Browse / 1954 / June 23, 1954

The New Canadian — June 23, 1954

Open page images (PDF viewer)

Searchable text below was produced by OCR from microfilm and may contain errors. The original page images are authoritative — open the viewer above.

Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
VOL. 17 — NO. 49

Duty Unpaid So Kabuki Stage Scenery Burned
Instead of Being Used as Goodwill Gesture

The
FRANCISCO.
beautiful scenery used by Japa­
nese Kabuki dancers during their
recent tour of the United States,
has been burned because of fed­
eral regulations, it has been
learned.
Arrangements had been made
to present the much-admired
stare scenery to San Francisco
State College and University of
California’s International House.
However, the Kabuki scenery had
been allowed into the U.S. under

Honorarium Fund
For George Tanaka

TORONTO, ONT.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 1954.

bond^and no import duty had
been paid.
Under government regulations,
the scenery under bond had to be
shipped back to Japan if the
duty was not remitted. If it re­
mained, the bonding companv
would be penalized unless the
Japanese Embassy could get the
U.S. State Department to have
the scenery remain as an “act of
international courtesy”. T h i s
would have required some lapse
of time, and meanwhile the sto­
rage charges could mount.
So the gesture of friendship
went up in smoke recently when
the party responsible was forced
to order the scenerv destroved.

MONTREAL, Que. —A cheque
for $500 was received recently at
the National Headquarters of the
JCCA from Miss Margaret Boos,
secretary of the former Co-Oper­
JUNE 23, 1944
ative Committee on Japanese
VANCOUVER.
Van. ConCanadians. This amount.was tak­
en from the surplus of the admi­ suttative Council sends letter to
nistrative expenses of the Com­ Prime Minister King condemning
mittee and sent to the National proposals for forcible expulsion
JCCA as part of an honorarium of Japanese Canadians, and urgfund for George Tanaka, former Ang vigour in resettlement of
National JCCA Executive Secre- evacuees.
LONDON. — Affirmative side
tary.
This cheque has now been for­ wins debate on topic, ‘'Resolved
warded to Mr. Tanaka. Further that the Future of the Nisei lies
contributions from the general in Canada”, argued in Japanese
public should be sent to the Pro­ Canadian group.
PENTICTON, B. C. — Majority
vincial Liaison Officers or to the
National Headquarters, for for­ of delegates at the annual con­
vention of B. C. Junior Chamber'
warding to Mr. Tanaka.
The respective provincial liai­ of Commerce defeat resolution
son officers and their addresses recommending deportation of all
are: Mr. Peter Yamauchi,. 217 people of Japanese extraction
Dunlevy Ave., Vancouver 4, B.C.; after the war.
Mr. Walter- Koyanagi, P.O. Box
609, Taber Alta.: Miss Kay Mo­ REDS SEIZE JAPAN “SPIES”
TOKYO. — Moscow radio said
nta, 1821 McDermot Ave., Win­
nipeg; Dr. Fred Sunahara., 119 last week that the Russion border
Almore Ave., Wilson Heights guards have captured two Japa­
P.O., Toronto; Mr. J. Nishihata, nese “spies” and shot one. The
1-58 Roy St. E., Montreal: and broadcast' located the capture
National JCCA, 1601 Millar Ave., only as on an island east of
Vile St. Laurent, Que.
Russia.

a decade ap

Prince Akihito Obtains
Driving License
TOKYO. — Crown Prince Aki­
hito has passed his driving test
to become the first member of
the Japanese Imperial family to
obtain a license to operate an
automobile.
Palace officials said, however.
that the Prince will not venture
out into the hazardous, traffic­
jammed streets of Tokyo. The
future Emperor will drive only
within the palace grounds and at
the Imperial villa in the country.

Canadian Envoy to
Japan Is Stricken
TOKYO. — Robert W. May­
hew, Canada's ambassador to
Japan, collapsed at a funeral
service he was attending Mon­
day and was taken to a United
States Army Hospital in To-

An embassy spokesman later
said that the 74-year old dip­
lomat's condition was “not ser­
ious, but he ‘needs several
weeks’ rest.”

B.C. Fishermen on Strike
In Salmon Price Squabble
By GENICHI OHASHI
VANCOUVER. — With 93.3 percent of the B. C. fishermen
having voted in favour of rejection of the latest salmon prices
offered by the Fisheries Association, all coastal salmon netters
commenced strike action at midnight June 19 to back up demands
for increased rates. Hopes for a quick settlement seem not
very high.
Five thousand or more fishermen, including a large number
of Japanese Canadians, have been affected. No fisherman is
allowed to leave his home port except in eases of emergency,
and picket lines have been thrown around the main fishing grounds.

Upon reaching an agreement, there will be a waiting period
of 72 hours between the end of the strike and resumption of fishing
to ensure that all will be able to reach their fishing grounds and
resume work at the same time.
Latest reports indicate that the operators are offering a mini­
mum guarantee price per pound of 21 cents for sockeye, one cent
less than last year’s price. The union demand is 234 cents. Union
demands for other species of salmon, with company offers and
last year’s prices in brackets, are: coho 16 cents (13, 11); pinks
S 4 (7 *4 , 7 4); sum mer chums IL (5*4, 514); fall chums 7bi and
94 (514 and 64, 6VI and 8).

60 Years for Teenage Nisei;
Hid in Hatch 11
Took Part in Armed Robbery Foodless Days
HONOLULU, T. H. — A local
19-year old Nisei was put under
a maximum 60-year sentence hero,
last week for participation in an
armed -robbery of a Kapiolani
cafe.
Edward Yamaguchi was one of
a trio of bandits who held up the
restaurant, robbing the till of
3419.
Life for Associate
A minimum 15-year sentence
was set for Johannen Poche, Jr.,
one of Yamaguchi's associates in
the holdup.
James (Egghead) Wong, 18,
the third bandit, is now under a
life sentence for the crime. His
minimum term has not yet been
set. A minimum term for Yama­
guchi is expected to be recom-

mended by the prison board in
three months.
Only One Not Armed
According to police reports,
Yamaguchi was the only one of
the group who was not armed.
Both Wong and Poche fired pistols, wounding a cafe cook in the
right knee and one side of his
face, evidence showed.

AM ONG FELLO WSHIP
WINNERS
TORONTO. — Samuel T. Ya­
mada of London, Ont., was one
of seven Canadians who have
been awarded fellowships for
heart disease research by the
Life Insurance Medical Research
Fund, an annoucemcnt by the
Canadian Life Insurance Associ­
ation showed this week.

Ex-U.S. War Ace Meets Japanese Hero

By NORMAN HACKING

Vancouver. H. C.
The life of a stowaway is not
a happy one, particularly when
he goes for 11 da vs without food
or water.
This was discovered by Manji
Tamura,
little Japanese who
stowed
v in the Canadian
Pacific steamship Maplcdcll at
Yokohama., in hopes of coming to
Canada, which he had heard was
the promised land where there
was work and prosperity for all.
He managed to creep unob­
served into the chain locker in the
fore-peak of the ship, and there,
he remained, cold, damp, hungry
and thirsty, for 11 days.
He might well have starved to
death, for the chain locker hatch
was padlocked, and he had no
means of letting the ship’s com­
pany know where he was.

