Page 1
THE N
CANADIAN
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22
16—NO. 57
Three Hundred Cars, rour Buses Garry 2,000
Persons to Toronto JCGA Community Picnic
TORONTO, ONT.
g^^ jj^gn^g^ Adding 3,000 Japanese
An estimated number of three
hundred automobiles—a note
WASHINGTON, D. C. — Accepting an amendment to add 3,000
worthy commentary on the state
of the Japanese Canadian com- “Playing Cowboy"
Japanese to the President’s proposal to admit 240,000 refugees with
munity in Toronto—four charter
in the next two years to the United States outside regular quotas,
By Ken Adachi
ed buses and a few trucks carried Results In Tragedy
the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Naturaliza
about 2,000 persons to the mam For 9-Year-Old
Hot-Weather Trivia
tion reported the measure out for consideration by the full House
moth Fourth Annual Community
WHITE ROCK. B. C. — A
Judiciary Committee, the Washington Office of the Japanese AmenWhat with looking at those picnic sponsored by the Toronto
simple game of “playing cow
pictures in the newspapers about JCCA on July 19 at Tarmola
boy*' resulted in the death of
bathin. uit-clad winners of such Grounds.
nine-year-old Allan Isao Mori
The amendment was proposed
aoka Washington J ACL repro
hot -weather contests as “Miss
Carrying on what seems to be
zawa of White Rock on July
by
Rep.
Francis
E.
Walter
(D.,
Universe " or “Miss Toronto”, I a tradition at JCCA picnics, rain
Pa.), co-author of the WalterThe Administration originally
more than slightly en- fell slightly in mid-afternoon for
Allan, playingMcCarran
Immigration and Na suggested that a total of 240,000
those cool lovelies who
game of cowboys had tied a
a few minutes but otherwise, the
tionality Act of 1952 which for immigrants be admitted to the.
•m! with practically no
weather alternated between 85rope around hi neck three
the first time extended .immigra U.S. outside of the annual quota
times at the back porch of his
degree sunshine and clouds to
tion quotas to Japan and provid system. Several weeks ago, Ma
e is nothing more dehouse. One end of the rope,
give a break to the local chapter's
ed naturalization privileges to the saoka urged both the House and
frustrating than to see
mt
however, got entangled in a
biggest affair of the year. The
Japanese.
Senate Judiciary and Foreign Re
res of practically unnearby table and little Allan
attendance easily marks the larg
Under the amendment, 3,000
include
Committees
dressed femininity when one is
was hanged, his feet danglingest annual outdoor gathering in
Japanese who qualify under the Asian, including the Japanese, in
forced to wear hot clothing that
eight inches from the ground.
preference categories of the 19l’2 the legislation which otherwise
Canada.
sticks to the skin with leech-like
Firemen
tried
to
revive
him
All events proved popular, the
Act will be admitted as perman would be discriminatory in its ap
persistency.
but to no avail.
ent resident immigrants outside
bingo and refreshment conces
plication in favor of only Eu
Although we males are fortun
Allan, a grade Four student,
of Japan’s annual quota of 185.
sions attracting a steady stream
ropeans.
ately not in the same pitiable and
who was born in New Denver,
Under the basic law, 50 per
of patrons. In the sports event,
The Subcommittee approved
sometimes idiotic predicament of
was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
cent of the quota is reserved for
which included a variety of races
version of the President’s bill is
t'ne female of the species who
Kauekichi Morizawa.
those aliens who are urgently
for young and old, the East-West
expected
to be considered by the
constantly have to gear her ward
needed in the United States be
point competition was won by the
full Judiciary Committee this
robe to the fickle whims of the
cause of training, background, or
eastenders, 155 to 139, reversing $1,000 Raised For
week. Already several proponents
commercial designers, we are de
skills.
last year’s result. Other features Kyushu Flood Fund
of the President’s measure have
cidedly on the losing side when it
The next 30 percent of the
The sum of $1,000 has been
included fuku-biki and dancing
announced that they will oppose
comes to summer wear. It is obindulged raised to date in the Kyushu quota is set aside for the alien the Walter amendments.
while
hardy
enthusiasts
vious that the males are just as
in swimming in the nearby Flood Relief Fund organized by parents of United States citizens
dressed, from top to bottom, in
the Toronto JCCA. Donations j and the remaining 20 percent is
summer as in winter, But if it is stream.
Japanese Film Third
Prizes were awarded to per have been coming from many for the spouses or children of rea detriment, then it is the only
At Berlin Festival
sons estimating the attendance groups and individuals in aid of sident aliens.
one.
the
That
portion
of
each
of
the
’
flood
victims.
BERLIN. — Winners of the
Some animals, I am told—and and to the parents of the young
The money has been sent to the preference (fuotas which are n o t Berlin Senate prizes at the Ber
est
child.
The
latter
was
won
by
the peacock is as good an exam
Embassy of Japan in Ottawa as used are made available to the
ple as any—are peculiar in the Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Koyanagi a first instalment. It is to be for alien brothers, sisters, sons or lin Film Festival for the films
which best illustrated the theme
fact that the male is more bright whose child was one month old.
warded to the Japanese Red daughters of American citizens.
The
Japanese
Davis
Cup
team
of freedom in the world inclured
ly adorned than the female. I am
Cross.
members
were
special
guests.
Because
Rep.
Walter
realized
•“Man On a Tightrope” produced
thankful, however, that this is
that
the
small
annual
quota
for
by Twentieth-Century Fox of the
not so with the human animal.
Japan did not begin to take care United States, first place and
Except for the Greenwich Village
of the problem of war-separated ‘Entotsu
No
Micru
Basho”
types who, among other things,
families
and
because
he
felt
Ja
(Where
the
Chimneys
Stand)
of
like to curl their hair. Pink shirts
pan and Asia are entitled to the Japan produced by Toho Studios,
and monogrammed underwear to
same
immigration privileges as third place.
the contrary, nothing is more ac
VANCOUVER. — A touring San Francisco and Seattle first,
Europeans, he
proposed the
These films were chosen by the
ceptable than male attire, unless party of 50 Japanese mayors and then fly up to Vancouver.
industry
representatives
some scheming female designer civic officials will pay a nineThe city will put up 8500 of the amendments which were accepted film
by
the
Subcommittee,
Mike
Mafrom all countries participating.
takes a fiendish notion to inno hour visit to Vancouver August estimated $2,000 cost of the visit,
vate some new twists as zippers 22 as guests of City Council and with the balance being met by
on the side of pants instead of industry leaders.
the Alaska Pine and Celulose
the usual place. It’s been tried
Aim of the tour is to stimulate Ltd., the Canadian Pacific Air
before but fortunately with little trade between Japan and the Pa lines and the Vancouver Board of
or no success.
cific Coast. The party will visit Trade.
TOKYO. — The^purgc of So pen by gazing at a man’s face.
The mayors are scheduled to
viet
Deputy Premier L. P. Beria
The soothsayer also predicted
I have my shirt off as I write White, Negro Troops
arrive at International Airport at
was
predicted
with
amazing
ac|
that
Malenkov and Molotov would
this piece. (I have locked myself
10 a.m., visit City Hall Jour Uni
Brawl
Over
Japan
Girls
tip in the privacy of my room
versal Lumber and Box Company curacy by Japan’s leading sooth work in harmony.
TOKYO.
—
Japanese
news
actermined to finish my Monday
plant .attend a luncheon at Hotel sayer four months ago.
The soothsayer, Sekiryushi, in “Taxi Hotels'’ For Late
task of writing a column). An paper reports said four American Vancouver, take a sightseeing
soldiers
were
hurt
in
a
brav
i
be
ant mitering mirror gloomily re
tour* of Stanley Park and the terviewed by the English lan Drinkers Under Quiz
tween Negro and White GIs at
North Shore, attend a buffet sup guage Tokyo Evening News
that time has done to my semi- a beer hall on Lake Yamanaka at per at the Stanley Park Pavilion March 9, declared:
TOKYO. — Tokyo’s late drink
the
foot
of
Mount-Fuji
south
of
“
Beria
couldn
’
t
run
things.
na^ed skinny frame. It isn’t much I
ers who miss the last train home
and return to Seattle at 7:15 p.m.
Tokyo
last
week.
•He
’
s
not
that
big
a
man.
or a body, I will admit, although
stay at a “taxi hotel” near major
Reports said Japanese police
“Malenkov will have things or railway junctions.
L is singularly adaptable to the
quelled the free-for-all which PITTSBURGH EX-GI
ganized fast. Malenkov is crafty,
Cab drivers, parked near sta
pastime of lying prone.
merciless,
and
relentless
when
it
tions,
offer “sleeping room” in
I am also reminded that in the started over girls in the bar.
DELIVERS OWN BABY
Kyodo
news
agency
and
the
comes to defending himself. He the vehicles from 2 a.m., after
Elizabethan era, men used to
PITTSBURGH. — Ex-Army
newspapers
Uomiuri
and
Asahi
wouldn’t hesitate for a moment the last train, until dawn, for
“ear Ught breeches and other
Ss-t.
Charles
Igims
and
his
Ja
^n‘ic form-fitting things that said four white soldiers were panese war bride Sachie are par to liquidate anyone he doesn’t I around 300 yen.
The “taxi hotels,” started by
" --re supposed to enhance the at- beaten up by 30 Negro troops.
ents of a new baby daughter. The trust.”
Yomiuri
’
s
account
of
the
Satur
Sekiryushi
made
the
statement
drivers
trying to profit from idle
activeness of the male strucinfant arrived so quickly Mrs.
•-ic. Looking down at my legs, day night fight at Lake Yama Igims couldn't be taken to the as he gazed at photographs of hours, may be closed soon how1 wn convinced that it was an era naka, southwest of Tokyo, said hospital, so Igims telephoned the Malenkov and Beria. He makes
Police are checking up to see
mstAricaiiy interesting but hap- 20 white soldiers participated in doctor and delivered according to his predictions as a physiogno
the
fight
and
four
were
seriously
j
mist—foretelling what will hap- what laws cover the situation.
over.
I think it was the
instructions.
injured.
