Page 1
Qa
^P^J^8* Steam Ship Kanrin Maru Being Built
^e?v^^
^DA
1 a r
s
ii$h?r
tA
ditor
VEST
t.
authentic 1:100 scale model of the
■rdn Yam, the first Japanese steam vessel to cross
^Pacific flying the Rising Sun flag, is now being
tufted from copies of the original blueprints
,n(j j^ee years ago in the Netherlands.
The historical accounts of the Dutch-made ship
J jo be corrected as new facts were revealed by
; discovery of the blueprints, said Isao Iimori, 4G,
ember of the Japan Society of the History fo Mari
na and the modeler of the vessel.
The auxiliary bark, equipped with a steam engine,
to built between 1856 and 1857 at Fop Smit Ship
ul (now L. Smit and Zoon’s Scheeps and Werktuigt0£YO—An
in KindeWK the Netherlands, on order
of the Japanese feudal government. Iimori said
The exact date of the commencement of the ve.W CrtrUCti°n
had 10n- bee” unknown m
Japan because of the missing documents. Iimori said
that it was presumably around June 10. 1S56. judo-inDom a date stamped on one of the diagrams' of'Am
b ™PlmFS Whlch 111 Dutch read “10 Junv 1856."
inTv11?
the Japan 0,1 ^ completion
in the Netherlands in April 1857 and arrived at Nao>
Sa^ aftv’ a 97'day V°yage Sept 21 the ^me ye;
he ship, then renamed the Kanrin Maru bv the
Tokugawa Shogunate, was to have a historic roL
in
1 e earIy stages of relationship between Japan and
iillllllllllllllHHHIinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinmiinHn^
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
(plus postage)
he Dcto (Canadian
UXXXII'
Ro. 83
uimm
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
By MISS J.L. BEATTIE
$5.00 (plus postage)
Toronto Japanese Garden Club . .
Biggest Annual Flower
Show On Oct. 31 & Nov. 1
n
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 97 1970
jiiiiiiimiiiiiininhiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiinj.HHikiniiniiiiiiiiiiniiiininujiiiiiniiiiiiiHjnii.HiHim^
ited
3
....... HIIIIUH....,.....,,,.,.„..,..„„„.............
(Continued on Page S)
____
,l,l,ll,,,,llll,,i,|i||imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiuitiiiiii
^” independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
>rontoi
;A
In I860, the Shogunate dispatched a mission to the
U.S. to exchange ratification documents of a treaty
of amity and commerce between the two countries.
Althoug’h the <7-member mission led by Shinmi-Buzennokami Masaoki and Muragaki-Awajinokami Norima
sa, was to sail aboard a frigate, the USS Powhatan,
the Kanrin Maru was as signed to escort it.
However, the Kanrin Maru, with 90 naval officers
and crewmen, including the then 27-year-old Yukichi
Fukuzawa, founder of the
sailed from Uraga Port on
acitic cros
Feb.
10, i860, three days before
p Powhatan.
»
Toronto, Ont
Youth Gets Life For Murder
Of B.C. Japanese Canadian Boy
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — A 16- the mandatory life sentence after a
year-old youth was sentenced recent B.C. Supreme Court jury found Clin
ly to life imprisonment for the murder ton Arthur Ash of Hope, B.C., guilty
of a 9-year-old Japanese Canadian of non-capital murder.
schoolmate in February.
Ash was charged after the body of
Chief Justice J. O. Wilson imposed Roland Kamimura was found tied to
Nisei Doctor And Family Murdered
a sapling by a belt around his
neck in bush country near the Coquihalla River in Hope Feb. 5.
In
imposing the sentence,
Chief Justice Wilson explained
to the jury that it did not mean
that Ash would spend the rest
of his life in prison.
“In a great many cases, even
adults are released after serving
a much shorter time,” he said.
SOQUEL, Calif
Firemen daughters who were not at home.
answering a call to a blazing
Miss Cadwallader’s body was
mansion atop a remote hilltop floating in the swimming pool
overlooking the Pacific Ocean and the others had sunk to the
last week found the bodies of a bottom.
rich Nisei eye doctor and four
First word of the killing came
other persons in a swimming from Chief Ted Pound of the
pool.
Live Oak Fire Department which
Sheriff Douglas James of San had been called to the 2-yearta Cruz county where the doctor old mansion isolated among trees
practised
called it the “most four miles north of State High
gruesome crime in county histo way 1 between Santa Cruz and
Mrs. Kin Izumi
Mrs. Y. Yoshikawa
ry.” All the victims had been Soquel, about 100 miles south
Izumi Misho
| shot in the back and bludgeoned. I of San Francisco.
Ohara School
Chief Pound' told sheriff’s de
, ,^TJ0. One of the largest annual flower- shows in Tor- Their hands had* been tied in
front of them with scarfs.
puties that a bloody smear led his
PORTLAND, Ore. —S. I. Ha
011 Saturday, October 31st and Sunday, November
They were Japanese Ameri men to the swimming pool where yakawa, President of San Fran
k- J3lS "^en Tlie Toronto Japanese Garden Club presents
can
Dr. Victor Ohta, 45, who the bodies were found.
cisco State College, said recent
7
*^nnual Flower Show” at the Japanese Canadian Culwore his hair long and was
An entrance roadway to the ly that allowing blacks to indulge
Centre, 123 Wynford Drive, Don Mills, Ont.
considered
“
hippie
”
by
his
ac
rambling mansion , which had in violence which would bring
Jlr. John Bradshaw, one of Canada’s leading horticulturist
quaintances; his wife, Virginia, cost between $250,000 and $300,- swift punishment to whites in
®s and broadcasters, will officially open the event.
43, their sons, Derrick, 12 and 000 to build, had been blocked volves a “double standard” to
Ue folloving trophies will be awarded:
Taggart, 11; and the physician’s by a locked Lincoln Continental which he objects.
secretary, Dorothy Cadw.allader, which belonged' to Miss CadwalHayakawa spoke to nearly 2,!• John Bassett (Telegram)
38.
The
Ohtas
had
two
teenage
lader.
000
students at an American
2. The Garden Research Laboratory
studies forum presentation spon
3. The Toronto Japanese Garden Club
sored by Columbia Christian Col
4. The Kenzo Nagao Memorial
lege.
5- The Genji Nakamachi Memorial
He recounted an incident at
LOS ANGELES. — Los
to help attorneys to determine San Franciasco State in which he
6- The ^ Shin Memorial
les’ Coroner Thomas T.
the course of further .action — said a group of 40 Black and
I
Tn
rn
chi
’
s
decision
to
permit
live,
White radicals invaded a classr2' M\h°r°nL° ^aPanese Garden Club consists of 7 schools —
criminal or civil.
