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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 17

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Rochester, New York
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17
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CITY. NEWS SPORTS Section II FINANCIAL NEWS Section. WANT. ADS 9STH YEAR KOCHESTEIi. X.

FRIDAY. 1030 PAGE SUPPORT FOR iNathaniel G. West Appointed jONE DEATH Title Group to Hear Surrogates; Mastick Discusses Mortgage Tax nrr 10 Head tnariotte High bcnool DENSE SMOKE TESTS SKILL OF FIREMEN MLLMLLU1 IN RECORD HEAT WAVE Promotion Recognition of Outstanding Ability, Superintendent Says JUDGES FIX NEW TRIAL TERMRULES Designed To Speed Up Court Procedure in Seventh Judicial District SAID GAINING All Groups Signing Plea for Special Council Poll, Bareham Says Lyell Avenue Man Dies in One Overcome in Blaze at Hospital After Collaps- I Bartholomay Plant Now ing on Building Job Being Demolished NEED LONG RECOGNIZED MERCURY SOARS TO 90 CONTROL IS DIFFICULT; If 4 I tv ft i I i I Showers Today Expected to Thick Walls Resist Play of ILLEGAL, SAYS GERLING Holds Charter Change-Is Needed to Give Council Right to Call Election Old Regulations Not Revised Since 1917, Inadequate to Present Calendar Bring Relief from Torrid Streams; Men Risk Lives to Get Upper Hand Spell Lasting 4 Days Rules governing the conduct off the trial term of Supreme Com 3 in the Seventh Judicial District. mm Hi i I 11 1 mum 11 1 II 11 fc i imI One fireman was overcome by acrid fumes of burning cork insulation and the. neijfliborhpod for blocks around was shrouded In a dense pall of smoke yesterday afternoon as fire again swept the partially dismantled portion of the Bartholomay Company's plant on the east bank of the river at Smith ilreet.

Thousands of gallons of water were pumped Into the burning structure before the smoulder NATHANIEL G. WEST Active at meeting of New York State Title Association. William Warren Smith of Buffalo, (left) president; and Senator Seabury C. Mastick, guest speaker. $17,000 for Harbor Work Here Approved Surrogates will have their day' consisting of Monroe and ievenj adjoining counties, were reviseetj yesterday afternoon hi the Interest of efficiency.

This revision Is the first ainc March 15, 1917, and the rule pro-' mulgated by the trial justices atj' that time, while they met the situ- ation then, are not considered adequate to the present condition of1 the trial calendar, and all of tho! trial justices lent themselvei devising a remedial program. To Call Only Preferred Cane I One of the changes provides foit the calling only of the preferred, cases at the opening of each trial, term. It has been the practise ii By JIXIA M. TRAVKR Nathaniel G. West, principal of Andrews School No.

9 for neariy thirteen years, was yesterday assigned to be the new principal of Chailotte High School, to succeed Roy L. Butter-field, who has been transferred to the principalship of the new Benjamin Franklin Junior-Senior High School. This assignment, brings recognition to the next to the oldest in point of service, of the Rochester public school principals, Mark Way of Henry Lomh School No. 20 being the (lean of them all. Mr.

West, entered the Rochester public school system in September, 19U, when he became principal of old Benjamin Frainklin School No. 6. row designed as William Fitzhugh School No. 6. Native of Indiana Mr.

West was born in Mier, Ind but came to Rochester in his early years. He was graduated from East High School in the class nf 1903, and from the University of Rochester in 1907. After graduation from college, Mr. West was principal of School No. 7 in Olean for three years, and then principal of the Greigsville High School until he came to Rochester as principal of old Benjamin Franklin School.

In announcing the appointment, yesterday. Superintendent Herbeit S. Weet said: "Mr. West has been an Indefatigable student, receiving his master's degree as the result of summer session work at Columbia University, He took one year's leave of absence, 1927-29. and did work In residence, at New York University.

As the result of hi? years of study, he has. completed all the work in residence for the degree of doctor of philosophy, and needs only the final thesis and the final examinations. Mr. has been an outstanding principal in all that relates to his school and the system as a whole. Hi was president of the Rochester Teachers' Association In 1916-17, and has been identified with the state and national elementn'y principals' associations.

