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The New Canadian — December 7, 1966

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Page 1

£
,c

di

Re W^ p°Pu,a,ed City In The World, Called fl fiiWrW

law®

<i-This city is a sitting duck Tor fires.
g^prone condition is nothing new. However,
l^tuated
iby an explosive city expansion, the
iwntaiated'by
^population figures, and'a more recent ad&ygh-rise construction to the urban scene.
Unore-than 10H million people jammed into
|%f11260 square’ miles, the I population density
Fstuffing'10 pounds of sand into a five-pound

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Edr
iitoi

E'&e policy of fire departments the world over,
Kjnetropolitan fire brigade .seeks to prevent
^save lives in the event, of fire, and 'then
Kgu^the job of extinguishing^ the blaze,
biiree actions operate,in concert.
g^pievention program is a seven day a week
KJie Addition of new/and more advanced types
^fighting .apparatus is being carried 7 oh? at an
. ,

>wa
ts.

t*'

The matter of savin- lives’teke^
forts of more than 10 000
^
Service and

v

4

7

Tokyo Fire

^^ 5lso ™ of *>« «‘ simple iX It V»
in a multSto^ bnMta^ 1S “StaIled at ^ ™dow

~^‘ MKa^^ vs
StSu^0 seconds by fliPJPing an “instent-release”
thi^A ^is
13110 position at a window and
of cSetti.^ ^d^’ unfurling like a giant strand

iToky°’ •the '^-“odem Hotel Okura’s 14-story
^LkUnge 1S eqiUPped With several ^ ^ese escape
___ ^.
cUUcb»
1

? "r * *
THey also have been ?installed' in 'spools' factories 5
apartment
apartment houses
houses and
and 'office 'buildings. ' ^'»^
in a city where zoning and building regulatory laws
were once lax, there are thousands,of 30"to'.40'year I
°^ structures still in. use that were/bunt-/without
sufficient fire escapes or means of .emergency jexiLiJ '
It is this type of building that the/ escaptT’chute fills
its most critical need. ‘
To use the chute is I as simple astakinga trip-in
a giant playground slide.'-' b
~ \
'^'’j
A person swings himself into a sitting position^t
the mouth of the totally enclosed tube, lets go of his
grip and allows the law of gravity to do the rest.
Descent is retarded by pushing your feet away/frbm
your body, creating a5 drag on the canvas^ and^you
accelerate by keeping' your legs together. The'trip- j

.... ......... I|fi-11|U||I ;

g«™'-«^^

SlCO
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rhe 11® Canadian i

^Stella Ito’s

Miyaki Cookbook”
tar
3-64

|?0nIy $1.50

^^^4«
■4?
Jessie L. Beattie’s
Strength For The 1
Bridge. Ohly - $5.00

I

AA'Independent Organ for, Canadians-of Japanese> Origin

9,
tne

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER ?,' 1966
- :> '
:
Toronto,! Ont
ft«»nii«iiiiiiii™.... luiiumm.iAuu................................................. .. >

Inquest Rules Chinese
Husband Stabbed JC Wife

inalChopin M.S.
Bind Owned By
Japanese Widow I

>9

J
i

TORONTO.—A coroner’s jury. ruled last - week that Toronto \
Nisei, Margaret Kato Wong, 32, died of stab'wounds inflicted by
her'husband Douglas Wong.‘
'
Mrs. Wong was found June 29 on the floor of the'Wong
apartment on Sheppard Avenue West, with two stab wounds in 4
the abdomen. Her husband, also stabbed in the stomach,,was found
beside her and recovered after surgery.

