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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1918. Ce ‘ 5% PANORAMIC VIEW OF OMAHA, SWEPT BY TORNADO AND DEVASTATED BY FIRE DOOQODHHOGOHGHHHHHGHOEHIGS tue v4 Sag. age ©0999S POHOOODOGHDOHOGGGHOOHOONGOIOON DODHODHOGOHHOHODHOGSNS [OCC O OOK @ @ ered. Hanscom Park, ituated near where the storm originated, was greatly damaged, and Bemis Park, ‘one of the show restdence districts of the city, firemen worked together, all of both branches of the municipal service as- suming the duties of both, under orders of the Mayor. COURIGR GOES TO TERRE HAUTE FOR AIO. Perth and Prairieton, suburbs of Terre Haute, where there were no solid blocks and the detached houses were mostly of frame construction, were | Teported utterly in ruins, A coufier, ignorant of the fate of Terra Haute, |Tode in on a barebacked horse from the southern part of Vigo County for help. He reported passing many farms jand hamlets where bodies of the dead were belfig dragged from debris to the roadaide, Ab in Omaha a torrent of rain saved the city froma deadly hole- caust following the windstorm. Glass factories throughout the nat- ural gag belt crumpled up and blew away like torn paper boxes. Whol sections of the Root Glass Company's Piant in Terra Haute were swept out of sight. The frishtful velocity of the wind was shown in the case of the foundry as though it had been a board fence. Moses Carter, his and a baby running out of the door. Ot! | killed were found lying a | thelr homes, Running out houses, they the wind until they were felled by do- tris or were hurled against lampposts, treés and the edges of porches, xk from of their their home feli on them as they were vs of the had been driven before ; MOTHER FATALLY HURT WITH! i STORMS IN FIVE STATES; MANY DE. AD OU TSIDE OF OMA HA\SE\RnES Test IS APPLIED 10 THE NEW TON! Thousands of People Watch To See If Its Initial Success is Sustained. © ALL USERS PRAISE IT Mrs. C. A. Stutson Tells How Tona Vita Has Helped Her So Splendidly. Never has any medicine been watche.! room of the Gartland factory, where | 44 closel Ks or been given aa severe a tes! an eighteen inch wall was blown over: @* Tons Vita, the new nerve tonic. Tbe number of cases it relieves has attracte:! attention, and on all hands people are | watching to see if its wonderful recor! kept up. Instead of successful.treat: in numbers they are and thousands 0! cnived, praksin: vita in the highes' | statements are bein, the action of Tona possible terms, Such stronger than any lorsement, for it ity power of r no scientific de Death in Storm’s Path Outside of Omaha; Sweeps Five States was struck with sufficient force to practically wreck most of the homes within its limits. One part of the area covered by the storm {is that located between Cuming street, on the south, and Ames avenue, on the north, and from Twenty-fourth street, on the east, to Fiftleth street, on the west. This is the most thickly populated residence district in the city and contains ten - of the largest public schools. Many of the large churches of all denomina; SOME OF DEAD IN TORNADOES THAT SWEPT OVER OMAHA AND OTHER CITIES DAY-OLD BABY. but a real Mrs. Clara A. fete Mrs, Leonard Sloane, trying to awl 803 Central Park West, New. Yor! | her day-old daughter, was #0 ingurea | () yy nae ne following to say in regard ° that she was picked up dying. The | “This js to testify that I have taken baby in her arms was also mortally one bottle of Tona Vita and find it 4 a i splendid tonic, In my case it hae in- Mayor Gerhardt, with the telephoned) duced sleep and has improved my nerv- qutnority of Gov. Ralston, called out| ous condition very much. I have been Th Omaha the path of the storm was abeut five miles long and six blocks the city Is suspended, and newspaper extras containing authentic news have Mra. GriMth, Prat- Mra. Ida Newman. rieton, Dr. Ernest Lemoor, Sam Riley, grader. ays William Rodgers. rather what had heen a house, and be- f the Terra Haute company of the militia! lid for neartyfour years. I hawoss f tions also are in that part of the city. Omaha University was in the path KNOWN DEAD IN OMAHA, Ray Abbott. Thirty, in Dta- y a . 