Hot Springs, Arkansas; its hotels, baths, resorts and beautiful scenery .. . owardsthe setting sun, while the latter disappears among the hills to the eastward. In thisdirection the horizon is soon hemmed in by the mountains, but the view^ is never-theless charming. At your back is the Hot Springs Mountain and the GovernmentPark, while from the very portc-cochcre of the hotel you can trace the beautifulGorge of Happy Hollow, with its throngs of pedestrians, its crowds of merrylaughing children, its donkey parties, its photograph galleries, and all its other•happy accompaniments. The New Arling
Hot Springs, Arkansas; its hotels, baths, resorts and beautiful scenery .. . owardsthe setting sun, while the latter disappears among the hills to the eastward. In thisdirection the horizon is soon hemmed in by the mountains, but the view^ is never-theless charming. At your back is the Hot Springs Mountain and the GovernmentPark, while from the very portc-cochcre of the hotel you can trace the beautifulGorge of Happy Hollow, with its throngs of pedestrians, its crowds of merrylaughing children, its donkey parties, its photograph galleries, and all its other•happy accompaniments. The New Arlington will continue under the management of S. H. Stitt & Co.,who have done so much in the past to make the old hotel attractive and popularwith patrons, and this management will be hailed as a guarantee of the prosperityand success of the new enterprise. Mr. Lyman T. Hay will occupy the positionof manager, as during the past season, when he proved so popular a host, and willgather about him the best and most efiicient corps of assistants to be found in thecountry. 35. ©thert Metel ^CGemmedatiens. 3^C ^ >f ^ 3]C /S)S before indicated, the visitor to Hot Springs is never at a loss to find a lodgingJ^ place suited alike to his tastes and his pocket-hook. Besides the three largehotels already described, and which are more especially patronized by the wealthierclass of pleasure seekers and invalids, there are a dozen or more first-class hostelriesat which lower rates prevail, and four or five hundred boarding houses. Of thehotels, among the best known are the Hotel Hay, the Pullman, the Avenue, theWaverly, the Hotel Worrell, the Josephine, the Humpter, the Plateau and the Grand. The more pretentious boarding houses assume names—^the Albion, the Burling-ton, Tavlors, Magnolia \illa. Haynes Villa, for example. These houses are hand-somelv furnished, conveniently located, with pleasant surroundings, and are wellpatronized, as their excellent conduct deserves. Following the desce
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidhotspringsar, bookyear1892