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Show A8MKEWM Tfi CLAI1 A FORTUNE I I j LOSE PURSE ON TRAIN BEFORE I REACHING METROPOLIS. ! Mother and Daughter Lodged in Mir-nicipal Mir-nicipal Lc'J3'"3 House Being Unable Un-able to Find Lawyers. New York. May 10 Mrs. Lottie Me-Calf, Me-Calf, a whiow, and her daughter. Miss j Elizabeth McCall, 19 years old. cam ! to New York last Friday from their I home in New Orleans to collect a l"g-I l"g-I ncy of $30.0iio, but last night, they I were forced lo teek shelter in thu municipal lodging house. Mrs. McCVll Is a niece of James McCall, a well-known well-known Alabama horseman and Fhe has two uncles in Chicago, both named McCall, who are in prosperous circuMi-stances. circuMi-stances. Mrs. McCall believe she io-J her purse oa the train before reaching reach-ing New York. On neither Friday nor Sat 11 rda v was hhc able to llnd the Wail street kiwvei s who have change of tho citato la which she is u beneficiary, and last night, having spent her last dollar a Brooklyn bridge policeman gave her and her daughter carfare to the municipal lodging hoiuc. They were notified some N"10 that Mrs. McCall's auuL Mrs. Mary Vincent Harric, had died in tho woman's wom-an's hospital 'itJ,e and ,n bcr win hai1 left Mrs. McCall fifty thousand dollar?. On dlbcovering her financial predicament predica-ment Friday. Mrs. McCall telegraphed telegraph-ed to her t: iu Now Orleans tor funds, but hp to last night had nut heard from him. It ii said that she will receivo lh' J.'O.OOO as soon as sh-? i can see the lawyers, which will bo j probably today. |