Page 1
ihot Agriculture: Fully Automated Vegetable Farms Slated In Japan
Q
s
market!
of vegetables*
k VO - In order to com,t- | Forestry Ministry, will be built | products.
•, ol seeing.
■ , ,n I nnd stop sptrultac pne® that
Ministry offi
said Lie { Ministry
otiicmb >aid the
^tribiited to a continuous
declining number of near large consumer cities dur- | Ministry officials
automatic factory would ensure j for automated
anan. a fully automatic ing the next two years.
a part of wide- rise, in the cost of living.
The
pilot
project
involves
13
a stable flow of egetables to i decided on
project where crops
Attempting to stablize prices,
without human labor air-conditioned cultivation houses the cities, cost les in labor and i ranging agricultural reforms.
vegetables,
37,918-square-yeard
over
ensure stabilized prices through-j Japau was once a predomin- Japan imports many
Taiwan
out the vear.
iantly farming country, but the including onions from
first automated vegetable about eight acres — site.
and greens from China.
Basically, it is the old-fashion
will begin production in
Tomatoes and cucumbers will ’ agricultural population is rapided greenhouse on a large scale.
.Last year, farmers near Tokyo
■h near Kobe in western But automatic machinery' will be the mainstavs of the first ! ly declining’ and now represent
of
the
labor
only 15 per cent
The only human operadestroyed hundreds of tons of
factory, which will produce
take over from humans in fumi
the
decision
on
which
forcevegetables as a bumper crop
tons of vegetables annually.
Swill be
gating
the
soil,
spraying
water
^tables to grow.
Officials said they believed made transi
In the complex will be a separand
insecticides,
fertilizing,
harsupfactories,
imilar
help maintain titan prices.
of the ate building for the production Hie project would
and packagi
riculture
and
tee. d ; the
. ............................................ iiiiiiiiihhiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihii li!iiiiiiiiitiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii!iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHH»H«»»»,l,,’’,,,lHl,,,,l,,,,,mM^
iiiini
I
“A CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 ‘WITH POSTAGE
-SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65
WITH POSTAGE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Toronto. Ont.
Kiiiiiiimiiiininiiiiiiiiiiiiiinm
iimuniiu.nuHnniiuumnnVinnn.iUi.n.i^..................... """""""""..........
..
Let’s Be Quiet No
Longer Says U.S. Nisei
'"""■"'...... •'"'"
J.C. Cultural Centre’s 8th Annual
Spring Festival Slated Mar. 4&5
TORONTO — The Japanese Canadian Cul-Jng). Shodo (calligraphy), Oiigami (papej fold
torsi
Centre’s 8th Annual Spring Festival wi.l be HnS), the Martial Arts of Aikido, Judo,. Karate,
By MO MARUMOTO
program of music and dances.
held on Saturday and Sunday, March 4th and Kendo, and also a
Sukiyaki, tempura, teriyaki dishes will be served
5th from 1 to G/p.m.
lie New York Times recently7 reported on a development
The Honourable John Yaremko, Q.C., Ll.D., throughout the day.
hould make all of us most joyful. The article discussed, and Provincial Secretary and Minister of Citizenship,
Admission: Adults $1.00 Children 50 cents
soon to be named Solicitor General for Ontario, (Members Admitted Free on Saturday7 only)
-A quiet, little noted American success story — the almost will officially open the Sth Annual Spring Festival.
Theme of this year’s Spring Festival will be
filial disappearance of discrimination against the. 400,000 Chinese
There will be a display7 of festival dolls and
W 500.000 Japanese Americans since the end1 of World War II demonstrations of Chanoyu (tea ceremony), Ike “Heritage Ontario.”
In replying to the Japanese Canadian Cultural
their assimilation into the mainstream of American life.”
bana (flower arrangement), Sumie (brush paintCentre, The Honourable John
Our situation is better, no doubt about it, and that surely is
Yaremko. Provincial Secretary
®od
Citizenship
and
Minister
of
in 1910,' that the Sacramento Bee edinot so longwrote:
®alized.
. . ., ,
“It gives me great pleasure to
“Now the Jap is a wily and crafty individual, more so than
your
acknowledge and a>
He Chink. They’ try7 to buy in the neighborhoods where there are SAN FRANCISCO. — Dr. S.I. rebuilt the place — at Hue
fething but white folks. The Jap will always be undesirable. They
terrible. massacres kind invitation to have Mrs.
Hayakawa, president of the San after the
^e lower in the scale of civilization than the whites and will never
the Yaremko and me open Hie An
Francisco State College, still there. in which many' of
he nual Spring Festival, to be held
murdered,”
|mkome our equals ...”
were
trying to adjust from the time faculty7
Saturday7 March 4, 1:30 p.m. at
In that same year, tire San Francisco Chronicle, with be ter
■
" ‘'” i tra- said. “They’ve built chemistry
dislocation of- trans-Pacific
the
Japanese Canadian Cultural
dammar but. the same spirit, complained,
vel, described his overall reaction Labs, all kinds of needed things, Centre. This annual occasion is
“Japanese ambition is to progress beyond mere seivility to after a 12-day tour of South But mostly it’s been courage and
certainly7 one that is unsurpassed
determination.”
Ke plane of the better class American workman and to own a Vietnam.
in Ontario and I very much look
Sine with him. The. moment that this position is exercised, the
The leadership center, he re forward to being a participant.
“The Vietnamese are a cou^panese ceases to be an ideal laborer.”
i rageous people and they’ve been lated, “is one of the most imI am very7 pleased to learn that
g Well. “Once a Jap, always. a Jap,” as U.S. Army7 General John through ,an
•an awful lot, and they7 pressive educational institutions
he I’ve ever visited in my whole the Festival organizers have
DeWitt said as he sent us into the wilderness in 1942.
our admiration,
deserve
chosen to use “HERITAGE ON
life.”
said.
