New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 30, 1926, Page 17

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s —— —— 14 YR, 0LD GIRL WITH MAN OF & Two.Lived Together in Woods as Man and Wile Waterbury, July 30. (P—Having disappeared since Saturday, a 14- year-old girl was found in the woods of Wolcott yesterday afternoon by police officers after “ thorough search of Waterbury and environs. She had been living with a 54-year old man George Willis since the day of her disappearance from her home, 30 Bishop street. The man was arrested on statutory charge. The girl 4 held for incorrigibility. On being questioned by the police, both the man and the girl admitted illicit relations. The stated, @c- cording to the police, that they had been living together since Saturday. Friend of Family Willis has bBeen a friend of th family for the past five years, th girl's mother told the police yester- day. He pald frequent visits to their home, and had taken an es- pecial interest in the girl, although they never surmised that he had serlous intentions toward her. Police officials say that Willis remarked to them that ne would like to marry the girl, who = allege® to have said that Willis had always been very friendly and kind to her. The two betrayed evidences of affection when brought together for questioning at police headquar- ters this morning. The case was on the docket this morning to be brought up in the city court here, hut it was later dis- povered that the couple had been| arrested just over the Waterbury line, within the corporate limits of Wolcott, and will be tried there Threatens To Run Away. Numerous times the girl has| threatened to leave home, but her parents paid no attention to her threats. They did not become greatly alarmed when she disappeared Sat- urday, with an extra dress as the only luggage, believing that ehe wag spending the wWeek-end with friends Police, seeking her, learned that a child dressed as a boy, had been| seen around the section above Lake- | wood and the Wolcott reservoir on the old Wolcott stage road. Those who had seen the child suspected it must be the girl, having noted her bobbed hair. She was dressed, how- ever, in man’s trousers and a shirt. | Falling in their search, the officers went to the farm of Joseph Lawlor north of Lakewood, where Willis is employed. There they found the man. After a grilling by Lieut. Hickey, Willis confessed to having taken the child to the woods and of- fered to lead the way to the spot where the girl was waiting for him. Accompanied by the officers, Wil- Nis led the way up the old Wolcott road beyond the Wolcott reservoir Then leaving the car, the men all walked for a short distance. As they aproached a spot, in the midst of a thick woods, Willis put two fingers to hs mouth and whis- tled. Girl Steps Out. In answer to the call, the girl stepped out from behind a rock and some bushes. She was clad in a pair of man's trous shirt and | a pdir of heavy shoe ted, the pol to having stayed | there with Willis and told the story | of their four-day sojourn | They had no shac explained. They ground, with no other bedding or| covering than one blanket. The rest | of the camping equipment consisted of two handkerchiefs, one towel and one _comb slept on OLD OFFENDER 13 GRABBED IN RAID Stanley Trzaska Must Again Face Charge of Selling Trzaska, allas Stanley Stanley | of 24 Clark street, who | Paweczyk, was convicted on three other occa- | slons for viglation of the liquor law, | on another occasion for breach of | peace, and for driving while under the influence of liquor was arrested Detective Thomas Feeney in & raid at his home on Clark street I yesterday afternoon and was ar- ralgned in court today on a charge | of violation of the liquor law. On | request of his attorney, Thomas F. | McDonough, the case was continued | until Tuesday morning under bonds | of $900. Trzaska was convicted der the name of Stanley Pawecayk | and once under his own name under which he will appear in court Tues- day. On one occasion his case was nolled when his wife pleaded guilty | to the charge and she was fined. 