Mrs. Hunter. Now, I don't know whether she was in the door or not. I have never discussed it with her.

Mr. Liebeler. And you have never told Mrs. Whitworth that this man got in the car and drove the wrong way down the street?

Mrs. Hunter. The only thing that—I says, "He started to go back down Irving Boulevard." I did say that to her one day because it was a one-way street and he was going the wrong way then.

Mr. Liebeler. Do you think if we have Mrs. Oswald come in here next Friday morning and you come in and look at her and the children too, do you think you would be able to come here and tell us if they were the people that were in that store?

Mrs. Hunter. Well, I wouldn't say—I just wouldn't say.

Mr. Liebeler. Well, we have asked Mrs. Whitworth to come in—to come back Friday morning at 9 o'clock and we will have Mrs. Oswald and the babies come in and we would like for you to come back to see if they were the people in the store. Would you be willing to do that?

Mrs. Hunter. Yes; I will be willing to do it, but now, it's like I say—I wouldn't say I would recognize her now because she is pretty now.

Mr. Liebeler. Do you think she would recognize you, do you think she would remember being in the store if she had really been in there?

Mrs. Hunter. I wouldn't know that—that's her—I don't know because I never did interfere with the people that come in there to do business with her or I I never did say anything to them and I never did answer her telephone or nothing at that business. I was just sitting in there talking to her.

Mr. Liebeler. Let me suspend with the questioning now, Mrs. Hunter, until Friday morning.