Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXVI.—Xo. 18
FROM
TWO
Ifoio’ito uNoids blazed with the
last week:
K\p
BLI^ w0-
hlG" cried the Justice Weekly,
I among its ionely-heart ads, rape^trrmsvestite-sex sioiies and turf
s
(selections.
0
n3".
is
Lf^; piece involved a 43-yeariok " Toronto Japanese businessIr.p convicted of making indecent
Lieohone calls to a blind woman
land1 fined 8100.00 or 30 days by
(Senior Magistrate T. S. Elmore.
I ^b^ is reported to have told
Ipohce the calls had been coming
(regularly for some time. They
f adused her to make the man—
| who used the alias, George Shina
I —believe she would accede to his
I wishes of going to bed together,
I and propose a meeting for such a
| puroose.
He was reported as
I beaming what a good ' man he
Luas
, .
She arranged to meet him in
I the lobby of a downtown hotel at
M2:?(’ pan. on September' 13th.
I Be arrived completely prepared
j^or what he thought would reK sift from the meeting, and had
| rented a room in the hotel under
K the name of George Shina.
E Defense counsel explained that
a friend of the accused had given
| him the woman’s phone number
H as a joke, and the accused
1 thought he was dating a call-girl,
Knot a respectable housewife. He
i was on holiday at the time.
[
"LAW TEARS CHILD FROM
j LOVING ARMS OF EX-GI, JAP
(MFE,” screamed Flash
(No
KBear. No Favor, The People’s
K Paper!) Weekly.
E The story is about a Cleveland
K couple, Mr. and Mrs. Meri Baker
f and their attempts to adopt a
If child. Jeannie. But because their
E marriage is mixed—Meri is an
American Caucasian, his wife JaI panese—a Cleveland judge, Leo| nard Frost has told the Bakers
। they cannot adopt Jeannie. The
k child has come to live with the
1 Bakers 18-months ago from a re| liable adoption agency, the Cleiieland Children’s Service.
r ’‘The good Lord created five
I laces,” said Judge Frost, “and
I he never inteded that the races
I should be mixed.’’
I The judge made one concession.
I He gave permission for Jeannie
I to stay on with the Bakers—as
| she is doing—until the children’s
| Service can find another place for
r her.
fe Immediately a wave of protest
| f'vept across Cleveland.
The
| Cleveland Children’s Service was
I stunned. They had selected the
| makers from scores of applicants
| and after thorough investigation
L concluded: Baker was a soft-talk| ‘^y P^hnt man, a first rate mia| cninist who earned enough to keep
| a family secure and comfortable;
[ /s wte was well-educated, culfl tured. hai a gentle but firm way
e '"-th children.
"^ by. if anything should hap
pen to my wife and me,” spoke
f
HU
neighbour, Mr. Joseph
Bl
/I’d rather have the BaJ<e care of our three kids
iyone I know.”
s n-^ science professor at Western
J :'e?R'e . University, in Cleve■
??!<? that the judge was
f Adc:ea in his ideas about the
; i*015, ’7r,ere is 110 such thing,”
$ -t- ?ro^?sor said, “as a pure
s '.^‘a‘ "MG not anymore. Everys g'® *n
world is propbably of
'1 / sor- of mixture.”
. ^F'^^-Uient Jewish Rabbi and
(
volant church leader issued
: ./h/:-'' accusing the judge of
t i^/':‘? the Lord by saying He
J -V~3*~a keeping the
races
:
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 10. 1962
SUPPORT YOUR
U
TORONTO,. ONTARIO
Educational TV Series
Features Art of Origami
TORONTO. — Last Saturday, i also describes, whenever it is ap
October 6th, at 10 a.m. the Me- 1 propriate. Japanese history, nV
tropolitan Educational Television 1 and civilization. At the beginning
and end of each program, tho
outstanding 10
t series of theme music, a tea .intonal Japa
titled “Ori- nese air. is played on the koto,
childrens’ prog:
a stringed instrument by Miss
rami” in co-op'
Akiko Hirabayashi of Palo .Alto.
station CFTO. channel 9.
Canada’s increasing in California.
in the Orient, and partieuArtist Takahiko Mikami is the
appropriate director of the J n panose Art
Centre in San Francisco. He is a
devoted to tradition- graduate of Meiji University m
—in this case. Orign- Tokyo mnd of the National Aca
the art of paper folding. The demy Scheel of Fine Arts tn New
Takehiko York City. He has taught art in
on this
ami. who turns from brush Japan and in the United States
another delicate. and has Inui several one-man
TORONTO.—Give the greatest gift of all. Give HOPE
painting to
sparce and subtle form of art. shows in New York. Sun Fran
through your local United ^Appeal. S3 Metro agencies need
I origami. The basis for this art cisco and St. Louis.
$9,717,000 to stay open for another year. Lend your support:
i is a square piece of paper, which.
give generously.
On last Saturday's opening
without scissors or
program of the series, Mr. Mika
folded into all sort of shapes. mi explained a little of tho his
suggesting birds, fish animals tory of origami a word which
and to vs,—easy to mak and fun translated into English means
to play with. Mr. Makami devotes “to fold paper.” Origami is a
each program to one of the tra very’ popular aH. with children
subjects—boats.
fox, in japan, he explained because it
TOKYO.—An appalling num tunate outcome of an undesir ditional
crane,
balloon
—
and
demostrates
is easy, requires no special train
ber of juvenile deliquents are re able milieu or innate defectiveing and no special equipment.
gistering in official statistics neses in character.
Mr. Mikami domom trated how to
First of all, the lower the age
and causing widespread conster
fold a paper cup and then drew
nation. While' these figures, may bracket is, the larger is the ra
a picture of a horse drinking
lend themselves to Various inter tio of increase of deliquency. This
water out of the cup.
He ex
pretations, the situation is cer shift to the lower age came to
plained
ways
to
combine
origami
the
fore
about
1957,
but
it
has
tainly lamentable.
and brush painting. The second
During
1961,
a
total
ot been accelerated to late.
part of the program was a de
Let
TORONTO.
216,456 boys and girls were
The type of criminal offence
monstration of how to make a
English.
”
the
26-weck
series
of
brought to police attention be tends to be more vicious. Since
English lessons via television, paper handbag, call' d tesage in
cause of criminal offences. Some 19o5
of violence ineludin
of them were under 14 yeais of blackmail have increased three to which was presented on CBLT- Japanese.
Next week Mr. Mikami will
age, the lowest age-bracket in^the fourfold, and sexual crimes two TV. channel 6, last fall in Ontario
is being offered this fall to wes fold a paper house and then show
juvenile law of this countiy. The to threefold.
above total means that 10.5 out
Of the total of juvenile crimi- tern viewers of Calgary station, detailed model - of different kinds
After re
of every 1,000 juveniles commit nal offences in 1961, 53 per cent CHTC-TV. The series started on of Japanese houses.
peating
his
dom
;mst
ration
he
September
24.
was accounted for by pupils in
ted criminal offences.
will
introduce
Miss
Hirabayashi
Text-books
for
this
course
are
If the cases of traffic law vio various schools, another alarm
lation and preventive police at ing fact. If this percentage fi being made available through whoso playing of the koto pro
tention are included, the total gure arouses suspicion that more the joint efforts of the Canadaian vides the series with some very
comes to 1,748,5 /1 and the ration juveniles from better families | Broadcasting Corporation and the charming theme musi'’. Ho will
are being corrupted, the suspicion I Metropolitan Educational Tele explain how the koto is played,
83.1 out of every every 1,000.
vision Association of Toronto, something about its history' and
Since the Second World Mu, appears to be confirmed by. an- i with the assistance of the Citi then he will proeeed to fold a
juvenile delinquency has marked other set of statistics analyizing ; zenship Division, Ontario de musical instrument out of paper
an alarming increase and it can the family background of the de- partment of Provincial Secretary’ —a piano. At the end of the pro
not be dismissed as part of the hquents.
While competent authorities I and Citizenship, the Citizenship gram, Mr. Mikaiw will again
worthwhile trend.
The afore
Branch of the Federal Depart turn to the koto and show dif
mentioned 200,000 figure is about and experts are studying the st a- । ment of Citizenship and Immi ferent old drawings of the intrufour times as large as the pre tistics,- it may be noted even by i gration and Canadian Scene, the ment and explain hew it is con
casual observers that a general ।
war figure in Japan.
ethnic press news service,
structed.
