Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
SATURDAY, MAY 21,
VOL. 18 — NO. 39
1955
TORONTO, ONT.
j Manitoba Willing to Assume
National JCCA Headquarters
iates & doings
(and other dull chattel)
By MWRGIE^
W1NNIPEG. — The Manitoba financial feasibility of the proj JCCA is willing to assume the ject could be examined.
MORE HAPPY PEOPLE: At
Financial statement showed
I responsibility* of the National
the University of Toronto, S. Sato
graduated in 4th year architec
JCCA headquarters, according to cash on hand of $1,743. The Outture, while G. K. Okamura com
the May issue of The Outlook, ook publication had a balance
pleted his 1st year of same, in
on hand of $536.
i monthly publication of the MJ4th year civil engineering, R. A.
| CCA.
Kuwahara graduated with hon
| “After much discussion” at the
or- R. Y. Fujii passed in chem
first meeting for the new exec
ical engineering, J. M. Toguri
utive, it was decided that Mani
completed metallurgical engineer
toba could "take it on for the
ing with honors, and M. Y. Hori
next term.”
uchi received her school of nurs
“A committee will be formed
ing degree. At the College of
|
to
appoint an Executive secretary
Education, R. K. Takimoto -gra
Toronto police court magistrate
and some of the more prominent
duated in modern systems. In the
T.
S. Elmore was told last Tues
citizens will be approached to
U. of T evening business classes,
serve on the National Executive days at least $10,000 in jewelry
human problems of administra
has disappeared
mysteriously
Committee,” said the report.
tion was completed by M. Naka
during the past year from the
mura and A. M. Arai, who also
—JAPAN AIR LINES Photo
Mark Koga was returned as Canadian Jewelry Products Co.,
finished corporation finance. The
president. Other officers: I. Hi Lombard St.
Ontario College of Art grads
rayama, vice-president; K. Mori
This was revealed when an emincluded Tadayoshi Taniishi who
ta, corresponding secretary; G. ployme of the company, Joseph
received honors in 4th year ad
Nishikihada, recording secretary ; Ikeda, 31, of Bernard Ave., plead
vertising art, and David Koba
PALO ALTO, Calif.—Japanese Ken Fukunaga, Nisei from Salt H. Matsuo, treasurer; K. Okano, ed guilty to theft of $250 in
yashi (who designed the New
public relations; J. Okimura, R. jewelry7 from the company7.
Canadian’s 1953 Christmas issue actress Mitsuko Kimura (shown Lake City, says she will retire
Kaita, H. Kuwada, K. Shimizu,
cover) graduated with honors in above on arrival here May 8, from the screen after the kiss.
Ikeda, working for the com
She first came into public at J. Suzuki and T. Nakai, social
3rd year general design, while admiring flower lei worn by7
committee; Bill Takeuchi, sports pany7 fox' the past year and a
Juneya Oishi received 1st year Mike Loring) is now in Holly- tention when she was Life mag
azine’s cover girl for an issue convenor; J. Okimura, Junior half, was remanded to May7 25
honors. At McMaster U, Frank wo. d, where she will give the
fox* sentence and warned by7 the
on Japan. Columbia Pictures JCCA.
Watanabe graduated with honors first and last kiss of her film
magistrate he should “come back
press agent managed to get con
Assisting Jack Okimura, with
in 4th year chemistry . . . and career to Aldo Ray in Columbia’s
siderable publicity7 over the “no the Junior JCCA will be I. Hira then and tell us where the rest
a correction from last week’s list “Sergeant .O’Reilly” (renamed
kissing” incident on the news yama, Y. Abe, Fred Matsuo, T. of it is.”
of Ryerson grads: it was Kaz G. from “The Gentle Wolfhound”),
“I would go so far as to say
Mitani, S. Sato, H. Hirose, S.
Osaka who graduated in elec which was shot entirely7 in Japan, wire sexwices.
Fujii, K. Okano, Geo. Fukumura that at least $10,000 ixx goods has
tronic technology, not Mas G. except for the kiss.
been missing ovex* the last year,”
The 22-year-old actress refused Kase to Replace Sawada and Elmer Oike.
Osaka . . .
company7 owner Harvey7 Freed
Others elected to the executive
Our westcoast correspondent to kiss Ray during the shooting, At UN Observer Post
committee were T. Mitani, Y. man told the court.
Genny Ohashi finally found his claiming it was against Japanese
Two detectives found what they
TOKYO.—The Japanese gov Abe, M. Watanabe, S. Sato, Y.
way back to Vancouver on May tradition and custom. An urgent
estimated
as $250 worth in Ike
ernment tentatively7- appointed Tsutsumi, T. Amadatsu, T. Nakai,
14 after wandering down through appeal from Hollywood caused
foreign office adviser Shunichi Clare Fukumura, F. Yahiro, S. da’s home. Detectives said they
sunny California ... he reports her to chang’e her mind.
Miss Kimura, ■who recently7 wed Kase last week to relieve Am Matsuo, Fred Matsuo and ' Geo. found stolexx jewelry in “at
that the Maria Stella Club of
least 40 parts of the house.”
bassador Renzo Sawada as Ja Fukumura.
Vancouver held its most success
pan’s observer at the United
Detectives said Ikeda told them
ful dance of 1955 on May 13 at
The Building Committee fox* a
Nations.
he
had intended to use the jewel
| community7 centre was asked by
the Hastings Aud with 200 at
Kase, a veteran diplomat who
the meeting to draw up tentative ry as prizes fox* a “young peo
tending . . . the Stellites will be
accompanied Foreign Minister
architectural plans and to es ples’ organization.”
holding their annual picnic on
Mamoru Shigemitsu for the sign
timate the cost in order that the
Neal A. Hisa, charged with
July 10 at Bowen Island . . .
ing of Japan’s surrender aboard
receiving 29 sets of cuff links
Mrs. Frances Miyashita has start
the battleship Missouri in 1945,
and tie bars, stolen from the
ed a gift shop at her husband’s
must have the cabinet s approval @ Take care of the sense and the
same company, was remanded to
establishment at 394 Powell,
LOS ANGELES. —Plans for before he becomes the official sounds will' take care of
May7 25 for trial.
1 ancouver, importing such items the establishment of a Japanese
themselves.
UN observer.
as ningyos, music boxes, and college and cultural center re
photo albums from Japan . . . ceived further support at a meet- WIN MIN THAN:
In Taber, Alberta, a Mother’s ing held recently7.
Day Social was held by the Taber
Approximately 30 persons were
Sunday School on May 8, with present at the Sunday7 afternoon
about 90 in attendance-. . . con meeting called by7 Taemitsu Sugigratulatory* speeches to the moth machi and chaired by Meijiro
ers were made by ’ Misses Shi Sato and Matsunosuke Oi. These
not show immediately, but in 10
TOKYO.—Win Min Than, the and particularly7 its children.
mozawa and Nagai . . • .
30 persons compose the prepara
She said she was amazed at or 20 years.”
Here in Tee-Oh, the tennis tion committee of the center brown-eyed Burmese beauty who
The Burmese actress, who
the type of programs children
crowd at last Friday’s Sweater which will officially7 be called created a sensation in her ±ixst
speaks
with a perfect British ac
are allowed to see and said
Dance tripped the light fantastic Japanese Cultux*al Institute of movie said recently7 that life is
“too fast” in the United States some of them were “simply cent, said she turned down all
(^ell, fantastic, anyway) to the America.
the Hollywood offers she re
and television is “completely un awful.”
trains of the Canadian Barn
The proposed Centex* is to be a necessary.”
The young actress, who became ceived.
Dance and Dip and Dive, after
Impressed by7 “how modern
mexxxorial to the Issei pioneers
She condemned television and a star overnight in British film
s’uing through a couple of films
and will house many7 departments
“Purple Plain” with Gregory Tokyo is,” she has nevertheless
on tennis . . . and I still haven’t including flower* arrangements, said she would do everything pos
sible to keep it out of Burma. Peck, said comics and television stayed close W her rooms in To
figured out why* it was called the
tea ceremony7, bonsai, fencing,
are what disturbed her most kyo’s plush Imperial Hotel. She
The 23-year-old actress, who
'-heater Dance . . . Also on Fri judo, as well as courses in the
has not toured Japanese studios,
about the U.S.
day, the Toronto AYPA Social
mav never make another picture,
Mothers like it (TV) because seen any7 Japanese pictures, or
Japanese language.
is visiting Toky*o with her hus
"tiraciea only seven hardy memThe target set by7 the commit
they7 can put their children in met any Japanese film stars.
^s from Toronto, while 15 ar
band after a two-month tour of
Asked if the Burmese were still
tee, to fulfill this undertaking is
front of the television and not
rived from Hamilton . . . On
the U.S. that included many7 TV
resentful
because of Japan’s
$135,000 which was considered
worry about them,” she said,
^urday night, the Mixed Major
appearances.
the minimum. To raise this huge
“but some of the programs are World War II acts, she replied
^ ing League’s Dance at HagBut she told the United Press
like a British diplomat:
sum,- a-plands being discussed to
simply awful.”
rn.cn * Hall featured a couple of
j in an interview that she is “ex“Do the Japanese still resent
solicit $100 subscriptions either
She added that “the human
; tremelv worried” about the effect
^Panese songs by a very shy*
in cash or in $10 monthly* install
mind is delicate. The effect may the Americans?”
| television will have on America
(Continued on Page Seven)
ments.
Toronto Nisei Admits
$250 Jewelry Theft
In $10,000 Loss
A Long Trip for a Kiss
Los Angeles Japanese
Discuss Project
For Cultural Institute
Burmese Screen Beauty Very Critical
Of American Ways of Life, Television
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
SATURDAY, MAY 21,
VOL. 18 — NO. 39
1955
TORONTO, ONT.
j Manitoba Willing to Assume
National JCCA Headquarters
iates & doings
(and other dull chattel)
By MWRGIE^
W1NNIPEG. — The Manitoba financial feasibility of the proj JCCA is willing to assume the ject could be examined.
MORE HAPPY PEOPLE: At
Financial statement showed
I responsibility* of the National
the University of Toronto, S. Sato
graduated in 4th year architec
JCCA headquarters, according to cash on hand of $1,743. The Outture, while G. K. Okamura com
the May issue of The Outlook, ook publication had a balance
pleted his 1st year of same, in
on hand of $536.
i monthly publication of the MJ4th year civil engineering, R. A.
| CCA.
Kuwahara graduated with hon
| “After much discussion” at the
or- R. Y. Fujii passed in chem
first meeting for the new exec
ical engineering, J. M. Toguri
utive, it was decided that Mani
completed metallurgical engineer
toba could "take it on for the
ing with honors, and M. Y. Hori
next term.”
uchi received her school of nurs
“A committee will be formed
ing degree. At the College of
|
to
appoint an Executive secretary
Education, R. K. Takimoto -gra
Toronto police court magistrate
and some of the more prominent
duated in modern systems. In the
T.
