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SENATE HAS BILL
RESTRICTING
MARRIAGES
Copeland’s Measure Provides
Medical Examination and
Shuts Out Dope Fiends.
Rigid medical examination as a pre
requisite to marriage and prohibition of
marriages of drug and alcoholic habit
uates persons afflicted with heredi
tary diseases or lunatic taints, is pro
vi(jed in a bill introduced in the state
senate today by Senator E. A. Copeland,
o j t h e Nineteenth district.
The author of the measure, although
aware of the fact that it can not pass
the legislature, is confident that mar
rjage reform along some similar line
„. in eventually be considered by Geor
gia lawmakers.
“Some one has got to do the mission
ary work necessary to awaken the peo
ple to realization of the necessity of
medical marriage law's and 1 might
lust as well be the one to do it,” said
Senator Copeland, in explaining his
The machinery of the bill Is elaborate
and the opinion of the majority of the
senate seemed to be that the measure
would be defeated. The prime objec
tion to the bill seemed to be that it
was considered an interference with
personal liberty that would not be tol
erated bv the general public.
What the Bill Provides.
The bill provides:
A commission of three members;
one a physician appointed by the
judge of superior court. This com
mission is to make a physical ex
amination of all persons seeking to
marry.
Declaration of intention to mar
ry shall be made to the ordinary' of
county at least 30 days before such
marriage is contemplated. Upon
such declaration tire ordinary shall
require Information as to the pa
rents and grandparents of the mar
riage parties before issuing a mar
riage license.
Persons, addicted to the use of
alcohol or drugs, affected with or
having transmissible taints of dis
ease or insanity shall be denied a
marriage license.
Senator Copeland asserted that sev
eral states and at least one foreign gov
ernment —Germany—had enacted laws
along tills line. His bill, he maintain
ed. included the best features of a res
olution recently' adopted by the Amer
ican Nfedlcal association.
The senate confirmed the following
nominations made by Governor Brown
Appointments Confirmed.
P. C. King, of the county of Clay, to
be solicitor of the city court of Fort
Gaines for a term of two years from
August 27. 1911.
' S. Burkhalter to be solicitor of the
county court of Clinch for a term of
two years from October 28. 1911.
Roger L Gamble, of the county of
Jefferson, to be judge of the city court
of Louisville for a term of two years
from November 1. 1911.
John R. Phillips, of the county of
Jefferson, to be solicitor of the city
court of Louisville for a term of two
years from November 1. 1911.
E C. Elmore, of the county of Bryan,
to be judge of the city court of Pem
broke from September 28. 1911, until
January 1, 1913.
J P. Dukes to be solicitor of the city
court of Pembroke from September 28.
1911. until January' 1, 1913.
T G. Ham to be Judge of the county
court of Echols from April-23, 1912, un
til his successor is elected and quali
fied.
R. O. Jackson to be judge of the
countv court of Henry for a term of
two years from December 1, 1912.
Pau! Turner to be solicitor of the
county court of Henry' for a term of
two years from December 1, 1912.
Mrs. Maude Barker Cobb, of the
county of Fulton, to be state librarian
for a term of four years from June 26,
1912.
The senate adjourned at noon until
Monday at 11 o’clock,
Tippins Bill Read
First Time in Senate
The Alexander-Tippins bill was read
in the senate for the first time today
and referred to the temperance com
mittee of which Senator I. A. Bush,
the prohibition leader of the senate, is
chairman.
>o meeting of the temperance com
mittee is expected before next week
and call for the meeting will not be
made until Monday. The bill will be
railroaded through the committee and
come to the senate with a favorable re
port.
iny quantity of amendments likely
rill be submitted both in committee
and on the floor of the upper house.
County Attorney
Bill Is Opposed
Mr Fullbright, of Burk, opened one
of the hardest fights of the session this
c orning when house bill No. 19 was
' 1 led up for passage under a favorable
t' port from the committee on amend
ments to the constitution.
