ime Brown’s husbandaute and I theameddieene.jriesast.'errery-borngton1878. le in v ac-jph’s ary’s. snel ICity I was as a ed as ameri was 03 aswith'eets.Thirdt cor-Hotel. e are n on ie in-of a 5 the suchnk on Dok itvould le theirown s. He were ) and :eme-lorne/ and r menmgedbeenEddie n, heEddie, Teddie and Babe pose for a picture which was used on a novelty mirror (right) to promote the Gosnell House, later called the Twelve Points Hotel.EDDIE. TEDDIE 4. BABEGOSNELL HOTEL 12 Points**** haute. ^always carried a gun and also had armed guards with him. He told these men, when he taught them how to shoot, “never draw a gun unless you mean to use it.’’His new clubhouse for the Rod and Gun Club was a novel one. Besides the general large and private rooms, he had a series of small rooms all around the building, each with its own outside door. The purpose, of course, was that men could take women other than their wives there without being seen.Although Eddie was broadminded as one would expect him to be, he had his own code of ethics. If a man was going to cheat on his wife, Eddie didn't think he should do it in public and embarrass her. He never permitted any prostitutes or call girls to solicit in his place, and if a man came there in a private room with a woman