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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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been quite a good Governor of Kansas. I think he had great possibilities. I think he was perhaps somewhat out of his depth politically when he came to Washington. There were shrewder politicians around than he was, although he fancied himself a good politician. There was no question that he knew that he had been badly treated. He knew he had been rottenly treated. He even asked my advice, informally to be sure, as to whether he should not make a great denunciation and tell the world the story. My advice to people in that frame of mind is what my grandmother's would have been to me, “Sleep on it. Don't do it today. Don't do it this week. It will come with better grace, if it must be done, in three months than it does now. It puts you in a bad position if you speak out now. The only thing you can do is to be very graceful about this publicly, at least, If there's any wrong been done, people will find it out.”

At any rate, he did not sputter publicly, except a little. He sputtered here and there, but he made no general denunciation with a marshalling of all the facts of how bad he had been treated. But he was awfully mad. We've always maintained our friendship, largely because, I think, I went out of my way to be a little nicer than





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