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1 8 3 - R A D R A D I 0 N I-C_ i n _ D e p t Ih i t i a t i o n t o -! n C a u - s ta l E n g i y Artjcies & Patents for Methods lppiiiiui io proou.ei.erJl6 i n e e r - i n g . . . 2 5 and effects via s a m D l e s n c r e s o n a nt tu n i n g . T o p i i i - i n i r r o " r p e s t a coniiir...DeLal{arr,s "Radiatron-Therapy Appiratus' patent)..Korschelt,s _ a i e d e v i c e . . H i e r o n v m ou s p a t e n t . . T ho e ri - i . i iari r r R a d i o n i c us' w ra;il;;...The M a c h r n e o r ^ p e s t c o n t r o. . . j f nt r g o y d , t - - g i i t i i n p a t e n t : , , r n s t r u n eA go a d f r Detecting and Investrgating minationr;..0r. E h r t s P a t e n t":1 ' ' 1& M , f o r 0 b t a i l i n-g -s lP :l" o i viiO n ii.orri" 6 . t " . Riu tg D r o w n , s B Zi oid ih c . l o g S i l e - i g . r . . c,t, nT h eB . S . R . F , , a . rk R a t n b o w u n e r " .s o u t h w i c s u T H a i o& c o l o r A u r a R a d i a t i o n s " . - - A n d e r s o n 's p e c t r o s c o p i i " s e ,,psychic p ',.. i " Al M i r r o r " - . B a l d w i n ' s" P a r . l i t e " . . A d a m e nf k tpri f. i, . i Ef,h c.. p ay c ih n aS , , V e r t i c a i a - ; o_ , o doir. A ; ;v lf t a t i n g B i o _ f , f i , I l e c t r i c E n e r g y " . . 8 u r& N o r t h r o p :T h e r je B i o m a g nc tF i e i d g e n e r a t o r " . . g o y r e :0 c c r l t I n u m i n a t o r " system,,..payne,s " M a - o n e t - P y r a mo dF i e l dD e t e c t b r , , n dr u c f ,r o r e l Bi i a

EVIDENCE

FOR THE EXISTENCE OF AN ELECTRO-DYNAMIC FIELD IN LIVING ORGIIf/SM.S* Bv H. S. Brrnr. eNo F. S. C. NontrrRoP
Y,rr-r UxrvensrrY April 24, 1939 Readbeforethe Academy,

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There are two major classical tieories of modern science: partide physics and field physics. The chief difference between tlem was dearly stated by Clerk Maxwell in his initial paPer on electro-magnetic theory. Partide physics, he writes, considers any phenomenon "as due to the mutual action of particies," "but we are proceeding on a difierent principle, and searching for the explanation of the phenomena, not in the currents alone but also in the surrounding medium" r or, to use the language of his third paper, "in the form of the relations of the motion of the parts."z In short, particie physics directs attention to the constituent particles, whereasfield physics centers theory and e-xperimentation upon tle medium in which tle system as a whoie is imbedded and upon its structure. Sincetle fundamentd problem of biology is organization, it wouid appear that field physics is tle more appropriate for its investigation. It was con-' siderations similar to these, together with certain facts h experimental embryology,s which caused tle writers in 1935 to propose the "electrodynamic thmry of life."{ It was tlis theory in turn which guided Burr, Lane and Nims to the constmction of the vacuum-tube microvoltmeter,t 6-rn and findings which and which suggestedthe experimental investigations it is the purpose of the remainder of this paper to summarizeIn biology, the complexity of the living system is so great tlat investi-

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PlanetaryAssociationlor Clean Energy Newsletter

Vclume4. Number 2

RAlronv ic S

How to Makea Corruaated v Round Tower Sensor

without a cone cap. The yellow fever mcsquito, t'rhichalternattvely scans human skin with eacn nind !eg, has ilat-topped cor;'ugatedsensi/la on its iegs. They iook !ike the eorrugarcd slope tower in the Figure (wtthout cone). 5. To maxe ihe cone.cui a pteceoi indexcaro a b o u t2 t n c h e sb y 3 i n c h e s ( 5x 7 . 5c m l i n s t z e and f old it along ihe 3 inch edge. Join :he edge with a piece of tape. Cut the corner olf {dotted line in the Figure) to f it the diameter of the toa ol the tower.Open the cone up enc giue it ln olace. You now have a comDleted corrugatedcardboardround tower.

The :nrrared-paranagneticrounci lower conf ig' uration described is based on experimentation wrth different forms and on experience instde the carrugated Red Tower of Delhi, the Quth Minar. Many species ol insecls also have corrugated sensll/a on their antenna. fhis ls expecially true oi insects sucn as mosquitoesthat seek out human or mammalianauras.Thecorrugatedsensoris not than the smooth lorm but also onlv more sensrtlve seems lo store ihe aura energy better. Another reason ior oescribinqa ccrrugated ccnfiguration rs tnat it is much easterto accuratelvraper ihan a s smooln-sroeoensci'.

C o a t i n gt h e s e n s o r Spray !he index card tower with Scotcn Sorav Adhesive(photo mount) ano scrinkle it ',vithgocc a o t t i n g s o i i . l i m e s t o n e ,t e d . l a y o r e r o u n o - u c ' ! i l o v t e r o o t c l a y . i . : o ' Jn e " , i a v e i o s o r a , ia n a c o a ! g e t J : ' ' ] t c e ' ? v e n ' a vDr : n e ) o r ' en s e v e r a :i t m e s i o r u g a t e ds u n a c e . N o a d h e s t v es p r a yi s n e e o e oi o r a good wax tower sensor.just dip the corruoatec tower tn melted beeswax. Testing the Sensor Suspend ihe tower lrom a woooed :--shapeo arm by heavy duty thread. iesl your coated tower for paramagnetismwith a 1000 gauss magnet to attracted - believe me, it check if. it is stronglyr will be! I'low lhat you know how tc constructyour rauno iower aura sensor. begin iesting tt wtth ihe paramagnetic-infraredaura of vour body. rhe f orce is strongesr at '/our solarplexus. fest it in a well ventilateoroom. Dui with no breezesblowing. Y o u m u s l l i r s t c o n v i n c ev a u r s e l fi h a t t t i s a l i v i n o f o r c e i n c p e r a t i o na n c n o t a t r b l o w r n g : h e t o w e r t o w a r d sy o u r b o o y ( h o w c o e s o n e D l o w a n a b t e c ! towaro cneself?). l,loveslowlv. at aDout.{5 degree'/ecior,to the side of the f ront cone ot !he suspendeCtower. if you do feel gooo, the tower will move slowly t o w a r dy o u w h e n y o u r D o d y t s , ' o u ri o s / x i n c n e s f r o m i t . l t a l w a ' / sw o r k s o e s l a t c a v l n c r d u s Kt n e well-ventilatedroom. Staie air auencnes move' m e n t a n d p e o D l es t a n o i n gl o o f l o s e t o g e t h e r a m i
oanh nlhpr'e r,,ra<

1. Taxea 5 inch by I inch index card (127x 203 mm) and fotd it along the 5 inch sideinl/o inch (6 mm) folCs. You should end up with aporoximatelvfitteen corrugations (peaksl
alono thc I incn icnoth ,Sce the Finure. .4n

easyway tomake the f olds is to take the card between the four !ingers and thumb of both hands and use the f lat surface of a table to straighteogethe !oid by pressing it agatnst lhe taDle.Turn the card over to alternate the next f old. The tips ot eight f ingers p/esseo a q a t n s tt h e f o t d o n i h e t a o i e u i l l k e e o r h e corrugationsat thetr ' i a inch dimension. 2. Put a line ol ruhitegiue along the outer peak o f t h e ; a s t e d g e .i o t d a t o n e e n d a n d g i u e i t into ihe inner valley ol the iast fold at ihe other end. You now have a round corruqated tower. 3 . Tc taper lhe tower, takea small ruober band a n d p u t i t a r o u n dt n e r c p o f t h e t o w e rs o i h a t vou constrict ihe upper corrugations. By, sliding the rubber banci up and down, '/ou can change the degree ol taper. lf you slide the rubber to the center of ihe iower. of course, you wiil have a smaller diameter (ccnsiricted)corrugatedtower Dut no taDer. It is interestingio experiment with ditferent degree tapers. 4 . !n order 'lo hold your index card iawer to its put a lew droos of glue on the top and snape, also gtue the bottom to a !ittle 2 inch square (5 cmz!ol index card.,\lter a ccuDleof hours, the nardenedglue at eacn end witl hotc ;"'our ine taperediawer io irs snape. .4e.'nove ruo' ber pand. {c:t mav wish to use lcui tower

lt vou practice, you will see lhal 'tour mind afan f ects lhe movement. it is aDvtousl,/ alternattng or pulsating iorce since sonetrmes tne iower codv, The tower moves siowlv away irom 'y'our oefiniielv stores energy as you wiil soon note that there is a constderablepause belore it moves lo your boov. You vvill iind lhat a iower vou maKe worKs better iar )rourself :han icr lour irtenos: aithouEh tt wtil :eslono io anvane. vlhv coes it r v o r x 5 e s i l o r y c u , ) C b v i a u s i v ,l e c a u s e i n c o n '

PlanetatvAssoclalronlor Clean Energy Newsretter

''doped" it with the structing it.'/ou nave t/ot. "essence oi yourself" iSee Ne\^,,sletter, 2,' 2 and Vol, 2. 3) Finally, oi course, you can use tound lowers : - u c , a s t h e s ef o r s c / l l e s l i n go v c c a t r n gi n e m w t i h l Jiiferent types c! soil ano uslng a protractor to
. i i t c a r u t c , t ca ^ / t ;t ^o1t^q l l C

the

various soil'coated

towers rotate with regard to a lixed 1,000gauss '!'he magnei. stronger the attraction, the more p a r a m a g n e t i c h e s o i l .a n o h e n c e , t h e b e t t e r i h e t so//.

T h e t a p e ro f t h e c o r r u g a t e d e o T o v r e r i D e r h r R c r l e i l 'r s a c D l c x i , . n a i e rc e g r e e s i.r i s ni c v l e r ss u c h 5v 1 a s t h e K i i m a c o u a g n n e l s e e N e w s / e t l e rv o i . - 1 . ) o , t e n c r ? ?a r o r n d 2 r e e r e e s T h e S e r J o w e r ; S 2 3 3 T f e e t B i n c h e s 7 i . 2 5 e t g r s )i.r i s nr o u n ct o , , v e ra r e 1 m s s r n o c t n - s i d e d n Ch a v ea c o n i c a ir o o f a n d a r e r f n a i h e a v e r a c e7 0 f e e r i 2 1 . 3 3m e t e r s )i ' r i o h - h e c o r . r u q a t e d , o u n d l o v r e r s e n s o r r s a h v o i r o r , r fr h e s e trryoiot'.:r'ls. S iPhilip .lallahanr

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* t = 0 t r = = - ! C ! r F - = O C - i { = G 3 E ! 6 9 5 ! g t s d F d N o : O - r > - = _ a r - r = - * = ! A C i F - C ; A C G a > i = = J - - ? a ; a = a . 4 C . r r . P O C T T E Z : = a a : = = a E 3 6 4 r ! { < c F 6 : i r c = a c = c - l c c o o l h = c ! c l J = ! F a x = a c L = g - F 6 3 r S P r + ! O f = = & t < N = : = - c C 3 p o @ t s O r s = = . , : a = ' c ^ P - E S - e ' 1 1 c F t t c F - : p O P < E F O 5 I l p S O A ! t - : a a t - c - t s g c d c g e . c e a ! c o c { d ! * t a , < 3 < a c x 5 : r = c = d c a r D o c H < c p * a = ! E p a 7 A P t r e F . T C l O g c r i p S J = = & F C d @ p c , , - - E t t C 3 < > C r F G t r p - ! O g ! - A V Z C ! ! O t r t r O - l @ G E - * F = > a C 3 > a p r O * * * . = t O = C p = A c O I = - _ h E = = @ * s O ! : a = ( = 3 = ! C = = e C - r j . - . a . a L : e * . < ' D a G < g a i F J 3 ! C O h ! 6 E : p . { i l - a < A = r J d : . : ! i : i c ! - - : o - : ! f , - = < * ! t s a t ! 3 < c t r * F t < - E a a - ' - t d u . c a - " c c c t = c h i l * l a r a r . a r - a e i c - - 2 i - * = < : F L ? e = 7 1 . 1 = i ^ . A 6 j C - : : - O : 3 s a * ^ , : = u = = = ? = ? : a J a i = - ! ; * i - - . t i L - F . d ; - E : d ! - C - F i = q f y , : r . / < a Q = - c - . . t - J L ! a a . , a ! . , = a u . > i = = - = a , ' ' - ( a ' : L a - 4 4 3 , : a , p . , . i , f , < - - - . Z e . . . ! = * . ! a 3 : a i a C > < a ? , = = a / . t s ! D C : < C C 3 { O - v r C ! ; t = 4 a = - - G r F a ) . , a a . C . Q - a Z . a = = = = r i . 3 f O n E F s = a a . G x * g p - c = - = r ? ; < t f o < c t r i s r E ; G F c t ! a ! - t g o t s p 3 : z - F ! ! e r C C f C a 6 = C l = a t a ) C 5 C E d O - O I : > > ^ d c : I F C B p O C o p 3 F t = a a 6 r o N = 0 i 5 C < < 6 C d F c a O o ! o C a ! 6 t < p . i _ . 3 = a a Q p E p F P U < F F c = G L F l 1 O t v * O = 7 n - = A C e F G O * O p = - = C V . = g r d p - ' q C = e A 1 ! d : 3 > < / U e u 6 o 4 r O d t r O ! - t C { C O @ 9 O p i C : = + F < t 6 O F E * a J C a E $ a : O v , i 3 : , 3 t s a o - o p . c + O = = p = - o < l o o q o 6 F 5 - . G F o G f o < p a J 3 6 = ! r c p I r o a * 9 = G o I 3 3 { o { < o J a , d y E = c 9 . c g o o G - . = c r > h c h = 5 l c 3 x c > c c o o * c G o { p o o e 6 F O ! F d { O * ! F : X p { O - F t s A t ! D I O O < O G . d = 9 G O p e p t ! l i P < 1 = O b b l O t - < 5 e D 6 3 A = a a a = a x J O A y C C = t s a O - < g h p 5 5 t O F e . O * C = F C e . O o C C p E s E : G l * D A > X < e 4 O s O O F d @ 5 6 d a . C f - , ! 6 P @ - l O a 0 6 ^ . A A = 6 O 5 d C = < : D r 3 C O p ! C O g F O < 6 6 O O U 6 d ; d h < > C C i g R c = t r F < a = x ; p J c > o o c f K c a p * > o p { t r E G G g o ! d F F < i l t o i x o c i d S { a = a c c o : k a o o a . l > o L a p e g . p > o d C * H F 6 6 o . O O U a d : C O O = d t O d = C J O { O E G i E = t 4 p e : q 1 - - s J o X < o I t E a O d > g O h v x C o 5 3 c < a : E { A c 5 c = r a < = a o I p F t s < C = : t f o l l t t E = A F 0 3 O O ! - ! t * - i V o C ) t - F . a F t s . O O h : F h O O . F - r * 6 C * t - e r C p d p O C - 3 d = C i D e h l ? O D J E C t n < C . . 5 O C P * 4 c u . \ t * F : d p c c J o ^ e - - g = , b t r c c b r d r l c G c s p e = * = p 3 o c * A C - E P ' g g - a " 6 e = 6 C - c X G = ! E = c l $ ! J t ! o o t r t c p p o c p F c > F . c ' O t r 5 o u d L c > A c J r < F h o F S - E r 3 = o E p O c = 1 a 5 L . l g = q p c d G o F . ' 6 > . , p 3 3 s t q E . a ! p F e i a o t v . n D l P P , o l o < e r a 6 6 e , * . p u * C A = 3 a C O C g O { t C c ' , F { 5 l G O g d J . . a p d . t r a p x O C - = 6 7 F ' r = = * t * t ' h O E a & : t r p C a O P \ O C C p g { ( t C 3 3 < < * G l * G = = e U > - D : F d C ! c l p . . ! O c r c ) - t s ! - F 0 l ; * O E 3 q - - r g A a O C t s - . = t = a f c . t r r i r < g r = = c O l p = p * a G 6 O O < ; 5 O v O C O > p g C ! < e . c G p . G @ s C 6 a = 6 P G O C y C C g J o = * y d > = - F + o t a , * r . t s 5 F . = o ) ! = g < F t r a r - n a v a * o o < F - - P o d F 3 = - 4 . ! u ? d 3 < = o o o ! o o F = { o d l g t t c h . C a . o = p ; , F o o o a o o o ! h t F = o > ; : o P v c l c . . c S q : * d f = o p b e . J c < o ' o ! l F > l F t a o ! d o 6 o 6 d d t o c o r i c ' . * u = c c t n o 6 F p o o r c , q ^ . * o < l < g c F c = f 3 c t < t r o c d i c c < o ! x = t c e c e 6 6 ) = ! 3 * t 6 ! o A C C F ! o ! t P O i l F C * F g A P A a ! 5 A O ! * a ) A > r O @ E a X l C O = a A 6 ^ , = d O p - O C O F F . = C 5 e O = y O O s h p C C P f t s F a A C / e d q t e t 6 - . : = F e C t a a F C O O < l t c h O S l 6 h . 5 e < { = t ! t s ! F I t s < : o - o i i C a = l a = g = i : p * a S O a t D < r > . : p C : r g t r - . 3 F e . d g a a L e < a c , ! a C a i ? = a c . = = j v g . p * : . h , a s . o = o < l c l F F . c l c = - d a G = ! H f c e a o a q o o 3 O o 5 c g c : = o E = = = e 5 p - F < 5 G = o F E o < < E < g * < k c A . < ^ . 6 o 3 e t < 5 F - a * + c @ r 6 o F G F + c : 5 : a = o J o h F . ! < O p r . a c 6 = / = e e = d 3 ^ ^ = 6 C C ! i F t = c r C O E A O = t A . C c X o ! c , r z r o c E : c F o o 3 9 c c F < c b h a = = < c = o < c d & ! o o F d 5 o = ^ . d & S o p h E a a a a t , 6 - Q e o t r z c o G b t d + o o 7 < 9 a 6 d E r o F t s a n n c l o o g g G = ! ^ . = c r o o * c I o a c g p = 3 9 ' l i . : e * $ 5 o r c = J ) o o c l a < o u = a ( r p o t D 6 a * c a p g ? F o c t o e a o G ! * n t r - a c ! 5 3 e < E ' o l c o a 6 3 * = e d a ! = @ o c . ^ . t s l d 5 c F + * d @ h o t 6 P r < F t t o e < o x l F = ! a ! c p p + r F J C ; h : O = : O O P c ! F c t i G O r i ! E D l d l * O O 6 O = 0 A e ! p O 3 d P r E r C a - d g 1 3 3 > F E = a i * F C A 9 = 9 X A I X = C d g c o ^ P O d P t O = p a < O O n O O : I G = C l l = C = ! O - r O r : = > p c x d ! : ; = c > F l o - c E , : c ! c r o ! p t e o < = = u F t s a p C g * g = C r > U . i g I o G r O g C O 6 t r O e d d t O O O ! 1 : l * C g C o F F t E E O t C A . : O C a O F I = O F e E O c J = C 3 ' F hO 6 V: E I C G E F 3 = t t l d l a

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Answering to both eLectrictrL ( nerves) and opt ical , ( eyes) in Iiving substance r w have llrotlucecl the drawing. using physical equipment to llrorlrrce the power o1' the image. Onl-v the past is cl_oihecl in secrecy, the future htrs no bounds. I y h o h a s s e e n t h e 1r own spirit? \le hope some of our assoc iates can work n'ith ttris. . ideaThe drawing delricts ii device wiilr tu,o metar pr,tes. This makes a trvo lrrarte cal),citor. voJ.tages, and llorarities, wourd harve to be tuoiked out on this ideacertirinly'nyone rvith a rick of erectricar sense rvourd rearize thev must not contact both;li_ates at the same time or ilrey mi13ht be erectrocuted. This drarving rvourd llut b,ttr the brarn.rnd the optical svstem inside of ilre prate ratiiat i'ns. PossibJ.y tlris rvould give the subject an',inside out L o o k ' ra t t h e " o t h e r w o r l c l " , o r j . ; m i g h t b e . r n , , o u t s i d e i n l - o o k" . Tests conducted rvith ilris device shcruld b.e conducted by experi-enced electrical researchers. If anyone gets any results we rvttul<lapl)rec iate ilreir w r i t i n g t o us.

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r t\rrohorseshoo Eagnetg "The mounti.ng bcard pref erably of cak r.'ood r.'ire loup of #LZ oopper ths 2+ ils., of strffici.ent st;ength to Iift rj.ie cr beeviefr the stcel- ;'od i; :be center is 3/4 i-n. in dianeter' Xagnets ai'e to 5e piaced in sicCs so they can be roved io';ard or auat fromthesteelrod.Tbeysirou}daisobopi.'.otetisotheNorthandSouch or rupel., as inciicated by the polatitT poles can be set so as to aitlact tbe magnets fron the Steel rod Distance cf the receryer or sub;sct, " ir e c e i v e r ' ft is suggested to be ad.justed for greatest benefit to to tl:e end of the steel of tlre recelver be attached ti:a t rhe blrthsroue E:<periment rrilL shos best regults.tt rod yith putty or c1ey. si:e of tbe nnu::tYesner gave no Cinensions for hlg deeign. 3b" io* board rriil be deiermined. to sone extent by the size of the p11r of ?here Perhaps tl:ese sbouLd be bougbt fj-rsthoiseshoe nagnetE used. here fron the design giren in tbe Octa!.e severai Jb"ion" diff"r"n.ei journal. There is oo break or overlapping in the copPer wire loop oUu" f or tbe pulsed or oecillatl-ag a ihor.-o- bove but r?e f ee1 this is essential ife beLj.eve tbo Lakbde'r'ice. of a uire coi1, a basic elecironic effect rhythrric oscillatri1l give the nuJ.tiple magnetlc fleLd oysky circuit Because than a siraple Eagnet. which roake it nuch more effectiYe iioni tc negative attd back again, nl11ious from positive lt :s alternating, it doesntt mat:er vbich hand bolds'tbe gteel rod. of rines a Beccnci, of nagneti.c eDergf ' ci rcuit current I believe this is an a1ternating there 1s no hlnt by Dr. lfesngr of the need fn tbe above narerial fither h e d L d n? t f o; a carbon rccl to compiete or augr.:entthe circuit, Ir'e believe tbat the knou about Lt, or f ef t chat it r.'as not i.nportant. use of a carbon roc fol tl:e ocher l:and is hignly important and do uge i r Rc;h thc Sun anC the )ioon are important to .l-j.fe on this eartb, and suggested tbat the steel rod be covered in t.h,is bodyJ Neitl:ei is it ?hia covering probably rrith ccpper or sorle other diamagneti: Eauenal.
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Y o u w i , I l n o t e t h a t ) l e s m e r ts w i r e l o o p i s g l f t f l i d g t b e 6 a g n e t 8 , i{bicb atrangetrnt 1r llof rather than lngi.dg then as ln our deslgn. be prorrea and retil. welcome the reports of Aasocieffectlye "h l p - ? \ v ' ek n o w o u r d e S i g n r l o r k g . F i v e a t 6 S , w h o t a e ie l f r l atro i n P r o j e c t V : . t i c , gives the charged magneticaily rri th cirbon anci minutes i.n circuit 9 i ) I o E t p e o"P lte r h o n i l e l Y s bourg' nerYes a cirarge of mana which lasts f or Some repor! no reaction vhatfavorable results. tested have " e' S o r t e d e a r r g n g e m e n t r - r f t h e c o m D o n e n t s n a y b e n e C e g s a r i ' i pe a r eve1.. For th -irtj.c deviCe sbouLd be nede adjus"abie' This :s ',rhyehe

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TTG ZODfACAL on RAINBO}T COLOR TONER Our e:ryerlnrental Eorcr r{as assembled 1lke thls wj.th the copper dlsc antenna mounted flat on vooden dowels about I in. above the Ford col1s. These'vere also mounted fl-at on a 9 ln. square plywood board.. ];Ie used stardard, whlte lanp rubber insulated cor C for all wir e l eads , from the antenna to coil-, bef*een the first the coiJ.s, ard. f::om the second coll to the lead It c an contact plate. nretal, be other

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on shelf or high dresser to a subject lylng c om for tpbly on a bed. Do not of each For d doil. on the lJ ls no measurable elecer Remembet there fl.owirg ln this circuit; trlclty so ther efs no use 1n ar gui ng Thls 1s wlth anyone about lt. not just a nental d.evlce and the parte must be kept 1n a though, logrcal relatLonshlp, thelr dimensions are not cri tlcal.
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The theory is that Healing Color Rays from the L2 constellations of the compass are picked coming from all directions the'Zodiac, of down the and funneled 360 degrec antenna, conccntrated up by the wire attached to the dinpled recess in the center of the antencopper two tlao From there it is stepped or augmented as it Passes thrcugh Model A Ford Coils before being absorbed by the body through the rnetal plate electrode. see that the r,vire lead fronr to the diagram you rriIl Referring The cosmic the antenna goes into the plus side of tlre l,lodeL A coilo and irrto r:ire coil is drawn off the center tap of the first current plus side of coil The augmented ctrrrent is tilen drar;n numbe:: trvo. off the center tap of coil number two throuqh a long, flexiblet r,vire lead to the body of the subject. insulated The Rainborv loner doesn't seem to be erfective in the unbalanced conditj.ons changing or balancing or neut:alized the cosmic rays are not polarized there if the device is used on the ground floor, lead from coil number tlvo to body-contacr- plate, high above on a shelf" as a device for body unless it

Sot bv the earth. be a lonq should wi.th the cl.evice

do aog seerl A larger dianreter antenna and more Mode1 A coils gadget. The;e i.s to increase the effectiveness of this borderlard -- at least not circuit fLowing in this no measurable eleciricity no use arguing rvith neasurable on standard equipment -- so therets going ihrough 1:he And with no standard current anyone about itl itts debatable whether anything is being stepped uP. Certainly, coils principles, according to electronic coil trvo wilL not step up rvhatare is coming out of coil ever current one because the trvo coils may in some but the volume of coiled wire in the circuit identical; rvay unkno$rn to us at present increase or augment the "amperage". In any evnt the pragmatic test is the only way to provel or disprove, its effectivDsso It should be obvi.ous to the researcher that the Rainbor Toner is a universaL treatment to any and all device, applicable equally tc a "shotgttn'r Eut there ate those who prefer conditions. a ":ifle" and and the Radionic Treatment Instrunent does have nore direct rates specific application" The difficulty is tl:.at the treatr'qnt is silment for a specific change from day to day as the trCatnent This is why tlre Tonet tvas developedo effective! And this is why no Treatment Rates t!-ere included in the Atlas when this rvork was first Now it has been dec:-acd to cidd released. the Rates developed years ago by the designer of the Instrt:nen?, because it has been found by experience that these t'ixed rates Co help in nany cases.

t Psychoenerge! tc S 1'sem.t 1 9 7 7 ,Y o l . 2 . p p . 7 9 - r i 0

Publishers Q Cordon and BreachSciencc Ltd., l97j printedin the lJnitedKingdom

THE ACCUVIULATION OF BIOELECTRICAL ENERGY


V. G. ADAMENKOf U..S..t.R. Irutitute of Plwsioloey
'l-tvo c.tperrmental proctr!ures arc described by which human bioeiectncal encrgy can bc studied. One proceclure tnvoives obtainrng elcctrical current from acupuncture polnts \vhile the othcr involves a r l e t a l l i c h a n d d i r e c r e d b y a h u m a n h a n d c n c l o s c d i n a dialcctnc rlovc.

The amounr rri bi<xlectrical,rncrgy produced by h u n r a n b e r n s sr s ' , , c r t ' s m a i l u n d e r r n o s t c o n t l i t i , r n s I. : o r r h i s c n c r q vt o h a v c p r a c t i c a tl p p i i c a t r ( ) n sr n : u c h u r c a s a s h c a i i n g . m c t h o d s n e e d [ o be dcvciopeci for augmcnring the energy and uccunlularrng it in various devices. Two r p p r o a c h c sw h i c h r n r y i t t . t s i nt h c s c g o t l s h a v c rcccntly becn instigared. ACUPUNCTURE ELECTRODES An clcctrical currcnt has been obtained from a c u p u n c r u r ep o i n r . s i t h e h u m a n b o d y t h r o u g h o thc usc of elcctrodcs.ln this proccss.nickcl and silvcr clcctrodes ilre attached to l0 or 12 a c u p u n c t u r ep o i n r s . , \ v o l t a g e o f h u n d r e d s i t f r n i l l i v o l t si s t l b t a i n c dw i t h a c u r r c n t o f a b o u t i 0 O nlicroampcrcs. This currcnt is sutlicientto charge an accumulator ()r ll battery of capacitors. Conductivitv oi rhe acupuncturc polnts c l t a n g c s .d c p c n d i n g o n i h e ( ) r g a n i s m ' sp s y c h o p h - " " s i o l o g i c5 tia t e s .F o r e x a m p l e .w i t e n t h e s u b a j c c t i s c m o t i o n a l l y i l r o u s e d .i h e c u r r e n t ' s p o w c r incrcuscsbv 100 lo --100 per dcnt in comparisiln r v i t h t h c s a r n cs u b j e c ti n a r e l a x e ds t a t e . Tlris :rrousai an aiso bc pr<xluccd oiitionaily, c v Aftcr elcctrcxiesare connccted to a battery oi capacitors rrnd tr) the subjcct's acupuncture D ( ) t n t s .r h e s u b j c c t i s t < l l d t o a t t e m p t c h a r g i n g tlrc cupacilorswirh bioclcctrictl currcnt. Then l l r c e u p o c l t ( ) r s t r c c t ) n n c c l c dl o a t n i c r o a m p c r r motcr through u switch and are disconnectcd i ' r o n rt h c r c s t c ds u b i c c t .T h e v a l u c o f t h c c h a r g i n g c u r r c n t r c g i s r c r c db y r h e r n c t e r i s p r o p o r t i o n a l t o t h e a m o u n t r t f t h e s u b j e c t ' sv o l i t i o n a l e f f o r t . S i n c e t h e c o n d u c t i v i t v o f a c u p u n c t u r ep o t n r s
is r senior ;-esearch i)hysrology, Moscorv.

, r f c a c h s u b j e c r i s d i f f e r e n t .t h e i n i t i a i c h a r g i n g L u r r e n t r s c i i i l e r e n t .T h e r e t o r c . t h e d e g r e e o i v o i i t i 0 n l r i: t l t r r t r s c v a l u a t c cr t v u s i n g . t n o n l dimensronai ocrlicientlf K. wnich is a i-elatil'e c . v a l u co t :


A : ,r i"

i"

whereK = coetficienr voiitional e|Iort, oi


i

= c h a r g i n g u r r e n tr v i t h v o l i t i o n a ie f f o r t . c = charging current withour volitionai efTort.

Ctrclficicnt K of popic nor capablc of I volitional cffort cquals "1." Subjecrs ith volitional w abilities have coelficienrswhich cqual "2," "3." and "4." or more. lt has also been noted rnal a s u b j c c t ' s v o li t r o n a l c l T o r t r l c p c n d so n o n c ' s p s v . choph;"siologicalstate. Subjecrs who orciinariiy can obtain a coefficientK of "2" orten ,rbtain a \cor t)f " 1" when thcv itrc iatigucd. On rhc rrrhcr hand. some subiecrs an obtain c a cocficicnt K itf '1.5" r)r "r" cven wnen iatrgucd: after rcsting, rherr score usuallv incrcascsto "3" r)r ".1." 'fhis proccclurccan be uscd for rcscarchpurposcsin psvchocnergetics. \,IOVING DISTANT OBJECTS Another mcrh()d rlf accumulatinc bit.rricctrical c n c r g y i n v o i v c s r h c a b i l i t v s o m e D c o p j eh a v e t o m o v c s m a l l o b i c c t s l t l a t l i s t a n c e, , v i t h o u tt o u c h ing them. Some of thesc subjccts imoart an L ' t e c t r i c a lc h a r [ e t o t h c t r b j c c t s w h i l c m o v t n g t h e m . I t i s i i k e l v r h a r a i r i o n i z a t r o ni s c r e a t e d a r o u n d l h e o b j c c t sd u c t o t h e e l e c t r i c a l e l d p r o . i duceci l-rv the subiect. Tn any cvent, another subjc.ct. can usuallv approach thc obiect. once c h a r g e d .a n d c a u s ei t t o m o v e m c r e l y b y l r i n g i n g

'' -lf t V C;. .ilmenko, Ph.D., irss()!-ratc :lt the Institutc of

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i ) r 1 c ' s a n d sn c a r r i . f h i s r n o v s m c n t v r i l c ( ) n t l t t u c r h u n t i l t h e o b l c c t r s d i s c h a r g e dt h e n t h e f l r s t s u b : jcct must again impan an cicctricai charge to rt. h A simplc,.jcvicc as becnbuilt which facilitatcs 'Ihe this cffect mechanically. dcvice consistsoi a closed dielectric box with dimensions of 1.10 nrm. by 140 mm. bv 100 mm. The iop of the apparatus is covcred with a transparent organic giass. uncierneathwhich a metallic hand weighing one gram is fastened to an axis. The structure of the hand insuresgreat mobility and flexibiiitv. lf one wears a dielectric glove and clectrilies it on the organic glass. one crn cause the m e t a i l i ch a n d t o m o v e . O n e c a n l l s o c o n t r o l t h e m c t a i i i c l r a n d ' s I n ( ) v c m c n ti r v : c i c c t i n g l l t c p o s i tion ,rl thc lrand in the spacc rwa_yircm thc -lhe cicvicc. magnitudc of the clcctric lieid tension in these experimcnts avcraged about 1.000volts per centimcter.

h . \ s . r i - c s u i t , r ic x p c r i t r t c n t s ' v i tth c r n e t a l l i c l r a n d . i t r v a s c o n j c c t u r e dt h a t t h c c t l c c t t r f t h c c l c c t r i c a ll i e l d c o u l d b e m a g n r t i e dC ( ) n s c q u e n t l y , . t h c r n c c h a n i c ullp p a r n t u s s h o u l t l h e l p s u b i c c t st o rnovc objccts rvithout touching thcm. To tcst this conjecture.matcheswere placed in t h e d i e i e c t r i cb o . r a n d . r v i t h t h e h e l o o f a h u m a n hand in a diclcctrie rlltlvc. its rvalls wcrc c l c c t r i f i e dt o o b t a i n a h i g h l i c l d t c n s i o n . W h c n the held reached a tension of about 5.000 volt.s per ccn(imcter. movement of thc matches rvas observed. T l t c s c c x p c r i n r c n t s l r c c a s i l v r c p c a t a b l cl t n d c l c m o n s t r u t ct h a t c l c c t r i c a i l i c i d f o r c q s c a n b e l t s c t ll r r r p i t l s r c a il l l ( x i c i l i n q l t l i s ( l r n t n l l t r c n r ' c s . o i I i e c t n c a l l ( ) r c c si l l c c t ; r r u q n c t i c' : n c r S ] ; r s r v c i l a s m a g n c t i ct r b j c c t sa n d c o u l d c i a l ' : r n i m p o r t a n t ( r o l c i n u n d e r s t t n c i i n g) n c ( ) f t h c m c c h a n i s m s v b r v h i c h c n c r g y i s t r a n s m i t t c dl t a d i s t a n c c .

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JOHN C. PIERI{AKOS. M.D. ,lgc rl :\lort. .i1(l Eutt 57rlt .\fttt. Exccutivc Dircctor- lrr:;tittttcittr tlrc ,Vr,rr, . l'ork l(t()22.L/.5..'l Cilv, ,Verv Thc conccpt of bioclcctrical energy has bccn clusive to studv and objcctriv. ln this articlc. two verv rnqenrous approachcs are prescntcd t>btaining ricctricai currents irom itcupuncture p o i n t s a n d , i i a l c c t r i ca p p a r a t u s . Thc constructron and ellccts of the diaicctnc rpparatus appcarsto be ver)'simiiar to thc a p p r o a c hW i i h c i m R c i c h u s c d i n t h c c o n s t r u c t i o n o o f t h e L r r - c o na c c u m u i a t o rl n d l t i s s t u c i i e s n i t s e cflcct rrn the biocicctricai ctfccts ,rf thc ltuman ()rganiSm. ,Vr,rr, !'orl

Whilc lhc urticlc is vcrv cxciting ancl has i n g c n u i t l i r r t l t c c r p c n r u c n t u l a D p r o u c l t .n ( ) ( '-nougit specific information is given about . a D p a r a t u sa n d c x p e n m c n t a i e r r a n g e m e n t sS u c h v i r r f t l r n t l ' r t i orn o u i d l r a v c m e d c t h c b a s i c c o n c c p t s easicrto undcntand and wouid have madc thc . c x p c r i n r c n tr c p r o i i u c r b l c W i t h t h c p r c s c n t i n f t r r mati()n it ivouid be ,.'cn'cli{}rcult o vcrih' thc e x p - r i n r c n t .I t i s h o p c d t h a t i n l ' u t u r ca n i c l c s D r . A d a m c n k o w i l l c x o a r r du p o n t h c m a t c r i a i i n t r o d u c c c ii n t h i s n a o c r .

