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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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Part:         Session:         Page of 915

and he's trying to make good on his bet.”

I didn't read his column regularly so I didn't realize what was afterwards pointed out to me. He had predicted rather consistently, over the previous week or ten days, that the President would go to the convention. I hadn't read his column and didn't know that, but I thought he really was speaking sincerely, although I had my fingers crossed. I thought he was speaking with some sincerity because I too knew that this thing was very sour. What might happen I didn't know.

I said to him, “Thanks for your information. I'll think about it and I'll see if I can do anything. I'll see if there's anything that's reasonable for me to do.”

I then talked to Mary Dewson. She agreed with me that things were very sour, but she said, “The President will never come out. You know he won't. He said he wouldn't.”

I talked to Lorena Hickok about it. She was sort of an advance agent for Mrs. Roosevelt. I talked to her because I ran into her. I talked to one or two others of that group, people who were friends of Mrs. Roosevelt's through Lorena Hickok, that kind of a relationship, because I ran into them. I said, “Do you think it's sour?”





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