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PAGE EIGHT
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| OMNIBUS
P
|| A FREE RIDE FOR
- EVERYBODY |
“Hats OFf.”
s Marion” . . .
, Bhe's been teaching the first
ferade since she graduated from
f@%‘ , and in that peried she has
S won the love of every one of her
; apils. Today, members of her
{ first classes still look on her with
giithatfl'a»dorlnu glance which few
£ feachers have thrown their way—
f{fl!:ieularl,\' after S 0 many years.
I One vear she was offered the po
';.f?j;ny of principal at one of ¢he
‘; eity schools. After a while, she
" found it interfered with her work,
" and asked to be changed back, so
" she could spend her entire time
teaching the children she loves so
much. The Omnibus driver knows
that there are a lot of Athenians—
_ 4f not all of them—who join him
" ijn removing his hat and tossing a
iwt big bouquet at that soft
. spoken, lady of charm: Miss Mari
~on Bloomfield.
. Trophy To Be
- Awarded Here . . .
. shat silver football in the win
. dow. of Costa’s is to be given to
the most valuable player on Geor
_gla’s 1933 football team, as you I
~ probably already know. The X
_ elub, one of the younger organiza
~ tions on the University campus, is
~ making the award, and the com
" mittee which will select the win
ner is composed of leading sports|
_writers on ithe Atlanta papers:
~ Ralph McGill, of the Constitution;
. Ed., Danforth, of the Georgian;
and Ole Timer (Edwin Camp) of
~ the Journal. Plans are for it to
_ be presented at the annual foot
~ ball banquet to he held shortly be
~ fore Christmag holidays.
Happy Birthday
To You ...
. When C. B. Williams wakes up
~ tomorrow morning his family wm(
be congratulating him, When he‘
. goes to work at Fire Station num- |
~ ber 1, his colleagues there will
~ gongratulate him, toéo. Tt's his
. pirthday, and the Omnibus driver
i wishing him good luck now.
. Mr. Willlams is the only fireman
-on tthe local force, incidentally,
- whose birthday comes in Novem
ber, S
~ International Inspector
~ At Kiwanis Club Tuesday
~ Inspector Shortess of Kiwanis
International will address the
~ meeting of the Kiwanis club (o be
held Tuesday at the Holman hotel
~ at 2 o'clock. This meeting will be
~ in the form of a inter-club gath
~ ering, as members from the Elber
: ton and Commerce clubs will also
~ be present to hear Mr. Shortess,
. District - Governor Dave Parker,
~ well-known to Athenians, will also
~ attend this meeting, and be one of
-the speakers,
You Can Hear The Cons
As Well As The Pros
~The League of Women Voters is
giyipg another of those interesting
Wrxs at the Holman hotel to
; at one oO'clock. The ap
-1 ching bond issue election will
be the main topic and will be dis
cusged pro and con, And that's
the beauty abou; these luncheons,
You are not stampeded into any
opinion. You hear both sides of
the question and the League givey
you credit for following your own
judgment a; the polls instead of
trying (o make you vote for either
side.
B. Y. P. U. Traning
School To Be Held . . .
" The Prince Avenue B. Y, P, U,
will hold a training class all thig
week at the church, beginning to
night. E. 8. Preston, state sec
yetary of the B. Y. P. U, wil
teach the senior group. The firsi
meeting will be thig evening, and
Q‘.l'.membcrs are urged to attend.
| mppy Comeback—
- It bappened in a church in a
nearby community. After a par
ticularly long sermon by the
preacher, his wife sang a solo,
which threatened to be just that
long. After about the sixth verse
and when she was starting on the
seventh, one member of the con
gregation began to fidget. “Sh.
sald his neighbour, “she deserves
_the right to get even with him.”
! .
~ Quiet Week End Is
- Reported By Police;
E po y ’
g »
- Still Is Captured
e B o bl i
A quiet week-end was recorded
£ on the docket at Police headquar-
E ters with a total of enly twenty
¢ four arrests: seven for disorderly
¢ conduct, nine for drunkenness,
four for gambling, and four for
i ffic violations. ‘
\ ial was waived by Otis E.
ark, arrested by Federal agents
Bfor violation of ‘the National Pro
hibition law in Franklin county, it
{ was announced today. Bond was |
. set st SI.OOO. |
¢ Clark was arrested in a raid
& maade by C. C. Plamplin, J. R.
Emmsey, W. A. Crowe, David
§ Ayres, W, C. Grubbs, ana J. 0.
[ Btewart on a still in Gum Log dis
;"! et. Friday. A 60-gallon copper
. &till, 5,000 gallons of corn mash in
© 101 barrels or “fermenters”, 119
. gallons of liquor, and 18 cases of
_ frujs jars were taken in this raid,
. Deputy-clerk V. G. Hawkins said..
