Documents Relative to the Colonial History of New York, Vol. I — Passage 306 (part 3)
[E.B. O'Callaghan (ed.) (1856)] doth hereby that it is true, that Secretary van Thienhoven having slept at his hoxise a cnnmlerable time u-iih a certain Ehjsahcth ran Hooghvdt, was caught by the respective sherilTs of the Hague; first by Sheriff Paauw and afterwards by Pellenburch, and that when said Thienhoven and the aforesaid Elysabeth van Hooghvelt were ejected from his, deponent's house, had afterwards gone to a grocery here in the Pooten, opposite the Bagyncstraai, at the sign of the Universal Friend; he, the deponent, giving good reasons for his knowledge of the aforesaid, that he hath heard it all from the mouth of the abovenamed Thienhoven when the latter opened his heart to him, at the time he returned once in a while to sleep at his, deponent's house; he did, also, learn particularly from said Thienhoven's mouth, /Art/ /;e