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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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So he gave me the reply. The reply was more blistering than Ickes' original letter had been. Morse was about equal to Ickes. It was terrible. Of course, the next day Ickes telephoned back to me, “I have received a preposterous reply from that man Morse of yours. I'm not going to have this go on. I'm now taking pains to lay it down to him that this can't go on.

They exchanged four or five sets of letters in this vein. I was privy to all of them, although I'm not positive that I have still a copy of every one of the letters. But if a copy wasn't given to me, it was read to me. I know that Ickes read one of them over the telephone, and that I could hardly keep my face straight.

I told the President eventually that they were doing this, and the President just roared with laughter. He had the same kind of sense of humor that I did. They felt better. He said, “Nothing happens from this, does it? Nothing's going wrong. The coal is getting out all right. Are you getting the coal?”

“Oh yes, we're getting the coal.”

“All right, then.”

We both agreed that if this was the temperament that they had and if this made them feel better, well then let them blow off steam as long as I was able to take it. It was all right for everybody. They didn't have to go to the press with it. I remember saying to the President, “This saves the necessity of their going to the press.” That would have been





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