Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians
of Japanese Origin
WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1960
TORONTO, ONT.
K.B.S. International Essay Contest PM s ‘Bill of Rights*
Prize Includes Cash and Paid Trip to Japan
Japanese Canadian Treatment Singled Out
TOKYO.—Kokusai Bunka Shin page reference if quoted directly.
Awards:
kokai (.The Society for Interna
OTTAWA. — Prime Minister
The following“Any amendment to the Contional Cultural Relations) takes
to be
Diefenbaker Friday in the Com- stitution that will interfere with
pleasure in announcing- an Essay awarded:
Air. Pearson also
Contest- in i960 with the special
First Prize: $1,500 including mons called his proposed Bill oi- whatever the meaning of
failure to introduce the
object of stimulating interest in one round-trip tourist-class air Rights ‘‘at least the essence of rights is within the words uro- sooner in the session.
international cultural, exchange passage to Japan and all expenses the conscience of tin peopl of petty and civil
of e
Quoting Professor
R M.
sive provincial jurisdiction (in the
and promoting better under for a two-week visit in Japan. Canada.”
Mr.
>1
He repeated that
standing between Japan and the Should the winner of the first
:m
in normal
nationsYf the world. The condi prize be unable to make a trip consent for inclusion of the bil sent, of all the province
This ponce mo the liberties of Canawill be a step forward.
tions and awards are described to Japan, he will receive instead in the constitution was impo
dinns
we not in
sible at this time but he si
Mr. Pearson said that while on
below: entries are welcomed. an award of $1,500 in cash.
but that
wore. in
was no
Conditions:
Second
Prize:
$500;
two ed that the provinces pas their the
own bills of rights effective with disag-reemeut about the desirabi
Mr. Diefenbaker's bill proposes
United awards.
1. Citizens
of the
in
their own limits and jurisdic lity for Parliament doing every to make the proclamation needed
Third
Prize:
Selected
books
Suites or Canada may submit
thing it possibly could to protect for enforcement of the War Mea
published in Japan valued at tions.
essays.
But Liberal Opposition Leader human rights and fundamental sures Act debatable in Parlia
$100;
three
awards.
2. One person is to submit' one
If in the opinion of the judges Lester Pearson described as ina freedoms—“and there is no dif ment,
essay only.
Mr. Pearson warned that refer
no
essay merits an award in a dequate the bill’s terms, criticized ference,” he said, “of opinion in
3. Applicants may write on any
the procedure followed in bring regard to the principle, if you ence to the War Measures Act in
particular
category,
such
an
subject pertaining to
ing the measure before Parlia like, and the purposes embodied the --bill gav< that act
Cultural Exchange Between award will not be made.
ment, and proposed three major in this bill”—where the Opposi- sanctity and
Japan and North America.
changes to the War Measures tion quarrelled
with tin
This, ho said. might have an un
4. Essays must be typewriten
Act.
terms of the bill which we're not
in English on standard 8^ x 11
(continued on page- tight)
The Prime Minister said he ‘ in its view adequate to discharge
inch paper. Essays are not to ex
would set out some of the abuses
ceed 4.500 words in length. In
which had taken place. He was
addition, a resume not exceeding
not going to be partisan.
300 words in length, must be in
TOKYO.—Communist plan to
All the cases he listed had
cluded immediately following the capitalize on the 10th anniver taken place under the former
title page.
sary of the Korean war as an Liberal Administration and even
Some 3,0(10 JCs attended the
5. Essays must be mailed not anti-American propaganda vic tually Mr. Diefenbaker had Lionel Toronto JCCA Community Picnic Montreal. PA).
later than September 30th, 1960, tory collapsed both in Japan and Chewier (L. Laurier), a member last Sunday at Lynbrook Park.
The balance of two barbecue
to the following address:
Communist China last week.
of that administration, on his The long-awaited Toronto JC sets and three picnic tables wore
Reports from north and south feet charging similar conduct now Centro raffle was conducted, and
Kokusai- Bunka Shinkokai
Korea indicated these two coun- on the part of the Progressive the f
four winners are
will be announced at a later date.
bo. 55, 1 Chome,
follow
tries mest intimately involved Conservative Administration.
Shiba Shirokane Daimachi,
were less concerned than PeiFirst prize of a free trip to Ja- Dissension in Leftist
Air. Diefenbaker had singled
Minatoku, Tokyo, Japan
Japan
for two. or, $2,090 cash,
ping
’
s
propaganda
agencies.
U.S.
out
a
1945
Orders-in-Council
un
Early entries may'' be sent by
was
won
by Miss Tanya Horn of
and
north
Korea
’
s
delegates
meet
der
the
WaiAleasures
Act,
which,
surface mail. Entries mailed later
RR
No.
3,
Pickering-, Ont. The
ing
at.
the
I
’
anmunjom
truc,e
vil
had they been enforced, would
in September should be sent bv
TOKYO
overflow crowd
seller
of
the
winning- ticket was
lage,
however,
traded
verbal
have exiled to Japan 11,000 -or
air.
of
leftists
jammed
a public hall
Air.
T.
Nakamura
of
136
Grange
barbs.
more persons of Japanese origin,
6. Awards will be announced
recently in the heart of Tokyo
St., Toronto.
After
a
24-hour
buildup
of
antia
large
proportion
of
whom
were
on or before December 31, 1960.
Second prize of a hi-fi- stereo to attend a “people’s funeral” for
American
aimed at Ja- Canadian-born citizens.
7. Essays can not be returned. pan—first from Peiping and then
As to the suggestion of having set was won by Joyce Fukuda of a Japanese coed they trampled to
8. The Society for International its.Asian Communist satellites— the Bill of Rights- made an Clarkson, Ont; third, air-condi death while rioting against the
Cultural Relations reserves all scheduled
protest
demonstra amendment to the Constitution tioner, by Charles Stone of De Ju pan-U.S. security treaty.
Top officials of most major
rights to winning essays.
tions in Tokyo were a letdown.
and therefore binding on both the troit. Michigan, and fourth prize
leftist
groups, used the funeral
of
a
de-humidifier
by
Miss
K.
. 9. In order to assure impartial
Federal Government and the pro
Lose Support
service
to continue dheir attacks
judgment, authors are requested
Fewer than 5,000 pro-Commu vinces), the Prime Alinister said
on
the
government of Premier
^j'3^ their names on a detach nist Korean residents appeared at that there was no chance of secur
Nobusuke
Kishi, the security
ing
the
consent
of
all
the
pro
able title page. Further, to as- a rally in downtown Tokyo’s Hitreaty
and
the
United States. But.
’ ,
sui e that there will be no mis biya park. They dispersed shortly vinces.
more
significantly,
it revealed
take in identification, a separate afternoon without incident.
“I am not thinking of any one
some
dissension
in
the leftist
sheet, giving the following infor
A predicted march by 30,000 province in particular,” he said.
ranks.
mation must be enclosed:
Koreans on the American embas
The Communist party boycotted
1) Name, address and brief sy to demand that the U.S. leave
panesc Diet (national Parlia
the
service after charging in the
personal history of the Korea, failed to materialize.
ment) they too dispersed.
party'organ
that the extreme ac
writer.
Just before dusk 3,000 Com
Leftists had broadly advertised
tion
of
the
fanatical
Zengakuren
Title of essay.
NEW YORK.—New evidence Students Federation, of which the
munists and Socialists staged the that 660,000 would march on the
Photograph 'and signature most caustic, anti-American de Diet. This, 700 fizzled. Even Zen- has been reported that Amelia coed—-Micihko Kamba—was a
of the writer.
monstration of the day when they gakuren . Student
Federation Earhart, the pioneer woman flier member, killed her.
10. Any references
marched
on
the
embassy
shout
which
could
draw
30,000
persons who disappeared 23 years ago,
used in
Inejiro Asanuma, chairman of
ing
“
We
hate
America
”
and
“
Get
into
violent
anti-Kishi
demonstra
may have been executed by the the opposition Socialist party, ac
ruing Jie essay must be
oe clearlv
clearlv
acknowledged and identified bv your dirty hands out of Asia.” tions, found it could muster no Japanese.
cused the police of "murdering”
The
Columbia Broadcasting the girl.
-udior, title, publisher, date, and After a token swing past the Ja- more than 100 diehards.
But the Zengakuren
System said July 1 that she was strongly implied that Asanuma
—.— ---------- ■--------------------------------seen to crash-land off Saipan dur must bear some of the responsi
ing her ill-fated flight around the bility for the. girl’s death June 15.
world.
correspondent Don MozeSEATTLE)—Frail and alert Ya- Sun.” Their leader is Shintaro woman, a book that has in it an leyCBS
said a special news team sent
sunan Kawahata was in Seattle• Ishihara. They are different from idea of Japanese beauty.”
to , the Pacific island “found at
Kawabata, who is credited with least a dozen natives who remem
.^^jJ^eagBr to share an hour’s: the lost generation because they
^Qiu.e ox the precise gentle wis- are destructive thinkers. "Where a major role in making Japanese ber seeing the famous aviatrix
fY ^M.hnsjnade him Japan’s there was dillusion and help-de- literature known in the West, had crash land in the water in 1937,
-Osv distinguished novelist.
