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Bridal Procession Continues During Waning Summer Season Though the summer season is on the wane there is no lessening in the number of weddings each day. Yesterday Miss Anne Carroll Hansford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wall Hansford, was married to Mr. Harry Gott Carr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gott Carr the ceremony being performed in the Central Presbyterian Church. The pastor, the Rev. Graham Gordon Lacy officiated at 4 o’clock and the reception was held in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hansford for only mem bers of the two families, the wedding party and a few intimate friends. Mr. Carr gave his daughter in marriage and she was attended by her sister, Mrs. Franklin Staples as matron of honor, Miss Nancy Davis * as maid of honor and her bridesmaids were Miss Kate McKelway and Miss Anne Plaskett. Mr. Carr had as his best man Mr. Allen Cox and the ushers were mr. nowara a. oauiue, Mr. jvih.vu Cox, Mr. George Irminger, Mr. George Hanks, jr., and Mr. Thomas Broughton. The bride was dressed in white satin, a Juliet cap embroidered in pearls held her veil and she carried white roses and gardenias. Her at tendants wore taffeta frocks with matching Juliet caps and carried garder flowers. Mrs. Staples was in blue and the others in white. Mr. and Mrs. Carr are making a tour of the Blue Ridge mountains for their wedding trip and will make their home in Washington. Both are graduates of Western High School and Mrs. Carr attended Mary Wash ington College of the University of Virginia and the Washington ' School for Secretaries. Mr. Carr at tended the Bliss Electrical Engi neering School before entering the Armed Forces in which he served for three years seeing duty in both the European and the Pacific thea ters. iilod-Zasada The Shrine of the Sacred Heart was the scene of the wedding of Miss Eleanore Zasada, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Steven K. Zasada, who became the bride of Mr. Walter J. Glod, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Glod yesterday morning. The Rev. Paul Repetti officiated and said the nuptial mass and the wedding breakfast was served in the Admiral Club for members of the two fam-: ilies and the wedding party. Mr. Zasada escorted his daughter to the Sanctuary where she was awaited by the bridegroom and her brother, Mr. Arthur Zasada, who acted as best man. The bride wore ivory satin trimmed with seed pearls and a coronet of seed pearls held her veil. She carried white orchids, roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Lorraine Hickey was maid of honor and wore pale yellow taffeta with a>half hat of matching tulle and carried talisman roses. The bridesmaids were Miss Mary Ann Glod, sister of the bridegroom’and Miss Dorothy Nyquist. They were dressed in mint green. . matching tulle picture hats and they carried yellow roses. The ushers were Mr. Edward Ligus and Mr. Henry Rackowski. Mr. and Mrs. Glod have gone to Atlantic City on their wedding trip and on their return they will live in Alexandria. Mrs. Glod was grad uated from the Georgetown Visita tion Junior College and attended Wilson's Teachers’ College. Mr. Glod was graduated from North Carolina State College and served during the war as captain in the ordnance department with the 9th Air Defense Command. He now is with the War Department. Fischer-Norgle The marriage of Miss Helen Geor gette Norgle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Norgle of Cheverly, to Mr. Carl E. Fischer, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Fischer of Chi cago, took place yesterday in Trinity Lutheran Church, the pastor, the Rev. Edwin E. Pieplow officiating. The bride's gown was of white net with lace insertions and her veil was becomingly arranged and held with orange blossoms. She carried; white roses and orchids. The matron of honor was Mrs. Jesse Nanney wearing pink and the bridesmaids were Miss Ruth Severns and Miss Norma Dressier w'ho worej blue. They all carried bouquets of| pink and blue blossoms, i The best man was Mr. William. Weideman and the ushers were Mr. Edward Owens and Mr. Samuel Murphy. Following the reception, which was held in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Norgle, Mr. and Mrs. Fischer left on their wedding trip. They will make their home in Cheverly. % MRS. COLE. Before her marriage to Mr. Benjamin Franklin Cole on August 16, she teas Miss Isabel Carrington Foster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carrington Foster. Mr. Cole