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— m Pere Chief Kenlon Clad in Ice; é tack. T 0 8 witehine he roof and but three 1 , who we rc d, say there was at least eight other watchmen in various pa ne building who have not yet been accounted for. Chapiain Who Ministered to Hurt At noon the fire had pretty well burned itself out, But business wa practically suspended in the financial district, ICE A FOOT THICK IN STREETS. The general tie-up of the district was made complete when rivers of water flowing through the streets for blocks around froze to the deptt of from two to twelve inches, Fire engines were frozen tight and could Not be moved after the fire until their wheels were chopped loose, Wate towers were slender monuments of ice frozen fast to the street. Th walls of the buildings opposite the Eauitatte were ice clifl THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, BI G CRO WDS WATCH MANY THRILLING RESC UES: 1912.% nd greatly in Helmont sing: were drenched w the danger. The maguific th water and must be FIREMEN INJURED IN MANY WAY. Willian Brown and Peter Donovan, on the au street side, fell down the ice-coated step of a building opposite, Brown's right arm was broken Donovan had a bad id his thigh was badly bruised An Jee splinter cut a h Engine No. 17. Pa of the y refurnished. enti ealp cut long ¢ Healy ross the face same company suffered the same rek ) inJury John Roth of Engine No fell from a slippery window ledge two | stories up. His leg wos broken, his back injured and hia head was cut. All these were taken to S!. Gregory's Hospital by Dr. Savage Charles Bass, Captain of Engine No. 24, was taken to Hudson Strect Hospital hedly ent and burned after a fall into the ruins. Besides the thousands of employees who worked for the $00 tenants Ma efore dawn a crowd ef alinost incredible size had gathered . : i n the streets as near aa the police would permit. Inspector Cahalane f tl d thousa of other the general usion the ee L of the building, thousands of others made the general confusion the {sent requisitions to Headquarters for rekerves from all over the city. excuse for a holiday 4 : There were 300 policemen on special duty whon his orders had been An insta of the general inconvenience was the predicament of the carried out. There was little business done in the financial district. American Exchange Nationa) Bank, which was obliged by law to hold its | Bankers and brokers and annual meeting on the premises. The stockholders had to wade through i six inches of water into the building at No, 125 Broadway, from which firemen were fichting the Equitable fire, and sat with their feet in water up to their ankles to hold their meeting. One feeble old director couldn’: get to the building unaided and was carried in by a big policeman, FIGHTING THE BLAZE A DIFFICULT PROBLEM. From the practical view of the fire-fighter, the blaze was the most difficult, problem New York's department has faced in) many a year. Weather conditions made a bad situation worse. Back of this trouble was the stupidity of the employees of the building, who made a silly effort to control the fire themselves, and after it had been gaining on them for half an hour protested against the calling of firemen by the ice. a. When the fire was at its ‘neight, just before dawn, there was a sight for early risers along the Columbia Heights section in Brooklyn to be remembered a lifetime. Against the dull purplish bine of the night, a monster forked tongue of flame, spitting sparks and embers and even blazing rafters, rose into the air for a quarter of a mile. Yellow at the core, it showed every hue of red and orange along its edges. The unearthly glare lighted, in fancitully shaded hues, the tall buildings which looked down on the seething furnace, Dore’s imagining’s of hell seemed like trifling guesses in the tace of the awful reality, down in the canyon of business New York, LACKED REALLY FIREPROOF PROTECTION. The EquitaLle itself was not a high building. It rose to eight stories TIRE CHAPLAIN PMC OLANG REMOVED THOUSANDS OF DOL-| LARS IN WASTEBASKETS | THROUGH STREETS. A wight of the fire was a pi jor clerks and oMcers of the Company, flanked by taking me vale and loose in e ofices of the pany, at Pine safety | Mark Snowden, an elderly man, of No. | 112 Oak street, Brooklyn, was knocked down by the bursting of @ hose Ine armed in bundles and uskets from Kquitasle Trust Ce guards, waste and Nassau streets, to i at Malden