Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
VOL 18 —NO. 43
iitrt iloings
TORONTO. ONT.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1955
After Rousing Brother, Girl
Dies in Early Morning Fire
other dull chatter}
By MARGIE
NELSON. B. G.—In a spec
tacular blaze which gutted Nel
son s oldest hotel, the 45-year-old
Strathcona, a young Nisei girl
of 21, Harumi Shinmoto, was one
of six persons to lose their lives.
Sixty persons were believed to
have been in the hotel when
flames swept through it within
minutes just before 1 a.m. last
Friday.
mote of Kaslo.
to
Harumi Shinmoto
mourn her loss her parents and
brother Mike at Kaslo, brothers
Yosh in Nelson, Slug at Deep
River. Ont., and sisters Toki and
Mrs. G. Kishita, in Toronto.
Who’s in the news: Appearing
iv both the Toronto Star and
the Tely were two May brides,
photos by Yamada '(plug), Mrs.
Harry Haruta (nee May Aoki)
and Mrs. George Kudo (nee Mary
Maikawa). Also in the Tely was
a candid snap of a group in
cluding Shirley Nishioka, Marg
aret Arima, and Frank Nishioka,
Ironically, Miss Shinmoto had
following their confirmation at
roused her brother, Yosh, who
the Church of St. George-themanaged to escape by climbing
Martyr . • • and hi The Star,
out the fire escape after an un
Louise Okawara was shown as
successful attempt to leap from
one of the winners of scholar
SINGAPORE.—Japan emerged
the second storey window. Miss
ships and prizes in the graduat
predominant
in the Southeast
Shinmoto had then apparently
ing class of the Toronto General
rushed into the hallway into the Asian Film Festival held here
Hospital, Wellesley Division. At
recently. “Golden Shinkun", a
blazing inferno.
the U of T, Miss P. S. KamitakaRCMP said the hotel was “a Daiei production, was selected the
hara was successful in obtaining
regular tinderbox.” The building top full-length movie in the fesa standing in her 1st premedical
was levelled except for one cor
year, class II. At McGill, Soichi
award went
The best
ner where portions of the walls
Isomura, B.Sc., received his de
to Miss Keiko Kishi of the Japa
were left standing.
gree of Doctor of Medicine, Yosh
nese Shochiku Film Co. The
Taguchi obtained his B.Sc. with
Mr. Joe Graham, well known company also won awards for
2nd class honors in psychology,
—Photo by SHIGETOMI PHOTOGRAPHICS local citizen and manager of the best photography, best sound re
Akira Kimura, B.Sc., received the
Canadian Bank of Commerce cording, art, and direction, in the
AY decorates the Japan Tourist Bureau booth
Doctor of Dental Surgery degree,
branch here, had been very high
.dian International Trade Fair which opened in his praise of Miss Shinmoto’s film, “The Refugee,” in which
while Haruo Gordon .Kawai re
Miss Kishi starred.
ceived the Robert Forsyth Prize Monday at the Exhibition Grounds in Toronto. The life-size “dolls” work as a machine operator at
Udeki Motohari won the spe
in Theory of Structures and shown above are Tosh Kumamoto and Betty Mochizuki. The Fail is the bank. He is reported to have cial prize for best boy actor, and
Strength of Materials along with open to the public three days only: today, Saturday and next done his utmost to bring relief three Japanese films—“Breeding
his degree of Bachelor of En- Wednesday.
and comfort to the grief-stricken Ground for Snowy Heron,”
,
parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Shin- “Beer,” and “French Art”—won
gineering.
that
From Manitoba, we hear
awards in the non-dramatic catthe winners of the MJ CCA An
Kazuo Nakamura Joins egory.
nual Essay contest were an
The Filipino film, “Ifugao,’
Water Color Group
nounced last month . . -.’1st, wim
produced by the People’s Premier
' It was announced last week
the topic, “Canada Needs a Bill film Co. in Manila, won awards
That
was
the
morning
when
a
that the Canadian Society of
WASHINGTON, D.C.—Though
of Rights”, was Sachi Ono; 2nd,
for the best direction, best screen
Lily Nagamori; 3rd, Jane Tera it received practically no mention special Senate Judiciary Sub Painters in Water Colors has play and the best male, actor,
uchi; 4th, David Shimozawa; and in the general press of the Na committee held a public hearing elected five new members: Jean Efren Reyes.
5th, Emily Tonogai. Sachi Ono tion, one of the most significant on the nomination of Benjamin Murray Crozier, Kazuo Naka
was also selected as one of three events in the history of persons M. Tashiro to be a federal judge mura, John Richmond, William
Odori Demonstration
Roberts and Jocelyn Taylor.
reps from St. James Collegiate of Japanese ancestry in the Unit in the Territory of Hawaii.
This was the first time in con
The recently-arrived Japanese
Officers of the Society are Bob
in Winnipeg to the (take a deep ed States took place Thursday
gressional
history,
dating
back
to
president;
William classical dancing teacher, Miss
Haworth,
breath) “Second Annual United morning, May 19.
1789,
that
a
Senate
Subcommittee
vice-president;
Albert Hideya Ogawa, will give a de
Minter,
Nations University Seminar for
held a formal, public hearing to
Montreal, second vice- monstration in Toronto this Sat
Selected High School Students of
NC Seeks Information determine the qualifications of Cloutier,
president; Edward F. Cooke, sec urday, 8 p.m., at St. Elizabeth
Manitoba and Northwestern On
citizen
of
Japanese
On Surviving Pioneers an. American
retary; Oscar Cahen, Donald Ned- Church, corner of Dundas and
tario” . . .
ancestry
for
a
responsible
feddeau, Dawson Kennedy and Gus Spadina. The affair is to be
Gerichi Ohashi, our westcoast
Among Canadian Issei
sponsored by the. Kisaragi Club.
eral post.
tav Weisman, directors.
correspondent, appeared in Van
The New Canadian is re
was,
and
i
s,
more
At stake
couver courts twice recently—as
questing the cooperation of all
than
approval of a single indi
sponsor for two Isseis who were
surviving early Japanese im
vidual; at issue was, and is, the
scheduled to receive their Can
migrants to Canada. Those
question of whether the Senate of
adian Citizenship . . . and “Fat
The Writer Concludes His Observations
Issei who arrived in this coun
the United States will confirm a
Boy” Fujisawa, who was sched
try 50 years or more ago (or
presidential nominee of Japanese
on California and Nevada
uled to arrive in Toronto lasttheir relatives, friends, etc.)
ancestry
for
national
judiciary.
week, bade farewell to his enjoy
Sacramento State College, located
are asked to notify this newsThe subcommittee is the first ILL the larger cities in the state
able (?) bachelor’ days last Sat
of California have a commun five miles from the downtown
paper, giving particul ars of
hurdle in the legislative proced
urday in Vancouver. . . . Imagine
area, has an enrollment of 4500.
name, age, native Japanese
ure leading to confirmation. It is ity of Japanese Americans and
Toronto as a honeymoon haven . .
One of the top athletes at this
prefecture, present address,
here that the preliminary skir a Little Tokyo. In Fresno, a niA Toronto lass, Emiko Irie,
college
is George Goto, a Korean
date and year of entrance into
mish was fought and the de honjin-machi of one block is on
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Yotaro
War vet, who uses his 6’2” height
Canada.
cisive battle may be determined. Kern street, a few blocks from to advantage in baseball and bas
Irie, will be looking forward with
Public response has been
There is no question, as debate the main shopping district of the
special interest to the arrival of
ketball.very good to date, and a dead
on Statehood for the deserving
the 2 Japanese airlines steward
The temperature hit 95 degrees
Sacramento, capital of the
line of June 15, 1955, has been
Territory of Hawaii released last
esses who are coming to Toronto
here when I watched a sport meet
set.
year, that there are several sen “Golden State”, has the second
tor the Canadian International
at the College, but I was told
ators who have grave reserva largest JA population on the the summer average is about 72.
Trade Fair this week. Miss Irie
Coast. (Los Angeles, of course,
was in the same class in Aoyama there will be a dance this Sat tions about Americans of Japa having the largest number of Ja Winters are very mild, with an
Gakuin (College) in Japan with urday at the University Settle nese ancestry.
average temperature of 47 de
Several of these senators are panese in the U.S.) Sacramento’s
Fumiko Shiba, one of the pretty ment House, starting ’bout 8 . . .
LiT Tokio is located on Fourth grees.
hostesses.
and take note: hereafter^ a Sat very influential, and most of them street, a few minutes walk from
In Fresno, summers are so hot
are from what is generally de
urday
Nite
dance
will
be
held
that air conditioners are found on
A last reminder for the El
signated as the Deep Soufh. the Tower Bridge, a local landevery
first
Saturday
during
the
the roofs of homes, a fact which
Destino June Hop this Friday
mark.
Whether
they
will
allow
ancestry
n'^r at Matsuo Studios, 133LA summer months . . .
Sacramento is noted for the I found interesting. Here I stayed
to
cause
them
to
object
to
Ta
Remember, Toronto JCCA
Pandas West in Toronto. Come
beauty and extent of its city at the “world s largest ’ motel,
shiro
is
not
known.
the Hacienda, which has over
°n out and support this all-Nisei members, there’s an exec meeting
_ (By Mike Masaoka parks. A total of 1204 acres is
(Continued on Page Seven)
Musical group. Terry Shiga of tonight at 8 sharp, 415 Spadina.
in the Pacific Citizen) said to be devoted to park use.
^e Saturday Nite Club says that Everyone’s welcome . . .
Southeast Asia Festival
Gives Japanese Films,
Actors Top Rating
Historical Event: U.S. Nisei
Named to Federal Judiciary
ON THE ROAD: Genny Ohashi
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
VOL 18 —NO. 43
iitrt iloings
TORONTO. ONT.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1955
After Rousing Brother, Girl
Dies in Early Morning Fire
other dull chatter}
By MARGIE
NELSON. B. G.—In a spec
tacular blaze which gutted Nel
son s oldest hotel, the 45-year-old
Strathcona, a young Nisei girl
of 21, Harumi Shinmoto, was one
of six persons to lose their lives.
Sixty persons were believed to
have been in the hotel when
flames swept through it within
minutes just before 1 a.m. last
Friday.
mote of Kaslo.
to
Harumi Shinmoto
mourn her loss her parents and
brother Mike at Kaslo, brothers
Yosh in Nelson, Slug at Deep
River. Ont., and sisters Toki and
Mrs. G. Kishita, in Toronto.
Who’s in the news: Appearing
iv both the Toronto Star and
the Tely were two May brides,
photos by Yamada '(plug), Mrs.
Harry Haruta (nee May Aoki)
and Mrs. George Kudo (nee Mary
Maikawa). Also in the Tely was
a candid snap of a group in
cluding Shirley Nishioka, Marg
aret Arima, and Frank Nishioka,
Ironically, Miss Shinmoto had
following their confirmation at
roused her brother, Yosh, who
the Church of St. George-themanaged to escape by climbing
Martyr . • • and hi The Star,
out the fire escape after an un
Louise Okawara was shown as
successful attempt to leap from
one of the winners of scholar
SINGAPORE.—Japan emerged
the second storey window. Miss
ships and prizes in the graduat
predominant
in the Southeast
Shinmoto had then apparently
ing class of the Toronto General
rushed into the hallway into the Asian Film Festival held here
Hospital, Wellesley Division. At
recently. “Golden Shinkun", a
blazing inferno.
the U of T, Miss P. S. KamitakaRCMP said the hotel was “a Daiei production, was selected the
hara was successful in obtaining
regular tinderbox.” The building top full-length movie in the fesa standing in her 1st premedical
was levelled except for one cor
year, class II. At McGill, Soichi
award went
The best
ner where portions of the walls
Isomura, B.Sc., received his de
to Miss Keiko Kishi of the Japa
were left standing.
gree of Doctor of Medicine, Yosh
nese Shochiku Film Co. The
Taguchi obtained his B.Sc. with
Mr. Joe Graham, well known company also won awards for
2nd class honors in psychology,
—Photo by SHIGETOMI PHOTOGRAPHICS local citizen and manager of the best photography, best sound re
Akira Kimura, B.Sc., received the
Canadian Bank of Commerce cording, art, and direction, in the
AY decorates the Japan Tourist Bureau booth
Doctor of Dental Surgery degree,
branch here, had been very high
.dian International Trade Fair which opened in his praise of Miss Shinmoto’s film, “The Refugee,” in which
while Haruo Gordon .Kawai re
Miss Kishi starred.
ceived the Robert Forsyth Prize Monday at the Exhibition Grounds in Toronto. The life-size “dolls” work as a machine operator at
Udeki Motohari won the spe
in Theory of Structures and shown above are Tosh Kumamoto and Betty Mochizuki. The Fail is the bank. He is reported to have cial prize for best boy actor, and
Strength of Materials along with open to the public three days only: today, Saturday and next done his utmost to bring relief three Japanese films—“Breeding
his degree of Bachelor of En- Wednesday.
and comfort to the grief-stricken Ground for Snowy Heron,”
,
parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Shin- “Beer,” and “French Art”—won
gineering.
that
From Manitoba, we hear
awards in the non-dramatic catthe winners of the MJ CCA An
Kazuo Nakamura Joins egory.
nual Essay contest were an
The Filipino film, “Ifugao,’
Water Color Group
nounced last month . . -.’1st, wim
produced by the People’s Premier
' It was announced last week
the topic, “Canada Needs a Bill film Co. in Manila, won awards
That
was
the
morning
when
a
that the Canadian Society of
WASHINGTON, D.C.—Though
of Rights”, was Sachi Ono; 2nd,
for the best direction, best screen
Lily Nagamori; 3rd, Jane Tera it received practically no mention special Senate Judiciary Sub Painters in Water Colors has play and the best male, actor,
uchi; 4th, David Shimozawa; and in the general press of the Na committee held a public hearing elected five new members: Jean Efren Reyes.
