Page 1
ANNUAL
HOLIDAY
rom
Another year. Another Christ
mas edition. And writing this
final column on a Sunday morn
ing just before the deadline and
looking out into the refreshing
sight of a snow-covered street
g
one can almost feel some semb
lance of sense and sensibility
come seeping back into the mind
and body which had been sorely
tried by several weeks of pre
£
occupation witn the holidav ef
the Japanese Canadians, and
fort.
which saw a wholesale change in
The Christmas edition which
iheir economic and social status
I
has
become
a
hoary
tradition
i the JC population has decreased
8
with The New Canadian since
?'V ^SC’ Thc PoPulMion now is
1939, is what one might call the
21,(563, as compared to 23.149 in
annual bane of its editors. But
1941. These are figures gleaned
here it is, cover girl and'all, and
trom a special press-time release
we hope you like it.
to The New Canadi n of the JC
An interesting feature of this
population figur
of the 1951
1952 version is the return of some
of the “veteran” writers whose
The ten-year period has seen
disappearance from the NC pages
an actual decline in the Japanese
has been sadly felt during the
population, the natural increase
recent years.
over the period offset by the re
turn flow to Japan. Another note
Frank Moritsugu, a former staff
worthy
pomt is the effects of the
member and erstwhile editor of
The Varisity, the U. of Toronto
evacuation and relocation on proundergraduate daily, who is pres
Ontario, for example, where
ently working at C.B.C., has
I‘ere is tJie la**gest concentration
favored us with “Christmas Needs
M
Japanese Canadians, had only
A Child’s Eyes”, a look at the
234 persons of Japanese origin
commercialism of Christmas to- I
in
1941. Todays there is 8,581
day and his answer to it.
j
9
representing 39.6% of the total
. Sue Sada, long a familiar name |
JC
population. A startling con
with NC readers, and one of the I
trast is British Columbia which
most outright of the Nisei writ- I
had 95.3% of the JC population
ers, also looks at Christmas in I
her long story-article, “Saturn- I
m 1941 and although still con
taining the second largest group,
aha and Christmas”. It would be I
/,169, now only represents 33.1%
interesting to note the reader re- I
of the total population. Third in
action between Moritsugu’s and I
rank is Alberta, booming froni
Sue Sada’s respective efforts.
.
234 in 1941 to 3,336 by 1951. a
Another veteran to return is
rise from 2.5% to 15.4% of the
R. I., who now makes his home in
total
population.
Hamilton as a school-teacher,
By contrast to these figures,
who wonders what happened to
IT HAPPENS EVERY CHRISTMAS and
it is noted that Newfoundland
the Nisei spirit of yore in “The
kids from six to sixty always find delight in doin^ June Watanabe of Toronto demonstrates here what
has
the smallest JC population,
Changing Times”.
decorating the Christmas tree.
a total of two residing in Can
And there is W. K. who tells
photo by Jack Hemmy
ada’s easternmost and newest
us that he would rather not have ens of Ottawa are newcomers as
province.
an autobiographical sketch, pre is Masashi Kawasaki of London.
An interesting point is the
ferring instead to slip into the Then there is the amusing bit of
breakdown by males and females.
anonymity of the older type Ni dialogue by Richard Arima on
First introduced to the world
There has been no appreciable
seis, “retiring into the comfort Nisei girls—always a meaty top at 1:05 a.m. on Jan. 1, 1952, bridge being the winner of the difference in the female column,
first “contest” in 1951. But babies
ing world of slippers, books, and ic for provocative discussion when -orenda Joyce Matsue, daughter
born a week or more after Jan. I a meie total of three persons
males get together and forever,
fireplace”.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sakata of can easily win the honor since a being added to the 1941 figure.
And of course, we' have regular J seems, a perennial topic on Sw> ift Current, Sask., became The glance at the personal files show But with the male population, '
columnist Cinderella, and we are these pages.
New Canadian’s “First Baby of that only three babies were born there has been a decrease of 1,489,
“
M.
Sitarr
”
who
certainly
stir
truly fortunate in having a writ
1952”. Now who will be her suc on New Year’s Day during the । representing practically all of the
red
up
a
lot
of
controversy
over
j ten-year decrease of the total JC
er of her calibre gracing our pag
cessor, the NC’s first baby of past seven years.
his
comments
on
Buddhism
in
I
1953
?
