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T., John, November 1 and 23, 1976, tape 3, side 1

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Peter Gottlieb:  The following is a [unintelligible] Of 2035 Crestas
Avenue, North Versailles. In Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.

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Gottlieb:  The following is a continuation of the interview of--
[unintelligible]

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Gottlieb:  All the time that you were working at Westinghouse, you were
also doing, uh, church work of different kinds. John T.: Oh yeah. Gottlieb:
You were still active, so you had really two different kinds of jobs. John
T.: Yeah. Gottlieb: I was just interested if-- John T.: I was working in
person and preaching all the same time. Now, the first church I pastored, I
organized it out in the cement works. Out in University, organized the
church over there. Gottlieb: Now, where was that? John T.: Out in
University, cement works. Yeah, we had to make cement building. I went
there and organized the church up there. That's where I got a name.
Gottlieb: I see. John T.: When they called me, I organized the church. I
was just a licensed preacher. I couldn't baptize. I couldn't marry nobody.
And I could bury folks, but I couldn't give the Lord's Supper. Gottlieb: Uh
huh. John T.: But then he called me out there, and I organized the church,
and they wanted me for the pastor of the church. Well, then they ordained
me with the understanding that-- I didn't pass, first, but they had
ordained me with the understanding that I'd keep going to school, you see?
Gottlieb: Uh huh. John T.: And I pastored out there. There they go-- three
years. Gottlieb: Uh huh. John T.: I was called from there then to
Wilkinsburg on Penn Avenue. Gottlieb: Uh huh. John T.: I was called out to
that church, Mount Calvary Baptist Church. And I went there and I built
that church up, fell down when I went there. And I built it up and I bought
two nice lots and I was going to build a church. I had that all the people
with me, the mayor of the town and all.

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John T.:  Then all these big shots in the Westinghouse. They all know me.
Gottlieb: Yeah. John T.: And they all recognized me as a minister, you see.
So I had them out on my programs and all and they'd come out and make big
speeches for me and throw money on the table and them $20 and all like
that. We raised good money and we bought two nice lots and we was going to
build a church, gon' build a church. Well the company told me if I'd raise
a $15,000, he'd put money up a church and pay for it like I wanted, you
see. Well, we that bought them lots and paid for it and we was going town
raising money. And then I stayed there pretty near three years and a half.
Then I was called to a bigger church in Belle Vernon. Gottlieb: Yeah. John
T.: I was preaching when my, some of them members now. Town next to it. And
some of them members come over and heard me one Sunday preach. Then they
didn't have no pastor in Belle Vernon. And they went back. I was preaching
in the Mount Essen. He went back and told the people that they had the
preachers man, they over here. So they got in touch with me somehow or
another and wanted me to come up and preach for him. I said, Where is Belle
Vernon? I didn't know where Belle Vernon was. They told me. I said, What do
you know about me? Say, some of the members heard me preach in there. They
want me to preach at that church.

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John T.:  I told them I'd come up and preach for them. I went up preach.

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John T.:  Well, I didn't think I'd ever get back up there. Some folks just
sat there and looked at me and you could hear a pin fall. Nobody didn't say
nothin'. I told my wife I never get back there no more. But I knowed I was
gonna get that church and my mind because I dreamt it. I seen the church
and all in my sleep. And when I drove up to the church, it was in a White
settlement. No Colored folks around. And I thought it was a nice church. I
thought it was a White people church and a Colored fella stand across the
street. And I asked him, where he went to church, the Colored people, said
that's the church right there. I went back to the car and I told my wife, I
says, this church, I've seen my sleep. I've preached in this church, in my
sleep. So I went on in and had service with them. So when I left that
night, everybody shook hands. Told men and I said, Well, I'll never get
back in. It was the coldest church I ever preached in. But two weeks later,
they call me back. When can I come up and preach and give communion? I told
them yes, I'd come up. So I went back up there. And they was fixing to call
a pastor. And I didn't know it. I didn't know what they wanted. Went up
there and preach, give communion. Preached two sermons, morning and
evening. So we dismissed them that night. All of them come to me and shake
hands and say Reverend, we certainly did enjoy your service. We're going to
have you back again. I said, Well, maybe the Lord fix it so we can be back.
Come on home.

