Last updated: July 12, 2020. - Fortean Notes

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Last updated: July 12, 2020.

Charles Hoy Fort's Notes


I, J & K


I:


[Ice (& some Hail)]:


Ice / Meteoricemeteor / deluge and q. / Dec 29, 1820. [SF-II; 168. See: (1820 Dec 29).]


Ice / and metites / 1815. [SF-II; 169. See: (1815).]


Ice / (+) / huge hail and meteoric nuclei / Oct 20, 1824. [SF-II; 170. See: (1824 Oct 20).]


Ice / Hail and cosmic dust / May 2, 1892. [SF_II; 171. See: (1892 May 2).]


Ice / Clear sky / July 2, 1908. [SF-II; 172. See: (1908 July 2).]


Ice / Hail and metite / Ap. 12, 1889. [SF-II; 173. See: (1889 Ap. 12).]


Hail / Clear sky / Aug 15, 1902. [SF-II; 174. See: (1902 Aug 15).]


Ice / Meteor / q / Dec 29, 1820. [SF-II; 175. See: (1820 Dec 29).]


Ice / Hail one place / meteors other / June 23, 1838. [SF-II; 176. See: 1838 June 23, (I: 2317).]


Ice / Hail / cosmic? / July 31, 1869. [S-II; 177. See: 1869 July 31, (III: 1832 & 1833).]


Ice / Hail and great met / June 14, 1877. [SF-II; 178. See: (1877 June 14).]


Ice / June 4, 1814 / Ice, aerolite and hail—Oct 20, 1824 / Ice and q., Ap. 12, 1839 / Hail in ice—July 7, 1839 / Icicles, Sept 7, 1856 / and detonations, March 15, 1860 / March 3, 1869 (+) / Dec 29, 1872 / Slow falling hail, Sept., 1873 / Ice and cosmic, Oct 9, 1876 / July 11, 1884 / June 6, 1881. [SF-II: 179.1, 179.2. See: ( June 4, 1814 ); 1824 Oct 20, (I; 1147); 1839 Ap 12, (II; 35); 1839 Ap 13, (II; 36); 1839 Ap 14, (II; 37); 1839 July 7, (II; 62);  1856 Sept 7, (II; 1976); 1860 March 15, (II; 2427); 1869 March 3, (III; 1712); (Dec 29, 1872 / Slow falling hail, Sept., 1873 / Ice and cosmic, Oct 9, 1876 / July 11, 1884 / June 6, 1881).]


Ice / Hail with cosmic dust / May 3, 1892. [SF-II; 180. See: (1892 May 3).]


Ice / Huge hail with cosmic dust / Oct 26, 27, 1913. [SF-II; 181. See: (1913 Oct 26, 27).]


Hail / India / bet 1822 and 1850 / Top Cat. / Buist. [SF-II; 182. (Top Cat.) (Buist.)]


Ice / Slow hail / May 8, 1921. [SF-II; 183. See: (1921 May 8).]


Ice / Day after day large hail as if from one source. / June, 1858. [SF-II; 184. See: 1858 June 8, (II; 2185), and, 1858 June 12, (II; 2195).]


Ice / Hail—Messina / q—China / Aug 17, 1856. [SF-II; 185. See: 1856 Aug 17, (II: 1966 & 1967).]


Ice / Strange hail and strange bird / Aug 2, 1879. [SF-II; 186. See: (1859 Aug 2).]


Ice / Hail winter in th. storm / Jan 8, 1895. [SF-II; 187. See: (1895 Jan 8).]


Ice / Hail, Jan / 1870, Jan 3. [SF-II; 188. See: 1870 Jan 3, (IV; 63).]


Ice / Hail and distant q / Oct 21, 1907. [SF-II; 189. See: (1907 Oct 21).]


Ice / Hail and q / Feb. 3, 1893. [SF-II; 190. See: (1893 Feb 3).]


Ice / Hail and detonations—1818 / March 15, 1860 / Nov 25, 1894. [SF-II; 191. See: (1818), (1860 March 15), and, (1894 Nov 25).]


Ice / Hail / 7 layers / Nature 48-294. [SF-II; 192. Johnstone-Lavis, Henry James. "Remarkable Hailstones." Nature, 48 (July 27, 1893): 294.]


Ice / Huge hail / March 28, 1867. [SF-II; 193. See: 1867 March 28, (III; 1038).]


Ice / Remarkable hail in January / Jan 25, 1852 / —in th. storm. [SF-II; 194. See: 1852 Jan 25, (II: 1583, 1584, & 1585).]


Hail / 6 strata / July 20, 1900. [SF-II; 195. See: (1900 July 20).]


Ice / Hail / winter / th. storm / Jan 15, 1909. [SF-II; 196. See: (1909 Jan 15).]


Ice / Hail / seven strata / May 29, 1868. [SF-II; 197. See: 1868 May 29, (III; 1366).]


Ice / Hail in winter with th. storm / Feb 4, 1906. [SF-II; 198. See: (1906 Feb 4).]


Ice / Hail photo / hail / See May 30, 1897. [SF-II; 199. See: (1897 May 30).]


Ice / Sheet / June 23, 1878. [SF-II; 200. See: (1878 June 23).]


Ice / But disap. / Nov. 25, 1894. [SF-II; 201. See: (1894 Nov. 25).]


Ice / Hail and salt /July 18, 1895. [SF-II; 202. See: (1895 July 18).]


Ice / Hail large number of places / Aug., 1883. [SF-II; 203. See: (1883 Aug).]


Hail / Spiked hail / Feb 25, 1900. [SF-II; 204. See: (1900 Feb 25).]


Hail / and distant explosion / Oct 28, 1922. [SF-II; 205. See: (1922 Oct 28).]


Hail / Slow / May 8, 1921. [SF-II; 206. See: (1921 May 8).]


Ice / Hail and an explosion / Oct 28, 1922 / Hail from clear sky. [SF-II; 207. See: (1922 Oct 28).]


Ice / Hail up to 8 rings / Dallas / May 8, 1926. [SF-II; 208. See: (1926 May 8).]


Hail / Explosive / Nov 11, 1911. [SF-II; 209. See: (1911 Nov 11).]


Hail / and substance (seeds) / May 26, 1889. [SF-II; 210. See: (1889 May 26).]


[Hail] / Slow hail / May 8, 1921. [SF-II; 211. See: (1921 May 8).]


Ice / Hail / stratified lumps / Dec. 23, 1909. [SF-II; 212. See: (1909 Dec 23).]


Ice / Hail / 9 layers / June 20, 1906. [SF-II; 213. See: (1906 June 20).]


Ice / Persisting great hail / June 12, 1858 / before and after. [SF-II; 214. See: (1858 June 12).]


