Page 1
?A >Lm'
aw
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
VOL. 15, NO. 70
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
3, 1952
56 Per Year — 10 c Per Copy
MONTREAL WINS NISEI SOFTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
■e
Canadians Sweep Tourney
SAPPORO, Hokkaido Island — Beat Cleveland, New York
Guzzles Beer In 15
Seconds, Wins Title
X. Hatano, a 27-year-old taxi
Let them tie it up, bui i never give them the lead,
driver, last week won laurels as
That policy paid off for th e Montreal Niseis who won
the “best beer guzzler” in Ja
the Second Annual Interna tional Softball Tournament
pan’s northernmost island.
He downed a bottle of famed held by the Toronto JCCA over the Labor Day week“Sapporo beer” down his hatch end in Toronto, but taking an extra day to do it.
m 15 seconds flat, more than
It almost cost them the series.'
three seconds faster than his After amassing an 8-1 lead, the
runnerup.
Montrealers, in the finals against Toronto Nittas beat New York in
A field of 27 future pot-bellied Cleveland on Sunday, allowed the the consolation game, 5-4, as Key
guzzlers, including a woman, en
Americans to retrieve those runs. Tanaka and Joe Matsumoto pow
tered the finals which were en With the score 8-5 in the bottom ered two consecutive homers in
viously watched by 20,000 spec of the ninth and with-two men the sixth for Toronto. Jackie Ta
naka, who settled down after the
tator's.
on and an equal number of outs,
Cleveland pitcher Jim Hosaka first inning, hurled good ball to
win while Inky Sawahata, who
tied it up with a homer.
Japan Expert Picks
After a quick consultation, and was way off last year’s form,
Ike For President
tossed for New York.
with Sunday curfew creeping- in,
TOKYO — A Japanese who it was decided to play out the
The first round games saw
makes a living predicting people’s
Cleveland which fielded a greatlytied game. Neither scored in the
futures by looking at their faces
tenth. In the opening- half of the improved squad ovex- last year’s
said Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
eleventh, the Canadians banged ousting- a tired New York team
will literally nose out his oppon
out foui- consecutive hits to plate 5-3, while Montreal eliminated
ent, Gov. Adlai Stevenson, in the
three runs but they were nulli Toronto Nitta Machinery 6-4.
November election.
fied as the game was called at Maw Mori claimed three hits, in
Dr. Ryushi Seki, after an in
the six o’clock deadline. Then cluding a double and homer, as
tensive study of photographs of
another conference resulted in the slugging star of the night.
the Republican and Democratic
With all pitchers going the route,
the replay on Monday.
candidates, declared Eisenhower
they were: for Cleveland, Hosa
Here again, Montreal jumped ka; New York, Sawahata; Mont
will be the victor because he has
a quick lead, but this time real, Ono and Toronto, Roy Ta
a “strong and large nose and into
Cleveland
never could make it al naka.
fierce eyes.”
Seki, w hose motto is “you though the score remained 4-3 at
The Sunday games were wit
have to face the facts of the the end of the third and as the nessed by close to 1,000 specta
face,” is known as a physiogno sixth inning opened, Montreal tors.
EMIKO KATO WAS SEL
*
*
*
mist. He earned his doctor’s title had only a 5-3 lead with pitcher
ECTED AS “MISS NISEI
Laz Nishio having moments of
by completing a medical course.
Final Results
WEEK OF 1952” in a popular
wildness. In the seventh, Cleve
First
Round:
ity poll last month in the 12th
land loaded the bases with none
Blind Japanese Girl
Cleveland 5, New York 3
cut, but the old reliable, Squat
Annual Nisei Week Festival
Montreal 6, Toronto 4
To Study In Texas
Ono, who had gone the route for
held in Los Angeles. California.
Consolation
Game:
EL PASO, Texas — Miss Mi Montreal in the Saturday and
The 20-year-old Queen and her
Toronto 5, New York 4
chiko Toi, 22, who is the first Sunday games, squelched it af
royal court are pictured (1. to
Championship
Game:
Japanese blind girl to go to the ter two runs crossed the plate,
Montreal 8, Cleveland 8
r.) Emiko Kato, legal steno
U.S. to study after the war, will making the score read Montreal
(Called in the 11th, Sunday
register at the Texas Western 6, Cleveland 5.
grapher; Barbara Abe, 19, UC
curfew)
College in El Paso to study social
However, by making sure the
LA student; Mickey Yamamo
welfare enterprises for the blind Americans never quite caught up Replay Championship Game:
to, 20, insurance clerk; Louise
Montreal 8, Cleveland 5.
in America.
this time, the game and the tro
Kawasumi, 17, student nurse;
Sponsor of Miss Toi is Wilkie phy, held last year by New York,
Sally Gushiken, 20, dental as
Roberts, a Methodist and owner went to the Quebec fastbailers.
Calif. Negroes Open
of
a
cattle
farm
in
Texas
who
has
sistant.
Final score read 8-5.
Community Centre
previously sponsored Oriental
Courtesy Rafu Shimpo.
Offensively, it was shortstop For All Races
students to study in America. As
well as giving her the opportu Hiro Uchida and catcher Larry
SAN FRANCISCO — In 1919
nity to make a four-year study Nakatsuka’s bats that played the Booker T. Washington center
in college, he will take care of most prominently in the Mont in San Francisco was begun as a
real victory. Clean-up man Uchi
her during her stay.
community center for Negroes.
The Japanese girl lost her eye da drove home three runs on a During the war it took over facisingle and double while Nakatsu
LOS ANGELES, Calif. —High of ten by a judging committee sight in early childhood. After
ka who hobbled throughout the kties of a Japanese language
finishing
the
course
in
a
high
and
the
winner
this
year,
Miss
school.
light e d by the selection of
game smacked three hits. Singy
“Miss Nisei Week”, the Nisei Emiko Kato, was chosen by a school for the blind in Yokoha
Last week it opened its new
Suefuji and Bruce Y'amashita al
ma,
she
entered
Palmore
Institute
popularity
vote
at
a
Coronation
Week Festival is an annual af
so claimed a pair of hits apiece building at Sutter and Presidio,
fair held in Los Amgeles by the Ball. One of the first duties of in 1947 and became valedictorian for Montreal while the Montreal not as a center for Negroes alone
Japanese American community. the Queen and her court was to of the 60-member class when she infield was the best in the tour but as a community activity for
The 12th version of the festival pay their respect to Mayor Flet graduated last year.
ney. Pitcher Squat Ono was persons of all races and creeds.
was held Aug. 15 to Aug. 24 this cher Bowron and other civic lead
Said Dr. Howard Thurman.
toughest with men on bases.
ers of Los Angeles. Dressed in partment drum and bugle corps.
year.
“There is not a person here to
For Cleveland, although hit
Other events held during Nisei colorful kimonos, they rode in Thousands of spectators lined Lard in the final game, Hosaka night who could hold a straight
Week included a bowling tourna open convertibles through the the streets to watch the parade put in 22 innings of mound duty and honest face if we were dedi
ment, golf tourney, flower ar heart of downtown Los Angeles while others flocked to the 50- and demonstrated plenty of capa cating a center—a community
carnival booth.
center—for one race at the ex
rangement demonstrations, talent to the city hall.
Some 80 children between the bilities. Centrefielder Jim Furu clusion of another.
The event that drew the larg
show, baby, show, tea ceremony,
kawa led the Cleveland stick
“Since the first World War,
carnival, the first post-war Nisei est attendance was the Ondo Par ages of nine months and four work in the final game with two
relays, and an Ondo dance parade ade with its hundreds of dancers years vied for “Personality” hon out of their total five hits, all the whole idea of people being
separate has changed. And so
through the business district of and musical components. Prodd ors at the baby show. Various singles.
tonight I am able to join with
the Japanese American commu ing the music were a boy scout churches also observed a “Nisei
In revenge for last year, when you of many races in opening a
drum and bugle corps, the Mon Day in Church” in tribute to per
nity.
sons
of second and third genera the Americans "were the masters, center for the whole communi
terey
Park
girls
drum
and
bugle
Five finalists for “Miss Nisei
tion Japanese.
Canadians swept the tourney as ty.”
Week” were chosen from a field corps, and the L. A. Police De-
Queen Contest Highlights
12th Nisei Week Festival
aw
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
VOL. 15, NO. 70
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
3, 1952
56 Per Year — 10 c Per Copy
MONTREAL WINS NISEI SOFTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
■e
Canadians Sweep Tourney
SAPPORO, Hokkaido Island — Beat Cleveland, New York
Guzzles Beer In 15
Seconds, Wins Title
X. Hatano, a 27-year-old taxi
Let them tie it up, bui i never give them the lead,
driver, last week won laurels as
That policy paid off for th e Montreal Niseis who won
the “best beer guzzler” in Ja
the Second Annual Interna tional Softball Tournament
pan’s northernmost island.
He downed a bottle of famed held by the Toronto JCCA over the Labor Day week“Sapporo beer” down his hatch end in Toronto, but taking an extra day to do it.
m 15 seconds flat, more than
It almost cost them the series.'
three seconds faster than his After amassing an 8-1 lead, the
runnerup.
Montrealers, in the finals against Toronto Nittas beat New York in
A field of 27 future pot-bellied Cleveland on Sunday, allowed the the consolation game, 5-4, as Key
guzzlers, including a woman, en
Americans to retrieve those runs. Tanaka and Joe Matsumoto pow
tered the finals which were en With the score 8-5 in the bottom ered two consecutive homers in
viously watched by 20,000 spec of the ninth and with-two men the sixth for Toronto. Jackie Ta
naka, who settled down after the
tator's.
on and an equal number of outs,
Cleveland pitcher Jim Hosaka first inning, hurled good ball to
win while Inky Sawahata, who
tied it up with a homer.
Japan Expert Picks
After a quick consultation, and was way off last year’s form,
Ike For President
tossed for New York.
with Sunday curfew creeping- in,
TOKYO — A Japanese who it was decided to play out the
The first round games saw
makes a living predicting people’s
Cleveland which fielded a greatlytied game. Neither scored in the
futures by looking at their faces
tenth. In the opening- half of the improved squad ovex- last year’s
said Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
eleventh, the Canadians banged ousting- a tired New York team
will literally nose out his oppon
out foui- consecutive hits to plate 5-3, while Montreal eliminated
ent, Gov. Adlai Stevenson, in the
three runs but they were nulli Toronto Nitta Machinery 6-4.
