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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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Well, we all filed out looking very serious and very downcast. Then we went to the Speaker's room, which is the place you go to when you leave the House. There's a kind of parlor there and room to run around in. There we all gathered. Mrs. Bankhead was brought there, if she wasn't already there. She was in deep mourning - a very handsome-looking woman, with beautiful red hair, very stylish, with always very interesting and lovely clothes. She was in deep mourning of the old-fashioned kind, with a long veil bordered with crepe, which isn't much used any more, but is really very becoming and effective. We all paid our respects to her, which is natural and proper. Then she was taken to the funeral train. We talked to each other for a few minutes, but the word was that we were to get going. The train was already in the Union Station and we should go right over there.

I remember going down and getting into my car. The cars of the Cabinet officers were drawn up at the side, ready to fall into the funeral procession. The caissons and the gray horses from Fort Myer were already there. Of course, the Speaker's body was brought down the front steps of the Capitol and placed upon the caisson, which is all right. That's a suitable arrangement. Then came





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