(population. Today there are 11,59?
es with her weekly Femme Fare.
last year’s issue, has come up
Patents of baoies born early in
males to 10,066 females whereas
'■Then there is Ottawa’s Jack
with a relatively new topic in
1953
or
friends
knowing
of
such
in
1941, there were 13,086 males
Nakamoto who in between hob
“Let's Talk About Mom”, a sub- blessed events are asked to sub
to 10,063 females.
nobbing with the elite of the
ject made popular by author Phil- mit “entries” to the NC’s third
(Shortage of space curtails the
Japan Embassy and writing his
lip Wylie. M. Sitarr is a graduate
stork
derby.
They
should
send
printing
of other provincial fig
‘Across My Mind” column, has
ih psychology and is presently the names of the parents, ad
ures, distribution by cities, ratio
contributed a story and a cartoon. working at the U.
of Toronto’s dress. sex of the baby and the
of
Issei to Nisei, and by occupa
We admit to placing a lot of psychiatric clinic.
tions, but they will be forthcom
time of the birth in hour and
emphasis on Christmas articles
In closing, this issue goes to minutes. The time should be veriing
m further issues).
^nd stories this year, perhaps you with the best wishes of a
by the attending physician
more so than formerly, but we Merry Xmas and a Happy New or
EXTRA COPIES XMAS
inrse. Eligibility is based on
hope the other articles will bal
Year from T. U. and Ken Mori,
or both parents being of JaEDITION AVAILABLE
ance them out. There is an article those stalwarts of the Japanese
panese orig
Extra copies of the Christmas
in
on Kaz Suga, perhaps the “dean” section; Hajime Doi and Rozie
Canada.
edHion can be sent to friends and
of Nisei baseball players, who is
Ogaki, our gallant compositors
The report should be sent to
’
Cfttives in Japan and elsewhere.
reported to be still lustily clout- who sweated mightily over the
this office as soon as possible and
They will be mailed upon sendmg the ball in the same manner printer’s ink and type; the many
BOv
letter
ilian
Jan.
1
/
to
be
clij°f fauces and addresses and
that we, as a mere fledgling, helpers; and yours truly who is
ible
for
the
honor
and
an
award.
I
he
remittance of 25 cents per
used to admire back in the Powell breathing a deep sigh now that
copy./
In
the
past
two
years,
the
winstreet and ghost-town days. Y. this issue is finally being put to
n ei e oorn on New ^eHr;s
New subscribers will have a
BRENDA JOYCE SAKATA
T. of Montreal and Rav Stev- “bed’
Robert Nakamura of LethCGhj Gf the edition sent to them
e 1, 1952
upon request.
HOLIDAY
rom
Another year. Another Christ
mas edition. And writing this
final column on a Sunday morn
ing just before the deadline and
looking out into the refreshing
sight of a snow-covered street
g
one can almost feel some semb
lance of sense and sensibility
come seeping back into the mind
and body which had been sorely
tried by several weeks of pre
£
occupation witn the holidav ef
the Japanese Canadians, and
fort.
which saw a wholesale change in
The Christmas edition which
iheir economic and social status
I
has
become
a
hoary
tradition
i the JC population has decreased
8
with The New Canadian since
?'V ^SC’ Thc PoPulMion now is
1939, is what one might call the
21,(563, as compared to 23.149 in
annual bane of its editors. But
1941. These are figures gleaned
here it is, cover girl and'all, and
trom a special press-time release
we hope you like it.
to The New Canadi n of the JC
An interesting feature of this
population figur
of the 1951
1952 version is the return of some
of the “veteran” writers whose
The ten-year period has seen
disappearance from the NC pages
an actual decline in the Japanese
has been sadly felt during the
population, the natural increase
recent years.
over the period offset by the re
turn flow to Japan. Another note
Frank Moritsugu, a former staff
worthy
pomt is the effects of the
member and erstwhile editor of
The Varisity, the U. of Toronto
evacuation and relocation on proundergraduate daily, who is pres
Ontario, for example, where
ently working at C.B.C., has
I‘ere is tJie la**gest concentration
favored us with “Christmas Needs
M
Japanese Canadians, had only
A Child’s Eyes”, a look at the
234 persons of Japanese origin
commercialism of Christmas to- I
in
1941. Todays there is 8,581
day and his answer to it.
j
9
representing 39.6% of the total
. Sue Sada, long a familiar name |
JC
population. A startling con
with NC readers, and one of the I
trast is British Columbia which
most outright of the Nisei writ- I
had 95.3% of the JC population
ers, also looks at Christmas in I
her long story-article, “Saturn- I
m 1941 and although still con
taining the second largest group,
aha and Christmas”. It would be I
/,169, now only represents 33.1%
interesting to note the reader re- I
of the total population. Third in
action between Moritsugu’s and I
rank is Alberta, booming froni
Sue Sada’s respective efforts.
