Page 1
960
N
IO
THE NEW CANADIAN
Vol. XXIV
1960
West Coast Nisei Honored
Transient Jailed For
Assault on Issei Woman
-A tran-
Fore
er appears.
of
’Oil!
is
ard
■est
ree
eat
ful as he was s'
food on the
^nor.
Hall then m
go to Mrs.
ni and hit
nor in the face,
down kicked i
nt
thigh.
ile was hustled outside by tw
local residents, and RCMT arriv
ed on the scene and jailed him.
r?’
Photo courtesy James Kakutani. Vancouver
Fishermen's Union Ask
May Place Low Tender
To Fill Subway Car Order
A trip to Japan was contem
plated by the Toronto Transit
Commission this week in the
event the low bidder for $40,000,000 worth of subway cars for the
Bloor-University subway line is
a men i
Wei far,
his me
when the proprietor
i nd
les
at
rill
tch
TORONTO, ONT.
W. E. P. Duncan. TTC general
umger of subway construction,
obtained specifications prepara
tory to bidding on subway cars,
and some electrical equipment for
the project may come from that
country.
The commission has already
traveled to Hamilton and Mont
real to view facilities of various
companies for making subway
cars, and it authorized a trip to
Philadelphia for the same .pur-
:* number of European corn
obtain
first hand knowledge of
Visiting subway car companies
before the October closing date
for bids is not an influence to men
who cannot be influenced, com
mented TTC vice-chairman Allan
Lamport.
”11 the low bidder is from Ja
pan Metro can buy us all one
way tickets,” laughed Commis-
Just Jottings
Now U-2 Salmon?
M>LI TOPS IK THEIR FIELD and off to prove their abilities were
Controller William Allen ques
LONDON.—Workers at a fish
Miss .Marge Iwasaki and Mr. Thomas Kakinuma seen with Mr.
tioned the propriety of visiting
George Isniwara (centre) President, of the host organization the
companies that may bid on the factory near the far eastern town
of Okhotsk in the Soviet Union
^ncouver JCCA. Miss Iwasaki is currently with the Canadian swim
VANCOUVER. — B.C. fisher
have discovered a Siberian salmon
ming contingent at the Rome Olympics. Mr. Kakinuma, artist, is men asked the federal govern
Years of Study
marked with two discs saying in
in Mexico furthering his studies. The partv in their honor was held ment to help in the exploration
Russian: “Please return to Wash
prior to their departure at the Waldorf Hotel in Vancouver.
Commissioner*
Ford
Brand
said
of the tuna potential of the Paci
ington
University, Seattle. USA,”
fic.
The United Fishermen and Al termine the marketing conditions.
‘‘If we just sit hero we. will know Aug. 23. It was thought that the
fish was marked in the area of
ed in a letter to Fisheries Minis nothing,” he added.
the Aleutians and hud made the
John
Inglis.
TTC
general
man
ter MacLean that, tuna , could be
long journey through the western
ager
of
operations,
said
officials
caught by seiners previously used
Pacific
tlie Sea of
of
his
department
have
for
the.
in the defunct herring industrv
Okhotsk
"The
seiners would be
RICHMOND, B.C.—Two fisher Tab him. Then down I went.
ideal ft
fishing,” said the
men fell into funnel of flame
‘T thought at first I had lost
'Mule fighting a blaze in a peat him, then I saw him enveloped in union.
The UFAWU suggested six of
MARBURG, Germany. ■—More Canadian Senators To
storage shed last Saturday.
flames as though he
inside the
should
than 500 historians of religion are Attend Confab in Tokyo
Time after time they tried to a furnace.
hired, with each crew member on scheduled to attend the 10th In
claw their way up the eight foot
“I could just see his outline
c wage of $400 a month, ternational Congress for Re
OTTAWA.—Two senators and
moss of crumbling bales of. peat.
Orange flame was all round him.”
payment
for
production.
four
members of the Canadian
ligious
History
here
Sept.
11
but each time the peat gave
Oikawa himself was standing Each einer should take a de- through 17. Among them will be Commons will leave next month
"ay and they tumbled back again. almost clear of the flames in the
Prince Mikasa, the Japanese Em for a 10-day conference in Tokyo.
Colleagues finally pulled both tunnel and managed to .pull Lasko p a r t m e n t observer.
The
union
said
B.C.
now
The delegation, drawn from all
imperors’ younger brother, who
men irom the pit.
from the heart of the blaze.
ports most of her tuna, while the teaches religious history at To parties, will attend the 49th con
By then Jackie Lasko, 23, 454
Said Lasko, “I would be dead Soviet Union and Japan are both
ference of the Inter-Parliamen
nompson Road had been burned if it was not for Tommy. It was taking advantages of the huge kyo University, according to an tary Union, an organization of
announcement in the bulletin of,
on the face and neck and Tommy close. I’m still shaking.”
Pacific tuna potential.
non-cabinet representatives
of
the German Tourist Association.
- iKawa, 42, 2340 Smith Crescent
more
than
50
national
parlia
an tne legs.
ments,
including
Russia
’
s
Su
It happened at a $50,000 fire at
preme Soviet.
estem Peat Co. Ltd., 1961
On the agenda will be the pro
' astnnnster Highway.
blems
of fluctuating prices, dis
TOKYO.
—
Japanese
spokesmen
have
been
invested
in
building
an
which
cut
down
even
more
the
Ine two men were standing on
armament
and the preservation
, e? of peat inside the 800-foot- are voicing a cultural complaint, atomic energy research institute time available for research.
of
parliamentary
democracy in
that is often heard in Canada— at Tokai Village, north of Tokyo,
During his stay at Princeton
torage shed,
too many of the best brains are but little has been done to ensure he lectured from six to eight
nown to them the fire was being lured out of the country.
that universities obtain the ex hours a week with the remainder
waY along a tunnel
The Weekly Yomiuri says most pensive equipment necessary for of the time free for research, and
'
bouses a conveyer belt be0“ tic oases on which thev were of, Japan’s authoritative pure scientific faculties today. The re- had equipment far superior to
mathematicians are already in the suit is that more and more Japa that available in Tokyo.
In comparison he received for
-■XX^e!^** ^le wooden roof of United" States—40 Japanese nu nese scientists are taking jobs
clear physicists are in the United with U.S. universities or business the nine-month school
in
S^ve way and Lasko States and another 20 in Europe
Japan
he
was
paid
$12,000
in
the
“Oppea through
TOKYO. — Japan’s post-war
TV°
—and now the trend is spreading
Most of
a n fl U.S. In addition he attended sum
27 ‘ un Quoted Oikawa, father to electronics.
economy
has finally reached the
thematicians now taking jobs mer seminars for which he was
;
aying
“
Lasko
fell
point
where
exports surpassed the
Two
years
ago
the
government
sondo
with considerable also paid.
ight and I went to of former prime minister Nobu
pre-war
average
of the vears
y insist that they
Osaka Municipal University,
suke Kishi announced a compre
erelv to earn more which has. always been highly re 1934-6.
A “white paper” issued by the
hensive policy to improve scien ni oncy, but because Japan simply garded as a leader in Japanese
T^ T^PAN. The Ocean tific and technological education
Japanese
Ministry of Interna
does not offer the facilities or theoretical physics, has suffered
Q
^ailing from Vancou- and encourage private industry -pare
tional
Trade
and Industry* shows
need to continue
August 29 destined for Ja- to expand research, either co
that
exports
reached a record
(continued on page eight)
^ 1 resident Wilson is sail- operatively or individually. But
total
of
$3,456,000,000
in 1959, an
example of the scientific
increase
of
20
percent
over 1958.
‘2 t^X Prancisco on Sep- since then results have been dis
nt is Professor Tatsuo
• destined for Japan.
Imports also increased 19 per
appointing. Considerable sums Ka wad a. formerly with the Tokyo
cent to $3,599,000,000, second only
sity of Technology. Three
to the record 1957 peak of $4,283,he went to the U.S.
.’ears ago
;
000,000.
=t the: invitation of Princeton
sity. He returned to Japan
NEW YORK.—The all-girl Ta
Sharp Change
Tokyo -The Japan Monopoly
last vear. but is now re- karazuka Dance Theatre troupe’s
nr
The sharp increase in Japanese
to overcome the Corporation’s an
television appearance with Ed exports was largely credited to
wil] soon launch an
ca ^Paign to popularize nual financial deficit, amounting
:p at tne Sullivan last fall while they were a 51 percent increase in ship
to thousands of dollars.
America in New York on tour- will be re- ments to the United States for a
holic
'•ion of salt roads.
tele
Su nd , Aug. 23.
The cost of a salt road is only
’KPoration_ recently comtotal value of 1,030,000,000. As a
The hour-long
how will be result,
b^213^^!6 study into one-third that of the cheapest
radition
Research Cut
seen
tion-wide
ver the CBS al trade surplus with Japan on
?f usin= salt*in the paved road and is free of dust and
networK.
^1 °I roa<^ throughout mud and retains its smoothness
ve
the foreign exchange basis for
Seven dances were performed the first time since 1951.
after
each
rainstorm.
- and are satisfied with
)irv ms
1
. During by the group v him <
Japanese exports to Canada in
Experts point out the hardness
m gutters, 1959 were one-tenth of the U.S.
