Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
1. XXIX—No. 25
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1965
Toronto, Ont.
To Visit J.C. Cultural Centre
Civil Righters
Will Succeed
ip Hayakawa
SAN JOAQUIN, Calif. — Dr.
I. Hayakawa says the history
minority groups and the “logic
mass production and consumpn” are sufficient to assure
» success of the civil rights
wenient. >
Dr. Hayakawa, who was born
Vancouver, B.C., is a professor
English at the San Francisco
ite College and one of the
rld’s foremost authorities on
nantics. He spoke here at a
eeting. .
.
.
ji have a great deal of hope
or Negro revolution,” he told
is almost completely white
fidience. “The logic of mass
reduction and consumption and
*e technological
impossibility
! two separate cultures are the
ason.”
Dr. Hayakawa observed the
ie of communications in tripng human events and equated
levision’s influence on the civil
ghts movement with that of
.e invention of printing on the
^formation.
^“People often question the se
al disorganization of the. Negro
i comparison with that of o ther
inority groups,” he said. “The
>sition of the Negi’o is unique;
s own culture was destroyed
: slavery. He has no social or—
inization comparable for inance, to the Chinese. Cut off
om his past, all his ideals of
lues and prestige are supplied
' the white world which rejects
Miss Japan-Canada
Friendship Arrives
In Toronto Today
TORONTO.—Miss Hiroko Koba, the 23-year-old Japanese
schoolteacher, continues spreading charm across Canada living
up to her title of Miss Japan-Canada Friendship. She arrived in
। ,
. ।
। ! ■■ ! i 1 i < i i I ! I ' । ! Photo by Jack Hemmy
Toronto today at 1:30 p.m. from Ottawa and is staying- at the Royal
York.
Bi and Bi Commissioner Gertrude Laing
She will be at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre tonight
TORONTO.—Congratulations are extended to Mrs. Gertrude
at
6:30
p.m. to attend a reception held by the Ontario government
Laing of the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism
on her recent speech at the Toronto Japanese Canadian Citizens’ and a fur show sponsored by the Canada Mink Breeders. Miss Koba
Inaugural Banquet held here- recently. Extending thanks on behalf is expected to model some coats. At 7:30 p.m. a dinner will be held
of the groups are Mr. Edward Ide (centre) President of the Na there in her honor.
tional JCCA and Mr. George Imai (right) President of the Tor
On Thursday, Miss Koba and
onto JCCA.
her 12-member journalist entour
age will visit either the Ford Architect Yamasaki
Motor • Plant in Oakville or Recovering from Surgery
General Motors in Oshawa. On
DETROIT. — Noted Japanese
Friday they will visit Hamilton
and Niagara Falls. On Saturday American architect Minoru Yathe will tour Niagara Falls. Be masaki is reported recuperating
fore leaving Toronto for Edmon in Ford Hospital following a
ton on Sunday, April 4th, Miss stomach operation.
VICTORIA. — Many land de ments in Capilano Highlands.
The Seattle-born architect was
velopment schemes in B.C. con ■ They affect Jews, Asiatics, Canada Japan Friendship will be
feted at a reception at the home admitted Mar. 5 and was operat
tain racial discrimination clauses Orientals and Negroes, he said. of the Toronto Japanese Consul, ed on two days later. He is re
“You would be amazed when S. Saiki.
but they cannot be enforced, the
portedly “doing fine.”
you
start combing the land reg
B.C. legislature was told recently.
Last Sunday she was greeted
The subject was discussed as istry for documents of assign in Ottawa by a crowd estimated
MLAs gave third and final read ment and conveyances to find at over several hundred. Trade
ing to amendments which stream how many original promoters of Minister Mitchell Sharp present
TOKYO. — Japanese animal
ed her with a furry “Ookpik”, his
land have included on original department’s Eskimo symbol for lovers mourned the death last
line the Land Registry Act.
week of Ichimonji, the donkey
Gordon Dowding (NDP-Burna- grants restrictive covenants on Canadian goods.
with the gold-filled false teeth.
by) said there are restrictive those of non-Gaucasian blood
Miss Koba’s 3-week tour, spon Ichimonji, a veteran of Japan’s
It is significant that so many covenants preventing people of from being purchasers of land,” sored by the Canadian Dept, of war on China in 1937, died at
Trade and Commerce, is aimed 30 of old age. Tokyo Medical
'ung people are at the heart of some faces from buying land in said Dowding, a lawyer.
ie demonstrations ... It is be- Shaughnessy Heights, University
“It is a disgrace no one does at improving trade relations be University experts last year fit
iuse they know from the friend- of B.C. endowment land's, British something about this publicly,” tween Canada and Japan.
ted Ichimonji with a $2,000 set
television^ that ‘.you are an
of
gold-filled dentures to replace
It picked her over more than
merican. V' ou are entitled to Properties, and some develop- he said.
1,000 applicants to be Miss Ja his decayed teeth.
f j ^ and wear what others
pan-Canada Friendship and of
. ’ drink and ■wear.’ Then they
ficial hostess at its prestige Police Make Unique
acover that the things televiCanadian Pavilion in the forth
on advertising says are theirs
coming Internationl Trade Fair Arrest Of Cab Driver
TOKYO. — A 41-year-old Ja of a Tokyo food company exe in Tokvo from April 16 to May
■e not, so they protest.”
panese
housewife broke down be cutive, said she fabricated the 6.
TOKYO. — A Japanese taxi
'
a
genius of this country is
second robbery report in order
fore
sharp
police
questioning
re
driver
flagged down for speeding
.She will receive visitors to the
takes unassimilable people
to keep her “golf crazy” husband
cently
and
confessed
as
a
hoax
by
a
motorcycle
traffic police
Canadian exhibition of agricul
"e the Irish, Poles and the Chihome.
her
report
that
she
had
been-held
man
recently
in
downtown
Tokyo,
tural and forest products, min
^® fn\,absorbs them,” he said.
Police
began
suspecting
the
closed
the
window
and
began
up
twice.
erals and metals and will model
.iZ ’, because the American
reading
a
newspaper.
woman
’
s
second
complaint
be
an
estimated
quarter
of
a
million
.'She said she was really robbed
iPoUle ^
really so much
Other policemen came on the
cause nobody had seen a man dollars worth of Canadian furs
prejudice as culture preju- of 30,000 yen when an uniden- enter her apartment.
scene
and ordered the driver to
daily.
tified _ person broke into her
open
the
window, but he ignored
Police also suspected her be
“Oh yes, Japanese love to wear them and kept on reading his
a ,mill°rity group adopts apartment. But she added her cause
the threatening notes she furs,” Miss Koba smiled through
m
dress and consump- report to police that another
paper. It was his way of denying
■pin^15 °f every°ne else, the man had held her up. in the said she received appeared to be her pretty airline stewardess in he had been speeding.
terpreter in Montreal, last week.
|.*e against it disappears apartment in broad daylight and her own writing.
Police finally called a wrecker
Police
also
are
questioning
the
taken
55,000
yen.
($152)
was
un
“
They wear them on formal oclb S11'PnSlng raPidity.”
and
had the taxi and driver
woman on the first holdup she
wen ‘hr' Hayakawa’s opinion, true.
hauled
to police headquarters.
(
Con
tinned
on
page
8)
Snlhe Biack Muslims — a
Mrs. Miyoko Nakagawa, wife reported.
ipeLriF'11/6? to Prora°te the
bet
tke ^egro and the
of the races —
Egress ^hH1^ to the Negro’s
Many B.C. Land Schemes
Contain Racial Clauses
'Gold' Donkey Dies
Hoax To Punish Golf-crazy Husband
«>blern^US
tackle a central
aS Jead On- H is the after^er cla^ e^k-hat much of the
Pled
ol?e£1’oes have ac* no JJ /Ste Premise they
ns
a sense the Mushuence.” been a rehabilitating
Widower's In-Laws Ordered To Pay For Suicide
daughter’s parents-in-law
Suzuki’s parents, however dis his
UEDA, (Nagano).—The Ued a
also sprinkled salt in front of
covered
the
“
outcast
”
status
of
branch of the Nagano District
the front door of the young
Court recently ordered a com their daughter-in-law after the couple’s house, a superstitious
pany employee to- pay 400,000 voung couple settled down at gesture of purification.
yen in damages to his parents- Niihama near the home of the
Emiko Suzuki committed sui
in-law because his wife killed young husband’s parents.
cide
in late 1960 leaving behind
herself in 1960 after claiming she
The discovery caused the wo
ast wit otber hand, he says at was mistreated by her in-laws.
her
a
note which expressed her
man’s parents in -law to become hope that
Muslim
lniP°rtant facet of
“the loathesome pre
The late Mrs. Emiko Suzuki, suddenly cold toward her, accord- judice be stamped out from this
U5hvor^OI)aganda — the un<* the whites — nee Emiko Minamisawa, came jug’ to Kunitaro Minamisawa, 6o, world.”
