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The New Canadian — July 8, 1964

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Page 1

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Y. 5-1

WEDNESDAY. JULY 8, 1964

Toronto, Ont,

Hamilton J.C. Wins Raffle . .

amii Race Marriages Show
3,000
Me Age Span In Partners

Attend TJCCA Picnic

whether to
in Hamilton. He has not
take the trip or the $2,000.
N0LULU. — The higger climbs as tire age spread bebride
and
bridegroom

A
crowd
of
over
3,000
young
and
ween
TORONTO,
Other winners were:
^soan between bride and
of
2nd Prize, Color Television: Mrs. Sh
^4
the bigger the grows.
old Japanese Canadians took
^ A an interracial mar2-Year Period
mura. 314 Coxwell Avenue in Toronto
’ect summer weather to arte
^ceoMing to Hawaii marMr. Henry Ichikawa,
statistics
are
contained
in
The
held on
Community Picnic
i
3rd Prize,
J statistics.
a paper prepared by Robert C.
nt in Clarkston, Ont.
percent of the maru- Schmitt, of the Department of Park.
Portable
Tele ision: Mrs. Olive Mc4th Prize,
Visitors from Chatham, Hamilton, Oakville and
!’V which the bridegroom Planning and Economic Develop­
5 vears or more older man ment, for tire annual meeting of Montreal also attended this big event which is Elhinnoy, It 5 Crescent in North Toronto.
the PoDulation
hide are interracial.
Population Association of annually sponsored by the Toronto J CCA.
5th Prize, Tape Recorder: Mrs. Mo
Francisco.
4 compares with the State America in San
_
One of the big events was the Annual Air Trip 121 Lanyard Road in Weston.
•age of 37 per cent for ad
An interesting program started after lunch with
He studied in detail the mar
To Japan Raffle. This year’s 1st Prize winner of
in 1961 and 1962.
of a two-yea
riage statistic
a Kite Flying Contest followed by 12 varieties
the air trip to Japan plus 8500. or $2,000. in cash
e couple of the same age, period,between January 1, 1961,
L-pAc’uI marriage rate is through December 31, 1962.
was Mr. George Sakata of 571 Burlington Street of foot races and bingo.
One of the events that drew
Aer' cent. The percentage
“Interracial marriage rates in
Hawaii
have been increasing
the most laughs was the Gent­
since data were first compLed 2 J.C/s Die In Auto Crashes .
lemen's Knee Contest with the
more than a half century ago, ’
ladies acting as judges
Schmitt said.
A Kendo demonstration by’ a
for the four-year
“The rate
group headed by*
period ended in mid-1916 was
shield.
TORONTO.

A
26-year-olc.
kam u r a, 5 th - da J i, and a Karate
11.5 per cent.
The impact forced the pas­ demonstration by Mr. Mas Tsu“It rose to 20.3 per cent for Nisei woman, Mrs. Irene Asada
*
1930KIRONTO. — Mr. Kazuhide 1920-1930, 22.7 per cent for
of Windermere Avenue was kill­ senger door open and Mrs. Asa­ ruoka, oth-dan, and his group
Uy Consul of Japan in To- 1940, 28.4 per cent for 1940da hurtled toward the hydrant. thrilled
the audience as they
1949, and 32.7 per cent for 1950- ed early Saturday morning when
control
|o, has been appointed counThe
car
swung
out
of
their
a car driven by* her husband,
went through
1959
|r at the Japan-Embassy in
“The rate for 1962, the most Frederick, 28, a draftsman, col­ and reached the hydrant at the paces.
|goon, Burma it was an- recent year so far reported,
same time, she did.
Harry
Kumano's ChilMr.
cent, an all-time lided with a street car and struck
to St.
was
37.7
per
Mr.
Asada
was
taken
inced on July* 1st.
Choir
carried
on bravely
a fire hydrant at Keele and Dun­
dren’s
treated without the usual piano accom­
and
Komuro and his family high.”
J
oseph

