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COURTED WHILE ON TRIAL

TITIAN-HAIRED WOMAN Wooed during a trial in which she Las acquitted of slaying her second husband, a beautiful Titian-haired woman has just acquired hei thud spouse. Now Mrs Van Clief, she was once Mrs Frances Kirkwood, the wife of Dr. Glen Kirkwood, the great American veterinary surgeon, whose talks over the wireless on “How to treat your pets,” were once a popular feature in the United States. It was in August of last year that Mrs Kirkwood rushed out of the house which she occupied with her husband, screaming. She was covered with blood, and when a next-door neighbour went into the house in response to her hysterical pleadings, he found Dr. Kirkwood sitting in a chair in his pyjamas, covered with blood, which flowed from eight separate wounds about the body. The weapon with which these wounds were inflicted —a huge carving knife—was not discovered till afterward, and then it was found in the drawer of the kitchen cabinet, care-, fully hidden, but stained with blood. Subsequent inquiries revealed a most astounding state of affairs. It came to light that only a day or two before the death of the doctor, he and Mrs Kirkwood, together with John McAvoy, her first husband, who divorced her so that she might .marry Dr. Kirkwood, and a woman friend of Mr. McAvoy, stayed for some days together at a little one-roomed shack- up in Lake Ronkonkoma, where they held a week-end party among themselves. Apparently the doctor returned home alone, and then Mi*3 Kirkwood received a letter telling her that she had better come back because during her absence her husband had been having wild parties, at which a number of women had been present.

Mrs Kirkwood hastened back to Iter house. There, according to her own story, she taxed her husband with Infidelity, and there were high words. The death of Kirkwood followed in the early hours of the next morning and 4 was described by Mrs Kirkwood herself as follows: —I wouldn’t doublecross anyone, and when I fell in love with Doc, I told Mac, and he agreed to let me marry him. He stepped out like a man. I idolised Doc, but at the same time I still liked Mac. Doc brought him up on that last trip to Lake Ronkonkoma. I never was suspicious of Doc until last Thursday night. Doc was in the habit of coming up to the lake and seeing me on 1 Tuesdays and Thursdays and Saturdays. He didn’t come Thursday, and I thought something was wrong. And when I got back on Monday, I heard things that started me putting two and two together. A woman —the District Attorney has her name —came to me and said, ‘That was a swell party you had on Wednesday night at your house, but I wish you wouldn’t keep it up so late.’ I was amazed, because, of course, I hadn’t attended the party. So I questioned* her at length, and she said she could hear me laughing for blocks. I didn’t tell her that all the time I was parked away up at Lake Ronkonkoma, with the mosquitoes. I went to Reuman the radio man (William Reuman, a friend of Kirkwood, who is supposed to have been at the party), and confronted him with the information I had gathered. He denied being there, and I brought him along home to prove it with Doc. They got their wires crossed, and I knew Doc was lying. I was furious. Reum'an left. . “There’s no need for me to go into further detail. I got the carving-knife, intending to kill myself in front of Doc. I resolved then that if I could not have him alone I wouldn’t have him at all. I stood before him with the knife. He tried to wrest it from me, and in the struggle he was cut. 'I didn’t know it was serious, but when I saw the blood I ran from the house screaming. I didn’t know he was dead- until a few hours afterward. I wanted to have a blood transfusion — I wanted to give him my own blood, but they wouldn’t let me. When I said I wanted to go on the table and give him my blood they told me he was dead.” Dr. Kirkwood was a boarder at the house of the 'McAvoys when he first met Mrs Kirkwood, and they fell violently in love with each other. She begged her husband to divorce her so that she could marry the young and handsome doctor, and at length he did so. Prior to this Mrs Kirkwood had appeared in court on a charge of beating a pretty 16-year-old domestic, who she alleged had been flirting with the doctor, and had been fined. After the divorce, both husbands and the wife had maintained friendly relations, and it was to her first husband that she appealed for help when at length she stood charged with the slaying .of hex- second husband. During the trial, however, she was introduced by hei lawyer, Dana Wallace, to Mr. Van Clief, a wealthy roadhouse owner, and day after day the latter attended the court, visiting the accused woman between whiles, and showering her with attentions and gifts. He took special interest in the little 12-year-old son of Mrs Kirkwood by her first husband, and when the jury returned a verdict of acquittal on the widow’s plea that the stabbing had occurred accidentally, he applauded so so vigorously that he. was ushered so vigorously that he was ushered out of court. At first it was rumoured that Mrs Kirkwood was going to return to her first husband, but in the end the persistent wooing of Mr. Van Clief, which began under such extraordinary circumstances, gained the day, and they were married. They have opened a tea-room and gift shop in a street not very fai from the scene of the tragedy, vhich gave rise to this romance.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19300329.2.10

Bibliographic details

Greymouth Evening Star, 29 March 1930, Page 3

Word Count
997

COURTED WHILE ON TRIAL Greymouth Evening Star, 29 March 1930, Page 3

COURTED WHILE ON TRIAL Greymouth Evening Star, 29 March 1930, Page 3