PrimitiveMethodist Leader

Transcription

PrimitiveMethodist Leader
Pam run Mimeo= 1.2ansal, July 5, 1917.
Our New Opportunity. By Principal Henry J. Pickett.
Evangelise! Evangelise! By W. M. Patterson.
Death of Rev. W. Pickering, B.D.
The
PrimitiveMethodist
Leader
LONDON: THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1917.
No. 562. Old fleerlme.
No. 5
990' Mew Berle.
P.M..
PRICE 1.0..
Our New Opportunity.
JAME PUBLISHED.
FOR HA KKKKK TIME.
"GRANNIES FAITH"
By Principal HENRY J. PICKETT.
BerT100 .1 Bong by L ALUM.
STAND1.10 upon the threshold of a new Connexioual these dark days, when, not alone in Central Europe,
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ear, we do well to forecast the situation, to seek to
' diecern the signs of the times,"and, ere our programmes are formulated, try to understand, as beet
we may, what the times demand of us, as part of the
Israel entrusted with the oracles of God and the
supreme treasures of the Kingdom. The year will be
eventful nod critical beyond all precedent, that ia
certain. The signs are evident that it will prove to
be among the greatest days of the Son of Man upon
the earth. As we approach it, we are awed by its
grottoes, into deepest reverence. As we face its tasks
we find new depths in the Apostle'e experience and
exclamation, saying with him, " Who is sufficient for
them thing I
I.
The urgency ol the immediate situation presses in
with special appeal upon the Church., The " burden of
the hour," indeed, is the oommon experience of the
nation. We are all sharers of its anguish. Surely
the Church, called to" fill up that which is lacking of
the afflictions of Christ," should feel the pressure of
these great days more than the nation.
In his so
stimulating and suggestive book, " The Jesus of History," Dr. Glover points out how Jesus moved forward
to His work under the sense of a great pressure. Even
so should His Church now feel and move in ito die.
ti e
rk I
g
a steadying the nation.
May we not, taking the super-national view, say the
nations? In view of the world-crisis now upon us,
every sermon, every service, every business meeting,
every Sunday-school session, bears the label of urgency.
The problem forcing themselves upon the political and
ecclesiastical statesmanship of the world, problems
economic, industrial, social, political, and theological,
made the more acute the longer the war dregs on,
acute by reason of the growing menace of ,military
despotism on the one hand, and the growing determination to resist it on the other; all these press M
upon the Church, for, at bottom, they vitally, concern
the coming or the delay of the Kingdom of God. This
is no hour for fooling, or spending time and strength
on smaller things which do not matter. More thou
once, in the long obeyof the centuries, Christianity
has shifted ite capital, and changed its dress and
method of appeal, that its central glory may be the
eatastropho, the
better understood. If, in this world.
Churches of the Weet ehould fail the Master, and
decline the leadership of the world, then the centre of
the now dynamic will move to the East, and nations
late to hoar of Jesus and accept Him will know the joy
of bringing in the day of Universal Goodwill.
II.
But the hour, eo . big with problems, so fateful for
the future, constitutes o challenge for the Church.
flews • Ufa
IN The difficulty is part of our opportunity. In such en
N/ MARIS MIL
hour as this the Church may come to her own, and, as
W. It PIA6105 finder a
ERR RAIR19 CYCLE CO_ liglerosa Works, COVENTRY.— the organ of Jesus, prove herself mightier than the
mightiest materiel forces.
Diffibulties come to he
And, in every realm, power and true
overcome I
A SPLENDID TEACHER'S BIBLE
sovereignty belong to those who overcome. "He
W the% f• even rm.. •40•71. BIM
110101CM81111 I that overcometh, I will give fo him to sit down with
1.11•17110111111.0•1.
Pher BM. of
...W.. frown.
Me in My throne, as I also overcame, and not down
1.5r- teams, en Y.611.81NOLOff seats; Loewe, 20. with My Father in Hill throne" (Rev, iii. 21). In
but in free.loving England, we are threatened by an
aggressive, insistent recrudescence of feudalism, and
the military despotism which always accompanies it,
Christians will do well to live in the company of the
glorious challenges closing the ever wonderful eighth
chapter of Romans. Neither history nor literature
possesses anything even approaching it as an equal.
Consider the masterfulness and pride of military display marking the world-empire of Rome! Think of
the numerical feebleness, the despised social position
of those who in that world represented Jesus, and stood
for spiritual ideals contemptuously pitied where they
were not actively resisted! Then picture this &liens
Apostle, who had" gladly suffered the loss of sit things
that he may win Christ and be found in Him," hurling
his fine spiritual defiance against that brutal, military.
loving age, asserting the inviolability of love for Jesus,
and the powerlessness of everything to separate or
prevent victory! With how much more reason, and
with a confidence strengthened by centuries of achievement, may we not face the enormous tasks of Ow
moment, knowing we are well able to go up and
possess the land promised by the Lord our God.
III.
What an encOuragement to this quietly confieb nt
temper, and this boldly defiant spirit, is Lund in the
entire failure of every competitor to the glorious
Evangel of Jesus. Not for the first time, it is true.
Every century has witnessed the overthrow of sonic
rival to the eupremacy of the Son of God. History
is a fine corrector, if not the final cure, of depression.
The Christian need never fear long views. The wider
the vision the more searching the inquiry, the luxe
intelligently shall we believe, and the more insistently
shall we declare. that Jesus is the final answer to every
problem, and to all the sin, of man. But, whili in
former centuries this heresy or that rival has been
r.
ordtoi 101 usi ngle
iiphoos:di,,eeanndkl.rhiey,0hLver bmeenist.
etwitness the overthrow of Christ's competitors in w
e
battalions! The awful tragedy of a world-war has
done the world this service, that it has left Jesus
Master of the whole field ! This is the outstanding
"sign of the times " of which the Church should
take due note, and concerning which parents,
teachers, and preachers should speak with ever enchaining interest. Never had Sunday-school teachers
such an unhampered field; never had preachers so
ample a gospel, nor a gospel less vulnerable to attack.
Sermons need never again be dull. Christianity holds
the field today against all comers, the humiliation
and failure of every rival being' witness! Using the
Apostle'. phrase, " A greet door and effectual is
opened" to the Church, here is the opportunity up
to which centuries of preparation have worked. For
what are the facts and factors accounting for the
present position I Philosophy as a substitute for our
By philosophy here we
gospel has utterly failed.
mean the teaching which has largely prevailed in
recent years over Central Europe, exalting the gospel
of the" superman," depreciating whet are mistakenly
called " the softer virtues," such as gentleness, meek.
ness, patience, no glorifying war end brute force that
an apt disciple like Rernhardi can write of " war as
504
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST
a nmessity for the development of physique and the
stronger moral qualities." In the fig of the experience
of the last Oree years, and in the light of what is still
going on, how completely the teachers and the teaching
are discredited ?
To the same low level of humiliating f Minn, belongs
the cult of mere intellectualism exalted to a religion,
and the criticism which, having no place for the
Divide, (to which Wong whet is generally understood
as the mipernatural, the Jobeculoue, temse by ne mane
the lent), ads by depot:Man the ham., making
man a ULU lower Gm the mechonimn by which be can
he the more /Natively dottroyed. There is henceforth
' no place for the anti-Pauline esitieran Walt loran
Jesus and refutes to recognise the Bon of God as the
final caveat.. of God's thought to' the world, and
the supreme authority over thought and conduct.
When God goes out of per-Bond hie, of a nation's
torching and practice, He takes with Him everything
worth keeping. There is but a step from the practical
denial of Deity to the actual disparagement of hen
life. When that step ie taken the exaltation of brute
force, with all the horrors which follow, is as nataral
at the night following day.
As to the failure of materialism, Lhe exaltation of
mere success, securing a place in the sun (whatever
that may mien), we did not need the war to reveal
its folly. Its failure is the story of all the centaur..
Hut the.war has brought its wickedness home to men
experiencea which will never be forgotten. Now is
the time for the passionate enforcement of our spiritual
gospel. With Added .conviction, and with • paver of
argument and appeal, assisted by a wealth of nat.tion our fathers could not know, we may declare the
old truth Chat " God woe in arid, remanding the
world unto Himself." The opportunity of the hour
is glorious. One thrills with enthusiasm at the inviting proepeot. The varied work of our Churches,
teaching, preaching, manning, visiting, comforting,
more attracwas never more eramearyd no, let as
tive. And if the open eer`Us entered by
by a devotion
for Jesus which abatis ell other crime, by a heron=
which finds in great Wake an inviting challenge,.and
by a remelting peaea for man, which counts aecrideo
a joy that we mad wan him for oar Lord, the glory of
the new Conn.:tonal year mall outshine the gloom,
and every sue.edieg yew add DOW haten to the
Saviour's elOWU, became new fields are conquered in
tile name.
THE "HOLBORN REVIEW."
Edited by Rev. J. Day Thornton,. lady, 1817. Is. 6d.
mei. (J. Johosoral
The characteristic mark of the July Holborn" is the
brevity of the mach. Genenthy speaking, brevity is to
be commended, but in a ariorm review it is not always
the hallmark of value. And in thin throe, who all is
interesting and some contributions are of enstsmding
worth, them is not always the elm grip Irak reditathet
marks mem.e from topical )ormalinie treatment.
There is everywhere lucidity, but not always depth and
breadth. An article on "The War and Social Pr:green"
by E. S. Kirk, deserves careful study. He makes no ant at
the mom sentimental 'parifirts' " which is hard to
understand in the light of what dads expression in the
neat centers. In the madament .der the war conviction
will weigh more than the qualities which seem to be
more convenient now. Two mpers—" Is There a Oar
nex hotel Renaissance;" by W. Bridge, and "The
Missionary Outlook," by J. G. Boston—reveal optimism
dm is sommdingly refreshing. Mr. E. W. Walters writer
on -. Viscount Grey of Falloden," but gives us only a
Wom
by F. J"falru
,:r.°1!ymttenbelie study el than
women who tarred Goland their attention faithfully end
well. Me. W. M. Patterson writes on The Growth ol
Journalism," J. Hedger on "The Genius. of Charlotte
Bronta," Rev. G. En en "The New John Wanly;' end
W. E. Bert continues his Judy on "Crisee of Papal
History." The book reviews are full and valuable, and the
Views and Discussionsdeal
"Cr
with matters of interest
Two other papers on
reed Fteriaion are given. Mr.
Walton, in hie con lesions of faith, whkh is intended to
be communal and not only personal. excludes mention of
rites but include. the Church. In Maas v. he deala with
a feel of personal experience, but it leases on mreadved
in face of • complex world of humanity. Mr. Sykes, in his
emphasis on Ilystionni, its reprice as well as its nudity,
certainly puts hie finger upon what this age is emplumising,
boot whether thia insirtence will continue in another thing
other aspects of track will swim into vision presently. It
is strange that in his personal conked. the Holy Ghost
And. no mention, anima it to be tacitly moderated ea
included in God as immanent Gam. Of theme snoodand
these given in the April lame, their one outmoding
halms is She r.ognition that they will need revision.
Perham Primitive Methodists have not fully conaideral
the masons for the emergence and continnanoe of the weeded Arad.
FJ1Po/lOOW Woo, how a Port ie
eevision, but history is not em be silenced easily. The
Holborn" under its new editorship pie. every promise
of a greet career. It will be a good day when the Church
in really awake to its 'alas
J. a m.•
611•171.01;
W•COMPX`MalFt
I i•
:4 II,.
PoWw1ow: NO• w
PHILIP GIBBON (Louien Exam.). s.
LEADERS
A FALLEN COMRADE,
By Raymond Temetons
JULY 5, 1017
NOTES OF THE WEEK.
The Propene of the War..
•
Whatever views may be held in Germany as to the
"finish" of the spring offensim of the Allies, it is moldy
clmrly demonstrated that our intrepid British leading
General is determined to give the haughty Hun no roe..
A persist., attempt to more moodier great victory by
the maize investiture of Lens is being pushed
cone
in the therm valley. The gain. for the moth el Jae
me signifies..., lor, besides mat Inantities dear malmid,
Wing widely real, a that we may haw a glimpse el rer thine than 111,4116
Getman patina have been bin,
°se of the may gas el pod living that male amid the ineloding Mb ion. La maimed la Aran swab°
honor al the halefield—ne if mom went elaieg even
el.arte of he mooniest trench. as well es more
in die worths el eh* Morin. Hem sometimes spa it the .P.6fi .Bottla&p.tt he mr. 16 he became
vident oleo
ziLti,:
i...
larate pea. en the pert of
Church we.= artificial creation, remettiorg diethaet from
by the cretin Beets, they,
mmkind, the private "fad." of Mow who ears for it
la, are proving Maury for unless the German report us
Now, this is not true. The growth of r, Church is a totally turtruatworthy, General Brushoff has made
natural and imitable growth, which emerges from the vigins attack in Galicia over an eighteemmile 1/011L
heart of man bemuse it smut. Take ma Mundt away and This in. he 'confidently taken as indicating that the
auother le rum to coma. Or mem a comp...el men recent lembles in Reads have not undermined the mint
to • new Ind mid soon. en lea May "ill fed the mad of of the indomitable Russian army. The flirtation of the
Gamma forces with our Herniae Ally is likely to have en
a Church, as Brady ea yang lads, when they gum op, leek ummpoiled result and to completely explode all it
the need id a ma and make ma Apparently Cal meant ee to wer.wearinesa
all this In be re, for mhiely the seed el religion hes very Tim 'Baratta. in Russia:
deeply in the heart of man.
Notwithstanding the latest news, however, affairs in
Now• the first peerage el the tales eases with He Rum itt.ebolf comma to give considerable anxiety. Cm.
ev idence. Liston Per 'slimy monthr.s. it ha been the Bating internal conditions, thoogh they undeabtrally
custom for Christians in doe lunbula.e to meet reguMill weaken some coneon in Marks which ara
Ths mg.. that the idea. of a masa pease
larly for mod. and feu =dal helphaem. Thee them
has grown. up among us whet can be appropriately called •with Germany being viewed with growing did...
muet he a. huge' disappoinamit to German abaft.
'Anadarms Church,' even a. St Paul uses repeatedly This decline of hope will be rather ammtnaled by the
theph,...' The Church which meets in yoor home. " Here antmen.mant at en early madam of the. Constituent
you me the Church, which habit and spiritual necessity Aasembl.L...enth, of coarse, be forgotten that there
en, 1.."‘, hated, ieto eadenrq become immediately an. In
'meths of minting., which, Gantt each
Christian by its very rimplicity—it is juste body ol men indivkloally amll, may, if brought more or Ian together,
Mending together in the light of Christ. Then it becomes make the final isa..tremely unmrtain. Extremists are
more definitely Christian by opening the hearts .1 its often more loodmieed than powerful. It must not be
sunders m kindly feeling bermda those whom they had forgotten that Reseda is pre-eminently the home of
newer even seen lace to face
intrigue, lied the It.es of to-day may be rudely dashed
"The member. who Beek to maintain, strengthen and to-monow.
bdieved, however, that the steadying
extend Mkt work, with, ea well en it may be Lanxibie, to horde of trusted men are hemming increasingly strong.
express dear deep sympathy with you in the as of year The Dkreinian moment graly Co to impeded unless
son Alfred." Then mem that salastional
iedindual, IL shthl dame its spirit ned teepee
•
There her been handed to me a letter written to the
lather and mother of a young man who wee • member of
our Church, and whose death at the front was recently
announced in theme columns it was written by two mem
wthwork.1 in the B,A.M.G with hint, and it is worth
=
that insight. into tempo...[, e at thug watatalmon te
Ind charade, which ore so charm... et Christiaxity Aniva/ of Americus Tema. •
that we nenetimes wrongly saw. them qnalitim to
One of the aigrettes. mine of the each has been the
belong to any religion
A. • comrade and a -Chriertian
he brought to us his owe dirldnetive and ennobling infoanm. By disposition charitable to all, in anthill fellowexample stringy
amide., and yet, with all these einem, very restrained
le rase., he hes left a gap hail. him which will be
even partially filled only with difficulty." In. kith on
wavering! Tel be had passed through nightmares with
hie eye open! Let that come as a rebuke to those who
have suffered nothing and yet Mik of " their faith giving
ay."
