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Fate, Numbers and Vibrations * * +
A SYSTF1U W H I C H B Y I T S INVENTOR I S U S E D T O TELL T H E F O R T U N E S O F INDIVIDUALS A N D TO GAIN
KNOWLEDGE OK T H E U N I V E R S E .
rhytnm, puts all things in their legitimate place, while discord breaks and destroys, and to b9 disturbed about vital matters and business is v i ta l - i s discord. It is J^JJQUE PIECES TUAT AltE SEL-therefore plain that to set the things right J nftHtnnrrrn in a life Is not trivial, but important. DOJt ttEPRODLCED.
The truth is. when a person understands
PRIZED BITS OF FURNITURE.
his concord, sees what it mean3 and what he can accomplish when he lives within i t j
j his mind unfolds from within, and as a ! i flower reaches toward the light he reaches ! for higher truths.
"Not long ago a mine owner came to me.
Commode Wasnstanrts Anachronisms to Be Sousbt AfterOld American Sea Chests Now 1'sed as Linen Cheats The Ancient lloopsklrt Armeaalr.
Now that nearly all standard articles ^ J * ! ^ * . cf antique furniture are reproduced by the
, I found his concord, andfaking it in con- f a c t o r i P 9 i c u r i 0 U 3 and unusual p!ec?*are
n e c t i o n wuh the name of his mine, was able j m ( W t f c a n e v e r p r i a , d W h e n t h e 0 e r
to tell him much which no one knew save o f r i c h old mahoganv heirloom? s-es them
at the same time, OT soon after, but even the reproductions are now scarce. The chair. with its wedge-ehaped seat and many ning3. looks uncomfortable, but is pleasant enough, to sit in when properly cushioned.
The craze for tue old mirrors of the Colo-nial period and later 3 dying out. but such mirrors with unusual decorations still inter-est collectors and some householders. The long narrow mantel mirrors in three di -visions with gilt frames are also still much
THE CASE OF THE HOME GIRL. BEAUTY CVLTUBE FOR THOSE . I F I I 0 DOX*T CO OUT MUCH,
'Number-? and the musical vibrations | be no need to combat evil , which they represent control each individual j and the univeivo of Which ho i* a part.* j said Mn. Aso-Neith Cochran, the author, or. as she puts it.the discoverer of the Aso-Xeith eystem of cryptogrum numbers, which has already been d e s c r i e d in T H E S e x .
According to this system, each human being is anchored in the infinite by a certain geometrical sign which retools a digit num-ber. Of these numbers th^re are but eight. being a composite number, the* Alpha and j tern yays that all things are controlled Omega of a cycle. A j by a mathematical law and that each part
The authorasserts that tthen rightly un- ! of the body has its own vibration. This i s derstood these numbers opVn the door of \ quite in accord with the fact that it ba3 been a life. Tlus done, all will tie adjusted a o i found that different currents of electricity
himself and with him.
Still another carious mirror is a circu-lar concave glas3 sometimes found in shav-ing standi. The purpose is to furnish a magnified reflection of the face that wul
those immediately connected t reproduced r m o for line not only by good i enable the man who f haves himself to make I was also able accurate y to j
cabin!tt makers, but also by factories that j sure that no stray hair shall escape bis When one thinks of it. most of the bother d e s m b e the personality of one whose name j
t u m o u t , h e cheapest of etahvd w o * l razor, in life comes from an effort to root out what ! a n u o m n a a t e *"> gave me. with such ; f u r n i t u r e , she cannot help feeling that Old American sea cheit n u c h a s are fit n . seemstobeevi l .andit isbyreasonofthefacl ! proof of the efficacy cf this system, persons j
hor treasures must seeni almost common- in the little ports from Maine to the Gulf. that good is not planted in sufficient quan i naturally are ready to give sympatheticl oar- ;
l a c ? t o a l l ^ ^ t b o m s t r U c t e d in suoh are now favorite articleswith housewives tity that evil flourishes. Let those then ! ing to higher truths, as was this man." j
r n a . c r g > for the stowage of linen. Even those quaint little toylike trunks in which the occa-who discover that 11 or any numbers j When questioned as to the higher truths ,
T h e f a c t o r i e 8 , however, turn out only which added make 11 or 22 are lucky for ; to \ sno referred. Mrs. Cochran said J
6 U Ch articles as are likelv to be really useful them, act according to rroebel and the law : of eleven of the Aso-Neith system. j
As has been said, the author of this sys
that the number cryptogram not only j -m m o d e m hous?a. Many other articles of makes prophecy plain, but holds the key rf^
n e c e s s i t y m every weU eppointed. to the future; and state, with a positiveness f i,11M, ^ nn. i M . ^ ~ which leaves no doubt as to her own con-victions, that the twentieth ceutury marks
i the great daythe epoch prophesied in the sacred books of all nations.