s
During the two-year period das streets.
for shock and rib injuries.
be returning to Japan in selected for detailed analysis.
paniment.
Police said a street car stopped
The victim is a daughter ot
I near future and then take 3,986 marriages, or ot per cem to let off passengers and, as it
The last event was the FukuKen Shiomi of Tothis new position. He has been of the total, were interracial.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
started up again, it was struck
biki
(gate
draw) with many
Among bridegrooms, the iatc
ronto.
porMito since October, 1961.
prizes
donated
by- the following
was lowest for the Japanese by* the Asada car.
the 62nd traffic
This
was
E: successor will be Mr. Sen- (14.9 per cent), and Caucasians
Mrs. Asada received a fractur­
busin ess establishmen Is:
b Saiki, section chief of the (34.2 per cent), and higaesr ed skull when she was thrown fatality in Metro this year
Continental Family Co-op, I-nL West Asia Bureau of among the Hawaiians (84 9 per against the dashboard and wind- compared with 61 last year.
ruya Trading Co. Ltd., Eglincent)' and Koreans ('Y4 per
■Msho.
wood Gift Shop, China House,
*
cent).
,
,
Kwong Chow Chop Suey House,
Among brides, the yate i
Kameoka
Books Trading Co.,
lowest for Caucasians (2U2 pt
cent), Negmoes (22 4 per cent)
Dundas Union Store, Japan Ca­
and Japanese (20.2 per cent.
circles. He is the son of Mrs. Ai mera Centre, Paramount Gift
MARKHAM, Ont. — A popuIt was highest for Hawanam M
Fujiwara of Toronto.
Shop, Golden Dragon Chop Suey
per cent) and Koreans (<6.6 pm bar Toronto Nisei skier and tenThe
engine of Fujiwara’s House, Nikko Garden, Sai Woo
cent).
nis player, Kiyoshi Fujiwara, sports car came through the fire­ Chop Suey* House and Mrs. M.
Common Pairings
30, of 97 Indian Road, was killed wall and pinned his body, killKameoka.
Schmitt said the most common on Sunday in a 2-c.ar crash on
ing
him.
He
was
returning
home
The picnic ended with dancing
(interracial pairings were Cauca­ NO. 48 Highway,
north
miles
sian men and
part-Havaiiai
cottage
up
north.
to
the music of Johnny* Kunito­
from his
women (583
marriages), P _ of Markham.
the
Booth’s body was found in
mo and the Embers.
Hawaiian men and Cauca_m
other back seat of the Gibson car, and
The
2
occupants
of
the
women (309), Filipino men a .d
car, James F. Gibson, a musician Gibson’s was pinned under the
part-Hawaiian
women
Tom Saito Off To Japan
i- dashboard.
Caucasian men and Japanese at a Scarboro Hotel, and
Saito,
Tom
TORONTO.
women (246) and Caucasian mm am Booth, both of Sutton, were
Police rerouted traffic throng?
Karate
President
of
the
Nisei
and Filipino women (236)
a vegetable-market driveway for Club at the J.C.C. -Centre, left
i
There is a significant ditm- also killed.
than an hour, until the for Tokyo, Japan yesterday af­
rence in interracial marriage
Mr. Fujiwara was !an artist more
and occupations.
,
, , with a Toronto advertising firm wreckage and bodies were re­ ternoon. He will train and make
contacts before returning in Nov.
Twenty-four per cent of
moved.
I and well-know n in J.C. .athletic
(Continued on page 8)

