File #3653: "ms-0243_ref.pdf"

Text

FHF

I

r

f
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING

I

AT 7.30 P. M.
~HE PROGRAM FOR MARCH IS AS FOLLOWS:
SMITH,

le

I

Director of the

I

lute, New York, aud prethe ~real Sunday evening
oope r Union, upon which
Hnll Meetings are modelled,
ta 11 1 of II IVi1rking· with the
ut f the ~reat success which,
t II years, l'rofcssor Smith has
of rnch \\' ork, the commit1uillcnce alike should draw

/!

I

' - .'... , L,(., c

I
I

IMi~~w,,,-.., f ( the movement here in
tu le will he furnished by Mrs.
M101._.,, '

mO· M, soprano, Miss Virginia
llht, 111ul ~lrs, Minnie Little

a I nht,

The program:

• Andac ht," fro1n Suite" Im Wald" .


\ 11th

\'trdurc Clad," from " C r ea tion .,
Mus.

11.

P,ijjcr

I

. /!"yd,,

I

ULoo:\1FIHt.1>

"l lcrb•thh11nc" ,

I. •• (i a,·ottc

.- ,

, L,- l,-- I

11


Mi ss

"Lol'c I la s \Vings"
/J, "Au l'rintcmp s "

11.

Mits.

-L /

c ,4 , ,

1,,,

·

I

t. L,, {,A/ l.(,

STJCl{NKY

,

. l?o_ crs
g
(,'ounod

B1.oo:\1F1H1.o

Song•

with 'Cello Ouligato,
11
••
Sl'rcnudc"
I, " Sprlni; Song" .

Shubert

W eil


\lit!-, ll1. oo:-.1F JEL O a11d ~II SS ~T I C:KNI!\.

I

f

,,
~I

?/
f

(..I[..

'9

C

,


i

,,

~ l . / t ( -f'·.;[,,{r"

Tol'd._

(~

\.i ".· • /\/ ; ,,.· .. , ;I'.·

,- ,",/ •-

,a,
fl
10

igr
1:h
~at
!SU

ori

,d
,d

da1

,an

t

i

rat

:ha
o.
p

3
~

a,

nk
og
is
e
pet
!OII

the.
1ey

bes

th<

,d c
eric

.rd
,op

:,a
Bl

>YB '

nd

.ter
1an .
;he J

March 14-Y!R. Ho RACE FLETCHE R will speak o n "Feeding for

Mr. Fletcher's name is a household wo rd and we need
add nothing to it; when yo n see him yo u ,vill feel that he is his own
best advertisement. For he carries his
sixty years like a yo uth of eighteen and
he diffuses on every side the sanity and
poise which his system of mastication
sen·es to promote. If, perchance, }"Oll
feel that this topic la cks the "ethical and
spiritual" aspect pronounced a desideratum
in all subjects treated on the Ford H all
pbtform, try living with a dyspeptic before and after h e has learned how best to
care for himself. Recent re sea rch has
shown that nearl y all the mi santhropists
of hi sto ry were victims of an ill-working
di gestive apparatus'. Professor \Villiam
James a t any rate has declared the matter in Mr. Fletcher's address
"of fundam ental importance both to the individual and the state." The
music will be supplied by the Louise vVood-Fo rrest Trio.
Their
program:

qu,

''Allegro from Tri o·,

I.

letic
f th,

c-e cc

, '' Serenade "

S. B. Wlu'tney

"Spanish Dance"

eopl
1em

s b,
like ·

3.

"Fan t:1s ia ,,

sts.



. 1Vidor

5.

. 3I eudclssolm

HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the· Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
meet) by the late Daniel Sha rp Ford, w ho owned The routh's
Companion.

r e<l

ch

,t of
go

l

Fore
,gs a

by

.M iss

PEARSON

Trio , Op. 330
Allegro.
Duo-Adagio Molto ..
Finale- Allegro .

Bohm

COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings

reg
,ings
1

Chopi1t
Violin Solo

· kne
I a3 i

Chri
tiroV<

Raff

+· ''Kocturne"

D e B eriot-

"Scherzo" .



I

:acti,

D

Trio , " Cavatina ''

Violin Solo by .\·[rss B RANDEGEE

>eop

S qu ires
' Cello Solo by ~I KS . E. THo"rsor<-II ALL

"Serennde,'' Op. 30

4.

H e,·bert

"Gavotte"

Popper
'Cdlo Solo by 2\lt<.S. llowA1<D

rch

iDg

.,tarch 21-:.lR. JoH:-. Z. vVHITE, of Chicago, will discuss ' ' Un, mr /,.;1 mod: Ifs Cause and Cure." Mr. vVhite has studied law, but
it ,:,.,,,. ,15 a p rinter tha t he earned his living before he became a public
, p o::1 ker.
L yma n J. G a~e, late Secret:H,· nt the Treasu ry, once rema rked, after
li~t-t!nin~ to :.fr. \ Vhite in an impromptu
c..:b:1tc ,,·hich called for the ready applicati o n o f the principles of philosophy to
pr:ictical problems in economics and
policies : "\Vhile journeymen printers
can th ink as cle:uly and reaso n as logic:i lly on public ques tions as that , we need
h:i ,·e no fe:ir fo r the future of our country."
T he p u bl ic ques tion w hich especially interests :\Ir. \ Vhite is the remedy which
Sing-le T:ix offe rs for our economic ills.
It is said, too, tha t he can m ake this
\
doct rine so clear that it may be understood hy anybody! The music
will be sup plied by the Grieg Trio, Miss Marguerite Pearso n, violinist,
:\frs. E. Thompso n-Hall, 'cellist, a nd Mrs. M. G. de! Castillo, pianist .
Their progr~m :

Efficiency."