'Before the end of this century all tho
of musical vibration." said Mrs. Cochran. "It is the p o w r which operates the universe, and man will learn how to utilize it, as he ha3 learned to utilize steam and electricity.
cording to the laws of harmony and the j ana also different light rays must be used in *ork of the world will l ^ d o n e byjneans Individual can then g o forward" along the 4 treating the several parts of the body. way of tho least resistance t ^ t leads the J The many small differences t o be taken eoul to iU individualization and polarizes j Into account in this system tend to be some-it in harmony with the infinite.'" ! what distracting, but the author comes
"Each digit number," said.MjrS. Cochran, i t o the rescue when she says: has its own individuality, characteristic j "Scientists are agreed that all things
" and temperamental musical "vibration, ns j are differentiations of one thing, and in has each musical tone. The syefceni, which considering the differences in this system is exact, rests as does music on the great 1 it is necessary to bear this in mind. The law of vibration; a law which i s coming to j idea of unity must be maintained, as it is be more and more recognized, though a s j pivotal. The further we drift from unity
yet but little understood." \ j the nearer we draw to dissolution, to dis-Recently returned from a stay of some- 1 integration. And as it is with a nation,
thing more than a year in Germany and J s o is it with an individual; harmony is the Italy. Mrs. Cochran says sho was greatly j bond of unity, of continuance; inharmony surprised t o find that persons with whom j of the disunion which i s death. she came in contact in these countries were * "How are we to distinguish the differ
hous-* a century ago no longer m?et the ! needs of the modem hous3holder.
Some such artioles are mere anachro-! nisms in the house of to-day, with ttselab-j orate plumbing, stationary basins, steam
heat and permanent refrigerators. What the English call a wash-band stand
and American cabinet makers call a com-medo washstand was an article of neces-sity a ocntury ago. but i3 to-day purely an article of taste and luxury. So. too, are
A Piano Stoel Apparatus Enough, t o Fxer-clse With and Cain Grace and Symmetry or BodyWalks Around the Centre Table and D M 0 5 From a Chair.
What can a home girl do to develop her-self physically?" asked a girl of the woman who boasts of having developed more women athletes than any other woman in the world. *I d o not want to become an
^SSSftEStt u bum I $750 Imperialsilk lined Stole. 4 ver figure and answered: Y c u are too stout. to begin with. Before you can be devel-oped you must reduce your weight.
The home girl." the teacher went on.
CCShayne f l a c u i i c t u r t a g F u r llerctaant.
Russian Sables
suffers from many things which do not } afreet the business girl, the society woman
fcBe!ng a finer force than cither of these, i t h e s t 0 p 3 o r hsd m o u n t s u d with old high
it will do much more. For example, it p ^ i ^ j ^ . will, in addition to becoming the motive power of the age. bo the educator and healer, though there will be little healing to do. as when there !? harmony there Is health, and when musical vibrations are
The best of those art icles that have come down to us have much charm and interest, and are sought after by those who like the unusual In furniture.
An almost perfect example of a commode understood harmony will bo the rule, not | washstand was bought for a trifi? out on the exception." j Ixmgls!andi>yadca:er.soldatahandsom9
Another prophecy fovnded on this system j profit, and put in ord?r for the new pur-of numbers is this: That the earth is com-
; chaser by a skilled cabinet makr. i'jg into naw regions- Travelling in tne } n c o f c r r f c r i n ^ f n ^ n ^ t n i k n n , ; , ^ , ! ^ , . present direction? before 1017 it will. Mrs. I - "sslenderleg^endingmtheoriguial long Cochran avers, come Into a now conr-tel a-
slonal seafarers of a century ago were wont to carry their coin are treasured now 93 jewel and ribbon boxes.
The age of the articles i s frequently marked by the date of the old newspapers used for lining. One such trun's preserved by a Southern family was made a t Dover, N. H., and is lined with newspapers bearing a date of the summer o t 1S03.