J
Continued on Page 2)
f CouiiterPOINT
Fifty Japanese Mayors
To Visit Vancouver Aug. 22
Japanese Soothsayer Predicted Beria’s Purge
Four Months Ago. Study of Face Reveals Future
CANADIAN
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22
16—NO. 57
Three Hundred Cars, rour Buses Garry 2,000
Persons to Toronto JCGA Community Picnic
TORONTO, ONT.
g^^ jj^gn^g^ Adding 3,000 Japanese
An estimated number of three
hundred automobiles—a note
WASHINGTON, D. C. — Accepting an amendment to add 3,000
worthy commentary on the state
of the Japanese Canadian com- “Playing Cowboy"
Japanese to the President’s proposal to admit 240,000 refugees with
munity in Toronto—four charter
in the next two years to the United States outside regular quotas,
By Ken Adachi
ed buses and a few trucks carried Results In Tragedy
the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Naturaliza
about 2,000 persons to the mam For 9-Year-Old
Hot-Weather Trivia
tion reported the measure out for consideration by the full House
moth Fourth Annual Community
WHITE ROCK. B. C. — A
Judiciary Committee, the Washington Office of the Japanese AmenWhat with looking at those picnic sponsored by the Toronto
simple game of “playing cow
pictures in the newspapers about JCCA on July 19 at Tarmola
boy*' resulted in the death of
bathin. uit-clad winners of such Grounds.
nine-year-old Allan Isao Mori
The amendment was proposed
aoka Washington J ACL repro
hot -weather contests as “Miss
Carrying on what seems to be
zawa of White Rock on July
by
Rep.
Francis
E.
Walter
(D.,
Universe " or “Miss Toronto”, I a tradition at JCCA picnics, rain
Pa.), co-author of the WalterThe Administration originally
more than slightly en- fell slightly in mid-afternoon for
Allan, playingMcCarran
Immigration and Na suggested that a total of 240,000
those cool lovelies who
game of cowboys had tied a
a few minutes but otherwise, the
tionality Act of 1952 which for immigrants be admitted to the.
•m! with practically no
weather alternated between 85rope around hi neck three
the first time extended .immigra U.S. outside of the annual quota
times at the back porch of his
degree sunshine and clouds to
tion quotas to Japan and provid system. Several weeks ago, Ma
e is nothing more dehouse. One end of the rope,
give a break to the local chapter's
ed naturalization privileges to the saoka urged both the House and
frustrating than to see
mt
however, got entangled in a
biggest affair of the year. The
Japanese.
Senate Judiciary and Foreign Re
res of practically unnearby table and little Allan
attendance easily marks the larg
Under the amendment, 3,000
include
Committees
dressed femininity when one is
was hanged, his feet danglingest annual outdoor gathering in
Japanese who qualify under the Asian, including the Japanese, in
forced to wear hot clothing that
eight inches from the ground.
preference categories of the 19l’2 the legislation which otherwise
Canada.
sticks to the skin with leech-like
Firemen
tried
to
revive
him
All events proved popular, the
Act will be admitted as perman would be discriminatory in its ap
persistency.
but to no avail.
ent resident immigrants outside
bingo and refreshment conces
plication in favor of only Eu
Although we males are fortun
Allan, a grade Four student,
of Japan’s annual quota of 185.
sions attracting a steady stream
ropeans.
ately not in the same pitiable and
who was born in New Denver,
Under the basic law, 50 per
of patrons. In the sports event,
The Subcommittee approved
sometimes idiotic predicament of
was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
cent of the quota is reserved for
which included a variety of races
version of the President’s bill is
t'ne female of the species who
Kauekichi Morizawa.
those aliens who are urgently
for young and old, the East-West
expected
to be considered by the
constantly have to gear her ward
needed in the United States be
point competition was won by the
full Judiciary Committee this
robe to the fickle whims of the
cause of training, background, or
eastenders, 155 to 139, reversing $1,000 Raised For
week. Already several proponents
commercial designers, we are de
skills.
last year’s result. Other features Kyushu Flood Fund
of the President’s measure have
cidedly on the losing side when it
The next 30 percent of the
The sum of $1,000 has been
included fuku-biki and dancing
announced that they will oppose
comes to summer wear. It is obindulged raised to date in the Kyushu quota is set aside for the alien the Walter amendments.
while
hardy
enthusiasts
vious that the males are just as
in swimming in the nearby Flood Relief Fund organized by parents of United States citizens
dressed, from top to bottom, in
the Toronto JCCA. Donations j and the remaining 20 percent is
summer as in winter, But if it is stream.
Japanese Film Third
Prizes were awarded to per have been coming from many for the spouses or children of rea detriment, then it is the only
At Berlin Festival
sons estimating the attendance groups and individuals in aid of sident aliens.
one.
the
That
portion
of
each
of
the
’
flood
victims.
BERLIN. — Winners of the
Some animals, I am told—and and to the parents of the young
The money has been sent to the preference (fuotas which are n o t Berlin Senate prizes at the Ber
est
child.
The
latter
was
won
by
the peacock is as good an exam
Embassy of Japan in Ottawa as used are made available to the
ple as any—are peculiar in the Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Koyanagi a first instalment. It is to be for alien brothers, sisters, sons or lin Film Festival for the films
which best illustrated the theme
fact that the male is more bright whose child was one month old.
warded to the Japanese Red daughters of American citizens.
The
Japanese
Davis
Cup
team
of freedom in the world inclured
ly adorned than the female. I am
Cross.
members
were
special
guests.
Because
Rep.
Walter
realized
•“Man On a Tightrope” produced
thankful, however, that this is
that
the
small
annual
quota
for
by Twentieth-Century Fox of the
not so with the human animal.
Japan did not begin to take care United States, first place and
Except for the Greenwich Village
of the problem of war-separated ‘Entotsu
No
Micru
Basho”
types who, among other things,
families
and
because
he
felt
Ja
(Where
the
Chimneys
Stand)
of
like to curl their hair. Pink shirts
pan and Asia are entitled to the Japan produced by Toho Studios,
and monogrammed underwear to
same
immigration privileges as third place.
the contrary, nothing is more ac
VANCOUVER. — A touring San Francisco and Seattle first,
Europeans, he
proposed the
These films were chosen by the
ceptable than male attire, unless party of 50 Japanese mayors and then fly up to Vancouver.
industry
representatives
some scheming female designer civic officials will pay a nineThe city will put up 8500 of the amendments which were accepted film
by
the
Subcommittee,
Mike
Mafrom all countries participating.
takes a fiendish notion to inno hour visit to Vancouver August estimated $2,000 cost of the visit,
vate some new twists as zippers 22 as guests of City Council and with the balance being met by
on the side of pants instead of industry leaders.
the Alaska Pine and Celulose
the usual place. It’s been tried
Aim of the tour is to stimulate Ltd., the Canadian Pacific Air
before but fortunately with little trade between Japan and the Pa lines and the Vancouver Board of
or no success.
cific Coast. The party will visit Trade.
TOKYO. — The^purgc of So pen by gazing at a man’s face.
The mayors are scheduled to
viet
Deputy Premier L. P. Beria
The soothsayer also predicted
I have my shirt off as I write White, Negro Troops
arrive at International Airport at
was
predicted
with
amazing
ac|
that
Malenkov and Molotov would
this piece. (I have locked myself
10 a.m., visit City Hall Jour Uni
Brawl
Over
Japan
Girls
tip in the privacy of my room
versal Lumber and Box Company curacy by Japan’s leading sooth work in harmony.
TOKYO.
—
Japanese
news
actermined to finish my Monday
plant .attend a luncheon at Hotel sayer four months ago.
The soothsayer, Sekiryushi, in “Taxi Hotels'’ For Late
task of writing a column). An paper reports said four American Vancouver, take a sightseeing
soldiers
were
hurt
in
a
brav
i
be
ant mitering mirror gloomily re
tour* of Stanley Park and the terviewed by the English lan Drinkers Under Quiz
tween Negro and White GIs at
North Shore, attend a buffet sup guage Tokyo Evening News
that time has done to my semi- a beer hall on Lake Yamanaka at per at the Stanley Park Pavilion March 9, declared:
TOKYO. — Tokyo’s late drink
the
foot
of
Mount-Fuji
south
of
“
Beria
couldn
’
t
run
things.
na^ed skinny frame. It isn’t much I
ers who miss the last train home
and return to Seattle at 7:15 p.m.
Tokyo
last
week.
•He
’
s
not
that
big
a
man.
or a body, I will admit, although
stay at a “taxi hotel” near major
Reports said Japanese police
“Malenkov will have things or railway junctions.
L is singularly adaptable to the
quelled the free-for-all which PITTSBURGH EX-GI
ganized fast. Malenkov is crafty,
Cab drivers, parked near sta
pastime of lying prone.
merciless,
and
relentless
when
it
tions,
offer “sleeping room” in
I am also reminded that in the started over girls in the bar.
DELIVERS OWN BABY
Kyodo
news
agency
and
the
comes to defending himself. He the vehicles from 2 a.m., after
Elizabethan era, men used to
PITTSBURGH. — Ex-Army
newspapers
Uomiuri
and
Asahi
wouldn’t hesitate for a moment the last train, until dawn, for
“ear Ught breeches and other
Ss-t.
Charles
Igims
and
his
Ja
^n‘ic form-fitting things that said four white soldiers were panese war bride Sachie are par to liquidate anyone he doesn’t I around 300 yen.
The “taxi hotels,” started by
" --re supposed to enhance the at- beaten up by 30 Negro troops.
ents of a new baby daughter. The trust.”
Yomiuri
’
s
account
of
the
Satur
Sekiryushi
made
the
statement
drivers
trying to profit from idle
activeness of the male strucinfant arrived so quickly Mrs.
•-ic. Looking down at my legs, day night fight at Lake Yama Igims couldn't be taken to the as he gazed at photographs of hours, may be closed soon how1 wn convinced that it was an era naka, southwest of Tokyo, said hospital, so Igims telephoned the Malenkov and Beria. He makes
Police are checking up to see
mstAricaiiy interesting but hap- 20 white soldiers participated in doctor and delivered according to his predictions as a physiogno
the
fight
and
four
were
seriously
j
mist—foretelling what will hap- what laws cover the situation.
over.
I think it was the
instructions.
injured.
J
Continued on Page 2)
f CouiiterPOINT
Fifty Japanese Mayors
To Visit Vancouver Aug. 22
Japanese Soothsayer Predicted Beria’s Purge
Four Months Ago. Study of Face Reveals Future
Page 2
THE
Page 2
THE NEW CANADIAN
NEW
Wednesday, July 22, 1952
CANADIAN
Letter to Editor
Editor, The New Canadian:
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
We would like to remind your
readers at this time that our
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
CARE Alission in Japan is pre
as a medium of expression and news outlet
pared
with stockpiles of food and
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
blankets for immediate delivery
KEN ADACHI______________________ ___ ____________ Editor
to recent flood victims.
