries, he absconded, with in January of 1951 of the peti
tion asking- for incorporation of the next session which might be
the $1,000 and she hasn’t seen
the Buddhist Church of Quebec a more advantageous time for
him since.
still remains vague. What had this matter.”
The girl revealed to the Utah- been regarded as merely a legal
A . Central Committee is pre
Nippo that this was the second formality had broken out into so
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The
sently
planning a course of ac
occasion she has been duped by mething bigger—that strong po
U.S. Senate last week passed the
tion,
led
by Kiyoshi Suga of
a man.
Reject
Proposal
litical
opposition
in
the
legisla
McCarran omnibus immigration
Montreal, president of the ECYture
opposed
the
presentation
of
Favorable
to
JC's
BL. The matter affects about 400
and naturalization bill bringing
Costumed
Nisei
Girls
such
a
bill,
thus
developing
into
Buddhists in Quebec, mostly rethe right to citizenship a step
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Vot
a
bigger
issue
than
what
was
ex
siding
in the Greater Montreal
May Tag for UN Group
closer to approximately 80,000 re
ing on the McCarran Omnibus
pected.
area. It is nf concern to 2,500
sident aliens of Japanese ances
bill, the U.S. Senate last week
Girls of various race and na
The petition, prepared via re- Issei and 1,445 Nisei and Sansei
try and few thousand other U.S.
rejected an amendment which
tionality will appear on Toronto
residents who are still “ineligible
proposed that Asians living
streets on Saturday, May 31 as gular channels for a hearing be- officially registered as Buddhists
to citizenship.”
outside the Orient should have
taggers for the United Nations fore a Private Bills Committee, across Canada. There are appro
Committee. ximately 10,000 Buddhists in
The measure, Which inspired
the same privilege of immigra
Association. Purpose of the tag never reached the
Canada, the total including the
the Senate’s biggest debate of
tion applying to other nation
day is to sustain the work of the Said the barrister- who had been
official numbers.
the year, will revise and codify
als in the lands in which they
UN Association which as the pub acting for the Quebec Buddhist
the nation’s immigration and na
reside.
lic arm of the United Nations, Church, “I have been recently in
turalization laws.
Under such a proposal which
strives for a better understand formed from Quebec that it would Quebec Law Denies
be rather inadvisable to present
A companion bill, known as the
was introduced by Sen. Benton
ing of the UN.
our petition at the present ses Religious Egualitv
Walter Bill was passed last
of Connecticut, a Democrat,
Among the taggel's will be a
In Quebec, Buddhists have car
month by the House of Repre
Japanese residing in Canada
number of Nisei girls who are sion. It is not felt that it would
meet
with
any
degree
of
success
ried
on their own religion with
sentatives. Differences between
would not come under a restric
volunteering their services. The
if introduced at the moment for in their rights as Canadian citi
the two bills, which are of a mi
tive quota as Canada is a non
plan calls for the girls to be
hearing
before the Private Bills zens, but have been deprived cer
nor nature, will be ironed out by - quota country.
dressed in their native costumes.
Committee. In the circumstances, tain official rights because Budd
a joint Senate-House Committee.
I would urge that the presenta- hism is not officially recognized.
Once the compromise is reach
Quebec law recognizes only Cath
ed and the changed are approved,
olicism, Protestantism and Juda
the bill would go to President
U.S. Nisei Engineer
ism. All other religions seeking
Truman for his signature. Pos
Working in Regina
recognition, must present a peti
sibility of a presidential veto
REGINA,
Sask.
—
A
Nisei
ention for a Church Charter to the
still exists as the President is
Senior
Isseis
of Toronto,
Of the guests, five have -eunderstood to look with disfavor among them 12 persons over 80 sided in Canada for 58 year-, and gineer from Denver, Colo., Hen Legislative Assembly.
ry Nogami is presently working
The Quebec Buddhist Church,
on certain restrictive features of years of age, were guests of the 49 for at least 50 years.
in Saskatchewan in oil develop therefore, while morally sanction
the McCarran-Walter Bills.
Toronto JCCA Keiro-kai held on
Having the most number of ment for the Atlantic Refinement ed within the province, has no
Indeed, the strongest opposition May 25 at the Canadian Legion grandchildren were Mrs. Kuma
to the McCarran measure came Hall, attended by some 350 per Sumi and Mr. Yasutaro Morika Co. He is expected to be in the legal status and is deprived of
Regina., area for some time with certain privileges accorded the
not from Senators opposed to the sons.
wa, each with 21. Ten represented an oil exploration party of the three recognized faiths. Without
principle of eliminating race dis
Ninety-two persons, out of 119 the largest number of great
a charter, they are deprived of
crimination from U.S. immigra invited who are 70 years or over grandchildren, claimed by Mrs. Atlantic Co.
His wife and children are the right to carry on its religi
tion and naturalization laws, but were present at a box-supper and Kame Nitta.
planning to join him during the ous work, the right to acquire
from those who favor more libe entertainment program planned
property, the legal right to per
Flowers
for
the
occasion
were
summer.
ral amendments.
in their honor. Included were se
form acts of civil status, such
This group, led by Sen. Hubert ven couples. Men outnumbered donated by Mr. M. Moritsugu of
as
baptism and marriages, and
St.
Thomas,
Ont.
Donations
were
Humphrey, Minnesota, and Sen. the women guests by about two
1st Nisei to Receive
to keep registers of such acts.
received from the Toronto BuddRobert Lehman, Now York, both to one.
Ph.
D.
at
Western
Church,
Toronto
Sangha
Democrats, are proposing a mea
This state of affairs is what
Paying tribute to the elderly hist
LONDON, Ont. — Joining the the Quebec Buddhist Church call
sure which would actually tend to people were E. Nobuoka, Ken Ho and from many of the guests.
still very few but slowly increas a violation of one of the Four
improve the quota system in fa- ri and Mikio Nakamura. Tokue
ing list of Nisei Doctors of Phi Freedoms — Freedom of Wor
Vor of the Japanese and other Kameoka introducted the guests Envoy to U.S.
losophy is Fred A. Sunahara of ship — incorporated in the “Unipresently non-eligible groups.
and Tammy Marubashi acted as
TOKYO — Eikichi Araki, first London, Ont.
He received his versal Declaration of Human
Their measure, however, was chairman. Entertainment includ
Japanese ambassador to the Unit post-graduate degree in physio
Rights” on Dec. 10, 1948, by the
mmed back by the Senate. 51 to ed songs, odoris and films.
ed States since World War II, left logy, last week.
General
Assebly of the United
Mrs. Tsuruyo Oka, 86, was the last week for Washington.
Sunahara,
an
active
member
of
Nations, and to which Prime Min
oldest of the guests. She has a
PIGEONS TO RACE IN U.S.
“
The
promotion
of
goodwill
and
the
London-St.
Thomas
JCCA,
is
ister
St. Louis Laurent placed
Tokyo — The Japanese Pigeon son, 62. grandson, 39 and great
friendship
between
the
two
coun
the
first
Nisei
to
be
conferred
his signature on behalf of the Ca
society will enter 35 homing p- grandson, 10. Found to be the old
tries
will
be
my
first
and
last
with
the
Ph.
D.
degree
at
the
nadian
Gov’t, and the Canadian
geons in the races in Denver and est couple were Mr. and Mr?.
I
task
always.
”
Araki
said.
University
of
Western
Ontario.
people.
Genya Yasui, 83 and 77.
San Antonio this fall.
Citizenship for U. S. Issei
Step Closer As Senate Acts
92 Elderly Guests Honored
At Keiro-Kai Oldest Is 86
Page 2
PAGE 2
THE NEW CANADIAN
THE NEW CANADIAN
LIMIT IS 200
Wednesday, May 28, 1952
PASSING THRU
There’s a movement afoot to ;
By KEN ADACHI
make most of the legal holidays ■
fall on Monday. Then there’d be J
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
none of this taking a day off, One Bright Afternoon
My feet took me to a small
as a medium of expression and news outlet
working a day, then another
dirty
looking park several blocks
I woke up dripping after
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
holiday. Instead, we’d have one dreaming most of the night of down the street. It was noon
long holiday week-end.
_________ _____ __ Editor
KEN ADACHI
wallowing in ice-cream. Already hour and there were office girls
For
instance,
instead
of
cele
Japanese Section Editor
Takaichi umezuki___
the approach of summer was all and factory workers spreading
brating
Victoria
Day
on
May
24
________ _ _ Advertising
KEN MORI
too evident. There was a cloud out their lunches out on the
the closest- Monday to May 24 less expanse of deep bright blue rough grass. A little girl sobbed
Office Hours:
would become a holiday. The outside and the potted plants lay quietly in the foreground, nurs
Subscription,
in
Advance:
8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
same would apply to Dominion wilted forlornly.
ing a skinned knee and a tear in
53.00 for six months
Monday to Friday.
Day. Labor Day and Thanksgiv
In the heat of the restless her dress. Her face loomed pale
$6.00 per one year
9:00 a.m.-12 noon,
ing are always Mondays.
afternoon, there was not one and white among a misleading
Saturday.
We think it’s good plan. A long whisper of coolness or freshness number of laughing faces.
week-end is always welcome.
There was something appealing
479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5605 — Toronto, Ont.
in the air. All was strangely sus
But instead of having the holi pended and the humming whirr of and refreshing in the stifled sobs
Authorized as second class mall, Post Office Dept., Ottawa
day fall on Monday, why not on
the fan slicing the air into tiny of the little girl. All the emotions
Fridays ? The one objection to the
pieces in the office was the only of pain and tragedy were there
Monday arrangement is that Sun
sound that penetrated the sus- in that one little skinned knobby
THE QUEBEC BUDDHIST PROBLEM
day, a day of rest, is the middle
knee and she cried softly and
pension.
day of the three-day week-end.
beautifully,
without pose, with
Slowly I crept down the stair
One of the most pressing problems facing a large Japa
It should be the last, then we
out superficiality, to an audience
nese Canadian group is the Quebec Buddhist Church prob would be in better condition to way, pausing to wonder at the
stillness of it all in the midst of unseen and unreal. Her tears
lem. The problem is the fact that Buddhists in Quebec do return to work.
a hot, bright afternoon.
There were not yet mature but they
And people who ordinarily
not share equal rights with the three recognized religions in
was a funny kind of lightness in came in a long uninterrupted
work
half
a
day
on
Saturdays,
the province. It has been pointed out that an apparent op
my head like one gets from rid stream unfettered by any self
would put in their four hours on
ing a roller-coaster falling pell consciousness in that glow of
position to the recognition is a blatant violation of the de Fridays.
mell down a runway. The fleet life when there is nothing to
mocratic way of life, the latter 'which has often been the
ing giddiness caught up to me hide.
focal point of much lofty and high-sounding talk in this time
and I slipped outside. I wondered
Nakamuras Edge Itos
of ideological struggle.
I 'closed my eyes for a while
whether I would ever feel any
and lay on the grass. In a short
The aftermath of a petition presented by the Buddhists And Tanakas in L.A.
thing cool on my face again.
while I was not surprised when
LOS ANGELES, Calif.—There
' in 1951
it failed to reach a hearing before a Private
Out on the street an old old
Bills Committee in the Quebec legislature has been becloud are more Nakamuras in Los An man carrying a huge pile of neat I looked up and saw the ill-kempt
man and the little girl standing
ed with vague ruminations, the resulting assumption that geles than any other names, ac ly stacked newspapers stumbled
over
me and peering down at me.
cording to Mariko Akasaki and
powerful political influence opposes such a move to incor Joe Yamada of the Rafu Shim- along in front of me as I walk The man held a tall glass in his
ed slowly on trying to get one
porate a Buddhist charter in Quebec.
po’s English staff who checked breath of air. He was typical hand filled with chopped ice and
The Quebec Buddhist and the Eastern Canada Young through the new Los Angeles of the kind who roam the streets the little girl stood looking with
looking for handouts and who re that expression of half-child halfBuddhists' League have decided to fight mot only for the central area phone book.
They found 57 Nakamuras, and flect the terrible dregs of what woman on her adolescent face,
privileges but for the principle involved, that of the right of 53 Itos and Tanakas.
humming a sad little song. I took
we call our way of life.
a Canadian citizen to worship as he pleases, something
the offered drink wordlessly and
Yamamoto came next with 47,
Suddenly he fell and I was pre listened to
which in the eyes of all liberal minded people should be in followed by Kato, Yamada and
the girl’s voice and
pared to step around him as I presently
their figures faded
alienable and not contestable. They have decided to make a Sato, 42. Other more numerous had not any real desire to linger
away and only the strange music
names
were,
in
order,
Watanabe,
country-wide appeal for funds, the sum of $2,000 which is
on the spot. But he called weakly
of the song remained hauntingly.
Inouye, Matsumoto, Takahashi,
needed to push the petition in this fall's session of the Legis Saito, Kimura, Sasaki, Nakano to me and therefore I helped him
A shadow fell across my face.
struggle to a doorway where he
lative Assemby.
and Suzuki.