• structive power and lessness be not visited the United .States be- watched her taken to jail by the
a young Nisei summer camp
’r-:-VnV^^
,st°PPed here on fore there now is foreign in . fore his arrival May 5. He wore Japanese, and then disappear.”
supervisor is feared dead near
<1° Washington, where he fluence mostly French and Ame a’ sweater under his Western
“All the islanders.” the report
Ontario, 300 miles
shirt and suit' coat.
continued, “believe Miss Earhart north of here since June 4, when
wi.th State Depart- rican.”
oxxicials in preparation for
Quiet During War
and her navigator, Fred Noonan, a canoe he was using was dis
Zen Buddhism
:L °jn^th tour of the United
He praised the work of Emer were executed' out of sight of the covered wrecked on shore follow
Kawabata made one surprisUTN ith the help of two in--■ ing comment on the Zen Buddhist son, Poe and Whitman, said he local population. The Japanese ing a violent wind storm.
piecers^ he talked for the bet- movement among the American had. read Ernest Hemingway’s were determined that no AmeriKatsuhiro Tsunetomi, 19, a
d ?art M an afternoon with stu- avante guard:
“The Old Man and the Sea” in can would ever tell the world Nisei who returned from Japan
Yr^.at the Universitv of Wa“I know very little of Zen,” he English and was very fond of it, they were fortifying the Island just a few months ago, is report
ed to have followed some young
said. “It is more popular in the that he read the works of Wil- of Saipan.”
^.J
3
?
211
there
is
definitely
canoeists out onto a lake when
imUnited States than in Japan, I liam Faulkner and
a
Invitation Refused
.‘°'T generation,” he said, think. In Japan, everyone is more pressed without liking the books,”
a sudden wind storm occurred and
™u^ ^ the end of the or less aware of it, but it has then closed his remarks with a
Saipan was one of the battle blew him off course. The others
v-or^ The bible of this group no interest to the intellectuals. I juiet answer to a question about grounds of "World War IL
managed to reach safety on an
P3^’3 “The' Siting
S-t
“One native said he had been island where they spent the night.
kink the American interest owes what he did during the war:
The following morning the
“I lived in a small village. The invited to witness the hanging of
to a search in this country
th - ~Cai,e .^ter the name given
S- 'Y^^ion: “Children of the .tor a new spiritual basis—some- war passed without much effect a-white woman,” added the re youths returned to camp and
learned that Tsunetomi had not
thing apart from Christianity.”
upon my household. There was, port. “He refused to go.”
Y-n^5 movement in Japan,
Of Kawabata’s 19 novels, three of course, an attempt by the
The
blonde,
boyish-looking returned and a search for him be
.^.^^P^^ble to Amerigovernment to recruit intellec woman with- the .soft smile had gan.
rhjg’3^11^ he said.
At last reports the discovery
The most recent translation, tuals for military’ work—war cori°at generation is begin- “Thousand Cranes.” is a drama respond
orona gandists, infor- imaginations of a whole genera of his smashed canoe was made
p5 ~° Uas-s on and now there tic story of love which Kawabata mation oliicer.s. But I remained tion of Americans moving into and searchers were continuing
w'10^ei!?e?'' among the voung described as “an immoral tale, a unbothered.
dragging operations in the hope
Apparently
they
fcontinued on page eight)
-of recovering his body.
tale of the beauty of an immoral didn’t think I was very useful.” -
Propaganda on Korean
Local Girl Wins Japan Trip
Investigation Team
finds New Evidence
On Earhart Mystery
Novelist Compares 'Children'
Beatniks
Nisei Camp Supervisor
Missing in Canoe Mishap
An Independent Organ for Canadians
of Japanese Origin
WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1960
TORONTO, ONT.
K.B.S. International Essay Contest PM s ‘Bill of Rights*
Prize Includes Cash and Paid Trip to Japan
Japanese Canadian Treatment Singled Out
TOKYO.—Kokusai Bunka Shin page reference if quoted directly.
Awards:
kokai (.The Society for Interna
OTTAWA. — Prime Minister
The following“Any amendment to the Contional Cultural Relations) takes
to be
Diefenbaker Friday in the Com- stitution that will interfere with
pleasure in announcing- an Essay awarded:
Air. Pearson also
Contest- in i960 with the special
First Prize: $1,500 including mons called his proposed Bill oi- whatever the meaning of
failure to introduce the
object of stimulating interest in one round-trip tourist-class air Rights ‘‘at least the essence of rights is within the words uro- sooner in the session.
international cultural, exchange passage to Japan and all expenses the conscience of tin peopl of petty and civil
of e
Quoting Professor
R M.
sive provincial jurisdiction (in the
and promoting better under for a two-week visit in Japan. Canada.”
Mr.
>1
He repeated that
standing between Japan and the Should the winner of the first
:m
in normal
nationsYf the world. The condi prize be unable to make a trip consent for inclusion of the bil sent, of all the province
This ponce mo the liberties of Canawill be a step forward.
tions and awards are described to Japan, he will receive instead in the constitution was impo
dinns
we not in
sible at this time but he si
Mr. Pearson said that while on
below: entries are welcomed. an award of $1,500 in cash.
but that
wore. in
was no
Conditions:
Second
Prize:
$500;
two ed that the provinces pas their the
own bills of rights effective with disag-reemeut about the desirabi
Mr. Diefenbaker's bill proposes
United awards.
1. Citizens
of the
in
their own limits and jurisdic lity for Parliament doing every to make the proclamation needed
Third
Prize:
Selected
books
Suites or Canada may submit
thing it possibly could to protect for enforcement of the War Mea
published in Japan valued at tions.
essays.
But Liberal Opposition Leader human rights and fundamental sures Act debatable in Parlia
$100;
three
awards.
2. One person is to submit' one
If in the opinion of the judges Lester Pearson described as ina freedoms—“and there is no dif ment,
essay only.
Mr. Pearson warned that refer
no
essay merits an award in a dequate the bill’s terms, criticized ference,” he said, “of opinion in
3. Applicants may write on any
the procedure followed in bring regard to the principle, if you ence to the War Measures Act in
particular
category,
such
an
subject pertaining to
ing the measure before Parlia like, and the purposes embodied the --bill gav< that act
Cultural Exchange Between award will not be made.
ment, and proposed three major in this bill”—where the Opposi- sanctity and
Japan and North America.
changes to the War Measures tion quarrelled
with tin
This, ho said. might have an un
4. Essays must be typewriten
Act.
terms of the bill which we're not
in English on standard 8^ x 11
(continued on page- tight)
The Prime Minister said he ‘ in its view adequate to discharge
inch paper. Essays are not to ex
would set out some of the abuses
ceed 4.500 words in length. In
which had taken place. He was
addition, a resume not exceeding
not going to be partisan.
300 words in length, must be in
TOKYO.—Communist plan to
All the cases he listed had
cluded immediately following the capitalize on the 10th anniver taken place under the former
title page.
sary of the Korean war as an Liberal Administration and even
Some 3,0(10 JCs attended the
5. Essays must be mailed not anti-American propaganda vic tually Mr. Diefenbaker had Lionel Toronto JCCA Community Picnic Montreal. PA).
later than September 30th, 1960, tory collapsed both in Japan and Chewier (L. Laurier), a member last Sunday at Lynbrook Park.
The balance of two barbecue
to the following address:
Communist China last week.
of that administration, on his The long-awaited Toronto JC sets and three picnic tables wore
Reports from north and south feet charging similar conduct now Centro raffle was conducted, and
Kokusai- Bunka Shinkokai
Korea indicated these two coun- on the part of the Progressive the f
four winners are
will be announced at a later date.
bo. 55, 1 Chome,
follow
tries mest intimately involved Conservative Administration.
Shiba Shirokane Daimachi,
were less concerned than PeiFirst prize of a free trip to Ja- Dissension in Leftist
Air. Diefenbaker had singled
Minatoku, Tokyo, Japan
Japan
for two. or, $2,090 cash,
ping
’
s
propaganda
agencies.
U.S.
out
a
1945
Orders-in-Council
un
Early entries may'' be sent by
was
won
by Miss Tanya Horn of
and
north
Korea
’
s
delegates
meet
der
the
WaiAleasures
Act,
which,
surface mail. Entries mailed later
RR
No.
3,
Pickering-, Ont. The
ing
at.
the
I
’
anmunjom
truc,e
vil
had they been enforced, would
in September should be sent bv
TOKYO
overflow crowd
seller
of
the
winning- ticket was
lage,
however,
traded
verbal
have exiled to Japan 11,000 -or
air.
of
leftists
jammed
a public hall
Air.
