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"ANOTHER IS FINED $5 |} FOR VIOLATING LAW Alhn Schumpski, of Orange St Had No Garbage Can. Albin Schumpski, the fourth mem- ber of the quartet who were sum- moned into police court yesterday and charged with violating the statute and ordinance regarding the provision of a garbage can in every back yard, was given a hearing this morning and was also fined $5 without costs. This was the same fine as was meted out by Judge Meskill yesterday. Judge Mangan was on the bench today. Admits His Fault. Health Superintendent Dr. Reeks and John O’'Brien, his said that Schumpski's three house. at No. 113 Orange sf provided only with a barrel f bage and that has no cover an; of the refuse is scattered abo gound. Several warning lette! sent to the proprietor, but he them not. Schumpski admitts he was at fault and, paid His{ the spot. 3 Mother Knocked Out, Mrs. Lucy Fangila, with N humped up like a cripple whole form convulsed with rél sumed pain, hobbled to th stand this morning to testi] ts. Carmilla Apara, whi leged, has assaulted h mother, Mrs. Congo Pre tim declared that shortly o'clock Tuesday night the children got into a squabbl own and one of the form a stone at her little boy. grandmother interfered and ‘The CUF VALUE FOR YQUR HARD EARNED DOLLARS - $7.95 $6.00 and $7.0€ T. Eben ] Store Open Fri¢ Extra Specia FOR FRIDAY, JULY 3RD. You need not wait till after the 4th to get Summer Goods at cut prices, but come here tomorrow and you can buy all kinds of seasonable merchandise at greater reductions than at any time in any other store, just when you need them most. -~ Our Ready-to-Wear Dept. offers you Suits, Skirts, Coats, Shirt Waists, Petticoats, Hats, Raincoats, and Muslin Under- garments at manufacturers’ prices, and some items you can cuy for less. Men’s Negligee Shirts, the kind that others ask $1.00 for. Special at .... Men’s Balbriggan Underwear, all sizes shu‘ts and drawers, worth 29c. Specialat ............ Men’s Half Hose, in black, that sell at 12c a pair. Special @t ......ccviiiiniitnieicsaosnons oo 09c 15¢ 7c 4 pairs for 25c. Men’s Silk Hoseé, the kind that wear well. price 35c.. Special at Regular 19 c “Women’s Hosiery and Underwear Women’s Ribbed Under Vests, worth 12c. Special at ..oyl < Women’s Fast Black Seamless Hose. ~ A 12 1-2. Special at ... Women’s Gauze Lisle Hose, worth 19c. Spegial At . . ;e aaga o s s ‘Women’s. Long Silk Gloves, worth 75c. Special at .. 1c Regular price ... 12%¢ Wash Goods Special A big assortment of Wash Goods, in Voiles, Crepes, Poplins, - Ratine, Crepes and Silk Striped Novelties. range of 25¢c values. Special tomorrow at yard The balance of stock of 12 1-2c Crepes at, yard The balance of our stock of Extra and Voiles, beautiful materials. 50c values Tomorrow at, yard .. 200 pieces of Wide All Silk Ribbon, worth 25¢ tl) 40c . yard. Special Tomorrow at, yard - A big 12%¢ e .Fme Silk Finished Crepes 25¢ 19¢ Newsy Items From Our New ouse Furnishing Department COMBINATION SPECIALS. Bce Soap Dutch Cleanser . fkage Gold: Dust ... s Fairy Soap ................Reg. 10c All For 24c «.....Reg. 20c .Reg 10c ..Reg. 5c ewel” Electric Flat Iron Fully [ipped. Guaranteed For Five Years AT $1.97 .00 Charcoal Flat Iron, at v...vvvnns 59c¢, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, $10 and $12 Sults n6w ; e $15 and $18 Suits now $9.95 Suits now . $22.50 1 $12.95| PRICES THAT WILL ALLOW EVERY MAN A NEW SUIT $20 and $21.50 Suits noi:'ld.$25$14 95 e of Those $1.50 Shirts We Are Ciearing Out for 69¢? A Few Left. 3c ik $1.50 Umbrellas for .... 98¢ $1.00 Caps, now ....... | 50c Caps, now 69¢ Handkerchiefs . $6.00 Slip-ons for 3c $3. vntll séarf pin to match, at 5c set | Men’s Khaki Pants, worth $1.25, for 88c | $2.50 and $3.00 Soft Hats $1.89 SALE OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT. CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY 0 has a child of rged the accused, say- Bhat it was no .more thad any ent would do to interfere when ranger hit his child. \ ‘Broom and Umbrella; Used. " Another Amazonian battle was re- ited in court when Annie Bohuma told how she was assaulted by her sister-in-law, Annie Mokiewez, at.the latter's home on High street last night. | The