^n one million tons of of salt is similar to concr
n Tokvo
d
and the amount at a total of $114,312,000.
f^t'apable and the Corhilarious
on
Japanese
Ts its use will not onlv 400 cars daily.
hours
holding
Japanese imports from Canada
* a.'so point
pa conditions through- out that salt re.
also expected mannerisms by Phil Ford and were 35 percent higher at $153,nars. He
water pene-
Pacific Tuna Test
Richmond. Firemen Escape
Death from Flaming Funnel
Prince to Attend Meet
Japan Worried Moul Exodus of Scientists
Export Volume Returns
To Pre-War Level
launch Build More Salt Roads' Drive in Japan
-mry but will also serve ita uon.
Takarazukas Set For
Sullivan Show Rerun
on several committees, Mimi Hines.
585,000.
N
IO
THE NEW CANADIAN
Vol. XXIV
1960
West Coast Nisei Honored
Transient Jailed For
Assault on Issei Woman
-A tran-
Fore
er appears.
of
’Oil!
is
ard
■est
ree
eat
ful as he was s'
food on the
^nor.
Hall then m
go to Mrs.
ni and hit
nor in the face,
down kicked i
nt
thigh.
ile was hustled outside by tw
local residents, and RCMT arriv
ed on the scene and jailed him.
r?’
Photo courtesy James Kakutani. Vancouver
Fishermen's Union Ask
May Place Low Tender
To Fill Subway Car Order
A trip to Japan was contem
plated by the Toronto Transit
Commission this week in the
event the low bidder for $40,000,000 worth of subway cars for the
Bloor-University subway line is
a men i
Wei far,
his me
when the proprietor
i nd
les
at
rill
tch
TORONTO, ONT.
W. E. P. Duncan. TTC general
umger of subway construction,
obtained specifications prepara
tory to bidding on subway cars,
and some electrical equipment for
the project may come from that
country.
The commission has already
traveled to Hamilton and Mont
real to view facilities of various
companies for making subway
cars, and it authorized a trip to
Philadelphia for the same .pur-
:* number of European corn
obtain
first hand knowledge of
Visiting subway car companies
before the October closing date
for bids is not an influence to men
who cannot be influenced, com
mented TTC vice-chairman Allan
Lamport.
”11 the low bidder is from Ja
pan Metro can buy us all one
way tickets,” laughed Commis-
Just Jottings
Now U-2 Salmon?
M>LI TOPS IK THEIR FIELD and off to prove their abilities were
Controller William Allen ques
LONDON.—Workers at a fish
Miss .Marge Iwasaki and Mr. Thomas Kakinuma seen with Mr.
tioned the propriety of visiting
George Isniwara (centre) President, of the host organization the
companies that may bid on the factory near the far eastern town
of Okhotsk in the Soviet Union
^ncouver JCCA. Miss Iwasaki is currently with the Canadian swim
VANCOUVER. — B.C. fisher
have discovered a Siberian salmon
ming contingent at the Rome Olympics. Mr. Kakinuma, artist, is men asked the federal govern
Years of Study
marked with two discs saying in
in Mexico furthering his studies. The partv in their honor was held ment to help in the exploration
Russian: “Please return to Wash
prior to their departure at the Waldorf Hotel in Vancouver.
Commissioner*
Ford
Brand
said
of the tuna potential of the Paci
ington
University, Seattle. USA,”
fic.
The United Fishermen and Al termine the marketing conditions.
‘‘If we just sit hero we. will know Aug. 23. It was thought that the
fish was marked in the area of
ed in a letter to Fisheries Minis nothing,” he added.
the Aleutians and hud made the
John
Inglis.
TTC
general
man
ter MacLean that, tuna , could be
long journey through the western
ager
of
operations,
said
officials
caught by seiners previously used
Pacific
tlie Sea of
of
his
department
have
for
the.
in the defunct herring industrv
Okhotsk
"The
seiners would be
RICHMOND, B.C.—Two fisher Tab him. Then down I went.
ideal ft
fishing,” said the
men fell into funnel of flame
‘T thought at first I had lost
'Mule fighting a blaze in a peat him, then I saw him enveloped in union.
The UFAWU suggested six of
MARBURG, Germany. ■—More Canadian Senators To
storage shed last Saturday.
flames as though he
inside the
should
than 500 historians of religion are Attend Confab in Tokyo
Time after time they tried to a furnace.
hired, with each crew member on scheduled to attend the 10th In
claw their way up the eight foot
“I could just see his outline
c wage of $400 a month, ternational Congress for Re
OTTAWA.—Two senators and
moss of crumbling bales of. peat.
Orange flame was all round him.”
payment
for
production.
four
members of the Canadian
ligious
History
here
Sept.
11
but each time the peat gave
Oikawa himself was standing Each einer should take a de- through 17. Among them will be Commons will leave next month
"ay and they tumbled back again. almost clear of the flames in the
Prince Mikasa, the Japanese Em for a 10-day conference in Tokyo.
Colleagues finally pulled both tunnel and managed to .pull Lasko p a r t m e n t observer.
The
union
said
B.C.
now
The delegation, drawn from all
imperors’ younger brother, who
men irom the pit.
from the heart of the blaze.
ports most of her tuna, while the teaches religious history at To parties, will attend the 49th con
By then Jackie Lasko, 23, 454
Said Lasko, “I would be dead Soviet Union and Japan are both
ference of the Inter-Parliamen
nompson Road had been burned if it was not for Tommy. It was taking advantages of the huge kyo University, according to an tary Union, an organization of
announcement in the bulletin of,
on the face and neck and Tommy close. I’m still shaking.”
Pacific tuna potential.
non-cabinet representatives
of
the German Tourist Association.
- iKawa, 42, 2340 Smith Crescent
more
than
50
national
parlia
an tne legs.
ments,
including
Russia
’
s
Su
It happened at a $50,000 fire at
preme Soviet.
estem Peat Co. Ltd., 1961
On the agenda will be the pro
' astnnnster Highway.
blems
of fluctuating prices, dis
TOKYO.
—
Japanese
spokesmen
have
been
invested
in
building
an
which
cut
down
even
more
the
Ine two men were standing on
armament
and the preservation
, e? of peat inside the 800-foot- are voicing a cultural complaint, atomic energy research institute time available for research.
of
parliamentary
democracy in
that is often heard in Canada— at Tokai Village, north of Tokyo,
During his stay at Princeton
torage shed,
too many of the best brains are but little has been done to ensure he lectured from six to eight
nown to them the fire was being lured out of the country.
that universities obtain the ex hours a week with the remainder
waY along a tunnel
The Weekly Yomiuri says most pensive equipment necessary for of the time free for research, and
'
bouses a conveyer belt be0“ tic oases on which thev were of, Japan’s authoritative pure scientific faculties today. The re- had equipment far superior to
mathematicians are already in the suit is that more and more Japa that available in Tokyo.
In comparison he received for
-■XX^e!^** ^le wooden roof of United" States—40 Japanese nu nese scientists are taking jobs
clear physicists are in the United with U.S. universities or business the nine-month school
in
S^ve way and Lasko States and another 20 in Europe
Japan
he
was
paid
$12,000
in
the
“Oppea through
TOKYO. — Japan’s post-war
TV°
—and now the trend is spreading
Most of
a n fl U.S. In addition he attended sum
27 ‘ un Quoted Oikawa, father to electronics.
economy
has finally reached the
thematicians now taking jobs mer seminars for which he was
;
aying
“
Lasko
fell
point
where
exports surpassed the
Two
years
ago
the
government
sondo
with considerable also paid.
ight and I went to of former prime minister Nobu
pre-war
average
of the vears
y insist that they
Osaka Municipal University,
suke Kishi announced a compre
erelv to earn more which has. always been highly re 1934-6.
A “white paper” issued by the
hensive policy to improve scien ni oncy, but because Japan simply garded as a leader in Japanese
T^ T^PAN. The Ocean tific and technological education
Japanese
Ministry of Interna
does not offer the facilities or theoretical physics, has suffered
Q
^ailing from Vancou- and encourage private industry -pare
tional
Trade
and Industry* shows
need to continue
August 29 destined for Ja- to expand research, either co
that
exports
reached a record
(continued on page eight)
^ 1 resident Wilson is sail- operatively or individually. But
total
of
$3,456,000,000
in 1959, an
example of the scientific
increase
of
20
percent
over 1958.
‘2 t^X Prancisco on Sep- since then results have been dis
nt is Professor Tatsuo
• destined for Japan.
Imports also increased 19 per
appointing. Considerable sums Ka wad a. formerly with the Tokyo
cent to $3,599,000,000, second only
sity of Technology. Three
to the record 1957 peak of $4,283,he went to the U.S.
.’ears ago
;
000,000.
=t the: invitation of Princeton
sity. He returned to Japan
NEW YORK.—The all-girl Ta
Sharp Change
Tokyo -The Japan Monopoly
last vear. but is now re- karazuka Dance Theatre troupe’s
nr
The sharp increase in Japanese
to overcome the Corporation’s an
television appearance with Ed exports was largely credited to
wil] soon launch an
ca ^Paign to popularize nual financial deficit, amounting
:p at tne Sullivan last fall while they were a 51 percent increase in ship
to thousands of dollars.
America in New York on tour- will be re- ments to the United States for a
holic
'•ion of salt roads.
tele
Su nd , Aug. 23.
The cost of a salt road is only
’KPoration_ recently comtotal value of 1,030,000,000. As a
The hour-long
how will be result,
b^213^^!6 study into one-third that of the cheapest
radition
Research Cut
seen
tion-wide
ver the CBS al trade surplus with Japan on
?f usin= salt*in the paved road and is free of dust and
networK.