v ''
f
find was reported by MarThe jury’s verdict said Mrs. Wong died “as a, result of stab
s Kiku Maeda to the Towounds inflicted by her husband Douglas Wong while under the '!
Kwspaper.Yomiuri. She said
influence of drugs.”
pand had bought the score
>
Mr. Wong’ testified earlier in
\. urging^ at. an«auction .irf
the inquest—that he had suffered
on May28, 1930. She said,
JapaneSHcdl JutJoka ; t1
wfof.thejurchase was^ re-'
amnesia over the period in which
i in her husband’s diary. ''
.
Mrs. Wong was wounded and Ne^ds .'More Lessons
First "Mikdn" Boat/Still Awaits^Unloading
,^ Jjy/v
husband, the late Marquis,
swore he had no idea how either
VANCOUVER
Thirteenri Maeda, who served /as' By T; UMEZUKI
year-old Ian Osman is/going'to t.
attache in the 'Japariese' ^ "'-VANCOUVER, B.C.—Three “mikan” — orange — boats with he or his wife was stabbed.
be concentratings' just a kittle, r
sy in London, also bought full-cargoes are sitting in Vancouver-unable to unload because
He said he took two sleeping harder on his judo lessons'in the 1
ra believed to be a/note of the B.C. dock strike. The first ship to reach.here, the Suruga
>
ty _Chopin which read' in' Maru was the only one to unload a small portion of its cargo.
pills before going to bed • and nextfew, months.
.:
Ian,/'
of
,
3565
*
Franklin/'
was
> J "V Thirteen ' B.C. fruit wholesalers have made injunction appli­ could not remember anything ex­
Jumped by /. three 4 youths /about i*z
ftjs convenient with you; T cations to the B.C. Supreme Court to force the employees’ associacept,
a
severe
,pain
in
the
abdo
­
6’ P-m. one . eyening as »he\was
be‘waiting for Lady Murray? tion to unload the> orange shipment. The foremen have offered
o clock Your devoted ser- tb work without payzThese offers were refused by the association. men. He1 said^rhe spent three walking in -the. 500. bl^ckH^well,
on his;way: to ?judo -classes^at the'
.aw
IW ’.v '"
If 'this
.this situation continues, it is tearea
feared tne
the pensnaoie
perishable iruit
fruit weeks in hospital recovering Japanese?:Hall,:
A 1 “
300Alexander. I
- IaS?n^ "carried by the three ships, estimated at several million dollars, will from the wound.
' ..ffis/attadcers,' 4 all *| about?15, a
^ociefy said -one of "its become a total loss.
pushed/him/
to/the/g^
, Masahiko' Sato, examiriDr. Kenneth G. Gray, a pro­
'^ * Some varieties of semi-mandarin oranges, imported from south
heldhhintyas
/they
took/15 'cents,'
^^®;‘ ^ was almost* of the border, are attracting mixed attention in Southern Ontario. fessor of psychiatry from .the
gW.-were genuine.
y .Usually, by this time, many super markets and Japanese stores University of Toronto, testified three ball-point/ /peris-—and ^a’
black bag z containing;/'his 1-judo
W-inform the Chopiii- in Southern Ontario are busy filling mandarin orange orders.
costume,
that
Mr.
Wong,
having
taken
^.Warsaw of the-'dis-.
tranquillizers and a strong seda­
>s»e,spokesman said? He
&was known that the-'ori-'
tive, .would, if roused, have had
ffo16'0^6 MazurkaTm C'
‘'diminished consciousness.” He
W
33-3 had been mis?
A solicitous maitre-d offered
1TOKYO. — In the winter a
*25 ~
i
penniless man’s fancy turns to Hiramoto a job -to pay for his said that a stab wound such as
Jrf:^ Opus J 33-3 ar warm bed and three square dinner, but it was refused.
Mr. Wong . received would pro-/
i
^S^-SS, publish­ meals a day.
“It was not heaven’s wish that bably not cause amnesia, but sev­
# I
er ?d dedicate to
’For-Kakichi Hiramoto, 54, it is I work for a living,” Hiramoto ere emotional shock might do Tan ? wears .^Japanese? war?helMostkowska.
,
no longer fancy. He is back in said,, as he. fondled a suitcase SO.
met; ..eyer^here ^