complainant declared that she went to her brother’s house to get some imoney that was due. her. When she went in she said ‘““Hello,” and was immediately advised to seek a warmer climate by her sister-in-law: A wordy war ensued in which one used a broom to good advantage while the other used an umbrella as a wea- pon of defense. The sister-in-law was knocked down and the visitor was knocked out and had to be revived by a dash of water. Dropped Off Steps. Witnesses for the defense declared that after Annie Bohuma was knocked out one of the boarders went for an automobile and then tried to carry her out, but finding her too heavy for his feeble body dropped her off the steps. This was pretty funny, said the man who dropped the girl. Attorney P. F. McDonough ap- peared for Mrs. Moklewez. Officers Charles Grace and Moore were sent = to investigate the case last even- ng. As Judge Mangan could not de- termine from the evidence presented Just who was at fault he dismissed the case. Had Nervous Headache, Mrs. Thomas O’Brien appeared be- fore’ Judge Mangan this morning to ask that her husband be made to support her. Thomas was visited by a representative of the charity de- partment several days ago. and was drinking a pail of beer at the tima However, he promised to go to work yesterday. When yesterday Ttolled around he decided to get drunk in- stead. As an excuse he told the court that he was suffering from a nervous headache yesterday so couldn’t go to work. As O’Brien rromised faithfully to 8o to work if siven another chance the judge piaced him on probation for one week, during which time he must get work. Mrs. O'Brien said that it has been only two weeks - since Thomas has given her any money but from past eaperiences she knew that if he was not prevehted from continuing on his vacation he would not do any work all summer so she decided to nip his plans for a long vacation in the bud. Before leaving the court Mrs. O'Brien thanked the court for considering her case, & thost unusual thing for a com- plainant to do. Violates Probation. Because he violated his probation Anthony Orencole, who was arrested gome time ago on a charge of breach of the peace, will not be - treated leniently any more and Judge Man- gan revoked his probation this morn- ing. MILLARD RETURNS HOME. Local Young Man Has Been in Far ‘West Since First of This Year. Leon P. Millard has returned to his home in this city after having been in the far west since the middle of last January. The local boy went west as a junior salesman in the em- ploy of the Stanley ‘Works, While away he traveled through Texas, Oklahoma, Indiana and Ken- tucky on business trips and also visit- ed many places of interest along the route, Members of Burritt grange are plan- ning for a picnjc to be held at the home of the lecturer, Mrs. A. W. Mason of Shuttle Meadow avenue Sat- urday. Grangers and their families lure invited to attend. ISSUE WITH ROOSEVELT NIDOSS. Fxplains - Reasons Upporting Colombian Trealy. | Hallstead, Pa., July 2.—In a state- ment issued here last night dealing Wwith the proposed Colombian treaty, James T. Dubois, who was United States minister to Colombia under the ! Taft administration, takes issue with the views recently expressed by Colonel Roosevelt and explains his own reasons for supporting the treaty. He also analyzes. the treaty at some length. Regarding his difference with | Colonel Roosevelt on this subject, Mr., DuBois expresses regret at opposing “‘a great leader whose fortunes I de- vcotedly followed for ten. years” and states that ‘‘no man will tolerate the thought that any of Colonel Roose- velt’'s acts was inspired by tainted motives, but no man is always right.” Negotiations for a treaty during the Taft administration, failed, he says, because his instructions, out of excessive care not to impugn the mo- tives of President Roosevelt in “tak- | ing” Panama, failed to give Colom- bia sufficient justice. The pending treaty, he believes, should hardly be approved by the American people. Upholds Men’s Characters. Taking issue with Colonel Roose- velt regarding the character of the public men in Colombia, Mr. DuBois declared that they compare well with the public men of other countries in