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o t t h e P o r o p h y s i c o lL o b o r o t o r y r D o w n t o n ' T l r r o u g h o u i 1 9 7 4w e h o v e b e e n c o r r y i n g s u i , : x p e r i m e n t s m o n n e r o b e o m o f p l o n e - p o l o r i s e dl i g h t " f i f t e r E n g l o n Ct o o s c e r i o i n i f P K o g e n i s c o n i n f l u e n c e i r r s o m e m e t h o d ' c n d e o s i e s ti o c o n t r o l' w o s i o o o s so s i r y i n o i r l o n yo r r c n o e n l e n r w e l o u n d t h e r n o s tc o n v e n i e n t testiluid, soyglrccsesolg h b e c m c r c o i c r i s e dl i g h t v e r t i c o l l y c i o w n w o r ots r u c b e c k e r c c n t o i n i r . rs o m e ',vos ituoiedobove the beoker. s o u t i o n ; t h e p o i c r i s e r i t s e i f c o u l d b e r o t o t e c jt h r u r n e o s u r o b l e n g i e s o n c j o f c o n t r o l l o b l e i n t e n s i t y ' T h e u o l t o g e o c r o s st h e o s p o r t o f o n o p t i c o l f o c u s s i n gs y s t e mo n d l i g l r t s o u r c e s u p p l i e d b y o f r e s h l y - c h o r g e do c c u m u l o t o r i i g h t : o u r c e w o s m o n i t o r e d c o n t i n u o u s l y ,t h e c u r r e n tb e i n g switchingcrrongement'if tlre'roliogebegon to foll' w i r i c l r c o u l d b e r e p l o c e db y o n o t h e r , b y o s i m p i e u s o g ef o r u p t o f c u r h o u r sw i i h o u t c h o n g e o f v o l t T h e c c p c c i t y o i t i r e o c c u m u i o t o rp e r m i i i e d c o n f i n u o u s f u n c i i o n i n g o f t h e r e m o i n i n go P P o r o r u s ' j o g e , w i i l r i n p e r m i t t e d t o l e r o n c e r e q u i r e cb y i h e P r o P e r lvioe,2'5 cm diometer' 7' 5 cm long' O n p o s s i n ot h r u i l ' : e t e s t l i q u i d , t h e b e o r ne n t e r e d o b r o s s t u b e o n d s e v e r o l l o y e r s o i i n s u l o t i n gi o p e ' o n c jf i n o l l y shieldei by heot rqdiotionby o thick cordboord e m e r o e du p o n o p h o t o ci lo d e d e t e c t o r c o n n e c t e d t o o c o n t r o l b o x c o n t o i n i n g o 'Dorlington poir' ompli-

u f i e d , r y h i c hr e g i s t e r e co c u r r e n t u p o n o m i c r o o m m e t e o f v o l u e c j e p e n c j i n q p o n t h e i n t e n s i t y o i l i g h t l r i n s e r t e di n v o r i c u s p o s i f i o n s ' u s u o l l y i n s i d e t t r o r r s m i t t e d h r u r h e i e s l l i q u i d . A n o p t i c o n o l y s e rc o u l d b e o n g l e s , i t w o s p o s s i b l et o c o l i b r o t e t h e b r o s st u c e , c n d b y c r o s s i n gf h e p o l o r i s e rc n d o n o l y s e ro t ' / o r i o u s of the cosineof the ongle' this squored b t h e i n s r r u m e n r y p l o t t i r r g o g r o p h o f c u r r e n t o g o i n s ri h e s q u o r e c o s i n e b e i n g p r o p o r t i o n o l i o i n t e n s i i y o i t r o n s m i t t e clii g h t . rhe PK ogent sotwith elbows o s T h e , , v l r o l e D p o r . o t uw o s s o l i d l y c l o m p e d f o o n u p p e r b e n c h ' w h i l e ihe brosstube' The hondsrested t if 1 , - q r r q , , p o 1 o l o w e r i n c j e p e n d e nb e n c h , w i t h h o n d s c u p p e d r o u n d tube ond to preveni ony occidcrrtol b , . r p o ro u o r d - r i n g st o m o i n t o i n o c o n s t o n tc j i s t o n c e e t w e e n h o n d s o n d r o n d s o p r o d u c e d o s p u r i o u sr e o d i r l go r r c c n t o c l w h i c h m o y h o v e d i s t u r b e c tj h e c o l l i m o t i o n o f t h e b e o m t h e s u r f o c eo f t h e t e s t l i q u i d ' o n c j t h e t h e m e t e r . A s o n o d d e d p r e c o u t i o n , o w o t c h - g l o s sf l o o t e d u p o n which wos foiihiully s l i g h t e s tt o u c h c r e o t e d o s c i l l o t i o n so f t h i s w o t c h - g l o s so f c h o r o c t e r i s t i c . { e q u e n c y , i n s t r u m e n fw o s e q u i p p e d o s i t w e r e w i t h o d u p i i c o i e c j i n [ l u c t u o t i o n so i t h e m e t e r r e o d i n g . T h u s t h e buili-in seismometer. monitoredthe voltoge of the bottT h e c o n t r o l b o x o l s o c o n f o i n e do v o l t m e t e r w l r i c h c o n t i n u o u s l y t drown by the phototronsistor, his voltoge reery poweringthe photodiode; with the minute current t h e b o t t e r y ' T e m p e r o t u r e 'h u m i d i t y o n d o t m o i n e d s t e o d yf o r u p t o q w e e k b e f o r e h w i n g i o r e p i o c e w mospi:eric ressure ere qll recorded' P t h e b r o s st u b e w i t h t w o m e t o l j T h e e f f e c t s o f i n c r e o s i n g t e m p e r o t u r ew e r e o b s e r v e c b y s u r r o u n d i n g

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P o O f i e l i , w o s o b l e f o p r o c j u c e eristicolly' t f o c e r r i r o l i s eh e n e e d l e o t 0 ' 5 m A ' c h o r o c f i l e c i i o , o i I m i l l o m p e r e . o n s e i t i n gi r r e c o n t r o l s in less u p o s i t i o n , i h e n e e cl je w o u l d c l i p s i e o c j i l y s u o l l y w i t h i , 3 0 t o 6 c s e c s . o f p i o c i n g h e r h o n d si n which the t h e r e u n i i l s h e r e m o v e d l r e r h o ' r c j s 'o f t e r i i r o r .o m i r r u t e i o 0 . 2 o r l o w e r ; o r r d w o u l d r e m o i n r 0' 5' n e e . l l e v v o u l dm o r e s i o v r i y r i s e t o i t s i o r m e r r e o c i i n g t i m e so u t o i t o 5 o . f f l . , s h e l r c i r i e v e dt h i s ' e s u i t 2 4 l n c n e r e n r o r k o b l c5 e s s i o rl lo s t i n g f r o m m i c l n i g h t '24 n o o i h e r s u b i e c l c o u l c io c i r j e v e c n y m o v e m e n t ts r r i a l s ' L o i l l ' r er e s L . J lb e i r r g : l i g i r t l y r v e o k e r ; " v h i i e in ltre P K o c t i n g ; g o r . li ; n l i i e i e c : r i c : b i e c l s r o t , . : i lo i ' : n e i r J e c l e , D u r i r r g n i ss e s s i o n : o o n T o n e c u s , r o o m w e r e c i e c . : r i ' r 'l D s e l ' r ' e o ' s , v e c I t e r e o t h e c o n o i r i o n s t o o eb Y s t c 3 e oi i n c r c e r | o t , i s c o v e r . r y l r p r e c i s e l ys h e w o s o c c o m o l i s h i n o , p r o c u c et h e r e s u l t w i r ; c l r s h o w e c i t i n s y , s i e r n o l m o n n e r ' ,i i r u s , o . r e m o v i r r gl r e c n o i y s e r ' s n e c o u i c js t i l l ic t h e c p r i c o i . i Yc c i i v e - 9i u c o s e t i h o i , i r e . v o sr r o t i r r i o c t r o i c r t i n g h e .p l o . t e o i p o l o r i s o if o n ' O ' r ' e p i o c i n g leovingonlY os before' Bui on removinoi h e , , v o I e r , s o l u l i o r tw i i h c i s t i i l e d " v o i e r , i h e e f f e c t c o r r t i n u e d oir !n tire beoker, ihe needle ihis time did ttol move' rro t p o i o r i s e dl i g h r p o s s e C h r u i h e b e o k e r ' C n i e m o v i r r q ; h ep c i o r i s e rs o t h o t o r d i n o r y r o n d o m l y the efiect to toke conioinedony Iiquicl' $e itren' ior o effecfswere prcduced'wilether r not the beoker in the beoker' a n d s o m e c l e o r l i q u i d m u s tb e p r e s e n t p l o c e , c l o n e - p o i o r i s e cl ji g l r t m u s tb e e m p l o y e d , s h e e to f p o l n o r m o i l yw o u i c b e i o i n s e f t o h o r i z o n t o l t o T h e o r r l ; , m e t h c d t s i m u l o t i r r gf i i s c f r e n o m e n o n of w i i h i e f e r e n c ei o t i r e p o i o r i s e r ' l n t h e o p i n i o n c r o i c i n t h e l i q u i d c n d c r o s si i i c o n c n g i e o f 7 5 o con oniy be ortribuioble p r o l , e s s or;J , b,r o v , u . r l r ot o s e x p r e : s e cijn t e r e s t i n i h e s e e x o e r i m e n i s , t h e e i i e c t - , i t o b i c g r o vi t c r t i o n i s e n s i t i . ' ' ee t e c i o r o f i l u i d t u r b u i e n c e t 1 l , r : e , . r e r c ,l . . , r e ' o u r r dl r o t p l o n e p o l o r i s e d l i g h t i s o m o i ' e tlron ::r,:l:nrlyllclcri:ei liEirt. 'ceorn ieid optic-thermol p o s s i n gt h r u o n o n i s o t r o p i cm e d i u m i s m o r e l i k e i y i o f An ,-:rri:oiroprc c o u p l i n g o n d t h e r e f o r e e r r e r g yo b s o r p i i o n . o c c u r s ; i o r s i m o i i c i t yi m o g i n e o I n t h e c o s e o i s u r f o c er i p p l e si t i s e o s y t o s e e h o w i h i s e f f e c t light beom; if the ongle c p l c n e . , , r o v e - l - r o n fn w o t e r s u r i o c c u p o r rw l r i c h i m p i n g e so p l o n e - p o l o r i s e d e c l g eo f l h e b e c m w i l l s r r i k e l h e " v o f e r b e t w e e n t i r e s ei v r o p l u c e s d i t f e r s f r o m o r i g h t o n g l e , i h e n o n e r e i r o c f e c jo n o l e s o i t h e p o r t i o n s o f s u r f o c ec i o n o n q i e d i i f e r i r r gf r o m t h o t o f i h e o t h e r e d g e , s o t l r e will reoch the photo-eye: ort the t h e b e c m r v i l l . , , o r yi r o r n p o i n t t o p o i . t , i . e . c d i m i n i s h e d i n t e n s i i y o n i n c r e o s e dp ' o b o L i i i t y t h o t m o r e o i t h e l i g n t p c . , t h eirr o n d r v i i h r o r r d o n r i y o l o r is e d l i g h t , t h e r e e x i s t s 'eye'. i will 'e,.:chlre ' , ' , ' e e n r o n s t r o t e dt l r i s p r o c t i c o l l v b y d i p p i n g o t u n i n g f o r k ' c i p i r c h 2 5 5 h e r z o n d o m p l i t u d e i i o o n o s c i l l o s c o p ev i o o s u i i c b l e c w i r i c i - , c u l d c e r n o n i t o r e db y m e o n so f o m i c r o p h o n ec o n n e c t e d w i i h o u t p o l o r i s e rt h e r e ' w o sn o i n f l u c m p i i i i e r , i u s i u n c j e rt h e s u r t o c eo f l i q u i d i n t h e t e s t b e o k e r .

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effect" betweenwo pcoplewhich is enhanced if they first spchronizc heanbeats.rlo;;r" earlier experimenc the energy Eansnrned undcr thc.framc *rt ri-. n""j tu., rnrhlpn Rorauons up o 4Od"gr""i couid not be accounrcd by known eiectre of for rmprliodc oc rqruon,rnes *r-th "r. "bs.*"-J tm of mrpetic ficld effects.The dctcctorswere ttc goo;dcoifida firsr M'grcts ptaccd tbc frrmc;cr"lF;;;e o 11ll,I:brque. humanbodicswhich in tum exhibiteacnanges oonrl Thc bioficldis not magnetrc, i, .pp_rit plg[ on. milliontincs t which could tlen bc monilored Uy f-.;"";;;;". stanOira 6cid TlArceiarn u rnown''rl;b,r;;;;fi?;"go,rl-6. biofeedbaci instruments. r.hcgpoougactic rctinry. cootrorioii.i-rrc P-gJ1} ttrcnbcd rrrd su'irsuons for funhcro"r"i, The apparaurs dcscribcdin this papcr soems gi".o. "* to measuresome effect around the human body relarcd 6 mngnetisnnThc observed Wrtne investigating pyramid forms and gffpst gennst be accountcd for by ordinary their possibleconnection with magreti^ fields, :!e*-c cr magnetrc fields, howculr, a,,olt" the author djscovered which can exact nantre remains a mystery as of this be used to measurea"o "pp"r"tu, around the field effect rriting(Febnrary, l9g2). The device hasbeen lrrm65 body. This effectwaseventuallyfound called a "biofield melcr" or more simply, a bf o be rclaed b Earth's mngneticfield andio rneter. It provides repeatable, quandfiable vary as Earth's field varie4 01sshrnges beirg data and gpns up the possibility for manymostpronounced duringmagneticstorms.and avenues of invesrigatron (parent applied for). times of new snd full m@rl at Developmentsin instrumedation have often Metcrhl rnd Mcrhod Iead to new discoveries.yogii -U pry.li., have claimed that 8n sura cxists around the The edgesof the pyramid are about45 cm . body, but only in the last dccsdc l;;" l*Iong Twenry ring magncts about:OOgauss of rnstrurnenb begun to detect effects which nelq suenguleach 8re placcd at each corner, could be rclacd to such an suraKidi; octh polcs pointcd towsrds thc apcr A smaj, photography scems to dctcct an intcractifocrurng mirror of the D?e used in ladies elestric field Earlier work by tte autfroruscO compact scts is placed st tie apex of the sensitive enplifien !o detcct two aspects of pyramid A light mounrcdon a nearty wall is human"fields; " onerelarcdto transmision of reflectcd hom the mirror and focuscd on a emotional chaages bctwecn one pcrson and scale mounted on the wall about one mete; anotbcr, aad thc sccondreiarcd to some..field hom tbc pyra,nid which is ,,"pcod; by; r! r"ra.-*1i i.'ii_* *f"rr -d mcrsurqr cncrry rs associecd ,r,"-g."."-e;uJi.ra *,6 51I d"lsubjeosirs rn rllc,.s
American Journarof Acupuncture, Vor.'r1, No.4, october-oecember 1gg3 353

magnctic G s t o n v l o n l i n e . W h e n s p c r s o n s i t s u n d c r tne i n tg0 ;gtt* l e v a r i e dsuonS' e w d e gstorms'o v e r the h e b o t t d'ring f r o m a f l with nwamid trt'i't'""fi*ii'to Gerrame' 'spot wlu usht movcr;d;;.,4 .*fu:"tr"t*;}.T#'1!;'i*:: or 8re{:: movements easuy t;," #i* fiTg l). These
and observed recoroed ,rquirim.ns for the biofield construction bc wood' mctcr8renot critical JilJ,.,"n canbe o, metalplastic' gl*', ;itbtt*to ,gong., although of any type of ,o.ngrh, pracile '-!'l ';;;;;' masnetsproduce shownin Tablc *6*t"to"9c Envirorr Envr fromthe -do:q'' dats*t *. Spaccwrrh the along *: graphed t* /)' of tbe biofieldmeter(rt& '-tlcarly,thegreatestresponscofthebiofield *'pont"t t;;;;*t

o*5"rri"-ili. aiongthe mssners

*iu*oi

that there eboutssweilasatttrestanteages.Directiono}fieldarecontinuous,soareresponsesofthe ;;;.ld t:'er' I would conjecture in the U;r the annlanrl variations oolarity is not imporrant, a"ity' lunsr' lDd ecasonal 8rerll with the "i willnotworlunless tbcmagpets the bio'eld mc."r rlroog "liry; i.,,Gt *fi vanThc general' flares'Io in the same direcrion "** .tr""[ ["ft if"'a t-tottt JilI6,h" meterare with no ,o"g,ro, of operare in theresponsc thc bioficld b" madl in'oe gcomagpctic "tio* weaker.*, t* "i frasrecan are ero;rrh"o tlc lnutons do witb prani; Maryland havenothing.o at The effects Ottt mcasured Frcdricksburg" weston distant)'or 8t " or secalled pyramidenergy' whcncver a Gititf Ut-dredmiles biofieldt"tt' i' ""-uvated The days' This frequentlytakes fcw inchesuP tnto AegreeL ""^J etery fe* stormsandjust before rhe seconds franre*iilrootr""erai placcduringttp"tit arn..tionl' * The ampiioa" or t#iJI'J

i;

JT]-:::"dons in dregeomasteuc

auri"e the time of magneuc

q;;!; ;: :l:"[jkru: *t; "*xg"[]*:'"t's3 re 1 ry111,v


#ll;r$.il:h:l*r of thL tY; weather, luoar aspccts' mood
menter, "r"' ou"'"-"it*-'*
new

incruding "'#'{ili$ pcriod's' thc biofield mercr ffiH"oo" 23 "'-'n or fuil moon
i"'o"'""a-'"""tt"pol'rity87 percentof
;r't*tiu"*15perccntofthctime'Achangeln in mercr either of in" r'esponse Ut biofield has ocslsionaiiv becn direction or ampiitrxic obsewed exactly 8t surnse' vanes amplitudc of the initiai response ..ft"

oJ; *"fi; ;;r tmei ?&nL, aro'nd as 3",*=;*Sn'*:tfr T;."iq',x'ffi the daY.
over l0 kg rnd Thc bioficld mecr weigls ltl iot -ri, has atime ***ri"f "*uar. _.rililirfr-ocsnot*,itrate &flectcdbydr* nearby' itsef o't-en pt*o is not or move UV " from day t d; althought]le zero fi;hiftr

*"ary -"it

..av

a centimetcrs. by rew
Rccults

;li:t#:X**:."'*t"'ff"H"Ttli::'1 or relatcd to cmotional

and nor **4 lnitial obscrvationswere careful oU'"'""JJ^ quandtative, uut il" th";tbt O'*"t"a wcre oadc *U*i-** apparatusr6p*d;;duringthc.m;;; 6ltdt:d;; storms following;il;' obaervauonOr*;;;';d"rdi".d-

the that J'T:f..'tr'*e*LX ffiT:' r,?orts ffi;".1':l#'L"t"t in suspcnded a batancc' showedlargeresponscsll.timcsi'ljiijPtesclccofsomeindividudsinduccsmove. in a-mccbanical
tsir BonL; mapcuc stofits iorgrmnt oftr.r."'pviili*i obscrvearotatiJns 1gg0.
354

i""t U"io observed the experimentcr' ocntal stStl' or scx of t""nn' dcflness' orrnyothcrparamercrsnr& crist and icd' Howeve'' 'o"n tntt"a erobab! e'ith this i$tnthave not'yet been observed design' On two t"* P its Prcsc't prinitivc didcrent individuals have Tt"ttT':-:o others who were shown reversodpolan'.frorn

mcnt ;;;

(30 minutes If onesitsfor a rongtime

1983 Vol' 11' No' 4' October'Dcmbr Ameri{tanJourncl ol Acupurcturt'

or more) under the bioficld meter, it will usuallycometo 8 new zeropoint displaccdin . the direction of thc initid deflection and about l/10 of the amplitudcof the initial dcflectionThis would suggest that the biofietd hrs a stcady-state cmponent. At otber times it sppearsthat tbe biofield meter never stops oscillaungwhile a person sis under ir This that there is a time.varying or result suggests pulsingcomponentto the biofield The smaller version scdcd in a s,lsssbottle is quite portable, andmeasurcmcnts hsvc bccn madeon the coasts andin themounrrinsof th Unitcd Statrs, in Mexico, Pucrto Rico, Egpq endNew Zcdaad In gpnenl, tbc arnplitudc of rotation is lcss near the oceansand greatcr in mountoi"ous regions.Since the Earth's field rapidly at tirnes,simultoneous changes measurements would bc helpful. Since this ap paranls providesmore information and more variability than the geomrgneticindices,perhapssomeotheraspects the geomagnetic of or solaractivity fields aremorecloseiyrelatedto this energyfield around the human body. Severalindividualshavesmallervenions of the instnrment and have reported casual ob servations.A large version was built in the Washington Research laboraories in San Francisco,and by an independcnt rcsearcher and former EEG analyston Cape Cod Both versions,while sligbtly different han Oe one used by the author, show tle sane general efrecs. A psychologistin New Zealand has built a biofield meter and reports that the direction of the initial rotstion is in the op positedirectionasin the northernhemisphere.

Dlscusrion

Many pararnetersand conuol studies were For madeto rule out Eitcrnstiveexplanations. cxample, diffcrent shapcs werc testcd Most worked as worked, and tbe pyramid strucurrre well or bctter tbsn most and wes easy to construcl However,"pyramidenergf," if thereis any suchenergy,is probablynot relatedto this effecL in Bioficld mcen suspended sealedbotles provided proof tlat air currents wcre not rF sponsible. In this configuration, rotation is obscrved when a pcnon placed bortb hnnds eround the boule without touching it Re Bponses are much too fast to result ftom thermaleffects.Electroetaticshieldingdid not diminish the efect, nor did electrical gFoun& ing of the subject Magnetic shieldingdid stop the effecL ln one control study, four glassjars with hangng pyrrmi6ls were placed about l0 feet apart on a concretewall. One pyramid had on doublemagnets eachcomer,onehad singie rnagDets,one had the magrets alternating nonh pole up andsouthpole up, andthe fourth had rwo hcary stcel nuts on each corner, of about Oe same weight as the riag magner the increased dcflcction. The Double magDcts with alrcrnatingpolarity of magrres did unit not move, nor did the one wrth stcel nuts in placeof mrgne6. Howcver. the largemodel of the bioficld rlietrr does rotatrr ryhen there are no magnets. Magnetism must tberefore b only partially rclated to the observedeffecs. At times of intense magretic storms the effect has bcen observed when the expenform the biofieldmeteris conr ln its present mentcr xrasmoriethan two metcrs away from parableto the hrst ligbt bcsm galvanometers the apparaars. Rotationsof up to l/4 rurn have with binoculars in ued by early experimenters the sody of bccn observed Observations in elcctricity. Further refrnements the instru on both the small ud large instrumentshave rarely rcpeatcdlyshownthat rapid movements ment are obviouslyneeded Forresearch purposes take place when a prsonis not nearby. The aform ofthe devicehasbeenbuiltwhich zcro point movesa degreeor two from day to consistsof a copper coil wound about a pyrin amid frane. This form is also observed to day, perhapsreflectingchanges the Earth's ficld and/or changesin tbc tcmperature and rctate when no curent is applicd to the coil, so humidity which effcct tbe nylon suspension rnorle when current is applic4 and to vary with thc geomagnetic storms.Currentrcsearch line. Sincethe measured bumanmagretic field is is in progress to determine the effects of s'avcform inpua to the coil various only on the order of l0i g8uss,"it couid not
Vol. 11, No.4, Oclober'Dscembr 1983 AmericanJoumel of Acupuncture, 357

possibly bc affectingthe biofield meter.T'he effecs of a human beingon the apparaos can be dupiicatedby gently moving a 300 gauss magretabout cmfromthecornerofthebie l5 field meter. Whatever the uature of the bie field, it is large and only wgqkly intcractive wrth ordrnarymagnetisrn Suggcstionsfor Furlhcr Rcscarch At this time, concluions arc only tcntative. Theseinitial observations needo be verified by other expenmenten.The ap,pararus needs to bc refined and improved Individud differencesneed to bc carefully studied and meas. urmentsneedto bc taten on plants, animds, ud pcrhapswster a.sdother substanccs. In the theoretical pa'lrn, many qucstions nU bnE0drcssed. tO Forexample.ar E-grish biologrst5bas pculated the existerrceof a non-electromagnetic field arorurd aI living organisms. He calls his theoretical field thc "morphogenetic field" The biofield posu> latcd by the author may be equivalenr These arejust wordg aftcr all But if thc biofield docs proveto bavephysicalreality,bow is itrelarcd to classical fieldsof physics? Does thc bioficid obey inversesquarelaws? Is it AC or DC? Does it have a spiral strucurr+-a vortex form? Can it be focrsed?Coltectcd?Used to storc or extrsct cner6t? Can it bc made artificiaily? There are hundredsof possible experrmens o do. [a fts lgrlm of biology, physiologgr, psyctF ology, and sociology, therc are oany important connectionsto explorc. The biofield meter clearly showsvariationswith solar activity and lunar phase. During solar flare activity, charged particles stream towards Esrtb in grcstcr abundance, producing so called magnetic storms. Human health and behavior, as wcll as animal behavior has been linked to solar activity andg666ngnc'ticstorns by many studies.6'7 During magneticstorms people 8re more psychologically disturbc.4 rnd tbc weatler is more likcty to bc scverc.s

lotcrnational banles iue more likeiy during; which takeplaceevery. solarmagneticchanges The next solar magretic changeis 22 years.e expectcdaround 1985. Will this change&e human biofield? lnlesserwayq the geomagneuc fieldis often disorbcd jrst aftcr everynew or full mmn and the humanbiofieldalsoundergoes temporary a polarity shift. Many surdies have related de ctmctive bcbaviorof pcople to lunar cycles.r0 on Research magneticeffectson living organisrns is mrsbrooming rapidly now and we rppcsr to be at thc tbresbold of many ncw discovcrics.ll Clearly, somethingis going on in this arca which is important Pcrhaps the spparatus dcscribcd in this papcr may help unravel linls bcnpeenthc Sun, Moon and life on Eartb, gving us I greaterr:ndersranding of our placc in tlte solar systcm.

Rcfcrcrcct I. Peync, B: Biercrgy and Pwchocncryy. R4oru

nr tb. FirrPtrrt rron c Cofcreocc, 1974. 2. SOrccEovirmr ScrricesCcntcr.325 Broadrrv_ &f3 Eoujdcr,Colondo 80303. Prriirn inary Repo'n and Fottcast of SolarGaphysical Dan Wcclly frec upoo rqult 5rrbti:etiro lyrihh[ 3. Pcrchll W.: Gerrnaalnsdturc for Sprcc Rescarctr, Suagrrq Wcrt Gcrmeny. {. Cobco, D.: M4nctic Eficcrs of tbc Hunur Body. Physia fodcy, Aqrut l9?5, pp. 3r!a3. 5. Sbcidretc, k: / Ncw Scicncc of Life Bloode nd Bnfgs lxt, LcCoG Engian( i981. 5. Brocm, F.A: Biologlcd Clats. Ocroaology Int, July/Augrst 1967. 7. 9pcvyrbcv, l'{.N., Norntr ICF.: Solar Acuviry rnd lrlrarfestrtions in thc Bicpberr. National Rcscarch Couacil oiCanafu. tcchntc.l tnlrlruon 1679, Ottrsr l9?3. E. Hcrnrg J.R, Goldbcr3, RZ: Srrn Veathen and Clim^tc NASA SP{26, Wuhiagroo, D.C., 1978. 9. Dcrry, ER: Endcocc of Cyclic Prncrns io an Irdrl d l4s611ioorl Errlcr, 600 B.C.-AD.. 195?. Cplas Juae l9?0. Fordroo for rhc Srudv of Cyclcl Pitrburyh. PA. 10. Ucbcr, AL: Thc Lunar ffet Anchor prcss, Grrdco Cty, N.Y.. l9?8. ll. Ellingca F.T., Kristirnscn H.: Docs Mrgncric Slerrr Trcrrmcnt InJlucocc Precrprurioo of Crtium Crboac ftroo Supcrrrurnrd Solutknr? &lntytk v Vaut 35/1,1979,p9 3O$3t5.

358

Atnsrican Joumal ot Acupuncture, Vot. ,t1, No 4, Octobcr-Decembcr 1g&l

LIGHI SOURCE

fr 's

RtNG MAGNETS

Fte l'
Tbe Biofield Mercr'

s lnches

t* il-r I

1--

A'lnder lx I l' MD Fredrrcxsourg

t2r
'tO ' t

7 ; . l
t

- l
I

i " rlIF l\ r 1

[.
l

-F t " L
- \
-1 I iI - 2 -

I t

Fl& 2. Dcflccdons' (A) rj gidi"tO Mear Ctcodgstic I'o&r

I
1983 11' No' 4' Ostobr'Decembr Acupuncture'Vol' ol AmericanJournat

355

Teble l. Rccordedobservations the Bioficld Meter. on Deccmber 1981. Tloe (Grcearicb) t2/09 tarltlel DcOcclioo(cm) 4.5 5.0 left E.9 (Full Moon) 5.i 3.8 r 9.0 19.0 lcft 2.5 lcft 0 2.5 lcft I?.8 6.4 lcft 15.2 1.2lcft 0 2.5 l'1.0 25.4Ieft I t.4 t.9 r0 . 2 1 0l. 12.1 (NcwMoonr 2.5 lcft

t2/r0 12/rr
12/ll t2/tl 12/13 t2/t3 t2lt4 t2/15 12/16 t2/11 12/11
tt / | I

t2/18 t2/19 ,2/20

t 2/ 2 r
t 1 / 1 l

l) l',

/ )1 t 11

t2/24 t2/25 \2/25 t2/26 12/26 t2/26 t2/26 t2/26


l) /)1

t2/28 12/28 t2/29 t2/29 t2/29

l:24 p.nl. l:31 p.n" l2:13rro3:42 s-rn 8:48 a-rn 5:06 a.rn I l:30 a-nr. l2:O4 p.m" 4:10 r.n12:18p.o. 4:34 p.rn 3:12 asr4:57 a-m. 5:00 p.ro. 2:28 p.m. Il:41 p.ro6:03 p.m. 3:00 a-mI l:33 rrn 12:ll p.m. 12:12p.m. 10.08p.rn9.42 p.nt l0:45 p.rn2:06 rrr5:lI a-nr 12:42p.a. 4:14 p.rn I l:10 p.m. 4:02 r-m. l2:56 p.mI.27 r.m" 2:07 p.m6O8 p.m2:00 a-mE:50p.m-

r0.r

i.6 1.3left 8.9 12.7 26.1 30.5 10.l 2.5 lcft

The rvcrrge rcsponseir rbout t 0 cu rnd the mlrrrdum is over 30 cq Ooc cm - 0.3o rdruort.

356

Amrican Journalof Acupuncture, .11, 4 O c t o b e r - D e c e m b1 9 8 3 Vol. No. er \

TIiE E I OFIFLD IETER


A measurenent devlce for what has an been unmeasurabie heretofore energy f1e1d around the hurnan body.
LIGHTSOURCE

-:-; i:F-

Meter ls slmple to use' The Blofleld rugged, and stable 1n operatlon. To make a messurenent, a Person slts under the lnstrument wlih eyes at the level of the frame and reads the degree of 1nlt1al rotetlon on fhe scale provlded wlth che lnstrument. amount of rotatlon Usuaily the lnltlal wlll be between I and 7 degrees. The dlscovery of rhls lnstrument opens up a whols new srea of sclentlf !c lnvestigaElon. iIHAT IS TiG SIOFIEI,D?

tt'

WALL SCALE

R E F L E C TN G I MIRROR

RING MAGNETS

for blologj-caI energy T h e t e r " m ." E l o f l - e l d t t i s n r e r e l y a n a b b r e v l a t l o n from lt. ts relate-d to magnetlsm, Yet dlfferent The blofleld fleId. aura. rt seer:s it nay be related to what people have called the human research Further to be a splnninf force or torque around the body' the nature of the b10field. ls needed. to determlne WIiAT IS THE SIGNIPICANCE OF TI{E EiOFIELD? l , 4 e s s u r e m e n t so f t h e b l o f L e l d h a v e s h o w n b h a f 1 t l s h l e h l y t vertab,le and clcsely assoclated wlth maenei-c ciranses of fleId. the Earth's w111 vary Durlng strong Seomasnetlc dist;.rrbances the blofleId cf dlrectlon ln boih anrpiituoe ano polarl-ty. ( tnat 1s, lnltlal the Blofleld Mecer.) rotatlon of There 1s a polarlty change B5f" of the tlme arcund new or fu]l :noon.

People are inore stressed and hyperactlve durlng perlods of crlmes , and' geomagneblc als turballCe . Accldents , lllness, are a}l more I1kely at these tj-mes. battles lnternatlonal i ' r ea t h e r s t o r m s o f t e n a r e m o r e s e v e r e a t T i r e B l o f L eL o a l s o v a r t e s dls turbances . t l m e s o f g e o m a g n et 1 c sccordln$J"y.

i'

-r-f ) - 'sl,:'w

1' v

rssN 070t-9t81

PIANETARY ASSOClAfiON fOr cl-EAN ERGY Eil$


Newsletter 1 3 Volum , Number

September 1979
to The SaneAlternative Pesticides RADIONICS;
An alarming, world-wide insect,plant and rodent resisfanceto chamicalpasticidos ( including the novel At hormonesand growth inhibitors)is being registered. ones such as chamosterilants, or unconventional as the same time, mora casas of human death and dr'sease wellas savere ecological imbalances directly related to petrochemical pesticide applications are being monitored throughout the planet. Ancient plaguessuch as malaria and rodent inlestations recently considered to be under control ara again on the upswing due to reslstanceto pesticides.fo these critical developments,radionics and psychotronicsotler a sane alternative.fhis lssue of the Newslettercovers the theory of radionics and itsmoniterad application in a severe Spruce Budworm intestation in Naw Brunswick, some insights lrom an entomologist, and finally, a sober raport f rom the United Natlons Environmantal Programma. Basicto radionictheory and practiceis the conin and matterare submerged cept that all life-forms the electro-magnetic energy field of the earth;and f u r t h e r , t h a t e a c h l i f e - fo r m h a s i t s o w n electromagnetic field with its own particular frequencyor vibrationwhich can be expressedin a numerical valueand which is knownin Radionics as a "rate".This energyis, for our purposes. as yet still unidentifiedwith no conventionalinstrumentation being availableto measureit. Another important conceptis that the electro-magnetic life-field or of the earth, with its subtler variety of frequencies beyond the electro-magnetic spectrum,provides the link betweensubiect and the radionicspractitionerduring analysis and interaction. The energy field of a specific thing and the by informationit containsis detectable the human mind/nervous system acting as a sensor and is quantified a device, radionicinstrument, acting by a as a tuneableantennfr=inthis analyticalmode, the developedsuper sensiblefacultiesof the operator play a significantrole. or the Conversely energyf ieldof a life-form thing can be affected by a device acting as a resonant tuned circuit to its frequencies and modulated In further by other frequencies. this transmission to of mode the faculties the operatordo not appear to transmission seems be a factorand,furthermore be effectiveregardlessof distance. This simplified interpretationof Radionics is

Association tot CIeanEnergy Newslettel P,"nrr1.,,y

1.979 September

offeredwithoutgoing into the full theoryto provlde in a backgroundfor this paper.Those interested alsocalled more depth on the subiectof Radionics, The are Psychotronics, referredto the bibliography. book The Secrel Llle of Plantcgivesthe historyand describes the early agrlcultural success ano development of Radionics. These were by characterized the use of an electronicradionic transmission instrument which "tuned" to the specific crop being for insects by means of the and-' in ehetgy informationlontained a photograph of by moOuiatea the energyfrequencies a"reagent" the or in found to be effective repelling controlling pest. insect Spruce Budworm ExPerlment in conducted In the spruce BudwormExperiment was a differentRadionicapproach New Brunswick in crop harvested one taken.Unlikean agricultural protection a longon growthrequires Jorest season, term basis and so the obiectivewas to protect the lust the foliage of the trees, and not necessarily killing of the pest insect. A dual approach was icallY; sPecif formulated . the strengtheningof the tree vitality and the orovisions of any deficiencies in nutrient or hormonalenergies. r the devitalization the targetinsectby the useof of very specific techniquesrather than using broad spectrum reagents which might also affect the target specie'spredator insects. ln the case of the host tree White Spruce,in its an early growth it actually manufactures insect hormone Juvabione,which forestry researchhas or ul shownto be a powerf ovacide, insectegg killer' young trees manuiacture their own insect The of As controlorolection. a tree maturesproduction maturestandsof the hormone diminishesso that forest create the conditionsfor a naturalcycle of These cycles have become a Insect infestation. in virtualplaguedue to the interference thecyclefor valid economic reasons of f orest harvesting' and for radionically this deficiency, Compensating andthe the othersthat werefound,improved vitality of survivabililY the trees. of of The effectiveness devitalization the insects was shown in the experimentwhere the insect in population the controland testareawasthesame hot"eu"r,in the test area the insects had stopped eatennew foliage by feedingas witnessed partially buds ind had not gone to the next stage of extentin the as development wasf ound to a greater was done very rapidlyand latein controi.The test so the season that the full effectof a properprogram was not determined. Other ErPeriments conductedat the same time Other experiments of SpruceBudwormMothsas the repelling included by measuredby counts of egg massesdeposited

moths and done by offical Forestry survey teams. werecertainlv indicative success, The results of but of as were not as definitive first appearedbecause data from previousyears. lack of comparison As well considerableresearchwas done on the Dutch Elm fungus and a double blind experiment conducted which showed success using some techniques but not with others. since them preparatory research and small scale experimentation taken place with mosquitoes, has black flies,and the area control of biting insects. Observatlons The emphasis throughoutour work has beenon thorough researchinto the natureof the insectpest, its cycles, the host plant or tree and the most ef{ective timing and approachto the problem.As well, and almost as important, has been the checking of treatmentagainst companion trees, plants and insectsto ensurethe selectivity the of control.But mostof all hasbeentheeffortexpended to attemptto solidly substantiate experiments all wherever possible by means of the scientific methodwith statistical techniques and independent Nonetheless, followingobservations the observers. are sharedat face valuewithoutmuch explanation, f b u t h o p eu l l y w i t h s o m e m e a n i n g t o o t h e r researcners o Treatmentsusing the "complimentaryrate" to rateof the insect'or cancelout the basicf requency fungus, were considerablymore effective than using only a reagentin the treatment' trealments found insecVfunguswere o Treatments againstthe if to be moreeffective put on {or a periodof time and for then repeatedat24 hour intervals 3 or 4 times' ungus vitality of the insecVf The decreasing followed a step-functionwith some bounceback was stopped' occuringwhen treatment o Exoeriments and observations on f ungus that the colony was ically,indicated specif colonies outright but stoppedgrowing and not demolished expandingand then decayedrapidly.This is also corroboratedby the interruptionof the developmentalstagesof the sprucebuoworm' designed' o Any experiment mustbe verycarefully with the proper experimental protocol being as established-orit is unacceptable proof of what as beingof anecdotal is occurringand is dismissed valueonlY. Future Dlrectlons At the present time the/e are upwards ol 17 doiirg radiontcagricultural enterprises commercial on for individuals privateland in the insectcontrol that in the world,30Staes.lt is estimated United of 500/o all food grown is destroyedby insectsand t f p l a n t d i s e a s e sT h e a p p l i c a b i l i t y . oR a d i o n t c s o . insectcontrol is of primesignificance' agricultural Howeverthere are a number of other areas in

PlanetaryAssociation lor Clean Energy Newsletter

1979 Seotember

pinpointsthesewave lengthsand the frequency of the plant's vibrations transmits and energyusingthe earth as a conductor.The plant,acting as a tune receiver, strengthened is against disease, in this or, case,the attacksof the budworm. The originalplan was to conductthe tests in an areaiocated White's at Mountain nearSussex, made a v a i l a b l b y J . D ,l r v i n gL t d .B u t o n M a y 2 5 , 1 9 7 6 , t h e e area was sprayed with fenitrothion so it was abandoned. Next 150acreslocated Route880, on LesterRoad. near Benvick, were selected. After an initial malfunction equipment May 30,T.J. Klich,an of on officer of the Klimac Company,reportedtreatment o control of aquatic"weeds"which are a currently had taken placeJune 11-13on some 200 trees. problem. unmanageable The reportconcludes that whilesDruce budworm populations were roughly equal on both trees . control of plant diseases, viruses and fungii, and thosein the "control" or which arc veryamenable radionicmethodology. treatedwith radionics to untreated areas, the treated trees were able to It is in theseareasof the aoolication Radionics producebetterfoliage. of public whichareessentially on a largescaleto areas icallyeighttreesf rom eachof the treatment Specrf lands where the jurisdiction of the public and control areas were sampled.The report said: government agenciesis encountered. "For eight trees in each there was no appreciable It is here that the need for a theory to explainthe in difference sprucebudwormpopulations." The lack of an is conceptof Radionics paramount. Estimates defoliationin trees sampledwere of explanatory theory, and the fact that it appears divided into 10 categories depending on the concept,is a on the surfaceto be an impossible percentage defoliation. The categories of were:0stumbling block to scientific recognitionof the T-one to 5 per cent defoliation: no defoliation; viability from displayingan interestof scientific one-six to 15 per cent; fwo-'l 6 to 25 per cent: objectivityin Radionicsfor fear of ridicule.In this three-26 to 35 per cent: four-36 to 45 per cent; regard we leavethe pioneeringwork of explaining five-46 to 55 per cent: srx-56 to 65 per cent; in Radionics/psychotronics terms of quantum seven-66 to 75 per cent; elght-76 to 85 per cent: physicsand photonsto peoplelike Dr. W. Tiller of nine-86 to 95 per cent; 70a-96 to 100 per cent Stanford, Tom Bearden and to the Russian (needles almost all missing but some six axils variety remaining); who are publishing tremendous a scientists and 70b-96 to 100 per cent (neartyalt of papers on the many aspectsof the total area of needles and axils destroyed). mind/matterinteractionknown as Psychotronics/ The reportsaid:"Despite similar sprucebudworm Radionics. population of the treatment and control areas, ( T e dK l i c h ) current defoliationon the trees sampled in the treatment area rangedfrom Category1 (6 to 16 per cent)to Category with two treesin Category1.On 4 the control area, current defoliationon the trees sampledrangedf rom Category5 to CategorySwith fivetreesin Category and one eachin Categories 5 6, 7 and8. "Vigor or recoveryon the trees sampledin the treatment area was fair on seven of the trees and good on one tree. All eight treessampledon the control area showed poor recoveryas comparedto t h e 1 9 7 5c o n d i t i o n . " radionics testingin Kings Countyin A report on The reportsaid:"lt wouldappearthat the treeson treatmentof 1976 indicatesthat the experimental the treatment area,withthesamenumberof feeoing trees affected by spruce budworm had some for sitesavailable sprucpbudwormin 1976, and the influenceon the trees. The report was prepared for the radionics same sprucebudwormFopulationin 1976(at least at the time of the pupalsurvey)were successful in Associates Ltd. of company, Kilmac Management producing noticeably signif a icantlybettercrop and Downsview, Ont.,by MaritimePestControlLtd.,of to Fredericton, madeavailable fhe Record.The of foliageby the end of the sprucebudwormfeeding and period in 1976 and are thus in a better,healthier a reportwas writtenby N.R.Brown,of Fredericton, a c o n d i t i o n t t h i s t i m e .J u l y 1 9 , 1 9 7 6 . " University New Brunswickforestryprofessor. of Moth repellant testswere then carriedout at the plantsemit Radionics basecj the theorythat is on of forestland lastJuly 5. impulsesthe same way that radiation University New Brunswick distinctive Forest Canadian Service egg masscountsper102 A throughoutnature. machine impulses emitted are which Radionicsresearchis also headingwhich include: . the "fertilization" largetractsforestotherwise of not amenable to fertilizationby affecting tree vitality, a i00/oincreasein growth could bring a forestto maturityin 30 yearsinsteadof 45. . areacontrolof bitinginsects suchas mosquitoes black flies, tse-tse flies to make areas more habitable manand livestock. in thecontrolof for and diseasessuch as malariaand others. . suppression of growth of plants known as "weeds" where they affect crop production.

whattests Here's Radionics: showed

FlanetaryAssocattonf or CleanEnergy Newsletter

metreson the treatedblockswere:63,62 and97.On the adiacent untreated block areas, they were: 1 , 3 0 82 7 3 , 1 5 6 , 8 31 9 4 , 3 2 61 9 7 ,5 1 1 ,1 6 3a n d 6 5 4 . , , , Both Mr. Klich and Dr. Browntold lheRecordthe results ol these tests should qualify radionicsfor further tests.But while the provincialgovernment has expressedinterest,their federalcounterparts So alternatives to are not interested. while potential chemical spraying such as bacteria and sex are attractions beingtestedunderfederalauspices, radionicsis not. do Dr. Brownsaid,"l certainly (thinkthereshould be more tests). lt's an unexplored area with potential." Mr. Klich said the radionic exoeriment near "had the lowestegg count anywhere." Fredericton The experiment was carriedout "in haste"and what h e i s a d v o c a t i n gs f u r t h e re x p e r i m e n t s . i for supporters more One of Mr. Klich'sstrongest testing in Newfoundlandis Senator Chesley W. Welfareand Carter,chairmanof the SenateHealth, Sciencecommittee. In a letterto fhe Record,datedJune '18, Senator I Cartersaid:"Personally,think the results thathave been achieved so lar fully justify further experimentation, sufficiently extensive and carried o u t u n d e r s u c h c o n d i l i o n sa s t o o r o v i d ed e f i n i t e proof either for or against the efficacy of the radionicsmethod. "Dr. Ray Brown of the University of New Brunswickand Dr. FrederickConron (of Quebec City), deservemedalsfor their couragein making positive statements about the radionics. Most scientists so learful of the riskof losingfaceor of are t a r n i s h i n g h e i r i m a g e t h a t t h e y p r e f e rt o r e m a i n t regardless anonymous,or even to be negative, of the cost to their country... "l have talked with Dr. Klich and I know he has become discouragedwith the present setup. lt forestryauthorities depend appearsthat provincial on the federalforestryauthoritiesand the refusal of the federal forestry division to explore the radionicsmethodwhile at the sametime endorsing method,raises suspicion the thatthere the chemical may be a tie-in somewherewrth the chemical i n d u s t r y , i m i l a rt o t h e e x p e r i e n c e { t h e U n i t e d s o of StatesDepartment Agricultureas describedby Dr.Conron. "The cost of the radionics me\hod is only a s f r a c t i o no f t h e c o s t o f c n e m i c a l o t a y i n ga n d t h e potential savings alone justifies a fuller n m i n v e s t i g a t i oin t o t h e r a d i o n i c s e t h o d .l f t h e r ei s t r u t h i n i t . s o o n e ro r l a t e rt h e t r u t h w i l l c o m e o u t forever, becausethe truth cannot be suppressed and I am thereforegratefulto you for keepingthis subjectalive..." has The theoryol radionics beenknownf or years, t b u t i t w a sd i s c r e d i t e 5 0 y e a r sa g o w h e n i t f a r i e d o d i i v e u p t o e x a g g e r a t e c l a i m s .L i k e e l e c t r i c i t yn o , d o n e c a n e x p l a i n i t . " ( J o h n E v e r e t t ,T h e K i n g s S . C o u n t vR e c o r d , u s s e x N e w B r u n s w r c k )

THE INCREDIBLE HIERONYI'US I'IACHTNE ULTTilATE DOOIISDAY I'TEAPOXOR SAVIOR TO I{ANKIND?


by Joseph F Goodavage

I converted nllltary Not far Country, Dutch fron the Pennaylvanls of verdant reconnalarnce h1lIe farnland in fLerl over rolIlng elrcraft wlng farthfully recorded the the V a J ,I e y . Cunberland A catnera 1n the ,*here bllghted eere crops topography, ereas belng lncludlng brown-grey ghopn to a Locaf waa developed, The filn atlacked by hungry lngectg. gectlona were outLlned. he wanted A techfarrner, and the "treeted" :.n Newport, Foundation Pa., Honeotronic Research niclan from the and placed kept negatl.re, cllpped out t.he chogen sectlone, the the grnaLf we-l] of a bLack box. eelected cut's ln the "Every morning the farner, ted right." SeveraL nernetodee externinated box. fron "lurn a 8:3O to 11 for thrg large dla-l week," on the the top technrcian instrucall the way to the

beetLe, Japaneee borer, every corn days Later ge.Iected .eere thoroughly area, ln the eolL af lhe (but what?) way by "aonethlng" in some etrange

even the dead fron the

Chlef ot Dow Chenlca-lWiLlian J. Ha.l.e, Florrda, Dr. In centraL photographed orchard. He daubed a cltrus Conpany Reeearch, a bllghted (a chenlca.l on the lmeges of powerful to the tnsects) deadly reagent nenatodeg thread-I1ke ln severrl rowg of The efender, lnfected treea. and lneradlmost destructlve warrn cf lrnate sorl.d'g thls are ernong the of 14 feet and are cabLe paraeltes. eolf to a deptlr They bore lnto the peet:.c1dee. irnpervlous Lo the most vlrul.ent photograph placed rnto a devi-ce s:.ni-l-ar to Dow's chief chenist the grot.rer thege lnetruccr.trus Lhe one used 1n Pennaylvanla and gave the The "machlne" looked "Turn nornlng." 1t on for every tlong: two hourg power source. there was no vlslble electronlc, bul "treated" phglg: gegelq areae every the A ureek later, ro!r, 9f !!g The insect destruction was free of all. parasltic infeEtation. Slgpb, (untreated) w:-thout interruptl.on. rows had progressed in t.he ad3acent underground lay of dead nernetodee nunbere f n on, countl.eee addltl "machlne 1n go11 that had k1lled force frorn the byr sone lnvlolble ground. been thelr heven and breedlng The Journal of Paraphysics (Nov. 3, 1969) reports lhe externrnati.on

of

ternltes
(rlorkg

The electrical bysten of a power paf lrlest Gernany. 1n Rosenhein, vrlth breakdopng no known crippllng plant 1n Callfornla experienced photographe detalled of the lnserted untlI a troubfeghooter c6ug,e tJlthin "dowalng" devlce. box-l. 1ke r nysterloua, lnto lneta.Ilatlon were beck 1n nornel relaya and nal.functlonlng houre, al] clrcultg operatl'on.

