Page 1
1953
THE NEW CANADIAN
16 —NO. 45
»nto
I
WEDNESDAY, JUNe7oT1953
HAMILTON NEW HOME
FOR JAPANESE BRIDE
Aiko Saita To Make Concert
Tour, Went to Japan in 1940
HAMILTON
Masao
Kawanami, 30, who became the
first Japanese Canadian soldier
to bring a Japanese war bride to
Canada, will live with his wife
Yoko in Hamilton where he expects to get his overdue discharge and settle down as a
sheetmetal worker, a trade he
learned between wars on a DVA
grant.
While in Vancouver, Yoko,
chic diminutive 23-year-old said
that Vancouvei- traffic was a let
down. “It impressed me more
than anything else,” she said
through her husband. “Tokyo
traffic is much faster
She learned to understand, but
not to talk, English while a stu
dent at the University of Hiro
shima.
Sgt. Kawanami met his wife
while convalescing at Kure after
being wounded in Korea. They
were married a year and a half
ago. He has a brother, Hiroshi,
who enlisted in Japan, fighting in
Korea.
a
JIS
n.
TORONTO, ONT.
TOKYO
A reliable source in Japan said that, in
o-contralto
r
Aiko Saita who was born in Cumberland, B. C., will be leaving Tokyo
for Vancouver on a six-month tour of Canada :and the United States
shortly after her “Sayonara” 1
ibuyn Hall, Tokyo, on
July 13. Her visit will mark th e first time in thirteen years that the
ted to Canada.
recently took pro
cedures for a passport for a trip
San Francisco and Los Angeles.
and is expected to arrive in earlv
She gave hoi farewell recital
August.
in Vancouvei in November.
1939. and enroute to Tokyo,
A member of the Fujiwara
she gave many concerts in
Opera Company. foremost opHawaii.
era group in Japan, she has
In one of her concerts in Can
gained fame in singing the lead
ada, the Issei audience was so
role in the opera “Carmen”.
impressed by her singing that she
Born in 1911. she is now 42
was called upon to sing 100 songs.
years old. Her brother. Dr.
CANADIAN-BORN
AIKO
SAITA
i
She arrived in Tokyo in Feb
v
.
shown here with famous
Harold Saita, is practicing in
Negro contralto Marian Anderson upon the latter’s arrival at the
ruary of 1940 wlicrc she has re
Vancouver.
International Airport in Tokyo recently. Miss Saita who will be
mained until the present time.
She has made three trips to
coming to Canada on a concert tour, was introduced to Miss Ander
Although she made her operatic
son by an executive of the NHK. Miss Anderson who is in Japan Japan, the last one in 1940
debut in “Aida” in Tokyo, her
permanent one. She first went to
major role has been that of
on a concert tour was welcomed at an informal reception during the
Japan as a child shortly after the “Carmen”.
same evening. She was presented with a gift by Miss Saita. Upon
death of her father. Returning to
listening to a radio broadcast of the world-famous singer, Miss Saita
Vancouver, she started taking
said she will “have to work much harder” in ordqr to trv to attain
singing’lessons when 15 years old 500 Japan Girls Vie
the quality of Miss Anderson’s voice.
Quebec Sansei Girl
and gave her first recital in 1929. In Tokyo Beauty Contest
Studying
under Madame Mignon
SIX YEARS OF SERVICE
Chosen May Queen
TOKYO — Five hundred Japa
Duke-Giddy, she graduated from
MONTREAL — Joy Tanaka of
the Toronto Conservatory of nese lovelies have made bids for
Ville LaSalle Sansei girl, was
the coveted “Miss Universe” title
Music in 1931.
crowned May Queen at the special
at
Long Beach, Calif., contest
In 1932, she went to Italy to
Coronation Dance of the annual
continue her studies and shortly this year.
May Prom at Lachine High
On May 30 preliminary screen
Toronto, Ont nese Canadian Committee, a before leaving, she sang in a
School on May 29.
ings wore held in 10 districts
Six years of service for the group that was formed in 1943 religious cantata.
The 16-year-old senior of the Japanese Canadians will be be- about the time he arrived in Tor
Returning to Japan in 1935, for throughout the country to select
graduating class, was chosen over hind Georg-e Tanaka when he offi onto from Vancouver via the her second trip, she worked with the 10 semi-finalists who con
five other candidates. She is the cially resigns from his post of sugar beet farms. The Commit the Victor Record Co. for one and verged on Tokyo for the final
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbv national executive secretary of tee, formed as “liaison between
a half years, before going back showdown at the Imperial The
Tanaka.
the JCCA some time next month. Japanese Canadians and the com to Canada where she made con ater on June 7.
The beauty chosen to represent
munity”, soon outgrew7 its bonds cert tours in Canada and the U.S.
Whenever one speaks to Geo.
Japan in the California comp
Kamloops JCCA Float
and became the Japanese Canad
as did this writer in a recent in
In
1937,
she
made
a
cross
etition,
scheduled for July 9 to 19,
ian Committee for Democracy
Wins First Prize In
terview, an impression of high
country
tour
of
Canada
and
in
will fly by a Pan American World
(JCCD), George serving as its
idealism
is
gained
for
a-s
in
1939,
she
sang
in
concerts
in
Airways
plane in early July.
Coronation Parade
chairman from Nov., 1946, to
his own words, “the JCCA should
KAMLOOPS, B. C. — The work with heart and emotion for August, 1947.
float entered by the Kamloops
the welfare of the people”. One
ARMY
JCCA was the prize-winning
gains the impression that he has
It was a turbulent and bewil
entry over 60 floats entered in
much faith in the JCCA whose
the Coronation Day parade on
work he has helped to guide in dering time for all Japanese Can
NEW YORK — Women like to velt didn’t want the mole remov
Jone 2. In addition, it won .the
his years at his job and as he adians and the JCCD itself. The
JCCD
faced
bitter
criticism,
for
be made to look younger, but ed from his left check, while Cal
first prize among organizations
says, “the JCCA was formed to
example,
when
it
pushed
for
the
men prominent in the life of this vin Coolidge liked his freckles.
" ho sponsored floats.
help us work as Canadian citizens
John L. Lewis and John Nance
Girls dressed in kimonos
in the community and the nation”. right of Nisei to enlist in the Can country like to appear natural,
adian
Army.
“
You
have
no
right
even to have certain physical Garner both want their bushy
stood atop the float decorated
And one feels immediately that
to
take
responsibility
for
the
eye-brows untouched, even if the
characteristics
emphasized.
bj a Japanese garden and a
here at least is a man with an
lives
of
the
Nisei
”
was
a
criti
So Genichiro Nishio, Washing camera should exaggerate them,
cherry tree. Authentic Japa
abiding faith in the democratic
cism
levelled
at
the
JCCD
but
the
ton. D.C., Japanese artist with an Nishio says. Charles Evans
nese lanterns hung from the way of life—as something to fight
JCCD,
and
rightly
so,
felt
that
airbrush, has discovered after 35 Hughes, the late Chief Justice,
free while a small reid bridge
and work for and not merely ac
“loyalty to country” meant more years as a portrait retoucher at felt the same way about his eye
cept.
spanned a ni a k e-b e I i e v e
than a grandiloquent phrase. the Harris and Ewing studio in brows, but wanted his beard
stream. The front of the float
George—to whom modesty is George, himself, enlisted in the the capital. After working on trimmed a little.
"as surmounted by a huge
an innate characteristic—does not Canadian Nisei Intelligence 200,000 negatives he should know
Nishio remembers that William
crown in recognition of the
wave the flag on his own behalf Corps, and served from May, of what he is talking.
Howard
Taft, former president
coronation while a huge dia
but becomes highly excited when 1945, to Sept., 1946, although he
“I’ve never had a woman com - and Chief Justice, liked to have
mond commemorated the Dia
he speaks of what the JCCA did not go overseas as did some plain because she was made to the fullness of his face reduced
mond Jubilee of Kamloops.
means to him and what it should of his luckier mates.
look too young,” he said. The only slightly, but his son, Senator
The flowers on the cherry
mean
to
others,
and
although
he
Robert A. Taft, is emphatic about
tree were made by teams of
Much of the story of the JCCA man who ever surprised him was
is
stepping
down
from
his
post,
not being prettied up.
L5 girls working each night
from 1947 to 1953 is necessarily Gen. John J. Pershing, who re
he feels that there is much left |
Possibly because they both play
for two weeks.
tied in with that of George Ta turned a portrait with the com
undone and much to do.
golf, Nishio’s favorite is Pres
naka. Through the years, the plaint that “I don’t look that
ident
Eisenhower. 'Whenever Ni
1 • BUTTE BUDDHIST CHURCH STARTED IN 1947
JCCA has worked towards gain old.”
Prominent men, he has found, shio works on his picture he tries
BLOAT WINS TOP PRIZE
ing the federal and provincial
George first assumed the secre
don’t want the lines in their faces to keep that country-boyish look.
PICTURE BUTTE, Alta. — taryship in September, 1947, when franchise, recouping property los that give them strength and char
Included among the gallery of
ses, regaining employment in
notables on whose portraits he
1 iioaL entered by the Picture the National JCCA was organized
Crown Timber and fishing indus acter removed. They would rather
Ue Buddhist Church, in the in Toronto. But even before 1947,
has worked are the Duke of
tries in B.C., opening up move- look strong than youngs
& Coronation Celebration won George was connected with the
Windsor and Charles A. Lind
President
Franklin
D.
Roose
berg.
1 prize over 30 others.
(Cont’d. on Page 8)
same type of work with the Japa-
Geo. Tanaka and the JCCA
Issei Airbrush Artist Works for 35 Years
Retouching Photographs of U.S. Presidents
»
THE NEW CANADIAN
16 —NO. 45
»nto
I
WEDNESDAY, JUNe7oT1953
HAMILTON NEW HOME
FOR JAPANESE BRIDE
Aiko Saita To Make Concert
Tour, Went to Japan in 1940
HAMILTON
Masao
Kawanami, 30, who became the
first Japanese Canadian soldier
to bring a Japanese war bride to
Canada, will live with his wife
Yoko in Hamilton where he expects to get his overdue discharge and settle down as a
sheetmetal worker, a trade he
learned between wars on a DVA
grant.
While in Vancouver, Yoko,
chic diminutive 23-year-old said
that Vancouvei- traffic was a let
down. “It impressed me more
than anything else,” she said
through her husband. “Tokyo
traffic is much faster
She learned to understand, but
not to talk, English while a stu
dent at the University of Hiro
shima.
Sgt. Kawanami met his wife
while convalescing at Kure after
being wounded in Korea. They
were married a year and a half
ago. He has a brother, Hiroshi,
who enlisted in Japan, fighting in
Korea.
a
JIS
n.
TORONTO, ONT.
TOKYO
A reliable source in Japan said that, in
o-contralto
r
Aiko Saita who was born in Cumberland, B. C., will be leaving Tokyo
for Vancouver on a six-month tour of Canada :and the United States
shortly after her “Sayonara” 1
ibuyn Hall, Tokyo, on
July 13. Her visit will mark th e first time in thirteen years that the
ted to Canada.
recently took pro
cedures for a passport for a trip
San Francisco and Los Angeles.
and is expected to arrive in earlv
She gave hoi farewell recital
August.
in Vancouvei in November.
1939. and enroute to Tokyo,
A member of the Fujiwara
she gave many concerts in
Opera Company. foremost opHawaii.
era group in Japan, she has
In one of her concerts in Can
gained fame in singing the lead
ada, the Issei audience was so
role in the opera “Carmen”.
impressed by her singing that she
Born in 1911. she is now 42
was called upon to sing 100 songs.
years old. Her brother. Dr.
CANADIAN-BORN
AIKO
SAITA
i
She arrived in Tokyo in Feb
v
.
shown here with famous
Harold Saita, is practicing in
Negro contralto Marian Anderson upon the latter’s arrival at the
ruary of 1940 wlicrc she has re
Vancouver.
International Airport in Tokyo recently. Miss Saita who will be
mained until the present time.
She has made three trips to
coming to Canada on a concert tour, was introduced to Miss Ander
Although she made her operatic
son by an executive of the NHK. Miss Anderson who is in Japan Japan, the last one in 1940
debut in “Aida” in Tokyo, her
permanent one. She first went to
major role has been that of
on a concert tour was welcomed at an informal reception during the
Japan as a child shortly after the “Carmen”.
same evening. She was presented with a gift by Miss Saita. Upon
death of her father. Returning to
listening to a radio broadcast of the world-famous singer, Miss Saita
Vancouver, she started taking
said she will “have to work much harder” in ordqr to trv to attain
singing’lessons when 15 years old 500 Japan Girls Vie
the quality of Miss Anderson’s voice.
Quebec Sansei Girl
and gave her first recital in 1929. In Tokyo Beauty Contest
Studying
under Madame Mignon
SIX YEARS OF SERVICE
Chosen May Queen
TOKYO — Five hundred Japa
Duke-Giddy, she graduated from
MONTREAL — Joy Tanaka of
the Toronto Conservatory of nese lovelies have made bids for
Ville LaSalle Sansei girl, was
the coveted “Miss Universe” title
Music in 1931.
crowned May Queen at the special
at
Long Beach, Calif., contest
In 1932, she went to Italy to
Coronation Dance of the annual
continue her studies and shortly this year.
May Prom at Lachine High
On May 30 preliminary screen
Toronto, Ont nese Canadian Committee, a before leaving, she sang in a
School on May 29.
ings wore held in 10 districts
Six years of service for the group that was formed in 1943 religious cantata.