Ice / q follows hail / Ap 19, 1850. [SF-II; 215. See: 1850 / 19th April, and others up to 21st, (II; 1387).]


Ice / Like river ice / Ap. 12, 1881. [SF-II; 216. See: (1881 Ap. 12).]


Ice / 3-pounder / ac to Russell / in N S. Wales / Dec 29, 1872. [SF-II; 217. See: (1872 Dec 29).]


Ice / Dust / d. fog / Australia / Oct 9, 12, 1876. / R McCulloch. [SF-II; 218. See: (1876 Oct 9, 12).]


Ice / Hail / cloudless sky / Dec 7, 1881 / Aug 15, 1902. [SF-II; 219. See: (1881 Dec 7), and, (1902 Aug 15).]


Hail / Sept 27, 1850. [SF-II; 220. See: 1850 Sept 27, (II; 1459).]


Ice / 1920 / Summer. [SF-II; 221. See: (1920 Summer).]


Ice / Hail long in air? / May 30, 1897. [SF-II; 222. See: (1897 May 30).]


Ice / enclosing hailstones / July 7, 1839. [SF-II; 223. See: 1839 July 7, (II; 62).]


Ice / Hail dislodged from sky / at Batavia / Aug 26, 1883. [SF-II; 224. See: (1883 Aug 26).]


Ice / with French Series / So from external and whirl from external? / Oct, 1844 / Jan, 1844. [SF-II; 225. See: (1844 Jan), and, (1844 Oct).]


I[ce] / Hail fall gently / An Reg. 1859/70. [SF-II; 226. (Annual Register, 1859-70.)]


Ice / Big hailstone that fell gently / Ill. London News 34/546. [SF-II; 227. (Illustrated London News, 34-546.)]


Hail / seen to fall slowly for size / Nature 40/151. [SF-II; 228. Robinson, Edward B. "Note on some Hailstones that fell at Liverpool on Sunday, June 2, 1889." Nature, 40 (June 13, 1889): 151-152.]


Ice / and q-met / Dec 29, 1820. [SF-II; 229. See: 1820 Dec. 29, 30, (I: 832), and, 1820 Dec 29, (I: 835 & 837).]


Ice / Hail / low velocity / metite low velocity / July 21, 1918. / 3 [note cut off / Jun [note cut off] / Aug 20 [note cut off] / A [note cut off]. [SF-II; 230. See: (1918 July 21).]


Ice / and Cosmic / See March 3, 1869. / Oct 9, 1876 / See Cette, ab 1844, and Spain, 1828-29. / See Australia, 1903? [SF-II; 231. See: (1828-1829); (1844); (1869 March 3); (1876 Oct 9); and, (1903).]


(Ice) / Remiremont / Hail as if in a mold / Eng Mec 84/164. [SF-II; 232. (English Mechanic, 84-164.)]


Ice / Nov. 30, 1922. [SF-II; 233. See: (1922 Nov 30).]


Ice / Moosejaw / icicles / July 12, 1923. [SF-II; 234. See: (1923 July 12).]


Ice / clear sky / July 2, 1908 / B.D., p. 178. [SF-II; 235. (D-178.) See: (1908 July 2).]


Ice / large hail / Formosa, May 4 / after q / Ap 14, 1905. [SF-II; 236. See: (1905 Ap 14).]


Ice / —q.—met / Dec 29, 1820. [SF-II; 237. See: 1820 Dec. 29, 30, (I: 832), and, 1820 Dec 29, (I: 835 & 837).]


Ice / pieces of ice enclosing hailstones / July 7, 1839. [SF-II; 238. See: 1839 July 7, (II; 62).]


Ice / and waterspout / Ap. 10, 1888. [SF-II; 239. See: (1888 Ap 10).]


Ice / Large hail from clear sky / Aug 15, 1902 / See 16th. [SF-II; 240.See: (1902 Aug 15 & 16).]


Ice / (+) / June 11, 1858. [SF-II; 241. See: 1858 June 11, (II; 2188).]


Ice / 1,200 pounds / May 28, 1802. [SF-II; 242. See: 1802 May 28, (I; 45).]


Ice / Icicles / Aug., 1813. [SF-II; 243. See: 1813 August, (I; 447).]


Ice / Icicles / Sept 7, 1856. [SF-II; 244. See: 1856 Sept 7, (II; 1976).]


Ice / (+) / June 11, 1858. [SF-II; 245. See: 1858 June 11, (II; 2188).]


Ice / Ap. 2, 1881. [SF-II; 246. See: (1881 Ap 2).]


Ice / Hail long in air? / May 30, 1897. [SF-II; 247. See: (1897 May 30).]


Ice / Icicles / July 12, 1923. [SF-II; 248. See: (1923 July 12).]


Ice / Hail 52 days / Sept 5, 1898. [SF-II; 249. See: (1898 Sept 5).]


Ice / Slabs and great debris / June 6, 1894. [SF-II; 250. See: (1896 June 6).]


Ice / Hail great / Sept 5, 1898. [SF-II; 251. See: (1898 Sept 5).]


Ice / Hail not from clouds / July 31, 1869 / Sun shining. [SF-II; 252. See: 1869 July 31, (III; 1832).]


Ice / Red hail with ordinary / May 7, 1885. [SF-II; 253. See: (1885 May 7).]


Ice / For water in space, see q-torrents. [SF-II; 254.]


Ice / from waterspout / Ap. 10, 1888. [SF-II; 255. See: (1888 Ap 10).]


Ice / Size of elephant / 1800. [SF-II; 256. See: Before 1800, (I; 7).]


Ice / Jan 22, 1885. [SF-II; 257. See: (1885 Jan 22).]


Ice / Nov. 3, 1893. [SF-II; 258. See: (1893 Nov 3).]


Ice / Detonating / Nov. 25, 1894. [SF-II; 259. See: (1894 Nov 25).]


Ice / Hail and no clouds / Aug 15, 1902. [SF-II; 260. See: (1902 Aug 15).]


Ice / Aug 14, 1906. [SF-II; 261. See: (1906 Aug 14).]


Ice / Aust (+) / March 3, 1869. [SF-II; 262. See: 1869 March 3, (III; 1712).]


Ice / and q's / June 15, 1829 / back to Sept, '28. [SF-II; 263. See: 1828 Sept 14, (I: 1406 & 1407); 1829 June 15, (I: 1481 & 1482); and, 1829 July 24, (I; 1488).]


Ice / London / Aug 31, 1820. [SF-II; 264. See: 1820 July 31, (I; 818).]


Ice / floods/ metite / Oct 21, etc., 1844. [SF-II; 265. See: (1844 Oct 21, plus).]


Ice / Hail little force / Ap. 5, 1887 / Sept., 1873 / May 29, 1859 / Ap 13, 1897 / March 26, 1900. [SF-II; 266. See: (Ap. 5, 1887 / Sept., 1873); 1859 May 29, (II; 2297); (Ap 13, 1897 / March 26, 1900).]