'Then the letter. Trite simply and without effort, begins
to climb op to the heights el OrrieLian mystiorm, what
sedeserifies is trandonoed, end there is • calm, bald,
embienct. fbm4.g of the doors which we tall death, a it
there rare not WO lives; but all were one triumphant be.
the vigour of the preset. of Christ.: . We mourn
his loss, but eannot regret his ...orifice; tar we know that
•nrede must.' Ha
in Divine Providenm it we
followed thrriet not emir in the genexal mom of life,
but was privileged (ea BA Peal ...)'M alms He afarinp.• 'He mad add., lamed he .neat weed To
the wheel he leaves behind we rend oar heartfelt syn.
pithy. We on but pray that Ha who from th. darkness*
and the tragedy of the Croce looked down to comfort and
pnwide for His own mother, will ever comfort all nth
at this time.. There it is' Sooner or later, for some
mason or other, Cheiatian men met come together, ma
in tire pale twilight of nom., and look op, awed, at dm
Corm. There, en the shadow of it, they kneel al may,
end when they open their eyes again, and look to the
ma, they ea that the. twilight and the night are gone,
and that„Day, bursting with gold, is at lumd!—Ourstmg
with gold which neither moth err ever nor war can car.
ship ever loyal, it faith otormeriag,
mroval of the first instalment of American troops to set
to eani.thioa with our own Army on the Western front
The inereduction of the holly-Mined mm to not only
a theory addition to our fighting strength. but is a
portent and augury on which the mind of Britain
psedaddy dwell. To me Arnaricarm and Brit:them
fighting side by side 10 mare the fall tel
for dm.., and tor ell for width deans. st•., is a sweetie:1e which will not be overlooked by historiam.. Femw
bonny Ian than Britain Bas good remit •give these
new OMim glad greeting, which she hoe already ex-
tended. The her 'immune' neutral nations may also
well take note. This ordeal and very prahral eradiation of forces speaks eloquently end raggentieely for the
Wore of the world. Autocracies and doomed aca it
lovers of freedom, teteratioal junta, and thfety cal
DOW breathe more freely. This arrival of transport. wild
not only spell the earlier Amish to the war, hot may prove,
to be one of the birthdays of the se.
The Maithotamin Modal.
The publication of the Report of the Mesopotamian
Commiteion will revive some memories of earlier episodes
nla hags, bum
athetalenr
"
im'kh tdectdat"'44
profonn
gtal
natiLd-allatie oft Lail into extremely mutable Made.
How atone mpatationa ea paddy sent. those one
piing and demean' nevelatirme it is a litale
ntst
hlji age,
at the mania to ma The melt very do
y, end
lions blame, hat upper.* norm the p
not a whit toe sower. Amon from the tern le Iota of
life it awey ends of width might ad should have
been prevented, the terrible...ermine of the sick and
wounded during the winter o f 1411646 veil earthen horror
in the Moats of all who read or hear of them. It to
apt pirailde to imagine swore which would be too etroeg
r'ite names of those who signal thin Utter am Imbue as to the shantefth neglect or maladministration of these
Clarksomand Arthur S. Deere. The name al the soldier
fee the predo not haw to what whose eepreme Imainses it ram to arsine
who died is Alfred Powell,
denomination the dormer Iwo belong. What dm it
matter? Them in one Cross—and one Shepherd—and
room for all the...nomination, intermingled, at the Mt
of it, because there ie room for all men.
To mom of dime who teed [hie Alfred Powell is rode
unknown—jost a soklier twenty-two yean of age—but
this letter to his pants wan to base been written ma if
he sem the only solder oho had died, instead
not of thousands! That is just bow Christianity affects ; it makes
if
vention or restragement of the pains which oar brave
troops, hafan as wedl British, ware compelled thromali
the &Mt.heto endure. To miry avast or humus mane
allowed to be iguana.. nein. the indicmust not
tion of adequate and appropriate IDIWIDWIDiel en the one
hand, end to reader impossible the repetition of kindred
wrongs on the ether
The Prosier's hatch Tour.
Th.h oraably Mr. Loyd George meads the Manley
set a priceleas value upon any one of the theep..
to Bited no as to roram the beam of lie oilier
one theep were all the node, .and one son wee a the of Ging. and Dundee, the .whole world swivel the
world. ho, there a no other religion, in all the tremaries ha lad gone {stagily to make momentaw prottonnemeals
of history, that
IA.would have prompted the writing of a as to mit rem aims and, not lea of all, cor peen aloe.
Idler quite
thie. So human! blinistera of mligion
are speaking too timidly of Ware, am too easily convinced
ol their tirelessness. We find clusters of England's sons
here and there. end lime and there again, setting tip
little fervent Church inatead of bitterly tourplaining as
they have many reasons to de, of their lot—retina op s
Church in the mid. of bettle—edliag wg211•2 with au unheard trarepet .11, ar in the Mame of which I Lae
He has once more lad the world b no &eat se to what
these an. That he hoeagain in.pitharea. and mragent
fathion ad these out, cod at the same time pilloried our
it hie, is to Simply slob the feat
4nosant and
In sane mes a it was the very woad for vhich
world ben mated time he spoke. It will carry greet
heartening into She ranks of our brave Army, as will WI
lhme 01 oar Allies. His steady mnfldence and his horsy
told, a little bet strong community of - Good Same. optimism wall:woe. inlectione, and wild brace the poops
Ws." It was bey time. but they found time to meet ; and the nation for the .alarp struggle which is still id
eh heart that finds time. Preachers and testhers, front, end which nosy be nearer Man ma imagine. We
whenever they have been hopeful and genuine, have mold
ha. Mehra dud there heel been Ito tame of ...or
taught with more somas then they can ever be aware of. at • tether Imo gin pay way al treating melt ...blot
n
Any one Chorth organisstion may performs di, but The
it Sr, 2/9: • web Church <an never doe. Illenhinel cannel Img lim with- ns the drink mak and hornmacing but it gm a g
and Mold. series of speeches, the influence of mai&
Dom Await,. Leers out a living Church. Cod is alive.
be long and powerfully felt.
JULY 5. 1017
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
NOTES AND NEWS.
bleeder. die and culdthe mienianammeet there, the
mkt reliedog fathom m day s dded reed being the.
brewery of the men who *ere bunglingly led to death.
That Will the tel
of ea all, ad bore we unite. The
MUM hem been—aa hem* abeam arc Ad the libation
bo preened do the world will he doe to there
Their memory will be immortal. And wearied may
gradually creep ewe the did .. the nonage goes onBut oho that sees the irarardeas ef thinm would dam
now to expect • betlar
Aden the.sprit that hetigeted the warie broken ad the viras ended I The
grimiest el all poeohniag poplin, the Americans, me
this in in whelemas, and meld net keep out of thestreggle.
The wound nout heel deg the wheleade Id or the
annealing will be het on the surface and suppuration will
-begin thresh. Audio 5 oat elseeleMy to em that the
poison -is withdrawn L10111 the likod, that the healing
peeress will ham the hely, though marred, yet whole, in
order ultimately to grow strong. IL is the way of intense
pain, ea sorrowfully too many hearts knee, but is It not
under the ciente:Made the only way( We, therefore,
tam to the life that is th be and to the Church which
• •
that mew life will demand if such a mthativehe is never
' The leolleseness concerning things u they are and to occur again.
the intense dissatisfaction with things as they bane bean
hare ample evidence is the unnerves Wed we Mare
The sad tiding. of the death of William Pickering 'on
theeived, ems of widish we ware Able to mist lath meek June
With Ms dosed deepest regret. wherever that winwhile others smear today. Ahoy other. are editing
rink apace ea we may be able to provide. There is et ning peleenality was kned Throughoat the whole of the
North
the nee fest declined produced • poled amealath • mead inquire, end it will grow in dud sad in- lion. L
him perssepg
' the Chuck-Ma bet me of its beet
teneity. The spirit prompting the pawed need ens
Ithe ie the recent Conferrime, and, se owasion add; Cad noblest eone. Few ministem we bare known lad the
aptivating
therm that drew yea theonscieuely bet ready
At only feed ethressien, but Was greeted es the utter- '
-within
his
indeed His death is • tregic lose. Re
ance of hog tienlea Stolid mid weseetheriencid muse of the meet virile Primitive Meth.ief stock. ea
1.11 ho could perceive were able to dimes veld wee
W. M. Paden Ma so di Tend oat in the
d ent; The wind.as Mowing over east plainsoltheright. Mr.
"didegthe" for last meek Kenmethylene Lodi
• Wilhite Pickering. He ws so hums, melds so lull of
hie,
maw
ao mach that thrilled him that he tramenitted the
IS ie markedly evident there ie greatrdilereity among
as conceroing the war—dimeity, and sometimea con- thrill he felt to other, until wed glowed-with eel. hid
fade of thortt The problems raieed are layiag bare wiWet so Ada. Olin elect and dieser qualities of
the cola ol
, and men are being drive. bath to hart and intellect seemed to he leo mach at home in him,
they dwelt at eam within hie ample and richly Indehed
firth prescgdes.
e bail with delight the Inendly
•
11 beds to strength—Lthe strength that ode. to • apirit. Reentered the ministry sixteen des me, and has
the tree Ihrotigli' the pressing, emtying wind. The dead eased away with imperishable honours at the age of
prep may litter the ground around, the living Line forty-four. To say that te was clever memo but to apply
a paltry word te db.& nature. He bob hie 111.5c. degree
swan. So is the was eating. That whirl u old he reed
eeme 'ear. ego, and while dill pureeing hard ciicuit work
te Tomah away, and wth go, except. where dead
clomp pieces d the dead past. Ad the dead will then gained the Le.dwe B.D. degree, the hurt of oar minieters
to win filet coveted homer. Rebelled from Neesastleon
have to hut the dead.
TMe. from vkleb oily he entered the oniaiehy. klie
cuita have all bath in the North, the lath being Shelley
Thee is • lenience, rather strong in noire plums, Bridge. He had been out of health for some tine, the
to mitigate the Church because of her alleged Were, death of a brother killed in mtion nearly a year ego
et the firth ditence, to prem. the war, and for the poet deeply eliding him. Fie, however, kept at his 'rode
eke hat bacon iv giving be judgment to the aide of the d al done 17th, when the collapse came that berminethd
em. It to poet here where we need to recd that liberty
kis death. The (dad took place on Monday het at
te others vee dim for endives It will be loved on thinfroldeide Clemetny, Bleekkill, • large madam of
close memberethe that the whole truth dim not lie en friends dm all pad of the Ilmth being present
either side. Both have • portien; dither is deny
moug mobahly hell, right, with liner bone. We doubt
Our congratelationa to Bee. Henry Smith, editor of the
whether there as any did who- would elect to Um "United Methodist,. on the completion of the livein any endern city where lone waa not eitimatthy
hundredth number of that kernel ism., under his
able for the protection of its nosithere. We doubt, too, editor/de. It is a greet achieveddt in these milt days
whether then ere cry dorm as who would my that for one man to be allied with a weekly paper for the full
the nee el force wee adore wore. If not sleep drag, rounded ten years, and greater Mill to arses in &dol.
there meal,. tome commas who it ie right. There are national journalkon a steady but continuou. advance.
nraltitades of the followers ef Jeans who believe the ad Our United Methodist blonde have just cause ie be
et force as now witnessed in the our is absolutely j1181.113- pleased with themselves. They- have a paper aa bush as
Jae, and they a. as eincere•thd conacientime ee thme the morning thd poet ea new. The editor knows his con '
who would l for their convictions. ft would be a slitinency, he knows the hates of his readers, he knows his
reenarkalle midden., esy, it the conscionoes of John writers, too, and week by week he provide. for his Cherch
Milord, Br. Jewett, Dr. Hord end Dr. Osathbell a Aimed for heart end mind. He dares to encounter
Megan andsome•nnehle
..d
Friends should all - go wrong oppoeition also, which mad he dais pot write or conduct
st arm wane lime
concerning the some subject II his journal merely to please, which is a Imppy circler,
• of code, conceivable; it is hardly probable, Auld elide Bet he and hie per are a emcees, end through
the two thousands thane noble youth, fathers and and the yum of the United Methodize Clinrel—specially the
tld -were, who prior to
of
went ord—" ten- earlier p.m of the Union—he leiloted the amalgamated
idled" am their own word—of their own accord. They, dth with marked discretion, anal the spirit of union
tee, had'
enirecienem sincere end enlightened. Many el hes taken firm bold upon the united. decomuuthion . leng
don here paid the prim of their conviction.
may hie strength and fertility of mind endure, araucbd
not
alder die weekly page, but through that oar edema
Chuck
hot while al. is so, we must palmed/ guard the right
.1 the man wham coassignee en& equal sincerity leads
.to a different canclunon. We team re sympathy
Shall the Children Suffer,
whatever with those who revile the mnscientmen objector
(To the Readees of the Seidel
—who east him aside ea a vile thin
et That attitude ill
becomes the champions ol liberty,
ch aa our Church
Stet—I behove yea will agree with me that the poor
claim. to be. And in ad reed we are thithing not children of Bleckbier. ought not, became of war condiof the man who poses ea th objector merely to shun what dee, to be sobbed of the one dare Imvpied in all the
he would not thoose and who hos thug broeght discredit par to dna Ow leak forward with me& eager anticipayou inviolate and noble meth We have in mind thou, tion, vie, a day Mlle country. Noi ehoeld the Wok and
who are sincerely persuaded to their own mind. that this hung.
them be deprived el few dap at the mawar M oreng. And the
th...147"th.l.d de when emir Feda oat of their extreme poverty connen beve been tested is a scandal to the DM. of teibut. hold the ad We dire also to give • "date mt.
