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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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was tall enough. He was very amiable and very alert, and very diplomatic in handling the Press and handling people. When they went off to visits, you know, went off to Jamaica to speak somewhere or other, Pa would say the word and pass the word that made the committee that came to meet them retire while the President got into the car or out of the car. “How, would you gentlemen mind just going over there? we just don't like people to see the President moving, you know. We don't allow no pictures taken moving.”

You know, they never did--I mean, they never took a picture of the President moving. That was the one rule. Pretty near everything else, but no moving pictures. And Pa Watson would say that. I've seen the camera men get their cameras up, obviously coming off the back end of the train, and I'd hear Pa come out and say in a very firm military tone, “No pictures while moving, gentlemen; no pictures while moving.”

Sometimes you'd go out in the sticks here and there'd be people that hadn't heard about that rule. But they'd obey Pa Watson. They kind of took it from him. And I think that was the thing. I don't think he was a military adviser but he was kind of a social and diplomatic help and advisor, and an awfully good fellow with appointments. He had much more sense than McIntyre did about appointments, and he ran them through more quickly. McIntyre tended to let them stay too long. Pa watson had a kind of military way, even talking to





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