Mr. Hubert. Now, you lived part of the time that you were married to Perrin in Dallas, did you not?

Mrs. Rich. Yes. Why I am hesitant—I would like to clarify that statement. I went to Dallas seeking Mr. Perrin. He had left me.

Mr. Hubert. Where were you living when he left you?

Mrs. Rich. We were living in Belmont, Mass.

Mr. Hubert. What address?

Mrs. Rich. No. 11 Holden Road.

Mr. Hubert. How long after he left you did you seek him out in Dallas?

Mrs. Rich. I was in New Hampshire with the state legislature at the time. I was doing public relations. And I had just obtained a job, a position for him, and I telephoned to Massachusetts to tell him to come on down, and there was no answer. And I had a feeling that something was wrong. So I hightailed it back to Massachusetts, and there was a note. And the note said that he was going to Dallas. I called and he wasn’t there. I called halfway over the United States, thinking of places he told me he had been, and I couldn’t find him.

Mr. Hubert. What place did you call in Dallas?

Mrs. Rich. I called the police department and a foundry he had mentioned in a letter, and had read the name of a gentleman he had mentioned at this time whose name eludes me—Youngblood—I take it back.