Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
TORONTO, ONT.
Wednesday, July 15, 1953
Embassy Of Japan To Handle Sending Of Donations
For Kyushu Flood Relief, $440 Raised To Date
• taWOUT
By Ken Adachi
The Happy Time
|
TORONTO — Donations to the
“'Kyushu Flood Relief Fund’’ will
be sent to the Japanese Red Cross
through the Embassy of Japan in
Ottawa. Up to S441 has been rais
ed thus far in individual and
group donations for the fund or
ganized by the Toronto JCCA.
25 Japanese Mayors
VANCOUVER. — The Van-)
couver City Council last week
invited a party of 25 Japanese
mayors (o visit the city in
during their tour of
Pacific Coast cities.
The touring Japanese are
visiting the U. S. for a JapanU.S. mayors’ conference, an
annual affair.
They are expected to visit
San Francisco first and move
north to Seattle on Aug. IS for
a week's stay.
CCF Candidate Mentions IC’s
In Pre-Election Controversy
TORONTO — Japanese Canadians became imolud in pm
federal election political campaign speeches when they were pointed
out as an example of racial discrimination practiced by the lab. . .
Government during World War II.
aroused
when
alone was “the grossest piece of
Went fishing several Sundays
Ambassador Sadao Iguchi in
aid. by
ago for lack of anything better reply to a letter by T. Kameoka,
- election in the Newfoundland lion was
Liberal administration in October
to do.
secretary of Toronto JCCA Issei
Now I am scarcely what one Division, said that the Embassy
a Liberal candidate
would call a fishing enthusiast. will handle the fund willingly.
secretary to former Prime Mini>stated that the Conservative ter MacKenzie King.
I am not addicted, by any7 wild He said that articles such as.
Party's racial
stretch of the imagination, to the clothing, medicine and foodstuffs
"It was only after public opin
of his reasons for his switch from
call of the sea ,or as in this in can also be sent to the Japaneso
that party to the Liberals in the ion, generated by Conservatives
stance, to the call - of the lake. Red Cross through the Embassy. Returns Home, JC
and CCF members, and some Li
Nor do I know7 the difference be These goods, if sent by organiza
berals. that the Liberal Govern
Pickersgill had stated in
tween a bass, a pickerel or a tions, will be duty-free. Details Ol Finds House Burning
campaign speech in Winnipeg last ment was forced to cancel the orperch, or any7 of the species that goods and destination must be
STEVESTON, B. C. — In the week that ‘'many Conservatives der-in-council,” declared the CCb
supposedly7 inhabit the lakes in given.
early morning of July 8, Genji felt at that time that those of candidate.
these parts. I am abysmally ig
Mr. Pickersgill is not a man to
The Embassy will also handle Otsu, fisherman at Stcveston. re
supernorant of the methods and ap personal relief parcels sent b) turned from w’ork to find hk Xneio-Saxon origin
make
such a charge of racial dis
It was
ior to their fellow men.
proach to catching fish. Nor am individuals. It is believed that
crimination, being secretary to
home on fire. Volunteer firemen
ed that it was hard for
be
reduced
in
I interested.
custom duties may
arrived from Brighouse and Ste- them to accept their fellow citi the former prime minister and
Perhaps the only7 thing that has such cases.
knowing what the policy on the.
veston but the fire had already zens of other races as equals.
amused me in the past has been
subjcct was, said Mr. Brewin.
who is
According to the Embassy's re eaten through the roof.
Andrew Brewin.
the fantastic fish stories for they
When Otsu arrived on the familiar to Japanese Canadians
The CCF candidate was wclL
illuminate thoroughly7 the egot port, 708 are dead, 390 missing,
acquainted
with the situation,
scene,
he
found
his
wife
and
three
as legal counsel for the Co-Opera
ism of man who washes to sur- 671 seriously7 injured and 3,81o
daughters
standing
outside
of
the
slightly7 injured in the recent
tive Committee on Japanese Can said the Toronto Globe and Mail,
pass the other in what has be
bumins
house.
His
22-year-oW
for at that time he was retained
come a basically competitive floods that hit Kyushu island in daughter Ai had discovered the adians during the deportation as counsel for some Japanese
and property7 claims questions
addition to the heavy property
sport.
fire
at
3:45
a.m.
and
had
awaken
and also as counsel for the Na Canadians in a courtroom battle
losses that left about one million
*
*
homeless. Completely lost, said ed the rest of the family.
tional JCCA. stated last week in over the legislation and at a
When I was but a mere child
criticizing Mr. Pickersgill that meeting with the federal cabinet.
fishing may have prompted some the report, were 3,946 houses;
the
Progressive
Conservative The candidate said he was not
cries of excitement to w7ell in my 3.766 houses washed out; 16,o50 HAIL HITS NEW DENVER,
Party7 has been a “victim of a holding Mr. Pickersgill respons
throat. But I soon learned that houses half destroyed. Flooded
vicious injustice in being accused ible for the legislation but con
fishing and myself were tw o above the floor were 219,910 damages many houses
of racial prejudice by Mr. Picker sidered that the state secretary
alien things, much too far apart while flooded below7 the flooi
NEW DENVER, B. C.
Big
would have been much wiser to
”
’
for any’ remedy. For one thing were 286,916.
hailstones, about one inch in dia sgill.
Mr. Brewin is CCF candidate remain silent.
Statistics are also available fo
— and I have to say this quite
meter, rained down on July
in in Toronto St. Paul’s riding.
Holding no brief for the Con
covertly’ and with a slow blush loss to cultivated lands, damage New Denver, damaging many
yr of
o
servative Party, Mr. Brewin said
to dykes, roads, bridges and rail
rising to my dappled cheeks
He pointed out. that the ordcr- he thought it advisable to speak
the houses and breaking window
the nasty necessity of dissecting ways.
panes. The hail which started in-council providing for the de
Donations for the Fund will be around 6 p.m. was l»"»"ed b- portation of Japanese Canadians up considering what he knew of
worms into parts and impaling
them on the cruel looking busi received by T. Kameoka 11;> heavy rain. The Kyowakai held on the basis of their racial origin the Japanese Canadian affair.
ness end of hooks was too much McCaul ’St., Toronto, The Conti „
meeting to discuss refor me. I came to heartily7 dis nental Times and The New Can
of the damages.
like handling the cold slimy adian.
_________ .
things as I dislike touching
Black Widow Spiders or cock
roaches. Far it be for me to ask
Six con- Smith Act was five years in priHONOLULU, T.H.
others to do such menial and dis
victed Smith Act violators, ~ in- son and $10,000 fine.
tasteful chores, I decided to give
U. S. District Judge Jon Wiig,
jh-year- eluding four Nisei, went to jail
up fishing.
VANCOUVER. - Twenty-one- ^J^
Richardson in on July 4 because they could not who presided over the 7 k-month
I also became highly indignant
long trial, raised bond for each
three sets
July
teamed with put up $15,000 bond each.
_ on j
uly 9.
9, teamand frustrated when I was not vear old Kosei Kamo Pro'e_
defendant from $7,500 to $15,000
be the only player on the Japan Kamo in losing the doubles, 6-,
A seventh person remains free
able to catch as much fish as my
on the day of sentencing July 3.
ese Darts Cup team to exten^
6-0 3-6. 6-3, to Tom Brown and on bond.
friends. Call it jealousy, if y°L
Only Jack W. Hall, regional
Americans in the American Zone Trabert on July 10- ^n's
The four Nisei, all Hawaii-born,
will. Perhaps I was not endowec
director
of Harry Bridges left
Davis Cup tennis «>,m,na‘"
squad was primarily selected with are Charles K. Fujimoto, 35,
with the proper amount of pa
wing International Longshore
matches at the Vancouver La
chairman of the Communist
tience to sit and glare at the
the accent on youth.
men’s Union, was able to put up
Tennis Club which the L. S. team
Masanobu Kimura who at 30, Party of Hawaii; his wife, Edeen the required bond. The money was
water glumly for hours on end
. ,
placed his third straight year T. Fujimoto, 33, Koji Ariyoshi, paid from the union’s "defense
as others seem to be able to do. swept. 5-0.
Kamo, in the opening Hug s with Japan’s Davis Cup team, lost 39 editor of the weekly Honolulu
Naturally I quit fishing.
match
on July 9, gave Toni. Tra to Tom Brown in one of the
Record, and Jack Denichi Kimo fund.’’
*
*
The other defendants, besides
bert a big scare when he took the
But I have suddenly discovered I first twoNets, 6-L 6-1, but suc singles matches on July 1 , to, 47, a employe of the Record.
Hall and the four Nisei, were
Six of the seven persons were
Brown scoring an easy 6-2, 6-0,
that there is attraction in fish
Reinecke, a former
sentenced to five years in jail John
cumbed to the American s power
ing after all. And it came about
school
teacher,
and Dwight James
win.
ful game to lose the next three 6-1Jiro
of and fined $5,000 each in the Com
Yamagishi,
veteran
purely by accident since it was
Freeman, a construction worker.
sets Had Kamo won, the com
the first time in at least a decade plexion of the following matches Davis Cup teams in 1934-3.0-3/- munist conspiracy case.
38. may have played in the dou
Defense attorneys have indithat I had ever looked at a fishMrs. Fujimoto, only woman
may have differed.
ble^ if either Kamo or Miyagi convicted, received a lighter sen cated they plan to appeal the
ing rod without snickering.
In the final singles mJdi °
Ninth Circuit Court
I have developed my own little July 11 after U. S. had clinched had Won one of the singles on tence. She was given a three year case to the
Julv 9. but instead gave way to prison sentence and fined $2,000. in San Francisco and, if neces
theory after one intensely sun
the series win, Kamo again too* the" vouths in order to give them
sary, to the U. S. Supreme Court.
baked day when the sun cooked
The ’even were convicted by a
the lead, opening with a 6This was the first Smith Act
experience.
He
is
still
said
to
be
my tender skin into a fiery mess over Hamilton Richardson. Rich
federal jury on June 19 for con case in Hawaii and the Nation’s
spiring to teach and advocate Jie
of hideous and painful red ,that ardson, however, came from be Japan’s best doubles player.
fifth such case, the first being
The
team
is
expected
to
arrive
violent overthrow of the U. a fishing tackle and the other ac hind to defeat Kamo in the next
the famous New7 York trial of
in Toronto today, July 15, to com
coutrements that go hand in hand
government.