■ jk
rexuted “by the events from a family classified privately father of the deceased woman
Farmer, Minamisawa and his
“Th Past few days.
by Japanese as “social outcasts.” and farmer of Wawanishimura,
wife, Miyuki, 56, had appealed to
Nakano-ken.
hitp?^^6^ sacrifices of the
the court for 2,500,000 yen in
Thirty-one-year-old Komei Su
in° b -Alabama to show
Minamisawa
said
his
daughter
compensation.
against the treat- zuki of Niihama, Ehime-ken, aid was not permitted to be entered
, brethren refutes not know of his wife’s family in the Suzuki family register as
An estimated 3,000,000 Japa
dun theory that there is background when he fell in love Komei’s legally wedded wife.
nese are still considered as “so
with her in Yokohama and mar
cial outcasts.”
(Cont, on Page 8)
ried her in June, 1960.
I The elderly farmer further said
In old feudalistic Japan, per
sons who were considered “social
outcasts” usually came from
families which engaged in pro
fessions a Japanese normally '
would not dream of following.
This social discrimination has
been abolished on paper but privately many Japanese today still
harbor this feeling toward “social outcasts.”
The late Mrs. Suzuki, there
fore, was a victim of this feudal- istic practice.
When her case came to light
in 1961, enterprising- motion pic
ture producers made a film bas
ed on the woman’s plight.
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
1. XXIX—No. 25
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1965
Toronto, Ont.
To Visit J.C. Cultural Centre
Civil Righters
Will Succeed
ip Hayakawa
SAN JOAQUIN, Calif. — Dr.
I. Hayakawa says the history
minority groups and the “logic
mass production and consumpn” are sufficient to assure
» success of the civil rights
wenient. >
Dr. Hayakawa, who was born
Vancouver, B.C., is a professor
English at the San Francisco
ite College and one of the
rld’s foremost authorities on
nantics. He spoke here at a
eeting. .
.
.
ji have a great deal of hope
or Negro revolution,” he told
is almost completely white
fidience. “The logic of mass
reduction and consumption and
*e technological
impossibility
! two separate cultures are the
ason.”
Dr. Hayakawa observed the
ie of communications in tripng human events and equated
levision’s influence on the civil
ghts movement with that of
.e invention of printing on the
^formation.
^“People often question the se
al disorganization of the. Negro
i comparison with that of o ther
inority groups,” he said. “The
>sition of the Negi’o is unique;
s own culture was destroyed
: slavery. He has no social or—
inization comparable for inance, to the Chinese. Cut off
om his past, all his ideals of
lues and prestige are supplied
' the white world which rejects
Miss Japan-Canada
Friendship Arrives
In Toronto Today
TORONTO.—Miss Hiroko Koba, the 23-year-old Japanese
schoolteacher, continues spreading charm across Canada living
up to her title of Miss Japan-Canada Friendship. She arrived in
। ,
. ।
। ! ■■ ! i 1 i < i i I ! I ' । ! Photo by Jack Hemmy
Toronto today at 1:30 p.m. from Ottawa and is staying- at the Royal
York.
Bi and Bi Commissioner Gertrude Laing
She will be at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre tonight
TORONTO.—Congratulations are extended to Mrs. Gertrude
at
6:30
p.m. to attend a reception held by the Ontario government
Laing of the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism
on her recent speech at the Toronto Japanese Canadian Citizens’ and a fur show sponsored by the Canada Mink Breeders. Miss Koba
Inaugural Banquet held here- recently. Extending thanks on behalf is expected to model some coats. At 7:30 p.m. a dinner will be held
of the groups are Mr. Edward Ide (centre) President of the Na there in her honor.
tional JCCA and Mr. George Imai (right) President of the Tor
On Thursday, Miss Koba and
onto JCCA.
her 12-member journalist entour
age will visit either the Ford Architect Yamasaki
Motor • Plant in Oakville or Recovering from Surgery
General Motors in Oshawa. On
DETROIT. — Noted Japanese
Friday they will visit Hamilton
and Niagara Falls. On Saturday American architect Minoru Yathe will tour Niagara Falls. Be masaki is reported recuperating
fore leaving Toronto for Edmon in Ford Hospital following a
ton on Sunday, April 4th, Miss stomach operation.
VICTORIA. — Many land de ments in Capilano Highlands.
The Seattle-born architect was
velopment schemes in B.C. con ■ They affect Jews, Asiatics, Canada Japan Friendship will be
feted at a reception at the home admitted Mar. 5 and was operat
tain racial discrimination clauses Orientals and Negroes, he said. of the Toronto Japanese Consul, ed on two days later. He is re
“You would be amazed when S. Saiki.
but they cannot be enforced, the
portedly “doing fine.”
you
start combing the land reg
B.C. legislature was told recently.
Last Sunday she was greeted
The subject was discussed as istry for documents of assign in Ottawa by a crowd estimated
MLAs gave third and final read ment and conveyances to find at over several hundred. Trade
ing to amendments which stream how many original promoters of Minister Mitchell Sharp present
TOKYO. — Japanese animal
ed her with a furry “Ookpik”, his
land have included on original department’s Eskimo symbol for lovers mourned the death last
line the Land Registry Act.
week of Ichimonji, the donkey
Gordon Dowding (NDP-Burna- grants restrictive covenants on Canadian goods.
with the gold-filled false teeth.
by) said there are restrictive those of non-Gaucasian blood
Miss Koba’s 3-week tour, spon Ichimonji, a veteran of Japan’s
It is significant that so many covenants preventing people of from being purchasers of land,” sored by the Canadian Dept, of war on China in 1937, died at
Trade and Commerce, is aimed 30 of old age. Tokyo Medical
'ung people are at the heart of some faces from buying land in said Dowding, a lawyer.
ie demonstrations ... It is be- Shaughnessy Heights, University
“It is a disgrace no one does at improving trade relations be University experts last year fit
iuse they know from the friend- of B.C. endowment land's, British something about this publicly,” tween Canada and Japan.
ted Ichimonji with a $2,000 set
television^ that ‘.you are an
of
gold-filled dentures to replace
It picked her over more than
merican. V' ou are entitled to Properties, and some develop- he said.
1,000 applicants to be Miss Ja his decayed teeth.
f j ^ and wear what others
pan-Canada Friendship and of
. ’ drink and ■wear.’ Then they
ficial hostess at its prestige Police Make Unique
acover that the things televiCanadian Pavilion in the forth
on advertising says are theirs
coming Internationl Trade Fair Arrest Of Cab Driver
TOKYO. — A 41-year-old Ja of a Tokyo food company exe in Tokvo from April 16 to May
■e not, so they protest.”
panese
housewife broke down be cutive, said she fabricated the 6.
TOKYO. — A Japanese taxi
'
a
genius of this country is
second robbery report in order
fore
sharp
police
questioning
re
driver
flagged down for speeding
.She will receive visitors to the
takes unassimilable people
to keep her “golf crazy” husband
cently
and
confessed
as
a
hoax
by
a
motorcycle
traffic police
Canadian exhibition of agricul
"e the Irish, Poles and the Chihome.
her
report
that
she
had
been-held
man
recently
in
downtown
Tokyo,
tural and forest products, min
^® fn\,absorbs them,” he said.
Police
began
suspecting
the
closed
the
window
and
began
up
twice.
erals and metals and will model
.iZ ’, because the American
reading
a
newspaper.
woman
’
s
second
complaint
be
an
estimated
quarter
of
a
million
.'She said she was really robbed
iPoUle ^
really so much
Other policemen came on the
cause nobody had seen a man dollars worth of Canadian furs
prejudice as culture preju- of 30,000 yen when an uniden- enter her apartment.
scene
and ordered the driver to
daily.
tified _ person broke into her
open
the
window, but he ignored
Police also suspected her be
“Oh yes, Japanese love to wear them and kept on reading his
a ,mill°rity group adopts apartment. But she added her cause
the threatening notes she furs,” Miss Koba smiled through
m
dress and consump- report to police that another
paper. It was his way of denying
■pin^15 °f every°ne else, the man had held her up. in the said she received appeared to be her pretty airline stewardess in he had been speeding.
terpreter in Montreal, last week.
|.*e against it disappears apartment in broad daylight and her own writing.
