Page 1
K“ ^ff1^ Japanese American Issei Engineer
Ehskura —
■
.
_
------01 this extraordinary Japanese ambassadorial
p»ri yas to seek revision ;of unfavorable portions
^X3 with 15 foreign .powers .and to gain first^Kiffations and studies of the Western ways
Brunswick, SfeTjeS/n^. University in New
Tomomi Iwakura’s son- I.^6.01 ?^ Ambassador.
University.
- » n ere already enrolled at the
comers - welcome”
a Francisco tendered the newof the city X\%7,^
hospitable mood
Dally Evening Bull.t?“ b.
aiitl’"al ™ d'e
cumstances of het XiJ-T
a" the
most progressive nation onc°P“t10" considered, the
twentv vears hqvo
, a ^ae globe. Less than
made‘by Perrv in issT? S11'ce a’e fiKt treaty was
wrecked seamen and A > r h?Ws of refuge shipand.still ?ss since th F1'?
ve»sels in distress.
&afisesf f
™ ^ b''
Ke-party consisted., of .107/ Japanese of whom 49
£ft«d the-Embassy white, the remainder includfeats and 53 attaches. and servants. Among the
& were two brothers of the Matsudaira famiof the Ueda Clan in Shimizu, central Japan.
k younger brother Tadaatsu had been born two
£after Commodore Perry had negotiated the opend Japan and was, upon his arrival .with the Iwas party, just 17 years old. While the rest of the
^ continued on to Europe, he remained behind to
iMiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiniininHwX^^^^
-^
Stella Ito’s
iukiyaki Cookbook”
Only $1.50
l?™Uth«TV^
known"
^ °
E1pbassy left San Francisco bv rail on January
over?n Sacramento, where thev were die
atUre and on the evening of FebruLake Citv
ban<*uet They reached Salt
? ™ February 4, but. snowslides enroute comremain in the Mormon capitol until
A CUI Uul V
^^SbanY Young, Governor of the Utah Territorv
he
much like to ™eet Am&
t
W,Uch the -Ambassador replied
persons of
A
PWper etKT’ette in Japan for
pe - n of his rank, when among strangers, to make
................................... s:x;,x;.
Hit Uttu Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
1. XXX—No. 83
illllllllllliiiiiiniiiiimnim^?,^
Jessie L. Beattie’s
Strength For The
Bridge. Only $5.00
OCTOBER 26, 1966
lUI‘!Hn “"“"’"“’"""‘I’liiUniiiinnw
Masao Kaneko ...
St^te of tilings prevailed
STCe then more radical
Place than in any country
Toronto, Ont.
^iillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiun
reviews Pearl
Latest Book
People Of Japan”
upon Doctor Finds New
ncer Detecting Method
By BILL HOSOKAWA
Pearl S. Buck, one of Ameri
ca s most eminent authors, best
known for her books about Asia,
published a book titled
^TeopJe of Japan” (Simon
and Schuster, $6.95.). On the
dust
jacket is the subtitle, “A
Young Winnipeg, J.C.s To Sing In Concert
perceptive portrait of their life
today.” The volume is that and
_ When the substance is injected
WINNIPEG,Man. Tin colorful Japanese garb, youthful San more
although
unfortunately
into the artery, it remains as a
Inada Helicopter residue
someone,
who
either
hadn’t read
in a cancerous part of the sei dancers of the Miya Club practice for their show this Saturday the book or had sales
appeal
body.
hooking For
at the Playhouse here. This dance is one of many acts in the show t°reniostjn mind, chose .to grace
the dust jacket with a color photo
^.clinical tests conducted
in
celebration
of
the
20th
Anniversary
of
the
Manitoba
‘
Buddhist
of
a young geisha who represents
faii Dr' Kaneko has found
pnese Pilots
a dying institution in the new
that the substance remains for Church in Winnipeg.
Japan.
r
Canada’s leading about one -.week, in the case of
• To Paint a. word portrait, withp company is seeking stomach and liver cancer, and
n
l brie confines of one volume
weeks for lung cancer.
fe pilots because of their
of as complex a nation and soci
The size and location of the
h ability, the Japan Airety as Japan today happens to be
c?nc.ey can be determined by
n
a f°rnaidable assignment. (Miss
: Mot Association said re- checking the radio activity comLuck
s text is accompanied by 80
mg, from the cancer tissue, ac
which go
cording to the doctor.
VANCOUVER.-Uewelry worth $1,150 and about $200 in other Sh?n<! of Photographs
traditional
scenic
P the Bullock Helicopter,
property
was
stolen
recently
in
a
break-in
at
the
home
of
a
Japa
M-°
tS
n
things
considered,
, .Tr. Kaneko, who will report
r Canada has offered $800-. his discovery before the Japan nese Canadian, Fujihiro Komori at 6329 Tisdall. Komori said Miss Buck has viewed Japan with
commendable perception, although
p a month for temporarily- Radiological Society to be held in he and his family were away from home at the time of the theft.
one might complain that she
Matsumoto
City
in
Nagano
Pre
The thief entered by an open basement door, then forced the tails on occasion to clarify for
pilot;s who have to work
fecture, is carrying out further
the reader whether the social
at least seven to eight researches on what causes the living room door, he said.
customs
and outloo'k she is talk
radioactive substance to adhere
^ and $500 a month
ing
about
apply to Japan today
to
a
cancerous
tissue.
----- more
or
to
the
somewhat different
*“* settle in Canada.
He has expressed the belief
na™n
a generation ago.
that the blood flow in a cancerJ^ity? — From the
TORONTO. The Radio Station CKEY- recently awarded the strictly Kisei
point of view, some
°TS <Pa£t °f the body become ob
Toronto Buddhist, Church. with a Good Citizen Award Tor, its do passages,, may be of interest
structed..
"Mil' For
nation of books on Buddhism to the Toronto Public Library. Pre here Speaking of Japan’s own
Under
normal
circumstances,
Ieap forward, she writes:
Rnatorial
an. obstruction in the blood vessel ' sentation was made on Oct. 19 at the,.Library on College and St m rheTeoPle of Japan in a little
is i removed by the body but this 1 George Streets. Representatives from the church included, Shinore, than a half century had
cleaning” action is weakened kuro Kozai (president), Mrs. Toki Edamura (Fujinkai"president), been transformed from feudal
1>XELBS’
Placards by cancer Tissue, he believes.
isolation into a great
world
। LaiTy Maekawa (director) and Rev. Newton Ishiura.
P
m
Vei
\
Jt
Was
a
feat
aS
remark
iORJagan’ Panzai!” and
able,
I
repeat,
as
that
of
the
A
'
,
'-pva.Uj
a^
Uldt
OX
1
- Mt, Ron!’ greeted
A™.erican people in building a
n?tloii °f a wilderness. Th
Sl^Jhe ^e spirit^the same
35 he arrived to
inspiration, ithese two peoples,
Jabers of the Japanese
TOKYO. — Japanese girls of cultural association in Ibarakiand in some ways, are much
•
newlyweds
with
prefabricated
& community in Li’l To- marriageable age are forsaking ken north of Tokyo to providei homes to “ensure their complete alike.
^mcently.
^e farms and agricultural com
■ privacy.”
