UNCLAIMED MILLIONS. FORTUNES UC IN THE HANDS OF ADMINISTRATORS. PUB- Struce Beanhci for Heirs to Larce Fortunrs In Brooklyn A Strange DIs mppeannca The Fund In Charge of the State Treasurers Keeps Increasing. Speaking rtraghly there is at the pres ent time over j.UOO,000 in hard cash in the hands of the various state treasurers in this country awaiting the claim of legal heirs. This large amount has been deposited -with the treasurers from time to time by public administrators. Of this f5,000,000 the New York state treas urer has about $250,000, and although he pays out now and then certified claims from the administrative fund it keeps steadily increasing in a ratio with the population of the state. The public administrator of Brooklyn . furnishes the following cases from his record books: , . ; . Thomas Wilson sold newspapers in : Brooklyn's Twentieth ward for a gener- ation. His route was an aristocratic - one, comprising such streets as Clinton &nd Clermont avenues, in which are the homes of millionaires. He peddled his wares in all sorts of weather, appeared on the streets in rain and shine every day and far into the night, and even , made a feeble attempt to brave the fury of the . big blizzard of March 12, 1888. Be had no friends, no confidants, no as sociations; and he lodged in the attic of a miserable tenement ' house. One day :. in the spring of 1889 his legs refused to carry mm along his route, and he went for succor and shelter to the Brooklyn hospital. Here he was warned that he had but a . short time to live and was told to com municate with his friends, if he had any. Old Tom shook his head negatively ana aiea inai nignt wiuiout making a sign. Five bank books were found under his pillow, showing three or four thou sand dollars to his credit in different in stitutions. The administrator could learn nothing about him in the banks, where he had told different stories about him self. It is thought he was of Swedish origin and that bis real name was Nil ' son, not Wilson. THE CASE OF LAUGIER. Then there was Joeeph Langier, a name common enough in the south of , -France, in Marseilles especially. Langier was also a solitary man, living or, rather, grubbing in an Atlantic avenue garret. He ' paid the janitor a dollar a month for his miserable room.' He wen t -out and he came in, Bpoke to nobody and answered questions by shaking or nod ding his head. One day he went forth for the last time staggered and fell at . the next corner. $vaa taken into a saloon, thence conveyed in an ambulance to Long Island College hospital, where he ' died after a few hours. In the pockets of his coat were found bonds, mortgages and bank books worth $17,000 to the owner, also a will drawn up in excellent legal phraseology and written in a beautiful hand. His signa ture was affixed to the will, but it lacked the names of witnesses. So careful had he been in preparing the instrument that he affixed an explanatory para graph, underlined in red ink. In a codi cil he revokes the will, so that he really died intestate. Rumor says Langier's heir is a nephew living in Marseilles, a sister's son, whom, if the administrator could locate, would inherit $17,000. 1 Wilnam Cato is another of the great intestate for whose heirs the adminis- . trator is looking. Cato was no tramp or news vender. He was a marine in the service of the United States, and had been one for such a length of time that lie had only a vague memory of what he had been before. His comrades had an idea that ho was Scotch, and that is all they could tell about him. He died sud denly while still in the service, leaving $1,000 or so he had saved out of his small Cresham lived on Third ave nue, near Forty-sixth street. South Brooklyn, and was in good circum stances. His wife died in the spring of 1889, and the loss drove him crazy. A week later he committed suicide. He left a good deal of property to which bis little 4-year-old daughter was heiress. His brother, a well to do New York car riage builder, was the legal guardian of the little girl, but there happened just then to be in the house a sister of the child's mother. She was on a visit from Ireland, and had arrived just in time to see her sister die. The night of the day Cresham committed suicide the aunt took the little girl stealthily out of . her bed and out of the house, went over to Hew York, and on the morning follow ing sailed for Queenstown in the Um bria. Mr. Cresham, the uncle and legal guardian, reported the theft to the po lice, and they cabled to Queenstown to have the aunt .arrested on her arrival in that port. Now, it happened that owing to a great storm the Umbria could not put in at Queenstown, and bo went di rectly on to Liverpool, where no police were waiting for a handsome lady of the name of Miss Crowe and her 4-year-old niece. Miss Crowe arid the child are still in Europe, and the legal fight has not yet been decided. New York Tele gram. ' An Vglj Habit. I wonder what saccharine or succulent qualities . inhere in -wooden toothpicks that bo many persons cling so persistently to those unlovely little instruments long after they have performed the service for which they were designed. On any ele vated railway train onels sure to see one or two men with toothpicks protruding from their lips, as if to advertise to the world a recent breakfast. - Not all of those who make this exhibition are ill dressed or boorish, and one is left to con ' jecturein vain why a particularly private portion of the toilet is thus thrust upon public attention. New York Star. It Is Hard. "Why don't you shave yourself and save time and money?' "Because I can't bear to cut an old ac quaintance." Life. Parlor Car Porter's Experience, Thaddeus Rich, the former valet of John