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Show I W f P PeuM C II Will the Fate and Fortune of the I Actress's Fatherless Boy Really I i tf Turn Out as Prof. Maccabee I j 1 1 Br1 "'T Forecasts J iT I f ' I Peggy Marsh Fishing for Shrimps at Deauville, France. Is Peggy, I mj wdddi I v. .! -little J four-cj r-old Henry Anthon Mar.-h baj ;fl lost an Inheritance of million? and I future is ijed up in a confusion of couipli 1 cations the outcomp of which the human 1 1 mind cannot predict. I If PaggJ Marsh, the winsome musical comedy ante had become the wife In- j rtend of the sweetheart of Henry Field 2d. grandson of the late Marshall Field, oi C'hlcngo. everything would have been stin-shire stin-shire and QapjtftteM tor reggy and her It wan in London Rve years ago that young Held met Mis-- I'i vgy while -he va- : playing at the Alhamhra (here. Th" young muiti-inillionaire became very much fhpi eatog i i-rt in Mrtm V gjpexi '' t vJm' V ifi n ae i I LTril P Hi did. however, make an agreement In Pel-1 Pel-1 11 ' ruury, 1917, that he would establish a fund lit' of a hundred thotisaud dollars for the sup- port of the actress and her child. Young T-'ield then married Miss Nancy Perkins, a niece of the l.anghome sisters of Virginia. And shortly afterward he died. Miss March has sued the Field estate and the litigation la being fought through the Illinois court. Meanwhile, newspaper reader? were .-ur-prleed the other day by the news that Peggy Maish had married Albert L. John-son, John-son, -on of a WOll-tOdO New York railroad man j.nd nephew of the late Tom L. Johnson, John-son, four times Mayor of Cleveland. BhI what of the child? It La not only the loss of the Field million? mil-lion? which the child suffers from its mother's moth-er's indiscretion, but it mum go througa life with the social stigma which attaches to a love child. Young Johuaon baa made Peggy Marsh blfl wife and thus established and rehabilitated rehabil-itated her as far as this Is possible. And lltUc Henry Anthony will no doubt be adopted and become Henry Anthony Johnson. John-son. What will the courts decide in the child's nit for a share of tho Field fortune? How will the cloud of the child's parentage effect ef-fect his future? These Interesting specu 'ations are answered below on this pago by Professor William A. Maccabee as be reada and Intreprets the child :, boroscopo from the stars that ruled that night lu the Summer of 1916, when he was born. HH Horoscope of Little Henry By Professor Wm. H. Maccabee. I a OCORDINl lenco of l aatralog i theCbaldeans, the Bgyp sag and the kl tho late of each of us is fixed at the hour of our birth by the position at that time of the stars in the heavens According to their arrangement how close they are to j each other and in srnal parts of the sky ; '' , to it is supposed will the future life of tho 1 one born under them be arranged. This ; celestial page of destiny, of which the let- l tered symbols aro tho reverr planets, the J moon, the sun and the constellations of I the zodiac, is called a horoscope. If Is a difficult script to read, but by riles and I formulas determined by centuries of obser vation we cau at least decipher lis lurger meanings, j Were It posnible to kno Its exact mean- 1 me, down to the least detHll, e could pie- J diet the happenings, hour by hour, in the Itc of unyono whose horusoope was under examination. We would be able to read the Hook of Fate as easily as a grown man can read the alphabet. Of this perfection t ! the science In modern time-, hns fallen v khort. We can read, nevertheless, though 1 haltingly, j In the horoscope of little BCUJ Anthony Marsh th"re an' three Important factors, j n examination of the noMtlon of his star j In what Is called "The House of Fortune" 1 hows It Jut peeping over the eastern j horlion. Thin slunlflei- the tinanclal aspect I 1 ' 'be native as the ierson for whom the j horoscope U being: drawn 1 called Here i we And the evidences of his future In terms of wealth and material pmp.rit Henry Anthony Marsh's star insures that the boy will never lack tor money. Here is the first factor The second factor ' 't the position of tho benevolent, ponderous 4 nd Jovial old Samaritan, the planet Jupl- . -r. who