His promotion to the principalship of the Charlotte Junior-Senior High School comes as a reward not only of service, but of outstanding ability as a principal and student of education." Crintinued nn Va KlRhtcett Death cf a man from prostration yesterday marked the fourth day of the heat wave In Rochester. The maximum temperature was 90 degrees at 4 o'clock as compared witha high of $9 degrees Wednes-day; 88 Tuesday" and 81 Monday. The dead man is Frank Fidele. 50, of 144 Lyell Avenue, who collapsed Wednesday afternoon while working in the sun on a building at 119 Main Street West. He wa-s taken to the Strong Memorial Hos pital, wheie he died at 4:30 o'clock yesterday morning.

His body was taken to the morgue, where Coroner David Atwater said he will conduct an autopsy and inquest. Approaches Record Yesterday's maximum temperature compares with a record Jejune 5 of 93 degrees, established In 1925. The thermometer has reached 90 only once before this year, on May 23. The minimum was 66 degrees at 6 o'clock in the morning. Relief from the hot weather today is predicted by Meteorologist Jesse L.

Vanderpool. He expects showers and cooler weather today. Hour.y temperatures yesterday follow: The ta-k of obtaining signatures to petitions urg'ng; a election for rouncilman-at-Iarge this fail is well under way, according to Harry J. Bareham. Republican county chairman.

Mr. Bareham said that ward leaders inform him that Republicans, Democrats and enthusiastic City Manager League advocates are signing the petitions as they feel that the people this fail should have an opportunity to break the counrilmanic deadlock. The petitions will be filed with the City Council next. Monday evening. The attitude of the Law Committee of the City Council, which Is made by of Vice Mayor Isaac Adler, chairman; Councilman Louis S.

Foulkes and R. Andrew Hamilton will be determined after the matter is formally presented on Monday evenir.j. It Is not expected that the four City Manager League councilmen will concur in the wish of the Republican organization that election be. held next, fall and it is expected that they will stand firm in their position that, the election should be held next year. Illi-gnl, Knvs Gerling Jacob Gerling, former alderman, who served under three charters, claims that the election cannot be of rieasantvllle was the chief speaker before the afternoon session yesterday.

He pictured the mortgage tax as a burden on the borrower and urged its abolition. Edwin H. Lindow, president of the Union Title Guaranty Company of Detroit, to'd the convention that title insurance is due to supplant the abstract in real estate just as public records supplanted word of mouth and abstract of title supplanted examination of public records. Franklin F. Russell, professor of la win Brooklyrt Law School, spoke on "Proposed Statutory Change in the Law of Per before delegates to the tenth annual convention of the New York State Title Association in the Hotel Seneca today when Surrogates Joseph M.

Feely of Monroe County. jgother with State Senator George K. Fearon of Syracuse, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, address the sessions. More than a hundred are attending Mr. Feely wil lspeak on "The Risk of an Unknown Will in a Purchase from Heirs' and Mr.

Foley on "Recent Improvements in the Law of Estates." Senator Pearon's subject will be "An Effective Mechanics Lien Law." An allotment of $17,000 for the Rochester harbor was included In a total of $39,580,090 for rivers and harbor works in all parts of the United States and insular possessions approved yesterday by Secretary of War Hurley, according to an Associated Press "Mispatch from Washington. Other harbors on Lake Ontario were given allotments as follows; Great Sodus Bay harr.ru;, Little Sodus Bay harbor, Oswego harbor, $65,000. can tne entire calendar, a proce-j dure that took more than a half, day. i petuities." George A. Loewenbcrg State Senator Seabury C.

Mastick and Anson Gctrnan also spoke. ing debris was extinguished. The one casualty of the blaze, Fireman William Powers of Hose 3, Who lives at 35 Masseth Street, was overcome as he directed a hose line. He was taken to the General Hospital. The fire started at 1:35 o'clock when Alexander Mackie, employed by the William T.

Jackling Wrecking Company, which is razing part of the plant to make way for the new Smith Street bridge, was using an acetylene torch to cut away some steel beams. Mackie said a small but red hot piece of steel dropped down the center of the wall and ignited the insulation. Chief Mounts Ladder Dust-dry after standing for years, the Insulation burst Into flames and Mackie was driven back by the suffocating fumes. A telephone alarm brought Battalion Chief Edward Ragan and companies to the scene. So quickly had the flames spread that Chief Kagan put in an alarm for additional apparatus which also brought Battalion Chief George Moran.

In the hope of knocking doi one of the walls to permit tlreme.i to play their streams directly on the burning debris Chiefs Moran and Ra'an had three hoselines connected to one high pressure nozzle and a pumper run at full force. But the. old walls, three and four feet thick In some places, withstood the tremendous pressure. Continued on fag Twenfy-lhree held this fall. Mr.