Bugled It held not be but that proof of enacted
to the poor mama of our node's meetings, and
should Is debt, it could not labia that tribthals Mould thee enable theta to ford done day et lent their grindby ...Mated. The wrong was be relegating garediona of ing wed., width sanmadings and utter weaned
ounicianos to panel of men math of wham neither Bat we add read lid this Chriellthe writhe leainelanithed nor wooled to andenitand that era. the d emiderable help limn dtaide fried. I dial' be
delicate Nullity with which they lied to deal locum- deeply 'cadet, therefore, tor donatiom, however =calkerptitode, deer weod.eman addend may ingm in the verde of the pm,
at timeN..ti7 as much the civilian se the
mionhara "that the militath aboald he thane a
finney Chapel Central (Dead 171LichVre=d,Ptta
•ll was • thee Wunder. But this eueatien, like monied
ibelf,
=dive when the war es men Then mother
and a me.mlitary bibunal will he set op. The military
aml not the civilian will then he arraigned:
.unction of the Chorales is boo
. tike a
deemeded for the ismeme tad th at edit them ia the;
manimg daps Whether the dr collapse early, . mom
nthinuthe prophets intimate, or dither it pursed Me
three km hopeful theft,
tonne ter other two years,
it will come to ea node and will the
mane in mann ea like a rushing de znany new end ie..
paling demands. These do see hoe the mods of
ting free
died and drat gild. ore eleadil4iin
wild
• eat beim thew to warn es .1 tha
set
the wenn
go al with these Childs. thatt do not
They,
ruy knock math the door is eket if they sheep
too Md. A wth oat el the mount lato the theme will
be did to on in a wed of weeks by the ea-Prethlent
al Cent demon the pedal nodal " Pulled of Beton
elanellow" There are fee religious. mitres who ere
eo meanr to the elmorderic dd. ea Mr. Geelart
tem. who me to clearly appthend by • red surd of
the heoveo whet the de is going to ho. The Bert el
the aeries will be umbel in oar math den Rd they
milt dearead wide Attention and idlest. mar.
e
a
=;th
BUY YOUR BACON DIRECT
FROM THE FACTORS
ed an deep 7 Illw. of the ad delleds domoket
We peke miry, white acknowledging that the war waa d eath, neat past
be
eeth
•• neadity,
do not approve of some dedommy that pre-
h. Iv-
hatlthactd1 guaranteed.
.md tbp ounflict, end positively condemn mach thth has
ti.thlared dee the etruggle commenced. Thee see ISM• MOW* I.. fcigt\e.r nelthre tMa Mthethgat.
896
WEATHER SIGNS.
By Rev. W. Younger.
Remit eon knee deduced a crop of .proteetimm
aspirants in the realm of forecast And no department
el Life boo hoe,, free boar these juvenile deeded
Thee dade the radix., political, intellectual,
religiose mem The eerie.. admit of affair.
hes impend th at their cockaded would hare been
added by the krabatable prod of their frequent
blenders But they go ea in Wahl indifference to the
ationed the incalculable beton, of medal and collect
life what defy enalpis, whkh emerge in unexpected
lonm, and enp forwerd in obedience to principles which
am eathown le the avenge weather prophet. And the
month hour is far too g cam and too hag with Limeen
poseibilide for the supeeficial interpreter.
But certain Ida in the ethane situation give pause ea
our penults.' It is important that. we should keep •
vigilant watch upon great humeial batereetri The met or
food is naiad. The struggle to keep body and soul
Theproblem, aot only to the working
together ie a
Imam but also to the large number of level middle clam
people whom incomes remain statimare. The latter sea
tion of the community haw, ne organisation to
their
plight And yet lathe numbers of people era richer than
they have ever been. In the mod terrible war of human
hired it ie . frightful ...Aeration that the wealthy
dames men more mended oboe t fortunes than du.
They peached conscription and believe in monopolies.
'They cry for the vigorous prosecution of the war, and
fatten upon the prefita which the war makes possible
Let there be no doubt about the menace which threatens
no if this clam is alloyed unredirted paned. to do oe
they wish.. The call Ion theoonscription of w.lar wA he
rs
that narAiri arip
e'V
ei
rather than freedom. oral the Government interim.
drestically with these scoundrels in the nation they will
raise ee aetation among the industrial and cultured
chum w. will teed toe the arrival el peace. Men
won't hunger and die II they know that the wmIthy classes
ere allowed to keep prices at a lamim level.
The stupid policy
plump of the military austerities in draw'ng
the .Army. who can stand 011 two feet
will produce results which will destroy national unity in
the was We ell know cases where weak end :amiable
mm ham been taken into the Army. 'Theyare manifestly unable to take up any military duties The rigid
of diet, discipline and dwelling will ?eaten their end. me
dectors must have hied the condition of them men, even
without any detailed esirminetion. Unfortunately, democratic mane:one de not grow easily in the soil of the
medical peofereion. Again, it me be confidently affirmed
thre-if thew
des ad brat. policy continues there
wilt be a growing deemed to end the war. Mier .11, there
ie • limit te the Man of taking men tor the slaughterdee. Aid if we ham mend at • point did the
dined and the halt must be commandeed, the further
preametioa he a edition for the morel Ode.d
of the rand
But other considerations rave Mending grerity to these
mused. We here teen living until ncenth in fool's.
paradise. We talked about the May of the Boman entry
uno the wee And yet dming the two porn el slaughter
our eons were dying by the Mudd theamod Id Czar and
his collider were eon-ally acting in friendehip with
Germany. Peeks were a calthaw for monarchs
31illiona el man may die while royal houses, domithardly
sena sworn enemim, Are acting
eaglet bthind the
seed It bah as if the Itmean Gewerament. "egged "
uz on be the Dardanelles campaign in order (a parlaym
us in the etruegle. Our apparent friends bore peered our
greatest enemd. Coo kneed.he
piece of tamps Tim is
Sat the %rad treachery
created the dead
Revolthien. Then Greek shade Ins presided the
war. The thar wee net ferourable to the removal of his
favourites It dam not matter whether • uthion ., thirties
into civil war and mortgaging ite future Them ere
detailed comiderations, ...red with the OXILIOK dd
safety and threw of a monad who is the cease of it!
tam, the horror of it! Peoples may dims long .
monarchs are right. B. the Caw W. been medal
There sits upon the throne of Greece • eon of the seKing Constantine. Vendn eriddly feel, deeply abort
this trilling with Governments. Why has the em of du
last monarch been allowed to occupy the throne' The
consenting partici are Italy, Feuded Eurgland. Who is
reaponablet Was it 110t clearly a case tor the Greek
people themoelveal. In ad hone of travail have dims
to be et the mercy of a menacing policy t Does deeded
west
nand for nothing !edam...all When win wren
mad
tha;reito
.ple are going to be the judgercl
ate hue more
for monarchs, and .mr again dee they be allowed to
drench the fair fields of earth in lawn blood.
We could with for no fir...odds of the war than the
creation of a German
blia. The amoral of the
Hoheneolleth dynasty wo
great step lorded. But
the impossibility of any Rowel moceesor would be • atilt
mother Mop. Ford rad set agate be the 6.4 d ielarestianal Hod dread. The intrigue. and corn ett. ad three. of Ebert life ham too bug poimnedl
hued rthatioathips.
Geternmento of the valid mud
not a fahre be lend dm heselitery 'oddment., hot
Ion the badership of dm de by mitere nod deeretter
thdommertherin will head toed. • permanent wed of
doe ad good will the the ems of men.
r
7:,11tilararPfintrt
M' Illinabeth Withers, datighter of Mr. F. 'Withers,
hceire &Torii!:
ajpreacher in
d
mg
LI=the 'A'dof Ilmhalar of Arta at Dothan
' 90
JULY 5, 1017
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
found a hearth susceptible. In hie home wee I first
brought into acquaintance with the great Casa. and the
silvestongued Virgil, with (Yes, I will confess it though
the hour'. egainst it) G.the and Schiller, who are the
princes of eh intellectual .Germany which the Hohensollems have prostrated before the iron image of war, in
the manner of mldiera who turn cathedrals into stable.
for their hones Nor has any man dond more, few se
much, as Mr. Clemitson for the University Estension
Movement, and one of the achiereinente of which he ie
juetfy proudest is. the winning of the Vice-Chancellor's.
Certificate.
I don with one morepersonal word. To thin eon of a
brave Primitive Methodist pioneer and great preacher I
owe a zest for books, and a prising of them no though
they were fertile demeine. (which indeed they are), and I
• honour the man who give. his HAMM to the sowing of the
seed of .choler's lore. Hie place of memorial, as Brovmbig rightly says shall be open the mountain-lop.
applause ; the fight grew hotter. Haman heir and shreds
A GREAT PREACHER'S SON.
of to clothing flew all around. At last, with both hands
in her hair, Sell dragged Moll down. Twisting her hair in
both her heeds, ehe battered the head of her opponent on
My Week - end in Bishop Auckland.
the ground. -It seemed as though the would scatter her
brains. The eight was too awlul to dereribe. I payee.
By Sydney Walton, M.A., B.Litt.
F.tidioue friend! I hear you eay " Disarming!
Tee
if disgusting to you who read, what of thom who look
upon each scenes daily? Are you better then they 7 Have
I have been es a tying visit W Bietiop Auckland_ B b
you been more delicately nurtured, more efficiently
plmsant, when the laburnum Me faded in the Sooth, to
educated? Do you not know that the noble men and
find ire golden lamps undimmed. theNorth. Theoamdles
womm who deity move amid each orgies me ao sensitive to
el the horse-chestnula offering incense at. Nature'. new
ham= degradation se youreelf Is there any wonder
dawn are burnt oot with us 311 Harrow. Their withered
that at timee their hands hang down, their hearts ms
petals mingle with the duet of the reed and sweeten the
Imre, and their eyes infiamed with teare? Think of these
common traffic es do the memories of youth. Here in the
things, end, it you have even a spark of human feeling,
ham of Durham the candle. ere lost alight, and the
extend your sympathy, and it you dare coy that you love
glorious ritual is but beginning in the dune el of the year.
Christ remh out the hand of help.
a -must ree, and mop be pardoned, an ecolesiaatical
But to 3717 story. "Hold," mid Moll, "I'm beaten. I
metaphor, for I am writing almost within sound of
eve in. I e had enough." Sall was mrried shoulder
DurImm's .thedrel belt, and if this hot June afternoon
high to the
th gin shop over the way to be !mated and
I had list to climb yonder hill I might.° the white
fuddled."Drink, Sell," they shouted, you're chamtowers of them- who, on the central height of the city,
SLOP COURT.
pion !" Poor Moll, bleeding and. beaten, was left to pick
"left us their adoration.".)
herself up and- crawl to her lair. The next morning Moll,
It ie June in the South ; it is May in the North, and
to console herself, went and got drank. The people joked
By James Flanagan.
we taste anew the first sweet freehnms of the year. So do
and chaffed her, while the young gamins pelted her with
I taste the early ecstasy of Primitive Methodism in eon.
the filth off the road. Smothered with dirt she sank helpvermilion with Mr. William Clemitron, of Bishop Auckless
to a step and tried to clear away reme of the foub
Slop Churl would be difficult to find. It lies at the ex-. nem on
with him in his garden, upon which the
which load filled her ey.; bat her hand was unsteady
land. I
tame end of e network of interminable streets that inter- and she made matters worse.
evening light is talk., but our talk in about eon
end springtime, the first larva pioneering days when elect each other like a complicated Chinese pilule. I have • It wee at that moment that Sister A. of the minion
Primitive Methodism strode along the lanes of Britain sometimes thought that if. the devil got lost there he came into view. She was beloved by all the lends in the
natures
with a song. I sea them now in fancy's light, the mighty would never be able to find himed11.. BM, to calm the
e'
rti;ishtliki:See'doen. TILy
."'
Itiwth
ityathaV;ea"reorfonnthierr
dead, a company of the apostles whose early work cannot here of those who nerve him, Were ie no fear of him
without us be perfect, for we are the fruit of their labours, losing limeeli there, for it was he who inspired the archi- behaviour when she was present. Even the roughed men
would raise their headgear when she passed. Bee
and they have wrought for as a wealthy place.
Mr. Clemitson is the on of Rev. Witham Olemitson, tects (if the devil inspires anybody) that designed the to Moll, the Sister knelt by her Bide, and, heedlesa a
to the wiped the filth and the blood away Irmo
whose figure looms out ofeho mil igh .1 Primitive Methodist scheme, and seeing that he owns so meth property in the contamination,
with a portion of her dress. All mockery
biothry between the years 1834, when he P119 eent by the district where Slop Court is, he Inoins hie way about too the women'.
Oircuit to mission the Isle of Wight (it wee a land of well to be trapped in the roam; but the .gel is stronger of Moll reamed, and a meter Mending by mid "Well,
She might be an angel!"
for diet.ces in those days), and 1872, in the summer of than the devil. When Micheal threw Satan over the that's good enough, ain't i
which he retired from active work. Impressive traditions battlements of heaven he gave us a hint of the devil's Gently lilting Moll to her feet, ehe bore her to her dwelling in Slop Court. Changing the rags on which Moll slept,
have come down to on concerning his power as a prey her.
hinny a time, it is told, he mounted the pulpit elem in final overthrow. He now gore sneaking about into any she made her a bed of sheets and blankets from the mit
bodily weakness and exhaustion, but the text would eat as hole and corner'where he can find a hit of filth, diseam, sion. Lighting the fire, she warmed some water and
trumpet .II to all his powers and translate him for the or lust ; but the angels are on his track,and I want to tell .warthed her lace ; then elm made Moll a cap of tea, and
watched by her Bide all that day and night until ton next
hour beyond the enthernassmmte of physical infirmity, no of one who beat him.
morning. Them acts of merey found the woman'. heart,
complete Was the .august of his ardent epirit over the
Slop Court ie in "Suicides Land." Where's that? Let and, leaning on the bosom of her friend, she sobbed in penibarriers of the flesh.
me tell. you. If you stand on Waterloo Bridge and look tential wi
th A few eieninge after, a broken.hearted
In my early teens I need to importune the late Mr. John
ea
ler
down
the
river
ae
London
Bridge,
you
see
one
half
woman, with black eyes and bruimd lese, knalt at a rode
Armstrong to tell me stories eboot the remembered
form, and in a trembling voice pleaded for mercy. Mercy
preachers of his youth. I like to climb • Wcardale hill of it. Then pass 'to London Bridge and Lake in your was
grunted,
and the change of life was manifold to all.
view
the
Tower
Bridge
and
you
have
the
other
half,
with
and greet the rising of the sun. Something of a kindred
dogleg words of raw. prayer were remarkable
joy I find in climbing the mouniainaide of .other's special reference to the south nide. When the Judgment The
Joe., Sell won't believe you've given me relithon, but
memories that I may see the new-born glory and the dew Day arrives, and the hooka are opened, the very angels of "help
me
to
show
her that you've made me a good wain..
upon the meadows. Perham Se-we eat 'by the fireside, Mr. God will eland in horror at the record of the tragedies
not alreid of the devil. but I'm afraid of her, for fear
Armstrong, a veteran in Nmthern Primitive Methodism, which have taken plare within that space. The !stranger I'm
she Arnold come with any of her tricks." The days
who hod come bravely throoth many adventures, I a mere
pmsed,
and
Moll
held on, the Sister helping to confirm •
lad, hungering for news
ne of spirituel coaete.d continents, never visited this court. It wee a beastly chute which her in the faith. Moll then resolved to try end win the
them
ght have seemed a faint resemblance to that emptied itself into the slimy mud of the river Themes other mint to the Saviour. Love is very inventive, and
picture of the boy Raleigh—Walter Haleigh—wi th wonder- It was no thoroughfare for any sane poeron. In fact, knock. at many doors. One day Sall was in the gin
late intent upon the sailor, whose tale is of the high ems, there was no thoroughlare except to a death of filthy mffo- ealmn. It was a cold, wet day ; as usual. the had to
end the treasures of fabled forests. Again and again Mr. cation, and that way none would take, except those who her boy Sandy out. He eat shivering on the doorstep.
A rin.rong would break forth in enthrmeam "Ak, but sought release from one hell to a lesser. Sometimes a poor "Are you cold?" asked Moll. " Yes, and hungry, too."