S. Elmore was told last Tues
citizens will be approached to
U. of T evening business classes,
serve on the National Executive days at least $10,000 in jewelry
human problems of administra
has disappeared
mysteriously
Committee,” said the report.
tion was completed by M. Naka
during the past year from the
mura and A. M. Arai, who also
—JAPAN AIR LINES Photo
Mark Koga was returned as Canadian Jewelry Products Co.,
finished corporation finance. The
president. Other officers: I. Hi Lombard St.
Ontario College of Art grads
rayama, vice-president; K. Mori
This was revealed when an emincluded Tadayoshi Taniishi who
ta, corresponding secretary; G. ployme of the company, Joseph
received honors in 4th year ad
Nishikihada, recording secretary ; Ikeda, 31, of Bernard Ave., plead
vertising art, and David Koba
PALO ALTO, Calif.—Japanese Ken Fukunaga, Nisei from Salt H. Matsuo, treasurer; K. Okano, ed guilty to theft of $250 in
yashi (who designed the New
public relations; J. Okimura, R. jewelry7 from the company7.
Canadian’s 1953 Christmas issue actress Mitsuko Kimura (shown Lake City, says she will retire
Kaita, H. Kuwada, K. Shimizu,
cover) graduated with honors in above on arrival here May 8, from the screen after the kiss.
Ikeda, working for the com
She first came into public at J. Suzuki and T. Nakai, social
3rd year general design, while admiring flower lei worn by7
committee; Bill Takeuchi, sports pany7 fox' the past year and a
Juneya Oishi received 1st year Mike Loring) is now in Holly- tention when she was Life mag
azine’s cover girl for an issue convenor; J. Okimura, Junior half, was remanded to May7 25
honors. At McMaster U, Frank wo. d, where she will give the
fox* sentence and warned by7 the
on Japan. Columbia Pictures JCCA.
Watanabe graduated with honors first and last kiss of her film
magistrate he should “come back
press agent managed to get con
Assisting Jack Okimura, with
in 4th year chemistry . . . and career to Aldo Ray in Columbia’s
siderable publicity7 over the “no the Junior JCCA will be I. Hira then and tell us where the rest
a correction from last week’s list “Sergeant .O’Reilly” (renamed
kissing” incident on the news yama, Y. Abe, Fred Matsuo, T. of it is.”
of Ryerson grads: it was Kaz G. from “The Gentle Wolfhound”),
“I would go so far as to say
Mitani, S. Sato, H. Hirose, S.
Osaka who graduated in elec which was shot entirely7 in Japan, wire sexwices.
Fujii, K. Okano, Geo. Fukumura that at least $10,000 ixx goods has
tronic technology, not Mas G. except for the kiss.
been missing ovex* the last year,”
The 22-year-old actress refused Kase to Replace Sawada and Elmer Oike.
Osaka . . .
company7 owner Harvey7 Freed
Others elected to the executive
Our westcoast correspondent to kiss Ray during the shooting, At UN Observer Post
committee were T. Mitani, Y. man told the court.
Genny Ohashi finally found his claiming it was against Japanese
Two detectives found what they
TOKYO.—The Japanese gov Abe, M. Watanabe, S. Sato, Y.
way back to Vancouver on May tradition and custom. An urgent
estimated
as $250 worth in Ike
ernment tentatively7- appointed Tsutsumi, T. Amadatsu, T. Nakai,
14 after wandering down through appeal from Hollywood caused
foreign office adviser Shunichi Clare Fukumura, F. Yahiro, S. da’s home. Detectives said they
sunny California ... he reports her to chang’e her mind.
Miss Kimura, ■who recently7 wed Kase last week to relieve Am Matsuo, Fred Matsuo and ' Geo. found stolexx jewelry in “at
that the Maria Stella Club of
least 40 parts of the house.”
bassador Renzo Sawada as Ja Fukumura.
Vancouver held its most success
pan’s observer at the United
Detectives said Ikeda told them
ful dance of 1955 on May 13 at
The Building Committee fox* a
Nations.
he
had intended to use the jewel
| community7 centre was asked by
the Hastings Aud with 200 at
Kase, a veteran diplomat who
the meeting to draw up tentative ry as prizes fox* a “young peo
tending . . . the Stellites will be
accompanied Foreign Minister
architectural plans and to es ples’ organization.”
holding their annual picnic on
Mamoru Shigemitsu for the sign
timate the cost in order that the
Neal A. Hisa, charged with
July 10 at Bowen Island . . .
ing of Japan’s surrender aboard
receiving 29 sets of cuff links
Mrs. Frances Miyashita has start
the battleship Missouri in 1945,
and tie bars, stolen from the
ed a gift shop at her husband’s
must have the cabinet s approval @ Take care of the sense and the
same company, was remanded to
establishment at 394 Powell,
LOS ANGELES. —Plans for before he becomes the official sounds will' take care of
May7 25 for trial.
1 ancouver, importing such items the establishment of a Japanese
themselves.
UN observer.
as ningyos, music boxes, and college and cultural center re
photo albums from Japan . . . ceived further support at a meet- WIN MIN THAN:
In Taber, Alberta, a Mother’s ing held recently7.
Day Social was held by the Taber
Approximately 30 persons were
Sunday School on May 8, with present at the Sunday7 afternoon
about 90 in attendance-. . . con meeting called by7 Taemitsu Sugigratulatory* speeches to the moth machi and chaired by Meijiro
ers were made by ’ Misses Shi Sato and Matsunosuke Oi. These
not show immediately, but in 10
TOKYO.—Win Min Than, the and particularly7 its children.
mozawa and Nagai . . • .
30 persons compose the prepara
She said she was amazed at or 20 years.”
Here in Tee-Oh, the tennis tion committee of the center brown-eyed Burmese beauty who
The Burmese actress, who
the type of programs children
crowd at last Friday’s Sweater which will officially7 be called created a sensation in her ±ixst
speaks
with a perfect British ac
are allowed to see and said
Dance tripped the light fantastic Japanese Cultux*al Institute of movie said recently7 that life is
“too fast” in the United States some of them were “simply cent, said she turned down all
(^ell, fantastic, anyway) to the America.
the Hollywood offers she re
and television is “completely un awful.”
trains of the Canadian Barn
The proposed Centex* is to be a necessary.”
The young actress, who became ceived.
Dance and Dip and Dive, after
Impressed by7 “how modern
mexxxorial to the Issei pioneers
She condemned television and a star overnight in British film
s’uing through a couple of films
and will house many7 departments
“Purple Plain” with Gregory Tokyo is,” she has nevertheless
on tennis . . . and I still haven’t including flower* arrangements, said she would do everything pos
sible to keep it out of Burma. Peck, said comics and television stayed close W her rooms in To
figured out why* it was called the
tea ceremony7, bonsai, fencing,
are what disturbed her most kyo’s plush Imperial Hotel. She
The 23-year-old actress, who
'-heater Dance . . . Also on Fri judo, as well as courses in the
has not toured Japanese studios,
about the U.S.
day, the Toronto AYPA Social
mav never make another picture,
Mothers like it (TV) because seen any7 Japanese pictures, or
Japanese language.
is visiting Toky*o with her hus
"tiraciea only seven hardy memThe target set by7 the commit
they7 can put their children in met any Japanese film stars.
^s from Toronto, while 15 ar
band after a two-month tour of
Asked if the Burmese were still
tee, to fulfill this undertaking is
front of the television and not
rived from Hamilton . . . On
the U.S. that included many7 TV
resentful
because of Japan’s
$135,000 which was considered
worry about them,” she said,
^urday night, the Mixed Major
appearances.
the minimum. To raise this huge
“but some of the programs are World War II acts, she replied
^ ing League’s Dance at HagBut she told the United Press
like a British diplomat:
sum,- a-plands being discussed to
simply awful.”
rn.cn * Hall featured a couple of
j in an interview that she is “ex“Do the Japanese still resent
solicit $100 subscriptions either
She added that “the human
; tremelv worried” about the effect
^Panese songs by a very shy*
in cash or in $10 monthly* install
mind is delicate. The effect may the Americans?”
| television will have on America
(Continued on Page Seven)
ments.
Toronto Nisei Admits
$250 Jewelry Theft
In $10,000 Loss
A Long Trip for a Kiss
Los Angeles Japanese
Discuss Project
For Cultural Institute
Burmese Screen Beauty Very Critical
Of American Ways of Life, Television
Page 2
THE
PAGE 2
The New Canadian I
Published Wednesdav and Saturdav each week *
as a medium of expression and news outlet among f
those of Japanese origin in Canada ;
Henry 0. Moritsugu _ ________________ Editor <
Takaichi Umezuki ..„-- Japanese Section Editor j
Ken Mori ----------------.................. ------ Advertising j
Authorized second class matter, Post Office ■
Department, Ottawa. Subscription, payable in '
advance, $6 per year. Office hours, Mon.-Fri.
S.30-5:30; Sat., 9-12 noon.
EM. 6-5005 — 479 Queen St. W., Toronto, Ont.
How ilioiit a Statement?
With the Quebec chapter’s term as
host for the National JCCA office end
ing August 30, the question of head
quarters location is “hanging fire”.
Nothing tangible (nor theoretical, for
that matter) as to the immediate future
of the organization has reached the pub
lic in more than three months. The oper
ations of the current National headquar
ters seem to be at a standstill.
Montreal is in a difficult position.
With provincial chapters inactive or
non-communicative, the national exec
utive cannot make decisions that affect
all chapters or require their cooperation.
Perhaps we should add, though, that
National has been too timid in some rela
tively minor projects within the past
year to use the public funds which rest
in the JCCA treasury.
While it is easy to attach blame to a
national executive that neither acts nor
talks about its problems, perhaps we
■should be more concerned with studying*
(on the basis of dwindling support) the
need for a JCCA cause. If members in
the active positions of the organization
do not possess leadership abilities, that
is not entirely their fault. And if the
cause is supported neither by the gen
eral membership nor by the “active”
members, it seems logical to assume that
there is no cause. An examination and
re-evaluation of the present JCCA status
is in order.
Survival or disbandment is the ques
tion facing the Japanese Canadian Cit
izens Association, once an influential (if
at times shaky) organization whose
member Nisei took pride in its name. If
National allows the current inaction to
continue, the most authoritative (when
properly handled) voice of the Japa
nese Canadians may die.
