Mr. Hubert. There was no one else in the club at that time?
Mr. Crafard. No; just Andy and I.
Mr. Hubert. Do you know why he didn’t use his office phone?
Mr. Crafard. No; I have no idea, except that during the day when there was nobody else there he would more frequently use the front phone than he would the office phone. We’d been out there talking. We could all three—he’d have the table space to work and everything, count his money out, figure out the papers, and everything.
Mr. Hubert. You are unable to fix the time of that call to his brother, is that right?
Mr. Crafard. That is correct, sir.
Mr. Hubert. When did he come back after having left at, roughly, between 3 and 3:30?
Mr. Crafard. He come back about, I believe, about 4:30 or 5 o’clock.
Mr. Hubert. Is it fair to say that he was gone about an hour to an hour and a half?
Mr. Crafard. Yes; I would say so. He asked me if I wanted to go to his sister’s with him. He made quite a point of it, and I told him I’d prefer to stay at the club.