OCR Text |
Show ' A Strange Case of Abduction. Little Ermie Einor', - a winning - and extremely interesting girl of seven years, while out for a stroll on Fifth avenue last Wednesday morning, with a female relative, suddenly and strangely disappeared disap-peared from sight. At. least, this is the ' story told by her cousin, the relative above referred to. : Instead of at once reporting the fact to the child's grown sister, sis-ter, Grace Emory, or to her guardian, the cousin seemed to treat the affair with indifference, and only casually referred to the disappearance of. the child about an hour after her return home. The consternation of Grace Emory, : young lady well known in the best soci ety of New York, may be imagined on learning that her beloved sister had not been seen for some hours. The most intense excitement prevailed in the alarmed household, and in less than fifteen fif-teen minutes after receiving the startling intelligence, Grace Emory herself was at police headquarters, invoking detective aid in the search for her lost, sister. Detectives were at once put upon the case ;and one of them, on visiting the Emory mansion, to make enquiries which he deemed essential to give him a trustworthy trust-worthy clew, learned that Grace Emory had as mysteriously disappeared as her little sister. This was a startling surprise, and the detective was amazed and perplexed. per-plexed. With the aid of a bright young reporter, he took up the trail in quest of the missing girls, both of whom, he soon learned, were prospective- heiresses to a vast property. How the detective succeeded in unraveling this remarkable case of abduction is fully detailed in the stirring story of "The Murray HrLL Mystery," just begun in -No. 12 of the New York Weekly. Send for a sample copy containing this story. It will cost you nothing. Address Street & Smith, Publishers, 31 Rose street, New York. P. O. Box 2734. |