. A tan coat, left in a window op
. Clayton street by someone attend
;hfi the Barn dance Saturday night
.is being held by Chief of Police
_ Beagraves. The owner can-get it
! |
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(Drawn by Don Lavin from data in the Paris L’lllustration.) |
For a 200-mile stretch north of the Vosges, France's border is defended by the Maginot Line, a system of permanent fortifications like :
a glorified underground trench system with all modern improvements. The above drawing, though not intended to be exact in detail or to |
show any particular fortification, gives a graphic idea of the magnitude of the work. |
I—Main entrance to Wworks,
reached by sunken road.
9—Air ehamber or lock enabling
high atmospheric pressure to be
4—Series of “‘bulkheads” in pas
3—Village. Inhabitants specially
trained to man nearby defenses.
4—Series of “bulkheads” ni pas
(By NEA Service.)
PARlS.—Armistice Day, 1983,
gees France’s eastern border once
again a line of trenches.
But what trenches! Not the sod
den thread of trenches that saved
France 15 years ago—the system
‘ot dugouts, bombproofs, communi
cating and support trenches dug in
|thc bare earth, which the World
war soldier developed literally un
der fire. |
The doughboy who lokos back
today to Flanders or Aisne-Marne
never would recognize the system'
of “trenches de luxe” by whlch]
France today is covering the vital
spots of her exposed frontier,
Secrets Quarded
Deep mystery in construction of
these new fortifications, which has‘
surrounded them constantly since!
they were begun in 1925, has been |
lifted partially. Naturally, details
of military value still are guarded
jeaously, and ‘“spy scares” repeat
:edly have foiled alien efforts tul
penetrate their details.
But the general lines of such de- |
fonses now arve clear. The under-i
ground mazes have no cuumerpurti
in the wrold, {
Typical of such complicated |
works is the “Maginot Line,” which
protects for 200 miles the vital in
dustrial region of Briey, north of
Vosges and op}{oslte the disputed'
Saar basin, It is named for M]
Andre Maginot, the late war min
ister, who was cative in conceiv-]
ing and building them. l
Here, invisible and sunk beneath
the rolling and wooded terrain liké]
a great mining project, are tre
mendous works which no one but!
the French military have seen. 1
Far-Flung Network ‘
Perhaps here and there among'
the hills & wandering peasant has
been ordered away from a mush
room-like turret, or a new road or
concrete entrance like that of a
mine shaft has barred the curi
uos.
But the steel and reinforced con
crete casemates are not just scat
tered helter-skelter through the
hills. They are lined up with one
another to give mutual protection
by crossfire, and are interconnected
by a series of tunnels and galler
jies far below the ground-—far
enough to be safe from either high
explosive shells or aerial bombs.
All the key positions are buried
deep in the bowels of the hills.
Living quarters, magazines, stores,
power stations, contrel posth, and
machinery are out of reach of any
known means of attack. |
Millions Spent
Something like $150,000,000 has |
gone into these elaborate forts,
which are of course purely do-l
't’ensi\'(- in nature. |
Near each sector of these de-|
senses, permanent posts of French !
regulars have Dbeen established. |
But, in addition, the conscripts ufl
‘the neighboring villages have been
ftrainod to take their places as n--é
serves in the works on very short |
notice. 1
Thus mobilization is speeded up, |
specialization of work, and the in- |
centive of local defense are all!
added to effectvieness of the forts. |
It is Dbelieved that within a few |
hours the frontier along the lines|
of new fortifications could bel
closed and sealed. |
Proof Against Gas J
The approach to one of these|
forts usually is by a sunken road!
leading to a concrete-walled «n-“
trance similar to that of a mine. |
The passages within are barred by |
a series of steel doors, so that even |
if the entrance should be forced |
or destroyved, successive sectors of |
the galleries could be defended |
one after another. i
In some cases the galleries andi
——-—-_—_______t’
|
READ |
BANNER-HERALD
; |
-~ WANT ADS
e *J {
sage as defense if entrance is in
vaded.
f—Casemate, or “pillbox fort”
projecting above ground,
6—Elevator and stairs in tower
giving access to casemate, i
7—Casemate.
B§—Widened assembly chamber
in gallery.
e e e e
the passages have been sealed air«
tight, with means provided both
for artificial wventilation and for
raising the air pressure slightly
above that of the outside.
This would provide an effective
‘defense against gas of all kinds, it
‘is expected, for gas could not enter
an area where the air pressure
'was higher than that of the free
’gas outside.
i Artillery Fire Defied
The labbyrinth of galleries and
!passages underlies the whole sys
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the cigarette thats MILDER - the cigarctte that TASTES BETTER =2
D : : :'S . % : 1 OBACCO Co.