William Clemilson was a great pp
her I He liked beat
yourself." The led' entered
"Come in then and we
the terte that rang out no s elmlialige and edirred the derelict would slip through in the night ; then there would Moll'.
ho mom. She set a chair for him near the fire, rubbed
Mood. I .n hear him still, after all these years, ea/ling be a splash and a gurgle and all would be o'er, the one his
and lea, and gave him some food. Another day,
out, 'Are 0001 Aka. and Itherpar, then§ Of Demise., accompaniment being the roar of the city on the other when Sall was out Moll washed her doorstop end pipsbetter than all the waters el Israeli May I not wash side.
aimed it, (There's wonderful power in pipeclay). When
in thorn and be eleanl' 'What meaneth, then, this bleat.
As I have mid, the court bordered on the river Thames. Sall came home ehe inquired who had done it ; and the
ing 01 the cheep in mine ears, end the leering of the oxen There was nothing to prevent you sliding into the river youngreare told hen
which I bear?' ' For their rock is not no oar Bo., even
Week. pealed, and the love service went on. One day
save
a
crumbling
brick
wall,
holed
here
and
there,
in
the
our enemies fhemeelves being judges."•
a knock came to Moire door ; a knock at her door mut
To the proud vireo of Dameacus the waters of Primitive count. of time, by the action of the muddy liquid against unusual, and her heart beat quicIdy. Who coald it be?
Methodism most indeed have seemed en irefficreime erne its side. Through them crevices " mudiarke" would Opening the door, them Mood Sall. Moll'. heart dropped
plebeian minietry, but the preacher had seen with his own eometirnes creep to sport in their native element—dirt. at once. "Oh, dear," the thought. "she's on for another
eyes how wondrously they had healed the lemon of merry There were two bums in the court bone.: forgive me, fight." "What do you want, ' she oohed. "Excore me,
en iniquitous colliery village. I am told that durine hie bricks and mortar, with a number ands bre. knocker, for Moll. but I wanted to know they vs got my more nth=
Principalship of Hartley Oollege lie.. George Parkin, classing you with such trash I should' have need the more li
M.A., BD., quoted come of William Clemiteon'e manors correct, term—Stye. To begin again. There were two yokne lei;
ytrrlinIow
" i"1
go,
if T. :rani; 117"'••yrw
as model. of homiletic structure. So do words win for etyee in Slop Court. In the one on the left lived Moll any more religion to
t epee liko that you've got where yez
themselvea an immortality, and the sermon in a wayside Thompson, in the one on the right lined Sall Dearing.
n
ci
1!Ir
c
el
chapel M carried down the year. on the lips of pilgrims.
=4117
"Yee,
shy
Tan;
M
a
ly
'
•Zoto
t
e.
;
some
These two were supp.ed to be women, but they had been
night Moll led Sall to the penitent form,
Mr and Mrs. William Olemitson, of Bishop Auckland, unlined for some time. They contradicted the Darwinian my'aen."
Jove, will yen
have recently given £250 to the Central Churches a law of evolution ; they had changed the law of ascent to and, kneeling.by her Inds, prayed.
memorial of their devotion to Primitive Methodism. Un. the law of descent They bed climbed down from the pleas
giit711
fortunately, Mr. Clemitson is at pre.nt an invalid human to the bead.; still, they had a little of the hum.
,.nthoeu lar
,ef of God
km heart and the mile of
(though be woold resent the word), but he ie still alert to left, as the aequel will show. It was in this " little" that itth
the intenosts and delight. of hooka. and to mention Cicero the angel struck gold.
or Shakespeare is to see hie face glow like a festive room.
The neighbourhood round the more had bed few diverHe is a dm..e of learning. A few years ago--he was sions and these were out ol the ordinary The chief one
then nearly twenty—I found hint hard at work before, wa. to get drunk ; a murder stood next ; following that was
HINTS ON EYESIGHT.
breakfast learning Italian so that he might read Dante in to me "co " badly mauled ; and last, hut not Imet,
the original end not be dumb in Rome. I thought of dime etanebup fight ; and the cream of Esti. was to nee a est
fines, which Perhaps I do not quote exactly:
to between two women. Moll Thompson and Sell Deer
A Mistaken Notion.
ing of ten afforded the dwellers with this inspiring emoSome day or other I most surely cope
ted°. It was a question of dispute as to who was the best
-Where true hearts wait for me;
fighter of the two. The two women venally fought about
Persona who have had good eyesight in early life begin
Then let me learn the language of that home•
once a month to settle the matter. I forgot to no that to require 1111BiAlUle0 for reading and dose.. at about
While her on earth I be;
Sell Deering had a lad whose name wee Sandy, end he en- forty years of age, and it in e mistaken notion to suppose
L.t my poor lips for want of words be dumb
joyed a "scrap" between hie mother and Moll n much as that en advantage le gained by putting off the use of
In that high company."
anpone. When Bober, which wee seldom Ball would isesee as long as possible. By an effort some can go, for
over him with a sickly eentimentality. but when g year without artificial aid, after the fleet symptoms of
He hoes library of many thousand becks, end I ern slobber
debtor to them, both to Greek and barbarian. Friend of drank -he might Marrs deal, or go to the devil for all need manifest themmlres In this year they lose more
bishops mod scholar. and men of letters, a traveller along she cared. One day, in a It of ill.humour, Moll threw a ca.e.ightilhdan theyth=ltingnive yearhi: as:rendes or eni
of mud through the broken window of Salle dwellbeen
the highway. and byway. of Europe, I have sometimes handful
ing. Thie wee considlored to be en not of chivalry, like
orr'
eading
thought that it ie by some miiage of circumerence throwing down`the glove in olden times It meant that old sight me: The Oa get tired alter e spelm
that Mr. Clemiteon has spent five decadesor more in the Moll wanted to fight. Sall knew the sign, end in a few and work, the object lean to he held further away to dearly
locus
It,
and
one begine to grumble about the poorness of
engineering industry rather than in the cloistered grove. mconde she was out in the court steering at her impudent
the
gee,
eft
If
youlet
Mr.
Aitchison
teat
your
eight
when
of knowledge. He might here been chmeical tutor in our foe. The news spread by the alum's w ireless that Moll and
own Hartley College. But, then, mr daily baldness seldom Sall were up against one another again. The hell. .round the first mane of uneasiness manila. themselves he cm
is our real life ; even our bodies are nourished by in- were mon emptied, and dirt,immeshed hooliganism supply nth glees. as will m.sterially arrest the decay of
brand, by manna that falls when morale perceive stook round, rapt and admiring. Bets of "pint and peat" the sight, and if the eyes are regularly re.tested reasonable intervals can largely prevent further &Wrier/Won.
it not.
and "hell end half " were freely made according to In
Me. Aitchison.e modem of .can
is ea perfect e.
One thing I know. • Mr. William C101131E:son Ilea been a Ile fight began amid the yell. and daps of the welching
and careful attention can make 1, and be mill be
I r m torchbearer of learning, he has handed on the sacred erew. Fists, finger nails, end teem loond Ors mercise soden.
pleased to test the eight free of ch'arge, andleviefoli
lied, kindling real for accurate scholarship wherever he soon blood began to flow. Sh et blood brought • bunt of spectacle. In correct defects, et 4211, Strand,
London, W.O
ti
Tho
allardm.eTolLEtgfirgle:Ir'gru
. mytirldir'rert
e
JULY 5, 1917
597 .
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
A LABOUR LEADER.
"THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST
LEADER."
THE LATE REV, W. PICKERING, B.D.
Mr. S. Jacks,
A Year of Trials and TritiLphs.
One could wish that every member of our Church had
beets s listener at the recent meeting of the ehareholders
of the Lreder, held at Holborn Hall, under the presidency of Rev. W. A. Hammond,' with Rev. G. Armitage
RS monetary. There were reminiscences of the old PrimiLive Methodist papers, there were mngratulations upon
the new. For though the Leader is twelve years old, yet,
as the history of ...papas§ gm., it is only in its youth.
That. which filled every shareholder with delight was the
fact that in en abort a time it had become firmly eetab.
lished in the confidence of our Church, .hed become en
icsdi
leractlei,part of the literary rations of our people,
I
they were willing to pay an increased coat
After hearing the 'Editor'e narration of the lact,e one felt
.atelnl that the price was not higher—ton quite a number of its contemporaries are now sold at twopence, It
washinted that if the war continued and the pries of paper
and printing still therms. it might be evens neceseary to
all the Leader elm at that price, but even that would not,
we think, deter our people from its worthy support. That
necessity, however, hae not arisen, end may, let us hope,
00Ver VISO.
Mr. S. Jack, is a man of no ordinary type. On first,
acquaintance one finds him somewhat difficult to cleanly.
There ie c brusqueness of speech and manner which ie a
little disconcerting. The observant, however, will detect
a kindly glint icc the eye which will immediately not him
at ease. Whatever the mterior may appear to suggest
there shines forth from the eye a large soul with generous
impulses and tender sympathim. He is the very essence
of kindness and generosity, his life-long devotion to seen,
tug the welfare of hie fellows in manifold forms to the
natural outcome of his large heartedneas. In Primitive
Methodism and trade. unionism he has found congenial
spheres in which to merciae his power. and secure her
end..
Born at Ponderebary in the Mineterley Circuit emenly
years ago, he became a member of our church at Dar.
laston in 1866. Last year both he and Mrs. Jack. had the
joy of celebrating their jubilee as members of the church.
Over forty.seven years lance he became a local preacher
on the Bloswich arena, flu, to him is c vocation for
which he her striven to equip himself. To thin work he
coneecrated gifts of no mean order. He her • keen
intellect and a cultured mind, ie an original thinker,
Thursday morning without the Leader is unthinkable,
toe then it ie we entertain end are entertained by an irc
numerable host et the breakfast table, then it is we join
up alresh in the march of our great convex-Sinai movement., then it is we hold fellowship in suffering
and serrice with brethren all over the Land. Wee.
whet ie London and Birmingham and Edinburgh doing?
What news of the coalfields missions? Have our missionaries! arrived safely? Has that Connexional appeal been
snoceasfull Have more of cur 800. fallen in battle? We
ask them and a hundred other questions mneerning old
stations, old friends, and lo, the " lanspread family
join us et Thureday or Friday breakfast. and (newer our
qumtiona They chat with ue, comfort us, inepim us, rebuke on The week-end without the Leudrnl Impoesible!
And it to us the bleating is so great whet is Cl Co our
ipyal song who are absent et the war. How eagerly they
awaitite arrival, and whet a link it is with the old church
and school they have " loved long since and lost awhile."
These were some of the eentimentu expressed at the thereholden' meeting, and it was because the Leader had
ebundantly justified its existence and had proved such a
powerful Prese.ally that every ellareholder wits lull of
gratitude to the men who manage lie affairs. Men?
Teel But after dl, it is the product of personality and
everybody knowx or ought to know, that one man is
mainly responeible for its production, and that no man
et the helm is George Bennett. He wee especially con.
gratulated upqp the fact that, notwithstanding the enormous difficulties of the year the "wider had held its own,
and was bond, weekly, ifi many thousand. of the homes
of our people. It was recognised that Mr. Bennett had
brought hie great powers of initiative and administration
to the service of the Leader, nod that had borne fruit, not
only in economical administration, but in the securing
of e clientele of literary contributor who were delightfully representative of our Church', many aided intereete
and movements. " Does the Editor ever go to bed I" one
director asked, and whilst it came out in evidence that
there were occasions ol eleep it else transpired that five
in the 'morning was often the hour for beginning the
day'e work. It must be remembered that the Editor not
only directs the Louder but he is one of the meet popular
preachere and speakers of our Church, and is in constant
demand in all parts of the muntry. Nor meld we .pare
him from the Connexions] Committee., for who know.
more correctly thee he the state of our Church pulse, and
who ha, a better opportunity of testing the conditions of
the intellectual and spiritual life of our people?
Never were thanks more heartily given, and never more
jestly deeerved—thanks to the Editor, to the genial and
capable manager (Mr. A. C. Vincent) and to the staff. In
hie reply the Editor mid that no man outside the office
could mtimate the difficultiee under which the Leader had
been prcdmed-during the pet year. At the time when,
for three week., the Leader was reduced in sim
they were threatened with paper -famine, and
[several times the cost of paper had rieen, so that
it was now more than 300 per cent. higher then before
the war. Added to that was the greatly increased cost
of printing and the scarcity of labour. They were fortunate in having, as printers, Mmers. Wyman and Sone,
one of the greatest firms in London. He was proud to
say that firm had congratulated their office upon the regularity and promptitude of "copy" eupplied. Mr. Bennett
eke sad there wm [suggestion that their paper might
reeoh a wider constituency by some modifications and
adjmtmente and the (suggestion, mode would be considered
hY the directors. He was deeply convinced that there wae a
Peg Mare before the leader with conaantly increasing
influence. He was glad they were able to .emnt loch a
good statement of account. in war-time. He gratefully
acknowledged the valuable eo-operation of the .tag, and
the eminent and invaluable mrvices rendered to the
busines. aide of the pap. by the chairman of the direetors
(Alderman E. C Rawlings, 3.7.) who never spared time
or energy in promoting • its interests, of Rev. W. A.
Hammond who so carefully managed their finances, of
Mr. 11. H. Bowyer, the capable secretary of the company,
and of Mr. A. a Vincent, who had been the manager of
the paper from its commencement, and whose servicm
could' not be set forth in words. That the Leader really
"leads and is worldly of a place in every Primitive
Methodist home was the convon of every director and
shareholder et then hearty and representative annual
meeting.
E. J. T. Hamad.
An Appreciation. .
By
Rev.
M. T. Pickering.
A great sorrow mire "I am distressed for thm, very
[dement heel thou been unto me." Not merely kinship of
blood but that higher kinship of,soul had made him
pleasant and prmious. Behind were we
of mummiec
and comradeship together, and in our finite way we
thought we saw the lane of life araching far ahead, and
the privilege of further and fuller comradeship and fellowship. Ilia face was ever to the stun rising. He ever looked
out and welcomed life's to-morrows Hie was never the
backward look, except to learn how better to live and slave
the future. Only a few weeke ego we heard him speak of
his deep yearning to help hie people and nation in the
.train and sorrow of thou hour, and in the reconstruction
which meet follow. We knew it not then ; his work here
was almost ended. God needed him elnwhere. The out
came when it wee but noon. Acme think of his wondrous
vitality, hie nnamping, untiring activity, hie sent of life,
thsi broken column expreeses our human way of looking
et the waft and sudden translation, but our faith corrects
us, and reminds ice our Father knows best. Only fortyfour years were given him. Few, but how crowded they
were He could never reprove himself over wasted hours
and ymre, or misused opportunities. We know no man
who took life more mriously, or worked 01007 aseiduouely.
He was a camel.. worker. Every moment was used either
in the culture of mind and heart, or the doing of the daily
tears of the ministry. We sometimes asked him to pain
a little for breath on the journey, but the puma were few
and brief.
He had great gilts, as his attainmenta in the schohatic
world show. Whet a diligent student he was? Before his
entrance into the ministry he won an exhibition, and as a
result had three years' training in the Royal College of
Science, London, where he gained an associnteship in
Chemistry (fleet clam). In college and on probation he
almost invariably stood et the top of the list. He took
his RD. as London University. Since then he paseed his
first exam. for London BA., and he/day, been given him
ho would shortly have attained that degree. That culture
of mind end heart were used in the preaching ol the Word.
presses the type ol ministry to
Cultured evangeliem
which he belonged. 1:130 ministry et Ashington was alive
with evanwelistic zeal. He was at home in a revival, and to
him there wee no more sacred or desirable place then a
good prayer meeting. His outlook was wide. He.ee ever
seeking new and Idler light. Them wee nothing narrow
or parmhial in his vision. He welcomed truth every.
where, but he believed firmly the one remedy lore bruieed,
bleeding, Mittel world was the Gospel of Jesse Christ, and
he preached it with an earneetness born of a deep conviction.
