The souls that take up a residence on the earth during the latter part of August and the first three weeks of September come from the planets in the division of Ahmo. These people possess a materialistic, matter-of-fact turn of mind; a keen insight into human nature and a cold, calculating estimate of life. They are qualified for success as lawyers, chemists, designers, scholars, philosophers, journalists, novelists or politicians. They are daring, cunning and resourceful. Their investigative turn of mind often leads them into trouble; especially is this true when it leads them to pry into the personal affairs of their friends and make use of the information so obtained. An inconsistency in the lives of these people is their inability to cope with their family troubles and misunderstandings which they themselves may have created. Domestic strife seems to paralyze them and make them mentally and physically ill. An unfortunate matrimonial alliance will do more to wreck the career of one of these people than any other one thing. In their home relations they are not tender and demonstrative, but rather maintain a respectful formality. They are more interested in match making for their friends than for themselves. With them sympathy once lost is slow to recover. While practical and indomitable in most matters, yet they crave appreciation of their intellectual authority. This they generally receive, for they are persistent readers and acquire and retain much knowledge, and they are particularly clever in the use of the acquired wisdom. They are, however, unjust, in that they criticise the work of those younger or less experienced, forgetting that the great should be just, if not generous.

The women of this tribe are especially fond of finery and of social leadership, and will go to dangerous extremes to procure them if need be. They can detect an advantage in a business transaction where others could not see it. Neither the men nor the women let many opportunities escape.

Though frail and delicate in outward appearance, these people possess remarkable vitality and recuperative powers that defy the ravages of disease and age. Few of them are financially poor, for their practical utilitarian estimate of life is a promise of at least moderate success. They do not travel much, but drift instinctively toward shops, schools, and cities where they can study the thought movements and motives of other men.