Mr. Hubert. But the normal practice would have been to make more than one copy?
Mrs. Robertson. More than the original?
Mr. Hubert. More than the original and one copy—normally you would write the original and how many copies?
Mrs. Robertson. Now, by this going to the captain that is not necessarily so. Anything we address to the chief we would have definitely more than one carbon copy, but for little instances like that, I cannot remember—Lieutenant Revill just might have said "an original and one will be enough."
Mr. Hubert. Do you recall that he did say so?
Mrs. Robertson. I do not—absolutely.
Mr. Hubert. And you don't really know how many you did make?
Mrs. Robertson. I cannot tell you—I cannot remember.
Mr. Hubert. When the letter was finished, what happened to it?
Mrs. Robertson. I called Lieutenant Revill, as well as I can remember, I called him into my office. Now, I might have gone into his office, but I took it directly to him. I waited and let him read it and let him proof it over to see it and I know he questioned me—he said, "Are you sure this is the correct way to spell assassination?" And I said, "Yes, sir; I looked it up in the dictionary," and he read the letter and then as I remember, I got my personal belongings together and I left the building then.