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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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alumnae of Wellesley College. Jim certainly had a combination of social ambition, which he never would have named and intellectual ambition to see those girls go into a slightly better level.

His loyalty to Boss, his wife, was another very touching thing. She was a girl he'd married when young in Rockland County. She was a cut under Jim in ability, although smart in her own way, quite a social climber, but not knowing really what social standards were. She didn't know the difference between people with a lot of money who were showoffs, and people with real position. She was a good-hearted soul too, but could get very spiteful, while Jim didn't. Jim did not get spiteful until he was, apparently, deeply hurt. But Boss got spiteful very easily. She hated Washington. She hated the social obligations of Washington. She hated to come down to Washington. She could, with great difficulty, be persuaded to receive the public, when it was then expected to be a Cabinet officer's wife's duty to receive the public on fixed Wednesdays. She hated to do that. It bored her to death. She didn't see any votes in that, or any sense in it. It seemed to her very tiresome. She would take a big suite at the Mayflower and a notice would be in the paper that she was at home,





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