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The New Canadian — August 3, 1966

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Page 1

odle Man Gives Way To American Hot Dogs, Popsicles

A few years ago, an enterprising Ameri* »* a t3f leeordms of what he termed
sunds of Japan.
{
a few year's these
3 ^Eoniore” His prediction was a good one.
^ bnd more cities in Japan, the distinctive
of the soba man (noodle vendor), fol'
to what can only be described
fc? Americana: adapted of course to suit Japak
mobile hot dog vendor.
■^ Mliterallv “hot business” in Japan today.
S md»r earns from 70,000 to more than
K per mo”*11 Ker expenses. In U.S. dollars,
feS to $300 or more, an upper middle class

'“Sods vendors use to peddle their wares
nd US residents here of Suburbia, U.S.A., circa

1935, when American businessmen employed various
means to sell their products to communities that were
just beginning to spread.
Some American businessmen bought scores of ehilwagons, mounted wooden boxes on the bodies
whicli they filled with “dry ice," cream and Popsicles,
iwo schoolboys were, employed to pull each wagon
around a given district selling the products—a fore­
runner of the ‘‘Good Humor Man" and others.
A few years ago in Japan, the human-propelled
soba wagon was the most prominent and " colorful
vehicle on the streets. The vendor pulled his two-wheel
wagon to a busy corner, lit a charcoal fire under a
huge vat mounted in the middle and strung out his
paper lanterns.
The plaintive sound of his whistle summoned police­
men, consti'uction workers, cabaret girls and other

late nght workers to a snack of noodles, bits of meat
and spinach cooked in a stomach-warming bowl of soup
for 20 yen (6 cents).
The crowds in sophisticated industrialized Japan to­
day have a more cosmopolitan taste. Many Japanese
prefer Western foods or at least Japanese dishes
that are more filling.
This is where the hot dog vendor has stepped in.
In Tokyo. Yokohama, Yokosuka, Osaka—wherever
there were parks, shopping and recreation centres—
the vendor has made his appearance with his hot
dogs and American soft drinks which he peddles from
a small moving van.
A hot. dog costs about 90 yen (25 cents) and a soft
dring is 40 yen. The hot dog’S are about half the
size of a U.S. frankfurter and they contain a largo
(Continued on Page S)

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Jessie L. Beattie’s
Strength For The
Bridge. Only $5.01)

Stella Ito’s
‘Sukiyaki Cookbook’Only $1.50

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
XXX—No. 59

Toronto, Ont.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1966

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.................................................................................. ..

archand Extends Japan's Floating Fair
mmig. Deadline Sakura Maru To Visit Expo

iTTAWA.—The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, the
unable Jean Marchand has announced that the July 25th deadfor non-immigrants in Canada who wish to apply for landed
igrant status has been extended to August 15, 1966.
■From July 8, when Mr. Mar­
chand announced the special poli­
clear Japan?
cy in the Commons, until July7 19,
KYO. — A growing debate a total of 1,935 applications were
pan over its relations with received-—far fewer than had
Jnited States and China is been expected.
hg out the first vague hint
Officials hope that advertising
the general Japanese attitowards nuclear arms may in the many foreign newspapers
ianging.
last week would bring out the
J debate, centred on the remaining visitors-turned-immii-U.S. Security . Treaty and
ds atomic weapon potential, grants.
ocussed attention on controThe minister emphasized that
proposals for a Japanese the extended deadline applies
^buildup.
this country, which suffer- only to persons who were in
eJ° i on!y atomic bomb- Canada on July 8, the date on
toe whole idea of rearma­ which the governments new imx' especially with nuclear migration policy "was announced.
^ — has been shunned for
ecades.
TORONTO. — The National
more boldly
Japanese
Canadian Citizens
(the government is proAssociation
has received an en­
L?0^ boldly with plans
couraging progress report on
defence buildup. It also is
the Japanese Canadian Histo­
subtle stand on thg
ry
Project from its writer Ken
nuclear proliferaAdachi.
v^Mbe way open
Mr. Adachi, writing from
0
its own atomLondon,
England, gave revita­
as long as others do.
lized
hope
to the long-await­
“me- the military
ed J.C. History. It is antici­
J
hkely to be a nonpated further details will be
L^panese opposition
forth coming as announced by
bombs goes deep.
the newly formed Trustee
Commitee which will meet on
a ^^rmed Japan,
S i n?ear weapons:
August 4th. There will also
be a meeting of the National
^duL ma^e other Asian
JCCA Executive Committee
w£. and JaPanes^
on August 10th.
be openin
fc ’®ay
U debate
eve’(r;
United*