9!

9 {leleege

ee4 f!!!eg!

Peelf5ldee

\-

at the

l'tun1c1-

33

Slnl lar experlnentg 1 n C a . li.f o r n i a , and Arlzona reaulted ful treatnent of nore ttran SO,OOO {tcreet of dleeased trees.

1n and

succeaa_ rnfegted

sonetirnee .he r.eoveg or s6p from a pJ.ant or tree are used "regonant as o' polnt of contact... A blood eanpre from hunan patLentr I'ock n of halrr gkln ot acraplnga have eLeo been ueed to egtabrrgh "l'lnk" a to the eub,ectA phoiograph 1 e e r -u e-rrr'y - q re 4f'e c t l v e sf gggggye the r,f 1sn,! glgslroygd! fn another experinent ln pennsylvaniar o 1j. ly seed was placad the 1n wel'l' of a pelonlc (e devlce devlce whoee nyeterloue po.,er derj.vea frora j'nj'ty the aff glrnrJ.ar between rnatter); .uhen the prate waa veloped, dethe bur,b perlod of 1te rlfe cycre cleerly appeared 1n ohotograph' the uelng the sane eeed, the operetor concentreted '.tunlng,. on a Later period, end to the correct vtbrattonal rate, devel.opeci prcture a that revee.l.ed e fJ.owerlngl , fully_developed Illy! At a 'r'aboratory in oxford, Eng.r'and, a rn.,n put a few drops wonan's of a bLood lnto the receptecJ.e of an odd-J.ookrng e]ectronlc devrce. concentratlng lntentry, he turned eerleg of dlaLe. A trhlte-coated I'ab eeelstant roaded a photographlc plate rnto elde eLot. They a1_ rently tlned the The aeveropea ptcture revear.ed the proflle "e r o t t t " * . *p of a wontan'e lor"r vertabrae and pe.l,v1c reglon. A .enr-tranaparent hunen fetuer 8 1n an X-ray plcture, rras def lnltely v1g1b.e. 1f "About glx 'reeks gone, r'd 1t progreaaea norrnally...eet here; s6y," 1t do the assistant renarked. at four nonthe,..... al.L thege varioug ..Lets see

(dhat's happenlng 1n connon? "A nee, forcee

what

experinente

have

ctrl energy

connected

with

peopler

lrn

;:*il:":'i:

ro ;:;.ff.'ir::::-?I-;ita;_-J:::"_Lvnn_schroeder andshej

energy

knogrn

crr

-rn-qre!at!-alri=i=roii"oi'"ini!=i-:""u.'l; f ieiilg eld lese!1rg{erelgnesa!!! Ieselllg {erelgn esalII 1n d phe! ffifi='rh=ti;=1;e : grgphe), as flylng; lust ktte t o c a t c h 6 s pa r k .a nr lrax+h{-_,^
! : = ! - b =r: = : :q e -h =t h =e 5 , 1 r x l k1 1 : l g t n a ' l r l r r . - J - _ - I l g 9 e : ' e g . : . t 8 e , 4a 1 nl llyl! elleoe e! Ielq relss, of I1ghtn1n9
.F tr

tv. "

tant onlv becquse ir


'r

red ro rhe aiscovery ;;-;;"::.i";"'ii"3r::.:l:::1e

lnDor_

rron avaiLable evldence' the hunon race appears to be on the brlnk of a dlacovery that drearfs the conblned lnventlon of the wheel. and the dlecovery of flre, electrlclty gld etomrc energyf "!1y pereonal hunch," wrote Lrailblazi.ng edltor John canpbell in one of h1e "Aatoundlng sclence Fact', ,.1s edltorlere back 1n 19s6, that theee lndlvldual'e and groupr are proddlng at the edgee of a ne,, fleJ.d that wlrL open a totaliy .., concept of the unlveree. And that, w1th1n the next 20 years, the barrler w111. be cracked; a reproducj.bLe ,nachlne wllI be achleved when a var.1d Lheory of operatlon 1s achleved end

l3lal"t""".

But r betleve

thar

rhar

can be,

and !1ll

be, done before

34

nost And the,nan llkely to do it le T. GaJ.en Hieronynue, an anazing inventor uhoge creatlve hietory goes back at Leaet. gO years. Hleronytnus began worklng on nee nethode of broadcaet technlquee durlng 19tg20 when he ul6 1n the Arny Slgnal Corpe aB a radlo operator and eLectrlcalenglneeilelth the Ralnbour D1v1e1on ln France. He, d had h1g own hsn glnce radlo I'j.cenee wt wrth 1913 and etatlon KDKA, Pltteburgh, Pa., and took part ln the flrst radlo broadcagt. He eas q.lgo trylng to develop wireLese telephone ln early wtdf when he frrgt diecovered aotne pecuJ. ler propertlee of certarn netal-g and mlneral_s. Th1.s led h1n to experlmente wlth palonice, lhen caLled radlonlcs, and the work of other ploneera early insplred h1rn. In 1956, Hieronyrnus presented CanrpbeJ.L r.rrth a copy of hig' patent for exactly the kind of devlce the edltor wrote about a patent he j.n 1946, had applled for whlch Lras granted ln L948. Hieronymua 1.;aa careful' to lntroduce h1e patent prlnclpaI-Ly as an lnetrunent for detecting j-nert nelr' unknown ensnatlong fron matterr fiB1nly nineralg. For very good reasona Hleronynue deLlberately kept any lLfe-a{fect:ng abrLltles of h:.e devlce e secret. fn London tr.ro decades go, George De Ia klarr nade the startling dlecovery that the enu.l.elon on a'photographlc pJ.ate r.lae, eornehow llnl<ed to the person whoee photograph ioaa teken or to anythlng or anyone e'l'ee 1n the photograph. Sclence guch lnverlabJ.y re3ecta obvlouely "lrnpoes1ble" notlong. Sclentlets qre know euch devlceg rnere flgnente of the 1rrag1nat1on, eo why bother lnveetlgatlng when there are nuch nore lnportant f 1e.Lda o{ lnqulry? "nagtc" If exists, then the laws of Synpathetrc ltagj.c would come lnto the rul.e belng thet "the (both Pfay, Synbol the Oblect ln 1te !c present actuolrty and future potentialj.ty) . whatever t s Ibele{ore, done to the Synbol cLso hoppens to the Ob3ect!.. western cenoufleged quecks, and shrug thrs cff by nonfunctlonal. nechanlens charlatang. gcj'entigts as ueed rj.luaLj-scrc melnly by supergtj.tion fraude,, med1ca.l.

"f t's bqsed on voodoo r " says the Amer j.can !'tedlcaL Asgocratron. "...c1ap-trap lnvented by quacka for the deeperate and gulJ. 1b1.e..... "Quacks" like the Soviet Acodeny of Science, naybe? To therr lmnense eatlefectlon, Rueelan sc:.entiate experlmentlng wlth prapsychology have establrehed the re]1abl.11ty of the most unLlkely phenonepK (1.e., na; ESP, paychotronlc generatore, peychoklneals, the ablIlty to move physrcaJ. ob3ects wrth power), nlnd and rnterolanetary telepathy. ..ac_ Brltieh and Amerlcan scientrfic instrtutiong rqgrst that n ceptable" theory precede nust experlnentat:.on. Thoie who know the .stakeg reallze hovr derk the future couLd be for the btegtern natlons, partlcularly 1n hlgh-r1ek natlonaL eecurity nattersr oF aa1 1t ls now calLed ESPlonage. It nakes reJ.atlvely llttle dlfference whether you eetablieh a Link between photograph a nan and hls or ug,! the plcture of, let'g saY, a forelgn agent to plnpolnt' h1s locaLlon anyehere on Earth.

35

fIights on the of "eavsdropped" Hieronyraus axercise, rn 6 sj,rniLar Ernanatrong I'lltogenlc to the devlce hle By tunlng and 11. a Apol. lo of the gavegr Radlatlone) or Eloptlc Helloda (algo cal.J.ed Odlc Force, and condltlong phyalologlca-lthelr he nonitored aatronaute, Americsn eplaeheven efter return and voyage lunar the throughout changee perloda' quarantine Lhe enauing and during down device Hieronynus,6 fron data test the rnportant, }tost syaten' telenetry with NASA',s own nedica.l agreenent conpJ.ete erperte. ls 6nE up on the Hleronynua however., lnst ance, nysteri'oug of 6n unknown, detec+-ed the presence he devlce, the noon. eurroundlng radj.ation Thls beings. radiatlon, he saysl, ig harnful possibly deadJ'y ln wag 1n Lhle lrJlLh hLe of beLt

to

hunan

in *-o f .ind hrdden a n d ' Li m : - t a t l o n s barrlers begi.nnrng "We're adaptable "Hunans are preCty claims. Hreronynus pecteci piaces," in we f rnd of ener-Qles wrll what krnd But. . .g! tures. eglth. f-l-eLde?" planetary

unexcreaother

and De 1a Warr, George guch aa Hj.eronynus, T. Galen Experirnentere geonegnetlc the to peopJ.e reepond how ctlscovered heve Ruth Drown the nenta'L and emotlonal' and. . .to envlronnent, celegtla.I the {1e}d, and co-trorkers. of cLose frlends attltudee ..Everyl:-vingthingrodiatestlrisodlc.Force'..saj-dBaronvon ' He t,ras so creosote) who lnvented (a welL-known cherrlgt Relchenbach radlonlcg 8D early P1oAbramg, Albert by Lhe work of Dr. lrnpreseed (of "anlrnaL negnetlen" F. A. l'teerner Dr. physlclan and Auetrlan neer, radlof and practlce to the study h1s l1fe he devoted that fame), on1ce. a resonance there'g nay be' it how gnall- or diluted "No mtter Drown' Ruth parts," hunan body and each o{ ltg whoJe the betrleen ghe wrole before device, receiver-transmitter of a radionics inventor Associetion l{edlcel e Anerlcan The hostif prlson. in q Cal-1f ornia dled and charged and ,she ws rnethodg and devices' her about protested was of cour'se' Her device, quackery. and nedlcaL fraud for convicted '.he authorrtleg. Nothrng ..obviously.. lo the Al'1Aand ecccrdlng a f ake, for' the Drown Mech:'ne dj-d clermed what her petlents do cou.Ld poealb]y cage cl-oged' elther. tests, in ugelege 1n engaglng No polnt then. or 1n bLood sanplee or otherwlse, eubetheric no reg,onnce, There,s they g no rnat'-er how cf osel'y lndlvlduaf dlfferent grafts fron tj,g,sue ouL I'ed experlne"L-Le carrled of tight Iy controf In a serles typed. are fact'g new atrsnge oxford' 1n Laborstorles plants at the Delawarr on 1nfLuenced be could of plante and heaLth The growth began to energe. a dlstancel fron lrradlatlon cofor by lndlrect "After wrote: Lhe Aton' ln h1s book New trJorlds Bevond Doy, Langeton plaLe 1'g photographlc of an ordlnary enulglon the that dlscoverlng sane the that we found phoLograph, Ln the peraon to lhe aonehow llnked be couJd growth plant that we dlscovered Laler to plants. rule appLled photograph 1te (alloglng to strlke) llghl by lrradlatlng etlnuLated a ColorecoP." sith caLled a devlce

35

"How can there be a ri.nk betueen a plant and i.ts photograph?.. he uondered' "The J.nage on the plate 1g forned by the nultipllcity of reflected l1ght rays conlng fron the cabbage," De la qrarr explalned. But ln additlon to 119ht, other klnde of vlta] radlatlone are aLeo ernnetlng fron the cabbage; theee are recelved by the enul.s10n. " ' ' 'Each nolecul'e of nqtter carriee an el.ectric ,rhrch charge is speclfic for that partlcul'ar nol.ecule; thla charge acte aa an lnconcelvably t'Lny radlo etatlon shlch both transnltg and recelvee 1te own pertlcular algnaJ'e. lJhen theee countl.eeg nyrlade of charged no.l.ecul.eg are broadcaetlng, they pattern bulLd up a Generlc whlch 1e, the meang !''hereby forrn or shape .ppears i.n the nreterlar. world. "Furthermore' 9!g!i9!, pottern playe':'!g whrch 1s nltter' Pattern af f ectlng slnce each trny no-LecuLar charge is al.so a rgggivinq the Generrc Pattern of a plant or a hurnan berng governs the of srgnals recerved fron outsideTh:.s 1s where a photograph prt' The emulalon pattern retelna Lhe Generlc of the *.hrng photogrephed, and therefore 1t ect.s a.s ,sort of a tuned trangrf a radlonlc broedcaet 1e prolected through r-., thle Generrc wr l-l- tranernlt exactJ.y the pattern of radlatlong .gultsble f or (or human belng ) at r the ptant ,. dletance.

Probably the nost outstanding fact obout psionrc reseorcherg accordlng to my opn lnvegtlgatl0ne 1e that so nany are hardr p.ac_ t1cal, let'g-gee-1f-1t-workg typea, not the lvory tower theoreticlang logt 1n du'st-covered tradltlon and conpletely gulded by Authorlty. The confortable EstabJ. lehrnentarlans naturally won, I rock the acadern:c bost; not onry do they refuge to lnveetlgate, they uron-t even Lleren to thoge who heve experlnented. That, unfortunotely, has been the hlde-bound eetabllEhnent ac:.entlst n honeet seeker a{ter truth. al-1-too-prevoJ.ent attrtude - nore of a corporation of nan the than

h'hen Ed Hernann r Qrl eng:.neer a t l t c G r a , , , r - H i . l .l , f nc. publ:.shing company 1n New York requested that Hleronynue treat a caterp1j.1ar-infeeted tree on h1's Lawn, he never expected anythlng aa far out as.. lon,odlstance externlnatlon." Everything el.ge hed geveraL fai1ed. For years' in spite of ar'r Lhe pesticrdes he and his nelghbors used, every 'Jrl'd cherry in h1e northern New Jeraey nelghborhood !.raB under the rnurderoug attack of hordeg of voracl0ug tent caterpllr.arg. Hernann happened to be investrgat:.ng psronj.cs.nF was currentry coJ'lectrng lnfornatlon f ron Hleronylnus. The Flor:.de inventor was v1s1t1ng Brlg' Gen' Henry R- Groee's Honeotronlc Reeearch Foundatlon sL the Latter'e farn near Harriaburg, Pa. Grogg, then slate Drrector of selectl-ve servlce, wts worklng wrth pelonlc (To hie devlcee. nelghbors' sgtonlshnent, Grose !.rs invariably successfuL in externrnatrng lnsectg fron a good dlstance on nore than 90 farme ln the cunberrand ValJ.ey alone! )

"Send rne a photograph of your lree, " Hleronynus wrote Hernrann. .,put sone .l.eaves and a few caterpj. llars in a b o x a n d n o i L t h e n a l o n g . Ald 99!'t {g=ge! !e fncfgg lhe negq!iye,.. he added.

37

gtruck with the request. Herrnann as odd, but he conplied Thig Three nlLee eeparated hig the Groeg fqrrn. Yet, hundred hone fron a few daye work, he hit after the brakee errhe pulled lnto h1s driveway and Later everywhere he looked 1n wlde-eyed aetonlshnent. there stared Seeningly The furry horde ley was a "carpet" of rnany thougands of caterpll.laro. the branchee a full clrcle around and beneath 1n the cherry lree and r*hlch aorne nysterlous dead by fron they'd fal. len etruck Leavee force t you your wrote laterr recordor" Hernann Hleronynua "For "1 lhj.nk you d1d Lo the whatever shouJ.d knoc, thet Lree on our Lawn was cherry good. lrle don't. Thls have a caterpi, Il.ar len't Iagt 1n elght! norrnaJ-: year we wlre st1l. I burnlng off caterpll.Larg June 1n late and early Juj,y wlth flanlng kerosene torches...Sonethlng speclflc deflnlte and waa done here. . . " psrwidely regearcherg indlvidual, separated fn Over t-he years, +-hat aIl- natter onlcs have been dlscoverlng end redlecoverlnq emits goaded von Relchenbach radlatlong. l'lesner's experlnentg lnto etudylng peopJ.e who obvlously of theee hed ESP. Wlth the help von "geneltlves," provlng Relchenbech accunu-Lated a wea-Lt.h of deta the exletence of aonethlng he ca.l,Led the Odlc Force. He dlscovered lt 1n cryatala, 1n .l1ght, . negnets, he a-l,go found heat, and ln lj.vlng celfa; lteelf nenlfeetlng wherever were occurrlng. ltse-Lf chenlca] reactlons Other scientists fron the grolrth o{ t1gtg, I . I . Rab1 , trhlch concluelvely have reported thig l'titogenic Radiation occurring Unlverslty, l1v1ng ceLLe. At Colunbla eclenthree P. Kusch, developed a new epparatus and S. l'll Ll,nen, proved prss vlbratlone that aone klnd of ray or between one no.lecule and another. They Ehoered t.hat each noLecul-e, (and 11v1ng or 1nert, 1 g a e r n a l .l . r a d l o trangnltter recelver) that broadcagts Thege wavea range over the entl.re electrornagcontlnuouely. netlc spectrum vo.Lune of theee vlbratlone often beyondt The sheer 1s apparently csn glve of f rays of a ] 1nlt.legs. A alngle nol.ecule dlfferent wavelengtha, but only on one frequency at a t1ne. e1f!l,gl then the Hieronynus dev j.ce operates, Rodiat j.on strnuthe Elopti.c iatee the Generlc Pettern bond of the eub3ect snd sone klnd of psychlc llnk 1g eetabllehed moleor between the enanatlone of the atorng and cuLeg of netter and the nlnd of the operator. Even prlor to 1946 when (trho 1g a Fel l.ow ln the Soclety Hleronynua of Elec+.rlesJ Englneers) patented he had Learned h1s lnvention, that any rnlneral. or chenicalldentlfled a tray, could be by placlng ore sanple on conpound an qraa seeking on the elenent and turnlng a gglcE!!Ig!1!g he to:.dent1fy, plate on the lrJhen the of the 6 grna]l diaL. fingers hand stroking r,las Luned to the rlghL frequency. nachrne he knew the dlel "atuckr" doeg the 1tg oern "rate." rnakee no dlfference Everythlng hae It lbg wj.lL the device on "ggPPgE, " tun j-ng. operator concentrates If the (rf present) presencr rn the ore sanple. detect any is the of copper rod. satne way as a dowsrng Ae a detect.or, in inuch the it' operates wllL obtaln the exact sarne dlal srho dupllcatee Everyone the experlnent (or rate) Intereetlngly, nelther vlbratlon of copPer. eettlng for the gllver, u1ll. cauete a "Bt1ck" unlege 11 le nor gold, else nor anythlng conacJ.ouely belng eought,

AlI rndependent psionic reseorcherg are :.n unanlJnous agreernent (here qnd overseaa) that Elopt'lc Radlatlon of al..l, natter can be caught on a photographlc plate and the detector w1l. l. react to a photogEeph of a nineral 'rould specinen as it to the nineral ltseIf. Like De Ia lrlarr's canera, the Hieronynus nochine a-Lso detectg emanatlona f ron bl.ood sanplea, nlnera).s, plants, lnsects enythlng at aL-l' that cannot be recorded by any other known rnethod. Horeover, ea John CanpbeI.l. dlecovered, works, gygB llgn dlsconnegleg !h. dgylgg {fgU (reguJ.ar household 1!S PoggE soglge electr:.c current). Slnce both devlces operate on the 6atle psychrc princrpJ.e and cqn be used ag, recelvera phyeilcal. 11.-lneesea can be lnfluenced 9Bg tranemltterg' even j's in another when the pat:.ent j.s the lor.rn or city. This porrerf uJ. nost obetacl'e to the nindg of etrictly naterla.l. ly-orlented people. The i'dea that a brt of galrva on a blotter, a lock of hq:.rr or skln or (to say nothlng bLood sanplea of a photograph! ) couLd have any connecr'rrth a cilgtant tron petlent le enough Lo cause the rnost- obgtlnate react.lon even ernong ordlnarlly reaeonab.Le people. Yet the enanotions j.n fron aLl. natter anywhere and everywhere the Unlverge as far ag 1g known can be dlrected elong a w1re, Ilke electriclty, or tranenltted fron the eub3ect on J.1ght waveg. Thle 19, trhy Hleronynus caLled von Relchenbach'g Odlc Force "Eloptlc Radlat1on." It can be tranenitted a6 an electrlcaL charger BB a radlo wave, r"reivea. or aa llght To the aetonlghnent of experlnentere yrho gent 5cl cents to the gJeahlngton Patent Offlce 1n and recelved echenatLc drawlnge and 6 deecrlptlon of Patent No, 2r4821773, the Hleronynus nachlne dld aeen capeble of recelvlng and trenenlttlng Eloptlc Energy. The problerr wae (end 1e) that the operator needed elorne practlce to become ',gkll.-Led ln the art." I'toreoverr sone experlnenterg eeened to have more neturo] (end patlence) tal.ent than others. When teet lt, tlne. John Carnpbetl the "stick" bui. lt the occurred device at the ernd encouraged polnt rlght on Ed the Hernann to dlaL every

Adnrttedly, rt l,s a bafflltg, paradoxical and alt'ogether rncredible lnventlon. It can't real. ly be cal. Ied a nachlne becauee 1t operatee as we-L.I wlthout connection to a gource of power. In thrs respect, 1t,g, a The key to all. pslonlc lggl. devlcee 1e Lhe {1nd the operaror, qf whrch l5 usualJ.y attuned to the enanatj.ons of whatevei ob3ect 1s under analyale. Han's flret reelly powerful tool-g for aldlng nental actlvlty were t'he equivalente of Peper and pencil. Nearly anyone perfornr can rnpreesive nental' feats with pencl} and paper featg that wouJd be rnposslble wlthout then. Addj.ng four seven-dlg1t nunbers, for exanple. The paper and pencll, qL arL to do lhough, have nothlng wj.Lh the functlon of Lhe n1nd. They don,t do the cal,cuLatlng, yet nogt peopre couLdn't do the then. lob without "Pslonlcsr" declared Dr. blill.ian J. Hale when he was Chi.ef of Dow ChenicaL's Reeearch D1v1glon, "1E the fleld of hunan achlevernent geveraJ. g91g!gg. OnJ.y after lgygqd thougand yearE hae eclence been put lnto aone klnd of reagonable order. Anyone who thlnks thlg conp.Iete.Iv

39

ai broad at least field nrw lnveetlgated thoroughly be can hlngel-f - " ludlng fn his fanlLlar Eng.Iand.

and ln

deep luat

gcienca today as al'J' knonn 1g eorely a feu decadeg

de-

Dr. book Far:ner Trlurnohant, the beglnnlngs eaa wlth he

Hale denonstrated ln of palonlcs

hos the

thoroughly and U.S-

a has an energy of nodulating capable Pottern, "The hunan nind, 1e "Unlvereal Illnd he .saldforcesr" glyglcal wlth ,dlrect connectlon The Hieronynus pattern ae rnatter. an energy through to nanlfest abLe ne cal-l extragenaory which functlon, rnental a purely connectg devlce deTheee palonlc plate. photographlc on a an lnage wlth percepcJ.on, r,rhlch ls abfe to probe tool an extradlnenslonal provlde ut slth vlces up hlgher a llltl.e to etee what 1e happenlng regu.Itg gro!r neterlaf the of Caueat.ion." ladder on the enabLe hands night in unscrupu.Ious devlce a psionlc that fact The has human be1ng, enother to Elf! Least, et theoretlcally an operetor, (publicly, by anyone in the fieLd. ot Least) faced been squarely never the ln reeideg and death por,ler of l1fe yet un.Iinlted apparently thie operator. skll. Ied pelonlcs any hlghly of elrnoet nlnd ateeped of eclentlstg cornprehenglon the beyond tg wholly The truth of the nargln lleg Thereln and approachea. attltudee tradltlonal 1n huof snother He csn cause the death klfJer. potent.lat lhe for .safety get ae,ay wlth lt' of rteys and llterally 1n any nunber man belng nen trlhenever no experlence, aomething "Here's youreelf. see for with a power have deai.t g J 'l g h t e e t the one Pald workgr bY go1ly ! that . . " beYond attentlon I don't or knowledge hunran that fact to the know how oruhy , but

to inpossible "sure" it's thot knols for as Big Sc:ence long As and a dial', a box, arlray wrth 3oo nileg from effect any physlcal cause aeens It nowhere. w111 get guy wlth the devlce the photograph, a 1ts doe,g what repeatedly that j.ncredib.le, Any nachlne true. 1t's but rs whoee effect 1t w1l.l do, but and predlcts 1t to do, built lnventor falr get a w1l'L never j.n of whet ree know noet' terng unexpl.alnable Foundatlon Science Natlonel funded lavlehJ.y preetlglous, The test. the Hleronynus of denongtratron at a practlcel. even lggE wrl.L not European EeetErn and other union sovret the that fact rnachi.ne. And the wlth ice no pace cutg pelonlce at a fast devej-oplng are countrres corporatlon executlveg or lt, about euch thlng and governnent bureaucrat.e. one executtve " snorted men and grown naglc, uhen know

..Radiesthesia he heerd there'g no

you cal. l it, whatever Il'g nonsenae. "ls as naglct"

such ael and peychrcs professj'onalg skll]ed a9o, flore than 20 years a-Il-out rrernlnga abouL lhe c.l.ear Ebon leeued and ltartln ElLeen Garrett and and clalrvoyenta' nedlume, paychlcs, 1n tral,nlng Sovlel effor! the At generatore. peychotronlc and thelr pelonlc devlcee deveJ.oplng to offer down Hleronynus's turned polntedly Pentagon lhe Ene tlne to lndlfferent eeens totally etllL brage The tegt h1e lnventlon.

40

learning nlneraf
(dhen

whether anal.yaee.

j.t

is

capabJ.e of

more than

3usL making

chenica.l.

and

for the he sent it, heard about John Carnpbelf rt Leeted eccordlng to speclflcatlons, og.rndevlce h1e to r.rho vlelted h1e hone 1n Nes Jeraey everyone lnduced (often tndlvldualletlc tough-rr1nded, 1t. For a b1g, and acrupuloualy eraa abaolutely felr he ence-balter, on June Hleronynua what he wrote Here'g carne to fecte,.

patent, bu:.Lt repeatedly, and experlnent wlth gc1eccentrlc) honeet when lt 4, 1956:

you can kill. "If lnsect oeste of thoueande of nll-ee dletence

wlthst a huge dretance, you can k1.Ll l1v1ng entltleg more you prove you the more can be defended, }j.nkage that any underetandabl.e out you make a man know The nore prove nyaeJ.f . to defend I an helplees he llves ln a worid that he can feeJ Lhe leee extat, that euch forcee, heve warning of at leaet, whereln he can, of reaeonab.j.e aecurlty, to neet 1t'. attack and prepare

deseile slM e! y e u s s ! S rl I E e !t!b sssh e [eshi!e' I llsht 9e !o BYse}f' 9{ Prglectllg uu beyleg ely gheege tlaleyel lithgg! blde, rhe er epper!s!!!v !e de{eld ess!!e! !!e e!!es!. !l!Dee! Ey Uerlsdge

and at o by work:-ng on a photograph' f! Itrpllee !!e! !{ I sggep! Ue!

you're helpfng hurnan berngs. "True, you're insects; only att'acking denied. You be and cannot ar there, the inherent inpllcqtrons But Lf I acattack; euch 6n agarnet nyeeJ.f tel.]. me hoe, t.o defenci cannot I an helpI acknow.i.edge that of thoee forceg, knowledge reallty the leee and knorr of no defenge. your I selectad svailable becauee: nachine 1) 1t tnomanY poserble arrong the Ptlon.:-c rrs patented; 'speclfled 2) the patent

chlneg,

and !!e slrnp.Iy a nlneraJ-analyzer, Sleleglelle!1ge 11!e-e!!eg!i!g nachtne 3) tt lggbg l1ke an electronic-phyelcal. gggld !g lglgleQ,.
to appears rt eclence Level nake sone gort of alrnoet-sense at the purely

phystcaf

your knorrn; nachrne of the "A rnan can learn onJ.y at the boundarreg pure el.ectronlcg and parbetween on the boundary sppeEg to be rlght were a learnable-underthrs aE though it appears onics. Therefore, of already-underextenelon wlth a 1ltt.l.e can, that device standab.l.e be conprehended. study, and ei llttl.e etood concept.s the lifeof the nqchlne "The therapeut,lc aspects and diagnostic sclent:etg and so physrcal J.gnored, be total,J.y could aepecte force powerend extrenely deep, eLlrrlng the probJ.en wlthout cou j.d atteck fuL, fearg.

f n the old, real, and "ibe! Egghtne 9! Xours rg gllnos! Pg=e Eggrc. ggd ge! Eg g'seg gpglle, inposes dge!!-leg!g, potent lt cagle sense, known laws of Synpathetrc on the ancrent}y It' operates {gf l1.{g-ggglg. "The Synbol !g +-he the law that Llke voodoo dol..l.g, applles lt, l.lagici the occurs aJ,so to whrch rs done to the SynboJ. Ob3ect, and that Ob3ect. "
"That, over the g a too a .l-aw, world, Eeklnog fron hunan The pr:.nilive real. one. Afrlcane, Hasallang, through tribes Incasr aLi. 8D-

41

cient Greeks and pre-history European to the gane fundarnentar. concruglona. Unlveree re, 1n fact, lnvolved.

trrbes, rt nust

aLL rndepencientJ.y carne be that the Lews of the

90t'
l from

"You're scaring hell out of the people who understand what You rny be using 1r *,el.r., but iereggg 1t, and what r1lltg tnaglcian
ransorn can destroy denand, fron a ntln t""c"f!=-!ty, the vengefu] hate of who an is safe fron unJurt eneny?

you,ve 1t? rf
threat,

"You're shl-Le you

scaring can nane

people, 4g llrnlt,s

o1d they have reason for the:.r to thlg powerful technlquet

fears

"9hen I began workins with the nachine, I learned that it dj.dn,t need a power aupply. tien r rearned 1t r.rourdn,t work Lf a tube l,ag tnlsslng or defectj've' r gas sorne of the palon:.c mechrnes end aaw that they worked ' deeplte the f act that thelr wirl ng eyeten nade abgo.l.uter y genee. no logiceL Fron Lhat , I derlved a new ccncept , a +_heory, and made a cruclaL experlnent. "r have e nrodel' of your ena.Lytrcal nechlne, ernplrf 1ed snd

eynboJ.lzed vcuum tube eer-aynbo'l' by ,nelna of a nylon thread. The j'e connected drawlng to the eynboJ. lzed vacuun nylon thread fron ,ny w1fe,e eewlng k1t. "The machlne exce.L L ent . "LJe're working workg beautlfuJ.Iy; the

solety 9t !!g glfggff glegleB. r prisn, rnounted on a Natronal. Velvet Vernr'er "n i dia]': that' a n d a s ; ;a l . r copper roop, ar.one appear on the fronr gurfece of rhe paner. Egck s{ lhe pensl, lle slrcgl! dlegrel drawn l'n rndre llE on ls egegdeiq-grsitros peperr- !!e pri.sn-syrb'! rotatee' 1n !!e epproprlete pteee-rl-gie glrg!!! The splraJ. dlegreu. co1L 1a drawn 1n rndla i;i. on paper glued to th; u".x of the paneJ.; 1t ls connected urrth the
plate other tube through end of cathode a condenthe col.Lby a gecond

lrned have

eo the u.ttlnare. It conalsrs o 9yrEgl of a prisn, not a

etrean-

conalstency

of

perfornance

is

on {efn

with

ltagrSr

pg!!gl!

rather

.,Dd t'agi.c

rhan eubeteic;.----"

doesn,t

ciepend

on

matter,

but

"Your electronic cj.rcuit represents a pattern of relatjonshrps; that 1s lnportant' The electrlcal. charecterietics are utterly unirnportant' and can be dropped out compretely. The nachrne falLe when a tube burne out because that a.l.ters the patiern; 1t works when:there ls no poq,er becauee the pattern of reJ.atlonehlps 1e intact. Hy synbolrc diagrarn worke becauee the pattern 1s preeent. . . "...If you can dg qt a djgtance through barriersr that you coul'd gbgilyg at a dlgtance through barriers. tneans the end of personal privacy. The fact is rnplicj.t at a dletence \.,lthout nechanlsn at the other end. ft,g lt is inpircrt crairvoyance j.n the action

tflg!!gg!!g.,.

tdhen Hieronynus filed the patent apptication for hrs psionic devrce 1n L946' he L',aa acutely apare of 1te potentLalltreg. rt could be uged for greet goo'd or terrlbLe ev1L. rlrle, he explalned Later, wa8 why ,,Thoee ds]llcrglgly onltted sone crlt1cal. fectore. l: were cruclaL t1me8"' he eald. "There wast a reallgnnent of po11t1cal and n 1 J .l t a r y eol,er after {tJurr and r was afrald lt m19ht get lnto the \.rrong hande...

42

nay have used tJhatever Hieronytnus then, knowledge of his the extent tJas even then serloua' bloc that the Sovlet pelonics t'o learn Pursulng as a use of Ptrapaychology gtate-gupported practlcal regearch ln the gcale. lt, about noncontnlttal' He'g trool. for EsPlone_qe on an unheard-of t o m a k e . I n J ' l g h L o f w h a t t . r !n o w declglon 1t was a lough but d1d acinlt underthla could be the ln parapsychoJ,ogly, regearch know of Rugetla'e of the century. etatenent or known, sooner device becarne publicly once his He reaLj.zed thct be nrght unlltnlted lhat to real. lze weg certain Power Later eonebody o*ten unprlnclpled clever, There are enough 1nte.Ll1gent, available. ( as pe.Ll as natlone) to uae hi"s lnwho ',rou.l.dn't heeltate lndlvldualg expen6e. gain at everyone'a persona] or potrer ventlon for .seens qulet cooperatlon dan_oersr 8n unueually of the great f n epite A krnd in the U.S. experinenterg ps:.on:.cs work:.ng exie't arnong the to D91neers' blochenigter phyelclete, "reeervolr" of of underground '.he gcience-oriented are a.Lerted to laynen and skrLl-ed technlclans, whon wlth everyone Nearly of pe1on1cg. neer nastery denger of Rusela'g th:.e fear. hes expreseed the problen i've diecugaed Anyone workshop Hleronymue a wj.th haLf or baeernent, devlce. buck and the for severaL patent, some odds r'-o sPare can hourg a and ends fron o\rn burld hre

or chemtcally analyze, we cou.Idn't "(rle,ve f ound anything never too. 1 s a n e g J .1 g 1 b . L e f a c t o r , "Dletance sald . " Hleronynue otherwls, practically we find world our physlcaL Phyal'When we analyze !9!!1!g to down csa l trrrnt the nanlfee'tatlon when we d1v1de thlnge of elgrqy b partic]es. " u]tinote their W. 5. Prof. Phvsics, book Psvchical in his radionics Descrrbing that energy the etherlc "ld1th an lnetrunent, Tronp reported Pattern can be artlflor condltlon substance ob3ect., to any glven corresponds 11es It ]eve1. The procese 1e not on the phyelcal elnuLated. clalJ-y the to be outg:.de the five known erenses and seens of l-inite beyond the apectrutn. " neagurabLe efectromegnetrc a nrnd-bender Radj.at.toffrs Eloptic about report every honest Nearly Hrerthat 1n fact' They ere ao atrange, aLL precedente. ehettere that ScrAdvanced lo egtab"I 1eh the were obllged and h].e col.Ieagues onynus Inc. and DeveJ.opnent Corporationr ences Regeerch "Vitality staternenL containrng consolidated published a Z2-page He l1f tf ron I and 11 of Apolloa V.Iuee" of the astronauts intenelty perrods. quaranline lhe and through off to splashdown "Of al..j. the data of Apollo the fllght and lnfornation col.Lected wrote, Hieronynus 11," uncovered "the nogt durrng by us and inPortant

etartllns

ie

that

lhefe
fron

le

a lellel
65

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down to

Eel!