4 n invalid arly ‘i Lea (Revised List.) Rudolph Reiger. mond Moving | Terre Haute, Ind., Hit With Great Fury, Whhile| sna put them on potice duty throughout | patterned from extreme nervousness, bie of the storm. cectee Ladd ae. Salas Jes Walter Peterson Picture ‘Uheatre, pa if . the city, There was a remarkable ad-/| am recovering slowly, and I know Tons George 1. Beamer one of the best known merchants in the Middle West Mubele MeIiride. "Fred: Hens ont’ fF eaidren, Johuny Ryan, Cities and Towns in Other Sections RETOREENLEC WAGE SIRES ET SCEl ieeceromtpeatiee Toe tiaaat: oe and propriotor of the Byrne-Hammer Dry Goods Company, was taken out| Walter Peterson, Mrs, A. Hengman, ) L. B. z sutomobiles whose machines had not ‘ervous debili ¢ ailmet . My of the wreckage of his home late last Adan MM “if a Joseph's Hi Samuel Denguler. Mrs, F. G. Good- DEAD IN RALSTON, Suffer Severely. vn disable! iy the overturning 9, Vita is ticularly efficient in treating rf i and died in St. Joseph's Hos-} ips, Norris, babi: J. M. McDonald, Miss Mario Moran. sarages voluniecred for ambulance ‘ser-| can be denoted by any of the following , a, pital to-day. Mrs. Hammer was seriously injured, while Mrs. Arthur] Mary Norris, Mra, John Doyle. | Mr. and Mrs, Said. a The Greenwood school, though! Symptoms: Loss ‘of vigor # rr i : Lavidge and her baby eon, who were visiting at the Hammer home, are| Henry Cooper. A. Hanson. DEAD IN Cou While the earlier despatches from the abled but alive in the wreckage of the! pane of glass wu out of dizziness after any unaccustomed ex- ) not ‘expected to live. CR ed ree F for te z or, James B. Rice, bod brig 'A+) stricken part of the Missour! Valley er homes. As in other cities, the dwellers) ¢ii¢ window frames, was put in service ¢ftion, dull pains in the beck aa hood, P ‘ F ae ees Mra. Rice. Mra. W. gion made the damage to the city of/ in frame tenements, the poor with large] «an impromptu hospital swollen joints, poor memory, loss of ap- , ‘f gh flr an tal aed ld Ragean ai cand _After the tury of the storm MES ML /M: Mitee Tees Le GATOR) ise, Soka woke Mi. Tents, °°! |Omaha by far the most appalling, many| families were those who suffered most| “Whiie only tour dethe were reportet| Petite, restless sleep, susceptibility to .o swept Omaha originated along the |houne while the: epee ona er Mra. Bigelow. John Grene. bs oro child, Peter Mra, | td ‘Swinner- towns and cities in five States} severely. from Chicago before the wire service be- | ‘“isease Gh that fae etins ta 5 Platte Hiver to the southwest of |Thon, just rf ‘tically | Henrietta Griev, Two infant ohtl- are. Twenty lives were lost and 150 tn-|came demoralized early in the morning, _, 200s Vita can be obtained i] * —Omatia.” On its way to this city the lreached safety, a part of the wail off MueRtAt Fitzger- dren of | Morrie DEAD IN TERRE H HAUT SS oe oe comparatively exact! sured were cared for in the emergency | the damage to property was enormous Vee drug ‘store in New York CHy\T 3 mie cloud struck Loulevitie and their hocwe caved ferent alt four wece | otlatione. | ere ntOm vie | MEE Fed King and Chamis Edwards, 6|"roliowing is the gist. of despatches | MOFPitals. running well toward a million dotiars, | AdYt enemaeniinial Pp Jarenice Cady. FA vie 4 - =, 5 Ashland on the Platte River. Injured by falling Wricks. Jean . Brooks, Peck, Moses ‘Carter, sett Fox from towns outside of Omaha and its] ‘The crippling of the street car lines | 2 Miactwece canara peels SUBURBAN TOWNS ARE WIPED| | Thousands of inernona afe Rentexing| fea estate man, reher. Mra. Moses Carter — Courtney. Cotesia and the blockailing of the streets hin-| sured and there were unverified rumo: 7 OUT BY STORM, the temyor hoenitals and morgues | —- Ferguson, Henry Bleaveit. and babn William ys ‘Terre Haute, Ind., was hit by @ blast} dered the work of rescue exasperating- that @ score had been killed in the from the latter place it ewuns to-day, seking information of rela-| Wlam Fish sepa children, Mra, Tully. Neal Yearger. just as furious and wicked as that/ly. Three hundred grave cases requir- urbs. In our fifty y: ars of acroen country toward the Missouri |vew and friends Aw order io being | J. 0. Hanson. oo Mise Bell, 12 yeare Charies Davis, which assailed Omaha, The first est!