University of the Pacific Scholarly Commons

Harold S. Jacoby Nisei Collection Japanese-American Internment Collections

12-21-1946 Pacific itC izen December 21, 1946 Resettlement Issue Section 6 Unidentified

Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jacoby-nisei

Recommended Citation Unidentified, "Pacific itC izen December 21, 1946 Resettlement Issue Section 6" (1946). Harold S. Jacoby Nisei Collection. 82. https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jacoby-nisei/82

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Japanese-American Internment Collections at Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Harold S. Jacoby Nisei Collection by an authorized administrator of Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. PACII=IC CITIZ~N , UTAH, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1946. CHRISTMAS, 1946. Four Die Intermountain JACL Delegates Army Initiates In Crash of A-rmy Transport Investigation of Urged to Fight Against At Airfield Near Osaka Crash of Plane Race Discrimination in U.S. TOKYO - A special U. S. Tomomasa Yamazaki, Former Califontia Newspaperman, Army board has initiated an in­ Prof. Smith R ecommends Con tinued Campaigns on Among 22 Victims of Air Tragedy; WO Mori, Sgts. vestigation of the cause of the Inequities in Housing, Employment; 247 D elegates, crash of the C-46 transport of Boosters Attend Sessions H eld Boise, Weiser Ota, H irano Identified in War Deparbnent R eport the 317th carrier group which in Tech. Sgt. Tomamasa Yamazaki, former newspa­ crashed on Dec. 10 at ltami air­ BOISE, Idaho-Declaring there are "still evidences of dis­ !X)rt near 0. aka, killing 22 per­ 1 perman, and three other American soldiers of Japanese ancestry sons, including four Nisei sol- crimination and racism" in the western , Elmer R. were identified la!t week by the War Department among 22 oc­ diers. · Smith, assistant professor of anthropology at the University of cupation personnel who were killed when a U. S. transport crash­ The plane crashed while on a Utah, called on the 247 delegates and boosters at the Intermountain ed on Dec. 10 shortly after leaving Osaka, Japan. routine flight from Tachikawa district convention of the J ACL to "finish the fight" against race field to Ita.-.uke airbase at Fu­ The other Nisei reported killed in the crash were Warrant kuoka in Kyushu: discrimination. Officer SQ.igeru Mori, P 0 Box 426, Rt. 1, Sandy, Utah; Master Speaking at the convention banquet in the Hotel Boise on Sgt. Frederick M. Hirano, formerly of the Granada relocation, Dec. 16, Smith declared: whose wife resides in Minneapolis, California Will "We still have court battles to )1inn.; and Tecll. Sgt. Daniel c. Canad·lans May fight and win and education to be Two Evacuees Ota of . p 8 1c W carried out to overcome undemo- The crash of the C-46 transport lc I d • ay ac ages cratic preachings. We still have Found Dead in s ee n emn1ty y N. • G fights to win to guarantee civil was reported by the U. S. Fifth Air 0 ISel rOUp rights and fair employment to Illinois Home force. The list of per:;ons killed in- For Evacuation- au regardless of race, creed, color eluded one woman identified as Control Board or national origin in many of our Cond ition of Nisei )1iss Fay Givelman of Brooklyn, E.~acuees• Conduct Approves Settlement states. d 11 h '11 Girl R eported Critical ~ew York. Surv " Relate to a of t is, we stJ ey on Damages For Evacuees have the facts of housing facilities In Joliet Tragedy Tech. Sgt. Yamazaki volunteer- From Evacuation being at a premium and the asso· ed for Army intelligence service SACRA:\IENTO-The Califor- ciated practices of discriminatien, JOLIET, 111.-F.rank G. Nishi­ da, 56, and his wife, Risa, 54, after serving as a language in- TORONTO, Ont.-A mass meet- nia ~tate Board of Control on restricted housing covenants, slum were found dead from carbon structor at the Navy school at ing was sponsored by the Japa- Dec. 17 authorized payment of area developments and the social monoxide poi.so.ning on Dec. 15 Boulder, Colo., where he and his :3,216 in !tack salary to forty and psycholomcal clashes associat- wife, the former Ruth Kurata of nese Canadian Committee for De- ·J apanese A merc1ans· wh o were ed with such o•conditions." in their home at 630 Gardner St. Los Angeles, had gone with their mocracy on Dec. 7 for the purpose dismissed from civil service jobs The banquet and a farewell dance Their daughter, Edith, 24, children from the Manzanar relo- of discussing steps for restitution in 19t2 after the Federal govern- at the Miramar ballroom conclud- was taken uncoosciou.:; to St. Jo­ · d b J ment's evacuation order. seph's hospital. cation center. y amazaki , wh o s t u- of propert y 1osses sutame y ap- ed the three-day convention, the Two burners on a gas sto\e died at the University of Califor- anese Canadians as a result of the The award covered the period first in the intermountain area were lit, when the Ni.shidas were nia, formerly was a member of the forced evacuation in 1942. between the severance of the 40 since the end of the war. discovered. Police said the fire edI.to r1 ·al s taffs of. the Ne\"·• urorldn • - The JOCD is conducting a sur- N i s e i from state serv•· ce