.
234 in 1941 to 3,336 by 1951. a
Another veteran to return is
rise from 2.5% to 15.4% of the
R. I., who now makes his home in
total
population.
Hamilton as a school-teacher,
By contrast to these figures,
who wonders what happened to
IT HAPPENS EVERY CHRISTMAS and
it is noted that Newfoundland
the Nisei spirit of yore in “The
kids from six to sixty always find delight in doin^ June Watanabe of Toronto demonstrates here what
has
the smallest JC population,
Changing Times”.
decorating the Christmas tree.
a total of two residing in Can
And there is W. K. who tells
photo by Jack Hemmy
ada’s easternmost and newest
us that he would rather not have ens of Ottawa are newcomers as
province.
an autobiographical sketch, pre is Masashi Kawasaki of London.
An interesting point is the
ferring instead to slip into the Then there is the amusing bit of
breakdown by males and females.
anonymity of the older type Ni dialogue by Richard Arima on
First introduced to the world
There has been no appreciable
seis, “retiring into the comfort Nisei girls—always a meaty top at 1:05 a.m. on Jan. 1, 1952, bridge being the winner of the difference in the female column,
first “contest” in 1951. But babies
ing world of slippers, books, and ic for provocative discussion when -orenda Joyce Matsue, daughter
born a week or more after Jan. I a meie total of three persons
males get together and forever,
fireplace”.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sakata of can easily win the honor since a being added to the 1941 figure.
And of course, we' have regular J seems, a perennial topic on Sw> ift Current, Sask., became The glance at the personal files show But with the male population, '
columnist Cinderella, and we are these pages.
New Canadian’s “First Baby of that only three babies were born there has been a decrease of 1,489,
“
M.
Sitarr
”
who
certainly
stir
truly fortunate in having a writ
1952”. Now who will be her suc on New Year’s Day during the । representing practically all of the
red
up
a
lot
of
controversy
over
j ten-year decrease of the total JC
er of her calibre gracing our pag
cessor, the NC’s first baby of past seven years.
his
comments
on
Buddhism
in
I
1953
?
(population. Today there are 11,59?
es with her weekly Femme Fare.
last year’s issue, has come up
Patents of baoies born early in
males to 10,066 females whereas
'■Then there is Ottawa’s Jack
with a relatively new topic in
1953
or
friends
knowing
of
such
in
1941, there were 13,086 males
Nakamoto who in between hob
“Let's Talk About Mom”, a sub- blessed events are asked to sub
to 10,063 females.
nobbing with the elite of the
ject made popular by author Phil- mit “entries” to the NC’s third
(Shortage of space curtails the
Japan Embassy and writing his
lip Wylie. M. Sitarr is a graduate
stork
derby.
They
should
send
printing
of other provincial fig
‘Across My Mind” column, has
ih psychology and is presently the names of the parents, ad
ures, distribution by cities, ratio
contributed a story and a cartoon. working at the U.
of Toronto’s dress. sex of the baby and the
of
Issei to Nisei, and by occupa
We admit to placing a lot of psychiatric clinic.
tions, but they will be forthcom
time of the birth in hour and
emphasis on Christmas articles
In closing, this issue goes to minutes. The time should be veriing
m further issues).
^nd stories this year, perhaps you with the best wishes of a
by the attending physician
more so than formerly, but we Merry Xmas and a Happy New or
EXTRA COPIES XMAS
inrse. Eligibility is based on
hope the other articles will bal
Year from T. U. and Ken Mori,
or both parents being of JaEDITION AVAILABLE
ance them out. There is an article those stalwarts of the Japanese
panese orig
Extra copies of the Christmas
in
on Kaz Suga, perhaps the “dean” section; Hajime Doi and Rozie
Canada.
edHion can be sent to friends and
of Nisei baseball players, who is
Ogaki, our gallant compositors
The report should be sent to
’
Cfttives in Japan and elsewhere.
reported to be still lustily clout- who sweated mightily over the
this office as soon as possible and
They will be mailed upon sendmg the ball in the same manner printer’s ink and type; the many
BOv
letter
ilian
Jan.
