CHAPTER XXXIY. 



We took the noon train, northward, to Gaylord, the 

 northern terminus of the .Jaekson. Sauinaw ami Lansing 

 R. H. There procuring a team. \ve were conveyed dir<vtly 

 aero-- the wilderness, twelve mile> westward, to Flmira, 

 throimh a heavy forest of heaeh, maple and hemlock. We 

 saw many incipient, pleasant homes and future rich farms 

 on the way, chopped and hewn, out in the heart of the 

 wilderness. FJinira is a town consisting of a single house 

 in the wood>, on the ({rand Ifapids and Indiana K. K. \Ve 

 i up a train and took passage lo IVloskey, on Little 

 Tr:ivrr>e IJav. This is a \\ondcrfully bright little town. 

 fi\e 01 six years old. "beautiful I'or situation," whence one 

 i/.e out over the blue waters of the cliarmiii'.' li.-i\. 

 and upon the distant and broader waters of Lake Michigan 

 beyond, and dream of peace \\ilhout heal, dust, or dis- 

 comfort of any sort but a crowded hotel. 



l>ay View," a mile north, is a famous camping ground 

 of the Methodist Episcopal Church of the NVesl. and is the 

 favorite summer resort of thousands of people of all 

 denominations. 



Taking an e&rly morning train, we retraced our way to 

 Iloyne Falls, proceeding thence throuu'h the woods six 

 miles by sta.^e over a Li'ood road to Uoyne. a hamlet at the 

 .head of the North Ann of IMne Lake;. The JJoyne river, 