and Delegates voted in session in . had exhausted all the oxygen in Sun in San Francisco and the San- vey on the economic losses sus- their actual arrival at evacua- Boise l\londay to accept the invi- the room. gyo Nippo in Los Angeles. Born tained by the evacuees and 1·esults tion camps. The payment has tation of Radao Morishita, pre:;- Nishida had been employed as in Japan, he was brought to the of t.he investigation will be used in been approved by the State Per- identl of the Idaho Flails chapter, a cook in Joliet. United States by his parents while urging the government to estab- sonnel Board. to hold the 1947 convention there. a child. Mrs. Yamasaki, formerly lish a claims commission for the Prof. Smith shared the platform t was on the staff ofAthe California purpose of indemnifying the evac- Fre ·no Group with Harold G. Gardner, dean of Pacific Southwe Daily News in Los n,geles. uee group. , ~t •• Jichael's Episcopal chapel. Dr. Council Will Hold Warrant Offker Mori, n signed To Sponso Conce1·t Gardner spoke on "One People in to the Army's counter-intelligence, San Jose Spal·tans One World." Emergency Meet was bhe son of Shigenobu and Kusa FRES. ·o, Calif. - A group of Dr. Samuel P. Weaver, Spokane. ).Iori. He entered the army in Name Yonamine orr. Japanese folk songs will be fea- president of the Great Northwest LOS ANGELES-Delegates June, 1945, and trained at the tured in the concert by Masako Life Insurance company and pro- from ten Southern California and Army's counter-intelligence sc.hool All-Opponent Team Ono, which the Central Ce.lifornia ·t 1 1 t G one Arizona chapter of the JACL in Maryland, going overseas in Young Buddhists Association will fel:lsor of oonstl utiona aw ~ on- will attend an emergency confer­ Feb., 1946. Besides his parents, he SAN JOSE, Oalif.- The San Jo- sponsor in the Fresno State college zaga university, was the m a.i n ence of the Pacific Southwest Dis­ is survived by seven brothers and se State Startans, cllampions of auditorium on Dec. 29. :~=~~~~ 'llat the main convention trict on Dec. 22 at the Kow Nan :;dsters, Tom, Shiro, Steven, Nobuo, Californi·a olleY ter in Utah where he was on the Infantry Division in Italy, to which professional and public officials of the Foreign Broadcast Informa­ staff of the Topaz Times and was Nisei Soldiel'5 the 442nd Regimental Combat southwest Idaho and eastern Ore- tion Service, the bride having re­ on duty with the Fifth Air Force Team was attached during one gon. cently transferred be.ck to FBIS He recently returned to Japan aft- SEATTLE, Wash.- Fifty~three phase of the campaign, declared. MaY 0 r Westerman Willock of headquarters from the field office er several months furlough in Cal- white candles, e~h for a Nisei sol- Gen. Kendall, now commanding Boise, Mayor Geor""" Crookham of in Kauai, Hawaii. l'f orru ·a , h avmg· enlisted for an- dier from the State of W ash' m gton the 2nd Infantrv.. Division at Fort Caldwell and Mayor.,~ F. S. Gwilliam th · w ld Lewis, said that Nisei soldiers o er year. b who gave his life d unngfl orb started fighting for the United of Weiser were among the guests. Sgt. Ota was 6ttach ed tot h e pu - War II, flickered in a ower- e· States on the morning of Pearl Greetings from Idaho's governor, Ben Nakata Wins lie relations office and was plan- decked table here on the night <>f Harbor day and never stopped Arnold Williams, were read at the Bowling Tourney nin,g a career in newspaper work Dec. 13 as more than 1300 persons figllting and made an "unparal- meeting. While on his furlough he wrote an joined in a testimonial in Civic leled record in all theaters of op- New officers for the Intermoun- At IDC Meeting article on Japanese swords which Auditorium to the JapaJ¥!se Amer- eration." tain district council for 1947 will he sold to Popul6r Science maga- icans who served in the armed "Now that most of the Nisei are include Joe Saito, Ontario, Ore., BOISE, Idaho-Ben Nakata of zine. He is survived by his parents forces. back in the United States," Gen. first vice chairman; Tom Hoshiya- Payette, Jdaho, won the finals of and by a sister, Lillian, who a1·e Honor gueests at the dinner, Kendall said, ''I trust they are re- rna, Salt Lake City, second vice the bowling tournament at the In­ residents of San Francisco. sponsored by the Seattle ohapter peating in civil life the wonderful chairman; Mrs. Henry Kasai, Salt termountain district convenion of Sgt. Yamazaki is survived by of the Japanese American Citizens record they set .in the Army. I Lake City, sec.; Harry Yamasaki. the JACLI on Dec. 16 with a 571 his wife, two daughters, Luanne League, were more than 50 "gold trust they are shouldering the bur- Rexburg, Idaho, treas. S h iKe k 1 (99)~70 series. and Avlon, and two brothers, To- star'' parents of the men who were den of American citizenship and Ushio, Murray, Utah, remains as The team match was won by the motaka and Toshi. His father, now killed in battle. ~ssisting the nation to bind up its district chairman. Big Five team from the Snake in Japan, was proprietor of the Other honor gueests were 600 of wounds and to begin again a life The Snake River and Boise Val­ River chapter, composed of George Linen House on San Francisco's the 1400 Japanese Americans from which will show the same devo- ley chapters, co-sponsors of the Hashitani, Abe Saito1 Keizo Shige­ Grant avenue before the war. the State of Wasilington, who tion to the welfare of the nation." conference, registered 115 de 1 e - no, Shiz Harada ana Paul Takeu­ Master Sgt. Hirano is survived served in the war. Testimonials paying tribute to gates while 32 attended from Po- chi. Thirteen teams were enured by his wife, Mrs. Fumie Hirano, "The only difference that could the Nisei veterans were presented catello. Idaho Falls sent 14 dele- in the event. 