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Last updated: July 12, 2020.

Charles Hoy Fort's Notes


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[Taboo]:


Taboo / Coincidences / N.Y. Herald (magazine section), Nov. 26, 1911 / Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey, who was murdered on Greenberry Hill (now Primrose Hill), London. Three men hanged for it. Their names were Green, Berry, and Hill. [SF-V; 1. ("Curiosities of Coincidence." New York Herald, November 26, 1911, mag., p. 6.) Hall, John Richard. Four Famous Mysteries. London: Nisbet, 1922, 87-136. The murder of the magistrate Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey, was discovered on October 17, 1678, "in a ditch at the foot of Primrose Hill," (not Greenberry Hill); and, Robert Green, Henry Berry, and Laurence Hill, (Catholics), were implicated by a confession made by Miles Prance, (which was later recanted); and, these three men were executed in February of 1679, continuing to protest their innocence to their end. "On one point alone do the various searchers for the truth appear to be agreedthe three men, who were tried and hanged for his murder, were innocent of the crime." "I have not been able to verify the truth of this story. It excited much interest at the time. It looks to me, however, suspiciously like Whig anti-Catholic propaganda."]


Tab[oo] / [Compton Will Hunt Secret of Cosmic Ray In World-Wide Study From Lofty Mountains] / [The New York Times, January 3, 1932.] [SF-V; 2. Newspaper clipping. ("Compton will hunt secret of cosmic ray in worldwide study from lofty mountain." New York Times, January 3, 1932, s. 1 p. 1 c. 4-5 & p. 29 c. 1-2.)]  


Tab[oo] / Dr. Bohrand sun's energy from nowhere / [Again the Cosmic Riddle.] / NY Times, Jan. 17, 1932. [SF-V; 3. Newspaper clipping. "Again the Cosmic Riddle." New York Times, January 17, 1932, s. 3 p. 1 c. 4.]


Taboo / Jungle Survey Of Apes Shows Human Traits] / N.Y. H. Trib, Nov. 20, 1931. [SF-V; 4. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, November 30, 1931.)]


Taboo / [Einstein Advances Uncertainty Idea] / N.Y. Times, March 22, 1931. [SF-V; 5. Newspaper clipping. (New York Times, March 22, 1931.)]


(Taboo) / For an account of representation o crosses that appeared upon people's clothes, told of by Joseph Grünpech, in his book, Speculum Naturalis Coelestis, published in the year 1508, see Notes and Queries, Ap. 2, 1892. [SF-V; 6. (Joseph Grünpech. Speculum Naturalis Coelestis, 1508.) (Notes and Queries, Ap. 2, 1892.)]


Tab[oo] / [4 More Sailors Lie Ill Of Dog's Bite Fatal to 2] / [New York Herald Tribune, November 16, 1931.] [SF-V; 7. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, Novemver 16, 1931.)]


Taboo / From Dr. Richardson's Journal, quoted by Sir John Franklin, "Narrative of a Journey to the Polar Sea," p. 157a young Chipewyan, whose wife had died, was trying to save his new-born child"x x to still its cries, he applied it to his breast, praying earnestly to the great Master of Life, to assist his endeavors. The force of the powerful passion by which he was actuated produced the same effect in his case, as it has done in some others which are recorded: a flow of milk actually took place from his breast."  [SF-V: 8.1, 8.2. ( Sir John Franklin, "Narrative of a Journey to the Polar Sea," p. 157.)]


Taboo / In the Sphinx, March, 1893I take from Religio Phil Jour, 1893, p. 732there is an account of a Fakir, Soliman Ben Aissa, who was exhibiting in Germany; stuck daggers in his cheeksm tongue, and abdomen harmlessly and with quick-healing wounds. [SF-V: 9.1, 9.2. (Sprinx, March, 1893.) (Religio-Philosophical Journal, 1893-732.)]


Tab[oo] / Spon / [Just the Man for Politics.] / NY Ev Sun, July 9, 1927. [SF-V; 10. Newspaper clipping. (New York Evening Sun, July 9, 1927.)]


[The following two notes were clipped together by Fort. SF-V: 11 & 12.]


Tab. / [On the Homing Dog.] / N.Y. Sun, Ap. 24, 1931. [SF-V; 11. Newspaper clipping. (New York Sun, April 24, 1931.)]


[Taboo] / Fakir / [Dog Finds Way 400 Miles Home] / NY Herald Trib, July 4, 1931. [SF-V; 12. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, July 4, 1931.)]


Taboo. / [Phosphorous Lack Causes Dental Ills] / NY Times, Dec 25, 1931. [SF-V; 13. Newspaper clipping. (New York Times, December 25, 1931.)]


Taboo / (St. Francis Xavier's Coffin Is Opened for 13th Time] / Herald Tribune, Dec. 6, 1931. [SF-V; 14. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, December 6, 1931.)]


Taboo / [Sees 16-Foot Men by Glandular Aid] / [The New York Sun, December 16, 1931]. [SF-V; 15. Newspaper clipping. (New York Sun, December 16, 1931.)]


Tab[oo] / [16-Foot Men Held a Gland Possibility] / [New York Times, Dec. 16, 1931.] [SF-V; 16. Newspaper clipping. (New York Times, December 16, 1931.)]


Tab[oo] / [Six Survivors of Fishing Boat Here on Ship That Cut Their Craft in Two.] / N.Y. Times, Feb. 8, 1932. [SF-V; 17. Newspaper clipping. (New York Times, February 8, 1932.)]


Tab[oo] / [The Fiery Flying Serpents] / H. Trib, Jan 5, 1932. [SF-V; 18. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, January 5, 1932.)]


Taboo / Hyena men / 1919 / July / Jour. Soc P.R for / A review of an article in the Cornhill Magazine, of Oct., 1918, by Mr. Richard Bagot, upon "The Hyenas of Pirra" the supposed power of certain natives of northern Nigeria, to change themselves into lower animal forms. Some of the data are from a Lieut F. An experience by Capt. Shott, D.S.O., is told. It is said that raiding hyenas were wounded by gun traps and were tracked in each case to a point where the hyena traces ceased and were succeeded by human foot prints, which made for the native town. It is said"At each shooting a man mysterioously dies in the town." Capt. Shott's story is of "an enormous brute" that was shot and that made off, leaving traces easy to follow. It was tracked and a spot was come to where "they found the jaw of the beast lying near a pool of blood. The tracks went on toward the native town. The next day a native died. His jaw was shot away. John Mostyn Clarke was an idea of a kind of atavism and of an overpowering instinct in some beings to return to the animal forms from which humanity came. Ownthat may be psychic aspect to all evolutionof that by a kind of ambition lowers evolve and by atavism return. [SF-V: 19.1 to 19.6. "Correspondence." Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, 19 (July, 1919): 88-91. (Bagot, Richard. "The Hyenas of Pirra." Cornwall Magazine, October, 1918.)]


Taboo / [Family Loses Left Arms.] / N.Y. Sun, Oct. 7, 1930. [SF-V; 20. Newspaper clipping. (New York Sun, October 7, 1930.)]


Taboo / Dr. Waite / N.Y. Sun, Nov. 29. 1930 / Medical / Germ-theory of disease / [The Sun's Rays]. [SF-V; 21. Newspaper clipping. (New York Sun, November 29, 1930.)]


Taboo / [Food from Coal] / H. Trib, July 26, 1931. [SF-V; 22. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, July 26, 1931.)]


Tab[oo] / [Chemist Discovers 'Growth Hormone'] / NY Times, Sept. 4, 1931. [SF-V; 23. Newspaper clipping. (New York Times, September 4, 1931.)]


Taboo / 1931 / Sept 29NY Times / [Mad Vampire Bats Spread Hydrophobia]. [SF-V; 24. Newspaper clipping. (New York Times, September 29, 1931.)]


(Taboo) / [Smuggled Dog's Bite Kills U.S. Sailor; 9 Others Hurt] / N.Y. H. Trib, Nov. 16, 1931.[ SF-V; 25. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, November 16, 1931.)]


Tab[oo] / 1931 / Nov. 29 / H Trib / [Inventor Says His Ray Blasts Foe's Explosives]. [SF-V; 26. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, November 29, 1931.)]


(Taboo) / 1931 / NY Times / Dec. 6 / [California Scientists Seek To Develop Luminous Porkers]. [SF-V; 27. Newspaper clipping. (New York Times, December 6, 1931.)]


Tab[oo] / [Fears Race Will Perish Of Disease Now Unknown] / H. Trib., Jan 6, 1932. [SF-V; 28. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, January 6, 1932.)]


[Teeth]:


[The following two notes were clipped together by Fort. AF-III: 724 & 725.]


Teeth / 3 sets / N.Q. 3-1-386, 439. [AF-III; 724. (Notes and Queries, s. 3 v. 1 pp. 386, 439.)]


Teeth / New in old persons / N.Q. 1-12-25. [AF-III; 725. (Notes and Queries, s. 1 v. 12 p. 25.)]


[Teeth] / [Tooth Cavities Fill Themselves By Proper Diet] / H Trib., June 28, 1931. [AF-III; 726. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, June 28, 1931.)]


