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The New Canadian — February 19, 1969

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Page 1

anese Potter With Different Length Arms Is Living Treasure

18 M

luNOMIYA. — In Tochigi-ken, * north of Tokyo,
'lives an old potter who takes pride in the fact
Is hand is two centimeters longer than his left.
Ea^ been molding clay and turning thte wheel for
than 50 years since graduating from the ceramics
? of Tokyo Technical-College in his early 20’s.
J manual labor for such a long time has made
@ht arm longer than his left, he says.
ha
^potter’s name is Shoji Hamada, an intangible
t
Eft ci Hal property of the nation and probably the greattemporary in Asia.
_
.
_
W
ives in a small town in the Kanto Plain called
ko” which has now become a synonym of the
• old artist of clay.
, m
.
mayor of Mashiko and the governor of Tochigiave* since been asking for his consent to hold
celebration program in his honor.
^^ he has been declining the offers by saying
1ST
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| “SUKIYAKI”
i Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO

that “I am just too busy to attend such celebrations.”
“Formality bores and repels me,” he says. He added
that he did' not hold a wedding ceremony for himself
and would like to do away with funeral services, if
possible.
Hamada is short and he works and meets with
people in his hardy cotton kimono and mompe (split
skirt ■.
When he receives foreign guests he speaks English
with a' British, accent, according to Midori Ogawa,
member of the Tokyo Folk Art Association (a fre­
quent visitor to Mashiko, who once accompanied Leach
to Hachijo Island to see the famed Kihachijo weave
there).
As many as 30,000 foreigners visit the town every
year just to have a chat with Hamada, smiling and
yelling ‘tea’ a dozen times a day to his wife.

Among the distinguished foreign guests was Mrs.
John D. Rockefeller III, who stayed1 overnight at the
Hamada’s.
If you visit Mashiko, expecting to see ceramics
brilliantly colored and worked to egg-shell fineness
.with aristocratic style and tastes, you will be dis­
appointed. Because Mashiko products are as unpietentious as ancient Cretan earthen ware.
_
Mashiko ware, is the commonest kind of ceramics for
daily use — the kind you will find in the kitchens
of farmers and artisans — well-thumbed and shiningthrough generation after generation of use.
They are not the products of a genius but the hands
of unsung and undentified plain people. _
,
Ego and individuality have no place in the bowls
and'dishes being turned out from Mashiko’s 73 kilns.
(Continued on Page 8)

hr Dels Canadian

STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin

ted

tot XXXIII—No. 13
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Toronto,
Ont
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY
19, 1969

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B.C.
Nisei
Elected
President
Of
Nisei In Europe
Creston Chamber Of Commerce

his week we conclude our series entitled “Nisei In Europe’
ew Canadian writer Thomas T. Mitsunaga of Lethbridge, AlISflillr on his impressions of his recent visit to Europe.

