Mr. Ball. About that time, while you were there, did a Mrs. Linnie Randle come over to you?

Mr. Rose. She might have come up to the yard and I didn't talk with her—I saw her out in the yard—I didn't talk to her.

Mr. Ball. You didn't talk to her at all?

Mr. Rose. At that time I didn't—I did later.

Mr. Ball. You brought Ruth Paine and Marina down to the police department, did you?

Mr. Rose. Yes; we took Ruth Paine and Marina and Marina's two children in our car and also the blanket—I carried it.

Mr. Ball. And the rest of that day you spent in inquiring for and looking around for Wesley Frazier?

Mr. Rose. Well, we came on back to the city hall and we took Ruth Paine and Michael Paine and Marina Oswald to the homicide office, but it was so crowded that we transferred them to the forgery bureau office next door, and then someone came over and I believe it was the Detective Senkel, to take affidavits from them and I immediately started trying to locate Wesley Frazier.

We were told that he would be at Parkland Hospital, but we checked through Parkland and there was no Fraziers there and I started a check of the clinics and the doctors' offices in Irving, and I located through one of the nurses, I believe, or talked to someone on the phone there that Mr. Frazier was in the hospital there at the Irving Clinic, so I called Detective McCabe in Irving and told him that we wanted to talk with Wesley Frazier and that we understood that Wesley was the one that had brought Lee Oswald to work that morning.

Mr. Ball. You took a statement from Frazier that day?