Amorc Folder 1

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AMORC FOLDER 1 ( 1898- 1929)

1898

The Chicago Sunday T ribune Chicago, Illinois Sunday, A pril 17, 1898 Page I

Wpmen yesterday organised a lodge of Masons at the Tuxedo. Madison avenue and Fifty-ninth street. They call It Manhat­ Woman tan Mystic Lodge. Organise a There had been taik [asonlc Lodge. of such a movement for several weeks. but the women were reticent. They mat In a real lodgeroom. with queer insignia and a delicious air of mystery. Humor says much of this mystery was occasioned by doubt whether the real Masons would recognise this new feminine order. But fats and the Masons—a real lodge—were kind to the women. Mrs. May Banks Stacey, who li the head and front of the movement, was formally Initiated a few days ago. and yesterday she ■wore In, with mysterious rites, twenty of her followers. The principal requisite for membership Is that one must be the wife, widow, daughter, sister, or granddaughter of a Mason. ” The ritual used In Manhattan Mystic Lodge wlU be that of the first woman's lodge, founded in France In 1796. of which the Empress Jo­ sephine was s member." said Mrs. Stacey.

1906

The W ashington Times W ashington, D istrict of Columbia Saturday, August 25,1906 Page 5

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l& .m e a tle s ft IS s s 'c H ic W o n d e r 0 1 T I 9 0 6 . 'whom ho had never nocn, 4nd told whera ha wag . S P E N C C R l e w is , rocltnj which f«"t* war« nfterH itt Arte Vort I n s t it u t e f o r P*yrAlrtJ< at the iiiutreni wmd verified to the minutest detail. / irt h ) In this .lemon*!rjtlon it wtta not possible for tlio Medium to ever 1i ^ vt>-n«an-the foonrs ha dt*^L H K -*«*ne spfjtril. sne1 therefora thera could have been no otie nf^ 'lhe most ftnnd sticc^sslul for tha ThlH lenves but two explanations—that of tele-ndvfmccirtmt -of--pmTchi'-^pnihxr:tTid that of erlihll spirit ecEfitnunJcatlon. Of ml rwotirch And study. r« i ii.iTUfr Pt s ly n f tIicf ? urrscilt. OliO roam ' wfiola was the most remark able, o f Its class, ever In J -’jp' »n±_______ ____ ______________________ recorded hi’- our society, ar perhapa by uuy o t i — - JJe uku descilbfd the appearancfl of a gentleman bo a ring She holds It up so that all may soe It and begins *o describe It minute)} a s tbough for the bench! of those at a d is­ tance * N ow with this ring,' she goes on ‘conies the form o f a beautiful spirit I do not know w h it there Is In this ring to attract this spirit (A p a u s e ) Again 1 see this bcautirul spirit that cornea w ith this ring I h f s spirit has a m essage for the person a ho b-ought this rin g " ■All the tim e sh e Is talking the m -dlum Is scanning tbc faces o f the people before her T his Is w h \ sh e m lnutcl} describee the ring—to give her tim e In which to ohservo the audience And Invariably the person Those tin g Is held aloft betra>s her Identity "It m ay be that one womnrf will nudge another or that the owner will sm ile or becomo rrmnrknb!} interested, oc grow goervous W hatever It may be. the quick, practiced eve of the medium detects It

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"She then slowly descends from the rostrum sa)Ing that the spirit Is leading her to the one for whom Its m essage Is Intended She pauses befors each row of people as though w alling for spirit guid­ ance but alt the wiille m anning the faces before her through half closed eyes At last extending It to the right person she s b m sof 11}

