Newspaper Page Text
TAUKSDAY, APRIL 19, 1951.
P
.
Mechanized Farm
y oyl LA N
To Be Studied
At College Meet
ceveral hundred Georgia agri
~ultural leaders and farm equip-~
" ont dealers who attend the first
+.rm Mechanization Conference
on the College of Agriculture cam
us here, April 24-25, will have an
P ortunity to study the operation
of a 100-acre farm that has been
completely mechanized, according
to R. H. Driftmier, chairman of
ihe Division of Agricultural En
sincering at the College of Agri
culture and in charge of arrange
ments for the conference.
«puring the April 24 session,”
priftmier stated that, “John R.
Carreker, agricultural engineer at
the Southern Piedmont Conserva-~
tion Experiment Station, Wat
ginsville, will report on the op
eration of a 100-acre mechanized
conservation farm unit at the sta
tion. On this farm the cropping
program is arranged for adequate
conservation benefits. And the op
eration has been completely me
chanized since 1948.” According to
Driftmier, Mr. Carreker will point
out at least seven advantages
of using mechanized equipment
over mule drawn equipment,
These will include:
1. Better , more timely and
quicker land preparation, planting,
fertilizing and cultivation of crops.
9. Time and equipment is avail
ahle to exchange for hire of a
combine, hay baler and power
duster not available on this farm.
3. Time and power are now av
ailable for developing new and
impoving old pastures. °
4 More time for care and hand
ling ‘of livestock.
5 Less fatigue to the farmer and
his family.
6. Increased assurance that the
desired cropping plan can be fol
lowed.
7. Greater net income.
The mechanization conference
is sponsored by the Atlanta Farm
Equipment Club and the Division
of Agricultural Engineering of the
College of Agriculture. All meet
ings will be held in the Conner
Hall Auditorium on the College of
Agriculture campus.
Approximately 20 of this state’s
leading authorities in agriculture
and farm equipment are to appear
on the two-day program.
i i i
COURT REPEATER
LEXINGTON, Ky. — (NEA) —
All-America Bill Spivey of Ken
tucky led Southeastern Conference
basketball players for the seécond
consecutive year with 247 points in
14 games.
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SPIRIT OF SPRING IN ITALY _ Roberto
La Terza, ballet dancer, does a high leap for benefit of watching
tourists in a Terpsichorean welcome to Spring at Brolio, Ifaly.
Dexter, Son Of Clergyman, Takes
Part Of Late Rudolph Yalentino
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK, (AP)—A young
clergyman’s son is perturbed at
the task of enacting the life story
of the screen’s greatest lover—
Rudolph Valentino.
“I feel embarrassed,” admitted
Anthony Dexter.
He feels a little worried, too,
wondering how middle-aged
housewivecs ang their teen-age
daughters will react to his por
trayal of the all-time film sheik.
The film, “Valentino,” produced
by Edward Small for Columbia
pictures, has been a 13-year pro
ject. The studio says Dexter, a
31-year-old stage actor, got the
role over 75,000 candidates.
Dexter, the son, grandson, great
grandson, gnd nephew of clergy
men, was porn in Nebraska and
christened Walter Reinhold Alfred
Frederick Fleischmann. Figuring
that was wo mucn for the average
theater marquee, he changed his
name to Walter Craig. His produc
er changed it again to Anthony
Dexter after signing him for the
Valentino part in 1947.
Studied Valentino
In the years since then Dexter
spent his time studying Valentino
learning tango dancing bull whip
cracking, rencing, “watching polo
and football games and waiting for
the writers to finish a script.”
This also gave-him plenty of
time to grow an elegant pair of
sideburns. The sideburns, long
enough to cover his upper molars,
still make him uneasy. People
stare at them, but as they would
if a 1927 flapper pranced by them.
“Playing the role of a great lov
er—youve got three s@rikeg;
against you before you start,” said
Dexter, a bit morosely. “I am no
more like Valentino than you are.”
I thought this was rathe gracious
of him, as I am more often com
pared to the late Lor Cheney, sr.
Actually Dexter bears quite &
resemblance to Valentino.
“I’m about an inch taller than
he was and weigh ten pounds
more,” he admitted. “But he had
black hair and was darker; he
had an olive complexion. Also he
was a good horseman. I used to
do a little calf riding out of chutes
back in the middlewest, but I
wouldn’t know what to do with
an eastern saddle.”
Valentino died of peritonitis in
1926, Dexter feels the legend has
rather outgrown the man,
“He was a shy, quiet moody
type—worried a lot,” he said. “He
was intelligent and had a good
head on him. The people who used
to work with him say he was
straightforward and cooperative.
He didn’t run around with women.
He was a hell of a good mechanie
and liked to putter around with
motors.”
