126 THE OREGON SPORTSMAN 



and lions at the zoo. The park is frequented by thousands of 

 people every day and in order to prevent accidents, the range is 

 on the shore of Lake Michigan and the danger zone on the lake 

 is fenced off by buoys to prevent motor boats from coming too 

 close. 



IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE. 



"The Oregon Game Commission will find it a profitable 

 investment to spend one thousand dollars a year in advertising 

 Oregon's fishing and hunting advantages/' said Mr. Joseph C. 

 Rader, of Eeading, Pennsylvania, who has just returned to his 

 eastern home. 



Mr. Rader said that he was attracted to Oregon by the lec- 

 tures given • by the woman commissioner from Oregon at the 

 Buffalo Exposition in 1901, and that he knows of five permanent 

 settlers in Oregon as the result of the same woman's work. These 

 five families brought to Oregon for investment about $462,000. 



Mr. Rader has been visiting the expositions in California 

 and stopped in Oregon for an outing. He went to the Hood 

 River valley to make a visit to Lost Lake. He made the trip to 

 the lake on foot, carrying a Klondike pack. He said the ice was 

 not all out of the lake and that there was some fallen timber 

 across the road beyond Cedar springs. This is Mr. Rader 's 

 third visit to Oregon, but his first to Lost Lake. He said he had 

 excellent fishing. 



According to Mr. Rader, the sportsmen who are organized 

 throughout the state of Oregon are doing splendid work in pro- 

 tecting game birds and animals and in helping to get more fish 

 into our streams. This work will be the means of bringing a 

 great deal of money into Oregon, for there are many people all 

 through the eastern states who are willing to cross the continent 

 for good fishing and hunting. 



FISHING IN WALLOWA LAKE. 



Wallowa lake is one of the most popular summer resorts for 

 those who like outdoor life. It is beautifully located in the edge 

 of the mountains. For several years it has been well stocked 

 with fish by the Fish and Game Commission and even the most 