Capt. Kelly’s body was found
“I always thought it was gas­
Eleven Days
lippines.
“Japanese pilots were sent up oline. I stayed on the B-17 until later and buried near where he
Fortunately for Tamura
to engage B-17s which had bomb- | it went down to about 3,000 feet. fell. An erroneous report at the the Mapledell was 11 days
at sea,
ed Japanese shipping off Luzon,” | Then T saw three .parachutes time said he dived his plane onto approaching
V;
crew
I don't remember • open. I wondered why they were the deck of a Japanese battle­ members opened up the locker in
said Sakai.
exactly, but I think we opened! jumping because it looked as if ship.
preparation for dropping the
Col. Kurtz first told the story
another.
fire on them at about 8,000 me- j the plane were going to make
anchor.
I he lean man with six rows of ters.”
| it home. I didn’t know it was on of Colin Kelly’s death in the best
The stowaway did not surren]
^bbons on the breast of his nat“That would be about right, ’ ; fire. I watched it disappear into seller “Queens Die Proudly” pubder
at once, but he soon appeared
4 b:ue-gray U.S. Air force uni- Kurtz replied. “Tell him our the clouds below. Then I broke lished in 1943. He wrote that
on deck, a walking skeleton,
-om was Col. Frank Kurtz, a B-17’s normally bombebd above off and headed for Formosa. I Kelly’s crew was the only one
hardly
able to stand.
didn’t see it crash, and so the bailing out in the vicinity.• of
of a battle tested B-17 20,000 feet.”
When the crew sighted him,
the Swoose, which fought
Sakai recalled that one of the Imperial Navy did not give me Clark Field.
they
could not believe their eyes,
Sakai recently wrote a book on
2iavey ui the early Pacific war B-17’s was losing altitude and credit for shooting it down.”
end now awaits a final honored first dipping one wing and then
Kurtz said nothing for a mo- his war experiences. He took part for he appeared to be more of a
in the first raid on Clark field ghost than a man. None thought
i‘ece in the Smithsonian’s Na- the other as if the pilot had been ment.
.0'
•‘The day Colin was shot down and led the attack on what ap­ at first that he could possibly be
Museum in Wash­ hit. “There were 10 Zeros in the
he
began. “I saw him coming in, parently was Kelly’s B-17 group. a stowaway.
attack. The B-17 gunners were
Comparison of recollections of
v a biu serge suit, younger firing back furiously. Every Zero | and you're right on that point.
He was Liken to Capt. Gerald
Kurtz
and
Sakai
presents
what
!
Three
open
chutes
camethrough
Baugh,
who immediately ordered
5 'nan his
was but mine got a hit. Me kept
I
the
overcast.
I
thought
that
cloud
seems
to
be
reasonable
evidence
the man taken to the ship’s hos­
;---^n> >>akai, Japan’s greatest | pressing the attack until I saw
that
Sakai
is
the
man
who
shot
i
deck
was
about
2,500
feet.
'
pital. There is no doctor aboard
a
white
film
stream
out
of
the
5;r acc’ who shot down 64 I
a *d planes.
; bomber’s fuselage. I thought he i
“Three chutes came through rhe last burst of fire into Colin the Mapledell, so the captain and

i
I the overcast,” Kurtz continued, Kelly’s plane.
chief steward treated the little
'-a.-riors were discussing I was jettisoning gas
Very
probably
these
two
had
Kurtz
said.
I

Then
five
more
opened
beneath
Japanese
for starvation and mal­
Colin Kelly, America’s ■
“That wasn’t gas,
flown
by
each
other
in
combat
nutrition,
first giving him injec­
i it. Anyway, that s how it looKed
oi the war who was | “It must have been smoke.”
several
times.
As
the
American
tions so he could not suffer from
Sakai nodded politely, then • to me from the angle I was
his B-17 attacked i
^Panese warships off the Phi- ‘ went on.
(Cont

d
on
Page
Two)
too sudden access to food.
watching.”
loKiO. — The two men fin­
ished dinner and began to talk,
'lowly because each word needed
Lanshtimr. They were trading
recollections of battles in which
‘^ey had tried to destroy one

Page 2

Page 2
VAGARIES . .

THE

NEW

Wednesday, June 23, 1954.

CANADIAN

By LARRY TAJIRI

Yashima Moves West
JHE OTHER AFTERNOON the |j graphical volume of drawings and
phone rang- and it was Jun text which told of his experiences
Iwamatsu. Jun, better known to as a young man, an artist and
the nation and the world under a believer in freedom in Japan,
his penname, Taro Yashima, is a was printed by Henry Holt & Co.
painter and writer who has had Holt also issued Jun’s second
three books published in the past book, Horizon Is Calling. Shining'
ten years. A fourth book is being through the drawings and the
published in September and con­ terse captions is the author’s in­
tracts have been signed for a tegrity as an artist and as a
human being, something which
fifth.
Jun was driving across the he has not compromised. Talking
country from his New York stu­ with him the other night, we
dio to California with Mack Oike, found his faith in the human
the young painter who is the spirit still undiminished. .

first Nisei to receive a fellow­
Jun was in India with an OSS
ship from the Huntington Hart­ unit on V-J day. Later he flew
ford Foundation. He will spend into the defeated nation on an
the next five months painting on OSS mission shortly afterward.
the Pacific Palisades estate of A.s the plane paused at Guam,
the young scion of the A & P he could not sleep, knowing that
food chain who has become a on the following morning he
patron of the arts. Jun, who was would see his native land for the
at Pacific Palisades last year, first time in seven years. He
liked Southern California: after would also learn whether his
14 years in a New lork apart­ son, now 12, was still alive.
ment and is planning to move his (Shortly before, Jun had seen
family — wife Mitsu, daughter OSS films of B-29 raids on Kobe,
Momo and son Mako — to the which showed that the area in
Los Angeles area.
which his house was located was
The short visit brought us up completely ravaged.) Jun found
to date on what Jun, or Taro his boy alive, although the house
Yashima, has been doing since had been destroyed. The son,
the last time we saw him — Mako, was not able to join his
which was on a warm summer parents in New York until almost
night at his studio in midtown four years later when the U.S.
Manhattan in 1949. Jun, the son congress passed a special bill
of a village doctor, and Mitsu, granting him the right to join his
the daughter of a Kobe ship­ parents. The Iwamatsus, who had
builder, had the courage and come to the .United States origi­
audacity to criticize and oppose nally as visitors, also receive the
the Japanese militarists in the right of permanent residence
years of decision in Japan in the from congress in appreciation of
1930’s. Jun’s cartoons, for the wartime services.
leading Japanese political-econo­
Jun has had several New York
mic monthly, Kaizo, and for othe: showings of his paintings, and
publications, attacked the sword three of them are part of the
rattlers of Nippon. As a result permanent collection of the Phil­
he was jailed nine times in three lips museum in Washington.
years and his wife also was im­ Since the war he has been con­
prisoned — and their first child centrating on teaching, as well
was born in prison.
as painting, but also has found
The situation in Japan became time th do a pictures-and-text
intolerable for Jun and Mitsu book about his childhood in Kyu­
who believed in the very tenets shu which Viking published last
of freedom which the militarists year under the title, The Village
and their secret police were Tree.
crushing out of Japan. Ostensibly
* * *
to write and draw about America,
It is Momo, the 5-year old
and the San Francisco interna­
tional exposition in particular, daughter, who is responsible for
they came to ths United States The Village Tree. Momo was bom
in 1939- Jun was not to return in New York and has grown up
until 1945, when, shortly after in Manhattan. Jun and Mitsu
have told her stories and drawn
V-J day, he arrived in the uni­
form of the Office of Strategic pictures of life in Japan and it
was from these that the book
Services (OSS).
was conceived. The Village Tree
$
*
*
was the March selection of the
The Iwamatsus arrived in the Junior Literary Guild and 20,000
United States with only money copies are in circulation. The nextenough for a few months' visit book, also about life in a Japaand they had left behind their nese village, is titled Plenty to
young son, Mako, then only 5. Watch, and Viking will issue it
They found a cold-water flat on in September. The books should
New York’s eastside, with the prove of especial interest to Nisei
Third Avenue elevated rattling by parents.
at window height. For weeks they
Mitsu, also an accomplished
did not even possess a mattress painter, is the author of an ar­
and Jun. attending art classes, ticle, Momo's Street, which was
scrounged through the waste bas­ published by Glamour magazine
kets for paper and canvas on some time ago, and which was a
which to draw and paint. They mother’s tale for her daughter of
had traded a comfortable life in the New York street in which
Japan — where Jun was one of they lived and of the neighbours
the nation's outstanding cartoon­ who came there from nations far
ists — for freedom and poverty away.
in New York.
Young Mako was attending
After Pearl Harbor, Jun work­ Pratt Institute with plans to be­
ed for awhile for OWT (Office of come an architect when he was
War Information) and later for drafted. He is now on U.S. duty
OSS. During this time his first in Tokyo and the Iwamtsus
book. The New Sun. ax autobio- learned in a recent letter that he

was playing baseball for an Army
team. Jun doesn’t know what
position Mako plays but says that
he was advised by a friend that
Mako is a good player — so good,
in fact, that when Mako was
playing schoolboy baseball in
New York city he was approached
by a scout for the New Y'ork
Giants who asked if he had
thought of making a career in
baseball.
Jun and Mack Oike spent the
night in Denver before leaving
for Los Angeles over Loveland
pass which is U.S. Highway 6.
Mack explained that they were
taking the long way because he
wanted to revisit the little moun­
tain town of Rifle, Colo., where
he topped sugar beets after
leaving the relocation center at
Poston, Ariz., more than 10 years
ago.
When Jun finds accommoda­
tion in Los Angeles, he will send
for Mitsu and Momo. It perhaps
reflects the tide of American his­
tory that the Iwamatsus, those
latter-day arrivals, are moving
west.

