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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1934)
PAGE EIGHT Inclement Weather Reduces Attendance At Sunday Schools i o Sunday school attendances were decreased greatly by the inclement weather that prevaileq here yester day. No church reported as large number present as on the previous Sunday. /s First Baptist continued to lead in total attendances with 464, Ninety-four men and 9 women were present in the Bible classes. Four hundred and fifty were pre sent at the First Methodist Sun day school, inciuding 72 men anu 50 women. Prince Avenue Baptist reported 830 present at Sunday school, with 73 ,men and 5¢ women in the Bible classes. LChristian church had 149 present at Sunday school with 21 men and 26 women in the Bible classes, East Athens Baptist reported 128 present, including 21 men and 448 women, who were in the Bible classes. Central Preshyterian reported 122 attended Sunday school ser wvices, with 23 mex and 19 women in Bible classes, west Engd reporte ed 102 present, including 22 men and 16 women in the Bible classes Oqox{ee Street Methodist reported 98 attending, including 15 men and 10 women in the Bible classes. HAIL FELL SUNDAY Several rarmers living on the Dan jelsville road bevond where the road to Neese branches off, re-" ported this morning to the Banner- Herald that hail fell in that s(*(:-‘ tion Sunday afternoon. The stmmgl however, were of small size and thé hai] was not heavy enough to | da&ilége Crops. 1 . Railroad Schedules « SEABOARD AIR LINE Arrival and Departure of Traim Athens, Ga. To and From Scuth and West Atlanta, Washington, New York ARRIVE— —DEPAR% 10:08 pm Birmingham 6:33 an 3:28 am Atlanta 4:15 ax Atlanta New York-Wash, 8:03 pm Bham-Mem. 2:20 pn To and From Nurth and South 2:20 pm Rich.-Norfolk 3:03 pm 4:15 am Rich.-Norfolk 10:08 pr New York-Wash. 10:08 pm Birmingham 6:33 am * S . GAINESVILLE-MI!DLAND * " SCHEDULES : . Leave Athens Neo. 2—for Gainesville— 7:45 aun No. 12—for CGainesville— 10:45 an No. 11—from Gainesville—lo:oo amnt No. I—from Gainesville— 6:15 pu GEORGIA RAILROAD Train 61 Arrives Athens 7:456 ax Daily Except Sunday Train 50 leaves Athens 11:00 ar ; SOUTHERN RAILWAY Lula—North-—South Depart— = ArTVi( 6:40 am. 11;20 a.m ©1:30 pm. 4:20 p.m ! Telephone 81 : J. L. Cox, Assistant General Freight-Passenger Agent. . CENTRAL OF GEORGIA Daily (except Sundays) 6:30 am and 4:15 p.m. Sunday only 7:50 a.m. and 4:00 pm . Arrives Athens Daily 12:35 p.m. and and 9:16 p.m. Sports Star - HORIZONTAL - 1,8 Who is the " sports star in ' the picture? 13 old French ... coins. 34 Payment ~ demand. 16 To guide. 17 An astringent. 18 Singing voice. 20 Assam silk worm, 22 Encountered. 23 Rower. 25 Male cat. A 26 Preposition. ‘ 27 Minor note. 28 Alleged force. 30 Myself. 31 Matter from a sore. | - 32 To make lace. 34 To oust, | 35 Fact of having been elsewhere 36 Silkworm. 37 Golf device. 38 Right. - 40 Half an em. 41 Corpse. 42 Father. Answer to Previous Puzzle CAISITIONDIOIUJME IRIGILIE] MOO RINRIR AT LIOBE Hlß] GASION [DIAID) TR TVOM ) e ST ANARRT]ED) "HOREO VIATISHTIAR AN [ INTIERILANDAUIL [E[T] SEALERMCOESHMED] HBEE TASKIMSE] YlO SEEE AT NS DIORML |[E NSHITIVIRIF [LIOIN T RESILIALT INIIR[E AID [FRENCHMOREMITERIS 43 Belonging to. 45 She is among the world's best women 51 Southeast. 52 Weight. 54 Kingdom. 55 To melt. 57 Passages in ~ the brain. 59 Nothing. g 60 Ascended. 61 She is 1933 ~—— in her sport. 62 Combined. R T TIFT T 5 o 3 0l o\ o LI N TS e SN TTT N] ?!