Page 1
11
THE NEW CANADIAN
1/
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
VOL. 15, NO. 73
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,
The Weekly Habit
1952
S6 Per Year — 10 c Per Copy
I j Dr. Saita Elected
B. C. JCCA Prexy
B.C. Strike Over Price
VAhCOUVER — Selected as
president of the British Columbia Difference Affects
------------- By Toyo Takata------- —_
JCCA at a meeting of the Van
business matters, they^a^that ^ ^^^ and picnics, and there is couver JCCA Executive Council Japanese Canadians
the Japanese (including all vari- even an annual golf tourney bet- 011 ^P1- 4 was Dr. Hax-old Saka
- NCOUVER
In a second strike affecting more than 4,000
Saita who will now take over the
eties, the transplanted 7n7th^ rt™
ishermen on the West Coast, including many Japanese Candians,
nmdnr^
___
Se lowshxp among members is an provincial headquarters here.
LoMX”tr?S Tlf ”rt of usalmon fishing was once again tied up from midnight, Sept. 6, when
Dr. Saita is regarded as being
all negotiations between the United Fishermen and Allied Workers
work together to common advan- I taXw
one of the few persons capable to
Union and the canneries failed. The dispute is over the price of
handle the job and has also been chums.
tare. This Is by their own *1,
doing work in the JCCA for a
Officials reported that more
I number of Niseis who would be number of years. He is also viceWhether this trait is particular genuinely interested in its for- president of the Vancouver JCCA than 90 per cent of the fishermen
I "voted in favor of strike action
Two JC Fishermen
to the Japanese race, ox’ to the I mation.
Executive Council.
I
when
they
cast
their
votes
Sept
Issei and Nisei, we don’t know.
Forced to Dump
It s the ideal way to invest
5-6.
It would take an ethnic and socio and learn about investment
300 lbs. of Fish
logical study to prove or disprove | fox the Nisei who is a per Japan Ship Awaits
The Salmon Canners’ OperatVANCOUVER — Two Japathe claim.
ing Committee had offered the
son of modest means and who is Repairs in Vane.
panese
Canadian gill-netters
fishermen only 5H cents pei'
However, it may not need to not in constant contact with the
VANCOUVER — Lying in the
were forced to dump about
be so.
investment game. By investment, i Burrard Inlet for repairs is the pound for chums in comparison
300
pounds of fish into the Bur
Duiing our stay in Chicag-o, I we didn’t mean strictly stocks Nippon Yusen Kaisha’s Anshu to last year’s prices of 11 cents
rard Inlet when the boat ar
we learned the existence of not and bonds, but also such other j Maru. The Japanese ship had in Johnstone Straits and Fraser
rived
in Vancouver. Pickets
less than five co-operative enter possibilities as real estate, a co- I been towed into Vancouver late River, 9 cents in central and nor
established by the striking sal
thern areas, and 8 cents in the
prises among the Niseis of that I operative business, financing
an last month from Campbell River
I mon fishermen boarded the
city. These groups contain any- I enterprise etc.
when a broken shaft had been Queen Charlottes.
boat and ordered the fish to be
Poor market conditions are be
where from ten to 40 members
Principally, the motive to or I discovered just prior to departure
thrown overboard.
who have banded together into I ganize is to invest for profits. from-the island to Japan with a lieved to be the cause of the dis
The
Japanese
Canadians
pute. The UFAWU officials met
business associations ox* svndi- I But such a group has other bene- I cargo of iron ore.
I with the B.C.’s Social Credit cab- I claimed that they were carry
cates, investing modest sums of I fits. Most of us are unfamiliai’ I
The Anshu Maru is awaiting
ing- fish for home consumption
money into whatever c o m e s I with the many intricacies of oui’ I repairs to be made here since it inet on Sept. 9 to discuss market
along that has potentials of prof- I financial structure. We are un- j was found that a new part problems and ask for government j but United Fishermen and Al
lied Workers Union officials
itable yield.
j familiar with fiscal policies, tax- brought over from Japan would" I support in finding- new markets.
had ruled that not even fish for
The strike does not actually
We attended a meeting of the I a^on’ c*vd laws and other perti- require too much expense.
hit the Northern B. C. coast fish- I this purpose can be landed.
youngest such organization in | ^P*' ^ata that infringe on our
It is regarded as fortunate for
ermen since they had good catch
Chicago composed of 13 members. daily lives. A group such as that the engine trouble to^ have been
This particular group included a j could secure guest speakers such discovered before the ship had es this season but to the gill-net I Japanese Canadian fishermen, it
fishermen in the Fraser River I
lawyer, an engineer, production j as a banker, a lawyer, income I sailed for the high seas. - G. O.
is reported, are feeling quite bit
district among which number I
manager in a plastic plant, a j tax expert, a broker and others
ter over the delay.
many Japanese Canadians, the
florist, an optometrist and three for the purpose of membership Search For Treasure
British Columbia’s native In
strike is a blow since they have j dian fishermen have been in
women. Their discussion centred I education.
experienced a generally poor sea- structed to continue fishing by
These facts are particularly Becomes Man-Hunt
around the purchase of certain
son
with the exception of one the Native Brotherhood of B. C.
useful to us, especially to those
TOKYO The purported quest
speculative stocks.
|
good
week. The gill-netters were
who are in private business or foi
Captain Kidd’s treasure”
which is representative of the
The oldest and the largest
practice or those who are contem turned into a hunt for the man exPectant of good returns from Indian fishermen.
group, although admittedly not
plating a move in that direction. who claimed he knew where the ^ePtember’s white spring salmon
This is the second strike since
the most successful, which has
season and it is a sacrifice for the four-day layoff in July during
Even an exchange of ideas pirate’s hoard was hidden.
been in existence in Chicago for
among the membership itself is
An angry member of the Ja- the fishermen to suspend fishing the peak of the season over nego
six years, has a membership
sometimes useful and enlighten panese House of Councillors because of the price negotiations, i tiations on prices fox- .1952.
whose names read like an Amer
ing. If it were to have Niseis
gxubstaked ’ Masahiro Yoshi jiican Nisei “Who’s Who.” They
from various fields of occupation ma foi' an expedition to an unin
have a fairly substantial capital
or profession, that alone gives it habited island off southwest Ja
which they invest in high-grade
a versatile group from which in pan to dig up the treasure sup
stocks and in short term loans. dividual members can glean use
posedly valued at $280,000,000.
The operations of these organi ful information.
Now he is looking for the wouldzations are quite simple. They
From the investment angle, the be explorer.
I
MEDICINE HAT, Alta. — I
At Brooks station, 50 miles
elect officers and the larger ones sum of ten dollars per month is
The financial backer of the More than 300 persons gathered
have even a board of directors. A a paltry sum but from 20 mem treasure Jxunt says he has not I at the railroad station in Medi I west of Medicine Hat, several
general meeting is held monthly bers it adds to $200 monthly or heard from Yoshijimi for two I cine Hat to welcome Pte. E. R. Japanese Canadians gathered at
the depot and greeted the Japaat which time each member in $2,400 yearly, a nice pot to dab months.
McMillan and his wife, the first nese girl briefly as the train
vests an equal sum, which in the ble in some worthwhile invest
Japanese war bride of a Cana stopped fox' a minute.
case of all of the groups, is ten ment.
dian serviceman to come to Cana
Candidate
For
VP
The couple may return to Ja
dollars. The accumulated funds
There is one group in Chicago
da, when they arrived on Sept. 10.
pan again unless a good oppor
are either deposited as cash or which is interested in establish Recalls Evacuation
Before
the
couple
were
taken
tunity
can be found in Alberta
LOS ANGELES — Democratic j
invested at the direction of the ing connections should a similar
to the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Home on a 60-day furlough, Pte."
general membership.
group be set up here.
nominee for vice-president of the Hashizume who are market garUnited
States Senator John! oeners in the- area, for a Japa McMillan said that there were
Nor are these associations de
There are many problems to
voted entirely to making money. organize a group here, to be sure, Sparkman declared that the pa nese dinner, the bride met her unlimited opportunities in Japan
for positions and careers and may
Members and their families hold 1but we feel it’s worth considering. triotic and cooperative attitude of mother-in-law, Mrs. Leo Venne,
Nisei leaders such as Mike Masa where the two hugged each oth return there as a civilian.
