The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 24, 1901, Page 1

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o 1 - | P LU W A causes | ds which t the and the dyve s 15 good silk to which reveal The when silk is on. fr. You need 8 M AGAZNE /FCTION MARCH. 24 190 cen along with the astral for ma, to the spot where The /{)L( orT t Doctor E d another gentler for inder th s exhibition and ook n statve. We did s fmportant { and fou of a cer there a letter giving v tions ae to the work of the clety, “When we more of the m stranger app ter to Madame Blavatsky, friend in Paris, and’ giv nt in- structions-about the management of cer- tain society affairs. Another time, as we were driving in.the park one evening, a majestic figure stopped our carriagé in flowing Oriental robes, he was ly visible in the glare of the electrie After a few kindly words he a leaving behind him, however, arrived In India I saw still sters. At Bombay a Hindu ed and dictated a long let- wldressed to a import light appeared, a splendid gold embrofdered head-cover- , of peculiar shape. ‘I kept 1t is still one ofimy most sessions. F- cumstance {8 Important as the Mahatmas dre not mere ¥ visions, conjured up by one’s tion, or, as some suggest, by hyp- suggestion. The clothing worn by is at the time absolutely real; it has ing or turk the turt asured ¥ “This cir proving ¢ imag notie them teal or as at the time be psicep In f: or anywhere peared In the takes place, » of the Mal else, w double ap- ay. In this ¥ power cf trans- L tal body from the 1 appear just er m >d 1t remain s m nd was told h ? fingérs tig n ments. 1 did and when I d this ring in"the e at_Simla his r a jady 8. us, ) by f ¢, she slip- 7 s about whe Jame Bla- lous feats € In range es was t nginz in Ty One of her hair g color. and light t wo wak ack and be- alp, it *: nt x B wth till it reached 1 ched the stage of any nt which bles me 1o f : 1€ tnearoations on thi i but 1 se Informed of many ‘ hem. Afl that I am at Wb- however, is that my 1 m ' too c 00 years age idn't home ur like it pect- ou hadn’t buen she rems ¥as no one el r of*the day as upon the man of be thouzht to K Then a ful demeaner e part of “the beemost effective of the house info the humor for the day. There vever, on this subjret, p came from a woman wihos periences jn her marrfed Jife have of a kind to yurage any wife She ees with th \"lnw as to the poteney of good humor in the morzing. Her sebeme 18 ¥ “The important moment of the day to 4 man's peace of *.she sald, “is the ten mi that follow his return from of the day. At that time * change his whole state of iing. He comes home usually tired. Work r the tions of bysiness during the A t ught nervousnese at ittle thing may decide what his mbod will be for the rest of the evening. Of cotrse the particullar dis- nan s going to tell here as it does eve But my will hold good for the average man, most imp 1t thing for the tact- nan to do 1s to walt until she sees f his temper before she makes any decided move. Don't, above 1 things, tell him that the plumber has just sent in a terrible bill merely for mak- that little alteration, or say that stupid Mrs. Jones has been at the house all afternoon talking about the new house her husband has bought and showing off postion of every fust where else T her sables as if she was the only woman in 8an Francisco that had them. “‘Geneeally, it is best to avold such be- ginnings, although a woman's tact must always be called in to help her out, if one af the children has just'been taken down with measies, or the cook has been drunk all day and had to be sent away, “Pon’t talk too much in the beginning on any subject. Conyersation taken tor- - = =5 C LG L rentially at-the outset is lflely. to upset s a little d after a day's work and wants quiet before adjusting his mind to the quiet enjoyment of home. “The wo: llows this advice 1s going to find her evenings pies nter than if she jumps at the beginning into the heart of - things, especially disagreeable things. A litile tact Guring the first quar- ter of an hour after the return home is wortli all the early ‘morning cheerfulness in the world when It comes to making the wheels move smoothly in the household.”, —_————————— Gotham—1 understand in a Brooklyn bowling alley they have girls to set up the pinse < Church—Yes, that Is correct, “1 suppose that is the means they take of making a little pia money who £ {n.vln‘ fought the good n;l_n for freedont H9 Y Government Guest for Nineteen Years 7%, - MOST. strious case. showing how I\ the sevarate systems of the Gov- \ for the take on confusing thing country to recognize his worth by a money consideration, so he but_in an ap ation for a pension. It was _allowed, and the man's name was written on the book of fame, after which he was entitled to doll Shortly following this man passed on to the Y ernment may shape, has -just come to light in Indiana._ A man who has for nineteen years been confined in jall at the expense of the natlon, has diring all these years beerl in receipt, or intended receipt, of .a considerable sum of money from this same nation. It 'is because the man fought in the great war zhn.:,the complication was made possible. At least, his services in battle were respon&fble in part for the situation. It once occurred to the man thgt after period another eat beyond, under circumstances which the Coroner's jury considéred called for the trying of some- body on a capital punishment charge. It so-happened that the- pensioner was the person fixed upon as the active agent as- sisting the earthly exit of the decéased. Aithough the pensioner stoutly main- /s and unification it might be the graceful - — \ the proof was so jury to a verdict Judge to a tatnea fnnocence. to lead the and the com of Hf: sfrong as of guilty senten tting , and for nine- out his This was in. the teen et sion of worked rs the p behind tk L this time the mitted the took to his last bed, and it A - free_now. There are some pension money failed to turm iged to sue for s, there are the . because of the fm- the infallibllity of man who mur oceurred im to make So the p s trou Dut he s thousands of dollars in wh the s have over to him, and h their recovery. wasted nineteen ye plicit judicial faith Umstan

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