By T. UMEZUKI

[ronto Consul
bpointed To
Loon, Burma

26-year-old Nisei Wife

I

Well-known Nisei Skier

f

Yamada Studio Photo

(Doctor of Philosophy
TORONTO. — Akira Watana-

Writer Seeks Nisei Girl Pen Pal

I am writing to ask if you any- organized religion.
If the Japanese - Canadian
friends be a native of Vancouver, can assist me in two respects.
and the other can be
fmm To put it briefly, could you <..1- young lady had a father or
LONDON, Eng.
who
was interested
man, now a loyal Brims i
San Francisco or elsewhere in nq/ advise me with regard to brother
pen
friend- th* United States. For
enough,
then
1
should
like to ex is looking for Nisei
_
.
obtaining two Nisei pen friends
who
them the British
-----he prefers _ one from the U.S. and one change with
— no preference to looks
Vancouver,
from
are able to lend his novel a mac someone between 20 to 26 years from Vancouver, British Colum­ Weeklev News Magazine “Time
and Tide” for the _ American
more realistic appearance.
old with a father or■ brother bia, Canada.
science fiction magazine
Ana­
The Scotsman, Mr. G. ^im who’d be willing^ to write him
To assist me in my book, for
occasionally. As mi the Ameri- the purpose of making its back­ log.”
34 Honor Oak Road. F»rK;
London, S. E. 23 Grea, Biitain, can gm.
I hope you can assist me in
=
ground detail” appear realistic
is writing a lengthy novel m oh is pernussable
to the book’s eventual readeis, mv quest, for which I grate­
ing some amount of sociology
he is entire./ I would be glad to have the co­ fully* thank you in advance (end
He says that
Proceeding on educa- theme. The book is based on .
=
to
whether ms operation
of two Nisei pen of quote).
U leave, he received his
indifferent
are
beautiful,
ugi.v.
fictitious
Japanese
J
t
Neil is a native of Scotland,
friends.
Ler -^ *^r^ degree from the lovable, kind-hearted, in^^ pen friend:
or of low or high
now
a patriotic British subject,
I
am
entirely*
indifferent
to
rich,
°f Toronto in 1962.
. , poor
onlv asks tha^ looks. 1 onlv ask that they be xree and 47 vears old. He says that
Japanese girl t4 year
social
he
.
--Rat
pUj0^ his first three years was born and educated m Ja^
y for 1 ■ f Japanese,
j e studies Watanabe Her mother is a native Canadian ^ey?e
^ tolerant from “Rat* Race'* mentality, ar- he is
Thai,
Burmese
and
rX^a , a -National Research
Race- .and dim ^^-dless of rcerant snobbery, and that they Chinese
people,
alj
other
Far
Eastern
be" tolerant towards individual
LLC ^tU(ientship, and last
toward;
Neil
is
looking
for
tw°
*
:
Eo
though
he
has
yet
to
meet
an
beliefsno
matter
if
their
religions
hHv011
Canadian Kodak
furl pen friends to assist “ ..,,
Buddhist,
Christian, ■ Spiritual them before.
eeks Assistance
ists,
Mohammedans,
or if re­
I^Lb?he son ot Mr. and Mrs. making the “background de.a>l^
M.
In hi nuest for Nisei
ligious but without belonging to
I® n^ Watanabe of Hamil- i of
or his book appear m^ie ^ea
reade *ri ends, he wrote.
r marr’ed and has two to
to the eventual
Karen. 6, and Larry, 4. | essential that one of the

*he degree of Doctor
philosophy at the Spring Con.<ation of the University of
RNo. His research work was
Faceted jn molecular physics,
h obtained his Bachelor of
pace degree in Honour Phys[in McMaster . University
f dm, and subsequently workthree and a half years
I1 the Defence Research Board
F Ottawa.

I

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PAGE 6

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Page 7

July S. 19(54

PAGE 7

T H E

tees aitd lamp |

The New Canadian s . . ■ . . .

