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Improvements In The Cook House

Improvements In The Cook House image
Parent Issue
Day
26
Month
June
Year
1891
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

The traveling public may be heard to express a decidedly favorable opinión of the Cook House under its new management. A glance over the interior would show that this praise bas been deserved; owing to the many improvements made. In the first place, every room in the house has been repapered, and the house has been recarpeted throughout There exists a harmony between the paper and the carpets in the various rooms, and one can hardly recognize the rooms as being the same which have so long received guests. Then each of the sleeping rooms has been refurnished. The new bedroom sets are very handsome. A few of the rooms are provided with large folding beds. Many of the rooms are handsome, and all are comfortable. I As an instance of the care taken, it may be stated that the bed-springs are of the latest and easiest pattern, the mattresses doublé, so that the commercial man will flnd as good a bed in Ann Arbor as in any town he may reach. The office has been repainted, the dining room greatly improved. An elevator will shortly be placed in the hotel. The house, as our readers know, is now under the efficiënt management of M. M. Nowlin. Mrs. Nowlin has a faculty for running a hotel which pleases the traveling public. She gives her personal attention to the Cook House. The drummers are loud in their praises of the improvements made in the table and they know as well as any class of men what good meals are. In next week's Argus will appear a cut of the Cook House of forty years ago with some description of the changes which have been made as the jears haye passed.