He subsequently immigrated to Japan in 1928, at the invitation of Baron Kihachiro Okura and Inukai Tsuyoshi (later prime minister of Japan), and embarked on a professional career.
Inukai | Tsuyoshi Suzuki | Tsuyoshi Shinjo | Tsuyoshi Sekito | Tsuyoshi Nagano | Tsuyoshi Nagabuchi | Tsuyoshi Kusanagi | Tsuyoshi Kohsaka | Tsuyoshi Kitazawa | Tsuyoshi Ikeda | Inukai Tsuyoshi | Inukai, Ōita |