2106 3rd Ave. So., Minneapolis, be seen between Nisei and other by Henry H. Okuda, Toru Saka- gates and boosters. Yellowstone, Boots Kishi of Caldwell won the ::\linn., and his mother, Mrs. Kikuye American soldiers was in the spell- hara and Col. John J. Sullivan. Mount Olympus and Salt Lake City women's singles witil a 439. fol­ Okura, 1104 No. Alma St., Los ing of names on the roster," Maj. Clarence T. Arai was master of were the other chapters represent- lowed by R.hea Yamashita of Mid­ Angeles. Gen. Paul W. Kendall, command& ceremonies. ed. dleton, Idahe, with 41 6. • 42 PACIFIC CITIZEN Saturday, December 21, 1946

prive Japanese Americans of their property because their parents were born in Japan. Recent court actions also have highlighted From the Frying Pan the existence of discriminatory c o d e s in By BILL HOSOKA WA Official Pllblication of the ~ education and in commercial fishing opera­ Japanese Amf'riun Citi1.f'n8 Leagut> tions. Reflections on the Christmas Season The task for the new yaer will be to carry Denver, Colo. National Headquarters: 413-16 Beason Build­ on the fight against all forms of discrimina­ ing, 25 East Second South Street, Salt And so it's the Christmas season again. It's a grand custom. Lake City, Utah. tory activity based on arbitrary conditions of despite all its commercialism, that is understandable to persons of race .or religion. The job ahead also calls for all religious faiths. In its broader sense, Christmas is no longer a Editorial and Business Office: 415 Beaaon activity to obtain the passage of the proposal Building. Phone 6-6601. Christian festive day; its cheer and good will extend to all peoples. to indemnify the evacuees for losses sustained The youngsters have been waiting for Christmas with great Other Hational JACL Offi<.'es in Chicago, New during the evacuation and for remedial legis­ York, Denver, San Francisco, Seattle and anticipation and impatience. This will be the grandest Christmas Los Angeles. lation to remove racially discriminatory con­ yet for each of them, for both are young enough not to remember Subscription Rates: JACL members, $2.00 year ditions from the immigration and naturaliza- the past so vividly that they cannot focus their minds on the Non-members, $3.00 year. tion laws. _ future. Entered as second class matter in the post The state of California long has exerted Per.haps it is wrong, but we have been holding Santa Claus and pres­ ship from persons we lmew well at office at Salt Lake City, Utah. Published a major force in the passage of discriminatory some time in the dimming past. weekly, under the act of March 3, 1879. ents as a club over the heads of legislation against persons of Oriental an· the ooildren. They are so ram­ Not that we mean to slight our cestry. The mandate of California's citizens bunctious and energetic it is hard everyday associates. But they are LARRY TAJIRI ·-··------·-····--·------EDITOR for them to behave all the time. real and close and we see them in the vote on Proposi\ion 15 indicates that often, and we do enjoy receiving the majority of the state's population no lon­ When t.heir behaviour becomes too anti-social, we remind them that their greetings. EDITORIALS: ger condones such discriminatory activity. Santa remembers only good chil­ In many respects old friends are The necessary corollary to the defeat of Propo­ drell. It usually works. the best friend::., even if our paths have gone separate ways. And so, sition 15 is the initiation of action to repeal We haven't gotten around to de­ when we hear from them we re<.'.aJI The Christmas Season the alien land law itself. signing tactics to outfox them their faces (as they 'were years after Christmas. ago), and we remember incident The Christmas season is a time to be home. • • • and their individual whimsies. It This Christmas, 1946, is the first which many is good to go t.hrough the cata­ Nisei will spend at home since the dreary, Credit-Lines Christmas Tree logue of memories, to brush off blacked-out holiday season of 1941, when the the rust and t.he cobwebs, and to DILLON . l\IYER is now the administrator At this writing our Christmas remember things not as they really ache of Pearl Harbor was still sharp in our of the Federal Public Housing Authority Of the tree is still a nebulous thing. But were, but only as we want to re­ hearts. National Housing Agency ... TOGO TANAKA, presently we shall acquire one, rig member them. pre-war editor of the Rafu Shimpo in Los Ange­ up a non-upsetting stand, and For thousands of Nisei who served with les, now is an editor with the American Techni­ begin the process of loading it Perhaps we are overly .nostal­ combat forces in Europe and in the Pacific cal Society, a Chicago publishing firm . . . dowll with baubles. gic because we haven't been able l.lnd with occupation armies in the lands to RALPH G. l\IARTIN, author of Ben Kuroki's to sink our roots deeply. 