Page 1
8
wHs#®ll^^
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
toronto^ont.
SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 19^7
Touchy Minorities
^ay Bring Faceless Race
Reasons for B.C.'s
Cenntennial Hext Year
American Families Adopt More Oriental Children
families adoption the children and proTOKY 0 .—American
p^tive adopting family arc
that want to adopt children ax *
screened' to make sure they are
turning increasingly to mixed
suited for each other.
blood orphans in the Orient.
- She said this is done by her
Miss Florence Booster, Japan
ISS
representative for the interna agency in Japan ami by the
office in New York Gity in con
tional Social Service US^E ^ays junct ion with local xyclfxtre agen
this is true because the families cies throughout the United-States.
• ‘see what good adj ustment s t hose
V AN CO EVER.—Reasons f o r
celebrating'
British Columbia’s
By kango kunitsugu
t»^"K
centennial in 195S were graphi
norities protest loudly when the cally sketched for the Vancouver
Ir Crossroaui^
’
1 o -jolt to read recently' 'stereotype brings out the “baa" Bar Association, recently by pro
It
York City school side of the group—such as the vincial archivist Willard F; Ire
children are making in the 1 m*' ’A/lned from .its list of usual “sly, sneaky, buck-toothed land.
corning the 1SS adoption \\ ork xs
system T’Sttooks,
Mark
Jap who is always hissing and - He stated that next year's cen ted-States.
the fact that more girls are
approve
.
“Huckleberry wearing that perennial toothy tennial will NOT mark the hund
ISS, a worldwide social service
than boys. Miss Booster
?ai"Ktai « ®sed to? smile even after he had driver redth birthday of B.C. but he agency, has been placing Asian
_
...
"“iot « ®e one of the mam a nail through his foot by acci- a greed with the choice of 1958 for orphans—usually with Japanese said:
“1 think it’s because families
* Lit in the book, a Negro dent.”
or Korean mothers and American think they’ll have less -trouble
centennial celebrations.
£rif>", is referred to as
“Admittedly- it is the birthday fathers—for adoption with Ame with girls. They fear that boys
But when the stereotype goes
mnv find discrimination in get
"S So "have read.the book in the other direction, such as of only part of B.C. (tiny main rican families for 2k years.
land crown colony of B.C. m
Since
1953
when
the
U.S.
first
ting a job, entering school and
i=E seen the movie version “the short but sturdy Nisei with 1858k” Mr. Ireland said.
permitted
Atncrkans
to
adopt
the
‘■"'ouera llv making a livcliohpod.
. the green thumb, who has an un
It was in 1866 that the main
ill remember that Jim is pro- canny artistic talent and whose
“products ot war” in limited num
“But "if suitable girls are not
li
most noble and sympaland colony of B.C. and the co
£ ®te in the book. How-■ tastes in the .material things of lony of Vancouver Island formed bers. almost 2,000 of them have available, we persuade families to
life runs on simple, clean lines a union The province proper was been given visas by the American accept a nice boy and they usual
5 ttai is beside the point.
of meditative beauty and whose born in' 1871 when it joined con- Embassy in Japan to enter the ly do."
The point is that “Huckleberry bravery would even make Lassie
Miss Booster said the most po
But with the change in U-y pular age for adoption h less
■ v n” is a recognized American drool,” there is an embarrassed federation.
“But in 1858 decisions wore immigration laws under 'Whica
iv^ic and the student, I think, silence of approval.
made
which resulted in this pro adopted orphans can got inm- Than seven years of age. “Over
^e poorer for not being exposthat,” she said, “families fear
And yet the “bad’" and the vince as we know.it today. Next
visas, this total is expected adjustments like language and
will be the. hundredth anni
ed to it.
‘good’ stereotypes are just that vear
meeting new people may be auversary of the gold rush, he said, to swell in the next
The American Civil Liberties
—
^stereotypes.
One
is
just
as
when Californians came north oy
-^dle of September a ficult to' surmount.
union protested the board s ac
the thousands. It resulted m the
’ “^
became
tion “Must we emulate the So- dangerous as, the other.
“But our experience is that
Sts and rewrite history and the
end
of
the
fur
trading
economy
/™'
“
"^tfan
orphan
children
as old as 10 or 12 readily
Then there are some do-good
undev Lhe ne^. hw. learn English.“
c assies to conform with the views ers who’like to contend that all forever, and marked the coming f^
of certain individuals or groups?' religions are basically the same of British law and order.
Her foster parents are U.S. AuMiss Booster said recent re
and that racial differences ought
_ :——------- ——
Force Sgt. and Mi's Carl Hill of ports that orphans adopted in tne
thev asked.
■ ■
Even if there are portions oi .not to exist. “Now'some of our
Portland. Ore.
, » /
/ United state • hu^ c “dissapom od
the book which may ■be__ cons
. timed
.
are do-gooders, and
Miss Booster said that at any or found their way into a black
stereotype of tliey
we hate just as much as tney uo
given time” the demand for or market are completely unfound^Wn& of materials the bestial racism that puts -the
phans to adopt usually exceeds
CdShe said “groat attention” is
circulated through our New hoik obscenity into the two syllables
the number available.
schools and libraries emphasize of ‘nigger’, says an apt editorial
Immediately after World War ■paid to making certain a chin;
SLOCAN CITY, B.C.—A refer
"the equality of races. We shudder- ^ ^current Reporter magazine,
II,
she said, it was popular for has a suitable iamily for his pros
to think what would remain if all '"“But we also depise
- •
- ...... - endum on the proposal that. kJothe
invert
American
families to look to itu- pective foster parents before he
books which are in any way of ed racism that would cram ,ail can City change its niuincipal rope for adoptees because of ra ever gels a visa.
.
city to a
fensive to -some people
American citizens into a mystical status from that of a here for cial and cultural similarities to
“Besides," she said, our orcountry were removed as Huck melting pot and boil them down village was scheduled
ganization and child welfare,
America.
- .
Finn’ has been.
P
to a mass of gray, lumpless pot Nov. 7.
“ But. recently,” Miss Booster group:; keep close track of them
“If we adopt this criterion tor. tage. -Aren’t the smothers-oyer
. Section 19 of the. Municipal
. .
own after they aim adopted.
evaluating, the worth and merit ox faintly despicable themselves .
Act provides that a city7 munici said, “we have been receiving nu
An American Embassy official
books, the day may come when
“The craven neutralists sing- pality shall have a population m, merous requests for these u
our literature will consist of obi pious ■ anthems to law and order not less than, A000., The L/oo Oriental children because more in T^kyo reponsible for issuing
tuary notices, telephone books in the midst of a great and ter census gave Slocan City s pops and more people see what good y.sa^ to children being placed lor
adjustments they are,making in adoption in the U.S. said a
.
and dictionaries.” ;
:
_ rible battle that will only be end lation as 315 persons.
“black market would be almost
The change would result in in the United. States.
I too, protest the New Y oik ed when differences that keep
impossible.”
Miss
Booster
said
there
have
Citv Board of Education’s action, them from , turning into homo- duced taxation for ratepay eis.
.......
over
been
“extremely fewcases
During the war years
and would protest even though
enized nothingness.
the Jim in “Huck Finn” had been
1 000 Japanese Canadians were where an adoption.'‘didn’t worn New York Now Has 7
“It would be a poor .bargain relocated to Slocan City. Heijn'o out.” She added:
a Japanese and was called J ap
Japanese Restaurants
indeed
if equality before the law Matsubayashi is presently a
Jim.” Sometimes these incidents
“
Before
anv
children
from
Ja
With the opening of New
that occur because of
racial could only be purchased at tu member of the city council and pan or Korea are placed out for
pi-ice
of
making
all
men
equa»5
York
’s most authentic Japanese
slurs” can get ridiculous.
acting mayor.
eatery,
the Saito Restaurant at
To cite another case, the Can faceless.”
70
West
55th St. (mentioned m
adian Broadcasting Corporation
Wednesday
’s issue of NG) on
recently added to its list, or
Oct. 16, New York City’’ is now
words-not-to-use, the word Yank
the home of seven Japanese ics because it was considered .to be
He aurants. A. reference list for Can
_____
________
_
—
—
—
"
sued
a.
commercial
course.
“derogatory to color, • nationality
had a natural ear for music as a adian tourists follows:
“Nisei dancers just don't seem,
or religion!” And all this time 1
By FRED TAOMAE
Fuji Sukiyaki Restaurant, 238
child, and even had his own com
thought “Yank” was a nice clean to' enjoy themselves when they go
In Shin Nichi Bei,
bo in college. During the post W 58th St., New York 19.
word. The Canadians may use. it to' dances,” said George Aquino,
war years he led his band at en
Miyako, 20 W. 56th St., New
Los Angeles
with a derogatory inference, but the Japanese; 'orchestra leader,
listed men’s clubs in and around
^ Nippon Shokudo," 138 W. 56th
y
from the looks on the . faces of whose outfit made music fo
the Tokyo area.
Americans when they are called Hui O’’ Hawaii s Third Annu.
New York 23
panese will be doing the steps in
Before forming his own outfit St.,Saito
“Aloha Hop” on Sat. Nov. —
that, you would never know it.
Restaurant, <0 V. both
here, he had stints with Lionel St., New York 19.
Now take the case of our radio,
“They seem to hold back, tney Tokyo.
>r
“You’d be surprised,” he said Hampton, Art Pepper and Tets
TV and movie- industries. They don’t express pleasure or displ^Suehiro Restaurant, <m L. -9ln
have been harried so often from sure in any way,” he said. Tn y “that the 14-15 vear old in Japan Bessho. He plays the alto sax.
St., New York 16.
hiX school will be.doing steps
Tokyo Sukiyaki House, 144 W.
so many sides .that the. only safe
He is married to the former
villain is an unemployed white just seem to exist through the Hat many’ of the- Nisei dancer a
St* New. York 19.
Taruya, 239 W. lOBth-St, New
Anglo-Saxon Protestant. If the night. You don’t know how they eoSdnotllo. It’s hardto.believe Marv Uveda of Salinas and they
villain was a lawyer, the Bar
I know, but it s true, he ham are the parents of Charlene, four York 25,
feel.
”
!
'years of age.
Association would holler.
.
“T can’t' understand it,” an mered at me.
If the villain was an Afghani George left some hints that the
stanian, the entertainment 'med went on. “They pay admission m
Nisei
could use to click with him
in
buy
their
drinks,
but
ium would be sure to hear in tiine Stand ’around without looking foi
One
is
that if the tempo is too
from the Afghanistan Protective
slow or too fast, they shouio al
TOKYO.—A 91-year-old Amer- 11 Suzuki, now an advisor
advisor to . the
Association or something.
_ ‘ ^George, who is an alien Japa ways go up to the bandstand
ican
spinster, Maria Walters ie- American Cultural Centre m KyoThere are instances when, the
protests made by certain individ nese and played for six Y^“( rpnuest other numbers. / Artex portedly plans to leave her entire to, speaks of Miss Walters as a
am” as he says, he’s getting undisclosed savings to distressed modest, woman of spotless integ
before coming to bo., uals can be considered legitimate. Tnkvo
^2 in 1953 went on to W «
Japanese children.
n
rity” who had lived austerely to
paid.
One of the few that I feel a little
Miss Walters, whose pnd^ save money for child
I guess musicians, like the rest
strongly about is the (portrayal in Tokyo it's not like tat Thore
Immediately after the Russ'
, of humanity, like to know thu thropic efforts for afflicted Ja
of the Nisei in the movies, as fifth that don’t have partners c
un
to
the
-bandstand
and
libtc
i their work is getting I’espon- panese date back 50 years, m Japanese war of 1904-0o she colcolumnists during the last war.
1921 had entrusted her will, Ma ^ iectpd $1 million for
The reason .is obvious and need to the music. Nobody sits down. mid appreciated,, even
“
It
just
doesn
’
t
make
sense
her
,
have to be directed to that end. ing her property to JaPanf3C Japanese farmers. In 1923, she
not be elaborated here.
" .
Geor&e had a seven-piece orcli - children, to the care of Hidesabu- raised $50,000 for the uctims of
On the other hand, if the-villain he pleaded.
great Kanto earthquake, and
'SwitEMas
Hamasu as vocal ro Suzuki, then a Tokyo, univer
in a movie or TV program,, or ra
“In Japan, the dancers make it
sity
student
interested
in
d
Id
in
1954,
she donated
000 tp
dio broadcast just happened to be a p^t £ have a M- B^g nat- ist.