This bill provides for the abolition of
’ “ office of solicitor general in Georgia,
' amendment, ami the
• institution therefor of prosecuting
a'torneys in the various counties, on a
salary basis.
the law now stands, solicitors are
e.ect-d by judicial circuits and serve
| Is It an Insult To Be •
• Called a Bull Moose? •
• __— «
• HAMMOND. IND., July 12.- •
• When a man is called a "Bull •
® Moose" is he insulted? That is the •
• question Indiana courts have been •
• called upon to decide. •
• John Banks and Charles Ander- *
• son, ofr Delaware, engaged in a •
• fight because Banks called Ander- •
• son a Bull Moose. •
• "I don't allow any man to call •
• me such names;” said Anderson. •
• and sailed into Banks. Police ar- •
• rested the belligerents. *
• •
Li ON EXCESS
RUE HELD VALID
Supreme Court Grants New
Trial of Suit for Overcharge
on Central Railroad,
The state supreme court today held
constitutional the law providing a fine
of SI,OOO per offense to railroads charg
ing more than the legal passenger rate
on through fares over connecting lines.
The decision was reached in the case
of William Stephens, of Whitesburg.
Carroll countyi who had sued the Cen
tral of Georgia railroad for $2,000 for
refusing to sell him a through ticket
to Atlanta byway of Newnan over the
Atlanta and West Point railroad for
$1.06. The lower court had ruled
against Stephens, but the high tribunal
assigned the case for new trial.
The fare from Whitesburg to New
nan over the Central is 28 cents and
from Newnan to Atlanta 78 cents. The
Central’s agent at Whitesburg required
Stephens to pay $1.21, or 15 cents extra,
for the through ticket.
The law', which the court held to be
good, requires railroad companies to
observe the railroad commission
tariff on through tickets over lines with
which they connect directly or Indi
rectly. The penalty for failure to ob
serve this law is SI,OOO,
STOVEMAKERS TO MEET.
P.OME, GA., July' 12.- —The Southern
Stove Manufacturers association con
vention will be held in Rome July' 17.
and will bring a large number of vis
itors here. A barbecue and boat ride
down the Coosa river are among the
entertainments planned by the local
stove men for the guests.
from one to ten counties. They get a
small salary from the state, but the
greater part of their compensation
comes from the forfeitures and fines
brought into the county treasuries un
der a fee system.
The proposed new law seeks to es
tablish the office of county prosecuting
attorney in every' county of the state
for service in all courts, without com
pensation from the state, to be elected
by the people and to receive a salary of
not more than $5,000 per annum in any
event, and as much less as the county
authorities may' determine from the
county' treasuries
Fines to General County Funds,
All fines and forfeitures brought into
the treasuries by the county attorneys
In excess of their salaries shall go into
the general county funds, and unless
the county attorneys bring Into the
treasuries sufficient funds to pay their
salaries, through fines and forfeitures,
they shall receive only' such propor
tion of their salaries as they do bring
in.
This bill, in the main, seems likely
to find much favor in the house, but it
will not pass, in all probability.
The fight begun today likely' will end
eventually with the enactment of a
law putting Georgia s prosecuting offi
cers generally on a strict salary' basis.
Mr. Fredericks, of Macon, under a
request for unanimous consent, had his
bill permitting the icing of fruit cars
on Sunday In this state read a second
time today.
In briefly discussing his bill. Mr.
Fredericks read some figures from a re
port of the fruit exchange, showing
that for the first three days of one
week this season 750 cars of high-grade
peaches were shipped out of Georgia,
valued at SIIB,OOO.
The bill was passed to a third read
ing without opposition,
A resolution of Mr. Johnson, of Bar
tow. was adopted In the house inviting
Harvey Jordan to address the house of
representatives in the eapitol next
Tuesday afternoon al 4 o’clock on the
subject. “European Rural Credits."
Mr. Jordan is a former president of
the Georgia Cotton Growers associa
tion and is a recognized authority on
banking and kindred subjects.
CRIMINAL COURT WEDNESDAY.
Contrary to former announcements.
Judge Calhoun will open a session of the
criminal court of Atlanta next Wednes
day. when a number of Jail cases will be
heard. The decision was made today
when It became known that the number
of prisoners confined In the city jail has
grown in such proportions that a disposi
tion of many of them will have to he
made to allow room for the daily arrests
by the police.
Under a cleverly conducted, but not
particularly illuminating, filibuster at
the hands of Mr. Wohlwender. of Mus.
cogee, the bill went over as unfinished
business until Monday.
Mr. Wohlwender favors tne bill, but
was afraid jo trust it to a vote today,
hence he held the floor from 12:10 until
the hour of adjournment, addressing
himself eloquently to the merits of
country boys and their superiority over
town boys, without particular refer
ence to the measure under considera
tion.
jHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS FRIDAY. JULY 12. 1912.