At least Ontario chapter and prob
ably B.C. would air their protests if Na
tional JCCA were to collapse this fall
without explanation. Weaker sisters Al
berta and Manitoba will no doubt re
main silent. Recent indications from Al
berta are that the provincial structure
there has crumbled. Manitoba, whose
provincial and Winnipeg local chapter
function as a unit, continues to struggle
with a personnel problem. Meanwhile
at Montreal, the Quebec chapter ap
pears to have an enthused executive
membership in its local-provincial joint
setup which is separate from the -Na
tional executive.
TORIC OPTICAL
H'
NEW
Saturday, May 21, 1955
CANADIAN
ON THE ROAD: Genny Ohashi
Our Westcoast Correspondent Mixes Facts and Figures
With Some Random Observations on Sunny California
Vancouver
IT LAST I've found time to
write about my recent trip
down the Pacific coast of the
United States. California, and
principally Los Angeles will be
topics of my discussion here.
The second largest state in
the union, California is a land of
extreme geographical contrasts.
Here are the highest and lowest
points in the U.S., with Mt. Whit
ney at an altitude of 14,500 feet,
and Death Valley sitting 280 feet
below sea level. 'Extreme heat of
the desert (110 degrees on the
Mojave on May 5) contrasts with
the perpetual ice and snow of
high mountain areas; arid waste
lands and abundantly fertile
farmlands are both part of this
state.
Motoring in California is al
luring. The variety of scenery
and points of interest that can
be seen on a day’s car- drive is
limitless: sandy beaches, high
cliffs, rolling surf, harbors, fish
eries . . . sand dunes, wild flow
ers, date groves, cactus gardens,
ghost towns . . . rolling vineyards,
truck gardens, orange groves,
missions . . . mountains, lakes,
ski resorts, oil wells, cities, Latin
and Oriental settlements . . .
movie lots, radio stations, TV
studios, and lots more, too!
40,000 residents of Japanese
descent are among two million
people who scurry about on a
451 square mile plot called Los
Angeles. In many ways more
than one city, LA is oil town,
farm town, trade and banking
centre, railroad terminal, fifth
largest industrial centre in the
USA and motion picture capital
of the world.
The much talked-about Li’l
Tokio of Los Angeles is located
on the southeast corner of the
downtown area: East First St.,
East Second Street and San
Pedro. The Nipponese sector has
everything in Nisei enterprises:
real estate agency, hotel, barber
shop, movie theatre, sukiyaki
house, pharmacy, cafes, news
paper offices, and many more.
For night-clubbers, “Ginza girls”
appear nightly with the Miyako
Hotel Trio at the Ginza Sukiyaki
on East First.
What is urgent today is com
munication with the public on
the problems of National. We ap
preciate that the present status
may be hard to define in view of
lack of inter-chapter communi
cation, but let's share the prob
lems. The public, whose hardearned funds are long invested in
JCCA, will take interest if it
knows what's troubling the Nat
ional JCCA. All of us demand to
know what's going- on!
The Miyako Hotel houses the
Southern California office of the
JACL as well as the Pacific Cit
izen, official JACL newspaper.
Here I had the pleasure of meet
ing Tats Kushida, SoCal JACL
Regional Director and PC 'bus
iness manager.
Further notes on LA: 70 play
grounds and parks offer every
type of relaxation imaginable,
. . . a striking phenomenon inone of the parks is the La Brea
Tai’ pits, where* the tar which
trapped prehistoric monsters still
bubbles ... in regard to traffic,
you haven’t seen anything until
you visit 7th and Broadway . . .
it’s said 60,000 autos and 450,000
pedestrians pass this corner every
24 hours . . .
gOLLYWOOD is located midway
between the Los Angeles business section and the beautiful
Pacific beaches, on the southern
slope, of the Santa Monica Moun
tains. While sight-seeing was
banned inside the movie studios,
I was able to observe a TV pro
duction, Hollywood being west
coast capital of the Radio and
TV industries as well as film
centre.
Grauman’s Chinese Theatre,
one of the outstanding landmarks
of Hollywood Boulevard and
scene of the super-colossal pre
mieres, had a cement courtyard
splattered with the impressions
of footprints and other identify
ing trade marks of the stars,
past and present . . . Griffith
Observatory in Hollywood is a
striking landmark whose plane
tarium, museum and lectures of
fer the layman some insight into
the celestial mysteries.
Pasadena, Beverly Hills and
Glendale are known for their
attractive
homes.
Pasadena’s
Rose Bowl, which hosts the an
nual New Year’s football game,
sees many other attractions dur
ing the year as well. The Califor
nia Institute of Technology in
Pasadena is one of the foremost
of American institutions devoted
to technical education and re
search. Pasadena is also the win
ter home of millionaires.
Santa Monica, probably the
most popular of the Southern
California beaches, is a few min
utes drive from Los Angeles
Westwood.
Nowhere in the North Ameri
can continent can be found the
diversity of climate, scenery and
activities which centre on Los
Angeles and vicinity. This writer
would agree with Angelenos who
say LA is not only the climatic
capital of the USA but the yearTound playground for millions.
1
thar she blows! !
(J column dedicated to facts and footnotes I
maybe and mayhem} (
By T. M. K.
“Ask not for whom the bell tolls,
it tolls for me and thee!”
__
EACH OF US dies a little in another’s deatheach of us is shamed a little in another’s
shame. The punishment in ancient Sparta was
not for the offense but for being caught. Today
the public mores is such that only those who are
caught and publicly denounced are guilty, while
those whose petty offenses and greater ones 2:0
undiscovered are thought to be ‘playing it smart’
and envied by others. Who among us does not
at one time or another remember an occasion
when our one thought was: “What they don’t
know won’t hurt them!” Or, “What’s one little
item among so many?” “I’m entitled to what
I can pick up on the side.” Yet who has not paid,
and paid dearly, in loss of integrity, self-respect ?
The ebb and flow of the tides wear away the
toughest rocks; and the single but persistent
drop of -water will eventually weaken the hardest
ground until it breaks. Thus the smallest weak
ness in humanity can -wither the strongest.
Atheists, communists, and spiritual illiterates
scoff at what they call the namby-pamby doctrine
of love, the central Christian doctrine. They point
at those so-called Christians whose only doctrine
seems to be hate. Alas for the darkness in our
hearts and minds! Only in our moments of despair
do we realize that a -great love outside of us
elevates us when we hit the bottom. Those who
know about that infinite love cling to it, for its
grip is all the more tender when we weep, and
all the stronger when we grovel in abjection.
Because there is that infinite love, there' is jus
tice, and where there is justice, there is mercy.
This theme has never been explained to the
Nan sei in any satisfactory way. Once it is under
stood, it is as if the limited mind (so full of our
self-importance, our ignorances and prejudices)
were opened to the sunlight, and illumined by
the divine that is sub-strata and the supra-strata
of all our life. Then conflict ends to give way to
a steady growth. The pitiful Marxian philosophy
of conflict which has taken advantage of man’s
selfish concern with his own material self is
shown up for its barren-ness.
JUSTICE there must be, and mercy.
We cannot judge others -without giving judg
ment on ourselves, because we, as humans with
human nature, express ourselves more truly than
we usually realize. Our judgment is conditioned
by what we are, and we are not God. The best
judgment is that which is tempered by love, and
that love be God.
There is something ugly and unhealthy in the
scornful attitude of too many Nisei who have
been ‘browned off’ by Christian churches, or the
frailties of Christians. The causes of that attitude
can be traced and understood. The true Buddhist
is a whole lot more religious than many a
nominal Christian. But Buddhist or under-done
Christian, the inquiring mind must reach beyond
the facade foi' the truth. And that reaching is
the exercise we all need. Only when we limber
up from that exercise can we initiate the energy
to distingush between what is good for us and
what is bad.
Therefore let those who scoff be thankful they
can still learn humility, and let those who con
demn be shamed into forgiveness unto the day
they themselves will need mercy. So be it.
The HAMILTON J.C.C.A. Presents
Distinctive
Floral .Arrangements
OPTOMETRISTS
Wail Flowers
Complete Care
tJ
For Your Eyes
I
118 W. HASTINGS ST.
in
JON ONODERA
A VARIETY CONCERT
Saturday, May 28, 1955
From 7 :00 p. m.
M-W»ffi#i:St
VANCOUVER, B.C.
|
Proprietor
at St. Stephen’s Hall
Barton at Mary St.
ADMISSION: adults, $1.25, children, 50c
HU. 9-4654 - BA. 1-4374
(Residence)
i
(Business)
i
i
540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
Toronto
PAGE 2
The New Canadian I
Published Wednesdav and Saturdav each week *
as a medium of expression and news outlet among f
those of Japanese origin in Canada ;
Henry 0. Moritsugu _ ________________ Editor <
Takaichi Umezuki ..„-- Japanese Section Editor j
Ken Mori ----------------.................. ------ Advertising j
Authorized second class matter, Post Office ■
Department, Ottawa. Subscription, payable in '
advance, $6 per year. Office hours, Mon.-Fri.
S.30-5:30; Sat., 9-12 noon.
EM. 6-5005 — 479 Queen St. W., Toronto, Ont.
How ilioiit a Statement?
With the Quebec chapter’s term as
host for the National JCCA office end
ing August 30, the question of head
quarters location is “hanging fire”.
Nothing tangible (nor theoretical, for
that matter) as to the immediate future
of the organization has reached the pub
lic in more than three months. The oper
ations of the current National headquar
ters seem to be at a standstill.
Montreal is in a difficult position.
With provincial chapters inactive or
non-communicative, the national exec
utive cannot make decisions that affect
all chapters or require their cooperation.
Perhaps we should add, though, that
National has been too timid in some rela
tively minor projects within the past
year to use the public funds which rest
in the JCCA treasury.
While it is easy to attach blame to a
national executive that neither acts nor
talks about its problems, perhaps we
■should be more concerned with studying*
(on the basis of dwindling support) the
need for a JCCA cause. If members in
the active positions of the organization
do not possess leadership abilities, that
is not entirely their fault. And if the
cause is supported neither by the gen
eral membership nor by the “active”
members, it seems logical to assume that
there is no cause. An examination and
re-evaluation of the present JCCA status
is in order.
Survival or disbandment is the ques
tion facing the Japanese Canadian Cit
izens Association, once an influential (if
at times shaky) organization whose
member Nisei took pride in its name. If
National allows the current inaction to
continue, the most authoritative (when
properly handled) voice of the Japa
nese Canadians may die.
At least Ontario chapter and prob
ably B.C. would air their protests if Na
tional JCCA were to collapse this fall
without explanation. Weaker sisters Al
berta and Manitoba will no doubt re
main silent. Recent indications from Al
berta are that the provincial structure
there has crumbled. Manitoba, whose
provincial and Winnipeg local chapter
function as a unit, continues to struggle
with a personnel problem. Meanwhile
at Montreal, the Quebec chapter ap
pears to have an enthused executive
membership in its local-provincial joint
setup which is separate from the -Na
tional executive.
