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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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that got it through. The Anti-Saloon League had been in existence a long time and it really did have the moral support of thousands of people. The Anti-Saloon League was not strong in the South, so far as I know, but the idea of Prohibition being a good thing was very strong.

I questioned people in the South, whom I knew drank, about the repeal of the Prohibition amendment. They were going to stay Democratic all right, but they thought that the Prohibition ought not to be repealed because they thought the Negroes might get hold of liquor. Always it had been anticipated that the white people who wanted to get hold of liquor would be able to get it, but that Negroes wouldn't be able to get hold of liquor. That would be wrong and against the law. So there was very confused moral reasoning operating there. Prohibition was a strong issue in the South, but they were very mixed up about that. They were opposed to Al Smith on that ground. It was very dominant in Georgia.

Also, it was dominant in some of the western states like Ohio, Indiana, Kansas and places of that sort. They were strictly for the Prohibition amendment and they didn't like Al Smith's stand on it. That was very much against him.

Also, they tied in with his stand on Prohibition





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