Show FOUND HIS SAVINGS It Emigrants Lost Fortune Re i turned to Him by Cable I Pocketbook Containing 886 Lett on I 1i Counter In Cigar StoreOwner Notified of Recovery by Wireless I New York There la an honest man In the South Ferry district and onboard on-board of the Oceanic steaming at n nineteen knot gait eastward by this 1 time Neston Kasko a Flop has dried his tears and calmed his tears that 88360 his savings for years has not I been lost forever but will be awaiting him when ho arrives In Stockholm I Sweden his destination Ho prob1 I ably did not know of his loss until tho big Whlto Star liner was woll past I Fire Island and about that time II j I Kaufman tho proprietor of a cigar j store was seeking tho owner of a fat wallet that ho found Mr Kaufman found the wallet among the goods displayed on top of ono of his many cigar cases and when ho opened It tho green notes almost I Jumped out when tho pressure was I taken off There wj s but ono mark of Identification In the wallet a card which bore the legend in pencil 5 Water street room 24 As soon as 11 ho could spare time to leave the store Mr Kaufman went to No 5 Water street which ho found was the Swedish Swed-ish emigrant home and told of > the circumstance to Pastor Lilja In charge Neston Kasko was found by tho books to be the last occupant of room No 24 and it was known that he do parted that morning to go to Sweden by way of England on tho Oceanic and tho liner steamed away at ten oclock sharp By this time It was three oclock In tho afternoon and Pnstor Lilja and Mr Kaufman went to Messrs Nelson Lundberg ticket brokers who It was known had sold Kasko tho ticket to know what to do next The first thing that the brokers did I was to dispatch a wireless message j to C D Lancaster purser of tho Oceanic to toll the steerage passenger passen-ger that his money had been found and would be sent on by cable to Sweden Then the money was cabled abroad to tho financial agents to Messrs Nelson Lundberg who are Instructed to pay It over the moment Kasko appears Mr Kaufman was congratulated again and again for his promptness in seeking the owner of the pocketbook pocket-book but said that it was not a new thing to him I havo had a store hero for about eight years he said but before that I kept on West street near the Pennsylvania railroad ferry Once a farmer camo In and bought something tobacco I think and after ho went away I found a pocketbook with 300 lying on tho counter I ran out and at last located tho mal on the Pennsylvania ferryboat Just about to leave the slip As near as ho could remember the purchase made by tho Finn was a fiftycent pipe and Mr Kaufman t > ah that there were dozens of customers that came In between the time the man left tho wallet and the time that It was found |