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John T.:  Couple of weeks from there, phone ring one night, 12:00. No, they
call me, they want to know, could a committee see me. I told them yes and
told them with them could see me. But didn't have no idea they were calling
no pastor and nobody wouldn't call me because they didn't know me. So four
the deacons come down and talk and he said, I didn't call no pastor. And
the only thing he said to me, Reverend, would you mind us using your name?
And I didn't give it a thought. I said, If you want it. Didn't know what
they were talking about. So they went on back. The next Friday they were
going to call a minister. The next Friday night I went to bed and about
12:00 phone rang. Well, I thought somebody might call me. A lot of time I
get called if somebody bad off sick in the hospital. Go pray for him.
Gottlieb: Yeah. John T.: And I said, Lord, wonder who called me this time
of night, I don't want to get out here tonight. And there's one of the
deacons up here and I answer the phone, say Reverend John T.. Deacon Lemon
from Belle Vernon, Reverend, how you doing? I said, I'm fine. Deacon, how
are you? Doin' fine. Says how your people? Oh, just fine. That's good. Say,
well, we call a pastor tonight. I said, You did? Yeah. I said, Well, I
certainly hope you call a nice man and somebody will pastor your church and
get to success. Said, I think so. We called you. I was speechless. I
couldn't see-- I said, called me? Yeah, we called you. I said, You folks
don't know nothing about me. Why you call me, there's seven or eight
preachers trying to get it? I said, you folks don't know me. Said, We know
more about you than we think, you think we know.

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John T.:  He said, 25 voted against you and 175 voted for you. So I think
we got you. Wanted to know when could I come up and talk it over? I could
have went the next week, but I wouldn't-- I wouldn't let them know I was
anxious. Gottlieb: Yeah. Yeah. John T.: I put them off a couple of weeks. I
went back up there, talked it over, come to terms on payment and all. Told
them what's on that ticker next on that take over his path. Everything went
nice. Well, they ain't got no pastor, naturally folks don't attend so good.
And he told me what they could pay me. And if people started coming back,
they raise my wages. $45 a Sunday they give me to start off.

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John T.:  I was working, I was making good money. I was making $125 a week
in the plant. I said, No, don't put it up too high. You gotta take care of
your church.

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John T.:  As if you say you give me $5, $5 or Sunday for five Sunday or
Sunday. If I'd take it, I'd want that nickel because of mine. So we can pay
you. All right. Well, a fellow, Hunt had been there four years. He took in
one member on Christian experience in four years. I was there six months. I
took in 58 Christian experience and baptized 47. And if you didn't get
there eleven o'clock, you didn't get a seat in that church. All standing
room in there, I run it over. So I stayed there and they was runnin' so
well. They want me to stop workin'.

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John T.:  Said, Reverend, we don't want you to work. You're the best pastor
we ever had. They had two beautiful lots, say we gonna build your
apartment, say we can take care of the preacher. We don't want you workin'.
I said, No, I can't do that. I said, Now as long as you want me to pastor
the church, I'll pastor. I said, I'm too old. I got a good job. If I still
had my job three more years, 2 or 3 more years, I'd be on pension.

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John T.:  And I said, if I get down sick 12 months or something, I said,
You folks can't have preachin'. If I get old, you gonna want a young man.
If I stay in the Westinghouse, I said, I get 65 years old. I ain't got
nothing to worry about. I have a pension coming as long as I live. I said
as long as you want me to pastor, I'll pastor. If you want me to quit my
job. I said, get you another preacher because I ain't quit my job. So I
stayed with them five years. And I seen he didn't like it so well. You
know, but they wanted me to work, so I give up. I was too old anyhow. I
give up pastor.

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John T.:  I give it up-- I go up here now. And those people, Reverend, we
ain't done no good since you. We-- You still our pastor. We ain't done no
good since you left here. But I had a nice church up there. John T.: Were
there a lot of other men like you--

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Gottlieb:  Preaching in this area who-- Who work during the day, had
regular jobs?

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John T.:  No. You know the most preachers-- You want talk to me?
Unidentified speaker: No, I was say Reverend Dukes. Tisadale: Oh, yeah. We
had only one more I know of. The fellow I was telling you about, had the
next biggest church in Braddock, Reverend Dukes. He worked in the steel
mill. See, he belongs to my club minister union. And that's where we all
got churches by working and preaching. Gottlieb: Yeah. John T.: And he-- He
stayed on. He's in the mill.

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Gottlieb:  Well, what happened to all those other fellas?

