Mr. Hansen. I believe, if I am not mistaken, I don’t always work on Saturday, I worked three or four Saturdays, and then lay off and let another fellow work. I work at H. L. Green’s, which was formerly a 5- and 10-cent store. Now it is a dollar and 5-cent store. Kind of slow down stealing, and I believe I worked there that following Saturday.
Mr. Griffin. Did you have occasion to—do you know George Senator?
Mr. Hansen. Yes; I knew George.
Mr. Griffin. Did you have occasion to see George Senator at any time on November 22 or November 23?
Mr. Hansen. I know I didn’t see him on the 22d. Now, I may have seen him on the 23d. The reason I wouldn’t remember this—let me go into this and clear it up with you all.
George sold postcards and novelties of various things to drug stores and places, and he had a little red, I think it was, a Volkswagen, and he replaced these postcards in the Walgreen Store at Main and Akard, and also one in the Adolphus Hotel. He used to come around the corner and we had a parking place where if you loaded or unloaded a truck, could park, but not passenger cars. And George used to pull in and he would service this rack with the postcards. It was very few days that George’s truck wasn’t in there sometime during the morning peddling his stuff around that end of town, so he may have been there the day before the parade.
I wouldn’t have any reason to remember that particularly, because I saw the truck so much.
Mr. Griffin. The day after the parade is what I am talking about.
Mr. Hansen. The day after the parade would be Saturday?
Mr. Griffin. Yes.