" 'Y es you This beautiful spirit tells m e that vou are’ the one for whom lie m essage Is Intended ' “T hat Is the dram atic side of the work T o go right to the person and say. ‘Tola a rtl'le Is yours ‘ wouldn’t produce the sod. tearful condition alw ays desired bv the medium A w om en thus wrought up and susceptible to all sorts of em otions Is the ono for whom the m olt wonderful m essages enn bo ototnlned * We w ill euppose that n man Is sitting n e st to the woman who brought the ling Well everv m tdlum knows that a naan seldom goes alone to n seance and In nlno Canos out of ten the woman Is hie w ife It le also a fart (not when a man and Me wife conic to a eeance It Is gen ­ eral!) In the hppes of receiving a m es­ sage from a child they hnve lost “Acting on this cue the medium now sat ■ * ‘Yes tnle henutlfnl spirit stands here and this sp l-lt form s a ) s ‘M other1 * “This word Is pronounced \er> eoftly and svveetlv Still the medium hae not com m itted herself If the woman does not break down and begin to weep eae know s som ething le wrong ard goes on to te p h ln that ttir spirit srem i to be that of a mother who wants 10 give a m essage lo her child or mentions one possible explanation aftci another until the woman assents to one of them Parents Begin to Weep. * In nine cases out of ten however the woman begins to weep nnd the medium e a )s io f 1% ’ \nour child who stands before you now Tide sp ill, w ants me to say that It le nice of >ou to com e to day It seeni9 to mo that this spirit haw not passed out very long ngo K as your child pasts.d out long ago ' sho ask s suddsnly of tne 'mother ‘‘And probably the m ether w ill answer, *Wh> no the passed out tw o a o n tb s ago * That Is apparentl) an Innocent b l of Information which the medium m ight h ave deduced from the woman's mourn­ ing But the medium h) asking the question hot Iear nod the sex o f the cnlld, which she did not know She goes on Your daughter »ays she w ants to thank )c u for the m any tim es you have visited her grave and the m an) pr^tte flowers )ou brought her there, reasoning Of course th a’ If the daughter has been ool) two rnontht. dead the mother baa visited the g ia v e and taken flowers. 'T hen the medium will p-obabl) end up with Your daughter ift)» she Is so glad that you got fathei to com e w ith you this evening He dldp t want to coice bm you Induced h'm to do so and sh»* is so glad to see him here She hopes you will hot ■ come o d e a ta talk with her* Of ton iht u k le placed on tlie /rostrum tells much o ' tlio one who owned It A ring m 3) give lIk sc\ and n good Idea o f the nge of the oac who wore It Ant ever, locket wnlch opens contains a pho-

togrntih 01 , b e c a u s e It la a r a l l c o r L e u is s a id . " I - e t u s t n k o a t y p i c a l o n e w h o l a d e a d . T h e r e f o r e , w h e n n m ed iu m P i c k s u p s u r h n lo ck e t from m eettn*. " T b s m e d i u m t a k e s u p a n a r t i c l e — t h e r o s t r u m s h e a l w n y s se..*, t h o u g h a n y a rln* . Hhe h n b l s It u p s o t h a t a ll w i t h o u t c o m m i t t i n g h e r s e l f d ef i n i te l y , m a y s e e it an ti b e g i n * t o d e s c r i b e It n p h o t o g r a p h w h i c h Is c o n n e c t e d w i t h m l n u l e l y , n a If f o r t h o b e n e f i t o f t h o s e It. " It m u s t b e t a k e n Ihto c o n s id e r a tio n a t a instance. " 'Nencer Lewis, the mail order and m erchandising specialist, who successfully launched the recent Voltite campaign, has been engaged to start a vigorous publicity and selling campaign for the C. F_. Sheppard Co., of New York, manufacturers of loose leaf system s and devices. I’art of ihc company's systematic selling campaign consists of a large and interesting m onthly house organ, the first issue of which will he mailed about the 10th of October, a -mailer house organ foj agents, and a scries of fifty booklets, each dc-crihing a loose leaf system especially adapted to some p ar­ ticular business. These liooklets will Ik- widely adver­ tised and distributed, and means an innovation in bringing business to the dealer's doors.

The American Stationer Volume 72, page 6 New York and Chicago July 6, 1912

1913

H. Spencer Lewis Gets 2548 Answers From One Small Classified Adv. 3Iffecilvencs* of Tvcnt advertisements la Fhown by a jitAtrmcTu made b} H Spen«* r j o u !s, ittl\ ei*c5a»n;T mnn;i. successful -1at Best’s. (To pat.it gqnaervatt • operapO ifqaum ike them. T hey do -> .as w e prefer to dp.)._• .-.