98 lbe

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15

aPPafeet

rently extending fron the surface... was a "There neuta) and n

about

niLes

approxj.nately

noticeable lncreage

viLality general drop in the readlnge. 1n carclnogenlc

(of The

astrothe pathologles

43

untrl increased reversed. thlng ings. "

the rnen actually Thle situatlon

stepped onto the l'toon' r'l6s slnlfar to all' otlrer

then lunar

every]and-

report 5OO copies of thrs Only wilJ. lng :rnedlcal nen and eclentle'te dsta.
'.1t

hrere distr:-buted check, to etudy,

to rnterested the and evaluate

t'hat sPec).f ical J'y states Energy of Eloptic Hieronynug', 5, descrrption gntna raya. or to or Beta partlcl-ee to Alpha ie 1n no way reLated It apectrun. electronagnetrc any pert of lhe into not fit It doeg nedia." in an entirely operatee Qlffefen! well-docunented' body are the over pourers ot the nind healrng The capaclty we have this If abilltles. deetructlve rs are l-gs negative, of that rncludrng condllrons, and digease health our gl! control to urou-Ld be that extenslon loglcal the and death, 99[g of us shouLd l1fe It done, :'t gan be If glherg. over controL Lo exerclse a.lso be able \L rs using But uj.thout done! Power, being Psron.l'c a1rnost certa:.nly !s stage a or powerful how sophret-icated to deternine a.1rnost inpossibl.e paet two decadeethe psionics durlng hae reached of the evolution is effort a powerfuf that indicate seems to Evj.dence now avail.able RidlcuJ.e, known. w1dely beconlng fron nade to keep the facte belng concfuthe.ge nen who reeched have befallen and dlecredlt susplclon, hae urrlter but '*hle to Prove, d1f f lcuLt extrenely a1ons. Thle 1e the rnvolvLng lnclcientg very eusplcloug. of f1ve knowLedge personel and two l:'gted "naturef" cal-Led eevera] nysterious deathe, untlnely, lnvestrgatora of pelonlcs ael "guJ.cldee" the w:-thout be done at any dj.stance could thrs very recently, Until of +-he victrrn, denger no absolutely and wrth of or coneent knowledge :.s the onJ-y concelvab.Le ehleLd" A "pelonic or retal, 1etlon. detectlon wou'Ld devlce guch deadly But guch a onglaughte. protectlon agalnst year! 365 days a a d"y' 24 hours all- the tlne have to be operatlng nor,, berng are sh:.eld" such a "psychic versiong of ;ust Several. 1es anC a,r*other el.ectronI'toreover, Bel. L Laborator developed. secretly '-he Hieronyrnus r-q cnrnnrar j,6n are brdciing to produce the r:.ghts for (for ts sard) . "scientr.f ic purposes, " lt besis devtce on a connercj.al nore we need to .learn much are mass-produced, Before euch thlnge K. I'lorrrs Dr. of slnllerltieg among the cieaths atrange about the eragon j'n (Listed dead j.n hrg station when found as a "gulclde" Jessup the 29, 1959), of Apr1L on the evenlng F1or1da, Dade County Park, other and death,g of three and the.sulcldee prLson of Ruth Drown, death compfete to eLmogt then cloge whoee regearchee brought rnveetlgatora of palonJ'c undergtandlng Poerers. of this frj.end a physicist Cied. he Before ln comlng llght who anaLyzed aetrononer anateur devlce a pelonlc atars by connectlngt and dlg,tant By geme, concentratlng to he wae able on learn a version nentaL Lhat and report of l1fe eras o writer recj-hol planets fron nearby to his telescope. Twenty QuesLions Lhe planets exlgt.s on tuo

44

(other than Ear+-h) wilhin our solur One of these systen. ts VenuE, but Venuslan 11f e f orms sre unl. lke enythlng we knour. He detected f'tltogenlc Radletlon regu.l.tlng fron the growth o{ 11v1ng ceLlg probably "nost the cell d1v1g1on 1n the rootg plant.s, " he cl.ained. of extrenei.y lerge Other researchers have analyzed the enanations from relj.cs of the past. In thls reepect, aJ.J. peionlc devlces, lnc.l.ud1ng the Hleronyrnue (rl1th a De La 9Jarr edaptet-ion, rnechlne, are al.so 11gg Itacblneel rsdlatlong fron the foggl]e of prehj.st.orlc r.rhrch exl.sted creatureg on Earth n r - 1L r . o n s o f y e a r a . ago h a v e b e e n c a u g h t on f1In and developedt Using blood sarnples taken fron wife hIs end h:.nself , George De la trJerr once t-uned hle cenera and concentrated on therr weddlng d.y, an '.hat had occurred event years nearly prevrously thlrty ! plcture The lraa deve.Loped in front o{ skeptlcal wltneeeeg and was recognrzebly that of a young couple in eoner,rhat outdated weddlng outfj.ts. He uged thrs aame photograph for "poeltlve" identlflcatlon that the ccupj.e were 1n fact hlnae-If and l{rs. De la trJarr. Part of the energing theory psronics concernrng shrrnks the srgnif!-o alrnost icance of Tlne and Dlgtance pure r l-}u.gron. This hag mny fsgcrnatrng poaarbll-itlesAnong practltlonerg of radlonlce, and psionica, the 18th Century concept of t.he Interplanetary Ether hag replaceci satronomy's theory of a "dead vacuum" to expleln propertles the of enpty elPtce. It ig fron thle Ether, cleJ.rn peionlcs experts, that e-Ll Llfe end Congclousness cornea lnto neterla] exl.stence and to whlch rt ( 1n gtate returng a hrgher vlbratlonel, pJ,ane) or phyelcaf af ter "death. " Al I th j.s nakes a cornpellingly diff icuLt kind of an aLrnost.-sense. HardJ.y anyone whoee vieurs have been shaped by orthodox sc:-ence 1,s able to cope wlth 1t' even the mo.gt gtubborn naterla-I 1st'. At the.3ane tlrne, it holds forth sone hope that al. l. ie not chao.g efter aLl and thror,;e; a new, excltlngl.y dlfferent 11_qht on the aFctentJ.y known concepls of ' Karme and relncarnatlon. "As the Unj.verse is without beginnj.ng and r.r:.thout end, so tre a}l_ perta 1te equally Eternal-. " Or. . .ln the words of Brltle,h coernoj.oglet Dr. Fred Hoyle, "lrJhen gclence beglns the atudy of nonphyercal phenonena, :"t w111 neke nrore progress than tn arl the ln eDe Qqcade centurlee of 1ts exlstence." If ny own intelligence, decade l-s upon us. infornation, and hunches are accurate, that

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l4arch-APril- i973 RR, Page 25

der balanced on a pract,leally frictionless volve under E,he sligheest lmpulse.

pivoE. and free

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Cup one of your hands round the cylinder with E,he fingers . horizontal, but, wiE,hout E,ouching it, and Lhe cylinder will-begin t,o revolve. If iE doesn'L revolve for t.he right hand, it witl for lhe lefr. Now if you put, the bot,t,le and cylinder in t.he middle of the room on a small Eable ror.md which you can easily move, Iou wiII find that Ehe direct,ion you are facing roakes a- considin.which erable difference, and if (for insEance) you gec E,he maxirnur roEaE,ion wiE,h your right hand when facing East, thaE, will be Ehe direction of minimum roE.aE,ion for t.he left hand; whereas, if you change round and face West, you will geL t,he maxirm:m roE.at,ion- for the Lef t hand and the minirmrn f or E.he righc. This opens up a new line of choughe; because iE would seem t.hat, noE only is somet,hing coming out from your fingers which is sufficient,Iy substant,ial E,o make Ehe cylinder revolve, but, thaL "something" is kindred in its naEure to anocher "something" which varies with Lhe point,s of E.he compass. A later development, has been thaE the cylinder can be made Eo revolve, without, any human influence, under the impulse of t.hat "somechj-ng" in t,he aEnosphere, In suicable conditions (i.e. when t.he "currenE" is flowing It is only necessary scrongly). to shield E,he East or West. half of the cylinder with a semi-circular screen of tin or cardboard or glass, so that uhe currenE can operate on t,he exposed half only. If you play a little with this Eoy, I think Ehat you will soon convince yourself that draught,s, or E.hewarmEh of your hands, cannoE account for the moL.ion, alLhough t.he former have of course to be guarded against. which I have generThe maxinRrm rotation at.ed in this crude apparatus is aborlc /+0 revolucions per minut,e. This was obtained in boE.h direccions with a cylinder made of paper in which I had sEabbed a rmrlfifude of holes wit.h a pin, in order to increase its surface roughness. The cylinder can be made to revolve, by t,he influence of t.he screen, uncier a draught-proof cellophane cover.

I believe Lord Dowding was overly opLimisuic about Ehe possibiliuy of jusE. anyone get,t,ing the paper cylinder Eo revolve, wit,h either hand, sitting in any direction, on the firsE,, or second, or even L,hird tryi Nevertheless, Ehis is excellenE E.raining in the development of the physical will and every scudent should add this t.o his daily rouE,ines unt.il he can decnonstraE.e Eo h i s o ? e r ls a t . i s f a c E i o n EhaL, psycho-kinet,ic energies can be released from his body or aura and direct.ed to do const.n:cEive rvorkr specially in t,he field of healing keeping in mrnd thaE. Spiric help is essent.ial to success! March-April L973 RR, page 26

UK A c o
as a broadon Ehe research done with iE and ics effecciveness instnment. The L,echnical narne for E,his in psychic casE t,leaEment wit,h an invisible research is Psycho-kinetics, acLion-at,-a-distance force. magazine did an article on UI(AC0 in 1952 and che "Fortune" tiniversity burean published a bullet,in of Perursylvania fa:m on iE to encourage more experimentat,ion and research. Buc t,he Radionics tre,Ernent of planEs w8s 1, maj or threat" Lo the 0i1 and Chenical tnrsts, their multi-rsillion dollar Eo annual sale of pest,icldes. groners were losing over 90% T?re Santa Cntz area artichoke of t,heir crop Eo pests when Curtis Upton cnme along and persuaded one grower E,o give UIGCO a trry. It worked, of course, and the farSo, Upton had eager custqners mer ha:nrested over 90ii of his crop! for his se:rrices for Ehe next growing season. But. he was too sucof art.ichokes Ehat Ttrere was massive over-production cessful. year and E,he boEt,om fell Nobody made any money out of Lhe markec. but, Upt,on A gleeful chemical salesman t,old his cusLomers: "I warned you guys wha! would happen if you all went for Lhat new-fangled tontiapeionll' And to maice surb that, it wouldn'c happen again lobby to work uhe Oil and Chemical t:rrst put t.heir very effecEive Now, in E,his stat,e, state capital, Sacramento. in California's or Radionic broadcast treatment !L is illegal t.o do any electronic More t.han likely Ehere of planLs except for research purposes. are slmilar laws on t,he books of Texas and other agriculcural staEes \ Now, witn pollution of air, water and soil so rm:ch in the news, iE is t,ime Lo take up Ehe Eorch laid down by Upt,on and KnuEh on Radionics aE, Eheir passing years ago. Goodavage's articles in ehe nationallydistriSuted "Saga"-magazine have helped renew We do our bit with ehe int,eresE in t,his Aquarian Age science. and UKACOschemaE.ic to this broaddit.ion of E,he Gerald article researcher a start. chure, enough Eo give any dedicat.ed borderland an amplifier, Not,e E,haE t,he UIGCO device is basically not, a The 6SJ7 Eubes called for, sharp cut.off Pentodes, transmiEter. These are Ehe old, large are generally used in amplifier circuits. They rnay st,ill tubes of t,he 1940s, as is the 6X5 rectifier. be substiEutes would available but, exDensive. AccepEable miniature probably be t.he 6X4 and 6EJ7s,'and Ehey're cheaper. At inf lat,ed probably be over S40. The later, 1970s prices, cost of part,s will sEnrcture so be sure E,o internal mi.ni-ature Eubes fr,ave a different Triad' s modern R consult a Eube manr:al f or proper connections. as the older, l04A power t,ransformer has'E,ha same ch;.racEeristics obsolete R4A. Good luck.

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BUIIJ YOUR OtiN RADIONICTTJNER by PETER LIIIDE{ANN A.

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Recently, a number of people have inquired c.o BSRF how to build your oeJn Radionic device. it seems that the schemat,j.cs chat have been published in Lhe past are some how r.nclear or thac che rates that go nith them are not understandable. Therefore, f a.mundertaki.ng this project, to write a article chat clearly makes avail.able to the beginner, a useful, easy to understand device for experimental work. HY PHTI.OSOPIff It should be noted that the FDA, US cUSToMs and the N{A all frovn on these devices. Ruth Droun rras Jailed for treating her patiencs nith one. And many other horror scoris can be recounted as to fouJ' treatnent of those who use chern openly i.n the treatment of human dlsease. Mosc people gec into troubla because they make wild clairns and actually obtain only average result.s. Ttre other way people 8et inEo trouble is t,hat they do nor understand the L-Atj concernj.ng che Practicing of Hedicine withouc a Lj.cense. I recomrnendghat anyone building one of chese devices use it onJ-y on yourself. TTracway you will be very careful what you do and you will not rnake anv cLaims thac you cannot substantj.ate. Also, you will not be breaking any I3t{S, written or unwritten. i.lith that in mind, I gladly nake this informarion avai.lable to the experimencer associates of BSR-F. THE BIO.NORMALIZER I call ny systam a Bio-Normal"izer because it is a bio-feedback device of Ehe subtlesc order. It is based on ny oun researches.buc is heavily influenced by the work of Ruth Drown, L.E.Eernan and Dr, Bruce Copen. The device, when couplete, works very well with rates published by Ruch Drown or Bruce Copen. Since the Drovn rat,es aFlas ls available fron BSRF, chis is a good place to b'egln. I{Y PHILOSOPHYCOAITINI.'ED /

Radionic devices dontt do anything. In this sense they are not machj.nes by the cLassic definition. Neither do che raEes represent the various body The tuners are made cf electri.cal cornponents chac perform Parts and diseases. no electrical functions. You can see why che FDAmighc have a lirtle troubie wich then. Frornmy poinc of view, and the point of view of many radionic practioners, Radionics is a form of CEREI'IONIAL MAGIC. The cuner is only a SOLIDIFIED THOUGHT FORMand the races represent AGREEMENTS wirh the subcie narure SpIRITS. Although some radionic practioners are angered by chis type of discussion, others are quite comfortable. One thi.ng everyone agrees with; the rnore people sho use a particular syst,ern,the better it uorks for everyone. i believe thac each one of us has ehe ability to make ourselves sick or weil. Most of us have resistance io releasing our osn inner healer. That is, we ciontt gi.ve ourselves permission to heal ourselves or others unless some "THfNG" sacisfies our analytical mindrs doubt. The choughr rhat rhe "MDIONIC DEVICE"is heal.ing me is often all that is required co release onets own inner healer from behinJ the wall of doubt. Ttre results can be incredible, but only when you "agree.', Underneath this sirnple philosophy, rhere is an inrricare ART OF HEAIING. The body built itself from scratch in lhe firsE place and ir can repair itself easily shen all the CAUSES for disease are removeci. l'lav-Jr:ne .|986 JBR, page 11

A Radlonic Twter may be Just what some beginners need to discover these subtre Laws of iiving. The mind is che real Racilonic Tuner, and uhar you think abour iE makes all Ehe difference in ehe world. A VITAL RADIONIC SECRETREVEALED Eighc years ago' on Ehe rsland of Hawaii, H a r E , yM a r t : . n a n d r w e r e e n g a g e d in some serious research into che operacional m e c h a n i s m so f R a d i o n i c s . l,liEhout going into his proceedures at thi_s ti.ne, maybe some fucure article, Marty fi.rst lsolated a profound discovery. llhen, for any reason, E,he RNA function of the body is depressed, Radlonic treatnents uere arnost arways *neffective. gut, vhen che Rl'{Auas flrst stio'rlated by a rp".irr" rt.at"aeni or an. RNA onry, then arr other radlonlc treatnents became effective. After seeing this phenomena a nurnber of cines, re flnarly interpreted it this way. ALL RB,IEDTLS ARE,yADE rN THE BoDY BY THE DNAI The radionic methed is simpty a ,ay of ,,tarking,, Eo che DNA' if ehe DNlTould not get its rnessage our into rhe ceg. t,hrough the Rl'lA' che creacment see-nednot to uork. This one pi.ece of informati.on may help you geE flrcre consistant result,s in your work. For us , it el_irninated aLrnost all ihe t.inres that our proceedures did not work. RUTTI DROI{NREVISITED In rny estimaclon, alL students of Radionics should study _.he mechods of R'uth Drorrn, especlarly her discovery rares for che Brain Actl.vity Cenrers. rn l0 years of work, r have learned "t-;;; ihac it is almost never need,ed to creat a specific organ or gland chat is dis-funcci.oning. rc is aimosc invariable underactive because of a sHocK or a cHorcE has shut down che Srain AcriviEy center governing chac part of che uoav.--By"ar""ting che BAC, che body normariees aucomaticarly' Discovering exaccly uhat ii obscructing che BAC i.s sometimes a little chalrenging, buc thJn no one ever said bej.ng healthy was going eo be easv. TEE CIRCUIT r could 8o on and on about proceedures, buE lets get down to the hardnare. A Blo-Normalizer conslsts of a nain rat.es tuner, a potenCi zet, and under-funccion dials, a specinen or witness .over_flnction place, a"a""io, teithef a shcick Plate or penculun prates), and a broadcaster syscem. " r,/ith these feacures and the Drown Rates AlLas, a beginner is werlon his/her wav co iocs of fun and discovery' Like il'uch Drosn, r prefer to ccnnecc c.he human body directly co the circuitry' For chis I use a modified Eernan "relaxacion ci.rcuit,, to promoce m o v e m e n to f t h e l i v i n g e n e r g y o f the body. Hich alr. of che bodv,s vibracions circulacing r.n "relaxation circu:.t,,'the t . u n e r c h e n b e c o m e ss r m p l y a n o d i f i e r chat is cuneable' The bo'dy is wired - hanci to opposlte to itself foot, hand Eo opposite footr a'd che head-and sacr.* ;;;" connect co che cuner. This syscetn brings the full power of che uoay on co the detector prates to exaSerace che i'ndicaEions, thereby "i"rgy helping t,o eriminace errors :.n anarysis. The parts list for a 15 dial tuner with pendulum indicacor is as forlows. 17 5K va_riable resistors L7 LO f p capacirors 3 one inch square,inet,al plates (stainless steej_ is nice) 2 banana or RCA plug recepticles I variable capacitor from an old AH radio I on/off ssitch 17 dials wlth nr:rnbers 0 - l0 I dial rlth 1ine indicaror I copper plate tvo inches square I briefcase and front panel May-;:r'n" 1985 JBR, page 12

The clrcultry is of the varlable resistive type, with a fen differences. Flrst, r reaj.ized some years ago chat the body energy nrcving in che circuit is not resisted by the reslstors. since resistance is noc the function of che resistor in Ehis case, having the energy flow chrough Ehe resrstor is not necessary for proper function. it ir sufficient thac ch. ..sist.or simpiy make concact. with the energy in che circuit. After a 10t of research, i devised this niring mechod. fhe variable r e s i s r o r u s e d i s a 5 K o h m r ir n 1 9 aLr r r e6 potenti'ometer' rt has chree (3) leads or concact points. (see figures l-3.)

o (*) y (r,ffi (3)\4 \Er


^ )J r

The 5K poc J'ooks soroething like the figure in drawing (l). r have iabelLed the t'hree leads A, B, & c. A and c are the tvo ends of che fixed resistance' and B is the movable mernberthat can r"..p around to change the value of the resistorDrawing (2) is a symbolic diagrarn of the 5K por in che same shape as the poc' Drawing (3) ii a simpr. I"n"r"ir."Jr-irr" r"*. rhing. Next, r atrach a Loli capacitor across the 5K poc from A:o c on alr the pots in a row and then attach a-1.1the B leads together in serres as shown.

c s t

Ttre living energy in the circuit Eravels along the wj.re actached to che B's but does not actually go through the variable resistors. i{hen;rou turn the dlal' it impresses into che liie force a subrre CHANGE RELATroNSitrp oF between the tvo harves of the resistor and capacitor set. Thrs rs arr that is requlred for tuning. r use dials rith numbers already on then for convenience. Now that you have a rates tunerr |ou need some r,ray to raise the potencv of any given t'ning. For this r ,rr" ci'," uig-,rari.bre capacito.-ojc="i"}i"lio Al{ radio from the junk yard. t{hen you ger-lne-or rhese, yo; wii:. prouau:.y find four cr five possibre reads to wire ic from. Jusr pick any rwo rhac connect to eech half of the capacicor. To gec a'/i-tarity reading on_your tunings, we use c\ro more ciiais; one for oVER-FUNcrroNand one for-uNDEi-FLNcrroNl 'rh"r. rwo ciials are w:.reci together and paral.Lei the nain tuner. Next' you need a detector. For this system, a set of two prates, one before and one afrer rhe Euner, creare ;; ;;;;;; fieid co infiuence a pendulum. The pendulum move-rnents indicate whether or not-Ehe energy oualicy on the tHo prates is the sune' rf che energy is the sarne, the penJulum wrll swing freely over both plates, breaking inco a clock-wise circre if chey are exaccJ-ythe s F m e ' T h i s i n d i c a c i o n f l l e a n st h a E t h e tuning on the tuner is alreadv present in the personb energy field, that is , Ehe iuning hasnrt changedanyrhing. r f y o u e u n e t o s o m e c h i n gt h a c i s n o c p r e s e n t in che person,s energy fierci, c h e p e n d u l ' u mw i l l s w l n g s i d e w a v s b e c w e e n che places. This means chac the energy on che piaces is differenc, that is, /ou have added someching with your tuning' other angles of the pendulum swing'usuairy indicate thac your Eunlng is presenc buc thac it needs further aeretoir"ni, such as compensac,ionon one of the over or'nder function dials or the potency diar. l{ith this sysc.m, you either Hant a sideways swing or a clocklwise circle swing iDeanrng No or yES.

May-June

1985 .TBR, page

13

Next, you need a speclnen place (for witness or rearedy) and a Hay co connect the body energy dlrectly to the circuit. These are self-explanatorv and are indicated on the schernatic. F i n a r l y , y o u m a y w a n t c o " a d j u s e " y o u r e n e r g y q u a l i t y w h e n , , - o ua r e n o c in the same place as your radionic tuner. For this you may uanc a nethod, go impress vour iunings inco t.he greater "life force" chereby affeccing yrour incentions at a distance. The best 1ow cost method for t,his use is a yAllTRA or POI'JER DIAGRAfi. The sirnple concencric squares pactern works very well and can be mounted on a copper place and sired Eo c.he circuit through an on/off ssitch. A strong rurgnec placed behind the YAIITRAsrrengthens t,he effect. There are lots of ways to effectively "broadcast" your tulings, so vou nay rrith this sectl.on of the r:nit. want to experirent i{e11' this should keep note. The races are dialed of che rate deslred. INFRONT up backwards begrnning from jusc call ocher quescions, you do-iE-yourselferrs busy for a while. One iast on to the dials so that all the r.rnuseddials are The easiesc mechod for this is co dlal che race Lhe right and moving left. If Ehere are :rny Torn at BSRF Headquarters. Have iun!

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1985 JBR,

page

lq

crN*.urt.sb 5c,, (.eS. Fonlr drs1713g to. Earry C. Gardaer. Ib. Gdrdner vrrt to 3rookfya ald sarr the Conr e traelog aE tJre crigcgnder nbo trrrued orrer tbe drewlr orr Eore eo:rectlg 1rr pogseaglcta of poesLblg So }tr. Gardner and I Bre'nov 1:lat bad. beea lost. tbe only dravJ.ng of Slleonrs Ldqe enctaott I. say tbla conflde:$ly ae f s! Nerney who has beea eseiEped tbe Job by norr 1^sto'ucb 'rltJe ldlse }&ry ChuLLd.a tbe execntors of tbe Erlleon eetste to cuIL Edlsoare effectgrdtlr a vler to It pubgeh13g a book oo tbe bventorre vork j.:r tbe reai.a of tbe psycblc. rsclentlflc Al,pereat1y bXs lotes rrrre Book of the Montlrt choi.ce. nllL be a eceaty and tbus far ehe bas oot for"urd eny refereoce to tbe drevlng 1n qusBfi.oB. after Edleour e deetb a soclety $or for tbe bachground. Sortly rge, f6ed &ey occr:lt thlngg frm the pbyeieal steudpolat. to bveetlgate Beseareb aad 1t sas lDes4torated ce,U"d tbeoee.Lvee: f,re Soclety for Etierlc under tbe lgng of, DeJ.aware. Ihe orlgl:ral neubere 'rere: Comaad,er lfYnne. F3"tpb Feeb (Not Faecbt ee spelled by Edlson. Ee &Led aotr tl,&e ago; a fact apparently not knovu to &t1eoa). BI,LL Ounther, and She -,raepsycblc even tbeal &lltb Fr]ls. Tbey dld not get an1ruhere. fte 8d1son devlce d1d not uqk. &cc,e A. Ed,lson Devlce

Page 11.

'cox j.r -*hLcb. In Le placed a nderopboe. It coaslsts of a cr:blcal .;hj.cb ::lsee an ail:cj-su:c truulletSe dleath,e top cf the bq 1s a bole ircra lbe slcne otr ibe bcoc are ]+' * f" x ir" and tbe trr:r'pet about 18" 1n belgb.t'.rooden plug j.aeerted -j:ereilr conea.d,orm' ti:nr tbe and aa aerle.i rrlde eo6 bss a '*ay dor.ra rbe iyr:Ilpet. tre outslde of, the truspet nld.dle of tlre plug to baJ-f t-to :erslraj.s .:f tbe nlcropboae. :es;ect1vet;r ere ionneciec. :o aad ibe leriai '.;betber ln soluttoa or 1n perrangalate, lrttb. lote'estur 1e f!:led Ibe trqrpet ',rbes Jdlsca bad 1n inlnd. It 1s clear crlratal form 1e not stated',.r'ire foru r-|e oppoeltc polee otr e Sre alun{nr.u .mIl- and tbe lnterlor 'oelrg - t"he potaselr:m peroengsnate 3 stroDg c0rl'dlz{'g cr prfueliy celJ. befrery 'nreves ebich r.rere to actuate tglg rnglglned etberlc egeat and 1.g the electrolyte. by ibe el"ectroi3rtic ectloa of, flre bat tbe olcrarpbone .*ere i:hus to be aupiifled -*b{Le tbe reactloa wae go{"9 tary. "Bo connrur1catJ.oa vortd be talr{ng place gentort g renark. wlrst waa once l'tr ft vorrlcl eeell to be aa ecbo of Reca.l]. mln .lleo c,ote that la +,be Cfi.aoa Or theee Akaeblc recordel tbe Lsrrentorte *{Dd. PantoD ssys: "Ibere le aov a fop seagce, SasjL Valentlne saya be le belplng. I'"aU.aa, but i heve to go back a1$1 L3f,luence, Frencb aad perhape a Llttle 3asiL '/elentj.ne flor;rlsbed. about i250 to :be bes+- of cur knowledge aad far." booas ',;ere puoJ-lebec ln lrencb. bls flrst '.rorkt "Althougn ;be jdj"son oev:ce Cld :rot Ccu@eadet ll'yane speeklng: And be tr:rned over to l4r. Card.ner ao ollgrnel bere ls aonetJr{ng tba.t dldl by 1a !'r'eneb end grs.nted l,c a Selglan bo:l cf ftflteen irrlt,ten Be.Lglan patellt, yr, Gerdner Ccee lot Enow Frencb and tlre name of Eenrf 8.G.3. Vanderrceufen. aow r.{e n,ay se gerbeps ',+hy Mone. Huguemcnt uae tirarm loto tbls as nell ag I. Eereln 3+i]olre 14. fuguemontrs trsnsiatXoa;

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priam caa be obtalned. by cover.{ '.9 by ueans of, a &e roeln-eoated tbree faceg aad tbe baee by renns of corm,erclal ioeln rendered bnreh, the the prlsm being beated prlor io tbe coatlng. fJ.u-ld or molten on a low ftle, rbe rosia tende to erack; to avoLd ttuls sbort-co&r tlb.Lle cooli'rg, rr,'g tt le adv!'eable to add,, '.rhlJ-e s!l'l'l 1n the nolten etate, oae cublc eelttvlulcb 1g refor evexy 2t grane of ros1a, the quanitty neter of firrpentlae qu&ed to cover one prleu l.nc.ludlng baee. Tbe rosln ntrst b very bot but !mr!t not bo1l. i'lhen tb,e coatlag 1s about L cm. tJrick, tbe rqsln on "bhe glass surface. the whole te beated eo aa

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are placed on the board flre prisns bev'fng been tbus prepared, dnlcb le to act as suBFort, eo that there ls a d,lstance of J co. betweea tbe feet end so tbat one of tbe faces of tbe bare gJ-aes prlso be parae{,rcular -ihe rosla-eoeted prisn; one of the edges of tlre fLeI ll'l.tb. oae of tb,e fecee of tovard.s tbe copper lllre wblch eonaects the gJ.eee Iasttenr m.at be dlrected pole of the cel1. 1:lf;ts to t'be posttlve starts llrom the posltlve Srle coBpr-r lrire of aboai; L rm. dleeeter 1e lsrnlrai! et tbe prlem P of, tb cqll end -'l-ebent dourr..ard prior lpl,e (Uarsglesa), eror::rd'*hl.ch the end ls secureLy festened; it crust paes 2 cm. of, the edge of prism iR. tu froat lbs d:y cel1 A, eonslstLng of one of the +-r+oe-leneute (d,ependlng trl)o! the reststance cf the bei-l)r 1s placed on';be proJ-ongatlon on'*h1pb tbe bcard,. / 1pl'dus &re nounted, and the bell- B 1s nounteti on the vertlcai Fron ibe prlsn FR goee a copper wlre, whlcb surroulde solldly rbat e d,1et&nce of about 4 cn, arey fron the upper end, Ih:lo copper rLre 1trd,str at te cornected to one of tbe iernieal.e. Sae end of tb.e copper :rire, vhlch is attacbed to prlsu .ER, ls terhook, another hook 1s ai,te,ched, ternlnatlng rfnated bY a.ilttJ.e tbe l{ght trlaogte T, wbleb is aade o:l very th1:r lron or tLnned copperrlre, eo that tJre trlaugJ-e miJ.l hang at a distance of about i5 un. from tb,e prlsnr s edge, wj.re. eud 5 un. fron tbe horlzontal. posltive Tbe base of tbe trlangle Le ulre. about $ wrm,belov this posltlve bangs betlreen tbe prlsm FR and ibe poslIn tbts -nray, the trlangle base m:si be para1lel vith tbat v1re. ead at rest Lts
- e $ v + 2 .

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'l:y the negatlv'e pole cf ibe eelL i,s :c:nerted neans cf a fJna]ly, idren raounted. !r ihls paDrrrr cf ibe le.}L. cogPer w-lre to tb,e otberterainai th s{gna-]] 'f ng denrlce is ready ro cperare. fli. @e'aiJ.on cf tbe DevLce.

eratc

wblcb, ,leeLre 'io cosrn::d.cate mlst cause tbe belL to dpSe eatltlee j.lght triangie poeltlve ibe borlzcnw,i wlre. by puablng lbe f agalcst end, tlrey ?roJeet againet tbe tvo prlercs a f].ux of energy tbe ]trlstr FR. poeltlvel.y :be glesa -:rlsm P snd cegatively

To thls rrblcb eLee'trlfXes

cf pri.sn P passee aioDg tbe poettj.ve rrlre Ibe BosJ.ttve eleetrLcity ',rEl]'e i:Jre negatl're .:l-eetrlelty of hlsm PR fl.olrs tbnr tbe atteched.tbeeeto, t":'langl e suspended thereto, and acta ae evltch. rrlre aad tbs hook to tb,e light :'rbicir ls aegarl.vely chargeq le tirue repeJJed. by tbe Se irlangle 'rlre; the horlzontal aegatlve roeln-coatecl _orism end !g i1raun by tbe posltlve *,,lre:,nre ra.ke ccntact. anci cbe:lrcult of :be eal.l 1s tbus trlaagle and 'oel-' ::.na :e,uoes 1t tc :1n9. cloaeri; tbe etrr:'ent racvs tbru :be Tl . irrpose rr' r-ire Slgnaiilr:B levtce.

'rj.ee i.a i.::forla1.Eg ;lersons Hho ts:e ,1nslcse o! tb.e signall-I"ng der'lce deslres f6:n;li.g a ccrorn:alcetloa. To tble ryle buey o'tber.rlse. that an entl;y :auses lhe bell- -,o :ing, and 1f tlle person cal}.ed he tbe reattd, tbe entlty '"rr1thg, qulred faculty of takJ-ng e i!e66age ,:r cu1.je or ,sutoratic tbe Latter gay be recel'red. 0n tbe othel' bend, it' a perscn j-s :regr the spparetus end a preeeat j.'" j.nfcrns -Ehat person, aaC t&e l-etter 6tct1t1r d.eslres to nalle a eccsurLcetlcr,, +ite rea::e --bat beve been outl5ed." nay tb.en reeei're the nessage t:,r
-l'f' =,{:ii1e a Jet:Gcn 1s preseni ri.o :.:ot :r1eh to ccnsunl-cste ancltLes 1-l:e bel 1 doee not " i1!r lt j-s because

tbe

:s l:: :be .::se ',vire'. i. :lerscn "d-b.c :eer -.he airlerabus d.eslxgs to teeelve a !IerJ6aqe., :iarTej- ninutes irre nee<ieo sorietlxles bet-ore ihe enil-ty r"rho t*lsbe to eornuni-ce-ie ias enouq.c. l;':iant on :c Deuee the bei-i ;o ritg. fre oeee -he :,ii.aagie ncvrs. anc r':na1i-v' rakes eontact r;itb rb.e poeitLve r.'lre. tbea:iret -tlt ;:e -lventcr, ;he slg::a] 1,i:1g cievLee ..ictc::::1hg ".o -'9(':ax:xete.a*:-;.n j.r :*-s en:-iretli. gl.LL not ce piaceC on i..:?erar:ler CrrL3' -"be eJ-esents ',riIL 'ce &e devlce found an rbe gg,r::ea ]rirLc.n 3r:e iequ:-red :'or lis 3onatrucl;icn. "rl.]-f hgve to be 1cEestl*c, :',' ;hcse -'rnc:d.esi:'3 ic po6ees i-r.

',&e :r::-rq -'f "iis ]esc:.lp;:cu bes been cnerous but +"h:a.ls the r'1:e up :he sior:r' anc I '.mnted 'l:be reccrd ccAf,lrst C.rae I be','a rrtenpreC :i plete" .f::'cu.-e ir.se" Ibe Jocunent is'::cnecesserily I:.n keepi-ag l. :cpi'i:r 'Ihe ,levlce 1s !o I Lier3ry i:rm. vord,y but jla"cen'c ..::r ::arres :cl :crcessio:i pb.otoats*us. llmple 1e een i* .ee! I:'::l:be:tteched. realJ-y'qulte :;r ':ej-,:^i,g ::" :br:lie ;tcr:.' :c ,bs. 3-r;enColyn /.eiley flaclr, I legraed gb,e betr,:-i,l *b;',:'.'. ;:.s le'::ee , :ev:!s i: st f '"'Lf,-LaSereea,l ?:rer:iienten',llth ''sgjflsre3 cf h" gnd jtt's. R. airgtre fl-crelge -:: Jta.l', ll:c ri'*erri.ios,:it:.ile .ir:. lec:.:'; f,ctes isi,:er: :'u i.be :1ee, state Assageglol: :t ".d*rcqgc '. :;34" 'r'rc:'::eci -:::s'cil:,"r ::: r .:naf- rcon 'lcec :':'^eI; ior ieecltatloa thet +,he nasi::le
tQ al: i)

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Thea la }farch, 1952 llr. Hollaad sunmarlzed acloitionaL infornation ubich had come to light, both from his orrn sources and, from those *sgociates who had urltf,en to l.Ieade and rc hirn of their efforts, ir TELiiATI+rc COlffUlliCATI:tc DEvi0t rfProject Hermes is a telepathis rdhile communicating device. primarily iatended for use between persons on this plane, it can if tuned to tF" proper frequency, reacb any lnrelligent entity on the information any plane. concernitrg lt was gi'/en, by para-iorraal [eans, by friEnds on another planet anri plane. Itft cr'e&tes' a high frequency fleLd which raill sensi+-!-ze indiridualsi to' such conta,cts by stimulating some ordinarily unused brain.. Tbere may also be solne heterodyning involved. Pdrti.ot of'tbe tb frequency used ig one which carries only a short dl.stince and & s e a s l l y s t o p p e d b y s o l j . d o bj e c t s . Thus it ru:li. ordinarily influenco ooly those j.n the innediate vl-cinity. ;f , however, it is tuned to the exact frequency of anotber sirniLar insrrument, or to the naturaL mentaL frequency of some other bei-ng, then by the law of rogona[t rapport :ts range becomes theoretlcalJ",- rrnlimited. For the intended uge, however, exa,cr resonance is not r3cessary aild quite a large frequency tolerance is permissible, fn some cages it nay be nocessary to nake sLlght tuninrl adjustments in order to produce identical i.ndiviriuals, resultt in rjifferent ;tlt should be under-sioog the j.nformatj-on rras not pres6nted ih"! &'a a fully and immediatoly wpurkable ce'rj.cerr but nerelF as a fasis fron r+hich.to begln experime{,tation. The ictual device used by the commurrisators could nop.fe exactly duplicated by us becaus! the parts are sot to be had;$ere. 0n the other hsad electronic o:onponents aYailable bere are not availabLe rorrche comnunicators, so they can do no experimen:ta1 work raith them. Such rrrould be useless erren i,f it rrere possible. Due to dif t'erences in the rratural mental ?rysv ienghts r , a devigs stri iabLe r-cr chen would produce ao resultS f,or uSr and vice versa. They have attempted to select coeponents rhich are commerci.alLy to us; aud theoretlcally r s o r k o u t a c i . r c u i t r r h j _ c h r ,""ri- o i lp ao de c e e s s e n t i a L l v L1 -r bl u t h o s a . m er e s u r t as the device used by thenr. l!re.,'ldo not cLein ;;*' he infalLibLe, +nd some chanqes may L" nece,,.r3-, Itwhile nany Persons may be intereste<i in tire possibiLity of eonnunicatlon Mi'th entities on other planes, rhe comnunic&tors negard th,is of minor value. T h e ; , "* . * ; hoy!lro., part:.cu1ar1y anxious to bave it develo.ped and uni.versaLfv urui n, a per sonar commurrication device between per sons on thi; p1,-.n. e Thi s would sventually result in the Treatest and mosr rapiii changes for the better in our socia.L, poiiticalr conorni" ;;;-iu*.n r e l a t i o n s v ri r r ^ v. h o systems this vorLd has ever seen.
in sia, dupiiciry.. secrecJr and anonymi.ty. trCrime, a n d o t l r e r u n . l . . r o r t l : r ,j L : , l d s f l o u r j . s h only Irery are so A" iJ tc conmi-t such """r:..:

Page 23

deeds in the fulL light. frr any forn of telepathic conmuri cation tbE ldnds. of both pF,rties are Lai& bare. It is impossible ro coaceal alry svii or low iatent. If a^ ttan. rranted to be a stinker; but be couLd no loager, as nov, -ssquerade as tbe Honorable So-and3o fror here-or-therer His ovn a,areranreSsof hj's i.ntent and purpose would: be go rl:ividLy ia his uind tbet aayone who contacted hin would itrstantly be aware of it. Few could stard ?he resulting contempt. tr'Ifr sn the other hand, the deq!.cs ',rere developed secretly by any group or catioa, aad nouopolized it could resulr in the grea.te$t evil the worLd. has ever kuovn, since it couid be used to bypooticaily sontrol tbe thinking of otbers. rt ls essentiar, therefore, thaf the, infornstiorr be. so raideLy dl.strituted that it ril1. be iltpo.ssible for a.ry ono per*on ur satton to nonopollze it.

