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The New Canadian — July 1, 1953

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN
TORONTO, ONT.

VOL. 16 — NO. 51

WEDNESDAY. JULY 1, 1953

Toronto JC’s to Welcome
Visiting Davis Cup Squad

Quebec JCCA Submits New National JCCA Body
For Approval, Hiroshi Okuda Elected President

welcome the Davis Cuppers.
The JC committee is planning
MONTREAL. P. Q. — Likely assuming the duties of the.
to hold an exhibition on Sav.
National
Japanese Canadian Citizens Association for the next two
July 18. probably at the Hudsos i I Tor. JCCA to Discuss
veai"< will be a nine-member National Executive Committee headed
Tennis Club, from 4 to < p.m. The' i Relief to Victims
bv President Hiroshi Okuda. Approval of the executive members is
opponents of the Japanese will bo Of Japan's Flood
now being awaited by the Committee from the provincial chapters
top Ontario players and lowerThe Toronto JCCA and Issei
_
ranking Canadian Davis Cun Division will hold a joint officers of B. C.. Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario.
Besides President Okuda, other
players, and possibly some for- meeting on July 2 to discuss the
eig-n stars. The top-ra
possibility of relief to victims of member ; are Yo Kato, first vice- urer. Miss Ni:
J CCA.
1
nt
t; Pei Nishio, second, venor of the Quebec
adinn Davis Cuppers
modern Japan’s most disastrous
Kim Nakas
udent: Toyo Ebata, execMontreal in their Cup tie. against flood now raging in Kyushu
ident
of the Quebec
Mexico and will therefore be un­ Island.
presently public relations officer
Amv
able to meet the Japanese in the
Flood waters, fed by seven da\ >
and editor ot the Monticnl bul­
Mike
nd
of torrential rains, have forced
Kosei Kano, Atsushi Miyagi and exhibition.
letin. a JCCA organ. Amy Uchi­
Also on July IS. the committee the evacuation of the cities on Ochiai.
Masanobu Kimura—who will be
da. an active Quebec JCCA work­
in Toronto to play in the Canad­ is planning a banquet in honor of Kyushu and at the latest conn*.
er. Ims been recording secretary
Okuda i
ian Tennis Open, July 18-26. at the Japanese. Officials of tor) ten­ 457 arc dead. 810 injured, < H>
Kat ional
for the past two years. Yoshio
the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club, nis groups in Toronto will be in­ missing and 1.090.000 homeless.
Ono is secretary of the Japanese
National police
will be feted by local Nisei and vited to the affair.
(he organization, in beptcmbei, Division. Sam Toguri, present
The Davis Cuppers may at­ unprecedented the number of 1347. He has b rnn past president Quebec JCCA president, was the
Issei during their stay here. Fuz
Fujiwara is chairman of the local tend the Toronto JCCA’s annual dead and missing.
chapter’s lone delegate to the
committee which includes Roy Community Picnic at Tarmola on that all 48S inhabitants of one
handles Quebec
Fifth Conference in Vancouver.
idence to the National JCCA.
Shin. Matt Matsui, Y. Iwasaki Sunday. July 19, and would be an
Alike Ochiai is general secretary
the Chikugo River burst its banks
attraction
there,
although
of
to
Kato,
a
recipient
of
the
for Quebec. Toyo Ebata is also a
and others.
and swept away the houses.
JA Gold Pin—an award given
The team will likely be housed course, they will not play.
the
Both Fukuoka,

