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Queen Air Mattress Frame

QUEEN AIR MATTRESS FRAME : INFLATABLE BED WITH FRAME : AERO AIR MATRESS.

Queen Air Mattress Frame

queen air mattress frame
    air mattress

  • An inflatable mattress
  • An air mattress is an inflatable mattress/sleeping pad. Due to its buoyancy, it is also often used as a water toy / flotation device, and in UK is termed as a lilo ("Li-lo" being a specific trademark).
  • a mattress that can be stored flat and inflated for use
    queen

  • A king's wife
  • The female ruler of an independent state, esp. one who inherits the position by right of birth
  • a female sovereign ruler
  • A woman or thing regarded as excellent or outstanding of its kind
  • promote to a queen, as of a pawn in chess
  • the only fertile female in a colony of social insects such as bees and ants and termites; its function is to lay eggs
    frame

  • a single one of a series of still transparent pictures forming a cinema, television or video film
  • Erect the framework of a building
  • Place (a picture or photograph) in a <em>frame</em>
  • Surround so as to create a sharp or attractive image
  • enclose in or as if in a frame; "frame a picture"
  • the framework for a pair of eyeglasses
queen air mattress frame – Queen Size

Queen Size Quad-Fold Folding Bed Frame
Queen Size Quad-Fold Folding Bed Frame
Frame Open: 80″W x 60″D x 14″H
Frame Folded: 23″W x 30.25″D x 10.75″H
Flame Boxed: 32″W x 25″D x 12″H
Finish: Black
Material: Metal
Queen Size Quad – Fold Bed Frame
Provide maximum comfort during your most relaxing hours of the day, and versatile enough to be quadruple folded in under 15 seconds.
Can be stored in a bed or closet, a queen-sized quad-fold Pragma Bed* frame only requires 23* x 30.25* x 10.75* of storage space.
The Pragma Bed* bed base is engineered with heavy-duty wire mesh, which serves as a complete mattress support system that will not bend or sag over time.
Provides a flat, sturdy, squeak-free base for your new memory foam mattress or even your old spring mattress.
The bed base also provides you with more space than many other beds out there.
The bed sits 14* off the ground, creating 38.69 cubic feet of storage space.
Pragma Bed* bases do not require a box spring.
The strong yet lightweight design can resist up to 1200 pounds per queen bed frame.
The weight of the bed frame is 45 pounds only.
Pragma Bed* frames are strong enough to withstand jumping, yet light enough to be carried up the steps.
Unfold bed frame and snap legs into place. Using the two included screws, place them through the two holes and fasten the two pieces together. Place bed in desired location.
If you wish to store your Pragma Bed* frame, just fold it up and hide it away.
No tools assembly required.

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Children's Aid Society, Tompkins Square Lodging House for Boys and Industrial School

Children's Aid Society, Tompkins Square Lodging House for Boys and Industrial School
Alphabet City, Manhattan

Opened on April 21,1887, the Children’s Aid Society Tompkins Square Lodging House for Boys and Industrial School, aka the Eleventh Ward Lodging House, is one of a series of buildings in which the Children’s Aid Society sheltered and educated destitute working children, particularly newsboys and bootblacks. The Children’s Aid Society was founded in 1853 by Charles Loring Brace, a Protestant minister, to address the city’s worsening problem of juvenile vagrancy. The funds for the building were donated by Mrs. Robert L. Stuart, who placed $50,000 in trust for the Children’s Aid Society to replace an inadequate facility.

The preeminent and nationally influential architectural firm of Vaux & Radford designed the Tompkins Square Lodging House, the third of approximately a dozen picturesque structures that the firm created for the Society between 1879 and 1892. The building is a significant surviving example of the work of Calvert Vaux and the oldest extant Children’s Aid Society building as well as the only extant combination lodging house and industrial school designed by Vaux & Radford. The four and five-story building handsomely exemplifies the High Victorian Gothic style with its dormers, paneled chimney stacks and steep pyramidal towers that make it stand out from the surrounding tenements. In 1925, the Society sold the building to the Darchei Noam, a Jewish center whose programs included after-school religious study for Jewish immigrants. In the 1950s, the East Side Hebrew Institute operated a yeshiva in the building. The building was purchased in 1977 and converted to apartments in 1978.

