Page 1
|lo Yachtman Kenichi Horie’s Round-the World Nonstop Voyage
Fails
wuyagc raiia
ft1KY0._ wth
Bro
ms hopes
stem
■Steam-. ^
,
_W,,M
search because radio communiNewspaper and- hews agency They had been searching for the
ship Co.’s containership Califor cation
with Horie was also in- companies also
sent their own missing yacht for a week.
nia Maru picked up distress re
terrupted.
aircraft.
'
°
port early Nov. 14 near Hawaii.
Some yacht designers have
It resumed again after a num
Overcast but calm
weather criticized the way Horie’s yacht
J. his distress call was relayed bv ber of hams in the nation re
prevailed at the scene.
the containership and was re
was designed.
ported receiving calls from Ho
Horie who reportedly apolo
ceived by an amateur radio ope rie asking to be rescued and his
The yacht had four inverted
gizedfor
having
been
the
cause
rator in Nara Prefecture.
V.shaped masts, the
like
of
position’was confirmed.
of so much trouble said he hop which is unknown in the world.
The Maiitime Safety Agencv
The Maritime Safety Headqu ed to make another attempt.
started search but failed to Foe ate
A mast was made of aluminum,
arters in Nagoya dispatched
Maritime Safety Headquarters 7 cm.
the yacht.
.
and each mast is
three patrol boats and a Beech officials in Nagoya were reliev
fixed with two wire ropes.
The agency
suspended
the craft plane.
ed at the news of Horie’s rescue. |
(Cont. on Page 8)
... .. ................................................................................ iiiiiiiiiiIiiiiiiiii,iiI||||uIIIIII„ii1iiiii|||11|||1||1|11|1|11|||1|1||
round-the-world
feting
^^.•iq yacht voyage dashed,
Kin'Kenichi Horie,
who
Kj th? world 10 years ago
^ trans-Pacific solo voyamall sloop, was taken
a Maritime Safety Agenol boat on Nov. 20th.
Merfee' crippled yacht,
en
in
tow
by
the
II. was t
s >1 boat Komi shima.
RIHIIIIIIIHillilllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllli
.
I
I
he ft6) Canadian
SI
& XXXVI — 94
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1972
F....^^
..... .
Toronto, Unt.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIITIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Japanese Scientists Claim Absorbent
To Remove Poisons From Water
Adventures In
Pachinko-land
R. Foulkes
................. . .................... .................... .
TOKYO. — Japanese scientists mium, mercury and lead, in the the absorbent is nitrohumic acid
claim to have produced a low- water.
solidified by carboxyl methyl ceMin almost any country in'the
cost absorbent that can remove
The
discovery
could
be
a
godllulose.
Stid. if you were to ask the man
•SOBA = ------ ----poisonous heavy metals in waste send for Japanese
industries, | The acid can be extracted at
H the street to tell you someUDON
water discharged by industrial now being prosecuted with in low cost from low-grade coals
about the Japanese, one
i where SOBA = Straightening- plants.
creasing frequency by the public such a lignite, which are abun
gibe things he would probably
The semi-governmental Natio for deaths and injuries caused dantly available on the norther
, up Of Baachan’s. Abode, UDON^
Station is that “they keep their
1 Ultimate
Degree Of Nearness, nal Chemical Laboratory for In by discharge of poisonous waste nmost Japanese island of Hok
k beautifully tidy and cleand'
K
=
aconstant of propor- dustry said a series of tests has water, and facing a government kaido.
& This notion is reinforced by
shown the new absorbent can re requirement that they meet all
Nitro-humic acid is being wid
kagners who have had occasion tionality, — the so-called “Kleen”
move more than 99.5 per cent of anti-pollution costs.
Constant.
ely used as a material for soil
visit Japanese homes. It is
the heavy metals, such as cadA
laboratory
spokesman
said
In
fact,
because
the
enrichment
and compound ferti
average
farther reinforced by many of
lizer, a spokesman said:
^ar Japanese friends here, who, Japanese home is much smaller
than
its
Western
counterpart
and
^though they do not proclaim" i
Its strong absorbent.qualities
does
not
usually
have
a
garage
have
long been known, -but . its
^ih cult of cleanliness, also do
or
basement,
it
tends
to
be
more
bi deny it,
. i
practical application has previ
crowded
and
may
even
appear
ously been a problem as it was
| My personal observation'
is
GREENWOOD, B.C. — MasoThs Midway detachment of the easily soluble in alkaline liquid.
more
cluttered
than
the
Western
^i Japanese homes are neither
nobu Oye of
Greenwood was R.C.M.P. investigated the letter
This has been solved by transfor
per nor more unkempt than home, (consider, for example, the sentenced in court in Greenwood
and discovered it had been wri- ming-it into pellets with the ce
hundreds
of
“
omiyage
”
knickhe anywhere else. During the
in on October 10, given a suspended ttn by Oye and on September 18 llulose, the spokesman added.
pie of living and working in knacks which are displayed
sentence and put on probation the hearing was held at which
Tests showed that a small am
pn for over a year, my wife most Japanese homes, contribufor eighteen months.
he
confessed
to
be
guilty
of
wri
ting
to
their
character
and
ount of the absorbent in a glass
fl 1 had many occasions to
On September 18 Oye appe- ting- ;it. Charges were then laid 'tube could remove all traces of
pi1 all types of Japanese ho- warmth).
There is even evidence that the » ared at a court hearing, after an by the R.C.M.P. under Section cadmium from gallons of waste
r- Almost invariably
(with
^ne exceptions explained below) Japanese, being aware of their AR.C.M.P. investigation of a le 331-1 of the criminal code and water.
The acid pellets could be used
i~ homes were neater when we image abroad, try to live up to tter .which had been pinned to the case heard on October 10 be
the
door
of
the
house
occupied
fore.
Judge
McIntosh
in
the
almost
permanently, as the abso
fe invited to them than they it before Western visitors. In one
rbing capacity could be easily
in by Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Uye- Greenwood Court.
when we dropped in unex- small household we visited
de.
The
letter
allegedly
made
Oye will be required to report restored by washing them in hy
^edly. The exceptions, to this, I Hachi-no-He, the charming wife
.threats
against
members
of
the
kept
apologizing
to
us
for
the
to
the probation officer during drochloric acid or a salt solution,
I course, are universally true:
the spokesman said.
the next 18 months.
lipper class homes tend to smallness and clutteredness z of household.