TORIC OPTICAL
H'
NEW
Saturday, May 21, 1955
CANADIAN
ON THE ROAD: Genny Ohashi
Our Westcoast Correspondent Mixes Facts and Figures
With Some Random Observations on Sunny California
Vancouver
IT LAST I've found time to
write about my recent trip
down the Pacific coast of the
United States. California, and
principally Los Angeles will be
topics of my discussion here.
The second largest state in
the union, California is a land of
extreme geographical contrasts.
Here are the highest and lowest
points in the U.S., with Mt. Whit
ney at an altitude of 14,500 feet,
and Death Valley sitting 280 feet
below sea level. 'Extreme heat of
the desert (110 degrees on the
Mojave on May 5) contrasts with
the perpetual ice and snow of
high mountain areas; arid waste
lands and abundantly fertile
farmlands are both part of this
state.
Motoring in California is al
luring. The variety of scenery
and points of interest that can
be seen on a day’s car- drive is
limitless: sandy beaches, high
cliffs, rolling surf, harbors, fish
eries . . . sand dunes, wild flow
ers, date groves, cactus gardens,
ghost towns . . . rolling vineyards,
truck gardens, orange groves,
missions . . . mountains, lakes,
ski resorts, oil wells, cities, Latin
and Oriental settlements . . .
movie lots, radio stations, TV
studios, and lots more, too!
40,000 residents of Japanese
descent are among two million
people who scurry about on a
451 square mile plot called Los
Angeles. In many ways more
than one city, LA is oil town,
farm town, trade and banking
centre, railroad terminal, fifth
largest industrial centre in the
USA and motion picture capital
of the world.
The much talked-about Li’l
Tokio of Los Angeles is located
on the southeast corner of the
downtown area: East First St.,
East Second Street and San
Pedro. The Nipponese sector has
everything in Nisei enterprises:
real estate agency, hotel, barber
shop, movie theatre, sukiyaki
house, pharmacy, cafes, news
paper offices, and many more.
For night-clubbers, “Ginza girls”
appear nightly with the Miyako
Hotel Trio at the Ginza Sukiyaki
on East First.
What is urgent today is com
munication with the public on
the problems of National. We ap
preciate that the present status
may be hard to define in view of
lack of inter-chapter communi
cation, but let's share the prob
lems. The public, whose hardearned funds are long invested in
JCCA, will take interest if it
knows what's troubling the Nat
ional JCCA. All of us demand to
know what's going- on!
The Miyako Hotel houses the
Southern California office of the
JACL as well as the Pacific Cit
izen, official JACL newspaper.
Here I had the pleasure of meet
ing Tats Kushida, SoCal JACL
Regional Director and PC 'bus
iness manager.
Further notes on LA: 70 play
grounds and parks offer every
type of relaxation imaginable,
. . . a striking phenomenon inone of the parks is the La Brea
Tai’ pits, where* the tar which
trapped prehistoric monsters still
bubbles ... in regard to traffic,
you haven’t seen anything until
you visit 7th and Broadway . . .
it’s said 60,000 autos and 450,000
pedestrians pass this corner every
24 hours . . .
gOLLYWOOD is located midway
between the Los Angeles business section and the beautiful
Pacific beaches, on the southern
slope, of the Santa Monica Moun
tains. While sight-seeing was
banned inside the movie studios,
I was able to observe a TV pro
duction, Hollywood being west
coast capital of the Radio and
TV industries as well as film
centre.
Grauman’s Chinese Theatre,
one of the outstanding landmarks
of Hollywood Boulevard and
scene of the super-colossal pre
mieres, had a cement courtyard
splattered with the impressions
of footprints and other identify
ing trade marks of the stars,
past and present . . . Griffith
Observatory in Hollywood is a
striking landmark whose plane
tarium, museum and lectures of
fer the layman some insight into
the celestial mysteries.
Pasadena, Beverly Hills and
Glendale are known for their
attractive
homes.
Pasadena’s
Rose Bowl, which hosts the an
nual New Year’s football game,
sees many other attractions dur
ing the year as well. The Califor
nia Institute of Technology in
Pasadena is one of the foremost
of American institutions devoted
to technical education and re
search. Pasadena is also the win
ter home of millionaires.
Santa Monica, probably the
most popular of the Southern
California beaches, is a few min
utes drive from Los Angeles
Westwood.
Nowhere in the North Ameri
can continent can be found the
diversity of climate, scenery and
activities which centre on Los
Angeles and vicinity. This writer
would agree with Angelenos who
say LA is not only the climatic
capital of the USA but the yearTound playground for millions.
1
thar she blows! !
(J column dedicated to facts and footnotes I
maybe and mayhem} (
By T. M. K.
“Ask not for whom the bell tolls,
it tolls for me and thee!”
__
EACH OF US dies a little in another’s deatheach of us is shamed a little in another’s
shame. The punishment in ancient Sparta was
not for the offense but for being caught. Today
the public mores is such that only those who are
caught and publicly denounced are guilty, while
those whose petty offenses and greater ones 2:0
undiscovered are thought to be ‘playing it smart’
and envied by others. Who among us does not
at one time or another remember an occasion
when our one thought was: “What they don’t
know won’t hurt them!” Or, “What’s one little
item among so many?” “I’m entitled to what
I can pick up on the side.” Yet who has not paid,
and paid dearly, in loss of integrity, self-respect ?
The ebb and flow of the tides wear away the
toughest rocks; and the single but persistent
drop of -water will eventually weaken the hardest
ground until it breaks. Thus the smallest weak
ness in humanity can -wither the strongest.
Atheists, communists, and spiritual illiterates
scoff at what they call the namby-pamby doctrine
of love, the central Christian doctrine. They point
at those so-called Christians whose only doctrine
seems to be hate. Alas for the darkness in our
hearts and minds! Only in our moments of despair
do we realize that a -great love outside of us
elevates us when we hit the bottom. Those who
know about that infinite love cling to it, for its
grip is all the more tender when we weep, and
all the stronger when we grovel in abjection.
Because there is that infinite love, there' is jus
tice, and where there is justice, there is mercy.
This theme has never been explained to the
Nan sei in any satisfactory way. Once it is under
stood, it is as if the limited mind (so full of our
self-importance, our ignorances and prejudices)
were opened to the sunlight, and illumined by
the divine that is sub-strata and the supra-strata
of all our life. Then conflict ends to give way to
a steady growth. The pitiful Marxian philosophy
of conflict which has taken advantage of man’s
selfish concern with his own material self is
shown up for its barren-ness.
JUSTICE there must be, and mercy.
We cannot judge others -without giving judg
ment on ourselves, because we, as humans with
human nature, express ourselves more truly than
we usually realize. Our judgment is conditioned
by what we are, and we are not God. The best
judgment is that which is tempered by love, and
that love be God.
There is something ugly and unhealthy in the
scornful attitude of too many Nisei who have
been ‘browned off’ by Christian churches, or the
frailties of Christians. The causes of that attitude
can be traced and understood. The true Buddhist
is a whole lot more religious than many a
nominal Christian. But Buddhist or under-done
Christian, the inquiring mind must reach beyond
the facade foi' the truth. And that reaching is
the exercise we all need. Only when we limber
up from that exercise can we initiate the energy
to distingush between what is good for us and
what is bad.
Therefore let those who scoff be thankful they
can still learn humility, and let those who con
demn be shamed into forgiveness unto the day
they themselves will need mercy. So be it.
The HAMILTON J.C.C.A. Presents
Distinctive
Floral .Arrangements
OPTOMETRISTS
Wail Flowers
Complete Care
tJ
For Your Eyes
I
118 W. HASTINGS ST.
in
JON ONODERA
A VARIETY CONCERT
Saturday, May 28, 1955
From 7 :00 p. m.
M-W»ffi#i:St
VANCOUVER, B.C.
|
Proprietor
at St. Stephen’s Hall
Barton at Mary St.
ADMISSION: adults, $1.25, children, 50c
HU. 9-4654 - BA. 1-4374
(Residence)
i
(Business)
i
i
540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
Toronto
Page 3
.-...jay, May 21, 1955
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CROWN LIFE INSURANCE co.
CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO-OP.
Head Office Toronto
Insure Today
For Sure Tomorrow
iM
618 Dundas St. W.,
Phone 'EM. 6-5589
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△ △△△A© △△△△△△△©
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Sole Agent For Canada
ANDREWS & GEORGE
CO. LTD.
09
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2909 Grandview Highway
and
2850 Renfrew Street
Vancouver 12, B.C.
DExter 5303
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CROWN LIFE INSURANCE co.
CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO-OP.
Head Office Toronto
Insure Today
For Sure Tomorrow
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618 Dundas St. W.,
Phone 'EM. 6-5589
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Sole Agent For Canada
ANDREWS & GEORGE
CO. LTD.
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2909 Grandview Highway
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2850 Renfrew Street
Vancouver 12, B.C.
DExter 5303
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Page 7
THE
cv, May 21, 1955
NEW
PAGE 7
CANADIAN
j|: ENGAGEMENTS'
personal Notes [I
i Mr. Kanao Nishi of Vancouver
; wishes to announce the engage! ment of his sister, Sueko Sue
Nishi to Mr. Sumio Sora of Tor
onto, son of Airs. Hanayo Sora.
CALENDAR
Alary Afaikawa became Airs
George Kudo on Alay 7th in Tor
onto, not in Montreal.
leaves
Tour :o Ouaw
JCCA Issei-bi
a.m.. returns Mor
Toronto
r
j and piano solos by Eddie Ide . . .
klso an impromptu performance
-1—Toronto. 9th Eastern Canada
Nisei Open Bowling Tournament i pain . . . Sunday was the day for
at O 1 y m r i a-Edward. 1 p.m.: i Dr. S. I. Hayakawa's reception
Nisei Women's Club
11 a.m.. Junior Congregation
11 a.m.. Family Eng. Service
Ii "FEEDING THE FLOCK" i*
Rev. J. Lavell Smith. D.D.
1
and lecture . . . The reception
and tea (nt which we served cof■y successful, and the
more so.
—Toronto. El Choclo Windup So
the Toronto Isseis’
By
now.
cial at Matsuo Studios. S-ll p.m.
half-way
’—Toronto. Club El Choclo Spring tour to
(
Fiesta at Polish Alliance Hall.
iodo
that
through . . . sineer
I—Hamilton. JCCA varietv con- the grouu is having
A Heartv Welcome To All
Toronto. Japanese Catholi
ci al for
McGui-
Many Nisei to Remember
Former lashme Girl
December. A good response
was received from many who
remembered the popular teach
er and night school student
from Tashme days.