-| ing surgical attention poured into Terre a S hk River and between Ashland and Omeha | WTOUsHt by the police ‘and the militia | re 4. OG. Hanson. C, B, Wishon, oe James Brown, mate of the killed in that city-was| Taute police headquarters within an practice we have seen Practically wiped out the towns of Wee families are becoming reunited "ty gtanieys, 8, Helen Nowns. Mra. ‘paneer porn ad oe fifty, but it was scaled 4 to fifteen] hour or two after telephone communica | the harm that comes {and persone reported missing are ap- fult- bs 2 le. sons were found dis- tion was partly restored. Police and Gretna, ant Ralston, whlch were AU [Oeosing at thelr homes. unifens ta Mra, Frieda Hult. Mrs, B, Davis. sr Mcbride William Gitte Ce ee dd from lack of glasses wheretheyatenecded. 4 Two unidentified y look. di nr wide. The work of destruction was aot [POE Yet Hlleuced the reyori that thous Will Matherly of — men, | Pee ee Us woaminy, Lieuen a But a ee ne bid continuous, At irregular intervals the ieee peo. di eiled. te Gardentown, Unldentitiea onita. We got all of the Injured out of the comes from buying e ma- . ! —= poygrete ag eons iescpgios abe tlon to the people ut Uinann estas.| OvNthia, baby at Mra R,-B, Van. | MORTALLY (ean IN TERRE rulns and brought them to the train. We . «cheap glasses from above; only to strike again further on | ing military lines around @he dov.| Child Saving In- deivan and une UTE: were about te leave when our attention | those incompetent to i with, @stated area and calling on all who! etitat born child. Mrs, Leonard Sloan Mrs, Catherine was called to a Httle house sgme distance | ly fi e beaten yeere tayed all the | C8 spare the time to ald in the work | Hien ea | mora ouden. ly |from the others, Tt had been wrecked | Properly fit your eyes. Ae freak Gaal avat Ute dosed Ps pod of rexcue. He appealed to the people; | Oliffont Daniels, Four unidentified Nan nies bert pave cess and moved from Its foumlation, but we Eyes Examined Without Charge ine storms. Looking ovet the ground cov- | t9 open their homes to the Injured and; wife and two men. ery 1N vu Ey vy found a mother and her little baby lying by Registered Eye Physici H ered by the destructive morin, one wor. | homelesy, but the appeal came after) Andrew Hendriok- Mary Hanson, ii Pines A D ly upon a dea uninjured, Another sian uke Perfect Fitting Glasses, 82.50 to $12. there had been a univerlal mov son — Jimpson, lenry Scheele, rs. Gilster, na basement. His house was earrie¢ be BI eaten Melia aiautenre en | seed Roxie Weley, [ACH Hammond. Mex. Wit 8 anay boally and He vas tefl standing J. EHRLICH & SONS ae RUS tay that some 0 perspns| Surrounding towne to tho west andj Mr m and Rose ¢ Mra, Hammond and Miss Babcock. | with a very surprised look on his face Oculists’ Opticians at have Yeon treated for serious Injures, (North are cut off from communication, | gid MMU | ian starman, baugh and “met, pores: Half a Century in Business. ; whfle @ number not calculated, bit un- | It im feared that the loss of life in those, REPORTED Misett Dg SP sh aa) , | Passengers on Burlington Ex-|THRESHING MACHINE LIFTED 217 Broadway, Astor House L dowbteaty three timon e, aremut (little communities has been heavy, A) Mr and Mis Aare oartoc’ earns DEAD IN ERIE, ILL, 8 HIGH IN AIR. | 22) Sith Aves th Ste Se Nor rae b ° fering from minor hurts. Many of the! courier reached Omaha on horweback| yO" AOR if alu Bl s ‘There was a big threshing machine 101 Nassau, Ann St. 17 Wes lew Yor! i Injured will die. Bodies have been car-|this morning from Yutan, a town twenty, -attle Abbott. siaaas Mie TA Ebon, press Watch Tornado as It | (there was a ble mnrcsning machine 498 Fulton St., Cor. Bond St., Brooklyn." " t ried {nto the temporary morgues with | miles to the northwest, and reported the ' when the cloud struck {t shot ‘straigh > , every stitch of wearing apparel, includ- | place pmctically destroyed. Fifteen per-| night was accomplished by the ght of | very badly injured one in the family. Lashes Nebraska Village. ‘up Into the alr and wae carried about MMR ara eoreicen ficeet or | kane ware Wind cuir ana tat iene Mrs, G. B. Medlock was about to sive ‘forty rods. Houses were rolling and Satisfied With c Some of the 4 were found totally | fifty others injured, several fat | Not one telephone girl let her swite birth to a baby when her home, at a \tumbling along the ground. I saw «| paperked, _thourh they