is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar W. Cole of Durham, N. C. They will make their home in Washing ton. —Harris & Eioing Photo. ... i i aja,Biais/aiaf5EM3iSMs.Bi®sia)a®a®aig E 11111 Si Admiral Hussey Is Honor Guest At Large Party Vice Admiral George F. Hussey, jr., was the reason for the biggest party in town last night. The retir ing Navy Chief of Ordnance and his attractive wife were honored at a reception and dance that filled the Presidential and Congressional Rooms of the Statler Hotel with about 1,000 guests. Top ranking Navy personnel were drawn to this affair which was given by the Bureau of Ordnance for the man who became their chief in December, of 1943 and was later awarded the Distinguished Service Medal for his services there. He will be succeeded by Rear Admiral Albert Gallatin Noble, who, with Mrs. Noble, makes his home at 4700 Con necticut avenue. Among the distinguished guests invited to the party which lasted from 8:30 until midnight with the melodious encouragement of Jack Morton’s Orchestra, were the Secre tary of National Defense and Mrs. James V. Forrestal, the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air, Mr. John Nicholas Brown; the Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Mr. W. John Kenney; Gen. and Mrs. A. A. Van degrift, Admiral and Mrs. De Witt C. Ramsey, Admiral and Mrs. C. C. Bloch and Admiral and Mrs. J. Strauss. Admiral and Mrs. Noble were there, of course, and the Deputy Chief of Ordnance, Rear Admiral M. F. Schoeflel and his wife, and others on the list of special guests were Vice Admiral and Mrs. J. L. McCrea, Vice Admiral and Mrs. F. P. Sherman, Vice Admiral and Mrs. R. B. Carney, Vice Admiral and Mrs. D. B. Duncan, Vice Admiral and Mrs. W. L. Cochrane, Vice Ad miral and Mrs. W. M. Feehteler, Rear Admiral and Mrs. A. M. Pride, Rear Admiral and Mrs. G. B. Davis, Rear Admiral and Mrs. Frank Beatty, Rear Admiral and Mrs. C. T. Joy and Rear Admiral and Mrs. T. D. Ruddock, jr. Famous House Scene of Tea The garden party planned yester day by the Speech Clinic Founda tion-was held in the Great Hall and the ballroom of the house at 1825 R street because of the cooling showers of the late afternoon. How ever no spirits were dampened and the short program given by Angelina Montana Chisholm, mezzo soprano, and William Goff, tenor, of the Washington Opera Guild, was en joyed by those who braved the ele ments to attend. Marcel Vigneras played the accompaniments for the singers. Attracting favorable at tention were the pictures exhibited by the students 'of the National ftrt School. Guests were received by Mrs. Gar aimer Luce at the entrance to the Great Hall of this handsome resi lience built by the late H. Fessenden Meserve and more recently occupied by Mrs. Douglas Parmentier and her j late husband, Mr. Demarest Lloyd, j The Siamese Ambassador and Princess Wan Waithayakon were there, the latter taking her turn at pouring tea. The Assistant Secre tary of the Treasury and Mrs. Ed ward F. Bartelt also attended the fete, Mrs. Bartelt presiding at the punch bowl. The Bartelts were ac companied by their daughter, Miss Betty Bartelt. Others assisting were Mrs. C. B. Platt and her sister, Mrs. Parker Pair land; Mrs. James W. Boyer and Miss Jeanette Masse. Guests also in cluded the Counselor of the Mexi can Embassy, Senor Luiz Fernandez j MacGregor; Col. Stanley Edwards, J Dr. and Mrs. Paul Fleming Holland.! Col. and Mrs. John Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Ryan. Mrs. James Hel finstein, Mrs. James Gavin, Mr. C. Wilfred Dare, Mr. and-Mrs. Nelson Hoff and their son, Mr. Jack Hoff; Dr. Richard Hutchison and Col. and Mrs. Gavier Ceresaedo. —.I Suffragette Parade of 1913 Recalled by Male Marcher By Ruth Dean William Clark Taylor, local attor ney, who walked with 5,000 suf fragettes in the famous parade on March 3, 1913, the eve of President Wilson's inauguration, still thinks “women are the hope of the world." Mr. Taylor, when interviewed this week, laid the blame for making wars to men. “I think women bet ter wake up, before it’s too late,” he said, “and realize what' a force they are for world peace.” A popular speaker at women’s gatherings since his early “suffrage” days, he will be the guest of the Washington Branch of the National Women’s Party Saturday on a special radio broadcast commemo rating Proclamation Day. In femi nist circles, Proclamation Day marks the anniversary when Congress, on August 26, 1920, proclaimed the suffrage amendment law, after its ratification by three-fourths of the States. Mr. Taylor recalled his experi ences in the parade, which