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Ing that some day knowledge might wonderful thing the Rosea Crucis la civil ceremony, a christening and funeral service of tbelr o«i., *aid to be wiped out. the family y f Thotmis Mr. Lewis explained.decided to store in .thy pyramids “When the Initiates on entrance to be very Impressive and beautiful. The lodges hold monthly meetings the 'order, pass through, the threshphilosophies and secrets which conld not be transcribed -or otherwise In. hold." he said, "they have a most at which the officers wear robes. The dleated to perpetuate‘theni for "time wonderful revelation of what can be dues are nominal, the "great expenses eternal.** Astrology, the Rosleruclans done in' the science of spiritual, and of the order being furnished In an calm, was thus handed down through material thing*- They get their Hrst unknown and unusual manner." The the ages, finally becoming the science convincing evidence of the. Ros!cru-j question of finances nev.fr, gives the clan control of great natural phe-j lodges any cohc-rn,.'Mr. Lewis said. of astronomy. ’ 1 There arc no sick benefits or insur­ The .order is fraternal, like the nomcna. ' Masons, which the Raatcruciana claim, "They must, take' an oath to bold ance, but the members see to tt- that sprang from the order of Rosaea Cru­ sacred above all other things the .In. loo one of their fellows is ever In' < I cis, the seventeenth degree of Mason- nermost secrets and teachings of the want. 'Any one who doubts that Rnsl..1 ry. It Is claimed, being an' admission o>der. They pledge themselves to ac* its debt to the Roslerudang. Out­ compllsh- at least-one thing for the Icruclann Is not weir founded.” feaid Ancient and Mystical Order of Rosaea Crucis tc Have Ameri- of growths of the Rama Crucis, it- Is betterment of mankind before thev Mr. Lewis In conclusion,'' ‘Whocld go stated, are tha Knights of the Rosy dle. H i s s matter of mortal life and up to the Astor Library. There are life: for ■them to reveal thirty books pn' the subject there and caft Lodge— Men and Women on Equal Footing— Cross Cross In England and the ooclete Immortal secrets. To break the pledge of the n catalogue o f some 360 books, pub­ Roslcruclana In France. . Rostcrudana ifi the United States order Invites all the disaster of life lished in' nine languages. There arc Used Said to Antedate Christian Symbol 1,700 Years have been trying'-for. half a century and condemns the soul and inner, also more than 300 manuscripts In the to obtain tha right to ' establish a most man to all punishment here­ public libraries. There arc between '.-..ooo.ooo and 6,000,000 members of the lodge here, according- to H. .Bpcncer after.” — Many Distinguished Members. order." Lewis. Amerlkait fOUndUlottVirooL deni, of ISO Pelt avenue; who I*, also No Onthe in Court. president of Us How York I&rtltute The-Rosleruclans never take an oath SHOOTS PARTNER ANp SELF. Would you like greater peace of tlnguished members, among whom of rysebloal Ueeearch., ' In court. They make thVd sign of the bo mentioned, according to tha Bind, (treater control of emotion, might C FIK I.D , Mass.. Feb. 21—In claim* of the Rosleruclans, Xapolean, i : cross. They don't believe In heeven a SPRIN ability to rise above tlie material con­ Hc-nry II. of England, King Louts the Jewels and Srmbob. business d i l u t e V hich law yers hat; or hell, as "Billy” Sunday yxpounds been called In to settle. Joseph Rogoff. ditions of life, capacity for greater Hour. U n i ' Rulwer |,ytton, and "After fifty yars of pleading, n t io . Itacon. Ur. / "►Ttfl. t^rpjl of the Bating, gad preVratlon, the.supra.vie It They believe with certain modifi­ a cloth in g manufacturer* shot his physical and mental recreation, a Lord Rockefeller Institute, who Is now at huthorlUea bavegrai.-i ’ the right to cations In the theory of rcIncarnatioiA partner, W alter A. W ldlunsky, this better understanding of life, a oceper Lyons directing surgical treatment They have- a marriage ceremony morninff. H ofoff then committed sir insight into, its possibilities—la other for wounded French soldiers,' and establish such a \ Ige,” be aald. ‘T f e which Is performed previous to the Mde. W ldlansky Is seriously woonfcy Banks-8ta«iy. is In it? You would, of course, and An ex-president of the United States widow of. £o'r Stacey. V; &' A-. ' so would your neighbor. \y»ll, then, is alsp said to be a Roslcrucian. i and symbols to to brlnf the become membersof ,the Ancrcnt and Antedates Christian Era. n has th* roqgry this country Mystical Order ef Rosaea Crucis, 'hotmls about Rosss a Crucis means r o s y cross. used by ,th-' ts made of which is'now organising an American The cross used by the Rosleruclans a s 1 .5 0 0 a C turquoises, skin, set lodge. .ucr apnea bearing a 'symbol antedates Christ b y 1 ,7 0 0 amethyst The R o s tra C ru cis is not In be c o n ­ , y ears, t h e y claim . W h e r e the arms weird hi, . yules.” f i r s t . J 9 U & / I C jnr.exttcr/ni'fit of f u s e d w i t h t h e R e d C ros Society. of t h e cross m eet in th e R o s i c r u c i a n Mr. Ltk'is explained hs* V ij . Bar.ks-Sta :ey was a lineal •>ere is n o t h i n g eb k ritn b ! • relip- s t m b o l a p p e a r s a half u n folded' red f o r tr ;e O r je r I f f - '* - " > ;a n t on ktr mother's side c c„.. ab out It. d c - p ite ti at th e ro.-e. The sy m b o l signifies t h a : S tu a rt, ai d on her father's, J- : o F ? i> r :. a n d — T h e fam ily of T h o t m i s IV. fo unded 1 cr . o\fcr twenty-one years. organ­ ' I me Deity, good moral v t h e o r d e r ;niu built ' e tem p le o 1 habits, ana belief in w h ere Kitrniik a n d o t h e r tern v of the Rosleruclans. f o o t ­ I i n s t r u m e n t a l in h av in g eorae a member until h. Vast | p y r a m i d s a n d Other sr one m ay apply for t I e m b le m s a n d s 1 of minute one becom cnees a n d a r she realizes what

