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4 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 21, 1930. % 1 R o Week’s Activities ] In Catholic Churches St R TILDEN INJURES ABHLE IN PARI Twists It in Practice—Nature of +:% Tnjury Uncertain Rev. ¥ idy, speaking at VOTE APPROACHES Wilted Senate May O ASSASON SHOs ACTING NS “ D, Constantin Angelescu Grave- Iy Wounded by Student Seek Early Ballot P ———— Heat Stricken Burglar KINCAID APPOINTED | T0D. A. V. OFFICE State Commander Names Ridgewood Overcome in New York Y ork, 2 To- Street Man As Chief of Staff of | Connecticut Department Raymond B. Kincaid of 75 Ridge- | this city. was named state depart- | ent, Disabled American Veterans of e World Wa State Commander iward W. K of Meriden at a g in Bridgeport yester- | woo t chief of staff of t Commander Kelley and the staff of officers elected at the state conven- Bridgeport last June, were | n office by Past Depart- | Thomas F. Mc- | n of Meriden. rtment adjutant may be reach- 1 in Hart- sdays and ek and by e office in Meri- between the Personals S se m::z;\v‘fi‘;“onb; " Elaborate Still Raided ~In Waterbury by Police alley in ed their vacant build- led by discov orate liquor_ plant | ring prohfition. evins, 30, who city, and he | costs and given ail sentence in | rge of manu- plant em- lon still, five fer- 00 gallons ca- rate steam NAMES MEN BOOTH dgeport (P—Judze 87 MORE INJURED IN EGYPTIAN RIOTS Serious Disturbances in Cairo— Ask Special Session Egypt, July 21 (P—The miembers of the chamber of deputies | which was prorogued last week to- | day presented a petition to King | Fuad to convene an extraordinary session of parliament on Saturday for solution of Egyptian political strife, Cairo, 87 Persons Hurt | Cairo, Egypt, July 21 (Pl—One} rioter was killed, §7 injured, 27 by gunfire and missiles uring severe rioting which climaxed the political situation here today. Up to mid-afterncon there had | been 323 arrests. At that hour the authorities announced that troops were being employed as pickets and | police guards and that the crowds had been dispersed, but that further outbreaks were believed to be im- minent. With troops, civil police and ex- cited students by thousands strug- gling for the upper hand along prin- | cipal streets of Cairo, great damage seriously, to property was caused. In one thoroughfare hardly a win- | iow remained unbroken in the show- ers of stones and other objects | hurled by the rioters, Troops Use Rifies | The troops used their rifles freely, so0 severe was the encounter that after the police had obtained the upper hand emergency relief squads | lined some of the streets treating the i injured, of whom many more than a score were taken to hospitals. | Losses on the side of the police and | troops were not made known. | The rioting crowds, furious when news spread that the followers of | er Premier Nahas Pasha had | ed oif their proposed “outlaw” | parliament session, ripped up lamp- posts, barricaded a street with every For: - | obstruction they could lay hands on | volley boys who 2cations at the | weren't for ‘B.O." " Yet, to be polite, alone.” COMPLET ELY SUBSCRIBED o - Girls Head Ached for Weeks had—unknowingls offended e with. Yet ryone h until one day a young doctor w knew dropped a friendly hint about seldom went hlm twice—all because of 0 HOME nou? Why, the evening had barely started. Did she rea have to leave so early? Was wrong? Had he offended her? She thought: «I'd like you so much—if it She said: “I've had a delightful time, but I must get home. Mother’s out with (Body Odor) ¢ safeguard and be sure of not offending— y wash and bathe with Lifebuoy. anything Nothing so refreshing as a Lifebuoy bath on a hot day. Oceans of billowy er—even in hardest water. Banishes —full of pep— . No fear of > now. Lifebuoy’s creamy, pene- trating, antiseptic lather purifies pores— set fire to an escaping gas which, however, the police | d after a severe attack h dispersed the students. Twelve rioters fell in the second | from the troops. The first had been fired into the air. no effect. The leaders| y shifted their campaign and | a result succeeded in calming the | ongs, it being reported by the po- that a measure of quiet was in- ed before noon. 