Gerling is a itudent of the election law and he maintains that the. privilege of the council to rill the vacancy caused Six-year-old Pedals Velocipede Fourteen Miles in Under 7 Hours Congress Avenue Lad, Missing from Home, Discovered by Sheriff's Deputies at Crittenden Road Farm Tired but Safe and Trusty Velocipede Intact By FRANK THOMPSON i 5 a. tifl I p. h7 6 a. fifi 2 7 a.

3 p. 8 a. 7u 4 p. i 9 a. 74 ft p.

1 111 h. 79 i fi p. ill a i 7 p. itt S'i Noon Sd 8 p. I a p.

Nine-day-old Baby Boasts Two Teeth A nine-day old baby born at the Highland Hospital to Mrs. Helen Walsh of SI Werner Park, was found to have two teeth peeping thiough the front of its lower jaw when the mother and babe were taken home yesterday. Such cases are rare, physicians said, because the first teeth do not usually appear until babies are from four to six months old. Only two of the justices whni signed the rules in 1917 are service now. Justice Robert vl Thompson Is an associate of the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, and Supreme Couiti Justice Adolph J.

Rodenbeck ut now senior justice of the six trl'ilj justices in the Seventh District Justice Rodenbeck has long; noted throughout the nation a student of simplification of Judl-1 cial practises in the interest ofj efficiency and the protection oC, Interests of litigants. Besides Justice Rodenbeck, the justices who signed the present lules ate Benjamin B. Cunningham, Willis K. Gillette, Marsh Taylor, Clyde W. Knapp and Ed-I win C.

Smith. The rules will Hied with the county clerks of Monroe, Cayuga, Livingston, Ontario, Seneca, Steuben, Wayne Yates counties. They are of lap, reaching importance In the practise of law, and they will beJ. printed and incorporated in the court calendars. i Continued on 1'age Mneteea Prisoner on Hunger Strike Unbalanced distance velocipede tlons such as curb stones at inter- All long sections, Robert and the velocipede settled into their stride.

ny the. deatn oi tne late Joseph C. Wilton lapsed by its failure to act in the first 30 days. "The charter says that when vacancies in the office of councilman arising otherwise than by expiration of term or by recall shall, within one month, be-filled by appointment by majority vote of the remaining members of the council," laid Mr. Gelling.

"On account of the deadlock the council did not exercise this provision1 of the charter. Therefore, unices some provision for filling the vacancy can be found in the public officers law or in some section of The course led out the Scottsville INDICTMENTS FOR TWELVE IN PROSPECT Road to Eallantyne Bridge, than down the Town Line Road to West Henrietta Road, West Henrietta records for the 6-year-old clans were broken yesterday when Robert Schuler, 6, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Schuler of 282 Congress Avenue, burned up the county roads In a non-stop flight that ended only when Robert ran out of leg power and came to rest at the farm of Paul Lucas in Crittenden Road, miles from his home hangar and after nearly seven hours of peddling. Seen and Heard By Henry W.

Clune "Chocolate sundaes are. bad, and bo is white bread," said a member of the medical profession, with whom the man who suffered from a pain low in his right side occasionally lunched. "Per Road to Crittenden Road, where the landing was made on the Lueus farm. Official records: 14 miles, hours. the state, constitution, the vacancy I With all honor due such hero Robert and his history-making Burglars Flee Job, Leaving Stolen Car will stand until the next municipal tlcctlon in Continued on rare Twrnty-three velocipede were brought back to Unlike his predecessor.

the famous Colonel Lindbergh, Robert the city by the deputies, acting as a guard of honor. Later when police began broadcasting information concerning the missing pilot, Robert was rushed to his home. haps you aren't getting enough roughage. Maybe you need a tonsillotomy operation. Are your feet flat?" So the man who suffered from a pain low in his tight side gave up chocolate sundaes for dessert and eschewed white bread.

But the pain didn't desist. He took to eating roughage, nibbling at lettuce leaves like a rabbit, eating raw cabbage salad, which he detested. And between his lettuce leaves and cabbage salad, he ate rye bread, with caraway seeds, although no taste in the entire category of tastes was so abominable to him. Sometimes it wasn't a pain. Sometimes It was Removed to Municipal Hos took off from the home hangar at 9 oclock yesterday morning In his Schuler, single-pair-o f-l motored velocipede without even a sandwich or a bottle of pop.