In another development, a Ja
[‘'©.and (2) the amount of her house (.. honto ni sumimasen
panese agricultural scientist has
neu . .
semai
desu kaphtening-up-for-the-visitor is ga
announced the discovery of a spe
gsely proportional to thei de- ra ne...), As it turned out, at
TOKYO. — Tatsuji Nakaoka, vestigators that he bought a cies of fern that absorbs copper
k n ?n^aiacy shared ’with that time we . ourselves were lif lhat is, good friends feel ving in an apartment which was who unsuccessfully
hijacked a parachute' in San Francisco for from contaminated soil and could
U . en^ai’rassed about having even smaller, and her home truly Japan Air Lines jetliner recently, that purpose before coming to Ja become a cheap'and efficient soil
7,il^e’r Uome in its usuai looked roomy to us!
said he had planned to pa pan Oct. 31. Police said they be- cleanser.
k • i d^rray than do mere
If one is careful enough to look rachute down with a $2 million lieva Nakaoka wanted money to
glances. This can also be at the sources of the oft-heard ransom somewhere between Van •repay his debts.
Nakaoka, 47, who lived in Los
reports concerning the Japanese couver and Mexico City.
Police
said
Nakaoka
told
inAngeles, told police earlier he
neat-home syndrome, one most
wanted to go to. Cuba and later
often finds them to be people
to Uruguay because he was “fed
who were either invited to Ja
up” with the American society.
panese homes (therefore the ho
TOKYO, — A juice, the gomes were specially prepared for
Policemen,
disguised as JAL
vernmentwill
- rule soon,
must
them), or to be people who were
employees,
overpowered
him
- .
when he transferred to a DC-8 contain juiced
The Canada — moving in fairly high social cir
Japan’s Fair Trade Commission
K, ,WJ of Tokyo marked cles such as academics or impor
TOKYO. — The graduation jet plane with his three hostages has decided to invoke a regulation
year ^S autumn- To tant businessmen (therefore they ceremony was suspended at So- and explosives from the Boeing
Lu18 their anniversary, the were only exposed to high class nomachi Elementary School after, 727 plane he hijacked while it on labels and order the manufac
turers of various synthetic soda
rabpp1!
a recePdon on homes).
it burned down in a U.S. air raid was flying from Tokyo to Fuku drinks, being sold in Japan as
; Another source of the belief over Tokyo on Mar. 10, 1945. oka, western Japan.
piyo St at the ^eW Ctani
"juice,” to /‘call a spade a spade”
may have been the fact that the
Nakaoka was turned over to — or clearly indicate that these
Last month, after
extensive
Lv L^e past two decades the Japanese take relatively frequent
searching and advertising, Kei -he Tokyo district prosecutors of products do not contain juice, li
baths.
From
this
it
is
easy
to
;
suke Matsukura;
the
school’s fice on charges of the vio quid fruit or plant extracts.
^eveioped through
^»a»Jc»nd/OOperation “f jump to the conclusion that they present principal, found the ad lation of the hijack prevention
The new rule, the ; Commission
^ fripn^F nadlans and Japa- exercise a high degree of perso dresses of 59 of the 150 pupils law, armed robbery and illegal said, will also cover “fruit” milk,
^o.S °f Canada living in nal hygiene, and that this clea who were to be graduated. Many possession of a weapon, explo yogurt, powdered "juice”
and
nliness is carried over into their of the others were killed in the sives and gunpowder.
other similar drinks.
Canadian and the lomes. Of course, the ritual of air raid, he said.
Authorities say Nakaoka could
The Federation of Housewives’ .
$ CptPanese Canadian Cui- the Japanese bath is a whole
Recently, 30 of the pupils, now be sentenced to seven years to Association filed a complaint with
fe0“
of chapter in itself...
aged about 40^ gathered finally life imprisonment? for his hijack j the Commission about the confusling labeling.
ns *-0 this event.
Next: The Japanese Bath for their graduation ceremony. attempt.
g by Dr. Frank
expressed
mathematically
as:
Japanese Canadian Gets Suspended
Sentence For Threatening Letter
Japan Hijacker Planned To Parachute
poda.Japan
piety Marks
Is 20th Anniv.
Graduation Is
Held After A
Quarter Century
All "Juices" Must
Contain Juice
Rules Gov't.
Fails
wuyagc raiia
ft1KY0._ wth
Bro
ms hopes
stem
■Steam-. ^
,
_W,,M
search because radio communiNewspaper and- hews agency They had been searching for the
ship Co.’s containership Califor cation
with Horie was also in- companies also
sent their own missing yacht for a week.
nia Maru picked up distress re
terrupted.
aircraft.
'
°
port early Nov. 14 near Hawaii.
Some yacht designers have
It resumed again after a num
Overcast but calm
weather criticized the way Horie’s yacht
J. his distress call was relayed bv ber of hams in the nation re
prevailed at the scene.
the containership and was re
was designed.
ported receiving calls from Ho
Horie who reportedly apolo
ceived by an amateur radio ope rie asking to be rescued and his
The yacht had four inverted
gizedfor
having
been
the
cause
rator in Nara Prefecture.
V.shaped masts, the
like
of
position’was confirmed.
of so much trouble said he hop which is unknown in the world.
The Maiitime Safety Agencv
The Maritime Safety Headqu ed to make another attempt.
started search but failed to Foe ate
A mast was made of aluminum,
arters in Nagoya dispatched
Maritime Safety Headquarters 7 cm.
the yacht.
.
and each mast is
three patrol boats and a Beech officials in Nagoya were reliev
fixed with two wire ropes.
The agency
suspended
the craft plane.
ed at the news of Horie’s rescue. |
(Cont. on Page 8)
... .. ................................................................................ iiiiiiiiiiIiiiiiiiii,iiI||||uIIIIII„ii1iiiii|||11|||1||1|11|1|11|||1|1||
round-the-world
feting
^^.•iq yacht voyage dashed,
Kin'Kenichi Horie,
who
Kj th? world 10 years ago
^ trans-Pacific solo voyamall sloop, was taken
a Maritime Safety Agenol boat on Nov. 20th.
Merfee' crippled yacht,
en
in
tow
by
the
II. was t
s >1 boat Komi shima.
RIHIIIIIIIHillilllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllli
.
I
I
he ft6) Canadian
SI
& XXXVI — 94
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1972
F....^^
..... .
Toronto, Unt.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIITIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Japanese Scientists Claim Absorbent
To Remove Poisons From Water
Adventures In
Pachinko-land
R. Foulkes
................. . .................... .................... .