CRESTON, B.C.—Former Creston Nisei aiderman and long­
time civic worker Tak Toyota was installed recently as 1969 pres­
By THOMAS T. MITSUNAGA
sarnies
ident of the Creston Chamber of Commerce.
fully a
Mrs. Toyota, speaking to about 90 persons attending the cerewitzerland is such a tiny country; that next day we were
travelling through southern France by mid morning. The weather mony said he accepts his gavel of authority with humility “. . .
wHlso inclement that most passengers were glad to get some rest knowing the responsibility that goes with it.
ity
aris was our next stop. A girl from Ottawa organized <•
“We will put in a good year and I will do my best to carry
531-KS
sin | song but after a few rousing numbers, it seemed as if the
would rather sleep away the miles. We passed through
®n, the birthplace of Louis Pasteur and had our first French
:ylinde5
"'"at Vittaux. It was a multi course meal and the hosts did
VANCOUVER.——Japan s rapid­ have reached its first goal of
best to please us but we found the meal tasteless and the
ly increasing standard of living owning a TV, fridge and -wash­
i® not as clean as we had been used to. It was strange to see
is because of good labor-manage­ ing machine within 10 years.
again for Italy, in spite of its poverty, is devoid of flies
He said the Japanese automo­
I
ment relations and not because
it is the only European country on our tour in which the guide
bile
industry is producing more
of cheap labor, M. H. Miki, viceit was safe to drink the local waters. By mid afternoon we
president and general manager cars of better quality at less
Ltd.
reached Fontainbleu, the palace of French kings. By 6 p.m.,
of Nissan Automobile Co. (Can­ cost while paying higher wages
,ts
ad arrived in Paris. Ironically, the worst accommodations of
to its employees.
ioor
entire trip was experienced in Paris. Dinner that night at the ada) Ltd., said recently.
“This destroys the persistent
Miki told the luncheon meet­
Ht Quinquin was very ordinary and the hospitality was much
ing of the Board of Trade that myth still held by many people
Tak Toyota
ng.
.
if Japan had remained a cheap that cheap labor is the secret to
We managed .a Paris tour by night which included amongst, labor market after the Second
on the work that A. R. Speers
things, a visit to the Arc of Triumph, the Eiffel Tower and World War, the average middle­ Japan’s industrial success,” he (past president) has started,” Mr.
^^Bfamous night club, The Moulin Rouge. The Eiffel Power is class Japanese family wouldn’t said.
Toyota said.
Eliminated and its outline against the Paris skyline is bieathMr. Toyota said any citizen
’^^^igly beautiful. For 75 francs ($15.00) each, we managed to get
with problems or questions for
l^^e side seats which included a bottle of champagne at the
the chamber should contact the
permanent
secretary-manager in
Delegates
to
the
annual
con
­
(Res*) ^l^ilin Rouge. This night, the place was jammed with patron.-,
By GEORGE DOBIE
vention of the United Fishermen the chamber’s office above the
"^we heard Midwest American twang, Tokyo Japanese, German,
VANCOUVER. — British Co­
talian and accents from all over the world. The famous cancan lumbia fishermen want to be the and Allied Workers Union op­ town hall.
posed Fisheries Minister Jack
^us line with their exuberant shouts are very much the scene ones to harvest the lowly dog­ Davis’ recent suggestion that Ja­
B. Nevile-Smith was named to
[oitc
fish
off
this
coast
if
a
way
as
hey were during the days of Toulouse Lautrec.
panese fishermen be licensed to the position of secretary-manager
found to make it profitable.
take dogfish inside B.C. waters. with the disbandment of the
? Notre Dame Cathedral on the island of St. Helen was our
They passed a resolution sug­ Creston Board of Trade and
stop the next morning. This famous church boasts an unusual
gesting that when Davis visits the start of the Creston Cham­
"giocl of supporting the great weight of the ceiling by means of
Japan this spring he try to ar­ ber of Commerce in 1968.
j®g buttresses. The famous stained glass windows of Notre
range sales of prices sufficient­
Serving on Mr. Toyota’s exe­
ly high to support of dogfish
are perhaps the best remembered' items about this historic
cutive
this year are: W. H. Lloyd,
fishery by local fishermen.
cStrrch. Just across the street from it, a small shop sold water
first vice-president; Norman Pat­
STUDY SUBSIDY
Sts of scenes of Paris for next to nothing. What film footage
erson second vice-president and
i shot at the Eiffel Tower. It seems as if everyone wanted at
They suggested he should even directors Mrs. Inez Ballman,
AMAGASAKI, Japan. — Bro­
t ten shots of this most visited landmark and I cannot remem- thel operators appealed to city consider recommending a federal
ast.
George Sinclair, Al Masuch,
L-25S1
any more frenzied picture taking. There are vendors here authorities recently to help them subsidy to support it.
Homer
Eddy, Bill Piper and
ng those French post cards whose artistic value is seriously get into another line of business
The predatory dogfish have no
because of police raids.
marketable value on this conti­ Oliver Salvador.
tioned by many. A visit to Napoleon’s tomb at Hotel Des lunent
but are smoked, 'canned and
“Many of the customers were
SHes resulted in another' quarrel between . two French guides,
made
into sausage for human
•Sus time, over what seemed to be one group spending too much highly embarrassed when they consumption in other countries.
—_
one artifact. Napoleon is to France what Nelson is to were caught and never return­
The union fishermen are op­
inland, a national historic figure. Napoleon’s tomb encased in ed,” one policeman said.
posed to letting in Japanese on
In one raid last year, police grounds there is already too
marWe may be viewed from a circular gallery above. Bronze
arrested’ 280 operators, prostitut­ much foreign encroachment on
encircling the tomb describe the many battles of France s es and customers. Police estimate
V
the west coast fisheries.
^^®test soldier.
that 800 prostitutes work in ATORONTO. — Because of the
Reduction of the growing dog­
magasaki, a suburb of the in­
reduction
of mail delivery to five
That afternoon we journeyed to the Palace at Versailles, the dustrial city of Osaka.
fish population could help re­
days
effective
this week, The
^tifmous court of Louis XIV. The palace is about an hour’s drive
The brothel operators said habilitate B.C.’s herring and New Canadian is forced to change
^^S1 T^ris. The buildings and grounds are most regal but by this (hey would like to conceit then salmon stocks, the UFAWU con- its publishing dates beginning
' 0Ur5 Umly at least was getting a little too much of palaces establishments into lestaurants vention saidMarch, 1969. The N.C. will be
courL^. The world famous Hall of Mirrors was different from and apartment houses. But they
Delegates unanimously reelect­ published every Tuesday and
thing we had seen so far. There must have been many balls said they had trouble obtaining ed their three top, 8155-a-week Friday instead of the regular
Wednesday and Saturday.
'n ^’s sa^on with noble gentry from all of Europe. The out- loans from banks.
officers: President H. Steve StaPlease send in all news items,
gardens at Versailles are worth the trip there. They are the
venes,
secretary
Homer
Stevens,
ads,
etc. to correspond with this
Municipal authorities said they
earlier
date.
and
business
agent
Jack
Nichol.
would study the request.
(Cont. on Page 8)
ed