TAKAICHI UMEZUKI_ ______ __ _ Japanese Section Editor
° Our parcels ready now for de
KEN MORI ___ _______ ___ __ _ __ __ ___________ Advertising
livery to stricken areas are the
Subscription, in Advani.
$3.00 for six months
$10.00 basic food package con
$6.00 per one year
taining meat, coffee, rice, flour,
479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
sugar,
margarine, lard, skim milk
Authorized as second class mall. Post Office Dept.. Ottawa
powder, egg powder, and soap: a
$10.00 baby food package con
FROM THE FRYING PAN . . .
taining whole milk powder, skim
milk powder, chopped and strain
ed baby food, sugar, egg powder,
cod liver oil, baby powder and
In a way, this loss of tangible soap and a $7.00 wool-cotton
By BILL HOSOKAWA
blanket.
DENVER, Col. — Mike came evidences of our cultural heritage
Canadians wishing to help
home from junior high the other is an unfortunate thing. I think it
through CARE can do so simply
day and reported that his class deplorable when any tie with an
by sending a cheque or money
was going to have an internation other culture is lost. But there’s
order to CARE-Japan Flood Re
al day. Every member was told another way to look at it: Why
lief, 73 Albert Street, Ottawa.
to bring something to school that should the Sansei be any closer
reflected the culture or handi to the Japanese culture than to Small donations will be pooled to
craft of some foreign nation, and any of the other cultures that make up the price of a complete
of course Mike was expected to make up the background of parcel. All contributions are de
ductible from taxable income.
show up with something from Americans ?
Thank you very much for
We have in oui* home samples
Japan.
«
To his parents it was an old of Norwegian brassware, Swed bringing this information to the
story. We used to trot off to ish glass, English cutlery, Mexi attention of your readers.
Neil MacNeil
grade school, many years ago, can puppets, and a mess of other
Director for Canada
with Japanese dolls and clogs and imported things. Why couldn’t
lacquer trays and paper lanterns some of these articles been
that our parents had stashed Alike’s contribution to the inter
away. The kids and the teachers national day exhibits ?
would oooh and ahhh, and when
Here’s another side of this is
(Coat’d from Page 1)
the big day was over we’d care sue.
shrewdest and well calculated
fully take the stuff back home.
In one issue of the evening
But somewhere along' the way newspaper- recently I saw an ad turn of events that transformed
all those mementoes of the old vertisement for bamboo rollup male attire into something that
country have disappeared. I* or shades and another for women’s compelled speculation, and there
the Sansei, Japan is two full sandals. Of course, the shades fore an air- of mystery, to what
generations away and the cultur were Asiatic in origin, probably lay beneath.
On infrequent sojourns to the
al ties have stretched thin and Japanese. So was the idea be
beach, I am often assailed by the
been broken.
hind the sandals.
sight of physical culture addicts
In an effort to accommodate
These sandals were American- who preen their muscles before
Mike, we searched the house for made, of foam rubber. But it was
trinkets and souvenirs that he apparent the inspiration for the an awed audience. They seem
.might take along for the edifica design was Japanese. A thong', capable of standing for hours on
tion of his classmates. We found like those on Japanese “zori,” end twitching and bringing ’ all
a lot of stuff, all right. A carved sprouted out of the toe end and the muscles in their bodies into
cocoanut head from the South was caught up neatly By the play, their only garments abbre
Seas. A couple of brass trays ankle strap. Some designer was viated Bikini-like affairs which
hand-beaten in India. An iron smart enough to pick up an an make me fairly crimson with emwood head carved in Bali. Some cient idea and adapt it to Ameri barassment.
This is another form of male
Chinese vases. A vase and jewel can styles. So American women
ry box made of marble that Uncle will be wearing them this sum coquetry that can well be done
without. For like the aforemen
Kenny sent back from Italy mer.
tioned
Greenwich Village types in
during the big war. A rug' and
Likewise the bamboo shades.
some other things that we picked They’ve been used for centuries their effiminancy, these men in
up on a visit to the Indian coun in the Orient. They are quaint their supposedly supreme mascu
try of New Mexico.
and picturesque. That’s all they linity, their cute egotistic poses
But we couldn't find anything were to all of us who had seen and their moonstruck gallery, are
suitable with a Japanese back them until someone hatched the just as ridiculous.
*
*
*
ground.
bright thought of importing
I am sure that the happiest and
Finally we went into the gar them. Immediately they went up
age and probed into some dusty over patios and sun-drenched well-adjusted people in this world
old boxes hidden down. We dis picture windows.
are those who live off the land
and
wear no clothes at all. Ex
covered some carved wooden Ja
Perhaps we’ve been too close
panese dolls, and a tiny plaster to things like “zori” and bamboo cept, perhaps, for a breech-cloth
reproduction of the three mon shades to see their possible adap or two for the mere sake of iden
keys (see, hear and speak no tation to American needs, but I tity. I am not a sunbathing cult
evil) of Nara. These we rescued sure wish I had been first to ist by any means nor do I sub
and dusted off, and Miko took think up ways to use them .in the scribe to what seems to be an
them to school.
U.S.A.
unholy and doubtful practice, but
—from Pacific Citizen I would say that the invention of
clothes—and certainly when you
think of the tremendous com
Hirohito .Writes 2nd Book on Marine Life
mercial and competitive aspects
TOKYO. — Japan's scholarly . ed him a modest reputations as of the clothes-making business
Emperor Hirohito is going to j a biologist. In 20 years he has and the wearing of clothes—has
publish his second book about I uncovered many new species of done a lot towards adding to the
royal experiences wading in the j marine life. He has given each a inhibitions and frustrations of
waters of Sagami Bav near his i Latin name.
*
the human animal, if not only to
summer home.
I
His new book is entitled unrelieved discomfort in summer.
The Emperor likes to remove j “Charts of Ascidian Species in
But I find right now that all
his shoes and splash about look- ; Sagami Bay.” The Emperor has this talk about' nudity has done
ing at beautiful water creatures, i listed Si different types.
The little to make me feel any cooler.
The Emperor’s summer wading | royal fishnet bagged 21 of these There must be some other way
and other researches have earn- ’ for the first time.
to beat the heat.
International Day
COUNTERPOINT
By CINDERELLA
I
J
"Porchville, Quebec"
Porchville, Que. isn’t shown on any standard map of Canada
It doesn’t rate a single mention in any tourist map of the Citv of
Montreal, but a great majority of Montrealers spend their summer
days there.
Perhaps the staunchest supporter' of Porchville and its superior
advantages is my landlord, Ely Lysobiej (pronounced exactlv the
way it isn’t spelt). Air. Lysobiej is of the opinion that anyone who
goes elsewhere for vacations is somewhat of a fool. His wife and
two children, he told me in strict confidence, were “damned fools’’
but what else could he expect of women. In accents which still have
something of the steppes of Russia and the polling lands of the
Ukraine ,he swore that Porchville was the'' “bes’ damn place in all
Canada for a vacation.”
Air. Lysobiej speaks with great authority. “Why for you take
holidays?” he didn’t wait for me to answer. “You go for rest. My
wife, she no believe in rest. She wants to go Chicago. I say you go
to Chicago and take kids. I no go.”
“For free weeks she nearly go crazy, getting ready for trip.
She need new clothes. The kids need new clothes. She sew like mad
after midnight for t’ree weeks! You tink she gonna enjoy holidays?
Naw . . . she so crabby I glad I no go wif her. And she dead tired
when she come back. .
“Alebbe you like people. Coney Island, Old Orchard, Florida—
they have plenty people! Rush here, push there. Aly wife, she com
plain Afontreal Tramway no damn’ good. She tinks people plenty
rough but she don’t mind rush here, push there after she read
plenty nice folders with nice coloured pictures which say bes’ vaca
tion for $11.00 a day with bath.”
*
*
*
No sir, Air. Lysobiej will stick to Porchville, Que. He will have
plenty of privacy and do what he damned well pleases to do. Without
his wife—(bless her!)—whom he loves in his own peculiar RussianUkrainian way, and his two daughters whom he privately thinks are
pretty good female chips off the old block, he will enjoy at Porchville, all the freedom of bachelorhood without the expense involved.
He’ll get up when he pleases. Will go to bed when he pleases.
He won’t have to shave if he doesn’t feel like it. And he can forget
about white shirts for* a good two weeks.
He’ll eat what he feels like eating when he feels like eating it.
And the service, if not as high class as what his wife will be getting
in that new hotel in Chicago with the private swimming pool and the
exotic bar, won’t cost him a cent. He’s got his pantry stocked with
canned goods, and his frigidaire is jammed with quart-sized AIolson s and Black Horse beer, with several more cases down in the
basement. He may not have the privilege of swimming in a private
swimming pool but for his brand of natating, the bathroom shower
serves as well.
*
*
*
And he can pick and choose his own company. If he feels like
company, he can call up his cronies who are holidaying at Porchville,
for several games of poker or a night of drinking and of telling
good, raw jokes reserved only fox* hairy-chested, red-blooded he-men
like himself, Eli Lysobiej. If he wants to be alone, he can thumb
his nose at company without feeling he has committed a social
offence.
And he’s very fond of the scenery around Porchwile. There’s
something familiar about the scenery which makes him feel com
pletely at home. He can count on a hundred unseen frogs announc
ing the crack of dawn at four o’clock of a summer morning; he can
depend on his neighbor’s old jalopy backfiring for ten minutes as
it starts to take its master to work at 7:30 a.m.: he can hear the
kids two doors away asking “why” and their mother’s plaintive voice
hying to answer a thousand questions.
He likes the noon hour hush . . . and the sun beating down on
dusty side lanes while he sits in the shade. And when twilight comes
around, he’s pretty sure that there’s no sunset as brilliant as the
one "which streaks across his view, nor none better.
*
*
*
And ■when darkness falls .and the only bright objects are the
moon .the stars, and the Dominion Bread Company’s neon sign to the
northward, he knows he’s as close to peace as he’ll ever be vim
a welcome breeze sifting through the tall trees whose name he ?
never taken the trouble to find out, sound of laughter in the lane?
of youngsters in love, familiar staircases of apartment houses similar
to his own casting familiar shadows everywhere, a glass or col J
beer at his elbow and he in his own favorite chair.
And that’s not all. “Plenty of pretty girls ,too”, he says, as he
gives me a sly wink. “I see plenty from here and I no pay for it
*
*
*
For a cheap .relaxing holiday, Air. Eli Lysobiej recommend?