November election.
fied as the game was called at Maw Mori claimed three hits, in
Dr. Ryushi Seki, after an in
the six o’clock deadline. Then cluding a double and homer, as
tensive study of photographs of
another conference resulted in the slugging star of the night.
the Republican and Democratic
With all pitchers going the route,
the replay on Monday.
candidates, declared Eisenhower
they were: for Cleveland, Hosa
Here again, Montreal jumped ka; New York, Sawahata; Mont
will be the victor because he has
a quick lead, but this time real, Ono and Toronto, Roy Ta
a “strong and large nose and into
Cleveland
never could make it al naka.
fierce eyes.”
Seki, w hose motto is “you though the score remained 4-3 at
The Sunday games were wit
have to face the facts of the the end of the third and as the nessed by close to 1,000 specta
face,” is known as a physiogno sixth inning opened, Montreal tors.
EMIKO KATO WAS SEL
*
*
*
mist. He earned his doctor’s title had only a 5-3 lead with pitcher
ECTED AS “MISS NISEI
Laz Nishio having moments of
by completing a medical course.
Final Results
WEEK OF 1952” in a popular
wildness. In the seventh, Cleve
First
Round:
ity poll last month in the 12th
land loaded the bases with none
Blind Japanese Girl
Cleveland 5, New York 3
cut, but the old reliable, Squat
Annual Nisei Week Festival
Montreal 6, Toronto 4
To Study In Texas
Ono, who had gone the route for
held in Los Angeles. California.
Consolation
Game:
EL PASO, Texas — Miss Mi Montreal in the Saturday and
The 20-year-old Queen and her
Toronto 5, New York 4
chiko Toi, 22, who is the first Sunday games, squelched it af
royal court are pictured (1. to
Championship
Game:
Japanese blind girl to go to the ter two runs crossed the plate,
Montreal 8, Cleveland 8
r.) Emiko Kato, legal steno
U.S. to study after the war, will making the score read Montreal
(Called in the 11th, Sunday
register at the Texas Western 6, Cleveland 5.
grapher; Barbara Abe, 19, UC
curfew)
College in El Paso to study social
However, by making sure the
LA student; Mickey Yamamo
welfare enterprises for the blind Americans never quite caught up Replay Championship Game:
to, 20, insurance clerk; Louise
Montreal 8, Cleveland 5.
in America.
this time, the game and the tro
Kawasumi, 17, student nurse;
Sponsor of Miss Toi is Wilkie phy, held last year by New York,
Sally Gushiken, 20, dental as
Roberts, a Methodist and owner went to the Quebec fastbailers.
Calif. Negroes Open
of
a
cattle
farm
in
Texas
who
has
sistant.
Final score read 8-5.
Community Centre
previously sponsored Oriental
Courtesy Rafu Shimpo.
Offensively, it was shortstop For All Races
students to study in America. As
well as giving her the opportu Hiro Uchida and catcher Larry
SAN FRANCISCO — In 1919
nity to make a four-year study Nakatsuka’s bats that played the Booker T. Washington center
in college, he will take care of most prominently in the Mont in San Francisco was begun as a
real victory. Clean-up man Uchi
her during her stay.
community center for Negroes.
The Japanese girl lost her eye da drove home three runs on a During the war it took over facisingle and double while Nakatsu
LOS ANGELES, Calif. —High of ten by a judging committee sight in early childhood. After
ka who hobbled throughout the kties of a Japanese language
finishing
the
course
in
a
high
and
the
winner
this
year,
Miss
school.
light e d by the selection of
game smacked three hits. Singy
“Miss Nisei Week”, the Nisei Emiko Kato, was chosen by a school for the blind in Yokoha
Last week it opened its new
Suefuji and Bruce Y'amashita al
ma,
she
entered
Palmore
Institute
popularity
vote
at
a
Coronation
Week Festival is an annual af
so claimed a pair of hits apiece building at Sutter and Presidio,
fair held in Los Amgeles by the Ball. One of the first duties of in 1947 and became valedictorian for Montreal while the Montreal not as a center for Negroes alone
Japanese American community. the Queen and her court was to of the 60-member class when she infield was the best in the tour but as a community activity for
The 12th version of the festival pay their respect to Mayor Flet graduated last year.
ney. Pitcher Squat Ono was persons of all races and creeds.
was held Aug. 15 to Aug. 24 this cher Bowron and other civic lead
Said Dr. Howard Thurman.
toughest with men on bases.
ers of Los Angeles. Dressed in partment drum and bugle corps.
year.
“There is not a person here to
For Cleveland, although hit
Other events held during Nisei colorful kimonos, they rode in Thousands of spectators lined Lard in the final game, Hosaka night who could hold a straight
Week included a bowling tourna open convertibles through the the streets to watch the parade put in 22 innings of mound duty and honest face if we were dedi
ment, golf tourney, flower ar heart of downtown Los Angeles while others flocked to the 50- and demonstrated plenty of capa cating a center—a community
carnival booth.
center—for one race at the ex
rangement demonstrations, talent to the city hall.
Some 80 children between the bilities. Centrefielder Jim Furu clusion of another.
The event that drew the larg
show, baby, show, tea ceremony,
kawa led the Cleveland stick
“Since the first World War,
carnival, the first post-war Nisei est attendance was the Ondo Par ages of nine months and four work in the final game with two
relays, and an Ondo dance parade ade with its hundreds of dancers years vied for “Personality” hon out of their total five hits, all the whole idea of people being
separate has changed. And so
through the business district of and musical components. Prodd ors at the baby show. Various singles.
tonight I am able to join with
the Japanese American commu ing the music were a boy scout churches also observed a “Nisei
In revenge for last year, when you of many races in opening a
drum and bugle corps, the Mon Day in Church” in tribute to per
nity.
sons
of second and third genera the Americans "were the masters, center for the whole communi
terey
Park
girls
drum
and
bugle
Five finalists for “Miss Nisei
tion Japanese.
Canadians swept the tourney as ty.”
Week” were chosen from a field corps, and the L. A. Police De-
Queen Contest Highlights
12th Nisei Week Festival
Page 2
Page 2
THE NEW
CANADIAN
Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1952
THE NEW CANADIAN Mayer and ‘Go for Broke
By LARRY TAJIRI
ainst L. B.’s better judgment. The of a great motion picture studio’s
In Lillian Ross’ recent New dramatis personae of "No. 1512” resources were utilized to make
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
Yorker series, “No. 1512,” the are Schaiy, Mayer, Director John the story of Nisei soldiers a me
as a medium of expression and news outlet
devastatingly documented story Huston, a genius on horseback; morable film document.’ Instead
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
of the production of a single mo Producer Gottfried Reinhardt - of recreating battle scenes on thtion picture in Hollywood, there Max’s son and a troubled man of sound stages, location troupes
KEN ADACHI _______
------------------------------- Editor
are a few pargaraphs on Louis artistic integrity; Mrs. Reinhardt were sent to the San Jacinton
Takaichi umezuki
— Japanese Section Editor
B. Mayer who hated “Japs” and and Mocha, the Reinhardts’ dog; Mountains for the Vosges scenes
KEN MORI __________
—---- --------------- Advertising
“Go for Broke!” which was MG Assistant Director Albert Band of the rescue of the Lost Battal479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
M’s $1,500,000 tribute to the Ni and an assorted Greek chorus of ion and to the olive groves of
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Dept., Ottawa
sychophants, known in Hollywood Ventura County for the Italian
sei Combat Team.
With the objectivity of a tape parlance as yes-men. “No 1512”, hillside shots. With Mike Masawhich will be published soon in I oka as special consultant everv
recorder Miss Ross tells in “No.
3 512” the story of the filming of book form, is as much a social effort was made to see to it that
Stephen Crane’s “The Red Badge study as Hortense Powdermak- the uniforms of the GIs as well
By KEN ADACHI
of Courage” from conception to er’s investigation of Hollywood’s as the European backgrounds
were authentic. For example, the
birth, from the first take to the dream factories.
In the face of the sort of op- j use of different shoulder patches
Hot and Busy Weekend
Grandstand Show I saw a few final preview. In the interplay of
position
which Miss Ross men- I for the Nisei uniforms for* each
FRIDAY: Got myself talked nights before. Seems to me that ids and egos surr o u n d i n g the
into going to another stag party. the show is too difficult a task making of “Red Badge” the char tions, it is astonishing that “Go phase of the 442nd’s history,
I think that stag parties can be for anyone to put over really suc acters in the drama take time off for Broke!” was produced at all. from the Red Bull of the 34th
either a monumental bore or cessfully. This, despite what the to attend the invitational pre Louis B. Mayer, a powerful fig- Division in Italy, the Texas “T”
something quite interesting, all critics say. The performers looked miere of “Go for Broke!” at the ure in Hollywood and one whose I °f the 36th Division in France
depending on the type of people like pint-sized dolls moving like Egyptian Theater in Hollywood. idea of a good picture is an Andy and the red, white and blue torch,
who are present. Invariably there puppets on a massive stage and The 442nd film, personally pro- j Hardy story starring Mickey the 442nd’s, own insignia was a
is a glass of liquid amber and the intimacy and the contact so duced by Dore Schary (in charge Rooney, agaudy Esther- Williams single detail which added man some pretzels with which one can necessary for a good show is of all production at MGM), got musical or some similar cinemat- hundreds of dollars as the cost of
amuse oneself so it never really lost. The fireworks were very a big hand but Louis B. Mayer, ic opiate for the popcorn palaces, I the film.
When “Go for Broke!” was
turns out to be a complete loss.
pretty though.
who had been the Mikado of all was against it. It also is true that
no
other
Hollywood
studio
was
completed,
MGM backed it all the
Anyways, got to thinking that
It was astonishing the amount he surveyed at MGM until Schawilling to risk its capital on a way. It was -the studio’s major reif I were ever to foresake bach of ultra-nationalism and the ry’s arrival, was unhappy.
Nisei
picture, although a num lease of the month and special
elorhood, I would certainly not Canadian flag-waving that took
Ten days after* the premiere of
like to have a stag party wished place in the show. Reminded me “Go for Broke!” Miss Ross tells ber of anti-Nisei films were made premieres were held in Holly
upon me. Rather I would prefer of a flossy MGM musical and its of joining Mayer in his private in the name of patriotism early wood, New York, Honolulu, To
sitting with a few intimate “Hurray For America” theme. dining room at the studio. May in the war. Harry Zanuck at 20th kyo and many other cities. Full
friends, enjoying their company, But, on second thought, I think er- was talking about the picture Century, one of the few produc page ads were bought in mass
without the necessity of any act h was rather nice to see the to Arthur Freed, MGM’s produc- ers who is not frightened by an circulation magazines to plug the
ing. Some of these stag parties people proud to be Canadians, er of musicals.
idea, had registered the title “I film.
gather together total strangers We have been too submerged
The story, of course, is that
“I don’t like Japs!” Mayer de- Am a Nisei” about the time noc
who remain in the same category with the feeling of awe for the dared. “I remember Pearl Har- turnal hoodlums were burning Louis B. Mayer was wrong and
after the affair- is over. I think U.S.A. in the past.
the homes of some returning eva Dore Schary was right, The Ame
bor!”