TOKYO. — Japanese scientists mium, mercury and lead, in the the absorbent is nitrohumic acid
claim to have produced a low- water.
solidified by carboxyl methyl ceMin almost any country in'the
cost absorbent that can remove
The
discovery
could
be
a
godllulose.
Stid. if you were to ask the man
•SOBA = ------ ----poisonous heavy metals in waste send for Japanese
industries, | The acid can be extracted at
H the street to tell you someUDON
water discharged by industrial now being prosecuted with in low cost from low-grade coals
about the Japanese, one
i where SOBA = Straightening- plants.
creasing frequency by the public such a lignite, which are abun
gibe things he would probably
The semi-governmental Natio for deaths and injuries caused dantly available on the norther
, up Of Baachan’s. Abode, UDON^
Station is that “they keep their
1 Ultimate
Degree Of Nearness, nal Chemical Laboratory for In by discharge of poisonous waste nmost Japanese island of Hok
k beautifully tidy and cleand'
K
=
aconstant of propor- dustry said a series of tests has water, and facing a government kaido.
& This notion is reinforced by
shown the new absorbent can re requirement that they meet all
Nitro-humic acid is being wid
kagners who have had occasion tionality, — the so-called “Kleen”
move more than 99.5 per cent of anti-pollution costs.
Constant.
ely used as a material for soil
visit Japanese homes. It is
the heavy metals, such as cadA
laboratory
spokesman
said
In
fact,
because
the
enrichment
and compound ferti
average
farther reinforced by many of
lizer, a spokesman said:
^ar Japanese friends here, who, Japanese home is much smaller
than
its
Western
counterpart
and
^though they do not proclaim" i
Its strong absorbent.qualities
does
not
usually
have
a
garage
have
long been known, -but . its
^ih cult of cleanliness, also do
or
basement,
it
tends
to
be
more
bi deny it,
. i
practical application has previ
crowded
and
may
even
appear
ously been a problem as it was
| My personal observation'
is
GREENWOOD, B.C. — MasoThs Midway detachment of the easily soluble in alkaline liquid.
more
cluttered
than
the
Western
^i Japanese homes are neither
nobu Oye of
Greenwood was R.C.M.P. investigated the letter
This has been solved by transfor
per nor more unkempt than home, (consider, for example, the sentenced in court in Greenwood
and discovered it had been wri- ming-it into pellets with the ce
hundreds
of
“
omiyage
”
knickhe anywhere else. During the
in on October 10, given a suspended ttn by Oye and on September 18 llulose, the spokesman added.
pie of living and working in knacks which are displayed
sentence and put on probation the hearing was held at which
Tests showed that a small am
pn for over a year, my wife most Japanese homes, contribufor eighteen months.
he
confessed
to
be
guilty
of
wri
ting
to
their
character
and
ount of the absorbent in a glass
fl 1 had many occasions to
On September 18 Oye appe- ting- ;it. Charges were then laid 'tube could remove all traces of
pi1 all types of Japanese ho- warmth).
There is even evidence that the » ared at a court hearing, after an by the R.C.M.P. under Section cadmium from gallons of waste
r- Almost invariably
(with
^ne exceptions explained below) Japanese, being aware of their AR.C.M.P. investigation of a le 331-1 of the criminal code and water.
The acid pellets could be used
i~ homes were neater when we image abroad, try to live up to tter .which had been pinned to the case heard on October 10 be
the
door
of
the
house
occupied
fore.
Judge
McIntosh
in
the
almost
permanently, as the abso
fe invited to them than they it before Western visitors. In one
rbing capacity could be easily
in by Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Uye- Greenwood Court.
when we dropped in unex- small household we visited
de.
The
letter
allegedly
made
Oye will be required to report restored by washing them in hy
^edly. The exceptions, to this, I Hachi-no-He, the charming wife
.threats
against
members
of
the
kept
apologizing
to
us
for
the
to
the probation officer during drochloric acid or a salt solution,
I course, are universally true:
the spokesman said.
the next 18 months.
lipper class homes tend to smallness and clutteredness z of household.
In another development, a Ja
[‘'©.and (2) the amount of her house (.. honto ni sumimasen
panese agricultural scientist has
neu . .
semai
desu kaphtening-up-for-the-visitor is ga
announced the discovery of a spe
gsely proportional to thei de- ra ne...), As it turned out, at
TOKYO. — Tatsuji Nakaoka, vestigators that he bought a cies of fern that absorbs copper
k n ?n^aiacy shared ’with that time we . ourselves were lif lhat is, good friends feel ving in an apartment which was who unsuccessfully
hijacked a parachute' in San Francisco for from contaminated soil and could
U . en^ai’rassed about having even smaller, and her home truly Japan Air Lines jetliner recently, that purpose before coming to Ja become a cheap'and efficient soil
7,il^e’r Uome in its usuai looked roomy to us!
said he had planned to pa pan Oct. 31. Police said they be- cleanser.
k • i d^rray than do mere
If one is careful enough to look rachute down with a $2 million lieva Nakaoka wanted money to
glances. This can also be at the sources of the oft-heard ransom somewhere between Van •repay his debts.
Nakaoka, 47, who lived in Los
reports concerning the Japanese couver and Mexico City.
Police
said
Nakaoka
told
inAngeles, told police earlier he
neat-home syndrome, one most
wanted to go to. Cuba and later
often finds them to be people
to Uruguay because he was “fed
who were either invited to Ja
up” with the American society.
panese homes (therefore the ho
TOKYO, — A juice, the gomes were specially prepared for
Policemen,
disguised as JAL
vernmentwill
- rule soon,
must
them), or to be people who were
employees,
overpowered
him
- .
when he transferred to a DC-8 contain juiced
The Canada — moving in fairly high social cir
Japan’s Fair Trade Commission
K, ,WJ of Tokyo marked cles such as academics or impor
TOKYO. — The graduation jet plane with his three hostages has decided to invoke a regulation
year ^S autumn- To tant businessmen (therefore they ceremony was suspended at So- and explosives from the Boeing
Lu18 their anniversary, the were only exposed to high class nomachi Elementary School after, 727 plane he hijacked while it on labels and order the manufac
turers of various synthetic soda
rabpp1!
a recePdon on homes).
it burned down in a U.S. air raid was flying from Tokyo to Fuku drinks, being sold in Japan as
; Another source of the belief over Tokyo on Mar. 10, 1945. oka, western Japan.
piyo St at the ^eW Ctani
"juice,” to /‘call a spade a spade”
may have been the fact that the
Nakaoka was turned over to — or clearly indicate that these
Last month, after
extensive
Lv L^e past two decades the Japanese take relatively frequent
searching and advertising, Kei -he Tokyo district prosecutors of products do not contain juice, li
baths.
