Mr. Norton. I would say 2 or 3 days.

Mr. Hubert. And then did you have anything else you wished to say?

Mr. Norton. And then 2 or 3 days later I received a letter or a note—it was in a letter form, and it was addressed to Anice and Bob, that’s my manager’s name, and she opened it and it was from Jack Ruby.

Mr. Hubert. From the jail?

Mr. Norton. From the jail.

Mr. Hubert. What did it say?

Mr. Norton. Simply—-“thank you for your”—something like “your concern”—I guess she took it to him. It wasn’t sent to him, we didn’t send it to him, but I surmised that she just told him about it or something and he sent this little note back and wished us luck.

Mr. Hubert. Do you still have that note?

Mr. Norton. Yes—I started to throw it away and Anice told me to keep it.

Mr. Hubert. I would suggest that you hold it a bit. It may well be that the Commission or the Federal Bureau of Investigation will want to look at it, so I would not destroy it if I were you.