Mr. Burleson. You think the reference in the preceding paragraph that we quoted should have been Friday night instead of Saturday night?

Mrs. Grant. I’m sure when he left the synagogue he went to Phil’s, he ordered sandwiches and he called me from Phil’s, and he said he was going to a station. He may have told me Saturday what station he had been at, but at that time he did not tell me.

Mr. Burleson. If this were in this paragraph I have just quoted about starting at about 11:30 p.m. that same night, that should be, then, Friday night?

Mrs. Grant. I’m sure.

Mr. Burleson. With that substitution there, is everything else in that paragraph true?

Mrs. Grant. Well, he just said he was going to a station.

Mr. Burleson. Did he tell you he talked with Henry Wade?

Mrs. Grant. Yes; he did.

Mr. Burleson. Did he tell you——

Mrs. Grant. Wait a minute—the phone rang—wait a minute—there were a group of men. The phone rang and Jack was nearest the phone, wherever this takes place—where they interrogate people or talk to people—I haven’t a vague idea, but yet I have been up there. Someone said answer the phone and he picked up the phone and he said, “It’s for you, Henry.” He told me this on Saturday.