which gives

to

Japan "while
help defend the Ja-

J

j

£ SAMpAIGN

®f VaSa Socialist party

Uin? the Viet
-^erican^011 fY Setting
??a?ei- They say
Asian
lt?elf invQlved
^t XTamaSainSt ^S ^b.
for ih ar ^as been
5
lhe ?arIY debate
* Sku
Prime
&i. ^ Sato’s st--'
trategy
^Poosible,

™to ’he de­
treaty should

MONTREAL.—Expo 67 will have a minor rival
next year.
Japan’s floating fair aboard the ship Sakura
Maru will visit Montreal at tlie beginning of July,
1967, and will be in port for about a week, dis­
playing some of Japan’s numerous export items.
The specially-designed fair ship will have 420
exhibition booths for display7 of a large number
of products, ^models and illustrations, showing
Japan’s technical and industrial achievements.
The air-conditioned ship is equipped with_ a
banquet hall with a stage accommodating 500

guests, a VIP room, cocktail lounge, room for
business talks and three escalators and an elevator.
The Japan Industry Floating Fail- was inagurated 10 years ago when a specially-converted cargo
ship undertook a journey to Southeast Asia. The
venture, was so successful that it was continued
and in 1962 a special ship specifically designed
for exhibition purposes was built. This is the ship
that will be coming- to Montreal.
Montreal is only one of several North American
ports that will be visited1. Other ports where the
ship will call are Vancouver, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Houston New Orleans and
New York.

Trade Paramount
The reason for constructing
floating fair is quite simple. Ja­
NEW YORK.—The Sony Corporation put on a most successful pan is a country poorly endow­
but wholly unexpected demonstration of its new portable video tap? ed with natural resources and is
therefore heavily dependent on
recorder here recently.
Akio Morita, executive vice president of the Tokyo-based trade with other nations.
company and chairman of the Sony Corporation of America, the
During Japan’s economic re­
following
World
United States sales organization, had just sat down to be intei- construction
War
II
emphasis
shifted
from
viewed at his office at 580 Fifth Avenue. An associate had filmed
exporting
light
industrial
goods
the .arrival of the reporter and the meeting with Morita and was such as textiles and sundry small
items to an extensive production
playing it back on an earlier model receiver.
of machinery, much of it in the
All at once fire sirens sounded and Morita glanced outside, heavy category.
savin0- “there’s a fire on Fifth Avenue.
.
,

It is Japan’s policy7 to exhibit
Immediatelv, Morita and the associate did a double take, at as many international trade
n-abed the TV tape recorder and dashed out of the office. The show­ fairs as possible but it is simply
not feasible to attend them all.
room diagonally across the street was on fire.
Moreover many of the develop­
The two men filmed live action of the firemen openeng the ing countries do not have tbe
facilities for international fairs.
freight
crowd that gathered. Then,
There are also other problems
after mating certain"that everything teas all right, they returned confronting Japanese exporters
to tie office and showed the film. It was of top qua ity and may wanting to make their products
be Useful in showing to insurance officials when full damage . known abroad. Unlike textiles
and sundry goods it is usually
impossible to mail samples in the
^D^age was confined to a cellar storeroom and heater system.
case of machinery. This is a
drawback since it is important
The interview then resumed.
~________—---- ---- .---------for a buyer to inspect the piece
1 of machinery7 to judge its effici‘ ency and
performance before
I concluding a contract.
t-r | Thus, it was decided to build
ivioney *1 cc
,
teii
thousand
bundles,
wom
ten a floating fair.
to a glass of hot sake, a. for
half
a
million dollars.
So far, the Sakura Maru has
Tokyo

