OCR Text |
Show Deflation .L 1. jqiJjyJ-TiiPr-- - She planned on spending the day to find The dream of a hat she had in mind. She'd search each shop and little boutique For something special, superb, and chic. She'd try on cloches and floppy felts, Then view the collection somewhere else. J- J - " Quips V"W.''T' amid But she found the hat in the very first store, So there's no reason for shopping more. And what a letdown! For here she stands With the hat on her head and the day on her hands! Georgie Starbuck Galbraith Quote ' i s L. The teen-ag- e girl was hauled into the high-schoprincipal's office for fighting in class. "What's more," she told the principal defiantly, "I'm going to keep fighting as long as they call me Turnpike.' " "But why would they call you 'Turnpike'?" the principal asked. "Because there's not a curve in sight," the young girl wailed. Frank Benjamin ol The huge jet took off from the New York airport and sped westward on the first leg of its flight to Los Angeles. The hostess approached a woman passenger and asked sweetly, "May I take your coat, ma'm?" "Oh, never mind," the lady replied, "I'm getting off at James Shurluck Chicago." I'" 1 The only time the modern girl sticks to her knitting is when she's wearing a wet bathing suit. Anna Herbert ikv. s smart I i girls! It isn't only their faultless grooming and clothes that identify them as smart and grown-uAll three of them decided on their own to use Tampax internal sanitary protection. It gives them confidence and poise, even on trying days. For with Tampax, nothing can show; no one can know. It frees you from monthly worp. ries about bulk, chafing, odor. You feel your usual clean,fresh self. Grown-u- p girls value these advantages. Wouldn't it be smart for you to turn to Tampax? Slacks and tennis dress by Sacony, dress by Majestic ss JACQUELINE KENNEDY (Continued from page 5) merable requests to write books, magazine articles, and newspaper columns). Jacqueline is today both a private citizen and a public figure. She seems wholly private when she strolls through the Georgetown streets or visits John Paul's beauty salon on Wisconsin Avenue. John Paul used to come to the White House to do her hair ; now she goes to his shop like everybody else. "One day," says a customer, "I saw her waiting. Her eye caught a cover line of a fan magazine. 'The Romance of Jack and Jackie,' it read. She winced." She is public because she stirs the public imagination and realizes that she has enormous influence in setting standards of conduct and in lending weight to causes. Crowds assembled daily in front of her new home in the first weeks after she moved there. "She did not seem to resent it," says a neighbor. "From a second-stor- y window, she raised her hand again and again in gracious acknowledgment." Presents have poured in. There are dolls, pictures, toys, books, records, clothing, towels, and dishes. There is even a Madonna and Child of inlaid wood from an unknown sympathizer behind the Iron Curtain. The children drink their milk from porcelain mugs made by an Ohio woman. At the bottom of each mug is a statuette of an animal which rises to view as the level of milk goes down. And John-Joh- n sometimes wears a suit made by a Pennsylvania seamstress who wrote that she wanted him Ml S6 TA AA HA V Incorporated Palmer, Mass. Ml Mi SS a Family Weekly, May 10, 1964. "How do you kick this habit?" to have it even though she was of "modest" means. To this Georgetown home, too, distinguished visitors keep coming. When President Antonio Segni of Italy was received at the White House in January, he also went to see Mrs. Kennedy. Terrance O'Neill, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, came to present her with gifts of Irish linen. There is a small walled garden in the rear of Mrs. Kennedy's house. Sometimes Jacqueline gardens, although she does not consider that her forte. She does keep fresh flowers in the rooms, though, as she always has done. She often stays up long after midnight, reading, handling matters connected with her husband's various memorials and his place in history, or just talking to friends. AT the top overlooks of her Georgetown house is an enclosed walk the city. In the solitude of this walk and elsewhere as well she sometimes broods about how the closeness between her husband and her children was so cruelly severed. How unfair was the loss both to him and to them, she finds herself saying. How unfair, too, she adds, was the grief he suffered at the loss of their infant son last August when his own death was so imminent. Losing her husband and her baby within 14 weeks, Jacqueline has natural fears arising from these tragic experiences. These fears, as she recently told a friend, revolve around Caroline and John-Johwhose safety and g have become the center of her thoughts. When the fears come, however, Jacqueline Kennedy has the strength to overcome them. The world has learned what President Kennedy meant when he once said, "My wife is a very strong woman." n, well-bein- |