120 FLY-FISHING IN MAINE LAKES. 



village hotel, an obliging and agreeable gentle- 

 man, will perform for you the same service. 



Just overlooking this charming sheet of water, a 

 camp has been recently built, owned, and occupied, 

 in the season, by the Messrs. Barber, Davis, and 

 others, of Boston and vicinity, where a sportsman's 

 welcome is always given when the occupants are 

 "at home." 



Duck Lake about a mile and a half in length 



connects with Junior Lake, six miles in length, 

 by Duck Lake Stream ; at the left of Junior lie 

 Scragby and Pleasant Lakes, both beautiful sheets 

 of water. On the right of Junior, and approached 

 through Junior Stream and Compass Thoroughfare, 

 lie Compass Lake and the two Sisladobsis, known 

 more familiarly as the Dobseys, where the well- 

 known " Dobsey Camp " is situated. 



Passing through Junior Stream, about two and a 

 half miles in length, we enter Grand Lake, a beauti- 

 ful sheet of water, twelve miles long ; again, Grand 

 Lake Stream, three miles in length, connects with 

 Big Lake, Long Lake, and Louis Lake, where rises 

 the West Branch of the St. Croix, and where is situ- 

 ated the village of Princeton, Me. 



Here one can take the railroad twenty miles 



to Calais, steamer to Eastport, and the Inter- 

 national Line of Steamers to Boston, making, in 



