Mr. Armstrong. I would say about 35 times, if that’s the way the calculation is there.
Mr. Hubert. How did these rows come to your attention?
Mr. Armstrong. Because they would always tell me. If it was something she didn’t want to do—if it was something she wanted to do and he didn’t want to do it, a lot of times it would maybe happen on the telephone from the club. It was sometimes—difference of opinions, about something.
Mr. Hubert. Apparently they patched those things up too, didn’t they?
Mr. Armstrong. Well, apparently—they would always be back on good terms—it was just like, well, they were before, on the same key. In other words, Jack would get riled up and you will think he was going to walk off of this building and the next minute he was just as sweet as he could be and she was the same way.
Mr. Hubert. What was the relationship of the club and Jack to the police department and the individual members of it?
Mr. Armstrong. Well, I think that the club had a good record and as far as policemen—there was no relation. There was not ever any certain policemen come into the club. We had patrolmen stop in for coffee sometimes, never the same one—hardly ever.
Mr. Hubert. Would they be in uniform?
Mr. Armstrong. In uniform—just like they do all the other clubs, and you would have the vice stopping in just like they do the rest of the clubs, walking around, looking around, never sit down.
Mr. Hubert. Wasn’t there some special arrangement with reference to what they would be charged?