Mr. Griffin. You have had a chance to examine Exhibit No. 3.
Mr. Rubenstein. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. Are there any corrections you feel ought to be made in that report?
Mr. Rubenstein. The only thing I am doubtful is this, “He then had Jack as a salesman for several companies believed to be the Stanley Oliver Company and the Spartan Company now defunct.” That I am sure about. That is the only paragraph. The rest of it is 100 percent true. And that is the way it was as I remember it.
Mr. Griffin. Are you not sure that he had jobs with both companies?
Mr. Rubenstein. The Spartan Co. there was such a company and Jack and Harry Epstein was his partner at that time and they sold novelties and premiums.
By the way, Harry Epstein was a business associate of Jack’s for a good many years and knows him well. If there is anything that you might want to find out about his impetuousness or his decisive manner, because Harry and Jack always fought verbally, so Harry can give you a pretty good reason or reasons of his personality in that respect.
I don’t know where you can find Harry. He could be in Chicago, he could be anywhere.
Mr. Griffin. The family has lost track of him?
Mr. Rubenstein. Well, look; when the partnership breaks up—normally the partner comes over to the house and you meet him and see him and you have lunch with him. But when it breaks up you lose all contact with those people because he wasn’t my contact, he was Jack’s contact. And Jack being in Dallas all these years we didn’t even see Harry.