'I'he The tree won't be too tall, for last ten ChristmaS have been which fascist avarice brought ruin, this will biography, ''The Boy From Nebraska," is back they come close to $1 per foot this in New York this week with his wife, Marge, spent in a total of seven dif­ be the Christmas of which they dreamed in year. Time was, back in Seattle, ferent cities, and it may not be foxhole and ba1:rack. after completing a six months' tour of the United when a stately 8-footer could be strange that the season is .filled States for material for his new book on the bought for 75 cents and the nee­ with memories. For other thousands who lost" their homes retunted veteran, "Where Is Home?" which Far­ dles wouldn't begin to fall out un­ in the evacuation and who improvised Christ­ rar and Straus will publish in 1947. Mr. Martin til after New Year's. Lest the fullness of the Yuletide spirit run completely away with mas celebrations around the government-is­ also is a staff contributor of The New Republic, in But this year t.he tree will be a which "The Day the Signs Came Down," appeared little shaver, heavy with tinsel and us, let us recall two Christmases sued pot-bellied stove in the drab relocation on Dec. 16 under the title, "Hood River Odyssey." that, at the time, were far from glittering balls that have re_ap­ merry. center barracks, this also will be a Christmas BILL HOSOKA WA, editor of the most out­ peared on dime store counters. The at home. The homes may be far from the spoken of relocation camp newspapers, the Heart single string of lights, a pre-war One was many years ago when old ones before the evacuation, but they are :\fountain Sentinel, is now on the staf.f of the relic, \vill be brought out again, we had our hearts set on a gy­ Denver Post after more than two years with the and we'll let them burn as long as roscope top- the kind with a situated in normal communities and nave a heavy flywheel spinning rapidl,y sense of permanence which the relocation Des Moines Register. The Hosokawas recently the children like because we're bought a home in Denver .... JOH~- REINECKE fortified this year with eight extra within a frame and which would camp barracks never could achieve. is a well-known educator m Hawa11 and an au­ bulbs ( 6 cents at Woolworths, balance os a small peg at all The Christmas season today has a signifi­ thority on labor and liberal questions in the ter­ while they lasted). sorts of exciting angles. cance beyond religious sectarianism. Its pre­ ritory' ... MINEO KATAGIRI was the head Christmas wouldn't be com­ It seemed the folks couldn't lo­ cept of "peace on earth, good will to men" is of the Honolulu Council for Unity and has re­ plete without a tree. We hope cate one, so Christmas morning it cently moved to Maui, where he has a new every little tot ha.s one, even if was a musi<.'al top instead of the the hope of all the ordinary peoples of this one church ... LAWRENCE NAKATSUKA is a it's only a foot high and made of ' gyroscope that was under t.he tree. world. It may well be the last hope in this member of the editorial staff of the Honolulu cardboard stained green, like the Having been a snippy sort of age of the fissured atom. Star-Bulletin and is a specialist on labor and po­ one we had one tropical Christ­ youngster, we protested loudly mas in Singapore. that we had been short-changed, The Christmas season is a time when the litical stories. He also is a regular contributor to the New Pacific, Honolulu monthly ... Already the ChriSit)lllas canis are that Christmas was the bunk any­ human race is on its best behavior. It is a SACHI L. 'WAD •.{ writes a weekly column from beginning to drift in. They most­ how and we didn't want any old time for nostalgia, for carols and mistletoe. Minneapolis for the Pacific Citizen. Miss Wada ly are annual messages of friend- punk musical top. It is a time of giving and gratitude, of senti­ recently sold two short stories and has finished The scolding which followed i~ still fairly vivid, and since then ment and warmth. It is a time when good a novel. J(}HN KITASAKO, the PC's Washington we have been somewhat easier to triumphs over evil and cynicism and spiritual columnist, was man-ied on Dec. 13 to .Miss Sue The please. hangovers are relegated to the morning after. Aoki ... TOSHIO l\IORI has been published in • • • But in a time of hard reality which must New Directions, the Coast, the Clipper and other Unhappy Ordeal follow the yule season, the peoples of the literary magazines. His short stories have b~en a feature of the Pacific Citizen. Now residing Spoilage world, through their appointed representa­ The second was during Sunday in San Leandro, Calif., he is working on a trilogy. by school days, when we were roped t ives, must find an answer for the question One of the novels tentatively is titled, "Send These, in to sing (soprano) in a chorus posed by the atom bomb. Unless the Christ­ the Homeless." ••• l\1ASARU