s
Ginza,
TOKYO.
Japanese man about town has io
Credit Company manager, No­
which used to have almost every­ 2 a credit card into the money buo Tanabe says, however, that visited 62 nations and dropped
anchor in 71 ports.
thing’, now has everything, with machine beioie he b L
he
is
not
worried
about
anybody
the addition to its amenities of
kidnapping his machine. It is an- j Apart from exhibiting Japan’s
a slot machine that dispenses m Japan Credit Centre the com- chored to the ground so as to be many products the ship is also
money.
panv which devised the money almost immovable, it is so heavy : an advertisement for
Anybody who finds his banK- machine, is pretty selective abom that it would take at least ten shipbuilding industry,
roll petering out just as the party who it'gives the credit cards g men to carry' it and its armoured i
is beginning to swing in a Ginza
So far it has only about
steel body is further safeguarded ■ The ship is ulra-modern in
bar can go to the machine and authorized beneficiaries..
design. It has no conventional
triple patent locks.
get from it twenty thousand yen business recently and by next byAnvwav,
funnels, a fact that attracted
he’s insured.
(about $55) in crisp new notes. jnorning thirteen drinking me
If the Ginza machine is a suc­ attention in shipping circles as
Well, almost anybody7 can do had already taken advantage of cess. Mr. Tanabe is going to in­ epoch-making at the time of her
it. The machine isn’t quite as
On order to have as
it5A?e5?e=°S?'the money machine stall others at principal Tokyo launching.
gullible as it sounds.
much
space
as possible for ex­
railwav
stations.
Ai. pre-ent
qq 000 ven
Instead of using coins .as he YStoYs^
After that he sees no reason hibition purposes the engine was
five hundoes "with a host of other slot,
placed at the stern of the vessel.
(Continued on Page 8)
machines that provide him witn SXfi. But there is room
everything from a squirt of co-

Sony Videotape Instant Film News

Monev Tree? No, But A Money Machine

Page 2

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BAMBOO GROVE
692 No. 3 Road,.
Richmond, B. C.
Phone CR. 8-9585
CR. 8-9586

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Page 7

;^npsday. August- 3, 1966

PAGE 7
Japan Air Lines Recipe
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult

■’CA President E. Ide sends congrats to JACL

Hot, savory, easy to prepare and guaranteed to please, Japanese yakitori is a versatile party food, especially adaptable to
your outdoor summer barbecues.
.i 11 ^?Pan? mi entire meal can be made of the little skewers for
boiled chicken. Or you can serve them as authentic Japanese hors
o oeuvre preceding a full continental-style dinner. It's good fun
to let each guest broil his own but if you want io fix them well
in advance they are even good cold. This is the recipe used by
Japan Air Lines:
1
broiler chicken, 2 lbs., boned
10 large scallions, cut in two-inch lengths
% cup shoyu
cup sugar
% cup sake, dry vermouth or sherry
clove garlic, chopped (optional)
Cayenne or cracked black pepper
Cut the chicken into Ik-inch squares. On bamboo or metal
skewers 6 or 8 inches long, skewer about four pieces of the chicken
pieces of scallion, alternately. The livers may also be used.
,C. Cultural Centre Hosts 34 Tokyo Univ. Students and three
Combine the sake or sherry, shoyu, sugar, and chopped garlic
TORONTO.—The local Nisei and Sansei, as well as students (if desired) in a saucepan. Bring to a boil (do not cook), and
rom Japan attending universities here, will join hands in hosting baste skewered meat and scallions with this sauce and put to broil.
Keep skewers about four inches from the charcoal if cookingcroup of thirty-four university students from Tokyo at the Jaanese Canadian* Cultural Centre on Saturday Aug-ust 6th at 6:00 on a barbecue pit or a Japanese hibachi. Remove three or four'
times to baste with the sauce. Be careful not to overcook, or juices
un.
will escape .and the flavor will be destroyed. When nicely browned,
The students—26 girls and 8 boys—are all between 19 and but still juicy, serve on hot plates and sprinkle with the cracked
'5 rears of age and represent seven universities in Tokyo.
pepper or cayenne. Pork or veal may be used instead of the chicken.
'The group will be fed by Father Fortin, Director of the Canaiian Information Centre of Sophia University in Tokyo. The students
CHICKEN STUFFED PEPPERS
"are on a three month tour of Canada which, began on May 31st, 6 medium-sized green peppers
'and their itinerary includes .all the big cities across Canada.
2 cups water
This will be a wonderful opportunity for everyone to meet 1 teaspoon salt
and exchange views, and have an- enjoyable evening. A charge of 1 package chicken gravy mix or 1 cup chicken g
$1.50 will be made to defray expenses.
1 cup whole kernel corn
C For reservations, please call the Centre, 429-0676, by Thursdaycups diced cooked chicken
August 4 and let them know who and how many. Lets join them!
'8 teaspoon black pepper
*
*
*
teaspoon poultry seasoning
4 cup buttered bread crumbs
Paprika
Cut tops from peppers, remove seeds and membranes, and wasn.
: LOS ANGELES.—Four Japanese actors, have been signed for Place peppers, 1 cup water, and salt in a saucepan and cook,
ithe fifth of the James Bond films, “You Only Live Twice,” which covered, for about 8 to 10 minutes.
Drain well. Add sauce mix to 1 cup water, and bring to a
began filming this week at Pinewood- 'Studios, London.
boil.
Add' corn, chicken, black pepper, and poultry seasoning.
Sean Connery is again, in the role of Ian Fleming’s 007, a British
Pile
mixture loosely in peppers. Sprinkle with bread crumbs
Secret Service agent licensed to kill.
Billed as principal villain in the film, set in Japan, is Osato, and paprika.
Place in shallow baking dish, and add water to cover the bottom
■played by Teru Shimada, veteran Nisei actor. Shimada assumes
. ,
~
p
of the dish.
the role of a Japanese industrialist.
in
350
degrees
for
20
minutes.
Serves
b
Bake
Tetsuro Tamba will play Tiger Tanaka, head of the Japanese
CHICKEN
WITH
ALMONDS
Secret Service. Tamba had brief roles in Carroll Baker’s “Bridge
to the Sun” and William Holden’s “The Seventh Dawn.”
8 ounces chicken white meat., diced
3 ounces bamboo shoots (canned), diced
Akiko Wakabayashi, 24, will portray Kisi Suzuki, the. beautiful 3 ounces onion, diced
; abalone diver who rejected a Hollywood film career. She measures 4 ounces roasted almonds
35-23-3512, five feet, four inches tall and says she looks more 1 ounce dried mushrooms, soaked 10 minutes m 1 cup hot water
like a Southeast Asian than a Japanese. She has appeared ex­ 4 slices ginger root, diced
tensively in Japanese films and television.
1 tablespoon soy sauce
Mie Hama, 22, will play a character not in the book, Tiger’s 4 tablespoons oil
secretary, Suki. Miss Hama, 35-23-35 and tall for a Japanese woman 1 tablespoon cornstarch
ai five feet, four and a half, has appeared in 67 Japanese films.
1 teaspoon sesame oil
The leading villains in the hook are Bond’s perennial enemies, 2 teaspoons wine
Ernst Stavro Biofield and Irma Bunt. They established a poisonous 1 teaspoon sugar
estate which attracts more Japanese suicides than the government '/s teaspoon pepper
considers healthy.
_
r
1 teaspoon salt
dice them,
Drain mushrooms, saving water for Latei u-e, and cornstarch.
Tanaka asks Bond to knock out the estate and the villains.
soy sauce,
This is the price of access to the Japanese-CLA monitoring of
Soviet espionage communications in the Far East. More than half
® ^e book is devoted to Tanaka educating Bond in the ways
0i the Japanese before the action starts.
quickly, stirring, f^0^
S' plate.
The book’s latter half has Bond off on his solo mission of
knocking out the Biofield-Bunt palace of poison. At the book’s Heaton “again and add bamboo shoots and onion; saute 1 minute
end, Bond is written off as dead by M, his secret service boss.
then add
teaspoon salt and 1 teaspoon wine.
Add chicken and prepared sauce. Stir thoroughly.
,., “^^By Bond’s an amnesia victim headed for Vladivostok
Add almonds and serve.
no idea of his true identity or that he and Kisi are to become
Parents.
^TORONTO__Edward Ide, President of the National JCCA,
q-attended the Detroit convention of Hie Jap a nese-American
T^aano The success of our American- counterparts was
inzens___________ Ide
National1 J ACL recently held their 19th Biennial Conven•n San Diego. California and Mr. Ide sent the folowing conkdaiory telegram to Mr. Kumeo Yoshinari, President of the
'^Tt^read-^^Our very best wishes to you and your chapter
r. Jates for a successful 19th Biennial Convention. We Canadians
attendance at the Detroit Convention gained from this experience
3 'will not forget your hospitality remembering always the
Xsia^n and the dedication of your members.
Mav vour League continue to grow in strength and in stature.
>ur warmest regards to all.” Edward Ide, President. National
CGA, Toronto, Canada.

