Luck chain letter. Death-Lottery. "St. Jude It Works." Love-Car. Two retype notes. Canada, 1993.

              WITH LOVE ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE

This paper has been sent to you for good luck.  The original in
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 return, send it on.

This in 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 peace.  Do not keep this letter, It
must leave your hands in 96 hours.

An R.A.F. Officer received $470,000.00  John Bilied received
$40,000.00 and lost it because he broke the chain.

While in the Philippines, Gene Welch lost his wife, 51 days after
receiving the letter.  He failed to circulate the letter.  However
before her death he received $7,555,000.00.

Please send twenty copies and see what happens in four days.  The
chain comes from Venezuela and was written by Saul Anthony de Group
a missionary from South America.  Since the copy must tour the world
you must make twenty copies and send them to friends and associates.
After a few days, you will get a suprise; this is true.  Even if
you are not superstitious.

Please note the following: Constantine Dias received the chain in
1955.  He asked his secretary to make twenty copies and send them
out.  A few days later he won a lottery of 16 million dollars.
Carlo Dauitt, an officer employee, received the letter and forgot
it has to leave his hands within 96 hours.  He lost his job.
Later, after finding the letter again, he mailed twenty copies.  A
few days later he got a better job.  Delan Fairchild received the
letter and not believing, threw the letter away, nine days later
he died.

In 1987, the letter was received by a wealthy women in California
very faded and hardly readable . She promised herself that she
would re-type the letter and send it on, but she put it aside to do
later.  She plagued with various problems including expensive car
repairs.  The letter did not leave her hands within 96 hours.  She
finally re-typed the letter as promised and got a new car.

This letter was received in 1989 by a women in Sidney who re-typed
it again as it was to be clearly readable.

This letter has been re-typed again in 1993 as it was to be clearly
readable.

REMEMBER, SEND NO MONEY.  DO NOT KEEP THIS.

     St. Jude It Works.


Photocopy of typed original. Postmarked June (?), 1993 in Charlottetown, Canada. Keystrokes preserved. Sic "...fate hs no peace." Supplied by Paul Smith to Preston.

le1993-06u_dl_wlcj_retype2

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