HORIUCHI was Dorothy S. Thomas for the Christmas program. mas spirit of peace and good-will is adopted among the first Gls to land in Japan after V-J We were to sing three verses, by nations and individuals as an everyday day. He is now the national office secretary and or maybe it was six, of "Oh Oome of the JACL. All Ye Faithful." It is strange concept of behavior, this may well be one of FRANK MIYAl\lOTO, assistant professor in RichardS. Nishimoto that we can recall the title, for our the fast Christmases in the world we know. sociology at the University of Wasin,gton, spent interest in singing was nil, our de­ The world no Ion~· can tolerate hate in any the war years at the University of Chicago ana sire to take part in a chorus even participated in social scientific studies of J apanes.e The story of the "technically form, for the we~ons of destruction ar~ many * less definite. American resettlement . , 1, AUBREY HAAN 1s disloyal" segment of Japa­ and terrible. ~ We memorized the first verse. principal of the Stewart Training School of the nese Americans. The time which should have been The Christmas spirit of peace and good­ University of Utah. Before coming to Salt Lake spent in commiting the other City, he was executive secretary of the Council will must be incorporated into the daily lives A brilliant analysis based on verses to memory was devoted to of nations and th'-eir people. The atom bomb for Civic Unity in San Francisco . . . FRANK * more important pastimes, su<.'.h ns MORITSUGU is an associate editor of The three-and-a-half year's field ticks in some far corner of the land. observations by sociologists digging "forts" in an empty lot, New Canadian of Winnipeg, Man. studiously reading about how A .. T. HANSEN was community analyst at from the UniYersity of Cali­ fornia. .Henry "Ware scalped a dozen In­ the Heart J.\Iountain relocation center and, wit'h dians with one sweep of his trusty The Job Ahead Mrs. Hansen, engaged in a survey of W.est Coast lOS pages - 3 photogra1>hs hunting lmife, and plotting tactic resettlement for WRA. He is now back at his 10 charts - Index for the next B-B gun fight. The year -t>f 19·16 has seen the diminishing ·post on the faculty of Miami University in Ohio $3.75 ... ELl\IER R. 'l\UTH assistant professor of We mounted the platform, un­ or organized pn:judice on racial g r o u n d s UNIVER ITY OF der parental edict, with the re~t anthropology at the University of Utah, left the of the chorus and somehow we against Americans and resident aliens of Japa­ campus during the war to serve as <.'ommunity CALIFORNIA PRESS nese ancestry and an increase in organized Berkeley 4, California made a pretense at singing the analyst at the Minidoka relocation center. He is wordR. But that was not a happy activity to forestall racism and other anti-dem­ the author of an article on restrictive covenants ordeal. ocratic practices. in a recent issue of Common Ground ... JOBO NAKA~IURA was a member of the staff of the At the end of the year more than one-half Tulean Dispatch at the Tule Lake relocation camp of the evacuees have returned once again to before relocating in Chicago ... FREI) FERTIG The largest and best equipped school in the the West Coast and are being reabsorbed into is well known at PC readers for his articles from Bay Area devoted exclusively to both urbari and rural communities. Los Angeles. Forthright activity on the part of groups SABURO KIDO will leave Salt Lake City next Costume Designing week for Los An,geles, where he will be asso­ interested in the welfare of the evacuees laid ciated with A. L. Wirin, noted civil liberties at­ Pattern Drafting the groundwork in great part for the reac­ torney in the practice of Jaw ... ·MASAO SA­ ceptance of the returned evacuees. TOW, 'on leave from the National YMCA, is act­ Grading Today the tensions of wartime have been ing national secretary of the JACL ... An ar­ Dressmaking ticle by ::\IARY OYAMA of Los Angeles arrived eased and prejudices engendered by those ten­ • too late for this issue and will be published on Tailoring sions are being dissipated. But the fact of Dec. 28. . discrimination remains on the land and must Among the photographers: HIKARU .IWA­ Register Now for New be rooted out if the integrity of our democratic SAKI was a photographer for WRA and IS now l\q__ D- WINTER SE::\IE TER one of the members of Wilshire Studio in Denver, ~ociety is to be sustained. Race .and religious where BILL HATANAKA, who took the Los An­ January 6tl1, 1947 prejudice face all of the American minorities geles pictures, is an associate ... TOGE FUJI­ with varying degrees of intensity. On the HIRA is employed in the visual education depart­ an Francisco's Leading West Coast Japanese Americans still meet bias ment of a large religious or«anization in New Professional School of in housing and employment. Restrictive hous­ York City, while HENRY YAMADA ~s i~ the pho­ Fashion tographic department of Dell pubhcat10ns . . . Since 1931 ing covenants pose the issue of white suprema­ VINCENT TAJIRI is <>n the staff of Shigeta­ cy. Although the people of California l'epu­ Wright noted Chicago photo studio ... BE:' 'UNderhill 4176 diated the Alien Land law by the overwhelm­ TERASHIMA has his own studio in Salt Lake 1179 Market gt. ing defeat of Proposition 15 at the November City .. . CARL SHIRAISHI is a free-lance pho­ t;}grapher in Salt Lake . . . ALLEN NEILSEN San Francisco, Calif. elections, the law itself remains and under its who drew the GI for Masaru Horiuchi's article provisions litigation bus been initiated to de- ~crved with the Fifth Army in Italy. Saturday, December 21, 1946 PACIFIC CITIZEN 43