No longer can juvenile delin
(Continued on Pane 8")
[ carefully how each is made. He
quency be regarded as an unfoi-
Juvenile Deliquency
Rises In Japan
“Let’s Speak English"
Now On Western TV
A Look
At Japan
Printing Industry Boom
30 per cent of its facilities. Bj
TOKYO.—Japan’s printing m- the end of the wai, 60 pei cent
dustrv is a typical example of the of the printing machines and
and
small and medium-size induMne> eouipment in Tokyo and 50 per
spread out widely and numei- ! cent in Osaka had been damaged.
ouslv across the nation s eco- I However, between 1946 and 1948,
The industry, in fact,
nomy
: a printing bo-m swept the counwith
roughly 12,000 en i tr.v. stimulating a rapid rehabiliswarms
terprises. of which only seven ! tation of the industry. As a reemploy more than 500 persons : suit, by 1948. as many as 14,000
In recent years, the aemaii I printing compames had been es
for printing has risen sharply an tablished throughout Japan. But
rapidly and the industry i, M I the boo'ii was snort-aved. Tne
joving the prosperous side ot ^e ’publishing business was hit by’ a
! recession" and the printing indusbusiness picture. It is no
ever, free of problems. L
I trv bore its brunt. By July 19.19
at the moment m the raids- oi< : nearly 2.000 firms had closed
fierce whirlwind oi competi'.io.i : their doors.
with ad its resultant d^oruers. i The maioritv of the surviving
A handful of the larger. pnn/hp Companies' ,about 12.000 can be
companies, however is ndtiM / i rvYified as small and medium
crest of the business boom vhich
ze enterprises. As a matter of
has been in existence xor
j
companies eirEoytime These companies are am-Ja
than 300 workers numbitiously pushing themselves mto
ith over 500,
14 and tho
new fields of special apphed
firms em]v seven.
printing and precision worn.
This situation is widening no
i= much as 40 per cent
ticeably the gap b^-een the>e ot tee
ye industry.
competition
large companies and i-x
To a
judge, who I have a of smaller printers.
lots the in
- =uspicion might be a
Size Of Companies Vary
dustrv wisely tooK a serie? ox
“ ‘ -- r. has stuck to his deWorld V uv II deprived the i measures which included volun(Continued on page 8)
of more than
printing indus
Ambassador Transfered
To Netherlands
OTTAWA. — The
Canadian
government announced this week
that Fredrick Bull, Canadian Am
bassador to Japan has boon trans
ferred to the Hague to succeed
the late C.P. HerN rl as ambas
sador to Hollami. The released
statement revealed that the ap
pointment has been made on Oct.
9
tary restrictions on the lowering
of printing rates, exploration of
new machines for new types of
While not all of the
printing.
printing companies followed these
measures, tangible- results were
achieved.
The existence of so many small
printing firms makes it difficult
to determine the exact amount of Angler Finally Finds
the industry’s total sales. .How
ever, the production of printing Fish With His Name
paper and ink helps indicate the
CHRISTINA LAKE.-—Isao Ki
trend ->f business in the industry shi of Christina Lake has been
as a whole.
The production of sure for a long, long time that
oi one of the big ones :n Christina
(exclrn
printing pape
increasing
newsprint) hai
Lake has his name cm it and re
remarkably
in
recent
years. cently proved the point by bring
Printing paper production reach- ing in a 14 lb 15 oz. trout. Like
ed 7 86.4 72 tons in 1959 , 884.368 al! true blue fishermen al! he
tons in 1960 and 1.024.036 tons said when asked where and how
in 1961.
Printing ink output he caught the fish was “some
amounted to 43,643 tons in 1959. where near the centre of the lake
in 1960 and 58,544 on a medium light tackle.”
51.409
tons : n 1961. Per capi
tion oi paper totaled 23.81
n 1955 and 46.51 k
TWO SHIPS
gram
1960.
]
MAIL TO JAPAN.—Two ships
t will soon be leaving Vancouver
Recent Developments
indu.- ! fm- Japan. They are on October
- J a panes., pnr
t 16—Mankato
Victor;
and cm
undergoing
has been
I October 23 — Phiibpine Correg;(Continued on page 8)
I gor.
An independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXVI.—Xo. 18
FROM
TWO
Ifoio’ito uNoids blazed with the
last week:
K\p
BLI^ w0-
hlG" cried the Justice Weekly,
I among its ionely-heart ads, rape^trrmsvestite-sex sioiies and turf
s
(selections.
0
n3".
is
Lf^; piece involved a 43-yeariok " Toronto Japanese businessIr.p convicted of making indecent
Lieohone calls to a blind woman
land1 fined 8100.00 or 30 days by
(Senior Magistrate T. S. Elmore.
I ^b^ is reported to have told
Ipohce the calls had been coming
(regularly for some time. They
f adused her to make the man—
| who used the alias, George Shina
I —believe she would accede to his
I wishes of going to bed together,
I and propose a meeting for such a
| puroose.
He was reported as
I beaming what a good ' man he
Luas
, .
She arranged to meet him in
I the lobby of a downtown hotel at
M2:?(’ pan. on September' 13th.
I Be arrived completely prepared
j^or what he thought would reK sift from the meeting, and had
| rented a room in the hotel under
K the name of George Shina.
E Defense counsel explained that
a friend of the accused had given
| him the woman’s phone number
H as a joke, and the accused
1 thought he was dating a call-girl,
Knot a respectable housewife. He
i was on holiday at the time.
[
"LAW TEARS CHILD FROM
j LOVING ARMS OF EX-GI, JAP
(MFE,” screamed Flash
(No
KBear. No Favor, The People’s
K Paper!) Weekly.
E The story is about a Cleveland
K couple, Mr. and Mrs. Meri Baker
f and their attempts to adopt a
If child. Jeannie. But because their
E marriage is mixed—Meri is an
American Caucasian, his wife JaI panese—a Cleveland judge, Leo| nard Frost has told the Bakers
। they cannot adopt Jeannie. The
k child has come to live with the
1 Bakers 18-months ago from a re| liable adoption agency, the Cleiieland Children’s Service.
r ’‘The good Lord created five
I laces,” said Judge Frost, “and
I he never inteded that the races
I should be mixed.’’
I The judge made one concession.
I He gave permission for Jeannie
I to stay on with the Bakers—as
| she is doing—until the children’s
| Service can find another place for
r her.
fe Immediately a wave of protest
| f'vept across Cleveland.
The
| Cleveland Children’s Service was
I stunned. They had selected the
| makers from scores of applicants
| and after thorough investigation
L concluded: Baker was a soft-talk| ‘^y P^hnt man, a first rate mia| cninist who earned enough to keep
| a family secure and comfortable;
[ /s wte was well-educated, culfl tured. hai a gentle but firm way
e '"-th children.
"^ by. if anything should hap
pen to my wife and me,” spoke
f
HU
neighbour, Mr. Joseph
Bl
/I’d rather have the BaJ<e care of our three kids
iyone I know.”
s n-^ science professor at Western
J :'e?R'e . University, in Cleve■
??!<? that the judge was
f Adc:ea in his ideas about the
; i*015, ’7r,ere is 110 such thing,”
$ -t- ?ro^?sor said, “as a pure
s '.^‘a‘ "MG not anymore. Everys g'® *n
world is propbably of
'1 / sor- of mixture.”
. ^F'^^-Uient Jewish Rabbi and
(
volant church leader issued
: ./h/:-'' accusing the judge of
t i^/':‘? the Lord by saying He
J -V~3*~a keeping the
races
:
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 10. 1962
SUPPORT YOUR
U
TORONTO,. ONTARIO
Educational TV Series
Features Art of Origami
TORONTO. — Last Saturday, i also describes, whenever it is ap
October 6th, at 10 a.m. the Me- 1 propriate. Japanese history, nV
tropolitan Educational Television 1 and civilization. At the beginning
and end of each program, tho
outstanding 10
t series of theme music, a tea .intonal Japa
titled “Ori- nese air. is played on the koto,
childrens’ prog:
a stringed instrument by Miss
rami” in co-op'
Akiko Hirabayashi of Palo .Alto.
station CFTO. channel 9.
