DEAR ABBY: From time to time you print letters about finding “pennies from heaven.” Are you ready for another one?

Our daughter is adopting a little boy, and our other daughter was hosting a yard sale to raise money for the airfare to bring the child to this country.

My mother, a widow, had donated my father’s racing bike. It was hard for her to let go of it because Dad had won many senior Olympic medals with it.

The bike sold the first day, and I immediately called Mom to tell her the news. Right after I hung up the phone with her, I looked down at the table where my grandsons had been helping me count change. In the middle of a pile of dimes was a penny. When I picked it up, I saw it was a “wheatie.” Then I turned it over and couldn’t believe my eyes. The date on the penny was 1918, the year my father was born.

Although this may not be your typical “pennies from heaven” story, I truly believe it was a penny from heaven – a message from Dad that he was glad to contribute to our yard sale and was with us in spirit. – JACLYN IN BALLWIN, MO.

DEAR JACLYN:
And don’t ever let anyone try to convince you otherwise.

DEAR ABBY: I read your column every day, and I never see the grammar and punctuation errors I typically encounter. Are the letters you publish revised, or are only the most literate and conscientious people moved to write to you? – ENGLISH TEACHER IN AUSTIN, TEXAS

DEAR ENGLISH TEACHER:
Everyone who writes to me is “conscientious.” However, there are some errors in spelling, grammar or punctuation in the letters that cross my desk.

My staff, my syndicate editors and I try to ensure that any errors are corrected before a letter appears in print. To perpetuate the errors by printing them would set a bad example or distract from the question being presented.

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.


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