The utmost secrecy surrounded the takeoff. The home folks. Mr. and Mrs. Schuler, lacking information concerning the flight, eventually be- Police Find No Law against Color Waves So Colonel Ghadiali May pital for Observation I A burglar trio, who escaped when surprised at work and left a stolen automobile behind them, were sought by police last night.

They were discovered early yesterday morning when they tried to break into the warehouse of the General F'oods Sales Company at 101 Thorndale Terrace. James Phillips of 60 Lazier Street, district manager of the comnanv? whose home Is In front Arson Squad Probes Fire in Denise Road Crazed by a hunger strike whlchi "jrrme anxious and notified the. po merely a dull depression, he was always of the disturbance -pain or dull depression. lice of Robert's disappearance. Then Lucas notified the sheriff's Grand Jury Expected to Report Today -County Buildings Inspected With its Inspection of county buildings completed late yesterday afternoon, the Monroe County Grand Jury is expected to return twelve Indictments in Its partial presentation to Supreme Court Justice Fdwin C.

Smith this morning. Arraignments will follow directly after the indictments, four of which are expected to be scaled, are handed up. Since the Grand Jury convened only Tuesday, its session probably will be one of the shortest in Rochester in a long time. The County Court criminal term, which will open Monday, also is expected to last only a few days. The Grand Jury yesterday In-snected the County Jail, Alms House, County Hospital and Rochester State Hospital.

Itecommen-dations and report on conditions will he. Included in Its presentment this morning. and Deputy Sheriffs Rert of the warehouse, was awakened office bv the noise buiulars made as'Iase and Raymond Flynn were Investigation was begun yesterday by the arson sijuad of the Fire Bureau Into a Hre of supposed Incendiary origin which early yesterday morning swept an unoccupied house In Denise Road, near Lake Avenue, and did damage of $1 fiOO. thev tried to force a window with dispatched to the scene of Robert's jimmies and crowbars. Handing.

There they received first After shouting to them, he called hand information concerning the police, but no trace of the trio record-making niRnt. He asked people who had been operated upon for appendicitis about the pain of the operation, and was told that theie was no pain. One i man who had passed successfully through the operation said, "You simply put your head into a sort of a hoodlike thing, and take deep; breaths, and do exactly as they say. If you go under without you come out so much easier. If you tight, you'r bound to come out-er.

unpleasantly. You may say things you don't mean. You may! call out names from the past. Use words that aren't used in polite society. Make a general bum of yourself." "But what if you don't come out of the ether quickly? What then?" "You either come out." replied the man who had survived ici operation, "or you don't.

And if you don't, of course, you'll never a fourth at bridge again." What an atrocious taste in jokes! "If you don't com? out, you'll; After an excellent takeoff and he has endeavored to maintain nt the Monroe County Penitentiary, for two weeks, despite forced feed-, ing, Michael Guerin, 52, formef' prosperous Salamanca yesterday was removed to the Ma-, nicipal Hospital for observation. 1 Guerin, who Is serving a sentence' on a third degree assault charge, is said by authorities at the pent-, tentiary to have bitten one of th guards in the arm several days! ago. i He was sentenced from Salamanca to serve a year in the penitentiary and pay a $500 fine. He-completed his year's sentence iev-7 months ago but as he was unable to pay the fine he was serving 500 additional days as prescribed by law. Guerin is said to have-claimed that penitentiary authorities were trying to poison his food.

could be found. The stolen car, found nearby, was owned by Frank Kopal of 75 Barons Street, and had been stolen from his garage about midnight. with favorable although lather warm weather, the "Junior we" followed a course, through the city streets to the Scottsville road. The blaze was discovered by-Mrs. Lena Pitcher, who lives opposite the house, which is owned by the estate of Mrs.

Louise W. There, with no bad flying condt-! Rnestow. Lecture Unhampered After a long and diligent search, conducted with much wet-thumbing of law books and with the advice of the teachingand medical professions, the police have discovered that there is nothing in the penal cool of the gieat state of Nov Yrrk that prohibits anybody talking about attuned color waves. As result Col. Prnsah P.

Ghadiali, w-ho professes to be thoroughly familiar with the harmonious waves and what they can do for humanity, is going to continue, his set ics of lectures at the. Powers Hotel where tonight he will tell "why attuned color waves surpass medicine." Police suspicion concerning the colonel and his attuned color waves "was aroused when the colonel was arrested here last Saturday on a grand larceny charge preferred by a Buffalo man. Colonel Ghadiali went to Buffalo and returned to complete his lectures here after pooling SI, SOU bail. A report that he bad been invited to be a guest lecturer before the police school Dailey Names First Fireman, Views Fire New University Carillon Wins Approval of Music Authority Dr. Dayton C.

