The Lost Million
she was only fifteen, she looked some years older, and on 9th April she was married at Exeter, to the student, whose name was given as Henry Earnshaw.

At this youthful age the young bride started her long list of aliases. According to the marriage register she was nineteen years of age--a jump of four years--and her name was given as Edith Jane Lucy Haddon, the surname being that of her nurse's daughter.  Her actual life immediately after marriage is not known, but about a year later she was living at Manchester, where, according to the prosecuting counsel in the case heard yesterday, she was obtaining her living by acting in a pantomime. Her stay in that city was perhaps her longest in any one district, and she did not obtain notoriety until some years later.  In Manchester she was known as the Hon.  Lucy Huntingdon, and also as Lady Ella Earnshaw. The Hon.  Lucy was unmarried, but Lady Ella had entered the bonds of wedlock.

With her many aliases and a husband and foster-brother, who conveniently changed places as the occasion demanded, Lady Lettice Lancaster, to give her the name by which she is best known, has nearly always contrived to enjoy life at the expense of others.  When the bills began to arrive, she denied responsibility, the husband or brother to whom the creditors were referred was not to be found, and yet, when a suitable opportunity occurred, she herself disappeared, only to bob up elsewhere, and continue the same game.  The story of this amazing woman's extraordinary life has never been published, but we are now in a position to give many interesting facts as to her career.

The name Lady Lettice Lancaster was not used until about six years ago, when she blossomed out in London, took a flat in Hyde Park Court, and was frequently seen driving in the West End.  She then started a more clever system of defrauding her creditors.

Here is a list of some of her abodes, each of which she left somewhat hurriedly-- 
1903.--Tufnell House, Teddington.
1903.--Skelton, York.
1903.--St Catherine's, Guildford.
1904.--Hackthorn, Lincoln.
1904.--Kiltoon, Athlone.
1905.--Saham Toney, Thetford.
1906.--Gloucester Terrace, London.
1907.--St John's, Woking.
1907.--Stuston Hall, Chelmsford.

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