^1 °I roa<^ throughout mud and retains its smoothness
ve
the foreign exchange basis for
Seven dances were performed the first time since 1951.
after
each
rainstorm.
- and are satisfied with
)irv ms
1
. During by the group v him <
Japanese exports to Canada in
Experts point out the hardness
m gutters, 1959 were one-tenth of the U.S.
^n one million tons of of salt is similar to concr
n Tokvo
d
and the amount at a total of $114,312,000.
f^t'apable and the Corhilarious
on
Japanese
Ts its use will not onlv 400 cars daily.
hours
holding
Japanese imports from Canada
* a.'so point
pa conditions through- out that salt re.
also expected mannerisms by Phil Ford and were 35 percent higher at $153,nars. He
water pene-
Pacific Tuna Test
Richmond. Firemen Escape
Death from Flaming Funnel
Prince to Attend Meet
Japan Worried Moul Exodus of Scientists
Export Volume Returns
To Pre-War Level
launch Build More Salt Roads' Drive in Japan
-mry but will also serve ita uon.
Takarazukas Set For
Sullivan Show Rerun
on several committees, Mimi Hines.
585,000.
Page 2
PAGE 2
________ THE NEW CANADIAN___________________
spoors
Saturday, August 27 ]
Regent Press Giants Capture Opener of Toronto
Nisei League Finals at Earlscourt by One Point
CKBBA Asked to Judo Tourney at CNE; Hatashita
By TOSH SAKAMOTO
Regents combined a pair of walks,
Raking keen, advantage of op a pair of singles, and two costlv STORE CLERK,
position errors, Regent Press Main Auto miscues,, to count five plant. Exoeriebig^runs in the second inning.
By LIZ PEARCE
enthusiastic and anxiously await Giants went on to take the open
Main Auto picked away maner of the Toronto Nisei Baseball
A’ale Help wint^
The sport of judo has gained ing the first judo tournament held League best of three finals last ^Ng single runs in the second,
It hopes that in future
third and fourth frames. The de
considerable* interest as support there.
experienced' —
years
it
may build up to become Sunday from Main Auto, 6-5 at
fending
champions. Regent Press cleanlng oAt.’ptA -t,
has shown in various centres
Earlscourt
Park.
‘
Giants, added their sixth final and onto).
tli rough out the country. Now, one of the highlights of the CNE
Allowing their hosts to open
and
also
a
top
drawing
card
which
winning tally in the fourth on an MALE CLERK and TRUCK "dRU"""
whenever there is an exhibition or
the scoring with a run in the first,
error and manager Sumi Tomi- for north end
sports display to be held, the judo committee members are forever
-a-.I U”'’
RU. 3-4255
.-.•
hiro’s clutch single.
association of that district is
The
tournament
will
be
chaired
A single by Fred Nishimura
called upon to give a demonstra
by OB BA Vice-President Frank
and a two-bagger by John. Nishi ^“.“^ Help W5
tion or hold a small tournament.
One of the world’s outstanding Hatashita, 4 dan, who is the mostmura resulted in single tallv for
SINGLE GIRL
—
Main Autos in theii-'half of the Bathurst
annual exhibitions, the Canadian capable judoka in eastern Canada
and E-^ a .or
to
be
selected
to
run
the
first
sixth cutting Regent’s margin to RU. 2-1501 (To-cV
National Exhibition here in Tor
onto, will be holding the first an event in this world exhibition. Dr.
just one run. But the rally was
All persons interested in bowlnual judo championship in the Tats Hori, 2 dan of the Hatashita
cut short as an attempted squeeze
Rooms to Let
Coliseum Building on Thursday. club here will be emcee. Referees !nS\ Lr the Toronto Nisei Mixed play failed to materialize for the
Major
BowlingLeague
on
Sunday
TWO unfurnished -c3-;
tying score.
September Sth at S:00 p.m.—ad and judges are Mr. M. Umetsu 4
welcome. Danforth c^ "I cxw
afternoons
are
requested
to
call
dan,
President
of
CKBBA,
S_
Na
mission free.
Sab Seki, who allowed only |dct. Parking outionaG n7».
S?.ig Nishikawa at LE. 1-3661;
........ ...
The tournament is sanctioned kahara 4 dan, M. Sakata 3 dan,
seven Regent safeties, all singles,' (Toronto). ’ *
by the Canadian Kodokwan Black George Teshima and Mils Tamino, Kim. Kono at HO. 5-8491 or Aileen deserved a better fate as he UNFURNISHfflVRMU
Belt Association and will be of 2 dan. Due to the short notice of Tahara at HO. 3-6879.
struck out ten enemy batsman.
and St. Clair diskicUp^
Bowlers from last season who
ficiated by the Ontario Black Belt the tournament and limited num
Tom Sumi collected two of the Uoronto).
Association. Competition will be ber of participants allowed, the have not yet been contacted are Regent hits while Bob Miwa, Vic
open to black belts, non-black sports committee wishes to apolo asked to contact any of the above. Kitamura, Sumi Tomihiro, ’Roy
Starting- date will be Septem Tanaka and Frank Nishimura
belts and junior members 14- gize to CKBBA members, who.
ber 18th.
due
to
inconveniences,
are
unable
years and under. This tournament
managed the others.
is open to CKBBA members only. to compete.
Fred Nishimura gathered two
It is hoped that next year,
B.WllgTEE and SOLICIT03
There will also be judo and ju
of the Main Auto’s six safeties.
jitsu demonstration at the tour everyone who wishes to particip
John Nishimura with a double,'
HOT ABY PUBLIC
ate will be accomodated.
nament.
Gen Hamada, Mr. Mitch Nishi
Suite 513 Temple Buildiag
There will also be a judo de
The executive of the Sport’s
mura and Sab Seki with singles
monstration
on
Athletic
Day
Committee of the CNE are verv
each, were the other Main Auto
September 3rd at the BA Rest
TORONTO
hitters.
A Japanese rugby Motball
Station which is situated near
ENI.
6-3323
—
Res.: RO. 7-3(27
Regent Press Giants—Frank
Lakeshore Road, and to the rig-ht team will tour Canada for g'ames NTshimura (6) Sumi Tomihiro
of the CNE Grandstand. The de with teams in Victoria, Vancou and Eddie Hisaki (6) Kaz Nishi
monstrations will be performed ver, Toronto and Montreal.
mura.
It will be only the second such
by members of the Hatashita
Main Auto—Sab Seki and Sam
Judo Club every hour on the half tour by a rugby team from Japan, Matsuo.
hour from 1:30 p.m. until 4:30 and the last occasion was 30
TOMORROW: Main Auto vs C
Barrister & Solicitor
years ag’o.
p.m.
Regent
Press
Giants
at
Earls
Air-Ship-Bus-Rail
The Yawata Rugby Team, spon
Ton rs-Hotsl-Sightseeing
sored by Y awata Iron and’ Steel court Park, St. Clair and Lans
Travellers Cheques
Corporation, will bring a party downe Avenue beginning at 9:30 I
Brewin & McCallum
Obtainable
of 30 players and officials overTravel, Accident
seas in arrangement with the
| 372 Bay St.
—
Toronto
card Baggage Insurance
British Columbia Rugby Union
f
EM. 3-43SI
and the Japan Rugby Associa
J1-VRLTON. —The Hamilton tion. All of the players are em
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Nisei bowling League season is ployed at the Yawata plants.
The schedule includes five allPassage arranged by Steamer or Air
approaching once again with the
staigames and one college team.
COMPLETE
League slated to start on Satur
1500 Dundas at Dufferin
The
games
are Wednesday, Sept.
Call for Reservations or
day, September 10th.
LE. 2-4267
INSURANCE COVERAGE
Those who are interested are 41 against a Vancouver team:
Saturday,
Sept.
24
in
Victoria:
Information—EM. 8-9934
LIFE—FIRE—THEFT—AUTO
asked to contact one of the fol
Fishing Tackle
Wednesday.
Sept.
28
in
Montreal:
lowing before Sept. 1st: Hank
Kondo at LI. 4-9593: Ted Sekine Saturday, October 1 in TorontoKIYO TAMURA
Soc ShintX at Saturday October 8 at University
of British Columbia: and ThursOffice CH. 7-5471—Res. PL. 9-8317 |
801 or Kay Shimoji at JA.
K. Iwata Travel Service
. W. October 13 against, a pro
TORONTO
vincial team in Vancouver.
Club to Demonstrate Gentle Art of Self-Defense
Nisei Mixed Majors
Need Bowlers Now
Lucien C. Kurata
Yawata Footbail Team
To Play Goodwill Games
Travel Arrangements
F. A. BREWIN, Q.C
£ Cameron, Weldon
More Keggers Asked
To Sign in Hamilton
OSCAR'S
PHOTO & SPORT
I. KAMEOKA
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
113 McCaul St. TORONTO
179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4, B.C. MU. 2-4641
WE HAVE NO.
SERVICE CHARGES
226 QUEEN ST. WEST, TORONTO
EM. 8-4847 — OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
RE,Il ESBTE long & kami realty ltd
kami insurance agencies ltd imm
c^tfce Kaniitakaka-ia
Paul K. Asada, D.C., KD.5
♦Doctor c: Chiropractic
728A ST. CLAIR AVE. WEST
CONTINENTAL ACCEPTANCE
(i/2
CORPORATION LTD.