~...... _.. .•. -· ·-· ·-· ... ~...-.+ Co-Ed's Beauty Salon HELP WANTED Kinoshita Scores In South Shore residence. Per­ I IN CHICAGO t 1305 E. 53rd St. - Chicago manent happy young home. $20 SEATTLE-Little C.huck Kino­ f Let Us Do Your Hauling f Shizuye Kido and for general housework no cook­ shita, star halfback for O'Dea Kay Kawamura ing. Private Rm. Excellent food. hi~ school, caught a 28-yard pass f TOl\1 KIMURA EXPRESS ff f 935 E. 42nd Place Phone Fairfax 4371 to score his team's ~nly touchdown 1\IRS. KATZ Ph. ATLantic 3914 7552 Chappel St. Chicago, Ill. as O'Dea and Seattle Prep battled f f + ·-·------MASAJI MQRITA .... to a 6 to 6 tie in the city's Catho· +------· ·- ..... Special Agent lie rhampionship game at the Uni­ FE,IALE HELP WANTED versity of Washington stadium on •···------OCCIDENTAL LIFE INS. Nov. 28. COMPANY Plain Cooking, Light Housework CHICAGO NISEI One No. LaSalle St. Pleasant surroundings, nice HOTEL Chicago, Illinois home for right party. WANT ADS It's easy to capture that exotic, mysteri· Tel: RANdolph 2281 Reference ROOM AND BOARD ous "Oriental Fla· PERSONAL: Whereabouts of Ed­ T. Tsumagvi, Mgr• vor"-in your Chop -· - .. ·- -· - -· -· -· -- RANdolph 1020 Chicago, Ill. ward H. Sugioka, formerly re­ . 3991 So. Ellis Ave. Suey, Chow Mein and DISTINCT~VE PRINTING siding at Rt. 3, Box 371, Petalu­ o t h e r appetitin9 Phone ATLantic 1267 dlshesl Just use Ori· ma, Calif. You are wanted on ental Show-You Sauce By HENRY SUZUKIDA urgent business matter. lmpor· Chicago, Illinois -~killfully - b rewed taut! Yoshio ugioka. and slowly·aC)ed to HOME PRESS Lincoln National Life Ins. Co. its subtle, true-to• 5623 So. Dorchester Ave. Suite 1855 ------+ nature Flavorl • W. Hoshl,yama, Prop. One North LaSalle Street -·- . -- .. ----~-· -·- -- -· - ·- ·-·- Send for Free PLAza 6823 Chicago, Ill. .Personality Portraits by . • • . Oriental Recipe Chicago 2, Illinois Bo~k CENtral 1393 THE .ALBUM DELIVERY TO YOUR DOOR Portrait Photographers International Market 1171 E. 55th (at Woodlawn) Chicago, Illinois Telephone: MIDway 4433 Kiyo Okawa Wholesale and Retail LINtOLN Fish, Meat, American and 412 S. Dearborn, Chicago 4, Ill. ------·- --,. ---·- ·- -·-· ·-· --... Oriental Food . Factory Mainte.nance ... _.. . $1.05 Tel: PLAza 1633 Engineer ...... $1.50 1462 E. 55th St. Chicago 15 Firemen L. P ...... $51 CURTISS CANDY COMPANY Punch Press ...... $1.50+ P.W. Make own setups Employment Offer - NISEI GIRLS WANTED Janitor ...... $60 THE SPEED-0-SEX Supervisor - Transformers Openings immediately: female candy wrappers (between ages of Machine Shop Foreman 17-35) to 8ack and package candy and other food products. BABY CHICK SEXING INSTITUTE Stock Shipping Clerks H URLY AND PIECE RATES AVAILABLF, Printing Trainees Pleasant Working Conditions - Group Life Irstrance · Warehouse Men Retirement Income Profit Sharing Plans - Group Machinists Health Insurance- Vacation with Pay-Pension Plans WANTED SEXORS Welders Company employs man;v Nisei workers. No experience necessary TOP SALARIES ON ABOVE Report to Main Off1ce, 1101 W. Belmont Avenue, Chicago STUDENTS • EXPERTS See Mr. Harry B. Mayeda or Elmer L. Shirrell at that address JAPANESE BITtersweet 6300 Veterans Under G. I. Bill AMERICANS ~ Learn under new methods as developed MALE DOCTOR, M.D . ... ~ ...... $6,000 Order Your New Year Needs Now! by Prof. C. Yanaura Clinical hospital + Comm. Cabinet Shop Hlprs ...... $1.00 Cabinet Shop Foreman ...... $1.25 FOR INFOR~IATION WRITE: Prod. Typist ...... 40 RICE, MOCID, AGE, KAMABOKO 1\lachine Shop ... - ...... 90c J. YAMAGUCill Bench Assembly ...... $1.00 GREEN TEA Lithograin (50 Ius.) ...... 90c 1200 N. Clark St. Chicago, Dl. Spot Welder ...... $50 Spray Paint Begin .... 90c start Receiving Clerk, 54 . hrs . .. $1.02 Complete Line of Oriental Foods FEMALE Steno.-Secy. Northwest .. $32.50 PLACE YOUR ORDER FOR Typist-Biller-(Loop) .... $32.50 • Steno.-5-Da ...... ~ ...... $175 Steno.-So. side ...... $183 N e'W" "Year Nlochi Bookkeeping-(South) ...... $183 S & I Company -with­ Comptometers, 4 positions $160 Gen. Office ...... $140 4868 N. Sheridan Road Chicago, nlinois " Beginner Bkkpr...... $145 Phone: LONgbeach 5794 Ste.no.-Loop ...... ~ ...... $150 DIAMOND TRADING CO. Messenger Girl ...... $125 Mail Orders Promptly Filled 1012 No. Clark St. Chicago 10, Illinois Phones: SUPerior 5166 - SUPerior 5174 SHIP.:\IENTS TO ANY PART OF U. S. A. T· ·· W;n; ~: b;~; ·· ·· + CALIFORNIA - ·-· ·-· ·- ·-·- .• ·-· ... I A~:;:~a;;?or I+ • • ·-M. ~:.~~~~~t~t.~~;y- .. '"'i ltlANCHU GRILL & CHOP- . -· ·-· -· ·-· ·-· ·-· -· -·-· -·- . ISSEI AND NISEI SUEY RETURN TO LOS ANGELES I PROMPT - DEPENDABLE - EXPERIENCED I J 956 Larimer St. Ta. 9576 For TO SCHOOL ON SUBSIS- 3420 Seventh Avenue Los Angeles 16, Calif. TENCE IF A VETERAN I Telephone-REpublic 2-3524 Dennr 2, Colo. Auto Insurance I R.oom and Board Jobs are •Je ., -- ._. • •• -- ••• ••• ••• .