Hail / and B. Rain Later / July 16, 19. 1850. [SF-II; 267. See: 1850 July 16 / and 19, (II; 1432).]


Ice / Great hail persistent / Spain / Sept., 1828, to July 24, 1829. [SF-II; 268. See: 1828 Sept 14, (I: 1406 & 1407); 1829 June 15, (I: 1481 & 1482); and, 1829 July 24, (I; 1488).]


Ice / big Hail / dif times / June, 1889. [SF-II; 269. See: (1889 June).]


Ice / hail / winter / Feb 4, 1906. [SF-II; 270. See: (1906 Feb 4).]


Ice / and q / Sept 14, 1828. [SF-II; 271. See: 1828 Sept 14, (I: 1406 & 1407).]


Ice / a sheet / 20 x 20 feet / 8 inches thick / March 3, 1869. [SF-II; 272. See: 1869 March 3, (III; 1712).]


Ice / with Australian phe that is with European / Oct 7, 1876. [SF-VI; 1409. See: (1876 Oct 7).]


Ice / Hailgreat / May 6, 1886. [SF-VI; 1410. See: (1886 May 6).]


Ice / as if from an ice-lake / Aug 14, 1906. [SF-VI; 1411. See: 1906 Aug 14, (IX; 354.2).]


Ice / 10-pound lumps / June 26, 1930. [SF-VI; 1412. See: 1930 June 26, (XII; 234).]


Idealism / I can see somebody else affected by something that he had no idea of. [AF-III; 38.]


Identification / + / On March 14, 1906, a woman committed suicide by poisoing herself in Liffen's Hotel, London. / Weekly Dispatch, Ap. 1-9-6 / Mrs Gertrude Wood, an American, said she identified the woman as her sister, by various possessions, by "a physical peculiarity, which was a family trait", and by her handwriting. But several days later heard from her sister, who was in Paris. [AF-II: 360.1, 360.2. (London Weekly Dispatch, April 1, 1906, p. 9 c. 6.)]


Identified / + / Body of a woman been in Thames not more than day or two differently "identified" six times. / The People, Sept 3-6-3, 1922. [AF-II; 361. (People, September 3, 1922, p. 6 c. 3.)]


Illustrations / + / When a route across Isthmus if Panama was discovered, a priest named Acosta, in 1588, denounced the using of it, because the isthmus a barrier made by divine wisdom. / Howitt, Hist. of the Supernatural, p. 242 / 2 / When forks introduced in England, denounced by preachers. [AF-III: 39.1, 39.2. Howitt, William. The History of the Supernatural.... London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts & Green, 1863, v. 2, 242. Acosta, José de. Historia Natural y Moral delas Indias.... Seville: Juan de Leon, 1590, 148. "Of Domestic Novelties at First Condemned." New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal, n.s., 35 (1832): 353-358, at 354.]


[Image]:


Image / Lot of parachute-jumpers. [AF-II; 362.]


Image / A deer on an ice flow fighting off an eagle / Story in the Sun, Feb 9, 1911. [AF-II; 363. (New York Sun, February 9, 1911.)]


Image / Elephant, stuck in mud and covered with swollen leeches. [AF-II; 364.]


Image / Bending forms in a field of cotton. [AF-II; 365.]


Im[age] / Searchlight or lights on Niagara Falls. [SF-VI; 1413. (Ref.???)]


Image / Sciencean elephant mired in a bog, papillated (spell?) with leeches. [SF-VI; 1414.]


[Imposters]:


Impostors / Dauphins / ['Lost Dauphin' Legend Is Revuved in France] / [The New York Times, March 4, 1928, page 8]. [AF-II; 366. Newspaper clipping. (New York Times, March 4, 1928, p. 8.)]


Impostor / Fake / A French Canadian named La Joie, who got into Arctic and came back, telling of strange lands and peoples. / N.Y. Herald, March 18, 1900, section 6, p. 1questioned about their language, he wwas caught in noerrors of giving one word for something one time and something else another time. / In Washington, was subjected to every test scientists, one of whom was Prof. Simon Newcomb, could think of, and got into no inconsistencies. [AF-II: 367.1, 367.2. (New York Herald, March 18, 1900, s. 6 p. 1.)]


Impostors / See Hoax. [AF-II; 368.]


Impostors / Dec 31, 1891 / [A Famous Mystery.] / Cagliostro (with) / Ev. Standard / Dec 18, 1926. [AF-II; 369. Newspaper clipping. (London Evening Standard, December 18, 1926.)]


Impostors / See again Nansen's story. [SF-VII; 1068. See: (Nansen; possibly Nansen's denouncing Carsten Borchgrevink a fraud).]


[Inertia]:


Inertia / Sept 19, 1927 / 36th Annual Convention of the Master Horsehoers and Blacksmiths of America, at the Plaza Hotel, Jersey City. Horsehoers doing well"things looking up." Farmers asking for more blacksmith shops in their neighborhoods. [AF-I; 363. (Ref.???)]


Inertia / (Vs.) / Dr. Erwin Freundlich, The Theory of Relativity / Ac to Newton, every body has a definite gravitational mass, which it exerts uponn every other body. / Inertial mass is always equal to gravitational mass. If we could think of a body so remote from all others as to have no weightalso it would have no intertial mass. So Newton's 1st law becomes meaningless. [AF-I: 364.1, 364.2. ( Erwin Freundlich, The Theory of Relativity.)]


Inertia (?) / Woman dies. Sounds of a sewing machine go on. / Aug 21, 1875. / Hair. [SF-VII; 38. See: (1875 Aug 21).]


Insanity / Experts / See Alienists / Lib. [AF-II; 370.]


Insane / 3 sisters / triplets / Dec 12, 1893. [SF-VII; 1067. See: (1893 Dec 12).]


Insanity double / [LT] / 1869 / Sept 25-10-e. [SF-VII; 1070. (London Times, September 25, 1869, p. 10 c. 5.)]


Insane 2 / Oct. 24, 1888. [SF-VII; 1071. See: 1888 Oct 24, (B; 960).]


[Inscriptions & Inscribed Objects]:


Inscriptions / under Archaeo. / Aeroplanes / myst assault / Oct 5, 1913 / March 1. [AF-II; 371. See: (1913 Oct 5, March 1)???]


Inscribed rock / Dakota / Amer. Naturalist 20/423. [AF-III; 40. (American Naturalist, 20-423.)]


Inscribed tablets / Amer Ant. 2/69. [AF-III; 41. (American Antiquarian, 2-69.)]


[Insects]:


[Fort's “Insect Year” notes from 1869 are in a separate category of this collection, under: Insect Year Notes.]


