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| i -_:z.-m EGYFTIANS DECLARE BOYCOTT ON BRITISH Adopt Tautics of Nati«ma i8ts | That Country afl Mar 18l Alexandrin, Kgypt, 1.—In dev aring « boyeot all goods of nglish manufacture, the Igyp tans have adopted the tactics of the nationalists o Indla, hey have heard that the Indians have been suceessful In their attempt to boycott Uritish goods and are endeavoring to use the same means to bring the British government to terms. As yet the oxtent of the hoycott i not clear. However, many kgyptian merchants arc now refusing to bhuy wnglish poods nnd salesmen calling an ligyptian cugtomers are promptly tald that he wishes no quotations on v such merch, e. But the great majority of importers and exporters are foreigners who de- | in| continue to sell markets, Sertous Result It the Egyptians are able to hold together on the bhoyeott program and force the importers to no longer deal in Iinglish cotton piece goods, iron and steel products, the result may be serious for Engiisk factories in lan- cashire and Birmingham. British banks are included in the *hoycott. It is stated that consiler- able sums of money have been with- drawn from Iinglish banks in K and placed in other foreign banks. School hoys have boycotted ‘he schools and the native bar association voted to suspend all work. It kas heon proposed also 1o re- strict the, cuitivation of Igyptian cot- ton, which would he of interest to the cotton growers of the ('nited States It has even been suggested that the Egrptians should refuse to on onfons to -lingland which now takes 80 per cont. the ptizn onion crop. Certain members of the ciasy, Egyptiang of leisure, nounced that they would cease to drink Faglish whiskey and refuse to * wear short-cropped mustaches as the ish do. Various other boycotting have been proposed. * she to buy and the best ol Effendi have an- NEST BUILDERS A HERACE 7" CABLES d Homas Interriot Communi- cation Botween Two Americas 1.—Birds who build their n 5 on the arms of tele- graph poles are onc of the most exasperating causes of the interrup- tion of cable communication between North and South America, according to officials of the All-American Cables. The uest-builders construct their Domes along the land section of the company's lines between Valparaiso and Buenos Aires and causing short circvits, sometimes delay say the official One of these annoying nest-build- ers is called by the natives ‘el ecar- pintero,” another “el hornero,” mean- ing respectively the ‘“carpenter’” and »the “kiln-builder.” Both of them se- lect the ang'e botween the arm of {he pole and the peg which holds the in- sulator to coustruct their homes,: us- ing the telegraph wires as additional " support, The ‘“'hornero” mostly of clods of earti and the “‘carpintaro” employes small sticks and frequently bits of diccarded tele- groph and fence wire, The ‘“he ero's” nest is usually harmiess until it rains when it becomes mud, the water in which establishes a circuit with the arm of the pole or between Buenos Aires builds his nest There is nothing in the ¢ world quite so nourish- § ing or helpful as 1 Srott’s Emulsion for thin, anemic girls of “teen-age.” It is well-worth trying. uofi & Bn\vn;.’.glloomficli N} SERLIR L R G CTSNOR TR [the difrerent “earpintero” tries to re-enforce the 'wulls of his house with w piece of [wire, the disaster to commuanication ' lis nstantaneous, wires, Liut when the | '\ llu- wiy from Bucnos Alres u.l vso up over the Andes, the| ‘\ll ,\mmu-nn Cable line employs pa- | trols wrmed with long poles whose | |duty it is to wateh for these nests and | ‘destroy them, The birds working in|{ I pairs will bulld o nest in o few hours, | It 1s said. The patrols also have to watch the | “Devil's Beard,” the thick web of a species of Argentine gpider, swept | from the ground by the wind and car- | ricd aguinst the telegraph wives, | electrically connecting them when wet by rain or dew. YELLOW FEVER NOW 1S A FISH CURE Ellective Method of Treatmg' Scourge Discovered Bloomington, Tnd., Mar. 1.