The Japanese girl who speaks
oka contributed greatly toward er. The girl had sobbed, “Mama,
m
a halting English, said of the
the sympathetic government poli Mama, Mama”, as she threw her
cy which motivated the War Re self into the arms of her hus country she had sen, “So much
land, so much, and so few people.
location Authority.
band’s mother.
No people seen I—so much of
u Sen. John Sparkman, Alabama
Prior to reaching Medicine Hat, long train ride. Oh, this Canada
Ilbera1’” met a group of Nisei the couple was given a welcome
REEDLEY, Calif. — Torrance been travelling about 100 miles
is so wonderful.”
emocrats of Los Angeles during and gifts at the Calgary station.
Minoru-Oishi, 27. and his nephew, an hour at the time.
Another soldier, Pte. Tony Deo
f
i
hlS Labor Day weekend visit to Fte. McMillan was given a white
Stanley Shimono, 9, were killed
maris,
was reported by his sister
Ihe impact of the plane hitting make the statement.
instantly on Labor Day when
cowboy
hat
from
Mayor
Don
Mac
Mrs.
John
McArady of Medicine
the line was so powerful that it
“A less cooperative and more
Luen bniau
u^u
,
, .
—vFtlaUVC ana mo
their
small piane
plane crasnea
crashed into a
kay of Calgary and h salute and Hat, of marrying a Japanese girl
vineyard after striking a 30-foot cr
occupan s out of the belligerent attitude might hai, , .
—ive handshake from Col M t
and believedto be coming home.
t
ted in considerably harsher Rome, army commandant r
high power line which catapulted
Oisln was employed as a mech- ^eatment and would have caused Calgary area.
‘
t K'
the craft down.
“Of the civil rights conferred,
Wreckage was scattered over anic in a San Diego aircraft fac the kxss of much goodwill which
“Can you imagine a staff col- none is clearer and few more
several hundred feet but the tory and had been taking his the" Japanese evacuees gained be- cnel coming up and saluting a vital than the right to buy a
cause of their helpful spirit,
plane did not catch fire. It had nephew out for a ride.
and live in it.”—Justice
buck private?”, Pte. McMillan home
Paul Vallee cJrr
' ~JUStlce
Sparkman said.
1 ’ CaW°mia Appellate
exclaimed happily.
[ Court.
t
Over 300 Welcome War
Bride At Alberta Town
)
Nisei Pilot, Nephew Killed
In California Plane Crash
THE NEW CANADIAN
1/
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
VOL. 15, NO. 73
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,
The Weekly Habit
1952
S6 Per Year — 10 c Per Copy
I j Dr. Saita Elected
B. C. JCCA Prexy
B.C. Strike Over Price
VAhCOUVER — Selected as
president of the British Columbia Difference Affects
------------- By Toyo Takata------- —_
JCCA at a meeting of the Van
business matters, they^a^that ^ ^^^ and picnics, and there is couver JCCA Executive Council Japanese Canadians
the Japanese (including all vari- even an annual golf tourney bet- 011 ^P1- 4 was Dr. Hax-old Saka
- NCOUVER
In a second strike affecting more than 4,000
Saita who will now take over the
eties, the transplanted 7n7th^ rt™
ishermen on the West Coast, including many Japanese Candians,
nmdnr^
___
Se lowshxp among members is an provincial headquarters here.
LoMX”tr?S Tlf ”rt of usalmon fishing was once again tied up from midnight, Sept. 6, when
Dr. Saita is regarded as being
all negotiations between the United Fishermen and Allied Workers
work together to common advan- I taXw
one of the few persons capable to
Union and the canneries failed. The dispute is over the price of
handle the job and has also been chums.
tare. This Is by their own *1,
doing work in the JCCA for a
Officials reported that more
I number of Niseis who would be number of years. He is also viceWhether this trait is particular genuinely interested in its for- president of the Vancouver JCCA than 90 per cent of the fishermen
I "voted in favor of strike action
Two JC Fishermen
to the Japanese race, ox’ to the I mation.
Executive Council.
I
when
they
cast
their
votes
Sept
Issei and Nisei, we don’t know.
Forced to Dump
It s the ideal way to invest
5-6.
It would take an ethnic and socio and learn about investment
300 lbs. of Fish
logical study to prove or disprove | fox the Nisei who is a per Japan Ship Awaits
The Salmon Canners’ OperatVANCOUVER — Two Japathe claim.
ing Committee had offered the
son of modest means and who is Repairs in Vane.
panese
Canadian gill-netters
fishermen only 5H cents pei'
However, it may not need to not in constant contact with the
VANCOUVER — Lying in the
were forced to dump about
be so.
investment game. By investment, i Burrard Inlet for repairs is the pound for chums in comparison
300
pounds of fish into the Bur
Duiing our stay in Chicag-o, I we didn’t mean strictly stocks Nippon Yusen Kaisha’s Anshu to last year’s prices of 11 cents
rard Inlet when the boat ar
we learned the existence of not and bonds, but also such other j Maru. The Japanese ship had in Johnstone Straits and Fraser
rived
in Vancouver. Pickets
less than five co-operative enter possibilities as real estate, a co- I been towed into Vancouver late River, 9 cents in central and nor
established by the striking sal
thern areas, and 8 cents in the
prises among the Niseis of that I operative business, financing
an last month from Campbell River
I mon fishermen boarded the
city. These groups contain any- I enterprise etc.
when a broken shaft had been Queen Charlottes.
boat and ordered the fish to be
Poor market conditions are be
where from ten to 40 members
Principally, the motive to or I discovered just prior to departure
thrown overboard.
who have banded together into I ganize is to invest for profits. from-the island to Japan with a lieved to be the cause of the dis
The
Japanese
Canadians
pute. The UFAWU officials met
business associations ox* svndi- I But such a group has other bene- I cargo of iron ore.
I with the B.C.’s Social Credit cab- I claimed that they were carry
cates, investing modest sums of I fits. Most of us are unfamiliai’ I
The Anshu Maru is awaiting
ing- fish for home consumption
money into whatever c o m e s I with the many intricacies of oui’ I repairs to be made here since it inet on Sept. 9 to discuss market
along that has potentials of prof- I financial structure. We are un- j was found that a new part problems and ask for government j but United Fishermen and Al
lied Workers Union officials
itable yield.
j familiar with fiscal policies, tax- brought over from Japan would" I support in finding- new markets.
had ruled that not even fish for
The strike does not actually
We attended a meeting of the I a^on’ c*vd laws and other perti- require too much expense.
hit the Northern B. C. coast fish- I this purpose can be landed.
youngest such organization in | ^P*' ^ata that infringe on our
It is regarded as fortunate for
ermen since they had good catch
Chicago composed of 13 members. daily lives. A group such as that the engine trouble to^ have been
This particular group included a j could secure guest speakers such discovered before the ship had es this season but to the gill-net I Japanese Canadian fishermen, it
fishermen in the Fraser River I
lawyer, an engineer, production j as a banker, a lawyer, income I sailed for the high seas. - G. O.
is reported, are feeling quite bit
district among which number I
manager in a plastic plant, a j tax expert, a broker and others
ter over the delay.
many Japanese Canadians, the
florist, an optometrist and three for the purpose of membership Search For Treasure
British Columbia’s native In
strike is a blow since they have j dian fishermen have been in
women. Their discussion centred I education.
experienced a generally poor sea- structed to continue fishing by
These facts are particularly Becomes Man-Hunt
around the purchase of certain
son
with the exception of one the Native Brotherhood of B. C.
useful to us, especially to those
TOKYO The purported quest
speculative stocks.
|
good
week. The gill-netters were
who are in private business or foi
Captain Kidd’s treasure”
which is representative of the
The oldest and the largest
practice or those who are contem turned into a hunt for the man exPectant of good returns from Indian fishermen.
group, although admittedly not
plating a move in that direction. who claimed he knew where the ^ePtember’s white spring salmon
This is the second strike since
the most successful, which has
season and it is a sacrifice for the four-day layoff in July during
Even an exchange of ideas pirate’s hoard was hidden.
been in existence in Chicago for
among the membership itself is
An angry member of the Ja- the fishermen to suspend fishing the peak of the season over nego
six years, has a membership
sometimes useful and enlighten panese House of Councillors because of the price negotiations, i tiations on prices fox- .1952.
whose names read like an Amer
ing. If it were to have Niseis
gxubstaked ’ Masahiro Yoshi jiican Nisei “Who’s Who.” They
from various fields of occupation ma foi' an expedition to an unin
have a fairly substantial capital
or profession, that alone gives it habited island off southwest Ja
which they invest in high-grade
a versatile group from which in pan to dig up the treasure sup
stocks and in short term loans. dividual members can glean use
posedly valued at $280,000,000.