,
;.
Kyoto
prefectural
government
for
welfare. She is
a Nisei crook, murderer, shyster,
Geor«e was born in Tokyo 31
to replace this will vhic. juvenile /welfare work,
ng er do well or just a plain stink
vears ago and graduated a’om was destroyed during World M ar
er. I ’wouldn’t take it too hard,
Meiji University where he puisince we have had our share of
them in real life.
Slocan City Wants
To Be a Village.
^Nisei ©tracers ^©^’t Make Sense
Spinster Wills Entire Savings to Japanese Kids
S^i»i«-
wHs#®ll^^
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
toronto^ont.
SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 19^7
Touchy Minorities
^ay Bring Faceless Race
Reasons for B.C.'s
Cenntennial Hext Year
American Families Adopt More Oriental Children
families adoption the children and proTOKY 0 .—American
p^tive adopting family arc
that want to adopt children ax *
screened' to make sure they are
turning increasingly to mixed
suited for each other.
blood orphans in the Orient.
- She said this is done by her
Miss Florence Booster, Japan
ISS
representative for the interna agency in Japan ami by the
office in New York Gity in con
tional Social Service US^E ^ays junct ion with local xyclfxtre agen
this is true because the families cies throughout the United-States.
• ‘see what good adj ustment s t hose
V AN CO EVER.—Reasons f o r
celebrating'
British Columbia’s
By kango kunitsugu
t»^"K
centennial in 195S were graphi
norities protest loudly when the cally sketched for the Vancouver
Ir Crossroaui^
’
1 o -jolt to read recently' 'stereotype brings out the “baa" Bar Association, recently by pro
It
York City school side of the group—such as the vincial archivist Willard F; Ire
children are making in the 1 m*' ’A/lned from .its list of usual “sly, sneaky, buck-toothed land.
corning the 1SS adoption \\ ork xs
system T’Sttooks,
Mark
Jap who is always hissing and - He stated that next year's cen ted-States.
the fact that more girls are
approve
.
“Huckleberry wearing that perennial toothy tennial will NOT mark the hund
ISS, a worldwide social service
than boys. Miss Booster
?ai"Ktai « ®sed to? smile even after he had driver redth birthday of B.C. but he agency, has been placing Asian
_
...
"“iot « ®e one of the mam a nail through his foot by acci- a greed with the choice of 1958 for orphans—usually with Japanese said:
“1 think it’s because families
* Lit in the book, a Negro dent.”
or Korean mothers and American think they’ll have less -trouble
centennial celebrations.
£rif>", is referred to as
“Admittedly- it is the birthday fathers—for adoption with Ame with girls. They fear that boys
But when the stereotype goes
mnv find discrimination in get
"S So "have read.the book in the other direction, such as of only part of B.C. (tiny main rican families for 2k years.
land crown colony of B.C. m
Since
1953
when
the
U.S.
first
ting a job, entering school and
i=E seen the movie version “the short but sturdy Nisei with 1858k” Mr. Ireland said.
permitted
Atncrkans
to
adopt
the
‘■"'ouera llv making a livcliohpod.
. the green thumb, who has an un
It was in 1866 that the main
ill remember that Jim is pro- canny artistic talent and whose
“products ot war” in limited num
“But "if suitable girls are not
li
most noble and sympaland colony of B.C. and the co
£ ®te in the book. How-■ tastes in the .material things of lony of Vancouver Island formed bers. almost 2,000 of them have available, we persuade families to
life runs on simple, clean lines a union The province proper was been given visas by the American accept a nice boy and they usual
5 ttai is beside the point.
of meditative beauty and whose born in' 1871 when it joined con- Embassy in Japan to enter the ly do."
The point is that “Huckleberry bravery would even make Lassie
Miss Booster said the most po
But with the change in U-y pular age for adoption h less
■ v n” is a recognized American drool,” there is an embarrassed federation.
“But in 1858 decisions wore immigration laws under 'Whica
iv^ic and the student, I think, silence of approval.
made
which resulted in this pro adopted orphans can got inm- Than seven years of age. “Over
^e poorer for not being exposthat,” she said, “families fear
And yet the “bad’" and the vince as we know.it today. Next
visas, this total is expected adjustments like language and
will be the. hundredth anni
ed to it.
‘good’ stereotypes are just that vear
meeting new people may be auversary of the gold rush, he said, to swell in the next
The American Civil Liberties
—
^stereotypes.
One
is
just
as
when Californians came north oy
-^dle of September a ficult to' surmount.
union protested the board s ac
the thousands. It resulted m the
’ “^
became
tion “Must we emulate the So- dangerous as, the other.
“But our experience is that
Sts and rewrite history and the
end
of
the
fur
trading
economy
/™'
“
"^tfan
orphan
children
as old as 10 or 12 readily
Then there are some do-good
undev Lhe ne^. hw. learn English.“
c assies to conform with the views ers who’like to contend that all forever, and marked the coming f^
of certain individuals or groups?' religions are basically the same of British law and order.
Her foster parents are U.S. AuMiss Booster said recent re
and that racial differences ought
_ :——------- ——
Force Sgt. and Mi's Carl Hill of ports that orphans adopted in tne
thev asked.
■ ■
Even if there are portions oi .not to exist. “Now'some of our
Portland. Ore.
, » /
/ United state • hu^ c “dissapom od
the book which may ■be__ cons
. timed
.
are do-gooders, and
Miss Booster said that at any or found their way into a black
stereotype of tliey
we hate just as much as tney uo
given time” the demand for or market are completely unfound^Wn& of materials the bestial racism that puts -the
phans to adopt usually exceeds
CdShe said “groat attention” is
circulated through our New hoik obscenity into the two syllables
the number available.
schools and libraries emphasize of ‘nigger’, says an apt editorial
Immediately after World War ■paid to making certain a chin;
SLOCAN CITY, B.C.—A refer
"the equality of races. We shudder- ^ ^current Reporter magazine,
II,
she said, it was popular for has a suitable iamily for his pros
to think what would remain if all '"“But we also depise
- •
- ...... - endum on the proposal that. kJothe
invert
American
families to look to itu- pective foster parents before he
books which are in any way of ed racism that would cram ,ail can City change its niuincipal rope for adoptees because of ra ever gels a visa.
.
city to a
fensive to -some people
American citizens into a mystical status from that of a here for cial and cultural similarities to
“Besides," she said, our orcountry were removed as Huck melting pot and boil them down village was scheduled
ganization and child welfare,
America.
- .
Finn’ has been.
P
to a mass of gray, lumpless pot Nov. 7.
“ But. recently,” Miss Booster group:; keep close track of them
“If we adopt this criterion tor. tage. -Aren’t the smothers-oyer
. Section 19 of the. Municipal
. .
own after they aim adopted.
evaluating, the worth and merit ox faintly despicable themselves .
Act provides that a city7 munici said, “we have been receiving nu
An American Embassy official
books, the day may come when
“The craven neutralists sing- pality shall have a population m, merous requests for these u
our literature will consist of obi pious ■ anthems to law and order not less than, A000., The L/oo Oriental children because more in T^kyo reponsible for issuing
tuary notices, telephone books in the midst of a great and ter census gave Slocan City s pops and more people see what good y.sa^ to children being placed lor
adjustments they are,making in adoption in the U.S. said a
.
and dictionaries.” ;
:
_ rible battle that will only be end lation as 315 persons.
“black market would be almost
The change would result in in the United. States.
I too, protest the New Y oik ed when differences that keep
impossible.”
Miss
Booster
said
there
have
Citv Board of Education’s action, them from , turning into homo- duced taxation for ratepay eis.
.......
over
been
“extremely fewcases
During the war years
and would protest even though
enized nothingness.
the Jim in “Huck Finn” had been
1 000 Japanese Canadians were where an adoption.'‘didn’t worn New York Now Has 7
“It would be a poor .bargain relocated to Slocan City. Heijn'o out.” She added:
a Japanese and was called J ap
Japanese Restaurants
indeed
if equality before the law Matsubayashi is presently a
Jim.” Sometimes these incidents
“
Before
anv
children
from
Ja
With the opening of New
that occur because of
racial could only be purchased at tu member of the city council and pan or Korea are placed out for
pi-ice
of
making
all
men
equa»5
York
’s most authentic Japanese
slurs” can get ridiculous.
acting mayor.
eatery,
the Saito Restaurant at
To cite another case, the Can faceless.”
70
West
55th St. (mentioned m
adian Broadcasting Corporation
Wednesday
’s issue of NG) on
recently added to its list, or
Oct. 16, New York City’’ is now
words-not-to-use, the word Yank
the home of seven Japanese ics because it was considered .to be
He aurants. A. reference list for Can
_____
________
_
—
—
—
"
sued
a.
commercial
course.
“derogatory to color, • nationality
had a natural ear for music as a adian tourists follows:
“Nisei dancers just don't seem,
or religion!” And all this time 1
By FRED TAOMAE
Fuji Sukiyaki Restaurant, 238
child, and even had his own com
thought “Yank” was a nice clean to' enjoy themselves when they go
In Shin Nichi Bei,
bo in college. During the post W 58th St., New York 19.
word. The Canadians may use. it to' dances,” said George Aquino,
war years he led his band at en
Miyako, 20 W. 56th St., New
Los Angeles
with a derogatory inference, but the Japanese; 'orchestra leader,
listed men’s clubs in and around
^ Nippon Shokudo," 138 W. 56th
y
from the looks on the . faces of whose outfit made music fo
the Tokyo area.
Americans when they are called Hui O’’ Hawaii s Third Annu.
New York 23
panese will be doing the steps in
Before forming his own outfit St.,Saito
“Aloha Hop” on Sat. Nov. —
that, you would never know it.
Restaurant, <0 V. both
here, he had stints with Lionel St., New York 19.
Now take the case of our radio,
“They seem to hold back, tney Tokyo.
>r
“You’d be surprised,” he said Hampton, Art Pepper and Tets
TV and movie- industries. They don’t express pleasure or displ^Suehiro Restaurant, <m L. -9ln
have been harried so often from sure in any way,” he said. Tn y “that the 14-15 vear old in Japan Bessho. He plays the alto sax.
St., New York 16.
hiX school will be.doing steps
Tokyo Sukiyaki House, 144 W.
so many sides .that the. only safe
He is married to the former
villain is an unemployed white just seem to exist through the Hat many’ of the- Nisei dancer a
St* New. York 19.
Taruya, 239 W. lOBth-St, New
Anglo-Saxon Protestant. If the night. You don’t know how they eoSdnotllo. It’s hardto.believe Marv Uveda of Salinas and they
villain was a lawyer, the Bar
I know, but it s true, he ham are the parents of Charlene, four York 25,
feel.
”
!
'years of age.
Association would holler.
.
“T can’t' understand it,” an mered at me.
If the villain was an Afghani George left some hints that the
stanian, the entertainment 'med went on. “They pay admission m
Nisei
could use to click with him
in
buy
their
drinks,
but
ium would be sure to hear in tiine Stand ’around without looking foi
One
is
that if the tempo is too
from the Afghanistan Protective
slow or too fast, they shouio al
TOKYO.—A 91-year-old Amer- 11 Suzuki, now an advisor
advisor to . the
Association or something.
_ ‘ ^George, who is an alien Japa ways go up to the bandstand
ican
spinster, Maria Walters ie- American Cultural Centre m KyoThere are instances when, the
protests made by certain individ nese and played for six Y^“( rpnuest other numbers. / Artex portedly plans to leave her entire to, speaks of Miss Walters as a
am” as he says, he’s getting undisclosed savings to distressed modest, woman of spotless integ
before coming to bo., uals can be considered legitimate. Tnkvo
^2 in 1953 went on to W «
Japanese children.
n
rity” who had lived austerely to
paid.
One of the few that I feel a little
Miss Walters, whose pnd^ save money for child
I guess musicians, like the rest
strongly about is the (portrayal in Tokyo it's not like tat Thore
Immediately after the Russ'
, of humanity, like to know thu thropic efforts for afflicted Ja
of the Nisei in the movies, as fifth that don’t have partners c
un
to
the
-bandstand
and
libtc
i their work is getting I’espon- panese date back 50 years, m Japanese war of 1904-0o she colcolumnists during the last war.