T.
Nakamura
of
136
Grange
barbs.
more persons of Japanese origin,
6. Awards will be announced
recently in the heart of Tokyo
St., Toronto.
After
a
24-hour
buildup
of
antia
large
proportion
of
whom
were
on or before December 31, 1960.
Second prize of a hi-fi- stereo to attend a “people’s funeral” for
American
aimed at Ja- Canadian-born citizens.
7. Essays can not be returned. pan—first from Peiping and then
As to the suggestion of having set was won by Joyce Fukuda of a Japanese coed they trampled to
8. The Society for International its.Asian Communist satellites— the Bill of Rights- made an Clarkson, Ont; third, air-condi death while rioting against the
Cultural Relations reserves all scheduled
protest
demonstra amendment to the Constitution tioner, by Charles Stone of De Ju pan-U.S. security treaty.
Top officials of most major
rights to winning essays.
tions in Tokyo were a letdown.
and therefore binding on both the troit. Michigan, and fourth prize
leftist
groups, used the funeral
of
a
de-humidifier
by
Miss
K.
. 9. In order to assure impartial
Federal Government and the pro
Lose Support
service
to continue dheir attacks
judgment, authors are requested
Fewer than 5,000 pro-Commu vinces), the Prime Alinister said
on
the
government of Premier
^j'3^ their names on a detach nist Korean residents appeared at that there was no chance of secur
Nobusuke
Kishi, the security
ing
the
consent
of
all
the
pro
able title page. Further, to as- a rally in downtown Tokyo’s Hitreaty
and
the
United States. But.
’ ,
sui e that there will be no mis biya park. They dispersed shortly vinces.
more
significantly,
it revealed
take in identification, a separate afternoon without incident.
“I am not thinking of any one
some
dissension
in
the leftist
sheet, giving the following infor
A predicted march by 30,000 province in particular,” he said.
ranks.
mation must be enclosed:
Koreans on the American embas
The Communist party boycotted
1) Name, address and brief sy to demand that the U.S. leave
panesc Diet (national Parlia
the
service after charging in the
personal history of the Korea, failed to materialize.
ment) they too dispersed.
party'organ
that the extreme ac
writer.
Just before dusk 3,000 Com
Leftists had broadly advertised
tion
of
the
fanatical
Zengakuren
Title of essay.
NEW YORK.—New evidence Students Federation, of which the
munists and Socialists staged the that 660,000 would march on the
Photograph 'and signature most caustic, anti-American de Diet. This, 700 fizzled. Even Zen- has been reported that Amelia coed—-Micihko Kamba—was a
of the writer.
monstration of the day when they gakuren . Student
Federation Earhart, the pioneer woman flier member, killed her.
10. Any references
marched
on
the
embassy
shout
which
could
draw
30,000
persons who disappeared 23 years ago,
used in
Inejiro Asanuma, chairman of
ing
“
We
hate
America
”
and
“
Get
into
violent
anti-Kishi
demonstra
may have been executed by the the opposition Socialist party, ac
ruing Jie essay must be
oe clearlv
clearlv
acknowledged and identified bv your dirty hands out of Asia.” tions, found it could muster no Japanese.
cused the police of "murdering”
The
Columbia Broadcasting the girl.
-udior, title, publisher, date, and After a token swing past the Ja- more than 100 diehards.
But the Zengakuren
System said July 1 that she was strongly implied that Asanuma
—.— ---------- ■--------------------------------seen to crash-land off Saipan dur must bear some of the responsi
ing her ill-fated flight around the bility for the. girl’s death June 15.
world.
correspondent Don MozeSEATTLE)—Frail and alert Ya- Sun.” Their leader is Shintaro woman, a book that has in it an leyCBS
said a special news team sent
sunan Kawahata was in Seattle• Ishihara. They are different from idea of Japanese beauty.”
to , the Pacific island “found at
Kawabata, who is credited with least a dozen natives who remem
.^^jJ^eagBr to share an hour’s: the lost generation because they
^Qiu.e ox the precise gentle wis- are destructive thinkers. "Where a major role in making Japanese ber seeing the famous aviatrix
fY ^M.hnsjnade him Japan’s there was dillusion and help-de- literature known in the West, had crash land in the water in 1937,
-Osv distinguished novelist.
• structive power and lessness be not visited the United .States be- watched her taken to jail by the
a young Nisei summer camp
’r-:-VnV^^
,st°PPed here on fore there now is foreign in . fore his arrival May 5. He wore Japanese, and then disappear.”
supervisor is feared dead near
<1° Washington, where he fluence mostly French and Ame a’ sweater under his Western
“All the islanders.” the report
Ontario, 300 miles
shirt and suit' coat.
continued, “believe Miss Earhart north of here since June 4, when
wi.th State Depart- rican.”
oxxicials in preparation for
Quiet During War
and her navigator, Fred Noonan, a canoe he was using was dis
Zen Buddhism
:L °jn^th tour of the United
He praised the work of Emer were executed' out of sight of the covered wrecked on shore follow
Kawabata made one surprisUTN ith the help of two in--■ ing comment on the Zen Buddhist son, Poe and Whitman, said he local population. The Japanese ing a violent wind storm.
piecers^ he talked for the bet- movement among the American had. read Ernest Hemingway’s were determined that no AmeriKatsuhiro Tsunetomi, 19, a
d ?art M an afternoon with stu- avante guard:
“The Old Man and the Sea” in can would ever tell the world Nisei who returned from Japan
Yr^.at the Universitv of Wa“I know very little of Zen,” he English and was very fond of it, they were fortifying the Island just a few months ago, is report
ed to have followed some young
said. “It is more popular in the that he read the works of Wil- of Saipan.”
^.J
3
?
211
there
is
definitely
canoeists out onto a lake when
imUnited States than in Japan, I liam Faulkner and
a
Invitation Refused
.‘°'T generation,” he said, think. In Japan, everyone is more pressed without liking the books,”
a sudden wind storm occurred and
™u^ ^ the end of the or less aware of it, but it has then closed his remarks with a
Saipan was one of the battle blew him off course. The others
v-or^ The bible of this group no interest to the intellectuals. I juiet answer to a question about grounds of "World War IL
managed to reach safety on an
P3^’3 “The' Siting
S-t
“One native said he had been island where they spent the night.
kink the American interest owes what he did during the war:
The following morning the
“I lived in a small village. The invited to witness the hanging of
to a search in this country
th - ~Cai,e .^ter the name given
S- 'Y^^ion: “Children of the .tor a new spiritual basis—some- war passed without much effect a-white woman,” added the re youths returned to camp and
learned that Tsunetomi had not
thing apart from Christianity.”
upon my household. There was, port. “He refused to go.”
Y-n^5 movement in Japan,
Of Kawabata’s 19 novels, three of course, an attempt by the
The
blonde,
boyish-looking returned and a search for him be
.^.^^P^^ble to Amerigovernment to recruit intellec woman with- the .soft smile had gan.
rhjg’3^11^ he said.
At last reports the discovery
The most recent translation, tuals for military’ work—war cori°at generation is begin- “Thousand Cranes.” is a drama respond
orona gandists, infor- imaginations of a whole genera of his smashed canoe was made
p5 ~° Uas-s on and now there tic story of love which Kawabata mation oliicer.s. But I remained tion of Americans moving into and searchers were continuing
w'10^ei!?e?'' among the voung described as “an immoral tale, a unbothered.
dragging operations in the hope
Apparently
they
fcontinued on page eight)
-of recovering his body.
tale of the beauty of an immoral didn’t think I was very useful.” -
Propaganda on Korean
Local Girl Wins Japan Trip
Investigation Team
finds New Evidence
On Earhart Mystery
Novelist Compares 'Children'
Beatniks
Nisei Camp Supervisor
Missing in Canoe Mishap
Page 2
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Page 7
Wednesday. July 6, 1960
the NEW CANADIAN
SPOSTS
PAGE 7
A Story Having that Ending With a Hitchcock Twist
IGwYO.—Doe. 12. 195K was a
od home and asked police to
^l letter day for throe-vear-md
It was ;he last time Shigeru write the letter.
pmgeru Nobe.
He had'been a "^ s.eeu ^' Uss 'parents. Roth he
"Shigeru,” said the father
।
particularly
good
boy, and in re- aim the aunt disappeared.
brown belts have boon put in
hopefully,
"has a small
।
"aid
Uis
aunt
was
taking
him
to
Don Niiya. defeated two of same division. Joe Tanaka
The
story
was
made
known
this
the
small
of his back,
a movie.
mine Lalonde Academy’s top
week by* the Emukae police sta find mv son.”
held
to
Shigeru didn’t get to see many tion nr the southern Japan port
r, belts to complete a sweep
oro
fry
mow.es.
