Page 1
THE NEW CANADI
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japa
nese Origin
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 196
Sokagakkai: New Japanese
Religion Scares Opponents
I TOKYO.—A religious earth- al force.
I quake has jolted Japan in the The movement is reaching into
I form of a movement that has ex- all strata of Japanese life, and
I Dloded from 3,000 to between 10 has followers in 43 other coun
I and 15 million members in 20 ' tries, including the United States
I years.
What is Sokagakkai ? Opinions
I It is a moveme mt that has bol- iange from a Fascist organiza
( ted. practically overnight, into Ja_ tion like Hitler’s Black Shirts
s pan’s third most powerful politic- an Oriental expression of early
American Puritanism . . . salva
tion of the world ... a political
Trojan Horse.
Some westerners, alarmed by
Sokagakkai’s phenomenal growth,
its potential and actual strength,
its military discipline, mistakenly’
| TOKYO. — This thief was a termedit a “new religion.” It is
not. Sokagakkai derives from Ni| mean guy.
chiren Shoshu, which has passed
| His victim, Reiko Takahashi, from
generation to generation
I 59, was lying in a hospital bed, since 1253 A.D.
I both eyes bandaged, recently
The branch now known as So
| when he broke her arm, gagged
kagakkai
was founded in the
I her, threatened to kill her and early 1930s,
about the same time
| took all her money, 68,000 yen
the
Federal
Council of Churches
’ ($188).
met in the United States to pro
i The money was to pay for an claim the new movement known
! operation which had transplant- as “Social Gospel.” The “Gospel”
- ed a cornea to her left eye.
claimed by' American educators to
The victim had come from a reflect the liberalizing efforts of
—Star Photo
■ far away island for the delicate the
depression
on
popular’
operation in Tokyo.
thought, duplicated many of the
First Nisei Policewoman
ideas then coming into being in
HAMILTON, Ont. — Officer, Florence Katsuko Hayashi is highly regarded by her fellow officers,
Japan—an appreciation of va
Hamilton Police inspector, Samuel Burd says she
lues, a world organization re Hayashi, 23, first and only Japanese Canadian po
nouncing Avar, preparing people licewoman in the North American continent takes is the best policewoman he has ever known. "Tell
for world citizenship by’ chang careful aim during a session of target practice at her something once, and she never forgets,” he
a Hamilton police station. Ex-Vanoouverite, Miss added.
ing their values.
If Social Gospel in America
was born of the depression So Slated For September 25 and 26. . .
TORONTO. — The winners
kagakkai can be said to have
of the §500.00 JCCA Labour
received its impetus from the
Day’ Softball Benefit Draw
chaotic conditions in Japan
after World War II.
were announced this week.
They’ are as follows:
The country was bankrupt,
OTTAWA. — The 2nd Japan- da Trade Relations, Problems of November in Tokyo. Since then,
1st Prize of $300.00 won by
both in money and morals.
Canada
Ministerial Conference is Trade With Red China, and Ja Canada has abolished import sur
Miss Ruby Hayashi.
Nearly two million people had
slated
to
be held on September pan-Canada Economic Prospects charges and slightly relaxed quo
2nd Prize of $100.00 won by
been killed. People slept in
with special emphasis on the quo te on Japanese goods.
25th
and
26th
in Ottawa.
-Mrs. Chiz Yasui.
caves,
dugouts
and
flimsy
The meeting’s agenda will in ta of Japanese goods to Canada.
Since the Liberals came into
3rd., 4th., 5th., and 6th. Pri
shacks. Teachers slept on their
The 1st Japan-Canada Minis power last April, the new govclude such topics as International
zes of §25.00 were won by:
desks.
this conference’s
Mr. Ken Asano, Mr. K. Aoya
/Sokagakkai seemed the ans Economic Relations, Japan-Cana- terial Conference was held last eminent
committee has shown a progres
ma, Mr. J, Sunohara, and Mr.
wer. It started on a broad so
sive attitude to better improve
F. Terpstra.
cial and religious base with
trade
relations between the two
strong emphasis on faith heal
countries.
ing. It not only emphasized the
Representing Japan at this con
therapeutic side of faith heal
So in the Autumn of 1947 Aki
TOKYO. — After 16 years of
ing, but also promised people painstaking labor and research, a ko Minami went to work prepar ference will be Finance Minister
they would get sick if they’ did sightless Japanese woman has ing one. After first translating K. Tanaka, Trade and Commerce
It grew completed the first English-Japa both Japanese and English words Minister H. Fukuda, Agricultural
not join Sokagakkai.
and Deputy
slowly but steadily.
into the braille symbols, she care Minister M.
nese braille dictionary.
Foreign
Minister
Shima.
fully
reviewed
the
meanings
and
Akiko
Minami,
aged
36,
of
Sa
socioloGovernment leaders,
Canada will be represented by’
; TOKIO.—Three bottles con. gists and other religious groups kai lost her eyesight when she then sent the compilation to the
Finance
Minister Walter Gordon,
engraver.
was
16.
viewed
it
with
amused
detach
30>000 gold coins circuThe plates were finished last Trade Minister M. Sharpe, and
As no English-Japanese braille
p a jln ^® middle of the Edo ment until 1959 when Sokagak
t uiod. worth 12 million yen in kai’s tightly’ disciplined adher- dictionary existed in Japan, it year and the completed diction External Affairs Minister Mar
was virtually impossible to read ary, comprising 13,900 pages in tin.
’^ay s money, were excavated
(Continued
on
page
8)
71 volumes, is now on sale.
English
books.
The Japanese ministers will ar
construction site for the
rive
at Malton Airport in Toron
0^ Mills Company new
to on September 24th. A govern
*ng m Shinkawa, Chuo-ku,
ment plane will then fly them to
Wo, recently.
u °^ coins such as these cannot
After the conference, the Can
p°sSessed by an individual
adian
government has arranged
approval of the EducaLOS ANGELES. — Tokyo-born for the 20th Century-Fox Film puses for a young Oriental to for the Japanese Minister’s to in
i ^’^ry since they have
play- a part in his motion picture, spect the St. Lawrence Seaway
pert^-51®1111^^ as cultural pro YMshio Y'oda was in the sixth Corporation.
“
The Horizontal Lieutenant.”
rade when World' War II ended.
Ugast took an interest in th
and tour Niagara Falls.
Prof. William White of the
Now,
18
years
later,
1
oshio
is
and
discussed
career
i e ministry' finds it necesUSC faculty’ suggested that Yo
/ '
c°Miscate the coins, the a senior at the University of Ca- with him over a period of several shio talk to Pasternak. Accord
^rer an^ ^e owmer (in this lifornia and a wacky version of years. By then Yoshio had de ing to the young hopeful, in less
0Wner of the land) will World War II is still going on cided he didn’t want to be a ma- time that it takes to tell he was
for him in his role of seaman . nufacturer or a lawyer.
~PPr?Driate indemnities.
interviewed, tested and signed for
. , The conversations with Ugast the part.
^.‘CO glass bottles con- third class Takeo Fujiwara oi
j v g°id coins were discover- the Imperial Japanese navy in i convinced him that he wanted to
Jerry Senshaw of the Revue
Navy
be a. motion picture producer. In casting office saw the picture and
1 5 r/XC.mLtruction worker some ABC TV’s “McHale
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.—
Fuji is the private POM of August, 1958, Yoshio landed at arranged to screen it for “Mc Mayor Beth Wood of New West
below ground where a
krdh r^Or ^e Nisshon Oil McHale and the crew of_ the PT the University of So. Calif.
Hale’s Navy’ producer Edward minster, last week reigned as a
as under construction. 73. Deciding that the U.S. had
Enrolled in a cinema course, Mentagne,
who
subsequently- first citizen of Moriguchi, Japan,
/vere buried in sand the best chance on winning, Fuji Yoshio had trouble at first with signed Yoshio to the series, en while Mayor Masatake Kizaki of
\\ei'ea wHh a frame of lost no time surrendering. _
Moriguchi boasted the freedom
the language barrier: he poke tering its second season.
Yoshio was bom to a family of ome English,
^< trie discoverer said.
classe. that
Yoshio is presently on a leave
'Ler./;V exPert judged them manufacturers. After World IVar first year were tough.
of absence from the University
The honors were bestowed here
II he continued his education and
What followed could only* hap j of South California. He’s one se recently when Kizaki and a de- io- ^U11}6’ the company look- eventually became a law student
i ormer land owner in
pen in Hollywood.
Yoshio de mester short of graduation and
e business■ tuj 1^Ported the find to po- at Keio University in Tokyo.
returnin
plans to attend night classes in men
a visit bv
clares
Hollywood
producer
Joe
It was then he met Edward
^sshin Oil Mills Co.
cam- order to finish.
Wood to Moriguchi last April,
Pasternak
was
Ugast, general manager in Asia
^ed the lot in 1953.
I Victim Of
Mean Thief
JCCA Draw
Winners
2nd Japan-Canada Conference In Ottawa
Japan Braille Dictionary
Pots of Gold
Discovered
Yoshio Yoda: POW “McHale’s Navy”
Citizenship
Exchange
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japa
nese Origin
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 196
Sokagakkai: New Japanese
Religion Scares Opponents
I TOKYO.—A religious earth- al force.
I quake has jolted Japan in the The movement is reaching into
I form of a movement that has ex- all strata of Japanese life, and
I Dloded from 3,000 to between 10 has followers in 43 other coun
I and 15 million members in 20 ' tries, including the United States
I years.
What is Sokagakkai ? Opinions
I It is a moveme mt that has bol- iange from a Fascist organiza
( ted. practically overnight, into Ja_ tion like Hitler’s Black Shirts
s pan’s third most powerful politic- an Oriental expression of early
American Puritanism . . . salva
tion of the world ... a political
Trojan Horse.
Some westerners, alarmed by
Sokagakkai’s phenomenal growth,
its potential and actual strength,
its military discipline, mistakenly’
| TOKYO. — This thief was a termedit a “new religion.” It is
not. Sokagakkai derives from Ni| mean guy.
chiren Shoshu, which has passed
| His victim, Reiko Takahashi, from
generation to generation
I 59, was lying in a hospital bed, since 1253 A.D.
I both eyes bandaged, recently
The branch now known as So
| when he broke her arm, gagged
kagakkai
was founded in the
I her, threatened to kill her and early 1930s,
about the same time
| took all her money, 68,000 yen
the
Federal
Council of Churches
’ ($188).
met in the United States to pro
i The money was to pay for an claim the new movement known
! operation which had transplant- as “Social Gospel.” The “Gospel”
- ed a cornea to her left eye.
claimed by' American educators to
The victim had come from a reflect the liberalizing efforts of
—Star Photo
■ far away island for the delicate the
depression
on
popular’
operation in Tokyo.
thought, duplicated many of the
First Nisei Policewoman
ideas then coming into being in
HAMILTON, Ont. — Officer, Florence Katsuko Hayashi is highly regarded by her fellow officers,
Japan—an appreciation of va
Hamilton Police inspector, Samuel Burd says she
lues, a world organization re Hayashi, 23, first and only Japanese Canadian po
nouncing Avar, preparing people licewoman in the North American continent takes is the best policewoman he has ever known. "Tell
for world citizenship by’ chang careful aim during a session of target practice at her something once, and she never forgets,” he
a Hamilton police station. Ex-Vanoouverite, Miss added.
ing their values.
If Social Gospel in America
was born of the depression So Slated For September 25 and 26. . .
TORONTO. — The winners
kagakkai can be said to have
of the §500.00 JCCA Labour
received its impetus from the
Day’ Softball Benefit Draw
chaotic conditions in Japan
after World War II.
were announced this week.
They’ are as follows:
The country was bankrupt,
OTTAWA. — The 2nd Japan- da Trade Relations, Problems of November in Tokyo. Since then,
1st Prize of $300.00 won by
both in money and morals.
Canada
Ministerial Conference is Trade With Red China, and Ja Canada has abolished import sur
Miss Ruby Hayashi.
Nearly two million people had
slated
to
be held on September pan-Canada Economic Prospects charges and slightly relaxed quo
2nd Prize of $100.00 won by
been killed. People slept in
with special emphasis on the quo te on Japanese goods.
25th
and
26th
in Ottawa.
-Mrs. Chiz Yasui.
caves,
dugouts
and
flimsy
The meeting’s agenda will in ta of Japanese goods to Canada.