Buses

Japanese Cheap Labor Hit By Speaker

B.C. Fishermen Fear Japanese Inroads

Other Positions
Wanted By Japan
Brothel Owners

N.C. Changes
Publishing Dates Due Mail Change-

Page 2

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INSTANT COOKING BASE
'Sunt COOKING 8**

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^wr.65GM.(2V*

5(7) ftl4nnK

j«SOMOTO CO-<NC-

BAMBOO GROVE
692 No. 3 Road,
Richmond, B. C.
Phone CR. 8-9585
GR. 8-9588

Page 4

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60 Tn»S4S STREET WEST,
^TORONTO 2-B
TELEPHONE EM. 6.2164

Page 5

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Page 7

119. it
PAGE 7
II b a good policy to
bar* th# RIGHT POLICY
Coxxrult

Seiji Ozawa & Wife Shine In San Francisco |
^A^ FRANCISCO. — Newlyweds Seiji and Vera Ozawa could
t Bazaar Meet Of All JC Groups Feb. 24 turn heads on any street but when they stroll down Powell here
v
s
A preparatory meeting of representatives from in their matching white Mongolian lamb fur coats with a Russian
Japanese Canadian organizations will be held on Mon- grandmother between them, tourists turn their cameras away from
the cable cars.
24, in the Banquet Room of the Nikko Garden at
J he delightful conductor-elect of the San Francisco Symphony
^^®>’m‘ Tlxis big annual event is being held as a cooperative
had
a crowded schedule during his recent weeks of concerts here,
Japanese
Ot all
3
JaPaiiese Canadian
Ganadian organizations.
organizations, individuals, and
If OfcBra of
of the Centre- we need more gifts and donations, home- he protested, “We haven’t had much time to look around our future
^Salnng, knitted goods, ‘-‘white elephants”, etc. to make this a home.”
One time-saver is his portable electric rice-cooker which goes
g£e$tf success. Last year’s net was $6,700 and the year before $5,with
him around the world. “Vera does the cooking. She’s a great
3^^3Ve’re definitely improving. Let’s shoot for another extra
cook,