1
/
to
be
clij°f fauces and addresses and
that we, as a mere fledgling, helpers; and yours truly who is
ible
for
the
honor
and
an
award.
I
he
remittance of 25 cents per
used to admire back in the Powell breathing a deep sigh now that
copy./
In
the
past
two
years,
the
winstreet and ghost-town days. Y. this issue is finally being put to
n ei e oorn on New ^eHr;s
New subscribers will have a
BRENDA JOYCE SAKATA
T. of Montreal and Rav Stev- “bed’
Robert Nakamura of LethCGhj Gf the edition sent to them
e 1, 1952
upon request.
Page 2
PAGE 2
NEW
CANADIAN
Wednesday, December 24, 1952
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Page 8
PAGE 8
the
new
THE NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, December 24, 1952
HOLIDAY
HAPPENINGS
_______ ________DECEMBER
24~Toronto. Metropolitan Young People's
Snowflake Frolic, at Club Top Hat,
9-1 a.m.
24—Hamilton. Hamilton Nisei Club Coun
——By CINDERELLA
cil. Third Annual Christmas Dance, at
Rainbow Room, 9 p.m.
26—Montreal. Quebec’JCCA Jamboree,
at Victoria Hall.
.26—Lethbridge. JCCA Annual Snoball, at
The simple tune, “I’m dreaming of a White Christmas” hold,
the Trianon, 9-1 a.m.
for me much of poignancy and pain, of tenderness and quiet iov T
27-28.—Vancouver. Vancouver JCCA
Second Annual Shibai and Varietv
is a tune which draws me, no matter where I chance to be aero.,
Show, at Buddhist Church.
the
miles to a little town lost among mountain peaks, imbedded in
31—Toronto. Tor°nto JCCA New Year's
tve Dance, at Labor Lyceum, 9-1 a.m.
a deep ravine.
31—London. London-St. Thomas JCCA
New Year's Eve Dance, at King St.
., . 'Tm dreaming of a White Christmas”, is only a song, but to me
United Church gym.
It
is a song as personal as my inmost thoughts. And to hear it on
31-Hhbrid^e’ Alberta JCCA "Niseis"
New Year's Eve Mammoth Jamboree,
bps that know not the strangeness of a time cut short from life’,
9-3 a.m.
I
forward
march, when living promised nothing but stagnancv—tn
31—Taber. Taber Y.B.A. New Year's Eve
Dance, at Taber Buddhist-Hall, 9 p.m.
hear R on lips alien to that experience is to me a sacrilege.
31—Raymond. Raymond YBS New Year's
Eve Social, 8-1 a.m.
I
“White Christmas” is a picture which is indelibly fixed upon mv
' ctre
em/Tie
as a medium of expression and news outlet
479 qX& w °f fr® Origin in
'Tm Dreaming Of A White Christmas"
Toronto JCCA
announces its
New Tear's Eve Dance
at the
LABOUR LYCEUM
Wednesday, December 31
am'
n<MSE MAKERS
~
—
ADM
8
JANUARY, 1953
I memory. It means a quiet town where at this time now the snow
1—Vancouver. Vancouver JCCA New fa Is noiselessly all day, and when night descends, from beneath
1 Lear s Dance' at Hastings Auditorium.
balaclavas of white powdery snow the lights of homes glow bri^f
1 Vancouver. New Year reception for
s by the Consul of Japan and Mrs.
with
hope and is reflected in the stars that shine above the glisten
Takeshi Yasukawa, 3:00-5:30
,
3838 Osler St.
P
Wa
Alld 1 Can h6ar the OTnch of ice-crusted snow underfoot
2—Toronto. Kisaragi Club New Year's
Dance, at Polish Alliance Hall, 8 p.m. I and the tingling air, and the strange noises of silence whispering to
omp
Next Issue Out
Wed. January 7
TORONTO JCCA TENNIS CLUB
Co-Presidents:
Min Furukav
Ike Matsuo
ears made acute with too much loneliness. And all around the
mountains tower in peaks, menacing shadows fencing one in or dark
tiXoMnM”68
assurance’ depending on one’s ’mood at
As in -past years, the staff will
. "W“te, Comas’’ is an experience. Christmas came into ghost
be taking a holiday season vaca
vns slowly, surreptitiously, turning up in gay little Christmas
tion before resuming the twiceTV
"ndi*y in R°Sie'S dru»
i” fatturkeyha™
weekly schedule in 1953. The\
Johnny
Harris
’
general
store.
g 1
next issue will be out on. fan. 7.