before the end of its progress up Pennsyl vania avenue, was marked by riots and abuses resulting in a congres sional investigation. He was then deputy register of wiJio iui me aim a pi u fessor at the Washington College of Law, which at that time was the only school in the country admitting women to study law. The school had been founded a few years earlier by Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey and Miss Emma Gillet. It was at Mrs. Mussey’s invitation that Mr. Taylor found himself in the suffrage parade. “A short time before we were to start from the Peace Monument,” he recalled, “I found myself at the head of a contingent, with a banner stuck in my hand, bearing, in large letters, the word ‘Law.’ ” Police protection had been re quested, he said, to provide for the crowds which had converged on the city for the President’s inaugura tion the next day. That the pro tection was insufficient was proven by the ensuing two hours of bedlam that broke loose as the parade slowly wound its way down the avenue. “When we got to Seventh street,” he said, "the crowd had all but blocked the street, in spite of the efforts of Miss Inez Milholland, who was leading the parade on horseback.” A rowdy drunk lunged out of the crowd and grabbed Miss Milholland's bridle, whereupon she lashed at him with her whip and rode her horse into the crowd. “By the time we got up to Four teenth street, we were walking sin gle file,” Mr. Taylor recalled. “The parade had almost disintegrated and the police were doing nothing to prevent the taunts and insults of the mob.” All Mr. Taylor remembers of the ensuing confusion was his arrival at a spot where Constitution Hall now stands, where a tent had been erected. There he was greeted by Mrs. Mussey and Miss Gillet and met such renowned women leaders of the day as Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, Miss Frances Willard, Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Mrs. Belva Lockwood. He told them what happened, after which he was invited to lunch. “X was so badly shaken up, X have no distinct recollection of the af fair,” he said, “except that after lunch, the bill for the entire party was passed to me.” Mr. Taylor recalled that the late Dr. Harvey W. Wiley was among the paraders and that news ac counts of the day stated that many Senators, Representatives and top Army and Navy officials also marched to show sympathy in the cause. _ Engagement Announcement is made by Mr. William Jefferson Nickles of Ab beville, S. C., of the engagement of his daughter, Miss Jane Eleanor Nickles of Arlington, to Mr. James Morris Trumble, son of Mrs. Elea nor Trumble of East Falls Church and the late Mr. Robert E. Trumble. The wedding will take place in the fall. U. S. Award Given Trench Officer The Assistant Military Attache ol tfie French Embassy, Capt. Ber nard Delegue, was presented the Bronze Star yesterday afternoon by Brig. Gen. Walter E. Todd. The award was made in recognition of Capt. Delegue’s meritorious service to the Allied intelligence officers, during the North African campaign. The citation was read at the cere mony yesterday in the Pentagon by Lt. Col. Walden Woodward and those who attended the presenta tion included members of Capt. Delegue’s family and his colleagues it the Embassy. The group included Mme. Delegue and her parents, the Dean of the Law School of the Paris University and Mme. de la Mozandiere, who are visiting Capt. and Mme. De egue. From the Embassy they were the Air Attache, Col. William Brey ton, the Assistant Military Attaches, Col. Albert J. P. LeBeL Lt. Col. Raymond J. Cann, Capt Etienne de Sr asset and Capt. Francois Thore. Also present yesterday were the As sistant Naval Attache, Lt. Comdr. Pierre Rouliot, and the Attache, Mr. Pierre Basdevant. Also oflering con gratulations to Capt. Delegue yes terday were Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell and Miss Martha Freeman. Mr. and Mme. de la Mozandiere have been in this country for some time and recently made a trip over the Skyline Drive with Capt. and Mme. Delegue and their small son, Marc Etienne, now about a year old. Preceding their visit in Vir ginia, Capt. and Mme. Delegue and the Mozandieres spent some time at Spring Lake. MRS. GLOD. —Glogau Photo. II I li lull II limilllllH i I ii»i MRS. FISCHER. —Pittman Photo. Mil n . . k MRS. CARR. —.Harris & Ewing Photo. I — gj RUGS WASHED—REPAIRED I STORED | Lowest Prices for | Finest Work Why Take a Chance? 1 run Insurance Coverage Jcqa'tian £to&. Gi Established 1920 3316 P St. N.W. 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