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Show MOVIES Shrinks Hemorrhoids‘ New Way Without Surgery Albert Finney— STOPS ITCH — RELIEVES PAIN | How to Succeed in Show For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve pain—with- 3 out surgery. In case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction } (shrinkage) took place. Most amazing ofall—results were so thorough that sufferers made # astonishing statements like “Piles i; hfve ceased to be a problem!” The secret is a new healing substance (Bio-Dyne®)—discovery of a world-famous research institute. This substance is now available in suppository or ointment form under the name Preparation H®. Ask for it at all drug counters. OE VIOBIN THUD TRU HELPS HEART ACTION GIVES MORE STRENGTH ¢ STAMINA ° VIGOR PROVED 10 years-600 persons University Experiments REFUSE SUBSTITUTES— only VioBin Oil PROVED helpful. Send NOW for FREE book #15 ...¢an rob you of happiness and Re burden on your loved ones. ’t suffer another day before trying DeWitt’s Pills, world famous for analgesic relief. DeWitt’s Pills ease those stabbing pains and help the body work naturally to clear up the cause. iT HE STOCKY young man with tonsured hair and dungarees bowled a wobbling ball down the alley and picked off the 6-9-10 pins. He guttered the nextball. at “Can't do anything right,” he complained, pulling crowd at the hand towel in mock anger. The chattering the Broadway bowling alley ignored his frustration. Albert Finney deserves to be ignored as a bowler, and doing it is hard to take seriously his complaint about not do no anything right. In another world, Finney can wrong, and the crowd clamors to see him perform—both on movie screen and dramatic stage. Many. experts believe the 28-year-old English acting sensation will win an Oscar Monday night for his title even role as the rakish rustic in “Tom Jones,” and he may add a Tony, top award on Broadway, for his portrayal of the religious reformer, “Luther.” The person least concerned about the accuracy of these predictions is likely to be Albert Finney himself. At last a reports, he was blithely ignoring acclaim while on round-the-world voyage in cheerful pursuit of his philoswhat ophyof life: “When I am old, I want to be sorry for I’ve done—not for what I haven’t done.” reThe fun-above-all attitude is not one acquired with for cent successses. When first starring in “Luther,” example, Finney faced opportunities most young actors yearn for: some 20 national magazines and newspapers wanted “profiles”; the nation’s largest weekly magazine asked for a cover portrait; a leading women’s fashion magazine proposed that he be the first man ever to appear on its cover; backers planned an expensive promotion campaign which might assure him the Oscar trophy. Finney ignored them all. “Well,” a bearded fellow actor-bowler explains, “Albie this is busy taking guitar and Greek lessons, and there’s in bowling league, too, you know. Then he likes to sit Downey’s (an actor’s hangout in New York) and quaff a cup and talk a streak. Then there are girls, you know. I suppose he has no time for the by-products of fame.” Finney moreor less agrees, except for the girls. Mar- ried in 1957 to actress Jane Wenham and divorced four years later (one child), he has popped up regularly in the New York gossip columns with a parade of lovelies. in “In England,” he says, grinning lopsidedly, “I fell love three or four times after the divorce. I hate it when I’m notin love. But lately I haven’t been involved. I’m worried.” LBIE FINNEY does not appear to be muchof a worrier. In discussing him, friends dismiss his “worries” as a joke and return most frequently to three characteris- tics: “total lack of acquisitiveness,” “intuition,” and “a This is National Library Week. joyful search for insecurity.” The characteristic “insecurity” provides good insight into how the past has shaped the present Mr. Finney. He is the son of a Lancaster bookmaker, who provided a warm and comfortable homefor his wife and three children in suburban Manchester. As Finney tells it now, home was total security. At school Finney was a disinterested student. Only in athletics and school plays did he feel the sensation of not knowing what would happen next. He enjoyed the sensation. After he flunked a series of university entrance ex- 4 Familg Weekly, April 12, 1964 He may win an Oscar tomorrow, but who cares? Not Albie, whose “search for insecurity” is more important than fame and fortune By JACK RYAN |