[Teeth] / [Doubt Tooth Is Human] / [source unidentified]. [AF-III; 727. Newspaper clipping. (Unidentified source???)]


[Teleport]:


Teleports / See Dew Ponds. [MB-II; 127.]


Teleports / See Migrations. [MB-II; 128.]


Teleports / See Objects in strange places. [MB-II; 129.]


Teleport? / A beetle that eye could not follow / Cur. Lit. 75-475. [MB-II; 130 “Bugs That Fly Faster Than Sight Travels.” Current Opinion, 75 (October 1923): 475-476. “Flight Faster Than Eye Can See.” Nature Magazine: An Illustrated Monthly With Popular Articles About Nature, 2 (August 1923): 75. Psephenus lecontei.]


Teleport / or not / Crocodile 600 miles from habitaton an island. / Nature 103-264. [MB-II; 131. Gardiner, John Stanley. “A Crocodile on Rotuma.” Nature, 103 (June 5, 1919): 264.]


Teleport / See Fassig, part 1, p. 138. / Rain without clouds. [MB-II; 132. Fassig, Oliver Lanard, ed. Bibliography of Meteorology. Part II: Moisture. Washington: Signal Office, 1889, 138.]


Teleport / Water snails and leeches in a small artificial pool in a London garden / Nature 102-50. [MB-II; 133. “Notes.” Nature, 102 (September 19, 1918): 48-52, at 50.]


Teleport / Transportation of witches / Montague Summers. History of Witchcraft, p. 128 / Cent Library / 133.4 / S. [MB-II; 134. (Summers, Montague. The History of Witchcraft and Demonology. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1926, 138. OKQ BF1566.S8 Stauffer Books.)]


[Teleport] / + / BO / 1849, p. 120, Magazine of Science, quoting from a book upon mosses, by M. de Brebisson, tells of a pond near Falain, having gone dry in a drought, the drying mud was covered by a fine-stalked moss, Phaseum axillare, which had never previously been observed in the country. [MB-II:

135.1, 135.2. "Spontaneous Plants." Magazine of Science, 1 (1839-1840): 120. "Spontaneous Plants." Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, 17 (1835): 209. "Few things are more extraordinary than the unusual appearance and development of certain plants in certain circumstances. Thus, after the great fire of London in 1666, the entire surface of the destroyed city was covered with such a vast profusion of a species of a cruciferous plant, the Sisymbrium irio of Linnaeus, that it was calculated that the whole of the rest of Europe could not contain so many plants of it. It is also known that if a spring of salt water makes its appearance in a spot even a great distance from the sea, the neighbourhood is soon covered with plants peculiar to a maritime locality, which plants previous to this occurrence were entire strangers to the country. Again, when a lake happens to dry up, the surface is immediately usurped by a vegetation which is entirely peculiar, and quite different from that which flourished on its former banks. When certain marshes of Zealand were drained, the Carew cyperoides was observed in abundance, and it is known this is not at all a Danish plant, but peculiar to the north of Germany.In a work upon the useful Mosses by M. de Brebisson, which has been announced for some time, this botanist states that a pond in the neighbourhood of Falain having been rendered dry during many weeks in the height of summer, the mud in drying was immediately and entirely covered to the extent of many square yards by a minute compact green turf, formed of an imperceptible moss, the Phaseum axillare, the stalks of which were so close to each other, that upon a square inch of this new soil, might be counted more than five thousand individuals of this minute plant, which had never previously been observed in the country." Probably, Falaise, France, (not Falain). (Brébisson, Louis Alphonse de. Not: Flore de la Normandie. Possibly: Mousses de la Normandie, 1826; print copies only.)]


Teleport / ? / A tiger at the Cape / L.T., 1849, June 5-7-f / Seems that in S. Africa leopards are called tigers. / Don't know about this case. [MB-II; 136. (London Times, June 5, 1849, p. 7 c. 6.)]


Teleport / BO / If anyone accept from spiritualists' records, see account in Medium and Daybreak, May 26, 1871, of transportation of a spiritualist, Mr. Herne, morning of Friday before 26th, to 2 miles into room in home of other spiritualists, Mr and Mrs Guppy. [MB-II; 137. "A Gentleman Carried Two Miles by Spirits." Medium and Daybreak, 2 (no. 60; May 26, 1871): 167. "We confess this is rather an astounding statement, but the truth must be told. The facts are as follows:—On Friday morning last, Mr. Herne had called on a friend living at Caledonian Road. When near Thornhill Square, about twenty minutes past ten, he felt a peculiar sick sensation creep over him, and he became unconscious and knew nothing till he came to himself at Mr. Guppy's house, situate at 1, Moreland Villas, Highbury Hill Park. Now for the other side of the narrative. Mrs. Guppy was in her little breakfast-room when she heard Mr. Guppy coming downstairs—this was about a quarter to eleven. She went to meet him, and was in the act of speaking to him, when she turned round, and between herself and the window saw what appeared to be a large black bundle descending from the ceiling. She screamed out at the unusual occurrence, when Mr. Guppy stepped into the room as Mr. Herne was arising from the floor. He had been brought there by some unseen power. Mr. Guppy’s curiosity was very much excited, and he at once made a thorough search of the house to see if by any means Mr. Herne could have gained access. He however found three doors shut and securely fastened, through which any person would have had to pass before he could gain the inside of the house. As Mr. Herne revived, his heart beat violently and he suffered much from thirst. It would appear that he had been carried by spirit-power between the two places described."]


Teleports / 1871 / Sept 14 / Nature of, copying N.Y. Tribune, Aug 24—that Spoon Lake, near Council Bluffs, never before known to contain many fish, was swarming with "finny monsters". Fish in such numbers that shores line with dead ones that been washed up. All full-grown, weighing from 2 to 5 pounds. Nothing like it ever been known before. [MB-II: 138.1, 138.2. “Notes.” Nature, 4 (September 14, 1871): 394-395, at 395. "A fish mystery...." New York Tribune, August 24, 1871, p. 4 c. 5. "They have come in such numbers that the waves wash them high and dry on the shore where they lie knee-deep, dead and putrefying." "The prevalent belief is that the swarm came into the lake by a subterranean passage, during a late storm, while a few venerable observers contend that the Missouri overflowed its banks and flooded the lake with catfish and perch."]


Teleport / Lottie Fowler / Feb. 17, 1872. [MB-II; 139. See: 1872 Feb 17, (A; 745).]


Teleport / Rev. F.W. Monck, of Bristol, said been carried a distance from his home. / Medium and Daybreak, Oct 17, 1873 / He was a medium, see p. 573. / See p. 604. [MB-II; 140. "Mr. Monck's Aerial Flight." Medium and Daybreak, 4 (no. 185; October 17, 1873): 468-469. "I will say that the report of my aerial from Bristol to Swindon, a distance of forty-two miles, is substanially corrext, so far as I know, I can prove that I was in Bristol at a certain time, and that within half an hour after I was standing outside Rose Cottage, Swindon." "Dr. Monck's Tour." Medium and Daybreak, 4 (no. 192; December 5, 1873): 573. "Dr. Monck's Aerial Flight." Medium and Daybreak, 4 (no. 194; December 19, 1873): 604. Francis Ward Monck.]


Teleport / spiritualists / One sent a penknife 67 miles through space. / Medium and Daybreak, Aug 7, 1874. [MB-II; 141. “A Material Object Carried A Distance of Sixty-Seven Miles By An Invisible Agency.” Medium and Daybreak, 5 (no. 227; August 7, 1874: 504.]


Teleport / (BO) / Spiritualist, Sept 18, 1874, copies from Newcastle Chronicle, letter from Mr. T.P. Barkas, F.G.S., telling of falls of water of invisible origin at seances of "a private circle” of himself and friends of his sitting with hands on a table both in the dark and in daylight. Tells especially of an experience on Sept 8, in broad daylight. By raising and lowering a receptacle, found about where the appearing point was. [MB-II: 142.1, 142.2. “Falling Water Phenomena.” Spiritualist Newspaper, (London), 5 (no. 12; September 18, 1874): 138. “We then tried the height at which the water fell by holding a large piece of paper at an elevation of three feet from the table; no drops fell on it, but several fell on the paper beneath it. We gradually lowered the height of the suspended paper, and when it was eighteen inches from the table drops began to fall, and I think I may say that all who were present were utterly unable to account for the falling of the drops of water.” (Newcastle Chronicle, 1874; not at BNA.)]