If No Answer
181 EAST PENDER ST.
VANCOUVER 4, B.C.
MU. 2-4641
BE. 3-3869
:
TORONTO
1
DAVE’S
SPECIALIZING IN TV SERVICE
OPTICAL
TV & RADIO
SERVICE
OPTOMETRISTS
SERVICE
DOMINION
Travel Office
46 LILYWOOD RD.,
TORONTO 19
Phone LE. 4-7954-5-6
1338 Queen Street West Toronto 3
I
EM. 8-6451
Toronto
55 Wellington Street West
PHONE RU. 1-1002
ll!R-fflSiMi:«t-
118 West Hastings St.
OWNED BY HAROLD MAEDA
Azum-—
i
TORONTO JCCA LABOR DAY WEEKEND
SOFTBALL TOUBNAMENT
torcnto^^^
^a®
hcturdcY. 9:30 0.=..- Sunday 1:00 p.m.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 8:30—12
DETROIT, CHICAGO & TORONTO
SalLd-yAs^ JC/^
SUSY
TOURNEY DANCE
PLAYERS SOCIAL AT BUDDHIST CHURCH HALL
Sunday, 9:00 p.:
I
I
Cell
«
I
Or Bringing Some
one over?
We represent all
lines including
American President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacific
and Pan American
Write or call for
full information and
rates.
AU. GAMES Ar
6-8220
(or leave message at AL. 5-1743)
TRAVELLING
TO JAPAN
I
Block West of Christie)
Telephone LE.
(formerly - Pathey Finance Co. Ltd.)
Personal & Commercial Loans
res. ALpine 5-2302
'
SI.00
SI.25 AT YMHA AUDITORIUM
________ THE NEW CANADIAN___________________
spoors
Saturday, August 27 ]
Regent Press Giants Capture Opener of Toronto
Nisei League Finals at Earlscourt by One Point
CKBBA Asked to Judo Tourney at CNE; Hatashita
By TOSH SAKAMOTO
Regents combined a pair of walks,
Raking keen, advantage of op a pair of singles, and two costlv STORE CLERK,
position errors, Regent Press Main Auto miscues,, to count five plant. Exoeriebig^runs in the second inning.
By LIZ PEARCE
enthusiastic and anxiously await Giants went on to take the open
Main Auto picked away maner of the Toronto Nisei Baseball
A’ale Help wint^
The sport of judo has gained ing the first judo tournament held League best of three finals last ^Ng single runs in the second,
It hopes that in future
third and fourth frames. The de
considerable* interest as support there.
experienced' —
years
it
may build up to become Sunday from Main Auto, 6-5 at
fending
champions. Regent Press cleanlng oAt.’ptA -t,
has shown in various centres
Earlscourt
Park.
‘
Giants, added their sixth final and onto).
tli rough out the country. Now, one of the highlights of the CNE
Allowing their hosts to open
and
also
a
top
drawing
card
which
winning tally in the fourth on an MALE CLERK and TRUCK "dRU"""
whenever there is an exhibition or
the scoring with a run in the first,
error and manager Sumi Tomi- for north end
sports display to be held, the judo committee members are forever
-a-.I U”'’
RU. 3-4255
.-.•
hiro’s clutch single.
association of that district is
The
tournament
will
be
chaired
A single by Fred Nishimura
called upon to give a demonstra
by OB BA Vice-President Frank
and a two-bagger by John. Nishi ^“.“^ Help W5
tion or hold a small tournament.
One of the world’s outstanding Hatashita, 4 dan, who is the mostmura resulted in single tallv for
SINGLE GIRL
—
Main Autos in theii-'half of the Bathurst
annual exhibitions, the Canadian capable judoka in eastern Canada
and E-^ a .or
to
be
selected
to
run
the
first
sixth cutting Regent’s margin to RU. 2-1501 (To-cV
National Exhibition here in Tor
onto, will be holding the first an event in this world exhibition. Dr.
just one run. But the rally was
All persons interested in bowlnual judo championship in the Tats Hori, 2 dan of the Hatashita
cut short as an attempted squeeze
Rooms to Let
Coliseum Building on Thursday. club here will be emcee. Referees !nS\ Lr the Toronto Nisei Mixed play failed to materialize for the
Major
BowlingLeague
on
Sunday
TWO unfurnished -c3-;
tying score.
September Sth at S:00 p.m.—ad and judges are Mr. M. Umetsu 4
welcome. Danforth c^ "I cxw
afternoons
are
requested
to
call
dan,
President
of
CKBBA,
S_
Na
mission free.
Sab Seki, who allowed only |dct. Parking outionaG n7».
S?.ig Nishikawa at LE. 1-3661;
........ ...
The tournament is sanctioned kahara 4 dan, M. Sakata 3 dan,
seven Regent safeties, all singles,' (Toronto). ’ *
by the Canadian Kodokwan Black George Teshima and Mils Tamino, Kim. Kono at HO. 5-8491 or Aileen deserved a better fate as he UNFURNISHfflVRMU
Belt Association and will be of 2 dan. Due to the short notice of Tahara at HO. 3-6879.
struck out ten enemy batsman.
and St. Clair diskicUp^
Bowlers from last season who
ficiated by the Ontario Black Belt the tournament and limited num
Tom Sumi collected two of the Uoronto).
Association. Competition will be ber of participants allowed, the have not yet been contacted are Regent hits while Bob Miwa, Vic
open to black belts, non-black sports committee wishes to apolo asked to contact any of the above. Kitamura, Sumi Tomihiro, ’Roy
Starting- date will be Septem Tanaka and Frank Nishimura
belts and junior members 14- gize to CKBBA members, who.
ber 18th.
due
to
inconveniences,
are
unable
years and under. This tournament
managed the others.
is open to CKBBA members only. to compete.
Fred Nishimura gathered two
It is hoped that next year,
B.WllgTEE and SOLICIT03
There will also be judo and ju
of the Main Auto’s six safeties.
jitsu demonstration at the tour everyone who wishes to particip
John Nishimura with a double,'
HOT ABY PUBLIC
ate will be accomodated.
nament.
Gen Hamada, Mr. Mitch Nishi
Suite 513 Temple Buildiag
There will also be a judo de
The executive of the Sport’s
mura and Sab Seki with singles
monstration
on
Athletic
Day
Committee of the CNE are verv
each, were the other Main Auto
September 3rd at the BA Rest
TORONTO
hitters.
A Japanese rugby Motball
Station which is situated near
ENI.
6-3323
—
Res.: RO. 7-3(27
Regent Press Giants—Frank
Lakeshore Road, and to the rig-ht team will tour Canada for g'ames NTshimura (6) Sumi Tomihiro
of the CNE Grandstand. The de with teams in Victoria, Vancou and Eddie Hisaki (6) Kaz Nishi
monstrations will be performed ver, Toronto and Montreal.
mura.
It will be only the second such
by members of the Hatashita
Main Auto—Sab Seki and Sam
Judo Club every hour on the half tour by a rugby team from Japan, Matsuo.
hour from 1:30 p.m. until 4:30 and the last occasion was 30
TOMORROW: Main Auto vs C
Barrister & Solicitor
years ag’o.
p.m.
Regent
Press
Giants
at
Earls
Air-Ship-Bus-Rail
The Yawata Rugby Team, spon
Ton rs-Hotsl-Sightseeing
sored by Y awata Iron and’ Steel court Park, St. Clair and Lans
Travellers Cheques
Corporation, will bring a party downe Avenue beginning at 9:30 I
Brewin & McCallum
Obtainable
of 30 players and officials overTravel, Accident
seas in arrangement with the
| 372 Bay St.
—
Toronto
card Baggage Insurance
British Columbia Rugby Union
f
EM. 3-43SI
and the Japan Rugby Associa
J1-VRLTON. —The Hamilton tion. All of the players are em
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Nisei bowling League season is ployed at the Yawata plants.
The schedule includes five allPassage arranged by Steamer or Air
approaching once again with the
staigames and one college team.
COMPLETE
League slated to start on Satur
1500 Dundas at Dufferin
The
games
are Wednesday, Sept.
Call for Reservations or
day, September 10th.
LE. 2-4267
INSURANCE COVERAGE
Those who are interested are 41 against a Vancouver team:
Saturday,
Sept.
24
in
Victoria:
Information—EM. 8-9934
LIFE—FIRE—THEFT—AUTO
asked to contact one of the fol
Fishing Tackle
Wednesday.
Sept.
28
in
Montreal:
lowing before Sept. 1st: Hank
Kondo at LI. 4-9593: Ted Sekine Saturday, October 1 in TorontoKIYO TAMURA
Soc ShintX at Saturday October 8 at University
of British Columbia: and ThursOffice CH. 7-5471—Res. PL. 9-8317 |
801 or Kay Shimoji at JA.
K. Iwata Travel Service
. W. October 13 against, a pro
TORONTO
vincial team in Vancouver.
Club to Demonstrate Gentle Art of Self-Defense
Nisei Mixed Majors
Need Bowlers Now
Lucien C. Kurata
Yawata Footbail Team
To Play Goodwill Games
Travel Arrangements
F. A. BREWIN, Q.C
£ Cameron, Weldon
More Keggers Asked
To Sign in Hamilton
OSCAR'S
PHOTO & SPORT
I. KAMEOKA
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
113 McCaul St. TORONTO
179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4, B.C. MU. 2-4641
WE HAVE NO.