The operations of these organi ful information.
Now he is looking for the wouldzations are quite simple. They
From the investment angle, the be explorer.
I
MEDICINE HAT, Alta. — I
At Brooks station, 50 miles
elect officers and the larger ones sum of ten dollars per month is
The financial backer of the More than 300 persons gathered
have even a board of directors. A a paltry sum but from 20 mem treasure Jxunt says he has not I at the railroad station in Medi I west of Medicine Hat, several
general meeting is held monthly bers it adds to $200 monthly or heard from Yoshijimi for two I cine Hat to welcome Pte. E. R. Japanese Canadians gathered at
the depot and greeted the Japaat which time each member in $2,400 yearly, a nice pot to dab months.
McMillan and his wife, the first nese girl briefly as the train
vests an equal sum, which in the ble in some worthwhile invest
Japanese war bride of a Cana stopped fox' a minute.
case of all of the groups, is ten ment.
dian serviceman to come to Cana
Candidate
For
VP
The couple may return to Ja
dollars. The accumulated funds
There is one group in Chicago
da, when they arrived on Sept. 10.
pan again unless a good oppor
are either deposited as cash or which is interested in establish Recalls Evacuation
Before
the
couple
were
taken
tunity
can be found in Alberta
LOS ANGELES — Democratic j
invested at the direction of the ing connections should a similar
to the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Home on a 60-day furlough, Pte."
general membership.
group be set up here.
nominee for vice-president of the Hashizume who are market garUnited
States Senator John! oeners in the- area, for a Japa McMillan said that there were
Nor are these associations de
There are many problems to
voted entirely to making money. organize a group here, to be sure, Sparkman declared that the pa nese dinner, the bride met her unlimited opportunities in Japan
for positions and careers and may
Members and their families hold 1but we feel it’s worth considering. triotic and cooperative attitude of mother-in-law, Mrs. Leo Venne,
Nisei leaders such as Mike Masa where the two hugged each oth return there as a civilian.
The Japanese girl who speaks
oka contributed greatly toward er. The girl had sobbed, “Mama,
m
a halting English, said of the
the sympathetic government poli Mama, Mama”, as she threw her
cy which motivated the War Re self into the arms of her hus country she had sen, “So much
land, so much, and so few people.
location Authority.
band’s mother.
No people seen I—so much of
u Sen. John Sparkman, Alabama
Prior to reaching Medicine Hat, long train ride. Oh, this Canada
Ilbera1’” met a group of Nisei the couple was given a welcome
REEDLEY, Calif. — Torrance been travelling about 100 miles
is so wonderful.”
emocrats of Los Angeles during and gifts at the Calgary station.
Minoru-Oishi, 27. and his nephew, an hour at the time.
Another soldier, Pte. Tony Deo
f
i
hlS Labor Day weekend visit to Fte. McMillan was given a white
Stanley Shimono, 9, were killed
maris,
was reported by his sister
Ihe impact of the plane hitting make the statement.
instantly on Labor Day when
cowboy
hat
from
Mayor
Don
Mac
Mrs.
John
McArady of Medicine
the line was so powerful that it
“A less cooperative and more
Luen bniau
u^u
,
, .
—vFtlaUVC ana mo
their
small piane
plane crasnea
crashed into a
kay of Calgary and h salute and Hat, of marrying a Japanese girl
vineyard after striking a 30-foot cr
occupan s out of the belligerent attitude might hai, , .
—ive handshake from Col M t
and believedto be coming home.
t
ted in considerably harsher Rome, army commandant r
high power line which catapulted
Oisln was employed as a mech- ^eatment and would have caused Calgary area.
‘
t K'
the craft down.
“Of the civil rights conferred,
Wreckage was scattered over anic in a San Diego aircraft fac the kxss of much goodwill which
“Can you imagine a staff col- none is clearer and few more
several hundred feet but the tory and had been taking his the" Japanese evacuees gained be- cnel coming up and saluting a vital than the right to buy a
cause of their helpful spirit,
plane did not catch fire. It had nephew out for a ride.
and live in it.”—Justice
buck private?”, Pte. McMillan home
Paul Vallee cJrr
' ~JUStlce
Sparkman said.
1 ’ CaW°mia Appellate
exclaimed happily.
[ Court.
t
Over 300 Welcome War
Bride At Alberta Town
)
Nisei Pilot, Nephew Killed
In California Plane Crash
Page 2
PAGE 2
THE NEW CANADIAN
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Page 7
KI
Saturday, September 13, 1952
THE NEW CANADIAN
CANADA JUDO FEDERATION FORMED,
AUTHORITY ON JAPAN HEADS GROUP
Whole Family Sees
14-Year-Old Get
Novice Tennis Cup
PAGE 7
Buzzers Capitalize on Errors to Snatch
Sunday League Playoff Opener from Busseis
Enthu&iRsts in the art of iuHn
o
Engand members of the Yudansha r
Umi and Dan Baker,
Bj
The first game of the Toronto Tanaka, Min Nagata and Aki Ko
. _c 1 uuansna- I sh 5PPratO7»iAn. G hsh
XT-1-secretaries; G. Nakahara and
The entire Yamamoto family
lai (Black Belt Association) met
I
Nisei
Sunday League finals
•
Japanese secre attended the presentation cere I went to Buzzers, 8-7, after the yanagi, 2 for 5. In the Busse
on Aug. 31 and decided to form
cause, Muts Kinoshita and Kunchtary; M. Sakata and Frank Good- mony at the Fifth Nisei Open
a Canada Judo Federation em
Tennis Presentation Dance at | Busseis had led most of the way. Suyama, 2 for 5, and Make
enough, treasurer
S. Nakamubracing all provincial units ac
UNF
Hall last night to see one Five runs in an error-filled Uyeda, 2-run single, were tops.
ra, Y. Kimura and K. Ryoji, aud
ross the country.
Tommy Nagano hurled the dis
itors; T. Sumi, chairman of di member of the family carry away eighth inning salted the game
.The meeting held at the Cana- rectors.
the Fuzzy Fujiwara Novice Tro away for the winners.
tance for the win, allowing eight
aian Legion Hall decided to ser
Bussei
piled
up
an
early
lead
phy,
symbolic
of
beginners
suprei
hits
while loser Ken Izumi was
Diiectors are M. Ishibashi, Y.
headquarters of the newly foundmacy.
when
they
scored
five
runs
in
the
touched for 10 blows.
Mukai, M. Hatashita, J. Shimizu,
e$ federation in Toronto and also
second
frame
on
three
hits,
two
In the afternoon exhibition tilt,
while committee members are
Fourteen-year-old Sonny Ya
adopted by-laws and a constitu
walks
and
one
costly
Buzzer
er
the Sunday League All-Stars bat
T. Umetsu, M. Kawasaki, Baker, mamoto, son of Nisei parents,
tion, although further study wil.
ror.
The
league
leaders
came
tled to a 2-2 deadlock after nine
Goodenough, G. Nakahara, h’ Mr. and Mrs. Toe Yamamoto, and
be made on the latter by a 12innings.
Kawano, J. Shimizu, H. Sano, M. sister Nana who also made a fine back in the third with three runs
man committee.
Games tomorrow, Sept. 14,
Hatashita, and M. Umetsu.
showing- in the Ladies “B” series on four mighty hits and a walk
Elected as president of the
were all present. Youthful Sonny to make the score 5-3. Three starting from 9 a.m., will pit Bus
federation was Dr. E. Herbert
who has held a racquet in his scoreless innings f ollowed with seis vs. Buzzers in the second
Norman, probably Canada’s fore Westerns Jrs. Win,
I Buzzers always threatening" the game of the finals, and an exhi
hands for a mere five weeks,
most authority on Japan. Born in Advance to Finals
I 2-run lead until Busseis added bition game between the Sunday
trounced his opponents who were
Japan of missionary parents, Dr.
two more counters in the seventh, League All-Stars vs. Best Clean
V'estern Juniors qualified for by far his elders in his march to
Norman spent many years in
Mako Uyeda singling- sharply to ers of the Viaduct Senior League,
the title.
