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  • the next day after it arrives there. When I talked to you and Charles and Alice_by telephone, I could hardly do more than keep the telephone booth door closed and talk loud enough to keep the workers from drowning me out. I t may be that I will get ordered
  • of some of the things Congressman Johnson has done since coming to Congress in 1937, as requested. in your telephone conversation with him last Sunday. Sincerely, Walter Jenkins. SECRETARIES: GLYNN STEGALL MISS MARY RATHER MIIS. PHILIP NICHOLS, JR,, MIis
  • the i dea t o t he recei vers at Louisville . We know we can handl e the paper sit uation with eit her Mead or Internationa l . ad , naturally , i s very anxious to ke ep the Louisville tonnage and my conversation wi th Conway indicated t hey would grant
  • let 1■ started me hear troa 7ou 1mmed1ate17. Yours ••rr truly, HG1MBP The above 1s salt-explanatory and it would be appreciated it JOU would advise me whether or not you saw Mcclendon Monday afternoon attar our telephone conversation. I think
  • to extract an hour or so of conversation on what seems to be the truth. Relationships of male and female in the cycles of companionship. quo. Who is qµid?. ledge of the facts. And Quid pro who is quot The cycle of emotion llU8t start with a lmow­
  • were telling the truth through Feltus to me. Your drive forced me immediately to the telephone on calls to Port Arthur and Orlando. At the end of the year in grading people, you remember I told you that you and Helen Fuller had done the best work
  • . Charle11 Marsh Adolphu• Hotel Dallas, Texas Dear Mr. Marsha Pursuant to our telephone conversation some week ■ ago when I • • in Kansas City, Missouri w1 th Senator Claude Pepper, I wi ■h you to consider this a ••mi-official report concerning the di
  • making definite headway there every da:r and I feel confident we can vrnrk out something very much to our advantage by the first of Auf!;ust if vre will take two full days to it . You told me in our long distance conversation that you had arranged
  • HOME PRINCIPAL SUBJECT OF CONVERSATION AMONG OPPOSITION IN THIS INTELLIGENT CITY ARGIJMF..NT_ THIS SINGLE FACT SEEKS TO CONVINCE MAN WITHOUT LOCOMOTION THAT THE WHOLE IDEA IS SCREWEY HE IS VERY CUTE ABOUT HIS ANSWER BUT THAT WILL KEEP FOR THE BOOK
  • - · :5 : J~ :\Iclor.! ies 5 3 Telephone 8-6611 For All Departments be liabl e tn suffer through. fraud th ur nuw pitching !or ci\ilizR- · __:..._o_:-._ ·~_ .,_,·_s_ __ or deceptw n. tion. 5 :~5 . Rh ~ thm Time 1 I iL I O n e Ma n ' I Q p.n . I
  • 12-19 June 16., 1942 Kiplinger•s Washington Letter-June 13, 1942 "Politics in the form of fall election are pltqing a big J;B.rt in many governmental policies bearing on war. In conversations 'With officials, we hear it said a dozen times per
  • troubles end disruption in their own plants. They do not vote their men as they used to. Conversation Monday evening 9: 30 Ds State Young Democrats are meeting in Beaumont Friday and Saturday of this week. Believe it 13 e. Garner controlled group end
  • there is much fo g at the moment, let us imagine the Christ concept and the Buddha concept meeting somewhere f or a conversation at the town of the Golden Mean -of thought in motion. The distinguished Emerson might be the Corres-· ponding Secretary. Nietzsche
  • and then today we say, ''Let George do it, 11 as we return to our debutant balls and such. Over the telephone, a thousand miles away, this morning crune a question, 11 It is very bad, isn't it?" bad." And, of course, one had to say, "V~ry, very But one said
  • , N.w. Was~n, D. c. October$• l9Ja Dear Fredat I think ;your DiN blaineaa ia just wbat I suggested to J'OU in conversation-it tends to accelerate tba death or. a doomad bn>o­ cbondriac. Probab~ the tone was a little too personal on the nan instead o
  • conversations vms--I quote--"the desire of both countries for yes.ce and for the strengthening of the p~aceful purposes of' the civilized world •. 't That dtisire still lives. Through the ordeal of fire, through the honr of ;nounting doubt as t he aggressor made
  • . If American democracy is to survive , it can ' t do it on conversation. It can'; survive on the glories of the past . If American democracy persists it will be because Americans want it to . Because they want it -6- to so muoh they will offer