Outer space to you, p.19
Outer Space to You, page 19
As yet nobody has been able to duplicate this simple apparatus, as far as I know.
One of my latest experiments involved a thing people have called impossible—a “one-pole magnet.” The minute someone says something is impossible, I am presented with a challenge, as I was in this case.
Does a magnet with only one pole refute Newton’s third law of motion, which states that every force or every action produces an equal or opposite reaction? Whether or not it does, many witnesses saw me demonstrate the “one-pole magnet” during a recent lecture, sponsored by Dr. Alfred Smith of The Space Seekers Society in Philadelphia.
As with the so-called free energy motor, a series of these magnets have turned a small direct current generator and lighted a small flashlight bulb. In my opinion, this is an example of harnessing a free energy to impart work of its own accord, generating a secondary energy in the form of what we term electricity or electrons, which, in turn, produces light energy or heat.
Magnetic phenomena in the form of what we call attraction is not a pull, but a push from a surrounding unseen funnel of magnetic vortex enveloping this planet, which in itself represents a balance of motion in the form of imbalance which continually seeks an equilibrium—an effect presenting itself as secondary energies seen and unseen, originating from a Cause Unseen which is Infinite.
Part 4. The Mystery Appearance
I would like to let you in on the incredible results of one of my own experiments, and the best way to present this in detail, I believe, is to quote from one of the Long John Shows, as he is interviewing Miss Mary ——:
(Jan. 11, 1957)
LJ: This morning we are talking with Mr. and Mrs. Howard Menger of High Bridge, N.J. The young couple has appeared on my show seven or eight times, and they have been telling us about their experiences of having physical contacts with people from outer space. Howard had the opportunity of riding in a saucer. We also have John Otto, Cortland Hastings, and a young lady, the sister-in-law of Howard, whom we will identify with the name, “Mary.” Her last name will not be used, since she is going to tell us about her own meetings with people from outer space. Mary, we have never had the opportunity of having you on the Party Line with us and we have been told by your sister, Rose Menger [the former Mrs. Menger] and by your brother-in-law, Howard Menger, that you have had some rather unusual experiences in the past few months. One in particular was the teleportation of a pipe. This was described to us by Howard. Now, rather than asking any questions at the moment, suppose you just take over if you will, please, and tell us in your own words what happened, when Howard teleported his pipe from Pennsylvania.
Mary: I was sitting in Rose’s and Howard’s living room and I heard this pounding on the door, and so I went and answered it and I saw Howard there.
LJ: In front of the door?
Mary: In front of the door. I knew Howard was in the Pocono Mountain area that night. He stared—he just stared straight ahead. He did not say anything, and he handed me a pipe. I felt very strange—I-I-I just couldn’t understand how he could be there. He was—He didn’t come up in any car or anything. I had this verified about 10 minutes later.
LJ: What do you mean by “verified,” Mary?
Mary: He appeared at the door at 8:20 p.m. that night, and about 8:30 p.m. he called on the telephone to verify that he had been there.
LJ: Now, where did he call from, Mary?
Mary: He called from the Pocono Mountain area.
LJ: Now, how did you know he was calling from the Pocono Mountains?
Mary: Because of the call. It sounded far away. It was a long distance call.
LJ: In other words, when you pick up a long distance call you usually can tell that it is from some distance?
Mary: Yes, and also I found out later that he had been seen in this diner and he had witnesses to the effect that he was at that diner, and he had them sign their names.
LJ: Well, now, let’s just take it step by step. When the operator—first of all, was this a collect call?
Mary: No, it wasn’t.
LJ: In other words, Howard was paying for it on his end. Howard was calling from a diner in the Poconos. Do you have any idea how many miles away from your home in High Bridge that Howard was located at the time—approximately?
Mary: I don’t know how many miles, but I would say it is about an hour and a half ride or a little more.
LJ: Now how do you judge an hour and a half as far as driving time; in other words, did you know the town he was calling from?