Police finally called a wrecker
Police
also
are
questioning
the
taken
55,000
yen.
($152)
was
un
“
They wear them on formal oclb S11'PnSlng raPidity.”
and
had the taxi and driver
woman on the first holdup she
wen ‘hr' Hayakawa’s opinion, true.
hauled
to police headquarters.
(
Con
tinned
on
page
8)
Snlhe Biack Muslims — a
Mrs. Miyoko Nakagawa, wife reported.
ipeLriF'11/6? to Prora°te the
bet
tke ^egro and the
of the races —
Egress ^hH1^ to the Negro’s
Many B.C. Land Schemes
Contain Racial Clauses
'Gold' Donkey Dies
Hoax To Punish Golf-crazy Husband
«>blern^US
tackle a central
aS Jead On- H is the after^er cla^ e^k-hat much of the
Pled
ol?e£1’oes have ac* no JJ /Ste Premise they
ns
a sense the Mushuence.” been a rehabilitating
Widower's In-Laws Ordered To Pay For Suicide
daughter’s parents-in-law
Suzuki’s parents, however dis his
UEDA, (Nagano).—The Ued a
also sprinkled salt in front of
covered
the
“
outcast
”
status
of
branch of the Nagano District
the front door of the young
Court recently ordered a com their daughter-in-law after the couple’s house, a superstitious
pany employee to- pay 400,000 voung couple settled down at gesture of purification.
yen in damages to his parents- Niihama near the home of the
Emiko Suzuki committed sui
in-law because his wife killed young husband’s parents.
cide
in late 1960 leaving behind
herself in 1960 after claiming she
The discovery caused the wo
ast wit otber hand, he says at was mistreated by her in-laws.
her
a
note which expressed her
man’s parents in -law to become hope that
Muslim
lniP°rtant facet of
“the loathesome pre
The late Mrs. Emiko Suzuki, suddenly cold toward her, accord- judice be stamped out from this
U5hvor^OI)aganda — the un<* the whites — nee Emiko Minamisawa, came jug’ to Kunitaro Minamisawa, 6o, world.”
■ jk
rexuted “by the events from a family classified privately father of the deceased woman
Farmer, Minamisawa and his
“Th Past few days.
by Japanese as “social outcasts.” and farmer of Wawanishimura,
wife, Miyuki, 56, had appealed to
Nakano-ken.
hitp?^^6^ sacrifices of the
the court for 2,500,000 yen in
Thirty-one-year-old Komei Su
in° b -Alabama to show
Minamisawa
said
his
daughter
compensation.
against the treat- zuki of Niihama, Ehime-ken, aid was not permitted to be entered
, brethren refutes not know of his wife’s family in the Suzuki family register as
An estimated 3,000,000 Japa
dun theory that there is background when he fell in love Komei’s legally wedded wife.
nese are still considered as “so
with her in Yokohama and mar
cial outcasts.”
(Cont, on Page 8)
ried her in June, 1960.
I The elderly farmer further said
In old feudalistic Japan, per
sons who were considered “social
outcasts” usually came from
families which engaged in pro
fessions a Japanese normally '
would not dream of following.
This social discrimination has
been abolished on paper but privately many Japanese today still
harbor this feeling toward “social outcasts.”
The late Mrs. Suzuki, there
fore, was a victim of this feudal- istic practice.
When her case came to light
in 1961, enterprising- motion pic
ture producers made a film bas
ed on the woman’s plight.
Page 2
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Page 6
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Page 7
’n^dav March 31, 196o
e New Canadian's
'Cosmopolitan Cuisine i
J
Dates anct Dein^s
(
•Win. Buddhists To Hold Annual Lotus Blossom Tea
| OFFICE
f EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1335
RESIDENCE
I
S V»cta Drive I
Hudson 5-1338
I A. E. McKague, Q.C.
|
Barrister & Solicitor
—G’ Man.—The Maya (Buddhist) Club cordiallv inNOTARY PUBLIC
to their Annual Lotus Blossom Tea on Fridav.
|
ICOS
Northern Ontario Building
7 ™ 9 ^’MSaturday, April 3rd from 2 — 5 P.M.
j
330
Bay
Street (at Adelaide)
at the Buddhist Church, 825 Winnipeg Ave. in Winnipeg.
|
TORONTO
Lenten Meals
/^lere ^H be bake’ craft aud handicraft sales. Also Odor! en
’
—
.
—
; . .
J
and displays of Japanese musical instruments and
tFNTEX MEALS need not be monotonous or problematic— tertainment
kimonos.
•
--mderful chance to prepare all these meatless dishes that
Man. Outlook
1 hr passed during the rest of the year. Fish, shellfish,’eggs and
I Bus: 924-8153
Ros: LE. 3-6759
; - didie= are every bit as nutritious as the red meat that the
*
*
^ of die family seem to go for. Let them enjoy the rich
Manitoba United Church Announces New Execs.
q’v that our market offers, and your - ingenuity can create.
ERNEST JOMORI
*
WINNIPEG.—Newly elected officers of the Manitoba Java
*
nese United Church is as follows:
Chartered Accountant
EGG-LASAGNA CASSEROLE
n nB°nard of Stew»rds: Chairman — M. Miyamoto; Treasurer —
D. R, Sakade, H. Morita, K. Shimozawa, R. Hamade.
Ingredients:
Suite 403
^^e^on: Elder — K. Mori; Clerk — T. Nakai; Correspondence
ECE:
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
— M. Shibuya; Delegate — S. Nishioka: Visitation — C. Hosaka,
tablespoons butter or margarine
H. J. Kobayashi, K. Kinoshita, T. Kawata, T. Nakai, K. Matsubara
clove garlic, finely chopped
:and S. Koga.
; cup dropped onion
z
United Church Women: Advisors — Miss B. Megaffin, Mrs.
■ can (1 lb. 12 oz.) tomatoes (about S’/z cups)
A. Furuya; Past Pres — K. Shimozawa; President — M. Nakai; | A UTO — FIRE — LIFE:
; can (8 oz.1) tomato sauce
Vice Pres — K. Shimozawa; Recording Secretary — T. Hirayama; I
ALL FORMS
'
; teaspoon salt
Correspondence — Mrs. Takada;
Treasurer — Mrs. Hayashi:
tablespoons chopped parsley
Social — Mrs. T. Sakade, M. Takasu; Visits — C. Shibuva, K. Hi
1 teaspoon crushed sweet basil
kida, H. Furutani; UCW — Miss J. Bates; Manse — T. Mizuno,
‘ teaspoon crushed rosemary
S. Matsubara; Bazaar — U. Miyamoto; Nisei — S. Kawata, Mrs.
Prepare sauce by melting butter or margarine. Add garlic Asae; Groups — S. Kubota, F. Morita.
|
consult
'
d onion and cook until onion is transparent, but not brown. Add
M. JCCA
|
KIYO TAMURA
;
gaining sauce ingredients and cook slowly until thick, about
*
*
» hours. Stirring occasionally. Sauce can be cooked in advance
?
TORONTO
£Bus, 366-5812 Res. Pl. 9-8317;
d refrigerated until ready to use.
Mont. Seisho-Kai Holds Elections At Annual Meet
SAGNA NOODLES:
MONTREAL.—On Sunday. March 21st, 1965, the Seisho-Kai
pound lasagna noodles
marked the first day of Spring’ by holding’ its Annual Meeting’ at
oz. creamed cottage cheese
the. hom'e of Mrs. S. Kuwabara.
; eggs
A review of the Club’s activities for the past year indicated
cup chopped parsley
that our teacher, Mrs. S. Kuwabara, together with assistants Mrs.
teaspoon salt
V.- Kuwabara, Miss Dorothy Okata, and Mrs. June Tanaka, pre
tsp. pepper
sented a great many demonstrations of the art of Ikebana through
Picture Frames
hard-cooked eggs, sliced
out the city of Montreal and district with much success.
cup grated parmesan cheese
The following slate of officers were elected for the coming
oz. Mozzarella cheese, thinly sliced
year: Mrs. Seisho Kuwabara, Advisor; Mrs. H. H. Tanaka, Honor
CUSTOM FRAMING
Method:
ary President; Mrs. S. Yamaoka, Treasurer; Miss Dorothy Okata,
1278 Yonge St. — Phone: 923-6877
(S. of Woodlawn)
Cook lasagna noodles according to package directions. Drain, Recording Secretary; Mrs. M. Okata, Social Convenor; Mrs. W. E.