The outstanding characteristic of William Pickering wee
Mn. B. incite, J.P.
arength strength all round—physically, mentally, mora strong man. It was e full.
ally, spiritually, hew
and has the courage of hie convictions. Beyond all orbed. but well-balanced life. Them wee nothing effemithem, however, he has Bought and found the most essen- nate about him. In the men, and in all be did, you felt
lie form of equipment, the gilts and graces of the Divine the potency of a strong persomlity. Hie wee a high ethical
Spirit. To hear him pray is a revelation of the fact that nature. He did the straight thing, and, whatever haphe is on familiar ground, that he is on terms of intimacy pened, took the straight course. There was nothing little
with God, and that he knows how to prevail. To such as or mmn about him. He was incapable of doing the shady
thing. He abhorred. shams and shamming. Sell.seeking
he our Church owes more than it can ever eetimate. was foreign to his nature. Trmeperent homely marked
though nearly half a nntury hes limn given to Una work all his dentingt and relationships. Straightforward men.
he has never grown old, he has all the buoyancy of spirit lieese was stamped on all he wee end did. He was ever
and optimism of youth. These ere the beet times that ever loyal to truth, true to right, as far m he could see it or
were and the best it yet to be, ie with kiln a settled con- find it. In the conflict over the Education Act he went
viction, therefore he who glorifies the past et the expense to prison rather than disobey his conmience. He had the
of the present, whether of the Church or the world, is gift of friendship. and many hearts warmed to him. Hie
going to expose himself to s trouncing at his heed, He collmgues peak with affmtion ol his big peters and
mtholic emit. He never failed them.
His ministry was brie!, effiteen yore ; his stations only
'd henc'rrnilati
e
ijlirls7shrela rdel%e.
o nit
lour. Yet Stanley, Jarrow, Ashington, and Shotley Bridge
on" Chris
I
tial
Christianity and organised laboutr
pies he secs the avenues through which the King ern of will gratefully remember him for all time. In the day of
God is tojcorne on earth, and for thie end be Wile none. trouble, and in the lone night he comforted. We saw no
much he might do tomorrow. Hence getting into the
sandy to connection with both.
aride of things. Tine Conference glued him on the ProAt nine years of age he commenced life as a miner, bationers' Exemining Committee, and there was entrusted
and his aaeociation with mineze he' still retains. While to him the writing of a [section of the lemons in the
residing et. Cannock there were discovered to him the Scndu
magarine. He revelled in 'the service of
qualities of a trustworthy and efficient leader, and honours the Church. As we travel the rcad that winde ahead:of
come to him in this direction entirely unsought. Alter cc we shell mim his delightful and helpful compationelnp,
his removal to West :Yorkshire 10 1671 and during his
trill travel it better because we knew him. and we
torn
readence at Normanton he wee one of the foundere and
meethim at Home at last ; the Primitive Methodist
became the first chairman of the Nornffinton Trade. and minietry has had in its ranks no truer, finer soul than
Laboar Council, which position he held for eight year., William Pickering.
am also a member of the Wakefield Board of Guar.
diens for three years. On his removal to Mirfield in RICO
he was engaged as checkweighman at Mirfield Colliery,
and still retains his association with it, being the Yorkshire miners' delegate at the company's three pits no well
as chairman of the branch. For over twenty years he has
been e member of the Joint Board of Coal.Owners and
Employees, also of the Wage Board since its inception to
TO SAVE
the present, in both cases (or the Southern and Western
Divisiom of the country, the president of the former being
Sir Edward Clarke and the latter Judge Amphlelt. Hie
appointment by the Iced Chancellor as Jaetice of the
GLASGOW I.
Peace has come upon him as • surpriee, for he had no
previous knowledge nor thought of it. To him, however, 1,26011ffliliese received. 12,744 required.
it is a Divine appointment, m such he accepts it ee a
further opportunity of service to men for Christ's sake.
Contributionc pimae send he..In this spirit he will serve, for this end he livee. We
Rev. J. J. HARRISON,
congratulete him on his appointment, and pray. hie may
141, OnetoW DAM, DBOAISTOUL GLASGOW.
be the privilege and joy of service yet for years to come.
tife aVnai: h
14,000 SHILLINGS
illexandra Parade Church,
•
398
JULY 5, 1517
THE • PRIMITIVE METH JDIST LEADER
Woman's. World.
— •
In 1.1111fmk1tre there is widdptead interest in the Food
Economy spoy, them&
independence ut
eorel damned when died An don the purple (or is it
blues) ribbon pledging the wearer to moderation in the
emelth. It seems a sort of admidion that hitherto
Imeheel Md.. appetites, bat Mit new we ems
Madera Some Immeweels who make OM dm hied
aszt um 'need et it, think the ado.oe is assered, hr
die• war gum ia
different, from the odd, and . one
appetising when mob fah breed that the appetite fta.
met Mem myllme mertitice of it. Sem of my bin.
m ttp MA bethee head, med mem pieseed with the
imorevearaest: a little Madding b den • plasma asds
for
either-me vary city or ben thommile
to. "go damp md elegy." Tbe
mgt.
by • Mlle extra baling, or that it becomes my
mall mot lief
ethane and home-made bore.
ewe a grad relief, sod me that fruit in ptentifof end
R My we am able as get sup,. The, hem.
Ms le a dry imports. person nomdirm red no lem
mem Wm.
study
me
0.11/1drIliA ILYIEL—emilinneth
A Ram= Lamm%
" And doyon think it honest, Mr. Wedwortb, to
almme more.. a hone than le is worth?"
"Wm dep.& on eirearesrance0
And, pay, what enema...nee de you coneidar muld
jostely seek • bath. and' honed a gentlemen as- yodels* gabor 81a more in ydsr pocket than Ma marl.
ea. ef the howl"
-.
to 7tir
j1"
...te=
.virfirt Li
de"
, de
redo:ebbe prise the bares by deprmiating
and mode
eat he Twee•
• lot about beam, whale his knovehdy
of the oseathree would have shamed a aty meals Then
be heal. g maw
all prin.., threeniaried lid, and
he Am "Me melee easily ae—no, 'nano be persorod—os
dethy es a dog mellow metor, them Me said to
mated it lee hind/4 Mils. the time! lam to ma
after it for Sir
he Howard; . I dapped the - yinene
on aa a warming la hen not teknow mook in thefutans,
to keep him as mar the tam es I mild 'Wed dein'
viol... his natore.".
"1 ere," replied teener.
Sb pow initiate morals and
fill year own puree it the same time."
Yes, just like the Mahone," replied Joe. "I teeth
truth and banality and mab my papils pay m their
lames. Thal, is the way you teeth La, hinny it, P.4"
^I thought we had agseed to bias ne nos posnal
goes...," said M. Canner. "So pet Middy got 43I5
for a bur deer was worth 4300. That se the prnitionee
far or we have gone."
" The.* mealy
" And pat told Ma Wilson that the home was worth
throe hook. gained, I anppooei"
"I did newtot the kind. I told him that ens ray prim,
end he mild lake it or leave ii."
"Yoe dm to hare method. of your own in rolling
homer, Mr. Wentworth."
Yee, I have," mimes. Zoe. "Lid I mulct like the
Etna d selling yon a hoes thee that ; could. die
"75il Me goodme I go samewhere she ifj ever do
want a horse," replied the lawyer. " Your methods do
not comend themselves to me, and I de not third they
will to your customer. altar your cenlession in Court this
morning."
My regular customers trout me," answered Joe
Nona', and not ono of dim to der made a ow...plaint
that I over treated bins maything but fairly. I wonder if
yw can say dm romes"
Yow orgy Mated demo, Mr. Wentworth, The Court, I
how no, doubt, will know - who Mee Sr place upon
yoa own estimerte of your character."
"Yea" replied Joe, "
en doubt the Judge has
weighed as both up, and I'll bet my bed racer mated a
Jerusalemt pony he rather trod me in the dark wi' •
thomand pone. thee you in the Wight eV s froepound
me Mb wouldet behind reedy adman he li the"
And with thin parting shot Joe teak hie lent while the
Mem did their bed to suppled. the appInnee which
god. hie release from the Mem bee.
The ca. proceeded end See sat Beduins to the
evidence. Sir John next pet lei he. grom into the how
re. dolmaed that attar the has bud been bat to fortnight in the ambles he detected Igoe of rmemg and alto
thooght that his knees ware uneatisfactory. The. horse
td vet lam out of the stable mem for Mims. He
wee certainly not up to the gummed which had been
print eve by Mr. W. lath and Um handed on by
IA Wilms In the meardame Joe dribbled smother,
on the bade of is hill end peal. it to the tamer for the
dehisce •
Will you elate or your oath did the hem ma nom
era of the stable except or me d. daring the first three
make he warm Sir John's prom sionf "
will," replied Foster.
" Sore he was never ridden by one of the dab& boys,
for ample, "
"To, sir, l on mue he was cot"
"You rosy nand down. Now Mr, Wentworth, I moat
trouble you to go into the witness Or again, el you don't
Not a bit," exclaimed Jae. " I rather like it Now,
earl fire away..
" You were at Whet
on the amt March, I believe."
" Then will you tell the Coast what happeoodl"
"I ma returning home sod had got ebod • mile from
wham I beard a. bees amnia' op bekied I. • whirl.
. In a hurry. I demo let - my own Imam glop to
otz' ,aatar
.
..
guess riddles on the re
waey
., but etturgh zroa:kd
tow.,
"Thank yen, Mi. Weetmenth. Tam may *tea dom.
d® my leund AMA Ids any haelbeer emetions In
ark ,"
1 ha
e," and.. Oman meit to Ihs
"
nay thia hamar. ow tha M. Mask; Will lea
tell the !oat her you come em precisely to remember
date? "
...II," mid Am remount beam thola me the
•
d the NM in. et WM.. Iludea, anan
cne. aim I was Ina ma ea theza
atthei mat
there
be dam
the. rig. I
ant
mil the maple woo te the ad aim
Fel mom
Week"
•
Weingweght Weald
"Se yea ease st the dim
you and AGM the Cm. what hmilteshirth hefw
" red Gate
N
'
ortn'
llrilad
ot.'
//r:"°' °trim
hotel where I pet
a. form rope of coffers Men I got
home. I didna do any other &Mire that neat"
" And do my it was Or oinked..., Mkt Maw you. left
Whitthead"
"Theredowd," anewm. Jon "I sadaa swear to
half a mod"
" And it v. dartx
ire of consel'.
"It genesiddy
agate gmit. thee of moist
.the in Mamh,"
tld tom "Mot
mu hall
mcon and • tow Om"
"Just ea. Now MR yr.
11. Goot how you could
diningeish
ti on a Auk
ewe may a. path.. horse,
but that
Mar had mi
di seas add" asked
the
mode alest pada.
ra
Th• movenevnt to promote. Infant Wellare though.
to
p
thar7e7
"'L
e. "4. 1%Telv
sty
al a
' irrj4
ellserreet,
Mothercridt will be mat irs the dthil
beach. It ia high time that Motherhood receded the
homer it deserve.. Grounded in necessary self:make,
ourroondok rifle Anger and cam *a
adormlith.
ma ill eV deep comma to the nation, and moray as voll
▪ ibooshAmay MI Sr spent upon ash a Iamb ef the
ChM flasks: Tel am thee er to Sr properly mehriisni
mpronated*
it's mew, mard three who. as who..
male Joe madam here nevem., en has Mk thr
ellthibres or halm:vary for both, me well as diet ems
and reedleine, are .tree patriot. to lapel.
elzdeet hp to
ler ma
theright.
t ie entirely
pier meetsiTrIeddety by their children. Wm
boom in poverty, see feeble, their mother. hem
.
11 at time. am weekly, ami, dm!' there. rhea
keedialge to hey them The" mother-Mi." dm MR
edairoth me Warm. Is* who will pi...domed eed
MM. end to willed had le Salem MR be my rule
tome I. Wad. the NW modieremt will drieeth
he
a.
ma masts and peon* Adria
gallop l'or=111* fem7elt
dem
oar memo ate eines, a rad itaa et apeestim
" lea fro is MI Mao M.', Ifedmak, that Bel the Mate met =pdt sit this Mentery Moms
•041" Yd. the It edam* meth M. to ma. the ' the
nestality mew em ie m thplembly Amy. Hoy
" may m Is tell my wig.- yea years," eh. sheath home Wm Met ia a mai. end hmennAlb
said E.
mts like our mat
non Ism dome tell a MLLE lay Am Dick.
bairesk em Ilk Membered., on amp. dm, mending
If the Edda should care for the child's needs=
to pm wed
m
Adm. ym
on the physical and educational side., sandy Ms
dphies
divatimere mere intemerty end efficiently for its spa..
I one,"
frame. .1.1nor that SIOLI meal needs The falling off of
youth et der .LE, wet I knee Lomb. tim Mb. at Sondaysechoshi bee many dplandioue. melee this
Sir To
.
hni:uplrea and whim pm d mph minded to mhaps, the compulsory aideriance et
dereclemth
him to
std
lamod w• thee mid eve his which mho the child Mk ai eseeps more of the me
foe.
I Or *ma the hs hq I me elitthenecue. Mktg on Sundays. The'rigidity ofoe methods thee:fame
And though Tads. ma, rat LE my... mast e
en
the.fack of sm.& in the peel
e, eosin, the
wisp of MT art it me the met when the boss dt hie
, lemy singing, hem didactic padre, the Med
knees damaged."
hoer
MM. bell milling for aide, all mid I. mode ors ea
You
no right to norldthat dominion," snapped uninsiting snake. - Thr glory codbgladness of youth..
Gomm "You are not asked for your opinion, but for
nitlet. IL dm In us. agm.ellago the landm
coma"
• Moot WM... and meindeeeeng need of the Cm
"Oh, well, I won't chime yea anything fire Ms," cot gad ore monmse de do heavy and wedtheagent
replied J.; "hut that's when the deed me dome. • ter lbw. Agensaaa wiped, salinity, order—not Am
md agar
Medved., hot as a he. bee emething
good hose mil., or rya • Otheaman."
dmyh
Medd thre to Mall Mx Tomer," mid the tamer — redl theretheimga
dolmsis desthemmeng yomg people ...many,
for the pinizigil.
ves amid rmlm of one maim at lead of the Mod •
rr®
The beady..
eves mare entered thr witonshos.
" CAM yam
the 51. of Kordal° tame the Mega height wevice, not remeardy dispeneing with
dem, but allowing immovable Me Ira a mammat mot
lamer lorldmadene.
eleventh, spa yin. We hymn ha h. Amply Mem.
" Yea sir," replied the tam "1 Weak I ms"
roe Once the INV
in thialnench d work d many it
"Wisem did yea mad the day/
The Moss suddenly halted, .and then embed red a. bogsn,and we um all. Erring le fill in soma. nee* by
be all grads d dash
mom en
he Implied, "It was the day I buried my brother at Shah. it St illmss
ing in the Seadaynehode.
.
!'
' So you were at Stockport. What time did pow. get
hosed"
Soots of vs were deeply interested ond touched to, on
" lidded my train and did Oct get back antil them. ear beastild college tai Steleadea the Red Ce
res Addy:
,'" w. the mower,
i 7•17sefeoll
Hospitr Everyone see,ted
whme charge did pm leave the etabled"
I'iry
V7Eld
th,
"In the charge of Christi."
by- the eated and beady of the accommoddians He
wo saw the commodious hell., whieb
"The* is the youth to Men Mr. Wentworth has jest Inmate were full
referred in his evidence, is it rest?
and sewed, new
read to be filled with each h../
rpemy• 0.
