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INTRODUCTION This little work, printed on Hasegawa's untearable crepe, will it is hoped be welcomed for the fact that it can be placed in the hands of very young as well as older children without fear of torn leaves and dislocated covers.These books can be subjected to an amount of rough usage which no other books can stand.The author therefore hopes the “Children's Japan” will be so well received as to justify her bringing out other children's works in the same style. |
JAPANESE HOUSES.
JAPANESE house has no bricks, no walls, no chimneys and no windows. This sounds very funny, and so it is, yet a Japanese house is both pretty and comfortable. The most prominent thing about it is the roof, which is made of large heavy tiles and projects some distance |
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Copyright (C) 2006 Kansai University. All Rights Reserved. |