5 ^ included four mazurjaiT'for * the ~16th'time.
he was carrying to his new home.
! ^“ ^^‘'■.h^'rouAfhe'); hiad'* with-'
®eemovement) in G.sharp
.Hiramoto downed a bottle of
It worked.
He said that he did not be- a; baseball-bat^-he 'said'/^Tthurt.,
fe’ C major ana B sake
and two dishes of sushi
and 'L’m -, taking^ nochances^ I*
S ’ appareniIy meads (rice balls adorned with raw fish)
Restaurant officials called po­ lieve that Mr. Wong was mal- even wear., ft ? when I eat#FeeL
&T?™s the third in afta’-Ginza restaurant and then lice to take Hiramoto to jail and. ingering when he said he had that rbump.’f^’
e.of mazurkas of -the; ^announced that he had no money away from the windy, and cold amnesia.
Tan, a 65?year-old Isseis from*'
Tokyo nights.
to pay. for them.
California, is'- tiny and ' thin and?
More than three dozen wit- has one: hand. His leftiHand jWasfj 4
1!-^R'BlWHiiiiinimiiiiyinm^^
nesses were heard in the inquest, amputated after ‘ an*-, accident; “ on
a tuna boat 30^,years^Agb.^ *? *
which lasted three days;
He has beeri^attacke^^^^
.The jury wasp confronted with androbbedtwicetin/the?pastfew
?
conflictinga testimony regafding months’ omhis/.way to-wbrkas.a >-Vietnam
a. good pocket knife. Need some / Aunt Viola wrote and told me Mrs. Wong’s - character. Psychi­ car washer 'Tat the^
f
adhesive tape l-inch wide, white. to send her a list of thing I atrist Dr. Earl. Baker arid neuro­ car wash./fBoth . /assaulted took
L.
^ttentlv
^^a in Vi- I.would (also)-use that one-sided wanted for Xmas — cookies, logist Dr., Andrew Park testi- p!ace?aroiiiM^6^aji£><^j^
'«Tam ik/a/bfave,; tdugh/?aridun^
binocular-/if you’ll send it to me; cakes and stuff like that get
sure would come in handy. (Al- crushed, dr get old — not unless ffed' Nov. 25 that she was suffer­ usual?/ mahZWhat" he - does;* after
^ ” -v^ christmas card so) send "three bottles" of “Off” it’s air tight and in a can. — Any ing from a form-of epilepsy that he is/ beaten or stabbed Ts getiup
t ^.^:' The ? next (mosquito repellant). day that packages or letters come could occasionally cause, a person’ and -goy to /work.,?
v ke Kis last r We are on. a 5-day sweep of is a holiday.' — Don’t worry to commit strange actions.?; ' : ; Several- months^ ago,/-a?—-gang
m Da hiang, he was bur area,': checking out every lit­ about me too much. I’m taking
jumped him and he fought back^
tle thing;/to chase out the V.C. good care of .myself as best I
Kazuo Kato;of Dallas Road,, He was cudgled. on the.;, head and
We received lots of sniper fire can, keeping-my head low. — brother of the; deceased, woman/ ribs with a^baseballzBat;^^ was
Imock^,outii<^3''':^
X
and a few people got'hurt. One ‘Bye for now. Your son. ’Wes.
denied
that
-Mrs.
Wong
..was"
P.S.
Marine
Corps
had
a
When?
heJwoke^ChB
decided
5
killed. /Nothing happened to me,
H'£ 1 ^ th»t thank 'goodness. I' fire ah M-79* Birthday. We got through with mentally ill, saying that she/was he didn’t wa^
bother -the <
^ (more) Jit’s b-grenade ^launcher. Mighty our sweep, got to our Battalion upset over the recent; death bp Police./4‘They’;have? enough trou- J
It her mother.
ble,”;;he./explained;? So, he- got up ;
^nd^ -°f ?her^ effective." We sweep during the rear and had a hot meal.
- / A?
t. «m strip wire (and) day, ;then .dig in (at) nights
was decent.
1
HO. — What is believed^
the original score of UhoV
Mazurka in 'C Major Opus
was reported recently foun d?
^possession of the widow
i Japanese aristocrat who/
t it at an auction in Berlin

l

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■41

JailMeans A Warm Bed And 3 Meals

Issei/Wearc/^

L

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HelmetTo/Worki

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O- Sansei Soldier’s Last Letter Home