^u'lu> Kakko, Sogetsu, Ikenobo, and Ohara — and color TV coverage of the inquest
FCont. on Papp R>
KMEX, the all-Spanish speak
into the death of Los Angeles
| * 3 basic styles:
newsman Ruben Salazar was a ing UHF-TV station where Sa
|
*
Traditional Arrangement
“first” in the nation. It was also lazar was news director, televis
।
Uie
Contemporary Arrangement (in deep, high
:he longest and costliest inquest ed live the entire series and re
peated them in the evening. The
I
container)
n county history.
seven
VHF stations covered the
! -^Bribana -_ p .
The 16-dav inquiry which :
[
contemporary Arrangement (shallow container)
proceedings on a rotation basis,
Uaa{
^ a demonstration of Ikebana by Mrs. Y. Yoshi- ended Oct. 9; saw a procession a format
which is unique in
witne. s, 204 exhibits
of
61
fe?> o.-ET ^^t'U1’d.a.y, Mrs. N. Mitsui at 4:30 Saturdav, Mrs. Kin
public broadcasting.
LOS ANGELES. — Mrs. Naand 2.025 pages of testimony
Sunday.
kako
Tomita got out of her car
As the Salazar inquest was sputtering
that culminated with a split 4-3
with anger when
■tejy q,A
^0 seed and nursery catalogues on display, decision: For jurors called the closing, the mysterious death of another motorist ran through a
kin Nakajima, landscape architect, Consolidated' death “at the hands of another blues singer Janis Joplin Oct. 4 stop signal and crashed into it.
The other d^'ver explained
1 -eaiCh Ltd. of Tokyo, Japan.
person” and three saw it as an brought the coroner’s office and that
he had been watering a
Dr. Noguchi’s name back’ into
lawn and that his wet foot slip
:'»» > I*ns ™ Saturday at 2:00 p.m. to 7:00 and on Sun- “accident.”
prmt. His deputy coroner, Dr. ped from the brake onto the gas
* 1’-" to 6:00 p.m.
The verdict expressed no blame
David Katsuyama, chief of the pedal. Mrs. Tomita had little
11 be a door prize of a Panasonic 20 inch color TV and and is not binding on any legal forensic medicine section, is often choice but to accept the story.
The other driver was her hus
action. The inque.
expected quoted and quieried.
band, James Tomita.
Double Racial
Standard Scored
By Hayakawa
L.A. Nisei Coroner Stays In Print
Angry Lady
Driver Runs
Into Surprise
^P^J^8* Steam Ship Kanrin Maru Being Built
^e?v^^
^DA
1 a r
s
ii$h?r
tA
ditor
VEST
t.
authentic 1:100 scale model of the
■rdn Yam, the first Japanese steam vessel to cross
^Pacific flying the Rising Sun flag, is now being
tufted from copies of the original blueprints
,n(j j^ee years ago in the Netherlands.
The historical accounts of the Dutch-made ship
J jo be corrected as new facts were revealed by
; discovery of the blueprints, said Isao Iimori, 4G,
ember of the Japan Society of the History fo Mari
na and the modeler of the vessel.
The auxiliary bark, equipped with a steam engine,
to built between 1856 and 1857 at Fop Smit Ship
ul (now L. Smit and Zoon’s Scheeps and Werktuigt0£YO—An
in KindeWK the Netherlands, on order
of the Japanese feudal government. Iimori said
The exact date of the commencement of the ve.W CrtrUCti°n
had 10n- bee” unknown m
Japan because of the missing documents. Iimori said
that it was presumably around June 10. 1S56. judo-inDom a date stamped on one of the diagrams' of'Am
b ™PlmFS Whlch 111 Dutch read “10 Junv 1856."
inTv11?
the Japan 0,1 ^ completion
in the Netherlands in April 1857 and arrived at Nao>
Sa^ aftv’ a 97'day V°yage Sept 21 the ^me ye;
he ship, then renamed the Kanrin Maru bv the
Tokugawa Shogunate, was to have a historic roL
in
1 e earIy stages of relationship between Japan and
iillllllllllllllHHHIinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinmiinHn^
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
(plus postage)
he Dcto (Canadian
UXXXII'
Ro. 83
uimm
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
By MISS J.L. BEATTIE
$5.00 (plus postage)
Toronto Japanese Garden Club . .
Biggest Annual Flower
Show On Oct. 31 & Nov. 1
n
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 97 1970
jiiiiiiimiiiiiininhiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiinj.HHikiniiniiiiiiiiiiniiiininujiiiiiniiiiiiiHjnii.HiHim^
ited
3
....... HIIIIUH....,.....,,,.,.„..,..„„„.............
(Continued on Page S)
____
,l,l,ll,,,,llll,,i,|i||imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiuitiiiiii
^” independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
>rontoi
;A
In I860, the Shogunate dispatched a mission to the
U.S. to exchange ratification documents of a treaty
of amity and commerce between the two countries.
Althoug’h the <7-member mission led by Shinmi-Buzennokami Masaoki and Muragaki-Awajinokami Norima
sa, was to sail aboard a frigate, the USS Powhatan,
the Kanrin Maru was as signed to escort it.
However, the Kanrin Maru, with 90 naval officers
and crewmen, including the then 27-year-old Yukichi
Fukuzawa, founder of the
sailed from Uraga Port on
acitic cros
Feb.
10, i860, three days before
p Powhatan.
»
Toronto, Ont
Youth Gets Life For Murder
Of B.C. Japanese Canadian Boy
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — A 16- the mandatory life sentence after a
year-old youth was sentenced recent B.C. Supreme Court jury found Clin
ly to life imprisonment for the murder ton Arthur Ash of Hope, B.C., guilty
of a 9-year-old Japanese Canadian of non-capital murder.
schoolmate in February.
Ash was charged after the body of
Chief Justice J. O. Wilson imposed Roland Kamimura was found tied to
Nisei Doctor And Family Murdered
a sapling by a belt around his
neck in bush country near the Coquihalla River in Hope Feb. 5.
In
imposing the sentence,
Chief Justice Wilson explained
to the jury that it did not mean
that Ash would spend the rest
of his life in prison.
“In a great many cases, even
adults are released after serving
a much shorter time,” he said.
SOQUEL, Calif
Firemen daughters who were not at home.
answering a call to a blazing
Miss Cadwallader’s body was
mansion atop a remote hilltop floating in the swimming pool
overlooking the Pacific Ocean and the others had sunk to the
last week found the bodies of a bottom.
rich Nisei eye doctor and four
First word of the killing came
other persons in a swimming from Chief Ted Pound of the
pool.