It was a dark cloud scudding
would be out of the way. He was
swiftly across the path of the
What is more important, however, than financial aid
in a truly magnificent state of burning sun. ‘The leaves of the
which should not be too difficult to attain, is the moral sup Japan In Trade Fair
disrepair and his face was lean
worn maple tree shivered in an
and hungry, not with any desire
port from the public at large, beyond the limit of Buddhists
The Fifth Canadian Interna for food but with a kind of tra invisible wind and then bent to
and Japanese Canadians, a factor that cannot be over em
tional Trade Fair opens next week gic loneliness. I left him there the onrush of the rain sucking up
phasized. Wholesale public support from influential and free- at the Exhibition Grounds in To
color fast. I picked myself up and
and he sat stoically like a Ro
ran
back up the street. The rain
thinking organizations and different media of public opinion ronto with Japan as one of the man statue without a whimper of
should be sought and snowballed into an effective wedge many participating' nations. For complaint. He was like a wound had -fallen, my period of mild
insanity was over.
into the situation
Quebec that smells offensively of a Japan who is looking for new ed piece of flotsam floating on to
The afternoon turned blessed
restriction on freedom. It should be a matter of concern to and wider export outlets to stabi a barren shore. A dog licking at ly cool. Ahead of me the rain
lize the economy of a land of 84 his heels would not have made
all of us.
danced its dervish dance on the
cramped millions, it is an excel the picture more pathetic.
sidewalk and a soft haze flickered
lent opportunity to present her
in the sky.
wares in what is a veritable shop
This incident did not help the
ALTERNATIVE VOTING IN B.C.
window for not only Canadian but fever that I felt 5111'111115; at mv
Japanese Canadians in B.C. who first went to the polls other foreign buyers. It would be temples this strange afternoon.
Mrs. Akagi, Montreal, in mem
to vote in the provincial elections in 1949 when the discrimi more than interesting to note Rather it intensified the pulse
what Japan has to offer in terms that beat ever so slowly and soft ory of late husband.
natory restriction was finally lifted on the franchise, will re of her return to world trade.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sora,
ly.
turn to tne polls for the second time in their history on June
Toronto, on marriage.
svs'em
Alt
-eY will be faced with a unique preferential
alternative voting which was brought into
y an amendment to the Provincial Elections
v<
means that the voter makes a first
and second, third, fourth, and as
are candidates, thus changing from
eg a cross for one candidate. A canve at least one vote more than the
amed by all his opponents to have
■ eno:
d me
a
T
r third a
a
the ballot until
noting candidates being
h
result in a
unfamiliar but it
anger government of representatives
of the vote of the largest amount of
I, is the effect that is desired.
ACROSS MY MIND
Outwardly, Japan has made spectacular
strides; but actually she is still on the threshold
of the road toward democratization. Now that
she is free, her mettle is yet to be tried.
Under the Allied control she made an aboutface from a country ruled by a ‘divine Emperor’
and controlled by a group of militarists 6L
j ears ago to a nation ruled by the people under
a democratic Constitution denouncing war.
Although Emperor Hirohito had his time col
ors shown, a humble human who had been used
as. a puppet by the war lords, he is still wor
shipped by the Japanese people as though his
power is divine and absolute. Further indication
of the. mentality of the Japanese is that General
Douglas MacArthur had not only been respect
ed for his firm but fair occupation of Japan
but also had been worshipped like an idol. Such
idol worship however is understandable when
one realizes that ancestor worship and unmitigat
ed respect for authority are part of the sociolog
ical make-up of the Japanese.
u a
By Jack Nakamoto
Had Japan not closed her doors to foreigners
or about 300 years, before and during the To
kugawa Period (1600-1868), the road might have
been paved today for her to adapt herself readi
ly to democratic, ways. Even then, she would not
aye had maturity for true appreciation of the
principles of democracy as would those Occi
dental countries which fought time and again in
the past for freedom’s cause.
during the period of the Imitation of
China .(645-784 A.D.) and even more spectacularly
. so during Meiii Period (1868-1912)
when great borrowing of ideas
and systems
from China and the Occiden
t took place, the
-en maj be a beginning of another progres
sive period.
the Japanese learn to understand
JeCtlVeIy but aIso instinctively what
t
of the United Nations refers to
inherent right of individual thev will
not have learned the true essence of democracy.
?
THE NEW CANADIAN
THE NEW CANADIAN
LIMIT IS 200
Wednesday, May 28, 1952
PASSING THRU
There’s a movement afoot to ;
By KEN ADACHI
make most of the legal holidays ■
fall on Monday. Then there’d be J
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
none of this taking a day off, One Bright Afternoon
My feet took me to a small
as a medium of expression and news outlet
working a day, then another
dirty
looking park several blocks
I woke up dripping after
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
holiday. Instead, we’d have one dreaming most of the night of down the street. It was noon
long holiday week-end.
_________ _____ __ Editor
KEN ADACHI
wallowing in ice-cream. Already hour and there were office girls
For
instance,
instead
of
cele
Japanese Section Editor
Takaichi umezuki___
the approach of summer was all and factory workers spreading
brating
Victoria
Day
on
May
24
________ _ _ Advertising
KEN MORI
too evident. There was a cloud out their lunches out on the
the closest- Monday to May 24 less expanse of deep bright blue rough grass. A little girl sobbed
Office Hours:
would become a holiday. The outside and the potted plants lay quietly in the foreground, nurs
Subscription,
in
Advance:
8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
same would apply to Dominion wilted forlornly.
ing a skinned knee and a tear in
53.00 for six months
Monday to Friday.
Day. Labor Day and Thanksgiv
In the heat of the restless her dress. Her face loomed pale
$6.00 per one year
9:00 a.m.-12 noon,
ing are always Mondays.
afternoon, there was not one and white among a misleading
Saturday.
We think it’s good plan. A long whisper of coolness or freshness number of laughing faces.
week-end is always welcome.
There was something appealing
479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5605 — Toronto, Ont.
in the air. All was strangely sus
But instead of having the holi pended and the humming whirr of and refreshing in the stifled sobs
Authorized as second class mall, Post Office Dept., Ottawa
day fall on Monday, why not on
the fan slicing the air into tiny of the little girl. All the emotions
Fridays ? The one objection to the
pieces in the office was the only of pain and tragedy were there
Monday arrangement is that Sun
sound that penetrated the sus- in that one little skinned knobby
THE QUEBEC BUDDHIST PROBLEM
day, a day of rest, is the middle
knee and she cried softly and
pension.
day of the three-day week-end.
beautifully,
without pose, with
Slowly I crept down the stair
One of the most pressing problems facing a large Japa
It should be the last, then we
out superficiality, to an audience
nese Canadian group is the Quebec Buddhist Church prob would be in better condition to way, pausing to wonder at the
stillness of it all in the midst of unseen and unreal. Her tears
lem. The problem is the fact that Buddhists in Quebec do return to work.
a hot, bright afternoon.
There were not yet mature but they
And people who ordinarily
not share equal rights with the three recognized religions in
was a funny kind of lightness in came in a long uninterrupted
work
half
a
day
on
Saturdays,
the province. It has been pointed out that an apparent op
my head like one gets from rid stream unfettered by any self
would put in their four hours on
ing a roller-coaster falling pell consciousness in that glow of
position to the recognition is a blatant violation of the de Fridays.
mell down a runway. The fleet life when there is nothing to
mocratic way of life, the latter 'which has often been the
ing giddiness caught up to me hide.
focal point of much lofty and high-sounding talk in this time
and I slipped outside. I wondered
Nakamuras Edge Itos
of ideological struggle.
I 'closed my eyes for a while
whether I would ever feel any
and lay on the grass. In a short
The aftermath of a petition presented by the Buddhists And Tanakas in L.A.
thing cool on my face again.
while I was not surprised when
LOS ANGELES, Calif.—There
' in 1951
it failed to reach a hearing before a Private
Out on the street an old old
Bills Committee in the Quebec legislature has been becloud are more Nakamuras in Los An man carrying a huge pile of neat I looked up and saw the ill-kempt
man and the little girl standing
ed with vague ruminations, the resulting assumption that geles than any other names, ac ly stacked newspapers stumbled
over
me and peering down at me.
cording to Mariko Akasaki and
powerful political influence opposes such a move to incor Joe Yamada of the Rafu Shim- along in front of me as I walk The man held a tall glass in his
ed slowly on trying to get one
porate a Buddhist charter in Quebec.
po’s English staff who checked breath of air. He was typical hand filled with chopped ice and
The Quebec Buddhist and the Eastern Canada Young through the new Los Angeles of the kind who roam the streets the little girl stood looking with
looking for handouts and who re that expression of half-child halfBuddhists' League have decided to fight mot only for the central area phone book.
They found 57 Nakamuras, and flect the terrible dregs of what woman on her adolescent face,
privileges but for the principle involved, that of the right of 53 Itos and Tanakas.
humming a sad little song. I took
we call our way of life.
a Canadian citizen to worship as he pleases, something
the offered drink wordlessly and
Yamamoto came next with 47,
Suddenly he fell and I was pre listened to
which in the eyes of all liberal minded people should be in followed by Kato, Yamada and
the girl’s voice and
pared to step around him as I presently
their figures faded
alienable and not contestable. They have decided to make a Sato, 42. Other more numerous had not any real desire to linger
away and only the strange music
names
were,
in
order,
Watanabe,
country-wide appeal for funds, the sum of $2,000 which is
on the spot. But he called weakly
of the song remained hauntingly.
Inouye, Matsumoto, Takahashi,
needed to push the petition in this fall's session of the Legis Saito, Kimura, Sasaki, Nakano to me and therefore I helped him
A shadow fell across my face.
struggle to a doorway where he
lative Assemby.
and Suzuki.
It was a dark cloud scudding
would be out of the way. He was
swiftly across the path of the
What is more important, however, than financial aid
in a truly magnificent state of burning sun. ‘The leaves of the
which should not be too difficult to attain, is the moral sup Japan In Trade Fair
disrepair and his face was lean
worn maple tree shivered in an
and hungry, not with any desire
port from the public at large, beyond the limit of Buddhists
The Fifth Canadian Interna for food but with a kind of tra invisible wind and then bent to
and Japanese Canadians, a factor that cannot be over em
tional Trade Fair opens next week gic loneliness. I left him there the onrush of the rain sucking up
phasized. Wholesale public support from influential and free- at the Exhibition Grounds in To
color fast. I picked myself up and
and he sat stoically like a Ro
ran
back up the street. The rain
thinking organizations and different media of public opinion ronto with Japan as one of the man statue without a whimper of
should be sought and snowballed into an effective wedge many participating' nations. For complaint. He was like a wound had -fallen, my period of mild
insanity was over.
into the situation
Quebec that smells offensively of a Japan who is looking for new ed piece of flotsam floating on to
The afternoon turned blessed
restriction on freedom. It should be a matter of concern to and wider export outlets to stabi a barren shore. A dog licking at ly cool. Ahead of me the rain
lize the economy of a land of 84 his heels would not have made
all of us.
danced its dervish dance on the
cramped millions, it is an excel the picture more pathetic.
sidewalk and a soft haze flickered
lent opportunity to present her
in the sky.
wares in what is a veritable shop
This incident did not help the
ALTERNATIVE VOTING IN B.C.
window for not only Canadian but fever that I felt 5111'111115; at mv
Japanese Canadians in B.C. who first went to the polls other foreign buyers. It would be temples this strange afternoon.
Mrs. Akagi, Montreal, in mem
to vote in the provincial elections in 1949 when the discrimi more than interesting to note Rather it intensified the pulse
what Japan has to offer in terms that beat ever so slowly and soft ory of late husband.
natory restriction was finally lifted on the franchise, will re of her return to world trade.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sora,
ly.
turn to tne polls for the second time in their history on June
Toronto, on marriage.
svs'em
Alt
-eY will be faced with a unique preferential
alternative voting which was brought into
y an amendment to the Provincial Elections
v<
means that the voter makes a first
and second, third, fourth, and as
are candidates, thus changing from
eg a cross for one candidate. A canve at least one vote more than the
amed by all his opponents to have
■ eno:
d me
a
T
r third a
a
the ballot until
noting candidates being
h
result in a
unfamiliar but it
anger government of representatives
of the vote of the largest amount of
I, is the effect that is desired.
ACROSS MY MIND
Outwardly, Japan has made spectacular
strides; but actually she is still on the threshold
of the road toward democratization. Now that
she is free, her mettle is yet to be tried.
Under the Allied control she made an aboutface from a country ruled by a ‘divine Emperor’
and controlled by a group of militarists 6L
j ears ago to a nation ruled by the people under
a democratic Constitution denouncing war.
Although Emperor Hirohito had his time col
ors shown, a humble human who had been used
as. a puppet by the war lords, he is still wor
shipped by the Japanese people as though his
power is divine and absolute. Further indication
of the. mentality of the Japanese is that General
Douglas MacArthur had not only been respect
ed for his firm but fair occupation of Japan
but also had been worshipped like an idol. Such
idol worship however is understandable when
one realizes that ancestor worship and unmitigat
ed respect for authority are part of the sociolog
ical make-up of the Japanese.
u a
By Jack Nakamoto
Had Japan not closed her doors to foreigners
or about 300 years, before and during the To
kugawa Period (1600-1868), the road might have
been paved today for her to adapt herself readi
ly to democratic, ways. Even then, she would not
aye had maturity for true appreciation of the
principles of democracy as would those Occi
dental countries which fought time and again in
the past for freedom’s cause.
during the period of the Imitation of
China .(645-784 A.D.) and even more spectacularly
. so during Meiii Period (1868-1912)
when great borrowing of ideas
and systems
from China and the Occiden
t took place, the
-en maj be a beginning of another progres
sive period.
the Japanese learn to understand
JeCtlVeIy but aIso instinctively what
t
of the United Nations refers to
inherent right of individual thev will
not have learned the true essence of democracy.
