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Show k 4 H $ I Ruminatin' Roundabout jj In wliicii Kuminutor pi opose; ti dream 11 lot, tlunk as little as necessary, sonitcr a few bou- iliict-s while their objectives mo still above the sod to enjoy thoin, and fir hot-shot now aiul then -while said limuiiiK or can enjoy setfinii the spam ny. The retirement from the local restaurant field of Kay Suyefusa ami his departure for his native land, marks the passing of one of the finest representatives of the Japanese people it has been the luck of Mil for,! people t. encounter. encoun-ter. Honest, generous, publio-spir-itil a:ul a het.tr man gcnoiauy than many of our own people to whom citizenship is no: denied, it has been a privilege to know Kay! We coi.fess little l.ve for the Japanese as a whole an,! even less -' since their defenseless raping of a sister nation was undertaken in such deadly earnest, but that does deter us from giving credit where credit is due and Kay has proved himself fine in so many admirable ways :hat we should be remiss did we not say a few good things of him on the eve c-t his departure to rejoin his wife, son and daughter whom he hasn't seen for 12 years. And a son whom he has never seen, the latter having been born a few months after Kay reached this country! Kay now returns to his home village, about 100 miles from Kobe; the approaching marriage of his daughter, now nearly 20 years of age: and to enjoy in a sort of vicarious vi-carious way the steady advance-men: advance-men: in the marine supply business busi-ness of his oldest son, about 25 years of age, on whose education Kay has spared no expense. What Kay will do himself, he does not know or hasn't chosen to tell but he has promised a letter, let-ter, if we will undertake to "fix it up like should be." |