Live Oak Fire Department which
Sheriff Douglas James of San had been called to the 2-yearta Cruz county where the doctor old mansion isolated among trees
practised
called it the “most four miles north of State High
gruesome crime in county histo way 1 between Santa Cruz and
Mrs. Kin Izumi
Mrs. Y. Yoshikawa
ry.” All the victims had been Soquel, about 100 miles south
Izumi Misho
| shot in the back and bludgeoned. I of San Francisco.
Ohara School
Chief Pound' told sheriff’s de
, ,^TJ0. One of the largest annual flower- shows in Tor- Their hands had* been tied in
front of them with scarfs.
puties that a bloody smear led his
PORTLAND, Ore. —S. I. Ha
011 Saturday, October 31st and Sunday, November
They were Japanese Ameri men to the swimming pool where yakawa, President of San Fran
k- J3lS "^en Tlie Toronto Japanese Garden Club presents
can
Dr. Victor Ohta, 45, who the bodies were found.
cisco State College, said recent
7
*^nnual Flower Show” at the Japanese Canadian Culwore his hair long and was
An entrance roadway to the ly that allowing blacks to indulge
Centre, 123 Wynford Drive, Don Mills, Ont.
considered
“
hippie
”
by
his
ac
rambling mansion , which had in violence which would bring
Jlr. John Bradshaw, one of Canada’s leading horticulturist
quaintances; his wife, Virginia, cost between $250,000 and $300,- swift punishment to whites in
®s and broadcasters, will officially open the event.
43, their sons, Derrick, 12 and 000 to build, had been blocked volves a “double standard” to
Ue folloving trophies will be awarded:
Taggart, 11; and the physician’s by a locked Lincoln Continental which he objects.
secretary, Dorothy Cadw.allader, which belonged' to Miss CadwalHayakawa spoke to nearly 2,!• John Bassett (Telegram)
38.
The
Ohtas
had
two
teenage
lader.
000
students at an American
2. The Garden Research Laboratory
studies forum presentation spon
3. The Toronto Japanese Garden Club
sored by Columbia Christian Col
4. The Kenzo Nagao Memorial
lege.
5- The Genji Nakamachi Memorial
He recounted an incident at
LOS ANGELES. — Los
to help attorneys to determine San Franciasco State in which he
6- The ^ Shin Memorial
les’ Coroner Thomas T.
the course of further .action — said a group of 40 Black and
I
Tn
rn
chi
’
s
decision
to
permit
live,
White radicals invaded a classr2' M\h°r°nL° ^aPanese Garden Club consists of 7 schools —
criminal or civil.
^u'lu> Kakko, Sogetsu, Ikenobo, and Ohara — and color TV coverage of the inquest
FCont. on Papp R>
KMEX, the all-Spanish speak
into the death of Los Angeles
| * 3 basic styles:
newsman Ruben Salazar was a ing UHF-TV station where Sa
|
*
Traditional Arrangement
“first” in the nation. It was also lazar was news director, televis
।
Uie
Contemporary Arrangement (in deep, high
:he longest and costliest inquest ed live the entire series and re
peated them in the evening. The
I
container)
n county history.
seven
VHF stations covered the
! -^Bribana -_ p .
The 16-dav inquiry which :
[
contemporary Arrangement (shallow container)
proceedings on a rotation basis,
Uaa{
^ a demonstration of Ikebana by Mrs. Y. Yoshi- ended Oct. 9; saw a procession a format
which is unique in
witne. s, 204 exhibits
of
61
fe?> o.-ET ^^t'U1’d.a.y, Mrs. N. Mitsui at 4:30 Saturdav, Mrs. Kin
public broadcasting.
LOS ANGELES. — Mrs. Naand 2.025 pages of testimony
Sunday.
kako
Tomita got out of her car
As the Salazar inquest was sputtering
that culminated with a split 4-3
with anger when
■tejy q,A
^0 seed and nursery catalogues on display, decision: For jurors called the closing, the mysterious death of another motorist ran through a
kin Nakajima, landscape architect, Consolidated' death “at the hands of another blues singer Janis Joplin Oct. 4 stop signal and crashed into it.
The other d^'ver explained
1 -eaiCh Ltd. of Tokyo, Japan.
person” and three saw it as an brought the coroner’s office and that
he had been watering a
Dr. Noguchi’s name back’ into
lawn and that his wet foot slip
:'»» > I*ns ™ Saturday at 2:00 p.m. to 7:00 and on Sun- “accident.”
prmt. His deputy coroner, Dr. ped from the brake onto the gas
* 1’-" to 6:00 p.m.
The verdict expressed no blame
David Katsuyama, chief of the pedal. Mrs. Tomita had little
11 be a door prize of a Panasonic 20 inch color TV and and is not binding on any legal forensic medicine section, is often choice but to accept the story.
The other driver was her hus
action. The inque.
expected quoted and quieried.
band, James Tomita.
Double Racial
Standard Scored
By Hayakawa
L.A. Nisei Coroner Stays In Print
Angry Lady
Driver Runs
Into Surprise
Page 2
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VANCOUVER: 777 Hornby St
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INSTANT cooking base
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COOKING
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Page 7
pipsdav. October 27, 1970
PAGE
I Hon. Allan Grossman Praises
I Japanese Organization
Dates And Doings
Buddhist Church Welcome Party For Rev. Miyaji
lt fci a good policy to
b#r« th* HIGHT POLICY
Coilsnil
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
I
TORONTO.—The Honorable Allan Grossman, Ontario's Min- f TORONTO.—The Rev. Fumio Miyaji and his familv will be
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
COmed at a Party at the Buddhist Church on NovemPhone 368-4681
I ;s?r of Correctional Services, has paid tribute to the Japanese S '”
I government for its excellent work in the organization of the recent
receding the party
party, an induction ceremony for the Japanese
I fourth United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and
peaking
congregation
will be held at 3 p.m., follovcd by
I the Treatment of the Offender. The Japanese Gvermnent actec
a receoHon
at
4
p.m.
I as host for the Congress which was held August 17-26 at the InRev. Miyaji was with the administrative
I ^national Conference Hall in Kyoto, Japan.
office at Ryukoku
University prior to his ordination and
I
Mr. Grossman participated in the closing ceremonies with
? cert ifica ti
of ministry.