On July 21, the committee
outstanding JCCA workers—
at a fraternity house at the Uni­
largest city with a population of
Following’ approval of the pro­
hopes
'
to
take
the
players
on
a
is the rest of the. proposed
versity oi Toronto and v ill be
392,649
and
nearby
Moji,
with
vincial
chapters, the committee
wutive committee members, is
welcomed at Malton Airport by tour of Niagara Falls. Another
124.399. were deserted by r
. present Quebec JCCA treas- will assume its duties from Sep­
the Canadian Championship Com­ feature that the committee . is ’
idents
seeking
higher
ground.
tember, 1953. The Quebec JCCA
hoping to arrange is a practice ■
mittee and local JC group.
is the first provincial chapter to
and
coaching
session
by
the
play|
On Thurs., July 16 and Friday,
take
over national headquarters
July 17, the team will warm up ers for local Nisei enthusiasts or
on the rotating basis decided upon
and practice for the champion­ the game during their stay m
by the Fifth National Conference
ships at the Badminton & Racquet Toronto.
in April. They will carry on the
The Japanese will actually
Club and the Toronto Cricket
work of the National JCCA for
Club. On July 17, the Nisei will swing into action in the Canadian
I Financial Editor, Wellingthe years of 1953-54 and .1954-55.
Dr. Ichiro Ishikawa, noted Ja­
hold a dance at the UNF Hall to championships on July 20. Sonic
J offers. last week.
Prcviously, national headquart­
of the highest ranking court panese economist mid industrialof exporting- to
ln
speaking
ers
had remained in Toronto since
stars from all over (he world will statesman, who stopped o\ei in
RAISE $127 FOR PRINCE
Canada, Dr. Ishikawa said, “One 1947, the work being carried out
KAMLOOPS, B. C. — Total do­ be on hand. Dick Savitt, last Toronto on June 25 after attend­ thing that encourages us is that
by a national executive commit­
nations received for the welcome year’s singles and doubles and ing the 14th Congress of the
of Japanese
Canadians
those.
tee and full time executive secre­
of Crown Prince Akihito in Kam­ mixed doubles title holder, as International Chamber of Com­
cho met certain difficuldescent
w
tary.
The only paid member un­
loops reached $127.50. Expenses well as Melita Ramierez of Mex- merce at Vienna, Austria, as Ja­
Second World
ties
duringthe
may be a
der the new
ico who also scored a clean sweep, panese chief delegate, said that
amounted to $98.18.
War are now beginning to conic part-time secretary, the budget
are expected to play.
Japanese Canadians could become into their own. That broadminded
alloting $700 for wages.
Japan Enters Films
Other luminaries will be Aus­ a link in trade relations between
policy here reflects the knowledge
tralia’s Rex Hartwig and Mervyn Canada and Japan.
In Venice Festival
that they are good Canadian cit­
DIETITIAN TO INTERN
TOKYO — Japan will send Rose, and Mexico’s Felicissimo
He addressed over 100 persons izens not Japanese at all, but we
Ampon.
Invitations
have
been
ex
­
Film
three entries to the 14th
at the Canadian Legion Hall in hope that they will be a link
Festival to be held in Venice, tended to Art Larsen, Gardner a meeting sponsored by the Tor­ eventually in growing trade and
VANCOUVER, B. C. — Louise
Mullov, Vic Seixas, Althea Gibson
Italy, from August 20.
onto JCCA Issei Division. His relations between the two coun­ Hisaye Nakamura of Summerland
They are Daiei Motion Picture and Maureen Connolly of U.S. comments on trade and allied tries.”
will be interning at Vancouver
Company’s “Ugetsu Monogatari” Canadian players such as Lorne problems were also discussed in
General Hospital starting from
Among other things, he is the
(Tales in a Rainy Month), based Main, the country’s No. 1 Davis a two-issue column by Globe &
July 1. A recent graduate of die­
president of the Federation of
on a spirit’s love story written Cupper, will be on hand.
tetics at the University of B. C.,
Economic A ssoc i ations, di rector
200 years ago; the “Himeyuri no ON THE PRAIRIE:
she is the daughter of Mr. and
of Japan Federation of Employ- Mrs. Ryoji Nakamura of Sum­
Toh” (Tower of the Lily), story
ers’ Association, president of the
of wartime schoolgirls on Okina­
Showa Electro-Chemical Indus­ merland, B. C.
wa and the Toho Company’s “Tatries Co. Ltd.
biwa Soyokaze” (Journey Is A
He was accompanied to Vienna Hope Free Liquor To
Breeze, the story of a vagabond.
by 46 Japanese delegates and Smash Bootleg Market
Daiei produced the grand pre­
during his stay in Europe, studied
mier winner “Rashomon.”
The Yokote tax
how European countries are mak­
AKITA
By GENICHI OHASHI
ing reconstruction.
office and the liquor shop owners
NC Staff Writer
Moose Jaw, Saskin Akita city joined in sponsoring
rondel'S and friends back on the Pacific
a “free liquor day” to imbibers
Greeting o all ^ «^a. ^^ ^ ^ ^ and Nisei Wins Award
of sake (rice wine) and shochu
Coast, “P'™115’ ”’ 5?' j,
Fot the second time in the past Will Enter Univ, of B. G.
Leaving Toronto via train on
(Japanese vodka) last month in a
rainy province of Sask
Vancouver> bringthe first leg of his trip to Japan
SURREY,
B.
C.

Winner
of
campaign
to eliminate bootleg­
« and cleanest little city in
on June 28 was Ken Mori, asso­ decade, CP
^-ity li«e known to Japanese Canadians at the Surrey Teacher’s Scholarship ging activities which have been
ciate editor and advertising man­
valued at $160 was Toshio Su­ rampant in the area.
ager of The New Canadian.
the time of the evacuation.
its Golden Jubilee year, be- zuki, a recent honors graduate of
The idea behind the project was
Mori is expected to leave Van­
the
Queen
Elizabeth
High
School.
Moose Jaw, presen _
^^ Japanese Canadians when the
to provide tasty, tax-requiring
couver on July 4 aboard the
Suzuki will be entering the
came known to many of tl e -- ,
d Jack McKillop.
liquor and try to convert consum­
Canadian Pacific Airlines for Department of Labour, ^er Walter Da^.
^ cjty -n University of B. C. this fall. Durers of the tax-evading concoc­
Tokyo. His airplane trip to Japan
ing- the 1952-53 term, he was
opened
up
the
Japanese
o-i
,
tihan
300
JC

s.
Since
the
has been arranged through, cour­
president of the student council tions of the hidden stills, but the
1946,
accomodating
at
one
nn
,
the
majority
has
scatgeneral consensus was that the
tesy of CPA. He will spend one
Ure of the Hostel in the ®« « ^ with
3 at the high school.
month in Japan touring most of
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. conversion would only be good
the country.
S. Suzuki of Surrey, B. C., for­ for the one day the free liquor
His impressions of Japan will
merly of Pitt Meadows, B. C.
lasted.
in this C^P—
'
be carried in the Japanese Sec­
tion of The New Canadian.
4

TORONTO — Following its
Davis Cup tie with U.S. in Van­
couver. the Japanese Davis Cup
team will be arriving in Toronto
on Wed.. July 15, at Malton Air­
port. This is what Roy Shin who
•, a member of the local Japanese
Canadian tennis committee which
i/preparing for the team’s arriv­
al.’unfolded under its conference
with W. H. Reid, chairman of the
Canadian Championship Commit­
tee. on June 29.