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an Incurable Wife Dives BapKol ShafL Ancient and Mystical Order of fiosaea Crude W Have Ameri> can lodge—Men and Women on Equal Footing-Crow ‘• h . K —I n v e r t I r tn * l K- f r t f i c Used Said to Antedate,Christ by 1,700 Years—Many Oha. I l e a C a r k r c l l - —------ tlnoulsheffUb niftBrs. ------- _ *— — iii*> r th a t a te w o* c u n b l# n u la d i, d h n m l m l- A ■ e m i n ' i p u re e , p i k in M a flk in u a k -d th a t her I 1t e w if e of I F M B M l f d w ith 4iWi R a i lr o a d mi la t h e A ral Um * ■ I l i a d n d c M i by ■ rt i t r t n

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The New York Times New York. New York Sunday, O ctober 24,1915 Page 16

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T o q u o t a M r. L e w is " L o t a n y b r ig h t 1 o b jo c t ho p U c a d a s a l n s t a (la r k b a c k g r o u n d a n d t h o Is no o f th o m m a r a f o c u s e d s h a r p ly u p o n It. T h a u I n s e r t In t h s r a m o r a a p lo t s ho Ids r c o n t a i n i n g * p l * ’.a. M otors w it h d r a w - I in g t b s si Id s fro m th e c a m e o s p o r m lt t h s io n s t s t h r o w t h o o b j e c t I n to t s o d a r k e h a m b or o f t h o c a m e r a . T h a n r e n o w t h o o b j e c t q u i c k l y , a n d a t th o s a m e t i n s w it h d r a w t h s s lid # f r o m t h s p la t e h o ld o r . m l m o b s a v a r y s h o r t e x p o s u r e . I f c o n d i t i o n , a r s r ig h t , t h o r s w i l l b e I m p la n t e d u p o n t h s p l a t s a to m * Im ­ p r e s s io n o f t h s r e m o v e d o b j e c t a n d a t o t h a r tir o e s a s l i g h t l y d l l f s r s n t fo r m . l l o w T " Me th a n prtM -eeda t o a n s w s r h is q u e s t i o n b y a lo t o f t a lk a b o u t d e p a r t e d s p i r i t s a a d s i m i l a r ** m y s t i c ” t h e o r is i n g . T h s farri Is. lig h t a a * • a c c e p t It b y th o r y e g i v e s u s o u r lim it e d p e r c e p t io n o f w h a t

