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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 13
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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 13

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Rochester, New York
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Page:
13
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Section CITY NEWS SPORTS emu rat FINANCIAL NEWS WANT ADS Section II II D7TII YEA It KOCIIKSTKIJ. X. V. SATURDAY. JUXK pac.g WITNESS IN BRIBE CASE IS LOCATED New Detour Sign to End Problem of How to Get to Ontario Beach ARMY CHIEFS PRAISE WORK OF NEW TANK BOARD ASKS REVISION IN Escaping Gasoline Fumes Cause Explosion Injuring Six and Wrecking Station 33 POLICE HOLD SIX IN PROBE OF SHOOTING m.iuim.

wi.ummssaamBmmmm ASSESSMENT Two Women Are Arrested as Material Witnesses in Attack on Mrs. Resso 1 ONTARIO BEACH PARK FOLLOW THE ARROW T. A. Trimble, Prosecution's; Ace Against Petrossi, Fishing in Canada Realtors Seek to Equalize Burden Placed on Corner Lot Property Owners Hills and Rough Tarrain No Obstacle to Device Made Here, Tests Indicate I ijjjif 1 1 CLOSED a mX. -II 1 GUNMEN SAID KNOWN BEACH ML (HUE' Detour sign showing 1 CSEf NLCAF RD.

roads if .1 ij from Lake Beach Park. Public Works Department to Indicate Best Route to Park During Construction Work; Extra Police to Expedite Traffic: All 'Lake' Cars Go Through I ork Miller under the dirt reMon of Commissioner Harold V. I The siPn show" route I throuch Grecnleaf Road, which roug Seneca Service Station at Hudson Avenue and North Street after it was damaged by an explosion of gasoline fumes yes terday. Gasoline fumes being released of SS Fairvlew Avenue, anil Bern ard Garah, 24, of 210 Portland Ave Explicit directions to motorists in reaching Ontario Beach Park are contained on a detour sin pre- reaches Reach Avenue at the Idlers' lub. Motorists are advised to follow the arrows.

City Manager Stephen Story yesterday afternoon took steps to speed to the maximum the construction of Lake Avenue Boulevard between Stutson Street and Beach Avenue. He announced that he has been assured by City Engineer Henry Howe that shortly after July 1 a 20-foot strip of concrete will be opened to Ontario Beach Park. The George Cham, bers Company, contractors, pushing the work. Concrete Is being poured, and as soon as the center strip is completed and set, it will be opened to traffic. Extra Officer Detailed George J.

Nier, commissioner of public safety, has extra safety-men detailed to Lake Avenue Boulevard to expedite traffic over the detour. The intersection at Stutson Street and Lake Avenue is being rushed When this Is com-1 pleted traffic can go through Stut from a large air compressor as the gasone tanks were being filled and which were ignited by friction last night was believed to have been the cause of the explosion at the Seneca Service Station at, 2 Hudson Avenue yesterday morning. The blast wrecked the building and injured six persons, five of whom were taken to Mary'i Hospital. Damage is estimated at $6,000. Tho injured are Roy Green, 27, cf 97 Chahberlnin Street, and Ralph Pierce, 23.

of 327 Grand Avenue, both severely burnd about the face and dy. Gordon Wolfe. 16, of f8 Woodward Street, Russell R. O'Dell, 29, Pair9 One Employee, Held in Priest Born Here Drowns Trying Porto Rico Rescue WILL TESTIFY "MONDAY Lynd, Also City Inspector, Repeats Testimony of Proffered Bribe Thomas A. Trimble, discharged city inspector who is one of the chief witnesses for the state in the trial of John Petrosi, paving contractor charged with bribing a city Inspector to sign for loads of asphalt never delivered, was located yesterday at Fitkin, and deputies are expected to escort him to Richester to testify again, on Mon day.

Trimble delayed the first trial Trimble supplied important testi mony fo rthe state at the initial which ended when ihe Jury disagreed. Ho claimed that Petrossi offered him a share in the booty to be obtained from the city by signing slips for asphalt which was never delivered. Trial Resumes Monday The present trial was adjourned yesterday in County Court by Judge William C. Kohlmetz until Monday at 3:30 o'clock. The hearing started Wednesday when attorneys began selecting 12 jurymen from a new panel of 100 which had betn drawn.