Great prices are paid for elaborately j carved Italian chests, which were origi- j cal cufctve outlook than the girl who has nally, perhaps, strong boxes. Few have j to work bard out ot doors. Window clean-the "original elaborate locks, but such as } ers. women who sell papers on the corners, have possess additional value, though they j those who c a n v a s from house to house and do not add to the security of the chest. j those who d o .other work of a n outdoor
Even among articles that have f reuuently i nature get the fresh air at least. But the been reproduced in factory made furni- home girl dees not always succeed in ob-
and the girl athlete. She has what physi-cal culture teachers might call hometls. I t comes from staying in the house too much.
The home girl m a y b e active, but i t i s the wrong kind of activity. She eats, but she eats the wrong food. She breathes the air. but it i s the wrong kind of air- She l ives in the wrong way.
"The home girl i s worse off from a physi
ture there are special peculiarities that dis-tinguish individual pieces from similar article3, old or new. and such peculiarities givs an old piece special value. The large, old, mahogany sideboards, usually said to be of the Sheraton pattern, and probably misnamed, are not unusual, and are repro-duced; but there is a decoration of feath-
! brass claw feet the renovator would have* J e r e d . * t ! L e I v e s f " ! > * * a eagerly interested in her cryptogram of j ence? By learning the law which governs \ fion. and two new planeFs will be aldi d to ! been glad to ornament with fluting, and ' *Peal \alue. because
and.
says cussed her system in Europe had studied rhythm with the creative force. To be out the cabala and other number systems and entered into tho study of the Aso-Xeith numbers with an interest boru of under-standing. Mrs. Cochran says:
of concord is to lack life in the degree one is out of rhythm. l i f e i s in circles, death in straight lines; rhythm is circular.
"To gain a thorough knowledge of the "One gentleman, a wealthy and accom- Aso-Xeith system, that one may know him
pushed Russian Hebrew, thoroughly con- i self and reach the fullest understanding . vereant with tho cabala, who all his life had J of the law of fife, there are three sciences
been a student of numbers in their large | with which one should be conversant. a s well a s their subtle significance, w s s s o { These three sciences are mathematics,
deeply interested that he took up the study 1 chemistry and muslo. of my system with me.
"He asked what was to be done when the vibrations of a name wero inimical to the one bearing it , and I told him another name should be taken which would 'be
"Mathematics i s fundamental and holds the other two. Through the study of tho spirit of mathematics in music i s gained a knowledge of the larger law.
"First of all, I would say learn mathe-beneficent. and the person should be put", j matics as you would learn German or any or put himself, under the vibrations of the j language, for through mathematics One new name while still using the one by which ho had been known, if for any reason it was desirable to do so . Then he asked:
'Have you not heard that among my people, when a child is sick and the ail-ment does not readily yield to ordinary remedies, the name i s changed?* 1 "When I assured him I had never heard
of this, he stated that there is traditional
can reach the truth more nearly than in any other way. A single stroke of the pen and we have a number, as 1 or S, the meaning of which it would take several words to express; two or three strokes of the pen and we have a geometrical figure, which often signifies more than can be explained
I b y nages of print
decoration in its perfection seems irrow naturallv out of the mahoganv
^ A further prophetic assertion Is that two i be preserved intact, and it now looks e x - j t ~ ^ n ^ ^ ^ d < ^ S ^ ^ new letters will be added to the alphabet. I cctly as it must have looked when the or- ****&** o r . j " ' ? d o l I a r i> t o t h e ^ u e the language of alienations will berecon- jginal purchaser first installed it in her r ^ n ? n t i q u ^ s i ^ _ __" Btructed Into a universal language, and. delectable state to be hoped for. color and musical vibration will so rule pronunciation that no word will be mispronounced. When all this happens the publishers of diction-aries must needs seek other fields of effort, since there will be no further use for their books, as tho letters of which a word is composed will reflect its meaning.
bedchamber. A hole in the top receives the basin and
a closet beneath conceals the pitch?r. When the lid is down nothing is seen but the slender legs upbearing a neat rectangu-
j lar box of polished mahogany. The town might be searched in vain for such another.
The present time, according to the num-ber cryptogram. Is the dawn of the day of seven. Day signifies cycle, and the law of seven, operating universally, unifies and j ^ m t v but ^ f einilrelv dTcrent -cattpm establishes peace, not with_ quiescence
It i s commonly supposed that clever mechanical contrivances are characteristic of modern rather than of antique furniture. But the cabinet makers of the eighteenth and the early nineteenth century were often extremely ingenious in matters of this kind.