lane and Nassau street. His} Bee eee mee Seren ater ab mere al Bes biden except lie) jive was broken and he was removed to northeast corner, which was occupied by William A. Read, banker and | | Hudson Stret) Hosp’ Several other | mon were knocked down and bruined. broker. While it was called fireproof then it lacked nearly all the pro- tection whe it ‘now EVEN Ofes buildings, tely there has been talk stil) confined to the upner floors - Smoke mado it almost Impossible for of replacing it with a skyscraper, Jany of the men with him to accomplish anything. He ordered them out. Chief Engineer Davis entered the building at a fittle after 4 o'clock | When they reached the street he was missing. ‘They rushed back, but even to oversee the work of geiting it ready for the day, At half past 4/!n so short a time the fire had dropped down three stories, and the big o'tlock he went to the limekeeper’s room under the Pine street en. | inner rotunda was too hot for satety, trance, back of the elevators, A number of cleaners were lounging there | THREE MEN PERCHED ON ROOF. reading newspapers, One of them was leaning back against the parti- | Onlookers broke through the police Hnes at Cedar street and ran to tion of the storeroom of the Cafe Savarin, He sprang forward and | Deputy Chief Davenney, They caught hina by the arms and pointed up to rubbed his back. ; | the roof over the window arches, There were three men, ‘Thelf mouths verti oY | ighty hot,” he sald to Davis | were open as though they were screaming. Long streamers of flame were at wall is mighty hot,” he said to Davis. | spouting from the windows right under them, Only the broad, curved Davis laid his hand on the wall and ilinched. It was as hot as a) stone on which they perched kept them from burning. lighted stove. He ran to the door of the storeroom, opened it with his wet ‘Truck No. them,” said Devanney. Pass key and faced a room full of fire. He sounded the interior alarm ‘of the building, and with a force of ten foremen, cleaners and porters turned a line of hose into the room. POLICE WERKN’T TOLD FOR HALF AN HOUR, all for volun- 1 go after teers." Lieut. Humphries, who had been eut on the back of the leg by a plece of stone earlier in the morning, had been stitehed up by Surgeon Jarrett of Hudson Street Hospital and ordered home, ran Umping to his company, which was stationed east of Nassau street, and Ib up his men, The fire had been going for halt an hour when a man ran out of “Who wants this Job?" he asked. "Step out for Valeatsar auty ons Pine street to Broadway and told Policeman Foley there was a fire in) iyciniue at the wheris to. help the tere ted. Horses, the extension ladder ruck the Equitable Building. Foley went down Pine street on the run, rap: | was wheelod up r the place Where the doomed mon were. By this Ume they ping the curb with his stick as he ran, Sergeant Casey met him, a : Vitis i icaaee a vidbly praying and crossing themaelves. the two entered the building. with a coll ef rope it men to the roof of the building across the street It was thrown across the gap and one of the Ap soon as Casey got a look into the burning storeroom he sent Foley! 1 Huddy had tls hands closed on it when @ spray of flame fron below cut it 7 . 6 ale Nhe a knife. a iat diet ilale ei With a toreifle report somewhere about the third floor, the roof went tn, The What are you fellows butting tn for?” paid one of the engineors, got-| go. TWHIGh Eat Glan ales DiscOe diac plunged abwnclerinn ting in front of Foley, ‘We can take care of this ourselves,” F falling floors. the other two fe street and were unrecognizable when Go on, Foley,” commanded Casey, The policeman brushed the) fremen ran out and dragged them rv gidewalk, engineers avide and went, He had not reached the street when there was| One of them stuck the Jong, slight ladder, wavering under the welght 4 rh and 4 rear and the fire burst through the partition Into the elevator | of three men who were being ratsed to the coping, and It was very nearly iwi aad went whirling up to the filth floor, where it spread out tate thy Knocked over, The men had to cling to tt for thelr lives, Been ee era tne baeoeya Olub LIVED SHORT. TIME AFTER FALL. Depary Calef Blans, coming down Broadway ahead of the engines, took a x ‘ zy = ty (hk Mhentnn ot ihe! wiles ene} at the butiding when his ear turned into Pine strect and leaped | THE third man who fell was later found al pening y eral the fro box op the vorner to