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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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nobody felt worse than he did; that it was just terrible. It was a dreadful thing to have that happen. He thought we should have spoken more in sorrow than in reproach. At any rate, I apologized to him for ever having hinted that his intentions were not good, although I continued to say that I really felt that whatever the past had been we should take a new look and that something ought to be done to make sure that the inspection services were improved.

He told me that he never knew one thing about factory inspection. He'd never heard of it. Nothing having to do with the Diamond Factory fire or any other inspection had ever been brought to his attention. It of course seemed surprising to me that as a member of the Commission who had responsibility it hadn't been brought to his attention. He alleged that his whole time was given to the legal problems of the Workmen's Compensation Act. I guess they never had discussed these other matters in the Commission itself. At any rate, he hadn't looked into it. None of them had. Lynch ought to have, because he was a labor man and should have been thinking about those things. At any rate, they had all overlooked the the entire matter. Lyon thought that it would never happen again and he supposed that the inspectors were taking care of it. He never appreciated what an





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