RCA
I Mr. Yoshitsugu Baba, the former Vice-Minister of Justice and the
The Miyajis now
:
reside .at 234 Cedric Avenue. Toronto 10
Sales — Service
■ Chairman of the Congress. Mi. Grossman, as Acting Head of th-1 and their telephon
2S93 Lawrence Ave. East
I Canadian delegation, personally extended an invitation on behalf
Their sons, Kenji, ;ge 9 and Koji, age 8 have <
at
I of the Federal and Ontario Government for the Fifth Congress to the
At Brimley Rd. Scarborough
nearby J.R. Wilco Junior Public School. —T.B.C.
Phone 759-1583
I beheld in Toronto in 1975. The Congress unanimously1 accepted the
| invitation which is expected to bring to Toronto approximately
I 3.000 persons, including delegates, observers, and others. This will V.O.N. Aids Patients Coming Home From Hospital
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
TORONTO.—When a patient has been in hospital, commo
be the first such congress held in the Western Hemisphere.
ALL FORMS
I
In his speech Mr. Grossman stated that everyone attending the wme may be an anxious move if he still requires nursing care.
OF
congress shared his feelings "of admiration, respect, and gratitude 1 he Wctorian Order nurse can help both the patient and the'family
for the work of the Japanese Organizing Committee . . 7 for the in this difficult time. Many hospitals
continuitv of
[ development and carrying out of this most successful congress.” nursing service by having- the V.O.N. nurse, the hospital nurse,
consult
He also expressed to Mr. Yoshitsugu Baba the Canadian delega UCtOr7?d tlP patient confer together in the hospital before th
KIYO TAMURA
------ ; place. The V.O.N. nurse then continues the same
tion’s "very1 deep appreciation” of the effective manner in which move takes
TORONTO
nursing care .at home and she will teach a member of the family
he presided over the deliberations.
Bus. 366-5812 Res. PL. 9-8317
:o carry on this care between her visits.
Mr. Grossman expressed the Congress’s gratitude for the
E\ en if your hospital doesn’t have such
highly successful social occasions arranged for the intermingling arrangements for V.O.N. nursi
at home can be made before the
of delegates. "We were also delighted,” the Minister added, “with, patient leaves the hospital by
Bus: 824-8153
Res: 922-1353
telephoning the Metropolitan Torthe arrangements macle for us to see the work of our host country. I onto Branch of the Victorian Order
Japan, in a variety1 of institutions. These visits have contributed cipant of United Appeal. —V.O.N.
significantly to our personal education and understanding of the
subject.”
I
Charl erod Accountants
"Indeed, Mr. Grossman concluded, "this Congress has been T.B.C. Memorializes Dr. Richard H. Robinson
acreditto the enterprise and capabilities of the Japanese people.”
TORONTO.—Children and adults were all involved in memo
Suite 403
Ai the encl of the closing ceremonies a large backdrop was | aIiS'ng the contribut!ons made by Dr. Richard H. Robinson at
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
lowered at the front of the Conference Hall which read: “Savona^ th’ee separate services on October 11th, Dr. Richard H. Robinson
see you in Toronto, Canada, in 1975.”
'
’I Memorial Sunday.
Mr. Grossman was asked in an interview what matters were
•„
aSS°CiateS fr°m th? universitT as "ell
former “Busof greatest concern to citizens of countries in the Far East
t ™embers "'^
i T^118
the “ a'm' MorCustom Picture
flnJu r
I
.
mng Service’ Among the speakers, Mr. Howard White, reminisced
Framing
He said that as a result of private conversations with many on the Huron Street days when he read in the local paper of a
people he was given the impression that there is considerable con- Buddhist lecture at the Buddhist Church on Huron Street When
NISHIMURA
l
J
X10n^y «* United States of its military he arrived there he heard a young man in his earlv twenties giving
establishment in the Far East, This was leading to a feeling of the lecture. This was the beginning of Mr.White’s association with
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
holation and worries about being left surrounded by Red China I the Buddhist Church.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
and Russia.
I
v i v
r
n
I
All. lakeo Yoshida, a former Bussei, recollected on the very
Tokio Nishimura
923--G877
human side of Dr. Robinson who encouraged as well as gave the
Japanese Canadians confidence during the early days of resettle
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
ment in Toronto. He recalled how much Richard Robinson enjoyed
the intellectual and the social side of church activities.
Call: KEN iiORl
Collections for the day totalled close to two hundred and fifty
dollars. Toronto Buddhist Church board of directors decided to
RealZoR
remit the sum of three hundred dollars to the Richard H. Robinson
Memorial Fund, which was established at the University of Wis
MEMBER of TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
consin. — T.B.C.
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Tom’s Television
And Radio
INSURANCE
ERNEST JOMORI
»’$ MARKET
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
Red & White
Food Store
Scarborough
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
^ Takara Jewellers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1970
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
918 Bathurst St.
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
Monthly Memorial
Telephone: 534-4302
3:00 P.M. Induction Ceremony
4:00 P.M. Welcome Reception For Rev. F. Miyaji and Family
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
21 n
} Mnon' ~ Fr’day 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1204. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle
Dew Worms and
Fishing Licenses
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
■ TORONTO JAPANESE GARDEN CLUB
PRESENTS
701 Dovercourt Rd.
South of Bloor
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1970 11:00 A.M.
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5267
English — Rev. Ken Matsuau, 444-5159
Sunday School for children
A warm welcome to all.
at the
Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
T23 Wynford Drive, Don Mills
IPs Private! No Time Limit!
* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
Gat the
most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food I Plenty of free parking!
’°°« PRIZES
ADMISSION
f4&tet
OF TORONTO
18th ANNUAL FLOWER SHOW
°n Saturday, Oct. 31, 2:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
“nd Sunday, Nov. 1st, 1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
81.00
CHINA
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
HOUSE
—
RU. 1-9123
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
f
Tel. 463-8104
7
PAGE
I Hon. Allan Grossman Praises
I Japanese Organization
Dates And Doings
Buddhist Church Welcome Party For Rev. Miyaji
lt fci a good policy to
b#r« th* HIGHT POLICY
Coilsnil
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
I
TORONTO.—The Honorable Allan Grossman, Ontario's Min- f TORONTO.—The Rev. Fumio Miyaji and his familv will be
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
COmed at a Party at the Buddhist Church on NovemPhone 368-4681
I ;s?r of Correctional Services, has paid tribute to the Japanese S '”
I government for its excellent work in the organization of the recent
receding the party
party, an induction ceremony for the Japanese
I fourth United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and
peaking
congregation
will be held at 3 p.m., follovcd by
I the Treatment of the Offender. The Japanese Gvermnent actec
a receoHon
at
4
p.m.