© 1933, Licgerr & Myeaes iob
9—Steel partition doors. ,
‘ 10—Central kitchen. 1
11—Sleeping quarters. ,
12-—Magazine, 1‘
13—Control room, governing air
pressure, heat, electrical wiring,
ete. |
14--Power plant,
15—-Steel partition doors.
tem. , Here it widens out into an
assembly room like a subway sta
tion. Passages lead to Kkitchens,
power plants, contrel rooms, sup
ply departments, barracks.
Here and there are the rooms
containing elevators and stairways
leading through a tower to the
casemate poking its nose out at
ground level. Small railways car
ry ammunition to the hoists lead
ing up to the casemates, just as
the hoists supply ammunition to
the turrets of a battleship.
l The casemates themselves, heav
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
16—Gallery “leading to casemate |
tower.
17—Casemate of concrete over-l
laid with steel armorplate, and |
containing quick firing guns. l
¢ 18—Ammunition hoist. {
19—Minijature railroad to ttans- !
port ammunition, |
20—Casemate. {
ily constructed of armorplate aud%
reinforced concrete yards in thick-‘
ness, are believed proof against(
any known kind of artillery fire,
while of course their guns are able,i
to lay down a deadly fire over the |
‘accurately ranged ground bef(n'e;
them? |
No country in the world has so!
complete or elaborate a system of |
border fortificationl as the French, |
and their secrecy in constructing |
it seems well justified by the nov- ]
elty and apparent effectiveness of |
‘the system, !
E ‘
WILL DANCE HEREi
Eminent Dancer to Ap
; 5 gt
pear in Recital At Uni
versity Next Month.
Ted Shawn, considered by~ erit
ice America’s foremost male dan
cer, will appear in Athens on Dec
ember 7, under the auspices of the
Dance Club of the University of
Georgia, Mrs. Mary Ella Lunday
Soule, head of tße Physical Edu
cation department, announces, He
will be assisted by six men dan
cers whom he has trained him
self, and the performance will be
given in the Physical Education
puilding, on the College of Agricul
ture campus,
During his twenty years of danc
ing, Mr. Shawn has made a care
ful .study of what .is masculine and
what is feminine in movement,
and on this information has built
the dances of his male ensemble.
Rhythms of labor and sports are
used, strongly rhythmed music,
powerful in dynamics, and clear
and direct in its emotional color
ing. As a result, he successfully
proves that dancing by men is the
antithesis of effeminate.
Great variety is found in the
program. Primitive dances, dances
on religious themes, humorous
numbers, and “music visualiza
tions” of great classic composers
make it up. Among the most pop
ular ones are the Spanish dances.
. Mr. Shawn is the subject of a
ire('om book, “Shawn, the Dancer”
' by Katherine S. Dreier, published
!b_\' A. S. Barnes and Company. It
| contains 80 pictures of this great
‘d:m(rm-, a biographical sketch, and
i('ontrilmti(ms from Dr. Hans Hil
{dpm';mdt. professor of Art in the
!Swu;;:u‘t Institute of Technology,
tand Dr. Niedecken-Gebhardt, art
| director of the Metropolitan Op
! era House, New York,
\ e e e e—————t e g
- COUGHS
| Don’t let them get a strangle
{hold. Fight germs quickly. Creo
i mulsion combines the 7 best helps
{'known to modern science. Power
| ful but harmless. Pleasant to take.
|No nareptics. Your own druggist
| is authorized to refund your money
lon the spot if your cough or cold
{is not reliéved by Creomulsion.
| s T RAYY)
Large Group Goes
To Sunday School
' .
- And Bible Classes
Athens went to Sunday school
in a big way this week-end with
over three thousand people attend
ing classes.’ The First Methodist
led the number of those present
with 637 members, followed by the
First - Baptist, with 599 and the
Prince Avenue Baptist with 425.
Tetal attendance at the other
churches was as follows: First
Christian, 191; East Athens Bap
tist, 187; Oconee Street Methodist,
183; Young Harris Methodist, 178;
and West End Baptist, 98.
The First Baptist Men's Bible
class had 102 present, with 78
women to balance that, while the
First Methodisy Men's class had
78 present, with 80 women in the
other class, Eighty-six men and
68 women attended Bible classes
Swagger Suits
$11.90
J. C. PENNEY (0. i
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1933
lat the Prince Avenye Bapt st
| church,
i Figures for other Bible clas ey
{ show Young Harris Methodist; 3
imvn and 49 women; Oconee Stree
M‘-:pn(liht: 31 men and 26 women
| First Christian: 24 men anq 3
| women; Easty Athens Baptist ,
| men and 54 women; and West Epg
tl‘.:xplifl. 16 men,
Sttt bl bl S
|
{ ‘.C
{
| ,
'Eases Headache
| .
- In 3 Minutes
‘also neuraigia, muscular aches
\and pains, toothache, earache,
| periodical and other pains due
|to inorganic causes. No nar.
jcotics. 10c and 25c packages,