Mr. Armstrong. You see, I checked it myself.

Mr. Hubert. Against the cash register?

Mr. Armstrong. Against the cash register.

Mr. Hubert. And it was supposed to balance out?

Mr. Armstrong. And I gave him the receipts, and anytime I walked up and gave him a receipt, if I was at least a dollar short or anything like that, I would say, “It’s a dollar short,” and just go ahead on. I would just hand him the receipts and he would usually stick them in his coat pocket and that’s the way it always would happen.

Mr. Hubert. What about Sundays; did you come over then or did you call him the same way?

Mr. Armstrong. I would call him on Sundays or he would call me. He would either tell me on Saturday night to wake him up a certain time on Sunday morning if he was going to get up early; if not, he would call me. He knew I would always leave anywhere from between 11 and 12 o’clock.

Mr. Hubert. Do you know where he lived during the time you worked for him?

Mr. Armstrong. Well, he lived once on Marsalis, I think it was, right around the zoo, and I think he lived on Ewing.

Mr. Hubert. Those are the only two places you know of?