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£*;

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Page 2

Wednesday, December 7

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THE BANK
OFNOVASCOTIA
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fc^December 7, 1966

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727 Danforth Ave, (at;Pape)
Toronto. Phone- Day Or -Night
466-9911

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INSTANT COOKING, BASK

Itimo

BAMBOO GROVE
6921No.>3 Road, *
Richmond, B. C.
Phone CR.- 8-9586
CR. 8-9588

Page 4

Wednesday, December 7 I
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Continental Family CH>
460 Dundas St, W, Toron*
EM. 6-5589 — EM. ^711

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PAGE 5

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Page 6

PAGE «

THE

Wednesday, December 7

NEW

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THE
NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St. W.,
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Phone EM. 6-5005

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Page 7

RAGE 7

Tuesday, December 7, 1966

Dates And Doings
jUi Social Club's Xmas Party Tickets All Sold Out

Nisei Christmas Cake Recipe From Winnipeg

It U a good policy to
har. th* RIGHT POLICY
Consult

LIGHT CHRISTMAS CAKE
By Mrs. F. Meg Yahiro of Winnipeg, Man.

William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents

lb. butter
cups sugar
eggs
lbs. bleached sultana
lb. cherries
lb. citron
lb. almond
fotoist Kimio Eto To Play In Montreal On Dec. 11th
lb. mixed fruit
tins (15 oz.) pineapple (not drained)
VMONTREAL—The M;B.C.stakes' great pleasure in welcoming 2
Eto to Montreal.onTecember 10th. He will give a koto SjA cups flour
^•M^
at the President Ken- 2 tspns. baking powder
-^ Auditorium 3030 Bernardin St., Ville St. Michel — south 2 tspns. vanilla

,
Cream butter and sugar well. Add the eggs one at a time,
S?Metropolitan Blvd, and a block west of St. .Michel Blvd.
4 Esion tickets are available from church executives and beating between each addition. Add vanilla and beat veil, add pine­
apple and mix well. Sift the dry ingredients and use part of the
ithe gate -Montreal Buddhist Church________________________
mixture to flour the prepared fruits and nuts. Add remaining
dry ingredients and cream, then add floured fruit.
,
Line cake pan with aluminum foil or brown paper and add
batter, building batter well up to the sides and corners of toe
pan, making a slight hollow in toe centre Bake ^. 350°4< foi
% hour, then reduce the heat to 250° F., and Bake 3^2 to 4 hours
^Greetings
Omitted
Due
until
cake is done.
Greetings Omitted Due
To Bereavement of Father
CHRISTMAS BAKING HINTS
To Bereavement
Preparation . of Fruit
T
MR. MASUYA SHOJI KONDO
MRS. W. OHORI
Small dried and glaced fruits are usually left whole. Larger,
MR.
&
MRS.
DAVE
KONDO
MR. & MRS. BUS OHORI
fruit .and nuts, such as candied cherries, Pinea,PpJVS^^
MR. & MRS. SEIM KONDO
IMR & MRS. GEORGE OHORI
should be chopped or cut up to allow for even distribut
MR.
&
MRS.
TOM
KONDO
MR. & MRS. JOE OHORI

