Defendant on Stand in Hanion I Murder Trial Clara Smith Relates Events Leading Up to Fatal Shoot ing Which She Claims Self-Defense. (I'outinuttd from I'mf One.) t noticed that the lights in the car ! were on and I said 'wait a minute, I wait to turn the lights of iny car off.' lie turned nie loose and I walked to the car and switched off I the lights. ' f "When I passed by him. and turned to get through the door he again grabbed ine by the arm and i. jerked me down on , a chair, and v cursed me. I said 'go to the room f Mr. Hanion, if you vvant to abuse "i me. there are some men ' standing there; you must not talk that way I here in public,' so he got up and I ? went up stairs to my room. Was Afraid of Him. ' "I was afraid of Mr. Ilamon, very ; afraid of him. I saw a look on his j face that I had never seen before. V, He was drunker than I had ever 1 seen him in all the years I had known him. He was drunk and "crazy. I don't think the whisky was good red whisky as Mr. Nich ''s ols said. He usually drank good whisky and lie was not usually crazy like that. He was crazier and . drunker than he had ever been in ';aU the years I had known him. . When I got to my room the doors '.'were locked between our ' rooms, y that is the bath room door was ' locked. 1 rang for Bill, the porter. . I thought I had better eat sonie- thing. I had not had anything to ' ' cat all day. At breakfast I could j not eat. "I seldom ever eat any breakfast ' and when Bill came and knocked on the door he came in with ice water and Mr. Hanion slipped ip with him. ' I had to unlock the door for Bill. I Was afraid of Mr. Hanion.. I wanted 'to keep away from him for 24 more !r hours so I could go to California i'and wait for him to sober up and Hconic to me, looking the sweet, kind plover he liad been before, j' Sneaked in Room. ;j "So he came in as Bill came in. Bill poured the ice water in the ',; pitcher. Mr. Hanion paced up and Jdown, running his hands through his (ihair as he did when he was agitated, . and the minute Bill went out and the i door was closed Mr. Hanion said .with an epithet. 'Where have you been,' and grabbed me and at the 1 same time he choked me and he f thoked me until I was blind and I , could not seem to think." y "Now, Miss Clara, "interrupted W. j,P. McLean of her counsel.' "Just a ; minute. I -will finish the story, Mr. McLean," she said. ! ' "He choked me and hit me and f somehow he threw me over on the bed by one of hik licks, and after he irot me on the bed ha- beat me and j s'apped me and hit me two or three ;times and took me by one foot and jerked me off the bed on my back, j I had been operated on in the back f snd it hurt me extremely; .and he : tuuiv plains iu uik .jne in luc uai.lv ana ne kickcq. me ana cnoKea me, .'. nd I struggled to get up and he j' choked me again and backed me up , igainst the window ana cnoked me Rgain and again and slapped me; and ! then he was' not satisfied with that ; and he twisted the skin on my hand; i he twisted and he was not satisfied t with that; he bent my fingers back j md tried to break them, and then he 'said I will cut vour throat, and he reached for his knife. Knife Was Missing, j',' "The knife had. fallen out pf his ? pocket in the afternoon while he was lying on the bed and I picked it up and put it over on the table after he i, walked out of the room; then when . he did not have the knife in his pocket he reached for the knife I had I given him on a little gold chain, and I somehow, some way, that knife was t not there. He looked around and Vmeanrime he was choking and beat- irg me very bad. I cannot remem ; ber all of it, it fs too much for any ','body to remember." 1 t, "Did he make any remarks to you?" ) .McLean asked. f "Well, I am getting to that, Mr. v McLean," she replied, continuing: H "I am getting to that. He said, 'you have been riding with somebody, '..haven't you?' and I said, 'no, you ; i know I have not.' I knew that he ;knew I had not.' He was crazy - !drunk. When he did not find his igold knife, he saw a knife over on j the dresser he had given me a long ' time ago, an old knife of his, just 'to sharpen pencils and use around the f room, and I had it sharpened. It v Swas very, very sharp. He reached . for that knife and said, 'I would just . jas soon slit your throat as .draw on this cigar.' Anyway, when he j reached for that knife I knew the time had come. I unconsciously or i consciously or somehow reached back , . , - - - . . . j -I, ,ancl in my purse on inc winaow sm got my little gun. I asked him to stand back and let mc pass." . -' "Well, what did you do with the