007 Has Ye (r) n To Marry

^Tans®rxdN^

i .Obviously, this is changed in the film since Kisi is scheduled
the first of he Bond .film girls to wed 007. In Fleming’s
was wed briefly to Terese (Tracy) Draco who was
1
by Blofield a few hours after the ceremony.
t
B’°ducers and director have made no announcement yet
r x ^^aets to be featured in the film. In the book, Blofield
i ve their entire estate planted with poisonous flowers
a small lake is stocked with carnivorous piranha fish.

-

Why Take A Charce?
Have Your Diamond Rings
Checked, Repaired or Remounted
And Your Watches Checked or Repaired

TAKARA JEWELLERS
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0902

^hen Buying Or Selling A Home
CaU

Ken Hori

KINO’S MARKET

14 Perivale Cres.
Scarboro
^ Phone: AM. 1-5194

Continental

Red & White
Food Store

Family Co-op
Japanese & Occidental Foods

phone 355-2211

460 Dundas St. W. — Toronto

EM.

6-5589 and

EM. 6-ov 11

Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9

1.

Bill Wales
Insurance Agency
464 Yonge Street,

Toronto

Phone WA. 1-3171

RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365

OFFICE
EM 4-1394
EM. 4-1395

Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO

Bus;

924-8153

Ree:

922-1353

ERNEST JOMORI
Accountant

Chartered

Suite 403
130 BLOOR ST. W.

AUTO



FIRE

TORONTO



LIFE

ALL FORMS
OF

consult

K/YO TAMURA
TORONTO
Bus. 366-5812 Res. Pl. 9-8317

Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yong© Stroot, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
ToHo Nishimura
923-6877

13841/2 Queen W.
Toronto
LE. 2-6378

DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS

Fishing Tackle, and
Golf Equipment
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlow)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
Open Thur, and Fri. Until 9 p. m.

Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Ari Watanabe

Formal
Rentals
(Dining lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.

Toronto, Canada

Phone: 364*3481
(4 Lines To
rve Yon)
CATERING SERVICE - “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

Banquet Facilities
For Businesj Or Private )>arties

Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.