and
to ease the cutting of toe Crashed cak^ C^
MISS
MARY
KONDO
1 & MRS. YOSHIAKI SATO
fruits are easily cut with scissors, dipped
^
J
MR.
&
MRS.
TAK
FURUKAWA
North Surrey, B.C.
To
puff
raisins,
wash
and
drain
well.
Then
paxtially
di^
MR^ & MRS. KEN TAMANE
.MR, & MRS. ROY MORITO
between
towel.
Place
on
cookie
sheet
.and
allow
to
puff
by
placing
*
*
*
*
in 350° F. oven for 10 minutes
,Greetings Omitted Due
Greetings Omitted Due
“To Bereavement
Preparation of Pans
To Bereavement
Cover
with
two
layers
of ungreased aluminum, foil or one
MR. & MRS. SHIGERU NINAKA
MIKI TATEISHI
layer of greased brown paper.
_
And Family
HARRY & SUE TATEISHI
0
Baking Fruit Cake
MRS;
SADA
NINAKA
.-NANCY & YUKE TATEBE
Fill cake pans no more than % full, Press batter well into
146
Beech
Ave.,
the
;
327 N. John St.
Bake caKes
cakes ar
at auu350° r.
F. for
pans. BaKe
xvi first _/2 hour, then reduce
Toronto
13,
Ont.
Fort William, Ont.
temperature to 250° for the remaining time:
3x3 x 3 inch cake
ny3 hours
hours
5 x 5 x'4 inch cake
— 4% hours
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
4
inch cake
9
4^ —■ 5 hours
cake
inch
SUNDAY, DECEMBER IL 1966
allowed
BakeAakes once removed from the oven should
« be
f ™

11:30 A.M. Nisei Service
t0 ^ ^akTrte™"^
Infant Baptism' and Christmas Communion
Rev. Wm. Morris . _.
ZS« Places in the cake. Wh- the aeedl« out
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL

701 Dovercourt Rd., loro
clean and the cake springs back wnen touched, it is done.
Storage of Fruit Cake
.

Wrap in several layers of aluminum foil, theii m a_clean tea
^TORONTO. _ The - Nisei Social Club regrets- that all tickets
l?L Annual Snowflakes Xmas Party have been sold out. Please
^advised that tickets will not be available at the door. —N.S.C.

1
2
6
2
1

PersonalNotesAcross Canada

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH

918 Bathurst St.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1966
BODHI. DAY
10:30 A.M. Religious < School
,
11:00 A.M. Morning Service — Prof. H. Saddhatrssa Univ, of Toronto
“Meaning of Enlightenment
...
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service — Rev. Newton Ishiura

as'this improves both the flavour and texture of .the cake.

464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone 921-3171

OFFICE
EM 4 1394
EM. 4-1395

RESIDENCE
HUdson 5-1365

A. E. McKague, Q-C.
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1008 ^Northern Ontario Building ,; ;
330 “Bay Street (at "Adelaide)
TORONTO

*54

^

Rm:

824-8153

922-1353

ERNEST JOMORI
Accountant

Chartered

Suite 403
130 BLOOR ST. W.

TORONTO

Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
; 1278 Yonge Street. Toronto 7. Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
923-6877
Tokio Nishimura

AUTO



FIRE



LIFE;

ALL FORMS

INSURANCE
KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO

When Buying Or Selling A Home

Eus. 366-5812

Res. Pl. 9-8317

Call: KEN HORI

KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C
Phone 355-2211

Continental
Family Co-op

rtealtoR

K. HORI
REAL ESTATE

MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL EST^JE
ten • I
?Phone:;26u5194
14 Penvale Cres.
Scarborough

Japanese & Occidental Foods
460 Dundas St. W. — Toronto

EM. 6-5589 and EM. 6-5711

It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding

reception or anniversary

fe Takara Jewellers
Diamonds And Watches
"Our Specialty"
21 Dundas SqFToronto’ Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952

Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!

CHINA

RU. 1-9123

( Dining. j/punge)
Toronto, Canada
118 Elizabeth St.

