Times-Dispatch personnel and the Richmond police did not always see eye to eye. Once while accompanying a reporter on a story, Foxo and the reporter encountered a policeman who, when discovering they were from the newspaper, told them, "All I use the Times-Dispatch for is wiping my* . To which the reporter replied, "You keep that up. Before long you’ll have more brains in your * than you do in your head." According to Foxo, that policeman never forgot the reporters words. {From my book, “Whistling Down the Halls, The Times and Cartoons of America’s Original Pantomime Comic Strip Artist.” M. Reardon, son of Foxo.
Times-Dispatch personnel and the Richmond police did not always see eye to eye. Once while accompanying a reporter on a story, Foxo and the reporter encountered a policeman who, when discovering they were from the newspaper, told them, "All I use the Times-Dispatch for is wiping my* . To which the reporter replied, "You keep that up. Before long you’ll have more brains in your * than you do in your head." According to Foxo, that policeman never forgot the reporters words. {From my book, “Whistling Down the Halls, The Times and Cartoons of America’s Original Pantomime Comic Strip Artist.” M. Reardon, son of Foxo.