he beamed at the darkhaired beauty beside him.
®^-in 1969! We’ll be counting on you. —Bazaar Committee
“This is Vera Ilyin, my wife, and this is Vera Ilyin, her grand­
*
*
mother,’- he made the introductions, then teased, “but I’m married
^" Authority Alan Watts To Speak In Van, B.C, to only one of them. Only one wife is permitted in Japan.”
' H E
The wedding took’ place there in September. “Quietly with
VANCOUVER.—Philosopher Alan Watts “Talks about Japan”
CANADA
just
our families,” said the bride, who displayed the pearl and
iday, March i, 1969, 12.15 — 1.45 p.m., Queen Elizabeth
sen St. I
diamond
rings worn on her right hand. “That’s Greek style. My.
playhouse, 650 Cambie. Fee $2.00
1 2-B', fa
EM
S___. 'e-registration is advised. For tickets contact daytime pro- parents are Greek Orthodox and the wedding was in that church.” '
228-2181.

Mrs. Ozawa, a former top Japanese fashion model who has
A^u Watts is known in North America and abroad as given up her career to stay close to her international concert­
aS;^0®^ the most stimulating and' unconvential philosophers of our hopping husband, explained that her mother is Japanese and her
®
special interest is Zen-Buddhism, but his hooks and father Russian. “The Russian branch of the family left Russia for
-^^^®eS cover a freewheeling range from “'Nature, Man and Japan but Grandmother came on here 18 vears ago My uncle
who came with her, lives in Palo Alto so I’m very fortunate in
to “Beyond Theology”. — KJ.
having family here in our future home.”
The 33-year-old globally acclaimed conductor will succeed re­
^»®tHeart Fund Needs Aid Of All J.C. Canadians tiring Maestro Josef Krips here in the fall of 1970. Ozawa will ap­
z i-iMgjpfiBlI^O^
When a Heart Fund Volunteer calls at your home peal again as a guest conductor for six weeks.
°f Heart month (whieh started Feb. 1st” and conUntil then the couple has a heavy travel schedule with his
commitments
with the Japan Philharmonic, the New York Phil­
Ulltil the 28th’ at is our hope that the thought running through
harmonic. the Toronto Symphony.
iX#P^mind win be somewhat as follows:
S -^^^The dolLarS 1 have contributed to earlier Heart Fund drives
“Here we have been trying to squeeze in time to look for a
fl^^^B'been used wisely and effectively. They have now begun to house and see- family and1 friends. We did get in some weeken
4mporbanb dividends. Achievement to date show why it is skiing said the conductor. With a mop of long, thick black hair
for me to continue to support the Heart Fund.” (i framing his merry face and a pale blue turtleneck sweater show#^® require a great deal of space to list all the achievements ing under his fur coat, he was the perfect representative of the
Heart Fund dollars have helped to develop since the first Now generation.
A suggestion they drop in on a rock party caused his bride
Bund campaign. Here are just a few of the highlights:
to
widen
her big brown eyes with interest and it was
■/^liSJif?- Thanks to significant advances in diagnosis and treatment,
easy to
picture
the
pair
equally
at
home
with
Beethoven
or
folk
percentage of heart attack victims are recovering from
music.
Mis. Ozawa has been the most interested listener at both
and returning to their jobs.
v-ij^b*^^’ Medical science has learned how to prevent most initial Opera House performances and rehearsals recently, Con ceil
attack of rheumatic fever, frequent forerunner of evenings usually finds her adorning Box A in one of the chic
di esses from her international wardrobe.
KPfeiiratic heart disease.
“S6^ designed 0Ur coats- They were perfect in Toronto, maybe
^’ ^ew ways ^° control high blood pressure have been den^^^e(^’ reducing damage to heart, brain and kidneys.
a little warm for San Francisco most days,” she took off the
4. New surgical procedures, can now correct most congenital coat and did a model’s turn.
,
“This is from mother’s new boutique, Verachika. It just opened
defects affecting thousands of babies born each year.
5- Heart transplants can now be considered because of Heart in Rapongi district in Tokyo,” she displayed a slim tunic of la­
lin'd dollars.
vender wool with pink inset bands, tied with a gold cord and
he outlook for more conquests is .bright. But we cannot over- worn over faintly flared pants of oyster white and blunt toed
_
^e fact that the heart and blood vessel diseases still con- black patent pumps.
t^te our foremost health problem. They are responsible for over
at home in English, Russian and Ja­
panese. The willowy bride has been busily packing and unpacking
ercent of all deaths in Canada.
ft
w
?°> put out the welcome mat for your Heart Sunday visitor, that size 6 wardrobe.
“We were hi Japan, then Toronto and now we’re going to
t by the heart-guarding literature she will leave at your
E
Make your contribution a generous one. And remember: nwh
gl’eat t0 be bere’” and she hugged her grandmorner. —b.r . Examiner
oxe will live —-the More You Give! — CHF

