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■lriffin Daily News
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SITTING PRETTY, financially, at least, is Lee Marvin,
taking a break here on the set of “Paint Your Wagon.”
A former plumber’s helper, he is now a very highly paid
actor who wants to help the people of Micronesia estab
lish a commercial fishing industry.
LONG WAIT
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPD—It
took 14 years, but policeman
Richard A. Neal is finally
getting his pistol back.
Neal lost the weapon in 1954
when two men jumped him.
They took his pistol away and
Bhot him with it before fleeing.
The two men were captured
CLAIR CON WALKY-TALKY
4 Transistor — Reg. $24.95
$13.88
Sunset Portable Tape Recorder
Mike, Tape, Batteries — Reg. $21.95
$13.88
JIM & JOE'S PHOTO CENTER
212 S. 11 th Street
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BOYS' SHOP - 2nd Floor
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Scoufe
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(A) Popular Pocket Knives —
Boy Scout 2.50
Cub Scout 2.25
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£ cWfei ■'£ aluminum zipper, contains 2} lbs. of
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(C) 2 -Q uart Canteen — Leakproof
1 T seams, chained cap, rugged cloth
'*»»•'■ v cover. 3.00
1 ' S_ a*A
( d ) Cook Kit — Aluminum fry pan,
~/ " pot, plate, plastic cup, all nest to fit
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(E) Yucca Pack — Roomy pack of *
water repellent army duck for campers. (F) Flashlight — Has 3-way signal
5.50 switch, with bulb and batteries.
$2.19
USE YOUR GOLDEN CHRISTMAS CARD
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-RolwtU Eharjfn-il OPEN
~ ImorrowPowielll Monday thru Friday
" 5A - lT UKK . U *.-. rOWELL I 9 A.M. 'til 8: 30 P.M.
01034 1 Saturday
MRS. U.R. CUSTOMER , „ , „ .
„ 9 A.M. til 6 P.M.
Griffin, Georgia 30223
23
Thursday, Dec. 12, 1968
I but the pistol was never found.
! Neal recovered from his wound.
The two men claimed they
had thrown the weapon into a
lake at a park.
Lakdscape workers were
i dredging the lake Wednesday
when they found a pistol. A
serial number check showed it
to be Neal’s.
Lee Marvin On Set
Show Business Is
Really ‘Business’
By DICK KLEINER
HOLLYWOOD — (NEA) —The
business life of Hollywood stars
doesn’t stop, just because they
are making movies. Go on any
set and you’ll see the stars talk
ing, between takes, to their
team, —agent, manager, press
agents, business manager.
I was with Lee Marvin in his
dressing room at Paramount,
where he’s shooting “Paint Your
Wagon.” His business manager
dropped in. He told Lee that an
exploratory oil well he had In
vested in had come in. Lee
seemed uninterested — then he
laughed.
“That reminds me,” he said,
“of once when I was out fish
ing with some millionaries and
a man flew in to tell one of them
that an oil well had come in.
“ T told you not to bother
me when I’m fishing,’ the mill
ionaire said.”
While he was talking, Lee was
sketching something on a piece
of paper. It was a diagram of
some plumbing repairs he
wanted done to his house, whi
ch his business manager would
see to. The diagrams seemed
very professional.
“That’s how I got started in
acting,” Lee said. “I was work
ing as a plumber’s helper in
Woodstock, N.Y., and the people
there are very democratic. They
would invite me to dinner, and
many of them were in the thea
ter. We started talking and act
ing sounded interesting and
that’s how I became an actor.”
After he finishes “Paint Your
Wagon,” Lee Is flying out to
Micronesia, to Palau, where he
shot The Pacific.” He
has become very enthusiastic ab
out the area, about its fishing,
about helping the natives help
themselves. He’s having a boat
built there now.
“I’ll use it when I’m there,”
he says. “The rest of the time,
the islanders can use it. I want
them to get started with com
mercial fishing —there's a tre
mendous fortune to be made,
and the islanders should be the
ones to make it, not some out
sider.
“Civilization is bound to come
" JOI
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Ray Walston
to Micronesia, one way or the
other. I’d like it to be the right
way."
Another “Paint Your Wagon”
star is Clint Eastwood. Clint is
still bubbling about the birth of
his son. The boy is now six mon
ths old. The Eastwoods have
been married 14 years, so you
can see why having a child me
ans so much to him.
Clint is one of Hollywood’s hot
test properties at the moment.
Add this to
die long list of
reasons more people
than ever before
are selling Buicks and
Opel Kadetts for us.
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HOMER SIGMAN
America’s newest Buick-Opel dealer. Sigman Buick-Opel, 1 303 West Taylor'Street
Introducing America's newest Buick-Opel dealer. Homer Sigman
/ Remember him.
He's the man to see to get a great new 1969 Buick or a great new Opel
Kadett.
He’s the man to see to get great service, service when you need it.
He’s the man to see to be treated the way a respected customer should be
treated.
Homer Sigman, America's newest Buick-Opel dealer, is the man to see to
get just about everything you’ve wanted in a new car deal. The right car.
The right price. The right treatment.
Buick Motor Division is proud to introduce Homer Sigman to you.
Visit him soon at I 303 W. Taylor St. And start selling your favorite Buick or
Opel Kadett for us.
Buick Motor Division proudly introduces America’s newest Buick-Opel dealer
SIGMAN BUICK — OPEL
* 1303 West Taylor Street — Griffin, Ga. •
He’s so much in demand that he
says, "I think 1970 is free so
far.” His 1969 calendar is all
booked up.
“It’s nice to be in demand,”
Clint says. “I went through a
long dry spell before this hap
pened.”
Ray Walston, in an eye-stop
ping set of red whiskers, is also
in Josh Logan’s big musical.
He told a funny story about
how he got the part. He want
ed it, because it is different for
him. Ray plays the part of a
Cornish miner. He asked Josh
Logan for the part, but Logan
said he wanted an authentic Cor
nlshman.
Walston doesn’t give up eas
ily. He went to a dialect coach
and said, “Teach me an auth
entic Cornish accent.” The coa
ch played a tape of the real th
ing and it was such a thick ac
cent that Ray couldn’t underst
and a word. He borrowed the
tape from the coach and went to
see Logan.
“I want you to hear someth
ing,” he said, and played the ta
pe. Logan couldn’t understand
it, either.
“That’s the authentic Cornish
accent you wanted,” Walston
said. And he walked out of the
office with the job.
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EARRINGS that apparently complement any costume are worn by Mrs. Ariane Shep
pard in these photos taken in 1963 (upper left), ’64, ’65, ’67 and ’6B (bottom right),
where she is shown with her husband. Dr. Sam Sheppard. Mrs. Sheppard has filed
for divorce, charging neglect of duty and extreme cruelty. Dr. Sheppard, convicted
and then acquitted of killing his first wife, Marilyn, recently resigned from the staff of
Youngstown Osteopathic Hospital after being named in suits resulting from deaths of
two patients on whom he had operated.