Introducing Petunia , , ,
she: S A low-slung, beautiful thing, of gleaming charcoal g;?,

with a superb line which has Marilyn Monroe beat, Had she
been born in the Dark Ages, she could have been a proud stallion,
broken in against her will, by some warrior brave to do his bidding,
She’s a proud thing to look at — but there the resemblance to a
stallion ends.’To take possession of her, there was no pitting of
human cunning against brute endurance, no great conflict between
man and beast for mastery. She turned up in my Girl Friend’s life
like a single petunia in a flower bed of prize roses — quite by
chance. All my Girl Friend did was to place a dollar on a mink coat
If there were any conflicts, they amounted to several sleepless
nights when my Girl Friend’s soul — and mine — were torn bet­
ween two loves, one gorgeous mink coat forever or a Petunia some
time in the future.
Why Petunia for a two-door 1954 Chevrolet, complete with
heater and air conditioning combination' and soft grey upholstery?
Petunia is such a lovely name for this particular car. There’s
something so proudly familiar, so gayly ridiculous and yet possessing
all the common sense hardiness, the common touch of the garden
variety of perennial whose name she now bears. Petunia is a good,
dependable name, and my Girl Friend’s car, brand new though it is,
has all the possibilities for being undependable that man-made
gadgets possess. If ever we want to get her out of a soft shoulder
she has no business wallowing in, what, would be more compelling
and authoritative than the sound of “Come, now, Petunia! Up you
come!” And if she’s sometimes expected to do twenty-five miles
to the nearest gas station on the. last gallon in her tank, what, could
be more appealing than to croon “Come on, Pet, old gal. We just
have to get there. . .” And anyway, if an old milkman I know
can call his mangy, broken-down nag “Geranium”, if a Nisei mother
can name her dark, chubby Japanese baby “Lorelei Dawn” or her
(Cant'd from Page One\
slant-eyed son “Winston Churchill”, then what is so ridiculous about
bombers, among them the Swoose
calling a brand new Chev “Petunia”.
fell back through Java, Borneo,
I took to Petunia like a duck to water. Petunia, has one of thoss
and New Guinea, Sakai was in
attractive personalities. I guess one would call it Sex Appeal. She
the planes leading the pursuit.
has a kind of personality which makes people want to gather around
“Why did you always attack
her, wanting to possess her, and causes them to stare at her for
B-17’s from' the rear?” Kurtz
hours. She appeals to all men, knowing instinctively their predilec­
inquired.
tions for all mechanical things, and makes them discuss the merits
“At first that seemed to be the
of her streamlined chassis, the super performance of her mechanized
most vulnerable place. It became
build, and the wonders she is capable of in a. thousand emergencies.
an order from the High Com­
And I, standing on the side lines, noting how each man warms to
mand,” Sakai replied.
the subject, how his eyes follow and take in every detail ■with loving
“We thought so. The first
looks, catch myself wondering if it might not have been better to
B-17’s didn’t have tail guns. But
have been born a car like Petunia than just a mere female.
after about three months we ’got
She even makes me pay homage. I am forever stopping mysek
that old stinger in the tail. Your
from passing my fingers along her long, shining sleekness, from
pilots never seemed to change
touching her wheel, from worrying over some minute scratch which
their attack, though. At the be­
is visible only to my Girl Friend and myself. But how deeply
ginning they always came in
she had entrenched herself within my heart I discovered only after
from the rear.”
we took her to Plattsburg, just seven hours after she had been
“Later we changed,” Sakai said
introduced to me. I liked the way she conducted herself as we headed
“We found out it was better to
down the two-hour stretch of highway, with a beautiful June moon
attack head on. Once over New
winking first through our right side windows, then through those
Guinea I was in a formation of
on our left, slowing down when we wanted to catch the wonder
nine fighters. We attacked five
of some sleepy scene, or picking up speed when we wanted to pass
B-17’s head on. They all drop some meandering fellow car on our way. And when we turned m
ped.”
at the State Park, Petunia slowed down to a gentle purr, and found
‘’What was the toughest plane herself a parking space under some giant trees. I discovered then
you fought?”
that we spoke the same language — Petunia and I.
“The P-3S wasn’t tough at
I knew then, that if some starry summer night I were to say.
first, but later on it became a “Look, Petunia, let’s go!”, she would be with me, as eager and a;
very difficult plane to fight,” impatient as myself, and as exultantly as myself will whip along
Sakai said. “But I believe the some highway, past telephone poles, traffic signs and sleeping town?,
B-17 was the hardest plane of all licking up the miles to its very end. And that end might be the sea,
to fight. It has so much fire brooding and deep and mysterious, or a friendly little town where
power.”
a love might be waiting, or even a little lost road leading nowhere
Sakai said he thought the fun­ but hungry for company. The place would be right for Petunia
niest incident took place at Bali, and me.
in February 1942.
My Girl Friend and I tucked Petunia in for the night. Ke
“The Japanese army had occu­ looked at her long, slim loveliness. She had so much possibilitiespied Bali, but an American B-17
My Girl Friend looked at me. I looked at her. We were bo"
tried to land on the field. Appar­ thinking of travel folders — leading to Mexico, to the Rockies, am
ently the pilot didn’t know the even beyond the horizon’s rim to Europe.
Japanese had taken the island.
Petunia might some day take us even beyond the horizon?
When the B-17 was almost down, rim to Europe.
the army opened fire and chased
it away.”

Ace Meets Hero

Sakai shook his head. “The
Navy was really mad at the
Army for losing that plane.”
Kurtz asked Sakai what im­
pressed him most about the U.S.
Air Force.
“Teamwork,” Sakai replied im­
mediately. “The Japanese pilots
were brave and fought as indi­
viduals. But the American pilots
always fought together as a
team* That made them great,”

THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Japanese-English Organ
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada.

GEORGE NISHIMURA__________________________ ____ Edit°r
TAKAICHI UMEZURI
Japanese Section Edi tor
KEN MORI
Advertising
4 7 9 Queen St. W. — EMpire 6-5005 — Toronto. Ont.
Authorized « second class mail. Post Office Dept., Ottcrvs

Page 3

1954.
■■

0 ©

^

'X

y

b

io*

0
I5
11

n

i
I'

g

9

V

$
0

o

L

jS
y

©

0

the NSW

5
- 1
ft 6
LT
b
0
©
b
il 1 X
L
I- 1? b
Ip*
b
9
11 6 X X X
© t‘ 0
0 ft
1
11
o
0 ft 1 IZ
ft T
2#
5
1
11
ft
i
9
r
6 ©
b 11
11
Ip 9 X?
Sil X

50
A
0
Ab
& ft
© 5 (Z (1
0
jQ
ft
b
Ip
—Ei t'
1_ L.
T
9 T

11'

QA N A D IA N
5

&
au

a

i a b

fl

Lt
©

17
I'

>5
I
»1

11
n " tz ft
79
T X
0

•9 0
T §

Ip
b

6

X

S © <1
6



0*
£

£

i’
©

L
©
© 5
11 ©*

$

il

n

(5

©

is

M
tz ©
1
5

u
i
0

ft

9

©

(1

n

±111

11

6
e

It

jS

n
0

X

©

KT 5

X

£

■y

L

11

e

c

PAGE 3

!1

11 u
5

9

iJ
«
e

11 it
n
ir (1


i'

izf

n

1P

i
552

t r<

£^0^5

a
o


6

fi1'
fa

iz

- ft 0

ti

©

i'

A

©

ft

ft It

(1
ii

9

©
ft

I'

i

4

E
(1

#>
11

i

AK^®

11'

9

9
0

£{O
i& {III

i

» A-t #& =F {lh »-t =F
W®® KA«Afti«it o

fiU

0

JB

i

c
3

Ji to tn +n /^
fill fill i£ ^ fill

8

5

(1
11

^(l^PW#®

fw »

10^ ^

:p । »B»®
MlSSft

t^M

RO

Hasp

HRMI

BTC
^G

IRV’
0S

H 9

I ®1

L&J



^^O
b (1 i

MH

hl^H

Os

JH^
#
tz

« § £ ~ -it
0« ®iB
^|
ob«M #ft
Sil • Oil £ SB • -

K^yft
m &

IS

^ ft
ft

^ it ^^

IMPERIAL
BANK
ofHuda
ELIZABETH ft DUNDAS STS.
(116 Elisabeth St.)