Canada’s increasing in California.
in the Orient, and partieuArtist Takahiko Mikami is the
appropriate director of the J n panose Art
Centre in San Francisco. He is a
devoted to tradition- graduate of Meiji University m
—in this case. Orign- Tokyo mnd of the National Aca
the art of paper folding. The demy Scheel of Fine Arts tn New
Takehiko York City. He has taught art in
on this
ami. who turns from brush Japan and in the United States
another delicate. and has Inui several one-man
TORONTO.—Give the greatest gift of all. Give HOPE
painting to
sparce and subtle form of art. shows in New York. Sun Fran
through your local United ^Appeal. S3 Metro agencies need
I origami. The basis for this art cisco and St. Louis.
$9,717,000 to stay open for another year. Lend your support:
i is a square piece of paper, which.
give generously.
On last Saturday's opening
without scissors or
program of the series, Mr. Mika
folded into all sort of shapes. mi explained a little of tho his
suggesting birds, fish animals tory of origami a word which
and to vs,—easy to mak and fun translated into English means
to play with. Mr. Makami devotes “to fold paper.” Origami is a
each program to one of the tra very’ popular aH. with children
subjects—boats.
fox, in japan, he explained because it
TOKYO.—An appalling num tunate outcome of an undesir ditional
crane,
balloon
—
and
demostrates
is easy, requires no special train
ber of juvenile deliquents are re able milieu or innate defectiveing and no special equipment.
gistering in official statistics neses in character.
Mr. Mikami domom trated how to
First of all, the lower the age
and causing widespread conster
fold a paper cup and then drew
nation. While' these figures, may bracket is, the larger is the ra
a picture of a horse drinking
lend themselves to Various inter tio of increase of deliquency. This
water out of the cup.
He ex
pretations, the situation is cer shift to the lower age came to
plained
ways
to
combine
origami
the
fore
about
1957,
but
it
has
tainly lamentable.
and brush painting. The second
During
1961,
a
total
ot been accelerated to late.
part of the program was a de
Let
TORONTO.
216,456 boys and girls were
The type of criminal offence
monstration of how to make a
English.
”
the
26-weck
series
of
brought to police attention be tends to be more vicious. Since
English lessons via television, paper handbag, call' d tesage in
cause of criminal offences. Some 19o5
of violence ineludin
of them were under 14 yeais of blackmail have increased three to which was presented on CBLT- Japanese.
Next week Mr. Mikami will
age, the lowest age-bracket in^the fourfold, and sexual crimes two TV. channel 6, last fall in Ontario
is being offered this fall to wes fold a paper house and then show
juvenile law of this countiy. The to threefold.
above total means that 10.5 out
Of the total of juvenile crimi- tern viewers of Calgary station, detailed model - of different kinds
After re
of every 1,000 juveniles commit nal offences in 1961, 53 per cent CHTC-TV. The series started on of Japanese houses.
peating
his
dom
;mst
ration
he
September
24.
was accounted for by pupils in
ted criminal offences.
will
introduce
Miss
Hirabayashi
Text-books
for
this
course
are
If the cases of traffic law vio various schools, another alarm
lation and preventive police at ing fact. If this percentage fi being made available through whoso playing of the koto pro
tention are included, the total gure arouses suspicion that more the joint efforts of the Canadaian vides the series with some very
comes to 1,748,5 /1 and the ration juveniles from better families | Broadcasting Corporation and the charming theme musi'’. Ho will
are being corrupted, the suspicion I Metropolitan Educational Tele explain how the koto is played,
83.1 out of every every 1,000.
vision Association of Toronto, something about its history' and
Since the Second World Mu, appears to be confirmed by. an- i with the assistance of the Citi then he will proeeed to fold a
juvenile delinquency has marked other set of statistics analyizing ; zenship Division, Ontario de musical instrument out of paper
an alarming increase and it can the family background of the de- partment of Provincial Secretary’ —a piano. At the end of the pro
not be dismissed as part of the hquents.
While competent authorities I and Citizenship, the Citizenship gram, Mr. Mikaiw will again
worthwhile trend.
The afore
Branch of the Federal Depart turn to the koto and show dif
mentioned 200,000 figure is about and experts are studying the st a- । ment of Citizenship and Immi ferent old drawings of the intrufour times as large as the pre tistics,- it may be noted even by i gration and Canadian Scene, the ment and explain hew it is con
casual observers that a general ।
war figure in Japan.
ethnic press news service,
structed.
No longer can juvenile delin
(Continued on Pane 8")
[ carefully how each is made. He
quency be regarded as an unfoi-
Juvenile Deliquency
Rises In Japan
“Let’s Speak English"
Now On Western TV
A Look
At Japan
Printing Industry Boom
30 per cent of its facilities. Bj
TOKYO.—Japan’s printing m- the end of the wai, 60 pei cent
dustrv is a typical example of the of the printing machines and
and
small and medium-size induMne> eouipment in Tokyo and 50 per
spread out widely and numei- ! cent in Osaka had been damaged.
ouslv across the nation s eco- I However, between 1946 and 1948,
The industry, in fact,
nomy
: a printing bo-m swept the counwith
roughly 12,000 en i tr.v. stimulating a rapid rehabiliswarms
terprises. of which only seven ! tation of the industry. As a reemploy more than 500 persons : suit, by 1948. as many as 14,000
In recent years, the aemaii I printing compames had been es
for printing has risen sharply an tablished throughout Japan. But
rapidly and the industry i, M I the boo'ii was snort-aved. Tne
joving the prosperous side ot ^e ’publishing business was hit by’ a
! recession" and the printing indusbusiness picture. It is no
ever, free of problems. L
I trv bore its brunt. By July 19.19
at the moment m the raids- oi< : nearly 2.000 firms had closed
fierce whirlwind oi competi'.io.i : their doors.
with ad its resultant d^oruers. i The maioritv of the surviving
A handful of the larger. pnn/hp Companies' ,about 12.000 can be
companies, however is ndtiM / i rvYified as small and medium
crest of the business boom vhich
ze enterprises. As a matter of
has been in existence xor
j
companies eirEoytime These companies are am-Ja
than 300 workers numbitiously pushing themselves mto
ith over 500,
14 and tho
new fields of special apphed
firms em]v seven.
printing and precision worn.
This situation is widening no
i= much as 40 per cent
ticeably the gap b^-een the>e ot tee
ye industry.
competition
large companies and i-x
To a
judge, who I have a of smaller printers.
lots the in
- =uspicion might be a
Size Of Companies Vary
dustrv wisely tooK a serie? ox
“ ‘ -- r. has stuck to his deWorld V uv II deprived the i measures which included volun(Continued on page 8)
of more than
printing indus
Ambassador Transfered
To Netherlands
OTTAWA. — The
Canadian
government announced this week
that Fredrick Bull, Canadian Am
bassador to Japan has boon trans
ferred to the Hague to succeed
the late C.P. HerN rl as ambas
sador to Hollami. The released
statement revealed that the ap
pointment has been made on Oct.
9
tary restrictions on the lowering
of printing rates, exploration of
new machines for new types of
While not all of the
printing.
printing companies followed these
measures, tangible- results were
achieved.
The existence of so many small
printing firms makes it difficult
to determine the exact amount of Angler Finally Finds
the industry’s total sales. .How
ever, the production of printing Fish With His Name
paper and ink helps indicate the
CHRISTINA LAKE.-—Isao Ki
trend ->f business in the industry shi of Christina Lake has been
as a whole.
The production of sure for a long, long time that
oi one of the big ones :n Christina
(exclrn
printing pape
increasing
newsprint) hai
Lake has his name cm it and re
remarkably
in
recent
years. cently proved the point by bring
Printing paper production reach- ing in a 14 lb 15 oz. trout. Like
ed 7 86.4 72 tons in 1959 , 884.368 al! true blue fishermen al! he
tons in 1960 and 1.024.036 tons said when asked where and how
in 1961.
Printing ink output he caught the fish was “some
amounted to 43,643 tons in 1959. where near the centre of the lake
in 1960 and 58,544 on a medium light tackle.”
51.409
tons : n 1961. Per capi
tion oi paper totaled 23.81
n 1955 and 46.51 k
TWO SHIPS
gram
1960.
]
MAIL TO JAPAN.—Two ships
t will soon be leaving Vancouver
Recent Developments
indu.- ! fm- Japan. They are on October
- J a panes., pnr
t 16—Mankato
Victor;
and cm
undergoing
has been
I October 23 — Phiibpine Correg;(Continued on page 8)
I gor.
Page 2
PAGE 2
Wednesday. Octobe,. u ■
4t
y
IX
1
P1
an
jm.
