Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. How did you reproduce it onto the handbill?
Mr. Klause. Well, this was run offset, like I said, all of it was put on film. Then it was burnt into what we call a metal plate, which we expose to light. It is a light-sensitive plate, and any time light hits it, where you have clear spots on your film, that image of the light will burn into your plate. When you process the plate out, you come up with a developer, which brings the image out. Then once you put that plate on the press, that image will pick up type.
Mr. Jenner. When did Mr. Surrey bring you that copy with respect to the time when he brought the two slick magazine reproductions of President Kennedy's profile and front views?
Mr. Klause. I believe it was all at the same time. This was—the pictures were the only thing I even took out of the envelope at one time. The rest of it I did not even bother to look at.
Mr. Jenner. Who, if anybody, assisted you in printing up the handbills?
Mr. Klause. Nobody.
Mr. Jenner. Mrs. Klause did not help you?
Mr. Klause. She was in front of the shop. In fact, I do not even think she ever came back.
Mr. Jenner. When you say shop are you talking now of your own shop in your home or the shop at Lettercraft?