CM) Ths Dalles Daily Cbronieie. HORRORS OF THE SKAGUAY. Hardships of Men Who Gone Over the Trail. Have One Man Works EiKlit Weeks Oyer the : Difficult Pus and Is Compelled " to Give It Up and Tarn Back. , , , ' The horrors of the Skaguay trail hare only half been told. A number of men have recently returned from the White pass (which will henceioi-vt-ard be known as the Black pass) with stories fit to sicken the stoutest heart and sub due tea hottest courage.. One man, L.. J. Uiekard, of Seattle, a bright unci in telligent young: fellow, v.i'.'-i plenty of pluck and perseverance, iisEti his very best efforts to get over Use trail, but has Teturned to a mere friendly Ir.nd f or the winter, and will make anothei If ial in the spring-. He v.iU then ro b another route. He has had all cf ike Skr.gi'.ay trail that he wants. To begin with, the trail was never ready fcr triTcl, end the "promoters" who are responsible for all the waste of time and' money should be prosecuted. Itickard arrived iat Skaguay on the Islander, which de posited its passengers on August 1, and so was among the earliest earners. He had an- ordinary miner's outfit, weigh ing 1,200 pounds, two horses and $200. He considered himself fairly well equipped. He helped the others cor duroy the trail and bridge the rivers. By the time this necessary work had been done crowds of wayfarers had arrived, and soon the trail was worse than ever. In eight weeks of the hardest work he had ever done Eickard managed to get his goods to the summit of the last hill. Then his money was gone, his horses exhausted, and he had the choice of wintering in the timber by the lakes, while his food supply diminished, or of returning to California and earning more- money to again attempt the trip noithward. He figured that if he camped the winter, as so many are counting upon doing, he would have an early start in the spring, but would by that time have only two men ths pro visions left at the cutsicc, ar.ti he was already penniless. Eickard -spent his money for food and shoes f cr his horses, He says the difficulty of feeding horse: on the Skaguay trail is enormous. It was necessary to so all the wav back to Skaguay for hay, and by the- time it was brought back to the hungry ani mals waiting for it the other animal: met on the trail, by each taking a pass ing nip, had reduced the qumtity about 50 per cent. The horses are fond of Tbirch leaves, but they soon contract mud' fever, and, as they are insufficient ly fed and not sheltered at all, theyisoon beccTno worthless. Xct so many are lost on the trail as is supposed. They really die from lack of care. Horses are a good deal better on the Skaguay trail than burros, although the best thing of all would be an ox, w-hfoh is very good for muddy traveling and can carry a big load. The burros taken up are almost a failure. They are good over the rocks, but no goodi at all in the swamp, which forms about two-thirds of the distance. Eickard reports the packers have lost money on account of the mortality among the horses. They would start cut with 20 and return with 17. The most tryingplace below thesummithas. been fittingly named Dead Horse srulch Instead of one short, steep hill, as at the Chilkat, there are five Ions- hills. and Eickard thinks it isharder than the Chilkat itself. Hundreds of disappointed men at Skaguay in September were, making herculean efforts to reach the timber that lies bej-ond the summit with their goods, there to spend the winter and get a very early start down the river m the sDrins-. Thev must .mini Tmctn for snow had already fallen on the sum mit, and they must make their camp and build their log huts before snow flies, otherwise they cannot procure the moss with which to wedge the chinks of tneir nouses. It takes a strong- back andi a weak mnncll to become a. successful packer, Kicnard says. H- also says that, though quiet and orderly, the Skaguay country is the meanest in the world. Tr. rain there all the time except when it stops tong enough to snow. Mabel C. Craft, ,,AID TO SUBURBANITE MEMORY. Debtees Employed by Wives to lle ndnd Hnsbaradsi ctf Errands. it ""Talking1 of memory systems," e aid - the su'buirbamite on the accommodation train, Mcan't -for the life of cne see how a man who is unable to remember one thing is helped by having- to re member two. If I tie a string- around -.my fingeir I must recall the purpose of w.eari!g- j4-whleb, I never can, do. If I must always tltfnk of fain when I want- to carry an urnjbTlllit, I have dou 'hle work. Tfow, any wife wanted me to remember something to-day and she gave rme a.word- r say over to myself. And I've forgotten the word," "Poofli. It's easy enough to remem ber t)hing3 if you gU.ve your mind 'to it," said another suburbanite. "My wife told me to be sure to ordler some now, what tiheimlisehief was it?