Cosmopolitan Cuisine

!I

A

TORONTO. — On JNv

By STELLA ITO

J

Nipponia Home Benefit Dance Slated July 11
Ilih. tmmin Home.
U

A

t

R

Barbecue Sauce
Throug
and steaks are fine for cookouts, but pork chops
the
Jana
a welcome change occasionally.

barbecue sauce

in
t

•: 8 o.z. can tomato sauce
1 6 oz. can tomato paste
i> cup brown sugar
one-third cup vinegar or lemon juice
one-third cup salad oil
cup red 'vine
med. onion,, chopped fine
>
cloves garlic, grated or chopped
tbsp. Worchestershire sauce
'4 cup shoyu
tsp. salt
tsp. black pepper
tsp. each oregano, marjoram, crushed rosemary

Rev. Yoshida Returns To Canada From Trinidad

4 tsp. dry mustard
' t tsp. chili powder
! 1 tsp. Ajinomoto
;
Combine all ingredients in large saucepan. Bring to boil, sLii ring. Reduce heat .and simmer for 10 minutes.

t.ne
Ho

Tor. J.C. Credit Union Features Low Interest Loans
personal

con- ! on

con

apply for a loan m
amount to borrow Cull
of interest
the cot



LIFE

consult

KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO

Res. Pl. 9-8317

Picture Frames
CUSTOM FRAMING
1278 Yonge St. — Phone: 923-6877
(S. of Woodlawn)
Toronto

s), cost at credit.
(.Insurance includ-

a

ing
company
rate
on
twelve months period
nor month or $13.00.
facts Credit Union memshould bear in mind beinnuemg or applying
Bor Non Members
n
membership ar
Hl times. Funds ar
Available.
r mancc

10

FIRE

ALL FORMS
OF

lor $100.00 Loan
Bank charges
rec e iv
wived.

vdit Union’s cost of interest
>100.00 loan at S/10 of dm
month repaid in
ths final res out to

re t
bur



■ Bus, 366*sS12

pa

wff

member

loan is 6%. DIS-

low

is b:
T1

TORONTO

INSURANCE

»

One of our favorites prepared outdoors is stuffed porkchops.

Keigo B. Inouye

Suite ISIS

will

*

*

Accountant

Chartered

AUTO

The

w a ica
benei
the lo

ERNEST JOMORI

2 CARLTON ST.

a

ploy me
their 1

Kes: LE. S-6759

of

IQ

and
fast
Have vour butcher prepare loin pork chops (one to a person) sales pitc
with
' about an inch thick. He’ll gladly slit a pocket in each if you ask. charges.
’ does not
i
Fill each pocket with an oyster, first dipped in egg, then p late. B
curmng
‘ bread crumbs. Clamp the edges of pockets with a couple ox l-oogi ing. th civic fat
; picks. Season well with salt and little pepper.
siblv bopm
of the now
If "-rilling over barbecue, wait till fire has burned down to
I nice quiet ember. Cook them slowly and cook them wed, U
all
I over and over. Neither your family nor your guests will be =ori
However.
) for having been so patient.
.necessity
are
I
If you prefer to bake them in oven, then .after the chops aie
offer
01<
i filed, dip into slightly beaten eggs, seasoned to taste, roll mem
ns with
i in bread crumbs. Brown - in heavy skillet. Transier onto <.00^2 on
r sheet or large baking dish. Bake for 45 minutes at moderate u^v lateral. But oft
is not available
Apples cored and sliced into rings can be kin on top ox eatMany people
; and baked for the last 20 minutes.

Bus: EM. 6-97S7

sently
Onta-

IV

TORONTO. — A
father
buy
in
nev

B»*i RO. 7-3427

from Triioka un-

Before li

napuna,
in
Indios. He v,



G. Unai

OAKVILLI

Ingredients:

BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY' PUBLIC
Oifice Bourn Saturday
October to April Indus!v»
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suits 518 Temple Building
TORONTO
KM. 6-5323

e

gd spareuos
-i reUpe for barbecue sauce. It can be used as marinade
Her.p^\ver'chicken, spareribs or chops. It has everything in
or w P-T 1, .. •
? Keeps well, for days stored in refrigerator.

