New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 27, 1915, Page 5

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i Itunity for exercise, \; {+! Britaia interested in the organization ECTIVE CLUB HAS MANY ASSETS. | ‘With the rapid development of the plans put under way several weeks | ago the pessibility of a.mew country' ! crete. Residents of Berln realizing 'ithe need of ‘a club in that.town and ‘the marvelous opportunites for a per- | fect golf course afforded by the rol- | ling land back of Berlin street start- ed an agitation td procure one. The imatter soon grew too big for that | #own to handle and it was seen that | - ‘there ‘were many people in Now ot a club that would give an oppor- Arthur Hadden of Berlin is the instigator of . the scheme ‘and he soon saw that it was ‘necessary to take New Britain folks into his idea if he wished a good house and grounds for the support of golf. € ‘idea has grown to such an ex- itent that' an option Has been secured ‘on ‘the Burdick property, north of ‘Waddruff's cornor on 'Berlin street and in a short time prospective mem- bers, will be given. literature setting forth the scheme in detail.” An Ideal Location. - The Burdick property is ideal for i the to whl?h it will be put.’ A * “house standing’ about eighty yaras . back from the road is in a good spot ‘for ub ‘house and this will Le i to meet the demands of ‘he . Dancing, dining and lounge will' b6 provided when - the smade over, and it is un- _to'state that the usual com- f locker and bath. rooms ibe lacking. - Tennis courts, eens, croquet’grounds and ng ranges will be provided 1y Jof the other forms of creation will be pro- ¥ ortunities for = winter 3 aré present, ‘particularly to- ming and skiing which are weil _ en care of by nature in the long ihills- back of the house. | The golf course should be one /which will appeal to lovers of ‘*he ®port. A large stretch of land, large _jenough. for eighteen holes, is con- . ‘tained in the purchase. At the front dithe width is small but a few yards at k. rear of the house it widens out it extends back about a mile. & ' long slope from the back of the club - house feads-up to a series of plateaus Swhers the green of the future may be proached by well directed mashie tches and where the opportunities ifor good greens are fine. 'From thiy ipoint a long drop over a small pond ' leads down to the valley on the far slde with fts brook ‘and water hazard. 3 Up over ‘the hill for more fine “work and the patience of the g ‘will be fewarded with'a'wide v and slopinig drive ' to the elghteenth hole. S 8 «club is meant particularly for e young fellows of this and nearby ¢ “An ‘opportunity will be made ieep the dues within bounds that fill appeal to as many as possible, turally a ballot will select new lembers and good fellowship will be aim of the club. The grounds are Within three minutes walk of the rolley and within twenty-five of New ijtain by trolley and foot. Auto- obiling facHities could not' be. bet- roomis, will be built. house generally remodelled. \ hill pitch. . house give an gpportunity greens. ... The view from the high ground back of the club house is beyond ;he power of a half tone to adequately present. A long geutle slope with "an océasional ditch descends from tliis point to the club house giving.the returning golf enthusiast an opportunity for playing the last hole on a down \ A series of ledges with little platé between about 500 yards back of the for sporty approaches and beautiful putting’ ERIE HPAD INDICTED. ‘Underwood - Charged Interstate Commerce Law. Cleveland, 0., May 27.—F.'D. Un- derwpod, president of the Erte Rall- way company and the Delaware & Hudson rallroad, was indicted yester- day. by a special federal grand Jjury. Violation of the interstate commerce laws is charged. ¢ .~ The organizers of the club hopo to .make an ideal spot for healthful ixercise with congenial company and many are the people of New Brtain ho wish this hope to be realized. The indictment charges tnat in July, 1912, W. B. Miller, former president of the Diamond Rubber company of Akron and seven friends were allowed the use of a private car for a trip from Akron to Beverly, Mass., upon | 2nother man had given it Under the | Cssga also payment of eight fares, With Violating | interstate commerce law, a private car | can -be, allotted only upon payment of | mythical twenty-five full fares, SCHOONER SUNK. Saunderstown, R. I, May 237.