Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Washington, July 22—An attempt by Senator Fall of New Mexico, to force the senate to enunciate a strong policy of protection for American cit- izens in foreign countries today pre- cipitated a lively debate which dem- onstrated appreciation on the part of senators of the gravity of the Mexican situation and the necessity for a de- termined stand by the United States. Denunciation of Taft's Delay A STERNER POLICY Sentiment Expressed in Senate That There is Urgent Need of It—Taft’s Dilatory Attitude Denounced and Dis- appointment Expressed that Wilson has Pursued Similar Course—Resolution for Protection of American Citizens would favor sending an armed force. Senator Williams maintained that | a citizen of the United States had no | constitutional rights in foreign | countries. ¢ Amended, he thought, sll(.h a resolu- { tion ought to be passed “to strength- | en the arm of the secretary of state.” What Full Protection Means. Senator Works asked: “Are we pre- pared now to declare this government, TOWARD MEXICO Denunciation of the policy of delay | #s set forth in this resolution pre- of the ¥Taft administration | Pared to give full protection to her ‘ally pronounced by Sen- | ¢itizens in Mexico. R ator Fall and blamed by him for the | ull protection must necessarily present critical situation which, he | mean that if our citizens in Mexico sterner national policy. This declara- RSV e e - i BChy flon was approved by Senator Lodge of | With MeXico.” he added. I submit that | Massachusetts who expressed disap- | Pefore the senate makes a declaration | pointment that the nsw president and | !¢ that effect the question should be new secretary of state had not inaug- j‘hd‘fl“e‘é".?“y Litbis st Loa A e urated a different Mexican policy. ! Eanater Fall Wormeius: Argued for Serious Deliberation N adtar Al s iaseal b e That the delicacy of the situation | termed intimations from semators | was “keenly appreciated w: evinced | that he was seeking to precipitate war by the insistence Of many senators, | with the resolution, made a stirring led by Senator Bacon, chairman of the | reply. foreign relations committee, that any ly sole purpose” said he, “through- mnciamento be deliber- | out this and the former administration | ously considered before | has been to prevent war with Mexi- ted upon co. 1 urged the last administration | Actioh uh Resomm" p,stpuned 1o realize the sitvation in \1.;;;.30 and 5 Lo act so as to prevent war. But mat- the “shastith e S L e P to1a the situation. lajso delicate | oo Mirpigeliy i s waserloi | that we shouid not make a_declaration el iy e o S an oDy | ot inis broad principle. The senator s i dis- I from New Mexico is not responsible | PoRvD for conditions in Mexico. It is the | Would Send Armed Force. | delay, the failure of the admimistration } Bacon asked if the resolu- | to act, the failure of the administra- | « 1 that the United | tion to carry out its warnings to the | an armed force in- | beople of Mexico, that is responsi- | to protect American citi- [ ble for conditions that will continue | so long as this policy of delay con- Stone, reviewing certain | tinues.” conditions in Mexico, declared he | R s Other People's Ways. B R | At one time it was the practice to ——————— | £1V¢' 5 shillings (31.20) to the finder | of a dead body in the Thames, but | UROGEN nothing for saving life from drown- | | The “mud larks” and other FOR ALL FORMS OF RHEUWA. de characte were credited 'TSML ways making sure of their re- | Dr. H. H f New I\um by waiting till*a drowning man | specialist, relieved | had sunk the traditional three times presented to him with | before pulling him out of the water. Uro- serip- n v rical neitl d extensive erwise, 1 posi- for Lrl(, Aud—lhe rms of Kheuma- tive antidc te Gol rmu d 1d by 50c and all drug- NOTICE On July twenty-fourth, COXETER, THE TAILOR, will move from 33 Broadway to the STEAD BLOCK, 208 Main Street, Second Floor | NEW DESIGNS We are now showing some very a‘- tractive deas for memorials, which can be comstructed at a Moderate Price without sacrificing gnality. The Chas. A Kuehler Co. Tel. 39-41 Franklin St. AUTO REPAIRS AT SHORT NOTICE. Done RIGHT at a RIGHT price. me a trial. HARRY C. WASHBURN, Telephone 132-5, Bath Street. Give Pies, Lake and Brea] that canzot be excelled. "Plione your order. Fromut serv: LOUIS H. BRUNELLE 10 Carter Ava. (East ) Dr. J. M. KING DENTIST May Building Jan1TuWF s The Vaunhn Fuundry Co. Nos. 11 