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John T.:  Most of them dead. Gottlieb: Oh, I see. John T.: Yeah. Most all
the other boys-- Let me see if either one of those boys living now. Yeah,
there's only one more, Reverend Dukes. And little while, that little
Reverend White-- honey. You know Reverend White. He belongs to our union.
He's on-- There's only three of us living, all the rest of them dead now.

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Gottlieb:  I was speaking of back when you first came up here. At that
time, were there lots of-- John T.: No. Gottlieb: --pastors who work?

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John T.:  No, no, no, no.

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Gottlieb:  Most of them were full time. John T.: Yeah, full

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John T.:  time preachers. Unidentified speaker: [unintelligible] John T.:
No, Duke was just a licensed preacher when I come here, you know.
Unidentified speaker: But he was working. John T.: Yeah, he worked all the
time. But he won't pastor. Gottlieb: I see. John T.: But most of the
pastors was pastorin' churches. He didn't work at that time because. Only
about a few here. Gottlieb: I see. John T.: 1 or 2 here. Then after we got
out and got their thing going good and they got the church around and
organized different churches, that's way come about. But we was-- New Hope,
that's the leading church in Braddock, you know, for, pastor there. Church
she belongs to, they furnished them as pastors and everything, furnished
them. And so much--

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Gottlieb:  [simultaneous talking] They gave them a full salary?

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John T.:  Yeah. Full salary. Yeah. They preachers. They won't work.

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Gottlieb:  When you would become a pastor of a church, why-- Why wouldn't
they give you a position like that full time?

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John T.:  They weren't able. Gottlieb: They weren't able to. John T.: They
couldn't pay you. You didn't have but a few members. And all they could do
to keep the little church going. Now, when I come here, Doctor Preston was
here. Big shot from Philadelphia. He's paying him $200 a month. He's
parson, all the expenses. Month vacation we pay. All I got was-- that was
big money then. Gottlieb: Sure. John T.: I ain't making $200 a month
preaching and pastor and everything punished. That was good money. Then
there was a big preacher. Gottlieb: Uh huh. John T.: And-- but the other
little churches, they just had their man. Sometime he didn't have but 35,
40 members, you see, they could raise enough money now. Fella Willow Way
Baptist Church, when I come here to the man down there, Reverend
McLaughlin, he took that church for $4 a week. Well, that's all he was
gettin' there, and they had to pay room, room and everything else that was
out of fellowship. But he stuck there and built a nice church and kept
getting in members on. He built a nice church, Reverend Taylor pastor of
that church now. McLaughlin died. He stayed there 32 years and he built a
nice church down on the corner of Town Avenue and East Street. Nice, but it
wasn't but a-- a little, that church didn't have a little holy, holy
church, holy thing, that man worked features there-- most old storefronts,
some of them.

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John T.:  Yeah. He told me. He said the ground make it there now. We worked
our way up through that. I pastored them and organized church and the
pastor there in Wilkinsburg. And from there I went to Belle Vernon and I
done good at all of my churches. Build them up good. That's way I come
along. But I worked all the time because I-- I never wanted to depend on
nobody. I always wanted to be independent. I don't want to depend on you
for nothing. I said, I might want something this week. Born a suit of
clothes and Negro system [??] and I got depend on the church to do it. I
don't know how I'm going to raise enough money Sunday to do what I want to
do now. Well, if I wasn't go in there then made my day. I know I'm going to
get what I want. Then you-- people will recognize you more if you're
working independent. Because the folks you ain't got nothing, you depend on
church for everything you get. You don't do everything they want you to do,
they'll sit down on you. They won't put in. Won't pay off.

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Gottlieb:  Yeah. Besides that, you were in a position to help your people.
John T.: Yeah, sure. Gottlieb: [simultaneous talking] by being down there
in Westinghouse.

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John T.:  Working, I could help them, and I could get programs and putting
on rallies and things, and I could go to all of them big shots down, and
everybody knows me through the plant-- I took in, I turned in $125 on
rallies to donate people to give me, know from my church and put the name
down, the month and year. I'm getting on rallies. I'm getting $125 that we
could to donate to the church to help us out, you know, especially when
there's burning coal then, had to raise money for the body want a coal
then. I turned in $40 and $50 every year, that people give me a little
something on coal and everybody liked me down there. They know me.

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Gottlieb:  Did those-- did those big companies like Westinghouse and US
Steel around, did they support many Black churches? Was it-- John T.: Oh,
yes. Gottlieb: [simultaneous talking] It was common for them?