call second alarm between the Read building and the Equitable building on Pine street, A) Chief Kenion was thote three minutes after the second alarm, He aia, Mfemman carried him: to a place of comparative safety under au arch and Hot bother with a iuird alarm but turned in a fourth, Later he turned in TePOrted fo Chlef Winns, ‘The man died In an ambulance which was taktng | # Afth and thon sounded an alarm at the Brooklyn end of the bridge which | MM 9 SL George's Hospital, His skull had been fractured. A card in} was Massina Br Ia pocket caused the in the restaurant, Ata little afier dawn firemen huddled in the entrance of the Trinity Hullding heard a scream from the Equttable ‘irast Company on the first The men, all of them, rushed across the street, daring the tottering BLAZE WORKED RAPIDLY THROUGH BUILDING. | wall and the rato of hot stone. A hurried of the building comvinced Chief Kenlon that tt! The yells came from a small sidewalk opening. could nyt be saved, From the Lawyers’ Club and its dining room the Bre! pote thro eh the sidewalk window of the vault. Deputy Chief Devan paces sant SS «then north and baek to Broadway agit AC yent to them and ordered them back to the other side of the stroet, B15 o'clock the upper floors of the buliding were all a mass of fre | orders had not the slightest Infueace with the men. ituree Gatiniiona etcatod police to believe he ta, a cleaner Klyn firemen across to ald in the tight at tire i headquarters that never before in the history of Che cepartiwent bad @ requisition been made on Brooklyn for fire appa- ratus It was sald ay surve The flremon chopped a y etreet His Tle might as well have | \r Before a suff wevterly gale, which swept Ga-the bulldog! iivea ic ie are iisaih through Trinity Churchyard, w storm of burning embers was belng scat They Frank W pulled Peck of No. $24 Columbus avenue out of the | tered aver all (he buildings to the east of Nassau sireet, “Chief Kenlon had! note. He was nearly dead from suflocation and the fey chill of the water | falp mon take to ihe rovls of every bullding between Nassau and Wearl| in which he had been floundering told them there was another man | Streets, after warning janitors and caretakers to keep all windows closed. | somewhere In the murk. A firenian dropped through the hole and groping | He estimaved there was $50,000,000 worth of property within the danger around found and brought out Fred Peterson, who was uncogsclous, After | wi Ca a es egeore cnet OU anlr eeare ae on and Mie trepuscs bad ‘been lifted out things were getting too hot | folldated from three hydrants into the Lawyers’ Club windows, ‘The But hoarse erles still arose, One fireman stayed Just long enough to Pepi pivee OF tie mennrmernerh BUNGLES OF Dei Aelita, the Founh NaLDAAN Oct down an axe, which was gramned by @ hand nelow: He hed intended Bank on Nasseu street, the Chase National Bank on Cedar sreet, and tho! io pent | \n to the surface, bul the axe was twisted out of his hand Trinity Bullding on Broadway were all commandeered by the firemen who Then the atono shower drove him away, | shot ineffectual streams into the cauldron, All they hoped to do was to 3 ; | eer ua ay du cattln a ar hbiacans toi baits dn more dkuges CHOPPED WAY OUT WITH FIREMAN'S AXE. Floor rafters, heavy chairs, whole window frames, tables, burning like bis [tte Liter a negro, Lee Pelt t of the Cedar str entrance of paper, went whirling up into the 6ky until the suction of tho burning gas \ Ho hod the axe in his hand, He sald he had chopped his released them to fall (o the roofs of Lhe streets below ae ‘ Mucitack Sera tOTThe Aenean Ghat Keneldant GREAT CHIL’S OF STONE FALL 7O Ss? REPT. y het 4 office from his home in Seventy-second Wherever water struck great chips of stone, gome « mas big as a street, Ww the by ory of the herole rescue of Giblin man’s head, bounced off and rained Into the street Wind became and two other men f ho vaults tx told elrewhe flercer and flercer, aud, Whipping around the edge of the ‘Trinity Hullding Atal! noon Dig safe in the banking house of Kountze & often brake the force of even the mighty standplpe streams and threw them Co. broke t floor of the second story and crashed down into th down to Broudway to make the Walks apd the street surface a glirg offices of the M Ve Depostt Company, where the fire was burnin of Ice, tereely. Ter eum s Were at once brought to bear on the safe to keep tt The horses of the department a frightful time. Thoy