1921 had entrusted her will, Ma ^ iectpd $1 million for
The reason .is obvious and need to the music. Nobody sits down. mid appreciated,, even
“
It
just
doesn
’
t
make
sense
her
,
have to be directed to that end. ing her property to JaPanf3C Japanese farmers. In 1923, she
not be elaborated here.
" .
Geor&e had a seven-piece orcli - children, to the care of Hidesabu- raised $50,000 for the uctims of
On the other hand, if the-villain he pleaded.
great Kanto earthquake, and
'SwitEMas
Hamasu as vocal ro Suzuki, then a Tokyo, univer
in a movie or TV program,, or ra
“In Japan, the dancers make it
sity
student
interested
in
d
Id
in
1954,
she donated
000 tp
dio broadcast just happened to be a p^t £ have a M- B^g nat- ist.
,
;.
Kyoto
prefectural
government
for
welfare. She is
a Nisei crook, murderer, shyster,
Geor«e was born in Tokyo 31
to replace this will vhic. juvenile /welfare work,
ng er do well or just a plain stink
vears ago and graduated a’om was destroyed during World M ar
er. I ’wouldn’t take it too hard,
Meiji University where he puisince we have had our share of
them in real life.
Slocan City Wants
To Be a Village.
^Nisei ©tracers ^©^’t Make Sense
Spinster Wills Entire Savings to Japanese Kids
S^i»i«-
Page 2
PAGE 2
N______■_________________Saturday, November 9
SPORTS
JCs urged to support Yamada capers; opener tonight at YMHA gym
KEG NEWsFaCROSS CANAPa!
The Yamada basketball team . Last season saw Yamadas win
will take to the floor tonight at the Southern Ontario Senior B
7:30 in the YMHA gym (Bloor crown and the Senior A Church
and Spadina) in its opening game league championship. This year,
of the season against Andy’s.
the Nisei basketball team will en
ter the Senior A T & 'D League,
although they will still be classed
as Senior B.
In the double-header tonight,■
the Yamada-Andy competition
will be followed at 9 p.m. with
IN NEGOTIATING
REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE
YMHA playing Etobicoke.
Vancouver-ites!
SUNDAY"!O-PIN (Nov. 3): Georg© vs.
Ken 1-3, Mays vs. Paul 3-1, Mas VS.
The Japanese Canadian public Mike 4-0, Herby vs. Barney 0-4.
is urged to come out and root for
With hdco.: Paul Omoto'628 (257), Ken
the predominantly-Nisei team. •Yamada 608 (219), Peter Mukai 606
(222), Tosh Iwai 604 (209); Joe Tsujimo
The playing will be of high 'cal to
595 (222), Slim Hashida 594 (210),
ibre. Admission is 50 cents.
Henrv Nagai 586 (215), Nick Nozuye 585
(210)" Ken Doi 589 (205); May Mukai
Yamada line-up: Paul Hirano, 640. (237, 201, 207), Anne Okada _S93
Roy Kurita, Stan Koyata, 'Yuki .(229), Irene Tsujimoto 581 (206), r''"
Kameoka, Dick Tanaka, Jim Pet Nishimura ^81 (202),. Kay Ogak 572
tiford, and Herb, Ken and Roy . (223); Sue Nagamatsu 569 (200).
Fldt high ..games: Joe Tsujimoto 583
Miyasaki. (Gerry Doucette and (218), Ken Moritsugu 536 (207), Ken Doi
Dick Shatto will be in Montreal 523 Paul Omoto 212, May Mukai -.505
(187).
■
•
—Barney.
■with the Toronto Argos.)
PROPERTY MANAGET^ENT,
MORTGAGES,
JUDO AT KODOKAN:
Consult
Azu G. Oikawa
American sour at taste of Japan's 'gentle art
Boultbee Sweet & Co. Ltd.
VANCOUVER NISEI 10-PIN lxAlter a- year's absence fro-'
Mils .Ikeda; is showina
j'.^rls
bowling high triple 517* aXT f;Q. :k
for : the day. La*dies' '25
captured by. - Bettv Kita^"1’®"^
Ladies' high triple—Asako Noc^ k
; Commonwealth Savings tsoRv'TY
from. Mikado's - and also
Auto Body . took 3 points
Life. ..Chunking won' 1 audio1-* "^
to Amano's; Tom's National* wo^
lost 2 points: to Maunfactu'er^'i;: ®
TYBS (Nov. 3): Jack Shimiau 794 >
Hori 704, Hideo Baba 653, Rov
’
Ken Tsujiuchi 644", Ike * Shix^:°
Nancy Mori 769, Kim' Kono . GS^Ro-i
jimoto 639, ■ Haru Murakami 601' .
DANFORTH (Nov. 4):
Tb«- "Q.L
Really (went. “hog wild". RoyUshKi
smashed : his ...way to hit the high sin^
of. .355 and a whopping trid° Rqq. c 2
Masuda 767 (332),* Hippo' Towata 749
°'
(343), Ken Kaneko 724
lets Sec
708.. Torchy Abe led -th
:1s>" ■with c
ni£ty 734 (313), Pat Ono 6S5 and S so
Towata 683.
' . < ’
Kats blanked Don 7-0, Harley over .-fa
5-2; Yo. and., Roy edged Tak andTJ-
to each other until their heads bothers me, aside from my aches
By OSCAR FRALEY
touch the mat. Then they proceed and pains. How do you suppose
1000 W. King Edward, VANCOUVER
TOKYO.—Fearless Fraley is a. to make like tigers with a hang
MA.
7452
OE. 4184
little Toshi’s old man gives him
second cousin to a busted grain over.
a spanking if and when he needs
sack today because a ten-yearold as cute as a button and,, as
You only get to perform in this it? '
gentle as a rattlesnake gave a high-vaulted room surrounded by
lesson in “the way of gentleness.’' a spectator’s ' gallery . after you
have first learned how'to fall in
This is the art of judo,'as pra
OFFICE
* RESIDENCE
ctised in the~ Kodokan, the birth the novice room upstairs. This
is
a
torture
chamber
where'
the
place of the Japanese art of self
JA-2-7559
defense.
And from now on. I instructor throws the beginner up
wouldn’t even shake hands with- against the wall until he is jellyOPTOMETRISTS
one of those chubby-faced infants like enough to bounce of his own
the mamma-sans pack on their volition. To help the novice, in
Complete Care
case he lives long enough to do
DOCTOR OF .OPTOMETRY
backs like reserve papooses.
a
bit
of
attacking
on
his
own,
For Your Eyes
EYES EXAMINED — PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
If you’ll pass the arnica and there is an elaborate chart which
fluff up the pillow on which I’ll illustrates all the vulnerable,
GLASSES FITTED — HEARING GLASSES
W^K±
be.'sitting' for a few days, I’ll tell parts where a wallop with foot,
you all about the chamber of hor elbow or hand will best reduce
MORGAN'S OPTICAL DEPT. (MAIN FLOOR)
rors where a diabolical English" the human body to a horizontal
' GREATER HAMILTON SHOPPING CENTRE
teacher named Jigoro Kano start position.
H A'M I L T O N ,
O N T A R I O
A
118 West Hastings St.
ed this judo dodge some 70 years
ago. And about the little mons
“You must try,” said the guide,
VANCOUVER. B.C.
ter . . . ah, I mean, tiny fellow, and before I knew it, old fearless
who used old fearless as a standwas attired in a pair, of canvas
in for a bean bag.
We cater to Banquets, Weddings, Showers,
pajamas which is the costume
The Kodokan is a huge concrete
worn when performing the rites
Business Parties and Take-Out Orders
building which is sort of a steriliz-'
of
“
the
way
of
gentleness.
”
It
ed Stillman’s gym where some
For Homes. Business or
7
600 men, women and children was one of the biggest mistakes
Acreage, Consult
J daily learn the “gentle” - art of
of a life chock full of errors.
tripping, elbowing, kicking, chok- .
JIM KAKUTANI
FAMOUS CHINESE FOODS
I played it cozy—I thought.
ing and ‘smashing windpipes with
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
There
was
this
little
button
about
the flat, knifelike edge of the
half as big as a minute, and I
126 Elizabeth St., Toronto
EM. 4-5935
rigid hand.
suggested
that
it
would
be
fun
In the dojo or exercise hall,
at almost any hour, you-can see to see whether he could move this
up to 50 1 pairs of combatants big, handsome, virile chunk of
Established over 35 Years
: ,
going at it on. the straw matting American manhood.
When Buying, Selfing or Exchanging Your Borne
Little
Toshi
bowed
low,
which wouldn’t give if you ran a
MArino 6421, Day or Night
straightened
up
and
moved
gently
Mack truck over it. They start
530 Burrard St., VANCOUVER i B.C.
very gently, kneeling and bowing in until he stood head high to my
floating riK He took a chubby
fistful of my canvas lapel, did a
two-step in which lie turned his
INSURANCE
TRAVEL SERVICE
back, and bent forward, and old
FIRE — AUTOMOBILE — BURGLARY
AIR - SHIP — BUS — RAIL
fearless made like the man on the
and ACCIDENT Etc.
HEALTH
CRUISES — TOURS — ■HOTELS
BERNARDI-MATHEWS REAL ESTATE
INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS-"
flying trapeze.
BOOK NOW FOR 1958
OPTICAL
N. H. TANAKA, O.D.
MOVING TO B.C,?
China Garden
KEN HORI
PHONE OR WRITE FOR EXPERIENCED & RELIABLE SERVICE
-
Travel & Insurance Agencies
697 Bay Street, Toronto 2
.
EMpire 6-9488
Frankly, if we had gone an
other round, I’d have murdered
the little bum. We didn’t,; though,
because I couldn’t straighten up
when they got me on my feet
again.
There’s just one thing which
PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS
Res: AM. 1-5194
OX.8-1121
TORONTO ONT.
2670 DANFORTH AVE.
Residence: 14 Perivale Crescent, Scarboro
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
GOLDEN DBAGON
CHOP SUBY HOUSE
WE HAVE NO
SERVICE CHARGES
Open Noon to 2 a.m.
EM. 8-2475
LEARN CHICK SEXING
• REAL SHORTAGE OF EXPERT SEXORS
• EARN UP TO $800 A WEEK
• SERVING’ HATCHERIES IN 42 STATES
• G. I. BILL FOR VETERANS
WRITE
20*
TODAY
FOR
FREE
CATALOG
HOME
OFFICE:
214 Prospect Ave.
LANSDALE, PENNA.
‘ heg. l
CHECK SEXING SCHOOL
TRAVELLING
TO' JAPAN
Orders to Take Ou*
131A Dundas St. W., Toronto
Small Size Shoes
IN NEW FALL STYLES
Or Bringing Some
one over?
We represent al)
lines including
American President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacific?
and Pan American <
Write or call for
' full information and
'rates.
DOMINION
Travel Office
55 Wellington Street West
EM. 6-6451
Toronto ■
Ladies' Shoes, 1 & Up
Men's Scott-McHales, 4-14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Toronto
C.O.D. ORDERS
FROM COAST TO COAST
N______■_________________Saturday, November 9
SPORTS
JCs urged to support Yamada capers; opener tonight at YMHA gym
KEG NEWsFaCROSS CANAPa!
The Yamada basketball team . Last season saw Yamadas win
will take to the floor tonight at the Southern Ontario Senior B
7:30 in the YMHA gym (Bloor crown and the Senior A Church
and Spadina) in its opening game league championship. This year,
of the season against Andy’s.
the Nisei basketball team will en
ter the Senior A T & 'D League,
although they will still be classed
as Senior B.
In the double-header tonight,■
the Yamada-Andy competition
will be followed at 9 p.m. with
IN NEGOTIATING
REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE
YMHA playing Etobicoke.
Vancouver-ites!
SUNDAY"!O-PIN (Nov. 3): Georg© vs.
Ken 1-3, Mays vs. Paul 3-1, Mas VS.
The Japanese Canadian public Mike 4-0, Herby vs. Barney 0-4.
is urged to come out and root for
With hdco.: Paul Omoto'628 (257), Ken
the predominantly-Nisei team. •Yamada 608 (219), Peter Mukai 606
(222), Tosh Iwai 604 (209); Joe Tsujimo
The playing will be of high 'cal to
595 (222), Slim Hashida 594 (210),
ibre. Admission is 50 cents.