^en^°uld it come about
munities are . battling to keep
that during those years we, beIn
Tokushima-ken,
the
local
in^311626 American them home where they are need
government pays the interest of
They were the
ed as brides for bachelor farmloans
for building separate rooms
n - estrangement, those
ers.
for young women who agree to yea^' During them we drew
As lures, they offer anything
marry farmers in the prefecture Kart' each People, engrossed in
from “incentive” money to pre
^ t0° busy
HOLLYWOOD. — That Bat- It launched the plan when it
fabricated houses where voune'
(.Continued
on
Page 8)
fe??08 Off To brides
learned
that
a
23-year-old
bride
can live with their hus° cycle "ith attached’ self-propelldecided
to
forego
her
dreams
of
K Fb Sh°w
bands away from relatives and able sidecar that is used on ne a life in the city when she learn
m-laws—the usual encumbrances cessary occasion by that invete ed a private room would be mad»
Thom- of a Japanese farming house rate foe of evil. Batman, and1 his available to her.
brave and loyal ally, Robin, is
hold.
In Niigata-ken, city fathers
rui OUZUKrS
really a rebuilt Yamaha, Cata opened
a bank account for a bride
The
weekly
magazine,
Shukan
lina
250
in
disguise..
Specials to
who
married one of
their
-eason on NBC. Asahi, says the strategy worked
out by rural communities to keep
The black and white vehicle, farmers and in Okayama-ken, an
MELBOURNE. - Pat Suzu^er Dw?eCted to be‘ prospective brides at home to fully equipped with the absolute .award” was given to a go-be
who had arranged a suc ,?teSt wording, “The Duke
^al m, • b second or marry tillers of the soil is an latest in dynamic devices de tween
^ “Tae Wn??63, for the “escalation of operation mar signed to deal with dastardly de cessful marriage.
been banned by
In Tottori-ken, a marriage °
>e III«^nul World riage.”
mons of crime will be featured in counseling
the
Australian
radio
stations be
service
has
been
set
''^eaU1??6 colorcast
It cites such examples as the the next full-length Batman film, up where all 3o members are
cause it makes royalty the object
resolution adopted by an agri say its producers.
former school masters.
of jest.
TOKYO.
, —,.Dr. Masao Kaneko of the Aichi Prefectural Cancer
^e has discovered a new method of cancer diagnosis through
use of a special radioactive substance.
SS t0| xe MainiChi Newspaper, the special substance
radioactive alubumm.
iS1^ the,s"bstance i! ™ microns fa size (a mici.on .-s
J iif length equal to one thousands of a milimeter).
Vancouver Japanese Canadian's
Home Is Robbed Of $1,150 Jewelry
Buddh ist Ch urch Gets CKE Y Awa rd
Calif.
WR, Reagan
|Japan Attempting To Keep Girls On Farm |
Sy^* Hai1 f°r
Batman's Batcycle
Made By Yamaha
Australia Ban On
Latest Recording
Ehskura —
■
.
_
------01 this extraordinary Japanese ambassadorial
p»ri yas to seek revision ;of unfavorable portions
^X3 with 15 foreign .powers .and to gain first^Kiffations and studies of the Western ways
Brunswick, SfeTjeS/n^. University in New
Tomomi Iwakura’s son- I.^6.01 ?^ Ambassador.
University.
- » n ere already enrolled at the
comers - welcome”
a Francisco tendered the newof the city X\%7,^
hospitable mood
Dally Evening Bull.t?“ b.
aiitl’"al ™ d'e
cumstances of het XiJ-T
a" the
most progressive nation onc°P“t10" considered, the
twentv vears hqvo
, a ^ae globe. Less than
made‘by Perrv in issT? S11'ce a’e fiKt treaty was
wrecked seamen and A > r h?Ws of refuge shipand.still ?ss since th F1'?
ve»sels in distress.
&afisesf f
™ ^ b''
Ke-party consisted., of .107/ Japanese of whom 49
£ft«d the-Embassy white, the remainder includfeats and 53 attaches. and servants. Among the
& were two brothers of the Matsudaira famiof the Ueda Clan in Shimizu, central Japan.
k younger brother Tadaatsu had been born two
£after Commodore Perry had negotiated the opend Japan and was, upon his arrival .with the Iwas party, just 17 years old. While the rest of the
^ continued on to Europe, he remained behind to
iMiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiniininHwX^^^^
-^
Stella Ito’s
iukiyaki Cookbook”
Only $1.50
l?™Uth«TV^
known"
^ °
E1pbassy left San Francisco bv rail on January
over?n Sacramento, where thev were die
atUre and on the evening of FebruLake Citv
ban<*uet They reached Salt
? ™ February 4, but. snowslides enroute comremain in the Mormon capitol until
A CUI Uul V
^^SbanY Young, Governor of the Utah Territorv
he
much like to ™eet Am&
t
W,Uch the -Ambassador replied
persons of
A
PWper etKT’ette in Japan for
pe - n of his rank, when among strangers, to make
................................... s:x;,x;.
Hit Uttu Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
1. XXX—No. 83
illllllllllliiiiiiniiiiimnim^?,^
Jessie L. Beattie’s
Strength For The
Bridge. Only $5.00
OCTOBER 26, 1966
lUI‘!Hn “"“"’"“’"""‘I’liiUniiiinnw
Masao Kaneko ...
St^te of tilings prevailed
STCe then more radical
Place than in any country
Toronto, Ont.
^iillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiun
reviews Pearl
Latest Book
People Of Japan”
upon Doctor Finds New
ncer Detecting Method
By BILL HOSOKAWA
Pearl S. Buck, one of Ameri
ca s most eminent authors, best
known for her books about Asia,
published a book titled
^TeopJe of Japan” (Simon
and Schuster, $6.95.). On the
dust
jacket is the subtitle, “A
Young Winnipeg, J.C.s To Sing In Concert
perceptive portrait of their life
today.” The volume is that and
_ When the substance is injected
WINNIPEG,Man. Tin colorful Japanese garb, youthful San more
although
unfortunately
into the artery, it remains as a
Inada Helicopter residue
someone,
who
either
hadn’t read
in a cancerous part of the sei dancers of the Miya Club practice for their show this Saturday the book or had sales
appeal
body.
hooking For
at the Playhouse here. This dance is one of many acts in the show t°reniostjn mind, chose .to grace
the dust jacket with a color photo
^.clinical tests conducted
in
celebration
of
the
20th
Anniversary
of
the
Manitoba
‘
Buddhist
of
a young geisha who represents
faii Dr' Kaneko has found
pnese Pilots
a dying institution in the new
that the substance remains for Church in Winnipeg.
Japan.
r
Canada’s leading about one -.week, in the case of
• To Paint a. word portrait, withp company is seeking stomach and liver cancer, and
n
l brie confines of one volume
weeks for lung cancer.
fe pilots because of their
of as complex a nation and soci
The size and location of the
h ability, the Japan Airety as Japan today happens to be
c?nc.ey can be determined by
n
a f°rnaidable assignment. (Miss
: Mot Association said re- checking the radio activity comLuck
s text is accompanied by 80
mg, from the cancer tissue, ac
which go
cording to the doctor.
