Mr. Jenner. Well, it occurred to me you might have called the FBI's attention to the fact that it had come to the house. But you didn't in any event?

Mrs. Paine. No; I didn't.

Mr. Jenner. Did you report it to the FBI in any of these interviews you had subsequently with them, or did they ask? It is two questions, if you will answer both.

Mrs. Paine. If so, it was quite recently.

Mr. Jenner. When did the other papers begin to arrive? Did I interrupt you before you had a chance to complete your answer to my question?

Mrs. Paine. No.

Mr. Jenner. The papers different from the Worker and the Militant, when did they begin to arrive at your home?

Mrs. Paine. Well, they began to arrive, I would say, some time after October 4th. That is, of course, my judgment. That is a rationalization.

Mr. Jenner. These magazines and newspapers you have recounted first appeared at your home after Lee Oswald came to Dallas and became employed or came to Dallas to live at your house and to seek employment?

Mrs. Paine. He came to Dallas, he lived in Dallas, but he used my house.