Porchville, Quebec. It won’t be found on any map of Canada.. I- just one step outside one’s kitchen door.
Page 2
THE NEW CANADIAN
NEW
Wednesday, July 22, 1952
CANADIAN
Letter to Editor
Editor, The New Canadian:
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
We would like to remind your
readers at this time that our
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
CARE Alission in Japan is pre
as a medium of expression and news outlet
pared
with stockpiles of food and
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.
blankets for immediate delivery
KEN ADACHI______________________ ___ ____________ Editor
to recent flood victims.
TAKAICHI UMEZUKI_ ______ __ _ Japanese Section Editor
° Our parcels ready now for de
KEN MORI ___ _______ ___ __ _ __ __ ___________ Advertising
livery to stricken areas are the
Subscription, in Advani.
$3.00 for six months
$10.00 basic food package con
$6.00 per one year
taining meat, coffee, rice, flour,
479 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto, Ont.
sugar,
margarine, lard, skim milk
Authorized as second class mall. Post Office Dept.. Ottawa
powder, egg powder, and soap: a
$10.00 baby food package con
FROM THE FRYING PAN . . .
taining whole milk powder, skim
milk powder, chopped and strain
ed baby food, sugar, egg powder,
cod liver oil, baby powder and
In a way, this loss of tangible soap and a $7.00 wool-cotton
By BILL HOSOKAWA
blanket.
DENVER, Col. — Mike came evidences of our cultural heritage
Canadians wishing to help
home from junior high the other is an unfortunate thing. I think it
through CARE can do so simply
day and reported that his class deplorable when any tie with an
by sending a cheque or money
was going to have an internation other culture is lost. But there’s
order to CARE-Japan Flood Re
al day. Every member was told another way to look at it: Why
lief, 73 Albert Street, Ottawa.
to bring something to school that should the Sansei be any closer
reflected the culture or handi to the Japanese culture than to Small donations will be pooled to
craft of some foreign nation, and any of the other cultures that make up the price of a complete
of course Mike was expected to make up the background of parcel. All contributions are de
ductible from taxable income.
show up with something from Americans ?
Thank you very much for
We have in oui* home samples
Japan.
«
To his parents it was an old of Norwegian brassware, Swed bringing this information to the
story. We used to trot off to ish glass, English cutlery, Mexi attention of your readers.
Neil MacNeil
grade school, many years ago, can puppets, and a mess of other
Director for Canada
with Japanese dolls and clogs and imported things. Why couldn’t
lacquer trays and paper lanterns some of these articles been
that our parents had stashed Alike’s contribution to the inter
away. The kids and the teachers national day exhibits ?
would oooh and ahhh, and when
Here’s another side of this is
(Coat’d from Page 1)
the big day was over we’d care sue.
shrewdest and well calculated
fully take the stuff back home.
In one issue of the evening
But somewhere along' the way newspaper- recently I saw an ad turn of events that transformed
all those mementoes of the old vertisement for bamboo rollup male attire into something that
country have disappeared. I* or shades and another for women’s compelled speculation, and there
the Sansei, Japan is two full sandals. Of course, the shades fore an air- of mystery, to what
generations away and the cultur were Asiatic in origin, probably lay beneath.
On infrequent sojourns to the
al ties have stretched thin and Japanese. So was the idea be
beach, I am often assailed by the
been broken.
hind the sandals.
sight of physical culture addicts
In an effort to accommodate
These sandals were American- who preen their muscles before
Mike, we searched the house for made, of foam rubber. But it was
trinkets and souvenirs that he apparent the inspiration for the an awed audience. They seem
.might take along for the edifica design was Japanese. A thong', capable of standing for hours on
tion of his classmates. We found like those on Japanese “zori,” end twitching and bringing ’ all
a lot of stuff, all right. A carved sprouted out of the toe end and the muscles in their bodies into
cocoanut head from the South was caught up neatly By the play, their only garments abbre
Seas. A couple of brass trays ankle strap. Some designer was viated Bikini-like affairs which
hand-beaten in India. An iron smart enough to pick up an an make me fairly crimson with emwood head carved in Bali. Some cient idea and adapt it to Ameri barassment.
This is another form of male
Chinese vases. A vase and jewel can styles. So American women
ry box made of marble that Uncle will be wearing them this sum coquetry that can well be done
without. For like the aforemen
Kenny sent back from Italy mer.
tioned
Greenwich Village types in
during the big war. A rug' and
Likewise the bamboo shades.
some other things that we picked They’ve been used for centuries their effiminancy, these men in
up on a visit to the Indian coun in the Orient. They are quaint their supposedly supreme mascu
try of New Mexico.
and picturesque. That’s all they linity, their cute egotistic poses
But we couldn't find anything were to all of us who had seen and their moonstruck gallery, are
suitable with a Japanese back them until someone hatched the just as ridiculous.
*
*
*
ground.
bright thought of importing
I am sure that the happiest and
Finally we went into the gar them. Immediately they went up
age and probed into some dusty over patios and sun-drenched well-adjusted people in this world
old boxes hidden down. We dis picture windows.
are those who live off the land
and
wear no clothes at all. Ex
covered some carved wooden Ja
Perhaps we’ve been too close
panese dolls, and a tiny plaster to things like “zori” and bamboo cept, perhaps, for a breech-cloth
reproduction of the three mon shades to see their possible adap or two for the mere sake of iden
keys (see, hear and speak no tation to American needs, but I tity. I am not a sunbathing cult
evil) of Nara. These we rescued sure wish I had been first to ist by any means nor do I sub
and dusted off, and Miko took think up ways to use them .in the scribe to what seems to be an
them to school.
U.S.A.
unholy and doubtful practice, but
—from Pacific Citizen I would say that the invention of
clothes—and certainly when you
think of the tremendous com
Hirohito .Writes 2nd Book on Marine Life
mercial and competitive aspects
TOKYO. — Japan's scholarly . ed him a modest reputations as of the clothes-making business
Emperor Hirohito is going to j a biologist. In 20 years he has and the wearing of clothes—has
publish his second book about I uncovered many new species of done a lot towards adding to the
royal experiences wading in the j marine life. He has given each a inhibitions and frustrations of
waters of Sagami Bav near his i Latin name.
*
the human animal, if not only to
summer home.
I
His new book is entitled unrelieved discomfort in summer.
The Emperor likes to remove j “Charts of Ascidian Species in
But I find right now that all
his shoes and splash about look- ; Sagami Bay.” The Emperor has this talk about' nudity has done
ing at beautiful water creatures, i listed Si different types.
The little to make me feel any cooler.
The Emperor’s summer wading | royal fishnet bagged 21 of these There must be some other way
and other researches have earn- ’ for the first time.
to beat the heat.
International Day
COUNTERPOINT
By CINDERELLA
I
J
"Porchville, Quebec"
Porchville, Que. isn’t shown on any standard map of Canada
It doesn’t rate a single mention in any tourist map of the Citv of
Montreal, but a great majority of Montrealers spend their summer
days there.
Perhaps the staunchest supporter' of Porchville and its superior
advantages is my landlord, Ely Lysobiej (pronounced exactlv the
way it isn’t spelt). Air. Lysobiej is of the opinion that anyone who
goes elsewhere for vacations is somewhat of a fool. His wife and
two children, he told me in strict confidence, were “damned fools’’
but what else could he expect of women. In accents which still have
something of the steppes of Russia and the polling lands of the
Ukraine ,he swore that Porchville was the'' “bes’ damn place in all
Canada for a vacation.”
Air. Lysobiej speaks with great authority. “Why for you take
holidays?” he didn’t wait for me to answer. “You go for rest. My
wife, she no believe in rest. She wants to go Chicago. I say you go
to Chicago and take kids. I no go.”
“For free weeks she nearly go crazy, getting ready for trip.
She need new clothes. The kids need new clothes. She sew like mad
after midnight for t’ree weeks! You tink she gonna enjoy holidays?
Naw . . . she so crabby I glad I no go wif her. And she dead tired
when she come back. .
“Alebbe you like people. Coney Island, Old Orchard, Florida—
they have plenty people! Rush here, push there. Aly wife, she com
plain Afontreal Tramway no damn’ good. She tinks people plenty
rough but she don’t mind rush here, push there after she read
plenty nice folders with nice coloured pictures which say bes’ vaca
tion for $11.00 a day with bath.”
*
*
*
No sir, Air. Lysobiej will stick to Porchville, Que. He will have
plenty of privacy and do what he damned well pleases to do. Without
his wife—(bless her!)—whom he loves in his own peculiar RussianUkrainian way, and his two daughters whom he privately thinks are
pretty good female chips off the old block, he will enjoy at Porchville, all the freedom of bachelorhood without the expense involved.
He’ll get up when he pleases. Will go to bed when he pleases.
He won’t have to shave if he doesn’t feel like it. And he can forget
about white shirts for* a good two weeks.
He’ll eat what he feels like eating when he feels like eating it.
And the service, if not as high class as what his wife will be getting
in that new hotel in Chicago with the private swimming pool and the
exotic bar, won’t cost him a cent. He’s got his pantry stocked with
canned goods, and his frigidaire is jammed with quart-sized AIolson s and Black Horse beer, with several more cases down in the
basement. He may not have the privilege of swimming in a private
swimming pool but for his brand of natating, the bathroom shower
serves as well.
*
*
*
And he can pick and choose his own company. If he feels like
company, he can call up his cronies who are holidaying at Porchville,
for several games of poker or a night of drinking and of telling
good, raw jokes reserved only fox* hairy-chested, red-blooded he-men
like himself, Eli Lysobiej. If he wants to be alone, he can thumb
his nose at company without feeling he has committed a social
offence.
And he’s very fond of the scenery around Porchwile. There’s
something familiar about the scenery which makes him feel com
pletely at home. He can count on a hundred unseen frogs announc
ing the crack of dawn at four o’clock of a summer morning; he can
depend on his neighbor’s old jalopy backfiring for ten minutes as
it starts to take its master to work at 7:30 a.m.: he can hear the
kids two doors away asking “why” and their mother’s plaintive voice
hying to answer a thousand questions.
He likes the noon hour hush . . . and the sun beating down on
dusty side lanes while he sits in the shade. And when twilight comes
around, he’s pretty sure that there’s no sunset as brilliant as the
one "which streaks across his view, nor none better.
