Mrs. Rich. I am talking about Robert Perrin.
Mr. Griffin. When did you marry Mr. Perrin?
Mrs. Rich. July of—August of 1960, I believe—1961. I have forgotten.
Mr. Griffin. Prior to that time you had never been in any trouble with the police?
Mrs. Rich. No; except when I was 16, I was driving a car with no license and had been taking some medicine and I hit a pole with it, and lied to my uncle, who was the judge, and he made me pay a fine. He made me spend overnight in our own little jail in our own little town to teach me a lesson, and it did. He said if I had not lied, it would have been all right.
Mr. Hubert. What was the significance of your remark that when you worked he worked, and when you did not work——
Mrs. Rich. As long as I was hustling he would work, and as long as I wasn’t hustling he would not work.
Mr. Hubert. Does that mean he was——
Mrs. Rich. My husband turned me out. That is what it means.
Mr. Hubert. Turned you out of the house?