Text
~
I
;;..=•--~-•-- - . ••es.•s•· '"·" '" •..,., •• •..
'.,
_ t ';"1
-HF (
1.
-·
Handel
Solo-'' He Shall Feed His Flock ,..
By MRS .. DoROTH~ }IcTAGGART
4-·
Nov. 15- MR. WrLLIAl\I SALTER of the UniYersity of Chicago
will review for us " Tolstoi' s Story of' A
Soul's Resurrection.'" The great Russian novelist has produced no novel more
powerful in its ethical appeal than this
tale of a . girl-criminal's growth into
goodness, which no one of us can follow
without increased hope and from which a
successful play was made last winter.
If only for its arresting sentence, " Stop
trying to make other people good and be
good yourself," the book would live.
Opportunity for questioning the speaker,
as usual, and the following excellent
music by the Carolyn Belcher String
Q_uartet:
3·
Duet-:-". When Life Is Brightest"
By MRS. '.\1oo><E and Miss
M1LLEK
Solo-" The Year's at the Spring" .
B y Miss DADMUN
5·
CoE
\
,~:,
'
Pinsuti
Beaclt
Sullivan
s1:scn, author of "Christianity and The
Social Crisis," who has just returned to
America after a period of study in Gernuny, will speak on "Are Oztr J.Vational
Standards Etli£cal.2''
For music we
have secured The English High School
Orchestra (forty pieces), who will render
m
this program :
N
:
\~
d
Wagner
Variations on "ThP. Austrian Hymn·• .
Haydn
1.
"Pilgrim' s Chorus"
Violin Solo-Largo
Handel
-·
"Morning, Noon and Night"
3.
"Music of the Spheres"
Rubinstein
Moffat
Tschaikowsky
3·
Intermezzo
4·
°Faust,,
Andante
r
Nov. 29-PRoF. WALTER R.AuscHEN-
1.
5.
qllur
~ ·ill b
['
~ mu
ar
" The Lost Chord"
2.
4. · Violoncello .Solo-" Romance"
Rav
d Re
tJi, '"'
Hawley
n:.:{'.~
a n . .s
Eth\
"'"""" in the '""ent mag,zine, of article• on Socialism. E><rY·
just published an intmiew, by Lincoln Steffen,, witb
EuScoe V. Deb•, the man who i, standing a, Socialist candidate fo<
the p«sid,ncy, and Thi Am.rican Mag-azin<, The Outio,k, Peom•'<
and Tt,e World'< Werk have all given libe,al ,pace, in recent issues, to
,ympachedc articles on this subject.
We have the,efore asked fou<
ci«oymeo of a, many different denomioation, to discu" "Sociali,m A<
J Sc< Ji"' REV- O. ?. GtFFORD, D. D. (Baptist), REv. ?an.o W.
Srit..\ GL' E (Epi'~copalian), REV. GEORGE W1LLIS CooKE (Unitarian),
aoJ R£Y. DANIEL EvANS, D. D. (Congregationalist). Qiestions, as
usual, and the following program by the Westland Ladies' Q_uartet:
"A Song of the Seasons "
n _ .ot
l
Nov. :22- A Symposium Niglzt, suggested by the astonishing
Nov. 8-M1ss ELIZABETH S. COLTON, "the greatest woman
linguist in the work]," whose knowledge of fifty-four languages has
made her famous throughout this country
and Europe, will talk on "The People
and Problems of India." Miss Colton
was as welcome, while in India, at the
palaces of rajahs as in the homes of English officers and she also became the
intimate friend of sufis and pundits, of
Brahmins and Buddhists. She has had
peculiar opportunity, therefore, to get at
the real genius of the land to which
Kipling first introduced us and she has
arrived at some original conclusions concerning economic and social ills.
The
usual questioning will follow the address
anJ music will be supplied on this occasion by the harp, violin and
'cello of the "Mauldon Trio."
i,;tP.~;l~
C\;t~nFi1
Sujje
d:
.,
Nlascagni
I
I Ii'
..
Gounod
I d!
.
I l'l-t
I
,I'
hll
. cc:,
\ I
--
·,"-
---~---,.
-·~·~--<,,- ,.Q ' o.f --,__,.
