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The New Canadian — June 25, 1966

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Page 1

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Hollywood Averaging $15,000

'sS?*S
LeiSsef gardeners who have clients in Beverly Hills, according ??3
fthe June 13 issue of Newsweek Magazine under the Life .and Leisure feat™
f/rhe article begins, “In Los Angeles’ Beverly Hills, homeowners returning
Lrlate party often nod sleepily to the Japanese gardeners alreadv at work
Esnicuring the lawns.’’
| Having the services of a Japanese gardener is almost a status svmbol in
loverly Hills and other high-income suburbs.

F A’host, proudly pointing out an immaculate garden will tell M^
by Japanese gardener did it.”
t The article continues, Actually, the term Japanese gardener is somethin^if a misnomer. Many* are Naser or even Sansei. All belong to the Southern Calk
omia Gardener’s Federation, 99 percent of whose members are of Japanese de­
cent”

^mnimninumuu..... .

big^rf
who employs a Japanese gardener savs “It's the
The^Tn^
according to the Newsweek stem
business because
Japanese gardners set high standards for the
“But ”
the know ledge each carry regarding their trade.
‘•Tlie succes/of
quoting Mike Fujizawa, president of the federation,
F
Se gardener can be attributed to elbow grease.”
from\
L f ed
of Ben Kiyoha™
gardens
n week
- to 6 p’m’ He bandies five hou s a day

'
and
may
bo
paid
by
the
u?TCh ?r-Se
mach as ^15° u month The prices are not exorbitant own
in the.
words of Kiyohara.
sendh”t)»h Aiifare
nurseries of their own . . . and
,Ulen children to expensive colleges
eludes thVarMcle’ean ““ “^ °f ““ Jnkanesc in the field in Ute future. con-

.......... uimiimimZmi

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ted

Stella Ito’s
Sukiyaki Cookbook”
Only Si.50

■-----

°- Goodl

'ladies
htood

reewds

V 1 AW '

fer.‘i

The Dem Canadian

Japanese & English
Job Printing
The New Canadian

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXX—No. 50

SATURDAY. JUNE 25 1966

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(Armada
Greets
'Kaiwo
Maru
Team To Film Canada Series
At Annual Van. Sea Festival
i