His father. Yoshio, was city of Sasebo, where the Nobe’s
Seidokwan Academy of the
■ one-minute extensions
onsy at his job, and his mother’s live, tn a letter to Tokvo news
’■'g’-^h'd black oelt was taken rime was taken up by- household
vidual judo t
papers.
°’^^^P^-ihoii dazed after chores.
Rene .Lalonde 8-dan 1
Police appealed to everyone to
'S' his head on rite floor off , So Shigeru chattered happily- as
two black belt judges
help them find Shigeru;- who
he skipped along beside his aunt, would be 10 years old.
oei ore
ajuiko Matsuse, 25, en route to
Hood in the
i
Lor six and a half years police
x^e muc-gre
division final
The young shodan then got was an alt-Si
and pareents conducted a search
; There will be Ron .Odori prac
x-hold on Yvon Lalonde" to Dave Zackon ga
lor the boy and his aunt.
tice
for young and old tonight
ng' osaikomi on
:e black-brown division,
Jphn Finn. -In th emi-final, Finn
Last week, there was a break at S:00 p.m.. at the Toronto Bud
i had made two of the
j on
in the case. The father received dhist Church, 91S Hathurst Street
ntral YMCA’s
best technique, throws be
a letter from the aunt written in for the big- outdoor Ron Odori to
coming up against Niiya.
Tokyo. She did not mention the
Orange bolt AndThere will be a Toronto Nisei child, but she gave her address.
Everyone is urged to come out
down Central Y-s yellow belt
Golf
Club
tournament
this
Sunwith spec
mid
participate
the outdoor
rles Hachey for the orange- ^y? July7 10th at- Roug-e Hill
and
to
the
address
given.
ow-white title,
Golf Course beginning- with the
Only two other black belts com
Then came the final blow.
tiny at Christie Pits beginning at
he- total entry of
“
B” Flight at 7:00 a.m. Follow
peted in this tourney, the - first
At the address was a mental 9:00 p.m. A stage will bo erect
to tournament chair
ing the first flight will bo "C”, hospital. The aunt was an inmate. ed in the centre of the park and
time in Quebec that, yudansha and man Rene Lalonde.
Other
then
“A”.
Despite intense interrogation, about 100 arc expected to par
or
HalParticipants
will
be
vying'
for
the
mentally ill aunt could give ticipate’ dressed in Japanese ki
Lnhorsity of Montreal, Montreat the Club Trophy for low net and
no
clues
as to Shigeru’s where monos.
M.MP and St. Jean, Que.
Ball prizes. All,Ball prizes will abouts. Her memory of the past
.Harold Tokairm 3-dan assisted be given out at the following- was gone.
with officiating duties.
tournament.
Discouraged, the father return-
Niiya Sweeps Three Seidokwan Undo Titles
Odori Practice Tonight
Event at Pits on 9th
Toronto Nisei Golf
Tourney This Sunday
Earlscourt Tennis
By FUZ FUJIWARA
THANK YOU
vancing to the quarter final round
The Kido Kwan Judo Insti
Surviving the rounds and adTOKYO.
—
You
can't
blame
the
tute
and club members would
Then his days of menial chores was given a ride in a jet plane,
in the men’s singles at Earlshusky
7
youngsters,
especially
7
the
like
to
thank the many won
are
definitely
court Park last Sunday were Ed
a
is expected to win the tournament
derful friends who have supTsujimoto, Vid Lum, Toru Ide- non-first horns of farming- fami tori,” he is entitled to three or for his ninth title. His irch rival
ported the club and enabled it
nouye, Joe Leibet, who once again lies. in the rural regions, for four appentice attendants. They Tochinishiki has reti red
aspiring to become sumo (Japa now run his errands and carry
to
make the annual picnic a
met and outlasted : aggre ’
Under age old rules. Wakanonese
style
wrestling)
champions.
Shintani.
his wrestling equipment.
avisnimura, outhana does not fight either Wakn. For sumo, the country’s an
Corry
smarted
Pa rn mount
Three of the most popular misugi, who is his younger stable
Shintani, the risGift Shop, Yeo On Trading Co.,
- star from Japan, Aki cient sport, is the quickest path wrestlers today7 are very7 young'. mate, or Taiho, a member of an
Male Shop, Russ Winters. Dan
Koyanagi overpowered the 19-19 to fame and money7 for the youth Wakamisugi darkhorse winner of affiliated stable.
forth
Cleaners,
Ostranders
singles’ champ Frank Matsui, and in Japan although it requires de the last tournament in May, is
Kashiwado. however, who be
Jewellers, Golden Dragon Chop
this writer was lucky7 to win termination and fortitude for the only 22 years old. Kashiwado, of longs to a small independent
Suey, Furuya Trading Co.,
over the 1954 champ, Y’osh Wa individuals to succeed.
high sekiwake rank, is only’ 21 stable, is the “hard luck” wrestler
First of all, formal school edu and Taiho, whose father is re because he has to take on all the
Continental
Family . Co-op,
tanabe.. Y osh is still 15 pounds
Ellinwood Shop, Mr. T. Ka
over his best playing weight, and cation is not a prerequisite to suc ported to have been a White Rus top grapplers during- the 15-day
meoka, Mr. George Sugimori
furthermore, this veteran old- cess in this sport of pushing- and sian, is only 20 years old.
tournament.
and-Japan
Trade Centre.
timer always meets his Waterloo throwing.
But Wakamisugi, Kashiwado
There is, therefore, n cry of
J.he youngster, once he joins a and Taiho have reached stardom unfairness in the present setup.
at the hands of fastrunning jinx
ln ^le ^a^ dozen times lie was stable or camp of a former in their profession.
Each has If Kashiwado emerges as the win
unfortunate enough to meet Yosh champion,-has to follow tradition. several “servants” and each is ner, lie certainly7 would be a real
m,l.ep Neafs' of tournament com- He has to get up earliest in the assured of a good income.
champion.
peution. The last spot in the big morning and do all the menial
To question: In what other
There has been talk among su
eight will be filled by either Don chores. He has to run errands sport can three young- fellows mo experts for a rule change’
rokota or Kiyo Fujiwara whose for the older wrestlers.
attain such success ?
making it mandatory for wrest
Of course, he is allowed to let
lnT;Ch was interupted bv rain.
Some might cite professional lers of one stable tn compete
who smiled and his hair grow long without trim baseball as an answer. But there against those of all other stables,
Female Help Wanted
- latcned their way to the quar- ming- so that eventually7 he will is only one Shigeo Nagashima, irrespective of whether they are
PAYROLL CLERK, experienced
wilh
“‘us gaining seeded status have the topknot which still dis “Golden Boy” third baseman of affiliated.
piece work .tickets for ladies coat and
e Sue Iwasaki, Kav Takasaki. tinguishes the professional sumo the Yomiuri Giants, in a million.
These experts claim such a suit manufacturer, Wilson Garments
k!en°sz, Louise Baniel, wrestler from all other indivi
Wakamisugi, Kashiwado and change would make possible many7 Ltd., 119 Spadina Ave., Phone EM. 2-2515
Ke Xana^?a"’a,. June Nobuoka, duals-in this modern era.
Taiho are expected to make the new interesting- bouts and provide (Toronto).
v‘h Okazaxi and Marie Baniel.
In due course of time, the new tournament which opens Sunday, a' sense of fairness among the
EXPERIENCED machine oporatorn for
apprentice
is permitted to appear for 15 days at Nagoya an in contestants.
semis and the
children's w*-a . Apply Dorolhy Brown
He begins teresting one.
ovLI An sm"les' are to be held in the tournament.
On the other side of the pic Childrens' V, ars, 13 Broadalbano
'V0 S™day, July 10th owning wrestling about 9 a.m. when there
By his winning of the cham ture, however, such a change (Toronto).
r
^e finals of all are no spectators. The day’s final pionship in May, Wakamisugi has might spark “fixed”, bouts, some
^b 5 slated for the Mlow- match of the Yokozuna or grand been promoted from fourth rank experts fear, because it would be
Domestic Help Wanted!
Jl^K 17th, in addition champion occurs close to 6 o’clock ing maegashira to sekiwake (one natural for close friends to dis
TWO Japanese girls ■ for’large suburban
mens and ladies’, doubles in the evening.
of the three top ranks). Taiho like competing between them homo
south of Calgary. .General House
But if the apprentice is strong jumped from sixth ranking mae selves.