In a letter last January to
all the Nisei who helped out,
Miss Kawashita expressed her
gratitude and said she hoped
eventually to return to Can
ada to thank everyone person
ally. Gratitude was also ex
pressed to all in Canada by Mr.
and Mrs. Kawashita and fam
ily. Further letters to her best
friend in Canada, Mrs. Y oshiko
Jean Goto of 705 Danforth
Ave., Toronto, repeated Miss
Kawashita’s appreciation for
the kindness of her friends.
' Her sudden death last month
came as such a shock to her
relatives that Mrs. Goto was
not notified of it until this
week.
TORONTO
BUDDHIST CHURCH
MAY 22. 1955
10:30 a.m.. Sunday School
11:00 a.m.. English Servic
“Three Bodies of the Buddha"
2:0G p.m.. Got anye
Joint Service
“THE WHITE LOTUS"
Rev. T. Tsuji
Everyone Cordially Invited
LUCIEN C. KURATA
BA KRIST ER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
Credit Foncier Building
TORONTO
EM. 0-0959
Res: RO. 7-34
r
Say it with flowers
ENO FLORIST
City Wide Delivery
Phone — ILA. 2041
Simpson St. — Toronto
284-A YONOI STRUT, TORONTO, ONT.
© Also Repairs on Washing Machines, Electric Irons, Toasters, etc.
NOBUTO ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES
and OIL BURNER SERVICING
Phone EMpire 6-3378 (Toronto
Y
FEM A LE HELP WANTED
JAPANESE'real estate salesGIRL for ~drv-cleaning store,
^3 banted. Apply Ken Wiles steady iob.LO. 6141 (Toronto).
SEVERAL girls wanted for
/H Estate, 1982 Eglinton Ave.
book-binding factory,^ starting
wages 75c. Apply Wilson and
"
t l L D presser, Jones Co., 107 Front St., Toronto.
LO. 6141 (Toronto). GIRLS for typing or stenograph
“ObGH spotter, experience ers, experience not necessary but
must be eager to learn. Mr. Good
Necessary, will train. LO. man. Dominion Insurance Corpo
ration, Toronto. WA. 4-4192.
HELP WANTED__
an ior grocery store, i
1 or part ime. ST. 8-6991, 428 I GLERK-TYPIST, must be exper2.?^ Ave., Toronto.
j ienced. Apply Aero Gasket Indus
try Ltd., 36 Yonge St., Toronto.
domestic help wanted
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
Barrister & Solicitor
Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
372 Bay St.
—
Toronto
JC'S WELCOME
For fine Chinese food
and parties in Hamilton
it's
Luck Eno
21 John St. N., Hamilton
Phone: JAckson 7-9576
Golden Dragon
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
Open Noon to 2 a.m.
EM. 8-2475
We have no
Bervice charges.
Orders to Take Out
131A Dundas St. W., Toronto
TRAVELLING TO
JAPAN
_ male help wanted
3 month, experienced girl
ROOMS FOR RENT
IJ11^
modern Forest Hill
kTTCHEN and bed-sitting
k 7 ehadren, private room
j
room,
suit couple, College-Dufoatn. IKl cooking. OR. 5184
wonto)
’ferin. LL. 0529 (Toronto).
T
a
EM. 3-4391
FURNACE CLEANING
CLASSIFIED SECTION
EM. 6-8061.
Nisei United Church
(Continued from Page Oue)
Next meeting of the Nisei Women’s Club of Toronto w ill be
held Wednesday, May 25, from
8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Irene
the
: Maruno, 708 Fulton Ave.
held at
R6C9p^*$^ ^
Guest speaker will be Mr
gods Hotel
Brown, interior decorator of Rob
cert, ■‘Ballyhoo" at St. Stephen's
Hall (Barton and Marv). 7 v.m.
ert
Simpson
and
Co.
Ltd.
Reports
ASADA-YAGUCHI
Canada Nisei Open Bowling Tour
Othy Yoshimi, daughter of cf the fund-raising parties and
sponsored by Quebec JCCA and nament’s Dance (What annouth/,nd Airs. Chuichi Yaguchi of tea held by the group will be
McG-ill Campus Club, at Com ful) at Hasaryk Hall in Toronto
—KT
□ton, and Buddy Katsumi given.
munity Centre, S:30 p.m.
Tomorrow night, the El Choclo
i son of Mr. and Mrs. Shi31—Toronto. Young Adults Family dance club is holding- its Wind-up
Night at Queen St. Church.
era Asada of Toronto, were Toronto JC Catholics
Social at the Matsuo Studios.
■ed last Saturday, Alay 14, 1955, To Fete Archbishop
1331A Dundas St. West, from 8
□es Street Baptist Church,
An opportunity to meet Car 3—Toronto. El Destine June Hop to 11. Everybody’s welcome. They
amilton. Rev. E. W. Chickland dinal James McGuigan, Arch
at Matsuo Studios, S-1'2.
also remind you to be sure to
■ficiated. Sewanin were Mr. and bishop of Toronto, will be ac
attend the Spring Fiesta next
up Dance at Histadrut Hall, Es
[r,, S. Sato.
Friday . . . lotsa fun and prizes
corded local Japanese Canadians
planade and Laurier, S:30 p.m.
Reception was held at 33 Baillie at a buffet social sponsored by 18—Toronto. Rec Socratic-Kisaragi- for all.
JCCA Community Centre Benefit
the JC Catholic congregation,
Dance at Masaryk Hall, S :30-12.
honoring the silver jubilee of his
News item in the Toronto Star:
)BITUARY
19—Toronto. Bussei 9th annual pic
;
episcopal
consecration,
tomorrow
nic
at
Lynbrook
Park.
“
A
young couple who spoke in
FUJINO
25
—
Montreal.
Bussei
Outing
at
|
from
4
p.m.
at
St.
Peter
’
s
Church,
Chinese or Japanese are beingTsuta Fujino, in her 78th year,
Burlington, Vermont.
Bathurst
at
Bloor.
sought for the attempted armed
assed away last Saturday, May
Consecrated at the age of 36,
robbery of . . . Dozen's jewellery
4 1955, at Toronto Western
Cardinal
McGuigan
is
the
only
1—Lethbridge. Niseis’ Dominion store, Yonge St., Sunday . . .”
lospital. Funeral services were
Day Dance at the Trianon; exhi Elope it wasn’t the latter . . .
prelate
to
have
been
Archbishop
onducted by Rev. T. Tsuji last
bition baseball at Henderson Pk.
in
two
dioceses,
having
been
post
¥
*
*
londay at the Washington and
3
—
Toronto.
JCCA
6th
Community
ed earlier at Regina, Sask.
Since Dr. Hayakawa lias stated
ohnson Funeral Home.
Picnic at Lynbrook Park.
that
more listening- has to be
10—Vancouver. Maria Stella
KUNIKO KAWASHITA
done, I’d better stop talking . . .
at Bowen Island.
5 Kuniko Kawashita passed
i away suddenly on April 17,
4955. at Amakusa Hospital in
Kumamoto, Japan. She was in
i her 30th year.
.When the Tashme, B.C., in
terior housing centre broke up
after the war, Mr. and Mrs.
Masao Kawashita and daugh
ters Kuniko, Kiyoko and To-...
yoko went to Japan. Since ar
rival in that country, Kuniko
Kawashita had been ill, and
Lr the last several years un
able-to work.
Last summer, the former
Ocean Falls girl was advised
to enter a hospital. Since re
quired medical expenses were
very high, friends of Miss
Kawashita in Canada, headed
by Jean Goto, Hedy Arai, Miye
Yasunaka, Tsuneo Omotani and
Uc Kadonaga organized a pri'Ute canvass for funds last
*
rl with a very nice voice called
0-28—Toronto.
CORRECTION
-.kst United Church, Lethwas netting
o for the
of Tamiko, daughter of
Mr Jukichi Nakamura,
'
Hre-awa. son of Mrs.
.ibnrv
_
^Hasegawa, on May 7, 19oo.
I Y Yoshioka officiated. Se3Sin were Mr. and Mrs.
i I
i
i
It’s Spring at ALBERT'S
where you can get
small size shoes
for ladies and men.
Regular Sizes Also
SCOTT McHALES for men
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen Street West
Toronto
ME. 1931
^ Q p_ orders from Coast to Coast
Ch bringing
someone ov«r?
We represent
all lines including
American President
Canadian Pacific,
Pan American,
Northwest Airlines.
Writ® or call
for full ixfrrmation
or rerte^
DOMINION TRAVEL
OFFICE
68 Wellington St. West
Toronto
EML 6-6451
cv, May 21, 1955
NEW
PAGE 7
CANADIAN
j|: ENGAGEMENTS'
personal Notes [I
i Mr. Kanao Nishi of Vancouver
; wishes to announce the engage! ment of his sister, Sueko Sue
Nishi to Mr. Sumio Sora of Tor
onto, son of Airs. Hanayo Sora.
CALENDAR
Alary Afaikawa became Airs
George Kudo on Alay 7th in Tor
onto, not in Montreal.
leaves
Tour :o Ouaw
JCCA Issei-bi
a.m.. returns Mor
Toronto
r
j and piano solos by Eddie Ide . . .
klso an impromptu performance
-1—Toronto. 9th Eastern Canada
Nisei Open Bowling Tournament i pain . . . Sunday was the day for
at O 1 y m r i a-Edward. 1 p.m.: i Dr. S. I. Hayakawa's reception
Nisei Women's Club
11 a.m.. Junior Congregation
11 a.m.. Family Eng. Service
Ii "FEEDING THE FLOCK" i*
Rev. J. Lavell Smith. D.D.
1
and lecture . . . The reception
and tea (nt which we served cof■y successful, and the
more so.
—Toronto. El Choclo Windup So
the Toronto Isseis’
By
now.
cial at Matsuo Studios. S-ll p.m.
half-way
’—Toronto. Club El Choclo Spring tour to
(
Fiesta at Polish Alliance Hall.
iodo
that
through . . . sineer
I—Hamilton. JCCA varietv con- the grouu is having
A Heartv Welcome To All
Toronto. Japanese Catholi
ci al for
McGui-
Many Nisei to Remember
Former lashme Girl
December. A good response
was received from many who
remembered the popular teach
er and night school student
from Tashme days.
In a letter last January to
all the Nisei who helped out,
Miss Kawashita expressed her
gratitude and said she hoped
eventually to return to Can
ada to thank everyone person
ally. Gratitude was also ex
pressed to all in Canada by Mr.
and Mrs. Kawashita and fam
ily. Further letters to her best
friend in Canada, Mrs. Y oshiko
Jean Goto of 705 Danforth
Ave., Toronto, repeated Miss
Kawashita’s appreciation for
the kindness of her friends.