J] Dauahters of Dixie in Business Life
LEARN HOW TO EARN YOUR LIVING,
WOMAN IN BANK URGES ALL GIRLS
Mrs, Ella Wright Wilcox, Ex
pert Teller, Says All Young
Women Should Save.
Mrs. Ella Wright Wilcox, the former
Augusta society girl who has become
teller in the savings department of the
Fourth National bank, is bringing up
her little daughter so that if it ever
becomes necessary the child will be
able to run either a boa-ding house or
a bank.
"1 think those two arts are things
that every woman ought to know." she
explained. “And, seriously, I think it
requires Just as great ability' to suc
cessfully conduct the boarding house
as it takes to run a bank.”
Mrs Wilcox has had experience in
both. When, a widow, she came to
Atlanta from her family home in Au
gusta three years ago she faced the
necessity of making a livelihood foi
herself and daughter and she solved it
first byway of the boarding house.
She made a success of it, but she ad
mits |.hat she found ft far from a
"snap."
"When the great majority of un
trained women find themselves in the
position of having to make their own
living they, go in taking boarders,” she
said. "They seem to think, as 1 did.
that, that is a very simple way of gar
nering the pot of gold. Well, it isn’t
by any' manner of means. I’ve got. a
tremendous respect for a woman who j
has made a successful landlady.
Landlady Must Be Financier.
"If she’s come, out even at that busi
ness it means that she Is not only a
competent cook, but a financier. 1
think it takes more mathematics to run
a money-making boarding house than
it takes to run a store.
“That’s a reason that every giri
ought to be taught the science. No
girl can tell how soon she’ll, be thrown
upon her own resources and she'll fall
nine times out of ten unless she has
been practically taught how to make
money keeping house.
■ “And along with that art parents
ought to teach their children to be
amateur bankers. I don’t mean to buy
the child a toy bank made of nickel
with a little slit in the roof to put the
pennies in. I mean that a girl should
be made to earn some money of her
own, bank it in a real bank, keep her
own accounts, even make investments.
“Now. I’ve only been teller in the
savings department at the Fourth Na
tional for about three weeks, but in
that little time I know it has given
me the moat valuable experience and
insight into human nature J have ever
known. It has proved to me that wom
an is more thrifty than man I've
never footed It up exactly, but I know
that in our savings department the
women are giving in more money than
the men. I think they’re more con
sistent savers: that they' put by a
greater proportion of what they earn,
and that they can better resist the
temptation to spend Os course. I'm
talking about the. average woman now.
Faith in Women Grows.
“My' faith in women as practical
•Americans has bounded up tremen
dously’ since I’ve been at the teller’s
•window. The worst trouble is that
most of them haven’t been practically
trained."
Incidentally, Mrs. Wilcox, who comes
■from the famous Wright family of Au
gusta, is not the only woman of her
■home to enter business. Her sister,
Annie Gregg Wright, is employed al
the strong boxes erf the Mutual Benefit
Company In Augusta Her success
equals her sister’s in Atlanta. At the
Fourth National the officers say that
■Mrs. Wilcox's acquisition has been a
real stroke of luck for the bank. She
handles between three and five thou
sand dollars every day and she admits
pride, in the fact that her row of fle-ures
has never shown a penny’s error since
■she took the place.
DAMAGE SUIT FOR $50,000
FOLLOWS DALTON WRECK
CALHOUN, GA.. July 12.—Several
largo damage suits are resulting from
the recent wreck of the Calhoun picnic
train, near Dalton. Efforts to settle
some of the more serious cases have
been unsuccessful. John W. Ray,
whose wife received a broken back
which caused her death, has filed suit
for $50,000 through a law firm of At
lanta. it is rumored that another suit
for $40,000 will be filed in a few days.
There are still about 30 claims unset
tled.
RECEIVER FOR SUBSIDIARY
OF NIALL-HERIN COMPANY
The Atlanta Pole and Novelty Company,
a subsidiary company of the Niall-Herin
Company, has been placed in the hands
of Receiver T. J. I’eeples, the same re
ceiver appointed for Ntali-Herin Com
pany The petition asking for the com
pany to be declared bankrupt was filed In
the Federal court today.
