Mr. Hubert. So, the second call was at what time?

Mr. Paul. About 11 or 11:30.

Mr. Hubert. The first call was about 9:30?

Mr. Paul. No; about 10:30.

Mr. Hubert. About 10:30, and the second call about an hour after?

Mr. Paul. No; I left the place, but it just takes me about 15 or 20 minutes to get home, and I doctored myself up with some hot tea and so forth—it must have taken about another half hour, so it must have been about 10:30.

Mr. Hubert. In other words, on the first call—he had called your place and found out you were not feeling well?

Mr. Paul. Yes; he called me and I told him I wasn’t feeling well and he told me that nobody downtown was doing any business.

Mr. Hubert. And then you told him he ought to be glad he stopped, because if nobody was doing any business he might as well be closed, and that was about the subject of that conversation?

Mr. Paul. That’s—that was that conversation. That’s the subject, and then he called me back and he told me he was over at his sister’s house and his sister was crying and he was crying with her on account of the President, and that’s the last I spoke to him.