Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 25, 1912, HOME, Page 3, Image 3

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Miss Thelma Harrell Swims, Rides Motors, Runs, Motorcycles, Plays Basket Ball and Lives Outdoors ATLANTA’S SOCIAL REALM HAS AN "ELEANOR SEARS" ALL ITS OWN Miss Harrell in favorite sport—swimming. Miss Harrell in basket ball togs. Miss Harrell loves to golf, too, and is quite skillful. \\\ [[// wuLk, \ w \ \\ Inra v . A\ i \ -wP' ».\ ■ \\\ w* s. w .> 1 A * \ AlO ‘Tx\ iKw i y jHW A %zt : A? SBfe. ‘<f|| Al/AAO ■ I ■'' 'Cii zl /woil- W \Wlr 'll. I /4>• c oofc ' ■ wHteJ 3’" v owHK'/ t aibafc \Y7-w;w y- A-.., i lAt ■hi ... s w \. wir# ; " .:A ; 'Vz ',W \V \\w zF » . A l 1• w ■ FW‘ w -/ A^i» : 9/ A / i, Iw HMJ// ■ •-•fftVSßKfcr- ' A "Z*** ml l Wo ' -L'-" " iOa ’ . wm ■-, 7c- -Wwß-'SIW ' • " ■i HM m& w>/ x wff / W j ?a. . J Ik x wL / ; \\ \\ \ - /^JKKKK ?< y/ BaA \ \ \\ \JMB w**® a . ' (M \lA£l( w Xa j.'Wt z- < x v \\ w i x\ \W® W ® V \\ */ wo W i | y ID T . ' I I u SI HL R esident of Street PaJ ay Men’s Union At re si. ad !i Au gusta Strike Continues. \I 1 :i STA. GA.. Sept. 25. While I 'here has be n no pet" "iril vie- ! ' (tempted against strike !>i.ak-»’’■ " il’g '.’.l? of the AUgll-01-AikOil and Railway < ’orp<-t■ ■ i eon - ■' 1 Hl '' damage has b< >it tl"ii w tin I ! ' of the company by strikin’; | lf, r, and conductors or their s> tn- I I‘"’ay the strike situation is very unsettled. Eight cars are being | ’ 1 ’ <1 on the Summerville and Mon- 1 ' i... belt line, but all other city lint s Augusta-Aiken interurban road ■ mnpletely lied up. Police arc rid- ■ tf. w ears that are b 'lng 'un. ' the ],resident of the st ear 1 • union appeared in recorder's l! to answer a charge of holding a ' rope while a striker cut it. The i as continued. ’ night several hunded feet of - torn up. a feed wire was cut t .Iley wire sev< red. 1 '■ was no attempt made to oper- ars last night. WEDS SUPERFLUOUS WIFE OF HIS BIGAMOUS BROTHER MASS . Sept. 25. Following ''■•very that Matthew Connell. .Jr. inent Lynn business man. had two his brother, John Connell, has mar t "Be of them and Matthew has os with a tine imposed by a l>or- • r judge. 'ive married the woman who for five bought she was the wife of my **r. said John Connell, ‘’b'c.iuse I to atone for some of the wrung has been done her by a Connell. 1 my brother’s child, five years old. ■ 4 '-e the name Connell, for it be- ' ' ~ ■ to him. - ' forced™ paint, wife SAYS IN DIVORCE SUIT Loris, Sept. 25.—Mrs Mathilda charges in a diver t- petition husband, Henry, forced he: to his house. She also avers that i ran vied with her. fed/ Fjßss« ■ A Ji< x v| y.^/jfwrX wMIWiV IV- \\ ® 7/ a c. AV' i v i W .fey i / * ! : Cares More for Khaki Than Silk. More for Bathing Suit Than Ball Gown. A pretty girl in a st ay tailored suit li. n out of the \ragon hotel, slipped under the steering wheel of green au tomobile with a young man Inside it and was off toward East Lake in a I hurry. "There goes the Eleanor Sears of I Atlanta." said another young man. who was left behind ami looked as though lie was sorry. "She swims, rides, drives ■ i motor, runs a motorcycle, plays bas ket ball and lives outdoors. If she doesn’t ride to hounds, it's because Ith < re's no hunt club in Atlanta, nor any foxes." Tile girl was Thelma Harrell, whose father. B. Prank Harrell, is manager of the Aragon. Miss Harrell lives in a hotel, but she is far from being a »it around-the-parlor girl. Sh«'s a tailor made, divided-skirt, leather-leggins I kind of girl, who cares more for khaki I than silk, likes a bathing suit much better than a darn ing frock and says she had rather swim than play bridge. "Oil, swimming." said Miss Harrell, when she was asked what she liked most of all sporti "I had a dip at East Lake this morning. Yes. it was cold. This is my last day. and I’m so sorry. Down at our summer home at St. (Purges Island we swim much later than this. But that's salt water, you know. "No, I'm not a horseback tiend. I used to love to ride, but since I've grown nt' il to motoring I don’t care for horses. They seem slow. yon know. No, I haven't a car of my own. But I have so many good friends with motors that I really wouldn't have any use for a car of my own. “Os real games, basket ball is my favorite. I played on the Hanna school team last year, you know. It was lots of fun. <>f course. I like tennis. I'm just learning to ride a motorcycle and .nr .m'LAXTA GEORG TAX AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. 