20 Months’ Vacation Arrested yesterday afternoon on a charge of breach of peace,” Willlam Karbonick of 20 Millard street in court today admitted that he had not worked in 70 months. The last | job he had in a lunch room was | too muech for him because of the | hours he was obliged to work. Since then he has confined himself to his home, He worked at Russell & E or two weeks and at North & Judd's Jor- six weeks previous to his lunch | room position, he said. Judge Alling | lectured him about staying home and letting his family support him. The | fudge continued the case untll Aug- | st 20 and warned him to get work in the meantime. The charge of being a fugitive | trom justice agalnst Douglas A. Pre- zent was molled whey. Prosecutor | Joseph G. Woods sald Pregent had | gone back to face charges of non- | cupport brought by his wife in| Poughkeepsie, N. Y. SUSPECT VENDETTA Omaha, Neb., July 30 (P—A ven- getta, dating from a killing in 1924. | s bl#mea by police for the murder bt P. J. Blackwood, 30, motion pice ure operator, afld his wife. Margafy- t. 20, who were shotgun fargets §s | hev were on thelr way home lajt ond degree after he that re Venealano. and the case was dismissed. police were seeking a relative of Veneziano, believing he might have fired the shofs in revenge. society. scient -{tlon of this bewildering mystery. out |age height calculated b; law of suspected to of the difficult of all the calculating the rigidity of the which at once supercedes the meth- lity equal to that of standard steel, |calculation, that the rigidity | ing due | the oce | twice | vanadium | um for billions of years, | the enormous pressure acting on all | twice un- |® | winter date for taking the decennial | census bureau offi | the spring, and betewen mid-winter | -Blackwood was charged with sec- murder July 17, 1924, admitted firilng two .shots ulted in the death of Tony He pleaded self-defense Today CHAINED IN TUB, SAYS LITTLE NEW YORK GIRL Brooklyn Girl, 14, Tells of 2-Day Confinement by Parents, Who Are Arrested. Brooklyn, N. Y., July 30 (®— Rose Panzita, fourteen, stood before the bar of Flatbush court yesterday nd told Magistrate Seers how her parents had chained her in a bath- tub for two days because they did not want her to spend her money on the motion picture: Joseph Panzita, her father, who lives at 515 Grevésend avenue, was held in $500 ball on a charge of assault for a hearing Wednesday, while her mother was released on parole. The girl was placed in the tody of the Brooklyn Children's Rose sald she returned from the pletures Tuesday night and her father, in a fit of anger, seized her and chained her to the tub. She sald she earned the money she used by washing windows for neigh- bor: Her screams, after the second day, used neighbors and they called | .ester Rockhover, Children Society agent, and Partolman Rowland, who | went to the house, released the girl | and arrested the parents. TIDES MAKE SHIFT N EARTH'S AXIS Prof. See Also Asserts G]nbe% Is Solid ‘ San Francisco, July 80 — nouncement was made here today Captain T. J. J. See, professor of | mathematics, United tes government astronomer at Mare and, of the discovery of new proof at the tides originating in the Pa- cific and propagated as a world wave through the Indian and Atlanfic oceans, are the cause of the varia- tion‘of the latitude with the observ- | ed circulation of the earth’s pole | about its means position in 427 days. | The orfginal discovery of the shift- ing of the pole in the earth was| made at Berlin in 1890 by Prof. Kustner, now of* the Observatory at Bonn, but 36 years elapsed before any scientist could get a clue as to the cause of the wob earth's axis about its mean position Thus for more than a third of a century the mystery challenged all the physicists in the world. Now | Prof. See s has traced the motion of t parth to € tides origin: isphere with pole at N the tidal relief being tI passage h of Australi Professor See said he had received | congratulations from the leading | sts of the world, on the solu- | “It has not heretofore been given " said Professor See, “that I found that the careful height of the s, treated as world waves in mo- , actually is over twice the aver- | the equi- librium theory_ of Newton. This eat advance discloses to us a new | nature, not heretofore even | exist. Thus the new mathematical theory will mark a | notable improvement in all direc- tions, and clear up completely one 1 science. greatest improve- ents relates to the new method for earth, ods of Lord Kelvin, Sir George Dar- | wgn and 8, 8. Hough. Instead of the | nticleus of our globe having a rigid- | exact s three | we find by definite and ver: imes that heretofore accepted By carefully separating the yield- to the tidal oscillations of | s trom that of the nucleus of the earth, if any, we prove that the nucleus shows no yielding what- er; so that its rigidity comes out that of the hardest nickel- steel used in the armor plate of a modern battleship, “As the earth is now known to have existed In quiescent equilibri- with the everywhere ad- mutually unde internal justing particles themselves des, this great rigidity of the nu- | cleus will not surprise the experi- enced natural philosopher, but ft will forever put a stop to any fur- ther discussion of liquid in the in- terior of the globe. It is not only solid throughout, but twice as rigid as armor plate.” CENSOS