NOTED JAPANESE ECONOMIST HOPES JCS WILL BE
EVENTUAL LINK BETWEEN CANADA-JAPAN TRADE

Handful of Evacuees
Remain in Moose Jaw

Mori Leaves for Japan,
Heads for Vancouver

Page 2

2
A*

THE

First Nisei Convicted Under
Smith Act Await Sentences
HONOLULU, T. H. — The first Nisei in the United States to
be convicted under the Smith Act are waiting to be sentenced in a
Honolulu Federal court while their attorneys are preparing to ask
for a new trial.
Four of the seven defendants
half month trial.
are Nisei; all seven were found
Mrs. Fujimoto, the lone woman
guilty on June 19 by an all male defendant, is employed as an of­
jury that deliberated 16 hours to fice worker by Bridges’ militant
climax a trial that
left wing union, the ILWU.
Nov a.
The defendants are free on

NEW

Wednesday, July 1, 1953

CANADIAN

CRITIC SAYS NISEI
GI'S ARE LOVERS TOO
Los Angeles, Calif,
is”, official publication of
tional Ass’n. for the Adent of Colored People,
d a review of “Go for
Broke” in a recent issue. Reviewer Geor•ge Yamada said that the
movie vvas impregnated with the
He
‘"old stereotyped pattern
noted that Van Johnson’s conversion from bigot to a good fellow’’ kacked sincerity, feeling and
pathos He observed that while
the Caucasian soldiers carried
amorous relations with the Italian
lassies in the picture, “the
almond-eyed GI is apparently a
stoical Oriental unpreoccupied
with such peccadilloes” when it
was a fact that. Nisei GLs
brought home Italian war brides.

The Lady Is A Pick-Up
She’s only a pick-up but once you’ve known her, you’ll seek her
again.
Perhaps you won’t understand. But in every man’s life There
comes ”a"'time when the responsibilities which he accepts as part
of his manhood, as part of his share in the scheme of things be­
come restrictive and confining, and the^ part of him which he has
suppressed as a dream—a figment of his o wn iin agination—must
become reality if he is to breathe again.
There’ have been other women in my life—rwomen who have
stirred within me a gentle protectiveness. Others there were who
have piqued my curiosity with their aura of brooding tragedy and
their aloofness, and I must confess that I have followed, sometimes
not too wisely. But with time, like other pleasant things, they have
come and they have gone. But not this one woman. She rem a insalways filling a need—always a reality.

The defendants were convicted $7,500 bail each, while a battery
on conspiring to teach and advo­ of four defense attorneys is pre­
cate the violent overthrow of the paring to seek acquittals through
U.S. government. They face a various legal avenues. A. L. Wirpossible penalty of five years in in, Los Angeles attorney who ha'S
prison, $10,000 fine, or both.
figured in numerous Nisei cases
The Nisei, all Hawaii-born are: here and on the Mainland, is one
Charles K. Fujimoto, 25, a for­ of the defense attorneys.
I picked her up one day. She was leaning over a fence, her
mer soil chemist at the Univ, of
slim legs tanned a golden brown, chewing the end of a blade
Hawaii; his wife, Eileen T. k uroad hogs trying to break 75. I was doing
of grass, watching 1
£
as ri « ^
jimoto, 32, a stenographer; Koji
80 myself when I g<ot a blow-out. I was hot, I had business to do
Ariyoshi, 39, editor of a weekly,
from Page 1)
in the next town, and a blow-out was something I hadn’t accounted
the Honolulu Record; and Jack
Okada
of
Moos
Ta
1
Mrs.
Moose Jaw, incidentally, i the
for. And as I crawled under the car to jack it up, I let fly a few
an
Denichi Kimoto,
■ill be aboard the boat, choice expletives. And then I heard her deep, throaty laughter.
d writing for
of the Record.
re two of the longest res“What’s so damned funny?” I growled, a little put out that
The other defendants are Cau­
with James Tadao Hori who is idents of the city and they will anyone could laugh so deeply as if life were deeply and completely
casians :
ina their homeland for the
satisfying. “If you want to be helpful, you might lend a hand.”
Jack W. Hall, 38, Hawaii re­ now hibernating in the woods of first time in years.
British
Columbia

s
heavy
forest
“Sure thing!” she said, as she leaped over the fence. And
gional director of Harry Bridges’
One of the most pleasant social
near
the
Southern
Alberta
boundInternational Longshoremen’s &
sidelights of my two-month stay there she was, jacking up Cleo as if changing tires were as simple
Warehousemen’s Union; Dr. John
as combing her hair. I took in her profile,..noting-the deeply golden
Now in the summer of 1953, here has been the attending of
E. Reinecke, 48, a former Honothe wedding of a former school­ skin, one pepper shaker’s shake of freckles across the bridge of her
Moose
Jaw