, three sets, 6-2, 6-1, 6-—
*
pete in the Canadian championMaximum sentence under the 11 top Communists.
with the sport are merely things
Kamo is an example of Japan s
to look at and not necessarily “accent on youth” policy. Atsu- ships.
Continued on Page 21
Kosei Kamo Only Player
To Extend U.S Net Stars
Hawaii Nisei Given Five Years Imprisonment
Fined $5,000 In Communist Conspiracy Case
3
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
TORONTO, ONT.
Wednesday, July 15, 1953
Embassy Of Japan To Handle Sending Of Donations
For Kyushu Flood Relief, $440 Raised To Date
• taWOUT
By Ken Adachi
The Happy Time
|
TORONTO — Donations to the
“'Kyushu Flood Relief Fund’’ will
be sent to the Japanese Red Cross
through the Embassy of Japan in
Ottawa. Up to S441 has been rais
ed thus far in individual and
group donations for the fund or
ganized by the Toronto JCCA.
25 Japanese Mayors
VANCOUVER. — The Van-)
couver City Council last week
invited a party of 25 Japanese
mayors (o visit the city in
during their tour of
Pacific Coast cities.
The touring Japanese are
visiting the U. S. for a JapanU.S. mayors’ conference, an
annual affair.
They are expected to visit
San Francisco first and move
north to Seattle on Aug. IS for
a week's stay.
CCF Candidate Mentions IC’s
In Pre-Election Controversy
TORONTO — Japanese Canadians became imolud in pm
federal election political campaign speeches when they were pointed
out as an example of racial discrimination practiced by the lab. . .
Government during World War II.
aroused
when
alone was “the grossest piece of
Went fishing several Sundays
Ambassador Sadao Iguchi in
aid. by
ago for lack of anything better reply to a letter by T. Kameoka,
- election in the Newfoundland lion was
Liberal administration in October
to do.
secretary of Toronto JCCA Issei
Now I am scarcely what one Division, said that the Embassy
a Liberal candidate
would call a fishing enthusiast. will handle the fund willingly.
secretary to former Prime Mini>stated that the Conservative ter MacKenzie King.
I am not addicted, by any7 wild He said that articles such as.
Party's racial
stretch of the imagination, to the clothing, medicine and foodstuffs
"It was only after public opin
of his reasons for his switch from
call of the sea ,or as in this in can also be sent to the Japaneso
that party to the Liberals in the ion, generated by Conservatives
stance, to the call - of the lake. Red Cross through the Embassy. Returns Home, JC
and CCF members, and some Li
Nor do I know7 the difference be These goods, if sent by organiza
berals. that the Liberal Govern
Pickersgill had stated in
tween a bass, a pickerel or a tions, will be duty-free. Details Ol Finds House Burning
campaign speech in Winnipeg last ment was forced to cancel the orperch, or any7 of the species that goods and destination must be
STEVESTON, B. C. — In the week that ‘'many Conservatives der-in-council,” declared the CCb
supposedly7 inhabit the lakes in given.
early morning of July 8, Genji felt at that time that those of candidate.
these parts. I am abysmally ig
Mr. Pickersgill is not a man to
The Embassy will also handle Otsu, fisherman at Stcveston. re
supernorant of the methods and ap personal relief parcels sent b) turned from w’ork to find hk Xneio-Saxon origin
make
such a charge of racial dis
It was
ior to their fellow men.
proach to catching fish. Nor am individuals. It is believed that
crimination, being secretary to
home on fire. Volunteer firemen
ed that it was hard for
be
reduced
in
I interested.
custom duties may
arrived from Brighouse and Ste- them to accept their fellow citi the former prime minister and
Perhaps the only7 thing that has such cases.
knowing what the policy on the.
veston but the fire had already zens of other races as equals.
amused me in the past has been
subjcct was, said Mr. Brewin.
who is
According to the Embassy's re eaten through the roof.
Andrew Brewin.
the fantastic fish stories for they
When Otsu arrived on the familiar to Japanese Canadians
The CCF candidate was wclL
illuminate thoroughly7 the egot port, 708 are dead, 390 missing,
acquainted
with the situation,
scene,
he
found
his
wife
and
three
as legal counsel for the Co-Opera
ism of man who washes to sur- 671 seriously7 injured and 3,81o
daughters
standing
outside
of
the
slightly7 injured in the recent
tive Committee on Japanese Can said the Toronto Globe and Mail,
pass the other in what has be
bumins
house.
His
22-year-oW
for at that time he was retained
come a basically competitive floods that hit Kyushu island in daughter Ai had discovered the adians during the deportation as counsel for some Japanese
and property7 claims questions
addition to the heavy property
sport.
fire
at
3:45
a.m.
and
had
awaken
and also as counsel for the Na Canadians in a courtroom battle
losses that left about one million
*
*
homeless. Completely lost, said ed the rest of the family.
tional JCCA. stated last week in over the legislation and at a
When I was but a mere child
criticizing Mr. Pickersgill that meeting with the federal cabinet.
fishing may have prompted some the report, were 3,946 houses;
the
Progressive
Conservative The candidate said he was not
cries of excitement to w7ell in my 3.766 houses washed out; 16,o50 HAIL HITS NEW DENVER,
Party7 has been a “victim of a holding Mr. Pickersgill respons
throat. But I soon learned that houses half destroyed. Flooded
vicious injustice in being accused ible for the legislation but con
fishing and myself were tw o above the floor were 219,910 damages many houses
of racial prejudice by Mr. Picker sidered that the state secretary
alien things, much too far apart while flooded below7 the flooi
NEW DENVER, B. C.
Big
would have been much wiser to
”
’
for any’ remedy. For one thing were 286,916.
hailstones, about one inch in dia sgill.
Mr. Brewin is CCF candidate remain silent.
Statistics are also available fo
— and I have to say this quite
meter, rained down on July
in in Toronto St. Paul’s riding.
Holding no brief for the Con
covertly’ and with a slow blush loss to cultivated lands, damage New Denver, damaging many
yr of
o
servative Party, Mr. Brewin said
to dykes, roads, bridges and rail
rising to my dappled cheeks
He pointed out. that the ordcr- he thought it advisable to speak
the houses and breaking window
the nasty necessity of dissecting ways.
panes. The hail which started in-council providing for the de
Donations for the Fund will be around 6 p.m. was l»"»"ed b- portation of Japanese Canadians up considering what he knew of
worms into parts and impaling
them on the cruel looking busi received by T. Kameoka 11;> heavy rain. The Kyowakai held on the basis of their racial origin the Japanese Canadian affair.
ness end of hooks was too much McCaul ’St., Toronto, The Conti „
meeting to discuss refor me. I came to heartily7 dis nental Times and The New Can
of the damages.
like handling the cold slimy adian.
_________ .
things as I dislike touching
Black Widow Spiders or cock
roaches. Far it be for me to ask
Six con- Smith Act was five years in priHONOLULU, T.H.
others to do such menial and dis
victed Smith Act violators, ~ in- son and $10,000 fine.
tasteful chores, I decided to give
U. S. District Judge Jon Wiig,
jh-year- eluding four Nisei, went to jail
up fishing.
VANCOUVER. - Twenty-one- ^J^
Richardson in on July 4 because they could not who presided over the 7 k-month
I also became highly indignant
long trial, raised bond for each
three sets
July
teamed with put up $15,000 bond each.
_ on j
uly 9.
9, teamand frustrated when I was not vear old Kosei Kamo Pro'e_
defendant from $7,500 to $15,000
be the only player on the Japan Kamo in losing the doubles, 6-,
A seventh person remains free
able to catch as much fish as my
on the day of sentencing July 3.
ese Darts Cup team to exten^
6-0 3-6. 6-3, to Tom Brown and on bond.
friends. Call it jealousy, if y°L
Only Jack W. Hall, regional
Americans in the American Zone Trabert on July 10- ^n's
The four Nisei, all Hawaii-born,
will. Perhaps I was not endowec
director
of Harry Bridges left
Davis Cup tennis «>,m,na‘"
squad was primarily selected with are Charles K. Fujimoto, 35,
with the proper amount of pa
wing International Longshore
matches at the Vancouver La
chairman of the Communist
tience to sit and glare at the
the accent on youth.
men’s Union, was able to put up
Tennis Club which the L. S. team
Masanobu Kimura who at 30, Party of Hawaii; his wife, Edeen the required bond. The money was
water glumly for hours on end
. ,
placed his third straight year T. Fujimoto, 33, Koji Ariyoshi, paid from the union’s "defense
as others seem to be able to do. swept. 5-0.
Kamo, in the opening Hug s with Japan’s Davis Cup team, lost 39 editor of the weekly Honolulu
Naturally I quit fishing.
match
on July 9, gave Toni. Tra to Tom Brown in one of the
Record, and Jack Denichi Kimo fund.’’
*
*
The other defendants, besides
bert a big scare when he took the
But I have suddenly discovered I first twoNets, 6-L 6-1, but suc singles matches on July 1 , to, 47, a employe of the Record.
Hall and the four Nisei, were
Six of the seven persons were
Brown scoring an easy 6-2, 6-0,
that there is attraction in fish
Reinecke, a former
sentenced to five years in jail John
cumbed to the American s power
ing after all. And it came about
school
teacher,
and Dwight James
win.
ful game to lose the next three 6-1Jiro
of and fined $5,000 each in the Com
Yamagishi,
veteran
purely by accident since it was
Freeman, a construction worker.
sets Had Kamo won, the com
the first time in at least a decade plexion of the following matches Davis Cup teams in 1934-3.0-3/- munist conspiracy case.
38. may have played in the dou
Defense attorneys have indithat I had ever looked at a fishMrs. Fujimoto, only woman
may have differed.
ble^ if either Kamo or Miyagi convicted, received a lighter sen cated they plan to appeal the
ing rod without snickering.
