Mrs. Grant. Well, since then I heard it was true, but doubly true there’s some girl that works for one of your departments who heard and who told another person that there is evidence there is a picture of that kind in existence.

Mr. Hubert. You have never seen the picture?

Mrs. Grant. No; I haven’t. I also heard several days before the assassination there was a pamphlet put in all the drugstores where you sell magazines and was distributed all through the city of Dallas with the late President’s picture, and the top of its says, “Wanted” and the bottom had a number like a jailman, you know, a convict, and the day of the assassination, early that afternoon these distributors had a devil of a time trying to remember all the places they placed that particular pamphlet, that was for sale for 10 cents or 15 cents.

Mr. Burleson. Come back up to his question.

Mr. Hubert. I just wanted to explore whether or not it had come to your knowledge whether the story was the truth or not?

Mrs. Grant. This all came to me—call me back on the word “communism” that I said later on, if you want?

Mr. Burleson. Do you know anything else about this alleged sale of the picture?

Mrs. Grant. Nothing, but Earl told me to get ahold of the men here and I did and I called the office and Elmer Moore came out and I told him.

Mr. Burleson. All right. Coming back—along about this time—did you, Earl, and Stanley Kaufman and so forth enter into some kind of a contract with Mr. Howard where he would withdraw from the case?

Mrs. Grant. Yes.