5th, Emily Tonogai. Sachi Ono tion, one of the most significant on the nomination of Benjamin Murray Crozier, Kazuo Naka
was also selected as one of three events in the history of persons M. Tashiro to be a federal judge mura, John Richmond, William
Odori Demonstration
Roberts and Jocelyn Taylor.
reps from St. James Collegiate of Japanese ancestry in the Unit in the Territory of Hawaii.
This was the first time in con
The recently-arrived Japanese
Officers of the Society are Bob
in Winnipeg to the (take a deep ed States took place Thursday
gressional
history,
dating
back
to
president;
William classical dancing teacher, Miss
Haworth,
breath) “Second Annual United morning, May 19.
1789,
that
a
Senate
Subcommittee
vice-president;
Albert Hideya Ogawa, will give a de
Minter,
Nations University Seminar for
held a formal, public hearing to
Montreal, second vice- monstration in Toronto this Sat
Selected High School Students of
NC Seeks Information determine the qualifications of Cloutier,
president; Edward F. Cooke, sec urday, 8 p.m., at St. Elizabeth
Manitoba and Northwestern On
citizen
of
Japanese
On Surviving Pioneers an. American
retary; Oscar Cahen, Donald Ned- Church, corner of Dundas and
tario” . . .
ancestry
for
a
responsible
feddeau, Dawson Kennedy and Gus Spadina. The affair is to be
Gerichi Ohashi, our westcoast
Among Canadian Issei
sponsored by the. Kisaragi Club.
eral post.
tav Weisman, directors.
correspondent, appeared in Van
The New Canadian is re
was,
and
i
s,
more
At stake
couver courts twice recently—as
questing the cooperation of all
than
approval of a single indi
sponsor for two Isseis who were
surviving early Japanese im
vidual; at issue was, and is, the
scheduled to receive their Can
migrants to Canada. Those
question of whether the Senate of
adian Citizenship . . . and “Fat
The Writer Concludes His Observations
Issei who arrived in this coun
the United States will confirm a
Boy” Fujisawa, who was sched
try 50 years or more ago (or
presidential nominee of Japanese
on California and Nevada
uled to arrive in Toronto lasttheir relatives, friends, etc.)
ancestry
for
national
judiciary.
week, bade farewell to his enjoy
Sacramento State College, located
are asked to notify this newsThe subcommittee is the first ILL the larger cities in the state
able (?) bachelor’ days last Sat
of California have a commun five miles from the downtown
paper, giving particul ars of
hurdle in the legislative proced
urday in Vancouver. . . . Imagine
area, has an enrollment of 4500.
name, age, native Japanese
ure leading to confirmation. It is ity of Japanese Americans and
Toronto as a honeymoon haven . .
One of the top athletes at this
prefecture, present address,
here that the preliminary skir a Little Tokyo. In Fresno, a niA Toronto lass, Emiko Irie,
college
is George Goto, a Korean
date and year of entrance into
mish was fought and the de honjin-machi of one block is on
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Yotaro
War vet, who uses his 6’2” height
Canada.
cisive battle may be determined. Kern street, a few blocks from to advantage in baseball and bas
Irie, will be looking forward with
Public response has been
There is no question, as debate the main shopping district of the
special interest to the arrival of
ketball.very good to date, and a dead
on Statehood for the deserving
the 2 Japanese airlines steward
The temperature hit 95 degrees
Sacramento, capital of the
line of June 15, 1955, has been
Territory of Hawaii released last
esses who are coming to Toronto
here when I watched a sport meet
set.
year, that there are several sen “Golden State”, has the second
tor the Canadian International
at the College, but I was told
ators who have grave reserva largest JA population on the the summer average is about 72.
Trade Fair this week. Miss Irie
Coast. (Los Angeles, of course,
was in the same class in Aoyama there will be a dance this Sat tions about Americans of Japa having the largest number of Ja Winters are very mild, with an
Gakuin (College) in Japan with urday at the University Settle nese ancestry.
average temperature of 47 de
Several of these senators are panese in the U.S.) Sacramento’s
Fumiko Shiba, one of the pretty ment House, starting ’bout 8 . . .
LiT Tokio is located on Fourth grees.
hostesses.
and take note: hereafter^ a Sat very influential, and most of them street, a few minutes walk from
In Fresno, summers are so hot
are from what is generally de
urday
Nite
dance
will
be
held
that air conditioners are found on
A last reminder for the El
signated as the Deep Soufh. the Tower Bridge, a local landevery
first
Saturday
during
the
the roofs of homes, a fact which
Destino June Hop this Friday
mark.
Whether
they
will
allow
ancestry
n'^r at Matsuo Studios, 133LA summer months . . .
Sacramento is noted for the I found interesting. Here I stayed
to
cause
them
to
object
to
Ta
Remember, Toronto JCCA
Pandas West in Toronto. Come
beauty and extent of its city at the “world s largest ’ motel,
shiro
is
not
known.
the Hacienda, which has over
°n out and support this all-Nisei members, there’s an exec meeting
_ (By Mike Masaoka parks. A total of 1204 acres is
(Continued on Page Seven)
Musical group. Terry Shiga of tonight at 8 sharp, 415 Spadina.
in the Pacific Citizen) said to be devoted to park use.
^e Saturday Nite Club says that Everyone’s welcome . . .
Southeast Asia Festival
Gives Japanese Films,
Actors Top Rating
Historical Event: U.S. Nisei
Named to Federal Judiciary
ON THE ROAD: Genny Ohashi
Page 2
■’PAGE 2
THE
The New Canadian ;
Published Wednesday and Saturday each week ■
as a medium of expression and news outlet among’ j
those of Japanese origin in Canada t
Henry 0. Moritsugu _______ .________ __ Editor }
Takaichi Umezuki___ Japanese Section Editor
Ken Mori______________---------------- Advertising
Authorized second class matter, Post Office
; Department, Ottawa. Subscription, payable in
i advance, 86 per year. Office hours, Mon.-Fri.
I
8.30-5:30; Sat., 9-12 noon.
j EM. 6-5005 — 479 Queen St. W., Toronto, Ont.
Everybody thinks his load is heaviest, said some
wise fellow years ago. Newspaper editors (espec
ially those who have served terms with this pub
lication, and particularly this writer) are no
'exception. Nobody likes to listen to complaints,
but having nothing better on hand to fill this
space, here we go with a few gripes:
Everything about this job, rushing out our
newspaper twice a week, is dependent on time.
Just as now, we’re struggling to meet the Tues
day noon press deadline for the Wednesday issue.
And what’s more irksome is the constant nagging
of the printing men when we’re doing our darn
edest to get the forms on the press. Of course, we
don’t blame these fellows for getting on our
necks, but it doesn’t help a heck of a lot.
Turning away from the immediate problem
(which I shouldn’t do), we have a complaint to
make against all those people who promise to get
their reports and columns in, but are always
weeks late . . . O.K., so it’s our job—but we like
to gripe, just like anyone else . . .
—H.M.
Toronto JGCA Fund Drive
THIS TORONTO J.C.C..-\. acknowledges with
thanks the following contributions to the 1951-55
-Membership Fund Drive:
PREVIOUS TOTAL ..................................................... 81,925
820—Anonymous.
$12 Mr. T. Kawabe and family.
810 Mr. Girobei Miyazaki and family, Mrs. H
Kuroda. Mr. Chuzo Furukawa.
8~—Mr. Toshio- Kotani.
85—-Mr. Bus Ohori, Mrs. S. F. Omura. Mr. Masaji
Tokiwa. Mr. D. K. Uyenaka, Mr. and Mrs. F.
Hayashi, Mr. J. H. Kono and family, Mr. Isosaburo
Ueda, Mr. M. Shiozaki, Mr. S. Okazaki. Mr. H.
Taira, Mr. Y. Kaneko. Mr. G. T. Tanaka.
84—Mr. Mata.hara Otsu, Mr. I. Imagama, Miss
1^- Okada, Mr. a.nd Mrs. Eiichiro Nishioka.
83—Mr. H. Ogura. Mr. Saichi Harafuji, Mr. Shiroemon Shimone. Mr. Mamoru Nishi. Mr. Kiichi
Maikawa. Miss Kiyo Obokata, Mr. M. Watada.
82—Mr. Toyoshi Hiramatsu. Mr. J. Yabu, Mr.
and Mrs. T. Ura. Mr. Haruyoshi Takeguchi, Mr.
F. M. Hamade. Mr. S. Tanaka (Capitol Cleaners).
Mr. Bob Shiozaki, Mr. S. Irizawa, Mr. Isamu Omori
and Miss Yosh Omori. Mr. M. Seo, Mr. E. Kamitakahara, Mr. S. Hayashi. Mr. Joe Tehara. Mr. M.
Hattori, Miss Grace Ozawa. Mrs. M. Kanamaru,
Mr. M. Yanagisawa, Mr. Shoso Tomihiro. Mrs. H.
Sora, Miss F. Hirayama. Mrs. Hode Hirayama,
Miss R. Hirayama., Mr, K. Nishimoto. Mr. H. Nishi
moto, Mr. T. Yoshida. Mr. S. M. Fujimoto, Miss H.
Shimono, Mr. George Tanabe, Mr. R. Okhda, Mrs.
Shizue Harafuji. Mr. Manzo Sakamoto. Mr. Kimio
Shinohara, Mr. Sani Tomotsugu. Mr. N. Nishimoto.
Mr. Sakuhei Izukawa, Miss Sally Mitsubata, Mr.
W. H. Kurisu, Mr, Harry Tanouye. Mr. M. Kubota.
Mr. P. S. Nishina., Mr. Kinjiro Seko, Mr. Y. Hakkaku. Mr. I. Fujino, Mr. and Mrs. Mits Otsu, Mr.
Masatoshi Shimoda, Mr. T. Aida, Mr. Frank Ya
mada. Mr. Slim Hashida, Mr. M. Hashida. Mr. Jiro
Suehiro, Mr. Toshiro Tsuji, Mr. K. Fukusaka, Mr.
Jisaki Sato, Mrs. C. Kitazaki, Mr. Tomekichi Kokuryo. Mr. T. Kimura. Mr. Kiyoshi Uyesugi. Mr.
and Mrs. Tokizo Toguri. Mrs. Kay Ogaki, Mrs. H.
Uyeno. Mr. Jack Hemmy. Mr. Toraichi Kajioka,
Mr. F. Kawasaki, Mr. Izo Arima. Mr. Yoshiichi
Hashimoto, Mrs. Mini Omura. Mr. Hirouemon
Takagi.
81—Mrs. K. Kobayashi, Mr. K. Kondo.
TOTAL TO DATE............................................................... $’.227
(advt.)
Wedding Invitations
A
Letterheads
Envelopes
EXPERTLY DONE
THE NEW CANADIAN
:
479 Queen St. W.
EM. 6-5005
NEW
Wednesday, June 1, 1955
CANADIAN
American Niseis in Show Biz JAL Steivardesses
Since '’Way Back When’
Visit New York
By LARRY TAJIRI in The Pacific Citizen
Denver, Colo.
jpHIS IS really Bob Okazaki’s
column. Guess we’ve known.
Bob for a long time—Though we
haven’t seen him since one dayjust before mass evacuation in
Los Angeles back in 1942, thir
teen years ago. We first met him
early in the depression-ridden
1930s when he came down from
his home town of Seattle to start
the first Nisei-operated daily’
newspaper in Los Angeles, the
New Japanese American News.
The venture wasn’t long-lived but
Bob’s tabloid generated consider
able excitement in Little Tokyo
in those days.
Bob has had about as varied a
career as any Nisei. Even before
his newspaper venture, he’d been
down in Hollywood where he’d
started playing bit parts in the
movies as far back as 1925. Bob
kept taking an occasional role in
the movies while he was running
the newspaper in the 1930s and
later, just before Pearl Barbor,
when Hollywood was turning out
a spate of anti-Japanese films,
mainly about militarism in the
Far East. “I was one of the
busiest guys in Los Angeles,”
Bob recalls, “doing Japanese
spies, secret agents, army offic
ers . . . and other devious and
inscrutable Nipponese bits.”