w c d is t in g u is h a s o p a q u s or t r a m p a r e n t ; b u t w e k n o w t h a t t h e e p e c t r u m c o l o r s a r e o n ly a s m a l l s e c t i o n o r t h s ro im * o n » n < s i f li g h t , a n d b y u tb o r m e t h o d s o f l i g h t a n a l y s t s w e r a s l l y p r o v e a w id e f ie ld o f " I n f r a - r e d r a y s cm «mo s i d e a n d ” u l t r a - v i o l e t *' o n t h e i s ib u T h e s e a r e so s r o u p e d b e c a u s e a s y e t • i k n o w c o n a p sk r a liv e ly l i t t l e a b o u t t h e m , b u t so m e th in g s w o d o n o t k n o w a b o u t th e se lig h t e le m e n ts . F or ss o m p ls . « • k s* w th a t 1sores o f th e se ra y s hava m uch m ore p e n e tr a t­ in g p o w e r t h a n t h e r a y s in t h e s p e c t r u m d iv is io n . The X - r a y s h a v e a p e n e t r a t in g p o w e r q u it e u n d r e a m e d o f u n t il K o s n t g e n d i s ­ co v e re d th is f a c t . T h s e>-re*n *»f a c a m e r a Is o f s l i g h t h in d r a n c e t o t h e p a s s e s * o f r a y s o f t h i s t v p * . a n d r n o .e o r le s s w - l l d e f in e d p h '»t*»orap hs «>f " s h a r p ly r i e u w d b y th o le n s ” c* n r e a d i ly he to k e n by th is m ean s t h r » u s .» Ih e ’* o p a q u e ” s c r e e n o f a p l a t e b o l d e r ^ ^ ^ l f t h e I c o n d it i o n s o r e r i g h t . ” C o n s i d e r in g t h e » a r y In g p r o p o r t io n s n f s u c h r a y s , d e p e n d in g O.i b a r o w .e ir ir . a t m o s p h e r i c , c h e m ic a l. o r •••h e r i n f l u e n c e s a t w o r k o n t h e l ig h t . • • ran s u r e ly e x p la in t h e v a r y i n g lo t o f s p lr l1 1 p ic t u r e s w it h o u t r e q u ir in g t h s a id " p lr ita ! N e w Y o rk . O c t 21. 1013 C - *J

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THE WORLD, New York, Sunday, July 2, 1916 VISITING THE MYSTIC TEMPLE WHERE IMPERATOR LEWIS (FORMERLY OF P.S. 16) PERFORMED AS AN ALCHEMIST. As the June convocation o f the supreme Council of the Ancient and Mystical Order Rosae Crucis, held in the back parlor o f the dwelling at No. 70 West Eightyseventh Street, which is fitted up as a temple. H. Spencer Lewis. Imperator o f the Order, performed the mystical transmutation ceremony. He placed fifteen ingredients in a crucible, stirred them with his fingers and at the end o f eighteen minutes withdrew a bit o f yellow metal. Everybody present was profoundly impressed, believing he had produced a piece of gold. By Charles Welton

It will surprise some of the boys who were in Principal John Burke's graduating class in P.S. 16a dozen or so years ago to learn that "Fat" Lewis, as some of them used to call him, is now a high muck-a-muck in the occult business and a Grand Master General and Imperator. It may also surprise some of the people who ten years ago worked with Lewis in the Psychic Investigating League and helped him round up spooks and experiment with hypnotism and telepathy. But there's no going back of the words. Lewis is in the mystic line for fair. He says he isn't out to make money and has nothing to sell. There are strange goings-on at No.70 west Eighty-seventh Street - goings-on full of mysticism and the pungent aroma of Eastern spices. Students of the occult, clad in the robes of the Rosaecrucian Order, are as busy as an alarm o'clock trying to get results in science, electricity and other things by following wheresoever the symbols of the ancients direct. Lewis is a short person, with a big, round head, a big round face, a big, round body and a very stouts arms and legs. He is thirty-three years old and talks regular New York. His office is in the front parlor. He and Thor Kiimalehto, Secretary General, sit back to back at rolltop desks, Kiimalehto is a printer by trade, Lewis used to go to him with an occasional job and in that way they became acquainted. I called at the temple on Wednesday. Mr.Roth, who is a student of hieroglyphics,