Lucien C Kurata

RESIDENCE

OFFICE
EM. 4-13M
EM. 4-1395

2 V*«ta Drivo
HUdaon 5-1365

A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister <S Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaida)
TORONTO

THE JAPAN
(TORONTO) CREDIT

LIMITED.
Toronto 6
-th Mortimer

collateral, the Ban

Mink, Seal, Grey Lamb, Black Lamb, etc.

Specializing In Repair and Restyling

TORONTO
BUDDHIST
CHURCH »t ’■•>”’1 SL
IV.IV:
SOSDAV. JULY 12. 15M

All Coats, Jackets, Stoles, Cape Collars
Made To Order
Terms Arranged

o BON SERVICE
10'30 A.M. MORNING SERVICE

Bus. EM. 3-1509 — After 6 p.m. Res. RU. 7-2938

nev, n

>
2-30

13841/2 Queen W.
Toronto

LE. 2-i

12*30 P.M. Cnoir Luncheon
P.M. Japanese language Service
p.M. Welcome Tea

DANFORTH

We Specialize in
Giftware of Quality
From the Orient

When Buying Or Selling Cal!

GOODS
FISHING TACKLE — LIVE BAIT
BASEBALL 6 GOLF EQUIP.

547 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)

George Fukusaka

Phone: HO. 3-7400
(Member of Toronto Real Estate Board)

Open Thur, and Fri. Until 9 p. m.

K, Hori Real Estate — AM. 1-5194
Lacquerware — Porcelain Tableware — Household °™aments
Lanterns — Handiworks of Wood, Bamboo — Framed Pic jr&
drolls of Japanese Painting — Oriental Jewellery — Foldm0
Screens — Flower Arrangement Accessories
* a-113
Dolls and Statuettes

Paramount Gift Shop

ichee Garden
(Um
US Elizabeth St

Toronto. Canada

Phone: 364-3481
733 Danforth Ave. Toronto/ Ont

To S^we Ton)
4 I.
SERVICE “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

(1 Block East of Pape Ave.)

Banquet Facilities

TELEPHONE HO. 3-7831

wedding"RECEPTIONS (Languor Small)

Sl»re Hours: Mon.. Tues., Wed. & Sat.: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m-

Thursday And Friday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m-

Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Weddings
Dances Etc.

ALNA
Of Toronto

Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE.,
PHONE: 463-8104

Page 8

Wednesday, July gj

PAGE 8

Tokyo Olympic Official Seeks P.M. Seat TSEmSg

Perry’s Gift Returned
OSAKA.
wooden lion
which crossed the Pacific as a
souvenir of Commodore Mathew
C. PeiTy, who signed the JapanU.S. treaty of amity of 1854 for
found
the United States
p rop er pl ace as symb olic witness
of Japan-U.S. friendship back
home in Grams.

Perry

received

this

wooden

ter
TOKYO.
for Olympic Construction Sisaku
Sato resigned his post recently
a ball.
and announced his candidacy for
Unknown Sculptor
Prime Minister of Japan, the
Mainichi
Newspaper said last
Although the work of an
week.
believed
known, sculptor
The paper said Sato’s decision
art critics to have been made by
a master craftsman centuries was given to his political allies
immediately.
Sato’s bid to oust incumbent
The wooden lion stands 10 in
Prime
Minister Hayato Ikeda will
ches
nd weighs 17 c
be
made
in early July at the conpound.