' Her sudden death last month
came as such a shock to her
relatives that Mrs. Goto was
not notified of it until this
week.
TORONTO
BUDDHIST CHURCH
MAY 22. 1955
10:30 a.m.. Sunday School
11:00 a.m.. English Servic
“Three Bodies of the Buddha"
2:0G p.m.. Got anye
Joint Service
“THE WHITE LOTUS"
Rev. T. Tsuji
Everyone Cordially Invited
LUCIEN C. KURATA
BA KRIST ER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
Credit Foncier Building
TORONTO
EM. 0-0959
Res: RO. 7-34
r
Say it with flowers
ENO FLORIST
City Wide Delivery
Phone — ILA. 2041
Simpson St. — Toronto
284-A YONOI STRUT, TORONTO, ONT.
© Also Repairs on Washing Machines, Electric Irons, Toasters, etc.
NOBUTO ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES
and OIL BURNER SERVICING
Phone EMpire 6-3378 (Toronto
Y
FEM A LE HELP WANTED
JAPANESE'real estate salesGIRL for ~drv-cleaning store,
^3 banted. Apply Ken Wiles steady iob.LO. 6141 (Toronto).
SEVERAL girls wanted for
/H Estate, 1982 Eglinton Ave.
book-binding factory,^ starting
wages 75c. Apply Wilson and
"
t l L D presser, Jones Co., 107 Front St., Toronto.
LO. 6141 (Toronto). GIRLS for typing or stenograph
“ObGH spotter, experience ers, experience not necessary but
must be eager to learn. Mr. Good
Necessary, will train. LO. man. Dominion Insurance Corpo
ration, Toronto. WA. 4-4192.
HELP WANTED__
an ior grocery store, i
1 or part ime. ST. 8-6991, 428 I GLERK-TYPIST, must be exper2.?^ Ave., Toronto.
j ienced. Apply Aero Gasket Indus
try Ltd., 36 Yonge St., Toronto.
domestic help wanted
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
Barrister & Solicitor
Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
372 Bay St.
—
Toronto
JC'S WELCOME
For fine Chinese food
and parties in Hamilton
it's
Luck Eno
21 John St. N., Hamilton
Phone: JAckson 7-9576
Golden Dragon
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
Open Noon to 2 a.m.
EM. 8-2475
We have no
Bervice charges.
Orders to Take Out
131A Dundas St. W., Toronto
TRAVELLING TO
JAPAN
_ male help wanted
3 month, experienced girl
ROOMS FOR RENT
IJ11^
modern Forest Hill
kTTCHEN and bed-sitting
k 7 ehadren, private room
j
room,
suit couple, College-Dufoatn. IKl cooking. OR. 5184
wonto)
’ferin. LL. 0529 (Toronto).
T
a
EM. 3-4391
FURNACE CLEANING
CLASSIFIED SECTION
EM. 6-8061.
Nisei United Church
(Continued from Page Oue)
Next meeting of the Nisei Women’s Club of Toronto w ill be
held Wednesday, May 25, from
8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Irene
the
: Maruno, 708 Fulton Ave.
held at
R6C9p^*$^ ^
Guest speaker will be Mr
gods Hotel
Brown, interior decorator of Rob
cert, ■‘Ballyhoo" at St. Stephen's
Hall (Barton and Marv). 7 v.m.
ert
Simpson
and
Co.
Ltd.
Reports
ASADA-YAGUCHI
Canada Nisei Open Bowling Tour
Othy Yoshimi, daughter of cf the fund-raising parties and
sponsored by Quebec JCCA and nament’s Dance (What annouth/,nd Airs. Chuichi Yaguchi of tea held by the group will be
McG-ill Campus Club, at Com ful) at Hasaryk Hall in Toronto
—KT
□ton, and Buddy Katsumi given.
munity Centre, S:30 p.m.
Tomorrow night, the El Choclo
i son of Mr. and Mrs. Shi31—Toronto. Young Adults Family dance club is holding- its Wind-up
Night at Queen St. Church.
era Asada of Toronto, were Toronto JC Catholics
Social at the Matsuo Studios.
■ed last Saturday, Alay 14, 1955, To Fete Archbishop
1331A Dundas St. West, from 8
□es Street Baptist Church,
An opportunity to meet Car 3—Toronto. El Destine June Hop to 11. Everybody’s welcome. They
amilton. Rev. E. W. Chickland dinal James McGuigan, Arch
at Matsuo Studios, S-1'2.
also remind you to be sure to
■ficiated. Sewanin were Mr. and bishop of Toronto, will be ac
attend the Spring Fiesta next
up Dance at Histadrut Hall, Es
[r,, S. Sato.
Friday . . . lotsa fun and prizes
corded local Japanese Canadians
planade and Laurier, S:30 p.m.
Reception was held at 33 Baillie at a buffet social sponsored by 18—Toronto. Rec Socratic-Kisaragi- for all.
JCCA Community Centre Benefit
the JC Catholic congregation,
Dance at Masaryk Hall, S :30-12.
honoring the silver jubilee of his
News item in the Toronto Star:
)BITUARY
19—Toronto. Bussei 9th annual pic
;
episcopal
consecration,
tomorrow
nic
at
Lynbrook
Park.
“
A
young couple who spoke in
FUJINO
25
—
Montreal.
Bussei
Outing
at
|
from
4
p.m.
at
St.
Peter
’
s
Church,
Chinese or Japanese are beingTsuta Fujino, in her 78th year,
Burlington, Vermont.
Bathurst
at
Bloor.
sought for the attempted armed
assed away last Saturday, May
Consecrated at the age of 36,
robbery of . . . Dozen's jewellery
4 1955, at Toronto Western
Cardinal
McGuigan
is
the
only
1—Lethbridge. Niseis’ Dominion store, Yonge St., Sunday . . .”
lospital. Funeral services were
Day Dance at the Trianon; exhi Elope it wasn’t the latter . . .
prelate
to
have
been
Archbishop
onducted by Rev. T. Tsuji last
bition baseball at Henderson Pk.
in
two
dioceses,
having
been
post
¥
*
*
londay at the Washington and
3
—
Toronto.
JCCA
6th
Community
ed earlier at Regina, Sask.
Since Dr. Hayakawa lias stated
ohnson Funeral Home.
Picnic at Lynbrook Park.
that
more listening- has to be
10—Vancouver. Maria Stella
KUNIKO KAWASHITA
done, I’d better stop talking . . .
at Bowen Island.
5 Kuniko Kawashita passed
i away suddenly on April 17,
4955. at Amakusa Hospital in
Kumamoto, Japan. She was in
i her 30th year.
.When the Tashme, B.C., in
terior housing centre broke up
after the war, Mr. and Mrs.
Masao Kawashita and daugh
ters Kuniko, Kiyoko and To-...
yoko went to Japan. Since ar
rival in that country, Kuniko
Kawashita had been ill, and
Lr the last several years un
able-to work.
Last summer, the former
Ocean Falls girl was advised
to enter a hospital. Since re
quired medical expenses were
very high, friends of Miss
Kawashita in Canada, headed
by Jean Goto, Hedy Arai, Miye
Yasunaka, Tsuneo Omotani and
Uc Kadonaga organized a pri'Ute canvass for funds last
*
rl with a very nice voice called
0-28—Toronto.
CORRECTION
-.kst United Church, Lethwas netting
o for the
of Tamiko, daughter of
Mr Jukichi Nakamura,
'
Hre-awa. son of Mrs.
.ibnrv
_
^Hasegawa, on May 7, 19oo.
I Y Yoshioka officiated. Se3Sin were Mr. and Mrs.
i I
i
i
It’s Spring at ALBERT'S
where you can get
small size shoes
for ladies and men.
Regular Sizes Also
SCOTT McHALES for men
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen Street West
Toronto
ME. 1931
^ Q p_ orders from Coast to Coast
Ch bringing
someone ov«r?
We represent
all lines including
American President
Canadian Pacific,
Pan American,
Northwest Airlines.
Writ® or call
for full ixfrrmation
or rerte^
DOMINION TRAVEL
OFFICE
68 Wellington St. West
Toronto
EML 6-6451
Page 8
THE
PAGE 8
Lefty Jim Rennie Hurls
Honest Ed’s Nisei
To 2nd Victory
Min Sakamoto Tops
Tahara’s Grand Slam Clout
Montreal Bussei Keglers
With 222 Average
Paces Vancouver ..Niseis
MONTREAL.—T he B u s s e i
Bowling League recently con
cluded its schedule and the fol
lowing statistics were revealed
Honest Ed’s Nisei made it two for the record:
in a row Thursday evening when
FINAL LEAGUE STANDING
Teams
(and Captains): King Pins
they took advantage of loose
(Tats
Sakauye)
121, Big Six
pitching by Presswoods that re Sakamoto) 116, Gutter
Rats (Jack
sulted In 12 walks and one hit nabe) 107,
(Shiz
batter. A big fourth inning in 105, Alouettes (Tosh Oike) 95, Handiwhich Nisei counted 6 runs gave caoDods (Min Sakamoto) 85.
‘ ‘ HIGH TRIPLES AND SINGLES
Sub Miike’s nine another come
LADIES: Connie Oike 753, Joyce Asa
back victory.
zuma 337; MEN: Min Sakamoto 8S0, Tosh
Sfeady pitching by southpaw Oike 351.
AVERAGES
Jim Rennie over the six inning
LADIES: Nao Sugie 202. Connie Oike
route featured the Nisei win. 192, Amy Matsubara 191, Lil Kobaya
Maw Mori smashed a two-run kawa 182. Liz Matsubara ISO.
MEN: Min Sakamoto 222, Koichi Saka
single for the most potent Nisei moto
218, Tats Sakauye 205, Jack Watabat.
Tosh Oike 2W, Kats Sakanabe 20
Al Mugford and Bill Weir pac moto 203, Its Ikegami 203. Hiro Yamaed the Packers’ attack with back- moto 201, Jim Ishii 198, Mits Ikegami
tG- back homers in the third. Both 193. '
presentation banquet will be
collected two hits in three trips.
held Saturday, June 4 from 6
Presswoods ...... 102 000 — 3 6 1 p.m. at the Histadrut Hall, EsHonest Ed’s.—. 200 GOx —
planade and Laurier. A public
Jerry Eakins, Jay Krycia (1), dance will follow at 8:30 p.m. The
Peter Cowan (4) and Nick Stay- annual Bussei Outing has been
ner; Jim Rennie and Bill Shep set for June 25 at Burlington,
hard, Stan Sheldon (4).
Vermont. Details will follow.