and Mr. Callahan, who once explored an Egyptian tomb with me, went along. Two glad hands were extended to us. "Will you be good enough, Mr. Lewis," I asked, "to tell us just how you do the alchemy stunt by which you transmute odds and ends into gold?" "Stunt is good," replied the lmperator. "Now, to begin remember we may be nuts or bugs, but we don't pretend to have wings growing on our shoulders. On the night of our convocation, which was attended by Torch-bearer and the Vestal Virgin, the twelve other officers and others of the advanced order to the number of thirty seven, 1 delivered an address saying that for the first time in America 1 would demonstrate the secret process of transmutation. "For hundreds of years the Elder Brothers of our order in Egypt worked at their crucibles and wrestled with the problems of alchemy in an attempt to apply the fundamental laws of our philosophy and science. At last they succeeded in transmutation on the material plane. The members of the Fourth Degree being the most advanced, I felt the call to make the demonstration for the first time in this country. "1 had directed each of fifteen members to bring a certain ingredient, and I may say that these ingredients were such as might be found in any kitchen - say, saleratus, ginger, etc., but these were not among them. Salt was one. A rose in full bloom was another, although you would not pick a rose in a kitchen. "Then we had a bottle full of distilled water and a cube of zinc. As accessories, we were provided with a crucible, fire and a pair of pinchers - all the necessary outfit. "Well, when everything was ready 1 asked the fifteen brothers and sisters to come forward with their offerings. No one knew what the others had. The various ingredients were plated in the crucible with the lump of zinc, which had been tested with nitric acid and carefully weighted. This I stirred with my fingers for several minutes and 1 might add that I scorched my fingers in the process. At the proper moment 1 stopped stirring, and with a pair of pincers took from the crucible a bit of yellow metal - the transmuted metal which stood the acid test and was found to be a trifle heavier than the zinc. Every one present saw it. 1 might add that there is no money in making gold that way. You get only a little bit for all your pains."

"Was it the regular goods - the real stuff - gold?" 1 asked. "Gold transmuted from other metals," said Lewis, making a statement instead of a reply, "is the purest of gold. Now about the order. It was established way back in the dynasty of Thutmose III, who was the husband of Isis. The obelisk in Central Park, one of the two erected in Egypt by Thutmose 111, and intended to stand some day in 'the country where the eagle spreads its wings, bears the cartouche or seal of the order as well as many other authentic and Rosaecrucian signs. I told Lewis that, while I was not familiar with all the symbols and cartoons on the obelisk, his word that they were there was good enough for me. "When 1 went to Toulouse, France, in 1909 to secure permission to found the order in this country, 1 was informed that it soul be not until 1915, and so I waited and studied and fitted myself for the work, and on April 1, 1915, the charter was drawn up and signed, and the order took its place in the country where the eagle spreads its wings." At my suggestion we were permitted to enter the temple proper, which is the third room back on the parlor floor The room was heavily curtained. The crucible stands in front of the Imperator's desk. An electric bulb is inside the bowl, and when the current is turned on lights of several colors show. The crucible has a circular pan around its edge. This was filled with what looked like powdered dried leaves. Kiimalehto stepped into a closet, and, returning with a bottle, pour some of its contents into the pan and touched a match to it. Immediately the temple was filled with an odor like a combination of cayenne pepper, myrrh, sweet marjoram, terebinth and other things. The thick smoke rose from the pan, spread out over our heads and formed in a thin cloud which floated to the ceiling and dispelled some of the darkness. There was then disclosed the presence of a very tall and straight figure, garbed from neck to heels in a bright red garment and topped with a turban. He stood at the curtained window before an electrician's desk. 'May I ask what you are doingn" I inquired, and the figure turned and looked at me through big. round glasses