In the final singles mJdi °
Ninth Circuit Court
I have developed my own little July 11 after U. S. had clinched had Won one of the singles on tence. She was given a three year case to the
Julv 9. but instead gave way to prison sentence and fined $2,000. in San Francisco and, if neces
theory after one intensely sun
the series win, Kamo again too* the" vouths in order to give them
sary, to the U. S. Supreme Court.
baked day when the sun cooked
The ’even were convicted by a
the lead, opening with a 6This was the first Smith Act
experience.
He
is
still
said
to
be
my tender skin into a fiery mess over Hamilton Richardson. Rich
federal jury on June 19 for con case in Hawaii and the Nation’s
spiring to teach and advocate Jie
of hideous and painful red ,that ardson, however, came from be Japan’s best doubles player.
fifth such case, the first being
The
team
is
expected
to
arrive
violent overthrow of the U. a fishing tackle and the other ac hind to defeat Kamo in the next
the famous New7 York trial of
in Toronto today, July 15, to com
coutrements that go hand in hand
government.
, three sets, 6-2, 6-1, 6-—
*
pete in the Canadian championMaximum sentence under the 11 top Communists.
with the sport are merely things
Kamo is an example of Japan s
to look at and not necessarily “accent on youth” policy. Atsu- ships.
Continued on Page 21
Kosei Kamo Only Player
To Extend U.S Net Stars
Hawaii Nisei Given Five Years Imprisonment
Fined $5,000 In Communist Conspiracy Case
3
Page 2
THE
Page 2
A SHORT STORY
NEW
CANADIAN
.Wednesday, July 15, 1953
By JACK MATSUYE
flight into fantasy
could sit down and while she ate,
SINCE TIME began, through watching the vagueness gradual
he
would talk very wittily about,
all his wanderings on earth, man ly taking shape. Flitting figures
music, about artists and their MURDER — HOLLYWOOD STYLE
has sought solace for his loneli became waiters hurrying back
work. And her performance, he
A little London clerk will hang for the murder of seven women
ness. This tremendous feeling of and forth, the solid blackness
would
say,
was
the
Ultimate
in
The penalty7 for destroying life is life. Had he been proven mentally
being alone was frightening. turned into many tables with peo
artistry.
ple.
and
to
the
right
the
bright
unbalanced, he would have been absolved for all responsibility for
Imagine, no one to talk to, no
Leaving her with a pleasant the acts he has committed and put away, out of touch with normal
spot
of
light
grew
into
the
little
one to love, no one to hate; even
impression of himself, he would men and women.
no one to fight with. A meaning band that was entertaining the
return
night after night, bring
less life, desolate, barren, fright audience.
John Christie will pay7 for his brutal acts. But what of those
Taro found himself at one of ing flowers and candies and men who sacrifice integrity, those men who have never looked into
ening; hearing only the echoes of
the sound he makes, hollow and the many tables that ringed the jewelry, the paraphernalia of a the meaning of
empty and sterile. To conquer small dance floor. At the mo lover’s courtship. On her night
“Beauty7 is truth, truth beauty — that is all
this feeling of loneliness even for ment couples were dancing to the off he would take hei' to the
Ye know on earth and all ye need to know,”
a passing moment was what he swaying music. Sipping his drink, Fairmont, the Palace, the Mark these men who go about butchering beautiful things of art. ?
he looked around and saw people Hopkins where he would dine and
strove for.
I am thinking of an act of travesty7 as brutal in the sphere of
For Taro, as he wandered chatting", drinking, laughing; but dance her until the wee hours of dramatic art as any of the seven murderous acts of John Christie^
aimlessly along blanket Street, it all with someone. Only he was the morning. Holding her in his in the realm of human intercourse. What Hollywood did to Jan de
alone; drinking, thinking alone. * arms very tenderly, they would
was one of those moments. Paus- j
He gulped his drink and felt the dance and dance and dance, cheek Hartog’s “The Fourposter” was criminal and unforgivable.
ing" here and there, looking at [
“The -Fourposter” as conceived by Jan de Hartog, is a. delight
ouickening of his pulse, and a to cheek, dreamily with stars
the merchandise displayed in the
in their eyes. Then, one day, he ful human comedy. It is a mastei*piece of stage writing. It consists
store windows, he sometimes rising headiness.
The floor show was on. A spot would ask her to marry him. of two characters, a man and his wife,, who against a single setting,
glanced at passing couples whose
light was turned on the platform With a shy smile, eyes rimmed develop the ups and downs of marriage over a period of some forty*
faces were filled with either
years of living together. And at the end of that long period they
smiles, expectancies, or plain in focusing on the girl pianist who with happiness, she would say
look
back on a good marriage.
yes.
difference. He envied them. To was announcing" the floor show:
Hartog created a comedy of human experience which every
“Tonight the Hawaiian Club
All the bells in heaven would
sec others happy, busy, erasing
takes great pleasure in present peal out the tremendous happi body7 understands, so natural, so familiar, so tuned to life itself,
their
loneliness
momentarily,
ing . . .” He no longer heard her ness in his heart. Gone would be that all those who watch Agnes and Michael move through the
served only to intensify his own
speaking. Instead he only saw her that terrible loneliness, the feel years, feel a kind of kinship "with them. Agnes and Michael are like
feelings. For a moment Taro in
loveliness. The poise with which ing of being left out as the world ourselves, like our neighbours, in fact like a great many7 of our
dulged in self-pity.
she held her head, the winsome goes by, companionlcss. Instead married friends. Therein is the charm and the universal appeal of
How lonely he was. No girl
smile that could not fail to en he would have his darling by his “The Fourposter”. And woven through the spontaneous laughter
friend to cling to him and call
side, consoling him in his mo and the gentle tears is the Hartog touch — never maudlin senti
him dear, to kiss him and look chant anyone.
Taro stared and stared, and ments of emptiness, of futility mental, never going beyond good taste, keenly perceptive — stress
up at him with admiration in her
felt his heart grow and grow, and frustration.
ing the permanence of a good marriage.
eyes. He looked at passing cou
spreading" throughout his entire
This first rate play, combined with the talents of three great
ples, walking hand in hand, and
being until he could no longer
artists,
Jose Ferrer as director, Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy*
TARO
SMILED
at
himself
thought of what he was missing.
bear it. Tearing his eyes from vaguely, felt the coldness of the as Michael and Agnes, became an unforgetable dramatic experience.
With heavy heart he turned
her, he stared down at the float night penetrating" his dulled sens
Michael is very7 much like all the stubborn husbands we know,
away and found himself walking
ing ice in his bourbon and ibility and shivered. Swaying
often unheroic, often worried, decidedly bungling, sincerely7 trying
along Powell Street.
thoughts came into his mind.
from
.side
to
side
walking
in
a
to figure out what makes his Agnes tick, and yet never really7 quite
He glanced indifferently at the
God, how often he had wished zigzag fashion, he made his way
finding out. Agnes is the shrewd, understanding and often illogical
flower cart on the corner where
for a girl like that. Beautiful, into the deserted, lonely street
woman "who shares with him all the ups and downs of forty7 years
one of the denizens of this Ionel},
proud, talented.
If a girl like in the early hours of the dissipat
world was trying to eke out a
that loved him, all barriers would ing" darkness a solitary7 figure of marriage.
living selling his flowers, at the
The history7 of their marriage is all there — the couple’s first
melt under his irresistible on wandering through the night.
dozing cabbie in his idle taxi, at
intimate moment and their awkwardness; the birth of their firstslaught. Everything would be
__ from Pacific Citizen child and Michael’s understandable fears; the lean years when their
the clattering arrival of the cable within easy reach of his inspired
car emptying its load of passeng
love and faith kept them together; the successful years when
persistence. He would go to the
ers. now being pivoted on the
Michael’s attentions temporarily stray; the period when Agnes fac
ends of the earth, to far flung
huge swivel to go back from heavens above. He would get the
ing middle age, rebels and cries out that she wants once more to
(Cont
’
d
from
Page
1)
whence it came. In the midst of brightest stars for her to wear in
be a woman before she becomes a grandmother — played with a deep
this busy, crowded corner he was her hair, the silvery moon as a use. They are merely7 incidental and human understanding that touches the heart. And the wondei
alone, isolated apart, desperately brilliant brooch to grace her wil to what is called fishing.
and the essence of a happy marriage — where crises arise and are
trying to stem the tide, of loneli lowy neck. He would adore her,
Now I know why thousands of somehow met, leaving no scars but rather* a deeper, more abiding
ness rising in his breast.
he would be hers to command.
males happily7 forsake their dot love — projects itself across the footlights into the hearts of the
•
ing" wives on weekends, giggling audience.
®
THOUGHTS OF work repeat
DRINKING HIS bourbon Taro like bumpkins, to head for their
But this wasn’t good enough for the men of Hollywood. Not
edly plagued him. The sound of imagined his first meeting with, pilgrimages to the lakes.
content with the superb direction and casting of the original, the^e
those machines, yammer, yam her. Would he smile at her, ap
What better opportunity7 is people streamlined the whole play, and mutilated it to a point yheie
mer, echoed and reechoed in his proach her, and ask for a request there to catch up some misplaced
except for a few recognizable passages, it became a domestic ex
cars. Production, production, pro number? Would he ask one of the rest and simply wallow in the
travaganza to show off the particular talents of two personalities,
duction. The constant “on the waiters to ask for her presence warm embrace, of sunlight and
go" feeling welled up in his at his table? He might accident gently7 succumb to the hitherto Rex Harrison and Lilli Palmer.
All the endearing humanity was lost in the shuffle. In place 0
breast, choking him, and a wild ally bump into her as she left the suppressed urge of sheer* laziness
the
bungling,
lovable Michael, utterly human and so like the hus
restlessness flooded his mind. He platform, apologize, and intro
that the city7 routine does n ot al bands of one’s acquaintance — aye,7 even one’s own
there
paused and shook his head trying
low you to do. Then it is to con Sexy Rexy*. cavorting in his smooth, almost sarcastic way, moufhin,-.
duce himself.
to clear his mind from the dismal
template,
philosophically7
or
very7 glib witticisms, elegantly suave and elegantly7 naughty, remote
and sterile thoughts of work. ~ Perhaps he would even stay
otherwise, the throb of Nature
1
night
after
night
at
a
ringside
from the universal male of a normal, day-to-day7 marriage. And in
Have fun and live while you can.
of the soothing- impact of water
table
until
she
could
not
fail
to
stead of Agnes, there was Lilli Palmer. She is beautiful. One ran
Drink and be merry. Trite
and sky and air. A man can lie that of her, and perhaps we do her an injustice by expecting more
notice
him.