SOME SIDELIGHTS: Second’
baseman Tak Nakano walked HERE'S WHAT'S DOIN'
twice in his debut before going
Welcome visitors to the NC office
out in the fourth for Ian Mc Thursday were Alfie and Sab KamiPherson . . . Big Maw was again takahara, who are vacationing in
outstanding at the first sack, Eastern Canada and U.S. Bowling
picking up several wayward pegs type Sab and JCCA man Alfie are
out of the dirt . . . Bill Shephard accountants from Lethbridge.
is the third backstop on the
Toronto Tennis League carries
Nisei roster with Yuki Kameoka on Sunday with Nobuoka vs Yasui
and Stan Sheldon. The weekend at Trinity, Hirano
Matsui at
schedule has been changed Earlscourt . . . members will be
around so that Niseis play three notified if league games are to be
games on the next three days: played Monday . . . Toronto Sunday
Sunday, Columbus
Honest Ball sees Giants vs Royals at ChrisEd’s, 1:30: Monday, Honest Ed’s ■tie. Bussei vs Yamada a.t Stanley
vs Presswoods, 10:30 a.m.; and tomorrow . . . Toronto golfers tee
Tuesday, Honest Ed’s vs Con off at 6:10 a.m. Sunday at Lakecords, 6:30; all games at the view .
OOPS !
Don’t, forget
Pits ...
"
—MO Eastern Canada keg tourney at
interprovlncial tourney with Dry
den,
Ont.
Sunday
next .
’sthatall?
Olympia-Edward today from 1 p.m.
. . . Manitoba Judo Club hosting
Bv GENNY OHASHI
VANCOUVER. —Paced by a
sparkling all-round performance
by Seichi Tahara, the well-condi
tioned Vancouver JCCA Niseis
wallopped the Catholic Youth
Organization 14-3 last Saturday,
May 14. A capacity crowd watch
ed the Nisei debut in their 30game Industrial Union League
sked.
Niseis went hit-happy smash
ing a dozen hits off four CT O
hurlers in a contest abbreviated
by darkness. All but- one man in
the JCCA line-up was credited
with at least one hit.
Tahara wielded the biggest bat,
collecting a grand slammer to
centre in his first time at the
plate, and adding a single in the
fifth. The ex-Tashme veteran
was credited with four RBIs and
a stolen base, as well as parti
cipating in the first Nisei double
play of the campaign in the 2ndcanto.
Popular Azu Oikawa register
ed three singles in his 5 ABs, had
2 RBIs, and pilfered two sacks,
both in the big fifth frame. Bo
Miyagishima counted 2 RBIs on2 singles in 4 trips, while Hubbo
Matsuzaki doubled in two runs
in the 5th. Tad Kitagawa’s single
accounted for the eleventh Nisei
run, and only the remaining three
tallies were unearned. Toru Ni
shi, Frank Kika, and Dan Okano
also singled.
210 000 — 3 6 5
cyo ...............
530 06x — 14 12 0
Joe Brem (LP), Bill Edwards (11, Jim
Russell (1), Jim Butterworth (5), and
Bill O'Donnell; Ron Montgomery and
NISEIS ................
LINE DRIVES: 3 of Montgomery's 7
whihs came in the -.Inal inning . . .
Merv Franks, Ken Paialunga and Ken
Homma appear to be 3 other regular
hurlers on the Nisei staff . . . outfielder
TORONTO NISEI BASEBALL LEAGUE:
Busseis, Yamadas Win Sunday Openers
The Toronto Nisei Baseball
League opened last Sunday with
two high-scoring, loosely-played
games. Yamada Studios made a
last inning comeback to edge
Royals 10-9, while Busseis coast
ed to a 17-4 victory over Giants,
partly on loose Giant pitching.
Playing coach Sid Nishimura’s
hard smash that Royal shortstop
Seko couldn’t handle, climaxed a
7th inning rally at Christie Pits.
Nishimura was the only player
to get two safeties.
Royals scored all their runs in
the first three frames. Muts Baba
doubled with the bases filled.
while Richard Seko also had a
two-bagger.
Jack Tanaka went all the way
with Mac Oikawa as the winning-
Saturday, May 21, 1955
CANADIAN
NEW
battery, while Dave Sakamoto
and Muts Baba (5th) threw to
Ken Kutsukake, with Baba the
loser..
Singles by Ike Shiozaki, Frank
Miyahara, Tad Wakabayashi and
Dick Hashimoto’s triple, sand
wiched in between by five walks
counted five Bussei runs in the
first inning
„ at Stanley Park.
Giants hopes were killed in the
second when Busseis continued
their rampage with 9 runs on
singles by Tad and Min Nishi
mura and by Hashimoto, with
five more free passes.
Pitcher Dick Hashimoto paced
the winning attack with two
triples and a single, while Tad
Nishimura collected 3-for-5 and
Wakabayashi, Shiozaki had two
hits apiece.
Roy Tanaka and Ed Hisaki
were best for Giants with two
hits each. Hashimoto, Mike Uyeda (5) and Maw Uyenaka were
the winning- battery, while Connie
Tanaka, Yuki Kameoka (2) and
Roy Kobayashi (2) all threw to
Hisaki for the Giants.
Thos. T. Onizuka, B,A.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR Cr4
NOTARY PUBLIC
OFFICE: Km. 403, 229 Yon^e st
EM. 3-5002 - OX. l-33Ss’res )
TORONTO
Nagano is also available if
needed for the mound . . . Co-coacnes
for 1955 are Johnny Inouye and Mush
Uyesugi, who has retired from active
day . . . Nobby Fujisawa was elected
Industrial loop vice-prexy . . . Nisei
sked: May
I—Longshoremen, S—FireBoilers, Ju
Gordie
J
Paul K. Asada, D.C. i
X-RAY DIAGNOSIS
DOCTOR. OF CHIROPRACTIC :
699 Yonge St. (at Bloor)
WA. 1-6549 ,
TORONTO !
Oikawa r, Nishi lb,
Matsuzaki cf, Tahara ss, Kika lb, Oka
no ri. Tasaka ri, Miyagishima 2b, Kita
gawa 3b, Homina 3b, Montgomery p.
Nisei
Line-up:
i
Comets Capture Crown
In Hamilton Basketball
Bv OLD FAITHFUL Jr.
HAMILTON.—Fidelis Comets
rounded out their flashing string
of wins last Friday, May 13, by
overthrowing the not-so-noble
Dukes in a fast and steady 57-35
game. The poor “peers” started
off very gallantly, but half-time
showed an un-aristocratic 26-14
deficit.
Even the Duke of Tkachuk’s 16
points didn’t slow down the
streaking Comets, power-headed
by Frank Shimoda’s 26 wellearned points. The celestial hoopsters continued their powerful
drive and finally humbled the
Noblemen for the league cham
pionship. Other high scorers for
the heavenly host were Timmy
Oikawa 15, Lind Mits Watanabe
9. The only other untarnished
escutcheon of the Dukes belonged
to Paul Yamaguchi, whose 9 pts.
and top-notch team play proved
to be the only commendable
thing about the losers.
St. Gabriel would flip his horn
if he heard that last year’s
champs were edged out in semis
by the Dukes. Angels were so
pitifully weak this year it’s a
wonder they even came third in
a 3-team loop.
Added highlight in the night’s
games was an exhibition between
the “semi-All-Star” team and an
aggregation of the founders of
the former Nisei league. The Old
Boys including such former stars
as Bruce Yoshida and George
Kitagawa put up quite a fight,
with Shaw Tsuyuki, Tad Suzuki
and Ike Murase scoring 8, 6 and
2 respectively. Too bad the Fidelians’ Oikawa, Tkachuk and Fu
kumoto scored 12 each. The oldtimers were defeated 69-22.
^[oa too, can earn
$6 to $15 an hour
When Buying, Selling
or Exchanging Your Home
»W8
For Made-to-Measure Clothes
BING
TANAKA
37 Norseman St., Toronto
MU. 8966 days — BE. 1-0942 eves
WILL CALL
Moving to B.C.?
Contact
Jim Kakutani
H. A. ROBERTS LTD.
> Established 32 Years
Members of Vancouver
Real Estate Board
530 Burrard
—
Vancouver
MArine 6421, Day or Night
/
COMPLETE
SIGNS & DISPLAY
SERVICE
s
For Particular People
-LL. 2478 — DON YOKOTA
1345 Davenport Rd., Toronto
I
I
|
ROSE’S
|
Beauty Salon
K
Permanent Waves
and Hairstyling
I
y
Mrs. Rose Akiyama
H
f 648 College
I
—
Toronto P
PHONE ME. 6078
CLUB
CONSULT
CHOCLO
Ken Hori
BERNARDI-MATHEWS Ltd.
OX. 4-1127
2670
GL. 8314 (res.) '
Danforth Ave.
Toronto
&
K
L ft
REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES
OF CARS AND TRUCKS
& G
& I ft
K
©
&
6
is
Chippy's Garage
I
#>
■5
5
TVrite For Free Catalogue Today
Branch School:
203 S. Roscommon Ave.
L. A. 22, Calif.
WA. 3-4551
301 Manning Ave., Toronto
EVERY GRADUATE EMPLOYED
MORE SEXORS URGENTLY NEEDED
VETERAN APPROVED
LIVING ACCOMMODATIONS
OLDEST AND LARGEST SCHOOL
Zernov
"Reg. U.S. Pat. Off."
!
214 LINE STREET, LANSDALE, PENNA.-
Friday, May 27, 1955
•
at POLISH HALL
62 Claremont St., Toronto
J
PAGE 8
Lefty Jim Rennie Hurls
Honest Ed’s Nisei
To 2nd Victory
Min Sakamoto Tops
Tahara’s Grand Slam Clout
Montreal Bussei Keglers
With 222 Average
Paces Vancouver ..Niseis
MONTREAL.—T he B u s s e i
Bowling League recently con
cluded its schedule and the fol
lowing statistics were revealed
Honest Ed’s Nisei made it two for the record:
in a row Thursday evening when
FINAL LEAGUE STANDING
Teams
(and Captains): King Pins
they took advantage of loose
(Tats
Sakauye)
121, Big Six
pitching by Presswoods that re Sakamoto) 116, Gutter
Rats (Jack
sulted In 12 walks and one hit nabe) 107,
(Shiz
batter. A big fourth inning in 105, Alouettes (Tosh Oike) 95, Handiwhich Nisei counted 6 runs gave caoDods (Min Sakamoto) 85.
‘ ‘ HIGH TRIPLES AND SINGLES
Sub Miike’s nine another come
LADIES: Connie Oike 753, Joyce Asa
back victory.
zuma 337; MEN: Min Sakamoto 8S0, Tosh
Sfeady pitching by southpaw Oike 351.
