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should give me a check for $10,000. to start with made payable to Arthur W. Page, and that Arthur was to send London exchange to his father without any explana- tion as to where it came from. Dudley Malone telephoned in reference to the State Democratic Ticket. He is to see me later in the day. The other day in Washington when talking about the Clayton Bill and of Senator Reed's attack upon it, the President said that "Senator Reed <add>is</add> <del/> the most compre- hensively ignorant man I have ever met", and added, "Culberson has made the bill so weak you cannot tell it from water". October 3, 1914. It was an unusually busy day yesterday, beginning with Cleveland Dodge in the morning and winding up with Governor Glynn at 11.30 last night. Between times, there was Dudley Malone, McCarthy, Judge Gerard's Manager, William Church Osborn and others. I was in constant communication with Washington during the evening in order to inform the President and McAdoo what I was doing. It seems that McCombs is making a hard drive for the State Chairmanship and they were about to elect him. As far as I am concerned, I should be glad to see him National, State and County Chairman if he desired, but it is not the Washington view of the way things should go, and while I did my best to keep out of it, it became impossible. I have tried my utmost to keep out of national and state politics and devote myself to international affairs, but I seem doomed to the treadmill for awhile longer. I arranged with Governor Glynn to keep in constant communication with me. I agreed to get the independent and administration forces back of him and Gerard so that the party may put up a solid front. The Governor made many protesta- tions of fairness and of good intentions and I accepted him at his word. <del/> I have a letter from the Austrian Ambassador asking for an appointment
Title | ms_0466_s2_v2_188 |
Transcript |
should give me a check for $10,000. to start with made payable to Arthur W. Page,
and that Arthur was to send London exchange to his father without any explana-
tion as to where it came from.
Dudley Malone telephoned in reference to the State Democratic Ticket. He
is to see me later in the day.
The other day in Washington when talking about the Clayton Bill and of Senator
Reed's attack upon it, the President said that "Senator Reed |
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