Then
one
night
when
phrase's passed through his mind
the club was about to close up in a boat and be completely7 de
as he kept walking.
than that from her.
.
Big. gaudy neon lights beckon and she would be in one of those tached from the world and conThe human touches — Agnes kissing Michael’s balding Ka '
ed to him. Hawaiian Club, dine corner booths eating a little temvlate one’s navel, as it were.
Agnes offering a cup of tea in a moment of crisis as it tea com
*
*
*
snack
by
herself,
he
would
ap
and dance. Like a moth attracted
banish instantaneously whatever cloud that hovered oxer their aorne^
Not for me .the worry of
to light, Taro entered. Dimness proach her in great dignity and
tic horizon; Michael leaving a bottle of champagne in tin 101 '
compliment her performance. And whether the fish are biting. It is poster for his successor so that the lad, whoever he might be. c0^
greeted him.
For a moment he stood there as a natural consequence he a source of astonishment for me fortify himself against the embarrassments he had gone througi
to see people fitfully cursing at
the unproductive water and wait forty years ago — were replaced by more Hollywvoodish shenam^
By Hollywood standards I guess the film “The Fourposter^ "^
ing with a fanatic zeal for the
fish to bite. IC is a prodigious a successful picture. It was a nice bedroom comedy , stariin^
and shameful waste of time that sophisticated people. Nothing more, nothing less. Rex and Li 1
could be better spent in being aged to be very7 charming and very7 clever, and if anyone is nwe ?~
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
deeply7 engrossed in the business ed in the kind of underwear people sported in that era, LilU v >
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
of sleeping to the fitting lul a good job of displaying it. And if they took a long time
as a medium of expression and news outlet
laby of the waves. It is such oldd they redeemed themselves near the end by becoming
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
times as these when one can fully old a la Hollywood.
_
Q;
Editor
KEN ADACHI
There should be capital punishment for the
reach a compromise with the
truth. Granted that the technique of screen and legitima e
^
world.
TAKAICHI UMEZUKI ------------------ Japanese Section Editor
I tell you, I had a wonderful differ, there was absolutely no excuse for the brutal hacking _
479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
something which was as true as life itself and as valuable.
time.
Authorized as second class mall. Post Office Dept,, Ottawa
COUNTERPOINT
THE NEW CANADIAN
Page 2
A SHORT STORY
NEW
CANADIAN
.Wednesday, July 15, 1953
By JACK MATSUYE
flight into fantasy
could sit down and while she ate,
SINCE TIME began, through watching the vagueness gradual
he
would talk very wittily about,
all his wanderings on earth, man ly taking shape. Flitting figures
music, about artists and their MURDER — HOLLYWOOD STYLE
has sought solace for his loneli became waiters hurrying back
work. And her performance, he
A little London clerk will hang for the murder of seven women
ness. This tremendous feeling of and forth, the solid blackness
would
say,
was
the
Ultimate
in
The penalty7 for destroying life is life. Had he been proven mentally
being alone was frightening. turned into many tables with peo
artistry.
ple.
and
to
the
right
the
bright
unbalanced, he would have been absolved for all responsibility for
Imagine, no one to talk to, no
Leaving her with a pleasant the acts he has committed and put away, out of touch with normal
spot
of
light
grew
into
the
little
one to love, no one to hate; even
impression of himself, he would men and women.
no one to fight with. A meaning band that was entertaining the
return
night after night, bring
less life, desolate, barren, fright audience.
John Christie will pay7 for his brutal acts. But what of those
Taro found himself at one of ing flowers and candies and men who sacrifice integrity, those men who have never looked into
ening; hearing only the echoes of
the sound he makes, hollow and the many tables that ringed the jewelry, the paraphernalia of a the meaning of
empty and sterile. To conquer small dance floor. At the mo lover’s courtship. On her night
“Beauty7 is truth, truth beauty — that is all
this feeling of loneliness even for ment couples were dancing to the off he would take hei' to the
Ye know on earth and all ye need to know,”
a passing moment was what he swaying music. Sipping his drink, Fairmont, the Palace, the Mark these men who go about butchering beautiful things of art. ?
he looked around and saw people Hopkins where he would dine and
strove for.
I am thinking of an act of travesty7 as brutal in the sphere of
For Taro, as he wandered chatting", drinking, laughing; but dance her until the wee hours of dramatic art as any of the seven murderous acts of John Christie^
aimlessly along blanket Street, it all with someone. Only he was the morning. Holding her in his in the realm of human intercourse. What Hollywood did to Jan de
alone; drinking, thinking alone. * arms very tenderly, they would
was one of those moments. Paus- j
He gulped his drink and felt the dance and dance and dance, cheek Hartog’s “The Fourposter” was criminal and unforgivable.
ing" here and there, looking at [
“The -Fourposter” as conceived by Jan de Hartog, is a. delight
ouickening of his pulse, and a to cheek, dreamily with stars
the merchandise displayed in the
in their eyes. Then, one day, he ful human comedy. It is a mastei*piece of stage writing. It consists
store windows, he sometimes rising headiness.
The floor show was on. A spot would ask her to marry him. of two characters, a man and his wife,, who against a single setting,
glanced at passing couples whose
light was turned on the platform With a shy smile, eyes rimmed develop the ups and downs of marriage over a period of some forty*
faces were filled with either
years of living together. And at the end of that long period they
smiles, expectancies, or plain in focusing on the girl pianist who with happiness, she would say
look
back on a good marriage.
yes.
difference. He envied them. To was announcing" the floor show:
Hartog created a comedy of human experience which every
“Tonight the Hawaiian Club
All the bells in heaven would
sec others happy, busy, erasing
takes great pleasure in present peal out the tremendous happi body7 understands, so natural, so familiar, so tuned to life itself,
their
loneliness
momentarily,
ing . . .” He no longer heard her ness in his heart. Gone would be that all those who watch Agnes and Michael move through the
served only to intensify his own
speaking. Instead he only saw her that terrible loneliness, the feel years, feel a kind of kinship "with them. Agnes and Michael are like
feelings. For a moment Taro in
loveliness. The poise with which ing of being left out as the world ourselves, like our neighbours, in fact like a great many7 of our
dulged in self-pity.
she held her head, the winsome goes by, companionlcss. Instead married friends. Therein is the charm and the universal appeal of
How lonely he was. No girl
smile that could not fail to en he would have his darling by his “The Fourposter”. And woven through the spontaneous laughter
friend to cling to him and call
side, consoling him in his mo and the gentle tears is the Hartog touch — never maudlin senti
him dear, to kiss him and look chant anyone.
Taro stared and stared, and ments of emptiness, of futility mental, never going beyond good taste, keenly perceptive — stress
up at him with admiration in her
felt his heart grow and grow, and frustration.
ing the permanence of a good marriage.
eyes. He looked at passing cou
spreading" throughout his entire
This first rate play, combined with the talents of three great
ples, walking hand in hand, and
being until he could no longer
artists,
Jose Ferrer as director, Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy*
TARO
SMILED
at
himself
thought of what he was missing.
bear it. Tearing his eyes from vaguely, felt the coldness of the as Michael and Agnes, became an unforgetable dramatic experience.
With heavy heart he turned
her, he stared down at the float night penetrating" his dulled sens
Michael is very7 much like all the stubborn husbands we know,
away and found himself walking
ing ice in his bourbon and ibility and shivered. Swaying
often unheroic, often worried, decidedly bungling, sincerely7 trying
along Powell Street.
thoughts came into his mind.
from
.side
to
side
walking
in
a
to figure out what makes his Agnes tick, and yet never really7 quite
He glanced indifferently at the
God, how often he had wished zigzag fashion, he made his way
finding out. Agnes is the shrewd, understanding and often illogical
flower cart on the corner where
for a girl like that. Beautiful, into the deserted, lonely street
woman "who shares with him all the ups and downs of forty7 years
one of the denizens of this Ionel},
proud, talented.
If a girl like in the early hours of the dissipat
world was trying to eke out a
that loved him, all barriers would ing" darkness a solitary7 figure of marriage.
living selling his flowers, at the
The history7 of their marriage is all there — the couple’s first
melt under his irresistible on wandering through the night.
dozing cabbie in his idle taxi, at
intimate moment and their awkwardness; the birth of their firstslaught. Everything would be
__ from Pacific Citizen child and Michael’s understandable fears; the lean years when their
the clattering arrival of the cable within easy reach of his inspired
car emptying its load of passeng
love and faith kept them together; the successful years when
persistence. He would go to the
ers. now being pivoted on the
Michael’s attentions temporarily stray; the period when Agnes fac
ends of the earth, to far flung
huge swivel to go back from heavens above. He would get the
ing middle age, rebels and cries out that she wants once more to
(Cont
’
d
from
Page
1)
whence it came. In the midst of brightest stars for her to wear in
be a woman before she becomes a grandmother — played with a deep
this busy, crowded corner he was her hair, the silvery moon as a use. They are merely7 incidental and human understanding that touches the heart. And the wondei
alone, isolated apart, desperately brilliant brooch to grace her wil to what is called fishing.
and the essence of a happy marriage — where crises arise and are
trying to stem the tide, of loneli lowy neck. He would adore her,
Now I know why thousands of somehow met, leaving no scars but rather* a deeper, more abiding
ness rising in his breast.
he would be hers to command.
males happily7 forsake their dot love — projects itself across the footlights into the hearts of the
•
ing" wives on weekends, giggling audience.
®
THOUGHTS OF work repeat
DRINKING HIS bourbon Taro like bumpkins, to head for their
But this wasn’t good enough for the men of Hollywood. Not
edly plagued him. The sound of imagined his first meeting with, pilgrimages to the lakes.
content with the superb direction and casting of the original, the^e
those machines, yammer, yam her. Would he smile at her, ap
What better opportunity7 is people streamlined the whole play, and mutilated it to a point yheie
mer, echoed and reechoed in his proach her, and ask for a request there to catch up some misplaced
except for a few recognizable passages, it became a domestic ex
cars. Production, production, pro number? Would he ask one of the rest and simply wallow in the
travaganza to show off the particular talents of two personalities,
duction. The constant “on the waiters to ask for her presence warm embrace, of sunlight and
go" feeling welled up in his at his table? He might accident gently7 succumb to the hitherto Rex Harrison and Lilli Palmer.
