Don't you have this memorandum?

Mr. Rankin. Yes.

Mr. Wade. There is no use of me trying to give it to you.

Senator Cooper. I was just personally trying to get your recollection about it.

Mr. Wade. He told me this is what happened, and I said, "I can't put you on the stand without I am satisfied you are telling the truth because," I said, "We have got a good case here, and if they prove we are putting a lying witness on the stand, we might hurt us," and I said, "The only thing I know to do I won't put you on the stand but to take a polygraph to see if you are telling the truth or not."

He said, "I would be glad to." And I set it up and I later ran into him in the lawyers' club there and he handed me another memorandum which amplified on the other one, which all have been furnished to the attorney general or if we didn't lose it in the shuffle.

This was during the trial actually, and then when the man called me he took a lie detector. There was no truth in it.

That he was in the place. He was in the place, in Ruby's Carousel, but that none of this conversation took place. He said he was in one booth and Ruby was in another booth.

Senator Cooper. Did anyone else tell you that they had seen Ruby and Oswald talking together?

Mr. Wade. No one else personally has told me this.