The jury box was finally filed Thursday morning, witnesses heard, and testimony began an hour earlier yesterday, In an effort to speed up the trial. Trimble Is expected to be the last witness of the state. His evidence is expected to corroborate that cf Edward J. Lynd, another inspector. I.ynd aided the district attorney's office in obtaining evidence against Petrosal, according to the testimony brought out.

by Assistant District-Attorney Frde S. Hiibrook, in charge of the prosecution. One of the first witnesses called the present hearing, Lynd testified that Petrossi had approached him with an offer of a "share in the dividends," if Lynd would sign for loads of asphalt never delivered, which were supposed to have been used en a paving Job in Jersey Street. At the first trial It was contended by defense counsel Charles E. Bostwick, aided by Anthony Mlcell, that Petrossi was paid by the city according to the amount cf concrete used In the street.

This was determined, It was claimed, by the theoretical method, and coring tests so that Petrosal would have had no object in trying to get inspectors to pass extra-load tickets. According to the testimony, Lynd Continued on l'mce II Bids In Defendant's Home To Settle Suit John Kane of East Rochester yesterday bid in the home of Mrs. Jennie Joslyn in East Rochester to satisfy damages awarded to his six year-old daughter, Mary Irene Kane, in a negligence suit last year. The child was awarded $.800 damages, as a result of being hit by the automobile of Mrs. Jotlyn near her home In April, 192R.

Through her attorney, Wiltlam L. Clay, judgment was taken against the defendant the same day that James S. Bryan, attorney for Mrs. Joslyn, entered judgment for 11.600 counsel fees. The property bid In by Mr.

Kane consists of a house nd two and a half acres of land In East Rochester. Casket Firm Office Rilled by Burglars Two unlocked safes, files and desks In the offices of the Rochester Casket Company, 3f5 St. Paul Street, were ransacked by burglars who took $23.50, a top coat and tweater, according to a report made by officials of the firm to police yes-! terday. Entrance was gained through an unlocked window. Jury's Verdict Scaled in Trolley Injury Suit A sealed verdic was reurned lat night by a Supreme Court Jury b- of Petrossi In April by going to Pit- kin "for his health." At the start the present trial, Trimble is rumored to have gone there to fih.

i Thefts From Accused of acting together In purloining quantities of lead and ther metals from the plant of 'he Rochester Lead Works at 3m Ex change Street, Isadora Brown, 34, of 108 Crestline Drive, associate! In the metal business with run father, William Brown at 18 Rhin Street, and George Zelner, 38, of Strathmore Drive, Greece, shipping clerk for the lead company, were arrested last-night on a charge of grand larceny, second degree. According to John A. Doyle, head of the Doyle Detective Agency, th two have been operating for three years and have diverted metals of a total value of at Iea3t 1.10,000. The two were arrested last nlghj by Detectives Fordham and Durgen, accompanied by Mr. Doyle.

Doyle (WTARfOECHPK Avenue to Ontario son Street to Latta Road, to Green-leaf Koad and then to Beach Avenue. Supervisor William F. Schmitt of Greece, at the request of Harry J. Bareham, chairman of the Republican ounty Committee, is co-operating with the city officials In making as convenient as potjible the movement of motorists to Ontario Reach Park. Commissioner Baker has furnished some calcium chloride for sprinkling Greenleaf Road to prevent dust from rising The town officials are repairing the Continued nn Page 14 Demented Youth Not a Suicide, Coroner Says Coroner Richard Leonardo y- terday issued a certificate of death by drowning in the case of Ignatius Ia Marinto, 19, of 345 First Street, who fell from the Central Avenue bridge into the Genesee River.

The coroner explained that the death was not a suicide as the youth, who was mentally ill, did not mean to kill himself. "When he stood on the rail of the bridge he was harboring the delusion he could fly to heaven," the coroner said. "He had no Intention of killing himself Father Sercu was graduated from the commercial department of St. Joseph's Parochial School and for five years was an employee of the Central Trust Company. He then began to study for the clergy and joined the Redcmptarist Order.

He was graduated from the juv lor seminary of the order at Northeast, and entered the senior seminary at Esopua, N. Y. He was ordained June 20, 1920. After three years of pastoral service in Our Ladv of Perpetual Help Churi Brooklyn, he was sent as a mU-tion-ary to Aguas Buenas, Porto Rico, where he remained to hia deatn. Here Last in W1 Since that time he has visited Rochester tnfrequently, but a society known as the Porto Ricar.