"Tee, sir," repheel.Foreer.
t, „
Tim liaafilixa
ay=veie seer mem
Twi
From that mosned the verdict ens foregone on.
dot. The hon.... of the dey were with i.e Wm Mid, with its pade green sod hits filleglilii0110
worth. Mat when a for days after he lean. that white, coadortalde bedn, the eon hooding the doge es
them!. Melo. framed ilk fresh ivy: Igo
eat
Christie had conleseed be could not res. the femeadon healthfully
guests hod dthed ha threw
to go to. the circa, and hed, in his hurry to gel frame Mkt
which math
before Ins eoperior retained, let the horse fall end he. pr. me ewes. with beautiful Amara and plead. In
dahr
eh dominant mesculiany
place
of
healthy
dismissed his situation, Joe sent for him and offered him
eppd
nurses,
gench
and
efficient,
making needy far thed
o
a Marin his own noble.
amps who mold be Orderly mood heels in hmIth
azoong myself once," he said, " and • circus hot ohm pimihth Chie fah • ...ache et the peeing dim
i
g
r
I power, hot you mom, play my ef your
from the " halla of lommg," bolt
hanky-panky tricks ore me, or you'll knew Mast IA I Mem and
molders how split, lint it was necessary to gat jun.. for neat mimed we* consoled by the linking of me Chadds
bs.the great healing home. TM. meg MR Ida. MI
Wilson and to defend my own. character. Game and afar{
us oor
lot need them sill ham • mad
area Monday ; same pay ae Sir John'.."
and if um of O.. my own " bays Meld be tbers endt
(To he andinewd)
they he jud • little plead. The lambearted, Proated
ha. great 'addition. In their family el
and If elan
r.!
":1'
la.ri.ka-g„.
r .. .
kr
rrn
at
czar.
m
•"Zz
pace 4he
bell n' oval thei' eilwayg Madge, but it dn., and jean VISITORS TO LONDON
as l
oftot to the top of the hill he overteth ma It was
htewM
one of Sir John' wider-groom-the me el' red hair and
ryes that are lootin' after ...May and to-morrow at the
Game time. He was Md.' the/ hod at a pace—yell, if
ha. thineer him and treed
tt had bin one of my rem
the akin one a whip. If that hose w. touched in the
wind I donne wonder . at it, and if he ever was on his
knees without &yin' hIN prayer., depend no it, that was
the toue, Geed &dna ere him."
The Red Gds. lonely is a very triumph of soleated
sern. With leer ...lore, and there only of the mad
Athol and remeneible. ell the work is done wigs. ler.
Too kildiena no 'crabbed, dishes end pans Imbed,
hem domed, vesetabld prepared, even, in the mi.
&eons* dm wets of the cooking is done by mwid
let],
workers. Wearing spotless uniform. they
peddle these lowly tasks while paying maid to do
Will And my Comfort .d Acomemoddlon at
THE MAY THEE HOTEL,
133, MINORIES, CITY.
Cr, come en me *ammo)
Engle Beds, 8.
',made. Ss
laud* EMMA ad O.. to Ides hothendals.
JULY 5, 1117
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
similar work for 'themselves at home. Throughout the
day limy work in relays, and the work randy liege at
alb one bald. el 'helpers coming on duty as du Misers go
ofr Any duty is pleasantly nderteken, and a warm
Prig s among all. ;apply, even this MX.
m
slier side, and this ie seen in oar boarritals.
,ear has
But those white beds! May God soothe and comfort the
Nang men wins will lie there, sd may ties find Mint
Our r.9 7. will hover evr them, for His seem to Wong
m double ease. Our love for oar own de.
le no
I,. say deed expression in ors loving service for other
wrOP106 bore.
and W. Dawson here es respectively the preacher as
reformer. Seders, arganieer and philsephar. Mho preset officials of the churelt are young, air.. and conacientios men: Muss. It. Parish, PL. Thew, G. Kidd,
B. Dowall, A. R. (Barnihron, 1. Stephenson, W. Goddard,
E. Robins., W. Forager, J. A. Farish, and J. E. G.
Aitchison- Among its godly elders aro Revs. R. °limit.
so and W. Godley. It is proposed to continue the cekbrations over four &redeye wham the preachers mill int
Revs. J. 'Weber Parr. G. Armstrong S. Palms and W.
Dawson ;
role £2.50
veldt the home el every member and Sunday-school scholar ; to ask •
el of
prase, tesitimeey, fondly worship, and Christ.like living;
sad to mille the snomberabip to MI.
•
A Church with a Great. Record.
The semi-jubilee of the D.haniveed Church, Ogees-.
shortly be held. Esr knee its eredlion
had.,
11303 it has heen largely attended and generoosly sopported. The late Alderman John Lowland was the prr.
sashay, whs. Mier.e the church carries to this day.
Maw. Gentand and Wee daughlms are ant hi its memhurdle, as are else their husband. and children. Mr. T.
Weightman is organist, Mr. F. Aitchison G school superc.
inlendent, end Mr. W. Bowan ie a local preacher. The
or
, too, in person hes nun •
dan-reh
Welty and ability. Mr. Ralph RieJraby has been thou-,
renter forty-fire yetis, and his brother WEiara amistant
ohnirmaster too the ea. period. The chief widely close
that merle every Sunday afternoon was founded by the
lab John Sherry iti Nelaen.streat mote than fifty yeas
ego, and daring that half-cemtury bee hod only three'
ludeit—t e looedor. J. Gou-land, mid R. Hickeby,
W. T. Clark his aesistant Durham-road is the auccessor
of Nelson-street. Mr. J. F. Paxton has been shoot
treasurer tor twenty-air year., and has been coneected
with the school fifty-dove year.. Mr. John Bell, a fine
tyre .of Methodist, has been connected with the church
very many years, and hoe held numerous offies. Mr. T.
Clark hes been church aearetary einoe 1893, and for
lhirtsn years of that time wa.cirsit Brewer& The
membership today is 274, the Sunday-shoot has 350
scholars and ilia I v-1 hree teachers. The church income stet
ysr wee E506. The building was erected at a costal £6,7M,
the debt remaining being only £736. Between eighty
and ninety men have joined the Army or Navy, of wham
seven have been billed and twelve wounded. One yseth,
Captain Derry Hobson, hoe won the M.O. Glorious to
relate. congregations and collection. are larger to-day
than before the war.
The church has been favoured in its minister.. Ender
the coo leadership of Rev. H. Prete the church wa.
bode, and for six years he wee its devoted minieter.
G. Armstrong succeeded him, and remained eight yeare,
indefatigable in service, and [earls. in prophecy. Then
tactful, and running over
cams Rea. B. Haddon,
e dit sympathy. His been tested six veer.. The preset
superintendent enters upon hie filth peer. The young
ministers, who hove seconded their supers, have been
worthy types—Rees W. Duffield, G. Ferstner, G. Fermate,
Progressive Work in London.
Tim ministers' anniversry on the Kennington and
Battersea Gircuit law held at Now.road Church, Battersea lent ...Amid. The public tea was
petswired.
Mr. G. W. Crider presided at the evening meeting. There
a large audience, and the opening dsothates, lad by
Mr. "Pennell, prepared the people for the wiriest mtaietretr®m which followed. The superintendent minister
reviewed the work of God duoughout the Circuit for the
put year. end it ass • jog to all that real sdrance had
beta made in every at Congregation,. and member.
ship had heel fully maintained. The work in the Sundayschool advances. and the Bud of Hope work ia is loll
.swing in each 'Church. Endeavour work is repreaented
puns Intermediate and sewer sections. The Boys Life
Brigade is eleMg well at Kennington, whilst the Boy
Smoke and Girl Guided grow and in
at Brixton.
Over 3750 haa gees peel off the capital debt during the
year, and them is • balance in hand of the Circuit Fund
Gorwersions have taken else during the year, and
aeveral young people lime been linked up to Church
membership through the ached and Eadeaser meanies
The diatride wherein the circuit is Seeded offer • great
chalbenge, and present • great opportunity for the soul.
winning penis of our Ohurch. Open-air meetings are
being held with good results througliont the summer. The
scold moire el the past year have brought greet encoaragement to all. and the prospects are bright_ The
speakers lies. G. Stanley Reasell, MA., Rev. E Ernieston Pets (President of the Free Church Council). Rev.
Jacob W. Richiardaon, were all in good form, and did
eplendidly. MS Nellie Tarrant, Itrirron, sang sloe,
which NOM beautifully rendered and greatly appreciated.
In thecomes of the evening Rev_ M. Featherstone moved
the following resolution which was srried sunniest?
and unaided to the Prime hi Mister on behalf of the
piscine :—" That we view with grave concern the proposals to incises the manutacture and output el beer at
eriticel a 'period in the history of the war. • The nation
threatened with fm
food nnnns aE
prahibitise pries;
re s tel We enemy submarine
u
390
warfare on our shipping indeed., are still spelling; cod
in the light of (hos facia, whack the Government ha
brought to our slice, we urge that prompt measure. be
Glen to pshibit the ma onfact.e of beer. which destroy.
trod the nation weeds, and that such prohibition be made
comprudery for the duration of war and throughout the
tarried el demobilirrition, and thee similar measrea be
immediately Laken M regard to racing in Great Britain
and Ireland. 'Unless each alien he promptly Laken by
the Government we son., with reason, urge the people
to eat less bread is save the nation from pending famine."
Rae. W. Soltufield expressed thuds to all who had in any
way contributed to the samosa of the event. The Doxology
brought a great meeting to a close.
Annisnrary earsicee were held et New-road.,
Bette.rees. on July let
Medley
Hudson, Harringay, N., preached
coded appropriate
End.
Mo. sermons
to appreciative segregations morning and evening.
A. special young people'a service wee held in the
afternoon. Mr.
Brown presided. Rev. If. Featherstone -delivered an address on "Decision of Character.
Mr. Edmund Cole took the chair at the public meeting on
Monday, end. Mr. Edwards had
hsppy timein hia
adders, "Think el Others" Mrs. Featherstone and Mrs.
Cole distributei the pros to the lunfr nnd eti98'r
scKolar. rspeclively. Mr. Robert Taylor was 'mounted
With • diploma el honour for thirty-six yeasof continuous service at New-road Sunday.shool. hfr. Taylor
rephed with deep emotion. The singing of the children
wee splendid. All the recites did credit to themselree
sd the whorl. The order of the children we idea.
Mr. Dudley, scrota., gave a detailed and encouraging
report of the yeses work. The finscial sults were well
ahead of fat year. An omnibus resolution we move/
by Her. W. Schofield, bringing a scressfel esiversary to
Ile close.
a
A Correctl'on.
soi,—On opening my copy of the Lender last week
I fend that the ears of Herbert Allen has been omitted
I rant the het of Swindon First Circuit ministers.
I
sari/Mod the official list as corrected by Conference immediately before leaving London an the Saturday mid.
day, and Mr. Allen's name was standing in its right place.
No instructions were given at any sitting of Conlerens for
the name to be deleted. The proper order of names for
the circuit is :—Harold W. Pope, Herbert Allen, Army
Domed Supply, George Grippe, sup., Francis J. Harper (on
military .auks). I would be grateful if, in justice to Mr.
Allen, yam could briefly indicate the correction in your
mat issue.—Youre, etc.,
Ilea°. W. Pore, C.C.D.
91re Meese. Brinkworth.
(We llesply regret, by an inadvertence, the onieeion of
Mr. Allenh sane from the hat of ministers stationed to
Soudan First Circuit=-ID.]
DR. BARNARDO'S HOMES
(111
Will you send us 6 ?
The usual Altimmel. Appeal is made for —
100,000 Half-Crowns
to help to pay the Food Bill for pur great family of over
7,000 children Airing the coming lean months.
The cost of food is constantly increasing.
lest year we raised 167,163 Half-Crowns m memory
of the late Dr. Barmaid°.
Will you please help m to do mere this year, became the
out
need is Breaker? 4,371 children admitted omen war
Jay 4th wee the enurivereary of Do. Bareardo's Birthday.
W ill lasts send a 'Gift in memory of the man who lowed little
chid en and who was a pioneer in saving the Rabies
Owing to absence of railway facilities and difficulties of
providing food, we feet it is more patriotic not to hold
Founder • Day celebrations this year.
Yours faithfully in the service of the Children,
WILLIAM BAKER,
&worry firwtor..
Cheques sod Orders payable "Dr. lbwrehie'e Hemet feed Dia Fund" and awned (Notes should
&Watered) end eddresew he She Herswerg Wavier, William Baker, N.A., LL.B., at
l
mention .rokalrhe Weans. lawder,. JEW S. ways
.READOFFICES
Is
Id to 28, STEPNEY CAUSEWAY, LONDON, E,
▪
400
▪
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
JULY
READY SHORTLY.
Order through your Minister.
herlerort'gtil.ti
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B L A CK PO 0 L.—Mrs. Warn. , I)1,
"EPILEPSY
D LACKPOOL.—Mrs. T. WOOD, Osborn
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Office., Circuit Ministers, Supernumeraries, Lay Agents, ac..;
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Sr J. 1 44444 DMA
iCtLACKPOOL —PENNINGTON, FornroyS,
a lie of Missionary Deputation Appointments, and much other
valuable information indispensable to all Church Members and
Officials.
5, 1917
APARTMENTS, .4..
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MORE OA NI E.—Note Addrom Mm
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.1.V1 Lanni, 7
Centea1 fronnoade. —Splendid ,ILIon, achy el. own
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Oen.
noel
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M°1'11
%‘' ne-1
121:4a}n{T
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00.4,4
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COUFIPORT.—Mrs DESOIL MOM
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SOU T HPORT.— KENWORTHYS
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BLACKPOOL—Mtn. Hewn.; 40, Hull Cs.relatirva'rer./.31,
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NEV.& — Mrs. Poi
LILACKPOOL. — Mn. WILL1noe, es, rpUNBRIDGE
AL Glen OW bd.—Comfortable. How
▪ Albert Pool confute. •partmenlen aho ▪
Ipaeo Ontlm .1
Room , tro
■1=ro'der.;
2141
plane • Yal neommen.datYno
Pliny 5111. WI
HEATI G.
Success Guaranteed.
TRUBIBIE11.1.. & SON (Newcastle),
Caloric Works, NEWCASTLE, Staffordshire.
ESTCLIPP-ON.BEA —Mrs
■,tddre..t.-:.
BL,ACKPOOL.—Chango of sus
yen. 40, 111. Brims Ilned.E.
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end ehornIttOre tainat=i
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BLACKPOOL.—Mr•DZIAAN, 42,
ick.
When answering an AdvertMS
mant, please mention "PrUalt.les
Methodist LeAlder..
JULY
""*" THE. PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER
5, 1017
me
Primitive Methodist Leader
in.ruin. Bersontsr a YD.. rumen minor. wan,
THURSDAY, JULY 5, UHL
,aNO'd
elea
atitiornrit'arigarn
"
Vs
g.u. S. and ingttas TOZIAT
Seth. or letrt.,
church new, Itemittanues
Lease •• muse Era
'TI:enalabee7.'&rirer rgirV
arac
. 4
.1
e+retnEriRVitic,*e.
