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· Conducted by THE BOSTON BAPTIST SOCIAL UNION

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MRs. PoL PLAN CON
. Violinist
Accompanist
Miss CoNSTANCE FREEMAN
"Barcarolle"
Goldsteiu
. , Sch;tbert
"The Bee"
HYMN, ' 1 The Coming Time/'
Schubert
"Serenade" .
JCela B ela
"The Son of the Puszta"
ADDREss, 11 America's Influence upon the Older Nations"
-William T. Ellis of Philadelphia
HYMN, "Hark, for the Hour Is Coming." _
QUESTIONS FH0M THE FLOOR . .

PROGRAM FOR JANUARY 28.

1.
2.

3.

. Basso
A. R. FRANK ..
GEORGE MENDALL TAYLOR
Accompanist
"Lord God .of Abraham''
.Aie ndelssohn
"Invictus"
Bruno H uhn
HY111N, "My Country 'Tis of Thee."
"Pilgrim's Song"
Tschaikowsky
ADDRESS, "Science and Immortality"
-Prof. James Hervey Hyslop,
Secretary American Society for Psychical Research
HYMN, "Choose Ye, This Day."
QUESTIONS .FROM TI-iE FLOOR,
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD, Secretary for the Meetings

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ok up the qu estion 0
d m edlumlstlo Ph c no
e d What th e res ult s
Ot oases lnves tli;u tcrl b
e , y tor Psyc hfca J R es,
h :•dblJ ccn lnveM ll ga tecl
\ll thefurIn dmun y Hild l·
c ea th
I
1e o1
·
<ltlH
l1 uclnn t1 011s wer e fr o ,
d eud , H e d efin ed th,
, or cons etous a c l) v
1
nt or rorl!e . ,,
~t fn o r d hrn1·y m edtu ,
. ,. .n_
eurly B<> mu ch fl'a
11 ,','ftl•l'fu , and li e ..
rberg wh en h u s al ci"
u no t buc n li1v c1-. t1va 1
';', II Y h e Would jus t ~a ,
fraud 11 0 n nylJo<)y 01
·~
aee .!)t' llllss Qu entl "
,,n l• plscopa l bis hop n
,
ough wh om li e hl' ,'J ·
,with Oo vrg 0 P c llu~m
la tter .with D r HI
ll ha d a lHo s poken
l'Oll!fh llfrs P ipe,·. n .
t Mrs . V at'J•ol, th e ; :
olnr and m cdlnm
wJth tne la t,/ F :·(,/
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ln ed ·_ th e "ll-lvlnl\ty l
7t ch le u s ua l!)• fur,
1
< u m e on !h e i;ro un c
r 1v 1 1 t'nc t s that c a n,
a
Y m ea ns ot' fra ud "
belf e ves thu t s uch
, a ned by t ele pa th)' "
ex pl a in ed th a t l~l,
1ylng wns an a ccept c,
I1 Y be tween the · d e ,;,
,wae not. 'I'ho fac ts'
ve lh o -e xist ence or 1
In con clu s Jon , h o
c Ve Phlloeoph y h as
n. \Vo muHt 11rovc
~ beyond stock brccu i

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lift·

Iona asti ed Prof. ·Hys lt
fi eld . H e ro iu·o a fo ·
and 8P Uco forms o
A. I don ' t l<now, an

!l]O

~o you think of 11
il,Jo t
h onomena ? A. 'l'n bl e 1
al Phenonienn, nncl 111
will nevor ·prov o th e /
spirit aft er d e uth J
aJ , f! Ot n r> td r:a l 1 o1
hy
~r

on t th e spirit s co11
well 11s You'/ A
Tl
n m odlum. ,
· ,
r-•: r am juet as 1111

Office Hours at Room 707, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays,
Telephone, H a ym ~rket 2247
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P-"I nm not n m edf

ONE'S OWN MASTER

ma:_ hne been oonll'Oi l
n
n force outsftlo' 9 , h

It is poss ibl e to put th e cause of "the
prese nt unres t " into a s ingl e se nte n ce o f
t,..:e nty-eight word s and thirty-fiv e sy llables , and we are g oing to do it. H e re it is :

1-Vhat men w ant is th e cerlai11ty that
every ma11 willi ng l o work shall g rt a
chance to work, a11d g et f or him.<c{l the
full results of h,:, 7t• or!.-.
Observe : cerlai11ty ; n o pa nic, s trike ,
lockout , di s mi ss al, s pree , whim, m a nipulat io n , combine, tru s t, o r s pec ulation
to pre ve nt it.
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ot tlv1.1 co n8eJon

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, clou ene 8 8 , • Not?;'~ 'o,, ~•
con solo,us nes,. f,
nt lln, l 1•l o n t lhlnl,
,
o1·< er to PJ'OV(
1 O -1111 fndl\cfdu a J ll O ll I

AT 7.30 P. M.

