One of Bevy's longtime 'hobbies' has been the use of precognitive remote viewing in a field that offers almost instant feedback....the world of Wall Street
Originally, the interest began when a man, J. P. Dixon, saw Bevy and NewYork's Shawn Robbins on a television show discussing criminal work. After the show, he called and asked if this would work as well in business as it would in crime?
Not knowing the answer, Bevy, who was working on learning to touch-sense sealed envelopes at the time, asked him to write his 'business question' down, and seal it into an envelope. She asked him to come to the Squad office the following Saturday.
When he did, he handed her the envelope.
Taking it in her left hand, Bevy began remote viewing from the envelope, and 'saw' in the mind's eye a scene involving odd-shaped bushes with small red cherry-like fruit on them. The fruit was scarce and shriveled up as if affected by bad weather. There were people in white outfits picking them in big flat baskets, but there were so few that the baskets were almost empty.
She saw bad weather affecting the bushes and basically - the failure of some unknown crop. When she looked at Mr. Dixon, he was smiling broadly and said 'go right on'. She was somewhat surprised as what she had seen seemed to have no relationship to a 'business' question. However, he seemed to be happy and she continued. When she finished, he laughed and told her he'd had a dream that involved the crop she'd seen, which was coffee on the bush in Colombia. His dream involved some numbers, which seemed to be 2900 L. Sterling....in British pounds.
Naturally, he told her, coffee had never approached anything like that, never even going over 500 pounds sterling. But he'd had the dream and remembered it and when he saw the two on television talking about the role of the mind in helping to solve crimes, he wondered. He was curious. He had never believed in 'psychics' but having watched Bevy 'seeing' a crop which was obviously coffee, he had changed his mind.
Dixon asked 'when' this would happen. One of the most difficult things in PSI work involves when things will happen. So Bevy Jaegers could not tell Dixon any more than that it would happen as she'd seen. She felt certain of that much.
Dixon left the Squad office, and taking out his bank account of $24,000 he bought as many coffee futures contracts as he could afford at $200 per contract. He had opened an office in Crestwood, Mo.,and was trying to build a business as a Broker, with limited success up until that time. He had clients and was doing fairly well, but he wanted to be 'in' on something very big. So his dream had spurred him to look for answers outside his own mind. He drew a large sign with COFFEE @ 2,900 L on it and hung it on the wall facing his desk.
Several months later, in 1975 a terrible freeze hit the coffee crop, similar to that in late 1998. The crop was ruined completely and what coffee was still on the bush was severely damaged. No crop would be picked that year.
In response, coffee futures on the London Market went up slightly, but not to a level even near 1,000 pounds sterling. He called Bevy's office and asked 'when' again, but she could not tell him any more than that it would happen.
Commodity futures players do not stay in any commodity more than a few weeks.
Dixon was nervous about his investment. He kept in touch and kept asking, but nothing more could be found out.
Later in that year, the jovial Texan showed up in Bevy's office with another envelope. This time she saw a very strange scene. There were what looked like Russian tanks, along with Cuban soldiers and red Chinese soldiers rolling through a City and over some fields of bushes. Then there was a scene of what looked like a large group of businessmen or foreign Government workers with briefcases yelling and fleeing out of a building. Next came a scene of the tanks and soldiers burning some large sacks in enormous warehouses. Nothing seemed to make sense.
Dixon looked astounded. What was in this envelope was a newspaper clipping about a Russian threat to Angola in Africa. Angola was the second largest coffee producing country in the world, and the source for all ROBUSTA coffee,which was the coffee used for all instant coffees. What Bevy had seen involved a real invasion of Angola, the removal of the Government, and destruction of the coffee stores in the warehouses by burning. The tanks rolling over the fields completed the scenario. It happened in just that way only a few weeks later and hit the national news.
NO COFFEE! Dixon was ecstatic! But, the London price moved up very slowly, a tiny bit at a time. The Brokers were being cautious. By the following spring, the price began to soar when it was seen that there really WAS a terrible shortage of coffee supplies, and Colombia's bushes were still not recovered from the freeze damage.

