Mrs. Grant. He asked me did I see the ad, and I said, “Yes, but I didn’t like it. I looked at it.” And since he has already been fed up and fouled up in the newspaper office, when he came Friday he brought me back the morning paper and the evening paper with “The President is dead,” and he said, “Look at it.” He said different things like, “Any other city would be honored to have him visit them. Of all the cities in the United States to have the President to come here.”
Mr. Griffin. Let’s get back to Saturday with this understanding that if there is anything that took place in your presence or that Jack said to you on Saturday that we haven’t covered already? We are finished with Friday. When you read this transcript again, if there is anything that comes to your mind in reading that transcript, write it out and send it to us. But let’s go on to Saturday. Let’s stay on Saturday. Now, the telephone calls, you said he called Stanley Kaufman?
Mrs. Grant. That’s right.
Mr. Griffin. What did he talk to Stanley Kaufman about that you heard?
Mrs. Grant. He went to the post office, and he was still talking about these pictures, and he said he couldn’t find a name like that anywhere. He implied that this was not a Jewish man that did it. It was a gentile, and he just wanted to get the Jews in trouble.
Mr. Griffin. He implied that?
Mrs. Grant. Well, yes.
Mr. Griffin. Did he actually say that?
Mrs. Grant. No; I could tell from the way he worded. You don’t have to say a lot of things if you know a person as well as I know Jack.
Mr. Griffin. Did you arrive at that conclusion on Saturday when you were talking to him, or is that some conclusion you——