I as host for the Congress which was held August 17-26 at the InRev. Miyaji was with the administrative
I ^national Conference Hall in Kyoto, Japan.
office at Ryukoku
University prior to his ordination and
I
Mr. Grossman participated in the closing ceremonies with
? cert ifica ti
of ministry.
RCA
I Mr. Yoshitsugu Baba, the former Vice-Minister of Justice and the
The Miyajis now
:
reside .at 234 Cedric Avenue. Toronto 10
Sales — Service
■ Chairman of the Congress. Mi. Grossman, as Acting Head of th-1 and their telephon
2S93 Lawrence Ave. East
I Canadian delegation, personally extended an invitation on behalf
Their sons, Kenji, ;ge 9 and Koji, age 8 have <
at
I of the Federal and Ontario Government for the Fifth Congress to the
At Brimley Rd. Scarborough
nearby J.R. Wilco Junior Public School. —T.B.C.
Phone 759-1583
I beheld in Toronto in 1975. The Congress unanimously1 accepted the
| invitation which is expected to bring to Toronto approximately
I 3.000 persons, including delegates, observers, and others. This will V.O.N. Aids Patients Coming Home From Hospital
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
TORONTO.—When a patient has been in hospital, commo
be the first such congress held in the Western Hemisphere.
ALL FORMS
I
In his speech Mr. Grossman stated that everyone attending the wme may be an anxious move if he still requires nursing care.
OF
congress shared his feelings "of admiration, respect, and gratitude 1 he Wctorian Order nurse can help both the patient and the'family
for the work of the Japanese Organizing Committee . . 7 for the in this difficult time. Many hospitals
continuitv of
[ development and carrying out of this most successful congress.” nursing service by having- the V.O.N. nurse, the hospital nurse,
consult
He also expressed to Mr. Yoshitsugu Baba the Canadian delega UCtOr7?d tlP patient confer together in the hospital before th
KIYO TAMURA
------ ; place. The V.O.N. nurse then continues the same
tion’s "very1 deep appreciation” of the effective manner in which move takes
TORONTO
nursing care .at home and she will teach a member of the family
he presided over the deliberations.
Bus. 366-5812 Res. PL. 9-8317
:o carry on this care between her visits.
Mr. Grossman expressed the Congress’s gratitude for the
E\ en if your hospital doesn’t have such
highly successful social occasions arranged for the intermingling arrangements for V.O.N. nursi
at home can be made before the
of delegates. "We were also delighted,” the Minister added, “with, patient leaves the hospital by
Bus: 824-8153
Res: 922-1353
telephoning the Metropolitan Torthe arrangements macle for us to see the work of our host country. I onto Branch of the Victorian Order
Japan, in a variety1 of institutions. These visits have contributed cipant of United Appeal. —V.O.N.
significantly to our personal education and understanding of the
subject.”
I
Charl erod Accountants
"Indeed, Mr. Grossman concluded, "this Congress has been T.B.C. Memorializes Dr. Richard H. Robinson
acreditto the enterprise and capabilities of the Japanese people.”
TORONTO.—Children and adults were all involved in memo
Suite 403
Ai the encl of the closing ceremonies a large backdrop was | aIiS'ng the contribut!ons made by Dr. Richard H. Robinson at
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
lowered at the front of the Conference Hall which read: “Savona^ th’ee separate services on October 11th, Dr. Richard H. Robinson
see you in Toronto, Canada, in 1975.”
'
’I Memorial Sunday.
Mr. Grossman was asked in an interview what matters were
•„
aSS°CiateS fr°m th? universitT as "ell
former “Busof greatest concern to citizens of countries in the Far East
t ™embers "'^
i T^118
the “ a'm' MorCustom Picture
flnJu r
I
.
mng Service’ Among the speakers, Mr. Howard White, reminisced
Framing
He said that as a result of private conversations with many on the Huron Street days when he read in the local paper of a
people he was given the impression that there is considerable con- Buddhist lecture at the Buddhist Church on Huron Street When
NISHIMURA
l
J
X10n^y «* United States of its military he arrived there he heard a young man in his earlv twenties giving
establishment in the Far East, This was leading to a feeling of the lecture. This was the beginning of Mr.White’s association with
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
holation and worries about being left surrounded by Red China I the Buddhist Church.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
and Russia.
I
v i v
r
n
I
All. lakeo Yoshida, a former Bussei, recollected on the very
Tokio Nishimura
923--G877
human side of Dr. Robinson who encouraged as well as gave the
Japanese Canadians confidence during the early days of resettle
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
ment in Toronto. He recalled how much Richard Robinson enjoyed
the intellectual and the social side of church activities.
Call: KEN iiORl
Collections for the day totalled close to two hundred and fifty
dollars. Toronto Buddhist Church board of directors decided to
RealZoR
remit the sum of three hundred dollars to the Richard H. Robinson
Memorial Fund, which was established at the University of Wis
MEMBER of TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
consin. — T.B.C.
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Tom’s Television
And Radio
INSURANCE
ERNEST JOMORI
»’$ MARKET
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
Red & White
Food Store
Scarborough
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
^ Takara Jewellers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1970
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
918 Bathurst St.
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
Monthly Memorial
Telephone: 534-4302
3:00 P.M. Induction Ceremony
4:00 P.M. Welcome Reception For Rev. F. Miyaji and Family
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
21 n
} Mnon' ~ Fr’day 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1204. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle
Dew Worms and
Fishing Licenses
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
■ TORONTO JAPANESE GARDEN CLUB
PRESENTS
701 Dovercourt Rd.
South of Bloor
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1970 11:00 A.M.
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5267
English — Rev. Ken Matsuau, 444-5159
Sunday School for children
A warm welcome to all.
at the
Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
T23 Wynford Drive, Don Mills
IPs Private! No Time Limit!
* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
Gat the
most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food I Plenty of free parking!
’°°« PRIZES
ADMISSION
f4&tet
OF TORONTO
18th ANNUAL FLOWER SHOW
°n Saturday, Oct. 31, 2:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
“nd Sunday, Nov. 1st, 1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
81.00
CHINA
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
HOUSE
—
RU. 1-9123
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
f
Tel. 463-8104
7
Page 8
PAGE 8
THE
NE W
Lfosdw_Oetol^ J
Emperor Hirohito’s Daughter
Works In “Departo” Store
Model . , ,
(Cont. from Page One)
ma (John) Manjiro, an interpret- mated at 380 tons gi'oss, with
er who was repatriated from the a displacement of 360 tons, calSecond class Oai! , . .
U.S. as a castaway fisherman,
E^ber O3S‘S ^
from figures given in
was among the crew.