Insects / the dragon-flies in after a rain / Aug 21, 1881. [SF-II; 273. See: (1881 Aug 21).]


Insects / May, 1909 / fleas. [SF-II; 274. See: (1909 May).]


Insects / See Migrations. [SF-II; 275.]


Insects / unknown? / Jan 1, 1887. [SF-II; 276. See: (1887 Jan 1).]


Insects / new in great numbers / Sept 1, 1845. [SF-II; 277. See: (1845 Sept 1).]


Insects / from Pelée? / May 24, 1902. [SF-II; 278. See: (1902 May 24).]


Insects / and Drought / 1911. [SF-II; 279. See: (1911).]


Insects / strange / July 28, 1888. [SF-II; 280. See: (1888 July 28).]


Insects / unknown / Jan 1, 1881. [SF-II; 281. See: (1881 Jan 1).]


Insects / and drought / See summer, 1893. / See back, 1892. [SF-II; 282. See: (1892 to 1893 summer).]


Insects / spring and summer / 1926. [SF-II; 283. See: (1926 spring and summer).]


Insect / Swarms / Col / Aug., 1880. [SF-II; 284. See: (1880 Aug.).]


Insects / 1886 / espec. 1892. [SF-II; 285. See: (1886), and, (1892).]


Insects / and birds, etc. / before and after Krakatoa / up to Oct 10, at least. [SF-II; 286. See: (1883).]


Insects / See Col / Aug, 1869 / and summer, 1921. [SF-II; 287. See: (1869 Aug), and, (1921 summer).]


Insects / unknown / Jan 1, 1881. [SF-II; 288. See: (1881 Jan 1).]


Insects / Unknown / July 16, 1908. [SF-VI; 1415.1. See: 1908 July 16, (IX; 1044).]


Insects / After drought / rats / mice / 1930. [SF-VI; 1415.2. See: (1930).]


Insomnia / Dec 24, 1891. [AF-II; 372. See: 1891 Dec 24, (B; 1188).]


[Instruments]:


Instruments / Micrometric determinations of parallax differ. / Eng Mec 48-8. [AF-I; 365. (English Mechanic, 48-8.)]


Instruments / Moon on observer's meridian is about 4000 miles nearer than when on horizon. Consequently diameter should be 1/60th greater. / Is, ac. to microeter. So does not look larger at horizon except by comparison with objects on horizon. / Moulton, Intro to Astro, p. 255 / But just as much confusion, objectsm roofs, chimneys, etc., on meridian. [AF-I: 366.1, 366.2. (Moulton, Intro to Astro, p. 255.)]


[Invaders]:


Invaders / 1885 / Sept 13 / Near Jutroschin, Posen, by Herr M. (sic) Scholtz, chemist of [Jutroschin] / About midnight in fields. He saw a light that astonished him because it was white and more brilliant than a lantern. It moved toward him and he waatched it several minutes. Suddenly a ribbon of light shot from it, and then another, directed toward the ground. He says that with an astonishment that he would never forget he watched this brilliant thin ab. 8 minutes. He says that he was then obliged to continue on his way without seeing the end of the spectacle. Upon Oct 29, ab. 11 p.m., at this place again, he saw the object again, shining even more brilliantly. Sparks gushed from it, long lines of light were cast out. The lights disappeared and he returned to his home, The next day, with the will o' the wisp idea, he returned to the place and searched for the kind of ground, or bog, from which imflammable gases might rise, finding nothing to suport the idea. / Bull Soc Belge d'Astro 7-15. [SF-IV: 2.1 to 2.5. (Bulletin de la Société Belge d'Astronomie, 7 (1902): 15.)]


Invader like Linville / 1873 / May / Exmoor, Devonshire / A luminous globe like the Linville obj, accompanying a manafter a rainstopping when he stopped though not so quickly. Ab. 2 feet from ground. "Something like the steam from a locomotive as illumined at night from the fire-box. Ac to Mr. R.B. Marston, as he told it to Dr. Phipson / "Familiar Letters, p. 22. [SF-IV: 33.1, 33.2. Phipson, Thomas Lamb. Familiar Letters on Some Mysteries of Nature and Discoveries in Science. London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, 1876, 22-24."He cannot say how long he slept, but awoke with the rain trickling on to him, and determined to walk about carefully till morning. The wind had fallen, and the rain was nothing but a fine mist, and he walked (feeling his way with his fishing-rod) for about half-an-hour over the moors. ‘All at once,’ says Mr. Marston, ‘my eyes were attracted by a bright light about two feet in diameter, which was moving along about fifty paces in front, but a good deal to the left of me. I was walking at the time in very boggy land. The light seemed to have come out of a valley which opened on to the ground I was crossing, and this would account for my not having seen it sooner.’ It occurred to him that it might be ‘a species of ignis fatuus,’ but was much larger than those he had read of, but never seen. ‘It seemed to be attracted by my person, for it kept moving as I did, and stopped when I did, though not so quickly: it stopped gradually, and was then quite still till I went on again.... When looking away from the light I could see nothing of it, though a turn of the head showed it was still following. The ground now began to rise, and after going up the side of the hill for some time I found the light had vanished.... It was of a peculiar whitish-yellow colour, something like the steam from a locomotive as illumined at night for an instant by reflection from the fire-box. The light was brightest in the centre, but only of a hazy brightness anywhere, and gave no light whatever to objects near it, for I expected to see the wet grass glistening under it. It was round in form, but the contour varied a little at times, and it floated about two feet from the ground, as near as I could judge.’"]


(Invdrs) / 1858 / Sept / Cor writes in L.T., Nov. 5, 1862. Writes that she and his daughter and a friend were lost on one of the Taff Vale Mountains in South Wales, among bogs. They saw across a ravine "many bright lights swing about near the ground". Looked like lanterns. Bogs are mentioned. Writer says ab 1000 feet above sea level. [SF-IV: 34.1, 34.2. (London Times, November 5, 1862.)]


Invaders / 1888 / March 3 / St Lous G-Dem / From the Batavia (N.Y.) News. / That along the railroad track from Corfu to Indian Falls, had been seen lights like large lamps, very brilliant, see usually between 8 p.m. and midnight. Sometimes three but sometimes as many as twenty. Said that one person had seen several of them burst, shooting out flames. Said to be in swampland. [SF-IV: 40.1, 40.1. (St. Louis Globe-Democrat, March 3, 1888, p. 12.) (Batavia News, 1888, not at NYS website, nil on search.)]


[The following seventeen notes were clipped together by Fort. SF-IV: 56 to 72.]


Invaders / 1907-8 / Pa. / Sept 3, 1886. [SF-IV; 56. See: (1886 Sept 3).]


