What to see in New York . ison Square. Thetower on the former is 612 feet high, while the toweron the latter is fifty-two stories or 700 feet high. The United States Sub-Treasury, the site ofWashingtons first inauguration as President, islocated at Wall and Nassau Streets; WashingtonArch, Washington Square, foot of Fifth Avenue;Soldiers and Sailors Monument, a picture of whichappears on the cover of this book. Riverside Driveand Eighty-ninth Street; Metropolitan Museum ofArt, Central Park, opposite East Eighty-secondStreet; American Museum of Natural History, Cen-tral Park West and Seventy-sev


What to see in New York . ison Square. Thetower on the former is 612 feet high, while the toweron the latter is fifty-two stories or 700 feet high. The United States Sub-Treasury, the site ofWashingtons first inauguration as President, islocated at Wall and Nassau Streets; WashingtonArch, Washington Square, foot of Fifth Avenue;Soldiers and Sailors Monument, a picture of whichappears on the cover of this book. Riverside Driveand Eighty-ninth Street; Metropolitan Museum ofArt, Central Park, opposite East Eighty-secondStreet; American Museum of Natural History, Cen-tral Park West and Seventy-seventh Street. The newest building to be opened to the publicis the New York Public Library in Bryant Park,Fifth Avenue and Forty-second Street. This beau-tiful building of Vermont marble has cost millionsof dollars and taken twelve years to complete. Nowthat it is finished it stands the peer of any librarybuilding in the country, and it is really the first NewYork library that is at all adequate to the needs ofthe city. 10.


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