Japan and the Orient and has the West Toronto Junior Base
bat in Tosh Hori who had walked game time 1:30 p.m.‘ Both gained
ball
League
finals
when
they
written
several
authoritative
Tournament officials, encour and Muts Kinoshita who had are slated for Christie Pits.
books on Japan. He was chief of ousted Earlscourt three games to aged by the Sansei’s success and singled.
the Canadian Liason Mission in two in the semi-finals. Westerns the interest shown by his par
The eighth inning, however, Accurettes Play
Japan, head of the Asiatic sec took a 7-4 win on Sept. 10 to ents. suggest that other parents saw a complete collapse of the
tion of the External Affairs De knock Earlscourt out of the lim should encourage their offsprings Bussei defense as five errors Oshawa Tomorrow
Accurettes, the Nisei girls’ jupartment and was with the Can ning with Stan Sheldon’s 2-run in sports, thus furthering the were committed, allowing the
nioi
team which is now prepping
homer the big blow of the even cause for better JC athletes. The
adian legation in Tokyo.
Buzzers
to
score
five
times
for
for next year’s entry into the
ing.
officials hope to help such play the 8-7 win.
In addition to the prominent
East
Toronto Ladies Softball
They will now meet Milwaukee ers next year by registering them
Dr. Norman, the executive mem
-Leaders in the winning attack League, will play an exhibition
for the junior title.
in recognized tennis clubs.
bers include the following:
were Fred Tanaka, 2 for 4, Roy
game against a g'irls’ team from
Meanwhile
the
Western
Seniors
A. S. Kamino (Ont. YudanshaOshawa
on Sunday, Sept. 14,
kai president), E. Kagetsu and stumbled along in their semi
starting from 2:30 p.m. at ChrisY. Mukai, vice-presidents; Tsu- final round with Mahers when
ne Pits.
they dropped their third in a row
on Sept. 11 in the best of five
X
series but a protest over the use
A
A
For Finest Qualityof an ineligible player by the
TOKYO — Bantamweight Roy
8 rooms, brick, semi-detached, Shoemen earned them a replav Higa of Honolulu will meet world
Kitchen Utensils
:
hot-water oil-heated, all large of the second game and a slight flyweight champion Yoshio Shi Plans Underway For
Contact
A
rai in a 10-round non-title match
rooms, big income home, value reprieve.
Russ
Cunneyworth
and
Walt
at the Korakuen Baseball Sta
$15,500, Beverley-College, price
PAUL TOKIWA
Tennis Curtailed
Severnuck
failed
to
hold
Mahers
dium in Tokyo on Sept. 27.
$14,500, $4,000 down.
x
:
distributor
of
VANCOUVER
—
Bowling
will
© 8 rooms, detached, brick, gar in the second, tilt, Westerns los
The announcement was formal
A
age, with large lot, Annette and ing 5-2 on Tuesday night. Jack ly made last week in a signing get away to a noisy start among A WEAR-EVER UTENSILS
i
4
Clendennon, $13,900, $5,000 down. Colvin was again the batting ceremony attended by Shirai’s Japanese Canadians here for the I A
for
Aluminum
Goods
© 6 rooms, detached, new brick spark in Westerns’ third game, American manager Dr. Alvin second year at the De Luxe Bowl- I
Co. of Canada
t
Cahn and Reginald Ichinose of ing Centre on Oct. 4 with 14 al £
building, hot-water oil-heated, clouting a homer in the 6-5 loss.
::
X
Honolulu who represented Higa. leys resented from 7 to 9 p.m. A
PHONE: RA. 9066
living dining garage, nice home,
KE.
9717
for
the
Nisei
league.
The two fighters were also pre
f
St. Clair and Christie, $16,500,
HIRANO-YATABE
f
KES. 128 HALLAM ST.
sent.
$7 or $8,000 down.
Vancouver JCCA sports chair
A
A
Toronto
e 6 rooms, new bungalow, Phar RETAIN CROWN
The weight limit for the match man Tad Ikeda points out that
A
has been fixed at 114% pounds. more alleys can be rented in the
macy and Wilson, $15,000, $5,000
Gus Hirano and Marie Yatabe
down.
Promoting the fight is Haku- case of the expected increase of
successfully
defended their Nisei masa Hamamoto of Honolulu who players. All persons who have not
© 5 rooms, bungalow, Kennedy
Rd. and
Malton, $9,000, $1,500 Open mixed doubles crown by heads the International Promo already contacted league officials
defeating Tomio Nishikawa and tions Ltd. It is being sponsored and are interested in participat
down,
need reliable
Amy Tsuruda 6-4, 6-2, last Sun I by the Yomiuri Shimbun, one of ing, should contact Ikeda at HA. | I
*
*
*
answers to your"crisis
day at Earlscourt Park. They had Tokyo’s leading dailies.
2916-R or Nobby Fujisawa at
M. YANAGISAWA
questions"
this year!
advanced to the finals by edging"
The fight which pits two of the CH. 1155 immediately.
Agent for K. Wiles. Realtors
• . • get them in
Yozy Yasui and Toshi Takasaki top boxers in Japan today is ex
Steveston’s Nelson Bros, under I |
West Office: KE. 7941
^-9, 1-5, 6-3 in the semis.
pected to draw a capacity crowd. high-scoring Hiroshi Niwatsukino I £
East Office:
GE. 1178
The
losing
pair
had
squeezed
When
Shirai wrested the world will likely be defending their ?
Residence: 659 Bathurst St.
CH FUSTIAN SCI l^Cl
through
Tosh
Watanabe
and
'flyweight championship from Da 1951-52 laurels. Masao Hatanaka j '
OL. 1427, Toronto
■ ■ > MoNTTpFf 'U
Mich Isozaki 9-7, 8-6 in their do Marino of Honolulu at the has been touted as the bowler to *
"^ ’NJEP^J^
^.
V
( ^
^
semi-final bracket.
Korakuen Stadium last May, a watch this year.
.
j
Tomorrow, Sept. 14, the Bussei record breaking 40,000 fans saw
The early falling of dusk cur- (
Often referred to as z/a
mixed doubles tournament will the bout. Ringside seats will sell tailed the Maria Stella Tennis :
newspaperman's news
continue with defending champs at 1,500 yen ($4) which is top Tournament’s Men’s and Ladies f paper" the MONITOR
WILL
Mossy Mitsui and Mary Ebata price for boxing matches in doubles with only the m i x e d
covers the world with a
playing Yosh Watanabe and Amy Japan.
doubles champs (Margaret Kitanetwork of News Bureaus
Tsuruda at Earlscourt Park from
Manager Ichinose said Higa I gawa and Gordon Nagano) de8 a.m., the winner to meet Fuz who already commenced training I clared- The other finals will not
Order a special intro
YOU . afi
Fujiwara
Inamoto.
The I W1H be in there Pitch>ing and not be played.
t
, and
, , Chic
,
,
—
G.
O.
ductory
subscription
other scheduled match, also at 8 taking at the fight. The 27-veartoday
—
3
months for
a.m., pits Tom Iwasaki and Masa old Hawaiian is presently spar counter this with his speedy foot$3. You'll find the
'
Felix I W°rk an^ scientific tactics taught
I Hamaguchi against Jack Oki and ring- with featherweight
m'ust
J
Chick Fujiwara, the winners to i Colman
ACCEPT
Colman of
of the
the Far
Far East
East Air U™ by his Amedcan manager.
-reading and as necessary i
meet Mush and Ruby Fukumoto. Force, who won his first profm- Should one of Higa’s powerful las
your HOME TOWN I
The winner of the latter match sional fight in Japan early this hooks connect on the champion, M PAPER.
A TRIAL LESSON
will meet Tomio Nishikawa and I month.
he might experience difficulty.
B
?
y
K
°o°
’
.
“
Hi
g
a
is
on
a
diet
now
and
tlm
, Shirai as champion is expected
At No Cost
From 9 a.m., the eagerly await- main worry will be bringing to enter the ring as the favorite.
Or Obligation
e^u'sei men s and ladies singles I down his weight to 114 lbs ” com
So far, Higa has had two fights
The Christian Science Monitor
“blind draw pot tournament” will tinned Ichinose. But he was
TO YOU?
m Japan. In his first appearance
One, Norway St., Boston 1 5, Moss., U.S.A.
be staged The 16 men and eight fident that the Hawaiian has a m July, he TKO’d Japan’s top
Please send me on introductory Moni
adies will pick their own posi- good chance of winning and con
tor subscription—76 issues. I enclose $3.
antamweight. Hiroshi Horiguchi
tional numbers from a box at the eluded that his man will be in ton an in a one-sided 10-round deci
courts
with No. 1 playing No. 2, shape for the big fight.
