Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
1. XXIX—No. 58
How Japanese Am I ?
Asks Young Sansei
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4. 196-5
Toronto, Ont.
Tor. JCCA Membership Drive
Nets Almost 600 To Date
By TODD ENDO
I?
How Japanese am
Many months ago The New Canadian reprinted Carol HaseTORONTO. — The Toronto Japanese Canadian
wa’s two articles entitled, “Value of Speaking Japanese” and
“'Responsible Toronto Japanese Canadians can
w Group Characteristics”.
Citizens’ Association’s 1965-66 membership drive feel assured that their rights, as first-class citi
1 As I was reading the first article, I could not quite share her to date has netted almost 600 members, report
zens are constantly guarded by the JCCA. But,
W of view. I would agree with her that to be able to speak
ed
Second
Vice-President
Rits
Inouye
this
week.
to insure this, the Toronto JCCA needs the J.C.’s
ipanese is of “inestimable value”, gives “self-satisfaction”, is an
“Although it is still lagging behind last year.” aid in return. Japanese Canadians in this city
set “job-wise”, and is crucial in “interpreting cultures”.
Twould further agree that without a knowledge of the Japa- she added*, “we still have high hopes for reaching can now show this organization that they re
se language, we “tend to lose all consciousness of being Japa- our objective of 2,000 members.”
cognize this constant vig’il in all aspects of citi
se and of things Japanese”. But, I would disagree with her
Last
year
their
paid
membership
was
609.
zenship and welfare by becoming members for
dement that the inability to speak Japanese is embarrassing.
Mr. George Imai, President of the Toronto Ja the nominal fee of two dollars.”
Perhaps this is a difference between the Nisei and. the Sansei.
sa Sansei, I am not embarrassed that I cannot speak for more panese Citizens’ Association said:
This fee and the income from the big" Annual
an a minute of coherent Japanese. Inconvenienced, maybe; but
|Japanese Canadian Picnic
it embarrassed.
their two main sources of in
The third generation of all immigrant groups tends to lose
come.
e use of their grandparents’ tongue. Really, why should I feel
ubarrassed if a third generation German does not when he
■Their annual commitment to
iiinot speak German? The Sansei cannot be expected to learn
the Issei division is $500.00 and
ipanese.
to the National JCCA is $400.00.
For the Sansei, still, the value of speaking Japanese is imLast
year they contributed $500.iense. But, let us not suppose we have any great advantage over
MILTON,
Ont.
—
Two
kilted
Toronto
lassies
of
Japanese
third generation German in learning Japanese.
00 to the National JCCA History
parentage stole the applause if not the prizes recently at the
I have just finished the equivalent of two years of Japanese
Project — a project that they
; school. I read well enough, but cannot speak proficiently.
fifth annual Ontario Highland dancing championships.
say must be completed. These,
; My teachers tell me my “ra, ri, ru, re, ro” sounds are poor,
Elayne Kageyama, 7, sporting the MacNab tartan, and
as well as their regular output
think they sound all right but they undoubtedly know better.
Darlene Shimizu, 13, wearing the ancient Black Watch tartan,
for welfare, immigration, human
: My oral comprehension is better than most of my classmates,
were among 244 competitors.
.■obably because I have heard Japanese throughout my life even
rights, etc. added to further exI haven’t spoken it.
penses.
: Suffice it to say that my vast storehouse of prior knowledge
This year the Toronto JCCA
.Japanese kept me ahead of the class for all of three lessons.
Miss Okinawa . .
plan
the formation of a Junior
In this experience I don’t think I’m a terribly unusual example
JCCA. which .will require added
.a Sansei. To the Sansei, Japanese is virtually a foreign language,
wild be valuable to know it but let us not deceive ourselves
financial assistance. This junior
’thinking that it comes naturally.
program
will concentrate os
MIAMI BEACH, Fla., — Miss her kimono and talks quietly of
The reason for this breakdown lies with the experience of
bringing
together young people
Okinawa, lovely auburn-haired her American father.
s Nisei.
who
are
interested
in the JCCA
Whereas in the Issei home Japanese is the everyday language, contestant in the Miss Universe
“My mother was a maid for
the Nisei home English is the everyday language. Thus, the Contest, came to this country him, in his quarter. Her husband projects and problems and who
®i aoes not grow up in an environment where they could to find her American father who was killed in the war and she had share their urgency for develop
does': not know she exists. •
ck up Japanese without effort.
two other children and' she had ing future leaders in the Toronto
If keeping the language alive in their children is a grave
Reiko Arakaki is half Ameri to work. She says I have his
ncern to Nisei parents, they must make the painful effort of can, half Okinawan. Her father, face, that I look like him almost Japanese community.
Membership Committee Chair
easing Japanese in daily household conversation. Japanese she says, was an American Array exactly.
* cannot really do the job.
officer in her country in World
“That was my first mother. man, George Takahashi urged ail
If Japanese falls out of household conversation, who can ex- War II. He left shortly after I didn’t know her until a few Toronto J.C.’s to come to the
'U^eeding generations to learn the language?
Christmas of 1946, six months years ago.
aid of their organization. “This
Exhortations on the value of speaking Japanese merely amounts before she was born.
“
My
second
mother
adopted
$2.00 investment today, is for
sounds carried away by the wind.
me
when
I
was
a child.
“
My
mother
didn
’
t
know
Eng
n contrast to her first article, Mrs. Hasegawa’s second article,
the benefit of your children tc
lish. She didn’t know how to ex
“When I was in school, other morrow,” he said.
Characteristics”, struck home.
plain to him she was pregnant, children used to tease me about
inread h6r list of characteristics: (1) sense of respon- lie doesn’t know I am born.”
All membership fees should
being American. That's when I
t-) sense of honor and . pride, (3) industriousness, (4)
be
addressed to: Toronto Chap
Reiko folds her arms around first began to think I was. My
^ss, (a) deep belief in education, I could identify with them.
hair has much red in it. Other ter, Japanese Canadian Citizens'
I identify with these and not the Japanese lanOkinawans have brown and black Association Postal Station “K”,
, oe • Ihe reason is that my parents passed these characteristics
hair.
Japanese Freighter
they didn’t pass on the Japanese language.
Toronto 12, Ontario.
,7. .course, they didn’t sit down with me and teach me these
“I never told my mother about
being teased. Then when I was
:r^^ eSS°n torm. Instead they expressed them in their every- To Van. For Repairs
about 15, a friend, a .classmate,
8,000VANCOUVER.
—
The
p^gj^ ^ow VaIues are passed on. This is how a language
ton Japanese freighter Sanyo told me about my real mother.
Maru is here for repairs after I asked* my second mother for
aS ^ ^<P^ °^ ^rs> Hasegawa’s articles I conclude tha'., fire gutted her upper decks, me and we talked about my
<<grouP characteristics” are still vibrant though engine room and cabins while father.
L“
• c°.niPr°niised in many ways by “Americanization' OU she was loading logs at Grays
“I’m afraid my father will not
is dying.
■ • ■ ■
come forward. He probably has
Harbor,
Wash.
our^r^ an°^er way of retaining an appreciation and application
a family, a wife and maybe chil
thn
heritage which has proved beneficial to me. This
dren. The wife would be jealous.
Thk ? °r the history and culture of Japan and the Far East, Heavy Fines For
“I would not want to hurt him,
school
] e^an’ for the first time, to study the Ear East Forgetful Airlines
or
his family. I just want to
hcciol J • class we read history, literature, political science
meet
him.
j know I’ve barely scratched the surface, out even
MIDWAY ISLAND. — Were
TOKYO. —• Japan announced
“And if I could prove I was
John
was very enlightening.
it will impose heavy fines on part American, I could have a Lt. Joichi Tomonaga, alive today
atedlv th 11 bank, professor of Chinese history at Harvard, re- airlines which land passengers
to lead Japan’s planes on another
- “Asian r°-U?» -^e year stressed that from a global perspective, here without required visas. A new birth certificate saying so. Midway attack, he’d sight in on
v”
TvaY is the norm for human society and the “Western justice ministry spokesman said That would allow me to get a an island suburbia inhabited by
much better job, better pay, in more birds than people and with
Uv iescept onthe warning was given to 17 Okinawa.
only target rifles to defend it.
IM'erse as we automatically assume.
foreign and Japanese airlines
“In Okinawa, if you are part
^ymg to beat out of our heads the assumption that serving Tokyo because of fre
The Navy has more people on
If I
was. natural, human, and ideal.
quent cases of travellers—most American, you get better chan- Midway now than when Japan
nothing else I learned to remove the western of them American—arriving here ces for good work. I need to pay began the biggest battle of the
back my mother.”
I
e^entre of ihe universe. .
Pacific 2.3 years ago, but most
without visas.
Reiko is a sales clerk at the of them are women and children.
dly differ JAat on the other side of the globe live peoples
American post exchange in Ft.
More ?nen-b n°m ourselves from whom we can learn much.
Now there are bowling alleys,
Beckner in Okinawa. She would
^h BroX - I Earned much about rny parents and grand- Together As Doctors
softball
schools, stores,
■^ in
■ ^^ locus were many things which were always Nisei Couple Graduates like to be a fashion model. Her bungalowsfields,
a
n
d
tree - shaded
34-23-35 dimensions packaged fn
thoritv onj111-1110—tor instance, the concepts of the family,
streets
on
this
mid-Pacific
atoll
Evervon
m Personal relationships.
OAKLAND. — A U.S. Nisei 110 pounds of a 5-foot-4 frame 1150 miles northwest of Hono
^ m scho 1c^nn°t. spend a few years in Japan or many more husband-wife combination, Susan lend themselves to modeling.
lulu.
^ our Ta01 earning^ Japanese. But everyone can be inquisitive and Thomas T. Aoki of Oakland,
She says she entered the con
The Christian Fellowship wel
idin<r
Panese heritage and at lest try to understand it by graduated recently from Yale test with hopes of “coming to
comes
everyone to its prayer
Medical School, New Haven, this country to find my father. meetings every Wednesday night,
** ^ hkeaMe student, Japanese or otherwise, owes it to him- Conn., with degrees in medicine. It is hard to travel away from
and sloppily dressed teen-agers
^ owes ;^ ?one c°urse in Far Eastern history. Everyone
The new doctors will intern at my home without something
fl to followlurnself to be continually curious about Japan
such as a beauty contest.”