------------------------------ ------- Improvements
TARIO” as their theme for this
“I now understand a lot more
at the center are year’s events. As well as indicat
Students
B But the times have changed for us, and in my own lifetime,
about the needs of a country elected by their villages, and ing that the Japanese community
^hite acceptance of yellow skin has improved immeasurably. In , _ ^ej rafner
7
into the seek to learn the practical asis involved with our Congress,
1942 I was S years old, American bom, an. American.citizen. An
of seif_gOvernmcnt and of
pects of upgrading the communi this symbol might serve to better
' needs of s
Bike some 110,000 others of my7 race, who were considered fit
the 20th Century, after thou ty physically and economically, inform all Ontarians of Hie rich
little more than gardeners and truck farmer’s, I was a piisonei sands of years of Chinese rule,
and defending it.
tradition which the Japaneseal an American concentration camp.
then hundreds of years
of
The training includes sanita Canadian community7 brings for
I
Now I count myself fortunate to be working for the President French, and for a time, Japa
the enjoyment and appreciation
tion and public health as well.
®f the United States, and many of the friends and relatives who nese rule.”
Igraduated from the camps with me in 1945 are now doctors, law“They are trying to provide of all.”
Dr. Havakawa’s visit was made
|ers, architects and engineers, esteemed and accepted in their pio- through the courtesy of the new leadership for the villages,” What Is “HERITAGE
Hayakawa said, “because the ONTARIO”..
^essions, in the neighborhoods where they7 chose to live, in the South Vietnam government.
strength of the country exists
Associations they7 care to make.
In the 1971 Speech from the
‘While the government treat- in the leadership of the hamlet
ed me very7 nicely7 as a guest, and the village. And they’ve de- Throne, the Government of On
I was left free to do as I want cided that in order to beat the tario declared its intention to
ed, go where I wanted, see what Communists, they have to be hold a multi-cultural congress
Shikatagani
than the now scheduled for June 1972 to
can claim a United States Senator and i I wanted. I felt no effort- to see more revolutionary
NOW, IN 1971
av
with a parti Communist.”
be called “HERITAGE ONTA
two members of Congress (which
(_____ prompts the New York Times that I came aw
RIO.” This Congress will focus
to say that we may7 well be the most over-represented minority). cular point of view.”
of South Vietnam’s attention on the rich diversity of
Because
The Canadian-born semantiOur parents did a remarkable job of repairing the fabric of
desperate need for agricultural our cultural traditions and enheir lives, so rudely7 torn by7 prejudice. Shikataganai, they said. It cist, who was responsible ior expertise and the attempts
to i courage all gi’oups in the Pro.
isn’t be helped. That’s life. They7 endured relocation with patience. halting student militants three diversify the agricultural
Pro* vince
explore avenues of futur. they worked hard and caused trouble to no man ' years ago at the college, declined duct, the Ministry of Education^ socjal and cultural developj to discuss military or political
forgave and seemingly forgot a crude injustice.
to develop practical
t
any7 other way. Indeed,' aspects of the Vietnam situation,
Perhaps they could not have acted in
programs set up on lines similar ।
areas are closer to the
antil then all their techniques for survival in the United States . because educators should stick to the American junior college
to education.”
• heart of this Government than
>vere based on accommodation.
system.
He was particularly impressed
its concern for the full cultural
One
of
the
leaders
in
this
mo
I
Un-American Trait
with the university .at Hue, and
development of all its peoples,”
vement in the Ministry, when the Minister wrote last Septem
with
the
national
training
center
i
ihikataganai. How easy it is to say. How easy. But it is an
FWvude no longer suited to our times, our needs, our conditions- for leadership cadres at Vung they’ were introduced, he recalled, ber when announcing the Conproudly flashed his membership
is hoped that “HERI(k is a relic. It is wrong. It is. if you will, un-American. And I Tau.
! gress.
card
in
the
San
Francisco
the
“I was impressed with
[believe far too many of us continue to adhere to it.
(Cont. on Page 8)
sheer courage with which they Alumni Association.
I
(Continued on Page 8)
S. I. Hayakawa Expresses Admiration
Of Vietnamese People After Visit
*
*
*
Q
s
market!
of vegetables*
k VO - In order to com,t- | Forestry Ministry, will be built | products.
•, ol seeing.
■ , ,n I nnd stop sptrultac pne® that
Ministry offi
said Lie { Ministry
otiicmb >aid the
^tribiited to a continuous
declining number of near large consumer cities dur- | Ministry officials
automatic factory would ensure j for automated
anan. a fully automatic ing the next two years.
a part of wide- rise, in the cost of living.
The
pilot
project
involves
13
a stable flow of egetables to i decided on
project where crops
Attempting to stablize prices,
without human labor air-conditioned cultivation houses the cities, cost les in labor and i ranging agricultural reforms.
vegetables,
37,918-square-yeard
over
ensure stabilized prices through-j Japau was once a predomin- Japan imports many
Taiwan
out the vear.
iantly farming country, but the including onions from
first automated vegetable about eight acres — site.
and greens from China.
Basically, it is the old-fashion
will begin production in
Tomatoes and cucumbers will ’ agricultural population is rapided greenhouse on a large scale.
.Last year, farmers near Tokyo
■h near Kobe in western But automatic machinery' will be the mainstavs of the first ! ly declining’ and now represent
of
the
labor
only 15 per cent
The only human operadestroyed hundreds of tons of
factory, which will produce
take over from humans in fumi
the
decision
on
which
forcevegetables as a bumper crop
tons of vegetables annually.
Swill be
gating
the
soil,
spraying
water
^tables to grow.
Officials said they believed made transi
In the complex will be a separand
insecticides,
fertilizing,
harsupfactories,
imilar
help maintain titan prices.
of the ate building for the production Hie project would
and packagi
riculture
and
tee. d ; the
. ............................................ iiiiiiiiihhiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihii li!iiiiiiiiitiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii!iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHH»H«»»»,l,,’’,,,lHl,,,,l,,,,,mM^
iiiini
I
“A CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 ‘WITH POSTAGE
-SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65
WITH POSTAGE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Toronto. Ont.