It has been pres:
as a family
ry's descendants
treasure ever since, the most recent custodians be ig his great
Belmont, a
grandson. August
and
N ew Y ork busineessman,
1
Tokyo is spendTOKYO.
The image carved in wood is Mrs. Gardnei’ Levis, Belmont’s ing $62,000,000 to stage
the
that of a young lion playing with sister.
1964
Olympic
Games and 30
In 1961, the two custodians times that much to face-lift the
talked with Professor Donald city before an expected 30,000
Bartlet at Dartmouth college in foreign visitors descend on it.
Hanover N.H., well known on
The expenditures, unofficially
both sides of the Pacific as a compiled by the Tokyo Olympic
staunch American friend of Ja­ Organizing
Committee, include
pan, in hopes that this family $25,500,000 in opertaing expenses
35,750,000 for
treasure may find a worthy place and another
of its own outside their family building, expanding and renovat­
vault.
ing game sites.
In
addition
the committee
Bartlet, formerly an officer in
charge of cultural affairs with listed $1,861,000,000 being nent
the American embassy in Tokyo, on improvement projects related
is credited with having founded to the Games.
projects include
The
big’
the American Studies Promotion
for
new subway
$647,000,000
Foundation in Japan in 1950.
T
$469,000,000
construction,
The Dartmouth professor then road construction and improvesuggested that the lion sculpture meat
$80,000,000 for railw
should be returned to Japan and improvement and $57,000,000 for
placed in the custody of Toke- airport improvement.
jiro Shindo, 73, now adviser to
Also included is $93,000,000 in
the Toyo Spinning Co. of Osaka.
subsidies to
hotels
and inns,
The wooden lion symbolizing where a crash building program
Japan-U.S. friendship was then was necessary to provide living
donated to Shindo, who had been space for Games’ visitors and
instrumental along with Profes­ $66,000,000 for improvement of
sor Bartlet in the establishment communication and broadcasting
of the American study founda­ facilities.
tion when the latter revisited
Japan this April.
Marriage Statistics
Upon receipt of this unique
gift of friendship, Shinto felt
(Cont. From Page 1)
that he should not take private
possession of it in view of its men in the professional and
immense historical value.
technical category were involv­
He therefore contacted Nao- ed in interracial marriages, while
yoshi li, Mayor Hikone and a 57 per cent of the farm laborers
descendant of the chief minister and foremen were in interracial
of the Shogunate credited with marriages. Thirty-three per cent
’1 Year $2.4
6 Months $12
having helped to open the na of the men in the military ser­
vices were parties to interracial
3 Months $6
tion’s doors to foreigners.
marriages, while 12.8 per cent
Clip this advertisement and
return it with your check or
It has been agreed betw<
of the women in the military
money order to:
the two that the lion should
services
married outside then
The Christian Science Monitor
installed as a feature exhibit of racial group.
Ono Norway Street
the Hikone museum dedicated to
Boston, Mass. 02115
Schmitt said there were th
Lord
li.
hypotheses advanced to expl am
PB-15
the
differences m rate;
occupation.
1—Higher income individuals
WELCOME may live in a neighborhood with
. FOR
a low degree of racial mixtureto
TOURIST
and thus not meet members of
other ethnic groups as readily as
JAPAN
CAMERAS & BINOCULARS
those living* in middle and lower
income area
Everything in
2—‘-High tatus families may
OPTICAL & PHOTOGRAPHIC
be less tolerant toward intei
EQUIPMENT
racial marriage than low-staw
families.”
employers
and
3—“A few
social groups
minute agains mixed couples.’’

ke, a feudal lord of the Hikone
clan and then chief minister of
the Tokugawa Shogunate, prior
to his departure for home in Jane
1854.

Olympics To Cost
Over $62 Million

mom™

Accurate
Complete
News
Coverage

(TORONTO) CREDIT
UNION LIMITED

For Complete
Real Estate Service
Call

OPT. DEPT. STORE
3-chome, Ginza, Tokyo

Tel. 535-3451/5,

i

S’

subscription
54.00 per -5 nonti
87.00 pep year

QUEEN ST. west

Toronto 2-B. Ont.
EMpire 6-5005

female Help Wanted
YOUNG
converse
igjsh and J
front oi.uce position
hotel. Call or write:
Park
Motor
Hotel
EL. S-3293.

