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THE DISAPPEARANCE  BY G.G. SILVERMAN

Orion Williamson was a farmer near Selma, Alabama. One day in July 1854 he got up from his chair on the farmhouse porch and set out across a field to bring his horses in from the pasture. His wife and child watched from the porch, and on the far side of the field two neighbors riding by waved to him. Before their very eyes, Williamson vanished.


OF AMBROSE BIERCE THE DIFFICULTY OF CROSSING A FIELD
OF AMBROSE BIERCE THE DIFFICULTY OF CROSSING A FIELD

The witnesses searched the field but found no hole in the ground and no trace of Williamson. Searchers came from town, and bloodhounds nosed about, but to no avail. Journalists came, too, including the young Ambrose Bierce, who wrote of the incident in the story “The Difficulty of Crossing a Field.”


On September 23, 1880, the Williamson disappearance was repeated: David Lang, a farmer living near Gallatin, Tennessee, set out across the field in front of his house and vanished while in the full view of his wife. His disappearance was also witnessed by two arriving visitors (Judge August Peck from Gallatin and the judge’s brother-in-law), who had just waved to Lang from their buggy. A search of the field revealed no sinkholes or hidden caves.


The Lang story, supposedly related by his daughter years later, appeared in Fate magazine in 1953. It was not until then that the case was researched. A check into the 1880 census records of Sumner County where the Langs lived turned up neither Langs name nor Peck’s. Nor was the farm nor any other evidence found to substantiate the story. Had Bierce’s narrative been appropriated and embroidered with new detail?


A third farmer, Isaac Martin of Salem, Virginia, strode into a field and disappeared, according to the New York Sun ofApril 25, 1885. Whether anyone saw him vanish is unknown.



A nighttime trip to the well for water seemed to be as hazardous as crossing a field, according to three accounts of such errands.


In November 1878,16-year-old Charles Ashmore of Quincy, Illinois, went out into the night with a water bucket. When he did not return after a few minutes, his father and sister went to look for him. They found his footprints clear in fresh snow, leading halfway to the well, where they abruptly stopped.



On Christmas Eve, 1889, 11-year-old Oliver Larch of South Bend, Indiana, went to get water, cried out for help, and vanished.


On Christmas Eve, 1909, 11-year-old Oliver Thomas of Rhayader, Wales, also went into the yard for water and cried out, “Help! Help! They’ve got me.” His footprints ended halfway to the well.



In his anthology of strange disappearances, Into Thin Air, Paul Begg wrote that these incidents “must be duplicate accounts of the same story, although which if any is the original is anyone’s guess.”



A News about the Unearthly Fates: Prophecies of  Joeseph DeLuise
A News about the Unearthly Fates: Prophecies of Joeseph DeLuise

On the night of January 16, 1969, Joseph DeLouise walked into a Chicago cocktail lounge and requested to find a newspaper. He wanted to read about the two trains which had crashed somewhere south of Chicago. The guys in the bar suddenly paid attention. What crash? They had heard nothing about it. There had not been anything in the papers. Where?


Two hours later, at 1 a.m. on January 17, two Illinois Central trains collided head-on from the fog, 45 miles south of Chicago. Forty-seven people were hurt and three killed. It was the worst train disaster in the field in the past 25 years.


DeLouise had spoken to a radio show on December 14, 1968, in Gary, Indiana, also predicted that the crash could happen in five or six months.


He works as a hairdresser, never completed the eight grade, and, like many scryers, utilizes a crystal ball to make his predictions. On television and in the media he's foretold many disasters.



On November 25,1967, he predicted the collapse of a bridge. Three months later, on December 16, the Silver Bridge across the Ohio River in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, collapsed. Thirty-six people were murdered, and another 10 were reported lost.


On January 8, 1968, DeLouise predicted that there would be no significant riots in the nation in the coming year but that there could be a real "insurrection." On April 7, 1968, the governor of Illinois announced an outbreak of violence in Chicago to be an insurrection; 5,000 federal troops were flown in.


January 1970, police report

Joseph DeLuise predicted that ''Zodiac'' who had a love for flowers. I do believe his prediction was prior to the Lompoc Domingos / Edwards connection.




Police Chief Kinkead joins the hunt for a notorious serial killer who began his murder spree by targeting beautiful young women, and was now threatening to kill school children.This is the true story of a killer's confession...a confession that quickly turned into a curse, for both a lawman, and an entire family.

On December 15, 1968, DeLouise predicted that the Kennedy family would be involved in a tragedy connected with water. Afterwards, he "saw" a girl drowning in that circumstance. On July 18, 1969, Mary Jo Kopechne was drowned at Chappaquiddick in an auto accident between Senator Edward Kennedy.


On May 21, 1969, DeLouise called the crash of a jet airplane near Indianapolis. He explained that 79 people would be murdered and that somehow the amount 330 would be involved. At 3:30 p.m. on September 9, 1969, an Allegheny Airlines DC-9 collided with a private plane near Indianapolis. The four crew members and 78 passengers were killed, in addition to the pilot who had flown the personal plane.

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