We remember being in a New
York movies house back in 1941,
watching a Clark Gable opus
about an American caught in the
mesh of Japanese intrigue in the
Far East, when a Japanese gen
eral strutted past the camera—
and there was Bob Okazaki. Bob,
incidentally, ahvay-s disclaimed
any artistic or thespian ambit
ions. “My- heart wasn’t in it,” he
says, “I was doing it because I
needed the money.” Bob’s still
playing in the movies, though.
He’ll be seen shortly as a pearl
merchant- in a 20th Ceritury pic
ture with a Japanese setting,
House of Bamboo, which stars
Shirley- Yamaguchi, Robert Ryan
and Robert Stack.
THE OTHER DAY* we got a
letter from Bob Okazaki. He’s
married, settled down in Los An
geles and in the wholesale im
porting- business with George
Nakaki. But he’s still interested
in show business and his pitch
was to get the word out to the
younger Nisei—guess some of
them are technically- Sansei and
Yonsei—about some of the things
the Issei and Nisei have done in
the entertainment world wayback when. But let Bob tell itr
“I suppose the average Amer
ican thinks of the California
Japanese as a farmer.Y garden
er, market man, shop keeper,
Skid Row hotel operator, or an
Oriental art goods dealer, with
a sprinkling of doctors, lawyers,
dentists, optometrists and preach
ers . . . Even the Nisei them
selves read the news this year
about the importation of Japa
nese circus artists by- the Ringlings as something new. They
little know about Tsuru Aoki or
Sessue Hayakawa who used to
play- leads in Holly-wood features.
And it was not too long ago when
the Takahashi sisters, Helen and
Dorothy, from the Maryknoll
school, billed with Paul Jew as
the Three Mah Jongs, were play
ing the big vaude circuits, and
later Dorothy- and Paul teamed
in a dance act which appeared on
three continents. They- were danc
ing at the Savoy- in London in
1939 when the blitz came to
Britain.
“I tell these kids about Togo
Tanaka’s sisters dancing on a
Mississippi River showboat and
they- think I’m nuts. But I re
member back when Toshia Mori
was a Wampus Baby Star, and
farther back when Shojin Kami
yama played one of the Three
Wise Men in Cecil B. DeMille
epic. The new Freeway- has cut
through some of the picturesque
portions of the Hollywood of by
gone days, but it just missed the
old Hayakawa mansion. It still
stands, a silent reminder to a
now little-remembered actor who
v.-as a top star in Hollywood and
the senior Douglas Fairbanks
was a member of his supporting
cast.
“I could gc on and on, telling
about vaudeville headliners like
Haruko Onuki (who now sells
real estate here), Madame Iki, the
clever Miy-akos, the Kanazawa
acrobatic troupe and Fumiko
Kawabata, the Los Angeles girl
who was on the old Orpheum
two-a-day- when she was only 17.”
Bob says that Hollywood has
a number of Japanese back
ground pictures in the making,
creating something of a boom for
players of Japanese ancestry. Bob
has an agent, Mary- Reeves, who
operates the Oriental Casting
Sendee and handles many of the
Japanese Americans in entertain
ment. If there’s a boom, Bob will
be in the middle of it.
*
*
As we said, this is really- Bob
Okazaki’s column. He may- insist
that his heart isn’t in it, but
personally- we prefer to believe
that down deep he’s fascinated—
as most of us are—by the world
of lights and shadows, of grease
paint and kleiglights. .
* AH the modern inconveniences.
4^ City-Wide
^ Delivery
The Bill Takeda Agency
Phones
Immediate and best
coverage for your
automobile insurance
New York
A,Victorian hansom carriage may- not ride like
a Jinrikisha, but it was in such a horse-drawn
vehicle that Misses Fumiko Shiba and Kikuko
Sasaki were introduced to the verdant charms
of Central Park. They- claimed it was much more
comfortable than the ride they- had had the dav
before when they- had set New York traffic and
spectators agog by drawing up to the Waldorf
in a life-sized Jinrikisha, flown in from Tokvo
just for the occasion.
Miss Shiba and Miss Sasaki are currentlyvisiting New Y’ork to acquaint Americans with
a few things Japanese, including Japan’s tourist
attractions. They are making fantastically- rapid
progress through radio and television appear
ances and newspaper interviews.
Winsome Smiles
But this attractive pair with their winsome
smiles and quiet good manners, who speak Eng
lish so easily-, are also giving the U.S. a chance
to see what is happening among Japan’s younger
generation of women, for they are, at the same
time, alert, intelligent girls who have learned
to deal efficiently with flying and culture prob
lems—both Occidental and Oriental.
Miss Shiba and Miss Sasaki represent 70 airline
stewardesses, who work on both the domestic
and international flights of Japan Air Lines.
Since they fly the Toky-o, Honolulu, San Francisco
route, they were among those trained by- Miss
Ty Attwood of United Airlines, who went to
Japan for eight months to supervise training of
Japanese air stewardesses who would serve on
the international flights.
Because the East and West represent such
different cultures, this was no small task. Miss
Attwood taught the girls the intricacies of Amer
ican food and how to serve it, and then polished
off food training by- placing the girls in fine
Toky-o hotels,■•where the trainees actually- waited
table.
Miss Attwood familiarized the girls with
American manners, customs, and habits, threw in
all she could of geography, and answered endless
questions about American cities, American fash
ions, and American girls. When Miss Attwood
assured the trainees that American boys always
carried bundles and let women pass through doors
first, her Japanese charges began to turn tables
fast on some of their bewildered Japanese men
folk!
The girls learned the differences in dealing
with American and Japanese babies (American
mothers are reluctant to let stewardesses do
much), how to avoid the glances of too-flirtatious
passengers and how to deal with crochety. hardto-please riders. Since from 20 to 50 per cent
of the passengers are, normally, Americans, the
stewardesses must of course, be bilingual.
Parle Vous Japanese
Most of the girls know, or are studying a
'third language, as well, such as Chinese, French
or Spanish. Since most American passengers are
eager to learn a little Japanese before landing
in Toky-o, the girls also tutor eager passengers
with the aid of a pamphlet prepared for them
(Continued on Page Eight)
Day & Night §
LO. 5691 §
Flower Shop
$
$
$
365 Roncesvalles Avenue
Toronto
$
When It's Flowers
Say 11
coy
It With
wnn ours
Ours
&
COMPLETE
SIGNS & DISPLAY
SERVICE
45Phone evenings & week-ends«
For Particular People
TOSHE TAKASAKI
X
LL. 2478 — DON YOKOTA
WA. 1-03S9
0
1345 Davenport Rd., Toronto
EM. 3-1349
TORONTO
By MARILYN HOFFMAN
in The Christian Science Monitor
&
GENERAL INSURANCE
ST. 8-7288
$
(The stewardesses of the following art., e
Fumiko Shiba mid Kikuko Sasaki arrived in Dr.
onto Sunday to participate in the Canadian hrei.
national Trade Fair.—Ed.}
*
c
1
|
I
r
ft
f
|
|
s
THE
The New Canadian ;
Published Wednesday and Saturday each week ■
as a medium of expression and news outlet among’ j
those of Japanese origin in Canada t
Henry 0. Moritsugu _______ .________ __ Editor }
Takaichi Umezuki___ Japanese Section Editor
Ken Mori______________---------------- Advertising
Authorized second class matter, Post Office
; Department, Ottawa. Subscription, payable in
i advance, 86 per year. Office hours, Mon.-Fri.
I
8.30-5:30; Sat., 9-12 noon.
j EM. 6-5005 — 479 Queen St. W., Toronto, Ont.
Everybody thinks his load is heaviest, said some
wise fellow years ago. Newspaper editors (espec
ially those who have served terms with this pub
lication, and particularly this writer) are no
'exception. Nobody likes to listen to complaints,
but having nothing better on hand to fill this
space, here we go with a few gripes:
Everything about this job, rushing out our
newspaper twice a week, is dependent on time.
Just as now, we’re struggling to meet the Tues
day noon press deadline for the Wednesday issue.
And what’s more irksome is the constant nagging
of the printing men when we’re doing our darn
edest to get the forms on the press. Of course, we
don’t blame these fellows for getting on our
necks, but it doesn’t help a heck of a lot.
Turning away from the immediate problem
(which I shouldn’t do), we have a complaint to
make against all those people who promise to get
their reports and columns in, but are always
weeks late . . . O.K., so it’s our job—but we like
to gripe, just like anyone else . . .
—H.M.
Toronto JGCA Fund Drive
THIS TORONTO J.C.C..-\. acknowledges with
thanks the following contributions to the 1951-55
-Membership Fund Drive:
PREVIOUS TOTAL ..................................................... 81,925
820—Anonymous.
$12 Mr. T. Kawabe and family.
810 Mr. Girobei Miyazaki and family, Mrs. H
Kuroda. Mr. Chuzo Furukawa.
8~—Mr. Toshio- Kotani.
85—-Mr. Bus Ohori, Mrs. S. F. Omura. Mr. Masaji
Tokiwa. Mr. D. K. Uyenaka, Mr. and Mrs. F.
Hayashi, Mr. J. H. Kono and family, Mr. Isosaburo
Ueda, Mr. M. Shiozaki, Mr. S. Okazaki. Mr. H.
Taira, Mr. Y. Kaneko. Mr. G. T. Tanaka.
84—Mr. Mata.hara Otsu, Mr. I. Imagama, Miss
1^- Okada, Mr. a.nd Mrs. Eiichiro Nishioka.
83—Mr. H. Ogura. Mr. Saichi Harafuji, Mr. Shiroemon Shimone. Mr. Mamoru Nishi. Mr. Kiichi
Maikawa. Miss Kiyo Obokata, Mr. M. Watada.
82—Mr. Toyoshi Hiramatsu. Mr. J. Yabu, Mr.
and Mrs. T. Ura. Mr. Haruyoshi Takeguchi, Mr.
F. M. Hamade. Mr. S. Tanaka (Capitol Cleaners).
Mr. Bob Shiozaki, Mr. S. Irizawa, Mr. Isamu Omori
and Miss Yosh Omori. Mr. M. Seo, Mr. E. Kamitakahara, Mr. S. Hayashi. Mr. Joe Tehara. Mr. M.
Hattori, Miss Grace Ozawa. Mrs. M. Kanamaru,
Mr. M. Yanagisawa, Mr. Shoso Tomihiro. Mrs. H.
Sora, Miss F. Hirayama. Mrs. Hode Hirayama,
Miss R. Hirayama., Mr, K. Nishimoto. Mr. H. Nishi
moto, Mr. T. Yoshida. Mr. S. M. Fujimoto, Miss H.
Shimono, Mr. George Tanabe, Mr. R. Okhda, Mrs.
Shizue Harafuji. Mr. Manzo Sakamoto. Mr. Kimio
Shinohara, Mr. Sani Tomotsugu. Mr. N. Nishimoto.
Mr. Sakuhei Izukawa, Miss Sally Mitsubata, Mr.
W. H. Kurisu, Mr, Harry Tanouye. Mr. M. Kubota.
Mr. P. S. Nishina., Mr. Kinjiro Seko, Mr. Y. Hakkaku. Mr. I. Fujino, Mr. and Mrs. Mits Otsu, Mr.
Masatoshi Shimoda, Mr. T. Aida, Mr. Frank Ya
mada. Mr. Slim Hashida, Mr. M. Hashida. Mr. Jiro
Suehiro, Mr. Toshiro Tsuji, Mr. K. Fukusaka, Mr.
Jisaki Sato, Mrs. C. Kitazaki, Mr. Tomekichi Kokuryo. Mr. T. Kimura. Mr. Kiyoshi Uyesugi. Mr.
and Mrs. Tokizo Toguri. Mrs. Kay Ogaki, Mrs. H.
Uyeno. Mr. Jack Hemmy. Mr. Toraichi Kajioka,
Mr. F. Kawasaki, Mr. Izo Arima. Mr. Yoshiichi
Hashimoto, Mrs. Mini Omura. Mr. Hirouemon
Takagi.
81—Mrs. K. Kobayashi, Mr. K. Kondo.
TOTAL TO DATE............................................................... $’.227
(advt.)
Wedding Invitations
A
Letterheads
Envelopes
EXPERTLY DONE
THE NEW CANADIAN
:
479 Queen St. W.
EM. 6-5005
NEW
Wednesday, June 1, 1955
CANADIAN
American Niseis in Show Biz JAL Steivardesses
Since '’Way Back When’
Visit New York
By LARRY TAJIRI in The Pacific Citizen
Denver, Colo.
jpHIS IS really Bob Okazaki’s
column. Guess we’ve known.
Bob for a long time—Though we
haven’t seen him since one dayjust before mass evacuation in
Los Angeles back in 1942, thir
teen years ago. We first met him
early in the depression-ridden
1930s when he came down from
his home town of Seattle to start
the first Nisei-operated daily’
newspaper in Los Angeles, the
New Japanese American News.