SERVICE CHARGES
226 QUEEN ST. WEST, TORONTO
EM. 8-4847 — OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
RE,Il ESBTE long & kami realty ltd
kami insurance agencies ltd imm
c^tfce Kaniitakaka-ia
Paul K. Asada, D.C., KD.5
♦Doctor c: Chiropractic
728A ST. CLAIR AVE. WEST
CONTINENTAL ACCEPTANCE
(i/2
CORPORATION LTD.
If No Answer
181 EAST PENDER ST.
VANCOUVER 4, B.C.
MU. 2-4641
BE. 3-3869
:
TORONTO
1
DAVE’S
SPECIALIZING IN TV SERVICE
OPTICAL
TV & RADIO
SERVICE
OPTOMETRISTS
SERVICE
DOMINION
Travel Office
46 LILYWOOD RD.,
TORONTO 19
Phone LE. 4-7954-5-6
1338 Queen Street West Toronto 3
I
EM. 8-6451
Toronto
55 Wellington Street West
PHONE RU. 1-1002
ll!R-fflSiMi:«t-
118 West Hastings St.
OWNED BY HAROLD MAEDA
Azum-—
i
TORONTO JCCA LABOR DAY WEEKEND
SOFTBALL TOUBNAMENT
torcnto^^^
^a®
hcturdcY. 9:30 0.=..- Sunday 1:00 p.m.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 8:30—12
DETROIT, CHICAGO & TORONTO
SalLd-yAs^ JC/^
SUSY
TOURNEY DANCE
PLAYERS SOCIAL AT BUDDHIST CHURCH HALL
Sunday, 9:00 p.:
I
I
Cell
«
I
Or Bringing Some
one over?
We represent all
lines including
American President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacific
and Pan American
Write or call for
full information and
rates.
AU. GAMES Ar
6-8220
(or leave message at AL. 5-1743)
TRAVELLING
TO JAPAN
I
Block West of Christie)
Telephone LE.
(formerly - Pathey Finance Co. Ltd.)
Personal & Commercial Loans
res. ALpine 5-2302
'
SI.00
SI.25 AT YMHA AUDITORIUM
Page 3
August 27,2960
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PAGE 8
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127 EAST PENDER STREET
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Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
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Page 7
Saturday, August 27, 1960
THE NEW CANADIAN
PERSONAL NOTES ACROSS CANADA
i st 11
Surrey
wan
Elaine Masako Weds With Ken
HOGG-KAMEOKA
Id at the
on the
d McWilliams offi-
Engagements
Air
Toronto. Ontario mi o'
ot. ma ur. k. Shimizu of ti annot
ed the marriage vows of June
Atul Hogg- <>n
1960 afCci-
i M
Mis
in her 57th rear
July 27, I960
at Vancouver
1 irncipais are daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. 1 okue Kameoka and the
son of Mrs. Hazel Wao-o-
was hold on the
non
Buddhist
\\ ith Reverend S, Ikuta
Interment took place.
: Cemetery.
Li EDA-OKASH IMO
Toronto, Ontario
moi
kahasm
CALENDAR
Kimbourne Park United Church,
loronto, was the scene of the kichi
wedding of Marge Okashimo to Alberta
Air.. Tosh Toshiro Uyeda.
The
Reverend Armstrong- perform
ed the ceremony on” Saturday 13. 196
July 30, 1960.
'1 he recent bride is the daughter Obituaries
of Mr. and Airs. Kamezo Okashi
mo, and the groom is the son of
GOTO
Mr. and Mrs. Seniiro Uvedn nil
Air
of Toronto.
Following- the reception, the
Toronto, hi
b-Toronlo
Births
Air. and Mrs. Ken Kameoka
(nee Mitsi Hamaguchi) of Toron
to. Ontario are happy to announce
the. arrival of their son, Richard
Keith, on Wednesday, August 10,
I960 at Scarboro General Hos
pital, Richard Keith arrived at 5
pounds. 11U ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hideo Mi
toma (nee Shirley Fujimoto) of
Kapuskasing, Ontario are happy
to announce the birth of their son,
IM AI- HOSAKI. Toronto, Ontario
Donald Harry Sadao, on Sunday,
Kiaine Masako Hosaki and Mr. Kenneth Takeshi Iwai exchanged August 21 1960 at St. Michael’s
redding vows recently at Glenmount United Church. Toronto. The Hospital. Toronto, Both mother
pimcipals are the daughter of Air. and Airs. George Hosaki and tire and son are doing fine.
->on of Mr. and Airs. Rokuro Iwai, all of this city.
Air. and Mr
Toshio Tosh
Omoto (nee Wase Omori) of Tor
onto. Ontario arc happy to an
nounce the arrival of Susan Ka
zuko on Friday, August 12, 1960
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 1960
at
Women’s College Hospital.
10:30 a.m., Sunday Church School
oMaian
-neral
Lr bo;
September
1-11—Toronto,
O'ronno-
10:30 a.m., Nisei and Centennial Joint Service
"DEPENDABLE PEOPLE"
Rev. M. P. Smith, M.A., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
@
fl)I Dovercourt Rd., Toront.
♦
*
Charles and Masako Yoshida
(nee Miyazaki) of Toronto, On
tario are happy to announce the
Hoy
3—Tor onto
10
taticnal
I
!’11(
9:00
6th from
Lanes.
It rr.C'ia! P
.::■>! I’ 43 p.jn
HUH-t at Kwon:
Th !rve( gihmBs
Toronto
I
3—-Toronto
to contac
Takemoto
Kay Sat<
early as
K.
t hcr
ideal
1 l7St
it Alpim.' 5-45S7 :
ssible. Thanks load
4-.. Toronto
cutina to
Aiua
north
oi
> at in«!ittU0. 75c
.-saner, of softball
ne I.U0 p.m., last
Toronto
Toronto
■r a '-i! at Buddhua
1 (M.
' N ' ri GH! Club
Ml Coif Court:..
>y _ ot Nmci Golf
mil. Banquet to
~«wsiSSSj^W®
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
y af
a m.
33—Toronto
Chance to Bowl H)-Pin
In Van coiiver League
of the United States.
it Darien
Rev. Tsuji Guest
■Toronto
5.—Toronto
At Sangha Anniversary
6—Vancouver
v <1 n
:'
ie Sangha organization of
the Toronto Buddhist Church is
observing- its Hhh anniversary on
September 11th
Takashi Tsuji. f< iding father of
now, Buddhist
Education Di rector■ of the Buddhist Churches of
guest speaker.
The public is
invited
to the welcome
from S;tiO p.m.
' 0.. -Hamilton
nis<-:
howling
1otam Lanes,
inq league start-
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER — SOLICITOR
notary
Room
103
WA. l-MOJ
OX. 8-2280 (Ro«.)
• Colley© St., Toront*
GIVE THAT GIFT THAT IS SURE TO PLEASE . . . FOR ALL OCCASIONS
nJous Savings . . FTC.
DISCOUNT OUTLET at Tr.
Phone Chris Shinohara
®
EM. 6-5889 or LE. 2-1595
SUITE 304I
229 YONGE STREET
TORONTO, ONTARIO
Watches . . Diamonds . . Transistor Radios . . Parker Pens
LORRAINE JEWELLERY COMPANY
SAY IT WITH
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
GOLDEN DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
SPECIAL ATTENTION FOR TAKEOUT ORDERS
Open Noon to 3 a.m.
EM. 8-2475
—
Orders to Take Out
13IA Dundas St W„ Toronto
DUNDHS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
@ SAKURA RICE
0 MARUKIN SHOYU
$ VINEGAR
5 SUGAR
@ EGGS
3 SUKIYAKI MEAT
© MANJU
g MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
PHONE EM 4-7692
a!
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Distinctive
Floral Arrangements
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
Buy Your House Through
The Most Successful Realtor in Toronto
M. YANAGISAWA
representing
TORONTO, Ont
•
HU. 7-3361
Res.: LE. 4-1427 or OX. 9-3776
JON ONODERA
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
HU. 9-4654—HU. 1-8805
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
oiverj
(Business)
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W
Toronto
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM 2-0029
For Reservations
EM 2-4322
THE NEW CANADIAN
PERSONAL NOTES ACROSS CANADA
i st 11
Surrey
wan
Elaine Masako Weds With Ken
HOGG-KAMEOKA
Id at the
on the
d McWilliams offi-
Engagements
Air
Toronto. Ontario mi o'
ot. ma ur. k. Shimizu of ti annot
ed the marriage vows of June
Atul Hogg- <>n
1960 afCci-
i M
Mis
in her 57th rear
July 27, I960
at Vancouver
1 irncipais are daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. 1 okue Kameoka and the
son of Mrs. Hazel Wao-o-
was hold on the
non
Buddhist
\\ ith Reverend S, Ikuta
Interment took place.
: Cemetery.
Li EDA-OKASH IMO
Toronto, Ontario
moi
kahasm
CALENDAR
Kimbourne Park United Church,
loronto, was the scene of the kichi
wedding of Marge Okashimo to Alberta
Air.. Tosh Toshiro Uyeda.
The
Reverend Armstrong- perform
ed the ceremony on” Saturday 13. 196
July 30, 1960.
'1 he recent bride is the daughter Obituaries
of Mr. and Airs. Kamezo Okashi
mo, and the groom is the son of
GOTO
Mr. and Mrs. Seniiro Uvedn nil
Air
of Toronto.
