Occasional periods that should be question marks not changed.

Occasional periods that should be commas, and commas that should be periods, were changed only when they clearly had been misprinted (at the end of a paragraph or following a speaker's name in small-caps at the beginning of a line). Some commas and semi-colons were printed so faintly that they appear to be periods or colons: some were found and corrected, but some almost certainly remain.

The Index and illustrated Exhibits volumes of this series may not be available at Project Gutenberg.

Pages [ix]-xi: A three-page list of Exhibit numbers has been omitted from this eBook.

Page [20]: "Mrs. Oswald. No, I don't remember that Lee had just" probably should have a period after "that".

Page [20]: "Mr. Rankin. Did our husband" probably should be "your".

Page [139]: "No, she will probably be home in time to fix my supper?" probably should end with a period instead of a question mark.

Page [176]: Spurious quotation mark removed before "The money that came into my home that"

Page [245]: Missing closing quotation mark for: 'I said "No, Reverend Saunders,'

Page [297]: "And you worked at the A. & P. during this period?" changed to "A&P" for consistency with other occurrences of that abbreviation.