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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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group of people in this so peaceful country was, I think, a sort of picture of what was going on all over the country. Tension developed in their minds that something dreadful was happening and we were likely to be in it. They knew in their hearts that we were likely to be in it, although we would still keep up a front of saying, “Oh no, this has nothing to do with us. This is just one of these mid-European flare-up.” It was the fashion to say then, “It can't last. The French will stop them. Poland has a treaty with France. France will come to her aid.”

At any rate, when we got to Washington the next morning the place was alive. Before I left Maine for Boston I telephoned to the Department of Labor office in Boston, the Wage-Hour office, thinking that there might be a telephone operator there and that if there was a telephone operator there I would get him to telephone over to the South Station. I had been trying to get hold of the South Station, but couldn't get into the ticket office, couldn't get a wire in to hold me a berth. I knew I couldn't wait, but had to get going in the automobile to get to Boston. So I tried to reach the Department of Labor to get a telephone operator to get me a berth. To my astonishment





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