IX
S'
Q>
5
6
“p
UP
IX
Canada
Savings
Bon
0
CO
co
2
L
3
CO
7
4 E
f II
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Page 7
Wednesday.- October 10, 1962
PAGE 7
CANADIAN CITIES
Prince Rupert B. C
By T. H. WISER.
TORONTO.
—
(Canadian
<pe,ie)_ Five hundred miles west
^Vancouver, but almost cling;„ir to the southern tip of Alaska,
jF Prince Rupert; an all-year,
deer-water seaport of 11,000 peo
ple* As Northern B.C. rail out
let'to File Far East and astride
V S communications to its 49th
state, it could well be a great city
of the future.
Prince Rupert’s modern build
ings, in steps 3o0 feet up tlie rug
ged shoreline, overlook one of the
heltered harbors in the
fine
Ships loaded with fish,
world.
lumber and grain sail, outwardbound across the Pacific, to Asiatic markets.
Along the waterfront, between
docks and a huge grain 'elevator
lie it's fisheries; orginal source
of Prince Rupert’s existence.
Aside from flat fish cod, clamcamiinc fresh shrimp and crab
meat processing has the distinc
tion of ranking as the world’s
greatest halibut port. It’s huge
fleet of fishing boats lands 20,000,000 pounds a ye'ar.
Since 1947, when Celanese Cor
poration of America built a §27
million plant, employment has be
come more stabilized.
Also, a
sawmill was recently built on an
old dry dock site. These indus
tries together with grain storage
and The Grand Trunk Railway,
provide additional employment
for local citizens.
Prince Rupert boasts two theaires and, is proud of, its Civic
H8®llili«!llliilli8lllllll!IIIIIIB
See SUS NAGAI
Phone WA. 4-8427
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
Centre. Basketball,
swimin g , arts and eraft
sical education and other
keep the Centre all
Uty. Though once
town, city streets
ow
paved.
If you stopped a
Tab
tant and asked about television,
he would say: “We have none".
But he would quickly add: “We're
the only major centre which owns
its telephone system, and we
have mosquitos or flies.
Neat, Polite Girls, Visitor’s Main
Impression of Japanese Youth
By ALLAN FOTHERINGHAM ; cares.
l-rom the Van. Sun
TOKYO.—The British a-vra- - I've
I Of
ow
AkivV
-.he
r
; iu OV
r
: every
ew Br
I
*
$
returned from
rhe
Mt
wa
The
fflffllllillillMIWIIIilW
tiuonce
compulsory retirement age is now
60; in some large industries such
as Japanese National Railways,
Sccarb@r@ Terrace
Famous Chinese Foods
1994 Lawrence Avenue East
(near Warden Ave. at Colony Plaza)
SOMETIMES YOU GET ONLY ONE CHANCE—
—to put aside vour pride and say, humbly, “I was wrong.”
—to explain a misunderstanding that, if ignored, would sour
a friendship.
—to hear what a child very much needs to tell you.
—io defend a person when slighting rernarks are being made
against him.
__ to accept a shy but sincere- offer of friendship.
__ to stand up and be counted when you don't agree with the
crowd.
Winnipeg
^S^'S
1500 Dundas (at Dufforin)—IE. 2-4267
WALES and DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
ning within this present century. bedion
COR o overthrow
On May 17th, 1906, a party of government.
The
Buddha
engineers landed from the steam
One gets the s
into the
er “Constance” to chop out a
h
mclearing and survey the townsite. towards a differed
and
a
different,
ag
In a year a. hundred and fifty
in a nation who;
lie gms. who earn anour ;>.->(>
people were in homes along the
mmn
month,
can be seen by construcwater’s edge. By the time Prince
impression is
tion
at
the
Rupert's population had reached
; of Japan.
t o re y department
lion of a :
4,000, the General Manager of the of all of the
16-21.
R
aihv
Grand Trunk Pacific "
They infos
place.
T
tacked atop
taurants
Mr. C. M. Hays, decided the town overun it.
.there you
and
that
will cater
anothe
was -destined to become the Van they pop up. invariably neat, ii
to
the
young
girl,
couver of the north with 100variably polite and cheerful, whit
seen
bv
the
vouih.ful
It
can
be
000 population. So he made
bobby-sox rolled to their ankle
Prince Rupert the western terwhite gloves, pert little tarns or
o the title of the
minus of his railroad. Mr. Hays
caps perched on their fashionable world's busie t thoroughfare. The
was an ardent booster for B.G.,
Ginza cuts a loud splash down
but he died in the Titanic disa
They ypify the
tofn Tokvo and S the <
ster in 1912.
tic face of Japan and they
Japan's uddonlv
Prince Rupert hit an all-time one of the main
whv
S
^l^551™ 01
dooming country is such a de
(as elder
The eld
Thirties. .However, when 'var i ]ightfuf spot for tourists,
broke orum 19o9 the town pros“Tbe
^rls stand at the
with alarm) doesn\
pered and grew. It soon became । bofctom of e^alators .in depart : at
think much of the Ginza. The Jaa sub-port for embarkation of ; ment stores {o bow {o
American military supplies and i tomer on Ws wav up to the men's ■ panose editor of a small Englishits population swelled to 2; .0000 undershirts.
i crazy teen-agers.
I hear them
people.
War ended and Prince
01
They bring you
;
say
that
if
they
don
’t walk down
Rupert, once again, became al- ginger ale when you sit down in
;
the
Ginza
once
a
day
they get a
most deserted.
a bank to commiserate with your I headache. I get a headache just
Today, with a new airport on bank balance.
Everywhere you
nearby
Digby
Island, paved turn in a hotel they are there, as ; thinking of the Ginza.
‘■'Japan's young' people. Um
highway 16 to the interior and waitresses, elevator girls, reafraid,
arc discarding many of
increased U.S. trade to Alaska, captionists, cleaning girls.
ings of the East in
Prince Rupert looks forward to a
They wait on you in railway favor of
i many of the bad
bright future; as the Gateway to buffet cars.
They are on the
of the West
the Pacific Northwest and, per platform to bow to you as you
haps, a great city of the future.
They are the efficient
alight,
little conductors on wery bus. i Government Authorizes
in barber : Change In Union Name i
are over
shops.
I TORONTO.—The
change of I
PAUL Y. TOKIWA
When you stop m a restaurant
or a bar, they are at- your elbow, 1 name, of the Kisaragi (Toronto)
shyly preferring the most civiliz ■ Credit. Union Limited to Japanese
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
ing idea in travel—a warm face- ’Canadian (Toronto) Credit Union
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
authorized
Li m i ted was
...... —
------ ------ bv the
cloth to wash away the city's ix/iumvu
Bus. JA. 8-1186
John S. Millar
world
’
s
i
Ontario
government
on Oct 1st.
grime and the outside
Res. FU. 3-3545
Suite 600
15 King St. W.
| Hamilton, Ont.
FISHING TACKLE
It is a coca policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Tre; d on th
hotel has ISO room
. T1
n residence JO vouu
I
■ It
os ot .
ed up .
*
just
Ol/ 1TFO
MA
I Ed
46-1 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
LE. 2-6378
Toronto
—
FIRE
We cater to Banquets. Parties and
Fast Take-Out Orders — Free Delivery
CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO-OP
consult
KIYO TAM UK A
TORONTO
PL. 9-8317
Mrs. Gertrude Urabe
Crown Life
Insurance Co.
office: bO5 Eg'linlon Ave. W.
phone: HU. 1-6877
home: .11 Valentine Dr.
Don Mills, Ont.
phone
7-8905
JAPANESE ANDOCCIDENTAL FOODS
FREE PARKING AT
REAR OF STORE
fresh meat and fish
order Thurs. and Fri.
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
©
EM. 6-5711
FREE DELIVERY EVERYDAY
THE NEW CANADIAN
.o:
sna tor payment of postage in cash.
,e Pest
For Complete
Real Estate Service
Call
TOSH IWAI
Real Estate Broker
Bus. 755-7371
Res. PL. 7-7578
48 GALBRAITH AVE.
TORONTO REAL ESTATE
BOARD PHOTO CO-OP
R. Kinoshita
Representative
TORONTO
Tel: EM. 4-1314
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each wee'
as a medium of expressio-n and news outle
among those of Japanese origin in Canaan
T UMEZUKI, Publisher
RICK MATSUMOTO_______________________ English E _
HEN MORI________ Japanese Section Editor & Adverta^
EM. 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W., TORONTO 2-B, ONTARI
INSURANCE
I
.5
Should you buy your child a
Life Insurance policy?