. But the fans never went to
watch Valentino putter around
with anything but hearts. To the
women of the 1920 s he was a sym
bol of the great romantic lover—
the kind that the Mrs. Babbitts
yearned for at home but didn’t
have.
Dexter Uneasy
And that is the fact that makes
Dexter uneasy.
“FEveryone asks did I take
lessons in how to make love,” he
said. “Of course, 1 didn’t. I did
see some revivals of the old Val
entino movies. He had screen per
sonality, and it is still there. The
women were standing in line to
see him again.
“But the peculiar guality any
person possesses canhot be imi
tated completely. When he dies,
the mold is broken. That is as
true of Valentino as it is of ‘Babe
Ruth.”
And Dexter feels he took a
“terrific gamble” professionally,
because he doesn’t want to be
typed in one kind of role, parti
cularly that of “a greater lover.”
“I feel that if I can please 50
percent of the people who liked
Valentino, I'd be lucky,” he said.
“I’'ve already had a number of
letters from women fans who ad
mired Valentino. They wished me
a happier life than he had.”
Stamps In
Todav’s News
By SYD KRONISH
The U. S. Government has en
tered into an agreement with the
United Nations which will enable
the UN to design, print and sell
its own postage stamps. There will
be eleven denominations from the
1 cent to the $1 for ordinary mail.
Four denominations, from the 6
cents to 25 cents, will be for air
mail. These stamps should be is
sued in July or August.
According to the agreement the
UN stamps will be good only for
letters and parcels sent from the
UN headquarters.
The U. S. posta]‘service will op
erate the post office in the base
ment of the new UN building inl
New York City. The SIBO,OOO in
postage which the UN averages|
annually for its own mail will go |
to the U. S. Postal Service. i
Designs of these new UN stamps |
are now being prepared.
* % *
Formosa has issued a set of four
new stamps commemorating the
establishment of local self govern
ment and popular elections on the
island. The 40 ¢ carmine, $1 blue,
$1.60 violet and $2 brown are of
identical design. They show a hand
placing a ballot in a box. Beneath
that is the head of a smiling For
mosan. These stamps have been
issued under the authority of the
Chiang Kai Shek Government, The
inseription on the stamp states
“Republic of China Postal Admin
istration.” 4
. ¥ &
A new series of Vatican City pos
tage stamps will be issued soon to |
commemorate the “Dogma of the|
Assumption,” proclaimed during
the 1950 Holy Year by Pope Pius.
One of the stamps will show St.
Peter’s Sqguare at the moment)
when the Pope proclaimed the;
Dogma. The scecond stomp wili de- |
pic: St P.ler’s Square throoged
with Pilz.ims and a group of an-
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
gels over the Basilica,
* s 0w
A controversy - in. .the- stamp
world has arisen over the design
of the new U. 8. commemorative
honoring the United Confederate
Veterans, The stamp, which will be
issued at Norfolk, Va., on May 30,
is almost identical with that of the
GAR commemorative of 1949, The
only difference between the two
stamps ig that on one stamp the
words “GAR” appear over the
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| Knuckle Portion or Short Ribs When You Buy AtP's 1o o e TS
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s April 19th through Wed., April 25th, Bag Bag n ‘A -" | , 5 - 4
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hour glass in the upper left corner.
On the recent adhesive the words
“UCV” .will appear.. On. the GAR
stamp the inscription reads “Final
National Encampment of the
GAR.” The new stamp reads
“Final Reunion Unitad Confeder
ate Veterans.”
The group in agreement with
the similarity claims that it is cor
rect for both sides to receive equal
treatment. Their- esmmon bonds
rather than their (ifferences are
cited. 'The other group, in disa=
greement, claims that the Confed
erate stamp 1s a “hand me down."”
A new design, entirely different,
should have been issued, they ar
gue.
s * »
Austria will issue a special
stamp to ocmmemorate the 150th
birthday of Joseph Lanner, fam
ous Viennese composer of waltzes.
A contemporary of Johann Strauss
with whom he collaborated for
many years, Lanner wrote many
waltzes which are still popular to
day. Born April 12, 1801, Lanner
died of typhus on April 14, 1843,
He is buried in Vienna next to the
grave of Strauss who died six
vears later. The design of this
stamp illustrates a likeness of Lan
ner. It is a 60 groschen blue, re
ports the Mercury Stamp Co.
The shells of snails sometimes
spiral out instead of coiling up.
PAGE THIRTEEN
Do FALSE TEETH
Rock, Slide or Slip?
FASTEETH, an improved pow
der to be sprinkled on wupper o
lower plates, holds false teeth mor«
firmly in place. Do not slide, sli
or rock. No gummy, gooey, past
taste or feeling. FASTEETH i:
alkaline (non-acid), Does no
sour., Checks “plate odor” (den
ture breath), Get FASTEETH a
any drug store.