-. •• -· -· ••• ••• ••• •• • ••• ,., ••• • + Fine Fooda a Specialty Plentiful for Housing "Meet Your Friends Here" NO RESTRICTIONS ~~~d~~c~~~~~~A.c~~r::. ~~+--Seas_o, :~s··· G·-,-:-eeti-:-gs ~------.•. .•. .•. • • - ·- ·- ~ - -- - Contact · I -·"I' . ·-·- ·-· ·- ·- ·--·-· ·- -· ·- Full Secretarial Course Lead­ •.•. OCCIDENTAL- LIFE H. LEE ~OMBS ing to Good Posit~ons luurance Co. of California Nisei in Attendance Now. f f AGENT and ADJUSTER Opening Quarter: R Q Y AL JEWELRY H. H. KODANI 414 Insurance Bldg. General Agent Jan. 6, 1917 - Feb. 3, 1947 a HAROLD 1\IASADA, Prop. f SEATTLE 4, WASH. Day or Evening Classes ' U72 Fresno St. Between E & F Phone; Emerson •306 Phone SE 4060 1011 Milwaukee St~ Denver -·----- SA~~~IenBa~ndSW~CEHSn~OL tf Fine WatchesSpecializes • Diamondsin tf -·' I f Dependable Watch Repairs f a All Watches Tested on the f t& 812 W. Eighth Street ' f ' BA 8187 Los Angeles f SPLIT-SECOND WATCH-MASTER RECORDER l 4 \Vatchmakers Fast Service f WE WISH TO THANK OUR FRIENDS +------,., . 1 FOR THE MANY FAVORS OF THE +...... -. ·-· -· ._. ..._. -· -· ·-·----..~.._.....-.~~~..-...-.....-.....-..+ PAST YEAR AND TAKE THIS OP­ . TOM T. ITO PORTUNITY OF SEND IN G YOU INSURANCE: Life- Auto- Fire GREETINGS FOR ••• General Liability TIME and JEWELRY SHOP 312 E. First ~t. Room 402-403 A Merry Christmas :\Uchigan 8001 - Los Angeles Henry Y. Okamoto 622 :North Orange Grove 1501 Kern · Phone 3-1591 and Pasadena 3 - SYcamore 3-9369 • FRESNO 1, CALIFORNIA A Happy New Yem· "- - ... -·~·-·- ·-·..-.- SPOKANE, WASH. CUT AND CURL SHOP · GUARANTEED AOYAGI CO. 1700 Parker St. Our SELF-COMPLETING SAVINGS PLAN MR. and MRS. YOSHIO TERADA Phone: Thornwall 2264 Including LIFE INSURANCE and Berkeley, California $100 l\IONTHLY ACCIDENT INCO!\IE MISS NAN YA:\IAMOTO ....._...._...... _, .. ·- -· •. -· ---.. FOR LIFE 147-lai We!'t ·i2nd St. New York City 18, New York For Complete Information Write OUYE'S PHARMACY TOMS. IWATA Harold N. Ouye - Fred M. Ouye E. 2301 5th Spokane 15, Wash. PreRcription Pharmacists 1213 4th St. Sacramento, Calif. Representing Always say OUYE'S for Prescriptions California Western States Life Insurance Co. Phone 2-8594 HOl\IE OFFICE - SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - 44 PACIFIC CITIZEN Saturday, December 21, 1946

··-· ·-·- ·-.-...-· ·- ·-· ·-· ... ._.~..._....._..._....._....._....._..._...._..~ PROFESSIONAL NOTICES Tomorrow's In DRY ~E~~ ~~~HSHMENT I Good Wages - Pleasant Surroundings - 8 Hours a Day For full details write: Dr. Catherine Itatani T. HEDANI, 0. D. l-Ieirs GEORGE H. HAKATA, Sr. f Optometrist 511 Railroad St. Elko, Nevada t OPTOMETRIST By Sachi L. Wada +- ·-· ·-· - ·-· ·- ·-· - ·-· -·- - .... ·-· ...... -..- .•. ·-· .._..._...... _..~ 4335 South Lake Park 185( Fillmore Street ..._.._._._ ·-·---...-.-~ BOUlevard 8655 Minneapolis, Minn...... f ·-· ·-· ·-· ·-· ·- ... ERN. GARAGE I SAN FRANCISCO ON NICOLLET • • . a 630 So. 1st West MOD Salt Lake City Chicago, Ill. Telepho~e: Walnut 9423 Stars dangling from wires, t' PHONE: 4-8257 snow falling on building tops, peo- Announces the Opening of Their Business for pie laug.hing, jostling and griping; I GENERAL AUTOMOBILE AND TRUCK REPAIRING DR. Y. KIKUCHI all on Nicollet. And, outside, on QUICK - DEPENDABLE - GUARANTEED SERVICE Megumi Y. Shinoda Dentist the cold pavement, a legless man Geo. M. Nakamura M. John Hatae Geo. H. Sonoda extending with his one whole arm, 4-4063 9-5791 3-6957 M.D. 12-i South San Pedro Street 244Yz East First Street a cap \vith pencils in it. We \V.ould + ...... _...._...... _...... ,_...... ••·• (Former Shokin Building) have \Va}ked 0111 like all the Oth- liUIIIIIIIIIUJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUUnl Los Angeles, California ers seemed to, had we not seen Phone: Michigan 2576 Los Angelea 12, California that gallant smile, the white hair SEASON'S GREETINGS from ... Res: Normandy 2-7597 Tel: Michigan 3580 Room 211 and his skin parched from the cold. It made us feel a .hundred CONSOliDATED MERCANTILE, Inc. per cent better after we had 140 West Second South St. Salt Lake City placed our movie money in it . . . GEORGE KITA Drs. Hiura & Hiura and we almost believed with the Specializing in a Complete Line of ' OPTOMETRISTS kiddies, whose faces were pressed ATI'ORNEY-AT-LAW SOUTH SIDE against the magic windows of Food Products and Merchandise 1454 E. 53rd St.- Tel. M:ID 8363 shops filled with toys. There is ORIENTAL FOODS- RESTAURANT SUPPLIES- MAROBEE 944 E. 43rd St. Rm.13 something catching about wailking Chicago, Illinois NORTH SIDE down Nicollet durmg the yuletide PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT - TOYS - GAMES - STAMINITE Tel: Boulevard 2715 1200 N. Clark - TeL SUP 1612 rush. I think that many of us in­ PLASTIC PAINT PRODUCTS - NOVELTIES- ELECTRICAL CHICAGO, ILLINOIS tentionally become provincial last- HOl\IE APPLIANCES. minute shoppers for the wonder­ We Solicit Your Inquiries - Phone: 4-0513 ful madness of flitting from one Charles Yonezu - William G. 1\lors - Thomas P. Hicks H. Sto.re to another fj)}g YOU \Vith a IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIUIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIJIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIRIRIIIUUmUIUIUIJUhl WILEY IDGUCHI I r~;;-ru;~·m•1 wild excitement. You catch a Attorney-at-Law whiff of pine tang, and you watch ~ ATTORNEY-AT-LAW !l 32 N. State Street ! § the snow flakes cascading to the Suite 709, Chicago, Illinois 160 N. LaSalle Street earth. Something makes you ANNIVERSARY SALE Phones: i CHICAGO 1, ILLINOIS pause to hear the earnest, imma- Office: DEArborn <&684, <&685 ture voices of the young carolers $50 1st Prize and 25 Other V aluahle Prizes Residence: SUNnyside 9229 Telephones: singing the ageless Christmas cal"­ State 6750 - Franklin 5120 ols in a very modern age. Beautiful 1947 Calendar Freel' SCALISE, CHINO & ALL !