Henrv Nagai 586 (215), Nick Nozuye 585
(210)" Ken Doi 589 (205); May Mukai
Yamada line-up: Paul Hirano, 640. (237, 201, 207), Anne Okada _S93
Roy Kurita, Stan Koyata, 'Yuki .(229), Irene Tsujimoto 581 (206), r''"
Kameoka, Dick Tanaka, Jim Pet Nishimura ^81 (202),. Kay Ogak 572
tiford, and Herb, Ken and Roy . (223); Sue Nagamatsu 569 (200).
Fldt high ..games: Joe Tsujimoto 583
Miyasaki. (Gerry Doucette and (218), Ken Moritsugu 536 (207), Ken Doi
Dick Shatto will be in Montreal 523 Paul Omoto 212, May Mukai -.505
(187).
■
•
—Barney.
■with the Toronto Argos.)
PROPERTY MANAGET^ENT,
MORTGAGES,
JUDO AT KODOKAN:
Consult
Azu G. Oikawa
American sour at taste of Japan's 'gentle art
Boultbee Sweet & Co. Ltd.
VANCOUVER NISEI 10-PIN lxAlter a- year's absence fro-'
Mils .Ikeda; is showina
j'.^rls
bowling high triple 517* aXT f;Q. :k
for : the day. La*dies' '25
captured by. - Bettv Kita^"1’®"^
Ladies' high triple—Asako Noc^ k
; Commonwealth Savings tsoRv'TY
from. Mikado's - and also
Auto Body . took 3 points
Life. ..Chunking won' 1 audio1-* "^
to Amano's; Tom's National* wo^
lost 2 points: to Maunfactu'er^'i;: ®
TYBS (Nov. 3): Jack Shimiau 794 >
Hori 704, Hideo Baba 653, Rov
’
Ken Tsujiuchi 644", Ike * Shix^:°
Nancy Mori 769, Kim' Kono . GS^Ro-i
jimoto 639, ■ Haru Murakami 601' .
DANFORTH (Nov. 4):
Tb«- "Q.L
Really (went. “hog wild". RoyUshKi
smashed : his ...way to hit the high sin^
of. .355 and a whopping trid° Rqq. c 2
Masuda 767 (332),* Hippo' Towata 749
°'
(343), Ken Kaneko 724
lets Sec
708.. Torchy Abe led -th
:1s>" ■with c
ni£ty 734 (313), Pat Ono 6S5 and S so
Towata 683.
' . < ’
Kats blanked Don 7-0, Harley over .-fa
5-2; Yo. and., Roy edged Tak andTJ-
to each other until their heads bothers me, aside from my aches
By OSCAR FRALEY
touch the mat. Then they proceed and pains. How do you suppose
1000 W. King Edward, VANCOUVER
TOKYO.—Fearless Fraley is a. to make like tigers with a hang
MA.
7452
OE. 4184
little Toshi’s old man gives him
second cousin to a busted grain over.
a spanking if and when he needs
sack today because a ten-yearold as cute as a button and,, as
You only get to perform in this it? '
gentle as a rattlesnake gave a high-vaulted room surrounded by
lesson in “the way of gentleness.’' a spectator’s ' gallery . after you
have first learned how'to fall in
This is the art of judo,'as pra
OFFICE
* RESIDENCE
ctised in the~ Kodokan, the birth the novice room upstairs. This
is
a
torture
chamber
where'
the
place of the Japanese art of self
JA-2-7559
defense.
And from now on. I instructor throws the beginner up
wouldn’t even shake hands with- against the wall until he is jellyOPTOMETRISTS
one of those chubby-faced infants like enough to bounce of his own
the mamma-sans pack on their volition. To help the novice, in
Complete Care
case he lives long enough to do
DOCTOR OF .OPTOMETRY
backs like reserve papooses.
a
bit
of
attacking
on
his
own,
For Your Eyes
EYES EXAMINED — PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
If you’ll pass the arnica and there is an elaborate chart which
fluff up the pillow on which I’ll illustrates all the vulnerable,
GLASSES FITTED — HEARING GLASSES
W^K±
be.'sitting' for a few days, I’ll tell parts where a wallop with foot,
you all about the chamber of hor elbow or hand will best reduce
MORGAN'S OPTICAL DEPT. (MAIN FLOOR)
rors where a diabolical English" the human body to a horizontal
' GREATER HAMILTON SHOPPING CENTRE
teacher named Jigoro Kano start position.
H A'M I L T O N ,
O N T A R I O
A
118 West Hastings St.
ed this judo dodge some 70 years
ago. And about the little mons
“You must try,” said the guide,
VANCOUVER. B.C.
ter . . . ah, I mean, tiny fellow, and before I knew it, old fearless
who used old fearless as a standwas attired in a pair, of canvas
in for a bean bag.
We cater to Banquets, Weddings, Showers,
pajamas which is the costume
The Kodokan is a huge concrete
worn when performing the rites
Business Parties and Take-Out Orders
building which is sort of a steriliz-'
of
“
the
way
of
gentleness.
”
It
ed Stillman’s gym where some
For Homes. Business or
7
600 men, women and children was one of the biggest mistakes
Acreage, Consult
J daily learn the “gentle” - art of
of a life chock full of errors.
tripping, elbowing, kicking, chok- .
JIM KAKUTANI
FAMOUS CHINESE FOODS
I played it cozy—I thought.
ing and ‘smashing windpipes with
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
There
was
this
little
button
about
the flat, knifelike edge of the
half as big as a minute, and I
126 Elizabeth St., Toronto
EM. 4-5935
rigid hand.
suggested
that
it
would
be
fun
In the dojo or exercise hall,
at almost any hour, you-can see to see whether he could move this
up to 50 1 pairs of combatants big, handsome, virile chunk of
Established over 35 Years
: ,
going at it on. the straw matting American manhood.
When Buying, Selfing or Exchanging Your Borne
Little
Toshi
bowed
low,
which wouldn’t give if you ran a
MArino 6421, Day or Night
straightened
up
and
moved
gently
Mack truck over it. They start
530 Burrard St., VANCOUVER i B.C.
very gently, kneeling and bowing in until he stood head high to my
floating riK He took a chubby
fistful of my canvas lapel, did a
two-step in which lie turned his
INSURANCE
TRAVEL SERVICE
back, and bent forward, and old
FIRE — AUTOMOBILE — BURGLARY
AIR - SHIP — BUS — RAIL
fearless made like the man on the
and ACCIDENT Etc.
HEALTH
CRUISES — TOURS — ■HOTELS
BERNARDI-MATHEWS REAL ESTATE
INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS-"
flying trapeze.
BOOK NOW FOR 1958
OPTICAL
N. H. TANAKA, O.D.
MOVING TO B.C,?
China Garden
KEN HORI
PHONE OR WRITE FOR EXPERIENCED & RELIABLE SERVICE
-
Travel & Insurance Agencies
697 Bay Street, Toronto 2
.
EMpire 6-9488
Frankly, if we had gone an
other round, I’d have murdered
the little bum. We didn’t,; though,
because I couldn’t straighten up
when they got me on my feet
again.
There’s just one thing which
PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS
Res: AM. 1-5194
OX.8-1121
TORONTO ONT.
2670 DANFORTH AVE.
Residence: 14 Perivale Crescent, Scarboro
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
GOLDEN DBAGON
CHOP SUBY HOUSE
WE HAVE NO
SERVICE CHARGES
Open Noon to 2 a.m.
EM. 8-2475
LEARN CHICK SEXING
• REAL SHORTAGE OF EXPERT SEXORS
• EARN UP TO $800 A WEEK
• SERVING’ HATCHERIES IN 42 STATES
• G. I. BILL FOR VETERANS
WRITE
20*
TODAY
FOR
FREE
CATALOG
HOME
OFFICE:
214 Prospect Ave.
LANSDALE, PENNA.
‘ heg. l
CHECK SEXING SCHOOL
TRAVELLING
TO' JAPAN
Orders to Take Ou*
131A Dundas St. W., Toronto
Small Size Shoes
IN NEW FALL STYLES
Or Bringing Some
one over?
We represent al)
lines including
American President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacific?
and Pan American <
Write or call for
' full information and
'rates.
DOMINION
Travel Office
55 Wellington Street West
EM. 6-6451
Toronto ■
Ladies' Shoes, 1 & Up
Men's Scott-McHales, 4-14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Toronto
C.O.D. ORDERS
FROM COAST TO COAST
Page 3
Page 3
1957
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ONCE SOLD
ALWAYS SERVED
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Magill Export Import Ltd.
Is
SO
3
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IX i
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2909 Grandview Hwy.
^IThIU
IS ?i^if
l^ S
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^ L 5
V • CL - CD
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A°
PHONE DE. 5303
'
^ < n$?
L ^t ft ^
£1
NEW WORLD HOTEL
Bauipiy hy I0J |ua3y pazuoipuy
Prop. Y. Fujiwara 396 Powell St., i
TOtiiq i^pwaij uBouatuy *aun ’M ’A 'NioJlw2V pozpoqjuv Phone PA. 0964 Vancouver, B.C
31IAHK 11AV81 V1VMI1
IM sr GARDENS
W. IV. UAKMEHJ
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
XT
Mead Office Toronto
Insure Today
For Sure Tomorrow
CATERING to
Wedding, Club Banquets
Private Dining Rooms
nil
%^
^1«
a
p
It? 0 1/^
ib't
«
P
cn
?c
b ~
= M
crown life insurance co.
TEL. PA. 6642 — 0455
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PASSENGERS-
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® 0 ft « Wig IS i1- U E tl =■ ’-^
©i »sm>-awa > "-Bi5 vx
£ ^
lift 1
1400 Kilocycles
Every. Sunday
8:20 to 8:50 a.m.
I
8
b*
z fg rtf IB * A :fc
BP * n
fe 2 0
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k
Socratic Club
at UBC's Internationa! House Bal! Rec
This Sunday's meeting will
SONAL NOTES are inserted iree of charge. Reade
;.nvited to send in announcements of marriage, e
cement, anniversary, birth’and obituary. For insi
> in both sections, names should be given in be
nr ages. Short submissions are accepted, by phoi
dos (glossy print, contrast) are also welcome.
■ UBC Al- pura), and Japanese, girls serv ie :re the Waltz steps, for both
VANCOUVER
advanced and the beginners
a Mater Society’s International
:es. Everyone is welcome,
ouse Club has chosen a Japamembers particularly are
i nese theme for its Annual Bail
*d
to dome our and enjoy this
House formal dance1 i
। scheduled for .early
a theme Centennial project.
! Each year, the Ball
The Vancouver JCCA id an
from a different country
Highest Efficiency. . .
its i
s The project
Elmer H. Hara, president, of ' 6
| the club, contacted the Japanese
about
m an
i Consulate in Vancouver and the
Marriages
Office Overload entitled "A Now
I JCCA for cooperation in making
Way to Keep House and Hold a
* the dance in authentic Japanese Old World Bazaar
AV AKA YA MA -KOZAI
Job
”, mention is made of a local
I
style,
with
Japanese
decorations,
Toronto
The
International
Institute
of
N
isei
who combines home-making
Wed on Nov. 2, 1957, at the I Japanese food (sukiyaki or temMetropolitan
Toronto
will
hold
a
and
office
work.
• Some^ like
Toronto Buddhist Church, were
unique
and
fascinating
Old
World
Mrs
Sue
Kai,
a
Japanese
Cana
Keiko Kay Kozai, daughter of
dian
who
had
the
highest
ethChristmas
Mail
Mr. and Mi's. Toyonobu Kozai,
and Noboru- Nobby Wakayama of
Handicrafts of many lands will Office Overload, can accept, asToronto, son of Mr. Takumi Wa- | sent in sealed envelopes must, be
be
on display and goods for sale signnhmts only evening’s or on
kayama, now in Japan. Rev. T. * Sent under letter rates; unsealed
will
many forms of cera her husband’s day oif. ’
Tsuji solemnized the vows.