to 2 St., MILi. CASTINGS & Specialty, Receive Promut Attention erry Urders BR. C. R CHAMBERLAIN Dental Surgeon In charge of Dr. S. L. during his MaGrory Building, Geer’s practice last illness. Norwich, Cama. | In Austria it behooves one to be care- ful when rescuing people from death. Not long ago a Viennese tradesman, while taking an evening stroll, found a man hanging from a _tree. He promptly cut the rope, and by taking | strenuous measures brought the | would-be suicide back to conscious- | ness. His act of benevolence was re- | warded with a summons for effecting | the rescue so carelessly as to raise ! severe bruises on the body when it | fell to the ground. The court decided ‘lh-lt defendant was liable under arti- cle 325 of the Austrian code, which | enacts that any person injuring an- | other through want of due care must | pay a fine and damages. “ Though reticent the British officers just released from a German fortress agreed in one mat- ter. They found two meals a day sut- ficient. In England people are some- | | times addicted to flve—Breakfast, ’Inn(h tea, dinner and supper, The on many matters, continental fashion is a snack for | morning coffee, a midday meal and an | ir-\'(-ning meal, But when the great | army of Xerxes was marching through Asia Minor, and city by city had to | provide food for the day, the people ’(hnnked God that Xerxes and his ar- | my ate but onne a day, i A Canadian paying his first visit to London was asked what he thought of it. “Well,” he replied, “it is as- | tonishing the number of people who | have got on thelr boots in the morn- ing.’ He then explained that over on | ‘lhv other side landiadies never brush | boots, with the result that people of | both ‘sexes get into the habit of pat- | ronizing “shoe shine parlors” when | | they want their boets cleaned. i i 4 i Men of Attainment. | David Livingstone, explorer and missionary, was a man af varied ac- complishments. Besides ge\\ln§ him- self taught on board ship, later | by Sir Thomas Maciear, to tuke with | great accuracy astronomical observa- | tions for fixing latitide and longtitude, | besides acquainting himself with bot- any and geclogy, with patriotic liter- ature and Egyptology, Livingstone | was an excellent mechanic, a steers- man and a mariner. His resourceful- ness was at all times remarkable. | When he was hard up for fuel on his first steamer journey up the River | Shire he landed and no fuel was ob- tainable, but his men found many | | bones of slaughtered elephants. Li ingstone at once took the bones on board, burned them in the furnaces of the Ma-robert and so ceontinued his | Journey Herbert Spencer regarded the deci- | v mal system as a most dangerous in- Inovation. A clause In the philos- | opher’'s will provides that, “if within jten years after my death a bill| {shall " be introduced into parlia- | ment £ the compulsory adoption of the metric system for weights | and measures, I desire that my pam- | phlet entitled ‘Against the Metric Sy: | tem’ shall be reprinted from the stere- otvped plates which were cast in Feb- \ ‘ ! | ‘ ruary, 1901, with such correctnesss as are indicated in a copy of the pam- | phlet deposited in my sefe, and that | such reprinted pamphiet shall be dis- | | tributed gratis, and at the expense of | my estate, among both houses of par- liament, and shali be put on sale by | my publishers at a nominal price.” | . Raouf Bey, commander of the Turk- ish warship Hamidieh, which sunk Greek ships besides dolng great dam- uge to island and coast fortifications during the height of the Balkan war, | { i | is only 26, speaks English perfectly | | and is said to be more American than | | Turkish in his ideas. He has visited | | America several times to study naval | % tactics, Forest Note France has spent $35,000000 in planting trees on the watersheds ufl important sireams, | to the Canadian forestry | 50 per cent of Canada is | capable of growing nothing but timber { crops, Ammonia bombs are being tried out on some of the national forests for the purpose of extinguishing forest fires, | They are said to have worked well in | the case of brush fires where the fire- | fighters find difficulty in getting near enough to the burning area to beat out | the flames. ch bomb exploded will | extinguish fire in a circle of about | \LH\L‘, yards in diameter | The Wesiern Pacific Rallway has istructed its engineers to report fires | the right-of-way where it tra- rses the Plumas national ferest, | California. The location of fires 1s lmdl«;:l«d on a card dropped by the engineer or fireman to the next sec- tion crew met after the fire is di ered, It is then the duty | the section créw to o back on hand- | cars or speeders and put out the blaze. | Ve | dlans, worth about $5,000 each, is said to be the largest. per wealth of any group of people i world. Need One More. If there is no law which can | Lamar, then Colonel Watterson wholly’ correct when he s { 100 many laws.