VICTORY — A MORAL DUTY I
Lueitania," the deportation end alarm of civilians, our
indignati. w.white hot There is a real dmger of the
moral sense being dulled ; we may grow to accept inlenial
innovation. as common incidents. Mat moral decay is
seen in pious excuses and subtle pretensions of what
claims to be hummitarian lunar... The final hour of
the struggle must find our moral indignation as ratans
. in the hoot moment when we discovered appalling evils.
We dare not accept the precedents of this war, the cr..
of Germany as es.blished traditions of struggle. II we
do the poison has entered our own blood. We must beat
Ohm new wickedness out of life; we must make
it imposeible, and do it in the only way the German
mnscren. will acknowledge. War is lull of pollution,
but it ma be a purgation. It can be that today if we
hold on till the power of war-makers is broken. We are
olririwol
Xittfiestlare Tuna ;Tie itor, m
defies every instinct of conscience and freedom. To make
terme with that withednese, to have it able to doom our
children to elavery is to cover oui memory with reproach
and km our own mule. It is a had and unwelcome
lesson ; 4merica has learned it slowly ; pacifists or their
children will discover it, There nn he no righteous and
abiding peace without victory in the field and upon the
„„„
yildrileN
•
By Arthur T. Guttery.
401
utterance, no Christian moll or woman dare deny that as
a people we have wandered from God, and that a revival
of pure and undefiled religion has been long needed.
Breaking in upon the smug ccroplamney of the Church
crones the dmlaration of the bluff miler, containing
rebuke, prophecy, and call to penitence and action.
Upon no community iv the realm should the Admiral's
tremendous words ham a greater effect than upon Primitive Methodist.. From our homes have gone the dower of
with manhood, within our borders the sword has pierced
'71Yiieofe4:
111iittalriLBo.
Iweave'
i
igibm
hark. In
onrocTadtioUn'
...
prayer and evmgelieation should find a response, deep
and intense, in the breaste of many thousands in hamlete
and cities. Amongst' the eldero it ought—it will—awakes
e of e heroic day in the history of our people
whith should fr et to instant determiution to time do.
with the lame retains of sapless and fruitless times. In
the ranks of the young it should stir ambition to emulate
the zed and daring trod sacrifice of their grandsires.
With awakened passion for the spiritual uplift of the
thin
not Rimitine
;Teti
,
mcispahliolerOrgwmta=
resources, its particular genius. accomplish ins
ousing the
country to seek the lord? Whom is the ociety, the
circuit., which, when it persistently pureued evangelistic.
work under the direction of the Holy Ghost, failed to win
men and women for Jesus, and made meet. the domestic
and social conditions of the area in which it operated?
And be it not a saddening fact that there are infinitely
too many placee which for at least twenty years have
seldom, if ever, brood in their streets from the lip. of
Primitive Methodists any testimony of grace, any song of
mlneion? Oh! those songs which were sung boom
hounding heart, and which drew to chapel, repentmco,
and to a hew life wretched, besmeared, hopelese wanderers
!roan Gal! They set a-ringing the bells in the belfry of memory at this hour. Song. of Redeeming Love—songs
of exhortatio.n and anneal—songs of usured forgiveness—
songs el deliverance from sin, death, and hell—Bonn of
rapture and icy while ” truelling in the good old way "—
tongs of " heaven on the way to heaven." and of
triumphantly reaching "the Canaan that we lore,"
Such a victory is an certain aa the dawn of day it we
do not slacken in our purpose or weaken in our efforts.
We must bathe our spinle in the free and lofty ideals of
three years ago. We must avoid the cry of revenge on
All men are weary of rear, but we must beware leet i
t lvied ai
ddetkinddterardtehiest:owfewsi
aly
r dd
Lirpityrdth
wed,il:rd
we allow wearinne to betray the weed ideate that drove
Peace that involves the did not desire it, nor did en believe in it. We loathe all
us into this terrific conflict.
abandonment of .a holy cause and leaves lustful brutality that war involves, but we could not mane it unfree we
to boast of immunity would be the greatest disaster that
could come to the race. The moral nerve of free peoples erarmeTtPo'reiof
rVeWrZi
e:ItTliat:iO1 a greet
is being tried as never before, and, cruel ea is the refusal, and we must hold on till victory, mmplete and
discipline, we dare not lay down our task unfulfilled and just, vindica.s our resolve and ravn us from the reproach
The of weary infidelity. We are eager to get back to our tasks
bequeath its tragedy and tears to our children.
world has reached a crieis when the only way to abiding of main} reform and sacred mercy, bin Bret we mut era.
by the sword the military pride that would deny all
htle 1'1
''
X:tr- send adv.ce or humane good-will. There must be
er
;
'qy'hTliiii117aettCrInd
171"olli'n! :e'
ier..., but we ere up against a gigantic wickedness that victory, and then the erection of a new and better world.
has put all its treat and boat In war, and it can only
be humbled and convinced by the pressure of military
"Far from a world of grid and sin,
defeat. Prussianism can only he forced to acknowledge
With God eternally shut in."
the truth of conscience under the shock of arms and the
agony of overthrow upon the field. Most wars can be
Our churches should take action at once. Open-air
settled by negotiation and the wooer conferen. begine
me tine. should be .held, with singers and preachers at
the better it is for all. They are caused by rivalries of
each place. The home. of the people should also be
trade, dynastic ambitions, diplomatic disputes and
visited, and such other means adopter' as the officials
wounded prestige. They always close with a bargain,
What? Elv.gelise on a epedal sense when our monde think would be advantageous under the circumstance.
and it in well to open the market swiftly. Here the mane are obameed min this frightful war? Yes; why not? This is ,imply a revival of the old methods. But they cen
is not national, it An moral and opiriluaL It can never We have born milling lee a -prophet to say the word foe he made new by the infusion of the new spirit ; and the
be settled by .compromise. We can no more make tonne thie dramatic hour. We have been lietening IL success of other days would be repeated in them tine. It
with Germanism than Lincoln could with elavery in has some The. prophet did not wear priestly robes, is the Spirit which giveth life. Given the pmeeesion of
America or Cromwell with absolutism in England. Preemie non was he M. about with the Wine of wild the Spirit, the machinery will really be found to give it
has challenged the conscience of the world • she would .isnals. From the wilderness of the water. the voice expression and form. Let no one fall back upon the plea
day the free spirit of the race ; she has introduced amid came. It cos from a eviler—a miler in high command that the Church lag been robbed of ito men.
There on
the nations precedente of wrong end crime that would In Britain's fieet—a Railer who had watched, and waled, the worsen. Heaven blear them, and make them a
poison humanity emrywhere. She her made force the arid dared, and won. No voice was expected from thence, blessing.
beowldge, and she can only but it hoe come, and those who have ram to her have
only arbitrament she will acknowledge
And
now
conies
the
exhortation
of
our
own
Chief
for the
he moved to repentance and
mote it for remmiliation heard.
year:—"het us proclaim the Gospel menage, not only to
by Joint in the field. It is only by o condemnation
What said the sailor? Bob VicajAdmiral Sir David
which carries with it the awful powers of penalty Gun Beatty saw before he spoke. It war what he mw which the pulpit, but let to lake our congregations and choirs
with
us
into
the
parka
and
market.plmes
and
preach
it
ImPereal moundreliem can be made to con that its crimes made him speak. The miler-.ter apprehended that this
are no long. profitable and will not be tolerated in a war had a Divine purpose, and he mw into the souls of there se our fathers did." What le our responee?
decent world. It in not we who have called upon the thenations whether his purpose was being in any degree
word td enforce righteousness. We loathe the necessity, lulfilled. Franca he saw ^ has risen out of her ruined
but we have been forced to except the challenge if we cities with a revived religion that ismost wonderful."
would not am civilisation rot with cmcer. We dare not Turning to his own land, he doubtless mw the activity in
One of the most popular and brilliant annual gathering.
allow judgment to falter into feeble laments; it must be the making of munitions, end he would also see the rising
enforced or the reign of hell will be ntablished. The evil of her sons to her detente from the uttermoet parte of the in our northern distrine is the garden party darranged
,ed.loclietfidOrplgu
is intensified Lemon we cannot separate the German north But he saw eomething else. He cow her still 1,71
nnge,
a C
do
dr
m.m.idto
tee.dodlhthde ill
drnad tfoo.
rdrZ
people from their government, There is ne sign of remaining in " the stupor of mIt-satisfaction and cowcleavage ; the worst crime. are cheered by the masa.. pl easy into which her flourishing condition has steeped menced on a small scale, and each year has seen deeper
intereet, larger number., and a corresponding increase em
end church bellsring for appalling infamies. II the her " ; and this is his cry "
l she can be stirred out
revenue. This year the Lord Mayor and Lady.
German people would- throw off the Hohensollerns the of this condition, until religious revival takes place at
nitration would change and democratic mein... could home, just eo long will the war continue. When she can Mayoreee of Bradford (Alderman and Met A. Peel) very.
generously placed their beautiful redden. and charming
begin, hot as long aa they believe might is right, and
look
on
the
furore
with
humbler
eyes
and
a
prayer
on
co
tu
d
r:d
d: et the dietliza.
l.
odthd
l ed.
follow the policy of derolopment and aggression through
Ltaddies' Co
nreid
nitoten,.
.,..dvt
her lips, then we can begin to count the days Mwarde the
war, thereto only left to us the eupreme duty 01 beating
Lion. Lem mmy circuits and fro': the neighbouring
down such o lest upon the field where it boasts its will
Otit.
of
the
heart
of
a
man
.
of
war,
whom
Ureters
eye
is
dietrict of leer. loyal aupponers of the Orphanage came,.
Vietory is to ue to proud ambition i it is a moraTobliga
day
and
night
guarding
our
shored
and
our
homes,
comes
Lion. We cannot escape it if .1. is fo be ckan.
md a kir sprinkling of the one dignitanee and ladies of
The growing horror of all the angering,
tofig, cost and death Ike call, the yearn, for prayer and a revival of religion. Bradford mingled with the guest. From the time of the
involved in war makes to eager
find mother road. Confidenu he bee in the Ships and men on the water, in reception onward no one was burlier than the dielieguiehed
We may easily-forget that infamme can be as hideous and the men on the far-flung fronts on the laude, but to him host and bootees, who spared neither energy nor expenee
proud that they can only. be atoned in the eacrifi. of the del./mining force is this nation'. humility before God in providing for the entertainment of their vieitors. The
blood. Suppoee we negotiate with an arrogant and un- and mnscione grasp of His almighty power. "Until Manor House, Bnidlord, to beautifully situated, and the
eaten
of
eee at once the defeat of the best veligions mind lakes place at home, put so long aria the weir gardens, lawns, coneervatorin, and Bower. afforded real
conscience of the race. It is troe that Berlin would not continue!" Considering from wham the message comes; delight to all lover. of natural beauty. The Bredlord City,
smure the full victories it hoped to gain by Lb swift the words are startling.ov their significance, None can Police Band and the Lyric Qmrtette Party alternately eon.
engine. upon a world unprepared. But Germany would oey the rebuke is not merited, for 'there boo been no tributed muaiml items, and added considerably to the
etie
..red,o: th
rfe ■dltde
linnio4;rdAddym
eri ,I,ifirtgecelrj wee the
eay, and its people would Mee. the evil creed "We have general anise of the agony of the hour. "The shush of
were
broken
treaties, we have overrun
hares neutral tertitories we selfaatiafaction and complacency" is only too apparent
pledged to protect we
deluged
woe
a continent to yet. Notwithetanding the hideo.- pictures which have gracefully repined ei a large. variety of useful and faux
horror.; we have introduced into
savage prendents been given of the multiplying durables during nearly articles, and, incidentally, added handsomely to the funds.
that were deemed impossible; we have forted ervilisation throe yeas of brilehmy, notwithstanding the accumuleling no Mines Peel had under their charge meet stall, and
to acknowledge the new methods of poison,rapine, elanry, homes in these islands upon which the pall her fallen, found many willing and eager conomere for their deli.,
ethmarine murder., and the alaeghter of u.need how lowly has been the apprehmaion of the people of cdies. Tea win provided be 11 Sundayechcol convenientily
Mr, end although the acoommodation was hmiled,
civilian. Tree, we have not gained all we nought; the the awfulness of the welter I " With regard to the wicked
world her risen in protest, bat more indignation has bed and ugly waste mined by war," writes an officer, "I mreful organ... end method there was no overcrowdto make terms with our military metheda. Conscience tampon nobody can quite prelim it who has not men, as ins, and one BOO people partook of tee. No clump we.
couId not defeat no, and our leaders, who made the eword I have, hundreds and hundrede of connee--our best .tae made for lea, but liberal collections were taken.
After tea an informs' meeting commenced with the ging•
the final judgment, have been vindiaabed. Idealism could most of them, our bravest and healthiert youth—lying
gaol two favourite hymns. Mr. J. Brearley,
prey
delay our coml.., it could not break one purpose or unburied where they fell, patrid and blackening. It's a
crush our military power." To have in Europe each a filthy sight I have hated seeing it, and it has made me sided, and the district eecretory. Rev. Johnstone Dodd,
made a brief statement regarding the work of the Orphan
creed.rationally held by a proud and logical people, more than ever furious at the folly of wan"
Multiply that gruesome spectacle by many a hundred- Home., and appenird foe continued support of the latherwouId he to curse the Continent and poison all the future
of the world. Our bargain would he our defeat, and it fold, and then let us think that Admiral Beatty eye it ing children. Chandler A. L. Whittaker, the Orphanage
wouId fling Finery beck into a berbariam from which our has to go on .til our eloper is smashed, and mill this treasurer, and Councillor Tom Fletcher, .1.P., =premed
reve al d hr aft.
children could only escape By more awful sacrifieee than nation humbles itself before high Heaven and gripe the thanks to the Lord Mayor and Lady
deep
those we mourn to-day. To negotine with Germanism, so strengthof the Lord Jehovah. This eailomeer really a great ovation, the bon responded. Be revealed
tong as it boutful, to acknowledge the reign of the Maulers the responeibility ler the continuance of the intense in the...8 of the orphans, and mknowledged his
word and that jA to make the return of alavery inevitable. war from the combatant forces to the non-combatant intense pleasure that the garden party had been m anWe dare not abate or honor of the foul deeds that population. Whatever view we may take of his indict- ...dented nose. We
pocpomabrinty
ma v. a t
e
ere the curse of Berlin. When we heard first of the crime ment of user o nation, whatever criticiem may be passel of the Lo Mar and
o Ldaod nyo ayorn . tThheey
against Belgiam,the use of poimn gee, the sinking of the upon hie words and hie attitude and his semi-prophetic remarkle buenea plit. wi
nd a noble public villa
EVANGELISEI EVANGELISE I
By W. M. Patterson.
Lord Mayor's Garden Party.
Unti
ed
402
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER. 's
with religiose devotion end genial* el imoperent.t.
Weft*. re proud el them, and ee is she eleurthel esti.
thoy are eath loyal supporta. The knancial retures
the present we aa follows —theratio. for lay
; per Mr. IL Fletcher, £27 IS. ;Mrs. T.
Lomb. LID; Councillor A. L. Whit:mime 1110; Me. lend,
the. £2 lire. J. E. Whittaker. £2 2s.; Mr. IL iflenoton,,
LI as ; Mr. W. E. Rhode., TA; eollsetionent tee, Meer „,Ludy -Marne. See table, 611 13.. ; mlleetien eligeroark,
CM ;
rkopory stall, f 46 Ms. M.; Mires Pahl;
woes wall. £11 Is. 211. ; grand tot. SAM Ile bd., an
tacos. of SAO wee late y.". amount Dimly remain..
imlawakelge that this ...did result eel.* arra erred.
upon the °rpm.= of the eresniitter.end the& nentinted
err. is due to Bev. F. Hobson, Mr. Herbert Ped. and.
the large ninabor of devoted helpers who &ended them.
