According to the story Charley had an interaction with the past which is in 1894's.........charley was late that day as he had extra work and he went in the Grand Central Station so that he can take train back to his home to his wife Louisa.......but he goes in to a door that leads him to third level where he witnesses the past which is 1894 where life's peace full not in such a fear n insecurity as in the modern 1950's...........so when he told to his wife she might have probably taken him to psychiatrist friend Sam .........n he then explained him because as he also was his friend...............
i think this could be the probable answer.......you can get pointers from this.......
Because Sam is his psychiatrist and Charley thnks hes gone crazy or just wants someone else to know about it.
Charley felt there was a tunnel that nobody knew about, which was feeling its way under the city at that moment too, on its way to Times Square, and maybe another to Central Park. Grand Central, he felt, was like an exit, a way of escape and perhaps that's how he got into the tunnel. He didn't want to tell the psychiatrist, for he would not have believed him and would have wanted to treat him.
Yes, "Jack and the Beanstalk" is typically written in the third person. This narrative perspective is commonly used in fairy tales to tell the story from an outside, objective viewpoint.
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because its true
tell me the answer tell me the answer tell me the answer
A lumber jack?I don't a bumper jack but I will tell you whats a lumber jack is.It is a person who cuts down trees.
If there's nothing written on the jack, you can't really.
of what game? i will tell you when you tell me the game ^^
I wont tell you jack
Jack it up and spin it.
They have not identified who Jack the ripper was and therefore no one can tell you if the offender had any family
If my friend has win number of my car, can he put lo jack in my car?