All the endearing humanity was lost in the shuffle. In place 0
breast, choking him, and a wild ally bump into her as she left the suppressed urge of sheer* laziness
the
bungling,
lovable Michael, utterly human and so like the hus
restlessness flooded his mind. He platform, apologize, and intro
that the city7 routine does n ot al bands of one’s acquaintance — aye,7 even one’s own
there
paused and shook his head trying
low you to do. Then it is to con Sexy Rexy*. cavorting in his smooth, almost sarcastic way, moufhin,-.
duce himself.
to clear his mind from the dismal
template,
philosophically7
or
very7 glib witticisms, elegantly suave and elegantly7 naughty, remote
and sterile thoughts of work. ~ Perhaps he would even stay
otherwise, the throb of Nature
1
night
after
night
at
a
ringside
from the universal male of a normal, day-to-day7 marriage. And in
Have fun and live while you can.
of the soothing- impact of water
table
until
she
could
not
fail
to
stead of Agnes, there was Lilli Palmer. She is beautiful. One ran
Drink and be merry. Trite
and sky and air. A man can lie that of her, and perhaps we do her an injustice by expecting more
notice
him.
Then
one
night
when
phrase's passed through his mind
the club was about to close up in a boat and be completely7 de
as he kept walking.
than that from her.
.
Big. gaudy neon lights beckon and she would be in one of those tached from the world and conThe human touches — Agnes kissing Michael’s balding Ka '
ed to him. Hawaiian Club, dine corner booths eating a little temvlate one’s navel, as it were.
Agnes offering a cup of tea in a moment of crisis as it tea com
*
*
*
snack
by
herself,
he
would
ap
and dance. Like a moth attracted
banish instantaneously whatever cloud that hovered oxer their aorne^
Not for me .the worry of
to light, Taro entered. Dimness proach her in great dignity and
tic horizon; Michael leaving a bottle of champagne in tin 101 '
compliment her performance. And whether the fish are biting. It is poster for his successor so that the lad, whoever he might be. c0^
greeted him.
For a moment he stood there as a natural consequence he a source of astonishment for me fortify himself against the embarrassments he had gone througi
to see people fitfully cursing at
the unproductive water and wait forty years ago — were replaced by more Hollywvoodish shenam^
By Hollywood standards I guess the film “The Fourposter^ "^
ing with a fanatic zeal for the
fish to bite. IC is a prodigious a successful picture. It was a nice bedroom comedy , stariin^
and shameful waste of time that sophisticated people. Nothing more, nothing less. Rex and Li 1
could be better spent in being aged to be very7 charming and very7 clever, and if anyone is nwe ?~
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
deeply7 engrossed in the business ed in the kind of underwear people sported in that era, LilU v >
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
of sleeping to the fitting lul a good job of displaying it. And if they took a long time
as a medium of expression and news outlet
laby of the waves. It is such oldd they redeemed themselves near the end by becoming
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
times as these when one can fully old a la Hollywood.
_
Q;
Editor
KEN ADACHI
There should be capital punishment for the
reach a compromise with the
truth. Granted that the technique of screen and legitima e
^
world.
TAKAICHI UMEZUKI ------------------ Japanese Section Editor
I tell you, I had a wonderful differ, there was absolutely no excuse for the brutal hacking _
479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
something which was as true as life itself and as valuable.
time.
Authorized as second class mall. Post Office Dept,, Ottawa
COUNTERPOINT
THE NEW CANADIAN
Page 3
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Page 7
Bests Face Hamilton
In First Inter-City Tilt
rst inter-city baseball game of the st
whei
July IS, at. Viaduct Park, starting :
[its Shimoda and his Hamilton Niseis
t Best Cleaners of the Viaduct Senior Baseball League.
Th
ry
Mary Ebata, Chic Yanagisawa Win Toronto Bussei
Ladies Doubles Title For Third Straight Year
tended 1 henladies double
i to Bussei
by turning
The junior singles tournament
ill bo staged on Julv 26 and as
in a well played
This yeai
The ex
t Viaduct Park^Best
inked Hamilton. 4-0.
r Hamilton is coming
in an effort to avenge
thus assuring an in
of the Viaduct
PATRONIZE
TORONTO. —Mary Ebata and
id A
ix wins and eight losse
TH? Sva>'
Cleaned
and this
in full fo
the dete
PAGE 7
THE NEW CANADIAN
\Vednesday2 July 15, 195o
Kobayashi, infielders Pete Sasaki
and Johnny Nishimura and catch
er Bob Adachi. Veterans such a*
Tad Miura, Bill Aoki. Bob Ohashi,
the player;
it will be
without an
at
itle in 1949 and 1959
all opposi
tie a tor
Toronto, Ont
will i
this ?
but ’
out ;
xor
raight
F.F
and
Lucien C. Kurata
I
I
I
3 Adel
Isi
JUHI
M
v
I
Oft. EM. 5-0959 I
hoping for a good Ja- Kutsukake. round out the
I
Four good •startingaouIn
nl
have augmented last yeai
jink
Willi the schedule at the half pitching staff. The ace
"^S
[ mori won in the finals ov
way mark. Best Cleaners, after a staff is towering fastbal
2 ' P4*^"
Les
Four
Ming
Canadian
[
Okazaki-Kay
Horiuchi
6
bad Hart, are gradually picking Eason who last year pit
will oppose the
up and are currently tied for an inter-county O.B.A.
If
Cuppers on July
i runners-up had previously ousted ।
third spot. In a game on July 11,
nue-arm'
[ Susan Mivashita-Chick Fujiwara i
De Cleanermen edged Hoskins,
hold
exhibition matches.
plus last sc
4-1. in a rain-curtailed six-inn284.A YONOt STRUT. TORONTQ,
Teddy [
Cormier a
Lawrence Barclay and Jim
ing tR behind Les Easun’s 3-hit
Bentley, two alternates mi Cana
Barret.
burling. Roy Kobayashi’s double
Specialize! In
nured the da’s Davis Cup team which will
md Howie
in the third inning scored the
be
playing
Mexico
at
Montreal
on
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday men's consolation doubles by outI
tying and winning runs.
the same day, will play against
nights at Viaduct Bark, Broad
the Japanese. Also . present will t
view and Danforth. Nisei fans
be Jim Duff and
the veteran ? 684 Church St. (cor. Bloor)
are urged to come out and give TO HONOR JAPANESE
Phone Ml. 0995 — Toronto
Beau
Summers
of
Toronto.
A mid-summer dance will be
Best Cleaners moral and vocal
Stands at 1
support in their drive for a play held this Friday, July I n at the
of rain,
600
persons.
off position in the second half of UNF Hall to honor the visiting
Davis Cup players matches will be held on the next
Japanes
0. K. CLEAHERS
the schedule.
Dancing continues from 9 to 1 day, July 19, from 1 p.m.
101/2 QUEEN ST. W.
Reservations for the banquet
a.m. All are welcome to attend.
For Pick-up and D»liv«ry
Roy Shin, master of ceremon in honor of the visiting players
Phon®
Trinity Tennis Meet
ies, will introduce the tennis must be made immediately. Rhone
EM. 8-6953
Starts, No Upsets
players to the crowd. Official Matt Matsui at ML 9633 for tick
hostessess will be [Mary Ebata, ets. Members of Toronto’s tennis
The Trinity Nisei Tennis Club
Chic Yanagisawa and Sue Iwa officialdom will be present. Af
fair takes place on July 18 at
YONEMITSU
as scheduled on July 12 and play saki.
St.
Charles
from
8:30
p.m.
Watch Repair Shop
The Hall is air-conditioned.
continued to the second round.
Results were according to form
328 BROADVIEW AVE.
and no startling upsets were re
(near Gerrard St.)
Tokyo
Toronto.
Phone GL. 3652
corded.
to
The longest match of the day
I
was
between
Oscar Hatashita and
Vs^esyYef
W4-0508
Residence:
Frank Matsui, the latter winning
2
Vesta
Drive
FOR EMIGRANTS
in three sets after three giuelMAfair 1365.
Lack of any real slugging Westerns as the latter lost, 6-4
ling hours. Matsui, however, bow
Tokyo to Toronto 610.30
Andrew E. McKague,
ed to Mickey Matsubayashi, 6-1, power which was feared before on July 9. Lefty Ken Ikeda start
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
ed for "Westerns but gave way to
the
start
of
the
season
as
being
Public.
6’3>
Russ Cunnyworth in the second
Westerns
’
Achilles
’
heel,
has
pro
Plav
continues
next
Sunday,
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
^f^O^S
when
George
Dunkley
belted
a
3330 Bay St.
3A
ven to be more than disturbing
July 19, during the morning.
(Corner Adelaide A. Bay St#.)
run.
homer
to
give
Mahers
a
lead
as the Nisei lads hold a lowly
TORONTO
eight wins. 15 losses record with that was never overcome. Walt
well over half of the schedule al Scvcruck finished the game.
Westerns threatened briefly in
X
ready on the books. The 8-15 let
the final inning, scoring two runs.
cord leaves them bogged in fifth
:
Toronto Nisei Tennis Club
Joe Brown, the dean of West
place, three games behind Indus
Sales & Service
presents
trial Lumber who hold the covet erns’ pitching staff, provided the
ALL .MAKES
(:
ed fourth playoff spot of the onlv bright spot in Westerns X
t
otherwise dull week, when he
West Toronto Senior League.
threw a 7-hitter to stop Industiial
RAT E S REASOXA BLE
Only a glance at last weeks
Lumber,
6-5, on July 11. West
boxscores is enough to under
(air-conditioned)
erns rapped out six hits, Aki Hascore the idea that Westerns will
vashi and Fred Tanaka both gar
in honor of Japan's Davis Cup Team
Auto Technician
have to come up with some better
:
nering
two
singles,
good
for
two
,1,
’:
FRIDAY JULY 17
hitting to augment their fine de
303
Westmoreland
Ave.
rbi’s each. Eddie Nishimura and
DANCING 9 to 1 a.m.
fensive and pitching which has
ADMISSION $1.00
ME. 6165 — TORONTO
Major
Fukumoto
collected
held up well this season if they
t.
singles.
hope to garner a playoff spot.