P sion against featherwieght Aki
DANCE STUDIO
(name)
No. 3 playing No. 4, etc. As time
The fibhf
r
yoshi Akanuma scored an impresis limited, all members are re- I sus
b
TtOry in his second fight.
(address)
KI. 9934 — 714 YONGE
quested to adhere strictly to the initelv Z
H'ga def'
In both cases his slugging ability I
Toronto
enforced schedule.
Lp p
~, . n^ .7e e^ge m hitting
♦city)
(zone)
(state)
| poxver. Shirai is expected to proved too much for his oppon
ents.
1
| PB-1O
FOR SALS
na
20TH CENTURY
*
da
v
n w
ar
Saturday, September 13, 1952
THE NEW CANADIAN
CANADA JUDO FEDERATION FORMED,
AUTHORITY ON JAPAN HEADS GROUP
Whole Family Sees
14-Year-Old Get
Novice Tennis Cup
PAGE 7
Buzzers Capitalize on Errors to Snatch
Sunday League Playoff Opener from Busseis
Enthu&iRsts in the art of iuHn
o
Engand members of the Yudansha r
Umi and Dan Baker,
Bj
The first game of the Toronto Tanaka, Min Nagata and Aki Ko
. _c 1 uuansna- I sh 5PPratO7»iAn. G hsh
XT-1-secretaries; G. Nakahara and
The entire Yamamoto family
lai (Black Belt Association) met
I
Nisei
Sunday League finals
•
Japanese secre attended the presentation cere I went to Buzzers, 8-7, after the yanagi, 2 for 5. In the Busse
on Aug. 31 and decided to form
cause, Muts Kinoshita and Kunchtary; M. Sakata and Frank Good- mony at the Fifth Nisei Open
a Canada Judo Federation em
Tennis Presentation Dance at | Busseis had led most of the way. Suyama, 2 for 5, and Make
enough, treasurer
S. Nakamubracing all provincial units ac
UNF
Hall last night to see one Five runs in an error-filled Uyeda, 2-run single, were tops.
ra, Y. Kimura and K. Ryoji, aud
ross the country.
Tommy Nagano hurled the dis
itors; T. Sumi, chairman of di member of the family carry away eighth inning salted the game
.The meeting held at the Cana- rectors.
the Fuzzy Fujiwara Novice Tro away for the winners.
tance for the win, allowing eight
aian Legion Hall decided to ser
Bussei
piled
up
an
early
lead
phy,
symbolic
of
beginners
suprei
hits
while loser Ken Izumi was
Diiectors are M. Ishibashi, Y.
headquarters of the newly foundmacy.
when
they
scored
five
runs
in
the
touched for 10 blows.
Mukai, M. Hatashita, J. Shimizu,
e$ federation in Toronto and also
second
frame
on
three
hits,
two
In the afternoon exhibition tilt,
while committee members are
Fourteen-year-old Sonny Ya
adopted by-laws and a constitu
walks
and
one
costly
Buzzer
er
the Sunday League All-Stars bat
T. Umetsu, M. Kawasaki, Baker, mamoto, son of Nisei parents,
tion, although further study wil.
ror.
The
league
leaders
came
tled to a 2-2 deadlock after nine
Goodenough, G. Nakahara, h’ Mr. and Mrs. Toe Yamamoto, and
be made on the latter by a 12innings.
Kawano, J. Shimizu, H. Sano, M. sister Nana who also made a fine back in the third with three runs
man committee.
Games tomorrow, Sept. 14,
Hatashita, and M. Umetsu.
showing- in the Ladies “B” series on four mighty hits and a walk
Elected as president of the
were all present. Youthful Sonny to make the score 5-3. Three starting from 9 a.m., will pit Bus
federation was Dr. E. Herbert
who has held a racquet in his scoreless innings f ollowed with seis vs. Buzzers in the second
Norman, probably Canada’s fore Westerns Jrs. Win,
I Buzzers always threatening" the game of the finals, and an exhi
hands for a mere five weeks,
most authority on Japan. Born in Advance to Finals
I 2-run lead until Busseis added bition game between the Sunday
trounced his opponents who were
Japan of missionary parents, Dr.
two more counters in the seventh, League All-Stars vs. Best Clean
V'estern Juniors qualified for by far his elders in his march to
Norman spent many years in
Mako Uyeda singling- sharply to ers of the Viaduct Senior League,
the title.
Japan and the Orient and has the West Toronto Junior Base
bat in Tosh Hori who had walked game time 1:30 p.m.‘ Both gained
ball
League
finals
when
they
written
several
authoritative
Tournament officials, encour and Muts Kinoshita who had are slated for Christie Pits.
books on Japan. He was chief of ousted Earlscourt three games to aged by the Sansei’s success and singled.
the Canadian Liason Mission in two in the semi-finals. Westerns the interest shown by his par
The eighth inning, however, Accurettes Play
Japan, head of the Asiatic sec took a 7-4 win on Sept. 10 to ents. suggest that other parents saw a complete collapse of the
tion of the External Affairs De knock Earlscourt out of the lim should encourage their offsprings Bussei defense as five errors Oshawa Tomorrow
Accurettes, the Nisei girls’ jupartment and was with the Can ning with Stan Sheldon’s 2-run in sports, thus furthering the were committed, allowing the
nioi
team which is now prepping
homer the big blow of the even cause for better JC athletes. The
adian legation in Tokyo.
Buzzers
to
score
five
times
for
for next year’s entry into the
ing.
officials hope to help such play the 8-7 win.
In addition to the prominent
East
Toronto Ladies Softball
They will now meet Milwaukee ers next year by registering them
Dr. Norman, the executive mem
-Leaders in the winning attack League, will play an exhibition
for the junior title.
in recognized tennis clubs.
bers include the following:
were Fred Tanaka, 2 for 4, Roy
game against a g'irls’ team from
Meanwhile
the
Western
Seniors
A. S. Kamino (Ont. YudanshaOshawa
on Sunday, Sept. 14,
kai president), E. Kagetsu and stumbled along in their semi
starting from 2:30 p.m. at ChrisY. Mukai, vice-presidents; Tsu- final round with Mahers when
ne Pits.
they dropped their third in a row
on Sept. 11 in the best of five
X
series but a protest over the use
A
A
For Finest Qualityof an ineligible player by the
TOKYO — Bantamweight Roy
8 rooms, brick, semi-detached, Shoemen earned them a replav Higa of Honolulu will meet world
Kitchen Utensils
:
hot-water oil-heated, all large of the second game and a slight flyweight champion Yoshio Shi Plans Underway For
Contact
A
rai in a 10-round non-title match
rooms, big income home, value reprieve.
Russ
Cunneyworth
and
Walt
at the Korakuen Baseball Sta
$15,500, Beverley-College, price
PAUL TOKIWA
Tennis Curtailed
Severnuck
failed
to
hold
Mahers
dium in Tokyo on Sept. 27.
$14,500, $4,000 down.
x
:
distributor
of
VANCOUVER
—
Bowling
will
© 8 rooms, detached, brick, gar in the second, tilt, Westerns los
The announcement was formal
A
age, with large lot, Annette and ing 5-2 on Tuesday night. Jack ly made last week in a signing get away to a noisy start among A WEAR-EVER UTENSILS
i
4
Clendennon, $13,900, $5,000 down. Colvin was again the batting ceremony attended by Shirai’s Japanese Canadians here for the I A
for
Aluminum
Goods
© 6 rooms, detached, new brick spark in Westerns’ third game, American manager Dr. Alvin second year at the De Luxe Bowl- I
Co. of Canada
t
Cahn and Reginald Ichinose of ing Centre on Oct. 4 with 14 al £
building, hot-water oil-heated, clouting a homer in the 6-5 loss.
::
X
Honolulu who represented Higa. leys resented from 7 to 9 p.m. A
PHONE: RA. 9066
living dining garage, nice home,
KE.
9717
for
the
Nisei
league.
The two fighters were also pre
f
St. Clair and Christie, $16,500,
HIRANO-YATABE
f
KES. 128 HALLAM ST.
sent.
$7 or $8,000 down.
Vancouver JCCA sports chair
A
A
Toronto
e 6 rooms, new bungalow, Phar RETAIN CROWN
The weight limit for the match man Tad Ikeda points out that
A
has been fixed at 114% pounds. more alleys can be rented in the
macy and Wilson, $15,000, $5,000
Gus Hirano and Marie Yatabe
down.