is Just above the horizon In Dtvl-Mioo Dtvl-Mioo 1 and in the odiecel sign of the j Pull. His position glTes Utile Anthon remarkable power and ability to ovetvomc the most serious obstacles Whenever any J erteia arlaee Jupiter backs the boy nut the third factor is vastly threaten- 3 tnx It Is the position of the sinister, ma- 'us and scandal-creating Saturn, in eon I Junction with Venus, menaclns br and seeking the aid of the erti and treacherous Cauda to augment his malignant influence. Saturn always endeavors to nullify the beneficent influence of Jupiter and eclipse the promise of the House of Fortune. Will he succeed? My reading Is that in the material welfarn of the boy he will not but in the spiritual destiny, tho love life of Henry Anthony Maieh. ho will certainly I!nd gratification for his evil enjoyment With Saturn aj a menace, the red planet Mars lines up threatening the child's health. Deslde them stands tho planet 1'rar.ns a warning to tho lad and to his pnrents to be very careful in the iel( ICtfon of associates and friends. Against these three evil factors Saturn, Mars and Uranus aro the strong constellation of the Dull, tho beautiful hut somewhat hand! capped Venus, and gqod old Jupiter, the Ifst star ot all. The boy will grow up fond of pleasure. . s'.nslng and dancing, and will alwav-. bo much civen to the society of the other sex. The stars Indicate that his temperament will not bo so much frivolous or merely pleasure living as full'of the Joy of living PaJanelng this lightness. Jupltor give hliu sympathy, generosity and justice the entire en-tire combination making for nn exceed Ingly pleasant, companionable and trustworthy trust-worthy friend Yet through his life Uranus in the House of Friendship constantly leads blm to betrayal be-trayal by his friends, and Saturn, using tho weapon of the history of his birth, constantly con-stantly seeks to make, htm unhappy and more or less succeeds. It la not until his first love affair, which occurs In his nineteenth year, that Saturn deals his first effective blow. The boy will l precocious, and this affair of tho heart, although occurring at such an early ape. will be as serious as though it happened to a man ten years older. Crtain Indications in the constellation of Taurua show- that about thto time be will engage In ranching, ranch-ing, possibly in Mexico He will fall In lova there with a girl of other blood than tils own. but whosa Lome Is close to hie own. There Is evidence that she la of a proud Spanish family. They will be engaged en-gaged to jnarry but through a faithless friend, who himself cares for the girl, the secret of Anthony's birth will bo told to I! tne parcuts. This will put a sudden and sorrowful end to the romance and the boy will give up the career that he has been bent upon, and will go' back to his mother and his stepfather Five years later, tho wound healed bo Is again en-gasred en-gasred to a girl of an aristocratic family In America. This romance is ended by another malicious friend, who distorts various va-rious lively but Innocent In-nocent friendships with other girls Into In-to matters for suspicion sus-picion and Jealousy. The Question o f birth does no? entoi into this at all. Four-Year Old Henry Anthony Marsh. Hut immcdlately after tho o.uefctlon does become prominent. Notwithstanding the fact that Anthony will be surrounded by and constantly In the society of fashionable people, and that his environment will be of the best, he will never be able to resist or. at least, wholly to overcome, a desire to choose companions compan-ions and associates from lower strata of society. His sympathy with people of this kind conxtantly betrays hlni, and he will always be Inclined to look too leniently vpon their conduct and limitations. This tendency, which will worry ant dls-trei dls-trei hU mother, from the time he la ten ears old, finds its culmination from the influence of Saturn shortly after the unhappy un-happy breaking of the second love match. PlUcd with resentment and morbid Introspection, Intro-spection, young Anthony Is shown as fore-saklng fore-saklng his parents and their class end burying himself among these lower people with whom he hss always had the peculiar sympathy