Invaders / Rail lights / Col. / Feb 23, 1888 / See Jan-March, etc., 1888. [SF-IV; 57. See: (1888 January-March).]


Invaders / March 22, 1880 / Germany. [SF-IV; 58. See: (1880 March 22).]


Invaders / Decatur light / Dec 2, 1812 / Oct, 1834 / May 8, 1839 / Dec. 31, 1839 / Sept., 1853; Sept., 1858 / See Railroad lights, 1888. / June 17, 1872 / Oct. 5, 1872 / May, 1873 / March 2, 1875 / March 21, 1878 / Sept. 13, 1883. [SF-IV; 59. See: (Decatur light / Dec 2, 1812 / Oct, 1834 / May 8, 1839 / Dec. 31, 1839 / Sept., 1853; Sept., 1858 / See Railroad lights, 1888. / June 17, 1872 / Oct. 5, 1872 / May, 1873 / March 2, 1875 / March 21, 1878 / Sept. 13, 1883.).]


Invaders / times of stress / Sept 13, 1885. [SF-IV; 60. See: (1885 Sept 13).]


Invaders / Sept. 3, 1886. [SF-IV; 61. See: (1886 Sept 3).]


Invader / and revival / Jan 4, 1888. [SF-IV; 62. See: (1888 Jan 4).]


Invaders / March 3, 1888. [SF-IV; 63. See: (1888 March 3).]


Invaders / Sept. 18, 1888. [SF-IV; 64. See: (1888 Sept. 18).]


Invader / Oct 7, 1889. [SF-IV; 65. See: (1889 Oct 7).]


Invaders / Ap. 5, 1891. [SF-IV; 66. See: (1891 Ap. 5).]


Invaders / Ghsts carrying lights / Feb 1, March 5, Ap 29, 1892 / See phe, 1888. [SF-IV; 67. See: (1892 Feb 1, March 5, Ap 29, 1892 , and,  phe, 1888).]


Invader / Feb. 3, 1892. [SF-IV; 68. See: (1892 Feb 3).]


Invaders / 1900. [SF-IV; 69. See: (1900).]


Invader / Dec 24, 1903. [SF-IV; 70. See: (1903 Dec 24).]


Invaders / June 30, 1918. [SF-IV; 71. See: (1918 June 30).]


Invaders / Ap. 5, 1924. [SF-IV; 72. See: (1924 Ap. 5).]


[Invalids]:


Invalids and phe / See Witchcraft cases. [AF-II; 373.]


Invalid and fires / March 14, 1922. [SF-VII; 44. See: (1922 March 14).]


Invalids and phe / See Witchcraft cases. [SF-VII; 62.]


Invalid / Stones time a man was dying / middle Dec / 1883. [SF-VII; 70. See: (1883 middle Dec).]


Invalid / July 15, 1882. [SF-VII; 71. See: (1882 July 15).]


Invalid / Also new in house / Nov 12 / 1905. [SF-VII; 1066. See: (1905 Nov 12).]


Polt Invalid / July 28, 1916. [SF-VII; 1072. See: 1916 July 28, (D: 811 & 812).]


Invalid / Jan 26, 1920. [SF-VII; 1073. See: (1920 Jan 26).]


Invalid / July 15, 1882. [SF-VII; 1074. See: (1882 July 15).]


Invalid / Somebody stoning her, but not succeeding, but killing her some other way? / Aug 2, 1890. [SF-VII; 1075. See: (1890 Aug 2).]


Invalid / Became one / Oct 8, 1889. [SF-VII; 1076. See: (1889 Oct 8).]


Invalid / March 12, 1883. [SF-VII; 1077. See: (1883 March 12).]


Invalid / Girl stricken / Oct 8, 1889. [SF-VII; 1078. See: (1889 Oct 8).]


Invalid / Myst illness / Jan 9, 1885. [SF-VII; 1079. See: (1885 Jan 9).]


Invalid / March 31, 1883. [SF-VII; 1080. See: (1883 March 31).]


Invalid / Man dying at time of phe / middle of Dec., 1883. [SF-VII; 1081. See: (1883 middle of Dec).]


Invalid / Girl and polt phe some time before been ailing / Feb. 15, 1884. [SF-VII; 1082. See: (1884 Feb 15).]


Invalidism / Man "sickened" by witchor wizardkilled him / Jan 19, 1892. [SF-VII; 1083. See: (1892 Jan 19).]


1892 July 9 / Polt Stones / St Louis G-Dem of, 13-5 / From Atlanta ConstitutionIn a house in Cuthbert, Ga. Says that whether had anything to do with it or not, sometime before a Negro woman had been taken violently ill upon the premises and had diedunearthly sounds—falling stones and irons. Four young men lived in house. Phe when they were there or away. They were grown men and would have left the house, but their crops were in the surrounding fields. [SF-VII: 1084.1, 1084.2. (St. Louis Globe-Democrat, July 9, 1892, p. 13 c. 5.) (Atlanta Constitution, ca. July, 1892.)]


Invalidism / See phe after deaths / July 9, 1892. [SF-VII; 1085. See: (1892 July 9).]


Polt / Flames / Illness / Oct. 25, 1891. [SF-VII; 1086. See: (1891 Oct 25).]


Invalid / Polt and several in family ill / fall ill / March 5, 1903. [SF-VII; 1087. See: (1903 March 5).]


Polt and invalid / 1839 / 1890 / Aug 2. [SF-VII; 1088. See: (1839), and, (1890 Aug 2).]


Invalids / May have more time to imagine and conjure up phe. [SF-VII; 1089.]


Invalidism / But if case is their imaginativenessonly one case of blind person / March 15, 1901. [SF-VII; 1090. See: (1901 March 15).]


Invalid / Showers of stones and dying child / Feb. 17, 1896. [SF-VII; 1091. See: (1896 Feb 17).]


Polt invalid / Child anyway / Ap. 5, 1893. [SF-VII; 1092. See: (1893 Ap 5).]


Invalid / Confessed did it. / Jan. 7, 1892. [SF-VII; 1093. See: (1892 Jan 7).]


Invalid / ab June 1, 1888. [SF-VII; 1094. See: (1888 ab. June 1).]


Polt / Invalid / Stranger im house / phe / March 5, 1883. [SF-VII; 1095. See: (1883 March 5).]


Invalid? / Boy wastes away but much scared / Aug 18, 1874. [SF-VII; 1096. See: (1874 Aug 18).]


Polt / Invalid / Calf affected / June 1, or 8 / 1872. [SF-VII; 1097. See: (1872 June 1, or 8).]


Invalid girl / Jan 16, 1843. [SF-VII; 1098. See: (1843 Jan 16).]


Polt and invalid / 1839 / Jan 16, 1843. [SF-VII; 1099. See: (1839), and, (1843 Jan 16).]