- Soatp? Blue ing? "Well, that's funny. I thought I would be sure to remember!" He plunged his hands into his over coat pockets to cover his chagrin, and ioulled out of orae a iwiehljit of scant- uu, vn,n a aumwraouum in icaa pca cii afctaefhed. "Well, I vow! My wife muet have stuck tha-t thing- in there. Oh, yes, I Bee. It was a load of kindling she wanted me to order. But one could hardily be expected to remember a thing like that.." .'-'""y; I "I wish I could find a reminder of what I am to get as easy as you 65id j tut my wife doesn't believe in giving cample to help out a joor memory. Hst'o, old fellow, how's that?" tie had pulled a little rubber sfhtoeotrt of "his poeket and was regarding it with loving eyes. ; , - "Earoany's overshoe, by all thats .-jueert And (here's something inside. '.Oength. five inches. Bless his little heart, Td have forgot all about them if it hadn't been for 'this memory lesson. There's something in the system after all." Chicago Times-Herald. " , . MODERN SCIENCE. Predictions for tbe Twentieth Cen tury Are Broad. It may be that we are, with.respect to the coming century, in the same imma ture mental condition in which the peo ple of the eighteenth century were with regard to the nineteenth, says the Pop ular Science Monthly. If some one in the preceding century had dared to pre dict the wonderful achievements of the nineteenth, he would probably have been declared a fool, and treated as was Kobert Mayer, in Germany, in this century, who, after the discovery of the law of the conservation of force, was put into an insane asylum. A like fate might befall the man who should: dare now to cast a horoscope for the twen tieth century, and to predict the prog ress of the human mind in the various domains cf scientific research. After all, those may be right who, in spite of all those acquisitions on which we so justly pride ourselves, are of opinion that we are still moving in only the initiah-steps, in the leading strings of evolution, and that we are yet very far from the goal of those material and ideal aims which the human race in its unremitting onward struggle, is des tined to attain, or to show its capacity of attaining. The great Sir Isaac Jfew- ton used, perhaps, the most appropriate simile when he compared men with children who on the seashore are pick ing up here and there a curious pebble or colored shell while the great' sea of truth lies still unexplored before them, We can only conjecture as to the prob able progress, as we cannot know which position we occupy in the course of hu man evolution, whether we are still in its beginnings or well advanced. This lias hidden in the bosom of the future. STRICT BOARDING SCHOOL Three Callers a Year at Twenty Min- ntes a Call for Girl Stndcnts. ' The young ladies ox the normal school in Winona were lately throwr, into a flurry of excitement, says the St Paul (Minn.) Dispatch. Xtiey wen called into one oi the recitation-raomf and put through a rigid examination about the number of callers each had and a description of each caller. They were told that it was highly impropei to receive a caller from out of the city. and that many of the young men of the city were not proper persons with whom to associate. It was also considered tughly im proper to receive a call which was ol more than 20 minutes duration. In all over a dozen questions were required t: be answered, all of which were in regard to the subject of gentlemen callers. A number of rules wercrriven to thr young ladies, which they were told they must obey. Among them was one for bidding the same young men to call upon them more than three times year, and then the call must be purclj formal and not exceed 15 or 20 minutes The young ladies were also requested to furnish a list of their callers and their characters, and as to the general subjects of conversation when calling or riding, and if the landlady where they boarded approved of the young men. - ..Some of the young ladies arc indig nant, , and say they will not submit tc KV.ch rules, while others believe they are all right, and propose to follow them. Little Attentions. - If husbands only realized what the little attentions mean to their wives there would be many: happier unions. It is not the cost of a gift that makes it preciaus to the recipient. A tiny bunch of violets brought home at hight betokens the thought, given to her even while business