s
Japanese
Canadian
lulu school teacher, a
straight little nose, the mobile mouth, crimson, full-lipped and
somewhere mate at Tashme relocation centre,
James Freeman, 41, ta construc- population
the made for laughing.
around 60 to 75. half of the num­ Kazuko Kojima, who became
tion worker.
“Well, Butch... she said, as informal as that. .. “It’s O.K.
resided in the city bride of Robert Nakashima reHall is married to a Hawai- ber having
Hostel opening. The cently. The latter is the top JC now. Better check her when you get to town.”
born Nisei, the former Yoshiko prior to the
bowler in Saskatchewan.
She was casual, with a “take it or leave it” attitude. I took
Ogawa; Reinecke is married to JC population is a mixture of
her and discovered a woman I shall never forget.
another Hawaii-born Nisei, the young and old, only a handful
40
Speaking
of
top
players,
*
*
between the ages of 18 and 25.
former Aiko Tokimasa.
is
Percentage wise, Moose Jaw has miles east of here in Regina
Here Va companionship as casual as the summer breeze
The jury of 12 men included just as much JC’s as the city of one of the best Nisei wrestlers in which ruffles her hair, and as refreshing as when it blows across
three Nisei: Robert M. Naka­ Vancouver which presently has Canada, 147-lb. Roy Ohashi who
one’s face on a hot, sticky day.
mura, an insurance underwriter; about 1,100 since Moose Jaw’s is now teaching many Occidentals
Her charms are those which come with maturity of outlook and
as well as performing in Moose of experience. O, she’s been around. She’s had just enough haid
Robert T. Uyeoka. an electrician, population is 27.000.
Jaw and Regina. 23-year-old
and Thomas H. Kawakami, an au­
knocks to make, her wise without becoming bitter. She knows what
Ohashi who is just as popular as
tomobile salesman. All live in Ho­
In regard to occupation, I find
life is all about for she’s learned that it is essentially sad, but she s
Kinji “Mighty Kojo” Shibuya in
nolulu.
that there is no discrimination to­
young enough, bouyant enough and practical enough to enjoy the
After the verdict was delivered wards Japanese Canadians in this the rings, is also the operator of
present. And she enjoys a fellow in exactly the same way. She
each juror was polled individual­ “Friendly City” and they may be the flourishing O’Hash Tire Shop
accepts me as I am ... no more and no less.
ly, and each replied he had reach­
lurants (mainly in on Albert St. in Regina.
in
She’s completely a happy woman. She’s as direct as the sum­
ed a finding of guilty on each of
In Regina where there is less
Cafe and Tea Gar
mer sun, as adaptable as a reversible raincoat, and as, reassuring
the defendants.
den), hotels. woolen mill, Robin than 100 Japanese Canadians, as an early sunrise after a dark, turbulent night. Shell sit ^hi
The trial was the longest
Hood Co., and British-American there are five JC’s employed by
Hawaii's his- Oil Co. In speaking of the Ex­ the CCF Government, among you in the hot sun, rooting like mad for your favorite baseba 1
criminal trial in
i
tory and the ssecond longest 01 change Cafe which employs them being Tom Shoyama, for­ team, just as happy with hot dogs and a bag full of French fries
the five Smith1 Act trials held about GO persons, I find after hav­ mer editor of The New Canadian. today as she was the night before sipping dry Martinis and order­
throughout the• countrv so far. ing travelled between Winnipeg Latest to join the civil service is ing an expensive caviar. And if you’re in the mood, she’ll matci
to Vancouver, that I have never Thomas Tamaki, a University of your stories with hers—tall stories which skate around the edge
.11 top Communists,
seen a more beautiful cafe. And Saskatchewan graduate. Also of naughtiness and. you’ll find yourself laughing a deep belly laug-i
than
in the —the kind of laugh you’d almost forgotten you were capable of.
nine months, went
i
the food served up by the Charlie with the government
the Honolulu trial.
And she’s susceptible to romancing, but she takes it like
Wong-operated concern, is defin­ “Queen City is the 1953 Governor-General Medal winner from takes me—casual and easy and not too serious. She 11 go a 011^
Fujimoto is the onlv one of itely the “best in the west.”
the seven defendants who has
There arc a few JC-operatcd the U. of Saskatchewan, Arthur with you, wish on a summer moon, take a walk through Ioaci &
acknowledged his Communist af­ businesses in this city. There is Wakabayashi oQSaskatoon. He is lane, dream before a campfire with you as you watch the cmU
filiation. He describes himself as a dental laboratory, cleaners, with the auditing department.
die, even let you whisper a little love to her. ..
At the Golden Jubilee Exhibi­
chairman of the Communist Party grocery, greenhouse and hotel.
*
*
of Hawaii.
When the M.S. Hikawa Maru tion in Moose Jaw which just
She is relaxation. She has the child-like capacity for giving
None of the others have testi­ departs from Vancouver on Aug­ concluded its stand on July 1,
herself wholly to one given thing, enjoying it completely, and
fied on that point. None of the ust 15, in its first post-war’ pas­ little Nancy Nakano took part in
her long, lithe self under an
s own senger ship run between Van­ the Ukrainian dances. When this forgetting as quickly. She’ll stretch towel, and fall fast asleep.
and a couver and Yokohama. Mr. and girl performed on the stage, I afternoon sun, nuzzle her nose in a
during the
recalled the fine performance in oblivious to your* adoration . . . and with her gentle breathing, some
odori by the Konishi sisters in thing of stillness enters you. You see vast vistas of quietude .
the last year's Pacific National remembering events and dreams of days when you were not hemnieu
Exhibition’s Outdoor Theatre in in by the worries of a work-a-day world ...
,
And things which she has said come back to you. The ..01™
Vancouver.
An Independent ] apanese-Englisb Organ.
of breakers which she pointed out to you ... you hear it now . 10I in^
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
The weather out on the prairies up and receding, up and back ... sounds you’d almost forgotten. 0
has been terrible and I under­ follow the sea gulls which her eyes had followed, and sudden J
as a niedium of expression and news outlet
stand that it. is the worst in 30 you remember how, as a youngster, "you tried to put the giact
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
years. In Moose Jaw, for ex- of a sea gull into a poem ... and you remember other things
KEN ADACHI
-------------------------- Editor
ample,
_we have had only four enjoyed when you were just a kid ... and when you thought y
TAKAICHI UMEZUKI
Japanese Section Editor
non-rainy days in May and June, werc grown up .. . and suddenly too, you feel you can go back
KEN MOKI ________
------------------- Advertising
folks have told
Office Hours:
if life was once good, it still is good...
Monday to Friday.
“Vancouver is
Saturday.
And the reality of this woman beside you stirs you. You know
too rainy. I prefer the prairies’’, no matter where you go, you will come back and she will alwaj = bS:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-12 noon.
I think that just the opposite is
4j9 Queen St. h. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
(Con fa on Page 8)
true now.
Authorized ss second class mall. Post Office Dept., Ottawa