*
*
*
And ■when darkness falls .and the only bright objects are the
moon .the stars, and the Dominion Bread Company’s neon sign to the
northward, he knows he’s as close to peace as he’ll ever be vim
a welcome breeze sifting through the tall trees whose name he ?
never taken the trouble to find out, sound of laughter in the lane?
of youngsters in love, familiar staircases of apartment houses similar
to his own casting familiar shadows everywhere, a glass or col J
beer at his elbow and he in his own favorite chair.
And that’s not all. “Plenty of pretty girls ,too”, he says, as he
gives me a sly wink. “I see plenty from here and I no pay for it
*
*
*
For a cheap .relaxing holiday, Air. Eli Lysobiej recommend?
Porchville, Quebec. It won’t be found on any map of Canada.. I- just one step outside one’s kitchen door.
Page 3
July 22, 1953.
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Page 7
v.
PAGE 7
THE NEW CANADIAN
day
Enchant Onlookers, Cuppers Show Wares
Japan Davis Cup Team in Toronto for Canadian
Championships a Mixture of Youth, Experience
8
i
In. York Giants Hesitant
(Wonder About Wives
!
TORONTO — The visiting-’ Japanese Davis Cup
team not only sported beautiful tans but proved pretty
nimble on the courts as they showed their much herald
ed wares to the 300 onlookers at the special exhibi
tion matches arranged by the Toronto Nisei Tennis
Club on a muggy and showery July IS afternoon.
Their opponents on the clay of
t;ie Hudson Tennis Courts, four the equipment and possibilities of
becoming a future world
noted Toronto netmen, must have
with
his booming serve,
seemed easy after the Japanese
backhand and forehand.
ne
had faced such outstanding court
quickly swept through Don Platt,
stars as the U.S. Davis Cup team
of Tony Trabert, Ham Richard 6-1.
Kamo, on the other hand, dis
son and Tom Brown two weeks
played a blistering overhead
asp in Vancouver. For the Ja
smash in several of the rallies
panese didn’t extend themselves
with Jim Duff, winning 6-3. Also
in the one-set matches.
a Waseda College student, Kamo
To one not hardly initiated to
is ranked No. 2 in Japan but
the complexities of the game,
didn’t seem to have the confi
such as myself, tennis is a be
dence of Miyagi. Kamo is the lad
wildering conglomeration of lobs
who nearly upset the American
and drives..and serves. But this
ace Tony Trabert.
was interesting for one can readi
He Beat Tilden
ly sec that the expert playing of
tennis is a highly developed
The crowd,
understandably
science, one that involves more enough, was waiting to see Jiro
than the mere hitting of a ball Yamagishi who played on Japan's
over a net.
great Davis Cup teams in the
And this
was
the
sub past, and who beat the fabulous
ject of the crowd’s delight as and storied Bill Tilden at his
they watched, quite raptly I ima prime.
One would never think
gine, to the 21-year-old youths, that Yamagishi was actually 41
Kosei Kamo and Atsushi Miyagi, years of age for he is almost as
and to comparatively more wizen agile as his more youthful com
ed members of the team, 41-year- patriots. Certainly he showed
old Jiro Yamagishi and Masano- plenty of craft .all-around court
bu Kimura who has seen 30 sum- wizardry and concentration in
mers.
beating out another old-timer
Jim Bentley, an alternate on Beau
Summers. Summers, a
the Canadian Davis Cup team, crowd-pleaser with his constant
showed as the best of the op stream of wisecracks, took the
ponents, beating Kimura 6-4. The first two games but Yamagishi
latter didn’t appear as sharp as
the old pro he is, came back to
his teammates, netting many of
•win the set, 6-4.
his drives and looking weak at
Yamagishi and Kimura, the
his volleying game.
latter with his omnipresent long
Disarming Grin
Miyagi—he of the disarming
boyish grin and cool nonchalance
—was easily the favorite of the
crowd, for he plays the game as
if he enjoyed it, quite unlike'the
deadly seriousness and dead-pan
expressioned faces of the others.
The lithe Miyagi, a Waseda Col
lege student, showed that he has
LOWEST
PMES
$450
to
Vancouver
Tokyo to Toronto 610.30
3A
trousers, teamed up to beat Platt
and Duff in doubles, 6-4. Platt is
seeded Nb. b in Ontario while
Duff is a veteran of many tennis
wars.
Youth vs Age
Then in a fine display of tennis,
Miyagi and Kamo won over Summers-Yamagishi in a match tha.
tested youth against experience,
age bowing 6-3. The veterans
whose combined years easily
double that of the young hopefuls of Japan, took a 3-0 lead but
Miyagi and Kamo took the set
6-3 with their crisp volleying and
•whipping shots in a match that
sent the crowd home happily.
CORRT SHOTS: The Japanese
have forsaken the usual style of
baseline play with only Kimura
playing the baseline. Kamo ana
Miyagi both display big serves
and hard volleying, trademarks
of the big American game. . Yamagishi, the last figure in Ja
pan’s tennis glory, is playing in
his first post-war tourney in the
Canadian Open. . . Although most
of the spectators thought Miyagi
showed better stuff than Kamo
on the strength of the exhibition,
the latter is considered to be a
steadier player with his smooth
ground strokes while
tends to be a little eratic with
his -whiplash strokes. . .
-season activities ale
t
Giants are officially enthusiastic
from the
want
their hats in the
aceordir
New Ym
writer.
-Who
.1:
player
you think '
if I told my
Japan for ;
without her
mon 11
how much
ate for the
Win In First Round
Of Canadian Open
JIRO YAMAGISHI
KOSEI KAMO
in the
round singles •matches over vir
tual unknowns in the Canadian
Championships on July 20 which
the name
their U.S. hero
cd equipment
the
Yorkers nud insisted their m"forms be cut from the eloth made
in the same mills : s that for
Flood of
Horace Stoneham president, is
Miami, 6-0. 6-0: Kamo beat Dan eager for the trip, but he has
Sullivan of St. Petersburg, Ela., some, talking to do to convince
6-4, 6-3: Kimura racked up M.
Jones of Toronto, 6-4, 6-1; Yar York officials recalled
beat R. Wilson, Fort
William, 6-0, 6-1.
On July 21, Kimura faced top- around the world with the ChiSox and another- trip
in the feature match while Ya to Europe in 192-1, also with the
magishi played Rex Hartwig- cf
The most recent post season
All played in doubles except trip to Japan was led by Lefty
for Miyagi w> o is troubled by a O’Doul, then manager of the San
sore back suffered in the Davis Francisco Seals who has made
all-star junkets several times.
Cup tie with U.S.
Hayashi’s Beaning Adds Further to Westerns
Woes, Loss to Team Depletes Outfield Corps
MASANOBU KIMURA
F>espcctacled Westerns’ left- a fifth-place 8-17 record, was confielder Aki Hayashi left St. Jo tinned in the 7-3 loss to IndusA grand-slam homer by
seph’s Hospital after being hos tria.
pitalized for two days from a con Rusty Wallace was the big blow
cussion received when he was against Westerns’ Russ Cunnybeaned during a game, against worth. Ken Ohara’s leadoff homer
Industrials on July 16. Westerns in the first inning was the only
lost the curfew-shortened 4'A bright, gleam.
Westerns play on July 23
Hayashi’s beaning adds further against West Yorks, 7:1.5 p.m.,
to Westerns’ woes. The outfield and July 25 versus Hrants, 7:15
er who is one of Westerns’ de p.m. July 25 is a prize night,
proceeds going to the injured
tensive stars and a good hitte
will likely not play again this players’ fund.
season although the injury was
bv no means a severe one. He
FEMALE HELP WANTED
was stunned by one of Bill Mefor
Danforth
Store
Bratncy’s high hard ones which
Cleaners. Good Wages. Steady
he says he didn’t even see.
employment.
Apply 300 Jones
If he departs from the roster,
the hardluck team will be short Ave., Toronto. RI. 2424.
of outfielders. Centrefielder Key
Tanaka was lost to the team
earlier in the season due to an
injury. New addition Johnny
Stoneberg isn’t able to play re
gularly.
Westerns’ mid-summer dol
drums which has left them with
representative
Bernardi-Mathews Ltd.
ATSUSHI MIYAGI
The visiting Davis Suppers
were also feted by the local Nisei
tennis group at St. Charles. On
Sunday, they visited Niagara
Falls.
*
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.
f
Electrical Contractor
:
Special Heavy Wiring
A1
FOR RANGES. GO Amp. $60.
SAME DAY SERVICE
Xi
j
REAL ESTATE BROKERS ,:.
1075 St. Clair Ave. W.
TORONTO
*
J.
A
Office OL. 7971 - Res. GL. 8914;?
JOHNSON
ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTOR
697 Queen St. W. — Toronto
EMpire 4-0535
PAGE 7
THE NEW CANADIAN
day
Enchant Onlookers, Cuppers Show Wares
Japan Davis Cup Team in Toronto for Canadian
Championships a Mixture of Youth, Experience
8
i
In. York Giants Hesitant
(Wonder About Wives
!
TORONTO — The visiting-’ Japanese Davis Cup
team not only sported beautiful tans but proved pretty
nimble on the courts as they showed their much herald
ed wares to the 300 onlookers at the special exhibi
tion matches arranged by the Toronto Nisei Tennis
Club on a muggy and showery July IS afternoon.
Their opponents on the clay of
t;ie Hudson Tennis Courts, four the equipment and possibilities of
becoming a future world
noted Toronto netmen, must have
with
his booming serve,
seemed easy after the Japanese
backhand and forehand.
ne
had faced such outstanding court
quickly swept through Don Platt,
stars as the U.S. Davis Cup team
of Tony Trabert, Ham Richard 6-1.
Kamo, on the other hand, dis
son and Tom Brown two weeks
played a blistering overhead
asp in Vancouver. For the Ja
smash in several of the rallies
panese didn’t extend themselves
with Jim Duff, winning 6-3. Also
in the one-set matches.
a Waseda College student, Kamo
To one not hardly initiated to
is ranked No. 2 in Japan but
the complexities of the game,
didn’t seem to have the confi
such as myself, tennis is a be
dence of Miyagi. Kamo is the lad
wildering conglomeration of lobs
who nearly upset the American
and drives..and serves. But this
ace Tony Trabert.
was interesting for one can readi
He Beat Tilden
ly sec that the expert playing of
tennis is a highly developed
The crowd,
understandably
science, one that involves more enough, was waiting to see Jiro
than the mere hitting of a ball Yamagishi who played on Japan's
over a net.
great Davis Cup teams in the
And this
was
the
sub past, and who beat the fabulous
ject of the crowd’s delight as and storied Bill Tilden at his
they watched, quite raptly I ima prime.