&;l,gwgfififlQHl N TS PN LT T S==p 11 [ N | ]I | el )l ol il 00l 0 N G R e UL LT Lt P A [ 1 R ] Blenbeakonlnkt “The Best Secretary” In The New Deal -- That’s Morganthau's Aide Henrietta Klotz, Mother of 5-Year-Old Daughter, |s Capable Executive. Tactful Helper |ls Necessary in Important Treasury Post. A young mother whose chief interests are her five-year-old daughter and music—but who is, above all, an executive, a vital, moving figure in the New Deal. This is charming Hen rietta Klotz, whom Mary Margaret Mcßride describes in this article, the fourth of her series ¢cn Queens of the New Deal. By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE NEA Service Staff Correspondent. (Copright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) WASHINGTON.—They’ve been tryving to hang high-sounding gov ernment titles upon efficient little Henrietta Klotz ever since she came here more than a year ago from her native New York city, but to date she has refused them | all. That's because the only title she cares about is one that has already heen conferred upon her by the orignial of a photograph that looks down benignly from its place of honor on a wall of her big, busy office. ‘ “T'o Henrietta Klotz, the Best! Secretary—From Her Boss,” isi the inscription that Henry Mor genthau, jr., secretary of the United States Treasury, has writ ten underneath that picture of himself, and he ought to know what he’s talking about. For al though it’s difficult to imagine how the youthful-looking Mrs. Klotz could possibly have been grown-up enough at the time, records show that she actually be came secretary to Mr. Morgen- llhau thirteen years ago! “Nothing Is Tabled” Despite the seemingly contra dictory evidence of her appealing; blondness, curly hair, misty blue eyes and heart-shaped face, this} voung woman is above all thingsi an executive, sometimes stern, al-‘ I\\'ays with a rapier-like faculty for cutting ruthlessly throughl lendlefls verbiage to the heart of an issue, and an uncanny talent for getting work—her own and every body else's—quickly and smoothly accomplished. “One rule of our office is that business must be handled. if pos sible on the day it comes in,” she' declares firmly. “We do not table, anything.” This dispatch in dealing with affairs has doubtiess been learned in part from Secretary Morgen thau, a precisionist of the flrstl water. He does not procrastinate, and will not tolerate anybody around him who does. The Secretary of the Treasury reaches his office at about a quar ter of nine every morning. Always he finds Mrs. Klotz there, desk cleared. every curl in place, ready to start a strenuous day. Sits At Conferences i Until 9:30 the two deal with o | heavy correspondence. All the iworld, it seems, pines to discuss igold and its problems with the ‘Sevrvt:n'_\' of the Treasury. Let ters out of the way, comes a brisk conference attended by the seven or eight most important staff members of the department. [At ten, the.appointments begin, to {continue at 10 and 15 minute in !tervals. until 5 in the afternoon, lor even later. Mrs. Klotz is always on hand ‘for the conferences, and in case .01' notes to be taken, for appoint- 18 Toward. 19 Sun god. 21 She lives in ——. 23 Moistening with butter. 24 Puts into notation. 27 Riches. 29 Valleys. 31 Pastry. 33 Neck scarf. 39 Fang. 42 Leguminous plants. 44 Blood-sucking insect. 46 Either. 47 Cotton fabric. 48 With joy 49 Measure of cloth. 50 Ream (abbr.). 51 Discharged a gun. 52 Twitching. 53 Limb, 55 Three. 56 To marry 58 Spain. 60 Form of “a.” VERTICAL 2 Little island. 3 Disorganized flight. 4 Tooth tissue. 5 Exists. 6 Thought, 7 Your mother’s sister. 9 Morindin dye. 10 Born. 11 Hard skin tumor, 12 Cast of a language. 15 Name. 17 She is an ——. | o —wmppmrere il y;;v,,, 5 ,‘ Vs . o b, ' '!l s 54 o : i;g;;;;z;';:::f:. 4 7 \(l’ A ? R [A2&Fg ; ¥ N VA, g ; E " Bf‘ ) f X 5 A & | : it (8 i 0 - ; | B S ' / A vifffiffiéffié§§§§s§%s’s§s2"sssssssss3s??s*s?.':3;» R 4 ie . 5 ON THE VOB EACH |T S -~ e ; 7 | DAY AT B:3OAM| 4 . 