Mr. Semingsen. Yes. It was thought that the money order was payable to someone at a specific address in Dallas, which was the YMCA.
Mr. Liebeler. So when you searched through the records indicating money orders payable during the period October through November 1963, you determined that no money order had been made payable to Lee Harvey Oswald, or to these aliases, and in addition to that fact, that no money orders of any kind had been made payable to anyone at the YMCA in Dallas; is that correct?
Mr. Semingsen. That is correct.
Mr. Liebeler. Do you know where the information came from that the money order was supposed to have been payable to Oswald at the YMCA?
Mr. Semingsen. Yes. This information came from one of our night employees, Mr. C. A. Hamblen.
Mr. Liebeler. Before we get into Mr. Hamblen, I want to cover the rest of the statements made in your memorandum, and we will try to cover them generally. The memorandum indicates that certain money orders were received by Jack Ruby, and that certain telegrams were sent by Jack Ruby through the Dallas office; is that correct?
Mr. Semingsen. That's correct.
Mr. Liebeler. And that information was determined as a result of the search that you have just described?
Mr. Semingsen. That is correct.
Mr. Liebeler. That is, the search of the money order payable file, plus the telegrams sent file, which search was confined, as you have indicated, only to the telegrams sent cash paid or sent collect; is that correct?