arrived ina meltin 1 also ot aife deposit vaul wild state of un #8. Plain shod, they hud most « ) fallen many It was s ¢ ho Brook Ines came clanging over the fimes on the Ieo-couted streets, The great chunks of falling wood, all attre, tee and ) yo (he smoke pall whieh filled Nassau apd the constant rattle of broken stone, threw (hem into a pantie 1 ' iY ‘ 1 head of this column of nine engines and were consiant runaways, As fasi as an engine had t wh ad mt tool ¢ he Nowan street side of (he Dutkiing, He wrenche place the horses were unbitehed and tuben to quiet etn ted he would e to seve the Belmont Building, Including the In front of Benedict's jewelry store two hoaecaris, In a runaway, bad Equitable | locked Wheels on the sidewalk. Atop of them was a Battalion Chief's He added that If he succeeded tt would be arainst the utmost efforts of wagon. The horses were roaming around wild in Broadw on old an floor scrubber, who had run back after the police had put Deputy Chief Walsh went up inside the building while the fire was ! 4 She jusisted on sunning through the building throwing window help the sufferings of the firemen. Hurry orders were sent to restaurants for coffee and sandwiches by the wagon load. Cups and saucers were Yourht outright, with no promise of thelr return. Men of millions jollied thelr way past policemen, rounded up a band of eut and shivering firemen and marched them off to warm them up. The banking office of Raymond and Pynchon was an emergeucy warm- ing station for relays of twenty-five men, waited upon by sympathetic lb oh eirls all Loatbhahte > EQUITABLE RECORDS SAFE; NEW OFFICES ARE ESTABLISHED President Says Business Will |OLD STYLE BUILDING OF BRICK AND IRON SHOWN TO BE UNSAFE. F. J. T. Stewart, Superintendent of the Bureau of Surveys of the New York Board of Fire Underwriters, said that ithe Equitable Building fire would open the eyes of the fire insurance com- panies, “It has always been presumed that what {i as the old style fire- {proof buliding, which has brick arches and exposed iron was a good beans, office structive ag was the Equitable “nt offices of August | of Samuel Diamond of | risk when the structure was used as an Tee destruc of the gorgeous home Club and its priceless ty of more than 20,000 volumes re- moves, temporarily at leaat, one of the y's most famous institutions. The law library was probi the finest In Amer- fea, and 4) the famous library of njamin I, Butler, who was Atrorney- f the United States under Prea- n and Van Buren, ‘This collection and many famous first edivions can never be replaced, and, be- | sides, there was av ie collection of documents, autographs and letters that has been accumulating in the archives of the olub since its organization In 1887, As for the 20,000 standard works, lawyers devoted themselves to trying Lyi Abe be duplicated for less than | The law Itbrary was on the top floor jof the building, reached by tiny eleva- tors and Uirough clolster-like corridors. The fire found its way into the silm flues of the narrow elevator wells and shot up them in geysers of flame, flood- ing the corridors and sweeping through the great Hbrary room, which was soon transformed into a seething furnace. The magnificent dining-room of the club was on the fifth floor of the Kquitable Bullding, and for the last twenty years it has been the most fa- mous dining place in downtown New York, unique in its Kind and the gath- ering place of the most noted lawyers of the New York Bar. The dining-room occupied the entire Nassau street wing, was eighty feet deep and forty feet wide. The walls and ceilings were decorated in white and gilt with artistic ornamentation. On the walls were hung many valuable paintings. The paintings had been given the cl’ by Its members from time to time. No expense was spared in the orna- menadon and decorations of the dl + + ‘ sald Mr, Stewart. “It has|ing-room. The prevailing style was Be Carried On in City been clearly demonstrated to-day that | massive elegance. There were two r en the old style fireproof structure 1s not | great circles of electric Hirhts in the Investing Building. a8 safe an has been presumed. domed celling that gave the effect of “I have heard the report that the} shaded clouds, shedding a soft yet bril- spd first alarm was not urned in for|iant radiance ‘There was a magni- President William A. Day of the Eat some time after the eovery of the/ficent grate, surrounded by large slabs table Assurance pty