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The New Canadian — February 18, 1959

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
VOL. 22 — NO. 13

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1959

TORONTO, ONT.

sored Miss Valentine Dance

was 16-year-old Sue Otani
representing Junior TYBS.
In close second place was
Sally Abe (right)repre­
senting Sunday Mixed
Major Bowling. The choice
of Metropolitan Badmin­
ton, Agnes Shimono (left), Mi
came third by a slim mar­
gin behind Miss Abe. The
new queen crowned by
last year’s winner, April
Sugai, received the coveted
Miss Valentine Trophy, a
bouquet of roses and a
wristwatch.

A

—Photo by JACK HEMMY

Appeal to Two W2 Holdouts for Their Surrender

that to date, the fund drive had cherry tree saplings during ship­
accumulated a total of $134,568.- ment, and also during his time of
00 which is slightly over the one- instruction and assistance in their
aS
third mark of the set goal of planting upon arrival here.
$400,000. The break-down of the
The 2,000 cherry trees, the
donation amounts to about $173.- largest donation since the war,
00 per donor.
is. a gift from Metropolitan To­
In order to keep the public well kyo to the City of Toronto ini­
informed on all developments and tiated through the wishes of JC
facts in regards to the Centre residents.
Committee’s work, a meeting- has
Monthly meetings to acquaint
—photo by JACK HEMMT
been called to which heads of the various committee members
various Japanese Canadian or­ on the progress will be held.
ganizations in Toronto will be in­
Those present at the meeting
O th er c an d id a t es vying vited to hear the full report and
Bob Kadoguchi, Mikio Naka­
for the coveted trophy last proceedings. The date and locale
of the open meeting- has been set mura, Tosh Moriyama, Frank
Friday evening were, left on the evening of Friday. March Chtake, Kimi Takimoto, Ken
to right, Kazzy Niwatsuki- Gth, 8:00 p.m., at 4.15 Spadina Mori, Mils Sumiya, Gloria Sato,
Avenue.
Ken Kutsukake, T. Kadonaga, Y.
no
representing
TYBS.
Mr. Joe Ohori who reported Iwasaki, R. Yoneyama, T. Ume­
third-place Agnes Shimono, that the movie (Seven Samurai) zu ki, S. Watanabe, M. Washimopresented by the Centre commit­
second-place Sally Abe, tee had netted over $1,000 was to and Raymond Moriyama.
Queen Otani, Pat 'Okawa appointed as the special programs Sustained to Fire Loss
representing Nisei Music director.
The meeting also resulted in a
TABER,Alta.—-A loss of $15,Club, Irene Matsushita re­ sub-committee being appointed 000 was sustained in an after­
presenting Rec Socratic to select and set-ups a “special noon fire on the Albert Green
group’’ consisting of Occidentals farm a half mile east of Taber,
Dance Club, Bettv Takata and Japanese Canadians to assist Feb. 7, when a commercial root
re presenting Nisei Anglic­ in the project, directly or in­ cellar was destroyed. Tenants on
It is felt that the addi­ the farm is George Setoguchi,
an, and Elaine Miike repre­ directly.
tion of others would give needed who thought the fire started from
senting Club Ami. In addi­ strength to the committee which an overheated stack from a stoveenable them to continue used to keep the frost out of the
tion to receiving miniature would
cellar.
its efforts on the project.
trophies, candidates were
It was agreed by those present
Besides the root cellar, and loss
that
the
expenses
of
the
trip
of
by frost, Mr. Setogu­
presented with portraits by from Tokyo of Mr. Sinyei Niibori, chi produce
lost two tractors and other
Yamada Studio as were the head of the Technical Division of equipment.
x UUDGl-UpS.