’ or open- cards may be sent under mics,include
jewellery, wood carving,
Reception was held at Miur- j printed matter rate, if bearing, a
needle-craft, books of all langua
head’s, after which the newlyweds seasonal greeting not exceeding ges. and European baking. There iiniiiiiuiiuiiinnmniiiiHiiniiu^
honeymooned in the States.
will also bej/coffee shop on the
five words
IWASAKI-KONISHI
niuiiiuiHHiimiHinniiiuuniiHiiin
Kamloops, B.C. I Hawaii and Alaska—-7 cents foi
'rimed for Christmas shopping,
NOVEMBER ..... ...........
Setsuko Konishi, daughter of
the Bazaar will offer an amazing
1
the
first
ounce;
.
5
cents
each
ad
9
—
Toronto.
Buddhisf
Bazaar
at 913
Mr. and Mrs. Kumajiro Konishi
assortment of gifts for family and
i
ditional
ounce.
Asia
—
25
cent;
of Tappen, B.C., and Bud Yataro
friends, including an unusual col 9-H—Kamloops, B.C; Third annua; E'y
Iwasaki, son of Mrs. Yasue Iwa i each half oounce.
vm Convention; Convention bah .e^lection of Christmas cards creat
’Miss Bussei contest: bowling
saki of Kamloops, B.C., were
ed bv artists of many lauds.
i
Parcel
Post
Insurance
rates
married in the Catholic Church in
b Phenix Fall Social
Highlight and closing feature 17—Toronto
admission Sb door
Kamloops. B.C., on October a, Gold, jewellery, bank notes, noL. of the Bazaar will be a conceit
1957. Reverend . McIntyre offi accepted for insurance. These featuring' songs and dances of
should be sent by registered let many nations, to be held batm- 17—Vancouver tumn bacaar. MU p.m.
ciated at the ceremonies.
Church's an
ter
mail. Fragile and perishable day,’Nov. 16, 8 p.m. at Harbord 22—
Reception was held at Alex’s
Toronto. N ;sei Students Club Autumn
Nocturne at Polish Alliance Hall.
Bar-B-Q. Sewanin were Mr. and articles may be insured against Collegiate auditorium.
22—Kelowna, B.C. KYBA Sixth Annual
loss only. In Canada—free, if re
Mrs. T. Kawase.
International Institute is a
0011^101' Ejection^
quested, up to $50 (for delivery,
22—HamiUon. Hamv
United
Appeal
agency.
Dance,
MINATO-BANNO
in Canada); 12c over- $504100.
Matqueo Restauronh ?b Main St. West.
Vancouver
To Japan: 12c up to $50; 30c over
Supper wiH commence b:30 p.m., adShirley Toshiko Bannogdaugh $50-$100.\
Pictured
Bride
30—Toronto. TYBS Musical Talent Row.
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Magohashi
Gift parcels not exceeding $50.
Toronto. Nisei Women b Ohio din
Banno; became the bride of Sadao in value addressed to Japan do ' KAMLOOPS, B
Pictured 30—
ner and dance at Little Jack s, La
Minato, son of Mr. and Mr. Kei not require an export permit.
in the Kamloops
Stpi-Kolowna, B.C.' Bukkyo-kai 25th am
ji Minato of 100 Mile House, B.C.,
Wedding.
Pftge advertisements
<
nivorsary Conceit and Shibai at
on Oct. 26, 1957, at the Vancouver MAIL TO JAPAN: SS American was Airs. Yataro (Bud) Iwasata
Buddhist Hall.
. Mail leaves Vancouver for J^apan (nee Setsuko Konishi) in a photo
Buddhist Church.
december.
Rev. S. Ikuta officiated. Se on Nov. 19; SS Hikawa Maru by Artlite.
wanin were Mr. and Mrs. Yada
21—Winnipeg. Manitoba; JCCA Xmas,
Ball at Curtis Hotel, East kildonan.
and Mr. and Mrs. R. Kobayashi..
24
—
Toronto. Club Phenix's Chicken
Reception followed at Ho Ho CHURCH NOTES
Dance includes turkey dinner, orche
Chop Suey.
stra, doer prises. Admission. 55 a head.
.
X-RAY DIAGNOSIS
DOCTOR of chiropractic
Yonge st.
: - Toronto
WA. 1-6549 (office)
If no answer, call >
BE. 3-3869 (residence)
Lucien C. Kurata
giEBlSTEK and SOLICITOR
notaky PUBLIC
Suite 502, Temple Building
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TORONTO
Kes: EO. 7-3427
EM. 6-0959
WA. 1-5605
OX. 8-2280 (Kes.)
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER r- SOLICITOR
NOTARY
Room 203A
*
2 College St., Toronto
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
Office: Room 403
229 Yonge St., Toronto
EM. 3-5002 — OX. 1-3388 (res.)
F. A. BREWIN, Q.C
Barrister & Solicitor •
; Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
372 Bay St.
— EM. 3-4391
Toronto..
^
^
*
CALENDAR
Osaka Bishop to Meet Local Japanese Catholics
Obituaries
6-30-midnight.
MATSUMURA
Kumajiro, Matsumura, 55, of
Kumamoto-ken, died on October
24 1957, at the hospital m Calo-arv, Alta., where he had been
hi confinement. The funeral serv
ices on October 28 were conducted
by Rev. Y. Kawamura.
Bishop Taguchi was present at
His Excellency Bishop Paul
Taguchi of Osaka Diocese will the Catholic Immigration Con 12-Toronto. Club Phenix presents Now
arrive in Toronto on Sunday, ference in Assisi, Italy, earlier in
Year's Dance from 8-U:jO, at Club
Harmony Hall, 39b College St.,
November 17, with the express the fall. He is visiting Toronto
desire- of meeting with the Japa on his way to South America.
nese Catholics of Toronto. .Rev.
Immigration, received word 01
C. Mulvihill, Director of.Catholic
the Bishop’s projected arrival,
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The New Canadian acknowledges and he immediately contacted the
with thanks generous donations from editor of the LUMEN, Japanese
Catholic Newsletter.
the following;
, ■
n n
Mrs. H. Inouye, North Surrey, B. .,
MONEY SAVING SPECIAL!!
Father Mulvihill made it known
on son's marriage.
Toronto,
on
that
with
the
cooperation
of
the
Mr. and Mrs. T. Kozai,
DO NOT MISS THESE
daughter's marriage.
Japanese -Catholics a ^reception
.Mr
and Mrs. Minoru Nishimura,
. 35c lb.
will be held for. His Excellency
Scarboro., Ont., on'son's birth.
® HAKUSAI-ZUKE .......
on that Sunday. Bishop Taguchi
35c pkg.
will speak at the evening Holy
0 MISO-ZUKE SALMON
Hour, 7:30 p.m. on November 1/,
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
■it St Brigid’s Roman Catholic
4
"
EMpire 6-3663
Church. He will also gn^e-beneEMpire
Help Wanted
diction at that time. Both Japa
nese Catholics and non-Catholics
Sun Valley, 96 Spading - Ave.. loronto_ are cordially invited to attend.
DUNDAS UNION STORE.
ii!r«nr»Mi^:ill
2S4.A TONOI STKItT, TORONTO, ONT.
CLASSIFIED
DAVE’S
TV and Appliances
Sales and Service
JOIN OUR CHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY
PLAN ON GIFTWARE' AND SMALL
APPLIANCES ,
Male Help Wanted
YOUTH, interested in
Cleaning
cessary. Apply_ onerry
learning
__
Dry
1938.
DAVID AZUMA
Domestic Help Wanted
734 St; Clair West
(1 block west of Christie)
HOUSEKEEPER^^. or^J^ction1
single gentleman,
_T tid„
Must be excellent cook,
‘
68^2
driving permit helpful. Phone BE. 3-b«.z
(Toronto).
_ _
-—"
"*
TORONTO
LE. 3-038S
—Downsvietv CUSTOM
ALL REGULAR LINES
TOURS, SIGHTSEEING &
CHARTER COACH
SERVICE
For Sale or Rent____ Phone Us at EM. 8-9934
Distinctive
Floral Arrangements
o cuerd
JON ONODERA
Proprietor
WORKSHOiT^taT^
2 eMcmc1.
Avenue, sewer, V,®' 9 suitable for*
Come *” J”’^ ” i«S“ Coll
S”SB "M (Toronto^
SMifH^bRONA Etdndard ^^
practically new , Je^
Call New
prefers private transaction
Canadian Office bM. 6-5033..--------
PRINTING (IF All DfSGRIPIIONS
UPHOLSTERIHG Co.
TRAVEL BY BUS
BUS TOURS for Your Vacation
mYou can leave
leuvc any
u..,’ day.
—. -Price
,
eludes return bus fare,
hoteli encl
sightseeing.
.s; 27.55
Detroit, 3 days ..............
41.10
Chicago, 5 days ..........
52.50
New York, 4 days .........
52.50
Washington. 6 days ....
168.25
California, 17 ddYs .....
.125.00
Florida circle, 12 days
Many more
__
I
bringing SOMEONE OVER.
. |
;sage arranged by steamer o*
Passage
.
»
wIDE selection or latest fabrics
• ”EC
352* Downsview Ave.'
Toronto 15
SUNDaY, NOVEMBER 10. 1357
10.33 a m., Sunday School
' ira.m.,.Enghsh
’’BUDDHA SPEAKS IO
Rev. T. Tsuji
everyone CORDIALLY
IK McCaul St. TORONTO
HARRY $. BOO ^#^
627 BAY STREET. TORONTO
RE^ 2OW BEVERLEY STREET
EM- 3- 3O8»
t
■
' _ _
invite.
NISEI UNITED
CHURCH» q^ *‘SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 10. US?
”™“
V
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
-Toronto
s.
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH^
HU. 9-4654 - BA. 1-4374
(Business)
For Free Estimates Lail
Ralph Kamo-ME. 3-2433
A
am.. Junior Congregation
JI a m.. Family Memorial Service
.^“ vTOOLE FAMILY IN ChRtSI.
' Rev. K. Shimizu, M.A.. D-D. _
H E A R T Y
W E L CO M E
TO
.
Socratic Club
at UBC's Internationa! House Bal! Rec
This Sunday's meeting will
SONAL NOTES are inserted iree of charge. Reade
;.nvited to send in announcements of marriage, e
cement, anniversary, birth’and obituary. For insi
> in both sections, names should be given in be
nr ages. Short submissions are accepted, by phoi
dos (glossy print, contrast) are also welcome.
■ UBC Al- pura), and Japanese, girls serv ie :re the Waltz steps, for both
VANCOUVER
advanced and the beginners
a Mater Society’s International
:es. Everyone is welcome,
ouse Club has chosen a Japamembers particularly are
i nese theme for its Annual Bail
*d
to dome our and enjoy this
House formal dance1 i
। scheduled for .early
a theme Centennial project.
! Each year, the Ball
The Vancouver JCCA id an
from a different country
Highest Efficiency. . .
its i
s The project
Elmer H. Hara, president, of ' 6
| the club, contacted the Japanese
about
m an
i Consulate in Vancouver and the
Marriages
Office Overload entitled "A Now
I JCCA for cooperation in making
Way to Keep House and Hold a
* the dance in authentic Japanese Old World Bazaar
AV AKA YA MA -KOZAI
Job
”, mention is made of a local
I
style,
with
Japanese
decorations,
Toronto
The
International
Institute
of
N
isei
who combines home-making
Wed on Nov. 2, 1957, at the I Japanese food (sukiyaki or temMetropolitan
Toronto
will
hold
a
and
office
work.
• Some^ like
Toronto Buddhist Church, were
unique
and
fascinating
Old
World
Mrs
Sue
Kai,
a
Japanese
Cana
Keiko Kay Kozai, daughter of
dian
who
had
the
highest
ethChristmas
Mr. and Mi's. Toyonobu Kozai,
and Noboru- Nobby Wakayama of
Handicrafts of many lands will Office Overload, can accept, asToronto, son of Mr. Takumi Wa- | sent in sealed envelopes must, be
be
on display and goods for sale signnhmts only evening’s or on
kayama, now in Japan. Rev. T. * Sent under letter rates; unsealed
will
many forms of cera her husband’s day oif. ’
Tsuji solemnized the vows.
