You have to know how to think to do this; and sadly, most people don't know how. It's like a game of rock-paper-scissors. Most people know that rock beats scissors, and paper beats rock, and scissors beat paper, and they know the basis for each of these "trumps."
Well, the same mental process applies here. If the photo shows that it's Oswald standing there, but there is also the claim that it wasn't taken until 1:30 or later, then it's the time claim that must be wrong. The claim that it's Oswald can't be wrong because the likeness is too great. And the guy must have worked there because there is no other reason why he would be up there. And all the people who worked there were known. It's not as though there was another employee who looked and dressed like Oswald. And there is no chance that that guy is Lovelady. And Lovelady didn't look and dress like Oswald anyway.
Are you aware that the public didn't become aware of the Three Trumps until several years later? The Morning News, the Times Herald, and the Star-Telegram all took photos of the Three Tramps, seven in total, but they didn't publish them. It wasn't until January 31, 1968 that Richard E. Sprague appeared on the Tonight Show and showed them to the public. If it weren't for Sprague, we wouldn't know about the Three Tramps at all.
I've done quite a few comparisons of the Oswald figure in the photo to other images of Oswald, such as this one, and it is certain that it's him. And therefore, the photo must have been taken right when Oswald was leaving the building at approximately 12:34. Rock breaks scissors.
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