BuddKist Priests Combat
Age-old Traditions

TOKYO.—The emotional ap­ tempts will be made to get them
TOKYO.—Chief priests of 20
peal of a Japanese father to his to the former lieutenant.
Buddhist
temples have launched
holdout son to surrender will
The Philippine Embassy in
a
campaign
to fight the stillsoon blare out over the jungles Manila sent two officials into the
strong
prejudice
which prevents
oi Lubang Island in the Philip­ area. With co-operation of the
priests
from
walking
in public
pines where the son has hidden constabulary they will scatter
with
their
wives.
since 'world War II.
2,000 surrender leaflets.
“We are going to begin walk­
u^ail!?'!lro Onoda of Kainan,
Bishop Cudra, who will soon
ing
the streets with our wives
vaKayama prefecture, tape re­ build a church on the island, will
just
like any other citizen and
corded the appeal to be broadcast take the tape recording and let­
even
walk hand-in-hand just to
k Ds son, former imperial army ters to the Philippines.
emphasize
our contempt for ,this
-.eutemuit Minoru Onoda.
tradition,

said Ryuzen Hosoda,
r.Qie younger Onoda and Pvt.
chief
priest
of
the Seishin Temple.
Kozuka of Tokyo have
Kotobuki-kai
Japan
He
said
that
people still re­
jyding on Lubang Island,
gard
Buddhist
priests
as a sym­
-Umdoro, since the end of Tour Counts 91 Heads
bol of feudalism and that to com­
worm War II.
, Numerous attempts in the past
A total of ninety-one Japanese bat this “we have decided to re­
^persuade them to surrender Canadians will be leaving via linquish tradition by holding an
success, Philippine chartered ulane to tour Japan open social evening with our
wives.” -mmmit-es issued a “shoot on
from
Vancouver

s
International
after the holdouts
“ ;jktc-iy killed one villager.
Airport next month.
. i. urn leaving everything in
Among the persons leaving on
the Japanese Em- the Kotobuki-kai’s Pioneer Tour
Manila/’ the elder Ono- are fifty-eight women, thirtyU '&'5“ “but as my son has man- three men, five Niseis and three
SASKATOON, Alta.—A service
Aif!? L0. Survive for more than 14 children.
of
goodwill provided by student
U./.A
‘'be war ended, I very
Consul M. Endo of the Toronto funds to enlist, two students from

vish to see him again alive. Consulate has invited rhe mem­
Japan was announced by Dr.
1 'U’g.be does not commit any bers to tea on Saturday, Februarv Robert Paton, Department of Phi­
//U /-kings. I feel much more 21st at 5:30 p.m. In Vancouver, losophy at the University of Sas­
this time as the kind Mr. M. Tanabe, Vancouver Con­
..///"P (Matias) Curada, who is sul has also invited the touting katchewan.
Both students guests from To­
///;,.
acquainted with the JCs to tea on March 8th at 4:00 kyo are Andrew Tsubaki and John
/?///', where my son is hiding, P-m.
, r
,Ta
Among them is Mrs. Amo sa­ Hayashi, who, under the auspices
UL './*ere(t his co-operation and
kura who is 82-years-old and the of the local World University
Services of Canada, will be pro­
;t
-acher also asked his son’s elest member of the tour. 1-— vided with residence, board, and
friends and neighbors oldest couples are Mr and Mrs. free tuitibn, and in addition cash
y \e. letters to the holdouts Kisaku Nishimoto and^ Mr. ana assistance throughout the year
k/’.'A "ilni 4o surrender. Twenty Mrs. Yataro Suefuji. All are from 1959.
-----is were received and at­ Toronto.