THE NEW CANADIAN

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THE NEW CANADIAN

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Page 7

Wednesday,July k 1953

PAGE 7

THE NEW CANADIAN

Lost weekend for
westerns, errors

Tor. Golf Club Slates
Meet at Rouge Hills

k^ GAME AWAY

The Toronto Japanese Canadian
Gc’f Chib has slated a tourn­
ament this Sunday, July 5. at
Rouge lid’s Golf and Country
Ch’i'. First tee-oil takes place at
5:00 a.m. sharp.
(Members are all warned to be
on time for tec-offs. Since match,
play will result from the outmmo of this tournament, mem­
bers are also asked to compete
if possible.
Sixteen will get into the first
night and another sixteen into
bcemsLi'ivii thght. Fees will bo
1,00 and prizes will be awarded
sow ma an i gross.

I TORONTO — Westerns ran
I .
hi nek weekend, dropping
I'"" ^.:n,f; -t-0 to Milwaukee
4-5 to Industrial Lum|?
wWeh didn’t improve
candincs in the
C'r^Ee Senior ^Baseball

Ohashi. Tachiri Win
At Bran-ford Cycling
BRANTFORD. Ont. .... Tim
Japanese bicycle team took the
nod again in the racing cxhib:tion nt l'”amto:'d on Juno A?,
shortly before it left for Som'lie, N.J. On the previous
■mb!, th- v ha.I meed at the
G.N.F. in ’Toronto.
Masaaki Ohashi, the top sprint
champion, wen the half-mile
half-mile scratch race in one
minute 02 seconds. Yuji Tachiri
eked out the win in the "missand-out'’ race, nosing out Art
Johnson ot Toronto. Kihei 1 omioka came in third.

hi the nightcap.
into the toy
of th.- ninth, Wmri ns
f tun Led for throe errors, giving
the four members of the Japanese Davis Cup team who will be meeting the L.S. next
Hain-trial three runs and a 5-4
week July 9-10-11. They are. left to right. Masanobu Kimura, playing captain Jim
i lead Westerns came back in their
Yamagishi,
Atsushi Miyagi and Kosei Kamo. Following their Davis Cup tie, the Japanese
; bah. tying the count to 5-5 when
will be coming to Toronto to play in the Canadian tennis championships, July
a.
t Fred Tanaka walked with bases
the Toronto Tennis Club together with a galaxy of big name tennis stars.
1 loaded.
__ rom-tosv Vancouver New s-liviaiu
A. single, walk and a double by
I ^i'be Wiseman, however, chased
; poiss the winning' run for IndusIrate Japan Bike Fans
i u al in the extra 10th frame.
Stage Sitdown Strike
^
Joe Brown hurled well in his
TOKYO — More than 1,100
t o-- limiting the Lumbermen to
“We had Art Larsen out there. irate bicycle fans staged a “sitsleep, write stacks of letters
1 me blows. Westerns’ defense,
By PAT SLATTERY
He got $200 expense money which down strike at a I* uchu cyclohome, watch the driving rain
I however, completely collapsed,
There’s really nothing ailing from their hotel windows,
w a s used mostly for nightlifing. drome in suburban Tokyo recent­
1 committing seven errors. Indus- Japan’s Davis Cup tennis players
mov- After being licked in the finals ly after an allegedly misjudged
£ trial also erred five times in the that our somewhat distraught in numerous wild and wooly
for our national championship. ’•upset” win.
s and be entertained by local
a loosely played tilt.
Larsen (hen complained about the
Police moved in to arrest two
weatherman can’t cure.
Japanese Consul.
t
The twin loss gives Westerns
Japanese
balls
after
not
bringing
persons
when the track stalling
However, for the first time in
“How come the western mov; a Wly record of G wins and 11 at least eight days, team man­
up this subject until then. It equipment was burned.
ies ?” I asked.
it
several hours for police
> o^es.
didn’t make him too popular with
ager Jiro Yamagishi and his
“You see Kosei. Alsush and
^
Westerns had a game sched- three fellow-countrymen actually Masanobu only know a few woids the fans.”
On the subject of training',
■ tiled for last night against Indus- risked a smile. The break in their of English,” Yamagishi explain­
i mat and will play Mahers at gloomy opinion of V ancouver s ed. “But the action is always the Yamagishi showed he had a good
* 7 15 p.m. on July 4 at Earlscourt. summer weather came at lunch at same in Westerns so they can get sense of humor.
“The day usually starts with
the Vancouver Tennis Club when the drift pretty easily without
V
me trving to wake, up the younga Seattle radio station released
kAD ft
knowing
what
the
actors
are
Uyeyama Wins Again a long-range weather summary.^
sters around 11 o’clock. Then
answers So you? crisis
few letters
they