Invalid / Woman said have hypnotized her 3 grown sons into thinking they were invalids and had to stay in bed / May 23, 1914. [SF-VII; 1100. See: (1914 May 23).]


Invalid / Invalidism brings on phe or phe brings on invalidism. [SF-VII; 1101.]


Invalid / Case of having nothing else to do / and develop occult powers. [SF-VII; 1102.]


Invalid / But seems as if something wanted Mollie Fancher. / The 2 accidents. [SF-VII; 1103.]


Polt / Now I think of invalidism not as vampirish result, but as cost or sacrifice like half-wittedness of math prodigies. [SF-VII; 1104.]


Polt / Invalidism / See psychic trances of invalid / Mollie Fancher. [SF-VII; 1105.]


Invalid / Mollie Fancher phe. [SF-VII; 1106.]


Invalid / Hornsey boy / Feb., 1921. [SF-VII; 1107. See: (1921 Feb).]


Polt / Invalid / Gaskin / Aug 22 / 1920. [SF-VII; 1108. See: (1920 Aug 22).]


Polt / Invalid boy's bed / Aberdeen / Jan 6, etc. / 1920. [SF-VII; 1109. See: (1920 Jan 6, etc.).]


Invalid / Women's son kept as? / May 23, 1914. [SF-VII; 1110. See: (1914 May 23).]


[Invisible]:


Visible to medium / Polt to girl / March 25, 1883. [SF-VII; 119. See: (1883 March 25).]


Invisible Hands / June, 1921. [SF-VII; 1069. See: 1921, (E; 64), and, 1921 June, (E: 62 & 63).]


[Item]:


Item / Prayer wheels in a Lama Temple / One turn = 1,000 prayers. [AF-II; 374.]


Item / For missionary purposes a letter said to have been written by Christ, circulated among the Negroes on Southern plantations (Religio-Philosophical Journal, March 9, 1872). Also upon the document, was the signature of the Angel Gabriel. [AF-II; 375. (Religio-Philosophical Journal, March 9, 1872.)]


[Item] / Use of forks considered immoral / NQ 11/6/89, 158, 293. [AF-II; 376. (Notes and Queries, s. 11 v. 6 pp. 89, 158, 293.)]


Item / Coxey's Army / Big demonstration. The leaders arrested at Washington, at Capitol grounds, for walking on the grass. [AF-II; 377. (Ref.??? In 1894, 20 days sentence.)]


Item / A pure white tarantula / Rel-Phil Jour, 1889, Nov 23-6-5+. [AF-II; 378. (Religio-Philosophical Journal, November 23, 1889, p. 6 c.5+.)]


Item / H. Trib, Sept 12, 1927 / Radio experiments under water at Cape Hatteras prevented by noises made by oysters. [AF-II; 379. (New York Herald Tribune, September 12, 1927.)]


Item / N.Y. Times, Dec. 2-6-6, 1872 / A Brooklyn saloon keeper was about to close up his place. Two men entered. In silence they fought. He got a policeman, They had vanished. But for broken chairs, the policeman would not have believed him. [AF-II; 380. (New York Times, December 2, 1872, p. 6 c. 6.)]


Item / Beats his dying wife, using his baby as a club. / B Eagle, 1900, Ap. 21-18-5. [AF-II; 381. "Brutal Husband Now in the Jail." Brooklyn Eagle, April 21, 1900, p. 18 c. 5.]


Item / The hair-dressers once petitioned Parliament for an act to compel people to wear wigs. / De Morgan, B. of Paradoxes, p. 266. [AF-II; 382. De Morgan, Augustus. A Budget of Paradoxes. 2nd edition. Chicago: Open Court Publishing, 1872, 266. "Reports from the Daily Papers." Derby Mercury, February 15, 1765, p. 3 c. 1. "We hear that on Monday last [February 11] several of the Journeymen Barbers, who went to petition his Majesty about reviving the Fashion of Wigs, were inconsistent enough to march, in their own Hair. This gave many of the Spectators so much Offence, that a Number of the unfortunate Friseurs had their Tails docked, and were marked out as Objects of Redicule by the whole Multitude." "It is said, that upwards of 70 French Hair-Dressers have already been discharged [from] the Service of the Nobility and Gentry at the West End of the Town, since the 12th Instant, in Consequence of the Petition lately presented to his Majesty by the Master Peruke-makers, on Behalf of themselves, and the many Thousand distressed Dependants on their Trade."]


Item / Under disadvantages / Man lame, almost blind, suffering with asthma, 84 years old, but had stolen 22 horses. [AF-II; 383. (Ref.???)]


Item / H. Trib, Dec. 15, 1931 / [6 Condemned Houses Wrecked by Thieves]. [MB-I; 376. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, December 15, 1931.)]


Item / [Good Start on the New Year] / H. Trib., Jan. 6, 1932. [MB-I; 377. (New York Herald Tribune, January 6, 1932.)]


J:


[Jacks]:


Jack, the Peeper. / [Date unidentified]. [SF-VII; 1111.]


Jack, the hat-snatcher / Killed / Sept 25, 1927. [SF-VII; 1118. See: (1927 Sept 25).]


"Jacks" / Slipper snatcher / Ap. 12, 1913. [SF-VII; 1119. See: (1913 Ap 12).]


Jacks / etc. / Simultaneous and far apart / Aug., 1907. [SF-VII; 1120. See: (1907 Aug).]


"Jack" / Feb. 2, 1916. [SF-VII; 1121. See: (1916 Feb 2).]


("Jacks") / Oil "Jack" / 1872 / Jan 14. [SF-VII; 1122. See: (1872 Jan 14).]


Jack the egg-thrower / Jan 21, 1923. [SF-VII; 1123. See: (1923 Jan 21).]


Jack the Ripper / Col. / 1889. [SF-VII; 1124.]


Jacks and Crimes / Aug., 1907. [SF-VII; 1125. See: (1907 Aug).]


Jack, the slipper-snatcher / Ap. 12, 1913. [SF-VII; 1126. See: (1913 Ap 12).]


Jacks / Persecutors / For years a girl posion penned a man unknown to her / June 15, 1924. [SF-VII; 1127. See: (1924 June 15).]


Jack the paint thrower / B/ Eagle / 1894 / May 28-1-5. [SF-VII; 1128. "Jack the Paint Thrower Caught." Brooklyn Eagle, May 28, 1894, p. 1 c. 5.]


Jack the Ripper / Col. / 1889. [SF-VII; 1129.]


Jack / A Jane, the stabber / May 7, 1909. [SF-VII; 1130. See: (1909 May 7).]


Jack the Ripper in Atlanta, Georgia / June-July, 1911. [SF-VII; 1131. See: (1911 June-July).]


Jack / Shooting Jack at Albany / Feb. 3, 1916. [SF-VII; 1132. See: (1916 Feb 3).]