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IATA 0N IR0JECT i{sR}ms l5'tici Ori:inal infornation specified lleissner (1), (Z) A (3) Coi1s. 1 z ' 1 - 1 O ? . iIr, . . - l - 0 ? 2 a n c i L + - 1 0 7 i : r e s D e < : t i ' . ' e i y . r t o o \ { co..los. apFears that theie are 1:robably too lor.' in fre quency to work' da*"a belotr', r.'orked out by Ed John. ioii S;; possibie alternate B (+)'S.9 to 14.5 variable condenser, IlamrnerlunC FC 12 or equal. value not critical ' (s I Carbon re si stor, 3 to 6 nne;ohm, e:iact 1.\34. (Ol Crystal diocie, Iiaytheon CI(-?05 or $yl;a.ia Crystal diod.e, nrytttuon Cl(-?08 (miqht sub :;i-?05 here). hl (At Cartr5.d,ge unir: only from variabie i'eLuctance phono pickup. (g ) Ilheostat, exact value not criti-cal. (1O) iush button or momentary contact stitch' fndicates grc u n d t o c h a s s i s , connect these points together C ALTDRN/rTE 0IIS ff metal chassis is r,'ith wire ' not used,

The cni;' experimenter '*ire sccui'ed .1n7 resuits ,i) v (1)r 10 turns m a c i eh i s c o i i s a s f o l L o v s : rv!'re, i in. diameter arr6 secondarV of it\7 silver on eacb, pfinary leuqth of about { i-nch. spaced to o""t py * totai of coilr 81rd (,3) sami as,rbove except that 13 turns l/ere used on each prinary and Secondar;1. The primary and secondary of each coiL were pJ'aced side by side about a ia. 4p&It1 anci the coils vere arra-nged in fron one to tbe sther. fashion ro prevent i;rduction triangular coils cou1d, be placed end to end (Note: trrinary and secondary To rrlnd coils use tiro pieces of wire and wind side if deslrod.) Slide both off the rod and b.y side on a. round rod or pencil. :iv5.n{ i'ou ircc na:ched coiis. unscrerr sne out of the other,

produced somewhau errati c resulcs and rather the above coiis i : ir !i \ : . h i' s n r . \, r f i^ v . .feqllenCy, and are perlraps .rrcird psycitj-c phencmena, a stra I i'ange " It is sugan undesirable rdrich inay put thern into coiis ;e t:ieci, for conv[gested that si:e several iifferent oi a piug-in on sotne sort mounting ience these can be arrangeri lroard for quick interchange.

tube developed for lhe 2831 tube is a sub-miniarirre :n1y from Raythoon. pocket sile radios, and available permi; connect:-ng into the clrft has r.rire lea<is long e:rouqh to Soclcets are agai.Labf e r howe*rer, i+hich would cuj.t rrithor.at a sockerj. make tube reirlacement easier; in r,rhich sase tire leads are cut shorter ;\lmost any srnal] tube cculd be substituted to form pias. ln case a:rri GJiTgnnel Diodes of necessitl-, {And nors in 196C Transistors are avail.able for oneration ia this ultra h:;h frequency range, Crabb) r.rith far less battery drain than ihe fl,aytheon tube, TUBE llOi'I
BrlfTEIl.Y itND SwfTCg ji standard flasn:. r+hen ne\c, iirr: batcery, has a Yo1tage t;r'lr i r i .g h e r t i r a a s p e c i .\ penli.ght fi.ed f or the rube " ce11 may be :scd., hor*ever, es the vo]-tage soondri;ps l b e I tj r f b : r , it e r . ' I e a c s c o u l t i b e s o 1 under 1oad. r : a t t e . r - J . ' . r i r r i o m e s o i ' t , )- - J : r : n q n o U n t i n q dered directi',1 to li:e clip lJ.Tlj -

The' por'rer should be turned on by a snall rheostat, devised, inrush of current rnight otherrather thaa a switchr 38 the first of tube burnout To provent eh possibility rj-se be sxcessive. the tt;iif l:attery should always be turned on before the tl3tr. .\ or pusb-button typa switcir is reconunendedin the nonentary-contact lBn batterll iead. Then, in gvcat of undesirable psychic results, the switch, thus shuttin'r would be. to,release the natura]-\ reaction the Cerrice dff. \ devJ.ces such a.s this are veFJ' GtrNEItAL NOTES - Ultra hl,gh frequency between p&rts, In circuit \ sensitj.ve to lnduction of draftine as a nalter diagrana liued ae often. shown perallel they should run at angles to In actual cons'trustion convcniesccr each other aud be keilt' as short as possible,
i

vouLd be to nount the devl'ce on construction Tbe rnosf, desirable metal];lc chassis (copper or aluminun)r rdcb each qf the a. ortn sbJ.eldLng cansr which shoul.d three sets of coiLs in their ft rsould also be well to encloeo the to t.he chassis. connect with only thg GoDbo*: or'snclosure, entire device, tn a rnctallic These' shielding (5) and (8) praJectLng outside. troIs. and. iretrs; or nede of foil 8hs3t aluninunr trp out of"thlu Itart8, cou1d. be bent sovercd cardbo&rd. (Itens 3, T V 8) Condrunicators advise that the bctveen are lnternediate frequenci.es involved q',rote ihs remarkt of Associate John, To va'ves. radio and optical too high for these are, in- the rdc.g houss, corncr of electronicgn; Slnce there is no available and. too lorE for wav gu:ideS' rlres componerx (J-952, but who knows wbatrs availabJ.e uow ia l95o? Crabb) conruui.cators frequency, are rhich r{ould respond, t'o tbe fundanental to pick up end use as a rnodulating frectrcuit Lo their attenptiag The phono pi.ck-up quency one of ths lorrur or highor harrnoaics. ll.sted is about the nost colnpact and the chcapest devlcs cartrid.ge harmonics. Cernhich rrould respond to the lover elEctro-magDetlc or dynamio microphones mlght work cqually taia typcs of nagnetic A11 other parts are as" rrc.Ll. Only the coils oud corEa function. need Eot be renoved unless dagirod. eurpluc bu.r poss{b!,e ts nake the dsvice fsrction rritb the ft should also'bc opti.col, or tbe heat, range. i,n the sub or: ultra upper har:nonlcs: cel1s wtll respond to freguencies Certain frl'pcs of photo-electric possiblo undesired Bpestrnn. To elininate outside thc.visible' fron vlsible rays, cornmunicators, -ruggest using light interfrouce or ultra-vilolet both plein and polariced. filters, either infra-red probably be necessarr ff any' chauge is, Eede in part (g) it will (3) which nust lrave the to also melce chauges in coupling,'coil, proper characterletLcs to natch (8) to the rest of rhe eircuit. should haye cousiderable background in C A U T f O N S- ' E x p e r i n s o g e r s p s y c h i c a n d . :o c c u l t m e t t e r s , a s s o n e p o s s i . b l e r e s u ] t s night otherr,rise be a severe mentaL shock. lfost sf fective usc c1l Page 26 HODULAr0RNOTITS-

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PR0JECT HERMES,A I,IECHANICAL ArD TO TELgpATHy Addit,ional fnforroaeion and Suggestions b-v Associate Wiili^am F. Z'rLrgt In the book "Fg t{ysterious Pastt' by Robert Charroux, Berkley R r b l i s h l n g c.o rp .r_ 2 0 0 Madison Ave,, New ybr k, Ny 100r G, paper i r ac k r $1.50, French tiLle "Le Lirrre Dupasse I'tysteri.eu)<t', lherl is a short t'The Russian proscientist ParaglaPh on thought, waves, page- 156: f9sso1 Kogan.has Put fonvard-tf,e lheory that thoughEs can be tiansB.1lEeg by using electro-magnetic fieldb on waves 5f extremely variable length, ranging beEr^reen and 965 kilometers. 25 Success-fuJ experimenEs have been carried out beEween England and ehe Universitv o f L o s A n g e l e s i n vo l vi n g a distance of 8r 0d0 kir - om ecer s".
)=25 Lo 955 kilometers equals 300 to 121000 cycles and thrs is (fn the'beginning our Audio spectrunJ was ihe Word and the word was wiEh God. Speecn is the Carrier and-thoughu is Lhe Hodular-orl fiic)

In the book "Ext,ra-Sensory Perception, Witchcraf E, Spirrtualisrn anci Insanilytr, by A.W. Maclellan, I quote in part: "Tn otco. t.o make it possible for an agenc, to influence anoEher'indiv:-dual ar a cjisEance the Vital Force or l'lagnetic Aura mrst first be generateci rrom brain (and second from the solar ple:ans, tfre power cencer)". -the_ living It{aclellan wrote EhaL this magnet,ic radiaE,ion was obtainei L,hrough E , h ew i E c h ' s f a m i l i a r , her caI.-praising iE, or pinching, a *rrict on Ehe head' etc. 0f course the successful witchbs were-mediums. but we can learn from Ehcrn. (Ana what we Learn is thac Vital Force is necessary to Ehe success of any ruagickal operati-on, whet.her i-t rs drawn froo a htrnan being or an animal] This is why Lhe Witch deliberately irritat,ed her cpt. that force doesn'E come from the c'rinc buc from the emot.ions. (The Chri-stian Bible savs it well: "l"lake a iovful noise unt,o the Lord,"-if you would have your prayers "nr*eiefl-a-K) If we study how we hear it could help. A sound i-s a mechanical vibration eoming to our ear. The ear turns ie j-nto an electricai vibration forthe brain and we "hear" iL; so it shouldntE be ver!' difficult ,to send a message electrica.lly to the brain or inner hla:-lng cent,er, bypasslng the outer ear. Cafi :itis Cl-arraudience. i-et's see how the Hermes device creates these vibraEions f fcrm the reoui re<i part,s. Meissner Coi1s, Nos, L4-L07t+, L4-L072, 14-i071 llarmerlund BFC L2 or equal variable condenser-, 3.9 to 14.5 These .an ie obtained from r-he Thordarson i'leissner, Inc., Elect:oni-c Center, Mt. Carmel, Illinois 52863 Ehe cn i ' " :

N o . ? , 1 4 - 1 0 7 2 - - i!ry:'t!8 9 0 M F i 132 ro 2 N o . L , L L - .LO7{ - - 110 to 190 MH + Harnmarlundl,tanufacturing^co. o. rnc., 20 Brid.ge Aye., J e r s e y 0 7 7 0 L , V a ri a b l e -CapaciEor l- 3.t io"fz..S- fi Item 4 and Item 1 in Ehe sc,henatie, page 24, C a p a c i t o r 3 . 9 L o L4.5 pF and Goil ll0 Eo i90 MH IResonant Freq. = O f

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I ' he R e so n a n L F re q u ency r get. is 3,q0g,000 to g1000,000 c y c l es . lQuare waves have alrdady been-dis"os".d bi ;;";h"i'asnr member and r have nothing to add t.hereto. so iar I nied to know why the coils it'Z and ll3. l'ty electronics knowledg*-i" littie rust.)r. llow ler's -ri. gg to. Page 28 of "T\^rornventorstt. " ciiscusses the :="q""r,.y-;; t ' h o u g ht w a ve s a s l 0 t,o 6 0 M yr iacycles. A t' fyr iacycte is' ior o60 c y c l es s o w e h a ve 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 to 8 0 0,000 cytles. To srrnmarize: Mechanical sound -Ifgject_Hermes Nikola Tesla B S R FA -F 300 - 12,000 cycles 3 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 - A r b O O , 0 0 0c r r c l e s 100,000 - g00,OOO'.y"f"i 60,000,000,000 cyclls ( ia::r noni c s)

rf. r left anyonets frequency ouL, please add it so w dont anything. - Wtten t'he answer is foirnd ii probabiv wiir be a simple miss s o l u E i o n E h a t d o e s i t. M aybe it.r s *or *' i' hor - r o" ."ifr "r ;M ;"' !:;;quenc v . "Extra -S e n so ry P e rceptionr Spir i.tr :alism anci ns .W itchcr b y - - Al a st? i l w - Ma ci e rl a f, M.A.' ( Eafili- *""aft, pubr isheci in ' i ;1958t "r* " [ ani l v ,, - ; ; " " " by ir he c.w. Danier co., Ashingdon, Roclifordr' Essex, England. book, 82 pages, and proUaUiy out of p.i"t now. Maclellan heard voices. in his- head, bypassing Lhe outer ear, and.finally learned how he he4rd them, and-was abie E,o duplicate rhe action. He v,as an A@ captal-n. He was thought i.t""r," but of course htas only-mediurnistic. It i: *y opinion Ehat Ei"ri" u.of. could heic a d v a n c e P ro j e cr H e rme s co nsidei:abiy.. r c has r he onr l,' i"iIiii;;; ex p l a n a L i on o f ch e w i E ch rs Familiar i have it m ak es s e n s e . r t d o e s n o i g i v e t h e t e l e p a L h i c f r"o*u- ""r our ' r "au u i L equenci.l, t coulc herp once we have t!*, which is most importanc. liac.Leligan Coe-sgi..,e u s e f u l di scu ssl o n o f fre q uencies. " REVISED SCHEMATIC OF PROJECTHERMES DEVICE T h is i s a su g g e ste d cir cuiE,. IE needs mocification pr obabi y . Not'hing is changed-from the original **"*pe a question about cat.hocje a n d F i l a me n t i 1 tfre tu b e , gs you can se".^ r p;;;;i- it - see as an educ ar ec g u e s s o r sP e cu l a ti o n . L e tr s what, we havei or "itiator w i thi n ".r

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:i1e f reguenc-; :ange if thought r.raves .?nc :r.lc:-c .^/ave-c, also ncdu,r-et: ;rDcGSlirii:tles lf 5sc::l-aEo- "i-:::cuenc;es 'o:-i arlc '.vi: o -s : , * c a n i : - a n s m i i , c r ' : ? c e i . v e L i r i s : ; - l l : n : l n a . . l o n . A t " *:" in t . . . i,=o,i]n te nic '- . ;:"o e s : t o - , . t n a t t e : : i S a t i h e : : : , - c : : 1 c i s ; r - . s : : o c _ r i , : : c , , - : ; _ e ,, : o r l . . : . ., Test_:r;;, retinernerlg and :mprcrrement ivj--.i :crne. RE}{NAER ::JE I]?A.II:C';
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let's be praetical &no use Since we- have. a magnetic'cartrj.dge it where we alwa'7s use it, on a phonograph recording; and i-f the "ievice is working we should. hear iE talk, inside our heads. ExperimenEaElon !s required. be different. fire Of course, once ic starta wo.rklng life will will revealed and disbe Evil moral nature of roan rgill be isoroved. c - r e d l t ed . T e l e p h o n e .a n d r elevision wlll" be outmoded. Sicknes s c oul d be healed by Lrming in. on offending vibrat,lons and-changlng them. ln Ehe beginning, nany researchers are begter than a few. Like:adio Lf iE crorks !n a loom tt will work anyr,rhere Ideutifled Brain Waves: Alphar E uo L3 cyeles per second, 50 M i c r o v o l t s ; B e t - a , 1 5 E . o5 0 c y c l e s , 5 - 1 0 l t u ; D e l t a , 1 t , o 5 c y c l e s , 20-200 l4v; Theta, 4 t,o 7 cycles; Garnrawaves 14 cvcles. IiHAT ARE THE WAVS FORMS? An o sci l l o sco p e o f wave for m s is needed, especlally wher e :he diodes,are concerned- Once the sircuiL works prgperly i-n producing Ehe oscillaLor wave fotm, and can be modulated wieh Ehe magnetic carcridge sound frequencies (voice) -- plus belug able Eo transmit Lhen we are on the way. The next step is Lo experiment with oscilexpert in brain waves can lator frequencles. Here Ehe laborafory help out. Even if we dont. yet hear it in our brain, is iE comin,g Ehrough? f h ere ts a g o o d re fe rence to this in a L974 "FaLe" r nagazi ne b]' l{ary Margaretr Filler, "A Physical Explanation For EsP". fhe tusis Monograph Supfor- her irticle is "PercepLrral and Motor Skills", Sudbury, 0nLario, plement, 3-V35 L973, $1.00,y l,aurentian Universityr Canada. Dr. Michael A. Persinger is one of Ehe three auchors. frave atLenpted E,o I'hese Lwo references sEaEe chat "Scientists Most theories find some.physical mechanissr Eo explain telepat,hy. suggest aome radio wave-like connection beEween a sender and a reRecent work wirh Extremely Low Frequenci-e (ELF) waves and ceiver. pulses in the frequency band between.0l and 100 cycles a second involved". are our bnain waves since-we have icienr-rj-Ec fuay be Theie th-e ones fron I Eo 15 cycles a second. AIso "the V"LFpulses alE,hougn thousands.of cycles per second can occur as so ntany pulses per seccnc El.F eleci:o- m agi n ' t h e E L F w a ve s. D e spice their low intensities, il miles. netic wgves can t,ravel thousands of I do n o t trn d e rsta n d all Ehis yeE. It appear s chat many c :l fer e n t , f r e q u e n ci e s a re 'g o i n g io be discover ed, i- nvolveo ;r om simo- e br a.n to brain cornmtrnicat,ion to higher rnanifestations such as celen^rtaiion ite:,,ting will bec one e a n d c r e ati n g t,h i n g s: u si n g m ind power only. thoughE elininauing illness anci it will begin wicl'our knowleoge o: Project Herrnes. It, is fuuportant that, we c"ievelco r-his cornnunica:ion It may also f inaify solve lire mvscer:' .''f tr-.e ilyr-ng iauc.:s. device. Incidentally, E h e s o l v i n g o f t h i s p r o b l e m : , ' i t " j . s c s ? r . ' e r o t ): l : n c c : r - 3 6

Roi Poison
oeing n man of vrried talents iJesides rnd strikinq personalitl'.the Iate Robert T. Nelson was a grea! tllker. Before his deatir in r q35, re ls'eti his iriends by i ; e i n g. i b l e r : o d i : c o u r s cl i u d i l y i o r h o u r s on rlmost.ln1' subiect. ,\mong his accompiishrnentsrvas his "discovery'." rround v r g r S . o f u n " e l e m e n t "n o u ' i : a l l e d r i l i u m . c i o u ' h i c hi r e l t t r i b u t e d p r o d i g i o u s u r a ! i v e poNers. Neison ciici nor explain exactly n h r r h e t h o u g h tv r i i i u m l ' : r s . b u t h e d i d c i r i n r t h a c i 1 s , n 5" r e d i o i l c t i v e . ' ':os. \elsotr started plckIn the earll' l : l g i n g p i n c ho f v r i i i u m i n s r d e n o r d i n a r v a l t r v o - i n c h - l o n gr r a s s c f i i n d e r . P o p u i a r i v > r'alleti Thc .\13!:lc niii,j.' tne certridqe suiierinqfrom a varten' rvessold to preopie , t i i , e i n i u l J i s e l s c s \. e l s o n s a s ; t i i v a y s iuppl' to expllin hoiv it *orked: rvhenthe cliincier \\'as rttached to the lf,pei ( or u h u n q l r o u n d t h e n e c k) . ' - h e r e ' e r e" e m a o n x t i o n s ' i n t o ' , h e : l t m { ) s l ) i l e rie r e d i s ' 1 1 1 g o i : o i c c [ . t i i s c o u r l t ( i n lq i l s o r t so i s t the -\Ieenu'hiie. vrilium rvas iiseasegerrns. 'L'manilte"inrvard' restortng to :upposecj thL buver's sick bociy ceils to normal. The Morkup. So manl' ailinq PeoPie in & around Chicagotiocked to buv lhat in rg.14 the Vriiium Products Co. rvas

'f. -\ersoN Jn. Ronenr F or vioiet s, vriliuttt' end misieading"clairnsabout the grdget's po\\'e rs I mxxlmum l)ellalty: a )'ef,r ll) jril. Sr,coo). 'I'hc The Lowdown. l)rosecuiioncallecl n h : r l i l t l o z e nt l i s e r s e ' r i d d c ) I l t r c S l . r i k e , i ) u v c r st o t n e s t a n c i 1 l l n i n i r o r n L e s r i t i e t i thrir thev hacibecn reiievctlof notiringirut Dr. GeorqeL. Clark' reld of thcir mone;,'. r i i t h e c i i v i s i o n - r e n a l y ' t i c ac h e t n i s t r l ' e ti h e l - ' n i v e r s i t vo i I I l i n o i s , r e p o r t e d l h l t l h c fleqic Spikes he haci tested con!lrned rlo be-bur merevriiiurn-rihatever i! rnirqht. h 1 r ' r / : . o o o t h o f f , c e n t ' s' , v c r r ro i b l r i u m Dr. Bcrnard ,ihluridc.:r cireaprat llo.isotr. \\'aldmen. nead of the nuclear physics l . r b o r a t o r l ': r l ' . h e U n i v c r s i t l ' o i N o t r e D : r m e . : L r r - l c r.it t l c t q c r ! u u n t e r : r ! s i x " r e d i o a c t i v e ' ) I l r i c S p i k e si n t h e c o u r t r o o m . ' f h e j u c i g e : i n c i - t u r o r sI r e e r d n o t c l i t a l cr e t - t r ! - t l t t . Undauntecl. the tieiense)cnt ij parade to ,..rf suristied)tlartc Spike customers the sranci. L)ne man testilied that 'r )Iagic Hec!or. Spike had cure<ihis dachsirund. He also ,ri parall'sis oi the irindqu;rners. declared thac untii he bouqhr the gad,<et if in I g3g, he himse had been .hort r-rl
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formed to ntanuiacture ;rnti :t:il ntorc Ihgic Spikes. I'ormer )la1'or i:d Iicill' \vore one to the rq.lS Dernocrltic \ational Convenrion,and credited the heaiinq of e bone abscess its powcr. Other [o weilrersincluded \Iunicipai Court Bailiff Al Hor:rn arrd Illinois State Senaior Willilrn J. Lionnors. Exact saiesligureson the \lrgic Spike are unknoNn. Osteopath Ravnrond Kistler oi Wy'andotte, -\Iicir. : r d m i t t e d h e t h e l r o u q h tL 5 o : r t , L r o u n d t ,i t <o :rpicce.resoid t lrr:m :rL ) joo. L a s ! n e e k i n C h i c a g oi e d e r e .t i i s t r i c t l was linaiiy court. the U.S. {-iovernmenL rrking o|ncial, disapprovinr; notice oi the \ I a g i c S p i k e .I n v c n L o r\ e i s o n ' s s o n . I l o b '1. ert -\r:ison Jr., and [is partner'Gcorge C. iirickson were on trial. chlrgcd, uncier lhe Pure For,rd and Drug :\ct, rvith "ialse

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b r e a t h r n d u n a b l e t o \ v a i k a q a i n s tt h e u'ind. ;\fter he qot the spike. he srid. he rvalked rqainst the u'ind line. Anothcr rvitnesstestjheri that r lI;rqic Spike not h i o n l v c u r e c h i s a r t h r i t i sb u t l i s o m a c i e i s w i f e ' s v i o l e t s l ; l o s s o mi h r e e l i m e s b e t t c r ihen normai. ,\nother mln simoll' toid t h e j u r v t h a t I ] I a c i c S p i k eh a d i m p r o v e d h i s r v i f e ' si i s p o s i t i o n . \\:hen vounq Nclson took '.he stlnd. he r s e e m e du n i m p r e s s e bi1 ' l h e i a c t l h a t h i s ou! oi ]Iaeic Spikeshad .eot no response t h e G e i g e r c o u n t e r .S a i r i r e b l a n d l v t o lhe jurors: "I beiieve s'e have xn unrec' o g n i z e df o r m o i r r d i o a c t i v i t l ' . "

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DrownCase TheIncredible O 1968 RalphLeeSmith

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Mrs. JackieMetcalf, a22-yearold Torrance, California, housewife,mounted the stepsof a white one-story building on LaBrea Avenue in Los Angelesand entereda door marked "Dr. Ruth B. Drown, Chiropractor." Inside shegave three small piecesof blotting paper to Doctor Drown and her daughter,Dr. Cynthia Chatfield, also a chiropractor. The stainson the blotters, Mrs. Metcalf said,were samples blood from her three children. She askedto of have her children'sills diagnosedfrom the blood samples and paid $50 for eachdiagnosis. The datewas May 23,1963. In a few days shehear([ from Doctor Chatfield that analysisof the blood samplesshowedthe youngstersto be coming down with chicken pox and mumps. On an earlier visit Mrs. Metcalf had purchasedfrom Doctor Chatfield a "little black box" -- a $588 Drown TherapeuticInstrument -- to treat herselfand her family at home. Doctor Chatfield told her how to set the dials on the machineto cure the children. Mrs. Metcalf, however, was not just another patient -- shewas an undercoveragent for the California State Dcpartmentof Public Health. Her three children were not ilI. And the blood samplesshegave to Doctors Drown and Chatfield were not her children'sblood -- they were the blood of a turkey, a sheep, and a pig. On the basisof Mrs. Metcalfs experience and other evidence,Los Angelesdeputy district attorney John W. Miner and a squadof police and public healthinspectorsswoopeddown on the LaBrea Avenue building, arrestedDoctors Drown and Chatfield and all assistant, Mrs. Margaret Lunness,and took into custody enoughAlice-in-Wonderlandmachinesto fill a wing of the SmithsonianInstitution. Doctor Drown died in 1965while awaiting trial. Doctor Chatfield and Mrs. Lunnesswere convicted of grand theft for their part of the operation and -n 1967were sentenced Mrs. Lunnessbeing placedoil probation for three yearsand I)octor Chatfield receiving an indeterminate prison term. They are appealingthc conviction. caseis a vivid reminderthat pseudo-scientific health quackeryis still a major activity in the tjnited States.At the time of their arrest, Doctors Drown and Chatfield had treated 35,000 personsfrom all over the country, and had sold their devicesto other ftinge practitionerswho had treated an unknown number of other patients.The devicesallegedly could diagnoseand cure nearly every known affliction from jealousy to cancer,plus a few ailments-- which medical sciencehasyet to discover. Actually, expert witnesses testified that the elaboratemachinesthat form the basisof the Drown treatmentare a hoax. In finding the guilty, the judge statedthat the theory of the treatment is no more valid than defendants "voodoo or witchcraft." Ruth Drown got someof her ideasfrom Dr. Albert Abrams, king of 20th century gadget quacks,who died n 1924 after having mademillions leasinghis rnachines and treating patientswith them. According to the Abrams "theory," which he calied ERA, all parts of the frequencies, What'smore, body vibrate and emit electricalimpulsesof different, ascertainable he maintained,diseased organsemit impulsesof diferent frequenciesfrom healthyones.To diagnoseillnesshe "tuned in" the patient'sblood specimenon an Abrams ERA machine, noting where abnormal vibrations were occllrring and pretended to pinpoint the nature of the illnessfrom the rate of vibration. The "cure" consistedallegedlyfeedingproper vibrations 'I'he

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into the body with another Abrams rnachine,thus overcomingthe improper ones. The American Medical Association'sDepartmentof Investigationhas estimatedthat the Abrams contraptionsinspiredat least50 imitations. In state and federal legal actionsagainst such devices,expertsrepeatedlytestilied that both the machinesand the theory behindthem are sheernonsense. This did not deter Ruth Drown, who took the old master'snotions and addedmany colorful and imaginativetwists of her own. At Drown Laboratoriesa patient was told to sit besidean impressiveconsoleand put his feet on two footpadsmadeof Germansilver. The consolehad nine knobs arrangedin three rows of tluee, and eachknob had settingsnumberedfrom zero through 10, On the consolepanel there was also a micro-ammeter.Near the right-hand corner of the desk on which the consolewas mounted was a small rectangularrubber membraneclampeddown by a metal frame. Next to this was a cylindrical well about an inch and a half deep. Seatedat the console,Doctor Drown placedan electrodeon someportion of the patient's body, lJsually his abdomen.This immediatelycauseda movementof thc needleon the ammeter.With her right middle finger, on which shewore a mbber covering, Doctor Drown then stroked the rubber membrancwhile making adjustments the nine dials with her left on hand. When her finger beganto "stick" or squeakon the rubber, this indicatedthat the dial settingswere beginningto approachthe vibration rate of the part or organ of the body that shewas supposedlytesting. Next shewould open a drawer of her desk and draw forth a numberof sealedglassvials, eachcontaininga different chemical.T'hese would insert, unopened,into the well in the she desk. one by one, while continuing to make delicateadjustments the dials. By this means on she supposedlyarrived at the exact vibration rate. Shewould then read offthc numbersat which the dials were set, beginningwith the upper left dial and proceedinghorizontally 'fhis acrossthe three rows to the lower right. compositenumber,taken down by an assistant on a large chart, represented vibration rate of the illncss, which could be lookcd up in an the immense "rate book." The "rate book" also indicatedthe "normal" vibration rate to be fed back into the body to restorehealth. In treatment,the patient lay down in a small cubicle in the Drown Laboratories,placing his feet againstfootpads, and appliedan electrodeto the area designated Doctor Drown. Wires led from the footpads and the electrodeto a Drown by treatmentmachinein anotherroon! which was essentially sameas a diagnosticmachine the except that it had no rubber plate. The nine dials of the treatmentmachinewere set to the numbersindicatedin the rate book and the patient supposedlyreceivedhealingvibrations of just the right frequency. Another Drown treatmentdevice was a tremendoushollow coil into which the patient. lying on a slab,was bodily inserted."All we know about it," Doctor Drown told investigators, "is that a coil with a chargein it seems straightenup people who walk lopsided." State to offrcials who impoundedthe device at the time of the arrestspromptly dubbedit "The Tunnel of Love." If a patient wished to do so he could buy a nine-dialtreatmentmachinefor home use.After treing,diagnosedat the Laboratory the patient would be told, often over the phone, where to

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at set the dials for regular treatment sessions home. Even this, however, was only tile beginning.If a patient didn't want to bother being hooked up to a machine,either for diagnosisor treatment,either at the Laboratoriesor at home, he of didnt needto. Doctors Drown and Chatfield kept dried specimens eachpatient'sblood on piecesof blotting paper. If it patient felt ill he could call Drown Laboratories,and the blood sample,insteadof the patient, would be hooked up to the diagnosticmachine.The blood remainedin somekind of continuouscommunicationwith the rest of the samplesupposedly patient'sblood, whereverhe might be, and thus reflectedany current illness. Treatment, like diagnosis,could also be "indirect." For $35 a month, Drown Laboratories would insert the patient'sblood specimeninto a treatmentmachineat a specifiedtime each day, set the dials to the indicatedhealingrate, and broadcastan hour's worth of treatmentto the patient, which would supposedlyreachhim anywhereon the face of the earth. organsof Ruth Drown also claimedher machinescould take photographsof the diseased patients,whereverthe patientswere. She called the process"radio-vision." Severalsuch photographswere exhibited at the trial, including, one allegedlytaken by a Drown machine in London showing a blood clot and cancerin a patient in Connecticut.One medicalexpert called it "completely unintelligible."Another said that it looked to him like a Rorschaoh inkblot. In a University of Chicago demonstrationsimilar photos were producedmerely by exposing photographicplatesto light momentarily. Doctor Drown had lots of other ideas.One of them was that jazz music was a causeof cancer.Cancercausedby jnzz, she said,could be dissipatedby playing such soothing tunes as CarrieJacobs Bond's"PerfectDay." She also said that eachhumanbody is surroundedby a magneticfield, and that people should be taught how to care for their magneticfields properly. One of her publications,the Drown Atlas of Radio Therapy, says: Any patient who is weak and depletedshould nevertake shower bathsand standin the water the over the drain, because patient'smagnetismis washeddown with the water through the drain, leavinghim depleted. Also, a weak patient, after having had a tub bath, should leavethe tub and have someoneelse to drain the water and clean the tub. If it is necessary do this himself, he should leavethe tub and put on a robe before starting to drain the tub. Too many people sit in the tub and drain the water while finishing the bath, and their own magnetismis suckedaway through the drain pipes to the ground, leavingthe patient with that much lessreserve. As early as 1949,the Drown deviceshad been shown completelyincapableof diagnosing illness.At a University of Chicago experimentDoctor Drown was suppliedwith blood of samples a numberof personsand askedto diagnosetheir conditions.In one case,after working over her dials for an hour, sheannouncedthat the patient had cancerof the left gall breastwhich had spreadto the ovariesuterus,pancreas? bladder,spleen,and kidney; that shewas blind in her right eye; that her ovarieswere not functioning properly; and that there

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was reducedfunction of various organs including the stomach,spinalnerves,and heart. Actually, the patient was suffering from tuberculosisof the upper lobe of the right lung. In 1951 Doctor Drown was tried on federalchargesof introducing a misbranded device into interstatecomrnerce.At the trial one of the government's expert witnesses,Dr. Elmer Belt, describedtile Drown device as "perfectly useless.""You just do not seemto think much of the instrument,do you, Doctor Belt?" the defenseattorney asked."I couldn't even use it to amusethe children," Doctor Belt replied. Doctor Drown was found guilty by the jury and was fined $1000. She stoppedshippingher devicesacrossstate lines but otherwisecarried on business usualas In 1966 Doctor Chatfield and Mrs. Lunnesswent to trial in Los Angeleson the state charges.In addition to receiving Mrs. JackieMetcalfs fnsthand account the court hearda processionof witnesses relate astoundingstories.One testified that Doctor Drown assured him that his son, a diabetic,could reduce his intake of insulin, prescribedby a doctor, if lie took the Drown treatment.Another witness,an epileptic, was told by Doctor Drown that she could cure him; shesaid that he would be able to stop taking the drug diplenylhydantoin prescribedby his physician,and shecontinuedto treat him even after he had a severeseizure in her oflice. In anothercase,a chiropractor who used Drown therapy instrumentson hcr patientsbrought a rnanto Drown Laboratorieswho had polyps in his lower intestinaltract. A diagnosisby Drown instrumentsshowedno cancer,and the chiropractor thereforecontinued to treat the supposedlybenignpolyps with a Drown therapy device. The patient worsened and died. A biopsy, done by a medicaldoctor, had shown the growths were malignant. A dramatichighlight of the trial was the testimony of Dr. Moses A. Greenfield,professorof to radiologyat the UCLA Schoolof 'Medicineand a consultant the Atomic Energy Commission.Disassembling Drown device in open court, Doctor Greenfieldexplainedthat a all it basicallyconsistedof was a length of wire linking together two piecesof dissimilar metal -- the Germansilver of the foot pads and the lead of the electrode.The only function performed by the patient was to completethe otherwisebroken circuit. With the circuit complete,a small electric current flowed betweenthe two metals,which registeredon the ammeteron the console.The entire device therefore opcrated likc a simple flashlight battery. It was even possibleto eliminatethe patient entirely. Doctor Greenfielddemonstrated that the samedeflection of the ammeterneedlecould be produced by dipping the footpad and electrodeinto a dish of water insteadof applying them to a humanbody. As for the nine dials with their l0 numberedsettings,Doctor Greenfielddismountedthe paneland showedthat only two wires eachdial to the circuit. Further dismantlingshowed that the l0 positions of eachswitch were connectedtogether and it therefore madeno differenceon which position any of the dials were set! to The exposureof the scientificfraud brought somemomentsof amusement the courtroom. cruelty, and indifferenceto human life. But behind it lay all epic exampleof heartlessness. "Quackery can kill," said deputy district attorney John Miner in his summary,"and the use of fraudulentinstrumentssuch as thesedevicesin the courtroom is dangerousto human life." which treatedthousandsof patientsand took in immensesums The Drown-Chatfield scheme, in had of money for yearsafter its worthlessness beendemonstrated the Chicago experiments and the federaltrial, demonstrates that the nation is stiil far from solving, one of its gravest social problems-- the menaceof healthfraud.

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Dr. Drown's llomo-Vibra Ray "The physician is only allowed to think he knows it all, but the quack, ungoverned by conscience, permitted to know he knows it all; and with a fertile mental field for is competewith untruth." - Dr. Albert Abrams humbuggery,truth can never successfully The history of radionicsbeginswith the discoveriesof Dr. Aibert Abrams around the physicianwho beganto pursue his beginningof the 20th Century. Abrams was a respectable theoriesof diseases having specificvibratory ratesthat could be detectedby tapping on the patient'saMomen or spine. He refined his diagnostictechniqueswith inventeddevicessuch as the "dynamizer." in Accordingto Martin Gardiner,in his book Fadsand Fallacies the Name of Science: jungle of wires. One wire ran to an electrical source.and It was a box containingan insane anotherwas attachedto the tbreheadof a healthyperson.A drop of blood was obtained from the patient, on a piece of filter paper, and placed insidethe box. Abrams would then percuss(tap) the abdomenof a healthyperson,who was strippedto the waist and always for a reasonnever madetoo clear - facing west. By listeningto the sounds,the doctor was ableto diagnose ills of the patient... the Not only that, but without the patient even being present,Abrams could tell the patient'sage, a sex and religion.If a drop of blood from the patientwas not available, lock of hair or even (he diagnosedills of long-deadhistorical personalities in a handwriting samplewas enough this manner). After the dynamizercamethe "oscilloclast" and the "reflexophone." His discipleswere never permitted to examinethe wiring in the boxes,which were rentcd to trained practitioners. Gardncr again: Shortly before the doctor's death,however, a committeeof scientistsopenedone of the magic boxes and issueda report on what they found. It containedan ohm-meter,rheostat, condenser,and other electricalgadgetsall wired together without rhyme or reason. Sincepatientsdid not have to be physicallypresentto be diagnoscdby the devices,a thriving industry was createdin which people could sendin blood samplesand receivediagnoses through the mail. Some scepticstook advantageof this anonymity. Blood from a rooster was sent to Abrams, who diagnosed"malaria, cancer,diabetes,and two venerealdiseases." Among Dr. Abrams'converts was author Upton Sinclair,who wrote that Abrams "has made the most revolutionary discovery of this or any other age. I venture to stake whatever reputation I ever hope to havethat he has discoveredthe great secretofthe diagnosisand Further, Abrams had treated "over fifteen thousandpeople, and cure of all major diseases." my investigationconvincesme he has cured over ninety-five percent." Gardiner srxnsup Sinclair'smany apologeticsfor Abrams as a "clinically perfect statement of the persistence irrational belief on the part of a convert to a totally worthless set of of theorieshatchedin the brain of a brilliant paranoid."High critical praise,indeed. Dr. Ruth Drown took things a step further, able to not only diagnosebut to cure from a had a distance- any distance- as long as the operator of her Homo-Vibra Ray mechanism

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blood sample&om the patient on-hand.Not only that, but the device could createX-Ray-like pictures of the patient remotely. In 1950,the University of Chicago formed a committeeto investigateDr. Drolvn's methods promoters, in at work - shehad beenhaving remarkablesuccess finding enthusiastic lines in the university'sannouncement: including... well, read betweenthe On the face of it, the Drown claims appearto be totally unworthy of seriousconsiderationby anyone,leastof all a university. However, certain friends who are membersof lay boardsthat to have beenof great assistance the university have urged that the Drown claims be investigatedso that they may be repudiatedif found unworthy or adaptcdto the benefit <lf mankind if they should prove to be worthy. It wasn't even close. In her first test, Dr. Drown took six photographsusing her machineon None were clcar enough for hcr to basea diagnosison. The tcsting blood samples. committeedecidedthat the filrn imageswhich have intrigued Mrs. Drown and her disciplesare simple fog patterns produced by exposureof the film to white light before it hasbeenfixed adequately.These of imagesare significantlyidenticalregardless whether or not the film is placedin Mrs. Drown's machinebefore being submittedto the highly unorthodox processingwhioh has beendevisedby her. In the numerousold filrns shown us by Mrs. Drown we can seeno bacteria,etc., that Mrs. Drown resemblance the anatomicalstructures,appliances, to professes see. to Test two, a diagnostictest using blood sampleswas equally disastrous.Healthy patientsand oneswith obvious medicalproblemswere remotely diagnosedby Dr. Drown as suffering three patients,the from a motley assortmentof maladies.After badly misdiagnosing According to the testing committee: remainingseventests were abandoned. rest The machineis a sort of Ouija board. It is our belief that her allegedsuccesses solely on the noncritical attitude of her followers. Her technic is to find so much trouble in so many organsthat usually shecan say'I told you so'when sheregistersan occasionallucky positive guess.In theseparticular tests, even this luck desertedher. Test three testedthe healingpowers of Dr. Drown's machines.Drown had claimedto have treated the hemorrhagingof a traffic accidentvictim in ltaly by using her machinein California. Shewas confident she'dbe ableto stop the bleedingof two lab animalsfrom one room over. Two dogs had their arteriesperfbrated;two dogs bled to death;the committee report: In the opinion of all observers,including herself,Mrs. Drown failed completelyto control or modify hemorrhage.Spectacularfailures such as thesehave hardly slowed the radionics industry. Indeed,if the links in the column to the right are any indication, radionics is going strong. The modern radionicsexpert, with her thousand-dollarmedicaldowsing rod, her extensive training in the subtletiesof homeopathicdiagnosticsamplesand remote healing,her medicalterminology and trendy new-age wholesaleappropriationof respectable-sounding

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jargon - what are we to make of her and her practice? It's cheapand easyto determinethat the apparatusand theory of radionics is completebunk. The fact is, though, that as a form of faith healingit does heal somepeople with remarkable success, and a success that medical sciencemight be unableto match with its techniques. Medicine has long acknowledgedthat in order to scientificallytest the efficacy of a new medicine,for instance,it must be comparedto the effects of a placeboadministeredwith cqual solcmnity, ritual and bclicf. This is bccauscthe solcmnity and ritual and bclicf can themselves heal. Establishment medicineoften seemsto treat this as an inconvenientfog that makesthe respectable diagnosisof physicalailmentswith chemicalremediesmore difficult. Faith healers,like radionicspractitioners,use placeboheaiingas a technology,intuiting that to masterthe authoritativetrappingsof a cure may heal more patientsthan a conservativc and prudent scientific diagnosisand treatment. physiciandiagnoses depression from a checklist of symptoms,represented An establishment in a patient'scashistory and in interviewswith the patient. He knows that scientific, double-blindtests have shown that chemicalsthat inhibit the "reuptake" of "serotonin" can symptomsto lessenor disappear. causethe patientsdepression-indicative The radionicspractitioner discoversfrom the patient, who describeshimself as depressed, of clues as to wherc overworked and struggling with the challenges raising teenagers, disturbances the "subtle energy fields" that createthe multidimensionalinterference in pattern that is the patient'sbody and life may be found. She knows from her training and experience that by using her precisioninstrument,shecan influencenot only the patient's bodily health but the very circumstances his lifb that are causinghim distrcss. of In somepatients,a placeboniccure of their love-livesor their terrible commute or rotten Iandlord - or perhapsmore importantly, the treatmentby a medicalpractitioner who agrees that theseenvironmentalirritants are to blame(at least in part) for the problem - may leadto treatmentsof scientific better resultsfor the patient than all the scientifically-proven medicine. medicine,and I have no I happento believein the nostrumsand rituals of establishment patiencefor a healerwho wants to clear my chakraswith tachyonic chi-crystals.But, on the can boggle me with equally other hand, an MD in a white lab coat with a stethiscope in nonsensical diagnoses and coursesof treatment,expressed a languagethat I respect(even in, and I'm sold. if I don't fully understand)and haveconfidence So here'san ethical question for Dr. Reader:If you have no idea what is wrong with a patient and don't really know how to proceedor know of no therapy that's likely to promote healingfor a particular patient - are you honestwith your patient? Is it better to honestlyeonfessthe limitations of medicalknowledge and technique,or is it better to put your hard-earned trappingsof medicalauthority to good use in the "theatrapeutical"creation of a potent placebocure?