From
this
it
is
easy
to
;
suke Matsukura;
the
school’s fice on charges of the vio quid fruit or plant extracts.
^eveioped through
^»a»Jc»nd/OOperation “f jump to the conclusion that they present principal, found the ad lation of the hijack prevention
The new rule, the ; Commission
^ fripn^F nadlans and Japa- exercise a high degree of perso dresses of 59 of the 150 pupils law, armed robbery and illegal said, will also cover “fruit” milk,
^o.S °f Canada living in nal hygiene, and that this clea who were to be graduated. Many possession of a weapon, explo yogurt, powdered "juice”
and
nliness is carried over into their of the others were killed in the sives and gunpowder.
other similar drinks.
Canadian and the lomes. Of course, the ritual of air raid, he said.
Authorities say Nakaoka could
The Federation of Housewives’ .
$ CptPanese Canadian Cui- the Japanese bath is a whole
Recently, 30 of the pupils, now be sentenced to seven years to Association filed a complaint with
fe0“
of chapter in itself...
aged about 40^ gathered finally life imprisonment? for his hijack j the Commission about the confusling labeling.
ns *-0 this event.
Next: The Japanese Bath for their graduation ceremony. attempt.
g by Dr. Frank
expressed
mathematically
as:
Japanese Canadian Gets Suspended
Sentence For Threatening Letter
Japan Hijacker Planned To Parachute
poda.Japan
piety Marks
Is 20th Anniv.
Graduation Is
Held After A
Quarter Century
All "Juices" Must
Contain Juice
Rules Gov't.
Page 2
HAGE 2
Tuesday December 5
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IMPOTRERS — DISTRIBUTORS
SHIMIZU INDUSTRIES LTD.
Ma:^drreSS! PO' B°X 5569> Vancouver
344 East Hastings Street, Vancouver 4
(606)-687-5445 or 687-5016’
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IMPOTRERS — DISTRIBUTORS
SHIMIZU INDUSTRIES LTD.
Ma:^drreSS! PO' B°X 5569> Vancouver
344 East Hastings Street, Vancouver 4
(606)-687-5445 or 687-5016’
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Page 5
Tuesday December 5, 1972
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M I H A MA Y A
394 POWELL STREET, VANCOUVER, B.C
PHONE 685-9960
It's a New Name In Vancouver
Come on in and meet our new staff
JAPANESE FOODS
GIFTS
PROVISIONS
Store open till 9 P.M. every nights till New Year.
Super Special Sales from Dec. 12 to Dec. 20 (One week only)
(Division of MARUFUJI TRADING COMPANY LIMITED.)
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M I H A MA Y A
394 POWELL STREET, VANCOUVER, B.C
PHONE 685-9960
It's a New Name In Vancouver
Come on in and meet our new staff
JAPANESE FOODS
GIFTS
PROVISIONS
Store open till 9 P.M. every nights till New Year.
Super Special Sales from Dec. 12 to Dec. 20 (One week only)
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Page 7
II Tuesday December 5, 1972
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
g
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 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.
I
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TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
701 DOVERCOURT RD.
Include Former Address When Making Change .
TORONTO.- — The New Canadian urges all subscribers sen^an5es of address to include their former address. This
aid tlie stuff and facilitating swifter response.
.AHo prompt attention to payment of subscription dues before
expiry date is much appreciated. — T. U.
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1275 Yonge Street. Toronto 7, C
SOUTH OF’ WOODLAWN
Tokio Nishimura
S23-6S77
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10/ 1972
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi. 782-5267
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
TOBONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
December 10, 1972. BODHI DAY
Religious School
Morning Service
Japanese Service
10:30 A.M.
11:00 A.M.
2:00 P.M.
3:00 p.m.
St
918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: S34-4302
Gohokai Gen. Meeting
General Photography
Wedding Specialists
PHOTOGRAPHY
Exclusive
I
T.B. Matsuda
Coverage
677-1467
Estimates & Samples
Toronto
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
Japanese Dolls On Display S. M. Gallerv
10R0N10. — Several dolls by Burlington artist Kimiko Koya
nagi are exhibited in the Christmas Show at the Shaw-Remine'ton
Gallery, 20 Birch Avenue, Toronto. The._.dojis ...are for ale and
were made especially for the show.
Ihe Show opens November 30th and runs till December 23rd.
The gallery is open 2—-i6 daily 9. ■5 on Sundays, and closed Mondays. Shaw-Remington Gallery is located south of St. Clair off
1 onge Street, near the Summer Hill Station.
*
*
*
Christmas Benefit Dance At Centre Dec. 9&
TORONTO. — The Nisei Women’s Club of Toronto, in conjun
ction with Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre, will present- CHRI
STMAS BENEFIT DANCE with the Pat Riccio Orchestra. All
proceeds of the Nisei Women’s Club will go to the Momiji Club’s
Fund.
-Place: The Centre, 123 Wynford Drive, Don Mills. Date: Sa
turday, December 9, 1972 at 8:30 p.m. — 12:30 a.m. Bar Facilities,
Refreshments, Door Prizes. $3.00 per person. 3.50 at the door.
' — A. M.
Call: KEN nUKl
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
T
ii
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
NisGii Hongwanji International Theme Contest
TORONTO. — In anticipating the Sth Centennial Birthday of
Shinran Shonin. during the spring of 1973, the Nishi Hongwanji
sposored an international theme contest to celebrate th& auspicious
birthday celebration. Recently a news release reached the National
Office of the Buddhist Churches of Canada. The 1st and 2nd pri
zes went to contestants from the United States. Miss Maya .Ishiura
of Toronto received honourable mention by sumbitting the theme
of: TAKE A BROTHER BY THE HAND AND LEAD RIM INTO
SHINRAN’S LIFE. — T.B.C.
RCA — ZENITH
I
I
Custom Picture
- Framing
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between Eglinton & -Lawrence Ave. Sast.
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D
Go To Church Of Yom
Choice This Sunday
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
72bA St. Clair Ave. West
C/z block West of Christie)
TOBONTO
551-8060
Takara
Jewellers
Through
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Mon. — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 129 4. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
]
J
t
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
463 Eglinton Ave. W.
Phone 489-8611
KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle
Dew Worms
551 Danforth Ave.,
(neai
Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
463-7400
Buy & Sell — Your Home
Repairs To All Makes
-
Authentic Oriental
lift Items/ Kimonos
& Noritakes China
OPEN FBI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
Res. 621-1989
It is a good policy to
have the BIGHT POLICY
CaafviJ!