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th~~ ~::}~•~~>tic 1Jt n to C:

EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY

01 ·

0

FIFTH SEASON-1911-12

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ll. UH !,

:vnrl:'ot ~~hlch ! own
:i Wo rld Is my am
~Id do I ' kn,,w a n y

Obsen·e: every man-ditcher, kitc he n
maid, coll ege pres ide nt , fir e man, bank
director, farm er, la wye r, middl e ma n,
break e r boy, manufacture r, Roc kefe ller,
J.P. Morgan, John Smith, l\fary S mith,
Bridge t O'Sulli van.
O bse n ' e: /he full results - wha t hi s.
work is worth to the wo rld, head wo rk,
hand w ork , organi z ing, cli s tribulin g,.
transp o rti n g , g rowin g , makin g , boss in g .
That is th e probl e m. Wh en it is so lved
"the prese nt unres t" will cea se , nnd n oL
till th en .-Chn'., t ia11 E11dca1· or 11·0,ld.

e do about It ? ,\ 1,, 11
atudy lh e tac ts, · 1•1i'e
th oro lo ho JnveR tlsn ll c
o •to know whut th o 81
Ice-must w e w o,·J, fo r
·b A. · I havo n ove1 11
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out It.

er-"'l'h en Jou l<now u

an I do,"

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Ellis Says That. Spirit · of .1 75
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s Abroad in ·the JJ:ast . • -: 1 ,-.

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the '
·• lous
,
Ford
lng, I
fluen
• East,
"Tl
"ls Jr
Itic o:
coun1
unreE
prlce1
slant

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and rumors of wa~s, the iatior
d social and !Political conti'o-·
ch are prevalent. indicate that
~astern I world Is hi a. '' turmoil
laused by · the eame spirit and
Lmlbltlons which brought · about
ian Revolution-the d'llelre: !or
1ua1Jty and brotherhood.
So
lam T. Ellie In an address at
1!16t evening upon his return
tens!~ trip through the ·orlent,
econc
re," said the spealcer, "man le
may ·
d under the heel of oppressionI Russi
ustrlal and social. Think of Itlast C
Tu1·lcey have a constitutional
glnnli
t, and even R)l&sla will at la.st
"In
,e citadel o! absolutism[
ture ,
·, has ·1ald her grip on the whole
well
m ,I tlnd A:merlcan flags every~
decla1
roam-In · little out-of-the-way
the g
ey are not displayed for business ·
'j l
·
'rhey testify to the heart-love
mowi
lndus1
t !or this country. While I was · '. are et
.
tubout through the world I heard
rl=n history quoted than I ever
'large
A.merlca.. our- heroes are being
Bagdf
1eroes In other countries and the · _ _ State!
o! foreign nations are being
land
the principles of Americanism.
· than
working out of the probiem of
throu1
1lch sweeps· the entire · worid,
, jca, ti
nd .A,merlca must work together . I ed to
.and. .A;merlca le the promised
: labore
ts talking _ ith the chief rabbi o« . \ 0 f ti1
w
oout the Zionist movement. He
,
elleve In it. He said that the
I other
'd never return to Palestine, He
: mo~t
that 1, t_ elr · p~omlsed- l~nd ·.was
h
: brougl
,. :, :; ,
· .\ : ~ '. .. ~. ~ ·:\• :' ·
the s,
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,and It
shall ·
v• - \ .
own I:
~ world.
· · The
'is Pro

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·
:chlcal
; .-,.i mce i

0 Goll of earth nnd altar
Bow down and h ea r our c ry ,
Our ea rthly rnlers falter,
Our peo pl e drift and di e;
Th e wall s of gold e ntomb u s ,
The s words of scom divid e ,
Take not Thy thunder from us,
But take away our prid e .