?
Page 3
Wednesday, May 28, 1952
NYIQYNYD MSN SHI
X
F
3
o
6
0 fl
i
3
F
6
0
o
fn
F»
30
IX
@
1
0
o
(i
3
o
7.
0
0
IX
T
H
0
p.
6
(X
O
o
3
0
IX
ix
Y
IX
IX
tZ
i
w
0
IX
IX
IX
T
IX
5
(X
X 0
n
0
?]
iL
L
0
>0
in
i’
' 6
4
lb 77 rv
IX X
0 JL
5^c
K
1
ffl 71< tH $ ftfl
T^^IZ^IX (Z 0^ °t£^-
0 If tr
10f b
^
ft
0
ft
0
t1
?iTi
w & -^r
■0
0
0 ®
7
1/ M fr:
4
77
A 7 77
0' 7
i)
o
li
$5
A
L 0
3 w
70'
zK X
0 *9
i A
X W
L
ft
T
fe
/z
ft
ft
-9
^r^i^tr
5
7
9
A'
X
ft
0
X
It
SI n
7^
9
i
ft
PJ
nn
u
1
ft
±
fa
fl
0
70
w
»
o
dig
TA
4
&
®^
tl
0
s
A£
0
bi
'3
o
(X
u
o
I
t
tz
#
IX
i
0
?F
&
O
0
fl
i
U
0
b
0
0
IX
(X
c
C
L
T
0 it
o
bl
I
0
£
0
0
S£
0
5
0
c
1
6
(X
Si XT
/b
nr
U
t
?7lt
IX
6
fl
5
L'
o
T '1?
i) 0
o
7
(t
x
7~
o
o
0
U
5?t
ft
'3
&
7.
0
X l
Jll
PAGE 3
IX
ft
#
ib
0
IZ
(Z
ill
£
i
>
L
ilk
_WL
0$ £u if
tz
Sl
ft
0 BP A 4*
l'
7
0
T
0
fAT
f
r
Xi
IZ
ft
-99
T
Tn
it EAT 0
JH.
H
IX
0
H
9
©
X
5
t
■»
i
ft $
i
i:
u bt
Aw
ft tz It
Tn M 0 0 0
0
fif
9
7
b
70
77
lit
’I1
-Y
X
<9
nn
T;
pi-
GO u-
TU
Lt® b®4 1 +1
O
4
(t>
(D
3
3
O
o
B »^^B#
b
IX
W©^ 7 ^-'’0 ®
®L^|JA^®W^* Rdt^T^^t-L
0
^^120 A0 L^j®
li
nn
4tiiim^^raraisj
£
t
°©nt^^%
ax
w
A
0
ftAa[JAA®A;kAAAi
0
O f1^ ^ y0 ix i
#f
*
°x
nn
o
pa
0
co
co
3°
Q
4
n>
fD
3
fa:^tW0J:
H^i^0Fr f)
4^iii t
? S> ‘I’HKSflgA
■§i§B«^
-ti
A
gt^l^S^
fill
p
5
IX'
T©f?
IX
^ft
A
X
OF CANADA
A
ELIZABETH & DUNDAS STS. X
x fx^tz^
TORONTO
Manager
£ ^ If ^ 1
IMPERIAL BANK
g.“"«a«77K h *tz
-c E?8°a^.ittBAf
5
2^# ± f!i|i
pi
L^g^Kt
^|B
^6^15
.AMERICAN PRESIDENT- UNES.
(116 Elizabeth St.)
L. J. WALKER,
A
X
A
X
tS)
^ S S ®A
rtf
M
in
^? ft
p
9
co
ft
Vo
V
rz a
$
<2
5
NYIQYNYD MSN SHI
X
F
3
o
6
0 fl
i
3
F
6
0
o
fn
F»
30
IX
@
1
0
o
(i
3
o
7.
0
0
IX
T
H
0
p.
6
(X
O
o
3
0
IX
ix
Y
IX
IX
tZ
i
w
0
IX
IX
IX
T
IX
5
(X
X 0
n
0
?]
iL
L
0
>0
in
i’
' 6
4
lb 77 rv
IX X
0 JL
5^c
K
1
ffl 71< tH $ ftfl
T^^IZ^IX (Z 0^ °t£^-
0 If tr
10f b
^
ft
0
ft
0
t1
?iTi
w & -^r
■0
0
0 ®
7
1/ M fr:
4
77
A 7 77
0' 7
i)
o
li
$5
A
L 0
3 w
70'
zK X
0 *9
i A
X W
L
ft
T
fe
/z
ft
ft
-9
^r^i^tr
5
7
9
A'
X
ft
0
X
It
SI n
7^
9
i
ft
PJ
nn
u
1
ft
±
fa
fl
0
70
w
»
o
dig
TA
4
&
®^
tl
0
s
A£
0
bi
'3
o
(X
u
o
I
t
tz
#
IX
i
0
?F
&
O
0
fl
i
U
0
b
0
0
IX
(X
c
C
L
T
0 it
o
bl
I
0
£
0
0
S£
0
5
0
c
1
6
(X
Si XT
/b
nr
U
t
?7lt
IX
6
fl
5
L'
o
T '1?
i) 0
o
7
(t
x
7~
o
o
0
U
5?t
ft
'3
&
7.
0
X l
Jll
PAGE 3
IX
ft
#
ib
0
IZ
(Z
ill
£
i
>
L
ilk
_WL
0$ £u if
tz
Sl
ft
0 BP A 4*
l'
7
0
T
0
fAT
f
r
Xi
IZ
ft
-99
T
Tn
it EAT 0
JH.
H
IX
0
H
9
©
X
5
t
■»
i
ft $
i
i:
u bt
Aw
ft tz It
Tn M 0 0 0
0
fif
9
7
b
70
77
lit
’I1
-Y
X
<9
nn
T;
pi-
GO u-
TU
Lt® b®4 1 +1
O
4
(t>
(D
3
3
O
o
B »^^B#
b
IX
W©^ 7 ^-'’0 ®
®L^|JA^®W^* Rdt^T^^t-L
0
^^120 A0 L^j®
li
nn
4tiiim^^raraisj
£
t
°©nt^^%
ax
w
A
0
ftAa[JAA®A;kAAAi
0
O f1^ ^ y0 ix i
#f
*
°x
nn
o
pa
0
co
co
3°
Q
4
n>
fD
3
fa:^tW0J:
H^i^0Fr f)
4^iii t
? S> ‘I’HKSflgA
■§i§B«^
-ti
A
gt^l^S^
fill
p
5
IX'
T©f?
IX
^ft
A
X
OF CANADA
A
ELIZABETH & DUNDAS STS. X
x fx^tz^
TORONTO
Manager
£ ^ If ^ 1
IMPERIAL BANK
g.“"«a«77K h *tz
-c E?8°a^.ittBAf
5
2^# ± f!i|i
pi
L^g^Kt
^|B
^6^15
.AMERICAN PRESIDENT- UNES.
(116 Elizabeth St.)
L. J. WALKER,
A
X
A
X
tS)
^ S S ®A
rtf
M
in
^? ft
p
9
co
ft
Vo
V
rz a
$
<2
5
Page 4
PAGE 4
THE NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, May 28, 1952
3
ft
R
n
RT^^ ft1
f^:
n
O'j
^MS
BE
US
ft
b
9
pa
1L Pl
b
R
9'
ft
i)^
5
6
CT
b
O
in
i1
t
I1
PI ®
A
S[7
tzo
ia (7)
b
i'
I1
b
?
i
3
0
i1
(5
I)
6
Rr
a
It
n
5
ft
6
i'
I'
6
0
5
on
i
i
6
b
5
n
b
R
b
Id
#>
11
ft v-^B^t^
>L?
-w
fX ^IT^ ft 0 b
b ^
11
T K £, ^
5
n
6
IP] P] In] R |P] PJ |p] ^ ^ |p] BJ]
6 M’©^
©l^zftft^
AK ^
.O
Tn
3
11
fi^
11
£
3 11
Il®fl);t0
9
H
# y
i
-SB-E-bftjlnC
Bifi
ISKft^t
Wcftll^Cftll S3
£ °£ "Kb
OE0®
M
aq w
°° _
co 2.
H B] B B H H 151 H B *
~3 ■
^^^i Left
#1 ip ® ^R^irr^E ib ^
®; □ R S
& & ^ ft Kt □ ®
01
#: ^ i S
M
i ^ ^ B ^ i ,i
IB
^ M ^ ?FS ftn i^
tt ft M t ^i jg □ ^ # ^] ^D $
«
Ui
PI
f
i«w t^isg^^i
^Li# 2
•tt^DTtft 5
^z'^h 11 H K^
JS^T b" ^ 'J ft ® ^ ^
$01^1]^ ?
^1 ft _t T T II (cf iz ^
The Great China Restaurant,
11 Elizabeth Street, Toronto,
Telephone
EM. 4-5935 ”
9
l 8 $ * i T ® S} il
^ R fe
>1 & ? feft
PI
11
THE NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, May 28, 1952
3
ft
R
n
RT^^ ft1
f^:
n
O'j
^MS
BE
US
ft
b
9
pa
1L Pl
b
R
9'
ft
i)^
5
6
CT
b
O
in
i1
t
I1
PI ®
A
S[7
tzo
ia (7)
b
i'
I1
b
?
i
3
0
i1
(5
I)
6
Rr
a
It
n
5
ft
6
i'
I'
6
0
5
on
i
i
6
b
5
n
b
R
b
Id
#>
11
ft v-^B^t^
>L?
-w
fX ^IT^ ft 0 b
b ^
11
T K £, ^
5
n
6
IP] P] In] R |P] PJ |p] ^ ^ |p] BJ]
6 M’©^
©l^zftft^
AK ^
.O
Tn
3
11
fi^
11
£
3 11
Il®fl);t0
9
H
# y
i
-SB-E-bftjlnC
Bifi
ISKft^t
Wcftll^Cftll S3
£ °£ "Kb
OE0®
M
aq w
°° _
co 2.
H B] B B H H 151 H B *
~3 ■
^^^i Left
#1 ip ® ^R^irr^E ib ^
®; □ R S
& & ^ ft Kt □ ®
01
#: ^ i S
M
i ^ ^ B ^ i ,i
IB
^ M ^ ?FS ftn i^
tt ft M t ^i jg □ ^ # ^] ^D $
«
Ui
PI
f
i«w t^isg^^i
^Li# 2
•tt^DTtft 5
^z'^h 11 H K^
JS^T b" ^ 'J ft ® ^ ^
$01^1]^ ?
^1 ft _t T T II (cf iz ^
The Great China Restaurant,
11 Elizabeth Street, Toronto,
Telephone
EM. 4-5935 ”
9
l 8 $ * i T ® S} il
^ R fe
>1 & ? feft
PI
11
Page 5
Wednesday, May 28,. 1952
PAGE 5
0 li
0 5
1 K^
I ft A * 5
3 ’i
? i + i>! ?i s' ,. fz <:'
0 1:-®*; s so
■o A ^ i b 4 f ^ ft
fz £ 0 -O ® fl) £ t 4
g, « ®
ft 5 1
L 0 ' gs
r th A s
1’ g f ® f,
*i ^ _ !? t
4< ^ 1 ? H
® fij fl o
5
®
>* 1 ^5 S <i
5 1.
fl 5 «> £> t: L
t, A i>- ft
"L^«
CA]
g^ft
' 9 4
fttti-SftftRzaJBWSftfiRi
"
5 ft ? r r r '
i®
o * M ®
S
r if 1-SiSI
is T ??? ® “x ^ 15 s ® ®t H: ® *
.
^
m.
^t^*L^i£££A*XLlA±AE
7
0
Z ? g £ * » ? ~ ^ 2 <
f « P
b
t P 0 T 0)
# * o ®
o
r
o t rz t
'
T O L IZ T IZ
°
»b 0
A H ii' ^ n
zT>
H
<
Z
*
rfri ( i & A £ A g 0 * 4
ex M ’ 1- “ f: tt 4
S' J 18 2 1
'Mg rs
i' f ' C'RH L
^
s t- ft § gj
*?Fi
IM
in n 0 atji 1:
5 - £ t 4
T
g 1: s
5 ttfe 4 g in ft ffl
b H 2" i5'"“«”^;
? a 5 ? £ ?j 5 ? 1 J> ^ i lo ^ S T 4 ® 8 T h
® b rs
X J
t t
©ft lU ^ ifii ^ I
Jefe
a
p: © ^ # © -^ ?
S
I—‘
L-
|H
*M«t0i*Tb!f©P'?S^S>M»4
11■;h ©i 1!j|«
A ^ ^>
.