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John T.:  Yeah. Yeah. But, you know, there's so much money that all these
companies got to put down for charity. You see, there's so much money they
got to give for charity every year, you see. And if you go in and put in
for a donation, they have to help you. They would help you. And if they
know you, you work in there and all, working for them and all, well, man,
you get it.

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Gottlieb:  [simultaneous talking] Yeah. Did-- did they expect anything from
you when they gave you money for your church?

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John T.:  No. Just donation. That was a donation they have to give,
charity, for charities. Gottlieb: Yeah. John T.: You have. They give so
much for charity, they get that off their tax, you see. Gottlieb: Yeah.
Yeah. John T.: I had to-- give in them tax. If you working there now this
little church up here, the church you pastor in, there's the one man down
there that pastor in the Westinghouse he pretty much paid for that church.
He knowed Mr. Carter, our commissioner up here and during the Depression
they was building that church. There was nobody work and nobody had
nothing. And they had the church built and the-- for it and all and every
payday. He told Carter to come down there with them, pay with you and said,
I like that little church, I'm gonna keep my arms around it. And every
payday. He'd go down there and he'd write a check for that amount of money.
On that church, but paid for.

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John T.:  Yeah. You made it nice and happy in here. They, uh. I went down
there and had some benches and tables made for the church. Made them here.
They made for the church.

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John T.:  But then I-- everything I buy, I get a ten cent discount on
everything because I'm a minister. Clothes, anything I buy. I get a ten
cent discount. That's on food, get that on food, clothes and anything else,
get a ten cent discount. Pay the minister.

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John T.:  And you'd be surprised. How a preacher can help folks. Now a long
time, my folks ain't learned good yet. If you member my church, you can get
a job much better.

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Gottlieb:  Yeah. Is that right? John T.: Oh, yes, my Lord.

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John T.:  You go down there and, you know, such and such a man preaching
and my pastor. And that belongs to this church, you know, trouble get job.
I've had boys to come here, don't belong to nobody's church and trying to
get me to give them a baptizing certificate so they could get a job. They
could show the baptizing certificate that it belongs to such and such
church. With the baptized there, is easy to get a job and I've had them
come here, wouldn't join nobody's church and wouldn't go to church and
wanted me to get them baptized and saved like I baptized them. And I tell
them no, what do you think I'm going to tell a lie for you? See, you don't
think enough of church to join? I don't think nobody gon give you no
baptizing certificate. But you go down there and tell them you belong to
the church and show them your baptized certificate, they think you're
honest. Gottlieb: Yeah. John T.: Nice church man. John T.: They put you to
work. Gottlieb: Uh huh. John T.: Otherwise when they got-- know something
you want. Want to know something about your background. Gottlieb: Uh huh.
John T.: No, no. I could go down there, I had-- after I started putting
them girls in the plant down there. All the lot of the preachers, all them
big preachers in town, they call about him. Reverend John T., I heard you
was putting Colored girls in the plant. Yes, I am. I got a girl in my
church who finished high school or some of them going to college, and I
prepared to be people on [??]. Send her down there and tell them, Reverend
John T. sent her, go down there and say, I recommend her down there. A lot
of time I call up people in the plant. Reverend John T., did you recommend
such and such who want such and such a--? Yes, I did. Put her to work. I
ain't never seen her.

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Gottlieb:  You got to be like a-- like one of the people in the hiring
office yourself. John T.: Yeah. Yeah.

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John T.:  They come to me. I had a White man in Rankin, lived across the
street in front of me, made a nice neighbor. He had two boys and a girl and
nice German, nice family. And I'm putting my folks to work. And she had
worked with some of the vice presidents at the plant. She had a brother in
law, worked in the plant, and they all was pulling for her, trying to get
her husband on. They didn't have no job. And. She came over to my house one
day and. Say this funny thing.

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John T.:  She couldn't get her husband on. She worked for someone on the
big shots. And they couldn't get her husband on. My wife said, Well, my
husband can put him to work. Well, he's doing so much for his folks. I'm
ashamed to ask him. He said, Well, it don't make no difference in color. He
can help you and he help any of the other folks.

