THE- MORNING OBECFONIA3S, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1905. the Dolly Varden trout, whose size. beauty and gamy qualities are well known: and In these and other streams In various portions ot the state you will aloo find the Eastern brook trout, a few Loch Leven trout and many Rainbow trout, more than a million fry of which have, within the last four or five years. been planted by the Oregon Fish and Game Association. This is an organization of sportsmen. with a membership of nearly 400. whose object Is to assist in the protection and propagation of fish and game In the State of Oregon, to foster a true spirit of sports manship and to promote acquaintance and good-fellowship among Its members. The Best Angling Streams. Experienced anglers, some of whom have fished in the best streams of Europe and America, and who have visited the Klam ath Lake region, in Southern Oregon, are loud in their praises of Its excellency. Indeed, it would be difficult to find better fishing grounds anywhere for trout or other game fish than Pelican Bay. on Klamath Lake, and tho streams which flow into It, or along the Rogue. Umpqua and McKenzie Rivers. In this respect tho picturesque Wallowa Lake, In the north eastern part of the state, and the numer ous trout streams In the Blue Mountain region, such as the Umatilla, Mcacham. THE journals of Lewis and Clark show that when they made their memora ble journey to this far western shore 300 years ago the great natural beauty of the scenery and the number and variety of wild animals abounding in the forests and the excellence ot the fishes in the streams of this region filled them with wonder and admiration. So interested were they In the fauna and flora of the country that we find their journals filled with admir able and detailed descriptions of the bird and animal and fish life which they saw. And, although a hundred years have now passed since those hardy explorers first visited these shores, and Oregon and the Northwest have made great strides in civilization and material advancement, there are today still to be found hundreds of square miles of almost primeval wil derness within the boundaries of the state. And to tho lover of outdoor sports Ore gon and the Pacific Northwest still pre sent many and varied attractions. To the hunter who delights In the search for large game the Blue Mountain region of Eastern Oregon, or the beautiful val leys of the Rogue and Umpqua Rivers in the southwestern portion of the state will prove peculiarly attractive. There, In for ests as dense and wild as any In Amer ica he will find the bear, the deer and the elk Jn numbers; and he may have an op portunity to try his aim, and perhaps to test his courage, on some prowling cou gar, himself In quest of game. If he pre fers upland birds, he can have sport to his heart's content In pursuit of the latest addition to the long list' of Oregon game birds, the Chinese pheasant, which is found in abundance in the great valley if 4 the Willamette. 20 bird can try the hunter's patience more or deceive him oftener than this Oriental pheasant; and when you -have bagged htm you have not only a bird of graceful outlines and most gorgeous plumage, but one whose flesh wilt satisfy the most epicurean tatstc. In this valley of the "Willamette, and in nearly all the valleys and foothills of the state, the native pheasant or grouse, the partridge and the quail also abound. And in the Blue Mountain region of East ern Oregon may be found, in addition, the prairie chicken and the sagehen. Water Fowl In Millions. As for water fowl, they can be found on every bay, lake and stream in the state; but If you want to see them in such numbers as have never gladdened your eyes before, a trip to their breeding grounds In tho Klamath Lake region in Southern Oregon will be Hi revelation to you. There you will And great areas of water, thousands of acres, perhaps, liter ally covered with ducks, geese, snipe, plovers, pelicans and other nquatlc fowl. There hundreds of thousands of these water fowl neat and. rear their young every year. It is unquestionably one the most wonderful breeding grounds for aquatic birds in America, and is well worthy of your visit. Game Fish in All Streams. If you are a disciple of good old Izaak Walton you will find Oregon and the Pacific Northwest a paradise indeed; tor its numerous mountain streams, wild tor rents hurrying down from their elevated sources and now and then resting in still pools, with waters cold and clear, are the haunts of the lusty trout, the grayling, the salmon and other game fiehes, while the great rivers at certain seasons of the year literally teem with salmon, smelt, shad, bass, and other varieties of fish. The cut-throat