VANCOUVER.-Uewelry worth $1,150 and about $200 in other Sh?n<! of Photographs
traditional
scenic
P the Bullock Helicopter,
property
was
stolen
recently
in
a
break-in
at
the
home
of
a
Japa
M-°
tS
n
things
considered,
, .Tr. Kaneko, who will report
r Canada has offered $800-. his discovery before the Japan nese Canadian, Fujihiro Komori at 6329 Tisdall. Komori said Miss Buck has viewed Japan with
commendable perception, although
p a month for temporarily- Radiological Society to be held in he and his family were away from home at the time of the theft.
one might complain that she
Matsumoto
City
in
Nagano
Pre
The thief entered by an open basement door, then forced the tails on occasion to clarify for
pilot;s who have to work
fecture, is carrying out further
the reader whether the social
at least seven to eight researches on what causes the living room door, he said.
customs
and outloo'k she is talk
radioactive substance to adhere
^ and $500 a month
ing
about
apply to Japan today
to
a
cancerous
tissue.
----- more
or
to
the
somewhat different
*“* settle in Canada.
He has expressed the belief
na™n
a generation ago.
that the blood flow in a cancerJ^ity? — From the
TORONTO. The Radio Station CKEY- recently awarded the strictly Kisei
point of view, some
°TS <Pa£t °f the body become ob
Toronto Buddhist, Church. with a Good Citizen Award Tor, its do passages,, may be of interest
structed..
"Mil' For
nation of books on Buddhism to the Toronto Public Library. Pre here Speaking of Japan’s own
Under
normal
circumstances,
Ieap forward, she writes:
Rnatorial
an. obstruction in the blood vessel ' sentation was made on Oct. 19 at the,.Library on College and St m rheTeoPle of Japan in a little
is i removed by the body but this 1 George Streets. Representatives from the church included, Shinore, than a half century had
cleaning” action is weakened kuro Kozai (president), Mrs. Toki Edamura (Fujinkai"president), been transformed from feudal
1>XELBS’
Placards by cancer Tissue, he believes.
isolation into a great
world
। LaiTy Maekawa (director) and Rev. Newton Ishiura.
P
m
Vei
\
Jt
Was
a
feat
aS
remark
iORJagan’ Panzai!” and
able,
I
repeat,
as
that
of
the
A
'
,
'-pva.Uj
a^
Uldt
OX
1
- Mt, Ron!’ greeted
A™.erican people in building a
n?tloii °f a wilderness. Th
Sl^Jhe ^e spirit^the same
35 he arrived to
inspiration, ithese two peoples,
Jabers of the Japanese
TOKYO. — Japanese girls of cultural association in Ibarakiand in some ways, are much
•
newlyweds
with
prefabricated
& community in Li’l To- marriageable age are forsaking ken north of Tokyo to providei homes to “ensure their complete alike.
^mcently.
^e farms and agricultural com
■ privacy.”
^en^°uld it come about
munities are . battling to keep
that during those years we, beIn
Tokushima-ken,
the
local
in^311626 American them home where they are need
government pays the interest of
They were the
ed as brides for bachelor farmloans
for building separate rooms
n - estrangement, those
ers.
for young women who agree to yea^' During them we drew
As lures, they offer anything
marry farmers in the prefecture Kart' each People, engrossed in
from “incentive” money to pre
^ t0° busy
HOLLYWOOD. — That Bat- It launched the plan when it
fabricated houses where voune'
(.Continued
on
Page 8)
fe??08 Off To brides
learned
that
a
23-year-old
bride
can live with their hus° cycle "ith attached’ self-propelldecided
to
forego
her
dreams
of
K Fb Sh°w
bands away from relatives and able sidecar that is used on ne a life in the city when she learn
m-laws—the usual encumbrances cessary occasion by that invete ed a private room would be mad»
Thom- of a Japanese farming house rate foe of evil. Batman, and1 his available to her.
brave and loyal ally, Robin, is
hold.
In Niigata-ken, city fathers
rui OUZUKrS
really a rebuilt Yamaha, Cata opened
a bank account for a bride
The
weekly
magazine,
Shukan
lina
250
in
disguise..
Specials to
who
married one of
their
-eason on NBC. Asahi, says the strategy worked
out by rural communities to keep
The black and white vehicle, farmers and in Okayama-ken, an
MELBOURNE. - Pat Suzu^er Dw?eCted to be‘ prospective brides at home to fully equipped with the absolute .award” was given to a go-be
who had arranged a suc ,?teSt wording, “The Duke
^al m, • b second or marry tillers of the soil is an latest in dynamic devices de tween
^ “Tae Wn??63, for the “escalation of operation mar signed to deal with dastardly de cessful marriage.
been banned by
In Tottori-ken, a marriage °
>e III«^nul World riage.”
mons of crime will be featured in counseling
the
Australian
radio
stations be
service
has
been
set
''^eaU1??6 colorcast
It cites such examples as the the next full-length Batman film, up where all 3o members are
cause it makes royalty the object
resolution adopted by an agri say its producers.
former school masters.
of jest.
TOKYO.
, —,.Dr. Masao Kaneko of the Aichi Prefectural Cancer
^e has discovered a new method of cancer diagnosis through
use of a special radioactive substance.
SS t0| xe MainiChi Newspaper, the special substance
radioactive alubumm.
iS1^ the,s"bstance i! ™ microns fa size (a mici.on .-s
J iif length equal to one thousands of a milimeter).
Vancouver Japanese Canadian's
Home Is Robbed Of $1,150 Jewelry
Buddh ist Ch urch Gets CKE Y Awa rd
Calif.
WR, Reagan
|Japan Attempting To Keep Girls On Farm |
Sy^* Hai1 f°r
Batman's Batcycle
Made By Yamaha
Australia Ban On
Latest Recording
Page 2
PAGE 2
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727 Danforth Ave, (at Pape)
loronto. Phone Day Or Night
466-9911
Pape Ave.
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Page 7
Wednesday, October 26, 1966
PAGE 7
^e New Ccmo4^^
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
Dates And Doings
It I* a good policy to
hart the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
New Canadian Theatre Starts Sth Season Nov. 30
Bill Wales
Insurance Agency
P16 -^ew Canadian Theatre will be^in
S^ S SeriOUS ^ by a ^^^-born Anteriad playH
Chicken And Cranberry Salad
I HERE'S SOMETHING YOU MAY' NOT HAVE KNOWN
be
December IS
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
Algirdas Landsbergis will
Cential Library Theatre from November SO to
B Did you think the North Americans ate the most meat’ No!
OFFICE
again. New Zealanders average 235 lbs. a year. Australians
EM 4-1394
2 V»sta Dnv*
fc'^llbs. of meat; Uruguayans, 213 lbs.,- Argentinians, 202 lbs
EM. 4-1395
HUdson 5-1365
b. followed by North Americans. Our annual per capita consumpfen is 164 lbs. of meat a year—still, quite some pounds for the
designed by CBC designer- -Mahmoud Rashid
fette housewives to tote fi om the car to the kitchen refrigerator. York^^X?^
haS alm<ly had a successful run in New
Bad all those trips back and forth to the super market!