Following- the reception, the
Toronto, hi
b-Toronlo
Births
Air. and Mrs. Ken Kameoka
(nee Mitsi Hamaguchi) of Toron
to. Ontario are happy to announce
the. arrival of their son, Richard
Keith, on Wednesday, August 10,
I960 at Scarboro General Hos
pital, Richard Keith arrived at 5
pounds. 11U ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hideo Mi
toma (nee Shirley Fujimoto) of
Kapuskasing, Ontario are happy
to announce the birth of their son,
IM AI- HOSAKI. Toronto, Ontario
Donald Harry Sadao, on Sunday,
Kiaine Masako Hosaki and Mr. Kenneth Takeshi Iwai exchanged August 21 1960 at St. Michael’s
redding vows recently at Glenmount United Church. Toronto. The Hospital. Toronto, Both mother
pimcipals are the daughter of Air. and Airs. George Hosaki and tire and son are doing fine.
->on of Mr. and Airs. Rokuro Iwai, all of this city.
Air. and Mr
Toshio Tosh
Omoto (nee Wase Omori) of Tor
onto. Ontario arc happy to an
nounce the arrival of Susan Ka
zuko on Friday, August 12, 1960
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 1960
at
Women’s College Hospital.
10:30 a.m., Sunday Church School
oMaian
-neral
Lr bo;
September
1-11—Toronto,
O'ronno-
10:30 a.m., Nisei and Centennial Joint Service
"DEPENDABLE PEOPLE"
Rev. M. P. Smith, M.A., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
@
fl)I Dovercourt Rd., Toront.
♦
*
Charles and Masako Yoshida
(nee Miyazaki) of Toronto, On
tario are happy to announce the
Hoy
3—Tor onto
10
taticnal
I
!’11(
9:00
6th from
Lanes.
It rr.C'ia! P
.::■>! I’ 43 p.jn
HUH-t at Kwon:
Th !rve( gihmBs
Toronto
I
3—-Toronto
to contac
Takemoto
Kay Sat<
early as
K.
t hcr
ideal
1 l7St
it Alpim.' 5-45S7 :
ssible. Thanks load
4-.. Toronto
cutina to
Aiua
north
oi
> at in«!ittU0. 75c
.-saner, of softball
ne I.U0 p.m., last
Toronto
Toronto
■r a '-i! at Buddhua
1 (M.
' N ' ri GH! Club
Ml Coif Court:..
>y _ ot Nmci Golf
mil. Banquet to
~«wsiSSSj^W®
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
y af
a m.
33—Toronto
Chance to Bowl H)-Pin
In Van coiiver League
of the United States.
it Darien
Rev. Tsuji Guest
■Toronto
5.—Toronto
At Sangha Anniversary
6—Vancouver
v <1 n
:'
ie Sangha organization of
the Toronto Buddhist Church is
observing- its Hhh anniversary on
September 11th
Takashi Tsuji. f< iding father of
now, Buddhist
Education Di rector■ of the Buddhist Churches of
guest speaker.
The public is
invited
to the welcome
from S;tiO p.m.
' 0.. -Hamilton
nis<-:
howling
1otam Lanes,
inq league start-
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER — SOLICITOR
notary
Room
103
WA. l-MOJ
OX. 8-2280 (Ro«.)
• Colley© St., Toront*
GIVE THAT GIFT THAT IS SURE TO PLEASE . . . FOR ALL OCCASIONS
nJous Savings . . FTC.
DISCOUNT OUTLET at Tr.
Phone Chris Shinohara
®
EM. 6-5889 or LE. 2-1595
SUITE 304I
229 YONGE STREET
TORONTO, ONTARIO
Watches . . Diamonds . . Transistor Radios . . Parker Pens
LORRAINE JEWELLERY COMPANY
SAY IT WITH
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
GOLDEN DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
SPECIAL ATTENTION FOR TAKEOUT ORDERS
Open Noon to 3 a.m.
EM. 8-2475
—
Orders to Take Out
13IA Dundas St W„ Toronto
DUNDHS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
@ SAKURA RICE
0 MARUKIN SHOYU
$ VINEGAR
5 SUGAR
@ EGGS
3 SUKIYAKI MEAT
© MANJU
g MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
PHONE EM 4-7692
a!
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Distinctive
Floral Arrangements
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
Buy Your House Through
The Most Successful Realtor in Toronto
M. YANAGISAWA
representing
TORONTO, Ont
•
HU. 7-3361
Res.: LE. 4-1427 or OX. 9-3776
JON ONODERA
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
HU. 9-4654—HU. 1-8805
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
oiverj
(Business)
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W
Toronto
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM 2-0029
For Reservations
EM 2-4322
Page 8
THE NEW CANADIAN
New U.S. Nisei Magazine Will Also Cover Canada
Brains Lured Away
(continued from page one)
THE NEW CANADIAN
Image, the new Japanese American Ne
Magazine
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each we
severely from foreign “raiding”
enough photography and glitter to cover the
as a medium of expression and news outlet
ana Canadian
of the Japanese. Though not on vital object, it m tne past two years. The bril
™d ^^ acceptable with lavish ideas on deliwrv liant 33-year-old physicist, Kaamong those of Japanese origin in Canada
Mr. Ld IragaMii, editor and publisher, has
in Osaka gained world-wide at
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
Japanese in Toronto under Japanese In Far wwav
tention,
is
now
with
the
Univer
amUdcS <h,ring the war ^^^’ We are told the Toron KEN MORI------------ Japanese Section Editor & Advertise,
° ?to j in thc JT’ issue comes in two parts and future issues. Write sity or Illinois. Professor YoichiJERRy KUTSUKAKE---------------- —English Section Editor
o include material on JCs across the country. Subscribers are Hven ro Namba, former chief of the
EM. 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W., TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
a special introductory price of 35.00 for the monthly 12 issues. Write university’s theoretical nhwsics
department is now with the Uni
to. Image, (><08 North Sheridan Road, ChicAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Department O'‘-wversity of Chicago, while ProfesStill with the books.
ice at Fortyor I oshio Yamaguchi is enThe author, raged in nuclear research in
Tatsuzo Ishikawa
of considerable interest but none so familiar
Geneva. These three men repre
to many “older’’ N
j translator, I
sented the top brains of the
yarns is a former Vancouve
■ who is
ROME.—A Japanese Olympic to Rome on August 15 to comoN-Osaka
university's
theoretical
Securities .in Tokyo. Nakavam
- said to
official
predicted the May dates presentation of Jason's
physics
department.
to translate as accurately as po ible. But this is perhaps where we
for
the
1964
Games in Tokyo will , Te hve subiidtted
It
is
estimated
that
in
theoretfeel the book fails. The English
»*n
is
almost
tryingat
times
be
adopted
shortly
by theTnterical
phy
alone
about
40
first—so adolescent it tends LoTmre.
7 l.nn t sesswn whkil opened
author has been wronged class Japanese are now work national Olympic Committee.
-^u^. 19,” Iwata said.
as Ishikawa is one o! <the best c
v Japanese novelists. Tie ing in the U.S. and another 20 in
Yukiaki Iwata, who was Ja
won the first Akutagawa Prize
A member of the Japan 0’vmEurope.
Japanese
industry
is
pan
’s advance representative at ■pic committee and also*of the'orin 1935. Since, his novels have
appealed to the Japanese for their being- affected in a similar way. the Rome Olympics, said he be
'dgor and sense of justice.
ganizing committee for the 1964
Last February, Leo Ezaki, one of lieves his country will win over- Games, Iwata arrived in RoT?
Resistance at Forty-Eight i
■>out a middle-aged man and his the country’s most brilliant young- whelmin
temptations
_ support for its propo- last December to studv ItaHar
<o
,ri
, and frustrations
........ as
uaiiyerous a°-e o
....... '■-istanee
hist* electronic research brains, accept sal to stag'e the 1964 Games iigirethods for organizing* a m^k’*
ed a job with a big U.S. manu May instead of the humid-Heat sports festival.
ho .
’ at iargt” as Wei! as the temptations of geisha. facturer of computers and busi of August.
He said that inquiries from
™i m
»7'"7' pot pout ri establishments, night-clubs, ciburets
and nude ait Mimios. but the message it purports to deliver is at ness machines. Ezaki was the in
The Slay dates are strongly op Tokyo had shown only about IO
once deep and philosophical. Though Ishikawa’s works are said to ventor of-the Ezaki diode, which posed by several Northern Euro per cent of some SO Olvmpic nais as re pean countries where the track tions are opposed to a May opeiinot'f 'H thi°nS p
ot th? immortal German, Goethe, we can- electronics experts
^
this m Resistance at I orty-Eight as the difficulty the read- volutionary as the transistor.
and field season does not norm hig date for the Tokyo Games.
'
fmd, though the setting and characters may be‘understood
ally get started until about that
Asked to name these nations
symbolically i> the Oxford
time.
English in this translation making
opposed to May dates, he named
this influence indistinguishable
Iwata said his country’s senior only Norway, Sweden. Denmark
Employed by the Sony Corpor
ation—which pioneered the boom representative on the IOC, 83- and Finland. He added that the
year-old Shingoro Takaishi, flew Japanese conferred with represen
we Japanese Canadians still high on the list of desirables ing Japanese transistor radio in
tatives of these nations nrior to
dustry
—
Ezaki
was
paid
8340
per
and if so, foi how long? One wonders when there is much dUconthe IOC session.
month.
