Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1916 Page: 3 of 8
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t
OLI> FRIDAY AFTERNOON
F iVOR'TES.!
The Ship (,f Stute.
Tliou, too, ea 11 on, O SJiip of 'State!
Sail ou 0 Union strong and great!
Humanity with all its fears
With all the hopes of future years
Is hanging breathless on thy fate.
We know what Master laid thy keel,
What workmen wrought thy ribs of
Bteel,
Who made each mast, and sail, and
rope,
What anvils rang, what hammers beat.
In what a forge and what a heat
V\ ere shaped the anchors of thy hope!
Fear not each sudden sound and
shock,
'Tis of tilie wave and not the rock;
"Tis but the flapping of the sail
And not a rent made by the gale!
In spite of rock and tempest's roar,
In spite of false lights on the shore,
Sail on, no fear to breast the sea!
Our faith triumphant o'er our fears,
thee!
Our hearts, our hopes,, our prayers
our tears.
Our faitti triumphant 'er our fears,
Are all with thee—are all with thee!
—Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
3- , PACK 'ft
I'HI\ FSF Mill' SINK; OVEIt 1000
DROWN.
Soldiers and Sailors Are Lost When
Steamer and Cruiser Collide.
Shanghai, April 23.—More than a
thousand soldiers and men of the
crew of the steamer Hsin-Yu were
lost when the steamer sank after a
collision with the cruiser Hai-Yung
Saturday evening south of the Chusun
Islands.
The steamer, acting as a transport,
was taking troops to Foo Chow. The
collision occured during a thick fog
and only one foreign engineer, twenty
soldiers and nine sailors out of six
foreigners and over a thousand sold
ier& and members of the crew, were
saved.
The Hsin-Yu was a vessel of 1,639
Ions. She was built in 1829 and was
owned by the China 'Merchants' Steam
Navigation company of Shanghai.
.1 FATHER'S HEART BROKEN.
".Mike" liilirallen Hail Worked All His
Life For limn. Joe Howard's
Second N Iff, Once a Countess,
Hoped by Suicide, "Not to
Worry Dad Any More."
From the Chicago Post.
"Mike" Kilgallen's big Irish heart
broke the other day.
Down at Omaha he found the body
of his Irma—little Irma of the hous of
toil and wretched poverty; gentle
Irma, ol the days of plenty; gracious
Irma, the countess; tearful Irma, the
divorcee; then Irma grown worldly
wise whose final lunge in quest of
happiness left her a suicide In her
bridal robes.
A message told "Mike" his girl was
desperately ill. Then he found her
dead. He was too grief stricken to
ask why. He knows she shot her-
self, and he thinks she did it because
she didn't want to worry her dad any
more.
How the former Countess de Beau-
ford, who married Joseph Howard,
singer and composer, failed in a re-
concilation with her new husband and
shot herself through the head at the
Hotel Fontelle has been told.
While waiting for the reading of
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Car
tive land the spirit of adventure in
him led him to America. He came here
to accept the only work his untrained
hands culd perform, that of strength
and endurance, rather than skill.
He got work as an iron puddled in
the South Chicago mills. There was
nothing about his overalled exterior
that differed in appearance from that
of the countless other young work-
men. He took his place in line on pay
day and although his name was Mar-
tin, answered to the foreman's desig-
nation of '"Mike"' when he drew his
envelope. Out of these meager en-
velopes the young laborer saved enough
to buy a trifling interest in a small
casing shop'.
When the first promise of success
came, the sturdy workman married a
young woman who lived in the South
Chicago mill district. Before they
were able to move into the home they
desired in k better district, a baby
was born, Irma Kilgallen.
Those who knew the parents then
say the father's life ibeeame so wrap
ped up in the baby that he thought of
nothing else. Every plan he made was
fpr the future of the child. She was
to go to school, and grow up to be a
"line lady."
happiness faded the father's patience | ( EK.HAN AUXILIARY SH'H' AT
gave out. After an assault on his wife. TEMPT1NH TO l,A\D ARMS IN
iby his titled son-in-law that resulted IRELAND, SUNK BY
in the countess falling down stairs BRITISH.
and breaking her arm, Mr. Kilgallen I
inflicted what his friends described as j Former English Co"snl On Board Yes
belated justice on the titled adven- J sel Captured. Loudon Statement
turer. He knocked him down and
"booted" him out of the house, ac-
cording to report.
v WEDDED SECOND TIME.
Count Beaufort went to Europe and
his mother later said he haj enlisted
and been killed in the war. The police
were informed that Bea'ufort had not
gone to war, but had been arrested in
London for speeding. Then he dis-
appeared and now is heard from in
Holland, where he is said to be in
prison awaiting trial for obtaining
goods and cash from merchants ou
worthless paper.
After the divorce and the publicity
Declares Revolt Plot Is Badly
Frustrated.
London, April 24.—Sir Roger Case-
ment has been captured from a Ger-
man ship which attempted to' land
arms in Ireland and'was sunk. This
official announcement was m'ade Mon-
day night.
"During the period between the af-
ternoon of April 20 and afternoon of
April 21 an attempt to land arms and
ammunition in Ireland was made by
a vessel under the guise of a neutral
merchant ship, but which in reality
was a German auxiliary in conjunct-
ion with a German submarine.
"The auxiliary sank and a number
letters at the inquest, which it was I ,, „
believed would reveal the motive for ey wan(ed to make her a
Irma's death, heart interest in the SCh00' 'ea,lu>r' Th™ as their W(>aUh
tragedy centered in th,. life they Planned to make her a fine
tragedy centered in the life story of
the man who toiled, sacriflved and
loved to the end of a strange fatality.
One of his old friends related the
story of iMr. Kilgallen's inner life. In
brief it is as follows:
A SELF-MADE MAN.
He was born in Ireland about fifty-
live years ago of peasant parents. Un-
able to obtain an education in his na-
SltiaDie
Book! Free!
musician. Later the little g*rl wanted
to be a singer. She possessed much
talent, 'but would never apply herself.
Teacher after teaoher tried to get her
interested in mueic, but the child had
a weird way of evading the task of
lessons.
Finally the parents abandoned this
ambition, and then their plans diver-
ged. Mr. Kilgallen. by this time a mil-
lionaire, wanted the girl to marry a
self made American. He preferred
that, sihe choose some man engaged in
actual work in th steel industry.
Mrs. Kilgallen wanted her daughter
to lead a social life. She induced
the father to consent to a tour thru
Europe to further her social ambitions.
Accompanied by the young girl, who
was beautiful 1n the flush of youth.
Mrs. Kilgallen went to Paris, Rerlln.
T>ondon, St. Petesburg and all over
Eu rope,
that broke the spirit of the father, Ir-I
ma sought forgetfulness with a small °.mm ,Tre n am°"g
ircle of friends that played the dan-.™ S'r R°ger Ca«ement-
, c. r, s, ^ . . yjferniany, in a I
saiits. She thought she had found hap-L . 1 'ls,""nt ><• ore the out-|Qn October 25, 1910. Francis
liiness (in Howard, whose own tragic .\° ?r°Pean, "V* ^ *
, , „ . . , British consular scrvice, havinc held
love affair aroused her sympathy. The „, „ , „. k 1 i
disnatches fron, „iv„ IPB8,S ln Portuguese Wese Africa, the I
TJiaw. Thaw obtained a divorce be-
fore Judge Josiah Cohen.
The parentage of Kussel "Pom Pom'
Thaw, Mrs. Thaw's young son, was
disclaimed by Thaw, who said he had
not seen nor heard from his wife since
1908.
The father of Pom Pom was alleged
to be "Jack Francis, a well known
New Yorker. This was testified iby
Theodore Francis, his brother of Rox-
bury, Mass., who was called as a wit-
ness by Thaw. It was alleged that
Mrs. Thaw was more than friendly
with Daniel O.Reilly, one of Thaw s
counsel at his murder trial, Jack Clif-
ford; E. R. Thomas, a prominent turf-
man; Riley Morrison and otJiers
Stories of .Mrs. Thaw's life were told
by maids formerly in her employ.
Thaw's testimony was to the effect
that he had been separated from his
wife since he was arrested after the
shooting of Stanford White in 1908.
Pom Pom, it was alleged, was born in
Germany, in a hospital near Pottsdam,
was
that time, it was stated.
and Brazil. i -
in mi, !waa with her at 44f> Park Avenue,
Howard was in the room of' ■ " 7 7" reported , N*w York in 1906 and 1907.
1 R°ger' Wh° Was the ,eader of th*l "Please tell what happened there In
>1 K ... i posts in Portuguese Wese Africa the1 ^aniie I)ulaney. former maid,
dispatches from Omaha give few de-1 r on the stand said she was employed
talis of the final chapter in the lives' and BraiU^ !*> " „„ Thaw's wife for several years. She
of the two principals. ' * ' —
Mrs
Mrs. Clara Lamberti. wife of an Or- aan.Mt. , ... , , _ " , | *" wnai nappenea tnere in
pheum actor, when she shot herself 1, , , "d ^"Vcganl to improper occurences," she
With small targe, pistol which still the Ger", ™ aaked .
bore the price tag of 8. |™"n , mPerial T " ' ' 1 "*«"• d,,rin« th' "me < at Mrs.
ion, it was said, being to open ne- . . . .. „ ,
An arrangement had been made that gotlationg between the German gov- L,?" s , en"P
Mrs. Howard should go to the theatre j Prnment an dthp antl.Eng,ish party In1^, <vn n, " h T
that night and wait until her husband! Ireland ORejIljr, and he was there very
had finished his act and then go to the) Assurance were .aid to have been ''[1™, "f sometlme« °ver
train together before Mrs. Howard! givon to Sir Roger that should the " * nln then w«"t away In the
started for Chicago. Howard was told I German troops land in Ireland all na- fmornin!;|h S°™etlmes he would stay
about 8!30 o'clock by Mrs. Lambert! tive institutions would he resetted ° °r "S &t " time"
that his wife was a suicide , by them. glr noKpr.8 fo]lowore i
Howard was just finishing making Ireland were according to the report !
up when Mrs. Umbertl appeared. Her to give every aid to the Germans
face was white and when Howard' Sir Roger was created knight In
answered her knock, she'tried to tell 1911. He is 52 years old. It was Sir
him his wife was dead. She hesitated Roger who in 1912 while consul gen
STYLE
Beautiful Lust and Shoulders
arc iMwsible if yoO will wear a scientifically
constructed Bien Jolie Brassiere.
The dragging weight of an unconfined bust
so stretches the supporting muscles that
the contour of the figure is spoiled.
/MEN/"
BRASSlEIi.ES
put the bu,t hack whore it Ixrlon^, prevent the
full bunt from hnviiiff tin* upln irHiur „r
hin''". ''I tlie,l,„,|t,T „r dmimtmrniuM'tea
ml "inline the: fle.li at the .l.oi.hler givhT* a
graceful line to the entire upiier hi.ly.
""i «"'! mo.t aervleeablo ■
menta imaginable-come in all materials a
styles: CroM. Baek, Hook Kn.nt, Surplice, Band-
eau, etc. Boned with "Wnlohn," the rustics
boning—permitting waahinK without removal.
Have your dealer allow you Blcn Jolie Bramiere.,
lr not Ntnckeil, we will Kludly aend liini, luepaid,
■ample* to .how you.
BENJAMIN & JOHNKS
SI Warren Street Newark. N. J
W. M. BRO.N'SON, President.
D. BRO.N'SON', Sec. and Treas.
Oklahoma Mortgage and Trust Co.
FARM LOANS
Lowest rates. Interest and principal payable atourrffiee.
Photie 306 108 W. Oklahoma Ave. GUTHRIE, OKLA
HcAlester,
Canon City
Wier City,
Piedmont,
Montreal,
Anthracite.
COM.!
J. B. FAIRFIELD
TRANSFER, COAL and STORAGE
ESTABLISHED 188*
OFFICE AND VAIillS 407 W. HARRISON AVE.
and Howard asked:
HOWARD'S SECOND SHOCK
"Where is 'Irma?"
"She is dead," Mrs. I^araberti blurt
eral at Rio Janeiro made a report on
the torturing and killing by employes
of the British company operating the
Putumayo rubber fields. As a result
ppVERYman who ha9 any Idet
■*-* of buvinp a Kerosene or GasoliDf
Engine should have this book.
Discua e« different typet of enirln««t
how ronatru> ltd : how operate«l . he w
cylinder* tnil o her pari, nhoulc' t>«
made to (rive sruatoa' ulHciancv
II hM t-ikni 30 yrars ol rnntm hnlld-
Ing experience lor me to learn 111*
ftacli* la llltat book. Voura to* U>« aakinc.
My If.* Mode? Englnef ar« th (rrente«t
ealua ! have ever offered Al' alzea pull from
10 to 60* t>v«r factor- rntlnr
WlTTF —built by exports. Frea
TrialTerms.
FD. fl. WITTE, IVITTE LVGINE WORKS.
83P1 Oakland Avrnue, • KniMCltT.r*.
3351tmplre • I', iihurgh. Pa.
ed out. "She has just killed herself." „f the report the BrltUh roval com-
11 ward turned white, for an inetant mission headed by him investigated
stant leaned against the wall of his nnd brought about reforms in the
They met Count de Beaufort. The! room. Then he braced up, murmured ; treatment of men employed In the In-
dazle of the title and the infatuation I something about It being all in Ood'e ' dustry.
of the girl made easy a enquest of her hands, and thanked Mrs. Lamberti!
heart. TOe couple were married with-
out waiting to get the father's consent.
The quick succession of unhappy
for coming to him. 'SAYS JACK FRANCIS FATHER OF
The} thoughts of the actor undoubt-1 POM POM
| *dly flashed back two yearR to the j .
developments that followed the eon- night he stood in the^ wings of th. Hurry Than Names Prominent Men In
ouest of this erratie scion oT Holland Rrandeis Theatre in the same city of ( Relation Willi Evelyn Ills
nobility were paraded in the press Omaha waiting to go on tiie stage In i Former Wife]
, Mr. Kilgallen bestowed all fie could a musical comedy, when a telegram Pitt3hurg, Pa., April 21 —Startling
upon his son-in-law. He gave Uie came telling him bis former wife. Ma- allegations of relations with five men
young folks the better part of hie bel Harrison, was d ad. j of prominence in New York nn the
j nalntial home in CWIohlgan Boulevard j ! part of Kvelyn Xesblt Thaw while her
lie furnished the motor cars, a chauf-1 It is not the plaee that maketh the husband was confined In Matteawan I
fcur, unlimited funds and all that person, but the person that maketh the were made In the testimony in the
1 Irma requested. As the girl's hope of place honorable.—Cicero. divorce proceedings died by Harry K
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1916, newspaper, April 27, 1916; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc169540/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.