The Diary: Cont'd on page.20. P A G E 17. Three minutes walk from the railroad station brought us to the chief thoroughfare of the city,Main Street, at the corner of the Terrace. Looking up Main Street, we see a model of the beautiful streets of Buffalo. It is a broad, clean street paved with smooth asphalt upon which a steel tired buggy is noiseless, On either side rise tall handsome public buildings. The city of Buffalo has been given the name " wheelmans Paradise " on account of the smooth streets. After walking up the street a short distance we came to the ELLICOTT SQUARE BUILDING a nine story brick building occupying an entire square. Here we boarded an ELMWOOD Ave car for Statlers Hotel. A short distance out Main Street we reached the Soldiers and Sailors Monument in La Fayette Square. A stranger can not be long in Buffalo without exclaiming in admiration of its smooth pavements. There is over one hundred miles of the asphalt pavement about the city. Buffalo's most famous street is DELAWARE AVENUE. For miles this magnificent avenue runs as straight as an arrow to the park, its asphalt shaded by an archway of elms and maples,its footways passing scores of handsome residences.Delaware Avenue runs to Deleware Park, the location of the Pan American in 1901. Turning into Allen Street we found our- selves whirling down Elmwood Avenue to the Statler Hotel.