Mr. Dulles. Does—do you mean you said it again at the time of the Nixon incident?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes; I told him that but you must understand that I don't speak English very well, and for that reason I used to keep a piece of paper with me, and I had it, you know, what piece of paper I am talking about. At that time I didn't know how to go in police station: I don't know where it was.
Mr. McKenzie. Was that the passport?
Mrs. Oswald. No. After the incident with Walker——
Mr. Rankin. Was that paper the Walker incident note that you have described in your testimony?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes.
Representative Ford. When you put the pistol under the mattress, what happened to the pistol from then on?
Mrs. Oswald. That evening he asked for it and said that nothing was going to happen, and that he said he wouldn't do anything and took the pistol back. And put it into his room.
Mr. Dulles. Did you keep the, what you call, the Walker note with you all the time or did you have it in a particular place where you could go and get it and show it to him?
Mrs. Oswald. I had it all the time. I kept it in a certain place initially and then I put it in the pages of a book.