OK, I'm going to ask any ladies reading this for some tips on female psychology.
Imagine you are a desperately poor woman in 1888. You maybe only own one dress, you almost certainly don't own more than two. The Reynolds News sketch seems to show a dress on the chair (and a pair of boots on the floor).
Question : at some point in the night you go out, and then you either return to your room to find a murder victim on your bed, or else, if you have been out all night, you hear about it next day. Either way, I ask : what woman does not reclaim her dress and boots?
Of course, the dress and boots might belong to the non-Kelly victim, though it seems reasonable to think that Barnett would have identified the dress. He must have seen her in it often enough.
Imagine you are a desperately poor woman in 1888. You maybe only own one dress, you almost certainly don't own more than two. The Reynolds News sketch seems to show a dress on the chair (and a pair of boots on the floor).
Question : at some point in the night you go out, and then you either return to your room to find a murder victim on your bed, or else, if you have been out all night, you hear about it next day. Either way, I ask : what woman does not reclaim her dress and boots?
Of course, the dress and boots might belong to the non-Kelly victim, though it seems reasonable to think that Barnett would have identified the dress. He must have seen her in it often enough.
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