ve
got
to
write
a

You
may
not
believe
this,

*I.
questions0 thy year'
At Woodbine Racing
The letter writing champion on
it
home
and
eventually
;a
in
smiled Yamagishi, “but the re­ the team is 21-year-old uiweii
TORONTO — Spud Uye­
time
for
it
port says summer is actually on sity student Kamo. He explained to the courts just in
the
clouds
yama rode his mounts into the
F
its way to this area. We were in halting English that he’s writ­ to rain. However, if
c
money twice in four attempts
just beginning to give up on youi ten 50 letters and to date hasn't stay away we do manage to get i
TS&P^
4|, >- < • c.
on June 28 at Woodbine Park.
weatherman and get on the tele­ received a single answer. He in about five hours’ good practice
In the first race, he guided
__
usually
on
the
cement
courts
phone to Victoria. They tell me takes quite a kidding from his
‘‘Jal”, a 2-1 favorite, for the
they have grass over there and pals when he says all of his let­ because the grass is too damp to
Often referred to os a
"in. his second in three days.
play on.”
most important, it never rains in ters are sent to his family.
newspaperman's j'iwsWhat do Japanese tennis play"Jal'’ paid $5.00, $3.80 and
Victoria.”
another college boy,
paper" the MON I f ui .
$2.70. The Nisei jockey piloted
You couldn’t help but ap- usually gets a letter a day but he ers eat while in training ?
covers the world witn a
"Optionor’’ to show in the
It may surprise you but they vc
preciate the touring Japanese won’t admit they’re from his girl
network of News Bureaus
eight race. ‘’Optionor” paid
become accustomed to our fare
team’s despondency over our cur­
and
correspondents.
friend at home.
S5.40 to show.
chiefly because Japan has many
rent weather. Since flying here
Yamagishi and Kimura are the
He also rode “Midnight
restaurants featuring western
Order a special intro­
June 15 from Tokyo, Yamagishi
two
married members of the
t
Doni’"' and “Good Cry” but fin­
ductory subscription
Kosei Komo, Atsushi Miyagi and (earn. Jiro has a boy eight who is food. They like steaks, salads,
ished out of the money.
today — 3 months ror
only
pie(
chocolate
sundaes,
tea,
coffee,
Masanobu Kimura have
just starting to play tennis, while
On June 27, Uyeyama placed
£
K
trained about twice in piepaia^ Masanobu boasts about his five- and milk.
MONITOR "must
in the second race with “Star­
When I tipped Jiro about a
tion for their important Davis year-old daughter. Jiro is in the
-reoding and as nscssso
town'’ which paid $6.30 and
good steak house in town he quip­
Cup matches with the United
4
the
export
and
importing
business
$140. His other mount, “Har­
States team July 9, 10 and 11 at while Kimura is vice-president of ped: “Well, we’ll have to take in ^ as your nurvi
1PAPER.
vey M” came in last in the
the Vancouver Lawn Tennis Club. his family’s hand-painted bone that spot, won’t we.”
O?A
f---------- —------------__ from Vancouver Sun •Vfl
seventh race.
I
Thk Chwstmx
Like Western Movies
china business.
All horses are out of the A.
N"bA I -^®5fi*fr.—V
They Like Those Steaks
About all the visitors have been
J. Halliwell stables.
The Christian Science Mmttcr
“I don’t think there are any
permitted to do is J^j^ of
One, Norway St., Coston
M..s.
more than five others in his busi­
ness which means the vice-pres­
representative
ident has to work with his hands
Bernardi-Mathews Ltd.
too,” Jiro laughed.
Yamagishi had some words on
❖ famous Chinese ^foods
<♦
Chop Suey Hous®
the manners of U.S. tennis play­
1075 St. Clair Ave. W.
4
* 6S Albert St. —Toronto ❖
S3-A Elizabeth St., Toronto ers—a point shared by several
(address)
■J
(at Elizabeth)
. ^
TORONTO
BANQUETS AND FAMILY United Kingdom newspapers fol­
t
(jonc)'
(slate)
*
Telephone EM. 8-9817
J
(city)
DINNERS
lowing the recent Gardner Mul^Office OL. 4241 - Res. GL. 8914$
•>
Special attention given
^‘
PB-1O
Hours: 12 Neon to 4 aym
loy racquet-tossing incident in
Reservations:
EM4-9035
*
to take out orders.
X
Londoni

IB

I

Page 8

Wednesday, July ], 1953

THE NEW CANADIAN

PAGE 8
>!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllll!llllll!lllll

| FELLOWSHIP PICNIC
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Personal Notes Across Canada

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JULY

5
MONTREAL — May 24th was
|
a
bright sunny Sunday for the
5—Toronto. Toronto AYPA Annual
Picnic, at Streetsvillc Memorial i Montreal Nisei Fellowship’s outPark.
i ing to Brome Lake. It was a day
11 —Montreal. Mont real Hei ’owslu p : of fun and games and the weather
and United Church Joint Picnic, i happily coincided with the happy
at Farnham, 9:30 a.m.
time.
18—Montreal. Quebec JCCA Annual
Community Picnic, at Cap S’.
Jacques.
19—Toronto. Toronto JCCA Fourth
Annual Community Picnic, at
Tarmola Grounds.
26—Vancouver. Vancouver Y.B.A.
Picnic, at Peace Arch.

AUGUST
2—Toronto. University of Toronto

Nisei
Picnic.

