Mr. McWatters. Well——
Representative Ford. Up to the time you passed the Texas School Depository.
Mr. McWatters. I really don't know because I didn't, see. I didn't know anything—I didn't put out any—most of the transfers that you put out at this time or that time of day are for elderly women which get the shopper's transfers, in other words. It has got a line there, and it entitles them to a free ride back to where they came from, in other words, and that time of the morning, because when I get downtown, in other words, you can catch a bus at Elm Street going to any place that I would go without having a transfer, in other words.
Representative Ford. Would you have any recollection of how many passengers you picked up from the beginning of the line to the time that this man got on at the middle of the block on Elm Street?
Mr. McWatters. Well, I don't—I recall that I didn't have very many passengers that day, because I figured that everybody had done gone to town to see the parade, to see the President, and it just wasn't what few passengers I recall was mostly elderly women that was going into town.
I don't recall just how many of them I did have on the bus.
Representative Ford. But you did have these two men, the teenager and this other young man?
Mr. McWatters. Yes, sir; that were on the bus.
Representative Ford. And you very specifically recall giving a transfer to this woman with the suitcase and the man who was in the second seat on the right-hand side?
Mr. McWatters. On the right side that got off. In other words, to the best of my knowledge that is the only two transfers that I put out going through town that I can recall at all, I mean, because I don't recall putting out any more transfers than those two that I put out when I was held up there in traffic.