issued the fo! blaze. That is just what the i of onyx and surmounted by a beautiful lowing statement Just before noon Underwriters’ Association and the Fire | tapestry. Te flooring of the room was ba burning of th home office Department has been preaching against | of oak, laid in “herring-bone’! pattern. badiding the soclety at N w for some tim The slic walls were lined with large roadway will cause but temporary “The Underwriters have always urged | mirrors. inconventence in the transaction of | the turning in upon the fir watehn fighting the turning In an that the fire of a discovery of a blaze, but rittes and important ree- ords protected by @lreproot vaults which are intact. Most of the office and records were re- e time ago to the society's building at No, 2 Albany street. he executive offices of the #o- y and the ‘cashler's department alarm when is beyond thelr control. fire apparatus when {t arrives, was the result to-day, have heen established tn the City |, ,mvren the fre sbearatue reached thy Investing Building at No, 165 Broads | Koanway way. The society will occupy the Mr, Stewart said the Bureau of Sur; second, third and fourth floors there. | yey of the Fire Uncytwritery Aasocla: This will, the Un be tion was busily jed in preparing a the home office of the society. All | preliminary report of the fire for the | business with the public will be transacted there, including the re- t of premium payments.” | Keal estate experts say the destruction of the building enhances the vaue of | CHIEF KENLON the ground, because It was unsalable GIVES PRAISE TO except as the alte of a new bullding, and the cost of razing It would be great It Is understood that the Equitable will at once put up a building to rival the Metropolitan, Singer and Woolworth Butldings. instirance companies of New York. | for @ week or ten days, handled, ning World reporter: “This fire again shows the eficien: Department. ity qu! sides and a from the open streteh in front. this It was nearly | more than usually se Wind, Notwithstanding zero weather and (Continued from First Page.) these he was made ap Instructor In the Fire) College. building, Walsh first appeared on the roll of ym honor for distingutshed bravery in July,| "The greatest calamity ts the loss of 106, Again he was placed on the roli| Walsh, is soul. “T have ni sn who fou) now."* in Mareh, 1909, but pratse for all the In June, 111, fifteen firemen in the cellar of a burning bullding at No, 67 Murray stvegt Were overcome by gas. were under command of Chief |! ated and he was also overcome, Building a in tlle he struck his head | praise ston tn wall, The revived. him. autficlentiy, to en skeleton of the he delivered his word o for the flre-tighters, chunks: regular alarm in bulldings will Insist upon flames themselves and then they find That lends to give the flames a head- {way that is hard to overcome by the That He | sald a full report would not be ready | BRAVE FIREMEN. Speaking about the way the fire was Chief Kenlon said to an Eve- a - of the New York Here was an old building, presumed to | be fireproof, but 4 ’ wise. ‘The streets were narrow on three fanning the fire Besides other- © because of the dlfticul- ties the fire was confined to the one the flre from daylight f Kenloa was standing before the Equitable He was cov- ered with ice that hung from him tn _The gilded _cetling of the dining room dining room NO FEAR OF (TAPPED SKIN CUTICURA Soap and Ointmen od aregrabons. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with Spee book on theskie. Addrem uti: pt. TH. Boston, Tender-faced men should Site wbatloare ey Sarna tak able him to craw % the floor to] While he was speaking a hose burst the cellar stairway. He work his} and before {t was disconnected the cloth- way half way up the steps wrapped his) ing of the Chief had become even more arms around a lne and hung | jcy than before. there until firemen drasged him. out cae aie . Then he told of the condition of the| French Cabinet Minister Quit nin the collar and they were rescued! pvRis, Jan, OM, do Selves, Minis: Thee een tne aga Chiet Walsh feti| ter of Foreign Affairs in the Cabinet of -five feet into an a in a] Premier Caitlaux, rvsianed terday, to-day. burning building at No. 83 Duane street _ ore Was eight feet oF water at the bottom of the well, He supported him- self by hanging to the top of a hot tron shatter for ten minutes watte firemen were arranging to rescue him, The Singers of his