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lor, wife, and mother to him. Few people are more happy in their married life. And yet it was not always so with Einstein.
Einstein grew up with his cousin. They were friends from the very beginning. When fate separated them early in life Einstein married a brilliant woman mathematician, a native of Serbia. Einstein had two children by his first wife.
His childhood companion, the present Mrs. Einstein, married, too, and became the mother of a family. Her husband, died after a few years of marriage. Then some force, stronger than those which Einstein imprisoned in his dynamic equations, drew the two cousins together. The professor and his mathematical wife were divorced, and he married his widowed cousin.
Since then his home life has been idyllic. When he ascends to his attic to work, his wife does not cling to his coat-tails. She adjusts herself to her husband's ways with a tact that is rare in wives of great men. She saves him from disharmonious contacts, and protects the serenity of his mind, which shows that Einstein and his devoted wife are one with all the happily married couples the world over.
While he wrestles with problems that withheld solution for ages he leaps on his partner, who cooks his breakfast, warms his slippers and sees to it that he dons his thicker underwear when the cold weather comes.
PARLIAMENT AND INDIA.
BY
J. L. Garvin. LJOWEVER deeply and differently any of us may
I feel on other things, the fateful question of India is paramount ; and there ought to be no possibility of a General Election until the Round Table Conference comes to its conclusion or adjournment.
This ought not to be for some months. To prevent disaster Shree Sudharmaswami Gyanbhandar-Umara, Surat
www.umaragyanbhandar.com