uove.It will be proven, said Mr. Conrad, that before Rltobie’s arrival at the bouse, Roadcap said that if Mra. Caldwell’s father 4‘fooled” with bin be (Roadcap) would use his knife on him.Ritchie's woiiqd was several inches deep. In'teiakttocr it Road-| Crawford began by saying that, contrary to report, Ktadosp bad never been charged with a crime prior to being accused of Ritchie's death.On the night in question Road-cap and Donovan, Mr, Crawford said, stopped at the Caldwell home in a friendly way and irere urged by Mrs. Caldwell to remain over night, she saying that it wag Christmas night and she was afraid to be alone. The men accepted the invitation, but Donovan left the place for a short time and went to the borne of Ritchie, a marriedman, who was living in adultery with Sallie Shoemaker, a woman of of notoriously bad repute.Ritchie was absent when Donovan was at his house, but upon bis return home he conceived the idea that the two men had defelred the presence of Sallie Shoemaker at the Caldwell home that night for a debauch. Incensed at ttiat Idea, Ritchie set out at onoe for Cald-waII'i to RAak reventre..