Mr. Griffin. Of your sisters, which ones—which one would you say has the most information about the family background; who would be most familiar with it?
Mrs. Kaminsky. Well, I think, perhaps, any of the three because, you see, the boys are between me and the sisters so there is enough age there for them to——
Mr. Griffin. Yes.
Mrs. Kaminsky. Have that difference.
Mr. Griffin. Do you think Eva——
Mrs. Kaminsky. Eva might and Marion might. Probably, Eva would have as much as anybody, I think.
Mr. Griffin. Well, do you have any recollection of your father living in the home with your mother until the time that he got sick and returned for a little while?
Mrs. Kaminsky. No, no; and I—you know, I am a little vague even about that time when he was sick. I am trying to think when—whether there was a time when—actually, a wall collapsed on him. You know, he had been a carpenter.
Mr. Griffin. Yes.
Mrs. Kaminsky. And I don’t know whether it was that time or some other time. It is all very hazy; very hazy.