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RO - l 3 ReS N R s s i - @ 1934, Licesry & Mvas Tosacco Co, o 2 . v - ¥ b - - #5 ->; e : ¢ THE BANNER-HERALI, ATHENS, GEORGIA unassociated bureaus as internal revenue, niarcotics: and secret ser vice, as well as some 37,000 em ployes, come under the jurisdic tion of the Secretary of the | Treasury, you may get some idea of the versatility demanded of the Secretary’'s secretary. In lan ordinary day she must see {dozens of people, ranging all the Iway from diplomats to job-hunt j ers, must argue, cajole, placate. iLuckily she has what amounts to zenius for getting on with every ’hody. : i Shows Diplomacy ¢ They tell, for instance, of the very important congressional com i mitteeman who burst in recently Iwith the announcement that he { “must see Secretary Morgenthau iat once.” Mrs. Klotz replied po litely that the Secretary was en gaged and could not be disturbed. iThe important gentleman appar |ently felt that he was more ur | gent than any engagement. ! | He got so excited about it that| | one of the men in the department, !alarmed, stepped in to “protect”i | Mrs. Klotz. H=2 discovered, how | ever, that the young woman hadl |th(~ gituation in hand. Fearlessly| 'she was pointing out to her irato| !visitor the injustce of expecting | ’her to interrupt the Secretary at 'a vital conference when she had .hefan expressly instructed not to do sO. ‘ Gradually the important gentle man’s wrath melted away before lthe little secretary’s wistful smile 'and air of sweet reasonableness. {ln the end, he not only left smil |ing, but returned next day to sing !Mrsg. Klotz’s praises te her em | ployer. With all her tact, Mrs. Klotz is painfully honest. She would stand up staunchly to the Secretary, 'whom she admires above all men, Ith(- entire cabinet, and even the President if she thought she was |in the right. (There's a person lally inscribed picture of the Pre%- iident in her office, by the way). Her Second Job | The job with Mr. Morgenthau | which in the thirteen years has ’involved helping to run a farm, a lfarm magazine, and more recently the United States Farm Board, lamong other things, is only the i second .she’s held. The first was ‘m an advertising agency.. The vear she went to work for Mr. Morgenthau, she had intended to enroll at Vassar. Instead, she let her earnings help a younger bro |ther through college. ! Mrs. Klotz resents bitterly a {rumor about the Capital that she’s Ithe iity’s best-dressed secretary. l “How can they say such a thing { when clothes- are . about .the -last ]thin;: in the world I ever bother |about?” she inquired nlaintively. | However, simple as her things 1 » i First Lady Enters Lists ' As A Two-Fisted Battler |As President Becomes | More Conservative, Wife ‘ Becomes More Radical. | By RODNEY DUTCHER | | WASHINGTON, — Girls who lcover Mrs. Roosevelt's press con ference brag that she becomes more radical and aggressive as the Ipresident seems more conservative tand conciliatory. j They cite her spirited replies to | Senator Schail, Dr. Wirt, and crit ;ics of her pet subsistence home | stead projects, her implied attack jon milk distributors who profiteer ‘at the expense of farmers and city i families, and her speech to the | sometimes militaristic D. A. ‘R, |urging it to work for peace. | The newspaper women arcs proud | of her, insisting that she has suf | sered more personal attacks than ithe president himself and that perhaps there won't be so many after her worsting of Senator :Schall, who said her philanthropic i furniture factory at Hyde Park jwas a profiteering enterprise, { The First Lady takes a vigor lous, outspoken interest in social lpmblems and sometimes can af ford to be more informal and tfrank than her husband, l In her press conference ‘“off lthe record” comments, her humani tarian slant is even more obvious lthan' his, Two Great Young Minds [ The capital’s current 'l'eading': | “The Planless Roosevelt Revolu tion,” by Lawrence Dennis, in the ,American Mercury, and Underse :Cl‘et‘dl‘y of Agriculture Rexford G. | Tugwell’s speech, ‘“The Return to ! Demoecracy.” 