Luck chain letter. Late example of Death-Lottery type. Love title. "Do
not sign
this letter." US, 2004.
With Love All Things Are Possible
This paper ha been sent to you for
good luck. The original is in New England. It
has been sent around the world nine
times. The luck has 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. Don't send money, as fate has no price.
Do not keep this letter it must leave
your hands within 96 hours.
A United States Air Force Officer
received $470,000. John A. Elliot received
$40,000 and lost it because he broke
the chain. While in the Philippines Gene Welch
lost his wife 51 days after receiving
this letter, he failed to circulate the letter
however, before her death he received
$7,555,000.
Please send 20 copies and see what
happens in four days. The chain comes from
Venezuela and was written by Saul De
Crop, a missionary from South America.
Since the copy must tour the world,
you must make 20 copies and send them to
friends and associates. After a few
days you will get a surprise. This is true even if
you are not superstitious.
Do not do the following: Constantine
Diaz received his letter in 1993, he asked his
secretary to make 20 copies and send
them out, a few days later she won the lottery
for two million dollars, Carlos Daddit, an office employee, received
the letter and
forgot that it had to leave his hand
within 96 hours. He lost his job. Later after
finding the letter again, he mailed 20
copies. A few days later he got a better job.
Brain Fairchild received the letter
and not believing, he threw the letter away. Nine
days later he died.
In 1997, the letter was received by a
young woman in California it was very faded
and barely readable. She promised to
type the letter over and send it on but she set
it aside to do it later. She was
plague with various problems including expensive car
repairs. The letter did not leave her
hands in 96 hours. She finally typed the letter
as promised and got a new car.
Remember; send no money.
DO NOT SIGN THIS LETTER!
IT WORKS!
Clean photocopy of word processor
original. Five identical copies in five separate envelopes all
postmarked in Houston, TX on July 26, 2004, all addressed to Daniel
VanArsdale, P.O. Box 2335, Lompoc, CA 93438 (various forms of name).
Address could have been obtained
from my WWW page on chain letters or an ad for chain letters in a paper
collectibles periodical. No
return address. Close to le2005-08_dl_xsign_w-lc
hence both are very likely circulating letters. Lines preserved.
Sic "ha" for "has," "she" won
lottery, "Brain" for "Brian," "plague" for "plagued." Entered by
DWV on 7/30/04.
le2004-07_dl_xsign_w-lc
The
Paper Chain Letter Archive - information.
Chain Letter Evolution.