Barrister and Solicitor
IT Broiler-fryer poultry supplies seem to increase each year
NOTARY PUBLIC
lad this year we can expect at least 5 percent above last season’
Offence to drive on Highway with Frost Windows
1008 Northern Ontario Building
other words, chicken can appear often on budget menus
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
f
NEWPORT CHICKEN
fr°Sfc “
windows of your car these
TORONTO
| Ingredients:
dSg9
B t
sure you clear- it off before you start
I fryer, about 3 pounds, cut up
|i; cups water
Effective October 1, it is an offence in Ontario to drive a
Y" clove garlic
Vehc? °n the highway unless tire windshield, windows
Bus: 824-8153
Res: 822-1353
a tsp. salt
on either side of the driver and the rear- window provide a clear
(i; cups chopped onion
The nifo^ein°adWay rld
approaching- from either direction.
| cup green pepper, chopped
Plosion respecting the rear window does not apply where
I tbsp, butter or margarine
?e
V^UC e 1S .^^PPed J^ith a mirror securely attached to
ERNEST JOMOR
tbsp, flour
the vehicle in a position to give the driver a clear view of the
cup chicken broth
Chartered Accountant
roadway in tire rear, other than through the rear window.
can (16 oz.) stewed tomatoes
fomid
be liable to fhies of not i«ss
cup pitted ripe olives
f
B0’, r m?r® ^ $100- Their licenses may also be suspended
Suite 403
cans (16 oz.) whole kernel corn, drained
tor a 30-day period. — Ont. Dept. Transport
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
cup shredded cheese slices
^ slices bacon, chopped and fried crisp
h Method:
Nipponia Home Needs $12,000 For New Staff Home
g Place chicken in saucepan, add water, garlic and 1 tsp. of the
By T. UMEZUKI
|alt Cover tightly. Simmer until chicken is tender, about 45
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
BEAMSVILLE,
Ont.
—In order to make extra rooms for the
Kninutes. Remove chicken and reduce liquid to ;% cup broth.
AXL FORMS
| Cut meat into bite-size pieces. Saute onion and green pepper Nipponia donie, now operating at a full 25-resident capacity,
OF
. “ the home is to vacate their living space. But in order
gin butter. Stir in flour, then add chicken broth, stewed tomatoes
to do this, a staff-house must be built first.
Kind remaining salt. Cook until slightly thickened.
| Add olives Place half of the com in a buttered casserole
Confronted with this situation, the Board of Directors re
cently decided to erect a house at a cost of $12,000. Construction
pop
i with half the chicken and half the tomato mixture. Repeat,
consult
i Sprinkle top with cheese and bacon and bake in a moderate ■has now started.
K/YO TAMURA
Oven (350F) for 40 to 50 minutes.
Until now the Ontario Government subsidized 50 percent of
i Delicious meal-in-one to serve 8 hungry eaters.
TORONTO
;
the cost of these home constructions. Recently they discontinued
L Incidentally, most casseroles taste better when made before tins practice under the National Housing Act. Now instead
Bu«. 366-5812 Res. Pl. 9-8317
band.
they present a gift of $500. for each case.
’
’
1 INSURANCE
these circumstances, the Nipponia Home must
Complement the above dish with the following salad and the rely Facing
on
the
goodwill
of its supporters to raise the $12,000. The
al is complete.
Board of Directors are now appealing to the public for donations.
CRANBERRY SALAD
Please give this home for aged Japanese Canadians your full
Ingredients:
support. All donations will be given receipts which may' be used
envelope plain gelatine
for income tax . purposes.
cup orange juice
can whole cranberry sauce
54 cup boiling water
To Organize Japanese Canadian Dramatics Club
tsp. sugar
TORONTO.—Of interest to those who have long felt the need
h cups finely chopped cabbage
of furthering the performing arts at the Japanese Canadian Cul
*2 cup chopped celery
h cup coarsely chopped walnut
tural Centre is the announcement that two new groups are being
Method:
formed. The first of these is a Dramatics Society and the second,
Makes 8 servings.
an Adult Choral Group.
in ?ranse ju^ce for 5 minutes. Combine cran
The idea of a Japanese Canadian Dramatics Club has been
ed
hoiling water and sugar. Stir in the softened gelatine
discussed
at length by aspiring thespians as well as seasoned
tuts Pom- ^ unnl, sightly thick. Fold in cabbage, celery and
• oui mto quart mold (or individual mold) and let it set. actors, directors and writers. So far little of concrete nature has
been done beyond the small but commendable effort at the last
Tanabata Festival. Now the call is for all those who are interest
ed
in this project to come forward and participate in a Dramatics
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH sis .^ «.
Workshop with a view to presenting an initial production in the
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1966
spring. If you are one of these J.C.’s with talent or aspiration
nn s m
^'M' Religious School
or both, please make it a point to contact the Centre and leave
; Morning Service — Rev. N. Ishima
2.00 P.M. Japanese Service — Rev. F. Watanabe
your name and phone number so that you may be put in touch
with fellow enthusiasts.
.
The other group which is being activated is a recreational
music group. Anyone who likes to sing and is interested in ex
perimenting with Japanese music is asked to get in touch with
the Centre Office immediately.
The phone number to call is 429-0676. — Kimi Takimoto
^ Takara Jewellers
Diamonds And Watches
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
21
m ^ 9~6’ Sat- 9—4 p.m.
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
Lichee Garden
(Dining Lounge)
Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Phone: 364-3481
(4 ^^ To " ^e YoiO
KING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
CATfotv
Banquet Facilities
WEDlHvr^DiSS?L9r Private Parties
^DDESG RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
fc|
PINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
Real/oR
NISHIMURA
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokio Nishimura
923-6877
13841/2 Queen W.
Toronto
—
LE
9-
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle and
Golf Equipment
551 Danforth Ave.,
(n*ar Carlaw)
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
G«org» Fuku*aka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
Open Thar, and Frf. Until Bp,®
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Peri vale Ches.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!
CHINA HOUSE
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
Custom Picture
Framing
RU. 1-9123
Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
ALNA
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 463-8104
PAGE 7
^e New Ccmo4^^
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
Dates And Doings
It I* a good policy to
hart the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
New Canadian Theatre Starts Sth Season Nov. 30
Bill Wales
Insurance Agency
P16 -^ew Canadian Theatre will be^in
S^ S SeriOUS ^ by a ^^^-born Anteriad playH
Chicken And Cranberry Salad
I HERE'S SOMETHING YOU MAY' NOT HAVE KNOWN
be
December IS
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
Algirdas Landsbergis will
Cential Library Theatre from November SO to
B Did you think the North Americans ate the most meat’ No!
OFFICE
again. New Zealanders average 235 lbs. a year. Australians
EM 4-1394
2 V»sta Dnv*
fc'^llbs. of meat; Uruguayans, 213 lbs.,- Argentinians, 202 lbs
EM. 4-1395
HUdson 5-1365
b. followed by North Americans. Our annual per capita consumpfen is 164 lbs. of meat a year—still, quite some pounds for the
designed by CBC designer- -Mahmoud Rashid
fette housewives to tote fi om the car to the kitchen refrigerator. York^^X?^
haS alm<ly had a successful run in New
Bad all those trips back and forth to the super market!
