SllTiSONI 



BROADWAY, 



Corner of Houston Street, New York. 



Single llooms, 50 c, 75 c, and SI 00 per day. Double Rooms and Parlors, 



S1.50 to $3.00. 



MEAU AT All HOUnSt AND AS OHOEREDt 



Or $2 per day for Rooms and Board, at option. 



The attention of the Traveling Public is respectfully directed to this Hotel, which, it 

 is believed, offers accommodations unsurpassed in Rooms, Furniture, and Attendance, by, 

 and cheaper in price than, any other. 



The guests are at liberty to pay for their Rooms separately from their Meals, or to have 

 a stated price for the whole, as suits their convenience ; and for the latter, the price of $2.00 

 per day is less by one-quarter than any other Hotel in this neighborhood. 



The location is on the highest ground north of the Battery — the water sheds at four 

 angles where Houston street crosses Broadway. It is central, being on the second block 

 from the St. Nicholas Hotel, on the same with the Metropolitan and Niblo's Theatre. Bur- 

 ton's and Laura Keene's Theaters, Wood's Theater of Ethiopian Minstrels, Fredricks' and 

 Ansons' celebrated Daguerreian Galleries, St. Thomas and Dr. Chapin's Churches, are all 

 within one block. In Summer this Hotel is one of the coolest and best ventilated in the 

 <^ity, and in Winter it commands, without danger from fire, the temperature of the Tropics , 

 being heated throughout by steam. 



It is appointed in all its departments equal to the highest priced Hotels. Every Room 

 is lighted by Gas, and has a self-supplyiug and self-draining marble Croton Water Basin. 

 The Servants are abundant, respectful, and attentive, and do not solicit rewards. The 

 Hotel is never closed, night or day. 



The Culinary Department is under charge of an experienced and capable Caterer, anrl 

 the tables and Wines will be found not inferior to any other. A regular Hotel Dinner is 

 provided in the American Style, every day, for those who prefer that to the European Plan. 



The aim of the Proprietor is, and it has been accomplished at great expense, to furnish 

 to the Traveling Public at moderate cost, a safe and well appointed stopping place, in a 

 central and desirable location. 



Having been the first in this City to originate the idea of a Hotel conducted on this 

 principle, I respectfully request a share of the public patron.age for this establishment, and 

 am at liberty to refer to the ofiBcers of the Smithsonian Institution, in Washington. 



CHAS. H. SMITH. 