^reeling
to customers and friends
FELIX FURNITURE STORE
I
H. Yamazaki
&
MR. K. MASAKI
MR. & MRS. Y. MASAKI
CAROL LYNNE
10 Felstead Ave.
Toronto
GE. 1297
TAD & GEORGE MORISHITA
Manager
259 Sherbourne St.
Toronto
Ph: RA. 8243
at New Premises
S
__
986 DOVERCOURT RD.
LA. 2616
TORONTO
•.: X3 X3S3 jSj^SJct X3SXJ Xj^
TOM CHO
II Elizabeth Street
Toronto, Ont.
Ph: EM. 4-5935
1^
M
Men^Bu? ?h P T' ° ’‘
Peac«
Earth, Goodwill toward
Sound m
™S ^ '^ “To Shore P^P’e, human beings
XXfc iiT”
1 had Pasted. -Look girl, take it
Zt
. ,
a” ®mer^ency measure”, came back the reply And
now I was tatog.t ‘'reasonably”, for in making things matter mad,.
more room for pain.
*
*
*
vear^oM
Came from a y°u^ Ia^ not quite eighteen
were ba kZ “ “
I^ scrawl the note read “Gosh, wish we
re back home, even in those damn hills of yours. The tree must
up now, and what we wouldn’t give for a honest to
t
cooked meal! Merry Christmas!”
honest-to-God home-
Merry Christmas from a mere lad
around”. And thinking of riJ i f
/
h
n
«
had been pushed
X^rtaZX\^^^^
cake, we felt the stir oT (ZXi in House “
*
C°U'd
*
tappl"* IheV™™ A di™«r~T^y, the Czechoslovakian
ian drugXre
Prospector, Rosie, the Itaidon general store to vfV7-!113 Alma Harris> °™ers of the Sanuncertain 1 X ^ds th J
*Se
was as
And then Toni t
roared around the eaves of the house,
of his worn hiliackSr
moustache on the sleeve
Our Best Wishes
for
leberry wine and made the
, 0™ ^ ^ ass of home-made huckticulaS yells sot? fa Jot T TSp“h “ a11 the
A Merry Christmas
a privilege
I am h~ ^^ mountains he loved. “Eet is
AndVtting the” 7?eVt^
’ ’ ’ a"d God bl« you all!”
and
uncurtained window the high
° °Se‘ And throu£h the
dark beasts and there wero^t? k
n°W ying Iow Iike friend,y
the radio,, loaned to us for
U.rmng'in the ni^Lt sky. And over
ing of a White Christmas
„e^ngr, came the words “I’m dreamness is a way of the spirit.’ ’ ’
* ^ “^^ 1 ^^ that ha^P’’
A Happy and Prosperous 1953
.‘White Christmas” to me means so many things
^ -acuation ceased
Modiste
to
memory of t™ o^ tlX^
450 Granville St.
> hopeless place. It is a
mattered most was the dailv n„MS ^^ hving, when the thing that
It is the memory of a ttae ™ b T
Kone^ and courage,
-hich is now a ^«^^‘ ™M —r end, but
Berkley Silks Ltd
It IS a renewal of faith in lifflo
everyday-laughing, in everyday hoping nV"1 ^^^ lo™0-’ ’"
people whose hearts
a Son
^ °^ courage
of
defeat.
^ wptp
Sre s0^Iv feed, but1Swho
refused
to admit
460 Granville St.
Vancouver, B. C.
the Denver Road into Sandon B C f
^^ °n a piI^rima^e un
for there the spring water 4 7 +
a refreshin? of the spirit,
shines undimmed
crystal dear
clear and the star of hope
tope? We” * years Iat“’ living
as a^ citizen in a busy niet-
93 Stratford Rd.
*^uipsiead, Montreal, P. Q
Mr. 5 Mrs. HAJIME SUZUKI
KAREN MATSU
LAWRENCE MUTSUMI
655 W. 30th
Vancouver, B C
Just I,k_e tlJe nne j f/ied t° Christmas
know.”