Teleport / At a seance at Mr. Terry's, 84 Russell st, Melbourne, Victoria, Feb. 22, 1876 (Spiritualist, May 19, 1876), said that a sea rock weighing 14 lbs was, in the dark, deposited on a tablethen a large piece of coarse sea weed. [MB-II; 143. “Fresh Seaweed And A Piece of Rock Brought To A Circle By Spirits.” Spiritualist Newspaper, (London), 8 (no. 20; May 19, 1876): 234-235. “Remarkable Physical Manifestations In Melbourne.” Harbinger of Light, no. 67 (March 1, 1876): 985. “They then formed a circle about the small table, aud sitting for some ten minutes, part of the time singing, the medium being powerfully convulsed the whole period. With a sudden thump, a heavy substance was deposited exactly on the centre of the table, which, on the gas being lit, was discovered to be a large piece of rock, measuring 12 x 6 x 4 in., and weighed 14 lbs., smelling strongly of the sea, of the kind common between St. Kilda and Brighton. Much pleased at so convincing a manifestation, the light was again put out, when the medium instantly said that something cold and clammy was near her face. This was for some seven minutes disregarded, till a member remarking a peculiar scent, a damp mass was felt on the table, which the gas revealed to be a large piece of coarse seaweed; on touching it, a large number of sea-insectivora spread themselves over the table, and were with some difficulty removed to a more fitting position on a newspaper.”]


Teleport / + / North China Herald, Oct 17, 1878that at Singapore, a python, 24 feet long and 11 feet in girth, had escaped from a rattan cage through an opening 1 inches in width, in a room in which a man was sleeping, and not heard of since. [MB-II; 144. (North China Herald, October 17, 1878.) Probably 11 inches in girth, (not 11 feet).]


Teleports / Bullets / March 6, 1880. [MB-II; 145. See: 1880 March 6, (B; 278).]


Teleports / Corncobsclubsstonesetc. / Aug 14, 1880. [MB-II; 146. See: 1880 Aug 14, (B; 308).]


Teleports / Rain / Oct, 1886 / Oct 25, 1888 / Oct 2, 1889 / Oct 19, 1889 / Oct., 1892. [MB-II; 147. See:

1886 Oct 15, (VI; 894); 1886 Oct 27, (VI; 895); 1886 Oct, (VI; 896); [Review this note for October of 1886, again]; 1888 Oct 25, (VI; 1469); 1889 Oct. 2, (VI; 1885); 1889 Oct. 19, (VI; 1895); 1892 Oct, (VII: 719 & 722); 1892 Oct. 19, (C; 66); 1892 Oct 22, (C; 67); and, 1892 / late in the fall, (C; 71, 72, & 73).]


Teleportations / Light 1888-167. [MB-II; 148. Sherratt, T. "Mrs. Guppy." Light, 8 (no. 379; April 7, 1888): 167. Sherratt mentions teleportations of Mr. Blank and Lottie Fowler, in the Echo, of June 8 and 9, 1871, (not online). Brown, Alexander J. "Flying by Night." Medium and Daybreak, 4 (no. 194; December 19, 1873): 599. Coleman, Benjamin. "The Transportation of Living Human Bodies." Spiritualist Newspaper, (London), 1 (no. 23; July 15, 1871): 179.]


Teleport / Showers of substances at seances / Med and Dayb., Feb 12, 1889, p. 11. [MB-II; 149. (Medium and Daybreak, February 12, 1889, p. 11; not online.)]


Teleports / Rain / March 18, Ap. 5, 1890. [MB-II; 150. See: 1890 March 18. (VI; 1985), and, 1890 Ap. 5, (VI; 1996).]


Teleports / Rain / Oct 25, 1891. [MB-II; 151. See: 1891 Oct 26, 27, (VII; 210).]


[Teleport] / BO / 1893 / April / Field, Sept 2, 1895about April, 1893, a paroquet appeared in a farmyard at Gledfield, Ardgay,Scotland. Caught and put in a cage. About 2 years later, another paroqet was caught in this barnyard. Both were males. No one missed a bird on either occasion. [MB-II; 152. "Stray Parrots in Scotland." Field, 86 (September 21, 1895): 518. "WaIking up to the moor here, I called to see a very old man of ninety-five, who been a gillie on the place for over sixty years. As I was leaving I noticed a lovely pair of green paroquets in a cage, and the old wife said, " Them birdies was never bought, nor brought here." I asked her what she meant. She replied, "They came of theirselves;" and then went on to explain, when feeding the hens one morning, she noticed a strange bird hovering near, but did not take "much notice of  him" till the grandson came in saying, "Grannie, there's a parrot feeding with the hens;" at which she told him "not to tell lies;" but on the child insisting it was a parrot, for it "had a nose," she went out to look at it, and finally they caught it by putting food in an old canary cage, when "he steppit in, the little lord, he did." as she expressed it. Last April a similar thing happened, the second bird arrived and was caught just the same way. Both are cock birds, and exactly alike in plumage. The house stands by itself right up on the hill, with moor all round it—and no one living anywhere in the neighbourhood missed a bird on either occasion. How both birds happened to alight at the same most unlikely place, with an interval of two years between their arrival, is certainly curious."]


Teleport / + / Dog finds way home. 30 miles. / B. Eagle, 1896, Jan 16-7-4. [MB-II; 153. "Pete Returned Home." Brooklyn Eagle, January 16, 1896, p. 7 c. 4.]


Teleportation / (?) / 1901March 9D. Mail / Man took his cat from Tunbridge Wells to Eastbourne, 30 miles away. He went north and left the cat. Cat found at his former home in Tunbridge Wells. [MB-II; 154. (London Daily Mail, March 9, 1901.)]


Teleports / see note 1907. [MB-II; 155. See: 1907, (IX; 540).]


Teleport / Rain tree / July 2, 1923 / India. [MB-II; 156. See: 1923 July 2, (X; 1964).]


Teleport / Rain / Ap., 1925. [MB-II; 157. See: 1925 April, (XI; 418).]


[Teleport] / Dogs come back. / [fragment of newspaper clipping about Cumberland Foxhounds] / Observer, Dec. 5, 1926. [MB-II; 158. Newspaper clipping. (Observer, December 5, 1926.)]


[Teleport] / + / [A Homing Cat.] / D. Mail, 1927March 25. [MB-II; 159. Newspaper clipping. (London Daily Mail, March 25, 1927.)]


Teleport / [Holy Mackerel! Talk of Flying FishesTie This] / [source unidentified] / [Jan. 14.], 1930 / Shipley. [MB-II; 160. (Unidentified source, January 14, 1930.)]


Teleport / Dog came back. / [New York Times, January 5], 1931 / [Exiled Terrier Jogs 25 Miles Back to Airport; Doggedness Wins Kennel From Newark Fliers]. [MB-II; 161. Newspaper clipping. (New York Times, January 5, 1931.)]


Teleports / Water / July 26, 1855. [SF-III; 2188. See: (1855 July 26).]


Teleport / Water / Nov 17, 1857. [SF-III; 2189. See: (1857 Nov 17).]


Teleportation / Animals that returned to Kraktoa / Ill. London News / 166-262 / or Sci Amer / 132-334. [SF-III; 2190. (Illustrated London News, 166-262.) (Scientific American, 132-334.)]


Teleport / Slow falling balls of snow / Ap 13, 1902. [SF-III; 2191. See: (1902 Ap 13).]


Teleports / See 1907. [SF-III; 2192. See: (1907).]


Teleportation / Electrified rain from clear sky / July 22, 1888. [SF-III; 2193. See: (1888 July 22).]


Teleport / B. Swan / horned owl / insects / July 16, 1846 / See before./ See Aug, Sept, locusts. [SF-III; 2194. See: (1846 July 16, Aug, Sept).]


Teleportation / Elec transportation fishes and substances / List / Aug 1, 1883. [SF-III; 2195. See: (1883 Aug 1).]


Teleportation / Dew ponds / Nature 62-495. [SF-III; 2196. Marshall, Arthur. "Atmospheric Electricity and Dew-ponds." Nature, 62 (September 20, 1900): 495.]


Teleportation / Dew ponds / Nature 63-20. [SF-III; 2197. "Conference of Delegates of Corresponding Societies of the British Association." Nature, 63 (November 1, 1900): 20-21.]


Teleportation / Nature, Aug 27, 1896—2 large living snails, Stenogyra (Rumina) decollata, found in a garden in St Kitts. Dr W.J. Branch, familiar with land shells of the island, never had seen any before. Thought might have come with European plants. [SF-III: 2198.1, 2198.2. Branch, C.W. "Foreign Snails in the West Indies." Nature, 54 (August 27, 1896): 392.]


Teleport / Liv / Myst of how frgs got into a cellar / Nature 45-8. [SF-III; 2199. Thomas, R. Haig, "A Plague of Small Frogs." Nature, 45 (November 5, 1891): 8. Muirhead, B.A. "A Plague of Frogs."  Nature, 45 (November 12, 1891): 30.]


Teleportation / Slow Fall / Ap 13, 1897. [SF-III; 2200. See: (1897 Ap 13).]


Teleportation / Elec of water? / July 22, 1888. [SF-III; 2201. See: (1888 July 22).]


Teleportation / Migratory birds? [SF-III; 2202.]


Teleport / B. Bugs. / Sc. Gos. 1886-199, 261. [SF-III; 2203. (Science Gossip, 1886-199, 261.)]


Teleport / New Holland birds and Stratford, Ap., 1885 / blue note. [SF-III; 2204. See: (1885 Ap).]


Teleport / English butterflies / N. Zealand / summer, 1881. [SF-III; 2205. See: (1881 summer).]