There are libra-y chairs of a century and though the cabinetmaker who renovated j this little treasure has recently put in order j a ^^ a t h a t P e a u ? a n d eho* a 8 a o r t
Dajrsigniriescycle.and the law of another commodo washstand of much ladder. f o r mounting the shelves. Old J English table? aro found the tops of which
Those little portable dressing tables with w h e n turned up vertically form the back three drawers, a swell front and a swinging ! * a settee. The simplest and most mod
with present condition?, but by demand-ing a new code of ethics which will include all the nations of tho earth.
While claiming for the Aso-Xeith system of numbers the same scientific foundation {
rr^QtT, ,. _ a s music. Mrs. Cochran makes the asser- j freei-v" b u t a r o *tlU .prized by persons w:th tion that one who has mastered it can be consciously in two places at the same time-
taining the 6ame treat "Recently we had a pupil, a girl who
wanted to become better in shape and in general health. She was a heme girl.
At the following Reduced Prices:
heavily furred skins, care shade $501)
$700 La Reina Scarf. 4 skins, dark shades. $425
Imperial Scarf, 4 dark skins: will sell at cost of skins.... $909
$1,000 La Reina Scarf, 6 skins, good color $650
$1,000 Eugenia Collar, 2 extra dark imperial skins, finished with tailed border. $600
$1,050 Ls Reina Scarf, 6 dark skins. $650
$1,200 Fancy Scarf, heads mounted and crossed at the back, 6 dark, extra silvery skins... $700
$1,200 Imperial silk lined Stole, 8 dark, heavy fleeced skins; sell for $800 On being questioned she confessed that j she sewed three long hours every day . j
helped in various ways and dislodged the dust from the bric-a-brac for an hour of $ 1 , 5 0 0 L a R e i n a Scarf, 6 v e r y
mirror, much used in the earlv part of the ! c m form of such an article is the kitcnen 1 settee-table, which is also a chest.
Asked to explain this, she said: With the eternal spirit there is no future
or past, no near or fan and when In perfect | harmony with that spirit it is possible to j partake"of its attributes. There are those ! who reach the fulfilment of this law at
'You ask if considering material matters, assurance that in most instances where j a s stocks and other things connected with the name has been changed the child re- | covers. This reminds me." continued Mrs. Cochran. *of experience in Munich.
"I made tho acquaintance of a physician
last century, have been reproduced pretty | ^ ^ a r t i c l e s > ^ ^ o f c h e a p ^ ^ ^ ^
, wood, were common in country kitchens a taste for old fashioned things. Tho j forty years ago. and are.now .made a s a originals are now hard'to (lad.-and thoy I convenience of the Xew "York apartmen. brirg much better prices than roproiluc- kitchen. The old ones, though liardly bet-tions in everv wav as cood J e r t h a n t h e n e w v f e t c h , Prett>* K 0 ^ prices, lions in every way a s gooa. . ^ ' but are not orten found.
Most of the old ones are of 60ft wood with j One of the oddest bits of furniture oc -ven.er, and must have been made at small j caslonally seen in modern drawing rooms. cost. The essential thing in tho reproduc- j but probably never reproduced, embodies
there who became interested in my conten-tion. He had a patient, a young American
! tunes without understanding it, just a s i tions is that thev preserve the lines and i m its. pndiar construction,the record of I primitive man used the laws of harmony j
r r n m r t : m c r th nntimm nnrt h r n w . ' a vanished fashion that i - sa id to threaten long before thos* laws were sufficiently Proportions or the antique, and the repro- a return. This is a Lirge armchair the arms
forward from in front. The
' chair was made in this fashion in order
woman, in a hospital seriously iU. whoso ' soul growth while that condition continues, ailment did not yield to his remedies and Xo more can one who is disturbed, uncertain was growing rapidly worse. i or distressed as to business matters make
"IVe talked the matter over and it was j gains in highest realms.
the stress of business life, is not distasteful, I does not seem to me trivial in view of the ! vast vista which this system reveals. | Asked if it was necessary to know the
"By no means. It i s all important, or i t i t h r ^ e . sciences she had named to get a rm,i,i *,** ..,:-* I working knowledge of tho Aso-Neith sys-would not exi,t._
t e m > M r g C o c h n m ^^ t h a t T y e t o unde r_ I dery a man in a starving state to attain
s e tand it fullv such knowledge wa3 essential. >i "In addition, the home girl has^to over-come a tendency t o sleep too much. You see, she has many things to contend with, this home girl.