One would never think
gine, to the 21-year-old youths, that Yamagishi was actually 41
Kosei Kamo and Atsushi Miyagi, years of age for he is almost as
and to comparatively more wizen agile as his more youthful com
ed members of the team, 41-year- patriots. Certainly he showed
old Jiro Yamagishi and Masano- plenty of craft .all-around court
bu Kimura who has seen 30 sum- wizardry and concentration in
mers.
beating out another old-timer
Jim Bentley, an alternate on Beau
Summers. Summers, a
the Canadian Davis Cup team, crowd-pleaser with his constant
showed as the best of the op stream of wisecracks, took the
ponents, beating Kimura 6-4. The first two games but Yamagishi
latter didn’t appear as sharp as
the old pro he is, came back to
his teammates, netting many of
•win the set, 6-4.
his drives and looking weak at
Yamagishi and Kimura, the
his volleying game.
latter with his omnipresent long
Disarming Grin
Miyagi—he of the disarming
boyish grin and cool nonchalance
—was easily the favorite of the
crowd, for he plays the game as
if he enjoyed it, quite unlike'the
deadly seriousness and dead-pan
expressioned faces of the others.
The lithe Miyagi, a Waseda Col
lege student, showed that he has
LOWEST
PMES
$450
to
Vancouver
Tokyo to Toronto 610.30
3A
trousers, teamed up to beat Platt
and Duff in doubles, 6-4. Platt is
seeded Nb. b in Ontario while
Duff is a veteran of many tennis
wars.
Youth vs Age
Then in a fine display of tennis,
Miyagi and Kamo won over Summers-Yamagishi in a match tha.
tested youth against experience,
age bowing 6-3. The veterans
whose combined years easily
double that of the young hopefuls of Japan, took a 3-0 lead but
Miyagi and Kamo took the set
6-3 with their crisp volleying and
•whipping shots in a match that
sent the crowd home happily.
CORRT SHOTS: The Japanese
have forsaken the usual style of
baseline play with only Kimura
playing the baseline. Kamo ana
Miyagi both display big serves
and hard volleying, trademarks
of the big American game. . Yamagishi, the last figure in Ja
pan’s tennis glory, is playing in
his first post-war tourney in the
Canadian Open. . . Although most
of the spectators thought Miyagi
showed better stuff than Kamo
on the strength of the exhibition,
the latter is considered to be a
steadier player with his smooth
ground strokes while
tends to be a little eratic with
his -whiplash strokes. . .
-season activities ale
t
Giants are officially enthusiastic
from the
want
their hats in the
aceordir
New Ym
writer.
-Who
.1:
player
you think '
if I told my
Japan for ;
without her
mon 11
how much
ate for the
Win In First Round
Of Canadian Open
JIRO YAMAGISHI
KOSEI KAMO
in the
round singles •matches over vir
tual unknowns in the Canadian
Championships on July 20 which
the name
their U.S. hero
cd equipment
the
Yorkers nud insisted their m"forms be cut from the eloth made
in the same mills : s that for
Flood of
Horace Stoneham president, is
Miami, 6-0. 6-0: Kamo beat Dan eager for the trip, but he has
Sullivan of St. Petersburg, Ela., some, talking to do to convince
6-4, 6-3: Kimura racked up M.
Jones of Toronto, 6-4, 6-1; Yar York officials recalled
beat R. Wilson, Fort
William, 6-0, 6-1.
On July 21, Kimura faced top- around the world with the ChiSox and another- trip
in the feature match while Ya to Europe in 192-1, also with the
magishi played Rex Hartwig- cf
The most recent post season
All played in doubles except trip to Japan was led by Lefty
for Miyagi w> o is troubled by a O’Doul, then manager of the San
sore back suffered in the Davis Francisco Seals who has made
all-star junkets several times.
Cup tie with U.S.
Hayashi’s Beaning Adds Further to Westerns
Woes, Loss to Team Depletes Outfield Corps
MASANOBU KIMURA
F>espcctacled Westerns’ left- a fifth-place 8-17 record, was confielder Aki Hayashi left St. Jo tinned in the 7-3 loss to IndusA grand-slam homer by
seph’s Hospital after being hos tria.
pitalized for two days from a con Rusty Wallace was the big blow
cussion received when he was against Westerns’ Russ Cunnybeaned during a game, against worth. Ken Ohara’s leadoff homer
Industrials on July 16. Westerns in the first inning was the only
lost the curfew-shortened 4'A bright, gleam.
Westerns play on July 23
Hayashi’s beaning adds further against West Yorks, 7:1.5 p.m.,
to Westerns’ woes. The outfield and July 25 versus Hrants, 7:15
er who is one of Westerns’ de p.m. July 25 is a prize night,
proceeds going to the injured
tensive stars and a good hitte
will likely not play again this players’ fund.
season although the injury was
bv no means a severe one. He
FEMALE HELP WANTED
was stunned by one of Bill Mefor
Danforth
Store
Bratncy’s high hard ones which
Cleaners. Good Wages. Steady
he says he didn’t even see.
employment.
Apply 300 Jones
If he departs from the roster,
the hardluck team will be short Ave., Toronto. RI. 2424.
of outfielders. Centrefielder Key
Tanaka was lost to the team
earlier in the season due to an
injury. New addition Johnny
Stoneberg isn’t able to play re
gularly.
Westerns’ mid-summer dol
drums which has left them with
representative
Bernardi-Mathews Ltd.
ATSUSHI MIYAGI
The visiting Davis Suppers
were also feted by the local Nisei
tennis group at St. Charles. On
Sunday, they visited Niagara
Falls.
*
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.
f
Electrical Contractor
:
Special Heavy Wiring
A1
FOR RANGES. GO Amp. $60.
SAME DAY SERVICE
Xi
j
REAL ESTATE BROKERS ,:.
1075 St. Clair Ave. W.
TORONTO
*
J.
A
Office OL. 7971 - Res. GL. 8914;?
JOHNSON
ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTOR
697 Queen St. W. — Toronto
EMpire 4-0535
Page 8
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 8
'Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiir
Manitoba JCCA Plans
Picnic Kildonan Park
SOCIAL CALENDAR
WINNIPEG. — The Manitoba
iiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiin JCCA has planned its annual pic
__ __________ JULY________ j
nic at Kildonan Park on Sunday,
2G—Vancouver. Vancouver Y.B.A. ; July 2G.
Picnic, at Peace Arch.
Transportation is being arrang
26—Toronto. Rec-Socratic Club Pic
ed from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Admis
nic, at Alcona Beach, Lake Sim- J
sion is 35 cents for adults and 15
coe.
2C—Toronto. Club Ami Picnic at cents for students.
Eldorado Park, Brampton.
;
26—Winnipeg. Manitoba JCCA An
nual Picnic, at Kildonan Park.
j
.Winnipeg R & S Club
Tabs Summer Dance
I
AUGUST
WINNIPEG, Man. —- The R &
2—Toronto. Club Queens Picnic at S Club of Winnipeg has planned
Mossington Park.
|
a mid-summer ball on Aug. 8 at
2—Toronto. University of Toronto i Sholem Aleichem in aid of the
Nisei Students' Club Annual
Clippers softball team, a Nisei
Picnic.
2—Port William. Lakehead Nisei entry in the Buffalo League.
The public is asked to support
Club Annual Picnic, at Chippawa j
Park, Fort William.
| this dance in aid of the team
which the Manitoba JCCA is
sponsoring. Prizes and refresh
PERSONS SOUGHT
ments are included in the evenPresently being sought are Mr. ing’s program. Tickets are 50
Jujiro Ohashi who was believed cents.
to have relocated to East Lillooet, B. C., during World War Kent JCCA Sets Beadh
II. Born in 1886, Ohashi lived at Party At Erieau
Yahata-mura, Kanzaki-gun, ShiCHATHAM, Ont. — The Kent
ga-ken, Japan. His family con JCCA has slated its annual Beach
sists of a wife, Toki, and three j party on Saturday, July 25, at
sons, Shigeo, Joji and Minoru. Erieau, from 7:30 p.m.
Shigeo and Joji were born in Van
Persons attending can obtain
couver, Minoru at Mission City.
transportation in
Yanoshita’s
Also sought is Mr. Toshuke
Fujimoto, formerly of Pacific
Mills, Ocean Falls, B. C. These
(persons or others knowing of
their whereabouts are asked to *
contact B. C. JCCA, 506 Medical
Arts Bldg., Vancouver, B. C.
Nisei Students Club
Plan Picnic, Dance
| Hoe Sai Gay |
,?*»**^*ZMy’M’*H~X’*XMI~X“H’,IM?'M'*>
FOR SALE:
*
|
|
SELF-SERVE
SUPERMARKET
$
*
MARRIAGES
HORI-MINATO
TORONTO. — Metropolitan
United Church was the setting
for the marriage of Julia Yoshiko
Minato, eldest daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Tomio Minato of Ver
non, B. C., to Ken Hori, second
son of Mrs. Sumi Hori of Toron
to, on July 11. Rev. Frank Bris
bin officiated.
Following a reception at Muir
head’s Restaurant, the couple
went to New York and other
points in the U. S.
*
*
*
BIRTHS
NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.
— Mr. and Mrs. Huck Suzuki
(nee Clara Maeda) of 1007 River
Rd., New Westminster, B. C., are
happy to announce the birth of
their son, Ronald Hachiro, on
June 18.
*
*
*
OBITUARY
TAKIMOTO
WINNIPEG. — Mrs. Kazuye
Takimoto parsed away on July 8
at St. Boniface Sanitorium. Fu
neral services were held on July
truck which leaves Nishizaki’s. .11 at the Manitoba Buddhist
Admission is 50 cents per person. Church, Rev. R. Nishimura offi
ciating.
$
$
*
An interesting program has
been lined up by the University
B. C. JCCA Organizes
of Toronto Nisei Students Club
for its forthcoming Third Annual
Flood Relief Drive
Picnic on Sunday, Augv2, at York
VANCOUVER. — The B. C. County Park, Lake Simcoe, near
JCCA has organized a Japan Jackson’s Point.
