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THE TV NTING;, STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9 '1928, Januarr 22. A native of Illinois, Col. Stansfield served in the Volunteer Army during the Spanish War of 1898 and as lieutenant colonel of the 132d Infantry. 33d Division during the World War. He ‘uMIIl?Med the Dlatl uis!‘:eg Religious Service Medal for coul and efficienc wnm ington Na- |in the rations at -de-Chaume, o A:‘fa-rnoon of | in oflo& 1918. In July. 1920, he was appointed & major in the Judge ho | Advocate General's Department of the Regular Army. Irish Actress Dead. LONDON, February ? (#).—Glddys Folliott, noted Irish actress, who wu prominent on the British sta; e-réy 80s until recently, died here yes- terday. Miss Folliott w‘x-mfl in New York in “The Ghost Traln. . Gorillas are less imitative than chim- panzees, recent experiments show. BURIED IN ARLINGTON. — Funeral Rites Held for Lieut. Col. James H. Stansfield. and military services at- RALEIGH HABERDASHER-1310 F STREET—WASHINGTON'S FINEST MEN'S WEAR STORE Tomorrow at 8 A.M. MEN’S FURNISHINGS At Substantial Reductions! *Ra Lelgh Shlrts. regularly $2.50 to $3.50 Collar attached or to match, soft or starched separate collars; plam2 and self figured white broadcloths, white oxford, woven madras and colored broadcloth. / Silk NeCkwear, regularly $2.50 to $3.50 $ Hand-tailored of rich silks and gorgeous satins in a variety of col- ors, stripes and smart patterns. Every one has non - unnkable lining. Imported HOSQ, regularly $2 and $2.50) $ Wool Hose from Europe’s best makers; diamond designs, stripes, plaids, ribbed heather effects—every conceivable color com-) ) 8 1 1 1 *Ra Leigh Pajamas, regularly $3 and $3.50 Round neck, London coat, middy, slip-on and collar styles; in woven madras, oxford cloth and xmponad broadcloth. Solid colors and novelty patterns. Sizes A to D. Tel'l'y RObeS, regularly $1 2.50 and $15 ) $ Tailored of heavy-weight, closely woven Terry cloth; smart; new patterns and beautiful blended colors. Trimmed with sash or girdle. Silk Mufflers, regularly'$5 and $6) $ Crepe, repp, foulard and jacquarded twill; smart plaids, stripes and solid colors — generous size squares, glsinor) fringed. Carter’s and Duofold Underwear All sizes and styles; Winter and Spring weights; in silk and wool, 5 pure wool, mercerized cotton and wool, and all cotton. Reduced Raleigh Haberdasher 1310 F Street INC. 1 6 f9: TIME FURNITURE ‘A Time When You Can Buy Single Pieces As Well As Suites at Savings Reductions Are Store-Wide VERY suite and single picce of Life- E time Furniture is substantially low- ered in price now. Savings are in every department. The values are unusual. For instance, the fine old mahogany pos- ter bed illustrated above is in a charming dull colonial red finish—full size—with quaint posts and turnings. Reduced to $29.75. Mahogany Poster Bed Illustrated—*297" MAYER & CO. SEVENTH STREET BETWEEN D &-E | the rank of major, DR. GRAHAM, UNION VETERAN, IS DEAD Former Chief Medical Exam- iner, 88, Practiced Here Many Years. Dr. Neil F. Graham, Union Army veteran, formerly chief medical exam- iner at the United States Pension Of- fice and for many years a practicing physician of this city, died at his resi- dence, 909 New York avenue, yester- | day after an illness of several months. He would have heen 88 years old Feb- ruary 9. He was & member of the Loyal Legion and of Dawson Lodge. No. 16, F.A A M Born in Ontaria, Canada, Dr. Gra- ham went to Ohio in 1858 and studied | medicine at the Ohio State College, | graduating in 1861. He was commis- sioned shortly after the outbreak of the Civil War and served as surgeon, with in the 12th Ohio Regiment. | Following the Civil War he was mar- | ried to Miss Harriet A Southgate, daughter of the late Bishop Horatio Southgate. He practiced medicine at Zenia, Ohlo, for several years and later practiced in Minnesota Coming to this city in 1872 he be- came chief medical examiner at the Pension Office and continued in that capacity until 1883. From that date he continued in private