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AUSTIN, TX / ACCESSWIRE / May 13, 2021 / Best Roofer of Austin Texas, Austin Roofing and Construction, wants to help locals recognize, identify, and manage hail damage to keep their home value high after the storm.
Hail damage is a problem that has plagued homeowners for hundreds of years, and it isn t going anywhere fast. Austin Roofing and Construction knows all about hail damage and the problems that come with it, which is why they are weighing in on what homeowners need to know. As roofing experts, they are prepared to share their expert opinion on identifying and managing hail damage.
Signs of Hail Damage
Suspicious Fire Guts Home near Benton City, Say Deputies
According to Benton County Deputies, and Benton County Fire District crews, the home was burned to the ground.
A person of interest is reportedly being sought by Benton County Deputies after a house fire burned through an unoccupied building.
Around 9PM Wednesday night, Deputies and Fire crews responded to the blaze on North Schumcher PR Road near Benton City.
Authorities didn t say who called it in, but when they arrived the home was completely engulfed in flames.
Fortunately, no one was inside as it was learned the home is unoccupied. For that reason, and because a person of interest was reportedly seen in the area just before the fire began, Officials are calling it suspicious but did not use the word arson.
LOUISIANA, Mo. â Itâs been 90 years since a big kaboom rocked Louisiana, and no one has been brought to justice.
A tremendous explosion decimated the newly-opened Clark Theatre on the southeast corner of Fourth and Georgia streets in downtown Louisiana.
It happened at 2:20 a.m. Thursday, May 28, 1931. No one was killed or injured, but the blast remains a mystery.
A Louisiana night watchman reported spotting two men in a parked car on the otherwise vacant street near the theater 35 minutes before the explosion, but did not question them.
Dynamite placed at the Clarkâs front door tore a three-foot hole in the sidewalk. An iron pillar was the only thing holding up the second floor after concrete a foot thick was blown away.