HUNTING AND FISHING GROUNDS AND PLEASURE RESORTS. 
are of the same general character. But- 
ternut Lake is one mile from the station. 
Mr. G. W. Stubblefield has erected a 
hotel on an island in the lake, selecting 
a remarkably picturesque location, where 
guides, boats, and all the paraphernalia 
for fishing and camping can be obtained. 
‘he house can accommodate from twen- 
145 
Just before reaching Penokee Station, 
three hundred and twenty-four miles from 
Milwaukee, the conductors on the trains 
inform the passengers that they are about 
to pass through the “Gap” of the Pe- 
nokee Mountains. Here the tourist finds 
in the dalles and rapids of Bad River, 
where it breaks through the hills and be- 
RAPIDS OF THE TYLER FORK OF BAD RIVER, 
ty to thirty guests. There are two fine 
sail, and any quantity of row boats con- 
nected with the house. 
The next station after Butternut is 
Chippewa, headquarters for immense 
lumberin{ samps. In the neighborhood 
are lakes similar to those mentioned as 
being at Phillips and Butternut, teeming 
with fish, where a line has never yet been 
thrown except by the dusky redskin. 
tween towering rocks, a number beauti- 
ful landscapes and charming pictures o 
woodland scenery, Itis here that some 
of the most difficult engineering was ac- 
complished in buildiug this highway, and 
one can appreciate the magnitude of the 
difficulties which had to be overcome in 
order to push to completion this rather, 
arduous undertaking. The railroad fol- 
lows, to a certain extent, the course of 
