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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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extent his diabetic condition explained part of his dumbness. His cases were terrible. I had to cover him a good deal. I told him that he needed an examiner because he had such a heavy burden of work. I sold him a very good examiner who had been trained in my office. That man want right in there and really decided Curran's cases. Curran never decided a case on the day of the hearing, because he couldn't. The case went upstairs. Leland W. Hill, the examiner, read the case, wrote the opinion and Curran signed it. It was as bad as that. He finally either resigned because of his diabetes or died.

Mrs. Moskowitz was the first person who pointed Edwards out to me. He was a very good Democrat. He had been extremely helpful in organizing some of the labor groups for Smith, so she had met him on the political side. He wasn't high enough up in the union for me to have met him in negotiations about codes and things. But I had met him vaguely at AF of L conventions.

I decided in my own mind that Edward W. Edwards was the fellow to get. I went over to the Governor and we got Edward Edwards. He was a first-class person, with a good mind, really a labor man, really inside the labor movement, really a Democrat, and really thinking that this was a good





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