The following are the petitioners and
the amounts they claim: Atlanta Paper
Company, $82.03; Pittsburgh Plate Glass
Company, $28.84. and the Nfall-Herln
Company, by T. J. Peeples, receiver, over
$5,000 The assets of the company are
said to be $15,000.
NOTIFIES HIS FRIENDS,
THEN COMMITS SUICIDE
MEDFORD. N. J.. July 12.—Making
his intentions known to his friends In
order that he might be regarded as a
man of unsound mind, Joseph Bennett.
63 year? old. ended his life sometime
during the night by Jumping into the
Rancocas creek. His body was recov
ered and a burial permit was it sued by
t'orener Belton, of M'torestown
Bennett told friends he did not care
to live owing to his poor health.
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Mrs. Ella Wright Wilcox, baoli teller, who gives valuable
business advice tn girls.
ATLANTA WOMAN BANKER'S
ADVICE ON TRAINING GIRLS
Evert sir! should be so trained that she will be able to help
run a bank or a boarding house.
Teach your child to be an amateur banker.
Woman is more thrifty than man.
A girl should know how to earn her own livelihood.
It takes as much ability to run a boarding house as a bank.
pjla Wright Wilcox, Teller in Fourth National
Hauk.
ALL DENVER MOURNS
SARAH PLATT DECKER;
THRONGS AT FUNERAL
DENVER, COL., July 12.—Funeral
services for Mrs. Sarah Platt Decker
were held this afternoon at St, Johns
Episcopal cathedral, where the body
was viewed by hundreds for two hours
before the services. All flags in the
city were at half mast during the day
and all public offices closed for the aft
ernoon. The dean of the cathedral, for
the first time in 40 years, departed from
the church service and pronounced an
eulogy of the dead.
Former governors were among the
honorary pallbearers and a guard of
honor was composed of past presidents
of the women's club, all members of
which wore mourning bands with the
club colors.
After the cathedral services all the
flowers sent by friends were delivered
to the county hospital and the Critten
ton home, in each of which Mrs. Decker
had been interested.
BURGLAR ROBS STORE IN
PRESENCE OF PROPRIETOR
ROME, GA., July 12. Hold up your
hands and keep quiet.” thundered an
unknown man in J. B. Porter's store at
Silver Creak, when Mr. Porter, awak
ened by a noise in his store room, went
there to investigate.
Held at bay, Mr. Porter could do
nothing, and the burglar proceeded to
help himself to everything lie wanted.
Backing out the window through which
he had gained an entrance, the ma
rauder hastened away and disappeared
up the Southern railway. Officers are
looking for him.
STATE TROOPS SENT TO
TAKE DOUBLE SLAYER
SAYLERSVILLE. KV July 12.
State troops have been sent hero at
the request of county authorities to
restore order and make arrests follow
ing a double murder Sunday in the up
per part of the county. Bud Collins
shot and killed two brothers named
Bailey and wa.- hirn.-elf shot and
yvounded by another brother. Collins
in biding with rolaU'"'! who defy
officers to arrest him.
COURT’S INJUNCTION
COMPELS CATTLE TO
SEEK NEW PASTURES
Judge Pendleton of superior court
has ordered twenty cows to remain off
the land of a farmer near Atlanta. The
command was made indirectly to them
through R. O. Rivers, their owner.
Victor E. Lambert, who lives on
South Boulevard near the city limits,
was granted an injunction today
through which Mr. Rivers Is ordered
to prevent, his cows from trespassing
on the lands of the plaintiff.
Lambert asserted the cows had been
allowed to run on his property and that
when he complained to Mr. Rivers the
latter became highly Indignant.
MILLIONAIRE BROWN CUTS
OFF SON WITH THOUSAND
BOSTON, MASS.. July 12.—Samuel
Newell Brown, a millionaire, who died
a few days ago at Swampscott in a will
made public, leaves his wealth to his
wife of a year, who was Miss Charlotte
Thompson Ames, and cuts off his son.
Harold Haskell’Brown with SI,OOO. The
will says:
I have already paid to him (meaning
his son Harold) a considerable sum and
there will be due to him at my death a
further sum of life insurance. One-tenth
of the estate which I bequeath to my
■vlfe is to go t" charity. She is not to
be accountable to any one for her .ac
tions In giving that money."
