Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
“Brilliant Opening of
Newly Renovated
7] Georgian, jan. 22
e (Continued From Page One)
Gold made many friends here and
the beautiful room is fitting trib
ute to his memory.
Among the outstanding improve
ments will be the new Coffee
Shop, which will be done in all
maple furniture, matching the
lovely mew window drapes and
other decorations,
From the basement to the roof,
the hotel has been completely ren
ovated. All furniture, bedding,
plumbing and bathroom fixtures
have been replaced with new and
modernized equipment. New rugs
Jights and soft coloring of walls
and ceilings add to the heauty
and restfulness of the lobby, cor
ridors and rooms.
The work done during the last
gßix months transforms the hotel
into one of the most comfortable
and, at the same time, most mod
ern in the entire South. NO ex
pense has been spared to bring
about the many changes.
Make Reservations
Manager Nelson said reserva
tions for the gala opening should
be made with the hotel at once,
as only a limited number can be
accepted. The affair will he strict
ly formal, with dancing and other
forms of entertainment being en
joyed. While the event had not
been officially announced, Mr.
Nelson has been receiving table
reservations from friends who
knew of the work in advance.
In the late spring, Mr. Nelson
4s considering opening The Tav
ern in the basement of the hotel,
which wil] add another enjoyable
feature for Athenians and fravel
lers.
Expected to be present are John
Ayres, president of the West Vir
ginia Hotel Men's Association and
proprietor of the Huntington, W.
Va., Hotel. Mr., Ayres has many
friends in Athens, where he once
operated the Holman hotel, who
will welcome him on his visit.
Young To Attend
Also attending will be A} Young
president of the Southern Hotel
Men’s Association and operator
of the Virginian Hotel, in Lynch
burg, Va. Mr. Young is also a
director in the Seminole Trail As
sociation.
. @G. Hohand, Danville, Va.,
president of the Seminole 'Trail
Association and proprietor of the
Burton Hotel in Danville, and W.
A. Booth, also of Danville and sec- |
retary of the Trail Assuciatinn.’
will attend.
Among those inviteq are O. W,
Donnell, manager of O'Henry HO-I
tel, Greensboro, N. C.; Barl |
Spence, operator of the King Cot- |
ton Hotel Greenshoro, N. (“'
Frank Hodges, proprietor of the
Franklin Hotel, Spartanburg, 8./
C., and Malcolm Ainsworth, secre- |
tary of the Spartanburg ('hnmlwr!
of Commerce. i
John RBirchmore, manager of the
John C. Calhoun Hotel, Amderson,
8. C., and formerly connected
for many years with the Georgian |
Hotel here and vice president of
the Seminole Trail Association;
Mason Alexander, manager of the
Poinsett Hotel, Greenville, 8. . ‘
Louie Morris, publisher of thel
Hartwell, Ga., Sun and former
president of the Georgia Press As- I
sociation; A. N. Alford, promi
nent Hartwell businessman; Mrs.'
Bloise Hodges, Hartweil; Milton |
Fried, Macon. f
- Many Invited i
Herbert Block, proprietor of |
Hotel Dempsey, Macon; Homce[
Caldwell, manager of the Dania]-i
Ashley Hotel in Valdosta; Bill/
Hastings, manager of the Ansley|
Hotel, Atlanta; L. O. Mosely, of
the Winecoff Hotel; Jim DedJar
nette, of the Henry Grady Hotel;
Jake Abelson, of the Jefferson Ho
tel; Willlam Candler, presjdent of
the Biltmore Hotel; J. G. Bran.
don, of the Piedmont Hotel; Will |
Yon, of the Atlantan Hotel .and |
Grady Callaway, asosciate mana.-!
er of the Robert Fulton Hotel
° Charlie Day, vice president andi
eneral manager of Hote] DeSoto
Savannah; Steve Styron, secremry‘
of the Georgia Hotel Men's As
sociation, Atlanta and Carling
Dinkler, president of the Dinkler
Hotels, Inc.
ECYPT DECIDES TO
JOIN IN PROTEST TO
LEAGUE OF NATIONS
© (Continued ¥rom Page One)
sed an Italian advance into the
Rift valley.)
Some reported continuance* of
aerial maneuvers along the north
ern front dispersing ‘“adversary
groups which again concentrated
on Amba Aradam.
Twelve hundred Alpine troops
were dispatched from Rome to fol
low 6,500 recently sent to Bast
Africa.
TURN T©
WRIGLEY'S
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VI
.i “* Iwt PERFECT GUM
® ——+ AIDS DIGESTION
F -
‘Hauptmann Will Not l
i Come Before Jersey
; Court of Pardons
}
[ (Continuea From Page One)
Iguilt, already have studied most
‘of them.
| Hoffman will delivery to the
court a letter affirming Haupt
mann’s innocense, signed “J. J.
| Faulkner,” a name that has long
' been one of the mysteries of the
lfuur-yea.r old Lindbergh kidnap
tnurder case,
] The name was signed to a de
- posit slip in 1933 when $2,980 of
| the ransom money was put in a
t New York bank,
' The governor sald tne signatures
l(m letter and slip were ‘“similar.”
| He awaited a full report from an
lunidemifi(ed New York handwrit
ing expert to whom he submitted
| the letter,
} “No Crackpot Letter”
| "I don’t know what significance,
if any, there is to the letter,” Hoff
'man said. “It didn’'t sound like a
crackpot letter.”
