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Dear Ann Landers,
always thought it was narrow-minded and mean of you to take such a strong stand against lonely-hearts adver-tisements. I changed my mind today when I read the Nashville Banner. It seems a man named Henry Joneson of Tomahawk, Alberta, Canada, answered an ad in an agricultural publication. The woman who was looking for a companion was Ada Wittenmyer, age 37. Henry, the 50-year-old owner of a 900-acre ranch, was lonesome and thought Ada sounded "interesting." He didn't realize his letters and checks were going to a prison until District Attorney General Kenneth Atkins called and told him that Ada had just been convicted of poisoning her fourth husband. She was already serving a 25-year term for poisoning her third husband-a wealthy Oklahoma rancher she had met through another lonely-hearts ad. Atkins said that when he told him the news Mr. Joneson said, "Oh, Lord." I hope you will print this letter in your column, Ann, as a warning to others who are lonely. And please accept my apologies for my previous attitude. -Nashville Reader

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Dear Readers,
, my wife caught me and in-sisted that I read your column about the “hog-mouth” husband who was too lazy to get a plate. Now that I have been properly chastened, I will, of course, give up this foul habit. Thanks to 25 years of Ann Landers’ brilliant counsel-ing, my wife has molded me into a model of perfection. I no longer dance at parties with a lamp shade on my head, nor do I pinch the fan

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"Television has proved that people will look at anything rather than each other."
-Ann Landers