—Yeliow fever, the scourge of South Amenigfa |for centuries, has been eradicarfd {trom Guayaqun on the coast of Ecja- {dor, according to an announcem pnt received here by Dr. Carl H. [ipgn- T head of the department! of | y of Indiana University and/an in South American ‘Mighes, from Sanitary Commitsiotr of Fcuador. The announcement whj'ac | companied by specimens of little “fish- es discovered Jor the prnennr’n of the disease, with a request that, they be classified and that informarkon be given from data collected in jrarious Indiana University expeditikis to South America as to whero these fishes are to be found. They fishes | have been identificd and detafed in- | formation has been forwardef which will enable o‘t‘: _ South ~fmertcan | countries to lod@te the fishes fand use them dealing death to tivef yellow fever mosquito. Yellow fever is carried fre person to another by a which lives in the barrels the natives of South Amfrica keep their drinking water. . Fgach family has kept its own supply ror yellow tever carriers, 50 to speal{, and many times ports of the west coast have been closed against ships/on account of outbreaks of yellow fe i Recent- {1y the sanitary mmumsm}. of 13 began experiments with Farious which would éat the m¢ gquitoe bairels. Some fishes fpte the “wig- glers” which develop ‘fito mosquitos, and it was found (h it two fishes, called ‘“chalacos” antf “hua the natives, did the vjork eftective The *chalacos” i/ found |where along the troy fcal pa | Pacific coast and will'f be availuble for | mosquito control alffng with the en- tire danger zone fyim Peru to Cali- forin. Others of (i} sume species are found in similar t:duations over the entire danger zonq ‘n the West Indies | and hot Atlantic e fast. The second sped: ps, called “huaijas’ would bhe even befger able to contrel the situation than/ the ‘‘chalacos™ if it did not have tlje habit of jumpfng out of the barrel. h This fish is con- fined to fresh Euor from Central Kecuador to Cen’fral Peru, according to the records of { the Indiana Univer- ity expeditions. | — g HIGH S(/H00L SHOOT hm one mosquito in which | | » Team Captain;id by Abraham Rosen- hal is Firs £ With Score of Roberts b fs "Highest Score. The rifle ‘kam captained.by Abra- ham Rosent hgl won the sitting com- petition, 10 phots at 50 feet at a bull's eye the sizegy o)f a nickel, in the aca- demic buil fivg of the nior High school yest puday. The con paetition has heen going on for the pa g 10 days, and up until yes- terday thej *winners could not be de- cided. S gme good shooting was done by the v Amning team, they getting a possible 426 out of 500, but they bare- ly nose % .out the team captaified by Dudley F. Bacon, who made a score of 422 gt of a possible H00, ‘The pighest single score was made | =,_..==_=,.,___£==, {two miles to their | But the | ing affairs of state. 'NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, First photograph for which the wife of Nikolai Lenin, head | of the Russian Soviet, ever posed. She aids her husltand in dllu‘,t-\v hen it dropped to 10,9 per cent. HOONSHINERS MUST HAVE NEW WHISTLES Kentuckians Want Them Blown From 1 & m. to 11 p. m. 1.—Now that assembly has White Mil pedestria ys whoever Frankfort, Ky. Mar. the Kentucky general made the streets of Hardin county, safe for by passing a bill which goes on the streetss of an unincor porated village with no police pro- | tection, clad only insa bathing suit is subject to a fine, its attention has been called to other public matters. Among the recent bills introduced in the senate is one to require moonshiners o attach whistles that can be heard stills, und to blow them every minutes from 1 a. m. until 11 Scantily-clad summd bourders are glven as the reason for ,the passage of the anti-bathing suit™ bill. The principal industry of White Mills Is entertaining summer guests. 1ts main usset a small river and swimming 18 its great outdoor sport. bath house facilities con- sist of willow trees under whose drooping branches one may park the bath robe. These facilities, however, have failed to appeal! to the visitors which include a goodly number of young women. Representative Charles A. Nelson noticed this and he tol® the legislature that the youth of his vil- lage home is being corrupted by the sight of women clad &nly in bathing suits strolling down the street to the river. The vote was 66 to 20, not- withstanding the fact that Representa- tive James Park, former big league baseball p er, called the bill an ef- fort to legislate the morals of the people and said the average bathing suit contains more material than the average evening dres: The bill has been reported favorably by the al- coholic liquors committee, to which it was reforred. Senator ‘Mannie Tabor of Carter county is