had dropped | Doctors and nurses have been went in| voard vihen the storm struck the city. |Twenty-ninth and Decatur streets, war] CILICAGO, March 2L—-Passengers on a boxcar carried along by the terrifle alr m fright or shoe Your Corset? | automobiles to Yutan. The exchange building escaped serious [blown to atoms, Her husband was badly current for a quarter Injury and the girls remained on duty |cut about the head and two littie daugn- ft split open of a mile, When six or geven men, who Burlington express train en route from BODIES CARRIED MANY YARDS BY THE HIGH WIND. Ast Godles that were picked up hun- drefg'ot yards from the point where the wind had first caught them were found hortibly mangled, some of them cn- tirely beyond recognition. Cries of thi Injured drew rescuing parties to hi Greds of different points and tho victine were drawn out from under the walls | of their homes. Houses were left un- scathed while their neighbors were lit erally torn to pieces, Splinters were riven through trees and in one piace the Jower story of a house was torn Out, while the upper story settled in its jolowt of its destructive energy along a SEPARATE STORMS WROUGHT) DESOLATION NEAR OMAHA, There wete two separate storms. The most severe—a typloal prairie tormnad attended by a paralyzing electrical di turimnce and a torrential downpour of rain—swept through Omaha at 6 o'¢lock st evening and appears to have vented narrow path about five miles in length, extending irregularly from the soutn- ‘wem to the northedst extremities of. the city. This is the storm that wound up in Omaha, Another storm appeara to have {as If nothing had happened, Place, Shade :reox were uprooted and driven entirely through brick Dulldings. Wires were torn down and wrapped about poles, if wound by the hand of am artisan. At Thirtieth and Hamilton streets four members of one family were Ouried in. the burning wreckage when Engine Company No. 6 arrived. The firemen rescued all. They were only elightly Injured. The heavy downpour of rain whieh followed the etorm saved much other property from being destroyed by fire. The rain quenched the flames and in many places put out the fire in stov. No estimate of the damage done by fire} following the storm can be made, but over a score of houses, costing from $2,000 to $10,000 each, were destroyed. A pathetic feature of the storm was the way two baby waifs in the Child Saving Institute at Forty-second street and Jackson street were destroyed. These little ones, known in the éneti- tution as Thelma and Cynthia, were in & nursery on the second floor when the tornado struck the building and par- tially destroyed st. ONLY TWO FATALITIES IN THE WRECKED HOSPITAL. Although the little inmates were battered and bruised the babies Thelma and Cynthia were the only ones killed, A twisting finger of the storm entered window of the nursery, blocs away. What disposition the fin- ger of cloud in its malicious sport made of baby Cynthia 4s not known, Her little body has not been found, ana it may have been caught in the heart of the storm cloud and whirled away for miles. i William Sell, No. 3465 California ave- nue, rushed his wife, daughter and Mins Gilpin, nurse at the O Gen- eral tal, who was visiting at the Bel) home, into « vot agter them as bis houge Wrouxht destruction in the outskirta; in fact, scattered reports indicate that there may have been several storms, all ‘Proceeding from @ conrmon centre some- ‘where to the south and west of Omaha Omaha Je to-day a stricken and deso- Jase city, but with characteristic West- ern energy whe is already planning to re- pair the damage of $6,000,000 or more done by the storm. While the mag- nificent quarte:s of the Commercial Club in the centre of the business district Were crowded with dying and injured Victims ahd nurses and doctors to-day, & meeting amid the scenes of suf- | fering and misery and started a vig | relief fund, | White the storm struck only the northern portion of the neighboring city \of Council Blutts, the damage donc was severe ani the @: of destruction was widespread, The property doss in the Towa city 1s represented at §200,000, | People tn Council Bluffs had suMcient Warning of the approach of the storm to fee to cellars and other places of sup- Pored safety hd nearly all those