’f
is scheduled
work (no laundry). Must bo fond of
one
!h?# S6^ ”"‘« and wins the majority of his gashira to komusubi ( rank im
children. Ability to drive an asset but
not a necessity. Modern separate living
and Erifet* “ ,m M°"to bouts he is gradually7 promoted. mediately’ below sekiwake).
quartbits .with bdard supplied. PormaAnd promotion can be rapid to
Kashiwado had a brilliant 10-5
nent posihon. Excellent salary. Apply.
day7 because there are six official record in the May tournament
to Gr. L. McMahon, 1000 Pacific Building, Calgary. Alta.
tournaments a year compared - to and was elevated to the top “se
two in the prewar years and three kiwake” post-—which is on the
Help Wanted
in the early postwar years.
traditional east column rather
,^.e apprentice becomes a “se- than the west column-in the offi
JAPANESE COUPLE for large suburban
kitori” or full pledged wrestler cial standings. ’
homo south of Calgary. Care of riding
ponies, dogs and chickens. Musi be able
when he is promoted to a “juryo”
Millions will follow the daily
:nd operate some /arm
—the rank immediately below bouts on television.
7-8-9—Toronto. Japanese movies at Astor eq jipsen!
sr). Mechanical ability
“makuuchi” or top class.'
Theatre.
Yokozuna Wakanohana, a fav
an as:x-l
fully modern separate
Montreal. Bukkyo-kai
picnic
to
Imng quartets,- all utilities found. Apply
orite of many’- American members 9—
Martin Beach, lie Bizard.
G. L. McMahon, 1000 Pacific Building.
of the armed forces and who once 9—Toronto. Earlscourt Tennis Club an to
Calgary, Alta.
^0 Japanese Seek Fame and Fortune Wrest ling Japanese Style
CLASSIFIED
CALENDAR
OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
nual picnic to Jackson's Point.' Lake
Simcoe. Cars leave Earlscourt 10 a.m.
sharp.
14—Hamilton. Japanese movies at Play
house Theatre.
15—Vancouver. Nisei Fellowship "Film
and Slide Nite
■nbia St. Unit-
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-13G5
t
See SUS NAGAI
Phone WA. 4-8427
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
-- NOTARY PUBLIC
? studio wtiY;
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street tat Adelaide)
TORONTO
Lor Complete Real Estate Service
138414! Queen W.
Toronto
LE. 2-6378
16—Winnipeg. Manitoba JCCA Annual
Picnic to Kildonan . Park. 1:30 p.m.,
35 CF’Cfs ror psrfnn.
16—Montreal. Bussei Sonenkai picnic.
16—Beamsville. Barbeque Party at Hipponia Home with Toronto JCCA.
13—Kelowna. Bussei Sunday School an
nual -picnic to Picnic Campsite near
Summerland. All xelcome.
23-24—Kelowna. Bussei Sunday School
Teachers' Training Session.
29-Aug. 1—Toronto. (Cleveland): Tennis
In Metro Toronto
Registered Real Estate. Broker
BUSINESS &
RESIDENCE
MACHINE CO
H. S. TSURUDA
PHONE
HO. 9-0551
ONE or TWO
and Ossinaror
Dupont
1-5485
TWO ROOMS for yo
forth and Woodbine
TWO
(Toronto).
c
vrith sink io:
>r: district. Pi
DanPhone
'allege
5-8334
SELF CONTAINED flat in a new home.
Possession date
during middle
of
August, Westen and Sheppard district.
Phene CH. 9-1469 (Weston).
UNFURNISHED. Three-room flat for rent
Kitchen with sink and cupboards, Bloor
and Bathurst district. Phone LE. 3-1245
(Toronto).
TOSH IWAI
1779-A DANFORTH AVE., TORONTO
Rooms to Let
(Japanese Canadian Agent)
35 Bown tree Ave., TORONTO
BO. M67J
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
WALES and DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
464 Yonge .Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
ST. CLAIR-PINEWOOD. 3-bedroom, up
per, heated sunroom, balconey, parking
optional. Phone Ln. 4-3932 (Toronto).
‘MODERN
bedroom.
BASEMENT
Living roo
apartment, one
■with jatenen.
Scarlet
Pi
ne R'O.
the NEW CANADIAN
SPOSTS
PAGE 7
A Story Having that Ending With a Hitchcock Twist
IGwYO.—Doe. 12. 195K was a
od home and asked police to
^l letter day for throe-vear-md
It was ;he last time Shigeru write the letter.
pmgeru Nobe.
He had'been a "^ s.eeu ^' Uss 'parents. Roth he
"Shigeru,” said the father
।
particularly
good
boy, and in re- aim the aunt disappeared.
brown belts have boon put in
hopefully,
"has a small
।
"aid
Uis
aunt
was
taking
him
to
Don Niiya. defeated two of same division. Joe Tanaka
The
story
was
made
known
this
the
small
of his back,
a movie.
mine Lalonde Academy’s top
week by* the Emukae police sta find mv son.”
held
to
Shigeru didn’t get to see many tion nr the southern Japan port
r, belts to complete a sweep
oro
fry
mow.es.
His father. Yoshio, was city of Sasebo, where the Nobe’s
Seidokwan Academy of the
■ one-minute extensions
onsy at his job, and his mother’s live, tn a letter to Tokvo news
’■'g’-^h'd black oelt was taken rime was taken up by- household
vidual judo t
papers.
°’^^^P^-ihoii dazed after chores.
Rene .Lalonde 8-dan 1
Police appealed to everyone to
'S' his head on rite floor off , So Shigeru chattered happily- as
two black belt judges
help them find Shigeru;- who
he skipped along beside his aunt, would be 10 years old.
oei ore
ajuiko Matsuse, 25, en route to
Hood in the
i
Lor six and a half years police
x^e muc-gre
division final
The young shodan then got was an alt-Si
and pareents conducted a search
; There will be Ron .Odori prac
x-hold on Yvon Lalonde" to Dave Zackon ga
lor the boy and his aunt.
tice
for young and old tonight
ng' osaikomi on
:e black-brown division,
Jphn Finn. -In th emi-final, Finn
Last week, there was a break at S:00 p.m.. at the Toronto Bud
i had made two of the
j on
in the case. The father received dhist Church, 91S Hathurst Street
ntral YMCA’s
best technique, throws be
a letter from the aunt written in for the big- outdoor Ron Odori to
coming up against Niiya.
Tokyo. She did not mention the
Orange bolt AndThere will be a Toronto Nisei child, but she gave her address.
Everyone is urged to come out
down Central Y-s yellow belt
Golf
Club
tournament
this
Sunwith spec
mid
participate
the outdoor
rles Hachey for the orange- ^y? July7 10th at- Roug-e Hill
and
to
the
address
given.
ow-white title,
Golf Course beginning- with the
Only two other black belts com
Then came the final blow.
tiny at Christie Pits beginning at
he- total entry of
“
B” Flight at 7:00 a.m. Follow
peted in this tourney, the - first
At the address was a mental 9:00 p.m. A stage will bo erect
to tournament chair
ing the first flight will bo "C”, hospital. The aunt was an inmate. ed in the centre of the park and
time in Quebec that, yudansha and man Rene Lalonde.
Other
then
“A”.
Despite intense interrogation, about 100 arc expected to par
or
HalParticipants
will
be
vying'
for
the
mentally ill aunt could give ticipate’ dressed in Japanese ki
Lnhorsity of Montreal, Montreat the Club Trophy for low net and
no
clues
as to Shigeru’s where monos.
M.MP and St. Jean, Que.
Ball prizes. All,Ball prizes will abouts. Her memory of the past
.Harold Tokairm 3-dan assisted be given out at the following- was gone.
with officiating duties.
tournament.
Discouraged, the father return-
Niiya Sweeps Three Seidokwan Undo Titles
Odori Practice Tonight
Event at Pits on 9th
Toronto Nisei Golf
Tourney This Sunday
Earlscourt Tennis
By FUZ FUJIWARA
THANK YOU
vancing to the quarter final round
The Kido Kwan Judo Insti
Surviving the rounds and adTOKYO.
—
You
can't
blame
the
tute
and club members would
Then his days of menial chores was given a ride in a jet plane,
in the men’s singles at Earlshusky
7
youngsters,
especially
7
the
like
to
thank the many won
are
definitely
court Park last Sunday were Ed
a
is expected to win the tournament
derful friends who have supTsujimoto, Vid Lum, Toru Ide- non-first horns of farming- fami tori,” he is entitled to three or for his ninth title. His irch rival
ported the club and enabled it
nouye, Joe Leibet, who once again lies. in the rural regions, for four appentice attendants. They Tochinishiki has reti red
aspiring to become sumo (Japa now run his errands and carry
to
make the annual picnic a
met and outlasted : aggre ’
Under age old rules. Wakanonese
style
wrestling)
champions.