Missionary Circle has raised funds to contribute to his work ard he has written constantly to hia mother and family. Ills last visit was In 1927, Just before the tornado left a trail of ruin, disaster and sorrow In the island. Father Sercu was actlvj in relief and rehabilitation woik. During active reconstruction work he was made administrator of ths town. Besides his mother, he leaver four sisters, Rosella Ethel Elea-nore L.

and Florence M. Sercu, and two brothers, Engelbert E. r.d Thomas Sercu. of Democratic (M XE blasts from a dog whistle temporarily Interrupted the proceedings. Bill Page had blown.

"That' BUI." they said all over Wheatland. "That's Bill Page," and the constituency smiled happily. Mr. Page will tell, on this anniversary of the blowing of a whistle that resounded round the world. trill says It was distinctly heard In London, Just where the Inspiration blow hi whistle.

He say that the of a dog whistle by him at the convention at Houston was tne nrst time. In the history of the Demo cratic party, that a dog whistle tn used for signalling purpose at a convention. Mr. Page feat of blowing the first whistle ever blown for eignal- i inr mail ic ziiur Point at sitting, and the fl- 'low who sat on the ton of a pole for tight days. I WILL GO TO COUNCIL Resolution Drafted Asking City Adoption; Sewer Plan Proposed A plan for the revision of local property assessments which will establish a uniform system of relieving owners of corner lots.

Irregularly shaped lots and deep and shallow lots from excessive expense for street Improvements will be presented to the City Council In the near future as the result of a resolution passed yesterday by the Real Estate Board at its meeting at the Powers Hotel. C. Pratt of the Bureau of Municipal Research spoke before the board yesterday and outlined the plan in detail, offering a resolution to be presented to the council. The plan was worked out by the Rochester Real Estate Board and the Bureau of Research and with certain alight alterations the suggested scheme presented yesterday will be that proposed to the Council. Text of Resolution The resolution on which the Council will be asked to vote reads as follows: Brt It Resolved, That in the matter of the Nie8iiing of the cot of improvements on residential street where a majority of the frontage of the afreet Improved is of corner lols It shall be the policy of this council to ases a portion nf the ont upon property on Intersecting nt reels ad-jacent to the improvement and Thut.

in general, it will be the pot-try of this council so to apportion the costs for assessment that the long siilei of corner Inls fronting on such streets will receive no greater burden by reason of having a long Continued on Pe DRY CHIEFTAIN STARTS PROBE OF OFFICE HERE Patton Silent as M'Campbell Investigates Alleged Use of Girls, Inefficiency Buffalo. June 21 Charges that the Rochester office of the Federal prohibition service was repeatedly Inefficient and had been reported as using girls to obtain evidence of liquor sales, made yesterday by the Federal Grand Jury at Rochester, are under investigation, Andrew McCampbell, prohibition administrator for the Buffalo district, declared today. Mr. McCampbell said he believed that the resolutions of censure adopted by the Federal body were unjustified, but that he had dispatched special Investigators to Rochester today to make a survey. Agents in the district, he said, had been expressly warned not to use women in getting evidence.

"Wo.nen may have been used In I isolatd he said, "but the piactisi certainly was not Harold F. Patton, In charge of the prohibition enforcement in the Hochester district, declined to make-any comment on the action of the Jury and said he was acting under instructions from Mr. McCampbell. The grand Jury, which made a partial report to Judge Simon Ad ler Thursday, will resume It deliberations next Tuesday. Police Arrest Youth in Loss of Motor Car Accused of Tenting an automobile on June 15 and failing to return it, Raymond Knight, 18, of Jf2 F.ritton Road.

Greece, was arrested last night by Detectives Fox and Folk on a warrant charging grand larceny, second degree. The warrant wa sworn to by official of the Drive-It System, Inc, of Broad Street, when they failed to locate their coupe which ha been recovered by police. Knight will be arraigned In City Couit thi morning. Park Band to Play at Ontario Beach Led by Herman Dossenbach and assisted by Nicholas Fiore, cornetlst, the Park Band will give the following concert at Ontario Beach Park at o'clock tonight America March Third Alarm Overture Kavmund Walt Blue Lwnube Fantasia Shepherd Life in the Alp Intermlftaa PeWira Hawaiian Cornet Solo Gten Walt Mrhela tiure r.hdsolv Mar lea Banner 18-MILE SPEED REACHED Men Pleased by Demonstration; to Report Findings to Capital With expressions of satisfaction over the demonstration, a group of high army officers returned to Washington last night after spending the day watching the performance of a new kind of jslot tank perfected and manufactured at the James Cunningham Son Company plant here. The group arrived in Rochester yciterday morning and spent several hours observing the, performance of the new machine ot war in a field bordering the Barge Canal near the Buffalo Road.