^ * * if t:
----- 5r____ 2_^_JMfc_jsjg_r_________ ___ 1 g r
—-------
ft
’
i £
4 Y
as
T
S f 4 5 ft 4
1
„
#0 3
„
. ? ? 1- £ © W ^ ft R 4 4 & H « R JR M
i '
® - b § § 5 J> i 8 L ® 0 * ?
k ix r
<- I ft fe± S 4 5 ft © ' ff ft M n ® ® ft
J - tS «> l 95
4 isj f$H I ft S ft i: fz ft) c ©
i lit i: S ' fit W S “ K W * 4 X IX
® St 4
# t * n *> b /? S M t O i
,-0^0 r—— ,
M
0
>*
&
ffLfShfti4Mii?*j4 lit
?> ® ft 1
2 il
a
R # fi ® ® y 1:
p' © b M to Mt 1:
Z 6 iz© h tj# £ © ? bi b
IS
1: t b •: f ^ 7 MOj IX ©
aaT^^^tAT b T ^ L
ta^
0
' H
Hi^ © # ^ ^ ^ © i' t a 1 t
J (Z £ T
g
1 XM $
b A A # TO 51 6 © ^ © li
MU
«WS I ^ Hu B M # * 2 ^O # A
A 0 a IX ^ 3? ^ ^ 0 a iz ^ ^
P3
U
Mi
0
u I
L t? 4^ i
- A (X M * 0 MZ £ $> y> "?
i 5 0 0 0 ^ H T <£>
#^
T — DJ.- i a til ^ ^ © 0 ^ .
^e ^ ^ 4 4^
T
ip 6 0 6
7? IZ
' ( b©p#Mfik5tLi
1®# IZ IZ 0 M
1^ ^ r
' 6
H
7 © t 5 0 b
i
f
tz 4c OB+1^
O IZ hz i
n ici b # ©
T^c t
t K ^ ^ R li O A
4# £ £
5" J # Ulf 1 T # iz X 9
0 A ^ © b 2 0 t
R3 b
£
i: t A n ft iz i: rU
^ 6 t A A i
© tz t ^
% t (Z
i b
z iz n M
1
© L 0 # 0 b A ' it b ® Z i^ L b W’ f ^1
b i
i 3
^ A M *3 i T -r 0 A s ir ?
?^^AAo^©5[S$A0© e# t ^ © f A S ^ Bi iJl ©' f
°5(Z0b0H^nt ' 7 r O
A ^7 m
A A # E S ^ b A
6 n 4
i 7 T
S z IX 7 A i IT * 0 O *© ^’ tO ^ © ^ # i gg ^> 2 ^z
^) ^3 A S gi © / ' © MO 2 © A B t U Z ^ ^ ‘ ib J TO £ £
j
t © fe TMM © S 1
(O
b
0 A S j
© U S A i # ft i- CD ti i iU M
^^A-^M^^T^bVji^
(l © © ^ f l' M’ ^ 5 ° A (X
(X 7 ®
t (Z f L 0
0 O 0 #£
A ? 5£ ® /)6^(?^T-^i
T ^ TO
O itz W & W ( § T A - iq /r
iT X |t 4 i a ^ 0
£ ° © Z 5 D'M 6 ^ t
- t
© IH 4? i I1 0 o 1 ± & L ±
0 (X A ( fl 1 ^ ?^1 Z $ IX fiH
M
6 > Tz ' b © f t f
W
0 ® ' 9
£ o ^7t # 6 ® a tz
5 i © ^ ® Z T iz © IM n a ^)
Z ^ z M 0 A > P bt AH b fti A
A i§ - 0 A # tz 0 < S ^ ^ K 4c ns
© 0 M
5
t 1 iz 0 Z (X A
t e Jbl IZ
if PJ mo i H © f02
S U
O °
£ zz #
^# x to t ft - iii b x ft i ix
z t iz i> t ^ H t; i n 6 ^
z ft r * 0 6 t
c 0 Z ^
b
£ b * 0
iz -5 7 b 0 ^O © ^ 5 Z # IX fiil 6 ® y
5 S
A f
9
o; m t
i u # t
b L O - t
0 t
^ n 1 t n z
T5 M ^ ^ © £ n ®
z
[PHO b r t iz 7 9
t t z x 0 ftM
* (X i 1: ^0
© ? ro t 1 0 b m i i
B£ 0 # fp] £ ( < 7 1 y ^ # < ^ <!: ^ ZZ ^ ^ ^ ^ £ MM n ^ f^ -T i M
^ h
A © 1 Z b ^ dt (X
M 0
4) h n 4 7’ y 0 0 J b IZ A t iz
y ^ L ( 5 £
b 1 ^ © © E b
tz iz
iz iz
L
A
0 fz t:
0
®
i5 T < 0 0 © (
© tz
J A ^ f A A b 4 ^^^^tio-M!>b^ff©(
© Z IX 1
IO tz tR
H = 7 Z 4)
z © ©
O z ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ |j i; je 1: 4) i T # 0 M ft fl # 3 /
H Md © O ^ 0
^ tt
0 E 6 ^ 6 ± ®
®
®
^
M^ 4 b ;>/ 1: T
' 1 A ® O 1
Ik
M
M
s Sil $
<
0 9 X/ # Mi 0 4> - M
O b
3 M t
i iU’ b$
0 ' T
(
©’ iS tlS © A ^it ^ ^ ^ ’3
mz
1
1
F
0 ntz bA^'bt^gMzto M
^ f3 T 4) V' i © 4)
0^€-5 0 A 6 6
J IZ
- 7
^ g r B 7
“ I ^ t i: ilj ^
% ^ 0 (X — b gt
i
l'5«-ft>A®?fMg*S®
*j fl 'ft T i' St 7 S A ® ft ® a 7 < ft A A
»
5?
4 « i> ft ® ’ ffi 11 ft if ® fi G IM 5A-'/'M?E?t0H-EBf0?TT. 5 2S
t v> #■ 6 i © j 3
4 S i’ © ft t> ft 4
i> ft R © 0 0 4
4 A # A * + i
b T ® r 15'4a
4 A,A#
0.
(j $
A 1 ? j. ? 7 1 £
5 '- ft A * ft :M
J ■' ft I
'? 7 ra ft
£ ? 4 7 £ ^ t
S ^ ft 1 K: 15! *'
u ft
0 +
4 ® 0 H8 4
i- A J J
ft » y + o®©
ig^wi
te
V- ^
?4^r= + lit? ' ' I> if A
ff^;}f/;©g^2$i 0
ft 0 A' 4 iM ® rS -M 4 r-4 i 1>; li a r- 1: 0
iX^bZ^^^bTHTH + o^MOiti^
Ml
Si
is
r
PAGE 5
0 li
0 5
1 K^
I ft A * 5
3 ’i
? i + i>! ?i s' ,. fz <:'
0 1:-®*; s so
■o A ^ i b 4 f ^ ft
fz £ 0 -O ® fl) £ t 4
g, « ®
ft 5 1
L 0 ' gs
r th A s
1’ g f ® f,
*i ^ _ !? t
4< ^ 1 ? H
® fij fl o
5
®
>* 1 ^5 S <i
5 1.
fl 5 «> £> t: L
t, A i>- ft
"L^«
CA]
g^ft
' 9 4
fttti-SftftRzaJBWSftfiRi
"
5 ft ? r r r '
i®
o * M ®
S
r if 1-SiSI
is T ??? ® “x ^ 15 s ® ®t H: ® *
.
^
m.
^t^*L^i£££A*XLlA±AE
7
0
Z ? g £ * » ? ~ ^ 2 <
f « P
b
t P 0 T 0)
# * o ®
o
r
o t rz t
'
T O L IZ T IZ
°
»b 0
A H ii' ^ n
zT>
H
<
Z
*
rfri ( i & A £ A g 0 * 4
ex M ’ 1- “ f: tt 4
S' J 18 2 1
'Mg rs
i' f ' C'RH L
^
s t- ft § gj
*?Fi
IM
in n 0 atji 1:
5 - £ t 4
T
g 1: s
5 ttfe 4 g in ft ffl
b H 2" i5'"“«”^;
? a 5 ? £ ?j 5 ? 1 J> ^ i lo ^ S T 4 ® 8 T h
® b rs
X J
t t
©ft lU ^ ifii ^ I
Jefe
a
p: © ^ # © -^ ?
S
I—‘
L-
|H
*M«t0i*Tb!f©P'?S^S>M»4
11■;h ©i 1!j|«
A ^ ^>
.
^ * * if t:
----- 5r____ 2_^_JMfc_jsjg_r_________ ___ 1 g r
—-------
ft
’
i £
4 Y
as
T
S f 4 5 ft 4
1
„
#0 3
„
. ? ? 1- £ © W ^ ft R 4 4 & H « R JR M
i '
® - b § § 5 J> i 8 L ® 0 * ?
k ix r
<- I ft fe± S 4 5 ft © ' ff ft M n ® ® ft
J - tS «> l 95
4 isj f$H I ft S ft i: fz ft) c ©
i lit i: S ' fit W S “ K W * 4 X IX
® St 4
# t * n *> b /? S M t O i
,-0^0 r—— ,
M
0
>*
&
ffLfShfti4Mii?*j4 lit
?> ® ft 1
2 il
a
R # fi ® ® y 1:
p' © b M to Mt 1:
Z 6 iz© h tj# £ © ? bi b
IS
1: t b •: f ^ 7 MOj IX ©
aaT^^^tAT b T ^ L
ta^
0
' H
Hi^ © # ^ ^ ^ © i' t a 1 t
J (Z £ T
g
1 XM $
b A A # TO 51 6 © ^ © li
MU
«WS I ^ Hu B M # * 2 ^O # A
A 0 a IX ^ 3? ^ ^ 0 a iz ^ ^
P3
U
Mi
0
u I
L t? 4^ i
- A (X M * 0 MZ £ $> y> "?
i 5 0 0 0 ^ H T <£>
#^
T — DJ.- i a til ^ ^ © 0 ^ .
^e ^ ^ 4 4^
T
ip 6 0 6
7? IZ
' ( b©p#Mfik5tLi
1®# IZ IZ 0 M
1^ ^ r
' 6
H
7 © t 5 0 b
i
f
tz 4c OB+1^
O IZ hz i
n ici b # ©
T^c t
t K ^ ^ R li O A
4# £ £
5" J # Ulf 1 T # iz X 9
0 A ^ © b 2 0 t
R3 b
£
i: t A n ft iz i: rU
^ 6 t A A i
© tz t ^
% t (Z
i b
z iz n M
1
© L 0 # 0 b A ' it b ® Z i^ L b W’ f ^1
b i
i 3
^ A M *3 i T -r 0 A s ir ?
?^^AAo^©5[S$A0© e# t ^ © f A S ^ Bi iJl ©' f
°5(Z0b0H^nt ' 7 r O
A ^7 m
A A # E S ^ b A
6 n 4
i 7 T
S z IX 7 A i IT * 0 O *© ^’ tO ^ © ^ # i gg ^> 2 ^z
^) ^3 A S gi © / ' © MO 2 © A B t U Z ^ ^ ‘ ib J TO £ £
j
t © fe TMM © S 1
(O
b
0 A S j
© U S A i # ft i- CD ti i iU M
^^A-^M^^T^bVji^
(l © © ^ f l' M’ ^ 5 ° A (X
(X 7 ®
t (Z f L 0
0 O 0 #£
A ? 5£ ® /)6^(?^T-^i
T ^ TO
O itz W & W ( § T A - iq /r
iT X |t 4 i a ^ 0
£ ° © Z 5 D'M 6 ^ t
- t
© IH 4? i I1 0 o 1 ± & L ±
0 (X A ( fl 1 ^ ?^1 Z $ IX fiH
M
6 > Tz ' b © f t f
W
0 ® ' 9
£ o ^7t # 6 ® a tz
5 i © ^ ® Z T iz © IM n a ^)
Z ^ z M 0 A > P bt AH b fti A
A i§ - 0 A # tz 0 < S ^ ^ K 4c ns
© 0 M
5
t 1 iz 0 Z (X A
t e Jbl IZ
if PJ mo i H © f02
S U
O °
£ zz #
^# x to t ft - iii b x ft i ix
z t iz i> t ^ H t; i n 6 ^
z ft r * 0 6 t
c 0 Z ^
b
£ b * 0
iz -5 7 b 0 ^O © ^ 5 Z # IX fiil 6 ® y
5 S
A f
9
o; m t
i u # t
b L O - t
0 t
^ n 1 t n z
T5 M ^ ^ © £ n ®
z
[PHO b r t iz 7 9
t t z x 0 ftM
* (X i 1: ^0
© ? ro t 1 0 b m i i
B£ 0 # fp] £ ( < 7 1 y ^ # < ^ <!: ^ ZZ ^ ^ ^ ^ £ MM n ^ f^ -T i M
^ h
A © 1 Z b ^ dt (X
M 0
4) h n 4 7’ y 0 0 J b IZ A t iz
y ^ L ( 5 £
b 1 ^ © © E b
tz iz
iz iz
L
A
0 fz t:
0
®
i5 T < 0 0 © (
© tz
J A ^ f A A b 4 ^^^^tio-M!>b^ff©(
© Z IX 1
IO tz tR
H = 7 Z 4)
z © ©
O z ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ |j i; je 1: 4) i T # 0 M ft fl # 3 /
H Md © O ^ 0
^ tt
0 E 6 ^ 6 ± ®
®
®
^
M^ 4 b ;>/ 1: T
' 1 A ® O 1
Ik
M
M
s Sil $
<
0 9 X/ # Mi 0 4> - M
O b
3 M t
i iU’ b$
0 ' T
(
©’ iS tlS © A ^it ^ ^ ^ ’3
mz
1
1
F
0 ntz bA^'bt^gMzto M
^ f3 T 4) V' i © 4)
0^€-5 0 A 6 6
J IZ
- 7
^ g r B 7
“ I ^ t i: ilj ^
% ^ 0 (X — b gt
i
l'5«-ft>A®?fMg*S®
*j fl 'ft T i' St 7 S A ® ft ® a 7 < ft A A
»
5?
