. ws + ws P gett THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, Merch 16, 1967 7 4 ge oe ne-half under . USE YOUR CREDIT Heer boo Of d ° cand ony Reading Ta Yesterday cf ; he accom- . | in aie Becomes Entertainment Today @ NO MONEY DOWN he imagina- A NEW YORK (AP)--Just 45| British ce h ' ? nm years ago U.S. Be officials seiahae. a eee * MONTHS TO PAY Ay pion seized and burned 500 copies of} They granted Ulysses a cer- : James Joyce's novel Ulysses|tificate for public showing in the speediest and for a decade afterwards the|London Tuesday but made 25 swim at 20 |"in" thing for tourists to bring|cuts, Where language was scis- ILL VE Y ith 10 m.p.h. home from Paris was a smug-|sored out, the screen shows ; U ABSOLUTELY gled copy of the work now re-)characters talking but no sound garded as a major modern|is heard. classic. At two points the screen goes Times changed and in 1934 ajblank where censors cut out federal judge ruled that Ulys-jscenes they considered objec-| ses--four-letter words and all--|tionable. | could be legally sold in the} The producers said the miss-| United States. ing dialogue and the cut scnes Times changed still further) will be quoted or described in and Tuesday night the movie/program notes handed out to version--four-letter words and) audiences. | erotic scenes intact -- opened| The Walter Reade organiza- | without censorship, without po-jtion, U.S. distributors of the lice interference, without pub-|picture, said it would take in lie disturbance in 65 theatres|more than $1,000,000 during its TIMES RE NTS PHOTO cE FREE Worth Oshewe across the U.S, first showings, limited to three . , The results? Rave reviews\days. Prices are among the | | of Merchandise 50 each from New York critics and/highest ever charged for admis- 'S each wane ors, ee sion to a movie--$5.50 for eve-| reatened official action|ning performances and $4 for| f h H yn Orders against the picture in Chicago miatinees, 0 Your @ oIce Pictures and Maryland failed to develop.| The picture cost less than $1,- 000,000 to make on location a Le esestraw wan Dublin ny Forestry Experts "The words," writes Bosley, ; h h h f | $, y) | lcm tn Wee oe with the purchase of a Times, "are such as are used! by average men and women in their intimacies, and they be- Tennesseeans reach out Nashville airport. Mrs. near Nashville and the ded- |Sawfly. | is descriptions of to shake hands with Mrs. Johnson will be joined by ication of a junior college at |, J. C. Macleod, of the federal ogi gy oro pony Bloom | Lyndon Johnson Tuesday the President Wednesday Columbia, Tenn. department of forestry and ru-|) +. Vite Mollie and Stephen De- night after her arrival at WARMING UP TO FIRST LADY for a full day of activities (AP Wirephoto) Declared Quebec Separatist Leads Social Credit Theory By DENNIS ORCHARD OTTAWA (CP) --Declared separatist Gilles Gregoire led the fragmented supporters of Social Credit theory in a mon- opoly of Commons debate Tues- day. Together, they demanded new credit - creating duties for the government - owned Bank of Canada and a scientific touch to setting the size of the money supply. : moneta olicy. It provides|immediate economic control but ' : Mr. Gregoire, MP for La-|its first clause since late last tg Aeeenitation. EA gy od populations at least two years 7 O/ Repairs Could've Been Vibrant new shades of grey, blue, brown and olive. pointe who has been sitting as|week won voice - vote approval|bank's governor and the finance |following the operation were /O Avoided by Preven: All sizes available from 35 to 42 for regular, tall, an independent since bolting Creditiste ranks last year, spoke half-a-dozen times Monday and} poqa: directive to the b in th y, Creditiste Henri La-|directive to the bank in the PROGRESS ON FILM Tassday on Fecumag on theltutippe (Compton . Frontenac) \event of disagreement. ARD DEER, Alte. (CP)--The Reconditioned PRICED s he wasn't on his feet,|PPoposes to make two amend-| The Creditiste and Socialicentennial project of the Al- Transmissions $ sy he Creditist 4: 56; ments --certain of defeat--and|Credit groups want broader|perta Poultry Federation is the MPs of the Largaedeit oy -lthe Commons is expected to|powers for the central bank, in-|production of a film of agricul-|} Per Chev., Pontiacs (Cdn.) Exchange Oe elal Credit ranks usually were.| ove on to long - awaited tural progress from the days of|| $125: Plus Installation ond Fluid. 