occupies his attention, the most trifling souvenir of a wedding or birthday anniversary becomes a sen timent underlying its ' proffering. Women may be foolish, they may be all heart and very little reason, but the man' who understands their nature and caters to it is the one who stands higher in their estimation than the one who acts as though all they- cared about was material comfort given With any sort of brusquerie. Of course there are many mercenary ! women thousands and thousands who can marry for a home and for Tich raiment. ' .These pooh-pooh the violets and value only the diamonds, but the average feminine heart, the sort which a man wants to beat beside his own, the foundation of truest sympathy and love, is moved more by the little attentions in which sentiment is involved than by the great offerings" representing only a stupen dous sum of money involved. 2T. Y. Ledger. j SHEEP KILLED BY DOGS. Facts "Ascertained Through Offi cial Census Figures. ' -. The Damage Done 1jr Worthless Cars Exceeds That Resulting; from the Fury of the j Elements Shonine by States. The dogs in the United States kill nearly two per cent of the sheep in the country every ?year. J.ney Kiueat more than 600,000" sheep in . the. year ending June 1, 1800, when the last sta tistics in regard to the flocks were gath ered. The damage done by them is greater than that from any other cause except unexpected storms, in . which whole flocks of sheep are killed, and dis ease. . In six states more damage was done to the flocks of sheep by dogs' than by anything else- In Florida D,833 sheep ' were . killed by dogs,' and only 4,750 by the weather and disease. The number killed by dogs was about nine per cent, of the total number of sheep in the state. The Florida sheep are not exposed to such changes in temperature as those on the farms in Nevada, where 128,850 died of cold and disease. Only 7,372 sheep were killed by dogs in Ne vada in the census year. The enormous number of deaths from changes in the weather was due to 1 unprecedented storms, which caught the bifecders un--prepared and almost halved their flocksj In South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana and Arkansas dogs do more damage to sheep than anything else, and more than weather conditions and disease combined. ' In Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut the num ber of deaths in the flocks due to dogs is almost the same as that due to disease and the weather. This is true in Mis sissippi, too. In this state, Maine, New Jersey, Pennsvlvania, Nebraska, Ari zona and the Dakotas, one-fifth as much damage is charged to dogs as to the other chief causes of loss. The dogs made the best showing in Vermont, where they killed 3,0n: sheep, against 28,000 which died from disease and exposure in an average winter. The Ohio and Michigan dogs have good records, too, for they killed only one sixth as many sheep as storms and dis ease. North Carolina and Tennessee dogs are red with the blood of ,; sheep. They killed four-fifths as many as the other causes of deatn combined. In Kentucky, Texas, West Virginia, In diana, Minnesota and Iowa the dogs did one-half as much damage as other causes combined; in Virginia, Missouri and Oklahoma,, two-thirds as much; in Illinois and Wisconsin, one-third as much, and in Delaware, Maryland, Kan sas, California and New Hampshire, one-quarter as much. If the winter of 1889-90 had not been a bad one for sheep in Nevada, Oregon, Idaho, Montana,- . New texico, Utah, Washington and Wyoming, the dogs would make a worse showing in the cen sus tables than they do. In these states whole flocks on certain ranges were ex terminated, and thus the percentage of deaths due to exposure and disease was raised to 6.95 for the whole coun try. 'The dogs killed nearly two per cent, of the total sheep population. The sheep raisers don't like uogs as a general thing. Many states use the money received from dog taxes to pay for the- damage they do.