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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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replace him. Then the President suggested knox.

Now, about Stimson replacing Woodring. Woodring had been appointed at a time when there was considerable confusion and quarreling between the veterans organizations and others. Louis Johnson, the Commander of the American Legion, had thrown his weight around a good deal. I'd known Johnson since very early in the administration. He appeared to be very much opposed to me and to the bills I was trying to get through with regard to the public Employment office, which was to absorb a perfectly ridiculous program that had been carried on at unnecessary expense in the government of a Veterans Employment Service. You couldn't get jobs for veterans in a special veterans service, but you might get jobs for veterans if they had access to all the employment opportunities that there were in the country. But if you had all the veterans huddled together in one room, only people who remembered that they ought to have a veteran and called the Veterans Service ever had any jobs laid before them. It was almost a total failure. All that it did was to give jobs as director and assistant director of the local office to a couple of veterans.





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