University of Sask.
To Guest Japan Students

SOLILOQUY
By KEN ADACHI
The First Time I Saw Paris
Paris is an incredibly swirling,
hurling, hjirly-girly city; it is
vulgar and mercenary, dirty and
fading, unheated and peeling. It
is enough, at first glance, to dis­
pel all the bright picture, post­
card, legend and song-filled
romantic notions of the place.
And yet the place is excitingly
different, as different as a walk
in New York’s brown-and-beige
Harlem, San Francisco’s charm­
ing white-washed hills, or the
blue-grey of Vancouver’s mem­
ories. And even more different,
because for the first time, I am
hemmed in by the enormous bar­
rier of language, cut off from
ordinary discourses, all at once
immersed into an alien world.
Paris, of all the cities, is a city
in which to walk and sit about.
The sights, smells and sounds
swirl about, in the pale sun of
the late afternoon, impressing
upon me the fact that I am very
far from Canada and its familiar
things. From Toronto to Paris,
by train and ship, it is only six
days, but the distance, is measur­
ed not by space and time, but in
terms of different worlds.
Walk with me, then, from my
hotel room in the Montparnasse,
somewhere on the Left Bank, the
artist and student quarter, where
even certain cafes are “strictly

reserved” for “artists and intel­
lectuals”. It is an old hotel, as
are most hotels and houses in
this crumbling city. The red tiles
on my fourth floor room are loose
and worn, the yellowed paint is
chipped and hanging from the
high-ceiling walls, and there is a
slatternly smell of decay—not
perceived by the sense but felt as
an impalpably brooding presence
—about the room. It would not
be difficult to leave this room,
but a better place within my re­
sources in one of the most over­
crowded cities in the world is
proring hard to find.
But once out on the street, life
swarms all about me in its cease­
less, hurrying motion, as swift as
the pace of the Citroens and Re­
naults that rush pell-mell along
the boulevards. See the lithelimbed, proudly poised Parisian
girls—impeccable
in
studied
casualness—and
the
bearded
youths, serious and collected. It
would be impossible to rival these
swarms of young people, lovely
and handsome, but so cooly aloof.
Up north near the Seine, along
the intersection of St. Germain
and St. Michel, stop for French
coffee or wine and croissants at
any of the sidewalk cafes, always

(Continued on Page Eight')

Page 2

Wednesday, February 18, 195q

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MINISTER of CITIZENSHIP and IMMIGRATION

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IMPERIAL BANK
OF CANADA
ELIZABETH & DUNDAS
(116 Elizabeth St.)
TORONTO
L. J. Walker, Manager

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Phone EM. 8-2475 — UN. l-i0320

KINO’S MARKET
P.O. Box 57.
Slocan City, B.C.

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155 East Pender St.,
Vancouver, B.C.
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46 Princeway Drive,
Scarboro, Ont.
Phone HI. 4-6033

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396 Powell Street Vancouver, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-0964

127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455

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Page 7

Wednesday, ^February 18, 1959

THE

SPORTS
Hatashita Dojo Victorious Over 21 Teams
Participating in 2nd Queens Invitational Meet

NEW

CANADIAN

PAGE 7

tforejr amf doingrs

CLASSIFIED
Female Help Wanted

U of T NSC Thanks 'Glenn Miller Nighters’
The Second Intercollegiate and Vice-captain Jim Martin, 1st. kyu,
Invitational Team Championship of Hatashita, won ovei- Marv Kir- Fifth Formers Invited to Coming 'Hash Night
Judo Tournament sponsored by luck, 2nd kyu, Queens, with a to-

Lansdow

urn size 0H1
gs. Phono
oronto).

