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known in relation to other bodies. The speaker also dwelt on vibra- tions. He stated that everything comes to wus by vibrations. in " T speaking of light vibrations he said i that all these vibrations are between red and violet. Lower than red and higher than violét we cannot see, Men are equipped to see a few octaves + Prol. Baumgardt Speaks t0 Mem- |25 Ssemhon® Fie Sronen ors | | ward the question of races on other bers 0' commonwealth clnb Planets who may be equipped for see- ing and feeling vibrations thit the B e people on the earth cannot conceive. | 55 Secret, Fay's Report “Einstein and Relativity” was the| oy, ro'port"f-:r tl’t year of Secre- gubject of an addregs by Professor B tary william E. Fay was as follows: R. Baumgardt W} SLOMEE. ""‘,‘ | ‘Tonight's annual business marks Commonwealth club at the Y. W. C.|tne ‘glose of sixtaen succegsive years FA, l,au evening. ot in the Commonwealth club's activities. _ Professor menr'hn ‘:I"’a "’h“? The present secretary has served in | Einstein ""ke’m “"l T il l“;t that office continuously since May 2, gravity where hr saac e;non 1¢ft11916, and since he has attended every oft. . Newton's theory 1s that every|p ceting of the club since that date, particle of matter attracts every other| . oo ag every meeting of the execy- | particle in proportion to its mass and | ;.o committee, he naturally takes a the inverse of the *quare of '.h° dis-| Geep interest in the affairs and wel- tunce. What makes it act was not| e, 0 of the ciub and for that reason shown by Newton because he did not|yo pones that the following recom- know. mendations wiMl nat be considered as Einstein progressed from that point. presumptious. The speaker took for example a star. “The first recommendation of the He sald that light, in passing from @ | secretary Is that the members of the remote star to the earth, passes the| commonwealth club, and - especially sun, curving as it does #0. Thcre(o]ro the new executive committe to be we do not see the star where it 1s. us'; elected tonight, coming very serlous- other words, he sald, “It is Ji ly the question of revising its pro- around the bend.” The light of thelgrym tor the coming year that the glars is deflected in passing the sun. 1., winy get back to its original pur- He stated that time is required to pose of providing an open forum prepare for the study of Einsteln. En-| g here gubjects ~may be discussed tirely new standards must be adopt-| which have a vital bearing on ‘the cd. However, the road is not an Im-| o mon good of our cosmopolitan passable one, there. belng manycity: 8o many of you have been theories more difficult. members of the Commonwealth club He opened his talk by speaking| gince its inception that T need not re- | about the universe, characterizing it|ning you of the purposes for which | as a great drama. No one Knows Why | ¢}y organization was established, but it is here or where it came from. perhaps I may recall to your minds However, it must have a meaning, 1ife| g report which President Bassette must have a purpose or it would be & pyade at the meeting December 12, tremendous tragedy. 1916, in which he made a partial list He made mention of the three be-|of some of the activities the club had liefs as to the origin of the universe.|engaged in since its foundation, He | The first one is that the universe has|enumerated the following: 1, anti- a2lways oxisted. But this can not be|tuberculosis work; 2, playgrounds, | | comprehended by human beings. 1In|outside and in; 3, eity planning; 4, | FRiladelphia wearing one of the mew | order to understand that, people home culture; 5, a restatement of |Uniforms devised by General Smed- | would have to be infinite themselves|democracy; 6, trade schools; 7, juve. | ¥ Butler, new safety ditector. They | and they are finite. According to that | nile schools; 8, public utilitles com- |are nifty, eh? . Lelief, the athelstic belief, the uni-|mission; 9 Internationalism; 10, blll- verse had no be""llng and it will | board reform; 11, penole; 12, child have no end. welfare; 13, conservation; 14, suf- g ; R S ha The second bellef, called the poten- | frage; 15, commission government “Wait, You May Lose” is Selected As tial 1dea, is that the universe onn-rged{;md city manager plan; 16, city prob- | Safety First Motto | from a potential state into an actual | lcms and economics; 17, city housing; ’ N Y Y| universe, which in plain English, |18, clean