Since the Liberals came into
3rd., 4th., 5th., and 6th. Pri
shacks. Teachers slept on their
The 1st Japan-Canada Minis power last April, the new govclude such topics as International
zes of §25.00 were won by:
desks.
this conference’s
Mr. Ken Asano, Mr. K. Aoya
/Sokagakkai seemed the ans Economic Relations, Japan-Cana- terial Conference was held last eminent
committee has shown a progres
ma, Mr. J, Sunohara, and Mr.
wer. It started on a broad so
sive attitude to better improve
F. Terpstra.
cial and religious base with
trade
relations between the two
strong emphasis on faith heal
countries.
ing. It not only emphasized the
Representing Japan at this con
therapeutic side of faith heal
So in the Autumn of 1947 Aki
TOKYO. — After 16 years of
ing, but also promised people painstaking labor and research, a ko Minami went to work prepar ference will be Finance Minister
they would get sick if they’ did sightless Japanese woman has ing one. After first translating K. Tanaka, Trade and Commerce
It grew completed the first English-Japa both Japanese and English words Minister H. Fukuda, Agricultural
not join Sokagakkai.
and Deputy
slowly but steadily.
into the braille symbols, she care Minister M.
nese braille dictionary.
Foreign
Minister
Shima.
fully
reviewed
the
meanings
and
Akiko
Minami,
aged
36,
of
Sa
socioloGovernment leaders,
Canada will be represented by’
; TOKIO.—Three bottles con. gists and other religious groups kai lost her eyesight when she then sent the compilation to the
Finance
Minister Walter Gordon,
engraver.
was
16.
viewed
it
with
amused
detach
30>000 gold coins circuThe plates were finished last Trade Minister M. Sharpe, and
As no English-Japanese braille
p a jln ^® middle of the Edo ment until 1959 when Sokagak
t uiod. worth 12 million yen in kai’s tightly’ disciplined adher- dictionary existed in Japan, it year and the completed diction External Affairs Minister Mar
was virtually impossible to read ary, comprising 13,900 pages in tin.
’^ay s money, were excavated
(Continued
on
page
8)
71 volumes, is now on sale.
English
books.
The Japanese ministers will ar
construction site for the
rive
at Malton Airport in Toron
0^ Mills Company new
to on September 24th. A govern
*ng m Shinkawa, Chuo-ku,
ment plane will then fly them to
Wo, recently.
u °^ coins such as these cannot
After the conference, the Can
p°sSessed by an individual
adian
government has arranged
approval of the EducaLOS ANGELES. — Tokyo-born for the 20th Century-Fox Film puses for a young Oriental to for the Japanese Minister’s to in
i ^’^ry since they have
play- a part in his motion picture, spect the St. Lawrence Seaway
pert^-51®1111^^ as cultural pro YMshio Y'oda was in the sixth Corporation.
“
The Horizontal Lieutenant.”
rade when World' War II ended.
Ugast took an interest in th
and tour Niagara Falls.
Prof. William White of the
Now,
18
years
later,
1
oshio
is
and
discussed
career
i e ministry' finds it necesUSC faculty’ suggested that Yo
/ '
c°Miscate the coins, the a senior at the University of Ca- with him over a period of several shio talk to Pasternak. Accord
^rer an^ ^e owmer (in this lifornia and a wacky version of years. By then Yoshio had de ing to the young hopeful, in less
0Wner of the land) will World War II is still going on cided he didn’t want to be a ma- time that it takes to tell he was
for him in his role of seaman . nufacturer or a lawyer.
~PPr?Driate indemnities.
interviewed, tested and signed for
. , The conversations with Ugast the part.
^.‘CO glass bottles con- third class Takeo Fujiwara oi
j v g°id coins were discover- the Imperial Japanese navy in i convinced him that he wanted to
Jerry Senshaw of the Revue
Navy
be a. motion picture producer. In casting office saw the picture and
1 5 r/XC.mLtruction worker some ABC TV’s “McHale
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.—
Fuji is the private POM of August, 1958, Yoshio landed at arranged to screen it for “Mc Mayor Beth Wood of New West
below ground where a
krdh r^Or ^e Nisshon Oil McHale and the crew of_ the PT the University of So. Calif.
Hale’s Navy’ producer Edward minster, last week reigned as a
as under construction. 73. Deciding that the U.S. had
Enrolled in a cinema course, Mentagne,
who
subsequently- first citizen of Moriguchi, Japan,
/vere buried in sand the best chance on winning, Fuji Yoshio had trouble at first with signed Yoshio to the series, en while Mayor Masatake Kizaki of
\\ei'ea wHh a frame of lost no time surrendering. _
Moriguchi boasted the freedom
the language barrier: he poke tering its second season.
Yoshio was bom to a family of ome English,
^< trie discoverer said.
classe. that
Yoshio is presently on a leave
'Ler./;V exPert judged them manufacturers. After World IVar first year were tough.
of absence from the University
The honors were bestowed here
II he continued his education and
What followed could only* hap j of South California. He’s one se recently when Kizaki and a de- io- ^U11}6’ the company look- eventually became a law student
i ormer land owner in
pen in Hollywood.
Yoshio de mester short of graduation and
e business■ tuj 1^Ported the find to po- at Keio University in Tokyo.
returnin
plans to attend night classes in men
a visit bv
clares
Hollywood
producer
Joe
It was then he met Edward
^sshin Oil Mills Co.
cam- order to finish.
Wood to Moriguchi last April,
Pasternak
was
Ugast, general manager in Asia
^ed the lot in 1953.
I Victim Of
Mean Thief
JCCA Draw
Winners
2nd Japan-Canada Conference In Ottawa
Japan Braille Dictionary
Pots of Gold
Discovered
Yoshio Yoda: POW “McHale’s Navy”
Citizenship
Exchange
Page 2
PAGE 2
—
Personal Notes Across Canada
Obituaries
FUJIOKA
TORONTO. — Mr. Yonesaku
Fujioka, 75, passed away on Sept.
2, .1963 at St. Michael’s Hospital.
Tsuya was held on September 3rd
and funeral was held on Septemberber 4th at the Buddhist Church
with the Rev. Newton Ishiura of
ficiating.
SUGAMORI
TORONTO,—Mrs. Matsuko Sugamori, beloved wife of Mr. Magotaro Sugamori of Toronto,
passed away on Sept. 4th, 1963
at St. Michael’s Hospital. Funeral
was held at the Ralph Day Fu
neral Service on Sept. 6 with the
Rev. Norisuye officiating.
In
terment took place at Rest Ha
ven Cemetery.
_____________ Saturday, September Umr
Only 1500 Beds Offered
DatesandDoings
By Japan Homes To
House 1964 Visitors Canadian Chrysanthemum Society To Hold Show
TORONTO. — The Canadian
The show will .be held on
Chrysanthemum Society will hold turaay, Sept. 28, 1963
a show to exhibit and compete in lada Tea Gardens in the Canad^'
early, varieties of chrysanthe National
Exhibition
mums grown and bloomed in the back of the BandXl. "*
open garden.
Building- open to exhibit.,Competition will be limited to from 9 A.M. to 2 F.M, Jtg
members of the Society except from 2 P.M. to 4 P.M. SW,p
for the last four classes cn the to public from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.
show schedule. Class 26 for Hor
Containers supplied bj
ticultural Societies.
Last three Society
classes open to anyone.
TOKYO.—Trying to get a room
in hotel-short Tokyo at this time
of year is about as frustrating
as trying to look up John Smith
in a New York telephone book.
It’s not difficult therefore, to
imagine what the situation will
be like a year from now, with
most hotels booked solid through
the
Olympic period and plans
CARD OF THANKS
being
laid to draw passenger
We wish to extend our
CARD OF THANKS
ships
into
Yokohama and Tokyo
heartfelt thanks and apprecia
We wish to express our
harbors
to
serve as floating dor
tion for the acts of kindness,
deepest gratitude to our many
mitories.
messages of sympathy and
relatives and friends for their
But apparently even that won’t Canadian Chrysanthemum Society Meeting
beautiful
floral offerings re
kind sympathy and floral of
)e enough. The Tokyo metropoli
ceived from our many friends,
ferings during our recent be
an government announced it will
TORONTO. — The Canadian our own members, who has grow
relatives
and neighbours dur
reavement in the loss of a wife
accept reservations, beginning Chrysanthemum Society will hold and exhibited chrysanthemums
ing the illness and recent be
and mother, Mikako Mickey
Sept. 1, from foreigners foi- ac a General Meeting Friday, Sept. tor a number of years.
reavement
of our dear hus
Akazawa.
commodations in private homes 13, 1963, 8 p.m. at Consumers
band and father, Yonesaku
We extend a welcome to anv
Richard Akazawa
during .the Tokyo Games.
Gas Co., 19 Toronto St. (West of one interested in growing chry
Fujioka.
and Brenda
The government has, at one Church—just north of King).
santhemums to come and bringMrs. Atsuki Fujioka
7190 Papineau Ave.,
time and another, conducted cam.
your
friends to an interesting and
.Montreal, P.Q.
This
meeting
is
especially
con
and Family
paigns of- varying degrees of subinformative meeting-.
vened
to
discuss
and
demonstrate
tletly to get Tokyo residents to
Canadian Chrysanthemum I
open their homes to foreigners the preparation of blooms for ex
hibition
and
competition.
Society
OFFICE
during the Games.
RESIDENCE
EM. 4-1394
The
topics
to
be
covered'
will
2 Vesta Drive
But the Japanese have a rather
EM. 4-1395
HUdson 5-1365
special feeling about home, and be:
Hamilton Church
the thought of heavy-footed forBARRISTER and SOLICITOR
1. Care of Blooms from cutting
eigners clomping- across tatami to show time; 2. Dressing blooms
HAMILTON.—Hamilton Buk-'
NOTARY PUBLIC
(straw mat) floors without re for show 3. Staging blooms for kyokai will hold the Ohigan-e ser- i
Oihca
Hours
Saturday
Barrister & Solicitor
vice at the Buddhist church" on j
moving their shoes would cost show.
October to April Inclusive
NOTARY PUBLIC
any
sane
Japanese
many
a
sleep
Sept.
21, 7:30 p.m. The lecturer I
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
There will also be a display of
less
night.
for
the
service will be the Rev.;
Suite 513 Temple Building
chrysanthemums from cutting
1008 Northern Ontario Building
So
it
’
s
not
verysurprising
that
Shojitsu
Ohara, who is an emeri
TORONTO
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
stage through various stages of
b\
all
this
vast
metropolis
of
10
tus
professor
of Ryukoku Univer
TORONTO
growth to securing the bud for
EM. 6-3323
Rea: RO. 7-3427
sity, Kyoto.
million and more, only 1500 beds blooming.
have become available to foreign
We hope many people willThe speaker will be Mr. Frank
ers in private homes.
come
to the service.
Fellow of the National
179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4, B.C. MU. 2-4641
What is surprising, a little, is Dellow,
Hamilton Buddhist i
that the government has finally Chrysanthemum Society, one of
got
around'
to
admitting
that
the
long & kami realty ltd
housing- situation will be despe
rate when the hordes of sports Toronto Art Gallery Launching New Lessons
fans descend on this city come
kami insurance agencies ltd
TORONTO.—The Art Gallery
Another series of classes will
next October.
It did so by issuing a little of Toronto is launching this year probe the fascinatin g subject of
collie KamUa/cakaXa^' CYpress 9-5345
pamphlet entitled “How to Re a. stimulating and. unique series artists’ materials—what is .availserve Accommodations in Private of classes for the experienced able, where to get it, and how the j
1171 Dunlop, North Burnaby
(or leeve me»*ago at AL. 5-1743)
Homes During the Tokyo Olym amateur painter who wishes to tools and equipment of the vari- j
enrich his or her knowledge and ous techniques are used. This;
pic Games.”
kayntondj^eong
res: HE. 3-3692
ability
in painting. Because con course, first instituted at the Art I
The charge will be five dollars
ventional
painting classes are Gallery last season, will be am- I
a day, which is a mere pittance
now
offered
in many places all plified and split into two groups, compared to hotel prices, and the
over
Metro
Toronto
accommodations are certain to be is trying a new idea. the Gallery one for the amateur painters and
clean and comfortable, if not air
one for the interested collectors.;
conditioned.
The course will experiment The latter series will enhance en- \
It probably would be a good with various ideas and styles of joyment in looking and buying j
idea to reserve one now, because
as well as sharpening the percep- j
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
the
demand is strong, if you 20th century painters from the tion of worth and permanence in |
“Pauves”, a work of art.
don’t and you’re still determined Post - Impressionists,
1
• SAKURA RICE
• EGGS
through
Cubism,
Expressionism
to
come
to
the
Games,
bring
a
0 MARUKIN SHOYU
• SUKIYAKI MEAT
sleeping bag. You’ll need it.
8 VINEGAR
;
and Surrealism to contemporary New Course For Children
C MANJU
0 SUGAR
• MANY VARIETIES OF ARARS
Abstraction and Non-Ohjective
In addition to the Children’s ■
styles. The members of the group Classes which have been in ope- j
N.
JCCA
Needs
Help
EM. 4-7692
will examine and' discuss works ration for many years, this sea- j
.— The National in the Gallery’s collection as well son will see the introduction of J
JCCA is looking for new'blood as prints and books before paint a new course for gifted adoles-1
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
to carry on their work.
ing their own pictures in the cents—students may only be es- j
_ Due to the mounting load of manner and style being consi pecially
recommended by their ?
jobs each month, they urgently dered.
high
school
art teachers.
