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BRIDGE

HOTEL,

No. 1 PRINCES STREET & 67 NORTH BRIDGE, EDINBURGH.
JOHN DONALD, PROPRIETOR, (late Kerr.)

STRANGERS VISITING EDINBURGH will find this Hotel most advan-
tageous, either for Business or Pleasure. The accommodation is ample, embracing
Private Apartments, Public Room, and Coffee Room. The arrangements are strictly super-
intended by the Proprietor, and the Charges Moderate. The HOTEL is situated opposite the
WELLINGTON STATUE, FOOT OF NORTH BRIDGE, and within a few minutes' walk of General
Railway Termini and all the Coach Offices.

SCALE OF CHARGES.-Breakfast, 1s. 9d. to 2s.; Dinner, 2s. 6d. to 3s.; Tea and Coffee equally moderate; Beds, 1s. 6d. to 2s. A moderate charge fixed for attendance.

MELROSE

KING'S ARMS HOTEL.

Long Established by Mrs. THOMPSON.

POST-HORSES AND CARRIAGES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. MELROSE, May 1857.

GEORGE HOTEL, MELROSE.

Centrally situated for Melrose and Dryburgh Abbeys, Abbotsford,
Bowhill, St. Mary's Loch, &c.

FAMILIES TOURISTS, and COMMERCIAL GENTLEMEN will

find this Hotel replete with every comfort and convenience.

POSTING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES.

An Omnibus attends the arrival and departure of the Trains.

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Fishing in the Devon two minutes' walk from the Hotel,

The Scenery of Castle Campbell, Rumbling Bridge, and Cauldron Linn is well

known to be unsurpassed in beauty.

A Coach leaves the Hotel for the Station at Tillicoultry of the Stirling and Dunfermline Railway, on the 11th May, at 6.30 A.M., and 6 P.M.; and Returning on the Arrival of the first and last Trains-See Railway Guide.

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THE TROSACHS.

ALEXANDER M'GREGOR respectfully informs

Strangers and Tourists in Scotland, that, in addition to his Hotel at Callander, he is proprietor of the Magnificent New Hotel at the Trosachs, built by Lord Willoughby D'Eresby in 1849. The building is a splendid piece of architecture, and occupies a delightful and commanding position, from which can be enjoyed a view of the far famed scenery of the Trosachs, immortalised by Sir Walter Scott in his Lady of the Lake. The accommodation consists of ten private parlours, a handsome and commodious Public Room, and about seventy Beds.

Carriages and Post-Horses on the shortest notice. Coaches to and from Stirling, daily during the Tourist

season.

Parties of pleasure who intend visiting Ellen's Isle are respectfully informed that Boats are to be had on the shortest notice, and that only by applying at the Trosachs Hotel.

Let Tourists and Parties visiting the Trosachs and Loch Katrine distinctly understand, that there is no such place as a "New Trosachs," and the place now called by that name is Duncraggan, and fully three miles from Loch Katrine.

C

NOTICE.

No person visiting the beautiful Scenery of the English Lakes should omit calling at

BROWN'S LAKE HOTEL, GRASMERE,

which stands upon the margin of the Lake, and was built expressly for an Hotel, and is fitted up with Hot, Cold, and Shower Baths, with every modern improvement for comfort. The public DiningRoom is the largest in the Lake District, being lighted by nine large windows, from which may be seen Loughrigg Fell, Silver How, Sargeant Man, High Raise, Steel Fell, Helm Crag, Seat Sandal, Stone Arthur, etc. etc. Also overlooks the whole of the Lake, Valley, and Church, the last resting-places of Wordsworth and Hartley Coleridge. There is near half-a-mile of gravel walks in the grounds, the Scenery from which cannot be EQUALLED in the whole of the Lake District.

A Refreshment Room and Coach Office is attached to the Hotel, to and from which the Lake District Coaches run in connection. Omnibuses also meet the Steamers at the head of Windermere

Lake.

Carriages, Cars, Phaetons, Ponies, Boats, etc.

CHATSWORTH HOTEL,

EDENSOR, DERBYSHIRE.