-: In these states some of the farmers are not un- friendly to the dogs. If a sh?ep dies or is killed by a wildcat or falls from a ledge of rock,, the thrifty farmer, re turn s it to the proper officers as a sheep killed by dogs. Then he gevs paid for it. Sometimes a New England farm er, when he loses st sheep, wiil collect the value of it from the county and from the owner of the dog that killed' it. Sheep-killing dogs become well-known in the community wrhere their masters live. Sometimes the dogs are such good hunters that their masters refuse to allow them to be killed, and try to keep them from ; doing any damage. Such a dog owner is an er-sy mark for the unscrupulous sheep breeders. Every time a sheep is killed, dies or disappears, the owner will go to the deg's master and demand pay for the dead animal, threatening to have the dog killed if its owner does not pay up. The dog may be innocent, but because it bears a bad reputation its owner submits. If there , are more owners' of sheep killers than one, the farmer may collect from eacit and make a good thing of his sheep. He may collect from the Coun ty, too. . ' -' Most dogs that kill sheep are bad dogs all the way through, and sports men and farmers unite in trying to get rid of them. A sheep-killing dog is j usually a tramp, untrained and worth less for hunting... Many of the dogs that kill sheep are ownerless. The farmers shoot them wnen they can, and sportsmen, anxious that their dogs shall not be accounted bid 'because of the misdeeds of ownerless curs, help them. Some farmers set traps for sheep killers. , The traps are like wolf traps, and are set where a sheep is killed, the body of the sheep being used for bait. Sheep-killing dogs usually visit the scenes of their depredations as a mur derer is said to haunt the spot where he commits a crime. The farmers and brecders..ccunt cn this, ar.d set their traps accordingly. Sometimes they put arsenic in the carcass to make sure that the guilty dog. Ehall not es.-ape. When a real Eheep-liiliing dog gets into a flock cf sheep he kills as many as he can. lie does net kill f or f ooc but for fun, apparently, and he finds his rv" easy, for '"n nhccrj can't fisht 'hack, and don't Snow enough, to run. They don't run fast enough to escape, anyway, and their only hope of salva tion lies in scattering." This the sheep won't do, but persist obstinately in fol lowing the bell wether while the dog kills them. N. 1". Sun. .. THE WOLF: AND THE EAGLE. A Legend of Two Yonng Saranae In- , dian Warriors. When we think of the Indians, we are apt to remember only the harsh and ruel traits that they have shown; but ra tneir stories! ana legenas many noble qualities are hidden under their cruelty, like pearls in the uncouth shell of the oyster. In one of these legends we are told that there used to be a great many wiz ards among the tribes, or sachems, as the Indians called them, who were coun selors in. the camp, hut whose chief de light was in doing evil. They worked so much mischief in ' the huniting grounds that at last the Great Spirit locked them in the hollow trees that grew along the trail. Some of them, in their struggles to es cape, thrust their arms out of the trees, but the closing wood imprisoned them, and they may be seen tothis day, twist ed and distorted in agony, as gnarled roots ' " and yvithered, : trunks and branches. Others survived this : terrible trans formation, and among them was Oqua rah, a bent, decrepit, aged sachem, cruel and evil minded, and jealous lest his power should .wane, or be eclipsed by that of a rival. The fate of his brother sachems did not arouse pity in his heart, nor did it soften him to know that he had been spared. . -. -. Oquarah lived with a trib.e of. the Saranacs, in which were two ., young) warriors, whose bravery and4ruth com manded the admiration and love of their companions. One of these braves was called -the Wolf, the other the Eagle, and they were friendly rivals in all deeds of valor. One day, in the moon of great leaves, when the hunting groundsiwere starred with flowers, and the soft south wind blew over the land, the Wolf and the Eagle left the camp and set out upon a hunt. The hours passed, and the Wolf re turned alone. Loud and angry cries greeted him as he appeared thus, but he stood silent, till, by the sternness of his look, he quelled the tumult. Then he told them that he and the Eagle had hunted for hours together, but at last had become suparated; and that when the time came to return, he had searched in vain for the Eagle. . . His words were received in silence; but presently Oquarah spoke, Oquarah, the cruel sachem. "I hear a forked tongue," he said. "It says that the Wolf was jealous of the Eagle, and that his teeth have cut into the heart of his friend!" "The Wolf cannot lie!" answered the young chief, and. then he stood pas sive, quiet. Then the sachem clutched his hatchet, and cried in rage: - ' "Where is the Eagle?" "The Wolf has spoken," answered the young chief. At that, Oquarah raised his hatchet and struck at the Wolf, but the Wolf's ! wif threw herself before her husband, auu 1 1 1 1; iiaiuucL' biuia iulu uci ucau. Them, with a cry of rage, the Wolf drew his knife, and a- moment, later the sai chem. fell with a mortal wound in his heart. Great ' excitement and discord fol lowed these tragic events, and finally the tribe divided, half of them following the Wolf down the Great Sounding river in search of new hunting grounds. But the Wolf was very unhappy. . He had lost his friend and his wife, and his tribe had been broken up; , all through the evil suspicions of the cruel sachem..; ; - '.'