Flood Relief Fund Committee
A baseball game, tug-of-war,
consisting of three or more re watermelon-breaking , swimmin sr
presentatives from each organi races, weiner roast, sing-song
zation in aid of the victims of has been arranged. There are fa
the recent disastrous floods that cilities for horseback riding.
swept over Kyushu.
bus leaves Varsity Stadium,
Money raised will be sent to the Bloor St., at 9:45 a.m. Reserva
Japanese Red Cross Society. Ap tions can be obtained from the
plication has been made for* in following: Reg. Mori OX. 8565,
come tax deduction for donations. Mark Sumi OL. 3719, Elsie Iwa
House-to-house calls will also be saki LL. 7906, Willie Tateishi
made. Deadline has been set at EM. 4-5853, Dave Misumi RA.
August 5.
Local chapter's are 9220, Mickey Matsubayashi LA.
asked to support the drive.
2048 or Jim Toguri GL. 8450.
Head office of the Relief Fund
Tickets are $2.00 if bought be
is the B. C. JCCA Headquarters, fore July 27, otherwise $2.25. The
506 Medical Arts Bldg., 825 ■ public is invited.
Granville St., Vancouver 2, B. C. j
Another social highlight is the
Telephone MA. 1616.
dance on Sat., July 25, at St.
George's Parish Hall, corner of
John and Stephanie Sts. Dancing
£ Open 12 noon to 2 a.m. $
continues from S:30 to 11:15 p.m.
Dance instructors. Misses Miki
Nakashima, Terrie Tsujimura
,^.
famous Chinese foods
£
and Toki Kobayashi, will be on
.J. 69 Albert St. —'Toronto *£ hand.
t
(at Elizabeth)
*
the dance is open to the pub
$
Telephone EM. 8-9817
f lic. Admission is members. 50
’:’
Special ait ention given
*f cents for gents, 25 cents for
¥
to take out orders.
ladies; nun-members, To cent^
•*^**»**^.*****.^**Z**^* <I**.«J»(J»**^^Jh>*W*MjM**^
and 50 cents.
*
eri on a f Hotei
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
Rev. T. Tsuji’s new address is
226-A Havelock St. Toronto 4.
Telephone number LO. 0868. The
Buddhist' Church is still at 134
Huron St.
£ Large
turnover,
modern*
’^equipment. North end shopp-<*|
;.ing district. Bargain.
*
£ Ask for Mr. Gilbert. PR.* l PARTNER WANTED :
£6241, 1497 Yonge St.. Toronto.’:’ i, M oodworking for chrome fur-'
£
MANN & MARTEL
* ’niture. Small investment re-'
quired. Write Box 10, The
>
REALTORS
❖
New Canadian.
UM AI
GREENWOOD, B. C. — Koichi
Imai, 49, passed away at Gpand
Forks Hospital on July 10. Fu
neral services were held on July
13 at Greenwood Hall. Rev. S.
Ikuta officiated.
*
*
*
MURAKAMI
LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — Yoshikichi Murakami, 79, died on July
13. Funeral services were held at
Christenson Brothers Funeral
Home on July 16. Rev. Y. Kawa
mura officiated.
*
*
*
SHIGEHIRO
COALDALE, Alta. — Mrs. Shizuye Shigehiro passed away on
July 9. Funeral services were
held on July 13 at Coaldale Budd
hist Church by Revr Y. Kawa
mura and Rev. H. Nekoda.
*
$
$
Queens Plan Picnic
At Mossington Part
At last! Club Queen’s teen
agers’ picnic has been planned.
1384% Queen W. — LA. 637s >
Queens is holding its annual pic
Toronto, Ont.
nic at Mossington Park on Au
gust 2.
All are welcome to come and
Lucien C. Kurata |
enjoy the program that has been
Barrister and Solicitor
I
planned. The climax of the even
Notary
Publie
ing will be a colossal weiner
3 Adelaide St E., Toronto i
roast on the beach.
1st and 2nd Mortgage Loans
Buses leave College St., one \
snarled
1
block west of ’Bay, at 8:30 a.m. | Oft. EM. 6-0959 Res. LI, 3427 I
sharp. For tickets ,contract Bob
Young at RA. 2664’or Mary Ku
wabara at GE. 9778.
CORRECTION
Misunderstanding on the part
of Club Ami prompted the group
to announce that it was holdinga joint picnic with Club Queens
at Eldorado Park, Brampton, on
July 26. Queens is holding its
own picnic at Mossington Park on
Aug. 2.
HAMILTON. — The United?
Church, Japanese Division, will be
holding an outdoor sermon and
picnic on Sunday, July 26, at
Dundurn park.
Participants are asked to ga
ther at the York St. entrance at
11 a.m. All are welcome.
95 Degrees At Slocan ■
JCCA Annual Picnic
FEMALE HELP WANTED
LAUNDRY SHIPPER. Excellent
opportunity for energetic young
man willing to learn laundry ship
ping. 4169 Dundas St. W., JU. 0552.
LAUNDRY HELP. Shirt pressed
experienced on 2-person units, also
finishers and hand-ironers.
4169
Dundas St. W„ JU. 0552.
OPERATORS, experienced on
blouses, steady employment high
est wages. Apply Front Page
Fashion, 130 Spadina Ave., Toron
to.
FOR RENT
TWO OR THREE room flat, un
furnished. Call JU. 4245, after 6
YONEMITSU
Watch Repair Shop
328 BROADVIEW AVE.
(near Gerrard St.)
Toronto. Phone GL. 3652
.Residence:
LAUNDRY HELP. Shirt presser
experienced on 2-girl units, also
finishers and hand-ironers. Apply
4169 Dundas St. W., Toronto. JU.
0552.
STENOGRAPHER
for
bright,
modern office, 5-day week. College
& Bay district, Toronto. Uniforms
Registered EM. 4-0125.
DRtSS OPtSATORS, experienc
ed, wanted immediately.
Apply
Formal Accent .Dress Co., 440 /Ade
laide St. West, Toronto.
RELIABLE SALES CLERK, per
manent position, 5-day week for
gift shop. Phone PR. 1705 (Toronto).
Patronize
Our Advertisers
EM4-0508
2 Vesta Drive
MAfair 1365.
Andrew E. McKague,
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Pubiio.
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
330 Bay St.
(Corner Adelaide & Bay Sts.)
TORONTO
Hamilton United Church
Slates Outdoor Sermon
________HELP WANTED________
GIRL for light housework, on No.
27 Highway, near Mallon Rd. For
further information, phone MA.
2266.
EM. 8-6953
All members and friends are
welcome to attend the weekend
camp to be held by the Young
Adults Group of Queen Street
United Church, at Nestleton,
Lake Scugog, on August 21-23.
There will also be a week’s
camping from August 21-28 for
all those looking for fun and en
joyment during their summer
vacations.
For further information please
contact Eileen Furusho GE. 4693,
Nosh Uyeda GE. 2401, or any
member of the executive.
CLASSIFIED SECTION
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
101/2 QUEEN ST. W.
For Pick-up and Delivory
Phon®
Young Adults Slate
Weekend Camp
SLOGAN CITY, B. C. — The
Slocan JCCA held its annual pic
nic at Lemon Creek on July 12
KUTSUKAKE
under a blistering- temperature of
TORONTO. — Tsugio Kutsu- 95 degrees.
kake, 67, died on July 19. Funeral
Games were the main feature
services were held at Queen of the day. Soft drinks were pro
Street United Church on July 21.' vided by the JCCA chapter.
GARDENERS wanted, immediately. Call M. Yatabe, OL. 5895,
Toronto.
ROUGH SPOTTER, eSferience
not necessary, steady emolovment.
Call LO. 6141. Toronto.
0. K. CLEANERS
£ • Wedding Invitations
$ • Card of Thanks
* • Letterheads
.;. • Envelopes
£ • Handbills, Name Cards
j EXPERTLY DONE
?THE NEW CANADIAN
$
$
479 Queen St. W.
EM. 6-5005
| New & Used Car
| " Sales 6c Service
$
❖
£
ALL MAKES
*
£
|
Expert Vehicle Analysis
RATES REASONABLE
$
£
f
JAMES M. KAI
|
Auto Technician
❖
•^
£
303 Westmoreland Ave.
*
ME. 6165 — TORONTO. . *
T. KOBAYASHI
& SON
For All Your
Insurance Needs
LIFE, AUTO, FIRE
FLOATERS, ETC-
ffi fi ^ ^ ^
P.O. Box 149
KAMLOOPS, B. C.
I
Residence:
T39 LEIGH ROAD,
North Kamloops, B. C-
I
J
[
PAGE 8
'Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiir
Manitoba JCCA Plans
Picnic Kildonan Park
SOCIAL CALENDAR
WINNIPEG. — The Manitoba
iiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiin JCCA has planned its annual pic
__ __________ JULY________ j
nic at Kildonan Park on Sunday,
2G—Vancouver. Vancouver Y.B.A. ; July 2G.
Picnic, at Peace Arch.
Transportation is being arrang
26—Toronto. Rec-Socratic Club Pic
ed from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Admis
nic, at Alcona Beach, Lake Sim- J
sion is 35 cents for adults and 15
coe.
2C—Toronto. Club Ami Picnic at cents for students.
Eldorado Park, Brampton.
;
26—Winnipeg. Manitoba JCCA An
nual Picnic, at Kildonan Park.
j
.Winnipeg R & S Club
Tabs Summer Dance
I
AUGUST
WINNIPEG, Man. —- The R &
2—Toronto. Club Queens Picnic at S Club of Winnipeg has planned
Mossington Park.
|
a mid-summer ball on Aug. 8 at
2—Toronto. University of Toronto i Sholem Aleichem in aid of the
Nisei Students' Club Annual
Clippers softball team, a Nisei
Picnic.
2—Port William. Lakehead Nisei entry in the Buffalo League.
The public is asked to support
Club Annual Picnic, at Chippawa j
Park, Fort William.
| this dance in aid of the team
which the Manitoba JCCA is
sponsoring. Prizes and refresh
PERSONS SOUGHT
ments are included in the evenPresently being sought are Mr. ing’s program. Tickets are 50
Jujiro Ohashi who was believed cents.
to have relocated to East Lillooet, B. C., during World War Kent JCCA Sets Beadh
II. Born in 1886, Ohashi lived at Party At Erieau
Yahata-mura, Kanzaki-gun, ShiCHATHAM, Ont. — The Kent
ga-ken, Japan. His family con JCCA has slated its annual Beach
sists of a wife, Toki, and three j party on Saturday, July 25, at
sons, Shigeo, Joji and Minoru. Erieau, from 7:30 p.m.