m

TOKYO.—The_
'
Japan Broadcasting Corporation will dispatch
to Canada June 27 a three-man team to produce in color a sixart television documentary.
The - public corporation has two Japan-wide TV networks,
By PHIL HOLCROFT
which this week’s annual Sea-Festival revolved.
nth a total of 810 stations.
VANCOUVER. — Hundreds of small pleasure
The week featured marine activities to highlight
Lishei
. The three-man team, headed by deputy foreign editor Takeshi ci aft, yachts, tugs and fishing boats, and even
subthe place of the sea in British Columbia life and
shida, will spend two months in Canada,
criss-crossing the a Chinese junk, hooted and blew their whistles development.
country from Charlottetown in in a wild western welcome as the Japanese sail­
Other events were canoe races, fireworks dis­
the east, to Vancouver in the ing ship Kaiwo Maru slipped into port last Sunday. play, illumination of navy ships and a naval sail
ucien Kurata Is
The Kaiwo Maru is the crown jewel around past, water* skiing show and a regatta.
west and Inuvik in the north.
Ids
The highlight comes today
pagued By Plaque The team will start off its
when there will be a sea festival
filming Canada Day celebrations Nisei News-photographer J. Hayashi
^TORONTO.—Last year Lucien
parade through downtown Van­
in Ottawa.
couver.
jurats,. then Reeve of Swansea
The team will then move to Wins Can. Press Picture-of-the-Month
’ownship, initiated
TRAFFIC JAM
correspond­ Montreal, Quebec and Charlotte­
ence with the mayor of Swansea,
TORONTO.—Toronto Telegram photographer, Julian Hayashi,
Traffic was jammed for miles
town to film a second “Century 28, recently won the Canadian Press Picture-of-the-Month award as thousands massed on Brock­
pales and accepted a plaque
of
Progress.”
pom that citv.
with a shot of a three-year-old gymnast in over-size shorts, who ton Point, West Vancouver beach­
es, and at .Centennial Pier to
In
Quebec,
they
will
make
their
si
cried when he couldn’t keep in rhythm with his team in a display watch the Kaiwo Maru arrive.
I :°"’? Metro dePuty magisthird* documentary on “Canadian of synchronized exercises. Each time young Timmy O'Connor’s
Kurata has been accused
Identity.’- •
The four masted barque glided
team bent down, Timmy was up. By the time Timmy got down,
ms former council of keeping
gracefully
into the harbor as the
For their fourth documentary, his team was up.
F plaque in his home, when h
small
crafts
bustled about her/
“The Big West,” the team will
R be in a public place.
Responding to the informality
travel through-the Rockies and
K ?? jt was a Personal
of
it all, the officers of the Japa­
L 4 but they can have it—I cover Canada’s booming west and BC Beauty Candidate Wins Art Award nese training vessel forgot Navy
its economic impact on Japan.
protocol and led the crew in tak­
p®i be stubborn.”
KELOWNA, B.C.—Kathleen Taniwa of Westbank, B.C. proved ing
For their fifth documentary,
off their hats and waving
“Awakening Northern Territo­ recently that she has other qualities aside from her beauty. A beauty back to the delighted crowd. The
ries,” the team will fly to Inuvik candidate for the . Lady-of-the-Lake contest as Miss Acquatic, crew stood in the ship’s rigging
■Citizen Reaches 114
to wave to the crowds.
°
on the Arctic Ocean to film the Kathleen was recently given an honorable mention award at the
‘Thank you, Vancouver, thank
FMeS ~t0 J^ei ^a^a- everyday lives of Canadian Eski- Annual Kelowna Art Exhibit Society Garden Party to further hetyou,
” beamed Captain Izaro Ara
studies in art.
mos.
from the bridge of the Kaiwo
The last of the series will be
Kathleen is a grade 11 student at Kelowna Secondary High Maru.
hX^ in n^ern
on “Canada’s Present-Day Diplo­ School. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Taniwa of
never had such a wonderWestbank, B.C.
fonuntXre
ye^ before macy.” ‘
welcome anywhere,” he said.
failed into
Perry
Kaiwo Maru, the citv’s guest
du™gJthe f^rth annual festi­
R doctor?? 111 1853*
val, led one of the most vivacious
* good^heakh ^-^^nced
and
colorful pageants ever seen
pressure is
?1S blood
here.
f? V? ‘a 80
0 and
TOKYO. — A Japanese pro­ 10 minutes at low temperatures change occurs, Type O is the
P te?£s ?s !0“se''ity to
DAZZLING RUN
occurs
fessor recently came up with of 50 to 55 degrees Centigrade. answer. If coagulation
her anchorage in Enr1 seaweeds
consists, mainly, what may become an epoch mak­
The heating served to separate in both test tubes, the blood is
a.
v> where she had charm­
ing method, of determining hum­ the hair and antibodies, making Type AB.
ed West Enders all last Satur­
——nor drink.
The entire process takes less day the Kaiwo Maru sailed our
an blood types, even of ancient easier the combining of the anti­
remains, without a single bodies with the testmg serums. than one-sixth of the time re­ a? .r a® Point Grey before be­
k/1Cn®trcrtion Unit human
The hair is cut into two parts, quired by the conventional me­ ginning her dazzling run into
error by just a single piece of
one of which is put into a test thod of this kind.
I Tokyo _°v Population hair in about three hours.
the harbor.
According to the professor, he
tube containing A-type blood
h^^d.
Man is not dog’s
Dr. Shoichi Yada, professor of cells and the other into a anoth­ has tried out his method on the /ltar
briSht red tunics
medical jurisprudence at Miye er test tube containing B-type head and other body hairs of 163 of the RCMP on patrol boats
c°mPanies have Univ, at Tsu, designed the me- blood cells. The type of blood is students whose blood types were stood out as the brightest of a
Lustration cara?*? nabioriAvide thod.
determined if coagulation takes known, and the results proved myriad colors.
place in either test tube. If no to be 100 percent accurate.
There are already various
_ *TTie flags of numerous nations
burgeon/n ^his counI A spoke??? ?°s Population. known methods of determining
Hew from every available mast­
by using
head among the armada of es­
Ltd
f°/
Tokyo human blood types
corting vessels.
b
Nissan hairs such as melting them down
3 build Pa
the firms to extract their essence and judg­
The flags were to have flown
31 ^ operate?10 e pipped ing the blood types. But all such
from
Point, but the
Karound th* ? \°OIn and take methods are not only complex
— A song written in I A senior at Keio University strike Brockton
TOKYO
of
civic
outside
workers
^ do?s fr^e o ° / ry castrating and time-consuming but not too Hawaii oy me
grandson ux
of ^yt
Em- *,.
in Tokyo, Higashikuni is the son made this impossible because
by he graiiu&uii
a
accurate.
peror Hirohito and Empress Na- of former Prince Higashikuni and flagpole could not be erected.
Sako has been made into a record the late Princess Shigeko, the
there are
Prof. Yada has a special way bv the Victor Company of Japan, eldest daughter of the Emperor.
In the harbor itself, Vancou$ of ^hich area's
Japan> of exposing the basic components
TH Kyodo
Kvodo said recently.
The song is sung by Ryuji To- v^r, fireboat said hello officially
Ltd.,
the e &tray dogs.
of a hair and making them easier
The grandson, Nobuhiko Higa- mo, a student at Tokyo Univer­ with a sparkling display of
5^e the camn°®panies will for absorption of the testing