(
need new workers. At present
only 11 members are carrying the
WELCOME JAPANESE CANADIANS
loan for all the various commit
tees.
Those willing to give assistance
are requested to contact either
President Ed Ide, Mr. Fred KaI
nubayashi, or Mr. Mits Sumiya.
Lucien C. Kurata
REAL ESTATE
INSURANCE
DUNDAS UNION STORE
GOLDEN DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
NOW SERVING BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEONS
ONLY' $1.00
12 NOON TO 4 P.M.
SPECIAL ATTENTION FOB TAKEOUT ORDERS
Travel Arrangements
Open Noon to 3 <Lm.
—
Ordera to Take Out
^ 8-2475
131A Dundas St W., Toronto
SMALL
SHOE
SIZES
SUMMER SALE
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Tours Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Ws Specialize in
Giftware of Quality
From the Orient
acquerware — Porcelain Tableware — Household Ornaments
Lanterns — Handiworks of Wood, Bamboo — Framed Pictures
°^ Japanese Painting — Oriental Jewellery — Folding
screens — Flower Arrangement Accessories — Fans
Dolls and Statuettes
Paramount Gift Shop
Call for Reservations or
Information—EM. 8-9934
T. KAMEOKA
113 Me Caul St., TORONTO
^- Iwata Travel Service
733 Danforth Ave. Toronto, Ont.
(1 Block East of Pape Ave.)
TELEPHONE HO. 3-7831
Store Hours: Monday-Wednesday: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursday-Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
—
Personal Notes Across Canada
Obituaries
FUJIOKA
TORONTO. — Mr. Yonesaku
Fujioka, 75, passed away on Sept.
2, .1963 at St. Michael’s Hospital.
Tsuya was held on September 3rd
and funeral was held on Septemberber 4th at the Buddhist Church
with the Rev. Newton Ishiura of
ficiating.
SUGAMORI
TORONTO,—Mrs. Matsuko Sugamori, beloved wife of Mr. Magotaro Sugamori of Toronto,
passed away on Sept. 4th, 1963
at St. Michael’s Hospital. Funeral
was held at the Ralph Day Fu
neral Service on Sept. 6 with the
Rev. Norisuye officiating.
In
terment took place at Rest Ha
ven Cemetery.
_____________ Saturday, September Umr
Only 1500 Beds Offered
DatesandDoings
By Japan Homes To
House 1964 Visitors Canadian Chrysanthemum Society To Hold Show
TORONTO. — The Canadian
The show will .be held on
Chrysanthemum Society will hold turaay, Sept. 28, 1963
a show to exhibit and compete in lada Tea Gardens in the Canad^'
early, varieties of chrysanthe National
Exhibition
mums grown and bloomed in the back of the BandXl. "*
open garden.
Building- open to exhibit.,Competition will be limited to from 9 A.M. to 2 F.M, Jtg
members of the Society except from 2 P.M. to 4 P.M. SW,p
for the last four classes cn the to public from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.
show schedule. Class 26 for Hor
Containers supplied bj
ticultural Societies.
Last three Society
classes open to anyone.
TOKYO.—Trying to get a room
in hotel-short Tokyo at this time
of year is about as frustrating
as trying to look up John Smith
in a New York telephone book.
It’s not difficult therefore, to
imagine what the situation will
be like a year from now, with
most hotels booked solid through
the
Olympic period and plans
CARD OF THANKS
being
laid to draw passenger
We wish to extend our
CARD OF THANKS
ships
into
Yokohama and Tokyo
heartfelt thanks and apprecia
We wish to express our
harbors
to
serve as floating dor
tion for the acts of kindness,
deepest gratitude to our many
mitories.
messages of sympathy and
relatives and friends for their
But apparently even that won’t Canadian Chrysanthemum Society Meeting
beautiful
floral offerings re
kind sympathy and floral of
)e enough. The Tokyo metropoli
ceived from our many friends,
ferings during our recent be
an government announced it will
TORONTO. — The Canadian our own members, who has grow
relatives
and neighbours dur
reavement in the loss of a wife
accept reservations, beginning Chrysanthemum Society will hold and exhibited chrysanthemums
ing the illness and recent be
and mother, Mikako Mickey
Sept. 1, from foreigners foi- ac a General Meeting Friday, Sept. tor a number of years.
reavement
of our dear hus
Akazawa.
commodations in private homes 13, 1963, 8 p.m. at Consumers
band and father, Yonesaku
We extend a welcome to anv
Richard Akazawa
during .the Tokyo Games.
Gas Co., 19 Toronto St. (West of one interested in growing chry
Fujioka.
and Brenda
The government has, at one Church—just north of King).
santhemums to come and bringMrs. Atsuki Fujioka
7190 Papineau Ave.,
time and another, conducted cam.
your
friends to an interesting and
.Montreal, P.Q.
This
meeting
is
especially
con
and Family
paigns of- varying degrees of subinformative meeting-.
vened
to
discuss
and
demonstrate
tletly to get Tokyo residents to
Canadian Chrysanthemum I
open their homes to foreigners the preparation of blooms for ex
hibition
and
competition.
Society
OFFICE
during the Games.
RESIDENCE
EM. 4-1394
The
topics
to
be
covered'
will
2 Vesta Drive
But the Japanese have a rather
EM. 4-1395
HUdson 5-1365
special feeling about home, and be:
Hamilton Church
the thought of heavy-footed forBARRISTER and SOLICITOR
1. Care of Blooms from cutting
eigners clomping- across tatami to show time; 2. Dressing blooms
HAMILTON.—Hamilton Buk-'
NOTARY PUBLIC
(straw mat) floors without re for show 3. Staging blooms for kyokai will hold the Ohigan-e ser- i
Oihca
Hours
Saturday
Barrister & Solicitor
vice at the Buddhist church" on j
moving their shoes would cost show.
October to April Inclusive
NOTARY PUBLIC
any
sane
Japanese
many
a
sleep
Sept.
21, 7:30 p.m. The lecturer I
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
There will also be a display of
less
night.
for
the
service will be the Rev.;
Suite 513 Temple Building
chrysanthemums from cutting
1008 Northern Ontario Building
So
it
’
s
not
verysurprising
that
Shojitsu
Ohara, who is an emeri
TORONTO
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
stage through various stages of
b\
all
this
vast
metropolis
of
10
tus
professor
of Ryukoku Univer
TORONTO
growth to securing the bud for
EM. 6-3323
Rea: RO. 7-3427
sity, Kyoto.
million and more, only 1500 beds blooming.
have become available to foreign
We hope many people willThe speaker will be Mr. Frank
ers in private homes.
come
to the service.
Fellow of the National
179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4, B.C. MU. 2-4641
What is surprising, a little, is Dellow,
Hamilton Buddhist i
that the government has finally Chrysanthemum Society, one of
got
around'
to
admitting
that
the
long & kami realty ltd
housing- situation will be despe
rate when the hordes of sports Toronto Art Gallery Launching New Lessons
fans descend on this city come
kami insurance agencies ltd
TORONTO.—The Art Gallery
Another series of classes will
next October.
It did so by issuing a little of Toronto is launching this year probe the fascinatin g subject of
collie KamUa/cakaXa^' CYpress 9-5345
pamphlet entitled “How to Re a. stimulating and. unique series artists’ materials—what is .availserve Accommodations in Private of classes for the experienced able, where to get it, and how the j
1171 Dunlop, North Burnaby
(or leeve me»*ago at AL. 5-1743)
Homes During the Tokyo Olym amateur painter who wishes to tools and equipment of the vari- j
enrich his or her knowledge and ous techniques are used. This;
pic Games.”
kayntondj^eong
res: HE. 3-3692
ability
in painting. Because con course, first instituted at the Art I
The charge will be five dollars
ventional
painting classes are Gallery last season, will be am- I
a day, which is a mere pittance
now
offered
in many places all plified and split into two groups, compared to hotel prices, and the
over
Metro
Toronto
accommodations are certain to be is trying a new idea. the Gallery one for the amateur painters and
clean and comfortable, if not air
one for the interested collectors.;
conditioned.
The course will experiment The latter series will enhance en- \
It probably would be a good with various ideas and styles of joyment in looking and buying j
idea to reserve one now, because
as well as sharpening the percep- j
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
the
demand is strong, if you 20th century painters from the tion of worth and permanence in |
“Pauves”, a work of art.
don’t and you’re still determined Post - Impressionists,
1
• SAKURA RICE
• EGGS
through
Cubism,
Expressionism
to
come
to
the
Games,
bring
a
0 MARUKIN SHOYU
• SUKIYAKI MEAT
sleeping bag. You’ll need it.
8 VINEGAR
;
and Surrealism to contemporary New Course For Children
C MANJU
0 SUGAR
• MANY VARIETIES OF ARARS
Abstraction and Non-Ohjective
In addition to the Children’s ■
styles. The members of the group Classes which have been in ope- j
N.
JCCA
Needs
Help
EM. 4-7692
will examine and' discuss works ration for many years, this sea- j
.— The National in the Gallery’s collection as well son will see the introduction of J
JCCA is looking for new'blood as prints and books before paint a new course for gifted adoles-1
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
to carry on their work.
ing their own pictures in the cents—students may only be es- j
_ Due to the mounting load of manner and style being consi pecially
recommended by their ?
jobs each month, they urgently dered.
high
school
art teachers.
(
need new workers. At present
only 11 members are carrying the
WELCOME JAPANESE CANADIANS
loan for all the various commit
tees.
Those willing to give assistance
are requested to contact either
President Ed Ide, Mr. Fred KaI
nubayashi, or Mr. Mits Sumiya.
Lucien C. Kurata
REAL ESTATE
INSURANCE
DUNDAS UNION STORE
GOLDEN DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
NOW SERVING BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEONS
ONLY' $1.00
12 NOON TO 4 P.M.
SPECIAL ATTENTION FOB TAKEOUT ORDERS
Travel Arrangements
Open Noon to 3 <Lm.
—
Ordera to Take Out
^ 8-2475
131A Dundas St W., Toronto
SMALL
SHOE
SIZES
SUMMER SALE
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Tours Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Ws Specialize in
Giftware of Quality
From the Orient
acquerware — Porcelain Tableware — Household Ornaments
Lanterns — Handiworks of Wood, Bamboo — Framed Pictures
°^ Japanese Painting — Oriental Jewellery — Folding
screens — Flower Arrangement Accessories — Fans
Dolls and Statuettes
Paramount Gift Shop
Call for Reservations or
Information—EM. 8-9934
T. KAMEOKA
113 Me Caul St., TORONTO
^- Iwata Travel Service
733 Danforth Ave. Toronto, Ont.
(1 Block East of Pape Ave.)
TELEPHONE HO. 3-7831
Store Hours: Monday-Wednesday: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursday-Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Page 3
the
new
c an a dIa n
PAGE 3
t ^ I
c T m 40
^ ;^ JR IX
I ^ ^c tA jg jg ' V' e
2> It ^ ^ X' £
-X gc x ' 5 L 4) ^
^^15H^V'69 B IX ' W
® t t ^r ^ w b ° A’ # G ^ O
b
° (p t< ii t y ^ f i> ft i» cfj
^
3 r: o ?| 4) t ^ IC © 72 ^ 7»
Co ° L
o 5 MX o
°n G
^ K /v
T
X
72 5 ^ iii ^
# ® ^ ^ i' # fr G A O ^ r^
' '
b <h # A
© ^ 51
o mt “9 0 |X X
^ ^^^ ^ t n ^ • ' ^
° 0 ^ HH
k ^ 7? o tr ix • n o i- 5 * ©
G 6^ 6 G
° '
fa A IX ^ ^ ^ ft
IX T L 72 < A
?5 £
0 □#
'
< t $ IS A
©
$) A it ' ©
S 5 ' ' i> 5
i ^ ^ © 5 <b ^
&
° L ^ ^ ^’
iz ^ ft V' J p
5 d? ^ d - o #
® I K ^ A: ^ &
«
0 (X #
©
' 0 IX 7? 0
bt
ft
s
^ ^ -^ Bfe ©
^ ^
G L #, B ^* /b is ^
!i ffi g /r 7 ^ ^ '
^ ^ ^ O ^> ^ 9 ^
M (X b T ^ O ^’ ^
K ' tz ' a? ^ o x
^ T © -^ 1 i:
tf
o C T z £ '
li
tZ A ^ ^ T ^
$ £*
X 6 ? tNi
, £ ^llibo^^^jl
^9M § A S £ X H4c
itrtf^CCPA)?-/-'- DC-8x77'i-^Sl
° # fz IL
<
nt T £4
b ^ © a £ dt ^ # -c tx -c
1 i 6 ^ ^ ffi o o fz ' 5
IM' A
<r #>’ t © G S T 77 ° i
f 0 >' 6 Aft®
£ *5 © ^ I It 0 ^ ? V' ft
± 5: 5 M 0 it
' I' b^; V' ' 3 77 O 5 ^ it ^ ^ k i '
-' fc ^' ^ ° V' X £ £ ^n©# < ° l ' m
’Ag @ o 5 r 0 It 1 ^ m ffi 5 K #
</ 4) T G #J ^^ x? ^ A & 5 ^2 5 x f ( ^ W
^ b I' 77 5 ' & if #* lb M L It 5 ^ <:
“C T 6 n ^ 9 ^ ’ ^ ^ A ' x ' 5
j^
i T l M t' r: M it t M ' ? ^ S
© ® i ^ m n /z XfbGo^^oi L
tifcfcirsKa$ic»Hr. a*i*t#-±ws
WMtK^LtV'SOUCPAo^-e Siii'OH
ii/7.^ r7/®Riftjo-c»Ht. i^m
BBSCAPiWjffl^f/y-M ^±-gJ©8B
MWJSttX'yir, ffit-itfeiWoa^^?