pushing a “still” bill, Hen- ator Tabor, in his bill, consisting of tive sections, propos that it shall be unlawful for a person to operate a still without a whistle that can be heard two miles; that it must be blown every half hour from 1 a. m. until 11 p. m. and that roadways or well-beaten paths must lead to the still. It creates the office of “moon- shine still inspector,” to see that the |1aw is obeyed under heavy penalty for thirty p. m. by Ha pld R. Roberts, who made 48 | out of H0. He was closely followed by | . G pert Sullivan with a 47 ont of | "ithe other boys competing in the showed very good skill with | ., and it is safe to assume that | natches arve continned they will | re closely contested than in the the ri if ihrfix he m past., m to 25 gallons of alcohol can he obtained pon of dry pine wood. 1 oe) 1 20 per from failure, ‘IuLLSW()RTH MAY NOT HAVE LEFT DISTRICT Friend Espresses Opinion That East . Berlin Elopers Are Somewbere In Vicinity, -Although more than a week has i.con Ellsworth, former East Berlin Methodist church preach- er, and Miss Marjorie Turner, 19 vear old Normal school girl eloped, as far as is known nothing definite 2% to their wherceabouts has been learned. Some intimate friends of both 1lls- worth and Miss Turner are of the opinion that they went to Detroit where it is said, Fllsworth has friends, Others believe that they started for Texus where Ellsworth is reported to have instituted divoree proceedings against his wife, The latest opinion expressed in con- nection with this scandal, however, s that neither Ellsworth nor Miss Tur- ner are out of this state. A friend who claims to be vory close to worth has made the assertion that he would be willing to wager that worth and Turner did not go to De- troit at all, adding “while 1 don't know, I'd be willing to bet that they are both where they ave reading the New Britain Herald every night.” GOLD 0UT OF LEAD Chemist Claims to Have Solved Prob- lem But Process is More Costly Than Original Stufr, 1 The re- a German Towa City, Ta., March cent claim attributed to chemist that he had perfected a process for making gold from other metals, has brought forth a statement from Dr. Charles R. Keyes, Des Moines geologist, that Dr. Gustavus Hinrichs of the faculty of the Uni- vegsity of Towa demonstrated in 1583 that lead could he changed into gold by removing two atoms of the lead molecule. Dr. Keyes states that the problem was worked out mathematically Dr. Hinrichs and that at a later time the success of the project was actual- ly demonstrated. 1t was found how- ever, Dr, Keyes states that the process was so costly that the artifical gold much more expensive than na- tural gold. CHURCH CONCERT Milo Sextette Will Give Program Un- der Auspives of Stanley Memotial Church Brotherhood, given by the (enter church on Thi concert is auspices of the A concert will be Milo Sextette in the Thursday evening. given under the Stanley Memorial church Brother- hood and is the first of a series of entertalnments planned by the Broth- erhood. It was to have been held in the Stanley Memorial church, fire a change of plans was hecessary. The following program will be ren- dered during the evening: Opening chorus Milo Sextette Viking Song. by S. Coleridge Faylor. . Morris Hoglund . by K. A, Glen cat Awakening, by Kramer tinsemble Milo Sextette a Sandman, by . Protherie b Swing Along, by Bothe Recitation ... Miss Amanda's Wedding Miss Alfreda Hellstrom iszt Milo Sextette ]rHIIH) Huln Miss Alva Needham ct, by Woodman Milo Sextette Prederic ( Ylay Tener solo a Twil b The G Signe Peterson PPiano solo . S Liebestraum, by Chorus Invictus, by Soprano solo s Hanson a Husheen, b An Open Se Ensemble ipsy John, by Recitation ) A" Talephone Conve BBaritone Solo . . a the Song of Steel b The Blind Ploughman . Milo Sextette Bullard Signe Peterson tion Walter I"alk \‘\nld of l‘(‘llul.