Paul Revere Frothingham
Edward H. Chandler
James A. Floyd
Dillon Bronson
Henry Abrahams
Roben A. Woods

cha
Ge

THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE

,icn
12se d

lead·

NO TICKETS REQUIRED

ation
,ptist

FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place

;oget
.all o

.

Doors open at 7 o ' clock

;y an,

eir s,
:t.

Osc,, Ho urs· _

L. K. Marston
John R. Gow
Hayes Robbins
Charles L. Noyes
John T . Prince
Edwin D. Mead
Meyer Bloomfield
H. A. Wilder
Emery B. Gibbs
Ernest S. Butler
W. N. Hartshorn
Franklin H. Wentworth
Secretary, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD

· Fo rd Hall, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Satu r d a ys.

Tel. Haymarket 2340

, con
nen 1
is sor

ne. I
: Hat
n.' a1;
1eetir

._...

,sBert

-- ··

_

n:1.n~ Rr e 1n c nurc 11 t1me wnen

nt:

u11.e:.cu 1

~

.•

. ..1-4,.,,

_
...,..~---

- ,_, ·- ,;)

'·?

.,

,.... ,,,... l,l"'!::,I' ··

nr

~

rn--

1

L

.

...

SUN DAy7

"Those _letters :1nd 11 few iippreciativ~ ne ~ s ~ ,
po_
per articles w~tch had been written, deter.ETI N GS
mmed the committee on Christian Work to Jet
·
Mr. Coleman try the thing o(lain this winter.
SON, D. ·o.
T~e respo'!se was almost immediate . .By tltP
third meetmg there was standing room only in
n hall which seats 1,200, ,-· - in the HERALD of syrnp,sium discussion c
uch. I think now, It,' by four ministers o:
•• paper ought to nominations - 500 pers,
rticle in a recent A few weeks later whe
York, spoke, admission h
This was just after his
,li shed in Chicago
ctting to the Un- York to the justices wh,
1s written by Miss
Perhaps the most si1
this season has be•n t
. ~arch 28 - :-lit.
An,u1s Pu,FFEtt who, for three years, wat
mee tings, who at- William Saller, of Chic,
:I knows the whole 'Story of a Soul's Rei
pr111c1pal oE the Lyman Reform School at \• lestboro, .tvlass, and
\
mlogy of Mr. Cole- have heard a pin fall du
has since visited the leading induslrial
1 ·ist.ian Endcat'or addre,s - wbich ln~tec
.1
questions which follow ec
schools of the United States and Fn~•
ury saint, "canon- to the lofty moral stond,
land, will speak on " Tlie BO)' aud T/1~
liss Crawford mys: cull 'the people' OITha
Gang." l\fr. Puffer believes heartily
peeled that there would
of the Baptist SoProfessor Salter's reiterE
that possibilities for good are to be found
ncome, which Mr. mnn who sins ngninst ch
in every normal boy and that the g~ng
, be used • to soften the woman. But not so.
ly clear to his keen Hall - which is always
instinct is in essentials a social ins1i11ct
recs of cnpitnl and postulated that position 1
misdirected. He maintains that the hoy,
Ir. Coleman imme- deeper things.
if rightly guided \vhile in the "gnni: "
e, was the prepnr"That the people thin I
,n in Boston, under
some hout·s of their long
stage of development, may always bt
Social Union, of a they hear nt Fo1d Holl i1
made into a good and useful citizen. T
o
the Cooper Union, which goes on outside
management of the I before the doors are ope
illustrate this truth he will relate 111nn7
1 begin s to gather, the co1
interesting ~tories, drawn from his 011n
-row th nnd develop- 1 ere and the questions th,
)vement, and every ' interest, uttered as th ey
ex perience. l\1usic by the Bostonia Bra
und himself in or broken English that be,
Q_uartet: Dora Damon Brown, corncli ►q
·n to have his ardor , just coming to feel th
addresses nnd the ' problems of his adopted
Grace Mac Morse, first horn; Alice Florence Morse, second horn; Belk
ston be was gradu- mg, too, to sense the seri
Yeaton Renfrew, trombone . The program :
Ins t year he per- of young people toward
rislinn Wot le of the ' night several sweatshop
.-I/,/
a. "In th e \Voods" .
e chairman he was I some minutes to Mr. 81
(~rnrtct {
I.
,rd Hall on six Sun- j that 'everything he e
Sj>t>//i>l'II
b. "l\lorning Song".
.ry out hie idea. To Near by, two Jewish boys
Sd111l11·1
·t
.
z. Duo for Horn s , "Serenade"
bis undertaking, he , cussing just what kind
(;011110,/
,legates in a smoke- , when - ne Prof. Walter
3· (~rnrtet, "0, Tender ]\-loon "
day afternoon, nnd gested - 'the ablest man
