Dear Sir, - Thank you very much for publishing another story by Wallace Stort in your ever popular weekly. This promises to be very interesting in the next installment when I suppose "Felice" will take "Tony" to "Le Phenomene". I can assure you that I keep my eyes open for the number which contains it.
I should like to take this opportunity of thanking your numerous one-legged girl readers for the splendid way in which they have answered my appeal for letters. It is astonishing how many of your lady readers possess only one leg and one arm. It shows how people will buy a paper that has a special interest for them, and I am convinced that the onelegged stories by Wallace Stort are eagerly sought by this section of your patrons.
It gives me very great pleasure to read how most of your limbless ladies appreciate the wonderful effect produced by a high heeled shoe or boot on a girl's only foot.
It's a proved fact that a high heel produces such a charming grace and daintiness of step that a girl who has one leg only immediately attracts the attention of all to the graceful way in which she swings along on her crutch or crutches.
I have proved that Wallace Stort is right about a single crutch. A one-legged girl who uses only one crutch seems to hold a wonderful fascination over all and sundry.
I think I shall have a one-piece dress made like the one worn by "Felice" in the story recently published. It does sound rather daring, but it will be a great thrill for my young man when I display my figure to him to my best advantage. My! What a thrill for any man!
I think I have wasted enough of your valuable space so au revoir for the present. I hope you will soon publish the next "La Belle Monopede" story.
Yours truly,
Only A One-Legged Girl