’ or open- cards may be sent under mics,include
jewellery, wood carving,
Reception was held at Miur- j printed matter rate, if bearing, a
needle-craft, books of all langua
head’s, after which the newlyweds seasonal greeting not exceeding ges. and European baking. There iiniiiiiuiiuiiinnmniiiiHiiniiu^
honeymooned in the States.
will also bej/coffee shop on the
five words
IWASAKI-KONISHI
niuiiiuiHHiimiHinniiiuuniiHiiin
Kamloops, B.C. I Hawaii and Alaska—-7 cents foi
'rimed for Christmas shopping,
NOVEMBER ..... ...........
Setsuko Konishi, daughter of
the Bazaar will offer an amazing
1
the
first
ounce;
.
5
cents
each
ad
9
—
Toronto.
Buddhisf
Bazaar
at 913
Mr. and Mrs. Kumajiro Konishi
assortment of gifts for family and
i
ditional
ounce.
Asia
—
25
cent;
of Tappen, B.C., and Bud Yataro
friends, including an unusual col 9-H—Kamloops, B.C; Third annua; E'y
Iwasaki, son of Mrs. Yasue Iwa i each half oounce.
vm Convention; Convention bah .e^lection of Christmas cards creat
’Miss Bussei contest: bowling
saki of Kamloops, B.C., were
ed bv artists of many lauds.
i
Parcel
Post
Insurance
rates
married in the Catholic Church in
b Phenix Fall Social
Highlight and closing feature 17—Toronto
admission Sb door
Kamloops. B.C., on October a, Gold, jewellery, bank notes, noL. of the Bazaar will be a conceit
1957. Reverend . McIntyre offi accepted for insurance. These featuring' songs and dances of
should be sent by registered let many nations, to be held batm- 17—Vancouver tumn bacaar. MU p.m.
ciated at the ceremonies.
Church's an
ter
mail. Fragile and perishable day,’Nov. 16, 8 p.m. at Harbord 22—
Reception was held at Alex’s
Toronto. N ;sei Students Club Autumn
Nocturne at Polish Alliance Hall.
Bar-B-Q. Sewanin were Mr. and articles may be insured against Collegiate auditorium.
22—Kelowna, B.C. KYBA Sixth Annual
loss only. In Canada—free, if re
Mrs. T. Kawase.
International Institute is a
0011^101' Ejection^
quested, up to $50 (for delivery,
22—HamiUon. Hamv
United
Appeal
agency.
Dance,
MINATO-BANNO
in Canada); 12c over- $504100.
Matqueo Restauronh ?b Main St. West.
Vancouver
To Japan: 12c up to $50; 30c over
Supper wiH commence b:30 p.m., adShirley Toshiko Bannogdaugh $50-$100.\
Pictured
Bride
30—Toronto. TYBS Musical Talent Row.
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Magohashi
Gift parcels not exceeding $50.
Toronto. Nisei Women b Ohio din
Banno; became the bride of Sadao in value addressed to Japan do ' KAMLOOPS, B
Pictured 30—
ner and dance at Little Jack s, La
Minato, son of Mr. and Mr. Kei not require an export permit.
in the Kamloops
Stpi-Kolowna, B.C.' Bukkyo-kai 25th am
ji Minato of 100 Mile House, B.C.,
Wedding.
Pftge advertisements
<
nivorsary Conceit and Shibai at
on Oct. 26, 1957, at the Vancouver MAIL TO JAPAN: SS American was Airs. Yataro (Bud) Iwasata
Buddhist Hall.
. Mail leaves Vancouver for J^apan (nee Setsuko Konishi) in a photo
Buddhist Church.
december.
Rev. S. Ikuta officiated. Se on Nov. 19; SS Hikawa Maru by Artlite.
wanin were Mr. and Mrs. Yada
21—Winnipeg. Manitoba; JCCA Xmas,
Ball at Curtis Hotel, East kildonan.
and Mr. and Mrs. R. Kobayashi..
24
—
Toronto. Club Phenix's Chicken
Reception followed at Ho Ho CHURCH NOTES
Dance includes turkey dinner, orche
Chop Suey.
stra, doer prises. Admission. 55 a head.
.
X-RAY DIAGNOSIS
DOCTOR of chiropractic
Yonge st.
: - Toronto
WA. 1-6549 (office)
If no answer, call >
BE. 3-3869 (residence)
Lucien C. Kurata
giEBlSTEK and SOLICITOR
notaky PUBLIC
Suite 502, Temple Building
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TORONTO
Kes: EO. 7-3427
EM. 6-0959
WA. 1-5605
OX. 8-2280 (Kes.)
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER r- SOLICITOR
NOTARY
Room 203A
*
2 College St., Toronto
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
Office: Room 403
229 Yonge St., Toronto
EM. 3-5002 — OX. 1-3388 (res.)
F. A. BREWIN, Q.C
Barrister & Solicitor •
; Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
372 Bay St.
— EM. 3-4391
Toronto..
^
^
*
CALENDAR
Osaka Bishop to Meet Local Japanese Catholics
Obituaries
6-30-midnight.
MATSUMURA
Kumajiro, Matsumura, 55, of
Kumamoto-ken, died on October
24 1957, at the hospital m Calo-arv, Alta., where he had been
hi confinement. The funeral serv
ices on October 28 were conducted
by Rev. Y. Kawamura.
Bishop Taguchi was present at
His Excellency Bishop Paul
Taguchi of Osaka Diocese will the Catholic Immigration Con 12-Toronto. Club Phenix presents Now
arrive in Toronto on Sunday, ference in Assisi, Italy, earlier in
Year's Dance from 8-U:jO, at Club
Harmony Hall, 39b College St.,
November 17, with the express the fall. He is visiting Toronto
desire- of meeting with the Japa on his way to South America.
nese Catholics of Toronto. .Rev.
Immigration, received word 01
C. Mulvihill, Director of.Catholic
the Bishop’s projected arrival,
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The New Canadian acknowledges and he immediately contacted the
with thanks generous donations from editor of the LUMEN, Japanese
Catholic Newsletter.
the following;
, ■
n n
Mrs. H. Inouye, North Surrey, B. .,
MONEY SAVING SPECIAL!!
Father Mulvihill made it known
on son's marriage.
Toronto,
on
that
with
the
cooperation
of
the
Mr. and Mrs. T. Kozai,
DO NOT MISS THESE
daughter's marriage.
Japanese -Catholics a ^reception
.Mr
and Mrs. Minoru Nishimura,
. 35c lb.
will be held for. His Excellency
Scarboro., Ont., on'son's birth.
® HAKUSAI-ZUKE .......
on that Sunday. Bishop Taguchi
35c pkg.
will speak at the evening Holy
0 MISO-ZUKE SALMON
Hour, 7:30 p.m. on November 1/,
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
■it St Brigid’s Roman Catholic
4
"
EMpire 6-3663
Church. He will also gn^e-beneEMpire
Help Wanted
diction at that time. Both Japa
nese Catholics and non-Catholics
Sun Valley, 96 Spading - Ave.. loronto_ are cordially invited to attend.
DUNDAS UNION STORE.
ii!r«nr»Mi^:ill
2S4.A TONOI STKItT, TORONTO, ONT.
CLASSIFIED
DAVE’S
TV and Appliances
Sales and Service
JOIN OUR CHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY
PLAN ON GIFTWARE' AND SMALL
APPLIANCES ,
Male Help Wanted
YOUTH, interested in
Cleaning
cessary. Apply_ onerry
learning
__
Dry
1938.
DAVID AZUMA
Domestic Help Wanted
734 St; Clair West
(1 block west of Christie)
HOUSEKEEPER^^. or^J^ction1
single gentleman,
_T tid„
Must be excellent cook,
‘
68^2
driving permit helpful. Phone BE. 3-b«.z
(Toronto).
_ _
-—"
"*
TORONTO
LE. 3-038S
—Downsvietv CUSTOM
ALL REGULAR LINES
TOURS, SIGHTSEEING &
CHARTER COACH
SERVICE
For Sale or Rent____ Phone Us at EM. 8-9934
Distinctive
Floral Arrangements
o cuerd
JON ONODERA
Proprietor
WORKSHOiT^taT^
2 eMcmc1.
Avenue, sewer, V,®' 9 suitable for*
Come *” J”’^ ” i«S“ Coll
S”SB "M (Toronto^
SMifH^bRONA Etdndard ^^
practically new , Je^
Call New
prefers private transaction
Canadian Office bM. 6-5033..--------
PRINTING (IF All DfSGRIPIIONS
UPHOLSTERIHG Co.
TRAVEL BY BUS
BUS TOURS for Your Vacation
mYou can leave
leuvc any
u..,’ day.
—. -Price
,
eludes return bus fare,
hoteli encl
sightseeing.
.s; 27.55
Detroit, 3 days ..............
41.10
Chicago, 5 days ..........
52.50
New York, 4 days .........
52.50
Washington. 6 days ....
168.25
California, 17 ddYs .....
.125.00
Florida circle, 12 days
Many more
__
I
bringing SOMEONE OVER.
. |
;sage arranged by steamer o*
Passage
.
»
wIDE selection or latest fabrics
• ”EC
352* Downsview Ave.'
Toronto 15
SUNDaY, NOVEMBER 10. 1357
10.33 a m., Sunday School
' ira.m.,.Enghsh
’’BUDDHA SPEAKS IO
Rev. T. Tsuji
everyone CORDIALLY
IK McCaul St. TORONTO
HARRY $. BOO ^#^
627 BAY STREET. TORONTO
RE^ 2OW BEVERLEY STREET
EM- 3- 3O8»
t
■
' _ _
invite.
NISEI UNITED
CHURCH» q^ *‘SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 10. US?
”™“
V
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
-Toronto
s.
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH^
HU. 9-4654 - BA. 1-4374
(Business)
For Free Estimates Lail
Ralph Kamo-ME. 3-2433
A
am.. Junior Congregation
JI a m.. Family Memorial Service
.^“ vTOOLE FAMILY IN ChRtSI.
' Rev. K. Shimizu, M.A.. D-D. _
H E A R T Y
W E L CO M E
TO
.
Page 8
PAGE 8
A better to a Rises
Are you a person whom an
VOU are the young adults of
other would like to get to
* today with goals attained
know? Can another discuss re
and still being striven for. .
Surelv to gain your aims, you , cent events intelligently with
you? Can you evaluate and
have worked hard against ob
compare
recent books (e.g.,
stacles not experienced by your
James
Cozzens
’ By Love. Pos
occidental friends—-the preju
sessed)
?
dices that accompanied your
Do ,you have an idea of Ja
nationality with uncalled for
panese
philosophy, poetry or
and unmerited results.
theatre; do you understand
Now the, post-war clouds
Darwin’s theory of evolution
have settled down gradually , and its axiom, “'the survival of
and an attitude and atmos
the fittest”, or Einstein’s theo-.
phere much freeriand less en
ry of relativity which has now
become
all-important since the
compassing is evident, but the
war still indirectly affects your
“advent of Sputnik” ?
lives, for many of you had your
Have you thought of Anthro
adolescent years disrupted by
pology or Spanish courses at
evacuation and the fear for the
the University in the evening,
future.
or furthering your bridge-play
ing or badminton at the YMThere exists a strata (classi
CA, or . studying physics at
fied age-wise) of restless yet
Central Technical School at
bland persons whose only inter
night?
est in life seems to consist of
next week’s club social or bowl
There are many things in
ing meet where they hope as al- which,
one.can develop an inalways that this time they may
terest or cultivate *an inkling
meet someone who is interest
of' interest already present.
ing, full of fun, and not the
Then you will find, you do no,t
run-of-the-mill type. This has
heed' society and crowds about
resulted in a sociable tmt most
you all the time, but can find
unsatisfying situation.
satisfaction in your doings.
-Instead of sitting around be
By having varied interests
moaning the tact that there is
in the world and peoples about
you, life will mean more to you
nothing exciting to do, look at
and to those who know you!
this problem more subjectively.
Candida
Saturday^November 9 1957
THE NEW CANADIAN
EM. 6-5005
479 Queen St W., Toronto 2-B, Ont
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa
A Chinaman’s Chance
UMEZUKI,
Publisher; 1,1
UMEZUKI, ■ English ; Section
KEN MORI, Japanese Section
and Advertising.' Manager. -
Subscription. Rates: $3.50 for 6 mc-*hs
So per year (Ad rates. bn request.