killed there met thetr deaths under falling | Walls, AIN AND FIRES HAMPER WORK OF RESCUE, During the night the work of rescue was hampered by the lack of light, by © pouring rain, by fires and by the dan- x from live wires which Uttered the Streets, To-day the task of gathering up the dead and caring for the wounded 1 proceeding with system and regular- ity, and as 00n ae Omaha has her own affuirs in hand she will look after her @matler and helpless neighbors. While the path of the storm was not through the business or manufacturing | districis, it eucceeded in tying up for a |time Omaha's telephone, cleotide ight | and trolley car systems, The fe ne followed !and transportation industries eylfered ven Slowe se worm, Mégot of the resoue wig igat ‘Vises of any vebtel, unions there was o om Every tele- ters were injured. A motor hearse was graph official in the city reported for |stopped by the Injured man and took duty, and the Hnes were repaired and | Mrs, Medlock to the home of a friend. put in operation as fast as possible. Most of the elty could be reached by | story brick structure telephone three hours after the storm. The Weirnter Telephone xchange, at Twenty-second and Lake atreots became a contre for resouc work as soon as the cyclone had passed, Physicians and nurses were su and army officers established there, headquarters were when the cyclone struck, Every window in the builling was broken out and coi siderable damage was done to the bulld- ing, but the switchboard remained in- tact. All nignt the force of operators continued at work at the soard Within five minutes after the storm struck every girl was at her place at the ewitchboands and many continued to “plug in” while broken glass was showering about them. One of the rest rooms, the furniture soaked with water and stained with blood, was converted into @ temporary morgue and dodi fiom the surrounding affitcted district were held there awaiting ambulances, Nurses and physicians occupied another reom, where injured persons were stretched on the floors, Telephone poles, trees and wrecked houses filled all the streets around the telephone building, making tt impossible for any vehiclo to get near the place, Automobiles passing were all urged to stop either to get @ doctor or to take the injured and dying to the hospitals, ‘Two men in an automobile refused to heed the call to take a dying man to a hospital. The crowd reviled them and| they only eacaped visieace by speeding | ahead. ‘The Sacred Heart Convent, one of the finest Catholic schools in this part of the country, was directly in the path of | 1, the storm and was totally demolished. It ts considered a miracle that every ‘person in the enormous building escaped ‘without injury. They are now all safe and most of them caring for the inburedt | 4034, in St. Joseph'a Hospital, Many of the victims, almost hysterical, gat! family groupe and sat through the cold rain that followed thy eyctone. For three hours the fires It up the y. Ag tho light died down the refugees from the atricken district wandered aim- leasly on, unadle to command the » exhausted and [ Streets, oned to the building | 4 i One hundred and soventy-six “young | women were working at the switchboard } ered together Ini cnicagy and St. on the sidewalks Omuha aboad of ‘The home of Waker Peterson, a two- tanding on a high ‘Twenty-elghth and Decatur was completely demolished. Neighbors searched in the ruins, but found no trace of any one living or dead. There were seven children in the family and none of them has been seen since the storm. Fire started in the ruins and, although & terrific rainstorm followed the wind, tno downpour had no effect on the flames. An hour after the helght of the atorm there were twenty-five different fires. Tho fife department and thousands of volunteers kept the flames from epreading throughout the devastated section of the city, From Lincoln, Neb. came'a report of eighteen killed in cities and towns in Nebraska other than Omaha, with twelve reported missing and more than one hu: dred s0 seriously injured as to require hospital care. —— U.S. SIGNAL CORPS SENT TO OMAHA TO HELP KEEP ORDER, March 24.