Luck chain letter. Death-Lottery type. No title. St. Jude. It works.
US, 1988.
This paper has been
sent to you for good luck. The original is in New England.
It has been
around the world nine times. The luck has now been sent to
you. You will
receive good
luck within four days of receiving this letter provided you in turn send
it on.
This is no
joke. You will receive good luck in the mail. Send no money. Send copies
to people you
think need good luck. Don't send money, as fate has no
price. Do not
keep this
letter. It must leave your hands within 96 hours.
An R.A.F.
officer received $470.00.
Joe Elliot
received $40,000.00 and lost it because he broke the chain.
While in the
Phillipines Gene Welch lost his wife 51 days after receiving the letter.
However,
before her death he received $7,755,000.00, and lost that too because
he failed
to circulate
the letter.
Please send twenty copies and see what happens in four days. The
chain comes from
Venezuela and
was written by Saul Anthony DeGroot, a missionary from South Africa.
You must make
twenty copies and send them out. After a few days you will get a
surprise.
This is true,
even if you are not superstitious.
Do note the
following. Constantine Dias received the chain in 1953. He
asked his
secretary to
make twenty copies and send them out. A few days later he won a
lottery
of two million
dollars. Carlo Dadditt, an office employee, received the letter
and
forgot it had
to leave his hands within 96 hours. He lost his job. Later
he found
the letter
again, mailed twenty copies, and got a better job. Dylan
Fairchild received
the letter,
and not believing, threw the letter away. Nine days later he died.
In 1987 the
letter received by a young woman in California was very faded and barely
readable.
She promised she would retype the letter and send it on, but she, too,
put
it
aside. She was plagued with various problems including very
expensive car repairs.
The letter did
not leave her hands in 96 hours. She finally retyped the letter as
promised, and
got a new car.
Remember, send no money. Do not
ignore this. St. Jude. It works.
Lightly smudged photocopy of
typed original. From the collection of Charles H. Bennett. His L11, see
le1980u_dl_wb!.
Annotated "Stanford, CA 1988" (as L9). Keystrokes
preserved.
No title. Entered by DWV on 12/9/2005.
le1988u_dl_w(l)cj
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