hikuni.
composed the music and sity who became a professional wa^er treated with red,. purple
enacted Pai?P -until “a serum by beating a hair flat
words
for
“Let’s Go Together singer after successfully audition­ and green dye, showering the
S °f dogs e??hlb?ing fte with a hammer.
z
ing for the Victor company last hues of the rainbow over the in­
^ p^S?1 for ^e
The crushed hair, bearing anti­ while visiting Hawaii earlier this
let.
bodies, is' then heated for about

Develops ‘No Mistake7 Blood Typing Method

Royal Song-writer

Page 2

Page 2

Safej^ 25

instructor, Diane Bachley —
Toronto’s Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre __
B,a^ley’ a lively dark-haired woman of
plans to open a yoga camp
I f ’ ^P65 t0 'have yoga, aikido, judo and karate
incorporating
the
Japanese niai tial arts in the Laurentians this taught at the camp.,
summer.

StGVGStOR Dominnta D P I i^ ^^
J,CVWTOn ^Ominate B.C. Judo Tn...
DUNCAN, B.C.—Three brothers fr
'^^^81

The summer seminar will be called “Yokara'
, w> assist her mother in yoga instruction.
Pounds and Ken the under 100 pounds P°™d
Eon a« I
“Yo” from yoga
and

kara

.
from karate. It
Advanced yoga students at the University of „w?5
alS° of Heston, took the oniv „«, ■
T Lbe OCated in ^^ b’eautiful natural settin°Montreal, the only university in Quebec to have^™ T°m Swan of Nanaimo won the
* otlJer Junior ew
of Domain Canard Blanc at Lake Cimon near n^ewu.
its sports stiff, allXe^ “^^ °f V—er
X * * ? *

n

Port Dover Judo
oivera
proprietor

JON ONODERA
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
(Residence)

(Business)

540 Eglinton Ave. W.
Toronto

TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
®B*JE5g±

118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.

PORT DOVER, Ont. — Some plus $20 per person.
of the top junior judo fighters _ Yoga is a pure science,” Mrs.
in Southern Ontario will be in Bachley said. “Yoga comes from
action on Saturday, June 25th in Egypt where it was taught to
he upper classes by priests, as
Port Dover.
z
long ago as 6,000 years before
That s when Port Dover’s Christ. It comes from the San­
Shobukan Judo dojo will host the skrit word meaning unite. Yo^a
Soutliern Ontario Junior Invita­ means to unite yourself with the
d*Vil?e intelligence. It is a way
tional Judo Tournament.
V*® which requires enormous
discipline and concentration. Girls
Wpg. J.C. Captures are apt to give up easily and that
is why there are more men than
W
°Men Practicing yoga today.”
Canadian 10-Pin
Mrs. Bachley has taught yoga
at
the University of Montreal
Championship
tor two years. Her classes vary
WINNIPEG. — Mr. Paul Y0- in size between 90 and 160 stu­
shimasu captured the Canadian dents, the majority of students
are men. The classes, held twice
10-pin Singles Championship and a week, last two and a half hours^
teamed with Norm Heywood also Professors at the university have
captured' the Doubles event, thus asked Mrs. Bachley to hold a :
class for them next fall, h
winning a
the World
. J °aa is marvellous for people I ?
Tournament in Spain in 1967.
with tensions and teaches people 5
. ^“h'ol their emotions,” she 5
said. “I teach in five steps; post- I
ure, breath control, mind con- I
KAZUO G. OIYE
In™ve control and meditaAAU Trophy Winner
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
Program is entirely
NOTARY PUBLIC
the requirements
of
DETROIT.
—Winner of the
In
M&^
mJ^^
Sportsma^hip
award
2 Carlton St., Toronto