The 16-year-old senior of the Japanese Canadians will be be- about the time he arrived in Tor
Returning to Japan in 1935, for throughout the country to select
graduating class, was chosen over hind Georg-e Tanaka when he offi onto from Vancouver via the her second trip, she worked with the 10 semi-finalists who con
five other candidates. She is the cially resigns from his post of sugar beet farms. The Commit the Victor Record Co. for one and verged on Tokyo for the final
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbv national executive secretary of tee, formed as “liaison between
a half years, before going back showdown at the Imperial The
Tanaka.
the JCCA some time next month. Japanese Canadians and the com to Canada where she made con ater on June 7.
The beauty chosen to represent
munity”, soon outgrew7 its bonds cert tours in Canada and the U.S.
Whenever one speaks to Geo.
Japan in the California comp
Kamloops JCCA Float
and became the Japanese Canad
as did this writer in a recent in
In
1937,
she
made
a
cross
etition,
scheduled for July 9 to 19,
ian Committee for Democracy
Wins First Prize In
terview, an impression of high
country
tour
of
Canada
and
in
will fly by a Pan American World
(JCCD), George serving as its
idealism
is
gained
for
a-s
in
1939,
she
sang
in
concerts
in
Airways
plane in early July.
Coronation Parade
chairman from Nov., 1946, to
his own words, “the JCCA should
KAMLOOPS, B. C. — The work with heart and emotion for August, 1947.
float entered by the Kamloops
the welfare of the people”. One
ARMY
JCCA was the prize-winning
gains the impression that he has
It was a turbulent and bewil
entry over 60 floats entered in
much faith in the JCCA whose
the Coronation Day parade on
work he has helped to guide in dering time for all Japanese Can
NEW YORK — Women like to velt didn’t want the mole remov
Jone 2. In addition, it won .the
his years at his job and as he adians and the JCCD itself. The
JCCD
faced
bitter
criticism,
for
be made to look younger, but ed from his left check, while Cal
first prize among organizations
says, “the JCCA was formed to
example,
when
it
pushed
for
the
men prominent in the life of this vin Coolidge liked his freckles.
" ho sponsored floats.
help us work as Canadian citizens
John L. Lewis and John Nance
Girls dressed in kimonos
in the community and the nation”. right of Nisei to enlist in the Can country like to appear natural,
adian
Army.
“
You
have
no
right
even to have certain physical Garner both want their bushy
stood atop the float decorated
And one feels immediately that
to
take
responsibility
for
the
eye-brows untouched, even if the
characteristics
emphasized.
bj a Japanese garden and a
here at least is a man with an
lives
of
the
Nisei
”
was
a
criti
So Genichiro Nishio, Washing camera should exaggerate them,
cherry tree. Authentic Japa
abiding faith in the democratic
cism
levelled
at
the
JCCD
but
the
ton. D.C., Japanese artist with an Nishio says. Charles Evans
nese lanterns hung from the way of life—as something to fight
JCCD,
and
rightly
so,
felt
that
airbrush, has discovered after 35 Hughes, the late Chief Justice,
free while a small reid bridge
and work for and not merely ac
“loyalty to country” meant more years as a portrait retoucher at felt the same way about his eye
cept.
spanned a ni a k e-b e I i e v e
than a grandiloquent phrase. the Harris and Ewing studio in brows, but wanted his beard
stream. The front of the float
George—to whom modesty is George, himself, enlisted in the the capital. After working on trimmed a little.
"as surmounted by a huge
an innate characteristic—does not Canadian Nisei Intelligence 200,000 negatives he should know
Nishio remembers that William
crown in recognition of the
wave the flag on his own behalf Corps, and served from May, of what he is talking.
Howard
Taft, former president
coronation while a huge dia
but becomes highly excited when 1945, to Sept., 1946, although he
“I’ve never had a woman com - and Chief Justice, liked to have
mond commemorated the Dia
he speaks of what the JCCA did not go overseas as did some plain because she was made to the fullness of his face reduced
mond Jubilee of Kamloops.
means to him and what it should of his luckier mates.
look too young,” he said. The only slightly, but his son, Senator
The flowers on the cherry
mean
to
others,
and
although
he
Robert A. Taft, is emphatic about
tree were made by teams of
Much of the story of the JCCA man who ever surprised him was
is
stepping
down
from
his
post,
not being prettied up.
L5 girls working each night
from 1947 to 1953 is necessarily Gen. John J. Pershing, who re
he feels that there is much left |
Possibly because they both play
for two weeks.
tied in with that of George Ta turned a portrait with the com
undone and much to do.
golf, Nishio’s favorite is Pres
naka. Through the years, the plaint that “I don’t look that
ident
Eisenhower. 'Whenever Ni
1 • BUTTE BUDDHIST CHURCH STARTED IN 1947
JCCA has worked towards gain old.”
Prominent men, he has found, shio works on his picture he tries
BLOAT WINS TOP PRIZE
ing the federal and provincial
George first assumed the secre
don’t want the lines in their faces to keep that country-boyish look.
PICTURE BUTTE, Alta. — taryship in September, 1947, when franchise, recouping property los that give them strength and char
Included among the gallery of
ses, regaining employment in
notables on whose portraits he
1 iioaL entered by the Picture the National JCCA was organized
Crown Timber and fishing indus acter removed. They would rather
Ue Buddhist Church, in the in Toronto. But even before 1947,
has worked are the Duke of
tries in B.C., opening up move- look strong than youngs
& Coronation Celebration won George was connected with the
Windsor and Charles A. Lind
President
Franklin
D.
Roose
berg.
1 prize over 30 others.
(Cont’d. on Page 8)
same type of work with the Japa-
Geo. Tanaka and the JCCA
Issei Airbrush Artist Works for 35 Years
Retouching Photographs of U.S. Presidents
»
Page 2
Page 2
THE
NEW
SITTING BULL BAITED
CANADIAN
Wednesday, June 10, 195
By V. S.
man and inconsistency
emme
are
*
?
There I was, sitting peacefully sonal conviction (albeit based
______ By CINDERELLA
beneath the shelter of an ancient perhaps on some degree of knowl
The difficulty’ and confusion
oak tree as the May’ storm broke edge and under-standing). On this probably arises owing to an un- “Perhaps This Father's Day . . "
overhead. I was bored. Then I basis, I would feel that it is just fortunate use of terms. What is
The newspapers are right out there pushing “Father’s D"
saw red. (T.M.K.’s article on the a trifle too harsh to chastise the attacked is probably’ not Com
It’s only the 5th of June by my’ calendar, but Henry’ Morgan's already
tragedy of human inconsistency average Nisei because his “un munism or the Communist doc had a full page ad suggesting that we buy a B.V.D. Nylon" T^r
and on Communism—hence, Red), derstanding is incomplete, (be- trine strictly’ but the unsuccessful
Shirt for $12.95 and a Pure Silk Woven Tie to match for 85^
Sitting bull was properly baited. cause he) cannot define exactly’, practise of that doctrine because
They’re guaranteed to make fathers feel like “Kings for a Dav” ?
There is no disagreeing with nor qualify" precisely’.” Can any of the weaknesses in the theory’
I don’t say that this commercialization of “Fathers Dav”
what is too evident today, that one ? Omniscience is too high for' (e.g. its throughly’ unrealistic
inconsistencies in human behav man, he “cannot attain unto it.” conception of man). T.M.K. does a bad thing. I have a feeling that if it weren’t for our newspaper
iour pervade modern life and To call us to have faith is another' not seem to me to attack these ads and shop advertisements telling us to remember “Fathers Dav”
cause much tragedy. T.M.K. of- matter. Too, can we indeed ‘see” theoretical contradictions but at this day would be by-passed by most of us altogether. AdshV
fers a few examples of these. I the human situation, the battle tacks rather the practical impli these, appearing daily for the next two weeks will ^et us
do not quarrel with these per between God and Anti-God, ex cations and consequences of dia daughters thinking in terms of what to get father for “Father's
ceptions. Even my’ youthful days cept “in terms of nations and lectical materialism in action in Day”. And it’s a quick, slick way of easing our consciences for a
have seen to much human tragedy’ politics, of peoples and geograph terms of a pseudo-Christian ethic. number’ of things we’ve left amiss.
and heard too much confusion to ical area, of trade balances, of It is a “let’s face it” criticism.
deny that “something is rotten in power balances” ? To view the As such, I would generally’ agree
I’m thinking of a number of fathers I know in our own Japa
the state of Denmark.”
conflict in transcendent terms with it.
nese-Canadian community—fathers who came to Canada when com
*
*
*
alone make the issues rather
paratively
young, who took the first job they could find, and who
I am tempted to comment on
However, I must admit to being hazy and removed, does it not ?
the moral drawn by the writer at saw to it that their children were well-fed, properly’ clothed and
*
.$
$
a part of this confusion. I cannot
the close of the article, but I shall got a betten-education than they’ themselves got. And I’m thinking
understand except in part. It is
T.M.K. went on to identify’ evil refrain. Enough said by a neo- too, that a $12.95 Nylon Tricot Shirt would fit rather incongruously
too facile to strike out at a clear today’ with Communism. This may phyte! Sitting bull sits.
around their shoulders, familiar to the feel of denim, cotton, and
ly’ defined enemy, to fire invec well be but I would hesitate to
■ordinary wool, and a $5.00 Pure Silk Woven Tie would hang em
tives at a ncgatively’-charged draw a simple line between Com
barrassed-like around throats used to ties cast off by their more
stereotype, to set up a simple munism and God. To see Comimmaculate, style-conscious sons.
opposition between the black munism as an ogre seeking power
The kind of fathers I have in mind are very’ much like the
horde of evil and the lily-white alone for its own sake is a mis
father I had. He 'wasn’t the type to be particularly’ enthused over
forces of goodness and to take representation. Und o u b t e d 1 y, Editor, The New Canadian:
a shirt of nylon, trade-marked B.V.D. Nor would a pure silk woven
up the cudgels (metaphorically) there always have been humans,
Re the article (The New Can tie costing $5.00 transport him to any’ earthly’ Seventh Heaven.
for the latter. However much the who lust for power as their sole adian May 23) about the fishing He chose his clothes more for practical purposes, for serviceability,
human mind yearns to command desired end. A good deal of the problem on the west coast. Being for- durability and for’ warmth. He’s of the tribe who, upon receiving
the human situation, its endeav Communist doctrine, however, a member of the negotiating lovely, hand-woven ties, cashmere sweaters, fine English broadcloth
ours appear doomed to futility. seems to me to contain something committee of the United Fisher ishirts, -will admire same with just the correct amount of apprec
To understand completely’ and to recommending itself to serious men And Allied Workers Union. iation, and will later put them away in his bottom drawer, along
act rightly’ thereby’ is not a simple thought. Since this article is a I feel there is need of some
with all the other' expensive things he has received, and will revert
matter—indeed, it is an impos debut piece, I shall not expand comments.
back to shirts which have the smell of manv washing's, clinging to
sible matter.
on this point here but bow to the
Primarily, I would like to ques them, friendly and comfortable.
Are we then fated to yield our sage advice of brevity, the soul tion the Japanese Canadian fish
I am all in favour of “Father’s Day” bub if fathers are worth
selves to cosmic confusion and to of wit.
erman as to where he got the remembering-, they’re worth more than one expensive item of clothhuman frailty’ and to bear out the
I do want to comment on T.M. facts to predict the fishing pros Lrg, a can of tobacco or a quick cheque. Our fathers who were
iniquities of human misery’ ? Such K.’s brief characterization of pects foi' 1953. I have yet to see
capable enough to keep us clothed and fed and saw us educated
a view is not uncommon in our Communism. I find it extremely’ any’ other JC fisherman at price
are still quite capable of getting these things for themselves.
day. Not a few have adopted the inadequate and contradictory’. I negotiations other than Buck Su
*
*
tragic despair of atheistic exist am not aware that Communism zuki who did not write the ar
One father I know said to me—not in any’ complaining son
entialism as the only’ honest ap anywhere proclaims as a basic ticle.
of way’, but. as a statement of fact—“Perhaps my’ kids will realize
praisal of reality.
tenet the sole sovereignty of the
My
’
main
complaint
is
the
when they’ have kids of their own.”
*
*
*
state. Nor does Communism make statement that fishermen may’
He looks at his three sons and one daughter, and often Wendel's
The alternative to despair, I the State the measure of moral have to take considerable slashes
if they’ are part of his flesh and blood, born out of the great ami
think, must be the hope that ity. (As I understand it, the Com
in prices. I would like to question urgent need of a couple who tried their fortunes in a new land.
comes through faith in God—the munist doctrine was set forth by’
the writer if he had fig’ured out
God of Christianity, I would say. Karl Marx and by’ his two most the actual net take-home pay of They are independent, these children of his.
Minoru and his smart Nisei wife live in a new home full of
T.M.K.’s article, I take it, is acknowledged interpreters and the average fisherman for the.
meant to be an attempt at one theorists thereafter, Lenin and last three years or considered the things,- with a small son, busy’ in their own way’, and have no time
to visit the old place.
statement of faith (plus exhor
The very’ antithesis is fact that the cost of living today-’
The father speaks of the time when Minoru followed him around
tation to heed its truth). What claimed Communism attacks the
has not dropped sufficiently for like a little, inquisitive pup, full of questions, slanting eyes so
else can the author really claim
an evil political instru- fishermen to be able to exist
much like his own, raised to his. He will tell me that he was once
without an unwarranted self- ment of Capitalism. It believes hi with price cuts.
a thoughtful little fellow. He will smile a little sadly and say, ‘‘Ah
righteo u s n e s s ? Unfortunately, the proletarian state (dictator
I, too, am a JC fisherman but yes . . . such dreams” and will remember little Minoru spreading
the tone of the article is one of ship of the proletariat) only’ as a
I am a fisherman no different his two arms wide and saying, “I’m going to buy a house that big
rational apology for- divine un transition instrument or means to
from the Norwegian, Finnish,
biggern Judge Parker’s, for you and mom!”
derstanding, a rather tall order the real sought-after end, name
etc. I wish to convey’ that the
Not that Namiko isn’t a good wife, he will add. He believes
for a mere human to fulfil.
ly Communism or the classless picture is Company’ vs Fisher
she will make him somebody’ for she’s a real hustler, that one!