L. Sullivan, when that gentleman was sporting editor of The Illustrated News, had five years experience on the Chicago trains of the New York Central. "I did fairly well with the company," said Thaddeus; "I had only $15ainonh salary, but my taps made it up to about $30. I made a good many friends. Iwa3 treated with especial kindness by the Vanderbilts, Mr. Armour, of Chicago; CoL Harker, police commissioner of Cin cinnati, and I don't know how many oth ers. The most liberal traveler I ever met was Mrs.' Williams, of Cambridge, Mass, I mean Mrs. Williams, the sister of George Lewis, the Lewis who is celebrat ed for giving diamonds away. This lady not only tips the porter but tips the drrv er, the guard, the fireman, the cook, the waiter, and every servant on the tram. not with paltry nickels or. a dollar, but with $5 bills and sometimes tens. "Speaking of liberal people I mustn't forget to mention John L. Sullivan. He never gave me less than $5 for blacking zus ooots on tne cars, ile often gave me more. Especially one morning when he bad jumped on me. You see he was talk ing in . his sleep and rolling about rest lessly. I went toward him and tried to make him comfortable. The moment I touched him, however, he leaped up and we Dotn reu 1 or a heap on the floor, and with such a racket that everybody wak ened up. John L. woke up, too, and was much disgusted when he surveyed the circus, as the bedclothes had come with him from the top berth. I gathered my self together the best way I could and crept to a corner, while John L. got back into bed and was soon sleeping again. In the morning when he left the car he handed me a $20 bilL" New York World. Took Aivay tUe darvard Man's Breath. Two men were walking down town to business the other day. One of them was a Harvard man. The other was graduated " at a most venerable and yet somewhat , formidable rival of that uni versity whose motto is "Lux et Veritas." They had arrived at City Hall park, and Were picking their doubtful way through the crowd which was surging between the elevated station and Frankfort street. Suddenly the Yale man exclaimed: "Hold on a minute, old fellow! I want to speak to a friend.' The Harvard man turned and saw his friend in the act of shaking hands with a line looking, middle aged man who "wore a long silken beard, and whose sun- browned face and powerful frame showed the good effect of many vacation moons spent upon the wave and in the depths or tne rorest. The Yale man continued in earnest conversation with the hand some looking man for a few moments, and then, after a leave taking which was almost Drotnerly on both sides, joined ms comraae, .who said: " "Who was that man?" "iiur saia ms menu; "aidn t you recognize him? Why, we sat near him and his family on the grand stand at the football championship game up at New Haven in 1880. That was the famous '.Professor B. W.' He was my division omoer once, and is one of the most popu lar instructors at Yale." "Well, that is just like you fellows," saia tne other; "but." continued he. should just like to see what would nan- pen to a Harvard man if he were to stop a proiessor or tnat university in a crowd as you did Professor W. that's all" New York Tribune. Ambulatory Rails. A Sst. Louis civil engineer says the rails on the St. Louis bridge were never stationary, but constantly crept to the east; that is, in the direction of the heaviest travel. The rate of progress, he said, was about 260 feet in the year, or would be if the rails w ru permitted to creep as they pleased, which, of course, they are not permitted to do. It reminded him of a hill in southwest Missouri, over which a turnpike road was constructed,- and, do what they would, the people could not keep the road up and down the sides of that hill in good condition. The stones would creep to the bottom, and in six months the road would be as bad as ever. They finally had to take up the gravel and macadam and replace them with good sized blocks of rough stone. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Pennsylvania Stogies. Their origin is worth recording. It appears that in the old days the drivers of the Cpnestoga wagons, so common years ago on our national pike, used to buy very cheap cigars. To meet this demand a small cigar manufacturer in Washington. Pa., whose name is lost to fame, started in to make a cheap "roll up" for them at four for a cent These became very popular with the drivers and were at first called Conestoga cigars, since, by usage, corrupted into "stogies" and "tobies." It is now estimated that Pennsylvania and West Virginia pro duce about 200,000,000 stogies yearly, probably all for home consumption.' New York Telegram. . Wonders of Selenee. Lady Do you take instantaneous pho tographs? Photographer Yes, madam; I can the pnotograph a humming bird wing or a swallow in its flight. Lady I want my baby's taken. Photographer Yes, madam, little fellow ready, and I will on picture Get the prepare the chloroform. New York Weekly. Catching- Kstt with a Decoy. A mechanical decoy rat has reached the patent office. It is made to resemble a rat with a piece of cheese stuck on a little spear, which projects just beyond its nose.. When a real rat nibbles the cheese the spear darts forward about six inches and the animal is impaled. Lon don Tit-Bits. A Close Approach. ' Wife You look worried; harried, in fact. Husband Well, I've not been har rowed exactly, but I've been shaved by poor barber. Good News. North Dalles to the Front. . The sale of lots continue to increase each day as contracts are eloped out for im provements, lu a few days active work will begin towards erecting several fine dwellings. Several prominent gen tlemen of The Dalles and Portland will erect residences at