Japan's
Specialty Shop
Mits Kuroda
Robt. Owen,
Realtor
I
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261 -2581
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
S^lttei
OF TORONTO
* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
437 Danforth Ave.
Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
Income Tax Reduction
TAVERN
and
RESTAURANT
Retirement Income
Family Protection
Disability Pay Cheques Mortgage Redemption
College Tuition Fund
— O —
MITS TANOUYE
NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
10 St. .Mary St., Toronto
923-0916
447-8986
TULLY LICENSED
SUKIYAKI
TEMPURA
TATAMI ROOM
ALL MAJOR CREDIT
CARDS HONOURED
103 YONGE
( Between King & Adelaide)
863-0002
SHOP
733 Danforth Ave..
Toronto
Phone Store 463-3426
Home 469-029.3
Japanese Fond
Deliver. Evenings
and Saturdays "
DANFORTH GARDENS
Famous Chinese Foods
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
One free order of WUN-TUN
One pair of chopsticks with orders over $5.00
Free local delivery over $3.00
10% off on pick-up orders over $2.00
Phone 699-1171
NOV. 29th. WINNER
iIIL GORDON McLEOD.
No. 428
MISSISSUAGA, ONT.
Xmas Benefit Dance
Dec. 9 8:30 p.m.
FILM SPECIAL
Dec. 16-8 p.m.
Dec. 17 3 & 8 p.m; '
“GION MATSURI”
Japanese Canadian
Cultural Centre
123 Wynford Drive
Don Mills, Ont.
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
g
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 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.
I
®?H
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
701 DOVERCOURT RD.
Include Former Address When Making Change .
TORONTO.- — The New Canadian urges all subscribers sen^an5es of address to include their former address. This
aid tlie stuff and facilitating swifter response.
.AHo prompt attention to payment of subscription dues before
expiry date is much appreciated. — T. U.
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1275 Yonge Street. Toronto 7, C
SOUTH OF’ WOODLAWN
Tokio Nishimura
S23-6S77
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10/ 1972
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi. 782-5267
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
TOBONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
December 10, 1972. BODHI DAY
Religious School
Morning Service
Japanese Service
10:30 A.M.
11:00 A.M.
2:00 P.M.
3:00 p.m.
St
918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: S34-4302
Gohokai Gen. Meeting
General Photography
Wedding Specialists
PHOTOGRAPHY
Exclusive
I
T.B. Matsuda
Coverage
677-1467
Estimates & Samples
Toronto
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
Japanese Dolls On Display S. M. Gallerv
10R0N10. — Several dolls by Burlington artist Kimiko Koya
nagi are exhibited in the Christmas Show at the Shaw-Remine'ton
Gallery, 20 Birch Avenue, Toronto. The._.dojis ...are for ale and
were made especially for the show.
Ihe Show opens November 30th and runs till December 23rd.
The gallery is open 2—-i6 daily 9. ■5 on Sundays, and closed Mondays. Shaw-Remington Gallery is located south of St. Clair off
1 onge Street, near the Summer Hill Station.
*
*
*
Christmas Benefit Dance At Centre Dec. 9&
TORONTO. — The Nisei Women’s Club of Toronto, in conjun
ction with Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre, will present- CHRI
STMAS BENEFIT DANCE with the Pat Riccio Orchestra. All
proceeds of the Nisei Women’s Club will go to the Momiji Club’s
Fund.
-Place: The Centre, 123 Wynford Drive, Don Mills. Date: Sa
turday, December 9, 1972 at 8:30 p.m. — 12:30 a.m. Bar Facilities,
Refreshments, Door Prizes. $3.00 per person. 3.50 at the door.
' — A. M.
Call: KEN nUKl
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
T
ii
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
NisGii Hongwanji International Theme Contest
TORONTO. — In anticipating the Sth Centennial Birthday of
Shinran Shonin. during the spring of 1973, the Nishi Hongwanji
sposored an international theme contest to celebrate th& auspicious
birthday celebration. Recently a news release reached the National
Office of the Buddhist Churches of Canada. The 1st and 2nd pri
zes went to contestants from the United States. Miss Maya .Ishiura
of Toronto received honourable mention by sumbitting the theme
of: TAKE A BROTHER BY THE HAND AND LEAD RIM INTO
SHINRAN’S LIFE. — T.B.C.
RCA — ZENITH
I
I
Custom Picture
- Framing
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between Eglinton & -Lawrence Ave. Sast.
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D
Go To Church Of Yom
Choice This Sunday
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
72bA St. Clair Ave. West
C/z block West of Christie)
TOBONTO
551-8060
Takara
Jewellers
Through
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Mon. — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 129 4. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
]
J
t
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
463 Eglinton Ave. W.
Phone 489-8611
KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle
Dew Worms
551 Danforth Ave.,
(neai
Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
463-7400
Buy & Sell — Your Home
Repairs To All Makes
-
Authentic Oriental
lift Items/ Kimonos
& Noritakes China
OPEN FBI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
Res. 621-1989
It is a good policy to
have the BIGHT POLICY
CaafviJ!
Japan's
Specialty Shop
Mits Kuroda
Robt. Owen,
Realtor
I
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261 -2581
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
S^lttei
OF TORONTO
* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
437 Danforth Ave.
Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
Income Tax Reduction
TAVERN
and
RESTAURANT
Retirement Income
Family Protection
Disability Pay Cheques Mortgage Redemption
College Tuition Fund
— O —
MITS TANOUYE
NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
10 St. .Mary St., Toronto
923-0916
447-8986
TULLY LICENSED
SUKIYAKI
TEMPURA
TATAMI ROOM
ALL MAJOR CREDIT
CARDS HONOURED
103 YONGE
( Between King & Adelaide)
863-0002
SHOP
733 Danforth Ave..
Toronto
Phone Store 463-3426
Home 469-029.3
Japanese Fond
Deliver. Evenings
and Saturdays "
DANFORTH GARDENS
Famous Chinese Foods
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
One free order of WUN-TUN
One pair of chopsticks with orders over $5.00
Free local delivery over $3.00
10% off on pick-up orders over $2.00
Phone 699-1171
NOV. 29th. WINNER
iIIL GORDON McLEOD.
No. 428
MISSISSUAGA, ONT.
Xmas Benefit Dance
Dec. 9 8:30 p.m.
