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Harvey’s 'Wayside Inn"

Harvey’s 'Wayside Inn'.jpg Spring BonnetsThumbnailsI would lay the puppy between my shoulders and draw my tiny robe up over his backSpring BonnetsThumbnailsI would lay the puppy between my shoulders and draw my tiny robe up over his backSpring BonnetsThumbnailsI would lay the puppy between my shoulders and draw my tiny robe up over his backSpring BonnetsThumbnailsI would lay the puppy between my shoulders and draw my tiny robe up over his backSpring BonnetsThumbnailsI would lay the puppy between my shoulders and draw my tiny robe up over his backSpring BonnetsThumbnailsI would lay the puppy between my shoulders and draw my tiny robe up over his backSpring BonnetsThumbnailsI would lay the puppy between my shoulders and draw my tiny robe up over his back

The Auditorium, Richelieu, and Leland Cafes, together with29 Devine’s wine-room on the other side of Jackson Street, and Colonel John Harvey’s “Wayside Inn” in the alley, form a sort of circuit or beat, which these “rapid” young men (i.e. the “bloods”) travel at all times, including such hours as the sale of cheering beverages is forbidden by city ordinance. Of these, Harvey’s is perhaps the most unique resort, though if one cannot find his friends in one of the places named after midnight he is tolerably certain to encounter them in one of the others.