TORONTO

<>3^sta4a
T ^ i: ft 11 M

American i.jsioen. lines

L. J. WALKER, Manager

T©«9

a

ipttW&ft £

"o
5 3

5 e
%^T

\3

^*ft 1 ^

b litn^
Tn©^^®ii
•tf^A^r

Page 4

PAGE 4

THE NEW CANADIAN

Wednesday, June 23, 1QU

□□

Hl

no

F

a
to

6
to

a

zp

0

9

£
6

51

to
£1

9

in

B

0

to



to

F

&

u

X
/
nn

K tz 0

i

7

^’

7

i5
*

f
3

3
i

i
to

a

1 £t^^

5

#n 51

; 0

6

5
to
6

i’

0

ft
t

5^ X EH

T|j
a h -^
B# X —
Ei 1 >
/'x
5! to
Zp 5 n]5 s u
^_ if X
^
1*
b
tz
4
^
7£ tz 1
0 fa to
0 0 * w
Zr * R
X
ip 12
^ w
< T
6 IX
Ob 1 f X 0
0
T Zp* * #
s
Ob
40 g 6
1
&
tit to 22
4
6 X 0 lil
to
A fAT 12 b to T?
i 0

JU sl^At

W
B

51

c
0

zK

E'

4
0

IX
E*

O’

li

£

f
ZP

to

11

0

Mt

0
a

o

51

R

$

n

t

Zr

to

r^
b

£O R
OU
.
ST? » I I

'

Mil*

0$
na

Y

Zp «

fM Zp

& 6H f? >
1 ^ 0T
h IS IP 1

r
51

to

ta

b b

to ®Hil| R
x in A
^ ^ ^ a + ps ^ it
X zK ^ g b {ill 0 m 1

2m ^ SB

ma et

t {111 i A e a

W ^ 1 - B$ BiJ 1

Pit?
OM Jit
0 zK 3£

TIP)

A® 9
Jt —

0

LYNBR.OOK.<
^ ft ^ R ^ ^'

b ^ ^ Ai

W'-e-s

0 4t
f It
z 0

^ to ' b
Fit fa To fO

LWBRP*.

hark. ^ATt

ii>
b
E'

^HUl^iMt
O M 2/
# P jt± in 0

1

i to
& zK
^Pk

fl® W T

"i

b 1
TORONTO

WwtbX


2 8 Miues

fi TH

^ 6 5$ X
o

®1 JR T a 5' ® b

Y. UCHIDA & Co,
615 West Pender St.,
VANCOUVER 2, B.C.

The Great China Restaurant,
X
X;

c

11 Elizabeth Street, Toronto,
Telephone
EM. 4-5935

n

co rt

3

4

b

B
IW

?l
O

a

H
14

ZP
»i

ASH

h it f

R

r0

til

WHi
H

B B

5!^
bO

♦ w

oSOO

s

iiil)^

B^J^

3
>1

8i3®

9

a

Page 5

Wednesday, June 23,

1954.

NEW CANADIAN

THE

0

PAGE 5

11
to
3

L

ft 0

ft

O

*

Mj

a

p;
to

CT

n

0

c

b

to

©
5

ft

It zb
M

0

fib

ii

0
3

jul

$

© zb ft

5

r

0

O

n.e.«

b
9
o

11

&
0 0

to

0

0
o

L

5
T
Pl

Ml

5

b

Xp

G

pA

0

fiS
M ^
0
K i
b
0 Ml
0 to' L
0 72 If £? T
t 72 o Xp ' 11
72 Xp T 6 «
I' 0 1# ^
7
£ (1 3o £ 1 MJ
11 j
IX ^ 0

.
0
IB &
Rf
11 ' ^1
Xp
( ‘<7 <
4b •9

# 72

72

Xp

6

®

to b M
MJ
72 ia Xp’ to
0
ft s1
1

m

0
3
3
r
>§ 3
4 ^T
& ite Os
/b
0 il 0 t
f^
X b A ^ IS
7? b
(1
#
l& 1 7

(i

if
ft
#B <fc

h

<

b
'T

b
(1
7

CT

T XP

6

IE

0

CT
72

to

'J-

17

&

72 n
72 0
6

0

Xp

C

a

&

iife
xp’

72

Xp

i:
H

fa
o

fa

&

Mf
6

to
?

il

©
G
0

7

b

3

a

to

<

7

L

7

1

I 7 r:
q* Ml

5 Xz’
t- to
to
to
3 to il 0
o G f
0 B -G
to
o

*

b

Xp

<

4a
1
ii u toll
^ T
3
0
to.

(1



to
V

1

0
0

Xp V 6
0
0 IS
W 0 h

b

7

6

fe
4>

7

72

T
b

(1 11
?f o T

£

b ^

b

ft

w

T
Z

to

A A
to g

72
0
©

7

>-

ta
to
-lb
3 to
b il'

6
0 —

7r
'
^
^
0

5

s?

b

#
0 is

11
-* »
''3

$1

to

72
b

1'7
Zp

H
7

72

47

7; ^ ^ © f
£ fll B 3

12

to

b

Ar
(1

G ^* to
to ®

«{£(:
4n 0 ^ ^

xp

ft

A 115

Xp & 0

1

0

72 x>>

t 31 V

3

il

X)'
Xp

to ^ *

ft to

to
‘CT

i:

i

11

lb
0
H
is M

11
Ml
fi

0
i

2

(0 *9 4Z 57

t
3 B
ft Xp &
12 ft to X. i®

it

O

5

A ^ to
Ar
ft # to tor CT b
b

b

6
XP

Ml

Xp

^-

xLU
ra

K

6 ^

11

5 0
to Xp 0 0
B lp too Hl
?
to
11
La* to
o
7
r
T
r
G

72

'J.

£

&

o

0

b

Xp

Xp

L

Tn

L
0

0
72 flMi
ii 72
o 11 7) 0

"o'

0 0

3)

M 1>>

72

Al
72

® ite ?

0
to

9

il

’Ml
(1

7

9

(1

WBJ

#

CT

to

a

A 11

®

b

iE

te
m

t JU

CT

RD
to

1 JK

fb

0 T

6
b
ft il
i’

o

ft

mi

i

11

K

0
7

11

n to CT f^ 3o

th

m>

b

Al

5

T

5
^
72
b

Si

5

7

0

7

0

a

0

"b

6’
ft
CT

L

o
to

M W

5

4

0’

ii3

#

ii

KU

0

0

11

CT

■U^B^AoW^IC 1 3 <S>^0 L0 B #W-H®-?^

0 215

6

Xp

0
r^KtorlT'^

I?

fT

CT

SI

(i^ f-^^^HinWi^ G

3
Xp

5

G ^ 31^

6

31 31

7

0

Broadwav

nn

315
t
>■£
6

31 * 31 *

Page 6

Wednesday, June 23

1 ^
M
0
^
®
iK
®
^

^
t'
'zS
^
'O
7

t

^

7 ±
-^ M
7 IZ
S ^'
K b

6

li t
v
&
2>
5 * 1 *

^’ ^

7 i: ^
^ ^ ->
-r E □
? ^ £
IZ n ^
tz ®
si
*
t>> tk
& Z> ^
E /b -

r fit b> & ^ -r

/f'

“1

/
7

^

eEI?'

itfr
#

/

&

_
—y
/

t

J M
vf£
7L-aA.ifi3#5
t

x

®

7

j x f f« + ® ij
j
,
P 1 ® A 4 ftx /j>f

rj
I ®L

M

ffc

» »s w -r ti
e

£ ^T t y 4 40 I A ^ ^ a # ^s :> ^ ^ fi it y
7
K © £ b’ ]
11 £ *- ^ ' IP ^ © y S ^ A
J t. 9
)■16
0 T ip y i?’ 4 £ if
iz © il t ^ l- ^ b k 7
r .Ji i>’
0tzbH171#^^#lztA01^'
il £ 1 7 il , u
Kt
$
^
G
6
Tz
R5
^
M
iz
^
b
iz
S
W
M
"7^.0
SI
0 zb M IZ f I Tz T
0 ¥
7 |£ a 4 y il
I
> I® T
bl
©
M
T5'
^
0
fi
#
ft