(Cont. on Page 8)
New Haven hospital.
this curiosity wherever it may lead.
Two J.C. Lassies Steal
Highland Dance Cheers
Japan Beauty Seeks Real Father In U.S
Midway: Now
Great Place
To Raise Kids
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
1. XXIX—No. 58
How Japanese Am I ?
Asks Young Sansei
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4. 196-5
Toronto, Ont.
Tor. JCCA Membership Drive
Nets Almost 600 To Date
By TODD ENDO
I?
How Japanese am
Many months ago The New Canadian reprinted Carol HaseTORONTO. — The Toronto Japanese Canadian
wa’s two articles entitled, “Value of Speaking Japanese” and
“'Responsible Toronto Japanese Canadians can
w Group Characteristics”.
Citizens’ Association’s 1965-66 membership drive feel assured that their rights, as first-class citi
1 As I was reading the first article, I could not quite share her to date has netted almost 600 members, report
zens are constantly guarded by the JCCA. But,
W of view. I would agree with her that to be able to speak
ed
Second
Vice-President
Rits
Inouye
this
week.
to insure this, the Toronto JCCA needs the J.C.’s
ipanese is of “inestimable value”, gives “self-satisfaction”, is an
“Although it is still lagging behind last year.” aid in return. Japanese Canadians in this city
set “job-wise”, and is crucial in “interpreting cultures”.
Twould further agree that without a knowledge of the Japa- she added*, “we still have high hopes for reaching can now show this organization that they re
se language, we “tend to lose all consciousness of being Japa- our objective of 2,000 members.”
cognize this constant vig’il in all aspects of citi
se and of things Japanese”. But, I would disagree with her
Last
year
their
paid
membership
was
609.
zenship and welfare by becoming members for
dement that the inability to speak Japanese is embarrassing.
Mr. George Imai, President of the Toronto Ja the nominal fee of two dollars.”
Perhaps this is a difference between the Nisei and. the Sansei.
sa Sansei, I am not embarrassed that I cannot speak for more panese Citizens’ Association said:
This fee and the income from the big" Annual
an a minute of coherent Japanese. Inconvenienced, maybe; but
|Japanese Canadian Picnic
it embarrassed.
their two main sources of in
The third generation of all immigrant groups tends to lose
come.
e use of their grandparents’ tongue. Really, why should I feel
ubarrassed if a third generation German does not when he
■Their annual commitment to
iiinot speak German? The Sansei cannot be expected to learn
the Issei division is $500.00 and
ipanese.
to the National JCCA is $400.00.
For the Sansei, still, the value of speaking Japanese is imLast
year they contributed $500.iense. But, let us not suppose we have any great advantage over
MILTON,
Ont.
—
Two
kilted
Toronto
lassies
of
Japanese
third generation German in learning Japanese.
00 to the National JCCA History
parentage stole the applause if not the prizes recently at the
I have just finished the equivalent of two years of Japanese
Project — a project that they
; school. I read well enough, but cannot speak proficiently.
fifth annual Ontario Highland dancing championships.
say must be completed. These,
; My teachers tell me my “ra, ri, ru, re, ro” sounds are poor,
Elayne Kageyama, 7, sporting the MacNab tartan, and
as well as their regular output
think they sound all right but they undoubtedly know better.
Darlene Shimizu, 13, wearing the ancient Black Watch tartan,
for welfare, immigration, human
: My oral comprehension is better than most of my classmates,
were among 244 competitors.
.■obably because I have heard Japanese throughout my life even
rights, etc. added to further exI haven’t spoken it.
penses.
: Suffice it to say that my vast storehouse of prior knowledge
This year the Toronto JCCA
.Japanese kept me ahead of the class for all of three lessons.
Miss Okinawa . .
plan
the formation of a Junior
In this experience I don’t think I’m a terribly unusual example
JCCA. which .will require added
.a Sansei. To the Sansei, Japanese is virtually a foreign language,
wild be valuable to know it but let us not deceive ourselves
financial assistance. This junior
’thinking that it comes naturally.
program
will concentrate os
MIAMI BEACH, Fla., — Miss her kimono and talks quietly of
The reason for this breakdown lies with the experience of
bringing
together young people
Okinawa, lovely auburn-haired her American father.
s Nisei.
who
are
interested
in the JCCA
Whereas in the Issei home Japanese is the everyday language, contestant in the Miss Universe
“My mother was a maid for
the Nisei home English is the everyday language. Thus, the Contest, came to this country him, in his quarter. Her husband projects and problems and who
®i aoes not grow up in an environment where they could to find her American father who was killed in the war and she had share their urgency for develop
does': not know she exists. •
ck up Japanese without effort.
two other children and' she had ing future leaders in the Toronto
If keeping the language alive in their children is a grave
Reiko Arakaki is half Ameri to work. She says I have his
ncern to Nisei parents, they must make the painful effort of can, half Okinawan. Her father, face, that I look like him almost Japanese community.
Membership Committee Chair
easing Japanese in daily household conversation. Japanese she says, was an American Array exactly.
* cannot really do the job.
officer in her country in World
“That was my first mother. man, George Takahashi urged ail
If Japanese falls out of household conversation, who can ex- War II. He left shortly after I didn’t know her until a few Toronto J.C.’s to come to the
'U^eeding generations to learn the language?
Christmas of 1946, six months years ago.
aid of their organization. “This
Exhortations on the value of speaking Japanese merely amounts before she was born.
“
My
second
mother
adopted
$2.00 investment today, is for
sounds carried away by the wind.
me
when
I
was
a child.
“
My
mother
didn
’
t
know
Eng
n contrast to her first article, Mrs. Hasegawa’s second article,
the benefit of your children tc
lish. She didn’t know how to ex
“When I was in school, other morrow,” he said.
Characteristics”, struck home.
plain to him she was pregnant, children used to tease me about
inread h6r list of characteristics: (1) sense of respon- lie doesn’t know I am born.”
All membership fees should
being American. That's when I
t-) sense of honor and . pride, (3) industriousness, (4)
be
addressed to: Toronto Chap
Reiko folds her arms around first began to think I was. My
^ss, (a) deep belief in education, I could identify with them.
hair has much red in it. Other ter, Japanese Canadian Citizens'
I identify with these and not the Japanese lanOkinawans have brown and black Association Postal Station “K”,
, oe • Ihe reason is that my parents passed these characteristics
hair.
Japanese Freighter
they didn’t pass on the Japanese language.
Toronto 12, Ontario.
,7. .course, they didn’t sit down with me and teach me these
“I never told my mother about
being teased. Then when I was
:r^^ eSS°n torm. Instead they expressed them in their every- To Van. For Repairs
about 15, a friend, a .classmate,
8,000VANCOUVER.
—
The
p^gj^ ^ow VaIues are passed on. This is how a language
ton Japanese freighter Sanyo told me about my real mother.
Maru is here for repairs after I asked* my second mother for
aS ^ ^<P^ °^ ^rs> Hasegawa’s articles I conclude tha'., fire gutted her upper decks, me and we talked about my
<<grouP characteristics” are still vibrant though engine room and cabins while father.
L“
• c°.niPr°niised in many ways by “Americanization' OU she was loading logs at Grays
“I’m afraid my father will not
is dying.
■ • ■ ■
come forward. He probably has
Harbor,
Wash.
our^r^ an°^er way of retaining an appreciation and application
a family, a wife and maybe chil
thn
heritage which has proved beneficial to me. This
dren. The wife would be jealous.
Thk ? °r the history and culture of Japan and the Far East, Heavy Fines For
“I would not want to hurt him,
school
] e^an’ for the first time, to study the Ear East Forgetful Airlines
or
his family. I just want to
hcciol J • class we read history, literature, political science
meet
him.
j know I’ve barely scratched the surface, out even
MIDWAY ISLAND. — Were
TOKYO. —• Japan announced
“And if I could prove I was
John
was very enlightening.
it will impose heavy fines on part American, I could have a Lt. Joichi Tomonaga, alive today
atedlv th 11 bank, professor of Chinese history at Harvard, re- airlines which land passengers
to lead Japan’s planes on another
- “Asian r°-U?» -^e year stressed that from a global perspective, here without required visas. A new birth certificate saying so. Midway attack, he’d sight in on
v”
TvaY is the norm for human society and the “Western justice ministry spokesman said That would allow me to get a an island suburbia inhabited by
much better job, better pay, in more birds than people and with
Uv iescept onthe warning was given to 17 Okinawa.
only target rifles to defend it.
IM'erse as we automatically assume.
foreign and Japanese airlines
“In Okinawa, if you are part
^ymg to beat out of our heads the assumption that serving Tokyo because of fre
The Navy has more people on
If I
was. natural, human, and ideal.
quent cases of travellers—most American, you get better chan- Midway now than when Japan
nothing else I learned to remove the western of them American—arriving here ces for good work. I need to pay began the biggest battle of the
back my mother.”
I
e^entre of ihe universe. .
Pacific 2.3 years ago, but most
without visas.
Reiko is a sales clerk at the of them are women and children.
dly differ JAat on the other side of the globe live peoples
American post exchange in Ft.
More ?nen-b n°m ourselves from whom we can learn much.
Now there are bowling alleys,
Beckner in Okinawa. She would
^h BroX - I Earned much about rny parents and grand- Together As Doctors
softball
schools, stores,
■^ in
■ ^^ locus were many things which were always Nisei Couple Graduates like to be a fashion model. Her bungalowsfields,
a
n
d
tree - shaded
34-23-35 dimensions packaged fn
thoritv onj111-1110—tor instance, the concepts of the family,
streets
on
this
mid-Pacific
atoll
Evervon
m Personal relationships.
OAKLAND. — A U.S. Nisei 110 pounds of a 5-foot-4 frame 1150 miles northwest of Hono
^ m scho 1c^nn°t. spend a few years in Japan or many more husband-wife combination, Susan lend themselves to modeling.
lulu.
