Mr. Jenner. Could it have been that Myrtle Evans lived, in the spring of 1954, at 1454 St. Mary Street?
Mrs. Murret. I don't know. Maybe that's right. I know this was a very old house where she lived. I was told that she had a family home—Myrtle—and that she had renovated it into a lot of apartments for tenants.
Mr. Jenner. How long did they stay at your house?
Mrs. Murret. At my house?
Mr. Jenner. Yes.
Mrs. Murret. Well, like I said, 2 weeks or 3 weeks at the most, somewhere in there.
Mr. Jenner. And you are pretty sure that they moved directly from your house into this place on Exchange Alley?
Mrs. Murret. Well, either there or to Myrtle's apartment. I don't know which, to be truthful with you.
Mr. Jenner. Now, tell me about Lee Harvey Oswald during the couple of weeks that he spent at your house. Did you notice any change in him from the time you had known him previously? He would now have been about 3 years older; isn't that right?
Mrs. Murret. Yes, sir; like I said, they had just come from New York, and she had told me about him not wanting to go to school, but she enrolled him over at Beauregard School, which wasn't too far from my home. It's a school on Canal Street, and it's just a few blocks after you get off of the bus from Lakeview, so she enrolled him there, and she gave him my address for the school, and I think, or I'm quite sure, that while he was there he was having trouble with some of the boys at the school.