4 « i> ft ® ’ ffi 11 ft if ® fi G IM 5A-'/'M?E?t0H-EBf0?TT. 5 2S
t v> #■ 6 i © j 3
4 S i’ © ft t> ft 4
i> ft R © 0 0 4
4 A # A * + i
b T ® r 15'4a
4 A,A#
0.
(j $
A 1 ? j. ? 7 1 £
5 '- ft A * ft :M
J ■' ft I
'? 7 ra ft
£ ? 4 7 £ ^ t
S ^ ft 1 K: 15! *'
u ft
0 +
4 ® 0 H8 4
i- A J J
ft » y + o®©
ig^wi
te
V- ^
?4^r= + lit? ' ' I> if A
ff^;}f/;©g^2$i 0
ft 0 A' 4 iM ® rS -M 4 r-4 i 1>; li a r- 1: 0
iX^bZ^^^bTHTH + o^MOiti^
Ml
Si
is
r
Page 6
Wednesday, Mery 28, 1952
tilt NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 6
r
Iv —
Bi
/JO
ft
5
i
tx
z
wi
0
7
2
a
ft
0
i
t)
0
o
iff’
0
(A MJ
0 ’
6
77
(k
a
tz
a
0
6'^
s S 0
6
At
9
IX
a
® O3
?n
^t
0
0
i
^
i
O’
tz
b*
fi
L
a
n
tz
a
(X
d
(X
^1
II
tx
i
0
M
fl
0
&
7
V
2
0
tin
0
The New Canadian
6
0 L
0 i
IX L a
h a
(X
a {Jr
a
। Ki
#
4
b
<
W!
i
€
KB
1
<
ft
0
0 ^J
IX
tx
IX
0
£
i
M
0
0<J
6
0
6
M
*
i
Bi
TA
0
i
6
(X
in
t
B^
Mi 70 IX
(^ 0
0
iuj
0
7 0
{■X i
f
o
M
0
6
)
L^J
c
5
0 a
a W
In]
o a CX Ht
0 #
fen^m
0 if
t.5
rz i 0
if
0;
IX
0
AT 0
IbW# (1^^)
9
^1
i
7’
4s
0
7JD
479 Queen Street West
Toronto, Ontario
(Phone (EM. 6-5005)
•
a
w At
Si
^n
tn
0
0
0
6
H
LIJ
0
0
6
AV- A B
ft
in
&
n 505
0
In)
JJul ^j
i
IX
Jill 3
{^
0
#
a b
T
i’ h
tx
0
0
tz
fl
0
MJ
6
73
0
C
b
IM
M
0
0
Iff
t
0} m
5H
b
7
0
tb
0
®
0
a
tx
IJB O’
(X
i’
0
AI
Hl
Lt 14
i
0
w tx
o
X
0 rm
At IX
W
b
■9
dt
T
5
7
If
0
T
I-
i
<W
^
7
55 !J
7a T
'X
I
£a
9
5
2L 0
I’
JO
^
0
L
Uh
in
0
0
L
o
o
L •
o
i
bit
2
5L'
0
5
0
<M
I
0 S
0
It ^
7
B 0
0 i
E
=7*
HO
07
i
o
'X
C
JX
L
0’
6
i
I’
4
iL
L
0
0
0
0
£E
i
9
O')
7
tJ
0
iris
6
7
0 0
a
K
t>
5f?
■i3
o
5
6
0
7
i
to
®
IX
0
t^
ire
0
^
X
7
*6
7
b
e
i’ o
o
7
B
a -i
X
a
0
L
b
fc-
a
0
L
XU
IL
a
fill
0^
b
a
If
0
0
6
§
IT
lull
4)
6
6
o
>
0 u
®
i
0
tilt NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 6
r
Iv —
Bi
/JO
ft
5
i
tx
z
wi
0
7
2
a
ft
0
i
t)
0
o
iff’
0
(A MJ
0 ’
6
77
(k
a
tz
a
0
6'^
s S 0
6
At
9
IX
a
® O3
?n
^t
0
0
i
^
i
O’
tz
b*
fi
L
a
n
tz
a
(X
d
(X
^1
II
tx
i
0
M
fl
0
&
7
V
2
0
tin
0
The New Canadian
6
0 L
0 i
IX L a
h a
(X
a {Jr
a
। Ki
#
4
b
<
W!
i
€
KB
1
<
ft
0
0 ^J
IX
tx
IX
0
£
i
M
0
0<J
6
0
6
M
*
i
Bi
TA
0
i
6
(X
in
t
B^
Mi 70 IX
(^ 0
0
iuj
0
7 0
{■X i
f
o
M
0
6
)
L^J
c
5
0 a
a W
In]
o a CX Ht
0 #
fen^m
0 if
t.5
rz i 0
if
0;
IX
0
AT 0
IbW# (1^^)
9
^1
i
7’
4s
0
7JD
479 Queen Street West
Toronto, Ontario
(Phone (EM. 6-5005)
•
a
w At
Si
^n
tn
0
0
0
6
H
LIJ
0
0
6
AV- A B
ft
in
&
n 505
0
In)
JJul ^j
i
IX
Jill 3
{^
0
#
a b
T
i’ h
tx
0
0
tz
fl
0
MJ
6
73
0
C
b
IM
M
0
0
Iff
t
0} m
5H
b
7
0
tb
0
®
0
a
tx
IJB O’
(X
i’
0
AI
Hl
Lt 14
i
0
w tx
o
X
0 rm
At IX
W
b
■9
dt
T
5
7
If
0
T
I-
i
<W
^
7
55 !J
7a T
'X
I
£a
9
5
2L 0
I’
JO
^
0
L
Uh
in
0
0
L
o
o
L •
o
i
bit
2
5L'
0
5
0
<M
I
0 S
0
It ^
7
B 0
0 i
E
=7*
HO
07
i
o
'X
C
JX
L
0’
6
i
I’
4
iL
L
0
0
0
0
£E
i
9
O')
7
tJ
0
iris
6
7
0 0
a
K
t>
5f?
■i3
o
5
6
0
7
i
to
®
IX
0
t^
ire
0
^
X
7
*6
7
b
e
i’ o
o
7
B
a -i
X
a
0
L
b
fc-
a
0
L
XU
IL
a
fill
0^
b
a
If
0
0
6
§
IT
lull
4)
6
6
o
>
0 u
®
i
0
Page 7
Wednesday, May 28, 1S52
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 7
Moonlight^Pacers Top E. Canada Meet Toronto YBS Tennis
Re adv for Summer
1952 executives of
Close to 200 talers Take Part in Tournament,
Club of
the four events of the
odd
Shig Kawasaki, president:
I of
monev
bowlin- Turnament tor $428
Major Mixed Title
Kondo, treasurer; Roy
i lery
oivmpR
S’°ry berore
The
the Toronto YBS Tennis
20J Annual
in
6th
members, active or other-wise,
prize
worth are
84.a YONGE STREET, TORONTO, ONT.
Harry
at the
^^
* pacKed Sn
Whizz Bangs proved without over most o
?
•
}S °n May 24 When n^ trundlin was Shin, inter-state correspondent;
doubt the top team of the year
r most
toe snobs was claimed by Toronto.
Yosh Watanabe, coach; Roy Ku
All four money spots in the -__
in the Toronto Major Mixed
bota, equipment manager and
YONEMITSU
Bowling League when they won men’s team division, all but sec- ; Naka
Fuz Fujiwara, membership.
(1399).
Third
place
Watch Repair Shop
the five game playoff last week ond place in the women, all mix- ) went to T.
The initial fee for new mem
Shiga-T. Honkawa
end adding to the title they had ed doubles and all but second j duo.
bers are $6 for adults and $3
328 BROADVIEW AVE.
Joe Izumi
Ferr* 19 and under. Nb fees are
already won as leaders of the Place in men s doubles fell to the !
(near Gerrard St.)
who won with Barhome-town
bowlers.
j
bara
Toronto.
Phone GL. 3652
league standings.
required of former members, ex
,
.
.
_
,
Nikaido
in
1951,
found
a
Individual
The winners enjoyed a comfort
big noise of the j similar partner in Rose Ogata cept non-tournament player's who
tourney
was
able margin, amassing 5448
second
•UnU
for j 3nd r°lhnS up 1,375 captured the will be asked to donate $1 for
pins to Clippers 4964, Smoothies ; ;
year won mixed doubles. Mas Sugamori and any season they wish to play, to
help with the club expenses.
4640,
and No Names 4490.
Agent
Roy Kubota, 133 Gorevale, WA.
Dreamers copped consolation hon Tt
I 1-363 white Mas -hwhima and
ors with 5408, followed by Dead cambo finished third.
Ginger Terakita finished third 7101, will be in charge at Trinity
COMPANY OF CANADA
Not
only
were
there
a
record
where Bussei courts are No. 4
heads- 5141, Pace-Setters 4959,
with 1,353.
number of entries, spectators and
Box 149 Kamloops, B. C.
and Long Shots 4885.
A score of 825 gave Izumi the and No. 5 on Tuesday, No. 2 and
No.
4
on
Thursdays.
Fuz
Fujiwa
amoum.
of
prize
money,
most
of
Kaide Shimizu was top bowler
high triple, followed by Mas Iso
in the playoffs with a mark of the winnin g scores were tourney shima’s 816. George Fukasaka ra, KE. 0437, will look after the
Calibre of bowling- is (Lowe Bros.) won high single nets at Earlscourt, cor. Lans
1328 in the five games. Other records.
JOHNNY NAKASHIMA
showing
£
a. great improvement. vith Hamilton’s Jim Kinoshita downe and St. Clair, on Sundays
Oil Burners, Roofing,
highs were Tosh Sakura 1256,
Rock Wool Insulation,'
Terry Fujioka 1230, and in the For instance the winning men’s just behind. Scores were 314 and from 7 a.m. and on Saturday
from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. Beginners
Gurney Furnaces.
girl’s, Rose Ogata 1121, Mich Iso team is 200 points better than 310.
117
Alton Avo.,
Toronto.
will
be
assisted
on
Saturday
zaki 1067, and Mary Ebata 1062. last year’s victor and it takes a
Ladies high triple went to Ha
mornings.
PHONE
HA. 5550
Joe Tehara won high average 700 score 1to claim the ladies’ milton as Shirley Umetsu bowl
high
triple.
Members
wishing
to
make the
over the season with 235 just
ed 737. Mich Isozaki came in to
tennis invitational trip to CleveMoonlight
Grill
captured
$75
nipping Mas Isoshima’s 234. Shiz
land can either phone in or put
Saito (formerly Hayakawa) took and the JCCA Trophy by rolling
Outside teams were enteied fhgir application personally
at
ladies averages with 207 with up a total of 3,418 pins as from Montreal and Hamilton.
General Insurance
Earlscourt,
stating
their
prefer
against Urabe Insurance who fin
Mich Isozaki 198 trailing.
224 Delhi Ave. Phone RE. 2385
ence: chartered bus, seating capa
Best high triples were rolled - ished second with 3,407 to claim
Wilson Heights P. O., Ont.
city 34, approximately $12 per*
I) and
by Tak Nishino 929 and Yas Sa $40. El Mocambo
Automobile, Fire, Burglary
person, leaving Toronto 9 p.m.,
Life, Accident & Sickness, etc.
ito 906. Kay Mitsuhashi 795 and Lowe Bros. Jewellers (3333) were
Friday
1 and returning
others
in
the
money.
Hedy Mitsuhashi 774 were best
Monday evening, Aug 4, or pri
Moonlight was composed of Ace
in the girls’.
FORT WILLIAM, Ont. — The vate cars at $10 per person, own
Maw Mori wrapped up the Fujibayashi, .Joe Nishizaki, Tak- Nisei-sparked Elks Bisons final er’s time.
season’s high single with. 393 fol Nishino, Muts Baba and Mas Iso- ly won the Don McKenzie Memo
sliima.
lowed by Charlie Sakura’s 390.
101J/2 QUEEN ST. W.
rial Trophy, symbolic of hockey National.
Pacers who were runner-ups
For
Pick-up and Delivery
Rose Ogata rolled a high of 329
supremacy in the 14-team Elks
In. the Bantam League, the
last
year
were
successful
in
1952
and Polly Nishino 320.
Phone
Pee Wee League by downing Elks Monarchs which includes five Ni
with a 3,168 score. Winning mem
WA.
