she married a real upstanding American named Harry Kahn.
And say, inside six months, once we removed this Bolshevik influence, those Hunks were dancing the Charleston just like you and I would, and they were reading the tabloid papers—maybe we may prefer more highbrow newspapers, but for them cattle, the pictures put over a message of Americanization they couldn't get no other way—and a couple of 'em had bought radios, and they were going to the movies, and in general getting so their grandchildren won't hardly be distinguishable even from yours and mine.
That's the kind of work we been doing on the committee, and this particular day I was speaking of, we were having a meeting to settle the question of birth control.
Now there, gentlemen, is a very vexed question.
That all of us practice it is, of course, beyond dispute. But we're different, because we are, after all, when all is said and done, the rulers of this great democratic country. But when it comes to a