Kiiiiiiimiiiininiiiiiiiiiiiiiinm
iimuniiu.nuHnniiuumnnVinnn.iUi.n.i^..................... """""""""..........
..
Let’s Be Quiet No
Longer Says U.S. Nisei
'"""■"'...... •'"'"
J.C. Cultural Centre’s 8th Annual
Spring Festival Slated Mar. 4&5
TORONTO — The Japanese Canadian Cul-Jng). Shodo (calligraphy), Oiigami (papej fold
torsi
Centre’s 8th Annual Spring Festival wi.l be HnS), the Martial Arts of Aikido, Judo,. Karate,
By MO MARUMOTO
program of music and dances.
held on Saturday and Sunday, March 4th and Kendo, and also a
Sukiyaki, tempura, teriyaki dishes will be served
5th from 1 to G/p.m.
lie New York Times recently7 reported on a development
The Honourable John Yaremko, Q.C., Ll.D., throughout the day.
hould make all of us most joyful. The article discussed, and Provincial Secretary and Minister of Citizenship,
Admission: Adults $1.00 Children 50 cents
soon to be named Solicitor General for Ontario, (Members Admitted Free on Saturday7 only)
-A quiet, little noted American success story — the almost will officially open the Sth Annual Spring Festival.
Theme of this year’s Spring Festival will be
filial disappearance of discrimination against the. 400,000 Chinese
There will be a display7 of festival dolls and
W 500.000 Japanese Americans since the end1 of World War II demonstrations of Chanoyu (tea ceremony), Ike “Heritage Ontario.”
In replying to the Japanese Canadian Cultural
their assimilation into the mainstream of American life.”
bana (flower arrangement), Sumie (brush paintCentre, The Honourable John
Our situation is better, no doubt about it, and that surely is
Yaremko. Provincial Secretary
®od
Citizenship
and
Minister
of
in 1910,' that the Sacramento Bee edinot so longwrote:
®alized.
. . ., ,
“It gives me great pleasure to
“Now the Jap is a wily and crafty individual, more so than
your
acknowledge and a>
He Chink. They’ try7 to buy in the neighborhoods where there are SAN FRANCISCO. — Dr. S.I. rebuilt the place — at Hue
fething but white folks. The Jap will always be undesirable. They
terrible. massacres kind invitation to have Mrs.
Hayakawa, president of the San after the
^e lower in the scale of civilization than the whites and will never
the Yaremko and me open Hie An
Francisco State College, still there. in which many' of
he nual Spring Festival, to be held
murdered,”
|mkome our equals ...”
were
trying to adjust from the time faculty7
Saturday7 March 4, 1:30 p.m. at
In that same year, tire San Francisco Chronicle, with be ter
■
" ‘'” i tra- said. “They’ve built chemistry
dislocation of- trans-Pacific
the
Japanese Canadian Cultural
dammar but. the same spirit, complained,
vel, described his overall reaction Labs, all kinds of needed things, Centre. This annual occasion is
“Japanese ambition is to progress beyond mere seivility to after a 12-day tour of South But mostly it’s been courage and
certainly7 one that is unsurpassed
determination.”
Ke plane of the better class American workman and to own a Vietnam.
in Ontario and I very much look
Sine with him. The. moment that this position is exercised, the
The leadership center, he re forward to being a participant.
“The Vietnamese are a cou^panese ceases to be an ideal laborer.”
i rageous people and they’ve been lated, “is one of the most imI am very7 pleased to learn that
g Well. “Once a Jap, always. a Jap,” as U.S. Army7 General John through ,an
•an awful lot, and they7 pressive educational institutions
he I’ve ever visited in my whole the Festival organizers have
DeWitt said as he sent us into the wilderness in 1942.
our admiration,
deserve
chosen to use “HERITAGE ON
life.”
said.
------------------------------ ------- Improvements
TARIO” as their theme for this
“I now understand a lot more
at the center are year’s events. As well as indicat
Students
B But the times have changed for us, and in my own lifetime,
about the needs of a country elected by their villages, and ing that the Japanese community
^hite acceptance of yellow skin has improved immeasurably. In , _ ^ej rafner
7
into the seek to learn the practical asis involved with our Congress,
1942 I was S years old, American bom, an. American.citizen. An
of seif_gOvernmcnt and of
pects of upgrading the communi this symbol might serve to better
' needs of s
Bike some 110,000 others of my7 race, who were considered fit
the 20th Century, after thou ty physically and economically, inform all Ontarians of Hie rich
little more than gardeners and truck farmer’s, I was a piisonei sands of years of Chinese rule,
and defending it.
tradition which the Japaneseal an American concentration camp.
then hundreds of years
of
The training includes sanita Canadian community7 brings for
I
Now I count myself fortunate to be working for the President French, and for a time, Japa
the enjoyment and appreciation
tion and public health as well.
®f the United States, and many of the friends and relatives who nese rule.”
Igraduated from the camps with me in 1945 are now doctors, law“They are trying to provide of all.”
Dr. Havakawa’s visit was made
|ers, architects and engineers, esteemed and accepted in their pio- through the courtesy of the new leadership for the villages,” What Is “HERITAGE
Hayakawa said, “because the ONTARIO”..
^essions, in the neighborhoods where they7 chose to live, in the South Vietnam government.
strength of the country exists
Associations they7 care to make.