In April, the contracts Dixon had purchased for $200 each and agonized over for a year had escalated to over $9,000.00 apiece and were still climbing! He was surely going to be very rich! The London Brokers were celebrating! He was so excited he called Bevy's office and asked her - if she could have anything she wanted, what would that be? Thinking he was joking, Bevy said "a house all on one floor" (she had had polio and did not manage stairs well)
Dixon laughed. "Pick one out and I'll buy it for you" he said. No way. Things like that just don't happen, she thought. But he was insistent. "Go pick one out". So by the end of that week, Bevy had found a long, low ranch house with room for her Office, zoned Commercial. On Friday she visited Dixon's office, and told him about it. On Saturday, he accompanied Bevy and her husband Ray to the house, and wrote out a check for the down payment of $2,500.00. The Real Estate Agent, Sally Ebinger of Ira Berry, was astounded!
No one, including Bevy's family, believed what was happening. Surely, it had to be a dream. But it was not. The News was released in London that an American small Investor was to become a multi-millionaire! A boy from a small town in Texas had struck it rich! And the media blitz began, for both Dixon and for Bevy Jaegers. Reporters and wire services carried the story, and even prestigious Barrons in New York made it a headline article.
In May, Bevy and her family moved into the house in suburban Creve Coeur, at 652 Emerson Court, and her outlook on financial things began to change. *her book Psychometry, the Science of Touch contains the house's photograph)
Dixon had begun to cash out although she told him to wait a few more weeks. He was impatient and wanted to buy a Lincoln and a particular house in Texas he'd always loved as a small child driving by. After taxes, his take-home was one million, three hundred thousand dollars, and as much more was made by several other investors who'd been backing his hunch and Bevy's remote views. (Jane Mock and L. B. Mock)
Bevy had asked Dixon to invest in gold futures when the price dropped to $99 and he bought many contracts and gave her two of them. Within a few weeks, she decided to try the Market on her own, bought a futures contract in Rubber(at a time when the car market was downsizing) against everyone's advice. The contract cost $1,000.00. Within 8 weeks, the rubber market had escalated and her contract was them worth $2,900.00. She cashed out and had a new kitchen built into the lovely home she'd earned - the $60,000.00 reward Dixon had given her. She cashed out of gold at $142 an oz. (Dixon himself happily retired and moved to that wonderful house in Texas.)
But the nagging idea of 'when' still bothered her. There must be some way to tell 'when' something would happen! It was then that she really began to study the effect of time on the mind and precognitive viewing. Choosing a stock Broker, Bob Kenney of Newhard Cook, she began to 'work' envelopes of her own, concealing what was inside by making up a large group of them. She picked stock names from a small booklet given away by all Brokerages. Folding them, she sealed them into identical envelopes. She began to ask her mind for a sort of 'graph' involving the way the stock in the envelope would move within the next 6 months. She drew the graph on each envelope, and began to buy those that showed a distinct up curve. One of those was G.D.Searle Pharmaceutical company. The stock was selling for $11 a share. The graph showed an up curve and within 2 1/2 months, it had hit $33 a share. She cashed out and bought several of the others including City Investing Corp. Within a year or so, the $1400.00 she'd begun with had grown to $24,000.00.
Jane Mock, one of those Dixon had made rich on coffee, came to Bevy to learn how to do these things for herself. She had a larger stake, naturally, but from her initial investment of $25,000.00 within 5 months she had a profit of$125,000.00 and her broker, Bob Kenney, was calling HER every morning to see what she 'liked' that day.
One morning she was working her sealed envelopes and one showed a sharp drop. She opened the envelope, saw that it was Eastman Kodak and called Kenney to sell it. He was surprised as it was doing very well. That was a Wednesday.
On Friday, Eastman was hit by a huge lawsuit, took a huge drop and Kenney could only shake his head. He no longer could doubt that the system worked!
Bevy was excited, because the problem of 'when' was becoming more workable, in her own work and that of Jane Mock. Kenney took to appearing at Bevy's classes to verify the work, and the rewards. (Kenney is now with AG Edwards)
In the late 1970's, the National Inquirer asked Bevy to be part of an experiment pitting 3 'psychics' against 3 professional Brokers, picking stocks over a 6 month period. Bevy's 'picks' won with the highest return. Shawn Robbins was second.