-.! : -' : 1 -V..1- Many years passed,' and the Wolf be came great in his tribe. . But when ever his tribe met the other, the ground between their hunting ground was wet with blood." One day the tribe on the, Upper Sar anae saw a canoe appear on the Lake of the Silver Sky, and in it was the Eagle. He told them how he had been1 sepa rated from thCt Wolf, ; and' had fallen into a cleft of a great rock, from which he was rescued by some soldiers from Canada. They had taken him with1 them, and he had fought with the Brit ish against the French.7 : As the years passed, and he grew old, however, his heart yearned for the people of his tribe, andrhe had come back' to die among them. . ' . . ' '.''--. When he heard that the Wolf had been accused of his death, he was very sad; but he called a meeting of the war riors of the two camps, and peace was made between 'them. So the Eagle died, at last, happy in the knowledge that he had cleared his friend and re united his people. Philadelphia Times. i'." 'The Gold Product, : The preliminary estimates of the di rector of the mint indicate that the world's gold product for 1897 amounted to about $240,000,000. This-is an in crease of nearly 20 per cent, over 1896. All of the great sources of supply show a gain. The. United States leads the list, with a product of $61,500,000; but is closely followed by- Africa with a' product of $58,000,000, and Australia with $51,000,000. ' Bussia, Mexico, Can ada and India- follow in the order named Bussia with $25,000,000, Mexico with $10,C00,C00 and Canada and India each' with $7,500,000.;.- ' , ., NOW THE TURKEY FOOT. A New: Charm That la Worn by the Superstitious. The Rabbit's Foot, So Lone Popalar, . fetas Been Displaced by the Mew ,'. Mascot An Old Negro's :v' Talk. ,''', The rabbit's foot is not in the' race any. longer as a charm. What has caused the downfall of bunnie's hind foot as a protection against all "e-yil and an assurance, of .perpetual good luck for its happy possessor is rather a puzzling question and one which the fair sex and the advocates ofthe new fad would find it hard to explain. Per haps the late presidential campaign may have had something to do with it. Every: one knew that the silver candi date was presented with a rapbit's foot immediately' upon receiving his nom iiiation, and that the mascot complied with all the requirements of the case, for it was "the left hind foot of a molly cottontail, that had been killed in the full of the moon, t 12 o'clock at night in a graveyard, by a red-headed nigger." Well, the rabbit having enjoyed so treat and so long a run of popularity, in the natural course of events, the time has come for him to step down and oat. He has done so, and his place has been taken by oue of the kings of the farmyard the lordly turkey. Fashion decrees that in order to be lucky one must wear in some manner or possess in some shape or other a turkey's claw. ; .. " This fad is so new that it has hardly reached the counters yet, except in one or two shops. Which pride themselves upon "bringing out all the most ex clusive novelties. Of course, it will eventually become as common as the craze for rabbits' feet, but to-day it is a very difficult thing to find a turkey's claw prepared in the proper style for a charm against bad luck. The most popular style at present is the natural claw, properly treated by a taxidermist, its shank covered by a sil ver or gold cap set, with an amethyst, -turquoise or the new green ' stone, which resembles an emerald. The tip of the nail is covered with a gold or silvef cap, with a fine chain to match the cap from the shank to what one might call the wrist of the claw, and a pretty scarlet ribbon bow with long ends tied just below the shank. ' These new mascots are so arranged that they can be hung up as ornaments, or used as paper weights or table orna ments. In one case I saw one profusely bejeweled, which was intended for a cabinet. As dress ornaments they are, so far, but little used, though I was told they were being fashioned into clasps for fastening golf capes at the neck. I asked an. old colored man if he had ever heard of the turkey's claw as be ing an unlucky, or lucky charm. ' "Why, yes," he replied. "Down south, where' I come from, it