In the 1971 Speech from the
‘While the government treat- in the leadership of the hamlet
ed me very7 nicely7 as a guest, and the village. And they’ve de- Throne, the Government of On
I was left free to do as I want cided that in order to beat the tario declared its intention to
ed, go where I wanted, see what Communists, they have to be hold a multi-cultural congress
Shikatagani
than the now scheduled for June 1972 to
can claim a United States Senator and i I wanted. I felt no effort- to see more revolutionary
NOW, IN 1971
av
with a parti Communist.”
be called “HERITAGE ONTA
two members of Congress (which
(_____ prompts the New York Times that I came aw
RIO.” This Congress will focus
to say that we may7 well be the most over-represented minority). cular point of view.”
of South Vietnam’s attention on the rich diversity of
Because
The Canadian-born semantiOur parents did a remarkable job of repairing the fabric of
desperate need for agricultural our cultural traditions and enheir lives, so rudely7 torn by7 prejudice. Shikataganai, they said. It cist, who was responsible ior expertise and the attempts
to i courage all gi’oups in the Pro.
isn’t be helped. That’s life. They7 endured relocation with patience. halting student militants three diversify the agricultural
Pro* vince
explore avenues of futur. they worked hard and caused trouble to no man ' years ago at the college, declined duct, the Ministry of Education^ socjal and cultural developj to discuss military or political
forgave and seemingly forgot a crude injustice.
to develop practical
t
any7 other way. Indeed,' aspects of the Vietnam situation,
Perhaps they could not have acted in
programs set up on lines similar ।
areas are closer to the
antil then all their techniques for survival in the United States . because educators should stick to the American junior college
to education.”
• heart of this Government than
>vere based on accommodation.
system.
He was particularly impressed
its concern for the full cultural
One
of
the
leaders
in
this
mo
I
Un-American Trait
with the university .at Hue, and
development of all its peoples,”
vement in the Ministry, when the Minister wrote last Septem
with
the
national
training
center
i
ihikataganai. How easy it is to say. How easy. But it is an
FWvude no longer suited to our times, our needs, our conditions- for leadership cadres at Vung they’ were introduced, he recalled, ber when announcing the Conproudly flashed his membership
is hoped that “HERI(k is a relic. It is wrong. It is. if you will, un-American. And I Tau.
! gress.
card
in
the
San
Francisco
the
“I was impressed with
[believe far too many of us continue to adhere to it.
(Cont. on Page 8)
sheer courage with which they Alumni Association.
I
(Continued on Page 8)
S. I. Hayakawa Expresses Admiration
Of Vietnamese People After Visit
*
*
*
Page 2
Tuesday, February 9.9 ^
PAGE 2
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IX 6
Page 7
February 29. 19/2
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
st
John's
Presbyterian,
at
Broadview
Simpson
The Song Was A Lullaby
Ave.
Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
jcy. prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
□ ay: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128. Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
,• JOHN AND TERU KO LOW
"My g-randmother began tattooing around my mouth wlie.it 1
wa about 12 vears old.” said Mrs. Toros lino Kaizawa. "She finished
ed when 1 was 15 or 16. To tattoo me. die put a metal pan upside
down over a. fire and collected soot. With a rough stick she set
ed me around my mouth until 1 bled. She rubbed in the soot."
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 5,
1972
91S Bail urst St.
A.M. Religious School
Service
f|J
Morning
11:00 A.M.
Telephone: 534-4302
*$
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
WORSHIP WHERE EAST MEETS V^ST
Mrs. Kaizawa spoke with us in a thatched hut where he.
in the Ainu
receives occasional visitors. The hut and her home
t.
Our first
settlement called Nibutani near Hokkaido's south
sight of the Ainu or their works had been the great hillside climbing shrine between Biratori and Nibutani. In white, stepped splendor, the shrine had looked Aztec.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5267
Sunday Service and Sunday School 11:30 A.M.
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
A warm welcome to all.
village, a few nondescript houses
and shops clustered near the road a school, a workship, and a few
rough, thatched buildings behind. Ve parked beside .a stilted storenouse. raised to discourage .mice and other food thieves. On ou.i j
other side stood a wooden bear c ^e. empty.
..
We walked in, footsteps quiet on pounded earth. Behind the
fire pit sat Mrs. Kaizawa on a low platform. Rough hewn posts
and beams supported straw walls and ceiling around us.
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
Legged, lacquered barrels gleamed black from floor to ceiling
the length of one wall. The barrels measured wealth, like a desert
shields concubines, a Kwakiutl Indian's coppers, an American s
cars. A girl worked one year to /acquire one. The barrels are called
‘shintoko’, god seats. The barrels were a basic bartering measure.
' Unlike the shields concubines or American’s cars, they wore long.
I Age did not matter.
SHOP
Income Tax Reduction
Retirement Income
Familv Protection
Disability Pay Cheques
Mortgage Redemption
College Tuition Fund
Mrs. Kaizawa told us of her youth. She told us of hardships,
hardships her people had suffered like those of the. North American
Indian and the Soutr African Bushman. “Things are better now,”
she said. ‘‘The girls all want to marry non-Ainu Japanese Actually
practically no one here, is pure Ainu. Go see the dancers in Asahi
kawa. Some you’ll think with hardly any Ainu blood at all.”
733 Danforth Ave.,
Toronto
Phone Store 463-3426
Home 469-0293
MITS TANOUYE
NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
Kaizawa wove a basket. She used
While talking with, us, Mrs.
.
carefully rationed elm bark Her loom was a notched beam, each
notch a guide for the weft string the notches about three centimeters apart. She had wound weft strings around, thumb-sized
stones, the stones hanging’ alternately on either side of the beam.
Japanese Food
Deliver Evenings
and Saturdays
10 St. Mary St., Toronto
447-8986
923-0916
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
Call: KEN bORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
Phone: 261-5194
14 Perivale Cros.
Scarborough
PHOTOGRAPHY
WEDDING SPECIALISTS
EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE
425-5211
T. B. MATSUDA
PHONE FOR SAMPLES
TORONTO
I
j
She laid a bark strand along the beam, tossed the stones .al
ternately back and forth, laid a bark strand, tossed the stones
alternately back and forth. Occasionally, she stopped to unwind a
little weft string off the stones.
After weaving enough, she closed the cylinder, wove the strands
together at one end for the bottom, wove a fancy stitch at the othei
for the basket’s top, fastened a plaited elm bark handle, the handle
adjustable for hand or shoulder carrying. 1 stuck my nose into the
basket, sniffed deeply, and got a head full, a lung full, of Hokkaido
forest.