I have really enjoyed only one
SUNDAY: Slept in until noon.
Miss Ross notes that Mr. May- cuees in 1945, but had called off rican people are not afraid of
stag party where the groom-to- Surely that is the stuff of com- er looked grim. He ordered lamb plans for the film.
social comment in motion pic
be was a close friend and I really plete contentment—lingering lux- chops. Mr. Freed wanted lamb
Had it not been for the fact tures and they do not shun the
felt that he would make a tre uriantly under the sheets, stick- chops, too.
that Dore Schary made “Go for occasional off-beat films like “Go
mendous success of his marriage. ing your tongue at the alarm
When he had finished his chops Broke!” his personal production, for Broke!”
The whole idea of all this is clock as it were and letting one- Mayer said:
When MGM’s figures for 1951,
the Nisei GI film might have suf
that probably the average groom- self sink slowly back into the
“Dore wants to make pictures fered the fate of “Red Badge of in which some 40 features were
to-be doesn’t really enjoy all the arms of soothing slumber . Into about Japs. All right, I’m Courage.” The film version of the produced and distributed, were
silly fuss over him.
idle contemplation of the sheer through trying to tell him.”
Stephen Crane novel about a totaled, “Go for Broke!” was one
SATURDAY. The typewriter beauty of life.
Mr. Mayer then went into a young man in battle is one of the of the studio’s ten most success
keys felt, a bit sluggish this
Went to see the Nisei softball long discourse on the good old finest motion pictures to be made ful films. It is well past the
morning, therefore, very little tournament in the afternoon. It’s
days of the movies, of Thalberg in Hollywood in recent years. It $1,000,000 mark in grosses and
work was done. It is surprising always interesting to see the am
and Laemmle, of Garbo and Har became the target, however, of should do well in the foreign mar
the many moods that an inani- azing number of new faces, par low.
intra-studio controversy and the ket. The picture, incidentally, has
mate looking thing like a type ticularly the pretty feminine fac
Suddenly he looked at Miss end result was that it was quietly not been generally released as
writer has. Sometimes the keys es that, gather around such af
put into release without fanfare yet in Japan but prospects are
Ross and cried “Stand up!”
leap with a sort of eagerness, fairs. Stimulating, yes. Of course
“I stand up for you,” he said. or fancy premieres, as if the stu- that it will be the most success
ready to transmit to a sheet of there is a lot of things that may
-dio were ashamed of it. The re ful American-made production to
“Why? I stand up fora lady.”
paper all kinds of thoughts or at be said on behalf of the new male
Miss Ross reports that Mayer action of critics, particularly out play in that country.
other times, it is appalling the faces that can be seen. But not
With the coming of age of te
side the United States, has led to
sat down and added:
way the keys stick and the whole by me.
“Nowadays, there’s no man a reassessing of the worth of levision, with its terrifying cap
mechanism of the machine jams
MONDAY: As a sort of pen ners. He’s making pictures about “The Red Badge of Courage.” It acity to probe and to inform, it.
up as if in protest, to the horrible ance for Sunday’s slumber, had
the Japs. Last week, who went to will be remembered and reshown becomes all the more important
stuff that comes out.
tc get up while others were sleep see the picture? All the Japs! long after “American in Paris,” for Hollyowod to folio w the
I had lunch with Cinderella ing on a holiday, with the grim
This week, the bottom fell out of the spirited MGM musical which Scharys rather than the Mayers
who was visiting from Montreal reminder that while a show some his box office.”
won the Oscar for 1951, is forgot who would relegate the film in
and we talked over a chicken times doesn’t always go on, a
ten.
dustry to the lesser role of a tel
Mr. Mayer’s outbursts were
salad sandwich and a cup of cof newspaper must.
directed, of course, at Dore
With Producer Schary backing ler of fairy tales and the port
fee. Very interesting lunch it
But no man can work indefinit Schary who was replacing him as
‘Go for Broke!” all the way, all rayer of escapist deams.
turned out to be.
ely bent over the typewriter on chief of all production at the stu
— from Pacific Citizen
“You’re not at all what 1 some cold idea, especially when
dio. Shortly after the “Go for
thought you would look like”, there is sun to soak under.
BEAUTY
Broke!” premiere Louis B. May
Cindy said.
Whereupon I decided to put off er, one of the original founders
By DOROTHY E. CLARK
A very comforting thought in the work until the morrow, cast
of MGM, left the world’s biggest If you would know the Beauty of a flower
deed.
off all unpleasant thoughts of and richest studio.
A Beauty so exquisite as to be a prayer
Took two visitors on a tour of such stuff and unlike a dutiful
What criticisms Louis B. May
the annual madness known as the boy, motored over to Hamilton
er may have had regarding the Loveliness, born of Earth and Sun and Shower
Canadian National Exhibition tc watch the opening game of
Glorious Symbol of the Love of which we Share.
production of “Go for Broke!”
that afternoon, a commercialized the football season.
were compounded manifold re If this you would know, then do not seek rare .gardens
spectacle that has really very
It’s a beautiful sight to see a
garding “The Red Badge of Cour n ?^se®ch °yt blooms especially on display
little attraction for me. Got huge crowd of sun-soaked people
age’’ which Dore Schary had put
caught in the intricate labyrinth enjoying themselves immensely
ut deeply, within a single flower gazing
on the production schedule agof a building where all kinds of by watching a football game. If
Find Peace, and Hope, and Faith-Things for which we pray.
strange animals started to make all men could be persuaded to
I'eed for more wholesome relaxa If in a woman you would know True Beauty
terrifying faces at me. Finally spend one day each week in com
tion and straight thinking.
Charm' qui®*ly expressing fineness that is there
managed to escape. Not before I plete relaxation in absolute ac
It’s a nice way to live but it is Wrought from her sense of Loyalty and Duty__
. realized my city-bred unfamili cord with everything, then the
one hell of a note to have to
arity with such things as pigs, world might not be such a pretty
The Masterpiece of which no other can compare.
pound out this column in the
sheep and cows. I was merely mess that it is today. There is
dead of night. For there is noth 11 this you would know, then do not look at profile
looking for the Men’s.
too much emphasis in the con ing so demanding as a deadline.
_ Or seek the fairest features as your gpal
Walking past the CNE grand stant drive for power and more
Alone I sit with a thousand little
stand, I got to thinking about the power. Certainly there is more
within her eyes which seem to shine
voices screaming in my head.
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
PASSING THRU
x md Beauty! expressive of A Woman's Soul.
THE NEW
CANADIAN
Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1952
THE NEW CANADIAN Mayer and ‘Go for Broke
By LARRY TAJIRI
ainst L. B.’s better judgment. The of a great motion picture studio’s
In Lillian Ross’ recent New dramatis personae of "No. 1512” resources were utilized to make
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
Yorker series, “No. 1512,” the are Schaiy, Mayer, Director John the story of Nisei soldiers a me
as a medium of expression and news outlet
devastatingly documented story Huston, a genius on horseback; morable film document.’ Instead
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
of the production of a single mo Producer Gottfried Reinhardt - of recreating battle scenes on thtion picture in Hollywood, there Max’s son and a troubled man of sound stages, location troupes
KEN ADACHI _______
------------------------------- Editor
are a few pargaraphs on Louis artistic integrity; Mrs. Reinhardt were sent to the San Jacinton
Takaichi umezuki
— Japanese Section Editor
B. Mayer who hated “Japs” and and Mocha, the Reinhardts’ dog; Mountains for the Vosges scenes
KEN MORI __________
—---- --------------- Advertising
“Go for Broke!” which was MG Assistant Director Albert Band of the rescue of the Lost Battal479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
M’s $1,500,000 tribute to the Ni and an assorted Greek chorus of ion and to the olive groves of
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Dept., Ottawa
sychophants, known in Hollywood Ventura County for the Italian
sei Combat Team.
With the objectivity of a tape parlance as yes-men. “No 1512”, hillside shots. With Mike Masawhich will be published soon in I oka as special consultant everv
recorder Miss Ross tells in “No.
3 512” the story of the filming of book form, is as much a social effort was made to see to it that
Stephen Crane’s “The Red Badge study as Hortense Powdermak- the uniforms of the GIs as well
By KEN ADACHI
of Courage” from conception to er’s investigation of Hollywood’s as the European backgrounds
were authentic. For example, the
birth, from the first take to the dream factories.
In the face of the sort of op- j use of different shoulder patches
Hot and Busy Weekend
Grandstand Show I saw a few final preview. In the interplay of
position
which Miss Ross men- I for the Nisei uniforms for* each
FRIDAY: Got myself talked nights before. Seems to me that ids and egos surr o u n d i n g the
into going to another stag party. the show is too difficult a task making of “Red Badge” the char tions, it is astonishing that “Go phase of the 442nd’s history,
I think that stag parties can be for anyone to put over really suc acters in the drama take time off for Broke!” was produced at all. from the Red Bull of the 34th
either a monumental bore or cessfully. This, despite what the to attend the invitational pre Louis B. Mayer, a powerful fig- Division in Italy, the Texas “T”
something quite interesting, all critics say. The performers looked miere of “Go for Broke!” at the ure in Hollywood and one whose I °f the 36th Division in France
depending on the type of people like pint-sized dolls moving like Egyptian Theater in Hollywood. idea of a good picture is an Andy and the red, white and blue torch,
who are present. Invariably there puppets on a massive stage and The 442nd film, personally pro- j Hardy story starring Mickey the 442nd’s, own insignia was a
is a glass of liquid amber and the intimacy and the contact so duced by Dore Schary (in charge Rooney, agaudy Esther- Williams single detail which added man some pretzels with which one can necessary for a good show is of all production at MGM), got musical or some similar cinemat- hundreds of dollars as the cost of
amuse oneself so it never really lost. The fireworks were very a big hand but Louis B. Mayer, ic opiate for the popcorn palaces, I the film.
When “Go for Broke!” was
turns out to be a complete loss.
pretty though.
who had been the Mikado of all was against it. It also is true that
no
other
Hollywood
studio
was
completed,
MGM backed it all the
Anyways, got to thinking that
It was astonishing the amount he surveyed at MGM until Schawilling to risk its capital on a way. It was -the studio’s major reif I were ever to foresake bach of ultra-nationalism and the ry’s arrival, was unhappy.
