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- FURNISHINGS ARE ORDERED RETURNED _Cez Hom Morgan it Kot sl New York, Feb, 29 (UP—The elab- orate turnishings of the Chez Helen Morgan, New York club, seized by federal prohibition agents under an old section of the internal revenue laws, have been ordered restored fol- owing withdrawal of the charges. The raid was made under a sec- tion of the rivised statutes which the agents contended empowers the gov- ernment to seize property on the premises of one believed to be de- frauding the government of money due on taxable goods—in this case alleged intoxicating liquor. Helen Morgan, an actress and hosteas, and several employes, were arrested. United States Attorney Charles H. Tuttle said new informations charg- ing violation of the prohibition law would be filed against the defen- dants, with the exception of Miss Morgan and Arthur Gordoni, an en- tertainer. The order of Federal Judge Julian W. Mack, directing restoration of the property, however, does not apply to barroom fixtures scized from an adjoining building. ‘The raid by agents under Admin- istrator Maurice Campbell the night of December 30 was one of the most spectacular ever made in the theatri- cal district. Patrons in dinner jack- ets and evening gowns looked on while the agents arrested Miss Mor- gan, Gordoni and seven others and dismantled the place, carting the furnishings to a warehouse. Mr. Tut- tle explained champagne, cognac, gin and othe liquors bearing no tax stamps wa: *ifound in the barroom. CHARITY INSTEAD Washington — Any folks who when getting married in Uncle 8am' capital agree that the husband need {not support the wife ~ill be liable to a maximum of five years in the hoosegow, if congress does, as desir- ed by Representative Willlam Hammer of North Carolina. His bill |so defines companionate marriage. New York — Up rise Robert W. Bell, stage director, nephew of Alex- ander Graham Bell, and Josephine Hutchinson, actress, who is Mrs. Bell, | ito deny they have separated. They lare happily married, but have separ- late establishments, because one |works in the day and the other at night. Peking — Marriage for bachelors !and divorce for married men are for- |bidden by Marshal Feng Yu-Hsiang, “the Christian general.” His reason is that some of the modern Chinese bobbed girls are so attractive that the revolution. New York — The dean of Ameri- can painters is a bridegroom at §0. Edwin Howland Blushfield has mar- ried Miss Grace Hall, 58, painter, writer and lecture Berlin — The Reichstag judicial |committee favors easier divorce, It vroposes to sanction decrees where the parties have lived apart fl years by agreement or where after !one year of separation a continuance of married life cannot be expected. York — The will of Charles reet, artists' model, stipulates |that $500 of his $3,600 estate shall be given to charity Instead of being | used for a tombstone. Rays the will: “The mute tribute by either self or | but usually unjustified by either ais- tinguished or moral worth." | Camden, N. J, — A course in eti- |quette and social graces has been | romance is displacing enthuslasm for | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1928 FLASHES OF LIFE: GIVES $500 FOR OF HIS TOMBSTONE here in the supreme court of errors. Hartford—Republican state con- vention which will elect delegates to the national convention in Kan- sas City to be held in Foot Guard hall here April 17 and 18, accord- ing to decision reached by the state central committee. Town eau- cuses and primaries set for March 19 and senatorial district conven- |tion t6 be held March 22. Groton—Voters accept $62,000 be- quest under will of Charles P. Fitzch and this with $140,000 also voted will be used for new high school at Pogqugnoc Bridge. Middletown—Jury awards $10,000 to Gilson M. Hall, administrator, against Clayton R.-Root of Colches- ter, whose automobile killed Miss Muriel Clark of East Hampton, two months ago. | New Canaan — Demotte school { chapel burned at Bonus Ridge with | loss of $20,000. | | Tariftville — Mrs. George A. Ball about to observe 45th marriage an- [ niversary dles of heart failure, 1 | Hartford—state Athletle Commis- sioner Donohue that Currie-Day fight at New Haven was fixed are unsubstantiated. |Sixteen Scholarships i _Announced at Delaware ; Newark, Del, Feb. 29 (®—-Dr. 5\\' ter Hullihen, president of the | University of Delaware, has an- nounced that 16 scholarships of $300 a year, each to run for three years | | impending defeat, Godfrey came out | | have been offered by a group of that a quantity of immedlate kin is not only wasteful { Prominent husiness men of Wil- | mington and Newark for under- graduate study in France. These scholarships will be under foreign study plan of the University of Dela- ware. The scholarships are to be finds that charges | GODFREY WINS IN FURIOUS BATTLE | Giant Negro Clubs Way fo De- Wrigley Field, Los Angeles, Feb. 29 M—George Godfrey, negrd co- lossus of the ring, clubbed his way | to & decision over Paulino Uzeudun, | knotty muscled son of the Basque country last night after tem furious rounds that had 40,000 persons on edge throughout the battle. | But Godfrey had no walkaway. Tipping the scales at 236§ pounds, which gave him a ¢4 pound advan- tage in weight, his hands were full from the start to the finish, The black haired Spaniard, arms | flailing, opened with a rush, but in the early session he was tied up by the titanlc Godfrey, who used his | huge bulk to advantage. The tide of battle shifted to | Uzcudun in the sixth. Beginning the round he caught Godfrey flush |on the jaw with a stinging left | heok. It hurt the negro and he re- treated steadily with his smaller opponent following him around the |ring. The negro landed but a | couple of blows during the round. Fiats flying, the Basque came out in the seventh to drive his opponent around the ring again. Godfrey ! was puzzled and hurt as | continued to bore in, pumping both | {hands to the body. The crowd |cheered wildly for the Spaniard as the round ended. The eighth |round went the same way with | Paulino continuing on the aggres- isive. lashed with the knowledge of in the ninth to take away the play. | He clubbed the Spaniard steadily to the body, crossing with a left to the face that had the woodchopper from | the Pyrenecs bleeding at the close. | The tenth was another Godfrey | round, as he mauled and beat his cision Over Pamlino © | Paulino | with a swooping right. During the first three rounds, - Godfrey loafed, content to stick & long left into his opponent's face. It held the Span- fard off, but he swung steadlly enough to gain a margin in the second. The crowd was the largest ever to attend a boxing contest in the far west, with gate receipts estimated at | between $100,000 and $135,000. Standing room in Wrigley Field was being sold more than an hour before the fighters entered the ring. The enclosure was jammed shortly with a sea of faces that stretched from the ring to the outfield bleachers, about 400 feet away. Some boos and groans greeted the decision of George Blake, fog- mer manager of Fidel Labarba, re. tired flyweight chaniplon, who was the third man in the ring. GHICAGO TG FIGHT FOR LIGHTWEIGHT TITLE 60 | Commission Plans to Invoke Ald of National Boxing Association in Controversy Chicago, Feb. 29 M—The Illinois | athletic commissioner stood geady | today to invoke the power of the | National Boxing association in | bringing the S8ammy Mandell-Jimmy | McLarnin lightweight champlonship fight to Chicago. In resolutions adopted yesterday the commission said that, other ne- | gotiations failing, it would @sk the National Association to compel Mc- Larnin to carry out a verbal promise to meet Mandell here, Tex Rickard | has asserted that McLarnin is signed | to.fight for him in New York. Man- | dell, on the other hand, has posted |a $5,000 forfeit to defend his title | here. Promoter Jim Mullen and Eddfe | Kane manager of the champion, | were in New York today. Mullen to | match bids with Rickard for the | fight, with Kane an interested on- leoker. “I gouldn’t sign with Rickard now if he offered me Madison Bquare SLUMP I3 BNDED fous in Crucial Ice Hockey Game With Ottawa. New York, Feb, 29 (P — The alarming slump of the Montreal Can- adiens has ended. Holding first place in the Canadian division of the Na-| tional Hockey league by only four points, the Canadiens emerged vic- torious in a cruclal game at Otta- wa last night with the world's cham- pion Senators. The victory, gained by a score of two to nothing., in- creased the Canadiens' lead to six points, The Montreal Maroona lost a gold- en oppertunity to go ' into second place in the Canadian standings by losing & hard fought game to the Boston Bruins at Boston, 2 to 1. The Maroons, as a result, continue to trail the Senators by a single point. The New York Rangers, leading Boston by one point at the top of the American group, matched the Bruing’ victory with a 1 to 0 triumph over Toronto, at New York. In a battle between the cellar oc- cupants of the two divisions, the New York Americans took the meas- ure of the Chicego Blackhawks in' & bruising battle at Chicago, 2 to 1, HOPKINS DEAD * Paris, - Feb, 29 (UP)—William Alonzo Hopkins, 83, American, and one of the principal founders of the newspaper Le Matin, died last night of grip. MAKES 23 KNOTS Genoa, Feb. 29 (UP)—The liner Conte Grande has made additional tests in which she reached & speed of 22 knots. An old Maine woods recipe gives the finest baked-bean flavor known L They have a unique way of baking B beans in the logging camps of the Maine woods. They bake them in the ground! ' Thebiground-bellied bean potis filled with the flavor-rich ingredi- ents—lots of brown sugar, molasses and prime sugar-cured pork. Then it is put to bake all night long in the “bean hole”-anovenintheground. This gives the finest baked-bean flavor known, A blend of forest fragrance, purgent wood smoke, fresh earthen oven. And now this same wonderful woods flavor is reproduced for your own table. In Bean Hole Beans! You'll be delighted with this new achievement in flavor. It's so differ- ent! Enjoy ittoday. Ask yourgrocer awarded under the competitive plan. | They are open to students of col- | |leges and universities |abandoned by the Camden Y. W. C.| |A. Nobody enrolled. { Garden,” was Kane's comment be- fore leaving for New York “but I am willing to listen to what he has to send you 2 or 3 cans, Two sizes ~—medium and large. Paulino from rope to rope. | Those at the ringside ecredited | ROUTINE WORKOUTS STILL * INORDER FOR PHILLIES CEER S Manager Burt Shotton Have Enough Playing Talent On Hand Tomorrow Philadelphia, Feb. 29 (A—Routine work wag still the order at the Winter Haven, Fla., training grounds of the Philadelphia Nationals today, . but Manager Burt Shotton expects to have sufiicient playing talent on _hand by tomorrow for more ad- :vanced practice, - Expects to Jimmy Ring, fornier Philly pitch- ing ace, and Bill Deitrick, young | shortstop candidate, are the ncwest arrivals in camp, Ring brought along his contract and is expected to sign this week. Deitrick is to get his sec- ond major league trial, He was with the Boston Red Sox once but was sent to the minors for seasoning. A halt dogen pitching candidates were permitted to work out from the box yesterday. _ A number of infielders and out- fielders were due to reach the Ath- letics’ fold at Iort Myers Fla., to- day. With their arrival to join the battery brigade, Manager Mack expected to have a regular workout stowed away by nightfall. Sixteen pitchers are at the training ..base and all are eager for the bat- “ting ‘erew o' arrive so that real hasebsll mey be interspersed with the routine drill. Mack expected that all hands should be at Fort Myers sometime today, including Tris Speaker, his | new center fielder. for something definite from Ty Cobb, the elusive Georgia peach, who he is “reasonably sure” will return to the Athletics this ycar for one more whirl in the big sho COPPER IN CHILE Coquimbo, Chile, Feb. 29 (UP)— Great excitement has followed the discovery of rich copper deposits in Amolana. Some copper had been mined, and it is believed Indians were working it but hid when its white discoverers arrived. 25 INJURED Berlin, Feb. 29 (UP)—Twenty-five persons were injured seriously when a motor bus capsized on the Moltke bridge and its upper deck was tele- scoped. Beveral of thoee injured may dle. /ou:[] a]ways like it/ Connie | He also looked | New York — Julla Hoyt, society beauty, who went on the stage, | |knows no beauty secrets. “Perhaps ten years from now I'll be & sight,” | she said over the radio, “but just the | same I go on breaking the rules.” St. Petersburg, Fla. — Mrs. Cath- {erine Fenton, who in her 105th year, {has had an airplane ride, says she | {was just as excited about it as when | {she had her first sweetheart, Chicago — Joc Leiter's hobby 1s| cooking. He has sent to friends a | copy of his book of recipes, all of which he has tried himself, New York — Comes from the con- | vention of the New York Custom | |Cutters' club a tabulation showing that the well dressed man may con- tinue such this spring for an ex- | penditure of only $2,283—8$1,695 for |suits and overcoats, $112.50 for, shoes, $60 for hats and $415.60 for| accessories. Chicago — There's to be a fire | station on the site of the O'Leary homestead. That, you know, 18 where the cow started things. Ansonia—William Stevenson killed 'here when struck by an automobilo driven by 18 year old Elarion Danieluk, who is held in $2,000. | Thompsonville — Leander Hills. |82, found dead in his home herc {today. He was a hunter and trapper and his death was believed due to a heart affection. | Wallingford—Burgesses of the borough favorable in views toward | leasing of municipal alirport. Final action to come in special meeting |soon. Terms of lease were not men- {tioned. | Stamford—Damage estimated at | $7,000 done by fire which destroys chapel attached to main building ot i Demott school on Pinus Ridge, two |miles from New Canaan town line. | The buildings are the property of the Grace church of New York city. Rockville—City council passes ordinance covering salary increases | which were formerly granted city officers by resignations. Bridgeport—Error was found in {nine cases out of 21 handed dow. | |the country. throughout The foreign study plan sudents ispend their junior year in France and return to their respective col- leges for their senior year. APPOINT COMMISSION Rome, Feb. 29 (UP)—The minis- tries of national economy corporations have appointed a joint commission to draft a compulsory health insurance measure. sentatives of capital and labor are represented. Godfrey with five rounds, the third, fourth, fifth and ninth and tenth. Paulino had his edge in the second, | | sixth, seventh and eighth with the | first fairly even, | Uzcudun's showing was a tremen- | dous surprise both to Godfrey and | ! his backers, who figured the negro's | | hugh bulk and clever boxing would | and ' carry him to a one-sided victory if | not a knockout. Both fighters turned thelr attack | Repre- mainly to the body with Uzcudun | shi; i depending on two-fisted punching in | the clinches and the negro clubbing | to offer, We have signed with Mul. |len, and I think he deserves the | match.” ; The Ilinois commission said that | if necessary it would *call upon the National Boxing association through its president, Thomas E. Donohue, and ask its cooperation in uphold- ing the agreement which was made i verbally by McLarnin's manager to box Mandell here for the champion- ;‘ RE. D CLASSIFIED ADS GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE LAST WEEK OF OUR SHOE SALE DOROTHY DODD—NETTLETON—RALSTON WOME. -§ Were $12.00 $10.00 $9.00 $8.00 $7.50 Now 5 Were 0 sw.00 0 :slz.oo : ( so00 g0 {ss.oo ! | 0 $7.50 MEN'S .00 You'll never tire of the flavor of Clark’s Teaberry Gum any more than you tire of fresh air and sunshine. That's what it really is —a breath of the great out-doors. right from Dixie Mouatains. $7.00 5.00 550 53,85 Many Other Specials Not Listed Above, Including Children’s. SALE ENDS SATURDAY, MARCH 3RD GLO BE CLOTHING HOUSE } | COR. MAIN AND WEST MAIN STREETS