Luck chain letter. Death-Lottery type. "It Works!!" Kiss title - "make music". US, 1994.

Kiss someone you love when you get this letter and make music.

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 been sent to you. You will receive

Good Luck within four days. This is no joke. You will receive it in the mail. Send copies

to people you think need GOOD LUCK. DO NOT send cash as fate has no price. DO

NOT keep this letter. It must leave your hands within 96 hours. An Air Force officer

received $70,000. Joe Elliot received $40,000 and lost it because he broke the chain.

While in the Phillipines, Gene Welsh lost his wife six days after receiving this letter. He

failed to circulate the letter. However, before her death, she had won $50,000 in a

lottery.  The money was transferred to him four days after he decided to mail out this

letter. Please make twenty copies of this letter and see what happens in four days. The

chain comes from South America and was written by Samuel Anthony Pearce, a

missionary from South America. Since the copy must make a tour of the world, you must

make twenty copies and send them to your friends and associates. After a few days you

will get a surprise. This is true even though you are not superstitious. Do note the

following: Conscatine Deas received the chain in 1953. He asked asked his secretary to

make twenty copies and send them out. A few days later he won a lottery of two million

dollars. Andy Daddit, an office employee, received this letter and forgot it had to leave

his hands in 96 hours. He lost his job. Later, after finding the letter again, he mailed out

twenty copies. A few days later, he got a better job. Mr. Fairchild received the letter and

not believing, threw it away. Nine days later he died.

Please send no money. Please do not ignore this. It works!!


Photocopy of word processor original. Paragraphing preserved. Received via campus mail by a UCLA receptionist (Spanish Dept.) on 5/25/94. Given to Shirley Arora, then to Preston.

le1994-05_dl_wk'

Annotated index for the Paper Chain Letter Archive

Chain Letter Evolution