The Chairman. It may be admitted.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No. 110, and received in evidence.)
Mr. Rankin. When was it that George Bouhe was teaching you English and you wrote this out?
Mrs. Oswald. This was in July 1962. I don't remember when I arrived—in '62 or '61.
Mr. Rankin. Is the handwriting in Exhibit 110 in the Russian as well as the English in your handwriting?
Mrs. Oswald. No. The Russian is written by Bouhe, and the English is written by me.
Mr. Rankin. Did you make the translation from the Russian into the English by yourself?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes, I had to study English.
Mr. Rankin. Did you have a dictionary to work with?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes.
Mr. Rankin. So you were taking a Russian-English dictionary and trying to convert the Russian words that he wrote out into English, is that right?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes.
Mr. Thorne. Exhibit 111 is a book written in Russian, a pocket book.
Mrs. Oswald. This is my book.
Mr. Rankin. Do you notice some of the letters are cut out of that book, Exhibit 111?
Mrs. Oswald. Letters?
I see that for the first time.
Mr. Rankin. Do you know who did that?
Mrs. Oswald. Probably Lee was working, but I never saw that. I don't know what he did that for.
Mr. Rankin. You never saw him while he was working with that?
Mrs. Oswald. No. I would have shown him if I had seen him doing that to my book.
Mr. Rankin. You know sometimes messages are made up by cutting out letters that way and putting them together to make words.
Mrs. Oswald. I read about it.
Mr. Rankin. You have never seen him do that?
Mrs. Oswald. No.
Mr. Rankin. I offer Exhibit 111.
The Chairman. It may be admitted.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No. 111, and received in evidence.)
Mr. Thorne. Exhibit 112 is an apparent application—an applicant's driving record.
Mrs. Oswald. I have never seen this.
Mr. Thorne. It is in English.
Mr. Rankin. That is not your driving record, then?
Mrs. Oswald. No.
Mr. Rankin. You don't know whether it was your husband's?
Mrs. Oswald. I don't know.
Mr. Thorne. May I clarify the exhibit? It is an application for a Texas driver's license. Standard form application.
Mr. Rankin. We offer in evidence Exhibit 112.
The Chairman. It may be admitted.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No. 112, and received in evidence.)
Mrs. Oswald. It is quite possible that Lee prepared that, because Ruth Paine insisted on Lee's obtaining a license.
Mr. Rankin. Did you hear her insist?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes. She said it would be good to have.
Mr. Rankin. And when was that?
Mrs. Oswald. October or November.
Mr. Rankin. 1962?
Mrs. Oswald. '63.
Mr. Thorne. Exhibit 113 is a driver's handbook published by the State of Texas.
Mrs. Oswald. We had this book for quite some time. George Bouhe had given that to Lee if he at some time would try to learn how to drive.
Mr. Rankin. I offer in evidence Exhibit 113.
The Chairman. It may be admitted.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No. 113, and received in evidence.)
Mr. Rankin. Was your husband able to drive a car?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes, I think that he knew how. Ruth taught him how.
Mr. Rankin. Did he have a driver's license that you know of?
Mrs. Oswald. No.
This is a Russian camera of Lee's—binoculars.
Mr. Thorne. Exhibit 114 is a leather case containing a pair of binoculars.
Mr. Rankin. Do you remember having seen those binoculars, known as Exhibit 114, before?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes. We had binoculars in Russia because we liked to look through them at a park.
Mr. Rankin. Do you know whether your husband used them in connection with the Walker incident?
Mrs. Oswald. I don't know.
Mr. Rankin. He never said anything about that?
Mrs. Oswald. No.
Mr. Rankin. We offer in evidence Exhibit 114.
The Chairman. It may be admitted.
(The article referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No. 114, and received in evidence.)
Mr. Thorne. Exhibit 115 is a box containing a stamping kit.
Mrs. Oswald. That is Lee's. When he was busy with his Cuba, he used it.
Mr. Rankin. You mean when he was working on the Fair Play for Cuba, he used this?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes.
Mr. Rankin. I offer in evidence Exhibit 115.
The Chairman. It may be admitted.
(The article referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No. 115, and received in evidence.)
Mr. Rankin. How did he use that kit in Exhibit 115 in connection with his Fair Play for Cuba campaign?
Mrs. Oswald. He had leaflets for which he assembled letters and printed his address.
Mr. Rankin. And he used this kit largely to stamp the address on the letters?
Mrs. Oswald. Not letters, but leaflets.
Mr. Rankin. He stamped the address on the leaflets?
Mrs. Oswald. Handbills, rather.
Yes.
Mr. Rankin. Do you recall whether he stamped his name on the handbills, too?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes.
Mr. Rankin. What name did he stamp on them?
Mrs. Oswald. Lee Harvey Oswald.
Mr. Rankin. Did he use the name Hidell on those, too?
Mrs. Oswald. I don't remember. Perhaps.
Mr. Thorne. Exhibit 116 is a Spanish to English and English to Spanish dictionary.
Mr. Rankin. Have you seen that before?
Mrs. Oswald. When Lee came from Mexico City I think he had this.
Mr. Rankin. I offer in evidence Exhibit 116.
The Chairman. It may be received.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No. 116, and received in evidence.)
Mr. Thorne. Exhibit 117 is one sheet of paper with, some penciled markings on it.
Mrs. Oswald. I don't know what that is. I don't know.
Mr. Rankin. Do you recognize any of the writing on that exhibit?
Mrs.