Miller, World Famous Physicist, Says Bells 'Finest I Have Ever Heard After Inspecting Installation in Library Building Tower The first fireman to be appointed I by Donald A. Dailey, commissioner Because He's Wilson Denies Larceny Charge in Auto Theft and standing of 97.1b8 per cent is appointed to till a vacancy in the flie bureau. Commissioner Dailey went to his Hy HAKI.l'.S V. (iOSNKIX Characterization of the carillon organ at the Eastman School of first, fire yesterday afternoon. It was at the old Barthoiomay plant Music of the university, was consultant In choosing and tuning the bells.

in the tower of the new library building of the University of Rochester as one of the finest he has in Smith Street and he watched with great interest the work of tha firemen. was emphatically denied. Again Delayed, Parker, Trial Set for Today! The method of tuning was the Richard K. McGheo of 1,18 Comfort Street yester lay pleaded guilty in Federal Couit to tampering with tha mails. Federal Judse Simon L.

Adler gave him a suspended sentence of three montlis in the Monroe County Penitentiary. McGhee Is said to have confessed to Postal Inspectors E. B. Teagle and Clarence F. Ford that he opened the mail of a neighbor who was on the route along which he delivered mail.

He said he took nothing from the letters, but opened them because he was curious. Wayne R. Wilson, 21, of Mount Hope Avenue, pleaded not guilty when arraigned In City f.ourt yesterday on a charge of second fe-gtee grand larceny for toe alleged, theft of an automobile last August. His case was adjourned to June 1-'. Wilson Is accused of stealing a car owned by Winston Churchill cf 45 Cornell Street.

The car was recovered a short time later when Deputy William F. Hoff overtook the car in Brighton and arrested Wilsons pal. Lester Ga'dner, of 132 South Avenue. Wilson escaped and was arrested Wednesday upon his return to this city. "five point" tuning which perfects the actual pitch of the bell, and the four overtones above, and eliminates extraneous frequencies.

The scale of tha cerillon is B-flat with some of the -hromatie intervals, which mekes it possible to play almost any tune. never make a fourth at bridge The man who suffered from a pain low In his right side hail always had a dcspeiate abhorrence of knives; particularly knives that were thrust into the lower abdominal regions, and those long explorative devices which surgeons use to find infection. In the days when he was in the full vigor of health he had once been taken on an inspection tour of the surgery department of a hospital. Above one operating room he had observed a small balcony. And what's that for?" he asked his guide.

"Oh, that's where the speetatois sit to watch the surgeons work." "Well, that's a swell idea," said the visitor, who invariably became nauseated at the lirst faint whiff of iodoform. "Having a cheering section above. I hope, If they ever bring me into one of these operating theaters, some guy in the gallery won't drop a peanut -hell or a program into my incision. Do they actually applaud." "No no applause. But, of corse, there are some jokes paed among the.

operating surgeons and nurses. Patients do look grotesque, sometimes, when they are laid out stiff and cold. You must know that this business of surgery isn't half so grim and cold blooded as the lay mind pictures it." "I can appreciate that. But I'd prefer, for modesty, If for no other reason, to have an operation -were I to have one strictly private, At least, admission by card only The ftrtt and second week of pain, low In the right side of the msn who suffered it, came and went and the pain neither became acute, nor entirely departed. It clung riepi essingly.

The sufferer became Increasingly apprehensive. He dreaded the cold analysis of examination; he dreaded the pitiless disclosures of diagnosis. He had never even had a carbuncle pricked. The only operation he had experienced, in fact, was the lemoval, by an eye specialist, of an errant eyewinker from his eye. That had been bad enough.

It had cost $5. But no knives had been employed. No flesh had been cut through and held back, while the surgeons wen to work, by those cruelly devised gadgets called retractors. Someone flnnly said to the man who suffered from a pain low in his right side: "You better have something done about this. Peritonitis may set In if you let it go too long." So, after a night of wakefulness, during which a vivid phantasmagoria of fiendish horrors passed through the sufferer's brain, he made an appointment with a physician.

At the hour appointed, a nurse, Impersonal, Immaculate, efficient, greeted him In the ante-room and took his history. "Let's see," she said cheerfully, "you're suffering from a pain In the lower right Bide." The patient essayed a grin, which was more a grim grimace. "Yes." he agreed. "But it can't be appendicitis. You see, we have ever heard has been made by Dr.