Barrister and Solicitor
IT Broiler-fryer poultry supplies seem to increase each year
NOTARY PUBLIC
lad this year we can expect at least 5 percent above last season’
Offence to drive on Highway with Frost Windows
1008 Northern Ontario Building
other words, chicken can appear often on budget menus
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
f
NEWPORT CHICKEN
fr°Sfc “
windows of your car these
TORONTO
| Ingredients:
dSg9
B t
sure you clear- it off before you start
I fryer, about 3 pounds, cut up
|i; cups water
Effective October 1, it is an offence in Ontario to drive a
Y" clove garlic
Vehc? °n the highway unless tire windshield, windows
Bus: 824-8153
Res: 822-1353
a tsp. salt
on either side of the driver and the rear- window provide a clear
(i; cups chopped onion
The nifo^ein°adWay rld
approaching- from either direction.
| cup green pepper, chopped
Plosion respecting the rear window does not apply where
I tbsp, butter or margarine
?e
V^UC e 1S .^^PPed J^ith a mirror securely attached to
ERNEST JOMOR
tbsp, flour
the vehicle in a position to give the driver a clear view of the
cup chicken broth
Chartered Accountant
roadway in tire rear, other than through the rear window.
can (16 oz.) stewed tomatoes
fomid
be liable to fhies of not i«ss
cup pitted ripe olives
f
B0’, r m?r® ^ $100- Their licenses may also be suspended
Suite 403
cans (16 oz.) whole kernel corn, drained
tor a 30-day period. — Ont. Dept. Transport
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
cup shredded cheese slices
^ slices bacon, chopped and fried crisp
h Method:
Nipponia Home Needs $12,000 For New Staff Home
g Place chicken in saucepan, add water, garlic and 1 tsp. of the
By T. UMEZUKI
|alt Cover tightly. Simmer until chicken is tender, about 45
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
BEAMSVILLE,
Ont.
—In order to make extra rooms for the
Kninutes. Remove chicken and reduce liquid to ;% cup broth.
AXL FORMS
| Cut meat into bite-size pieces. Saute onion and green pepper Nipponia donie, now operating at a full 25-resident capacity,
OF
. “ the home is to vacate their living space. But in order
gin butter. Stir in flour, then add chicken broth, stewed tomatoes
to do this, a staff-house must be built first.
Kind remaining salt. Cook until slightly thickened.
| Add olives Place half of the com in a buttered casserole
Confronted with this situation, the Board of Directors re
cently decided to erect a house at a cost of $12,000. Construction
pop
i with half the chicken and half the tomato mixture. Repeat,
consult
i Sprinkle top with cheese and bacon and bake in a moderate ■has now started.
K/YO TAMURA
Oven (350F) for 40 to 50 minutes.
Until now the Ontario Government subsidized 50 percent of
i Delicious meal-in-one to serve 8 hungry eaters.
TORONTO
;
the cost of these home constructions. Recently they discontinued
L Incidentally, most casseroles taste better when made before tins practice under the National Housing Act. Now instead
Bu«. 366-5812 Res. Pl. 9-8317
band.
they present a gift of $500. for each case.
’
’
1 INSURANCE
these circumstances, the Nipponia Home must
Complement the above dish with the following salad and the rely Facing
on
the
goodwill
of its supporters to raise the $12,000. The
al is complete.
Board of Directors are now appealing to the public for donations.
CRANBERRY SALAD
Please give this home for aged Japanese Canadians your full
Ingredients:
support. All donations will be given receipts which may' be used
envelope plain gelatine
for income tax . purposes.
cup orange juice
can whole cranberry sauce
54 cup boiling water
To Organize Japanese Canadian Dramatics Club
tsp. sugar
TORONTO.—Of interest to those who have long felt the need
h cups finely chopped cabbage
of furthering the performing arts at the Japanese Canadian Cul
*2 cup chopped celery
h cup coarsely chopped walnut
tural Centre is the announcement that two new groups are being
Method:
formed. The first of these is a Dramatics Society and the second,
Makes 8 servings.
an Adult Choral Group.
in ?ranse ju^ce for 5 minutes. Combine cran
The idea of a Japanese Canadian Dramatics Club has been
ed
hoiling water and sugar. Stir in the softened gelatine
discussed
at length by aspiring thespians as well as seasoned
tuts Pom- ^ unnl, sightly thick. Fold in cabbage, celery and
• oui mto quart mold (or individual mold) and let it set. actors, directors and writers. So far little of concrete nature has
been done beyond the small but commendable effort at the last
Tanabata Festival. Now the call is for all those who are interest
ed
in this project to come forward and participate in a Dramatics
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH sis .^ «.
Workshop with a view to presenting an initial production in the
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1966
spring. If you are one of these J.C.’s with talent or aspiration
nn s m
^'M' Religious School
or both, please make it a point to contact the Centre and leave
; Morning Service — Rev. N. Ishima
2.00 P.M. Japanese Service — Rev. F. Watanabe
your name and phone number so that you may be put in touch
with fellow enthusiasts.
.
The other group which is being activated is a recreational
music group. Anyone who likes to sing and is interested in ex
perimenting with Japanese music is asked to get in touch with
the Centre Office immediately.
The phone number to call is 429-0676. — Kimi Takimoto
^ Takara Jewellers
Diamonds And Watches
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
21
m ^ 9~6’ Sat- 9—4 p.m.
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
Lichee Garden
(Dining Lounge)
Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Phone: 364-3481
(4 ^^ To " ^e YoiO
KING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
CATfotv
Banquet Facilities
WEDlHvr^DiSS?L9r Private Parties
^DDESG RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
fc|
PINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
Real/oR
NISHIMURA
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokio Nishimura
923-6877
13841/2 Queen W.
Toronto
—
LE
9-
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle and
Golf Equipment
551 Danforth Ave.,
(n*ar Carlaw)
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
G«org» Fuku*aka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
Open Thar, and Frf. Until Bp,®
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Peri vale Ches.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!
CHINA HOUSE
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
Custom Picture
Framing
RU. 1-9123
Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
ALNA
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 463-8104
Page 8
PAGE 8
Engineer . ,
(Cont. From Page 1)
calls, but awaited calls of others for defiance of .. certain federal
The New Ca^.
I Their next stopping place was supplied their one livelihood.- The
among whom they may be so laws. '
!
I Chicago, where they were, as else- animals prorid ed a source of
journing.
Authorized « Swoa(J
' "J
Ambassador Iwakura, at once, I where, treated with warm hospi- food, fuel, clothing,., shelter, tools
The messenger from the Mor
mon President and Governor ex sent explanations saying, “We I tality. Iwakura commemorated lanJ Tg y.e‘ -- ^^^r by the’-'
Post fWK.. —
pressed regrets that it was im capie to the United :Siates-to see I the visit by presenting the mavor anti-lndian and bisom'propagarij
possible for. him to call immedi the President of this great na with., a gift .of 85,000 for the be-’ da of government officials, who
ately. When asked whv, the mes tion; we do not know how he I n?fit of the poor of that city, believed the Indian could only
• CT'tSb?E^^
senger informed him that Presi- would like tis to call on a man, devastated.by the Great.Fire .of rJ‘c,iyili?ed” .by^rf^
K
I
the
year
before.
’
’
'
dent ^0UnS of Oie Mormon whq^had. broken, the laws of his
buffalo, the bison were slaught
Church was under house ari'est country, "and’was under arrest.” '" . The .party left.. Chicago on ered from millions,.to near “ex
.February .27 and arrived in Wash- j tinction. .
.
- ington, "D.C., two ' days later? [ Weary of incessant.travel, Ma
Pearl Buck
On . January, the 30, the Cori-| tsudaira decided to settle, m.Den?'