Queens University, Kingston, was moenage. Jerry Harpell, 1st kyu,
Inspite of the rivalry caused by p.m. to 11 p.m.
PART-TIME
held on Saturday, February 14th of Queens, caught Paul Mantellaj the local showing of a Japanese
As the school term is coming ers. Phone
in the university gym. Twenty 1st kyu, of Hatashita, with a movie, the NSC’s Glenn. Miller to a rapid close and final exams
teams from Ontario and one counter, making the final score Night, was an overwhelming suc­ are approaching, the Nisei-Stu­
Male Help Wanted
from Quebec entered the competi­ 30-10 in favor of the Hatashita cess. It was undoubtedly the best dents’ Club would like to end an­
FKUCK DRIVER fa
ntions which began at 3:00 p.m.
club of Toronto. This makes the dance ever. The crowd was very other successful term by thank- ir.g
plant.
Siead
The CKBBA teams were en­ Hatashita dojo the first winners impressed by the decorations ing everyone for the support,
AM,
tered in this tourney with the of the Queens Cup.
created
bv
Ralph
Fujiwara the club’s functions.
Association’s
approval
even
A brief demonstration of uke- (FTS III)' and his assistants.
—31. T.
though members of the opposing mi chu-gaeri, and light randori Both music and entertainment
Jr auto,
ales C<
new group, the Judo Association
given by Frank Hatashita. deserve mention also.
of Canada, were entered. This is 4th dan. and Daisy Rosset, 2nd
Two scholarships were present­
because the. tournament was un­ kyu, both of Hatashita Judo Club ed that night.
LICENSED
Congratulations
on
1-5691
der outside sponsorship rather■ of Toronto.
are due to Miss Reiko Sameshi­
After
p rn.
•ante)
than sponsored by either of the
Vern Fagan, 2nd dan of Kiyo- ma an (VI 1) who is specializ­
Toronto JCCA Isseibu’s
—gawmmwMiwnrwjiiMr.'wff nn.'Ljtn
rival judo associations.
Shin Judo Club of Toronto, ing in French and Latin, and to
Help Wanted
Queens, McGill and Toronto fought 13 judoists in less than 11
Betty
Kamitakahara turday, February 21st, 7:30'p.m.,
universities with Ryerson Insti­ minutes with only one of the (UC 1) who is enrolled in the’ at the Toronto Buddhist Church
.anUactuniK
tute of Toronto, competed for the challengers being successful.
general arts course.
basement.
1
nl
Intercollegiate title with Queens
Tom Camillio, Hatashita Club
Besides the report, discussions,
This Friday, February 20th,
Atm-u-mw
and Toronto meeting for the of. Toronto, threw him for one the Nisei Students’ Club is hav­ and election of new executives,
•mo requ
bihlie:
finals. Queens won the title by point with an uchi mata.
ing its last general meeting and entertainment will be provided by
downing Toronto 25-10.
The refereeing chores were social before closing the year records of the latest Japanese hit
Rooms to Let
In the Invitation tournament. handled by Alfred Graber, 4th with a gi'and banquet. A special songs and a taped recording of
Queens University met Hatashita dan, of Toronto, Rick Richards, invitation is extended to the fifth “Naniwa-bushi” which has been FIVE roams wi
KPcd k5
Judo Club of Toronto for the new 1 dan, of Ottawa and Paul Esco, formers to get a bird’s eye view rented from the Kotobuki-.kai nished to suit
•ee or lour persons
cup which Queens University do­ 1 dan, of Kingston.
Pa: kina, TTC,
oppinn and beach
of the doings at NSC functions. for this occosion.
Phene'OX. 81
(Toronto).
nated in ■ hope of keeping this
The MC of the tournament was This final get-together has been
tournament an annual affair.
Frank Hatashita with the official justly termed “Hash Night” be­
' In the first bout Arnold Ba­ score keepers being Mits Tanino, cause it will include everything Architect Moriyama
iiiiiiinnniiiiininn mi iiimmiiiiiiiu
logh, 1st kyu, of Hatashita, 2 dan, John Oliver, 1 dan, from basketball (girls vs. boys),
fought to a tie with Jack Maine, Liz Pearce also Fred Okimura of volleyball, election of next year’s On Tabloid Tonight
4th kyu, of Queens. Maurice Col­ Montreal. Frank Hatashita, in executives, square-dancing', round­
wellRaymond
Moriyama,
man, 1st kyu, of Hatashita ap­ behalf of Mr. Sasaki, president dancing and refreshments. To in­
known
Nisei
architect
ol
the
Ja­
plied a sliding collar choke to win of the Canadian Kodokan Black clude all of these events, it is
February
panese
Canadian
Centre
and
Cen
­
the point over' Dave Wilson, 3rd Belt Ass’n, presented Robert necessary to begin early, so we
Club's
kyu, of Queens. Doug Willsie, 3rd Rothwell of Kingston with his urge everyone to come out at tennial United Church’s Nisei
'’Hash Night" and genera meeting
Chapel
will
be
on
CBC