—The little two masted schooner Thomas C. Rackett, from New Haven for Provi- dence with oysters, was capsized in a squall during the night and sank about three-quarters of a mile east-north- east of Saunderstown wharf. Captain R. 8. Ramus and his two sailors, all negroes, reached Fort Greble in a FISK SKID NON- dory. WITH FISK SERVICE AT LOW PRICES Cost Reduced — Quality Maintained Compate With Plain Tread Casing Prices 3:x30 4 x33 4 x34 Of Other Standard Makes - 12.20 4:x34 - 20.00 4:x36 - 20.35 - 28.70 5 x37 - '33.90 ' Fisk quality tires never gave more universal satisfaction ~ than they are giving today. - THE FISK NON-SKID is the only real non-skid which . can be bought at the Low Prices. Fisk Tires For Sale By All Dealers THE Fisk R of N. Y. Chicopee Falls, Mass. UBBER COMPANY An old fashioned farm house mndl.ng well back from the yoad will furnish the nucleus around which handsome club house with spacious porches, lounging, lunch and dancing rooms, with the usual locker and bath The partitions in the present building will be remov ed, hard wood floors put in and tlie i a CHOKES WOMAN AND & IS SENT T0 JALL! Ahdmw OSSQQ_MQRVZGIGH of Steaiig Suit of Cothss Convicted of stealing a suit of clothes ‘from Walter Mozenski of 56 Church street and also uf cruelly as- saulting Mrs, Victoria Mozenski of the same dddress, Andrew Ussga, of 131 Beaver street, was sent to jail for seven months by Judge James T. Meskill in' police court this morning. Mrs. Mozenski showec many signs of her recent beating when she took the witness stand, | Her face was puffed and bruised, her arms were klack and blue and one fnger was bandaged, She declared that on Tuesday Ossaga came into her tene- ment during her absence and let several parrots fly out ur their cages. Re also broke open ‘a trunk, she claimed.. When she came into the room she said that Ossaga grabbed her and twisted a heavy strap about her neck, then dragged her into a bath reom where he choked and beat her. Had not the. strap broken she would have been choked to deatn, she says. When the woman shrieked 1n "her pain the intruder fled. Yesterday, morning at 5 o'clock Officer James Skelley was sent out to 1ook foy him ard after a long chase he found him on Lafayette street at 3 o’clock in the afternoon. Much credit is due Officer Skelley for his clever work. Ossga denied stealing the clothes, and when Sam Tarski, a pawnbroker, testified that he was the man who =old the suit to him he explained that to him. assaulting Mrs. blaming it upon the stranger. Judge Meakill sent him to jail for thirty days on the theft count and for six months on the other. NEW COUNTRY CLUB AGITATION STARTED denied Mozenski, Phillip ‘Corbin and W. T. Sloper Pro- pose Building to Widen Social Activities of Golf Club. The. erection of a $20,000 building to replace the present structure of the New Britain Golf club at Maple Hill and the raising of the dues from $25 yearly to $40 yearly are proposed in a letter sent out last night by Phillip Corbin and Willlam T. Slopér two members of the club. The new club, say the ieaders in this movement, should contain a large central room with hard wood floor for dancing and a large open fire place. A.large kitchen . with pantries should be located in the rear of this room. Locker rooms and shower baths for men should be located on one side and the same provision should be maie for women on the other side. A wide roomy veranda is also essential, A heating plant would make the building available in the winter as well as the surhmer. The Golf club house which M. F. Plant Bas built as an adjunct to the Fort Griswold hotel at New London is a model of what is wanted for New Britain. Mr. Corbin and ‘Mr, Sloper know where $10,000 to $12,000 in subscrip- tions can be obtained for a new build- ing and they want all the money rafs- ed in this way. The $2,500 addition- al revenue which would be had by raising the dues would be used for increased expenses and the‘improve- ment of the golf .course. . WOMAN ELBOTROOUTED. Cranston, R. I, May 27.—Mrs, Ar- thur H. Noyes was accidentally ‘killed in her home yesterday when she picked up a telephone receiver with one hand while holding the handle of an electrically operatea vacuum cleaner in the other. A short circuit Doummdlmnrmd es greater losses every year in foodsand. property than an Fight him. will wipe out the pesta in a iy Abuolutely non: ot e nd s How to Destroy Rats™ Drug and General Steres 25c, SO0c; $1.90. 6-Ib. pail $5.00. BOTANICAL MFG. CO.. 317 Race 5t., Philadelphia, Po. FOR YOUR DECORATION DAY CUTING You’ll want music for song or danc- ing whether you spend aa ouidoor holiday or stay at home. A Gr#ifonola will add just the touch to make the day one of real pleasure. SPECIAL PATRIOTIC SELECTION 5 NEW DANCE MUSIC POPULAR HITS e Columbia Eciipse Other Models $17.50 to' ‘EASY TERMS BRODRIB & WHEELER 138 MAIN STREET, Hallinan Bldg., Tel 974-4 LABOR LEADERS ARE - | DENOUNCED BY TAFT For Excic.sing “Power Detrimental 1o Good of Society.” New York, May 27.—Former Pres- ident William H. T.ft in an address last night at the annual banquet of the National assoclation of Manufact- urers, severely critized the Clayton act and the federal trade commission act as “detrimental to the business interests of the country” and de- nounced the leaders of the American, Federation of Labor for exercising a “power and that became excessive | and detrimental to the public weal | and the good of society.” | Professor Taft was co-speaker with Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio/ i who declared that “the greatest men- | ace of American progress is the pro. | fessonal baiting of - big enterprises.” | Approves Union Principles. “I fully approve,” said the former president, “‘of the prineiple of labor unions. I believe that they are