noted. And when be ! thirty he will pick fum these associates a WW partner. The girl be will marry will be from the lowest tC Jtll. aumuiul TttVan Svntw. Loo. Peggy Marsh, i' ow Mrs. Albert L. John&on. rank of family servants! She will have no family and there Is Indicated some scandal or blemish upon her reputatlou. Whether this Is the same shadow that rests upon Anthony, or whether it is some slip or ill doing of her own Is not clear. But she will certainly not bo tho kind of daughter-in-law that Peggy Marsh would have picked out. He will not be happy lu this marriage. Constantly the other and tho larger tide of his nature will picture the possibilities ot a home with one more in harmony with his carlv environment and education. Ills wife will lovo hlni dearly, but she can be no truo companion. The strength of her lovo, however. will 'restrain him from breaking away whenever the other urg-ings urg-ings become dangerously strong. Tho wife will not have his mother to combat; tho stars show that she will not bo inimical. Indeed her own happy marriage for a casual study of an astrological chart irawa at the time of her wedding to Albert Al-bert Johnson arrows that it will be happy -!!! greatly broaden ar.d soften Ptgrv-yarah. Ptgrv-yarah. Thre not one Indication of even a shadow of danger of a separation i r any great discontent between Peggy gad her huhband. Curtoiuiy enough. howeTer la Intlueace of his stepfather upon Anthony An-thony to keep him to Ms duty will be oven greater than that of his mother Thw horoscope ?howt. that there will be two children of Henry Anthony Marsh's marriage, a boy and a girl. The loy win die young but the stars Indicate a remark-t,i remark-t,i k mr or d"ahtr. a career ' , rP' r all the unhapplness experienced both by her grandmother ano Grttt QrUvts M iLU gSBBl ber own well-meaning well-meaning but comparatively com-paratively Ignorant Igno-rant mother. But of this more later. There are two great dangers from .violence Indicated. The first occurs In Anthony's An-thony's twenty-fourth year and Indicates a wreck at sea with serious scandal attached. at-tached. It is linked with the breaking of his second romance, but not as tho determining deter-mining factor. It would seem to me aa though at this time he were either the gaest of the host of eome yachting party and that his companion? were a number of very frivolous people. Disaster is clearly Indicated and several deaths. Anthony's is not among them. Tho significance of the relation of this occurrence to the second sec-ond romance If perhaps that It will be o:ie of the entanglements which the faithless friend will use to destroy the lovo of the woman who might have shaped Anthony's life very differently. His second great danger conies when ho is thirty-five. At that time, the stars indi-'ate. indi-'ate. the United States will be engaged In a minor war and Anthony will serve as an PWOei In If. This struggle will be the precursor of a gTcat war which will follow nve years later, a struggle more deadly and murderous than the one from which the world Is Juat recovering. As his horoscope shows no participation in this war whatever, I would Infer (hat wDunds received In the other struggle will incapacitate him from aaln taking part la his country's defense. The length of bis life Is Indicated as eighty-five years. He win be fifty before he becomes a widower and will not re-marry, re-marry, using the gTcat wealth that will bo hi at that time in charitable enterprises. 1here Is evidence that he will possess in turn fl.e fortunes Each one of thee. Ii?.?t-the ,ftJt ho wl" ,0? through the Til influence of I ranus working through 'boe amo unreliable and false friends. These fortunes, so it la indicated In tho chart, will be progr?i lD "iasBP lm when b l , L by hi 0,3 ' J Very curiously, the fifth l"M Which H the .' '' -' of 311 LnWH In that period of obscurity jJM During that ''KPfA n. t0 'rfjjiisiEf . Ttio stars sfco TBIJl and cleavage P I sot 1.1 &u tori which are cal M'f- 19 I A I more p.-i , ! .In, TO 9 tip : y pu,2uwsM links up the low-born w J" ABBart "KT of wealth Just wba- I V The ahadow ' n fortune Ac.,ijra ! Jf. 1 ' Bl comma ndl: g Ii, I come. If i - the grands I dlcate fjr Utile Hear? Anu , jn. |