,
i:ei
·n -"·
r
n
,L-
' ;•"-·\'
·•,huc
tho t'I1
ii • m eo tln1
hlons ,lri r,
,, build up
the Conpc
11 n1t·c1.1<ly ,
' ot h er · w
Ion WG, ,
ot.1 11 hull
union l
(
teal
Un
of, the I
'
I
• ·• l · .
THESE rIEETINGS for the treatment, from the ethical standpoint
( and with prejudice to no one), of live questions, p ersonal or social, arc
dPhnll or'
3, who wn1
nllttod on u
lntornat1011
d <llrector
m for th,
yo11 t ordny r
mooting o
held in the most beautiful hall in Boston, situated on State House Hill,
the lnri:-E
Id by . th1
convenient to the Park-street Subway. They are for yo1t and your friends,
dotnllcd
port was r1
he union p1
By coming to them yourself and pa ssing on the n ews of them you will
g reatly he] p us to develop a new Boston institution, a place where, as in
the Cooper Union, New York, men and women will find mental aml
moral uplift on Sunday nights, and be able to enjoy in comfort good
music and stimulating discussion,
rl n1o1e. '1°h 0 1
ng and J o
1;,oceodlngs
branoh, A.
Mary l!l.
ry of the
m ee tings,
Bunda)'
r, etatln
gs, whtc
001101· un
ll I tho
11
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
o 101111 lon
th o oxo
l'(llntr · It
_,:1
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
\J.i
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
,·
d Hnl
o line
GEORGE W . COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
ow :
Paul Revere Frothingham
L . K. Marston
John R. Gow
Edward H. Chandler
Hayes Robbins
Charles L . Noyes
James A _. Floyd
Edwin D. Mead
John T. Prince
Dillon Bronson
Meyer Bloomfield
H. A. Wilder
Henry Abrahams
Ernest S . Butler
Emery B. Gibbs
Robert A . Woods
Franklin Wentworth
W . N. Hartshorn
~• w~
o· IJ
Secretary, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
Office Hours: Ford H a ll , State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays . Tel . Haymarket 2340.
·~•s
w1
led
0~
0 111
I
;;..=•--~-•-- - . ••es.•s•· '"·" '" •..,., •• •..
'.,
_ t ';"1
-HF (
1.
-·
Handel
Solo-'' He Shall Feed His Flock ,..
By MRS .. DoROTH~ }IcTAGGART
4-·
Nov. 15- MR. WrLLIAl\I SALTER of the UniYersity of Chicago
will review for us " Tolstoi' s Story of' A
Soul's Resurrection.'" The great Russian novelist has produced no novel more
powerful in its ethical appeal than this
tale of a . girl-criminal's growth into
goodness, which no one of us can follow
without increased hope and from which a
successful play was made last winter.
If only for its arresting sentence, " Stop
trying to make other people good and be
good yourself," the book would live.
Opportunity for questioning the speaker,
as usual, and the following excellent
music by the Carolyn Belcher String
Q_uartet:
3·
Duet-:-". When Life Is Brightest"
By MRS. '.\1oo><E and Miss
M1LLEK
Solo-" The Year's at the Spring" .
B y Miss DADMUN
5·
CoE
\
,~:,
'
Pinsuti
Beaclt
Sullivan
s1:scn, author of "Christianity and The
Social Crisis," who has just returned to
America after a period of study in Gernuny, will speak on "Are Oztr J.Vational
Standards Etli£cal.2''
For music we
have secured The English High School
Orchestra (forty pieces), who will render
m
this program :
N
:
\~
d
Wagner
Variations on "ThP. Austrian Hymn·• .
Haydn
1.
"Pilgrim' s Chorus"
Violin Solo-Largo
Handel
-·
"Morning, Noon and Night"
3.
"Music of the Spheres"
Rubinstein
Moffat
Tschaikowsky
3·
Intermezzo
4·
°Faust,,
Andante
r
Nov. 29-PRoF. WALTER R.AuscHEN-
1.
5.
qllur
~ ·ill b
['
~ mu
ar
" The Lost Chord"
2.
