WASHINGTON September 29, 1936. Dear Mr. President: I am handing you a letter that has just come in from Dr. Dodd. I do not believe that there is anything to be gained by making a further effort to obtain a statement from Carter Glass. He has not only failed to reply to my letter to him of September 2nd, but privately I hear that he is grouchy about Bullitt, his hatred of whom is said to have influenced him to make his wretched Hanover speech. He is also reported to have said he intends to answer my letter only when he "gets good and ready". I feel pretty sure, as I have told you before, that mentally he is an old age victim. Although everybody seems to think Virginia politically is beyond any doubt, I have been urged to broadcast a campaign speech from Richmond and will probably do so early next month. I am so tied up here as to have little opportunity to know anything beyond what appears in the newspapers and what is told me by all sorts of people who drop in to discuss one thing and another, but in some way I sense the fact that Landon has weakened himself by his recent soeeches and that your reelection is becoming all the time more certain. This, I believe, will become steadily more apparent as you carry on your own work in the campaign which is really being started only tonight. Yours very sincerely, (signature) Enclosure: Letter from Dr. Dodd. The President The White House. |