3 g ! I met Dennis in Senator Cut iting’s office-—a tall dark, hand lsome, youngish . ex-diplomat and lex-Wall Street banking experi ! with a realistic, objective point of view. - | - His articles cite conflicts in ‘ the New Deal and insist it must e s usually are, she looks lovely 'enough in them to deserve the {title. Her chief interests outside iher‘work are her pretty five-year old daughter Elinor, who is going §to be an artist when she grows lup. and music. If she hadn’t been Ithe “Best Secretary” of the New Deal, Henrietta Klotz would prob | ably have been a musician, have a definite, planned pro gram. Personally he believes the country is headed for Fas cism—since it is bound to head in some direction. Tugwell says he thinks Fas cism can be avoided by reforms in the present system. He thinks the American people are too individualistic, tgo defiant of regimentation, to enter any thing of the sort. To which the Dennis answer was that human nature, under given compuisions, is the same on any continent. Tugwell thinks the depression is temporary; Dennis doesn’t. But Tugwell isn't any too optimistie. He remarked at a dinner table the other night ‘that he didn’t think the country really be lieved that every good American had a right to a job or even that we ought to abolish poverty. Any way, those are random thoughts culled from a couple of brilliant, divergent minds which have in spired lots of heavy thinking here, |Just Natural Battlers { Little dramas of government |life: A boy and girl were married, igot to quarreling and seperated. The boy iost his job, so both were looking for work. CWA brought them together, unwitingly in the office of a library cataloging pro ject. Reconciliation? No, they start ed fighting again and had to be ’quelled so the rest of the force | could work. Now they're both job hunting again. . . . . A billiant young western congressman would ‘havp made a better record this | session but for one weakness, Blaz iing with a yen for social Jjustice, Ihe becomes so overrought over his 'favorite issues that he starts drinking to hold his nerves togeth 'er——:md takes too much. ... .An Interior Department gir] was as |signed to a night job. She had just marrieqd a man - who works days and tried to have something done about it. The official who interced {ed for her was formally advised: [“The shifts are rotated every 30 days, so the husband will have the benefit of his wife’s society ‘at least one month out of three. !. . . Several years ago, a man who lis now a ‘little cabinet” member, engaged in a corporate reorgani zation in higs home state, discover ed a crooked official in the com- MONDAY, App), 30, 193 \ p ! @ ‘ . Eases Headach, In 3 Minuyteg also neuralgia, MUSCular achey and pains, toothache, earachy, periodical and o¢her Pains dyg to inorganic cauges, No nap, cotics. 10c and 25¢ Dackages, :—_—\\ pany and had hipy fived, last Sun. mer he helped the same map P a Bood emergency jgh here, Now the second man jg €ngaged jp an undercover Campaign slanger against the “little cabinet” felloy o e die A giN secretary i NR4 smashed her automohile into gy, other car and was convicteq of reckless driving. She Was agked to resign, with the explanation that she had heen in g “similap” affaip before, It seems she was in g Darty which once invadeq 5 speakeagy with the alleged representation of one of the men that he was Gep. Johnson. A newspaper report saig Johnson himself hag raucougly demanded entrance—and Johngop obtained an abject Apology, ~ . Taxi drivers are stiy Complaining to passengers about the DAR convention. 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