New York, March 25, 1911 (UP) - The most remarkable rescue in the history of the New York fire department was made in the building just before 9 o'clock. A deputy chief while wading through the water in the cellar heard from groans coming from the sub-cellar in the neighborhood of the freight elevator. Hurriedly summoning a number of men with lanterns, he lowered himself into the water. There, submerged, with only his head above the water, but clinging with a death grip to the cable of the elevator, he found Hyman Meshel, 21, of 332 E. Fifteenth street. The youth was hurriedly carried into the street where an ambulance surgeon forced a stimulant down his throat and brought him back to consciousness.