gun, with. the pistol, when you got hold ot.it. viat did you do with it." McLean asked. , Shot in Self-Defense. .?.'"W!iat did I do with it? What would anyone do with it if they thought their life was in danger?" she replied. "Never mind that, what did you do with it?" her counsel asked." "I held it on him," she went on. (Gleeful . UT names crow and play when health is v right. Proper food' makes gleeful babies.Smce 165. EAGLE BRATD Condensed. Milk I "Did he back awa, sort of tietiind a chair and put his hand on the back ! of the chair?" McLean asked. "He did not raise his hands. I did not ask him to. I passed him, too. lie backed around to the door be tween our rooms and then I went to the door to get ou. holding my hand like this, (indicating), to back up to the door to unlock it. He had locked it when Bill went out. I could not sec him. for he was a little back of the corner of the bath room, so when 1 unlocked the door I had to let him out of my sight. Raised Chair, to Strike. "4md. understand when I tn locged the door to go, in that instant he turned off the light and raised the chair to strike me and did strike me. I could see from the light of the hall through the, transom. He struck me with that chair and the gun went off." , The defendant left the stand and walked before the jury box to illus trate her version of it. "And I was unlocking, the door like this and holding the gun on Mr. Hanion, but he was just out of my sight for a minute and he got around the corner and the chair Came down on mc and it knocked the gun out on the floor like this and it weuft off as it fell or I pulled the trigger, or something as he hit me. I. don't know. The' gun went off. "I had the pistol in my hand when Mr. Hamon hit me with the chair and it went off, I did not mean to shoot him," she continued, closing her story and getting back to a question and answer basis. Finishes Her Story. Court recessed at noon Nmtil 2 p. m. with the young woman Still on the stand. Defense counsel requested the ex tra 30 minutes so that the state could read 56 letters written to the defend ant by Colonel Hanion and which it desires to read into the record. Immediately upon rfecess Mrs. Ha nion, the widow, joined Attorney General Frceling in the task of read ing the letters. "They are all old letters," the widow said, after having read a half dozen or so. "They were written a way back in 1914 and 1915 when he really was infatuated with her. There are none written lately " Marriage of Convenience. Before leaving the stand at noon Clara said her marriage to Colonel Hamon's nephew was for the for mer's convenience and that she never lived with him a minute, "and it was not supposed they would live to gether." "I went under the name of Clara Smith part of the time and also un der the name of Hamon," she said. "I used the name Hanion for . Mr. Hamon's convenience. I have given checks signed Clara B, Smith when I had the money in the bank as Clara Hamon." She told about having purchased the pistol with which Mr. Hamoii was killed. . She said: ' Mr. Hamon gave me the money and told me to buy it." Hamon Was Sorry. "Upon the day Mr. Hamon was shot, after the pistol was fired what took place, what did you say to Mr. Hamon, if anything, relative to the light in the room?" queried her coun sel. Clara replied: "He said 'Clara, you hit me; or it hit me' something like that, I don'ri remember positively.' 1 said Air. H'amon' I am sure I did not hit you'; I Said 'lie on the bed and I will call Dr. Hardy.' I think I said Dr. Hardy; he was. always our best friend. He said 'no. 'don't: I can walk to the hospital.' . I said 'but I must call the doctor if you are hit; 1 must call the doctor'; he said, 'yes, I am hit, Clara. I will go to the hospUal myself; he raised his vest to show me where he was hit; there was a spot of blood about that hie around, (and she curved her fingers to illustrate) "breaking down at this point and crying. He left the room, she said. I will say it was an accident; it anyone asks you about this tell them it is all right, I will make the ex planations" she quoted him. She Changed Clothing. She said after the shooting she changed clothing, which she said had been torn badly in the fight, went out and put away her motor car and returned to her room where she spent the night. "Now the next morning what was the first place you went to the next morning?" Mr. McLean asked. "I went to the hospital to see Mr. Hamon," she replied. "He had asked the nurse to call me." She said she remained at the hos pital only a few minutes and then went to Mr. Ketch's office. "Now, you heard Mr. Ketch's statement on the witness stand as to what took place there. Was his SCHMOLLER & MUELLER the house of Grand Pianos This Behr Bros. Small Grand Piano is a wonderful instrument, the final achievement of master creators. Ideally suited for small apartments, its unusual grace and beauty com mend it for any home where charm and distinction are sought. The case, an original design, L superbly finished in brown mahogany satin finish.' 