479 QUEEN ST. W
(Continued from Pape 1)
gress
of the .United States,made I v er" He served : as an-'rassistant I Toronto 2-Bb Ont./ '
to reach a hand to the other. be fulfilled by destroying one’s - an appropriation, of' §50,000 .’ford
superintendent-of-mines
-for
the
L
Then there was the difficulty of bfe. Perhaps .it is best .expressed | the .purpose, of entertaining the I
Empire ,6-5005communication. Neither people by the old French phrase, nobles? Embassy while in this .country. _ I State of-Colorado. He- surveyed'! •
subscription'..
the . eastern and.' southern boun?
learns a foreign language easi se oblige. Or, if one is to use the
54,00
per 6 months
J
ly. Americans . feel no need to ''T,rris of a Japanese dictionary,
t
*
*
*
I dry lines-of the.state; He is said I S7.00 per naj .
4
to have designed -the-'suspension' learn, in the vastness of our ter “giri is the. .righteous way, the
On, Monday, March 4, the Em bridge, over-the- Royal Gbrge-ih h
ritory; and the Japanese have road human beings, should follow;
bassy.had.an
audience with Pres southern Colorado. For a" time' ^
1
no need because of their geogra something one does, though unphical isolation. There are ideals xyillingly, to forestall..apology to ident Ulysses S. Grant. Minister he taught at the School of Mine's —
lyakura presented their, creden j^Golden’ Colorado, andJalso" ’
and concepts, too, that our two the world.”
'
‘
tial
letter. It' was folded in ah aid .some work for the McNeal
peoples did not share, :and an al
Giri, relationships are those a ejty^lpp.jsomQ two feet long.and I Alining
Company at Denver
most total lack of meaningful man has toward his family, his iris^
.
inches
.
wide,
and
marvelously
% died of an illness in
contact on a personal level. The b-iAS, to those above, liiM in staAmericans and the Japanese had U°n, and , government; and :to' worked with flowers in gold. On 1888, at the age of 33, Matsu ^^’EKATORS exDerience"d?iL’
not taken time to know or those beneath''him -who' are’ de .^arch 6, the House of Represen- i daira was survived by a son Kin- and special machine
Bil1^
?. fc
tatives gave the Embassy'ri'for nosuke and his widow, who, with 96 Spading Ave,_
understand each other.”
.(TorontoJL 13 2oo:
pendent on'him. It has' to do Sri th mal reception and the Embassy I['her
family, moved to the East
one’s., personal honor in all. relri- I
_A people of contradictions — tionships; it has., to do -with I next.paid a risit to the Senate I
1/-’ Ambassador Tsuneo
Chambers.
. Matsudaira, newly appointed to
Miss Buck dwells at length cn
on bearing.gone’s .name,’ and f'witK
r or Des>t Results'?' ‘
Ari aweri observer of all the
the things the Japanese do, and keeping one’s’ proper /placed' with
United States, received this
scenes^enroute
.and
of
the
pro^.
New Canadian Ads..
letter from Kinnosuke:
why they d’o them, probing into paying debts arid reciprocating I
|.
codings
.
was
young
Tadaatsu
the matter of “giri”, and finding gifts and kindness, indeed “with !
“I am writing this letter in a'
contradictory exceptions to al- v-?^aIly—eY??y area, of Japanese Matsudaira. He was with' dis- i lrOpeJ°,u may be aWe to help, me
tinguished company . . .■ the
wxc muj- xauaci
most everything she says about ife.” .
Am- |। —
My
father’s name is Matsudaira
bassarior - and ..Vice Ambassadors I Tadaatsu.
the Japanese.
l
; He came to. this
The Nisei,_ of course, are. not
i
“What is giri?” she asks. Then bound by giri, but many of’ them flTre leaders of the emergingJ country to study in 1872
she answers this way: “If pressed still feel its. stirrings. and..per- Japan. The entire retinue was । After graduating',
~
fromsa..uniinto Western terminology, giri haps Miss Buck’s book can help: des.tined for, future„distinctlon. I versity.. . He .married a Cau
JU? 7^at'. iUisj QfkAe; timeTi^^^
is a moral imperative, a spiritual ST why
casian and had -twoisons .and a
obligation which, if it cannot
daug-hter.
Two e of these, children
a?5! yy they react to its , not avid scholar-. . . no drinking'no'
otherwise be paid in full, must entirely,
distant call,___________ Lris, nor..any.friVoS^
and .1 flm: the-orily
child who survived..;;. . As I part- I
JsorL.r.His two swords, .'thebadge .ed from, my .parents, when very!
en
I of nobility, were packed in his' small, I cannot.. remember: even
let
I u®t?age. When this handsome vaugely what theyriJooked like
‘
'
I yc^b - Vas asked why he didn’t I ?was told that both of them
Slocan City, B.C,
T0K10. — Probably no nation Four hours sleep,
pass.;,
six
I
£VI to : parties,^ replied/ “Be- passed away long, ago" fd^nAf
puts as much emphasis on educa hours sleep, fail.”
cau^ I 0m not .a man, but' only M^
ao
Phpne 355-2211
tion as does Japan. Less than one
zen
percent of the nearly 100 million
c
people are illiterate, a major rea
m
son for the country’s economic ior high school attendance is com- ern chronolo^i hniW-West, vwnout as yet being .able* to lopulsdty-mentally eye them .
. Since your family
and political progress.
available at . all primary?schools me5 better ^than a
II?1116!,?3
a sMatsudaira,’,.I
m
Education is regarded as the and the education ministry is After I havl, studied 11^^^^
be remotely
of s
only way to succeed, not just be
Ambassador Matsudaira soup-hi
ed
cause the learning in itself is Jtyn’in|t0 ^^ bb1^10 junior my be fitted ' for. partied, for
bigh-iSohdols^as
soon
^.a's
possible;
I-/biking,
and
snioking
and
danc-I
the
help of the US Stata Do
necessary but because it gives
wa;
a person a school tie, a -ready
e
Today, l,150,000?
™
identification with a group.
FamilyCo-op
and women attend M higher tech, *ilge in such' elegandes IK fata
,of ^
Strenuous examinations are meal schools, a five-year combi?' think 'these'Matsudaira was located
seki
”5r
janiori merits' in 'which' my coSy ^s'Den^ Rlver?id® Cemetery, in
given at every level prior to enaS
Japanese
&
Occidental Foods
college instituted-in 1964ty^
'
To fa
trance. As in the tradition of 414 junior colleges and 341 univ^atsudaira .graduated in 1879 ther^ in coniXoraSn ofT
‘etir
China, passing- the examination
460
Dundas St, W. — Toronto..
: h
eF
ities.
;
.
■
d
n
his'
profesyoung
nobleman
who
became
the
is the only key to the next level.
, 3 W. ^aduate I ^Uen be^oS
^'0^^^
His .adopt-']’
ties
EM. 6-5589 -and EM.- 6-5711This is an intensively compe
titive element in a carefully re stfluents^are working for masters | ^- - ^ext, . he served., as an en- ~
1
baloc
gulated society. Japanese parents ay doctors .de^e^ atj^
i?
have an adage for their children: ersities.Pennsylvania, he martry, i
ri
he /dau°Wer of? General
Un
: SS
Sampson, the founder,
e a si
Toronto Japanese Garden Club
Hibi
the..Colorado Industrial School
at Denyer.