Granted that the basic struggle
Thus, to identify Com- men. No particular racial g’roup And the y’oungster—the very’ strapping image of Minoru as a child,
underlying the inconsistencies in munism with the ty’ranny of the
is exempted. The fishermen are he doesn’t speak a word of Japanese. And the father shakes In?
the word today rest in the oppo material deity, the State, is innegotiating for prices that will head and say’s no ■ more.
sition between God and the de correct- The condemnation does
give us living wages. Fishermen
*
*
monic forces of Anti-God, it is not attack Communism at the
must stand united to attain the
He speaks of Michio, too handsome for his own good, popular
still a statement of faith, of per- right places.
best possible prices.
knowm to his friends as “Mike” . . . Michio -who married a hakujinI would like to give the facts He will not admit that perhaps he may’ have been hast v in hi?
to date: (1) Fishermen took big- denunciation of his second son, but he does admit that ti
cuts in prices last year. They not what they’ used to be.
were practically the only workers
Akemi, his daughter, puzzles him, so independent and
that took reductions in Canada. And as he watches her going her own pround way. he sometime?
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
(2) This year we cannot afford wonders wistfully why she places herself so aloof . .
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
to take any large cuts and still who used to come to him asking for candies and pennies wnen she
as a medium of expression and news outlet
continue to operate as expenses was eight y’ears old.
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
A small blue vein will throb in his temple when he meanerfishermen, including the JC's. feel Sammy, his 17-year-old. “You’d think Osamu was born all by himKEN ADACHI .... ---------------------------------- ------------------- Editor
that at the present prices offer »elf! he will shout in anger, remembering the many’ time vou
UMEZU KI------------------ Japanese Section Editor
KEN .MORI ------------------------------------------------------- Advertising
ed, it is not worth fishing-, as the Sammy has turned on his father.
Office Hours:
same individuals can earn more
And so he wonders if they’ are his children, flesh of his ue-‘
Monday to Friday.
on
land even as laborers. (4) Our md blood of his blood.
Saturday.
S:30 a.m.-5:30 p.iu.
demands in prices are not based
9:00 a.m.-12 noon.
*
* ■
Subscription, in Advanc
on profit, but based on need for
$3.00 for six months
Nylon Tricot Shirts and Pure Silk Woven Ties are flue. Ti
$6.00 per one year
coaxed enough father; will wear them self-consciously But the
4/9 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
Y. Sato, other things—affection , gentleness, understanding, love and re?p!
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa
New Westminster. B. C.
father can wear every day with shinin
Letter to Editor
THE NEW CANADIAN
THE
NEW
SITTING BULL BAITED
CANADIAN
Wednesday, June 10, 195
By V. S.
man and inconsistency
emme
are
*
?
There I was, sitting peacefully sonal conviction (albeit based
______ By CINDERELLA
beneath the shelter of an ancient perhaps on some degree of knowl
The difficulty’ and confusion
oak tree as the May’ storm broke edge and under-standing). On this probably arises owing to an un- “Perhaps This Father's Day . . "
overhead. I was bored. Then I basis, I would feel that it is just fortunate use of terms. What is
The newspapers are right out there pushing “Father’s D"
saw red. (T.M.K.’s article on the a trifle too harsh to chastise the attacked is probably’ not Com
It’s only the 5th of June by my’ calendar, but Henry’ Morgan's already
tragedy of human inconsistency average Nisei because his “un munism or the Communist doc had a full page ad suggesting that we buy a B.V.D. Nylon" T^r
and on Communism—hence, Red), derstanding is incomplete, (be- trine strictly’ but the unsuccessful
Shirt for $12.95 and a Pure Silk Woven Tie to match for 85^
Sitting bull was properly baited. cause he) cannot define exactly’, practise of that doctrine because
They’re guaranteed to make fathers feel like “Kings for a Dav” ?
There is no disagreeing with nor qualify" precisely’.” Can any of the weaknesses in the theory’
I don’t say that this commercialization of “Fathers Dav”
what is too evident today, that one ? Omniscience is too high for' (e.g. its throughly’ unrealistic
inconsistencies in human behav man, he “cannot attain unto it.” conception of man). T.M.K. does a bad thing. I have a feeling that if it weren’t for our newspaper
iour pervade modern life and To call us to have faith is another' not seem to me to attack these ads and shop advertisements telling us to remember “Fathers Dav”
cause much tragedy. T.M.K. of- matter. Too, can we indeed ‘see” theoretical contradictions but at this day would be by-passed by most of us altogether. AdshV
fers a few examples of these. I the human situation, the battle tacks rather the practical impli these, appearing daily for the next two weeks will ^et us
do not quarrel with these per between God and Anti-God, ex cations and consequences of dia daughters thinking in terms of what to get father for “Father's
ceptions. Even my’ youthful days cept “in terms of nations and lectical materialism in action in Day”. And it’s a quick, slick way of easing our consciences for a
have seen to much human tragedy’ politics, of peoples and geograph terms of a pseudo-Christian ethic. number’ of things we’ve left amiss.
and heard too much confusion to ical area, of trade balances, of It is a “let’s face it” criticism.
deny that “something is rotten in power balances” ? To view the As such, I would generally’ agree
I’m thinking of a number of fathers I know in our own Japa
the state of Denmark.”
conflict in transcendent terms with it.
nese-Canadian community—fathers who came to Canada when com
*
*
*
alone make the issues rather
paratively
young, who took the first job they could find, and who
I am tempted to comment on
However, I must admit to being hazy and removed, does it not ?
the moral drawn by the writer at saw to it that their children were well-fed, properly’ clothed and
*
.$
$
a part of this confusion. I cannot
the close of the article, but I shall got a betten-education than they’ themselves got. And I’m thinking
understand except in part. It is
T.M.K. went on to identify’ evil refrain. Enough said by a neo- too, that a $12.95 Nylon Tricot Shirt would fit rather incongruously
too facile to strike out at a clear today’ with Communism. This may phyte! Sitting bull sits.
around their shoulders, familiar to the feel of denim, cotton, and
ly’ defined enemy, to fire invec well be but I would hesitate to
■ordinary wool, and a $5.00 Pure Silk Woven Tie would hang em
tives at a ncgatively’-charged draw a simple line between Com
barrassed-like around throats used to ties cast off by their more
stereotype, to set up a simple munism and God. To see Comimmaculate, style-conscious sons.
opposition between the black munism as an ogre seeking power
The kind of fathers I have in mind are very’ much like the
horde of evil and the lily-white alone for its own sake is a mis
father I had. He 'wasn’t the type to be particularly’ enthused over
forces of goodness and to take representation. Und o u b t e d 1 y, Editor, The New Canadian:
a shirt of nylon, trade-marked B.V.D. Nor would a pure silk woven
up the cudgels (metaphorically) there always have been humans,
Re the article (The New Can tie costing $5.00 transport him to any’ earthly’ Seventh Heaven.
for the latter. However much the who lust for power as their sole adian May 23) about the fishing He chose his clothes more for practical purposes, for serviceability,
human mind yearns to command desired end. A good deal of the problem on the west coast. Being for- durability and for’ warmth. He’s of the tribe who, upon receiving
the human situation, its endeav Communist doctrine, however, a member of the negotiating lovely, hand-woven ties, cashmere sweaters, fine English broadcloth
ours appear doomed to futility. seems to me to contain something committee of the United Fisher ishirts, -will admire same with just the correct amount of apprec
To understand completely’ and to recommending itself to serious men And Allied Workers Union. iation, and will later put them away in his bottom drawer, along
act rightly’ thereby’ is not a simple thought. Since this article is a I feel there is need of some
with all the other' expensive things he has received, and will revert
matter—indeed, it is an impos debut piece, I shall not expand comments.
back to shirts which have the smell of manv washing's, clinging to
sible matter.
on this point here but bow to the
Primarily, I would like to ques them, friendly and comfortable.
Are we then fated to yield our sage advice of brevity, the soul tion the Japanese Canadian fish
I am all in favour of “Father’s Day” bub if fathers are worth
selves to cosmic confusion and to of wit.
erman as to where he got the remembering-, they’re worth more than one expensive item of clothhuman frailty’ and to bear out the
I do want to comment on T.M. facts to predict the fishing pros Lrg, a can of tobacco or a quick cheque. Our fathers who were
iniquities of human misery’ ? Such K.’s brief characterization of pects foi' 1953. I have yet to see
capable enough to keep us clothed and fed and saw us educated
a view is not uncommon in our Communism. I find it extremely’ any’ other JC fisherman at price
are still quite capable of getting these things for themselves.
day. Not a few have adopted the inadequate and contradictory’. I negotiations other than Buck Su
*
*
tragic despair of atheistic exist am not aware that Communism zuki who did not write the ar
One father I know said to me—not in any’ complaining son
entialism as the only’ honest ap anywhere proclaims as a basic ticle.
of way’, but. as a statement of fact—“Perhaps my’ kids will realize
praisal of reality.
tenet the sole sovereignty of the
My
’
main
complaint
is
the
when they’ have kids of their own.”
*
*
*
state. Nor does Communism make statement that fishermen may’
He looks at his three sons and one daughter, and often Wendel's
The alternative to despair, I the State the measure of moral have to take considerable slashes
if they’ are part of his flesh and blood, born out of the great ami
think, must be the hope that ity. (As I understand it, the Com
in prices. I would like to question urgent need of a couple who tried their fortunes in a new land.
comes through faith in God—the munist doctrine was set forth by’
the writer if he had fig’ured out
God of Christianity, I would say. Karl Marx and by’ his two most the actual net take-home pay of They are independent, these children of his.
Minoru and his smart Nisei wife live in a new home full of
T.M.K.’s article, I take it, is acknowledged interpreters and the average fisherman for the.
meant to be an attempt at one theorists thereafter, Lenin and last three years or considered the things,- with a small son, busy’ in their own way’, and have no time
to visit the old place.
statement of faith (plus exhor
The very’ antithesis is fact that the cost of living today-’
The father speaks of the time when Minoru followed him around
tation to heed its truth). What claimed Communism attacks the
has not dropped sufficiently for like a little, inquisitive pup, full of questions, slanting eyes so
else can the author really claim
an evil political instru- fishermen to be able to exist
much like his own, raised to his. He will tell me that he was once
without an unwarranted self- ment of Capitalism. It believes hi with price cuts.
a thoughtful little fellow. He will smile a little sadly and say, ‘‘Ah
righteo u s n e s s ? Unfortunately, the proletarian state (dictator
I, too, am a JC fisherman but yes . . . such dreams” and will remember little Minoru spreading
the tone of the article is one of ship of the proletariat) only’ as a
I am a fisherman no different his two arms wide and saying, “I’m going to buy a house that big
rational apology for- divine un transition instrument or means to
from the Norwegian, Finnish,
biggern Judge Parker’s, for you and mom!”
derstanding, a rather tall order the real sought-after end, name
etc. I wish to convey’ that the
Not that Namiko isn’t a good wife, he will add. He believes
for a mere human to fulfil.
ly Communism or the classless picture is Company’ vs Fisher
she will make him somebody’ for she’s a real hustler, that one!
Granted that the basic struggle
Thus, to identify Com- men. No particular racial g’roup And the y’oungster—the very’ strapping image of Minoru as a child,
underlying the inconsistencies in munism with the ty’ranny of the
is exempted. The fishermen are he doesn’t speak a word of Japanese. And the father shakes In?
the word today rest in the oppo material deity, the State, is innegotiating for prices that will head and say’s no ■ more.
sition between God and the de correct- The condemnation does
give us living wages. Fishermen
*
*
monic forces of Anti-God, it is not attack Communism at the
must stand united to attain the
He speaks of Michio, too handsome for his own good, popular
still a statement of faith, of per- right places.
best possible prices.
knowm to his friends as “Mike” . . . Michio -who married a hakujinI would like to give the facts He will not admit that perhaps he may’ have been hast v in hi?
to date: (1) Fishermen took big- denunciation of his second son, but he does admit that ti
cuts in prices last year. They not what they’ used to be.
were practically the only workers
Akemi, his daughter, puzzles him, so independent and
that took reductions in Canada. And as he watches her going her own pround way. he sometime?
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
(2) This year we cannot afford wonders wistfully why she places herself so aloof . .
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
to take any large cuts and still who used to come to him asking for candies and pennies wnen she
as a medium of expression and news outlet
continue to operate as expenses was eight y’ears old.
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
A small blue vein will throb in his temple when he meanerfishermen, including the JC's. feel Sammy, his 17-year-old. “You’d think Osamu was born all by himKEN ADACHI .... ---------------------------------- ------------------- Editor
that at the present prices offer »elf! he will shout in anger, remembering the many’ time vou
UMEZU KI------------------ Japanese Section Editor
KEN .MORI ------------------------------------------------------- Advertising
ed, it is not worth fishing-, as the Sammy has turned on his father.
Office Hours:
same individuals can earn more
And so he wonders if they’ are his children, flesh of his ue-‘
Monday to Friday.
on
land even as laborers. (4) Our md blood of his blood.
Saturday.
S:30 a.m.-5:30 p.iu.
demands in prices are not based
9:00 a.m.-12 noon.
*
* ■
Subscription, in Advanc
on profit, but based on need for
$3.00 for six months
Nylon Tricot Shirts and Pure Silk Woven Ties are flue. Ti
$6.00 per one year
coaxed enough father; will wear them self-consciously But the
4/9 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
Y. Sato, other things—affection , gentleness, understanding, love and re?p!
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa
New Westminster. B. C.
father can wear every day with shinin
Letter to Editor
THE NEW CANADIAN
Page 3
Wednesday/ June 10, 1953
3
'I?