is better and luckier to steal your Thanksgivin' or Christmas turkey. I don't hold with the fashion of stealing anything, but if you can only steal your turkey for the holiday dinner you will have erood luck all the rest of the year. In the old Cays I the 'massa' would put away a lot of tur j keys, and the darkies would go in the night, just at 12 o clock, and steal the birds." . ; ,: t "But what about the claw? What good luck does that bring?" ' ' "Why, bless your; heart, don't you know that the turkey's foot is an aw ful lucky thing? Vou must take .the claw after, you have cleaned your tur key a stolen one, mind you dip it in salt, bury it, you better say, in a dish of salt for a whole week, and let it lie there, so that all thei bits of flesh which ; stick to it are .cleaned away, and your I foot is jUst as sweet as a nut. Then i you take it out and scrape it and clean j it and polish it, until it just shines like .a piece of stone. Then you put it up j over your door, and! no bad luck, sick ness or anything can come in during . the year." . 1 ' , - "Will it keep out death?" v ' "No, ma'am, it will not. Don't you konw sometimes death is the biggest piece of good luck that can happen to you?" : j , v .. ', V "But do you know why turkey's foot is lucky?" j w "I never heard but one reason, and that was that after the ; devil had tempted Eve and Was crawling-away after getting her to eat the apple, he came afross the turkey's path and the turkey: lifted up his right foot and struck at his head.j The blow was' so hard that the devil was. stunned for a moment. . And that Is the reason of the turkey's right foot being lucky against Wad fortune." N. Y.IHerald. : Enterprising Druggist. Tnere are" fear. roJn more wide awake and enterprising than BIakel?y &. Hough on, who spare no pairis to secure the beet of everything in their line for their many customers. They 'now, have the valuable . agency for Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. This is . the ! wonderful remedy that ia producing such a furor all over the country by its many startling cares It absolutely cures Asthma, Bronchitis', Hoarseness and all; affections of the throat, chest and lungs. Call at: the above, drugstore and get . a trial bottle free or a regular . sizo for 50 cents and $1. Guaranteed to jcure -or; price re loaded, i :.. . .-. Oa Mi &Mi GO Depart .; time schkddlk. Arkivx. fob fsoxDAUis. From. Fast Salt Lake, Denver, Ft. Fast Jluil Wortb, Omaha, Kan- Mail. 11:50 p.m. sas City, St. Louis, 3:10 a.m. , .. Chicago and East.,. ... Spokane Walla Walla, Spokane, Spokane Flyer Minneapolis. St. Paul, Flyer. 5:30 p.m.. Dn 1 u t h, Milwaukee, 6:50 a.m. , i -Chicago and East. . 8 p.m. From PoinXANn. 4 p. m. Ocean Steamships. AU Sailing dates subject ' . to change. , ' For Ban Francisco Nov. 28, Dec. 3, 8, 13, 18, 83, 28, Jan. 2, 7. - - . ' - . ; ' ' :' ' : ?'-'-,.". v-- ' 8 p. m. 4 p. m. Ex. Sunday Columbia Rv. Steamers. Ex.Sundaj .To Astoria and Way Saturday Landings. 10 p. m. 6 a.m. Willamette River. 4: 30. p.m. Ex.Sunday Oregon City, Newberg, Ex.bunday Salem & Way Land's. 7 a. m, Wiixamettk and Yam- 8:30 p.m. Tues.Tlmr. hill Rivers. Mon.,Wed., and but. Oregon City, Dayton, and Fri. and Way-Landings... 6 a.m. Willamette River. 4:30 p.m. Tne..Thur, Portland . to Corvallis, Tue., Thur and Sat. and Way-Landings. and Sat, . - Leave Lv Riparia Snake River. . Lewiston. daliy Riparia to Lewiston. dally rxcept . except Saturday. Friday. For full particulars call on O. R. & N. Uo.'a' agent The Dalles, or address W. H. HTJRLBNRT, -. Gen. Pas. Agt., Portland, O Northern PACIFIC RY. H : S Pullman Elegant Tourist Sleeping Cars Dining Cars Sleeping Car 8T PAUL. MIN.NEAFOU DPLCTH VAKOO OKAND FOR CROOKBTOS WINNIPEG ' HELENA an If 1TXTB TO Thtoagh Tickets CHICAGO . WASHINGTON ' , - ' PHILADELPHIA SEW YORK BOSTON AND ALL POINTS EAST und SOUTH -" For Information, time cards, maps and ticket, cal on or write to - '"( W. C. AIXAW AY.' Agent, . ' The Dalles, Oregon :' OR .- A. D. ARLTON, Asst. G. P."AM - 25 rrison Cor. Third. Portland Oregon WE DOJjJJ FIRST-CLASS WORK. REASONABLE PRICES; Chronicle Pub. Co. THE DALLES, OREGON. Are You Interested? The O. It. & N. Co'i New Book On the Eesourses of Oregon, Washing ton and Idaho la being distributed. Oar readers are requeeted to forward the addresses of their Eastern friends and acquaintances, and a copy of the work will be sent them free, , This is a mat ter all ehould be interested in, and we would. ask that, everyone take an in terest and forward such addresses to W. H. Hitelburt, General Passenger Agent, O. R. & N. Co.,: Portland." y,i Printing