intelligence and respectability. In- stead of being “blackmailers and ban- dits,” quoting Mr. Roosevelt's declara- | tion that the people of Panama were a unit in demanding the revolution, he says: “A handful of men who were to be the direct beneficiaries of | the revolution, conceived it and not the hundredth part of the inhabi- tants of the isthmus knew of the re- volt, until an American officer, in the | uniform of the United States army raised the flag of the new republic.” Regarding the acting president, Marroquin, whom he quotes Colonel Roosevelt as describing “an absolute and uncontrolled dictator,” = Mr. Du- Eois says: 1 “He was a helpless and hapless old man, placed in'the midst of great | national unrest and disorder at the close of the most disastrous civil war in the history of Colombia. He was pot in accord with the congress and the congress was alive with discord and five millions of innocent and help- less people saw the true interests of their country destroyed by the selfish disputes of less than 100 men, If Theodore Roosevelt had realized the true situation in Bogota at that hour, he would have reinforced his patience with sympgathy for that helpless people who had been, for a hundred years, our best friends south of the Rio Grande. Hits Blackmail Claim. The claim made by Colonel Roose- velt that the Colombian treaty is a blackmailing agreement is dealt with by Mr. DuBois in his interpretation of the document. “While negotiating for a treaty I made the Colombian authorities un- derstand that under no circumstances would the United States apologize to any nation for a political act that was our unwritten law that never had been and never would be broken. In purely informal conversations, and in my official memorandum, I sug- gested that a chivalrous expression of regret that our friendship had in any way been marred, such as any real gentleman would freely grant to another, might later be embodied in a treaty as a balm for the wounded feelings of a once friendly nation which had been humiliated before the world, whose credit had been de- stroyed in foreign countries, whose borrowing ability had been annihilat- ed and whose persistent appeals for arbitration had been ignored. * * * The opposition to this feature, on the | ground that It is an apolo is not just and is not in the true interests of the United States. If the Anglo- Saxons are to live in harmony with the Latins on this continent, they must treat them with absolute justice, just as we shall exact justice from them.” Claims Should Be Met. directly “with article three Dealing of the treaty providing a payment to Colombia which Colonel Roosevelt at- tacked as blackmail, Mr. DuBois de- scribes. the claims of Colombia for the unpaid annuities on the occasion of the Trans-Isthmian Railroad com- pany, the reversionary rights in the Panama railroad and Panama’s por- | tion in the Colombian national debt, ' all of which, in his opinion, should be met by the United States, 1 “Under the contract of 1867,” “he says, “Colombia ceded the Trans- Isthmian Railroad company to the, Panama Railroad company for a per- iod of 99 years, and for this sale she was to receive $250,000 annually dur- b life of the contract. At the ‘of the separation of Panama | Were remaining 64 annuities un- | paild, amounting to $16,000,000. The concession also insured to Calombia | reversionary rights to the Panama ! canal railroad at the expiration of the ‘contract in 1967. Claims Total $36,000,000. i “The physical value of the rail- road shortly after the revolt, was placed at $16,446,000. In addition Colombia claims that she is entitled to several millions of dollars for that | part of her national debt incurred in | | right the interests of Panama before the| revolution, a claim which was recog- nized in the treaty of 1909 made un- der the Roosevelt administration. Al- together, these claims total about $36,000,000." ’ | i | Though Colonel Roosevelt asserts that all of the civil rights, titles and pesuniary interests of Colombia passed to Panama at the moment of ac- tual separation, Mr. DuBois declares that these rights had been virtually recognized by the Roosevelt admin- fstration itself. “Colombia,” he savs | “by an agreement concluded in 1880, | contracted a debt of $3,000,000 with the railway company amortizable in 29 years by the company's $250,000 | annual payments. The amortization | actually proceeded and the debt| would have been liquidated in 1909. * * % But, as the United States| prevented by physical force, the sup- pression of the insurrection on the| {isthmus by Colombia six years { fore the debt could be entirely paid, "and never attempted to exact the missing installments of the amortiz- | ation, they recognized Colombia's| of ownership.’ | and other material claims | says Mr. DuBo jur’»l ha- “These of Colombia,"” tify the indemnification article the treaty, to say nothing of the tre- mendous territorial loss and humil. iation that Colombia has sustained.” HELD FOR BIGAMY. Bridgeport Barber Bound Over ‘to Superior Court Under $2,000 Bail. Bridgeport, July 2.—Michael An- | nunziata, a barber, was arraigned be« fore Judge Coughlin in the city court of bigamy, cause was found and An- the superior Attorney Bayonnel N, J., rep- while Attorney No. here today on a charge Probable nunziata was held court in bonds of $2,000, for lsaac Cohan, ot resented wife No 1 ¥. B. Fallon appeared for wife 2 According to the testimony, An- nunziata married Maria Mancusi in Sarno, Italy, in 1904, when both were about eighteen years old and. shortly afterward he came to Ameri- ca, The prosecution stated that An. nunziata was married to Emelia Cer- nesa of Brooklyn in the Brooklyn Borough hall in November, 190 STORE OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL: 10 P. M. CLOSED SATURDAY CTORY~ STORE (LEARNESALF It Wasn’t Our Name That Brought the Crowds Here Saturday 1* isn't our name nor store that success has been built up on our est vrices in the town. haven’t bought here, If you have already you will sooner or liter. keeps (ustomers coming and keeps REPUTATION for giving good, bought here, you know is to corie to The Surprise Store now— during this Gigantic Ctezrance of Our Own Factory’s and Store’s Unso'd Stock, in Additionto the Surpius of Many Leading Manu'acturers DESIRABLE what Now's a good time to begin. us busy day in and day out. Our Merchandise at the low- we sa’ 18 true; and if you Our advice to every man $4.85 #OR SUITS Worth $7.50 to $10 Newest Tabrics In Gi Brown, and Nixtures You won't youa seo They ble un- them- ished all Rl o believe the ha them $7.35 FOR SUITS Worth $10 and $12 If they were not the very latest in recpect—fabric, pattern and wouldn't be bargains y mixtures in a sple for Men Men’s $1.50 and $2 Pants $1 A splendid ebllection of black plain blue serge, and fancy worsteda; sizes 28 to 42 waist $2 25 to $2.75 PANTS Worsteds, blue -serges and fancy mixthres; sizes 28 sl.so $3 and $3.50 PANTS Englisn stripe fancy worsteds, T $2.00 '$3.75 and $4.00 PANTS Mixtures, blue serges and brown and gray siripe wor- 32.50 i1 selv $9.85 FOR SUITS Worth $16and$18.50 The 1 offer:d_in worst grays. light handsome m: and y Negligee Slnrts The usual 69c quality from cur own stocks 39c on sale at Splendid percale in neat patterns that will hold their color; coat style; attached cuffs; sizes 14 to 17. 45c Work Shirts. Chambray in fast color blue, per- fect parments, size 1 to 17. At Men’s $1 50 Straw Hats are 95 C now $11.85 FOR LUITS Worth $20 and $22 Every time we show one of these suits to a prospective customer, it's sure sale; their excellence is notice- able to everybody; blues, graye, browns, siripes and checks: all sizos for men and youths. $14.85 FOR SUITS Worth $23 to $25 You opened un—they should see Ahe new ones just are, if anything. richer than the first lot that went out. Satmday they were the talk of the store; rich blues and stripes, tasteful and attractive mixtures, ete. Men's and Youths' sizey 31 to 46. Mm S Furnishings 39% Underwcar Shirts and Drawers; drawers have double seats and ev garment is guaranteed {o be first qual perfect ftting, and _well made, long and short 19c Balhriggan REFUNDED Or goods exchanged for any unsatisfac- tory purch: I“li?? AS USUAL 33-35 ASYLUM STREET, HARTFORD % Surprise, Store sleeves; clearance price, & garment MAIL ORDERS When accompanied by money order will be filled and charges prepaid. All Clothing Bought Here Pressed Free