William Wales Ltd
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-468.1

Residential Painting
And Decorating
By

KAZ KATO
Call 221-7841
AUTO



FIRE

LIFE



ALL FORMS
OF

INSURANCE
CODMllt

KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO

Bu«. 366-5812

Busi

Res. PI. 9-8317

824-8153

R»»i

922-1353

ERNEST JOMORI
i

Chartered
Suit.

Accountant
403

j 130 BLOOB ST. W.

TORONTO |

Custom Pictzire
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWIi
^okio Ni&hhnufQ
923-6877

KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan

Phone 355-2211
For Ice Fishing Fun

TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH

ARTS FISH HUTS

Nisei Service and Church School — Sun.

Highway 48
At Port Bolster
lopane Heated and Righted Huts To Accommodate 2-4-6

English — Rev. G. S. Imai, 444-5159
701 Dovercourt L°panese ~ ^ev. Y. C. Horikoshi, 766-5632
vercourt Rd.
A warm welcome to all.

Phone Pefferlaw 189

DANFORTH
S. of Bloor

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH

SPRING TOUR TO JAPAN, 1969
*
*

11:30 A.M.

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1969
10:30 A.M. Religious School — Rev. Fumimaro
Watanabe
11:00 A.M. Morning Service — Rev. Fumimaro
Watanabe
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service — Rev. Fumimaro
Watanabe
918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302

FEBRUARY 23rd, (Sunday)
MARCH 30th, (Sunday)
MAY 11th, (Sunday)

For detailed information contact
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School 2:00 P.M. Worship Service 3:00 P.M.,Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.

Sales - Service

When Buying Or Selling A Home

Franchised Dealer For
RCA. Victor — Color & B.W.

Call: KEN HORI

K. HORI
REAL ESTATE

Television — Stereo — Etc.

2893 Lawrence Ave. East At
Scarborough

551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka

Phone: HO. 3-7400

TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH

Phone 682-2241

TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO

Brimley Rd.
Iwamoto

SKATES
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening

OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.

Compass Travel Service Ltd.,
P Alain. Street, Vancouver

SPORTING GOODS

Phone 759-1583
Tosh Muraki
4

MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough

Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddinge
Dances Etc.