7?^*WtbtB0 ^To
M—®»M0 y = 7 f . « / = - gftgMit
$846.50 (* t^^^fi! $85.00y7 7 MOB
£ b 0X7
*9
7 7 < a
IC <1 IC ^ ^ 72
% b ^ © -^ 6
5
° K $
#'
& o ip j; ^ 0
& O © ^ IX
X 40 '
It g ^ ic ^
$ (X 5 L X 5
0 r X U4
t /b i iT
04^
A |^ + fl
° 0 — C
^ B$ O
0 IC 72
A & °
#’0 8$
K
0
X
V'
V' if
X
• 6
t'O®«a:7-7.7ii!) sr, #MMOIS&U
J ffaiilSj ©W4fcli#tt^i'F«^''&be
TSV.
^2zg^azt^Bfl^c
““------------------ - ---------- - --------------------------------------------------- £jL------------- r-y^r^
traihs/trucks/ships/planes/hotels/telecommunications
WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM
K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
j
Authorized Agent for All Airlines
1
AUTHORIZED AGENT FOB
P and O LENES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
i
|
>
W. K. GARDENS
Crown Life Insurance Co.
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
Frank G, Yada
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquets
Private Dining Rooms
1550 West Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C.
new
c an a dIa n
PAGE 3
t ^ I
c T m 40
^ ;^ JR IX
I ^ ^c tA jg jg ' V' e
2> It ^ ^ X' £
-X gc x ' 5 L 4) ^
^^15H^V'69 B IX ' W
® t t ^r ^ w b ° A’ # G ^ O
b
° (p t< ii t y ^ f i> ft i» cfj
^
3 r: o ?| 4) t ^ IC © 72 ^ 7»
Co ° L
o 5 MX o
°n G
^ K /v
T
X
72 5 ^ iii ^
# ® ^ ^ i' # fr G A O ^ r^
' '
b <h # A
© ^ 51
o mt “9 0 |X X
^ ^^^ ^ t n ^ • ' ^
° 0 ^ HH
k ^ 7? o tr ix • n o i- 5 * ©
G 6^ 6 G
° '
fa A IX ^ ^ ^ ft
IX T L 72 < A
?5 £
0 □#
'
< t $ IS A
©
$) A it ' ©
S 5 ' ' i> 5
i ^ ^ © 5 <b ^
&
° L ^ ^ ^’
iz ^ ft V' J p
5 d? ^ d - o #
® I K ^ A: ^ &
«
0 (X #
©
' 0 IX 7? 0
bt
ft
s
^ ^ -^ Bfe ©
^ ^
G L #, B ^* /b is ^
!i ffi g /r 7 ^ ^ '
^ ^ ^ O ^> ^ 9 ^
M (X b T ^ O ^’ ^
K ' tz ' a? ^ o x
^ T © -^ 1 i:
tf
o C T z £ '
li
tZ A ^ ^ T ^
$ £*
X 6 ? tNi
, £ ^llibo^^^jl
^9M § A S £ X H4c
itrtf^CCPA)?-/-'- DC-8x77'i-^Sl
° # fz IL
<
nt T £4
b ^ © a £ dt ^ # -c tx -c
1 i 6 ^ ^ ffi o o fz ' 5
IM' A
<r #>’ t © G S T 77 ° i
f 0 >' 6 Aft®
£ *5 © ^ I It 0 ^ ? V' ft
± 5: 5 M 0 it
' I' b^; V' ' 3 77 O 5 ^ it ^ ^ k i '
-' fc ^' ^ ° V' X £ £ ^n©# < ° l ' m
’Ag @ o 5 r 0 It 1 ^ m ffi 5 K #
</ 4) T G #J ^^ x? ^ A & 5 ^2 5 x f ( ^ W
^ b I' 77 5 ' & if #* lb M L It 5 ^ <:
“C T 6 n ^ 9 ^ ’ ^ ^ A ' x ' 5
j^
i T l M t' r: M it t M ' ? ^ S
© ® i ^ m n /z XfbGo^^oi L
tifcfcirsKa$ic»Hr. a*i*t#-±ws
WMtK^LtV'SOUCPAo^-e Siii'OH
ii/7.^ r7/®Riftjo-c»Ht. i^m
BBSCAPiWjffl^f/y-M ^±-gJ©8B
MWJSttX'yir, ffit-itfeiWoa^^?
7?^*WtbtB0 ^To
M—®»M0 y = 7 f . « / = - gftgMit
$846.50 (* t^^^fi! $85.00y7 7 MOB
£ b 0X7
*9
7 7 < a
IC <1 IC ^ ^ 72
% b ^ © -^ 6
5
° K $
#'
& o ip j; ^ 0
& O © ^ IX
X 40 '
It g ^ ic ^
$ (X 5 L X 5
0 r X U4
t /b i iT
04^
A |^ + fl
° 0 — C
^ B$ O
0 IC 72
A & °
#’0 8$
K
0
X
V'
V' if
X
• 6
t'O®«a:7-7.7ii!) sr, #MMOIS&U
J ffaiilSj ©W4fcli#tt^i'F«^''&be
TSV.
^2zg^azt^Bfl^c
““------------------ - ---------- - --------------------------------------------------- £jL------------- r-y^r^
traihs/trucks/ships/planes/hotels/telecommunications
WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM
K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
j
Authorized Agent for All Airlines
1
AUTHORIZED AGENT FOB
P and O LENES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
i
|
>
W. K. GARDENS
Crown Life Insurance Co.
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
Frank G, Yada
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquets
Private Dining Rooms
1550 West Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C.
Page 4
PAGE 4
NEW
Saturday, September 14 jggo
A
C'
li
£
Ze # 5U f ^
i‘
i
IX 6
d*
IC
CD
It
cd
£ ZF
O
B
3
cd ^ MIX'
I5®7 b
7?
I'
V'
V'
IX
Q
IX
d* i
Ft
z
IX 3
IX 5
It
IX £ it
IC
IX
& i'
n
JI
It
tr
IX
5
3
a*
o
V
V'
3 15
(X
a
^lt
! ht^®l
3
c^
3
wife
:j m®B
(X
0
3
IX
IB
7
r it
3
I
it
it
{^ ^ -ffi M U1 ffl
^’
FL
3
£>
fz
^ ^ £
#
p.
3
U
it
(X 3 11
73
7p
IB ( 7 ^ 7 :Az
# i W * 5
ft & ^
L 5& Jr if
g‘ T It ^ A
3r
#®i®t
IX
7 t. JK » i y
IX
t CD
MJ f o 7 (X ^’ t L U It cd <
ra “7 ' # Zt 7? T B
w
# m E
^
' G
73
7 Z 5 %
7^ ^
o *“
ic ^ 73 t
( A A ® it
° A
X A A 3 2$ # A
A <D j) $j - r< ©
J ^ ® ffl ^ ^ H
£ J ^J h b
^ffl"# rfi
MK^<«
3
It
<D 7
n
73 7
»
CD ^ t & 1
® 4 Kt ^ HI
% A 7* • CD
73
It
RS rU
M
d>
V'
3
CD
IX'
7
3> (X
■IX
3
5
IX
b
It
(X
SU
na
*
0 T
jn
o
3
£
IX 3
5 i
IX
a
3
n
1 ^^'
& A (X
j I IM « ^
fe
^ B * - PfJ
2 Illi X
u IS IX
IX
It
AU
ft
h
&
It
o
p
0
7c % 1 4 •
l& ^ £ & t JI
*> it
XD B ^ IX
IL V
I'
73
°
W®»+Sj
IX
CD
fl
-t MJ ^
¥^li
£
M^
IX Ld^
nn
JU
IX
8 co JU
p
c
M
w
et
3
3
S'
to 7
m
t+ JlUlP)$^Igg/ffi
s^ji|$
a^^lO
NEW
Saturday, September 14 jggo
A
C'
li
£
Ze # 5U f ^
i‘
i
IX 6
d*
IC
CD
It
cd
£ ZF
O
B
3
cd ^ MIX'
I5®7 b
7?
I'
V'
V'
IX
Q
IX
d* i
Ft
z
IX 3
IX 5
It
IX £ it
IC
IX
& i'
n
JI
It
tr
IX
5
3
a*
o
V
V'
3 15
(X
a
^lt
! ht^®l
3
c^
3
wife
:j m®B
(X
0
3
IX
IB
7
r it
3
I
it
it
{^ ^ -ffi M U1 ffl
^’
FL
3
£>
fz
^ ^ £
#
p.
3
U
it
(X 3 11
73
7p
IB ( 7 ^ 7 :Az
# i W * 5
ft & ^
L 5& Jr if
g‘ T It ^ A
3r
#®i®t
IX
7 t. JK » i y
IX
t CD
MJ f o 7 (X ^’ t L U It cd <
ra “7 ' # Zt 7? T B
w
# m E
^
' G
73
7 Z 5 %
7^ ^
o *“
ic ^ 73 t
( A A ® it
° A
X A A 3 2$ # A
A <D j) $j - r< ©
J ^ ® ffl ^ ^ H
£ J ^J h b
^ffl"# rfi
MK^<«
3
It
<D 7
n
73 7
»
CD ^ t & 1
® 4 Kt ^ HI
% A 7* • CD
73
It
RS rU
M
d>
V'
3
CD
IX'
7
3> (X
■IX
3
5
IX
b
It
(X
SU
na
*
0 T
jn
o
3
£
IX 3
5 i
IX
a
3
n
1 ^^'
& A (X
j I IM « ^
fe
^ B * - PfJ
2 Illi X
u IS IX
IX
It
AU
ft
h
&
It
o
p
0
7c % 1 4 •
l& ^ £ & t JI
*> it
XD B ^ IX
IL V
I'
73
°
W®»+Sj
IX
CD
fl
-t MJ ^
¥^li
£
M^
IX Ld^
nn
JU
IX
8 co JU
p
c
M
w
et
3
3
S'
to 7
m
t+ JlUlP)$^Igg/ffi
s^ji|$
a^^lO
Page 5
Saturday, September 14, 1963
PAGE 5
tt
n 3
IX
ix
0
<7
L
X
0
if s
T
z
^
it
b it
L
B t
n
£
6
t
3
IX
o d*
gg s
a
$i
3
£
5
0
1
K
0
it
$
f
3
it
3)
3 In
b
3
x
O 72
ip b5
11
IX
0
d> £
_^
a?
u.
z/
3
i
a
F
y
1
7 it.
f
H D
IX
4)
3
a
p
=8
• IX
7’ 7 3
>
y
a It
tk
51 d*
IKI
5
%
i
o
i d
y
7
•
i
6
IX
IX
0
d»
5
7?
Mo
$
72
v>
5 U (X
X fc ^ It 4
5
£
o
IX I'
o
(X
(ST
IX
n
b
o
IX
o
72
9
£
o
3
o
b
9
o
it
%
o
b it
n
ij
nn
Fr
if
V» 0
It
c
o
IX
1
8
z
6
3
72
0
TO
5
5
it
0
t mJ
$
1$ £
A IX
6
B
^«ft»SS ' T It 'X K f # 2 ft Ze * 8 tz & .
ZBi^KtSSW fSSK+ 6 »Wife# i> <
®z#j>rt#giRn#iM»R=S t ’f*g ;
St
X
7?
it
^
•t4 °i»5ISK
'z\TftJE+K AS
e J - sK» 3 Effl® «*S oei0fiR^
TT^t6^^o^±MBlT^L#@ La# '
f^±il»^t^ 7©i^Ai: ^H^m
• IX
(X
f
^'
A^AS iSSKtZSSt B ^4t Afti- 1
4 K 5 ^ WStT + ^ftR St-ill It ^ tft Ze H
t it tSSBWfi « fflS^B tsft® ill
5
n
7
IX
IX £* v- It
CD
IX
IX 5 fl 3 IX
d$
11 XP
£
72
0s
it
IX
0
n w
3 s’
it
(7)
9'
it.