^ our Ta01 earning^ Japanese. But everyone can be inquisitive and Thomas T. Aoki of Oakland,
She says she entered the con
The Christian Fellowship wel
idin<r
Panese heritage and at lest try to understand it by graduated recently from Yale test with hopes of “coming to
comes
everyone to its prayer
Medical School, New Haven, this country to find my father. meetings every Wednesday night,
** ^ hkeaMe student, Japanese or otherwise, owes it to him- Conn., with degrees in medicine. It is hard to travel away from
and sloppily dressed teen-agers
^ owes ;^ ?one c°urse in Far Eastern history. Everyone
The new doctors will intern at my home without something
fl to followlurnself to be continually curious about Japan
such as a beauty contest.”
(Cont. on Page 8)
New Haven hospital.
this curiosity wherever it may lead.
Two J.C. Lassies Steal
Highland Dance Cheers
Japan Beauty Seeks Real Father In U.S
Midway: Now
Great Place
To Raise Kids
Page 2
R<
w
co
o
o.w^
BU
p
6 h
5 °°o
h“®
li
CH
a
£
±
B
BAMBOO GROVE
M
co
692 No. 3 Road,
Richmond, B. C.
kW^s
Phone CR. 8-9585
CR. 8-9586
§S “
Sa?
to
no
B
w
w
KTc^lsEgc
74 m
oo cn
^7
• fiSSs—-WXiiHRM
• -itlttLKbfcs
fiO#KHt5f-
M3«g
M
S'^»4>-i«mi#
a«i«cas
sH-fK
IS4
iteli^©*
METRO PARKS
PLEASE WALK
ON THE GMSS
"^ ^ ItSAJJ^K®® l
E
B
^R3^)5it-^“-f'5f|||
^A@0<-ioJ&^B
^Bi-fettlp^g^j;
®3it8®^-
ASftKtKJ’CIiw
^ “"^ iuformation on the new Co^ ^ ^ ^ '
^^ . ^^ ^^
"
Department of Labour,
Ottawa
Hon. All
department of labour
ichen, Minte of Labour/George V. Haytho,
’
METROPOLITAN TORON?0
PARK DEPARTMENT ■
PHONE 487-5291
w
co
o
o.w^
BU
p
6 h
5 °°o
h“®
li
CH
a
£
±
B
BAMBOO GROVE
M
co
692 No. 3 Road,
Richmond, B. C.
kW^s
Phone CR. 8-9585
CR. 8-9586
§S “
Sa?
to
no
B
w
w
KTc^lsEgc
74 m
oo cn
^7
• fiSSs—-WXiiHRM
• -itlttLKbfcs
fiO#KHt5f-
M3«g
M
S'^»4>-i«mi#
a«i«cas
sH-fK
IS4
iteli^©*
METRO PARKS
PLEASE WALK
ON THE GMSS
"^ ^ ItSAJJ^K®® l
E
B
^R3^)5it-^“-f'5f|||
^A@0<-ioJ&^B
^Bi-fettlp^g^j;
®3it8®^-
ASftKtKJ’CIiw
^ “"^ iuformation on the new Co^ ^ ^ ^ '
^^ . ^^ ^^
"
Department of Labour,
Ottawa
Hon. All
department of labour
ichen, Minte of Labour/George V. Haytho,
’
METROPOLITAN TORON?0
PARK DEPARTMENT ■
PHONE 487-5291
Page 3
August 4, 1965
w
J h
9^
6
7
3
Ji
b
IX
1
d*
5
Fl
3
: O Ft
Page 3
7?
>t> z?
i’
9 A
5 *
It
it
IX £ o
< 3/
^ Fl ^ V' 7
A
g
*9
& fc r 5
Jar
fl
tc
I: £ ^ ^31- 1
13 5p
vj
>
3
£
^
3i
it 7
3>
V'
0
C,
0
a
IX
O
>
$
T ■ —A 3 n
1
3 ‘fit
<p
£>
/? X:
<
Ft
> 0
VC.
o 3
© c 3
3
£
ar
9 0
fz $
© I
j
Sgt
CT
b
o
.4^1
E
£ 1 IX T
7^
0
&
^
3
IC &
?
%
HI XX II ^ $
CD V
t
7
4
0
0
T
$
^
$
W
ip
tr
z
V'
(X
3 IL
a 0
|5f
t
it
3
oc
^
$ $
tc
IC
X b
ip
L. #
0
3
0
A
CT
X
X
T
5
3
1 3i
Ft
5' &
1 y
n b
d> X IX t> 7 0
# it 3~
>5
It &
ffi
> il ^X ft
3 X ^
m m j^
R 1: 7?
IX
4)
1
St If
It <
•Kit T
0
1'
X It
5 u
I'
5
I* 0
0 4?
# 0
*<
Ft ik I
L> w
&
IC ^ IC
OK
0
b
Ft IX (C T 7’
t"
w
Fl o 5 JtL a
FC 3
*■
IF
3 T
r to
fr
IX
£ ip A 3
Ft
J
0
o
o
H
^
0
9
IX
3
B
It*
£1
0
L
£
7 L'
iK
ir
IZ
X
y 3
ip
12
ft
T <uN
Bl
X 0
1
3
I "o 0 i 1
5 &
3
FC 0
IX
1
IX W
tn
B
1
4 FC
4
o ^
7
7^ u
^ l>
L' b £
Y 1
0 Ft A
IX
IC
7
r T
3
m
a 0
1 X 6 0
Ft
3?
7
5 Ft
A X
i
XX <® If § FC T IX I %
0
0 4
^X 7 X
r
ip
7 5
a’
3
d> 3
IC
IX
0
T
£
3
0
0
12
^ y
o O
o
T
i: 0
L
*
3 0
o
B
It n To 3 ?1J
t I’
IX
T
0
fc ip 0
<
5
y b b'
3
it
b
L
0
IX
B. 6
It
T ® ^
M^t^i
CO
0
fr
8
WJ5^>
^
7)'
|j|®R
ft
co
n
&
0
1 tx
IX
*
M0 o
5
M£©Oft0#0
K ^ ® t ft O
soa#
&ftft$K
15
o facials
It
IX
tit
I'
OE®
^#7
®
IX
6
It
5
•utJ
I ^ b
j? <i
20 ®4
O •
®©^5
&^ <
cr
bog
»3
$0
®H
?2
Ci a.
Cl w
co pi
tO CD
ft £p± Mi £ ^
ms;
&&0 ^^ <
h
4 wit^ ( 1^^
& 3;
4^ 51 ^
> w •/
^t£ b#TO& O
O“ *
£
%rM
Continental Family Co-op.
460 Dundas St. W., Toronto
6-5589 — EM. 6-5711
IX ® ui'^L
It
i
Ft
&'
SUPER- SEASON1 NG
AJINOMOTO
9
it
§
s
s <£ w
&5 £ 8
^i ? ^
T ic^
°IX«-
L S S.S
©• 2 <5
wPao
f:
w
J h
9^
6
7
3
Ji
b
IX
1
d*
5
Fl
3
: O Ft
Page 3
7?
>t> z?
i’
9 A
5 *
It
it
IX £ o
< 3/
^ Fl ^ V' 7
A
g
*9
& fc r 5
Jar
fl
tc
I: £ ^ ^31- 1
13 5p
vj
>
3
£
^
3i
it 7
3>
V'
0
C,
0
a
IX
O
>
$
T ■ —A 3 n
1
3 ‘fit
<p
£>
/? X:
<
Ft
> 0
VC.
o 3
© c 3
3
£
ar
9 0
fz $
© I
j
Sgt
CT
b
o
.4^1
E
£ 1 IX T
7^
0
&
^
3
IC &
?
%
HI XX II ^ $
CD V
t
7
4
0
0
T
$
^
$
W
ip
tr
z
V'
(X
3 IL
a 0
|5f
t
it
3
oc
^
$ $
tc
IC
X b
ip
L. #
0
3
0
A
CT
X
X
T
5
3
1 3i
Ft
5' &
1 y
n b
d> X IX t> 7 0
# it 3~
>5
It &
ffi
> il ^X ft
3 X ^
m m j^
R 1: 7?
IX
4)
1
St If
It <
•Kit T
0
1'
X It
5 u
I'
5
I* 0
0 4?
# 0
*<
Ft ik I
L> w
&
IC ^ IC
OK
0
b
Ft IX (C T 7’
t"
w
Fl o 5 JtL a
FC 3
*■
IF
3 T
r to
fr
IX
£ ip A 3
Ft
J
0
o
o
H
^
0
9
IX
3
B
It*
£1
0
L
£
7 L'
iK
ir
IZ
X
y 3
ip
12
ft
T <uN
Bl
X 0
1
3
I "o 0 i 1
5 &
3
FC 0
IX
1
IX W
tn
B
1
4 FC
4
o ^
7
7^ u
^ l>
L' b £
Y 1
0 Ft A
IX
IC
7
r T
3
m
a 0
1 X 6 0
Ft
3?
7
5 Ft
A X
i
XX <® If § FC T IX I %
0
0 4
^X 7 X
r
ip
7 5
a’
3
d> 3
IC
IX
0
T
£
3
0
0
12
^ y
o O
o
T
i: 0
L
*
3 0
o
B
It n To 3 ?1J
t I’
IX
T
0
fc ip 0
<
5
y b b'
3
it
b
L
0
IX
B. 6
It
T ® ^
M^t^i
CO
0
fr
8
WJ5^>
^
7)'
|j|®R
ft
co
n
&
0
1 tx
IX
*
M0 o
5
M£©Oft0#0
K ^ ® t ft O
soa#
&ftft$K
15
o facials
It
IX
tit
I'
OE®
^#7
®
IX
6
It
5
•utJ
I ^ b
j? <i
20 ®4
O •
®©^5
&^ <
cr
bog
»3
$0
®H
?2
Ci a.
Cl w
co pi
tO CD
ft £p± Mi £ ^
ms;
&&0 ^^ <
h
4 wit^ ( 1^^
& 3;
4^ 51 ^
> w •/
^t£ b#TO& O
O“ *
£
%rM
Continental Family Co-op.
