P 127 .C7 N5 Copy 1 ;#--^ ST .^ifes^'^-;. 1^«?^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. LMTED STATES OP AMERICA. '""""*«<'« Co. /3/56 •CT1V5- '-^mv^ :*^^>:/ V ..^^S^ rs:*^" ■^'■"^.f^ ^ ^ o» ^ 'M ,i<^Ui«^Sl^-^^^ 'tv LAKE CHAUTAUQUA. On a ricli table land, ten miles from Lake Erie and seven hundred feet above it, yet tributary to the Gulf of Mexico, lies beautiful and romantic Lake Chautauqua. Fourteen hundred feet above" the sea, it is distinguished as the highest navigated water in the world— too far from vulgar earth for malaria and too near heaven for mosquitoes. Before the advent of civilization, the Indians, with their peculiar instinct which seldom erred, selected this charming spot as a meeting place, and hundreds of camp fires were vividly reflected in the transparent water. The early hunters and trappers followed the same well- trodden trails, and when modern civilization, in the full flower of its intellect and beauty, demanded new centres of learning and gayety, the same charms that lured the early savage, attracted it to the wooded shores of Lake Chautau- i'^:a8«v (|ua. The result is Lakewood, a social resort of national note, Chautauqua, justly termed the Modern Athens, and dozens of delightful capes and Days, to which nature and art have combined to give a special charm. Poetic fancy might lead one to suppose that such a spot should be located on a distant continent or beyond impassable mountains, but the exact opposite is the case. No place in the world is easier to reach. The numerous lines and connections of one of America's greatest rail- ways, the picturesque Erie, all lead to Lake Chautauqua, as ancient roads did to Rome, and the culture of Boston, the wealth of New York, the aristocracy of Philadelphia, the enterprise of Chicago, Cincinnati and St. Louis, and the beauty of Louisville. Pittsburgh, Cleveland and Buffalo, may make the journey without change in luxurious Pullman cars, arriving as neat and fresh as Cinderella from her fairy carriage or the proverbial beau from his band-box. Copyright, IBflO, by W. C. RinearsQC^. L/\KEWOOD, Chautau^a. elfrisbee. L AKEWOOD. The most attractive spot on Lake Chautauqua, half hidden in a romantic grove and commanding an expansive view of sparkling water, is the ideal sum- mer city of Lakewood. Two exceptionally fine hotels, the Kent House and the Sterlingvvorth Inn, combine rural charms with every metropolitan luxury, and readily convince the most pessimistic, that life is worth living, worth enjoying, worth enlarging and improving. The Sterlingworth is a dream of architectural beauty, a creation of the experience and refined fancy of its proprietor, Mr. E. L. Frisbee, who has arranged every detail to insure the safety, health and pleasure of his numerous guests. The first season's phenomenal success, and the assured increase of the second, necessitated a five-story addition to the edifice, which has been mada without marring the beauty and symmetry of the general plan. The Kent House is a year older, of a sterner style of archi- 'tecture, but likewise perfect in appointments and surroundings. The proprietors, Messrs. Sliney & Brady, bear the burdens of prosperity with becoming modesty, and with unbounded confidence in Lakewood and its future, are able and determined to keep pace with its growth. Conceded to be the handsomest, best situated and most fully developed point on Lake Chautauqua, Lakewood has yet another advantage in being the easiest of access. All trains of the Erie Railway, including the famous vestibuled limited, stop : during the season at the beautiful and convenient station, and new steel boats, making close and sure connections, afford safe and quick transit to any point on the lake. Fast express trains, with Pullman's finest sleeping cars, leave Chictigo daily at 3:30 and 8:15 p. m., and Cincinnati at 7:30 a. m. and 7:00 and 10 p. m., making good time to Lakewood and arriving at convenient hours. Similar trains leave New York daily at n a. m., 3 p. m. and 8 p. m., and the service between Lake Chautauqua and Buffalo and Niagara Falls is the best in the Erie's history. 