Representative Ford. If you didn't see him write it in the cabin how did you know he wrote it?
Mrs. Oswald. In the first place, because the paper was from the Holland-American Line, and then I think—in the second place, because I saw these pages covered with writing in the cabin, and I think that he must have gone some place else on the ship, such as the library, to do the actual writing.
Representative Ford. Have you read that which he wrote on the ship?
Mrs. Oswald. No; I have not read them, because I don't understand English.
Representative Ford. He never read it to you in Russian?
Mrs. Oswald. No.
Representative Ford. At any time on the trip back, from the time you started to leave the Soviet Union until you arrived in the United States, did you have any trouble at the border of the Soviet Union or any other country?
Mrs. Oswald. We had no difficulty with the authorities of any kind on any border. I think that my husband may have had some financial difficulties in New York, when he arrived.
Representative Ford. You left the Soviet Union by what means, now?
Mrs. Oswald. Train and boat.