Office . Hours:.. 8:30-5:30 Monday-F.-ian9-1 p.m. Saturday.
iiiiiiiiiiijiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiniinm
the M-space
The expression “He hasn’t got a Chinaman’s chance is still
in. common use, although nowadays few people .remember how it
originated. It come from the Gold Rush days in California when iniHIIIIIHU by marge HIlliaum^
Chinese immigrants, hated and despised, had no -protection or re- • .
dress against extortion and violence. “A Chinaman’s chance wa& a tour
no chance at all..
■ ■ ■■■
ofia few art galleries...
Remembering this, there is a certain irony about the news that
two voung Chinese scientists, Dr. Chen lang and Dr. Tsung Dao.Lee
ART GALLERY OF TORON
—born in China, but now resident in the United States—have been TO: On exhibit until tomorrow is
awarded the Nobel Prize in physics for their work on the behavior the Sale of Canadian Art. Sales:
ended last night; a few days ago,.
of sub-atomic particles.
_
"
The United States attitude, to the Chinese has changed consider- 108 of the -157 paintings and
sculptures were already sold for
ablv in the course of the last century, and the two physicists found prices ranging from $18 (Phyllis
many doors open to them that would have’ been fiimly arre
o Janes’ lithograph, Rebellion—one
their predecessors. Yet. contemplating their achievements, one is of my favorite ‘local artists) up
bound to wonder how much potential scientific talent—and how to $200 (there were 17 at’ this
much military and industrial strength—- the U-S. has Ip st through price).
'
discrimination against citizens of Asiatic and African descent;
There are quite a number of
Indeed few Western illusions are likely to prove costlier than,
works, in there that I' wouldn’t
the notion that a small group of peoples
We.stei'Ua?^
Europe, and their descendants across the Atlantic, aie fawred bj mind having, if I had the money
nature with a monopoly of scientific-and technical skdls and thm and space to hang them in. . .
other races are qualified only to be hewers of wood and diavei.
Toronto artist Kazuo Nakamu
°^ AMs' illusion has been rudely shaken in recent years by the ra has three on exhibit (already
astonishing progress pf the Russians, so long thpuglit of as clumsy sold by" the time I got there—
peasants Nor is. Russia alone. Dr. Chen and Dr. Tsung may be Wednesday), commanding prices .
from $135-$185 ( I don’t mean to
classified as Chinese-Americans, but they received their early scien be mercenary about art—). Ail
tific training* in China. We-can be sure that a great many other
are representational—Night
talented youths are eagerly studying physics and chemistry in. Chin three
Fall, a dank blue watercolor, im
ese universities today.
'
pressive . in its B murky quality;
As in Russia, the new Peking regime places heavy emphasis on October, an oil in palette-knife
science. Censorship obscures the progress that is being made in these technique, a great contrast to the
fields, but already we hear of great engineering and industrial pro watercolor in ■ its boldness; and
jects which would have been impossible in the old days. Theie is Green Landscape, also a strong
no doubt that China will be a prominent contender in the race for sturdy oil. (Writing about a re
scientific and technological leadership.
cent sale .at the Vancouver' Art
By KEN ADACHI
The path has already been blazed for her by Japan. It used Gallery, UBC ^art curator Ian
- to be fashionable to dismiss the Japanese as ingenious imitators ot McNairn mentions that “Kazuo
Western models. The excellence of their cameras and optical equip Nakamura’s unique Into Horizon
ment, however, cannot be explained on this ground; nor can the is deceptively simple and suggests,
fact that their shipbuilding yards have turned out the largest vessels that insight into beauty which is
built in recent -years. They are making notable progress, too, in one of the great contributions of
the Oriental artist.”)
JUST now, when everyone is out being made to feel that he is pure as well as applied science.
These are the leaders', but other Asian and African countries . Two paintings by Tak Tanabe
- bound, under pain .of being a bore. And all he gets fur his
efforts are pimples upon his face. may be expected to follow them. India has long had a notable school ' of Vancouver were also for sale
labelled a'hater of humanity, to
of nhvsicisfs; Sir Chandrasekhara Raman received a Noble Brize ■—-Landscape with Pure Sun, an
enter in some clubable group, to ,. .Extreme enthusiasm, whether as long.ago as 1930. The Moslem’ Middle East was the centre ox oil of predominantly white back
cheer for one’s college-" football at school or. pulpit, on street study and research in medicine and chemistry a thousand years ago, ground -which was not .yet sold,
team; to integrate and assimilate, corner or platform, seems to be and, quite conceivably, could -be again. It-has been abundantly prov and High on a Mountain, a Red
a cry from the opposite party a symptom of deficient vitality; ed that every - race has men and women with the special apti flower, ochre and blue-green
who mre content in ivory-tower whereas a faculty for apathy im tudes of the scientist and the engineer. Given public interest and swirling upwards on a .white
nonentity, instead of rubbing el plies a catholic appetite and a proper educational opportunities, these" aptitudes can be developed ground, climaxed with a hint of
bows ecstatically witli the hurly- strong" sense of personal identity- and put to work. And this is what is happening all over the world. a red flower near the top, which
was sold; This latter painting I
burly, savors a little of bravado There is a sort of fidgety, hack
The
leadership
of-the
Western
peoples
in
science
and
technology
neyed
people
about,
who
are
'
would
have liked to own. It was
and cheekiness.
And yet this
should not be. Apathy so-called, scarcely conscious of living ex- beo-an roughly four hundred years ago. While it lasted, it. gave $125.
which does not consist in being cept in the exercise' of some con these peoples commanding prestige and authority and made possible
There are a, lot of others worth
faded wallpaper violets, but in ventional. boisterous cause. They the creation of great empires.
,,
- 1
seeing,
which' will not be seen
Today it is passing away. One of our greatest-problems is o after tomorrow when they are re
doing not a great deal, has as have no curiosity; they cannot
good a right to be championed as give themselves over to random recognize that fact, and’to. treat other races, over whom our ancesleased to’private homes.
anything else. It is certain .that provocations. It is no good talk tors were able, to lord it, with greater respect. Otherwise peopk m
much may be judiciously argued ing to such people; they cannot the Twenty-first Century will speak...of some unfol tunate as having
THE- PARK’ GALLERY, 17
in- favor of enthusiasm; only indulge in apathy, and they pass only “a white man’s ’chance”.
_The ^'^ .^ M Avenue Road: .This beautiful mo
there is something to be said those^hours in which they are not
dern gallery opened just a couple
anainst it, and that is what, on dedicated to some blue-and-black
of • weeks ago with an exhibit
the present occasion, I have to flag-waving in a sort of churlish
(lasting
’
til
Nov.
16)
by
Painters
11,
of which Nakamura is a mem
coma. If they, have to wait an then, for one to emerge from the ber. His works in this’ show are purely abstract' . . . all three on a
hour or so for a bus, they fall hallowed halls without a collec
It is admitted that the presence into a trance with their eyes tion of blue-and-white Varsity tea-green ground—Into Space, with the vertical lines; Infinitive
of people who refuse to become open. To see them, you would ribbons, a Yearbook, an unhealthy Waves,' entirely horizontal lines; and Cycle, partly horizontal and
stampeded by slogans and all the suppose there was nothing to fetchism for undergarments, a partly vertical lines. Bizarre though they may sound, I feel that i
banging, whistling, roaring' and look at and nothing to do; you few throaty lumps. There are, of could become quite attached to. one of them if I had the vhe ewithal to buy it. Prices were $185, $550 and $375 respectively.
growling of cheerleaders is at would imagine .they were
' para- course, a few who rebel against
,
once disenchantment for those, lyzed or alienated. They have not this ersatz -tyranny of carrying
GALLERY OF CONTEMPORARY ART, 98 Gerrard West: Lnwho' do. A clubable fellow (as learned to have private enthusia thing's into places where they do ■ til Nov. 23, paintings and ink drawings by -Louis De
we see so many) joins everything sms for their lonely hours. The not belong, and .graduate without whose work with Oriental or Mediaeval motifs reminds me of lund
—from learning how. to dance to fellow “who cultivates, apathy, on having once heard the university or Steinberg cartoons—inscrutable poker-facedpeople; Ihe au wcheering' for football teams-—and the other hand, will not often be Song. Cut of sheer instinct of are witty and pleasing to the eye, but I felt that"there should lune
labors therein with something not heard from. The shadows and the apathy, they had picked up the
Tar short of fevered ague. And generations, the shrill extroverts habit of never listening,. pref err- been a punch-line under each' one.
THEN’there’s the Hayter, ■Greenwich, Roberts and Hart Hoa^e
while- such a one is plowing in-’ and the dying causes, go by into iug to keep their minds a blank^ •
dustriously along, putting a vast ultimate silence and emptiness, and to do nothing more dishonest galleries; also the Odeon and other places, but there’s no space ej.
deal of activity out to interest as he sits and pares his finger- than speaking* in natural voices.
and receiving' a large measure of nails. >
^
5^SS
Enthusiasm’ - loses its charm
nervous derangement in return,
when it is not free; it becomes
College life is one
it is not hard to understand his
resentment, when ho perceives this unholy marriage of inhuman valueless and abhorrent, like the
by the way side. fanaticism and frenzy, where the caresses of a maniac.. The fingercool
lying•• with a handkerchief over student is cajoled, bullied and in-the-pie enthusiasts have also
their ear s, a book by their side, beaten into acquiring- something- brought into the currency of, our
it their elbow. It must called “school spirit” (i.e.. sup- ■ language such dismal expressions
Films
GQxuSS
^ “all righty” and “yes indeedy”
be a trying thing to have put so porting twelve burly men in a' as
and Santa Claus
much enthusiasm into the job and football stadium, thrilling to the and hundreds of others. They
Refreshments
..scaled the, arduous hilltops, and 'bosomy-gusty exhortations
of have become mechanical andwhen all is done, find some peo cheerleaders,
wrapping. toilet broken in spirit, and have lost all
December 21, 2-4 p.m.
ple indifferent to his achieve paper around one’s head, getting- touch with imagination.
ments. He always expects others lumps in the throat on hearing,
ert All People's United Church on Sherman Ave
I have nothing to say against
to share his paroxysms...and feels the alma'mater song), and prov
slighted in the uneven exchange, ing one’s masculinity by purloin genuine enthusiasm; it is only
for all children from 3 to 12 years
looking finally as if he were ing ladies’ garments. The ration that apathy saves so much time
PHONE Tosh Kanamoto (LI. 9-6134), Kay YagucAl 9^^'^
HanuHonviewing a small and horrible ani ale for this barbarous treatment and thought, and trouble and
(FU.
5-8938)/
or
write
to
Miss
Katie
Oyama,
33
Ham
#
mal, such as a horned toad. The i^ that one is simply expected to
Ont giving name and age by November 31, Lao/zealot ahvavs thrusts excessive have “school* spirit”. The student social friction of one sort-or an
free
admission
other
that
it
leaves
one
with
simply complies, unless he wishes
< so shamelessly that one cannot be to be set down as untractable, much morq leisure to cultivate
■ in his company a moment with- morose, anti-social.
It is rare. idleness.
• tauterPOINT
Hamilton ICCA
Children's Christmas Party
■
A better to a Rises
Are you a person whom an
VOU are the young adults of
other would like to get to
* today with goals attained
know? Can another discuss re
and still being striven for. .
Surelv to gain your aims, you , cent events intelligently with
you? Can you evaluate and
have worked hard against ob
compare
recent books (e.g.,
stacles not experienced by your
James
Cozzens
’ By Love. Pos
occidental friends—-the preju
sessed)
?
dices that accompanied your
Do ,you have an idea of Ja
nationality with uncalled for
panese
philosophy, poetry or
and unmerited results.
theatre; do you understand
Now the, post-war clouds
Darwin’s theory of evolution
have settled down gradually , and its axiom, “'the survival of
and an attitude and atmos
the fittest”, or Einstein’s theo-.
phere much freeriand less en
ry of relativity which has now
become
all-important since the
compassing is evident, but the
war still indirectly affects your
“advent of Sputnik” ?
lives, for many of you had your
Have you thought of Anthro
adolescent years disrupted by
pology or Spanish courses at
evacuation and the fear for the
the University in the evening,
future.
or furthering your bridge-play
ing or badminton at the YMThere exists a strata (classi
CA, or . studying physics at
fied age-wise) of restless yet
Central Technical School at
bland persons whose only inter
night?
est in life seems to consist of
next week’s club social or bowl
There are many things in
ing meet where they hope as al- which,
one.can develop an inalways that this time they may
terest or cultivate *an inkling
meet someone who is interest
of' interest already present.
ing, full of fun, and not the
Then you will find, you do no,t
run-of-the-mill type. This has
heed' society and crowds about
resulted in a sociable tmt most
you all the time, but can find
unsatisfying situation.
satisfaction in your doings.