Toronto
ise with hot water. Combine cottage cheese, the 2 eggs, parsley, Kesler, Corresponding Secretary.
The Seisho-Kai, now in its 14th year, plans to mark the
it and pepper.
: Spread one-third of the sauce in a shallow baking dish about occasion of its 15th anniversary which will occur in 1966. A large
Js x 7% x 1% inches. Arrange in layers, one-half of the-lasagna, Flower Show will be held at that time, which will be open to the
e-half of the cottage cheese mixture, one-half of the hard-cooked public. Further details will be announced in due course.
A supper of Japanese delicacies, including “Oshushi” was
gs (reserve some for garnish at the end), one-half of the ParBARRISTER and SOLICITOR
’
enjoyed by all the members of the Club.
w. cheese and one-half of the Mozzarella cheese.
NOTARY PUBLIC
: Repeat sauce and layers, ending with sauce. Bake in moderate
Office
Hours Saturday
*
*
.en (350°) until bubbly around the edges, for about 1 hour, Garnish
October to April Inclusive
th egg slices and parsley.
By STELLA ITO
|
I
INSURANCE
Lucien C. Kurata, Q.C.
*
Tor. Men's Press Club To Hold Annual By-Line Ball
*
ZESTY BAKED EGGS
Ingredients:
cup. salad dressing or mayonnaise
teaspoon salt
sh of pepper and paprika
teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce
cup milk
cup gi’ated sharp cheese
'
eggs
Method:
rrinT^A Sa^ad Messing and seasoning. Gradually add milk
• o until smooth. Add cheese and cook until melted (use low
°^ tHe sauce into each of 4 individual
c ln® ™shes’. and break 2 eggs. into each. Top with rennHiaUCe' ^Liee in .pan of hot -water and bake in moderate
en until eggs are done.
asITk
TORONTO.—The annual “By-Line Ball” sponsored by the
Toronto Men’s Press Club, will be held at the Royal York Hotel,
Friday night, April 23rd and the public along with media members
are cordially invited to enjoy the festivities.
For only $2.50 per person — $5.00 per couple — there will be
the exciting, glamorous “Miss By-Line Beauty Contest” — dancing
in two halls to the orchestras of Trump Davidson plus the vocal
styling of TV star Wally Koster — the honky-tonk room — Paddy
Conklin’s fun-filled midway — fabulous door prizes — in total an
evening of gala entertainment for everyone! But get your tickets
now! They are available by visiting or telephoning the Toronto
Men’s Press Club, 119 King Street West, EM. 2-4266.
Call your friends and form a group . . . you can afford the
price . . . but you can’t afford to miss Toronto’s biggest brightest
ball of the year — The By-Line Ball, April 23rd, Royal York Hotel,
and only $2.50 per person!
Phil Stone
Radio Station CHUM
Volunteer Promotion Chairman
Annual By-Line Ball
*
CHINA HOUSE
Proudly Presents For Your Enjoyment
Our New
"Cherry Blossom Room"
With Japanese Motif
9’5 r , . BANQUETS and socials
hghnton Ave. W.
—
Toronto, Ont.
Phone RU. 1-9124
Lichee Garden 4
(Pining Lounge)
8 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Van. JCCA Issei Council Announces New Execs.
VANCOUVER, B.C.—The election of the J.C.CA. Issei Council
Members, conducted by mail ballot, has now been completed. The
following is the list of members and their respective positions.
Chairman: Mr. K. Iwata, Mr. K. Kazuta.
Social Committee: K. Tahara, Y. Inamasu, K. Kobayashi.
Service Committee: S. Murakami, G. Yada, K. Tasaka, G. Na
kamura.
Entertainment: G. Ohori, S. Uchida, R. Kawasaki.
Study and Research: S. Kunimoto, K. Oikawa, J. Edamura.
Education: D. Enjo, S. Hara, N. Banno.
Bulletin: T. Motomochi, T. Asaoka, F. Nakamoto, Y. Fukui.
The Nisei Council of 18 members was elected by acclamation.
At the first meeting of the new Council held on March 7, 1965
the following people were elected to the Executive: Gordon Kadota —
President; Bob Miyasaka — General Secretary; Tom Hara — 1st
Vice-Pres.; Mits Tahara — 2nd Vice-Pres.;
Joe Yukawa —
Treasurer; Cheryl Iwasaki — Recording secretary.
Committee Chairman: Hajime Maeno — Bulletin Editor; Mrs.
G Kadota — Bulletin Japanese Section Editor; Yosh Sakata —
Social Committee; Ritz Enjo — Education, Cultural, and Welfare
Committee; Ed Shoji - Sports; Roy Sakai - Membership.
Van. JCCA
Phone: 364-3481
^ Lines To Serve You)
ERIX G. SERVICE - “TAKE:OUT” ORDERS
Banquet Facililies
ii'PnnTvn^?iness Or Private Parties
ADDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
_
DINNER MUSIC 'NIGHTLY
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
313 Bathurst St.
SUNDAY, APRIL 4, 1955
10:30 A.M. Religious School
' 11:00 A.M. Morning Service — Rev. N. Ishiura
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
Monthly Memorial — Rev. F. Watanabe
52 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: RO. 7-3427
13841/2 Queen W.
Toronto ' —
LE. 2-6378
DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS
SKATES, SKIS
AND
SKAffE SHARPENING
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
Open Thur, and Fri. Until 9
Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
1M1
Of Toronto
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE.,
PHONE: 463-8104
e New Canadian's
'Cosmopolitan Cuisine i
J
Dates anct Dein^s
(
•Win. Buddhists To Hold Annual Lotus Blossom Tea
| OFFICE
f EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1335
RESIDENCE
I
S V»cta Drive I
Hudson 5-1338
I A. E. McKague, Q.C.
|
Barrister & Solicitor
—G’ Man.—The Maya (Buddhist) Club cordiallv inNOTARY PUBLIC
to their Annual Lotus Blossom Tea on Fridav.
|
ICOS
Northern Ontario Building
7 ™ 9 ^’MSaturday, April 3rd from 2 — 5 P.M.
j
330
Bay
Street (at Adelaide)
at the Buddhist Church, 825 Winnipeg Ave. in Winnipeg.
|
TORONTO
Lenten Meals
/^lere ^H be bake’ craft aud handicraft sales. Also Odor! en
’
—
.
—
; . .
J
and displays of Japanese musical instruments and
tFNTEX MEALS need not be monotonous or problematic— tertainment
kimonos.
•
--mderful chance to prepare all these meatless dishes that
Man. Outlook
1 hr passed during the rest of the year. Fish, shellfish,’eggs and
I Bus: 924-8153
Ros: LE. 3-6759
; - didie= are every bit as nutritious as the red meat that the
*
*
^ of die family seem to go for. Let them enjoy the rich
Manitoba United Church Announces New Execs.
q’v that our market offers, and your - ingenuity can create.
ERNEST JOMORI
*
WINNIPEG.—Newly elected officers of the Manitoba Java
*
nese United Church is as follows:
Chartered Accountant
EGG-LASAGNA CASSEROLE
n nB°nard of Stew»rds: Chairman — M. Miyamoto; Treasurer —
D. R, Sakade, H. Morita, K. Shimozawa, R. Hamade.
Ingredients:
Suite 403
^^e^on: Elder — K. Mori; Clerk — T. Nakai; Correspondence
ECE:
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
— M. Shibuya; Delegate — S. Nishioka: Visitation — C. Hosaka,
tablespoons butter or margarine
H. J. Kobayashi, K. Kinoshita, T. Kawata, T. Nakai, K. Matsubara
clove garlic, finely chopped
:and S. Koga.
; cup dropped onion
z
United Church Women: Advisors — Miss B. Megaffin, Mrs.
■ can (1 lb. 12 oz.) tomatoes (about S’/z cups)
A. Furuya; Past Pres — K. Shimozawa; President — M. Nakai; | A UTO — FIRE — LIFE:
; can (8 oz.1) tomato sauce
Vice Pres — K. Shimozawa; Recording Secretary — T. Hirayama; I
ALL FORMS
'
; teaspoon salt
Correspondence — Mrs. Takada;
Treasurer — Mrs. Hayashi:
tablespoons chopped parsley
Social — Mrs. T. Sakade, M. Takasu; Visits — C. Shibuva, K. Hi
1 teaspoon crushed sweet basil
kida, H. Furutani; UCW — Miss J. Bates; Manse — T. Mizuno,
‘ teaspoon crushed rosemary
S. Matsubara; Bazaar — U. Miyamoto; Nisei — S. Kawata, Mrs.
Prepare sauce by melting butter or margarine. Add garlic Asae; Groups — S. Kubota, F. Morita.
|
consult
'
d onion and cook until onion is transparent, but not brown. Add
M. JCCA
|
KIYO TAMURA
;
gaining sauce ingredients and cook slowly until thick, about
*
*
» hours. Stirring occasionally. Sauce can be cooked in advance
?