FILM SPECIAL
Dec. 16-8 p.m.
Dec. 17 3 & 8 p.m; '
“GION MATSURI”
Japanese Canadian
Cultural Centre
123 Wynford Drive
Don Mills, Ont.
Page 8
PAGE 8
JMes^aT December 5, 1979
Tales Of The Foreign
Settlements In Japan
Montie Montana Ropes
^m
Mayor
By ALLAN BEEKMAN
The New Canadian
A
“*m*‘M
Ethnic PreS>
a! Ontano.
^01
Second rtaw. smT refutation’
number 0366
DMEZUKI Publisher
K. C. TSUMURA
English Section Editor
KEN MORI
Japanese Section Editor
T’
TOKIt O. — Cowboy-showman enjoying the tour
difTALES OF THE FOREIGN SETTLEMENTS IN JAPAN
by Montie Montana, Jr., leader of ferent kinds of Japanese foods.”
Harold S. Williams, Chas. E. Tuttle Co., Paperback, 351 pp„ $2.95.
an American old
West
show
The other members
of
the
On July 1, 1859, after more than two centuries of isolation,
visiting Japan, said the show troupe are Montana’s 13-year old
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
apan opened the ports' of Yokohama and Hakodate to trade, in I has received
AND FRIDAY
T
enthusiastic ” rea- daughter, Kelly, and Betty Mann,
accordance with treaties made with the Western nations. During ctions
from
Japanese
audi- both of Nebraska; John Brady
SUBSCRIPTION
the period of seclusion, Nagasaki had been open to the Dutch ences and his
S9.00 a Year
mission is being- and his wife Violet, from Okla
and Chinese, but only on limited and humiliating terms.
^5.00
for Six Months
achieved.
homa and Jones Wallace BennalJapan was to open Kobe and Osaka in 1868; Tokyo in
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
1869.
After a one-month tour in ly, Lamont Paul
Laird
and
The Japanese authorities assigned areas of the treaty
Toronto 133, Ont.
ports northern and central Japan, Mon Laird’s sister Elissa, an Indian
for foreign residence. With appropriate exceptions, foreigners
EM p ire 6-5005
were tana said, “What I feel is that from Arizona.
restricted to travel with a radius of about 25 miles from these they see a" small sample of the
areas. Fearing assassination from xenophobe samurai, isolated
from West and now they want to see
The New Canadian is now
the natives by language, custom, and interest, the foreigners for all of the West.”
Horie. . .
med close-knit communities.
accepting
requests on the
(Cont. from Page One)
“I also roped a mayor,” Mon
placement of personal ads for
Anti-Foreign Notices
tana said of his visit to mayor
I oichi
Ito,
chief of Awaji
greetings
omitted due to be
Outside the concessions were reminders that the ideals revered Kiyoshi Sugito of Nagoya Oct. yacht Making- Workshop where
reavement, until December 10,
by the foreigners might be abhorred by the native authorities. At 16. “This is an old cowbov cus- the Mernaid II was built, said
1972. The minimal cost for an
ie entrance to most towns and villages stood notice boards of- tom to friends.” Montana’s spe- he had felt the yacht was sub
ad will be §3.00 per family.
lering rewards for information against Christians — varying from cialty is trick roping.
ject to too much rolling in a
Please submit requests as soon
100 pieces of silver against a common believer to 500 for informa
The Buffalo Bill Wild West test run.
as
possible.
tion against a priest.
Hei said the four sails might
Show arrived in Tokyo Sept. 29
THE NEW CANADIAN
Francis Xavier had introduced Catholicism into Japan in for a two-month tour to help make a yacht speedier but less
1549, and it was chiefly due to official fear of this religion that lure Japanese tourists to Nebra tolerant of wind forces.
foreigners were excluded in 1638. The authorities had proceeded ska. and other, western states.
The crew of the MSA patrol
with such ruthlessness against Christianity that it appears to have
boat
said Horie ' slept for about
The
show
includes
Buy and Sell
Your Home
Indian
been the only time that religious persecution has realized its dances,
sign-language demon- j ^our Boni’s aboard the ship after
Through
purpose of near — extirpation.
strations, trick roping, whio-!he WaS rescued shortly . before
Evidence of the brutality of Japanese justice abounded. The cracking and country and western . n°°n'
accused were transported in bamboo cages like fowls being taken music.
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd.
to market. Public floggings were common. Before the government
After a month touring south
2008 Lawrence Av. East
building at Kobe, and also on the beach at Wada Point, condemned
ern Japan, Montana said, he
OFFSET AND LETTERPRESS ।
Scarboro, Ont.
persons were beheaded. Heads of the executed were fixed on top plans to stage shows in U.S.
757-5184
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
of long pikes where they putrefied as ravens fed on them.
military bases near Tokyo.
'V/a/tAny ^tn'/.a/a'fti^toenbie A »tc h" s
Extraterritorial Rights
However, he said, “We have
1 i !0 't'T the rigors of such a criminal code, the treaty nations contacted military officials, but
had ms.stod on the right to try those of their countrymen accused we haven’t heard yet” on the ’HARRY S.
Yamcnha Music Course
~27 BAY ST., TORONTO
Phohe 368-9768
of wrong-doing. Each treaty nation set up consular courts An planned shows.
Amenean charged with an offense against a Japanese was tried
We ar also planning to visit
For Children
in an American court; a Japanese offending against an American Moscow, but the plan isn’t defi4 to 8 years — nearly
was tried in a Japanese court. It was difficult for one nationality nite yet, Montana added.
Bus: 961-5511
Res: 922-1353
two million graduates.
to sue another; confusion and frustration followed.
‘
Montana said members of t* j
Free film demonstration, or
In the meantime the modernization of Japan proceeded apace
g-roup are “all > healthy”
and
visit a class anytime.
|
me nding the reform of the penal, code. When extraterritoriality
231 Danforth Ave. 461-2467
was relinquished in 1899, few fair-minded foreigners mourned it's
Chartered
Accountant
2645 Eglinton E.
261-6144
passing.
The Japanese, however, found immediate embarrassment. On
Made To Measure
LLoyd Edwards
Suite 403
da!’n hr “■5“”ed 3«r<»diction over foreign misbehavior,
SUITS FOR MEN
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
Music Academies
ii ^
,
American, usmg razor and clary hammer, murdered
wd . >«T ?
"' mC™an' “ wel1 «s h« Japanese mistress
ii '! u ?’ ? J°P“',esc woman. Japanese justice, however, handled
Phone 694-9553
■ r/j'T,”1^ potentially explosive case with such tact and
rectitude that it won the commendation of the foreign press.