6953
Maple Leafs in a best of three
bers were Kim Nishimura, Rose finals recently. For Nisei coaches sei on their roster, was ousted in
Ogata, Shiz Saito, Hedy Mitsu Paul Oda and Casey Iwasa, the the finals against Columbus Car
BOYS & GIRLS
hashi and Shirley Tanaka. Hamil win was their first in three years dinals. Nisei members were cen
tre Eiji Tsubouchi, right-winger
ton’s Q.ueenettes with 3,114 took of coaching the Bisons.
Wanted for piece work from
Lucien C. Kurata
Bobby Tatebe, defenseman Koichi
second place with Busseis (2953)
pbout June ' 15 foi picking peas,
Barrister ind Soilciter
Nisei members were Stanley Taand Acettes, last year winners niwa, Kenneth Tokiwa, Henry Hayashi, goalie Harry Mochizuki
1 Adelaide St. E.. Toronto
berries, beans and raspberries
and centre Lawrence Mochizuki.
(2887)
trailing.
1st
and
2nd Mortgage Loans
at 25 cents per basket. Six to |
Ichikawa, and Richard Okada.
Right-winger Tony Ichikawa,
arranged
A total of 29 men’s and 8 ladies’
eight boys for steady work a
Goalie Taniwa was awarded the the only Nisei on the Columbus
Office
EM-4
5259 Re«. LY.34 27
and about twelve girls for j teams took part in the team Les Logan Trophy for the most Canadians, helped his team to the
events.
daily work.
valuable goalie in the league and city juvenile championship.
Competing amongst 63 pairs, was also selected as all-star goa
Phone S. Uchibori, Oakville
Te fete the young hockey play
George Sato and Sub Miike rolled lie in the American League, one
Residence:
134, or Phone EM. 6-4758, To
EM 4-0508
ers, the Lakehead Nisei Club held
to
victory
behind
a
1,533
score
2
Vesta Drive
ronto.
of the two sections in which the a party for the winning Bisons
MAfair 1365.
ahead of Hamilton’s J. Kondo-T. league is divided. Roy Inaba was
team and their parents and the
Andrew JE. McKagne,
! chosen on all-star defense for the other Nisei players recently.
>
mo®
Fete Rising
0. K. CLEANERS
GLASSIFIED SECTION
FOR RENT
PHOTO-SPORT
Ask OSCAR HATASHITA for Fish Stories
1500 Dundas St. West — Toronto
PHONE LA. 4267
/
VOTE FOR YOUR C.C.F. CANDIDATE
RANDOLPH HARDING
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
I
THREE ROOMS with sink, unSTUDENT or business girl,
furnished, near Western Hospital, live in good home. Phone MA.
i, Bathurst St., Toronto. Phone EM. 1320, Toronto.
4-0170. after 6 p.m._____
GIRL or woman for modern
THREE ROOMS, unfurnished bungalow,
small pleasant family,
' with sink, private entrance, semino
cooking,
private room and
2 j private bathroom, hot water,
television.
Phone
RE. 0319, To
j; adults preferred. Phone LA. ronto.
’ I 4267, Toronto.
FOUR ROOMS, with sink,
STUDENT or woman as moth
Dundas and Munro district. Call er’s help for modern summer cot
RA. 8316, Toronto.
tage, private room, small friend
ly
family. Phone OR. 1353, To
HELP WANTED
ronto.
HOUSEMAN and general
, handyman (with driver’s licence
GIRL for domestic help, Forest
; j if possible) wanted for family of Hill Village. RE. 2666, Toronto.
; ! two adults in country home on
j 1 main highway where other Japal | nese employed. First class refer: j ences essential, would consider
; i couple. Telephone or write R.B.
’ ; Graham, 367 Front St., Bellevil-
Barristor, Solicitor, Notary
Public.
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
330 Bay St.
(Corner Adelaida & Bay St«.)
TORONTO
K.GOTO
Agent
MONARCH LIFE
ASSURANCE CO.
.J
204 Pigotto Building
36 James St. S., — Tel. 2-2594
Hamilton
Residence:
59 Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960
’0
H
ill
•H
Everything In Hardware!
TOOLS, KITCHEN UTENSILS
HARDING RANDOLPH
Silverton School Teacher
C.C.F.
FEMALE HELP WANTED
OFFICE GIRL for production
office. Phone KE. 8596, Toronto.
G GIRL for general
ilfing to leam operating
sewing machine, full or partne. Call MU. 5904, Toronto. %
THREE STORE clerks, ML
££C.F. GOVERNMENT WILL GIVE EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALLI ‘ year around, good wages. Phone
i HA. 6550. Toronto.
TOP QUAUTY
PAINT, VARNISH, ENAMELS
SHERMAN’S HARDWARE LTD.
3
W
537 Queen St. W. (Corner Augusta)
Phone WA. 5375 — Toronto, Ont.
a
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 7
Moonlight^Pacers Top E. Canada Meet Toronto YBS Tennis
Re adv for Summer
1952 executives of
Close to 200 talers Take Part in Tournament,
Club of
the four events of the
odd
Shig Kawasaki, president:
I of
monev
bowlin- Turnament tor $428
Major Mixed Title
Kondo, treasurer; Roy
i lery
oivmpR
S’°ry berore
The
the Toronto YBS Tennis
20J Annual
in
6th
members, active or other-wise,
prize
worth are
84.a YONGE STREET, TORONTO, ONT.
Harry
at the
^^
* pacKed Sn
Whizz Bangs proved without over most o
?
•
}S °n May 24 When n^ trundlin was Shin, inter-state correspondent;
doubt the top team of the year
r most
toe snobs was claimed by Toronto.
Yosh Watanabe, coach; Roy Ku
All four money spots in the -__
in the Toronto Major Mixed
bota, equipment manager and
YONEMITSU
Bowling League when they won men’s team division, all but sec- ; Naka
Fuz Fujiwara, membership.
(1399).
Third
place
Watch Repair Shop
the five game playoff last week ond place in the women, all mix- ) went to T.
The initial fee for new mem
Shiga-T. Honkawa
end adding to the title they had ed doubles and all but second j duo.
bers are $6 for adults and $3
328 BROADVIEW AVE.
Joe Izumi
Ferr* 19 and under. Nb fees are
already won as leaders of the Place in men s doubles fell to the !
(near Gerrard St.)
who won with Barhome-town
bowlers.
j
bara
Toronto.
Phone GL. 3652
league standings.
required of former members, ex
,
.
.
_
,
Nikaido
in
1951,
found
a
Individual
The winners enjoyed a comfort
big noise of the j similar partner in Rose Ogata cept non-tournament player's who
tourney
was
able margin, amassing 5448
second
•UnU
for j 3nd r°lhnS up 1,375 captured the will be asked to donate $1 for
pins to Clippers 4964, Smoothies ; ;
year won mixed doubles. Mas Sugamori and any season they wish to play, to
help with the club expenses.
4640,
and No Names 4490.
Agent
Roy Kubota, 133 Gorevale, WA.
Dreamers copped consolation hon Tt
I 1-363 white Mas -hwhima and
ors with 5408, followed by Dead cambo finished third.
Ginger Terakita finished third 7101, will be in charge at Trinity
COMPANY OF CANADA
Not
only
were
there
a
record
where Bussei courts are No. 4
heads- 5141, Pace-Setters 4959,
with 1,353.
number of entries, spectators and
Box 149 Kamloops, B. C.
and Long Shots 4885.
A score of 825 gave Izumi the and No. 5 on Tuesday, No. 2 and
No.
4
on
Thursdays.
Fuz
Fujiwa
amoum.
of
prize
money,
most
of
Kaide Shimizu was top bowler
high triple, followed by Mas Iso
in the playoffs with a mark of the winnin g scores were tourney shima’s 816. George Fukasaka ra, KE. 0437, will look after the
Calibre of bowling- is (Lowe Bros.) won high single nets at Earlscourt, cor. Lans
1328 in the five games. Other records.
JOHNNY NAKASHIMA
showing
£
a. great improvement. vith Hamilton’s Jim Kinoshita downe and St. Clair, on Sundays
Oil Burners, Roofing,
highs were Tosh Sakura 1256,
Rock Wool Insulation,'
Terry Fujioka 1230, and in the For instance the winning men’s just behind. Scores were 314 and from 7 a.m. and on Saturday
from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. Beginners
Gurney Furnaces.
girl’s, Rose Ogata 1121, Mich Iso team is 200 points better than 310.
117
Alton Avo.,
Toronto.
will
be
assisted
on
Saturday
zaki 1067, and Mary Ebata 1062. last year’s victor and it takes a
Ladies high triple went to Ha
mornings.
PHONE
HA. 5550
Joe Tehara won high average 700 score 1to claim the ladies’ milton as Shirley Umetsu bowl
high
triple.
Members
wishing
to
make the
over the season with 235 just
ed 737. Mich Isozaki came in to
tennis invitational trip to CleveMoonlight
Grill
captured
$75
nipping Mas Isoshima’s 234. Shiz
land can either phone in or put
Saito (formerly Hayakawa) took and the JCCA Trophy by rolling
Outside teams were enteied fhgir application personally
at
ladies averages with 207 with up a total of 3,418 pins as from Montreal and Hamilton.
General Insurance
Earlscourt,
stating
their
prefer
against Urabe Insurance who fin
Mich Isozaki 198 trailing.
224 Delhi Ave. Phone RE. 2385
ence: chartered bus, seating capa
Best high triples were rolled - ished second with 3,407 to claim
Wilson Heights P. O., Ont.
city 34, approximately $12 per*
I) and
by Tak Nishino 929 and Yas Sa $40. El Mocambo
Automobile, Fire, Burglary
person, leaving Toronto 9 p.m.,
Life, Accident & Sickness, etc.
ito 906. Kay Mitsuhashi 795 and Lowe Bros. Jewellers (3333) were
Friday
1 and returning
others
in
the
money.
Hedy Mitsuhashi 774 were best
Monday evening, Aug 4, or pri
Moonlight was composed of Ace
in the girls’.
FORT WILLIAM, Ont. — The vate cars at $10 per person, own
Maw Mori wrapped up the Fujibayashi, .Joe Nishizaki, Tak- Nisei-sparked Elks Bisons final er’s time.
season’s high single with. 393 fol Nishino, Muts Baba and Mas Iso- ly won the Don McKenzie Memo
sliima.
lowed by Charlie Sakura’s 390.
101J/2 QUEEN ST. W.
rial Trophy, symbolic of hockey National.
Pacers who were runner-ups
For
Pick-up and Delivery
Rose Ogata rolled a high of 329
supremacy in the 14-team Elks
In. the Bantam League, the
last
year
were
successful
in
1952
and Polly Nishino 320.
Phone
Pee Wee League by downing Elks Monarchs which includes five Ni
with a 3,168 score. Winning mem
WA.
6953
Maple Leafs in a best of three
bers were Kim Nishimura, Rose finals recently. For Nisei coaches sei on their roster, was ousted in
Ogata, Shiz Saito, Hedy Mitsu Paul Oda and Casey Iwasa, the the finals against Columbus Car
BOYS & GIRLS
hashi and Shirley Tanaka. Hamil win was their first in three years dinals. Nisei members were cen
tre Eiji Tsubouchi, right-winger
ton’s Q.ueenettes with 3,114 took of coaching the Bisons.
Wanted for piece work from
Lucien C. Kurata
Bobby Tatebe, defenseman Koichi
second place with Busseis (2953)
pbout June ' 15 foi picking peas,
Barrister ind Soilciter
Nisei members were Stanley Taand Acettes, last year winners niwa, Kenneth Tokiwa, Henry Hayashi, goalie Harry Mochizuki
1 Adelaide St. E.. Toronto
berries, beans and raspberries
and centre Lawrence Mochizuki.
(2887)
trailing.
1st
and
2nd Mortgage Loans
at 25 cents per basket. Six to |
Ichikawa, and Richard Okada.
Right-winger Tony Ichikawa,
arranged
A total of 29 men’s and 8 ladies’
eight boys for steady work a
Goalie Taniwa was awarded the the only Nisei on the Columbus
Office
EM-4
5259 Re«. LY.34 27
and about twelve girls for j teams took part in the team Les Logan Trophy for the most Canadians, helped his team to the
events.
daily work.
valuable goalie in the league and city juvenile championship.
Competing amongst 63 pairs, was also selected as all-star goa
Phone S. Uchibori, Oakville
Te fete the young hockey play
George Sato and Sub Miike rolled lie in the American League, one
Residence:
134, or Phone EM. 6-4758, To
EM 4-0508
ers, the Lakehead Nisei Club held
to
victory
behind
a
1,533
score
2
Vesta Drive
ronto.
of the two sections in which the a party for the winning Bisons
MAfair 1365.
ahead of Hamilton’s J. Kondo-T. league is divided. Roy Inaba was
team and their parents and the
Andrew JE. McKagne,
! chosen on all-star defense for the other Nisei players recently.