Jack / Unknown maniac throwing carbolic acid on infants / Feb. 2, 1916. [SF-VII; 1133. See: (1916 Feb 2).]


Jack the Ripper / Cases in NY begin / March 19, 1915. [SF-VII; 1134. See: (1915 March 19).]


Jack dress-slasher / June 18, 1922. [SF-VII; 1135. See: (1922 June 18).]


Jack the ink splasher / Aug 6, 1922. [SF-VII; 1136. See: (1922 Aug 6).]


Jacks / How many of them drunk? [SF-VII; 1137.]


Jack, the window-smasher / policeman / Drunk? / Jan 5, 1928. [SF-VII; 1138. See: (1928 Jan 5).]


Jack, the tomb-smasher / Nov. 8, 1927. [SF-VII; 1139. See: (1927 Nov 8).]


Simultaneous / "Jacks", etc. / far apart / July / Aug / 1907. [SF-VII; 1729. See: (1907 July, Aug).]


[Jersey Devil]:


Jersey Devil / Dec. 19. 1929 / Aug 5, 1930. [SF-VII; 1112. See: (1929 Dec 19), and, (1930 Aug 5).]


Jersey Devil / See Footprints. [SF-VII; 1113.]


Jersey Devil / + / Leeds Devil / Jan 21, 1909. [SF-VII; 1114. See: (1909 Jan 21).]


Jersey Devil / Jan. 1924 / See also March 1. [SF-VII; 1115. See: (1924 Jan, March 1).]


Jersey Devil / Jan., 1909. [SF-VII; 1116. See: (1909 Jan).]


Jersey Devil / Aug 4, 1927. [SF-VII; 1117. See: (1927 Aug 4).]


[Jonah]:


Jonah / Story told, as of day after arrival of Star of East, in New London, Conn., in B. Eagle, July 12, p. 12, 1891. [AF-II; 384. "A Modern Jonah." Brooklyn Eagle, July 12, 1891, p. 12 c. 2.]


[Jonah] / [Whale which Swallowed a Man] / [source unidentified]. [AF-II; 385. Newspaper clipping. (Unidentified source,)]


[Jonah] / [T.P.'s & Cassell's Weekly]—Nov. 6, 1926, [page 56] / [Whale which Swallowed Man]. [AF-II; 386. Magazine clipping. (T.P.'s & Cassell's Weekly, November 6, 1926.)]


[Jonah] / [The Story of a Modern Jonah] / [The Star.] / [date unidentified]. [AF-II; 387. Newspaper clipping. (London Star, unknown date.)]


Jonah / Whale and Man story / N.Q., Jan 23, 1892, from Great Yarmouth Mercury. [AF-II; 388. (Notes and Queries, January 23, 1892.) (Yarmouth Mercury, ca. 1892.)]


Jonah Story / + / Appeared first in the Great Yarmouth Mercury, about middle of Jan., 1892. I saw as copied in the Cape Argus, Feb. 23. Said was near the Falkland Islands. Sailor's name was James Bartley. [AF-II; 389. (Cape Argus, February 23, 1892.) (Yarmouth Mercury, ca. 1892.)]


[Jupiter]:


Jupiter / The slowness with which the disappearances and reappearances of Jupiter's satellites take place makes it impossible to observe the exact line of the eclipses. / Duncan, Astronomy, p. 93. [AF-I; 368. Duncan, John Charles. Astronomy. New York: Harper, 1926, 93.]



K


[Keely]:


Keely / + / [Hendershot in Hospital, Shocked in Motor Test] / 1928 / March 10, H Trib. [AF-II; 390. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, March 10, 1928.)]


[Keely] / ['Fuelless Motor' Is Described by Major Lamphier] / NY H Trib, Feb. 271928. [AF-II; 391. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, February 27, 1928.)]


[Keely] / H-Tribune, Feb 28, 1928, [page 10] / ['Fuelless Motor' Critics Make Inventor Talk]. [AF-II; 392. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, February 28, 1928, p. 10.)]


["Voidcombined with AF-II-391."] [AF-II; 393.]


[Keely] / Ev Post, Feb 28, 1928 / [Inventor Admits Old Motor Hoax]. [AF-II; 394.Newspaper clipping. (New York Evening Post, February 28, 1928.)]


[Keely] / N.Y. H. Trib., March 2, 1928 / [Scientist Here, to 'Expose' New 'Fuelless' Motor]. [AF-II; 395. (Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, March 2, 1928.)]


[The following seven notes were clipped together by Fort. AF-II: 396 to 402.]


Keely / Tubes, wires, etc., said been found. But is it said that with them anybody made the motor work? [AF-II; 396.]


Keely. N.Y. Sun, Dec 14-3-3, 1882-Annual meeting of the stockholders of the Keely Motor Co. William Boekel had been chosen by Keely and by the stockholders to share with Keely the secret. B's report, in which says that it would be improper to describe the mechanism, was that "Mr. Keely had discovered all that he has claimed." [AF-II: 397.1, 397.2. (New York Sun, December 14, 1882, p. 3 c. 3.)]


Keeley [sic] / Lit Digest 6/152 / Dec 10, 1892. [AF-II; 398. (Literary Digest, 6 (December 10, 1892): 152.)]


Keely Motor / N.Y. Times, 1875, July 3-4-4. [AF-II; 399. (New York Times, July 3, 1875, p. 4 c. 4.)]


Keely / Dead. His motor shop investigated. / B. Eagle, 1899, Jan 19-16-5. [AF-II; 400. "Keely's Old Workshop Ransacked For Secrets." Brooklyn Eagle, January 19, 1899, p. 16 c. 5.]


Keely Motor / Religio-Philosophical Jour., June 5, 1889, p. 5 / "The force is in Keely, and will die with him. [AF-II; 401. (Religio-Philosophical Journal, June 5, 1889, p. 5.)]


Keely / John Worrell Keely (Cosmopolitan Magazine, 26-633) exhibited his "vibratory generator" to a dozen well-known Philadelphians, Nov 10, 1874, or his hydro-pneumatic-pulsating-vacue engine." After his death Clarence B Moore, son of his patron, Mrs Bloomfield Moore, rented his house and investigated. Came upon an immense globe, weighing about 3 tons. Near it an iron pipe that led a distance of more than 15 feet into the space under a front room. Here a pit and in it ashes and remains of partly burned materialssections of tubing. Floor torn up and tubes found running to the spherical contrivance. Professors concluded that compressed air could have been driven through this tubing. / Etc. [AF-II: 402.1, 402.2, 402.3. (Cosmopolitan Magazine, 26-633.)]


