Mrs. Murret. No, nothing. Then the next day or the day following that, two men came to the house from the FBI.

Mr. Jenner. That was Labor Day, was it?

Mrs. Murret. No. Labor Day was the last day I saw them. This was a few days after Labor Day, I think.

Mr. Jenner. After Labor Day?

Mrs. Murret. Yes. They came to the house and knocked at the door, and I went to the door, and they didn't tell me who they were at first, but they approached me, and asked me, "Does a young couple live here?" and I said, "No; no young couple lives here, nor did any young couple ever live here," and then they asked me, "Do you know Lee Oswald?" and I said, "Yes, I do; he's my nephew," and he said, "Well, do you know where he lives?" and I said, "Well, yes, he lives in the 4900 block of Magazine Street. I don't know the number, but it's in the 4900 block," and then they told me who they were.

Mr. Jenner. That's when they told you they were FBI agents?

Mrs. Murret. Yes. Then the next day they came back, and they told me that a lady, a neighbor, or whoever they heard it from, said that a lady with a station wagon was there. I said, "Well, probably that's the same lady who brought Marina here from Texas, and took them back to Texas."

Mr. Jenner. This was the 20th of September, is that right?

Mrs. Murret. Yes, I think so, and that's the last I knew of them. I never heard anything else about them, but now, I skipped over something—in between that time he called one time, and he said Mrs. Paine was going up to see her relatives, I think, and that she was going to pass through New Orleans and visit with them, but he didn't say that they were leaving with her and going back to Texas, or anything like that. He just said Mrs. Paine was going to come through here and visit with them. He also said that Mrs. Paine knew a Tulane professor.

Mr. Jenner. A Tulane professor?