13,i;)j.JNI;) W~LD

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, •: / '; Eilis; -' ,;: wo;';rl ~;l'ide
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CHOOSE YE, THIS

Th en to s ide. with Truth is ·noble wh en we share her wretchc.d crust,
E'er her cau se bring fam e and profit and 'tis prosperous to be just.,
Th e n it is the bra,·e man choo ses; whil e the coward s tand s nslde,
And th e multitudes make drtu e of the faith they had denied.
N ew o ccas ion s teac h new duties; tinie makes anci ent good uncouth;
Th ey mu s t upward still and o nward who would kee p abreast of truth;
Lo, befo re us gle1~m her lamp-fir es I we ourseh·es must pilgrimR he, ·
Nor atte mpt th e Future' s portal with the Pas t's blood -rnstcd key.
-James H1use/l l.ot111/I,

PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY • 4.

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Miss MARY \V1NTIIROP SnACKFOllD • Violinist
Miss JESSIE \.Y. S11A~KFOilD
• Accompanist ' '
"Me ditation" from "Thais"
1
lfassc11el
"Rondo" fro;n Sonata in D Major
Hv111N, "My Country 'fis of Thee."
"Cavatina".
ADDilESS, "A Living- vVage"
·
Rev. John A. Ryan, D.

Beethoven
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of St,

Ra.fJ
'Paul, Mlnm ·

Hvr,rn, "Hark, for the Hour Is Coming."
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLoon.

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DAY.

Once to ev'ry man and nation comes the moment to decide
.
In the s trife of Truth with Falsehood, for the good or e ,·i l side;
Some g rea t ca u se , God 's new Mess inh, offering each the bloom or blight,
And th e ch o ic;e goes by fore Yer 'twixt that darkness and that light. ,·



sociolog1st, ih 'J1is · talk Snndny
Foi·µ ludi, snld tl;nt ·· the ··influ.li ····· 11fi~.! l.~s .. .. . . . nccount• . . .. ,
I
. the ·. desire . fol; li,berty. now
i,ng, H~ei'( .-(11,l ,l\round: the ,- ~ioli~.... ·
'I
1()Je, world is todny cryi11g . for
1d : frnternit~· ~ he <lerlnretl. Even
ne - fount! 't\ic Ame rican flo.g
he'•
.11nd . eheri~_e<l hy · nntives beh
tl,1cir npp_eci, ti.on . l)lld love for
r n
i<lcitJS . . ; ••·-'.' . .'/', .' ' : I . ' •;· ·
,
io{1s :' ~ric;1tnl , •~o~ htries, . wh~ie
d . ·rc11tnries· women .have · enr! l' · from · the , wells in crockery
1tld, )1 · tl1e .,.:ont~ii1icpv ie11,1:rj'.
.alf
~
11dru<l . Oil tin e(lns.:.' • · . ,- .
1 ,.hh· 'said, the politi.ca l. tlnrest
;;
1
~- ·- Its ,.. nrg11m ents · with ·· .i1leas
1to11 , nt\d , ~h,e ·Cn~1bridge sl'hool
,·s,'., ).'\t ,.hn1•e henr.d ·11fore ':Ameri-:
•rr :,quotcd in Asia thnn I ·ever
IC ' Uniteli States,", he decliirell.

From all that terr or teaches,
From lie s of tongu e and pen,
From all the ·ensy speeches
That co mfort cruel men,
From sale and profanation
Of honor and th e sword,
From s leep and from damnation, •
Deliver u s, good Lord .

-G. K. Che.<tertou,

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AND AL TAR.

Tie in a living tether
The pri es t nnd prin ce and thrall,
Bind all our lives to gether,
Smite u s and save us all;
In ire and exu ltation
Allam e with faith, nnd free,
Lift up a living nntion,
A single s word to Thee.

~1\:Aii¼t>tA~ .. ""'.\ .
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EARTH

(To the mu sic of" ,vcbb ")

Y\'~~.:J.t-· ·

, ta.ry o

GOD OF

PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY
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· 2.