4. · Violoncello .Solo-" Romance"
Rav
d Re
tJi, '"'
Hawley
n:.:{'.~
a n . .s
Eth\
"'"""" in the '""ent mag,zine, of article• on Socialism. E><rY·
just published an intmiew, by Lincoln Steffen,, witb
EuScoe V. Deb•, the man who i, standing a, Socialist candidate fo<
the p«sid,ncy, and Thi Am.rican Mag-azin<, The Outio,k, Peom•'<
and Tt,e World'< Werk have all given libe,al ,pace, in recent issues, to
,ympachedc articles on this subject.
We have the,efore asked fou<
ci«oymeo of a, many different denomioation, to discu" "Sociali,m A<
J Sc< Ji"' REV- O. ?. GtFFORD, D. D. (Baptist), REv. ?an.o W.
Srit..\ GL' E (Epi'~copalian), REV. GEORGE W1LLIS CooKE (Unitarian),
aoJ R£Y. DANIEL EvANS, D. D. (Congregationalist). Qiestions, as
usual, and the following program by the Westland Ladies' Q_uartet:
"A Song of the Seasons "
n _ .ot
l
Nov. :22- A Symposium Niglzt, suggested by the astonishing
Nov. 8-M1ss ELIZABETH S. COLTON, "the greatest woman
linguist in the work]," whose knowledge of fifty-four languages has
made her famous throughout this country
and Europe, will talk on "The People
and Problems of India." Miss Colton
was as welcome, while in India, at the
palaces of rajahs as in the homes of English officers and she also became the
intimate friend of sufis and pundits, of
Brahmins and Buddhists. She has had
peculiar opportunity, therefore, to get at
the real genius of the land to which
Kipling first introduced us and she has
arrived at some original conclusions concerning economic and social ills.
The
usual questioning will follow the address
anJ music will be supplied on this occasion by the harp, violin and
'cello of the "Mauldon Trio."
i,;tP.~;l~
C\;t~nFi1
Sujje
d:
.,
Nlascagni
I
I Ii'
..
Gounod
I d!
.
I l'l-t
I
,I'
hll
. cc:,
\ I
--
·,"-
---~---,.
-·~·~--<,,- ,.Q ' o.f --,__,.
,
i:ei
·n -"·
r
n
,L-
' ;•"-·\'
·•,huc
tho t'I1
ii • m eo tln1
hlons ,lri r,
,, build up
the Conpc
11 n1t·c1.1<ly ,
' ot h er · w
Ion WG, ,
ot.1 11 hull
union l
(
teal
Un
of, the I
'
I
• ·• l · .
THESE rIEETINGS for the treatment, from the ethical standpoint
( and with prejudice to no one), of live questions, p ersonal or social, arc
dPhnll or'
3, who wn1
nllttod on u
lntornat1011
d <llrector
m for th,
yo11 t ordny r
mooting o
held in the most beautiful hall in Boston, situated on State House Hill,
the lnri:-E
Id by . th1
convenient to the Park-street Subway. They are for yo1t and your friends,
dotnllcd
port was r1
he union p1
By coming to them yourself and pa ssing on the n ews of them you will
g reatly he] p us to develop a new Boston institution, a place where, as in
the Cooper Union, New York, men and women will find mental aml
moral uplift on Sunday nights, and be able to enjoy in comfort good
music and stimulating discussion,
rl n1o1e. '1°h 0 1
ng and J o
1;,oceodlngs
branoh, A.
Mary l!l.
ry of the
m ee tings,
Bunda)'
r, etatln
gs, whtc
001101· un
ll I tho
11
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
o 101111 lon
th o oxo
l'(llntr · It
_,:1
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
\J.i
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
,·
d Hnl
o line
GEORGE W . COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
ow :
Paul Revere Frothingham
L . K. Marston
John R. Gow
Edward H. Chandler
Hayes Robbins
Charles L . Noyes
James A _. Floyd
Edwin D. Mead
John T. Prince
Dillon Bronson
Meyer Bloomfield
H. A. Wilder
Henry Abrahams
Ernest S . Butler
Emery B. Gibbs
Robert A . Woods
Franklin Wentworth
W . N. Hartshorn
~• w~
o· IJ
Secretary, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
Office Hours: Ford H a ll , State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays . Tel . Haymarket 2340.
·~•s
w1
led
0~
0 111