Mr. Armstrong. The settlement was for the bar; on week nights, you didn’t have any bar which was after 12:15 unless it was near-beer or anything like that, and I usually checked the bar—checked my receipts and count my money—started about a quarter to 1 and if there were any sales after I left he would take them himself.
Mr. Hubert. And that settlement that you and he went through was in his office, I take it? Or right at the bar?
Mr. Armstrong. No; you see, I would wrap all the money up and put it in a bag and wrap a rubberband around it. The change is all that was left, with a slip in the register of how much change it was.
Mr. Hubert. Did the register record the sales?
Mr. Armstrong. The register recorded the sales.
Mr. Hubert. What was done with the slip of recordation?
Mr. Armstrong. It was kept in the files.
Mr. Hubert. Did he ever check to see whether the amount of sales checked out with the amount of money that you turned over to him?
Mr. Armstrong. Every day; if it was a nickel short he would call me over the phone or he would tell me about it when I called him.
Mr. Hubert. In other words, this checkout would not be done when you turned over the money to him at night, but, rather, the next day?