460 Dundas St. W., Toronto
6-5589 — EM. 6-5711
IX ® ui'^L
It
i
Ft
&'
SUPER- SEASON1 NG
AJINOMOTO
9
it
§
s
s <£ w
&5 £ 8
^i ? ^
T ic^
°IX«-
L S S.S
©• 2 <5
wPao
f:
Page 4
6
JU
JIS
ft
IX
zbo
mj
tx
IX
6
0
IX
0
IX
!!
1
IX
b
5
IX
b
K
3
d» IX
3
d*
o
5
31
/b 3
(X
IX
6
i
IC
^J
B
0
K
(X
IX
3
B V'
g a $^
® IX t ;«
ISSH
r tP
5
6
fig
$
IX
IX
ip
fl Hg
B
4
6
5
IX
aw
5
IC
5
IC 6
IX
5
W
3
i'
*
X
7
a n
IX
X
0
tc
IC
v
u
1
X-
T - #
(X
■IX
xp
d» £
6
# #i6
W2J:
® O ft A
It S # A’
i
IX IX
0
/ f
11
i’
5
lx
5i 0
i
2
tc
X
3
tc
0
£
(X
5 IX
6
Hr
ic
3
n
$ 5 £ £>
0
ic
tc
IX
IX
IE tf5
B
#ffl B
d»
IC
©
IX
£
JILL
ft X S • ^^M&IXO^BB'J.
t^^
t, V®
&
-“ 3 ) ^lA * tA S^^0^®®!®
m<
L #n -B If # L tz 1 £ I y u ^ >?’ iS
z
W_«—^L^?»i 4wmf|X[|± I ? £ 4? f S Rt £ £ * ^
C'
s>^
& f *
X
^IX
HO O
® K
S® B
3
Sts
ju
J)K H AK
JU
JIS
ft
IX
zbo
mj
tx
IX
6
0
IX
0
IX
!!
1
IX
b
5
IX
b
K
3
d» IX
3
d*
o
5
31
/b 3
(X
IX
6
i
IC
^J
B
0
K
(X
IX
3
B V'
g a $^
® IX t ;«
ISSH
r tP
5
6
fig
$
IX
IX
ip
fl Hg
B
4
6
5
IX
aw
5
IC
5
IC 6
IX
5
W
3
i'
*
X
7
a n
IX
X
0
tc
IC
v
u
1
X-
T - #
(X
■IX
xp
d» £
6
# #i6
W2J:
® O ft A
It S # A’
i
IX IX
0
/ f
11
i’
5
lx
5i 0
i
2
tc
X
3
tc
0
£
(X
5 IX
6
Hr
ic
3
n
$ 5 £ £>
0
ic
tc
IX
IX
IE tf5
B
#ffl B
d»
IC
©
IX
£
JILL
ft X S • ^^M&IXO^BB'J.
t^^
t, V®
&
-“ 3 ) ^lA * tA S^^0^®®!®
m<
L #n -B If # L tz 1 £ I y u ^ >?’ iS
z
W_«—^L^?»i 4wmf|X[|± I ? £ 4? f S Rt £ £ * ^
C'
s>^
& f *
X
^IX
HO O
® K
S® B
3
Sts
ju
J)K H AK
Page 5
f^nesday, August 4, 196a
V
6
£
3?
^
o 3
n i5
V'
Page
Zp
72
5 w
tx
Zp
| re
IX
LT
h
k
9*
SB raj
14
m
&
0
IX
Zp
3
£ I'
©5 9
n
o
I'
5
IX
7 3
A i
ft
it
it
ft
£
D
I' .£
0
0
ft
14
(X
n
3
11
5
14
I'
IX
nip IX 72
(X
re
i
M
^i
it
rx
t
3
IX
itfl
IP ©
zK
i?
IX
3
£ IX 6
is.
IX
D it
it
IX’
iX
I
^
B
re
it
IX
ip
©
I
IX li
re
9
X
ft
In
IX
3
&
0
o
IX
W
fill MU
7M
0
$
^J
it
it
9
0
V
^
n
«>
3
C
ft
®
^
it Zp
M- IX
7
£ 3
IX 3
2.
72
5
»
IX
re
B ^
re z?^
^ %
7c
3
0
in
0
®
IX
72
ft
A c
nT.
xK
5 0
it
#
0
B>
It £
® £
0
O
4nb
3
T ^ KJ
3
tli
J’ IX
i:
ft 3
n
b
ip
(X
72
0 (X
&
ft
d5
*0
(X
b
7
T
0
it
1
9
0
V
H
o
0
3
72
o
11 IX it
CP.
)2
KI
1
7
V'
7
0
7’
ir
id’
IX
72
re
n
it
(p
14
0
o
5
& id
0
3
i)>
£
IX
II
fl
B>
5
re
m
IX IX
nt
li
IX’ 7
i>
1
i
&
ir<
5
MB
nK
14
i>
it
14
IX
0
it
IX B
it
xp
3
72
ip
IX
£
^r
10%
©
72
5
iX
IX
3
X
I
tt
ifii a -fn 14
ip
X
5
$
ip
i& H
9
3
co
^Tt^ tA § # tlK8?IB <98^
£1-1 ' ° s S 'a®*.® t, tsaa®
^IXtEH
i
L-HU 0 lift
re A ^L m g
B
3 co
Sag
w“
'#5
Bm-bfE
KfeOSSHH
ft 'H3SJSS
Sf B K fi A
Mix®$«
^ ir <5 ffi
fr
'BM 'IS
t^ ?> ^ ^ ^ ®
$ B • W ' ’
' H 41 'BA
K©S g*I
’BiilS ft
3
#
72
0
®
5
3
i
3
i
(X
ip
inj
2.
V
6
£
3?
^
o 3
n i5
V'
Page
Zp
72
5 w
tx
Zp
| re
IX
LT
h
k
9*
SB raj
14
m
&
0
IX
Zp
3
£ I'
©5 9
n
o
I'
5
IX
7 3
A i
ft
it
it
ft
£
D
I' .£
0
0
ft
14
(X
n
3
11
5
14
I'
IX
nip IX 72
(X
re
i
M
^i
it
rx
t
3
IX
itfl
IP ©
zK
i?
IX
3
£ IX 6
is.
IX
D it
it
IX’
iX
I
^
B
re
it
IX
ip
©
I
IX li
re
9
X
ft
In
IX
3
&
0
o
IX
W
fill MU
7M
0
$
^J
it
it
9
0
V
^
n
«>
3
C
ft
®
^
it Zp
M- IX
7
£ 3
IX 3
2.
72
5
»
IX
re
B ^
re z?^
^ %
7c
3
0
in
0
®
IX
72
ft
A c
nT.
xK
5 0
it
#
0
B>
It £
® £
0
O
4nb
3
T ^ KJ
3
tli
J’ IX
i:
ft 3
n
b
ip
(X
72
0 (X
&
ft
d5
*0
(X
b
7
T
0
it
1
9
0
V
H
o
0
3
72
o
11 IX it
CP.
)2
KI
1
7
V'
7
0
7’
ir
id’
IX
72
re
n
it
(p
14
0
o
5
& id
0
3
i)>
£
IX
II
fl
B>
5
re
m
IX IX
nt
li
IX’ 7
i>
1
i
&
ir<
5
MB
nK
14
i>
it
14
IX
0
it
IX B
it
xp
3
72
ip
IX
£
^r
10%
©
72
5
iX
IX
3
X
I
tt
ifii a -fn 14
ip
X
5
$
ip
i& H
9
3
co
^Tt^ tA § # tlK8?IB <98^
£1-1 ' ° s S 'a®*.® t, tsaa®
^IXtEH
i
L-HU 0 lift
re A ^L m g
B
3 co
Sag
w“
'#5
Bm-bfE
KfeOSSHH
ft 'H3SJSS
Sf B K fi A
Mix®$«
^ ir <5 ffi
fr
'BM 'IS
t^ ?> ^ ^ ^ ®
$ B • W ' ’
' H 41 'BA
K©S g*I
’BiilS ft
3
#
72
0
®
5
3
i
3
i
(X
ip
inj
2.
Page 6
11
U)
L
zp
it
»>
«n
it
it
r^
11
ix
raj
^
3
I'
re
£
3
H
n
tx.
it
5
3
IK)
IX
5l
r 4i
5^
it
3
o
it
it
0
\1
11
5
11
it
w
it,
xp
fW
B
it
FH5
it
IX
it
3
3
5
-3
3
6
0
ID
5
H
it jW
5
3
Ira
;&>
3
3
XI
it
&
B
Toronto 2-3, fef
©
Phone EM. ^^
A
r ^li
Xp it
W
I'
6
b
^ Is]
^J
d»
?
CANADA
479 Queen St. W
3
b
it fjg
3
if
T
NEW
5
ft’
11
fi
ff
It
b
IX
IX it
Xp
3
5
©
£
i
It
&
F$
it
i
n
T
©
IX
3
X
^J
3
b
nX
IX’
Ze
it
it
it
i
0
n
6
£ it
b
0
it
11
&
b
V)
IX it
^E
IX
lift
IX
3
11
i11'
it
0
3
ah
re
t &
it
3
b
I'
ft
IX
it
^ 11
it
# # ill
M
(X f £ O!
I' £0^1
3 £«
it
0
3
0
^>
0
M
11
W
ah
it
W V'
3
11
11
ft
&
*> 46
H
IX
0 a«
8
* tt
i
a M
it V J
' 0
1U A
it
5
3
d»
©
s
9
tt
T
©
d>
it
V'
3
r
§8
ft
<E
3 t^t
a i>
3
It
L
g^5^
fie
5 n
3
&
0
£ ^
&
©
5
K
wiBIS
ft
* # 3 Kg!
i» « a
3
i
3
it
g
5
it £
iiJ
Cl
a
21
La
U)
L
zp
it
»>
«n
it
it
r^
11
ix
raj
^
3
I'
re
£
3
H
n
tx.
it
5
3
IK)
IX
5l
r 4i
5^
it
3
o
it
it
0
\1
11
5
11
it
w
it,
xp
fW
B
it
FH5
it
IX
it
3
3
5
-3
3
6
0
ID
5
H
it jW
5
3
Ira
;&>
3
3
XI
it
&
B
Toronto 2-3, fef
©
Phone EM. ^^
A
r ^li
Xp it
W
I'
6
b
^ Is]
^J
d»
?
