Glass Book. COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT iLLaStRAtED l^eu/'Vorl^-^ity -^^g^Q^ AnB SyRROyNDINSS, MITH MKPS. Copyrighted by CHAS. W. HOBBS & CO. IL. Illustrated NEW YORK CITY And Surroundings. If \ Descriptive Guide to Places of Interest. WITH MAP. CHARLES W. HOBBS & CO. 113 Sixth Avenue. 1889 NOTE. In publishing the following Guide, the object is to give the most full, and at the sanne time the most concise information obtamable. The work is in the form of an Itinerary, and divided into routes so arranged that everything specially worthy of attention is noticed. Our starting point is from the Battery, at the southern end of the city and the terminus or ali Eievaied flail: jads. Copyrighted, 1889, By CHARLES W. HO BBS & CO. GUIDE TO NEW YORK CITY .A.1ST1D pURROUNDINGS. THE BATTERY, TLe Dame is derived from fortifications erected by the Dutch founders of the city. ' ' It is a public park, has an area of 21 acres with green lawns and shady walks, by far the coolest spot in the city. Castle Garden stands within the limits of the park and was originally laid out as a rough fortification. In 1847 it was opened as a place of amusement and for a numl^er of years was occupied as such. Illustrated Guide to New York City. The Produce Exchange. In 1832 — 1843 Presidents Jackson and Tyler, were received here. September 11th, 1850, Jenny Lind made her first appearance in America in thi& building under the management of P. T. Barnum. It has been occupied as an emigrant landing depot since 1855, The European steamers bringing emigrants to this country transfer them to this depot, and after an examin- tion of their baggage tliey are forwarded to their destination. At the east- ern end of the Park is the U. S. Revenue Barge Office, which is built of granite, has a frontage of 105 ft. with tower rising from north-east corner 90 feet high. Ferry for Statue of Liberty leaves pier rear of the Barge Office. Ferry for Governor's Island adjoins, and in rotation are the Ferries to Staten Island and Bay Ridge, the South Ferries to Atlantic street and Hamilton avenue, Brooklyn, and the new Ferries to B9th street, Brooklyn. Here also is the terminus of all Elevated roads, Broadway and Belt line horse cars. Passing up Whitehall Street, the first object worthy of notice is Illustrated Guide to New York City. the U. S. Army Build- ing, (War Department), occupying block between Water and Pearl Streets. The Kemble Building occupies block between Bridge and Stone Streets. Produce Exchange. This magnificent brick structure fronts on Bowl- ing Green, and covers the. Square bounded by Stone, New and Beaver Streets ; the dimensions of the building are 307x 150 feet, has a tower 225 feet high with clock, the face of which is 12 feet in diameter. The building is entirely fire- proof, and said to have cost $3,179,000 to erect. The first floor is occu- pied by the Produce Ex- change Bank ; Maritime Exchange ; Branch Post Office, Station P ; Tele- graph Office ; Safe De- posit Vaults ; etc. On the second floor are com- mittee rooms, office of the Exchange, and the main hall. The entrance for visitors is from the Library floor, the gallery is open from 10 a. m., until 3 p. m. ; the hall is The Washington Building. 215 feet long, 145 feet wide and 60 feet high. Illusteated Guide to New York City. Cotton Exchange. Looking down Bea- ver St., the large yel- low brick building we see is the Cotton Ex- change, in Hanover Square. Bowling Green, at the beginning of Broadway, is a small enclosure, so called from having been used as such, prior to the Revolution, At that time it contained a leaden equestrian stat- ue of George III, which the populace in their patriotic zeal de- molished and convert- ed into musket balls. A fountain now occu- pies the site. The "Washington Building, the build- ing opposite, is on site of the old Washington Hotel, once Washing- ton's Headquarters. It was erected by Cy- rus W. Field, and is occupied by United States Bank and mis- cellaneous offices. On turning into Broadway we notice some of the immense structures of modern times Among these may be noted Illustrated Guide to New York City. Central Park. the Wells Building, at No. 18 ; the Standard Oil Building, at No. 26, and Aldrich Court, at No. 45. The Consolidated Stock and Petroleum Exchange is at the comer of Exchange Place. The business of the Exchange is dealing in Petroleum and prominent stocks of the country. Visitors admitted to the gallery, Fronting Wall street, with its portals invitingly open every day in the year, stands Trinity Church. It is the third edifice of the kind erected upon the spot, the first having been destroyed in the great fire of 1776. This fine gothic structure was completed in 1846, having been seven years in building. The church is 192 feet in length, 80 in breadth, and 60 in height. The interior will richly repay examination. The steeple towers up 284 feet in height ; the walls of the church are nearly 50 feet high. The grave-yard of Old Trinity occupies nearly an entire block. Within it are the venerated tombs of Alexander Hamilton, the statesman and friend of Washington ; the heroic commander Law- rence, and many other illustrious public men. Wall Street — The buildings are massive and imposmg ; the following are most noteworthy. The United Bank Building, corner of Broadway ; No. 10, Astor Building ; No. 13, visitor's entrance to the Stock Exchange. The U. S. Sub-Treasury is on the corner of Nassau Street ; a fine statue of Washington, with the following inscription, is on the steps of this building : " On this Site in Federal Hall, April .30, 1789, George Washington took the oath of office, as first Pres- ident of the United States." On the opposite corner is the Drexei, Building, and adjoining, on Broad Street, is the elegant Mills Building. Next to the Sub-Treasury is the Assay Office, erected in 1823. Gold and silver brought here in the crude state are assayed, refined and cast into bars. Columbus, Central Park. The Custom House, on corner of William street, Illustrated Guide to New York City. Consolidated Stock and Petroleum Exchange. is built of Quincy Granite and is 200 by 150 feet, and 75 feet high, with twelve granite columns 38 feet long by 4J feet in diameter, cut from one stone. The Rotunda is a beautiful hall 80 feet high. The building cost $1,800,000 to erect. Ferry to Brooklyn is at the foot of this street, Eeturning to Broadway we find the TRiNiTy Building at No. Ill ; Ielustbated Guide to New Yoek City. 9 the BoREEL Building at No. 119 ; the Guernsey Building at No. 164. The Equitable Life Insurance Building is at the corner of Cedar street, the entrance opens into the finest court yard in America, containing telephone and telegraph offices, handsomely fitted stalls for the sale of stationery, cigars, newspapers and books, elegant dining halls, etc. Pass- ing through to the rear of the building, on Nassau street is the Mutual Life Insubance new building, erected at the cost of over two millions of dollars. Their old building is at the corner of Liberty street and Broadway. Maiden Lane is the trade centre of manufacturing jewelers ; opposite to it is Cortlandt street, the Coal and Iron Exchange being at No. 19. The Western Union Telegraph is at the corner of Dey street. Fulton Street extends from the North to the East Rivers, having at its termini two of the most important markets in the cit3^ Fulton Mar- ket at the east end, is celebrated for its supply of fish. In 1877, State Fish Commissioner, Eugene G. Blackford, Inaugurated the custom of having a special display of fish, which now attracts great crowds. It occurs on the first of April, and is known as the Trout Opening Day, Washington Market at the west end is the principal centre for the distribution of meats and produce, both are places of interest to strangers. Fulton Fep.ry is opposite Fulton market. The United States Hotel is at the corner of Water and Fulton streets. The Bennett Building is on the northwest corner of Nassau street, opposite the office of the New York Commercial Advertiser, and the ten story Evening Post building is at the south east corner of Broad- way. St. Paul's Chapel, corner of Vesey street, was built by Trinity Corpora- tion, and is the oldest church building in the city. The interior is quaint and old-fashioned. In the church yard, sur- rounding the edifice, are numerous mon- uments worthy of attention, among the Indian Hunter, Centbal Park, most notable being a memorial tablet to 10 Illustrated Guide to New York City. General Richard Montgomery. Monuments to Emmet and MacNeven, the Irish Patriots, and George Frederick Cook. The famous Astoh House occupies the block between Vesey and Barclay Streets. Erected in 1838. Across Broadway, at the corner of Ann Street, is the New York Herald building. Park Row branches off from Broadway to the right. At the beginning of Park Row and both sides of the Astor House are starting points of innumerable lines of street cars. Nearly all the morning and evening papers have their business oflEices in this vicinity. In no city in this country can be found such an amazing group of lofty buildings as here. Tiie Tribune Building, facing Print- ing House Square, the first to be erected, is built of stone, brick and iron, in composite style, with tower 85 feet high. Temple Court is a huge building 160 feet high, erected at a cost of $1,200,000. Morse Building, The Tombs. Nassau and Beekman streets, is 165 feet high. The Potter Building, on the opposite corner, with fronts on Park Row, Nassau and Beekman streets, is 185 feet high, and cost $2,500,000, and the new Times Building, 213 feet high, topping all by 28 feet. On Broadway again, opposite the Astor House, is the Post Office building. The basement, first and second floors are occupied by the Post Office Department, while the third and fourth floors are used by the United States Courts and the Law Library. Just above the Post Office is City Hall Park ; it contains the City Hall, Hall of Records, Court Houses, and other public buildings. East of the Park is the station of the Second and Third Avenue Elevated R. R., and entrance to the great Brooklyn Bridge. Printing House Square. 13 Illustrated Guide to New York City. BROOKLYN BRIDGE. The span over the river is 1,595 feet, 6 in. The height of the roadway in the clear in the middle of the river, is 135 feet. The towers supporting the great strain of the entire work are each 276 feet, 6 inches high, above high water, their width and thickness at water line 140 and 59 feet respect- ively, and at the top of the tower 136 and 33 feet. The depth of the New York tower foundation is 78 feet 6 inches below high water ; the depth of the Brooklyn foundation is 45 feet. The Brooklyn tower contains 38,214 cubic yards of masonry, and weighs (as nearly as can be estimated) 93,079 tons ; the New York tower contains 46,945 cubic yards of masonry, and its weight is 125,000 tons. The promenade in crossing the bridge is 15 feet and 7 inches in width. It is raised eleven feet above the rail track, and is protected by a railing 4^ feet high. Upon each side is space 12 feet 8 inches wide for a railway, and upon which the cars are drawn by an endless wire cable and stationary engine, and at the extreme outer sides beyond the tracks, are the roadways, each 18 feet and 9 inches wide, travel toward Brooklyn taking the southern roadway, travel for New York going over the northern passage. The grade of the roadway is 3 feet 3 inches to the hundred feet, and its total length from the beginning of one approach to the end of the other is 5,989 feet and 6 inches. The cables are 3,578 feet 6 inches in length, measuring 15| inches in diameter, and made of 5,444 galvanized wires, and each cable weighs 800 tons. The cost of the bridge was about fifteen and one half mil- lion dollars. Ordinary vessels can easily pass beneath. Very large sail- ing vessels have to lower their topmasts. The fare for foot passengers is one cent. The fare on the bridge cars is three AuLD Lang Syne, Central Park. Illustrated Guide to New York City. id City Hai,l. Returning to Broadway at N. E. corner of Chamber St. ,is the white marble building, formerly A. T. Stewart's wholesale store. It has been re- modelled for offices. Broadway in this part is largely devoted to clothing stores. At about Worth Street the wholesale dry goods stores become nu- merous. Canal Street, a little further north is one of the widest cross- streets. Earle's Hotel is two blocks east, corner of Centre. The Metropolitan Hotel is at the corner of Prince Street, and Niblo's Garden Theatre is in the same building. This is one of the largest theatres in the city. The Grand Central Hotel is between Bleecker and West 3d Streets. New York Hotel is corner of Waverley Place. Astor Place branches off diagonally toward the large brown-stone build- iiig of the Cooper Union, opposite which is the Bible House. The Astor Library is quite near here, in Lafayette Place. At the junction of Astor Place and Eighth Street stands Old Clinton Hall. The American Insti- tute occupies a portion of this building. Its library contains about 12,000 Tolumos. The Institute holds its annual fair in the building on Third 14 Illustrated Guide to Kew York City. avenue, between 63d and 64th Streets. The Mercantile Library is also in Clinton Hall. It contains over 205,000 volumes. Members pay, if clerks, $4 yearly ; all others, $5. All important new works are purchased as soon as published. The reading-room, on the third floor, is supplied with the leading American and foreign papers and magazines. Branches of the Mercantile Library have been established at 62 Liberty Street and 431 Fifth Avenue. South-east corner of Broadway and Eighth Street is the Sinclair House. E. J. Denning &' Co's. , (formerly A. T. Stewart's), large retail dry goods estab- lishment occupies the block between Ninth and Tenth Streets. Just beyond, is Grace Church (Protestant Episcopal). This superb structure is an object of universal admiration. Adjoining the church, on the south side, is a small addition called the chantry, erected from the funds given by Miss Cath- arine Wolfe. The Ladies' Guild, also erected by Miss Wolfe, connects the church with the rectory. Back of the church in Fourth Avenue, is the Grace Memorial Home, erected by Vice- President Levi P. Morton in memory of his wife. The chancel (Wolfe Mem- orial), and the circular windows (Jones Mem- orial), were executed by Messrs. Claton and Bell, of London. St. Denis Hotel is at south-west corner of 11th Street. At corner of 13th Street is the Star Theatre. The Morton House is on the south-east corner of Church of the Strangers, Mercer St. Illustrated Guide to New York City. 15 AsTOR Library, Lafayette Place. t4th St. The hotel sidewalk fronting the Square is called the Rialto (by the " Perfesh"). Actors are usually found lounging about waiting for engage- ments. Further on at 56 E. 14tli Street, is the entrance to the Union Square Theatre. Steinway Hall is at 107 East 14th Street. Academy of Music is on the' corner of Irving Place, and at the corner of 15th Street and Irving Place is Amberg's German Theatre. Adjoming the Academy is the Tammany Hall Building. The Tammany Society has been in existence for about a century, and possesses great political power. Tony Pastor's Theatre occupies a portion of this building. West of Broadway, on Fourteenth Street is the veritable shopper's para- dise. The immense establishment of R. H. Macy & Co., is on the corner of Sixth Avenue. Just beyond is the 14th Street Theatre. Union Square, a small park, extends from 14th to 17th Streets between Broadway and Fovu'th x\. venue. It is ornamented with fine shade trees, and a neat fountain. Its northern side is an open plaza used for parades and public meetings, with a cottage and platform for speakers or reviewing officers. On special occasions the row of colored gas lamps is lighted, and presents a picturesque appearance. At the south-east corner is the bronze equestrian statue of Washington. In the park, facing Broadway, a bronze statue of Lafayette stands, designed by Bartholdi, and erected in 1876 by the French residents of New York. At the south-west corner is the statue of 16 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Amberg'h German Theatre, Lincoln, erected by the Union League Club. On the west side is Brentano's News Agency, Tiffany's, the great jewelers, and Sarony, the famous photo- grapher. On the east side (4th Avenue), Union Square Hotel, Hotel Dam and Hotel Hungaria. On the north side of the square (17th Street), is the Everett House. The most fashionable shopping quarter is between Union and Madison Squares. Gorham Manufacturing Co. , silversmiths, on the corner of 19th Street ; opposite is Arnold, Constable & Co., dry goods. Lord & Taylor, dry goods, and Continental Hotel at 20th Street. At 22d Street, J. & C. Johnston, dry goods, and Brooks Bros., clothiers, are opposite. Many places of interest are to be found on Twenty-third Street, east of Broadway. On the corner, Hotel Bartholdi ; just beyond is the American Art Gallery. The Young Men's Christian Association is at the corner of Fourth Avenue. The Association seeks to improve the spiritual, moral, social, mental and physical condition of young men. It maintains a gym- nasium, bowling alley, baths, a reading-room supplied with papers, a library containing 32,000 volumes, evening educational classes in writing, arith- metic, bookkeeping, phonography, German, Spanish, French, and vocal music, various entertainments, Bible-classes and prayer-meetings. 18 Illustrated Guide to New York City. New York Hospital, Directly opposite is the National Academy of Design. Annual exhibi- tions of the Academy are held during the spring and fall of each year, dur- ing which time the building is open to the public for a small admission fee. Lyceum Theatre adjoins the Academy of Design on Fourth Avenue, and the Ashland Hotel is opposite. The New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children has its office at No. 100 East Twenty-third Street. It is formed for the protection of children against brutal treatment. The College of the City of New York is at the corner of Lexington Avenue. It was originally entitled the Free Academy and is intended to furnish a complete collegiate education. No Illustrated Guide to New York City. 19 student can be admitted to the College unless he resides in the city, be four- teen years of age, have attended the Common Schools in the city twelve months, and passed a good examination Returning to west of Broadway we find some of the largest retail book stores. 27 West 23d Street, G. P. Putnam's Sons ; 37, T. W. Christion (French); 39, E. P. Dutton & Co., and At 38, Randolph & Co. The notable dry and fancy goods stores are Le Boutillier Bros., No. 31 ; Stern Bros., No. 82, and the Liliputian Bazar. The Eden Musee is near Sixth Avenue, traordinary collections of wax figures in the world, and the stranger should by all means pay it a visit. The figures arc startling in their life-like appear- ance. The Chamber of Horrors is well fitted to satisfy the most exacting of horror seekers. This is one of the most ex- The Casino. 20 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Broadway Theatre Masonic Temple is corner of Sixth Avenue and 23d Street. Returning to Broadway we reach Madison Square, a park comprising 6 acres, at the junction of Broadway and Fifth Avenue. It is handsomely planted with shade trees. In the centre is a large fountain. On the Broadway side, within the park, are the statues of Wra. H. Seward and Admiral Farragut, and in a triangular space between the Park and Broad- way is the Worth monument. Just back of the Fifth Avenue Hotel on 24tli Street, is the pretty little Madison Square Theatre. Albemarle Hotel is on the corner of 24lh Street. Hoffman House is at the corner of 25th Street. St. James' Hotel south- west, and Delmonico's, southeast corner of 26th Street. On the southeast corner of 27th Street is the Victoria Hotel ; diagonally opposite is the Cole- man House. The Fifth Avenue Theatre is at the northwest corner of 28th Street. Further along Dockstader's Minstrels. On the east side, above 28th Street, is the Sturtevant House, and on the corner of 29th Street is the Gilsey House. At southwest cor. of 30th Street is Daly's Theatre. Bijou Opera House between 30th and 31st Streets on the west side, and opposite is Palmer's Theatre (late Wallack's). At the southeast corner of 31st Street, 22 Illustrated Guide to New York City. is the Grand Hotel. The Union Dime Savings Institution building is at 32d Street, at junction of Sixth Avenue and Broadway. The Standard Theatre is between 31st and 32d Streets, on the west side. The brown stone church on the corner of 34tli Street is the Broadway Tabernacle. A bronze statue of Wm. E. Dodge is in the triangular space at 35th Street. Harrigan's Park Theatre , northwest corner of 35tli Street. Marl- borough Hotel, corner of 3Gth Street, and Hotel Normandie corner of 37tli Street. The Casino, at the corner of 39th Street, is a beautiful structure modelled after a portion of the Alhambra, and is devoted to comic opera. The Garden on the roof affords a delightful resort in summer. On the cor- ner opposite is the Oriental Hotel. The Metropolitan Opera House occupies entire block bounded by Broad- way, Seventh Avenue, 39th and 40tli Streets, It has the largest auditorium in America. The seating capacity of the house is 6,000. There are 122 boxes, each with a spacious salon attached. The stage is 98 feet wide, 76 feet deep, and 150 feet high from its lower floor. There are three vesti- bules and seven staircases for en- trance and exit. On the northwest corner of 40th Street is the Gedney House ; the southeast corner the Hotel Ven- dome. The Broadway Theatre is at the corner of 41st Street. At 42d Street are the Rossmore and St. Cloud Hotels, and at 43d Street is the Barrett House. Above are a number of elegant apartment houses. Broadway ends at the circle at 59th Street and Eighth Avenue, one of the entrances to Central Park. There are a number of elegant apartment houses on 59th Street, be- tween Broadway and Fifth av., the Madrid, Cordova, Lisbon and Gran- ada, etc., called the Navarro Flats, costing upwards of 7 millions to erect. Harlem Branch Y. M. C. A. Illustrated Guide to New York City. 23 Eiaiu ILkstSbSb 'WssCLZ. Copynslit^lSSe,!