IX
I
CD
#
5
i>
IX
b
m
72
ds
#;
d^
C'
6
b
o
fl
^‘
x
IX
S
a
3
&
A*
V'
5
tc
£
6
d5
^
6
U
72
IX
Cb d»
5
2* 3
IX
&
IX
5 A*
11
6
o
ip
r^
&
3
i
(X
IC
Z
n 5
7
0 &
IX
b
,0>
IX V'
y
b
IX u
b
5
^
O
7
d*
b
5
0
t
72
7
IX
IX
b>
It
I
in
< 0
n
5
9
7
W
L i'
5
3
£
b
1^
L
M 0
&
it
IX IC
7
0
n <pT
it
y
n
it
3
7
it
6
IX
IX
ip
W
L L
3
In
WJ
In
£ 1 O In
1 tz iP 3o I
L
X
it
IX
I
£
it
s M Pg
0
it 3
g ^ Wb
5
6
n ^A
72 T
3
^>
o
$f
iX
n
^
£
3
6
IX’
a*
0
7
tH
F to
•
7
11
0
t
8
8
t
I
I
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
>
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
IX
t ZA
t it <7
ffi
It T ©
p
A I
1
b »
• &9
7 it
t △
/
o
3
u
△
tK
b
IX
a
IX
i
0
5
IX IX
41
It
tfMt^B 3 3$ It 3m it T^ Ll^^
tel®
ffim
1
tf
7^
7
•^li
7®W
1
I it 7
3
b
8
Jig ill zb
WMV*
"St
b '>
A f 7
7^
1 Sc
s
7
Of
m^ 7
^ ' F
4
jna# - 1 /b § # 'b
1 2^® bi
M
T
7
'^* 1 • IE pSx
^
3 4#^ b
Zp
® n ^ttw C'y^^s^^^^m^ ^.a
Cg.«JI^^ * t^^fltilA^|0^+
^^(fcS^U^J '^^SBT^flt
® ^ 0^M^t k 7 153 ® t & yk tin ?’ -^1^
^^iSA^^fto^ei o0fiE^v
'
^^M^^^Tit^^^#^-^^^^ (^
M
3
b
it
<111
(111
It
72
^^Zt IX^ X k ^b T0i+iSM^^>
ill A 7 7 £ # L H 72 #1t ^ ft ^e?
®t^1?®^ HZ ^7’“ it ^^^^mJiMTK
0 4® ^ *
ao^^tW +#* t^Lft^^i «> ^T*
»»01WtS^I K^72AOT^bn^
t ^g#T&® B ^ 3 $#^M^^’fKA
IM< ^Ok$^- 1 il^^Z ^^^^
^1^ ^: * W
&&%% %%
ffl
B^0-
ffl
ffl
ffl
PAGE 5
tt
n 3
IX
ix
0
<7
L
X
0
if s
T
z
^
it
b it
L
B t
n
£
6
t
3
IX
o d*
gg s
a
$i
3
£
5
0
1
K
0
it
$
f
3
it
3)
3 In
b
3
x
O 72
ip b5
11
IX
0
d> £
_^
a?
u.
z/
3
i
a
F
y
1
7 it.
f
H D
IX
4)
3
a
p
=8
• IX
7’ 7 3
>
y
a It
tk
51 d*
IKI
5
%
i
o
i d
y
7
•
i
6
IX
IX
0
d»
5
7?
Mo
$
72
v>
5 U (X
X fc ^ It 4
5
£
o
IX I'
o
(X
(ST
IX
n
b
o
IX
o
72
9
£
o
3
o
b
9
o
it
%
o
b it
n
ij
nn
Fr
if
V» 0
It
c
o
IX
1
8
z
6
3
72
0
TO
5
5
it
0
t mJ
$
1$ £
A IX
6
B
^«ft»SS ' T It 'X K f # 2 ft Ze * 8 tz & .
ZBi^KtSSW fSSK+ 6 »Wife# i> <
®z#j>rt#giRn#iM»R=S t ’f*g ;
St
X
7?
it
^
•t4 °i»5ISK
'z\TftJE+K AS
e J - sK» 3 Effl® «*S oei0fiR^
TT^t6^^o^±MBlT^L#@ La# '
f^±il»^t^ 7©i^Ai: ^H^m
• IX
(X
f
^'
A^AS iSSKtZSSt B ^4t Afti- 1
4 K 5 ^ WStT + ^ftR St-ill It ^ tft Ze H
t it tSSBWfi « fflS^B tsft® ill
5
n
7
IX
IX £* v- It
CD
IX
IX 5 fl 3 IX
d$
11 XP
£
72
0s
it
IX
0
n w
3 s’
it
(7)
9'
it.
IX
I
CD
#
5
i>
IX
b
m
72
ds
#;
d^
C'
6
b
o
fl
^‘
x
IX
S
a
3
&
A*
V'
5
tc
£
6
d5
^
6
U
72
IX
Cb d»
5
2* 3
IX
&
IX
5 A*
11
6
o
ip
r^
&
3
i
(X
IC
Z
n 5
7
0 &
IX
b
,0>
IX V'
y
b
IX u
b
5
^
O
7
d*
b
5
0
t
72
7
IX
IX
b>
It
I
in
< 0
n
5
9
7
W
L i'
5
3
£
b
1^
L
M 0
&
it
IX IC
7
0
n <pT
it
y
n
it
3
7
it
6
IX
IX
ip
W
L L
3
In
WJ
In
£ 1 O In
1 tz iP 3o I
L
X
it
IX
I
£
it
s M Pg
0
it 3
g ^ Wb
5
6
n ^A
72 T
3
^>
o
$f
iX
n
^
£
3
6
IX’
a*
0
7
tH
F to
•
7
11
0
t
8
8
t
I
I
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
>
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
IX
t ZA
t it <7
ffi
It T ©
p
A I
1
b »
• &9
7 it
t △
/
o
3
u
△
tK
b
IX
a
IX
i
0
5
IX IX
41
It
tfMt^B 3 3$ It 3m it T^ Ll^^
tel®
ffim
1
tf
7^
7
•^li
7®W
1
I it 7
3
b
8
Jig ill zb
WMV*
"St
b '>
A f 7
7^
1 Sc
s
7
Of
m^ 7
^ ' F
4
jna# - 1 /b § # 'b
1 2^® bi
M
T
7
'^* 1 • IE pSx
^
3 4#^ b
Zp
® n ^ttw C'y^^s^^^^m^ ^.a
Cg.«JI^^ * t^^fltilA^|0^+
^^(fcS^U^J '^^SBT^flt
® ^ 0^M^t k 7 153 ® t & yk tin ?’ -^1^
^^iSA^^fto^ei o0fiE^v
'
^^M^^^Tit^^^#^-^^^^ (^
M
3
b
it
<111
(111
It
72
^^Zt IX^ X k ^b T0i+iSM^^>
ill A 7 7 £ # L H 72 #1t ^ ft ^e?
®t^1?®^ HZ ^7’“ it ^^^^mJiMTK
0 4® ^ *
ao^^tW +#* t^Lft^^i «> ^T*
»»01WtS^I K^72AOT^bn^
t ^g#T&® B ^ 3 $#^M^^’fKA
IM< ^Ok$^- 1 il^^Z ^^^^
^1^ ^: * W
&&%% %%
ffl
B^0-
ffl
ffl
ffl
Page 6
Saturday, September 14, 1963
PAGE 6
3
5
i>
5
7?
3
3
s f
^17
d*
IX
IX
3
3
d>
IC
fj
IX
I nJ
3
6
t
3
IX
Si]
It ft
21
/b^
0
IX
It
It
IX
It
It
0
7
/b
it
It
©
7
6
7 It
*1 K
IX
The New Canadian
479 Queen St. W.,
Toronto 2-B Ont.
Phone: EM. 6-5005
t
3,
m
inij
IX
©
cfizbl^o
Tet^fi^ :
5
?k
it
IX
72-^XSH
XP
^$Mi^' +
irtiirzfHH
^4)^ -^*^
4a M It 7
IX
IX
£ zb
IX
fi
5
IX
fj
H
b
5
IX A IX IX
0
5
t
b M
7K
it
It
IX
d*
It It
IX
j
IX 3
- It
if
It
5
It
It
< 5
IX'
' d>
©
e © 4b b ^ ft
IX
it It gf
5 it r < t W
V' Gt
<t X- ^ 3 bl^l
6
B'J d»
^ B9 ^
It
IX
t^ja
-i IX e sn '
A
^ j^. —* OS P $5
^ ft T
t
*
7X
I'
ft
O
IX
IS sft ® # 1# © Ze
a» j x. 14 t i’
t
© A pg (X
^- IX
V> 7^ ^
6 ip 4
w w It
if
p p
v>
3 SB
o
5
II
It
i»
iiihiihi
b
3l
£
d»
i» 4t
nn
it
it
&
“t*
It
o
IX
IX
"t* b bH
^ H
t
SU
“J* iz ©
^ SB
L
^J T Jg T IX Ml
• st a V'
3 o ©
fr
IX
©
^bl
72 X T
d* ^ Mi
* ^ ^J
P
u r L
X IX -x
It
t
IX IX
ft IC Ji
p ^ ^ 1? ? M
^' v^ ^E It it ^
&
It
it
^ L $U P &
t
^ ^ ^ ^
It
o® ° n #
g ^ ^ rk x ^
L ® t ^ ^ »
72
I'
5 IX IX
It
IX
i^
3
0
It
IX
3
V'
6
3
<£
IX
IX
b
d*
IX
®[ w
t lx
© mt
IX
IX
ir
o
d*
3
/X
b
It
5
if
ft
V' ft ^ l' < r ii i> S
£ S S r ^ ^ 3 x ' 3 ^ tx r
5 © p
b 72 °f r ° 72 zb —
z ^L T? S
° ft & >, X * c 5£ ^ zb ^
o#SI
72
X © n m^ ^ ^
it
IX
IX
b
IX
c XH
K
6
3
b
£
IX
#’
7'
7
IX
5
d*
It
i1
5
5
#
j
PAGE 6
3
5
i>
5
7?
3
3
s f
^17
d*
IX
IX
3
3
d>
IC
fj
IX
I nJ
3
6
t
3
IX
Si]
It ft
21
/b^
0
IX
It
It
IX
It
It
0
7
/b
it
It
©
7
6
7 It
*1 K
IX
The New Canadian
479 Queen St. W.,
Toronto 2-B Ont.
Phone: EM. 6-5005
t
3,
m
inij
IX
©
cfizbl^o
Tet^fi^ :
5
?k
it
IX
72-^XSH
XP
^$Mi^' +
irtiirzfHH
^4)^ -^*^
4a M It 7
IX
IX
£ zb
IX
fi
5
IX
fj
H
b
5
IX A IX IX
0
5
t
b M
7K
it
It
IX
d*
It It
IX
j
IX 3
- It
if
It
5
It
It
< 5
IX'
' d>
©
e © 4b b ^ ft
IX
it It gf
5 it r < t W
V' Gt
<t X- ^ 3 bl^l
6
B'J d»
^ B9 ^
It
IX
t^ja
-i IX e sn '
A
^ j^. —* OS P $5
^ ft T
t
*
7X
I'
ft
O
IX
IS sft ® # 1# © Ze
a» j x. 14 t i’
t
© A pg (X
^- IX
V> 7^ ^
6 ip 4
w w It
if
p p
v>
3 SB
o
5
II
It
i»
iiihiihi
b
3l
£
d»
i» 4t
nn
it
it
&
“t*
It
o
IX
IX
"t* b bH
^ H
t
SU
“J* iz ©
^ SB
L
^J T Jg T IX Ml
• st a V'
3 o ©
fr
IX
©
^bl
72 X T
d* ^ Mi
* ^ ^J
P
u r L
X IX -x
It
t
IX IX
ft IC Ji
p ^ ^ 1? ? M
^' v^ ^E It it ^
&
It
it
^ L $U P &
t
^ ^ ^ ^
It
o® ° n #
g ^ ^ rk x ^
L ® t ^ ^ »
72
I'
5 IX IX
It
IX
i^
3
0
It
IX
3
V'
6
3
<£
IX
IX
b
d*
IX
®[ w
t lx
© mt
IX
IX
ir
o
d*
3
/X
b
It
5
if
ft
V' ft ^ l' < r ii i> S
£ S S r ^ ^ 3 x ' 3 ^ tx r
5 © p
b 72 °f r ° 72 zb —
z ^L T? S
° ft & >, X * c 5£ ^ zb ^
o#SI
72
X © n m^ ^ ^
it
IX
IX
b
IX
c XH
K
6
3
b
£
IX
#’
7'
7
IX
5
d*
It
i1
5
5
#
j
Page 7
Saturday, September 14, 1963
THE
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
By STELLA ITO
Tomato Sauces
NEW
PAGE 7
CANADIAN
Yamada Studio Moves Into Lead In Finals
TORONTO. — Yamada Studio
moved into a one-game lead in
the best of three final series in
the Toronto Nisei Sunday Base
ball League last week with a 7-6
win over Japan Camera.