The rains that finally fell on
•Westerns played four games
to West July 12 didn’t fall soon enough
T. KOBAYASHI
last week, losing
for Westerns as they dropped the
Yorks, 6-4 to Mahers and 5-2 to
game, 5-2, to Mahers. As it was,
&SON
[Mahers again, pulling out their
by the Davis Cup Players
the rain curtailed the tilt to five
only win, 6-5 against Industrial
For All Your
innings. Ken Ohara who started
Insurance
Needs
Lumber.
the game after two straight vicLIFE,
AUTO,
FIRE
Westerns only got five hits off 1 tories, just didn’t have any con375 Dovercourt (below College)
FLOATERS, ETC.
York’s Rene Bouchard in losing I trol. giving way to Walter Seaturday, July 18
4 to 7 p.m.
on July 7, 4-2. Walt Sevemuck venuck in the fourth. Westerns
ADMISSION $1.00 (to defray expenses)
hey-- PJ
went
all the way for the losers. I punchless bats were practically
Special price for youngsters lS-and-under: 50 cents.
Westerns led, 2-1, until the fifth i silent, Eddie Nishimura the only
P.O. Box 149
when a bad hop over shortstop : player to touch Jerry Acheson
KAMLOOPS, B. C.
Major Fukumoto’s head scored
Residence:
the tying counter.
Maw Mori
Westerns arc scheduled to play
139
LEIGH
ROAD,
singled in the two Westerns runs.
Industrial on Thurs., July 16,
North Kamloops, B. C.
SATURDAY, JULY 18, 8:30 p.m.
Bill Kay of the league-leading ;
from
8:45
p.m.
$2.00 Per Person
Mahers yielded but five hits to ।
Reservations Must Be Made
Davis Cup Alternates
0 r av jaaaaess
1ST
Westerns Need Hits
To Make Playoffs
SEE THE JAPANESE DAVIS CUP PLAYERS’
DANCE at CNF HAU
EXHIBITION MATCHES
HUDSON TENNIS COURTS
BANQUET at St. Charles Tavern
In First Inter-City Tilt
rst inter-city baseball game of the st
whei
July IS, at. Viaduct Park, starting :
[its Shimoda and his Hamilton Niseis
t Best Cleaners of the Viaduct Senior Baseball League.
Th
ry
Mary Ebata, Chic Yanagisawa Win Toronto Bussei
Ladies Doubles Title For Third Straight Year
tended 1 henladies double
i to Bussei
by turning
The junior singles tournament
ill bo staged on Julv 26 and as
in a well played
This yeai
The ex
t Viaduct Park^Best
inked Hamilton. 4-0.
r Hamilton is coming
in an effort to avenge
thus assuring an in
of the Viaduct
PATRONIZE
TORONTO. —Mary Ebata and
id A
ix wins and eight losse
TH? Sva>'
Cleaned
and this
in full fo
the dete
PAGE 7
THE NEW CANADIAN
\Vednesday2 July 15, 195o
Kobayashi, infielders Pete Sasaki
and Johnny Nishimura and catch
er Bob Adachi. Veterans such a*
Tad Miura, Bill Aoki. Bob Ohashi,
the player;
it will be
without an
at
itle in 1949 and 1959
all opposi
tie a tor
Toronto, Ont
will i
this ?
but ’
out ;
xor
raight
F.F
and
Lucien C. Kurata
I
I
I
3 Adel
Isi
JUHI
M
v
I
Oft. EM. 5-0959 I
hoping for a good Ja- Kutsukake. round out the
I
Four good •startingaouIn
nl
have augmented last yeai
jink
Willi the schedule at the half pitching staff. The ace
"^S
[ mori won in the finals ov
way mark. Best Cleaners, after a staff is towering fastbal
2 ' P4*^"
Les
Four
Ming
Canadian
[
Okazaki-Kay
Horiuchi
6
bad Hart, are gradually picking Eason who last year pit
will oppose the
up and are currently tied for an inter-county O.B.A.
If
Cuppers on July
i runners-up had previously ousted ।
third spot. In a game on July 11,
nue-arm'
[ Susan Mivashita-Chick Fujiwara i
De Cleanermen edged Hoskins,
hold
exhibition matches.
plus last sc
4-1. in a rain-curtailed six-inn284.A YONOt STRUT. TORONTQ,
Teddy [
Cormier a
Lawrence Barclay and Jim
ing tR behind Les Easun’s 3-hit
Bentley, two alternates mi Cana
Barret.
burling. Roy Kobayashi’s double
Specialize! In
nured the da’s Davis Cup team which will
md Howie
in the third inning scored the
be
playing
Mexico
at
Montreal
on
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday men's consolation doubles by outI
tying and winning runs.
the same day, will play against
nights at Viaduct Bark, Broad
the Japanese. Also . present will t
view and Danforth. Nisei fans
be Jim Duff and
the veteran ? 684 Church St. (cor. Bloor)
are urged to come out and give TO HONOR JAPANESE
Phone Ml. 0995 — Toronto
Beau
Summers
of
Toronto.
A mid-summer dance will be
Best Cleaners moral and vocal
Stands at 1
support in their drive for a play held this Friday, July I n at the
of rain,
600
persons.
off position in the second half of UNF Hall to honor the visiting
Davis Cup players matches will be held on the next
Japanes
0. K. CLEAHERS
the schedule.
Dancing continues from 9 to 1 day, July 19, from 1 p.m.
101/2 QUEEN ST. W.
Reservations for the banquet
a.m. All are welcome to attend.
For Pick-up and D»liv«ry
Roy Shin, master of ceremon in honor of the visiting players
Phon®
Trinity Tennis Meet
ies, will introduce the tennis must be made immediately. Rhone
EM. 8-6953
Starts, No Upsets
players to the crowd. Official Matt Matsui at ML 9633 for tick
hostessess will be [Mary Ebata, ets. Members of Toronto’s tennis
The Trinity Nisei Tennis Club
Chic Yanagisawa and Sue Iwa officialdom will be present. Af
fair takes place on July 18 at
YONEMITSU
as scheduled on July 12 and play saki.
St.
Charles
from
8:30
p.m.
Watch Repair Shop
The Hall is air-conditioned.
continued to the second round.
Results were according to form
328 BROADVIEW AVE.
and no startling upsets were re
(near Gerrard St.)
Tokyo
Toronto.
Phone GL. 3652
corded.
to
The longest match of the day
I
was
between
Oscar Hatashita and
Vs^esyYef
W4-0508
Residence:
Frank Matsui, the latter winning
2
Vesta
Drive
FOR EMIGRANTS
in three sets after three giuelMAfair 1365.
Lack of any real slugging Westerns as the latter lost, 6-4
ling hours. Matsui, however, bow
Tokyo to Toronto 610.30
Andrew E. McKague,
ed to Mickey Matsubayashi, 6-1, power which was feared before on July 9. Lefty Ken Ikeda start
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
ed for "Westerns but gave way to
the
start
of
the
season
as
being
Public.
6’3>
Russ Cunnyworth in the second
Westerns
’
Achilles
’
heel,
has
pro
Plav
continues
next
Sunday,
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
^f^O^S
when
George
Dunkley
belted
a
3330 Bay St.
3A
ven to be more than disturbing
July 19, during the morning.
(Corner Adelaide A. Bay St#.)
run.
homer
to
give
Mahers
a
lead
as the Nisei lads hold a lowly
TORONTO
eight wins. 15 losses record with that was never overcome. Walt
well over half of the schedule al Scvcruck finished the game.
Westerns threatened briefly in
X
ready on the books. The 8-15 let
the final inning, scoring two runs.
cord leaves them bogged in fifth
:
Toronto Nisei Tennis Club
Joe Brown, the dean of West
place, three games behind Indus
Sales & Service
presents
trial Lumber who hold the covet erns’ pitching staff, provided the
ALL .MAKES
(:
ed fourth playoff spot of the onlv bright spot in Westerns X
t
otherwise dull week, when he
West Toronto Senior League.
threw a 7-hitter to stop Industiial
RAT E S REASOXA BLE
Only a glance at last weeks
Lumber,
6-5, on July 11. West
boxscores is enough to under
(air-conditioned)
erns rapped out six hits, Aki Hascore the idea that Westerns will
vashi and Fred Tanaka both gar
in honor of Japan's Davis Cup Team
Auto Technician
have to come up with some better
:
nering
two
singles,
good
for
two
,1,
’:
FRIDAY JULY 17
hitting to augment their fine de
303
Westmoreland
Ave.
rbi’s each. Eddie Nishimura and
DANCING 9 to 1 a.m.
fensive and pitching which has
ADMISSION $1.00
ME. 6165 — TORONTO
Major
Fukumoto
collected
held up well this season if they
t.
singles.
hope to garner a playoff spot.
The rains that finally fell on
•Westerns played four games
to West July 12 didn’t fall soon enough
T. KOBAYASHI
last week, losing
for Westerns as they dropped the
Yorks, 6-4 to Mahers and 5-2 to
game, 5-2, to Mahers. As it was,
&SON
[Mahers again, pulling out their
by the Davis Cup Players
the rain curtailed the tilt to five
only win, 6-5 against Industrial
For All Your
innings. Ken Ohara who started
Insurance
Needs
Lumber.
the game after two straight vicLIFE,
AUTO,
FIRE
Westerns only got five hits off 1 tories, just didn’t have any con375 Dovercourt (below College)
FLOATERS, ETC.
York’s Rene Bouchard in losing I trol. giving way to Walter Seaturday, July 18
4 to 7 p.m.
on July 7, 4-2. Walt Sevemuck venuck in the fourth. Westerns
ADMISSION $1.00 (to defray expenses)
hey-- PJ
went
all the way for the losers. I punchless bats were practically
Special price for youngsters lS-and-under: 50 cents.