CANADA
479 Queen St. W
3
b
it fjg
3
if
T
NEW
5
ft’
11
fi
ff
It
b
IX
IX it
Xp
3
5
©
£
i
It
&
F$
it
i
n
T
©
IX
3
X
^J
3
b
nX
IX’
Ze
it
it
it
i
0
n
6
£ it
b
0
it
11
&
b
V)
IX it
^E
IX
lift
IX
3
11
i11'
it
0
3
ah
re
t &
it
3
b
I'
ft
IX
it
^ 11
it
# # ill
M
(X f £ O!
I' £0^1
3 £«
it
0
3
0
^>
0
M
11
W
ah
it
W V'
3
11
11
ft
&
*> 46
H
IX
0 a«
8
* tt
i
a M
it V J
' 0
1U A
it
5
3
d»
©
s
9
tt
T
©
d>
it
V'
3
r
§8
ft
<E
3 t^t
a i>
3
It
L
g^5^
fie
5 n
3
&
0
£ ^
&
©
5
K
wiBIS
ft
* # 3 Kg!
i» « a
3
i
3
it
g
5
it £
iiJ
Cl
a
21
La
Page 7
r-^ar. August 4, 1965
?m 7
Dates and Doings
L& Murasugi To Speak At St. Andrew's^Cong.
OFFICE
EM. M3S4
EM. 4-1395
s
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
I TORONTO—St. Andrew’s Japanese Congregation at St. Alban
LAfitvr (Howland and Barton) will have as gnest speaker
Ur Mura^ugi, Professor of the Department of Mathematics.
Toronto on August 8th beginning 11:30 a.m. Conferfil £ Mr. T. Hiramatsu.
By STELLA ITO
| A. E. McKague, Q.C
-
I
Pot Pourri
'Everyone is extended a cordial welcome to attend' this service.
:
’
Rev. Ken Imai
EPICURIAN TREAT
nori-maki SASHIMI:
any desired fresh fish thinly
for osashimi.
Arrange on 1._ sheet of nori which has been toasted! and
cooled
for each roll,
Vancouver JCCA Membership Drive Starts Sept.
Roll as jelly roll, about ^ inch in diameter. Then wrap in
I VANCOUVER.—This year’s Vancouver JCCA membership wax paper and chill.
Live will start in September, and it is hoped that this year will be
Cut into thin slices and arrange on platter, cut side up. De
t most successful ever.
corate with shreuded daikon, cucumber slices and parslev
I Free telephone books covering all Japanese Canadians in
Mustard goes well
” with maguro.
Litish Columbia will be given to. members at the time the JCCA
Lvasser calls at your door.
fire up your outdoor GRILL FOR
FAll Japanese Canadians are strongly urged to support the
TROUT BARBECUE
CCA. This is your group, looking after your rights.
Ingredients:
6 pan-dressed trout
Van. JCCA
!4 cup French dressing
♦
*
♦
1 tbsp, lemon juice
lummer Folk Dancing Classes At J.C.C. Centre 1 tsp. salt
tsp. pepper
TORONTO.—Want to spend the summer doing
„ something
Method:
■eative as well as entertaining? How about Japanese folk dancing ?
Clean, rinse and pat the fish dry. Combine remaining- ingre
I The Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre has been presenting dients. Brush each fish inside and out with the sauce.
| Summer School of Japanese Folk Dancing. Classes started on
Place fish on well-greased grids and grill over moderately
July 20th and will continue until August 24th at the Centre. Here hot coals for 15 to 20 minutes.
I an opportunity to learn Japanese odori or folk dances under
Turn over and bi-ush with sauce. Grill 10 minutes longer, or
fee qualified direction of Mrs. Chiyo Seko, every Tuesday evening- until fish flakes easily with a fork (6 servings.)
The thing to watch in barbecueing trout is not. to overcook.
tom 8:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Trout
does not require heavy seasoning—preserve its tender tex
J Fee for this summer course is 25 cents for children and stuture
and
mellow flavor with .a minimum of fuss and bother.
ients; 50 cents for adults.
To round out your outdoor trout grilling, wrap some potatoes
J.C.C. Centre
separately in heavy-duty foil and cook them alongside on the
grill. Another vegetable that goes well with trout or any barbecued fish -is eggplant—sliced, skin on, coated with bread' crumbs
or other dips, -and grilled.
*
*
Simple but nourishing luncheon when heat is high and appetite
low—eggs poached in white wine.
OEUFS AU VIN
(Dining Lounge)
Ingredients:
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto,
Canada
L
1 tbsp, butter
’/z cup dry white wine
Phone: 364-3481
4
eggs
(4 Lines To Serve You)
salt and pepper
CATERING SERVICE - “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
Dash of paprika
1 tbsp, grated Bleu cheese
Method:
Melt butter in an 8-inch skillet. Add wine. Slip in eggs, one
For Business Or Private Parties
at
a
time, and season with salt, pepper and paprika.
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
Sprinkle with grated Bleu cheese and cover. Cook to desired
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
firnmess. Lift eggs with slotted spoon and drain well. Serve
promptly.
HAVE YOU GALS ORDERED YOUR COPY OF THE COOK
BOOK . . . DON’T MISS OUT ON THE PLEASURE OF JAPA
NESE COOKING ...
*
REMDENCE
2 Vesta Orivo
HUdson 5-1365
*
Lichee Garden $
Banquet Facilities
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1COS Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide}
TORONTO
—---- - ---Bus:
Ros:
834-9156
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
Account ant
Suit®
483
133 BLOOR ST. W.
AUTO
—
FIRE
TORONTO
—
LIFE
ALL FORMS
OF
INSURANCE
consult
J
|
TORONTO
J
Bus. 366-5812
Res. PI. 9-8317 |
NISHIMURA
Picture Frames
CUSTOM FRAMING
1278 Yonge St. — Phono: 923-6877
(3. oi Woodlawn)
Toronto
Lucien C. Kurata, Q.C
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
Ofiico Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
Reg: RO. 7-3427
EM. 6-3323
When Buying Or Selling A Home
14 Perivale Cres.
Scarboro
Phone: AM. 1-5194
Call
Ken Hori
• Income of $10,000 to $20,000 per year.
• Jobs guaranteed tipon graduation.
Glass starting once a year in September.
Write for School Catalog de information.
(Branch School in Long Beach, California)
Takara
Jewellers
Continental
Diamonds & iWatches
AMERICAN
Family Co-op
Watch & Jewellery Repair
Ch>ck Sexing School
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto
Home Office:
Prospect Ave.
^nsdale, Penna. 19446
Phone 363-0952
Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—3.
Suite 1103
Japanese & Occidental Foods
Eve. By Appointment
400 Dundas St. W. — Toronto
Hiro Kawaguchi
Art Watanabe
EM. 6-5589 and EM. 6-5711
1384y2 Queen W.
Toronto—
LE. 2-
DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS
FISHING TACKLE —
LIVE BAIT
BASEBALL & GOLF
EQUIPMENT.
551 Danforth Aye.,
(Rear Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
Open Thur, card Fri. Until 9 p. m.
Educational Funds
through Life Insurance?
CONTACT
See the
4
CO'S«.
z
Ron Marks
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
company of Canada;
Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
lOfA
Of Toronto
THE NEW CANADIAN
479 .Queen St. W.
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Office 364-5141
Residence 925-9636
I
KIYO TAMURA
JChick Sexing Profession
Young Men & Women
|
902-1383
Sus Nagai
487 DANFORTH AVE
PHONE: 463-8104
?m 7
Dates and Doings
L& Murasugi To Speak At St. Andrew's^Cong.
OFFICE
EM. M3S4
EM. 4-1395
s
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
I TORONTO—St. Andrew’s Japanese Congregation at St. Alban
LAfitvr (Howland and Barton) will have as gnest speaker
Ur Mura^ugi, Professor of the Department of Mathematics.
Toronto on August 8th beginning 11:30 a.m. Conferfil £ Mr. T. Hiramatsu.
By STELLA ITO
| A. E. McKague, Q.C
-
I
Pot Pourri
'Everyone is extended a cordial welcome to attend' this service.
:
’
Rev. Ken Imai
EPICURIAN TREAT
nori-maki SASHIMI:
any desired fresh fish thinly
for osashimi.
Arrange on 1._ sheet of nori which has been toasted! and
cooled
for each roll,
Vancouver JCCA Membership Drive Starts Sept.
Roll as jelly roll, about ^ inch in diameter. Then wrap in
I VANCOUVER.—This year’s Vancouver JCCA membership wax paper and chill.
Live will start in September, and it is hoped that this year will be
Cut into thin slices and arrange on platter, cut side up. De
t most successful ever.
corate with shreuded daikon, cucumber slices and parslev
I Free telephone books covering all Japanese Canadians in
Mustard goes well
” with maguro.
Litish Columbia will be given to. members at the time the JCCA
Lvasser calls at your door.
fire up your outdoor GRILL FOR
FAll Japanese Canadians are strongly urged to support the
TROUT BARBECUE
CCA. This is your group, looking after your rights.
Ingredients:
6 pan-dressed trout
Van. JCCA
!4 cup French dressing
♦
*
♦
1 tbsp, lemon juice
lummer Folk Dancing Classes At J.C.C. Centre 1 tsp. salt
tsp. pepper
TORONTO.—Want to spend the summer doing
„ something
Method:
■eative as well as entertaining? How about Japanese folk dancing ?
Clean, rinse and pat the fish dry. Combine remaining- ingre
I The Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre has been presenting dients. Brush each fish inside and out with the sauce.
| Summer School of Japanese Folk Dancing. Classes started on
Place fish on well-greased grids and grill over moderately
July 20th and will continue until August 24th at the Centre. Here hot coals for 15 to 20 minutes.
