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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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I say that?” or “I'll be asked about the war. What shall I say?”

He said, “The good safe line is to say that certainly there is no war wanted or planned, and that the United States will not fight unless attacked. That's always safe.”

I remember saying, “I shall dodge all questions about the war and keep them busy on something else. I don't speak well on that matter. I don't speak with conviction and I have a perfect out by saying I don't know.”

In many political meetings the custom of the open forum does prevail. Although it's not always so, the smaller meetings are likely to have a forum and ask questions. I remember that I spoke at Pittsburgh at a labor meeting. I made a Labor Day Speech, as I always did, but was not important. Labor Day has ceased to be a matter of any great consequence. I always made the speech from a radio in Boston. It was certainly a political speech and I think it was a rehearsal of what the Roosevelt administration had done to improve the conditions and lot of labor, including the recognition of labor as a partner in collective bargaining, treating them fairly, together with all the legislation that was aimed at the improvement of the lot of labor. By this time I could even bring in the state legislation that





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