A Yamada win tomorrow would
give the Photographers the Harry
Miyazaki Trophy to go along*
with the Toronto JCCA Trophy
which they already captured by
winning the league pennent.
Japan Camera held a 2-.1 lead
going into the bottom of the 4th
inning as they plated' single runs
in the first and second frames,
In our previous column featuring Eggplant Parmesan, one of
the important ingredients used was homemade toniato meat sauce
It is quicker and simpler to open a can, but oh, the flavor derived
from vour own tomato sauce, there’s nothing quite like it.
As a matter of fact, this is a perfect time to make a huge batch
and store or freeze for future use. Tomatoes are abundant and very
inexpensive. And' if you have a garden that provides ripe tomatoes
vou know very well, there’s a lot of soft ones, perfect for the sauce
pot. Toss them in. There’s no substitute for fresh tomatoes used in
sauces.
The following sauce can be used for all pastas—macaroni, la
sagne, spaghetti, noodles, ravioli, etc., etc. Sauce of this sort is to
pasta what okazu is to rice. You have noticed that most pastas served
as side dishes in restaurants have little or no meat in its sauce. Only
the northern Italians use meat (colder weather, you know). As you
o-o south, and the weather is hotter and meat scarcer, sauces consist
By K. KOBAYASHI”
mostly of tomatoes, seasonings, an onion or two.
(Port Dover Shobukan President)
TOMATO SAUCE BOLOGNESE
I started Judo when I was 15
years of age and continued until
1 lb. ground beef (chuck is the best)
1 got my Brown Belt. Remember
1 lb. ground pork (or sausage)
folks, Judo in my day, was learn
V2 cup olive oil
ing this sport the hard way. Now
2 med. onions, chopped
it "is modernized, gentle, easier
for everyone.
1 green onion, chopped
Even after 35 years, when I
3 No. 2% cans tomatoes (or P/2 doz. fresh)
see
the youngsters go on the mat,
3. Bayleaf
that surging feeling comes back
1 tsp. black pepper
to me. But practicing now is hard
one-third' cup brown sugar
on my* old bones.
1 tbsp. salt.
1 The question which lies in my
mind: “Is Judo going to be taken
1 tsp. Ajinomoto
away from us and* be in the hands
2 small cans (6 oz. can) tomato paste
of the Caucausian? Remember,
1 cup sherry
the last World Champion was a
Method:
Hollander. Who will be next?
Heat a large pot, add olive or vegetable oil. Brown beef and When we think of all the work
pork, breaking into pieces.
that men like Prof. Mifune and
Add chopped onion, pepper and saute. Add tomatoes, bay leaf, Prof. Kano has put into Judo, we
seasonings and tomato paste. Cover pot partially and simmer over realize we just can’t give it away.
very low heat for 3-4 hours.
Last December we officially
Take a peak occasionally, stirring often, and add a little wine opened our Port Dover Judo
each time. The sauce will thicken with longer simmering. Thicker Club. We invited all the Yudanthe better when topped over your favorite pasta.
sha, but unfortunately, due to the
After all the sherry wine is used up, and youYeel it’s still too weather, many could not make it.
thick, add % cup water . . . but no more. Instead, if you have over However, the Hon. J. Allan, Pro
ripe tomatoes, too soft for slicing, put them in.
vincial Treasurer, drove some
TASTY TREAT: Side dish of pasta is a perfect complement to 41/2 hours from Toronto to ar
barbecue or spareribs. Or even steaks if your dinner guests are ro rive here on time.
bust eaters.
In my memory of old Judo
And have you tried the green spinach noodles? They’re quite days, probably the greatest man
unusual, but delicious and colorful.
in Canadian Judo was my dear
Culinary Cue: Boiling any vermecilli products, add couple of and old friend, Mr. Kamino. My
tbsp, of oil in the water. You’ll never have trouble with the strands- head automatically bows to his
of noodles or macaroni sticking together. It’s a restaurant trick all picture which hangs in our dojo
chefs take for granted and never* think of passing on to the “non whenever I enter. He often spoke
professionals.”
about a Judo club here and once
brought some 35 Judoka’s to this
town for a demonstration.
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
At our club here we also have
some wonderful Judo men who
while Yamada counted one in the.
bottom of the opening stanza.
The Photographers, however,
staged a four run rally in the
fourth to take a 5-2 lead. An in
ning opening walk to Roy Tanaka
and successive singles by Zenko
Sugawara. Bernie Ikeda, Ray Ta
ni, Gene Machida and Larry Sakauye were responsible for the
four runs.
After a scoreless fifth inning,
in which Japan Camera loaded the
bases but failed to score, the Ca
merashop were given another op
portunity in the sixth, and this
South Ont. Junior Judo Tourney On Sept. 14th
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Keservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
fyLAtributed ^mt
BOSTON
LONDON
give instructions. Some of them
are: Mr. Sakata of Hamilton and
his assistant, George Uchida and
Gerhardt Kufield of Dunnville.
In order to celebrate our 1st
anniversary, we are holding an
Southern Ontario Junior Judo
Tournament on September* 14th,
1963. We extend an invitation to
all The New Canadian readers to
attended this event. So, see you in
Port Dover.
PRINTING
OFFSEUM LETTERPRESS
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES. LETTERHEADS
I^ai> T7r<ZZ>^ ^nr^^i/j'ejtN^f/i&v matc h ts
627 BAY ST., TORONTO
1
AN INTtRNATIOMAL
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
EM. 3-5002
—
OX. 1-3388 (B»».)
Chiropractor, Naturopath
Rheumatism, Discs, Sciatica
Lumbago, Arthritis, Migraine
Nerve Conditions
WALES and DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
728A St. Clair Ave. West
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
if no answer call — 233-3869
TORONTO
Buy & Sell
Your Homefl
LIMITED,
WM. FYSH
REAL ESTATE |
|
Through Ave.,
x
1444 Danforth
|»
MITS
KURODA
v
Toronto
Representing
8|S
6
Bus. — HO. 9-1151
|
|
Res. — AM. 1-2581
|
(
('/a block west of Christie)
Telephone: LE. 6-8220
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
Consult
RITZ KINOSHITA
For All Classes of
INSURANCE
Phone: PL. 9.2632
TORIC
OPTICAL
proprietor
JON ONODERA
(Business)
Interesting
Accurate
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
DAILY NEWSPAPSI
Thos. T. Onizuka, BA
Phone 368-9768
LOS ANGELES
CHICAGO
Christian
Science^
Monitor
NOTE: — Tomorrow’s second
game of the series will be played
nt Christie Pits. Game time 9:30
sharp. Fans are invited to come
out and see exciting Nisei Lea
gue play-off action
HARRY S. KONDO
The
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
time they made no mistake as
they brought across four runs to
go out in front 6-5.
The lead was short-lived, how
ever, as the Photographers came
back in their half of the inning
to plate two runs and squeak out
the 7-6 victory. Walks cost the
Camerashop the game. Bob Nishi
kawa, who took over from star
ter Ray Iijima in the sixth walk
ed two batters in succe^ion after
getting the first batter of the inring to fly out to left. Mitch Ni
shimura followed the two free
passes with a single to plate one
run, then after Checker Nishi
mura popped out, Ken Ikeda
singled to push the winning run
across the plate.
Roy Tanaka picked up the win
for the Photographers, his sixth
win of the yx ar (including* the
regular schedule) without a set
back. Nishikawa took the loss
for the Camerashop.
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W,
Toronto
8g^-Mffi^i:if
118 West Hastings St
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Complete
International Naw:
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
FLAT ROOFS
E A VESTROUGHING
TORONTO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
The Christian Science Monhor
One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass.
Send your newspaper for the tim^
checked. Enclosed find my check or
money order.
□ 1 year $22.
□ < month* $11
0 3 months S5.5O
22 Peterlee Crescent
Islington, Ontario
BElmont 3-3095
421-3374 nisei owned
"COVERING ONTARIO”
Night Calls: PL. 9-5095
HI. 7-1100
for your wedding candids
home portraits
and special events
State
PB-1«
THE
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
By STELLA ITO
Tomato Sauces
NEW
PAGE 7
CANADIAN
Yamada Studio Moves Into Lead In Finals
TORONTO. — Yamada Studio
moved into a one-game lead in
the best of three final series in
the Toronto Nisei Sunday Base
ball League last week with a 7-6
win over Japan Camera.
A Yamada win tomorrow would
give the Photographers the Harry
Miyazaki Trophy to go along*
with the Toronto JCCA Trophy
which they already captured by
winning the league pennent.
Japan Camera held a 2-.1 lead
going into the bottom of the 4th
inning as they plated' single runs
in the first and second frames,
In our previous column featuring Eggplant Parmesan, one of
the important ingredients used was homemade toniato meat sauce
It is quicker and simpler to open a can, but oh, the flavor derived
from vour own tomato sauce, there’s nothing quite like it.
As a matter of fact, this is a perfect time to make a huge batch
and store or freeze for future use. Tomatoes are abundant and very
inexpensive. And' if you have a garden that provides ripe tomatoes
vou know very well, there’s a lot of soft ones, perfect for the sauce
pot. Toss them in. There’s no substitute for fresh tomatoes used in
sauces.
The following sauce can be used for all pastas—macaroni, la
sagne, spaghetti, noodles, ravioli, etc., etc. Sauce of this sort is to
pasta what okazu is to rice. You have noticed that most pastas served
as side dishes in restaurants have little or no meat in its sauce. Only
the northern Italians use meat (colder weather, you know). As you
o-o south, and the weather is hotter and meat scarcer, sauces consist
By K. KOBAYASHI”
mostly of tomatoes, seasonings, an onion or two.
(Port Dover Shobukan President)
TOMATO SAUCE BOLOGNESE
I started Judo when I was 15
years of age and continued until
1 lb. ground beef (chuck is the best)
1 got my Brown Belt. Remember
1 lb. ground pork (or sausage)
folks, Judo in my day, was learn
V2 cup olive oil
ing this sport the hard way. Now
2 med. onions, chopped
it "is modernized, gentle, easier
for everyone.
1 green onion, chopped
Even after 35 years, when I
3 No. 2% cans tomatoes (or P/2 doz. fresh)
see
the youngsters go on the mat,
3. Bayleaf
that surging feeling comes back
1 tsp. black pepper
to me. But practicing now is hard
one-third' cup brown sugar
on my* old bones.
1 tbsp. salt.
1 The question which lies in my
mind: “Is Judo going to be taken
1 tsp. Ajinomoto
away from us and* be in the hands
2 small cans (6 oz. can) tomato paste
of the Caucausian? Remember,
1 cup sherry
the last World Champion was a
Method:
Hollander. Who will be next?
Heat a large pot, add olive or vegetable oil. Brown beef and When we think of all the work
pork, breaking into pieces.
that men like Prof. Mifune and
Add chopped onion, pepper and saute. Add tomatoes, bay leaf, Prof. Kano has put into Judo, we
seasonings and tomato paste. Cover pot partially and simmer over realize we just can’t give it away.
very low heat for 3-4 hours.
Last December we officially
Take a peak occasionally, stirring often, and add a little wine opened our Port Dover Judo
each time. The sauce will thicken with longer simmering. Thicker Club. We invited all the Yudanthe better when topped over your favorite pasta.
sha, but unfortunately, due to the
After all the sherry wine is used up, and youYeel it’s still too weather, many could not make it.
thick, add % cup water . . . but no more. Instead, if you have over However, the Hon. J. Allan, Pro
ripe tomatoes, too soft for slicing, put them in.
vincial Treasurer, drove some
TASTY TREAT: Side dish of pasta is a perfect complement to 41/2 hours from Toronto to ar
barbecue or spareribs. Or even steaks if your dinner guests are ro rive here on time.
bust eaters.
In my memory of old Judo
And have you tried the green spinach noodles? They’re quite days, probably the greatest man
unusual, but delicious and colorful.
in Canadian Judo was my dear
Culinary Cue: Boiling any vermecilli products, add couple of and old friend, Mr. Kamino. My
tbsp, of oil in the water. You’ll never have trouble with the strands- head automatically bows to his
of noodles or macaroni sticking together. It’s a restaurant trick all picture which hangs in our dojo
chefs take for granted and never* think of passing on to the “non whenever I enter. He often spoke
professionals.”
about a Judo club here and once
brought some 35 Judoka’s to this
town for a demonstration.
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
At our club here we also have
some wonderful Judo men who
while Yamada counted one in the.
bottom of the opening stanza.
The Photographers, however,
staged a four run rally in the
fourth to take a 5-2 lead. An in
ning opening walk to Roy Tanaka
and successive singles by Zenko
Sugawara. Bernie Ikeda, Ray Ta
ni, Gene Machida and Larry Sakauye were responsible for the
four runs.