Nisei
picture, although a num lease of the month and special
elorhood, I would certainly not Canadian flag-waving that took
Ten days after* the premiere of
like to have a stag party wished place in the show. Reminded me “Go for Broke!” Miss Ross tells ber of anti-Nisei films were made premieres were held in Holly
upon me. Rather I would prefer of a flossy MGM musical and its of joining Mayer in his private in the name of patriotism early wood, New York, Honolulu, To
sitting with a few intimate “Hurray For America” theme. dining room at the studio. May in the war. Harry Zanuck at 20th kyo and many other cities. Full
friends, enjoying their company, But, on second thought, I think er- was talking about the picture Century, one of the few produc page ads were bought in mass
without the necessity of any act h was rather nice to see the to Arthur Freed, MGM’s produc- ers who is not frightened by an circulation magazines to plug the
ing. Some of these stag parties people proud to be Canadians, er of musicals.
idea, had registered the title “I film.
gather together total strangers We have been too submerged
The story, of course, is that
“I don’t like Japs!” Mayer de- Am a Nisei” about the time noc
who remain in the same category with the feeling of awe for the dared. “I remember Pearl Har- turnal hoodlums were burning Louis B. Mayer was wrong and
after the affair- is over. I think U.S.A. in the past.
the homes of some returning eva Dore Schary was right, The Ame
bor!”
I have really enjoyed only one
SUNDAY: Slept in until noon.
Miss Ross notes that Mr. May- cuees in 1945, but had called off rican people are not afraid of
stag party where the groom-to- Surely that is the stuff of com- er looked grim. He ordered lamb plans for the film.
social comment in motion pic
be was a close friend and I really plete contentment—lingering lux- chops. Mr. Freed wanted lamb
Had it not been for the fact tures and they do not shun the
felt that he would make a tre uriantly under the sheets, stick- chops, too.
that Dore Schary made “Go for occasional off-beat films like “Go
mendous success of his marriage. ing your tongue at the alarm
When he had finished his chops Broke!” his personal production, for Broke!”
The whole idea of all this is clock as it were and letting one- Mayer said:
When MGM’s figures for 1951,
the Nisei GI film might have suf
that probably the average groom- self sink slowly back into the
“Dore wants to make pictures fered the fate of “Red Badge of in which some 40 features were
to-be doesn’t really enjoy all the arms of soothing slumber . Into about Japs. All right, I’m Courage.” The film version of the produced and distributed, were
silly fuss over him.
idle contemplation of the sheer through trying to tell him.”
Stephen Crane novel about a totaled, “Go for Broke!” was one
SATURDAY. The typewriter beauty of life.
Mr. Mayer then went into a young man in battle is one of the of the studio’s ten most success
keys felt, a bit sluggish this
Went to see the Nisei softball long discourse on the good old finest motion pictures to be made ful films. It is well past the
morning, therefore, very little tournament in the afternoon. It’s
days of the movies, of Thalberg in Hollywood in recent years. It $1,000,000 mark in grosses and
work was done. It is surprising always interesting to see the am
and Laemmle, of Garbo and Har became the target, however, of should do well in the foreign mar
the many moods that an inani- azing number of new faces, par low.
intra-studio controversy and the ket. The picture, incidentally, has
mate looking thing like a type ticularly the pretty feminine fac
Suddenly he looked at Miss end result was that it was quietly not been generally released as
writer has. Sometimes the keys es that, gather around such af
put into release without fanfare yet in Japan but prospects are
Ross and cried “Stand up!”
leap with a sort of eagerness, fairs. Stimulating, yes. Of course
“I stand up for you,” he said. or fancy premieres, as if the stu- that it will be the most success
ready to transmit to a sheet of there is a lot of things that may
-dio were ashamed of it. The re ful American-made production to
“Why? I stand up fora lady.”
paper all kinds of thoughts or at be said on behalf of the new male
Miss Ross reports that Mayer action of critics, particularly out play in that country.
other times, it is appalling the faces that can be seen. But not
With the coming of age of te
side the United States, has led to
sat down and added:
way the keys stick and the whole by me.
“Nowadays, there’s no man a reassessing of the worth of levision, with its terrifying cap
mechanism of the machine jams
MONDAY: As a sort of pen ners. He’s making pictures about “The Red Badge of Courage.” It acity to probe and to inform, it.
up as if in protest, to the horrible ance for Sunday’s slumber, had
the Japs. Last week, who went to will be remembered and reshown becomes all the more important
stuff that comes out.
tc get up while others were sleep see the picture? All the Japs! long after “American in Paris,” for Hollyowod to folio w the
I had lunch with Cinderella ing on a holiday, with the grim
This week, the bottom fell out of the spirited MGM musical which Scharys rather than the Mayers
who was visiting from Montreal reminder that while a show some his box office.”
won the Oscar for 1951, is forgot who would relegate the film in
and we talked over a chicken times doesn’t always go on, a
ten.
dustry to the lesser role of a tel
Mr. Mayer’s outbursts were
salad sandwich and a cup of cof newspaper must.
directed, of course, at Dore
With Producer Schary backing ler of fairy tales and the port
fee. Very interesting lunch it
But no man can work indefinit Schary who was replacing him as
‘Go for Broke!” all the way, all rayer of escapist deams.
turned out to be.
ely bent over the typewriter on chief of all production at the stu
— from Pacific Citizen
“You’re not at all what 1 some cold idea, especially when
dio. Shortly after the “Go for
thought you would look like”, there is sun to soak under.
BEAUTY
Broke!” premiere Louis B. May
Cindy said.
Whereupon I decided to put off er, one of the original founders
By DOROTHY E. CLARK
A very comforting thought in the work until the morrow, cast
of MGM, left the world’s biggest If you would know the Beauty of a flower
deed.
off all unpleasant thoughts of and richest studio.
A Beauty so exquisite as to be a prayer
Took two visitors on a tour of such stuff and unlike a dutiful
What criticisms Louis B. May
the annual madness known as the boy, motored over to Hamilton
er may have had regarding the Loveliness, born of Earth and Sun and Shower
Canadian National Exhibition tc watch the opening game of
Glorious Symbol of the Love of which we Share.
production of “Go for Broke!”
that afternoon, a commercialized the football season.
were compounded manifold re If this you would know, then do not seek rare .gardens
spectacle that has really very
It’s a beautiful sight to see a
garding “The Red Badge of Cour n ?^se®ch °yt blooms especially on display
little attraction for me. Got huge crowd of sun-soaked people
age’’ which Dore Schary had put
caught in the intricate labyrinth enjoying themselves immensely
ut deeply, within a single flower gazing
on the production schedule agof a building where all kinds of by watching a football game. If
Find Peace, and Hope, and Faith-Things for which we pray.
strange animals started to make all men could be persuaded to
I'eed for more wholesome relaxa If in a woman you would know True Beauty
terrifying faces at me. Finally spend one day each week in com
tion and straight thinking.
Charm' qui®*ly expressing fineness that is there
managed to escape. Not before I plete relaxation in absolute ac
It’s a nice way to live but it is Wrought from her sense of Loyalty and Duty__
. realized my city-bred unfamili cord with everything, then the
one hell of a note to have to
arity with such things as pigs, world might not be such a pretty
The Masterpiece of which no other can compare.
pound out this column in the
sheep and cows. I was merely mess that it is today. There is
dead of night. For there is noth 11 this you would know, then do not look at profile
looking for the Men’s.
too much emphasis in the con ing so demanding as a deadline.
_ Or seek the fairest features as your gpal
Walking past the CNE grand stant drive for power and more
Alone I sit with a thousand little
stand, I got to thinking about the power. Certainly there is more
within her eyes which seem to shine
voices screaming in my head.
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
PASSING THRU
x md Beauty! expressive of A Woman's Soul.
Page 3
Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1952
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Page 7
- Wednesday, Sept 3, 1952
Drop Opener
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 7
ACROSS MY MIND .
By Jack Nakamoto
My Sweetheart:
Already 34 years old, I'm pushing" on, and itseems as if I may remain a gay, old bachelor for
good. But, believe me, I do want to marry you.
I know I m a dreamer—perhaps wasting my best
) ears just looking for you—instead of marrying
the first girl who seems g’ood enough but who
doesn t quite strike the right note in my heart.
Anyway, I want to stick to my dreams and
work at them until they’re fulfilled. And to find
jou is indeed my loveliest dream.
But, dam it, I’m fed up with those Issei folks
who are anxious to g'et me married to some girl
whom they think is right for me. Sure, I know'
match-making" is a Japanese custom and that
they mean well and would like to see me happily
married and have kids and a home. But I wish
they’d stop playing Dan Cupid—as if I’m helpless
and don’t know which girl is for me.
What do they know about how I feel? A guy
of my age should know the. score and I’ll know
you when I see you. I didn’t think I’ve allowed
my heart to go to seed. Instead, my heart is
always open, and above all, sure of what it wants
and whom it wants.
So please don't worry your little head because.
I shall find you by myself someday. You may be
a girl working in a dress factory or in an office:
you may even be my sister’s girl-friend. Who
knows ? But one thing is sure, and that is, I
shall find you wherever you are. For I’m rather
live a few short happy years with you than spend
a lifetime of hell on earth with the wrong woman.
So wait, for me. then, till I come knocking" at
your door—very soon!
Dave.
Best Cleaners had to do some,
late season scampering but
squeezed into the Toronto Via
duct Senior League semi-finals
by winning a sudden death play
off last Saturday. Pitted against
Kingsway Lumber in the semis,
they dropped the opener, 6-5, on
the following day.
- In the final game of the sea
son, the Bests went all out in an
effort to clinch a playoff position
but. the league-leading Lumber
men s barrage of four homers set
the Nisei team down, 9-8, and
necessitated a playoff with the
Hawaii Batter Leads
other joint tenant of fourth place.
Coming through with the chips Tupan Pro Ball League
down, the Cleanermen hustled
TOKYO — Tomo Kai, a Ha
their way to an 11-8 win to oust waiian Nisei outfielder playing"
Drive Grill.
his first season in Japanese pro
Rookie Bill Smith coasted al fessional baseball, is currently
ong for his third win as he scat leading the Pacific League in
tered nine hits. Eddie Hisaki was batting" with a .332 average with
behind the plate. Bests played 82 hits in 247 times at bat. Kai,
their running" and bunting" game who joined the Kintetsu Lions in
for "which they are noted with June after being signed in Hafleetfooted Tad Miura pulling off waii, has played in 67 games.
a spectacular steal of home. They
ran Drive Grill dizzy with their To Continue Mixed
footwork, scoring 11 runs on only Doubles Next Week
six hits.