“Will call on you”
TOSH IWAI
PRINTING
ERNEST JOMORI
C. NOMURA
Mainichi Writer
The author was born in Melbourne, Australia in 1898 came
va?at’on
a. medical student, found employment
t icie, and remained. In 1953, he commenced,
writing historical artides, including a series for The Mainichi’
newspaper,
entitled
areTawm
PaS‘”
Series’ the arti'fe in ‘Ns book
(Within Toronto)
BE BLOOD
DONORS
r ^l?1.®’ about the Forei»n Settlements or Con-
' J?’ and.an addltlonM ten stories about those times.
he writing tends to bo discursive, but clear. Th* author has
captured much of the spirit of the times about which he writes
artlcle ^ entitled, “The Griffith Collection,”
" UC 1 the author was personally involved. It is the true storv
Jolu\Grif^ths who drived in Japan in 1907 as a pharma-st. Intel e^ted in botany, he commenced the studv of the'flora
of Japan. Fronv this point, his interest branched to* all phases of
Japanese art and culture.
;■
® "j’01' “'WtiomM Japanese were discouraging
examination of Japanese mythology, the interest of Griffith h
rY, rendered h,m suspect. In 1939, he was arrested tried and
Jiv 1 b,1t released after six months. His interrogators had eviden
him fiXuch rf >Ut Japanese history from their examination of
,. ,
nuieh of h,s magnificent collection of .Japonica whic’
b °li-tha'e ™"“ JaPan h3d * b“" Pr°Per,S- cared for. was tc
Sponsored by the Ijikai
Date: SAT. DEC. 16, 1972 — 9:00 A.M. to 12 NOON
Admission: $L00 per FAMILY
RAFFLE TICKETS TO BE DRAWN — SANTA
CLAUS
WILL BE PRESENT TO GREET ALL THE KIDDIES’
PUBLIC IS WELCOME! — ESPECIALLY FAMILIES WITH
3
GIVE TOGETHER
PRESCHOOLERS ’.
Looking For Holiday Articles
Stories, articles, photographs, etc. are wanted immediately
Aor The New Canadian’s annual New Year’s Issue.
Me /would appreciate writing on club activities, sports,
. s ort stories, profiles, “think” pieces, fashions, hobbies, as
pirations, poetry, etc. Accompanying photographs or illustra
tions are also welcome. About 1000 words is a good length,
x but optional.
□»»?■ IWATA AND FAMILY WISH TO CONVEY OUR
kinS ™anks to our many friends for their
All material should be slanted to interest the readers
°^ T^6 ^ew Canadian. All. manuscripts submitted should be
accOR^panied by self addressed envelopes with sufficient re
turn postage. While the publisher will take all reasonable care
the\ " ill not be responsible for the loss of any manuscript,
drawing or photograph.
telegrams a^ERINGS'
CARDS' floral trlbutes.
HE
Xx
EXPRESSIONS OF SYMPATHY DURING
passing of a dear
XMAS PARTY
Place: JAPANESE CANADIAN CULTURAL CENTRE
CARD OF THANKS
and father
TORONTO JAPANESE LANGUAGE
SCHOOL
husband
PHONE
621-6067
l
Mail all material to The New Canadian, New Year’s Issue,
479 Queen Street West Toronto 133, Ontario. Immediately.
j
JMes^aT December 5, 1979
Tales Of The Foreign
Settlements In Japan
Montie Montana Ropes
^m
Mayor
By ALLAN BEEKMAN
The New Canadian
A
“*m*‘M
Ethnic PreS>
a! Ontano.
^01
Second rtaw. smT refutation’
number 0366
DMEZUKI Publisher
K. C. TSUMURA
English Section Editor
KEN MORI
Japanese Section Editor
T’
TOKIt O. — Cowboy-showman enjoying the tour
difTALES OF THE FOREIGN SETTLEMENTS IN JAPAN
by Montie Montana, Jr., leader of ferent kinds of Japanese foods.”
Harold S. Williams, Chas. E. Tuttle Co., Paperback, 351 pp„ $2.95.
an American old
West
show
The other members
of
the
On July 1, 1859, after more than two centuries of isolation,
visiting Japan, said the show troupe are Montana’s 13-year old
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
apan opened the ports' of Yokohama and Hakodate to trade, in I has received
AND FRIDAY
T
enthusiastic ” rea- daughter, Kelly, and Betty Mann,
accordance with treaties made with the Western nations. During ctions
from
Japanese
audi- both of Nebraska; John Brady
SUBSCRIPTION
the period of seclusion, Nagasaki had been open to the Dutch ences and his
S9.00 a Year
mission is being- and his wife Violet, from Okla
and Chinese, but only on limited and humiliating terms.
^5.00
for Six Months
achieved.
homa and Jones Wallace BennalJapan was to open Kobe and Osaka in 1868; Tokyo in
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
1869.
After a one-month tour in ly, Lamont Paul
Laird
and
The Japanese authorities assigned areas of the treaty
Toronto 133, Ont.
ports northern and central Japan, Mon Laird’s sister Elissa, an Indian
for foreign residence. With appropriate exceptions, foreigners
EM p ire 6-5005
were tana said, “What I feel is that from Arizona.
restricted to travel with a radius of about 25 miles from these they see a" small sample of the
areas. Fearing assassination from xenophobe samurai, isolated
from West and now they want to see
The New Canadian is now
the natives by language, custom, and interest, the foreigners for all of the West.”
Horie. . .
med close-knit communities.
accepting
requests on the
(Cont. from Page One)
“I also roped a mayor,” Mon
placement of personal ads for
Anti-Foreign Notices
tana said of his visit to mayor
I oichi
Ito,
chief of Awaji
greetings
omitted due to be
Outside the concessions were reminders that the ideals revered Kiyoshi Sugito of Nagoya Oct. yacht Making- Workshop where
reavement, until December 10,
by the foreigners might be abhorred by the native authorities. At 16. “This is an old cowbov cus- the Mernaid II was built, said
1972. The minimal cost for an
ie entrance to most towns and villages stood notice boards of- tom to friends.” Montana’s spe- he had felt the yacht was sub
ad will be §3.00 per family.
lering rewards for information against Christians — varying from cialty is trick roping.
ject to too much rolling in a
Please submit requests as soon
100 pieces of silver against a common believer to 500 for informa
The Buffalo Bill Wild West test run.
as
possible.
tion against a priest.