Mary: No, I didn’t.
LJ: Mary, I am not trying to be facetious at this moment, but you certainly can’t judge how far away he is by the tone of his voice; in other words, you would say that you thought he was talking from some distance because evidently his voice was rather low. Is that what you meant?
Mary: That’s right.
LJ: Now, you said that he was in the Poconos?
Mary: Yes. He said he would be home in about an hour and a half.
LJ: Is that how you got the idea that it was about an hour and a half ride?
Mary: Yes.
LJ: Did he return in an hour and a half.
Mary: No, it was a little longer.
LJ: Well, maybe the roads were a little bad, and Howard, after that experience, didn’t want to rush. Do you want to say something, Howard?
HM: Yes, on the way back, when I got to Washington, N. J., I went through the Easton area, that is, in Pennsylvania. I wanted to call again, but something told me not to. So I went another 13 miles or so and got to the shop in Washington, N.J., and called from there instead.
LJ: Now this is not the call that she thinks was from the Poconos?
HM: Oh, no, no.
LJ: O.K. Now, Mary, to get back to you for a moment. How did Howard look to you when he came...when you answered the door that night? Did he appear to be in his physical body as we know it—as he looks to us tonight? Naturally, he would have an overcoat and hat on, I assume, but, in other words, did he look the same as he looks tonight?
Mary: Yes, he did, but he stared straight ahead.
LJ: What did he say to you?
Mary: He didn’t say anything; he just seemed to automatically hand me the pipe.
LJ: Was this a metal pipe or a smoking pipe?
Mary: A smoking pipe, and he left it with me and then disappeared.
LJ: When you say, “disappeared”—did you still have the door open, or had you closed the door?
Mary: Yes, I still had the door open.
LJ: Did he sort of dissolve, vanish, or did he walk away?
Mary: He took a couple of steps and then he sort of disappeared.
LJ: Well, is it possible he just “disappeared” into the night? Into the darkness? I am not familiar with High Bridge, but in New York there are a lot of street lamps, and I do not think you could disappear too readily. You say he took a few steps, but, first of all, you say he was facing you, is that correct?
Mary: Yes, he was.
LJ: Did he have the pipe out as he knocked on the door, or did he have to reach into his jacket to get the pipe?
Mary: No, he had the pipe out, in his hand. He handed it to me and took a couple of steps; then I saw him disappear.
LJ: He would have to turn around first, is that correct?
Mary: I did not see him turn around. I think he took a couple of steps backward, then he just disappeared. I felt very strange. I couldn’t understand it.
LJ: Well, you will have to get in line with me on that one! Do you remember what day this was—in other words, was it a Saturday, or Thursday—I am not looking for the exact date.
Mary: December 8, 1956.
HM: We did write some dates down, Long John, but...
Mary: It was a Saturday night.
LJ: It doesn’t matter. Now, let me continue. Do you live in the Menger’s home?
Mary: No, I don’t.
LJ: Do you live...without establishing where you live—do you live some distance away?
Mary: I live nine miles away.
LJ: When did you arrive at the Mengers’ home that particular Saturday, approximately—in the afternoon or in the morning?
Mary: I would say about 6:30 at night.
LJ: And what was the purpose of coming over? Were you going to baby sit that night, possibly, or just visit?
Mary: No, I go there often.
LJ: For supper?
Mary: Yes.
LJ: Was Howard home at the time?
Mary: No, he wasn’t.
LJ: He was away when you got there at approximately 6:30?
Mary: I think he was away; yes, he was. Rose had told me he was going up to the Pocono Mountain area.
LJ: She told you that in the afternoon?
Mary: When I arrived there. He told her that when he left.
LJ: But he had already left. Fine. Now this was about six o’clock at night. Was Rose in the house with you?
Mary: Yes. Rose was resting. She was over-tired, and she also heard the knock on the door.
LJ: And she did not get up?