With both the Nisei Open and
In the first game of the play the Toronto TBS Mixed Doubles
offs, Bests dropped a 6-5 heart tourneys still not completed, they
breaker. Teddy Barret who toiled will be played out on Sunday,
on the mound for the losers, al Sept. 7, at Earlscourt Tennis
lowed all of Kingsway’s runs in Court.
The Open foursomes will begin
the second inning and although
play at 8 a.m. while the Busseis
he held them runless the rest of will start at 9 a.m.
the way, the lead was too much
for Bests to overcome.
Lucien C. Kurata
J. T. MORITO, D. C.
Doctor of Chiropractic
19 YONGE BLVD.
(End of Yonge Carline)
BY APPOINTMENT
Office — HU. 8148
Residence — OX. 8021
END OF AN
By BILL HOSOKAWA
Denver, Colo.
An end came to an era of sorts
a few weeks ago when the Club
Seven Seas in Denver changed
hands. This night club, restaur
ant and bar is now called the
Acapulco. When I drove by last
Saturday night the joint was
jumping with Spanish-speaking"
gentlemen and their ladies.
But it was not always so. Be
fore it became the Club Seven
Seas, it was the House of Man
chu. And prior to that, it was
just plain Manchu Grill. From its
very beginning the guiding light
was expansive, cigar-s m o k i n g
George Furuta who used to be
called the m a y o r of Larimer
street. And beside him was Helen
Umezawa, as nice a gal as you
could meet.
The one-story brick building at
Twentieth and Larimer wasn’t
very presentable when they took
over during" the earliest days of
101/2 QUEEN ST. W.
the evacuation. They cleaned it
up, opened a restaurant. In the
For Pick-up and Delivery
years that followed, a large per
Phone
centage of the thousands of eva
WA. 6953
cuees who passed through Denver
stopped at the Manchu.
It was more than just a place J
Ladies & Gents
|
for a meal, or a cup of coffee. ITailored Suits & Coats |
Evacuees, hungry for a. taste of j MICHI ASHIKAWA |
Japanese or Chinese food could
find it there. It was also a sort of =237 Seaton St. — Toronto^
Telephone RA. 2618
|
haven, a port of call, where lone g
ly wayfarers could find a wel
come, a chance to exchange news
and gossip, a place to meet old
YONEMITSU
friends and make new ones.
Wedding receptions were held
Watch Repair Shop
here. Family reunions were cele328 BROADVIEW AVE.
brated, visitors feted. homecom(near Gerrard St.)
ing soldiers welcomed, baseball
Toronto. Phone GL. 3652
victories toasted. Business deals
were clinched over lunch in the
Residence:
EM4-0508
booths, perhaps even a few love
2 Vesta Drive
affairs got their start over a
MAfair 1365.
midnight bowl of noodles.
Andrew E. McKague,
FUKUOKA — Peace was rude
As the camps were emptied,
He said he had asked that the
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
ly shaken at Fukuoka’s “peace
and the west coast reopened, the
Public.
game be called when rain began,
baseball stadium” when an es
number of transients m o v i n g
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
but was overruled by umpires.
timated 6,000 fans descended up
through town dwindled. Denver’s
330 Bay St.
(Corner Adelaida & Bay Sts.)
on the diamond protesting the
Japanese population decreased,
TORONTO
Young
Nisei
Golfer
To stay in business, Manchu
calling off of a recent Profession
Grill had to look for business
al Pacific league game because Out of Prize Money
of darkness.
elsewhere.
EUGENE, Oregon — Kengo
BILL TAKEDA
With mayhem in their eyes,
So it became the House of ManGeneral Insurance
Kaneshima, young Hawaiian who
some of the more infuriated spec
chu
specializing
in
Chinese
dish
224 Delhi Ave. Phone RE. 2385
was the only Nisei entrant in the
tators seized baseball bats and
National Jaycee junior golf tour es, and then ?t was converted into
Wilson Heights P. O., Ont.
pounded players of the Mainichi
a
full-fledged
night
club
with
a
nament in Eugene, Ore., recently,
Automobile, Fire, Burglary
Orions. No serious injuries, how
Life, Accident & Sickness, etc.
finished far out of the prize mon Hawaiian decor. The club was
ever, were reported.
ey when he carded 248. Trees just unusual enough to become a
Three h u n d r e d hastily-sum
and iron trouble dogged him in Denver showplace, even though it
moned police restored order and the final 36 holes.
was in the heart of the tawdry
For A Sure Tomorrow
escorted the battered Orions—
Larimer
district. To the end the
In order- to qualify for the
not to their hotel but to the local
... Insure Today
championship play, the barefoot- Nisei patronized it, though they
jail for temporary safekeeping. '
were
in
the
minority.
favorite of the gallery scrambled
GENICHIRO YADA
The rhubarb was the outcome to a 167 in the first 36 holes and
900 West Pender St.
I haven’t talked to Furuta since
of alleged time-winning tactics
had to sink an uphill 36-foot putt the Club Seven Seas was sold, but
VANCOUVER, B.C.
by the Orions, who were trail on the 18th.
Phone:
PAcific 7341
Helen says maybe, just maybe,
ing the home team of the West
He was eight over par on the they’ll open up another place.
Representing
ern Japan Railroad Lions, 5-1, first nine and faced elimination This time, .again maybe, they’ll
when the game was interrupted but after a bogie on the 10th, the stick to good Oriental foods and
at 4:45 p.m. because of rain.
tiny Nisei links ter shot four leave the liquor and entertainInsurance Company
The muggy weather, aggravat straight pars before slipping to a ment to someone else.
HOME OFFICE • TORONTO, CANADA
ed by the hour-long downpour, double bogie on the 16th. He had
But from a sentimental point
served to heighten the tempers of another bogie on the 17th and
of view, it’ll never be like the
the local rooters for the Lions.
just managed to qualify when he old place. The place on Larimer
When the game was resumed sank the 35-footer on the 18th.
had history, and a warm place in
on a soggy field, the Orions ask
many a heart. We hate to see it
ed for time-out after each pitch Lakehead Bowl Meeting
either to go into a huddle or to
FORT WILLIAM, Ont. — All
Agent
On the final night, Helen said.
drink water.
persons who are interested in
“
After
all
these
years,
it
’
s
a
little
It took almost two hours for bowling this season in the LakeMONARCH LIFE
hard to lock it up for the last
the inning to be played.
'
head Nisei Bowling League are
ASSURANCE CO.
At 7:30, the umpire called the asked to attend a general meet time.” It was a gentle under
204 Pigott Building
statement.
game off.
ing of the L.N. Bowling Club on
36
James
St. S., — Tel. 2-2594
— from Pacific Citizen
And the stampede was on.
Sunday, Sept. 7, starting from
Hamilton
Orion Coach Sadao Yuasa de 7:30 p.m., at the Ortona Legion
Residence:
Patronize
nied that he had ordered his team Hall, 534 McLaughlin St., Fort
59 Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960
William.
to adopt dilatory tactics.
Our Advertisers
0. K. CLEANERS
6,000 Fans Riot, Protest Stalling Tactics
I9AW*
. . . the letters start. Thea
many readers of THE CHRIS
TIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
tell the Editor how much they
enjoy this daily world-wide
newspaper.
The Monitor is the most
carefully edited news
paper in the U.S... .*
* Valuable aid in teach
ing . , ." *
"News that is complete
and fair. . . .”
'The Monitor surely is a
reader’s necessity . . ."
You, too, will find the Monitor
informative, with complete
world news . . . and as neces
sary as your HOME TOWN
paper.
Use this coupon for a Special
Introductory subscription — 26
ISSUES FOR ONLY SI—And
listen Tuesday nights over ABC
stations to "The Christian
Science Monitor Views the
News.”
The Christian Science Monitor
One, Norway St., Boston 15,Mass..U.S.A.
Please send me an introductory subscription ro The Christian Science
Monitor—26 issues. I enclose $1.
(name)
(address)
(city)
PB9
(zone)
(stale)
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anemged I
Office EM-4 5259 Kes. LY.8427
Barrister and Solicitor
Notary Public
3 Adelaide St. E., Toronto
1st and 2nd Mortgage Loans
Crown Life
K.GOTO
Drop Opener
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 7
ACROSS MY MIND .
By Jack Nakamoto
My Sweetheart:
Already 34 years old, I'm pushing" on, and itseems as if I may remain a gay, old bachelor for
good. But, believe me, I do want to marry you.
I know I m a dreamer—perhaps wasting my best
) ears just looking for you—instead of marrying
the first girl who seems g’ood enough but who
doesn t quite strike the right note in my heart.
Anyway, I want to stick to my dreams and
work at them until they’re fulfilled. And to find
jou is indeed my loveliest dream.
But, dam it, I’m fed up with those Issei folks
who are anxious to g'et me married to some girl
whom they think is right for me. Sure, I know'
match-making" is a Japanese custom and that
they mean well and would like to see me happily
married and have kids and a home. But I wish
they’d stop playing Dan Cupid—as if I’m helpless
and don’t know which girl is for me.
What do they know about how I feel? A guy
of my age should know the. score and I’ll know
you when I see you. I didn’t think I’ve allowed
my heart to go to seed. Instead, my heart is
always open, and above all, sure of what it wants
and whom it wants.
So please don't worry your little head because.
I shall find you by myself someday. You may be
a girl working in a dress factory or in an office:
you may even be my sister’s girl-friend. Who
knows ? But one thing is sure, and that is, I
shall find you wherever you are. For I’m rather
live a few short happy years with you than spend
a lifetime of hell on earth with the wrong woman.
So wait, for me. then, till I come knocking" at
your door—very soon!
Dave.
Best Cleaners had to do some,
late season scampering but
squeezed into the Toronto Via
duct Senior League semi-finals
by winning a sudden death play
off last Saturday. Pitted against
Kingsway Lumber in the semis,
they dropped the opener, 6-5, on
the following day.
- In the final game of the sea
son, the Bests went all out in an
effort to clinch a playoff position
but. the league-leading Lumber
men s barrage of four homers set
the Nisei team down, 9-8, and
necessitated a playoff with the
Hawaii Batter Leads
other joint tenant of fourth place.
Coming through with the chips Tupan Pro Ball League
down, the Cleanermen hustled
TOKYO — Tomo Kai, a Ha
their way to an 11-8 win to oust waiian Nisei outfielder playing"
Drive Grill.
his first season in Japanese pro
Rookie Bill Smith coasted al fessional baseball, is currently
ong for his third win as he scat leading the Pacific League in
tered nine hits. Eddie Hisaki was batting" with a .332 average with
behind the plate. Bests played 82 hits in 247 times at bat. Kai,
their running" and bunting" game who joined the Kintetsu Lions in
for "which they are noted with June after being signed in Hafleetfooted Tad Miura pulling off waii, has played in 67 games.
a spectacular steal of home. They
ran Drive Grill dizzy with their To Continue Mixed
footwork, scoring 11 runs on only Doubles Next Week
six hits.