The venture wasn’t long-lived but
Bob’s tabloid generated consider
able excitement in Little Tokyo
in those days.
Bob has had about as varied a
career as any Nisei. Even before
his newspaper venture, he’d been
down in Hollywood where he’d
started playing bit parts in the
movies as far back as 1925. Bob
kept taking an occasional role in
the movies while he was running
the newspaper in the 1930s and
later, just before Pearl Barbor,
when Hollywood was turning out
a spate of anti-Japanese films,
mainly about militarism in the
Far East. “I was one of the
busiest guys in Los Angeles,”
Bob recalls, “doing Japanese
spies, secret agents, army offic
ers . . . and other devious and
inscrutable Nipponese bits.”
We remember being in a New
York movies house back in 1941,
watching a Clark Gable opus
about an American caught in the
mesh of Japanese intrigue in the
Far East, when a Japanese gen
eral strutted past the camera—
and there was Bob Okazaki. Bob,
incidentally, ahvay-s disclaimed
any artistic or thespian ambit
ions. “My- heart wasn’t in it,” he
says, “I was doing it because I
needed the money.” Bob’s still
playing in the movies, though.
He’ll be seen shortly as a pearl
merchant- in a 20th Ceritury pic
ture with a Japanese setting,
House of Bamboo, which stars
Shirley- Yamaguchi, Robert Ryan
and Robert Stack.
THE OTHER DAY* we got a
letter from Bob Okazaki. He’s
married, settled down in Los An
geles and in the wholesale im
porting- business with George
Nakaki. But he’s still interested
in show business and his pitch
was to get the word out to the
younger Nisei—guess some of
them are technically- Sansei and
Yonsei—about some of the things
the Issei and Nisei have done in
the entertainment world wayback when. But let Bob tell itr
“I suppose the average Amer
ican thinks of the California
Japanese as a farmer.Y garden
er, market man, shop keeper,
Skid Row hotel operator, or an
Oriental art goods dealer, with
a sprinkling of doctors, lawyers,
dentists, optometrists and preach
ers . . . Even the Nisei them
selves read the news this year
about the importation of Japa
nese circus artists by- the Ringlings as something new. They
little know about Tsuru Aoki or
Sessue Hayakawa who used to
play- leads in Holly-wood features.
And it was not too long ago when
the Takahashi sisters, Helen and
Dorothy, from the Maryknoll
school, billed with Paul Jew as
the Three Mah Jongs, were play
ing the big vaude circuits, and
later Dorothy- and Paul teamed
in a dance act which appeared on
three continents. They- were danc
ing at the Savoy- in London in
1939 when the blitz came to
Britain.
“I tell these kids about Togo
Tanaka’s sisters dancing on a
Mississippi River showboat and
they- think I’m nuts. But I re
member back when Toshia Mori
was a Wampus Baby Star, and
farther back when Shojin Kami
yama played one of the Three
Wise Men in Cecil B. DeMille
epic. The new Freeway- has cut
through some of the picturesque
portions of the Hollywood of by
gone days, but it just missed the
old Hayakawa mansion. It still
stands, a silent reminder to a
now little-remembered actor who
v.-as a top star in Hollywood and
the senior Douglas Fairbanks
was a member of his supporting
cast.
“I could gc on and on, telling
about vaudeville headliners like
Haruko Onuki (who now sells
real estate here), Madame Iki, the
clever Miy-akos, the Kanazawa
acrobatic troupe and Fumiko
Kawabata, the Los Angeles girl
who was on the old Orpheum
two-a-day- when she was only 17.”
Bob says that Hollywood has
a number of Japanese back
ground pictures in the making,
creating something of a boom for
players of Japanese ancestry. Bob
has an agent, Mary- Reeves, who
operates the Oriental Casting
Sendee and handles many of the
Japanese Americans in entertain
ment. If there’s a boom, Bob will
be in the middle of it.
*
*
As we said, this is really- Bob
Okazaki’s column. He may- insist
that his heart isn’t in it, but
personally- we prefer to believe
that down deep he’s fascinated—
as most of us are—by the world
of lights and shadows, of grease
paint and kleiglights. .
* AH the modern inconveniences.
4^ City-Wide
^ Delivery
The Bill Takeda Agency
Phones
Immediate and best
coverage for your
automobile insurance
New York
A,Victorian hansom carriage may- not ride like
a Jinrikisha, but it was in such a horse-drawn
vehicle that Misses Fumiko Shiba and Kikuko
Sasaki were introduced to the verdant charms
of Central Park. They- claimed it was much more
comfortable than the ride they- had had the dav
before when they- had set New York traffic and
spectators agog by drawing up to the Waldorf
in a life-sized Jinrikisha, flown in from Tokvo
just for the occasion.
Miss Shiba and Miss Sasaki are currentlyvisiting New Y’ork to acquaint Americans with
a few things Japanese, including Japan’s tourist
attractions. They are making fantastically- rapid
progress through radio and television appear
ances and newspaper interviews.
Winsome Smiles
But this attractive pair with their winsome
smiles and quiet good manners, who speak Eng
lish so easily-, are also giving the U.S. a chance
to see what is happening among Japan’s younger
generation of women, for they are, at the same
time, alert, intelligent girls who have learned
to deal efficiently with flying and culture prob
lems—both Occidental and Oriental.
Miss Shiba and Miss Sasaki represent 70 airline
stewardesses, who work on both the domestic
and international flights of Japan Air Lines.
Since they fly the Toky-o, Honolulu, San Francisco
route, they were among those trained by- Miss
Ty Attwood of United Airlines, who went to
Japan for eight months to supervise training of
Japanese air stewardesses who would serve on
the international flights.
Because the East and West represent such
different cultures, this was no small task. Miss
Attwood taught the girls the intricacies of Amer
ican food and how to serve it, and then polished
off food training by- placing the girls in fine
Toky-o hotels,■•where the trainees actually- waited
table.
Miss Attwood familiarized the girls with
American manners, customs, and habits, threw in
all she could of geography, and answered endless
questions about American cities, American fash
ions, and American girls. When Miss Attwood
assured the trainees that American boys always
carried bundles and let women pass through doors
first, her Japanese charges began to turn tables
fast on some of their bewildered Japanese men
folk!
The girls learned the differences in dealing
with American and Japanese babies (American
mothers are reluctant to let stewardesses do
much), how to avoid the glances of too-flirtatious
passengers and how to deal with crochety. hardto-please riders. Since from 20 to 50 per cent
of the passengers are, normally, Americans, the
stewardesses must of course, be bilingual.
Parle Vous Japanese
Most of the girls know, or are studying a
'third language, as well, such as Chinese, French
or Spanish. Since most American passengers are
eager to learn a little Japanese before landing
in Toky-o, the girls also tutor eager passengers
with the aid of a pamphlet prepared for them
(Continued on Page Eight)
Day & Night §
LO. 5691 §
Flower Shop
$
$
$
365 Roncesvalles Avenue
Toronto
$
When It's Flowers
Say 11
coy
It With
wnn ours
Ours
&
COMPLETE
SIGNS & DISPLAY
SERVICE
45Phone evenings & week-ends«
For Particular People
TOSHE TAKASAKI
X
LL. 2478 — DON YOKOTA
WA. 1-03S9
0
1345 Davenport Rd., Toronto
EM. 3-1349
TORONTO
By MARILYN HOFFMAN
in The Christian Science Monitor
&
GENERAL INSURANCE
ST. 8-7288
$
(The stewardesses of the following art., e
Fumiko Shiba mid Kikuko Sasaki arrived in Dr.
onto Sunday to participate in the Canadian hrei.
national Trade Fair.—Ed.}
*
c
1
|
I
r
ft
f
|
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s
Page 3
THE
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TORONTO
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Toronto 2-B, Ont.
(Phone EM. 6-5005)
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Wednesday, June 1, 1955
CANADIAN
NEW
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Page 7
Wednesday, June 1, 1955
Vancouver Bukkyo-Kai
Vancouver Buddhist Church wishes to acknowledge the following
donations to the Buddhist temple
fund:
THE
NEW
CANADIAN
PAGE 7
PERSONAL NOTES ACROSS CANADA
CALENDAR
MARRIAGES
YAMAUCHI-HORIUCHI
ENGAGEMENTS
A
double
ring
ceremony
per
$1,000: Genichiro' Y ada: Buddhist
KOBAYAKAWA-SHIOMI
The engagement of Kazuko,
June Hop
formed on April 23, 1955, in the
Church Women’s Association.
third
daughter
of
Mr,
and
Mrs.
On
Saturday,
May
’
ll,
1955;
the
$600 :Koby’s General Store.
Vernon United Church by Rev.
4—Montreal. Bussei Bowling wind
$500: Yoshio Okano, Genzaburo Na marriage of Yaeko Marie, eldest E. A. Affleck, united in mar Yoshinobu Inouye of South Bur-'
up Dance at Histadrur Hall, Eskamura, Zenno Tanaka, Yukiharu daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken
naby,
B.C.,
to
Jack
T.
Shimizu,
.
plana.de and Laurier, S:30 p.m.
riage Kuniko, daughter of Mr.
Tadokoro, Tomekichi Motomochi, kichi Shiomi of Toronto, to Mr.
second
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Iso,
4
—
Toronto. Saturdav Nite Chib
and Mrs. Takao Horiuchi of Ver
Yojiro Kondo, Shigeto Okada, YaUniversit v
jiro
Kobayashi
of
Toronto,
was
ozo Nomura, Magohashi Banno, Akira Kobayakawa, son of Mr. non, B.C., and Henry Masashi
went
Ho
nt
Genji Yada, Genichi Ohori, Shige and Mrs. Sadakichi Kobayakawa Vamauchi of Edmonton, son of announced on May 14,
the
Ho-Ho
Chop Suey in VanYada, Buemon Araki, Seiichi Ko of Montreal, took place at the
Mrs.'Kon Yamauchi of Calgary,
yanagi, Yoshinobu Inouye, Nishi Trinity United Church in Torcouver.
and the late Mr. Sampei Yama
zawa Co., Ichijiro Tanaka. T. Ama
Sewanin
Mr.
ei 9th annual piconto. Bev. E. Crossley Hunter uchi of Edmonton.
no Co. Ltd., Shinkatsu Kunimoto-,
Hideo
Yoshida
of
Toronto.
officiated.
Hyokuro Kozai, Yoshio Kondo and
The bride, given in marriage
Bussei Ou* ini
A ^ *
A reception followed at the by her father, chose a gown of
brother. Koichi Kaminishi.
Vermont.
$300: Ryota Kawasaki, Kiyozo Ka- Golden Dragon. The couple will
Mr. and Mrs. Tomekichi MotoFrench Alencon lace over white
JULY
zuta, Bunshichi Uyesugi, Gengo
reside in Montreal.
mochi
of
Vancouver
wish
to
ansatin
with
a
fitted,
yoke
effect
Ohashi. Stikeuemoh Arakawa, RyoI—Lethbridge. Niseis’ Dominion
*
*
♦
bodice, and the full circular skirt nounce the engagement of their
taro Horii, Miyoshi KimotO; KahiDay Dance nt the Trianon: exhiFUJII-NISHIZAKI
chiro Yoshida. Motoi Iwahaka, Sa
bition baseball r
ended in a short train. Her net daughter, Michiko, to Robert Yoon Pk
buro Nishimura, Tadao Tsuji, Yo
kio
Obara,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
3
—
Toronto.
JCCA
6th
Community
In St. Andrew’s United Church, headdress made of pearl-encrust
shio Sato, Kamenosuke Natsuhara,
Picnic at Lynbrook Park.
Tsuneo Obara of Greenwood. The
Chatham, Ont., on May 21, 1955, ed petals held a fingertip length
Tokiita.ro Tanaka.
9—Montreal. Quebec JCCA Picnic
$250: Toyohisa Koyanagi, Mdichi Rev. R. S. JohristOn, D.D., offici veil of silk illusion net. Her announcement was made at a
party at the Bamboo Terrace.
Omae; Tsuriitaro Kagetsii.
Stella picnic
ated at the marriage of Emiko spray bouquet was of gardenias,
Vancouver,
on Februarv 14. 1955.
$200: Shigezd Okada, .Moioji Hat
pink
delight
roses
and
white
hya
Alice; daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
tori, Masaye Bahdo. Kengo Oikawa,
Baishakunin were Mr and Mrs
and Mr. cinths, accented with touches of Toichiro Asaoka.
Yasumatsu Nakashima, Armstrong Busaburd Nishizaki;
Mare Fujii, son of Mr. and Mrs. ivy. For her jewelry she wore
Funeral Home.
and 1.1 a.m.
* * *
the
groom
’
s
gift
of
cultured
pearl
$179.72: Vancouver Y.B.S.
Yaju Fujii.
$150: Waichi Kinoshita; Kiyosada
Mrs. Haruko Ando of Toronto
earrings and necklace.