"I am a student," he replied, "and 1 am busy with the wireless." I asked his name and he said he was Harry Koenig, a theatrical electrician. He used to work at Cohan's Theatre and also at the Winter Garden, but was out of a job at present. While he was telling me these things the faint click of the instrument could be heard. "We do not do any sending here," said Koenig, "but we cut in and pick up bits of news. It is rather dull to-day." While Roth and Callahan were breathing the fumes of the burning incense at the other end of the room I slipped the wireless receivers over my ears. Koenig was right. It was a dull day. The instrument was not adjusted properly, so student Koenig turned a thumbscrew on a keyboard arrangement and, what to my untrained ears, sounded like a High School of Commerce boy communicating a baseball result to a friend in a Manual Training, clicked down the wire. Koenig was not the only student at his task. There is an average of dozen men and women - at work. It isn't absolutely necessary that they all wear robes, but most of them do. The different degrees have different robes - some red and others blue or white. The chemical laboratory is just back of the temple, in what used to be the butler s pantry before the Imperator moved in. The vibration and philosophy departments are in another part of the building. Getting back to that yellow bit of metal that the Imperator said he had transmuted, it can be said with authority that all suggestions that it might be sent to the laboratory of Columbia University for examination or assayed will be turned down The metal will be kept in the Eighty seventh Street Temple as a prized jewel of the order. The Imperator will not again give a demonstration of transmutation. Following the long established custom, the fifteen members who delivered the raw material to him are to keep their individual shares of the secret. No one individual knows the

mixture, but collectively they own the formula. In the event of the passing of the Imperator the fifteen may come together three years thereafter and repeat the ceremony. Probably the next function of real importance in the temple will be the christening of little Earle Cromwell Lewis. The date of this ceremony has not been fixed, but the Grand Lodge will be present. Earle Cromwell is the youngest of the Imperator's three children.

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T h e s_nl !a n t a n d m y i U • o r d e r t» s a i d * t « hnv* e s t a b l i s h e d in E r v p t in t h * , *••!** o f T t i o t m n * . l:*4n B IO Ti. C.. mid devoted to (lie s t u d y of philosphy. science mid the a r t s , « k well ns religion. M bn- a m em b ersh ip of (*.(>00.000. in* eluding some o f the w o r l d ’s m a s t e r minds. «iie|i as Lord lhtcnn niul Khilwer l.vtloii. 11 »-lainis to possess seientifie knowledge whieli is revealed tmlv to * mem hors. The Evening Record Greenville, Pennsylvania Thursday, January 18, 1917 Page 2

T he W ashington Post W ashington, District of Columbia Sunday, Ja n u a ry 21,1917 Page 4

A M ystic R evival. Word c o i t i p s from the far W est that the m ystic order of the R oslcrucians Is preparing to colonize in W yom ing on a large scale. According to the report, an advance guard of half a hundred of the membership haB already arrived and will be followed by many more. It is under­ stood that they will adopt plain farm ing, w hatever may be their esoteric side Is­ sues, and that practical cooperative ef­ forts will be pursued in the developm ent of the colony Perhaps th e plain or garden variety of the Roslcrucian will make as good a farmer as any other. For reasons prob­ ably connected with early reading of a desultory nature, many may fail to Bee how the role fits. The "Brethren of the Rosy Cross” are som ehow invested by those earlier im pressions with m idnight and m ystery, secret passwords, and lone­ ly castles with trapdoors leading into oubliettes. This im pression has been gained partly from veracious history, al­ though in all accounts of the fam ous or­ der the descent Into fiction Is not only easy but pleasant. It was In "The Coun­ tess of R udolstadt” and "Anne of Gelerstein," If memory Is not faulty, that they shone at their 6plendidest. It may be that the declension of the once m ysterious society to the dead level of agricultural pursuits has its own sig ­ nificant m eanings. Its heyday was in the tim es of despotism and the divine rights of kings, tim es when bright m inds could not w rite w hat they thought, but w ere

The W ashington Post W ashington. District of Columbia Sunday, Jan u ary 21, 1917 Page 4