trout Is our native trout. and may be found In nearly a!i of our streams; but if you are particular as to the species you want. Nature has here lavishly provided a great variety for you. In the Williamson. McKenzie, Deschutes and Upper Clackamas Rivers you will find Birch and M&ckay Creeks, are a close second. The Trask. Slletz. Tillamook. Ne canlcum. Nestucca and Yaqulna, all of them coast streams, afford most excellent trout and salmon fishing; and at Taquina Bay, one of the most beautiful sheets of water on the entire coast, you can, in season, have royal sport In fishing for that finest of large game fishes, the sal mon. There you wlU also find a variety of salt water fishes, such as the kelp-fish, flounder and rock cod. There are also places along the Colum bia and Willamette Rivers which afford excellent sport in fishing for the steelhead and other salmon and salmon trout with hook and line. Tour achievements as an angler are far from complete, and you have still a great joy to anticipate, if you have never caught a good-sized salmon in that manner. Your spoon hook is whirling In the swift current, and sud denly you feel a tremendous jerk; the next Instant a steel-gray object leaps high out of the water and lashes It into foam. You have hooked a salmon; but hooking a salmon and landing one are very difficult feats, as you will fully realize after you have had a Mttle experience. Many times before you, land him. if Indeed you are fortunate enough to do so at all, you will be wondering whether you will pull him out of the water or whether he will pull you Into it. During the years that have come and gone since Oregon first became a state much has been done in the matter of fish and game protection, and the good work is still going on. A careful examination of our fish and game laws will show that they will compare very favorably with those of any other state. The trout laws are particularly excellent, as an exam ination of the following abstract of some of their provisions will show: New Law Protects Game. It Is unlawful to fish for trout except with hook and line; to take trout, char or salmon less than five Inches long; to take more than 123 trout in one day; to taka trout from November 1 to April 1; to fish for salmon trout In any except tidal waters at that season: to fish for trout at night; to sell trout at any time; to dis charge explosives or put deleterious sub stances In the waters. Dynamiting game fish Is punishable by fine of not less than $1000 and Imprisonment. Strenuous efforts are now being made to prevent absolutely the eale of any spe cies of game or game fish: and if this Is accomplished, Oregon will stand a fair show of preserving Its one-time excellence as a sportsman's paradise. To tho lover of Nature, and of healthful, invigorating sport, Oregon and Its people bid a hearty welcome. A. E. GEBHARDT. Secretary Oregon Fish and Game Association. WEALTH FROM THE WATERS Fisheries of the Columbia and Oregon Coast Streams Yield Millions. TIRING the 3S years- that packing ! operations have been carried on. the salmon fisheries of the Columbia River and the Oregon coast streams have yielded ah output valued at fully $125. 000,000. By far the greater portion of this product Is put up in cans, although during the past few years sweet pickling and sharp freezing have come into vogue to a considerable extent. While the can ning of salmon is- carried on at many points on tho Pacific Coast and In Alaska, the Columbia River can be rightfully termed the headquarters of the industry, as it Is only hero the true royal chlnook, the acknowledged king ot salmon, is found, and It has a ready sale in all the leading markets of the world. The canning of salmon was first under taken on tho Columbia River in 1S66, when 4000 cases were put up, reached Its highest point In 1SS4. with over 600,000 cases, fell off as the effect of over fishing; until the returns from artificial propagation, which -as commenced In 1SS5, ' began to be felt. Since then the pack has been gradually Increasing each year. Pack Late but Large. . The season of 1904 on the Columbia River was most peculiar as well as very successful, so far as the size of the pack Is concerned. During the Spring season IS canneries were operated on the lower and four on tho Upper Columbia, four of the former being new plants erected on the Washington side. The pack put up by these plants, and the bulk of it is royal chlnook. Is estimated at 770,400 cases of four dozen one-pound cans to the case, 230.400 cases being packed on the Oregon side and 140,300 along the Washington shore, whereas the Spring pack In 1903 was 244.973 cases on the Ore gon side and 79,730 cases in Washington. a total of 232.723 cases. Again, five