A
^
i
^
b
y
1
A
y
7
$
^
^
+t4
s
s izM
5
' iz
M ®
0 tr e i>' g y ^
f
$ ' 0 £ ®c TP IZ & g t (1 0 W fl T ^ t i ••71^7©
”1 b f A § ft K 7 t ®
( 'b fr b
ft M n t ¥ Il '
» ' R g i i S 4' 4’’ ll 5 B 5 S ? J fi yUv
S ® T H ^ UH -1
^ # S S' £ £ M G 3E -^ ^ $ J T ? t ^ Ai*
:L »p

>

o

v

m

i

b iM

b; X

S

i
* -, C £5 -r

'

f T

m

t'

T
11 T 1 iz t - # © + 11 W IX
f IZ
i £ £'
A 1P 1
A #
V
6 S 7 A A 9
£ -tn ,14k
0

~nr

i

H fz s
t
] ^ "5

tit
55

B *

■fa

®
©

7
y

g

i

a

L S
<k

IP

It

M

® n

n #
® SH IH # # M H B £ * t>
i * t A J> T3£ M
!)# f g
R b
© IPJ St t
ffi 7
E ©
t; T’ "(z
|
® T tz iz - il c>
® b 7
v 7 iz • T1 — o £ M e
il £ i£ M
tp
? 7 V ^ E ^’ W tz 6 ^ 7 ©
Mt & 5? £ 7 7? a
t
1
' iz © °
T it b b ^ 7tx ]
£ 7 ^ J y #] b 1
T: ^ b
b
it i G T b
l'^ ® 7 IZj 7 T tz -t b b i f 7
y '7
mx^E tz 7
° ^ A -^ ft? 1 11 & 7 1 IZ 5
^ 47
M 1 / /
f^^TT^ i © - ^ T 7 ht
“ ^ © b § ^ ± S; 7 4
# w LA
^ ifi ^' ^ ^ ^ -^ T5 © ^ T$ Jf ^ ? i’
A ® i; 0 ^
11 ?& /
H 7 6
!) # IZ ® 6 A b) H 1
X
i
t ° M x E M M i’ f t - t 6 b t- tz
B
a 5. J
i ii «M = till /A ^ 7 /)> 5 IZ 4
v j |z
^ 7
b W^- It n ® i? W 0 7 £ o
A 7
ra.
t ft «
©
fXbiz " 1 " b f ^ © h
+ i
‘B
a t> ? as ,)(B 1 L
.
?
i
£
i
# 0 a v ® 1
^ ® ' ® > ^ / tz' A f E T 5 Pf
i^H0^i$^7il-iiil
" , ffi«
v ?Mt5
s ft t
O
®tb 11 S y 11
z T5
i/
° ^ it^ -i t|t -^ 0 ft © ^M J 1 * A > KJ
T ®
T^ b ^^
f < ^ 0 # 1 ^
ini
ii
7 $ 51
6
A
® iz IM’
° AM
t «S Ira 7
0 It 7 - # #J
© 1 £ *' & I b
b
b 4 4 H (1
o
gut
7 t (i life iz A.
f 7 y T ft®
b m
© 4t

2

r ft b S t: 4; 0 $ 0

t

iz

0

la

T

'

P

s

4 n
yz: W+ J
x
y 0
t

f

b

«7l

r

I



11 © ^ gg

^ ^’ O ^C i^

e‘

M* Eg

y^rt

11
b B H ATT
r
CHE NEW CANADIAN
# rx fl 0 G a b ^ yk
479 Queen St. W.,
M v1 MM H Mt
/
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
4r A f ^ iB 5
(Phone EM. 6-5005)
S v M' £ # t / ✓x
#il^± “In®if
M Me ® fl IP b
5 |__
^51 f # ? tl tt <
Wx® —^A e
L » £ 0 -^ It 6
Tz
f B 5fc n 0
WO AW0 IZ
7 M ' fl' IZ
^ ^ b 1k ■TT M ^
( b ^ ti: M' !? # t
* 1
il T H •
31 tz It il y JR ^J

g 0

gA
E

^ iz 7^ A । \
fi 1 M
H
^
^
ft^
1

6
v A
B 1
fi ^ M 11 ijl , E
1 " 2 i j£ A
CT) i
4r
i
i M Ip'
T # b —1M5^
J: Im
:y T 11 M
0
4 B ft
M* 6 ^
9 G # | 7 f f b
^ if ip H iz 1
b b ^ 7
/C
A M Tz $ IZ HI ££ TZ 51] y IZ b ©
6 &
© ft
A ft ? ^ \T 4g
S
11 ti $ Z 0 t) ^ © ^ b ^ Tz L # i © f ffl
ft
K
I
t
=
O
SytaRnH-^*^
agi* v u ® 4 ? Z
T T £ # #> 0 — X <
G © '
0
t b z
TZ A 'A Bl
St
8> >► S ’
>x X
n ® 0 Tz ^ B0 ^ 5 ^ (1 £ A. p 3 E ft 5 7* 7 1
»>•
' iSt X # t- » I I
>
1! f
S y ^ ^>
£ H
£'
1 T £ ^A V M 4r|li#^ £ ^ ' &
iz Tz > G V
M iz (z
# 11
S
T E © 1 M ?K y JE JE
® 7’ 9 M*
t S ®
31 ±
_ 7
^X A # 1
। T t tx M Tz 7?M
t iM 7 iz
iz |
t iz 0 T y #
O ± i: A x ® S t fo-~ 7 _

A— A R 0
6 b O f
1 Tz pi &
iz
' z r (
1
IZ 0
1
0
5
A
b
T
il
F T: fi A ^ # '
©
i
?
11
6
#

5
^
b
T
Z)
£
<
A
il
7 il zK &
i
,
(ft
® n A 1 # H'°tz G 11 ^
ft0 “ Tz C
Tz' y
11 1
s M 4
i 5
r ,
J
0
7
?
A
IX
# e' Hl i
ib + $ b ±
^j n i t
^ Mx ' A L Tz ^ 0 - Hi 0 H #
c
$>
^
^
^
M
A
III
ft
7
-7
^M
A ^
# tz 0 © tz A tz T' T £
g
® 0
a
® it
GEKB^Tt)
0 (1 *> ' 15 M 0
%! 11
b. 7
I> v ] iz
tz f lb
n © ^ 7 t§ 1 ^ B y ^ j^ ’
It
^ A M ^1 y
— -Jt 7 A E
75
b fl a*
tz y
+ s tz f
,
j’ ® « ra t ts 7
ip*
0
t)


^
iz
;
§
I
A
#
y
1
1
L
s
s
s
®
il
°
w
LALa
£
r & 73 ft ^ ^ ’ iz ^ >
SE ^4' \g ,
£^
b
5 T' BI T 11 E f
ft4T«T4ftS
v>
il s Z ^ > 7
f
y
£
Al
b
(Z
£
t ft l f n <
0 6
© 3 0 I1
6
.
j
5 ' £ IZ ® A
1
x
M
IZ £
t H 7 ® » * X fi § 11
T y tM 7 M
1
/
1 ^<=7 b A A 1
b b ^|j S
© iz
i
<
HroSHCg^ ^ ;: H
.t'
TZ
M
b
0
1
^
tgf
|M>
TZ
^
^
6
E
z
X- ^
6 © ^ © k g '
>
» 8 ft * ii * * f ^ Tz
fi
£
T
Tz
0
11
^
7
MX
**
#
f
&
0
f
£
T
^
^ 0
I7 ^
A 4
^t ^ 0 § 4 ft* —, ^ ,
f ' ^ 0 © J^ 4 IP
i;
f T g5 ^) y ^ 1 ^ 1 Tz
£ ( © IZ
o
k
7 i£ i
M3 6
7
# 0
gj^o b’ ^ 7
t 0
iz