Boom 1805

SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS

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Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
PAPE

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. There is accommodation at an panl
osence of Vitoria was overall black belt
inn, in cottages, and tents. in- Paul Musgrove of Courtenay overall senim- k
cllan®»n
struction is included with the
Also in the black belt competition
.^“Pion.
J°°m ^d board which ranges ver won the lightweight
/ ^h°&1 Hamazaki of Vanes
i&5^ Tent ac- Jmiddieweight.

HL 7-1100

SHOE

Eastern rites and cults.”
101 the ^st performance at the
“Tbere is a sweeping trend recent 14th Midwest A.A.U. JuQu£ S‘’sS md * “ J"
Ch^Pionship Tournament
jog up everywhere,” 'MK.'Shl “' of “ Sansei from Hamil- I
ley said. “One hour- of medita- °n.’ Ontario, Mitchell Kawasaki,
tion is equal to three hours of p^'® 16-year-oM youth is the I
of^£Stheref°re three hours son of popular judo sensei, Larry
of S^« ™eS “ S’™ 550 contestants!

For Berft Results
Use New Canadian A
It la a good ^ h
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult

Bill Wales
Insurance Agency
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171

JAMES KAMINO

T.V. Service
EM. 4-9913
z (TORONTO)

FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
Consult

RITZ KUMM
For AU Classes of

INSURANCE
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317

fiom 20 states and Eastern Can­
staXjinjbed”
ada
competed.
Mrs. . Bachley was born in
Indonesia, _ the daughter of a
Dutch officer. She was taught
yoga by an Indian medical of­
ficer at -the age of 7. She was
SHO MORI
ejU?ate^ in Holland and receiv­
ed her law degree from Leyden
Mutual Life of Canada — Investment and Insurance Plans
University. While studying for a I
Personal and tax exempt pensions
master’s degree she was taken
Business insurance. Group Life, Health <5 Accident Plans
prisoner by the Germans in the I
Office: 485-7608
__
—Res.: 261-6615
Second World War and spent one I
year in Ravensbrueck concentra-I
?°in
where she says yoga I
helped her to survive.

^^ Mrs- Bachley
[worked for a year with the In­
ternational Refugee Organiza&
^Or ,>a Year with the
wed Cross in Europe. Seventeen
years ago she came to Canada.
?n
m.amed to Peter Bachley.
a Bulgarian architect who is now
an inventor and designer.

SIZES

FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
ARRANGEMENTS

By Air, Sea and Land
Call
io

365 SPADINA AVE., TORONTO 2-B, ONT.

PHONE EM. 6-1075

SUMMER SHOES
AND CASUALS
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
4

ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 7-1931, Toronto

C.O.D. orders from coast to coast

DUNDAS UNION STORE
EE

IWi

Gertrude Urabe
AGENCY
Office — 3101 Bathurst St
Phone: 783-4261

Home phone: HI. 7-8905
---------

B
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h
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YOUR SHOPPING LIST
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGARMANY VARIETIES OF ARARE

173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7692

Page 3

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127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—045 5

CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquet#
Private Dining Room?

Frank G. Yada
Crown Life Insurance Co,
1550 We?t Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C.

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TORONTO 2-B, ONT.