WILLIAM JEPSON, the Proprietor, begs to inform visitors to Derbyshire, that the Hotel is situated in Chatsworth Park, in the immediate vicinity of the princely residence of the Duke of Devonshire, a palace adorned with chef-d'œuvres of art, and liberally embellished by nature...

The Hotel offers every comfort and accommodation to Tourists, and is within easy distances of the romantic scenery of the Peak of Derbyshire, which has not inappropriately been compared to Switzerland.

The Midland Railway, intersecting England between London and York, has a branch from the Ambergate Station to Rowsley Station, where an omnibus from the Hotel meets every train. This affords a delightful drive through the Park. Fare Sixpence.

Parties staying at the Hotel can be accommodated with tickets for fly-fishing in the Rivers Derwent and Wye, the former of which runs through Chatsworth Park.

N.B.-A Ladies' Coffee-Room.

W

GOLDEN LION HOTEL,

(CAMPBELL'S, late GIBB'S,)

KING STREET, STIRLING.

DUNCAN CAMPBELL,

HILE expressing his thanks for the liberal support he has received during the many years he has been Proprietor of this Hotel, respectfully intimates that many improvements have recently been effected in the interior arrangement and management of the House, rendering it complete in every department as a temporary Residence for Families, Parties, Tourists, and the Public generally.

D. C. flatters himself that those patronizing his Establishment will find it everything they could wish in point of accommodation, moderation in charges, and facility in obtaining necessary refreshments.

Everything which experience could suggest has been done to provide for Commercial Gentlemen, who will find it to their advantage to put up at the Golden Lion.

COACHING DEPARTMENT,

Coaches to Callander, Loch Katrine, the Trosachs, Lochearnhead, Killin, Kenmore, Aberfeldy, and Dunkeld, twice a day during the season.

Carriages, Broughams, Droskies, Gigs, and Post-Horses, on the shortest notice.

The Inn is in the immediate vicinity of the Post-Office, Stamp-Office, the Banks, and the Stirling Station of the Scottish Central Railway; an Omnibus runs to and from the latter on the arrival and departure of all the trains. Passengers and Luggage-Free.

HOT, COLD, AND SHOWER BATHS.

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CLOUDSDALE'S CROWN HOTEL, BOWNESS,

WINDERMERE,

FURNISHES Ninety Beds, every Comfort, and a most Extensive

View; it is 200 yards from the Lake, conducted on the most modern and economical principles, and patronised by the Rothschilds. Families boarded for periods not less than a week.

W.

BOWNESS.-LAKE WINDERMERE.

ULLOCK'S ROYAL HOTEL,
(LATE WHITE LION),

The Oldest Established Hotel in the District.

BOWNASS, Proprietor of the above Hotel, in returning his warmest thanks to the Royal Families, Nobility, Gentry, and the Public for the liberal support he has hitherto received, begs to assure his patrons that it shall be his continued study to merit a continuance of their support, by paying every attention to their comfort, combined with a strict view to economy and convenience of those who may favour him with their patronage.

Within a few years this hotel has had the honour of receiving the patronage of the late Queen Dowager, the King of Saxony, the Prince of Prussia, the Grand Duke Constantine of Russia, and most of the principal English and Foreign Families of distinction visiting this romantic and interesting district; being situated close upon the Lake, of which it commands extensive views, and within an easy day's excursion of all the principal lakes and mountains of the district.

Conveyances of every description kept. House and Estate Agent.

An Omnibus meets every Train at Birthwaite, the Terminus of the Kendal and Windermere Railway, 13 miles from Bowness, and Private Carriages if required. Bowness is within 10 hours of London, 4 of Manchester and Liverpool.

AT

RIGG'S WINDERMERE HOTEL.

T this Establishment, Families and others visiting the Lake District will meet with every accommodation and attention, combined with moderate charges. The Hotel is situated on an eminence immediately above the terminus of the Kendal and Windermere Railway, and is so situated as to prevent the least inconvenience or annoyance from the traffic.

The views of mountain and lake scenery commanded from the windows of the Hotel are unsurpassed by any in the district-the Lake Windermere, with its numerous islands, being seen nearly to its utmost extent.

Open and Close Carriages, Cars, and Post-Horses always in readiness.

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