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The noon recess for two hours then was ordered. Clara did not answer questions in the dramatic tones in which she had detailed the story of the shooting of Hamort at the morning session. She spoke in a full, firm, low voice and did not waste words in her replies. Mr. Hamon held out his arms and pulled me down and kissed meand asked me to forgive him and said it never would have happened if he had not been drunk, she said Hamo-i told her at the hospital when she visited him the morning after the shooting. Weeps As She Testifies. Her voice wavered and tears came into her eyes as she said that. She said Mr. Hanion told her she should leave town to save scandal, but to come back that afternoon. She described the conference with Mr. Ketch at which she was given money with which to leave Ardmore. She said she motored to Durant, Okl., intending to return to Ard more, but changed her mind and drove on south to Denison. From Denison she said she mo tored to Dallas, where she tried to get an airplane to San Antonio. She said she could not get a plane for an hour and that the ship did not Ipok safe, so she started to motor to San Antonio. She said she was acting on in structions of Mr. Ketch. Denies She Has Guns. She said Everett W. Sallis was her chauffeur Jrom Dallas, as he testi fied he was, but she denied, she car ried two pistols, as he had said. She said she was driven to Cisco, Tex., where she bought a railroad ticket for EI Paso, Tex. She said she went to Juarez, Mex., across from El Paso, and remained three days and then went to Chihua hua City. ' " Clara said when she left Oklahoma she was not fleeing from a crime she had committed, but left because Mr. Ketch told her to. She very emphatically replied, "I did not," when asked if she had told Sallis she had shot a man and that nothing had been said to Sallis about her haying shot a man andthat no discussion on thesuhject of wepons best for killing men was had. - -Hamon Took Pistol. "If that is true, I want to kill my self,'' she said sheuold Hamon when he said he had been shot and that Hamon took the pistol from her. She said she did not want Mr. Hamon to die. Her voice wavered again. Mrs. Hamon, the widow, listened to Clara's testimo.ny .intently, but without changing expression. "Leave and never come back," Clara said Ketch told her, but that when her uncle, Ben Harrison, went to her she decided to return to Ard more. "While in old Mexico did you meet ADVKRTISKMENT ft VOOR BLOOD With organic Iron Nuxtd Iron if like the iron in your tlood and the iron in fpinach, lentils and apples will not blacken or injurs the teeth nor upset the stomach. Entirely different from Vietallie iron. 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She said she had read w hat purported to have been an interview with her and that it was what she had told the court this morning. Hamon Not on Bed. She said she never had gotten any money except $125 from her. oil and motion picture properties, owned jointly with. respectivelythe Hamon estate and Ketch. "He certainly was not," Clara re plied when asked if Hamon was shot while lying on a bed. "I certainly did not." she replied when asked If she had placed her hand on Hamon's' head and fired the shot which killed, him. On cross-exaniination she said she was 29 years old and next October would be 30 and "had been living with Mr. Hanion eight or nine years." "No. sir, not when I began living with him," Clara said, when asked il she was 17 when that arrangement began.' She said she began working for Mr. Hamon in 1913 and worked at least two years. Clara Breaks Down. The court room was thrown into an uproar when spectators started wild handclapping and the defendant broke into tears and was led from the court room with tears streaming from her eves. The outbreak of applause and Clara's breakdown came after V. K McLean, of defense counsel, re plied heatedly to H. H. Brown, spe cial prosecutor, who had toid the court: "Well, we are willing for the jury to know how they took it, the old woman arid all." By the "old woman" Mr. Brown referred to Clara's mother. Mr. McLean, prior to Mr. Bsown's remark, had said that he wanted the jury to know how the entire Smith" family took the association of Clara with Colonel Hamon. 