HUNTING AND FISHING GROUNDS AND PLEASURE RESORTS. 
Munson, Esq., in a late number of The 
Chicago Field : 
“ Having concluded to vary my sport of trout 
fishing by a day with the black bass, I pro- 
cured a guide who knew where Lake Harriet 
149 
Brook bridge, about sixteen miles down the 
line from Ashland. As the train swept on, 
our guide plunged into the forest, followed by 
my wife and myself, and after an hour's tramp 
through what would have been an almost im- 
| penetrable wood, but for a tolerably well- 
THE DALLES O 
lay hidden in the pine wilderness.. J took my 
wife with me to enjoy the rare sport I was 
promised, and boarding the 7 A. M. train on 
the Wisconsin Central Railroad, was dropped 
by the accommodating conductor at Trout 
| 
| 
F BAD RIVER. 
defined blazed trail, we emerged upon a lovely 
little lake, covering probably eighty acres, en- 
tirely surrounded by lofty pines and thick 
undergrowth, which grew close down to the 
water's edge, aud whose shadows were reflect- 