Soprano
MRS. LESTEil M. BARTLETT
Accompanist .
M1ss ·CAnllIE L. HoLLEY- •
Group of Shakespea re's Songs- ..
Ar11e ·
a. "\.Yhere the Bee Sucks" .
Schuber/
b. "\VholsSylvia?".
Srh116erl
c. "Hark, Hark, the Lark!"
HYMN, "0 God of Earth and Altar."
Group of Old En g lish Songsa. "The Lass with the D e licate Air"
Arne
b. "Phyllis"
Whelpley
c . "Oh, for a Breadth of the Moorlands"
Whelpley
Ann1rnss , "The vVorld Outlook for. Temperance"
-Mr. Harry Phillips of London
1-IYMN, "Choose Ye, This Day."
QU ES TIONS P-ll0 ~I TIIE F1.oorr.

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THE COMING
And is the time approaching,
lly wise men long foretold,
Wh e n all s hall dwe ll together,
United in one fold?
" ' he n all me n s hall b~ broth e rs
Forsaking narrow creed,
And each for ill! do se rvi ce
As ev' ry one hath need!

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TIME

S hall J e w and Gentile mee ting
From many a di s tant s hore ,
Upon on e com mon altar
The ir common love outpour?
S hall nil that now di vi des 11 s
Remove and pass a way,
Like s h:i.low s o.f the morning
Before tl; e bla ze of day ?

-Shall all that now unite s 11 s
l\fore s weet and ia sting prm·e ,
A closer bond of union,
In a blest land of love?
Shall war be lea rn'd no longer,
Shall s trife and tumult cea's e,
All ear th a blessed kin gdom
Of harmony and peace?
- Jan e Bor//n;;icA·.

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MY COUNTRY 'TIS OF TH EE
Let mu sic swe ll the breeze,
My country! 'ti s of th ee ,
And ring fr o m all the trees
Sweet land ot lihe rty ,
Sweet freedom' s so n g;
Of thee I s ing ;
Let mortal tongu es awak e ,
Land wh ere my fathers died,
Let all that breath e partak e ,
Land of the. pilgrim's pride,
From ev;;.y n'i'~11ntain s id e ,
Let rocks th e ir silence break,
Let free,jo lll rin g!
The sound prolong.
Our father's God! to Th ee,
Author of libe rty,
To th ee we s in g;
Long m ay our land be bright
With freedom's holy li g ht ;
Protect 11s by _
'.r'hy might,
.Great God, 011r K- ng !
i

My native co untry, th ee ,
Land of th e . nobl e fre e ,
Thy name I love;
I love thy ro ck s and ·rill s ,
Thy wood s and templed hill s;
My hear t with rapture thrill s ,
Like that above.

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-S. F. Smith.

HARi<, FOR HOUR IS COMING!
Hark, for the hour is c·oming,
Lo, the burden s hall be dil'id ed,
,vhen your ears shall anointed be ,
And each shall know hi s own.
Aye ! li s ten, 'ti s ri sing a nd swelling,
And the roxalty of manhood
Shall 1i1ore than crown or throne,
O'er populous land and . sea ,
And the fl es h and l)lood of toile rs
The ,norning s tars began it
At th e dawn of creation's birth,
Shall no longer be less than gold,
And the circling spheres go swinging And neve r an honest life
And singing it unto-ear th.
(
Into hope less bondage sold .

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For th e song of t h e s ph er es is motion,
And motion and toil are life,
And the idle s hall fail and falter,
And yield al the encl of stri fe .
;As the stars tread paths appointed
½.nd th e s un gives forth hi s hea t,
So th e so n s of men shall labor,
Ere they res t in le is ure's seat. .

The kings are to serve th e peo ple,
And wealth is to ease the poor.
And learning to lift 11p the lo wly
And strength that the we ak may e ndure
For we th e· peopl e are waking
And low trnd high s h a ll e mpl oy ,
Th e s pl e ndid strength of uni o n,
For liber ty, li fe and joy.
-111. D. B abcock.