“As the zero. hour in the Haupt
mann case draws near,” the letter
said, “I feel impelled to direct these
few lines to your excellency in or
der to dispell the pre-conceivea
idea of the guilt of Hauptmann or
rather to sustain and affirm you
in your ewn gnd rightly-so formed
idea of his innocence, x x x
i “All the poor bum is gullty of is
ihln money-madness, which made
[him risk a thousand dollars or so
of his own good money in the be?
lllet and greedy notion that he could
'hy inaepex dently rich and by hid
ing this gheaply acquired hoard he
brought himself into all this trou-
Ible, nearly causing him to lose his
'life, which I hope will now bhbe
spared.”
~ 'The implication was that Haupt
mann had purchased some of the
$60,000 ransom bills as “hot money.”
The letter said the writer coulde
not go into further details “for
personal reasons.”
“As far as (Dr. John H.) Con
don s concerned,” it said, “you
would be well advised to take his
assertions with a grain of salt. He
has reasons.”
Ellis H. Parker, chief of detec
tives of Burlington county wlmJ‘
has expressed the belief that
Happtmann ig innocent, said he hudl
not accepted an opportunity to
question Faulkner because he did)
not regard the man as “important.” |
His identity had been eswbllshed,,
Parker added, althongh other au
thorities said they had been un
able to trace him,
An advertising copy writer nam
ed Jerome K. Faulkner, jumped to
death from an eighth story win
dow of the Chrysler building, New
York, ghortly after Hauptmann was
arrested in September, 1934,
DEMOCRATS MEET i
;
| IN PHILADELPHIA
| (Continued From Page One) 1
‘hall, and a number of other con
cessions. He estimated total \‘:llll"l
of the bid at $250,000 to $300,000, |
l The convention will meet Jumx,i
23, two weeks aflter the I:vpuhli«,
‘cans convene in Cleveland., 'This |
'ia the usual time for both g’lll,]lt‘l’~’
ings. TFor many years the Repub
‘llczms have been meeting first,
By gettihg the convention hall
'fl'ee, the Democrats will be able
‘to use much of the $200,000 as a |
start for their campaign fund.!
They hoped virtually to wipe ulll‘
their $400,000 deficit with receipts
from the Jackson Day dinners,
Although the absence of some
leading Democrats from the Jack
son Day dinner here had emphas
ized discontent within the party,
committee members were encourag- |
ed over the possibility of a united |
party for the coming campaign by l
the committee proeeedings,
Only one voice was misudl
against a resolution reaffirming the
committee's Joyalty to President
Roosevelt and ratifying his ad
ministration. That came from |
Governor Fugene Tamadge, of|
Georgia, who had already hu'n!
counted outside the Roosevelt |
ranks. ‘
NEW FACTS BROUGHT
{
OUT IN HEWITT CASE
(Continued From Page One) i
in Hackensack, N. J., Mrs, Mc-!l
Carter- sald her daughter nearly ,
ran away with a chauffeur four |
years ago.
Through her attorney, Russel]!
Tyler, Miss Hewitt said the chauf
feur incident embraced only shorts
rides about the ERdverwood estate
near Redwood, N. J., and that
there was no romance, 1
Tyler said Mrs. MecCarter left
the girl alone in a large house for |
days at a time and she went for
rides with the chauffeur to hreak '
the monotony of her existence, |
“I'll be glad to help out lilllel
Ann,” Miss Kelly was qouted as
saying in New York. ‘T've writ.
ten a letter tu her jawyer telling
him what a fine little girl she is.
I never thought she was an idict
as her mother séems to think.”
Miss Kelly attended the girl's
father, Peter Cooper Hewitt, be
fore he died in 1821, Jleaving a
trust fund for Miss Hewitt and
her mother which is estimated at
$1,300,000 to $10,000,000. Should
Miss Hewitt die childless, all the
income will revert tg Mrs. Mc-
Carter.
i b eiy
Europe's total number of unem
ployed is estimated to be about 9,-
370,000.
—-—-———-—————"—————‘_‘——_——
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
BY WILLIAMS
THIS 1S UPSIDE DowNs YYOU BET! I've Been
RAOCE TRACK [ savy!lT'LL [(EATIN' TH SAME FARE
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The “Dynamite’’ Arrives!
Easy Changes His Mind!
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
PR e TS SE I R SR e T
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2 EGAD, LAD,CAN YOU TANCY Iy SAY—~TH LAUNDRY
‘b THAT O~THE BANK REFUSING 47X FOUND YOUR SHIRT THEY
|l2 ME A MISERABLE LOAN OF LOST——TH ONE YOU |
| P #25000,T0 FINANCE MY GREAT VALUED AT #7 —
' 7% ELECTRIC LIGHT INVENTION! FAWY-4 SAID THEY WOULDNT
|y (| —DRAT IT~~—WHERE |STHAT 2 BE RESPONSIBLE FOR
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Birossyr MUCKLE-READSASKED ME THRU THEIR
sl THE DETAILS OF MY DRINKING ==y MACHINE. JF
! GLASS ELECTRIC LIGHT BULS, ; AGAN | I
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| FANTASTIC AND NOT 77, SN 7\
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An Old Friend!
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{AND, IF IM ELECTED SUH, IiLL BE ) (WELL,OF N NOW WE CAN'T \SORRY. FOLKS. )
WAITING FOR YOU ON THE COURTHOUSE | | ALL TH! DERN \GO TO MEXICO./BUT THOSE BIAST-:
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1936.
BY AHERN
W . BY COWAN
BY BLOSSE
BY MARTI
By CRANE
By Small