^ SaCEEI; £• Bbouici^ Railroad Branch of Y. M C Association. THE BOWERY. The ^reat East Side thoroughfare commencing at Chatham Square, to its termination at the junction of Third and Fourth Avenues, is one of un- ceasing activity. At midnight the throng is scarcely less than at midday. Its theatres, of whicn there are seven, grading from the highest class of drama to the lowest of varieties. Dime museums, concert saloons and catch- penny affairs of every description make it one of the most unique sights the city possesses. Some of the stores compare favorably with those on 24 Illustrated Guide to New York City. the more fashionable avenues as to outward appearance and fair dealing. The most important buildings are the Citizens' Savings Bank, corner of Canal Street ; the Bowery Savings Bank near Grand Street ; the branch of the Young Men's Christian Association at No. 243, and the Dry Dock Sav- ings Bank at the corner of 3d Street. Grand Street for about three blocks east of the Bowery is the shopping centre for the east side ladies. The immense bazars of E. Ridley & Sons and Lord & Taylor with the accom- panying smaller stores, makes it a formidable rival of the Bowery itself. EAST SIDE AVENUES. East of Second Avenue between Houston and 14th Streets is often called "Germany." Avenue A (Dutch Broadway), is the main thoroughfare. Here the German language is spoken almost exclusively, the signs are Ger- man, aud everything has a decidedly Teutonic appearance. There is very little of interest to strangers east of Avenue A. SECOND AVENUE. Second Avenue begins at East Houston Street, and continues in a straight line to Harlem River. The lower portion of the avenue is given to sub- stantial residences of the old families of New York, At the corner of 8th Street is the Free German Library and Dispensary. On the northeast corner of 10th Street is the Baptist Tabernacle, St. Mark's Church on the corner of Stuy- vesant Place, is a quaint old structure erected in 1794. Among the m any distinguished person- ages who have been buried in the church Residence Riverside Drive. FROM (UILDINQ. IlCustrated Guide to Kew York City. S5 yard are Petrus Stuyvesant, the last Dutch governor ; Col. Slaughter, (one of the old English governors), Commodore Perry, and Admiral Baldwin. It was from here that the body of A. T. Stewart was stolen. The tomb is located near the centre of the yard facing Second Avenue. On the southeast corner 11th Street is the New York Historical Society Building. On the southwest corner of 14th Street is the 14th Street Pres- byterian Church. From 15th to 17th Streets is Stuyvesant Square. The large church fronting on the Square is St. George's (Episcopal). Adjoining, in the rear, is the Memorial House erected in 1888, from funds provided by Charles and Louisa Tracy. The upper portion of the Avenue is devoted to manufactories, etc., which are of little interest to strangers. FKOM BUfLOlNO. Cancer Hospital, Central Park West, and 108th St, 26 Illustrated Guide to Kew York City. THIRD AVENUE, Third Avenue is solidly built and perfectly straight from its beginning at the junction of Bowery and Fourth Avenue at 6th Street to the Harlem River, a distance of six miles, and is one of the most active avenues in the city. The best way to do the avenue is by the Elevated Road. Tompkins Market, (the famous 69th Regiment occupying the Hall above as an armory). Cooper Union and Bible House are at the commencement of the avenue. Nearest station of the Elevated Road to these places is at 9th Street. At 11th Street is the Office of Charities and Corrections. Strangers wishing permits to visit any Institutions under this head apply here. (Station at 9th or 14th Streets.) At 24th Street is the centre of the Horse Mart. At 30th Street is the Third Avenue Theatre. American Institute Hall is at 63d Street, and at 66th Street is the Chapin Home. On East 67th Street is the elegant new building of the Central Turnverein. From 67tli to 69th are a group of buildings most interesting, viz ; Headquarters of the Fire Department, the Deaf Mute Asylum, Foundling Asylum, Mt. Sinai Hospital, Normal College, Baptist Home, and the huge 7th Regi- ment Armory. Beyond, the avenue pre- sents a varied scene of breweries, tenement houses, and retail stores in general. At 125th Street is ; , the centre of the old !i_il, village of Harlem. Elegant large dry ',:j~|[ goods establishments ^ abound, and the scene almost equals that of 14th St. Ex- cursion lines start from the bridge up the M BUILDCN9. O IT Residence Cor. 72d St. , and Boulevard. Harlem river. Illustrated Guide to New York City 537 FRON N. V. SUN. Headquarters Fire Dept. FOURTH AVENUE. (From 32d Street to Harlem River is termed Park Avenue. Fourth Avenue begins at the junction of Third Avenue and Bow- ery at 6th Street. The great building at the junction is the Cooper In- stitute. This institution was found- ed by Peter Cooper in 1859, and has cost over one and a half million dollars. The Institution is main- tained at an annual cost of |60,000. Its aim is purely educational. It places within the reach of the poor of both sexes the opportunity to ac- quire a thorough education in the varied branches of literature, art and science. It provides evening classes for all those who by reason of their avoca- tion are necessarily debarred from day attendance. Its comprehensive courses of lectures on art, natural philosophy and rhetoric are free. The department of art includes modelling in clay and drawing from life and from casts, India ink, crayon, wood engraving, photo- graphy, perspective and oil painting. The course of study in the scier tific department includes a fui. course of mathematics as prelimi- nary to the study of practical en- gineering and mathematics. It has a free library and reading- room, where are found over 300 papers and periodicals. 28 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Office of Charities and Coerections. Opposite, between Third and Fourth Avenues and 8th and 9th Streets is the Bible House, erected by the American Bible Society in 1852. Cost over $300,000. The great iron building occupying block between 9th and 10th Streets is E. J. Denning & Co's., dry goods store. Opposite 11th Street is Grace Church Memorial Home. From 14th to 17th Streets is Union Square East. At the northwest corner of 17th Street is the Everett House, and at the corner of 18th Street is the Clarendon Hotel. Opposite, on the northwest corner is the Belvidere House, The quaint looking struc- ture at the corner of 20th Street is All Souls' Church, one of the oldest Uni- tarian churches in the city. At 21st Street is the Calvary Episcopal Church. On the northeast corner of 22d Street is St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church, and opposite are the oflSces of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. On the northwest corner is the Fourth Avenue Pres- byterian Church. At the southeast corner of 23d Street is the office of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. The building on the Illustrated Guide to New York City. 29 southwest corner is a branch of the Young Men's Christian Association. The general office is at 40 East 23d Street. Otlier branches of the Association at Young- Men's Institute, 222 Bowery,, 243 Bowery, 153 East 86th Street, 5 West 125th Street, and the German Branch, 142 Second Avenue, near 9tli Street. Branches for railroad men are at 361 Madison Avenue, cor. 45th Street ; 470 West 30th Street, near Tenth Avenue, and 861 Eleventh Avenue, corner 60th Street. On the northwest corner is the Academy of Design. Adjoining is the Lyceum Theatre, and opposite is the Ashland House. From 26th to 27th Streets, on the west side, is the Madison Square Garden. This building occupies the entire block, the main entrance being on Madison Avenue. It is used for large gatherings, sucli as walking matches, Barnum's circus, Horticultural displays, and public meetings. The present building is to be torn down to make room for a new structure. Park Avenue Hotel is at 32d Street, and from 34th Street to 42d Street, over the hill, is called Park Avenue, At 34th Street is the Church of the Messiah (Unitarian); at 35th Street is the Church of the Covenant ; at 39tli Street is the First Baptist Church. From 40th to 41st Streets is the palatial Murray Hill Hotel, and from 41st to 42d Streets, on the east side is the Grand Union Hotel. The Grand Central Depot materially interferes with the progress of the avenue at this point, the avenue stopping abruptly in front of the build ing, and commencing again at 50th Street, eight blocks farther on. From 34th to 42d Streets the avenue is tunneled, which was originally done to allow the trains of the N. Y. & N. H., and Harlem Roads to proceed to the depot, then at 28th Street. A series of open cuts and tun- nels continue from 42d Street to the Harlem River. From 49th- to 50th Streets, west side, is •Columbia College. 30 Illustrated Guide to JSTew York City. I The block opposite is occupied by the Women's Hospital, incorporated in 1857. The upper ward free to residents of New York State, to others an entrance fee of twenty-six dollars is required. The Seventh Regiment Armory occupies I the entire Square between 66th and 67tli Streets, Lexington and 4th Avenues, and is probably the finest armory building in the world. It is a red brick building with granite facings. The rooms are elegantly finished in hard wood. There are ten company rooms, a board of officers' room, a veterans' room, a library and reading room, a reception room, a field and staff room, a gymnasium, an adjutant's room, a non- commissioned staff room, a colonel's room, a memorial room, six squad drill rooms, and a rifle range 300 feet in length, in the basement. The main drill room is 200x800 feet, the largest in the United States. Visitors admitted on ap- plication to the janitor of the building. At the corner of 68th Street is the Normal Col- lege. This institution accommodates about 1,600 pupils. The build- ing is 300 feet long by 125 wide and holds thirty recitation rooms, three large lecture rooms, retiring rooms, a library and a fine main hall. =5^: Dr. Hall's Church 5th Av. and 55th St. 32 Illustrated Guide to New York City. It was erected at a cost of $484,000. The College is under the con^ trol of the Board of Education, On the west side from 69th to 70th Streets, is the Union Theological Seminary of the Presbyterian Church. It was founded in 1836, and forms a group of handsome buildings. The property of the Seminary is valued at $2,000,000. The buildings along the avenue are the Morgan Library, Adams Cliapel, and Jessup Hall. Back of all is the great dormitory. . The block above is occupied by the Presbyterian Hospital. At 72d Street on the east side is the magnificent " Freundschault " Club House, erected at a cost of over half a million of dollars. At 77lh Street is the German Hospital. The avenue continues to the Harlem River, and will eventually be one of the finest in the city. Methodist Book Concern. Illusteated Guide to New York City. 33 FIFTH AVENUE. Fifth Avenue is the most fashionable avenue in New York. Begin- ning at Washington Square, it runs to Mount Morris Park, along the east side of Central Park, without a break ; then from 124th Street to the Har- lem River. Commencing at No. 1, in the first house on the right, lives William Butler Duncan ; No. 6, Lispenard Stewart ; No. 8, John Taylor Johnston. On the corner of Clinton Place is the aristocratic Brevoort House, opposite, is the Berkeley House. At No. 31, lives Gen. Daniel E, Stewart Mansion. Sickles. Corner of Tenth Street is the Church of the Ascension, (Epis- copal), Hotel Grosvenor opposite. The First Presbyterian Church corner of Eleventh Street. On the left-hand corner of Fifteenth Street is the building of the Manliattan Club, Democratic. At Sixteenth Street is the Judge Publishing House ; opposite, is the mansion of Vice-President Levi P. 34 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Morton, No. 85 ; No. 103 is the home of Edwards Pierrepont. At No. 107 lives Mrs. Marshall O. Roberts. At No. 118 live the New York Winthrops. At Eighteenth Street is Chickering Hall. Mr. August Belmont's la.ige house, with famous gallery of paintings, is No. 109, corner of Eighteenth street. At the corner of Twentieth Street is the new building of the Meth- odist Book Concern. The Union Club, corner of Twenty-first Street, is a social and non-political club, ranking among the first in New York. Di- rectly across the avenue, is the Lotus Club, also non-political ; its member- ship comprises literary men, actors, artists and professional men generally. Adjoining is the Glenham Hotel. The South Reformed Church stands on the south-west corner. From 23d Street to 29th street, between Fifth Avenue and Broadway is the great hotel centre. At 23d Street is the Fifth Avenue Hotel ; at 24th Street, Albemarle Hotel ; adjoining is the Hoffman House famous for its interior decorations and mag- nificent bar room ; 26th Street, Delmonico's ; and diagonally opposite it, the Hotel Bruns- wick ; at 27th Street is the Victoria. The corner of West 29th Street is known as the Holland Church, and belongs to the Collegiate Reformed Church, one of the oldest and wealthiest corporations in the city, chartered by King William III, under date May 11, 1696. Just around the corner, on East 29th Street, is the Church of the Transfiguration. Its pastor became famous about _^ seventeen years ago through , an incident which proved the Christian charity of Mr. Houghton. George Holland, a member of Wallack's com- pany, died and his friends ap- Residence, Fifth Avenue. Illustrated Guide to New York City. 85 plied to Rev. George Sabine, Pastor of the Church of the Atonement, a fashionable church then, in Madison Avenue, between 28th and 29th Streets, to read the burial service. When Mr. Sabine was informed that the dead man had been an actor he curtly refused to permit the funeral service to be held in his church. " There is a little church around the corner," said Mr. Sabine, "where you can be accommodated." Joseph Jefferson, who had the fu- neral of Holland in charge, went to the Rev. Mr. Houghton, the pastor of the Church of the Transfiguration, which was ' ' the little church around the corner " referred to by Mr. Sabine, and Mr. Houghton at once expressed his entire willingness to officiate at the funeral services of an actor or any other Christian. The Church of the Transfiguration and its pas- tor have been very popular with actors ever since this incident. At the northeast corner of 32d Street is the Knick- erbocker Club. At 33d and 34th Streets, on the rise of Murray Hill, are the residences of John Jacob and William Astor, and at the corner of the latter street is the white marble mansion of the late A. T. Stewart, erected at a cost of two million dollars 36 Illustrated Guide to New York City, The New York Club is on the corner of 35th Street. At No. 386 Gen. Daniel Butterfield, and at No. 389 Pierre Lorillard. Christ Church (Epis- copal), famous for its fine music and beautiful frescoes, corner of West 35th Street. Brick Church (Presbyterian) is at corner of West 37th Street. No. 415 is the St. Nicholas Club, composed exclusively of gentlemen of the Temple Emanu-el. oldest Knickerbocker families — the Remsens, DePeysters, Rhinelanders, Roosevelts, Schuylers etc ; no one being eligible who is not a descendant of a native of New York state prior to 1785. No. 425 is the home of Austin Corbin. Illustrated Guide to New York City. 37 The Union League Club House (Republican), is at the corner of Fifth Avenue and East 39th street. From West 40th to West 42d Streets is the distributing reservoir of the Croton Water- works. On the north-west cor- ner of 42d Street is the Hotel Bristol, and opposite is the Hamilton, Rus- sel Sage's house is at No. 506. The most beautiful and important synagogue in the city is the Temple Emanu-el, corner of East 43d Street. It is a large building in the Moorish style of architecture. Hotel Sherwood is at 44th Street. At No. 532 is Manton Marble's house, and No. 549 is Thomas T. Eckert's home. The Fourth Universalist, long known as Dr. Chapin's Church, stands at the corner of West 45th Street. The residence of Chauncey M. Depew is close by at No. 22 East 45th Street. The Church of the Heavenly Rest (Episcopal), on the east side of Fifth Avenue, abDve45lh Street. The Windsor Hotel extends from East 46th to East 47th Street. At No. 562 dwells Joseph W. Harper, Jr. At No. 574 are the rooms of the American Yacht Club. At No. 579, in the large The Vanderbilt Mansions, 3$ Illustrated Guide to New York City. brown-stone house, with lanterns in front, lives Jay Gould. At 591, the house with the carved stone griffins in front, is the home of Robert Goelet. At West 48th Street the Collegiate ReformedChurch. No. 597 is the residence of Tloswell P. Flower, and at 608 is Ogden Goelet, The Buckingham Hotel occupies block between 49th and 50th Streets. No. 615 is E. S. Jaffray's home. At the corner of 50th Street the Cathedral of St. Patrick. It is of white marble, 306 feet deep by 120 broad. The towers are 330 feet high, It was project- ed by Archbishop Hughes about 1850. The corner stone was laid August 15, 1858. Roman Catholic Or. phan Asylum (Male), from 51st to 52d Streets. No. 634 is the residence of D. O. Mills. On the west side between 51st and 52d Sts ,are the magnificent brown- stone palaces of the Yanderbilt family. No. 640 is the residence of the late W. H. Yanderbilt, and 642 Mrs. William D. Sloan. On the corner of 52d Street Is William K. Yanderbilt. The Langdon Hotel is between 52d and 53d streets, and St. Thomas Church (Episcopal), is at the corner of 53d Street. Just beyond are the connecting man- sions of Dr. W. S. Webb and H. McK. Twom- bly. From 54th to 55th Streets, Dutch Reformed Church. is the St. Luke's Illustrated Guide to New York City 39 The Residence of W. K. Vanderbilt. Hospital. At West 55th Street, Dr. Hall's (Presbyterian) Church. On the south-west corner of 57th Street is the residence of ex-Secretary of State Whitney, and the opposite corner is the new residence of Cornelius Van- derbilt. The elegant private residence of Mrs. E. B. Alexander, 4 West 58th Street, fronts the Plaza, which is the principal entrance to the Central Park. Plaza Hotel is the large building extending from 58th to 59th Streets. At East 64th Street is the entrance to Central Park Menagerie. Lenox Library occupies the block between 70th and 71st Streets. It was 40 Illustrated Guide to New York City. built and endowed by the late James juenox. The library occupies the en- tire south wing ; in the north wing will be f ounJ a collection of Bibles con- taining the earliest printed books, the first book printed in English, and the first book printed in this country. There are also rare manuscripts on vellum dated before printing was in- vented, ancient and modern vases, bric-a-brac, etc. The second floor of the main building is devoted to art, and contains about 150 fine paintings, and 30 pieces of statuary. The Library is free to the public, and the building is open from 10 A. J\I., until 4 P. M. , daily, Sundays and Mondays excepted. Residence of Cornelius Vanderbilt. Illustrated Guide to New York City. 41 By far the best way to " do " the Avenue is on the top of one of the Stages. Their route is from Elevated Station corner of Bleecker Street and South Fifth Avenue to 82d Street, at Metropolitan Museum of Art. The stages connect at 72d Street with Park Carriages for Riverside Drive. Lenox Library. SIXTH AVENUE. Sixth Avenue is next to Broadway in importance as a retail business street. It extends from Carmine Street north to 59th Street and Central Park. The largest and most elegant stores are from 14th to 23d Streets, the most noted being R. H. Macy & Co., on the east side, on the west, B. Alt- man & Co., Simpson, Crawford & Simpson, and O'Neill's. The principal buildings, other than the dry goods stores, are Jefferson Market Court and Prison, at the corner of West 10th Street, a picturesque gothic structure, with lofty clock tower. The lower part of the building is occupied as a Police Court ; the Civil Court, (3d Judicial District), occupies the upper portion. In the rear, on West 10th Street is the prison accommodating nearly 200 boarders. At the corner of Sixth and Greenwich Avenues is the new Jefferson Mar- ket Building. The upper portion of the building is devoted to miscel- laneous offices, while the market proper is first class in all its appointments. The Masonic Temple, corner of 23d Street. The Racket Club, corner of 26th Street, and the New York Athletic Club, corner of 55th Street. 42 Illustkated Guide to New York City. Jefferson Market Court-House. EIGHTH AVENUE. Eighth Avenue begins at Abiagdon Square and ends at the Harlem River. Between 14tli and 59th Streets the Avenue abounds in small stores of every description. The largest are Jones's, at the corner of 19th Street ; Ehrich Bros., 24th Street, and Walton's, 51st Street. There are but two theatres on the avenue, the Grand Opera House, corner 23d Street, where Illustrated Guide to New York City. 43 all the leading plays are produced at popular prices, and Harry Miner's Variety Theatre, near 25th Street. From 59tli to 110th Streets is now called Central Park West. On this portion of the avenue, at 72d Street, are the famous Dakota Flats, said to be 160 feet high. From 77th to 81st Streets is Manhattan Square, the large building occupying the centre of the park is the Museum of Natural History ; it is open to the public without charge on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Satur- day of every week. At 108th Street is the Can- cer Hospital, founded in 1884, and endowed by John Jacob Astor with 1200,000, At 110th Street is the high curve of the Elevated Road, being 91 feet from the street to the top of the rail. At looth Street is the station of the New York and Northern Railway. Be- yond is the Harlem River, : with lligii Bridge in the dis- tance. St. Thomas' Church, cor. 53d St. TENTH AVENUE. Tenth Avenue extends from 542 West Street to Harlem River. The lower portion is of little interest to strangers. The Roosevelt Hospital is at 59th Street. Between 59th and 60th Streets, is the College of Physicians and Surgeons, connected \\ith Columbia College. It was founded in 1807, and has 20 professors and nearly 700 students. William H. Vanderbilt gave it $500,000, which was increased by $250,000 given by his four sons to establish a free clinic and dispensary, and $250,000 by his daughter, Mrs. William T). Sloane, to establish the Sloane Maternity Hospital. Illustrated Guide to New York City. FROM BUILDINO. College op Physicians and Surgeons. At 93d Street is the Methodist Episcopal Church Home. At 105th Street is the Home for Aged Hebrews. At 116th Street is the Bloomingdale In- sane Asylum. Jnst above 127th Street is the Depot of the Cable Jvoad ; go in at the centre entrance, down one short flight of stairs, and view the pon- derous machinery that moves the cable ; it is worth seeing. The elegant large building at 136th Street is the Hebrew Orphan Asylum, and opposite is the pumping station of the New Aqueduct. The old mansion on the northeast corner of 141st Street and Convent Avenue was formerly the home of Alexander Hamilton, of Revolutionary fame. It formerly stood about 300 feet to the northwest of its present site. The 13 Elms planted by him occupy their original position. At 143d Street is the Colored Orphan Asylum, and from 153d to 155th Streets, is the Trinity Cemetery. At 173d Street is the High Bridge Res- ervoir. 