THE1 MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
..NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HA:LL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock

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. yhlo!\' 9 111,/: tii~ •i;,{la.t ··questlo,
hethe1 ' conscfp,usnosil'• ' l)Wefstccl I
~ t/i and •It wcu, · Op ' td ··sclcncr ~
,.. that cl(he1•., ft ctf<l, or 'that II :..
th111
ne
i:'
t In theE of ;hlch t own me;1•
world la my nm most
. How do I lmc,w any ,·ones lf.e~lde my ' own ? I mei·eJy
Axr,it~nco ot' tll,ll.t consciousness
,
11 the oatalyptlo Htulo ll ts
wn tlhal many l>OO r>lu ,11av..,
con8c ousnes8, ' Now h, the· n1 :t
sure thut consclousn e·s,i Is n ;1:
at death. I <lou't think he ls
t. ~\It In orcl er to Pl'0Ve this
_
,/aim an lnfl\Vldual soul unrl
n took up the question of upand · med iumistic ph e nom e na
la ln ed what th e results had
360 cases lnves tlgn terl by th e
oclety tor Psychical Res·oa r c h
os had been Inves tiga ted fro 11 ;
hours befo1·c cl ea th a nd It was
n whetl1er In m a ny cases th ~
hal111clna t101rn we re from th e
th e dead. He dcllned th e soul
·ea m ot conscious activity-a
s point of forc e. "
that In ordina ry med lunisli ' r>
s not _nearly Su mu c h fraud ~"
nn d w,'R le rla, and he sco1·ed
sterberg when he · said ll'fm c

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lu.\u not bee n h1v.Js tt in ted at

onull~ h e would just a 8 soon
h a f1 aud as anybody else. He
case of 11-Ilss Quentin the
'?f ,Ill Episcopa l bishop and a
tnroug h whom h e httd 00111 •
I! Wllh Cleu1·ge Pelham uhd
tnc latter with Dr Hlchar,1
.He h ad also spoken with
tlirough Mrs Pi per. He c lt ccl
of Mrs .Verrol, the famou s
chol a r and med ium, who hacl
cat0<J with t,1e lat e · F,·iederlcl·

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la ln ed th e "triviality of th e
which is us ua lly furnished
mediums on- \h e ground that
trivial facts that cannot be
by m ea ns of fraud uncl no
ma n beli eves tha t such facts
xplalned by telepa thy." ,

ex pla ined · th a t telepathj,
e liyh,1g wa _ an accepted tac t,
s
athy be tween the dead and
'. wa s not. 'l'h e facts would
1
·ove th e . ex istence ot a pcrtl ty. In conoluslon , he said ·
·uctlvo_ philosophy has eve 1
:
an. 1N e must prove th a t
~~ beyond stock breeding In
lions asked Prof. -Hyslop cove fi eld. He1·e are a -few:
Im a and ,;pace forms ot con? A. I don't kno\v• an>•thlng
1
do you think· ot .t11ble tipping
ph enom ena? A. '.l'able tipping·
cal phenomen!l, und physi cal
will nevor prove th e exi s t- .
e aplrt t after <.l eu th. It is a ·
al, not a physlcnl problem
don't th e splrlls come a11d i
well a s yon'/ A. Beca use I
a m edium. ,
,
/
r- ' \I um just as much as

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op-"I am not -~ medium a t/
0

man hns been· controlled tor
a · torce ontslde· 9t hlrnsolt
e do ahout It? ,\. 1•1n ·low 1;
study th e tacts. '!'here Is a
the re to be lnves tli:;-11led. • ,
o to know what the spiritual
ce-must we work tor a Jtv.
A. I have never troubled
bout•It.
r-"'.l'h en you lmow no ·more

11n I do,"

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_Ford Ball: Meetings i .

:S TO :A.ME.:iu-, "t+·"',.:.. ·: \: · W
:::.-..;,,_'l"':_ _.. c:' :t.,;.
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jour
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•.· the
tya That. ~,p.lrit of .17 · ·· lous
fa ·the East .·· -· •· 1 , /Ford
:
, .·
' ·
' lug,
ors of wars, the· iatior
fluen1
'
and 'P0lltlcaJ'· ccinti·o~· · · EastJ
revalent Indicate that
j "Tl
·orld Is hi ' Ii. ., turmoil
"ls Ir
1
' the eame spirit and
I tic oJ
whl-ch · brought · about
Icounl
Iutlon-the desire · tor
unreE
I
nd brotherhood, so
prlcet
:Ills In an addrMs at
Istant:
nlng upon pis return
·Ip thz·ough the 'Orlent; •
econc
may
the speaker, "man Is
he heel of oppressionI Russi
d social. Think Of ItI last C
have a cohstltutlona.l
glnnh
en Rpssla_wlll at last
"In
ot absolutism!
, ture ,
.•well :
her grip on the whole
LmerJcan flags every~
declal
1 little out-ot-the-way
the gi
: displayed for business
.tlfy to the hea.rt-love
i1mowi
country, While I was
I lndusj·
,ugh the world I heard • are e
large
)ry quoted than I ever
Oui- hel'oes are being
Bagd
other countries and 'the · ◄ State
, nations are being Im-'
land
than
:!pies of Americanism,
out ot the problem of
throu
ps the entire · worid,
, jca, t
·a must work together . ! ed to
erlca Is the promised
I b
with the chief rabbi o( ' a or~
llonlst movement. He
of t
it. He said that the
other
iturn to Palestine. He
moM
· promised. land wa11
broug
1
the s 1
._,. :··,
. -·and l~
shall I
own I:
, worldj
i The
Is Prd
, tary o
.chlcal
·, ence E