Teleportation / A puma? / See letter / Nov. 14, 1931. [SF-VII; 76. See: (1931 Nov 14).]


Teleport / Fish from a pond / Dec. 9, 1931. [SF-VII; 78. See: (1931 Dec 9).]


Teleport / The alligator showerDec. 26, 1877. [SF-VII; 1948. See: (1877 Dec 26).]


Teleports / See May, etc. / 1931. [SF-VII; 1949. See: (1931 May, etc.).]


Teleports / Mice / period of March 3, 1931. [SF-VII; 1952. See: (1931 March 3).]


Teleports / Aps and disaps of fish / Great Lakes / May 13, 1895 / March, 1931. [SF-VII; 1953. See: (1895 Mayy 13), and, (1931 March).]


Teleport / Alligator of Lebanon / Sept 29, 1891. [SF-VII; 1954. See: (1891 Sept 29).]


Teleport / Alligator / May 9, 1891 / Sept 29, 1891 / July 28, 1912 / Shower = Dec. 26, 1877. [SF-VII; 1955. See: ( May 9, 1891 / Sept 29, 1891 / July 28, 1912 / Shower = Dec. 26, 1877).]


Teleports / MiceSee 1892. [SF-VII; 1956. See: (1892).]


Teleport Alligator / Sept. 20, 1888. [SF-VII; 1957. See: (1888 Sept 20).]


Teleports / Men not ghsts / See cases in "Assaults / See "Men". [SF-VII; 1958.]


Teleport / [Yellow Perch Black and Blue] / NY H TribMarch 23, 1931. [SF-VII; 1959. Newspaper clipping. *New York Herald Tribune, March 23, 1931.) Pabst: "Fort circled topical notes in the next-to-last line."]


Teleports / In Nov., 1895, a pear tree in garden of Charles W. Klein, in Lennox road, Flatbush, bloomed. A butterfly appeared here and then a live caterpillar. Sent to B. Eagle and picture of it in Eagle, Nov. 24-8-4. [SF-VII; 1960. (Brooklyn Eagle, November 24, 1895, p. 8 c. 4.)]


Teleports / See Index / "Living Things" (Showers of) / cases besides frogs, etc. [SF-VII; 1961.]


Teleports / See Escapes? [SF-VII; 1962.]


Teleport / (?) / Squirrel / July 21, 1908. [SF-VII; 1963. See: (1908 July 21).]


Teleport / Alligator / Sept 23, 1929. [SF-VII; 1964. See: (1929 Sept 23)/]


Teleport / July 21, 1908. [SF-VII; 1965. See: (1908 July 21).]


Teleports / Snakes / Sept 24, 1910. [SF-VII; 1966. See: (1910 Sept 24).]


Teleport / Levitation / Nov 4, 1912. [SF-VII; 1967. See: (1912 Nov 4).]


Teleport / Reindeer / England / May, 1921. [SF-VII; 1968. See: (1921 May).]


Teleport / Aug 7, 1921. [SF-VII; 1969. See: (1921 Aug 7).]


Teleports / Bear / Newburgh, N.Y. / June 16, 1928. [SF-VII; 1970. See: (1928 June 16).]


Teleports / OpossumMay, 1828 / Coon, June, 1929 (?) / Opossum. Feb. 17. 1930 / Raccoon. Brooklyn, June 19, 1928. [SF-VII; 1971. See: (1828 May); (1928 June 19); (1929 June); and, (1930 Feb 17).]


Teleport / Boa / Island St Vincent / 1821. [SF-VII; 1972. See: (1821).]


Teleport / The impaled stag / Dec. 4, 1922. [SF-VII; 1973. See: (1922 Dec 4).]


Teleports / Lynxs / Jan 14, 1927. [SF-VII; 1974. See: (1927 Jan 14).]


Teleport / Snake / London / June 9. 1923. [SF-VII; 1975. See: (1923 June 9).]


Teleport / Aug 7, 1921. [SF-VII; 1976. See: (1921 Aug 7).]


Teleport / Reindeer / May 15, 1921. [SF-VII; 1977. See: (1921 May 15).]


Teleport / Alligator / N. Jersey. / Sept 19, 1929. [SF-VII; 1978. See: (1929 Sept 19).]


Teleport / Snake / Sept. 18. 1910 / See Sept 24. [SF-VII; 1979. See: (1910 Sep 18, 24).]


Teleport / "Magic" / Sept 27, 1910. [SF-VII; 1980. See: (1910 Sept 27).]


Teleport / Coipu. / Oct. 7, 1907. [SF-VII; 1981. See: (1907 Oct 7).]


Teleport / Boa at Patchogue / Sept 7, 1893. [SF-VII; 1982. See: (1893 Sept 7).]


Teleport / Johanssen case (boat) / 1900 / Aug 30. [SF-VII; 1983. See: (1900 Aug 30).]


Teleport / Snake / June, 1880 / London Park. [SF-VII; 1984. See: (1880 June).]


[Telescopes]:


Telescopes / Large / Flammarion, Popular Astronomy / Lord Rosse's diffusion telescope has a magnifying power of 6,000 times, but, to see clearly, 2,000 times can not be exceeded. [AF-I; 493. ( Flammarion, Popular Astronomy.)]


[Thefts]:


Thefts / Look N.Y. Times index / Sensational Jewel thefts in U.S. / ab July, 1913. [SF-VII; 108. See: 1913 (?) / summer, (D; 670); 1913 July, (D: 677 & 678); 1913 July 21, ( D; 676); and, 1913 / ab 30 July, (D; 680).]


Thefts by seeming occult being / March 14, 1928. [SF-VII; 1985. See: (1928 March 14).]


Theft by spirits alleged / Sept 22, 1871. [SF-VII; 1986. See: (1871 Sept 22).]


Theft / Polt phe and money stolen from a drawer / Feb. 28, 1874. [SF-VII; 1987. See: (1874 Feb 28).]


Thefts and yarn of a dog that said "Good morning."  July 29, 1908 / Pittsburgh. [SF-VII; 1988. See: (1908 July 29).]


Theft / Robberies / 10 years, at Barberton, Ohio. / See Sept 25, 1927. [SF-VII; 1989. See: (1927 Sept 25).]


Thefts / Cat burglar period on London was Jan., 1925. [SF-VII; 1990. See: (1925 Jan).]


Burglar / But stole nothing / polt pheslashed dresses and destroyed valuables / Ap. 9, 1892. [SF-VII; 1991. See: (1892 Ap 9).]


Thefts petty and the speaking dog. / July 29, 1908. [SF-VII; 1992. See: (1908 July 29).]


Theft / Robbery / Queer / Aug 7, 1926. [SF-VII; 1993. See: (1926 Aug 7).]


Thefts / sensational Jewel robberies / U.S. / ab. July 30, 1913. [SF-VII; 1994. See: (1913 ab July 30).]


Thefts / Cat burglar period / Jan., 1925. [SF-VII; 1995. See: (1925 Jan).]


Thefts and Polt phe / Feb. 28, 1874 / See March, 1905. [SF-VII; 1996. See: (1874 Feb 29), and, (1905 March).]


Theme / Sun close. q's, etc., assoc with sun in winter in Southern Hemisphere? Summer north? [SF-VI; 1507.]


Theft / Robber and hypnotizer / Ap 18, 1927. [SF-VII; 1997. See: (1927 Ap 18).]


[Thought]:


Thinking / My process od developing a theme is to have a subject spring in correlation or feel around for correlation as if independently of my volition. / Mind on human convulsionaries. / Then upon furniture disturbed by polts. Convulsed furniture? / What one kind of convulsion to do with other? [AF-III: 728.1, 728.2.]


Thoughts / If a man is to have a [fu]ture life, by evolutionary or developmental processes, what is there to him, corresponding to sense organs of an embryo, that is out of adaptation to present uses, because designed for future uses? / Pineal gland? [AF-III; 729. The principal function of the pineal gland in humans is the production of the hormone meltatonin, (which was identified in 1958); and, its mystical associations were frequently promoted as it is an atrophied light sensor, or parietal eye.]


Thought phe / Ap. 1, 1923 / woman suicidefelt something was trying to possess her. [SF-VII; 90. See: (1923 Ap 1).]


Thought phe / Look up death of Wayne Wheeler (?)the Drgab Sept 1929 or Sept 1928? [SF-VII; 91. Wayne Bidwell Wheeler, a leader of the Anti-Saloon League, was unpopular during the Prohibition Era, (especially due to the addition of poison to industrial alcohol, which resulted in thousands of death), and died on September 5, 1927. Wheeler's wife died from burns in a cooling accident, on August 14, 1927; her father suffered a heart attack coming to her aid and died; and, Wheeler, who had been in ill health, died a few weeks after their deaths. (New York Times, obit., ab Septemmber 5, 1927.)]


Thght phe / Witnesses bewitched? / 1914 / Feb. 16. [SF-VII; 92. See: (1916 Feb 16).]