The party which came here for the exhibition included C. C. Williams, chief of ordnance; Col. Harry L. Cooper, assistant commander of the tank school and president of the tank board, and Capt.

L. D. Thorp, test officer for the tank board. Built for Grades and Speed The new machine is an eight and one half-ton steel tank which mounts a machine gun in a turret and is equipped to climb steep grades, traverse rough terrain and travel at a comparatively high rate tt sneari Tf it-aa riuvplrined after of stiidv under tha direction j0 vjai Levl Campbell, who has been in Rochester for some time and who conducted the tests yester day. Every sort of strain and severe test was Imposed on the new machine in a series ot trials which began in the morning and continued for several hours In the afternoon.

The scene of the demonstration Is a rough and Irregular field of hard clav. covered with stones and con cealed under several feet of herbage. Loaded on a truck, the tank was brought to the site. The demonstration began when it was run down a plank under its own power. Then came speed trials, hill climbing trials, turning and stopping, reversing.

'The tests were repeated as the machine skimmed about with seemingly the speed of a fleet horse. General Williams, Colonel Cooper and others of the inspecting group donned overalls and "goggles and took rides in the tank to test Its riding qualities, or whatever else tra'ned experts are Interested In, and the stability and speed of the machine came in for much commendation. Results Declared Satisfactory Tabulation of results of the trials disclosed that a high speed of 18 miles per hour had been attained and that the tank successfully ascended a hill of 43 degrees grade. There were no steeper hills accessible, but members of the group declared themselves more than de lighted with the machine's hilr climbing ability. The tests were highly successful In all respects," Major Campbell declared.

"The tank did everything which it was designed to do and I think that none of us could have asked for more." Official action In regard to acceptance of the model tank will not be taken until several conferences take place In Washington, but Ma Jor Campbell said he feels assured that It will prove satisfactory. At the Genesee Valley Club, where the visitors were guests following the trials, members of the group commended the performance and design of the new tank and congratulated Major Campbell and Cunningham officials for Its success. 4 Youth Visits Morgue on Sentence lor I raffle Violation In the dim. half-light ot the city morgue, Sam Serlbani, 19, of 23 Al-mira Street, gazed unwillingly at rorpses of unidentified dead, victims of automobile accidents. Then, for good measure.

Morgue Superintendent Benedict Corcoran, drew forth tier on tir of other bodies nd uncovered them to Sam's unwilling gaie. Serlbani was serving the sentence Imposed yesterday morning by Judge Arthur Wilder In City Court after he had been arraigned on a charge of driving without an operator license. It wa testified that two children who Jumped from in front of Seribani machine were hurt as they leapt into the path of another. Judge Wilder' sentence was: Ten day or 110." Then the Judge suspended sentence, providing the youth visit ihe morgue to view It dead to impress upon him the result of Improper driving. FIRE K(MF Damage of ll.V) was done to the home of Albert Towner at 274 Curtis Street yesterday when fire of undetermined origin broke out on the roof.

Firemen were forced 10 chop away a section of the roofing before the flame were extinguished witlt chemical lint I i Abandoned Car Once Givea to Suspect in Insurance Fraud, Detectives Say Six persons, two of them women, were held without bail last tilghe In connection with the shooting o( Mrs, Rose Resso of 253 Pennsylvania Avenue, ahot down In front of hef home with a shotgun from a paes Ing automobile Thursday morning, Police believe that the arrest ar th (olutlon of the case, which at first threatened to remain a mys. tery. Those held are: Frank (Red) Granata of Cicero 111., formerly of thi city, tech nlcally charged with vagrancy. Frank La Placa, of 32 Heb bard Street, material wltnes. Joseph Furnarl, 1881 Clifford Avenue, material witness.

Mr. Paulina Sypnler, 19, of 40 Roacr Street, material witness. Elizabeth Chippero, 21, of 133 Bur well Road, material wltnes. Jame Chippero, 42, of 83 Noittt Street, material witness. Auto Fraud Charged Chippero and the two women were locked up last night, police say, when It wa learned that Chip pero on April 10 turned hi auto, mobile over to La Placa and later reported It itolen In order to col lect the insurance.