46 Illustrated Guide to New York City. At 175th Street is the New York Juvenile Asylum, a fine stone edifice, a home and reformatory for neglected children. The asylum, by its charter, becomes the legal guardian of all such children as may be committed to it by the voluntary act of their parents or by the precept of a police magis- trate. The institution owes its origin to Dr. J. D. Russ, of this city, so favor- ably known for his exertions in estab- lishing the New York Institution for the Blind. It occupies 20 acres of ground, which is in part cultivated by the children, who, during their stay in the asylum, are instructed in all the branches of a common school education. The institution has a House of Reception for 200 children, at No. 71 West 13th Street. All children, when first committed, must remain in this house ten days, to afford their parents an opportunity to reclaim them. Just beyond at 181st Street is the elegant new bridge across the Harlem River. The mass of broken stone seen on either side of the river is from the tunnel of the New Aqueduct, which passes beneath the bed of the river at a depth of 150 feet. The new aqueduct is nearly 32 miles in length, the diameter inside, 14 feet, and at an average depth of 200 feet below from bu.ldino. the surface. 13 Elms, Hamilton Grange. The Cable Road ends at 186th Streejt. A short walk to the old earth works of Fort George will well repay one for the trouble. The view from the top of the bluff is one of the most picturesque in the city. There are numerous summer-gardens in the vicinity. Illustrated Guide to New York City, 47 MADISON AVENUE. Madison Avenue begins at 20d Street, aud ranks next to Fifth Avenue in point of interest. It abounds in palatial residences and elegant cliurclies. Madison Square Presbyterian Church, a neat brown stone structure, is at the corner of 24th Street. At southeast corner of 26th Street is the old Union Leag.ue Club House, now occupied by the University Club. Op- posite is the Madison Square Garden. At 29th Street is 'Rutgers Pres- byterian Church, At the corner of 31st Street is the Madison Avenue Bap- tist Church. At 38th Street is Zion's Church (Episcopal). At 42d Street is the Church of the Holy Trinity (Episcopal). At 44th Street St. Bar- tholomew's (Episcopal), and at 45th Street is the handsome little building of the Young Men's Christian Association (Railroad Branch). Columbia College occupies block 49th and 50th Streets, Fourth and Mad- ison Avenues. In 1754 it was chartered as King's College, and the firsi buildings were situated west of College Place. It was removed to its pres ent site in 1857, There are five departments ; art, mines, law, poiit cal science, and medicine, with a corps of sixty instructors. Its treasury is chiefly supplied from the rental of land- ed property granted for that purpose by the state of New York and Trinity Church. The college course extends over a period of four years. The scien- tific department of Columbia College is called the School of Mines. It is di- vided into sections of civil engineering, mining, engineering, metallurgy, geol- ogy, and natural history. The course also occupies four years. The Florentine palace built by Henry Villard is at 50th Street, while opposite rises the great Cathedral, flanked on either side by the archbishop's palace (No. 452), and the beautiful rectory (No. 460). From 51st to 52d Streets, on both sides, are the Roman Catholic Orphan Asylums. Cable Car. Jii' 48 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Tiffany Mansion. The Berkshire Flats are at the northwest corner of 52d Street. Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church is at the corner of 53d Street. At 55th Street is the First Reformed Episcopal Church. At 57th Street is the Madison Avenue Dutch Reformed Church. At the corner of 58th Street is the elegant Madison Avenue Hotel, and opposite, at the corner of 59th Street, is a permanent building devoted to Cyclorama. On the northwest corner is the Hoffman Arms (Flat house). The corner of 60th Street is the Madi- son Avenue Methodist Church. At 64th Street is the Baptist Church of the Epiphany. Between 64th and 65th Streets is the Jewish Synagogue B'nai Jeshurun. At 66th Street is the Church of the Holy Spirit, Illostrated Guide to New York City. 49 From 70th to 71st Streets, on the right, is the Presbyterian Hospital. At the northeast corner of 71st Street is the St. James Episcopal Churcli. At northwest corner of 72d Street is the famous Tiffany Mansion, and at 78d Street is the Phillips Presbyterian Church. Electric Cars run the en tire length of this avenue, crossing the Harlem River at 138th Street, thence to the Mott Haven Depot of the N. Y. and N. H. R. R. College of the City of Nev York. 50 Illustkated Guide to New York City. Madison Avenue Hotel. PUBLIC PARKS. AUDUBON PARK. Audubon Park is the name given to what was formerly the grounds at- tached to the mansion which was the residence of the ornithologist Audu bon. The lawn, interspersed with handsome villas, is unfenced, and it has the appearance of a private park. It overlooks the Hudson, and lies be- tween Trinity Cemetery and 158th Street. It is reached by the Sixth Ave. Elevated Railway, and the Tenth Avenue Cable Railroad. Illustrated Guide to New York City. 51 New York Athletic Club. BRYANT PARK Bryant Park is between Fifth and Sixlli Avenues, 40tli and 42d Streets, and lias an extent of between nine and ten acres, upon one-half of which is the "Distributing Reservoir." The other, or western half, once had upon it the " New York Crystal Palace," but since the destruction of that build- ing by the fire of 1858, the grounds have been kept open as a park. 52 Illustrated Guide to New York City. CENTRAL PARK. The Central Park carriage service is under the supervision of the Park Commissioners, and for strangers affords the best facility for seeing the Park. The point of starting is either from Fifth Avenue and 59th Street, or Eighth Ave- nue and 59th Street gates ; usual time, one hour ; fare 25 cents. Tickets must be pur- chased of the starter, and they entitle pass- engers to be put down and taken up at the Museum of Natural History, Mt. St. Vin- cent, Museum of Art, and at the Terrace Bridge, without extra charge. Carriages in going take the West Drive, in returning the East Drive, thus making the tour of the Park. In going, you are driven past the Mu- seum of Natural His- tory, in Manhattan Square, the great Cro- ton Reservoir and the tower of the lower Reservoir. In returning, car- riages stop at Mt. St. Jewish Synagogue, Madison Avenue. Vmcent, Museum of Illustrated GiriDE to New York City. 63 Art, and Terrace Bridge. The principal walks of the lower park lead more or less directly to the Mall, and through this to the Terrace, which is the central architectural feature of the Park. Visitors entering the Park at Fifth Avenue and 59th Street will pass on the left the Pond, a sheet of water covering five acres, in a valley near 59th Street. Soon after, crossing a bridge passing over the bridle path, is the old Arsenal now used as a Menagerie Here is quite a large col- lection of animals and interesting aviary. A little further and the Mall is reached, begin- ning at the Marble Arch, (a tunnel for pedestrians under the driveway). Several of the best stat- ues in the Park are here. "Shakespeare," "Rob- ert Burns," ""Walter Scott," "Fitz Greene Halleck," and to the left "The Indian Hunter and his Dog." The Mall extends a third of a mile to the Esplanade and Terrace, which command a fine view of lake and road- way. Near the northern Jewish Synagogue, Lexington Ave. extremity of the 3Iall is the Music Stand. Concerts on Saturday afternoons during the summer. On the bank above is a long, vine-covered summer- house, and near it the Casino, a restaurant. O as o tn CO rt ^ Qj rQ •« .« a ""( ■^^03 - ri O C3 S O) 'T^ ts fc- «- 2 2^ .S <^ 5 ^ ^ "^ ^ . to it, as well as f to the Terrace em ents. A broad esp he margin of the L 1 of carved stone, w s, one on either side hward. > ding rive shm( to t wal ning nort •^ rn rd ^ P- S ^ 2 ^ ■£ ^ <^ ^ tairway: from tl istic em ches no with a ,'ith two otpaths 2 ^ S S ^ T3 '^ r-^ >■ i^ 02 «2 cy ^ w ■^ r <^ Poo <: Pi c 1 i 1 1 1I o3 02 -M O) ft i> orkmanship. A the plaza at the Terrace below, under the drive, elaborate pat- ework is every- n for the hall. ^ g o ^ .a g ^ d o -^ M ^ 5 ft • d il -^ OJ T^ 02 lificent ucted f : vel of that pa flnishe nd the . The H fH O (D 0) C3 "TJ mag onst he 1 read gar les, arvei m '-' "^ .etropolitan Museum of Akt. JEROME PARK. The most fashionable race-course in the vicinity of New York. It is reached by the New York and Harlem Railroad from the Grand Central Depot. Fare for the round trip sixty cents. MT. MORRIS PARK. Presents the anomalous appearance of an abrupt hill, with thickly wooded sides, rising from the midst of a plain that has no other hills upon it. It " head's off" the Fifth Avenue at 120th Street, and extends as far north as 124th street, and its area is nearly twenty acres. RIVERSIDE PARK AND DRIVE Is an irregular strip of land, running from 72d Street to 130th Street. It is nearly three miles long, and averages 500 feet wide. The Park coaches start from Elevated stations, 9th avenue and 72d Street. The drive is one of the most delightful iu the city. STUYVESANT PARK. Extends from 15th to ITtli Streets, and is divided by the intersecting pass- age of the Second Avenue. St. George's Church is upon the west of 60 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Fifth Avenue Hotel. this Park. The ground was presented by the late P. G. Stuyvesant, Esq., to the corporation of the Church. TOMPKINS SQUARE Is one of the largest parks of the city. It occupies the area formed by Avenues A and B, and 7th and 10th Streets. WASHINGTON SQUARE, Another great and most effective ornament to the city was formed by laying out the ground formerly occupied as a Potter's Field. The bones were collected in vast trenches, one on each side of the Square, which were inclosed with fences, and planted with trees. For many years this was used for burial purposes, and it is computed that over a hundred thousand bodies have been buried where now assemble for pleasure multitudes of liv- ing beings. The Square is surrounded with splendid private houses,''Bnd on one side is the University building and Asbury M. E. Church. One-third of the ground comprising the Square was purchased for $80,000, making a gross value of $240, 000, devoted to the improvement of this quarter of the city. The Square contains a little over nine acres, and is ornamented with a fountain, statue of Garibaldi and music pavilion. Illustrated Guide to Kew York City. 61 MISCELLANEOUS, AsTOR Library is on Lafayette Place. It was founded by Jolin Jacob Astor, who left by will, in 1848, the sum of $100,000 for its establishment. This was afterward increased by his son, William B. Astor, who added $550 000. John Jacob Astor further in- creased the aggregate by the sum of $250,000. This library is for consultation, and not for circulation. Chambers Street Hospital, or "House of Eelief , " of the New Yoik Hospital, 160 Chambers Street. Cares for, without charge, in case of accident, etc. Ludlow Street Jaii> is situated at the corner of Ludlow Street and Essex Market Place, and was first occupied in June, 1862, taking the place of the noted Eldridge Street Jail. It is built of Philadelphia brick, ornamented with New Jersey free-stone trimmings. The building is built in the form of an L, ninety feet on each street, forty feet deep, and about sixty-five feet high, leaving an angle of about fifty feet square, surrounded by a high wall, for a yard in which the prisoners are permitted to take their daily exercise. The Tombs — This famous prison was erected in 1838, and is a massive, heavy-looking granite structure in the Egyptian stjde of architecture. It covers the block between Franklin, Centre, Leonard, and Elm Streets, with entrance on Centre Street. Two courts (Special Sessions and the G2 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Stock Exchange. Tombs Police Court) are held here. Arrested persons waiting to be tried, and convicts waiting to be executed or sent to State Prison, are imprisoned in the Tombs. Many hangings have taken place in this prison. Permits to visit the Tombs are given by the Commissioners of Charities and Correc- tions, office, Third Avenue, corner 11th Street. The Morgue is situated within the grounds of Bellevue Hospital, at the foot of E. 26th Street. Behind a glass partition aie marble slabs on' which Illustrated Guide to New York City. 63 unknown deceased are placed to await recognition before burial. The bodies are kept three days, and then removed to the dead-house adjoining. Clothing found on the bodies is shown for thirty days, and preserved for one year if not identified. Photographs are taken of the dead, and a rec- ord taken of their place of burial. The Young Women's Christian Association occupies the building No. 7 E. 15th St. It was founded in 1870, and incorporated 1873, for the improvement of the moral, social and spiritual condition of young women. The institution offers to a self-supporting class between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five these educational advantages free: — instruction in writing, phonography, typewriting, retouching photo-negatives, coloring photo- graphs, and crayon. There are provided likewise concerts and readings, a circulating library, and reading-room. The employment Bureau is open to teachers, artists, stenographers, type-writers, copyists, clerks, companions, house-keepers, nurses, governesses and seamstresses. The industrial department instructs in machine and hand-sewing. In connection is an order department for all kinds of fine sewing, hand embroidery, crochet work, knitting work and lace-mending. The library contains 7,000 vol- umes. The reading-room is open daily from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., evening from 7 to 9 P. M. TwEi-PTH Regiment Armory. 64 IliLtrSTRATED GuiDE TO NeW YoRK CiTY. The U- S. Navy Yard well deserves the notice of visitors. It is situated upon the south side of Wallabout Bay, in the northeast part of Brooklyn. It occupies forty acres of ground, inclosed by a high wall. There are here two large ship-houses for vessels of the largest class, with workshops, and every requisite necessary for an extensive naval depot, A dry dock constructed here cost about two million dollars. The United States Naval Lj^ceum, an interesting place, also in the Navy Yard, is a literary institution, formed in 1833, by officers of the navy con- nected with the port. On the opposite side of the Wallabout, half a mile east of the Navy Yard, is the Marine Hospital, a fine building, erected on a commanding situation, surrounded by upwards of thirty acres of ground. Ili>ustrated Guide to New York City. 65 The New West Washington Market is said to be the largest market in the world. It extends from West Street to Eleventh \ Avenue, and from Gansevoort to Bloom- field Street. Erected at a cost of one mil- lion of dollars. It is a group of ten build- ings two stories high, 50 x ITo feet, with a frontage on the main thoroughfare. The structures are simple in design, the material being pressed brick of light brown color with terra-cotta trimmings, heavy iron pillars supporting the fronts. There are 440 stalls, each 9 x 25 feet, finished in yel- low pine, and protected with iron shutters. The rental of each stall is S7 per week. The General Theological Seminary of the Protestant Episcopal Church situated on what is called Chelsea Square, between 19th and 20th Streets, and Ninth and Tenth Avenues. It was founded in 1819, and has 6 professors and 100 students, a three years' course and a library of 20,000 volumes. Its group of picturesque buildings occupy the entire block. The Uniyersity of the City of New York occupies the large ' * University Build- ing" in AVashington Square, East, for its courses in law, arts, and sciences; and the structure of the Medical Col- lege, near the foot of E. 26th Street, for its course in med- icine. Charges for tuition are made to those studying law an.l medicine. The other two courses are free. 66 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Tammany Hall. CEMETERIES. The following is a list of the principal Cemeteries near New York : Calvary Cemetery (Roman Catholic), situated on Long Island, two miles from Greenpoint or Hunter's Point Ferries, is accessible by Borden Avenue line of horse cars from tlie Thirty-fourth Street or by the Long Is- land Railway. Cypress Hills Cemetery contains seven hundred acres handsomely laid out. Here is the National Cemetery for soldiers killed in the Civil War. Accesssible from Brooklyn by horse cars from the ferries, or King's County or Brooklyn Elevated Railroad. Evergreen Cemetery is at the edge of Brooklyn. It contains two hundred and forty acres, and is reached by horse-cars from Fulton, Grand, or Broadway Ferries, and Elevated Railroads. Illustrated Guide to New York City. 67 New York Historical Society. Greenwood Cemetery — Entrance on 5th Ave., near 24th St., Brooklyn. Contains 413 acres ; 17 miles of driveway, and 15 miles of footpaths. The interments made during the year 1886, 5,293 ; the total to June 4, 1887, being 240,004 ; number of lots sold of various denominations, 25,627. Greenwood is widely noted for its natural and artificial beauties, and its works of monumental art. The following are a few : Pilot's Monument, Battle Hill ; Monument erected by the City of New York to the Soldiers of the City engaged in the late war ; Soldier's Lot, Linden Avenue ; Firemen's Monument ; Horace Greeley, Monument and Bust. Horse cars from Fulton. Atlantic, Hamilton and So. Brooklyn Ferries. Lutheran Cemetery — 4 miles from Brooklyn. Horse cars from Hous- ton, Grand and Roosevelt Ferries. Maple Grove Cemetery is about six miles from Hunter's Point on the line of the Long Island Railroad. 68 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Marble Cemetery is on Second Street, between First and Second Avenues. It is the burial place of old New York families, and consists entirely of vaults. New York Bay Cemetery is reached by horse-cars from the Pennsyl- vania Raih'oad Ferries. Trinity Cemetery, between 153d and 155th Streets and Tenth Avenue, is reached by the Elevated Railroads or Tenth Avenue Cable Road. Union Cemetery is on Long Island, five miles from Grand Street Ferry. Reached by horse-cars from Fulton Ferry, Brooklyn. AVashington Cemetery is on Brooklyn Boulevard, four miles from Hamilton Ferry. Woodlawn Cemetery, at Woodlawn Station, is reached by trains from the Grand Central Depot. It has an area of three hundred and ninety-five acres. Police Headquarters. Illustrated Guide to New York City. CHURCHES. Baptist. Abyssinian (Col.), 106 Waverley pi. Berean, 35 Downing Calv.>rv, W, 57th near Sixth Av. Central, 220 W. 42d Central Park, 235 E. 83d Redeemer, W. 131st near 7th Ave. East, 323 .Madison Ebenezer, 154 W. 86th Emmanuel, Suffolk near Grand Epiphan}^ Madison av. cor. E. 64th Fifth Avenue, 6 W. 46th First, E. 39th cor. Park Ave. Laight Street, Laight cor. Varick. Lexington Av , E.'lllth cor Lex. Av ]\Iacdougal Street, 22 Macdomral Madison Av., Mad. Av. cor. E. 31st. Mt. Morris, Fifth av. near W. 126lh North. 234 W. 11th People's, 365 W. 48th Riverside, ^Y. 86th near Boulevard Sixth Street, 644 Sixth Sixteenth, 257 W. 16th Tabernacle, 166 Second av. Trinity, 141 E. 55th Twentv-third Street, 52 E. 23d West thirty-third Street, 327 W. 33d Zion, 451 Seventh av. Congregational. Bethany, Tenth Av. near W. 35th Broadway Tabernacle, W. 34th and Broadwav. Central, W. 57lh bet. 8th & 9th Av. Christ, Eleventh Av. near W. 51st. Church of the Strangers, 299 Mercer Friends. Meeting House, Rutherford pi. and E. 15th Meeting House, 144 E. 20th. Lutheran. Bethany, 87 Attorney Christ, 404 E. 19th Emmanuel, 412 W. 56th Holy Trinity Church. 70 Illcstrated Guide to Kew York CifY. Epiphany, Third A v. and E. 86th Evangelical, B'way and W. 50th Evangelical Lutheran, 47 W. 21st Holy Trinity, W. 21st & Sixth Av. Immanuel, 215 E. 83d St. James', 216 E. 15th St. John's, 81 Christopher St. Luke's, 233 W. 43d St. Mark's, 325 Sixth St. Matthev^'s, 354 Broome St. Paul's, 226 Sixth Av. St. Peter's, 474 Lexington Av. Methodist Episcopal. Allen Street, 126 Allen Asbury, 82 Washington Sq., E. Bedford Street, Bedford and Morton Beekman Hill, 319 E. 50th Central. 58 Seventh A v. Church of Saviour, E. 109th, Mad Av. Eighteenth Street, 307 W. 18th Fifty-sixth Street, 440 W. 56tli Five Points Home Mission, 63 Park Forsyth Street. 10 Forsyth Forty -fourth Street, 461 W. 44th Forty -third Street, 253 W. 43d Grace, W. 104th near Ninth Av. Hedding, 337 E. 17th Jane Street, 13 Jane John Street, 44 John Lexington Av., Lex. Av. cor. E. 52d Madison Av, Mad. av. cor. E. 60th Madison Street, 209 Madison Our Saviour, E. 109th nr Madison Av Park Avenue, Park Av. and E. 86th Perry Street, 122 Perry Hose Hill, 221 E. 27th St. Andrew's, W. 71st, nr Ninth Av. St. James', Madison Av. c. E. 126th St. John's, 231 AV. 53d St. Luke's, 108 W. 41st St. Paul's, Fourth Av., cor. E. 22d Second Street, 276 Second Washington Square, 137 W. 4th West Harlem, W. 129th 7th Av. Willett Street, 9 Willett Presbyterian. Adams' Memorial, 211 E. 30th Allen Street, 61 Allen Brick, 410 Fifth Av. Canal Street, 17 Greene Central, 220 W. 57th Central Park, E. 82d near Park Av. Church of the Covenant, 28 Park Av Eighty-sixth St. . E. 86th & Lex. Av. Faith, 423 W. 46th Fifth Avenue, 708 Fifth Av. First, Fifth Av. and 12th Street. First Union, 147 E. 86tli Fourth, 124 W. 34th Fourth Avenue, 286 Fourth Av. Fourteenth Street, 225 Second Av. Knox Memorial, E. 72d nr Second Av Madison, 9 Madison Av. Memorial, 506 Madison Av. Murray Hill, 135 E. 40th North, 374 Ninth Av. Park, W. 86th and Tenth Av. Phillips, Madison Av. cor E. 73d Rutger's, W. 73d and Boulevard Scotch, 53 W. 14th Seventh, 138 Broome Spring St., 246 Spring Thirteenth St., 145 W. 13th Union Tabernacle, W. 35th nr B'way University PI. , University pi. c. lOth West, 31 W. 42d Westminster, 151 W. 22d W. Twenty-third St., 210 W. 23d Reformed Presbyterian. First, 1264 Broadway First, 123 W. 12th Fourth, 365 W. 48th Second. 227 W. 39th Third, 238 W. 23d United Presbyterian. Jane Street, 41 Jane Seventh Avenue, 29 Seventh Av. Third, 41 Charles W. Fiftv-first St., 359 W. 51 St. W. Twenty-fifth St., 161 W. 25th Illustrated Guide to New York City. 71 Protestant Episcopal. All Angels, W. 81st c. West Eud Av All Saints, 386 Henry All Souls' Church, 139 W. 48th Annunciation, 142 W. 14th Ascension, 36 Fifth Av. Calvary, 273 Fourth Av. Christ, 369 Fifth Av. Holy Innocents, W. 136th nr 7th Av. Holy Sepulchre, E. 74th ur 4th Av. Holy Spirit, E. 66th cor Madison Av Nativity, 70 Av. C Epiphany, E. 47th nr Lexington Av. Grace, 800 Broadway Heavenly Rest, 551 Fifth Av. Holy Apostles, 300 Ninth Av. Holy Communion, 324 Sixth Av. Holy Trinity, 319 Madison Av. Incarnation, 205 Madison A v. Redeemer, Fourth Av. cor. E. 82d St. Ann's, 7 W. 18th St. Bartholomew's, 348 Madison Av. St. Clement's, 108 W. 3d St. Esprit, 30 W. 22d St. George's, 7 Rutherford pi. St. Ignatius, 54 W, 40th St. James', E. 71st cor. Madison Av. St. John the Baptist, 259 Lex. Av. St. John the Evangelist, 222 W. 11th St. John's Chapel, 46 Varick St. Luke's, 483 Hudson St. Mark's, Stuyvesant, nr 2d Av St. Mary the Virgin, 228 W. 45th St. Michael's, Tenth Av., nr W. 99th St. Paul's, Broadway cor. Vesey St. Peter's, 342 W. 20th St. Philip's, 161 W. 25th St. Thomas', Fifth av., cor. W. 53d St. Timothy's, 332 AV. 57tli Seamen's Chapel, Coenties si Transfiguration, 5 E. 29th Trinity, Broadway cor. Rector Trinity Chapel, 15 W. 25th Zion, 246 Madison Av. Reformed (Dutch). Collegiate. 