• No111,1
Song for Corn e t, " Resig-nat ion "
added to tbc co- for the same wage as the
/?11t,,'11 ,<f1•i11
:ers and of several his best.'
S· ~tartet, Paraphrase, " 1\lelody in F"
ad impressed from
" Already, too, the qu
I to give the under- reflect a more syrnpatheti,
-off. What really efforts, at any rate of th
however, was the kind. The common' peopl
THESE MEETINGS will continue for two evenings in
ad from New York and ns soon as they are c,
n who spoke was 8
titude toward the church
Announcement of the speaker for April 4 will be made later.
ion man . Charles change it. One of them
llicer, Robbi Schula he hod not for years be
by the Lillian Haynes Trio.
Leighton Williams church, but he would like
four of them Chris- covenant of the Baptiste.
ugh care was token , ~h_nt hundreds of the peop:
, of that in the ad- 1ctse the church ns being ,
<~rs, consequently, to the exclusion of prncti,
April l l-M1t. GEottGE W. CoLEnm men. And th ey of tbe church ns they kne
3 and cosmopolitan
hood. They nre indeed na i
MAN, whom you all know and love,
their humanity.
ore. criticising as the Cini,
will speak on "7'/i e R eligion of tlw
iter stated bis own nil eocinliets want to throw
Crowd." Mr. Coleman has had what
tooled dogmas, of
" For there is otber er!
tter thue, nnd the day tbon thnt of non chc
seems to him a message, borne in upon
·e Jews, respected Christianity ; it is that of
him since he first attenclcrl the Sunday .
s - ju•t aa the non- social movements. A go,
wny nt the close of · too, is being done at Ford
evenings at Cooper Union, three years ago,
hu s instic over the directly . The meetings at
and he will give us some hint of what
>y Rabbi Schulman. those, who have no regt
rn the six tentative men ts on Sunday evenings.
those meetings and these meetings he re
no means satisfied • "The c~mmittee in chat
have meant to him. That he can talk
ure that the • great cated in brotherhood. Gee
en reached. When tbe hrotherlinese which I
inspiringly on any subject you who have
series arrived be · nhle successfully to fuse di
followed his introductory remarks know
which really enved co~mi~tee, and now lendi;
verf well. On thi s subject , so near his
ne,' he urged the Umtarmne, Congregations
Jn, • nnd tell me Freethinkers, nnd Baptiste
heart, the secretary thinks she can promise
1Ve the meetings go moniously working togetb
actual eloquence! Music by the Page
,ember my name by may have at Ford Hall oe
.I-man, not the ice- service of such beauty and
Class l'vJale Quartet.
cheer and sustain their so
tte rs began to come beginning to the next.
1t nnd then by the
All the speakers com,
.ever for the cburch !ltnt the busiest of men a·
is spring,' one man rn n movement of this sort
others like you I that Professor Bowne, Li
,m.' ' I have been f,essor Zue~li_ Keir tiarc
n,
Sunday evenings at Fagan, the s1gnnlman, one
e another, ' but I hn,~e Rpoken nt t~e mee tin(
hing you have beP.n
Who, then, wtl! assert t
. leader among the tl)e orthodox B~pttst body_
__ _ _ _
P;;\~et.--ilt ~--<>lh~t:-·; ,;~t;i"t;·~~f~;.'\'i, e''nr,;'t~t~~~,.....-----.ed such mee tings h!m nre _
n?t d_omg n ~o.nsptcuous service to geneen good men who u!ne re!Jgton rn provtdtng a platform for nn unln tho hi s tory of these m co tlni:,s. But that
gles is necessary if bta~ed and unc~nv~ntional presentation of the
he will h n.ve n. s pecia l message for this s pefully the transition ethtc~I 8 f!d ~octal impulses second to none of
cial gro up tho se who kn'o w how the welfal'e
Mr. Ford's very ?1" time •J? importance 7 • I could easily imagof the ma sses res ts upou his hcn rt at'e sure
rom 8 diametrically me the Galilean on that platform answering the
F or lit e l'est of thi s month th o s penk et' s:
l1eglnnln 1; tomo l'l'OW nl g- ltt, :tl'e: Mt·. H orea11e~, ea~nest questions of tho perplexed multia,· c F le tc her , :.llr. ,John Z. V.' hllo, i\fr. J.
tud e, en!d _one Christian visitor who had hccn
, Arin.m s Puffer. 1.'hc ma nageme nt ltnpl'Ovcd 1
swept o!I hta feet by an evening nt Ford Hall
l\• nhu thtn•n ht'A fn tJ.Phn thiA"
f

. th e opportunlly afforc1ed by Professo r 1

I ".

J.

I
I

I

I

I "