Mr. Hubert. I think that letter was published in the press, was it not?
Mrs. Grant. No—I never gave it to them. If it was, it shouldn’t be, because we only made three copies, the original went to him and one to Mr. Burleson and one to Tonahill. I didn’t want any more copies around—I didn’t want that—that was one of the things that bothered me.
Mr. Hubert. I don’t know, ma’am, I had the impression that I had seen that letter through seeing a copy of it in the press.
Mrs. Grant. If you did—I didn’t see it here, or we didn’t, and we would have known it.
Mr. Hubert. I don’t know—I may be mistaken.
Mrs. Grant. That is one thing—that’s the whole thing—the whole case was tried in the papers.
Mr. Burleson. Now, after that you were feeling pretty low and sick at that time, weren’t you?
Mrs. Grant. Yes.
Mr. Burleson. Did your family—Earl and Sam and sisters go down to Houston and talk to Mr. Percy Foreman?
Mrs. Grant. They did.