24th aed Fifth av. Collegiate, 29th and Fifth Av. Collegiate, 48th and Fifth Av. Fourth, (German), 248 W. 40th Madison Av., Mad. Av.. c. E. 57th South, Fifth Av., cor. "W. 21st Thitrty-fourth St. , 307 W. 34th Union, 25 Sixth Av. Roman Catholic. Assumption, 427 W. 49th Epiphany, 373 Second Av. Holy Cross, 335 W. 42d Holy Innocents, 126 W. 37th Immaculate Conception, 505 E. 14th Most Holy Redeemer, 161 E. 3d Nativity, 48 Second Av. St. Ann's, 112 E. 12th St. Bernard's, 332 W. 14th St. Cecilia, E, 106th nr Lex. Av. St. Francis Xavier, 36 W. 16th St. Gabriel's, 312 E. 37th St. John Baptist, 210 W. 31st St. John Evangelist, E. 55th St. Joseph's, 59 Sixth Av. St. Michael's, 408 W. 32d St. Patrick's Cathedral, Fifth Av. St. Paul the Apostle, W. 59th St. Peter's, 22 Barclay St. Stephen's, 149 E. 28th St. Vincent de Paul, 127 W. 23d Unitarian. All Souls', 245 Fourth Av. Fourth. 72 E. 128th Hall, 135 W. 125th Messiah, 61 E. 34th Universalist. Church of the Saviour, 309 W. 57th Fourth 538 Fifth Av. Second, 121 W. 27th Third, 133 W. 11th Synagogues. Adath Israel, 350 E. 57th Ahawath Chesed, 652 Lex. Av. Bnai Jeshurun. Mad. A v. cor. E 65th Miscellaneous Broome St. , Tabernacle 392 Broome Messian, E, 34th and Park Av. 72 Illustrated Guide to New York City. SLANDS. Governor's Island, the first of importance, lies a little more than half a mile south of the Battery. It belongs to the United States, and is devoted to Military purposes. It in- cludes sixty-five acres, upon which are located Fort Columbus and Castle William, erected in 1811, and it is the headquarters of the Department of the Atlantic. The Island is well worth a visit. The war relics in the Museum alone would well repay one. Ferry leaves Battery hourly, free. Bedloe's Island is situated about a mile and a half from the Battery, and is the site of the Statue of Liberty, the total height of which is 305 feet 1 1 inches ; the length of the fore finger of the right hand is 7 feet, the firgcr nail about 14 inches long by 10 inches wide, and the nose nearly 4 feet long. The statue is made of repousse copper, the plates being about Illustrated Guide to JSTew York City. 73 one-quarter of an inch thick. It was modelled by M. Bartholdi, a French sculptor, and presented by the people of France to the people of this coun- try. The money was raised by popular subscription in France for the Statue, and through the efforts of the New York World, money was raised for the erection of the pedestal. The total cost w\as about one million of dollars. Ferry leaves pier rear of barge office hourly, fare round trip 25 Ellis Island is about one and a half miles from the Battery, the site of Fort Gibson, and now used for a magazine. Just before reaching Staten Island is Robbins Reef Light, and the body of w^ater beyond, between the Island and the New Jersey shore is called the Kill Yon Kull. Staten Island is at that part of the harbor called the Narrows, which divides the harbor into the upper and lower bay. The Island contains 60 square miles, its inhabitants number about forty thousand ; it is a pretty place naturally, and its attractions are heightened greatly by late improv- ments. The ferries land the visitor at St. George's. Here during the sum- mer are gigantic out door entertainments of various kinds, and here also is to be the eastern terminus of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. If the visitor would see the beauties of the Island, take the rapid transit train to the left (no extra charge), and stop at Fort Wadsworth Station. A short walk brings us to the fortifications, the strongest on the coast. From the top of the Hill we have a most mag- nificent view. Looking north can be seen the upper New York Bayj teem- ing with the finest shipping the world can produce ; the Hudson River, with Jersey City, Hoboken, and the Palisades ; New York and Brooklyn ; the Statue of Liberty and the big big Bridge ; these combined make a pan- orama of almost matchless beauty. On the opposite side of the Narrows is Fort Lafayette, a brick casemated structure now dismantled, and used for storage, etc. The stone fort on the Long Island shore is Fort Hamilton, (reached by 39th street ferry, foot of Whitehall Street, N. Y. , thence by steam cars), and is quite a Sunday re- sort in summer. The Swiss looking structure a little to the left is the Grand Yiew Hotel. Just around the bend, bordering on Gravesend Bay, is tJie flourishing little village of Bath. Further along at the point where the High Tower can be seen is Coney Island. Across the bay, the land rising in the dim distance is the Highlands of Navesink, and the low point of land only dis- ceruable in very clear weather is Sandy Hook, Illustrated ItUide to New York City. 75 Lower quarantine establishments are situated on Hoffman and Swinburne Islands, in almost a direct line with Sandy Hook and the Highlands. The li]st, Hoffman Island, is about two miles from this point, and is used for the temporary detention of persons arriving in infected vessels. Upon Swinburne Island (a mile beyond), are the Hospitals for Contagious Diseases. Upper quarantine is at Clifton. The beach of Staten Island is dotted with small hotels. They gather no great crowds, as there are few attractions. Sailors' Snug Harbor is a very interesting institution on Staten Island, founded about 1800 by a retired sea-captain, by the name of Randall. It gives a home and many comforts to old and disabled seamen. The build- ings are numerous, and have very large grounds overlooking the harbor. Some of the most valuable business property in the city is the property of this institution, which has an enormous income. Coney Island — No one should miss a trip to Coney Island during the season. Sundays are its busiest days. It has been for several years the popular summer resort of all classes from New York and the neighboring cities. The Island is about three miles long. Commencing at the eastern end is the Oriental Hotel, an immense wooden structure, for permanent guests. In the rear (though quite a distance away), is the Firework en- closure. The square building just this side is the Cafe, and the building fronting the Beach is the bathing Pavilion. Manhattan Beach Hotel is next in importance, and caters more to transients. The immense dining hall will accomodate 3,000 guests. The building contains cafe, billiards, and everything pertaining to a tirst class hotel. Gilmore's famous band plays here every day. Passing to the Marine Railroad (fare 5 cents), a ride of half a mile brings us to Brighton Beach Bathing Pavilion. The Brighton Beach Hotel comes next, and the finely graded lawn in front was but a short time ago its back yard, the sea had washed away about 200 feet in front and nearly all from beneath, obliging the proprietors to move the great building back, which was done by placing railroad tracks jjnd specially constructed cars under the Hotel and drawing it back 600 feet with a number of locomotives. The entertainment here is similar to that at Manhattan. Music by excellent bands, dining on its broad verandas, etc. One can take the elevated road (fare 5 cents), or open carriages down the Concourse (for the same price), for West Brighton. If on a Sunday the day be rainy, the place takes on a funeral aspect, and its people are all 76 Illustkated Guide to New York City. mourners ; but if the weather is fine, and the crowd large, it is pande- monium let loose — dime shows, toboggan slides, flying horses, minstrels — in fact everything that a ''fakir's" mind can suggest is used to catch the nickels. The larger hotels set fair tables, and the accommodations are good, but the majority of the restaurants are much inferior to those of New York. Entertainments can be found to suit all tastes. For the more quiet the Ob- servatory, 300 feet high, offers a most charming view of the ocean, the Is- land and New York Bay. The Iron Piers at which steamers land, provide regular dinners in restaurant style. There are also well managed bathing departments connected with them. The camera obscura is also an inter- esting place to visit, The Sea Beach Palace was one of the buildings at the Centennial, and there is always something of interest within its walls, free to the patrons of its road. Adjoining is the enclosure of the Sacred Elephant ; he is a huge fellow, and well worth a visit. There are a number of ways to reach the Island ; by New York and Sea Beach Road from the Battery, by ferry to Bay Ridge, and thence by train hourly. Or by Iron Steamboat from Pier 1, North River, and various other routes via Brooklyn. See daily papers. Blackwell's Island contains 120 acres of ground, thoroughly walled around with heavy stone laid in cement. The buildings are substantial and well built, the grounds neat and well kept, and a general appearance per- vading it of a well arranged and well managed institution. The buildings of size and importance seen as we advance are, first the Small-pox Hospital, next the Charity Hospital. Then following in succession, the Penitentiary, Warden's Houses, the Almshouses (two in number, one for each sex), the Workhouses or Houses of Correction, the Mad House or Lunatic Asylum, with a number of smaller houses Interspersed, which are occupied by keep- ers, bosses and helpers ia this department. A light-house is located on the northern point of the Island Ward's Island on our left, as we pass, containing about 200] acres. It is especially notable for containing the Emigrant's Refuge and Male Lunatic Asylum. The brick building near the point was formerly the In- ebriate Asylum, afterwards used as a Soldier's Home, and now used as the Homoeopathic Hospital. Randall's Island is just north of Ward's Island contain the House of Refuge and a home for people who are mentally incapable of taking care of themselves, but whose care is paid for by their friends. Also an Asylum Illustrated Guide to New York City. 77 for Indigent Children, consisting of an Idiotic Asylum, Nursery, House of Refuge, etc., reached hy boat from foot of E. 28t]i Street. Procure a pass from Commissioners of Public Charities and Correction, 3d Avenue and nth Street. Glen Island as a family resort is unsurpassed, and the extent of the its popularity may be imagined from the fact that nearly 800,000 people went to the Island last summer, and a single visit to the place soon con- vinces one that it is a most charming spot for a day's outing. The attrac- tions and amusements are almost numberless. There are three aquariums, filled with many wonders of the deep. The Zoological Gardens have many attractions in the way of performing bears and monkeys. The Shetland ponies, which are so popular with the children, are a conspicuous feature of the place, and to those who enjoy rowing and sailing every facility may be found here, there being some 200 boats at the boathouse ; in addition a number of steam launches which make frequent trips among the five Is- lands. The Grand Cafe serves dinners of the best, while the clam-bake 'island will accommodate 1,200 people. Indeed, here is about the only place near New York where a clam bake can be had in the genuine Rhode Island style. The popular " Dairy," too, is abundantly supplied at all times with farinaceous food of all kinds, and the milk and cream is from the Larch- mont dairy farm. Our German cousins will undoubtedly testify that their comforts have been well looked after in the establishing of Little Germany, to which there has been added a half acre. Only imported beers are sold here, and all the delicacies that please the Teutonic taste may be had at reasonable prices. Concerts will be given in the German Watch Tower every day. Glenwood, a natural woods, is a favorite resort with lovers of nature, and Beach Lawn for basket parties, where there is every convenience in the way of tables and benches erected under the spacious shade-giving trees. Tea, coffee and American beer can be purchased here, and every advantage is offered for indulging oneself in true picnic style. Here is also the bathing pavilion, with its 800 separate rooms, and the still-water bathing is of the finest. Concerts are given every afternoon and evening. Five boats run from New York to the Island on week days, landing at Cortlandt Street, North River ; 32d Street, East River, and Jewell's Wharf, Brooklyn, and eight boats on Sunday, Illustrated Guide to New York City. SUMMER EXCURSIONS. For a few days outing no other city in the world can offer such a variety, or at such low rates. In the earlier part of the season High Bridge Park draws largely. Later, Coney Island is the attraction (see Islands), and the smaller places take the overflow. Fort Lee is situated on the west side of the Hudson River. The boat leaves from pier foot Canal Street, touching at 23d Street. The distance is about 10 miles, and the fare round trip 25 cents. The grounds at Fort Lee ^re provided with all the requirements necessary for picnic or family par- ties. Close to the pier are bowling alleys, shooting gallery, boat and bath- ing houses, restaurant and dance hall. A short distance up the hill is a large, finely appointed hotel, accomo- dating about 200 guests. Music every afternoon and evening during the season. The Bluff, as it is called, is the commencement of the Palisades, an in- clined railway makes the ascent easy, and at the top will be found a regular " Donnybrook Fair," with music, dancing, merry-go-rounds, etc. Basket parties are welcome, and tables furnished them free of charge. Built on the very edge of the Bluff, 350 feet above the river, is the Pavilion, the finest point of observation on the Palisades, and its restaurant provides reg- ular dinners at city prices. Music and dancing every afternoon and evening during the season. Illusthated Guide to New York City. 79 The Palisades are a striking feature of the Hudson River scenery. They form an almost vertical cliff, and extend northward nearly twenty-one miles. The views from various points are singularly beautiful. Hudson River. — Every stranger visiting New York should spend at least one day on the Hudson. Numerous lines advertise one day excursions, generally to Newburg, the fare for the round trip 50 cents, and reach there with one or perhaps two hours to stroll through the quaint old town, but more frequently with only fifteen minutes, and theti return to the city, ar- riving at 9 o'clock or even later, with tired and disgusted passengers. Take your Guide's advice, pay a little more, and receive the comfort that the regular lines afford. The day line between New York and Albany leaves pier foot of Vestry Street, at 8:40 A. M., West 23d Street at 9 A. M., every day except Sunday. The fare to West Point or Newburg (generally with option of returning by rail, is one dollar). At the former place three hours time is given for visiting the United States Military Academy, while at the latter nearly two hours, giving ample time to visit the little "rough stone building " known as the Headquarters of Washington. These boats are always on time, elegantly furnished throughout and provided with a first class band and orchestra. " The Hudson by Daylight," a Guide, is sold on the boats, and contains the best description and map of the river pub- lished. RocKAWAY Beach lies between Long Beach and Manhattan Beach, on the Long Island Shore. Reached by the Long Island Railroad, via ferry from foot of E. 34th Street, or James Slip. Fare for the round trip fifty cents. Large steamers carry thousands of people to and from Rockaway at the same fare as the railroad, and afford a pleasant trip by water. 80 Ilx,ustrated Guide to New York City. The steamers leave foot of West 23d Street, and pass down the Hudson, rounding the Battery, affording a fine view of Castle Garden and buildings adjacent, up East River to the Brooklyn Bridge, touching at Jewel's wharf, (foot of Fulton Street, Brooklyn), for its Brooklyn patrons, then proceeding down the Bay, passing Governor's Island and the Statue of Liberty, thence along the Long Island shore past the Great Atlantic Docks to Bay Ridge, the terminus of the New York and Sea Beach R. R., to Coney Island, On the right as we pass through the Narrows is Staten Island, with the f orti- fications known as Fort Wadsworth ; on the left is Fort Lafayette, while just back of it is Fort Hamilton, Crossing Gravesend Bay the steamer Glen Island. i Illusttiated Guide to New York City. 81 rounds Coney Island Point, keeping close in shore tlie entire length of the Island, then heading directly out to sea for about four miles, passing around Coney Island Bar to Rockaway Inlet, the entrance to Jamaica Bay. Bar- ren Island is the only drawback to this beautiful bay. It is occupied by a fertilizer manufactory, and at times is very disagreeable. The steamer lands at the more thickly settled portion, and a short walk through the only street occupied by numerous hotels, restaurants, shows, beer gardens, etc., brings the excursionist to the Beach. The surf is high and the bathing good. The huge hotel which stands near the beach is said to be the largest in the world ; it is 1140 feet long, by 70 feet deep, with an ell at each end 300 feet deep, and contains 1200 rooms. Jamaica Bay is quite a fishing resort, and a very pretty trip can be made by starting at Brooklyn Bridge, thence by Brooklyn Elevated Road to Ala- bama Avenue, thence by railroad to Carnarsie (Depot, Howard House, one block from L road), connecting hourly with steamers to Rockaway Beach, a pretty sail among the Islands of about an hour ; fare round trip including elevated road, 35 cents. Glen Island. 82 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Long Beach, east of Rockawaj^ is recommended to those who desire to spend a quiet day by the sea. The hotel accommodations are first class, and the fare 50 cents round trip, reached via Long Island R. R Oak Point and Bowery Bay are small resorts on the East River ; the entertainment is music and dancing. Reached by boats from Harlem Bridge (3d Avenue). Fare 25 cents. Glen Island — Steamers leave hourly from foot of Cortlandt Street ; the fare for the excursion is 40 cents, the distance is about 30 miles, through East River, passing the Navy Yard and the various public institutions on Blackwell's, Ward's and Randall's Islands, by Fort Schuyler into the Sound. The Island is a charming, picturesque summer resort, with facilities for boating and bathing. and a dny spent here will be enjoyed. Long Branch has long been a famous summer resort. It is about 30 miles from the city, on the Jersey coast, and can be reached via Iron Steam- boat Line from the Battery di- rect to the Iron Pier, by boat and rail via Sandy Hook, by Pennsylvania R. R., or New Jersey Central R. R. Numberless hotels and cot- tages dot the shore for miles. The beach is abrupt and by no means firm, very hard to walk upon, and impossible for car- riage riding. Ocean Avenue, along the bluff, between the Iron Pier and the West End Hotel is the favorite drive, the fashionable hours are between 4 and 7 P. M. The rates per day at the hotels are from $3 to $5, and are most entirely on the American plan. South of the "Branch" is Elberon. It consists chiefly of picturesque cottages and Union Square Hotel & Hotel Dam. pleasant drives. Illustrated Guide to New York City. 83 AsBURY Park, about 7 miles south of Long Branch, is a temperance resort, no liquor being allowed to be sold within its limits. It abounds in hotels and boarding-houses, and the rates are moderate, ranging from $7 per week upwards. The entertainment is chiefly bathing in the surf, boat- ing on Wesley Lake, with music and dancing in the hotels. No trains stop here on Sunday. Ocean Grove is on the south side of Wesley Lake. Large numbers of Methodists, gather together here every summer, and hold camp meetings. The local regulations are extremely strict. The sale of intoxicating liquors, card-playing, Sunday amusements, etc., are entirely suppressed. There are numerous large hotels and boarding-houses, where prices are moderate. Besides the summer residents, many of whom live in tents, there is a perma- nent population of about 3,000, but iu summer nearly 30,000 people congre- gate here. 84' Illustrated Guide to New York City. HOTELS. Albemarle Arno Ashland Astor Barrett House Belvedere Berkeley Brevoort Bristol Broadway Bryant Park Buckingham Clarendon Coleman Honse Colonnade Hotel Continental Cosmopolitan Earle's Everett House Everett's Everett Fifth Avenue Gedney House Gilsey Glenham Hotel Broadway & 24th St. 1170 Broadway. 4th Ave. & 24th St. 221 Broadway. Broadway & \Sd St. 4ih Ave. & 18t!i St. 20 Fifth Ave. n Fifth Ave. 5th Ave. & 4M St. 83 1 Broailway. 66J Sixth Ave. 5th Ave & 50th St. 4th A^/ri. Si. 18th St. Broadway & 2?th St. 726 Broa'lway 904 Broadway. Chambers & W. B'way. Canal & Centre Sts 4th Ave & 17th St. 96 Barclay St. 114 Park Row. Fifth Ave. & 2M St. B'way & 40th.Street. Broadway & 29t'o St. 155 Fifth Ave. Gi-amercy Park Honse, Gi-auiercy Pai'k. Grand Broadway & 3 1st St. Grand Boulevard Broadway' & 8th Ave. Grand Central Grand Union Grosvenor Hoffman House Hotel Albert " Bartholdi Bradford " Brunswick •' Cambridge " Dam " De Panama •' Devonshire 671 Broadway. 4th Ave. & 4 id Street. 3r Fifth Ave. Madison Square. University PI. & 11th. St. Broadway & 23d St. 65 E. 11th St. 225 Fifth Ave. Fifth Ave. & 83d St. lOfi East 15th St. 17 University Place. 30 East 42d St. Espanol e Hispano Americana, 116 West 14th St. Florence 20th St. & Broadway. Griffou lOWestOthSt. Hungaria 4 Union Square. Martin University PI. & i)th St 7 East ISfhSt. Broadway & 38th St. Monico Normandie Hotel Royal " St. George " St. Marc " St. StL^phen " Shelburn " Wellington Int'rnational Langham Leggetfs Lenox Madison Avenue Marlborough Hotel Metropolitan Morton House Mount Morris Murray Hill New York Ocidental Oi-iental Parker Park Avenue Putnam House Rossmni'e St. Andi'e St. Charles St. Cloud St. Denis St. James St. Nicholas St. Stephen Sherwood Sinclair Smith & McNeil's Stevens House Sturtevant Sweeney's The Byron The Carlton The Hamilton Treniont Union Square United States Vanderbilt Vendoine 6th Ave. & 4nth S\ 825 Broadway. 433 Fifth Avj. 34 W llih St. 5th Ave. & 36tli St. 42d St. & Mad. Ave. 17 & 19 Park Row. 657 Fifth Ave. 76 Park Row. 72 Fifth Ave. Mad. Ave. & 58th St. 36th St. & Broadway. 584 Broad vv ay. Broadway & 14th St. Third Ave. & I30th St. 4th Ave. & 40th St. 721 Broadway. Broome St. & Bowery. Broadway & 39th St. 13)3 Broadway. 4th Ave & SJ.d St. 367 Fourth Ave. Broadway & 42d St. 11 West lltli St. 648 Broadway. Broadway & 42d St. Broadway &llth St. 11.33' Broad way. Washington PI. & B way. 48 to .52 East 1 1th St. Fifth Ave. & 44th St. 754 Broadway, 197 Washington St. 23 Broadway. 