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Show j HER DEFENSE $ of Intrigue With dnifs That She Knew. I He Was a Married Man. j Dirorco From Hor Husband Icr Sho Becamo Intimnte With Enclng Mnn- . nnT.- Dec 19. "Did you. or did tCcSSr ounft Nan?- said lr iSr to Juss Nan Patterson to- i, not." replied the witness, in a 1 " i would give my own life to to lack If It wcrc 1,1 my powcr trar tho revolver with which ho a "bet. There was a flash, and then ftw'ec quivering with emotion, but t ritb dramatic intensity. Miss Pat-Lj, Pat-Lj, who is on trial charged with loader of Caesar Touiiff." recltod to Ltrytht scenes In tfer life which had krilh her dealing with Young, facalydld Miss Patterson swear cho j j.( itiu Young;, but she denied every ttEstanco in the case which the Stale ,LTijht up against her. Sho denied J fie was dismayed bocauso Young iitoot lo leave her and go to Europe, i: laving bt-en told by him, as it has c illrsed. that all was over between a. Was to Go to London, i the othT hand she testified thnt t re-Jlt of her conference with Younc; TuapJ that she should Join him In uh'A and take apartments In tho Hi Cecil, London, taking care that sho a tor whereabouts a complete secret a Jits. Young and Young's relatives, j important feature brought out was tm that Young gave the woman a il card on which he wrote her name lri3rs, saying it was something- she AlIHd. U crowd In Ihe courtroom became Itoily still when the former show girl ti ftanu. The first of her testier testi-er relating to herself was given In a r, jren voice, but as she proceeded her u btcame more tense, until. In her sat of the fatal cab ride, her volco A siih tragic cxresslon. Her Life "With Young. 'ny In her story Miss Patterson told ifer crisinal meeting with Young, of k Vie together and of their confuted con-futed European trip. She old of her t idth Youag the night before his k;ce.il departure for Southampton, o tiisf: awakened by a telepho .1c mos-p mos-p from hlm to go to the pier to seo (vT, of the ride down town, of the Kits In a saloon and of the rldo In Ob Wore the shooting. U m usked to describe what hap-M hap-M after leaving the saloon, whilo I "wn west Broadway. talked about his going away, and "ft SMstlonlng me about my coming cl mm." she said. "I did not say ixzi , snd finally he said: 'But I don't iwsltltt that you are going lo come Hp said 'I believe that vour are SVey,.n' Then he said: 'Are you &iIlSM ,7Ve11- Caesar, there's no w111' bccause I'vo made up 77,5?' l0 but '" eo over there hvl . es nulc'twl down, until tho tiye forgotten things. By that time PKttyoual the Saratoga meeting.' m, You Mean That? jSti.t ai.m? a wllllc and 8Jd- 'Do IBiSVi 1 and lnen lle Prabbcd me lH5Wih,m- He hurt me 80 tnat I '4mr, liawaTy' bul 1 could not get VWi- J-m; 1 nul my other hand up MJm'l. - Somehow or other flggW from him. I told him that ho iB!t!v,t'I.f you .don,t como over there -Kit- j V alt UnUl Ule Saratoga v 1 ay nevcr see 'ou again. My tfKSr Koto back on me. I've lost l fekw;,1,m,,l03lne Ifiy llttlo Ji"Hff,X.r?u,m'51u that?' iKsffil1 me and hurt mc 20 lad!j l"Ktorri7. cam(; 10 my cves- I tried !W?5iU',y rrom hlm asaln. and 1 waa away over. iK?k"X'1 Aash-the end." Kl rd a rcPrl?" her lawyer ! the pistol In Young's hands?,,v -S ' Did Not See the Pistol. flRwntn th0 "llsl01- Mr- Young G? laP. cot half way up. fell (K; ill bought he was having a WU to wKf lw,1lch,"P d twltchfng K h m and tried to make hlm 5BfkM.iW0l',d .nolr 1 Relieve I (o ihl Piand,lold fhe cabman to tBifrT-iM druSS't. I don't know Bc7 rm"?rh' aS3 before I could Zm9 mc PQy any aUcHon to mo jB&aTn:01 lnl. 1110 cab- and I folt Br. ncw h would lake care , J'B'Xir' u . r that" I Jectcd to further answer and was sustained. sus-tained. "Did you or did you not shoot Caesar loung, Nan?" J.'Ldl.di no: "tT0U.ld 1' my own life to bring him bnck if It were In my powcr." sho answered. FAVORS NEW RELIGION, Rev. Lyman Abbott Believes in God, but Not One Jtcnched by Bible. CAMBRIDGE, Mara., Dec. 19 Dr. Lyman Abbott, In a sermon lo Harvard students, has announced his belief in n religion founded, not on the- Bible, but on science and the outreachlngs of the human henrf "I wonder," he said, "If you will understand un-derstand me when I say that 1 no longer long-er beileve In a great llrst cause? My God ls a great, and ever-present force which Is manifest In all the activities of men and all .the workings of nature. "I believe In a God who Is In and through and of everything not an absentee ab-sentee God. whom we have to reach through a Bible or some other outside aid, but a God who ls closer lo us than hands or feet. Science, literature and history tell us that thero Is one eternal energy; that the Bible no longer can be accepted as ultimate; that many of Us laws were copied from other religions; that the ten commandments did not spring spontaneously from Moses, but were, like all laws, a gradual growth, and that man Is a creature, not a creation. crea-tion. "No thinking man will say there are many energies. The days of polytheism are pasL There Is only one energy. That energy has always been working. It ls an Intelligent energy. No scientist can' deny it. It was working before Christ's time, even as It Is now." |