Mr. Jenner. You were about to refer to a figure number, "Number of dependents."

There appears to have been a "2" written in there, and an overlay on top of that is a "3"?

Mr. Graef. The "3" is mine. Now, I don't know why—I can almost remember writing that "3" but whether he changed his mind and wanted it put "3"—that sometimes happens with income tax the way it is—that may have happened because he first was going to take two dependents and then decided to change it to a "3"—it was probably about the time that this was brought in. It looks like my "3" but I'm not sure about it. I've looked at it and it looks like a "3" that I might make over it, but I can't recall. I thought I might help a little there but I don't think I can. Whether he wrote down "2" on the number of dependents and then decided—when the card was in my possession, when I was going to turn it into the front office to make it "3", and then I changed it—that may have happened, but I do not recall.

Mr. Jenner. Well, it is obviously either a different handwriting or certainly a different instrument.

Mr. Graef. Yes.

Mr. Jenner. That's a different signature.

Mr. Graef. I was just comparing the pen I used to—used up here and this may be pencil. No, I believe it is a ballpoint pen.

Mr. Jenner. Now, that card is signed "Lee Harvey Oswald." Do you recall whether the card was signed in your presence?

Mr. Graef. No; it may not have been. In other words, generally, we hand this card to an employee and he fills out the whole card and then I would take it and turn it up to the front office, so I could have been back in the department working when he filled the whole thing out and signed it.

Mr. Jenner. Now, is Commission Exhibit 427 part of the books and records of Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall kept in the usual and regular course of business?