food: 19, bird conservation; | ., ' Sihington, Icb. 26, — A poster | 20 sdt 4 bearing the warning, “Wait ! You May means an effect without any cause, 20, natoralization; 21, world federa- Lose !”, submitted by Martin H Then the third idea is this: that the | tion and peace; 22, local history; 23, | ciormpen g Ny Baan Risrdl 0 * | Gambee of Brooklyn, has been award- universe was created by an extornal|lecal charities. ed first prize in the contest condueted agency or agent. But then comes the| "“Some of the movements formerly h rlos ay 8 . at 5 | the the American Railway assoclation | question, he said, “What created the |discussed by the club you will note | - . an | " in preparation for an intensive cam- external agency or agent?” Tt is just have made great progress and some | aign to reduce grade crossing accle as casy to believe the atholstic fdea|of the questions at least partially | hony : g 5 | that the universe has always existed,|answered, some problems partly . 840 waa One of theso theories must be true, |solved. But we are still living in a |, > PriZe Of 3500 was offered for the he stated | great, busy, cosmopolitan city, What | C%t, POster O ARgLAE 9€ 1% L ko [ Ty politan city. - What |y, pest slogan, and Mr, Gambee was | He stated that time and space) can we do for its common good? |, woriod both. R, & Foeley, of Balde | cxist only within ourscives, They|Surely something more than meet | oiviile, N, Y. won the $200 prize are subjective, but not objective, |three times a year, enjoying a nice Wou o diinlen st “ loffered for the second best poster, Iinstein must be applicd to that, he | Suppér, and listening to an entertain- 4 et nt Bia » Xt 1 A jand H. Day Lowry of Richmond, Va., safd. Space is known by the objects|Ing lecturer. Ior several years OUr | \won the $100 third prize. in space, but we know time only by |¢ivic committee has been as dead as| ' A . - 5 y More than 20,000 slogans and b,- events, 1f there were no events to|Morley's ghost. And we all have|gop posters were submittod mark time, there would be no time, |s€hse enough to realize that the Com- | - : We then turn to motion, he um,}monwulth club will live only as it Motion is known from rest by objects | M"‘_’;l' ‘ | : in space. 1f there were no objects 18 | he second recommendation the , prod space, we could not tell motion from |Secretary feels it his duty fo ol‘[vr“"""‘ l‘.“rh"‘"‘:\ ‘11‘::‘ oL vest. A body 18 indifferent from mo-|YOU 18 this: That yeu take immedi- o ey . tion unless some superfor force {is|8te action to restore the treasury of| Wushington, 1'eh, 26.—"Little Levi" | hrought to bear. The fact of motion | this club to a position where there |a complete model of the liner Levia- «uming to re inconcelvable, He|Will be ample funds to carry out its|than, selzed duming the war at the example, t Photo shows Patrolman Elliott of | 150k a billi all for program. The pititul little dollar | Humburg-American offices in New {nowing how It starts at a certan | P!l Which we have been paying each | York and later loancd to the United upeed, gradually slowing down to a “ar has been stretched so that States lnes and shipping bourd for ‘raction of that speed, that fraction | Christopher Columbus, who stands on |exhibition purposcs, has been turned in ‘turn Being divided into fractions,|!!s 1eft. cannot possibly see that on|over to the Smithsonian institution by | on frough infinity. |the right side is the word ‘One.|the alien property custodian, The spewker made a plea to the| \Vould any of y8u oppose increasing| The model, which for members of the ' club, “Let's be| YOUr dues, at least by the amount|months has been at the humble,” ho sald. This plea was ad-| *hich the dollar of 1007 has|board's offices here, is dressed 10 the audience after he had | Shrunken to brcome the dollar of | mintature of the lined given & short talk on consciousness! 