>
mo®
Fete Rising
0. K. CLEANERS
GLASSIFIED SECTION
FOR RENT
PHOTO-SPORT
Ask OSCAR HATASHITA for Fish Stories
1500 Dundas St. West — Toronto
PHONE LA. 4267
/
VOTE FOR YOUR C.C.F. CANDIDATE
RANDOLPH HARDING
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
I
THREE ROOMS with sink, unSTUDENT or business girl,
furnished, near Western Hospital, live in good home. Phone MA.
i, Bathurst St., Toronto. Phone EM. 1320, Toronto.
4-0170. after 6 p.m._____
GIRL or woman for modern
THREE ROOMS, unfurnished bungalow,
small pleasant family,
' with sink, private entrance, semino
cooking,
private room and
2 j private bathroom, hot water,
television.
Phone
RE. 0319, To
j; adults preferred. Phone LA. ronto.
’ I 4267, Toronto.
FOUR ROOMS, with sink,
STUDENT or woman as moth
Dundas and Munro district. Call er’s help for modern summer cot
RA. 8316, Toronto.
tage, private room, small friend
ly
family. Phone OR. 1353, To
HELP WANTED
ronto.
HOUSEMAN and general
, handyman (with driver’s licence
GIRL for domestic help, Forest
; j if possible) wanted for family of Hill Village. RE. 2666, Toronto.
; ! two adults in country home on
j 1 main highway where other Japal | nese employed. First class refer: j ences essential, would consider
; i couple. Telephone or write R.B.
’ ; Graham, 367 Front St., Bellevil-
Barristor, Solicitor, Notary
Public.
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
330 Bay St.
(Corner Adelaida & Bay St«.)
TORONTO
K.GOTO
Agent
MONARCH LIFE
ASSURANCE CO.
.J
204 Pigotto Building
36 James St. S., — Tel. 2-2594
Hamilton
Residence:
59 Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960
’0
H
ill
•H
Everything In Hardware!
TOOLS, KITCHEN UTENSILS
HARDING RANDOLPH
Silverton School Teacher
C.C.F.
FEMALE HELP WANTED
OFFICE GIRL for production
office. Phone KE. 8596, Toronto.
G GIRL for general
ilfing to leam operating
sewing machine, full or partne. Call MU. 5904, Toronto. %
THREE STORE clerks, ML
££C.F. GOVERNMENT WILL GIVE EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALLI ‘ year around, good wages. Phone
i HA. 6550. Toronto.
TOP QUAUTY
PAINT, VARNISH, ENAMELS
SHERMAN’S HARDWARE LTD.
3
W
537 Queen St. W. (Corner Augusta)
Phone WA. 5375 — Toronto, Ont.
a
Page 8
PAGE 8
THE NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, May 28, 1952
Personal Notes Across Canada
"Self-thoughts On The Eve of Graduation
(Dedicated to those who are about to graduate)
MARRIAGES
SAITO — HAYAKAWA
TORONTO — Church of the
Holy Trinity was the setting for
the wedding on May 10 when
Shizue, eldest daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Masanori Hayakawa of
Toronto, became the bride of Ya
sushi Saito, only son of Mr. and
Mrs. Saito, also of the city. Rev.
W. H. Gale officiated.
Given in marriage by her fath
er, the bride wore a gown of
white brocaded satin fashioned
with a stand-up collar and full
skirt which fell into a long train.
Her fingertip veil was held by
a coronet of orange blossoms, and
she carried a white bouquet of
roses, sweet peas and lilies-ofthe-valley.
Matron of honor was Mrs. Lor
raine Omotani, while Fujiko Ha
yakawa, sister of the bride, was
the bridesmaid.
The groom was supported by
Slug Nishikawa while Eizo Fuji
bayashi acted as head usher.
The reception followed at the
International, and later the new
ly-weds flew to New York City.
For travelling the ‘bride chose
a light blue worsted suit, yellow
shortie coat with navy and white
accessories and a corsage of yel
low roses.
Mr. and Mrs. Sosaku Iwasaki
were the baishakunins.
AIHOSHI — KATO
NEW DENVER, B.C. — The
marriage of Kimiko, daughter of
Mrs. Ika Kato, to Tadashi Aihoshi, took place on May 10 at New
Denver
United Church. Rev.
Storfe officiated.
SOCIAL CALENDAR
28—Toronto. Metropolitan Nisei
Young People’s Windup
Party. Church House, 8 p.m.
JUNE
~
8—Kelowna. Kelowna JCCA pic
nic, Stranahan’s on Rut
land Beach.
22—Toronto. Toronto YBS An
nual Picnic.
27—Montreal. Montreal Nisei
Fellowship Group Dance, at
N.D.G. “Y”, 8:30 p.m.
29—Vancouver. Maria Stella Club
annual picnic, at Bowen Is
land.
Tomorrow’s the day! It’s the day you’ve been looking' forward
to. Yesterday, you read in the Star: “McGill to Confer 1,300 De
grees at Spring Convocation.” One of those 1,300 is you. You’re
Reception followed at the Ja
graduating! Yes, John Doe.
panese Hall.
Your eye travels around your room. It’s already got a half
Baishakunins were Mr. and
deserted look. Cigarette butts on the floor . . . gym shoes under
Mrs. T. Sameshima and Mr. and
the bed . . . half-packed valise on the bed.
Mrs. Y. Kosaka.
Your last bull session with the boys. Joe and Butch and Tom
my, all good fellahs. You had beer. Beer mugs all over the place.
NISHIZAKI — SUGA
The odour of stale beer clings heavy around the room.
TORONTO, — Canadian Legion
A CKNOWLED GEMENT
Last night . . . no, a few hours . . . no, until half an hour ago,
Hall was the scene of the marri
TABER, Alta. — The Taber
you and Butch and Joe and Tommy were in this room. You’d all
age
of
Yumiko,
daughter
of
Mr.
Chapter- JCCA acknowledges with
drunk to the future. You’d all told jokes . . . nice ones and off
and
Mrs.
K.
Suga
of
Montreal,
thanks a donation from Mrs. N.
colour ones . . . and laughed like hell. You even did an imitation
to
Joe
Yoshio
Nishizaki,
son
of
Teshima of Taber.
of old Snicklepuss delivering a seedy lecture. You must have been
Mr.
and
Mrs.
B.
Nishizaki
of
good. The fellahs laughed hard . . . perhaps too hard. You all talk
Chatham, Ont., on April 26. Rev.
ed a helluva a lot about life in general — and avoided life in par
T.
Tsuji officiated.
ticular as it touched you and Joe and Butch and Tommy person
ally. Sure, Joe’s going back home. Tommy’s going to stick around.
Following a reception atxthe
Might do a summer stint in a lab in the States. Butch’s still wait
Great China, the couple went to
FINE LINENS
ing for just one letter out of the eleven applications to the psychi
New York for their honeymoon.
atric departments in eleven different universities. You . . . you re
featuring
going to look for a job . . . yeh, in chemical engineering.
TORONTO AYPA DANCE
® Famous Cannon
There’d been silence. And you told a joke which didn t take.
The Toronto AYPA will be
Towels & Sheets
It dribbed feebly into nothingness. And you’d said, ‘Hey, fellahs,
holding
a
dance
starting
from
9
© Exquisite Madeira
we gotta keep in touch . . . you know, one for all and all for one!
p.m.
at
St.
George
’
s
Parish
Hall
& Chinese Embroidery
The others said “O sure. You bet!” and laughed louder and poured
following a banquet. The public
© Luncheon & Dinner Cloths
more beer. Joe spilt some beer on your “Practical Applications of
is
invited
to
come
to
the
dance.
® Fancy Pillows Cases
Electronics”. Then someone said, “It’s 3 a.m. How about some shutAn admission of 25 cents will be
@ Damask Sheets
eye. Gotta look fresh for the family . . .”
charged.
And you’re left alone. You, John Doe. You know it will never
be the same again. You’re graduating. Suddenly, you feel like
SPECIAL OFFER TO THE
Toronto YBS Picnic
$
:|c
^.
walking.
NEW CANADIAN’S
You slip out quietly. You lean on the wall of the library build
KAMO — TAKEDA
The Annual Picnic of the To
READERS:
ing, and take it all in . . . this you are leaving behind. Aou light
DOWNSVIEW, Ont. — The ronto Young Buddhists Society is
a cigarette . . . pause . . .and ponder. This will never come again.
Present this ad for
marriage of Michiko, daughter of scheduled for Sunday, June 22.
Never. And in your imagination, you hear voices, like voices of a
a 10% 'discount.
Mr. and Mrs. Fusajira Takeda of Site of the picnic and other de
fantastic dream in a fantastic sequence in a radio drama . . . only it
tails
will
follow.
Coaldale, Alta., to Ritsu Kamo,
isn’t a radio drama . . . you hear voices saying “never come back
374 H YONGE STREET
fourth son of Mr. Denzo Kamo
455 EGLINTON AVE. WEST
. . . never come back . . . never come back. . .”
of Downsview, Ont., took place
You wish suddenly, that you weren’t graduating. Now that
Toronto, Ont.
on May 10 at the Downsview
you’re checking out, your four years come swimming out to meet
Church. Rev. Rich officiated.
you.
Following a reception at King
What’s happiness? What’s truth? What’s reality? Is there
Edward
Hotel in Toronto, the
|
Ladies & Gents
j
religion ? What’s progress ? What’s democracy ? Can a capitalistic
couple went to New York for
MONTREAL — The accent is (Tailored Suits & Coats 1
state survive ? Undergrads toying with ideas . . . and the fate of
their honeymoon.
on youth this year for the Mont | MICHI ASHIKAWA |
the world hung in the balance.
real
Young Buddhists’ Society.
They were good days. At one time, they’d thought you a little
|237 Seaton St. — Toronto^
Maria
Stellas
Slate
Communistic in your leanings. Yes, you! Funny to think of it now
Telephone RA. 2618
|
At the annual general meeting g
Bowen Island Picnic
. . . you, John Doe a Communist!
held recently, active roles in the
The afternoon you and Tommy saved the day for good old
VANCOUVER —Bowen Island administration of the Society
McGill. No, not on the football field, but on the debating team. where fun and relaxation reign were placed in the younger mem j
CELESTIAL
Good old John! Good old Tommy!
supreme is the site of the An- bers of the organization.
The cramming for those stiff term exams. Remember the ben- -nual Picnic of the Maria Stella*
GARDENS
Heading the executive will be
zadrine that sharpened your wits when all other things failed.
Club on Sunday, June 29. There
Chop Suey House
Then, moments of aching memory. The campus at night. The will be plenty of refreshments Harry Yamada as president, with
92-A Elizabeth St, Toronto
way the moon slanted along the campus walk. The way a girl and fun for everyone with a the following members compris
smiled in the moonlight, shadows of the tree leaves mottling her variety of games on stock.
ing the executive body:
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
fresh young cheek. You remember the tenderness in her eyes —
Tickets, $1,50 for adults and 75
DINNERS
Hiro
Osaka, vice-president;
the girl who was ready . . . and the boy who wasn’t.
cents for children, may be obtain
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 am.
That soul-searching night when four years hung on your de ed from Estelle Iwase, Nobby Fu Tosh Oike, general secretary;
Reservations: EM4-9035
Shirley Tanaka, assistant secre
cision. When ashtrays became overloaded . . . when one cigarette jisawa, Doris
Katsuno,
Ben
burned after another. You, John Doe, was ready to chuck college for Maede, Sam Sugie, Irene Uega- tary; Kumi Nakano, recording
secretary; Phyllis Tanaka, trea X ’
*....................... . ^.
a principle . . .
ma, Martha Uegama or any club
You butt your cigarette. Strang-e, you’ve never realized how member. The steamer will leave surer; George Nakano and Con £ Open 12 noon to 2 a.m. •♦*
beautiful a May night can be on the campus. You look around you Union Pier for Bowen Island at Kobayakawa, auditors; Kiyoshi
Suga, religious convenor; Kaz
hard . . . with a peculiar tightening of the throat.
9:30 a.m. and returning hours
You walk down the flagged walk, past the lily pond. You look are 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. As the say Kadohama and Amy Kobayaka .♦.
famous Chinese foods
^
Johnny
up at a lighted window — one window alight while the others are ing goes. “The More The Mer wa, sports convenors;
| 69 Albert St. —Toronto $
in darkness. That must be old Jamieson marking term papers on rier”. meaning- that all are wel Ikegami and Louis Haruta, social £
(at Elizabeth)
convenors; Shiro Hasegawa and
“The Influence of History on Literary Thought of the 16th Cen come.
Telephone WA. 9817
$
Sachi Omoto, membership con *
tury”. Tough paper . . . that.
Thanks g_o to all members who
❖
Special attention given
❖
You light another cigarette. Your eyes accustom themselves to had worked so hard to make the venors; Sam Hashimoto, San
*♦•
to take out orders.
<•
the dark.
A suddent start. You recognize Doc, outlined in the last club dance a great success. gha editor.
shadows . . . Doc who meant well but never quite made, the grade. Door prizes were awarded to Vir
Doc stands there alone. Doc would always be alone. You wish to ginia Shimizu and Kats Nasu.
hell you’d been kinder to him. And suddenly, you feel a kinship
with him . . . with Doc whom you considered a bore, a grind . . . thing. . .” You can't be saying, “I
don’t want to graduate today. . . i:
a drip.