BOY OF TWELVE SAVES
LIFE OF CHILD IN SURF
NEXV YORK. July 12.-—Twelve-year
old Harry Melloy, whose parents occu
py a cottage at Bergen Beach, saved
eleven-year-old Charles Dockman. of
Brooklyn, from drowning at the immi
nent risk of hia own life. The. Dock
man lad was attacked by cramps and
his cries for help were heard by more
than 5,000 people on the boardwalk and
by the life-saving guards.
But before any of these people could
get to young Dockman little Harry
Molloy ran into the water with his
clothes on and ?want out to where
Docktnan tvas struggling Just as the
latter was going down for the third
time young Melloy grabbed him. and,
troarfinw u waited for the lifeboat.
CITY PLANT PLAN
AGAIN IN BALANCE
Fate of Project Rests With the
Decision of Mayor Winn and
Attorney Ellis.
• Indications today were that the New'
York Destructor Company will not
build a garbage disposal and electric
power plant for the city. With the
whole proposition hinging on a deci
sion of Mayor Winn and W. D. Ellis,
assistant city attorney, plans for dis
posal of garbage in Atlanta threatened
to become as unsettled as they ever
were.
The Destructor Company will not ac
cept the city’s moral obligation for all
but $50,000 of the $376,000 cost of hte
plant, as its representative promised
when the council offered It the con
tract. The company wants to retain
the title to the plant and have charge
of its operation until it is paid for.
Mayor Winn and Mr. Ellis refuse to
grant these concessions, declaring that
all the burden is placed on the city. If
the plant should fail to operate, the city
would be forced to sue t+ie bondsman.
If the city owned the plant and trouble
arose, the company would rightfully
become the plaintiff
The finance committee referred the
matter yesterday afternoon. It will
meet again tonight to hear a report
from the mayor and the assistant city
attorney.
The Destructor Company’s represen
tatives seem confident that the city
can not forfeit its $37,000 certified check
of good faith on account of amend
ments that flXve already been made in
the contract. It can’t get the contract
undet written unless some legal claim to
the plant Is granted. The representa
tives have declared their company can
not build the plant unless the council
does what they ask.
LEGAL REFORM THEME
AT ALABAMA BAR MEET
MONTGOMERY. ALA.. July 12.—With
an attendance of about 150 lawyers from
all sections of the state, the annual con
vention of the Alabama State Bar asso
ciation began here today at the eapitol.
The first order of business was the ad
dress of the president. Judge John Pel
ham, who discussed reform and revision
of the Judicial system of Alabama.
“The pending revolution” w'as the
subject for opposition to the initiative,
referendum and recall, by Colonel Al
fred P. Thom, of Washington, D. C„
general counsel of the Southern railway
in the principal address delivered be
fore the association at noon today.
In his address to be delivered before
the association Governor O’Neal will take
up the fee system and the practice of
sheriffs of Jefferson county employing
special deputies for corporations at Bir
mingham The executive's subject will be
"Law Reform.”
TWO ATLANTA FUGITIVES
TAKEN £N_BI RM, NGHAM
City Detective Norris returned last
night from Birmingham with two prison
ers. E. A. Watson, an insurance man of
the Alabama city, and L. J Stublefield,
an express messenger, of Fort Worth,
Tex. Watson Is wanted on an indict
ment for embezzlement, being accused of
misappropriating funds of the New York
Life Insurance Company. The amount
involved si small Stublefield is accused
of having passed a number of worthless
checks.
TWO WOMEN KILLED AND
DOZEN HURT IN CAR PANIC
MEMPHIS. TENN., July 12.—Two
women were killed and twmlve other
passengers injured, two fatally, when
a fuse in a Vance avenue street car
blew out today, causing a. panic on the
car. The accident occurred when the
crowded car was coming down town.
MAN IS MADE DEAF
BY SHOCK OF LIGHTNING
GAS CITY. IND., July 13.—Glen Fi
field was made deaf and Frank Kurtz
was knocked unconscious when light
ning struck near them.
POSTOFFICE SAFE BLOWN.
UTICA. N. Y., July 13.—The postof
flee at Clayville, four miles south of
this city, was «entered early today, the
safe blown open and SI,OOO worth of
stamps, SIOO in money and»a number
of pieces of registered mall was stolen.
HOW POOR ARE YOU?