THE NEW CANADIAN
I-
o
a
pi pj x m
^
iz
( fa
o ^ £ XX
iz
±
&
CD
° $'
I 1
b to"
L
to 7. L
A £ z to ( X
D
—
m
©
1
g
z
o
^ o
ft °
^ £
X
b
D
4
o
Zc © 4t
S
Ii
0
CD
X
©
b
D
*
©
i
I
7
CD
to
C
to
T
^
3
11
L
ft
f$
i
t
L
o
C
o
‘3
B
C'
X?
/L
X'
U^v
h 67
to
©
to
b
n
11
L
T
ir
Ze
L
C
to
XX
o
o D
L
2
X
a
4
a
^
L
©
o
M
■5
b
0
L
fa
0
•5
o
i
T
gw
a
o
9
IP
© je
A IX to iz
v
r ®
ip
L'
4;
fe
T
?
1
o
c
n
to
#
PAGE 3
7
b
X)
to
III
^
L
Lto A
©
fz i A ^#(1X0 ®
T ft
H
C ^
l? ^
B Z?
U PI
c. 7?
C ^
to
B
©
D
ct
^
X*
IZ
#
B
L,
T
0
b* X
0
' <&
b ^'
O ^
X !)
pf1 Ip
# to
o
U x
D ^s
A T
^’ ?
<£ 0
^> <5
(X
V">
to fpf
o
O
11
to
ft
&
o
//
to
XX
i
f*
fll
t
©
o
R
X
t
H
0
to
IX
x
IP
to
b'
D
5
R
iz
i
7
to
a
cd
CD
i
9
&
L
o
o
n
P
V1
©
©
41
B
5
'^ ^ ^ ^ b
b
to, D
b^ O
o
Mt
CD b
HU su
ne?
!
CD
Xf
A
b>
B
6
t I
US
4'
t
:b
u
i1
ft
10
C
&
©
T
b*
*
to
CD
T
^ 1 JO
II
vr
tu
(X JH
pi
T K
IX
5
©
i'
141
to.
AH
CD
7
k
b
® 4 /b ^
w b IW
CD
9
CD
i
r
T
^ ®1 'M D T
b
5
ii
^
1 ^P ^i It o fb ^ ® -^ ^ tb t
b
p
u
b
4X1
itlt °I? L^ A I
{£ L ® *> — ^ to ^ • © ^
b
i
^W
?p5 # ■ «Mt?E/;
tz zK A £>
^ (X
^j
113
b
C' 3c ° ^ ^ ( © 4’
A T /u ^
Is ^ & 1 rp g ^ g ^ ^ ^ rfi i
#1] (Z ^
13
11 ”
V
131A
fa
s
U L^#^M G sW^ B^T
° ^ rU + f
B W ft X c
^ ^J X H ^
b ff^M
b
DC
b
1 £
%+
£9 R$ W
BANK
i IMPERIAL
OF CANADA
X
A
A
N
* ra &
®© Tin nr ii w z i u^§
n^r$$^ 5©xi • t^Ar
^Ifi^l
> W Ph b 4s
co
to so
IX
£ z to-<T ®(x ^T^Jt #W ^
TW^ °^&0 iz^r^ g£P
1 ® 0 * CD f
ELIZABETH & DUNDAS STS.
(116 Elizabeth St.)
TORONTO
Manager
L. J. WALKER,
Jr
Illi
*'#©
i
A.
nn
i
I
T
x
X
’0B4*
*g«SA
E
b1
U
A
£
O 0
7 H
6
& ini f; tf-
AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
I
£
o
CH
X
£
ao
A.
!>
“OSS
to # ^ z- ^^
isr #
j^
Ln
O
O
P
-
^^^1X0 c ^
^0J&# “ J^
Tz^At^i>
CL
NW
&
A
5
P
9
*=5
o
to
n
o
»
to
(X
I- a® ^ ^ ^
P
z
3
'I?
THE NEW CANADIAN
I-
o
a
pi pj x m
^
iz
( fa
o ^ £ XX
iz
±
&
CD
° $'
I 1
b to"
L
to 7. L
A £ z to ( X
D
—
m
©
1
g
z
o
^ o
ft °
^ £
X
b
D
4
o
Zc © 4t
S
Ii
0
CD
X
©
b
D
*
©
i
I
7
CD
to
C
to
T
^
3
11
L
ft
f$
i
t
L
o
C
o
‘3
B
C'
X?
/L
X'
U^v
h 67
to
©
to
b
n
11
L
T
ir
Ze
L
C
to
XX
o
o D
L
2
X
a
4
a
^
L
©
o
M
■5
b
0
L
fa
0
•5
o
i
T
gw
a
o
9
IP
© je
A IX to iz
v
r ®
ip
L'
4;
fe
T
?
1
o
c
n
to
#
PAGE 3
7
b
X)
to
III
^
L
Lto A
©
fz i A ^#(1X0 ®
T ft
H
C ^
l? ^
B Z?
U PI
c. 7?
C ^
to
B
©
D
ct
^
X*
IZ
#
B
L,
T
0
b* X
0
' <&
b ^'
O ^
X !)
pf1 Ip
# to
o
U x
D ^s
A T
^’ ?
<£ 0
^> <5
(X
V">
to fpf
o
O
11
to
ft
&
o
//
to
XX
i
f*
fll
t
©
o
R
X
t
H
0
to
IX
x
IP
to
b'
D
5
R
iz
i
7
to
a
cd
CD
i
9
&
L
o
o
n
P
V1
©
©
41
B
5
'^ ^ ^ ^ b
b
to, D
b^ O
o
Mt
CD b
HU su
ne?
!
CD
Xf
A
b>
B
6
t I
US
4'
t
:b
u
i1
ft
10
C
&
©
T
b*
*
to
CD
T
^ 1 JO
II
vr
tu
(X JH
pi
T K
IX
5
©
i'
141
to.
AH
CD
7
k
b
® 4 /b ^
w b IW
CD
9
CD
i
r
T
^ ®1 'M D T
b
5
ii
^
1 ^P ^i It o fb ^ ® -^ ^ tb t
b
p
u
b
4X1
itlt °I? L^ A I
{£ L ® *> — ^ to ^ • © ^
b
i
^W
?p5 # ■ «Mt?E/;
tz zK A £>
^ (X
^j
113
b
C' 3c ° ^ ^ ( © 4’
A T /u ^
Is ^ & 1 rp g ^ g ^ ^ ^ rfi i
#1] (Z ^
13
11 ”
V
131A
fa
s
U L^#^M G sW^ B^T
° ^ rU + f
B W ft X c
^ ^J X H ^
b ff^M
b
DC
b
1 £
%+
£9 R$ W
BANK
i IMPERIAL
OF CANADA
X
A
A
N
* ra &
®© Tin nr ii w z i u^§
n^r$$^ 5©xi • t^Ar
^Ifi^l
> W Ph b 4s
co
to so
IX
£ z to-<T ®(x ^T^Jt #W ^
TW^ °^&0 iz^r^ g£P
1 ® 0 * CD f
ELIZABETH & DUNDAS STS.
(116 Elizabeth St.)
TORONTO
Manager
L. J. WALKER,
Jr
Illi
*'#©
i
A.
nn
i
I
T
x
X
’0B4*
*g«SA
E
b1
U
A
£
O 0
7 H
6
& ini f; tf-
AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
I
£
o
CH
X
£
ao
A.
!>
“OSS
to # ^ z- ^^
isr #
j^
Ln
O
O
P
-
^^^1X0 c ^
^0J&# “ J^
Tz^At^i>
CL
NW
&
A
5
P
9
*=5
o
to
n
o
»
to
(X
I- a® ^ ^ ^
P
z
Page 4
PAGE 4
THE NEW CANADIAN
fc
b>
1)' HU
O
0
o
IX
0
7
L'
0
Wednesday, June 10,
7K
iz
H
0
(X
6
3
2
6
;0
Hl
I1
^
;x
0
#>
B
£7?
IX
111
IE
b
LIJ
0
2?
IX
b
IX
R*
5
n
0
tz 3
65
4
—P* I
A ;
0
i:
^U
W
i
0
b
Y
I
IX
ix
IX
0
5
M
TZ
It
IX
(X
i j
n
JW
3
£
fz
i^
1
19:
(X
i’
0
b
0
o
7'’
I'
W5
£
o
0
£
0
EE
0
0
IX
4
£|J
n
IX
E*
7
0
7
1$
f)
0
f^
4”! 5g’
i
I'
V'
5
0 (X
6 IX
ft
0
Ui
PR
E' • ® □ D
JR
° PnM
(X
i
JR
20
n
n
®
IX A w
6
O
#
9
6
an
i
IX
X
0
n
6
i’
(X
&
-t
n
b
IZ IX
It ill
IX
i£
0
6
o
R
b
0
a
Be
3
It
△
^■^tU^/i
n
B HJ
4-
5^ ? ^ -^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ?^ ^ ® -^ "n △ ^’ Ifr ® C^
(4
6
1
0
6
#>
0
i
IX
0
^J
WUl #/E
0 ^i ^ W W 65
^ -x « a ^ ^ t
n
^ ^ ^ t^ g
si
oo
SAI
DO
M<
3
w
TR^tt
3?
^
fB
£
O XI
o
g
ss
~
n
O
R
6
o
3
B ^ ^ A^ ^^
04 3
2 *
00 *
{Hl {Hl {Hl {Hl {111 {ill fill {Hl fill
THE NEW CANADIAN
fc
b>
1)' HU
O
0
o
IX
0
7
L'
0
Wednesday, June 10,
7K
iz
H
0
(X
6
3
2
6
;0
Hl
I1
^
;x
0
#>
B
£7?
IX
111
IE
b
LIJ
0
2?
IX
b
IX
R*
5
n
0
tz 3
65
4
—P* I
A ;
0
i:
^U
W
i
0
b
Y
I
IX
ix
IX
0
5
M
TZ
It
IX
(X
i j
n
JW
3
£
fz
i^
1
19:
(X
i’
0
b
0
o
7'’
I'
W5
£
o
0
£
0
EE
0
0
IX
4
£|J
n
IX
E*
7
0
7
1$
f)
0
f^
4”! 5g’
i
I'
V'
5
0 (X
6 IX
ft
0
Ui
PR
E' • ® □ D
JR
° PnM
(X
i
JR
20
n
n
®
IX A w
6
O
#
9
6
an
i
IX
X
0
n
6
i’
(X
&
-t
n
b
IZ IX
It ill
IX
i£
0
6
o
R
b
0
a
Be
3
It
△
^■^tU^/i
n
B HJ
4-
5^ ? ^ -^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ?^ ^ ® -^ "n △ ^’ Ifr ® C^
(4
6
1
0
6
#>
0
i
IX
0
^J
WUl #/E
0 ^i ^ W W 65
^ -x « a ^ ^ t
n
^ ^ ^ t^ g
si
oo
SAI
DO
M<
3
w
TR^tt
3?
^
fB
£
O XI
o
g
ss
~
n
O
R
6
o
3
B ^ ^ A^ ^^
04 3
2 *
00 *
{Hl {Hl {Hl {Hl {111 {ill fill {Hl fill
Page 5
1953
Wednesday, June 10, 1953
PAGE 5
B^ ^
T ill ±
— ^’ -6 0 B A
S t
®
t
C ’. ? ? £ a- ’ T
- ^ ^ i: ®: (
'
w ft -r l' 2 HL ? 7 K
' *
«_L12®A® ^
ffi^
§ ?
IO
0
o>
B
~
= & 'Z 7 a’ Z ® H V'O^ -tW^mt ligas ^ <p
ft : A 'H4H gotSMbttAt * 37
T ftM: L * *- ’ gl L ft fl S n ©)
2 ^ 1 v * * V'
O 2 S'
’ « »' « ba ®
J iiirfi P H ^ S S 4 *
2B '
P L ^ 4z T IX x. ®
0
S X ? ^ ° ^®
W -t
i
? * •
- lu
'AB
’
~
--------------------- ---- ----------------- ——-----------0 z c IZ V
s
t a x
i
t
S 4 f ® T * ~ ’ ^ ® ^ i; 0 £ § * ^ 0 'i' a £E ft
-4—
b
1 I & 0
ft 0 >ffl
h # -, h
4’ ® &'
5
SU
1
ZZ P,
g T ^ eso ^
0
i i
0
If X ft fl ® 3 4# ® t 0
’?aoP||P->?®|0®»<- ;HIL
On
' T A i’
? 2 ?' I >
’ ft 0
s ^
1 K
Al®
® * ®
IS H 5
s IS ""
t A S K 0
li 8 fr H ®
K’lttH'f
® ± #
I I t "
1 ■®
1
i
h?u
’
H’
—----- — ^_ ^
:
1_ a
J®
f g *
* 2 3 # ' t i n>L fi ft T 1g
0 u 0
5 ft ® I * ft T
tifnissiiUH
O jg #
0
(7A
.
0 K n
*
3
0 ah
a
1
^ AA
i
a
yr a
( —)
b
)
A [4 r- A
/ li ° ^
- 4 4 H ? s ; 7' ^ ’ * ^ ®
,
°H
&
a c i
r
0a
?