Thght Phe / Psycho Revenge? / Hobbs of Mr. A case / Ac to John L. Balderton, in the N.Y. World, Dec. 1, 1924, Hurri Singh, as to [William Cooper] Hobbs the lawyer in the blackmailing conspiracy"WellHobbs is already stricken with a mysterious illness. What caused him to cry out in court, against harmless spectators, "Don't laugh at my agony, you baboons!" Anglo-Indians whisper that Hobbs is receiving long-distance treatment from a shriveled up magician in a Himalayan cave. [SF-VII: 104.1, 104.2. (New York World, December 1, 1924.) Hari Singh was referred to as "Mr. A" to avoid revealing his identity as the principal heir to the ruler of Jammu and Kashmir, during a trial of Hobbs for his part in a blackmail plot that threatened to reveal Singh's scandalous affair with a prostitute who also posed as someone's wife.]


Thought phe / In house where former tenants been evicted / Jan 26, 1892. [SF-VII; 105. See: (1892 Jan 26).]


Thought phe / Fears bring on phe? / Oct. 8, 1889. [SF-VII; 106. See: (1889 Oct 8).]


Thought phe / "Wished" afire / See Sept 13, 1910. [SF-VII; 107. See: 1910 Sept 13, (D: 408 & 409).]


Thght phe / Judge / Sacco trial / Sept 1, 1927. [SF-VII; 1950. See: (1927 Sept 1).]


Thought phe / Mind and explosion / March 25, 1931. [SF-VII; 2001. See: (1931 March 25).]


Though phe?  Jan 2, 1926. [SF-VII; 2002. See: (1926 Jan 2).]


Thought phe / (?) / Oct 14, 1923. [SF-VII; 2003. See: (1923 Oct 14).]


Thought phe? / Dec 8, 1921. [SF-VII; 2004. See: (1921 Dec 8).]


Thought-phe? / May 21, 1921. [SF-VII; 2005. See: (1921 May 21).]


Thought-injuries / Evil Eye / witches / Sept 13, 1920 / or 15. [SF-VII; 2006. See: (1920 Sep 13, 15).]


Thought phe by angry girl? / Sept 28, 1913. [SF-VII; 2007. See: (1913 Sept 28).]


Thought phe / Haunted placeSee Mapleton ghost / Aug., 1894 / Someone terrified by this placeimagined a traditional ghostand his imaging was seen. [SF-VII; 2008. See: (1894 Aug).]


Thought phe / ? / Girl imagined assault? / Dec 6, 1890. [SF-VII; 2009. See: (1890 Dec 6).]


Thought phe / by the girl? / July 29, 1875. [SF-VII; 2010. See: (1875 July 29).]


Thought phe / Man "persecuted by witches". For years, after "Failing to marry a girl". / July 29, 1875. [SF-VII; 2011. See: (1875 July 29).]


Thought phe / Instead of premonitions, have people brought about visualizations. [SF-VII; 2012.]


Thought phe / Black magic case as if image piercing transferred to bodyneedle in heart / Nov 16, 1919. [SF-VII; 2013. See: (1919 Nov 16).]


Thought phe / Black magic / pencil penetrates a leg. / Dec. 4, 1920. [SF-VII; 2014. See: (1920 Dec 4).]


Th. Phe / Fear / materializes? / or so nearly materialize that woman in a train thinks a man insulted her? / Dec. 6, 1890. [SF-VII; 2015. See: (1890 Dec 6).]


Thought phe / Girl buried alive and teleported water and drown self? / Feb. 4, 1892. [SF-VII; 2016. See: (1892 Feb 4).]


Thought phe / Look up Dis Debar as a psycho criminal. / Sent to prison for year or so, in 1892. [SF-VII; 2017. Ann O'Delia Diss Debar was a fraudulent medium and a swindler, whose tricks had been exposed by Houdini, yet continued her criminal career in England and South Africa, and was last sighted in the United States in 1909. ("Dis Debar Found Guilty; and Sentenced to Two Years in the Penitentiary". New York Times, March 25, 1893, p. 1 c. 3.) ("Dis Debar Founds a New Cult Here." New York Times, August 26, 1909, p. 16 c. 1-2.) (Houdini, Harry. A Magician Among the Spirits. New York: Harper, 1924, 66-78.)]  https://books.google.ca/books?id=aNUo2iJ5wZIC


Though phe / The beneficient sideFaith Cures. [SF-VII; 2018.]


Thought phe / Stonesabsence of girl's aunt / Oct. 14, 1892. [SF-VII; 2019. See: (1892 Oct 14).]


Thought phe / Set to Work / See Keely Motor. [SF-VII; 2020.]


Thought phe? / Suicidal impulse in somnabulism / ? / Nov. 18, 1892. [SF-VII; 2021. See: (1892 Nov 18).]


Thought phe / Flames and theftsMarch 4, 1905. [SF-VII; 2022. See: (1905 March 4).]


Thought phe / but see sheep / Someone hated sheep? [SF-VII; 2023. (Ref.???)]


Thought phe / See phe in absence of girl's aunt, Oct 14, 1892. [SF-VII; 2024. See: (1892 Oct 14).]


Thought phe / VisualizationsMy own so intense in drowsy, dreamy stateJust before sleeping. [SF-VII; 2025.]


Thought Phe / May bring on the Providential. [SF-VII; 2026.]


Thought Phe / Premonitions may = phe brought to pass by thoughts on them. [SF-VII; 2027.]


Thought phe / See fires in ships / 1929, 30 / early 1931? [SF-VII; 2028. See: (1929-1931).]


Thought phe / See 2 items of animals killed not by bullets. [SF-VII; 2029. (Refs.???)]


Thght phe / Keely Motor. [SF-VII; 2030. See: (Keely).]


Thought phe / By a member of the family? / May 24, 1873. [SF-VII; 2031. See: (1873 May 24).]


Thought Phe / See flamesnot communicateas if certain things wished on fire and fire not exceed the wish. [SF-VII; 2032.]


Thought phe / Flames and thefts / March 4, 1905. [SF-VII; 2033. See: (1905 March 4).]


Thought phe / by enemies / Cases of persons blamedsee Witches. [SF-VII; 2034.]


Thght phe / See Absence. [SF-VII; 2035.]


Thought phe / Faster, sleeper. and stigmatic as self-hypnosis / March 26, 1928. [SF-VII; 2036. See: (1928 March 26).]


Thought Phe  / Fall of the plaa trees into mass of worshippers / theist willed it? / March 5, 1931 / Thought phe. / Millerism? / Oct., 1844 / The q. [SF-VII; 2037. See: (1844 Oct), and, (1931 March 5).]


Thought phe / Here mind of a nation, more or less, on birth of a boybut without avail / [4th Girl Born to Empress As Japan Prays for Boy] / [March 7]1931 / H. Trib / March 7, 1931. [SF-VII; 2038. Newspaper clipping. (New York Herald Tribune, March 7, 1931.)]


Thought phe / See "Witches". [SF-VII; 2039.]


Thought phe? / "Europe" / Competitors ships burned? / 1929 / German ship / French ab Sept. 1. [SF-VII; 2040. See: (1929 ab. Sept 1).]


Thought-assault? / Thompson case / Oct., 1922. [SF-VII; 2041. See: (1922 Oct).]


Thought-attack / Glaziers / bullets / Sept, 1919. [SF-VII; 2042. See: (1919 Sept).]


Thought-phe / See Witnesses? [SF-VII; 2043.]


Thought phe / 2 clippings / ab. Dec. 27, 1930 / The prison keepers. [SF-VII; 2044. See: (1930 Dec 27).]


Thought phe / As visualizedSpon. Combs. people burned and nothing elsesurroundings not visualized. [SF-VII; 2045.]


Thought phe / Fear of fire and a fire / Jan 21, 1909. [SF-VII; 2046. See: (1909 Jan 21).]


Thought phe / Jinx / Jan. 1, 1931. [SF-VII; 2047. See: (1931 Jan 1).]


Thought phe / Home Jerry Meyers / Aunt hated girl? / Oct. 14, 1892. [SF-VII; 2048. See: (1892 Oct 14).]


Thought-fire?  Jan 21, 1909. [SF-VII; 2049. See: (1909 Jan 21).]


Thought fire? / Govt office / Ap. 28, 1920. [SF-VII; 2050. See: (1920 Ap 28).]


Thought-fire? / Ap. 28. 1920 / Sept. 15. [SF-VII; 2051. See: (1920 Ap 28, Sept 15).]


Thought phe / WantedJudges affected / See Oct. 14, 1923. [SF-VII; 2052. See: (1923 Oct 14).]


Thought phe / Someone hated soldiers? / 3 in diff parts of town, struck senseless by unknown assailant / Ap. 30, 1911. [SF-VII; 2053. See: (1911 Ap 30).]


Thought phe / Somebody vs mansions? / A "Red"? / March 10, 29, April, etc.1926. [SF-VII; 2054. See: (1926 March 10, 29, April).]


Thought phe / Someone hated hunters and calamity came to themJan 26, 1873. / Then Nap. Bonaparte hated Italians, or Austrians and they lost battles? [SF-VII; 2055. See: (1873 Jan 26).]


Thought phe / As if by a hater of luxurious living / Ap. 9, 1892. [SF-VII; 2056. See: (1892 Ap 9).]


