The Wingham Advance-Times, 1984-02-29, Page 17Crossroads—Feb. 29, 1984—Pae 5
Baby doll
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SPECIalvSKS s�
MATURES IN ALL NIARKET_ ._ ..._
TORS REGULAR AD
(INCLUDING STORE MONDAY -FRIDAY 9-930
HOURS SATURDAY 8:30-6 P.M.
• CONESTOGA MALL ONLY
BUY ONE 16 oz. LOAF
AT. REGULAR PRICE
SISIPFLINIER'S ONE
"MUNICH CITY" fREE
BR
FLORIDA
"INDIAN RIVER"
PINK or
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OUR REG. $1.59 Ib.
1.96
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SAVE!
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FRESH!
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ZEHRS
BUTTER
SAVE!
48016.
IMENNINI
CONESTOGA MALL STORE ONLY
CONESTOGA MALL ONLY
CONESTOGA MALL ONLY.
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FRESH
WHOLE
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18
/kg
CHICKEN
CUT FROM 'A' GRADE POULTRY
CONESTOGA MALL STORE ONLY
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SUPER "GRAND OPENING" SPECIAL
ALWAYS POPULAR
FRESH BULK
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4 ROLL 5 COLOUR
R.N 1.08
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CONESTOGA MALL ONLY
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LIMIT 6 PKGS. PER FAMILY
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SAVE!
9.14
PKG.
CONESTOGA MALL ONLY
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BEAUTIFUL FRESH GREEN
LARGE 10"
HANGING BASKET
BOSTON
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PANTY HOSE
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1.20 PR.
OUR REG.
2.19 PR.
CONESTOGA MALL ONLY
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THIS PAGE OF EXTRA SPECIALS AVAILABLE ONLY AT ZEHRS NEW CONESTOGA MALL STORE WATERLOO
UNTIL CLOSING SAT. MAR. 3 SEE ADDITIONAL PAGES FOR
ZEHRS SPECIALS IN ALL MARKET'S INCLUDING CONESTOGA MALL
Country Oven Bakery
HONEY GLAZED
CAKE DONUTS
PR.
CONESTOGA MALL ONLY
OUR REG. $9.95
ASSORT
12 POPULAR VARIETIES
HOSTESS SAVE!
22€
PKG.
4CKS
CONESTOGA MALL ONLY
CONESTOGA MALL ONLY ,
VARIOUS
SIZES
100-150 g
A
tells all
HOLLYWOOD — Once
upon a time, kiss -and -tell
was a fraternity row peroga-
tive and rather frowned upon
at that.
But lately ladies, taking
pen in hand or putting paper
into the typewriter, have
pre-empted the field of ro-
mantic tattling.
A surprising entry into the
realm is "Baby Doll," a book
by actress Carroll Baker.
Surprising because ,Carroll
wrote every lively line her-
self and because it's a lot
more interesting than per-
sons not acquainted with her
history would have expected
it to be.
Far from a dumb blonde,
Baker is a bright lady who
has done some foolish things
during her life but who's
smart enough to have extri-
cated herself from their re-
sults.
Through "Baby Doll", she
not only tells of kisses and
other sexual exchanges but
also confesses to nervous
breakdowns brought on
through the pressures of
stardom.
Between the beginning, and
the end of her memoirs,
Baker is transformed from
straightlaced Catholic virgin
to hostage of a nasty old man
(her first husband); to ac-
tress flushed with passion
falling on the floor with Ben
Gazzara; to movie -star sex
symbol and near slave of se-
cond husband, Jack Garfein,
and finally to contented wife
of third husband who encour-
aged her to tell all.
Some of the "all" she tells
concerns James Dean,
Elizabeth Taylor and George
Peppard.
Dean and Taylor fare well
in her recollections, for Car-
roll liked -likes both; though
she says she doesn't think
Elizabeth Taylor will like
her book.
George Peppard, whom
she recalls as not a particu-
larly nice fellow earlier in
his career, might be offend-
ed but Baker believes his
personality has improved
-sii ee-they-erode--The-Gar-
petbaggers" and that he
won't make an issue of her
recollections.
"I didn't want to leave
anything out," she says,
"but when I sat down with
publishers' lawyers, I was
wfiiing to`cut whatever they
suggested..
"I wasn't going to 'argue
with the lawyers."
Of persons mentioned in
the remaining material, first
husband Louie Ritter, se-
cond husband Jack Garfein
and producer Joe Levineare
mostharshly delineated.
Since Garfein is father of
Baker's children, Blanche
and Herschel; she let them
as well as her mother read
her autobiography before it
was published. Nobe object-
ed .to the text.
"My children know that I
was very good to their
father," Carroll declares., "I
think Blanche was rather re-
lieved to read how he'd
treated me, because she's
put up with some of the same
things. I really treated Jack
gently."
Though her mother Contin-
ues to be a devout Catholic,
Carroll doesn't think that
Mom was shocked by the .de-
tailed account of her daugh-
ter's activities, "Because,"
Baker says, "I think she al-
ready suspected or knew
most of it."
"Ben Gazzara will proba-
bly laugh if he reads what I
said about him," she contin-
ues, as well he might! If he.
doesn't laugh, he should at
least feel flattered.
But if Gazzara is presented
as irresistable, Robert Mit-
chum is presented as even
more so.
When he and Baker were
co-starring in "Mr. Moses",
they had adjacent bungalows
in the African bush, and' his
leading lady, though marri-
ed to Garfein at the time,
suffered from uncontrollable
lust.
Observing his physique,
which she remembers as
"nothing less than a marvel
of nature," she was tempted
beyond endurance.
Finally, giving in to what
seemed to be the. inevitable,
Carroll was seriously consid-
ering throwing marital fidel-
ity to the wind. Both hers and
,Mitchum's if possible.
But before she could knock
on her magnetic neighbor's
door, a knock sounded at
hers.
There stood Shirley
MacLaine announcing that
she'd just dropped into
Africa to surprise Bob. He
was surprised, she said.
So was Carroll.
t