0
b

0

1
iz
IZ
& 4 11
W
G
G tz
" L 0 H ^ £ 7^
y
IE
0
1
It
T
b
M
£'
Z
i
7 G
Tz zb
t jf f il t ro t
n
® ' (i is ii b
. b iz ± m ? iz
Y
5 © 7
1: m
a m b
A
^ £ 4 7 ft
^
/ il i it © Tz i^ ®3 r- m>
7? 4 $ 1
n 5 0 0
© p
E S & ^ © 5 tz 0
^
' Ml
r ©
» i’ a i' 3 2 ft' i S b «.■ fl » fe ® JM
O
7
4)
h 6
1 tz £
4 IZ 11 |Z
S Tz
f Z
5 6 y
M a £' Tz A I
G
7S
7 ©
Bi » L 6 i U £
S S
5
M
0
S
Tz
£
5
^
If
" 5 5 Z
"
£
4
g&
ZE
/<®
is » t
5 *? n r 6
w a
fl
#
Tz
#
K
I)
1
h
tM
f
Z
^
b7 + t M
ii 6 b o
h tz n
c 7 g
7 MM # '
I
77 6
4 0 T
^
• y 4i ft ^
n tz r < i
M i a 0 ii a p #
1
y
©
il
IM
*
E
Z
J
If
©
5
M.Z
Pft
tfc
^ 7
1
£
6 © 0 £ M
® t7 7
5 6 t Jl| 0
j
# 6 £ 5
' t*
6
7 b R 4 B
t> £1 '
7’
’ ? v
In
1;'
0 S
IZ
5
f 0 M
iz
M
T 7' #
M

y
1 b
t ± £' t
6
5
T 1: ® r Tz
' j® ^ 73
i ^ p iz / b t %
'
5
t>ng^®7lii©i^p-csi
Bq
^
1
1#
«
^H
<
#
fr
Hl

•^ ^ £ y 0
iE i jg
6
4s 11 0 m ^ I © - i£
a T tz ^ tt 4
7 T iz ^ M J:
©S'7
b ^ © 51 ' ^ v _u b il I T’ lb »U i f # K ^ #
SS
6g^7/)t(pyiRI^?§^7
tz ^ ;
tz
T
Hi ' li i M b
1
k
a
1
U
iz g ±
>5
° IE A K S
< g T U
B
6 1 ^ 7’ O . R

5
® £ iz e 7
ft A £
r
h ?8 't
b « K © 1; 0 $
? (1 ° i’ t;
n n 11 1' 73 t * t
®
M T T
A
'f
A H i
O
IL
T 4( N a
C t
Z
6 $ 5 5
I 7 © '
1^ #® Tz' £ r
®
t
i t A B
g
1
Z
a 0 t IZ 7
0
g £
£ A 1
©
1 ^

ft Ift

i

E

I

%

5

a

71

X

S

2

A

g
W

J J

4

7

E

A X 1
A H
M iz 7’
£ ^ 77 £t 1 4
A ^ © J

M
- b O' ’ 1 b \ 7
iB^i©^yii<6!)y^7
i iz ip ° I 4 o 4t
45 tt 1^ #
i a

I.
t

iz f
& 1 ts # 7 3£ R
11
iz
6
f iz
ih I
015’7'^1141^$^
Toh7^^o^^$$$


T & 7
i' i i)>
of

Page 7

-9.

Wednesday, June 23,

1954.
By GENICHI OHASHI

VANCOUVER BASEBALL.

Nisei Take Third Place,
Winning Three In a Row
The Vancouver JCCA “Niseis’’,
currently the hottest nine in the
Industrial Union, have beaten
every team in the loop at least
once this season. This distinction
was achieved with a 16-3 triumph
over Boilermakers on June 15 at
the Powell Grounds.
In chalking up their fifth win
in their last seven starts, the
"Niseis” wallbped three Boiler­
maker hurlers for a dozen hits,
including seven in the eleven-run
second frame which was featured
by Seichi Tahara’s two-run
homer. Tahara’s circuit clout was
the only extra-base blow of the
game for the JCCA crew.
Workhorse Ron Montgomery
was credited with his sixth win
in going the seven inning route
with a seven-hitter.
Boilermakers 020 100 0 3 7 2
"Niseis” 1(11)1 300 x 16 12 2
Delaire, Vickers (2), Paulunga
(2) and Keeley; Montgomery and
Oikawa, Okano (3).
* * *

Drop Western Bridge 5-1
The “Niseis” continued their
mastery over Western Bridge on
June 17 stopping them .5-1 for
their third straight victory to
take sole possession of third place
in the Industrial Union standings.
The JCCA nine now hold an even
win-loss record in sixteen games
and are only two games behind
the league-leading Longshoremen.
Johnnylnouye paced the “Ni­
seis” with two hits in three trips,
good foi- two runs batted in.
On the mound it was again Ron
Montgomery, who gave up only
five hits to win his fifth straightpitching assignment and his sev­
enth of the season.
“Niseis”
100 201 1 5 7 0
Western B.
000 100 0 1 5 1
Montgomery and Okano; Gurniak and Carolie.

Line Drives: The ‘‘Niseis’’
Booster Club is open to all local
residents, membership fee one
dollar. . . The Booster Club mem­
bership card entitled the holder
to a chance at a fifty-dollar prize
which will be drawn for later in
the season. . . In dropping the
Bridgemen 5-1, the JCCA crew
played their first errorless game.

Three Non-Title Bouts
For Yoshio Shirai in SA

Westerns Take 2nd Win
TOKYO. — World flyweight
In Three Weekend Tilts

champion Yoshio Shirai of Japan
is scheduled to fight three non­
title bouts in South America
this summer.
Shirai’s American manager. Dr.
Alvin Cahn, told newsmen the
Japanese boxer will leave Tokyo
sometime in July for two match­
es in Argentina and Brazil. Cahn
said all of the opponents have
not been named but one of them
definitely will be Pasqual Perez
of Argentina, tenth-ranking fly­
weight of the world.

Trinity Netters Prep for
International Tourney
In last week’s action in the
Inter-Church Tennis loop, the
Metro “A” team lost to Eaton
Memorial 2-1 on Tuesday. Gus
Hirano-George Ide salvaged the
only match, upsetting the strong
Gilmore-Toews duo, 4-6, 6-1, 6-4.
Mary Ebata-Chic Yanagisawa
dropped the ladies’ doubles in
three sets, losing the last one
7,-5. Toshi Takasaki-Yozy Yasui
were beaten 6-3, 6-4 by Joan Ster­
ling-Appleton in the mixed con­
test.
Only the men’s match was com­
pleted in “B” action on Tuesday,
as Nobby Kimura-Ben Kunihiro
were defeated 6-3, 10-8 by Ma­
son-Middleton of Eaton Memorial
on the Trinity courts. Wednesday
saw the completion of the June 9
match with St. Timothy’s. Rae
Kutsukake-Nancy Edamura were
beaten in the final set 6-4, as Hie
“B’s” lost the series 2-1.
All matches of Thursday, June
17, were rained out.
This week’s sked:
“A” — June 22 — St. JamesBond at Metro; June 24 — St.
Clements at Metro.
“B” — June 22 — Metro at St.
Timothy’s; June 24 — Metro at
St. Paul’s-Bloor.

International Tourney
The .Open Tennis Committee
chaired by Fuzzy Fujiwara has
worked hard, and is continuing to
do so, on the arrangements for
the International Tennis Tourna­
ment to be held in Toronto July
3-4.
The tentative plans call for
Cleveland to oppose Toronto on
Saturday, and Toronto to face
New York on Sunday. This new
system of team matches is ex­
pected to do away with the con­
fusion of previous years when
the intermingling of the Ameri­
can teams on both days resulted
in considerable mix-up. Fuzzy
Fujiwara will direct the matches.

Roy Shin and Sue Iwasaki are
directing arrangements for the
selection of a tournament queen
to be crowned at the dance. Other
committees have been chosen as
follows: reception: Mary Ebata,
Sue Iwasaki, Chic Yanagisawa,
and Toshi Takasaki; transporta­
tion: Yozy Yasui, Red Kitagawa,
Ben Kunihiro, and aYsu Nobuoka; reservations: Mary Ebata
and Roy Shin. Edzy Tsujimoto
will look after name cards for
the visitors.

Sister of Davis Cup Kamos
| Hoe Sai Gay | To Compete at Wimbledon
•:•

famous Chinese foods



£

69 Albert St,—Toronto

*

£
|

(at Elizabeth)
Telephone EM. 8-9817


*

$

Special attention given

•:•

£

to take out orders.

♦:♦

$ Open 12 noon to 2 a.m. ❖

TOKYO. — Sachiko Kamo, Ja­
pan and Asian tennis queen will
realize a life-long ambition when
she arrives in England for the
Wimbledon Championships. Miss
Kamo left here by BOAC plane
on June 11.