' '
' ■ '
Presents_
iopf
Fresh Fruits^and Vegetables Daily
ver
«
and be
$ struck out westward oh a job’as
cco
Ntrap Ready f
letely
:: n C1J? engineer.with;.the Union
•• hPacific Railroad. .The U. P. had
^t it
DAIKON-—, NAPPA
At Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
GOBO
« ^Y^’^ban-.a decade earlier, link-.
greet
fl est on 401 to Streetsville Rd. North
Oct. 29th 2 to 9 p.m. — Oct. 30th 1 to 8 pm 5’:
^-tb ^he' Central' Pacific”
Beer
^
tinenS^-T
’
^
tah
T
bis
transconSiS °of
byT Mr' Ke^ Nakashima,. Landscape
3 miles to market
,was- ^ow brisy
arcnuect ot Expo 6 is Japanese Pavilion*'^rum'^ ■
Beej
Japanese gardens, pot ^.-^ flower *ang«„%T 4 building feeder lines. Matsudaira
Ph one jn arket *,865-8 UI 2
- was assigned to surviving S
home 865-8526t he
Also movies, gift shop, and tea
"’ — :.. einess areas of Colorado, Wyom- ‘
Is bl
Membership fee §1.00
«jit
«
1G- Montana for: the U. P r
$I
to be 'constructed.
r
the old Wes:. J
KINO'S MARKEi
Red & White
Food Store
High literacy Rafe Noted In Japa
Continental
TERAMOTO FARM MARKET
Annual Autumn Flower Show
1
R
isSid raib L Wp SnBriAli7P hr*
^t* ® trail that I i
-- wPwMIKB III
tew***’*
tew&r F™"»*fieOrient
SS4?wf
Educational Funds
through Life insurance ?
°ck
1
n
CONTACT
^',Wj
Ron Marks COMPANY OF CANADA
as
Sy V 40’00() in a S By
j 1884, .however the drives
5
were
over.
I T a^Qoorware — Porcelain -Tableware — Household Ornaments
’ S™8^ Handiworks of Wood, Bamboo — Framed Pictures
i ^ of °* JaPanes® Painting — Oriental Jewellery — Folding
screens — Flower Arrangement, Accessories — Fans
Dolls and Statuettes , s
Paramount Gift Shop
Office 364-5141
733 Danforth Aye. Toronto, Ont.
- -
^ Blocky East ®fPape Ave.)
Residence 925-9636
and nothing e!i Fnyeir ^w
—’Ue western" Sa^t^
TELEPHONE HO? 3-7831
Store Hours: Mon., to. Sat.: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Excepting Friday' 9 - alm. to 9 p.m.
By JI
KYO. * by ;
? thf
^ adja
—• modi
Iter <
Hud
f ^tern
F be i
F. ®?e
[ -aZUOUi
ra a
-fl
> ban
^ ;‘ is
to
Engineer . ,
(Cont. From Page 1)
calls, but awaited calls of others for defiance of .. certain federal
The New Ca^.
I Their next stopping place was supplied their one livelihood.- The
among whom they may be so laws. '
!
I Chicago, where they were, as else- animals prorid ed a source of
journing.
Authorized « Swoa(J
' "J
Ambassador Iwakura, at once, I where, treated with warm hospi- food, fuel, clothing,., shelter, tools
The messenger from the Mor
mon President and Governor ex sent explanations saying, “We I tality. Iwakura commemorated lanJ Tg y.e‘ -- ^^^r by the’-'
Post fWK.. —
pressed regrets that it was im capie to the United :Siates-to see I the visit by presenting the mavor anti-lndian and bisom'propagarij
possible for. him to call immedi the President of this great na with., a gift .of 85,000 for the be-’ da of government officials, who
ately. When asked whv, the mes tion; we do not know how he I n?fit of the poor of that city, believed the Indian could only
• CT'tSb?E^^
senger informed him that Presi- would like tis to call on a man, devastated.by the Great.Fire .of rJ‘c,iyili?ed” .by^rf^
K
I
the
year
before.
’
’
'
dent ^0UnS of Oie Mormon whq^had. broken, the laws of his
buffalo, the bison were slaught
Church was under house ari'est country, "and’was under arrest.” '" . The .party left.. Chicago on ered from millions,.to near “ex
.February .27 and arrived in Wash- j tinction. .
.
- ington, "D.C., two ' days later? [ Weary of incessant.travel, Ma
Pearl Buck
On . January, the 30, the Cori-| tsudaira decided to settle, m.Den?'
479 QUEEN ST. W
(Continued from Pape 1)
gress
of the .United States,made I v er" He served : as an-'rassistant I Toronto 2-Bb Ont./ '
to reach a hand to the other. be fulfilled by destroying one’s - an appropriation, of' §50,000 .’ford
superintendent-of-mines
-for
the
L
Then there was the difficulty of bfe. Perhaps .it is best .expressed | the .purpose, of entertaining the I
Empire ,6-5005communication. Neither people by the old French phrase, nobles? Embassy while in this .country. _ I State of-Colorado. He- surveyed'! •
subscription'..
the . eastern and.' southern boun?
learns a foreign language easi se oblige. Or, if one is to use the
54,00
per 6 months
J
ly. Americans . feel no need to ''T,rris of a Japanese dictionary,
t
*
*
*
I dry lines-of the.state; He is said I S7.00 per naj .
4
to have designed -the-'suspension' learn, in the vastness of our ter “giri is the. .righteous way, the
On, Monday, March 4, the Em bridge, over-the- Royal Gbrge-ih h
ritory; and the Japanese have road human beings, should follow;
bassy.had.an
audience with Pres southern Colorado. For a" time' ^
1
no need because of their geogra something one does, though unphical isolation. There are ideals xyillingly, to forestall..apology to ident Ulysses S. Grant. Minister he taught at the School of Mine's —
lyakura presented their, creden j^Golden’ Colorado, andJalso" ’
and concepts, too, that our two the world.”
'
‘
tial
letter. It' was folded in ah aid .some work for the McNeal
peoples did not share, :and an al
Giri, relationships are those a ejty^lpp.jsomQ two feet long.and I Alining
Company at Denver
most total lack of meaningful man has toward his family, his iris^
.
inches
.
wide,
and
marvelously
% died of an illness in
contact on a personal level. The b-iAS, to those above, liiM in staAmericans and the Japanese had U°n, and , government; and :to' worked with flowers in gold. On 1888, at the age of 33, Matsu ^^’EKATORS exDerience"d?iL’
not taken time to know or those beneath''him -who' are’ de .^arch 6, the House of Represen- i daira was survived by a son Kin- and special machine
Bil1^
?. fc
tatives gave the Embassy'ri'for nosuke and his widow, who, with 96 Spading Ave,_
understand each other.”
.(TorontoJL 13 2oo:
pendent on'him. It has' to do Sri th mal reception and the Embassy I['her
family, moved to the East
one’s., personal honor in all. relri- I
_A people of contradictions — tionships; it has., to do -with I next.paid a risit to the Senate I
1/-’ Ambassador Tsuneo
Chambers.
