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The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • Page 19
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The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • Page 19

Publication:
The Tennesseani
Location:
Nashville, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Weaver, Civic Leader Here, Dies (Continued From 1 Page One) later came to be known as Colemere. The original homesite is now occupied by Metro Airport. She graduated from the old Ward Seminary on Eighth Avenue in 1905, and received further education at Woman's College of Baltimore, later known as Goucher College, and at Vanderbilt University where she was one of the first women ever admitted as a student. Mrs. Weaver was involved in many community cultural and civic works.

She was president of the Centennial Club from 1941-1943. She served as president of the Review Club of Nashville. She was a charter member and later a president of the Garden Club of Nashville. She was active in the Ladies Hermitage Association and in the Vanderbilt Aid Society. DURING WORLD War Mrs.

Weaver took on the Nashville leadership of the Committee for Fatherless Children of France, a national organization in the United States which cared for some 200,000 French War orphans. During this effort her home was visited by national leaders of the drive, including Margaret Woodrow Wilson, daughter of the wartime president. She was decorated by the French government for her role in this work. Mrs. Weaver was a Methodist.

As a young woman she taught Sunday school at Arlington Chapel while her home was at Colemere and later. when she moved to Franklin Road, she bacame a member of West End United Methodist Church. She served for several as a trustee of Scarritt College. as her hushand had done before his death. SURVIVORS include a son, Edmund Cole Weaver, Memphis; a daughter, Mrs.

Adolf Hach Jr. CLARKSVILLE Services for Adolf K. Hach 16, of Clarksville, will be at 3 p.m. today in Greenwood Cemetery. Hach died Friday in Memorial Hospital here following an extended illness.

Survivors include his parents, Adolf K. and Phila Rawlings Hach, and a brother, Joseph K. Hach, all of Clarksville, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A.

L. Rawlings Joelton, and Mrs. Adolf Hach, Clarksville. John W. Eisenbeus, Denver; 11 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

Pallbearers will be Dr. Thomas S. Weaver, William C. Weaver Granville Jackson John M. Barksdale, Thomas S.

Weaver III, Granberry Jackson III, John M. Barksdale. R. Thomas Barksdale, Weaver Barksdale, W. R.

Willis II, Raleigh F. Lane Herbert Bradford, Leonard Bradford and Dr. Fred Ownby, all of Nashville, Whitefoord Cole Jr. and Whitefoored Cole III, both of Louisville, and Edward B. Harris of Atlanta.

Mrs. Dempsey Weaver Funeral tomorrow Wear hair with a sunny disposition. Have a frosting. Ours is special, only Reg. $18.

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Charge it at JCPenney 100 Oaks and Rivergate Mall Franklin Man Bound Over FRANKLIN, Tenn. Charles Robert Hawks, 20, of Colt Lane was bound over to the Williamson County Grand Jury yesterday on charges of manslaughter and disposing of a dead body in the drug death of a Franklin teenager. General Sessions Court Judge James C. Short set bond at $1,000 on each charge, and Hawks remained in the county jail last night. He is charged in connection with the death of David A.

Eason 18, of Rebel Meadows Subdivision, whose body was found July 21 in the back seat of his car behind a truck stop near the interchange of Peytonsville THE TENNESSEAN, Sunday, stated that Hawks helped Eason take the shot. The statement attributed to Hawks said he pulled back the plunger to make sure the needle was in the vein, and after blood started backing up into the syringe, he forced the heroin into the vein. IT ALSO quoted Hawks as saying he and Miss Jones found Eason dead when they returned to the motel room. Hawks said, according to the statement, that he went to the truck stop and recruited David Wayne Helton, 17, of Franklin, and Michael Eugene Daniels, 16, of Thompson Station, to help him move the body. Road and Interstate 65 south of here.

A CORONER'S jury ruled at an inquest that the death was the result of drugs. Three juveniles are also charged with disposing of the body. yesterday's hearing, Sue Maddox, 18, Franklin, testified that she." Eason, Hawks, and another girl, Robin Jones, 16, of Franklin, injected heroin at a rented motel room on the night that Eason died. She testified that she saw Eason went into bathroom Hawks with a syringe, when to take the drug. She said when Eason returned from the bathroom, was staggering and his eyes looked funny." The girl quoted him as saying, "That's some really good stuff." MISS MADDOX testified the four had paid $45 for three bags of heroin to a man on Jefferson Street in Nashville.

She said Hawks made the purchase after tasting the drug to make sure it was heroin. She further testified that when the three started to leave the room, they told Eason they were leaving but that he didn't answer. Sheriff Fleming Williams read a statement which he said Hawks gave officers after his arrest, and which Our classic collection for boys is totally So anything goes! 498 Turtleneck knit in navy, burgundy or camel. Acrylic in sizes 8-20. 1098 Baggy slacks with wide cuffed flare leg.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1834-2024