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l OUR LONDON LETK^T s I «

DRINKING AT BUSINESS.

OLDEST WOMAN SUBJECT.

[No title]

! NATIONAL SYSTEM OPENED.…

AGRICULTURE'S CHANCE.

CHURCH AND THE MASSES.

| EPITOME OF NEWS.

. ! STORY OF MASKED BURGLARS.

. TOWN COUNCILLOR COMMITTED.

ADVENTURES OF A SIXPENCE.

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ADVENTURES OF A SIXPENCE. The strange story of a. gilded sixpence waø told at West Ham, when Millie Wheeler, married woman, living at Hermit-road, Plaistow, was charged with uttering counter- feit coins. Mrs. Wheeler went to a public-house and obtained change for a sovereign. Later che returned and asked for change of half a sovereign. The barmaid tested the coin and said it was a gilded sixpence. Mrs. Wheeler insisted she had received it in the change for the sovereign, but the barmaid r positive she had not given it, and tbø woman, greatly distressed, went away. She returned and said she had changed tho- half-sovereign at a pawnshop. Some time later a boy came to the public- house from a neighbouring oil shop to obtain change for "half a sovereign." The coin ho [tendered was a gilded sixpence. It was then found that Mrs. Wheeler had changed thtf gilded sixpence at the oil shop. Mrs. Wheeler, the magistrate was iit" formed, was a most respectable woman. Her husband out of his wages sent her a sovereign, which was all the money she pos- sessed, and she had acted throughout Jit good faith. Mr. Gilleepie said there had been a mis- take somewhere—-he did not wish to cast any aspersions—and the accused would be dis- 'charged. x

.1 NO DOUBT ABOUT IT.*

. "A SHEAF OF BANKNOTES."