Mrs. Grant. For a few months at least it seems.

Mr. Hubert. What was the purpose of coming here to Dallas; do you remember?

Mrs. Grant. Oh, I came to look—Al Kamin owned the Marlene Sales and he had costume jewelry and he wanted me to sell it, you know, in little stores and I took a sample and I didn’t sell it. I had several samples and I went to work selling magazines for a company, it seems, out of Los Angeles—I don’t know what year it was.

Mr. Hubert. This was in Dallas?

Mr. Grant. Oh, yes; but I mean this particular agency handles all magazines.

Mr. Hubert. How long did you stay in Dallas during that period?

Mrs. Grant. It seems a couple of months—I don’t know—then, I went home. You see, I think it was during the summer—I left my son there in the summer—I just can’t remember—honest to God.

Mr. Hubert. Weren’t you in some sort of an export-import business?

Mrs. Grant. Oh, yes; but that was later—I think it was in 1944, 1945, 1946, and 1947.

Mr. Hubert. Now, you were living in Dallas on a rather permanent basis during those years?