can neries, all located on the north side of the river, operated during the Fall season and put up about 35.000 cases, making the total pack on the river for the year 403,700 cases. Last year Fail packing was not engaged in to so great an extent, and only about 15.000 cases were put up. At 60 pounds of raw fish for each case. the Spring pack on the Columbia River represents 22.212.000 pounds, which, at 5 cents per pounds, the ruling price, gives a total of $1,112,000 that was paid to the fishermen. The greater portion of the Spring pack was sold in advance at $3A0 per case, an aggregate of over $2,500,000. Engaged In catching the fish were 500 traps, with 1000 men; 1500 gillnets. with 30 JO men: 40 seines, with S00 men; 70 fish wheels, with 500 men, a total of 5300 men who were employed In fishing. Close Season Was Ignored. The runs were so small and fitful that, when the legal season closed, on August 15. but few fish had been packed, and It was not until the latter part of August that the fish, which usually enter the' river during June and July, came In With the tacit consent of the authorities In both Oregon and Washington, fishing was continued uninterruptedly all through the "closed" season, with the result of a great Increase In the total. The greater portion of the fish was caught by gillnet tens, the trappers and seiners doing little until near the nd ot the season, and. al though, heretofore 12 or 15 tons have been considered a good season's haul for boat, the "high boat" this year had 24 tons, and catches of 20 tons and over were not unusual. The canneries on the Oregon coast also did well this yuar, putting up a total of about oo.COO cases. With the exception of a small amount of tho Fall and coast packs, all the canned product has been disposed of. and as the market Is practically bare, with a strong demand at high figures, the pros pects for the future have not been so bright in years. ing and shipping of large quantities of steelhcads and sllversldes. While the greater portion of the pack Is sent to Europe, the principal market be ing in Germany, there Is a growing de mand in the East that bids fair to as sume enormous proportions. When the Industry was in its Infancy, there was much experimenting with different prep arations, including salicylic and boraclc acids, with the result that the pack was subjected to rigid inspection in the mar- Keis, ana some oi it was rejectea. this experimenting has been wholly discon tinued, and the cold-storage fish are now clean and wholesome, only the best grades of salt and sugar being used In the curing. Benefit to Fishermen. One direct benefit locally from the es tablishment of the cold-storage business Is an Increase In the price paid for the raw fish. For this process, only the larger chinook salmon are used, those weighing 23 pounds or over, and usually 1 cent, and sometimes 2 cents, per pound more is paid for them than at the can neries. These plants employ white Jabor exclusively, and the amounts they expend each year In wages cuts a material fig ure In the payrolls of tho district. Roughly estimated, the output of the SALMON PUT ON ICE. Increase of Cold-Storage Pack on the Columbia River. 1303. Ton. Cold storage pack 4312 Sharp frottn (stceltwads) G30 Sharp frozen (sllversldes) 1004 Tons. 41C5 GOO 43S3 Totals 4062 j ANDLING of salmon in cold storage. ll or. more properly speaking, thp process of sweet pickling, although of comDaratlvcly recent origin on the Co lumbia River, is already one of the moat important branches of the fishing indus ond indclni: from the ranldlv In creasing' market for fish thus cured, it iMo tar in ctow for manv vears to come. The first attempt on the Columbia River was made in 18S9, but it was not unui 1S27 that the Industry was started on a flm fnnHnr. "That vear two firms were engaged in the business,- and put up about cn tvn sinr then the trrowth has been steady, and has included the sharp freez- 30 tons ot raw fish to 1000 cases of the canned product, this equals 166,000 cases. As the cured fish are said to cost the packer 30 cents per pound, the cold-storage pack of the Columbia River this year represents a cash value of J99S.O0O before any margin for profit is figured. Notwithstanding the large pack, -the market Is practically clear. The entire output, with the exception of a few sharp frozen fish, is said to have been sold, and the demand is excellent at high figures, making the outlook for the com ing season most promising. SMALL TAKE OF EGGS. Output of Fry at Hatcheries a Fail ure, Due to Several Causes. 1903. 1P04. 70. 631.501 16.633.783 ....... 6.534.D65 300.850 145.849 Chtnooks Sllversldes ..... Steelheads ..... Totals ..... 