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The New Canadian — July 2, 1960

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN

_____________

An ’ndePendent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin

sjl
w
Si

SATURDAY, JULY 2.1960

TORONTO. ONT.

finding Shows Hawaii

Asian. Trade Steadily Growing £k»an Ihmmham t ■±_ Wr
^” said
* '-neap Japanese Tubes
--Ager cargo,
come .a very bright spot 'in Tor-

Noonan, Ontario manager of
onJ/s overseas shipping picture. Dan
Federal Commerce and Naviga­
Ihe Japanese trade is booming’ tion, agents for the Iino Lines
and,, so are the shipments to and here,
"Every arrival has had
from Southeast Asia.
Spokesmen for the Canadian en to the wall,” he said. ’
larger tonnage.”
HONOLULU. — Hawaii leads
The Yasushima Maru, latest
*s claim that the national policy says ve are
The line, a monthly service to
the U.S. as the shining example Imo Lines vessel here last week­
the
1 government going to have a secondary manaJapan,
scheduled
extra
sailing
in
of civil-rights practices, accord­
EW
end, discharged _ 1,200 long’ tons May and August.

grants
protection,
they
are under fucturing industry, it i
ing to a report recently issued
°-^
_
general
carg

o,
an
imposing
a
death
sentence
from
foreign be driven to the wall.” going to
Orient
Mid-East
Lines
(Great
by the Hawaii State Advisory
Si
^8.® g'oods load for Toronto Lakes Overseas), with monthly competition.
Committee to the United States
Said T. W. Radcliffe, .general
which
is not a terminal port.
If the present rate of increase manager of the Electronics In­
service to Southeast Asia, also
Commission on Civil Rig'hts.
It also loaded 7,000 long tons of reports good business.
for the import of Japanese tubes dustries Association of Canada
A thorough investigation by
it
continues
export
g'oods
before
sailing

for
the committee,
appointed in Sarnia Monday and an export _ This is the line that is pioneer­ will have within two veal’s we which arranged the meeting:
no tube industry in
ing Seaway shipments of crude
January, 1959, by the commis­ load of synthetic rubber.
"We forecast, in 1958" that
Canada,

«
aid
W. E. Currie of disaster was coming-. Now wo
rubber manufacturers. The test
sion. shows that racial discrimin­
Iino Lines’ other vessel, the
Kitchener
have the proof. If' it takes as
ation is nearly nonexistent in the Muneshima Maru, was first to drop of crude rubber here was a conference.
success.
island melting pot.
long
to get (government) action
-navigate the St. Lawrence"Sea­
He is with Dominion Electro- witli our electronic industry as
Japanese industry has also been
“The picture here is far more way last year and the Welland
home, a Canadian-owned firm it did with textiles, we’ll have no
favorable than anywhere else,” Canal a few weeks ago also sail­ a heavy buyer of scrap metals
pi
educing- radios, TV sots and electronic industry.”
from Industrial Metals Ltd.
comments Joseph V. Hodgson, ing for Sarnia. other
electronic devices. He said
Although not a glamor product,
committee chairman.
Give Costs
a
Waterloo
company has made
scrap may be the largest single
More to Come
components
for
them
for
years.
Reports Summarized
export this year and may reach
Industry members said a Ja“The next Japanese ship will more than 50,000 tons.
V -'
They used to employ 500 workers. paneso radio tube has a laid-down
In a volume published by the
Now because of foreign competi­ cost, to the. importer of -16.9 cents,
’^i
Civil Rights Commission sumtion, only 200 work in the plaint. which includes a Japanese fac­
Biarizing civil rights reports from
tory selling price of 31 cents, 6.2
Japanese Offer
all states and Puerto Rico, Mr.
cents
duty, a sales tax of 4.1
Hodgson says:
“Our purchasing manager has
cents
and
excise tax of 5.6 cents.
on his desk now an offer from a
“Our report is considered the
With announcement in the tinuous residence in Canada.
An
identical
Canadian made
Japanese
firm
for
exactly
the
very best. The commission was Wednesday June 29th issue of
Nominated Immigrant (in Ja­ same component at half the tube Bas a factory selling price
extremely complimentary regard­ the NC of National JCCA’s in­
of $1. It carries in addition .15
ing our situation and holds up tentions of submitting a brief in pan)—full name, relationship to price,” Currie said.
applicant,
date
of
birth
cents
excise tax and 11 cents
&
and
‘'Will you take it-?” he was
Hawaii as America’s finest exam­ Ottawa (in July) on the discrim­
marital
status,
address,
and
sales
tax.
Both tubes retail for
oc- asked. “We’ll have to. Our com­
ple of harmonious racial and reli­ inatory restrictions existing in the cupation.
$2.85
with
some
price cutting but:
petition is taking it now.”
gious relations.”
present Immigration Act of Can­
The
information
is
needed
not
much,
they
said.
im“Canada’s secondary manu­
Perhaps the only comparable ada, the National JCCA has been mediately.
Association members said they
facturing industry is being drivstate, he commented, is Idaho collecting detail on cases where­
are
going to fight for survival
whose committee also found little in relatives in Japan are prevent­
by,
as
one said "taking our case
in violation of civil rights.
ed from joining their families in
to
the
top,
and that means Prime
“Of course the picture is* not Canada because of the present
Minister
Diefenbaker.

