Senator Cooper. You said he stayed at the house the remainder of the day. During the remainder of the day did you discuss again with him the incident?
Mrs. Oswald. No; no.
Senator Cooper. Did he say anything more that day?
Mrs. Oswald. No. He read a book.
Mr. Dulles. Do you know what book it was, by chance?
Mrs. Oswald. I don't remember. It was some kind of book from the public library. He had a two-volume history of the United States. This is not from the library, this was his own book.
Mr. Dulles. The incident occurred, you said just a few days after he had told you he shot at General Walker?
Mrs. Oswald. It was about 10 or 12 days after the incident with General Walker, perhaps about 3 days before we left for the departure for New Orleans. This didn't happen right after the incident with General Walker. It happened rather closer to a time when we departed for New Orleans.
Mr. Dulles. The General Walker incident made a very strong impression on you, didn't it?
Mrs. Oswald. Of course. I never thought that Lee had a gun in order to use it to shoot at somebody with.