TORONTO
£Bus, 366-5812 Res. Pl. 9-8317;
d refrigerated until ready to use.
Mont. Seisho-Kai Holds Elections At Annual Meet
SAGNA NOODLES:
MONTREAL.—On Sunday. March 21st, 1965, the Seisho-Kai
pound lasagna noodles
marked the first day of Spring’ by holding’ its Annual Meeting’ at
oz. creamed cottage cheese
the. hom'e of Mrs. S. Kuwabara.
; eggs
A review of the Club’s activities for the past year indicated
cup chopped parsley
that our teacher, Mrs. S. Kuwabara, together with assistants Mrs.
teaspoon salt
V.- Kuwabara, Miss Dorothy Okata, and Mrs. June Tanaka, pre
tsp. pepper
sented a great many demonstrations of the art of Ikebana through
Picture Frames
hard-cooked eggs, sliced
out the city of Montreal and district with much success.
cup grated parmesan cheese
The following slate of officers were elected for the coming
oz. Mozzarella cheese, thinly sliced
year: Mrs. Seisho Kuwabara, Advisor; Mrs. H. H. Tanaka, Honor
CUSTOM FRAMING
Method:
ary President; Mrs. S. Yamaoka, Treasurer; Miss Dorothy Okata,
1278 Yonge St. — Phone: 923-6877
(S. of Woodlawn)
Cook lasagna noodles according to package directions. Drain, Recording Secretary; Mrs. M. Okata, Social Convenor; Mrs. W. E.
Toronto
ise with hot water. Combine cottage cheese, the 2 eggs, parsley, Kesler, Corresponding Secretary.
The Seisho-Kai, now in its 14th year, plans to mark the
it and pepper.
: Spread one-third of the sauce in a shallow baking dish about occasion of its 15th anniversary which will occur in 1966. A large
Js x 7% x 1% inches. Arrange in layers, one-half of the-lasagna, Flower Show will be held at that time, which will be open to the
e-half of the cottage cheese mixture, one-half of the hard-cooked public. Further details will be announced in due course.
A supper of Japanese delicacies, including “Oshushi” was
gs (reserve some for garnish at the end), one-half of the ParBARRISTER and SOLICITOR
’
enjoyed by all the members of the Club.
w. cheese and one-half of the Mozzarella cheese.
NOTARY PUBLIC
: Repeat sauce and layers, ending with sauce. Bake in moderate
Office
Hours Saturday
*
*
.en (350°) until bubbly around the edges, for about 1 hour, Garnish
October to April Inclusive
th egg slices and parsley.
By STELLA ITO
|
I
INSURANCE
Lucien C. Kurata, Q.C.
*
Tor. Men's Press Club To Hold Annual By-Line Ball
*
ZESTY BAKED EGGS
Ingredients:
cup. salad dressing or mayonnaise
teaspoon salt
sh of pepper and paprika
teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce
cup milk
cup gi’ated sharp cheese
'
eggs
Method:
rrinT^A Sa^ad Messing and seasoning. Gradually add milk
• o until smooth. Add cheese and cook until melted (use low
°^ tHe sauce into each of 4 individual
c ln® ™shes’. and break 2 eggs. into each. Top with rennHiaUCe' ^Liee in .pan of hot -water and bake in moderate
en until eggs are done.
asITk
TORONTO.—The annual “By-Line Ball” sponsored by the
Toronto Men’s Press Club, will be held at the Royal York Hotel,
Friday night, April 23rd and the public along with media members
are cordially invited to enjoy the festivities.
For only $2.50 per person — $5.00 per couple — there will be
the exciting, glamorous “Miss By-Line Beauty Contest” — dancing
in two halls to the orchestras of Trump Davidson plus the vocal
styling of TV star Wally Koster — the honky-tonk room — Paddy
Conklin’s fun-filled midway — fabulous door prizes — in total an
evening of gala entertainment for everyone! But get your tickets
now! They are available by visiting or telephoning the Toronto
Men’s Press Club, 119 King Street West, EM. 2-4266.
Call your friends and form a group . . . you can afford the
price . . . but you can’t afford to miss Toronto’s biggest brightest
ball of the year — The By-Line Ball, April 23rd, Royal York Hotel,
and only $2.50 per person!
Phil Stone
Radio Station CHUM
Volunteer Promotion Chairman
Annual By-Line Ball
*
CHINA HOUSE
Proudly Presents For Your Enjoyment
Our New
"Cherry Blossom Room"
With Japanese Motif
9’5 r , . BANQUETS and socials
hghnton Ave. W.
—
Toronto, Ont.
Phone RU. 1-9124
Lichee Garden 4
(Pining Lounge)
8 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Van. JCCA Issei Council Announces New Execs.
VANCOUVER, B.C.—The election of the J.C.CA. Issei Council
Members, conducted by mail ballot, has now been completed. The
following is the list of members and their respective positions.
Chairman: Mr. K. Iwata, Mr. K. Kazuta.
Social Committee: K. Tahara, Y. Inamasu, K. Kobayashi.
Service Committee: S. Murakami, G. Yada, K. Tasaka, G. Na
kamura.
Entertainment: G. Ohori, S. Uchida, R. Kawasaki.
Study and Research: S. Kunimoto, K. Oikawa, J. Edamura.
Education: D. Enjo, S. Hara, N. Banno.
Bulletin: T. Motomochi, T. Asaoka, F. Nakamoto, Y. Fukui.
The Nisei Council of 18 members was elected by acclamation.
At the first meeting of the new Council held on March 7, 1965
the following people were elected to the Executive: Gordon Kadota —
President; Bob Miyasaka — General Secretary; Tom Hara — 1st
Vice-Pres.; Mits Tahara — 2nd Vice-Pres.;
Joe Yukawa —
Treasurer; Cheryl Iwasaki — Recording secretary.
Committee Chairman: Hajime Maeno — Bulletin Editor; Mrs.
G Kadota — Bulletin Japanese Section Editor; Yosh Sakata —
Social Committee; Ritz Enjo — Education, Cultural, and Welfare
Committee; Ed Shoji - Sports; Roy Sakai - Membership.
Van. JCCA
Phone: 364-3481
^ Lines To Serve You)
ERIX G. SERVICE - “TAKE:OUT” ORDERS
Banquet Facililies
ii'PnnTvn^?iness Or Private Parties
ADDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
_
DINNER MUSIC 'NIGHTLY
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
313 Bathurst St.
SUNDAY, APRIL 4, 1955
10:30 A.M. Religious School
' 11:00 A.M. Morning Service — Rev. N. Ishiura
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
Monthly Memorial — Rev. F. Watanabe
52 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: RO. 7-3427
13841/2 Queen W.
Toronto ' —
LE. 2-6378
DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS
SKATES, SKIS
AND
SKAffE SHARPENING
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
Open Thur, and Fri. Until 9
Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
1M1
Of Toronto
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE.,
PHONE: 463-8104
Page 8
Wednesday, March 3] w
Fifth In Series
THE NEW CANlDili
IZUMO- Land Of The Gods
and for payment ci postaa/J^5
Post Office DepoS’^
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B. Ont,
EMpire 6-5005
By NEIL PHILLIPS
wears wide trousers that have something of the cut of a cowboy’s
chaps.
At the great temple of Izumo Taisho the color of these
Taken all together, the Izumo Taisha, this great Shinto
Shrine, vital and impressive as it was, had not given me the trousers is ,a brilliant scarlet. Here at Hindmiseki, and at another
emotional experience I had expected1 from reading Lafcadio’s ac temple, we visited next day, the color is a very handsome, clear
count of his visit.. there. Bat then the circumstances were so dif turquoise. I was told that scarlet is worn only at the very greatest
ferent. Hearn had come to Izumo ;as the first foreigner to be ad shrines.