'SENATE CONFIRMS HINES | | FOR VETERANS' BUREAU Brigadier General Is Chosen As Ad- ministrator Far Newly Organized Governmental Department Washington, July 21 (P—The senate today confirmed Brigadier General Frank T. Hines as admin- istrator of the newly organized bu- |reau of veterans affairs. General Hines has been admin- istrator of the veterans' bureau for five years. The last session of con- gress combined all governmental activities relating to veterans, in- cluding the pension bureau, under the bureau of veterans affairs. There was no opposition to Hines and ne was approved without a record vote. BABY CONFERI SCHEDULE The schedule for the well baby conferences conducted by the Visit- ing Nurse association for the week of July 21 will be as follows: Tuesday, July school, Ellis street. Volunteer sistant, Mrs. William Kaplan; nurses in attendance, Mrs. Hattie Recknagel. ‘Wednesday, Miss streets. Volunteer assistants, Florence Bently, Mrs. Hérrison Bris- | tol. Thursday, July 24 — Washington school. Volunteer assistants, Harry Protass, Mrs. Harry Hine. Nurses in attendance, Mrs. Ramsey, Miss Doris Littlejohn Friday, July 25 — East school. Volunteer assistant, ‘Walter Murdock. Nurses in attend- street 22 — Northend | Lo Mrs. Anna Ramsey, | July 23—Elihu Bur- | ritt school, corner Clark and North | Mrs. | Anna | DRY COCKTAILS London—To enable American to- tal abstainers to attend the nume erous cocktail parties of the sea- son without appearing “high-hat.” cocktall “kings” of London have concocted numerous “dry” cock- tails to serve them. One is named the ‘“Pussyfoot,” after the dry crusader, and another the “Cats- foot.” The second named is mildly alcoholic. UNDERGROUND ROADS Parls — Underground roads for vehicular traffic and passages for pedestrians are being constructed in various parts of the city to relieve traftic conditions. One of the pas-| sages, placed beneath the entrance to the Bols de Boulogne at the Porte Dauphine, will be 930 feet long by 15 feet high. SHOE DIVORCE Berlin—Because his wife devoted her whole time to selecting and buying shoes, a Berlin husband is sceking a divorce. She now has 75 pairs, he says, and changes her shoes at least six times a day. Every week she buys a new pair and 8o crowded is their bedroom with shoes | that he cannot find a place to hang up his clothes. PAY FOR JAIL BED London—When William George Thompson, 81, describing himself as a doctor, was arrested for obtaining money under false pretensess he asked for a bed in the Guildhall jail. He was told that if he asked for a bed at the police station he would | have to pay for it. as a bed was con- e | sidered a Tuxury in the jail. A Boston irrigation engineer has | worked out plans for the French government to admit water from the Mediterranean sca to the Sahara The Jivaran tribes, a group of Indians living ‘at the eastern base of the Andes in Ecuador and the ad- desert, moisture as it F\Aporalfldijncenl parts of Peru, vrac(lz.‘t’ fl‘ni. making the surrounding area avail- art of shrinking their victims able for farming. | heads. —e——— The Resident Printing Corp. 55 Corbin Place Telephone 899 PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION DONE ACCURATELY AT MODERATE PRICE A useful note pad and an artistic colored paper fan will be given free to any one who will ask for them at our plant. Mrs. | ance, Mrs. Anna Ramsey, Miss Eliza- | beth Tait. Conferences are not held on rainy days. All weighing conferences are held from 2:30 to 3:30 p. m. Doc- | tor present at all conferences at 3 | m Slysz. D Examining physician, Dr. L. B JOHN R. LOGAN DIES Waterbury, July 21.—@—John Robert Logan, a former alderman, and 30 years with the Novelty Man- ufacturing Co., much of the period as assistant superintendent, died vesterday. NEW HEAD FOR C. E. Wethersfield, July 21.—(@—Law- rence C. Kipp of this place, has been elected president of the Connecticut Christian Endeavor Union in suc- cession to Rev. Vernon L. Phillips of Kensington, who has gone to Shen- andoah College, Dayton, Va. as president Oh Boy! 'hat a Treat! FRISBIE’S FRESH FRUIT BLACKBERRY PIES Made of Fine, Plump, Berries Get One Today At Your Grocers—At Your Restaurant Small Down Payment You Can’t See to Read Like you once could. Why worry about that? ~All that means is that you have reached an age when that condition is natural. But don’t strain your eyes TRY- ING to read. They néed help. They need glasses. They need them at once. So instead of worrying, be a patient of ours. My Specialty — Comfortable Vision FRANK E. GOODWIN Optometrist 327 MAIN ST. 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