Thought phe / Someone hated women? / See many attacks upon women. [SF-VII; 2057.]


Thought phe / A witness / Nov. 5, 1926. [SF-VII; 2058. See: (1926 Nov 5).]


Thought phe / See Tut Ank Hamen / May, 1923 / Perhaps not by Tut, but by some living Egyptian, angry at desecrations. [SF-VII; 2059. See: (1923 May).]


Thought phe? / John Lee / Feb., 1885. [SF-VII; 2060. See: 1885 Feb. 23, (B: 638 & 644), and, 1885 Feb, (B: 641. 642, & 643).]


Thought Phe / See Lizzie Borden's slanderer / Late (Dec?) 1892. [SF-VII; 2061. See: Lib / Canada or Boston paper / Late Nov., 1892, (SF-VI; 1419).]


[Threes (3s)]:


(3s) / 1893 / Nov. 2 / 6 p.m. / (q) / (Pembroke) / Swansea / Cardigan / Carmarthen / and in Cornwall / See Aug., 1892. / TimesNov. 3, etc. / Times, 4th, said (Three distinct shocks). [AF-III; 730. (London Times, November 3, 1893.) (London Times, November 4, 1893.) See: (1892 Aug.). (1892 or 1893???)]


[Thunder Storms]:


Th. storm / Winter and q. / Jan 4, 1802. [SF-III; 2284. See: 1802 Jan 4, (I; 41). (Th. storm and tidal wave, instead of "winter"???)]


Th. Storm / Great / winter / Feb 25, 1804. [SF-III; 2285. See: 1804 Feb 24, (I; 102).]


Th. storms / Winter / Meteorological Magazine. 61-133, 237 / PRA. [SF-III; 2286. (Meteorological Magazine, 61: 133. 237.)]


Th storms / and q's / Sept 22, 1905. [SF-III; 2287. See: (1905 Sept 22).]


Th storms / at distance from volc eruptions / See May 7, 8, 1902. [SF-III; 2288. See: (1902 May 7, 8).]


Thunder storm / Winter / Meeor other part of France / Jan 7, 1914. [SF-III; 2289. See: (1914 Jan 7).]


Th. Storms / and volc / May 8, 1902. [SF-III; 2290. See: (1902 May 8).]


Th storm / Winter / and sunspots / Dec. 15, 1869. [SF-III; 2291. See: 1869 Dec 15, (IV: 42 & 44).]


Th. storm / brings large hail in Jan. / Jan 25, 1852. [SF-III; 2292. See: (1852 Jan 25).]


Th storm / and "tidal wave" / July 29, 1911. [SF-III; 2293. See: (1911 July 29)


Th. storm / Winter / Jan 2, 1907 / q. registered this day. [SF-III; 2294. See: (1907 Jan 2).]


Th. syotm / Distant from volc / Aug 26, 1883 / a yellow note. [SF-III; 2295. See: (1883 Aug 26).]


Th storm / of ashes / May 7, 1902. [SF-III; 2296. See: (1902 May 7).]


Th. storms / Tr,emdous with volc., May 8, 1902. [SF-III; 2297. See: (1902 May 8).]


Th storm / preceds q / Jan 29, 1828. [SF-III; 2298. See" (1828 Jan 29).]


Th storm / q / tidal wave / Jan 4, 1802. [SF-III; 2299. See: (1802 Jan 4).]


Th. storm. / and tidal waves / July 28, 1911. [SF-III; 2300. See: (1911 July 28).]


Thunderstorm / in Dec and qDec 11, 1882. [SF-III; 2301. See: (1882 Dec 11).]


Thunderstorms / as Phe / See qs and torrents. [SF-III; 2302.]


Th. storms / and shocks / Oct 9. 1885. [SF-III; 2303. See: (1885 Oct 9).]


Th. storm / as phe / Th storm and volc eruption and b. rain / Jan 4, 1880. [SF-III; 2304. See: (1880 Jan 4).]


Th storm / as associate of volc / May 8, 1902. [SF-III; 2305. See: (1902 May 8).]


Th storms / as phe / Nov. 26, 1822 / Feb 24, 1823. [SF-III; 2306. See: 1822 Nov 26, (I; 1026), and, 1823 Feb 24-25, (I; 1040).]


Th. storm / and volc. / May 8, 1902. [SF-III; 2307. See: (1902 May 8).]


Th. Storms / as phe / Nov. 26, 1822 / Feb 24, 1823. [SF-III; 2308. See: 1822 Nov 26, (I; 1026), and, 1823 Feb 24-25, (I; 1040).]


[Th. Storms] / Thunder and lightning from a dust cloud / May 7, 1902. [SF-III; 2309. See: (1902 May 7).]


Th storms / and volc / Ap. 28, etc., 1872. [SF-III; 2310. See: (1872 Ap. 28, etc.).]


Th. storm / in winter / Jan. 6, 1914. [SF-III; 2311. See: (1914 Jan 6).]


Th. storm / At Batavia / time of Krakatoa / Aug 26, 1883 / Straits Times, Sept. 7. [SF-III; 2312. (Straits Times, September 7, 1883.)]


Th. storm / At Batavia / time of Krakatoa / Aug 26, 1883 / Straits Times, Sept. 7. [SF-III; 2313. (Straits Times, September 7, 1883.) (Not my duplicate of previous note.)]


[Thunderstones]:


Th stone / Dec 1, 1901. [SF-III; 2206. See: (1901 Dec 1).]


Th. stone / See 1893. [SF-III; 2207. See: (1893).]


Th stone / July 22, 1841. [SF-III; 2208. See: (1841 July 22).]


Th. stone / Fitz Gerald obj / July 21, 1923. [SF-III; 2209. See: (1923 July 21).]


Th. stone / Metite in th. Storm / Ap. 13, 1925. [SF-III; 2210. See: (1925 Ap 13).]


Th. stone / England / March 4, 1912. [SF-III; 2211. See: (1912 March 4).]


Th. stones / and q / July 19, 1918. [SF-III; 2212. See: (1918 July 19).]


Th. stone / July 28, 1911. [SF-III; 2213. See: (1911 July 28).]


Th Stone / Supposed / Ap. 12, 1919. [SF-III; 2214. See: (1919 Ap 12).]


Th. stones / Violent at Pelée / May 8, 1902. [SF-III; 2215. See: (1902 May 8).]


Thunderstones / Cinders in hail / Aug 10, 1901. [SF-III; 2216. See: (1901 Aug 10).]


Th. stone / ? / Sept. Early, 1908. [SF-III; 2217. See: (1908 early Sept).]


(Th. Stone) / July 13, 1909. [SF-III; 2218. See: (1909 July 13).]


Th. stone / Aug 23-24, 1891. [SF-III; 2219. See: (1891 Aug 23-24).]


Th stones / March 7, 1898. [SF-III; 2220. See: (1898 March 7).]


Th stone / Ap. 12, 1889. [SF-III; 2221. See: (1889 Ap 12).]


Th stone / June 13, 1884. [SF-III; 2222. See: (1884 June 13).]


Th. stone / Metite and typhoon / Sept 22, 1887. [SF-III; 2223. See: (1887 Sept 22).]


Th Stones / Objects / crystalline / Aug 24, 1880. [SF-III; 2224. See: (1880 Aug 24).]


Th. stone / Pa. / Sept. 8, 1882. [SF-III; 2225. See: (1882 Sept 8).]


Th stone / Ap 18, 1883 / Capron obj. [SF-III; 2226. See: (1883 Ap 18).]


Th stone / May 27, 1884. [SF-III; 2227. See: (1884 May 27).]


Th stones / Shower / substance / June 13, 1884. [SF-III; 2228. See: (1884 June 13).]


Th stone / Substance / July 28, 1885 / at Luzerne. [SF-III; 2229. See: (1885 July 28).]


Th. stones / Brooklyn / substance / July 17, 1887 / See Aug., 1887. [SF-III; 2230. See: (1887 July 17, Aug).]


Th. stone / See early Jan, 1888. [SF-III; 2231. See: (1888 Jan).]


Th stones / Pebbles / Dec., 1871 / See June 12, 1872. [SF-III; 2232. See: (1871 Dec), and, (1872 June 12).]


Th. stone / June 12, 1872 / Metite. [SF-III; 2233. See: (1872 June 12).]


Th stone? / Aug 27, 1873. [SF-III; 2234. See: (1873 Aug 27).]


Th stone? / BD-114 / Sept, 1875. [SF-III; 2235. (D-114.) See: (1875 Sept ).]


Th stone / Metite / Namur / night / July 5-6, 1868 / ac to Les Mondes 18-332. [SF-III; 2236. (Les Mondes, 18-332.)]


Th. stone / June 8, 1860. [SF-III; 2237. See: 1860 June 8 or 9, (II: 2469 & 2470).]


Th. Stone / Feb. 14, 1861. [SF-III; 2238. See: 1861 Feb. 14, (III; 64).]


Th stones / See May 12, 1861. [SF-III; 2239. See: 1861 May 12, (III; 101).]


