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- Теодор Драйзер
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- Американская трагедия
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- Стр. 432/598
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And
after
him
,
R.
T.
Biggen
,
an
oil
station
manager
of
Lycurgus
,
who
swore
that
on
the
morning
of
July
sixth
,
at
about
eight
o'clock
,
having
gone
to
Fielding
Avenue
,
which
was
on
the
extreme
west
of
the
city
,
leading
on
the
northern
end
to
a
"
stop
"
on
the
Lycurgus
and
Fonda
electric
line
,
he
had
seen
Clyde
,
dressed
in
a
gray
suit
and
wearing
a
straw
hat
and
carrying
a
brown
suit-case
,
to
one
side
of
which
was
strapped
a
yellow
camera
tripod
and
something
else
--
an
umbrella
it
might
have
been
.
And
knowing
in
which
direction
Clyde
lived
,
he
had
wondered
at
his
walking
,
when
at
Central
Avenue
,
not
so
far
from
his
home
,
he
could
have
boarded
the
Fonda
--
Lycurgus
car
.
And
Belknap
in
his
cross-examination
inquiring
of
this
witness
how
,
being
one
hundred
and
seventy-five
feet
distant
,
he
could
swear
that
it
was
a
tripod
that
he
saw
,
and
Biggens
insisting
that
it
was
--
it
was
bright
yellow
and
wood
and
had
brass
clops
and
three
legs
.
And
then
after
him
,
John
W.
Troescher
,
station
master
at
Fonda
,
who
testified
that
on
the
morning
of
July
sixth
last
(
he
recalled
it
clearly
because
of
certain
other
things
which
he
listed
)
,
he
had
sold
Roberta
Alden
a
ticket
to
Utica
.
He
recalled
Miss
Alden
because
of
having
noted
her
several
times
during
the
preceding
winter
.
She
looked
quite
tired
,
almost
sick
,
and
carried
a
brown
bag
,
something
like
the
brown
bag
there
and
then
exhibited
to
him
.
Also
he
recalled
the
defendant
,
who
also
carried
a
bag
.
He
did
not
see
him
notice
or
talk
to
the
girl
.
And
next
Quincy
B.
Dale
,
conductor
of
the
particular
train
that
ran
from
Fonda
to
Utica
.
He
had
noticed
,
and
now
recalled
,
Clyde
in
one
car
toward
the
rear
.
He
also
noticed
,
and
from
photographs
later
published
,
had
recalled
Roberta
.
She
gave
him
a
friendly
smile
and
he
had
said
that
such
a
bag
as
she
was
carrying
seemed
rather
heavy
for
her
and
that
he
would
have
one
of
the
brakemen
carry
it
out
for
her
at
Utica
,
for
which
she
thanked
him
.
He
had
seen
her
descend
at
Utica
and
disappear
into
the
depot
.
He
had
not
noticed
Clyde
there
.
And
then
the
identification
of
Roberta
's
trunk
as
having
been
left
in
the
baggage
room
at
the
station
at
Utica
for
a
number
of
days
And
after
that
the
guest
page
of
the
Renfrew
House
,
of
Utica
,
for
July
sixth
last
,
identified
by
Jerry
K.
Kernocian
,
general
manager
of
said
hotel
,
which
showed
an
entry
--
"
Clifford
Golden
and
wife
.
"
And
the
same
then
and
there
compared
by
handwriting
experts
with
two
other
registration
pages
from
the
Grass
Lake
and
Big
Bittern
inns
and
sworn
to
as
being
identically
the
same
handwriting
.
And
these
compared
with
the
card
in
Roberta
's
suit-case
,
and
all
received
in
evidence
and
carefully
examined
by
each
juror
in
turn
and
by
Belknap
and
Jephson
,
who
,
however
,
had
seen
all
but
the
card
before
.
And
once
more
a
protest
on
the
part
of
Belknap
as
to
the
unwarranted
and
illegal
and
shameful
withholding
of
evidence
on
the
part
of
the
district
attorney
.
And
a
long
and
bitter
wrangle
as
to
that
,
serving
,
in
fact
,
to
bring
to
a
close
the
tenth
day
of
the
trial
.
And
then
,
on
the
eleventh
day
,
Frank
W.
Schaefer
,
clerk
of
the
Renfrew
House
in
Utica
,
recalling
the
actual
arrival
of
Clyde
and
Roberta
and
their
actions
;
also
Clyde
's
registration
for
both
as
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clifford
Golden
,
of
Syracuse
.
And
then
Wallace
Vanderhoff
,
one
of
the
clerks
of
the
Star
Haberdashery
in
Utica
,
with
a
story
of
Clyde
's
actions
and
general
appearance
at
the
time
of
his
buying
a
straw
hat
.
And
then
the
conductor
of
the
train
running
between
Utica
and
Grass
Lake
.
And
the
proprietor
of
the
Grass
Lake
House
.
And
Blanche
Pettingill
,
a
waitress
,
who
swore
that
at
dinner
she
overheard
Clyde
arguing
with
Roberta
as
to
the
impossibility
of
getting
a
marriage
license
there
--
that
it
would
be
better
to
wait
until
they
reached
some
other
place
the
next
day
--
a
bit
of
particularly
damaging
testimony
,
since
it
pre-dated
by
a
day
the
proposed
confession
which
Clyde
was
supposed
to
have
made
to
Roberta
,
but
which
Jephson
and
Belknap
afterward
agreed
between
themselves
might
easily
have
had
some
preliminary
phases
.
And
after
her
the
conductor
of
the
train
that
carried
them
to
Gun
Lodge
.
And
after
him
the
guide
and
the
driver
of
the
bus
,
with
his
story
of
Clyde
's
queer
talk
about
many
people
being
over
there
and
leaving
Roberta
's
bag
while
he
took
his
own
,
and
saying
they
would
be
back
.
And
then
,
the
proprietor
of
the
Inn
at
Big
Bittern
;
the
boatkeeper
;
the
three
men
in
the
woods
--
their
testimony
very
damaging
to
Clyde
's
case
,
since
they
pictured
his
terror
on
encountering
them
.
And
then
the
story
of
the
finding
of
the
boat
and
Roberta
's
body
,
and
the
eventual
arrival
of
Heit
and
his
finding
of
the
letter
in
Roberta
's
coat
.
A
score
of
witnesses
testifying
as
to
all
this
.
And
next
the
boat
captain
,
the
farm
girl
,
the
Cranston
chauffeur
,
the
arrival
of
Clyde
at
the
Cranstons
'
,
and
at
last
(
every
step
accounted
for
and
sworn
to
)
his
arrival
at
Bear
Lake
,
the
pursuit
and
his
capture
--
to
say
nothing
of
the
various
phases
of
his
arrest
--
what
he
said
--
this
being
most
damaging
indeed
,
since
it
painted
Clyde
as
false
,
evasive
,
and
terrified
.