The bride, given ill marriage
Fujii, Yoshio Hanada, Kohei USui,
The maid of honor, Miss Mary j Wishes to announce the engageShukustike Hashimoto, Shizu Ban- by her father, wore a gown of
nd; Takeo Sakatiye, Asakichi Naka- Italian brocade fashioned on prin Horiuchi, in petal yellow, and the I bmnt of her youngest daughter,
The New Canadian acknowl
bridesmaid, Miss Kazuko Yama- ' Yuriko Lily, to Tsuzuku (Scotty) edges
inura, George Uyesugi, Joe Homma.
with thanks generous do
cess lines with Elizabethan coll al
S125: Juh Koyanagi.
uchi, in mauve, wore identical Takeuchi, son of Mr. and Mrs. nations from the following:
Takebayashi and train. Her fingertip veil was full skirted floor length gowns Y. Takeuchi of Winnipeg’ on May
SiOO: Fude Kada,
Mr, and Mrs. .S. A
T
Hikotaro
Egami,
Kimi Ta- held by a juliet cap studded with
Store,
i
occasion
of
son
’
s
of nylon tulle with matching 21, 1955, at the Hoe Sai Gay in
haka., Kanao Nishi, Ichiji Aomoto, seed pearls, sequins and beads.
Mr. V. Iida. Toronto, on occasion
Toronto.
Koichi Chiba, Rokuro Dai jo, Ta- She carried a bouquet of red stoles. They carried colonial bou
*
A
^
keji Yoshimaru, Masako Tanaka,
quets of golden woh’der carna
Mr. S. Tamura. Toronto, in momroses.
Yoshiji Nakatsu, Motomaru Iwata,
Tile engagement of Michi Totions.
Matsu Furukawa, Tadao Kitagawa,
Maid of honor Miss Nora AihoMr.
ncou ver. on
Two little flowergiris, Linda mive, daughter of Mr. Sutejiro
Kazuko Inouye, Kimi Nishizawa, shi of Toronto, and bridesmaids
grtg-emenf.
Tomiye
of
Kelowna,
B.C.,
and
and Jeanette Horiuchi, nieces of
Wataru Hirano, Yoshio Yoshimasu,
Miss Rumi Ryoji, Toronto, Miss the bride, wore identical floor Takashi Miyagishima, eldest son
Yosaburo Hayashi, Masao Ikari,
Tadashi Matsumoto, Tom Kurita, Sets Fujii, Chatham, and Miss length apple green frocks of of Mr. and Mrs. Ushikichi Miya
Ton
ng
Kenroku Uchiyama, Yoshiha.ru Ki Joan Borthwick, London, were nylon tulle with matching gloves gishima of Edmonton was an League.
tade, Yoshimatsu Haya,
Takao dressed
Mr. H. Haruta, Me
alike in floor-length and carried baskets of p’iiik and nounced on May 14, 1955, at the
in
memory o late mother.
Nakatani, Tamano Okino, Shingo gowns of turquoise pana-glare
Tomiye home.
yellow carnations.
Mr. am Mrs. R. Nir
Homma, Chuhei Ikeda.
on
with
which
they
wore
white
Mr.
and
Mi's.
Ebata
of
Ed
Elias
Yamauchi
was
grooms
$75: Sutekichl Miyagawa, Hiroyuki
masion of daughter's marriage.
Koyanagi, Hiroshi Watanabe, Ka feather- headdresses studded with man, and ushering were Hajime monton were, sewanin.
Miss C. Wakabayashi, Outremont,
zuo Nakano, Ito Imada. .
rhinestones. All carried nosegays Horiuchi and Peter Yamauchi.
BIRTHS
Montreal Buddhist Church.
S50: Matsumoto Store, Yai chi Fu of yellow mums.
Guests came from Vancouver,
Mr. and Mrs. E. Oikawa, Toronto
kui, Satoru Tamoto, Matasaburo
Junior bridesmaids Sachiko New Westminster, Calgary, Jas
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Baba of on
Uchida, Ryuichi Minamimaye, Manof birth of daughter.
Toronto proudly announce the
jiro Yamashita, Teruo Nakatsu, and Yoko Wakabayashi and flow per, Osoyoos and Kamloops.
Sadao Nakata,
Yoshiko Iwase, er girl Kay Wakabayashi were
Mr. and Mrs. Yamauchi went birth of a daughter, Donna May,
Tadayuki Sameshima, George Ku gowned in yellow bronze and car
to the United States and Vancou sister to Daley, on May 9, 1955,
rokawa.
ried
nosegays
of
turquoise
tinted
at St. Michael’s Hospital.
ver for their wedding trip.
S30: Aki Ito, Kazuo Inouye.
$25: Yoshiye Okahori, Koji Tasaka, mums.
101/2 QUEEN ST. W.
Sam Watanabe,
Kenichi Nishi,
Mr. George Nishizaki was
For
Pick-up end Delivery
Anonymous.
groomsman and Messrs Aki and
Phon®
$20: Tadao Murata, Minezo Hisa
Toji Fujii and Paul Uchiyama
EM. 8-6953
naga, Takeo Takata, Saburo Na
ushered. Dermis Nishizaki was
gano, Jiro Kamiya.
$10: Toshiyuki Seki, Kikuma Toda, ring bearer.
Yoshiko Adachi, Kaemon Shikaze,
Nearly 1,000 fresh air lovers pithily of shade for those who
Guests attending from TorOnMinato Haraga, YasUo Fujisawa,
to* Hamilton* London; Windsor are expected to enjoy the Tor wailt just to relax and chat with
Watch Repair Shop
Sumiko Tahara, Kaoru Kimoto, Yo
and this city were received at onto BtisSei Annual Picnic at old friends.
shio Murakami.
328 BROADVIEW AVE
Bus fare is $1.50, and admis
$5: Yetsuji Kariya, Masayoshi Fuji the Knights of Columbus Hall, Lynbrook Dark oh Sunday, June
Toronto
sawa.
The couple will live at 46 Park 19. Feature attractions in the sion will be 50c for those going
TOTAL TO DATE .............. $25,814.72
GL.
3652
—
OX. 4-9202(res.)
by private cars. Bus reservations
St. when they return from a program will includ&l
(advt.)
Kiddies’ races, free pop and may be obtained by phoning Tim
motor trip to the United States.
The bride is a graduate of St. ice cream for those 12 Slid under, Goto (HA. 5904), Ed Tsuji (ME.
• ..All experience Is an arch, to Joseph’s School of Nursing, Lon free bingo ,and fukubiki with 5485), Charley Shimizu (OL.
build upon.
prizes galore, suika-wari (plen 1308), or Yosh Omori (GL. 9966).
don,
Buses will leave the Church,
ty of melons to be broken), tugof-war, and as a special feature; 918 Bathurst St., at 9 a.m.
a Treasure Hunt. Of course, the
* * *
ever-popular Boil Odori will also
214.* TONOI ITIHT, TORONTO, ONT.
Obon Odori dancers are advised
be presented.
that practices will be held at the
MALE HELP WANTED
Japanese records will be played
HELP WANTED
Buddhist Church on June 5 and
EXPERIENCED presser,
LUCIEN C. KURATA
throughout the day. and there’s
EXPERIEN
CED
grocery
store
12, 12 noon to 1 p.m. Bussei,
Queen St. W. LO. 6141 (Toronto).
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
clerk, steady or part time. Apply
Sangha and Club Ami members
ROUGH spotter, experience in person, 1903 Avenue Rd., Tor
NOTARY PUBLIC
are asked to turn out. Bukkyokai
Welcome Home Party
necessary, will train. LO. onto. RU. 1-9645.
Credit Foncier Building
6141 (Toronto)._____
and Fujinkai members are also
244 Bay St. (at King)
DOMESTIC HELP~ WANTED^ For Pioneers
HOUSE painters wanted, some
—YO
welcome.
TORONTO
The Toronto JCCA, Kotobukiexperience necessary. J&G Paint CAPABLE GIRL for general
Kes: KO. 7-3427
EM. 6-0959
ers and Decorators, ME. 5933 or housework, 2 school-age children, Kai and Kisaragi club will joint
Toronto
Garden
Club
LO. 4286 (TorontoL
private room, liberal evening ly sponsor a welcome home tea
The Toronto Garden Club’s
_ FEMALE HELP WANTED
time off, $80 monthly. RE. 6223 party for the pioneer visiting
flower arrangement group will
GIRL for dry-cleaning .store, (Toronto._____________________
t
group which left for Japan last
❖
hold a meeting this Monday, June
-IgjLiob- LO. 6141 (Toronto).
BRIGHT young woman for moth February.
6, 8 p.m. at the Kotobuki-kai AJ.
LADY for small office, er’s help, must speak some Eng
The group plans to leave Tot
famous Chinese foods
?Usj o good typist. No short lish, live in, private room and
Hall, 415 Spadina Ave. Plans for
1,
arriving
in
Torkyo
on
June
hand. Some knowledge of book- bath. RU. 1-0316 (Toronto).
63 Albert St. —Toronto
the coming year’s program will
cnto during the second week of
eepmg of assistance, but not a
(at Elizabeth)
ROOMS FOR RENT
be discussed, and all the mem
5-day week, pension
June.
Telephone EM. 8-9817
bers, either new or old, are asked
KITCHEN and bed-sitting
1-1121 (Toronto).
The party will be held on June
Special attention given
$
exPerienced women for al- room, suit couple, College-Duf- 12 from 7 p.m. at the Toronto to attend the meeting.
ferin,
LL,
0529
(Toronto).
_____
? aLloris on better dresses, 5to take out orders.
:
Buddhist Temple. There will be
Cnn7ee^’ 2oo^ wages. Applv at TWO unfurnished rooms with
© It Is beginning 'to be hinted A
Goodman s, 388 Eglinton Ave. W., sink, west end. KE, 0207 (Tor travelogue films, tape recordthat we (ire a nation of amateurs:
ioronto. HU. 9-2820.
ings, and talks on the trip.
onto).
_
G. K. CLEANERS
Nearly 1,000 to Enjoy
TYBS Picnic on
CLASSIFIED SECTION
Hoe Sai Gay
I
Vancouver Bukkyo-Kai
Vancouver Buddhist Church wishes to acknowledge the following
donations to the Buddhist temple
fund:
THE
NEW
CANADIAN
PAGE 7
PERSONAL NOTES ACROSS CANADA
CALENDAR
MARRIAGES
YAMAUCHI-HORIUCHI
ENGAGEMENTS
A
double
ring
ceremony
per
$1,000: Genichiro' Y ada: Buddhist
KOBAYAKAWA-SHIOMI
The engagement of Kazuko,
June Hop
formed on April 23, 1955, in the
Church Women’s Association.
third
daughter
of
Mr,
and
Mrs.
On
Saturday,
May
’
ll,
1955;
the
$600 :Koby’s General Store.
Vernon United Church by Rev.
4—Montreal. Bussei Bowling wind
$500: Yoshio Okano, Genzaburo Na marriage of Yaeko Marie, eldest E. A. Affleck, united in mar Yoshinobu Inouye of South Bur-'
up Dance at Histadrur Hall, Eskamura, Zenno Tanaka, Yukiharu daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken
naby,
B.C.,
to
Jack
T.
Shimizu,
.
plana.de and Laurier, S:30 p.m.
riage Kuniko, daughter of Mr.
Tadokoro, Tomekichi Motomochi, kichi Shiomi of Toronto, to Mr.
second
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Iso,
4
—
Toronto. Saturdav Nite Chib
and Mrs. Takao Horiuchi of Ver
Yojiro Kondo, Shigeto Okada, YaUniversit v
jiro
Kobayashi
of
Toronto,
was
ozo Nomura, Magohashi Banno, Akira Kobayakawa, son of Mr. non, B.C., and Henry Masashi
went
Ho
nt
Genji Yada, Genichi Ohori, Shige and Mrs. Sadakichi Kobayakawa Vamauchi of Edmonton, son of announced on May 14,
the
Ho-Ho
Chop Suey in VanYada, Buemon Araki, Seiichi Ko of Montreal, took place at the
Mrs.'Kon Yamauchi of Calgary,
yanagi, Yoshinobu Inouye, Nishi Trinity United Church in Torcouver.
and the late Mr. Sampei Yama
zawa Co., Ichijiro Tanaka. T. Ama
Sewanin
Mr.
ei 9th annual piconto. Bev. E. Crossley Hunter uchi of Edmonton.
no Co. Ltd., Shinkatsu Kunimoto-,
Hideo
Yoshida
of
Toronto.
officiated.
Hyokuro Kozai, Yoshio Kondo and
The bride, given in marriage
Bussei Ou* ini
A ^ *
A reception followed at the by her father, chose a gown of
brother. Koichi Kaminishi.
Vermont.
