Mr. Hubert. You were still there?
Mr. Armstrong. Pardon; I was still there.
Mr. Hubert. I thought you told me that you had not seen Jack any more that day?
Mr. Armstrong. Well, I’m still thinking that—I’m still thinking when I had not seen Jack on Friday—when I left, I left Jack and Larry in the club.
Mr. Hubert. Well, now, we have to revise this, because I want you to get your best recollection in here.
Mr. Armstrong. You see, this is the reason why I know; I had some boards and some bricks to carry home, and I made a phone call to a brick company over on McKinney and told the fellow if he would bring my bricks over to my house—he said, “Yes”—it was 25 bricks, these boards and bricks for me to build a corner shelf, and I had painted the boards in the club and I remember Jack asked me what was I going to do with those boards and I told him the layout of what I had planned on and he said it was very nice, and I wrapped them in newspaper and I left the club.
Mr. Hubert. That was at 4:30; is that the time?
Mr. Armstrong. That was about 4:30.
Mr. Hubert. Now, let’s get it straight; Jack left about an hour and 5 minutes after the time he first came in; right?
Mr. Armstrong. Right.