This
is
a
big
salary
by
r^^^
who are ‘demanding Tanadianized”
It is because Japan still tends
“ Canadianiz ed ’ ’ Japanese standards, but is obvi
“I hope we made them realize
i
S:"lsei find their Canadian-born
to be weak in applied science that that all the people in Asia would
ously
a
fraction
of
what
he
could
M
tU e heavi*y on their ancestral wavs.
all
wavs This
the Government has been urging want the Games to be held in the
This all command in the U.S.
.ounds too familiar except lor the disrespect which now exists
sharp
expansion research facili spring,” Iwata declared.
Apart from dissatisfaction with
botwkm1 retiirm-°f an incident which happened
ties
and
in original research by
conditions,
“May is the month of cool
Xu
"
11 c-'onS *isei. A rumble occured in China- pay and working
industry.
(There have been veiled breezes
in Japan and it is drv.
mX Tl^
ago with about 35 participating in the young- Japanese scientists such as
government August is tremendously humid
aki (he is only 33) are unhappy threats that the
,e ot the
tamps
atewere
rumored
expanding for anv future
action
ho resuks
clash
beitor-than-bUck-cofU
“S?
S about the traditionalism, and might act to prevent Japanese and the worst month for sports.”
feudal overtones which still dom- firms relying- too much on foreign
It eyas reported that the* Scan
aad Sowing tension between these pre-adults. I would ima
gme
we
tlie
scientific patents and neglecting their own dinavian countries are known to
Nise, are so content there is nothing else to do
but quarrel among- scene. In unwersities and research
ourselves.
be against any start of the Tokyo
But unless some means of stop Games until their athletes have
laboratories, youth no matter how
brilliant. must still bow to age ping the steady draining away of had an adequate time for train
n
I .
approach left me a little jangled one day when an and length of service.
scientific talent can be worked ing.
Occidental man gingerly came to me and asked
In industry, at least, both the out, Japan’s progress into the age
if he could inspect
hair styles and Japanese furnisffX
^
government and business are be- of technology may be seriouslv
gining to recognize the dangers hampered.
PffilSr
w:ints his double eye lids removed to get that “far enb of the situation and there is a
The. Italian Government solved
el feet . We men may get into that fashion race vet.
growing* drive to change the the same problem by tripling J
THANK YOU
whole wag'e system from the old scholars salaries and the budget
I Mrs.
1 oshiko
Kobayashi.
basis of seniority and long serv for universities, but Japan can’t
Iwife
of
Kikuzo
Kobayashi
of
ice (under which a janitor with see any such solution in the near
jPort
Dover,
Ontario
has
reat) years’ service might be earn future.
iturned home after 12 weeks'
ing
more than the most brilliant
1OKTO. — A
black
market dakko-chan
than
would
her researcher with five years’ seiw(confinement in Women’s Colsprang up last week in sale of American counterpart go outdoors
lege Hospital. Toronto. Mr. and
ice) to one based on technical A LETTER READS. . .
dakko-chans—cuddly, little, pasiMrs. Kobayashi wish to express
without a hatbox.
Dakko-chan skill.
dt^ ,^°^s which caricature an
Editor:
deepest thanks to the friend
But in academic circles, old tra
African cannibal—when Tokyo even adorn the brooms of lonely
who
sent floxvers and person
Japanese housewives.
I
am*
very
anxious
to
have
ditions are hard to break and am
department
stores
suspended
ally visited the hospital.
of the cuddly plastic bitious young men who see them- someone to w'rite to in Canada.
found concealing- the selves confronted by an impene The only drawback is that I know
moe.
‘vital
ishes
” of stria teasers trable hierarchical barrier are no one to write to in a foreign
Sidewalk vendo s prepared to
land. Could you help me out?"
only too happy to listen to
reap tidy profits as prices rose
Dakko-eha
n.
sometimes
My name is Shoji Hotozuka,
called
tractive
offers
from
abroad.
on the no-Ionger Available “emnilliillilliHiiniillHilffiiblthii^iH^Hf
“winky’’ because the nine
and
Demand High
„ I, am 1 year;
. — old. I am en
appear to wink when the head* is
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
Why, if "Japan is so short of rolled at the Haisei Senior High
turned, is about 10 inches tall. i esearch facilities and equip School.. My hobbies are stamp
yen (.>1)—double the retail price
1 ue black “missionary eater” ment, have Japanese scientists at and picture post card collecting
—for the “winky” dolls.
conies
boy and girl models, the tained the Icvpl where thev are and sports.
3Ir. and Mrs. Frank Iwakazu
Sales were suspended when de latter inwearing
a ribbon. The much in demand. At least part of
I hope you will forgive me for
Sakai wish to announce the ad
mand for dakko-chan (literally:
with
such
dress of their new residence
embraceable one) exceeded the grooved banjo-eyes “wink’’ at the answer is that most top-rank burdening you
a
passersby, and rhe vinyl arms ing Japanese scientists who go troublesome request, remain
as: 114 Kingsview Blvd.. Mesmay be made to clasp onto any abroad come from such fields as
ton.
Ontario. Phone CH. 9-2994.
young matrons lined up at depar
Sincerely yours.
conxement
object.
Arms
and
legs
mathematics
and
theoretical
phy
meat stores ns early as 2 a.m.me the most popular among jeen- sics where the basic equipment is
Shoji Hotozuka,
not to buy dolls, but to get ticko
aeei>
Scrolling
op
Tokvo
’
s
bva
brain,
a
pencil
and
some
paper.
Mr. and .Mrs. George Fujita
entitling them to a del
4-421 Saginomiya.
w :iv
During
the
war
and
in
the
im
have
announced the address of
stocks were replenished.
Riot;
Nakano, ku, Tokyo
0
Fears Fad May End
mediate post-war period, many
a
their new re
Japan.
ko-chnn
is
the
invention
of
leading scientists were forced by
ox
Dakko-chan
Lancer Drive.
he hottest craze a some
lackof
equipment
or
contact
with
'
I
’
hore
ALpine
n Japan sin
3Iaple.
Ontario
hula hoops had old Jap
■^
‘
HF
1
}
science
to
coniine
their
Emperor doing shihiro
the
plant, activities to pure theory.
a
the Tsu
red to
Produce
a day.
Favorite of Models
Mr. and 31: . i as .
the
Watch Repair Shop
this
by
Is would not
to announce t he a; p^ oi
to expand his plant
as: 26
Ginza—Totheir new j
HO. 5-3652 — Res: LE. 2-7445
diffi'fitil
ca
rRro.
Place
—without, a
Barkworth
He was
328 Broadview Ave., Toronto
'ported
:re
t
7lb 4
Ontario. Phone AM
that
is
may
1 the
find out
r want makes
women
;so lonely th
: tie dolls.
I
*
Expect Cool Month of May For 1964 Olympics
Japanese Women Gone "Huffy" Over Winky Dails
YONEMITSU
!
i
“ x® ci good policy to
t
I
ALL-WAY ROOFING SERVICE
EAVE<TROUGH]NG
> I
; I
284-A YONGE ST.
EM. 6-2411
C WALES and DUNCAN 5 !i
J INSURANCE AGENTS 5 I
>
; I
454 Ycn?s Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
i i
TORONTO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
OX. 9-5941 NISEI OWNED
COVERING OX
HL 7-1100
■
New U.S. Nisei Magazine Will Also Cover Canada
Brains Lured Away
(continued from page one)
THE NEW CANADIAN
Image, the new Japanese American Ne
Magazine
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each we
severely from foreign “raiding”
enough photography and glitter to cover the
as a medium of expression and news outlet
ana Canadian
of the Japanese. Though not on vital object, it m tne past two years. The bril
™d ^^ acceptable with lavish ideas on deliwrv liant 33-year-old physicist, Kaamong those of Japanese origin in Canada
Mr. Ld IragaMii, editor and publisher, has
in Osaka gained world-wide at
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
Japanese in Toronto under Japanese In Far wwav
tention,
is
now
with
the
Univer
amUdcS <h,ring the war ^^^’ We are told the Toron KEN MORI------------ Japanese Section Editor & Advertise,
° ?to j in thc JT’ issue comes in two parts and future issues. Write sity or Illinois. Professor YoichiJERRy KUTSUKAKE---------------- —English Section Editor
o include material on JCs across the country. Subscribers are Hven ro Namba, former chief of the
EM. 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W., TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
a special introductory price of 35.00 for the monthly 12 issues. Write university’s theoretical nhwsics
department is now with the Uni
to. Image, (><08 North Sheridan Road, ChicAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Department O'‘-wversity of Chicago, while ProfesStill with the books.
ice at Fortyor I oshio Yamaguchi is enThe author, raged in nuclear research in
Tatsuzo Ishikawa
of considerable interest but none so familiar
Geneva. These three men repre
to many “older’’ N
j translator, I
sented the top brains of the
yarns is a former Vancouve
■ who is
ROME.—A Japanese Olympic to Rome on August 15 to comoN-Osaka
university's
theoretical
Securities .in Tokyo. Nakavam
- said to
official
predicted the May dates presentation of Jason's
physics
department.
to translate as accurately as po ible. But this is perhaps where we
for
the
1964
Games in Tokyo will , Te hve subiidtted
It
is
estimated
that
in
theoretfeel the book fails. The English
»*n
is
almost
tryingat
times
be
adopted
shortly
by theTnterical
phy
alone
about
40
first—so adolescent it tends LoTmre.
7 l.nn t sesswn whkil opened
author has been wronged class Japanese are now work national Olympic Committee.
