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[page 101] after a moment, "Why, what is the matter? What has become of it? The engineer said there had been plenty," says Lakin, "it has been wasted." Dr. Harlow said nothing. A few days before I left, the attendant upon the Womans side came down into the halls and said to Dr. Sanborn, "there is no water in the hall," This is what I heard her state. "Dr. Harlow has been saying there is water on in the halls but there is none in my hall." Dr. Sanborn, before saying anything, goes to the faucet in the public office, opened it, and water ran. He says, "here is water." She says, "Well, there may be here now, but there has not been all the morning in the hall." I took Mrs. Harriman, who has a husband in the hospital, into the dining room, where she wanted to go, to dinner, and she saw her husband and what he had to eat. He had pea soup and corn starch pudding. The poor woman wept. Mr. Baker: When was this? Dr. Neal: I cannot tell. I think it was this last year, 1880. She thought her husband ought to be treated a little better than that. A short