77.467,316 16.7S2.635 WHILE not an entire failure, the re sult attained at the several state and Federal salmon hatcheries in the Co lumbia River district during the present season has been a sore disappointment. OUTPUT OF SALMON FRY AT HATCHERIES. Number of salmon fry planted in Columbia River and tributaries each year since 1S93: CHIKOOKS. SILVERSIDES. ST Q S3 O i jJOO P5 Po i o Si 5" Soi : t z. 2 o : 2 s ? : a ? ? : 3 " : : n - '- 2 o o : : : 3 : s : : . 1S95-6 .. 3TCS700 1 47000.000 77687.000 . " 1S95 .... 8.842.O0O 3,300.000 12,142.000 107 .... 24.410.600 5,500,000 29.910.600 1S9S .... 12.899.69S 6.S0O.00O 19,699.638 1S99 .... 11.000.000 10.017.000 2.500,000 23.517.000 7.810.000 1900 5.9S0.00O 10.510,500 3.670,000 20.260.300 6.025.000 1901 .... 24.033,541 10.S66.000 7,536,200 42.475.741 7.550,000 7.742.200 245.000 1502 .... 23.6C6.10i) ; 10,955.700 20,918,635 - 55.510.433 7,345,413 5.7SS.600 256,327 1503 .... 23,573.891 9.472.200 37,585.410 70.631.501 3.546,000 2.98S.S63 300.850 1504 .... S.431.036 2.5S3,000 1 5.604.750 16.638.7S6 J 143 S49 Th take of Chinook eggs at each of the Columbia River hatcheries this season as compared with that of 1008 Is as follows: HATCHERIES. Oregon State Hatcheries Salmon River Clackamas River Grande Ronde River Wallowa Ontario , Totals United States Hatcheries Little White Salmon (Washington).. Big Salmon' River (Washington).... Eagle and Tanner Creeks (Oregon).. Lower Clackamas River (Oregon)... Upper Clackamas River (Oregon)... Totals Washington State Hatcheries Kalama River - Chinook River Wind River Wcnatchee River Totals 1904 1903 1.745.000 3,551.000 3.334.000 122.400 3.707.0CO 4.227,500 23.055,000 6,077.500 35.769.400 2.129,000 19.10S.100 2.161,400 10.000.000 111,140 1.214.000 3,691.000 10.180.000 1,297,500 9,380,040 40.502,100 2.500.000 6,100.000 100.000 1.700.C0O 270,000 2,500.000 240,000 2.S70.000 10.540.000 Columbia River cold-storage plants amounts to 51,000,000 annually, without counting the profits of the packers. The season of 1903 was considered the banner year, but that record was equaled, if not eclipsed, during the season Just passed, although the. amount of sweet-plckled fish was slightly less. During the season of 1904, ten cold-storage plants were in operation on the Co lumbia River, more than ever before, and all but two of them were located on the Oregon shore, where the shipping facili- PACK OF CANNED SALMON On Columbia River and Oregon Coast. 1503 Cases. Columbia River (Oregon side).244,975 Columbia River (Wash. side). 79,750 Columbia River (Fall pack)... 15.000 Oregon qoast 48,000 Total 3S7.723 1904 Cases. Columbia River (Oregon side).23O,40O Columbia River (Wash. side). .140.300 Columbia River (Fall pack)... 38.000 Oregon coast 55.000 Total 463.700 ties are better. In the early part of the season the fish were small, as well as orra anH Tipnrlv all were taken bV the canneries. Later, however, the larger fish came In. and tne plants were rusnea to their capacity. While to obtain official figures is Im possible, reliable estimates place this year's pack at 49S3 tons. On the basis of especially as this was expected to be a banner year, when new records would be established at some ot the plants, at least. a lie artificial propagation of salmon has . long passed the experimental stage, and the experience of the past few years has shown It to be a most effective means of Increasing the runs of salmon, and ot building up that valuable Industry, the fisheries, which until a few short years ago were fast falling into decay. Ac cordingly hatchery plants were established by the States of Oregon and Washington, and by tho Government on the various ' tributaries to the Columbia River as early as 1S95, and the work has since been pros ecuted with vigor and with an Increased outpur each succeeding year until the present season. The cause of the partial failure this year lies not so much in a lack of prep arations for handling the eggs as in the inability to secure a sufficient number of large salmon for hatchery purposes. Ore gon operated two plants. Instead of five; Washington three. In place ot four, but the Government had five plants running, instead of four. When compared with 1903, the showing made, by the hatcheries this season is especially poor. Last year the chlnook eggs taken amounted to 86,811,500, and from these 70,631,501 small fry were turned out. This year the total number of chlnook eggs taken was 18.487,540. and, only 16.63S.7S6 fry will be turned out. At the . hatcheries along the coast streams much better results are being at tained, and the output will equal. It not exceed, that of 1903. At Yaqulna 2,500,000 eggs have been taken, the Coos River plant has secured about 8,000,000, and at the Umpqua station the take exceeds 3,-000,000.