s
Tabloid
kyu, of Queens, was downed by black belt.
—Liz 7:00 p.m. sharp. It is to be held tonight to discuss general archi­ at Centennial Un;ted Chare.i Dancing,
Paul Schelck, 1st kyu, of Hata­
at 'Centennial United Church, tecture and the Centre. Program 21—Toronto. Isseibu JCCA general meet­
shita, with a counter foot sweep.
ing in Buddhist Church basement.
Dovercourt and Bloor Streets, on time is 7:00 p.m. on channel six.
7:30 p.m. Entertainment provided with
Friday, February 20th from 7:00

Isseibu JCCA Meet

7

mTTTiiirr ijc । Ui»i

KEG NEWS

CKKBA Judo Tourney

mi....m n uTiiim1 । «ht

The Fourth Eastern Cana­
DANFORTH. Feb. 9: Sammy Sameshidian Judo Championship Tourna­
took the honors with a sizzling 751
ment under the sponsorship of ma
(313) followed by Isa Katsuyama 744
the Canadian Kodokan Black (313).
Rhoda Masuda s 620 was high for the
Belt Association will be held on
Saturday, April 4, at the YMHA gals; Torchy Abe 591.
With only six weeks remaining, the
Auditorium, corner of Spadina team
standings are:
and Bloor Streets.
Rov 91: Don 85; Ken 80; Yo 79; Harley
—Harley
This tournament, which is 78, Aki 77; Nak 63; Tak, 62.
slated to begin at 7:00 pan., will
10-PIN. Feb. 4: Tak Takemura
be the prelude to the choosing of 564MEN
(228); Joe Tsujimoto 563 (196); Sam
a likely or favorable candidate Hayashi 555 (206); Len Doi 541 (208);
for the Third World Judo.. Tour­ Jack Watanabe 538 (198); Terry Doi 530
Maw Mori 526 (191); Ken Iwai 529
naments to be held at Tokyo in (202);
(221); Ken Doi 523 (195); Bud Paine 522
1960.
(197); Jack Cooke 521 (188); Ken Bain
Five-man teams will partici­ 521 (201); Jeep Seki 514 (184); Ken Moritpate in a program consisting of: sugu 512 (181); Tom Takemura 508 (172);
Tcsh Muraki 507 (187); Jimmy Archer
—Non-black belt holders from 500
(198).
each club.
Team results:
Waller's Tavern over
—Individual black belt compe­ Bennetts Trophies 4-0; Ken Moritsugu,
Tosh Muraki, Yuki Onizuka, Tosh Iwai,
titions.
Bob Archer and^Roy Sasaki 3-1 over
The tournament will also be Dick Aoki, Barney" Ozawa, Jack Cooper,
participated by clubs from the Best Cleaners, Kayo Shigetomi and Kaz
Osaka; Sam Eto and Male Shoppe split
Alaritimes and Quebec.
2-2.
Tosh Muraki and Roy Sasaki won the
—Joe Tsujimoto
cond series.

SKATES
FISHING TACKLE

MACHINE CO.

and

Toyota Best Actress,
At Stratford Festival

Kobayashi On Ontario
Ass’n Executive Post

STRATFORD, Ont.—Fumi. To­
yota of Waterloo, Ontario was
the winner of the Brickenden
Medal for the best actress award
at the Western Ontario Drama
League Festival held in Strat­
ford, Ontario. The festival ended
on Feb. 14th. Mrs. Toyota por­
trayed the part of Lotus Blossom
in the “Teahouse of the AugustMoon” presented in the semi­
finals by the Kitchener-Waterloo
Little Theatre. The Fuller Shield
was also presented to the “Tea­
house’’ group for obtaining the
second highest number of marks
at the semi-finals. The “Tea­
house” cast also gained recogni­
tion by walking away with the
best actor award, and best sup­
porting actor awards.