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Page 7

I

wHay, June 25, 1966

Japanese Scholar
Dates
and
Doings
I
, ~~~"
~—— -~ .
— ' ——I Study Big Revision

^ersonal Notes Across Canada

[onitoba Buddhist Church Annual Picnic July 3rd Of The Language I Marriag
WINNIPEG.—The Manitoba Buddhist Church will hold thei •
mual Picnic at Selkirk Park on Sunday, July 3rd, commencing
11:00 a.m. Admission will be $1.00 per car. The picnic Committee
airman is Mr. H. Matsuo.
ummittee

es

Anniversary

YAGI-CARMONA
” K^ox United
Church was tne scene for a wedstroke l^H^^V?
41 g
°n Satu^ar, June
The date of the Bon Odori is tentatively Set for Sundav
"l^e >“ War S
11
Mai
?
on’ daughter of
!y 10th, and is to be held at 825 Winnipeg Ave. —M. JCCA. "
& ®nd ?fo‘ I- Ya^ of River
'•art £wWre.?-Part of
•1' ^’changed marriage vows
nese aimed
i S\°" ?f J^pa- D1!
?ben Carniona‘ Kev.
burdAn
i
at
^S'htening
the
Supper Party Scheduled For Mr. <S Mrs. Sakumoto
f- Macdonald officiated.
| TORONTO.—Old friends of Mr. and Mrs. Seiku Sat-n^^
The reception was held at tlie
Jethbridge, Alta., who are visiting Toronto as delegates +n\|0±
International Inn
Japanese United Church Conference, will have a welconw
the
*
*
*
&gon Sunday, June 26th 5:30 p’m. at NikL Gard^
ABE-STEWART
Is welcome to join. Mr. S. Sakumoto is the president of LethS?16
WINNIPEG.
ind District JCCA and hopes to meet many Issei Nisei an^o dg^
- Knox Unitec
Church was the cne of a candlejeCA-ers. Those wishing to join should contact- T KaripnK61
light service o;
L Umezuki.
’ ^^meoKa or
—50th—
i
^ ^ki Abe’ duughtcr
of Mr.
and
Mr- ^d Mrs.- Y. - Abe. exCATHARINES, Ont.—Mr.
cation
Xe?

V7X
t
marriage
vows
with
and
Mrs.
Makiji Kajiura were
Man. JCCA Annual Picnic Slated For Sun., July 24
h
Harvey Stewart, son of honored- by their children
recent­
WINNIPEG. The Manitoba JCCA wilp he holdin°- their An
WaI1 in 331 attempt to
N- Stewart. Rev- ly on their

50th"
Wedding
- Anfill posts on the National
raal Picnic on Sunday, July 24th at Stonewall Kinsmen
J
m %DonaId solemnized
Park.
niversarv
^sW^8 BoaK1 - th‘a uuc double ring- ceremony.
at the home of their
Japanese Canadians from all over will congregate
for the
ueosteis Dictionary” of
The
bride
was
given in mar- son in Hamilton.
inltitude of activities including games, races, prizes
Four months have pas
wage by her father. Miss Dina
Air. Alakiji Kajiura, 76 years
wnts, and swimming.
’ refresh- “ ?„°lthe last board expir- XwT’i
maid of honor,
bom 4 ? new members ha^e | with the bride’s sister, Miss Yumi old and wife, Sumano, 70 years
s Eveiyone is welcome to attend. Come out and make
old have five sons and two
I Abe as bridesmaid.
this one been appointed.
~ uhe biggest Japanese Canadian picnics in Canada
Mr. Wayne Stewart, brother of daughters with fourteen grand­
tionalK?J°ble? is ?at the tradirionalists, outnumbered 43-7 on
gyccmj attended as best man children.
Lrt ast b°ard, are demanding and
Man. JCCA
e quests were
ushered bv L Th°y arefori«erly from Hancv,
brothAr
'
^Presentation—and have Mr. Kazu Abe, biothei
of the I British Columbia.
bride.
backing
from
Prime
MinAndrews Anglican Church Picnic Julv 10th ^^ Eisaku Sato.
I Following
__
» a reception
held at Riwkr.
brew's Japanese Anglican Church will be ™?! driving force behind the the Charterhouse,
terhouse, the happy
hm-mv D1IlUS
loMmgtheir Annual Picnic on July 10 at Lasalle Park in Bur istseiit
OfAhe traditional­ couple left on a wedding trip —
GREENWOOD, B.C. — Born
ists is Toshie Obama, former destination unknown. Mr. and
teton, Ontario.
let
aild K!rs‘ Mas Kubo of
president of the Japan Economic Mrs. Stewart now reside at
;
I In older to meet the Hamilton Congregation, Lasalle Park Journal
at St. Greenwood at Boundary Hospital
and head of a group of I Andrews.
I on June 13, 1966, a son.
gras chosen by the Advisory Board as .the ideal distance for both scholars called the National Lan^u^»e_ Problems Council.
■t. and Hamilton people. Furthermore there are adequate
fe"111
taWeS’ a biS ”ea f<ir ?ames. wading poo’ for
Io Obama, revisionists are at­
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
tempting to turn Japanese into
Be kiddies, washrooms, the pavillion in case of
.language, a move
rain, and best of
there is free parking.
Taid wouId cut the
i
°^ Japanese culture.
johl us ^ain this year. I am sure
y
W1 iave no T Even now’ postwar-educated
pfficulty in locating La Salle Park o n
as tins is the 11th picnic to be JaPanese cannot read books and
leld there.
,
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
I materials written before +he I
war, Obama said in an inter­
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
St. Andrew’s
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
m
#
| Ubama and his traditionalists I
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
S ^^ NeW Pr^ident Df Man. JCCA ®a? ttdStoS
Seating Capacity 240
^i

KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN

I
I

^^toba Buddhist Church
is the son of Mrs T
R
Masaichi Yamashita


hom
in
Vancouver
■graduated from Gordon Bell High’ School

On May
said students need to learn a
at least 3000 characters to atamashita, and the tend high school, and 5000 to I
x WmniPeg’ and attendpresent,
college.students are taught

rJlty of Onitoba where
the government-approved
|Alor of Architecture de^ee
^duated in 1963 with a list of 1800 characters.
his graduation* he’was
k
Postwar educators have carried
El>a until 1964, when
architectural the revision so far that “mv I
■®ntly employed ^^^
He is granddaughter had h“r paZ
lie“ a ““Art of Thet^Nn Ktf^
'5 F?rt Garryschool for cortX?years was mvolv^hfi^”^ and during his rectly writing a character that
Fo£-°YT^
pai^cipatSTi^
taUg^- Obama, recalled
various
sports
activities,
with
anger.
“When I heard that.
P»‘ President ■
— Mr. Stan Osaka; 1st 1 had her taken out of the public
2>"i Vice-Pros.
- Mr. Victor
Vietor'sht
-pres. —
Shi-} school and put into a private
Kusano; CorresDonS?U 7alnr?: Recording Secretary _. school.
I ^"nittees iere fS»?^?Creta7.Judy Urano;
WinX J Kojima (co-chairman'^Rx'v PlCHm — Joe Kakumaand Cultural —Koga, Ted Koizumi; EduThos, T. Onizuka, B.A.
taSershiP — Miss
^airman; H. Hirose, W. T. ShiBARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
Chrkfmo S ;yae Kawata, chairman; Fred Kaita
NOTARY PUBLIC
Ep^?.Aeiko NakaiUKred Matsuo, chair-|
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
Tsuta nk c
Koga> chairman; Y.
EM. 3-5002
Editor
Sakade; Outlook — Mrs. G. E.
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
b fe?’®»Mw.
■' Citizenship Council of Man.
fXT!-el“Jt^h^^
Pew members
leiko
Kishibata, Shio^^cil. These are Messrs. Mickey
Judy Ura^
^?ames Mashita and Missed
Mattuo aS
K °n
?ew executive council are:
o£hyea-rsKoga, returning after an absence
Anywhere — Anytime
included:

Travel Arrangements

^e WA?owling League chalIenge tr°phd

L

^ead? ie ^’nS
notices.of MJCCA executive
^Ct0- Vam°us clubsaS S6 executive members but also
°rder thattLv
211(1 to the ministers of
event tha?S “ay-b^ kept ^rrned as to meet3, tbs -Fe ^e council
^ey, wish to place requests or in- I
^ Ration
94 h°me for Mjc^™1^66 to Study the feasibility of a
•Manitoba JCCA

Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtain able
Travel. Accident

and Baggage Insurance

BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?

