Another Family Death on the Rocks

McClures Beach at Sunset

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mclures10005mclures10001In 1988, with one year sobriety, and after my Reading at the Berkeley Psychic Institute, I returned to MacLure’s Beach and climbed the rock I fell on that led to my death. I took the photos during a foggy day. I painted my angel from memory and got the rocks right.

In the first video we look down from the zenith on to the rocks below. Here is where I slipped and fell. I was heading over the edge. A jagged rock tore into the palm of my hand, and stopped me. My feet were dangling over the edge. I looked at a sea-lion below. This place looks just like Rocky Point. I had a powerful spiritual interest in how Christine died. Everyone refused to believe that? Why?

“Your sister followed in your footsteps. You were her John the Baptist. You led the way.” so said the mother of two gifted souls.

In the second video one gets an idea how hard the wind was blowing at Rocky Point on March 26, 1994

The Truth is, three gifted artists who loved each other dearly – died! I returned to MacLure’s just after I was in hypnotherapy looking at ver dark things. I was the only one around for miles. It was a very religious experience, one I sought again at Rocky Point, perhaps with the owner of that house. Instead, I was cast down into the darkness of hell. My longest nightmare, began. My Miracles were robbed from me in order to keep the liars – safe!

God wants me to tell His Story. God wants His movie made. And, that is that!

Jon Presco

McClures Beach

Independent Order of Good Templars

The Good Templars was founded in 1851 in Utica, New York, as a fraternal temperance society for teetotalers of either sex. It has since spread worldwide and publishes the National Good Templar 10 times a year. In 1994, there were 5,000 members in the United States alone.

The Good Templars promotes total abstinence from alcohol. The founder, Daniel Cady, had been a member of the Sons of Temperance (founded 1842), which had assumed a number of fraternal and benevolent characteristics while trying to reform drunks and keep them reformed. His Knights of Jericho (1850) soon metamorphosed into the Good Templars in 1851, survived schism and reunification the following year (the short-lived Independent Order of Good Templars) and went on to prosper. It always admitted women on the same basis as men, and has, according to its own literature, always been racially mixed. In 1868 the organization spread to England.

At the turn of the century, the Good Templars in the United States boasted about 350,000 members. It has shrunk drastically since then, but seems to be on the rebound from the low of 2,000 quoted by Schmidt in his Fraternal Organizations in 1979.

Its greatest strength is to be found outside the United States, especially in Sweden Lodges also exist in Austria, Canada, Denmark, England, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, India, Ireland, Japan, Liberia, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Norway, Scotland, Switzerland, Turkey, Wales, and elsewhere. Membership world­wide is probably between half a million and a million.

Originally, the Good Templars worked three Degrees, namely Heart, Charity, and Royal Virtue. The rituals and regalia were much diminished in the 1970s as the organization tried to make itself more modern and relevant. Now, the initiatory degree of Justice is the only one worked. Initiates are requested to promise to do all in their power “to promote total abstinence of intoxicating beverages both through the enforcement of laws and through [their] own way of life.”

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