Shigeo and Joji were born in Van
Persons attending can obtain
couver, Minoru at Mission City.
transportation in
Yanoshita’s
Also sought is Mr. Toshuke
Fujimoto, formerly of Pacific
Mills, Ocean Falls, B. C. These
(persons or others knowing of
their whereabouts are asked to *
contact B. C. JCCA, 506 Medical
Arts Bldg., Vancouver, B. C.
Nisei Students Club
Plan Picnic, Dance
| Hoe Sai Gay |
,?*»**^*ZMy’M’*H~X’*XMI~X“H’,IM?'M'*>
FOR SALE:
*
|
|
SELF-SERVE
SUPERMARKET
$
*
MARRIAGES
HORI-MINATO
TORONTO. — Metropolitan
United Church was the setting
for the marriage of Julia Yoshiko
Minato, eldest daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Tomio Minato of Ver
non, B. C., to Ken Hori, second
son of Mrs. Sumi Hori of Toron
to, on July 11. Rev. Frank Bris
bin officiated.
Following a reception at Muir
head’s Restaurant, the couple
went to New York and other
points in the U. S.
*
*
*
BIRTHS
NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.
— Mr. and Mrs. Huck Suzuki
(nee Clara Maeda) of 1007 River
Rd., New Westminster, B. C., are
happy to announce the birth of
their son, Ronald Hachiro, on
June 18.
*
*
*
OBITUARY
TAKIMOTO
WINNIPEG. — Mrs. Kazuye
Takimoto parsed away on July 8
at St. Boniface Sanitorium. Fu
neral services were held on July
truck which leaves Nishizaki’s. .11 at the Manitoba Buddhist
Admission is 50 cents per person. Church, Rev. R. Nishimura offi
ciating.
$
$
*
An interesting program has
been lined up by the University
B. C. JCCA Organizes
of Toronto Nisei Students Club
for its forthcoming Third Annual
Flood Relief Drive
Picnic on Sunday, Augv2, at York
VANCOUVER. — The B. C. County Park, Lake Simcoe, near
JCCA has organized a Japan Jackson’s Point.
Flood Relief Fund Committee
A baseball game, tug-of-war,
consisting of three or more re watermelon-breaking , swimmin sr
presentatives from each organi races, weiner roast, sing-song
zation in aid of the victims of has been arranged. There are fa
the recent disastrous floods that cilities for horseback riding.
swept over Kyushu.
bus leaves Varsity Stadium,
Money raised will be sent to the Bloor St., at 9:45 a.m. Reserva
Japanese Red Cross Society. Ap tions can be obtained from the
plication has been made for* in following: Reg. Mori OX. 8565,
come tax deduction for donations. Mark Sumi OL. 3719, Elsie Iwa
House-to-house calls will also be saki LL. 7906, Willie Tateishi
made. Deadline has been set at EM. 4-5853, Dave Misumi RA.
August 5.
Local chapter's are 9220, Mickey Matsubayashi LA.
asked to support the drive.
2048 or Jim Toguri GL. 8450.
Head office of the Relief Fund
Tickets are $2.00 if bought be
is the B. C. JCCA Headquarters, fore July 27, otherwise $2.25. The
506 Medical Arts Bldg., 825 ■ public is invited.
Granville St., Vancouver 2, B. C. j
Another social highlight is the
Telephone MA. 1616.
dance on Sat., July 25, at St.
George's Parish Hall, corner of
John and Stephanie Sts. Dancing
£ Open 12 noon to 2 a.m. $
continues from S:30 to 11:15 p.m.
Dance instructors. Misses Miki
Nakashima, Terrie Tsujimura
,^.
famous Chinese foods
£
and Toki Kobayashi, will be on
.J. 69 Albert St. —'Toronto *£ hand.
t
(at Elizabeth)
*
the dance is open to the pub
$
Telephone EM. 8-9817
f lic. Admission is members. 50
’:’
Special ait ention given
*f cents for gents, 25 cents for
¥
to take out orders.
ladies; nun-members, To cent^
•*^**»**^.*****.^**Z**^* <I**.«J»(J»**^^Jh>*W*MjM**^
and 50 cents.
*
eri on a f Hotei
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
Rev. T. Tsuji’s new address is
226-A Havelock St. Toronto 4.
Telephone number LO. 0868. The
Buddhist' Church is still at 134
Huron St.
£ Large
turnover,
modern*
’^equipment. North end shopp-<*|
;.ing district. Bargain.
*
£ Ask for Mr. Gilbert. PR.* l PARTNER WANTED :
£6241, 1497 Yonge St.. Toronto.’:’ i, M oodworking for chrome fur-'
£
MANN & MARTEL
* ’niture. Small investment re-'
quired. Write Box 10, The
>
REALTORS
❖
New Canadian.
UM AI
GREENWOOD, B. C. — Koichi
Imai, 49, passed away at Gpand
Forks Hospital on July 10. Fu
neral services were held on July
13 at Greenwood Hall. Rev. S.
Ikuta officiated.
*
*
*
MURAKAMI
LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — Yoshikichi Murakami, 79, died on July
13. Funeral services were held at
Christenson Brothers Funeral
Home on July 16. Rev. Y. Kawa
mura officiated.
*
*
*
SHIGEHIRO
COALDALE, Alta. — Mrs. Shizuye Shigehiro passed away on
July 9. Funeral services were
held on July 13 at Coaldale Budd
hist Church by Revr Y. Kawa
mura and Rev. H. Nekoda.
*
$
$
Queens Plan Picnic
At Mossington Part
At last! Club Queen’s teen
agers’ picnic has been planned.
1384% Queen W. — LA. 637s >
Queens is holding its annual pic
Toronto, Ont.
nic at Mossington Park on Au
gust 2.
All are welcome to come and
Lucien C. Kurata |
enjoy the program that has been
Barrister and Solicitor
I
planned. The climax of the even
Notary
Publie
ing will be a colossal weiner
3 Adelaide St E., Toronto i
roast on the beach.
1st and 2nd Mortgage Loans
Buses leave College St., one \
snarled
1
block west of ’Bay, at 8:30 a.m. | Oft. EM. 6-0959 Res. LI, 3427 I
sharp. For tickets ,contract Bob
Young at RA. 2664’or Mary Ku
wabara at GE. 9778.
CORRECTION
Misunderstanding on the part
of Club Ami prompted the group
to announce that it was holdinga joint picnic with Club Queens
at Eldorado Park, Brampton, on
July 26. Queens is holding its
own picnic at Mossington Park on
Aug. 2.
HAMILTON. — The United?
Church, Japanese Division, will be
holding an outdoor sermon and
picnic on Sunday, July 26, at
Dundurn park.
Participants are asked to ga
ther at the York St. entrance at
11 a.m. All are welcome.
95 Degrees At Slocan ■
JCCA Annual Picnic
FEMALE HELP WANTED
LAUNDRY SHIPPER. Excellent
opportunity for energetic young
man willing to learn laundry ship
ping. 4169 Dundas St. W., JU. 0552.
LAUNDRY HELP. Shirt pressed
experienced on 2-person units, also
finishers and hand-ironers.
4169
Dundas St. W„ JU. 0552.
OPERATORS, experienced on
blouses, steady employment high
est wages. Apply Front Page
Fashion, 130 Spadina Ave., Toron
to.
FOR RENT
TWO OR THREE room flat, un
furnished. Call JU. 4245, after 6
YONEMITSU
Watch Repair Shop
328 BROADVIEW AVE.
(near Gerrard St.)
Toronto. Phone GL. 3652
.Residence:
LAUNDRY HELP. Shirt presser
experienced on 2-girl units, also
finishers and hand-ironers. Apply
4169 Dundas St. W., Toronto. JU.
0552.
STENOGRAPHER
for
bright,
modern office, 5-day week. College
& Bay district, Toronto. Uniforms
Registered EM. 4-0125.
DRtSS OPtSATORS, experienc
ed, wanted immediately.
Apply
Formal Accent .Dress Co., 440 /Ade
laide St. West, Toronto.
RELIABLE SALES CLERK, per
manent position, 5-day week for
gift shop. Phone PR. 1705 (Toronto).
Patronize
Our Advertisers
EM4-0508
2 Vesta Drive
MAfair 1365.
Andrew E. McKague,
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Pubiio.
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
330 Bay St.
(Corner Adelaide & Bay Sts.)
TORONTO
Hamilton United Church
Slates Outdoor Sermon
________HELP WANTED________
GIRL for light housework, on No.
27 Highway, near Mallon Rd. For
further information, phone MA.
2266.
EM. 8-6953
All members and friends are
welcome to attend the weekend
camp to be held by the Young
Adults Group of Queen Street
United Church, at Nestleton,
Lake Scugog, on August 21-23.
There will also be a week’s
camping from August 21-28 for
all those looking for fun and en
joyment during their summer
vacations.
For further information please
contact Eileen Furusho GE. 4693,
Nosh Uyeda GE. 2401, or any
member of the executive.
CLASSIFIED SECTION
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
101/2 QUEEN ST. W.
For Pick-up and Delivory
Phon®
Young Adults Slate
Weekend Camp
SLOGAN CITY, B. C. — The
Slocan JCCA held its annual pic
nic at Lemon Creek on July 12
KUTSUKAKE
under a blistering- temperature of
TORONTO. — Tsugio Kutsu- 95 degrees.
kake, 67, died on July 19. Funeral
Games were the main feature
services were held at Queen of the day. Soft drinks were pro
Street United Church on July 21.' vided by the JCCA chapter.
GARDENERS wanted, immediately. Call M. Yatabe, OL. 5895,
Toronto.
ROUGH SPOTTER, eSferience
not necessary, steady emolovment.
Call LO. 6141. Toronto.
0. K. CLEANERS
£ • Wedding Invitations
$ • Card of Thanks
* • Letterheads
.;. • Envelopes
£ • Handbills, Name Cards
j EXPERTLY DONE
?THE NEW CANADIAN
$
$
479 Queen St. W.
EM. 6-5005
| New & Used Car
| " Sales 6c Service
$
❖
£
ALL MAKES
*
£
|
Expert Vehicle Analysis
RATES REASONABLE
$
£
f
JAMES M. KAI
|
Auto Technician
❖
•^
£
303 Westmoreland Ave.
*
ME. 6165 — TORONTO. . *
T. KOBAYASHI
& SON
For All Your
Insurance Needs
LIFE, AUTO, FIRE
FLOATERS, ETC-
ffi fi ^ ^ ^
P.O. Box 149
KAMLOOPS, B. C.
I
Residence:
T39 LEIGH ROAD,
North Kamloops, B. C-
I
J
[