Keely / other mysterious motors. / One by John Murray Spear, the Spiritualist, in 1854. / McCabe, Spiritualism, p. 85. [AF-II; 403. McCabe, Joseph. Spiritualism: A Popular History from 1847. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1920, 84-85. Spear claimed to have been told by spirits how to build an electric motor, and only a few people were permitted to see it; but, in a "well-guarded shed," at Randolph, New York, it was allegedly broken to pieces by a mob, whereupon he was forbidden by the spirits to reconstruct it, due to mankind being unready for its revelation, (according to Spear). Britten, Emma Hardinge. Modern American Spiritualism. New York: Hardinge, 1870, 217-229. Robinson, John Hovey. "Trying the Spirits." Spiritual Telegraph, 3 (no. 10; July 8, 1854): 39. "Common magnetic phenomena are often mistaken for spiritual exhibitions, and I suspect that the inhabitants of the next sphere are unjustly held responsible for much inane driveling, as incomprehensible to them as to us." "You have heard of the 'New Motor,' so styled by its friends. Having some knowledge of this wonderful 'infant,' I am constrained to say that it lives, moves, and has a being only in the imagination. There is no such thing as an electrical motor in existence. A motor is a moving power; but no man whose sympathies are not largely enlisted, and whose judgment is nor to some extent warped, can claim for that curious combination of metals any such characteristic. The part of the machine intended for the application of power has not performed a single revolution; the mere 'throbbing' of a few balls suspended by wires is no marvel at all, especially where there are electrical currents; but it is a marvel that such incidental, nay, inevitable, oscillations should be hailed as a motive power" "I regret that this 'new motive power' (which cannot turn a coffee-mill) should have been compared to one whose whole life was severely practical."]


Keely / Cosmopolitan Magazine26-633 / Keely / All this tubingbut any boiler or engine found? / Chimney from the pit? [SF-VI; 1416. (Cosmopolitan Magazine, 26-633.)]


Killers / See Aug 10, 1931. [SF-VII; 33. See: (1931 Aug 10).]


[Kissing Bug]:


1899 June last / K. bug / See Sept / 1900. [SF-VII; 1140. See: (1900 Sept).]


K. bug / See inhab's of lunatic asylum / Aug 16, 1910. [SF-VII; 1141. See: (1910 Aug 16).]


1913 Dec / "Sting late in year / 1857 / L.T. / Nov. 11-5-6. [SF-VII; 1142, (London Times, November 11, 1857, p. 5 c. 6.)]


K-bug / See cases Aug., Sept., 1925, when no general scare. [SF-VII; 1143. See: (1925 Aug-Sept).]


Kissing bug / See AssaultsLittle Wounds. [SF-VII; 1144.]


1899 June / K bug / See Aug. / Sept / 1925. [SF-VII; 1145. See: (1925 Aug-Sept).]


1899 June / K. bug / See Ap. 11, 1885. [SF-VII; 1146. See: (1885 Ap 11).]


1899 July / K bug / Aug 16, 1910. [SF-VII; 1147. See: (1910 Aug 16).]


1899 June / K bug / not summer cases / Ap. 20, 1920. [SF-VII; 1148. See: (1920 Ap 20).]


1899 June / K. bug. / See mosquito bite / Tut Ank Amen / Ap.., 1923. [SF-VII; 1149. See: (1923 Ap).]


1899 June / K. bug. / See alleged ghost attack / Jan 17, 1891. [SF-VII; 1150. See: (1891 Jan 17).]


1899 July / K bugnot summer / Ap. 20 and before1920. [SF-VII; 1151. See: (1920 Ap 20 and before).]


1899 July / K bug / See Ap. 20, 1890. [SF-VII; 1152. See: (1890 Ap 20).]


1899 June / K bug / See Ap 20 / 1920. [SF-VII; 1153. See: (1890 Ap 20).]


1899 / 99 / June / K bug / See Ap. 20, 1920. [SF-VII; 1154. See: (1890 Ap 20).]


1899 (?) / (K. bug) / See Dec 7, 1901. [SF-VII; 1155. See: (1901 Dec 7).]


1899 / K. bug / See Aug 16, 1910. [SF-VII; 1156. See: (1910 Aug 16).]


1899 June / K-nug / See Aug 16 / 1910. [SF-VII; 1157. See: (1910 Aug 16).]


1899 June last / K-bug / See Aug-Sept, 1925. [SF-VII; 1158. See: (1890 Ap 20).]


1899 June / K-bug / See winter cases such as Jan 9, 1894 / Jan 16, 1897. [SF-VII; 1159. See: (1894 Jan 9), and, (1897 Jan 16).]


1899 June / K-bugsee June 2 / 1923. [SF-VII; 1160. See: (1923 June 2).]


1899 June / K. bug / See L.T. Index / March, 1923 / Lord Carnarvon death / stung by insect. [SF-VII; 1161. (London Times, index, March 1923.)]


1899 June / K-bug / See Feb. 21 / 1921. [SF-VII; 1162. See: (1921 Feb 21).]


1899 June / K. bug / See June, 1919. / Most important is that Lord Carnarvon said stung by insect. [SF-VII; 1163. See: (1919 June).]


1899 June / Puncture marks / See Feb 5. 1920. [SF-VII; 1164. See: (1920 Feb 5).]


1899 June / K.b. / See Summer, fall / 1925. [SF-VII; 1165. See: (1925 summer, fall).]


1899 June / K bug / See in Winter / Jan 9, 1894. [SF-VII; 1166. See: (1894 Jan 9).]


1899 July / K. bug / See Sept., 1900. [SF-VII; 1167. See: (1900 Sept).]


1899 June / See July 23, 1887 / K-bug. [SF-VII; 1168. See: (1887 July 23).]


(1899) / N / July / K. bug / See Summer, 1833. [SF-VII; 1169. See: (1833 Summer).]


1899 June last / K. bug / See La Nat Sup of Jan 16, 1897. [SF-VII; 1170. (La Nature Supplement, January 16, 1897.)]


1899 June 28, etc. / Myst sting / See Jan 1, 1897. [SF-VII; 1171. See: (1897 Jan 1).]


1899 June / K. bug / See June 29, 1893. [SF-VII; 1172. See: (1893 June 29).]


1899 June / K. bug / Myst wounds by psychic snake / July 28, 1888. [SF-VII; 1173. See: (1888 July 28).]


1899 June / K-bug / Attacks on woman / See July 12, 1926. [SF-VII; 1174. See: (1926 July 12).]


1899 June-July / K. bug / See Hypo. Needle / Dec, 1913 / myst shooting / Sept 1907 / etc. [SF-VII; 1175. See: (1913 Dec), and, (1907 Sept).]


Knowledge / By the false methods of of classification that there are units; is definiteness, etc. It is the way of distinguishing of plants and animals between attractive and repulsive stimuli. / Is there some other Knowledge? [AF-III; 42.]

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