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Mailing List Logs for ShadowRN

From: Alex Rosenheim <BB566C@*****.BITNET>
Subject: .
Date: Thu, 15 Apr 1993 17:13:29 EDT
----------------------------Original message----------------------------
Delivery-date: Wed, 14 Apr 1993 11:22:47 UTC
Originator: guerin@******.curi.u-picardie.fr
Send-date: Wed, 14 Apr 1993 10:35:20 UTC+0100
From: guerin <guerin@******.curi.u-picardie.fr>
Message-ID: <199304140939.AA12955@******.curi.u-picardie.fr>


WITH LOVE ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE

This paper has been sent to you for good luck. The original is in New England.
It has been sent around the world nine times at least. The luck has been now
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 officer in the Royal Air Force received $ 47,000,000 and lost it because he
broke the chain.

While in the Philippines, Gene Welch lost his wife six days after he received
this letter. He had failed to circulate the letter, however before her death
he received $ 7,775,000,00.

Please send twenty copies and see what happens in four days. The chain comes
from Venezuela and was written by Saint Anthony Group, a missionary in South
Africa. 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're not superstitious.

Note the following: Constantine Diaz received the chain in 1953 and he asked
his secretary to make twenty copies and send the letter out. A few days later
he won a lottery for 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 finding the letter again, he mailed twenty copies.
A few days later he got a better job. Delan Fairchild recived the letter, and
not believing , he threw the letter away. Nine days later he died. In 1968
the letter, received by a young woman in California, was barely legible. She
promised herself she would re-type and circulate the letter, but she put
it aside to do later. She was plagued with various problems including expensi-
ve auto repairs. The letter had not left within 96 hours. She finally typed
the letter as promised and got a new car.

Remember: DO NOT SEND MONEY, DO NOT IGNORE THIS.

Remember Me Always, It works!

S & JUDE.

Disclaimer

These messages were posted a long time ago on a mailing list far, far away. The copyright to their contents probably lies with the original authors of the individual messages, but since they were published in an electronic forum that anyone could subscribe to, and the logs were available to subscribers and most likely non-subscribers as well, it's felt that re-publishing them here is a kind of public service.