This paper has been sent to you for good luck. The original
copy 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,
providing you,
in turn, send it on. This is no joke. You will receive
it in the mail. 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 RAF officer
received $70,000 -- Joe Elliot received $40,000 -- and lost
it because he broke
the chain while in the Phillipines. Gene Welch lost his
wife six days after receiv-
ing the letter. He failed to circulate the letter, however,
before her death
he received $7,775,000 -- Please send 20 copies of the letter
and see what happens
in four days. The chain comes from Venequela and was written
by Saul Anthony DE
Croup, a missionary from South America. Since the copy
must make a tour of the
world you must make twenty copies and send them to friends and
associates. After
a few days you will get a surprize. This is ture even
if you are not superstitious.
Do note the following: Constantine Diaz received the chain
in 1953. he asked his
secretary to make 20 copies and send them out. A few days
later he won a lottery
of two million dollars. Carlo Daddit, and office employee,
received his letter
and forgot it had to leave his hands within 96 hours.
He lost his job. Later
after finding the letter again, he mailed out 20 copies.
A few days after he got
a better job. Dalan Fairchild received his letter and
not believing, threw the
letter away. Nine days later he died. Send no money.
Please don't ignore this.
Photocopy (late generation, streaked) of typed
original (landscape format). Keystrokes preserved. From Boulder,
Co., Aug. 7, 1984. "While in the Phillipines" transferred to previous
testimonial (Elliot). Collected by Preston. Was 84-08.
le1984-08_dl_w'l
The Paper Chain Letter Archive- information. Chain Letter Evolution.