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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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a tomato or an egg, but we got them in the suburbs of our person. They would hit your clothing or your shoe, but so long as they didn't hit me right in the face, I thought I had nothing special to complain about. Of course, it was meant as very ill-willed.

It was on this occasion that I learned many years afterwards that Harry Truman was in that meeting. He was one of the loyal Democrats whom Harry Hawes had appealed to to quiet things down, to get things in order and to get the police out to handle these rambunctious people. He had been very persuasive in making the people ashamed of themselves and getting them to give way and let the audience come in to hear the speaking. He had been right out in one of the front rows leading the loyals who were standing by the party.

He remembered it plainly. I said to him once in a company of people before he was President about how I remembered the town that he came from, Independence, very well, because once I had made a speech there during the Al Smith campaign and I'd seen things I never saw before. He piped in and said, “Well, I remember it. That was the first time I ever saw you. You won't remember me because I don't think I had time to speak to you. If I did, I was only one of the people that was trying to arrange the meeting.”





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