1 forced to bury in alleged treatises on alc h e n y th e golden wisdom . Perhaps the beet argum ent in favor o f the Baconian authorship of Shakespeare’s w ritings lies in the su ggestion that Bacon's prominehce forbade his publicly fathering th e works that would mark him as an enem y to the political system s of the tim es, so that he foisted them on an obscure player, just as in his Rosicrucian m em bership he exchanged opinions with others of the cult that could not have been expressed openly. But that day has passed, in free Amer­ ica at least. Its last revival in modified form may possibly be traced in the Ku Kluk Klan. where the tem porary exig­ encies undoubtedly suggested the adop­ tion of som ething Blmllar. in order that and em pire within an em pire m ight carry out its purposes. The W yom ing Rosicrucians in all likelihood will be to the broth­ erhood that met in the dark forests, as the m onks of peaceful abbeys to the St. Simeon S tylltes and fierce proselyting Paphnutiuses of the days when the word of a com ing vengeance went out from the Thebald in its pronouncem ent of doom on a civilization already crum bling to Its fall.

preach at the morning service snd Bishop Fi Ilev. J. Frederic Berg, D.D., in the eve­ fhoersie of I. ning.

n l e t t e r to tl v lclnlty cnlli Society fo r I'iililral C iillum Mervlce in tl 0 « < ; AN I/A T I ON M Kl-ITI M i Tnyfituto for ROSAECRUCIAN ORDER ills t h e OPKN TO Tin: I'l'IlMC. copal r ’hu rcl Room .'2 , .Iohnnt«»ii Muiklfng’. 12 N t v ln s 3t., ing will be > TuoMlfly E vening, February 1:71ii. 8 p.m. t 24-3t #mtu Messiah, (»re t h e Rev. T>r Spiritualist at 4 o'clock P p yeh n logien l K rifa rrli Hoe. N. V., I n f . J 119 4. Singers fr< Wept HTtli *t, S un., Mon.. Ttiur*.. 8 ; S un., W«K. R a le i g h , N. K p.nt. SiiUJirt S u n d a y : **N S |d r lh iill« m Ouug r- Lawre ncevitl o iip V * C h r U t p n w n Plip n o m p n al l» rm o !i* tr.ttto u * .t of t h e old i Rev. l)r. U t e n t a t i v e of U n ita ria n m a k e a n ad

CHURCH OF THE SAVIOUR The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Brooklyn, New York Saturday, February 24, 1917 Page 9

I I' ► n 1n*ralor o f llie R o n a r e r i mn i r o n I he « p rllln B li aJiarra this Icnar*" ■ w i Lh t he m . nr a im s in. frr tin s a \ a n his hlsin ry o f ih« nrdrr in Avnrrlca •’TTtltJn In 1*f t,*n!t«d SIMM them it *n mr-rAy nf orfffl n l u Uflni nil pUlTOTtlPE t'* ir u f Pft'flM Purlnni Itirr* In In l i u l h hul one true order, the n rluin il nm! p«rfecl R o h c cruelan order, « h !cli |i b n n n n hy rn e o n ly mmf Tim A n rlen t and M y sflra l CrufU.* mhos* u n lvarta l and world wide itymhol l« Hi* l r ia n * li » | l h Min DOinl d m r ward.'1 An n lh ir sial*-fn*n t hv Founder (^tvl* will ■urr»rlAi a srWl m a r t p i * r a h n I h o u f b t Ih ry knejr nil n>oui RnglcruvZarIftr In thin co u n tr y 1! In ifcM Di« A m erlra n toclM v flat** tkarfc from 1915 H# made ■ miarend'nc nf M b qrfir^ia] i n s t r u c t i o n s r,om I he JnlllflJej. and vcliin In 1911 lie callrd upon Itie fio rtity fnr P i j ’chicaJ Ra/iearch Io help him form a Irulci here nf t h e R o s y rp n ss h f m e! w | | h IndJffrrefir^. It could not be o th e rw ise for ihe ari«nl9 had retarded Iho d a l e to H IS In th e early r arl "f t h a i i # a t . » lh th e n • lalanc* nf fluprrlnr 9 * r rct a rv - G en era l T h o r K U m alrh in and wh en Mlh e mrvin w a s In S a rlltarlUH.1' a rm ed « l i h c h a r i e r tnfl “ hlark hoolt - F o u n d er L e w is called i n * r l h e r a M;tl* band o f nine iron nnd w^rmn Id fr.rm a enm u n i t e s !n orirfriqic a S u n ^ n i i Council for America.

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