Hei said the four sails might
Show arrived in Tokyo Sept. 29
THE NEW CANADIAN
Francis Xavier had introduced Catholicism into Japan in for a two-month tour to help make a yacht speedier but less
1549, and it was chiefly due to official fear of this religion that lure Japanese tourists to Nebra tolerant of wind forces.
foreigners were excluded in 1638. The authorities had proceeded ska. and other, western states.
The crew of the MSA patrol
with such ruthlessness against Christianity that it appears to have
boat
said Horie ' slept for about
The
show
includes
Buy and Sell
Your Home
Indian
been the only time that religious persecution has realized its dances,
sign-language demon- j ^our Boni’s aboard the ship after
Through
purpose of near — extirpation.
strations, trick roping, whio-!he WaS rescued shortly . before
Evidence of the brutality of Japanese justice abounded. The cracking and country and western . n°°n'
accused were transported in bamboo cages like fowls being taken music.
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd.
to market. Public floggings were common. Before the government
After a month touring south
2008 Lawrence Av. East
building at Kobe, and also on the beach at Wada Point, condemned
ern Japan, Montana said, he
OFFSET AND LETTERPRESS ।
Scarboro, Ont.
persons were beheaded. Heads of the executed were fixed on top plans to stage shows in U.S.
757-5184
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
of long pikes where they putrefied as ravens fed on them.
military bases near Tokyo.
'V/a/tAny ^tn'/.a/a'fti^toenbie A »tc h" s
Extraterritorial Rights
However, he said, “We have
1 i !0 't'T the rigors of such a criminal code, the treaty nations contacted military officials, but
had ms.stod on the right to try those of their countrymen accused we haven’t heard yet” on the ’HARRY S.
Yamcnha Music Course
~27 BAY ST., TORONTO
Phohe 368-9768
of wrong-doing. Each treaty nation set up consular courts An planned shows.
Amenean charged with an offense against a Japanese was tried
We ar also planning to visit
For Children
in an American court; a Japanese offending against an American Moscow, but the plan isn’t defi4 to 8 years — nearly
was tried in a Japanese court. It was difficult for one nationality nite yet, Montana added.
Bus: 961-5511
Res: 922-1353
two million graduates.
to sue another; confusion and frustration followed.
‘
Montana said members of t* j
Free film demonstration, or
In the meantime the modernization of Japan proceeded apace
g-roup are “all > healthy”
and
visit a class anytime.
|
me nding the reform of the penal, code. When extraterritoriality
231 Danforth Ave. 461-2467
was relinquished in 1899, few fair-minded foreigners mourned it's
Chartered
Accountant
2645 Eglinton E.
261-6144
passing.
The Japanese, however, found immediate embarrassment. On
Made To Measure
LLoyd Edwards
Suite 403
da!’n hr “■5“”ed 3«r<»diction over foreign misbehavior,
SUITS FOR MEN
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
Music Academies
ii ^
,
American, usmg razor and clary hammer, murdered
wd . >«T ?
"' mC™an' “ wel1 «s h« Japanese mistress
ii '! u ?’ ? J°P“',esc woman. Japanese justice, however, handled
Phone 694-9553
■ r/j'T,”1^ potentially explosive case with such tact and
rectitude that it won the commendation of the foreign press.
“Will call on you”
TOSH IWAI
PRINTING
ERNEST JOMORI
C. NOMURA
Mainichi Writer
The author was born in Melbourne, Australia in 1898 came
va?at’on
a. medical student, found employment
t icie, and remained. In 1953, he commenced,
writing historical artides, including a series for The Mainichi’
newspaper,
entitled
areTawm
PaS‘”
Series’ the arti'fe in ‘Ns book
(Within Toronto)
BE BLOOD
DONORS
r ^l?1.®’ about the Forei»n Settlements or Con-
' J?’ and.an addltlonM ten stories about those times.
he writing tends to bo discursive, but clear. Th* author has
captured much of the spirit of the times about which he writes
artlcle ^ entitled, “The Griffith Collection,”
" UC 1 the author was personally involved. It is the true storv
Jolu\Grif^ths who drived in Japan in 1907 as a pharma-st. Intel e^ted in botany, he commenced the studv of the'flora
of Japan. Fronv this point, his interest branched to* all phases of
Japanese art and culture.
;■
® "j’01' “'WtiomM Japanese were discouraging
examination of Japanese mythology, the interest of Griffith h
rY, rendered h,m suspect. In 1939, he was arrested tried and
Jiv 1 b,1t released after six months. His interrogators had eviden
him fiXuch rf >Ut Japanese history from their examination of
,. ,
nuieh of h,s magnificent collection of .Japonica whic’
b °li-tha'e ™"“ JaPan h3d * b“" Pr°Per,S- cared for. was tc
Sponsored by the Ijikai
Date: SAT. DEC. 16, 1972 — 9:00 A.M. to 12 NOON
Admission: $L00 per FAMILY
RAFFLE TICKETS TO BE DRAWN — SANTA
CLAUS
WILL BE PRESENT TO GREET ALL THE KIDDIES’
PUBLIC IS WELCOME! — ESPECIALLY FAMILIES WITH
3
GIVE TOGETHER
PRESCHOOLERS ’.
Looking For Holiday Articles
Stories, articles, photographs, etc. are wanted immediately
Aor The New Canadian’s annual New Year’s Issue.
Me /would appreciate writing on club activities, sports,
. s ort stories, profiles, “think” pieces, fashions, hobbies, as
pirations, poetry, etc. Accompanying photographs or illustra
tions are also welcome. About 1000 words is a good length,
x but optional.
□»»?■ IWATA AND FAMILY WISH TO CONVEY OUR
kinS ™anks to our many friends for their
All material should be slanted to interest the readers
°^ T^6 ^ew Canadian. All. manuscripts submitted should be
accOR^panied by self addressed envelopes with sufficient re
turn postage. While the publisher will take all reasonable care
the\ " ill not be responsible for the loss of any manuscript,
drawing or photograph.
telegrams a^ERINGS'
CARDS' floral trlbutes.
HE
Xx
EXPRESSIONS OF SYMPATHY DURING
passing of a dear
XMAS PARTY
Place: JAPANESE CANADIAN CULTURAL CENTRE
CARD OF THANKS
and father
TORONTO JAPANESE LANGUAGE
SCHOOL
husband
PHONE
621-6067
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Mail all material to The New Canadian, New Year’s Issue,
479 Queen Street West Toronto 133, Ontario. Immediately.
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