ALNA
Of Toronto

CUSTOM MADE SUIT
437 DANFORTH AVE.
PHONE: 463-8104

Page 8

PAGE 8

The Samurai Swordsmith "Supreme Sharpness
“ft

During the Avar nF llftv t-Roh 00.,+:,.,3 •

rr

in Kyoto ior
“ twt“at1--jnUed





I

onxefl os

and for payment of pi
Posl Office

,

Famous^ names of Seki smiths—all generations of Kanesada
^^^ swordsmiths Kane^'^ £^
6334 Amon^tt
Sugcait™
Tamato Senjum Group in Akasaka in Mino whose originate
end Kanemota^wta'wJ'™ outstanding smiths named Kanesada
saemon sXsada of B
J® ar°","d 1M0’
Yosa- in the town of that name, the originate? bei^SL^'w
of the entire late koto era
'
as the best smiths of Tamashiro.
'
.
eino uarunia Masamune
Editor, KEN
selectldis3 o°ff S^^
a’vd the «c„nd Kanemoto were
Section Editor
the official tester of the Sho^te^T?^
Yoshimutsu the larger Seki Group for we see ao »fn™7™\absmibed into
T
After the Civil War was over and oX t ? ^^teristics.
b months
haiactenstics of Kanesada blades:
*'•00 per ye
Hideyoshi,, and Tokugawa lyeyiaJswessi™??™52! Toyotomi
try, most of the Mino smiths s ltST iS 6med the <=ounShinogi ridge, employed by various lords. TheBe^ia^e ^
to be
“ T wX±?? short slightiy ^5t££“= Shinto groups. They were called
of the
Masatsune and Nobutaka of Owari Kanesada
-Se^’ eke. I
grain. Surface color ^eai^bhhh^1 ky? mj?ed with straight Kanesaki
of Inaba, and Teruhiro of S
• f A^u-Mutsu, --------- ZY^iP Wanted
dark blue of most Mino blades.
s°mewhat different from the throughout the Shinto period
f M P 1Me aI1 wel1 kmiwn
-----------------—
?
Stores, full or
lrregltaX4efe^ ra?embHng thTof"^
based

w

gmated or dove-tailed style laiVwL f-B ? Ichimonji, emarwith choji, wide''1 or rnedinm’^?^?
genome mixed
are of rich c£j°nioi
^^ or; box shapes, all of which

opportunity for' aavance^ini
r’,’
' good
'
- ' 46J-3592, 9;00 a m. to
5SJ „
Friday, (Toronto) 0
P =1, M

Exodus of Ezawas concern in Japan
TOKYO. — An exodus of Ja­

The tug& ^*3^^ £3“d Ji-head "shapes. panese violinists to European serving as concert master—-Koji .SHORT^d^T—
countries is causing concern here ?.yia in Berliiu Takashi' Iwaexpert
6- Ve£yV|oodVtan^^
seen 011 these blades, mat Japanese orchestras will bayashi with the Linz Opera and
.“5.?*” !» ‘he Hamburg jD^S A'^^^
Players
ffe1
'
a
s
110
^
3
^
of
skilled
marks. Unusually a Kno- s?«mature
°r slantmg Hie
Symphony Orchestra,
Us
signatures.
0 sitonatuie but occasionally two character
According to Ryutaro Iwabu­
Yoichiro Omachi, a noted con­
chi,
concertmaster last year the
ductor, said recently that services
reason
there are so many openof Japanese violinists are beinf>JaPanese violinists is
^engurt: by major European on E
e lestras and he has a serious that the salaries of musicians
are very low as
compared to
became a common name nf
“ Thiee Cedars. Magoroku problem of trying to keep ac­ other professions.
acteristics were:
fc K“moto generations. His char- complished experts in Japan.
tiS ??ded ^P^t the . situation
'West Germany is drawing the there is growing worse and rethe greatest '
tatoxS™ and tant0 shapes similar to those of Kanesada but aigest number of Japanese mu­
h??ng \or more musicians will
sicians, he said.
be stepped up. . .
gift of all

your
blood

;ATnper h,nes are medium straight and
v
I concert tour had Kunio Tsuchiya*
4 R?«^
‘,rees that became his specia ?v
5 Sanbo1” a ™la player’ ■
round.
*
1S ea<1 shaPe ’but later generations.made small! j0,®3?' said he was as'tonish5. Carvings are very rare
■ ’ ’ i ■
, i / ' 'I e, °,3en Japanese violinists in
™. ,
.
• '
in various
mostly.
chaiacteis. File marks takanoka and htoaki P rts of ^est Germany during i
j ।

j a Recent trip to Europe.
---------- ::~99Just recently, Eiji Okada, a
• Senate of Tokyo

(Cont. From Page 1)
University passed an examiI liakon to join the famous Amhorizons should stop
ny enty fjve cents for each addi- sterdam concertgebou in the
shoit of world conquest.
Netherlands.
00 long as the mechanical bor- tional kilometer.
lh
7
-bin^c
been
in
business
for
Several Japanese are even
UVhere is biS- money
two
day
S
and
have
had
five
to be made by operator of the
w ।
A loan has to be S Tn°l.red biUt realistic customers. |
Tokyo has 3,500 to 4,000
?h5 ^aC < ?‘l three months and
the interest on fifty dollars for vTaEFto™11
accents a
dXrsm°nthS iS about tonteen yeai killing 53 m 1965.
he -ot the idea
oi his substitute drivers’ com' While Mr. Tanabe and his pany when one of his best fripnrk I I
money machine are taking care was killed while driving drunk
|
OSCAR'S '
f the financial interests of drink­
■-------------- j j 1500 Dundas (aLDufferin)—LE. 2-4267
ing men another new Japanese
c°mp.‘my of ingenious concept is
2S‘°~

