POINTS OF INTEREST 



ALONG THE ROUTE OF THE 



The wildest of all the wild northern lake land, except perhaps the 

 north shore of Lake Superior, is that from which the Upper Wis- 

 consin River receives its nourishment. The region from Wausau to 

 Vieux Desert, and beyond even to Gogebic and the Montreal, in 

 Michigan, was until very recently a howling wilderness. Three 

 years ago the chance hunter as he toiled slowly through fen and 

 bush, or paddled his canoe down the silvery waters, scarcely dreamed 

 of the transformation that was about to take place. A railroad has 

 been built. Numerous villages and even cities have grown from out 

 the forest, the beautiful forest which nature provided for man's 

 health and amusement. 



Starting from Milwaukee, the sportsman, if he be one of a party 

 numbering six or more, will most likely occupy a section in one of 

 the comfortable "Hunting Cars" provided by the M., L. S. & W. 

 Ry. Co. In these ^cars he eats, sleeps and makes himself generally 

 at home, the same whether his car is on the move or whether it ha« 

 been switched off at one of the many sporting stations along the 

 line. 



Long before reaching the "beautiful land over there," where 

 ducks and geese will never cease, where deer are fair and mosqui- 

 toes rare, oh that wonderful land over there, ..the sportsman, no 

 doubt, will have become interested in the charming scenery passed 

 en route. 



Sheboygan, fifty-two miles north of Milwaukee, is one of the 

 pleasantest cities in the State of Wisconsin. Situated as it is on 

 Lake Michigan, whose waters are plentifully supplied with the 

 finny tribe, visitors to the *' Evergreen City'* need never lack for 

 sport. In the marshes and among the "Kettles," the name of a 

 range of peculiarly shaped hills, a short distance west of the city, 