247 And would not some of you the clectric Mghting svstem. It is ninki d the various ."m‘wh-v-s take as much pleasure In pay-!181 feet long, with <Inch beam “:‘d o n:hn‘n] & t (vh.»m !Ing your own dues independently of |and three feet 10 inches depth from of thought that lead up to tHeNL|your husbands' dues as you do in|keel to the top of her funnels, ‘ ‘What was your first thought? What voling the democratic. ticket .w | ¥ will be youb last? What was "‘“qur Shohands ‘"; the ir' hn‘h”:‘ last thing you thought :r before you | cougse wome of you do ;‘::d ::r:p S / O e at mi littan. | O ¥ Won't. Money talks, but it| This Number of Indians May Become oryihe questions hurled &t his HIsIoh°| has strange lapses into sitence. \ Citizens Automatically »s. | “In case these two recommenda. s ’ | He asked his hearers not to think ' giony should be acted npa@ favorably| Washington, I'eb, 26, — Estimates that Einstein knows any more about|yy ghe eyl the secrctary would then | that 125,000 Indians upon application, his theory than anyone clse. ~HOlpresont this third recommendation |may become American citizens, with- | doesn’t. He cannot visualize his the-tnat tmmediate steps he taken by the |Out sacrificing any of their tribal ory any more than other perople. Commonwealth club and its oxnrun\-..frum-. were made today by the In- The speaker then spoke on the his- | committee. At onee enter upon a|dian office in a report on the Enyder tory of gravity since the timo In 700 | greatly entarged program. This| bill, recently reportcd favorubly by B, €, when the first inkling of it8 would contemplate increasing the the house committes on Indian af-| existence was gained. He stated thata | membership as fast as practicable up | falrse. Two-thirds of the country’s In- current bellsf for 2,000 years was that o at least five hundred; making plans | dlan population now enjoy American the earth was the center of he SOIAT | for more frequent meetings at which | citizenship. system. That false thought 4:|sh~d:v,l|-, attendance would be at least SRR Y I so long because there was no master | doubled and the general adoption of | It does sound a bit odd, though, to mind to delve into the mystories and s policy more aggressive than the accuse Uncle Andrew of wanting to | find out for certain whether of not|present, more definitely practical and et the rich ones off from a tax they | the earth was the center of the solar if necessary more adventursome, A | haven't been paving. —Rallas News system. Then, after 2,000 years, a|blg banquet in the new Elihu Bur- master mind brought forward In alritt hotel, with the best program ever book. “The Revolution of the Heav- arranged in New Britaln, meetings enly Bodies,” the fact that the planets | with 800 to 1,000 present; big gather- | move around the sun. In 1543 it|ings of people who do not neces. | was discovered or at least the theory |sarily think at all alike, a cosmopoli- was advanced that the planets move |tan membership eager to discuss and) in eclipses around the sun. No one learn things which would tend toward | attempted to show why they did this, | that uitimate gonl ‘for the common a8 no one knew., Then came Gallleo | good of our cosmopolitan elty.’ | with his theory of friction, showing! “These suggestions are offered by that if frictisn were reduced bodies |your secretary at this time without would travel on forever. In space any unfaverable eriticism of the past there 8 no friction. Therefore the |achievements of the Commonwealth heavenly bodics go on their way for- |club, but looking only toward a ever. Finally came Newton with his r’lllhy growth in the immediate theory of universal gravity uture. The speaker stated that Einstein, “It 1= not an unpleasant feeling to with his theory of relativity, makes bave sald your say right out in open | the faet truc that we know nothing | Meeting. save in a relative way. Motion Is { several shipping a perfect even down to “WILLIAM E. FAY, “Secretary.” | At the business meeting Buel B. Bassette was re-elected president of |the elub. This was the 16th annual meeting of the eclub. William E |Fay was slected secrelary. having | held that office since 1916 Rus. sell J. Hubbard was clected treasurer. The following committee chairman were chosen Leeture commiites, {Carl B. Neumann: publicity commit- tee, Beatrics E. Neal; membership committes, Mra. Bertha K. Fallon: |soclal commities, Mrs. W. B. Mon- tague, decorating, Mre. Harold E Dempsey: civie, Miss Elizabeth Leg- {horn. Mrs. Clarence Derrick was |elected a member of the executive ) |committee to serve for three years. | | s ———— | GO TO NEW HOME. | Rome, Feb. 26— Princess Yolanda | and her husband, Count Calvi Di Bergolo, are establishing themselves |10 thetr home at Pinerolo after a long stay at the Villa San Severino, Turin. |The princess and her baby, Marla | {Ludovica, are both In the best of | heaith. Tt is expected the family will |shortly g0 for a stay at the king's| Pisdmontese niry place, where | [the princess nt many months each ]yw during hér childhood. " Boys’ Golf Hose Boys' ribbed mixed wool Golf Hose. Browns and greys, with contrasting tops. 2 5 c For Wednesday only Boys’ Scho;IEIouses Made of neat striped standard percales. Sizes to 15. 