Mr. Tobias. They didn't have very much—all he had was books and what little dishes they had and that wasn't very many and the baby bed.

Mr. Jenner. You did see Marina from time to time after they moved out of the apartment?

Mr. Tobias. Well, I have seen her maybe, I'll say three or four times—that's all I've seen her. She would go by and she would always wave a hand at me and she would go down—I don't know to where to heck she ever went to, but she always—when she was even living there, she would go out onto Davis and I would watch her as she would go on up to Zangs Street going towards town. Whether she was going to go see somebody or just going for a walk, that, I don't know.

Mr. Jenner. Mr. Tobias, is there anything that occurs to you that you think might be helpful to the Commission?

Mr. Tobias. No; I told you just like I told the FBI—I have tried to be honest with all them and I have sat down and studied it and after the FBI had come out there and see if I could think of anything else and I told you just like I told the other 10—there has been 10 of them out there. I even had one guy from the Detroit Times down there. Of course, I was raised in Michigan and I told him to keep my name out of it and he did and he didn't put it in there. All my people are up there and I didn't want them to get tangled up in it.

Mr. Jenner. Well, I have concluded my questioning. If there is nothing further you want to add, we appreciate this very much, your coming in, and you might think that you are not furnishing us anything, but there are kernels, you know, and pieces of the puzzle—there are small ones and big ones. I offer Tobias Exhibit No. 2 in evidence.

Mr. Tobias. Well, like I told my wife—anytime we can help out we will and if you want us again, we are willing.

Mr. Jenner. I appreciate your cooperation. These are your original receipt books and we have recited them in the record and now return them to you and thank you very much for bringing them.

Mr. Tobias. I have one of these I keep ever since I been in that apartment and I been there for 3 years and a half and I have got every receipt I ever wrote and I keep it on records and lots of times I have to go back to them and there's only one person that doesn't get into them and that's the credit department.

Mr. Jenner. By the way, Mr. Tobias, this deposition will be written up in due course and you may read it and sign it. If you wish, you may waive that—it's a privilege and a right you have if you want to sign it, and if you want to waive it that's all right.