1186 Broadway. Chambers & Park Row. 47 E. 10th St. 24 West 2Sth St .503 Fifth Ave. 665 Broad way. 16 Union Square. Fulton & Wooster Sts. Lexington Ave & 42d St, Broadway & 4 1st St. Victoria 27th St. Broadway & 5th Ave. Westminster Irving Place & 1.5th St. Windsor Fifth Ave. & 46th St. TABLE d'HOTE RESTAURANTS. Table d'hote dinner, generally from 6 to 8 P. M., consists of 6 courses and small bottle of wine. The following are among the best in the city : Colunibo's, 51 Third Ave 75 cts, Hungaria Hotel 4 Union Sq. 75 cts. Plavana's, 136 3d Ave. 75 cts. Morel lo's, 4 W. 29th St. Moretti's, 3d Ave. & 14th St. Mazetti's, 867 Sixth Ave. 1 25 1 00 1 00 Also Brunswick Hotel, 5th Ave., Pursel's, B'way & 20th St., Moresia, 226 E. 14th St., Sinclair House, B'wav & 8t"h St., Delmonico's, B'way & 26th St., Nash& Crook, 18 Park Place, Astor House, Cafe Equitable Building, etc., Illustrated Guide to New York City. 85 DRIVES. Fashionable New Yorkers take their outiDg from three to five o'clock in the afternoon. Their route com- rf mences at the Fifth Avenue entrance to Central Park, '^ thence along the East Drive, passing the Obelisk and the MetropoHtan Museum of Art, etc. , to the upper end of the Park, returning by West Drive. The sporting gents, with fast horses, leave the Park at 110th Street, and proceed via Lenox or Seventh Avenues to Central Bridge (formerly known as McComb's Dam Bridge). Central Avenue begins at the northern end of the bridge, and extends to Jerome Park and Yonkers. It is lined with road houses, the "ton " generally stopping at Gabe Case's or " Judge Smith's," and returning* by the way of Sedgwick Avenue, and the new Harlem Bridge, thence down 10th Avenue to St. Nicholas Avenue to Central Park. * Or by Southern Boulevard (,from Jerome Park), to Harlem Bridge, to 125th Street, to Lenox Ave., to Central Par^- Distance 12 miles. 86 Illustrated Guide to New York City. The Boulevard commences at the Circle, junction of 8th Avenue and 59th Street. It has a series of ornamental parks in the centre, making a double roadway. Riverside Drive commences at West 72d Street, and extends along the bank of the Hudson for nearly three miles. This is a magnificent roadway, well kept, and in time will be the palatial resident quarter of the city. At the northern part, on a high elevation commanding a fine view of the Hud- son for miles, is the tomb of General U. S. Grant, and just beyond is the Claremont Mansion. Returning to the Boulevard, the upper portion is dotted with public and private institutions. At 155th Street we pass under the ornamental bridge connecting the two portions of Trinity Church Cemetery.* At 170th Street we may take the King's Bridge Road through the valley, cross the Harlem and return via Central Avenue, Central Bridge, and Lenox Avenue to Cen- tral Park, a distance of 12 miles. BROOKLYN DRIVES. Take Brooklyn Bridge, south drive, thence through Washington and Ful- ton Streets to Flatbush Avenue, thence to Prospect Park and Ocean Park- way ; thence to Coney Island, a distance of about 12 miles, f The Eastern Parkway begins at the Plaza at the main entrance of Prospect Park, and is a broad, handsome driveway, extending to Jamaica, L. I. Distance, about 6 miles. South Brooklyn Drive. Take 39th Street Ferry, at foot of Whitehall Street, thence to Third Avenue (very rough), to Bay Ridge, to 67th Street, turn to the right three blocks to the shore road, to Fort Hamilton, thence to Bath Beach. Returning via 11th Avenue to Gravesend Avenue to Greenwood Cemetery (tickets for admission of carriages must be procured from oflice, No. 1 Broadway, N. Y. , no charge), to 24th Street, to Third Avenue, to Hamilton Avenue, to Ferry. Staten Island has some excellent drives — the country is generally hilly and the views superb. Take Ferry from the Battery. From Jersey City. Ferries from foot of Desbrosses or Christopher Streets. Proceed direct to the Heights, thence north along the summit to Englewood, returning by Fort Lee Ferry to 130th Street to Boulevard, or St. Nicholas Avenue, to Central Park. Distance about 10 miles. * Or continue to Fort George, to 10th Avenue, to St. Nicholas Avenue, to Central Park. Distance 8 miles. t Or 23d Street Ferry to Broadway, to Bedford Avenue (Asphalt paving) four blocks rom ferry on Brooklyn side, thence to Prospect Park. \ Illustrated QciDE to New York City. 87 HACKS AND CABS. For conveying one or more per- sons any distance, sums not exceed- ing the following amounts ; Fifty cents for the first mile or part tnere of ; and each additional half mile or part thereof, twenty-five cents. By distance, for "stops" of over five minutes and not exceeding fifteen minutes, twenty-five cents. For longer stops, the rate will be twenty- five cents for every fifteen minutes, or fraction thereof, if more than five minutes. For a brief stop, not ex- ceeding five minutes in a single trip, there will be no charge. For the use of a cab, by the hour, with the privilege of going from place to place and stopping as often and as long as may be required, one dollar for the first hour or part thereof, and for each succeeding half -hour or part thereof, fifty cents. Coaches. — For conveying one or more persons any distance, sums not exceeding the following amounts : One dollar for the first mile or part thereof ; and each additional half mile or part thereof, forty cents. By distance for " stops " thirty-eight cents for each fifteen minutes. For brief stop not over five minutes, no charge. Coach by the hour, one dollar and fifty cents first hour or part thereof, and each succeeding half-hour or part thereof, seventy-five cents. Cabs and coaches hired by hour shall be driven at least five miles an hour. From " line balls " one or two passengers, to any point south of 59th St., two dollars ; each additional passenger, 50 cents : north of 59th Street each additional mile 50 cents. » One piece of baggage not exceeding fifty pounds, free ; each additional piece twenty-five cents. All disputes shiiU be settle! 1 y Wn /.layor or person designated by him. In all cases, where f:.^ l.'.! : c of a b..ul::iey coach or a cab is not at the time thereof sp •.•'; "..• 1 I ) b; li; t : ; !n i;-. it shall be deemed to be by the mile ; and for :r:y iM St. Art Student's League, No. 38 West 14th Street. School of Industrial Art, for women, 251 West 23d St. Metropolitan Art School, 49th St. & 3d Ave. Women's Institute of Technical Design, 124 Fiftli Avenue. Harlem Art Association, 1 19 E. 125th St. STUDIOS. studio Building, 10th Sr., near 6th Ave. Studio Building, B'way & 28th St. 4th Ave. Studio Building, cor. 4th Ave. & 25th St. Many of the artij Y. M. C. A. Building, 23d St. & 4th Ave. The Sherwood, 0th Ave. cor. 57th St. Rembrandt, W 57th St., near 7th Ave. Holbein, 139—145 West 55th St. have regular reception days, when vioitors are made welcome. EXPRESSES. (jKJNliKAL,. -ns Express Co., 59 & 08 1 B'v.'ay, 12 W. 1, 40 E. 42d, 311 Canal & 122 W. B'way. EUROPEAN. Baldwin'.; American, European & Havana 53 B'way. Contanseu Rapid Foreign Co,, 128 B'way and 059 Sixth Ave. Davies, Turner Sz Co , 34 B'way. WoolTs European Express, 382 Grand & 6 Bowling green, Morris European and General Foreign. 18 B'wity. GENERAL. Adams 23d, American Express Co, 6.5, 690, 785, & 9 10 B'way, 3 Park PL, 40 Hudson, 302, 314 & 490 Canal. 27 E. 14th, lOtli Ave. cor. W. 30Lh i.. Grand Central Depot. Baltimore and Ohio Express Co., 82 415 851 & 1140 B'way & 59 Gold. International. 409 Greenwich, Si2 Canal, 207 B'way. 101 Mercer, B'way cor. \V 33d, 243 W. 53d, 74 W. 1.25th & Pier 18 N. R. Long Island Express, 683, 942 & 1339 B'way 280 Canal. 11 E. 14th, foot E. 3tth, James slip, foot New Chambers. lU West & 02 W. 125th. Metropolitan Express Co., 200 Mercer. 312 Canal & 7 New Church. National Express Co., 145' 785 & 940 B'way 304 Canal, 407 Madison Ave., 12 Park Pi. and foot Jay. New England Transfer Co., foot E. 137th. New York Tiansfer Co., 944 & 1323 B'way, 737 Sixth Ave., 223 W. 26th, 134 E. 125th & foot Liberty. New York & Boston Dispatch Express Co, 63, 82 and 940 B'wav, 304 Canal. 8 Hubert Pier 28 N. R., 45 Church, 68Lispeuard & 97 Mercer. New York & Portland, 80 Wooster. Northern Express & Parcel Delivery, 243 W. 53d, 683, 819, 944 & 1323 B,way. 280 Ca- nal, 11 E. 141 h, foot Liberty, 737 Sixth Ave. & Grand Central Depot. Philadelphia and Reading Express, 785 B way. U. S. Express Co , 82, 317, 683, 950 & 1339 B'way, 280 Canal, 11 E. 14th, 142 West and foot Christopher. Well's Fargo & Co., 65, 315, 711, 9.57 B'way, foot Chambers N. R., foot W. 23d and and Bowery, cor. Broome. Westcott's Express Co., 3 Park PI.. 785 B'wav, 374 Canal, 155 E. 42d and 62 W. 125th. 90 Illustrated Guide to New York City. PLACES OF AMUSEMENT. Academy of Music, 1 Irving Place. Amberg's Germania Tlieatre, cor. Irving Place and E. IStli St. American Museum of Natural His- tory, W. 78th, cor. Eighth Av. Bijou Opera House, 1239 Broadway. Bowery Theatre, 48 Bowery. Broadway Theatre, Broadway cor. W. 47th St. Casino, 1402 Broadway. Chickering Hall, 180 Fifth a v. Daly's Theatre, 1221 Broadway. Dockstader's Theatre, 1195 B'way. Eden Musee, 55 W. 23d St. Fifth Av. Theatre, 1187 Fifth Av. Fourteenth St. Theatre, 107 W. 14th Globe Dime Museum, 298 Bowery. Grand Opera House, 265 Eighth Av. London Theatre, 231 Bowery. Lyceum Theatre, 314 Fourth av. Madison Square Garden, Madison Ave., cor. E. 26th St. Madison Square Theatre, 4 W. 24th Metropolitan Opera House, 1425 Broadway. Miner's Theatres, 169 Bowery and 312 Eighth Ave. New York Museum. 210 Bowery. Niblo's Garden, 580 Broadway, near Prince St. Palmer's Theatre, 1220 Broadway. Park Theatre, 1333 Broadway. Tony Pastor's Theatre, 145 E. 14th. People's Theatre, 199 Bow^ery. Poole's Theatre, 145 Eighth Street. Proctor's Theatre, 23d St. , nr 6th av Roumania Opera House, 104 Bowery Standard Theatre, 1285 Broadway Star Theatre, 842 Broadway. Stein way Hall 111 E. 14th Theatre Comique, 162 E. 125th. Third Av. Theatre, 445 Third Ave. Union Square Theatre, 56 E. 14th Windsor Theatre, 45 Bowery- BROOKLYN PLACES OF AMUSEMENT. Academy of Music, Montague St. Amphion Academy, Bedford Av., near S. Ninth St. Art Association Gallery, Montague Street. Association Hall, Y. M. C. A., Bond St., cor. Fulton. Brooklyn Athenseum, Atlantic Ave. , and Clinton St. Brooklyn Theatre, Johnson near Washington. Criterion Theatre, Fulton St., near Grand Av. Grand Opera House, Elm Place, near Fulton St. Grand Theatre, 166 Grand Street. Historical Hall, Pierrepont St., cor. Clint(m. Hyde and Behman's Theatre, Adams St., near Myrtle Av. Lee Avenue Theatre, Lee Av., near Division. Park Theatre, Fulton St. opp. Hall sq. People's Theatre, Montrose Av. Leonard st. Proctor's Theatre, Driggs St., S. 4th. St. Standard Museum, Fulton, bet. Hoyt and Gallatin PI. Zipp's Casino, Elm PI. near Fulton. City cor. near Illustrated Guide to New York City. 91 ELEVATED RAILWAY STATIONS. East Side Roads. 2d Ave. South Ferry, Hanover Square, Fulton St., Franklin Sq , Chatham Sq. (chansje cars for City Hall.) Canal St., GrandSt.. RivingtonSt., 1st, 8th, 14th, 19th, 23d, 34th, (change cars for Hunter s Point Ferry.) 42d, .50th, 5rth, 6.5th, 70th 7.5th, 80th, 86th, 92d. 105th. 111th, 116th, 120th, r28th Sts. (chang( cars tor Subur- ban L. Eoad. 3d Ave. South Ferrj^ Hanover Square, FultonSt., Fraukli'.i Sq., Cliatham Sq., (change cars for City Hall,) Canal St., Grand St., Houston St., 9tli, 14th, 18th, 23d, 28th, 30th, 34th, (chan.-e cars for Hunter's Point Ferry.) 42d, (change cars for Grand Central Depot,) 47th, 53d, 59th, 67th, 76th, 84th, 89th, 98th, 103th, 116th, 125th, 129th Sts. West Side Roads. 6tli Ave. South Ferrv, Battery PL, Kector St.. Cortlandt St., Park Place, Chambers St., Franklin St., Grand St, Bleecker St., 8th 14th, 18th. 23(1, 28th, 3?-d, 42d, 50th, (change cars for 58th St. & Central Park,) 53d St. & 8th Ave., 59th 72d, 81st. 93d, 104th, 116th. 125rh, I3.5th, 145rh, 155th Sts. (connect with trains via N. Y. & Northern R. R.) 9th Ave. South Ferry, Battery PI., Rec- tor St., Cortlandt St., Barclay St., Wai-- ren St., Franklin St., Desbrosses St., Houston St , Christopher St., 14th, 23.1, 30th, 34th, 42d, 50th, 59th, (change cars for stations beyond.) STREET CAR ROUTES. Avenue C. Line. Transtei*s with B'way & 7th Ave. Leaves Erie Depot, Chambers & West Sts. Runs through West, Charlton, Prince, Bowery, Stanton, Pitt, Ave. C, 18th, Ave. A, 23d, First Ave., 35th, Lex. Ave. to Grand Central Depot. Returns by 42d Street, Lex. Ave., 36th, First Ave., 23d, Ave. A., 17th, Ave. C, 3d, First Ave., Houston, West to Chambers St. Tenth Street Ferry Branch. Leaves Erie Depot, Chamberi and West Sts. Runs through West. Charlton. Prince, Bowery, Pitt, Ave. C. to 10th St. Ferry. Returns by 10th St. Ave. D, 11th, Ave. C, 3d, First Ave., Houston, West, to Cham- bers St. Bleecker St. &. Fulton Ferry. Leaves Fulton Ferry. Runs through Fulton, William, Ann. B'd- way. Bleecker, MacDougal, Fourth, W. 12th. Hudson, Ninth Ave., 23d to 23d St. Ferry. Returns by 23d, 9th Avenue, Hudson, Bleecker, Broadway, Park Row, Beek- man. South to Fulton Ferry. Boston Avenue Line. starts from 129th St. & 3d Ave. Crosses Harlem River, and runs via Third Ave. through Mott Hav^n and Melrose to Boston Ave., Mor'ania, thence through Boston Ave. to West Farms; returns by same route. Broadway &. 7th Ave. Transfers with 7th Ave., B'way & Univer- sity PI., Ave. C. Chambers and Grand St. Ferry Lines. Leaves Bowling Green. Runs through Broadway to 44th St., 7th Ave. to 59th St. Free Stage Connection between Bowling Green & South Ferry. B'way 8l University Place. Transfers with B'way. and 7th Ave. Line. Leaves Cor. B'way & Barclay St. Runs through Barclay, Church, Canal, Greene, Clinton Pi., University Place, Union Square, Broadway, 7th Ave to 59th St Returns by same route, to University PI,, Wooster, crosses Canal St., W. B'way, College PI., Barclay St., to starting point. 92 Illustrated Guide to New York City. Central Cross Town R. R. Leaves East 23d St. Ferry. Runs through Ave. A., 18th, B'way. 14th, rth Ave. W. 11th, West to Christopher St. Ferry. Returns by West St., to W. 11th, 7th Ave., 14th, B'way, 17th, Ave. A., to 23d Street Ferry. East Side Belt Line. Leaves Sout!i Ferry, foot of Whitehall St. Runs through Whitehall, South, Broad, Water, Old Slip, South. Grand, Goercli. Houston, Ave. D, 14th, Ave. A, 23d, 1st Ave., 59th to 54th St. Returns by same route to 59th, Ave. D., 8th, Lewis, Houston, Mangin, Grand, Corlears, Monroe, Jackson, Front aud Whitehall, to South Ferry. Connect with West Side Belt Line, Passes all E. R. Ferries. West Side Belt Line. Leaves South Ferry. Runs through Whitehall, Bowling Green. Battery PI., West, 10th Avenue to 54th St. Returns by same route, to Bowling Green, State to Ferry. Connects with East Side Belt Line. Passes all N. R. Ferries. Channbers &. Grand Street Ferry Line. Transfers with B'way & 7th Ave. Starts foot Grand St., E. R. Runs through Jaclcson, Madison, Cham- bers to N. R. Returns through Duaue, New Chambers to starting point. Roosevelt Street Branch. From foot of Roosevelt St,, nlong South, James Slip, New Chambers to N. R. Returns through Duane, New Ciiambers to starting point. Christopher &. 10th St. Line. Leaves Christoplier St. Ferry. Rnns through Christopher St , Greenwich Ave.. E. 8th, Ave. A , to East 10th Street Ferry. Returns by E. 10th, Ave. A., E. 9th, Stuy- vesant PI., 8th, 6th Ave., Greenwich Ave., W. 10th, to Christopher Street Feriy. City Hall, Ave. B &. 34th St. Leaves Ann St. &Broadway. Runs through Park Row, Chatham. East B'w^ay. Clinton, Ave. B., 14th, 1st Ave. 34 1 h to Ferry. Returns by same route, to 2d. Ave. A., Essex, E. B'way, Chatham, Park Row, to B'way. Runs all night. Desbrosses, Vestry &. Grand St. Leaves Gi'and St. Ferry. Runs through Grand, Sullivan, Vestry, Gi-eenwich, Desbrosses to Desbrosses St. Feriy. Returns by Desbrosses, Washington, Ves- try, thence by same route to starting point. Runs all night. Dry Dock and E. Broadway. Leaves Ann St. & B'way. Runs through Park Row, Chatham. East B"way, Grand, Columbia, Ave D., 14th, Ave. A. to 23d St. Ferry. Returns same route to 14th, Ave. B., Ave. D, 8th, Lewis, (.rraud, E. B'way, Chat- ham to B'way. 8th Avenue Line. Leaves B'way & Vesey Sts. Runs through Vesey. Church, Chambers, W. B'way, Canal, Hudson, 8th Ave. to 59th St. Returns by same route to College Place, Vesey St. to B'way. Ruus all night. B'way & Canal St. Branch. Runs through Canal, Hudson, 8th Ave. to 154th St. returning bv same route. 1st and 2d Avenue Line. Leave Fulton Ferry. Runs through Fulton, Water, Peck Slip, Pearl. Chatham, Bowery, Grand, For- syth, Houston, 2d Ave. to 128th St. Returns by 2d Ave., 23d. 1st Ave , Houston Allen, Grand, Chrystie, Bowery, Chat- ham, Pearl, Peck Slip, South to Fulton Ferry. Branch, cor. 8Gth St. & 2d Ave., to Astoria Ferry, foot 92d St., E.R. Illustrated Guide to New York City. 93 Worth Street Branch. From Park Row. throusrh Worth to B'way, returning by Worth, Park Row, then as Maia Line. AsTOR Place Branch. Runs from B'way and Astor PL, Stuyve- sant,2d Ave., 59th 1st Ave. to 128th St, Returns by same route. Runs all night. 42cl and Grand St. Line. Leaves Grand St. Ferry. Runs through Grand. Goerck, Houston, 2d, Ave. A, 14th, 4th Ave., 23d. B'way, 34th, 10th Ave. to Weehawken Ferry Returns by same route to Cannon, Grand to Grand St. Ferry. Fordhann Line. starts from 128th St. &3d Ave. Crosses Harlem River through 3d Ave., MottHavon. Melros-^, Morrisania, Tre- mont to Fordham ; returns by same route. Runs all night. 42d St., Manhattan Ave. and St. Nicholas Ave. From W. 42d St., N, R., through 4-3il St. 1st Ave.. 34th StE. R. B'way & Boulevard Branch. Leaves E. 34th St. & 1st Ave. Runs through 1st Ave , 42d. 7th Ave, B'way, Boulevard, Manhattan, 129thto 130th St., N. R. returns by same route. Manhattan Street & 110th Street Branch. Leaves. Fort Lee Ferry, and runs through 129th, Manhattan, St. Nich. Ave., llOth to 1st Ave., returns same route. Runs all night. 4th and Madison Ave. Line. Leaves B'way opp. Astgr House Runs through Park Row, Centre, Grand, Bowery, 4th Ave., to Grand Central De- pot. 44th St Madison Ave., to 138th St. Transfer car through 32d, Lex. Ave. to 34th St. Ferry. Retm'us same route. 14th St. and Union Sq. From Christopher St. Ferry to Greenwich, 9th Ave, 14th, 4th Ave, returning through 14th, 9th Ave , Washington, Christopher to Ferry, transfer to and from Hoboken Ferry, foot W. 14th, at cor. 9th A ve. & 14th. Grand and Cortlandt St, Leaves Grand St. Ferry. Runs through Grand, E- Bway. Canal. Walker, W. B'wav, N. Moore, Washing- ton to Cortlandt St, Ferry. Returns by Cortlandt, Greenwich, B^ach, W. B'way, Canal St., same route to starting point. Ninth Avenue Line. Leaves B'waj^ & Fulton St. Runs through Fulton, Greenwich, 9th Ave. 64th, Boulevard. lUth Ave. to 126th St., connecting with Manhattanville Cable Road. Returns same route, to Gansevoort, Wash- ington and Fulton. 125th St. and 10th Ave. Line. CABLE ROAD. Starts from foot 12.5th St. E. R. Runs through 12.5th & Manhattan, 130th St N. R., returns same route. Tenth Avenue Branch. Starts from foot of E. 125th Si. Runs through 12oth, Manhattan St., 10th Ave. to ISrthSt. Port Morris Line. starts from 129th & 3d Ave. Crosses Harlem Riv. and through 3d Ave. to 138th St., to Port Morris, returns by same route. 7th Ave. Line. Transfers with B'way & 7th Ave. Leaves B'way & Park Place. Runs throiipfh Park PI., Church, Canal, Sullivan, ^V. 3d, Macdougal, Clinton pi, Greenwich Ave. 7th Ave. to 59th St. Returns by same route to 4tli, Thompson. Canal W. B'way, College PL, Park PL to B'way. 6th Avenue Line. B'way at Tesey to W. B'way, Canal, Va- riciv, 6th Ave. to .59th St. Branch at Canal to B'way. 3d Avenue Line. Park Row to Bowery, 3d Ave. to Harlem. 23d St. &L Erie Ferry. From Erie Ferry, N. R. to Greenpoint Ferry, E. R. 94 Illustrated Guide to New York City. RAILROAD DEPOTS. Baltimore and Ohio R. R. Depot of New Jersey Central. Brooklyn, Bath &. West End R.R. Ferry from foot of Whitehall St. to 39th . St., Brooklyn. Central R. R. of New Jersey. Depot at Jersey City. Ferry from foot of Liberty St. Also Philadelphia & Reading R. R. Delaware, Lackawanna and Wes- tern R. R. also Morris and Essex Division. Depot at Hoboken. Ferry from foot of Barclay St. or Christopher St. N. Y., Lake Erie and Western R. R. Depot at Jersey City. Ferry foot of Chambers Street, or West 23d St. Also from same depot Montclair and Greenwood Lake R. R. and New Jersey andN. Y. R. R. Long Island R. R. Depot at Hunter's Point. Ferry from E. 34th St. and James Slip. Also Manhattan Beach and Coney Island R.R. New Jersey Southern R. R. Depot at Sandy Hook. Steamer from foot of Rector St. New York and Northern R. R, Depot at 155th Street. New York and Sea Beach R. R. For Coney Island. Foot Whitehall. Bay Ridge ferry. Pennsylvania R. R, Depot at Jersey City. Ferries at foot of Cortlandt and Desbrosses St. Also Le- high Valley R. R. Staten Island R. R. Ferry foot of Whitehall St. West Shore Railroad, Depot at Jersey City and Weehawken. Ferries from foot of Jay Street, and W. 42d Street. Also New York, Ontario & Western R. E. The folloiving Roads leave Grand Central Depot— Vanderbilt Ave. Side. New York Central and Hudson River R. R. and Ne-w York and Harlem R. R. 42d St. Side. New York New Haven and Hartford R. R. New York Sl New England R.R. and New York &. Boston Shore Line. BROOKLYN RAILROAD DEPOTS. Brooklyn & Rocka way R. R., from How- ard House, East New Yoik,'and Jamaica Bay. Take Elevated R. R, Brooklyn, Flatbush & Coney Island R. R., from L. I. R. R., Atlantic and Flatbush Aves. also Atlantic and Franklin Aves. Manhattan Beach R. R., from L. I. R E , Hunter's Point, Atlantic and Flatbush Aves.,foot Quay St., Greenpoint. Also Bay Ridge Fen-y landing. N. Y. Woodhaven & Rockaway E. E., from depot June. Atlantic and Flatbush Aves. Prospect Park & Coney Island R. E., 9th Ave. & 20th St. also from Bay Ridge Ferry Landing. Rapid Transit R. R., from junc. Atlantic and Flatbush Aves. for East New York and Jamaica. Union Depot. 39th St. & Third Ave., South Brooklyn, Illustrated Guide to New York City. 95 GENERAL POST OFFICE. B'way cor. Park row. Office is open continuously except Sundays ; Sun- days from 9 to 11 A. M. Money Order Department. Open from 10 a. m. to 6 p. m, Money orders can be obtained at all branch. offices. Money orders cashed at General P. O. only. There are seven and eight deliveries each day by carriers on the districts of branch offices. Collections are made from each and every street letter-box each day, south of Harlem River from 12 to 21 times a day ; north of Harlem River from 4 to 7 times a day. On Sundays collections from 2 to 12 p. m. ^ Branch Offices. Open from 6.30 a. m. to 8 p. m. and on Sunday from 8 to 10 a. m, A, 21 East Houston H, 156 E. 54th R, Third av. cor. E. B, 380 Grand J, 8th av. & W. 123d 150th C, Cor Bank & Greenwich K, 1529 Third av. S, Kingsbridge, River- D, 217 E. 9th L, 119 E. 125th dale, Spuyten Duyvil E, 322 Seventh av M, W. 158th, cor. and Woodlawn. F, 401 Third av . Tenth av. T, Tremont, Fordham G, 1661 B'way P. Produce Ex and W. Farms Rates of Postage. Notice — No letter will be forwarded unless the postage is prepaid by stamps. Stamps and stamped envelopes can be procured at the offices of sale in the in the P. O. bldg (on the B'way and Park row sides), and at all Stations. On Letters. On Letters the Postage to any part of the U. S. is 2 cents per ounce or fraction thereof. Every letter or sealed parcel not exceeding 1 ounce in weight is deemed a single letter, and every additional weight of an ounce, or less, is charged with an additional single postage, prepaid by stamps. City letters must be prepaid by stamps at the rate of 2 cents for each ounce or less, and 2 cents for each additional ounce, whether delivered from the office, or by the carriers. Advertised letters are charged with 1 cent in addition to the regular postage. Transient newspapers and periodicals, books, circulars and other like, print- ed matter, 1 cent for each 4 ounces. Samples, patterns and articles of merchandise in packages not over 4 pounds in weight, 1 cent per ounce. 