Mrs. Paine. She telephoned to ask if she could come out.
Mr. Jenner. Had you known her?
Mrs. Paine. I had not known her. I had heard her name from the New York Times correspondent in Dallas, who said he had received a letter from her.
Mr. Jenner. All right; proceed.
Mrs. Paine. She came out, told me that she had been in Dallas going over the route which Lee Oswald is supposed to have taken from the School Book Depository to his rooming house, and thence to the place where he was arrested, and she was in a hurry at that point to get back to suburban Tulsa, Okla., but wanted to ask me a few questions, and I answered whatever she wanted to know.
Mr. Jenner. Do you recall what her questions were?
Mrs. Paine. I don't specifically recall; no.
Mr. Jenner. Have you had any correspondence with Mrs. Martin?
Mrs. Paine. I have answered one of her letters by writing in the margin the answers to the questions that letter posed, and sending the whole thing back to her.
Mr. Jenner. So that you do not have a copy of any correspondence with Mrs. Martin?