 phone 911. Take this with you. Thank you. You did a good job on that immigration, Forest. Well, thank you, Mr. President. How are you? I'm mighty proud of you. Can you help us on 14B? Well, I just don't know just yet, Mr. President. I haven't had much chance to give it any thought. I was so busy on this other thing, you know. Well, you did a good job on it. Well, thank you, County, and I really do appreciate it. I've got a very, very difficult situation on this one. Of course, it's like some of the others, but this one, of course, I have now Northern Kentucky where it's strong labor. It's been added on, you know, Mr. Spence's district to mine, and here before I've had a strictly rural agricultural section, and the two have been, of course, joined together, and almost any way I go, I'm going to get hurt pretty badly, and I'm trying my best to figure out this what in the world is the best that I should do. I've got a level with you and tell you the truth about it. It's given me no end of trouble. I'm worried about the thing, and getting the commitments, that's for sure. I have very carefully refrained from making it because, as I say, I was just so dead, I got busy morning, noon, and afternoon on the immigration, and I just, I was just trying to cross the bridge. You've got your own problems, and I'm sympathetic with them, and I've had them too. I voted to override my own presence, speak to on it. But I did it. Mr. Redburn wanted to do the same thing. But he came down to be toward his leader, and he said, well, it better not. I hope it's since he was leader, but after the years went on, it's cut out now to where the only 19 states that have these laws, and if I had them out, Oklahoma's had three big battles on it in Louisiana, and Mississippi, and Alabama, and Teddinghouse, and Arsia, everybody has got the, I think over the long pull, you're going to be here a long, long time, at the masses and the working man, they never forget it. It's something that they, that means everything to them, kind of like Albert Thomas. He's on everything that directly affected labor. He's always voted with them, and everything that, like foreign aid or anything else, why he just voters you damn pleased the other way. He's pretty conservative, but this is one that they count, and it means a lot to them, and it's not going to hurt you whether Arkansas, Mississippi, or Alabama, some of these states are trying to steal some of these plants and get labor a little cheaper. It's not going to hurt you much what they do, but over the long run labor will be helpful to you, and the president will, the administration will, and if you don't have any other way just say Republicans were really moving in trying to wreck us, and that you thought you'd just take a chance to stop this fighting because labor and business do fight it out. Oklahoma's had three elections down there, and they adjusted each other's throat, and both of them spending money, and they got everybody mad at each other. Now, I think I've got the best relations we've ever had between business and labor now. They're all making money. They're all doing well. I see no reason why we ought to have a great big fight, and I know that it would really count going to be a long time. I know that if you can they would hurt you one bit with me. I love you just like I always have, and I can do Kentucky, and I know you'll do what you think's best for you, but if you can, and I can tell them that you're going to give them a vote if they have to have it, if it's required, if it means that it's not that close, they're going to carry it. My judgment will get about 220 votes, 215 to 225. And I don't think you have to have it, but if you could, I would say that to them, because then I think they don't think you're a labor abater, and so on and so forth. If you can't, well, whatever you do is all out of me, and you never hear a drive from me. Well, and that's mighty sweet of you, and I really do appreciate it, because I feel for the first time as president that I've been welcome at the White House for the first time. He was like a daddy to me, and he used to let me come in whenever I wanted to and talk to him, and of course I'd always sneak in the back door, and I'd never go out the front door and say the president said this and I said that and all that stuff, you know what I mean? I was very discreet about the matters of the kind that we talked over, but you know, I have the same feeling and the warmth for you, Mr. President, that I had for Mr. President. You're the only human being I've called on this bill. I don't want you to say a word about it, but you're the only one of 531, and I sent it up there. I don't want to get beat on it. They start beating you, then they'll beat you on everything else, but I don't think I'm going to, but Jordan talked to me and said, I like Frank Chep, and I wished you'd say a word to him and tell him that I remembered, you remembered, that you can help us all right, that you can't all right, and you just do the best you can, and if you can, let me tell him that I love you. If they got to have you vote, you'll certainly say this, that I love you, I respect you, you're not on my president, but you're my friend, and if they need me, they've got me. If they need me, they've got me, I'll pass up the first roll, and if you need me, I'll be there 4-square, but I got loud, I'll make the damn roof and the rafters, but I got reverberate, I'll make these glass wings on this bird up here flat. Thank you, my friend. Waiting.