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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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hundred thousand dollars was a lot of money. Everybody was surprised and said, “How?”

Dr. Lewy, who had mourned so on the train, came in to me bearing the New York Times. He said, “Commissioner, did you see this in the paper about Mitchell's will?”

I said, “Yes.”

“Seven to eight hundred thousand dollars, that's an awful lot of money for him to make. Commissioner, I don't feel so bad any more. He was a common man just like the rest of us.” He had put him a little higher than the gods - “I don't feel so bad any more.” It was the most direct expression of emotional change I ever heard from anybody's lips.

I knew Matthew Woll, but not very well. I met him during this period. Matthew Woll is one of the people you never do know very well. He's the kind of person with whom you have a rather superficial acquaintance. I don't know why that is. He's just that kind of a person. I rather like him. He was in the Civic Federation. There came to be a time when all of the labor men in the Civic Federation were greatly suspected of being disloyal to their class, or something or other. The other labor union men didn't like them. They





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