With both the Nisei Open and
In the first game of the play the Toronto TBS Mixed Doubles
offs, Bests dropped a 6-5 heart tourneys still not completed, they
breaker. Teddy Barret who toiled will be played out on Sunday,
on the mound for the losers, al Sept. 7, at Earlscourt Tennis
lowed all of Kingsway’s runs in Court.
The Open foursomes will begin
the second inning and although
play at 8 a.m. while the Busseis
he held them runless the rest of will start at 9 a.m.
the way, the lead was too much
for Bests to overcome.
Lucien C. Kurata
J. T. MORITO, D. C.
Doctor of Chiropractic
19 YONGE BLVD.
(End of Yonge Carline)
BY APPOINTMENT
Office — HU. 8148
Residence — OX. 8021
END OF AN
By BILL HOSOKAWA
Denver, Colo.
An end came to an era of sorts
a few weeks ago when the Club
Seven Seas in Denver changed
hands. This night club, restaur
ant and bar is now called the
Acapulco. When I drove by last
Saturday night the joint was
jumping with Spanish-speaking"
gentlemen and their ladies.
But it was not always so. Be
fore it became the Club Seven
Seas, it was the House of Man
chu. And prior to that, it was
just plain Manchu Grill. From its
very beginning the guiding light
was expansive, cigar-s m o k i n g
George Furuta who used to be
called the m a y o r of Larimer
street. And beside him was Helen
Umezawa, as nice a gal as you
could meet.
The one-story brick building at
Twentieth and Larimer wasn’t
very presentable when they took
over during" the earliest days of
101/2 QUEEN ST. W.
the evacuation. They cleaned it
up, opened a restaurant. In the
For Pick-up and Delivery
years that followed, a large per
Phone
centage of the thousands of eva
WA. 6953
cuees who passed through Denver
stopped at the Manchu.
It was more than just a place J
Ladies & Gents
|
for a meal, or a cup of coffee. ITailored Suits & Coats |
Evacuees, hungry for a. taste of j MICHI ASHIKAWA |
Japanese or Chinese food could
find it there. It was also a sort of =237 Seaton St. — Toronto^
Telephone RA. 2618
|
haven, a port of call, where lone g
ly wayfarers could find a wel
come, a chance to exchange news
and gossip, a place to meet old
YONEMITSU
friends and make new ones.
Wedding receptions were held
Watch Repair Shop
here. Family reunions were cele328 BROADVIEW AVE.
brated, visitors feted. homecom(near Gerrard St.)
ing soldiers welcomed, baseball
Toronto. Phone GL. 3652
victories toasted. Business deals
were clinched over lunch in the
Residence:
EM4-0508
booths, perhaps even a few love
2 Vesta Drive
affairs got their start over a
MAfair 1365.
midnight bowl of noodles.
Andrew E. McKague,
FUKUOKA — Peace was rude
As the camps were emptied,
He said he had asked that the
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
ly shaken at Fukuoka’s “peace
and the west coast reopened, the
Public.
game be called when rain began,
baseball stadium” when an es
number of transients m o v i n g
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
but was overruled by umpires.
timated 6,000 fans descended up
through town dwindled. Denver’s
330 Bay St.
(Corner Adelaida & Bay Sts.)
on the diamond protesting the
Japanese population decreased,
TORONTO
Young
Nisei
Golfer
To stay in business, Manchu
calling off of a recent Profession
Grill had to look for business
al Pacific league game because Out of Prize Money
of darkness.
elsewhere.
EUGENE, Oregon — Kengo
BILL TAKEDA
With mayhem in their eyes,
So it became the House of ManGeneral Insurance
Kaneshima, young Hawaiian who
some of the more infuriated spec
chu
specializing
in
Chinese
dish
224 Delhi Ave. Phone RE. 2385
was the only Nisei entrant in the
tators seized baseball bats and
National Jaycee junior golf tour es, and then ?t was converted into
Wilson Heights P. O., Ont.
pounded players of the Mainichi
a
full-fledged
night
club
with
a
nament in Eugene, Ore., recently,
Automobile, Fire, Burglary
Orions. No serious injuries, how
Life, Accident & Sickness, etc.
finished far out of the prize mon Hawaiian decor. The club was
ever, were reported.
ey when he carded 248. Trees just unusual enough to become a
Three h u n d r e d hastily-sum
and iron trouble dogged him in Denver showplace, even though it
moned police restored order and the final 36 holes.
was in the heart of the tawdry
For A Sure Tomorrow
escorted the battered Orions—
Larimer
district. To the end the
In order- to qualify for the
not to their hotel but to the local
... Insure Today
championship play, the barefoot- Nisei patronized it, though they
jail for temporary safekeeping. '
were
in
the
minority.
favorite of the gallery scrambled
GENICHIRO YADA
The rhubarb was the outcome to a 167 in the first 36 holes and
900 West Pender St.
I haven’t talked to Furuta since
of alleged time-winning tactics
had to sink an uphill 36-foot putt the Club Seven Seas was sold, but
VANCOUVER, B.C.
by the Orions, who were trail on the 18th.
Phone:
PAcific 7341
Helen says maybe, just maybe,
ing the home team of the West
He was eight over par on the they’ll open up another place.
Representing
ern Japan Railroad Lions, 5-1, first nine and faced elimination This time, .again maybe, they’ll
when the game was interrupted but after a bogie on the 10th, the stick to good Oriental foods and
at 4:45 p.m. because of rain.
tiny Nisei links ter shot four leave the liquor and entertainInsurance Company
The muggy weather, aggravat straight pars before slipping to a ment to someone else.
HOME OFFICE • TORONTO, CANADA
ed by the hour-long downpour, double bogie on the 16th. He had
But from a sentimental point
served to heighten the tempers of another bogie on the 17th and
of view, it’ll never be like the
the local rooters for the Lions.
just managed to qualify when he old place. The place on Larimer
When the game was resumed sank the 35-footer on the 18th.
had history, and a warm place in
on a soggy field, the Orions ask
many a heart. We hate to see it
ed for time-out after each pitch Lakehead Bowl Meeting
either to go into a huddle or to
FORT WILLIAM, Ont. — All
Agent
On the final night, Helen said.
drink water.
persons who are interested in
“
After
all
these
years,
it
’
s
a
little
It took almost two hours for bowling this season in the LakeMONARCH LIFE
hard to lock it up for the last
the inning to be played.
'
head Nisei Bowling League are
ASSURANCE CO.
At 7:30, the umpire called the asked to attend a general meet time.” It was a gentle under
204 Pigott Building
statement.
game off.
ing of the L.N. Bowling Club on
36
James
St. S., — Tel. 2-2594
— from Pacific Citizen
And the stampede was on.
Sunday, Sept. 7, starting from
Hamilton
Orion Coach Sadao Yuasa de 7:30 p.m., at the Ortona Legion
Residence:
Patronize
nied that he had ordered his team Hall, 534 McLaughlin St., Fort
59 Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960
William.
to adopt dilatory tactics.
Our Advertisers
0. K. CLEANERS
6,000 Fans Riot, Protest Stalling Tactics
I9AW*
. . . the letters start. Thea
many readers of THE CHRIS
TIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
tell the Editor how much they
enjoy this daily world-wide
newspaper.
The Monitor is the most
carefully edited news
paper in the U.S... .*
* Valuable aid in teach
ing . , ." *
"News that is complete
and fair. . . .”
'The Monitor surely is a
reader’s necessity . . ."
You, too, will find the Monitor
informative, with complete
world news . . . and as neces
sary as your HOME TOWN
paper.
Use this coupon for a Special
Introductory subscription — 26
ISSUES FOR ONLY SI—And
listen Tuesday nights over ABC
stations to "The Christian
Science Monitor Views the
News.”
The Christian Science Monitor
One, Norway St., Boston 15,Mass..U.S.A.
Please send me an introductory subscription ro The Christian Science
Monitor—26 issues. I enclose $1.
(name)
(address)
(city)
PB9
(zone)
(stale)
I
|
J
I
J
anemged I
Office EM-4 5259 Kes. LY.8427
Barrister and Solicitor
Notary Public
3 Adelaide St. E., Toronto
1st and 2nd Mortgage Loans
Crown Life
K.GOTO
Page 8
PA
PAGE 8
Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1952
THE NEW CANADIAN
ON A CLASSIC
EDUCATION
Hideo Mimoto’s third article
“On the Japanese L a n g u a g.e
>
__ _ ,
By CINDERELLA ——— School” in the August 13th issue
of The New Canadian is must
reading
for all thinking Nisei. In
Letter to a New Bride
this article he deplores the fact
You were beautiful today, more beautiful than I have ever seen that secondary education in Can
you before. As I stoood there, watching you exchange, vows before
ada is still in the pioneer stage,
God with my favourite kid brother, there was a lump in my throat
that the emphasis is on turning
and a mist before my eyes. They were unashamed tears, for today, I
out craftsmen or artisans and not
doffed my cynicism at the church door.
the “development of a well-round
You were so beautiful! Brides are always beautiful, but you
ed individual capable of thinking
especially! Perhaps it’s because of the proprietary- air I have for
of the profound issues of life”.
you; perhaps it’s because I’m a good deal prejudiced in favour of
The classics share only a small
my only young brother, and whoever he has chosen is okay by me.
portion of the curriculum. In lit
Whatever the reason, I think you were the most radiant bride I have
erature, the emphasis is on Shake
ever seen.
speare, and classic authors of
No one would believe that in the last several weeks youve been France, Germany, Greece and
running around hectically, standing for hours at the dressmaker’s, Russia are all but ignored. The
gathering your trousseau, making lists of guests to be invited, and tendency of education in Canada
even spending evenings looking for an apartment.
then is to give the student a nar
At time you’ve even appalled me with your knowledge of house row, materialistic view of life. He
hold matters, like Paul Revere copper-bottomed stainless steel kit concludes that the problem of
chenware and percale sheets. I listened and wondered if this were giving a well-rounded education
the same girl we all thought was cute when Hiro brought her home! falls upon the shoulders of the
You were so wise and I, older that I am, felt a great deal of an parents and the students them
ignoramus. It was all very much beyond me, but you talked about it selves. It will be necessary for
all as if you’d been dealing with pots and pans and sheets all your them ‘to develop a taste in the
arts—in music, art, literature,
life.