In 1981, the St. Louis Business Journal sent a reporter to her office to ask if she would take part in a Contest just like that one, but one they'd held for years amongst a group of 18 professional stockbrokers. This time, they would pit her against that group. The time limit was one year. Choosing envelopes before the reporter arrived, Bevy gave him five stocks. After he left, she re-checked another group and one showed such a huge up curve she called him and asked if she could change one of her picks. He agreed, and she added Metromedia, which was selling at $170.00 a share. At the end of 1982, Metromedia was leading her picks at $470.00, and the other choices had done very well, too. Of the Brokers in the contest, most had fallen short, and only one, whose 'pick' had split, rivaled Bevy's results, which were .04 higher than her own. The St. Louis Business Journal considered this a true 'tie'. In Dec. 82, they released the results, and media again besieged the story. CBS's Charles Osgood was intrigued and after careful checking with the Business Journal he wrote a segment for his morning CBS radio broadcast, sending Bevy a copy.
During the 1980's Bevy published a Newsletter providing investors with a number of stocks from which to choose and her accuracy was noted by many grateful subscribers. She does not like to do personal consultations,preferring to spend the bulk of her time in research. However, she does enjoy teaching others to follow her example!
In 1984, the home Dixon had bought for her was acquired by a large Commercial firm who planned a large Office Park on the Creve Coeur site, and the beautiful home was reluctantly sold to them for three times its original cost....and bulldozed. The Jaegers moved to another suburb, where they have remained. (they brought along the kitchen cabinets she'd earned with a rubber contract. :)
In 1989 a New Yorker named Henri Boll, who'd seen all the publicity and who put out a Wall Street newsletter called Financial Foresight called on New Year's Day and asked Bevy if she would be willing to take on a new challenge.
He wanted her to predict the monthly movements, up or down, of the Dow Jones Averages. She regarded this as another challenge, as working by the month seemed to offer solid results in tying down 'when' something would happen.
Not only that, the Wall Street Journal would tell the tale in the year ahead. She began that year, providing Boll with the forecast for 1990, and he printed it in his January issue. Since that, he has called her each year in November to ask her to do the following year's monthly Dow movements. (one year he asked her to do it by the week!) Bevy Jaegers found this to be a real challenge, and only now and then the forecast will be a week off. A 'drop' seen for November might take place during the 1st three days of October. Over the ten year experimental study, Mr. Boll has given her work a 90% average,considered extremely unusual in precognitive studies. He issued a letter to that effect in 1998. Boll does not accept individual subscribers to his newsletter, Financial Foresight, but only works with Institutions. He says that "Bevy's accuracy has helped to make a good many more millionaires" She receives no pay for this as she considers it an exercise in 'when'..
The Dow forecast for 1998 was given on several radio shows at the end of 1997, and proved to be extremely accurate, with one week differential, according to Mr. Boll and the results published in the Wall St. Journal.
In 1977, Aries Productions published a home-study Course Bevy had authored,giving some of her techniques and methods, which contains the newspaper articles about the experiments as well. It is entitled How To Make A Million In Stocks and Commodities with ESP. The price, with an accompanying audio tape is a mere $17.95 plus $3 Postage. It is available from Aries at Dept LS, P.O. Box 21741, St. Louis, MO. 63109 U.S.A. Foreign postage is $5.
Bevy is at this time updating this Course, but the price for now, will remain the same.
She advises the potential student that they should have some experience in remote viewing and precognitive work. If not, they will benefit by studying first the Basic Level PSI/RV Course also produced by Aries, which covers the basic skills of precognition and PSI. Jeff Rense, of Sightings radio, calls this Course one of the most informative, well-put-together Courses available today. His website, www.Sightings.com contains archived programs with Bevy Jaegers beginning on May 26, 1998. The Course is available from Aries for$45.00 plus $5 postage, $8 foreign.
The experimental work done in St. Louis in pinning down the factor of 'when' has been recognized by many researchers in the field, including Dr. Dean Radin, Ph.D., whose book, The Conscious Universe contains the Business Journal results on P. 201.
Bevy Jaegers' interest in both future and past have provided her with some of her most enjoyable experiments, ranging from predictive Wall Street work to mind treks to the prehistoric world through her cooperation with scientists.
A current project involves remote viewing dinosaurs with the help of fossils provided by a Museum scientist, and another in early-man's existence on the North American continent at a possible date of 100,000 years (using handmade artifacts found in Montana) also with scientists including Dr. Raymond Worring.
Probably, her insatiable curiosity with 'when' will never be ended. For if there are no new challenges for the mind, she says "life would be pretty dull".
(in the Jaegers household, life is NEVER dull)