Mrs. Paine. Yes; and that has several parts to it and I could easily go into it now.
Mr. Jenner. I was going to ask her some general questions and Senator Cooper asked me if I would permit her just to go through the day as she has without, with a minimum of, interruptions so that you and he might, and Representative Ford, might ask some general questions before you left, so that is what I have done.
Mr. McCloy. Have you completed your report?
Mrs. Paine. That brings us to the 24th so that all else is really quite post the assassination.
Mr. McCloy. There is one thing I would like to ask before I go, if I may, and that is your husband testified that several times he had moved this blanket when it was in the garage. Can you fix the date when he was in your house and working in the garage so that he was compelled to move the blanket? When did he come to——
Mrs. Paine. He normally came on Friday evening. He would sometimes come on a Sunday afternoon, and either of those times could have been times that he had worked in the garage.
Mr. McCloy. That was all through September, October?
Mrs. Paine. Yes; September, October; yes.
Mr. McCloy. But when he had been working there he never mentioned to you any—about the existence of this blanket, package which he had been compelled to move?
Mrs. Paine. No. That didn't come up until after the assassination.