A member o: Ethnic Pres. . "
the blueprints, Iimori said.
The commander was Kimura
ASS;
°* Ontario
“^
TOKYO.—The former Princess
and ^atSU
Maru is nearly completed new
PUBLISHED ON EVFsv
‘T really don’t know what ex
‘® r?S'Esi
Suga, the
independent-minded actly I’ll be doing here,” she said, (alias kaisnu), was the captain. —only the sails have still to b°
Six
Americans,
including
a
capfitted.
daughter of Emperor Hirohito, But I think it will be advising
SUBSCRIPTION i„ , i
As it took shape, character
showed up for her first day of customers on their purchases.” tain of a wrecked merchant ship,
“■
months 'I
"eXPa T? ab-oar^
. ,
, pstics of the Kanrin Maru be-j
work at a department store re
T' K CES.^
me Kanrin Maru arrived at came apparent
She refused comment on what
cently in a midi dress and said
37 ^J'S later, on
It was a three-masted bark
Because of an accident (for and main masts square rio-. KE?®!8? ^J
a job “outside the house” had she thought the public reaction
Ph° haF °f C°a ■ and ?'atre1’’ ged’ and
mizzen fore-and-aft)
would be to the daughter of the
Japanese
been her longtime wish.
the
Powhatan,
carrying
the
Jaequipped
with
a 100 h n steam I
emperor
working
in
a
department
4/9
S
UEEX
ST. ^J
The 31-year-old former prin
P
kavSJ cnv°y, arrived 12 days engine and 12 cannon. A twoToronto 133, Ont 1
store,
but
did
say,
“
I
want
to
be
cess, now Mrs. Hisanaga Shima
S
behind the Japanese vessel.
blade screw and retractable fun-I
EMpire 6-5005
I
criticized
by
the
public
on
how
I
zu, shocked J span’s older geneThe Kanrin Maim returned nel were unusual features of the I
home June 25 via Hawaii.
vessel designed primarily as a
lation by taking the job in an ^o my job and nothing else.”
Although
there
had
been
many
sailing
vessel. When under sail, |
The emperor’s daughter then
exclusive branch of the Seibu
books written about the voyage tHe screw was raised above the’ I
Department Store, but delighted led the reporters and photogra of the Kanrin Maru, there were water with, chains and the funthe younger set.
phers downstairs to the hotel ar very few documents to show the nel withdrawn like a telescope.
'‘Working outside the house is cade where the department store saidCtUre °f the Vessel Iimori
Iimori, remarked these devices
Help Wanted
a d'ream of mine,” Mrs. Shima- branch is located. A small room
zu said at a news conference has been designated as her work
said ‘the complete'<iuplfKer°’r P
the Kanrin Maru’s I
before reporting to work.
ing area in one end of the store
“I want to get outside the which sells high-priced gifts and Mtt, ‘JT”1? “ the fortunes dwindled wheThS
house to learn something,” she interior furnishings.
t was called ’bv "the Dutch^were ^ie'Tn' ?' TokuS‘a"’a Sho- experienced
----- 3
found
three
/ears
ago
nth
gU
/5
6
H
P
°"'
“
'
T
?
M
“
“
‘
“
>'
said. “I do not want to be a spe
Queried by a reporter about
cialist and I know the limit of the style of her dress mid the
my capabilities.”
hemline below the knee, Mrs. Shiseeking the documents for a long I agalnsrtte’ris^
Mrs. Shimazu, dressed in a mazu said, ^ don t think it’s a > time.
black and white midi dress, met midi, but my husband does. He
force supported by the Empem ZZZ~~----- -------The man, Tsumoru Katayama, Meiji.
reporters at a crowded1 news likes my skirts shorter.
51, executive director of the Yo
in August 1868, it sailed from Use New Canadian
conference in an elegant hotel
kohama
Presidents
Club, -had Shinagawa
nnae-awa Port . ,for
fm- Hokkaido
The former princess startled
meeting room furnished with
been
looking
for
the
blueprints
with a fleet led by Enomoto
the Japanese public 10 years ago
For Best Results
to rebuild a lifesize model of the Takeaki (popularly known as
white Victorian furniture and
when she chose a commoner' hus- Kanrin Maru, as a source of in
kl
Buyo),
one
of
the
leaders
of
the
glittering crystal chandeliers. She ban. Now the mother of an 8spiration for Japanese youth. lemnants of the government
k
sat gracefully through a picture year-old son, she is living again His wish materialized after he
forces who resisted the Empe
K«
RES. 231-0863
BUS. 783-425^
taking session and then easily w Tokyo after spending two contacted Charles van der Sloot, ror’s Army and Navy, He later
inov
11 Ivy Lea Cres.
3101 Bathurst!
second secretary at the Dutch’ became a politician.
fielded questions from reporters. years in Washington.
sid(
Embassy in Tokyo. The Dutch
But a storm delayed it and it
diplomat sought the aid of ship drifted to Shimoda, Izu.
MRS. SATOKO SATO •rate
Later, at
building
officials
and
others
in
Hayakawa ...
(Continued From Page 1)
Shimizu Port,
All types of insurance I
the Netherlands and brought to bmmizu 1 ort, it was attacked’
ispan
room and ousted a White lectur he couldn’t teach the course be Katayama the news that dupli by a fleet of the revolutionary
force and most members of the
mien
er on African history on the cause what could a Black man cates of the blueprints were still crew
CROWN LIFE
were killed.
grounds that a White man know about the soul of a great kept at a maritime museum in
In a widely-known episode in
INSURANCE CO.
Rotterdam.
^ It
couldn’t possibly7 understand the White poet like Chaucer?’ ”
the history of the period shortly
With the blueprints available, before the Meiji Restoration, a
t PR
Black experience.”
Katayama
founded an association local gambling
“I object to this double stan
boss
Shimizu
‘Most of the faculty supported dard,” Hayakawa said. “If Whites for the restoration and preserva Jirocho, ordered his men to bury
by fa
them,” Hayakawa said. “At the did this to the Black profes tion of memorabilia of the Kan the crew’s bodies which nobody
Buy & Sell - Your Hoi
meml
rin Maru, with an office inside
same time we happened to have sor, they would have been ar- the Presidents Club in Naka else would do because they were
branded as rebels.
Through
a Black professor of English li lested, and all the other faculty Ward, Yokohama.
At Katavalai an
The steam engine was strip
terature teaching Chaucer. What members would have come to the ma’s request, Iimori and four ped from the vessel which end
Mils Kuroda I right
other members of the maritime ed its period of glory as a
would have happened if some professor’s aid.”