Mrs. Kaizawa told us she was 84. We were amazed: she looked
20 years less. “Toroshino means to be well,” she said. She told us
any women with tattoos were necessarily over 70. The Tokyo
Government abolished the tattooing custom early in the century.
Shigeru Kayano came in. Big, exceedingly handsome, gentle,
black black eyes. He told us of the villagers’ plans for a museum.
‘Not for sightseers, though, We want a museum for our own people.
We want our children .and their children to see what their grand
fathers and greatgrandfathers could do. We want to help them be
proud of themselves and their people.”
Mrs. Kaizawa nodded agreement. Then she sang us an Ainu
traditional song. The Ainu worshiped nature. The song had as part
of its delicately charming melody a bird-like trill. I he song was a
lullaby.
and
RESTAURANT
CcMOlt
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
Buy and Sell
Your Home
Through
TOSH IWAI
2006 Lawrence. Ave.
Scar boro. Ont.
Ros: 922-1353
Bus: 924-8153
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered Accountant
Suite
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
RES. 231-0863
11 Ivy Lea Ci<
TORONTO
BUS. 783-4261
3101 Bathurat St.
MRS. SATOKO SATO
All types of insurance
CROWN LIFE
INSURANCE CO.
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, C
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
923-6877
Tokio Nishimura
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Buy & Sell — Your Home
O.K. CAFE
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
Through
Chinese Foods
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Mits Kuroda
TAVERN
th# HIGHT POLICY
Representing
469 Queen St. W.
Toronto, Ont.
Robt. Owen
Realtor
Take Out Service
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261*2o81
163-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
Free Delivery
in Central only
Tel. 367-0444
OF TORONTO
FULLY LICENSED
SUKIYAKI
TEMPURA
TATAMI ROOM
ALL MAJOR CREDIT
CARDS HONOURED
"103 YONGE
t
Read Stella Ito s
"SUKIYAKI
♦ FORMAL RENTALS
Cuitom Made Suit:
& Trousers
A Japanese Cookbook For Cosmopolitan Gourmets
( B&fween King & Adelaide)
863-0002
Over 60 Favorite Recipes
Available At The New Canadian For Only $1.65
479 Queen St. West — Toronto 2B, Ont.
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
st
John's
Presbyterian,
at
Broadview
Simpson
The Song Was A Lullaby
Ave.
Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
jcy. prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
□ ay: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128. Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
,• JOHN AND TERU KO LOW
"My g-randmother began tattooing around my mouth wlie.it 1
wa about 12 vears old.” said Mrs. Toros lino Kaizawa. "She finished
ed when 1 was 15 or 16. To tattoo me. die put a metal pan upside
down over a. fire and collected soot. With a rough stick she set
ed me around my mouth until 1 bled. She rubbed in the soot."
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 5,
1972
91S Bail urst St.
A.M. Religious School
Service
f|J
Morning
11:00 A.M.
Telephone: 534-4302
*$
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
WORSHIP WHERE EAST MEETS V^ST
Mrs. Kaizawa spoke with us in a thatched hut where he.
in the Ainu
receives occasional visitors. The hut and her home
t.
Our first
settlement called Nibutani near Hokkaido's south
sight of the Ainu or their works had been the great hillside climbing shrine between Biratori and Nibutani. In white, stepped splendor, the shrine had looked Aztec.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5267
Sunday Service and Sunday School 11:30 A.M.
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
A warm welcome to all.
village, a few nondescript houses
and shops clustered near the road a school, a workship, and a few
rough, thatched buildings behind. Ve parked beside .a stilted storenouse. raised to discourage .mice and other food thieves. On ou.i j
other side stood a wooden bear c ^e. empty.
..
We walked in, footsteps quiet on pounded earth. Behind the
fire pit sat Mrs. Kaizawa on a low platform. Rough hewn posts
and beams supported straw walls and ceiling around us.
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
Legged, lacquered barrels gleamed black from floor to ceiling
the length of one wall. The barrels measured wealth, like a desert
shields concubines, a Kwakiutl Indian's coppers, an American s
cars. A girl worked one year to /acquire one. The barrels are called
‘shintoko’, god seats. The barrels were a basic bartering measure.
' Unlike the shields concubines or American’s cars, they wore long.
I Age did not matter.
SHOP
Income Tax Reduction
Retirement Income
Familv Protection
Disability Pay Cheques
Mortgage Redemption
College Tuition Fund
Mrs. Kaizawa told us of her youth. She told us of hardships,
hardships her people had suffered like those of the. North American
Indian and the Soutr African Bushman. “Things are better now,”
she said. ‘‘The girls all want to marry non-Ainu Japanese Actually
practically no one here, is pure Ainu. Go see the dancers in Asahi
kawa. Some you’ll think with hardly any Ainu blood at all.”
733 Danforth Ave.,
Toronto
Phone Store 463-3426
Home 469-0293
MITS TANOUYE
NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
Kaizawa wove a basket. She used
While talking with, us, Mrs.
.
carefully rationed elm bark Her loom was a notched beam, each
notch a guide for the weft string the notches about three centimeters apart. She had wound weft strings around, thumb-sized
stones, the stones hanging’ alternately on either side of the beam.
Japanese Food
Deliver Evenings
and Saturdays
10 St. Mary St., Toronto
447-8986
923-0916
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
Call: KEN bORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
Phone: 261-5194
14 Perivale Cros.
Scarborough
PHOTOGRAPHY
WEDDING SPECIALISTS
EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE
425-5211
T. B. MATSUDA
PHONE FOR SAMPLES
TORONTO
I
j
She laid a bark strand along the beam, tossed the stones .al
ternately back and forth, laid a bark strand, tossed the stones
alternately back and forth. Occasionally, she stopped to unwind a
little weft string off the stones.
After weaving enough, she closed the cylinder, wove the strands
together at one end for the bottom, wove a fancy stitch at the othei
for the basket’s top, fastened a plaited elm bark handle, the handle
adjustable for hand or shoulder carrying. 1 stuck my nose into the
basket, sniffed deeply, and got a head full, a lung full, of Hokkaido
forest.
