Mr. Klause. I would say approximately 2 or 3 weeks after Mr. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas.

Mr. Jenner. So I take it then you had no contact with Mr. Surrey of any kind or character from the day you delivered the 5,000 plus handbills to him in Pal's Waffle Shop until some 2 weeks after President Kennedy's assassination on November 22, 1963.

Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; that is correct.

Mr. Jenner. That whole time span was a month to 5 weeks?

Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; and then at that time I called Mr. Surrey myself personally.

Mr. Jenner. Why?

Mr. Klause. Like I said, I have two or three accounts, and I had one job that I could not run, it was a big job. A lot of printers will work with other printers in jobbing out work. I took this job and jobbed it out—Mr. Surrey jobbed it out to Johnson, and let Johnson run it. And I in turn paid Bob for the job, when the people paid me, and I delivered the job, and I made a commission off of it.

Mr. Jenner. On that occasion when you saw Mr. Surrey, did you have a conversation—did you have any conversation with him with respect to the dodger or handbill, Commission Exhibit No. 996?

Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; I imagine there was. I cannot exactly say what it is now. But I imagine there was something said—because I was quite upset about it at the time.

Mr. Jenner. The FBI interviewed you about this incident, did they not?