The Ontario Federation of the
Fish and Game Protective Asso­
ciation is definitely going to hold
its annual convention at Port
Dover, the dates now having
been set for September 11th, 12th
and 13th. It is anticipated that
upwards to 600 delegates will at­
tend the convention, one of the
highlights of which will be a big
banquet.
Messrs. Gordon Evans, (president) and K. Kobayashi, of the
Port Dover Fish and Game Pro­
tective Association, extended an
official invitation to the provin­
cial association to come to Port
Dover, them invitation being sup­
ported by a letter from Mayor
Schneider who gave assurance
that everything possible would be
done to make the convention a
big success and one of happy
memories for all who attend.
The vote of the executive to
come to Port Dover was 90% in
favor. Mr. Kobayashi was named
tc the provincial executive.

PEKING
CHINESE FOODS
DINE IN OUR JADE ROOM
Banquets, Weddings and
Socials

H. S. TSURUDA
(Japanese Canadian Agent)
35 Rowntree Ave., TORONTO
KO. 9-0673

Oscar’s Photo Sports
1500 Dundas at Dufferin—LE. 2-4267

ACCURATE ROOFING CO. LTD.

West to Broadview Ave.,
north to Agincourt, Don
Mills, east Highland Creek.

A. K. (Alfie) KAMITAKAHARA

PHONE AM. 1-3373

5—Hamilton. Oyama Sho
worth Theatre. 7:(
15—Vcyicouver. ;3uss<
inaugural cerornon
box lunch.

st;

nil-

13841/2 Queen W.
Toronto

LE. 2-6378

2378 Kingston Rd., Stop 13A
Vancouver 5

Nishijima

Scarborough, Ont.

HA. 7356-L

TORONTO

THIS MONTH'S
SPECIALS

1

7

PV/ra/7 Buying, Selling or Exchanging Your Borne

CATERING TO ALL NISEI PARTIES

KEN HORI

(formerly Benny’s Steak House)

BERNARDI-MATHEWS REAL ESTATE

CANTONESE & MANDARIN CUSINE

OX. 8-1121

March

HOME DELIVERY

CON’S INSURANCE
AGENCIES & PATHAY
FINANCE CO. LTD.

Flat Roofing ® Shingling 3 Eavestroughs ® Sheet Metal Work
- BONDED ROOFER

Phone RO. 2-4911

Japanese records.
21—Winnipeg. Manitoba JCCA sponsor­
ed dance lor benelit of the Nipponia
Home located at Beamsvillc, Ontario.
SI.00 per at Elmwood Bldg, on Kelvin
Si. 8 p.m.
22—Vancouver. Grand Bingo at Buddhist
Church sponsored by Busseis.
7:30
r>.m. at $2.00 per.
23—Toronto. Toronto Japanese Gardeners
Union General Meeting at 415 Spadina
Ave. 7:30 p.m.
.25—Toronto. Oyama Shows at Astor
Theatre. 5:30 p.m. and 9 p,m.
25—Toronto. National JCCA meeting at
415 Spadina Ave. 8 p
arp. All
welcome.
28—Kamloops. Buddhist Womens' Ass'n's
10th anniversary service, concert and
variety.

Res: AM. 1-5194
—Larae

2670 DANFORTH AVE.
TORONTO ONT.
Residence: 14 Perivale Crescent, Scarboro

925 Eglinton Ave. W., Toronto

Phone RU. 1-9123

Rocket Radios $2.75
4 Transistor Radio
complete $26.50
• 6 Transistor Radio
complete $34.95

DAVE’S
TV and Appliances
991 BLOOR STREET WEST
Phone LE. 3-0386


Kg®®

i

r

Page 8

PAGE 8

THE

NEW

Wednesday, February 18,

CANADIAN

THE NEW CANADIAN

Saw Paris
{Continued f?o/n Page One)