34c For Wednesday only Women’s Sport Tweed Hose An Epglish ribbed high grade Silkk Lisle Sport Hose, in tweed mixtures. For ‘Wednesday only EXTRA HEAVY 40-INCH Unbleached Cotton Cloth A wery good grade fabric. For Wednesday OUR ENTIRE STOCK “PATHE"” and PURETONE “Double Disc” Records New DPancg and Vocal selec- tions. For Wed. 39° Only .... Men’s Paris Garters The regular 25c¢ kind, All volors, Wed. l 5 c " Boys’ School Knickers Extra well made School Pants of heavy mixed wool fabrics, Dark shades, S| 16. Vor Wed. Only 98¢ GENUINE Al'noskeag A splendld range of unew Spring patterns in this guaran- teed wash fabric. Vor 19 Wed. Only ... Yard C Ruffled Curtains - Made of fine quality crossbar Muslin—complete with tiebacks, Oy reevenesses.. JOG White Celluloid Ivory Dressing Combs An extra heavy Comb that we sell regularly for 59c. Coarse and fine or all coarse tecth, For Wednesday Fine Linen Stationery Made by Eaton. Crane & Pike White and all wanted shades, 24 Envelopes and 21 Toeetn, For wea, onty 19€ 5 Stork Castile Soap The regular 15c¢ cake. For Wed. ... 9¢ Céke. ... Women's Uni omens unicn . Suits Medium Weight Knitted Suits. Regular and extra sizes, Tight and loose knee. For Wednesday Only New Silk Hese 150-yard spools; black and white; all sizes. For Wed. . 4c Only ‘Women's Fibre Silk Hose, in the wanted new spring shades, Drawnwork glocks. For Wednesday only Wo“men’s- FI;“ Fashioned Silk fiose Pure Thread Silk. All wanted colors. For Wednesday only—Pair ...... a $2.00 hose, Mill runs of $1.00 Infants’ Nainsook Dresses Made of standard grade cloth. For Wednesday only . and sleeves. “Twink” Dye Flakes The regular 10¢ package, all col- ors. Vor Wed, Only 5¢ “La Bellel Band Brassieres All sizes of these well known garments, in pink gnd white, For Wednesday Only 29¢ Men’s Silk Lisle Hose A fine quality stocking in all staple colors, For Wednesday only i i SO One dozen on card — assorted sizes. Tor Wed, Card Richardson’s Crochet And Knitting Silk Closing out entire stock, Good assortment of ¢ olors, sold at 25¢, 25- yard spools; regularly For Wed, Only . 10¢c Women’s Imperted Linen Handkerchiefs With the fine 1-16-igch hem, for tatting and chocheting, A 25¢ valy Por Wednesday only Children’s School Handkerchiefs Nice grade cotton==full size ) Por Wednesday only inch hems, Genuine “Little Beau y" Waists Vor Girls 2o 14 years ony - 39€ Vaudeville Featuring “The Mendozas” in “The Globe of Death” New Nainsook Camisoles Made with wide straps and trimmad all around with neat °t embroidery. Por Wednesday Only 45c dkerchiefs, with 1-4 2 Kleinert's Rubber Pants For Infants Strictly first qu fty: each wi Kicinert's labele— -T\\'uL 19_9 » Fine Fabric Gloves The real Filosette Washable Fabric Gloves for women, Made to sell at $1.00 pair. All sizes and colors, 54c For Wednesday Only 7|mportedv ”l‘fir'ench Kid Gloves A high grade 2-clasp Glove, Closing out; not all sizes; browns, tans and greys, For Wednesday $ l 033 Only g;nith Bros. Cough Drops Two kinds. Menthol and Old Fashioned. For Wed, only .... Qehrot: [ 14-QT. "HEAVY RETINNED Dish Pan Regular price 69¢, Wednesday Only Large size; gnarantecd to last, Only . -Mirro Tea Kettles Panneled—b-quart size. Aeg- ular price $4.50, For Wed, Only ., $2089 Qctagon Soap Powder The large Package For Wed Only Ther Dowsine Made of fine geade of Hlinols Comet sewed=hlue polished handied—No, 7 size, w Wednesday Only 49¢ l|| Pillow Cases , A 23¢ Turki;il Hand Towel With three bl donble loop and good welght, Tor Wed. Only stze 12536, For Wadnesday Omly borders— 10¢ Bay State Superior Toilet Tissue 2000 sheet Rolls, Por Wed, Only 124¢ “Palmolive” 'I’ § Liquid Shampoo . They large 50c¢ hottles, 1 Por Wednesday Only 32c . V9T Shoe =i What Tales do your Shoes Tell? Do your shoes run over on the side? Do they wear unevenly at the heel? These are important tales which your shoes tell In Cantilever Flexible Arched Shoes, you not oniy permit vour foot muscles proper ex- ercise, but vou bring the weight of vour body to bear upon the proper foot muscles. Hence, vou assume correct posture and correet bal- The well-placed heel on Cantilevers helps yvou to maintain perfect carriage ance, these flexible shoes yvour comfort, ciency. health Step into our store and try on a pair of They are designed for and effi- SLOAN BROS. 185 MAIN ST,