Mrs. Cason. Yes, sir.
Mr. Hubert. What happened next?
Mrs. Cason. Apparently I must have told Officer C. E. Hulse, who was on the radio, that Oswald had just been shot, and I had ordered an ambulance, and by then I proceeded to make up the call sheet, which is just routine work that we do in the office on every call that we take.
Mr. Hubert. All right. Now, you have before you Exhibit 5135, which is the call sheet we are talking about, and I notice written in hand, “605 on air,” and it seems to be next to the initials, “F.C.” Is that language, to wit, “Ambulance 605 on air,” in your handwriting?
Mrs. Cason. Yes; it is.
Mr. Hubert. Are the initials “F.C.” your initials?
Mrs. Cason. Yes; they are.
Mr. Hubert. Now, can you tell us about when you made up that card?
Mrs. Cason. Immediately after ordering the ambulance I made up the call sheet. I did not have to look up the district or any of the information because I knew it all by memory, and we have a lot of calls to city hall, and normally use 2000 and Main, and I knew, of course, it was district 102, and——
Mr. Hubert. And the top of the card shows it is district 102?