Shintani.
his wrestling equipment.
avisnimura, outhana does not fight either Wakn. For sumo, the country’s an
Corry
smarted
Pa rn mount
Three of the most popular misugi, who is his younger stable
Shintani, the risGift Shop, Yeo On Trading Co.,
- star from Japan, Aki cient sport, is the quickest path wrestlers today7 are very7 young'. mate, or Taiho, a member of an
Male Shop, Russ Winters. Dan
Koyanagi overpowered the 19-19 to fame and money7 for the youth Wakamisugi darkhorse winner of affiliated stable.
forth
Cleaners,
Ostranders
singles’ champ Frank Matsui, and in Japan although it requires de the last tournament in May, is
Kashiwado. however, who be
Jewellers, Golden Dragon Chop
this writer was lucky7 to win termination and fortitude for the only 22 years old. Kashiwado, of longs to a small independent
Suey, Furuya Trading Co.,
over the 1954 champ, Y’osh Wa individuals to succeed.
high sekiwake rank, is only’ 21 stable, is the “hard luck” wrestler
First of all, formal school edu and Taiho, whose father is re because he has to take on all the
Continental
Family . Co-op,
tanabe.. Y osh is still 15 pounds
Ellinwood Shop, Mr. T. Ka
over his best playing weight, and cation is not a prerequisite to suc ported to have been a White Rus top grapplers during- the 15-day
meoka, Mr. George Sugimori
furthermore, this veteran old- cess in this sport of pushing- and sian, is only 20 years old.
tournament.
and-Japan
Trade Centre.
timer always meets his Waterloo throwing.
But Wakamisugi, Kashiwado
There is, therefore, n cry of
J.he youngster, once he joins a and Taiho have reached stardom unfairness in the present setup.
at the hands of fastrunning jinx
ln ^le ^a^ dozen times lie was stable or camp of a former in their profession.
Each has If Kashiwado emerges as the win
unfortunate enough to meet Yosh champion,-has to follow tradition. several “servants” and each is ner, lie certainly7 would be a real
m,l.ep Neafs' of tournament com- He has to get up earliest in the assured of a good income.
champion.
peution. The last spot in the big morning and do all the menial
To question: In what other
There has been talk among su
eight will be filled by either Don chores. He has to run errands sport can three young- fellows mo experts for a rule change’
rokota or Kiyo Fujiwara whose for the older wrestlers.
attain such success ?
making it mandatory for wrest
Of course, he is allowed to let
lnT;Ch was interupted bv rain.
Some might cite professional lers of one stable tn compete
who smiled and his hair grow long without trim baseball as an answer. But there against those of all other stables,
Female Help Wanted
- latcned their way to the quar- ming- so that eventually7 he will is only one Shigeo Nagashima, irrespective of whether they are
PAYROLL CLERK, experienced
wilh
“‘us gaining seeded status have the topknot which still dis “Golden Boy” third baseman of affiliated.
piece work .tickets for ladies coat and
e Sue Iwasaki, Kav Takasaki. tinguishes the professional sumo the Yomiuri Giants, in a million.
These experts claim such a suit manufacturer, Wilson Garments
k!en°sz, Louise Baniel, wrestler from all other indivi
Wakamisugi, Kashiwado and change would make possible many7 Ltd., 119 Spadina Ave., Phone EM. 2-2515
Ke Xana^?a"’a,. June Nobuoka, duals-in this modern era.
Taiho are expected to make the new interesting- bouts and provide (Toronto).
v‘h Okazaxi and Marie Baniel.
In due course of time, the new tournament which opens Sunday, a' sense of fairness among the
EXPERIENCED machine oporatorn for
apprentice
is permitted to appear for 15 days at Nagoya an in contestants.
semis and the
children's w*-a . Apply Dorolhy Brown
He begins teresting one.
ovLI An sm"les' are to be held in the tournament.
On the other side of the pic Childrens' V, ars, 13 Broadalbano
'V0 S™day, July 10th owning wrestling about 9 a.m. when there
By his winning of the cham ture, however, such a change (Toronto).
r
^e finals of all are no spectators. The day’s final pionship in May, Wakamisugi has might spark “fixed”, bouts, some
^b 5 slated for the Mlow- match of the Yokozuna or grand been promoted from fourth rank experts fear, because it would be
Domestic Help Wanted!
Jl^K 17th, in addition champion occurs close to 6 o’clock ing maegashira to sekiwake (one natural for close friends to dis
TWO Japanese girls ■ for’large suburban
mens and ladies’, doubles in the evening.
of the three top ranks). Taiho like competing between them homo
south of Calgary. .General House
But if the apprentice is strong jumped from sixth ranking mae selves.
’f
is scheduled
work (no laundry). Must bo fond of
one
!h?# S6^ ”"‘« and wins the majority of his gashira to komusubi ( rank im
children. Ability to drive an asset but
not a necessity. Modern separate living
and Erifet* “ ,m M°"to bouts he is gradually7 promoted. mediately’ below sekiwake).
quartbits .with bdard supplied. PormaAnd promotion can be rapid to
Kashiwado had a brilliant 10-5
nent posihon. Excellent salary. Apply.
day7 because there are six official record in the May tournament
to Gr. L. McMahon, 1000 Pacific Building, Calgary. Alta.
tournaments a year compared - to and was elevated to the top “se
two in the prewar years and three kiwake” post-—which is on the
Help Wanted
in the early postwar years.
traditional east column rather
,^.e apprentice becomes a “se- than the west column-in the offi
JAPANESE COUPLE for large suburban
kitori” or full pledged wrestler cial standings. ’
homo south of Calgary. Care of riding
ponies, dogs and chickens. Musi be able
when he is promoted to a “juryo”
Millions will follow the daily
:nd operate some /arm
—the rank immediately below bouts on television.
7-8-9—Toronto. Japanese movies at Astor eq jipsen!
sr). Mechanical ability
“makuuchi” or top class.'
Theatre.
Yokozuna Wakanohana, a fav
an as:x-l
fully modern separate
Montreal. Bukkyo-kai
picnic
to
Imng quartets,- all utilities found. Apply
orite of many’- American members 9—
Martin Beach, lie Bizard.
G. L. McMahon, 1000 Pacific Building.
of the armed forces and who once 9—Toronto. Earlscourt Tennis Club an to
Calgary, Alta.
^0 Japanese Seek Fame and Fortune Wrest ling Japanese Style
CLASSIFIED
CALENDAR
OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
nual picnic to Jackson's Point.' Lake
Simcoe. Cars leave Earlscourt 10 a.m.
sharp.
14—Hamilton. Japanese movies at Play
house Theatre.
15—Vancouver. Nisei Fellowship "Film
and Slide Nite
■nbia St. Unit-
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-13G5
t
See SUS NAGAI
Phone WA. 4-8427
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
-- NOTARY PUBLIC
? studio wtiY;
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street tat Adelaide)
TORONTO
Lor Complete Real Estate Service
138414! Queen W.
Toronto
LE. 2-6378
16—Winnipeg. Manitoba JCCA Annual
Picnic to Kildonan . Park. 1:30 p.m.,
35 CF’Cfs ror psrfnn.
16—Montreal. Bussei Sonenkai picnic.
16—Beamsville. Barbeque Party at Hipponia Home with Toronto JCCA.
13—Kelowna. Bussei Sunday School an
nual -picnic to Picnic Campsite near
Summerland. All xelcome.
23-24—Kelowna. Bussei Sunday School
Teachers' Training Session.
29-Aug. 1—Toronto. (Cleveland): Tennis
In Metro Toronto
Registered Real Estate. Broker
BUSINESS &
RESIDENCE
MACHINE CO
H. S. TSURUDA
PHONE
HO. 9-0551
ONE or TWO
and Ossinaror
Dupont
1-5485
TWO ROOMS for yo
forth and Woodbine
TWO
(Toronto).
c
vrith sink io:
>r: district. Pi
DanPhone
'allege
5-8334
SELF CONTAINED flat in a new home.
Possession date
during middle
of
August, Westen and Sheppard district.
Phene CH. 9-1469 (Weston).
UNFURNISHED. Three-room flat for rent
Kitchen with sink and cupboards, Bloor
and Bathurst district. Phone LE. 3-1245
(Toronto).
TOSH IWAI
1779-A DANFORTH AVE., TORONTO
Rooms to Let
(Japanese Canadian Agent)
35 Bown tree Ave., TORONTO
BO. M67J
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
WALES and DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
464 Yonge .Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
ST. CLAIR-PINEWOOD. 3-bedroom, up
per, heated sunroom, balconey, parking
optional. Phone Ln. 4-3932 (Toronto).
‘MODERN
bedroom.
BASEMENT
Living roo
apartment, one
■with jatenen.
Scarlet
Pi
ne R'O.
Page 8
—bM±_2------- --------- -- ---------- - ------- THE NEW CANADIAN
Japanese Farmer Returns Home With Great Wealth From California Job
-Wednesday, July 6> IDrq
( Bill of Rights
THE NEW CANADIAN
just, a new automo- of forest land and a few domes»3X%S^S
(Continued from Page One)
bile. A
ese farmer working
-a worl cow, a milkfor the
h of rime would ing goat, two pigs, i dozen rab- desirable- effect.