Passage arranged by Steamer or Air

Call for Reservations or

Information — EM. 8-9934

0NT° ^uw^E
June united church
<2^co^7« ^^!c^er _
TmmI*
26,





1966

’ 11-30 ^^g^u
~
. 7U1 Derwceurt li,

T. KAMEOKA
K. Iwata Travel Service

Buy & Sell

Your Home
Through

MITS KURODA
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
1444 “IaTn“ATe

Toronto, Ontario

-

BUS: HO. 9-1151 — RES: AM. 1-2581

Bjidw,
Portraits
Toronto’s
Foremost
Choose the lasting
beauty of a Yamada
Portrait
The precious pos­
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EM. 6-2411

Yaiiiada Studio
284A YONGE STREET

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Representing

EM. 6-2411

OUST SOUTH OF DUNDAS STREET)

Page 8

PAGE 8

Part I. .

Japan Began As U.S.-China Trade Way Station
J

_ CHINA TR
trade
For the United
^D? A^^^^
;
station to China; ^fter t^
}vas a convenient
States could carry on trade with
the United
an£ use demobilized* sailors Foreign
during the conflict
but profitable.
'
e °n tiade was not only necessary
°f China” and sent

her

andSSV-”1^ fm’ ginseng,
^ ^a, nankeen, silk fabrics chinawnrl d ^^kMacao purchases

Authorized

os

M

i

*a » 4

^ for payment Q,
Post Office DepXt’o^^

'^WM'?'

SSO^&wtel/lT? ^ Wya«e netted a Profit of I

I sSBlJSFF ^F ^MS
A. L Wirin for a legal brief on a WWTTtllbUte^-$^

to attorney

x°Sme^engaged in c°unter-r*

s4mBSCHIPnof<

. CLASSlHiDl

»»-«« sr isti » « ^ .sS««S3

STRENGTH

for the bridge

« Queen Slrei, ^ ^S.^XX S5.00

!!!!^^^

States it was ever westward toward the Far fc f°r the United ——----------------- |
For nearer ™” A&p^
^^21
°* the Dutch had a ShjRitX’Sd/ ^a ^“o”' ™™°" ^.“Sm^I
of bemg restricted to 1 tradtag nost ^ ?.“ n> land ^V means mer cottage. Liberal" Htoe"ff
were allowed one ship a year Sp fc at Nagasaki, where they (Taranto). nOt necess®T- Phone
«>aSte%
seek trading operators,

oan_ sailors mostly whalers were seirto^ Shipwrecked Ameriby Japanese law.
■ to Nagasaki as requested

Toronto Buddhist Church Picnic
Sunday, June 26th - Stanley Park
Erin, Ontario
“te1^ chir "*.12

^s75f

nub lore $i.iu — Reservations 534-1641
DeParture 9 a.m., 918 Bathurst
Brecon Ncdkon No. 10 to Caledo^ onto
No. 24 to Erin

OBJECTIVE $700,000.

the
,aPWi“e ^

misdated arose from
-d “ the

dresses.
Auply
RiHio(£).
m/t °?&t |
.^
96
Spading
Avenue

AMBITIOUS girl wanted for wardui?s' including inventory r6
stock ^control and some tyoing'
Sam Okamoto, Polaroid Com nt
ada, 255-5594 (Toronto).
P’ °f

0^5?^ mOr girl's Besses. Mb
President Fillmore that hehAd^ickS dn?ohiP T^hle reported to nn
and deliver. Excellent earning k=i
cans at Nagasaki and recommended X
^P^'ecked Ameri- perienced operator. Phone3
q
to Japan should have “ma tn ri t-y
- ea^ei 9^ an expedition (loronto).
obstinacy and rl^
^ JUdgment’ ^1=°^^ smgie needie
machine and sew and surge Eri
with a7sh^
» in 'another attempt seeking talks 3W,
iO?,L5° Psr hour., j