£©
r a a
iz r. ft: u
t < u^
$Li iz p i' \ f i T ^ pg^’^K
X O ^ IO IZ R ^ 0 > y ra
1 IO ^ # B ^ ft: ^ ;x io b BR
^C 0 ^ ^ 0 < O ft 1/ --e 0 ~c B
© ftoS ^ © © z Bo 6 ~
6 0 ?E —
?M t' ® ^ ^ *W
z la a ft
# fn] 1 lift
& ^£
A CT)
e W
in S |# x
3ft 0 ^
& Pa 1
iS jO'
2 1
#
J
7 B
?.»s
!t^s
9_____ 0 ^ ^ ^2 A__!L_L_221 A © ^ ^ 7’j&
t 1 E « 1 * 1 il , fi H " ?
iz
rP
0 # ft
u
t
ju-
J; ft:
^ 5
? j^
P>
7) ^
i r
i
«
o
f?!?^?^5'-*'^^5^'^
^gpmsMgsA
I @
A 1’
T ffi »d
2 ( O © : (£ 7 y
< I o
g
O' 5 c p ^0 RO W ? 4
c iz ^ 1'3
O
J d
ZJJJ____^ n> IE fc g ^ L ^ a M g t a A i: j A 8 4 »
Ho - ? W
L ft
10
O^'SXHBM OS
0 f po t ® 0« OP 0 01X hpPi
Z g ft '
Z ‘0 ^ ;'
Z t ?
1 ^ 4
A Q W (.' n y ®
9 ^ 1'
.g. /v
^> ?
IE O' ^
I ? / JBT H J
4i
:h
& Ttl^^^'^V'ifij'C
5 6'»HI6 60AJR9*Tt
5 li i i< i
S I ? ? ? ?f t 1 a £ ^ ^ t # « « i: 1 i ' £• S>
J ffl r i ft » r. }' !, A L 1 « ° - ® ^ IS o
’^^S^ili®^^*’ itBSSt * ' T B ® ®. ' 0 ® b fi‘ 0 C T ft 0 s ft M 6 1 «
f
1
;
!
I
S ^ ^ ^ I: © ® g 4 i: ffl ft :’©S^^
fflotzf^it
' if O’ ' ft r r © ft t? Zi a St- < z.
® ® !? 8 B ® = f «. ® « « <> i $ s ft® t «R ® 0 g a ® » c, © S 5 ft ft B;
' ® * bl T n
2 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^ftfSATl- ( ©K^^j^ftOC^F^^^^ift ’ ft ft 1 ^ S^ B> © a w c,
I $ > ^. ^ 6 1 o ft is. 6 U 3 A£ W g fr K ft k 4 ® 4 ?£ a G S © © i
i: ?, i 0 K H i • I 4
1 Jl^_^ ft ?> it ^ ft fi J> 4 ’ I' 0 ffi ^ #ft ( ( =F 0 # rj 4 tt A ^ B T- C
M ' A 4; ffi ® ir A li
^O^lt’OA^'C^i
^IX^Mxc^jatMT^e^a^tzO^B
0^1$
p 0 ® i ^ ® b 0 ^ -n' lj 0 § tz tz 6 ^MX©A^^^IOL^$K Mb ^. W ^ - ^ - ^ r ©
'O
X fOTOIAflO^^
^ O0
t) ^ ? ^ © (O ^ T ft ?? 11 : ^ H 4; iff t 5 t 4k # s
L- L
f: ^ ® !I IX ft £ C ® a a # ® £ ft 4 *> 3 ± L - s f ’ » * j I M I f 2 f hPM*
o Mf
# r ^ f &ij
0 Eft ' f © jb» ^ © O ii i> TO^^L^X^-X^i^^A
IS +
? © E ' # t £ * « I: / # e ^ a G ^ H T # e H i H 4fij 0 T iz 7 # A O © ' i ^
" # S TO
©
E ^ ^ © ^ iJ © It ® A © Co ^ t ^ M ^ IZ 7 ^ t + ^
O ^ t t IO ^t iz LJ?lT^idt)©^A '
;O A ^ ^b 6 t
iz
®
©
y O lO
i S t ^ O ® C ^
L 5 S 63 O =e 7 i> ^ ^- (Z ^ : s L O Ml A Mb ^ +
i #
©
i fe s
Mf^biXT^ofrOi:!' ^ ® # ^ i> a ^6 tz 4b + 1 iz ,< ^ © ,x
r & e^
o H C A /)
T tz g ^ t 7^
© O®O^6±03^^42^-bft?0^B ®
?
O t i £ A
t ' ^ i U ^J zK 6 (^ f ^ IZ J
' 7 0 —1 A © f It £ -g
fs b 1 ■ — & ^
B i 1 K
MlOC^sbfe^bb^
°ftBiz^ttt)^l^l©^ O iz js h T §■ ^ '
© © ^ ©
Wednesday, June 10, 1953
PAGE 5
B^ ^
T ill ±
— ^’ -6 0 B A
S t
®
t
C ’. ? ? £ a- ’ T
- ^ ^ i: ®: (
'
w ft -r l' 2 HL ? 7 K
' *
«_L12®A® ^
ffi^
§ ?
IO
0
o>
B
~
= & 'Z 7 a’ Z ® H V'O^ -tW^mt ligas ^ <p
ft : A 'H4H gotSMbttAt * 37
T ftM: L * *- ’ gl L ft fl S n ©)
2 ^ 1 v * * V'
O 2 S'
’ « »' « ba ®
J iiirfi P H ^ S S 4 *
2B '
P L ^ 4z T IX x. ®
0
S X ? ^ ° ^®
W -t
i
? * •
- lu
'AB
’
~
--------------------- ---- ----------------- ——-----------0 z c IZ V
s
t a x
i
t
S 4 f ® T * ~ ’ ^ ® ^ i; 0 £ § * ^ 0 'i' a £E ft
-4—
b
1 I & 0
ft 0 >ffl
h # -, h
4’ ® &'
5
SU
1
ZZ P,
g T ^ eso ^
0
i i
0
If X ft fl ® 3 4# ® t 0
’?aoP||P->?®|0®»<- ;HIL
On
' T A i’
? 2 ?' I >
’ ft 0
s ^
1 K
Al®
® * ®
IS H 5
s IS ""
t A S K 0
li 8 fr H ®
K’lttH'f
® ± #
I I t "
1 ■®
1
i
h?u
’
H’
—----- — ^_ ^
:
1_ a
J®
f g *
* 2 3 # ' t i n>L fi ft T 1g
0 u 0
5 ft ® I * ft T
tifnissiiUH
O jg #
0
(7A
.
0 K n
*
3
0 ah
a
1
^ AA
i
a
yr a
( —)
b
)
A [4 r- A
/ li ° ^
- 4 4 H ? s ; 7' ^ ’ * ^ ®
,
°H
&
a c i
r
0a
?
£©
r a a
iz r. ft: u
t < u^
$Li iz p i' \ f i T ^ pg^’^K
X O ^ IO IZ R ^ 0 > y ra
1 IO ^ # B ^ ft: ^ ;x io b BR
^C 0 ^ ^ 0 < O ft 1/ --e 0 ~c B
© ftoS ^ © © z Bo 6 ~
6 0 ?E —
?M t' ® ^ ^ *W
z la a ft
# fn] 1 lift
& ^£
A CT)
e W
in S |# x
3ft 0 ^
& Pa 1
iS jO'
2 1
#
J
7 B
?.»s
!t^s
9_____ 0 ^ ^ ^2 A__!L_L_221 A © ^ ^ 7’j&
t 1 E « 1 * 1 il , fi H " ?
iz
rP
0 # ft
u
t
ju-
J; ft:
^ 5
? j^
P>
7) ^
i r
i
«
o
f?!?^?^5'-*'^^5^'^
^gpmsMgsA
I @
A 1’
T ffi »d
2 ( O © : (£ 7 y
< I o
g
O' 5 c p ^0 RO W ? 4
c iz ^ 1'3
O
J d
ZJJJ____^ n> IE fc g ^ L ^ a M g t a A i: j A 8 4 »
Ho - ? W
L ft
10
O^'SXHBM OS
0 f po t ® 0« OP 0 01X hpPi
Z g ft '
Z ‘0 ^ ;'
Z t ?
1 ^ 4
A Q W (.' n y ®
9 ^ 1'
.g. /v
^> ?
IE O' ^
I ? / JBT H J
4i
:h
& Ttl^^^'^V'ifij'C
5 6'»HI6 60AJR9*Tt
5 li i i< i
S I ? ? ? ?f t 1 a £ ^ ^ t # « « i: 1 i ' £• S>
J ffl r i ft » r. }' !, A L 1 « ° - ® ^ IS o
’^^S^ili®^^*’ itBSSt * ' T B ® ®. ' 0 ® b fi‘ 0 C T ft 0 s ft M 6 1 «
f
1
;
!
I
S ^ ^ ^ I: © ® g 4 i: ffl ft :’©S^^
fflotzf^it
' if O’ ' ft r r © ft t? Zi a St- < z.
® ® !? 8 B ® = f «. ® « « <> i $ s ft® t «R ® 0 g a ® » c, © S 5 ft ft B;
' ® * bl T n
2 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^ftfSATl- ( ©K^^j^ftOC^F^^^^ift ’ ft ft 1 ^ S^ B> © a w c,
I $ > ^. ^ 6 1 o ft is. 6 U 3 A£ W g fr K ft k 4 ® 4 ?£ a G S © © i
i: ?, i 0 K H i • I 4
1 Jl^_^ ft ?> it ^ ft fi J> 4 ’ I' 0 ffi ^ #ft ( ( =F 0 # rj 4 tt A ^ B T- C
M ' A 4; ffi ® ir A li
^O^lt’OA^'C^i
^IX^Mxc^jatMT^e^a^tzO^B
0^1$
p 0 ® i ^ ® b 0 ^ -n' lj 0 § tz tz 6 ^MX©A^^^IOL^$K Mb ^. W ^ - ^ - ^ r ©
'O
X fOTOIAflO^^
^ O0
t) ^ ? ^ © (O ^ T ft ?? 11 : ^ H 4; iff t 5 t 4k # s
L- L
f: ^ ® !I IX ft £ C ® a a # ® £ ft 4 *> 3 ± L - s f ’ » * j I M I f 2 f hPM*
o Mf
# r ^ f &ij
0 Eft ' f © jb» ^ © O ii i> TO^^L^X^-X^i^^A
IS +
? © E ' # t £ * « I: / # e ^ a G ^ H T # e H i H 4fij 0 T iz 7 # A O © ' i ^
" # S TO
©
E ^ ^ © ^ iJ © It ® A © Co ^ t ^ M ^ IZ 7 ^ t + ^
O ^ t t IO ^t iz LJ?lT^idt)©^A '
;O A ^ ^b 6 t
iz
®
©
y O lO
i S t ^ O ® C ^
L 5 S 63 O =e 7 i> ^ ^- (Z ^ : s L O Ml A Mb ^ +
i #
©
i fe s
Mf^biXT^ofrOi:!' ^ ® # ^ i> a ^6 tz 4b + 1 iz ,< ^ © ,x
r & e^
o H C A /)
T tz g ^ t 7^
© O®O^6±03^^42^-bft?0^B ®
?
O t i £ A
t ' ^ i U ^J zK 6 (^ f ^ IZ J
' 7 0 —1 A © f It £ -g
fs b 1 ■ — & ^
B i 1 K
MlOC^sbfe^bb^
°ftBiz^ttt)^l^l©^ O iz js h T §■ ^ '
© © ^ ©
Page 6
PAC
Page 7
Wednesday, June 10, 1953
THE NEW CANADIAN
Nitta Softball Squad Looks
To League, Tourney Titles
PAGE 7
| Hawaii Nisei Distance Champion Hopes to Make
1956 U.S. Olympic Squad, Will be 49 Years Old
PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS
A orman AAU championships at Y’onker
Tamanaha, Hawa
ei mar- He would like to go back to Bo:
TORONTO — Nitta Machinery, a 3-run round-tripper.
athon and dist ance running- chain ton oi’ the AAU marathon ever
Nisei softball team in TorIn their second game on June pion, hope
continue running
have entered the Bellwoods u, i\ittas big guns really opened until the Olympic game
The 4b-year-old runner grinned
I t e r m e d i a t e “A” Softball up as they swamped Transfers The 46-year-old runne
when he recalled how the doctors
League- In their two starts, the 16-0 behind Palmer Rennie’s tinned fi’om the Boston
at the Mainland marathons re
X - x-men dropped the opener, shutout pitching. Rennie aided k o r s chain pio nsh ips.
fused to believe he was more than
1334^ Queen W. — LA. 6378
(U4. but came back to claim a his own cause by getting three
He feels that he has a chance 30 years old.
Toronto. Ont.
gmi win in theix' second game.
hits in four trips. Tad Miura and <.0 make the next L.S. Olympic
“They checked me at the end
11 st ling George Takaoka is Maw Mori each connected twice
"Right now there are onlv of the races," Tamanaha said,
again managing the team with both players hitting' for the three
I have to contend “said I was in perfect shape and
Lucien C. Kurata
.-ear. He promises a strong' circuit.
with.’
lained. "They are asked me my age. When I told
Barrister and Solicitor
nder and is gunning for all
The management would like to John J. Kelly of Boston univer- them they refused to believ me.
Notary Publie
and will be a strong factor see more Nisei fans out at the
"So I told them to go back and
3
Adelaide
St, E-, Toronto
forthcoming Toronto JC- games for moral support. The and John Latterly, also of Bos check my entry registration. They
ii
1st and 2nd Mortgage Goans
International Labox’ Day next game is scheduled for Thur's., ton.”
oiiangod
did. too."
on. EM. 6-0959 Res. LY. 3427
Tm ament.
June 11, at Bickford Park from
“Marathon running is no longer
The Nisei distance stav finished
s season the team will be 6:30 p.m.
10th at Boston and seventh in the. a jag/’ Tamanaha said in pointmuch improved with long ball
ing out that the man in the best,
hitting Maw Mori at first base
condition on the day of the race
and the addition of Freddie Ta
invariably comes out on top. One
naka. Fleet-footed Tad Miura will
to pace himself to run betbe another factor in what points
ween 10 h to UK
an hour
to be a good season.