1912. Jl' Its ~ t i VW 9'/ "■ - z / M \x ckM 'ZS'TOTC'Ji Miss Harrell i«; riglil at homo ■■■ on a motorcycle. it's fine. I wish more girls used them here." Just then » card came in. with the message that somebody was trailing at the door to try out a brand new motor car and wanted an expert opinion. So that ended the interview. SLAYS HIMSELF IN FUN JUST TO PLEASE‘KIDDIES’ ST EOCIS. Sept. 25. —Willie his sweetheart watched him amuse two young children by playing with a re volver In a Kirkwood confectionary about fi o'clock last night, Wallace Spurgeon accidentally shot himself through the right temple Death was almost instantaneous, ac cording to physicians summoned. "See. kiddies, I'm going to point this right at my head ano press the t ig ger," Spurgeon, who was only eighteen years old. told tin eager children who >.er> matching his manipulation of th.- weapon. WORLD CHEMISTS TO VISIT ATLANTA ON TOUR OF SOUTH Local chemists arc preparing to re ceive about seventy-five representatives of foreign chemical societies who are now attending the International congress iin Washington and who will tour th*' * princHial cities of this country They are expected to arrive about October 15. Something of the South’s products and industries will be shown the chemists while they are In Atlanta. The details are in the hands of .1 S. Brogdon. W. II Emerson and W. <’. Dumas, members of the local chapter of the American <'hemical society 12.000 RAILROADERS GO ON STRIKE IN SPAIN BARCELONIA, SPAIN. Sept. 25. - Twelve thousand of th” 22.000 railroad employees ordered to strike quit work vday. As fast as they left their posi- tion.* they were taken be government soldiers. Attempts were made to wrec k three trains, but only one was success ful. Eighteen persons were injured in tltis. Tfhe government has ordered mar. tial law along all divisions run by the troops. HIS HYPNOTIC EYE FAILS: SHOT ATTACKING BANDIT SAN ERANCISCtI. CAI,.. Sept. 25. In explanation of his action in spring ing unarmed upon the bandit who held up a San Mateo street ear and obtained SIO,OOO in money and jewelry from the passengers, City Attorney <'llarios N. Kirkbride. of San Mateo, who is recov ering from two bullet wounds, decla.eu that he believed he had so hypnotized the bandit the latter could not shoot. Kirkbride said he had been leading about hypnotism and had recently seen a play in which the hero had utilize I the strangi power to prevent the vil lain from pulling the trigger, ' cf’* / V 1 r Miss Harrell on tennis courts. ALLEGED SLAYER, AT LARGE FOR 5 YEARS, CAPTURED IN TROUP LA GRANGE. GA Sept. 25. Special 1 Bailiffs E. B. Edmundson and Gu R< cl. !of thi ci'y. Itavt- captuted Joint Btitley, i alias I'littrley Williams, alias "Big Six." I alias "The Bookbinder," a m-gro. charg ed with tit' death of I. B. McClary, a young railroad man, at Mulberry <'reek. near Lin< ville, Ala . Scptembej I 1907. The negro has lived for <ome time on I the William Godfrey term, in Long Cane district of Tioup county, and the officials report that his cabin w,as a small arsenal, ilthough they had no difficulty in. arresting lem He has been taken to Lineville by Sheriff Mayo, of Clay county, Alabama, to aeyait trial. A reyvard of $450 has b, en outstanding I for five years In 1907 Btiih-v yvas em ployed on grading work of the A., 15 anti A. railroad, it is claimed he shot McClary in the back while the latter yvas watering his horse in Mulberry creek, and then took ills yvateh and pistol, making good hi • '.apt ■II fit ■ !'■' '.ajygjr''" -TWWKSHKCtMMWt I'SW fiiA. A- L I B~ 7" is the BEST, because, in i leavening quality, it leavi some substance in the food. ’< Insist on having it. Al! good Gr 1000 Mom SLI BI CHINESE Soldiers Break Al! Restraint and Massacre and Pillage in Wholesale Manner. ST. PETERSBERG. Sept. 25.—Ac cording to a news agencj dispatch re* reived here today from Tsitsihkan Manchui ia. Chinese oidiers have mas. s u-i i'd 5.000 Mongolians in the prov< in under the dominion of Prine® < »<L i. in eastern Mongolia, on the Man ' churl.an border. Thi' chin -e troops, yvhn had been 'id against the sot of the Mongo ■it government, broke all restraint. I pillaging and burning monasteries and t otic . buildings containing rich loot, an<l i .iitirii' mg mi'll, women and children. ‘Several small towns yver. burned. It I imported here that Russian troou m.iv be sent into Mongolia from Turkbstan to support Russia’s profes sion of friendship foi the Mongolian government, which is now an autonomy. Tin country yyfis fm m< rly a Chinese de pendency. A<i ording to tie telegram, the Chi nese soldiers ar, still out of hand, and another outbreak is expet o ,i. FERTILIZER CONVENTION OCT. 22. MACON. GA.. Sept. 25.—The Geor gia I’ertilizei Mix, rs association, em bracing about 250 members in all parts of tlte state, will hold their annual con vention in Macon on October 22 during ■ tile state fair. Th* 'lati lias just been announced. addition to its unequalled 'es no bad taste or unwhole i lb.sc. — ’ Vlb. 10c.—1 1b.20c. rocers sell it or will get it for you. 3