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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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an assumption that he himself drank too much. His “whisky” voice, as they called it - which was his fit voice - they just by implication concluded came from drinking too much of the stuff that he decided ought not to be prohibited. It was that sort of a confusion, all of which built up this resentment against him. I don't want it to appear that the only count that the people who voted against him had was his religion.

The days just before the election of 1928 involved the usual running in and out of offices, asking people what they thought of this or that, hectic long distance telephone calls to people you were asked to call up, last minute thoughts. We were becoming increasingly aware that a man named Raskob, who hadn't been much heard of in Democratic circles before, was paying an awful lot of the bills. This was the only time that I've ever known the Democratic party when it seemed to have plenty of money. There seemed no lack of money to pay for everything in that 1928 campaign. There were a lot of people out speaking. There were a lot of individual speakers, organizers and workers out. There never seemed to be any problem about long distance telephone calls to San Francisco or Boston or anywhere - and three or four a day. It didn't occur to anyone not to call up anyone they wanted anywhere.





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