$300: Ryota Kawasaki, Kiyozo Ka- Golden Dragon. The couple will
Mr. and Mrs. Tomekichi MotoFrench Alencon lace over white
JULY
zuta, Bunshichi Uyesugi, Gengo
reside in Montreal.
mochi
of
Vancouver
wish
to
ansatin
with
a
fitted,
yoke
effect
Ohashi. Stikeuemoh Arakawa, RyoI—Lethbridge. Niseis’ Dominion
*
*
♦
bodice, and the full circular skirt nounce the engagement of their
taro Horii, Miyoshi KimotO; KahiDay Dance nt the Trianon: exhiFUJII-NISHIZAKI
chiro Yoshida. Motoi Iwahaka, Sa
bition baseball r
ended in a short train. Her net daughter, Michiko, to Robert Yoon Pk
buro Nishimura, Tadao Tsuji, Yo
kio
Obara,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
3
—
Toronto.
JCCA
6th
Community
In St. Andrew’s United Church, headdress made of pearl-encrust
shio Sato, Kamenosuke Natsuhara,
Picnic at Lynbrook Park.
Tsuneo Obara of Greenwood. The
Chatham, Ont., on May 21, 1955, ed petals held a fingertip length
Tokiita.ro Tanaka.
9—Montreal. Quebec JCCA Picnic
$250: Toyohisa Koyanagi, Mdichi Rev. R. S. JohristOn, D.D., offici veil of silk illusion net. Her announcement was made at a
party at the Bamboo Terrace.
Omae; Tsuriitaro Kagetsii.
Stella picnic
ated at the marriage of Emiko spray bouquet was of gardenias,
Vancouver,
on Februarv 14. 1955.
$200: Shigezd Okada, .Moioji Hat
pink
delight
roses
and
white
hya
Alice; daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
tori, Masaye Bahdo. Kengo Oikawa,
Baishakunin were Mr and Mrs
and Mr. cinths, accented with touches of Toichiro Asaoka.
Yasumatsu Nakashima, Armstrong Busaburd Nishizaki;
Mare Fujii, son of Mr. and Mrs. ivy. For her jewelry she wore
Funeral Home.
and 1.1 a.m.
* * *
the
groom
’
s
gift
of
cultured
pearl
$179.72: Vancouver Y.B.S.
Yaju Fujii.
$150: Waichi Kinoshita; Kiyosada
Mrs. Haruko Ando of Toronto
earrings and necklace.
The bride, given ill marriage
Fujii, Yoshio Hanada, Kohei USui,
The maid of honor, Miss Mary j Wishes to announce the engageShukustike Hashimoto, Shizu Ban- by her father, wore a gown of
nd; Takeo Sakatiye, Asakichi Naka- Italian brocade fashioned on prin Horiuchi, in petal yellow, and the I bmnt of her youngest daughter,
The New Canadian acknowl
bridesmaid, Miss Kazuko Yama- ' Yuriko Lily, to Tsuzuku (Scotty) edges
inura, George Uyesugi, Joe Homma.
with thanks generous do
cess lines with Elizabethan coll al
S125: Juh Koyanagi.
uchi, in mauve, wore identical Takeuchi, son of Mr. and Mrs. nations from the following:
Takebayashi and train. Her fingertip veil was full skirted floor length gowns Y. Takeuchi of Winnipeg’ on May
SiOO: Fude Kada,
Mr, and Mrs. .S. A
T
Hikotaro
Egami,
Kimi Ta- held by a juliet cap studded with
Store,
i
occasion
of
son
’
s
of nylon tulle with matching 21, 1955, at the Hoe Sai Gay in
haka., Kanao Nishi, Ichiji Aomoto, seed pearls, sequins and beads.
Mr. V. Iida. Toronto, on occasion
Toronto.
Koichi Chiba, Rokuro Dai jo, Ta- She carried a bouquet of red stoles. They carried colonial bou
*
A
^
keji Yoshimaru, Masako Tanaka,
quets of golden woh’der carna
Mr. S. Tamura. Toronto, in momroses.
Yoshiji Nakatsu, Motomaru Iwata,
Tile engagement of Michi Totions.
Matsu Furukawa, Tadao Kitagawa,
Maid of honor Miss Nora AihoMr.
ncou ver. on
Two little flowergiris, Linda mive, daughter of Mr. Sutejiro
Kazuko Inouye, Kimi Nishizawa, shi of Toronto, and bridesmaids
grtg-emenf.
Tomiye
of
Kelowna,
B.C.,
and
and Jeanette Horiuchi, nieces of
Wataru Hirano, Yoshio Yoshimasu,
Miss Rumi Ryoji, Toronto, Miss the bride, wore identical floor Takashi Miyagishima, eldest son
Yosaburo Hayashi, Masao Ikari,
Tadashi Matsumoto, Tom Kurita, Sets Fujii, Chatham, and Miss length apple green frocks of of Mr. and Mrs. Ushikichi Miya
Ton
ng
Kenroku Uchiyama, Yoshiha.ru Ki Joan Borthwick, London, were nylon tulle with matching gloves gishima of Edmonton was an League.
tade, Yoshimatsu Haya,
Takao dressed
Mr. H. Haruta, Me
alike in floor-length and carried baskets of p’iiik and nounced on May 14, 1955, at the
in
memory o late mother.
Nakatani, Tamano Okino, Shingo gowns of turquoise pana-glare
Tomiye home.
yellow carnations.
Mr. am Mrs. R. Nir
Homma, Chuhei Ikeda.
on
with
which
they
wore
white
Mr.
and
Mi's.
Ebata
of
Ed
Elias
Yamauchi
was
grooms
$75: Sutekichl Miyagawa, Hiroyuki
masion of daughter's marriage.
Koyanagi, Hiroshi Watanabe, Ka feather- headdresses studded with man, and ushering were Hajime monton were, sewanin.
Miss C. Wakabayashi, Outremont,
zuo Nakano, Ito Imada. .
rhinestones. All carried nosegays Horiuchi and Peter Yamauchi.
BIRTHS
Montreal Buddhist Church.
S50: Matsumoto Store, Yai chi Fu of yellow mums.
Guests came from Vancouver,
Mr. and Mrs. E. Oikawa, Toronto
kui, Satoru Tamoto, Matasaburo
Junior bridesmaids Sachiko New Westminster, Calgary, Jas
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Baba of on
Uchida, Ryuichi Minamimaye, Manof birth of daughter.
Toronto proudly announce the
jiro Yamashita, Teruo Nakatsu, and Yoko Wakabayashi and flow per, Osoyoos and Kamloops.
Sadao Nakata,
Yoshiko Iwase, er girl Kay Wakabayashi were
Mr. and Mrs. Yamauchi went birth of a daughter, Donna May,
Tadayuki Sameshima, George Ku gowned in yellow bronze and car
to the United States and Vancou sister to Daley, on May 9, 1955,
rokawa.
ried
nosegays
of
turquoise
tinted
at St. Michael’s Hospital.
ver for their wedding trip.
S30: Aki Ito, Kazuo Inouye.
$25: Yoshiye Okahori, Koji Tasaka, mums.
101/2 QUEEN ST. W.
Sam Watanabe,
Kenichi Nishi,
Mr. George Nishizaki was
For
Pick-up end Delivery
Anonymous.
groomsman and Messrs Aki and
Phon®
$20: Tadao Murata, Minezo Hisa
Toji Fujii and Paul Uchiyama
EM. 8-6953
naga, Takeo Takata, Saburo Na
ushered. Dermis Nishizaki was
gano, Jiro Kamiya.
$10: Toshiyuki Seki, Kikuma Toda, ring bearer.
Yoshiko Adachi, Kaemon Shikaze,
Nearly 1,000 fresh air lovers pithily of shade for those who
Guests attending from TorOnMinato Haraga, YasUo Fujisawa,
to* Hamilton* London; Windsor are expected to enjoy the Tor wailt just to relax and chat with
Watch Repair Shop
Sumiko Tahara, Kaoru Kimoto, Yo
and this city were received at onto BtisSei Annual Picnic at old friends.
shio Murakami.
328 BROADVIEW AVE
Bus fare is $1.50, and admis
$5: Yetsuji Kariya, Masayoshi Fuji the Knights of Columbus Hall, Lynbrook Dark oh Sunday, June
Toronto
sawa.
The couple will live at 46 Park 19. Feature attractions in the sion will be 50c for those going
TOTAL TO DATE .............. $25,814.72
GL.
3652
—
OX. 4-9202(res.)
by private cars. Bus reservations
St. when they return from a program will includ&l
(advt.)
Kiddies’ races, free pop and may be obtained by phoning Tim
motor trip to the United States.
The bride is a graduate of St. ice cream for those 12 Slid under, Goto (HA. 5904), Ed Tsuji (ME.
• ..All experience Is an arch, to Joseph’s School of Nursing, Lon free bingo ,and fukubiki with 5485), Charley Shimizu (OL.
build upon.
prizes galore, suika-wari (plen 1308), or Yosh Omori (GL. 9966).
don,
Buses will leave the Church,
ty of melons to be broken), tugof-war, and as a special feature; 918 Bathurst St., at 9 a.m.
a Treasure Hunt. Of course, the
* * *
ever-popular Boil Odori will also
214.* TONOI ITIHT, TORONTO, ONT.
Obon Odori dancers are advised
be presented.
that practices will be held at the
MALE HELP WANTED
Japanese records will be played
HELP WANTED
Buddhist Church on June 5 and
EXPERIENCED presser,
LUCIEN C. KURATA
throughout the day. and there’s
EXPERIEN
CED
grocery
store
12, 12 noon to 1 p.m. Bussei,
Queen St. W. LO. 6141 (Toronto).
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
clerk, steady or part time. Apply
Sangha and Club Ami members
ROUGH spotter, experience in person, 1903 Avenue Rd., Tor
NOTARY PUBLIC
are asked to turn out. Bukkyokai
Welcome Home Party
necessary, will train. LO. onto. RU. 1-9645.
Credit Foncier Building
6141 (Toronto)._____
and Fujinkai members are also
244 Bay St. (at King)
DOMESTIC HELP~ WANTED^ For Pioneers
HOUSE painters wanted, some
—YO
welcome.
TORONTO
The Toronto JCCA, Kotobukiexperience necessary. J&G Paint CAPABLE GIRL for general
Kes: KO. 7-3427
EM. 6-0959
ers and Decorators, ME. 5933 or housework, 2 school-age children, Kai and Kisaragi club will joint
Toronto
Garden
Club
LO. 4286 (TorontoL
private room, liberal evening ly sponsor a welcome home tea
The Toronto Garden Club’s
_ FEMALE HELP WANTED
time off, $80 monthly. RE. 6223 party for the pioneer visiting
flower arrangement group will
GIRL for dry-cleaning .store, (Toronto._____________________
t
group which left for Japan last
❖
hold a meeting this Monday, June
-IgjLiob- LO. 6141 (Toronto).
BRIGHT young woman for moth February.
6, 8 p.m. at the Kotobuki-kai AJ.
LADY for small office, er’s help, must speak some Eng
The group plans to leave Tot
famous Chinese foods
?Usj o good typist. No short lish, live in, private room and
Hall, 415 Spadina Ave. Plans for
1,
arriving
in
Torkyo
on
June
hand. Some knowledge of book- bath. RU. 1-0316 (Toronto).
63 Albert St. —Toronto
the coming year’s program will
cnto during the second week of
eepmg of assistance, but not a
(at Elizabeth)
ROOMS FOR RENT
be discussed, and all the mem
5-day week, pension
June.
Telephone EM. 8-9817
bers, either new or old, are asked
KITCHEN and bed-sitting
1-1121 (Toronto).
The party will be held on June
Special attention given
$
exPerienced women for al- room, suit couple, College-Duf- 12 from 7 p.m. at the Toronto to attend the meeting.
ferin,
LL,
0529
(Toronto).
_____
? aLloris on better dresses, 5to take out orders.
:
Buddhist Temple. There will be
Cnn7ee^’ 2oo^ wages. Applv at TWO unfurnished rooms with
© It Is beginning 'to be hinted A
Goodman s, 388 Eglinton Ave. W., sink, west end. KE, 0207 (Tor travelogue films, tape recordthat we (ire a nation of amateurs:
ioronto. HU. 9-2820.
ings, and talks on the trip.
onto).
_
G. K. CLEANERS
Nearly 1,000 to Enjoy
TYBS Picnic on
CLASSIFIED SECTION
Hoe Sai Gay
I
Page 8
r
THE
PAGE 8
NEW
Honest Ed’s Downed Here’s Opening Draw
Toronto Bussei
Twise by Press woods ForToronto
Bussei
Tennis prexy
Fuzzy Fujiwara announces the
following draw for
opening
rounds in the Club’s Singles
Tournament slated next Sunday,
June 5, at Earlscourt :
Nisei were scheduled to meet
Two more weekend losses for j
a string of five defeats was the ; Columbus Grads last night at
story for Honest Ed’s Nisei this ; Christie and will oppose them
week. Still a somewhat disor i again on Saturday at 1:30 p.m.,
ganized team after seven league I again at the Pits.
games, Sub Miike’s cohorts were ; Presswoods ............ 002 135 010 — 12 13 3
downed twice by Presswood Pack j Honest 'Ed's .......... 000 050 020 — 7 8 2
ers 12-7 on Saturday at Christie
Cowan,
Wrona
and McFaydes,
Pits and 6-2 on Sunday at St. Brepkwell, Rennie, Cunneyworth and
Kameoka.