Dayfon C. Miller, world famous physicist and authority on music, i Dr. Miller was In Rochester as special consultant to inspect the newly installed bells. He is professor of physics at, the Case School of Applied Science in Cleveland. He is the author of "The Science of Musical Sounds," and other books, and has himself invented After three postponements, the 'rial of Fred B.

Parker, former Genese County Republican leader. Dr. Slater Ta Dr John R. Slater, professor of English, played the chimes during nd Floyd Abrsrns and John G. Clark.

suspended prohibition! agents, Is expected to open at 1 this morning in Federal Court be-j fore Judge Simon 1.. Adler. I nu-ithe inspection, and will play them and made improvements on merous musical Instruments. Father Sues Railroad For Death of Boy, 5 Caught in Jaw by Crane Hook, Man Dies State Doctors' Head Urges Health Tests Speaking before the public dinner meeting of the State Medical Society at the Chamber of Commerce Thursday evening. Dr.

William H. Ross, president, made this statement in regard to periodic health examinations: "Medicine advocates a physical examination for everyone at regular intervals and corroborated by laboratory tests, blood chemistry, and the use of instruments of precision, for measuring functions of organs; the giving of advice regarding general habits of eating, sleeping, working and recreation, and treatment if needed at a time when it can be most surely effective: I. when disease is in a preventable or remediable stage to the end that life may be lived comfortably, happily, and efficiently. Medicine is organized for the advancement of its science and the making of medical knowledge available to the next year when the library is opened. He plans to play them several times a week, and has already adapted over 300 tunes for this purpose.

them are hymns, patriotic music and college songs. The IT bells are hung in the huge lantern that tops the stack tower of the library The clappers are moved by a system of wires, which, in turn, are actuated by a series of electromagnets Installed near the top of the tower. A control room, with the keyboard, is located near the top of the elevator shaft Kxcejttionally Fine Tone i "The bells are excetpionally fine toned and well tuned," Dr. Miller said after his inspection. "Sound-i ing in harmony, they are the finest I have ever heard." To improve transmission of sound from the tower, Dr.

Miller suggested cutting away portions of some of the beams supporting the bells, in no way endangering their support, and lill-i ing in gome of the corners in the The calendar blocked by the trial of fiustave A. Dmnierle, Buffalo pnstofTice employee, which consumed three days. Attorneys yesterday said they were certain that the trial will not receive another setback, and will proceed as scheduled. F. IlIOlsTaiAUGK DF.N IF Arraigned in City Court yesterday on charges of performing criminal operation on a 20-year-old wife, separated from her husband, a man and woman pleaded not guilty, and their eases were adjourned to June 27.

They were 1 floor. Trial of a suit for $10,000 against! the Pennsylvania Railroad Com-j pany for the death of his Joseph, 5, in which Dominic Izzo, 10 Ford Street, charges the boy lay for 25 minutes in a crossing shanty after being hit by a box car: at the Atkinson Street crossing on Nov. 25. 1929. opened before Supreme Court JusticeWillis K.

Oil-' lette and a Jury yesterday. The bov died in St. Mary's Hospital. The father is represented byi Heiby W. Ungerer' and Halton T.

F.ly, and the railroad by Edmund B'own of Buffalo, The bells were cast by Meenelyjin the tower. Injured nearly a week ago at the Webster Basket Works, where, he was employed, Charles Brock-man, 47, of Webster, died yesterday at the Snyder Sanatorium In that village. His body was taken to the Rochester Morgue, where Coroner David H. Atwater will direct an autopsy today. Brockman was fatally Injured when a laige hook dangling from a cable attached to a heavy crane used to raise logs, caught him under the Jaw and swung him Inter the air.

Rrothers. nf Watervliet, near Troy.) The are the gitt of the chil-N. makers of many famous of Arendt W. Hopeman. in peals in this country.

They were set up at the foundry and there tuned to absolute scientific ac honor of their father, who died recently. He was head of the contracting company which is now never had any appendicitis In our family- there no background for it No heredity. Oh, it couldn't be appendicitis." The nurse, fml'ed, condescendingly. It sounds very much like it." "wan her reassuring respone. "Very much like it, indeed.

But we'll see We'll ttt'. The doctor will decide what best." Continued Mrs. Florenre Vanderbug. 2S, of! 415 South Goodman Street, alleged! to have performed the td Alvin Hunt, IS. 825 Exchang Street, to hav aided and! bttd It.

building the "new university build- curacy. Harold Gleasott, professor of ings..

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