You were ready to drop many times, from sheer exhaustion, and and philosophy”.
I used to wonder if it weren’t a lot simpler just to sneak off and get I
from Montreal Bulletin
married without all the fuss. But then, it wouldn’t have been right.
Your mother and my mother would never have consented to it. I can
just hear them saying, “What would people think!”
^remme ^rctre
It seems just a few months ago that my young brother was go
ing around, scoffing at his friends who were leaving bachelorhood
behind. He was always bringing girls home—tall one, short ones,
wide-eyed naive ones, sophisticated ones—but his heart flitted from
one to another. We’d discussed them all in a friendly, sister-brother
way. Why shoudn’t we? He didn’t mince words when I brought- my
beaux home either! But he’d gone along, being a ‘ nice guy, to all
the girls, and his philosophy had been “Why should I marry and
make only one girl happy when I can make them all happy?”
And then suddenly, it was just one girl—you. And today, in the
late afternoon of a beautiful September day, you became a bride.
Your mother looked at my mother who was furtively wiping
tears for her baby son who was now old enough to get married.
People were being herded into taxis and whisked to the reception.
Everyone was saying, “Wasn’t she beautiful!” Sue, you were
beautiful . . .
And then you were in your neat going-away outfit, with th'bridal bouquet still in your hand, standing at the doorway with Hiro.
I could hear your mother saying to my mother, “Well, I’m so glad
it’s over!” And your big brother looked as if he couldn’t get out of
his monkey suit into comfortable clothes fast enough.
You turned to your mother and father; you looked at your
brother who used to tease you mercilessly; you looked at your small
sister with whom, up to now you’d shared your room, your secrets
and your clothes. These dear familiar faces—these faces—and all
the thing’s of your childhood—the old, colored Mammy doll that sat
on your dresser, the drawer full of old letters you were too senti
mental to throw away, the house to which, everytime you’d been
away, you’d always come back to—these things were yours no long
er. There were tears in your eyes . . .
And Hiro was right beside you.
Marriage is a wonderful institution. Don’t let anyone tell you
otherwise. It’s so easy to be cynical about marriage. We look about
us. We find marriages that have failed; marriages that are incom
patible and unhappy. They stick out like sore thumbs. But the happy
marriages are those that go unnoticed.
Sue, you’ve just turned twenty-one. And Hiro is twenty-four.
You’re both modern. You’ve both read all there is to read on mar
riage and how to make marriage work.
But will you remember just three things. Sue ? Will you re
member that marriage is the beginning’ and not the end of a girl’s
life ?
Will you remember too. that marriage does not necessarily mean
security. Marriage is sharing. And you will find that in this sharing
there will be a deep satisfaction. For what is success if it can’t be
shared with someone dear to you ? And what is pain but a dark
interlude, grief but a moment of time if it can be shared ?
LIMIT IS 200
Ever notice that on your dial
telephones, there are only 25 let
ters ? Just take a look, you’ll see
that the letter “Z” is the only one
in the numeral “0” slot, so three
times eight plus one is 25.
By this time, you’ll have found
out that it’s “Q” that’s missing.
Why did they omit that letter?
The
first
conclusion
that
comes is that there might be con
fusion between ‘O” and “Q” and
that you might dial the wrong
letter. But it isn’t that.
A “Q” is a useless letter in an
exchange, for you only dial the
first two letters and if “Q” is
the first letter, “U” must always
follow, and how many exchanges
can you make up with “Q” as the
second letter.
In order to use all the dial com
binations as possible, the tele
phone people have to figure out
the names of exchanges, and that
can be a stickler. For instance in
Toronto, there’s an exchange cal
led “Lloydbrook” where you have
to remember that it’s double “L”
and that “Hyland” is “HY” and
not “HI”.
The way to overcome all that
trouble is to stick strictly to nu
merals, but try to remember such
numbers as 3-6-6-5-0-0-5 which
would be the NC’s number under
that system. In Tokyo, they don’t
use letters, and each phone num
ber has six numerals.
One thing that the Issei would
probably like to see is the elimi
nation of either the ‘R” or the
“L”. That’s one thing in which
they always have difficulty.
Just now. Sue. you and Hiro have so many things to discover
These are the things I wanted
together—new experiences of which today is the beginning. But a
time will come, as it must come to any maturing, growing marriage, I could manage was to give you
to say to my new sister. But all
when you will suddenly discover that Hiro has funny little annoying
traits of his own. traits which you hadn’t noticed till now. And Hiro a peck on your radiant cheek, and
too. will face you one morning ■with complaints against little faults say, “Gee, you look wonderful!”
which you’ve had ever since you could remember. Will you remem And knowing I should say more,
ber, that you and Hiro are two individual people as well as wife and in my clumsy way, I said “Thank
husband ? And the successs of your marriage will depend on how God you’ll have to wake him up
much you both respect each other’s individual rights, how willing you in the morning! Hiro’s the world’s
worst guy for getting to work on
both are to adjust, yourselves.
time.”
From today. Sue. you will never be alone.
lllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllililllU
'Peg Young Women
Slate Fall Tea
SOCIAL CALENDAR
WINNIPEG — The Winnipeg
Young Women’s Club will hold Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin
their second annual Fall Tea on
SEPTEMBER
Sat., Sept. 20, from 2 to 5 p.m.
12—Toronto. Nisei Open Prein the Blue Room (No. 210) of
sentation Dance, at UNF
the Y.W.C.A.
Hall.
Among the features will be an
19—Toronto. Toronto YBS Sev“Apron Bar” with pretty but
enth Anniversary Dance, at
practical aprons for* the home
UNF Hall, 9—12:30 p.m.
makers and Tea Cup Reading for
those interested. All are invited
to come and enjoy a refreshing
cup of tea served by dainty maids
SAVE ON WEAR-EVER!
in Japanese costumes.
Effective Sept. 5
CORRECTION
Wear-Ever Cutlery
Obituary note on Aug. 30 issue
Will Increase 15%
was incorrectly printed that Mrs.
Tomegoro Sato had passed away
ORDER YOURS NOW
on Aug. 27. It should have read
AND SAVE
Mr. Tomekichi Sato.
Phone OR. 6271
OBITUARY
KIMURA
PORT EDWARD, B. C. — Jen
nie Florence Kimura, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Kikuo Kimura,
passed away on Aug. 19 at Prince
Rupert. Funeral services were
held on Aug. 20 at the Port Ed
ward Community Hall.
CLASSIFIED
FEMALE HELP WANTED
LADIES willing to earn money
at home, must have sewing ma
chine to do light sewing. Apply
3060 Dundas St. W., Toronto.
GIRL CLERK, full or parttime. Apply Service Fruit Mar
ket, 468 Bloor St., West, Toron
to, LO. 7733.
EXPERIENCED stenographer
and invoicing clerk. Apply Silver
ware Product, 108 River St., Tor
onto._____________
______
TRIMMER; experienced^ for
men’s made-to-measure clothes.
Apply Bradleigh Clothes Co., 6
Terauley St., Toronto.___________
OPERATORS, exper i e n c e d,
steady work, good wages. Apply
Jay-Lure Lingerie, 760 Bathurst
St., Toronto._____________________
DRESSMAKER, experienced.
Phone HY. 1960, Toronto.______
JERRY BIDGOOD
72 Westdale Drive
TORONTO
DANCE LESSONS
Social, Folk, Square
Dances. Hours 2-11 p.m.
DANCE EVERY FRIDAY
from 8 p.m.
“Hall to Let” phone LO. 3370
Matsuo Dance Studio
Can. Dance Teachers Ass’n.
1331-A DUNDAS ST. W.
Toronto
CELESTIAL
GARDENS
Chop Suey House
92-A Elizabeth St., Toronto
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
DINNERS
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 »Mf
Reservations: EM4-9035
/H*M*«A4*>»tMWHWH%^MT«4M%A»?*<TM!H!^^
A
X
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
$ Open 12 noon to 2 a.m. j
WOMAN for plain cooking and
general housework for two adults,
char once a week, near transpor
famous Chinese foods
|
tation, $90 a monthc references. ♦*»
Phone OR. 0904, 19 Strathearn $ 69 Albert St. —'Toronto $
Road, Toronto.
X
(at Elizabeth)
X
|
.
Telephone
WA.
9817
£
YOUNG girl or woman for
mother’s help, fond of children, *’•
Special attention given
{
light duties, to live in. Phone OR.
$
to take out orders.
|
6907, Toronto.__________________
'^♦♦^♦♦•♦♦^♦♦♦♦• ^ J J ^M^H****^^^
COOK-GENERAL, experienced,
for family of three adults, St.
Clair and Yonge Sts., Toronto.
Call HY. 3359.
| Hoe Sai Gay j
h
HELP WANTED
PRESSER, good wages, steady
job. Phone LO. 6141, Toronto.
INTELLIGENT young man
willing to learn textile trade. Apply 3060 Dundas St. W., Toronto.
SALES girl for grocery store
in Leaside, also delivery boy.
Phone MA. 9419. Toronto.
BODY AND FENDER man,
fully experienced, able to esti
mate, top wages. Call CErerry 16801, Toronto.
h m h
In Hamilton, It's
LUCK INN
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
For Fine Chinese Food
FACILITIES FOR
PARTIES & BANQUETS
21 John St., North
Alexanders
“THE HOUSE OF DIAMONDS’'
Finest Selection of Hand-Made
' Diamond Engagement & Wedding Rings
ALL OUR DIAMONDS GUARANTEED PERFECT
1324 Queen St. W. — LAkeside 7053 — Toronto
Representative
HENRY RYOII
Telephone ME. 3182
'Si
i®
PAGE 8
Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1952
THE NEW CANADIAN
ON A CLASSIC
EDUCATION
Hideo Mimoto’s third article
“On the Japanese L a n g u a g.e
>
__ _ ,
By CINDERELLA ——— School” in the August 13th issue
of The New Canadian is must
reading
for all thinking Nisei. In
Letter to a New Bride
this article he deplores the fact
You were beautiful today, more beautiful than I have ever seen that secondary education in Can
you before. As I stoood there, watching you exchange, vows before
ada is still in the pioneer stage,
God with my favourite kid brother, there was a lump in my throat
that the emphasis is on turning
and a mist before my eyes. They were unashamed tears, for today, I
out craftsmen or artisans and not
doffed my cynicism at the church door.
the “development of a well-round
You were so beautiful! Brides are always beautiful, but you
ed individual capable of thinking
especially! Perhaps it’s because of the proprietary- air I have for
of the profound issues of life”.
you; perhaps it’s because I’m a good deal prejudiced in favour of
The classics share only a small
my only young brother, and whoever he has chosen is okay by me.
portion of the curriculum. In lit
Whatever the reason, I think you were the most radiant bride I have
erature, the emphasis is on Shake
ever seen.
speare, and classic authors of
No one would believe that in the last several weeks youve been France, Germany, Greece and
running around hectically, standing for hours at the dressmaker’s, Russia are all but ignored. The
gathering your trousseau, making lists of guests to be invited, and tendency of education in Canada
even spending evenings looking for an apartment.
then is to give the student a nar
At time you’ve even appalled me with your knowledge of house row, materialistic view of life. He
hold matters, like Paul Revere copper-bottomed stainless steel kit concludes that the problem of
chenware and percale sheets. I listened and wondered if this were giving a well-rounded education
the same girl we all thought was cute when Hiro brought her home! falls upon the shoulders of the
You were so wise and I, older that I am, felt a great deal of an parents and the students them
ignoramus. It was all very much beyond me, but you talked about it selves. It will be necessary for
all as if you’d been dealing with pots and pans and sheets all your them ‘to develop a taste in the
arts—in music, art, literature,
life.