There are many worthwhile benefits when a child has a
policy of his (or her) very own. It has the lifetime
advantage of a low premium rate. It encourages thrift
and lays~the foundation for a growing personal estate.
But a note of caution—there arc more important
questions to answer first. Have you, the father, ade
quate insurance on your own lite? Is there enough to
guarantee the family their food, clothing, shelter and
education requirements for as long as its needed?
If you would like competent guidance on this problem
the Man from Manufacturers is a good man to talk to.
He'll put first things first—help you establish objectives
for all-round family security. He'll give you a realistic
plan for the future that will take the “hit and miss" out
of buying life insurance. Why not call him today!
LIFE
INSURANCE
Phone: 755-2206
Bring The Entire Family
Dine At Our Modern Dinning Room
—
ALL FORMS
OF
C O M P A N
PAGE 7
CANADIAN CITIES
Prince Rupert B. C
By T. H. WISER.
TORONTO.
—
(Canadian
<pe,ie)_ Five hundred miles west
^Vancouver, but almost cling;„ir to the southern tip of Alaska,
jF Prince Rupert; an all-year,
deer-water seaport of 11,000 peo
ple* As Northern B.C. rail out
let'to File Far East and astride
V S communications to its 49th
state, it could well be a great city
of the future.
Prince Rupert’s modern build
ings, in steps 3o0 feet up tlie rug
ged shoreline, overlook one of the
heltered harbors in the
fine
Ships loaded with fish,
world.
lumber and grain sail, outwardbound across the Pacific, to Asiatic markets.
Along the waterfront, between
docks and a huge grain 'elevator
lie it's fisheries; orginal source
of Prince Rupert’s existence.
Aside from flat fish cod, clamcamiinc fresh shrimp and crab
meat processing has the distinc
tion of ranking as the world’s
greatest halibut port. It’s huge
fleet of fishing boats lands 20,000,000 pounds a ye'ar.
Since 1947, when Celanese Cor
poration of America built a §27
million plant, employment has be
come more stabilized.
Also, a
sawmill was recently built on an
old dry dock site. These indus
tries together with grain storage
and The Grand Trunk Railway,
provide additional employment
for local citizens.
Prince Rupert boasts two theaires and, is proud of, its Civic
H8®llili«!llliilli8lllllll!IIIIIIB
See SUS NAGAI
Phone WA. 4-8427
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
Centre. Basketball,
swimin g , arts and eraft
sical education and other
keep the Centre all
Uty. Though once
town, city streets
ow
paved.
If you stopped a
Tab
tant and asked about television,
he would say: “We have none".
But he would quickly add: “We're
the only major centre which owns
its telephone system, and we
have mosquitos or flies.
Neat, Polite Girls, Visitor’s Main
Impression of Japanese Youth
By ALLAN FOTHERINGHAM ; cares.
l-rom the Van. Sun
TOKYO.—The British a-vra- - I've
I Of
ow
AkivV
-.he
r
; iu OV
r
: every
ew Br
I
*
$
returned from
rhe
Mt
wa
The
fflffllllillillMIWIIIilW
tiuonce
compulsory retirement age is now
60; in some large industries such
as Japanese National Railways,
Sccarb@r@ Terrace
Famous Chinese Foods
1994 Lawrence Avenue East
(near Warden Ave. at Colony Plaza)
SOMETIMES YOU GET ONLY ONE CHANCE—
—to put aside vour pride and say, humbly, “I was wrong.”
—to explain a misunderstanding that, if ignored, would sour
a friendship.
—to hear what a child very much needs to tell you.
—io defend a person when slighting rernarks are being made
against him.
__ to accept a shy but sincere- offer of friendship.
__ to stand up and be counted when you don't agree with the
crowd.
Winnipeg
^S^'S
1500 Dundas (at Dufforin)—IE. 2-4267
WALES and DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
ning within this present century. bedion
COR o overthrow
On May 17th, 1906, a party of government.
The
Buddha
engineers landed from the steam
One gets the s
into the
er “Constance” to chop out a
h
mclearing and survey the townsite. towards a differed
and
a
different,
ag
In a year a. hundred and fifty
in a nation who;
lie gms. who earn anour ;>.->(>
people were in homes along the
mmn
month,
can be seen by construcwater’s edge. By the time Prince
impression is
tion
at
the
Rupert's population had reached
; of Japan.
t o re y department
lion of a :
4,000, the General Manager of the of all of the
16-21.
R
aihv
Grand Trunk Pacific "
They infos
place.
T
tacked atop
taurants
Mr. C. M. Hays, decided the town overun it.
.there you
and
that
will cater
anothe
was -destined to become the Van they pop up. invariably neat, ii
to
the
young
girl,
couver of the north with 100variably polite and cheerful, whit
seen
bv
the
vouih.ful
It
can
be
000 population. So he made
bobby-sox rolled to their ankle
Prince Rupert the western terwhite gloves, pert little tarns or
o the title of the
minus of his railroad. Mr. Hays
caps perched on their fashionable world's busie t thoroughfare. The
was an ardent booster for B.G.,
Ginza cuts a loud splash down
but he died in the Titanic disa
They ypify the
tofn Tokvo and S the <
ster in 1912.
tic face of Japan and they
Japan's uddonlv
Prince Rupert hit an all-time one of the main
whv
S
^l^551™ 01
dooming country is such a de
(as elder
The eld
Thirties. .However, when 'var i ]ightfuf spot for tourists,
broke orum 19o9 the town pros“Tbe
^rls stand at the
with alarm) doesn\
pered and grew. It soon became । bofctom of e^alators .in depart : at
think much of the Ginza. The Jaa sub-port for embarkation of ; ment stores {o bow {o
American military supplies and i tomer on Ws wav up to the men's ■ panose editor of a small Englishits population swelled to 2; .0000 undershirts.
i crazy teen-agers.
I hear them
people.
War ended and Prince
01
They bring you
;
say
that
if
they
don
’t walk down
Rupert, once again, became al- ginger ale when you sit down in
;
the
Ginza
once
a
day
they get a
most deserted.
a bank to commiserate with your I headache. I get a headache just
Today, with a new airport on bank balance.
Everywhere you
nearby
Digby
Island, paved turn in a hotel they are there, as ; thinking of the Ginza.
‘■'Japan's young' people. Um
highway 16 to the interior and waitresses, elevator girls, reafraid,
arc discarding many of
increased U.S. trade to Alaska, captionists, cleaning girls.
ings of the East in
Prince Rupert looks forward to a
They wait on you in railway favor of
i many of the bad
bright future; as the Gateway to buffet cars.
They are on the
of the West
the Pacific Northwest and, per platform to bow to you as you
haps, a great city of the future.
They are the efficient
alight,
little conductors on wery bus. i Government Authorizes
in barber : Change In Union Name i
are over
shops.
I TORONTO.—The
change of I
PAUL Y. TOKIWA
When you stop m a restaurant
or a bar, they are at- your elbow, 1 name, of the Kisaragi (Toronto)
shyly preferring the most civiliz ■ Credit. Union Limited to Japanese
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
ing idea in travel—a warm face- ’Canadian (Toronto) Credit Union
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
authorized
Li m i ted was
...... —
------ ------ bv the
cloth to wash away the city's ix/iumvu
Bus. JA. 8-1186
John S. Millar
world
’
s
i
Ontario
government
on Oct 1st.
grime and the outside
Res. FU. 3-3545
Suite 600
15 King St. W.
| Hamilton, Ont.
FISHING TACKLE
It is a coca policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Tre; d on th
hotel has ISO room
. T1
n residence JO vouu
I
■ It
os ot .
ed up .
*
just
Ol/ 1TFO
MA
I Ed
46-1 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
LE. 2-6378
Toronto
—
FIRE
We cater to Banquets. Parties and
Fast Take-Out Orders — Free Delivery
CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO-OP
consult
KIYO TAM UK A
TORONTO
PL. 9-8317
Mrs. Gertrude Urabe
Crown Life
Insurance Co.
office: bO5 Eg'linlon Ave. W.
phone: HU. 1-6877
home: .11 Valentine Dr.
Don Mills, Ont.
phone
7-8905
JAPANESE ANDOCCIDENTAL FOODS
FREE PARKING AT
REAR OF STORE
fresh meat and fish
order Thurs. and Fri.