Mary: She didn’t answer it. I did.
LJ: Were the children asleep?
Mary: No, the children were awake.
LJ: Do you remember where they were at the time?
Mary: My nephew, Ricky, he was there; he heard the knocking. This boy is nine years old.
LJ: And would you say, when you answered the door—first of all, do the Menger children, when they hear somebody knocking at the door, usually go to the door, too, as a lot of children do?
Mary: Yes, they do.
LJ: Did they this time?
Mary: No, they didn’t. Ricky was with me when I answered the phone. He also talked to his father on the phone.
LJ: Now, just let me get this straight a moment. This phone call came prior to the time that the pipe arrived with Howard? Or after?
Mary: After. About 10 minutes later. It was 8:20 when he appeared at the door and 8:30 when I received the telephone call.
LJ: Supposing we forget the phone for just a moment, because we are trying to find out the time that Howard appeared at the door. Do you want to say something, Howard?
HM (Laughing): I know what you are thinking, Long John, and it doesn’t take ESP to see it either. I was just as amazed when I called High Bridge and asked Mary. This was just like a hunch. An experiment on my part. And I was truly amazed and I am still amazed, and I don’t know what happened. I honestly don’t.
LJ: If you will just stick with me and let me present some questions...
HM: The reason for the pipe was to present evidence that I had been there and I looked around the station wagon, 70 or 80 miles away, and could not find this pipe. Then I started to wonder, “maybe I’d better call...Did it actually happen?”
LJ: All right, let me continue, Howard, and we’ll get back to you about it. Mary, when you arrived at your sister’s home that night about 6:30 and she told you that Howard had gone to Pennsylvania—some place in the Poconos—did she tell you that Howard was attempting a contact that night?
Mary: I don’t believe. I don’t remember that.
LJ: Did you have any idea that Howard possibly would try an experiment in teleportation?
Mary: No, I didn’t, to tell you the truth...
LJ: We would like that.
Mary (Laughing): I didn’t know much about teleportation, but there was another incident that I know to be true.
LJ: You mean another incident other than this pipe?
Mary: Yes.
LJ: Well, let’s take the pipe and then we will certainly go on into the other one. This particular night that the children are playing in the...
Mary: In the living room.
LJ: And you were sitting there with them?
Mary: That’s right.
LJ: Watching TV?
Mary: That’s right.
LJ: And it was about 8:30 at night.
Mary: It was 8:20.
LJ: It was 8:20. I must compliment you, but of course Howard has trained you now, because Howard knows that dates and times are very important. Do you remember what picture was on television at the time?
Mary: Gee, I don’t remember.
LJ: It is not of any great importance anyway, and I don’t blame you for forgetting—for that was rather a shocking experiment, to say the least.
Mary: It certainly was.
LJ: When you heard the knock at the door—does Howard have a particular way of knocking?
Mary: He never knocks.
LJ: He just walks in.
Mary: Certainly, he just walks in. It’s his home.
LJ: I am not familiar with living in the country, but don’t you lock the doors there? Are they usually open?
Mary: At night when you go to bed you usually lock them.
LJ: The reason I say that is that if you come to my apartment in the city, you would have to knock, even if you were a member of the family. I think you can understand that—living in the city? We just don’t feel it is safe to leave the door unlocked. So Howard normally would not knock?
Mary: Well, you know, the way the knock was—it was very insistent, just like a pounding, a steady pounding—it was very different.
LJ: Steady pounding, for a considerable length of time?
Mary: Yes, just like a banging away.
LJ: What was the reason? If it was Howard there, whether in the astral or physical body, or whatever it was, why did he have to continue to pound? Was the living room fairly close to the door?
Mary: Well, I did not answer right away. I waited a couple of minutes. I thought Rose was going to answer it, and also it was at the back door.
LJ: The back door?
Mary: The back door.
LJ: Now, you open the door and Howard was standing there. What was your experience at that time? I mean, how did you feel?