JERRY KUTsty
Events of the ^™1
eye a ew
That's
all
he
KAKE,
tnglish
Section
bits
and
20
chicken:
The
family
past such as the spy trials and MORI, Japanese Section Edrotorn
-vi on t)
?£could afford.
consumes
three-quarters
of
all
the expulsion of Japanese Cana
h-nr:
and
"But now I’m afraid of money they produce and sell the re- dians still could be possible under Advertising Manager.
‘ ‘ ma
iditi
The idea of wealth frightens me? mainder to
citv markets the War Measures Act, Mr. PearWorks
as
Laborer
through
the
Village
Co-operative son warned.
$4.00 per 6 months
i'-rre-d Lu
one or
new
Ho
Association.
Last
year
the
family
$7.00 per year
da
speaking
with
the
drawl
farme rs”
He said the bill could be made
iaru
ot tli heavy Japanese rural dia- income
totalled 350,000 yen a much more effective measure
Ca
479 QUEEN ST. WEST.
lect. ; aid he was now working on
by:
EMpire 6-5005
tge levee construction, pro‘‘Our low economic status can
••njoyrd
Or.mge ’
Including a provision limitin
jec
ClS5 a day laborer.
have
be greatly improved by introduc
him look
Wearing a haki shirt and blue ing rational drinking in our vil the powers given tq the Goverh or-in-Council under the War
dungarees, he sat on the lacquer- lage life,” Honda said.
But
i
i
l
Measures Act by expressly ex cd veranda oi his thatch-roofed
much d
p an?e-ll° buy 3 Eluding from the powers the
Tse V1 Gumma prefecture. The oaiden tractor. cost: ^00.
power by Drder-in-Council to de
now to
ci tiering of chickadees and the
m
"But before I get the machine prive any Canadian citizen of his
line
mid.
urmuring of streams could be I must step up the. volume of
milli o n
Japanese costumes, Japanese
stmctly heard in the clear work in two . or three crops to citizenship.
13(1) now. I know
Expressly forbidding the Go\>
ountain air.
Canadians
bunklower expenses,’’ he said. “We are ernor-in-Council to act under the Canadians,
*kc a farmer her
boning up on. the Japanese lai?
ly 350 yen (97 now growing- more than 20 differyear- to save thi
War Measures Act’ to banish or guage all form part of the picture
nwney. But
J eight hours a ent kinds of crops on this small exile
any citizen of Canada in any these days at the Red Barn Thea
H-mda said .1 was making- piece of land.
circumstances.
ch more than this per hour in
tre in Jacksons Point, where di
Purchases Farm Land
Limiting by law the absolute rector Marigold Charlesworth is
the states.'’
He said he will spend the rest and arbitrary power of the Gov trying to re-create a genuine
Honda rubbed
blistered
of his American savings for more ernment to detain persons, even Okinawan -village on stage for
hands.
(continued from page one)
in wartime.
farm
land.
He, with his elderly parents,
her play The Teahouse of the
_
“
Naturally
I
want
to
get
a
tele
In this last instance, Mr. Pear August Moon.
e*
three brothers and three sisters,
vision
set,
a
refrigerator, a wash son suggested that there be writ- j
all
work
the
farm
’
s
four
acres
Koto
Adachi,
and
her
She was preUy and brave and
machine for my family and Len into the bill some provision ,^u^^ei’’ Kathy will be part of
in love with the sky. She sym-' containing a rice paddy, a mul- ing
a
motorcycle
for myself,” he said. limiting the detention power for the cast; Lotus Blossom, a geisha
bolized a new freedom for mod table; j ield and land for vege- “But I will have
to wait until I more than a stated period with
wil1 be played by’a young
ern women from the traditional crops. oats, wheat and other profit from my ‘modernized
farm out a hearing before a superior
j e,e. Canadian, Shirlev Jia
ties Unit bound them to earth.
court judge and without the Gov- and the costumes for the playThe Hondas also own 10 acres management.”
Honda said many other of his eminent having satisfied that have been lent by sources as di
fellow villagers have begun mech judge that there were serious verse as the U.S. Army and the
including in 1932 the
nese secret police later told her anizing their farms.
grounds for believing the deten Japanese Trade Centre in Tor
f light across the A th
after the flier had been shot.
"But
it
is
impossible
to
master
tion to be essential for the secur onto.
Charles A. Lindberg’s.
CBS sent a news team of its machinery if you forget the great ity
of the state.
■The Teahouse of the Anoint
own, plus a Times reporter to spirit which gave birth to it,” he
Mr.
Pearson
said
he
would
have
Moon
concerns the efforts of a
mvestig-ate.
added.
other
proposals
to
make
when
he
J°ung
G.L Captain to reform the
ippearanco
the
The network said the team,
"We
need
a
renaissance
here.
”
resumed
his
address.
natives
of an Okinawan village.
diving
into
the.
waters
of
the
bay
mid
He lands up being somewhat re
opposite the bld Japanese naval
formed himself, with the aid of a
LOGO men, 10 ships, base, found the wreckage of a
and 100 plane s swept the> Pacific, plane.
local brandy still, Lotus Blossom,
and a Teahouse, built by the vil
A generator was shown in San
Last May
lagers instead of the regulation
Mateo, brancisco July
. 1.
Paul Mantz,
By CANDIDA
Calif., Timos quoted
schoolhouse.woman the tuer who outfitted Miss Earor
The set, painted delicately on
a child hait s craft, said it looked like the
If °ne.were.asked which year of his life was the most exciting,
rec ug1i i z e d , pi c t ures one he had installed. He planned
bamboo,
screens, and featuring
thF happie?t’ his ^Ply would be moulded bv
ut Miss Earha rt as the American to check his work number rethe
building
of a teahouse on
P ^OMhC( his goals attained and the goals still striven for. ‘
pilot she saw
to make
stage, has been designed bv Janet
o custody
albwe1’ inay be the carefree, loose-flung year at seventeen McGregor Smith.
by the da pane.
In Tokvo ‘’. ^tiner admiral of tnli mrne ^
dances, laughter, sentimen. This
performance will be
emer-^
yet had the mature adult nightly this week on and until
tei
med
the
execution
reports
inwoman, Mrs. .1 osephine
f gasping adult reality and its decisive responi iedible. Shigeyoshi Inouye ini d i dG ?
oo^a^’ July 9th beginning at
Akiyama, now
g°al Was set toward adulthood—to- o:30 p.m. The theatre is about
re
L
^
e
opportunities;
one
does
not
seriously
Mateo, was reported as reau
1937. denied any Know- , value the responsibility of accepting the consequences at seventeen. an hour’s drive from Toronto bv
a member of the Japa- led te in
of the subject,
taking Don Mills Road to Lake
I
One may recall a year in his early childhood when he was so Simcoe.*
— secure within his family
Honda re
three-vea
a
Local Nisei Takes Role
In Teahouse Production
Earhart Mystery
THIS YEAR I REMEMBER
I
£S
1,1 Gre golden, mellow daylight: the games Hie piceffusion of childhood splendour. tliPe 311 Wended ^ a glittering
TORONTO 2-B. ONT.
I
I
Please find enclosed $ ... ......... „„
for which
D Renew my subscription.
° ^mr(
subkription for......... year/months
>1.00 for Six months • $7.00 per year.
r
YONEMITSU
Watch Repair Shop
HO. 5-3652 — Res: LE. 2-7445
328 Broadview Ave., Toronto
r
WIE
I
1
1
Or perhaps, one may remember his twenh-JW
for hSiponSbilT^^^^
citizenship and responsibility. Excuses
child-status became an (Sihtak’r?15111
assumed a
duties t«r^^^
*'“' in that year different front th. wildt^ £ ~
ADDRESS
CITY
PROV.
career, newH^ces^and0^
that year—marriage, a
cut and seamed the life that followed. A
deep elation to happv moments remember^
shifting from
youth and its free fire and the quive^
tang of
of
on the threshold of life.
$
° 'ecun^ °^ being perched
the
C?e would Recall
a
i w —“‘ aa year in
vents many from enjoying S; dr is IhSlLT tha‘ PK‘
Lucien C. Kurata
BABBISTEB and 8OLIOITOB
NOT AIRY PUBLIC
Suite SI3 Temple Building
82 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TORONTO
Mid-Summer Sale
TABLEWARES:
Dh
oritake)
_
UbEHOLD ORNAMENTS: Japanese Scrolls and
framed Pictures—Folding Screens (Byobu)—Table
L^?S’~Fiower Vases—Statuettes—Wall Plagues
cn A . Materials and Designs—Iron or Stone Ornafor Gardens.
SUNDRIES: Jewellery of S
ionic Mens—Fishina TackI
Paramount Gift Shop
733 Danforth Avenue, Toronto
STORE OPEN 9 A.M TO 9 P.M
S'
Japanese Farmer Returns Home With Great Wealth From California Job
-Wednesday, July 6> IDrq
( Bill of Rights
THE NEW CANADIAN
just, a new automo- of forest land and a few domes»3X%S^S
(Continued from Page One)
bile. A
ese farmer working
-a worl cow, a milkfor the
h of rime would ing goat, two pigs, i dozen rab- desirable- effect.