Promoting the fight is Haku- case of the expected increase of
successfully
defended their Nisei masa Hamamoto of Honolulu who players. All persons who have not
© 5 rooms, bungalow, Kennedy
Rd. and
Malton, $9,000, $1,500 Open mixed doubles crown by heads the International Promo already contacted league officials
defeating Tomio Nishikawa and tions Ltd. It is being sponsored and are interested in participat
down,
need reliable
Amy Tsuruda 6-4, 6-2, last Sun I by the Yomiuri Shimbun, one of ing, should contact Ikeda at HA. | I
*
*
*
answers to your"crisis
day at Earlscourt Park. They had Tokyo’s leading dailies.
2916-R or Nobby Fujisawa at
M. YANAGISAWA
questions"
this year!
advanced to the finals by edging"
The fight which pits two of the CH. 1155 immediately.
Agent for K. Wiles. Realtors
• . • get them in
Yozy Yasui and Toshi Takasaki top boxers in Japan today is ex
Steveston’s Nelson Bros, under I |
West Office: KE. 7941
^-9, 1-5, 6-3 in the semis.
pected to draw a capacity crowd. high-scoring Hiroshi Niwatsukino I £
East Office:
GE. 1178
The
losing
pair
had
squeezed
When
Shirai wrested the world will likely be defending their ?
Residence: 659 Bathurst St.
CH FUSTIAN SCI l^Cl
through
Tosh
Watanabe
and
'flyweight championship from Da 1951-52 laurels. Masao Hatanaka j '
OL. 1427, Toronto
■ ■ > MoNTTpFf 'U
Mich Isozaki 9-7, 8-6 in their do Marino of Honolulu at the has been touted as the bowler to *
"^ ’NJEP^J^
^.
V
( ^
^
semi-final bracket.
Korakuen Stadium last May, a watch this year.
.
j
Tomorrow, Sept. 14, the Bussei record breaking 40,000 fans saw
The early falling of dusk cur- (
Often referred to as z/a
mixed doubles tournament will the bout. Ringside seats will sell tailed the Maria Stella Tennis :
newspaperman's news
continue with defending champs at 1,500 yen ($4) which is top Tournament’s Men’s and Ladies f paper" the MONITOR
WILL
Mossy Mitsui and Mary Ebata price for boxing matches in doubles with only the m i x e d
covers the world with a
playing Yosh Watanabe and Amy Japan.
doubles champs (Margaret Kitanetwork of News Bureaus
Tsuruda at Earlscourt Park from
Manager Ichinose said Higa I gawa and Gordon Nagano) de8 a.m., the winner to meet Fuz who already commenced training I clared- The other finals will not
Order a special intro
YOU . afi
Fujiwara
Inamoto.
The I W1H be in there Pitch>ing and not be played.
t
, and
, , Chic
,
,
—
G.
O.
ductory
subscription
other scheduled match, also at 8 taking at the fight. The 27-veartoday
—
3
months for
a.m., pits Tom Iwasaki and Masa old Hawaiian is presently spar counter this with his speedy foot$3. You'll find the
'
Felix I W°rk an^ scientific tactics taught
I Hamaguchi against Jack Oki and ring- with featherweight
m'ust
J
Chick Fujiwara, the winners to i Colman
ACCEPT
Colman of
of the
the Far
Far East
East Air U™ by his Amedcan manager.
-reading and as necessary i
meet Mush and Ruby Fukumoto. Force, who won his first profm- Should one of Higa’s powerful las
your HOME TOWN I
The winner of the latter match sional fight in Japan early this hooks connect on the champion, M PAPER.
A TRIAL LESSON
will meet Tomio Nishikawa and I month.
he might experience difficulty.
B
?
y
K
°o°
’
.
“
Hi
g
a
is
on
a
diet
now
and
tlm
, Shirai as champion is expected
At No Cost
From 9 a.m., the eagerly await- main worry will be bringing to enter the ring as the favorite.
Or Obligation
e^u'sei men s and ladies singles I down his weight to 114 lbs ” com
So far, Higa has had two fights
The Christian Science Monitor
“blind draw pot tournament” will tinned Ichinose. But he was
TO YOU?
m Japan. In his first appearance
One, Norway St., Boston 1 5, Moss., U.S.A.
be staged The 16 men and eight fident that the Hawaiian has a m July, he TKO’d Japan’s top
Please send me on introductory Moni
adies will pick their own posi- good chance of winning and con
tor subscription—76 issues. I enclose $3.
antamweight. Hiroshi Horiguchi
tional numbers from a box at the eluded that his man will be in ton an in a one-sided 10-round deci
courts
with No. 1 playing No. 2, shape for the big fight.
P sion against featherwieght Aki
DANCE STUDIO
(name)
No. 3 playing No. 4, etc. As time
The fibhf
r
yoshi Akanuma scored an impresis limited, all members are re- I sus
b
TtOry in his second fight.
(address)
KI. 9934 — 714 YONGE
quested to adhere strictly to the initelv Z
H'ga def'
In both cases his slugging ability I
Toronto
enforced schedule.
Lp p
~, . n^ .7e e^ge m hitting
♦city)
(zone)
(state)
| poxver. Shirai is expected to proved too much for his oppon
ents.
1
| PB-1O
FOR SALS
na
20TH CENTURY
*
da
v
n w
ar
Page 8
PAGE 8
THE NEW CANADIAN
J
Saturday, September 13, 1952
THE NEW CANADIAN
VIEWS and REVIEWS
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
By K. A.
High Noon: Cinematic Masterpiece
Lucien C. Kurata
Barrister and Solicitor
Notary Public
3 Adelaide St. E., Torons
1st and 2nd Mortgage ^
/
Office EM-4 5259 Res. LY.3427
479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
Having sat through several good movies thus far in 1952,
“
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Dept., Ottawa.
would like to express the opinion that perhaps “High Noon” is one
of Hollywood’s finest products of this or any other year.
There is the mood, the atmosphere and the theme that is all so
appealing in this cinematic masterpiece that is concerned with the
courage and cowardice of human beings and suggests bleakly that
people are more concerned with the selfish end of things rather than
an ideal, this time symbolized in the tiny star of justice.
VANCOUVER — Little co I tion which is essential for the
The epic struggle between the forces of good and evil is impres
^84.. TONCI STRUT. W,M, J
operation had been received from success of the Directory, Inforsively depicted here, aided by the suggestive interplay of Dimitri
the Japanese Canadian public in mat-ion can be sent to any of the
Tiomkin’s moody musical score and the singing of the “High Noon
regard to the proposed 1952 Di following:
X-RAY DIAGNOSIS
Ballad” by Tex Ritter which further heightens the sense of impend
rectory, reports the Vancouver
ing doom. The film seemed like a Dostoyevskian novel (Crime & J CCA Census Committee.
Roosevelt Hotel, 166 E. HastFOR BETTER HEALTH CONSULT.
Punishment) in which good and evil battle.
ings St., MA. 4057; Seiji Homma,
The
Committee
had
requested
Not the least of the elements that make this movie an artistic
Great Northern Cannery, Sher
triumph, is actor Gary Cooper, usually a stock stereotype in most of all persons over 16 years of age man, B. C., .West 1661/Mickey
* DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC
his films, but thoroughly convincing here as the town marshall'who whose names had not appeared Nakashima, 3556 West 1st Ave.,
699 YONGE ST
lealizes, perhaps unheroically in comparison to the general run of in the 1951 directory to report CE. 7688; Genichi Ohashi, 4868
OFFICE RA. 6549
(YONGE AT BLOO )
their
names,
addresses
and
phone
RES. MI. 6364
TORONTO
}
insipid v esterns, that he must kill or be killed, consequently writing
Walden St., EM. 2594; Yukio
numbers, or* to report any errors
out his last will before going out to battle.
Matsuba, 1111 Davie St., PA.
in
the
old
directory.
Up
to
this
It is not difficult to sympathize with this gaunt marshall who
2990; Nobby Fujisawa, 2165 W.
almost singlehandedly kills the advancing gang of three ruffians date, the committee has not re 3rd. Ave., CH. 1155.
while the rest of the town cowers under bed-sheets. But one wonders ceived the co-operation it had
asked.
Donations, particularly from
310 BLOOR ST. WEST
about his cynicism as he throws the symbol of justice, the tin star,
JC
businessmen,
will
be
gratefully
TORONTO, ONT.