Mary: The way Howard looked, I was shocked.
LJ: When you say, “looked,” you mean how he was looking at you—his eyes—his appearance?
Mary: He looked right through me. Right through me. It was very strange.
LJ: What was his next movement?
Mary: His hand just seemed to come out automatically and he handed me the pipe.
LJ: In other words, the pipe was in his hands—or did he take it out of his jacket?
Mary: No, it was in his hand.
LJ: Was the pipe warm?
Mary: No, it didn’t feel warm.
LJ: In other words, Howard is smoking a pipe at this very moment. Will you feel that pipe for a moment (she feels the pipe)? That feels warm, doesn’t it?
Mary: No, it didn’t feel that way. It wasn’t lighted. It was filled with fresh tobacco, but the pipe was not lighted.
LJ: And you said nothing?
Mary: I was shocked. I didn’t say anything. I just accepted the pipe and inside the door I went.
LJ: What did you do at that time?
Mary: I called Rose and I said, “Gee, a very strange thing happened,” and told her about it. Then 10 minutes later I got the phone call.
LJ: What was Rose’s reaction to this strange phenomenon?
Mary: Well, I don’t quite know. I guess she felt strange too. She didn’t know what was going on, either.
LJ: Why did you feel so strange?
Mary: Uhmmmmm (thinking)...
LJ: In other words, let us assume this just for the moment: you knew that Howard was up in the Poconos?
Mary: Yes.
LJ: You didn’t know when he was coming back, did you?
Mary: No.
LJ: Well, isn’t it quite possible that you, if you arrived at the home at 6:30 at night, or approximately that time, and you told us it takes one and a half hours to get back from the location that he was at if he was in the Poconos at the time—because you got the call 10 minutes later—isn’t it possible that you would assume Howard had returned from this trip in the Poconos, and just stood at the door for a moment and handed you the pipe because, maybe, he had a little trouble with the car?
Mary: No, because he said he would be home in an hour and a half.
LJ: When did he say he would be home in an hour and a half?
Mary: When I got the phone call, ten minutes later.
LJ: Yes, but you haven’t got the phone call. You are still at the door. You came from the living room...you were watching television and Howard is staring at you, looking right through you, and he hands you this cold pipe. Why did you feel this was anything mysterious?
Mary: If you had seen him, you would have thought it was mysterious, too.
LJ: That is a good answer. I was not there, and I didn’t see him. Now let’s get to the telephone call.
Mary: That was 10 minutes after I saw Howard at the door.
LJ: You picked up the phone?
Mary: Ricky, my nephew, did.
LJ: Did he talk to Howard?
Mary: Yes, and then I took the phone—I guess about a couple of seconds after he...
U: Did Ricky say, “Hello, Daddy?”
Mary: He didn’t know who it was. He said, “Who is this?” and he couldn’t give him the message straight, because it was too far away. It sounded far away and he couldn’t hear him good.
LJ: It was a poor connection?
Mary: Yes.
LJ: Then you took the phone, not Rose?
Mary: Yes, and it sounded very far away to me. It was a poor connection I would say.
LJ: Do you remember the conversation you had with Howard at that time?
Mary: He said, “I want to verify this: was I there?” And I said, “Yes, you were just here about 10 minutes ago.” And he said, “I just wanted to verify it. I am up in the Poconos and will be home in an hour and a half.”
LJ: Did Rose talk to him?
Mary: No, she didn’t.
LJ: Didn’t you tell Rose? By now you told her you had received the pipe?
Mary: Yes, and I showed her the pipe.
LJ: Wasn’t she anxious to talk to Howard?
Mary: Yes, she was.
LJ: And you didn’t give her the phone?
Mary: She was resting.
LJ: You mean she was able to rest after you had told her of receiving the pipe in this strange manner?
Mary: After he had teleported himself, I went into the bedroom and told Rose about it and then...