ALNA
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT

Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 463-8104

Page 8

a
'ii

PAGE 8

Cont. from Page One

The New CanaJ

most elaborate and well cared for that I seen on the entire trip. | In the course of selecting our menu, we asked the waiter what the
Authorized m second
d
They surpass the gardens at Hampton Court in England and the different items meant and while we were debating what we would
Post
Office
Departmental!
gardens at the Ludwigsburg Palace in Germany, both in size and have, he lost patience with us, slammed his menu down, summoned
and for payment of Mage^«
beauty.
the head waiter and refused to serve us. The head waiter took
®
It rained in Paris that evening, For most passengers on the care of our needs but this incident brought to head the indifferent
tour, this was their last night in Pari s and they did the town but attitude of French service personnel. Hotel clerks, taxi driver:
Fred and I decided to stay another three days here so our time I bus drivers, waiters ticket sellers, ate. seem to operate on the
was not so precious. A family from Nova Scotia also left the tour principle which our ruide had explained to us prior to our arhere for they were leaving- for Amsterdam in the morning, The rival in Paris. This is the “Je m’en fou” saying or I don’t give a
Ottawa miss who organized the sing song on the autoroute into damn philosophy. This would certainly seem to be the case. What
?UBHLMnHE? °N EVERY
Paris also left the tour here.
a difference from the treatment one receives in Germany. With
and FRIDAY BEGINNING '^
, the troupe I feelings
t was hard to say. goodbye
march, 1969
_
- the next morning
------ c to
° somewhat dampened then, we bought tickets on the
who left for Belgium and England. As the bus pulled away from French railway for Calais. Again at the ticket wicket we were
T. UMEZUKI Public J
the hotel, the Paris sun was shining, and it was sad to see the given
indifferent treatment, this time false information about KEI TSUMURA E»g|ish ^
others leave for everyone knew each other by this time and1 we trains.
KEN MORI Japanese ft^
feL a kinship to the people with whom we had shared common
We managed1 to board the 8:09 the following morning for
experiences.
Calais from La Gare du Nord. This train was very crowded and
And Advertising. ®
six
of
us
shared
a
compartment.
But
the
electric
train
was
very
, The Seven of us who remained in Paris felt quite lonely and
SUBSCRIPTION
f:7
within three hours only Fred and X remained of the original fifty fast and by 11:30 we were in the French port city of Calais.
$4.00 per 6 months
S
Soon afterwards we transited by bus to the Louvres to see this
The French steamer in which we crossed the Channel was
$7.00 per year
~
renowned museum. By this time we had learned a fundamental very crowded and we had to stand all the way over. We went through
479 QUEEN ST. WEST B
principle of touring. If you visit a gallery or museum which -houses Fiench customs on the boat and in one and three fourths hour we
Toronto 2-B, Ont. ^
J ^eat J^’01^ of art> don't bother buying a guide book or maps but were on English soil at Folkestone. By 3:45 that afternoon, we
EMpire 6-5005 r?1
follow the crowds. Sure enough this principle worked again f
had arrived at Victoria Station in London. We checked in at the
this is how Aye found the Mona Lisa. In all the many galleries 'Gib&venor Hotel right at the station and unwound after our some­
we visited, this was the only one where any painting was guarded what untoward1 experience with Gallic temperament.
by a closed circuit TV camera. There I was gating uD into the
The following morning was actually sunnv in London town
most famous smile in history. Is her smile a smile to tempt a lover As if to assuage our feelings after Paris, the sun came out in full
or is it to hide a oroken heart, as thelyrics of one sono- o-0 ? Per lorce and the only photos of London we were able to take in
Z^!L!!!!p^i£|i
haps we will never know but from the throngs gathered around sunshine were taken then. We shopped for Last minute souvenirs
DENTAL receptionist wanted fcOS
Her, many people must wonder. We .also found Venus de Mdo ir and
,
“in* the afternoon we rendezvoused with a retired school Clair and Russell Hill district
the Louvres. The Louvres- is so huge it would
W
take a week just eacher whom Fred and I both knew. That evening the three of us RU. 2-8904 (Toronto).
to tour its many departments.
J6?1.
house in Soho and later to a club in the theatre SEWING machine ooerators
experienced for better dresses l^feo
From the Louvres we walked along the Rue de Rivoli to Place
emerged it was raining once again and it was Miss Sun Valley, 96 Spadina
ont°lde Vendome and the Place de la Concorde We
bach to X ictona Station by taxi where our friend departed.
found a most de^feteria here and had a Ve1^ ldsure,y ^ch. Then w~
Heathrow airport was crowded as usual and planes from
Male Help Wanted fW
valked the magnificent thoroughfare called the Champs des Elv- ZJ'^re m A e WOrld C0UId be seen- ^ India’ Alitalia, Pan
TELEVISION
and apoliance asg-fea
sees al the way to the Arc de Triomphe which is the focal point t/X
technician wanted. Must be fegO
* 31 Canada, Lufthansa, Air Lingus, Air* France perienced. Phone 259-3102, Mr.
of twelve busy streets whose traffic swirls around the Arch
of
St°°d °n the promenade deck and took movies (Toronto).
a counterclockwise direction. To reach the Arch is a sport in itself > X bV
?V
back t0 thiS Very sPQt "’here but three
Business Opportunity ^?®
1 ou make a dash into the traffic stream and pause for the cars a tte ef0™’?disembarked, and now a little wiser, I felt Potable
West End Gardening Bu&SlO
kreh T\When MOther °Pening; shows and fiM11^ ^ach the
°e of nostalgia lor our adventure was nearing an end.
For
Phone 536-8345, or
Aich This huge memorial was erected in memorv of all the con­
n ^YL
three quarter llours after take off, we landed
quests of Napoleon and more than any other single item is pointe-1
flight tX™?1 ?V ^ t0 be bOme in Canada ^
out with pride by Parisians. There is an elevator within the Arch
is a
? & Sary was sn'“th “d uneventful. Canada
and one may go to the top of it for a view of Paris.
Use New Canadian Ak^
fo m w X™’
,? the countries "’e had seen and after seeing
t
drivers> we fount? out, are not too eager to hoh it was a
7
7 and h™nE so many different tongues"
L^gT 1 V'a "’^ F°r eXample ^en We asked for routes “to at was a wonderment that this wide expanse ol land was mXFor Best Results
La Gaie du Nord, we were told to see the map. That evening in
got eminent sharing a common destiny.
s^sssssssss®
a restaurant near our hotel, we experienced an incident which
prompted us to cancel our stay in Paris and head back for London.