Westerns led, 2-1, until the fifth i silent, Eddie Nishimura the only
P.O. Box 149
when a bad hop over shortstop : player to touch Jerry Acheson
KAMLOOPS, B. C.
Major Fukumoto’s head scored
Residence:
the tying counter.
Maw Mori
Westerns arc scheduled to play
139
LEIGH
ROAD,
singled in the two Westerns runs.
Industrial on Thurs., July 16,
North Kamloops, B. C.
SATURDAY, JULY 18, 8:30 p.m.
Bill Kay of the league-leading ;
from
8:45
p.m.
$2.00 Per Person
Mahers yielded but five hits to ।
Reservations Must Be Made
Davis Cup Alternates
0 r av jaaaaess
1ST
Westerns Need Hits
To Make Playoffs
SEE THE JAPANESE DAVIS CUP PLAYERS’
DANCE at CNF HAU
EXHIBITION MATCHES
HUDSON TENNIS COURTS
BANQUET at St. Charles Tavern
Page 8
r»Ii J HI II11HUI HUMIHIIIHIUlIIIIHMill
NET STARS TO APPEAR
SOCIAL CALENDAR AT COMMUNITY PICNIC
lllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllillllllll
JULY
1/
Wednesday, July 15, 1953
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 8
New Yorkers Arrange
Social Activities
For Tennis Visitors
Ami, Queens Slate
Picnic at Brampton
Our Advertisers
Club Anti and Club Queens will
hold a joint picnic excursion on
Sunday, July 26, to Brampton’s
beautiful Eldorado Park. Some
forty members of the two friend
ly clubs will participate in softball, swimming, fishing, games
and dancing.
Bus leaves 134 Huron Street
from 9 a.m. and will leave El
dorado Park at 9 p.m. Tickets
are $1.50 per person. For more
information, phone Don Tsuji at
A series of social events have
17—Toronto. Dance in honor of vis
A
been planned by the New York
X
iting Japanese Davis Cup players,
Nisei Tennis Club during the
A
at UNF Hall, 8:30 p.m.
A
forthcoming
international
match
18—Montreal. Quebec JCCA Annual
A
es between Toronto and the Man
Community Picnic, at Cap St.
representative
hattanites on Civic Holiday week
Jacques.
A Bernardi-Mathews Ltd.
18—Toronto. Japanese Davis Cup
end, reveals Chiz Ikeda of the
Team’s Exhibition Match, at Hud
New Y"ork club.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS
son Tennis Courts, 4 to 7 p.m.
Following
the
train
’
s
arrival
on
Club's
i
18—Toronto. Nisei
1075 St. Clair Ave. W.
August 1, a chartered bus tour of
Banquet for Davis Cup Team, at
St. Charles Tavern, 8:30 p.m.
the city has been arranged. In
A
TORONTO
19—Toronto. Toronto JCCA Fourth
the evening, an informal dance at ME. 5485.
Annual Community Picnic, at
the Manhattan Towers Hotel will
X Office OL. 7971 - Res. GL. 8914 >j<
Tarmola Grounds.
be held, with New York’s Japan
26—Vancouver. Vancouver Y.B.A.
ese American community in at
Picnic, at Peace Arch.
26—Toronto. Bec-Socratic Club Pictendance.
Electrical Contractor |
at Alcona Beach, Lake SimThe tennis tourney will be held
coe.
on August 2 at the Fleet Tennis
Special Heavy Wiring
Club Ami—Club Queens
HAMILTON. — A tea party
and
Courts
with
a
buffet
dinner
at Eldorado Park, BrampFOR RANGES. 60 Amp. $60.
was held on June 26 by the Jageneral social to follow at the
ton.
panese
Canadian
Anglican
conSAME DAY SERVICE
clubhouse. A swimming pool can
gregation at the Hamilton An
also be utilized.
glican Parish Hall in honor of
JOHNSON
2—Toronto. University of Toronto
Persons wishing to make the
two missionaries, Miss Hawkins
Nisei Students’ Club Annual
ELECTRICAL
trip are asked to contact. eithei
and Miss Bailey, who have work
Picnic.
^
Mary Ebata, OL. 2725, or Roy
CONTRACTOR
2—Fort. William. Lakehead Nisei
ed in the past on behalf of the JaShin, MI. 7767, immediately. A
Club Annual Picnic, at Ch ip paw a
panese in Canada.
697 Queen St. W. — Toronto
Park, Fort William.
special return train fare of $22
Both missionaries^ were work
EMpire 4-0535
has been arranged .
ing at the 3rd Avenue Anglican
/The New York Yankees are
Church in Kitsilano, Vancouver.
PICNIC AT BELCARRA
playing St. Louis Browns during
Miss Bailey is still working at
VANCOUVER — The Vancou
the weekend, Miss Ikeda also ad
Slocan, B. C., but Miss Hawkins
ver JCCA held its annual com
t
vised.
has returned to Canada after five
munity picnic at Belcarra Park
Buses leave 61 College St.
years in Japan. She is expected ?
with the largest crowd on record
(west of Bay), starting at 10 a.m. CANADA BUDDHIST ASS’N
to return to Japan after one year.
attending the affair. (Last year
Chop Suey House
Return fare, including ground fee,
Both are on their summer vaca ?
over 650 attended the picnic
TO AID KYUSHU VICTIMS
is ?1.50 for adults and 75 cents
W-A Elizabeth St, Toronto
tions and will visit Japanese Can
for children. Persons driving to
PICTURE BUTTE, Alta. — adian communities in Eastern
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
Tarmola by car will be charged The Canadian Buddhist Church
DINNERS
Canada.
Re-Socratic Club
50 cents (adults) and 25 cents Association will collect a relief
Hours:
12
Neon to 4 sum.
Mr. Victor Kadonaga acted as
Picnic at L. Simcoe
(children). Tickets are available fund for the Kyushu flood vic master of ceremonies, speaking in
Reservations: EM4-9035
A summer outing has been from Toronto JCCA executives, tims. Money collected will be
English, while Mr. Miyasaka who
planned by the Rec-Socratic Club Continental Times and The New forwarded to Buddhis headquart
has just returned from Van
at Alcona Beach on Lake Simcoe Canadian, prior to boarding the ers in Kyoto.
V
couver, entertained in Japanese.
A
on Sunday, July 26.
buses or at the grounds.
Miss Bailey spoke about her | Open 12 noon to 2 a.m
Rates are $1.00 by bus and 50
X
impressions of the past and Miss Vt
j
by
car.
cents for persons
Gay
Hawkins related her heartwarm X
Buses leave MeCa.nl and College OBITUARY
A
ing experiences she had under A
famous Chinese foods
,:.
Sts. at 12:30 p.m. All those wish
FEMALE
HELP WANTED
X
SAITO
gone with her Christian work in A 69 Albert St. —Toronto ♦
ing to attend ,either by bus or
V
GIRL TO ASSIST in cuting room
A
Japan.
X
(at Elizabeth)
car, should contact, by July 18,
X
Mrs. Kiku Saito, 49, wife of Mr. to mark paterns. Apply Wilshire
On
the
special
program
were
A
Telephone
EM.
8-9817
any of the following persons:
Yuichi Saito of Toronto, passed Garment Co., 20 Camden St., Toranthe talented brother-sister comb X
X
Special attention given
Bob Yamashita EM. 6-4319, away on July 1 at Atami-shi, Shi to. EM. 6-S514.
A
ination
of
Mark
Fujino,
violin,
SEWING
MACHINE
operators.
X
k
to take out orders.
zuoka Prefecture. Memorial ser
Xr
and
Kay
Fujino,
piano.
Some
experience
on
sewing
mach
ta. LO. 3344, Bill Umezuki OX. vices were held at Trinity Hall,
ines necessary. Apply Harris7042, Art Arai GR. 1244 or Mak Toronto, on July 9.
Banks Reg'd., 116 Spadina Ave.,
Otsu OL. 4035.
Toronto._____________________
HELP WANTED
TORONTO. — One of the fea
tures of the big Annual Com
munity Picnic to be held this
Sunday, July 19. at Tarmola
Grounds, vzill be the appearance
of the Japanese Davis Cup tennis
team who have been invited by
the Toronto JCCA to attend the
affair.
They competed in the
American Zone eliminations last
week in Vancouver and will play
in the Canadian championships in
Toronto.
Other features of the picnic
which is expected to be attended
by about 2,000 Japanese Canasports program
are
which includes foot races and
novelty races of every conceiv
able type, bingo, tug-of-war, fuku-biki,
watermelon-breaking,
and dancing.
The
pavillion
and
picnic
grounds offer restful sites for
people who merely desire to re
lax and renew acquaintances
with friends from Toronto and
district. An east-west competi
tion will also be arranged to pro
vide more impetus to the sports
activities.
Hold Tea Party For
Two Missionaries
I
A
a
a
a
i
a
Hoe Sol
I
CARPENTER for finishing and
roughing. Phone RA. 8254 or ME.
1225, Toronto.
MAN FOR STEADY work, IS to
25, all-year around, experience not
necessary. Apply IS Spadina Ave.
(basement), ask for Mr. Marcus.
(Toronto). \
(Attention Voters of St. Pauls Riding)
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
*
CAPABLE GIRL or woman to do
plain cooking for doctor and family
Cottage on island in
in
Georgian Bay. Please apply after
July 19. Phone KA. 300.1 (Toronto).
________ FOR RENT___________
T VZ O
ROOMS,
unfurnished
Bathurst-Bloor. Large bedroom, kit
chen, sink and gas, suited for
business couple. KE. 6168, Tor
onto.
_
TWORlOOMS, unfurnished. One
big room and kitchen, with sink
and running hot-water. Call RA.
0389, Toronto.
*
*
If your name is not on the Voters' list and you are
entitled to vote, contact I. H. Rooney at Empire 3-4717,
and you will be qualified AT YOUR HOME.
*
*
*
On August 10th, ELECTION DAY,
Sunday, July 19
GROUND TICKETS: Adult 50 cents; Child 25 cents
BUS TICKETS (including ground) : Adult $1.50: Child 75 cents
Tickets Con Be Obtained From JCCA Executive
Members , Continental Times or The New Canadian.
Bus tickets will be sold at departure point. 61 College St.
(near Bay), leaving from 10 a.m.