Ive this
nstory society joined it. They freighter.
students went in and told him
Isr lea
Hayakawa also said1 he object studied the blueprints preparaRepresenting
After the Meiji Restoration,
-Oiy for rebuilding the historic :he government-owned Kanrin
e expe
ed to the practice by some White vessel.
Robt,
Owen,
sy nc
teachers of passing each Black . The blueprints consisted of 20 Vlaru was registered as a vessel
;o
carry
colonists
to
Ogasawa
Realtor
he st
student merely because he is diagrams, each about one square ra Islands and HokkaidoOFFSET AND LETTERPRESS
B bee:
Black, and of excusing violence meter. The measurement was in
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
The last moments of the Kan
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
I wan
.n
old
Dutch
system
of
duim
and the stocking of arms by such
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-251
rin Maru had long been unknown,
Maru
was
163
feet
sribes
'^//^ Am^^/^ 21^,^ gioups as the Black Panthers
,48.9 m,) Ion sr (from stern to i until 1962. The late Minoru Muwhile
looking with horror on si-1 the
mine looxing
me jib boom, excluding the
the bow- ] ny.ama’., Agrarian of Waseda
----- 6 m.)
cue DOUniversity and' a member of the
it’s likt
HARRY S. KONDO ^uilUi^Hllp milar actions by White minut^Pprit)’ 2S-3 feet. (8.64
Maritime
History
Society,
found
K-old :
and 12.5 feet (3.75 m.) deep.
627 BAY ST., TORONTO
Phone 368-9768
men.
a
record
of
the
ship
’
s
death
in
p he ;
It was of very shallow a historical volume about Hok
drawing only 9.5 feet kaido.
W <
(2.8d m.), said Iimori. He ex
According to the record, the
plained that it was quite under Kanrin
Maru, carrying 400 co
t® ne;
standable that as a result, the lonists, sailed on the stormy
Ispered
«
Kani'in Maru experienced a rou^h evening of Sept. 19, 1870, from
F beer,
passage to the U.S., as depicted Hakodate Port for Otaru, Hok
lieges,
m the famous picture drawn bv kaido. Shortly after it reached
Yujiro, acting captain the open sea the vessel struck a
pg tl
7± the vessel.
rock
at
Izumisawa,
Kamiiso-gun,
Pd his
The ship’s weight was esti- west of Hakod'ate, and sank.
PRINTING
R? can
Invitation
Line
Your Home
JSC
fo
two
THE NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St. West
Toronto 2-B, Ont
fc in
Or si
rWe.
Fs c<
Mme a
®i> J;
Through
TOSH IWAI
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
1527 O'Conner Dr.
Good taste needn't be expensive. Our beou«M Bouquet
invitation Une proves this with the most exquisite peters,
type foces ond workmanship you could wish for* It
features Thermo-Engraving—rich raised lettering—elegant
as the finest craftsmanship — yet costing so tttlel Come
see our unusual selection.
x ARE YOU A
Blbdp DONOR
757-5184
“EXPANSION DISCOUNT PRICES^
.
call now
e
ave moved to larger premises to expand our service
_T
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to our customers.
Now available: Furniture Paint Stripping
dlfferent methods)
Fuimture Finishing _ (Expert Craftsmanship)
r
A t qUes — (Bought and Sold)
old Seal Upholstery & Services
Bus. 244-9227
212 Peliat Ave
„
E'
653'6811
Rep. Don Mitsubata
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMEN1
Income Tax Reduction
Retirement Income
Family Protection
Disability Pay CW*
Mortgage Redemption
CoUege Tuition Fund :
MITS TANOUY
national LIFE
s of cow
3 safety
$ of 1
^ inev
stsujo,”
lienal l
the
s^ds as
’^ doe
5 ?one b
^ Cl
^^ 0
5
OF CANADA
10 St. Mary St, M
923-0916
:^ETS
THE
NE W
Lfosdw_Oetol^ J
Emperor Hirohito’s Daughter
Works In “Departo” Store
Model . , ,
(Cont. from Page One)
ma (John) Manjiro, an interpret- mated at 380 tons gi'oss, with
er who was repatriated from the a displacement of 360 tons, calSecond class Oai! , . .
U.S. as a castaway fisherman,
E^ber O3S‘S ^
from figures given in
was among the crew.
A member o: Ethnic Pres. . "
the blueprints, Iimori said.
The commander was Kimura
ASS;
°* Ontario
“^
TOKYO.—The former Princess
and ^atSU
Maru is nearly completed new
PUBLISHED ON EVFsv
‘T really don’t know what ex
‘® r?S'Esi
Suga, the
independent-minded actly I’ll be doing here,” she said, (alias kaisnu), was the captain. —only the sails have still to b°
Six
Americans,
including
a
capfitted.
daughter of Emperor Hirohito, But I think it will be advising
SUBSCRIPTION i„ , i
As it took shape, character
showed up for her first day of customers on their purchases.” tain of a wrecked merchant ship,
“■
months 'I
"eXPa T? ab-oar^
. ,
, pstics of the Kanrin Maru be-j
work at a department store re
T' K CES.^
me Kanrin Maru arrived at came apparent
She refused comment on what
cently in a midi dress and said
37 ^J'S later, on
It was a three-masted bark
Because of an accident (for and main masts square rio-. KE?®!8? ^J
a job “outside the house” had she thought the public reaction
Ph° haF °f C°a ■ and ?'atre1’’ ged’ and
mizzen fore-and-aft)
would be to the daughter of the
Japanese
been her longtime wish.
the
Powhatan,
carrying
the
Jaequipped
with
a 100 h n steam I
emperor
working
in
a
department
4/9
S
UEEX
ST. ^J
The 31-year-old former prin
P
kavSJ cnv°y, arrived 12 days engine and 12 cannon. A twoToronto 133, Ont 1
store,
but
did
say,
“
I
want
to
be
cess, now Mrs. Hisanaga Shima
S
behind the Japanese vessel.
blade screw and retractable fun-I
EMpire 6-5005
I
criticized
by
the
public
on
how
I
zu, shocked J span’s older geneThe Kanrin Maim returned nel were unusual features of the I
home June 25 via Hawaii.
vessel designed primarily as a
lation by taking the job in an ^o my job and nothing else.”
Although
there
had
been
many
sailing
vessel. When under sail, |
The emperor’s daughter then
exclusive branch of the Seibu
books written about the voyage tHe screw was raised above the’ I
Department Store, but delighted led the reporters and photogra of the Kanrin Maru, there were water with, chains and the funthe younger set.
phers downstairs to the hotel ar very few documents to show the nel withdrawn like a telescope.