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
©
EM. 6-5711
FREE DELIVERY EVERYDAY
THE NEW CANADIAN
.o:
sna tor payment of postage in cash.
,e Pest
For Complete
Real Estate Service
Call
TOSH IWAI
Real Estate Broker
Bus. 755-7371
Res. PL. 7-7578
48 GALBRAITH AVE.
TORONTO REAL ESTATE
BOARD PHOTO CO-OP
R. Kinoshita
Representative
TORONTO
Tel: EM. 4-1314
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each wee'
as a medium of expressio-n and news outle
among those of Japanese origin in Canaan
T UMEZUKI, Publisher
RICK MATSUMOTO_______________________ English E _
HEN MORI________ Japanese Section Editor & Adverta^
EM. 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W., TORONTO 2-B, ONTARI
INSURANCE
I
.5
Should you buy your child a
Life Insurance policy?
There are many worthwhile benefits when a child has a
policy of his (or her) very own. It has the lifetime
advantage of a low premium rate. It encourages thrift
and lays~the foundation for a growing personal estate.
But a note of caution—there arc more important
questions to answer first. Have you, the father, ade
quate insurance on your own lite? Is there enough to
guarantee the family their food, clothing, shelter and
education requirements for as long as its needed?
If you would like competent guidance on this problem
the Man from Manufacturers is a good man to talk to.
He'll put first things first—help you establish objectives
for all-round family security. He'll give you a realistic
plan for the future that will take the “hit and miss" out
of buying life insurance. Why not call him today!
LIFE
INSURANCE
Phone: 755-2206
Bring The Entire Family
Dine At Our Modern Dinning Room
—
ALL FORMS
OF
C O M P A N
Page 8
PAGE 8
i^feActobe,. iOj „-
She’s Not Your Idea Of A
tok^S31 JaPanese Woman
Printing Industry Boom. . . .
(Continued from Page One^
epoch-making development in the J ing the world’s best techniques
processing industry ;n
LearS anr t n°F in ^ lTodaW the Japanese printing in- natation of packagingA
°^te"ftalas a woman and I want to make ppotli^ht as
one of Japans most j dustrv, whose technical comuenese grandmother who had Mbecome possible to
~
ItenC^ F TH^btN respected abroad,
p™t” fe;
leady made a success of carA
careers J™”? ha»!’ tltfough legislaor
film
records.
Su
,A e
” achieve- , is receiving an increasing numin business and television jumped
a .J1^ Potential in - nenis hU
ment* is the aggressive technical j ber of orders
Miss
Nakimigawa
took
the
pofrom the United with the rapidly ^A Y
into politics this summer and was
taition as president and chief of innovations that has been insti- i States as well as from many
a hit right from the start
mands in the field °
— beauty department of th"
tilted in the postwar years. These Asian countries.
j
the
the first election- metic
music recording
company in 1955, after she ;
~Seen
by developing
The industry is not content to language training
n-. wer hfe, twice-divorced Aki was
seuaraind frA^ vk„t.:. A., idomeaiic technology' and facili
as separated from Yoshie Fu
Aakimigawa was elected to the
stay,
within the realm of the con mg books-a coitaiS a^
one of Japan’s best- ties and through actively adopt- ventional definition of what con and records—have ir^ /.'^
SFate With a rec<>rd ijivara,
'
xnown opera singers. The mar
1,16o,800 votes.
stitutes “printing.’’ Rather it has but. The production of nX^
riage
was dissolved the followNakimigawa contradicts
started printing on building ma- motors has been started aS?
just about every Western belief mg year.
t(Y!als ,and F now capable of ticolor printing on tap
•
The daughter of a Japanese
about Japanese women—usually
’ direct” printing on virtually any of polyethylene
continued
from
page
one
business
executive,
Miss
Nakimi“f®1 V . ’““t submissive
type of substance: plastics,*lum tubes has been achieved
cieatuies living m their hus- igawa was first married, at 16 Cisi°nAThe- takers and the Child ber, hardboards, gypsium and
In parallel with such divert
to an oculist three months after ren s Service have appealed to a
band s shadows.
even sheet iron. The inebistry’s
cation
in production, the nrhA’
„Shc ls best known to millions * t
higher
court.
But
they
aren
’
t
exfrom high school.
„
inventiveness
has
developed industry has been staMn?^
of Japanese as the star of My r r J A aYter divorcing her Pected to win. An Ohio law gi
gives platemiaking techniques
to
a Prove, its tradition al prinS
" in adop
thTu’version of tirst husband, she set out alone Probate broad auth ority
uoint where it is now possible to techniques
—in photogram^ J
W television panel game tor Italy to marry Fujiwara, who tion cases.
J them to the manufacture
was singing there.
What’s My Line.
set
printing,
type printing,’ “
AND SO the word “Jap” con . shadow masks for color tele
etc,
She lived in Italy for four tinues in print. Some mean well vision. The industry is also en
Heads Charm School
llas introduced su
vnShe
the show ear]ier this yeans and accompanied her hus- and others not so well.
gaged in the production of tran pet-high speed, multi-color reTrn
j
n
A°
Urs
of
Eur
°Pe
and
the
R™S /WEEK’S JAPANESE sistor masks and the world’s best fpY presses together with smali Seven Fears as a panel
?tateS’ helping him col
embei but is still carrying on
Japan Quest—(an illus- metal filters for centrifugal se lei, punting machines of hUh
ficiency.
Plate-making
as president of a charm school lect funds to support his opera tiated opinion of modern Japa parators.
had
depended
up0!™
a leading Japanese cos
nese life)—photos and text bv
The printing industry has made nual work, has-largely
She was 65 in August and hass Jacqueline Paul, published by
been dS
metics company which has 5 000
eight grandchildren.
stores throughout the country.
Charles E. Tuttle Co.. Rutland, valuable contributions to tire .mechanized. With the aid of J
Would
she
marry
again,
postwar development of the food- tionics, the industry will under
Asked what she wants to do
v ermont and Tokyo, Japan.
I
may
sound
heretical
’
in
J
as a politician, Miss NakimtaaJa. Many Isseis return from a vi
revoluE
she says, “but I would do
YLjLEW2JLW^
enough pan
in the near future.
sit
to
Japan
disillusioned
and
disso if I could find the right man ”
With Japan’s printing indue
^FFked on not finding the land
^ t,'1’ birth as they remember
try, it has been the lar% con™
• 1Je PlctlTres and captions in
;XS WS haLe ]aund1^into th
| tins book, Japan Quest, attempts
new ~ fields of electronics ^1
NEW YORK.—Major comma i c
T
8 to explain and show the tremenspecial printing. The small c^.
Female Help Wanted
nents of a secret Japanese auto" Saco-Eowe11 Shops, said the new o-ous change and upheaval in the
pames are
w
admittedly
lagging
COUNTER-clerk for dry cleaning plant
mated spinning system
were SyStem represents “the most im- customs and thinking of this new S.^?^ -Ploy-nF Phone behind in rati o n a 1 i z i n g and di
Japan.
versifying
Cii-P? or aU t^r^n Airways ^^nt advance in the textile inmanagement, thin
Gaigo Clipper from Tokyo to San [dustry
’
’ more than 75 years.”
resulting
Instead of adopting the usual I grocery store reamr^
1
in
u In an ever "’idenin?
PIOS'31C approach of emphasizing Davisville IGA Phone nd^s 6821
t gap between them and their
UwnMSCQi f°r delivery to SacoLovell Shops, a subsidiary of h Mr- Lowell and another execu- the obvious and superficial dif- Aokl- ev®™ng. RO. 7-8964 (Toronto1) " larger competitors.
ve of Saco-Lawell are the only terences between Japanese cus^i rJR---- XT------------ —
1 ^l01110^ Corps., Chicago.'
^ale Help Wanted
19-ton transpacific freight Americans who have ever seen toms and those of the West, phoshipment was forwarded to the the contmous automated spinnino- tographer Jacqueline Paul comes ta^ESE*^^
------system, which has been kept °a Revo? ^b^6 york"a-day, street R|°^
BA.
1-2145,
Mr.
Kinoshita
general
St1?11'
centre of strict secret.
level m her attempts to portray -mEL^M--_____
Where ^ 'vin be mo| contemporary Japan.
'
Remodeling
\ ° -nieet speciaI needs of
Die American textile industry.