Mortgage Protection
CONTACT

Ron Marks
SUN LITE ASSURANCE

SPORTING GOODS

.Fishing Tackle and
Golf Equipment
551 Danforth Ave-

Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now; For
Weddings
' Dances' Etc.

ALNA

Phone: 364-3481

For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Largest- SmaU)
DINNER . MUSIC NIGHTLY

DANFORTH

' Open Thur, and Fri.' Until 8 p. n.

(4 Lines To
rve You)
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

Banquet Facilities

rl3t84i/2? Queen W.
Toronto ' — ' LE. 2-6378

Phone: HO. 3-7400

through Life insurance?

Lichee Garden

SUPPUEb

Georg, Fukuaoka

HOUSE

925 Eglinton W. -Toronto

studio-

Office 364-5141

Residence 429-1089

Of Toronto
.
CUSTOM MADE SUIT

Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 433-8104

Page 8

Wednesday, December 7, ig6{

P^£
(Cont. From Page 1)
The hoodlums got only 35 cents
and went to work and washed badly to go to work, so he went
in
the knifing, he said, and not
to
the
police
for
help.
He
was
cars all day.
“I have a very bad headache,” taken to Casualty Hospital where much more than that when they
he said, “and my ribs hurt too.” his face and body were stitched. used the baseball bat.
Tan isn’t used to easy life—
Three weeks
ago, several He didn’t get to work until noon.
he
’s been on the bum, as he puts
youths came at. him with knives
Tan
figures
the
youths
picked
it,
and washed cars and dishes
and stabbed him in the face and
body. They left him lying on the on him because he has but one and worked in garages and gas
hand, is tiny and old and looks stations and done odd jobs all
sidewalk.
, •
vulnerable. It can’t be money, he over the country since he lost his
. When Tan got to his feet, he said, for he has practically none hand and that good job on the
tuna boat 30 years ago.
figured he was bleeding too of that.
But he draws the line .at mug­
gings. “I’m not going to get hit
on the head again,”, he said. “I
made up my mind. So I got this
helmet for a dollar. I wear it all
the time, I’m taking no chances.”
Tan, even with one hand, is the
best worker his boss, Martin
Cohen, has ever seen. “He’s fan­
tastic,” said Cohen.
“He’s the first one here every
day, seven days a week and he
does everything. He gets beaten
with a baseball bat and he comes
to work on time. He gets stab­
bed and he’s only, four hours late.
He’s fantastic.”
IlFRicohmatic 126
® Completely
automatic,
instant-loading
For Best Results
^B camera. Drop a film cartridge into the
Use New Canadian Ads
1 camera, focus and shoot. No chance to
intake a mistake. Automatic exposure
i control. Automatic shutter speed adjust£>llllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllll£
j ment for flash. Automatic film advancing.
EGold Seal Upholstery=
Easy zone focusing system.
E
Phone 633-3244 _
=
= All Phases Furniture 6. Antiques “
Canon Canonet QL19
= Custom Upholstered — Built. Experts
' -X\\
Features simple, automatic operation and

Polishing and Finishing

, ^.^ easy film loading. Fast fl.9 lens
=
Don Mitsubata
E
for sharp pictures. Most dependable CdS
E
Res. — RO. 7-6078
=
exposure control. Manual operation is pos­
5lllllIllllilIIIII!!lllllllllllllllilllllll)r
sible. Under-exposure warning signal in
the finder.

Now own
the best
Japanese camera .
an except ion a I buy

Nikon F
The world’s finest SLR camera you can
have. The camera responds smoothly, ef­
fectively and faithfully. Instant re-open
diaphragm. Instant return mirror. Sharp
fl.4 lens. Interchangeable viewfinder.
Speeds up to 1/1000 sec plus T and B.
.Complete line of accessories.