Mrs. Kaizawa told us she was 84. We were amazed: she looked
20 years less. “Toroshino means to be well,” she said. She told us
any women with tattoos were necessarily over 70. The Tokyo
Government abolished the tattooing custom early in the century.
Shigeru Kayano came in. Big, exceedingly handsome, gentle,
black black eyes. He told us of the villagers’ plans for a museum.
‘Not for sightseers, though, We want a museum for our own people.
We want our children .and their children to see what their grand
fathers and greatgrandfathers could do. We want to help them be
proud of themselves and their people.”
Mrs. Kaizawa nodded agreement. Then she sang us an Ainu
traditional song. The Ainu worshiped nature. The song had as part
of its delicately charming melody a bird-like trill. I he song was a
lullaby.
and
RESTAURANT
CcMOlt
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
Buy and Sell
Your Home
Through
TOSH IWAI
2006 Lawrence. Ave.
Scar boro. Ont.
Ros: 922-1353
Bus: 924-8153
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered Accountant
Suite
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
RES. 231-0863
11 Ivy Lea Ci<
TORONTO
BUS. 783-4261
3101 Bathurat St.
MRS. SATOKO SATO
All types of insurance
CROWN LIFE
INSURANCE CO.
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, C
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
923-6877
Tokio Nishimura
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Buy & Sell — Your Home
O.K. CAFE
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
Through
Chinese Foods
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Mits Kuroda
TAVERN
th# HIGHT POLICY
Representing
469 Queen St. W.
Toronto, Ont.
Robt. Owen
Realtor
Take Out Service
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261*2o81
163-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
Free Delivery
in Central only
Tel. 367-0444
OF TORONTO
FULLY LICENSED
SUKIYAKI
TEMPURA
TATAMI ROOM
ALL MAJOR CREDIT
CARDS HONOURED
"103 YONGE
t
Read Stella Ito s
"SUKIYAKI
♦ FORMAL RENTALS
Cuitom Made Suit:
& Trousers
A Japanese Cookbook For Cosmopolitan Gourmets
( B&fween King & Adelaide)
863-0002
Over 60 Favorite Recipes
Available At The New Canadian For Only $1.65
479 Queen St. West — Toronto 2B, Ont.
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
Page 8
Cent, from Page One
Marumoto . .
The New Canadian
coiTJorate
Where are we on corporate boards
number 0366
A member ot Ethnic Press
corridors ?
of Ontario.
8”:
and universities. And
There are some?. 1.600 mainland college
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
e descent. There are
AND FRIDAY
there is one uni ver•sity president of Japan
but not one of them
hool
distric
inland
more than 20,01)0 r
SUBSCRIPTION
Japanese American.
who
S9.00 a Year
rovernment, with its 2.5 million em§5.00
for Six Months
less than 1 percent are classified
only about 21.000
Orientals are
r. UMEZUKI Publisher
tai. And in Federal Government, only 13
K. C. TSUMURA
numbered in the 5,500 so-called upergrade positions where so
English
Section Editor
incidentally, pay between
much policy is determined. (Wh
KEN MORI
$28,129 to 837.624).
Japanese Section Editor
What Else...
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
I don't think these statistics reflect any great discrimination
Toronto 133, Ont.
against us. 1 do think they are another reflection of shikataganai,
EMpire 6-5005
a carryover from the low expectations of our politically powerless
Issei forefathers, a reflection of our willingness to leave our destiny
to the rages of fortune and the fickle tolerance of the majority.
What can we poor Japanese expect? shikataganai.
Fortunately, there have been Japanese-Americans who took
a different tack. And there were — and are — people like Mike
Masaoka, Saburo Kido and George Inagaki, whose efforts salvaged
for all of us our dignity and the restoration of our rights in this THREE
room
flat separate
entrance, one block to Shopper’s
society.
World Plaza. Phone 3 6 3-7606,
after 6, phone 444-3290 (Toron
to).
Second clou moi re^atratlM
Meanwhile, the attitude ha been compounded by a
complacency, the complacency of affluence.
iges. color television
suburbs now. you and I. W ith two-car c
, electric hibachis, the whole image, of m.a ing it in America.
, and the only things we have to worEverything is okay
on our
smoking not, the mortg
about is if our kid;
has
jgrass and how the
a
scratch a Nisei an<
igedy lor tne Msei. it was a Lingvo for
rise it raped constitutional principles but
Americans, not
because it. was accepted b : its victims, both the Asians inside the
fence, and the whites on the other side.
Complacence', apathy accommodation. How dearly thev cost
us. But we all know that t can’t happen again — don t
ons of the
I, too, am
past, 1 prefer not to be so forgetful.
Can Happen Again
one o.t
1 think it can happen again, and 1 think that thi
young are trying' to tell when
the things our
Americans,
as members in spirit
they describe themselves a?
Asian-Americans perceive the
of a Third World. These
potential for new trouble,
prejudice based on race, most
And the root of the
although others are. now getting th worst
certainly
of it.
can be thankfid to be beyond the daylight murders of a
ritage and the less-than-human valuation accorded so many
Chicanos and Puerto Ricans — all of whom, incidentally are fellow
citizens.
spies, kikes, and coons; and more re
cently, slopes, dinks and g eks — all are evidence of a strain of
fearful and ignorant savm my. the intolerance of perceptible differencc, that runs balefully through our society as it does through
has more clearly than many of
that the yomi
And they question our untiring pursuit of material values that
irts our attentions anil drains our energies.
1 forgive, but 1 cannot forget.
c ounc
CLASSIFIED
I HAVE mentioned the. young, and they can be disturbing,
particularly when they seem to spurn tne very things we hold
most dear and have worked so hard to attain.