, Deliquents. . . •
Her camera vividly captures, w' (A-Sr to 332 Rlchm°"d st:
Contractors
Saco-Lowell has signed a licenamong other things, the smoke
<
SPECIALIZING IN REMODELLING
a™10SPhere Of Japan’s ETER on Adies' knitted sportswear,
(Continued from page one)
witih Toyobo-HoPIAFS'45 AND kitchens
tal
‘ E "Steering- Comnanv
nightclubs; the anxiety of univer- Knitwear TPeFY ' a App!y Holiddy I; PL
^mTET^G COMPLETE ROOMS
Japan t0 P^uce’and tendency to moral laxity or at sity students awaiting the all- 6-2724 (Toronto)Padina Ave' Phone EM- (CEILINGS, ARCHWAYS, ETC.
A»,S
SyStem “ N°rth tachment to material ’ wealth important examination results ”
seems responsible. Otherwise it that may govern their future; the
Domestic Help Wanted
Riley & Sons
------ 7-------- 2--------W blank Lowell, president of is hard to explain why the bovs 'Cr°pyeA streets of Tokyo; the |
live i„ Ce„.
’fTSn? the supposedly conflict between the old and .lev ?™“
rFFGISTERED CONTRACTORS
healthy middle class are fal generations; the confusion of (Toronto?
ESTABLISHED OVER 40 YEARS
* 10' The New Canadian
ling to delinquency.
? and Western cultures “
OX. 9-1561 —Anytime i
Child Care* Available
J i”termingling; and the |
a ready pointed
"WE"!=,MmMS!*a®"O*WOBIBn«WMB»M«J
1
&
DUFFERlE
dA
or
> young—rock’n’roll,
out that the recent increase in eridob Of
jdebunis,
Mohawk
hair
cuts,
and
Y A Care o{ children available in niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiiimin
juvenile larceny is attribuatable
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
good home. Phone ‘757-0450 (Toronto)
tof ewness to enjoy amenities motorcycles.
NOTARY public
of life rather than to poverty It
Jacqueline Paul admits that
Rooms To Let
Offico Hours Saturday
Si""?
1 realize the extent of
tins conclusion is justified, it
October to April Inclusive
he
deuatm
of
the
old
and
new
^°U
to reflect also upon
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
the adult mentality, athough the [ in Japan, as she is not thoroumhSuite 513 Temple Building
number of adult crimes in the
J-szaz (Toronto)
With the county’s
TORONTO
same period did not increase.
I past traditions. She shows it'in three room firr+ rm • f—■—
EM. 6-3323
—
Ros: Ro 7.3427
g
d Y^' chi‘dren Relcom? Dm
(From The Japan Times Weekly) life TWS °"JaPanese married
TORONTO
i a Astern Caucausian ronto)and °neS' Ph°ne HO‘ 3-6989 (Ton^r^- she ^prejudiced and svmF07' the very best in
pathetic toward the Japanese
I
wedding casuals. . .
Bini au^ her comments on the
% I f^dom of the Japanese husband
I F07’ those who wish io
^iaie tinged with bias.
I treasure the present in
M .
^on^rful study for anv
the future
11 amateur photographer.
Sp!s\^nted' ful1 or pari
Vc
Casey’s Comer . .
I
MOAO niKAIDO
TYPIST WANTED
FIRST ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL SALE
ntact JC Centre office, RU. 9-2462
evenings RO. 3-3487.
g 11 A-l brick, cement and roofing
work. Complete repairs to the
home. Phone OX. 4-7548.
Scar boro, Ont
PHONE: 261-7040
FOR WORRY-FreE TRAVEL
ARRANGEMENTS
By Air. Sea and Land
HOLMES ROOFING
TAR and Gravel
Eavestroughs
hurry before enrollments
are closed. Next class will not
start until Sept. 1963.
and
Call
Furuya Travel Service
363 ^DJNA_AVE, TORONTO 2-B. ONT
new and
Repair work
Estirnates
AM. 5-8446
71 Tansley Avenue
Scarboro, Ontario
LAST
CALL
TORONTO
Kennedy Road
1.4
are
ant
to 1
Pre
The
to '
Fih
ben
or
th"
1.->D
pin
shj
adv
Pa
T
ask
pan
fore
.
T
PIS:
196
fore
h
mei
said
put
pan
subs
mill
It
that
flag
thai
deft
fore
m or
men
J.
sho i
avia
line,
peri
We
Fie
com
bad
the
t:
2136 Garrard St. East
SAND OWN MARKET
’
JiiiininiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiHiniiiiiiiin
Wm. Goldfinch
kazunoko for new year-
a v
mei
pan
Soc
CLASSIFIED
Secret Japanese Spinniog Macliine Flown to U.S
KICK SHOYU and MANY OTHER JAPANESE
j
cati
Chick Sexing School
Home Office: 214 Line St.,
Lansdale, Pa. •
s. John Nitta, Gen. Mar.
Branca School: Harry Nishino,
j
Director
25u0 Delta Ave., Lona Beach,
Calif.
join
tied
pool
proc
non
Fra:
poin
thro
said
yea
Eir
En
r.i. s
neat
194.
the
Ux
E'
to }
Old '
i^feActobe,. iOj „-
She’s Not Your Idea Of A
tok^S31 JaPanese Woman
Printing Industry Boom. . . .
(Continued from Page One^
epoch-making development in the J ing the world’s best techniques
processing industry ;n
LearS anr t n°F in ^ lTodaW the Japanese printing in- natation of packagingA
°^te"ftalas a woman and I want to make ppotli^ht as
one of Japans most j dustrv, whose technical comuenese grandmother who had Mbecome possible to
~
ItenC^ F TH^btN respected abroad,
p™t” fe;
leady made a success of carA
careers J™”? ha»!’ tltfough legislaor
film
records.
Su
,A e
” achieve- , is receiving an increasing numin business and television jumped
a .J1^ Potential in - nenis hU
ment* is the aggressive technical j ber of orders
Miss
Nakimigawa
took
the
pofrom the United with the rapidly ^A Y
into politics this summer and was
taition as president and chief of innovations that has been insti- i States as well as from many
a hit right from the start
mands in the field °
— beauty department of th"
tilted in the postwar years. These Asian countries.
j
the
the first election- metic
music recording
company in 1955, after she ;
~Seen
by developing
The industry is not content to language training
n-. wer hfe, twice-divorced Aki was
seuaraind frA^ vk„t.:. A., idomeaiic technology' and facili
as separated from Yoshie Fu
Aakimigawa was elected to the
stay,
within the realm of the con mg books-a coitaiS a^
one of Japan’s best- ties and through actively adopt- ventional definition of what con and records—have ir^ /.'^
SFate With a rec<>rd ijivara,
'
xnown opera singers. The mar
1,16o,800 votes.
stitutes “printing.’’ Rather it has but. The production of nX^
riage
was dissolved the followNakimigawa contradicts
started printing on building ma- motors has been started aS?
just about every Western belief mg year.
t(Y!als ,and F now capable of ticolor printing on tap
•
The daughter of a Japanese
about Japanese women—usually
’ direct” printing on virtually any of polyethylene
continued
from
page
one
business
executive,
Miss
Nakimi“f®1 V . ’““t submissive
type of substance: plastics,*lum tubes has been achieved
cieatuies living m their hus- igawa was first married, at 16 Cisi°nAThe- takers and the Child ber, hardboards, gypsium and
In parallel with such divert
to an oculist three months after ren s Service have appealed to a
band s shadows.
even sheet iron. The inebistry’s
cation
in production, the nrhA’
„Shc ls best known to millions * t
higher
court.
But
they
aren
’
t
exfrom high school.
„
inventiveness
has
developed industry has been staMn?^
of Japanese as the star of My r r J A aYter divorcing her Pected to win. An Ohio law gi
gives platemiaking techniques
to
a Prove, its tradition al prinS
" in adop
thTu’version of tirst husband, she set out alone Probate broad auth ority
uoint where it is now possible to techniques
—in photogram^ J
W television panel game tor Italy to marry Fujiwara, who tion cases.
J them to the manufacture
was singing there.
What’s My Line.
set
printing,
type printing,’ “
AND SO the word “Jap” con . shadow masks for color tele
etc,
She lived in Italy for four tinues in print. Some mean well vision. The industry is also en
Heads Charm School
llas introduced su
vnShe
the show ear]ier this yeans and accompanied her hus- and others not so well.
gaged in the production of tran pet-high speed, multi-color reTrn
j
n
A°
Urs
of
Eur
°Pe
and
the
R™S /WEEK’S JAPANESE sistor masks and the world’s best fpY presses together with smali Seven Fears as a panel
?tateS’ helping him col
embei but is still carrying on
Japan Quest—(an illus- metal filters for centrifugal se lei, punting machines of hUh
ficiency.