Westerns displaying their run- startox’ Walt Severnuck in the to stand a chance of winning.
Ou June 2, Nitta Machinery ning game to advantage by ral
“Yamada, the Japanese who
sixth, gained credit fox’ the win.
284.A YONQI STRUT, TORONTCt, ONT.
started off on the wrong foot lying for two runs in the bottom
DIAMOND D I? ST: Westerns won the Boston Marathon ran
when they lost the opening game half of the eighth inning nipped
now have 3 wins and 5 losses and about 12 miles an hour in spots.
of the season to Local 299 by a Milwaukee Sports, 6-5, in an ex
We Sp.
e In
share a portion of fourth place He is a little fellow, and runs very
6-4 score. A 2-run homei' in the tra-inning game for their second
with Brant’s . . . First-place hold- light. You can hardly hear him ;
final frame proved the fatal blow. straight win at Earlscourt Staex' is Mahers with 8 st raight wins running. He was in terrific condi
Newcomer Ritchie Wilson started dium on June
followed by West Y'orks and In tion. He was 26th in the last
684 Church St. (cor. Bloor)
on the mound for Nittas with
The teams headed into the dustrial . . . Manager Ogaki Olympic marathon, but at Boston,
Phone
MI. 0995 — Toronto
smooth working Roy Tanaka re eighth inning tied 4-4 with Milhopes to get anothei' catchei’ and he beat runners who finished far
lieving in the third.
waukee scoring once in the top a hard-hitting outfielder to ahead of him in the Helsinki
Tad Miura scored the first run half. Checker Nishimura’s triple strengthen the team . . . Negro Games. So you can never tell
of tiie season and the other’ Nisei which started the rally was the
outfielder Johnny Braithwaite has what will happen in a marathon
runs came when Sho Mori blasted key blow. A f t e r Sub Miike been dropped from the squad. . . run.”
101i/2 QUEEN ST. W.
Tamanaha said that in the
grounded out, Nishimura holding
Foe Pick-up and Deli vary
Banquet Winds Up
A AU marat hon, at YMnkers, he
third, Ken Ikeda walked after
Phone
Dance Proceeds Slated figured to place, fourth and paced
Nisei Flyers Season
missing two attempted bunts.
EiM. 8-6953
Nisei Flyers, only Nisei team Birabauer came in to relieve For Comm. Centre Fund himself well until the last mile.
Proceeds from the Coronation
in organized hockey, wound up starter Walt Wilush aftex’ the
“For 25 miles, I felt strong
Dance
this
Friday,
June
12,
spon
and held fourth place comfort
theix’ 1952-53 activities with a latter walked Yuki Kameoka to
sored
jointly
by
the
Toronto
JC
ably,
” he said. “But. I fell apart
banquet at Andrews Drive-In, fill the bases.
CA,
Kisaragi
Club
and
the
Recand had nothing left for the last
Scarboro, on June 5. Manager
Watch Repair Shop
.Manager Buzz Ogaki who had
Socratic
Club,
at
the
UNF
Hall,
miles.
”
Mas Nakao was presented with pinch hit for Walt Severnuck in
328 BROADVIEW AVE.
an album on which was engraved the fifth and played three innings will go towards the Toronto Ja
panese Canadian Community Cen
TOKYO — Mrs. Eleanor Roos
Toronto. Phone GL. 3652
the Flyers’ crest.
in left field, bunted to score Ni
tre Fund.
evelt
Monday
narrated
the
story
Nakao in a speech, praised the shimura. Major Fukumoto carry
Dancing continues from 8:30 to of “Peter and the Wolf” as the
“team spirit and clean play” ing on what seems to be a Japa
Residence:
12:30 and admission is' $1.00. Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra
SM4-0508
winch had made the season the nese Canadian trademark of
2 Vests Drive
During intermission, entertain played a Sergei ProkofiefT’s music
most successful in the team’s his squeeze plays, bunted to score
MAfair 1365.
ment will be supplied by mem for 2,600 Japanese high school
tory.
the winning run.
Andrew E. McKagne,
bers of the Rec-Socratic Club. All children. Mrs. Roosevelt is visit
The total sum collected for the
Milwaukee who have yet to
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
‘
are invited to attend.
ing Japan.
“Majoi’ Fukumoto Injury Fund” win a game, carried a 4-3 lead
Public.
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
reached 8212.50. Final donators into the 7th frame before Wes
330 Bay St.
were Sam Kano $5, Eglinwood terns rallied to tie the game. They
(Corner Adelaida A Bay St#.)
Shop 82, Dr. Noble Hori $5 and were one out from their first vic
TORONTO
anonymous $2. Players wish to tory when Ken Ohara walked,
FEMALE HELP WANTED
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
express theix’ gratitude for the stole second, and came home on
THREE STORE GIRLS for dryCOOK-GENERAL. Must be will
public, professional people and Maw Mori’s clutch single.
cleaners. Phone Danforth Cleaners,
New & Used Car
ing
to go out to summer cottage,
Tony Polito, fiery manager of Toronto, RI. 2424.
businesses fox' their aid.
i
could sleep in or out while in city.
A
Sales & Service
the luckless Milwaukee, who has
EXPERIENCED OPERATORS on Phone MO. 8756 (Toronto).
A
t
A
a weakness for being tossed out sportwear. Apply McIntosh Sport
ALL DIA KES
EXPERIENCED
WOMAN,
30-45
I
*
of games, was chased by Umpire wear Co., 266 King St. West, Tor years old, family with two children,
Expert
Vehicle
Analysis
:
bungalow, $80, private room. Re
Ferri in the 6th frame when he onto.
$
GIRL FOR BOOKKEEPER, cap- cent references only. Phone HU.
RATES
REA
SONABLE
shoved the arbiter around. Ferri
able of handling small set of books. 8-5168, Toronto.
had
called time-out just before
*
JAMES M. KAI
COUPLE, wife cook-general, hus
pitcher Ikeda threw the ball. The 5-day week. Apply Princeston band houseman or may be em
:
Auto Technician
Milwaukee battex’ singled but the Manufacturing Ltd., 44 York St., ployed elsewhere. Or male or fe
A
t
303 Westmoreland Ave.
hit was nullified, hence the rhu Toronto, EM. 4-4017._______________ male cook-general for North Tor
OPERATORS, interested in mov onto home of tvzo adults. Large
ME. 6165 — TORONTO
barb. Polito could have saved his
A
s. TSUJIMURA
ing to the west coast. Must be ful separate livina quarters. Phone
t
breath since the same batter ly experienced on better lines
A
HU. 8-7674.
A
doubled on the next pitch.
A
S
d. Apply Aljean Sportwec
The Nisei were actually outhit
HELP YVANTED
VANCOUVER, B. C.
T. KOBAYASHI
,
TorLtd.,
78
Wellington
St.
11-9. Ken Ikeda who relieved ।
BOYS FOR FACTORY and ship
WESTERNS NIP MILWAUKEE IN OVERTIME TILT,
SQUEEZE TWO RUNS ON BASES-LOADED BUNTS
0. K. CLEANERS
CLASSIFIED SECTION
i
1
1
LONG LIVE
THE QUEEN
Toronto JCCA, Kisaragi Club
and the Rec-Socratic Club
present
A
Coronation Dance
Friday, June 12
;
® TIME: 8:30-12:30
Proceeds
UNF HALL
t
*
A
s
A
onto.
SCHOOL GIRL for full-time in
summer holidays for fruit store,
10-5 p-.m. Can work part-time dur
ing school days on Saturdays, 9-3
p.m. Call Dorothy Wong, RO. 2904.
Toronto.
_____________
“CCUPLEUoR-DOk-IESTIC help.
Cook-general, houseman with driv
er's licence, experienced, referenc
es, good wages, private quarters.
Cali MA. 9939, Toronto.
__________ FOR RENT__________
© ADMISSION 81.00
To The Community Centre Fund
THREE UNFURNISHED rooms,
with sink. Phone Ge. O71Q, Tor
onto.
ping rooms. Nat Laurie Inc., 141
Spadina Ave., Toronto.
GARDINER wanted. For particu
lars, phone HO 4414, Toronto, Mr.
Heike.
BERRY-PICKERS.
Com mencin g
June 15, transportation leaving 7
a.m. from Ossington <5 Queen Sts.
daily. For full particulars, ’write
Masumi Yamamoto, c/o Orida,
R.R. 1, Oakville, Ont., or phone
Oakville 158-J-I2.
THREE OR FOUR carpenters, ex
perienced, for job in west end of
Toronto. Cail after 7 p.m., CL. 92664.
&SON
For Ail Your
Insurance Needs
LIFE, AUTO, FIRE
FLOATERS, ETC.
P.O. Box 149
KAMLOOPS, B. C.
Residence:
139 LEIGH ROAD,
North Kamloops, B. C.
THE NEW CANADIAN
Nitta Softball Squad Looks
To League, Tourney Titles
PAGE 7
| Hawaii Nisei Distance Champion Hopes to Make
1956 U.S. Olympic Squad, Will be 49 Years Old
PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS
A orman AAU championships at Y’onker
Tamanaha, Hawa
ei mar- He would like to go back to Bo:
TORONTO — Nitta Machinery, a 3-run round-tripper.
athon and dist ance running- chain ton oi’ the AAU marathon ever
Nisei softball team in TorIn their second game on June pion, hope
continue running
have entered the Bellwoods u, i\ittas big guns really opened until the Olympic game
The 4b-year-old runner grinned
I t e r m e d i a t e “A” Softball up as they swamped Transfers The 46-year-old runne
when he recalled how the doctors
League- In their two starts, the 16-0 behind Palmer Rennie’s tinned fi’om the Boston
at the Mainland marathons re
X - x-men dropped the opener, shutout pitching. Rennie aided k o r s chain pio nsh ips.
fused to believe he was more than
1334^ Queen W. — LA. 6378
(U4. but came back to claim a his own cause by getting three
He feels that he has a chance 30 years old.
Toronto. Ont.
gmi win in theix' second game.
hits in four trips. Tad Miura and <.0 make the next L.S. Olympic
“They checked me at the end
11 st ling George Takaoka is Maw Mori each connected twice
"Right now there are onlv of the races," Tamanaha said,
again managing the team with both players hitting' for the three
I have to contend “said I was in perfect shape and
Lucien C. Kurata
.-ear. He promises a strong' circuit.
with.’
lained. "They are asked me my age. When I told
Barrister and Solicitor
nder and is gunning for all
The management would like to John J. Kelly of Boston univer- them they refused to believ me.
Notary Publie
and will be a strong factor see more Nisei fans out at the
"So I told them to go back and
3
Adelaide
St, E-, Toronto
forthcoming Toronto JC- games for moral support. The and John Latterly, also of Bos check my entry registration. They
ii
1st and 2nd Mortgage Goans
International Labox’ Day next game is scheduled for Thur's., ton.”
oiiangod
did. too."
on. EM. 6-0959 Res. LY. 3427
Tm ament.
June 11, at Bickford Park from
“Marathon running is no longer
The Nisei distance stav finished
s season the team will be 6:30 p.m.
10th at Boston and seventh in the. a jag/’ Tamanaha said in pointmuch improved with long ball
ing out that the man in the best,
hitting Maw Mori at first base
condition on the day of the race
and the addition of Freddie Ta
invariably comes out on top. One
naka. Fleet-footed Tad Miura will
to pace himself to run betbe another factor in what points
ween 10 h to UK
an hour
to be a good season.
Westerns displaying their run- startox’ Walt Severnuck in the to stand a chance of winning.
Ou June 2, Nitta Machinery ning game to advantage by ral
“Yamada, the Japanese who
sixth, gained credit fox’ the win.
284.A YONQI STRUT, TORONTCt, ONT.
started off on the wrong foot lying for two runs in the bottom
DIAMOND D I? ST: Westerns won the Boston Marathon ran
when they lost the opening game half of the eighth inning nipped
now have 3 wins and 5 losses and about 12 miles an hour in spots.
of the season to Local 299 by a Milwaukee Sports, 6-5, in an ex
We Sp.
e In
share a portion of fourth place He is a little fellow, and runs very
6-4 score. A 2-run homei' in the tra-inning game for their second
with Brant’s . . . First-place hold- light. You can hardly hear him ;
final frame proved the fatal blow. straight win at Earlscourt Staex' is Mahers with 8 st raight wins running. He was in terrific condi
Newcomer Ritchie Wilson started dium on June
followed by West Y'orks and In tion. He was 26th in the last
684 Church St. (cor. Bloor)
on the mound for Nittas with
The teams headed into the dustrial . . . Manager Ogaki Olympic marathon, but at Boston,
Phone
MI. 0995 — Toronto
smooth working Roy Tanaka re eighth inning tied 4-4 with Milhopes to get anothei' catchei’ and he beat runners who finished far
lieving in the third.
waukee scoring once in the top a hard-hitting outfielder to ahead of him in the Helsinki
Tad Miura scored the first run half. Checker Nishimura’s triple strengthen the team . . . Negro Games. So you can never tell
of tiie season and the other’ Nisei which started the rally was the
outfielder Johnny Braithwaite has what will happen in a marathon
runs came when Sho Mori blasted key blow. A f t e r Sub Miike been dropped from the squad. . . run.”
101i/2 QUEEN ST. W.
Tamanaha said that in the
grounded out, Nishimura holding
Foe Pick-up and Deli vary
Banquet Winds Up
A AU marat hon, at YMnkers, he
third, Ken Ikeda walked after
Phone
Dance Proceeds Slated figured to place, fourth and paced
Nisei Flyers Season
missing two attempted bunts.
EiM. 8-6953
Nisei Flyers, only Nisei team Birabauer came in to relieve For Comm. Centre Fund himself well until the last mile.
