Hieronymus

Classicalfan626

Visionary
Zenith
Messages
4,025
@deadz74 - Very interesting stuff!

Just one question:
  1. What exactly does this have to do with time travel and time machines?
 

Num7

Administrator
Staff
Messages
12,453
Never heard of this device before. Many of the effects they claim it has are somewhat close to what the HDR can do, although they're never talking about time travel.
 

Opmmur

Time Travel Professor
Messages
5,049
The Incredible Hieronymus Machine

Flying high over the peaceful, rolling hills and lush farmland of the Cumberland Valley near the Pennsylvania Dutch Country, the converted military reconnaissance aircraft's wing-mounted cameras faithfully recorded thousands of acres below where the precious crops were being attacked by countless hordes of hungry insects.

The men who'd chartered the plane developed the film and showed it to one of the local farmers. He outlined the blighted areas of his farm in ink, spreading patches of brownish-gray. A young technician from the Homeotronic Research Foundation in Newport, PA. Scissored out the sections the farmer hadindicated, and kept the negatives. Then he placed the selected cuts in the small well of a strange-looking black box with dials on the outside and some kind of electronic-looking circuitry inside. An electric cord on the box was plugged into an outdoor socket.

"Turn this large dial on the top all the way to the right," the technician instructed the farmer, "every morning from 8:30 to 11 for a week.

Several days passed before the farmer and the owners of thee black box device inspected the "treated" areas. They found that virtually every corn borer, Japanese beetle, and even the nematodes in the soil of the outlined areas were completely dead- exterminated in some strange manner by "something" - a non-electronic power or force from the box.

In central Florida a few months later, Dr. William J. Hale, then chief of Dow Chemical Company research, photographed a blighted citrus orchard. He painted the pictures of several rows of infected trees with a chemical that was deadly to the insects, in this case, the slender, threadlike nematodes, which in a warm climate are among the world's most destructive and ineradicable parasites. They bore into the soil to depths of 10 to 14 feet and are perfectly immune to the most deadly pesticides.

Dow's chief chemist placed the photograph into a device that looked almost identical to that used in Pennsylvania and instructed the citrus grower as follows: "Turn this big dial all the way to the right for two hours every morning." This particular machine seemed to be electronically powered, but there was no visible power source.

One week later, every second row-the areas Dr. Hale had painted with the chemical reagent in the photograph- was free of the parasitic infestation. Some invisible force from the “machine” in the soil that had been their haven and breeding ground had killed uncountable numbers of dead nematodes deep in the soil, unreachable by ordinary means.

The extermination of insects - at a distance and without pesticides- at the Municipal Works in Rosenheim, West Germany, was also reported in detail in the November 3, 1969, issue of the Journal of Para physics. Similar experiments in California an Arizona was conducted by members of the Homeotronic Research Foundation. Fifty thousand acres of diseased and insect infested trees were treated successfully.

In this "biotonic" treatment, the "resonant point of contact" was a leaf or some sap from a plant or tree. In the same way, people have been treated with these psionics machines; among humans, a sample of blood, a lock of hair, or a skin scraping has been used to establish the "link" to the patient. Even a photograph can be used effectively - as long as the negative isn't destroyed!

Impossible? Of course it is - according to the:” known and accepted laws of science." But science couldn't possibly know all the laws that exist in the Universe. In fact, by the discovery of a completely new and different kind of energy or force, researchers learned that the scientific method doesn't always work!

In 1950 a man named J. P. Boyce of Victorville, California, was invited to visit the helpless owners of a huge expanse of cotton in Arizona near Tucson called the Cortaro Farms. Despite heavy crop dusting on a wholesale basis, the cotton growers were being eaten out of several million dollars by boll weevils. They were desperate, so when they heard the fantastic stories about Boysce's "magic box" they decided to try it.

Here's part of a feature story written by Norman Harrington for the Tucson Daily Citizen about what happened:

"The management of the Cortaro farms gave Boyce an 80-acre plot of cotton to work on and sat back to watch the results. "Here's where the story becomes more fantastic! "First, this man took an aerial photo of the 80-acre field. He then determined what insects were likely to strike the cotton field and selected a natural repellent. Science says that every known insect has a 'natural' repellent, so this is fairly easy to determine. "Then the man brought out a small piece of radio-like equipment built in a piece of aluminum luggage. He grounded the gadget and extended a whip-antenna some eight to ten feet in the air. He turned the thing on for a few minutes and then packed it up and left.

"He returned twice a week during the bug season and performed the same operation. He talked several other cotton growers in the area into allowing him to treat their fields of growing cotton and each job was handled in a similar fashion. "In nearby fields the crop dusting planes were at work day after day dropping their clouds of death-dealing fog on the pesky insects, but in the treated fields all was quiet and peaceful with the bees humming happily and the butterflies flitting from one blossom to another. "And to the surprise of everyone-except the men with the gadget-there were no plant-destroying or boll-destroying insects in the treated fields. "The cotton in these fields seemed to be stronger and the bolls seemed to have more seed. The crop from the treated acres looks like a bumper harvest. More cotton for less money. "Truly a push-button war on bugs. "At this point," Harrington conceded, "you have a right to ask,” How does it work?" My only answer is to attempt to explain the process as it told to me in an hour and a half by J.P. Boyce of Victorville, CA- the man with the 'thing'.

"The photo negative of the field being treated was inserted in the machine to determine the basic carrier wave released by the machine. That localizes the treatment to one plot of land. Then the natural repellent is inserted into another part of the machine so that its wavelength is transmitted out on the basic carrier wave of the field. The process is much the same as that employed in modern radio broadcasting where speech or music is transmitted on a certain wavelength that can be picked up by a receiving set.

Personal Notes: I built my first Hieronymus Machine in about 1960's and many other Radionics designs over the past 50 years.

Professor Opmmur
 

Top