IN 1930 Decennial Population Count Will Be Taken in Mid-Winter, Despite Protests Voiced. Washington, July 30 (A—Despite some dissatisfaction with the mid- population -census, the 1930 enumer- ation will proceed on the same method and at the same time of year as the 1920 count. Announcing this decision today, s said that the population census coincides with the census of agriculture, and. January | is a much more convenient month than July for obtaining farm statis- ties. Many farms pass into the hands of new owners or tenants in and July much data on crops, acre- and other major matters is lost. January has been found to be un- sirable for the population census because of inclement weather. Tabulation and compilation will be speeded greatly in 1980, they said, because of improvements in the tabulating, punching and sorting machines aver 1020, * By —_— A Save at‘Least $75 on This Remarkable A new living room typical of our greatest August Sale, upholstered in beautiful Jacequard, in several patterns and with high-priced spring censtruction. roomy sofa, mahogany finished end table, cheice of davenport table or occasional table, Arm chair, wing chair, and floor lamp, two framed pictures, table, scarf, all complete, 9 pieces. At the August Sale Price of DECORATED* 4-PIECE BEDROOM A charming suite at an amazing price. All four beautifully finished in WALNUT and have a ¢ dec panels—Vanity, large Dresser, End Bed. Regula August Sale priced at pleces Wardrobs and double-size are rated 9-Pc. Walnut Dining Room il value you will want to see. Just raceived on rkable example of ELIZABETHAN Large Buffet and China Cabinet with anels—Octagon Extension Table, Large Host Chair 5 Side Chairs in leather or tapéstry upholsterir richly finished in WALNT An AUGUS FEATURE at Aw our flool Style —a re *decorated Porcelain Top Table A sturdy '.\'ll‘, built to stand pounding and wear; white enameled base throughoutw—=with hard- haked PORCELAIN top. Specjial ‘drawer for Kniyes ing wtensile s, ete L $1.50 Weekly HARTFORD sign and the highly pol- Mahogany Finished ished top—and nk of End Table $§1.95 the amazing price - 1—“ Nots the unusual de- guaranteed while this group lasts only See Our Famous “Happy Home” Model Outfit 4 Rooms Complete $450 Including 3-Plece Velour Liying Room with Davenport Table and End Table —4-Plece Walnut Bedroom—10-Plece Walnut Dining Room—complete with Rugs, Floor, Table and Boudoir Lamps, Pletures, Bedding, Searfs— Kitchen with Refrigerator, Table, Chairs, Congoleum Rug, etc.—all for £4 a Week! A Wardrobe Sensation 1, Wardrobe of this 3.95 you know yo It has room e for everyth! wear. Keeps ¢ clean and in pre AUGUS priced Easy Terms 1092 MAIN ST. Open Sat. Evenings. JUGUST SALE VALUES THAT SURPASS ALL Previous Furniture Standards! LL over town the news is traveling of the wonder values in KANE'S Greatest August SALE. People who come only to look remain to buy. There is so much more for the money here that anyone can realize it. . Our enormous buying power permits greater return for every dollar you spend. This is not “just another sale” of old, ordinary furniture. Every piece is beautiful, good in style and fine in taste. Most are aceurate duplicates of higher-priced suites. For the sake of vour pockethook, investigate KANE'S values before buying anywhere else. Liberal Credit Terms Special low prices go hand in hand with special low terms in this Greatest of Sales. At KANE'S you receive CREDIT withont red tape, long waiting or embarrassing questions. A small deposit delivers your selection, and you can pay the rest in weekly or monthly payments you will mnever 1 miss, h Goods held Free until wanted. I ll { Wonderful Values In TAPESTRY RUGS 9-Piece JACQUARD LIVING ROOM 129 $1.50 Weekly Tuxurions TAPES- in many colorful patterns, duplicating highest-priced desizns, Size 9x12 feet. marvelons opportunity to brighten your rooms at very low cost. We do not helieve this value can be equalled elsewhere more. SPECIAL nificent rugs in rich LUXURIOUS 4-PIECE WALNUT BEDROOM 135 £1.50 Weekly od design of arrest- 1 GUMWOOD and Four magnificént pleces in a French peri . It comes in rich WALNUT a ires the new HIGHLIGHT fir with wide, swinging mirrors; large Wardrobe com AUGUST SALE Pri 3-Pc. Velour Living Room n values are ry comwmn in ou Did you ever o see three pieces at only ? Th o all } v overstufted VELOUR and have old MAHOGANY finished frames. I rly $150. AUGUST SALE Price Such uncomn AUGUST SALF ich massive covered in Coxwell Chairs $29.50 Easy Terms With Bridge Lamp MAHOGANY Cox well Chair, special- ly designed for greatest comfort Reversible J A C- QUARD cushion very thick and @ soft. Polychrome BRIDGE L A M P included at $29.50. HARTFORD

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