I an opportunity to learn Japanese odori or folk dances under
Turn over and bi-ush with sauce. Grill 10 minutes longer, or
fee qualified direction of Mrs. Chiyo Seko, every Tuesday evening- until fish flakes easily with a fork (6 servings.)
The thing to watch in barbecueing trout is not. to overcook.
tom 8:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Trout
does not require heavy seasoning—preserve its tender tex
J Fee for this summer course is 25 cents for children and stuture
and
mellow flavor with .a minimum of fuss and bother.
ients; 50 cents for adults.
To round out your outdoor trout grilling, wrap some potatoes
J.C.C. Centre
separately in heavy-duty foil and cook them alongside on the
grill. Another vegetable that goes well with trout or any barbecued fish -is eggplant—sliced, skin on, coated with bread' crumbs
or other dips, -and grilled.
*
*
Simple but nourishing luncheon when heat is high and appetite
low—eggs poached in white wine.
OEUFS AU VIN
(Dining Lounge)
Ingredients:
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto,
Canada
L
1 tbsp, butter
’/z cup dry white wine
Phone: 364-3481
4
eggs
(4 Lines To Serve You)
salt and pepper
CATERING SERVICE - “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
Dash of paprika
1 tbsp, grated Bleu cheese
Method:
Melt butter in an 8-inch skillet. Add wine. Slip in eggs, one
For Business Or Private Parties
at
a
time, and season with salt, pepper and paprika.
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
Sprinkle with grated Bleu cheese and cover. Cook to desired
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
firnmess. Lift eggs with slotted spoon and drain well. Serve
promptly.
HAVE YOU GALS ORDERED YOUR COPY OF THE COOK
BOOK . . . DON’T MISS OUT ON THE PLEASURE OF JAPA
NESE COOKING ...
*
REMDENCE
2 Vesta Orivo
HUdson 5-1365
*
Lichee Garden $
Banquet Facilities
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1COS Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide}
TORONTO
—---- - ---Bus:
Ros:
834-9156
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
Account ant
Suit®
483
133 BLOOR ST. W.
AUTO
—
FIRE
TORONTO
—
LIFE
ALL FORMS
OF
INSURANCE
consult
J
|
TORONTO
J
Bus. 366-5812
Res. PI. 9-8317 |
NISHIMURA
Picture Frames
CUSTOM FRAMING
1278 Yonge St. — Phono: 923-6877
(3. oi Woodlawn)
Toronto
Lucien C. Kurata, Q.C
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
Ofiico Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
Reg: RO. 7-3427
EM. 6-3323
When Buying Or Selling A Home
14 Perivale Cres.
Scarboro
Phone: AM. 1-5194
Call
Ken Hori
• Income of $10,000 to $20,000 per year.
• Jobs guaranteed tipon graduation.
Glass starting once a year in September.
Write for School Catalog de information.
(Branch School in Long Beach, California)
Takara
Jewellers
Continental
Diamonds & iWatches
AMERICAN
Family Co-op
Watch & Jewellery Repair
Ch>ck Sexing School
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto
Home Office:
Prospect Ave.
^nsdale, Penna. 19446
Phone 363-0952
Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—3.
Suite 1103
Japanese & Occidental Foods
Eve. By Appointment
400 Dundas St. W. — Toronto
Hiro Kawaguchi
Art Watanabe
EM. 6-5589 and EM. 6-5711
1384y2 Queen W.
Toronto—
LE. 2-
DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS
FISHING TACKLE —
LIVE BAIT
BASEBALL & GOLF
EQUIPMENT.
551 Danforth Aye.,
(Rear Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
Open Thur, card Fri. Until 9 p. m.
Educational Funds
through Life Insurance?
CONTACT
See the
4
CO'S«.
z
Ron Marks
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
company of Canada;
Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
lOfA
Of Toronto
THE NEW CANADIAN
479 .Queen St. W.
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Office 364-5141
Residence 925-9636
I
KIYO TAMURA
JChick Sexing Profession
Young Men & Women
|
902-1383
Sus Nagai
487 DANFORTH AVE
PHONE: 463-8104
Page 8
Chy Of Many Moods
Facets
^
--- -And
'
THFMEiP^
Authorized as
and for
ta Office »4C?^
Kyoto: True Home Of Japanese Culture rsiSE0’/"??*,
Ia
J1^
Editor, KBN MOH t ^
By GEORGE WOODCOCK
Section
Editor
1945.
trmKH^r0A ? a P^ce of many moods and facets. All that is
“We go to the Buddhist temple to be married1 and to be
iT conservative in Japanese culture is preserved and buried,
buried,” said one of my Japanese friends. “If we want religious
mu£4
iyet ? ■ Clt£T returns two out of the three com- experience,^ we turn Christian or join one of the new revivalist
1 um^t deputies who sit in the Japanese parliament.
KMpirs 6-5005
sects.- Buddhism
Z?..2Li— has
Aj very little to offer us in that direction anv
each morning
f" ^T theJpries,ts carefully rake the sand more.”
r
~ as they have done for centuries — in forms
If the temples contain most of Kyoto’s past art, its living
ff ,I!W ? “ °f life- but “ ‘he outskirts of the city the
f° 011 in a surprising variety of places, from' the classical
the citrh’Slf1™ a forest of factory chimneys where many of is oh theatres to the tea houses where the geisha perform. For most
W m • s 1111111011 and a quarter people work
shri^sta
almost two thousand Buddhist temples and Shinto of the year the geisha entertain small, discreet parties; they dance
smgj Play the traditional musical. instruments of their craft, serve*
Male Help Wanted
it
ther?1^
of Kyoto and in the wooded hills around food and sake, and make elegant conversation. A geisha* partv
YOUNG MAN to lea-n
oiiari rof
T m°re-trS anQ
in the great pleasure
o:-« woS.
Irain eventually nS
4 ^
geishas are the most celebrated in Japan, is so costly as to be beyond1 the means of the average visitor and 291-1673
(Toronto).3 eS‘
nois^ s
streets the crowds are as thick and the even more of the average Japanese; the most constant patrons
or geisha nowadays are business men with ample’ expense accounts.
S
n Tokyo itself, but at twilight, when the lanterns
S ^wo weeks every year the geisha show their talents
beside
the’tuples and in the little lanes of the old quarters ,
f
l eautv
6
T h°Ur °f luininous nostalgic to the public in the dances which they hold just before the cherry Q°?'EKEEPER-typiI^
Girl Friday for one air!
trees
come
into
flower
to
celebrate
the
coming
of
sprint.
We
were
words*
ntmospheiic that it is almost impossible to evoke in
have references Locator/^ “v3’ ^
m Kyoto when the Maiko Odori, as the dances are caked in that Adelaide.
Good waa^ w
1=3
?-AWere Performed in one of the kabuki theatres. It was a laro-e for Mr. Vali (ToronfoT’ " ^ ' ^
kara
w y°>° -1S an °Id city’ The fir5t eaPital was
an hours journey by electric train from Kvoto. building with an enormous, wide stage, curtained side galleries
at head level for dramatic entries and exits
beX^ so mS
the
B?ddhist monasteries'had through the audience.
mdy W°A. AddIv A
u tAut, Original,> Sl49
Camden St
of its
interfered in political life. Most
-nd
^"iill
6
rf
’
u
‘
the
curtains
of
the
side
galleries
went
up
old stilT
temples, some of them a thousand years
SAMPLE maker T^n^iidY^rTT:
'-’ith their ’ale Toulouse-Lautre? Experience essential Good
deer
2 a
^’bat green park where' herds of sacred f«V^e™klC?VTCT^^^
b Strike their samisens in practiced rhythms, the Phone 366-1651 (Toronto) d °?i
Prf°lmai]ce was entirely fascinating. It was a little o-arish a OPERATORS experienced «k
httle sentimental, and highly formalized as the dances representing ers, _ button sewina, butto^
hoi
i<vo 1 Citv of Z e-Un?
^ich he called- Heian tlie. seasons of _the year- unfolded and the younger Geisha ™ S? serging machines for W cl
manufacturer.
7'
'
“
The original Kvnfn
a"d "hich afterwards became Kyoto.
round work.
ed “t th? Centuries
f dr8penes and which, have hardly chang’-W (Toronto).
Planning “S ^ M ™ ^ XA^t“ed
were then building
rmirA
cities wmeh the Tang emperors
io;
miles bv three y?th t£ Xaof/3 g^at rectan&le t^e-and-a-half
less
’
laid
0at
withsofaultwhat reAilaritv
remains^
a
4 S
form
, and
does SS e “^ as, tHe 5inEers Wd their stories, in the Sd I
aS Xhos? eSbora^
^ wer= ^‘ened into masks |
streets in present-day Token kk'”?^
chaos of ‘angling
dolls.
artificial dress made them as sexless
leaveTthe Z“?o St? J*?
, r
uioiobists. io me the most impressive
1
nF
and
Fishing Tackle
the temples where thev
j
a little tiopble in finding
OSCAR'S
to show them. The famous Noh
and P®rsuading the priests h^fng ^
1500 Dundas (at Dufferin)—LE. 2-42G7
eSz^de ^^'doors ^snro*^^^^^^^
mythological drama orihnitpd
^Aa ,^irid °f highly ritualizec
literature in geS’ af£ S
Y°t0L a*d So did Japanese elementof modem Kyoto^126 ^ contrast which is the very
or characters based’ on foe^hiLe^sS °lVlth?hTet\^
It is a good policy to
tury one of the world’s <>-reat writ^
a 1 •
eleventh cenhave the RIGHT POLICY
Emperors court — produced
in tHe Midway
—
...............
—
-«S«
U
I
1
Consult
first real novel; Kam
as the
the main thing is that The Tala
c ■• ^1S Is due or n°t’ but pedal bikes along the asphalt sider wasting an atomic bomb | I
WALES and DUNCAN
1
g a nmsterpieee Of
the ^dy Murasaki, roads.