JERRY KUTsty
Events of the ^™1
eye a ew
That's
all
he
KAKE,
tnglish
Section
bits
and
20
chicken:
The
family
past such as the spy trials and MORI, Japanese Section Edrotorn
-vi on t)
?£could afford.
consumes
three-quarters
of
all
the expulsion of Japanese Cana
h-nr:
and
"But now I’m afraid of money they produce and sell the re- dians still could be possible under Advertising Manager.
‘ ‘ ma
iditi
The idea of wealth frightens me? mainder to
citv markets the War Measures Act, Mr. PearWorks
as
Laborer
through
the
Village
Co-operative son warned.
$4.00 per 6 months
i'-rre-d Lu
one or
new
Ho
Association.
Last
year
the
family
$7.00 per year
da
speaking
with
the
drawl
farme rs”
He said the bill could be made
iaru
ot tli heavy Japanese rural dia- income
totalled 350,000 yen a much more effective measure
Ca
479 QUEEN ST. WEST.
lect. ; aid he was now working on
by:
EMpire 6-5005
tge levee construction, pro‘‘Our low economic status can
••njoyrd
Or.mge ’
Including a provision limitin
jec
ClS5 a day laborer.
have
be greatly improved by introduc
him look
Wearing a haki shirt and blue ing rational drinking in our vil the powers given tq the Goverh or-in-Council under the War
dungarees, he sat on the lacquer- lage life,” Honda said.
But
i
i
l
Measures Act by expressly ex cd veranda oi his thatch-roofed
much d
p an?e-ll° buy 3 Eluding from the powers the
Tse V1 Gumma prefecture. The oaiden tractor. cost: ^00.
power by Drder-in-Council to de
now to
ci tiering of chickadees and the
m
"But before I get the machine prive any Canadian citizen of his
line
mid.
urmuring of streams could be I must step up the. volume of
milli o n
Japanese costumes, Japanese
stmctly heard in the clear work in two . or three crops to citizenship.
13(1) now. I know
Expressly forbidding the Go\>
ountain air.
Canadians
bunklower expenses,’’ he said. “We are ernor-in-Council to act under the Canadians,
*kc a farmer her
boning up on. the Japanese lai?
ly 350 yen (97 now growing- more than 20 differyear- to save thi
War Measures Act’ to banish or guage all form part of the picture
nwney. But
J eight hours a ent kinds of crops on this small exile
any citizen of Canada in any these days at the Red Barn Thea
H-mda said .1 was making- piece of land.
circumstances.
ch more than this per hour in
tre in Jacksons Point, where di
Purchases Farm Land
Limiting by law the absolute rector Marigold Charlesworth is
the states.'’
He said he will spend the rest and arbitrary power of the Gov trying to re-create a genuine
Honda rubbed
blistered
of his American savings for more ernment to detain persons, even Okinawan -village on stage for
hands.
(continued from page one)
in wartime.
farm
land.
He, with his elderly parents,
her play The Teahouse of the
_
“
Naturally
I
want
to
get
a
tele
In this last instance, Mr. Pear August Moon.
e*
three brothers and three sisters,
vision
set,
a
refrigerator, a wash son suggested that there be writ- j
all
work
the
farm
’
s
four
acres
Koto
Adachi,
and
her
She was preUy and brave and
machine for my family and Len into the bill some provision ,^u^^ei’’ Kathy will be part of
in love with the sky. She sym-' containing a rice paddy, a mul- ing
a
motorcycle
for myself,” he said. limiting the detention power for the cast; Lotus Blossom, a geisha
bolized a new freedom for mod table; j ield and land for vege- “But I will have
to wait until I more than a stated period with
wil1 be played by’a young
ern women from the traditional crops. oats, wheat and other profit from my ‘modernized
farm out a hearing before a superior
j e,e. Canadian, Shirlev Jia
ties Unit bound them to earth.
court judge and without the Gov- and the costumes for the playThe Hondas also own 10 acres management.”
Honda said many other of his eminent having satisfied that have been lent by sources as di
fellow villagers have begun mech judge that there were serious verse as the U.S. Army and the
including in 1932 the
nese secret police later told her anizing their farms.
grounds for believing the deten Japanese Trade Centre in Tor
f light across the A th
after the flier had been shot.
"But
it
is
impossible
to
master
tion to be essential for the secur onto.
Charles A. Lindberg’s.
CBS sent a news team of its machinery if you forget the great ity
of the state.
■The Teahouse of the Anoint
own, plus a Times reporter to spirit which gave birth to it,” he
Mr.
Pearson
said
he
would
have
Moon
concerns the efforts of a
mvestig-ate.
added.
other
proposals
to
make
when
he
J°ung
G.L Captain to reform the
ippearanco
the
The network said the team,
"We
need
a
renaissance
here.
”
resumed
his
address.
natives
of an Okinawan village.
diving
into
the.
waters
of
the
bay
mid
He lands up being somewhat re
opposite the bld Japanese naval
formed himself, with the aid of a
LOGO men, 10 ships, base, found the wreckage of a
and 100 plane s swept the> Pacific, plane.
local brandy still, Lotus Blossom,
and a Teahouse, built by the vil
A generator was shown in San
Last May
lagers instead of the regulation
Mateo, brancisco July
. 1.
Paul Mantz,
By CANDIDA
Calif., Timos quoted
schoolhouse.woman the tuer who outfitted Miss Earor
The set, painted delicately on
a child hait s craft, said it looked like the
If °ne.were.asked which year of his life was the most exciting,
rec ug1i i z e d , pi c t ures one he had installed. He planned
bamboo,
screens, and featuring
thF happie?t’ his ^Ply would be moulded bv
ut Miss Earha rt as the American to check his work number rethe
building
of a teahouse on
P ^OMhC( his goals attained and the goals still striven for. ‘
pilot she saw
to make
stage, has been designed bv Janet
o custody
albwe1’ inay be the carefree, loose-flung year at seventeen McGregor Smith.
by the da pane.
In Tokvo ‘’. ^tiner admiral of tnli mrne ^
dances, laughter, sentimen. This
performance will be
emer-^
yet had the mature adult nightly this week on and until
tei
med
the
execution
reports
inwoman, Mrs. .1 osephine
f gasping adult reality and its decisive responi iedible. Shigeyoshi Inouye ini d i dG ?
oo^a^’ July 9th beginning at
Akiyama, now
g°al Was set toward adulthood—to- o:30 p.m. The theatre is about
re
L
^
e
opportunities;
one
does
not
seriously
Mateo, was reported as reau
1937. denied any Know- , value the responsibility of accepting the consequences at seventeen. an hour’s drive from Toronto bv
a member of the Japa- led te in
of the subject,
taking Don Mills Road to Lake
I
One may recall a year in his early childhood when he was so Simcoe.*
— secure within his family
Honda re
three-vea
a
Local Nisei Takes Role
In Teahouse Production
Earhart Mystery
THIS YEAR I REMEMBER
I
£S
1,1 Gre golden, mellow daylight: the games Hie piceffusion of childhood splendour. tliPe 311 Wended ^ a glittering
TORONTO 2-B. ONT.
I
I
Please find enclosed $ ... ......... „„
for which
D Renew my subscription.
° ^mr(
subkription for......... year/months
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YONEMITSU
Watch Repair Shop
HO. 5-3652 — Res: LE. 2-7445
328 Broadview Ave., Toronto
r
WIE
I
1
1
Or perhaps, one may remember his twenh-JW
for hSiponSbilT^^^^
citizenship and responsibility. Excuses
child-status became an (Sihtak’r?15111
assumed a
duties t«r^^^
*'“' in that year different front th. wildt^ £ ~
ADDRESS
CITY
PROV.
career, newH^ces^and0^
that year—marriage, a
cut and seamed the life that followed. A
deep elation to happv moments remember^
shifting from
youth and its free fire and the quive^
tang of
of
on the threshold of life.
$
° 'ecun^ °^ being perched
the
C?e would Recall
a
i w —“‘ aa year in
vents many from enjoying S; dr is IhSlLT tha‘ PK‘
Lucien C. Kurata
BABBISTEB and 8OLIOITOB
NOT AIRY PUBLIC
Suite SI3 Temple Building
82 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TORONTO
Mid-Summer Sale
TABLEWARES:
Dh
oritake)
_
UbEHOLD ORNAMENTS: Japanese Scrolls and
framed Pictures—Folding Screens (Byobu)—Table
L^?S’~Fiower Vases—Statuettes—Wall Plagues
cn A . Materials and Designs—Iron or Stone Ornafor Gardens.
SUNDRIES: Jewellery of S
ionic Mens—Fishina TackI
Paramount Gift Shop
733 Danforth Avenue, Toronto
STORE OPEN 9 A.M TO 9 P.M
S'