Money Machine

TENNIS, GOLF
Fishing Tackle

Bond’s next car to
maT^^ ySUi’ a youn^ Tokvo be Made in Japan

b

Soba

PARKING AT REAR

K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE

s
s

VANCOUVER 4, B.C.
TELEPHONE 254-5101

s
sr
8
S'
8

e
6SE

OT

Ml

Kch
nt

s

a

tlOOO&f/wp
(MOC^atlXll

CHICK SEXING SCHOOL
274 Prospect Avenue
LANSDALE, PENNSYLVANIA

f@cus

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sor
phe
phi
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ca
ale
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mb
ms
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Br
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RM# «rt< my eubscrfptlon To the
*«*r far the period checked bel>Kl«d#M|------- - (UX Funds)

®* ^W

s

8

AMERICAN

ST SS?* W,nc' Monitor
Norway st. Barton, Mass. 02115

n

S

v

461 EAST HASTINGS STREET,

I tT"16 °f S12-°00 toSZMOO a year

®ua5ai^®®d upon graduation
• S S/ art,Septeml)er 27> 1966
^ school catalog and information
school ui Long Beach, California)

wortd
news
In

$
A*u

a

AND EXCITEMENT
ECOU£:AT?2fESSIONAL CHICK SEXOR.

Wisedn
graduated from
has established
Ltd Substitute Drivers’ Company

TOKYO. — James Bond’s next
bTe made in
bib n b
JaPanese automoiteTnf m1""’’ .Aers ‘he
afuanufacturers are hoping.
lonnef rh
,°f thc President’s
• °°J movie, “You
loimei classmates at anv hour ef On y Die Twice/’ set in Japan
<iay or night to drive the carl of Jill start location filming here
its P^ucSs
^'’i fh° Iind themself have
p e let it be known that if
un-Junged bv sake butW^that-the/do^U^eT
Ij??1656 factories can come up
? i something to match the
ine bober young substitutecharge two dollars ibi the f^
Bond dl’ove
ten kilometers of driving and via ?WfuJ=ei7’ they’ll plug it
world
Screen 011 over the
Toyota, Isuzu, Mazda, Nissan
Prince, Mitsubishi and Honda
(Continued from Pa^e
entered the race to
amount of fat meat. The “buns” have all
ui
ape
four
are of double thickness. Bread
.- wheels around 007.
Named In Story
nnd good tasG
°yota 1S ev?n Pointing out a
i
l^tIe nielted butter and
a dash of catsup, plus about SI i mierence made to it bv Ian
original* “You
a day maintenance and operating Fleming in the original
charges for his vehicle
Twice” novel to emSa* the operator makes abouG ^-fl^V1^™ to. Precedence.
WnnPn
J
the othpxeveuence.
er hand, is
oO percent profit from his busi­ o-i5 d ?
ness.
because the producer
Hot dog- vendor in Tokyo move coli
m°vies, Albert BrocaCJUalIy visited their factiLM ^Tge °f four or hve
times a day seeking the bu^v toy\ a lew months ago.
K
^ Ginza’ Shibuva, re-ri
comes up with a
Ueno Park and «k:—-..i- '» . L Ldasher am* Bond promotes
T go to ^he popular to ^ V^ r
a big s^«S
night, thev

r f
m tile international sports car
amusement?• oe.,t
centres.
market.

Please note our new Address and Telephone.

y.

net
The
er c

sphi
at
^tsia

□ $ months $12

“5n^^^

^et

STRENGTH FOR THE BRIDGE
A Japanese Canadian story
479 Queen street W^^0 ^ ^ New Canadian. For $5.03
Toronio 2-B, Ontario

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ZIP Code—__

the new CANADIAN

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Toronto 2-Bz Ont.

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