Students’

Club

Annua I

ANNUAL KAMLOOPS JOINT
PICNIC AT CM ASK BEACH

KAMLOOPS. B. C. — The an­
nual joint picnic of Kamloops
JCCA, Buddhist Church and sport
organizations will be held this
Sunday, July 5, at Chase Beach.
Two members from each organi­
zation form the programme com­
mittee. Two buses will furnish
transportation.
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
TORONTO — Dr. and Mrs.
Fred A. Sunahara, formerly of
London, have moved to 3 00 Som­
erset Ave., Toronto 4, Ont. Phope
number is LO. 7375.

The day started with sleepylooking picnickers gathering at
Park and Pine. When Brome Lake
was reached, many took to the
oars immediately. The afternoon
was spent playing nonsensical
games. They drew many laughs
and the novel prizes were hilar­
ious.
A brisk game of round robin
was played with a tennis ball
later. At sunset, everyone was
tired but happy, motoring home
and looking forward to the next
Fellowship outing.
The next outing on the Fellow­
ship’s agenda will be the joint
picnic with Nisei and Issei mem­
bers of the United Church on
July 11. The destination will be
Farnham, 35 miles from Mont­
real.
A chartered bus will leave
Church of All Nations at 9:30
a.m. Reservations will be taken
by Rev. Komiyama. Programme
for the day has been prepared by
the games committee for the en­
joyment of both young and old.
Free ice-cream will be supplied.
— T. O. Y.

MARRIAGES
NAGAI — KURITA
TORONTO — In a traditional
satin gown and crowned with a
coronet of orange blossoms, Yo­
shiko Kurita became the bride of
Harry Nagai at a ceremony sol­
emnized by Rev. Frank Brisbin
at Metropolitan United Church on
May 30.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Matsuji Kurita. The
groom is the second son of Mr.
Shoichi Nagai and the late Mi’s.
Nagai.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride carried a cas­
cade of stephenotis and sheer
pink roses. Her attendants, gown­
ed in periwinkle blue net, and
carrying’ a basket of yellow dais­
ies were Kathleen Sakaguchi, sis­
ter of the bride, and Mrs. Tosh
Ikeno. Junko Fujiwara, dressed in
yellow net, and holding a nosegay
of blue cornflowers, was the
flower girl. Rickey Tanaka, ne­
phew of the groom, was the ring­
bearer.
Mr. George Tsuji of Hamilton
was best man and the ushers
were Bill Masami Tsukamoto
and Roy Kurita.
The couple motored through the
Eastern U.S. for their honey­
moon.
*
*
*

TSUJI — SUMI
TORONTO — Queen Street
United Church was the setting
for the marriage of Margaret
Aiko Sumi, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Yoichi Sumi, to James Hi­
- 1384% Queen W. — LA. 637S
deaki Tsuji, son of Mr. Ryutaro
Toronto, Ont.
Tsuji, on June 20. Rev. K. Shi­
mizu officiated.
Following a reception at Gross­
Lucien C. Kurata
man’s, the couple went to Northem Ontario and Montreal for
Barrister and Solicitor
Notary Public
their honeymoon.
*
*
*
3 Adelaide St E-, Toronto
1st and 2nd Mortgage (-cans
YOSHIKUNI — ABE
arranged
Oft. EM, 6-0959 Res. LY 3427
HAMILTON — The Church of

the Redeemer was the scene of
the marriage of Yurie Abe,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Isamu
Abe of Hamilton, and Masayoshi
Yoshikuni, son of Mrs. Hide
Yoshikuni of Montreal, on June
20. Rev. Moncada officiated.
Following a reception at the
Century Room of Fischer Hotel,
the couple left for- a honeymoon in
New Y’ork.
i
"We Specialize In
Baishakunins were Mr. and |
Sellina Businesses"
Mrs. Kanezo Nagao of Toronto I
E. J/ S E A L E
and Mr. and Mrs. Takazo Wata­ |
REAL ESTATE
nabe of Montreal.
| 684 Church St. (cor. Bloor)
Mr. and Mrs. Masayoshi Yoshi­ j Phone MI. 0995 — Toronto
kuni will reside in Montreal.

OBITUARY

SHIMOTAKAHARA- TSUYUKI

KATO

Tsuyuki, exchanged marriage
vows with Mr. Lloyd Hideo Shimotakahara, son of Mr. and Mrs.
T. Shimotakahara of Montreal,
at the Rosemount First United
Church. Rev. D. Williams and
Rev. T. Komiyama officiated.
Following the reception at The
Bucharest, the couple motored to
New York for their honeymoon.
*
$
*

eral Chapel, the Rev. A. G. S.
Edworthy officiating. Interment
was made in Mt. Pleasant Cem­
etery.
She is survived by her hus­
band; a son, George Kato of Edmonto; one daughter, Mrs. Harry
Naganobu of Hamilton, Ont.; a
brother, Goro Katayama of Ed­
monton; six brothers and five
sisters in Japan.
*
*
*