The two women were present when the agreement was made, according to police, who lay that the three have mad full confessions. Detective-Captain John McDonald declared that three wlt nesses, whose name are withheld, have been found who have Identified La Placa and Granata a tha two men riding In th sedan from which Mrs. Kesso was fired on. La Placa I alleged to havi been driving, while Granata, police say, fired two shots from the short-barreled shotgun. Both are to ba charged today with assault, first degree, with Intent to kill, Captain McDonald declared.

Granata la said to have coma here from Cicero Thursday morn ing to seek revenge on hi former wife, now Mrs. Nicholas Verenda, who lives at th samo house with; Mrs. Resso. lioth are of the sama appearance and both worked at the same place, usually rldinf to work with a cousin of Mis. Resso.

Believed Mistaken Victim The police theory Is that as Mrs. Resso was going to work with her cousin Thursday morning, unaccompanied by Mrs. Verenda, Gra nata mistook her for hi former wife, whom he had not seen In two years, and fired on her. Mrs. Res-( ontliiued en I'ace City's Oldest Man Is Missing for llth Day Today marks the Ilth duy clnce) the mysterious disipa'ance of Lotenzo Hills, 102, Rochester'.

oldest resident, Mr. Hills w.ilked out of his home at 33 Auxtin Street, before noon on June 11, his ona hundred and second birthday, and has not been beard of sine, at though police of this and other, cities have been searching for him. He was unusually active for a roan of his age, with very keen, mental faculties, according to bis daughter, Mrs. Helen Rosa, at' whose house he wa stsying. Bha believe that he has (on to another city 'to visit friend, aa ha was In the habit of taking long Journeys.

Two Held as Dry Men Visit Hotel Gilliard The Hotel Gilliard at 21S Clinton Avenue North was raided by Fed er.il prohibition agents yesterday, and Clare N. Toft was arrested aa proprietor and George F.insfleld, as bartender, when two barrels of alleged beer wer found on tha premises. Alleged wine and cider wra seized in a saloon at 89T Joseph Avenue, and Arthur Klrchegeasner wa arrested. Entering a saloon at the corner of Hebard and Bay Street, the agent found two barrel of alleged beer and arrested Henry D. Knoble a proprietor.

All were ordered to appear for hearings before U. 8. Commiuiooer F. Zimmerman. Customers Ousted as Refrigerator Breaks Breaking of a pressure gauge on the ammonia line of the refrw rerntlon svstcm in th market of E.

H. Kirby A Ron at 13M Dewey Avenue yesterday afternoon, drovai employer and customer to tha) street. Firemen with mask entered tha store and turned eff nue, were treated at the hospital for lacerations received from flying glass and debris. John F. Goen, night man at the station, address unknown, was cut but did not go to the hospital.

So great was the force ot the blast that one wall cf the station was blown out and the building adjoining It badly damaged. Windows of buildings and automobiles for about a block around were shat tered by the explosion. Pierce, a truckman, and Green an employee of the station, were filling an underground tank from a gasoline truck at the time of the explosion. Compressed air laden Continued en Tege 14 Lead Company i operatives have been working on the case for several weeks after the Rochester Lead Work reported a shortage on their balance sheet. Operative yesterday reported that Prown ordered 55 pigs of lead from the lead works In the morning and received 7S pigs.

The order was valued at 1325. In the afternoon he I said to have ordered 10ft pigs and to have received 120 pigs. He Is said to have superintended loading of the metal. Both are said to have admitted thefts of metals and, last night, Detective Fordham and Durgen recovered BO pigs of tin, said to have been stolen. Brown was re leased later In 12.000 bail bond.

Besides a possible broken neck Snedeker ha severe laceration of the face and body. The truck he swerved to avoid wa driven by John J. Quinn of Parma Center Road, Parma, and wa turning Into Ridge Road from Dean Road. Aaron Adamovsky, 42, of 19 Buchan Park, auffered a fractured wrist yesterday when a truck he wa driving overturned In a collision with a truck driven by Pss-quale Martone of 10 Julia Street at Pearl and South Goodman Street. Adamovsky went to hi home.

Promises Fair Weather for After six years of sacrifice and self-denial for nearly destitute inhabitants of a Porto Rican village. Rev. Raymond Sercu, CSS.R., a native of Rochester, gave the supreme sacrifice, his life for that of another, just a day before the ninth anniversary of his ordinatlor. to the priesthood. Word of the death and burial of Father Seieu was received Rochester yesterday by his mottier.