Th. stone / Sept. 3, 1867. [SF-III; 2240. See: 1867 Sept 3, (III; 1126).]


Th stone / Metite / Aug 5, 1855. [SF-III; 2241. See: 1855 Aug. 5, (II: 1865 & 1866).]


Th stones / Brit Assoc 1852/239. [SF-III; 2242. Powell, Baden. "Report on Observations of Luminous Meteors, 1851-52." Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1852, Reports on the State of Science, 178-239, at 239. See: 1852 Mar 18 / Ap. 30 / 1851 Sept. 25, (II; 1597).]


Th. stones / Dec 17, 1852. [SF-III; 2243. See: 1852 Dec 17, (II: 1678 & 1679).]


Th Stones / Andover / Hants / Sept., 1852 / B.D.-112. [SF-III; 2244. The note copies information from page 112 of The Book of the Damned. See: 1852 / first week in Sept, (II; 1645).]


Th. stones / May 13, 1855. [SF-III; 2245. See: 1855 May 13, (II; 1844).]


Th stone / July 22, 1841. [SF-III; 2246. See: 1841 July 22, (II; 348).]


Th. Stone / and Series / July 4-5, 1841. [SF-III; 2247. See: 1841 July 4-5, (II: 324, 325, 326, & 327); 1841 July 4, (II: 323, 326, & 329); and, 1841 July 5, (II: 330 & 331).]


Th. stones / Pebbles / Aug. 10, 1841 / (F) / (?) [SF-III; 2248. (Fletcher???) See: 1841 Aug 10, (II: 356 & 357).]


Th. Stone / ? / Aug 5 or Sept 5, 1842. [SF-III; 2249. See: 1842 Aug 5, (II; 479), and, 1842 Sept 5, (II; 489).]


Th. stone / and geometric obj / Summer, 1846. [SF-III; 2250. See: 1846 / summer, (II: 982 & 984).]


Th. stone / (F) / May 17, 1830. [SF-III; 2251. Fletcher, 100. See: 1839 May 17, (I; 1553).]


Th stone / Sept 13, 1822 / Listed by (F). [SF-III; 2252. (Fletcher??? Epinal meteorite.) See: See: 1822 Sept. 13, (I: 995 & 996).]


Th. stone / Listed / Metite / July 12, 1820. [SF-III; 2253. Fletcher, 99. See: 1820 July 12, (I: 810 & 811).]


Th stone / Aug 25, 1823. [SF-III; 2254. See: 1823 ab. Aug 25, (I; 1074).]


Th. stone / Aug., 1826. [SF-III; 2255. See: 1826 August, (I; 1275).]


Th stone / Feb. 14, 1861. [SF-III; 2256. See: 1861 Feb. 14, (III; 64).]


Th stone / (F) / Sept. 13, 1822. [SF-III; 2257.


Th. stone / A metite in a th. storm / Sept 13, 1822. [SF-III; 2258. See: 1822 Sept. 13, (I: 995 & 996).]


Th stone / (F) / July 12, 1820. [SF-III; 2259. Fletcher, 99. See: 1820 July 12, (I: 810 & 811).]


Th. stone / England / June 4, 1919 / (?) [SF-III; 2260. See: (1919 June 4).]


Th. stones / (+) / July, 1923. [SF-III; 2261. See: (1923 July).]


[Tidal Waves]:


Tidal Wave / and Th storm / Aug 1, 1846. [SF-III; 2262. See: (1846 Aug 1).]


Tidal Wave / Greatest / June 15, 1896 / Japan. [SF-III; 2263. See: (1896 June 15, Sanriku earthquake and tsunami).]


Tidal Wave / and th. storm / July 5, 1843. [SF-III; 2264. See: (1843 July 5).]


Tidal wave / and th. storm / July 29, 1911. [SF-III; 2266. See: (1911 July 29).]


Tidal Wave / and storm / Oct 2, 1893. [SF-III; 2267. See: (1893 Oct 2).]


Tidal Wave / June 5, 1858. [SF-III; 2268. See: 1858 June 5, (II: 2181 & 2182).]


Tidal Wave / and th. storm / June 5, 1858. [SF-III; 2269. See: 1858 June 5, (II: 2181 & 2182).]


Tides / in fresh water wells / Nature 58/52, 45. [SF-III; 2270. "Societies and Academies." Nature, 58 (May 12, 1898): 45-48, at 45-46. Sinclair, W.F. "Ebbing and Flowing Wells." Nature, 58 (May 19, 1898): 52.]


Tidal Wave / and great meteor / See Nov 17, 1896, or Nature 55/160. [SF-III; 2271. "Notes." Nature, 55 (December 17, 1896): 159-162, at 160. See: 1896 Nov 17-18, (VII; 1622).]


Tidal Wave / July 13 or 14, 1824. [SF-III; 2272. See: 1824 July 13 or 14, (I; 1122).]


Tidal Wave / and wind / Sept 28, 1902. [SF-III; 2273. See: (1902 Sept 28).]


Tidal Wave / and th. storm / June 5, 1858 / June 21, 1868. [SF-III; 2274. See: 1858 June 5, (II: 2181 & 2182), and, 1868 June 21, (III; 1397).]


Tidal Wave / after typhoon / Aug 2, 1922. [SF-III; 2275. See: (1922 Aug 2).]


Tidal Wave / and th. storm / Aug 18, 1926. [SF-III; 2276. See: (1926 Aug 18).]


Tidal Wave / q and dust / June 11, 12, etc., 1897 / Nov. 23, etc., 1902. [SF-III; 2279. See: (1897 June 11, 12, etc.), and, (1902 Nov 23, etc.).]


Tidal Wave / after meteor / Nov 17-18, 1896. [SF-III; 2280. See: (1896 Nov 17-18).]


Tidal Wave / and a cloud / Jan 14, 1884. [SF-III; 2281. See: (1884 Jan 14).]


Tidal Wave / and meteor / Nov 17-18, 1896. [SF-III; 2282. See: (1896 Nov 17-18).]


Tidal Wave / with Aust. phe / See Nov. 19, 1902. [SF-III; 2283. See: (1902 Nov 19).]


[Tides]:


Tide / A well near Sligo, Ireland, ebbing and flowing with the tide / Athenaeum 1828-924. [SF-III; 2265. (Athenaeum, 1828-924.)]


Tide / observed in water in a mine in Austria / Nature 20-401. [SF-III; 2277. "Notes." Nature, 20 (August 21, 1879): 400-402, at 401.]


Tides / in wells / Nature 97-162. [SF-III; 2278. Kewley, James. "Effect of Tidal Water in an Estuary on the Level of Subterranean Water." Nature, 97 (April 13, 1916): 141. Carus-Wilson, Cecil. "The Influence of Tides on Wells." Nature, 97 (April 20, 1916): 162. (Carus-Wilson, Cecil. "Tidal Action of the Earth's Crust." English Mechanic. June 11, 1909.)]


[Time]:


Time / 1 a.m. , Feb 5, Sydney - 3 p.m., Feb. 4, London / Nature 6-202. [AF-III; 731. Russell, Henry Chamberlain. "The Aurora of Feb. 4." Nature, 6 (July 11, 1872): 202.]


Time / [question and answer about time] / [source unidentified]. [MB-II; 162. Newspaper clipping. (Unidentified source.)]


Time / Same local / q, Peru / metite, Prussia / Feb 1, 1883. [SF-III; 2314. See: (1883 Feb 1).]


Time / Same time / aurora, Ireland / metqU.S. / Feb 27, 1883. [SF-III; 2315. See: (1883 Feb 27).]


Time / Same Local / Feb 3, 1873 / Feb 4, 1920-(?) [SF-III; 2316. See: (1873 Feb 3), and, (1920??? Feb 4).]


Time / Same local / q at Jamaica and registered at Isle of Wight / Jan 3, 1908. [SF-III; 2317. See: (1908 Jan 3).]


Time / Same local Time / qs, Peru and Chile / March 4, 1904. [SF-III; 2318. See: (1904 March 4).]


Time / 14 h. = 2 a.m. / Time (astro) starts noon. [SF-VI; 1508.]


Time / French = 10 h = 10 a.m. astro time. [SF-VI; 1509.]


Time / Local same / q's recorded / Jan 22, 1910. [SF-VI; 1510. See: 1910 Jan. 22, (IX; 1520).]


Time / M / Australian times / When noon at Adelaide, S. Australia / 0:30, Port Darwin / 4:22 Bombay / 8:10 Naples / 9:14 London / N.Y. 2:12 a.m. of following day / L.T., Feb. 13, 1873. [SF-VI; 1511. (London Times, February 13, 1873.)]


Times / Phe / Crosshills / ab. noon / Sept. 1880. [SF-VII; 1946. See: (1880 Sept).]


Timed / Stones / Nov. 1, 1881. [SF-VII; 1947. See: (1881 Nov 1).]


[The following two notes were clipped together by Fort. SF-Vi: 1512 & 1513.]


[Time?] / 17 days apart / New Brunswick / Jan 28, 184[note crumbling] / Feb 14 / Sept 25 / Oct 12. [SF-VI; 1512. (Refs.???)]


