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Show j GOT SUBE ENOUGH BARGAIN. I j ! One good filing about a shirtwaist that a young woman bought'- for 9S cents in' Mrs. Anna Wassennann's dry goods stove, in Xcw York, was $5!)fl that was wrapped up in it. Shirtwaists, as .Mrs. Wnssermann herself said, do not Come that way this season as a general gen-eral rule, and tlie young woman who paid the f).S cents seems to be well pleased with her exceptionable bargain. She has not been back for alterations or an exchange, and Mrs. Wassermann became convinced that to continue lo expect, that she w6uld come back was trt place an unjustilieablc strain on hope. So she asked Captain Dooly of the Bedford avenue station to try to find the young .woman. , Mrs. Wassermann had a sale of shirtwaists, shirt-waists, and she offered' some really, ro-niarkablc ro-niarkablc bargains. Among them was a China silk; waist worth $2.25 of anybody's any-body's money, but jfor one day only marked down to 'AS cents. A young woman who was a stranger in the store, appeared and fell in love with the OS-cent: OS-cent: bargain at once. : ' When Mrs. Wassermann wrapped it. up she wrapped up with it $595' that she had placed on the counter prcpar atory to placing it, in a bank. She Fears that the' bargain-hunting voting woman has placed it in a bank herself by this time. Shirtwaists,' 4 the regular value of which is $2.25, bear such a familv resemblance re-semblance to one another that the policemen po-licemen who are looking for the one in which the $505 went home think they have a difficult task. |