You were ready to drop many times, from sheer exhaustion, and and philosophy”.
I used to wonder if it weren’t a lot simpler just to sneak off and get I
from Montreal Bulletin
married without all the fuss. But then, it wouldn’t have been right.
Your mother and my mother would never have consented to it. I can
just hear them saying, “What would people think!”
^remme ^rctre
It seems just a few months ago that my young brother was go
ing around, scoffing at his friends who were leaving bachelorhood
behind. He was always bringing girls home—tall one, short ones,
wide-eyed naive ones, sophisticated ones—but his heart flitted from
one to another. We’d discussed them all in a friendly, sister-brother
way. Why shoudn’t we? He didn’t mince words when I brought- my
beaux home either! But he’d gone along, being a ‘ nice guy, to all
the girls, and his philosophy had been “Why should I marry and
make only one girl happy when I can make them all happy?”
And then suddenly, it was just one girl—you. And today, in the
late afternoon of a beautiful September day, you became a bride.
Your mother looked at my mother who was furtively wiping
tears for her baby son who was now old enough to get married.
People were being herded into taxis and whisked to the reception.
Everyone was saying, “Wasn’t she beautiful!” Sue, you were
beautiful . . .
And then you were in your neat going-away outfit, with th'bridal bouquet still in your hand, standing at the doorway with Hiro.
I could hear your mother saying to my mother, “Well, I’m so glad
it’s over!” And your big brother looked as if he couldn’t get out of
his monkey suit into comfortable clothes fast enough.
You turned to your mother and father; you looked at your
brother who used to tease you mercilessly; you looked at your small
sister with whom, up to now you’d shared your room, your secrets
and your clothes. These dear familiar faces—these faces—and all
the thing’s of your childhood—the old, colored Mammy doll that sat
on your dresser, the drawer full of old letters you were too senti
mental to throw away, the house to which, everytime you’d been
away, you’d always come back to—these things were yours no long
er. There were tears in your eyes . . .
And Hiro was right beside you.
Marriage is a wonderful institution. Don’t let anyone tell you
otherwise. It’s so easy to be cynical about marriage. We look about
us. We find marriages that have failed; marriages that are incom
patible and unhappy. They stick out like sore thumbs. But the happy
marriages are those that go unnoticed.
Sue, you’ve just turned twenty-one. And Hiro is twenty-four.
You’re both modern. You’ve both read all there is to read on mar
riage and how to make marriage work.
But will you remember just three things. Sue ? Will you re
member that marriage is the beginning’ and not the end of a girl’s
life ?
Will you remember too. that marriage does not necessarily mean
security. Marriage is sharing. And you will find that in this sharing
there will be a deep satisfaction. For what is success if it can’t be
shared with someone dear to you ? And what is pain but a dark
interlude, grief but a moment of time if it can be shared ?
LIMIT IS 200
Ever notice that on your dial
telephones, there are only 25 let
ters ? Just take a look, you’ll see
that the letter “Z” is the only one
in the numeral “0” slot, so three
times eight plus one is 25.
By this time, you’ll have found
out that it’s “Q” that’s missing.
Why did they omit that letter?
The
first
conclusion
that
comes is that there might be con
fusion between ‘O” and “Q” and
that you might dial the wrong
letter. But it isn’t that.
A “Q” is a useless letter in an
exchange, for you only dial the
first two letters and if “Q” is
the first letter, “U” must always
follow, and how many exchanges
can you make up with “Q” as the
second letter.
In order to use all the dial com
binations as possible, the tele
phone people have to figure out
the names of exchanges, and that
can be a stickler. For instance in
Toronto, there’s an exchange cal
led “Lloydbrook” where you have
to remember that it’s double “L”
and that “Hyland” is “HY” and
not “HI”.
The way to overcome all that
trouble is to stick strictly to nu
merals, but try to remember such
numbers as 3-6-6-5-0-0-5 which
would be the NC’s number under
that system. In Tokyo, they don’t
use letters, and each phone num
ber has six numerals.
One thing that the Issei would
probably like to see is the elimi
nation of either the ‘R” or the
“L”. That’s one thing in which
they always have difficulty.
Just now. Sue. you and Hiro have so many things to discover
These are the things I wanted
together—new experiences of which today is the beginning. But a
time will come, as it must come to any maturing, growing marriage, I could manage was to give you
to say to my new sister. But all
when you will suddenly discover that Hiro has funny little annoying
traits of his own. traits which you hadn’t noticed till now. And Hiro a peck on your radiant cheek, and
too. will face you one morning ■with complaints against little faults say, “Gee, you look wonderful!”
which you’ve had ever since you could remember. Will you remem And knowing I should say more,
ber, that you and Hiro are two individual people as well as wife and in my clumsy way, I said “Thank
husband ? And the successs of your marriage will depend on how God you’ll have to wake him up
much you both respect each other’s individual rights, how willing you in the morning! Hiro’s the world’s
worst guy for getting to work on
both are to adjust, yourselves.
time.”
From today. Sue. you will never be alone.
lllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllililllU
'Peg Young Women
Slate Fall Tea
SOCIAL CALENDAR
WINNIPEG — The Winnipeg
Young Women’s Club will hold Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin
their second annual Fall Tea on
SEPTEMBER
Sat., Sept. 20, from 2 to 5 p.m.
12—Toronto. Nisei Open Prein the Blue Room (No. 210) of
sentation Dance, at UNF
the Y.W.C.A.
Hall.
Among the features will be an
19—Toronto. Toronto YBS Sev“Apron Bar” with pretty but
enth Anniversary Dance, at
practical aprons for* the home
UNF Hall, 9—12:30 p.m.
makers and Tea Cup Reading for
those interested. All are invited
to come and enjoy a refreshing
cup of tea served by dainty maids
SAVE ON WEAR-EVER!
in Japanese costumes.
Effective Sept. 5
CORRECTION
Wear-Ever Cutlery
Obituary note on Aug. 30 issue
Will Increase 15%
was incorrectly printed that Mrs.
Tomegoro Sato had passed away
ORDER YOURS NOW
on Aug. 27. It should have read
AND SAVE
Mr. Tomekichi Sato.
Phone OR. 6271
OBITUARY
KIMURA
PORT EDWARD, B. C. — Jen
nie Florence Kimura, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Kikuo Kimura,
passed away on Aug. 19 at Prince
Rupert. Funeral services were
held on Aug. 20 at the Port Ed
ward Community Hall.
CLASSIFIED
FEMALE HELP WANTED
LADIES willing to earn money
at home, must have sewing ma
chine to do light sewing. Apply
3060 Dundas St. W., Toronto.
GIRL CLERK, full or parttime. Apply Service Fruit Mar
ket, 468 Bloor St., West, Toron
to, LO. 7733.
EXPERIENCED stenographer
and invoicing clerk. Apply Silver
ware Product, 108 River St., Tor
onto._____________
______
TRIMMER; experienced^ for
men’s made-to-measure clothes.
Apply Bradleigh Clothes Co., 6
Terauley St., Toronto.___________
OPERATORS, exper i e n c e d,
steady work, good wages. Apply
Jay-Lure Lingerie, 760 Bathurst
St., Toronto._____________________
DRESSMAKER, experienced.
Phone HY. 1960, Toronto.______
JERRY BIDGOOD
72 Westdale Drive
TORONTO
DANCE LESSONS
Social, Folk, Square
Dances. Hours 2-11 p.m.
DANCE EVERY FRIDAY
from 8 p.m.
“Hall to Let” phone LO. 3370
Matsuo Dance Studio
Can. Dance Teachers Ass’n.
1331-A DUNDAS ST. W.
Toronto
CELESTIAL
GARDENS
Chop Suey House
92-A Elizabeth St., Toronto
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
DINNERS
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 »Mf
Reservations: EM4-9035
/H*M*«A4*>»tMWHWH%^MT«4M%A»?*<TM!H!^^
A
X
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
$ Open 12 noon to 2 a.m. j
WOMAN for plain cooking and
general housework for two adults,
char once a week, near transpor
famous Chinese foods
|
tation, $90 a monthc references. ♦*»
Phone OR. 0904, 19 Strathearn $ 69 Albert St. —'Toronto $
Road, Toronto.
X
(at Elizabeth)
X
|
.
Telephone
WA.
9817
£
YOUNG girl or woman for
mother’s help, fond of children, *’•
Special attention given
{
light duties, to live in. Phone OR.
$
to take out orders.
|
6907, Toronto.__________________
'^♦♦^♦♦•♦♦^♦♦♦♦• ^ J J ^M^H****^^^
COOK-GENERAL, experienced,
for family of three adults, St.
Clair and Yonge Sts., Toronto.
Call HY. 3359.
| Hoe Sai Gay j
h
HELP WANTED
PRESSER, good wages, steady
job. Phone LO. 6141, Toronto.
INTELLIGENT young man
willing to learn textile trade. Apply 3060 Dundas St. W., Toronto.
SALES girl for grocery store
in Leaside, also delivery boy.
Phone MA. 9419. Toronto.
BODY AND FENDER man,
fully experienced, able to esti
mate, top wages. Call CErerry 16801, Toronto.
h m h
In Hamilton, It's
LUCK INN
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
For Fine Chinese Food
FACILITIES FOR
PARTIES & BANQUETS
21 John St., North
Alexanders
“THE HOUSE OF DIAMONDS’'
Finest Selection of Hand-Made
' Diamond Engagement & Wedding Rings
ALL OUR DIAMONDS GUARANTEED PERFECT
1324 Queen St. W. — LAkeside 7053 — Toronto
Representative
HENRY RYOII
Telephone ME. 3182
'Si
i®