The number of new names have
into the dust in the finale, and whether it was really good or evil that
accepted
for
the
new
Directory.
was the victor.
been doubled through research
tT/amao/ea
“High Noon” is a tremendously absorbing and satisfying film. but the list will not likely be com- No results have been reported
concerning
the
JCCA
Welfare
piled until the Fund Drive has
OPTOMETRIST
As such, it is a rare specimen.
been completed, The Directory, Committee’s request for old mag
PHONE RA. 8137
first planned to be published in azines to be sent to patients at
Acknowledgements
September, may not be out until the TB Sanitorium. Persons wish
late this year or perhaps in 1953. ing to do so should contact the
The New Canadian acknow
ledges with thanks generous do
The Committee' is therefore Roosevelt Hotel.
nation^ from the following:
once again asking for co-opera— Genichi Ohashi
I F. A. Brewin, Q.C.
Mr. H. Kono, Toronto.
EVERY SUNDAY
Sundays 2-5 p.m.
Mr. Ikichi Azuma, Toronto, on
Barrister & Solicitor
I
son
’
s
marriage.
Tuesday Classes Will
Mr. Kiyozo Kawai, Hamilton,
Cameron, Weldon,
Open Within Month
! on son's marriage.
Brewin & McCallum
Mr. and Mrs. S. Funamoto, Ha
U.N.F. HALL
milton on son’s marriage.
372 Bay St., Toronto
FEMALE HELP WANTED
Ml*. Yakichi Shoji, Steveston,
HELP WANTED
GIRL CLERK, full or part- I
Archie Miyashita
B.C.
Telephone EM. 3-4391
)
PHONE MI. 1612
Embassy of Japan and the Ja time. Apply Service Fruit Mar _ SALES girl foi' grocery stor
panese Red Cross.
ket, 468 Bloor St.. West Toron- in Leaside, also delivery bov
Phone MA. 9419. Toronto.
Mr. and Mrs. V. Saito, Toronto, tD-L2-_I733-_
on birth of daughter. TWO STORir~GiRLSr~Fteady
Air. and Mrs. S. Tamane, Ha employment and g’ood wages. I Phone MU, 1528, Toronto.
MOVING TO B. C.?
milton, on son’s marriage.
Phone HA. 6550, Toronto.
I
MAN to learn cushion
Contact
Mr. and Mrs. F. Nabata, Mag
GIRL
for
general
work
in
dry
S
t
^^V
’
S
01816
^
trade.
Phone
JIM KAKUTANI
na Bay, B.C., on birth of daugh
cleaning plant. Phone HA. 6550, MU. 1528, Toronto.
ter.
H.
A.
ROBERTS LTD.,
We have no
Toronto.
EXPERIENCED Hoffman
933 West Pender St.,
service charges.
~TW0 HAT-CHECK girls, for presser, piece work or salary,
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
Vancouver, B. C.
steady work. Phone OL. 2361
Air. Sam Hagino and R. Hagi Lichee Garden. Phone WA. 8444, To %
Established 32 Years
or Phone LL- 004.8,’
ask for Mr. Kimura. (Toronto). ’ I
no, formerly of 317 Monarch Park
Gladstone Ave., Toronto.
Members of Vancouver
STENOGRAPHER, efficient at f
Ave., have moved to 188 GlenMAN
experienced
or
willing
to
Real Estate Board
shorthand and typing, respons
Cedar Road, Toronto.
earn,
immediately,
in
meta
1
ible position in pleasant, office.
Phone MArine 6421
Phone EM. 4 - 2325, ask foi' Mr. I trades, soldering, buffing, cast. TRAVELLING TO
Day or Night
Paulin.
ino, spinning. Good wages, steady
JAPAN
H Fall Suits & Topcoats
I
DENTAL assistant, practice employment. Apply Empire Sil
versmiths Ltd., 16 Ripley Ave
Tailored to Measure
limited to children. Phone KI. Toronto,
MU. 7249.
’’
8828, Thursday afternoon, TorMICHI
ASHIKAWA
|
Or bringing
onto.
237 Seaton St. — Toronto^
someone over?
FOR RENT
I
OPERATORS for blouses and
We represent
lingerie. Apply Style-Rite Blouse
Telephone RA. 2618
ROOMS, unfurnished, I
all lines including
Ltd., 489 College at Markham or
I
preferably
young couple, central
American President,
44 Camden St., Toronto.
OPTOMETRISTS
Canadian
Pacific,
location. Phone MI. 7497. aft^7
p.m.
Pan American, and
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
More Co-Operation on Proposed Vancouver
‘52 Directory Sought by Census Committee
r
DANCE CLASSES
TORIC OPTICAL
Complete Care
ROOMS, unfurnished.
I j, FRED LIVING quarters for
I family including telephone, heat,
couple- Phone CL.
For Your Eyes
tor full information
I electricity, in exchange for cator rates.
A country service station I ering- service to women’s organiunfurnished, ,
and repair shop, in Fraser I zation. Good potential income for
adult ^milv I
Valley, B. C. Living quar I ^.or“3n T v'’ith working husband. Piefened. Apply 126 Grace St?,
Phone KI. 8012, Mrs. Sugai 44
1oronto.
’
9
ters included.
I St- George St., Toronto. _______
UNFURNqSHED~^T~^
TOUNG GIRL for general
> 118 W. HASTINGS ST.
Apply L. Forrest, 260 E. I housework, nice home, four ad sink, phone OL. 5658, Toronto.
ults. Phone LY. 5919, 132 KinusVANCOUVER, B. C.
4th Ave., Vancouver, B. C.
I way St., Toronto.
Patronize
I BUSINESS GIRL or student
I room and board in exchange for
Our Advertisers
duties and babv-sitting
Phone OR. 5923. Toronto.
EXPERIENCED cook-general
WELCOME NISEI & ISSEI!
desired for family of two or pos
sibly three adults and one 8-year• For Wedding Receptions
I \ n C1’^?? S°°d Vancouver home.
JUST ARRIVED
:. . facilities and comfortable
• For Private or Club Parties
hying quarters, liberal wages and
In All Colours
I tune oft. Write enclosing refer
FOR LADIES: Size 1 up to 11
— AIR-CONDITIONED —
ence or telephone Mrs F L
FOR MEN: Scott-McHale, Size 4 up to 14
Glasgow. 4612 Pine Crescent.'
Vancouver 9. B. C.. CEDAR 361L
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
I .SCHOOL GIRL, to live in help
QUEEN ST- W- ~ ME- 1931 — TORONTO
11 p. ®ESTS»BaKT
with evening meals and small
MAIL ORDERS SHIPPED COAST-TO-COAST C. O. D.
household duties, full year school
II Elizabeth St.
—
Torontc.
™
!
?
preferablle.
remuneration.
- (1 Telephone EM. 4-5935.
> o81o Angus Dr., Vancouver, B. C.
Northwest Airlines.
Write or call
SMALL SIZE SHOES
™
I
a
v.’
lclllullCLdllUn.
CHINA
THE NEW CANADIAN
J
Saturday, September 13, 1952
THE NEW CANADIAN
VIEWS and REVIEWS
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
By K. A.
High Noon: Cinematic Masterpiece
Lucien C. Kurata
Barrister and Solicitor
Notary Public
3 Adelaide St. E., Torons
1st and 2nd Mortgage ^
/
Office EM-4 5259 Res. LY.3427
479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
Having sat through several good movies thus far in 1952,
“
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Dept., Ottawa.
would like to express the opinion that perhaps “High Noon” is one
of Hollywood’s finest products of this or any other year.
There is the mood, the atmosphere and the theme that is all so
appealing in this cinematic masterpiece that is concerned with the
courage and cowardice of human beings and suggests bleakly that
people are more concerned with the selfish end of things rather than
an ideal, this time symbolized in the tiny star of justice.
VANCOUVER — Little co I tion which is essential for the
The epic struggle between the forces of good and evil is impres
^84.. TONCI STRUT. W,M, J
operation had been received from success of the Directory, Inforsively depicted here, aided by the suggestive interplay of Dimitri
the Japanese Canadian public in mat-ion can be sent to any of the
Tiomkin’s moody musical score and the singing of the “High Noon
regard to the proposed 1952 Di following:
X-RAY DIAGNOSIS
Ballad” by Tex Ritter which further heightens the sense of impend
rectory, reports the Vancouver
ing doom. The film seemed like a Dostoyevskian novel (Crime & J CCA Census Committee.
Roosevelt Hotel, 166 E. HastFOR BETTER HEALTH CONSULT.