practice here until his recent fllness. In addition to his other work Dr. Graham served as a member of the faculty of Howard Uni- versity for a number of years. He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Richard Reading of this city and Mrs. Phillp Nourse of Falls Church, Va., and by _five grandchildren. Funeral services will be conducted nl | the residence tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. Robert Castleman of the | Old Falls Church. Falls Church, Va.. will officiate. Interment will be in Rock | Creek Cemetery. CLYDE J. NICHOLS, Inc. UNDERTAKERS 4209 9th St. N.W. Clvde 3. Nichols, Pres. Formerly Vice President-Secretary W. R. Speare Co. Phone Col. 6324 !onsu A CHARGE ACCOUNT AT _—-— Columbia 432 Funerals As Low As Complete Caskets & AII—$75 W. W. Chambers Co. 1400 Chapin St. N.W., Cor. 14th c%'%,s Pain stops instantly |: Inoneminute Dr.Scholl's Zino-pads make the most painful corns stop hurting—the world’s fastest, safest way. No powerful liquids or caustic plasters to give you acid burn on the toes. Zino-pads remove the cause— friction and pressure of shoes. No other method does this. Absolutely safe, sure —cannot harm the tenderest skin, Zino-pads protective, healing. Atallds and dept. stores — 35¢ per package. Dz Scholl’s |EISEMAN'S, 7th & F|< Zino-pa [Put one on = the pain is gone!? Genuine Nlligator First Siz bea styles lizard match, For All Time This Low Price from lected akins of a lovely mink brown alligator, while the shoes shown with brown auede quarters to All Cuban heels, the first offer these gennine amazingly low price, DR. NEIL F. GRAHAM. 'DETECTIVE'S SON'S OVERCOAT STOLEN Clothing Takem From Business High, Young Alligood Declares. Frank M. Alligood, jr.. son of a mem- ber of the police automobile detective squad, reported that his overcoat, hat, gloves, scarf and bunch of keys were stolen from him at Business High School yesterday. and fellow detectives of his father are investigating the theft. Theft of an express package contain- ing 17 boxes of stockings was Teported to the police bv A. L. Phillips, manager of the Faultless Hose Corporation at | Eighth and I streets, who said that the package was taken from a delivery truck in front of his place of business yesterday afternoon. Mrs. 8. E. Ridderhof of Quantico, Va., reported the theft of her purse con- | talning $15 in cash. a wrist watch, keys | | and several cards, which she said had been stolen from her in the restroom at the Union Station yesterday. Mrs. John Gray, fr.. 3212 Garfleld | street. asked police vesterday to make an effort to recover her hancbag. which contained $10 in cash, cards, keys and ! papers when she left it in a taxicab, which she hired at the Mayflower Hote) and rode in to Fourteenth and G streets. _FOU FS_hifocal LOST. RREASTPIN Tpiatinum reward Kina. A28 10th st se. Atlantic BL NCH OF JoEthel den- g m Rewar i—Liver and Tolte - and tae.No. V 20th st nw_ wire haired W Delta Omesa TY PIN unded with pearls and sapphires. | Tady's _on February 1. im M. quare. containing small sum money. kbook. et Finder may kel money and receive substantial rewan) if nts returned to 4204 18th st 0w Dair At Phone Potom: Finder _return | _9 Palie Stat th_vellow ba o Ditween Bih ring near Cairo Hotel: 511t Valuni as Keepsake Lib M_ Miller_Decatur 461 o lost this morning TR0 Mass ave & dying relatiy eral_rewa Teward Lost on Satur. P8 between the hovr of 11 11 m. hetween 1700 Mass 2100 mm st now. pearl shirt the same to John 1301 19th st day either Ada i oy 3 ore Maln. 1880 Shetween D ik umbrella reward T WATC e TR WAtch with lin mard and, Lothron reward. Miss | at_8:30 this morning for Miami, F. 3. SIMPSON DIE INHARRISBURG, PA. Sudden Attack Believed to Have Been Cerebral Hemorrhage. F. Stoddard Simpson, prominent at- torney of Harrisburg, Pa., and brother | of Dr. John Crayke Simpson of Wash- ington, a director of The Evening Star | Newspaper Co., died last night at his [ apartment, in a Harrisburg hotel, ac- | cording to word received here today. Mr. Simpson was found unconscious yesterday morning and