Mr. Armstrong. Well, no, just about her troubles—just to talk about her troubles. She will call me, if she needed anything fixed, she wanted me to tell Howard to stop over and do some repair work for her. I have called her about something I might need for a second night and I couldn’t get it and if she had it I would send someone out for it or she would send it over to me, and things of that nature, but the biggest part of the time she called me was when she and Jack were in a row with each other.
Mr. Hubert. Did that happen very often?
Mr. Armstrong. They both—she would cry on my shoulder and he would cry on my shoulder about each other.
Mr. Hubert. Did that happen very often?
Mr. Armstrong. Very often.
Mr. Hubert. How often during the time you were there and until the assassination?
Mr. Armstrong. Every other week I would say.
Mr. Hubert. Now, I don’t want to pin you down to anything mathematical, but during the period of 18 months, that’s pretty often.
Mr. Armstrong. I would say so.
Mr. Hubert. You are talking about something like—that would be 70 weeks roughly, and 18 months, and every other week would be about 35 times they had rows you know of?