-^u^. 19,” Iwata said.
as Ishikawa is one o! <the best c
v Japanese novelists. Tie ing in the U.S. and another 20 in
Yukiaki Iwata, who was Ja
won the first Akutagawa Prize
A member of the Japan 0’vmEurope.
Japanese
industry
is
pan
’s advance representative at ■pic committee and also*of the'orin 1935. Since, his novels have
appealed to the Japanese for their being- affected in a similar way. the Rome Olympics, said he be
'dgor and sense of justice.
ganizing committee for the 1964
Last February, Leo Ezaki, one of lieves his country will win over- Games, Iwata arrived in RoT?
Resistance at Forty-Eight i
■>out a middle-aged man and his the country’s most brilliant young- whelmin
temptations
_ support for its propo- last December to studv ItaHar
<o
,ri
, and frustrations
........ as
uaiiyerous a°-e o
....... '■-istanee
hist* electronic research brains, accept sal to stag'e the 1964 Games iigirethods for organizing* a m^k’*
ed a job with a big U.S. manu May instead of the humid-Heat sports festival.
ho .
’ at iargt” as Wei! as the temptations of geisha. facturer of computers and busi of August.
He said that inquiries from
™i m
»7'"7' pot pout ri establishments, night-clubs, ciburets
and nude ait Mimios. but the message it purports to deliver is at ness machines. Ezaki was the in
The Slay dates are strongly op Tokyo had shown only about IO
once deep and philosophical. Though Ishikawa’s works are said to ventor of-the Ezaki diode, which posed by several Northern Euro per cent of some SO Olvmpic nais as re pean countries where the track tions are opposed to a May opeiinot'f 'H thi°nS p
ot th? immortal German, Goethe, we can- electronics experts
^
this m Resistance at I orty-Eight as the difficulty the read- volutionary as the transistor.
and field season does not norm hig date for the Tokyo Games.
'
fmd, though the setting and characters may be‘understood
ally get started until about that
Asked to name these nations
symbolically i> the Oxford
time.
English in this translation making
opposed to May dates, he named
this influence indistinguishable
Iwata said his country’s senior only Norway, Sweden. Denmark
Employed by the Sony Corpor
ation—which pioneered the boom representative on the IOC, 83- and Finland. He added that the
year-old Shingoro Takaishi, flew Japanese conferred with represen
we Japanese Canadians still high on the list of desirables ing Japanese transistor radio in
tatives of these nations nrior to
dustry
—
Ezaki
was
paid
8340
per
and if so, foi how long? One wonders when there is much dUconthe IOC session.
month.
This
is
a
big
salary
by
r^^^
who are ‘demanding Tanadianized”
It is because Japan still tends
“ Canadianiz ed ’ ’ Japanese standards, but is obvi
“I hope we made them realize
i
S:"lsei find their Canadian-born
to be weak in applied science that that all the people in Asia would
ously
a
fraction
of
what
he
could
M
tU e heavi*y on their ancestral wavs.
all
wavs This
the Government has been urging want the Games to be held in the
This all command in the U.S.
.ounds too familiar except lor the disrespect which now exists
sharp
expansion research facili spring,” Iwata declared.
Apart from dissatisfaction with
botwkm1 retiirm-°f an incident which happened
ties
and
in original research by
conditions,
“May is the month of cool
Xu
"
11 c-'onS *isei. A rumble occured in China- pay and working
industry.
(There have been veiled breezes
in Japan and it is drv.
mX Tl^
ago with about 35 participating in the young- Japanese scientists such as
government August is tremendously humid
aki (he is only 33) are unhappy threats that the
,e ot the
tamps
atewere
rumored
expanding for anv future
action
ho resuks
clash
beitor-than-bUck-cofU
“S?
S about the traditionalism, and might act to prevent Japanese and the worst month for sports.”
feudal overtones which still dom- firms relying- too much on foreign
It eyas reported that the* Scan
aad Sowing tension between these pre-adults. I would ima
gme
we
tlie
scientific patents and neglecting their own dinavian countries are known to
Nise, are so content there is nothing else to do
but quarrel among- scene. In unwersities and research
ourselves.
be against any start of the Tokyo
But unless some means of stop Games until their athletes have
laboratories, youth no matter how
brilliant. must still bow to age ping the steady draining away of had an adequate time for train
n
I .
approach left me a little jangled one day when an and length of service.
scientific talent can be worked ing.
Occidental man gingerly came to me and asked
In industry, at least, both the out, Japan’s progress into the age
if he could inspect
hair styles and Japanese furnisffX
^
government and business are be- of technology may be seriouslv
gining to recognize the dangers hampered.
PffilSr
w:ints his double eye lids removed to get that “far enb of the situation and there is a
The. Italian Government solved
el feet . We men may get into that fashion race vet.
growing* drive to change the the same problem by tripling J
THANK YOU
whole wag'e system from the old scholars salaries and the budget
I Mrs.
1 oshiko
Kobayashi.
basis of seniority and long serv for universities, but Japan can’t
Iwife
of
Kikuzo
Kobayashi
of
ice (under which a janitor with see any such solution in the near
jPort
Dover,
Ontario
has
reat) years’ service might be earn future.
iturned home after 12 weeks'
ing
more than the most brilliant
1OKTO. — A
black
market dakko-chan
than
would
her researcher with five years’ seiw(confinement in Women’s Colsprang up last week in sale of American counterpart go outdoors
lege Hospital. Toronto. Mr. and
ice) to one based on technical A LETTER READS. . .
dakko-chans—cuddly, little, pasiMrs. Kobayashi wish to express
without a hatbox.
Dakko-chan skill.
dt^ ,^°^s which caricature an
Editor:
deepest thanks to the friend
But in academic circles, old tra
African cannibal—when Tokyo even adorn the brooms of lonely
who
sent floxvers and person
Japanese housewives.
I
am*
very
anxious
to
have
ditions are hard to break and am
department
stores
suspended
ally visited the hospital.
of the cuddly plastic bitious young men who see them- someone to w'rite to in Canada.
found concealing- the selves confronted by an impene The only drawback is that I know
moe.
‘vital
ishes
” of stria teasers trable hierarchical barrier are no one to write to in a foreign
Sidewalk vendo s prepared to
land. Could you help me out?"
only too happy to listen to
reap tidy profits as prices rose
Dakko-eha
n.
sometimes
My name is Shoji Hotozuka,
called
tractive
offers
from
abroad.
on the no-Ionger Available “emnilliillilliHiiniillHilffiiblthii^iH^Hf
“winky’’ because the nine
and
Demand High
„ I, am 1 year;
. — old. I am en
appear to wink when the head* is
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
Why, if "Japan is so short of rolled at the Haisei Senior High
turned, is about 10 inches tall. i esearch facilities and equip School.. My hobbies are stamp
yen (.>1)—double the retail price
1 ue black “missionary eater” ment, have Japanese scientists at and picture post card collecting
—for the “winky” dolls.
conies
boy and girl models, the tained the Icvpl where thev are and sports.
3Ir. and Mrs. Frank Iwakazu
Sales were suspended when de latter inwearing
a ribbon. The much in demand. At least part of
I hope you will forgive me for
Sakai wish to announce the ad
mand for dakko-chan (literally:
with
such
dress of their new residence
embraceable one) exceeded the grooved banjo-eyes “wink’’ at the answer is that most top-rank burdening you
a
passersby, and rhe vinyl arms ing Japanese scientists who go troublesome request, remain
as: 114 Kingsview Blvd.. Mesmay be made to clasp onto any abroad come from such fields as
ton.
Ontario. Phone CH. 9-2994.
young matrons lined up at depar
Sincerely yours.
conxement
object.
Arms
and
legs
mathematics
and
theoretical
phy
meat stores ns early as 2 a.m.me the most popular among jeen- sics where the basic equipment is
Shoji Hotozuka,
not to buy dolls, but to get ticko
aeei>
Scrolling
op
Tokvo
’
s
bva
brain,
a
pencil
and
some
paper.
Mr. and .Mrs. George Fujita
entitling them to a del
4-421 Saginomiya.
w :iv
During
the
war
and
in
the
im
have
announced the address of
stocks were replenished.
Riot;
Nakano, ku, Tokyo
0
Fears Fad May End
mediate post-war period, many
a
their new re
Japan.
ko-chnn
is
the
invention
of
leading scientists were forced by
ox
Dakko-chan
Lancer Drive.
he hottest craze a some
lackof
equipment
or
contact
with
'
I
’
hore
ALpine
n Japan sin
3Iaple.
Ontario
hula hoops had old Jap
■^
‘
HF
1
}
science
to
coniine
their
Emperor doing shihiro
the
plant, activities to pure theory.
a
the Tsu
red to
Produce
a day.
Favorite of Models
Mr. and 31: . i as .
the
Watch Repair Shop
this
by
Is would not
to announce t he a; p^ oi
to expand his plant
as: 26
Ginza—Totheir new j
HO. 5-3652 — Res: LE. 2-7445
diffi'fitil
ca
rRro.
Place
—without, a
Barkworth
He was
328 Broadview Ave., Toronto
'ported
:re
t
7lb 4
Ontario. Phone AM
that
is
may
1 the
find out
r want makes
women
;so lonely th
: tie dolls.
I
*
Expect Cool Month of May For 1964 Olympics
Japanese Women Gone "Huffy" Over Winky Dails
YONEMITSU
!
i
“ x® ci good policy to
t
I
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EAVE<TROUGH]NG
> I
; I
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>
; I
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