Officials of the Japan Lawn
Tennis Association said while
For Private and
J they do not expect Miss Kamo
to go all the way in the worldWedding Parties
। famous net matches, they think
her experience will be “immen­
sely valuable.”
“Miss Kamo should be able to
|
Chop Suey House
J learn many things even though
j
Open Noon to 3 a.m.
I she is the most outstanding wo­
J 131A Dundas St. W-, Toronto s man player we have ever pro­
|
PHONE EM. 8-2475
| duced,” said Takeo Mori, director
5 (ORDERS TO TAKE OUT) 2 of the JLTA. “She will have the
great responsibility of passing on
these things to Japanese tennis­
Day & Night | playing girls.”
$ City-Wide
Masanosuke Fukuda, Davis Cup
C Deliverv
LO. 5691 £
C
player in 1923, predicted Miss
4> Kamo would be one of the eight
QI
quarter-finalists if she has a
Flower Shop

break in the drawings.”
C
365 Roncesvalles Avenue
Toronto
“She is.an all-around player
with
not a single weakness,”
When It's Flowers
Fukuda said. “I personally be­
Scry It With Ours
^ Phone evenings & week-ends ^ lieve, however, that she was in
$
TOSHIE TAKASAKI
£ her peak form five years ago.
'■
WA. 1-0389
£ I would have liked to see her
play at Wimbledon then.”

!| Golden Dragon „ I

PAGE 7

THE NEW CANADIAN

One. win, one tie, and one loss resulted for Westerns in a busy
weekend for the West Toronto Senior Baseball League. The Nisei
team battled to a 1-1 tie with Industrials on Saturday afternoon, but
succumbed to league-leading Mahers' in an evening tilt, Sunday
action saw Westerns’ second victory as Brants were nipped 2-1.
Diminutive Tad Miura was out­
standing in the third stalemate of
the season between Westerns and
Industrial Lumber, He collected
three hits and pilfered two more
sacks. In the evening game.
KAMLOOPS. B. C. — Arrange­
Maher’s southpaw Cliff Lowcock ments were completed here retwirled a three-hitter as the first- centjy for the Waseda University
place Shoemen collected eight off baseball team to play its first
Westerns' Jimmy Rennie, X fine game in Canada at Kamloops at
pitching' chore by Walt
6:15 p.m. on Wednesday, June 30.
nuck gave Westerns their second
Manager Tanaka will head a
triumph of the season in the
party of 20 which is expected to
Sunday game. The speed of Tad
fly by CPA to Kamloops upon
Miura and Shig Akada played
arrival at Vancouver.
major offensive roles.
Earlier, the B.C. Athletic Round
Former Western pitcher Joe
Table
Society has also announced
Brown was the victim of his
that the Japanese ballplayers will
play in Vancouver on July 7. Fur­
ther games have been slated for
Seeks Entry of Judo
other B.C. centres.
In Olympic Games
The team is expected to play
ATHENS, Greece. — The International Olympic Committee later in Los Angelos and other
has postponed a decision on Ja­ centres on the. Pacific coast of
pan’s suggestion to add judo as the U.S.

Waseda Nine Plays
At Kamloops June 30

a voluntary sport in future Olym­
pics.
Japan has asked that their
native sport be given internation­
al recognition. The IOC post­
poned their decision until a meet­
ing in Paris, in May 1955. Deci­
sion on two other sports, arch­
ery, urged by Sweden and roller­
skating by Portugal, were also
held over for the Paris talk.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Hltruji Seki, on
occasion of marriage of daughter.
Mrs. C. Shimoda on occasion of
son's marriage.

Residence
2 Varta Driv»
MAfair 1385.

Andrew E. McKague,
Barri«t»r, Solpltor, Notary
Piibllo.
201 Northam Ontario Bldg.
330 Bay St.
(Corn«r Adelaida A Bay Stas
TOROttTC

Carnival at Christie
Changes Locations
Of Next Sunday Games
TORONTO. — Since a carnival
will arrive at Christie Pits this
Sunday, June 27, the sked for
the day’s Nisei Sunday League
games has been revised as fol­
lows:
At Riverdale Park: Giants vs.
Yamada Studio at 8:45; Royals
vs. Diamond Cleaners at 11:00.
At Stanley Park: Tigers vs.
Bussei at 9:00.

Miss Kamo, however, modestly
asserted: “I think it is a mistake
to call me an all-around player
because I do not have a single
strong point.”
She has a strong service, ex­ ,1
:
acting ground strokes both fore­ :
* *
hand and backhand, and her vol­ ::
ft
leying is of high order. If she has
any weakness, it is at the net.
co
ft
She is an indefatigable player
t G t
W
with a grim determination to win.
tc
fit
She is usually poker-faced, smil­
h
ing seldom when engaged in a
>> 2>
match.
Off the court, the 27-year old
National Singles champ is a dif­
ferent person, She is considered
to be taciturn, but once she gets
started, she talks freely. She is
of average physical build, at five
ft. two inches and 110 pounds.
Tennis experts say Mi^s Kamo
might have been an even better
player but for her “blank period” t
during the war. She was a stu­
dent throughout that period and
played little.
She comes from a remarkable
tennis family. Her two younger
214 LINE STREET
brothers, Reinin, 22, and Kosei,
LANSDALE, PENNA.
Branch Schpol:
21, are members of the present
208 8. Rotccmmon Ave.,
Davis Cup team which is to take
or Mexico next month in the
opening round of the North Ame­
4
rican. zone.
*A

I

Ofllce Phone:
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395

X
x
x

Various Chinese Foods

:

Shumai & Won Ton
92-A Elizabeth St., Toronto

:
i.

Welcome Japanese
Canadians
Hours 12 noon to 4 a.m.
Reservations: EM. 4-M35

I
x
1
X
X
i

w«Mw*44*MjWM*M*M*^WM*o*MfMW*4»A

i
x

2
EARN FROM
/
$200 TO $600 A WEEK

:
x
x
:

EVERY GRADUATE EMPLOYED

x

MORE SEXORS URGENTLY NEEDED
VETERAN APPROVED
LIVING ACCOMMODATIONS
OLDEST AND LARGEST SCHOOL

Write For Free Catalogue Today

"Reg. U.S. Pat. Off."

CHICK SEXING SCHOOL

A

Page 8

PAGE 8

THE

miiniiiiitiniiii]iniiii!iiiHHiiiiiimr

SOCIAL CALENDAR

flllllllllillllllllllllllilllHIIIIIIlllllllll

erd on a

JUNE

NEW CANADIAN

Good Crowd Despite
Chilly Weather
At Steveston Picnic

STEVESTON, B.C. — About
MARRIAGES
175 attended the annual picnic of
SHINOBU-TOGURI
[ the Steveston JC Community on
TORONTO. — The marriage of ? June 13 at Vancouver’s Second
Maki Rebecca, daughter of Mr. j Beach despite the cool weather
and Mrs. Tokizo Toguri, and Dr. | which prevailed all along the west
Roy Ryohei Shinobu, son of Mr. coast. The absence of high school
and Mrs. Saburo Shinobu, took I students cramming for exams,
place on June 19 at Trinity Unit­ i and fishermen preparing for the
ed'Church, with Dr. E. Crossley season was regrettably noted.
The outing, sponsored annually
Hunter officiating.
Reception followed at the Guild by the local Buddhist Sunday
School, included a program of
Inn, Scarborough.
races, and other competitive
1—Vancouver. Vancouver JCCA ENGAGEMENTS
games as orange-and-spoon, and
Community Picnic at Peace Arch.
VANCOUVER. — The engage­ banana-eating races which were
4—Vancouver. Maria Stella Club
ment
of Joan Aiko Konishi, enjoyed by all.
Annual Picnic and Dance (even­
daughter of Mr., and Mrs. Chojiro
ing) at Seymour Park.
Highlight of the outdoor gath­
4—Toronto. Toronto JCCA Com­ Konishi, to Gordon Shoji Imai, ering was a tug-of-war between
munity Picnic at Lynbrook Park.
second son of Mr. and
;
Mrs. U
the girls and the boys in which
Imai of Moose Jaw Sask., was the “weaker sex” upset the males
announced on June 12 at the three straight times.
Chungking Chop Suey.
Four busses had been’hired for
Baishakunins were Mr. and the 20-mile jaunt to the city.
Mrs. Bob Miyasaka.

27—Toronto. Japanese Anglican
Church Picnic at Lakeview Park.
Oshawa.
26—Toronto. Toronto JCCA Bazaar
at Church of All Nations from
7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
27—Toronto. Toronto Y.B.S. Picnic
at Lynbrook Park.
*
30—Toronto. Westerns Booster
Dance at U.N.F. Hall from 8 to
12:45 p.m.
30—Lethbridge. Lethbridge JCCA
Booster Dance at the Henderson
Lake Pavilion, from 9 p.m. to
1 a.m.