The New Canadiai

PAUL Y. TOKIWA

to.l Office D.1»I^,ra?O»*,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
Millar, Alexander' and Tokiwa
Suite 901 15 King St. W.
' Hamilton, Ont..
Bus. JA. 8-1186 Res. FU. 3-3545

Male Help Wanted
ST9CK Keeper wanted fo- dress „ ;
pany. Permanent. Phone 368-6106
onto).
UU;‘

PRINTING

PAYROLL clerk Lor dress c__
Permanent. Phone 368-6106 (Toronto) 7

OFFSET AND LETTERPRESS

Female Help Wanted

OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS

EXPERIENCED
operators on
dresses. Blue Bird Dress Co 444
laide St. 'West. (Toronto)

A&

'Y/aMi/ia ,^n»ila/u>ni ^oen/*e matches

HARRY S. KONDO

J^UlU^trllfJl

627 BAY ST., TORONTO

Flat For Rent

Phone 36S-9768

TWO unfurnished room and kitch^T’
rent. East end. Phone 394-6286 (Toronto”

HU Diamonds
Jades

4

Wedding, Birthda
K

MANDARIN JADE

Ih

E

4

590 Yonge Street Toronto
(Near Wellesley Subway*)
Phone 924-8374

THE EGLINWOOD SHOP
Gift Suggestions:
Lacquerware — bowls, cigarette sets, trays etc.

ow, movie picture-taking is as easy as
snapshooting. No troublesome threading
of film. Simply drop the Single 8 car­
tridge film into the camera .. . . aim and
shoot. Ultra sensitive electric eye sets
the exposure automatically. Shoot a full
50 foot movie without mid-film flipover.

Bronze vases, ningyo, pictures and ornaments.
Automatic rice cooker in 3 sizes (C.S.A. approved)
Baskets, bowls, vases and a good range of flower arrangement
accessories.

Variety of patterns in open stock dishes.
Chinese dresses, housecoats, tabi, happi-coats etc.

We have many competent Japanese Issei and Nisei Sales
Representatives. They are not only camera specialists but
shopping consultants, and ready to serve you. Come in
a personal demonstration, and ask for our
Christmas prices.

Small items for teachers.

i

*

And many other merchandise of good Quality
1558 Eglinton Ave., W.
(at Oakwood)

JAPAN CAMERA CENTRE
Towne & Country Sq. 151 King St. E.
294 Yonge St.
(at Dundas) Toronto (Yonge & Steeles)
Hamilon
223-5140
362-1555

Gift ware
LACQUERWARE OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS, PORCELAIN TEA

RU. 2-7571

Open Evenings from December 7th

The
SCROLLS,

Orient
FRAMED

PICTURES

(Embroidered

or

Painted)

FOR JAPANESE

HAKATA DOLLS — FLOWER ARRANGEMENT ACCESSORIES,

CUISINE (Nihonshoku*), BAMBOO TRAYS, PLATES, BASKETS,

TABLE LAMPS OF ORIENTAL MOTIF, PANELLED SCREENS

SETS AND

DINNERWARE,

TABLEWARE

PORCELAIN VASES, -PLAQUES, -ORNAMENTS, ORIENTAL

OF SILK OF SHOJI STYLE, CAST-IRON OR BRONZE STATUET­
TES AND ORNAMENTS, KIMONOS, TABIS, PARASOLS, ETC.

JEWELLERY OF SMOKED SILVER.

JUST ARRIVED: LACQUERWARES OF LATEST DESIGNS —
JUST ARRIVED: A LARGE SHIPMENT OF DOLLS,

XMAS, NEW YEAR CARDS OF JAPANESE

DOLL CASES OF GLASS OR PLASTIC.

MOTIF.

JAPANESE DOLLS OF ALL STYLES
AND SIZES
CAR PARKING
AVAILABLE CLOSE BY

PARAMOUNT GIFT SHOP
733 DANFORTH AVE., TORONTO

Phone 463-7831

STORE OPEN
NOV. 15 to XMAS
9 A.M. to 9 P-M-