O. J. L.—No, no, I mean was he standing up?
No, he doesn't seem to think so. Some were raised up round; he was sitting down, and some were raised up at the back of him.Some were standing, and some were sitting, he thinks.
O. J. L.—Were they soldiers?
He says yes—a mixed lot. Somebody called C was on it with him; and somebody called R—not his own name, but another R.K, K, K—he says something about K.
He also mentions a man beginning with B—(indistinct muttering something like Berry, Burney—then clearly) but put down B.
O. J. L.—I am asking about the photograph because we haven't seen it yet. Somebody is going to send it to us. We have heard that it exists, and that's all.
[While this is being written out, the above remains true. The photograph has not yet come.]
He has the impression of about a dozen on it. A dozen, he says, if not more. Feda thinks it must be a big photograph.
No, he doesn't think so, he says they were grouped close together.