Authorized as second class mail.
Post Office Department, Ottawa
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher, JERRY KUTSUKAKE, English Section Editor; KEN
MORI, Japanese Section Editor and
Advertising Manager.
SUBSCRIPTION

half-filled and forever pictures­
que, filled with the slurring- mur­
mur of a seldom-to-be-deciphered
tongue. But it is pleasant to -sit
S3.50 for 6 months, $6 per year
here, away from the chromium
(Ad rates on request)
and varnish and surly rudeness
479 QUEEN ST. WEST.
of Canadian restaurants. The cof­
fee is good, as rich and succuiant
EMpire 6-5005
as good coffee should be.
Nearby is the Rue de la Huchette (where -Hemingway once the courtyards, children play on
stayed and wrote) , and the sound roller-skates, and one woman
of ' Dixieland jazz swings out tosses a ball idly to two giant
from a subterranean bar, and a dogs as the vanished, varnished
second rate trumpeter is billed ghosts
of Michelangelo
and
as one of America’s foremost Rubens brood thickly and mas­
sensations. The streets, which sively between the walls.
are so narrow here that one could
Along the Right Bank, footsore
ahnost leap over the rooftops, and weary, walk along Jrie
allow no sun to filter* through to Champs Elysees, where it is New
the blackened pavements.
York’s Fifth Avenue and Times
The storied Seine never disap­ Square i-olled into one. People are
points as I walk along its banks lining up for the newest French
in the approaching- dusk. Ama­ movie or the American import
teur fishermen line the banks of with dubbed-in dialogue, or peer­
the sluggishly flowing river, and ing wistfully at the newest, too
youths pursue their love-making, expensive, creation, or lounging
hugging closely
against the in fashionable cafes, or crowding
winter chill. And it is free and •around, looking at- a television
easy to stroll along the banks, to program in a shop-window, for
pause lazily at the outdooi* book­ most people are too poor to buy
stalls with their overloaded rows sets in this city, and a television
of bargain-rate books and paint­ aerial is a thing of rare novelty
ings, to lean over the parapets here. Through the white r.eonand try to push back the wish lighted haze looms the Arch of
that someone else were with me Triumph, and these crowds along
10 share in this vision, 'this the boulevard are as nameless to
moment caught in the rush of me as the Unknown Soldier which
time, of tranquility. Spring- will the monument commemorates.
come soon along- the Seine, and
From there, I can go down a
the dead trees will blossom into ramp, through the half-lit gloom
leaves, and that will be a won­ and the crisscross of underground
drous sight.
passages, and take the subway :
Across one of the arching to Montmartre, the quarter where
bridges, then, and past the Come­ flesh is sold, by the high heel, by
dic Francaise, the Place de la bosomy girls hulking- in front of
Concorde and the Louvre with almost every cafe and alleyway.
their sooty, ornate columns ris­ Here is a garish, vulgar district,
ing from the ground. Outside on where
Toulouse-Lautrec
once
-wept and burned his stunted soul
away at the Moulin Rouge, and
the can-can still flourishes along
,
it is a aood policy to
;
have the'RIGHT POLICY
with the crepe suzettes and the
hot-dogs sold on sidewalk-stalls.
.
Consult
Here, too, you can buy, for just
WALES and DUNCAN
over one dollar, editions of books
long since banned in North Ame­
INSURANCE AGENTS
rica. H. D. Lawrence’s unexpur­
464 Yongo Street, Toronto
gated version of Lady ChatterPhone WA. 1-3171
Ity’s Lover and Henry Miller’s
Tropic of Cancer flame on the
shelves of the little bookstores.
Around two in the morning,
however, it is time to go home,
Lucien C. Kurata
for suddenly' nearly all of Paris
BVKKJST1CB and SOLICITOR
collapses and folds away its stalls
and
whisks the crumbs from its
NOTARY PUBUC
■tablecloths. Sleep claims all amid
Suae 5v2. Temple Building
the menacing hush. And life is
62 RICHMOND ST. VVBS’J
flushed out from the streets, ex­
TORONTO
cept for the solitary pedestrian,
£M. 6-0959