After a scoreless fifth inning,
in which Japan Camera loaded the
bases but failed to score, the Ca
merashop were given another op
portunity in the sixth, and this
South Ont. Junior Judo Tourney On Sept. 14th
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Keservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
fyLAtributed ^mt
BOSTON
LONDON
give instructions. Some of them
are: Mr. Sakata of Hamilton and
his assistant, George Uchida and
Gerhardt Kufield of Dunnville.
In order to celebrate our 1st
anniversary, we are holding an
Southern Ontario Junior Judo
Tournament on September* 14th,
1963. We extend an invitation to
all The New Canadian readers to
attended this event. So, see you in
Port Dover.
PRINTING
OFFSEUM LETTERPRESS
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES. LETTERHEADS
I^ai> T7r<ZZ>^ ^nr^^i/j'ejtN^f/i&v matc h ts
627 BAY ST., TORONTO
1
AN INTtRNATIOMAL
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
EM. 3-5002
—
OX. 1-3388 (B»».)
Chiropractor, Naturopath
Rheumatism, Discs, Sciatica
Lumbago, Arthritis, Migraine
Nerve Conditions
WALES and DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
728A St. Clair Ave. West
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
if no answer call — 233-3869
TORONTO
Buy & Sell
Your Homefl
LIMITED,
WM. FYSH
REAL ESTATE |
|
Through Ave.,
x
1444 Danforth
|»
MITS
KURODA
v
Toronto
Representing
8|S
6
Bus. — HO. 9-1151
|
|
Res. — AM. 1-2581
|
(
('/a block west of Christie)
Telephone: LE. 6-8220
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
Consult
RITZ KINOSHITA
For All Classes of
INSURANCE
Phone: PL. 9.2632
TORIC
OPTICAL
proprietor
JON ONODERA
(Business)
Interesting
Accurate
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
DAILY NEWSPAPSI
Thos. T. Onizuka, BA
Phone 368-9768
LOS ANGELES
CHICAGO
Christian
Science^
Monitor
NOTE: — Tomorrow’s second
game of the series will be played
nt Christie Pits. Game time 9:30
sharp. Fans are invited to come
out and see exciting Nisei Lea
gue play-off action
HARRY S. KONDO
The
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
time they made no mistake as
they brought across four runs to
go out in front 6-5.
The lead was short-lived, how
ever, as the Photographers came
back in their half of the inning
to plate two runs and squeak out
the 7-6 victory. Walks cost the
Camerashop the game. Bob Nishi
kawa, who took over from star
ter Ray Iijima in the sixth walk
ed two batters in succe^ion after
getting the first batter of the inring to fly out to left. Mitch Ni
shimura followed the two free
passes with a single to plate one
run, then after Checker Nishi
mura popped out, Ken Ikeda
singled to push the winning run
across the plate.
Roy Tanaka picked up the win
for the Photographers, his sixth
win of the yx ar (including* the
regular schedule) without a set
back. Nishikawa took the loss
for the Camerashop.
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W,
Toronto
8g^-Mffi^i:if
118 West Hastings St
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Complete
International Naw:
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
FLAT ROOFS
E A VESTROUGHING
TORONTO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
The Christian Science Monhor
One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass.
Send your newspaper for the tim^
checked. Enclosed find my check or
money order.
□ 1 year $22.
□ < month* $11
0 3 months S5.5O
22 Peterlee Crescent
Islington, Ontario
BElmont 3-3095
421-3374 nisei owned
"COVERING ONTARIO”
Night Calls: PL. 9-5095
HI. 7-1100
for your wedding candids
home portraits
and special events
State
PB-1«
Page 8
PAGE 8
THE
NEW
CANADIAN
Sokagakkai....
Point Blank
By HOWARD IKEBUCHI
If You Knew Suzie. . . .
I suppose that in the life of an average person it is not often
that one gets to meet a celebrity; when one does, it’s an experience
that one will probably not forget. Also, if is not often that an aver
age person can say “I used to know him when. . .” whenever one
reads of the acheivements of a distinguished scientist, whenever one
hears the voice of a best-selling vocalist over the radio, whenever
one witnesses the crowning of a new boxing champion, etc.
I am happy to report that I may yet gain membership to that
privledged body of people whose members can unflinchingly say
“I used to know him when. . . .” For the moment, however, I shall
join a smaller group of similar people, and be able to turn my flat,
nose upwards at that larger body and proudly exclaim “I know her!”
whenever I hear someone refer to the promising new vocal team of
“Gord” and “Sue”, of hear their disc being played over the radio.
In these situations, I.,shall, of course, be referring to the female
component.of that duo, attractive and vivifying Miss Susan Huber.
It just happens that Miss Huber has been right there in the office
under my very eyes for the past few years. Little did I realise,
though, that someday she would mount the high lights of the disc
cutters. It would, therefore, be dishonest of me to report that I was
not surprised to hear of her- good’ fortune.
I was. Furthenhore, I am very glad for her.
Susan, who has just reached the twenty year mark of her life
is a really remarkable girl. Very attractive, she has been compared
to Carol Burnett, the hilarious comediene of Broadway fame, by
many of her co-workers. By the same token, Sue has the talent to
entertain others—a gift which she sometimes calls forth to amuse
others by mocking famous entertainers or by original creations
which she expresses in a variety of vocal pitch and tone. A girl that
loves the outdoors, she skies in the winter in the slopes of the Laurentians, cheers for the Allouettes—(she was a cheerleader for the
Ais a few years back)—and likes to ride around in her newly acquired
sports car, amongst her other activities.
Their record, “Charming Willie And Surfing Sally”, a 45 rpm
disc with a Carlton label, is most probably going to sweep the na
tion’s “hit parade.” Already winning favourable responses in the
U.SA., this new version of a school choir favourite. (“Billy Boy”,)
has a fast and catchy beat to it along with new lyrics bitten by
Gordon Lafliche, the “Gord” of the refreshing duo.
“The sales in the States are going great,” beamed .a happy Su
san, as we chatted in her office at a local hospital where she is pre
sently employed as an interviewer. “We hope it goes as well in Cana
da,” she added, as she checked over some files handed her by a coworker. (At the time of this writing, “Charming- Willie And’ Surfing
Sally” was released about five weeks ago in the U.S.A, and about
two weeks in Canada.)
Sue, as she likes to be called, is a five foot seven, 125 pounds
of well-distributed feminine attraction. Although somewhat shv, she
does not readily show it. Just before going off to appear on an Ot
tawa TV show to promote their record over- the Labour Day week
end, she confided, “Believe it or not, I’m nervous.” To us, she ap
peared very poised and did not manifest any sign of apprehension
that might be the usual case with a neophyte. Perhaps, this is the
result of past experience of appearing before the public as a fashion
model a job she does from time to time in her spare moments, to
supplement her income and because she loves it.
Of her future, Sue is not unsure. She expects that she and Gord
Lafliche will be making more records if all goes well with their ini.
t;al effort, which, from all reports, is doing well. “I hope,” she said,
to make more records, lots of monev, I’ll save mv money and then
get married.”
*
.
To whom ? She didn’t say. . . .
The™, it was time for me to leave. I wished her good luck on
l.V ana went back to the drudgery of routine work wondering_
wondering whether she’ll make the ivy covered limelights which
many have tried to reach and failed.
T
1
she makes it. On second thought, No, by Gosh
bhe I make it. In any event, I hope she does. I can then sav
1 knew her when. ...”
*
ents elected all 76 candidates in
the Tokyo District to 23 town
assemblies; 261 of 287 Sokagak
kai candidates ' throughout the
nation were succesful in other
campaigns. Since then, Sokagak
kai members have claimed 15
seats in the Diet (congress) to
become
Japan’s third political
force.
It
has
been
labeled to
talitarian. By its own preach
ings, it seems to substantiate
these charges. Sokagakkai lead
ers have promised that their
main temple at the base of Mt.
Fuji will become the “National
Tabernacle” of Japan. They
preach fanatic intolerance of
other religions, including Chris
tianity. Violence is condoned.
Sokagakkai members are re
quired to destroy Bibles, icons,
Buddhas and any other vestiges
of what the organization calls
“decadent” religions. It is deri-
Nobel Winner Elected
TOKYO. — Dr. Hideki Yuka
wa, Japan’s Nobel Prize-winning
psysicist, has" been re-elected pre
sident of the World Association
of World Federalists.
Empress Donates $10,000
GENEVA.—The empress of
Japan has made a personal gift
of 810,000 to the International
Red Cross on the organization’s
LOOth anniversary.
Milk In All Colors
Of The Rainbow
TOKYO.—Milk in all the colors
of a Japanese lantern now is
being marketed in Japan.
Red, green, yellow and blue
powdered milk is made by incor
porating additives during the
drying process. The green pow
der contains vegetable vitamins;
the yellow, egg yolks and honey;
the red, carrots and oranges; and
the blue, sugar.
Saturday,: September 14, 1^3
(Continued from page one*)
sive of Christ and Christianity.
Several thousand Americans
have been caught up in and sup
port the movement. Most of these
are servicemen married to Japa
nese wives. There are branches in
South America, West Germany,
France, India, Hong Kong and
Taiwan. Chapters in the United
States are located in San Fran
cisco, Chicago, Washington, D.C.,
and San Diego, Calif.
Additionally, Sokagakkai’s mi
litary structure, organized on the
family basis, is a cause of fear.
The movement boasts a tre
mendous youth corps comprised
of men and women under 30, with
450,000 in the men’s section and
300,000 in the women’s section.
Great stress is placed on. physic
al condition, with field days, ju
do matches, races, bring a com
parison with the activities of the
youth corps of Hitler’s Germany.
Sokagakkai is not without pro
blems. Buddhists have been cri
tical of the organization’s into
lerance refusing to bury Sokagakai dead. Violence also is com
ing in for public criticism, spark
ed by such actions as the killing
of an 11-year-old girl because her
father balked at Sokagakkai.
With an average monthly
growth of 100,000 new members,
however, Sokagakkai is not likely
to lose strength.
“Once you are in,” said a 39year-old house painter, “there’s
no wandering off the reserva
tion.” Members who have tried
have been severely persecuted.
Sokagakkai says 1980 is the
year it will ascend to supreme
power.
Many say that this will bring
on another War of the Crusades.
But this time, they say, it will be
Sokagakkai on the one side and
“disbelievers” on the other.
Kashino & Weinberg
Chartered Accountants
221 Victoria St.
Suite 303
Toronto, Ontario
PHONE 363-7441
SAY rr WITH
FLOWERS
T.V. — RADIO — HI-FI
SHARON'S FLORIST
JAMES KAMINO
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
318 Bathurst St,
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15. 1963
10:30 A.M.—Religious School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Service
2:00 P.M.—Japanese Language Service
The Rev. Newton Ishima
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1963
11:30 A.M. English Language Service
11:30 A.M. Sunday Church School
"ISN'T RELIGION OLD STUFF?"
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada, B.A., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
—
701 Do ver court Rd., Toronto
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
EM 4-9913
0
(TORONTO)
£
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
Authorized as second class mail
and for payment of postage in cash
Post Office Department. Ottawa
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher, K C
TSUMURA,
English
Section
Editor, KEN MORI, Japanese
Section Editor and Advertising.
SUBSCRIPTION
$4.00 per 6 months
S7.00 per year
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
EMpire 6-5005
-CLASSIFIED^
Female Help Wanted
MANUFACTURING
company west-end
requires female help to do" light elec
trical assembly work at home. BoxTs
The New Canadian (Toronto).
ETOBICOKE plant requires several Japanese women for light assembly. BE.’
3-5833 (Toronto).
GIRL or woman for grocery store. Ex
perienced prefered. Apply Sun Produce,
1096 Yonge St. Toronto. WA. 1-7005 (Toonto).
FEMALE Presser for sweaters.
Good
wages and good hours. Phone 368-1317'
(Toronto).
PART TIME girl clerk. WA. 3-0346 be
tween 5 and 6 p.m. (Toronto).
Male Help Wanted
A FEW garden helpers wanted. Phone
533-6196, Mr. Maehara (Toronto)
YOUNG man to learn automotive ma
chine shop trade. 722 Broadview Ave.,
(Toronto).
ASSISTANT
stock keeper. Apply Wil
son's, 605 Adelaide St. W. Phone 3622515 (Toronto).
MOVE to .beautiful British Colubia. Fa
bulous fishing and huntting. Television
technician wanted. Bench man. Write im
mediately to: TAKS CRESTON ELEC
TRIC, Box 940 Creston, B.C.
A FEW garden helpers wanted. Phone
533-6196, Mr. Maehara (Toronto).
GARDEN helpers wanted immediately.
Phone BA. 1-2145 (Kinoshita)
GARDEN HELPERS needed immediately.
For particulars phone GA.
Heiki. (Toronto).
1-5040, Mr.
Apartment For Rent
TWO ROOM apartment at Dundas and
Huron district for rent. 875 monthly.
Phone EM. 6-5316 (Toronto).
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
For Repairs On
THE NEW CANADIAN
APARTMENT for rent. Pape and O'Con
nor. Newly decorated, self-contained
basement apartment. 3 rooms, a kitchen,
and a bathroom. Phone HO. 3-8980 (To
ronto) .