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After efforts of deputy sher iffs and bailiffs to remove them, the court reversed itself, but gave a lecture on court room decorum. Clara Hamon could not compose herself sufficiently to return to the court room and a one-hour recess was ordered. "I don't care what they do with me." she said as she wept, "but they must let my poor old mother alone." After the outbreak had subsided, Bud Ballew, a deputy sheriff, took the grown son of one oj the attorneys connected with the prosecution from the court room and searched him for firearms, but found none. Mrs. V. B. Walling, sister of the defendant, had just left the witness stand when the remarks of the coun sel precipitated the outbreak of ap plause. Mrs. Walling testified that Clara Ilamon was born in 1893 and is 27 years old, but a few moments later' said that sue was aooui "Did you know Jake Hamon during his life time?" she was asked. "Well, I knew him, yes sir. but I was ntt very well acquainted with him. I onlysaw him a few times," she replied. "Did you know of the improper relations existing between him and yottr sister?" Mc' "Not for several years after they began," 'she said. Knowing all of these iauts, all ot rn Visit first the MARMON miniatures tt I QORSETS grace or carriage. enhance a woman's natural White to $25 Second Floor -Seeond Floor Y ft the relation which existed between your fister and Mr. Ilamon, you lc,t your husband work for him and lived in his house?" Mr. Brown asked. "It was not his house," she said. "It was on the lease." "Well he controlled it, managed it, is that right?" counsel asked. "Yes. sir," Mrs. Walling replied. "And, knowing those facts, you continued to live there and work for him?" the attorneys asked. "Yes, sir, we did. We were friendly and he treated us nicely," the witness repjicd. On redirect examination. Mr. Mc Lean asked: "Do you remember your fathor coming up here to kill Jake Hamon and about the sheriff disarming him?" "Yes, sir," Mrs. Walling replied. The state objected and was sus tained. Mr. Brown rose and injected the remark," "well, we are willing for the jury to kncAv now they took it, Why Each telephone op erator answers the calls from a - certain number of telephones. It is just as impos sible for your oper ator" to serve you In stantly during a rush of telephone calls as it is for you to be THE BIG ATTRACTION DON'T FAIL TO SEE TH GARDNER. LIGHT FOUR ON EXHIBITION AT THE AUTOfclbB'rLE WOW THE BIG ATTRACTION THAT IS IN TERESTING EVERYBODY. ' , IT HAS PROVED 100 PER CENT VALUE IN THE HANDS OF THOU SANDS OF SATI9Frb DRIVERS THE?Y PRAISE ITS UNUSUAL ECON OMY AND EASE OF OPERATION-IT HAS OUTSIDE BEAUTY AND IN SIDE DURABILITY. 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She testified Clara is her third child and is 29 years old. Tears stood in Clara's eyes as her mother answered questions. Mrs. Smith's voice quivered at first, but she spoke in a good voice. She said Clara came to F.I Paso on Thanksgiving day, 1920, and that her daughter's breast was bruised You Sometimes Wait for the Operator watted on immediate- ; ly at a bank or store when several people are in line ahead of you. - An immediate1 answer to your call indicates that your operator is actually waiting for a call at the moment you signalled. . ' i t To answer your calls immediately would , require an operator exclusively for your liney Few people would be willing to pay for that. I B NORTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO The Gardner Motor Co.. . ST. LOUIS, U. S. A. OMAHA. NEBRASKA $1195 r. O. . XT. LOUIS j and that she complained of pairs in 1 her biuly. Mrs. Smith said Clara's right ;i.tn was skiutieu anu saia tne skin w.is almost twisted.olT her riht wrist. She said she had nut Colonel Ha mon at a hospital where Clara was undergoing treatment. ' Mrs. Smith said mi one occasion about six years ago Mrs. Jake I.. Hamon came to her door and asked her not to let Clara have anything more to do with Colonel Hamon. She said she heard of no other il lations between Colonel Hamon ami her daughter except that of cm plover and stenographer on other occasions than that on which Mis. Ilamon came to the Smith home, which then was in Lawton, Okl. "I love Clara and I can't give her up. 1 expect to marry her some day." Mrs. Smith quoted Colonel Ilamon as having said on one occa f ion. He said he intended to get a scnaraf'uii and uiarry Clara, Mrs. Smith testified. inc. CAR GO. 4 a c i P