Res.: RO. 7-3427
a;i automobile blinking its mourn­
ful yellow headlights, and two
tramps lying on the sidewalk
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
under one overcoat.
EM. 4-13S4
2 Vesta Drive
If there is one way in which I
EM. 4-1395
HUdson 5-1365
can sum up the first impact of
A. E. McKaque, Q.C. Paris, I have not found it yet. I
have not been able to catch the
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
spirit of place in the few days I
NOTARY PUBLIC
have been here. The impressions
whirl
in my head almost too
ICOS Northern Ontario Building
swiftly to record, take shape and
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
pattern.
TORONTO

viscount aluminum storm ] |
screen and doors '
MAS NAKAO
j
Bus. HO. 5-0771
Res. PL. 5-6173

|
ji

_________________ ________ 11

YONEMITSU i

for the 100th Anniversary
Christian Celebration in
November, 1959
Plan now to join with relatives and friends in Japan to celebrate the
centennial Anniversary of the Protestant Christian missions be­
ginning November 3, 1959 at Aoyama Gakuin Hall in Tokyo.
Be a part of the Anniversary Celebration and receive the inspiration
of its Christian message. Travel with your fellow church members
on a Special Anniversary Tour sponsored by the Northern California
Japanese Christian Church Federation, which includes visits to his­
torically famous churches, cities and landmarks.
The SS PRESIDENT WILSON, official ship for the 100th Christian
Anniversary Tour sails from San Francisco OCTOBER 2 and from Los
Angeles OCTOBER 4—and arrives at Yokohama October 18. You will
have two weeks to tour Japan before the official opening day
ceremonies in Tokyo, November 3. Make plans now. Enjoy a won­
derful vacation at sea. Arrive refreshed and relaxed for the days
ahead. See and visit Honolulu on the way.

L^o

TO IMS

ox0 -£©

A&

LXWP L© ? W
-F A S K.«MM K A^-F * $fc&ox

L/co z:

t.

Xj;Y_EO^FT

A'
Abjj%^+7\ FAo 3X- v x b

F-s b P
AAtX'0^-

FtVo

F^i/ioxy^Lo

rfjjb 9

TF

A£&

=

S-ftTo

ROUND TRIP ADULT FARES ‘10 YOKOHAMA
FIRST CLASS

ECONOMY TOURIST
CLASS

From $918
$630 to $670 in Dormitories
$690 in "Family Style" 4 to 8
berth rooms.

Special Anniversary Tour—.with 2 weeks in Japan—$970.00—includes round trip transportation

For reservations, descriptive folders and. a copy of the Special Anni­
versary Tour fojder see your Travel Agent; the APL office nearest
you, or mail the attached coupon.

Watch Repair Shop <
HO. u-36j>.2 — Res: L.E. 2-7445
328 Broadview Ave., Toronto

PLASTIC COVER
Custom Made—8 Gauge
GLASS CLEAR IT DEFIES WEAR LIKE A TRANS­
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Permanent protection from dust and liquids yet the
beauty of your furniture is never hidden. Reimorced
seam construction—me strongest procurable—will
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by experts. Separate cushions with ciooers and air
vents.
The first name in plastic covers
- year written guarantee.

plastic' covers co.

y

*904 Avenue Rd., Toronto RU 7-3133

Mr. Marvin T. Uratsu, Dist. Japanese Traffic Manager
American President Lines
301 California Street, San Francisco 4, California

COUPON

Please send "LI l ERATURE” and the JAPAN CENTENNIAL Christian Missions Tour Folder
Name...............................................................................................................................
Address....................................................................................

j
j

City........... . ......................... ..........................................
1 aer. planning to etter-d the Christian Anniversary Celebration..........