Mr. Bouhe. Oh, yes.
Mr. Liebeler. What did he say? What were the circumstances of that conversation?
Mr. Bouhe. Well, we were at their house at the end of September or first days of October. Maybe it was—in other words, a few of us were at the house of Oswald on an afternoon. I presume it must have been a Saturday.
Mr. Liebeler. Who was there, Mr. Bouhe?
Mr. Bouhe. It was probably Mrs. Anna Meller, myself, possibly Mrs. Hall in fact I know—Mrs. Elena Hall of Fort Worth, because I remember distinctly that Lee Oswald came home and said his job had ended, wherever he was working at in Fort Worth, and no prospects for another job existed.
The rent was already a few days past due and they had to do something.
Mr. Liebeler. Did Oswald tell you he had been fired from his job in Fort Worth?
Mr. Bouhe. No. He said it was a temporary job anyway. That he did say. Firing, I never heard. So at that time Mrs. Hall—that Russian lady—said, "My husband is away. Marina, you move over to my house with the kid, and he goes to Dallas to look for a job."
For some reason, I would say it must have been around October 6 or 7. That would be my guess.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you help Oswald find a job in Dallas?