bright for most other states and restrictions.
Members
said
their
workers
A typical Canadian gesture appealing to former JC residents
becomes dark when you come to
The information from persons was
are
joining
with
them
in
fight­
learned this week when a of Cumberland to assist in anv
the South,” Air. Hodgson points wishing to call family members
ing
for
action
by
Ottawa.
Nisei couple from Toronto visited way possible.
out.
or relatives from Japan is re­ the
What action? Higher tariffs?
Japanese Canadian cemetery
The committee’s report touched quired, to be submitted to Mr. T.
Mrs. Nishi, a former resident
No
because no tariff protection
on ail phases of community life Umezuki, National JCCA Immi­ at Cumberland, B.C. on Vancou­ of Cumberland, and her husband, we could ask for would do us
ver
Island
recently,
and
discover
­
for the past year.
Toshinami Nishi, on their arrival any good,” said Manager Rad­
gration Committee member, C/o
,.Le only instance of any racial The New Canadian, 479 Queen ed that the grounds have been learned that members of the cliffe.”
Cumberland Kiwanis Club had
aiscrimination found by the mem- St. West, Toronto 2-B, Ontario.- cleaned and restored.
Want Quota
The cemetery was reported volunteered their services and
beis is that practiced by certain
.Applicant (in Canada)—full earlier last year to be in devas­
The association will ask the
restored the cemetery
social clubs in Hawaii.
name, address, date of birth, citi­ tated condition through vandal­ completely
last May.
Japanese government to set a
But the committee reported, "In zenship, date of admission into ism
and lack of proper care dur­
This gesture is deeply appre- quota of 155,000 radio sets a
tecent years, more and more pri­ Canada, and the length of con- ing the war years, and the Van­
ciated and indebts our community
vate clubs are opening their mem­
couver Buddhist Church imme­ to the Kiwanis Club of Cumber­
6continued on page eight)
bership to persons of all races,
diately took up the restoration b v land, B.C.
and it may not be too long before
racial bars are lifted altogether.”
Japanese Group Chooses

Facts Needed For Brief

Cumberland Folks Aid JCs by Completing Task

Poor To Aid
Schools Integrated
are
commit Deviates Is
major
In education,
State Depart Never Closed

among the
­
findings':.
the
­
ment of Public lustruction has
V eUomm^siOI1ers appointed by
The official closing of The
V eAenior and confirmed bv World■ Refugee Year Fund took
me Senate.
place on June 30th! This means
commissioners in 1959 in- the official “Closing of the Door”
d?e\an American of Japanese to help those remaining pool’ un­
f ^Ve^sh-Hawaiian, and fortunate people who still remain
> ox Caucasian ancestrv.
in the camps of Europe—frus­
trated,
homeless, without an op­
aVe 310 records as to the
make-up of the depart- portunity to plan a life for them­
.a?Prox®ately 5,000 teach- selves. Many of these are child­
A
J^mates figure about 65 ren!
Are you willing to keep this
'
?re „n°n-white.
<-matmi<- of all races and reli- door open? So little is asked. It
ano .’?l'ten^ the public schools costs $o00 for each person taken
,e._° t restriction is that from these camps. In apprecia­
!
p.
meir li^ f^d the schools in tion of your freedom, liberty and
stated districts except for happiness, will you be willing
good •eason. .
right now-—to send a contribution
—no matter how small it may
ers^y of Hawaii us
is
by a board of regents be, to the Committee for World
Ume members also appointed
- - * ’ ’ Refugee Year Fund?
g Vs Governor and confirmed
At a meeting- on June 21st,
cheques were presented to the
Te *cart of 19a9 there were Chairman of the Toronto World
^ ^Caucasian ancestry, two Refugee Year Fund Committee
"I3' tWo Chinese, and one by various organizations. Among
these was a cheque for $400
from the Canadian Ethnic Press
Bloc Voting Denied
Club. At that meeting a small D
boy
sent his donation of 29c. If
'iW oit-niade charges of
a
child
can help a child—can’t we
?°^na in the islands,
each
help
someone?
~cninU^ee?s investigations
Made today “D” (Dollars) Day
'V ^ study made in 1957
"yT^ ^- Rind, a Uni- —time is so. short—lives are so
ox Hawaii sociology7 pro- precious. Send your donation To­
es
day——cheque or money order-—to
I
TORONTO WORLD REFUGEE YEAR FUND. Mrs. L. N. Clay,
article entitled “Racial
The Toronto Committee For ton. Secretary of Canadian Ethnic Press Club is seen nresentm/a
If °f the Club to Airs. I. Swinton, Chainfan
(continued on page eighty World Refugee Year, 329 Bloor nfT-r01' $t00^
of the Toronto Fund Committee.
, These
tee s

