A. I think they voted four tickets.
Q. Do you know how these tickets were endorsed, or what they were called?
A. I was not near enough to see the endors.e.m.e.nt; I noticed which boxes they went into.
Q. Upon the day of election were the defendants Jones, Marsh, and Hall, acting as inspectors of election?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Receiving votes?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And were acting as inspectors of election when these ladies voted?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. About what time in the day, or what time in the morning was it that these ladies voted?
A. I think there had been but a very few votes received in the morning when a number of them voted.
Q. Well, was it about 5 o"clock in the morning--very early?
A. No, sir; not so early as that; the probability is that there was not over 20 or 25 votes received before they presented theirs.
_Conceded_: That the women named in the indictment were women on the 5th day of November, 1872.
_Cross-Examination by_ MR. VAN VOORHIS:
Q. Which of those persons did you see register?
A. Mrs. Hough, Mrs. Pulver, Mrs. Truesdell, Mrs. Leyden.
Q. Do you swear you saw Mrs. Leyden register?
A. I think I did.
Q. Take a second thought and see if you are willing to say you saw her register--please look off that paper. Do you recollect seeing those persons register, or do you suppose they did, because you find it on a paper there?
A. No, sir; I recollect seeing pretty much all of them on my list with the exception of one or two; I won"t be fully positive I saw Mrs. Leyden register; I saw her vote.
Q. Did you go to Mrs. Leyden"s house and advise her to go and register?
A. I don"t think I did.
THE COURT: That is not important.
Q. Do you recollect seeing any others register except those you have now mentioned?
A. I think I saw Mary Anthony.
Q. Any other?
A. Mrs. Chapman.
Q. Can you recollect this without looking at that paper?
A. Well, the object in looking at that paper is to try to refresh my memory on which day they registered.
Q. Does that paper contain dates?
A. No, sir; it contains the names of all those who registered.
Q. You copied that paper from the registry, didn"t you?
A. They were copied by Hall at the time of the election, and handed to me.
Q. What was your business at the registry at that time?
A. I had a poll list; I was checking parties that I supposed had a legal right to vote.
Q. What sort of a poll list?
Objected to as immaterial.
THE COURT: It is only competent as a test of his knowledge.
A. I had canva.s.sed the ward and taken a list of all the voters in the first district; all those that I supposed would be ent.i.tled to vote.
Q. You had canva.s.sed the ward in the employment of somebody?
Objected to as immaterial.
Q. How many of these people did you see vote?
A. I think I saw the whole of them vote, with the exception of Mrs.
Hough and Mrs. Cogswell.
Q. Who took Miss Anthony"s vote?
A. Mr. Jones.
Q. Were both the other inspectors present when he took it?
A. I believe they were.
Q. Did Jones take all of the votes of those persons whose names you have on your list?
A. I don"t think he did.