When I had bought the post cards and had decided against
mitted to the Shrine precincts. He had been received by the Guji,
the
snails
we went up a shaded, rocky, pleasant path to the place
a living God, and also (it was obvious) a human being of great
SEWING operators, exoe^j ^
above
the
.village where the lighthouse stands. All the way up, ginners,
force and magnetism. And Hearn’s visit had been made at the
wanted. Pleasant *s^,'^5
good working
time of a great religious festival, with many thousands of pilgrims about a third of a mile, the path was edged solidly with souvenir and
EM. 4-7774 (Toronto).
i‘!0!!s-^
packed into the majestic approaches to the place, and he had been stalls. There were scores of them. They were exactly alike in being
without any customers and in having those masses of dried octopus,
allowed to see the most sacred mysteries and ritual dances.
Male Help Wanted
dried seaweed and snails. It became nightmarish. The only relief
The day was sunny, outside the cryptomeria grove, and very, from
the
stalls
was
provided
by
a
vast
colony
of
gulls
nestling
GARDEN
warm. I was tired rand thirsty so, just outside the grounds,
241-8115.
Mr. helpers
Onizuka. wanted
(^^^
on
a
great
crag
at
the
ocean
’
s
edge.
The
Japanese
name
for
them
I stopped at a pleasant open-front cafe to have some of the
Sea Cats and the din of their mewing is uncanny. At the top d/ R DJ N wR S wanied irnmedh^
delicious Japanese cold beer. At the table next to me sat an elderly is
of
the cliff we came to the big flat place where you gaze up at Phone Mr. Maehara at 533-Slcg A
man in Western clothes with his little ivory-skinned1 wife, who
the
white column of the lighthouse, so tall that it dwindles in- onto)... •
wore a neat grey kimono. They were in rapt quietness. and
perspective
at the top. Then you gaze down over the edge of the TRUCK driver for gardenerTpWv?
having no refreshments, not even glasses of water, the waitress cliff to a bold,
Heike at GA. 1-5040 (Toronto)? " y
horrific drop into the ocean below.
was leaving them respectfully alone. It was evident that they
The day now had become entirely clear and shining, something NIGHT work dishwashing and
bad just come from a service at the Temple and were still in a
state of ecstasy. On another day, at another Shinto temple, I saw not altogether common in Japan with its mists and rain. The Sea for restaurant. Avenue and Hot '0k< "
this same old couple again and judged that they were making of Japan, which can be so leaden and raging, lay a flat, calm blue 927-5001 (Toronto).
a pilgrimage to the various Shinto holy places in the neighborhood. to the horizon. I felt that Hino Peninsula is one of the most beauti A YOUNG man for salesclerk in lad
This second temple was closed and the old people stood with ful places I have ever seen. But the next day I was.to see a seascape and building materials yard.' Enel
enced. Good future. Mr. ’ Halex" H
bowed heads at the entrance steps and clapped their hands to and landscape equally fine, when we went to Kaka-Ura.
Lumber, RO. .6-1323 (Toronto).’’ invoke the Gods.
On our way back to Matsue from Hino, we stopped in the DRIVER with own truck and roui« 'When the morning had been passed at the great Shrine, we town of Shinji to have cold drinks at the Yokumo-Honjin, the dry cleaning plant. Good commit
went into the town to the Takenoya Hotel, the House of thc- Eight Clouds Samurai House, a fine Samurai mansion of the 17th Apply Brimley Cleaners, 2656 Ecfel
, T
Bamboos. They gave us a little private room (the Japanese inns Century. The owner, a descendant of the noble Samurai builder of East, (Scarboro).
do not have a general dining room or restaurant) overlooking a the. house,, had had to sell his land when the laws calling for the
Help Wanted
pleasant enclosed garden and offered a good meal of local division of the big estates went into effect with the American
sales clerks, men d
dishes. 1 remember a little porcelain bowl of what looked and tasted occupation. He then converted the house into a hotel and left to EFFICIENT
women wanted. lauan Camera Ou*
something like rhubarb, only it was made of seaweed and was Matsue to enter the newspaper business, The house had 294
Yonge Street, 362-1555 (Toronto)/
delicious. The pretty waitress who knelt by our low table during well proportioned rooms with good screen-paintings and* old,
-the meal said that I was the only foreigner who had* been to the austere, honey-colored woodwork. In the corridor an uquisu,
Domestic Help Wanted
inn that year, and that last year only two foreigners had come. the little songbird Hearn described so winningly, was singor couple for general house'
They were Germans, with long beards, and she had thought they ing in a darkened cage, the windows of the cage being covered’ WOMEN
work. Husband employed elsewhere:
were very funny. She was too polite to say whether she thought with panes of white rice paper. From another covered' cage came Separata quarters. Liberal free fa
/
I was funny also.
a rustling-, buzzing sound and the maid opened the little door to Phone 783-0506 (Toronto).
In the afternoon, before we went back to Matsue, we stopped show me 5 nestlings, the brood of the songster next door. On the .CENTRAL location. Small family, 1
enroute in the town of Taishi Ta to see the Inabaya Inn where open veranda, that ran alongside the rooms of the house, I was school-aged child. Require experience:',
cook-housekeeper. Livs in. Mrs. &SI
Hearn had stayed during his visits. It is still an inn and it looked given cold beer and peanuts and looked out into a calm, unclut WA.
5-6192 (Toronto).
'
like a nice one and I was sorry that we hadn’t had our lunch tered, classic garden. There was a sweep of fine-grained gray
there. In a little pavilion on the courtyard there is a small Hearn gravel across which stepping-stones led in a subtle composition.
Museum, in tlie two rooms he used to occupy, with photographs, In the background the planting of the clipped azaleas and the FURNISHED room and kitchen. Sr
framed letters and newspaper clippings. The custodian was an dwarf maples around the rockwork and the stone lantern had been two. Bloor and Landsdowne. Pis
elderly lady of; great charm, slender and rather elegant in her made with a high degree of artistry. The curve of intricate bamboo LE. 6-3479 (Toronto).
plain cotton kimono and obi. She had read all of Hearn’s books in fencing was, in composition and pattern, as good as any bamboo
For Sale
Japanese and was familiar with his history but she was not old work I had seen in Japan.
enough actually to have known him. She asked me to sign the
EMBROIDERIES and prints by the ii
(To Be Continued)
Mrs. Kono Tanaka are now for si*.
guest book and gave me an ink stone and one of the brushes the
Those interested should contact: ^
Japanese use to make their beautiful ideographs. The book had
I. Tanaka, 1478 Queen St. East, Ts
pages of soft, fine rice paper. On the sheet next to the one where
onto. Phone HO. 3-0997 (Toronto’.
1
Month
Jail
Sentence
For
Mongrel
Named
Chiro
I was to sign, I saw the name of a scholarly friend with whom I
had dined in Tokyo not long before:
TOKYO. .— In Hiroshima a
By the prefectural order, the
“Jean Daridan, Ambassadeur de France. IS Mai, 1961”
shaggy male mongrel,. aged one dog’s owner was sternly told to
The brushwork of Jean’s signature was as fluid and free as if he and named Chiro, one night re “keep Chiro leashed, muzzled,
and
had been. studying Japanese calligraphy for a long- time, as per cently pounced on a 19-year-old and placed in a barred dog house
haps he had been.
girl, bit her in seven places and for one' full month.” And to see
On tlie way back to Matsue we detoured through the Hino became the first member of the to it that Chiro lived a dog’s life,
Peninsula, every bit as magnificent as Hearn described it in city’s canine population on whom an official from the prefectural
OSCAR'S
“Glimpses,” and with sea cliffs and pine-topped islands straight the prefecture’s new “rules on office regularly turned up for a
1500
Dundas
(at Dufferin)—LE. M
out of the old scroll paintings. It would have been even more the control of pets and dogs” daily check.
. spectacular seen from a boat offshore, as Hearn had done, rather was enforced.
than from a rough, ill-paved, and sometimes frightening motor
road'that curved around the tops of tlie cliffs. This road finally
It is a good policy to
(Cont. From Page 1)
led, down to a rock-shored bay where there was a fishing village Toronto Visit .. .
have the RIGHT POLICY
that markets dried seaweed, dried octopus, and a species of huge^ casions with their kimono. Not “It is so vast, so big. When the
Consult
edible snail. The snail’s shell is the size of a teacup, rough and so much with Western clothes. . . tour is over (April 9) then may
WALES and DUNCAJi
horny, and colored green, brown and yellow like a piece of glazed
“And it does get chilly in Ja be I wall be able to say better.