Quebec Mining Mill
Investing $100,000
VANCOUVER. — A Japanese
mining group has taken an option
on a mill in. Quebec for a British
Columbia mining company.
The Sumitomo, group has put
down $100,000 as an option on a
5,GOO-ton mill with the ManitouBarvue Mines Ltd. for the Beth­
lehem Copper Co. which has pro­
perty in. Highland Valley, near
Merritt, 120 miles northeast of
here.
The mill had been operated for
four years on Barvue property in
Quebec, which suspended work in
September, 1957.
The move was reported is Beth­
lehem’s annual report. Total cost
of the mill is $1,500,000.
It was announced three weeks
ago that Sumitomo will decide by
February whether to put between
§7,000,000 and $9,000,000 into the
Highland Valley property.
H. H. Huestis, Bethlehem pre­
sident, said in his annual report
the plant would be moved to Bri­
tish Columbia and would result
in substantial savings in cost of
putting-the property into produc­
tion.
He also said the Toronto firm
of General Engineering Ltd. has
been engaged to prepare detailed
cost surveys for the property.
If the mine goes into produc­
tion the first 10 years’ output will
ffo to the Sumitomo group. Pat­
rick Reynolds, secretary-treasur­
er, told the meeting Sumitomo
has guaranteed a floor price for
concentrate.

Page 2

PAGE 2

THE NEW CANADIAN

Baba Elected to Presidency in Toronto Dana Group

SPORTS

The members of the Toronto men are Haru Baba, Hanna Kat­
Dana of the Buddhist Churcli re­ sura and Kazuko Shimizu.
tly elected Airs. Hisaye Baba
Program chairman is Hedy Yo­
a the 1960 President.
Others nekura; bazaar chairmen, Aki
elected to the executive commit­ Tateishi and Save Ejima; recrea­ ___ Female Help Want.^
payroll

usual sharp placements to the tee are as follows:
tion chairman, Jane Tsuruoka.
piece work- tickets fo^?C5:i
Vice-president,
Mrs. Nancy
District
Leaders:
corners
were
floating
yards
wide
Earlscourt’s Marie Baniel and
suit manufacturer
wib„
Ariza:
secretaries — Recording,
Scarboro, Michi Harada; Dan­ Lid.,
119 SpadinaAve./^
Minnie Toyota announce that the of the mark. But even then Vic Misao
Nishimura
and
correspond
­
much-awaited annual tennis club had to play his very best to come ing, Amy Fukusaka; treasurer, forth North, Dorothy Tahara; (Toronto).
picnic to Jackson’s Point will take out on top by a 6-2, 7-5 score, Fumi Ono and religious chairman, Danforth South, Yasuko Tsuchi­
be
ya; Central, Waki Kiyonaga;
place on Saturday, July 9th, with lorn, rated a 6-1 choice, will
»
Rooms to Let
Yoshiko Tanaka.
Bloor North, Alice Uyeda; Bloor
cars leaving Earlscourt Park at .out.of t}ie finals for the first
on the Welfare commit­ .South, Mrs. Y. Wakisaka; St.
10:00 a.m. sharp, after a bit of in his illustrious career and we teeThose
TWO rooms with SI
are Sumie Sasaki, assistant, Clair, Thelma Mori and Weston, and
will
miss
his
’ renEG
dynamic
blitz-krieg
Ossington d'is
early morning practice. The girD
one IP
Sachi Suefuji. Membership is Toyo Hikida.
style
of
play
(loronto).

till
the
Open
in
will each bring samples of their
Bonnie
Higashi,
and
social
chairculinary specialties (enough for August.
SELF CONTAINED flat ■:„ „ n
Iwo), and the men, excepting the
Possession date
dr-iU,
P' ■
August,
Weston
cCg ^'H'
cai owners who will be supplying
Phone
CH.