es- | sential to creating a state of equality of dealing between employes and em- ployers. I believe that they have made possible the enactment of a great deal of fnost healthful and use- ful legislaton and have greatly aided, the just cause of wage earners in this regard. But the power their leaders have acquired by the principle of combination in their organization has intoxcated them and they have exer- cised ‘a tyranny over socety and over | thelr own members that is certainly | leading to a reaction and to a re- | straint of their great powers within proper and lawful limits. | ““They have failed to condemn in ! any way, as they ought, the use of | criminal methods to which in a law- | less spirit their representatives at various times have séen fit to resor:. They have raised large funds in the defence of men who . have proven to be, by their own confessions, violat- ors of the ériminal law, and they have manifested a desire to secure in express statutory declarations, an im- munity for labor unions from the operation of general laws that should | be uniform. In other words, they have sought to make themselves and their agents a privileged class not subject to laws that affect every other man and even themselves when not engaged in labor disputes. | Politics Within Unions, | “We must of course concede that | many of the leaders would be glad | to utter protests and interfere with | these llegal methods that have been ! pursued, but there are polities with- | in labor unions and labor union con- ventions, and the loudest and the most extremists are too often ele- ments to be reckoned with in main- taining the leadership of such unions, The qulet, sensble, conservative mem- bers of the union, of whom there are many more than we realize, do not exercise the influence which their numbers would often entitie them to Such members manifest their opin- ions in elections where, in the secrecy of the election booth, they vote ther real opinions and often refuse to obey the formal declarations.of political policy made under the ingluence of the conspicuous labor leaders.” Professor Taft cited the recent ac- tion of the United Hatters of North America on the question of paying the $260,000 judgment found against ite members in the Danbury hatters' case. Must Restrain Leaders. “Neither the Hatters’ Unon nor the American Federation of Labor.,” he said, “is willing to raise a fund to relieve these 186 victims of their mis- guided urging, although they could and did raise funds quite as large for the defense of criminals who sub- sequently confessed their crimes, committed in the supposed upholding of the interests of labor. Such a con- dition cannot but have a useful in- fluence in bringing to the attention of the rank and file or organized labor, the necessity for restrainng thelp 1 shrapnel, other metal substances by the use of pewerful electro-magnets in the hos- pitals in the war zone leaders in such unwise' defiance of law."” , Mr. Taft said his -objection to the Clayton act and the trade commission act were that “their enactment with such a blare of trumphets and avowals of hostilty to capital in general, with | little discrimination, has a strong ten- { dency to frighten those whose judg- ment determines the amount of new investments of capital and thus to re- strict the normal expansion of sur business due to the re-investment of earnings.” BOY IDENTIFIES DEPUTIES. Who Shot Into Crowd of Strikers at Roosevelt, N. J. J., May New Brunswick, N. 27, Nine of the ten deputies on trial hereI on a charge of murder with the shooting of January at Roosevelt, | itively {dentified as men | into the crowd by & ness in superior court hers The witness, Edward € fourteen, said he had bees as an office boy in the 'Wi | Clark plant of the Amsé | tural Chemical company, | the deputies ran to the the shooting pceurred, | tified that he had seen sode and recalled d 1 names and faces of some ties who fired guns or s Speclal, Wed. only, 3 3 Milk and 1 Pound Best C Russell Bros.—advt. ? Electromagnet Draws Shrapnel From Wo SHRAPNEL EXTRACTO! of rurgery is the removal of pieces of The latest step in the science steel jacketed bullets and The electro- magnets have been used in g works in this country o Particles of steel are thus from under the skin ang eye. Large numbers of ¥h chines have been sent to the Save the Babies. NFANT MORTALITY is som of all the children born in el or mearly one-quarter, die per cent,, or more than one- they are fifteen ! ‘We do not hesitate to say that a timel; Neither eaths are occasioned by the use of majority of these precious lives. of these infantile Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups '%? e;or 4 they stupefy, retard o more or less opium or morphine. . In b deadly poisons. mydrg;:tnh ity, Sovec of ‘the siin and allays fover. Pul!ne Castoria always bears the lm’f frightful. zed coun 1 before they reach one year rt third, before they are five, and on tries, b ‘would ray use of Castoria lo we hesitate to children’ are, in ©o a exactl; signature of Chas, H. opens the 7

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