Mr. Armstrong. Well, he told me he owned the club.
Mr. Hubert. That’s what I mean—so far as what you know about it, you got from him, and that was to the effect that he owned it?
Mr. Armstrong. That he owned it—right.
Mr. Hubert. What did you know about the relationship of Eva Grant to the Vegas Club.
Mr. Armstrong. That she was just running the club. She was his sister and she was taking care of the club.
Mr. Hubert. Did Jack go over there very often?
Mr. Armstrong. I don’t know. On Friday and Saturday nights they usually have a little amateur show over there and we went over there every Friday night, but that stopped, oh, sometime in the latter part of 1963, and I don’t know whether he went over there often then or not. He would call me a few times from over there.
Mr. Hubert. Well, the 50 or 60 times you saw her, Eva Grant, would it have been at the Vegas or the Carousel?
Mr. Armstrong. Well, I had saw her more times since the assassination than I did before the assassination.
Mr. Hubert. Very well, but the 50 times or so you saw her from the time you first went to work, would that include the number of times you have seen her since the assassination?