right hand were buraed to the Walsh's d street, Mau avarers ol ib. Famous Weser Pianos free Triai Ofter NoScheme. Strictly Bona ‘d me was at No Brooklyn, He 1110 Forty: was mgr- ried. WIDOW OF CHIEF AND HIS DAUGHTER SEARCH FOR HIM. Mrs, Walan, the widow, olshteen-yea a Ulayer WV htnon 450 bo to ad to brother and hi fireman she met was Walter hai grade UNTRAS, to keep it. not tava Are Mev w and th ets Nething wad i Say Obligation advantage of r Jan, %=\ rep 1 oof the t to play and-enjoyed th great Nood i Vianos and PliyereMiane © Fully Guaranteed, ne than twenty-four h suthorities have warned mereh Herey to eva lower quays re length of —| COFFEE ‘|: AT WHOLESALE Paic Es An 5 Ib, lots, as low as 20c." WRITE FOR PRICE LisT DELIVER FREE GILLIES COFFEE CQ. 200-888 Wash Bet, Park Pl, & Barclay St, "Tels dant corva ‘POUND BOX, 1 9c Vark Row and Cortlandt street stores oan, nate ptifuliy with, PR Na tbe"net” 39 # poUND nox. ic ee Rare Volumes Lost When |. Lawyers’ Library Burns ‘| GAREY (Trade Sinek.) | special for Tuesday, the 9th Spelt trWednesay ini) VILBERT CREAM 10 ASSORTED 10 CREAM. MINT KISSES: poryn Rox. Cc desonrep POUSD BOX. ic. ORR CNRANED WAND CANDY, 25c!} All_our stores oven Suturday evening until O02 Milk Chocolate Covered Assorted Nuts | was supported by fluted and carved onyx columns, The side windows were jof the cathedral pattern, of stained glass, But this sumptuous dining room was only one of many splendid apartments. There was the white and gold cafe ad- Joining the diniag room, the Oriental smoking and reading rooms and ante- rooms of palatial richness; then there waa a sumptuous hall, with Carrara marble walls and mosaic floor, resplen- dent with dainty arc lights, which alone cost $60,000, On the sixth floor there were two general dining rooms, on the #nill room pattern, jess lavish in decora- tlon, and attached to these apartments was a richly equipped reception room for ladies, who were frequent guests of the olub members at luncheon and dinner. On the fourth floor the club had barber shops and baths for the ex- clusive use of members, Willtam Allen Butler, who has heen President of the Lawyers’ Club for al- most twenty years, declared this morn- ing, aw he gazed upon the ruin of the Equitable Building, that he had no {dea what the club would do in tts search for a new home. He thought tt was Ukely the members would decide to move uptown and occupy an entiro building of their own, but the future of the olub could only be determined after elaborate discussion. The Lawyers’ Club ts not exclusively a lawyers’ club. Among its 2,000 mem by are the leading bankers and cap- tains of industry of New York. J. P. Morgan {s a member and frequently dined there. In those gorgeous dining rooms and smoking rooms the fates of the nation’s trusts were threshed ot. All the famous guests of the nation have been dined there. Dukes and earls and even the sons of royalty have been numbered among the guests, and the saying has gone the rounds of financial district that many a fo: gn title has been negotiated Into American family at the Lawyers’ Clui The most prominent organizers of Tawyers’ Club were Wiillam Allen Butler, Chauncey M. Depew, William W. Astor, Cornelius N. Bliss, Cephas Brainerd, William Brookfle!d, Henry W. Cannon, Gen, ©. H. T, Collis, Aus- tin Corbin, John PD. Crimmins, Charles 8. Fairchild, Willlam R. Grace, WUL fam RB. Hornblower, Willam M. Ivins, Fdward Lauterbach, J Gen. John T. Me Gen. Horace Port mons_and John H. J. Edward Sim- Starin, Many persons dread the approach of winter on account of chilbiaina and frast- jocide compound in @ basin (not hat), Soak tae foot allmenta in really remarkable. nd can be peeled naht . Sweaty, smelly feet and tender, aching ad but a few appitcations. Buntons Instantly, Any druggist haa it In tock or will get It from his whol house, A twenty-five cent packa ally sufficient to put the worst f B. SALOMON "vic HALL Ciearance Sale FURS % SAVINGS % rUR SETS | SPECIAL! oe ‘tn wy Poin hive Wolt o7 cdo) 50% Hides wit en's Cape Huts and Caps, Fu x COATS Black Pony. Marmot Caracul In our complete ollare. ed coats, $25 ALOMON I, Who Retired 4——Still at Store. 346 Sixth AVE. sta = CONNOR PIANO ESTABLISHED IN 1871, Grand, Upright avd Mayer Planes, | 4 EAST 42D SI. | LoUND BOX, open every evening UAE o'clock, Ep 54. BARCLAY SB Sar Weer 29 CORTLANDT" st Charen 54 Nel Pare acé BROADWAY Gy sgt a0 (7 NASSAU sy. ‘The specified welgiit in euch insiance ar cludes the containe