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John T.:  Well, now to the lot of Colored folk live down lower end of the
street, but not right up where I was. And she lived right across the street
in front of me. And when I go on my vacation every year, I just walk cross
the street and hand her my key. She'd go in that house every day and aired
out and get my mail, anybody knock on my door, Reverend's not home. Nicest
neighbor there was. So the next day my wife told me and I went on, went
over there, and I said to him, Come on, let me take a little ride. He
jumped in the car and I get him right on down the plant, up in the
employment office, and I say to the man, say this a neighbor of mine, a
nice man, and he got a wife and three lovely children. Says he's a good
mill right man, and he's a good welder. And I said, for the sake of those
nice kids, I want you to put him work for me. All right, Reverend, I'll
just do that for you. Well, now, if I wanted to put you in, I could go down
in everybody's name application. I could pull different ones and bring you
over them in rotation, but I could pull it. Bring you in. So-- say you hear
from me? Say, That's all right. That's all right. Just go back three days
later. We sittin' out eatin', and here she come in, the door was open to
the house. And she flew in their house and screaming. And they grabbed me
around the neck. I said, What the matter? I thought someone kids got killed
or something. I said, What happened? Lord have mercy. Long as they've been
pulling for my husband and nobody can help him. You just tell them, he got
a letter to go over and put him to work [laughs]. That woman was so glad
she didn't know what to do. That Christmas he give me. Um.

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John T.:  White shirt and a black necktie. Give me a brand new pocket book.
$5. Brand new $5 bill in it. And she gave my wife, one or two of these
Turkish towels and a 5 pound box of candy for Christmas. I said, Honey, I
didn't charge you nothing for putting your husband to work.

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John T.:  She said, Reverend, if you hadn't got a job, I wouldn't have had
a dime for myself. You and nobody else. And every Christmas, they give us a
nice present. Gottlieb: Oh, isn't that nice? John T.: They didn't forget
us. They gave us a nice present. Say I didn't charge you nothing. I said it
was a pleasure. I said much of you done for me, says I'll leave here and
just hand you my key. You take care of my house and all. Said, I would be
left on the main charge you anything. But she was a happy soul. He stayed
there. I guess paying pension is still there. Yeah, she's still there. But
I think he's out on pension now. Gottlieb: Yeah. John T.: He make it. Yeah,
he make it. Then I had another Colored boy from town. He and his wife, a
young couple. They had one little girl, that was the prettiest kid I ever
seen in my life. Couldn't hardly tell them from White and that little girl,
just like that, her little hair just stood and curled. They come out to my
house one day and said, Reverend, they didn't have nothing to eat at home,
nothing. Said if you could put my husband to work, they'd be the turning
point of my life. Said on,

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John T.:  I say you stay here till I come back. I take him, get him on down
there. And I walk in the employment office and said, Now I want you to put
this man to work for me. I said, They ain't got a mouth in the house and he
is starving to death. There's a nice people, nice church folks. Says, Put
him to work for me. All right, Reverend. Call him. Bring him in in the
morning. I'll put him to work.

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John T.:  I didn't see that boy. In about three months. I got a box. I got
a suit of clothes. When the box come from Kaufman. Our name and order. I
said,

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John T.:  Say, you order anything from Kaufman? I don't know where Kaufman
is. I don't-- I never been in Kaufman. I said, Well, my name on it and I'm
home and I open it, and they done send me a nice blanket, bed blanket, $9
or something. The prices on it and a nice letter thanking me. They hope the
Lord would bless me. And I could do a lot for my fault. I didn't see him no
more in two years. I come out to plant one day coming home, and I run up on
him and he hugged me. He patted me, said, Reverend, I'm still here. Say, he
hadn't lost a day. He worked every day since I put him to work here. And he
said, Reverend, if I live a thousand years, I'll never forget you. And you
the cause, you saved my life for me. He say anything I can ever do for you,
I'll do it and say I made every day, where I work. Said the people like me.
And I'm getting along fine and say we're doing good. House keeping and
bought the furniture and all. We're doing good. Well, they appreciate what
I've done for. She told me she won't. She couldn't pay me, never could pay
me for what I'd done. But just let me know that she appreciate as much as
she could say. Yeah, that's a nice blanket.

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Gottlieb:  It must be very gratifying for you.

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John T.:  Just to think back over what I've done for folks and I-- I help
people, can put them work and all. It makes me feel good. Gottlieb: Sure.
John T.: I've done something to help somebody and it didn't make no
difference to me. Yeah, I hope this was helping somebody. Now I-- During
the Depression so bad, everybody trying to get on the rail stop and they is
cutting lights off, knocking windows out the house, trying to make folk get
out because they couldn't pay rent and all. Organized the club.