—Charleston Courier. of part of | than per ¢ and c: tional forests Utah other state. Nearly 2 the permits for shee in ing on the forests are tak thig state. This does not m ever, that 1 . all {he national t sheep; it happens that srazing interests malke 3 forests there; and individual flocks and herds are larger elsewhere. INTERESTING BITS. been investigating nd finds tha England has its Jury stem of ‘unfairness against juries no new thing. One old bishop remarked “London juries are so D -d that they would find Abel guilty of mur- dering Cain.” Strange uses are being found for some of the cues lately cut off in vast numbers by the Chinese, A British weelen manufacturer recently ree of five ters inte woolen fa ed an offer for weaving In Oklahoma s .,000 Choctaw Making a Smwia"q of It. you would | nd word S@ésf cfzazf | NO CLUTCHES TO SLIP. net! "It attrao where{in"¢ -Spite compatltlon—and holds them Don’t let the price keep you ‘from MECCA' Qg_cidx i | cases of twenty-eight, _thirty-eight and forty pounds net.—Consular Re- | port, American Apples In a report from Daily Consular and Tr: in Scotland. this office in de Reports for 19 5, it was stated that no Kind That Pays Rent. estimate could be given of the total One is inclined to suspect that Nov- guantity of American-cased apples | elist Ambassador Page will not be so \I nnus) in this market. It has |interested in the royalties he will see > ;l"'m;‘-“\fi‘” e ‘\] “‘l“"” d;‘?’??ifll}l(ki;l'ge’ll\f' as those he will continue to receive.— | from the States of Washinfiton, Or _y(.olumblai(s o A - | €00 and California) by Rdinburgh | Two cherry orchards in New South | wholesale fruit merchants in 1912 | Wales, Australia, yielded $10,000 worth amounted to approximately 105,000 | of cherries this season. | METZ 22, price $475. NO GEARS TO STRIP. 1614 Models Delivered Promptly. Cheapest car made but good enough to win the Glidden trophy WHL CONE, Agent, South Cmt-rbury, Conn. Steaks and Chops well done or rare —just the way you like them— when you.use a New Perfection Broiler with a New Perfection Oil Cook-Stove. Mare nerssans make usa of the pa- No dust. No ceal. No a.shea. No dclay Burns e cheapest, clcanatc}u The new 4-burner New Perfection Stove is the best and most complete cook-stove made. Smaller stoves with I, 2, or 3 burners. Ask your dealer toshow you a New Perfection stove with the New Per- fection oven, toaster pan-cake griddle and other accessories or write for descriptive catalogue to STANDARD OfL COMPANY ot New York 'MECCA Quality isa wonderful ma mag- Jsmoker:_ll‘rom every- of prloe- prejudice and - tinues the’ marvelous MEOCA success. 14 It ‘con- SPARK” ' The Best Battery If you are having battery troublee try our Ignitor Pattern “Green Label” No. 808 Dry Cells, made especially for Automobile and Motor Boat service, Ask your garage or dealer for this battery, You can get better results from it than can be obtained from any other cell on the market. Send for our Catalog “C” on Auto- mobile and Motor Boat Supplies. The C. S. Mersick & Co., 274-292 State St, New Haven, Conn iiack, Livery and Boarding STABLE We guarantee our service t» ha tha beat at ‘e 1N0St Teasonabis ~rces. MAHONEY BROS., Falls Ave FERTILIZER GROUND LIMESTONE AIR SLACKED LIME. Brick, Cement, Sand, Lims, all hard Plasters and Prepared Roofing. Best market. Full line of Sewer Pipe. THE UPSON WALL BOARD IS INEXPENSIVE WATER PROCF AND IN HANDY SIZES. Largest Storage Capacity in City A. N. CARPENTER Tel. 171 Roeofing Paint in the 23 Commerce St. ew York to Bermuda five to nineteen day tours, all expenses from $27.50 up JORN A. DUNN, Asent 50 Main Street MISS ELLA M. POTTER Instructor of Piano and Harmony Room 6, Alice Bidg. Tel. 968 GEORGE G GRANI, Undertaker and Embalmsr 2 Providence Si., Tailvili: - Prompt attention to day oF night ealla Telephone 830. apri4M WFawi J: F. CONANT 11 Frankiin St Whitesione 6c and the J. F. C. 108 Cligars are tne best on the market ¥y them TRERE X gvertlsing m Easterd connecuclxt aqull to 'rha 3&! Jetin for bununu resull