Mr. Jenner. But in due course you did enter their home in Fort Worth?
Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. I never entered their home in Fort Worth. George, I think, did once. George walked in, because Lee was asleep, I think, when we brought Marina—so he maybe walked in the house—because he went out to the door. I never did. They lived somewhere—there was a tremendous store, Montgomery Ward or something.
Mr. Jenner. Sears?
Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. No; I think it was Montgomery Ward. I don't remember. That is where they lived. It was a miserable-looking house. That is what I saw. A wooden building.
Mr. Jenner. You found them to be in destitute circumstances, did you?
Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. Well, I wouldn't say they were completely starving, but they were quite miserable—quite, quite miserable, you know. Even if they were not destitute, the personality that Lee had would make anybody miserable to live with.
Mr. Jenner. All right. Tell us about Lee Oswald.
Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. What I think of the fellow?
Mr. Jenner. Your impressions of him, what you thought of him.
Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. Disagreeable. He was very, very disagreeable, and disappointed. He is like a puppy dog that everybody kicked. And he was sort of withdrawn within himself. And his greatest objection was that people helped them too much, they were showering things on Marina. Marina had a hundred dresses given to her. The baby had a crib. My daughter didn't have it when I came to the United States, and I didn't have one-hundredth of what Marina had, because I didn't know anybody, and I didn't want to know anybody when I came over. I was in such circumstances. So, anyway, he objected to that lavish help, because Marina was throwing it into his face.