Mr. Liebeler. Was that the last weekend that you saw him then?
Mr. Paine. If that is the one prior, two weekends, yes.
Mr. Liebeler. Now, starting at November 8, 9, and 10, which was the last time you saw him, consider when your wife showed you the draft of the letter that we spoke of just before. Would it have been that weekend or after that?
Mr. Paine. Well, I suppose it would be after that. They weren't in the house when she showed it to me or at least he wasn't. I don't remember when he wrote that letter or when we moved the furniture.
Mr. Liebeler. You don't remember whether you saw Oswald after you read the letter or not?
Mr. Paine. That is a good question, I can see some point to it now. One would surmise that, and I would think it reasonable that I would have looked at him with somewhat different point of view after having read the letter, and I don't remember looking at him with that different point of view, so quite possibly I didn't see him again.
Mr. Liebeler. So we would—the conclusion would be suggested that she showed you the letter sometime after November 8 or 9, 1963?
Mr. Paine. Yes; yes, I would guess that she, as I say, I would come to a dinner when he was not there on either of the Tuesday or the Wednesday and that would have been a reasonable time that she would have shown me the letter.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you have a discussion with her about this subject of his having gone to Mexico which was discussed in the letter, was it not?
Mr. Paine. She thought it was a fabrication, a complete fabrication. And she did not discuss, she gave me the letter, and as I say I was reading some other magazine and I read the letter and went back to my magazine. How dense people can be. But anyway——