—President ‘Wilson telegraphed Mayor James C. Dahiman, Mayor of Omaha, as follows. “Tam deeply distressed at the news re- ceived from Nebraska, Can we help in any way? Becretary of War Garrison directed ‘Col, Hoyle, In charge of the Army De- pot at Chicago, to send Major Hart- mann and a division of the United Btates Army Signal Corps, stationed Dear Omaha, into th token olty to ald in preserving orde: Major Hart- |mann's detachment consists of about 100 men, ‘The War Department will render addi- lonal aid-in the way of supplie, or fend additional troops, :f the city and @tate authorities indicare they are in Reed of such asstatance, Director Bicknell of the Red Crose left for Omaha to take personal ot rellef measures. He previous. instructed Red Cross agems in Louie to burry on to him, char dy had Lanatord and MoVey Draw. | BRISBANE, March %.--Sam McVey and Sam Langford fought a twenty. round draw here (day. In thelr pies vious meeting Lang‘ord won by @ knuck- Lincoln to Omaha saw the storm, wit- nessed {ts initial work of destruction and followed its wake into Omaha. Some of these passengers reached Chicago to-{ day. William Coon, president of an autony- ‘bile company of Lincoln, graphic description of the tort Viewed it from tho platform of the servation car. “For miles,” he sald, “It seemed if the train were belng pursued by tne ‘orm, We were approaching Ralston, Neb., when I first noticed @ strange, copper-colored cloud moving across the, as sky. Before tha The cloud grew rapidly and was travel- ling at tremendous speed. It assumed the form of a funnel and the alr was filled with a curious noise—very percing. ‘Phen the funnel seemed to grow black and the smaller end—that near the giound—was about a half mile in di-! ameter. It swished across the raflroad track and swept toward the little town. si 8 COLLAPSE IN | STORM. ( “When the storm struck ‘the town | houses collapwed as though they were of | paper, The roofs went sailing away and the sides fell in. The passengers sut an though glued to their seats when the | cloud struck, “phen the engineer brought the train’ tr a atop and the passengers ran over to the wreckage of the houses, We could hear the groans of dying men and the wails and shrieks of injured women) and! children. I entered a house, or) EY the touch of of pe lanes x achieved Is found Pernin ive (*) anith the tone you can't forget” It to a player-plano PLiS expres- slon—a player-plano plus e: aN id every quality that you'll find i me | soul, or the brain, or the fin, | the great planiats of | the. work tat sane nensitiveness of tho finger 1 Be ning “pedal touch.” a riveree craond on ene nc turned out to be part of a repair gang, ropped out. Some of them lay very still, while others feebly crept about. The next station our train passed Benton, where the scenes There were through w: were still more appalling. several large factorics there and they were all strewn in heaps. up a lot of injured and Lt don't know how many dead we left behind, ‘the cloud south wheeled and Omaha. the tornado had throw Then, too, tracks. jall were cut an@ bleeding.” Pond Hoods'| Sarsaparilla Made from Roota, Narks,” Herbs, etc. NEW SERIAL BY CONAN DOYLE) ¢ April STRAND MAGAZINE “THE POISON BELT” Begins I ‘With Bed, White and Blue Cover Wow on sale, 16 conts a copy. 81.00 8 year. cleo. ZEIGINGER.—On Gunday, March 28 CHARLES ZKIGINGER, tn his 66th ".) nesday at Weedlaws, Kindly omit RRR SY Enon VE ee tc AO. We heaped Then made toward we stopped fre- quently to pick up the injured. There {t had been cjear.| were some with their limbs torn off and Headaches DrivenAway amania Yebis jing ¢ Sen. raigie overindulgence Pafie' rhoumatie anid ail other D that | and these wonderful pain relievers iit In this shop you geg-the advice of an Sav arican aor Corser ‘ CORSET SHOP-—CORSET HOSPITAL 500 Fifth Ave., ier er ae . North of Library. Contrary to reports the HOTEL VICTORIA Broadway and 27th St. will continue in business, Special rate alter April 1, 1913: Booms with bath .. tis tendency to veduce thelr purity Ep NUT | CHIPS, and “anton Pot Monday's Otfering MIDGET STICKS—Sm fn size and price only—auality a reat PER TIN dt and 125th Streci aterea open Antur Ta BARCLAY STREET ‘Cor, West Broadway 29 CORTLANDT ST. Cor, Church Street Park Row & Nassau St. Mt City Hail Park Park Row, C Special for Monday the Hath | Wt FE TE ESRI POM MMS LESANET ITS aft cereeenar is bred wns Bi nsenwes se