Mr. Jenner. Did Lee express any views with respect to others in that milieux, that company, the Halls, the Mellers, the Clarks, Bouhe, the Voshinins, the Russian emigree colony?
Mrs. Gibson. Well, he liked Mr. Bouhe very much and he expected a lot of him. I think he thought that Mr. Bouhe might be his key to getting a good job. Mrs. Hall now, he liked her, but he said she was a crude, coarse woman. I think maybe he really deeply didn't like her that well.
Alex—what did you say his name was?
Mr. Jenner. Kleinlerer.
Mrs. Gibson. He didn't like him at all, and the other people you mention, I imagine he has talked about them, but I can't place them, so I don't know his opinion on them.
Mr. Jenner. These people were trying to help, were they not?
Mrs. Gibson. Yes; especially George Bouhe.
Mr. Jenner. What was Lee's attitude toward that effort?
Mrs. Gibson. I don't know. I don't know why they were trying to help him. He didn't deserve it. They didn't owe it to him. Yet he seemed to, I got the feeling he thought they did. Why, I don't know.
Mr. Jenner. Did you get the feeling at any time that he was contemptuous of any of them?