-Instead of sitting around be
By having varied interests
moaning the tact that there is
in the world and peoples about
you, life will mean more to you
nothing exciting to do, look at
and to those who know you!
this problem more subjectively.
Candida
Saturday^November 9 1957
THE NEW CANADIAN
EM. 6-5005
479 Queen St W., Toronto 2-B, Ont
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa
A Chinaman’s Chance
UMEZUKI,
Publisher; 1,1
UMEZUKI, ■ English ; Section
KEN MORI, Japanese Section
and Advertising.' Manager. -
Subscription. Rates: $3.50 for 6 mc-*hs
So per year (Ad rates. bn request.
Office . Hours:.. 8:30-5:30 Monday-F.-ian9-1 p.m. Saturday.
iiiiiiiiiiijiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiniinm
the M-space
The expression “He hasn’t got a Chinaman’s chance is still
in. common use, although nowadays few people .remember how it
originated. It come from the Gold Rush days in California when iniHIIIIIHU by marge HIlliaum^
Chinese immigrants, hated and despised, had no -protection or re- • .
dress against extortion and violence. “A Chinaman’s chance wa& a tour
no chance at all..
■ ■ ■■■
ofia few art galleries...
Remembering this, there is a certain irony about the news that
two voung Chinese scientists, Dr. Chen lang and Dr. Tsung Dao.Lee
ART GALLERY OF TORON
—born in China, but now resident in the United States—have been TO: On exhibit until tomorrow is
awarded the Nobel Prize in physics for their work on the behavior the Sale of Canadian Art. Sales:
ended last night; a few days ago,.
of sub-atomic particles.
_
"
The United States attitude, to the Chinese has changed consider- 108 of the -157 paintings and
sculptures were already sold for
ablv in the course of the last century, and the two physicists found prices ranging from $18 (Phyllis
many doors open to them that would have’ been fiimly arre
o Janes’ lithograph, Rebellion—one
their predecessors. Yet. contemplating their achievements, one is of my favorite ‘local artists) up
bound to wonder how much potential scientific talent—and how to $200 (there were 17 at’ this
much military and industrial strength—- the U-S. has Ip st through price).
'
discrimination against citizens of Asiatic and African descent;
There are quite a number of
Indeed few Western illusions are likely to prove costlier than,
works, in there that I' wouldn’t
the notion that a small group of peoples
We.stei'Ua?^
Europe, and their descendants across the Atlantic, aie fawred bj mind having, if I had the money
nature with a monopoly of scientific-and technical skdls and thm and space to hang them in. . .
other races are qualified only to be hewers of wood and diavei.
Toronto artist Kazuo Nakamu
°^ AMs' illusion has been rudely shaken in recent years by the ra has three on exhibit (already
astonishing progress pf the Russians, so long thpuglit of as clumsy sold by" the time I got there—
peasants Nor is. Russia alone. Dr. Chen and Dr. Tsung may be Wednesday), commanding prices .
from $135-$185 ( I don’t mean to
classified as Chinese-Americans, but they received their early scien be mercenary about art—). Ail
tific training* in China. We-can be sure that a great many other
are representational—Night
talented youths are eagerly studying physics and chemistry in. Chin three
Fall, a dank blue watercolor, im
ese universities today.
'
pressive . in its B murky quality;
As in Russia, the new Peking regime places heavy emphasis on October, an oil in palette-knife
science. Censorship obscures the progress that is being made in these technique, a great contrast to the
fields, but already we hear of great engineering and industrial pro watercolor in ■ its boldness; and
jects which would have been impossible in the old days. Theie is Green Landscape, also a strong
no doubt that China will be a prominent contender in the race for sturdy oil. (Writing about a re
scientific and technological leadership.
cent sale .at the Vancouver' Art
By KEN ADACHI
The path has already been blazed for her by Japan. It used Gallery, UBC ^art curator Ian
- to be fashionable to dismiss the Japanese as ingenious imitators ot McNairn mentions that “Kazuo
Western models. The excellence of their cameras and optical equip Nakamura’s unique Into Horizon
ment, however, cannot be explained on this ground; nor can the is deceptively simple and suggests,
fact that their shipbuilding yards have turned out the largest vessels that insight into beauty which is
built in recent -years. They are making notable progress, too, in one of the great contributions of
the Oriental artist.”)
JUST now, when everyone is out being made to feel that he is pure as well as applied science.
These are the leaders', but other Asian and African countries . Two paintings by Tak Tanabe
- bound, under pain .of being a bore. And all he gets fur his
efforts are pimples upon his face. may be expected to follow them. India has long had a notable school ' of Vancouver were also for sale
labelled a'hater of humanity, to
of nhvsicisfs; Sir Chandrasekhara Raman received a Noble Brize ■—-Landscape with Pure Sun, an
enter in some clubable group, to ,. .Extreme enthusiasm, whether as long.ago as 1930. The Moslem’ Middle East was the centre ox oil of predominantly white back
cheer for one’s college-" football at school or. pulpit, on street study and research in medicine and chemistry a thousand years ago, ground -which was not .yet sold,
team; to integrate and assimilate, corner or platform, seems to be and, quite conceivably, could -be again. It-has been abundantly prov and High on a Mountain, a Red
a cry from the opposite party a symptom of deficient vitality; ed that every - race has men and women with the special apti flower, ochre and blue-green
who mre content in ivory-tower whereas a faculty for apathy im tudes of the scientist and the engineer. Given public interest and swirling upwards on a .white
nonentity, instead of rubbing el plies a catholic appetite and a proper educational opportunities, these" aptitudes can be developed ground, climaxed with a hint of
bows ecstatically witli the hurly- strong" sense of personal identity- and put to work. And this is what is happening all over the world. a red flower near the top, which
was sold; This latter painting I
burly, savors a little of bravado There is a sort of fidgety, hack
The
leadership
of-the
Western
peoples
in
science
and
technology
neyed
people
about,
who
are
'
would
have liked to own. It was
and cheekiness.
And yet this
should not be. Apathy so-called, scarcely conscious of living ex- beo-an roughly four hundred years ago. While it lasted, it. gave $125.
which does not consist in being cept in the exercise' of some con these peoples commanding prestige and authority and made possible
There are a, lot of others worth
faded wallpaper violets, but in ventional. boisterous cause. They the creation of great empires.
,,
- 1
seeing,
which' will not be seen
Today it is passing away. One of our greatest-problems is o after tomorrow when they are re
doing not a great deal, has as have no curiosity; they cannot
good a right to be championed as give themselves over to random recognize that fact, and’to. treat other races, over whom our ancesleased to’private homes.
anything else. It is certain .that provocations. It is no good talk tors were able, to lord it, with greater respect. Otherwise peopk m
much may be judiciously argued ing to such people; they cannot the Twenty-first Century will speak...of some unfol tunate as having
THE- PARK’ GALLERY, 17
in- favor of enthusiasm; only indulge in apathy, and they pass only “a white man’s ’chance”.
_The ^'^ .^ M Avenue Road: .This beautiful mo
there is something to be said those^hours in which they are not
dern gallery opened just a couple
anainst it, and that is what, on dedicated to some blue-and-black
of • weeks ago with an exhibit
the present occasion, I have to flag-waving in a sort of churlish
(lasting
’
til
Nov.
16)
by
Painters
11,
of which Nakamura is a mem
coma. If they, have to wait an then, for one to emerge from the ber. His works in this’ show are purely abstract' . . . all three on a
hour or so for a bus, they fall hallowed halls without a collec
It is admitted that the presence into a trance with their eyes tion of blue-and-white Varsity tea-green ground—Into Space, with the vertical lines; Infinitive
of people who refuse to become open. To see them, you would ribbons, a Yearbook, an unhealthy Waves,' entirely horizontal lines; and Cycle, partly horizontal and
stampeded by slogans and all the suppose there was nothing to fetchism for undergarments, a partly vertical lines. Bizarre though they may sound, I feel that i
banging, whistling, roaring' and look at and nothing to do; you few throaty lumps. There are, of could become quite attached to. one of them if I had the vhe ewithal to buy it. Prices were $185, $550 and $375 respectively.
growling of cheerleaders is at would imagine .they were
' para- course, a few who rebel against
,
once disenchantment for those, lyzed or alienated. They have not this ersatz -tyranny of carrying
GALLERY OF CONTEMPORARY ART, 98 Gerrard West: Lnwho' do. A clubable fellow (as learned to have private enthusia thing's into places where they do ■ til Nov. 23, paintings and ink drawings by -Louis De
we see so many) joins everything sms for their lonely hours. The not belong, and .graduate without whose work with Oriental or Mediaeval motifs reminds me of lund
—from learning how. to dance to fellow “who cultivates, apathy, on having once heard the university or Steinberg cartoons—inscrutable poker-facedpeople; Ihe au wcheering' for football teams-—and the other hand, will not often be Song. Cut of sheer instinct of are witty and pleasing to the eye, but I felt that"there should lune
labors therein with something not heard from. The shadows and the apathy, they had picked up the
Tar short of fevered ague. And generations, the shrill extroverts habit of never listening,. pref err- been a punch-line under each' one.
THEN’there’s the Hayter, ■Greenwich, Roberts and Hart Hoa^e
while- such a one is plowing in-’ and the dying causes, go by into iug to keep their minds a blank^ •
dustriously along, putting a vast ultimate silence and emptiness, and to do nothing more dishonest galleries; also the Odeon and other places, but there’s no space ej.
deal of activity out to interest as he sits and pares his finger- than speaking* in natural voices.
and receiving' a large measure of nails. >
^
5^SS
Enthusiasm’ - loses its charm
nervous derangement in return,
when it is not free; it becomes
College life is one
it is not hard to understand his
resentment, when ho perceives this unholy marriage of inhuman valueless and abhorrent, like the
by the way side. fanaticism and frenzy, where the caresses of a maniac.. The fingercool
lying•• with a handkerchief over student is cajoled, bullied and in-the-pie enthusiasts have also
their ear s, a book by their side, beaten into acquiring- something- brought into the currency of, our
it their elbow. It must called “school spirit” (i.e.. sup- ■ language such dismal expressions
Films
GQxuSS
^ “all righty” and “yes indeedy”
be a trying thing to have put so porting twelve burly men in a' as
and Santa Claus
much enthusiasm into the job and football stadium, thrilling to the and hundreds of others. They
Refreshments
..scaled the, arduous hilltops, and 'bosomy-gusty exhortations
of have become mechanical andwhen all is done, find some peo cheerleaders,
wrapping. toilet broken in spirit, and have lost all
December 21, 2-4 p.m.
ple indifferent to his achieve paper around one’s head, getting- touch with imagination.
ments. He always expects others lumps in the throat on hearing,
ert All People's United Church on Sherman Ave
I have nothing to say against
to share his paroxysms...and feels the alma'mater song), and prov
slighted in the uneven exchange, ing one’s masculinity by purloin genuine enthusiasm; it is only
for all children from 3 to 12 years
looking finally as if he were ing ladies’ garments. The ration that apathy saves so much time
PHONE Tosh Kanamoto (LI. 9-6134), Kay YagucAl 9^^'^
HanuHonviewing a small and horrible ani ale for this barbarous treatment and thought, and trouble and
(FU.
5-8938)/
or
write
to
Miss
Katie
Oyama,
33
Ham
#
mal, such as a horned toad. The i^ that one is simply expected to
Ont giving name and age by November 31, Lao/zealot ahvavs thrusts excessive have “school* spirit”. The student social friction of one sort-or an
free
admission
other
that
it
leaves
one
with
simply complies, unless he wishes
< so shamelessly that one cannot be to be set down as untractable, much morq leisure to cultivate
■ in his company a moment with- morose, anti-social.
It is rare. idleness.
• tauterPOINT
Hamilton ICCA
Children's Christmas Party
■