&
d
Two Calgary Sanseis
the transportation, will be charg”
ed a fee of two dollars for reMake Local History
T"o-room BC'
Ireshments.
Kitchen
with
sink
and —’ G ,
CALGARY, Alta.—Local his­ and Bathurst district
*
*
^^ u
tory was made recently when two (Toronto).
Motel and car reservations
Honor Students of Japanese ori­
By TOSH SAKAMOTO
Versatile Ken Ikeda smashed gin
numbering fifty strong are filled
were chosen to become Class
L^. a^ Earlscourt, and adding
The Young Busseis pulled off out a three-run triple for Regent Valedictorians at their Gradua­
PATRONIZE
Trinity Club’s contingent for the the.season’s upset when they out­ while Eddie Hisaki garnered a tion Exercises at Viscount Ben­
invasion of Cleveland, Matt Mat­ played, outslugged the defending pinch-hit double.
nett Jr. and Senior High School
OUR ADVERTISERS
sui will be sending the member’s champions. Regent Press Giants
Riding behind the no-hit pitch­ in
Calgary.
. —
.
names to the U.S. Committee for by a 14-8 score last
Sunday
at ing of fireballing Sab Seki, Main
Abraham Okazaki, a wellWffllts’ accommodation at the Earlscourt Park. Led by the Auto carried a two run lead in
known
top honor student vas Va­
Colonial House Motel. Approxim­ sparklin _ pitching and hitting the fourth inning. Then Tak Ta­
ledictorian
for the Graduating
KAZUO G. OIYE
ate rates per room for singles, display of Dick Tanaka, Busseis naka ruined Seki’s hopes for a
Grade
12
students.
He has won
doubles or twin beds are 10 "dol­ utilized Regent errors with timely no-hit, no-run game when he
barrister _ solicitor
lars per night, so members are hits to capture their initial vic­ sin'gled home Fred Tanaka, who numerous awards, and last year
notary
advised to team up in order to tory of the year in the Nisei Sun­ walked. Taking- advantage of won a trip to the United Nations
Room 103
New 1 ork for his debating abi­
halve the expense.
Seki s sudden wildness, Yamadas in
day League game.
WA. 1-5605
OX. 8-2280 (Res )
lities.
*
*
*
Meanwhile at Christie Pits, tied the score in the fifth on four
8
College
St.,
Toronto
Sansei, Ronald Kuwahara was
A, major upset occurred in the Main Auto continued to roll along free passes.
Jeep Seki broke open the game Valedictorian for the Graduating
s^Sles when second to theii fifth win behind the com­
Grade 9 class. He won 4 Bennett
seeded Tom Iwasaki succumbed bined one-hit .pitching- of Sab and in the sixth when he caught one Home and School awards this
to the 100 degree heat and the Jeep Seki, edging Yamadas 6-3.- of Jackie Tanaka’s pitches for a year for mathematics, science, so­
three run homer. A triple-by Sab
tireless retrieving of a^|e 21Busseis broke out in front with Seki phi ted Tak Murakami, who cial studies and English Lanyear-old youngster, Vic Lum, who a five-run first inning but saw
ouage. Ronald also received his
has a habit of losing- to B Flm*ht that outburst disappear as Re­ had singled, for the final 'Main Queen Scout Certificate earlier.
,
Barrister & Solicitor
players
but plays brilliantly gent stormed back to rally for Auto run.
When Yamadas loaded the
against top flighters.
six; runs in the third. The Inex­
Cameron, Weldon
y night of pokcr and perienced but everMrying Busseis bases with walks in the seventh,
alcoholic stimulants at his doubles fought back to tie the score in Jeep Seki came in to snuff out
Brewin & McCallum
the threatening rally. He walked
party’ Tom Played the. fourth, then broke open the the first man to face him to force
372 Bay St.

Toronto
tthaigically and the outcome was game for good with another fivein a run, but then struck out the
evident from the very first mo­ rim barrage in the fifth frame.
f
EM. 3-4391
final two men to preserve the vic­
ments of the match when his
Dick Tanaka, who came in to tory for brother Sab Seki.
pitch and hold Reg-ents to a single
For Y’our
Fied Nishimura and manager
rlln ^1 the third inning*, led the John Nishimura each collected a
Photography Needs
offensive power blasting* two aouble and single. Jeep Seki add­
Lucien C Kurata
TOSH'S CAMERA
homers good for four RBI’s. Fred ed a single in addition to his
Kotani (pounded out two doubles round tripper.
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
559 Bay St. at Dundas
while John Shimano contributed
TORONTO
NOTARY PUBLIC
Busseis—-Mas Mori (3) Dick
u pair of singles.
Phone
EM.
3-0867
Anywhere - Anytime
Suite 513 Temple Building
lanaka and Pat Kitamura (4) j Wedding Candids—Home Portraits
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Koshida.
Air-Ship-Bus-Rail
TORONTO
Tours-Hotel-Sightsoeing
1
Pr^s—Dick MatsumoEM. 6-3323
Koy Tanaka (6) Ken Ikeda
Res.: RO. 7-3427
Travellers Cheques
LIFE—FIRE—THEFT—AUT O
and Sumi Tomihiro (6) Roy Tani.
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
INSURANCE SERVICES
, Main Auto—Sab Seki (7) Jeep
PHOTO
&
SPORT
and Baggage Insurance
3eki and Sam Matsuo.
it is a good policy to
KIYO TAMURA
1500 Dundas at Dufferin
Yamadas—Jackie Tanaka and
have
the RIGHT POLICY
Ken Rutsukake.
1415 Lawrence Ave. W.
LE. 2-4267
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Consult
?ame: Christie Pits, ReFishing Tackle
Passage arranged by Steamer or A
Suite 106
oem Press vs. Yamadas; Earls­
WALES and DUNCAN
( court Park, Main Auto vs Busseis.
>
CH. 7-5471 Res. PL. 9-8317,

Second Seeded Tom Bows Out to Vic at Earlscourt

Busseis Score Upset of Nisei Sunday League

To Down Regents 14-8; Main Auto Takes Fifth Win

F. A. BREWIN, Q.C

Please Drive Slow, Let
Our Little Shavers Grow

®

Travel Arrangements

INSURANCE AGENTS

Ucdl for Reservations or

Toronto, Ontario

Information—EM. 8-9934

YONEMITSU

Thos. T. Onizuka, B-A.

T. KAMEOKA

Watch Repair Shop

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC

HO. 5-3652 — Res: LE 2-7445 l
323 Broadview Ave., Toronto j

*

Office: Room 403
229 Yonge St., Toronto
EM. 3-5002 — OX. 1-3388 (res.)