OBITUARY
TORIUMI
TORONTO. — Mrs. Kay Keiko
Toriumi (nee Chiba), wife of
George Shizuo Toriumi of Tor­
onto, passed away on June 21
following birth of a son. Funeral
service took place on June 22 at
the Holy Trinity Church offici­
ated by Rev. K. Imai.

Van. Maria Stella Club
To Hold July 4 Outing

Wednesday, Jun© 23, 1354.

Toronto JCCA to Hold
Bazaar This Saturday
TORONTO. — Under the spon­
sorship of the Toronto Chapter
JCCA, a bazaar will take place
this Saturday, June 26, at the i
1
Church of All Nations, 423 Queen
West, from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
The remnants of the goods dis- ■
played at the Japanese booths of ;
the recent International Trade 1
Fair were purchased by the JCCA j
to hold a benefit sale. One of the I
attractions will be cutrate prices
offered on a substantial amount'
of clothing material.

Family Service at
Queen St. United
TORONTO. — The semi-mon­
thly family service will take place
at Queen Street United Church
this Sunday, June 27, from 11
a.m. Guest preacher will be Rev.
Howard Norman, who will speak
on the theme, "Old and New
Wineskins in Japan.”

Tenrikyo Ministers of
Japan on World Tour

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

0. K. CLEANERS
10114 queen st. w.
For Pick-up and Delivery
Phone
EM. 8-6953

PRINTING

OF All DESCRIPTIONS

UBiAinctius. OTeddiny Lfncitaticni

HARRY S. KONDO
627 BAY STREET. TORONTO . EM. 8-976 8
Res. 20X4 BEVERLEY STREET . EM. 3 - 5OBI

I 1384% Queen W. — LA. 637S
f
Toronto, Ont.

TORONTO. — Rev. S. Naka­
Local JC’s
VANCOUVER.
yama, patriarch of the Tenrikyo
are reminded of the Maria Stella
Lucien C. Kurata
Church in Japan, and Rev. K.
A
A,
T.
KOBAYASHI
picnic slated for Sunday, July 4,
Barrister and Solicitor
Moroi, superintendent priest of
i
Notary Puhlie
at the Swedish Park (Seymour
I
the headquarters of the Tenrikyo
Agent for
Credit
Foncier Building
I
Park) on the north shore, west of
Church, visited Toronto early last
I
244
Bay
St.
(at
King),
1 SUN LIFE OF CANADA :
the Second Narrows Bridge. This week on the first leg of their
A
r
Toronto
locale is regarded one of the best
I
t
global trip.
P.O. Box 149
A,
Ph:
EM.
6.-0959
Res: LY. 3427 i
A
in the Vancouver district for out­
Mrs. Tomi Okura, head of the
Phone LY. 9250 mornings
:
Res. 139 Leigh Road
A
door gatherings.
1,
Tenrikyo-kai
of
Canada,
wel
­
ITO
Ai
A.
A full program has been pre­
KAMLOOPS, B.C
A.
Y
MONTREAL. — Yozaburo Ito, pared by the capable Maria Stella comed the party here. The two A
in his 65th year, passed away on executive. The -highlight of this ministers are being accompanied
by Mi's. Nakayama and her son. t
KEN HORI
Funeral service was
June lr
event will.be a five-team softball
& SPRING & SUMMER
The party left for the United
held at the Japanese United tournament. An outdoor platter
representative
States on completion of their
Church June IS officiated by
Casual Wear
dance will be held on the picnic Toronto visit. Their trip will take A
Bernardi-Mathews Ltd.
SLACKS, SPORTCOATS ii Rev. T. Komivama.
ground bowl after sunset.
them to South America and sub­ A
All newest fabrics
$ REAL ESTATE BROKERS
NISHIKAWA
Bus will leave St. Paul’s Hall
sequently to Europe.
A
v Cool summer tropicals
TORONTO. — Tsunejiro Ni­ at Dunlevy and Cordova Streets
1075 St. Clair Ave. W.
xMADE-TO-MEASURE
at
9:30
a.m.
Anyone
who
misses
shikawa,
in
his
84th
year,
passed
*
v
CORRECTION
TORONTO
away on June 16 at his home. this bus is urged to take the
The New Canadian apologizes
Funeral service was held on June Pacific Stage bus which leaves for any inconvenience caused by | Office OL. 7971 - Res. GL. 8914
V
20 at the Blake Funeral Home, the depot at Cambie and Duns- an error in the report of Van­
516 Manning Ave. - Tor
muir Streets every hour on the couver JCCA activities in the
officiated by Mr. M. Hokyoshi.
For Home Fittings
hour. Admission including the June 12 issue. The entire pro­
CALL ME. 6778 EVES.
For ibe Best in
dance
is 75 £
AWARDED MEDAL
gram is being sponsored by the
Floral Design & Sendee
local Vancouver chapter of the
MONTREAL. — At the comA
the provincial
JCCA,
not
techmencement
exercises
of
the
ASTRA FLORISTS
I
chapter.
nical school here recently, Akio
1778 EGLINTON AVE. W.
Omoto, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wedding Invitations
TORONTO, ONT.
HELP WANTED
Shohachi
Omoto, was awarded a
Card of Thanks
CARD
OF
THANKS
Phone Susan Tsuji
FUR BLOCKER .warted, a
:
1 silver medal and other prizes for
Letterheads
young man with some experience.
OR. 4940
Our most sincere thanks to
outstanding scholastic achieve­ Vogue Fur Co., 269 College St.,
Envelopes
City-wide delivery
ments. He stood second in a gra­ Toronto.
everyone who has been so kind
Handbills, Name Cards
:
Personal Attention to
duating class of 141) students.
FEMALE HELP WANTED
in so many ways during Mar­
EXPERTLY' DONE
Every Order
COUNTER-girl for west-end
ian’s illness. Your thought­
$the new Canadian
EVGS. Phone Susan
wiser than men dry cleaning store. Phone J U. i
• Women
fulness is appreciated more
479 Queen St. W.
2413
(Toronto).
EM. 3-4418
because I bey know less and un­
EM. 6-5005
than
words
can
express.
EXPERTENCED
P
R
E
S
S
E
R
derstand more.
*
WEDDINGS OUR
wanted immediately. Top wages.
Marian
and
Kyoto
Shigehiro.
SPECIALTY
Phone HO. 4246 during- the day,
GE. 8924 evenings. (Toronto).
FEMALE
OPERATOR
wanted.
Vogue
Fur
Co.,
269 Col­
H
lege St., Toronto.
EX PERIEN^
June 27, 1954
SER wanted for a new, modern
IMPORTERS & EXPORTERS
at LYNBROOK PARK
beauty shop. Phone OR. 1389.
Evening phone 6349 (Toronto).
MAN UFA CTURERS’ REPRESENTATIVES
Admission: 5(
Bus fare: $1.50
DOMESTIC HELP WANTED
GENERAL AGENTS & BROKERS
each occupant of car)
(Includes admission)
CAPABLE COOK 'GENERAL
Head Office
wanted for family of three. High­
For Reservations and Tickets
est wages. Private room. Phone
4869
Westmore
St., Montreal
PHONE GL. 9966 or OL. 1308
ST. S-3024 (Toronto).
Cable Address "CAJATRADE"
JAPANESE GIRL as mother’s
helper. Fond of children. Own
room. Willing’ to teach English
to a new Canadian. Phone BA.
l-0226_ (Toronto).
A
presents its
*
CAPABLE
girl
or
woman

wanted immediately for cottage
*
help. Lake Simcoe. Phone RE.
*
GENERAL INSURANCE
0520 (Toronto).
FOR RENT
ST. 8-7288
Phones
--------- I V
TWO UNFURNISHED rooms j •>
Wednesday,
June
30,
1954
*
1 j with sink. Phone LL. 5436 (Tor- | £
(EVE OF DOMINION DAY)
onto) after five.
ROOM & BOARD
i ❖
(On College west of Spadina)
ROOM AND BOARD wanted । X
by Nisei youth. Central location Ij[NG FROM S:00 TO 12:45 P.M.
preferred. Phone WA. 3-1612 i^
284-A TONOI (TKIIT, TORONTO

8
8
8

CLASSIFIED

Toronto Bussei Picnic

Western Booster Dance

CANADA-JAPAN TRADING CO, LTD,

The Bill Takeda Agency

Immediate and best
coverages for vour
automobile insurance