he dled at 9 | pm. without regaining consclousness. The sudden attack was believed to have been due to a cerebral hemorrhage, as Mr. Simpson had been in excellent health. He visited Dr. Simpson Eundu{ at the latter's country home, Oak Hall, necar Sunbury, Pa., and had planned to visit another brother, Horton, at Al- bany, next Sunday. Mr. Simpson would have been 68 years old February 5. He was born at Belins Grove, Snyder County, Pa., and at an early age moved to Sunbury. He was graduated from the State Normal School at Rowlsburg, and taught school for several vears. Leaving the teaching profession, he studied law and took up practice at about the age of 30, and remained in that profession ever ‘since. Besides the two brothers, Mr. Simp- son leaves four sisters, Mrs. James Tag- gart Priestley and Mrs. Charles W. Rogg of Des Moines, Towa:; Mrs. Horace Burg of Northumberland. Pa.. and Mrs. {Robert M. Stewart of Constantine, | Mich. Funeral services will be held at Oak Hall Gaturday afternoon and interment will be in River View Cemetery, Northumberland, Pa. | BACKS WILL ROGERS { Former Oklahoma Governor Com- | pares Humorist With Abraham ! Lincoln. By the Associated Press | CLAREMORE. Okla., February 2.—| \Hamrg Will Rogers as the “greatest ua\aLab'c asset of the Democratic party and of our country” C. N. Haskell, | former Governor of Oklahoma. yester- day indorsed the action of the Rogers | county Democratic central committee in sponsoring the nomination of the humorist for the Presidency. “The mere fact that Rogers has a humorous way of expressing his good ideas does not indicate that he is sim- | | ply a clown.” said Haskell. “Abraham lLlnmln invariably expressed the sound- | | est ideas always with a humorous mus-! tration.” Haskell sald Rogers was the besl‘ | known man of either political party. | R —— | “INTERNATIONAL SPY” | ACCUSED OF LARCENYE | Wife Says Man Implicated in Mex-! ican Documents Case Took Her Money. | By the Assoclated Press NEW YORK. Ftbr\ml’v 2. — Jaccb | Nocomsky self-styled “international spy.” recently implicated in the Hearst | Mexican forgeries. went on trial yester- | day in the Brooklyn County Court on | | charges of grand larceny filed by his | G1F: | young wite. Mrs. Nosovitsky said that she had l married Nosovitsky on September 19. A few days later he deserted her and, she | said, took $1,800 with him. She assert- | |ed she located him with another woman. Nosovitsky denied the charges and in- | timated that they were pro«f-ed by his | wife's parents. who opposed him be- | cause he was anti-socialist and had no money. Nosovitsky has been named in con- | nection with several attempts to obta:n | forged documents relating to commun- | st activities in \Ie‘(lco HOPS FOR SOUTH. J. F. Donnellan Resumes, Good-Will Tour. ATLANTA. February 2 (#%—Capt. Joseph P. Donnellan. flying to South Ametica on a good-will tour, took off Fla. The flight, which started from Chi- cago Sunday for the purpose of dem- | onstrating the practicability of long- | Capt. distance flights with small planes, has been delayed by adverse weather. Imporfc’d and Lizard Q}% Specially Reduced for Friday, Saturday and Monday At wtiful se- are have time in our history we eptilian shoes at this Sizes AAA to C . | eet N. W, ’ V'L SPEARE ¢ co. [ 113 SRYENTH ST () ‘nn un st | 3034 M {RAL_DIRECTORS. " James T. Clements s Arither e successurs of nat o wilh the oric Nneare estad ot 1009 H'St. N. w | Phone Frank 6ito For ALM Us R Succeeding *he original W. K. Speare Co. ! 1623 Connecticut Ave. Potomac 4600 N yrs. at 1208 L4 vry At 940 Fat | W. Warren Taltavull 14th & Spring Rd. Col. 464 Timothy Hanlon G K SUNE Phone L ASey Wm. H. Sardo & Co. I'rivate Limousine Ambulance | Modern Chael Frank Geier's Sons Co. 5 AN . Main 2473 T AR ISR (3 JOHN 'RWHIGHT co. _AXE 10 SU N W ehane North 47 K i fed T Bfcient”Serviy Chape! W. W. Deal & Co. NG H SUN K LINCOLN N200 P. A. TALTAVULL L fpe T Mer o mn\q H_OFFICK CHAS‘S ZURHORST 4L COSTELLO TN Capitol St NORUH TS Joseph F. Birch’s Sons 1ISAAR BIRCHY s 2t NAW FUNERAL l\l(\lh\\ "GEO. C, SHAFFER ; LALARLE FLORAL KMALEMS AT 00 N L) Auton o | | o '('Sur Only Store. l4lh & Eve Queen Quaty Boot Shop | 1219 F Str BLACKISTONE, Reautitul Froral l\r» na, S\ Am\ [ fAx '™ TR i iy Seivis Gud‘g’" 1 R Ty e Mnrwg St. FOR PRESIDENT RACE oenEN |‘07 H SINMONA. o S MRS. ALICE E. WAUGH DIES IN INDIANA Pioneer Suffrage Leader Was ‘Widow of Representative Dan Waugh. Mrs. Alice Elizabeth Waugh, a pioneer in the woman suffrage movement and widow of Representative Dan Waugh of Indiana, a member of the Fifty-sec- ond and Fifty-third Congresses, dled at her home at Tipton, Ind, Tuesday after an illness of several months. Funeral services will be conducted in Tipton. Mrs. Waugh, a former resident of this city, was at one time prominently iden- tified with the civic, religious and po- litical life of the Capital. She taught a Bible class in the Metropolitan Meth- odist Episcopal Church and retained an ::c.iuge membership in the Congressional u She worked ir. the woman suffrage movement with Susan B. Anthony, Lucy Stone, Julia Ward Howe and other leaders, appearing before many Senate committees in the interest of mv\ng women the voting privilege. For number of years she was a member o( the Indiana State Board of Charities and was appointed by former Gov. Han- ly as an honorary member of the Coun- cil for Women's Penal Institutions in Indlana. She had the distinction of being one of the first woman delegates to the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, attending the con- ference in Baltimore in 1307. She is survived by two daughters, Miss Pearl Waugh, widely known in Washington musical circles, and Miss Clara Belle Waugh of Tipton. The late Representative Waugh died in 1921. Deaths. “idence. ay. vm. Interment Ariing ieaves to m three brother and_ friends £ resiflence. Seat Pleass BOARMAN ATy, 1198, LA e = Deaths. SMITH, Departed this lifs Sunday. Jan 6" Wegt “idoud . Seow” {6 RA BAUM SMITH daughter William and "ar;' Bau: lll- GGe0! helovy ed 1r] nd of John Zfl"k'l( Sad) £ 7 Y ke ie Harvey and !lzl daughter of Harriet day_ February 5. at 1 p.m revidence: thence to_the ) 3 Bapatist Church. J. 'H. Randoiph. D officiating.” Interment Woodlaxn = AL WELDON. On Tusatay. January VELDON mesting. T ruary 2. 1926, at her laté o 8 ociock.” ¥ ng at the hambers { 1408 Chepin: ot T oor® fude WILLIAMA. | On Wedneatsy, Febraary 1. a . LBERT Vn ol YeRipliy Duscand and fay | BEHABETZ. In sad bt loving remembrance BEHABETZ. 14 who rgotte: ‘HirDREN, * In sad but loving remembrance and _and our de: father OTHA B. % B ARD. nal rest two seacs HIS wm: BUSSARD. oty of our YE TOVE ke Sed ur loved one we could mot ~ and stars are shining upon ber an “only littie e by n:xmnu i Ro 5 three years azo today. Febraacy Quiet ne little fee Brightest eves are closed forever. Gone the szilles that were 5o sweet. Soge told ke time woull heal the wound - it rest HIS LOVING WIFE AND CHILDRES FOUNTAINE. In 1o dear wwer Ko A B ATeE POrNTANE [ JOSEPH g mother of GILMORE. 1n sad b b r Gear ¢ and_ Mrs Y G o Wedneadar, \{ his tesidence A GIESEKIN . at® am. Fridar. February rment private Sudden!y. on Monday, January "HHX \i W teloyed son of Mary ate_ Thomas B Gl % Helen G Cangoes: 3 1 Thierment at Oak u. “\\‘Pl‘, 1n Ne: Y R ntew N B EMMA A BRIGHT Sec Lincoln 524/ \|‘i ot Ee Rt At Fas Cemetern HANLON. o RO L SN N Nita of Paipick . O Hankai O 'he late Thomas and Delia Hean e Jeaidencs. 10 Sow el b ate on Watnentay, Ky 5 % LA SUHRID 1RO and A Sl Tlideiin (N AN Ak W W i FOLETAry 4 ar 830 A Reauwem e | 1 (R ORich af ‘the Natvin at % aw | slatives id fioode il Taierment | Mot Olived Cemetery R Sudtonts Wednestav al Bouidence Hosnila anes Atmar helay I i ’L\:‘ N har W s CRuN e valie efatioes A B i .m,...‘ Funeral tom Pritey Veheaaes | 8 e Jhase wil b saud ay o dw AR BN ovmieri 29, | { HALIBY, RTON | | mUNDLEY. moter Tave h my dmas wedde Tad vears Nav Baaite aw A aeet aad dvo jwses math e o heaw LDREN FTREL Ay AV e Nancs Qevacad N Bas drovned wnd vine By Nax el 3 S e e \umn \\\-\" S TR J \ S PIERCE JR !unn \R"‘ emosy of EOWARD NN s PR T ot s 8 Yeare sk by | TR EN N RRE N