Mis Emma E. Sercu of 115 Ferris Street. The cablegram stating that her son drowned while attempting to save the life of another came only a few days after a letter from her son, dated June 12. Plan Memorial Mass Father Sercu died Wednesday and his body was buried Thursday, in accordance with the law of lr-' to Rico, stipulating burial within 24 hours after dath. Other Information than that he died while trying to save another and had been buried was not contained in the cablegram.

As a memorial to the priest who was born here, studied here and said his first mass after ordination in St. Joseph's Church, a solemn requiem mass will be said for his soul at 8 30 o'clock on the morning of July 4, Independence Day, in that church. Whistle Blower Detroit Couple Seriously Hurt in Ridge Road Crash Charles Snedeker. 51. of Detroit, was at the Ceneril Hospital last night with a possible broken neck and his wife, Mabel, 47, with a broken shoulder, after their automobile left the highway In Ridge Koad, eeven mile west of Rochester yesterday morning and crashed Into a telephone pole.

Snedeker, according to deputies, was hurrying to the bedside of his dying mother at Amsterdam when be swerved the car sharply to avoid collision with a milk truck and lost control. Hi machine turned over several times. Convention to Talk Over WHAM Summer Begins Officially With Shower Which Ends Torrid Spell Bill Page, Who Advised Friends of Arrival at Houston Meeting with Whistle that 'Resounded Round to Observe Anniversary of Notable Feat Meteorologist Vanderpool over Week-end: Yesterday Was Longest Day of Year by Few Seconds: Mercury Hits 85 By II KX William C. Tage. Democratic leader of Wheatland, who live In Mumford, has been asked to speak over WHAM next Wednesday evening at 8.45 o'clock on his experiences at the Democratic convention at Houston, Texas, which open a vear aeo Wednesday If you remember, Mr.

Page made 1 a conspicuous -some say, notable ture yesterday was 64 degree at JS a. m. Yesterday wa the longest day of the year by a matter of a few The temperatures yesterday officially recorded were: a m. a. bi.

a m. a. m. in a. II a Noun ft i 1 3 4 P.

7 i ..74 .74 .71 as mi howin? at Houston, due to a from that prompted -him to fore Justice Willis K. Gillette on.jtie mpI, he blew four time, Summer began officially at m.rglni tne iun ritlng al evidence in the suit of Miss Mary McXamara, former Rochester dressmaker and pianist, against the iew lor btate Railway. Misithose present. to notify friends in Wheatland, and other of the known wi: he had arrived and was among Knew Hill Wa There "Four blast from a dog said Bill, before leaving for the second, mere are 11 days on which there I little difference In the length of the day, according to Meteorologist Jesse L. Vanderpool, but yesterday won out by a i 32 a.

and letting at 7:53 p. m. Th four-degree drop in temperature was the result of a brief but heavy thundershower between 4 and o'clock. Rain tasted about 20 minutes ard two-one-hun-dredths' of an Inch fell Meteorologist Vanderpool said be looked for light showers during th night but espePtcd fair snd warm before yesterday' ended at 7.2ft o'clock yesterday afternoon and brought with it at least temporary relief from the heat of the last week, and shortly thereafter the long awaited showers promised by the Weather Bureau felL They succeeded in cooling the somewhat sultry air. Until 1 o'clock In the af'ernoon.

when a tempetotur for! Lone Star State, "and you'll know I ling purpose at a Democratic cotv am there." jventlon will go down In posterity Anxious lisieners-ln on the con- with other unusual feat. There Is ivention proceedings, hanging ovr'th feat, for Instance, of the man aiwimin lunerea injuries Dy a fall In a trolley car four years ago which medical testimony claimed had permanently deprived her of the us of her limbs. Miss McX'amara was awarded 121.M2.MI by a Supreme Court jury-when the uit was fint tried In 127. When, the verdict waj np- pled. the Appellate Division Fourth Department, ordered re-.

hearing of the evidence. i i I 1 the of 83 degrees wa recorded. but not particularly hot tempera-the thermometer had risen stesdily ture todiy and tomorrow, all day. but began filling when the Yesterday- rain was the first in kles cloud'd over 2 o'clock. exactly seven day.

The last shower i. o.i i i nn i was a momentary silenc at Its con- elusion. Then eomeone rapped for arder, and a great blast four (real and by 4 slock had fallen to 7Sj degree. leaiptra-40 clock la th morning of Jua li'tha ammonia. 1.

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