Punishment) in which good and evil battle.
ings St., MA. 4057; Seiji Homma,
The
Committee
had
requested
Not the least of the elements that make this movie an artistic
Great Northern Cannery, Sher
triumph, is actor Gary Cooper, usually a stock stereotype in most of all persons over 16 years of age man, B. C., .West 1661/Mickey
* DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC
his films, but thoroughly convincing here as the town marshall'who whose names had not appeared Nakashima, 3556 West 1st Ave.,
699 YONGE ST
lealizes, perhaps unheroically in comparison to the general run of in the 1951 directory to report CE. 7688; Genichi Ohashi, 4868
OFFICE RA. 6549
(YONGE AT BLOO )
their
names,
addresses
and
phone
RES. MI. 6364
TORONTO
}
insipid v esterns, that he must kill or be killed, consequently writing
Walden St., EM. 2594; Yukio
numbers, or* to report any errors
out his last will before going out to battle.
Matsuba, 1111 Davie St., PA.
in
the
old
directory.
Up
to
this
It is not difficult to sympathize with this gaunt marshall who
2990; Nobby Fujisawa, 2165 W.
almost singlehandedly kills the advancing gang of three ruffians date, the committee has not re 3rd. Ave., CH. 1155.
while the rest of the town cowers under bed-sheets. But one wonders ceived the co-operation it had
asked.
Donations, particularly from
310 BLOOR ST. WEST
about his cynicism as he throws the symbol of justice, the tin star,
JC
businessmen,
will
be
gratefully
TORONTO, ONT.
The number of new names have
into the dust in the finale, and whether it was really good or evil that
accepted
for
the
new
Directory.
was the victor.
been doubled through research
tT/amao/ea
“High Noon” is a tremendously absorbing and satisfying film. but the list will not likely be com- No results have been reported
concerning
the
JCCA
Welfare
piled until the Fund Drive has
OPTOMETRIST
As such, it is a rare specimen.
been completed, The Directory, Committee’s request for old mag
PHONE RA. 8137
first planned to be published in azines to be sent to patients at
Acknowledgements
September, may not be out until the TB Sanitorium. Persons wish
late this year or perhaps in 1953. ing to do so should contact the
The New Canadian acknow
ledges with thanks generous do
The Committee' is therefore Roosevelt Hotel.
nation^ from the following:
once again asking for co-opera— Genichi Ohashi
I F. A. Brewin, Q.C.
Mr. H. Kono, Toronto.
EVERY SUNDAY
Sundays 2-5 p.m.
Mr. Ikichi Azuma, Toronto, on
Barrister & Solicitor
I
son
’
s
marriage.
Tuesday Classes Will
Mr. Kiyozo Kawai, Hamilton,
Cameron, Weldon,
Open Within Month
! on son's marriage.
Brewin & McCallum
Mr. and Mrs. S. Funamoto, Ha
U.N.F. HALL
milton on son’s marriage.
372 Bay St., Toronto
FEMALE HELP WANTED
Ml*. Yakichi Shoji, Steveston,
HELP WANTED
GIRL CLERK, full or part- I
Archie Miyashita
B.C.
Telephone EM. 3-4391
)
PHONE MI. 1612
Embassy of Japan and the Ja time. Apply Service Fruit Mar _ SALES girl foi' grocery stor
panese Red Cross.
ket, 468 Bloor St.. West Toron- in Leaside, also delivery bov
Phone MA. 9419. Toronto.
Mr. and Mrs. V. Saito, Toronto, tD-L2-_I733-_
on birth of daughter. TWO STORir~GiRLSr~Fteady
Air. and Mrs. S. Tamane, Ha employment and g’ood wages. I Phone MU, 1528, Toronto.
MOVING TO B. C.?
milton, on son’s marriage.
Phone HA. 6550, Toronto.
I
MAN to learn cushion
Contact
Mr. and Mrs. F. Nabata, Mag
GIRL
for
general
work
in
dry
S
t
^^V
’
S
01816
^
trade.
Phone
JIM KAKUTANI
na Bay, B.C., on birth of daugh
cleaning plant. Phone HA. 6550, MU. 1528, Toronto.
ter.
H.
A.
ROBERTS LTD.,
We have no
Toronto.
EXPERIENCED Hoffman
933 West Pender St.,
service charges.
~TW0 HAT-CHECK girls, for presser, piece work or salary,
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
Vancouver, B. C.
steady work. Phone OL. 2361
Air. Sam Hagino and R. Hagi Lichee Garden. Phone WA. 8444, To %
Established 32 Years
or Phone LL- 004.8,’
ask for Mr. Kimura. (Toronto). ’ I
no, formerly of 317 Monarch Park
Gladstone Ave., Toronto.
Members of Vancouver
STENOGRAPHER, efficient at f
Ave., have moved to 188 GlenMAN
experienced
or
willing
to
Real Estate Board
shorthand and typing, respons
Cedar Road, Toronto.
earn,
immediately,
in
meta
1
ible position in pleasant, office.
Phone MArine 6421
Phone EM. 4 - 2325, ask foi' Mr. I trades, soldering, buffing, cast. TRAVELLING TO
Day or Night
Paulin.
ino, spinning. Good wages, steady
JAPAN
H Fall Suits & Topcoats
I
DENTAL assistant, practice employment. Apply Empire Sil
versmiths Ltd., 16 Ripley Ave
Tailored to Measure
limited to children. Phone KI. Toronto,
MU. 7249.
’’
8828, Thursday afternoon, TorMICHI
ASHIKAWA
|
Or bringing
onto.
237 Seaton St. — Toronto^
someone over?
FOR RENT
I
OPERATORS for blouses and
We represent
lingerie. Apply Style-Rite Blouse
Telephone RA. 2618
ROOMS, unfurnished, I
all lines including
Ltd., 489 College at Markham or
I
preferably
young couple, central
American President,
44 Camden St., Toronto.
OPTOMETRISTS
Canadian
Pacific,
location. Phone MI. 7497. aft^7
p.m.
Pan American, and
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
More Co-Operation on Proposed Vancouver
‘52 Directory Sought by Census Committee
r
DANCE CLASSES
TORIC OPTICAL
Complete Care
ROOMS, unfurnished.
I j, FRED LIVING quarters for
I family including telephone, heat,
couple- Phone CL.
For Your Eyes
tor full information
I electricity, in exchange for cator rates.
A country service station I ering- service to women’s organiunfurnished, ,
and repair shop, in Fraser I zation. Good potential income for
adult ^milv I
Valley, B. C. Living quar I ^.or“3n T v'’ith working husband. Piefened. Apply 126 Grace St?,
Phone KI. 8012, Mrs. Sugai 44
1oronto.
’
9
ters included.
I St- George St., Toronto. _______
UNFURNqSHED~^T~^
TOUNG GIRL for general
> 118 W. HASTINGS ST.
Apply L. Forrest, 260 E. I housework, nice home, four ad sink, phone OL. 5658, Toronto.
ults. Phone LY. 5919, 132 KinusVANCOUVER, B. C.
4th Ave., Vancouver, B. C.
I way St., Toronto.
Patronize
I BUSINESS GIRL or student
I room and board in exchange for
Our Advertisers
duties and babv-sitting
Phone OR. 5923. Toronto.
EXPERIENCED cook-general
WELCOME NISEI & ISSEI!
desired for family of two or pos
sibly three adults and one 8-year• For Wedding Receptions
I \ n C1’^?? S°°d Vancouver home.
JUST ARRIVED
:. . facilities and comfortable
• For Private or Club Parties
hying quarters, liberal wages and
In All Colours
I tune oft. Write enclosing refer
FOR LADIES: Size 1 up to 11
— AIR-CONDITIONED —
ence or telephone Mrs F L
FOR MEN: Scott-McHale, Size 4 up to 14
Glasgow. 4612 Pine Crescent.'
Vancouver 9. B. C.. CEDAR 361L
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
I .SCHOOL GIRL, to live in help
QUEEN ST- W- ~ ME- 1931 — TORONTO
11 p. ®ESTS»BaKT
with evening meals and small
MAIL ORDERS SHIPPED COAST-TO-COAST C. O. D.
household duties, full year school
II Elizabeth St.
—
Torontc.
™
!
?
preferablle.
remuneration.
- (1 Telephone EM. 4-5935.
> o81o Angus Dr., Vancouver, B. C.
Northwest Airlines.
Write or call
SMALL SIZE SHOES
™
I
a
v.’
lclllullCLdllUn.
CHINA