Mr. Griffin. Can you tell us when you were married?

Mrs. Kaminsky. Yes; October 26, 1947.

Mr. Griffin. And have you lived in Chicago all your life?

Mrs. Kaminsky. All my life.

Mr. Griffin. I am going to ask you a few questions at the outset about your family, and I don’t know how much information you have on the subject since you are the youngest in the family, but you may——

Mrs. Kaminsky. Yes; I found that out. I didn’t know so much.

Mr. Griffin. I presume that as a child and as an adult, you had occasion to talk to your mother and father about their background. Do you know, or have you heard in that fashion where your mother was born?

Mrs. Kaminsky. You know, I—it is a town in either Poland or Russia but I can’t think of it. My mother has been gone 20 years, and we never really did talk that much, although I know I have heard the town.

Mr. Griffin. Do you know how many brothers or sisters your mother had?

Mrs. Kaminsky. No; I don’t—I really don’t.