THE DIVORCE PROCKPniXOS HE-Gl % nKFOHE .HUGE O'DONNELL.A Mrse Mntnhcp f»f Wonirn Present HR W It nesses—Sim Testifies, ' AfRlu*t His Mot lie r#% ?i ——* The Heangartncr divorce caso was he-gun before .fnlt;3g?e O’Honncil Thursday «. m. The attendance of spectators was quite Jarg The defendant. who i# , a woman of obout forty years, occupied ii seat immediately in the rear of her attorneys, Messrs. MK'artby «V Kepi me. Khe appeared to be a little nervous and looked directly nt the witae**#* for the plaintiff, but they did not look directly at her. 'ITie plaintiff, who is a smallman. eat near his attorneys. Kyon Lyon. He had a careworn appearance* but paid particular attention to what the Witnesses said.The hist witness was a man named Bennett. He, said thnt he had once seeu a man go in# into the Heingartner residence in the evening, but that he was so far itway he crttild not tell who he* was.C, J. Barrett, son of the .dofeiidaut. was the next witness. He told aaHit how a detective had heen hired to watch the movements of hi* mother, and how he and the detact Ire one evening, when ehe went with a strange man. hired a rig and proceeded to a well known road house and waited outside about an hour until the man and defendant came out to teturn to the city. The defendant kept her gate fixed on the witness all the rims he was on the stand. On this occasion the man who was with plaintiff was reported to have received a sound pommeling at the hands of the witness. Shortly after the news of this affair was published In the papers* the plaintiff brought suit for a divorce.,T. C. Hendrick was the next witness. He testified that he had seen it man going into the ifeingartner home, one Right* between H and v o'clock* but ii Mt five Ids name. He remain* d about an hour and then came out again. The witness is the man who sold them the house In which defendant resides. The plaintiff had not closed hi* evidence when court adjourned to this morning. A number of the defendant’s neighbors were on the stand and testified to seeing strange men enter and leave her house at various hour* of the day sod night, and that her general reputation in tthe neighborhood a* to chustidywa- bad.One witness, « Mr. Krueger, related certain scenes that had transpired in her house, and when h«* left the stand Mrs. Heingartner jurap**lt;l to her ft*et and with fire in tier eyes turned to Krueger and shouted, Yuan* a l a you dirtydrunkard.” The court addressed I be woman's attorneys and told them that they must restrain their client from anyHiTiTi\U\\WIVW3antinHi1 A)MiIV'JVduristSSt.HotUctJ*PinDII*eHaHe?Kc(St.M01XevSio*OmKftiSlinxcrlooMNovHguo*Mfanton,MMb'11 lieMThumen