'Jf6vf }%rir ^q6§& Qri/qUTfiUQLifi. QU I ET HOMES .7^; Magnificent and overshadowing as are the great liotels, it must not he j|_.j^J:,., inferred that hotel life is the only life at Lake Chiutauqna. Lake wood. Chau- " '^'*S^ tauqua, Bemus Point and other delightful places are noted for qui(!t and com- fortahle cottages and boarding houses, which afford summer homes for thou- sands. The numerous cottages connected with the Kent and Sterlingworth, occupied during the season h}^ many of the most prominent visitors, are the natural outgrowth of the desire for a more retired existence. Among other quiet .living places at Lakewood may be mentioned the new hotel Ennin. whicli is open all the year round, and is in its second successful season. TluM'e are accommodations for 75 guests at the very reasonable rate of *i'3 a day, or from >>10 "^^jitiSS-.' to ^V~ a week. Omnibusses run to all trains and boats, and the proprietor, Mr. K. D. Fleek, is one of tJie most popular of hosts. It is situated opposite the Sterlingworth Inn. Tiie J'almcr House, Mr. J. C J'aliner, proprietor, is also enjoying its second successful season, and has been enlarged and remodeled. Accommodations are provided for 75 people at rates varying from ^J.50 to 6<-.' a day, and *.S to *10 a week, according to location. The Saratoga cottage is beautifully situated diagonally across the l)0ulevard from the Sterlingworth, and is worthy of its name. It accommodates fully 50. and liic rates range fromSlo to *12 a week. The proprietress, Mrs. Sarah Strunk. deserves the success which she has won. The New Delafield. .Mr. F. W Eddy, proprietor, has accommodations for 50, at ?1.50 a day and ^d to $9 a week. The Winch Cottage, Mr. C. D. Winch, proprietor, can accommodate 20 to 25 at 810 to 5^12 a week. The Wedge Cottage, Mr. E. C. Wedge, proprietor, can provide for 20 guests at *7 a week. I,The Giles Cottage, Mrs. M. E. Giles, proprietress, on the lake shore, above the Sterlingworth Inn, jCan care for 25 at SS to *lii a week. It is open from May to October. )ioasE, Chaut/\uqua. AROUND THE LAKE. A journey around the lake discloses numerous other beautiful resorts which deserve special mention. The new hotel Griffith, at Griffith's Point, is situated directly opposite Lakewood, and has superior accommodations for some sixty people at $10 a week. Penfold Bros, are the proprietors. The place especially noted for its quiet homes, however, is Bemus Point. Mr. A. J. Pickard's new hotel, in its second year, accommodates 100 guests. It faces the dock overlook- ing Bemus Point Bay. The rates are $3.00 a day and $10 and *12 a week, with half rates for children and nurses. It is open from May to October. The Lenhart House, Mr. J. J. Lenhart, proprietor, near the steamboat landing, overlooking the bay, has accommodations for 75 guests at 12.00 a day and $8 to $10 a week. Child- ren and nurses are charged *5 a week. Bemus Heights, run by Mr. Charles Bemus, is situated half a mile above Bemus Point and commands a fine view of the bay. It can care for 30 at *S to %10. There are free boats and carriages for guests. The Ravenswood and cottages, conducted by Mr. J. Bemus, three-fourths of a mile above Bemus Point on the bay, has accommodations for 70 guests. The rates are *9 a week and S5 for children and servants. Boats and carriages are free to guests. The Bay View is one mile from Bemus Point, at the head of the bay. It has accommodations for 25 guests at %8 to ^10 a week. Free carriages are furnished between the house and the steamboat dock. Mr. S. H. Brown is proprietor. The Wilbur House, owned by Mrs. W. Wilbur, is only five minutes' walk from the steamboat dock. The rates are S!2 a day and $8 to $10 a week. The Maple Springs is situated at the head of Long Point Bay. three miles from Bemus Point by steamer, diagonally across the lake from the Chautauqua Assembly Grounds. It accommodates 00 people. The rates are $9 to §10 a week, and it is open from May to October. Mr. P. S. Barnes is proprietor, whose postoffice address is Jamestown, N. Y. . Q-STTT^ <3 E/-^ IJI fje- cAT^ ^ \J^ \<^'Vsr' .s»*'j;.