96 Illustrated Guide to New York City. 1, 2, "Whitehall 3, 4, Mooi-e & Broad. 5, 6, 7, 8, Broad & Coenties si. 9, 10, 11, 12. 13 Coenties & Old si. 14, Jones la. 15, 16. Wall. 17, Pine. 18, Maiden la. 19, Fletcher. 20,21, Burling si, 22, Fulton, 23, 24, 25, 26, Beekman S: P-ck f1. 27. 28, 29, 30, Dover & Roo. evelt. 31, 32, James slip. 33, Oliver. 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, Catherine si. & Market 39, 40, 41, Market & Pike. 42, 43, 44, Pike & Rutgers. 45, 46, Rutgers & Jefferson. 47, 48, Jefferson & Clinton. LOCATION OF PIERS. East River. 49, 50, Clinton & Montgomery. 51, 52, Gouverneur si. 53, Jackson. 54, Corlears. 55, Cherry. 56, 57, Broome. 58, 59, Delancey. 60, 61, 62, Rivington & Stanton. 63, Third 64, Fifth 65, Sixth 66, Seventh. 67, Eighth. 68, E. 9th 69, E. 10th. 70, E. 11th. 71, E. 12th 72, E. 13t)i 73, E. 14th A& 1, Battery PI. 2, 3, 4, Battery Pi. & Morris 5, 6, 7, 8, Morris & Rector. 9, 10, 11, Rector & Carlisle. 12, 13, 14, Albany & Cedar. 15, 16, 18, Liberty & Cortlandt. 19, 20, Cortlandt & Dey. 21, 22, 23, Fulton & Vesey 24. 25 Vesey & Barclay. 27 (old,), Park PI. 28, " Murray. 29, " Warren. 20, (new). Chambers 21, " Duane. 32, 33, Duane & Jay. 23, (new) Harrison. 35. (old) Franklin. 36, " N. Moore, 26, (new), Beach. 27, " Hubert 28, " Laight 39, (old), Yestry. North River. 40, (old). Watts. 41.42" Canal. 34, 35, 36. 37, (new), Spring & Ciharlton. 38 (new). King. 39 " W. Houston. 40 " Clarkson. 41 " Leroy. 42 " Morton. 43 " Barrow. 44 " Christopher. 45 " W. 10th. 46, 47 " Charles & Perry. 54, 57 (old) Perry & Bogert. 58, foot Bloomfield. 59, (old). Little W. 12th. 54, (new), W. 24th 55, W. 25th 56, W. 26th. 57, (new), W. 27th & W. 28th. 59, " W. 29th. 60. W. 30th. Astoria— from E. 92 Brooklyn — from Catherine si. to Main, E 10th and E. 23d to Gteenpoint av. From E. 23d to B Vay. From E. Houston to Grand. From Fulton to Fulton. From Grand to Grand & B'way. From Roosevelt to B'way. From Wall to Montague. From Whitehall to Atlantic av. & Hamil- ton av. From Whitehall to 39th (S. Brooklyn.) From E, 99th to College point. Uommunipaw— from Liberty. FERRIES. Fort Lee— from W. 130th. Bay Ridge— from Whitehall. Hoboken — from Barclay, Christopher an W. 14th Hunters Point — from E, 34tb & James si. Jersey City — from Chambers to Pavonia av Cortlandt & Desbrosses to Exchange pi. W. 23d to Pavonia av. Staten Island— fm, Whitehall to St. George Tompkinsville, Stapleton & Clifton Also to New Brighton, Sailors' Snug Harbor, W. Brighton, Port Richmond and Elm park. Weehawken— f rom Jay & W. 42d. Directory for Streets and Avenues. ABBREVIATIONS. Ave. Avenue ; Bet. Between ; Ct. Court ; E. East ; F. E. East River ; F)7i. From ; 3Ikt. I^Iarket ; iV". North ; iV. R. North River ; Pk. Park ; PI. Place ; P. Right ; 8. South ; Ter. Terrace ; W. West. # Indicates Elevated R. E. Stations. Aba Av A 97 Abattoir pi., W. 39th, bet. 11th av., and N. R. Abingdon sq.. Bleecker st., from Bank to Eighth av. Academy, fm Nae- gle av.. N. of Dyck- man,W. to Seaman av. Ackerman, fm 2866 Riverdale av. Admiral, from 1927 Caswell Albany, from 122 Greenwich Aldus, from 2060 S. Boulevard Alexander av., fm Harlem river 1 Harlem River 56 E. 131st 82 E. 132d 112 S. Boulevard 138 E. 134th 164 E. 135th 190 E. 136th 220 E. 137th 250 E. 138th 276 E. 139th 302 E. i40th 328 E. 141st 3.i4 E. 142d 375 E 153d Third av. Allen, from 104 Di- vision 1 Division 13 Canal # 39 Hester 69 Grand© 87 Broome 113 Delancey 145 Rivington© 177 Stanton 213 E. Houston Anderson av.,from 805 Jerome av. Ann, fm 222 Broad- way 1 Park row 2 Broadway 19 Theatre al. 33 Nassau 71 William 91 Gold Anna pi., from 1354 Webster av. Anthony av., from 1575 Webster av. Aqueduct av., fm 830 Sedgwick av. to Croton ter. Archer, from 394 E. 177th, to Jerome av Arcularius pi., fm 1294 Gerard->av., to Sheridan av. Arnold, from L. I Sound to Wetmore av. Arthur av,, fm 1875 Fulton av., to Pel- ham av. Ash, fm 1854 Morris av. to Anthony av Ashland pi., Perry bet. Greenwich av. and Waverley pi. Astor pi., from 744 Broadway to Third {IV. Attorney, from 236 Division I Division 23 Grand 43 Broome 73 Delancey 111 Rivington 143 Stanton 175 E. Houston Audubon av., from W. 158th, to Fort George av. Audubon pk., W 1.55th & Boulevard Austin pi., fm 1085 E. 144th Av. A. from 2.30 E. Houston toE 93d 1 E. Houston 3 First 25 Second 41 Third 57 E. 4th 75 Fifth 93 Sixth 109 Seventh 125 St. Mark's pi. 141 E. 9th 1.57 E. 10th 173 E. 11th 193 E. 12th 209 E. 13th 225 E. 14th 241 E. 15th 257 E. 16th 273 E. 17th 289 E. 18th 307 E. 19th 323 E. 20th 341 E. 21st E. 22(1 381 E. 2.3.1 393 E. 24th * * * 994 E. 1014 E 1027 E. 1051 E. 1071 E. 1091 E. nil E. 11.31 E. 1151 E. 1171 E. 1191 E. 1211 E. 1231 E. 1251 E. 1271 E. 1291 E. 1311 E. 1331 E. 1351 E. 1271 E. 1391 E. 1411 E. 1431 E. 1451 E. 1469 E. 1491 F. 1511 E. 15.31 E. 1551 E. 1571 E. 1591 E. 1613 E. 1631 E. 1651 E. 1671 E. 1691 E. 1711 E. 1731 E. 1751 E. E. 54th 55th 56th 57th 58th 59th 60th 61st 62d 63d 64th 65th 66th 67th 68th 69th 70th 71st 72d 73d 74th 75th 76th 77th 78th 79th 80th 81st 82d 83d 84th 85th 86th 87th S8th 89th 90th 91st 92d 93d 98 Av B Street Directory. Ble Av. B, from 294 E. Houston 1 E. Houston 15 Second 35 Third 53 E. 4th 71 Fifth 91 Sixth 109 Seventh 125 Eighth E 9th 157 E. 10th 173 E. 11th 193 E. 12th 209 E. 13th 231 E 14th 251 E. 151h 273 E. 16th 291 E. 17th 309 E. 18th [^ if :^ E. 117th E. 118th Av. C, from 358 E. Houston 1 E. Houston 11 Second 31 Third 51 E. 4th 69 Fifth 87 Sixth 105 Seventh 125 Eighth 143 E. 9th 159 E. 10th 177 E. 11th 195 E. 12th 211 E. 13tli E. 14th E. 15th 271 E. 16th 291 E. 17th 309 E. 18th Av. D, from 426 E. Houston, 1 Second 19 Third 39 E. 4th 57 Fifth 75 Sixth 91 Seventh 111 Eighth 129 E. 9th 145 E. 10th 163 E. 11th B st , from Inwood. W. of Prescott av Bacon, fm 520 Wet- more av., to|Wor- den Bailey av., fm 2461 Sedgwick av., to Middlebrook pkw'y Bainbridge av.,fm 2324 Tiebout av., to Ochil.ree av. Bank, fm. 85 Green- wich av. 1 Greenwich av. 14 Waverley pi. 50 W. 4th 82 Bleecker 88 Hudson 92 Greenwich 131 Washington 169 West Thirteenth av Barclay, from 227 Broadway, 1 Broadway 23 Church 53 College pi. 73 Greenwich© 87 Washington 109 West BarloTT, from Far- lagut to Bronx II. Barnard, from 1545 Dickey, to Dongan Barney, junction of Fieldston rd and Spuyten Duy vil pk- way Barrett o, fromL. I. Sound to Fox Barrow, from 61 W. Washington pi. to N. R. 1 Washington pi, 3 W. 4th 35 Bleecker 65 Bedford 73 Commerce 89 Hudson 109 Greenwich 121 Washington 143 West Barry, from L. I. Sound to Tiffany Basset, fm 712 Var- ian to Ochiltree av. Bassford av., from 763 E. 182d to Kingsbridge rd. Batavia, from 78 Roosevelt to James Bathg^ate av., from 765 E. 172d, to E. 187th Battery, ft. Broad- way Battery pi., from 1 Broadway 1 Broadway 4 Greenwich 7 Washington 12 West Baxter, from 166 Park row, 1 Park row 27 Park 23 Worth 46 Leonard 64 Franklin 71 Bayard 82 White 99 Canal 102 Walker 130 Hester 160 Grand Bayard, fm 70 Di- vision 1 Division 2 Forsyth 18 Christie 38 Bowery 52 Elizabeth 74 Mott 92 Mulberry 108 Baxter Beach, from 132 W. Broadway 1 W. Broadway 9 St. John's la. 17 Varick 42 Hudson 51 Collister 59 Greenwich 71 Washington 81 West Beach av., fm 1303 S. Boulevard to Westchester av. Beaumont av., fm 9S5 Kingsbridge rd to Pelham av. Beaver, fin 8 Broad- way to Pearl 1 Broadway 9 New 31 Broad ^1 Lord's ct. 59 William 69 Hanover 95 Pearl Beck, fin 622 Con- cord av. to Inter- vale av. Bedford, fm 180 W. Houston to Chris- topher 1 W. Houston 29 Downing 37 Carmine 45 Leroy 61 Morton 77 Commerce 83 Barrow 97 Grove 115 Christopher Beekman, from 34 Park row 1 Park row 3 Theatre al 9 Nassau 37 William 61 Gold 89 Cliff 103 Pearl 119 Water 135 Front 156 South Beekman pi., from 429 E. 49th St., to E. 51st Belmont, fm 1517 Mott av., to Aque- duct av. Bender, from High- wood av., to Jer- ome av. Benson, from 107 Leonard Bergen av., fm 486 Willis av., to Brook av. Berry, fm 1984 Mor- ris av., to Anthony av. Bethune, from 782 Greenwich to N. R. 1 Greenwich 31 Washington 61 West 73 Thu-teenth av Birch, from 1236 Aqueduct av. to Jerome av. Birmingham, fm 81 Henry to Madi- son Bishop's la, from 174 Chambers to Warren Bleecker, from 318 Bowery to 8th av 1 Bowery 14 Elizabeth 30 Mott 42 Mulberry 58 Crosby 72 Broadway 90 Mercer 106 Greene 122 Wooster 138 8. 5th av 154 Thompson 168 Sullivan 186 Macdougal 202 Hancock 209 Minetta Downing 232 Carmine 248 Leroy Ble Street Directory. Bro 99 255 Cornelia 270 Morton 277 Jones 286 Commerce 294 Barrow 314 Grove 328 Christopher 348 W. 10th 366 Charles 384 Perry 400 W. 11th 414 Bank Eighth av. Blooinfield, from 7 Tenth av., to N. R. Bogart, from 539 West to N. R. Bolton rd., from Kingsbridge rd. to Spuyten Duyvil ck Bond; fm 658 Broad- way to Bowery Boone^ fm 1371 Al- dus to Westchester av. Boscobel av., from 1394 Sedgwick av., to 1894 Sedgwick av. Boston av., fm 105 Kingsbridge rd., to Bailey av. Boston rd,, fm 3260 Third av. to Bronx River Boulevard, a con- tinuation of Broad- way, from W. 59ih and Eighth av., to W. 170th Boulevard pi., W. 130th bet Fifth and Sixth av. Bowery, from 13 Chatham sq. 1 Division 2 Doyers 18 Pell 29 Bayard 61 Canal # 93 Hester 127 Grand© 151 Broome 181 Delancey 188 Spring 213 Rivington 230 Prince 245 Stanton 279 E. Houston© 303 First 318 Bleecker 323 Second 328 Bond 345 Third 346 Great Jones 361 E. 4th 379 Fifth 395 Sixth 402 Fourth av. Bowling Green, ft. of Broadway Bremer av., fm 847 Jerome av., to Feather Bed la. Bridge, fm 15 State to Broad Briggs av., fm 609 Brookline to Mid dlebrook Bristow, from 1319 Stebbins av.,to Bos- ton rd. Broad, fm 21 Wall 1 Wall 23 Exchange pi. 59 Beaver 72 Marketfield 81 S. William 88 Stone 98 Bridge 100 Pearl 108 Water 122 Front 144 South Broadway, from 1 Battery pi. 1 Battery pi 8 Beaver 27 Morris 55 Exchange al. 56 Exchange pi. 73 Rector 86 Wall 106 Pine 111 Thames 119 Cedar 145 Liberty 171 Cortlandt 172 Maiden la. 184 John 191 Dey 210 Fulton 222 Ann Vesey 227 Barclay 237 Park al. 247 Murray 259 Warren 271 Chambers 287 Reade 303 Duane 317 Thomas 318 Pearl 334 Worth 344 Catharine la 348 Leonard 362 Franklin 378 White 398 Walker 413 Lispenard 416 Canal 432 Howard 458 Grand 486 Broome 526 Spring 566 Prince 608 W. & E. Hous ton 640 Bleecker 658 Bond 681 W. 3d 682 Great Jones 694 W. & E. 4th 713 Washington pi. 727 Waverley pi. 744 Astor pi. 755 Chnton pi. & 8th 770 E. 9th 784 E. 10th 801 E. 11th 824 E. 12th 840 E. 13th 858 E. 14th Union sq. 857 E. 17th 871 E. 18th 887 E. 19th 901 E. 20th 919 E. 21st 939 E. 22d 957 E. 23d 957 Fifth av. Madison sq. 1099 W. 24th 1119 W. 25th 1139 W. 26th 1159 W. 27th 1183 W. 28th 1203 W. 29th 1227 W. 30th 1251 W. 31st 1273 W. 32d 1291 W. 33d Sixth av. 1311 W. 34th 1329 W. 35th 1349 W. 36th U69 W. 37th 1391 W. 38th 1409 W. 39th 1429 W. 40th 1447 W. 41st 1467 W. 42d 1489 W. 43d 1505 W. 44th 1525 W. 45th Seventh av. 1549 W. 46th 1569 W. 47th 1589 W. 48th 1609 W. 49th 1629 W. 50th 1649 W. 51st 1665 W. 52d 1687 W. 53d 1709 W. 54th 1729 W. 55th 1749 W. 56th 176e W. 57th 1787 W. 58th 1805 W. 59th Boulevard fm. 59th to 170th * * * (24th Ward) Spuyten Duyvil creek. 2878 Riverdale av. 2932 Kingsbridge rd. 3080 E. Varian av. 3081 W. Varian a v. 32J 4 Cooper av. 3342 Middlebrook pk- way 3390 Myers rd. 3432 Old Post rd. 3618 Emmet av. 3728 Buffon Riverdale la. 3810 Linnaeus 3960 Cooper av. Gentian pi, 4006 E. Mosholu av. 4007 W. Mosholu av. 4098 Downs pi. Broadway al.. fin 153 E. 26th to E. 27th Bronx, fm. 1343 Tre- mont av , to Ponus Bronx River rd., fm. 1073 Eastches- ter to City line. Brook av., from Bronx Kills, to E. 170th Brookline, fm 527 Kingsbridge rd. to Webster av. Broome, fm 15 East 1 East 4 Tompkins 16 Mangin 34 Goerck 50 Lewis 66 Cannon 82 Columbia 98 Sheriff 114 Willett 124 Pitt 144 Ridge 160 Attorney 178 Clinton 194 Suflfolk 210 Norfolk 226 Essex TOO Bro Street Directory. Che 24 i Ludlow 25i Orchard 274 Allen 290 Eldridge 306 Forsyth 324 Chrystie 330 Bowery 353 Elizabeth 370 Mott 388 Mulberry 395 Centre mkt pi 404 Marion Centre 414 Elm 430 Crosby 442 Broadway 452 Mercer 469 Greene 482 Wooster 500 S. 5th av. 518 Thompson 532 Sullivan 538 Clarke 562 Vai ick 590 Hudson Brown pi., fron Bronx Kills to E 138th Bryant, from L. I. Sound to Wetmore av. Buckhoiit, from 457 Tremont av., lo Valentine av. Buflfon, from 3728 B'way, to Douglass av. Bungay, from L. I. Sound to E. 1-1 9th Burling- Slip, from 234 Pearl 1 Pearl 11 Water 23 Front 41 South Burnet pi., fm 600 Wetmore av., t Tiffany Burnside av., from 2034 Aqueduct av., to Tiebout av. Bush, fm 2012 Mor ris av., to Anthony av. Bussing, from 788 Middlebrook park- way, to Webster av C St., from Inwood, west of B St. Cabot, fi-om L. I. Sound to Leggett av. Cambreling av.,fm 931 Kingsbi idge I'd. to Pelham nv. Cameron pi., from 2168 Jerome av., to Morris av. Canal, from 182 E. Broadway 1 E. Broadway 23 Division 26 Rutgers 37 Ludlow 53 Orchard 71 Allen© 87 Eldridge 105 Forsyth 123 Chrystie 145 Bowery 1( 5 Elizabeth 183 Mott 201 Mulberry 219 Baxter 239 Centre 2 19 Elm 270 Cortlandt al. 283 Broadway 311 Mtn-cer 331 Gret ne 344 Church 355 Wooster 375 S. 5th av. 384 W. Broadway 395 Thompson 398 Laight 415 Sullivan 428 Vestiy 429 Varick 485 Hudson 48 r Watts 503 Ren wick 521 Greenwich 541 Washington 542 West Cannon, from 538 Grand 1 Grand 19 Broome 45 Dehincey 77 Rivington 105 Stantun 137 E Houston Cat lin pi., fm 4010 S. Boulevard to Summit Carlisle, from 112 Greenwich Caiman pi.. Tenth av. bet. W. 152d & W. 153d Carmine, froui 1 Sixth av. 1 Sixth av. 2 Minetta la 15 Bleecker 49 Bedford 81 Varick Caroline, from 211 Duane to Jay Carr, from 708 Ger- man pi., to St. Ann's av. Carter av., fm 1590 Anthony av., to E. 176th Casanova, fm L. 1. Sound to Wenman av. Caswell, from 144 Hunt's Point rd. to L. I. Sound Catharine, from 1 Division 1 Division 2 Chatham sq. 12 E. Broadway 24 Henry 44 Madison 59 Monroe 68 Oak 73 Hamilton 100 Cherry Catharine la., fm 344 Broadway to Elm Catliarine slip, fm 115 Cherry 1 Cherry 11 Water 27 South Cauldwell av., fm 849 Westchester av to Boston rd. Caxton, from 1329 Doiigan, to West- chester av. Cedar, fm 181 Pearl 1 Pearl 38 William 70 Nassau 90 Broadway 96 Temple 104 Trinity pi. 118 Greenwich 128 Washington 142 West Cedar, (23d Ward), from 796 Eagle av. to Union av. Central park w^ Eighth av., trom W. 59thtoW. 110th Centre, from Try on row 1 Tryonrow 12 Chambers 22 Eeade 31 Duane 36 Park 50 Pearl 68 Worth 90 Leonard 110 Franklin 132 White 150 Walker 158 Canal 182 Hester 201 Howard 224 Grand 259 Broome Centre mkt pl.^ fm. 172 Urand, to Broome Chambers, from 96 Park row 1 Park row 15 City Hall pi. 21 Centre 69 Broadway 99 Church 131 W. Broadway 132 College pi. j 139 Hudson ■] 171 Greenwich 174 Bishop's la 183 Washington 2. 5 West Charles, from 37 Greenwich av. 1 Greenwich av. 21 Waverley pi. 59 W. 4th Voiinest pi. 85 Bleecker 115 Hudson 125 Greenwich 145 Washington 173 West Charles la., fm 692 Washington to W^est Charlotte pi., from 1390 WilkinspL, to S. Boulevard Charlton, from 29 Macdougal 1 Macdougal 55 Varick 89 Hudson 109 Greenwich 119 Washiugton 139 West Chatham sq., from 2 Mott 1 Mott 13 Doyers Bowery 19 E. Broadway 23 Oliver Cheever pi., fm 334 River av to Mott av I I Che Street Directory. Ore 101 Cherry, from 340 Pearl 3 Dover 10 Franklin sq. 45 Roosevelt 1 76 New Chambers 77 James ' 99 Oliver [ 114 Catharine 115 Catharine si 161 Market 196 Mechanic al 205 Pike 2;i8 Pelham 251 Rutgers 285 Jefferson 313 Clinton 349 Montgomery 373 Gouverneur 383 Scammel 433 Jackson 483 Corlears 525 East Chestnut, f m 8 Oak 2 Oak 4 New Bowery 22 New Chambers 28 Madison Chisholm, fm 1283 Stebbins av., to Jennings Christopher, from 3 Greenwich av. 1 Greenwicli av 12 Gay 31 Waverley pi. 63 W 4th 91 Bleecker 12f) Bedford 129 Hudson 143 Greenwich 161 Washington 185 Weeliawken 187 West Christie, from 44 Division 1 Division 11 Bayard 41 Canal 71 Hester 103 Grand 123 Broome 151 Delancey 177 Rivington 205 Stanton 233 E. Houston Cliurch, from 99 Liberty 1 Liberty 17 Cortlaudt 39 Dey 51 Fulton 71 Vesey 91 Barclay 107 Park pi 123 Murray 139 Warren 157 Chambers 173 Reade 189 Duane 207 Thomas 227 Worth 243 Leonard 261 Franklin 281 White 301 Walker 319 Lispenard 333 Canal Church, (24th Ward) from 2866 Riverdale av., to Broadway City Hall pi., from 15 Chambers 1 Chambers 2 Centre 10 Reade 20 Duane 40 Pearl Claremont av., fm W. 116th. between Boulevard & River side av., to 127th Clarke, from 538 Broome to Spring 1 Broome 13 Dominick 31 Spring Clarke pi., fm 1324 Jerome av.,to Sher id an av. Clarkson, from 225 Varick 1 Varick 29 Hudson 53 Greenwich 61 Washiugton 81 West Clay av., from 629 E 164th to Elliott Cliff, from 101 John 2 John 34 Fulton 54 Beekman 72 Ferry 102 Frankfort 106 Hague Cliff, (23d Ward) fm 872 St. Ann's av. to Union av. Cliff pi., ft-om 1295 Aqueduct av., to Sedgwick av Clifford p;., from 1718 Jerome av., to Sherman av. Clinton, from 293 E. Houston 1 E. Houston 31 Stanton 71 Rivington 97 Clinton al 107 Delancey 137 Broome 163 Grand 193 Hester 194 Division 197 E. Broadway 207 Henry 217 Madison 233 Monroe 251 Cherry 255 Water South Clinton al., from 97 Clinton to Suffolk Clinton av., fm 907 E. 169th to E. 187th Clinton ct., r 120 Clinton pi. Clinton pi., fm 755 Broadway. (See 8th St) Clover, from 2938 Edgewater rd to Bronx Coenties'' al., from 73 Pearl to 40 Stone Coenties' slip,from 66 Pearl 1 Pearl 5 Water 17 Front 33 South Cole, from 2626 Mar ion av. to Webster av. College av., fm 453 E. 135th to E. 158th College pi, from 53 Barclay to Cham- bers CoUister, from 51 Beach to Laight Columbia, from 520 Grand 1 Grand 19 Broome 43 Delancey 71 Rivington 101 Stanton 129 E Houston CoUimbia pi., 386 Eighth St. Columbine, fm 2300 Kingsbridge rd., to Boston rd. Commerce, fm 286 Bleecker 1 Bleeekpr 27 Bedford 41 Barrow Commerce av., fm 773 Jerome av., to Depot pi. Concord av., from 1107 E. 138th to K. 154th Congress, from 177 W.Houston to King Congress pi, from 4 Congress st. Conover av., from 225 Edgewater rd to Hunt's Point rd. Cooke, from 2500 S. Boulevsrd to Vj^se Cooper, from Acad- emy, bet. Kings- bridge rd and Sea- man av. Cooper av., fm 3214 Broadway Corlears, from 587 Grand 1 Grand 11 Monroe 23 Cherry 39 Water Front South Cornelia, from 158 W. 4th to Bleecker Cortlandt, from 171 Broadway 1 Broadway 23 Trinity pi. 51 Greenwich 73 Washington 91 West Cortlandt al., from 270 Canal to Frank- lin Coster av., fm L. I. Sound to Fariagut Cottage pl„ 176 W. Houston Cortlandt av.. from 2769 Third av. to E. 163d Crane pi., from 575 E 174th to E. 176th Craven, from L. I. Sound to Lane av. Crawford, from 825 Williamsbridge rd, to Gun Hill rd. Crescent av., from 2332 St John's a-v. to Pelham av. Crestline av., con- tinuation of Clay av. < reston av., fm 479 Burnside av., to Travcrs. Cre Street Directory. e. Nou Crestover pi., from Arcularius pi., to Highwood av. Cromwell av., fm 753 Setigwiek av., to Jerome av. Crosby, fm 28 How- ard 1 Howard 23 Grand 39 Broome 71 Spring 105 Prince 127 Jersey 143 E. Houston 169 Bleeeker Cross pi., from 1476 Jerome av., to Tovvnsend av. Croton ter., contin- uation of Aqueduct av. Custis, from 2818 Tillotson av., to St. John's av. Cuthbert la., from Riverdale av., Cuyler's al., from 28 South to Water. Cypress av., from Bron.^ Kills to Ter- race pi. Dst., from Inwood, nr C St. Dahlgren, fm 1271 Caswell to Bronx River Daly av., from 2951 Edgewater rd., to Boston rd. Dashwood av., f m 1986 Sedgwick av , to Aqueduct av. Davidson av., from Fordham rd., to Kingsbridge rd. Dawson, from 680 Prospect av., to Intervale av. Decatur av., fm 695 Brook line to Mid dlebrook Delafield av., from a509 Waldo to Riv erdale av. Delancey, from 181 Bowery 1 Bowery 19 Chrystie 35 Forsyth 53 Eld ridge 69 Allen 83 Orchard 97 Ludlow 113 Essex 131 Norfolk 147 Suffolk 163 Clinton 179 Attorney 195 Ridge 213 Pitt 229 Willett 245 Sheriff 263 Columbia 285 Cannon 303 Lewis 317 Goerck 325 Mangin 337 Tompkins 347 East Delmonico pi., fm 873 E 156th to E. 165th Denman pi., from 840 Forest av., to Union av. Depau pi., 185 and 187 Thompson Depew pi., Fourth av., from 42d to E 45th Depeyster, from 139 Water Depot pi., fm Har- lem River to Sedg wick av. Depot sq., fm 2900 Webster av. Desbrosses, fm 195 Hudson 1 Hudson 21 Greenwich 29 Washington 41 West Devoe, from 1288 Bremer av., to Claremont av. Devoe, fm Harlem River to Jerome av Dey, fm 191 Broad way 1 Broadway 25 Church 55 Greenwich 71 Washington 87 West Dickey, from 720 Longfellow st., to Drake Disbrow, from 388f Croton ter. to Mt Vernon av. Division, from ] Bowery 1 Catharine 2 Bowery 44 Chrystie 68 Forsyth 70 Bayard 71 Market 86 Eldridge 104 Allen 107 Pike 124 Orchard 143 Canal 144 Ludlow 160 Essex 179 Jefferson 180 Norfolk 202 Suffolk 207 Clinton 216 Hester 236 Attorney 247 Montgomery 254 Ridge 275 Gouverneur 276 Pitt 279 Grand Dominick, from 13 Clarke to Hudson Dongan. from 1220 Westchester av., to Bronx River Donnybrook, from 2750 Jerome av., to Anthony av. Donovan's la., fm 474 Pearl Douglass av., from 99 Middlebrook pk- way Dover, from 340 Pearl Downing, from 216 Bleeeker to Yarick Downs pl„ fm4098 Broadway to Doug lass av. Doyers, fm 13 Chat- ham sq., to Pell Drake, from L. I Sound to Bronx River Dry Dock, from 423 E. 10th to E. 12th Duane, fm 40 Rose 1 Rose 9 N. William 14 New Chambers 21 Park row 22 Reade 29 City Hall pi, 34 Cen:^re 59 Elm 89 Broadway 115 Trimble pi. 123 Church 149 W. Broadway 163 Hudson 169 Staple 185 Greenwich 201 Washington 211 Caroline 217 West Dunconib pi., E. 128th bet Second and Third avs. Dunham pi., 142 W. 33d Dunscomb pi., E. 50th, bet First av.. and Beekman pi. Dupont, from L. I. Sound to Wetmore av. Dutch, from 49 John to Fulton Dyckman, fm Har- lem River to Kings- bridge rd. £agle av„ from 853 E. 149th to E. 163d East, from 750 Wa- ter to Rivington E. Broadway, from 19 Chatham sq 2 Chatham sq. 6 Catharine 72 Market 116 Pike 162 Rutgers 182 Canal 189 Jefiferson 219 Clinton 259 Montgomery 287 Gouverneur 299 Scammel 311 Grand E. Houston^ fm 608 Broadway 1 Broadway 19 Crosby 35 Mulberry 56 Mott 71 Elizabeth 87 Bowery 117 Chrystie 118 Second av. 133 Forsyth 149 Eldridge 165 Allen 166 First av. 185 Orchard 203 Ludlow 225 Essex 230 A v. A. 243 Norfolk 267 Suffolk 293 Clinton 294 Av. B 317 Attorney 333 Ridge- 357 Pitt 358 Av. C 379 Willett 401 Sheriff J E.Hou Street Directory. E. 28th 103 421 Columbia mkt Av. D 443 Cannon 444 Manhattan 463 Lewis 485 Goerck 509 Mangin E. Mosholu av„ fm 4006 Broadway to Linnaeus E. Vandcrbilt av, continuation of Rail road av, from E 178th to Kings- bridge rd !E. Varian, fm 3080 Broadway to Bailey av. E. 4th, from 694 Broadway 1 Broadway 9 Lafayette pi. 41 Bowery 87 Second av. 129 Fil-stav. 17» Av. A 237 Av B 295 Av C 355 Av D 393 Lewis E. 9th, from 21 Fifth av. 1 Fifth av. 27 University pi. 69 Broadway 92 Fourth av. 117 Third a V. 207 Stuyvesant 233 Second av. 349 First av. 447 Av. A sq Av. B 651 Av. C 749 Av. D E. 10th, from 33 Fifth av. 1 Fifth av. 21 University pi. 59 Broadway 69 Fourth av. 93 Third av. 129 Stuyvesant Second av. 243 First av. 289 Av. A 345 Av. B 393 Av. C 423 Dry Dock 447 Av. D E. 11th, from 41 Fifth av. 1 Filth av. 33 University pi. 81 Broadway 101 Fourth av. 125 Third av. 231 Second av. 345 First av. 443 Av. A 551 Av. B 647 Av. C 