{ by Bils- | by but as this building was recently damaged by 00 Ls. ‘INE[]MES DECREASE ~ JBILLION DOLLARS EAmerican Fmfiief éa-ms Lass in 1920 Than Preceding 10 Years 19 New York, 1. farmer who to unprecedented helghts of prosperity in 1918 and! 1019, carned less in 1920 than he has| |earned in any year of the last ten, if| I his Income is reckoned in dollars hav- | [Ing the same purchasing power as in| 11013, according to estimates made pub- lic today by the fonal Burcau of lconomie Researeh, | Reckoned in actual dollars paid to [him in 1920, the farmers’ income, as 18hown hy tie report, was less than in | |the three peevious years; but was| | greater than in the seven years from 11910 to 1916 inclusive, | The figures, taken from }l'l-pnr!, of an exhaustive, Mar, rose The American A detailed nation-wide | country's earned ap- survey, ahowed that the 6,450,00 farmers, in 1020, proximately $7,200,000,000— a drop of 's:(.fifiu,nun,mm from their income for the year hefore, d The farmers who represent about 16 per cent of the gainfully employed, have received during the past decade {a share in the total national income! varying between 12,3 per cent in 1911/ and 17.4 in 1917 and 1918, until 1920, PAIGYE, SHOW ROOM DISPLAY. | Step into the Paige show room the ed with the new Paige line, We will be glad to take you for a ride and sou will be astonished at the performance {of these cars. West Main, at Lincoln street.—advt. | photographed at the hospital to v erash of the Roma, giant dirigibl beautiful car. In fittings and equal of cars sellin You Are Cordially I New ! Baltimore I'store ! Ronchton followed, {nrxl time you pass and get acquaint- | Saved From Ball Corporal Albert Flores, left, at a very AT THE SHOW HOVE WHULE TOWN Little Ohio Village Picks Up Stakes and - Settles Miles From Three mer Home, Bowling Green, Ohio, Murch ! Unable to move a railroad crossing which has resulted in several deaths, tle hamlet of Rouchton near has moved its eighty inhabi- tants, The town is gow located about threo miles south of Perryburg on the & Ohio railroad, Roachton moved after have the lway move its failed The main instigator teorge Schwind, on whose land ham'et now is situated, schwind owned the only neral in Roachton, When he moved half & mile from the original townsite, Townsmen as- other in the moving, week, efforts was the sisted each which took one LEDUCATIONAL Association is Holding Ses- sion in Chicago TALKS National chief edu- is a promo- Chid ireh 1—The cational Il1 of the state tor of a great enterprise, Augustus O, |Thomas, commissioner education [ia Matne, told delegates attending wions of the ational ucation sociation today. Sducation has lahead in recent year [administration has Leen |the movement,” he suid. “We have developed a lknown as educational engineeri lthe commission'r announced. *The state commissioner of education must be a technical expert. There is as much science in conducting a state |sehool system as there is in building [railways, tunneling mountains, of rapidly the state leader in pushed ind a new \(‘|r~|\u con- |structing vessels or in laying out great | industrial cnterprises.” loon Catastrophe and Sergeant J. M. Biedenbach which they were rushed after the e, at Norfolk, Va. They are two of the 11 saved from the fiery inferno in which 34 perished. The Sedan of the New Series of the good Maxwell is a uphoistery it is said to be the much hicher price. wvited To Inspect the Series MAXWELL —AND— CHALMERS Local Distributer HEY NHN‘ RE YOU DOWG DRWIN' UP HERE LIKE THAT? | CAYME TO HARDING FOR RIDE IN ™Y TAKE PRESIDENT A NO - NOT EXACTLY A FRIEND A i ACQ ARE YOU Honeyman Auto Sales Co. 139 Arch St. to| Crossing | FINAL Local Minstrel 'lrm pe Plans Jts I-I- tial Performance Fridey. A ftinal rehearsal of the Hardware City’ Minatrel troupe, preparatory ts its initial performance in Bristol, Fris day night, will be held tomorrow eyves ning at the home of James McCue, 104 South Burritt street, Membera of the troupe are: The Misses KEva Kingo, Julla Marley, Mary McAloon,; | Marguerite Scheyd, Alice Sullivan and I2sther Seaburg, and Messrs Harry Ahiberg, Harry Shamian, Henry Kumpf, Jamen Cosgrove, Louls Rasche kow, Joseph C‘osgrove, Joseph Clynes, | Arnold Thompson and Willlam ¥, REHEARSAL | ligan. 0 o R ot Horlick’s | The ORIGINAL | Mdll’ed Milk The “Food-Drink" for All Ages. Quick Lunch at Home, Office,and Fountains. Ask for HORLICK'S. la'Avmd lmhhom & Substitutes .HERE E IT B | A Radiator casy to repair and install in any make of car. The hest eool- | ing and strongest built Radiator en the market, Installed by O. Becker CORBIN PLACE Tel. 5353 — PALACE — Starting Sunday “FOOL’S PARADISE” Keith Vaudeville See us at The Auto Show McKONE TIRES “The Tire with the rvice Built In.” CORDOVAN TUBES Superior to all others. R. M. Healey 12 MAIN STREET Tel. 2750 THI COWLES ELECTRIC CO. STANLEY ' IR WORK A All Work Called ¥ Delivered Tel. 2229-4 UAINTED WITH WM ? WEARD A LOT ABOUT H\M