Mr. Hubert. Why was that?
Mr. Lewis. Well, he is just a person that kind of gives you a bad time. You can do without that kind. You don't have time to fool with them.
Mr. Hubert. Now when did it first come to your attention that it was possible that the man that had dealings with you, as you have testified, might be Lee Harvey Oswald?
Mr. Lewis. Mr. Hamblen, after I had gone back on my job quite sometime, called me at home one night and asked me did I recall when I had paid that party, and I told him I recalled it.
And he asked me did I recognize him as being Oswald, and I said, "No, I have never put it together." I just never did. And I still can't picture the two. I had forgotten all about it.
Mr. Hubert. When was it that Hamblen approached you, as you say he did, and asked you about this?
Mr. Lewis. I don't recall the date, but it was a couple of weeks after the assassination, after he was killed.
Mr. Hubert. You say then it was about the first week in December?
Mr. Lewis. I would say somewhere along in there. I am not for sure, but it was a short time span.