7;eit, from 770 Ix iit's Point rd., I 1 Bi-onx river. Glencoe, fm Bronx 1 iver to N. Ridge Goelet av., fm 259 Liunoeus to City Line Goerck, from 574 Grand 1 Grand 4 Rachel la. 19 Bi-oome 49 Delaneey 79 Rivington 117 Stanton 1-13 E. Houston 103 Third Gold, fm 87 Maiden Lane 1 Maiden la. 15 Piatt 23 John 36 Ryder''s al. 51 Fulton 59 Ann 65 Beekman 77 Spruce 86 Ferry 102 Frankfort Gouverneur, from 275 Division 1 Division 5 E. Broadway 19 Henry 32 Madison 49 Monroe 65 Cherry 75 Water Gouverneur la., fm 48 South to 93 Water Gouverneur pi., fm Bronx Kills N to E. 132d Gramercy pk., fm E. 20th to E. 21st, bet. Fourth and Third av. Grand, fm 78 Varick 1 Varick 17 Sullivan 33 Thompson 49 S. 5th A v. 71 Wooster 87 Greene 105 Mercer 119 Broadway 131 Crosby 151 Elm 163 Centre Centre mkt pi. 171 Baxter 189 Mulbei-ry 203 Mott 219 Elizabeth 235 Bowery 253 Christie 269 Forsyth 289 Eldridge 307 Allen 321 Orchard 339 Ludlow 355 Essex 373 Norfolk 389 Suffolk 407 Clinton 423 Attorney 441 Ridge 459 Pitt 471 Division 473 E. Broadway 482 Willett 502 Sheriff 520 Columbia 527 Henry 538 Cannon 541 Jackson 556 Lewis 567 Madison 574 Goerck 587 Corlears 590 Mangin 599 Monroe 606 Tompkins 625 East Grant av., from 718 Railroad av., to Highwood av. Great Jones, fm 682 Broadway to Bow ery Greene, from 331 Canal 1 Canal 33 Grand 53 Broome 85 Spring 117 Prince 151 W. Houston 183 Bleecker 215 W. 3d (Roslyn pi.) 229 W. 4th 239 Washington pi Waverley (Winthrop 2^1-) 263 Clinton pi. Greenwich, from 4 Battery pi. to Gan- sevoort 1 Battery pi. 39 Morris 49 Trinity pi. 59 Edgar 89 Rector# 112 Carlisle 122 Albany 131 Thames 139 Cedar 149 Liberty 169 Cortlandt 185 Dey 197 Fulton 213 Vesey 229 Barclay • 249 Park pi. 267 Murray 283 Warren# 301 Chambers 309 Reade 323 Duane 337 Jay 353 Harrison 369 Franklin # 383 N. Moore 397 Beach 413 Hubert 427 Laight 441 Vestry 455 Desbrosses# 469 Watts 477 Canal 513 Spring 531 Vandam 549 Charlton 565 King 583 W. Houston© 599 Clarkson 615 Leroy 629 Morton 641 BaiTOw 677 Christopher© 695 W. 10th 711 Charles 731 Perry 751 W. 11th 769 Bank 782 Bethune 798 W. 12th 814 Jane 830 Horatio 840 Gansevoort Greenwich av., fm 105 Sixth av. 1 Sixth av. 5 Christopher 21 W. 10th 37 Charles 55 Perry 71 W. 11th 74 Seventh av. 85 Bank 101 W. 12th 113 Jane 119 W. 13th 129 Horatio 136 Eighth av. Grinnel pi., fm 454 -Tiffany to Hunt's Point rd. Grote, from 2200 Fulton Ave., to Kingsbridgerd. Grove, fm 488 Hud- 1 Hudson 15 Bedford 45 Bleecker 75 W. 4th Washington pi. 98 Waverley Grove, (2Jd Ward) from 2970 Third av to Brook av. Grove Hill pi., fm Delmonico pi., to Forest av. Gun Hill rd., from 501 Middlebrook Elcway to Williams- ridge rd. Guttenberg, from 1416 Westchester av.. to Boone Hague, from 367 Pearl to Chff Hall pi., from 211 Sixth to Seventh Halleck, from 753 Edgewater rd. to Bronx river Hamilton, from 73 Catharine to Mar- ket Hamilton pi., from Boulevard cor. W. 137th to Tenth av. Hanover, from 57 Wall to Pearl Hanover sq., from 105 Pearl to Stone. Hanson pi., Second av.,bet. E. 124th & E. 125th Hargous Crescent fm 2712 Anthony av Harrison, from 81 Hudson 1 Hudson 5 Staple 23 Greenwich 33 Washington 53 West Har Street Directory. Jer 111 Harry Howard sq, bet. Canal, Walker, Baxter & Mulberry Hawkstone, from 1451 Mott av., to Townsend av. Hawthorne, from Naegl<^ av., nr W. 204th to Seaman av Henderson pl„ fm 541 E. 86th Henry, fm 14 Oliver 1 Oliver 13 Catharine 60 Market 84 Birmingham 101 Pike 146 Rutgers 177 Jefferson 'M7 Clinton 247 Montgomery 275 Gouverneur 285 Scammel 3^6 Grand 338 Jackson Hester, fm 216 Di vision 1 Clinton 2 Division 15 Suffolk 31 Norfolk 47 Essex 63 Ludlow 79 Orchard 93 Allen 101 Hester ct. 105 Eldridge 119 Forsyth 133 Christie 149 Bowery 159 Elizabeth 175 Mott 191 Mulberry 207 Baxter 219 Centre Hester ct., fm 101 Hester High, fm 934 Aque- duct av., to Ander- son av. High Bridge, from Bremer av., to An- derson av. High Bridge, from 449 Welch av. Higliw^ood av., fm 1295 Crestline av.. to Aqueduct av. Hillside av., from Kingsbridge rd., & Naegle av., to 11th av. Hoe, fm 874 Hunt's Point rd., to Cooke Hoffman, from 945 Kingsbridge rd., to Pelham av. Hogarth, from 3567 Tier av., to Croton ter. Holly pi., from 4306 Mt. Vernon av., to Quail av. Home, fm 1156 Bos ton rd., to Prospect av. Honeywell av., fm 1161 Tremont av.. to Pelham av. Horatio, from 129 Greenwich av. 1 Eighth av. 2 Greenwich av. 5 W. 4th 41 Hudson 59 Greenwich 87 Washington 117 W>st 146 Thn-teenth av. Horton. from 1468 Franklin av., to Prospect av. Howard, from 201 Centre 1 Centre 9 Elm 28 Crosby 45 Broadway 53 Mercer Hubert, from 149 Hudson 1 Hudson 9 Collist^er 17 Greenwich 33 Washington 49 West Hudson, from 139 Chambers to 9th av 1 Chambers 15 Reade 29 Duane 50 Thomas 61 Tay 72 Worth 81 Harrison 92 Leonard 101 Franklin 119 N. Moore 133 Beach 149 Hubert 163 Laight 179 Vestry 195 Desbrosses 213 Canal 219 Watts 230 Broome 262 Dominick 301 Spring 321 Vandam 339 Charlton 361 King 385 W. Houston 403 Clarkson 421 Leroy 445 Morton 463 Barrow 488 Grove 499 Christopher 515 W. 10th 533 Charles 549 Perry 567 W. 11th 583 Bank 598 Eighth av. Abingdon sq 609 W. 12th 521 Jane 635 Horatio 649 Gansevoort 665 W. 13th 684 W. 14th 691 Ninth av. Hull av., from 3902 S. Boulevard to Middlebrook Hunt's Point rd., fr-om L. I. Sound to Southern Boulev'd Hunter, from 1351 Dongan to West- chester av. Hyatt pi., from 4350 Mt. Vernon av., to Quail av. Indian pi., fm 3712 Mt. Vernon av., to Jerome av. Intervale av., from 1743 S. Boulevard to Boston rd Inwood, fm Kings bridge and Bolton rds., to Hudson R. Iriquois av., fm 523 Willard Irving pi., from 117 E. 14th 1 E. 14th 15 E. 15th 33 E. 16th 47 E. 17th 63 E. 18th 71 E. 19th 85 E. 20th Isaac, from 2760 De- catur av. to Web- ster av. Isham, from Tenth av and W. 209th to Spuyten Duyvil Jackson, from 338 Henry 1 Henry 2 Grand 12 Madison 24 Monroe 44 Cherry 62 Water 76 Front 88 South Jackson av. , from 925 Westchester av to E. 165th Jacob, fm 19 Ferry 10 Frankfort James, fm 215 Park row 1 Park row 11 New Bowery 37 Madison 71 Oak 85 Batavia 101 New Chambers 104 Cherry James' si, from 77 Cherry Jane, fm 113 Green- wich av. 1 Greenwich av. 34 W. 4th 36 Eighth av. 56 Hudson 66 Greenwich 98 Washington West Thirteenth av. Jay from 61 Hudson 2 Hudson 6 Staple 20 Greenwich 24 Washington 34 Caroline 48 West Jeannette pk., fm Coenties si., bet Front and South Jefferson, from 179 Division 1 Division 7 E. Broadway 19 Henry 27 Madison 29 Monroe 37 Cherry Water South Jefferson, (23d W'd) from 1382 Franklin av., to Boston rd. Jennings, from 1352 Boston rd., to Steb- bins av. Jerome av., from Harlem Elver to City Line. 112 Jer Street Directory. Mad Jersey, from 127 Crosby to Mulberry John, fm 184 Broad- way 1 Broadway 31 Nassau 49 Dutch 65 William 87 Gold 101 Cliff 119 Pearl John, (23d Ward) from 814 Brook av.. to Eagle av. Jones, from 174 W. 4th to Bleecker Jones' la., fi om 101 Front to E. R. Kane, from Farra- g:ut to Bronx river Katonah, Irom 3713 Mt. Vernon av. to Webster a v. Kelly, fm 658 Con- cord av., to Inter vale av. Kemp pi., from 98* Aqueduct a v. to Anderson av. Kemble, from junc. of Oneida and Mt. Vernon avs., to Quail av. Keppler av., fm 597 Willard to City Line King, from 41 Mac- dougal. 2 Macdougal 13 Congress 66 Varick 98 Hudson 120 Greenwich 130 Washington 142 West Kingsbridge rd.. Broadway fm 10th av., and W. 162d to Spuyten Duyvil ck Kingsbridge rd., (24th Ward) fm 2932 Broadway to Bos ton rd. Kip, from 2890 Til- lotson av., to St John's av. Kirk pi., from 2540 Kirkside av., to Creston av. Kirkside av., from 431 Welch to Don- nybrook Knickerbocker av from Tenth av., to Kingsbridge rd. Knox, from 4260 Cro- tou ter., to Wren av. Iiayfayette pi., fm 8 Great Jones to Eighth Lafayette rd., fiom 650 Wermore av., to Bryant Lafontaine av., fm 861 Tremont av., to Quarry i-d. Liagrange av. , from 629 Willard to City Line. I.aight,fm 398 Canal 1 Canal 11 St. John's la 21 Varick 48 Hudson 55 Col lister 67 Greenwich 77 Washington 93 West L,ane av., from 1094 Westchester av., to Farragut Lawrence, from W^ l^Gth ur Ninth av., to W. 129th Lebanon, from 2042 Lafontaine av., to S. Boulevard. Leggett av., from 1052 Westchester av., to Weuman av Leonard, from 92 Hudson to Baxter 1 Hudson 35 W. Broadway 63 Cbui'ch 93 Broadway 107 Benson 121 Elm 139 Centre 165 Baxter Lenox av., fm 110th to Harlem Leroy. from 248 Bleecker 2 Bleecker 38 Bedford 98 Hudson 128 Greenwich 144 Washington 162 West Lewis, fm 556 Grand 1 Grand 19 Broome 45 Delancey 69 Rivington 99 Stanton 127 E. Houston 149 Third 169 E. 4th 183 Fifth 199 Sixth 215 Seventh 231 Eighth Lewis pi., from 798 E. 132d to Bronx Kills. Lexington av., fm 1 E. 21st 9 E. 22d 17 E. 23d 39 E. 24th 59 E. 25th 77 E. 26th 97 E. 27th 115 E. 28th 135 E. 29th 159 E. ,30th 177 E. 31st 197 E. 32d 217 E. 33d 237 E. 34th 253 E. 35th 271 E.36th 293 E. 37th 311 E. 38th 331 E. 39th 353 E. 40th 373 E. 41st 389 E. 42d 413 E. 43d 435 E. 44th 449 E. 45th 473 E. 46th 491 E. 47th 513 E 48th 537 E. 49th 555 E. 50th 571 E. 51st 593 E. 52d 615 E. 53d 635 E. 54th 655 E. 55th 675 E. 56th 695 E. 57th 721 E. 58th 741 E 59th 751 E. 60th 781 E. 61st 801 E. 62(1 821 E. 63d 841 E. 64th 861 E. 65th 881 E. 66th 901 E. 67th 921 E. 68th 941 E. 69th 961 E. 70th 979 E. 71st E. 72d 1023 E. 73d 1031 E. 74th 1055 E. 75th 1077 E. 76th 1099 E. 77th 1113 E. 78th E. 79th E. 80th E. 81st 1209 E. 82d 1221 E. 83d 1241 E. 84th 1249 E. 85th 1271 E. 86th 1289 E. 87th E 88th 1328 E. 89th 1318 E. 90th 1362 E. 91st 1380 E. 92d 1423 E. 93d 1447 E. 94th 1469 E. 95th 1613 E. 102d E. 103d 1641 E. 104th 1659 E. 105th E. 106th 1695 E. 107th 1719 E. lOBrh 1741 E. 109th E. llOth E. 111th 1751 E. 112th E, 113th 1840 E. 114th 1856 E. 115th E. 116th E. 1 17th 1920 E. 118th E. It9th E. 120th E. 121st 2004 E. 122d E. 123d E. 124th 2056 E. 125th 2088 E. 126th E. 127th E. 128th E. 129th 2168 E. 130th E. 131st Harlem Kiver. Liberty, from 76 Maiden la. 1 Maiden la. 13 William 51 Nassau 57 Liberty pi. 75 Broadway 88 Temple 97 Church 98 Trinity pi. Lib Street Directory. Man 113 12S Greenwich 137 Washington 147 West liiberty pi., from 57 Liberty to Maiden lane Lillian pi., fm 1279 Woodruff to Bos- ton rd. Liincoln av., from Harlem River to Third av, Liincoln pi., fm 169 E. 118th Lind av., from 73 Devoe to Wolf Linden pi., jFirst av., bet. E. 71st and E. 72d Linnaeus, from 3810 Broadway to Sedg- wick av. Lispenard, fm 151 W. Broadway to Broadway Little W. 12th, fm Gansevoort to N R Livingston pi., fm 325 E. 15th to E. 17th Locust av., fm 1143 E. 132d to E. 141st. Longfello\ir, from East River to West- chestpr av. Lorillard pi., from 921 Kingsbridge rd to Pelham av. Lowmede pi., from ft. Scribner to Oliii av. Ludlow, from 164 Division to E Hous- ton 1 Division 4 Canal 30 Hester 60 Grand Essex mkt pi 80 Broome 104 Lelancey 131 Rivington 159 Stanton 189 E. Houston Ludlow pi., fm W. Houston, bet. Sul- livan and Macdou- gal Lydig av., from 3141 Edgewater rd., to Pelham av. Lyman pl„ fm 1257 Stebbins av., to Prospect av. Lyon, from 1216 In tervale av., to Westchester av. 3Iacdougal, fm 219 Spring 1 Spring 13 Van dam 29 Charlton 34 Prince 41 King 59 W. Houston 89 Bleecker 113 Minetta la. 131 W. 3d 141 W. 4th sq Washington pi. iWas}iingto7i sq) Wavei^ley pi. (St. Clements pi) 181 Clinton pi. Macombs' la . from Eighth av., & 150th st-, to Harlem R. Madison, from 426 Pearl to Graud 1 Pearl 2 New Chambers 6 Chestnut 13 New Bowery 15 Roosevelt 37 James 51 Oliver 67 Catharine 117 Market 137 Birmingham 155 Pike 199 Rutgers 225 Jefferson 251 Clinton 297 Montgomery 319 Gouverneur 333 Scammel 3S7 Jackson 411 Grand Madison av., fm 29 E. 23d 1 E. 23d 11 E. 24th 21 E. 25th 37 E. 26th 60 E. 27th 78 E. 28th 96 E. 29th 116 E.30th 132 E. 31st 150 E. 32d 168 E. 33d 184 E. 34th 198 E. 35th 214 E. 36th 228 E. 37th 244 E. 38th 262 E. 39th 280 E. 40th 298 E. 314 E. 330 E. 344 E. 350 E. E. E. 412 E 430 E. 450 E. E. E 510 e'. 530 E. 540 E. 570 E. 578 E. 606 E. 634 E 650 E. 670 E. 686 E. 708 E. 726 E. 750 E 770 E. 790 E. 811 E. 826 E. 846 E. E. E. E 931 E. 951 E. 971 E. E. 1009 E. 1029 E. 1047 E. 1071 E. E 1103 e! 1121 E. 41st 42d 43d 44th 45th 46th 47th 48th 49th 50th 51 .St 52d 53d 54th 55th 56th 57tli 58th 59th 60th 61st 62(1 63d 64th 65th 66th 67 th 68th 69th 70th 71st 72d 73d 74th 75th 76th 77th 78th 79th 80th 81st 82d 83d 84th 1549 E. 1569 E. 1589 E. Ifi09 E. 1629 E. 1649 E. 1669 E. 1689 E. 1709 E 1729 E. 1749 E. 1769 E. 1789 E. 1809 E. 1829 E. 1849 E. 1869 E. 105th 106th 107th 108th 109th 110th 111th 112th 113th 114th 115th 116th 117th 118th l!9th 120th 121st 1889 E. 122d 1909 E. 123d 1929 E. 124th 1949 E. 125th 1969 E. 126th 1991 E. 127th 2013 E. 128th 2029 E. 129th 2049 E. 130th 2071 E. 131st 2099 E. 132d 2119 E. 133d * 2139 E. 134th 2149 E. 135th E. 136th E. 137th E. 138th Harlem River. Madison sq . from 23d to 26th sts., bet. Fifth and Madison avs. Maiden la., fm 172 Broadway 1 Broadway 18 Liberty pi. 26 Nassau 62 William 76 Liberty 87 Gold 106 Pearl 134 Water 144 Front 168 South Mail, from Broad- way, opp. Park pi., to Park row. Mallow, from 3036 Tillotson av., to Prospect av. Mangin, from 590 Grand 1 Grand 3 Eachael la. 15 Broome 43 Delancey 63 Manhattan pi. 75 Rivington 105 Stanton 147 E. Houston Manhattan, fm 444 E.Houston to T bird Manhattan fm W. 124th cor. St. Nich- olas av., to Twelfth av. Manhattan av., fm W. 100th. bet. 8th and 9th avs., to St. Nicholas av. Manhattan pi., fm 10 Elm to Reade Manhattan pi., fm 68 to 71 Mangin 114 Man Street Directory. New Manor pi., fm 1130 Boston rd to Forest av. Mapes av., fm 1063 Tremont av., to Grote Marcy pi., fm 1324 Jerome av., to Mott av. Marion, from 404 Broome Marion av., fm 645 Kingsbridge rd., to Potter pi. Market, from 61 Di- vision 1 Division 7 E. Broadway 22 Henry 37 Madison 55 Monroe 57 Hamilton 79 Cherry 93 Water 103 South Marketfield, fm 72 Broad Marmion pi., from 1099 Tremont av., to S. Boulevard Marshfield, fm 794 Vanco r tl au dt av . , to Gun Hill rd Martin ter.. E. 30th bet. Second and Third avs. Martindale pi., fm 1546 Mott av., to Findlay av. Mechanic, fm 2932 S, Boulevard to Bost'n rd. Mechanic al., from 72 Monroe to Cher- ry Melrose av , fm 2837 Third av., to E. 163d Mei'cer, from 311 Canal 1 Canal 14 Howard 35 Grand 63 Broome 99 Spring 141 Prince 179 W. Houston 207 Bleecker 245 W. 3d 2.=)9 W. 4tli 273 Washington pi. Waverley pi. (Neilsonpl.) 307 Clinton pi. Middlebrook, con- tinuation of Middle- brook pkway from 788 to Webster av. Middlebrook pk- way, from .3342 Broadway to Mid- dlebrook Milligan pi.. 139 Sixtli av. Minetta, from 209 Bleecker to Minetta la. Minetta la., fiom 113 Macdougal to Sixth av. Minetta pi., from 2 Minttta Minford pi., from from 1647 Boston rd., to Mohegan av Mission pi., fm 58 Park to Worth Mitchell av., from June of Mt. Vernon av., and Van tassel to City Liine. Mitcliell pi., fm E. 49th bet.. First av., and Beekman pi. Mohegan a v. from 1621 Boston rd to Prospect av. Monroe, fm 59 Cath arine 1 Catharine 45 Market 72 Mechanical. 77 Pike 96 Pelham 119 Rutgers 145 Jefferson {Rutgers pi.) 151 Clinton 183 Montgomery 213 Gouverneur 223 Scammel 273 Jackson 315 Corlesrs 384 Grand Monroe pi., fm 517 Walnut to Morris av. Montgomery, from 247 Division 1 Division 5 E. Broadway 15 Henry 33 Madison 43 Monroe 71 C;herry 79 Water 87 Front 95 South Monument, fm 4090 Raven a v., to Verio av. Moore, fm 30 Pearl I Pearl 7 Water 19 Front 36 South Morningside pk, from Ninth av., cor. W. 110th to W. 122d Morris, from 27 Broadway 1 Broadway 6 Trinity pi. 11 Greenwich 15 Washington 27 West Morris av., fm 2557 Third av., to Welch Morton, from 270 Bleecker 1 Bleecker 29 Bedford 67 Hudson 89 Greenwich 97 Washington 115 West Mott, from 200 Park row 1 Park row 2 Chatham sq. 21 Park 38 Pell 53 Bayard 85 Canal 119 Hester 149 Grand 173 Broome 205 Spring 241 Prince 292 E. Houston 321 Bleecker. Mott av., from 217 Railroad av., to Morris av. Mott's la., from 767 Eleventh av. Mt. Morris av.fm W. 120th. bet. Fifth and Sixth avs., to W. 124th Mt. Morris pi., fm W. 124th het. Fifth and Sixth avs. Mt. Vernon av., fm .3371 Jerome av., to City line. Mulberry, from 186 Park low. 1 Park row II Wojth 29 Park 71 Bayard 91 Canal 27 Hester 149 Grand 177 Broome 213 Spring 255 Prince 271 Jersey 293 E. Houston 309 Bleecker Murray, Irom 247 Broadway 1 Broadway 29 Church 61 College pi. 87 Greenwich 95 Washington 111 West Myers rd., fm 3413 Cooper av., to Waldo Naegle av., from Kingsbridge rd and Hillside av., to 10th av..andW. 204th Napier av., fm 705 Willard to Edge- hill pk. Nassau, fm 20 Wall 1 \\all 11 Pine 25 Cedar 39 Liberty 55 Maiden la. 69 John 91 Fulton 105 Ann 1.35 Beekman 152 Spruce 170 Frnnkfort Neilson pi., Mercer bet. Waverley pi and Clinton ph New, from 7 Wall to Beaver New Bowery, from 396 Pearl 1 Oak 2 Pearl 3 Chestnut 9 New Chambers 17 Ro<)sevelt 25 Madison 41 James 63 Oliver 68 Park row New^ Chambers, fm 107 Park row to Cherry 2 Park row 6 Duane 12 William 36 Rose Nic Street Directory. Park 116 35 I'earl Madison Chestnut 53 Mew Bowery 57 Roosevelt 59 Oak 73 Batavia 89 James 92 Cherry Nichols pi., from Prescott av., bet Boltou rd and Em- erson Niles. from 3527 Woodlawn rd., to Vancortlandt av. Ninth av.. from Gansevoort to W. 155th 1 Gansevoort 7 Little W. 12th 27 W. 13th 43 W. 14thO 32 Hudson 66 W. 15th 86 W. 16th 102 W. 17th 122 W. 18th 144 W. 19th 162 W. 20th 172 W. 21st 196 W. 22d 206 W. 23d# 226 W. 24th 244 W. 25th 268 W. 26th 288 W. 27th 306 W- 28th 330 W. 29th 350 W. 30th# 370 W. 31st 388 W. 32d 398 W. 33d 429 W. 34th# 448 W. 35th 464 W. 36th 482 W. 37th 500 W. 38th 522 W. 39th 542 W. 40lh 558 W 41st 580 W. 42d# 600 W. 43d 620 W. 44th 638 W. 45th 658 W. 46th 678 W. 47th 698 W. 48th 720 W. 49th 740 W. 50th# 756 W. 51st 778 W. 52d 798 W. 53d 814 W. 64th 840 W. 860 W. 877 W. 894 W. W. 940 W. 9.-)8 W. 976 W. 990 W. 1181 W. 1380 W. W. W. W. 55th 56th 57th 58th 59th • 60th 61st 62d 63d 72(1 # 81st# 93# 104th« 110th Norfolk, fm 180 Di- vision to E. Hous- ton 1 Division 13 Hester 41 Grand ;j9 Broome 83 Delancey 115 Kiviiigtou 135 Stanton 163 K. Houston North Moore, from 122 W Bioadway 1 W Brdadway 15 Varick 47 Hudson 73 Gi-eenwich 85 Washington 109 West North Kiclge. from 3496 Jerome av., to 8esg:o pi. North William, fm 16 Frankfort to Park Row Oak, from 392 Pearl 1 Pearl 6 New Bowery 8 Chestnut 16 New Chambers 17 Roosevelt 39 James 49 Oliver 59 Catharine Oak av . from 1073 E. 1321 to E. 141st Oakley, from 4138 Oneida av, to Quail Ochiltree av., from 3,'50 Gleueoe to N. Ridge Ogden av., from 805 Jerome av., to Aqueduct av. Old si., fm 106 Pearl 6 Pearl 12 Water 26 Front 38 South Old Post rd., from 3609 Broadway Oiin av., from 3492 W^ebster av., to Bronx R. Oliver, from 63 New Bowery 2 Xew Bowery 14 Henry 32 Madison 58 Oak 84 Cherry 92 Water 1(4 South Oliver (24th Ward). from 2816 Webster av., to Fir Oloflf av., from 3174 Sedgwick av., to Croton ter. Oneida av., fm 781 Willard to Edge- hill pk. Oostdorp av., from 1646 Boston rd., to Ponus Opdyke, from 4108 Oneida av, to Quail av. Orchard, from 124 Division 1 Division 9 Canal 39 Hester 65 Giand 89 Broome 115 Delancey 145 Rivitigton 171 Stanton 201 E. Houston Orcliard (23d Ward) from 95 Birch to Anderson av. Oriole, from 3158 S. Boulevard to Lydig av. Oxfield, from 961 Vancortlandt av to N. Ridge. Ozark, from 1049 Vancortlandt av to Williamsbridge rd Pacific pi., from 133 W. 29th Park, from 36 Cen- tre to Mott 30 Centre 42 Pearl 58 Mission pi 84 Baxter Worth 98 Mulherry 112 M-ott Park av.. Fourth av from E. 34th 1 E. 34th 18 E. 35th 37 E. 36 th 47 E. 37th 65 E. 38th 79 E. 39th 99 E. 40th 115 E. 41st 135 E. 42d 775 E 795 E. 815 E. 835 E. 855 E. 875 E, 895 E. 913 E. 935 E. 955 E. 975 E. 995 E 1015 E. 1035 E. 1055 E. 1075 E. 1095 E. 1115 E 1135 E. 1155 E. 1175 E. 1195 E. 1215 E V2Sd E. 1255 E. 1275 E. 1295 E. 1315 E. K«5 E. 13.55 E. 1375 E. 1395 E. 1415 E. 1435 E 1455 E. 1475 E. 1495 E. 1515 E. 1535 E. 15.55 E. 1575 E 1.595 E. 1615 E. 16.35 E. 1655 E. 1675 E. 1695 E. 1715 E. 1735 E. 1755 E. 48th 49th 50th 51st 52d 53d 54th 55th 56th 57th 58th 59th 60th 61st 62(1 63d 64th 65th 66th 67 th 68th 69th 70th 71st 72d 73d 74th 75th 76th 77th 78th 79th 80th 81st 82d 83d 84th 85th 86th 87th 88th 89th 90th 91st 92d 93d 94th 95th 96th 97th 116 Park Street Directory. Pri 1775 E. 98th ir95 E. 99th 1815 E. 100th 1835 E. 101st 1855 E. 102d 1875 E. 103d 1895 E. 104th 1915 E. 105th 1935 E. 106th 1955 E. 107th 1975 E. 108th 1995 E. 109th 2015 E. 110th 2035 E. 111th 2055 E. 112th 2C75 E. 113th 2095 E. 114th 2115 E 115th 2135 E. 116th 2155 E. l!7th 2175 E. 118th 2195 E. liaji 2215 E. 120th 2<>35 E. 121st 2255 E. 122d 2275 E. 123d 2^9^ E. 124th 2302 E. 125 th 2324 E. 126th 2342 E. 127th 2360 E. 128th 2382 E. 129th 2398 E. 130th E. 131st E. 132d 2460 E. 133d E. 134th E. 135th Harlem River. Park pi., from 83' Broadway 1 Broadway 27 Church 57 College pi. 71 Greenwich 91 Washington 197 West Park row, fm 1 Ann 1 Ann' 34 Beekman 41 Spruce 53 Frankfort 72 Tryon row 89 N. William 96 Chambers 107 New Chambers 109 Duane 163 Pearl 166 Baxter 186 Mulberry 187 Roosevelt 198 Worth 215 James 200 Mott 231 New Bowery Chatham sq. Parkside pi., Web- ster av., fin Eclipse to Vancortland*" av. Parole pi., fni 2426 Anthony av., to Tiebout av. Partridge av, from 863 Eastehester to Mt. Vernon av. Patchin pi., Ill W. 10th Payne, from 1821 Foote av., to Bronx river Pearl, from 14 State to Broadway 1 State 23 Whitehall 30 Moore 53 Broad 66 Coenties si. 73 Coenties al 105 Hanover sq.# 106 Old si. 107 William 121 Hanover 141 Beaver 149 Wall l(i9 Pine 181 Cedar 197 Maiden la. 20» Fletcher 221 Piatt 234 Burling si. 235 John 2i 3 Fulton* 283 Beekman 309 Ferry 312 Peck si. 340 Dover 348 Franklin sq.