'‘Working outside the house is cade where the department store saidCtUre °f the Vessel Iimori
Iimori, remarked these devices
Help Wanted
a d'ream of mine,” Mrs. Shima- branch is located. A small room
zu said at a news conference has been designated as her work
said ‘the complete'<iuplfKer°’r P
the Kanrin Maru’s I
before reporting to work.
ing area in one end of the store
“I want to get outside the which sells high-priced gifts and Mtt, ‘JT”1? “ the fortunes dwindled wheThS
house to learn something,” she interior furnishings.
t was called ’bv "the Dutch^were ^ie'Tn' ?' TokuS‘a"’a Sho- experienced
----- 3
found
three
/ears
ago
nth
gU
/5
6
H
P
°"'
“
'
T
?
M
“
“
‘
“
>'
said. “I do not want to be a spe
Queried by a reporter about
cialist and I know the limit of the style of her dress mid the
my capabilities.”
hemline below the knee, Mrs. Shiseeking the documents for a long I agalnsrtte’ris^
Mrs. Shimazu, dressed in a mazu said, ^ don t think it’s a > time.
black and white midi dress, met midi, but my husband does. He
force supported by the Empem ZZZ~~----- -------The man, Tsumoru Katayama, Meiji.
reporters at a crowded1 news likes my skirts shorter.
51, executive director of the Yo
in August 1868, it sailed from Use New Canadian
conference in an elegant hotel
kohama
Presidents
Club, -had Shinagawa
nnae-awa Port . ,for
fm- Hokkaido
The former princess startled
meeting room furnished with
been
looking
for
the
blueprints
with a fleet led by Enomoto
the Japanese public 10 years ago
For Best Results
to rebuild a lifesize model of the Takeaki (popularly known as
white Victorian furniture and
when she chose a commoner' hus- Kanrin Maru, as a source of in
kl
Buyo),
one
of
the
leaders
of
the
glittering crystal chandeliers. She ban. Now the mother of an 8spiration for Japanese youth. lemnants of the government
k
sat gracefully through a picture year-old son, she is living again His wish materialized after he
forces who resisted the Empe
K«
RES. 231-0863
BUS. 783-425^
taking session and then easily w Tokyo after spending two contacted Charles van der Sloot, ror’s Army and Navy, He later
inov
11 Ivy Lea Cres.
3101 Bathurst!
second secretary at the Dutch’ became a politician.
fielded questions from reporters. years in Washington.
sid(
Embassy in Tokyo. The Dutch
But a storm delayed it and it
diplomat sought the aid of ship drifted to Shimoda, Izu.
MRS. SATOKO SATO •rate
Later, at
building
officials
and
others
in
Hayakawa ...
(Continued From Page 1)
Shimizu Port,
All types of insurance I
the Netherlands and brought to bmmizu 1 ort, it was attacked’
ispan
room and ousted a White lectur he couldn’t teach the course be Katayama the news that dupli by a fleet of the revolutionary
force and most members of the
mien
er on African history on the cause what could a Black man cates of the blueprints were still crew
CROWN LIFE
were killed.
grounds that a White man know about the soul of a great kept at a maritime museum in
In a widely-known episode in
INSURANCE CO.
Rotterdam.
^ It
couldn’t possibly7 understand the White poet like Chaucer?’ ”
the history of the period shortly
With the blueprints available, before the Meiji Restoration, a
t PR
Black experience.”
Katayama
founded an association local gambling
“I object to this double stan
boss
Shimizu
‘Most of the faculty supported dard,” Hayakawa said. “If Whites for the restoration and preserva Jirocho, ordered his men to bury
by fa
them,” Hayakawa said. “At the did this to the Black profes tion of memorabilia of the Kan the crew’s bodies which nobody
Buy & Sell - Your Hoi
meml
rin Maru, with an office inside
same time we happened to have sor, they would have been ar- the Presidents Club in Naka else would do because they were
branded as rebels.
Through
a Black professor of English li lested, and all the other faculty Ward, Yokohama.
At Katavalai an
The steam engine was strip
terature teaching Chaucer. What members would have come to the ma’s request, Iimori and four ped from the vessel which end
Mils Kuroda I right
other members of the maritime ed its period of glory as a
would have happened if some professor’s aid.”
Ive this
nstory society joined it. They freighter.
students went in and told him
Isr lea
Hayakawa also said1 he object studied the blueprints preparaRepresenting
After the Meiji Restoration,
-Oiy for rebuilding the historic :he government-owned Kanrin
e expe
ed to the practice by some White vessel.
Robt,
Owen,
sy nc
teachers of passing each Black . The blueprints consisted of 20 Vlaru was registered as a vessel
;o
carry
colonists
to
Ogasawa
Realtor
he st
student merely because he is diagrams, each about one square ra Islands and HokkaidoOFFSET AND LETTERPRESS
B bee:
Black, and of excusing violence meter. The measurement was in
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
The last moments of the Kan
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
I wan
.n
old
Dutch
system
of
duim
and the stocking of arms by such
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-251
rin Maru had long been unknown,
Maru
was
163
feet
sribes
'^//^ Am^^/^ 21^,^ gioups as the Black Panthers
,48.9 m,) Ion sr (from stern to i until 1962. The late Minoru Muwhile
looking with horror on si-1 the
mine looxing
me jib boom, excluding the
the bow- ] ny.ama’., Agrarian of Waseda
----- 6 m.)
cue DOUniversity and' a member of the
it’s likt
HARRY S. KONDO ^uilUi^Hllp milar actions by White minut^Pprit)’ 2S-3 feet. (8.64
Maritime
History
Society,
found
K-old :
and 12.5 feet (3.75 m.) deep.
627 BAY ST., TORONTO
Phone 368-9768
men.
a
record
of
the
ship
’
s
death
in
p he ;
It was of very shallow a historical volume about Hok
drawing only 9.5 feet kaido.
W <
(2.8d m.), said Iimori. He ex
According to the record, the
plained that it was quite under Kanrin
Maru, carrying 400 co
t® ne;
standable that as a result, the lonists, sailed on the stormy
Ispered
«
Kani'in Maru experienced a rou^h evening of Sept. 19, 1870, from
F beer,
passage to the U.S., as depicted Hakodate Port for Otaru, Hok
lieges,
m the famous picture drawn bv kaido. Shortly after it reached
Yujiro, acting captain the open sea the vessel struck a
pg tl
7± the vessel.
rock
at
Izumisawa,
Kamiiso-gun,
Pd his
The ship’s weight was esti- west of Hakod'ate, and sank.
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