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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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rich enough to pay their fare, or some such reason.”

It wa very good meeting from my point of view and from the others point of view. They were not Democrats. The women who belong to clubs are trained to listen for a speech that is factual and draws conclusions from the facts in a logical, and they like it to. be pleasing, manner. That's what a club woman's life is. She listens to quantities of speeches. So you have a very good audience, an audience of great influence, because they circulate in their communities. There you have a chance to persuade them that their best bet is to vote for the Democratic Party and for Roosevelt.

According to Emma and the others, that particular meeting was very fruitful in bringing a number of women, who were certainly no Democrats, to the conclusion that they should vote for Roosevelt, and they did in great numbers in that part of the country. There was very large woman's vote cast for him. Even though the women were pacifists, they were sort of alienated from Willkie on the “me too” basis. They didn't think he sounded sincere or competent.

Of course, the President thought that Landon was a fool. At the beginning he was inclined to think that Willkie was a sort of a fool, that he would make a lot





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