Well, her first duty must be to learn to walk well. To do this she must learn t o wear the right kind of shoes. - "It is not flat shoes you want, nor high-
heeled shoes, nor shoes with curved insteps, nor any other one kind of shoes. But you want shoes that fit your feet. Experiment until you "find a shoe that reaches every part of your feet without pressing upon any particular joint or sensitive place. Tnen, when you have found this kind of a shoe, wear it.
"Wear different shoes on different days. A woman who walks a great deal and i s alwavs comfortable has her Monday shoes and her Tuesday shoes and her shoes for other days. She never has tired feet and never a corn. She wears different shoes on different days, with the result that the pressure comes always upon a different part of the foot.
"The home girl need not go out t o walk. She can take her walking exercise right in the house.
"To walk properly put on a loose suit. Let out all your bands before you begin to walk. Loosen your collar. Loosen the top.? of your shoes if they are tight. - - "Now the next thing is the right position. To walk properly and well, you must hold your head erect. To be sure you are hold-ing your head a s you should hold i t . lift a light chair and carry it on top of your head. This will insure a correct carriage of the head and will develop the muscles of the neck and arms.
"Breathe deeply as you walk. Start off with a firm, erect carriage. Stride along. Move gracefully, if you can. And remem-ber that if you walk a s you should walk, grace will suraly come t o you. Walk about a room like this daily and you will soon see the good result.
"The home girl i s looking for economical exercises. I know one girl who developed j her chest by doing stunts with the piano stool. She played leap frog over it , she jumped over it, putting one foot on it , going over it a s though she were jumping a hvs M o i j - i ' H ' i *, * v than they have been before. Such a charm-ing, trifto i s r.ot made to fco hidden from tho public gate, and when a pretty worn n in a rcoiAU.-uct or a street oar calmly opens her vanity case.l .okls t t a mirror cut a t a
dark skins (decided bargain) $800 $1,800 Imperial Stole, 4 very
dark choice skins; sell for $1,200 $2,500 Imperial Stole, 8 very dark,
handsome skins, double width over shoulder; sell for... $1,500
$2,500 Pelerine, 8 dark and silvery skins, extremely hand-some; sell for. $1,400
$3,000 Shoulder Cape, finished with tails and paws, 13 very dark skins; sell for. . . . . $2,000
$3,000 Imperial Stole. 8 skins, very dark and silvery; sell for. $2,400
$3,600 Imperial Stole, 12 skins, extra dark; will sell for $2,500
$6,000 Menrle, withrlong tabs, 17 skins, dark and silvery; will sell for.. . . . . . . $4,503
$250 Stole, silk lined, 4 skins. $175 $300 Cross Boa, 2 skins, sil-
very, dcrk shade; will sell for $250 $300 Tie Scarf, fur both sides,
4 skins, good color $250 $300 Fancy Scarf, 4 skins, very
heavily furred, good color.. $225 $300 Florentine Scarf, 4 skins,
very heavy, good shade... $200 $300 La Reina Scarf, 4 skins,
medium shade, silvery. $200 Pelerine Stole, with storm col-
lar, 8 skins, good shade.... $400 $350 Fancy Head Boa, 3 dark
skins $200 $500, the new style Scarf, 3
very dark skins. $375 $400 La Reina Scarf, 4 skins,
good shade $330 * $450 Scarf, head mounted. 2 very
dark skins, splendid bar-gain, for. $250
$450 Fancy Scarf, 3 skins, good shade $250 supply. "Walk five miles a day, if only around
the centre table. March a t least an hour around the table, taking it in two instal-ments of half an hour each time.
"Practise ample athletics with a light t chair. j
"Practise diving, jumping, bending and { stretching. j
- . \nd finally, teach the muscles! Ascer- ! $ 6 0 0 F a n c y Scarf , 3 Skins , ROnd tain.which are.your, weak muscles a n d ,
CQi0T%h^ds m o i m t e d a n d
crossed at back $450
$500 Nicholas Scarf, 4 dark heavilv furred skins, well worth $500; will sell for $300
id ,v ...
c
tl.ry c:o a." rr.\:c!i t* ih ir*nwign.fivcnt wit .-v-he;
In the seventeenth and eighteenth cri turiM l.i lie > wore hanging fr . n the n small omarrenta! ca-o ca'V;in.iln!ing . r.i.w lv l c trying to tcr.e down he cx'.'.l