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RE H I ' l ' A N . K t N ' D S E A R CUl {L t l ' tl T E I I I N ' C .


NEWPRODUCT ANNOUiiCEI4ENT

I'IACHII'IES AGRAD
IATI NG ICULTURALRAD AGR .I,TACH,INES: I.NSECTCONTROL FOR Note: (1) Actual photo of' AGMD machine model BlA. 9V battery is b h o r + no n l y f o r s c a l e p u r p o s e s and i.s not used in the unit. (2) This is the same unit developed and used by General Henry M. Gross and his associates at the Homeotronic Foundation of Harrisburg, PA, in the 19405 0 r s . l , l R Ui s t h e o n l y c u r r e n t source of these original units.

(MRU) is' now introducing Inc.". Mankind Research unlirnited, radiating g1t"' agricultural field-effect use only perimental to be.used in the treatment intended AGRAD which is-solely insect populatlons-

basis for exon a lirnited the designated rnachine' of of crops and the control

to conduct exyears by MRU researchers Ttre AGRAD machines have been used' for several peri:nentalapplicationsofthetypedescribedinTheggcrgtLife.g-fPlantsby by Edward w' Russell' Bj"rd and peter Tompkins, and neport onE6iEs christopher in electromagnetic to pr|ffifftcts the.AGRAD machine is intended Theoreticdly, of insects control thus enabling with the environment interact that will wavefronts sensor mechanism' the latterts by disturbing coPPer plate for unit' transmitter field The AGRADcomes eguipped with the basic Reagents cliP' alligat'or and ground wire with wire to plate, .orrr^."iirrg specinens; be made available but will offer in this ale not included control insect for specific it' with those who request arrangenents licensing via slecial be shipped upon receipt machine will The AGRjAD for shipPing and handling of $390.00 plus $I0 of check charges' or money order in the anount

contlol' research 5:urposes for insect The AGRADnachine is intended for experi:nental MRU operation' to L" expected or exact theory of No claims are made as to results cause giving nachine without to refuse to se1I or lease an AGRAD the right reserves on arl basic Ninety day warranty purchaser. prospective or reason for doing so to any electron^ic Parts is granted'

.,.nainittg6Q-^^Lon^4e\o\fuc.ted'Lnthe'ulecsit!rcAGRA'nac|ine{onLnAec't Licatlrtn' and (eed &t '\lRuo(6lce' tu;n1;g-i"i'iauu' a'bout c.|ntnoL. Tncaw;'tte

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Ai THERIC,., PPAFATUS I^,ITHOU' F I T E DS U G G : S T I O N Ft,e: rschrift, Patentift im Deuuchen Reiche vom 14. rggl ab. osar Korschclt. Leipztg. Germa -' t; hanks tt subscribcr,Eenhard Vaegs, West Germany.) \

This devicr, according io ths invcntor, taps lita enorgiar from thr ethar. Korschalt's idaa evoh oua of cEtli.r f indingr by wilhelm Webar nho believad minut!, otheric-oloctric parlct6 originared tht s'."r' cornic ;lasma. KorJchett agrecd wrh Webcr's concept that th6c p"rii"l", rvith unlimitecj intenstty lhroughout the immediare,erheric "r" "on""n,r", { h u m i d i c l b a n d s u r r o u n d r n go u , p l a n The rheory goei on lo slato that thii energy band caussvibrational fields ro issuc as ray3 and bes from all {orms, up to a cgrtain dinanca. Thesc energicr prcsurnably obe,y unknwn, but hypotharica f o g i c a l ,m a r h e m a t i c a lr a v r si n t h e i r a c t i v i r y , l e d n o t e : s h a d e s f R A D t E s r H E s t A t . o Korschelt claimed his Jorm enetgy appatatus caused a vacuuming effcct, crraled by rotation 8 orderly intstraction nirh thc frec, positivc etheric particler, adding, ind with thc nrgatrva molccul inherent in solid forms. "lt is theteforo possiblc," stated Korschelt, "by the dilfuse moving aether in iha almospherr, balance'out," ths base theory of Korschcrt's cosmic contraption. ,,This apparatus,.' Korschclt vsot "can be used for alt purposer wtrsre an incraaso,of living energy from tha aeihers is darirod.,,

mon. axial spindle 16 made of dieiecrric moulded . plastic material. is aetaci,iUiv mounred.in fronr of an int'ra-red ]amp iO sit thar the light beam is at right angieiio thJ axis of each spirai 15. Eaclispir"f riii-oiJ vtcted wrth a radial tapping arm l? encae_ rng a predetermined point lg in eac-h spirai 15. An eiectromagnetic ."aiitoi-j'fj comprlslng a 70,000ohm resistor heateci bv etectrlc power is mounted in the lower end of the.tube 14. The radiator ig--"v-ifi""I natrvely be in the form of 'nermtonrc vacuum " "o""""tlo.rit tube. The settings of rch tapping arm 1? is preadjusiea-a:[iini

red, ultra-violet or vjiible light radiaiion and an initiator unit comprising at lealt one generaily- conical spiral of non-magnetic material inrerposed in the parh ;f tne Deam. An rnrtiator elernent13 comprising a.tube 14, containing iour gerr"iiilv conicai brass spirals lb mounrecio"no .om'-

source.a.rranged to project a beam of infraurce-a.rranged project beam

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S P E C i F I C A T I O N (tsrirish parenr. 0ffice) 5t5,eO6 JuIy l, 1938 No. Lg5d|i38. Dec. I5, 1939

Application

Date:

C o m p l e E , eS p e c i f i c a E . i o n A c c e p E , e d :

COMPLETE PECIFICATION S IIeEhod and l"leans For Obtaining Photographis Living and Ot,her Object,s lmages of

I, Ruth Drown, a citizen of the Uniced Staces of A m e r i c a , o f 4 7 0 6 O a l < w o o d v e n u e , L o s A n q c l e s , C : : rL f o r n i a , A t U n i r e d St a E e s o f A m e r i c a , d o h e r e b y d e c l a r e t h e n a E . u r e of this invention and in what manner the same i_s to be performed, to be particularly described and ascerEaineci i n a n d b y E . h ef o l l o w i n g s t , a E e m e n t : T h e p r e s e n t i n v e n c i o n r e l a t e s t o a n r e L h o do f a n d means f or obtaining photographic lmages of parts of E.he hunan body or of oLher: objects. Onc object ot rny invention is to enable accuraEe photographs of healthy a n d d i s e a s e d p a r t s o f l i v i n g b o d i e s s o m e w h a Ls i m i l a r to X-ray photography to be obtained in sinrple arnd easily applied manner. Another object is to provide a compact, portable apparatus for obtainine pho[ographic images according Lo t.he invention. IL. is believed thaE the action obtained by my pres e n t m e t , h o dc o n s i s t , s i n a c t i v a L i n g t h e f l o w o f e l e c t r o n s ol Etreuni-direcE.ional flow of currenL from the baE[ery o r o t . h e r e q u i v a l e n t s o u r c e a n d E . i r er a d i a n E . e n e r g y o f E,hebody being examined. In pursuance of the foregoing anci accordi-ng bo my present invention a method of obtaining photographic images of Iiving and other objects and more pareicularly human beings consists in subjecting a highly sensitized photographic plate or film to an electromotive force so a: !o produce a field Lhereon and providing means susceptible to the influence of invisible enersv ravs or elect r o n s o f [ h e a t o m s o f t h e o b j e c t E o b e p i i o c o g r : a p i r e <tlo produce a change in voltage drop across an elccLrical circuit to correspondingly influence said field. 1'hc apparatus for carryinl. ouL Llru inventron does comprisc a Iight-scnsi.Eivc cell, a uni-direct-ionaI source of currenE, corrnected aE tire neg,aLive side of Ehe catiro<le of t,he tight,-sensieive cell and ac Lhe posiLive side Lo E , h ea n o d e o f E h e c e l l . A s e r i e s o f i n r p e d a n c er h e o s t a L e s connected so as to have a condenser aclion and connected in parallel wit.h t,he cell and tire source of energy, - 8

located, said rheostac,s beinq connected across one of c.he plaLes of rhe condenser and rhe cell plaLes, and, che.other plate of the condenser being connected Lo the filt,ered negaEive side of the said iource. In carrf inq an embodiment of my invent,ion int.o practice ir should be understood that the latent imaqe is carried to the sensitized surface by means of a mignetic field having certain lines of force and the crriCt<ness or widEh of the field, i.e., Lransverse to Lhe shorLest distance between t.he negat.ive and posit.ive points, can vary from one t.hirty-second of an inch to an inch. 'fhis field, when applied across a sensicized surface, spreacis or is trapped to the plane of such surface and bv action of a suitable developer the imaqe of the field can be princed. Conseauently, if the poLential of che applied force is varied by using the eieccronic or lighr ray influence of Lhe object to be phot.ographed to aff6cr the photo-electric cell included in the circuit of che apparatus, the lines of force will be correspondingly varied on the plate. In practice t.he subject to be photographed is placed close to the photo-electric cell anci it is f ound t.hat the radiant energy of t,he subject impinges on tire cathode of the tube resulting in an increasingly higher resisEance placed across the cell. Such increase will cause an exceedingly minute change of the currenE in Ehe anode circuic, in Eurn producing a change in the voltage drop across the circuit, such volrage drop or change in poLenE.ion being led through the selecting or cuninq section constituted bv the rheostat. ThaE i_s to say a photoelectric celI is used to isolate a parEicular section to be photographed and in doinq so iE. pictures cha.nges in elecEro-motive f orce in an elect.rical circuj-t, such changes of the electro-motive force beine utilised to excite Ehe circuit producing a field across a highlv sensicized ermrlsion surface, t.he resulting distorti_on or change of Ehe lines of force across said surface producing an image which can be developed chemically. Suitable apparacus for achieving this resuLt is illusLrated by the .rppended sheets of drawings whcrein: Fig. I i s a d i a g r a n u n a t i c v i e w o [ a c o m p L e L ec i r c u i c .

g':31::fi :,::y;ii :ilr.l!" opDo pi^cu3"3r""of?i! sed , 3:"i: f ilm or plaEe is

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F-ig. 2 is a sectional side el.cr,'ationview of a portable casing acconunodating the cell, rheost..rt or tuning device, phoE.ographic plat,e-holder and ci-rcuir wiring. ltig. 3 is a detail sectional - 9 plan view showing one

of which of the adjuscable tuning devices, a.number as shown diagramconnecCed in t.he circuit " i"ui-"ri"fiffy 6 l v i n n i ! . l , . a n d a s s e m b l e d o n a p a n e l i n t h e a * i as qngwn :-n f ront and broken rear eleva;;;;;bl;'.tring in Figs.-4 and 5 resPecEiverY' [i;;; or Referring Eo t'he drawings a source, of direct I is"connecr.ed by its negative uni_direcEiorual-.rrii"r,g cell 3 via a side ro rire caihoJe 2 of a photo-electric which-can consist be coils of insulate<i wire fil;";-4 on boch iron cores and air cores:rnd or solenoids;";;J of por.enr.ial rnay be a battery rhe-iource G ;;;i;r. uhe porrable caiing 5 so !h.E Ehe apparatus and avallable for use an;nvhere. " ; ;r- i "" - i " s e l f - c o n [ " i " L a ; " ib a T h e o o s i t i v e s i d e o f t h e s o u r c e l i s c o n n e c t e d t o L ta n d a re C o n n e c E e ca c r o s s t h e a n o d e i celf 3. as shownr 1 Pluraliry " " . c t5 " i. e-r; h ; Z i r - o " u l ' o r - p r e f e r a b l y re a if i which are conof series-coupled impedance rheostats B 7 being in the rectifier s.r:l-lcted co aci as condensers, iltered negaE,ive side of the turn connecEeJ-ro Ehe f wi-t'h the parallel source I so that the rheostaCs arE in This of the battery and cell. beforemencionel-.it."if Eube may be a quartz-cr'yst'al .ryp-e' a vacuum rect.ifier of thl oxide'type or a chemical ^ t".aifier rectifier, of large surf ace arba ( in relation A-;;ir rect.if ier. plates 9 and l0 are Ioro rheir chici<Ilrrl-.."Jujting relaEibnship ' e'E ' ,af Ler the cated in natt;;it-tp".ua * " " " " ' _ " r " f i x e d c o n d e n s e r a n d a r e c o n n e c E ' e d i n p afr a m s lThis condenser device or lel wich the ,u.iiii"r. device because betwecn Lhem pio["gr"pni"g i;-"if;;r o highiy s6nsitized plate or film' d i ; i " i " t p o " ." l.Jiththesourceofthepotentialconneccedasshown a <lifference of potent-iaI between Eirere will tire anode l>einq posi" fa ny t -a n o d e o f t h e c e l l , t" d be the cachocle direction Live to ctl" caiftol. by reason of the applied of pot'enEial' of rhe source ;i ;"lariry is placed In praccice the object' to be examined of-rhe cathode so that ttre invisible close to t.he ,"ir""" impinge upon the cathode will Iight Tays."t"t"ai"iiottt electrons being emirtecl f rom the " r e s u l L r n g ',l-h i s l " " gp lla"c c s a n e g a t i v e p o t l n t i u r o n L l r c a n o d e " i ; catilocie. placed across Lhc cell and an increaiecl reslstance is r n i n u t e c h a r n g eo I c u r r c n t i n in'1"-"xieeaingty resultinq Becarjse of rhis change in current rhe anode circuit. . l r o p - i " t o t s E h e .d i r c u i t w h i c h i s Ehere will U"-"-"ofrige o; runing section collst'ituLed led rhrough ihe ,.f""Eing by the rheosEaLs. ThechangesinclielecEricsEressoft'hecondettser.
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the cnarllLlie arrang,ementof Places 9 and l0 caused by the Plates.9 and l0r proto -"=-"i potential r3 ccrl'r"p i "a c j u c e s c o r r e s p o n d i n g p c ih a n g e s i n r ' h e f i e l d i ; h i c i r of the phc-,Eorraphic c ^ i r . , " a i n t h ; s " .' r h li tsi z e d - s u r f a c e fs f ield is in the nat,ure ot a na[ncolace or f llm. ;iah oppioptiat.e Iines of force dependini: upcn Li;"ii"ia ,r u h e r u n i n g d e r . ' i c ec o n s c i L u t e <j i-iv c ' ;;; p"rricular;;t;i;;;f lectro-mo L e r t 5 e i - m p e c i a n c e h e o s C a E s 8 . A s t h e C u n e < ii n ptoJlt"u" Ehe f ield is varied or rei.ui'at:g-, iorce which or orfanisnl bv ihe enerqy derived from the nervous syst'em Lite f ie ld i s b e i n g p h o c o g r a p i r e d' oui ;;i ;il; r i;i;; r , , ' a r i e d a c c o r c i i n g l y" . . number The tuninq device can comprise any suit'able as s6own In l"ig. i to in seribs of rheosLaLs.3""".i.a Each rireostate coma f f ord a rvicje ranBe of adjustment ' studs La arranc'.ed in an conductor ^ pL.rr,riili f.iru, f pivot prn l-5 [rom - o . E "C . f a r c u a t - e p a t . h a b " -u o "a "c e n t e r c o n d u c t o r l6 engaging Lhe studs -singL1" rvhich ra<iiagei sleeve Li abouL wich an insriliring E.rcir stuci is iinea c a p a c i t ' 1 r' whicir is wounJ a wire 18 so that t'her:e is a '[he wLnd14' betrvecn Lhe wire and the conductor sLud and rhe c'onseries for each rheosLat' ^t" in i;;;-i8 connected to ductor pivot pi;-i5 of each rheostaL is ctt" next rheosLat in succession as cire tirsL,ol.tii"g-ot iords a wide shown j.n Fig. l-" Such an arrangement af the impedir.rce !?*?O in the cirf ine .""i"g' r."g" "Lns a"cnt*i"Ei uy t'he number of windings seleccuiL bei lt-t Llxcd rheosLals can be mounted on a Panel A swilch 2Q ior makin;; and i n cire porrabie-."ti"g-S' 5f the batEery c?l be proyidei on breal<inr the circuir I 3 can be pLuSC n i s D a n e I, o . r ; - t . f t . p h o t o - e l e c t r i c - c e l i l ' o n t h e b a s e o f t h e c a s i t - t gb e E r v e e n ,:cc i nto a to.["i a compartmenL ; ; ; p " " " i i g ; ; J a p a r r i E . i o n 2 2 s e p a r a E i n sO ' Inrnediarelr" l 23 containinq Ehe condenser plates'9 i"1 is a narrow Iio plates above che ,p^."- ir"tween these two c f t " c o m p a r t m e n E 2 3' 1 1 9 - ! : . 1 : i""f r"-iigtlc 24 adapted i_nserEion and removal of a mounc conLal-nIntop"""a'io, t . h e p h o c o g r a P h i cP l a t e o r f i l m ' described and a scerca i ncd - w pr d l i ; r vi n g n on , y -airiE i c u l a r l y inven't.ion and in wtlaL rn"]nncr Llte t5e ,-C,r."'of .a declare that whaL I claim is:-samc is to rro piriormed, oI i'9t i l . t ' l e c l r o co f o b L a i n i n g p h o t o g r a p h i c r e c o r d s objecrs consistins' itr lr;nttb Lions oL hurrurn odies or oif,!t or' I i .lrn p r r a g n c ti c f i e l d a c r o s s a s e n i i r L z e c l L a t e inq a and producing chanqes circuit ^., t y^*"".."or means of i n r h e e r e c c r o - ;";ii"i i"t;r i . r r f o r c e - i n r h e c i r c u j - t ? y e x p o s e d cell a lizhr-ser,rili',re cell or phouo-electric 'the - lI

to the influence of Lire radiant be photographed.

energy of the object

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2. t'lerhod of obtaining pirot.ographic records of portions of human bodies and other objects consisting in creating a magnetic field by an elecErical device and Iocat,ing a highly sensitized photographic plat.e or f ilm in cell in t,he magnet,ic field and locating a light-sensiEive jurxtaposition to Lire object to be photographed, -placing a potent,ial on Ehe anode of the cell by means of a unito insource of curreng of E.he said circuiL diiect.ional crease ttre resistance of t.he cell and rhereby produce a to the said change in voltage drop across the circuit m e a n s. f ield-producing 3. Appara[us for obtaining phoEographic records of p o r t i o n s o f t r u m a nb o d i e s a n d o t h e r o b j e c t s c o m p r i s i n q means f or appiVing a rn:gneLic iield acl:oss tlrc sensLCizeci surface oi a ptrotogral;hic pLate or film, a pitoto-clr:ct-ric or lighc sensitive cell adapted to producc change:; ln Lhc electiomotive force producing said field and susccpCible off- Ity Lhc ratiianL to the ipfluence o1-electrons;iivel to be examind, and tuning mcans conenergy of the object nected in r;arallel with Lhe cell and a source of current4. ApparaEus for obt:aining photograpiric records of portions of human bodies and other objects compriling source of cur; light,-sensiEive cell, a uni-direccisral to the rent connected at the neqative side via a filter c a E , h o d eo f t h e l i g h L . - s e n s i L i v e c e l l a n d a E [ h e p o s i t i v e side to the anode of Ehe celJ", a series of impedance rheostat.s connect,ed in parallel wich the cell and the and Cerminal members besource of current, a recUifier, plate is locaE.ed, said rheostats tween rvhich the f i1m or being connected across one of the Eermiruel members and t.he Cell plate, and the oLher terminal member bqinq connected Eo Ehe f ilt,ered negative side of the said source. 5. ApparaEus for obLaining photographic records 'lf p o r L i o n s o f i r u m a nb o d i e s a n d o t h e r o b j e c E , s - a c c o r d i n q t o llaims 4 or 5, wherein ghe negaLi'r,'e side of tire source oI current is connected [o t-he cattro<ie of [l-re pho[oc l c c t r i c o r l i . l l h t - s c t t s i L i v c c e l l . v i , a o n e ( ) 1 -{ I l ( ) r cs o l e n l l o i < i s o r c o . i l s o l L t t : ; u I a L t : tw L r c w o u r t < o t t a i . r - c t l r c s n t t d cores. iron j 6. Apparat-us for obt-a-nini] piroLotiraphic recorcls of p o r t i o n s b F h t u r u r nb o d i e s a n d o l h e r o b j e c t s a c c o r c l i n q t o claim 4 o'r 5, wherein zr port.able casinr, acconunodates [he elecCrical elements and is parEitioned to screen the o l a E e o r f i l m r e c e i v i n g s e c t i o n f r o m E . h ec e l l a n d t h e

- L 2

t:unin3 means or rheost'at's. 7. Apparatus for obraininc phocogranhic rccnrcs p o r t i o i r i o f h u m a nb o d i e s a n d o t h e r o b i e c t s s u t / s L a r oI Iir,'Lii or described wifh ref erence to Lhe accomprnltLIi\ 1 1a r g i n q s . r 6 Dace this Ist. day of 1938' MYI';ER CO' w.C.2 5, ChancerY Lane, London Agent.s for the APP1icant i L e a m i n g C o n S p a : P r i . n g e d f o r i i i s } l a j e s E y ' s S c ' a Co n e r v 1940' by t,he Courier P:'ess Office

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Sept.27, 1949.

T. G. HIERONYMUS oETECTIOiloF EIAI|ATl(J{,ts t'Rot IATERIALS ANt) IEASUREIENT TXENEOP OF T}IE VOLUXES flIed 0ct. 23, lgao

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This inventlon relets to thc art ol debcttng the prronca ol and morrurl|lg the !iltDtlty or qu8ntlty of any of tJlr Esosn Gl$iro-chcnlcai srrles of elementaof materlrl mritcr, or the comblnatton of two or morc ruob el?Dctrts, whether in solld, iuld or guGour fornu o3 (xdlnrrt noom or tcmperaCurer and wttbout rpolrl trlltmcnt undcr requtrlnS Nny ctrangc lo thc rmtslrt observaltoDTtts appltcaLlon ls s cootlBurtlon ltr Frt of Setent my co-pctrlrng appllosglon tor lrttrr .3rial NuEbr 556,653.nbd Bcptambr 3t. 19{1. nnd nos absndoned sDd psrtstrfDtl to frglvemeDtr ltr DetccttoD ol emroatlool ftlrrl Ert('rlsls . snd vdunc| tbsreol. Ttre prlmery rln o( thle lnventlon la ttre pr,ovlslou of a metbod snd spprrgtur for dctctlng g1e prcEcnoeof Eay elemeut or conbbrtlou of tm&r elemeuts thet mry be l|r tbe nrbbacr observatlon and to detcrmlnl tbc lrrtanlty or quantlly tbereof. Ttrir inventloa haa lor r stlll lurtbcr ob,cct to plovide a metbod and mcrnr for dctatlnr rhe presence oi and anslydrls rod mGrJqrtDa the quantity sI' lnttnrtly of eisucutr or coublnrUan of elemorts ltr t}le subtrloc tEdcr oEGrvatlon through the crpture sad .ndytls d rldtrtiorui emanattnS trom tbr laE alcnmtr. th?tbEr t.lre sald rrdtatloaf ba of rlBtrbrl or oplloal
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whlch ihc Feroum

A further olm of rhs tnvcntlo la to prcvlda an atomlc ndLrttou Blslyltr. brvflg s8 orF of Its lnlports[t ol|DGDtt. r rruthn dovtcc. t"be vtas lut'ctr8tlaa Fte. { lr c dt|.ItElol5cal surface 'phcroof l| aflectad lo lmrurc .dbtloo mcmb6r' rcltlctlns or frlcrlon Ns thc operacor ol tlr tullytcr strole! anoihcr iypt of ndtrHil ol t'he lDttruE nt cepablo ot torntDs t frt the surfaco of tbc dcylce rad qralpufrta ttre I'nscrumeDtto dtEct rrdlsi!6 thto. rl illutrated tD tl!. 1. to ttre pertr ol spc0orlly It has been dtlcovcrcd thrl tbat are radlamor to r"ttrrtot Ulustraid lr riont emanattnS (mm or rurlr'Gd lrom e*h of thc rppenhr! dlrgrtmmrtlcdly darlficacldr c( ihe llrcory upou thc inrlng, the known elcrnrnt,| coEtltutlDt Drtarrrl Brtvtll bc mrde t r. Tbese emagauosr occur et ot{h;y whlch tttc lnvcstton tr pndlcltrd rcom rcmpcratur3. l. e. {0' F. to rD" F. lai l,bey hrve 69 by exdsltrhg efipcrlmeDts heretoforc conductctl clrclrlcal snd optlcal chrnrtartrStan rd frcrnd cafrrbh of pmvuu rlr pbaromeoel tJmdc quencies whlch arc dlspilcd rn tbt 'onG irom hcrtttaftff dtlciosod il ilrvlDg r bcrrlng uDoD the vlolrt ray portlon of rhil v||Ir sDro?rugr up the pracdcablllSy and '.:tlllty of botb thD 61coporflor. rblob Dl| lnto bhi ultrrvlolet trlcd ald optlol spp$rt$l br| as ]'rt no3 brn tullt aDarad. {Itos lt !r| bcl 6t frc *h sf thc lnotTt etemeDtso( fudbtbr

found tbat tltEe rrdlarJonr from tbe leloenta or 'oe r:errtcd over elecrric$l costhelr efe0 mry isventlon io productoE. it :' the obrcct ol ",b18 vide aDfrEtul hsvl:u ilUtable conductors rnd ol eubctsDce may bo ! psrtl rc tDrt rn lydlf or tbe etrect ol Thc rrdrflmr accoErCllc(L elstncnts or col|'lrom knrn suCh ndrtbE blDru@r of tvo or mor eleEdrta of mrtcrlal mrgttr nry oot only bc cgrrled ovfelcctrlcel l0 coDducion snd hsndled Lo a. mauner slmllar to sE odlnrry elcctrlcll current. but tbey m8y bo afccted by ltectrld crmclty lltductsllce clrd mrt slso b -Tba ndl.tloD. red!t.e. d8rrstld ot ottlrwl! manlpfrrctd, tctlsd, il tho rsdlstloDl 16 ulstd lI tle saa rtrl$ar Atordtllsly, therefore. of tbc. vldblc tDactun. thla tnventlon btl lm ou ol ita stml to provlde lor horrllng tba radiatlons. ao lrutrunent eDsltdlg them ald ldcotltylng tldr prerec, gO mcarurlnt thdr lot odty---dt io tbo en<l tbat st onc or mt! of the kBown elethc pmct m6nt! Ely bo concludcd lrosr the charadtor of ibr nrllrtton El dttqgtlDrd by the bcbstdor ol thr rudydag dcvlcc eod tbe valuea read 26 from tbo .ppruprlrt tcll|| iorailng s plrt cd thc hrtrtlEcot. Othff obrrot! of the UrvrDtton wlll appear dtrrtng tha oounc of thc toUovla{ apecllcatlon, relerrlE ro lhr accomtnoyfD3 dnwfDs. strcrdn: tO fte. I E s cohtmrtJorl ind dlEgrsElortlcal vtew Ulufinltns fD 5ltrultl at tor dst ctls o( tbc f,ld mnlurtnt emcgltlonr fron nrLibb tttb tb3 voiuElc !hclo6(. Erdl lD ll6ol{aee prt !3 tnvatl8. &tru(xl lrr8r@trry Ftt. I L t8 mlsritrl 3! EchoErttc vl.w lllultrrtJE3 $ potuo|r of t'be llstrunat sborn l! Ftg' f. elcvailoorl vlery of a Fts. I !| s lrrfEcDtltt tl oolrcdd@ rtth tbe bstruchart. urllc 46 ment. to trrDll3ta thc eale rrdl!81 Xrto ldloHsDd tloetton of ibc subt'!$r:

2tgtt7?g mntler produce sollre torm ot encrgy, probebly lf, prtsn tl end electrode lt. all as shown ln tlcctrons whtcrr can be rnade 0o tlow along electls.2. Appsretu.r ll ls Jofndto urut t0 by contt t(:Rlconductors. The flow lronr eech of the eleductors ll snd 20 ocros! whlch ls AGposcO con_ a menls havlng cheractcrtstlct dltrereng from the ventlornl varlable condeDlcr if ano wtth whtch olhers' Conversely, thc 0ow of electronsalong o lsenployedIcondensrrofstm[rrtypll,locaged s conductor produces e rrdlrtton hevlng cherln conducior tf, tl tuustratad. Vsrtable con8ctristlcs of the radlrtlon troE ercb respectlve dralGr! tt aad ll mry lc oi strnosrd redtoelement. Euch of tbe lnocrn elements tr ar rebrodcrrt typG rnd thcl, Bre pro"fJ"O wrth gradquired Loleed growlnS plsnts hrvc bGGn trsnmtturtad scrlei la convcnuonrl nanner. ted lo the planE through rnetsUlc conductors as l0 hlm lt g of eny sultrble r.V-..f.".tin* subthe pl8nt^i were enClrelylsolsted from the. elestrnce s6 gl8sr, qu.Brtz or anslogous maLertals. Ilrcnts uDon whlcb they were fed. More preclscly, In grctlce r prl,sEr2l having two porrsneCf sccds wena plrotad ln boxe! ln a. drrtcncd barcdtlpdcd rt rnglee from 30 to 60 aegrees"ces hes mcnt roon. one of thc borcr o( plants cont&inprovcd lrtbt3ctory. AD electrode ll r :ohco to lns some o( thc recds wes uscd o! a contnol End to bU f f by coductor f0 ana conJulior ff. Stcno apparntustor transmllttng elemcnt redlrilons flonrry eiectrcdetf rnry G oi .onthereto provtd?d. The remrtnlng tnxeo ol planLs "ny-Jo"l.r.rt ducttng mrterlel such L eium,fnlm. brus.i, cophBClelectrodes or plcces o( conducung mstrr8l pcr or subtrnces havlna ctectrrcat mounCedor otherwlse disporcd sd.racnt thereto. propcriles. thc Otstonce-"f *l;;;;;" "n"iogou, ll from and each box of plsnts was ecprrately ettached to 30 prlsm :t ls not crlilcel so fong ; ine radiations a conductor ertendlng to s polDt outslde ihe or enaarttoru reech prrrn lt through s connned bulldlns wheru electrodeg plrtas were attschcd or pacho( trevel ln tJle naturc of e thln band or llne, to che conductors ead Bllowed to reanln exposed in pracuce, trus dbtrnc was !rcm one_hBlf to to the llght. guch of tbe kaown elemeotr ss retwo lnchec. A pa$sgcwry tl formed qulred !o lmDTrt normrl chrncterlrttcr !o tire zJ eprtroloettcdl;op3dG5ul.tfiilrerneptsdl- between plant'! werc a9prrentlv lcd tbereto by brvlng the rcitr tnc riarrudas-to; dc"t ud ;;" on one f ace radtaUoos of thc elemcutr from tbe llhl conot pr.tru lf. ducted to the plrntr tlrrqrsh tbc wlrer and a,6soThe en8te of incidence of ur!; p&th of tr'vel clsted electrodcs. ThG trcstd plrsts scre relsto thc race ot the prlsm l! wrr of the orcler of 5.5" tlvely he8lthy but the concrol plaot assutned the 30 for bcrt resultr and lor obtelnlns the wiclest usccharacterlstlcs of grostDg vetct8tlo! whlch h8E fui scgmeniafqng sctto U. been deprlved o( tbc elDeatr tr| n8turrt tlshc. arrcre,ctroacltshlltsucalongrcale 3l is Jorned Psrtlcularly was the control pbDt dovotd ot chloto ,'nlt fl bJ conOuctc lt. Electrocle lt i.s of rophyl whtle the remainln3 plratr wcrc green. ,"-t if"f" and dts_- thc srtrre spccllcaUonc art AfrDrratl5lorl8borttoryorconnarcldureand J5 tsncs froE prtet ff ar etcctroOe-ii Uut ls suitfor detectlng thc prescnce ol eoy of thc lcnown ably urqtnt d toinoveracni to scale ll elemeni!. preferablv reller upon the elcnent of whera ltr palUon m.y ,u"AUyE inilcatcd uy a "O"".., f ottch' snd thcrefore. the sllu ol the opcrator. polntcr ll'Eovrblc thcrcwlur and extrnclln( outThe lnslrument dlEsrEmmrttcslty lllurtntcd. ln ... werdl' urcrctrom towud scslG I tn atlrrment Fll<.I comprlsere unlt lf Includtng a coll li tlls-- l(t wtth ihe prt.lr of travcl of the lhtn i"y or ,.,r,..xy vxrstrdt'o plck up redlatlon lrom substrnce ll. lndtcrt{d by the llne ta. Tlr;;;toLrrLron or wherelnthe known et"montrare dlrpqtcd end that "i elcctrodc ti t.rsubstanudly on a,'dton line cxItre to be dtctad' The tcmpentun of rubEt8nce beadlnr lonsttudlnatty scrors trrJ ra.e oI prt.im z! " l' mav be wlthln the range ot fron {o to 90" F, proriiar-toiio"ttoc. ta. Elcclrode.srz ancr 3! but such tenpcrsture t! not crtilcsl. Thb nnge {j worl bcct wnen they J"Uu.ji thln snd of ilrrusbccn found srSlrtectorY tn sctusl pnoilce. thc o[dcr of a lew mll! "". t]rtclness. Coll It may bc I sDtrsily wound lat body apAr lllutrrtal ln Ft8. A, nlc tt ls ctubr8ted proxlm8tely 2 ln. ln dlrmctr tDd formcd of magwlth lDdlcb ff. aud tbcce tndlctB sr on chart net Insuletcd wlre of any convenuonsl sE. .t.s lf etong onc edlB thcraor. Th! hdlcta on chrrt 8n alternatlve' thlr cott lt Ery bc r slndc layer, 60 fl hryc bG?a glven a corrclpondtng rerereace cyllndrtcalcoll.wouudontcoreof Inrulr3lngma_ numcnl lo tbolc on scdc fl for clrrlfylng the tetld substantlauy t lE" tn dlunct r. The exdacrtpuon herctnrrter ret down. Intllclr lf on aatDtes siyen for thts cofl ll Bre not crlttcal snd charti|a;ff;rtc thcrtontc,etghtof elements .solong as the coll lr tn the fletcl of radlaglon of of rnitteirai-con{nuc up to lnclude l', thcpurposc or unlc l! wlll be rut- oo iicnenii-orttercctro-cf,cn&n-A;rrheu aU known rho ;ti,:J:"tt

:if"l:'i,:t

rr m"ey bc conncotedto sublgtnec la or lrlra f0 may elthcr r con{aUotUly rnrlrble tyDc or Ir mty so3_ bc terntnrtrd tn B! etctrode BDd t"ho tett r dB;dffi;;;; o, non-t51tuc61r! r6tstaDce udtr polcd wlth r?1.!ton torubrtlacc ll ar to ptck.up -the rtdtrdour th.refroa. rr d6t co|l lt ln rhe 0O lt. lt. ff. ind lf rrc croh r.lrut\d b, r cTAGb h-'rrri;;-b!" pobt ft. ll. ll aaO tt rarpe-vrlllustlatcd cmbodlzrant. In thb crs. wlrc [ --fn-'pncUcc. il;t: mcybosrounclodorconnrct dttpsrttGlytosubuntt tl vlll hrvc Dcn ttncs Lbe stsnce fa or trttlnrred ln anothcr etcctroCc Ct. sblcb t! tur! ls ren umce whlchmByrl.robcallcedncrrsubrtencc lf. The 00 d;qfi;Tir4t ;h" G;-Lit ff. e!c. (thc vducr mqy ilDdc proxtmlty of tubstsnce lf to col ll or thc elee,rom fncttoruol t otlauptolcycral Drcgohm!). lroder er th? calc nev be. lr ruch as to be wttnrn ilil ;b; ; E|ght bc 1 uregob tn ilcr of radtattoa ot
uc.nrnrtl*"-tr;; r;oorrnrcrcb,roaroonunqttbGraLllertunltvoulcl havc rtlf lo? eBouSh to ctvc tDc deolre<terac!ac!! to the mcfsur.cd vulnrnc o! tataulty of the rrdtrttoD!. Unlt la !s JotDtd to urrt lC by acaos ot *o

or cou rr . rnsrcad eBprovrns rr. _wrre m"v-]: dlrectly

t};f

;lT:1ffi,-..r-.

ooiroo. It conststs of two Drtnctp&l peitq the Arst belnF the iwo stendrtd type of vrn.bla condusers, lr and lt. .!d rha lccoftt b.lrr tdrr;-rJG"rlng devtcc urrd6 uD ol elcetrorli ff-irlrc;\y rO

r ts .,rh,Durrtrbrc . Hff#frtf.t$,r"*:ffiST . Apparsrusarnenuary nnar Ivzer tuncble co t'ltc spectlc teoiruon

roo,ooo onri each; unlt n tJrcn Fouldbe too,ooo

trg jirfJ;

fl

- t l

T i

(9.r.o,u
t?5

6l rsdlo frequency tvpe trarutormer untund throuSh the medtum ot conductors 12 and 60' Unlt a0 may be Jolned to unlt lt by reslstance 6,rxpll[g or ogher convengloml coupllng ol thc typc frequentlv used ln stsndard broadcrst radlo reeelvers eDd whlch 1r aDalosous to transformer !ti Ilnlt t! m&y be o conventlongl thrce strge tuned rndlo lrequency broodcast band-ty?c of ampllier wr[h the ucual varlEble condensers omltted or lt nrty be of the reslstance coupled ol tnpedance iype coupled typc often used ln rsdlo brudcsat the vclue Ssld amplmer lntcnrtllet nmpllflers. of the radlatlons reachlnS lt so thot tJre eflect Undr:r rrpon detcctor ll ls clegrly dbcenuble. some ccndltlons, lhe reactlons from unlt ll msy be put dlrectly lnto detector It wlthout lotrp6' inc unlt l0 but ampliflcatlon of the radlatlons ls deslrable. Detctor 12 ls a device that wlll tndlcate I chenge from its normsl stst when lhe radlotlons from the analyzer l! *re catxed to lnfluence ib. Deteetor ll may be connected bo unlt l0 bv transformer ll or lt msy b placed ncar enough to ptck up the radlatlona from the output of unlt l0 wlthout dlrect contact so long as lt la placed wrthln the fleld of radlatlons. Detector l2 ts preferably an electrlcal conductor roated wlth a materlal havlnc such characterlstlcs thet under Influence of energy flowlng throuch t.he conductlnc portton, the coatlng wlll chrnge lLs surface tenslon or vlscoslty. or ln lomc m8nner irve evldence of the presnce ol the encrty flowrng through the conductlng portlon by ptducinc l sreater drag or reslst$nee to the movement o( rrnv part of the body of the operator tlrertover' .srtcir as the hand or flngers. It has bcen lound rrractlcal to use a metal plete coverd wlth a sheet cf pla.sclc or coated wlth lacquer. whlch plrte ts of r.n area convenlent for stroklng rlth the tlpe of th,, i-rnsers or pelm o( the hend. It mey also b' a sheet or plastlc wlth a coil slmller to coll l2 rlrsposd ndjacent thereto and connectad to the ^rrrplins transformer ll. Irlc. { lllustrateg another lorm of thrt Dort of untt t8 showlnB ns. 2. so far as the elcmcrrt separator or fllter portlon thereol tr eoncerned. Thls seperatton or flltrrtnc ts accomDllrtrd ln thc embodtment t[ustratd In Fl8. I aod ttg. 2 bv nrlrm 21. In Ftg. ,l a lens tfl hee the elcctrode 32 dlspced adjecent thereto ond rnovfblt electrode tl tr rhlltable torerd and lrmr lcnt l0t. gcole tndlcla ll are cllrposed tn a llnc plrellel to the path of travel ol electrodc tl rnd tlrc element or elements Involved wlll trc dctcrmlncd by ll Bt ihe the locatlon or the scale ol polntf lnstant a reactlon l.sobtetned et dctector lt. of the Chart aa Lqof eourse produecd u r rrt compleie apparatus rphen such apDrntur lr manufacturd and efter the nr|sm tl (or lens lfl, 8s the case may be) ts lnstalled r.r a unlt of the A small qultttltt of etch ol materlal detector t,he known chemlcnl elements ls placed adJecent to corl l2 and wlth full knosledge of the ctement. the {rnsle of radlatlon formed by ltne ff cnd, thc foce of tire prism lt, is cletermtned and the dcgtle numeral on scale !1. whlch tdentllles tbc encle of the r8dlstlon. ls placed on chert ll rc oDc of thr. indlcia ll. After thls chart ll B so constructed and the tnterseetlnt UnB arc extcnded from tndica la (degree readln8r flrom ocrle tl) snd lndicla a8 (the stomic welght of thr lnorn elements) then when lhe Lpper8tur |l! In pttctleal u!e. 8ny materlal or substrncr mry bc located adJaceut to co0 lt and tts conpoacott dadnilaly

