HUNTING AND FISHING GROUNDS AND PLEASURE RESORTS. 
inconvenience of carryng a gun with 
him, for there are many squirrels in the 
forest lining the banks of the Jordan 
and adjoining streams. Aside from the 
good eating afforded by this festive ro- 
dent, his flesh forms most excellent bait 
in the absence of worms. 
Thirteen miles north of Kalkaska is 
the hamlet of Mane. lona, where the ex- 
press trains stop for meals, prepared at 
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place for fly-casting. The water fs 
about ten feet deep on the average, and 
clear as crystal, aud the numerous logs 
and stumps afford good hiding-places. 
The fishing in the stream is excellent. 
About two and a half miles from this 
station the extreme limit of navigation 
is reached, and from this to the mouth 
there is a channel about thirty feet wide, 
but all, save this channel—which has 
TRAVERSE CITY. 
the Mancelona House. Good accom- 
modations at this point at reasonable 
rates, and excellent arrangements for 
overland trips to Torch Lake, Speneer 
Creek, and other fishing waters. 
Boyne Falls Station, thirty-eight miles 
from Kalkaska, is located on the banks 
of the Boyne River, a stream well stock- 
ed with brook trout. Small boats should 
be used in fishing this stream, which is 
navigable for a short distance from its 
nouth. The mill-pond at this point is 
airly alive with trout, and is a splendid 
been cleared of logs and dead-falls by 
lumbermen—is a mass of roots and 
sunken logs, among which lurk the. 
gamey trout. The best way to fish the 
Boyne is to go up from the mouth with 
a boat, and after still-fishing above the 
headwaters for the big ones supposed to 
be lurking among the logs, leisurely fish 
down stream. Almost all the trout 
killed in the Boyne are caught with a 
bait, and are highly colored fish, yet the 
opportunities for fly-fishing are unsur- 
passed. At the mouth of the Boyne, 