Clair Stadium.
Catcher Bill Weir paced the Presswoods ............ 030 100 011 — 6 5 1
Packers in the Saturday triumph, Honest Ed's
........ * 000 200 000 — 2 7 3
Eakins and Weir; Vince Downs and
bringing home seven runs with
two long home runs. Al Mugford Tony DelMonte.
hit a homer with one aboard, I
CHEWING THE RAG: Strong winds
while Sheldon Childerhose also on Sunday didn't help the Nisei defen
sively . . . The winds may have been
homered.
a factor too in the lack of extra base
Maw Mori’s clout over the fence hits on either side . . . all 12 hits were
in right centre paced the big singles . . . It's easy to pin the Nisei
fifth inning for Nisei. Fred slump on bad breaks (certainly there've
a lot of them) but the team seems
Downs doubled, Kameoka and been,
to rank an the weaker side of the
Rennie singled, and Hayashi and league . . . the Honest Ed's nine is
Nagano were safe on errors in a a combination of green youth with older
fellows, few of whom are past 30 years
frame that produced five runs.
. . . and there is some small amount
Three wlks and Maw Mori’s of
the inevitable bad feeling when
fielder’s choice brought in two some players have to sit on the bench
runs in the eighth. Freddie through most of the games . . . these
individual faults that are over
Downs was the only man with are
shadowed by. the general h’-gh spirit
two hits, while Yuki Kameoka of the team . . . This may be the week
scored twice. Tak Nagano drew for Nisei to get back on the winning
track as they have two games 'with
four walks at his leadoff position. the
cellar club, Columbus Grads . . .
Five Nisei errors in the second None of the four teams is a pushover
inning provided the winning mar however, and it’s going to be tough
gin for Presswoods at Earlscourt all the way . . . The Western City loop
a hardened bunch of amateur
as the Packers counted three executive,
ballplayers past their playing days, are
runs.
to bo congratulated Jor their success
Three straight singled by Fred with the new league . . . Crowds have
averaging about 1,500. including
Downs, Aki Hayashi and Rocky been
week night and weekend games . . _.
Varacelli were followed by Maw we've heard that League prexy Jack
Mori’s sacrifice and an error as Pullman has lost the use of one ear
an unfortunate accident on open
Nisei counted two runs in the sinceday
when he was beaned by a
fourth, their only scoring inning. ing
practice ball while spiking down the
Freddie and Aki counted two keystone sack . . .
Walt Severnuk saw action at first
hits in four trips apiece.
and Ian McPherson took over at
Vince Downs threw a very I base
third last Sunday when the infield
creditable 5-hittcr (all singles) i brother act of Maw and Sho Mori failed
last Sunday, but those errors j to show at gametime . . . Maw got
were damaging'. The big right into the game from the second inning
on, while Sho was a pinchhitter in. the
hander was shelled in the second ii 9th
. . . Major Fukumoto returned to
innig in his first mound appear ! the lineup Sunday after missing two
I games due to a slight injury . . .
ance.
Wednesday, June 1, 1955
CANADIAN
MEN: Paul Nakamichi vs Dick Uhlig,
winner vs Lou Miyashita; Tosh Uyeda vs
Paul Omoto, winner vs Aki Koyanagi;
Tosh Watanabe vs Wes Hodgins, Mush
Fukumoto vs Ray Hodgins, Don Yokota
vs Ye Mori, Fus Fujiwara vs Jack Mu
raoka, Roy Shin vs Mickey Cinicola,
Frank Matsui vs Tak Yamamoto, Tom
Nobuoka vs Toru Idenouye, Edzy Tsuji
moto vs Ken Koyanagi, Mossy Mitsui
vs Kiyo Fujiwara, Gus Hirano vs Jim
Burns, Yozy Yasui vs Jim Baptiste, Jim
Kitamura vs Jim Isozaki, Yas Nobuoka
vs Tom Partridge, Tom Iwasaki vs See
Tsukamoto.
LADIES: Kay Oka vs Lorraine Takata, Nancy Edamura vs Helen Iwasa,
Eis Fujiwara vs Terri Fujioka, Betty
Kono vs Nora Aihoshi, Mich Isozaki vs
Roe Mori, Alice Sugamori vs Sue Ki
kuchi, Rae Kutsukake vs Grace Shi
mizu, Agnes Tsujimoto vs Kyoko Taxasaki, Mits Hamaguchi vs Haruko Sa
kuma, Amy Tsuruda vs Mary Saito, Kay
Okazaki vs Harriet Kondo; byes, Mary
Ebata, Chic Yanagisawa, Sue Iwasaki,
Toshi Takasaki, Gerda Wilms.
Men’s singles will commence at
8 a.m., while ladies’ matches are
scheduled to start at noon.
J5LT“L
ON THE ROAD . . .
(Continued from Page One)
400 units and, among its luxuries, Nevada, and where daytime tem
outdoor and indoor swimming peratures range from 90 to nr,
pools.
degrees. After three stops io cool
Fresno is the gateway to three the engine of our auto, we reach
national parks, Yosemite, King ed Las Vegas, eight hours after
Canyon and Sequoia. It is also leaving Los Angeles.
noted for the best irrigation sys
Gambling is legal in Nevada,
tem in the United States.
and the “'World’s Largest Casino
That’s about ' it on California. Centre” is run over with gamb
Could add that Long Beach has ling houses on both sides. Slot
a “'world -famous” convention cen machines, craps, roulette, Twen
tre in its Municipal Auditorium. ty-One, wheel-of-fortune, poker,
In California, everything is etc. are some of the indoor sports
“world famous”. I wonder how, conducted in such establishments
many Canadian Niseis have heard as the Golden Nugget, Fortune
of the sights which I’ve men Club, Pioneer Club, Las Vegas
tioned ? Personally, I hadn’t heard Club, et al.
of most of them till I made this
The town is filled with multi
trip!
million dollar hotels and expen
But regardless of the L’.S. tour sive motels. In one of the less
ist propaganda, I did enjoy my expensive motels at which my
vacation in California immensely. companion and I stayed over, it
Many Vancouverites think it’s cost us 15 smackers for one night.
terrific when they visit Seattle, Each hotel has a name band and
Portland or Spokane, but they’ll the “top shows of the entertinknow the difference when they ment world.” Rosemary Clooney,
see California . . .
Jane Powell and even Liberace
himself were in town when we
IF YOU plan to visit desert
visited.
country, here’s some advice: Be
There are many other attrac
prepared for terrific heat, and
don’t drive across the desert in tions such as Lake Mead, Boulder
the afternoon (which my com Dam, and wonders of desert
panion and I did, much to our scenery that I could talk about,
but I’d better conclude before this
regret!)
We had our experience on the gets too dull. I hope I’ve present
Mohave Desert, which stretches ed some interesting facts along
from southeast California into With the usual dull chatter.
Aki Koyanagi will head the
Nisei squad into the opener of
the Interchurch B Tennis League
Thursday at High Park.
The B section of the league
this year consists of two groups.
Nisei will participate (probably
under the banner of' Metropoli
tan) with St. Anne’s, High Park
and Canadian Memorial.
Playoffs will see the winners
of one group meeting the run
nersup of the other, and vice
versa in semi-finals. The winners
(Continued from Page Two)
of these, matches will square off
for the B championship, and the
play both Japanese and Amer
B champs will go into Inter called “Parle Vous Japanese.”
church League semis against the
Being able to cope with both ican games on the 29-hour trans
runnersup of the A section which cultures aloft includes a quick- pacific flights, and provide them
consists of only one group).
with Japanese, Chinese, and
Captain Edzy Tsujimoto will change act when the girls clip American reading material.
lead the Nisei A squad into their out of their trim blue uniforms
Both Miss Shiba and Miss Sa
openers during the second week at teatime and step into a spe
cially-designed kimono complete saki are college graduates, al
_ Any base was available for the of June (next week).
Bv GENNY OHASHI
Roy Shin reports that all ar- .with ogi and sandals. In bright though only two years of college
VANCOUVER.—The JCCA force play, but pinchhitter Ron
Niseis were handed their second Kirby’s scratch hit brought in rangements of the New York kimonos, the girls become for a are required. Initial qualifications
straight defeat last Thursday by one, ’ and George Bogdonavitch Civic Holiday weekend trip are time, traditional Japanese grac include two languages.When the
Western Bridge, S-7, before 2,000 followed with a grandslam to put being ironed out. Players and
field was opened, Japan Air Lines
spectators at the Powell Grounds. Western ahead again, 8-4. A others wishing to go are asked ious ladies, trained in flower ar
Strategy backfired for the brace in. the sixth and one in the to contact Roy oi' club officers at rangement, tea ceremony, paint was swamped by some 4.000 ap
earliest convenience. Fifty or ing—and the arts.
plications from Japanese girls
JCCA nine as Westerns rallied seventh fell short of tying.
more
persons
are
expected
to
Every
man
in
the
Nisei
line-up
for a five-run fifth. When Merv
The girls also help passengers who had the initial qualifications.
Franks walked two Bridgemen except the pitchers got at least- make the trip.
with two away, Ron Montgomery one hit. Starry shortstop Seichi
Matches were pretty even all
was brought in. and given the Tahara clouted a two-run homer around last Sunday when the i
intentional walk sign .by Coach and a single, while catcher Oi Bussei-Trinity interclub match
kawa had two singles nd a double was run off. Due to shortage of
Mush Uyesugi.
in three trips. Frank Kika had Bussei players, an accurate count
a perfect 2 for 2, including a of results was not kept,’ but
run-producing double. Gordie Na players on both sides enjoyed
gano and Ken Homma rapped themselves. Some of the ranking
their first singles of the 1955 players proved a bit rusty, and
campaign, while Toru Nishi, Hub- it was a good tune-up for every
bo Matsuzaki. Bo Miyagishima body ...
33 ardent Toronto golfers and Danny Okano all singled.
showed up for the G a.m. tee-off Nagano had a stolen base to his
OX. 4-4407(Res.) I
on May 22 in a very successful 1 credit, while Homma counted an f WA. 1-5605
i
RBI.
Victoria Day JC Tournament. The
| KAZUO G. OIYE j
course was strange to most of the I Nisei ............................. COO 132 1 — 7 13 2
001 250 x — 8
7 3 ? BARRISTER — SOLICITOR I
members as it was the first time i Westerns
|
Merv
Franks.
Ron
Montgomery
(5.
the Toronto JC Club had held a
NOTARY
|
| LP) and Azu Oikawa; Gary Zailo and |
tourney at Lakeview.
I Sill Taylor.
•
Room 203A
!
The winners: LOW NET: Best
2 College St., Toronto
I
LiNE DRIVES: Tho’ sporting a so-so i
Cleaners Trophy, Andy Yagi: sec record cl equal wins and losses in four
ond, Herby Miyazaki and Hacn games, the iCCA nine continues to show
hitting power . . . Azu
Yagi: third Ken Miyazaki, fourth. considerable
Oikawa tops Nisei SAs with .538. while
Mickey Mori, Tom Kawabe and Frank Kika and Seichi Tahara are both
pcw-lering the pill at .354 . . . Tahara
K. Nozaki:
LOW GROSS: Andy Yagi 79, is top Nisei RSI man with six. while
leads in stolen bases with six
H. Yagi SO, Geo. Ogino St, H. Oikawa
. . . Nisei stranded eight baserunners
Miyazaki S4.
against tho Bridesmen, however . . .
JAL Stewardesses Visit New York
Western Bridge Edges
Vancouver Niseis, 8-7
Ifout too, can. earn
$6 to $15 an hour
Andy Yagi Cops Trophy
In Holiday Golf Meet
g
L K
£& G
I g
Community Center
Benefit Dance
j
|
sponsored jointly by
Toronto JCCA, Club Rec Socratic, KisaragiClub
I
|j
Residence:
;
Saturday, June 18, 1955
j
at MASARYK HALL
I
ADMISSION: S1.00
DANCING: 8:30-12 midnighi
ji
|
2 Vs sta Drive
MAfair 1365.
Office Phone:
E3I. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
Andrew E. McKague,
Bamister, Solicitor. Notary
Public.
201 Northern Ontario Bldg.
8-30 Bay St.
(Corner Adelaida & Bay Sts.)
TORONTO
ic
b
t
s
EVERY GRADUATE EMPLOYED
MORE SEXORS URGENTLY NEEDED
VETERAN APPROVED
LIVING ACCOMMODATIONS
OLDEST AND LARGEST SCHOOL.
Write For Free Catalogue Today
SO
Branch School:
208 S. Roscommon Ave.
L. A. 22, Calif.
CHICK
. W
"Reg. U.S. Pot. Off."
SEXING
SCHOOL
.214 LINE STREET, LANSDALE, PENNA.