classified!

(Cont. From Page 1)
land.
Buy and Sell
. His pottery making at the Cor­
Your Homs f
nish
kiln opened his eyes to the
Through
artistic rebustness of English
pottery.
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
H spite of the great popular­
ity he enjoys abroad, Hamada
natix-e son of Kawa. had been relatively little known
S kl
-I7’ k^gawa-ken, took among people here except in folk
^ ^.iclency in Mashiko soon ^ ™cks until he was decorated
after his return in 1924 from his with the cultural medal in an
Tosh Iwai
year’s study in Britain.
imperial ceremony last month.
1527 O'Conner Dr.
i

\
ai
l
d
Be
niard
Leach
of
Bri
­
Toronto 16 I tain had worked at a kiln at St. ^A1^os^ overnight the event put
1S s.^10’P°ttei' and the town of
757-5184
nes, a small Cornish village in' ^
Mashiko and .Mashiko ware into
the southwestern part of Engtne national limelight.

Hamada has six children, four
male. His eldest son is a repor­
ter for a leading national daily
in Japan.
y
His most probable successor is
&tsUZO Smmaoka, who operates
studio0'™ kl nS near Hamada’s

GIVE

R
ferns

so more will lively


MAS. (Ron) MENDE

Private/ No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding

reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking!

CHINA
925 Eglinton W. Toronto

HOUSE


GENERAL INSURANCE
Phone 964-9000 William R. Bell

Special Discounts on Store and Business
Package Policies

Eve. By Appointment
' Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

SHIPPING

en

to Japan & all Ports

By Air, Rail,
Land & Sea

Overseas

Packing Cratin^g

Lichee Garden
J 3Icn,r Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1,
21 Dundas Sa. Toronto. Suite 1402. Phone 363-095“*

CANADIAN a
HEART RM|

Fire - Burglary _ Bonds - Automobile
Liability — Glass

RU. 1-9123

EAR PIERCING
By Appointment

bestir
fthrei

118 Elizabeth St.

r
Toronto, Canada

All Custom Papers
Arranged
Fully Insured

Call

Phone 364-3481
CATFO^ (4 1,11165 To S”« You)
CATERS SERVICE _ “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

Banquet Facilities
for Business Or Private
ADDING RECEPTIONS ?) p
dinner
<Lar^e or SmaU)
______MUSIC NIGHTLY

889-6269
- Metro Toronto