Every economic, social and racial group in this country now
see.ms to have their own collection of young militants. We are no
exception. Yellow Power and the Yellow Brotherhood are but a
few. of the manifestation
Long hair and hippie dress- How these Sansei offend us. But
the. long hair which is such, an affront to many of us was once a
badge of the Samurai — and' with the young as with the Samurai,
hair and principles tend to become woven together.
There have been enough recent examples of young people in
court fighting for their hair and their joos to establish that and
to remind u.s that liberty includes the right not to get a haircut.
Another thing that offends us with a growing number of
“As we all Sansei
that instead of wanting to be nice, quiet. honorary
know. Asians are a different kind of animal. Asians have no respect whites.
y want to be Asians, honorary or net. If black .and
for human life."
brown and red are beautiful, then yellow had damned well better
be. too, they say. And what difference does color or hair make
but
his
John 1'hilpott Curran is
in a man’s worth
spoken in 1970 in an Irish political dispute, must not be
Questions
m bv anv of us.
As I mentioned earlier, I think we might well listen to what
condition. upon which God lias given liberty to man i
‘which condition if he breaks, servitude. the young are trying to say. however shrilly they say it, and stop
ilance.” he
is at once the consequence ot his crime and the punishment of his treating everyone unde.r-30 like some new species of Eta. I don’t
think that our young' people have all the answers by any means,
guilt.”
asking prickly questions, questions that are important
but they
to the future of this society.
And so eternal vigilance is one price for us. too. but it must
Cont. On Sat. Issue
be buttressed by the weapons of political power, and these, we do
not now possess.
We have won our share of this nation’s material benefits. We i
group, we
won our access to education and to jobs.
• less poverty than many others. We now
the doctors
RCA — ZENITH
and the lawyers.
What we do not have are the Indian Chiefs.
SALES & SERVICE
It is easy to point to Daniel Inouye, Patsy Mink and Spar!
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
Matsunaga, but remember that they are special cases, all rep
relenting an island state in the mid-Pacific whose population i
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
40 percent
Between Eglinton & Lawrence Ave. East
e we otherwise, politically? How many
Repairs To All Makes
often a recognition of political value ns of judicial
which are
? How many
m
On ci tv
*
Festival
(Continued From Page I)
TAGE ONTARIO” will lead all
Ontario’s citizens to a fuller,
more, meaningful understanding
of their community heritage and
the value of a rich and varied
social fabric for the total culture
of Canada.”
On January 20th, Mrs. Hide
Shimizu, Sam Hagino, Coby Ko
bayashi, and Bob Kadoguchi re
presented the Cultural Centre for
a preliminary discussion with the
Minister’s staff on “HERITAGE
ONTARIO.” The theme “HERI
TAGE
ONTARIO”
for the
Spring Festival ‘72 emerged as
a result of this meeting.
J.C. Cultural Centre
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
728A St. Clair Ave. West
O/z block West of Christie)
TORONTO
651-8060
Res. 621-1989
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
Every Item 30 c<
off
Specializing In Japanese
Foods & Giftware
Famous Chinese Foods
Sandown
Market
Special This Month
arrived merchandise will be on Sale in
One free order of tried M un Tun and One pair
of chopsticks with orders over $5.00
middle of March, such as Lacquer ware, Japanese
Free local delivery over S3.00
10'3 off on pick-up orders over S2.00
dishes and ceramics - .
Call now 699-1171 or 699-1172
Japan's Specialty Shop
463 Eglinton Ave. W., Toronto
4S9-S611
Mon. ----Wed. & Sat. 10:00 to 6:00.
4 small gift will be given those who visit us during the sale.
the greatest
gift of all
DANFORTH GARDENS
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
Kimonos 50
YOUR
BLOOD
Takara Jewellers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Mon. — Friday 9—6. Sat 9__ 1
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1291.’ Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
221 Kennedy Rd. (between
Danforth & Kingston MJ
Scarborough, Ontario
Nancy Ariza 261-704
OHAGI & OSH USHI
On Thurs.. Fri. & JturpJI;
Open Sundays 10 A.M.-6
Yamaha Music L/ours
For Children
4 to 8 years
j
World Famous — °ver
million graduates.
n
Free Film demonstration »
See a class in operate
any day.
_
,
LLoyd Edwards
Yamaha
Music Academy
231 Danforth Ave461-2468
Enrol today
Marumoto . .
The New Canadian
coiTJorate
Where are we on corporate boards
number 0366
A member ot Ethnic Press
corridors ?
of Ontario.
8”:
and universities. And
There are some?. 1.600 mainland college
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
e descent. There are
AND FRIDAY
there is one uni ver•sity president of Japan
but not one of them
hool
distric
inland
more than 20,01)0 r
SUBSCRIPTION
Japanese American.
who
S9.00 a Year
rovernment, with its 2.5 million em§5.00
for Six Months
less than 1 percent are classified
only about 21.000
Orientals are
r. UMEZUKI Publisher
tai. And in Federal Government, only 13
K. C. TSUMURA
numbered in the 5,500 so-called upergrade positions where so
English
Section Editor
incidentally, pay between
much policy is determined. (Wh
KEN MORI
$28,129 to 837.624).
Japanese Section Editor
What Else...
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
I don't think these statistics reflect any great discrimination
Toronto 133, Ont.
against us. 1 do think they are another reflection of shikataganai,
EMpire 6-5005
a carryover from the low expectations of our politically powerless
Issei forefathers, a reflection of our willingness to leave our destiny
to the rages of fortune and the fickle tolerance of the majority.
What can we poor Japanese expect? shikataganai.
Fortunately, there have been Japanese-Americans who took
a different tack. And there were — and are — people like Mike
Masaoka, Saburo Kido and George Inagaki, whose efforts salvaged
for all of us our dignity and the restoration of our rights in this THREE
room
flat separate
entrance, one block to Shopper’s
society.
World Plaza. Phone 3 6 3-7606,
after 6, phone 444-3290 (Toron
to).
Second clou moi re^atratlM
Meanwhile, the attitude ha been compounded by a
complacency, the complacency of affluence.
iges. color television
suburbs now. you and I. W ith two-car c
, electric hibachis, the whole image, of m.a ing it in America.