THE
PAGE 8
NEW
Honest Ed’s Downed Here’s Opening Draw
Toronto Bussei
Twise by Press woods ForToronto
Bussei
Tennis prexy
Fuzzy Fujiwara announces the
following draw for
opening
rounds in the Club’s Singles
Tournament slated next Sunday,
June 5, at Earlscourt :
Nisei were scheduled to meet
Two more weekend losses for j
a string of five defeats was the ; Columbus Grads last night at
story for Honest Ed’s Nisei this ; Christie and will oppose them
week. Still a somewhat disor i again on Saturday at 1:30 p.m.,
ganized team after seven league I again at the Pits.
games, Sub Miike’s cohorts were ; Presswoods ............ 002 135 010 — 12 13 3
downed twice by Presswood Pack j Honest 'Ed's .......... 000 050 020 — 7 8 2
ers 12-7 on Saturday at Christie
Cowan,
Wrona
and McFaydes,
Pits and 6-2 on Sunday at St. Brepkwell, Rennie, Cunneyworth and
Kameoka.
Clair Stadium.
Catcher Bill Weir paced the Presswoods ............ 030 100 011 — 6 5 1
Packers in the Saturday triumph, Honest Ed's
........ * 000 200 000 — 2 7 3
Eakins and Weir; Vince Downs and
bringing home seven runs with
two long home runs. Al Mugford Tony DelMonte.
hit a homer with one aboard, I
CHEWING THE RAG: Strong winds
while Sheldon Childerhose also on Sunday didn't help the Nisei defen
sively . . . The winds may have been
homered.
a factor too in the lack of extra base
Maw Mori’s clout over the fence hits on either side . . . all 12 hits were
in right centre paced the big singles . . . It's easy to pin the Nisei
fifth inning for Nisei. Fred slump on bad breaks (certainly there've
a lot of them) but the team seems
Downs doubled, Kameoka and been,
to rank an the weaker side of the
Rennie singled, and Hayashi and league . . . the Honest Ed's nine is
Nagano were safe on errors in a a combination of green youth with older
fellows, few of whom are past 30 years
frame that produced five runs.
. . . and there is some small amount
Three wlks and Maw Mori’s of
the inevitable bad feeling when
fielder’s choice brought in two some players have to sit on the bench
runs in the eighth. Freddie through most of the games . . . these
individual faults that are over
Downs was the only man with are
shadowed by. the general h’-gh spirit
two hits, while Yuki Kameoka of the team . . . This may be the week
scored twice. Tak Nagano drew for Nisei to get back on the winning
track as they have two games 'with
four walks at his leadoff position. the
cellar club, Columbus Grads . . .
Five Nisei errors in the second None of the four teams is a pushover
inning provided the winning mar however, and it’s going to be tough
gin for Presswoods at Earlscourt all the way . . . The Western City loop
a hardened bunch of amateur
as the Packers counted three executive,
ballplayers past their playing days, are
runs.
to bo congratulated Jor their success
Three straight singled by Fred with the new league . . . Crowds have
averaging about 1,500. including
Downs, Aki Hayashi and Rocky been
week night and weekend games . . _.
Varacelli were followed by Maw we've heard that League prexy Jack
Mori’s sacrifice and an error as Pullman has lost the use of one ear
an unfortunate accident on open
Nisei counted two runs in the sinceday
when he was beaned by a
fourth, their only scoring inning. ing
practice ball while spiking down the
Freddie and Aki counted two keystone sack . . .
Walt Severnuk saw action at first
hits in four trips apiece.
and Ian McPherson took over at
Vince Downs threw a very I base
third last Sunday when the infield
creditable 5-hittcr (all singles) i brother act of Maw and Sho Mori failed
last Sunday, but those errors j to show at gametime . . . Maw got
were damaging'. The big right into the game from the second inning
on, while Sho was a pinchhitter in. the
hander was shelled in the second ii 9th
. . . Major Fukumoto returned to
innig in his first mound appear ! the lineup Sunday after missing two
I games due to a slight injury . . .
ance.
Wednesday, June 1, 1955
CANADIAN
MEN: Paul Nakamichi vs Dick Uhlig,
winner vs Lou Miyashita; Tosh Uyeda vs
Paul Omoto, winner vs Aki Koyanagi;
Tosh Watanabe vs Wes Hodgins, Mush
Fukumoto vs Ray Hodgins, Don Yokota
vs Ye Mori, Fus Fujiwara vs Jack Mu
raoka, Roy Shin vs Mickey Cinicola,
Frank Matsui vs Tak Yamamoto, Tom
Nobuoka vs Toru Idenouye, Edzy Tsuji
moto vs Ken Koyanagi, Mossy Mitsui
vs Kiyo Fujiwara, Gus Hirano vs Jim
Burns, Yozy Yasui vs Jim Baptiste, Jim
Kitamura vs Jim Isozaki, Yas Nobuoka
vs Tom Partridge, Tom Iwasaki vs See
Tsukamoto.
LADIES: Kay Oka vs Lorraine Takata, Nancy Edamura vs Helen Iwasa,
Eis Fujiwara vs Terri Fujioka, Betty
Kono vs Nora Aihoshi, Mich Isozaki vs
Roe Mori, Alice Sugamori vs Sue Ki
kuchi, Rae Kutsukake vs Grace Shi
mizu, Agnes Tsujimoto vs Kyoko Taxasaki, Mits Hamaguchi vs Haruko Sa
kuma, Amy Tsuruda vs Mary Saito, Kay
Okazaki vs Harriet Kondo; byes, Mary
Ebata, Chic Yanagisawa, Sue Iwasaki,
Toshi Takasaki, Gerda Wilms.
Men’s singles will commence at
8 a.m., while ladies’ matches are
scheduled to start at noon.
J5LT“L
ON THE ROAD . . .
(Continued from Page One)
400 units and, among its luxuries, Nevada, and where daytime tem
outdoor and indoor swimming peratures range from 90 to nr,
pools.
degrees. After three stops io cool
Fresno is the gateway to three the engine of our auto, we reach
national parks, Yosemite, King ed Las Vegas, eight hours after
Canyon and Sequoia. It is also leaving Los Angeles.
noted for the best irrigation sys
Gambling is legal in Nevada,
tem in the United States.
and the “'World’s Largest Casino
That’s about ' it on California. Centre” is run over with gamb
Could add that Long Beach has ling houses on both sides. Slot
a “'world -famous” convention cen machines, craps, roulette, Twen
tre in its Municipal Auditorium. ty-One, wheel-of-fortune, poker,
In California, everything is etc. are some of the indoor sports
“world famous”. I wonder how, conducted in such establishments
many Canadian Niseis have heard as the Golden Nugget, Fortune
of the sights which I’ve men Club, Pioneer Club, Las Vegas
tioned ? Personally, I hadn’t heard Club, et al.
of most of them till I made this
The town is filled with multi
trip!
million dollar hotels and expen
But regardless of the L’.S. tour sive motels. In one of the less
ist propaganda, I did enjoy my expensive motels at which my
vacation in California immensely. companion and I stayed over, it
Many Vancouverites think it’s cost us 15 smackers for one night.
terrific when they visit Seattle, Each hotel has a name band and
Portland or Spokane, but they’ll the “top shows of the entertinknow the difference when they ment world.” Rosemary Clooney,
see California . . .
Jane Powell and even Liberace
himself were in town when we
IF YOU plan to visit desert
visited.
country, here’s some advice: Be
There are many other attrac
prepared for terrific heat, and
don’t drive across the desert in tions such as Lake Mead, Boulder
the afternoon (which my com Dam, and wonders of desert
panion and I did, much to our scenery that I could talk about,
but I’d better conclude before this
regret!)
We had our experience on the gets too dull. I hope I’ve present
Mohave Desert, which stretches ed some interesting facts along
from southeast California into With the usual dull chatter.
Aki Koyanagi will head the
Nisei squad into the opener of
the Interchurch B Tennis League
Thursday at High Park.
The B section of the league
this year consists of two groups.
Nisei will participate (probably
under the banner of' Metropoli
tan) with St. Anne’s, High Park
and Canadian Memorial.
Playoffs will see the winners
of one group meeting the run
nersup of the other, and vice
versa in semi-finals. The winners
(Continued from Page Two)
of these, matches will square off
for the B championship, and the
play both Japanese and Amer
B champs will go into Inter called “Parle Vous Japanese.”
church League semis against the
Being able to cope with both ican games on the 29-hour trans
runnersup of the A section which cultures aloft includes a quick- pacific flights, and provide them
consists of only one group).
with Japanese, Chinese, and
Captain Edzy Tsujimoto will change act when the girls clip American reading material.
lead the Nisei A squad into their out of their trim blue uniforms
Both Miss Shiba and Miss Sa
openers during the second week at teatime and step into a spe
cially-designed kimono complete saki are college graduates, al
_ Any base was available for the of June (next week).
Bv GENNY OHASHI
Roy Shin reports that all ar- .with ogi and sandals. In bright though only two years of college
VANCOUVER.—The JCCA force play, but pinchhitter Ron
Niseis were handed their second Kirby’s scratch hit brought in rangements of the New York kimonos, the girls become for a are required. Initial qualifications
straight defeat last Thursday by one, ’ and George Bogdonavitch Civic Holiday weekend trip are time, traditional Japanese grac include two languages.When the
Western Bridge, S-7, before 2,000 followed with a grandslam to put being ironed out. Players and
field was opened, Japan Air Lines
spectators at the Powell Grounds. Western ahead again, 8-4. A others wishing to go are asked ious ladies, trained in flower ar
Strategy backfired for the brace in. the sixth and one in the to contact Roy oi' club officers at rangement, tea ceremony, paint was swamped by some 4.000 ap
earliest convenience. Fifty or ing—and the arts.
plications from Japanese girls
JCCA nine as Westerns rallied seventh fell short of tying.
more
persons
are
expected
to
Every
man
in
the
Nisei
line-up
for a five-run fifth. When Merv
The girls also help passengers who had the initial qualifications.
Franks walked two Bridgemen except the pitchers got at least- make the trip.
with two away, Ron Montgomery one hit. Starry shortstop Seichi
Matches were pretty even all
was brought in. and given the Tahara clouted a two-run homer around last Sunday when the i
intentional walk sign .by Coach and a single, while catcher Oi Bussei-Trinity interclub match
kawa had two singles nd a double was run off. Due to shortage of
Mush Uyesugi.
in three trips. Frank Kika had Bussei players, an accurate count
a perfect 2 for 2, including a of results was not kept,’ but
run-producing double. Gordie Na players on both sides enjoyed
gano and Ken Homma rapped themselves. Some of the ranking
their first singles of the 1955 players proved a bit rusty, and
campaign, while Toru Nishi, Hub- it was a good tune-up for every
bo Matsuzaki. Bo Miyagishima body ...
33 ardent Toronto golfers and Danny Okano all singled.
showed up for the G a.m. tee-off Nagano had a stolen base to his
OX. 4-4407(Res.) I
on May 22 in a very successful 1 credit, while Homma counted an f WA. 1-5605
i
RBI.
Victoria Day JC Tournament. The
| KAZUO G. OIYE j
course was strange to most of the I Nisei ............................. COO 132 1 — 7 13 2
001 250 x — 8
7 3 ? BARRISTER — SOLICITOR I
members as it was the first time i Westerns
|
Merv
Franks.
Ron
Montgomery
(5.
the Toronto JC Club had held a
NOTARY
|
| LP) and Azu Oikawa; Gary Zailo and |
tourney at Lakeview.
I Sill Taylor.
•
Room 203A
!
The winners: LOW NET: Best
2 College St., Toronto
I
LiNE DRIVES: Tho’ sporting a so-so i
Cleaners Trophy, Andy Yagi: sec record cl equal wins and losses in four
ond, Herby Miyazaki and Hacn games, the iCCA nine continues to show
hitting power . . . Azu
Yagi: third Ken Miyazaki, fourth. considerable
Oikawa tops Nisei SAs with .538. while
Mickey Mori, Tom Kawabe and Frank Kika and Seichi Tahara are both
pcw-lering the pill at .354 . . . Tahara
K. Nozaki:
LOW GROSS: Andy Yagi 79, is top Nisei RSI man with six. while
leads in stolen bases with six
H. Yagi SO, Geo. Ogino St, H. Oikawa
. . . Nisei stranded eight baserunners
Miyazaki S4.
against tho Bridesmen, however . . .
JAL Stewardesses Visit New York
Western Bridge Edges
Vancouver Niseis, 8-7
Ifout too, can. earn
$6 to $15 an hour
Andy Yagi Cops Trophy
In Holiday Golf Meet
g
L K
£& G
I g
Community Center
Benefit Dance
j
|
sponsored jointly by
Toronto JCCA, Club Rec Socratic, KisaragiClub
I
|j
Residence:
;
Saturday, June 18, 1955
j
at MASARYK HALL
I
ADMISSION: S1.00
DANCING: 8:30-12 midnighi
ji
|
2 Vs sta Drive
MAfair 1365.
Office Phone:
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EM. 4-1395
Andrew E. McKague,
Bamister, Solicitor. Notary
Public.
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TORONTO
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