C\
/

1i8\778
electrde tt on s ltlo detcrmlned by pcltlonlng of radl,allon ll where the derree number on the face ol scrle ll ls qulckly read end used by reWlren lhe degree Incucla {| Ierring lo chart ll. s ls so locatad. lhe tltre on chart a0 exteDdlna lt reaches tbe therefroE tt followed unul dlBgonal llne {l on cbart ll rhereupon lhe opcrator then follorc the lnterscttng llne to the loeer edse of the chart Fhere lhe value ol the stomlc I0 wetght ll ls rcad. These atomlc welshtt are well known end ere used ln convcntlonal texts aud sclentllc i'orkl. thBt, ID pr8ctice, for example, let tt be a.s.sumed substanee ll contnlns cnlclum btt[ it rs nol known 16 that such ls the case. The anclr' lrt. whlch the unlnown ray or radletlon leavts prism 28 wlll teech its name for. as the operator moves thP flncers over the surface of detect(lr 12. electrode 3t is shlfted slowly and polnter 18 moves along 29 scale 3l untll a creat('r degree of adhesion or resistance lo motlon at lhe srrrfece of dctector l2 ls set up. Thi.s oceurs when lhe energv or radlatton flows from unlt 16 lhrough unlts {0 and l0 lnto '12. When electrode 3! is a! a posltlon detector 26 where lC ls intereeptlng a radlat.lon from prlsm l!. or lensc lC0. thc reslstance lo stroke st detector l2 wlll be of hlchest order. As soon as elcctrodc 3l has been poslbloned as dcscrlbed. vari,.tblecondenser 22 ls adlustcd while 30 thc oDerator contlnues to stroke deteci,or l? to tt position where lhe greatest drag at cletector ll ls agaln manlfesied. Nextr,varlable condenser 2f ls slmllarly manlpulated to obtain s .setttngwhere t,hedrag aCdet.ectorll again reaahes a m&xlmum. 35 Eleetrode t! is then rendjttsted for a flnal posl' Llon. The employment of condenscrs 22 and 2l Insure a more accrrrate settlng of rninter 78 by vlrtue of thelr additional fllterlnr action In the lllustratlon. cieetrode t8 hns lntorccpt('d 'ttr t h e p a t h o f r a d l a t l o n w l t h p o i n t e r 1 8 r t t h r ' n t t m e r a l l 0 o n s c e l e l l n n d r e f e r e n c ct o c h a r t 1 6 w i l l teach the operator thBt the eloment itavinrl stomlc weight ?9.2 is that trom which the radiatlon alonc dotted llne ?5 is travelllne. rl atnmr(: 45 welghi ?9.2 ts calclum then thet eiement ln .substance ll has been localed. Ttte manner of uslns lens 100 ls substsntlullv the same a8 descrlH ln connectlon wlth rhe usc of prlsm 2l; The focal polnt ol paths of radla50 tlon of the elements wtll csuse deteetor ?2 to resct and establlsh a drag to the operator's Louch' whereupon the scale tl mey be read end lts readlna translated by reference to chart 10. Whet actually hanpens Rt dctector 12 to tni,5 crease and decrease lts drag to tho touch of the operator. ,r not known but the Rppar8ttrs functlon3 as above set,forth whcn constructrd as speclffed. and therefore, a rlostttvely acllng nnalyzer for atomlc rrdlnclons ls produced even lhough 0ll thc prlnclplc rrpon whlch tt ls bascd ls not fully known. Rrdlatlon from hydrogen pRsscsthrorrch prlsm 2l at the sharpest angle or et the lowest desree measurcd from the face of frrtsm ?8. RBdlatlons 66 f rom oiher elemenls and tholr lsotops pass through prlsm 2t ai srealer ftneles but in the same order as their ntomlc weleht-the heavlcr the element or it,: lsotope the wtder the ansle A subltence composed of two or more of the 70 known elements may be rnalyzed ls heretn 'qet down to determinc iLs comDonent constltuents. of The substance ltself whleh con-sl.st two or more known elemenLs may be tdcntlfiecl because the emonetlons therefrom will produce o composlte 76 frequency pecuilar Lo thai comblnEllon of ele-

g{13,?78
m(.nLs. All cumbinatlons may be chartd ln pnet Lsely the salne tDaruter as herelu de&tlbeci for ,rll the lDdlvldusl tnown elemeois ln l,hc electlro , lrt!mlcal serles. Llnlt. a0 !s ttsiedio menstlrr) tie inteostty of Lhe ;crdtatlona trom R gtven element or lubtCanc by .rdjustlng the seversl swttche! comprirlng urlt ll untll the mRxlmum amounL ol rertrtrnce hra been lnlroducecl lnto the clrcult wlthout lnterrupilng the reactlons menlleeCed st dct clor 12. The swltchec are callbratcd ln conventlonal reslstsuce l,alues and a chart must bc pr@8red l'y ewltah ltrst wrll relate the vclue lndlcrtlls stttngs of unrt l0 the quantatlve unltc of mcacurement, It s reatizecl that apparabus for detectlng mstr.rials r.nd :nr.asurlng Lhe volumes thereot, hsvins physlcal clraracteristics dlfierent lrom tbose illusLrated and descrlbed, mighc be made wlthout department from lhe spirit of the lnventlon or scope of the appended clalms. llavinc thrrs descrtbcd the lnveDilon. whag ls ctahed as new and destretl to bc secured by I/.tt,ers Peteni 19: l. The method of analyzlng substsnce to detrret thc' presence of any of lhe known element's contrlncd thereln. whlch comprlses caplurlng only lhe rodlettons {rmanating from one of the eiornen[s.h8vinc bolh ciectrrcal and optlcBl chsrircterrstlcs: lnd rdcniifyine thc ssld radtetlons lo acrromplishthe desircd purpose. 2. The method of analyzlng substance to del.^ct the prcsence of any of the known elements conlained thercrn. whlch comprtses capturlng nDly the radlallon:r cmanatlng from onc ol the lernonts havir:g both elcctricRl 8Dd optlcol charrcrorr:itrcs: tdentilylng Lhc sald radlsuons Lo accomprish the (leslred prlrpcrse:snd measurlng the rt'.l3ntity of satd radiations. :l The lnethod of analyzlng a subotaace contsurrnri I plrrrl!il.y of chcmical elemetrts to detern!rnc t ht- ionr lnncnt elements of sald subJt^nc(. whrcb comprl.tes capturing ttre rrdletloru enr;,.n;rlinn trom the substance havlng both electn(a,l lrnd optical ch3racteristtcS; Bnd ldentlfyrn6 Lhr. radral,tons to accompllsh the dcalred purpose. 4.'fhe rnethod of dcteetlnc the presence of ,'l)r,rnr(xl clement.s rn a speclmen under test by capturtnc snd analyzrn8 ihe electrlcal and optlcal radiatlons characterrsttc of such elements emanstlng from said speetmen whlch comprlses, impressing said radlatlons on an elcctrlcal conductor: conductlnS the radlotlons through s tunable crrcuit lncludlnc sald clectrical conductor to irn electrode ln rl|rd clrcult from whlch {.lectro.lc sald radlat,lons cmanate; dlrectlng the rsdlatlons emanatlnt'l from sald electrode through a refracilng borly; adju.stlns a sccond electrode unril lt tntercepts said rcfracted radlstlons: conductlns sald radi.ltlon.s from sald second nsmed electrocteto a dete:tor comprlslBg a conductlve solid hovrrlg a smooth planar sur(gce to vary the surfac: frrcttona.i charRctristlcs of seld solld: tunlng .sardtunable circuil untll n r|larlmum o( thc rirdtatlons from sard specimen are emltted f rom sird first namcd plectrode: and readjusttng sarlrl seconcl named cleclrode untU the vartatlon o( the surfacc chrroctFristlce of sSlcldetctor tndtclies th:.t 1r max:mum of rnfractd radlatlons sre tmpresscd on sald second nomod clcetrode. 5. The method ot detectlng tlrc prclcnce of chemlcsl eiemengE tn a spectmen undcr tost by cspturtnS and analynlnE the olec'trlcol rDd oDtlcsl radlrtlons chrracterbuc of sucb cltoctrtr ca-

i.'te Bna!tr8 from said speclmeu will(:ll ('rlrnt)t .. l,n presdDS ltdlaLions on an eleclrl(:rl c{ilr(lttcl(rr; condrrctlng Lhe radlatlorls through rr tttnnbk. r'tr irr eult ltrcludlDg ssld elcctrlcal cott(lu(:L(lr un elect ; lrode ln :e.ld clreult irom *ltlclr ci{}ct.r(xto ld radlsuon! emanale: cllrectln( t.lto radlsilorrs emsnatlng trom sgtd electrocle lhrouglt a refracllng body: adjt[tlng a scond electro<le untll lt tnt rceptr ssld re(racted radtBtlons: ampllfylnB !h! lo radlatloni lntercepted by Erld second namcd electrode; cotrductlng ssld alaplffied radlat.lons fo a detcctor coupled wltt! sEld amplifler which detector comgrlr* a conductlve solld heving & smooth plan8r surface to vary thesurface lrlctlonal chBrt6 oc0erlstlce of seld solid; tunins said tunsble clrcult uBtll a maxllllum of the radlatlons from satd speclmen are emltted froE sald flr.s[ nBmerl electaodc; arrd readJustlDg setd second named eieetrode untll ihe varinLlons of the surface frlctlooal :0 charactristlcs of sald deiector indicales that a maalmum of retracted radlatlons 8re lmpressed oa sajd scond named electrode b oblaln sn lndtcatlon of ihe presence of a chemlcai element ln sald cpeclmen. .lir 6. Ttte rne0hod of deteetlns the l)rcsence 8nd quantlty of chemlcel elcmenls ln a speclmen under telt by capturtns and sn8iyzlng t.he eleetrlcal and optlcai radlations characlori.stlc of :ittch elementg emanating from sald :;peclmen whlt:h com:;(l prlses, lmpresslng sBtd radlaclons on Bn electrlcal conductor: conductlng the radlatlons throush a tunable clrcult tncludlng sald electrlc8l conduclor to an electrode ln sald clrcult frorn whlch electtode s8ld radlatlons emaneici dlrectlns the ra:r5 dtattons emanatlng from sald electrode throuch a refractlng body: adjustlng s second electrode unttl lt lntercepls sald refracted r&dlBtlons: concluctlna ssld radlatlons lrom snld (ocond nented electrode through a varlable reslst,ancn; slnplll0 fy,n8 the radlailons pesslng throush snid variable reststance; conductins -sald amplifled r1rdtatiolt.i to a detector coupled wlth sald nmpilfler which deDector co[lprlses a conducttve solld h:rvlng & smooth plenar surface lo vary the surface lrlc,t6 rlonal chsractrlstlcs of ssld soltd: tuntng sald tun8blt clreult untll e maximum of the radtatlons lrosr sald .speclmen are emltted from sald nrsc nsmed electrocte; readjustlng sald second named etectrodt untU the verletlons of the surfRce fflc60 tlonal chargctrlstlct of sald detector lndlcsts.. thst r mertmum of retracted radtgtlons ere lmprelsd on sald second Duned electrode to ob!.aln cn ludlce0lon of the prlence of a chemlcal element and varytng the rellrtence ln satd vartable 66 reolstance unlt unill the surface frlctlonal charsciert3tlcs of nald detctor are unafteete<l io obt8ln ut lncllcatlon of th? quantlty of sald element lu scld 8pctmen. ?. The method of detectlng the presence ln any 60 body ol I speclflc element as weil as the quantlty thercof qrhlch comprtles, lmprelslng on an eleettlcal conductor radlnnt wcves havlns optlcal cnd electrlcd properttes whlch are Fenertit^d by and c|htch 8re char&cteristic of a speclflc element; 0! tuDlDg lald waves: lmpre-sslnBthe tuned waves on an electrode: smFilfylns sald wRve\ bY 3n amplllytag ctrcult whtch lncltldes a couPllnd eiennent, I gilp odjscent sald lrst namcd eleetrode. Rncl an edjuteble electrode. .satd lEst two electrodes bel0 tn8 8t opposlte ends of sald rap: ,:auslng seld wave! to pess through I refractlnr: irody 1r nnssese thrcuch snld q4p: lmpressins 'aid ampllOGd wlves on an lndlcator comprlqtng a conducttvc rolld hevlng I smooth planar surtRce coupied ?a to grkl coupltn8 elernent; atUustlng sald adJugt-

a{Ea,77t

from wblch fhe radlattoru move oulwsrdly along able elecfode and operallnS sald hdlcstor and a psth of travei; c leDs !D ss,td pstb ol iravel fo snld acljusCableeiectrode untll I maxlnull rntnrefract radlstloDt emarairng lrorn ttle s81d elecslty of relrected rays ls indlcated. trode aDd travettng tn seld Deth, sald leos bavtng 8. AppsrBtus for soalyzrng substance to deteci illc presence and quantlty of any of ibe klown 5 .r rocai ;otDt ;or each cDostl eienrent; :r second elecurode to collect rBdletloos Dassurg through tbe element's thereln comprtslnS, ln comblnatlon, a plck-up unit hsvlng elecCrtcal coaductlve properlens; a sclle havlDg tncllcl.a tbereon, irrorrlded witb reternce chsracters eac'b lndlcutlvr: oI oDE tres for absolblng characte!lslic rcdlstlou.s of on of the lnown eiements Bud e|ch 6grng at a focal optlcsl ond eleetrtc8l n8lure from the Eubstanco belng anelyzd: Bn electrode ln conneciloa wltb l0 polnt ol crld leru; and apprratur lor meBsurlog the quraclty of '"he r8cllagloB coilected by tho sald urrlt frorn whlch the reol8ttons move outsald scoond electrodc. wardly along e psrtlcular path of lravel; a re12. Appatrtls tor enalyzlng substance to detect f ractlng rnember of trarlsparent maierld ln seld p8th to lntersect sold rndletlon.s; a scele havlng the presence and quenllty of any of lho klowo lndlcla lhereon when:bY nnv one of the elemeDts l0 elemenLsthereln comprlslng a plck-rrp unlt havlnB electrlcsl conductlve propertte:; for collcctlng lnay l)e identlfletl; & lir-ci)nd electrorle between t'be charactrlsttc radiatlons of rn opttcol und t.lecssrd rnembcr and tl'le sc:rlL'to collect redlatlons trlcal nature from lhe zubstaoce br:tng analyzed: Irassing throutir lhc mtrnber after ihelr psth o{ an electrode ln connectlon witb 6ald plck-up unit travel has bcen altered thereby: Bud spp8rstus meaaurrng the quantity of the rBdiattons collected o6 from whlch the racllatlons moye outwardly aiong a path of trevel: a lens ln sald pgtb of travel to by the second electrode. rtfr8ct rsdlatlons emnnttlng from the sald electo 9. Apparatus for analyzlns .substance detect trode and i.ravellnc in sald path, sald lens havlnc the presence xnd quantiLy of rny of the known elements therern comprrslng, ln comblnstlon, a, r iocal polnt {or each klogD eiement: a sccond prck-Lrp unlt havrng electrrcal conductive proper- 26 eleclrode to collect redlatlor\ pSssius throuch the lens: a rca.ie havlng lDdlcts thereoo. provrded tles tor absorblng characleristlc radlatloDs o( wtth refercnce charactrs ercb lndlcatlve of r-,rre an optlcal and electrlcal n3ture from the subof the known elements and ea(h betng ar, a focal stance belne analyzed; &n electrode ioconnectlon polnt ol ssld ieLs: opporetut for messurinc the wrth sard unrt from whlch the radlallons move outwardly along a i)arllcular paLh of travel: a J0 quantliy of the radlatlons collected by thc sald .second eleclrode; Bnd B detctor nember conlsfractlng mcrnber of transparent materlal ln sald (luctlvety Joined to lhe last-meniloned apnrrrrrlrr.s I)nth to lntrsect .;aid rndlations; a scalc havtng charsctertlzed by the propcrty of hevlnR tls ef indtcla chereon whereby Lrry one of the elemenls tett upon the '.oueh altcred ln scc.ordance wltir mirv betdentlned: aseeondelectrodcbc3acenthe s;rld n:cmbcr nnd l.he .t:atc [o collecl rrdlailOns tt the flow of r8dtatlorls therCtO. 13. An sppsralus for enaltztng tI subittlnt.e to passlng thrfarch ilre member after thelr path of defc'ct the prresence sny of the known ( i;r'rnlr:'tl trRvet has been allerod thereby: apparatus mensof elements lnssldsubscancecomprlslng, an {,1,,r-Lrlrlrinc the quontrLy of llre r-:ldlaclonscollected by cal conductor for nhsorblng the charactert.st.lc the s('('ondelectlode: etrd :r detector mcmber conradllct!',ely.loine,l t() thc-last-mentloned opparstu.s {0 dletlons of an oprlcol snd electrtcal nsturr frotn a chemical elemeni in the subslancc betns enCh;'11,1,'t',r"Ui)y the propert.y ol having lts effect alyzed; a tunlng clr"eult connectcl to sald eiectrlrrpon the touch altered ln accordaDce wlth the cal conductor: sn etectrode ln sald tuniDg clrcult Ilow of radlallons thereto. from which sald radlatlons emanatc ln.a,i,:Ilr:t.d l(t Appersius for anal)'zrn; substance to detc('t lhe preseDce and quantity oI aDy of ttre {6 path ol travel: a refroctlng borly ad1aceni .,ard electrodc ud positloned ln ibe paih of r:.irvel known elements therein comprislng a plck-up of sald rsdlalloDs for refractlnS sald racliailorx: unit havlnR electrlcsl conductlve propertles lor nn adJuscrble eiectrode positloDed adJacent a porcollectln8 chsracterlstlc radiatlons of aD optlcal 8nd electncat nahrre from the substsnce berng __ tlon of ssrd rfrsctlng body lroE whlch the reanalyzed; an eleclrde in oonneetloa rltb setd w lracgedrsdtrtlonremrnrt'ssealeprovlded 1v!th plck-up unlt from whlch the radlatlog hdlcls ior :dcndlyurg any oac of tbe chemlcal roove elements Bsclatcd outwardly along a p8th ol travel: e lens lo srld vlth sald BdJustable elccpath of travel to refract r8dlatlons emanatlng trode: alrd a dctctor comgrldDa a conducilvo from the sald electrocle and trRvellnc tn sald path, __ 6oltd hrYln8 a smooth pl8trar qrrlsce conducilvely sald lcDs hsvlrg I focal polng for eech kaown 56 couplecl vlth sal<l edjurtablc electrode. sald deceetor blnr element: a sccond eleccrode to collect radlagloor ,:haractcrlzed by the property of pagslng throu8h the lens: Aod a scalo htvlng lnvar?ln8 lta eurfrcc frlcttonrl chrrsctrtsilcs when dlcla thereon, provlcled wlth reference cbsncterc e- mulEugr of rctrmt,d rtdlsuoD! are conducted thcrcto. each lndlcatlve ot one o( the knowD elemcntg nnd each belnS Bc & focxl potnt ot sald leDs. 60 TEOMAS Cl. EItR,of,fyMUg. 11. Apparatrrs for anolyzlnc substance to detect AEFEBENCES CffED lhe presence and quanitty of any of the kDo*n elemcnts thereln comprlslng s plcl-up rtnrt h8yThe foilowtng :e(er?-nces are of recorcl ln ihe lns electrlcal conductlve .properiles for coltecttng .. fUe of illc p.Int: characterlstlc radtatlons of an optlcel and elec- oo UNITID STATEEI PATlSrTs trlcol nature trom the iubstslce betns s!d;;, Bn electrode lo connectlon wlth sald plct-uD rJ.slt NuDbcf Nuoo Ebt 2,116r?E SlU __-_-_ ADr.26, i938

Sept. 12, 1967


Flled Dec. i, 196.1

T. H. SOUTHW|CK

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Sept. 12,7967

T. H. SOUTHWICK

3,340,865
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3,340,865
Patented Sept. 12, 1967

FIG. 2 is an enlargedsectionalview taken on line 2-2 of FIG. l, FIG. 3 and FIG. 4 are sectionalviews taken on lines 3-3 and +4 of FIG. 2, FIG. 5 is a perspectivcview of a ligbt f,lter rnenber, 5 and FIC. 6 is a diagram of an electric circuit employed in the device. Referring first to FIGS. 1 to 4, therc is shown the 16 opticai display device 10 which includesa taperedbox or ARSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURA housiog 12. The housing is tubular in form with opetr top An optical display device for visually conditioning a and bottom. At tbe narrow open top is a resilient cbanoclperson, iocluding a housing rvith an opening therern, a shaped pad or molding 14. When a person looks down pair of lamps in the housing, one emirtiog a sustained into the housing the pad forms a light-tigbt seal on tbe bright ligbt, the other emitting ultraviolet light, a disk in 15 forehead and cheeksaround the person'seyes so tbat exthe housinghaving a surfacewith fluorescent spotsof difternal, ambient light is exciuded.At the open bottom of ferent sizes,shapesand colors thereon, rvhich spots are the housing is an annular flange 16 abutting the rim of a adapred to become luminous when the ultraviolet ray bottom closure plate lE and held by scrervs19. Secured lamp is energizedto prcject the ultraviolet rays upon the near the top of the housing a spiderring 20 havingarms is spots, and eiectrical rneans tor cyclicrlly lighting the 20 22 supporting an internal ring l{ in which is fitted a lamps. double convex lens 25. The central plane of the lens is horizontal and perpendicular to the centrr.l axis of the housing. Located just .below thc lens 25 is a circular, This invention relatesto an optical display device cspetubular black light lamp 26. This lamp is supportedby a cially intended for conditioning the visuai organs of a 2i socket 28 on the inner rvall of the housing, and by two person for producing certain visual effects. spring bracket fingers 29, J0 spaced about 120. apart According to the invention there is provided an optical and partially encircling rhe lamp. Lamp 26 has a glass display device which includes a genera.lly cylindrical box body and is a fifteen watt self-filteringtube named purple or irousingwith an opening into which an operator looks. black tube (tsLB) by the StrobliteCorp., Ncrv York, New In the housingis rrn incandescent electric lamp which can 30 York. It emits light in a narrow band peaked ar 3650 to be turned on and off, and rn ultraviolet or "black ligirt" 3660 xngstrom units. Purple light in this range of wave larnp,rvhichcan be turned on and off. A multicolored disk lengths is popularly known as "black light" since it prois r<ltatablymounted in the housing.This disk has multiduces no glowing effectswhen it impingeson non-fluorescolored arens which giow when the ultraviolet light imcent surfaces.Surfaceswhich contain suitable phosphors pinges on them. Colored filters are provided in front of 35 will howeverglow with a color depending on their chemtbe incaodescentlamp for selecting and changing the ical constihrents.Surfaces of colored tin foil or tbosc coiors of bright light seenby the operator using the device. colors rvhich luminesce in the dark when previously The operltor looking into the housing first seesthe bright chargedby sunlight or electriclight, or powderswhich are incandescent lamp rvhich is lighted for about thirty secbrilliant under incandescent light becauseof their phosonds. Then the incaodescent lamp is turned off. The in- 40 phor chemicals,all such colors do aid producrion of after terior of rhe housingremains dark a few seconds and then irnage foliowing the processof starting at an incandescent the ultraviolet lamp is tumed on while the multicolored light, then closing one's eyes. Ordinary crayon or printed disk is rotated slowly. After about thiny seconds ultrathe inks will also produce after image under the above condiviolet lamp is theD turned off and the operator closeshis tion of staring ar a bright incandescentlight aod then eyesuntil he seesthe after image in his own mind of the 45 clo.singone's eves.The use of black light on phosphor or {iuorescentcolors on rotating disc. After about five secfluorescentcolor surtacesobtains the best results.All the onds tbe operator openshis eyes.In normal reaction,part visible colors ranging from red to deep purple can bc of the operator's surroundings rvill assume flashes of evoked in fluorescentsurfacesby the incidence of black aura or glow. The device can be used by normal persons light on a printed or painted surface that is liuorescenr. or even children for amusementpurposes. 50 This .light is harmlessto human cyes even when ihey are The device embodying the invention can be arranged exposed it for long periods. to for manual controi at the several steps of operation. or Mounted on the bottom plate 18 is a motor 32 havine can be arrangedfor autornaticcontrol, or for both manual. an axially vertical shaft 34 rotating at a spee<J not mori of and automatic control. than approximately twelve revolutions per seconcl. ilat A It is therefore an object of the invention to provide an 65 disk 35 is fixed to the shaft. Disk 35 has a sheet 36 of optical display device for conditioning visual organs,saitl white paper, plastic, or cloth cemented or otherwise deviceincluding means for producing a ,bright light in an securedto its upper side. On the upper white side of the enclosure, and then producing a rotating multicolored, sheer 36 is a plurality of rows of differently colored and fluorescentdisplay rvith or without a black light srimulus shaped fluorescent spots38. Thesespotsrvill glorvin black il the enclosurefor producing a glow. 60 light as bright.lycolored red, ;-ellorv,greenand blue when A further object is to provide a device as described exposedto the black light emittedby lanrp 26. They may rvhereinthe bright light can be changedto diferent colors. be visible in .light of wave lengthslonger than that of Another object is to provide a device rs described black light, L'ut rvill not fluoresceor glow. The internal wherein the device operates automatically for cyclical.ly srrrfaceS of the housing may be highly refiectivewhite or producing the brigbt light ancithen the fluorescent display. 65 silver. For furtber colnprebension the invention, and of the of The disk has a thick, central base 40 with a central objects and advantagesthereof, referencervill be had to recess 41 in rvhich shaft 34 .is received.A recess.12 is the follo.,vingdescription and accompanying drawings,and provided at the center of the disk 35 in rvhich seats a claimsin which the variousnovel features to the apperrded socket {l carrying a removableincandescent lamp 46. of the invention are more particularly set forih. 70 Electricalconductors 48, 49 in base40 are connected to FIGURE 1 is a sideobliqueview of a deviceernbodvins the socketrnd they terminateat concentric slip rines 50. the invention. 52 lt the urrdersirle brse 40. An electrical-conriector of 3.340.865 DEYICE FOR DETECTING ITALO AND COLOR AURAL RADIATIONS Tdbot H. Soutbwick. 79 Horatio St, New York. N.Y. 10014 Filed Dec. 7, 1964, Sen No. 416,249 lt Clairns. (C!. 128-r)

3,340,865
it 6 One or more of the filter members 73, 71,75 may be ator's) rnind. Or he may close his eyes while still having inlerposed ia tbe optical path of the lamp 46 and'lens his face and eyes over lhe housing and rouching samel 25 before or during the time lamp .16 is iightecl. The but after the incanclescent Iamp is turneclott, rvhetherby filter member can remain in the place set wbile the tamp automatic or manual means. Iie seescolor in his mind's 46_isextinguished, since the presence the filter membei s eye as an after image coloration. of wiii not ioterferematerially with the muiticoloredrotatThe operatormay look at a subjectin a dimty lighted ing.fluorescent view presentedlater in thc cycle of the area and observeexternaily the subiect ihe-ofter "rouni device. image color's which he frrst saw witbin his own mind wben his eyes were ciosed. This is rhe pre-block 1ight stage of -The way to producs the glowing or fluorcscenteffect of paint cr printed fabric that i.r luminous in darkly Iit -19 seeingthe halo. The later use of biack light on fluoreicent areasafter it is effectedby ultra violet rays that are long surfacesimprovesthe intensity of colors within the operawave of abou! three hundred sixty-five degreesr\ngstrom tor's mind and around the subiect he viervs. units, is by an5rone of four methods.Any two or three, Step 2.-Immediately, next ihe operator staresthrough -of or four of such rnethodscould be uscd simultaneouslyin the housing at tire rot;tion of the disc rvith its .o".r this rjevice: 1g fluorescent paints of fabric in multi color. He stares (l) The lamp 26, FIG. 2, can be an ultra blue lamp for about thirty secondsat such colors rhar glow by aid that, by itseli will not fluoresce fabric or paint of a of the black light lamp that is in the housini ond alo"e luminescent or fluoresceotkind; it must pass its rays the revolving disc. Noiv he again closeshis eyes and sees through purple plastic translucentglass (73-7iL75), FIG. by his mind;s eye or his aftei image imaginaiion faculty, 2' in order to causea fluorescentglow of paint or fabric 20 those colors of various hues and types.Tney are virtualiy on Cisc3$, FIG. 3. the same colors he observedon the rotrting disc befort (2) The lamp can be a black tube type that has withclosinghis eyesand while he staredinto rhe housing_ in the tube sard purple translucentglass filter meterial. .trep -7.-Now comes I main goal of the <.ievice ivhich In this casethe lamp itself known by the tradename the is to observethe halo colors or the commonly called of StroblireCorpcrration New York City, cen causethe 25 eural coiors arouncla personknown here as the subiect. of glotv or fluorescence fluorescent luminescent of or For this purposethe operator rvho took steps I and 2 surfacesof 3$, FIG. 3. This said filter absorbs nrost visible norv looks at the perimeter of the bead and body of the lisht, t'ut trausmit ovcr black light. subject who is three or more feet away depeniing on what distance getsthe best results.Escapelight from the two hundred ,,(1) The lamp can be an incandescent fifty rvatt black light bulb of the General Electric type 30 device is eoough for this 3rd srep, but-mori light from rzith a life of about forty hours. This bulb can be subordinary room lights may be added.if convenient. Room stitutedfor the incandescent lamp 46, FIC. 2. Such sublight outsidethe deviceshould be dim to a degree ma6ng stitutionis doneimmediatelyafter the first stepof staring readabilityof a newspaper's small type hardly possible, into housingof irtcandescent lamp ;16,FIC. ?. Such blacklVhen subiect is looked it by operator, rhe best areasare light of bulh type rvill fluoresce fabric of a lluorescent 35 those of the subject that are unclothed and uncolored by kirrd on the disc 36, i"IG. 3. cosmerics other artificial methodsor (a) The lamp can be xn extremely strong quartz high There is a 4th step that rnay be useci for this toy pressuremsrcury arc lamp one hundred watt in a sealed device.It aiso givesamusement. The operator rnay ask f he beam. Th: visible light transmittedis in the region of .^ subjectto srareinto the housing at the filters srirenthey 40 rre lightecl the incandescentiirmp the housing. three thousandsix hundred sixtv Angstrom unirs-range. by in Tho Said lamp can cause to giow the fluo:cscent fabric or sub.iect seiectsand concentrat.r on on" color tilter mempoint 38, FIG. 3. ber alone.Then the operatorasksthe subject closeboth to rhe lamp 26 in the presentdrawing is a eyes rvhile subjectis still in the position needel to peer _ For examPle, fluorescen!type rvith a self filtering purple black tube. into housing. He esks srrbjectto iry to s"" that color in Tire purp.lefilter giass that makes the lamp makes ultra 45 his own (the subjecr's) mind's eye. Thar is, the operator -violet for lhe purpose of- producing a florv of paints or asksthe subjectto have an after ihage recall of that color fabrics specially treated for luminescence, within the is selectedby subject before subiect c*losedhis eyes. Then lamp tube. I am able to modify this by changing purple th operator tries to inform rie subject rvhat color rhe glass plate strips either around an ultra blue iight tube subjeit has in mind as an after image etfect. He may keep as na;ned in Stroblite Corp. of Nerv York city, or by in- 59 comptitivescore of his orvn (the o-perator's)guesses -and sertingsuchultraglassstrips ,71,75now seeninFIG. 12 . o m p a . e h i s r e s u l t st o t h e g u e s s o f a n o t h i r o p e r a t o r s 2. I am a-iso able to manually substitute incandescent with the same subjectrvho a*gain for peersinto tbe htusing. lamp 46 a black lignt bulb named purple X by Generai Step -i.-11.r" operalor follows instructronof steps l, Electric Corp, and which has trvo hundrcd frfty rvattsand Z only. while he observes colors in his own mind because 115-1zS volts rvith fifty hours duration for life of. said bJ of afier image effcct, he tries to note any change of feeibulb. lhis can be done to increase fluorescence coiored of ings wirhin himself. paitrt or fahric of disc 35. lvhile I have iliustrared and described the preferrecl , .. The fcllorvingis an explanationof behaviorin use of embodiments my invenrion, is to Le understo.t'that ol it this as ir toy' One person using the toy is called the I clo not limit myself to tbe preciseconstructrons herein opciatorand the other is calledthe subiect. There may be 60 disciosed and thai variouschanges and mo6ification. -rV any.' rrumberof panicipants.There are six stepsneededto be matle rvithin the scope of tf,c invention ls defined in obtain amusement the use of wira! is commonlycalled by the appende<i ciaims. "lfter image" that occursin one'snind p:rrticulariy after Having thus described the invention,lvhat I claim as one stares nt br.ightcolors and closesone's eyes. This new end desire to secnre by Letters patent is: refersto the specialmeans of obtaining after image.by os 1. An opticat display device for visuaily conclitioning this devit-e. Said afrer image may he cerived from staring its cperatoi,comprisinga housing,a first lamp supponed. at glowing lluorescent coiors rvhile looking through the in the housingfor emitting ruJtin"d brighi lighi, said housing,or by slaring at brightly lit filters of differcnt " housing having an opening at one end through rvhich colors,even though not fluorescent nature. in saici light is visible, a secJnd t"nrp in the housing for Slep 1.-.{n operatofstaresinto the housingof the.de- T0 emitting ultravioletlight in norroi band witttb p"ifing vice for rL'out thirty seconds.Hc sees an extra bright " at about -1650angstrom units, a rotatable disk in the incandsscent tuib of light and no bright colois known housing,said ciiskiaving a,on.." to the second in the specialway of fluorescence glowing. Next, the "*por.a or ltrrp. said surface havi-ng.{luorcs..nirpot, of 41fferent cperatorlooksawav from the deviceand closes eyesio his sizes, shapes and colori, said spots being rendered ssc the bright iight's after image in his own (the oper- 75 lLrnrinous \vhen the s:cond laurp is-cnergized- project to

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Iamp 46 having one terminal connected to incandescent 5J is mounted on the stationary casing of the motor 32' nected to rvire 101. GIow lamp 26 is connectedvia rectiThis connector has spring contacts 55, 56 making con' fier 130 to the secondary winding 132 of a transformer tinuous contact with rings 50, 52 respectively,for supply' 134. The prirnary 135 rvin<iing is connected betrveen ing porverto the iamp'i6 in all positionsof the disk i5' 6l and 62 are connected between motor 32' 5 power ivire 101 and contaci 116. N{otor 32 rvbich drives Wircs 60, disk 35 is connectedbetween power rvire 101 and concoon?ctor 54. socket 28 and circuit component box 65. tact 116. Pushbuttonswitches66, 68 are connectedby rvires 69 to In operation of the device 10 and circuit 100' the box 55. Swilch 66 is mounted in an openingin the housing person using the device, looks into the dark interior of thereof. A power supply cord 70 is 12 near the bottom person to connected box 65' It extendsthrough a grommet ?2 in 16 housing 12. The operator of the device,or.the ^" the lookinginto the device,then presses buttonof START the side of housing 12. switch 66 and holds this button. Rotary arm I20 rvhich Lamp 46 is centrally disposedon the cenfial, verticat is in the OFF positionof timer switch LlO at areaAl ro' on the optic aKisof lens 25' When a.tisof the housiagand tates clockwise as vierved in FIG. 5' The timer motor ianp 46 is liSbtedit appearsas an intensewhite light to a persoo looking into the housing through the iens. The ts 126 is started rvhen the switch 66 is closed. When arm 120 reaches contacts 108 and 114 the operator of the iens spreadstbe field of the light so that the person sees device may releasethe switch 66. The limer motor wiil glows but this bright light. aimost nothing that continue to operate since it draws current via contacts Thrce light f,ltermembers 73,71and 75 colored respec103, 105, 108 and arm 120. Lanrp 46 rvill light since tively red, yellow and blue are provided in the houstng. clearly shown in FIGS. 3-i, each filter member has a pO currenr is drawn via arm 120 and contact llil. Lamp As 46 will be lighted for about thirty seconds rvhile thc circular end portion 76 stightly larger in diameterthan person using the device staresat the intenselight in the the lamp .{6. The filter membersmay be made of colored -Iae and interior of the housing.Lens 25 concentrates intensifilter members each has transparentplastic material. fies the light. .i\fter ebout thirty seconds,arm 120 leaves 77 rvhjch extends radially outwardly of the end a stem in portion 76 and is slidably disposed a rectangulartubular 95 contact 114 and reachesarea z\2. The lanrps 26 and 46 are extinguishedand the interior of the hortsing re' holder 78, 79 or 80 each securedin a difterent opening 82 Then lamp mains dark for about ten to twelve seconds. in the siding of bousing 12. The holders have flanges83 26 goes on while disk 35 starts to rotate as motor 32 89. The openings82 may be disheld by rivets or screws becomes energized via contact 116 and arm 120. The posed 90' apart circumferentially of the housing 12 and are spacedslightly apart axially of the housiog. Thus the i0 lamp 26 stayslightedand the disk 35 rotatesabout tbirty area Al again tbe mo' When arm 120 reaches seconds. circular end portions 76 cln be overlappcd.Any two filter tors f2 and 126 stop xnd lamp ?6 goes out. The operaporiions 76 can be overlapped <luring use of the device. tor of the device then closes his eyes. He may be rcThe operator of the devce, by retracting all filter mem' questeci this time to visualizeby his mind's eye or 3t bers until tbe end portions 76 are stopped at the inner side of housing 12, clears lamp ;t6 so that white light 35 imagination pertaining to efter image, that group of colors on disc 35. He then opens his eyes and turns p$ses through lens 25. If filter ,membcr 73 is extended from the device rvith his eyes open, rvhereuponhe will u:rtil its end portion 76 is aligned centrally rvith lamp 46 observe externally a glorv. rad.iance,halo or aura at the filter member will pass red light. Filter member ?4, the perimeter of the animate subject now under inspecsimilarly rviil passyellow ligbt, rnd fi.ltermember 75 will pass hlue light. If the cnd portions 76 of the red rnd 40 tion by the operator. The color of the giow seen around that animate subiectmay be the color last visualizedon yellorv filters are superirtposed,orange light will pass to the disc 35 by the operator, or Inay be anyone of those lens 25. Similariy the superimposedred and blue filters colors, or a combination of them rnost strongly rememyellow and blue f,lters wiil passpurple light. Superimposed bered by that operator, as he viewed the rotating, will pass green light. Three superimposed filters rvill pass no light and this arrangementrviil not be usedexceptrvhen 45 flourescentmulticolored disc 35, with its spots. In any case the colors so viewed rvill cease to become merely tbe device is not in use when all filters can be fully inthe aftsr image coiors formeriy seen by the operator sertedinto the devicewith only the ends of stems77 pro' in his own mind. They gradually become the colors of jectingradially from bousing 12. Pins 85 can be insertedin the animate subiect being viewed by the oprator. The holes lJ7 near the free ends of the stems to prevent the stems from passing entirely into the housing. When the O0 aJter image of the operator rvhen seen rvithin bis own mind after seeing glowing surface of disc 35 is called f,lter membersare insertedso that pins 85 abut the tubular internal aura or halo, The co.lor seen arouod tbe sub' holders, the circular portions 76 are properly located at ject by the operator who has stared through the housing the axis of the bousing 12 and lamp 46. at the glowing colors of the disc 35 and rvho now lookFIG. 6 shows tbe electrical circuit 100 of rhe device, in circuit 100 power cord 70 can be connectedto a suit' 55 ing at said subject, are the colors named external halo or aura. able power supply 102. Pushbutton switch 6E is a STOP It desired, the person using the device or the operatswitcb rvhich has contacts 103, 105 normally closed. ing attendant may press the button of switch 68 to open Pushbuttonsrvitch 66 is a START switch which has norit. This rviil stop motor 126 since its circuit will be mally open contact 105 connectedto polver supply rvire 10{, and open contac! 107 connected to arcuate contact 00 openecl.The cycling of the device rvill then stop wbile 1{13 a timer switch 110. Contact 103 is aiso connected of the swirch 68 is held open. If larnp 46 is ligbted, it will to contact 10E. Switcb 110 is located in the circuit comstay lighted. If either or both lamps {6 and 26 are off ponen[ box 65 shown in FIG. 2. The switch incluciesa they will stay off. If lamp ?6 is lighted aod disk 35 stationary insulared plate 112 on rvhich is contact 108. is rotating,lamp 26'will continueto be lighted and mo^, This contact is circui:rrly curved and has spaced ends oo tor 32 rvill continue driving the disk, until switch 6E at OFF area A1. The srvitch has two other arcuate conis released,whereupon the cycle can continue as before. tacts 114 and 116 spaced apart at areas A1 and A2' Thus, operatingswitch 68 at one or more points in the Tbe srvitch contacts l1;l and 116 are concentric wilh cycle makes it possible to controi manually tbe lengli contact 10E. Thc srvitch has a rotary shaft 118 carry-^ of difTerentparts of the cycle with either lamp held on -fhe in-e a rotary conductive arrn 120. r\rm 120 is electrical' '' <ieviceis thus autoor oft or both lamps held oll. ly connectedr,vithslip ring 722 and brush 124 to srvitch matic in operation but has mlnnal controls for selective of switcb 66. Shaft 1l$ is operativelyconcontrc! 106 operxtion if desired.Jnsteld of using :I .notor 32, it is nected to tbe shalt 125 of a timer motor 126, This possible to turn the disk 35 rnanuaily vie mechanical contact 105 of switch 68 ntotor is connectedbetrveen and rvire 101 ot' the porver cord. Contact 114 is con' T5 means such as a suitable crank and gelr me:lns.