It remains a worthy symbol of the work of the Children’s Aid Society.

History of the Tompkins Square Neighborhood

The Tompkins Square neighborhood is located on the Lower East Side, centered around Tompkins Square Park. The area, part of the farm of Peter Stuyvesant in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, was known as Stuyvesant Meadows. St. Mark’s in the Bowery Church, the burial place of Peter Stuyvesant (1799; 1826-28; 1854, a designated New York City Landmark) was built on the high, dry land east of Second Avenue. The land to the east was marshy and sparsely developed at that time. In the late eighteenth century the part of the area from the East River to Second Avenue was the estate of Mangle Minthom, the father-in-law of Daniel D. Tompkins (1774-1825), governor of New York and vice president of the United States under President James Monroe.

The Commissioner’s Plan of 1811, which established the city’s grid system, created Tompkins Square as well as nearby Union, Stuyvesant, and Madison Squares. The square, located between 7 and 10th Streets and Avenues A and B, was the site of a farmers’ market in 1812. Originally known as Clinton Square, it was named for Daniel D. Tompkins in 1833 and the following year it was leveled, planted, and fenced by the city in an effort to encourage development in the area. Additional planting and paving was undertaken in the 1860s and 1870s. The Tompkins Square neighborhood was populated by workers and middle class shop owners in the first half of the nineteenth century and the area was known for its German community throughout the nineteenth century. Tompkins Square has been the site of major public demonstrations and a nexus of civil disobedience since its opening. In 1849 the Astor Place Opera House Riot spilled over into the square and the conflict between Tammany Hall Democrats and Whigs took place there.

Anti-municipal-government activity converged on the square in the 1850s and, alter the financial Panic of 1857, a series of ‘work and bread’ rallies were held in the square by the American Workers League. In that same year, George Templeton Strong wrote in his diary of the case of the death of a German immigrant leader in a riot uptown. Strong stated that, depending on the verdict, there could be a "grand insurrection and a provisional government proclaimed in Tompkins Square."

During the Civil War, wives of soldiers demonstrated in the park to protest a wartime cut in public relief. In 1874, after the financial crash of 1873, hundreds were injured and arrested in a

workers’ demonstration for jobs and unemployment benefits. More than a hundred years later in 1988 a demonstration against a park curfew also turned into a major disturbance. Each was called the "Tompkins Square riot."

During the late nineteenth century, the predominantly German Tompkins Square neighborhood was one of the most densely populated in the worlds In 1904 many of the area’s German residents died in the burning of the Genera/ an excursion steamboat, an accident which claimed over one thousand victims. Following the tragedy, many of the remaining German residents moved out of the area. A monument to the victims stands in Tompkins Square. Italian, Eastern European, Russian, and Jewish immigrants replaced the German residents and in the mid-tw

Queen Elizabeth II (Queen of Canada)

Queen Elizabeth II (Queen of Canada)
Queen’s Royal visit to Canada. She wrapped up her two weeks tour of Canada as the Queen of Canada in Toronto on July 6, 2010. This picture was taken at her public walkabout at the Queen’s Park.

queen air mattress frame
queen air mattress frame

Queen: Greatest Hits I & II
Queen brought a whole new meaning to the phrase over the top. While rock & roll flamboyance stretched back at least as far as Little Richard, Freddie Mercury continued to camp it up, taking little seriously and smirking at the music’s growing pretensions while partaking in them no small bit. Many of the band’s singles hold up extremely well, later tracks such as “Hammer to Fall” as much as prime-era numbers such as “Bohemian Rhapsody,” “Killer Queen,” and “You’re My Best Friend.” The quartet’s canny sense of melody and sophisticated vocal harmonies–not to mention Mercury’s raised eyebrow–have traveled well through the years. –Rickey Wright