 Well, yes, how are you, Mr. President? I just wanted to tell you I loved you and I hadn't heard from you and see how you're doing. Well, it's been all right. I had to go up and take some shots from the doctor a while ago and kind of a bursitis arm that I've got, but then outside of that, I'm 100 percent. Well, I didn't think that you'd been out playing golf, but I keep going. He had a bursitis arm a few years ago, and I didn't know you were a golfer. No, I'm not. I don't know where I got it. I figured out the subword. How's Miss Truman? Oh, she's fine. It looks like to me your son-in-law is doing pretty good. Yes, he's doing all right. I'm very proud of that. I bet that grandchild's having some effect on him. Maybe that's helping him, you reckon? I hope so. I'm sitting here talking to a couple of your old friends about the best man I got around in these days, the ones that you left here. Well, I read you said that. Well, old Clark Clifford comes in every once in a while. Dean Atchison had lunch with me. Jim Webb's here with me now, and he wants to say a word to you. Just a minute. All right. I'll be glad to talk with you. I've been with you so many times in this office that I always think of you every time I walk in the door. Well, thank you. Thank you. I'm mighty glad you feel that way, and I hope you always will. Well, I told so many people that you always stood up and shook hands in the most polite way. If I saw you 10 times a day, and I always embarrassed you, you'd have to do that. Oh, well, why not? You know what a fellow gets high hat after he gets a job that he didn't deserve? Why, what do you think of him? I don't think much of him to you. No, sir, but I'd say this, that President Johnson has certainly done a tremendous thing in this office since he's been here. He's in the class by himself. He's going to be one of the greatest of the great presidents. Well, he's going to be right in there with you in that regard. Well, I think there ought to be, and Johnson's one of them. Well, I don't, I'm going to wait for history on that. Do you want to say another word to the President? Yes, sir. Yes, yes, yes. He's setting me up on a pedestal where I don't belong. Oh, you asked one around, and Lady Bird and I keep you on it all time. Listen, sometime in the next week or so, I want to, if you feel like hitting you up to it, I want to fly out there and just sit around and gab with you a little bit. Well, I'd like very much to have you do that. All right. And you set the date, and I'll be there. I'll just call you in. First afternoon I can get off. It won't take long. It's all right. You can take as long as you want. Because I've got a lot of things I'd like to talk with you about. But I don't want to introduce you to something. I want to be of help to you. That's what I'm working for. Well, you always help. What in the devil did you do to Roy Roberts to make you a Democrat out there? I do no better than trust him. Well, it's the first one he said since Grover Cleveland when the air ran dry. That's absolutely correct. He never said a kind word about it. That's the reason I look at it with suspicion.