Plate-making
as president of a charm school lect funds to support his opera tiated opinion of modern Japa parators.
had
depended
up0!™
a leading Japanese cos
nese life)—photos and text bv
The printing industry has made nual work, has-largely
She was 65 in August and hass Jacqueline Paul, published by
been dS
metics company which has 5 000
eight grandchildren.
stores throughout the country.
Charles E. Tuttle Co.. Rutland, valuable contributions to tire .mechanized. With the aid of J
Would
she
marry
again,
postwar development of the food- tionics, the industry will under
Asked what she wants to do
v ermont and Tokyo, Japan.
I
may
sound
heretical
’
in
J
as a politician, Miss NakimtaaJa. Many Isseis return from a vi
revoluE
she says, “but I would do
YLjLEW2JLW^
enough pan
in the near future.
sit
to
Japan
disillusioned
and
disso if I could find the right man ”
With Japan’s printing indue
^FFked on not finding the land
^ t,'1’ birth as they remember
try, it has been the lar% con™
• 1Je PlctlTres and captions in
;XS WS haLe ]aund1^into th
| tins book, Japan Quest, attempts
new ~ fields of electronics ^1
NEW YORK.—Major comma i c
T
8 to explain and show the tremenspecial printing. The small c^.
Female Help Wanted
nents of a secret Japanese auto" Saco-Eowe11 Shops, said the new o-ous change and upheaval in the
pames are
w
admittedly
lagging
COUNTER-clerk for dry cleaning plant
mated spinning system
were SyStem represents “the most im- customs and thinking of this new S.^?^ -Ploy-nF Phone behind in rati o n a 1 i z i n g and di
Japan.
versifying
Cii-P? or aU t^r^n Airways ^^nt advance in the textile inmanagement, thin
Gaigo Clipper from Tokyo to San [dustry
’
’ more than 75 years.”
resulting
Instead of adopting the usual I grocery store reamr^
1
in
u In an ever "’idenin?
PIOS'31C approach of emphasizing Davisville IGA Phone nd^s 6821
t gap between them and their
UwnMSCQi f°r delivery to SacoLovell Shops, a subsidiary of h Mr- Lowell and another execu- the obvious and superficial dif- Aokl- ev®™ng. RO. 7-8964 (Toronto1) " larger competitors.
ve of Saco-Lawell are the only terences between Japanese cus^i rJR---- XT------------ —
1 ^l01110^ Corps., Chicago.'
^ale Help Wanted
19-ton transpacific freight Americans who have ever seen toms and those of the West, phoshipment was forwarded to the the contmous automated spinnino- tographer Jacqueline Paul comes ta^ESE*^^
------system, which has been kept °a Revo? ^b^6 york"a-day, street R|°^
BA.
1-2145,
Mr.
Kinoshita
general
St1?11'
centre of strict secret.
level m her attempts to portray -mEL^M--_____
Where ^ 'vin be mo| contemporary Japan.
'
Remodeling
\ ° -nieet speciaI needs of
Die American textile industry.
, Deliquents. . . •
Her camera vividly captures, w' (A-Sr to 332 Rlchm°"d st:
Contractors
Saco-Lowell has signed a licenamong other things, the smoke
<
SPECIALIZING IN REMODELLING
a™10SPhere Of Japan’s ETER on Adies' knitted sportswear,
(Continued from page one)
witih Toyobo-HoPIAFS'45 AND kitchens
tal
‘ E "Steering- Comnanv
nightclubs; the anxiety of univer- Knitwear TPeFY ' a App!y Holiddy I; PL
^mTET^G COMPLETE ROOMS
Japan t0 P^uce’and tendency to moral laxity or at sity students awaiting the all- 6-2724 (Toronto)Padina Ave' Phone EM- (CEILINGS, ARCHWAYS, ETC.
A»,S
SyStem “ N°rth tachment to material ’ wealth important examination results ”
seems responsible. Otherwise it that may govern their future; the
Domestic Help Wanted
Riley & Sons
------ 7-------- 2--------W blank Lowell, president of is hard to explain why the bovs 'Cr°pyeA streets of Tokyo; the |
live i„ Ce„.
’fTSn? the supposedly conflict between the old and .lev ?™“
rFFGISTERED CONTRACTORS
healthy middle class are fal generations; the confusion of (Toronto?
ESTABLISHED OVER 40 YEARS
* 10' The New Canadian
ling to delinquency.
? and Western cultures “
OX. 9-1561 —Anytime i
Child Care* Available
J i”termingling; and the |
a ready pointed
"WE"!=,MmMS!*a®"O*WOBIBn«WMB»M«J
1
&
DUFFERlE
dA
or
> young—rock’n’roll,
out that the recent increase in eridob Of
jdebunis,
Mohawk
hair
cuts,
and
Y A Care o{ children available in niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiiimin
juvenile larceny is attribuatable
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
good home. Phone ‘757-0450 (Toronto)
tof ewness to enjoy amenities motorcycles.
NOTARY public
of life rather than to poverty It
Jacqueline Paul admits that
Rooms To Let
Offico Hours Saturday
Si""?
1 realize the extent of
tins conclusion is justified, it
October to April Inclusive
he
deuatm
of
the
old
and
new
^°U
to reflect also upon
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
the adult mentality, athough the [ in Japan, as she is not thoroumhSuite 513 Temple Building
number of adult crimes in the
J-szaz (Toronto)
With the county’s
TORONTO
same period did not increase.
I past traditions. She shows it'in three room firr+ rm • f—■—
EM. 6-3323
—
Ros: Ro 7.3427
g
d Y^' chi‘dren Relcom? Dm
(From The Japan Times Weekly) life TWS °"JaPanese married
TORONTO
i a Astern Caucausian ronto)and °neS' Ph°ne HO‘ 3-6989 (Ton^r^- she ^prejudiced and svmF07' the very best in
pathetic toward the Japanese
I
wedding casuals. . .
Bini au^ her comments on the
% I f^dom of the Japanese husband
I F07’ those who wish io
^iaie tinged with bias.
I treasure the present in
M .
^on^rful study for anv
the future
11 amateur photographer.
Sp!s\^nted' ful1 or pari
Vc
Casey’s Comer . .
I
MOAO niKAIDO
TYPIST WANTED
FIRST ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL SALE
ntact JC Centre office, RU. 9-2462
evenings RO. 3-3487.
g 11 A-l brick, cement and roofing
work. Complete repairs to the
home. Phone OX. 4-7548.
Scar boro, Ont
PHONE: 261-7040
FOR WORRY-FreE TRAVEL
ARRANGEMENTS
By Air. Sea and Land
HOLMES ROOFING
TAR and Gravel
Eavestroughs
hurry before enrollments
are closed. Next class will not
start until Sept. 1963.
and
Call
Furuya Travel Service
363 ^DJNA_AVE, TORONTO 2-B. ONT
new and
Repair work
Estirnates
AM. 5-8446
71 Tansley Avenue
Scarboro, Ontario
LAST
CALL
TORONTO
Kennedy Road
1.4
are
ant
to 1
Pre
The
to '
Fih
ben
or
th"
1.->D
pin
shj
adv
Pa
T
ask
pan
fore
.
T
PIS:
196
fore
h
mei
said
put
pan
subs
mill
It
that
flag
thai
deft
fore
m or
men
J.
sho i
avia
line,
peri
We
Fie
com
bad
the
t:
2136 Garrard St. East
SAND OWN MARKET
’
JiiiininiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiHiniiiiiiiin
Wm. Goldfinch
kazunoko for new year-
a v
mei
pan
Soc
CLASSIFIED
Secret Japanese Spinniog Macliine Flown to U.S
KICK SHOYU and MANY OTHER JAPANESE
j
cati
Chick Sexing School
Home Office: 214 Line St.,
Lansdale, Pa. •
s. John Nitta, Gen. Mar.
Branca School: Harry Nishino,
j
Director
25u0 Delta Ave., Lona Beach,
Calif.
join
tied
pool
proc
non
Fra:
poin
thro
said
yea
Eir
En
r.i. s
neat
194.
the
Ux
E'
to }
Old '