. Matsudaira, newly appointed to
Miss Buck dwells at length cn
on bearing.gone’s .name,’ and f'witK
r or Des>t Results'?' ‘
Ari aweri observer of all the
the things the Japanese do, and keeping one’s’ proper /placed' with
United States, received this
scenes^enroute
.and
of
the
pro^.
New Canadian Ads..
letter from Kinnosuke:
why they d’o them, probing into paying debts arid reciprocating I
|.
codings
.
was
young
Tadaatsu
the matter of “giri”, and finding gifts and kindness, indeed “with !
“I am writing this letter in a'
contradictory exceptions to al- v-?^aIly—eY??y area, of Japanese Matsudaira. He was with' dis- i lrOpeJ°,u may be aWe to help, me
tinguished company . . .■ the
wxc muj- xauaci
most everything she says about ife.” .
Am- |। —
My
father’s name is Matsudaira
bassarior - and ..Vice Ambassadors I Tadaatsu.
the Japanese.
l
; He came to. this
The Nisei,_ of course, are. not
i
“What is giri?” she asks. Then bound by giri, but many of’ them flTre leaders of the emergingJ country to study in 1872
she answers this way: “If pressed still feel its. stirrings. and..per- Japan. The entire retinue was । After graduating',
~
fromsa..uniinto Western terminology, giri haps Miss Buck’s book can help: des.tined for, future„distinctlon. I versity.. . He .married a Cau
JU? 7^at'. iUisj QfkAe; timeTi^^^
is a moral imperative, a spiritual ST why
casian and had -twoisons .and a
obligation which, if it cannot
daug-hter.
Two e of these, children
a?5! yy they react to its , not avid scholar-. . . no drinking'no'
otherwise be paid in full, must entirely,
distant call,___________ Lris, nor..any.friVoS^
and .1 flm: the-orily
child who survived..;;. . As I part- I
JsorL.r.His two swords, .'thebadge .ed from, my .parents, when very!
en
I of nobility, were packed in his' small, I cannot.. remember: even
let
I u®t?age. When this handsome vaugely what theyriJooked like
‘
'
I yc^b - Vas asked why he didn’t I ?was told that both of them
Slocan City, B.C,
T0K10. — Probably no nation Four hours sleep,
pass.;,
six
I
£VI to : parties,^ replied/ “Be- passed away long, ago" fd^nAf
puts as much emphasis on educa hours sleep, fail.”
cau^ I 0m not .a man, but' only M^
ao
Phpne 355-2211
tion as does Japan. Less than one
zen
percent of the nearly 100 million
c
people are illiterate, a major rea
m
son for the country’s economic ior high school attendance is com- ern chronolo^i hniW-West, vwnout as yet being .able* to lopulsdty-mentally eye them .
. Since your family
and political progress.
available at . all primary?schools me5 better ^than a
II?1116!,?3
a sMatsudaira,’,.I
m
Education is regarded as the and the education ministry is After I havl, studied 11^^^^
be remotely
of s
only way to succeed, not just be
Ambassador Matsudaira soup-hi
ed
cause the learning in itself is Jtyn’in|t0 ^^ bb1^10 junior my be fitted ' for. partied, for
bigh-iSohdols^as
soon
^.a's
possible;
I-/biking,
and
snioking
and
danc-I
the
help of the US Stata Do
necessary but because it gives
wa;
a person a school tie, a -ready
e
Today, l,150,000?
™
identification with a group.
FamilyCo-op
and women attend M higher tech, *ilge in such' elegandes IK fata
,of ^
Strenuous examinations are meal schools, a five-year combi?' think 'these'Matsudaira was located
seki
”5r
janiori merits' in 'which' my coSy ^s'Den^ Rlver?id® Cemetery, in
given at every level prior to enaS
Japanese
&
Occidental Foods
college instituted-in 1964ty^
'
To fa
trance. As in the tradition of 414 junior colleges and 341 univ^atsudaira .graduated in 1879 ther^ in coniXoraSn ofT
‘etir
China, passing- the examination
460
Dundas St, W. — Toronto..
: h
eF
ities.
;
.
■
d
n
his'
profesyoung
nobleman
who
became
the
is the only key to the next level.
, 3 W. ^aduate I ^Uen be^oS
^'0^^^
His .adopt-']’
ties
EM. 6-5589 -and EM.- 6-5711This is an intensively compe
titive element in a carefully re stfluents^are working for masters | ^- - ^ext, . he served., as an en- ~
1
baloc
gulated society. Japanese parents ay doctors .de^e^ atj^
i?
have an adage for their children: ersities.Pennsylvania, he martry, i
ri
he /dau°Wer of? General
Un
: SS
Sampson, the founder,
e a si
Toronto Japanese Garden Club
Hibi
the..Colorado Industrial School
at Denyer.
' '
' ■ '
Presents_
iopf
Fresh Fruits^and Vegetables Daily
ver
«
and be
$ struck out westward oh a job’as
cco
Ntrap Ready f
letely
:: n C1J? engineer.with;.the Union
•• hPacific Railroad. .The U. P. had
^t it
DAIKON-—, NAPPA
At Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
GOBO
« ^Y^’^ban-.a decade earlier, link-.
greet
fl est on 401 to Streetsville Rd. North
Oct. 29th 2 to 9 p.m. — Oct. 30th 1 to 8 pm 5’:
^-tb ^he' Central' Pacific”
Beer
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tah
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bis
transconSiS °of
byT Mr' Ke^ Nakashima,. Landscape
3 miles to market
,was- ^ow brisy
arcnuect ot Expo 6 is Japanese Pavilion*'^rum'^ ■
Beej
Japanese gardens, pot ^.-^ flower *ang«„%T 4 building feeder lines. Matsudaira
Ph one jn arket *,865-8 UI 2
- was assigned to surviving S
home 865-8526t he
Also movies, gift shop, and tea
"’ — :.. einess areas of Colorado, Wyom- ‘
Is bl
Membership fee §1.00
«jit
«
1G- Montana for: the U. P r
$I
to be 'constructed.
r
the old Wes:. J
KINO'S MARKEi
Red & White
Food Store
High literacy Rafe Noted In Japa
Continental
TERAMOTO FARM MARKET
Annual Autumn Flower Show
1
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isSid raib L Wp SnBriAli7P hr*
^t* ® trail that I i
-- wPwMIKB III
tew***’*
tew&r F™"»*fieOrient
SS4?wf
Educational Funds
through Life insurance ?
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n
CONTACT
^',Wj
Ron Marks COMPANY OF CANADA
as
Sy V 40’00() in a S By
j 1884, .however the drives
5
were
over.
I T a^Qoorware — Porcelain -Tableware — Household Ornaments
’ S™8^ Handiworks of Wood, Bamboo — Framed Pictures
i ^ of °* JaPanes® Painting — Oriental Jewellery — Folding
screens — Flower Arrangement, Accessories — Fans
Dolls and Statuettes , s
Paramount Gift Shop
Office 364-5141
733 Danforth Aye. Toronto, Ont.
- -
^ Blocky East ®fPape Ave.)
Residence 925-9636
and nothing e!i Fnyeir ^w
—’Ue western" Sa^t^
TELEPHONE HO? 3-7831
Store Hours: Mon., to. Sat.: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Excepting Friday' 9 - alm. to 9 p.m.
By JI
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