9! FROM toes In the end, it was Mr. Gre- goire who delivered the sum- mation. "We regret that the govern- ment is not ready to study and analyse the suggestions we have made." Charge Dropped By Government NEW YORK (AP)--The fed- eral government has dropped charges against Harry S. Stone- hill, court records showed Tues- way. He once was described as a 'vagabond millionaire." Stonehill went to Vancouver after being deported from Mex- ico in 1963. He left Canada vol-|§ untarily. after being refused landed immigrant status. Stonehill, 49, was indicted two years ago on charges of con- spiring to ship machinery to the Philippines in 1961 for the man- Wagging a finger at Finance Minister Sharp, he added: "The Canadian people, the Quebec people, will have to judge the minister." They will be asking whether it is right for people "to live poorly in such a wealthy country . . . to live in misery while you sit on wealth." The diminutive lawyer then sat down, and a bill stalled on of 19 of its 20 clauses in two minutes flat. clause-by-clause debate on the Bank Act. The Bank Act legislation makes a major revision of the powers of the chartered banks. The existing Bank Act expires in 15 more sitting days of Par- liament. The Bank of Canada Act sets out the functions of the central bank in influencing Canada's in- terest rates and money supply. The main change from the cur- rent act is a clarification of government responsibility for minister and authorizes the fi- nance minister to issue a policy cluding the right to dispense in- terest-free loans for social pro- "| Told Of Control MONTREAL (CP)--A gather- ing of forestry experts was told| Tuesday that chemical spray has proven the most effective way of controlling the jackpine| ral development, made the statement at the 49th annual meeting of the woodlands sec- tion of the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association. He said the regulation of in- sect populations is a difficult problem of forest management and the sawfly is one of the ma- jor problems. Severe forest fires in Quebec province had helped the growth come, in the voice of Barbara Jefford, who plays Mollie, a/ kind of earthy, desirous po- etry." | "How much of Joyce's cone dalus are in the film?" he asks, and replied: "The answer is that is plenty." The New York Daily News gave the picture its highest rating--four stars. "It's artistic quality," says says Archer Winsten in the New York Post, "is such that shock soon dissolves in astonishment! and admiration." of extensive stands of jackpine which were not yet merchanta- ble. Many of these stands were "intermittently attacked' by the sawfly and two methods of control had been tried. Spray- ing had been done with virus insecticide and with a chemical insecticide. "The virus failed to produce | substantially lower," he said. the first prairie settlements in the old Northwest Territories jects such as schools and hos- pitals. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION CENTRE 1038 Simcoe St N. 728-7339 Of elf Transmission tive Maintenance Every 25,000 Miles. All Work Guerenteed up to the present day in Alberta. SUIT It doesn't cost more or take more time to enjoy the special feeling of distinction this Easter. Just stop in... select from all that's new in fabric, styling and color . enjoy truly skilled fitting. And by all means top off your suit with a trim, dashing new hat. See what a lift your new look gives you. And what new looks your new lift gets you. See the New Season three-button and some two-button stylings for men and teenage men, all are expertly tailored. Take your pick of yarn-dyed wool worsteds in distinguished stripes, checks, nailhead weaves and venetians. short and stout builds, BOYS' CONTINENTAL STYLE SUITS Smartly tailored suits that he'll be proud to wear. Centre vents or two side vents. In charcoal, grey, brown, olive and blue. Sizes 8 to 18. $14.88 PRICED FROM..... cesta ufacture of black market cigar- ettes. He has been free in $100,-|; 000 bail. -- suid Federal Judge Edwar F Mansfield approved dismissal of|® VISIT OUR BOYS' the charges last. March 3. The|j government said it lacked wit- SHOE DEPT. pact itag Manila to press the Be sure and see our very amert line of complaint. JARMA h : Named in the indictment with style pon ae "or Mothers. Dress him Stonehill were pes SHIRTS Ge fer. Seana. ond of Westbury, N.Y., an <a Easter. We have a Hekker, 39, of New York. A cor- GB ALMA <blaetion in porate defendant was the: ex- In button down collar ' continental and ivy rting firm of Universal New ond ivy stripes. In MEN'S styles in cotton, worst- Pork Inc., headed by Stonehill. Maize, blue, grey ond eds and flonnels. Sizes Mansfield, acting without a white. Sizes 12 to 18. DRILL PANTS 12 to 18. jury, has heard government tes- (At Shopping Centre NOW ONLY tt rr gee ig cee a mee Gly: Sanforized shrunk in black, olive ekker, and given at March 31 to file legal briefs. a Available in sizes 30 5.95 MADE HIS FORTUNE | 2 qu y) 99 At the time of his indictment GRAN D PRIX e Regular 4.25 NOW.... 2 (Shopping, Centre Store here, Stonehill was described by U.S. Attorney agen ~: Morgenthau as a U.S. secon Heutenant in the Second World MEN'S TERYLENE MEN'S ALL WEATHER BOYS' War, who settled in the Philip- pines and made a fortune GOLF JACKETS TOPCOATS through various Pag at Deported from the ippines ; ; Just Dias inctnting Mnice,: rom the we dutaeon In beige and black Jf Come In and see ou new which he was deported in 1963. men this spring : spring stock of Boys' Stonehill arrived in Vancou- Liskt Vet war Sizes 36 to 46, If Sport Jackets and Blaz- ver aig peng en Zipper front fast- tall models ers In cheviots and soxon associate Robert Brooks. ening. 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