0. K. CLEANERS
101J4 QUEEN ST. W.
For Pick-up and Delivery
Phono
EM. 8-6953

Alta. — On June
THINK OLD U.S. ISSEI OVERGENEROUS WITH GIFTS MONTREAL — On June 27, 2G,EDMONTON,
Mrs. Kotomi Kato passed
Donalda Michiko Tsuyuki, daugh­
away. Funeral services were held
of Mrs. Chiyo Tsuyuki of
TO WASHINGTON OFFICIALS, TAKEN TO HOSPITAL ter
Montreal and the late Mr. Masao on June 29 at Hainstock’s Fun­
An interpreter from the Lib­
WASHINGTON' — You just
don’t go around leaving gifts to rary of Congress was rushed to
“honorable" statesmen on Cap­ the side of the confused man but
itol Hill without reason or you he found nothing wrong with him.
The man registered at the
get suspected of being a little oil’
Stratford
Hotel as Tossy Saki
the beam.
Au elderly little Japanese was from Price, Utah.
The hotel proprietor, Fannie
taken last week to Galliger Hos.pital for observation after auth­ McVeigh, however was all for the
orities learned of his three-month JapaneseVTf Tossy is nuts, I’ve
escapade around the Washington got a whole hotel full of raving
rotunda, leaving wristwatches, maniacs. He’s never been in any
binoculars and other gifts behind trouble. He’s got to have a ‘6’ oi*
statues of statesmen and White a ’5’ in his room number- so he’s
lived in 506 or 605 the whole
Hone officials.
Capitol police were puzzled time.”
She said that he arrived here
when they found two suitcases of
gifts in the rotunda. They held in March, spent the first, few
them for the owner, but when the weeks visiting all parts of the
Japanese arrived with a third city in taxicabs.
suitcase of presents bearing tags
On one of these jaunts, Saki
of prominent men they decided was picked up by the police
something was wrong with the when residents of Wellington
Village, a suburb, complained he
man.
A tally of his effects revealed just didn’t belong in their neigh­
he had $1000 in his pockets, $30 borhood.
more in his room, together with
The Fairfax police, however,
a storehouse of new clothing-.
after keeping him for several
Among the latter was a set of hours, sent him home in, of all
new shirts for Supreme Court thing’s, another taxicab.
Justice Tom Clark who claimed
Pvt. William Bonnet said, ‘‘You
he had never heard of the little just can’t charge a man with
being friendly."
philanthropist-

HORIUCHI — KURAMITSU

MONTREAL — One June 6 at
St. Shephen’s Church, Westmount
Minnie Kuramitsu, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rinchichi
Kuramitsu of Kobe, Japan, was
united in marriage to James Ho­
riuchi, son of Mrs. Torn Horiuchi
of Montreal. Bishop P. S. C.
Powles and Rev. A. T. Love offi­
ciated.
Reception followed the cere­
mony at the Rice Bowl Cafe with
a soiree windup at the Com­
munity Centre. The couple flew
to Washington, Philadelphia and
New York for their honeymoon.

eniwie

are

(Cont’d from Page 2)
the same, waiting for you. But she can be yours only for a while
... never completely yours. And so you’ll part from her, saying none
of the thing’s you would like to say. And she will smile and say
‘‘Bye, Butch . . . till next summer.”
*
*
*

BOOKKEEPER, experienced man
er girl, good salary. Apply Charles
B. Goodman, 110 Spadina Ave.,
Toronto.
MAN OR YOUTH to learn cush­
ion tilling in upholstering factory
Phone MU. 1528, Toronto.

MONTREAL — Mr. Sadakichi
Takamatsu, 75, died at his home
in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan.
A former Canadian resident, he
is survived by his two daughters,
Mrs. Shinya and Miss K. Taka­
matsu of Montreal.
*
*
*
YOSHIDA

EM. 4-6533 or OR. 2709, Toronto.

328 BROADVIEW AVE.
(near Gerrard St.)
Toronto. Phone GL. 3652

|

EM4-0508

Residence:
2 Vesta Drive
MAfair 1365.

Andrew E. McKagne,
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Public.
201 Northam Ontario Bids330 Bay St.
(Corner Adelaide & Bay Sts.)
TORONTO

|
|

*
TORONTO — Funeral services ^
for Mr. Kusumatsu Yoshida, 76,
|
who died on June 24, were held
on June 27 at the Thompson |
Funeral Home. Rev T. Tsuji and

Rev. H. Nekoda officiated.
$
*

New & Used Car
Sales & Service

J

ALL MAKES

*

Expert Vehicle Analysis
RATES REASONABLE

$
$

JAMES M. KAI

|

Auto Technician

{

303 Westmoreland Ave.
ME. 6165 — TORONTO




.♦ A AAAAA A A

A

T. KOBAYASHI
&SON

FEMALE HELP WANTED

LIFE, AUTO, FIRE
FLOATERS, ETC.

HAIR DRESSERS, experienced,
5-day week, able to manicure,
good salary. A.pply 445 Spadina
Ave., Toronto. MI, 5541.___________

FRONT ROOM and kitchen, suit
couple. A.pply 236 King Edward
Ave., Toronto.

*

***■♦*♦♦*•-♦***♦♦ t.

CHARTERED
ACCOUNTANTS.
Have excellent opportunities for
high school graduates interested in
C.A. course. Apply Stern, Sanders
& Co., Toronto. MI. 2573.

EXPERIENCED COOK, respons­
ible ’ for Kitchen, good wages.
Mariana Grill, 414 Queen St. West,
___________ FOR RENT________ __
Toronto.
And her name? It’s "July". She has no given address, but i
THREE UNFURNISHED ROOMS,
AbSibiAM BOOKKEEPER, for
with
sink. Call EM. S-5443, Toronto.
you’ll find her for four weeks, between the months of June and I accounts receivable, some typing

August, somewhere along the highway, waiting to be picked up = preferrea, for wholesale fruit mar­
when you’ve plenty of time.
J ket. Good salary, permanent. Call

Watch Repair Shop

TAKAMATSU

CLASSIFIED SECTION
________HELP WANTED________

YONEMITSU

For All Your_
Insurance Needs

ft & S
P.O. Box 149

I

KAMLOOPS, B. C.

j

Residence:
139 LEIGH ROAD, '
North Kamloops, B. C.

!
j
j