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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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of the imagination that you could regard it as an interstate commerce case. Most of it was sold locally, but there was testimony to the effect that a particular chicken in question was sold across the river in New York State. It was really a disgusting case to take up.

At any rate, my impression was that Roosevelt was very glad to be rid of the whole thing. They had begun to let the NRA run away with them. The general NRA spirit had begun to be to give a code to anybody. Even the fishhook industry had to have a code, although it didn't do them any good to have one. All the publicity and all the propaganda had made people want a code. So a lot of small industries, not involving a very large amount of capital investment, and certainly not involving any very large number of employees, not the great employing industries, and prevailingly operated in very small units, like the chicken slaughtering industry - is it an industry in the first place? - wanted a code. It's chicken when it comes into the plant and chicken when it goes out.

I said to Richberg when I heard about the case, “It's not as good as the milk cases when the court said, ‘It is milk when it arrives at the plant and it is milk when it leaves the plant.’” Nothing had been done to it





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