© 351 Frank tort 367 Hague 392 Oak 396 New Bowery 399 Vandewater 412 New Chambers 421 Rose 426 Madison 447 William 463 Park row 474 Donovan's la. 485 City Hall pi. 505 Park 511 Centre 533 Elm 555 Broadway Peck si., from Pearl to South 1 Pearl 19 Water 312 33 Front 45 South Pelham, fm96Mon roe to Cherry Pelhain av., fm 693 Kingsbridge rd., to Bronx river Pell, fm 18 Bowery to Mott Perry, fm 55 Green wich av. 1 Greenwich av. (Ashland pi.) 15 Waverley pi. 49 W. 4th 87 Bleecker 105 Hudson 119 Greenwich 149 Washington 175 West Perry av., from 3932 S. Boulevard to Middlebrook Pierre pi., fm 3682 S. Boulevard to E'ii Pike from 107 Di- vision 1 Division 7 E. Bmadway 21 Henry 37 Madison 57 Monroe 75 Cherry 77 Water 89 South Pine, fm 106 Broad- way 1 Broadway 13 Nassau 45 William 79 Pearl 85 Water 91 Front 99 South Pipe, fm 2460 Sedg- wick av., to High Bridge Pitt, from 276 Di- vision 1 Division 3 Grand 19 Broome 45 Delancey 79 Rivington 113 Stanton 141 E. Houston Piatt, fill 221 Pearl to William Pleasant av , from E. 100th 182 E. 110th 200 E. 111th 220 E. 112th 240 E. 113th 2.58 E. 114th 278 E. 115th 298 E. 116th 318 E. 117th 336 E. 118ih 358 E. 119th 378 E. 120th 398 E. 121 8t 418 E. 122d 440 E. 123d 463 E. 124th Harlem river. Poe from 1529 Lane av.. to Bronx E. Poillon. from 1>. I. Sound to Wetmore av. Pond pi., from Rosa pi to Marion av. Ponvis, from 3032 Edge water rd., to Bronx i iver Poole, fm 1800 Jer- ome av., to E. 174th Popliam, from 1860 Jerome av , to An- thony av. Porter, from 1950 Caswell to Faira- gut Post av.. fm Dyck- man, bet. Sherman and Naegle avs.. to Tenth av and W. 207th Potter pi., fm 3114 Jerome av., to Middlebrook PreMe, from Hunt's Point rd., to Bronx river Prescott av., from Inwood, W. of Bol- ton rd . to Spuyten Duyvil creek Primrose, from 2584 Jerome av., to Kingsbridge )d. Prince, from 230 Bowery 1 Bowery 15 Elizabeth 33 Mott 46 Mulberry 60 Marion 67 Crosby 79 "Broadway 91 Mercer 107 Greene 125 Wooster 145 S, 5th av. Pros Street Directory. Sec 117 165 Thompson 185 Sullivan 205 Macdougal Prospect av., from 1431 S. Boulevard to Tillotson av. Prospect pi., from E. 40tli, bet. Second and First avs., to E. 43d Punett, from 412 E. ITTili to Burnside av. Putnam av., from 841 E. 168th to E. 170th Quail av., from 901 Eastchester to City Line Kacliael la., from 4 Goeiek to Mangin Rae. from 654 Ger- man pi., to St. Ann's av. Railroad av., from 401 E. 135th to v.. and W. Vanilerbiit avs. Randall av., from Wetniore av., to Leg-gett av. Raven av., from 927 Eastchester to City Line Reade, fm 22 Duane Duane City Hall pi Centre 14 Elm 34 Manhattan pi. 42 Broadway 82 Church 112 W. Broadway 126 Hudson 160 Greenwich 174 Washington 194 AVest Rector,fm 73 Broad- way Broadway 5 Trinity pi. 11 Greenwich© 21 Washington 36 West Renwick, frdm 503 (-'anal to Spi ing Reynolds pi., from Tenth av, to Kings- bridge rd. Rider av., from 276 College av., to E. 144th Ridge, fm 254 Di- vision 1 Division 11 Grand 37 Broome 65 Delancey 99 Rivingtou 135 Stanton 169 E. Houston Ridge pi., from 366 Molt av. Ritter pi., fm 1280 Union av., to Pros- pect av. River av., from 165 liailroad av, to Jer- ome av. River View ter , from E. 58th to E. 5f!th, E. of Av A Riverdale av., fm 2879 Bailey to City Line Riverdale la., from Broadway, S. ( t Liiunseus to River- dale av. Riverside av., from W. 72d Rivington, fm 213 Bowery 1 Bowery 17 Christie 35 Forsyih 49 Eldridge or Allen# 83 Orchard 97 Ludlow 115 Essex 129 Norfolk 145 Suffolk 161 Clinton 179 Attorney 193 Ridge 215 Pitt 231 Willett 251 Sheriff 267 Columbia 289 Cannon 305 Lewis 321 Goerck 337 Mangin 355 Tompkins 371 East Robbins av.. from 1191 S. Boulevard to Westchester av. Rockfield, fm 3130 Marion av.. to Mid dlebrook av. Rockwood, fm 1415 Mott av., to Town send av. Rodman pi., from 1914 Lilian pi., to W. Farms rd. Rogers pi, fm Daw- St. Mark's pi., 8th son to E. 165th from 17 Third av., Roosevelt, from 187 see Eighth st. Park row. St. Nicholas av., 1 Park row from Sixth av., and 37 Madison 38 New Bowery 59 New Chambers 71 Oak 78 Batavia 101 Cherry 117 Water 131 Front 137 South Rosa pi., from 2766 Bainbridge av to Marion av. Rose, from 34 Frank- fort to Pearl Rose (23 Ward), fm 2922 Third av, to Bergen av. Roslyn pi , Greene bet. W 3d and 4th Rutgers, from 26 Canal 2 (^anal 3 E. Broadway 13 Henry 31 Madison 45 Monroe 59 Cherry 69 Water 81 South Rutgers pi., Mon- roe from Jefferson to Clinton Rutherford pi., fm 224 E. 17th to E. 15th Ryer av., from 531 Burnside' av., to Welch Sacrahong, fni 500 Faile, to Farragut St. Ann's av., from 841 E. 132d to Third av. St. Clemenfs pi., Macdougal from W Houston to Bleeker and fin Waverley pi., to Clinton pi. St. George Cres cent, from Ernes- cliff pi . to Van- cortlandt av. St. John's av., from 1525 Boston rd., to Prospect av. St. Johns la., from 9 Beach to Laight St. liUke's pi, 63 Le- roy W. 110th to Tenth av., and W. 161st St. Nicholas pi., Ninth av., Irom St. Niciiolas av., to W. 155th Samuel, from 2090 Tiebout av., to Bronx river Scammel, from 299 E. Broadway 1 E. Broadway 7 Henry 23 Madison 35 Monroe 51 Cherry 59 Water Schermerhorn av, from Old Post rd , to Riverdale av. Scribner, from 3418 Webster av., to Bronx river. Seabviry av , from 1489 Intervale av., to E. 175th Seaman av., from Bolton rd., bet Kingsbridge and Pi escott av., to W. 222d Second from 323 Bowery 1 Bowery 35 Second av. 87 First av. 145 Av. A 203 Av. B 257 Av. C 297 Sheriff 314 Av. D Second av., from 118 E Houston. 1 E. Houston 17 First 37 Second 49 Third 67 E. 4th 85 Fifth 101 Sixth 117 Seventh 127 St. Mark's pi. 143 E. 9th 157 E 10th Stuyvesant 172 E. nth 190 E. 12th 214 E. 13th J 228 E. 14th 118 Sec Street Directory. Six 236 E. 15th (Stuyvesant sq.) E. 17th 308 E. 18th 326 E. 19th 342 E. 20tli 360 E. 21st 380 E. 22d 398 E. 23d • 416 E 24th 438 E. 25th 458 E. 26th 476 E. 27th 498 E. 28th 514 E. 29th 540 E. 30th 562 E. 31st 578 E. 32d 598 E. 33d 620 E. 34th # 638 E. 35th 660 E. 36th 682 E. 37th 700 E. 38th 724 E. 39th 746 E. 40th 766 E. 41st 782 E. 42d • 804 E. 43d 820 E. 44th 844 E. 45th 858 E. 46th 876 E. 47th DOO E 48th 920 E. 49th 934 E. 50th# 962 E. 51st 982 E. 52d 1002 E. 53d 1020 E. 54th 1042 E. 55th 1062 E. 56th 1082 E. 57tli# 1102 E. 58th 1116 E. 59th 1138 E. 60th 1158 E. 61st 1178 E. 62d 1196 E. 63d 1222 E. 64th 1238 E. 65th# 1258 E. 66th 1274 E. 67th E. 68th 1310 E. 69th 1327 E. 70th# 1317 E. 71st 1385 E. 72d J402 E. 73d 1418 E. 74th 1438 E. 75th# 1454 E. 76th 1478 E. 77th 1496 E. 78th 1512 E. 79lh 1536 E. 80th# 1560 E. 81st 1576 E. 82(1 1600 E. 83d 1616 E. 84th 1638 E. 85th 1656 E. 86th# E. 87th E. 88th E. 89th E. 90th E. 91st E. 92d • E. 93d 1819 E. 94th E. 95th 1859 E. 96th 1879 E. 9rth E. 98th 1915 E. 99th E. 100th E. 101st E. 102d E. 103d 2017 E. 104th 2039 E. 105th# 3057 E. 106th 2077 E. 107th 2093 E. 108th 2119 E. 109th 2137 E. 110th 2155 E. lllth# 2175 E. 112th 2199 E 113th 2217 E. 114th 2237 E. 115th 2259 E. 116th# 2279 E. 117th 2^97 E. 118th 2317 E. Il9th 2337 E. 120th • 2359 E. 121st 2379 E. 122d 2399 E. 123d 2415 E. 124th 2433 E. 125th 2459 E. 126th E. 127th# 2498 E. 128th E. 129th# Harlem River. Sedgwick av, from Mott av. to City Line Sesgo pi., fm 3498 (ilencoe to Katonah Seventh, fm Fourth av. 1 Fourth av. 5 Third av. Hall pi. 43 Second a v. 87 First av. 133 Av. A 185 Seventh st pi. 198 Av. B 229 Av. C 285 Av. D 305 Lewis Seventh av., from 74 Greenwich av., to W. 59th and fm W. 110th to Harlem river 1 W. 11th 19 W. 12th 39 W. 13th t3 W. 14th 77 W. 15th 97 W. 16th 117 W. 17th 133 W. 18th 151 W. 19th 169 W. 20th 187 W. 21st 207 W. 22d 219 W. 23d 243 W. 24th 261 W. 25th 281 W. 26th 299 W. 27th 315 W- 28th 335 W. 29th 357 W. 30th 377 W. 31st 399 W. 32d 417 W. 33d 439 W. 34th 461 W. 35th 479 W. 36th 499 W. 37th 519 W. 38th 535 W. 39th 559 W. 40th 579 W, 41st 599 W. 42d 619 W. 43d W. 44th W. 45th W. 46th W. 47th 720 W. 48th 738 W. 49th 660 W. 50th 780 W. 51st 798 W. 52d 818 W. 53d 838 W. 54th 856 W. 55th 878 W. 56th 898 W. 57th 918 W. 58th 940 W. 59th Seventh st pi., fm 185 Seventh Sheridan av.. from 4G9 E. 153d to High- wood av. SheriflF, from 502 Grand 1 Grand 19 Broome 43 Delancey 71 Rivington 99 Stanton 127 E. Houston 131 Second Sherman av., from Kingsbridge rd.. & Elwocd to Tenth av and W. 211lh Sherman av., (23d and 24th Wards) from 421 E. 152d to Poole Sherwood, fm 2752 Valentine av , to Marion av. Simpson, fm 1243 Dongan to Free- man Sixth, from 395 Bow- ery 200 Bowery Hall pi. 242 Second av. 344 First av. 440 Av. A 546 Av. B 654 Av. C 754 Av. D 822 Lewis Sixth av., from Car- mine to W. 59th 1 Carmine 2 Minetta la. 16 W. 3d 39 W. 4th 57 Washington pi. 75 Waverley pi. 94 Clinton pi • 105 Greenwich av. 112 W. 9th 131 W 10th 139 Milligan pi. 149 W. 11th 169 W. 12th 187 W. 13th 207 W. 14th # 227 W. 15th 251 W. 16th 267 W. 17th 287 W. 18th 303 W. 19th 319 W. 20th 337 W. 21st 355 W. 22d , 373 W. 23d» Sixth Street Directory. Tenth 119 389 W. 24th 409 W. 25th 427 W. 26th 447 W. 2rth 465 W. 28th# ^ 483 W. 29th 499 W. 30th 519 W. 31st 533 W. 32d W. 33d© W. 34th W. 34th 609 W. 36th 631 W. 37th 651 W. 38th 677 W. 39th 697 W. 4Cth 717 W. 41st 735 W. 42d# 755 W. 43d 771 W. 44th 791 W. 45th 813 W. 46th 829 W. 47 th 847 W. 48th 867 W. 49th 885 W. 50th# 899 W. 51st 917 W. 52d 917 W. 53d 963 W. 54th 989 W 55th 1005 W. 56th 1027 W. 57th 1045 W. 58th# 1069 W. 59th from 110th st, to Harlem river is Lenox av. South, fm 66 White- hall 1 Whitehall 7 Moore 14 Broad 23 Coenties si. 28 Cuyler's al. 39 Old si. 48 Gouverneur la. 52 Jones la. 58 Wall 68 Pine 70 Depeyster 75 Maiden la. 77 Fletcher 87 Burling si. 93 Fulton Beekman 118 Peck si. 160 Dover 175 Roosevelt lb7 James si. 194 Oliver 202 Catharine si. 221 Market 240 Pike 260 Rutgers 270 Jefiferson 286 Clinton 362 Montgomery 371 Gouverneur si. 386 Jackson Corlears South William, fm 7 William to Broad S. 5th av., from 70 W. 4th 1 W. 4th 2 W. 3d 43 Bleecker# 67 W. Houston 109 -Prince 143 Spring 179 Broome 207 Grand© 247 Canal Southern Boule- vard, from 2410 Third av., to Jer- ome av. Sparrow av.. from 959 Monument to City Line. Spencer pi., W. 4th bet. Christopher & W. 10th Spencer pi.. (23d Ward), from 412 E. 144th to E. 150th SpoflFord, from L. I. Sountl to Hunt's Point rd. Spring, from 188 Bowery 1 Bowery 11 Elizabeth 27 Mott 45 Mulberry 61 Marion 64 Elm 77 Crosby 89 Broadway 101 Mercer 121 Greene 141 Wooster 1.57 S. 5th av 177 Thompson 197 Sullivan 219 Macdougal 226 Clarke 259 Varick 291 Hudson 306 Renwick 'V7 Greenwich : 33 Washing' on : ■ ^ West Sp ingp' . f-1 ^'"<\ Tliiid a. , tuBobtu. rd. Spruce, fm 41 Park Kow Park row 1 Nassau 21 William 41 Gold Spuyten Duyvil Pkway, fm Spuy ten Duyvil creek to Riverdale av. Stanton, from 245 Bowery 1 Bowery 23 Christie 39 Forsyth 59 Eldridge 73 Allen 89 Orchard 103 Ludlow 115 Essex 133 Norfolk 151 Suffolk 167 Clinton 187 Attorney 201 Ridge 221 Pitt 239 Willett 255 Sheriff 271 Columbia 285 Cannon 297 Lewis 319 Goerck .339 Mangin 351 Tompkins Staple, from 169 Du- ane to Harrison Stark, from 4026 Far ad ay av,, to Van- state, fm 48 White- hall to Broadway Station pi., from 1177 Scribner to 01 in av Stebbins av., from 1041 Leggett av., to Boston rd. Stebbins pi., from 1386 Jerome av., to Highwood av, Stone, fm 13 White- hall to William 1 Whitehall 21 Bioad 40 Coenties si 61 alley 65 AViliiam Strain pi., from 388 Farragut to Bronx j-iver Striker's la., fm 743 Eleventh av. Stuyvesant, fm 29 Third av., to Sec- ond av. 2 Third av. 14 E. 9th 46 E 10th Second av. Suffolk, fm 202 Di- vision 1 Division 5 Hester 37 Grand 61 Broome 85 Delancey 102 Clinton al. 117 Eivington 149 Stanton 177 E. Houston Sullivan, from 415 Canal 1 Canal 20 Grand 44 Watts 56 Broome 92 Spring 130 Prince 164 W. Houston (Varick pi.) 204 Bleecker 236 W. 3d Summit, from 3100 Marion av., to Briggs av. Sutton pi, Av. A fm E. 58th to E. 60th Sutton pi, (2.3d Wd) from 1054 Boston rd to Forest av. Sylvan pi., fm 1.53 E. 120th to E. 121st, bet. Lexington and Third avs. Sylvan ter., St. Nicholas av., nrW 161st Tappen, from 2688 Marion av , to Web- ster av. Teasdale pi. from 900 Boston rd, to Delmonico pi. Temple, from 88 Liberty to Thames Tenth av.. from .542 West to W. 218th 1 West 7 Bloomfield 19 Little W. 12th 35 W. 13th 57 W. 14th 79 W. 15th 95 W. 16th 111 W. 17th 150 Tenth Street Directory. Third 128 W. 18th 144 W. 19th 167 W. 20th 181 W. 21st 199 W. 22(1 219 W. 23cl 235 W. 24th 255 W. 25th 273 W. 26th 295 W. 27th 311 W. 28th 327 W. 29th 343 W. 30th 366 W. 31st 377 W. 32d 411 W. 33d 427 W. 34th 449 W. 35th 467 W. 36th 483 W. 37th 499 W. 38th 519 W. 39th 533 W. 40th 555 W, 41st 573 W. 42d 591 W. 43d 607 W. 44th 631 W. 45th 651 W. 46th 667 W. 47th W. 48th 710 W. 49th 735 W. 50th 751 W. 51st 769 W. 52d 787 W. 53d 813 W. 54th 829 W. 55th 849 W. 56th 863 W. 57th 889 W. 58th W. 59th W. 60th 949 W. 61st 965 W. 62d W. 63d 1005 W. 64th 1025 W. 65th 1045 W. 66th 1064 W. 67th 1085 W. 68th W. 69th W. 70th W. 71st Boulevard 1184 W. 72d 1204 W. 73d 1222 W. 74th 1244 W. 75th 1261 W. 76th W. 81st W. 93d W. 104th W. 116th W. 125th W. 135th W. 145th W. 155th W. 218th Terrace pi., at junc of Cypress av., and E. 149th Thames, from 111 Broadway 1 Broadway 3 Temple 11 Trinity pi. 29 Greenwich Theatre al., from 19 Ann to Beekman Third, fm 345 Bow- ery 1 Bowery 38 Second av. 88 First av. 142 Av. A 200 Av. B 260 Av. C 329 Av. D 356 Manhattan 370 Lewis 394 Goerck Third av., continu- ation from 395 Bow ery Sixth 1 Seventh Astor pi. 19 St. Mark's pi. Stuyvesant 28 E. 9th0 45 E. 10th 63 E. 11th 83 E. 12th 103 E. 13th 123 E. 14th# 145 E. 15th 165 E. 16th 185 E. 17th 203 E. 18th# 223 E. 1 9th 243 E. 20th 261 E. 21st 281 E. 22d 299 E. 23d • 319 E. 24th 337 E. 25th 3.55 E. 26th 373 E. 27th 391 E. 28th# 411 E. 29th 429 E. 30th 449 E. 31st 467 E. 32d 487 E. 33d 505 E. 34th# 523 E. 35th 541 E 557 E 577 E 597 E 617 E. 635 E. 657 E. 679 E. 701 E. 721 E. 739 E. 755 E. 773 E 793 E. 813 E. 835 E. 857 E. 875 E, 895 E. 913 E. 933 E. 951 K. 969 E. 989 E 1009 E. 1029 E. 1047 E. 1069 E. 1089 E. 1109 E. 1129 E. 1148 E. llfiO E. 1185 E. 1205 E. 1229 E. 1215 E. 1265 E. 1289 E. 1309 E. 1329 E. 1319 E. 1371 E. 1389 E. 1409 E. 1433 E 1451 E. 1469 E. 1487 E. 1505 E. 1525 E. 1545 E. 1565 E 1583 E. 1605 E. 1627 E. 1643 E. 1657 E. 1677 E. 1693 E. 1722 E. E. E 1781 E^ .36th . 37th . 38th . 39th . 40th . 41st . 42d« . 43d , 44th 45th 46th 47th # 48th 49th 50th 51st 52d 53d • 54th 55th 56th 57tii 58th 59th • 60th 61st 62d 63d 64th 65th 66th 67th« 68th 69th 70th 71st 72d 73d 74th 75th 76th # 77th 78th 79th 80th 81st 82d 83d 84th • 85th 86th 87th 88th 89th • 90th 91st 92d 93d 94th 95th 96th 97th 98th# 99th 1800 E. 100th 1816 E. 101st 1843 E. 102d 1861 E. 103d 1881 E. 104th 1897 E. 105th 1923 E. 106th# 1943 E. 107th 1965 E. 108th 1981 E. 109th 2007 E. 110th 2023 E. 111th 2041 E. 112th 2063 E. 113th 2082 E. 114th 2100 E. 115th 2123 E. 116th# 2141 E. 117th 2161 E. 118th 2181 E. 119th 2199 E. 120th 2217 E. 121st 2241 E. 122d 2261 E. 123d 2281 E. 124th 2297 E. 125th# 2319 E. 126th 2339 E. 127th 2359 E. 128th 2375 E. 129th# 2398 E. 130th Harlem Eiver, 2410 S. Boulevard 2428 E. 134th 2460 E. 135th 2484 E. 136th 2516 E. 137th Lincoln av. 2550 E. 138th 2557 Morris av. 257U E. 139th 2596 E. 140th 2620 E. 141st 2642 E. 142d 2662 Alexander av. 2687 E. 143d 2706 E 144th 2728 E. 145th 2756 E I4fith 2769 Courtlandt av. 2780 E. 147th 2810 E. 148th Wrilisav. 2844 E. 149th 2870 Westchester av 2865 E. 150th 2899 E. 151st 2922 Rose 2937 E. 152d 2945 Elton av. 2969 E. 153d 2970 Grove 2999 E. 154th 3015 E. 155th Third Street Directory. War 121 3C38 E. 156th 3067 E. 157th 3097 E. 158th 3123 E. 159th 3137 Washington av. 3151 Brook av. St. Anu'sav. 3172 Cliff 3189 E. 161st 3201 E. 162d 3.-30 E 163d 3360 Boston rd 3285 E. 164th 3325 E. 165th 3346 Frankhnav. 3377 E. 166th 3406 Spring pi. 3446 E. 167th 3516 E. 168th 3584 E. 160th 3690 E. 170th 3734 Fordham av. Thirteenth av., fm ft. W. 11th to ft. W 25th Thomas, from 317 Broadway 1 Broadway 26 Trimble pi. 40 Church 74 W. Broadway 96 Hudson Thompson, fm 395 Canal 1 Canal 20 Gi-and 48 Broome 82 Spring 118 Prince 160 W. Houston (Depau pi.) 204 Bleecker 234 West 3d 250 W. 4th Thrush av., fm 991 Monuaieut to City Line. Ticonderoga pi., from 224 Stark to City Line Tiebout av., from 1907 Webster av. to to Kingsbridge rd. Tier av., from 3467 Mt. Vernon av., to Di-brow Tiffany, from L. L Sound to E. 169th Tillotson av., from 847 Oliver to Bronx- river Timpson pi , from from 1075 E. 144th to Bungay Tinton av., fm 352 Bobbins av., to E. 169th Tompkins, fm 606 Grand 1 Grand 11 Broome 29 Delancey 55 Rivington 89 Stanton Topping, from 541 Walnut to E. 17fith Townsend av., fm 1566 Highwood av., to Poole Travers, from 2878 Jerome av, to Web- ster av. Tremont av, fm 1930 Highwood av.. to Bronx river. Trimble pi., from 115 Uuane to Thomas Trinity pi., from 6 Morris 1 Morris 31 Exchange pi. 53 Eector# 93 Thames 101 Cednr 115 Liberty Truxton, from L. I. Sovnd to Wetmore av. Tryon roAV, from 1 Centre to 72 Park row Twelfth av., from ft. W. 29th to W. 151-t Undercliff av,, fm St. Nicholas av., & W. 136th to W. 155th Union, fm 1164 Lind av., to Andeison av Union av., fm 1349 S. Boulevard to Boston rd. Union ct , from 53 University pi. Union pi., Fourth av., from E. 17tla to E. 19th Union sq., fm 14th to 17th and Broad- way to Fourth av. University pi.. Im 29 Waverley pi , to E. 14th Vale, fm 934 Jerome av., to Gerard av. Valentine av., from 607 Tremont av., to Anthony av. Valley pi., from 145 Orchard (23d Wd) Vancortlandt av,. from 3432 Broad- way to Webster av. Vancortlandt pk- way, from 819 Lm- nasus to C'ity Line Vandam, from 13 Macdougal 1 Macdougal 45 Varick 77 Hudson 101 (rreenwich Vanderbilt av., fm z7 E. 42d to E. 45th Vandcvj^ater, from 54 Fraukfort to Pearl Vannest pi, Charles from W. 4th to Bleecker Vantassel, fm 4072 Croton ter. to Wil lard Varian. from 3352 Jerome av., to Woodlawn rd. Varion 50 Greenwich 56 Washington 72 West Von Humboldt av, from 485 Middle- brook pkway, to Disbrow Vyse, fm 1295 West Farms rd to Samuel WadsvForth av., from W. 173d and Kingsbridge rd., to Eleventh av. Waldo, from 3004 Riverdale av., to to Old Post rd. Walker, from 135 W. Broadway 1 W. Broadway 29 Church 69 Broadway 77 Cortlandt al. 93 Elm 109 Centre 125 Baxter 126 Canal Wall, from 86 BVay 1 Broadway 7 New 20 Nassau 21 Broad 51 William 57 Hanover 75 Pearl 89 Water 103 Front 119 South Walnut, 1048 Eden av. to Topping W^alnut av., fm 1115 E. 13e:x:. Amusements 90 Art Galleries 89 Art Schools , 89 Art Stores 88 Asbury Park 83 Astor Library 61 Assay office 7 Audubon Park 50 Battery 3 Blackwell's Island 76 Bowery 33 Bowery Bay „ 82 Broadway 3 Brooklyn Bridge 12 Drives ...85 Theatres 90 R. R. Depots 94 Bryant Park 51 Castle Garden 3 Cemeteries 65 Central Park 52 Chambers St. Hospital, 61 Churches 69 City Hall Park 57 Coney Island 75 Drives 85 East River 82 East Side Avenues 24 Eighth Avenue 42 Elevated R. R 91 Exchanges 88 Excursions 78 Expresses 89 Ferries 96 Fifth Avenue 33 Fort Hamilton 80 Fort Lafayette 80 Fort Lee 78 Fort Schuyler 82 Fort Wadsworth 80 Fourth Avenue , 27 Gen. Theological Seminary 65 Glen Island 77 Grammercy Park 57 Grand Central Depot 29 Grand Opera House 42 Grand Street 24 Hacks and Cabs 87 High Bridge 58 High Bridge Park 57 Hotels r 84 Hudson River 79 Islands 73 Jamaica Bay 81 Jefferson Market 41 Jerome Park 59 Little Church around the corner. .34 Long Beach 82 Long Branch 82 Ludlow Street Jail 61 Madison Ave 47 Madison Square 20 Masonic Temple 20 Metropolitan Museum of Art r41 Metropolitan Opera House 22 Miscellaneous 61 Morgue 62 Mount Morris Park 59 Museum of Natural History 43 Illustrated Guide to New York City. New Harlem Bridge 58 Oak Point ' 83 Ocean Grove 83 Park Avenue 27 Piers 96 Police Headquarters 68 Postal Rates 95 Post Office 95 Public Parks 50 Rail Road Depots 94 River Side Park 59 Rockaway 79 Sailors' Snug Harbor 75 Second Ave , 24 Shopping District 16 Sixth Ave 41 Staten Island 5 Statue of Liberty 72 St. Paul's Chapel 9 Street Car Routes 91 Street Directory 97 Stuyvesant Park 59 Studios 89 Sub-Treasury 7 Table d'ho.to Restaurants 84 Tenth Aw 43 Third Ave 26 Tombs 61 Tompkin's bq 60 Trinity i. hiuvh 7 U. S. Navy Yard 64 University of N. Y. City 65 Union Square 15 Wall St... 7 Washington Square 60 West Washington Market .65 Young Men's Christian Ass'n 16 Younff Women's Christian Ass'n. 63 ST. DENIS HOTEL -AKU — Taylor's Restaurant, IBvoadway &; lltli Street, NEW YORK. EUROPEAN PLAN. «°r^ ®';3° ri^ °*^ jf^lSTlD XJFVsr-A-R,IDS. WILLIAM TAYLOR, Proprietor. ' 'There is an atmosphere of home comfort and hospitable treatment at the St. Denis which is rarely met with in a public house, and which insensibly draws you there as often as you turn your face towards New York." — Ex- change. Fredrick's, 770 Broadway, cor. 9th Street. F5EB^i€i\ 770 Broadway, cor. 9th St., MiW Y@R«^ ©tTY. Established 1859. GEEGOEY BEOS, No. 113 SIXTH AYENJE, New York City. 4. s^a)S-J: .4.. EVERY DESCRIPTION OF PRINTING. ;,J:ggH,| ^ . , ' — ^-— T^ .|jii!i|i|ill!yi:[!li!!ii!ill'!lllia^^^ View from S.W. "BUIL.DIXO." An Illustrated weekly devoted to Architecture and Decoration. Subscription, $6.00 a year ; 1 5 cents a copy. IVIODSRIV ARCHITECTURAL. DEISIOIVS AND DETAILS. A monthly publication devoted to designs and details (see cut) of houses of moderate cost. $5.00 a year ; 50 cents a copy. NEW BOOKS. hovise: pl-anxibjo. 106 pages. 69 illustrations: a work full of suggestions as to planning and arrangement of rooms. One 12mo vol., cloth, price $1.00. ARCHITECTURAL. IROX WORK. Illustrations, plates; 1 quarto vol. handsomely bound in cloth, $5.00. 88 page catalogue of Architectural books and drawing Instrument catalogue free to any address. WILLIAM T. COMSTOCK, Publisher, 23 WARREN STREET, N. Y. D a C 2 < rr X w ■< o > -< CD COSEY HOMES AND BEST BUILDING LOTS IN THE 26th WARD, BROOKLYN. For Sale By E. F. LINTON, Cor. Atlantic and Vansiclen Aves. Brooklyn Elevated, Union Elevated, Kings County Elevated, Atlantic Av. Rapid Transit, all lead to centre of 26th 'Ward, Population Increased from 23,000 to 30,000 during 1888. Healthy Location Excellent Neighborhoods. Twenty Minutes to Coney Island in Summer. BoREEi, Building. Charles Magnus' National Publishing House, 5 CHAMBERS STREET, N. T. Bet. Park Row & Centre St.— One block from Bridge Entrance. Trade Orders solicited for the following Articles of our own Publication. VIEWS OF NEW YORK on Letter for Correspondence, " 150 VIEWS OF OTHER CITIES on Letterpaper, - " 50 PHOTO ALBUMS and Souvenirs of the Cities and Scenery in America, also Stereoscopic Views, assorted 1 — 300. LARGE VIEWS of Ncav York, the Bridge, &c., Guide Maps. THEATRE-SHEETS, l^sir, Soldiers' Sheets &c., " 100 SCHOOIi BOOKS, BLANK BOOKS & STATIONERY CROCHET PATTERNS— 500 Designs. German Opera Text Books. GAMES and PICTURE BOOKS, Domestic and Imported. The National, Boa Constrictor and Fisher's 3 different Snake Games. PENNY ARTICLES, Age Cards, Models, Toy Cards, Picture Books . PLAYING CARDS, Stmbt., Tiger, Tourist, Bicycle and Fine Grades . CHRISTMAS, BIRTHDAY AND NEW YEAR NOVELTIES, unsurpassed in richest Variety, Beauty and moderate Prices. PA PET ERIE BOXES Filled with floral Note Paper and Envelopes. FANCY NOTE PAPER, for New Year, Birthday etc. Congratulation. HOLIDAY FAVORS and New Year CALLING CARDS, VALENTINES and EASTER NOVETIES. MODEL SHEETS, 14xir, fine Card-Board, Brilliant Colors, kinds, A ISeries 110 " " " thick , A2 " 140 •• " 7x9, at Ic. Retail, . - . - " 36 " " in Sets with Illustrated large Model on Cover," 18 ILLUSTRATED FORTUNE-TELLING CARDS, ^ kinds all in colors, with English and German description. Diviners, 54 Cards, retail $1.00. Palmistry, 40c. L'Oracle, retail 50c. Bonaparte Oraculum, 25c. American Fortune Telling Cards, 25c. THE PUZZLE OF THE UNKNOWN, a Spiritual Past time. Washington Centennial Prints, Photo Portraits Ss Flags. LAW AND COMMERCIAL BLANKS: 36 forms of Bent, Money, Shipping Receipts, Checks, Notes, Drafts, in Books. House Bills in Pads, Labels, Billheads, Business Cards, Show Bills, etc. I— ( o CO f CD c p k 1 Q Charles W. Hobbs George Gregory, a W. HOBBS & CO., No. 113 SIXTH A_VENUE), l^fe^v^ ^jTorli Oity, Guide Maps of Boston, New York City, Brooklyn and Washington. Illustrated Guide to N. Y. City and Surroundings. Also Brooklyn Street Directory, Travelers' Guide, Etc, HLMHYS ON TIME. Hew York and New England Railroad FAST TRAIN SERVICE mSBOSTONfflNEW YORK Leave either City - 12.00 Noon. *3,00 P.M. Arrive either City - 6.30 P.M. *9.00 P.M. The Shortest Line, the Best Parlor Cars and Coaches. Most convenient hours of Departure and Arrival at Termini. Dining Car between Boston and Hartford on 12 M. Train. Dining Car between Boston and Willimantic on 3 P.M. Train. Offices. 363 Broadway, Grand Central Station, N.T., N. H. & H. R.R., New York, 322 Washington Street, Depot, foot of Sammer Street, Boston. ♦ Daily. E. P. VINING, A. C. KENDALL, Traffic Manager, Boston. March, 1889. General Pass. Agent. MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM. MEMORANDUM. MEMORANDUM. MEMORANDUM. MEMORANDUM. JAMES McCREER Y & CO, IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF FoF\EiGN"T:8" i:^ ce — ats c — znz ' ~'KX99 ^ \: — DC 3/ ' ^j I g-pj 1 - \— ! ;:=5Q fgBeC=^.S r-^ \ I ^ n ■•i.9- -XS6? D D! I 1 s 3 a^ M C. W. HOBB8' GUIDE MAP OF NEW YORK CITY. / /'f".;^^^^^ Zii o_L^^ ir3