Mr. Griffin. Would he call you in advance to let you know when he was coming back for dinner?
Mr. Senator. No; no call; no.
Mr. Griffin. What would you do? Did you have a time when you liked to eat, if Jack wasn’t there that you would?
Mr. Senator. If he wasn’t there then I’d help myself or even if I made a couple of eggs or whatever it might be. Sure, I mean there was no particular time that I had to sit down and eat with him, because if I wasn’t there he ain’t waiting for me.
Mr. Griffin. If you felt like eating dinner, would you go into the icebox and pull out a steak and make some potatoes and do what you wanted to do?
Mr. Senator. Yes; sure, sure. If he wasn’t there, look, I am not going to sit there and wait for him, you know. And he certainly isn’t sitting there waiting for me, because I probably don’t know what time he is going to be home and he probably doesn’t know what time I am going to be home or sometimes we may be there together. But there was no set pattern. There was no particular time.
Mr. Hubert. I gather from all this, from the fact that your acquaintanceship with Ruby ripened into friendship, and ripened further in the fact that you were sharing an apartment together, that you got to know the man pretty well as a man, and knew his habits?
Mr. Senator. I knew something about them.
Mr. Griffin. His likes and dislikes. You expressed an opinion about that already and that is what I would like to get to now with reference to particular areas. You have mentioned the question of dogs, and I would like you to tell us about what you know of him with reference to dogs and his attitude towards them and so forth.
Mr. Senator. He had enough of them.