13 McCaul St. TORONTO

DUNDAS UNION STORE
• eggs

• marukin shoyu

• SUKIYAKI MEAT
6 MANJU
• MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE

• VINEGAR
9 SUGAR

travelling
TO JAPAN
Or Bringing Som»
oa# ov^r?
"’• J»prM*al ol.
»n#3 ii»cludin^
'africxai President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacific
« J Pan American
, „ . 8 « «U f«
full information

W*».

dominion

Travel Office
EM. S-S451 - Toronto
55 Wellington Streei West

TV & RADIO
SERVICE
46 LILYWOOD RD.
TORONTO 19

YOUR SHOPPING LEST

WE HAVE NO
SERVICE CHARGES

DAVE’S

TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes

®

c

R
^' I —

Shi

PHONE RU. 1-1002
—Dave Azuma—

PHONE EM. 4-7692

464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171

I
M
118 West Hastings SL
VANCOUVER. B.C.

golden dragon
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
Open Noon to 3 a.m.
EM. 8-2475

JACK

'

|HEMMY'
Orders to Take Out
131A Dunda, St W„ Toronto

for your wedding randids
home portraits
and special events

3

H
22 Peterlee Crescent
Islington, Ontario
BElmont 3-3095

■t I

^

Page 3

July 2, 1960

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FOR A SURE TOMORROW
INSURE TODAY

W. K. GARDENS
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquets
Private Dining Rooms

- ftp

Crown Life Insurance Co



900 W. Pender St. (MU. 1-7341)
6650 Heather St. (FA. 5-2528)
Vancouver, B.C

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K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE

1 GRADE

Authorized Agent for All Airlines
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AGENT FOR
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Page 4

PAGE 4

THE NEW CANADIAN

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Page 7

Saturday. July 2. 1960

PAGE 7

PERSONAL NOTES ACROSS CANADA
. Tsuyuki Takes Former Eva Shimizu As Bride

PERSONAL NOTES are inserted tree
. charge. Readers are invited to send
in announcements of marriage, engage­
ment, anniversary, birth and obituary.
^aserhon in both sections, names
should be given in both languages.
Photographs will also be accepted for
publication and will he returned upon
request.

Peterborough, Ont,

w„

)nl

SOOS

±

I

and a corsage of ormn
roses on her mink stole

yamamoto-enta
Montreal, Que.

^l\/n^ Mrs. Syd Nakamura
(nee Minnie Fujita) of Toronto,
y,la!?° arc happy to announce
tae birth of their son. Eric Ue.
11
and Patricia,
on Inursday, dune 23, i960 at
to Mr. Hiro Hiroynsu Yamamoto’ V omen s College Hospital.
t he groom is the son of Mr? and
? . $/n?wru Yamamoto of Atentreal,RQ.
Mr. and Mrs. Kiyoto ..............
...
Naknmib
Following the ceremony, the su (nee Joyce Morita) of Toroniceeption was hold at Martin */
nrc haPP.v to antiounce
Hotel, after which the newly­ the anth of a son, Kelvin Kiyo­
weds honeymooned to Washing­ shi, on Saturday, June 11, I960
ton. D.C
at ^ estern General Hospital.

Miss Marie Nagano Reg. N..
the only Japanese Canadian resib^ 1 eterborougn, has become
the bride of Jack Gordon Mason
son of Mr. and Mrs. George W.’
Mason of Peterborough.
The wedding was in St. An­
Engagements
drews United Church on Satur­
A
SA
0
KA
NOGUCHI
day,. June 25, 1960, officiated bv
}Irs’ Yasu Yamanaka of Tor­
the Kev. R E. Rice of Trinity
,
Hikone. Japan onto. Ontario is happy to an­
Ghurch.
nounce the engagement of her
Present were the bride’s par­
Godoku
Shrine
in
Hikone,
Ja
­
* erl, 'r^r-v Te™yn Yamaents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Naga­
no of Farnham. Que., and Mr. pan was the setting for the mar- huka, to Air. Roy Tndoyoshi Asa
intge of Miss "Yukiko Nogueh’ h/To1 Mr. and Mrs. Kaname Asa
Nagano
his daughter in daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Yuki­ of Japan.
marriage.
The event was celebrated with
She was .wearing a bridal gown chi Noguchi of Japan, and Mr.
George
Asaoka
on
M*ondav.
March
a
reception
at the Lotus Garden
of white silk organza over white 21. I960.
'
on
bunday.
June 26. .i960 Both
topped by a tiny bolero,
The
bridegroom
,
:
'
re
/^Ployed
with the Japan
is
the
son
of
and her short veil was caught to Mr. and Mr
trade Centro here,
*
roichiro
Asaoka
of
a seeded pearl tiara. Her bouquet Vancouver,
C. A wedding rowas of gardenias with stephanotis.
TT/^SS Evelyn Macfarlane of
Highland Park, Illinois, flew
xrom Chicago to be. bridesmaid
for her classmate of the Sher­
brooke, Que., Hospital School of
Nursing.
For the wedding she
wore a green shantung- sheath
\ AACOUVER.—The Vaneoudress with small beige hat with
:*sc‘ Fellowship is holding a 1’hCal?aiy' AltQ. JC Goll Assn tourveil and carried a bouquet of yel­
m-y at Regal & Inglewood Courses
and Slide Nile” on Friday.
low roses and daisies.
Conlacl Dan Saga.
July 15th from 8:00 p.m. at the
Ross G. Walker from Sher- Columbia Street United Church.
biooke, Que., was the g’room’s at­ The 1959 World Scries will be
SS; p5a “' pl“= ">
tendant.
the feature of the program, and 7VqTOrT0n,0’/0T0n!° ,CCA Cho!r pracuce
Following the ceremony there there will also be a film taken
Tb/Sre
°‘ Or'aneS0 mov,°s «‘ Astor
was a reception at.Foster’s Drift- by one of the campers al the Fel­
v ood. Room, where Mrs. Nagano lowship’s “Weekend Camp” in 9—Montreal.* Bukkyo-kai picnic to
.Martin Beach, lie Bizard.

