Mr. Liebeler. Did he ever discuss with you his personal relations with his wife?
Mr. Paine. No; he did not—he never spoke of girls at all. I thought he was very proper.
Mr. Liebeler. What was that?
Mr. Paine. Well, this is the way I supposed he was. I knew that he didn't smoke or drink and it seemed inconsistent with a libertine attitude toward women or even a sensual enjoyment of women would be a form of life that would be contradictory to his ethics.
Mr. Liebeler. You had no idea that he had been engaged in the Fair Play for Cuba activities while he was in New Orleans?
Mr. Paine. No; I did not.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you ever talk to Ruth about Oswald's employment situation in New Orleans?
Mr. Paine. Not that I can recall—no. I think I asked her what kind of a job he had found, and that was the extent of it.
Mr. Liebeler. What did she tell you he had found?
Mr. Paine. She said he had found the same kind of work he left here—the engraving business—or something like that.