’‘THE HOUSE OF DIAMONDS’'
You walk over to him. You say “Walking back to the house. .. I find I don't know anything.. .”
_
Finest Selection of Hand-Made
No. you just can’t say that! ;•
Wait, I'll go with you." And so you walk along with him. And he
Diamond Engagement & Wedding Rings
says. “Tomorrow’s the day. John.” And you say, “Yeh”. He looks at Look, John Doe. this is your gra 7
7
ALL OLR DIAMONDS GUARANTEED PERFECT
you tentatively. You say “Good night. Doc . . . Good Luck.” And duating day. This is the day you'
1324 Queen St. W. — LAkeside 7053 — Toronto
ve looked forward to. Your cap 7
you want him to know desperately that you meant it,
and
gown
are
waiting.
You're
go
You climb the stairs. You think . . . tomorrow . . . no, today
j’
Representative
. . . you’ll stand there, proud and tall. People will pump your hand. ing to get your hood and sheep
HENRY RYOJI
The folks will be mighty proud of you. You can’t saying to your skin. You, John Doe, will gradu ■
Telephone ME. 3182
dad, “Look, dad . . . isn’t it funny, but I don’t know a damned ate today.
H. Yamada Heads
Montreal Busseis
I Hoe Sai Gay |
<
Alexanders
THE NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, May 28, 1952
Personal Notes Across Canada
"Self-thoughts On The Eve of Graduation
(Dedicated to those who are about to graduate)
MARRIAGES
SAITO — HAYAKAWA
TORONTO — Church of the
Holy Trinity was the setting for
the wedding on May 10 when
Shizue, eldest daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Masanori Hayakawa of
Toronto, became the bride of Ya
sushi Saito, only son of Mr. and
Mrs. Saito, also of the city. Rev.
W. H. Gale officiated.
Given in marriage by her fath
er, the bride wore a gown of
white brocaded satin fashioned
with a stand-up collar and full
skirt which fell into a long train.
Her fingertip veil was held by
a coronet of orange blossoms, and
she carried a white bouquet of
roses, sweet peas and lilies-ofthe-valley.
Matron of honor was Mrs. Lor
raine Omotani, while Fujiko Ha
yakawa, sister of the bride, was
the bridesmaid.
The groom was supported by
Slug Nishikawa while Eizo Fuji
bayashi acted as head usher.
The reception followed at the
International, and later the new
ly-weds flew to New York City.
For travelling the ‘bride chose
a light blue worsted suit, yellow
shortie coat with navy and white
accessories and a corsage of yel
low roses.
Mr. and Mrs. Sosaku Iwasaki
were the baishakunins.
AIHOSHI — KATO
NEW DENVER, B.C. — The
marriage of Kimiko, daughter of
Mrs. Ika Kato, to Tadashi Aihoshi, took place on May 10 at New
Denver
United Church. Rev.
Storfe officiated.
SOCIAL CALENDAR
28—Toronto. Metropolitan Nisei
Young People’s Windup
Party. Church House, 8 p.m.
JUNE
~
8—Kelowna. Kelowna JCCA pic
nic, Stranahan’s on Rut
land Beach.
22—Toronto. Toronto YBS An
nual Picnic.
27—Montreal. Montreal Nisei
Fellowship Group Dance, at
N.D.G. “Y”, 8:30 p.m.
29—Vancouver. Maria Stella Club
annual picnic, at Bowen Is
land.
Tomorrow’s the day! It’s the day you’ve been looking' forward
to. Yesterday, you read in the Star: “McGill to Confer 1,300 De
grees at Spring Convocation.” One of those 1,300 is you. You’re
Reception followed at the Ja
graduating! Yes, John Doe.
panese Hall.
Your eye travels around your room. It’s already got a half
Baishakunins were Mr. and
deserted look. Cigarette butts on the floor . . . gym shoes under
Mrs. T. Sameshima and Mr. and
the bed . . . half-packed valise on the bed.
Mrs. Y. Kosaka.
Your last bull session with the boys. Joe and Butch and Tom
my, all good fellahs. You had beer. Beer mugs all over the place.
NISHIZAKI — SUGA
The odour of stale beer clings heavy around the room.
TORONTO, — Canadian Legion
A CKNOWLED GEMENT
Last night . . . no, a few hours . . . no, until half an hour ago,
Hall was the scene of the marri
TABER, Alta. — The Taber
you and Butch and Joe and Tommy were in this room. You’d all
age
of
Yumiko,
daughter
of
Mr.
Chapter- JCCA acknowledges with
drunk to the future. You’d all told jokes . . . nice ones and off
and
Mrs.
K.
Suga
of
Montreal,
thanks a donation from Mrs. N.
colour ones . . . and laughed like hell. You even did an imitation
to
Joe
Yoshio
Nishizaki,
son
of
Teshima of Taber.
of old Snicklepuss delivering a seedy lecture. You must have been
Mr.
and
Mrs.
B.
Nishizaki
of
good. The fellahs laughed hard . . . perhaps too hard. You all talk
Chatham, Ont., on April 26. Rev.
ed a helluva a lot about life in general — and avoided life in par
T.
Tsuji officiated.
ticular as it touched you and Joe and Butch and Tommy person
ally. Sure, Joe’s going back home. Tommy’s going to stick around.
Following a reception atxthe
Might do a summer stint in a lab in the States. Butch’s still wait
Great China, the couple went to
FINE LINENS
ing for just one letter out of the eleven applications to the psychi
New York for their honeymoon.
atric departments in eleven different universities. You . . . you re
featuring
going to look for a job . . . yeh, in chemical engineering.
TORONTO AYPA DANCE
® Famous Cannon
There’d been silence. And you told a joke which didn t take.
The Toronto AYPA will be
Towels & Sheets
It dribbed feebly into nothingness. And you’d said, ‘Hey, fellahs,
holding
a
dance
starting
from
9
© Exquisite Madeira
we gotta keep in touch . . . you know, one for all and all for one!
p.m.
at
St.
George
’
s
Parish
Hall
& Chinese Embroidery
The others said “O sure. You bet!” and laughed louder and poured
following a banquet. The public
© Luncheon & Dinner Cloths
more beer. Joe spilt some beer on your “Practical Applications of
is
invited
to
come
to
the
dance.
® Fancy Pillows Cases
Electronics”. Then someone said, “It’s 3 a.m. How about some shutAn admission of 25 cents will be
@ Damask Sheets
eye. Gotta look fresh for the family . . .”
charged.
And you’re left alone. You, John Doe. You know it will never
be the same again. You’re graduating. Suddenly, you feel like
SPECIAL OFFER TO THE
Toronto YBS Picnic
$
:|c
^.
walking.
NEW CANADIAN’S
You slip out quietly. You lean on the wall of the library build
KAMO — TAKEDA
The Annual Picnic of the To
READERS:
ing, and take it all in . . . this you are leaving behind. Aou light
DOWNSVIEW, Ont. — The ronto Young Buddhists Society is
a cigarette . . . pause . . .and ponder. This will never come again.
Present this ad for
marriage of Michiko, daughter of scheduled for Sunday, June 22.
Never. And in your imagination, you hear voices, like voices of a
a 10% 'discount.
Mr. and Mrs. Fusajira Takeda of Site of the picnic and other de
fantastic dream in a fantastic sequence in a radio drama . . . only it
tails
will
follow.
Coaldale, Alta., to Ritsu Kamo,
isn’t a radio drama . . . you hear voices saying “never come back
374 H YONGE STREET
fourth son of Mr. Denzo Kamo
455 EGLINTON AVE. WEST
. . . never come back . . . never come back. . .”
of Downsview, Ont., took place
You wish suddenly, that you weren’t graduating. Now that
Toronto, Ont.
on May 10 at the Downsview
you’re checking out, your four years come swimming out to meet
Church. Rev. Rich officiated.
you.
Following a reception at King
What’s happiness? What’s truth? What’s reality? Is there
Edward
Hotel in Toronto, the
|
Ladies & Gents
j
religion ? What’s progress ? What’s democracy ? Can a capitalistic
couple went to New York for
MONTREAL — The accent is (Tailored Suits & Coats 1
state survive ? Undergrads toying with ideas . . . and the fate of
their honeymoon.
on youth this year for the Mont | MICHI ASHIKAWA |
the world hung in the balance.
real
Young Buddhists’ Society.
They were good days. At one time, they’d thought you a little
|237 Seaton St. — Toronto^
Maria
Stellas
Slate
Communistic in your leanings. Yes, you! Funny to think of it now
Telephone RA. 2618
|
At the annual general meeting g
Bowen Island Picnic
. . . you, John Doe a Communist!
held recently, active roles in the
The afternoon you and Tommy saved the day for good old
VANCOUVER —Bowen Island administration of the Society
McGill. No, not on the football field, but on the debating team. where fun and relaxation reign were placed in the younger mem j
CELESTIAL
Good old John! Good old Tommy!
supreme is the site of the An- bers of the organization.
The cramming for those stiff term exams. Remember the ben- -nual Picnic of the Maria Stella*
GARDENS
Heading the executive will be
zadrine that sharpened your wits when all other things failed.
Club on Sunday, June 29. There
Chop Suey House
Then, moments of aching memory. The campus at night. The will be plenty of refreshments Harry Yamada as president, with
92-A Elizabeth St, Toronto
way the moon slanted along the campus walk. The way a girl and fun for everyone with a the following members compris
smiled in the moonlight, shadows of the tree leaves mottling her variety of games on stock.
ing the executive body:
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
fresh young cheek. You remember the tenderness in her eyes —
Tickets, $1,50 for adults and 75
DINNERS
Hiro
Osaka, vice-president;
the girl who was ready . . . and the boy who wasn’t.
cents for children, may be obtain
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 am.
That soul-searching night when four years hung on your de ed from Estelle Iwase, Nobby Fu Tosh Oike, general secretary;
Reservations: EM4-9035
Shirley Tanaka, assistant secre
cision. When ashtrays became overloaded . . . when one cigarette jisawa, Doris
Katsuno,
Ben
burned after another. You, John Doe, was ready to chuck college for Maede, Sam Sugie, Irene Uega- tary; Kumi Nakano, recording
secretary; Phyllis Tanaka, trea X ’
*....................... . ^.
a principle . . .
ma, Martha Uegama or any club
You butt your cigarette. Strang-e, you’ve never realized how member. The steamer will leave surer; George Nakano and Con £ Open 12 noon to 2 a.m. •♦*
beautiful a May night can be on the campus. You look around you Union Pier for Bowen Island at Kobayakawa, auditors; Kiyoshi
Suga, religious convenor; Kaz
hard . . . with a peculiar tightening of the throat.
9:30 a.m. and returning hours
You walk down the flagged walk, past the lily pond. You look are 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. As the say Kadohama and Amy Kobayaka .♦.
famous Chinese foods
^
Johnny
up at a lighted window — one window alight while the others are ing goes. “The More The Mer wa, sports convenors;
| 69 Albert St. —Toronto $
in darkness. That must be old Jamieson marking term papers on rier”. meaning- that all are wel Ikegami and Louis Haruta, social £
(at Elizabeth)
convenors; Shiro Hasegawa and
“The Influence of History on Literary Thought of the 16th Cen come.
Telephone WA. 9817
$
Sachi Omoto, membership con *
tury”. Tough paper . . . that.
Thanks g_o to all members who
❖
Special attention given
❖
You light another cigarette. Your eyes accustom themselves to had worked so hard to make the venors; Sam Hashimoto, San
*♦•
to take out orders.
<•
the dark.
A suddent start. You recognize Doc, outlined in the last club dance a great success. gha editor.
shadows . . . Doc who meant well but never quite made, the grade. Door prizes were awarded to Vir
Doc stands there alone. Doc would always be alone. You wish to ginia Shimizu and Kats Nasu.
hell you’d been kinder to him. And suddenly, you feel a kinship
with him . . . with Doc whom you considered a bore, a grind . . . thing. . .” You can't be saying, “I
don’t want to graduate today. . . i:
a drip.
’‘THE HOUSE OF DIAMONDS’'
You walk over to him. You say “Walking back to the house. .. I find I don't know anything.. .”
_
Finest Selection of Hand-Made
No. you just can’t say that! ;•
Wait, I'll go with you." And so you walk along with him. And he
Diamond Engagement & Wedding Rings
says. “Tomorrow’s the day. John.” And you say, “Yeh”. He looks at Look, John Doe. this is your gra 7
7
ALL OLR DIAMONDS GUARANTEED PERFECT
you tentatively. You say “Good night. Doc . . . Good Luck.” And duating day. This is the day you'
1324 Queen St. W. — LAkeside 7053 — Toronto
ve looked forward to. Your cap 7
you want him to know desperately that you meant it,
and
gown
are
waiting.
You're
go
You climb the stairs. You think . . . tomorrow . . . no, today
j’
Representative
. . . you’ll stand there, proud and tall. People will pump your hand. ing to get your hood and sheep
HENRY RYOJI
The folks will be mighty proud of you. You can’t saying to your skin. You, John Doe, will gradu ■
Telephone ME. 3182
dad, “Look, dad . . . isn’t it funny, but I don’t know a damned ate today.
H. Yamada Heads
Montreal Busseis
I Hoe Sai Gay |
<
Alexanders