, and the only things we have to worEverything is okay
on our
smoking not, the mortg
about is if our kid;
has
jgrass and how the
a
scratch a Nisei an<
igedy lor tne Msei. it was a Lingvo for
rise it raped constitutional principles but
Americans, not
because it. was accepted b : its victims, both the Asians inside the
fence, and the whites on the other side.
Complacence', apathy accommodation. How dearly thev cost
us. But we all know that t can’t happen again — don t
ons of the
I, too, am
past, 1 prefer not to be so forgetful.
Can Happen Again
one o.t
1 think it can happen again, and 1 think that thi
young are trying' to tell when
the things our
Americans,
as members in spirit
they describe themselves a?
Asian-Americans perceive the
of a Third World. These
potential for new trouble,
prejudice based on race, most
And the root of the
although others are. now getting th worst
certainly
of it.
can be thankfid to be beyond the daylight murders of a
ritage and the less-than-human valuation accorded so many
Chicanos and Puerto Ricans — all of whom, incidentally are fellow
citizens.
spies, kikes, and coons; and more re
cently, slopes, dinks and g eks — all are evidence of a strain of
fearful and ignorant savm my. the intolerance of perceptible differencc, that runs balefully through our society as it does through
has more clearly than many of
that the yomi
And they question our untiring pursuit of material values that
irts our attentions anil drains our energies.
1 forgive, but 1 cannot forget.
c ounc
CLASSIFIED
I HAVE mentioned the. young, and they can be disturbing,
particularly when they seem to spurn tne very things we hold
most dear and have worked so hard to attain.
Every economic, social and racial group in this country now
see.ms to have their own collection of young militants. We are no
exception. Yellow Power and the Yellow Brotherhood are but a
few. of the manifestation
Long hair and hippie dress- How these Sansei offend us. But
the. long hair which is such, an affront to many of us was once a
badge of the Samurai — and' with the young as with the Samurai,
hair and principles tend to become woven together.
There have been enough recent examples of young people in
court fighting for their hair and their joos to establish that and
to remind u.s that liberty includes the right not to get a haircut.
Another thing that offends us with a growing number of
“As we all Sansei
that instead of wanting to be nice, quiet. honorary
know. Asians are a different kind of animal. Asians have no respect whites.
y want to be Asians, honorary or net. If black .and
for human life."
brown and red are beautiful, then yellow had damned well better
be. too, they say. And what difference does color or hair make
but
his
John 1'hilpott Curran is
in a man’s worth
spoken in 1970 in an Irish political dispute, must not be
Questions
m bv anv of us.
As I mentioned earlier, I think we might well listen to what
condition. upon which God lias given liberty to man i
‘which condition if he breaks, servitude. the young are trying to say. however shrilly they say it, and stop
ilance.” he
is at once the consequence ot his crime and the punishment of his treating everyone unde.r-30 like some new species of Eta. I don’t
think that our young' people have all the answers by any means,
guilt.”
asking prickly questions, questions that are important
but they
to the future of this society.
And so eternal vigilance is one price for us. too. but it must
Cont. On Sat. Issue
be buttressed by the weapons of political power, and these, we do
not now possess.
We have won our share of this nation’s material benefits. We i
group, we
won our access to education and to jobs.
• less poverty than many others. We now
the doctors
RCA — ZENITH
and the lawyers.
What we do not have are the Indian Chiefs.
SALES & SERVICE
It is easy to point to Daniel Inouye, Patsy Mink and Spar!
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
Matsunaga, but remember that they are special cases, all rep
relenting an island state in the mid-Pacific whose population i
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
40 percent
Between Eglinton & Lawrence Ave. East
e we otherwise, politically? How many
Repairs To All Makes
often a recognition of political value ns of judicial
which are
? How many
m
On ci tv
*
Festival
(Continued From Page I)
TAGE ONTARIO” will lead all
Ontario’s citizens to a fuller,
more, meaningful understanding
of their community heritage and
the value of a rich and varied
social fabric for the total culture
of Canada.”
On January 20th, Mrs. Hide
Shimizu, Sam Hagino, Coby Ko
bayashi, and Bob Kadoguchi re
presented the Cultural Centre for
a preliminary discussion with the
Minister’s staff on “HERITAGE
ONTARIO.” The theme “HERI
TAGE
ONTARIO”
for the
Spring Festival ‘72 emerged as
a result of this meeting.
J.C. Cultural Centre
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
728A St. Clair Ave. West
O/z block West of Christie)
TORONTO
651-8060
Res. 621-1989
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
Every Item 30 c<
off
Specializing In Japanese
Foods & Giftware
Famous Chinese Foods
Sandown
Market
Special This Month
arrived merchandise will be on Sale in
One free order of tried M un Tun and One pair
of chopsticks with orders over $5.00
middle of March, such as Lacquer ware, Japanese
Free local delivery over S3.00
10'3 off on pick-up orders over S2.00
dishes and ceramics - .
Call now 699-1171 or 699-1172
Japan's Specialty Shop
463 Eglinton Ave. W., Toronto
4S9-S611
Mon. ----Wed. & Sat. 10:00 to 6:00.
4 small gift will be given those who visit us during the sale.
the greatest
gift of all
DANFORTH GARDENS
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
Kimonos 50
YOUR
BLOOD
Takara Jewellers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Mon. — Friday 9—6. Sat 9__ 1
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1291.’ Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
221 Kennedy Rd. (between
Danforth & Kingston MJ
Scarborough, Ontario
Nancy Ariza 261-704
OHAGI & OSH USHI
On Thurs.. Fri. & JturpJI;
Open Sundays 10 A.M.-6
Yamaha Music L/ours
For Children
4 to 8 years
j
World Famous — °ver
million graduates.
n
Free Film demonstration »
See a class in operate
any day.
_
,
LLoyd Edwards
Yamaha
Music Academy
231 Danforth Ave461-2468
Enrol today