received in a lilac silk shantung- May.
9 Toronto. Earhscourt Tennis Club ansheath dress and wearing a white
Anyone interested in showing
8’ALn1CrC
Jackson’s Point. Lake
flowered hat, white accessories their own slides or movies is welsMrp
CarS °CTV° Eai!scourl J0 a m.
and a corsage of pink sweetheart coined to do so as there will be
amiVtOn’. JaPan®se movies at Playroses. And the groom’s mother projectors avariable. All are in- 14C^
nou.se ineatre.

assisted, wearing a sheath of vited to attend.
a^UVOJ’ >?se* Fellowship THm
Refreshments IS^|
od^S r' ° a' Columbia St. Unitbeige lace over taffeta with hat will be served.
PEveryone welcome.
of beige organza, white acces-

To Hold Film Nite

Bdm«Z*t„d ?e bride ”e„Mr- “d Mrs. Shotaro T. Shimizu of
cuki" Xij Surrev'TC S
“ °f ^ a"d MrS’ Tokuter° T“'

The couple are 'residing at 13276-96th Avenue, North Surrey,

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH

918 Bathurst St.
SUNDAY, JULY 3, 1960
No Religious School For Summer
11:00 a.m., MORNING SERVICE
Theme and Speaker to be Announced
2:00 p.m., Japanese Language Service
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED

Births

Rex erend Gordon Imai of the
Japanese United Church in MAn.
treal officiated th
mony of Miss :
Enta, daughter of Mrs. Imavo

Vancouver Fellowship

a double ring ceremony joined to■Roy TsuyuW at A“Saints’

cation was held on Saturday,
I960 in Vancouver fol­
lowing iheir arrival to Canada
Sewanins were Mr. and Mrs/Su-

TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
SUNDAY, JULY 3. 1960
Bible Class 10:30 a m
D°y Joint Service 10:30 a m
TnE PROFIT OF RIGHTEOUSNESS”
Rev. Levi Hussey. M.A., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
TUI Dov»rcourt Rd.. Toront

CALENDAR

/CCA A™«al
memo to kildonan Park, 1:30 p.m
*5en s por Person,
P ”
L^°nlrOa-!; Bpssci Sonenkai picnic
16 Boamsnllo. Barbeque Party PatNiO’^'^“T^i Sunday S?fcol an-

Te^h/®^’- Buss?.i Sunday School
29 A^ 1sJrainin9 Session.
“rT^?n*°; (Clo^land); Tennis
namont ° C,ovoJand for annual tour-

si
GIVE THAT GIFT THAT IS SURE TO PLEASE . . . FOR ALL OCCASIONS
Watches . . Diamonds . . Transistor Radios . . Parker Pens
DISCOUNT OUTLET at Tremendous Savings . . ETC.
Phone Chris Shinohara
a
EM. 6-5889 or LE. 2-1595
229 YONGE STREET
SUITE 304
TORONTO, ONTARIO

LORRAINE JEWELLERY COMPANY
SPECIALIZING IN TV SERVICE
AND ANTENNA INSTALLATION

SAY IT WITH

SHARON'S FLORIST
SERVICE
Phone LE. 4-7954-5-6

1338 Queen Street West Toronto 3

CITY-WIDE DELIVERY

Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
SSZ2SSSQESE2SSESSE2

OWNED BY HAROLD MAEDA
Distinctive

Buy Your House Through
, 7 ™t Successful Realtor in Toronto
in Majority of Japanese Canadian Customers
Furanose Their Homes Through

TORONTO, Ont

' Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
o cue rd

JON ONODERA
Proprietor

M. YANAGISAWA
representing

Floral Arrangements

HU. 9-4654—HU. 1-8805



HU. 7-3361
Res.: LE. 4-1427 or OX. 9-3776

(Business)

(Residence)