I
INSURANCE AGENTS
i
s
.
an
archery
range
anc on it in case of war
the spirit of Japanese aristocratic life 1" ite Mta'aW? CatchSs
Suburban Look
I
tor more than a thousand years int 1 1(b? r 1 S' ■ , a childien s playground1 along
The streets are named mostly I 464 Y°nge Street’ Torollto
a model airplane field anc
the capital of Japan though
nF
+ x- S’-k7®^ 2^
±O1’ ^vy heroes. Halsey Drive, I
Phone WA. 1-3171
minal. The emperors *rei°Tied as wmhnr 3 nne its title was no- a shiny-floored gym.
ceremonial; the real power Hv wS
monarchs, occupied with ~ Twenty-three years ago Mid- and Henderson Drive, Roosevelt >
the great samurai cln^^
Boguns — leaders of ^ ay was littered with wrecked Ave. and Hazlewood Ave. There ~
“~
""
;7
ne
.®
can
Planes,,
dead
and
dving
in
centres
we»
~
who
ruled
are
the
Midway
Yacht
Club
-f^TZTT
“
-----------court life, centres like1 Kamakura
a atn£s£here^
PAUL Y. TOKIWA,
an<1 ?°vered ’by a pail of mostly outboards,- a Midway 11
Jokyo. The emperors turned mnro\ a edo’ Y^ch. J^k-F'became smoko, from burning oil tanks. ^bamber of Commerce and even
and no courtier mi^ht hold1 hk
1?oie ,to arfisfic ^pursuits,
a. downtown” section of the
Black Day
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
cup of wine with a
Unless
could drink his
island where the bank, commis
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
Mejji, grandfather of the present enwem°fbZen °n the Spot When r,.Sre were 'dozens of bomb sary movie house and snack bar
Millar,
Alexander and Tokiwa
craters
along
the
runway,
and
power, he deserted Kvoto for Tnkvn
A fi,na^Y resumed absolute
are located.
practically every building had1 , ?he climate is perfect for
Suite 901 15 King St. W.
Hamilton, Ont.
t the <<softening; c ild raising with'uncontaminat
up attack by Tomonaga’s squad ed sea air and mid-sevehty temBus. JA. 8-118S Res. FU. 3-3545
rons which took off from thp; peratures.. Most of the buildings
doomed carrier Hiryu.
ai’e
^ncan modern such as
^Ul^ch^^^^^^
The Buddes? monks'* who
The pre-dawn Midway attack
find
in South Pasadena,
so that the sincere woXp^ Sa ? C°ntaT
^ures, yas no Pearl Harbor; the de- Calif., or Oak
Park, Hl.
rmsmiiu offset mm
buymg his ticket at the door i S thnf eVen Tto PraY without jSeiS bieW from deciphered1
Cars are rare and out-numberOFFICE
FORMS, BROCHURES, IETTERHEADS
were distressed at the acquisitiveness oF Fh manY ^Panese laymen
the attack was w by, tke trucks .on the island.
is unaoubtediy one of ZIS^
®s conung, but the defending Ameri- Everybody owns a bicvcle—
I ^^rzx //c</</e/ty C^iv'/^ip^i^^^ m *tckes
^as were. knocked out of the knovm locally-as “horses.” *
Midway skies by the superior _ ‘ .jry ihouse has television
Japanese Zeros.
superior provided. by the small Midway HARRY S. KONDO
°nly two pIanes are based station that uses taped shows, a 627 BAY ST., TORONTO Phone 368-9765
K°
and both are merev .it later, than the mainland
amphibians
for
rescues. The onlv ^°Ipngs, but the same fare.
<
rS’^.'^tarahfe 1st?1 in the United
“
-t?
6
island
that
once
Mne
Akm-Commissioried
OfficStates (one in every 2.5 per- oubuiea
• ^i
pan. excluding motor-cycles and sons).
Avith artillery
are two eis Club, with its red-canopied
museum pieces that decorate the enirai2Ce is as swanky as any
three-wheelers, reached 6.775.971
the end of last December, or
number of auto- entrance: to the administration suburban golf club, and the
e vehicles
Sllel ^Jarge as at the end motiv
™
J
-in use' Japan building-.
menu ;at the . candle-lighted Ofranked seventh in
the world, ■w non" ? ? Population is nearly fi
ce^s Club will give you steak
the Transporta - followingr
the United Stages ai h ‘ °" y W are h™- or lobster with good California
Ministry announced recently. France,
Britain, West Germany’
nnmMry also announced C ofdJhF Soviet Union- ‘ ’ ails_> ,“e rest are birds th? wines at pre-war prices.
».nat_ as of Hie end of last vear
majority of which are Lavsan
Ui the total number of' VeMiami-Like Beaches
one in every 70 Japanese owned a
turkey-sized and clownREMEDIAL
The beaches that were once
passenger-car. This rate of dif- pl’Sttr^ ^counted for 57.3 uh-actmg sea birds known local
iusion. however, was still much j percent passenger-cars 24.7, bus ly as “goonies.”
J traPPed and strung with
MASSEUR
es 1.4 and others 16.6.
Twenty-three years ago it was barbed wire to receive the Japadie most prized possession in the nel® are reminiscent of Miami.
^ k-eystPne to Japan’s ’
tables and barbecue pits
’ Sciatica
I'Tmi for domination of the Ha oot the beach areas across which
. Jap.anes,e Avere expected to
wauan chain, and the anchor for
• Back pain
Americas defenses. Both coun inalge in their attempted landtries were willing to pav in good
• Circulation
rich, young blood for its posses
FkSland
once rocked
sion. And pay thev did.
the/rashing of bombs and
• Nervous tensionBusinessmen Luncheon'
Japan suffered the most dis- thunder of gunfire has onlv the
ba Payers and quack• Fibrositis
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
tnX°?S •” ltaiy defeat in its his- ^UtF
.°f ,®e goonies to break the
?? {W to take Midway, and
the cream of the U.S Xavv^ tropical stillness.
The serenity of Midway is that
teis were
out in »i
by appointment
l-l n11?1 o”' S'76“ ~ BI- S-°035
£ an ear]y f^OO’s midwestern
■Midway now is useful onlv as &rnLtCOmn™ty- ft had its dav
I-oA Dundas St. West
t
.
„ ,
651
—
Toronto 2, Ont.
a
refuge for distressed ship Md
27 Hillsboro Ave.
Params At Bay & Dundas
vaVT
’i23 years
’ andt°Planes and as a base for ah’ Sd S
“ n
T sleepy
and ago
peaceful.
W ^^ Its ^cers adSt
On June a, 1942 it was a likelv
Phone: 924-2237
that no enemy would even con- spot co get killed: today it’s a
great place to raise kids.
(
^ '"X??
JaPanese°wn Cars
• . T
,
~»v*v
U11VC
3
IW1
p
S
p’
Eve
OU
•01
F
JOS'
R
R
tier
It:
he
JUT:
ivei
it o
ren
vas
iad
ie
wu
®
h
r1
purr
gun.
ETOU
bad
came
flose
|stioi
■rifles
r
[time11
p0'
Ree
[foe.
I ^i
?f
bis ]
parbf
[fount
p^arj
^ej
h s
j inter]
Mi;
-W]
At n
‘Oite
Facets
^
--- -And
'
THFMEiP^
Authorized as
and for
ta Office »4C?^
Kyoto: True Home Of Japanese Culture rsiSE0’/"??*,
Ia
J1^
Editor, KBN MOH t ^
By GEORGE WOODCOCK
Section
Editor
1945.
trmKH^r0A ? a P^ce of many moods and facets. All that is
“We go to the Buddhist temple to be married1 and to be
iT conservative in Japanese culture is preserved and buried,
buried,” said one of my Japanese friends. “If we want religious
mu£4
iyet ? ■ Clt£T returns two out of the three com- experience,^ we turn Christian or join one of the new revivalist
1 um^t deputies who sit in the Japanese parliament.
KMpirs 6-5005
sects.- Buddhism
Z?..2Li— has
Aj very little to offer us in that direction anv
each morning
f" ^T theJpries,ts carefully rake the sand more.”
r
~ as they have done for centuries — in forms
If the temples contain most of Kyoto’s past art, its living
ff ,I!W ? “ °f life- but “ ‘he outskirts of the city the
f° 011 in a surprising variety of places, from' the classical
the citrh’Slf1™ a forest of factory chimneys where many of is oh theatres to the tea houses where the geisha perform. For most
W m • s 1111111011 and a quarter people work
shri^sta
almost two thousand Buddhist temples and Shinto of the year the geisha entertain small, discreet parties; they dance
smgj Play the traditional musical. instruments of their craft, serve*
Male Help Wanted
it
ther?1^
of Kyoto and in the wooded hills around food and sake, and make elegant conversation. A geisha* partv
YOUNG MAN to lea-n
oiiari rof
T m°re-trS anQ
in the great pleasure
o:-« woS.
Irain eventually nS
4 ^
geishas are the most celebrated in Japan, is so costly as to be beyond1 the means of the average visitor and 291-1673
(Toronto).3 eS‘
nois^ s
streets the crowds are as thick and the even more of the average Japanese; the most constant patrons
or geisha nowadays are business men with ample’ expense accounts.
S
n Tokyo itself, but at twilight, when the lanterns
S ^wo weeks every year the geisha show their talents
beside
the’tuples and in the little lanes of the old quarters ,
f
l eautv
6
T h°Ur °f luininous nostalgic to the public in the dances which they hold just before the cherry Q°?'EKEEPER-typiI^
Girl Friday for one air!
trees
come
into
flower
to
celebrate
the
coming
of
sprint.
We
were
words*
ntmospheiic that it is almost impossible to evoke in
have references Locator/^ “v3’ ^
m Kyoto when the Maiko Odori, as the dances are caked in that Adelaide.