NISEI WANTED
MALE Japanese Canadian
University graduate. Read
and write Japanese. To work
for a leading Japanesefirm in
Montreal. Knowledge in metal
and
machinery
prefered.
Phone for appointment: 9217194 (Toronto).
Toronto Nisei Mixed Major 5-Pin League
KAZUO G. OIYE
will commence on Sunday, Sept. 22nd at 1:30 sharp.
CHICK SEXORS
IN GREATER DEMAND THAN
EVER BEFORE
There are still a few openings for male and female
bowlers. Those interested please contact immediately: Theresa
—PL. 7-9285 or Jerry—HO. 3-0554.
n,?rk. durin" lhe da-v* Short evening classes. Schools in Calif.,
Illinois and Penna.
YOUR SEXING INCOME STARTS
GRADUATION
UPON
Sexors receive S6.00315.00 an hour at hatcheries.
WRITE TODAY! (No Obligation)
SymaTrlw™1 btinetit, and information. Extended Easy
CHICK SEXING SCHOOL
Home Office: 214 Line St.
Lonsdale, Peace.
S. John Nitta. General Manner
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
366-6388
421-9983 (Res.)
Furuya Fall Tours To Japan
Three Convenient Departures
Sept. 15, Oct. 16, Nov. 15, 1963
13 Day Tour $264.00 (Can.) plus airfare
Furuya Travel Service
365 Spadina Ave.
EM. 6-1075
GOING INTO BUSINESS
FOR YOURSEIF?
Tien maybe b's lime Io soil
MICHAEL OTSUKA
Chartered Accountant
HU. 9-3592
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA
THE
NEW
CANADIAN
Sokagakkai....
Point Blank
By HOWARD IKEBUCHI
If You Knew Suzie. . . .
I suppose that in the life of an average person it is not often
that one gets to meet a celebrity; when one does, it’s an experience
that one will probably not forget. Also, if is not often that an aver
age person can say “I used to know him when. . .” whenever one
reads of the acheivements of a distinguished scientist, whenever one
hears the voice of a best-selling vocalist over the radio, whenever
one witnesses the crowning of a new boxing champion, etc.
I am happy to report that I may yet gain membership to that
privledged body of people whose members can unflinchingly say
“I used to know him when. . . .” For the moment, however, I shall
join a smaller group of similar people, and be able to turn my flat,
nose upwards at that larger body and proudly exclaim “I know her!”
whenever I hear someone refer to the promising new vocal team of
“Gord” and “Sue”, of hear their disc being played over the radio.
In these situations, I.,shall, of course, be referring to the female
component.of that duo, attractive and vivifying Miss Susan Huber.
It just happens that Miss Huber has been right there in the office
under my very eyes for the past few years. Little did I realise,
though, that someday she would mount the high lights of the disc
cutters. It would, therefore, be dishonest of me to report that I was
not surprised to hear of her- good’ fortune.
I was. Furthenhore, I am very glad for her.
Susan, who has just reached the twenty year mark of her life
is a really remarkable girl. Very attractive, she has been compared
to Carol Burnett, the hilarious comediene of Broadway fame, by
many of her co-workers. By the same token, Sue has the talent to
entertain others—a gift which she sometimes calls forth to amuse
others by mocking famous entertainers or by original creations
which she expresses in a variety of vocal pitch and tone. A girl that
loves the outdoors, she skies in the winter in the slopes of the Laurentians, cheers for the Allouettes—(she was a cheerleader for the
Ais a few years back)—and likes to ride around in her newly acquired
sports car, amongst her other activities.
Their record, “Charming Willie And Surfing Sally”, a 45 rpm
disc with a Carlton label, is most probably going to sweep the na
tion’s “hit parade.” Already winning favourable responses in the
U.SA., this new version of a school choir favourite. (“Billy Boy”,)
has a fast and catchy beat to it along with new lyrics bitten by
Gordon Lafliche, the “Gord” of the refreshing duo.
“The sales in the States are going great,” beamed .a happy Su
san, as we chatted in her office at a local hospital where she is pre
sently employed as an interviewer. “We hope it goes as well in Cana
da,” she added, as she checked over some files handed her by a coworker. (At the time of this writing, “Charming- Willie And’ Surfing
Sally” was released about five weeks ago in the U.S.A, and about
two weeks in Canada.)
Sue, as she likes to be called, is a five foot seven, 125 pounds
of well-distributed feminine attraction. Although somewhat shv, she
does not readily show it. Just before going off to appear on an Ot
tawa TV show to promote their record over- the Labour Day week
end, she confided, “Believe it or not, I’m nervous.” To us, she ap
peared very poised and did not manifest any sign of apprehension
that might be the usual case with a neophyte. Perhaps, this is the
result of past experience of appearing before the public as a fashion
model a job she does from time to time in her spare moments, to
supplement her income and because she loves it.
Of her future, Sue is not unsure. She expects that she and Gord
Lafliche will be making more records if all goes well with their ini.
t;al effort, which, from all reports, is doing well. “I hope,” she said,
to make more records, lots of monev, I’ll save mv money and then
get married.”
*
.
To whom ? She didn’t say. . . .
The™, it was time for me to leave. I wished her good luck on
l.V ana went back to the drudgery of routine work wondering_
wondering whether she’ll make the ivy covered limelights which
many have tried to reach and failed.
T
1
she makes it. On second thought, No, by Gosh
bhe I make it. In any event, I hope she does. I can then sav
1 knew her when. ...”
*
ents elected all 76 candidates in
the Tokyo District to 23 town
assemblies; 261 of 287 Sokagak
kai candidates ' throughout the
nation were succesful in other
campaigns. Since then, Sokagak
kai members have claimed 15
seats in the Diet (congress) to
become
Japan’s third political
force.
It
has
been
labeled to
talitarian. By its own preach
ings, it seems to substantiate
these charges. Sokagakkai lead
ers have promised that their
main temple at the base of Mt.
Fuji will become the “National
Tabernacle” of Japan. They
preach fanatic intolerance of
other religions, including Chris
tianity. Violence is condoned.
Sokagakkai members are re
quired to destroy Bibles, icons,
Buddhas and any other vestiges
of what the organization calls
“decadent” religions. It is deri-
Nobel Winner Elected
TOKYO. — Dr. Hideki Yuka
wa, Japan’s Nobel Prize-winning
psysicist, has" been re-elected pre
sident of the World Association
of World Federalists.
Empress Donates $10,000
GENEVA.—The empress of
Japan has made a personal gift
of 810,000 to the International
Red Cross on the organization’s
LOOth anniversary.
Milk In All Colors
Of The Rainbow
TOKYO.—Milk in all the colors
of a Japanese lantern now is
being marketed in Japan.
Red, green, yellow and blue
powdered milk is made by incor
porating additives during the
drying process. The green pow
der contains vegetable vitamins;
the yellow, egg yolks and honey;
the red, carrots and oranges; and
the blue, sugar.
Saturday,: September 14, 1^3
(Continued from page one*)
sive of Christ and Christianity.
Several thousand Americans
have been caught up in and sup
port the movement. Most of these
are servicemen married to Japa
nese wives. There are branches in
South America, West Germany,
France, India, Hong Kong and
Taiwan. Chapters in the United
States are located in San Fran
cisco, Chicago, Washington, D.C.,
and San Diego, Calif.
Additionally, Sokagakkai’s mi
litary structure, organized on the
family basis, is a cause of fear.
The movement boasts a tre
mendous youth corps comprised
of men and women under 30, with
450,000 in the men’s section and
300,000 in the women’s section.
Great stress is placed on. physic
al condition, with field days, ju
do matches, races, bring a com
parison with the activities of the
youth corps of Hitler’s Germany.
Sokagakkai is not without pro
blems. Buddhists have been cri
tical of the organization’s into
lerance refusing to bury Sokagakai dead. Violence also is com
ing in for public criticism, spark
ed by such actions as the killing
of an 11-year-old girl because her
father balked at Sokagakkai.
With an average monthly
growth of 100,000 new members,
however, Sokagakkai is not likely
to lose strength.
“Once you are in,” said a 39year-old house painter, “there’s
no wandering off the reserva
tion.” Members who have tried
have been severely persecuted.
Sokagakkai says 1980 is the
year it will ascend to supreme
power.
Many say that this will bring
on another War of the Crusades.
But this time, they say, it will be
Sokagakkai on the one side and
“disbelievers” on the other.
Kashino & Weinberg
Chartered Accountants
221 Victoria St.
Suite 303
Toronto, Ontario
PHONE 363-7441
SAY rr WITH
FLOWERS
T.V. — RADIO — HI-FI
SHARON'S FLORIST
JAMES KAMINO
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
318 Bathurst St,
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15. 1963
10:30 A.M.—Religious School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Service
2:00 P.M.—Japanese Language Service
The Rev. Newton Ishima
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1963
11:30 A.M. English Language Service
11:30 A.M. Sunday Church School
"ISN'T RELIGION OLD STUFF?"
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada, B.A., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
—
701 Do ver court Rd., Toronto
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
EM 4-9913
0
(TORONTO)
£
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
Authorized as second class mail
and for payment of postage in cash
Post Office Department. Ottawa
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher, K C
TSUMURA,
English
Section
Editor, KEN MORI, Japanese
Section Editor and Advertising.
SUBSCRIPTION
$4.00 per 6 months
S7.00 per year
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
EMpire 6-5005
-CLASSIFIED^
Female Help Wanted
MANUFACTURING
company west-end
requires female help to do" light elec
trical assembly work at home. BoxTs
The New Canadian (Toronto).
ETOBICOKE plant requires several Japanese women for light assembly. BE.’
3-5833 (Toronto).
GIRL or woman for grocery store. Ex
perienced prefered. Apply Sun Produce,
1096 Yonge St. Toronto. WA. 1-7005 (Toonto).
FEMALE Presser for sweaters.
Good
wages and good hours. Phone 368-1317'
(Toronto).
PART TIME girl clerk. WA. 3-0346 be
tween 5 and 6 p.m. (Toronto).
Male Help Wanted
A FEW garden helpers wanted. Phone
533-6196, Mr. Maehara (Toronto)
YOUNG man to learn automotive ma
chine shop trade. 722 Broadview Ave.,
(Toronto).
ASSISTANT
stock keeper. Apply Wil
son's, 605 Adelaide St. W. Phone 3622515 (Toronto).
MOVE to .beautiful British Colubia. Fa
bulous fishing and huntting. Television
technician wanted. Bench man. Write im
mediately to: TAKS CRESTON ELEC
TRIC, Box 940 Creston, B.C.
A FEW garden helpers wanted. Phone
533-6196, Mr. Maehara (Toronto).
GARDEN helpers wanted immediately.
Phone BA. 1-2145 (Kinoshita)
GARDEN HELPERS needed immediately.
For particulars phone GA.
Heiki. (Toronto).
1-5040, Mr.
Apartment For Rent
TWO ROOM apartment at Dundas and
Huron district for rent. 875 monthly.
Phone EM. 6-5316 (Toronto).
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
For Repairs On
THE NEW CANADIAN
APARTMENT for rent. Pape and O'Con
nor. Newly decorated, self-contained
basement apartment. 3 rooms, a kitchen,
and a bathroom. Phone HO. 3-8980 (To
ronto) .
NISEI WANTED
MALE Japanese Canadian
University graduate. Read
and write Japanese. To work
for a leading Japanesefirm in
Montreal. Knowledge in metal
and
machinery
prefered.
Phone for appointment: 9217194 (Toronto).
Toronto Nisei Mixed Major 5-Pin League
KAZUO G. OIYE
will commence on Sunday, Sept. 22nd at 1:30 sharp.
CHICK SEXORS
IN GREATER DEMAND THAN
EVER BEFORE
There are still a few openings for male and female
bowlers. Those interested please contact immediately: Theresa
—PL. 7-9285 or Jerry—HO. 3-0554.
n,?rk. durin" lhe da-v* Short evening classes. Schools in Calif.,
Illinois and Penna.
YOUR SEXING INCOME STARTS
GRADUATION
UPON
Sexors receive S6.00315.00 an hour at hatcheries.
WRITE TODAY! (No Obligation)
SymaTrlw™1 btinetit, and information. Extended Easy
CHICK SEXING SCHOOL
Home Office: 214 Line St.
Lonsdale, Peace.
S. John Nitta. General Manner
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
366-6388
421-9983 (Res.)
Furuya Fall Tours To Japan
Three Convenient Departures
Sept. 15, Oct. 16, Nov. 15, 1963
13 Day Tour $264.00 (Can.) plus airfare
Furuya Travel Service
365 Spadina Ave.
EM. 6-1075
GOING INTO BUSINESS
FOR YOURSEIF?
Tien maybe b's lime Io soil
MICHAEL OTSUKA
Chartered Accountant
HU. 9-3592
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA