New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 18, 1929, Page 2

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ra- - - - = ” 3 - - - » » 14 - - - - 4 - - - - - - - - - - g = - - - - - ™ - - - o - - - = - - = - = = r - - - = 4 > - - ¥ ~ - - - - E - - » b - - - x - - - - - - 14 - - - = - - - - - - ’r'!'l'l‘llll\'l"!l\'t’l‘l'"‘t’l‘i'fllll I'l|'|l'llllll\‘l‘lIlll'l'l'llIIlll’lllll'l‘lllll'l'\‘(lll'l‘! THIRYECONL Y 3 their ancestors, and B ;_ScatterButPoll Over Clothes Till Their Return = Big Bathing Party at Doerr’s Pond Broken Up When Lads See “the Wagon” Coming and Flee O'er gill and Dale. “Bays will be boys. They insist that the anly way to go swimming is to | #° swimming au naturel, or in the | altogether. But when the police get a call that | lads are swimming, most of them at- | tired in suits they inherited from | that they are | swimming in Doerr's pond, things | begin to take on a serious aspect. That is what Sergeant McAvay and his cohorts found Monday eve- ning when they investigated a com- | plaint. | The wagon! The wagon! was the yell from young throats as the Ppolice | car drew near. Boys scattered every- where; even those fortunate enough | to have bathing suits on at the time also took to their heels. | bathing au naturel, in publie. ce Stand Guard Up and over the fields they went, stopping every now and then, to see if the dreaded gendarmes followed them. Of course, most got away, but not those who had their clothes parked in the ice house. For the poletzei stood guard over the ice house. One by one, as the shadows lengthened and it started to get cool, they came | in. And one by onc they were thrust | into the wagon. When they got to the station house (there were cight of them) it was found that they were eight | scions of the best families in the Cll\ It was pointed out to them that it is not just the thing for one to go CUTTER SHOOTS AT |tace and inhaled pure nitrous oxy- |gen gas until he was dead. His Protest to Gamdnn Govern- | ment Made When Cralt Is Hit Detroit, June 18 (A)—Charges that a United States coast guard cutter turned a machine gun on two men and & woman in a speedboat on the Detroit river yesterday were sent to the Canadian government at Ottawa last night by Chief of Police James | Proctor, of 8andwich, Ontario. The woman was said to be a “Mrs. John- son” of Sandwich. The men in the boat, Carl Ray- mond of Monroe and James O'Con- ner, of Newport, Mich., reported to Chiet Proctor that the windshleld of their boat was shattered by the| coast guard fire, although they and | charge of murder in connection with Mrs. Johnson escaped injury. Police and residents of Sandwich said repeated bursts of machine gun firing were audible ashore for sever- 4 seconda. Both men in the boot | said they were not challenged before the coast guardsmen opened fire. They could not say whether they were in American or Canadian v-a-:o,, a complaint that they were dn-} ter at the time, being near the mid- | dle of the river. Chiet Proctor addre: test to the Dominion external affairs and said: rtment of “While 1 appreciate the very difficult duties|ghot through the head. The machine | that the American officers are try- ing to perform, 1 feel that a matter of this kind should be brought to your attention before more serious trouble ensues.” DENTIST TAKES LIFE ‘Waterbury, day for the careful suicide of Clar- ¢nce W. Mara, 36, dentist. CONSTABLE JAILED | Heed Order to Halt his pro- | machine, June 18 (UP)—Au- | W. thorities were seeking a motive to- | manslaughter, The precise dental surgeon spread a carpet on the floor, turned off ths loxygen flow of his gas inhalator, 1()Jul!r‘11 the mouthpiece over his hody was found last night by friends who became alarmed at not seeing him since Sunday. 'INFATAL SHOOTING Officer Says Youth Failed to Buchanan, Ga, June 18 (®— Constable Luke Bellenger was held here without bail today penamg preliminary hearing Thursday on a the slaying of Grady Phillips, youth- | ful sawmill hand. | Phillips was shot Saturday night | |after he and three companions rid- | |ing in an automobile failed to heed ‘Bellengen order to stop, according |to the ofticer's version. The con- stable was attempting to arrest them | | urbing the peace. While in purmiit with his own| the officer said he fired one shot at the tire of the youths' car. Philiips, in the back seat, was halted. Bellenger searched it for | liguor but found none. Phillips | dicd at a Cedartown hospital a short | time later. ‘ A coroner’s jury found that the! youug man was slain by a bullet| fired by Bellenger and Coroner John | Cole swore out a warrant for | relatives of Phillips | later had a warrant charging mur- | der issued. Stomach Excess acid is the common cause|crude methods, never continue ‘o of indigestion. It results in pain and sourness about two hours after eat- ing. The quick corrective is an alkali which neutralizes acid. The best corrective is Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. It has remained stand- ard with physicians in the 50 years since its inventon. One spoonful of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia neutralizes instantly many times its volume in acid. It s harmless and tasteless and its action i8 quick. You will never rely on suffer, when you learn how quickly | how pleasantly this premier method | acts. Please let it show you—now. | Be sure to get the genuine Phil- | lips’ Milk of Magnesia prescribed | by physicians for 50 years in cor- | recting excess acids. 25c and 50c a bottle—any drugstore. “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S. Registered Trade Mark of The Charles H. Phillips Chemical com- | pany and its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875. CORONA Portable Is a Distinct Asset to the Student Attending Business Coll lege. Standard Keyboard and Standard Operation. Price $60 “Exclusive Agents” New Britain Typewriter Exchange 96 West Main Street Herbert Phone 612 W. Peterson, Mgar. Q;é»c‘.*& ‘i*@ ~ P -NEW BRITAIN .DAILY HERALD, = MONDAY, JUNE 17, 1529. AR [:[ o~ ADIO SHOW BEGINNING w BEGINNING , days nights TOMORROW TOMORROW Some of the Manufacturers showing are: ATWATER KENT MAJESTIC RADIOLA GREBE BOSCH and many others Many NEW Features in the New 1930 Models We Invite Your Inspection All of the leading Radio Manufacturers are showing the new 1930 Radios JUST WHAT YOUVE EEEN WAITING TOR We also have some- new and start- ling introduced by the world’s leading musi- cal manufacturers. You Will Marvel! New Britain's Biggest Radio Event' by New Britain’s Largest Music House SEE HEAR All of the new Radios by the leading manu- facturers will be displayed at our store for three days and three nights. Every one has something new — something different to show. We want you to come, see and hear. We Invite Your Inspection Big Features Every Afternoon Every Evening Open Every Evening During the RADIO SHOW Until 10 o’Clock T TR TACE SEGIZ S s, © NI /O (53) N Zb .7 i p -\2 " i | | {

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