HHHHHHHHI Don’t yon feel dejected and dis
couraged when you see an old
schoolmate driving to his office in
his big automobile? Whose fault
is it ? Weren’t yor chances equal?
Couldn't you save even SI.OO a
week? By saving, couldn’t you
have forced people to place their
faith in your common sense and
responsibility? Wouldn't you feel
lots more prosperous today if you
had saved just a little bit of your
weekly salary ?
Interest is paid on Savings at the
FULTON
NATIONAL BANK
Ml EMPIRE BUINDING H
FELDER RGGUSES
STENOGRAPHER
OF FORGERY H
Atlanta Lawyer Declares F. H«
Crauss Wrote “T. B.” Let
ter to “Hub” Evans.
AUGUSTA, GA., July 12.—With De
tective William J. Burns, of McNamara
fame, as a star witness, the special
investigating committee of the South
Carolina legislature, probing the old
state dispensary system, began a hear
ing here today, called primarily to take
the testimony of Thomas B. Felder,
the Atlanta attorney, who represented
the commission that w'ound up the dis
pensary affairs.
Colonel Felder’s testimony was only
partly finished at 2:10 o’clock this aft
ernoon, when the hearing was adjourn
ed until 3:30 o’clock. Detective Burns
is expected to take the stand later this
afternoon, after Colonel Felder con
cludes.
The principal feature of Colonel Fel
der’s testimony was that F. H. Crauss,
a former stenographer and chief clerk
in the office of Anderson, Felder, Roun
tree & Wilson, of Atlanta, in 1904, W'as
guilty of several forgeries and w»as
short several thousand dollars in
accounts. Crauss, he said, was a splen
did imitator of handwriting and forged
the famous “T. B.” letter which Felder
in charged with writing to “Hub” Ev
ans, inviting him to go into a scheme
with him to make some money tn the
South Carolina dispensary.
Felder read an affidavit from D. W.
Rountree to the effect that Crauss had
stolen from the firm and that he was
several thousand dollars short. Felder
said Crauss went to Newberry and
forged the “T. B." letter. He said that
he intended to prove that “Blease is an
assassin.”
Colonel Felder charged that Hub
Evans and Cole L. Blease, then attor
ney for Evans and now governor of
South Carolina, went to Atlanta and
secured $4,000 each, in SI,OOO bills, from
Monroe Bigot, of that city, as whisky
rebates, as Evans, so Felder said, pre
ferred to have the money rather than
get checks. He also said that in his
(Felder's) Atlanta law office, Evans
was to make a confession to him and
to Attorney General Lyon on the con
dition that he be granted immunity
from punishment and not be forced to
testify in any of the other graft cases,
but that General Lyon refused to grant
immunity unless Evans would go on
the stand in the other cases.
The hearing will probably last
through Saturday.
Shows How Dictograph Works,
Before Colonel Felder took the stand,
E F. Reed, one of Detective Burns’
operatives, made a demonstration of
the use of the dictagraph. Members of
the investigating committee talked and
listened in different rooms. They were
much interested in the demonstration.
It is expected Detective Burns will ore
sent dictograph evidence.
The hearing was opened at 10:5C
o'clock and a recess was taken until
noon, at Colonel Felder’s request, he
announcing that Detective Bums would
arrive at 11:30 o’clock and that he de
sired to Introduce the sleuth as a wit
ness. He intimated that the Burns tes
timony would be sensational.
| DEATHS AND FUNERALS
Mrs. Harriet Trader.
Mrs Harriet Trader, of 94 Spring
street, who died at her home late yes
terday, was buried in Hollywood cem
etery today. The funeral services weri
held at Poole’s chapel. Mrs. Trade!
is survived by four children, J. A.
Trader, Mrs, K. B. Simon, Mrs. J. L
Weeks and Mrs. Hattie E. Dove.
Mrs, Francis Garrett.
Mrs. Francis Garrett, of Chattanoo
ga. Tenn., daughter of Mr. and Mrs
J. B Peavy, of 264 East avenue, wh<
died in Tennessee yesterday, wat
buried in the yard of Peachtree
church todav. ,The remains arrived in
Atlanta late yesterday and funera.
services followed.
J, F. Bynum-
Though definite funera! arrange
ments of J. F. Bynum, who died in At
lanta last night, have not been made
the remains will be carried to Shell
man, Ga.. soon. The body is being
held in Atlanta awaiting the arrival oi
relatives.
5