Good waa^ w
1=3
?-AWere Performed in one of the kabuki theatres. It was a laro-e for Mr. Vali (ToronfoT’ " ^ ' ^
kara
w y°>° -1S an °Id city’ The fir5t eaPital was
an hours journey by electric train from Kvoto. building with an enormous, wide stage, curtained side galleries
at head level for dramatic entries and exits
beX^ so mS
the
B?ddhist monasteries'had through the audience.
mdy W°A. AddIv A
u tAut, Original,> Sl49
Camden St
of its
interfered in political life. Most
-nd
^"iill
6
rf
’
u
‘
the
curtains
of
the
side
galleries
went
up
old stilT
temples, some of them a thousand years
SAMPLE maker T^n^iidY^rTT:
'-’ith their ’ale Toulouse-Lautre? Experience essential Good
deer
2 a
^’bat green park where' herds of sacred f«V^e™klC?VTCT^^^
b Strike their samisens in practiced rhythms, the Phone 366-1651 (Toronto) d °?i
Prf°lmai]ce was entirely fascinating. It was a little o-arish a OPERATORS experienced «k
httle sentimental, and highly formalized as the dances representing ers, _ button sewina, butto^
hoi
i<vo 1 Citv of Z e-Un?
^ich he called- Heian tlie. seasons of _the year- unfolded and the younger Geisha ™ S? serging machines for W cl
manufacturer.
7'
'
“
The original Kvnfn
a"d "hich afterwards became Kyoto.
round work.
ed “t th? Centuries
f dr8penes and which, have hardly chang’-W (Toronto).
Planning “S ^ M ™ ^ XA^t“ed
were then building
rmirA
cities wmeh the Tang emperors
io;
miles bv three y?th t£ Xaof/3 g^at rectan&le t^e-and-a-half
less
’
laid
0at
withsofaultwhat reAilaritv
remains^
a
4 S
form
, and
does SS e “^ as, tHe 5inEers Wd their stories, in the Sd I
aS Xhos? eSbora^
^ wer= ^‘ened into masks |
streets in present-day Token kk'”?^
chaos of ‘angling
dolls.
artificial dress made them as sexless
leaveTthe Z“?o St? J*?
, r
uioiobists. io me the most impressive
1
nF
and
Fishing Tackle
the temples where thev
j
a little tiopble in finding
OSCAR'S
to show them. The famous Noh
and P®rsuading the priests h^fng ^
1500 Dundas (at Dufferin)—LE. 2-42G7
eSz^de ^^'doors ^snro*^^^^^^^
mythological drama orihnitpd
^Aa ,^irid °f highly ritualizec
literature in geS’ af£ S
Y°t0L a*d So did Japanese elementof modem Kyoto^126 ^ contrast which is the very
or characters based’ on foe^hiLe^sS °lVlth?hTet\^
It is a good policy to
tury one of the world’s <>-reat writ^
a 1 •
eleventh cenhave the RIGHT POLICY
Emperors court — produced
in tHe Midway
—
...............
—
-«S«
U
I
1
Consult
first real novel; Kam
as the
the main thing is that The Tala
c ■• ^1S Is due or n°t’ but pedal bikes along the asphalt sider wasting an atomic bomb | I
WALES and DUNCAN
1
g a nmsterpieee Of
the ^dy Murasaki, roads.
I
INSURANCE AGENTS
i
s
.
an
archery
range
anc on it in case of war
the spirit of Japanese aristocratic life 1" ite Mta'aW? CatchSs
Suburban Look
I
tor more than a thousand years int 1 1(b? r 1 S' ■ , a childien s playground1 along
The streets are named mostly I 464 Y°nge Street’ Torollto
a model airplane field anc
the capital of Japan though
nF
+ x- S’-k7®^ 2^
±O1’ ^vy heroes. Halsey Drive, I
Phone WA. 1-3171
minal. The emperors *rei°Tied as wmhnr 3 nne its title was no- a shiny-floored gym.
ceremonial; the real power Hv wS
monarchs, occupied with ~ Twenty-three years ago Mid- and Henderson Drive, Roosevelt >
the great samurai cln^^
Boguns — leaders of ^ ay was littered with wrecked Ave. and Hazlewood Ave. There ~
“~
""
;7
ne
.®
can
Planes,,
dead
and
dving
in
centres
we»
~
who
ruled
are
the
Midway
Yacht
Club
-f^TZTT
“
-----------court life, centres like1 Kamakura
a atn£s£here^
PAUL Y. TOKIWA,
an<1 ?°vered ’by a pail of mostly outboards,- a Midway 11
Jokyo. The emperors turned mnro\ a edo’ Y^ch. J^k-F'became smoko, from burning oil tanks. ^bamber of Commerce and even
and no courtier mi^ht hold1 hk
1?oie ,to arfisfic ^pursuits,
a. downtown” section of the
Black Day
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
cup of wine with a
Unless
could drink his
island where the bank, commis
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
Mejji, grandfather of the present enwem°fbZen °n the Spot When r,.Sre were 'dozens of bomb sary movie house and snack bar
Millar,
Alexander and Tokiwa
craters
along
the
runway,
and
power, he deserted Kvoto for Tnkvn
A fi,na^Y resumed absolute
are located.
practically every building had1 , ?he climate is perfect for
Suite 901 15 King St. W.
Hamilton, Ont.
t the <<softening; c ild raising with'uncontaminat
up attack by Tomonaga’s squad ed sea air and mid-sevehty temBus. JA. 8-118S Res. FU. 3-3545
rons which took off from thp; peratures.. Most of the buildings
doomed carrier Hiryu.
ai’e
^ncan modern such as
^Ul^ch^^^^^^
The Buddes? monks'* who
The pre-dawn Midway attack
find
in South Pasadena,
so that the sincere woXp^ Sa ? C°ntaT
^ures, yas no Pearl Harbor; the de- Calif., or Oak
Park, Hl.
rmsmiiu offset mm
buymg his ticket at the door i S thnf eVen Tto PraY without jSeiS bieW from deciphered1
Cars are rare and out-numberOFFICE
FORMS, BROCHURES, IETTERHEADS
were distressed at the acquisitiveness oF Fh manY ^Panese laymen
the attack was w by, tke trucks .on the island.
is unaoubtediy one of ZIS^
®s conung, but the defending Ameri- Everybody owns a bicvcle—
I ^^rzx //c</</e/ty C^iv'/^ip^i^^^ m *tckes
^as were. knocked out of the knovm locally-as “horses.” *
Midway skies by the superior _ ‘ .jry ihouse has television
Japanese Zeros.
superior provided. by the small Midway HARRY S. KONDO
°nly two pIanes are based station that uses taped shows, a 627 BAY ST., TORONTO Phone 368-9765
K°
and both are merev .it later, than the mainland
amphibians
for
rescues. The onlv ^°Ipngs, but the same fare.
<
rS’^.'^tarahfe 1st?1 in the United
“
-t?
6
island
that
once
Mne
Akm-Commissioried
OfficStates (one in every 2.5 per- oubuiea
• ^i
pan. excluding motor-cycles and sons).
Avith artillery
are two eis Club, with its red-canopied
museum pieces that decorate the enirai2Ce is as swanky as any
three-wheelers, reached 6.775.971
the end of last December, or
number of auto- entrance: to the administration suburban golf club, and the
e vehicles
Sllel ^Jarge as at the end motiv
™
J
-in use' Japan building-.
menu ;at the . candle-lighted Ofranked seventh in
the world, ■w non" ? ? Population is nearly fi
ce^s Club will give you steak
the Transporta - followingr
the United Stages ai h ‘ °" y W are h™- or lobster with good California
Ministry announced recently. France,
Britain, West Germany’
nnmMry also announced C ofdJhF Soviet Union- ‘ ’ ails_> ,“e rest are birds th? wines at pre-war prices.
».nat_ as of Hie end of last vear
majority of which are Lavsan
Ui the total number of' VeMiami-Like Beaches
one in every 70 Japanese owned a
turkey-sized and clownREMEDIAL
The beaches that were once
passenger-car. This rate of dif- pl’Sttr^ ^counted for 57.3 uh-actmg sea birds known local
iusion. however, was still much j percent passenger-cars 24.7, bus ly as “goonies.”
J traPPed and strung with
MASSEUR
es 1.4 and others 16.6.
Twenty-three years ago it was barbed wire to receive the Japadie most prized possession in the nel® are reminiscent of Miami.
^ k-eystPne to Japan’s ’
tables and barbecue pits
’ Sciatica
I'Tmi for domination of the Ha oot the beach areas across which
. Jap.anes,e Avere expected to
wauan chain, and the anchor for
• Back pain
Americas defenses. Both coun inalge in their attempted landtries were willing to pav in good
• Circulation
rich, young blood for its posses
FkSland
once rocked
sion. And pay thev did.
the/rashing of bombs and
• Nervous tensionBusinessmen Luncheon'
Japan suffered the most dis- thunder of gunfire has onlv the
ba Payers and quack• Fibrositis
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
tnX°?S •” ltaiy defeat in its his- ^UtF
.°f ,®e goonies to break the
?? {W to take Midway, and
the cream of the U.S Xavv^ tropical stillness.
The serenity of Midway is that
teis were
out in »i
by appointment
l-l n11?1 o”' S'76“ ~ BI- S-°035
£ an ear]y f^OO’s midwestern
■Midway now is useful onlv as &rnLtCOmn™ty- ft had its dav
I-oA Dundas St. West
t
.
„ ,
651
—
Toronto 2, Ont.
a
refuge for distressed ship Md
27 Hillsboro Ave.
Params At Bay & Dundas
vaVT
’i23 years
’ andt°Planes and as a base for ah’ Sd S
“ n
T sleepy
and ago
peaceful.
W ^^ Its ^cers adSt
On June a, 1942 it was a likelv
Phone: 924-2237
that no enemy would even con- spot co get killed: today it’s a
great place to raise kids.
(
^ '"X??
JaPanese°wn Cars
• . T
,
~»v*v
U11VC
3
IW1
p
S
p’
Eve
OU
•01
F
JOS'
R
R
tier
It:
he
JUT:
ivei
it o
ren
vas
iad
ie
wu
®
h
r1
purr
gun.
ETOU
bad
came
flose
|stioi
■rifles
r
[time11
p0'
Ree
[foe.
I ^i
?f
bis ]
parbf
[fount
p^arj
^ej
h s
j inter]
Mi;
-W]
At n
‘Oite