Biography gift montgomerys prophecy ruth subject
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A Gift of Prophecy: The Phenomenal Jeane Dixon
Knowing the person’s month and day of birth makes it easier or her to find them in her crystal ball; people born early in the year can be found in the front of the ball, whereas people born at the end of the year can be found toward the back of the ball (27). She asks people for their birthday to know the rising and setting signs; it helps her in her meditation to see which direction they’re going and pick up their correct vibrations. But she doesn’t ask for the minute they were born, because she doesn’t want to be influenced by what their horoscope charts would say (94). In her experience, “the early hours before daybreak provide the clearest channels for psychic meditation” (177).
She was taught a system by a Jesuit priest to study her birth chart. 5s and 9s were were best numbers, and 4s and 8s sho
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Ruth Montgomery
Ruth Shick Montgomery (June 11, 1912 – June 10, 2001) was a journalist with a long and distinguished career as a reporter, correspondent, and syndicated columnist in Washington, DC.
Later in life she transitioned to a career as a psychic and authored a number of books on metaphysical and New Age subjects. The polar shift of the early 21st century was among many predictions made by a spirit guide group from whom she regularly translated messages. She was a biographer of paranormal medium Jeane Dixon and a protégée of Arthur Ford, who claimed that he, like Edgar Cayce, could access the Akashic Records (or database) of the Universe.
Journalism
[edit]Montgomery began her long journalism profession as a cub reporter for Waco-News-Tribune while receiving her education at Baylor University (1930–1935). Later she graduated from Purdue University (1934) and began work as a reporter on the Louisville Herald-Post.[1]
In 1943, she became the first female reporter in the Washington bureau of the New York Daily News, and embarked on her extensive Washington, DC career. She covered notable foreign affairs (the Berlin Airlift among them), was a syndicated columnist for Hearst Headlines and United Press International[1] and was a well-read
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