,, , .

January 28.-PnoF. JAMns ,H, H)'sr.op
Secretary of the ·American So~iety tor
Psychical Research, will speak to ~ on
u•
"Science and Immortality." Since fbe
death of Prof. William James of Cambrldte
Dr. Hyslop has been recognized as the fort•
most American exponent of the prloclpl I
upon which the scientific investigation
spiritistic phenomena is based. Tlie work
to whic):i he is giving his life was onct
characterized by Gladstone ns II the mo
important which is being clone in the world I"
Come and learn why Gladstone . thought '°•

I

I

I

February 4.-Those who remember the
very interesting addre"'ss which Father Gasson
gave us here last year will be glad to know
that REV. JoHN A. RYAN, D. D., Professor
of Moral Theology and Economics in the
St. Paul (Minn.) Seminary for Catholic
Clergy, will come to us on February 4th with
an addre ss on '' The Living J,Vage." Dr.
Ryan has made a special study of the labor
question, both here and abroad, and to his
book, ''A Liviilg Wage/' has been accorded
the distinction of a Frerich translation.
Attention is called to the fact that, on
account of a gathering to be held in Ford
Hall late on · the afternoon of this cfote the,
doors will probably not be ope'n ed until 7.20
im,tt·ad of at the usual time.
0

February l l. -Mn. HAllltV Pmw
of London will address us on "Th• 011/IHJ
for Temperance." Mr, Phillipi bu ha
extensive and unusual opp!)rtunlty to atudy
from the inside, industrial · <levclopmenta ID
the Old World and in . the New 1ml he
brings with him a particularly clear muaa1
con·c ~rning the relationship bttwteD th .
things and the onward sweep of ·tho temper•
ance mo.Jement. He hns been calltd th
John B. Gough of England and' i• 111"1 t
possess much of that great Mnuachuaett1
man's power in word-painting and In movln
his audience at will to laughter or lb.lt11n,

iii' 'Jiis 'talk ·snhdny
snid thnt the '·influ-

'~1,~~

~vn~· nccount-

rc for libe1'ty _ now

ill . nround • the-glob~,- ........
is t~dny cry ing for

:,,·; he dcclnred. Even
,_ tj,c Amcricn.n ,llug
ii
s hed hy nntivcs be!cin~ion nnd, love · for

. .''

•,:· .. ~:

;

. , ... ,

:nl ·. ·~o~htries, .. where
s

wom cll .hn.ve ·. c·n r-

c •well~ in crockcrv
1c ." :omi:-ii' Ttqw ,·ca,1:r;i'.
,ill CQ.118, '

.'

.

the p~litira I tinrcst
nm cnts · with ·· .illens
he ·Cn111I1ridge · Sl'hool

hcnr.d lliore 'AmcriAsiit thnn ·1 :ever ' .
3tutes,';i
declii.i~u:
i

in

he·

'~'k ,. . ·, ·. , :,~
...

'

.

1) • • ~ ·!.;' '

'°'·\\\~

February 18.-RAY STANNAHD BAKEH
of the American kfagazine will speak to us .
of "The Progressive Spirit in Politics."
Mr. Baker is a close student of social and
political movements in this country and it is
significant that he should choose a suhje_
ct
so strikingly similar to that which Norman
Hapgood- recently treated here. Evidently
men wit.h their ears to the ground feel that
the ''Progressive Spirit" is a thing to be
reckoned with, these days.
~•s