T’ang pottery. This village of Hinomisaki is one of those places pan. In the whiter we have snow I’m sure there’ll be many, many
INSURANCE AGENTS
where tlie Japanese like to come on excursions for there is the and cold weather. Not so cold as things.”
bay and the scenic grandeur and also the fine Shinto temple that in Regina. When we were there
464 Yonge Street, Toronto;
Hearn has described. And on the cliff above the village there rises two days ago it was 25 below!”
The Department of Trade and
Phone WA. 1-3171
a g-reat stone lighthouse, built since Hearn’s time, that I was told
Regina was one' of more than Commerce are banking on it.
. is the highest in Japan.
;a_ dozen Canadian cities Miss
For some reason there were no pilgrims or excursionists Koba and her accompanying re
that day in Hinomisaki. I felt sorry for the women tending the tinue of journalists will visit dur
souvenir stalls. They had looked so-hopeful when our car had1 come ing’ tlie three-week Canadian tour.
into tlie village street. The stalls carried colorful junk, plastic
“It is too soon to say what I
toys and tackey objects made of seashells and little mirrors; but enjoy best about Canada,” said
what made them noteworthy was their huge, their incredible, Miss Koba, daughter of a Japa
stocks of dried octopus, dried seaweed and the edible snails. The nese novelist and literary critic.
octopus and seaweed were neatly packag’ed into cellophane parcels,
stacks and stacks of them. The snails were laid out, in their T’angpottery shells, on steam-tables, hot and ready to eat, and giving Dr. Hayakawa . . .
off a faint, offensive odor.
(Cont. From Page 1)
Dried octopus I had eaten before and found to be of chewv
texture and not actually nasty, but dull. Dried seaweed I often had no help from the wliites.
eaten with Japanese meals. It is a shiny dark green, almost black,
By the same token, Dr. Haya
(Member of Toronto Real Estate Board)
and it comes in very thin sheets about ten inches long and eight kawa says “the picture of Ne
K. Hori Real Estate — AM. 1-5194
inches wide, and is crumbly and crackly when you eat it. It has groes behaving as bravely as
, a salty, fishy taste that is pleasant with rice of* other bland food, they have, gives Negroes a great
but it is hither strong when eaten alone. So that afternoon I had' deal of pride in themselves.”
no urge to try octopus or seaweed again. As a conscientious travel
Judging from the smiles and
er I felt perhaps I should eat one of the outsize snails, but I recentlv nodding heads in the audience,
had the big lunch at Izumo and I was sure that there would be the speaker made one of his big
such a lot of snail inside one of those homy, highly-colored gest points by half jokingly re
shells. And there was the odor, a mere whiff, but malevolent, that calling the experience of another
hung in the warm, sunny air.
minority group.
Haring spent the morning at the great Shinto Temple. Izumo
“A century ago, being an Irish
Taisho, I found it 'almost a relief that the temple here at Hino- man made you about as popular
Businessmen Luncheon
miseki was not open that day. We walked around the outside of as an Apache raid,” he said.
the buildings and admired the cunning flow of the roof lines, the “People said Irish were uneduWe Cater To Parties And Banquets
intricate bracketing of- the eaves and the massive layering of catable; they were brawlers and
cypress bark which forms the roof material, At a little room near boozers with a talent only for
TAKE OUT SERVICE
the main steps I bought post cards from a clean-cut, intelligent- music and dancing and — God
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
looking young Shinto priest. The post cards showed splendid pan- forbid — if one moved in next
ed rooms that exist in the temple builtSngs, but the rooms are on door, the property values would
Toronto 2, Ont.
123A Dundas St. West
view’ only at certain times of the year and the priest was sorry go down ... now they elect
Parking At Bay & Dundas
he could not open them for us. Over his white robe, a Shinto priest ed one a president.
GOLF
Fishing Tackle
When Buying Or Selling Call
Specializing In Chinese Food
Fifth In Series
THE NEW CANlDili
IZUMO- Land Of The Gods
and for payment ci postaa/J^5
Post Office DepoS’^
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B. Ont,
EMpire 6-5005
By NEIL PHILLIPS
wears wide trousers that have something of the cut of a cowboy’s
chaps.
At the great temple of Izumo Taisho the color of these
Taken all together, the Izumo Taisha, this great Shinto
Shrine, vital and impressive as it was, had not given me the trousers is ,a brilliant scarlet. Here at Hindmiseki, and at another
emotional experience I had expected1 from reading Lafcadio’s ac temple, we visited next day, the color is a very handsome, clear
count of his visit.. there. Bat then the circumstances were so dif turquoise. I was told that scarlet is worn only at the very greatest
ferent. Hearn had come to Izumo ;as the first foreigner to be ad shrines.
When I had bought the post cards and had decided against
mitted to the Shrine precincts. He had been received by the Guji,
the
snails
we went up a shaded, rocky, pleasant path to the place
a living God, and also (it was obvious) a human being of great
SEWING operators, exoe^j ^
above
the
.village where the lighthouse stands. All the way up, ginners,
force and magnetism. And Hearn’s visit had been made at the
wanted. Pleasant *s^,'^5
good working
time of a great religious festival, with many thousands of pilgrims about a third of a mile, the path was edged solidly with souvenir and
EM. 4-7774 (Toronto).
i‘!0!!s-^
packed into the majestic approaches to the place, and he had been stalls. There were scores of them. They were exactly alike in being
without any customers and in having those masses of dried octopus,
allowed to see the most sacred mysteries and ritual dances.
Male Help Wanted
dried seaweed and snails. It became nightmarish. The only relief
The day was sunny, outside the cryptomeria grove, and very, from
the
stalls
was
provided
by
a
vast
colony
of
gulls
nestling
GARDEN
warm. I was tired rand thirsty so, just outside the grounds,
241-8115.
Mr. helpers
Onizuka. wanted
(^^^
on
a
great
crag
at
the
ocean
’
s
edge.
The
Japanese
name
for
them
I stopped at a pleasant open-front cafe to have some of the
Sea Cats and the din of their mewing is uncanny. At the top d/ R DJ N wR S wanied irnmedh^
delicious Japanese cold beer. At the table next to me sat an elderly is
of
the cliff we came to the big flat place where you gaze up at Phone Mr. Maehara at 533-Slcg A
man in Western clothes with his little ivory-skinned1 wife, who
the
white column of the lighthouse, so tall that it dwindles in- onto)... •
wore a neat grey kimono. They were in rapt quietness. and
perspective
at the top. Then you gaze down over the edge of the TRUCK driver for gardenerTpWv?
having no refreshments, not even glasses of water, the waitress cliff to a bold,
Heike at GA. 1-5040 (Toronto)? " y
horrific drop into the ocean below.
was leaving them respectfully alone. It was evident that they
The day now had become entirely clear and shining, something NIGHT work dishwashing and
bad just come from a service at the Temple and were still in a
state of ecstasy. On another day, at another Shinto temple, I saw not altogether common in Japan with its mists and rain. The Sea for restaurant. Avenue and Hot '0k< "
this same old couple again and judged that they were making of Japan, which can be so leaden and raging, lay a flat, calm blue 927-5001 (Toronto).
a pilgrimage to the various Shinto holy places in the neighborhood. to the horizon. I felt that Hino Peninsula is one of the most beauti A YOUNG man for salesclerk in lad
This second temple was closed and the old people stood with ful places I have ever seen. But the next day I was.to see a seascape and building materials yard.' Enel
enced. Good future. Mr. ’ Halex" H
bowed heads at the entrance steps and clapped their hands to and landscape equally fine, when we went to Kaka-Ura.
Lumber, RO. .6-1323 (Toronto).’’ invoke the Gods.
