Mr. Liebeler. And he received that prior to the time he contacted the Cuban consulate; did he not?

Mr. Delgado. Right. And he also started receiving letters, you know, and no books, maybe pamphlets, you know, little—like church, things we get from church, you know, but it wasn't a church.

Mr. Liebeler. Were they written in Spanish, any of them, do you know?

Mr. Delgado. Not that I can recall; no.

Mr. Liebeler. Did you have any reason to believe that these things came to Oswald from the Cuban consulate?

Mr. Delgado. Well, I took it for granted that they did after I seen the envelope, you know.

Mr. Liebeler. What was on this envelope that made you think that?

Mr. Delgado. Something like a Mexican eagle, with a big, impressive seal, you know. They had different colors on it, red and white; almost looked like our colors, you know. But I can't recall the seal. I just knew it was in Latin, United, something like that. I couldn't understand. It was Latin.

Mr. Liebeler. You don't know for sure whether it was from the Cuban consulate?

Mr. Delgado. No. But he had told me prior, just before I found that envelope in his wall locker, that he was receiving mail from them, and one time he offered to show it to me, but I wasn't much interested because at the time we had work to do, and I never did ask to see that paper again, you know.