Proceeds from the Coronation
in organized hockey, wound up starter Walt Wilush aftex’ the
“For 25 miles, I felt strong
Dance
this
Friday,
June
12,
spon
and held fourth place comfort
theix’ 1952-53 activities with a latter walked Yuki Kameoka to
sored
jointly
by
the
Toronto
JC
ably,
” he said. “But. I fell apart
banquet at Andrews Drive-In, fill the bases.
CA,
Kisaragi
Club
and
the
Recand had nothing left for the last
Scarboro, on June 5. Manager
Watch Repair Shop
.Manager Buzz Ogaki who had
Socratic
Club,
at
the
UNF
Hall,
miles.
”
Mas Nakao was presented with pinch hit for Walt Severnuck in
328 BROADVIEW AVE.
an album on which was engraved the fifth and played three innings will go towards the Toronto Ja
panese Canadian Community Cen
TOKYO — Mrs. Eleanor Roos
Toronto. Phone GL. 3652
the Flyers’ crest.
in left field, bunted to score Ni
tre Fund.
evelt
Monday
narrated
the
story
Nakao in a speech, praised the shimura. Major Fukumoto carry
Dancing continues from 8:30 to of “Peter and the Wolf” as the
“team spirit and clean play” ing on what seems to be a Japa
Residence:
12:30 and admission is' $1.00. Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra
SM4-0508
winch had made the season the nese Canadian trademark of
2 Vests Drive
During intermission, entertain played a Sergei ProkofiefT’s music
most successful in the team’s his squeeze plays, bunted to score
MAfair 1365.
ment will be supplied by mem for 2,600 Japanese high school
tory.
the winning run.
Andrew E. McKagne,
bers of the Rec-Socratic Club. All children. Mrs. Roosevelt is visit
The total sum collected for the
Milwaukee who have yet to
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
‘
are invited to attend.
ing Japan.
“Majoi’ Fukumoto Injury Fund” win a game, carried a 4-3 lead
Public.
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
reached 8212.50. Final donators into the 7th frame before Wes
330 Bay St.
were Sam Kano $5, Eglinwood terns rallied to tie the game. They
(Corner Adelaida A Bay St#.)
Shop 82, Dr. Noble Hori $5 and were one out from their first vic
TORONTO
anonymous $2. Players wish to tory when Ken Ohara walked,
FEMALE HELP WANTED
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
express theix’ gratitude for the stole second, and came home on
THREE STORE GIRLS for dryCOOK-GENERAL. Must be will
public, professional people and Maw Mori’s clutch single.
cleaners. Phone Danforth Cleaners,
New & Used Car
ing
to go out to summer cottage,
Tony Polito, fiery manager of Toronto, RI. 2424.
businesses fox' their aid.
i
could sleep in or out while in city.
A
Sales & Service
the luckless Milwaukee, who has
EXPERIENCED OPERATORS on Phone MO. 8756 (Toronto).
A
t
A
a weakness for being tossed out sportwear. Apply McIntosh Sport
ALL DIA KES
EXPERIENCED
WOMAN,
30-45
I
*
of games, was chased by Umpire wear Co., 266 King St. West, Tor years old, family with two children,
Expert
Vehicle
Analysis
:
bungalow, $80, private room. Re
Ferri in the 6th frame when he onto.
$
GIRL FOR BOOKKEEPER, cap- cent references only. Phone HU.
RATES
REA
SONABLE
shoved the arbiter around. Ferri
able of handling small set of books. 8-5168, Toronto.
had
called time-out just before
*
JAMES M. KAI
COUPLE, wife cook-general, hus
pitcher Ikeda threw the ball. The 5-day week. Apply Princeston band houseman or may be em
:
Auto Technician
Milwaukee battex’ singled but the Manufacturing Ltd., 44 York St., ployed elsewhere. Or male or fe
A
t
303 Westmoreland Ave.
hit was nullified, hence the rhu Toronto, EM. 4-4017._______________ male cook-general for North Tor
OPERATORS, interested in mov onto home of tvzo adults. Large
ME. 6165 — TORONTO
barb. Polito could have saved his
A
s. TSUJIMURA
ing to the west coast. Must be ful separate livina quarters. Phone
t
breath since the same batter ly experienced on better lines
A
HU. 8-7674.
A
doubled on the next pitch.
A
S
d. Apply Aljean Sportwec
The Nisei were actually outhit
HELP YVANTED
VANCOUVER, B. C.
T. KOBAYASHI
,
TorLtd.,
78
Wellington
St.
11-9. Ken Ikeda who relieved ।
BOYS FOR FACTORY and ship
WESTERNS NIP MILWAUKEE IN OVERTIME TILT,
SQUEEZE TWO RUNS ON BASES-LOADED BUNTS
0. K. CLEANERS
CLASSIFIED SECTION
i
1
1
LONG LIVE
THE QUEEN
Toronto JCCA, Kisaragi Club
and the Rec-Socratic Club
present
A
Coronation Dance
Friday, June 12
;
® TIME: 8:30-12:30
Proceeds
UNF HALL
t
*
A
s
A
onto.
SCHOOL GIRL for full-time in
summer holidays for fruit store,
10-5 p-.m. Can work part-time dur
ing school days on Saturdays, 9-3
p.m. Call Dorothy Wong, RO. 2904.
Toronto.
_____________
“CCUPLEUoR-DOk-IESTIC help.
Cook-general, houseman with driv
er's licence, experienced, referenc
es, good wages, private quarters.
Cali MA. 9939, Toronto.
__________ FOR RENT__________
© ADMISSION 81.00
To The Community Centre Fund
THREE UNFURNISHED rooms,
with sink. Phone Ge. O71Q, Tor
onto.
ping rooms. Nat Laurie Inc., 141
Spadina Ave., Toronto.
GARDINER wanted. For particu
lars, phone HO 4414, Toronto, Mr.
Heike.
BERRY-PICKERS.
Com mencin g
June 15, transportation leaving 7
a.m. from Ossington <5 Queen Sts.
daily. For full particulars, ’write
Masumi Yamamoto, c/o Orida,
R.R. 1, Oakville, Ont., or phone
Oakville 158-J-I2.
THREE OR FOUR carpenters, ex
perienced, for job in west end of
Toronto. Cail after 7 p.m., CL. 92664.
&SON
For Ail Your
Insurance Needs
LIFE, AUTO, FIRE
FLOATERS, ETC.
P.O. Box 149
KAMLOOPS, B. C.
Residence:
139 LEIGH ROAD,
North Kamloops, B. C.
Page 8
PAGE 8
PA<
P
THE NEW CANADIAN
'lllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIin
SOCIAL CALENDAR
Mont'l YBS Picnic
At Rawdon Beach
Wednesday, June 10, l9Sr
GEORGE TANAKA AND THE JCCA
(Continued from page 1)
erd on a.
MONTREAL — Now that the
ment in B.C., making represen turn of the Japanese Canadians
picnic season is in full swing, the
tations to the gov’t., for the the fishing industry on the We 0
1-1-—Toronto. Canadian Internat Montreal Young Buddhist Society MARRIAGES
naturalization of Issei and work Coast. It was there that Gwm
ional Trade Fair, at CNE.
has chosen Rawdon Beach in the
TANOUYE — HARADA
ing for the return of strandees. realized what he wanted to do
1-—Toronto. Coronation Dance, at scenic Laurentians for its sixth
UNF Hall, 8.30 p.m.
George, of course, had a hand “Following the dark days of
TORONTO-The marriage of
annual picnic on Sunday, June 28.
13—Hamilton. Hamilton Nisei Base
Persons wishing to join the Martha Matsuye, fourth daughter in all of this during his secretary evacuation, all of us wanted to
ball League Annual Dance, at
Gould’s Auditorium, 9-12 p.m.
crowd and spend a day at one of of Mr. and Mrs. Kumaichi Ha ship, and much ink and space express the pent-up emotion the
13—Montreal. Seisho Kai & Quebec Quebec's famous vacation spots, rada, to Mits Tanouye, eldest son would have. to be expended to gnawing feeling, the hurt of not
JCCA Japanese Flower Arrange
are requested to make their reser of Mrs. Itsu Tanouye, took place tell the complete story. Pressed being recognized as real Canad
ment Exhibit, at Victoria Hall,
vations early, and at the latest, on May7 16 at Carlton Street Unit for some highlights of his ten ians,. and I finally got the chance
Westmount, 2 p.m.
ure, George sat soberly back in to express myself.”
I!)—Toronto. George Tanaka Test June 22. For further informa ed Church.
imonial Banquet, at Hearthstone tion, phone one of the following
Maid of honor was Pansy Ha- his orderly office—for neatness
George took many trips f0
Restaurant, 891 Bay St., 7 p.m.
executive members: Connie Oike made while bridesmaids were seems to be another facet in his Ottawa such as the important one
21—Toronto. Toronto YBS Annual
DU. 8180, Ken Tatebe. PL. 3912, Susie Tanouye and Asako Ha character—and after much dis of presenting a brief with other
Picnic, at Huttonvillc, Ont.
or Harry Yamada CH. 1744.
rada. Flower girl was Lois Uyeda. course on the matter, some of minority races on human rights
The bus will leave St. Louis Best man was Tets Harada while the story can be sorted out of the and fundamental freedoms. Re
Square at 8:30 a.m. sharp and ushers were Koji Morishita and plethora of detail.
A CKNO WLEDGEMENTS
cently in pursuit of the re-entry
make a stopover at Jean Talon Stoney Nagata.
question, George said that he felt
The New Canadian acknow Bus Depot at 8:45 a.m.
FIRST TASK
The couple went to New York
that “here was democracy work
ledges with thanks generous do
for,
their
honeymoon.
They
are
One
of
the
first
and
important
ing
—our voices were being heard
nations from the following:
now residing at 23 Boston Ave., things the JCCA had to do was to in the government—and that is
Mrs. Yono Takaoka, Toronto, on
in Toronto.
Enumerators, Clerks
convince the Co-Operative Com something that most people take
marriage of daughter.
Baishakunins
were
Mr.
and
mittee,
a body formed by liberal for granted and generally never
Toronto Nisei A.Y.P.A.
Wanted for Elections
Mrs. Umezo Morishita.
minded Canadian citizens,' that think about.”
TORONTO — Persons wishing
*
*
*
the Japanese Canadians had suf IDEALISM & FAITH
to receive employment as enum
fered property losses from the
OZAKI — KAYAHARA
erators for the forthcoming elec
This is but an incomplete part
enforced evacuation. Given ample
tions will be paid at the rate of 9
LONDON, Ont. — The mar
of
the story of George and his
proof, the Committee set about
cents per name and they will re riage of Ruriko, daughter of Mrs.
in gaining recompense and al work with the JCCA. It is but
ceive approximately $30 for their Shizuye Kayahara of Toronto, to
though only “rough justice” was part of the story of six years of
work. The work can be handled Tom Tsutomu Ozaki of London,
Give him Japanese Books,
received, George says that the devotion and dedication, and al
part time in the evenings after took place on May 30 at the Cen
Magazines & Records
“Canadian government was forced though the work must have been
June 25.
tennial United Church. Rev. Gills
at
to admit that they had acted satisfying, it has not been easy 4
Poll clerks will receive approx officiated.
wrongly and that in itself, was and not without criticism. What
KAMEOKA BOOKS
imately $8 and Deputy Returning
Reception followed at the Palm
ever he has done, George has set
an unique achievement”.
Officers
will
receive
$12.00.
Grove
Restaurant.
113 McCaul St. — Toronto
“One of the most thrilling a high standard for idealism and
Further information can be ob
moments in my life”, George faith in the JCCA. and an era of
PHONE EM. 8-9934
ENGAGEMENTS
tained from The New Canadian.
says, “came in the provincial le sorts elapses when he retires f
EDMONTON, Alta. — Mr. and gislature in Victoria when I heard from his post.
:
OBITUARY
Mrs.
Kesahiro Iwashita of Ed- the provincial franchise being
His official capacity coming to
i
X
i
KEN HORI
KAWAGUCHI
monto, Alta.., announce the en- granted the Japanese Canadians.’’ an end, George will retire to pri
TORONTO
Susan
gagement of their daughter, ToAnother high point in his car vate life, and go back to his first
representative
A guchi passed away on June 6 at
miye Iwashita of Toronto, to eer came when he was given the love—landscape architecture—for
home. Funeral services were held Dave Toshio Watanabe, son of opportunity to speak before the in it, he hopes to apply his phil 1
Bernardi-Mathews Ltd.
bn June 8 at the Ralph Day Fun Mrs. Taka Watanabe of Toronto. United Fishermen And Allied osophy and attitude toward life
REAL ESTATE BROKERS A
eral Home conducted by Rev. K. A party7 took place on June 7 at Workers’ Union in Vancouver in and catch up with the esoteric
Shimizu.
the home of Mrs. Watanabe.
1949 on the question of the re- hopes that he had abandoned
She is tile daughter of Mrs.
since 1941.
TORONTO
A Suyeno Kawaguchi, and sister of
Office OL. 4241 - Res. GL. 8914
Toshio, Goro, Hiroshi, Masaki of
York City. Since she has taken
£ Toronto; Mrs. S. Kojima of Mon
dramatic roles, Miss Osato has
A treal.
been seen often as an exotic
By LAuRY TAJIRI
i an artist of minority ancestry
beauty in TV murder dramas. On
Colorado Springs probably faces a more limited
I
Studio One last year she appearI
For some 900 performances horizon as an actor than in any
as as a Eurasian girl who falls
now two Nisei dancers, Yuriko of the other arts. A Nisei actor,
I
in love with an American pilot in
Kikuchi and Michiko Iseri, have for instance, usually is restricted
“Pagoda,” which had a southeast
been holding- Broadway audiences to Oriental roles on.the stage
Asian setting.
spellbound with-their charm and oper TV and in the films. Sessue
Miss Osato, whose talents are
t
artistry in their duet which comes Hayakawa who once made $5,000
many and who is not one to be
i
a climax to the ballet, The a week as a leading man in Hol
bound by the dictates of type
i:
| Small House of Uncle Thomas
lywood silents, played a variety casting, has wanted for some
s
in Rogers and Hammerstein
--f Oriental menaces, although he time to make her Broadway debut
o
“The King and I.”
occasionally showed up as a ren in a straight dramatic role in the
Si
When wc were last in New egade American Indian as he did
lead of a play by Jean Girardoux,
J
Toik, which was last December, in a 1914 Thomas Ince produc
the French playwright who wrote
we finally had an opportunity- to tion called “Pride of Race.” There
“Amphytrion 38.”