\lEN MEET ••• JUST ARRIVED: SCHULTZ Christmas is the s t r e e t upon BLUE ROSE RICE- JAPAN GREEN TEA- DRIED SHRIMP Dr. John Y. Nakahara which all men meet. It is a street m.u_IIWWIJIIDJIVIWU....WW.._..I_I..-alll__ _.. Complete Line of Groceries & Vegetables-Also Japanese Foods DENTIST whic.h is wide and endless and age­ less, for the thoughts which make FREE DELIVERY! 25U Shattuck A venue .- -·-· --· -·-· ·-· -·-·- it what it is are warm and bright Phones: 4-8098 - 3-4853 DR.F.T.INUKAI and everlasting. The ric.h and the CALIFORNIA MARKET WHOLESALE DEPT. Berkeley, California poor, the young and the old . . • DENTIST 138 W. 1st South St. J. T. Iwanaga & Co. Phone: BErkeley 3270 they all walk silently under the Salt Lake Ci.tl}', Utah 138 W. 1st South St. 1001 Apgar Street dark skies with their eyes pivoted Oakland, California upon the star wJUch rose 1946 Phone: Piedmont 49(2 years ago over a stable in Beth- DR.M.OKUDA lehem. You can search through DENTIST ·-· ·-· ·-· -· -·-· all the world for this street, but - - - - -. vou oon find it charted only in the NOW AV All..ABLE: 515 Villa Street hearts of men. The marvelous Mountain View, California Dr. Tom T. Takahashi thing about it is that it does not Off.: Mt. View 3916 DENTIST end with the burning of Wl'appings Res.: Palo Alto 2-6483 from gifts, with the shedding of 637 28th St. - Cor. Grove needles from the pine, with the The WESCO-MATIC OAKLAND 9, California shelving of Christmas baubles. A li~tle bit of every day should be AUTOMATIC RECORD-PLAYER TE 1022 Res. HI 5U6 spent walking down that street, Dr. Yoshiko Shimada where self is forgotten for others. Dentist DEAR SANTA ••• Takes up to Ten 10-inch or 12-inch Records ·-THOMAS-· --·- --MASUDA. ·- -.. ._~ When I was a believer, and spent days composing long letters Price: $47.50 Ph. TU 2930 Attorney-at-Law to the cheerful imaginary figure, 312 E. 1st St. 13( N. La Salle St. St. Nick, I asked for the tangible Room 309 Loa Angeles Suite 2008 ~ things. Generous parents always Come in and Heal' it Today Chicago 2, Illinois fulfilled these requests so that on Phone: FRAnklin 1266 a very early Christmas morning, Residence - Midway 2099 I would find everything under a DR. K. SUGINO • tree whose top bent against the • .------.-· -·- - -·- ·-· ·-· - -· high ceiling. Christmas could not OPTOMETRIST be what it is unless we remem­ 122 So. San Pedro St. - JffiO YAMAGUCHI bered Santa ... and so I'd like to M·AIN JEWELRY Los Angeles, Calif. write a letter, which comes out of "Your Friendly Jewelry Store" Telephone MU 7U9 Attorney the heart of all of American JIRO SAKANO, Prop. Eve. and Sun. by Appt. . 1200 North Clark St. youth ..• 70 West 1st South Salt Lake City, Utah (JUcago 10, Illinois Dear Santa: For a very long time you an­ MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED Ph. SUP. 8356. Res. WBI 9878 swered all my wishes, and I Dr. M. M. Nakadate don't think I really went out of Place Your Order Now for Westinghouse Washers, Irone.rs, my way to thank ,you sincerely Refrigerators, and the Famous Westinghouse Laundromat. DENTIST •.• not you, alOJte, but a lot of Suites 311-314 - Firm Bldg. DR. C. M. ISHIZU other people, whom we take so •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• + ••••••••••• 112 No. San Pedro St., much for granted. Loa Anreles 12, Calif. DENTIST Fii'Sitl of all, I'd like to re- ·-· ----·-· ·- - - -· ·-· Phone: VAndyke 1592 31U Adeline St. - So. Berkeley -·O. -C.·-· TANNER------JEWELRY·- - .Portrait~ by ••• • member many American boys . (Above Bank of America) and girls who made three COMPANY Near Grove and Alcatras Christmases Epent in relocation Diamonds and Watches TERASHIMA Telephone Olympic 6307 centers brighter through the Salt Lake City, 170 S. ?tlain STUDIO gifts wftich they sent Ito exiled Dr. ,.Carl T. Hirota youth. Brigham City, 137 Main Phone 66 E. oith So. St. I want to remember Katie Ku- Murray Nephi oi-8261 Salt Lake City Dentist DR. A. KAWABE bo, the Phil Bete med tech at • • • • •• •• • • ·-- ... ·- -·-· .• . - ·-· ·- ._...._,. Physician and Surgeon General hospital here, who'll 1797 Sutter St. WE 5388 Osteopath llpelld her Christmas nq,t at DON'S CAMERA FANS · home, but tak~g somebody San Francisco, Calif. 112 N. Sa.n Pedro St. Insure your Cameras, Los Angeles 12 TUcker 8353 else's place in the white labora­ POOL HALL tory. Special Lenses, Equipment Res. 3125 Montclair St. 110 West ~t South Phone REpublic 0301 I want to remember all the "AU Risks" Coverage people whose faith and encour­ Salt Lake