) Mt’ & ^nS^1^3 KADOTA
Kisaragi Club
$
CONSTANCE HIDEKO
1012 W. 57th
Vancouver, B. C.
at Polish Alliance Hall
TT
FRIDAY, JANUARY 2. 1953
^ffT'-jf^^^ 5-p—-String8.12
Orch
p.m.
^S®®^^^®
§
the
new
THE NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, December 24, 1952
HOLIDAY
HAPPENINGS
_______ ________DECEMBER
24~Toronto. Metropolitan Young People's
Snowflake Frolic, at Club Top Hat,
9-1 a.m.
24—Hamilton. Hamilton Nisei Club Coun
——By CINDERELLA
cil. Third Annual Christmas Dance, at
Rainbow Room, 9 p.m.
26—Montreal. Quebec’JCCA Jamboree,
at Victoria Hall.
.26—Lethbridge. JCCA Annual Snoball, at
The simple tune, “I’m dreaming of a White Christmas” hold,
the Trianon, 9-1 a.m.
for me much of poignancy and pain, of tenderness and quiet iov T
27-28.—Vancouver. Vancouver JCCA
Second Annual Shibai and Varietv
is a tune which draws me, no matter where I chance to be aero.,
Show, at Buddhist Church.
the
miles to a little town lost among mountain peaks, imbedded in
31—Toronto. Tor°nto JCCA New Year's
tve Dance, at Labor Lyceum, 9-1 a.m.
a deep ravine.
31—London. London-St. Thomas JCCA
New Year's Eve Dance, at King St.
., . 'Tm dreaming of a White Christmas”, is only a song, but to me
United Church gym.
It
is a song as personal as my inmost thoughts. And to hear it on
31-Hhbrid^e’ Alberta JCCA "Niseis"
New Year's Eve Mammoth Jamboree,
bps that know not the strangeness of a time cut short from life’,
9-3 a.m.
I
forward
march, when living promised nothing but stagnancv—tn
31—Taber. Taber Y.B.A. New Year's Eve
Dance, at Taber Buddhist-Hall, 9 p.m.
hear R on lips alien to that experience is to me a sacrilege.
31—Raymond. Raymond YBS New Year's
Eve Social, 8-1 a.m.
I
“White Christmas” is a picture which is indelibly fixed upon mv
' ctre
em/Tie
as a medium of expression and news outlet
479 qX& w °f fr® Origin in
'Tm Dreaming Of A White Christmas"
Toronto JCCA
announces its
New Tear's Eve Dance
at the
LABOUR LYCEUM
Wednesday, December 31
am'
n<MSE MAKERS
~
—
ADM
8
JANUARY, 1953
I memory. It means a quiet town where at this time now the snow
1—Vancouver. Vancouver JCCA New fa Is noiselessly all day, and when night descends, from beneath
1 Lear s Dance' at Hastings Auditorium.
balaclavas of white powdery snow the lights of homes glow bri^f
1 Vancouver. New Year reception for
s by the Consul of Japan and Mrs.
with
hope and is reflected in the stars that shine above the glisten
Takeshi Yasukawa, 3:00-5:30
,
3838 Osler St.
P
Wa
Alld 1 Can h6ar the OTnch of ice-crusted snow underfoot
2—Toronto. Kisaragi Club New Year's
Dance, at Polish Alliance Hall, 8 p.m. I and the tingling air, and the strange noises of silence whispering to
omp
Next Issue Out
Wed. January 7
TORONTO JCCA TENNIS CLUB
Co-Presidents:
Min Furukav
Ike Matsuo
ears made acute with too much loneliness. And all around the
mountains tower in peaks, menacing shadows fencing one in or dark
tiXoMnM”68
assurance’ depending on one’s ’mood at
As in -past years, the staff will
. "W“te, Comas’’ is an experience. Christmas came into ghost
be taking a holiday season vaca
vns slowly, surreptitiously, turning up in gay little Christmas
tion before resuming the twiceTV
"ndi*y in R°Sie'S dru»
i” fatturkeyha™
weekly schedule in 1953. The\
Johnny
Harris
’
general
store.
g 1
next issue will be out on. fan. 7.
