THE DALLES OF THE ST. CUOlX. 



m 



"the dalles of the ST. CROIX." 



l-kA.\K H. XUTTI-K, r.ANUSCAI'i; AkCHITht I , M I \ N KAIM )LIS. 



Above tlie Dalles. 



To most of the inhabit- 

 ants of Minnesota and 

 Wisconsin, the locality 

 of which we write is an 

 unknown one, or at best 

 only r e ni e ni b e red on 

 those occasions when 

 the papers call attention 

 to the fact that so many 

 million feet of logs, "the 

 largest jam on record," 

 have accumulated in the 

 Dalles of the St. Croix, 

 and the lumbermen and 

 river-drivers are sum- 

 moned to their danger- 

 ous task of "breaking the 

 jam"; and it will come as 

 a new revelation to be as- 

 sured that probably no- 

 where else in the state 

 can there be found with- 

 in a similarly circum- 

 scribed area so much of 

 interest to the scientist, 

 the artist or the ordinarj' 

 tourist in search of rest 

 and recreation. 



r 



III the nalltv. 