[? Time ?] / 55 days / See May 25, 1894. [SF-VI; 1513. See: 1894 May 25, (VII; 1024).]


(Time) / Polt / Bewitched girlsevery evening / June, 1871. [SF-VII; 1998. See: (1871 June).]


Timed phe same days next week / Aug 1, 1907. [SF-VII; 1999. See: (1907 Aug 1).]


Timed phe / A sleeper / Dec 24, 1899. [SF-VII; 2000. See: (1899 Dec 24).]


[Track]:


Track / I have NY Times Indexed to July, 1880. / Trib Indexed 1875-79 / 1891-1903. [MB-II; 163.]


Track / Have Religio Phil Jour, 1889-'90 / n.g. around '90 / Have to March 7, 1891 / bound with 1890. [MB-II; 164.]


Track / Have not D. News for insects, summer, 1921 / not Sunday Express. [SF-III; 2319.]


Track / W. Dispatch to 1923 / D News at March 20, 1920. [SF-III; 2320.]


[Trance]:


Trance and saved from burial alive / Sept. 30, 1931. [SF-VII; 58. See: (1931 Sept 30).]


Animation Suspended / N and Q / ser. 2 / 6-298, 470. [SF-VII; 468. (Notes and Queries, s. 2 v. 6 pp. 298, 470.)]


Trances whole family / Jan 28, 1874. [SF-VII; 1951. See: (1874 Jan 28).]


Trance / Man / March 24, 1881. [SF-VII; 2062. See: (1881 March 24).]


Trance / Cataleptic / Religio-Phil. Jour / March 19-6-4 / 1881 / YRA++. [SF-VII; 2063. (Religio-Philosophical Journal, March 19, 1881, p. 6 c. 4.)]


Trances / See W.I. Bishop. / May 13, 1889. [SF-VII; 2064. See: (1889 May 13).]


Trance / Se;f Hypnotic / Ap. 10, 1903. [SF-VII; 2065. See: (1903 Ap 10).]


Trance / June / 1883. [SF-VII; 2066. See: (1883 June).]


Trance / Phe of K Hauser / Jan 29, 1876. [SF-VII; 2067. See: (1876 Jan 29).]


Trances / After serious injuriesSee 1876, Jan 29 / etc. [SF-VII; 2068. See: (1876 Jan 29).]


Trances / A family / Jan 28, 1874. [SF-VII; 2069. See: (1874 Jan 28).]


Trance / Boy in polt case insensible at times / 1850 / March / note (6) / note (12). [SF-VII; 2070. See: 1850-51, (A; 274); 1850 March 10,( A: 275 & 276); and, 1850, (A; 277).]


Trance / Ap. 5, 1875 / [note cut off] though sight restored on 18th. Cured on 30th. [SF-VII; 2071. See: 1875 Ap 5 to May 5, (B; 50).]


Trance / Jan 1, 1873. [SF-VII; 2072. See: (1873 Jan 1).]


Trance / May 19, 1877. [SF-VII; 2073. See: (1877 May 19).]


Trances / Probably hypnotic. [SF-VII; 2074.]


Trance / See Sleeping Sickness. [SF-VII; 2075.]


Trance / (+) / W. Irving Bishop'sin which he died / May 13, 1889. [SF-VII; 2076. See: (1889 May 13).]


Trance / Police captain's daughter / ab. Aug 1, 1886. [SF-VII; 2077. See: (1886 ab Aug 1).]


Trance / Man / Aug 11, 1888. [SF-VII; 2078. See: (1888 Aug 11).]


Trance / Ap. 21-5-2 / [source unidentified]. [SF-VII; 2079. (Unidentified source, April 21, year???. p. 5 c. 2.)]


Trance / Sept 26, 1926. [SF-VII; 2080. See: (1926 Sept 26).]


Trance / Times, Feb 2, 1892 / case in Germany. [SF-VII; 2081. See: (1892 Feb 2).]


Trance / Aug 11 (?), 1884 / ab Aug 1, 1886. [SF-VII; 2082. See: (1884  Aug 11), and, (1886 ab Aug 1).]


Trance / See Wakefulness / Jan 1, 1884. [SF-VII; 2083. See: (1884 Jan 1).]


Trances at Revivals / March, 1884, at Zanesville, Ohio, revival, women fell into trances for hours. / Rel-Phil Jour / Ap 5, 1884. [SF-VII; 2084. (Religio-Philosophical Journal, April 5, 1884.)]


Trance / Infant / Aug 10, 1889. [SF-VII; 2085. See: (1889 Aug 10).]


Trance / Sleeping infant / See Aug 10, 1889. [SF-VII; 2086. See: (1889 Aug 10).]


Trance / Sept 4, 1840 / Sept 2, 1852 / Oct 27, 1864 / July 14, 1869 / March 5, 1870 / Feb 12, 1875 / April, 1876 / Etc. [SF-VII; 2087. See: ( Sept 4, 1840 / Sept 2, 1852 / Oct 27, 1864 / July 14, 1869 / March 5, 1870 / Feb 12, 1875 / April, 1876).]


Trance / A boy sleeper / Feb 21, 1891. [SF-VII; 2088. See: (1891 Feb 21).]


Trance / Cataleptic / June 1, 1913. [SF-VII; 2089. See: (1913 June 1).]


Trance / Religio-Phil Jour, Ap. 23, 1887, translated from the Revue Spirite (Paris) / In month of April, 1886, VaclavPodbrsky, a stonecutter of Haykovic, appeared at the court of the royal imperial district at Vlasim, against Francis Solinek, a quarryman of Laumovie, Bohemia, to compel payment of wages due him for cutting stone on Blanik Mountain in year 1868. Case came up contending that Pod. had been dead 18 years having fallen down a cliff and body never found. Wages amounted to ab 50 cents in American money. Told that he had fallen from mt and in a trance 18 years/ Also this was his excuse for evading military duty. [SF-VII: 2090.1, 2090.2, 2090.3. (Religio-Philosophical Journal, April 23, 1887.) (Revue Spirite, ca. 1886-1887.)]


Trance / Sept 20, 1896. [SF-VII; 2091. See: (1896 Sept 20).]


Trance / March 5, 1900 / March 6. [SF-VII; 2092. See: (1900 March 5, 6.).]


Trance / Man / March 24, 1881. [SF-VII; 2093. See: (1881 March 24).]


Trance / W. Irving Bishop / May 13, 1889. [SF-VII; 2094. See: (1889 May 13).]


Trance and Vampire / Bertrand / 1849. [SF-VII; 2095. See: (1849).]


Truth / That all triangles = X. / But unless do = X, not call them triangles. [AF-III; 732.]


[Tunnel]:


Tunnel / Train set afire in. / July 21, 1924. [SF-VII; 2096. See: (1924 July 21).]


Tunnel / Mysts / Merstham / July, 1922  See Railroad Mishaps from Jan. 1. [SF-VII; 2097. see: (1922).]


Tunnel / Disap at Merstham / May 4, 1922. [SF-VII; 2098. See: (1922 May 4).]


Tunnel / Aug 18, 1907. [SF-VII; 2099. See: (1907 Aug 18).]


Tunnel / Jan 18, 1906 / Aug 15, 1906 / See Mooney / Sept., 1905, or Nov. [SF-VII; 2100. See: (1906 Jan 18); (1906 Aug 16); and, (1905 Sept-Nov).]


Tunnel case / Mary Money / Sept 24, 1905 / See Nov. 27. [SF-VII; 2101. See: (1905 Sept 24, Nov 27).]


Tunnel / May 9, 1922. [SF-VII; 2102. See: (1922 May 9).]


Tunnel / Loss memory / youths at Merstham / Oct. 12, 1921. [SF-VII; 2103. See: (1921 Oct 12).]


Tunnel / July 1, 1920 / See July 19. [SF-VII; 2104. See: (1920 July 1, 19).]


Tunnel / July 21, 1924. [SF-VII; 2105. See: (1924 July 21).]


Tunnel / Aug 15, 1906. [SF-VII; 2106. See: (1906 Aug 15).]


[Typhoid Mary]:


Typhoid Mary / Outlook, vol. 109, p. 803 / In 1906 found to be distributer of the typhoid bacillus/ For three years "detained" in a hospital by the public health officials of New York City. In Feb, 1910, tests indicated that she was no longer a public menace. She was released, upon promising to report for occasional examinations to the Board of Health. Did not keep her promise but obtained work under various aliases. Health Department traced to her a typhoid epidemic of 25 cases and 2 deaths at the Sloane Maternity Hospital, in New York, where she was a cook at the time. / See N.Y. Times, 1915, Ap. 4, V, 3. / 8-12-6. [MB-II: 165.1, 165.2, 165.3. "Typhoid Mary." Outlook, 109 (April 7, 1915): 803-804. ("Typhoid Mary Has Reappeared." New York Times, April 4, 1915, s. 5 p. 3.) (Werner, A.H. "A Cure for Typhoid Mary." New York Times, April 8, 1915, p. 12 c. 6.)]


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   

Typhoid Mary / See Disease. [SF-VII; 1945.]

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