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tbe ultraviolet iight upon the spots, a motor rotatably to supportingsaid disk, and circuit meansconnected the first and secondlemp for lighting the lirst lamp in one the tirst lamp part of a timed cycle, then extinguishing lighting 5 time simuitaneously anJ :lfter i predetermined the motor to turn said the secondlamp and energizing disk, said motor rotating the disk at a speednot greater than abou! lrvelverevolutionsper second. 2. An opticai display devicefor visually conditioning in a a a person,comprising housing. first lamp supported I0 bright light. said the housing for emitting a sustained housing having an opening at one end through rvhich sa,id light is visible. a second lamp in the housing fot emitting ultraviolet light in a narrow bandwidth peaking at about 3650 angstromunits, a rotatable disk in the 1; housing,said disk having a surfaceexposedto the second !amp, said surlace having fluorescentspots of different sizes, shapes and colors, said spots being rendered luminous rvhen the secondlamp is energizedto project tbe ultraviolet light upon the spots, a motor rotatably 20 supporting said disk, and circuit means connecled to tbe first and second larnps for lightins the finst lamp in one the first lamp part of a timed cycle, then extioguishing lighting time simultaneously and after a preCetermined the motor to turn said 25 the secondlamp and energizing disk; slid motor rotating the disk at a speednot greater than about trvelverevolutionsper second,and a plurality of different colored transparent filter members in the housing selectively disposable between said first Jamp and said opening for selectivelyvarying the color of the 30 bright light transmitted to said opening from the first iamp3. An optical display device for visually conditioning a person,comprising a housing,a first lamp supportedin bright lisht, said 3i the housing for emitting a sustained housing having an opening et one end ihrough rvhich saiC light is visible, a secondlamp in thc housing for emitting ultravioletlight in a narrow bandwidth peaking at :rbout 3650 angstrom units, a rotatable disk in the to housing,said disk having a surfaceexposecl the second 40 lamp, said surface having fluoresceotspots of different sizes, shapes and coiors, said spots being rendered luminous rvheo the second lamp is energizedto projecc the uitraviolet light upon the spots, a motor rotatably to supportingsaid disk, and circuit meansconnected lhe 45 first and second llmps for lighting the first lamp in one the first lamp part of a timed cycle, then extinguishing lighting time simultaneously ind after a predetermined tbe second lamp and energizingthe motor to turn said disk; said notfi rotating the disk at a speed not greater 50 than xbout iwelve revolutions per second, said circuit means including a timer switch, said first and sccond lamps and said motor being connectedin circuit rvith said timer switch so that each of the lamps and said motor is energizedfor tianes determined by said timer 65 switch. ^1.Ao optical display device for visually conditioning a person, conlprising a housing, a first lamp supportedin bright light' said thi housing for emitting a sustained housing having an opening at one end through.ivhich 69 said liiht is r'lsible,a secondlamp in tbe housing for emining ultraviole!light in a nanow bandwidthpeaking at about 3650 angstrom units' a rotatable disk in the to bousing,said disk havinga surflce exposed the second lamp, iaid surface having tluorescentspots of diflerent 65 sizci, shapes and colors, said spots being rendered luminous ivhen the seconcilamp is energizedto project tbe uitraviolet light upon the spots, a motor rotatably to supportingsaid disk, and circuit meansconnected the hni and secondlamps for lighting the frrst lamp in one 70 the first lamp Dart of a tinred cycle, ihen extinguishing lighting time simultaneously ind after a predetcrmined the sccondlamp and cnergizingthe motor to turn said disk: said motor rotating the cliskrt a speednot greater than tbout twelve revolutionsper secood, said circuil ?5

8
means including a timer srvitch, said first and second lamps and said motor being connectedin circuic with said timer srvitch so thtrt each of the lamps and said by motor is energizedfor limes cietermined said timer switch, said circuit further includinga timer motor driving said timer switch, anci a manually operable other switch in circuit rvith the timer n'rotor for stopping the motor at any poin! in said cycle for prolongingthe light' ing time of eitherof the lampsand for delayingthe lighting of either lamp. 5. An optical display device for visually conditioning a rterson,comprising a generally cylindrical housing hav' ing an opening at one end thereot, a lens located near said openingnear one end of ln optical line of sigbt in saitl first lamp supportedin the hous' housing,an incandescent ing for emitting a sustainedbright light through said lens to the open end of the housing' a fluorescent, tubular secondlamp in the housing,said secondlamp being circular in form and disposedin axial alignmentrvith said lens and said first lamp, said secondlamp having a deep purple transparentbody so that the secondlamp emits ultraviolet light in a narrow bandrvidth peaking at about 3650 ang' strom units. e rotatabledisk in the housingspacedfrom the lamps,saiddisk havingan axisof rotationalignedwith the axis of the secondiemp, said disk having a surface covered with fluorescentspots of different coiors, so that said spots are renderedluminous and visible through the lens when the second lamp is energized to project the ultravio.letlight on said sunace, seid surfacebeiog located in said line of sight, a motor rotatably supportingthe disk" the circuit meansconnectedto the first and secondlemps and motor for lighting the first lamp in one part of a timed cycie, then extinguishingthe first lamp and after a predelighting the scond lamp termined time simuitaneously and energizingthe motor to turn said disk: said motor rotating the disk at a speed not greater than about twelve revolutions per second. 6. An optical display device for visually conditioning cylindricalhousinghaving a person, comprising generally a an opening at one end thereof, a lens located near said opening near one end of :rn optical line of sigbt in said first lamp supportedin the houshousing,an incandescent ing for emitting a sustaioedbrigbt light through .saidIeos tubuiar secto the open end of the housing, a fluorescent. ond lamp in the housing,said secondIamp being circular in form and disposedin exial a-lignment'rvith said lens and said first lamp, said secondlamp having a deep purple lamp emits ultravioiet transparent body so that the second at light in a narrow bandwidth peaki-r:g about 3650 ansstrom units, r rotatable <iisk in the housing spaced from the lamps, said disk having an axis of rotation aligned 'ivith the axis of the second lamp, said disk having a surspots of dilferent colors, so face coveredrvith t'luorescent that said spots are renderedluminous and visible through the lens rvhenthe secondlamp is energized project the to ultraviolet light on said surface, said surface being located in said line of sight, a motor rotatabiy supporting the disk, and circuit means connectedto the first and second lamps and motor for lighting the first lamp in one part of a timed cyc.le, the first lamp then extinguishing lighting the time simultaneously and after a predetermined second lamp and energizing the motor to turn said disk; said motor rotating the disk at a speed not greater than about trvelve revolutions per second,said housing having a resilient pad around the periphery of said opening to form a light-tight seai rvith a person'siorehead and cheeks rvhenthe personlooks inlo the open end of the housing. 7. An optical rlisplav device for visuaily conditioning a person, comprising a generally c1'lindrical housing having an openingat one end thereof.a lenslocatednear said opening nenr one end of an optical line of sight in said in first housing,an incandescent Irmp supported the housbright Iight through said lens ing {or enrittinga sustained tubular scc,r to the open end of ihe housing, fluorescent, ond irrnp in the housing, said second lamp being circu-

3,340,865
9

10

3650 angstrom units, a rotatable disk in the housing lar in form aod disposedin axial aiignmentrvith said lens spaced from the lamps, said disk having an axis of rotaand said first lemp, said secondlamp having a deeppurple tion aligned with the axis of the seco[d lamp, said disk transparen!body so tbat the secoodlamp emits ultraviolet having a surfacecoveredwith fluorescent light in a narrow band rvidth peakingat about 3550 angspotsof different strom units, a rotatable disk in the housing spacedfrorn 6 colors,so that said spotsare rendered luminousand .risible through the lens when the second lamp is encrgized the lamps, said disk having an axis of rotation aligoed 'rvith the a.ris of the secondlamp, said disk having a surto proiect rhe ultraviolet light on said surface, said surface covered with fluorescen!spots of different colors. so face being located in said iine of sight, a motor rotatably that said spots are renderedluminous and visible tbough supporting the disk, and circuit rneansconnectedto the the lens when the secondlarnp is energizedto project the 19 first and second lamps and rnotor for lighting the fint uitraviolet ligbt on said surface,said surface beinglocaied lamp in one part of a timed cycle, then exringuishingrhe in said line of sight, a motor rotatably supportingthe disk, first lamp and after a predetermined time simultaneously and circuit me3nsconnectedto the first and secondlamps lighting the secondlamp and energizingthe motor to turn and motor for lightjng the first lamp in one part of a timed said disk; said motor rotating tbe disk at a speed not cycle, then extinguishilg the first lamp and after a prede- l5 greater than about twelve revolutions per second,and a termined time simultaneously lighting the secondlamp and plurality of different colored transparenrfilter members energizingthe motor to turn said disk; said motor rotatin the housing selectively disposablebetween said fint ing the disk at a spcednot greaterthan about twelvc revolamp and said opening for selectivelyvarying the color lutions per second"and a pluraltiy of different colorcd of the bright light transmitted to said opening from the transparentfilter members in the housing selectivelydis- 20 first lamp, said circuit means including a timer switch, posablebetweensaid first lamp and said openingfor selecsaid first and second lamps and said motor being contively varying tbe color of the bright light transmitted nected in circuit wirh said timer switch so thet each of to saidopening from the fust lamp. the lamps and said motor is energized for times deter8. An opticaldispiayCevice folrisually conditioning a mined by said timer .switch, said circuit further including person,comprising a generallycylinciricalhousing having 25 a timer motor driving said timer swirch, and a manua.ily an opening at one eod thereof, a lens located near said operable other switcit in circuir with the timer motor tor opening near one end of an optical line of sight in said stopping the motor at any point in said cycle for prohousing,an incandescent first lamp supportedin the housIonging the lighting time of either of the lamps and for ing for emitting a sustainedbright light through said lens delaying the lighting of either, said housing having a to the open end of the housing,a fluorescent,tubular sec- 30 resilient pad around the periphery of said opening to ond lamp in the housing,said secondlamp being circular form a light-tight seal,,vitha person'sforcheadand cheeks in form and disposed in axial aiignment rvith said lens rvhen the person looks into the open end of the housing. and said lirst lamp, said secondlamp having a deeppurple 10, An optical displaydevicefor visuailyconditioning transparentbody so tbat the secondlamp emits ultraviolet a person,comprising a housing, a first lemp supportedin light in a oarrow bandwidth peaking at about 3650 ang- 35 the housing for emitting e sustained bright light, said strom units, a rotatable disk in the housing spacedfrom housing having an openingat one end through rvhich said the lamps, said disk having an axis of rotation aligned light is visible, secondlamp in the housingfor emitting a with the axis of the secondlamp, said disk having a surultraviolet light in a narrow bandwidthpeakingat about face covcred with fiuorescentspots of different colors. so .^ 3650 rngstrom units, a rotatable disk in the housing, that said spots are renderedluminous and visible through 4o said tJiskhaving a surtaceexposedto the secondlamp, said the lens rvhen the secondlamp is energizedto project tbe surface having fluorescentspots of different sizes,shapes ultraviolet light on said surface,said surface being iocatand colors, said spots being renderedluminorrswhen the ed in said line of sigbt, a motor rotatably supporting second Iamp is energizedto proiect the ultraviolet Iight the disk. and circuit meansconnectedto the fint and secupon the spots, a motor rotatably supporting said disk, ond lamps and motor for lighting the first lamp in ooe part 4g and circuit meansconnectedto the first and secondlamps of a timed cycle, then extin$lisbing the first lamp and for lighting the nrst lamp in one part of a timed cycle, after a predetermined time simultaneously lighting the secthen extinguishing the lirst lamp and after a predeterond lamp uo61gngyqizingthe motor to turD said disk; mined time simultaneouslylighting the second lamp and said motor rotating the disk at a sped not. greater than energizing the rnotor to rurn said disk; said motor rotatabout twelve revoiutions per second, and a plurality of b0 ing the disk at a speednot greater than about tweive revodifferent coiored transparentfilter members in the houslutions per second,said circuit meansincluding a timer ing selectivellr disposable betrveen said nrst lamp and said switch, said first and secondlamps and said motor being opening for sel;ctively varying the color of the bright connectedin circuit rvith said timer slvitch so tbat each light transmittedto said opening from the first lamp, said of the lam.psand said motor is energizedfor times detercircui! meansincludinga timer switch,said first and sec- SS mined by said timer switch,said circuir further including ,rvith oncl lamps and said motor being connectedin circuit a timer motor driving said timer switch,and a manually said timer srvitchso that each of the lamps and said motor operableother switch in circuit .,viththe timer motor for is energizedfor times determined by said timer switch, stoppingthe motor at any point in said cycle for prolongsaid circuit funher inciuding a timer motor driving said ing the lightingtime of either of the lampsand for delaytimer switch. and a manually operableother switch in 69 ing the lightingof eitherlamp, and a pluralityof different circuit with the timer motor for stopping the motor at any colored transparent lilter memben in the housing selecpoint in said cycle for prolonging the lighting time of tiveiy disposabiebetweensaid nrst lamp and said opening either of the lamps and for delaying the lighting of eitber. for selectivelyvarying the color of the bright light trans9. An optical C.isplay device for visually conditioning mirted to said opening from the firsr lnmp. a person, comprising a generallycylindrical housing hav- 65 11. An opticai displaydevice for visuallyconditioning ing an opening n! one end thereof,a lens located netr a person, comprising a housing, a first lamp supportedin said opening near one end of an optical line of sight in the housing for emitting a sustainedbrigit light, said and incandescent lamp supported the said housing, iirst in housinghavingan opningat one end throughwhich said housingfor emitting 3 susrained bright light through said light is visible,a secondlamp in the housingfor emitting lensto the openend of the housing, fluorescent, a lubular 76 ultraviolet iight in a narrow bandwidthpeakingat aboui secondlrrnp in the housing,said secondlamp being cir3650 angstromunits,a rotatabledisk in the horrsingsaid cular in form and disposed axial alignmentwirh sei<i in disk having a surfaceexposedto the secondlamp, said lens and seid first lamp, said secondlarnp having a deep surface having fluorescenr spots of different sizes,shcpes purple transparent bc,dy so tha! the secondlamp emits and colors,said spotsbeing rentlered luminousrvhenthe ultravioletlight in a narrow bandwidthpeakingar about 7; secondlamp is energized project the ultraviole!light ro

f . Q= = ' - s a 'q c 3 o
6 *6fiS r.i'l

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f . \ \ ' r r . r . r . r -l r lrt s u s , r [ ] o r . n . , r l ] J r . i t i . l r i r o r r L e ' n C h r t l l i e r . : O , t - . . i O r . I i i - t .: r r - a r . i t r i r l e , . tratiorrirlit-r'. ,rr l;. i _ . rr r l r . t o l r l i ) i u t t ' , i rli:lulrr-'e lrctu eel iitc :ttlr'-it'r.. I he ,]i.C h a r i r r g ( - ' t ( , . . . t - i l r r s , - ; . , x . t l o I L " r . , , i , r l t i u r { ' e l . l ) p r r ) l ) l ' i . r t c , r ' i r e . t t i ' , t t r t i t . en l r , i . ' , l tict:iirrc tire rrtlllli, ,ri this int-elti,-rir t e . t i r c i r r l ' t i , r p l r r , l , . r r t o t r t l i r . i 1 1 g 9 n - i 1 1r' ; I 5 to lrc :ts ioiiows : -{0 t h e e n e t ' q ' r ' o t t h e , ! i i : u i i t t i ( ) u so r r i i r l l T h e . r u l r i e r . t , ' f r i r e l ) l . e . r , ! r i r r r . - e u t i u t irs t i o u s ; 1 r l ) r i f i n u l i l i e t ' t o t ' : : r t r d t ,i ) : r a n i r r s t t r r r r r e r r t1 o 1 .t i e t e ; ' r i r r g l l : r r r r i n r r i t . : ( ' : r i o v i r i ) l o f i r o ( 1 ( ( r r i r r' r l i p t ' t { ) l r e o n i i t t t , t l n l r t l i c l t s , r t ' e , i l t t , 1 r ' i l r t ' ; r t i r r r r sl t ' r ) r . c r : r l i u g ( r i r o i : e i t s i o n . , i f l o r t t s t t l r s t : u , , . , . . .t r i l r r : , 1r ' t : q . e t ; r l r l l , r t . ll , il ir to I'e notp{l lirrrl rlri.;lr.firrlq.t,utr'!ri l ( l r r , 1 t , , . t . r 11 { ) r .I t r , , p u l . ; ' 1 , , - , . , f i l r , i : l \ - i i l l o , . r l i l f t ' r ' s t l ' ( ) r r li l l l t n \ ' ' . r' ' l . i r . : : i i l t i r i l ! * . t : t t , i r\! 1,1 : 1. t h c i r p l r l r i r . u i i r l t . i ' p si , f . . l t , r . ' . r . i r .;l1 1 i i ; 1 i - . - i r r i h , l t r i r + t ' i ' i r r t l o , ; i ' , r i ) l l { i t l . r : r ( ' r . i i r l . r r h e t l t e t ' t l l r : \ - l r t e i n . i t , , 1 , i e , r r ' / . o l r l | , r r n i r l i ; ' i i r ' 1r e r i r i s : e i { - . . : r t ; r i r r r . r i r r r r r i i . r ' l : { ) i c J r e t r r i t ' r r l l o l r r r r r ! 1 . 1 r r ' i r e li r e , r f l i , ' i - u l . r r i r r l i t t t l . . t i t s l t ( ' r l t r r l r o t t e r titl t t , i r i r l ) i t l i l i l l . { n t t s e n t i n n i r l r n l r l f r r r . r , r , r ' i r r , , o t ' i l r , r . : r t e , l t ' r ' J e r t r ti f , r u r r t l c r i i ' ) u l r o v e . ' l ' i i i , ' r t , r , , r , ' Ii i n r , r , , , r u f a r : t u r ' , ' . r r i r s t l n i , . " . . n ' h o t , , l r . , i-r t r rl r':ltui il('1. h;rilt irs ii {.r.,lltilirrer.ior tir.-.i ( ) a r t a l v s i s o f i h e . r r l r . t a n r . er l l i r \ . l , e , . a i . r i , r t l s p t ' r ' i t r r e ' r r i l r l c t e s : . r r i i t t i l t i u r r l i r r , l J r ) 1 . o r r t_ , i r , 1 r , ' t ' t i oott t i r , . * i t , r ' t :i r . ; r i t , l l { , i . ! . \ r ' f i i r . ' t - l l h c i t r s i l t t r t r t , t t lt . r ' , . r r Dsl e s u r r e l c t , t r . i e t r i : l l l l i l : r l t tt . i l t r r t t e . l i r , r r . 1 ' l r * r . . t l . e n , , i , ' i r ' , ' r r i tr o l r l i r i r r i r r r - { r r ) - \ n i t r r i t r r . { : r r r r . r i,r : r l t e r ' i e : ) r .: { ) l u . ( . r 'rs} i . , r t ( , ! , t { i\t.r f l t . , i l t i r i , , : r : 1 0 ( ' : r l i i , r ' l r t t ,i trls \ n i . l r i l t i r , . r r r . r . sl . r . u r s . .( i / ) rl ).r , , i 'tt '' l' tt tt.i t , r t l r t l i l r i r n i l r , . . 1 , , . , ' i , , , n , r . i a r - a t ' i l r l r l e . o l l r l ( ' n 5 { . 1i .i . j l . r - o - r . l r l l e , i t , . r . . l i r r i t l r l t , t t ' t . i , , : 'l e 1 : r l i . i : i l t o r r i , , r , . - r , rtritrrrl tletcctor, jrr flre -i,r,rrr rtt 1 l,os t n : i i ' r l e n ( . n r l l r t r . r , t . ! : l i i tl r e l . \ - ( ,t . t . a , . t i n r r h a r i n g i r r r i t r , ; r r i ; r t t ' r ll r r , i t o r r r t , o r r t i r i l r i r r q i r r : r i l r r r r r u n- r r l r . i t . t . r . r . r l u r \ - l r * i n t i r t , {) sot.ue jloorl <.orrrlrllting .rrllst:tlrcesur'lt l o l i l l o f i l n t , i l i l l t r , t - p t t- i , i . . ' : l ! r , ) t r ' e f (j,tti .t ( , ! . 2 5 a s i r l r r r r r i r r i u r ri r i . r r i i r r u r in u ( l I t o i ) r ' r : r ' t i f i r ' r r r i orrrr.\ v i i l l ( ' i : r i l . , , r . n l i l \ . u t i l i . i . { ; ( ) r c o n t i l i t l i l r g . i r r r i i l t . 1 1 1 t 1 : . i i r li ' r ( j - i ' r i i l t t ' t r r r r v r . n r r . 'rfr t r . o i i o i r i , r lJ r i r r l t i , i l , i. r r , , . lar'lv irrsrrllrte,i. ,)l'. ii' e l l l o t e l , l . e r i . f l r r i r l r r r e r l i n u rr r s i r r r i i ; . r r t i ' r '. l r j i i i l , r . p n r . r , I t a v i r r g . i r l t ' s , . , r r r r r r i r r i lirr,i:-.' r l r l t u , i , , 1 , , , , .r - i l x r t e r r t i l r l i ) ( ' i \ , . 1 ' t ' i:'ir ' o . i r ] e . , t i r l r t , r . i r . , g t l i c n l c o n r i r r r . t i r rr r.r : r t e r . i r lt l , r . i n : r r i l r i l r l c r r i t i r r t l o r l r r c e r l i r L i , , r i r r . u r e t i i r r r r r . 30 I u i l l r . f i i t l l r l i n t r . r r i r t r t . r , r ltr. rr .i r r , t . r r t i n l i s r r t I ' ) r r t or ilr i sl t l r i r , l i r - ' r i I i * , . l r l u a r .l l - .' 1 . { j . , ? { 1 1 p1 1 . - p c e i i r e p l r , t s o f i h e i ' i p 1 . 1 1 . i r , , ,[i 1 . 1 eltit in rrhir.h ii is itlrr.rrl. ,rnrl iut ( ' I l I - t l i s I I . \ 5 I i i r . ' . \ iT \ ' , 't . . . \ ' i ' t I I . : 1 . l a l ' f a n g ( ' n l e r r t l r r ' i r r t : _ r . o r . i r l e r l t ' . ) r .. . , [ ) i t l . u t - l i . l . S l r i t r t f - i t r , t . r ' t S t l r . g r . t i l r n , " n r r p arrrl ing tlrc trro irIl.t'tr.(,r ,.nrrtlinirrg. fh,, r { , . - l - - . i , t ,(. . ' l r i r i r r . , . r 'L l' r l t , , . | . , u r i r r r l . \ \ - . ( . ' . .tt itrsttiltt.rl rlt.,,lt.ical r.,rniiur.rirr- nrrrter.ial -\gerrt-r for. th,.' -\ppii,.rrr,r.

C(]]II'T,Ii TU SI'EC i.'IU.\TI{.}\ I

fnstrument for Detecti,ng and. fnvesi.igating imanaticns Prc,;eedingfronr Su,bstances..


j [ . \ \ ' r i . r . l . r . r irr r s r : s ' rj j { r 1 - t , . , r tI t r . i r : . i r f i r i rl i r r q ( ' ; ' , r s . . ( i i a . . l r - o r r , r.jrr i11.1'r-,'lri' l i ; r t i r r r r t i i t r ' , : r f I T . f i : r : r r i r . r o r . r[l ) l , r u e , 1 i , . , . , i i 1 . rt ,[ r , l ] a i t , l i t , , , i r l t i . ittr-,,trt;,ril ;prir:e I!-7 lrt't

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' f ' h t t : o n ' e c t r t e s( ) l ' i t r c o r t e c t n e s s i . t l t t t s r : o s ltol'cr.er. itllltlitteri:tl ils t.lt''et'iirerl, , . . , , t t , t r t i , r r t si s . l.it'rrlur'11'

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f L r r t t tt l t t ' i.',,.f,,i,io,ft,, lre vltriitllll''prrr't'rl -i. l'rrl lll('ililtt llls l llt' c r t - . | t e l ' i t ti l r g p l a t e [)(]lllltl ; i ; ; i t t - i t r rp l , ' .1.,,r'i,,'i,,,.,.i tltt:.piiries il ittirI I tirt'tt' i' ' , , t ' 1 , , ' r t i . 'l tr't ' r ' ' 1 1 f i t t ' r ' r t ' t r ti r r t t r i s i u l r i t ,ii,,l i r r'r' t , , , ' i t l t ' , 1t ' r ' i l l t ' i ' fl 'u f o t ' t r t , t l ' i t t t ' o t ' p t ' t ' l t t e t ii t t l l t i l l t t l t : r ( ' l t t r t ' r l ' rricirllt' t't'ttttt'r'tt'tl,lrr 1,iute { i- elt't ilttitltsi* oi lirc s t t l t s i l t t t c t ' s . t ' ' i 1 1 1 1 ' 1 ' liltlt t :t.itt'lts i t t t l r t r r l r l t l t ' l i ' r l \ \ ' i r e \ t ' ( ) t t l l ( li r r Ittt l 5 s t t l r . l , t r t , ' t l t t i t \ : l r t : , ' l t tt i e ' l " t t l ' t :tlttl ettgitt'lt'rlirt lr. hltg't'l '.llrc tItlt'ill(]tt itl't' ulr itlt itt:tii;llt,r olrlillliltir)lt' irt lrl il ttttt atiltptr:tl to tlltvt'I ltlrtttg l r t ' t t t i t r t t t r .e t l t e t ' r r i t r ' t ' t ' l l t : t ' l s i , . i r l r i e , i l r c l i e v , ' , 1t o i t s t ' t ' e s ' - t l t l ' t ' r r t l t ' t.ip i n r l I e S r r t t l t e o J ) P ' ] : l t t ' i i i " ' t , , , ' l e c t t ' t ' t r i ' 'i l t t i l i l r - i n t h t ' : 1 ) ( ' r ' i l r r t t l $'ll't" itll(t Irirrtti ltottt the heiilrtiil'rrottttrl llte ' suilstirttt'e ji ircirrg rttttiet'tttotl thirt itttrl ,,i f tt" \itlrl(' l)it('ll. tlrt' itttillrttrti ( ( ) l r l l ) r lill l g t l r ( ' 20 ,rn,,1.'.i, i. t'flt'''ttltl 1r) i 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 ' l l t t I t : t ' t t lt 'l \ ' ' l l t l t .piritii.' lrtlittg

s 't u t e t t t e t t l: i t t v e t r t t t l t tl s 5 The sltlriet't'rf tht' l)tesellt iol' 'lt'rt"'titr:f trttrl irrsestiilu lrpl)ul'l\ttt} stlltg , i t i i i i , ' , , , , , , t , , t ' | . t r s l l l { ) r ' t i * r l i t t g. f r r r r r r i l t t I t t t r tl . r - , ' : ' l i 'ttr l ' l c o t ' . t t li t t t ' tl t l ' { r ' r 9litll('es, r ' a tt i t ' t t l : t l ' i l t e p t t l p u ' t ' ' r l : r t r i r l r ' ' i r t gt l r c i l

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L ir t)ilriet;t ",rtttitiitt'rl itt rt .tet't'lrtitlie plill{' l , . l i t i t t r ' , 1 , , 1 ' l r t ' , 1 ' 1 1 l r l : erti't t t t l t o t l l t '

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q r' t irt' 1 t \ \ ' i I \ ' ( ' s r o l i l j l l l i ' l l { r \ \ ' 1'1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 r i' t h' ' l i l t t l r r - t r l t e r r t i c i r l e l e t t t e t t t s" l ' \ril\'es ftntlt k r t o n t r o r g l t t ri r ' t l t e t ' i t t t e t t t ' ('(tlll'fhe i r l l l l l t t ' i t i t t sr l f - t l t c . l t t l ' t ' t t t l ( t t I (rr) p , i " t , , , i . , 1 " ' ' t l i t ' l r l' ' i r c t t i t t ' r r t t t i r i t r i t l g 25 il{ trtt'lt in lfn irrrlrtctllrrr' calilrrirtetl tltirt Itctttt's t)1 .( llls. : illltl :o i'tl'l'iltr{t'rl r':ltl lre e \ ' ( ' I ' \ ' 1 ) { r t ' t l r r t to f t l r c r l ' i n t l i r r u i ' f ^ ; r , r , l i f l ; l 1 f . 1 1 ' , ' r r t a t ' t ;( L ) ^ \ : ' - r ' i t i l e t l ,. trstr i e i n r i ' n l i l r i t r . t o r " l o r r s i s t i r r q 'o I 3"0 " , *-lri,'h ('tl ltt' ,,t.]i*iil. lrhf t "11'lttittt'tl ft'ortt elclr otltr:t' riiirl u-llit'h ltte t'rrtl:cr'ltlt'tl il i \ i ' 1 fi 1 [ 1 . " p | r ' ' i t t s iit"-iiti,,t,-rtirrg r)rirlt' lirces sulr;tarrtirrllr- it't,' frttlrr itt'rtlrttiutt' l i 1 p l a t t ' l r t ' i 1 i 1 1 ' 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 ' r 'tt' e re i t l t h o r t o ;;; 3"5 " rri rir'ot iritrg clctrtricrtl ^- irJ,ft uilpitl)lu llte ilro *rt"rg.:. thc tli.trrttr:e lrctrreett f i l r ' t r l t 'f r ) l ' r ' { ) l l l l ) i l lt l I \ ' . r ) l r l l r t t : * 1 t r t , r ' i t l i n r l1 1
tllet'il l t ( i i l i l l l 0 l t l t ' t r t , r I t l 1 , ' t ' l t ( ' l g \ ' " f ' l -' l t t 'rt' '' t : tlr tttt't' 'it'tt'r'tot" 4O ltt('lt. i'') -\ littirl =" as lt fitrirl 'itttt'trlr' its ltutt'toi; etrtplor-t,i l)t'iIli]' pllt'etl iri fole 1itoii,,.c,l. tt ltrttrtillI [ 1 r t ' r l S S ( rtS r e l r o r l v tit'ltl l'hit'h t'l lttilglleii(:

\\-itlr llris iitlrre 'ize' ilie :'',,r,r. of is ('0lltItI\tCrtl) ('oiltit('t thel'e llt'fitll[]elllellt l,e1l-een ttrt titrgey illl(l lltt rl'ite lrotrrillrl) (-) tlrrl lll([tt('tlllltt' .tittrriittg' r llriittirrtt of lrlrlrri, , , 1 t i , r , , t , t , , , 1 , 1 , ' * , 1l r v t t t t ' r t i t r g t l l t ' l'rtl''r' l r r ' 1 t , ' " 1i t i t t L ' , 1t r r r l r c ' r r i r r r i l t S ' r i r t i.)otlllt'l' r'elttirl \i"'"1 ll)''\' rfltllvilll{ tlt.' r)\.('r t(l rirovirrg' t''itli tht' {irr':t't I trit\'{'ts 0.j I'J ltl'o lllo\-llll-\ r'otttltrt the -r'rrle I l. n'ith tltc ti'r{at' i l:eitr'' "tt lt {'rrtt(lllt'flll3 .lt'i1t l;i. :l it t'tlttrittt'ior l:i i: l'lt',,ttt t lr,' 1,latr' rririr'lr 1 . , , 1r , - , i I l r l e t i l t l i r ' l t r o t - l r i l r t e i - l l o ''t.ttr- lt)0 tt r r r i r t - t t l . , l l t t ' ' lt'ottr . t t ' ( ' t t : t i i t t r t ' i t t l l t ' ' t l l i,rpt-llirtt' 1{ i. ill'l t'tttli r r t , , j r, r 1 l , - t . t r r t , r ' t t , rl lr r . - r ' r r l t t l t t t ' 1 1 1 1 i r t i t l r l t l l l t ' t : t l l t r ' ] i " u t ' t ' t v i t ! ' (l l l : t l t ' \ \ ' t ] l ' l i : r r ' , , r t r I t t ( . t r ,lt5 . r'oll(lt'll:Pl itr tt't itt i"'irlr t irt: I()l ,. ,',,,i,,i,lr' i ' , , , , 1 1 1 1 , ' 1 s, l1t l l t \ -i r c l r t " r ' i r i t ' ' l ' ' f l l t ' t r r . t r , rrt.tltc rlrrltut ls ttlrrritrrtte' ilt lt lrIuq' l1) to it irittttlltge irrlirptt'(l to lr('fittetl lilit r . , r l r , , i , . i , i ' r , ( l r e 1 , , , , 1 1 r t l t l t t ' . : l t r r t tl r t i t r : r .

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[1 ot'-ruirl- 1,,' s('t ul) 1tt tl -lllrr lllit!'ltlLll' " r l1 f" " , l u t I ' i s l r t l t t g i * l - l o - t l t e p l : r t t c o l i^ a t . - ilt' \ ' i t c ( ' t t l ' i \ t o \ \ ' ( t tl ( I s r c r t t t l l r l r t ' e i. to be 'ttrit"l thtrl.tlris ilrl itrrllt-'lrtultt r'lillcls flrittt tttltttt' ttitelrss ilrl iltlgt'tlltjltts if f i n l h a t { } 1 1 1 1i'5 t r o i l t ' l ' i i l i ' l r r r r t l r t r ' { l1 1 ' ' t c t ' l t t i t t n l re irrcltttles,,.-,-,''t"tt"t'11t'1 t'It'it:t'It'tl Io rtltttv(t' Jo lririletv ii"t.atnt tlre slrr:t'i' r i t ' , , i I , " , . . t , , , ' , ' " o t t ' t t t ' l$ ) ' t l s t : ( ' p t rrserl. rtrerr is Itr the tigrrrt: of tht'ilc('()rltpiltlvlltlr ,lll,r'iug tlri'r'e is illtt'tlirtr"l tli:r':lirtttlrr , i i u r i , ' , ' l l t ' i r l t i l t ' ! i t t l : : t ' l t l t ' l li lt t ' r ' t ' t ' r i i t l {
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j 1 t l0 ' , : i ' ; r ' r l ' t c , i : r, l r t , { t 1 , , , ' t t l , r t t t h c . p . i l t e s 'rrlro tttir5 litce rllhtr east irrrtl lT, irr:.1 91' rrc:t. I t r n i r t l r ( . 'i l t * l t l l l t ' ( l t h l t a P i l t h { t ) r c u l ' rtt' r e t r t i - . 1 l r e ' e t t t t ' t l l ' r ' t h u l l c l r { ' } i l l l (' ll ' l r e ^ I l;l ,,t the htrtrtrrtt l'tritrq' ,tiii., lr'. u t r i t t . l t ' l ' r , t t i r t o l t t . , , 1 r . , ' t . r ' , . ti I t . l ) t o r I t l { ' t ' { [ 'tt rltu i , r ' i , r 1 , 1 , i n st l r c t [ t t r t ' i r s" l ' i t l r t l t l l t t e t l lr.itrg. 'ir)-, irr tlrt' r'it.r' 'ri lltt' 1,u,t,,,'ti I t. i' , , i , . 1 , , , , , . ' , ,1 r ' ; t l l , , t t t t [ r e l l , ' i n t ' \ , ' . t l i l t t . i L ' l , l t t ' P i i r t t ' : , ii ' l l ( ) i,,,,,,1itt 1't,r,'tit'e it r h i f t e t l l l l ( r l e{ } l ' l e . s l l ' r t t t t l t e l t t i t l r ' * ' l r v l ' . r p p i t r si 1 1 ' \ r v i t l r , f , , t i ' t , t i , t t , ig r r , x l t t t ' t ' t l i r g i v t ' t t . , ' t t t t l l , t t t l t t ' i l t t l t t t ' t i t t t ' 'rr''i t l t t t l r ' il , i i l l , i , , , ' , , ' : . , : \ ':({i' l t i l l i l l i o t to f l l t t ' p l i r t r ' \ li ' t r t r t i . r l l i ' ' r t t r t l : t l r ; r t l : ' l ' l i ;;t;:i'i;,, ,, !,,,i1',*
t ltr' -ill) *,lfr,t'!\' lrtr. r't';lsr'tl trt rlil\\ -{' rrl'ltl iltl\.litt'' l , r , l r r t ' t ' ttti L , ' P l i r 1 1 'l 'l l t r t l ' 1 i - 1 1 'l r ' ii,, i rt,,'tu il tt,r l'r.rr!-r"l|ir*ir"l1' r 1 1 1 l' l l ' r r l l t t ' i : r r l l i , i l r , l ! \ ' 1 1 il . l t ' ( l l l l s i t t ' f ' t 1

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urot't't'.litt!{ flrrtrt .rtltstitttt'e-,' itttittritl' 25 i ' " g e t l l t l e ' , ) r l ) I i l l t : ll r l . f r - r r t h e l t t t t ' p o s e t l f t , , , , , , 1 . ' * i t r g h t r i r l l i l ll i ( ' t l l i t l t t ' 1 l e. ' r f t ' l e r ' ('ll('t'1{\'. ])itt'fit'ttiirl' iYl)es of ,'lllittlittirrit. - r : l t i n g . t t l t c ' t r i , . r i l r r . r ' t i v i t r ' . t ' i , r , r p l i . i l r J l .i t l l t ' l t ' t ' t ti t ' i r I ;.;;" [; irierrtiricrl r',"'i ilte , ' n l i l r t ' i t i t ' r ii r r t l t t rt i) i r r d t t r t l t l t t ' e a t s ' h i c i r s i t ' ' i t , l i r s c r v r t ti o t t s i t t ' t r , ' i l t ' u i t t ' , , r r t r t i i t i r t r ltr r f . \ an('e s.o ltt't'tttgt'rl lltrtt' erelv pot'tirltt of 30 ttradr.. 'l'he ( ' i l l l l : r ' ' r 1 ' , J r 1 l l t" l t t ' i t ( ' o t l i r l e l e t ' t l i t ' r r I , l i - i r t t ' l : i r l l ( ' t ' s' ( ' l ) t ' ( ' i s ' l t i l t - 1 1 1 s r i r r r l i t r l r ( / r ) - \ t t ' r r r r i r r i r Ir l c t t ' t ' t o r t ' r - r t t s t s t t t t f f tirt't : t i v e o f t l t e e t t t ' t ' g v i : t , l t t e s l i o t t i r . r ' cl t i q h Ilt]llI olle ' t f t ' t ' t 1 r t e n t ' ro , . r ' i l l i r t i , t r t s . l t t : t t t l t : i t t t t t t r I et ' i : , r f t r v o r r r e t t r l l i r p l i t t t ' s i t r s t t l i r t e t i ' trl ()llt, lr}' itttcl ttrilvl,l,l* r'elltitelt :rrrollter l 0 rrlrit'lt is rrt nt't'it'tti ll{)t lllt'itsllrl'lrli' lt rlt lltt' l t r r o t l r e t 't.l t t e p l t r l e . r r t l . l t e t t f t o n ' l t i l ' l r r l r t ' 3 ' 5 i r r r v o l l t e t ' n t . . r , t , -t l r i r t tt h e . , ' i t [ c . s r ) e ( . i n r ( , ri ls l t l l r t ' , ' t l . l r t r i l t q r ' o t t t t t ' t ' t t ' t ll 6 l i t t s t t ' r t t t t t ' r ri t . t ' l f . , , r ' l o i t l l o r l t ' , ' l r l x t l r l t 'o f l r l r * r l t ' l r i t r g - \ s l t s l , e t i t t t t ' l tl l t c r t ' t t t i t v l r e t ' r r r l l i r r r ' - t l , , . r r q l l r , , . l , ' ,rt l , r l ( ' t l t ' l ' ! J \ ' , t l r t ' t l i s t l t t r t ' l r t ' t r v e e t t 'i f t r t ' , ' s i r i r r 1 t l , , i. r , l t r t g . l i l e , , , ' t1 t ' i 1 1 'r i t ' l l f : r t ' i t ) t 'f o t ' t ' o l ) l {' l t . n l i r t r i r l i , , r r -t,v fl t i t ' l i r l e t r ) l r t ' l t . : t t ' r ] . r t t t l , 1 1 1 1r l o l l l l t t c r i l t ' o r i t l i t r c l l.) l i t e i l s t l l ' t ' l l l t ' r l i" I t l t i ' t t t t ' t ' g v 0 f + 0 pitl'iltlfe rv if 'lc.ilt'tl. ,,tttt1,i,tt',1ith tli,r.t',tf lit,' , 1 , , ' . , r , ' , ' i t t t * r :t t i , ' ) ^ \ t i t r r r l , l e t e r t " t ' : l t t t t l . I r i r l i r , r r t r - l r t ' t t ' i , r -t o r i c t e t ' t t t i t r ct l t t ' : t t i t i I , l e - i l c r l . i r l . o ( t , ' ) l t t l t t ' i l tl l l e l t , t t t l e l t t e r ' rrl,iiiti- of tltt' 'lt trs. I L , i ' i r r g l r o \ \ -| i r t ' ti t t r l i t t ' l v r l e . r ' t ' i l r t ' rilr t t i l l)rrtt'rl tlris l(lth tilrv ol Norctrrl)el', l!)'J!. 20 a s c er t i t i n e t l t h e t t i t t r l l ' c t - , f t t t t - s i r i < l i t t r - e t t ('Ri-IliSIIl,JIi & r-\rlt\\-l'l^\1'l{l'lIt. tiotr. attrl itr rrltitt rttilllller tltt: .trtlre is {il. S;rirrt \-ittrettt Srtt'et. Glltsq,rrr. itttti +5 pel'Iolnteri. I tlct'iirt'e thirt u-hai I to lre 6 5 - ( ; ( ; , C h i r u t ' e t ' . r -I : a I l t j , L r - r t t t l o t t , \ \ : - C . , r'lilllll ls:lgents for the \PPlicant. '\ppat'atus fol rletccting ell)illllltions Iledhill: Plrrted for l{is )[aiestl''s Strtionery Oflice, hy' Love & \[aleomson.Lttl.-i$23.

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