North Dalles. ' Mr. O. D. Taylor, President & General Manager of the Interstate Investment Co., with Mr. S. L. iSkeels will leave for the east in a few days with a view of meeting capitalists and closing out for manufactories. Two railroads are now ' headed , for North Dalles and the coming spring will make the Real Estate market in North Dalles lots lively. You will never again get lots as cheap as you can for the next few days, for the demands and the company will advance them soon. We would like to see every one of our citizens make money in lots at North Dalles. Many letters continue . to arrive from the Sound making inquiries and in most cases purchasing. We confidently expect to see not less than fifty houses underway by the be ginning of the new year. Mark what we say. Lots will advance rapidly at North Dalies. For further information address O. D. Taylor, President & General Manager of the Interstate - Investment Co., The Dalles, Or. Charles E. Dunham, -DEALER IX- CHEMICALS, Fine Toilet Soaps, Brushes, Combs, Perfumery and Fancy Toilet Articles. Iii Great Yarietv. Pure Brandy, Wines and liiquofs fot JVIediei nal Purposes. Physicians' Prescriptions Accurately Compounded. Gor. Union and Second Sts., The Dalles -TMJ Old Qerapia FRANK ROACH, Propr. The place to get the Best Brands ofj WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS. S EX T DOOR TO THE. J Washington Warket, Seeond St. Don't Forget the ERST END P0)i, MacDonal! Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. 0. K. Restaurant! Kelt to Passenger Depot. Day and Monthly Boarders, LUNCH COUNTER AT NIGHT. Meals CENTS. Misses. N. & N. BUTS. H. STONEMAN, Next door to Columbia Candy Factory. Soots and Shoes Hade to Older, and f?EPAIftED. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Quick Work. . Prices Reasonable. Drugs mm H. C. NIELS6N, Clothier and Tailor, Qpoxx-te.' Pii tt i l?at5 Qaps, - Boots and COKM.K or SIX O A 13 AND WASHINGTON ST.9.. TIIF. DAU.EA. or.rr.oK. Abstracters, Heal Estate and Insurance Agents. Abstracts of, and Information Concern ing Land Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rent, Parties Looking for Houses in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF Buiqe Location, Should Call on or Write to us. Agents for a Full Line of LeaJini Fire Insurance Coipaiies, And Will Write Insurance for on all DESIRABLE EISKB Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, - The Dalles, Or, "SflJVIPIlE KOOJVIS," Corner Second and Union Streets. CHf?IS BlLiliS, Prop. The Best of Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS ON SALE Mr. Bills will aim to supply bis customers with the best in bis line, both oi imported and do- mesne goods. JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a ' ZjuhoIx Counlov, In Connection With His Fruit Stand and Will Serve Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs' Feet, and Fresh Oysters. . Convenient to the Passenger Depot. On Second St., near corner of Madison. Also a Branch Bakery, California Orange Cider, and the Best Apple Cider. If you want a good lunch, give me a call. V Open all Night Health is Wealth ! BRA Lit Dr. E. C. West's Nerve anb Brain Treat ment, a guaranteed specific for Hvsteria. Dizzi ness, t onvulsioiiH, I-its, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache. Nervous Prostration pmiKnl hv th uu of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decav and death, Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex. Invuluntarv Iwses and Hivmai. orrhopa caused by over exertion of the bruin, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment, f 1.00 a box, or six boxes for .-.O0, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WK GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by .r.00, ve will send the purchaser our written frimmn tr m. fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued onlv bv BLAKELKV Sc HOUGHTON,. Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. Tbe Dalles. Or. $500 Reward! We Will UV the above ivwnnl Fro- anv nu f Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfac tion, sugar coatea. Large boxes containing 30 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi. tations. The genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN C. WEST COMPANY, CHICAGO, 1 LUNOIqi BLAKELEY & HOUGHTON, Prescrlntion Ilm .irUta 175 Second St. Tne Dalles. Or. avii - yi g Qoods, Tm9KS Ualises, Shoes, Eto. : TQB Dalles is here and has come to stay.. It hopes to win its way to public favor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end we ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous support. " . - The Daily four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Objects will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in. developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing' helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of The paper, both daily and weekly, will be independent in politics, and in! its criticism of political matters, as in its handling of local affairs, it will be JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask that your criticism of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. N For the benefit of shall print the first issue about 2,000 copies for free distribution, and shall print from time to so that the paper will reach every citi zen of Wasco and adjacent counties. THE WEEKLY, sent to any address It will contain from four to six eight column pages, and we shall endeavor to make it the equal your Postmaster for THE CHRONICLE PUB. GO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second'Sts. GHiClG an onpn tHtot. onri iv Eastern Oregon. our advertisers we time extra editions, for $1.50 per year. of the best. Ask a copy, or address. r h