blamed Biddle for not taki'ii? a
rejected Many in the US
This was- the score in
fher^
toward Japan:
braith Perry was annoint^
wh^n Comm°dore Matthew Caland special
the East Indian Fleet,
interpreter and outspoken critic who J^^yflliams, missionarytions described GlvS
accompanied the Ferry expediPerry’s request adM^^^^
Perry aptlyP At
was part of his gunboat diplomacy
k d for becsuse intimidation
' Perry be^^e£®p£® ™^^
listening to reports of people who’had 1“^ books on JjP™.
coast and voyaged in Japanese waters with trade31 ^f Japanese
„ j ^e chose the expedition’s staff ’ wnc leaders and* scientists.
and wrote his own orders.
>
as its purchasing agent,
'™/of^i“f£e><^11Z.r,

and a terror to

I
The Board of Directors of the Japa­ J
nese Canadian Cultural Centre wish I
to acknowledge with thanks the fol­ I
lowing contributors and pledges gen­ I
erously made to the current fund cam­
I he 'raphedindisp^^
^ it, and believed
paign:
I to perfection, acted as a Wes'terc'wtS’l ^ef he ^d everything
mnZ®7’?
the “Powhatan” do«nd succeeded..
I
Previous Total $62,137.33 16. C. Matsubara
10.00
17. Jack K. Hisaki
25.00
1. Eichi Hayashi
$ 20.00 18. Robert Ubukata
10.00
2.
19. Sada Sato
100.00
3. Miss Tosh Otsuka 100.00
25.00 20. George D. Suzuki
45.00
4. Shoji Kawahara
15.00 21. i ukio Maruya
15.00
5. Roy Adachi
75.00 22. S. Muraki
25.00
6. Y. Kitaura
mln? r^sed° *°™^ £2 demanded &? s?nt Ws 8fficers’
20.00 23 M. Nasu
10.00
7. Herb Hamade
15.00
Shigeru Sasaki
senn a ranking official m- b
eu that the Japanese govern25.00 I nient
8. T. Aliy a uchi
%? PerSm b^vSse ofteete
Present the Present's
100.00 25 Sho Okawara
100.00
9. Itoku Murakami
26
Shigeru
Akada
100.00
75.00
10. Unta Gyotoku
*ef-ofSJf £”™£C’™«™Atey came ashore with his
50.00
Taiichiro Kado; uchi 75.00
11. Arthur N. Sakaguchi 45.00 28. Jim
Moritafe?,.acc™Panied by their offim^5 T JuIy ?5' 1853. They i
200.00
12. Kiyokichi Iwamoto 45.00 29. T
I tote “te PUt °" a “®-y iilteX S steals
Hayashi
50.00
13. Edward Tsuji
25.00 30. Kudu Shimotakahara 50.00
14. pF. . Yoshimoto
15.00
1 U»T“^1!“^* ®?«"r2”■ff“,f • ’*«*. he. made 15. Seitaro Nishikawa 20.00
Total to date $63,602.38

ate ftsx-f £^5 S

obb-1651

(Toronto).

Flat For Rent
TWO rooms and a kitchen fumis^j
Broadview and Danforth, close to d
way. Phone 461-2384 (Toronto) ' I

Mickey S. Sato
Insurance

LIFE 5 GENERAL
Office—783-4261
Res.—BE. 1-0863

Those In Toll Area
Call—RO 6-3840

BECAUSE YOU GIVI

IP

in

r
Ida

r
fict
jho
h
str

■ Ur
Eel
fees
|op

|ira<
f^s

re

bit

lade
>e re

‘vora

SOMEONE WILL LIU

music and pageantry would'do her
CContinued Next Issue)
I h^mmmm^^
■ the

Toronto J„panese Canadian Citizens' Association

17th Annual Community Picnic

o
a:
P 01
P boi

hi
felted,
f able

Sunday, July 3rd, 7966, Paulynne Park
Direction: Go east on Hwv 407
. ♦
Greenwood Rd. 2 miles to Po™^- Go north io Pickering Viiiage. Go Ms, ,o GraenwootJ Rd
*00 a.m. Jsh^ ^ 1W«

r^.st

Go ^ on

415 s^- Ave. at 10:30 a.m.

5=00 Odor;, 6:oo Fakahiki, 6:30 JCC ^^^^.=30 Bingo, 4:00 Aikido, Kendo, Iodo,

PicmcrC-Ts^nVlX^^
years and OTe^ S't^i?^^ ^-

Pg

p&oc
h haro

gM
P hav
Hai

(5 ^ under) md 75

??el