n. E. LINES AROUND THE ADIRONDACKS. 2<'l 



in every direction, — ti most popular and niucli traA'clcd 

 route ; at Chateaugay, for the Cliateaiigay Lakes. 



From the Delaware and Hudson Canal Co. R. M. lines 

 on the East, cuter at Plattsburg b}' Railroad to Point of 

 Rocks, thence by stage to "Paul Smith's" on St Regis 

 Lake, or Martin's on Lower Saranac Lake, and on at 

 pleasure to any jiart of tiie wilderness; at Port Kent, (Lake 

 or Railroad,) by stage to Keeseville, Point of Rocks, and 

 then as last above; at Westport, for Elizabethtown, Keene. 

 Keene's Flats, through the Adirondack Mountains proper, 

 to North Elba, and on to Saranac Lake. At Saratoga, take 

 Adirondack Railroad for Schroon Lake, or to its terminus 

 at North Creek for Blue Mountain Lake, Raquette Lake 

 and on through to any point in the Eastern and Northern 

 wilderness, or from North Creek north to Adirondack Iron 

 Works, Lower and Upper. 



With the aid of an ordinary map of the wilderness, the fore- 

 going information will enable the tourist to form the plan 

 of almost any tour he may desire to make in that region. 



The sportsman will need to consult works designed to 

 point out more specitically the best resorts for hunting and 

 fishing. However, the guides in any of these localities can 

 give complete information, and the hotel keepers, at nearly 

 all these points of entrance, may be relied upon to post the 

 inquiring sportsman. "Wallace's Guide to the Adiron- 

 dacks," is exceedingly valuable in this connection. 



Where to go and Jio/r to go into the Adirondacks, depends 

 principally upon whether you go as a foar/'xf or as a .^ports- 

 7W«?i,— whether you wish to journey, or to camp. If you 