^reeling
to customers and friends
FELIX FURNITURE STORE
I
H. Yamazaki
&
MR. K. MASAKI
MR. & MRS. Y. MASAKI
CAROL LYNNE
10 Felstead Ave.
Toronto
GE. 1297
TAD & GEORGE MORISHITA
Manager
259 Sherbourne St.
Toronto
Ph: RA. 8243
at New Premises
S
__
986 DOVERCOURT RD.
LA. 2616
TORONTO
•.: X3 X3S3 jSj^SJct X3SXJ Xj^
TOM CHO
II Elizabeth Street
Toronto, Ont.
Ph: EM. 4-5935
1^
M
Men^Bu? ?h P T' ° ’‘
Peac«
Earth, Goodwill toward
Sound m
™S ^ '^ “To Shore P^P’e, human beings
XXfc iiT”
1 had Pasted. -Look girl, take it
Zt
. ,
a” ®mer^ency measure”, came back the reply And
now I was tatog.t ‘'reasonably”, for in making things matter mad,.
more room for pain.
*
*
*
vear^oM
Came from a y°u^ Ia^ not quite eighteen
were ba kZ “ “
I^ scrawl the note read “Gosh, wish we
re back home, even in those damn hills of yours. The tree must
up now, and what we wouldn’t give for a honest to
t
cooked meal! Merry Christmas!”
honest-to-God home-
Merry Christmas from a mere lad
around”. And thinking of riJ i f
/
h
n
«
had been pushed
X^rtaZX\^^^^
cake, we felt the stir oT (ZXi in House “
*
C°U'd
*
tappl"* IheV™™ A di™«r~T^y, the Czechoslovakian
ian drugXre
Prospector, Rosie, the Itaidon general store to vfV7-!113 Alma Harris> °™ers of the Sanuncertain 1 X ^ds th J
*Se
was as
And then Toni t
roared around the eaves of the house,
of his worn hiliackSr
moustache on the sleeve
Our Best Wishes
for
leberry wine and made the
, 0™ ^ ^ ass of home-made huckticulaS yells sot? fa Jot T TSp“h “ a11 the
A Merry Christmas
a privilege
I am h~ ^^ mountains he loved. “Eet is
AndVtting the” 7?eVt^
’ ’ ’ a"d God bl« you all!”
and
uncurtained window the high
° °Se‘ And throu£h the
dark beasts and there wero^t? k
n°W ying Iow Iike friend,y
the radio,, loaned to us for
U.rmng'in the ni^Lt sky. And over
ing of a White Christmas
„e^ngr, came the words “I’m dreamness is a way of the spirit.’ ’ ’
* ^ “^^ 1 ^^ that ha^P’’
A Happy and Prosperous 1953
.‘White Christmas” to me means so many things
^ -acuation ceased
Modiste
to
memory of t™ o^ tlX^
450 Granville St.
> hopeless place. It is a
mattered most was the dailv n„MS ^^ hving, when the thing that
It is the memory of a ttae ™ b T
Kone^ and courage,
-hich is now a ^«^^‘ ™M —r end, but
Berkley Silks Ltd
It IS a renewal of faith in lifflo
everyday-laughing, in everyday hoping nV"1 ^^^ lo™0-’ ’"
people whose hearts
a Son
^ °^ courage
of
defeat.
^ wptp
Sre s0^Iv feed, but1Swho
refused
to admit
460 Granville St.
Vancouver, B. C.
the Denver Road into Sandon B C f
^^ °n a piI^rima^e un
for there the spring water 4 7 +
a refreshin? of the spirit,
shines undimmed
crystal dear
clear and the star of hope
tope? We” * years Iat“’ living
as a^ citizen in a busy niet-
93 Stratford Rd.
*^uipsiead, Montreal, P. Q
Mr. 5 Mrs. HAJIME SUZUKI
KAREN MATSU
LAWRENCE MUTSUMI
655 W. 30th
Vancouver, B C
Just I,k_e tlJe nne j f/ied t° Christmas
know.”
) Mt’ & ^nS^1^3 KADOTA
Kisaragi Club
$
CONSTANCE HIDEKO
1012 W. 57th
Vancouver, B. C.
at Polish Alliance Hall
TT
FRIDAY, JANUARY 2. 1953
^ffT'-jf^^^ 5-p—-String8.12
Orch
p.m.
^S®®^^^®
§