Monday, 13th October 1913 Photo By Francis E. Price.
The Atlanta Constitution,
Monday, 13th October 1913,
PAGE 3, COLUMN 2.
MRS. JESSIE B. GWINN.
Mrs. Jessie Brock Gwinn, who has found that wealth and
automobiles to not always make a girl happy, and who longs for
the fianc who is not wealthy, instead of the husband who is, sat
on her front porch for just about two minutes Sunday afternoon.
She had consented to pose for a pleture. It seemed to the
photographer that the attractive little blonde head would turn this
way and that every second and that he had to snap his pictures
between movements.
The neighbors just seem head over heels in curiosity and
they won't let me come out of the house, she explained. She was
watching then that no one should come walking by to get a sight
of her.
Everybody Looks at Her.
The 17-year-old girl who last Monday ran away with John
Henry Gwinn three days after she had become engaged to Fred
Bagwell, and who left her husband last Friday, is the center of
attraction in the Larkin street neighborhood. It used to be that
when she came and went about her business that only the
masculine neighbors turned to look at her. They could not help it,
because she is good to look at, and really she didn't mind just a
fleeting glance. Now they all stare and never seem to take their
eyes off her.
It's worse than the crowds at the Frank trial, she said, and
I've had to stay in the house all day, and it's so pretty outdoors,
too.
The bride of a week is hoping that the courts will listen to the
demands of her father, J. W. Brock, and annul the marriage. She
discovered that after all she loves Fred Bagwell and can be happy
with no other man, and Fred still carries the marriage license in
his pocket. He had bought one on Monday and was to have been
married to her that night, but instead she was persuaded to marry
Gwinn Monday afternoon.
I never can tell how I ever came to marry John Henry, the
girl said. He and his friends got around me when I met at lunch
that day and when I wouldn't promise to marry him they
persuaded me to get in the auto and take a ride and they went
straight to the ordinary and got a license. Then they told me that
they'd never speak to me if I didn't get married right then.
Easy to Persuade.
Oh, I must be easy to persuade for somehow I couldn't
refuse and before I knew it Judge E. H. Orr had tied the knot. Then
I burst into tears. I realized what I had done, but it was too late
and I tried for five days to make the best of it.
What will happen in the romantic affair today is something
that can only be guessed at. Gwinn, who is the sone of the
shoeman at 6 Luckie street, has employed Munday and Cornwell,
attorneys in the Kiser building, and is preparing to file
proceedings for divorce. Mr. Brock is going to start suit for an
annulment of the hasty marriage on the ground that his daughter
is a minor and married without his consent.