4
Store clerks for Danforth
Cleaners. Good Mages. Steady
employment. Apply 300 Jones
Ave.. Toronto. RI. 2424.
Danforth Cleaners is opening a
branch store near O’Connor Drive
and St. Clair Ave., East York. A
store girl is wanted for this
branch, preferably residing in
this vicinity.
REMEMBER J. H. ROONEY M.P
(Liberal Candidate St. Pauls)
Pauls'
it's Jim Rooney'
i
i
;
i
I
1
NET STARS TO APPEAR
SOCIAL CALENDAR AT COMMUNITY PICNIC
lllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllillllllll
JULY
1/
Wednesday, July 15, 1953
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 8
New Yorkers Arrange
Social Activities
For Tennis Visitors
Ami, Queens Slate
Picnic at Brampton
Our Advertisers
Club Anti and Club Queens will
hold a joint picnic excursion on
Sunday, July 26, to Brampton’s
beautiful Eldorado Park. Some
forty members of the two friend
ly clubs will participate in softball, swimming, fishing, games
and dancing.
Bus leaves 134 Huron Street
from 9 a.m. and will leave El
dorado Park at 9 p.m. Tickets
are $1.50 per person. For more
information, phone Don Tsuji at
A series of social events have
17—Toronto. Dance in honor of vis
A
been planned by the New York
X
iting Japanese Davis Cup players,
Nisei Tennis Club during the
A
at UNF Hall, 8:30 p.m.
A
forthcoming
international
match
18—Montreal. Quebec JCCA Annual
A
es between Toronto and the Man
Community Picnic, at Cap St.
representative
hattanites on Civic Holiday week
Jacques.
A Bernardi-Mathews Ltd.
18—Toronto. Japanese Davis Cup
end, reveals Chiz Ikeda of the
Team’s Exhibition Match, at Hud
New Y"ork club.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS
son Tennis Courts, 4 to 7 p.m.
Following
the
train
’
s
arrival
on
Club's
i
18—Toronto. Nisei
1075 St. Clair Ave. W.
August 1, a chartered bus tour of
Banquet for Davis Cup Team, at
St. Charles Tavern, 8:30 p.m.
the city has been arranged. In
A
TORONTO
19—Toronto. Toronto JCCA Fourth
the evening, an informal dance at ME. 5485.
Annual Community Picnic, at
the Manhattan Towers Hotel will
X Office OL. 7971 - Res. GL. 8914 >j<
Tarmola Grounds.
be held, with New York’s Japan
26—Vancouver. Vancouver Y.B.A.
ese American community in at
Picnic, at Peace Arch.
26—Toronto. Bec-Socratic Club Pictendance.
Electrical Contractor |
at Alcona Beach, Lake SimThe tennis tourney will be held
coe.
on August 2 at the Fleet Tennis
Special Heavy Wiring
Club Ami—Club Queens
HAMILTON. — A tea party
and
Courts
with
a
buffet
dinner
at Eldorado Park, BrampFOR RANGES. 60 Amp. $60.
was held on June 26 by the Jageneral social to follow at the
ton.
panese
Canadian
Anglican
conSAME DAY SERVICE
clubhouse. A swimming pool can
gregation at the Hamilton An
also be utilized.
glican Parish Hall in honor of
JOHNSON
2—Toronto. University of Toronto
Persons wishing to make the
two missionaries, Miss Hawkins
Nisei Students’ Club Annual
ELECTRICAL
trip are asked to contact. eithei
and Miss Bailey, who have work
Picnic.
^
Mary Ebata, OL. 2725, or Roy
CONTRACTOR
2—Fort. William. Lakehead Nisei
ed in the past on behalf of the JaShin, MI. 7767, immediately. A
Club Annual Picnic, at Ch ip paw a
panese in Canada.
697 Queen St. W. — Toronto
Park, Fort William.
special return train fare of $22
Both missionaries^ were work
EMpire 4-0535
has been arranged .
ing at the 3rd Avenue Anglican
/The New York Yankees are
Church in Kitsilano, Vancouver.
PICNIC AT BELCARRA
playing St. Louis Browns during
Miss Bailey is still working at
VANCOUVER — The Vancou
the weekend, Miss Ikeda also ad
Slocan, B. C., but Miss Hawkins
ver JCCA held its annual com
t
vised.
has returned to Canada after five
munity picnic at Belcarra Park
Buses leave 61 College St.
years in Japan. She is expected ?
with the largest crowd on record
(west of Bay), starting at 10 a.m. CANADA BUDDHIST ASS’N
to return to Japan after one year.
attending the affair. (Last year
Chop Suey House
Return fare, including ground fee,
Both are on their summer vaca ?
over 650 attended the picnic
TO AID KYUSHU VICTIMS
is ?1.50 for adults and 75 cents
W-A Elizabeth St, Toronto
tions and will visit Japanese Can
for children. Persons driving to
PICTURE BUTTE, Alta. — adian communities in Eastern
BANQUETS AND FAMILY
Tarmola by car will be charged The Canadian Buddhist Church
DINNERS
Canada.
Re-Socratic Club
50 cents (adults) and 25 cents Association will collect a relief
Hours:
12
Neon to 4 sum.
Mr. Victor Kadonaga acted as
Picnic at L. Simcoe
(children). Tickets are available fund for the Kyushu flood vic master of ceremonies, speaking in
Reservations: EM4-9035
A summer outing has been from Toronto JCCA executives, tims. Money collected will be
English, while Mr. Miyasaka who
planned by the Rec-Socratic Club Continental Times and The New forwarded to Buddhis headquart
has just returned from Van
at Alcona Beach on Lake Simcoe Canadian, prior to boarding the ers in Kyoto.
V
couver, entertained in Japanese.
A
on Sunday, July 26.
buses or at the grounds.
Miss Bailey spoke about her | Open 12 noon to 2 a.m
Rates are $1.00 by bus and 50
X
impressions of the past and Miss Vt
j
by
car.
cents for persons
Gay
Hawkins related her heartwarm X
Buses leave MeCa.nl and College OBITUARY
A
ing experiences she had under A
famous Chinese foods
,:.
Sts. at 12:30 p.m. All those wish
FEMALE
HELP WANTED
X
SAITO
gone with her Christian work in A 69 Albert St. —Toronto ♦
ing to attend ,either by bus or
V
GIRL TO ASSIST in cuting room
A
Japan.
X
(at Elizabeth)
car, should contact, by July 18,
X
Mrs. Kiku Saito, 49, wife of Mr. to mark paterns. Apply Wilshire
On
the
special
program
were
A
Telephone
EM.
8-9817
any of the following persons:
Yuichi Saito of Toronto, passed Garment Co., 20 Camden St., Toranthe talented brother-sister comb X
X
Special attention given
Bob Yamashita EM. 6-4319, away on July 1 at Atami-shi, Shi to. EM. 6-S514.
A
ination
of
Mark
Fujino,
violin,
SEWING
MACHINE
operators.
X
k
to take out orders.
zuoka Prefecture. Memorial ser
Xr
and
Kay
Fujino,
piano.
Some
experience
on
sewing
mach
ta. LO. 3344, Bill Umezuki OX. vices were held at Trinity Hall,
ines necessary. Apply Harris7042, Art Arai GR. 1244 or Mak Toronto, on July 9.
Banks Reg'd., 116 Spadina Ave.,
Otsu OL. 4035.
Toronto._____________________
HELP WANTED
TORONTO. — One of the fea
tures of the big Annual Com
munity Picnic to be held this
Sunday, July 19. at Tarmola
Grounds, vzill be the appearance
of the Japanese Davis Cup tennis
team who have been invited by
the Toronto JCCA to attend the
affair.
They competed in the
American Zone eliminations last
week in Vancouver and will play
in the Canadian championships in
Toronto.
Other features of the picnic
which is expected to be attended
by about 2,000 Japanese Canasports program
are
which includes foot races and
novelty races of every conceiv
able type, bingo, tug-of-war, fuku-biki,
watermelon-breaking,
and dancing.
The
pavillion
and
picnic
grounds offer restful sites for
people who merely desire to re
lax and renew acquaintances
with friends from Toronto and
district. An east-west competi
tion will also be arranged to pro
vide more impetus to the sports
activities.
Hold Tea Party For
Two Missionaries
I
A
a
a
a
i
a
Hoe Sol
I
CARPENTER for finishing and
roughing. Phone RA. 8254 or ME.
1225, Toronto.
MAN FOR STEADY work, IS to
25, all-year around, experience not
necessary. Apply IS Spadina Ave.
(basement), ask for Mr. Marcus.
(Toronto). \
(Attention Voters of St. Pauls Riding)
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
*
CAPABLE GIRL or woman to do
plain cooking for doctor and family
Cottage on island in
in
Georgian Bay. Please apply after
July 19. Phone KA. 300.1 (Toronto).
________ FOR RENT___________
T VZ O
ROOMS,
unfurnished
Bathurst-Bloor. Large bedroom, kit
chen, sink and gas, suited for
business couple. KE. 6168, Tor
onto.
_
TWORlOOMS, unfurnished. One
big room and kitchen, with sink
and running hot-water. Call RA.
0389, Toronto.
*
*
If your name is not on the Voters' list and you are
entitled to vote, contact I. H. Rooney at Empire 3-4717,
and you will be qualified AT YOUR HOME.
*
*
*
On August 10th, ELECTION DAY,
Sunday, July 19
GROUND TICKETS: Adult 50 cents; Child 25 cents
BUS TICKETS (including ground) : Adult $1.50: Child 75 cents
Tickets Con Be Obtained From JCCA Executive
Members , Continental Times or The New Canadian.
Bus tickets will be sold at departure point. 61 College St.
(near Bay), leaving from 10 a.m.
4
Store clerks for Danforth
Cleaners. Good Mages. Steady
employment. Apply 300 Jones
Ave.. Toronto. RI. 2424.
Danforth Cleaners is opening a
branch store near O’Connor Drive
and St. Clair Ave., East York. A
store girl is wanted for this
branch, preferably residing in
this vicinity.
REMEMBER J. H. ROONEY M.P
(Liberal Candidate St. Pauls)
Pauls'
it's Jim Rooney'
i
i
;
i
I
1