Male Help Wanted
MEN for pa
Supervisory CC1
have minimum of senior

.4

but not a ns
Foods, 2 Huxievisor (Toronto).

Help Wanted
WANTED: Cook and janitor
STgu

mnnthiv

T*

monthly, wages 3150.. or uu.
s S125‘c:
only, monthly v
with room and board included.
Nipponia Home, R.R. 3, Ba

I Give Blood

|

CALI YOUR REB CROSS

It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY

i

Consult

WALES and DUNCAN
! INSURANCE AGENTS:
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171

SAI WOO
^ INSURANCE X_tQM£AHY

REPRESENTATIVE

TAKE-OUT SERVICE
Phone:

Gertrude Urate

EM. 3-7646

Office: 505 Eglinton Ave. W.
phone: HU. 1-6S77
Home phone: HI. 7-8905

123A DUNDAS ST. JE>T
TORONTO 2, 0M-

SE5B3B?

Hamilton JCCA

J
^WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE:;
J
LIMITED,
j
!’
1444 Danforth Ave.,
j
J’
Toronto
a
|
Bus. HO. 9-1151
j
’ |
Res. PL. 7-7578
h

! f Member Toronto Real Estate Board 4
j I
and PhotoCo-op
|

Weddings

Banquets

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Meetings

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beautifully decorated.
Completely private,
fully equipped.
Unlimited special time

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2 Dancing floors — free parkin

925 Eglinton Ave. W.

a

Special Businessmen Luneau
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Everyone Welcome

y
t

J
3

Specializing

At Lambert Park

TOSH IWAI i;

F

WINNIPEG, Man. Mr. Wally
Shibata has been elected Presi­
dent of the Manitoba JCCA at a
meeting of their Executive Coun­
cil on June 9th at the Manitoba
Buddhist Church. Others elected
were:
I. Hiraya1st. Vice Pres.
ia; 2nd. Vice Pres. — Noboru
himizu;
General Secretary —
Irs. Grace Thomson; Recording
,ry — Miss Masako KaTreasurer — Frank M.
wata;
Ejima: Assistant Treasurer —Frank Yahiro.
The Past President of the M.
JCCA is Mr. George Hirose.

T. UMEZUKI. Public v ,
TSUMURA.
BnsH'll
Editor, KEN MORI, J,
Section taker and Adve

On Sunday, Ju!y 12th

For
Inquiries, applications, loans, etc.
Phone
Days: T. Kameoka — EM. S-9934
Eve: S. Ariza — HO. 3-92S2
Mail all correspondence <5 remit
tances to Secretary-Treasurer
46 Mortimer Ave., Tor. S.

j
h
a

W. Shibata Elected
President M. JCCA

as

Post Office Depofa^O^

ANNUAL PlCrilC

NOTICE

Tokyo’s largest, and leading dealer in the heart of Ginza.
We have a maker’s show-room (onlv in Tokvo). on the 2nd
floor. We’ll be glad to send you a TAX FREE PRICE LIST
and CATALOGUE at your request.

vention of the Japanese Conser­
vative Party in Tokyo.
The conservatives rule ' the
country with >a substantial ma­
jority in the Japanese
parlia­
ment. In Japanese politics, who­
ever holds the presidency of the
ruling party usually
becomes
Prime Minister.
Long known as Japan’s ‘‘'Prime
Minister in waiting,” Sato, 63,
has marked time impatiently
during the. four years that Ikeda
has occupied the chair.
Sato is the brother of former
Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi,
a staunch friend of the United
States and Nationalist China,
who was driven from office in
the riots that attended Japan’s
ratification of the U.S. - Japan
Security Treaty in 1960.
The two men have different
names because Kishi was adopt­
ed into his wife’s family at the
time of their marriage.
^Sato’s early career was in the
Japanese
Railroad
Ministry.
During World Wai’ II he was a
high-ranking transportation of­
ficial, at a time when his brother
was Prime Minister Tojo’s war
production minister.

I