CL
see this musical version of “’Anna is nothing wrong with Oriental
Sono Osato is one of the lead
0]
and the King of Siam.” Rogers roles, except that there aren’t
Only Canadian Pacific offers new low
ing spirits of an avantgarde act
p<
and Hammerstein have provided many of them in dramatic litering company7, which will present
fares to emigrants changing permanent
0
a wonderful evening in the thea- ature, as Anna May Wong also
four new plays this month at the
residence to the Americas.
tei, a book which makes sense found to be true.
Theatre de Lys in New Yorks
luics that are singable and tunes
B
Sono Osato danced a wide var Greenwich Village. She will open
to hum on the way home on the
on June 9 in a leading role in
subway. All this, and a whisper iety of roles with the Ballet Russe “Maya” by Simon Bantillon and
MOW
of a message about free men and and her appearances in two
Broadway hit musicals “One she will be seen the week of J®free minds.
Touch of Venus” and “On the 30 in the femme lead in “The
in
“The Sr
House” is the
Little Clay Cart,” a translation of
Town
”
,
were
as
a
girl
from
Ozone
ne:
Siamese-Buddhist version of the
Park and as Olive Smith who is a Hindu fantasy by Arthur Wi
thi
uncle Tom legend, and in it Yu
chosen “Miss Subway” of New liam Ryder. (— Pacific Citizen)
Vancouver
Jaj
riko is Eliza Michiko the Angel.
on
There has been talk that Holly
Wei
wood will film “The King and I.”
A
A Open 12 noon to 2 a.m.
If is to be hoped that they will
A
A
cast Yuriko and Michiko in the
A
A
got
roles they have portrayed so ably
A
famous
Chinese
foods
Chop Suey House
lucl
A
and so delightfully- for more than
X
69 Albert St. —Toronto
W-A
Elizabeth
St.,
Toronto
two seasons on Broadway. “The
(at Elizabeth)
bar
BANQUETS and family x
8mall House of Uncle Thomas”
A
Telephone
EM.
8-9817
A
ROYAL YORK HOTEL
a b:
DINNERS
wouldn't be the same without
A
u
Special
attention
given
ihir
Heun:
12
Neon
to
4
aan.
them.
X
Reservations: EM4-9035
i’ei
to take out orders.
A
Type-casting being what it is
I1IIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
JUNE
FOR FATHER'S DAY
Choreo and Thespis
30% OFF
CANADIAN PACIFIC
fares from
THE ORIENT
$450
Hoe Sai Gay
PA<
P
THE NEW CANADIAN
'lllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIin
SOCIAL CALENDAR
Mont'l YBS Picnic
At Rawdon Beach
Wednesday, June 10, l9Sr
GEORGE TANAKA AND THE JCCA
(Continued from page 1)
erd on a.
MONTREAL — Now that the
ment in B.C., making represen turn of the Japanese Canadians
picnic season is in full swing, the
tations to the gov’t., for the the fishing industry on the We 0
1-1-—Toronto. Canadian Internat Montreal Young Buddhist Society MARRIAGES
naturalization of Issei and work Coast. It was there that Gwm
ional Trade Fair, at CNE.
has chosen Rawdon Beach in the
TANOUYE — HARADA
ing for the return of strandees. realized what he wanted to do
1-—Toronto. Coronation Dance, at scenic Laurentians for its sixth
UNF Hall, 8.30 p.m.
George, of course, had a hand “Following the dark days of
TORONTO-The marriage of
annual picnic on Sunday, June 28.
13—Hamilton. Hamilton Nisei Base
Persons wishing to join the Martha Matsuye, fourth daughter in all of this during his secretary evacuation, all of us wanted to
ball League Annual Dance, at
Gould’s Auditorium, 9-12 p.m.
crowd and spend a day at one of of Mr. and Mrs. Kumaichi Ha ship, and much ink and space express the pent-up emotion the
13—Montreal. Seisho Kai & Quebec Quebec's famous vacation spots, rada, to Mits Tanouye, eldest son would have. to be expended to gnawing feeling, the hurt of not
JCCA Japanese Flower Arrange
are requested to make their reser of Mrs. Itsu Tanouye, took place tell the complete story. Pressed being recognized as real Canad
ment Exhibit, at Victoria Hall,
vations early, and at the latest, on May7 16 at Carlton Street Unit for some highlights of his ten ians,. and I finally got the chance
Westmount, 2 p.m.
ure, George sat soberly back in to express myself.”
I!)—Toronto. George Tanaka Test June 22. For further informa ed Church.
imonial Banquet, at Hearthstone tion, phone one of the following
Maid of honor was Pansy Ha- his orderly office—for neatness
George took many trips f0
Restaurant, 891 Bay St., 7 p.m.
executive members: Connie Oike made while bridesmaids were seems to be another facet in his Ottawa such as the important one
21—Toronto. Toronto YBS Annual
DU. 8180, Ken Tatebe. PL. 3912, Susie Tanouye and Asako Ha character—and after much dis of presenting a brief with other
Picnic, at Huttonvillc, Ont.
or Harry Yamada CH. 1744.
rada. Flower girl was Lois Uyeda. course on the matter, some of minority races on human rights
The bus will leave St. Louis Best man was Tets Harada while the story can be sorted out of the and fundamental freedoms. Re
Square at 8:30 a.m. sharp and ushers were Koji Morishita and plethora of detail.
A CKNO WLEDGEMENTS
cently in pursuit of the re-entry
make a stopover at Jean Talon Stoney Nagata.
question, George said that he felt
The New Canadian acknow Bus Depot at 8:45 a.m.
FIRST TASK
The couple went to New York
that “here was democracy work
ledges with thanks generous do
for,
their
honeymoon.
They
are
One
of
the
first
and
important
ing
—our voices were being heard
nations from the following:
now residing at 23 Boston Ave., things the JCCA had to do was to in the government—and that is
Mrs. Yono Takaoka, Toronto, on
in Toronto.
Enumerators, Clerks
convince the Co-Operative Com something that most people take
marriage of daughter.
Baishakunins
were
Mr.
and
mittee,
a body formed by liberal for granted and generally never
Toronto Nisei A.Y.P.A.
Wanted for Elections
Mrs. Umezo Morishita.
minded Canadian citizens,' that think about.”
TORONTO — Persons wishing
*
*
*
the Japanese Canadians had suf IDEALISM & FAITH
to receive employment as enum
fered property losses from the
OZAKI — KAYAHARA
erators for the forthcoming elec
This is but an incomplete part
enforced evacuation. Given ample
tions will be paid at the rate of 9
LONDON, Ont. — The mar
of
the story of George and his
proof, the Committee set about
cents per name and they will re riage of Ruriko, daughter of Mrs.
in gaining recompense and al work with the JCCA. It is but
ceive approximately $30 for their Shizuye Kayahara of Toronto, to
though only “rough justice” was part of the story of six years of
work. The work can be handled Tom Tsutomu Ozaki of London,
Give him Japanese Books,
received, George says that the devotion and dedication, and al
part time in the evenings after took place on May 30 at the Cen
Magazines & Records
“Canadian government was forced though the work must have been
June 25.
tennial United Church. Rev. Gills
at
to admit that they had acted satisfying, it has not been easy 4
Poll clerks will receive approx officiated.
wrongly and that in itself, was and not without criticism. What
KAMEOKA BOOKS
imately $8 and Deputy Returning
Reception followed at the Palm
ever he has done, George has set
an unique achievement”.
Officers
will
receive
$12.00.
Grove
Restaurant.
113 McCaul St. — Toronto
“One of the most thrilling a high standard for idealism and
Further information can be ob
moments in my life”, George faith in the JCCA. and an era of
PHONE EM. 8-9934
ENGAGEMENTS
tained from The New Canadian.
says, “came in the provincial le sorts elapses when he retires f
EDMONTON, Alta. — Mr. and gislature in Victoria when I heard from his post.
:
OBITUARY
Mrs.
Kesahiro Iwashita of Ed- the provincial franchise being
His official capacity coming to
i
X
i
KEN HORI
KAWAGUCHI
monto, Alta.., announce the en- granted the Japanese Canadians.’’ an end, George will retire to pri
TORONTO
Susan
gagement of their daughter, ToAnother high point in his car vate life, and go back to his first
representative
A guchi passed away on June 6 at
miye Iwashita of Toronto, to eer came when he was given the love—landscape architecture—for
home. Funeral services were held Dave Toshio Watanabe, son of opportunity to speak before the in it, he hopes to apply his phil 1
Bernardi-Mathews Ltd.
bn June 8 at the Ralph Day Fun Mrs. Taka Watanabe of Toronto. United Fishermen And Allied osophy and attitude toward life
REAL ESTATE BROKERS A
eral Home conducted by Rev. K. A party7 took place on June 7 at Workers’ Union in Vancouver in and catch up with the esoteric
Shimizu.
the home of Mrs. Watanabe.
1949 on the question of the re- hopes that he had abandoned
She is tile daughter of Mrs.
since 1941.
TORONTO
A Suyeno Kawaguchi, and sister of
Office OL. 4241 - Res. GL. 8914
Toshio, Goro, Hiroshi, Masaki of
York City. Since she has taken
£ Toronto; Mrs. S. Kojima of Mon
dramatic roles, Miss Osato has
A treal.
been seen often as an exotic
By LAuRY TAJIRI
i an artist of minority ancestry
beauty in TV murder dramas. On
Colorado Springs probably faces a more limited
I
Studio One last year she appearI
For some 900 performances horizon as an actor than in any
as as a Eurasian girl who falls
now two Nisei dancers, Yuriko of the other arts. A Nisei actor,
I
in love with an American pilot in
Kikuchi and Michiko Iseri, have for instance, usually is restricted
“Pagoda,” which had a southeast
been holding- Broadway audiences to Oriental roles on.the stage
Asian setting.
spellbound with-their charm and oper TV and in the films. Sessue
Miss Osato, whose talents are
t
artistry in their duet which comes Hayakawa who once made $5,000
many and who is not one to be
i
a climax to the ballet, The a week as a leading man in Hol
bound by the dictates of type
i:
| Small House of Uncle Thomas
lywood silents, played a variety casting, has wanted for some
s
in Rogers and Hammerstein
--f Oriental menaces, although he time to make her Broadway debut
o
“The King and I.”
occasionally showed up as a ren in a straight dramatic role in the
Si
When wc were last in New egade American Indian as he did
lead of a play by Jean Girardoux,
J
Toik, which was last December, in a 1914 Thomas Ince produc
the French playwright who wrote
we finally had an opportunity- to tion called “Pride of Race.” There
“Amphytrion 38.”
CL
see this musical version of “’Anna is nothing wrong with Oriental
Sono Osato is one of the lead
0]
and the King of Siam.” Rogers roles, except that there aren’t
Only Canadian Pacific offers new low
ing spirits of an avantgarde act
p<
and Hammerstein have provided many of them in dramatic litering company7, which will present
fares to emigrants changing permanent
0
a wonderful evening in the thea- ature, as Anna May Wong also
four new plays this month at the
residence to the Americas.
tei, a book which makes sense found to be true.
Theatre de Lys in New Yorks
luics that are singable and tunes
B
Sono Osato danced a wide var Greenwich Village. She will open
to hum on the way home on the
on June 9 in a leading role in
subway. All this, and a whisper iety of roles with the Ballet Russe “Maya” by Simon Bantillon and
MOW
of a message about free men and and her appearances in two
Broadway hit musicals “One she will be seen the week of J®free minds.
Touch of Venus” and “On the 30 in the femme lead in “The
in
“The Sr
House” is the
Little Clay Cart,” a translation of
Town
”
,
were
as
a
girl
from
Ozone
ne:
Siamese-Buddhist version of the
Park and as Olive Smith who is a Hindu fantasy by Arthur Wi
thi
uncle Tom legend, and in it Yu
chosen “Miss Subway” of New liam Ryder. (— Pacific Citizen)
Vancouver
Jaj
riko is Eliza Michiko the Angel.
on
There has been talk that Holly
Wei
wood will film “The King and I.”
A
A Open 12 noon to 2 a.m.
If is to be hoped that they will
A
A
cast Yuriko and Michiko in the
A
A
got
roles they have portrayed so ably
A
famous
Chinese
foods
Chop Suey House
lucl
A
and so delightfully- for more than
X
69 Albert St. —Toronto
W-A
Elizabeth
St.,
Toronto
two seasons on Broadway. “The
(at Elizabeth)
bar
BANQUETS and family x
8mall House of Uncle Thomas”
A
Telephone
EM.
8-9817
A
ROYAL YORK HOTEL
a b:
DINNERS
wouldn't be the same without
A
u
Special
attention
given
ihir
Heun:
12
Neon
to
4
aan.
them.
X
Reservations: EM4-9035
i’ei
to take out orders.
A
Type-casting being what it is
I1IIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
JUNE
FOR FATHER'S DAY
Choreo and Thespis
30% OFF
CANADIAN PACIFIC
fares from
THE ORIENT
$450
Hoe Sai Gay