On our way back to Matsue from Hino, we stopped in the DRIVER with own truck and roui« 'When the morning had been passed at the great Shrine, we town of Shinji to have cold drinks at the Yokumo-Honjin, the dry cleaning plant. Good commit
went into the town to the Takenoya Hotel, the House of thc- Eight Clouds Samurai House, a fine Samurai mansion of the 17th Apply Brimley Cleaners, 2656 Ecfel
, T
Bamboos. They gave us a little private room (the Japanese inns Century. The owner, a descendant of the noble Samurai builder of East, (Scarboro).
do not have a general dining room or restaurant) overlooking a the. house,, had had to sell his land when the laws calling for the
Help Wanted
pleasant enclosed garden and offered a good meal of local division of the big estates went into effect with the American
sales clerks, men d
dishes. 1 remember a little porcelain bowl of what looked and tasted occupation. He then converted the house into a hotel and left to EFFICIENT
women wanted. lauan Camera Ou*
something like rhubarb, only it was made of seaweed and was Matsue to enter the newspaper business, The house had 294
Yonge Street, 362-1555 (Toronto)/
delicious. The pretty waitress who knelt by our low table during well proportioned rooms with good screen-paintings and* old,
-the meal said that I was the only foreigner who had* been to the austere, honey-colored woodwork. In the corridor an uquisu,
Domestic Help Wanted
inn that year, and that last year only two foreigners had come. the little songbird Hearn described so winningly, was singor couple for general house'
They were Germans, with long beards, and she had thought they ing in a darkened cage, the windows of the cage being covered’ WOMEN
work. Husband employed elsewhere:
were very funny. She was too polite to say whether she thought with panes of white rice paper. From another covered' cage came Separata quarters. Liberal free fa
/
I was funny also.
a rustling-, buzzing sound and the maid opened the little door to Phone 783-0506 (Toronto).
In the afternoon, before we went back to Matsue, we stopped show me 5 nestlings, the brood of the songster next door. On the .CENTRAL location. Small family, 1
enroute in the town of Taishi Ta to see the Inabaya Inn where open veranda, that ran alongside the rooms of the house, I was school-aged child. Require experience:',
cook-housekeeper. Livs in. Mrs. &SI
Hearn had stayed during his visits. It is still an inn and it looked given cold beer and peanuts and looked out into a calm, unclut WA.
5-6192 (Toronto).
'
like a nice one and I was sorry that we hadn’t had our lunch tered, classic garden. There was a sweep of fine-grained gray
there. In a little pavilion on the courtyard there is a small Hearn gravel across which stepping-stones led in a subtle composition.
Museum, in tlie two rooms he used to occupy, with photographs, In the background the planting of the clipped azaleas and the FURNISHED room and kitchen. Sr
framed letters and newspaper clippings. The custodian was an dwarf maples around the rockwork and the stone lantern had been two. Bloor and Landsdowne. Pis
elderly lady of; great charm, slender and rather elegant in her made with a high degree of artistry. The curve of intricate bamboo LE. 6-3479 (Toronto).
plain cotton kimono and obi. She had read all of Hearn’s books in fencing was, in composition and pattern, as good as any bamboo
For Sale
Japanese and was familiar with his history but she was not old work I had seen in Japan.
enough actually to have known him. She asked me to sign the
EMBROIDERIES and prints by the ii
(To Be Continued)
Mrs. Kono Tanaka are now for si*.
guest book and gave me an ink stone and one of the brushes the
Those interested should contact: ^
Japanese use to make their beautiful ideographs. The book had
I. Tanaka, 1478 Queen St. East, Ts
pages of soft, fine rice paper. On the sheet next to the one where
onto. Phone HO. 3-0997 (Toronto’.
1
Month
Jail
Sentence
For
Mongrel
Named
Chiro
I was to sign, I saw the name of a scholarly friend with whom I
had dined in Tokyo not long before:
TOKYO. .— In Hiroshima a
By the prefectural order, the
“Jean Daridan, Ambassadeur de France. IS Mai, 1961”
shaggy male mongrel,. aged one dog’s owner was sternly told to
The brushwork of Jean’s signature was as fluid and free as if he and named Chiro, one night re “keep Chiro leashed, muzzled,
and
had been. studying Japanese calligraphy for a long- time, as per cently pounced on a 19-year-old and placed in a barred dog house
haps he had been.
girl, bit her in seven places and for one' full month.” And to see
On tlie way back to Matsue we detoured through the Hino became the first member of the to it that Chiro lived a dog’s life,
Peninsula, every bit as magnificent as Hearn described it in city’s canine population on whom an official from the prefectural
OSCAR'S
“Glimpses,” and with sea cliffs and pine-topped islands straight the prefecture’s new “rules on office regularly turned up for a
1500
Dundas
(at Dufferin)—LE. M
out of the old scroll paintings. It would have been even more the control of pets and dogs” daily check.
. spectacular seen from a boat offshore, as Hearn had done, rather was enforced.
than from a rough, ill-paved, and sometimes frightening motor
road'that curved around the tops of tlie cliffs. This road finally
It is a good policy to
(Cont. From Page 1)
led, down to a rock-shored bay where there was a fishing village Toronto Visit .. .
have the RIGHT POLICY
that markets dried seaweed, dried octopus, and a species of huge^ casions with their kimono. Not “It is so vast, so big. When the
Consult
edible snail. The snail’s shell is the size of a teacup, rough and so much with Western clothes. . . tour is over (April 9) then may
WALES and DUNCAJi
horny, and colored green, brown and yellow like a piece of glazed
“And it does get chilly in Ja be I wall be able to say better.
T’ang pottery. This village of Hinomisaki is one of those places pan. In the whiter we have snow I’m sure there’ll be many, many
INSURANCE AGENTS
where tlie Japanese like to come on excursions for there is the and cold weather. Not so cold as things.”
bay and the scenic grandeur and also the fine Shinto temple that in Regina. When we were there
464 Yonge Street, Toronto;
Hearn has described. And on the cliff above the village there rises two days ago it was 25 below!”
The Department of Trade and
Phone WA. 1-3171
a g-reat stone lighthouse, built since Hearn’s time, that I was told
Regina was one' of more than Commerce are banking on it.
. is the highest in Japan.
;a_ dozen Canadian cities Miss
For some reason there were no pilgrims or excursionists Koba and her accompanying re
that day in Hinomisaki. I felt sorry for the women tending the tinue of journalists will visit dur
souvenir stalls. They had looked so-hopeful when our car had1 come ing’ tlie three-week Canadian tour.
into tlie village street. The stalls carried colorful junk, plastic
“It is too soon to say what I
toys and tackey objects made of seashells and little mirrors; but enjoy best about Canada,” said
what made them noteworthy was their huge, their incredible, Miss Koba, daughter of a Japa
stocks of dried octopus, dried seaweed and the edible snails. The nese novelist and literary critic.
octopus and seaweed were neatly packag’ed into cellophane parcels,
stacks and stacks of them. The snails were laid out, in their T’angpottery shells, on steam-tables, hot and ready to eat, and giving Dr. Hayakawa . . .
off a faint, offensive odor.
(Cont. From Page 1)
Dried octopus I had eaten before and found to be of chewv
texture and not actually nasty, but dull. Dried seaweed I often had no help from the wliites.
eaten with Japanese meals. It is a shiny dark green, almost black,
By the same token, Dr. Haya
(Member of Toronto Real Estate Board)
and it comes in very thin sheets about ten inches long and eight kawa says “the picture of Ne
K. Hori Real Estate — AM. 1-5194
inches wide, and is crumbly and crackly when you eat it. It has groes behaving as bravely as
, a salty, fishy taste that is pleasant with rice of* other bland food, they have, gives Negroes a great
but it is hither strong when eaten alone. So that afternoon I had' deal of pride in themselves.”
no urge to try octopus or seaweed again. As a conscientious travel
Judging from the smiles and
er I felt perhaps I should eat one of the outsize snails, but I recentlv nodding heads in the audience,
had the big lunch at Izumo and I was sure that there would be the speaker made one of his big
such a lot of snail inside one of those homy, highly-colored gest points by half jokingly re
shells. And there was the odor, a mere whiff, but malevolent, that calling the experience of another
hung in the warm, sunny air.
minority group.
Haring spent the morning at the great Shinto Temple. Izumo
“A century ago, being an Irish
Taisho, I found it 'almost a relief that the temple here at Hino- man made you about as popular
Businessmen Luncheon
miseki was not open that day. We walked around the outside of as an Apache raid,” he said.
the buildings and admired the cunning flow of the roof lines, the “People said Irish were uneduWe Cater To Parties And Banquets
intricate bracketing of- the eaves and the massive layering of catable; they were brawlers and
cypress bark which forms the roof material, At a little room near boozers with a talent only for
TAKE OUT SERVICE
the main steps I bought post cards from a clean-cut, intelligent- music and dancing and — God
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
looking young Shinto priest. The post cards showed splendid pan- forbid — if one moved in next
ed rooms that exist in the temple builtSngs, but the rooms are on door, the property values would
Toronto 2, Ont.
123A Dundas St. West
view’ only at certain times of the year and the priest was sorry go down ... now they elect
Parking At Bay & Dundas
he could not open them for us. Over his white robe, a Shinto priest ed one a president.
GOLF
Fishing Tackle
When Buying Or Selling Call
Specializing In Chinese Food