AVERAGES
Jim Rennie over the six inning
LADIES: Nao Sugie 202. Connie Oike
route featured the Nisei win. 192, Amy Matsubara 191, Lil Kobaya
Maw Mori smashed a two-run kawa 182. Liz Matsubara ISO.
MEN: Min Sakamoto 222, Koichi Saka
single for the most potent Nisei moto
218, Tats Sakauye 205, Jack Watabat.
Tosh Oike 2W, Kats Sakanabe 20
Al Mugford and Bill Weir pac moto 203, Its Ikegami 203. Hiro Yamaed the Packers’ attack with back- moto 201, Jim Ishii 198, Mits Ikegami
tG- back homers in the third. Both 193. '
presentation banquet will be
collected two hits in three trips.
held Saturday, June 4 from 6
Presswoods ...... 102 000 — 3 6 1 p.m. at the Histadrut Hall, EsHonest Ed’s.—. 200 GOx —
planade and Laurier. A public
Jerry Eakins, Jay Krycia (1), dance will follow at 8:30 p.m. The
Peter Cowan (4) and Nick Stay- annual Bussei Outing has been
ner; Jim Rennie and Bill Shep set for June 25 at Burlington,
hard, Stan Sheldon (4).
Vermont. Details will follow.
SOME SIDELIGHTS: Second’
baseman Tak Nakano walked HERE'S WHAT'S DOIN'
twice in his debut before going
Welcome visitors to the NC office
out in the fourth for Ian Mc Thursday were Alfie and Sab KamiPherson . . . Big Maw was again takahara, who are vacationing in
outstanding at the first sack, Eastern Canada and U.S. Bowling
picking up several wayward pegs type Sab and JCCA man Alfie are
out of the dirt . . . Bill Shephard accountants from Lethbridge.
is the third backstop on the
Toronto Tennis League carries
Nisei roster with Yuki Kameoka on Sunday with Nobuoka vs Yasui
and Stan Sheldon. The weekend at Trinity, Hirano
Matsui at
schedule has been changed Earlscourt . . . members will be
around so that Niseis play three notified if league games are to be
games on the next three days: played Monday . . . Toronto Sunday
Sunday, Columbus
Honest Ball sees Giants vs Royals at ChrisEd’s, 1:30: Monday, Honest Ed’s ■tie. Bussei vs Yamada a.t Stanley
vs Presswoods, 10:30 a.m.; and tomorrow . . . Toronto golfers tee
Tuesday, Honest Ed’s vs Con off at 6:10 a.m. Sunday at Lakecords, 6:30; all games at the view .
OOPS !
Don’t, forget
Pits ...
"
—MO Eastern Canada keg tourney at
interprovlncial tourney with Dry
den,
Ont.
Sunday
next .
’sthatall?
Olympia-Edward today from 1 p.m.
. . . Manitoba Judo Club hosting
Bv GENNY OHASHI
VANCOUVER. —Paced by a
sparkling all-round performance
by Seichi Tahara, the well-condi
tioned Vancouver JCCA Niseis
wallopped the Catholic Youth
Organization 14-3 last Saturday,
May 14. A capacity crowd watch
ed the Nisei debut in their 30game Industrial Union League
sked.
Niseis went hit-happy smash
ing a dozen hits off four CT O
hurlers in a contest abbreviated
by darkness. All but- one man in
the JCCA line-up was credited
with at least one hit.
Tahara wielded the biggest bat,
collecting a grand slammer to
centre in his first time at the
plate, and adding a single in the
fifth. The ex-Tashme veteran
was credited with four RBIs and
a stolen base, as well as parti
cipating in the first Nisei double
play of the campaign in the 2ndcanto.
Popular Azu Oikawa register
ed three singles in his 5 ABs, had
2 RBIs, and pilfered two sacks,
both in the big fifth frame. Bo
Miyagishima counted 2 RBIs on2 singles in 4 trips, while Hubbo
Matsuzaki doubled in two runs
in the 5th. Tad Kitagawa’s single
accounted for the eleventh Nisei
run, and only the remaining three
tallies were unearned. Toru Ni
shi, Frank Kika, and Dan Okano
also singled.
210 000 — 3 6 5
cyo ...............
530 06x — 14 12 0
Joe Brem (LP), Bill Edwards (11, Jim
Russell (1), Jim Butterworth (5), and
Bill O'Donnell; Ron Montgomery and
NISEIS ................
LINE DRIVES: 3 of Montgomery's 7
whihs came in the -.Inal inning . . .
Merv Franks, Ken Paialunga and Ken
Homma appear to be 3 other regular
hurlers on the Nisei staff . . . outfielder
TORONTO NISEI BASEBALL LEAGUE:
Busseis, Yamadas Win Sunday Openers
The Toronto Nisei Baseball
League opened last Sunday with
two high-scoring, loosely-played
games. Yamada Studios made a
last inning comeback to edge
Royals 10-9, while Busseis coast
ed to a 17-4 victory over Giants,
partly on loose Giant pitching.
Playing coach Sid Nishimura’s
hard smash that Royal shortstop
Seko couldn’t handle, climaxed a
7th inning rally at Christie Pits.
Nishimura was the only player
to get two safeties.
Royals scored all their runs in
the first three frames. Muts Baba
doubled with the bases filled.
while Richard Seko also had a
two-bagger.
Jack Tanaka went all the way
with Mac Oikawa as the winning-
Saturday, May 21, 1955
CANADIAN
NEW
battery, while Dave Sakamoto
and Muts Baba (5th) threw to
Ken Kutsukake, with Baba the
loser..
Singles by Ike Shiozaki, Frank
Miyahara, Tad Wakabayashi and
Dick Hashimoto’s triple, sand
wiched in between by five walks
counted five Bussei runs in the
first inning
„ at Stanley Park.
Giants hopes were killed in the
second when Busseis continued
their rampage with 9 runs on
singles by Tad and Min Nishi
mura and by Hashimoto, with
five more free passes.
Pitcher Dick Hashimoto paced
the winning attack with two
triples and a single, while Tad
Nishimura collected 3-for-5 and
Wakabayashi, Shiozaki had two
hits apiece.
Roy Tanaka and Ed Hisaki
were best for Giants with two
hits each. Hashimoto, Mike Uyeda (5) and Maw Uyenaka were
the winning- battery, while Connie
Tanaka, Yuki Kameoka (2) and
Roy Kobayashi (2) all threw to
Hisaki for the Giants.
Thos. T. Onizuka, B,A.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR Cr4
NOTARY PUBLIC
OFFICE: Km. 403, 229 Yon^e st
EM. 3-5002 - OX. l-33Ss’res )
TORONTO
Nagano is also available if
needed for the mound . . . Co-coacnes
for 1955 are Johnny Inouye and Mush
Uyesugi, who has retired from active
day . . . Nobby Fujisawa was elected
Industrial loop vice-prexy . . . Nisei
sked: May
I—Longshoremen, S—FireBoilers, Ju
Gordie
J
Paul K. Asada, D.C. i
X-RAY DIAGNOSIS
DOCTOR. OF CHIROPRACTIC :
699 Yonge St. (at Bloor)
WA. 1-6549 ,
TORONTO !
Oikawa r, Nishi lb,
Matsuzaki cf, Tahara ss, Kika lb, Oka
no ri. Tasaka ri, Miyagishima 2b, Kita
gawa 3b, Homina 3b, Montgomery p.
Nisei
Line-up:
i
Comets Capture Crown
In Hamilton Basketball
Bv OLD FAITHFUL Jr.
HAMILTON.—Fidelis Comets
rounded out their flashing string
of wins last Friday, May 13, by
overthrowing the not-so-noble
Dukes in a fast and steady 57-35
game. The poor “peers” started
off very gallantly, but half-time
showed an un-aristocratic 26-14
deficit.
Even the Duke of Tkachuk’s 16
points didn’t slow down the
streaking Comets, power-headed
by Frank Shimoda’s 26 wellearned points. The celestial hoopsters continued their powerful
drive and finally humbled the
Noblemen for the league cham
pionship. Other high scorers for
the heavenly host were Timmy
Oikawa 15, Lind Mits Watanabe
9. The only other untarnished
escutcheon of the Dukes belonged
to Paul Yamaguchi, whose 9 pts.
and top-notch team play proved
to be the only commendable
thing about the losers.
St. Gabriel would flip his horn
if he heard that last year’s
champs were edged out in semis
by the Dukes. Angels were so
pitifully weak this year it’s a
wonder they even came third in
a 3-team loop.
Added highlight in the night’s
games was an exhibition between
the “semi-All-Star” team and an
aggregation of the founders of
the former Nisei league. The Old
Boys including such former stars
as Bruce Yoshida and George
Kitagawa put up quite a fight,
with Shaw Tsuyuki, Tad Suzuki
and Ike Murase scoring 8, 6 and
2 respectively. Too bad the Fidelians’ Oikawa, Tkachuk and Fu
kumoto scored 12 each. The oldtimers were defeated 69-22.
^[oa too, can earn
$6 to $15 an hour
When Buying, Selling
or Exchanging Your Home
»W8
For Made-to-Measure Clothes
BING
TANAKA
37 Norseman St., Toronto
MU. 8966 days — BE. 1-0942 eves
WILL CALL
Moving to B.C.?
Contact
Jim Kakutani
H. A. ROBERTS LTD.
> Established 32 Years
Members of Vancouver
Real Estate Board
530 Burrard
—
Vancouver
MArine 6421, Day or Night
/
COMPLETE
SIGNS & DISPLAY
SERVICE
s
For Particular People
-LL. 2478 — DON YOKOTA
1345 Davenport Rd., Toronto
I
I
|
ROSE’S
|
Beauty Salon
K
Permanent Waves
and Hairstyling
I
y
Mrs. Rose Akiyama
H
f 648 College
I
—
Toronto P
PHONE ME. 6078
CLUB
CONSULT
CHOCLO
Ken Hori
BERNARDI-MATHEWS Ltd.
OX. 4-1127
2670
GL. 8314 (res.) '
Danforth Ave.
Toronto
&
K
L ft
REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES
OF CARS AND TRUCKS
& G
& I ft
K
©
&
6
is
Chippy's Garage
I
#>
■5
5
TVrite For Free Catalogue Today
Branch School:
203 S. Roscommon Ave.
L. A. 22, Calif.
WA. 3-4551
301 Manning Ave., Toronto
EVERY GRADUATE EMPLOYED
MORE SEXORS URGENTLY NEEDED
VETERAN APPROVED
LIVING ACCOMMODATIONS
OLDEST AND LARGEST SCHOOL
Zernov
"Reg. U.S. Pat. Off."
!
214 LINE STREET, LANSDALE, PENNA.-
Friday, May 27, 1955
•
at POLISH HALL
62 Claremont St., Toronto
J