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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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He'd made that clear to us in the Cabinet and to many others, I think. He would not come. He absolutely would not come to Chicago. People, however, kept saying, “Don't you think he will come? Don't you think we can get him to come? He must come. We can never go into a campaign with this feeling abroad in the land.”

It was during that period that one morning early my telephone rang. It was Bob Allen, who was the Robert S. Allen of the team of Pearson & Allen, who then had not yet split up and were printing the syndicated column called “Washington Merry-Go-Round.” Of course, Allen and Pearson were two very different personalities. Allen was a short, squat, rambunctious fellow, quite able to be very rude, whereas Pearson never was rude. Pearson was always very correct and very suave. That was his method of making headway in a news intrigue of some sort or other. Allen was inclined to rough it out. I knew Allen a little personally. I was very fond of his wife. She was a very nice woman, Ruth Finney. She is a newspaper woman. I had become acquainted with her before I knew she was Bob Allen's wife. They had been married for sometime, but I didn't know it. $She's a very, very delightful woman - good, kind, intelligent, far-sighted, discreet, with an excellent idea of the





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