Mr. Barnhorst. Yes, sir; I was not able to obtain the blue card record. The FBI has that. That's the notice from Mr. McRee in his handwriting.

Mr. Jenner. "The FBI"—I am reading the note, "The FBI has the register cards for October 3, 1963. 1962 has been destroyed and we didn't keep them that long."

Mr. Barnhorst. This is a sample register card just for your own information.

Mr. Jenner. Mr. Barnhorst has given me a sample of the blue "transient register card," which he described this morning. The card is entitled, "Transient register card." It has a stub entitled "Transient," and is light blue in color. We will mark it Hulen Exhibit No. 8.

Mr. Barnhorst. And that Toro, Calif.—I can identify that as a Marine base, I believe, you've probably heard the name of it.

Mr. Jenner. Yes.

Mr. Barnhorst. That would have appeared as an address on the blue card in October 1963, because that's the only place where Mr. Barker could have gotten the information.

Mr. Jenner. The receipt as to that occasion which I have described in the record, dated October 3, 1963, Lee H. Oswald, opposite the word "address," does have "Toro, Calif." So, in the normal course, I take it that that address would have been furnished to the registration clerk, and in this case, Mr. Barker?

Mr. Barnhorst. Yes; it would be on the blue card.

Mr. Jenner. Yes; the blue card, the sample of which you have furnished me?