540 Eglinton Ave/ W.,
Toronto

KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties

Seating Capacity 240

Special Attention on Take Out Orders

EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto

a

Page 8

PAGE 8

THE NEW CANADIAN

_ Saturday, July 2 I9«n

in the fundamental lav* of the
state.”
Haxvaii’s racial harmony is bestAuthorized as second class
(Continued from Page One) exemplified in a common practice
* ost Office Department, Ottawa*
of intermarriage between mem­
T.
UMEZUKI,
Publisher, JERRY rtrr—
------------------------- By E. T. SUMITH
Bloc Voting in Haxvaii,” he said, bers of different ethnic groups.
KAKE,
English
Section Edito- rX
“Racial bloc voting in the main­
■''Acceptance xvithout regard to
MORI,
Japanese
-.Section Editor

land sense, of the vigorous con­ race, color, or creed, and based
Advertising Manager.
* * 01
trol over an entire bloc of voters upon indixndual merit and stand­
of a common race, does not occur ing, is the general rule in regard
A few months ago the Federal Government had decided tliat in Haxvaii,' and even in the more to people of many races and is •
$4.00 per 6 months
the capital punishment issue should be settled by the free vote sys­ restricted sense of voting exclu­ rapidly becoming the rule in re­
S7.00 per year
tem whereby each member was allowed to express his opinion free sively for members of one’s oxvn gard to all racial groups in
479 QUEEN ST. WEST,
fiom tne dictates of any political party. Unfortunately, the agenda ethnic group, it is s o slight as to
t
Haxvaii,” said the committee’s re­
vas dropped suddenly, and although forecasts are being made that be inconsequential.”
EMpire
6-5005
port.
the matter is undergoing revision or already in legislative form,
He also observed “Any politithe topic might prove interesting from the private citizen’s point cian of the slig'htest ag-acity soon
of view.
learns, if he does not already
Capitol punishment is, in essence, a throwback to barbaric days. know, that the surest route to po­
It a killing occurred in those ages, the next of kin, obligated, sought litical suicide is an appeal on a
retribution in a due! or whatever means was customary. None so racial basis.”
familiar too, is the threat running through the Bible—the premise
Another office with composite
TOKYO.—Strains of the Com­ loxver house of parliament Mav Ai
that the punishment should fit the crime. Dating back to frontier representation is the Hawaii
daxs in Canada, hanging was legally established both bv ..custom Housing Authority, a public cor- munist Internationale mingled and for calling in police to restore
with the muffled roar of down­
and British tradition.
Socialist
poration which administers public town Tokyo traffic earlier this S
Nowadays many Canadians consider human execution as ana- housing.
tiled to delay ratification bv
week as some 3,000 students
cnronism in this enligntened 2oth century. These people believe it to
In the past decade, the author­ marched in another anti-Ameri­ force. He xvas accused of u^in^
tyranny of the majority.”
3
be sanctioned murder meted out by the provinces whose power to ity has had nine commissioners,
can demonstration.
do so should be curbed.
tz
-^T

hi?
resignation
statement,
five of Caucasian ancestry: two
The students, members of the Kishi said that he had “dedicated
In ctux the abolitionists” emphasize that no person has the of Chinese descent; one Korean,
Communist Democratic Youth myself' xvithout caring for “S
^tC’t- to terminate the natural length of a life, even that of a con­ and one, Hawaiian-Caucasian.
victed killer. Theirs is a humanitarian approach; life imprisonment
The authority'stated in a letter League, tramped along five oxvn personal honor” to brin^
is the solution they maintain.
dated April 13, 1959, “Complete abreast, blocking weekend traffic, prosperity to Japan
. . On the other side of the fence are staunch “advocates” of the racial integration of all racial singing and shouting •'‘Americans,
^historical moment
of the start of the new treat?”
oeath penalty. I he changing trend leans to materialistic standards groups has existed in all public go home” at Western passersby.
Police reported, no incidents. he said, “in order to renew the
thex insist, thus human life and dignity becomes devalued and capi­ housing in the territory since the
The
students dispersed noisily
of the. Pe°Pie to siren?tal cumes run rampant. If only to prevent inroads from this source, beginning (in 1935).”
when they reached a railroad w a A6 Practice of new policy
legal executions act as a bulwark.
Constitution Cited
station.
1 telt the necessity to bring forth
I he advocate further claims that no other crime compares xx-ith
Meantime,
police
reported
there
a political change and have deThe
new
state
constitution
con
­
muraer. brutal and horrifying as it is, clemency should not replace
were
235
persons
including
72
termined
to resign from the pretains
a
section
in
the
bill
of
rights
hanging except in cases of insanity. And xvith an active parole board
police
injured
Saturday
night
in
a
J
1U
p
S
office.
” However, owing
which
provides:

No
person
shall
life imprisonment becomes a token punishment, a mock-up of jus­
to
hisantentions,
the ruling Libclash
'between
demonstrators
and.
be
deprived
of
life,
liberty,
or
tice. Another argument always present in the discussion, though
police
in
Osaka.
Two
Japanese
{property
without
due
process
of
TJ^rats
were
reported
less important, is the rising maintenance expenditure.
newsmen were also hurt.
^ht. at least three wavs on a
law,
nor
be
denied
the
equal
pro
­
h
fHere are the middle groups. Both views are taken bv
sf
' ■ • Osaka demonstration was possible successor.
icse adheients: Retain the death penalty in specified cases, life tection of the laws, nor be denied theThe
Leading
contenders
were
rebiggest,
outside
.Tokyo
in
the
in others. Ihat is to say, the so-called normal killer would the enjoyment of his. civil rights, recent weeks of l’allies, strikes P°rte,dly Hayato Ikeda,’ Interna­
fit into the former category whereas the psychotic would form the or be discriminated against in the and demonstrations protesting tional xrade and Industry Minis­
exercise thereof because of race,
latter group.
religion, sex, or ancestry.”
against the newly-ratified United ter; Bamboku Ohno, Liberal De­
nioderate group also recommends that more humane and
States-Japan
security treaty, mocrat vice-president, and MitComments
the
state
advisorv
scientific form of execution should replace hanging.
which
permits
American
military sujiro ; Ishii, Liberal Democrat
committee:

This
article
was
in
­
_. , Except in cases of self-defence, human butchery is never justibases to remain in Japan for an­ Executive Board chairman
corporated
in
the
constitution
not
*©5
Hed—always bestial and contradicts humane treatment. For one because of any evil which the con­ other 10 years.
thing the .murderer destroys not hoping discovery and everv inten­
stitution sought to remedy, but
In another development Tues­
tion of escaping the noose.
' ,
simply
to
state
the
existing
leg'al
day,
Prime Minister Nobusuke
Let ns, at this time, probe the mind of the killer we would destructure and have it incorporated Kishi met with his cabinet to
m
normal slayer. By legal definition he is one
discuss his successor.
<tMn^ ab e n° differentiate right from wrong. Who is he? is the
The embattled Kishi bowed to
^milKVnXiv^^^
the neXt d°°r neiShbor, or even your everpressure from the political left
mulim, budd}. He is then, anyone xx-ith a motive.
presents
and enemies within his own party
t0° man-\of
innnune from thoughts of homicide as
and announced he would resign.
"Stranger With A Sword"
(continued from page one)
torn between hatred and self-recrimination. Yet
But Kishi, demonstrating the
(Shimizu no Sataro)
F
pex-s°rr to toss aside rationality, and with year for the Canadian market. strength and stubborness’ which
3 Unn,er' Shatter his fellow man as °«e would crush iLast year Japanese firms export­ marked
Starring Kokichi Tada,
his three years and four
ed
395,000
here.
They
also
want
months
in
office,
made
it
clear
.Michiyo Kogure,
Of course, no rules for human behavior can be charted xvith
taSC±’S
diners in circunXee £ a quota set on Japanese tubes.
he would not step down until his
Yataro Kitagami
One member said a federal
S ?™,t™”a ll); Perhaps conflict and revenge are tile pro- government civil servant told successor had been picked, a selec­
In Grandscope Eastniantion in which he would plav a de­
every factor in various combination.
Shochiku Color
them
to
come
back
with
their
cisive
role.
recall^
there is one ^Hich is
case

when
they
are
hurt.

The
Kishi, 63, purposely left vague
v because of its animal-like criminal cunning. The assasin
ALSO
£*rms making electronic the time of his resignation.
plots his waxy step by step, cold bloodediv almost xxdth a symbolic
tubes here had 4,500 production _ His announcement immediately
e to the ,3W enf°rcement. these cases are" exemp­ W°Jers in 1955 and 3,000 now.
You Are Like A Flower"
lified by a ficticious master detective such as Perry Mason who
intensified the behind-the-scene
(Kimiwa hanano gotoku)
Iheie were 25,000 production battle for power within his fac­
eventually proves “murder will out”.

Vho
workers
in
the
electronics
indusThe other types of murder runs the gamut from the sour of
tion-ridden Liberal - Democratic
THREE DAYS: July 7, 8. & 9
Canada in 1955 and only
19,000 now, they said.
'At Astor Theatre
J>ec.ame Premier Feb..
H it js ©oing to disappear as
July 7 & 8 from 5:30 P.M.
19o7, Kishi had successfully
an industry in Canada, it will
managed
to
control
party
facJuly 9 from 1:30 P.M.
accelerate the disappearance of

ons
the
tremendous
pres
­
other industries.
If electronics
$1.50 Adult—-75c Children
^°^b-a ^'Hole lot goes with it, sure that built up over the U.S.*
*
*
including defence,” a member oapan security treaty proved too
even for Kishi.
S'Ua
Our defence simply de­ much
Kishi had been under fire for
In Hamilton: July 14th at
pends on the existence of an elec­
some time for ramming the con­
Playhouse Theatre.
tronic industrv.”
troversial treaty through

Moot Point

THE NEW CANADIAN

Integration

On Capital Punishment

Kishi Delays Resignation to Decide Successor
Amidst Red Anti-American Demonstrations

NIKKA KOGYO SHA

Tube Competition

Toronto JCCA 11th Annual Picnic Tomorrow

. JULY 4 to JULY 30

Mid Summer Sale

I

c
r

TABLEWARES: D
Cups and S

h
v
n

ramie—Cu

" rn p

_ USEHOLD ORNAMENTS:-Japanese Scrolls and
framed Pictures—Folding Screens (Byobu)—Table
Vases—Statuettes—Wall Plagues
or All Materials and Designs—Iron or Stone Orna­
ments for Gardens.

a

mascene, Sea-shell, Cultured Pearl__

1

ana
____
’ Arrangement Basins and Accessories.

a

Paramount Gift Shop

th
S-

( /2 Block East of Pape Avenue) *
733 Danforth Avenue, Toronto
STORE OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

I