PRINCES AVENUE. LIVE RPOOL.
Record
Ckurch Anniversary.
On .Jeue 2411,1608 title Wm. church celebrated de
thartedtrat a=iversery, which proved le he • sword kw]
eallassiasm ad genemaity. Swedes's rod. Wm en •
rinapiring had, ...en the ex-Pr.ident preached .with hie
recouromed Are cud brilliance to peat eonspeganmor
the char.'s roll. of honour, aunnoun*1 be the Was of
the allies, ware displayed above the pulpit, and add.
re Much of =lour and patriotic dignity to the minion
In the afternoon a epec.I musics' serve. we hold when
/dr. Gallery spoke, end an inspiring pnognarine of .music
was tethered by .Miss Gwendolinn Haigh. Mx. W. J.
Pugh, and .the choir. In the o.n.o. (Mr. Wei. Arnold,
jou, of Northman.. Princes-avenue welcomed • new
triad. whoe nest visit is eagerly ..Licipated. Mr.
Arnold woe all henna by his earnest, telling wet., and
cheered the chump by a splendid donation towordo the
£250 which was the financial god el the anniversary.
Towards this sum gins of all &mounts had been flowing.
during the preceding week, and great Werra in its realeslion was manifest.
On Blonde,. evening a public monition was held from
*even to eight, at which Mr. and Mrs. V. D. P.h received
the wells. No more popular heed end hostess have over
presided over this *notion than Mr. and Mao. Parth,
w hose Malone devotion to the chumb—a devotion
splendidly seconded by their hamilv--hae won them
high piece in the affeocion of the church. Dmieg the
R
reception Miss Bladowen Jones and Mee Mood
Pugh supplied a choice musics] programme, and altheameets were provided and rrveal by the C.B. Society.
eat
in
hit
During the recepllon Mr. Glittery
receiving the gilts which poured in from glad and=
Beam. Following the reception,Mr. Ceuttem Termed
enthusiastic anclience on "Dement.and Wee'
n an enthusstic
Cormallor.H. Sped presided. Mr. Sp.d is an old and
tried friend of Princesavenue, and his present. at the
churdh annivermry is regarded by hie may Wends as
a vied item in the greet feetird. Hie heartening words
and generous gilt were most cheering. Goer nearer
et-tended the readings al the list of about Me dome end
gilts, and triumphant &p.a.. Rested the announcement that over £2. had been raised try the weekend's
,
A thanks.
effort (the amount has sin. macled M71.).
.o0b
wli,
deh refreshments
giving social hollowed 114
01 Oh,
chat and Maple)
(on bo=
presented to NO. Gallery -c eelorged portrait of Massa!
an • token of affection
Silo. upon the conalneion of hie ReCutlery e. greeted thy an up
sidential y.r.
standing assembly as he .rune to reply. Hie earnest woe&
gurittele
for
the
love end demtion of hie people, rd.
1.
hie ...reser° lore.at of the challenge of future Mahe
w aiting them together struck the fitting note ter the
due
doe of a victorious 41AnivensAry. Sprial Raise
to the thoir, she thomghout ger splendid andanalhand
era
in the history ol the
to the greater of
1,17.1.1ranoxia.
Appeals Irom Mission Centres.
Sou—Since last Christmaa I have hadan ids in wry
mind, and as there is a diecusaion on minions. matters
ed the peanut time it appeals to one as toeing appropriate
to mention it. Toward. Chritamu every year we lure
early a dome churche that advertise largely and appeal
strongly for fund. to n able.them to provide Christm.
dinners and gifts to poor and onlortrthate people. Is it
net poesible for the Home Missionary Committee to make
a litt of all rmoh mission ch.ches and appeal by Idler
and ...lopes to all
do's, and ask for a Christmas
dinner collection? All the moue, could go Lo as lend,
and then be distribided to the meny rhumba that work
Tor the wells. of =fortunate people. Some thire since
there mue suggestion in your paper for the "Herald " to
he sold with the Conneaional -magazine,. I .anot help
00 ol
daintiest the suggenion wee goal and won.
A few yeare ago • returned mirionery
ow Wroth
rem euccessfut
arse.. with ene of the theirs, and
arevebad mirionery eervice nee maenad and worked
tha pamphlet whieh
the circuit. In *Millen Se
ithed the-Ivrea. Miodonop Meriag, Belt root
.1
1""
AL
pratbk to &mange • emirsf adders*, enegrand lwarnia,
rhea toad be mere epproprialely'rwen by one of the
crier clarets of the Suudayatheol .or an ihnleareer
ote.,
tholiety
M.
Mee Jamie Wilkinson. deadlier of Me. owe' K..
Parkin Wilkinson, of Iloylend illennore. .91.6 meetly.
yea the B.Sc. degree at Sheffield therealty.
Whatflur Readers Say.
Ministerial Resaidaatione.
S..,—In poor repels of the tendon -Conlerence you,
martine thelsot tbet tour out Of the fire came of mini.;
Urea reeignation Whiter have been tendered during the
yew Ireve entered the ranks of the Beeman clergy. On
the gr.*,
that every nest
cause, two of
our Waders offered explanatione for the situation vthie.I
had wizen. Our Memo. .-Prouidenk Bev. A. T.
Griner, wondered whether the can. amen. lo loend
in the lack of an accurate comepticer—on the part of
those concerned—of the real and viral weitelletion which
is being made
one 'Church to the vConenonwealth of
Cleurthee.'"Dr. Prise, our beloved " friend, plaropher,
and gold.," maid that in his qpinion the ranee lay in
matters theological The attitude of ear Chodt towage
the Sacraments wee not, at all satialeetwy, and men therefore Gana from to to led a Mesa, whose attitude to.
wards the Sacraments or adialactory.
No., en, let it he aaid at owe, and quite I rankle, that
t
we have no manlier of sr ...thy with man Who, alter
having served
miniatere Tor eleven, thirteen. twain,
and twenty-seem year. in our Chumh lave bled to
magpies Ore pert that Cher. Is jilaying in the life of ear
maim bd.. Her history is weal written, and will bear
AO1/110 Aoralan. We AM not ashamed of our ancestors,
nor of the we they did. Nor need we Be in my way
thinned with respect to the coelribation rode in this
enr Dm. to the "Commenwealth ol Chinch."
our Wahl. he have left . have recognised this er ma, leadere of other Chemins recogrine
Yom correepondent lied • vary fine example d this
brooght Ware hen.. recen tly when he had the honorer
of speaking . bebaU of his brother miniatent at a meet.
leg el Free Chuck inherent in Birmingham on the
martian of Sabbath labour, when men whoa oozeee are
of making importance paid their tribute to the contriba.
non our Church is making to the other Churches ak the
present tame ; and le the life of Olio nation.
Now, sir, Mr. Cu tlery does not speak, as a rule, unless
his eye has seen a light—and more a this a a moment.
But of Dr. Peeke's position. is it true that our attitude
aa a 'Chorch towards the Sacraments leaves mmethiog to
be desired ? We think with Dr. Peake Unit it is true! But
it men have discovered a defect—men who have. been at
add, and trebled to become leaders, spiritual guides,
teachers, shepherds of the dock—without making a very
detentrieed art tia lead the look into an improved situ.
Idea and &Onside, free a tto wander in its err., whilst
.they themeelves meetly walk forth into =other fold, thee
• e. onto rep., we have no net of admiration ter
this kinder thing. If we es Weeder wish to retain the
repel Of the recede we .ball have to dick at ear pals
and put thug. rightmime they we wrong. To conclude,
. think whet the the points raird by ow friends Mr.
@Away end Dr. Peaks need te be examined and dealt
milk A copy of the Inetery of out Church omen to he
placed in the hands el every child palms through oar
echoed. at some period of school -training. It ought to be
deab with in evamte.hers' prevention dame. Hit is
weraary to train Zeal others in our hatory why not
Sunday-whool teacher. The
e erne.. forma
General Siordayacked Sweeney. So for ae the Sacra.
wets am conorreed, well. re riot this • sortion wpm.
which De Peale can apeak !rankly to us? wha weaned
is leadership not resignation ; lordly, not " funk."—
A. Heresen.-Tou
rs,etc.,
613, Me mel-read, Smell Heath. Birmingham-
rh.t
JULY 5, 1011 -
nor the noirst winch is greatest, sound must not be mistaken for volume. It is • moot. question whiCh position
red6treamers the majority el our people. Mane of
them he
ave recovered frem the stampede of the Prig days
of the war, and, O.! they timelreen made to think and to
pray amidst angering and sorrow.
Frankly I do not think much good would result from
bringing the eipmeentativee of bath pennon. together in
• conferee. at present. The cleavage is too Merry =I
mayboteelivg 3$1:01) strong. Unity ie good, but we do not
want a• artillond mill,
anrs hoed an .nipremise.
Dul immenw good may teeth tram a conference repro.
ensued Ohre who Mood for " downright " Chria
tinny" within ow Ohm.. This would answer hat to
the "Stockholm of which or much is 'heard. It might
take for We trigeot "The a..af the Church I. the .pre.
sent crisis . ..11m will A Ged he eur Church Md.,"
ad its eltjact 63 kW Mange Th. re .ton whereby our
Chunk m AMT. the people in
calamity. Berth&
less some of He reconnitations vodd be revoletionary..
But then revolutions are the order of the day, and it we
do not revolutioniee the Church, gore body else willffiely
do it for vs in ways not at all pleasant. May I suggest
that Wee ie e Dee epposithoity for the Social Semi.
Union.
Fore time its activity has necessarily to be
reetricted. Now, with its organisation ready to hand it
may do a spleartiething fir our Chinch. by arranging a
conference in more central postilion. And out of it con.
ferences in other Chorchise may. spring, leading up to a
great conference ol all the Churchea of the realm, ahem
the alai. of ire .Charch in loth the non Urinal and inter=Wetzel whew may be considered, =de 11.
ont of the
en
bwer
're Om setZlit prZpo
to ]ad, :ow blew and p
—Toe.., eta.
DM,/ T. Mwero.
The Church and the War.
Sra—If the latter of Jae. W. Richardson is the
mirk of oar Church, than wee in Primitive hfethodiem,
Ion we are feeling the Weibel of +Werra and extinction.
Better is in that - we eheold "have sheepishly followed
the flag" of Troth and Hower then Wive follo.d as
Mather cowards the madames .Xsiser. "Our meat
hrilliant orator and marer of ape/blies " is well able
m leek after himself, but, feweyelly, I honour hint a
thourod times more for hie harks. courage of a time
when amen corrardice, or ern hall-heerted Gapped,
'would blot or the Church, the Goapel, the Omer end all
Hut thee wean in the redemption al the warld. If half
do. nation had been "Jacob W. Hichardeems .` we almald
log ego have been the shawl of & Male, the vends of
t he wean. of the Christ, the =emir of program fr.
dm and eight...es. The writer a -angling fin you,
air, MG the leader of the lailadiewied
aml C.F.'.
I sm :happy to have had - year =interrupt. friendship
See ever forty peas, &ad if he o emerald I can othy
.y that wee hop. in luinania will be eleLlered. Tre
died h/". I/A1/.11.8 to Any whee pm. dawns, threw
we orer rns have fought eel ered and died for the
reredweause ef Reece, sod at the definite tall of the
Prime of Item-es hundreds of thermal* have Weikel
— arra w ehaLl hem the right to ea remething
brat. era., Sipe Condantine of Guess arid ether. el
hes moteriety, thee. der mere.. thek arouthe akd dee
their ewe dry. tenth Lbw stay we reign a bitter rail el
repent.. and areetation. One Wore vith ,home et
the diagram eame of .our se woad heap Her
rows, re,
E; Homier
or
Co-ordination and Union.'
So,—Tottt hut Ore showed how well your paper how
What Can the Church Do ?
abr.. of the Lim. I heartily madame Ho, J. W.
Sun,—The fernier part of Mr. Sykes' article on the above Riehardwahi plc for spiritual leaderthip, machasiod
gee*en ie arnating and quietuses expectation, but the bath by Mr. Potter and ow worthy Editor. The feener
g. A Stockholm wither ow deplores, as we all do, the lamp.a al all Chillies
0012014.ori is di
Church world net be very productive unless we can get Marches in &lending "...mot" from Wing tailed
to more fundamental thing. than that indicated in the in the and at thin
bei. the keen. stk..
artiole. It is we handamentele the Church has gone tribeeah& none too serupdons. Mr. Hoene windy ea
inmug, and become o mere adjunct of the Slate, or an lames up= pal& °panne thet .epescher are to be
amrexe of the Greernment embalming its freedom and deem,. W Oh.
Itromerretlea
independent. for bondage and aernlity. We hare will be
an ear..
, inn it must be lead an.
nhandoned the free sir of the Semen on the Mount
7
for the riding atmeePhere of Whitehall dement We seleputhely maiit, usiSsation Ire swan, an abed..
wee.. The harrowing revert of theropetamia mud.
in ohealth
sod strength, and the life-giei
*hall
ur
to ham this truth into our very wale It is elated that
power en we ,seem the freedom that re re Ch: T, a
'tale our mandates from Mb/alone, and he loyal to them the motheare of these horror
.air "thiolny of amtvel..—
at all mate. Then 'also we when her patter with the in other weds, officialism—eiva and military red tar
pm.). And what happened at the 'Ooriference 511. tee and domination
with hope. Mr. Heininord, in hie fine-description of Coo.
The poblio are very palled, but with Warts teen wad
tepees proceedings, rya "Neen had err, um., aganad dentemeertioud and diced
oseat* Ire
en. • fines group droning men then O. depleted Con- Wombed. The ",lrthn of :Meier . is the only
Them could be ne mistake .bat pont/14 tsiag Ice /bah en
end shrive. Bet far Rem
ference had. . .
the seal and devotion of that group of raiser. in the drioniel etruggles hate rifted emegalical week, ands.r
It Leo fine eulogy. Then he goes on n omplintled mirehinery is ahabruckng progress. la .1.1
very penile of life.
" • lot et it•for the
es describe their position: "They stood for .dowanight Chaos.. we *ball ham to
Mesphly and .ify our methode el
Christianity. The implication of Chririthi Sermon on the .11earee ache,
Mown to the ordinary nflaire of life, 63 wtional nod riminirentlion. For example, we might neer es Mr.
three erindides ol Esser. advocated • few weeks age, to eacorthate ll
internatimal rektienthips ;
brt theritecd .4 fraternity that we in danger of being our youeg people's wok
Dakeenother Red—London Primitive Metlathem. fie
overlooked to-dzy, for greet ideek and lefty prinuipler
bot above all for • prinoure Welty M Jeer Christ es this city weds= her teen wrought in mite of gm.
Lord and Muter." Now, I venture to way the posit-an. threes that Ls theedieepped vs. All weaned
afp If. +social it cow to the sop
the ...arm ee described it ...Idly diffrent kern thst zee/wiled new
mornthe Wilms em Chinch, and espraudlythere
tonne, tar the thence huh themok. Ombr.
who are incenly making " weroperine " and wriOng eel .
Orenesen 01 ..ley. W M copeclmg setae
malted. them is anemia* an -affinity kn.= the a Mg snide ferwed-, but tuner a lee were datum .d
two rinsitires. The one rends for downright Okla obeeinetentie whole them we damped. Oh I these groat
tianith." the other I have not rhetoric Mfficient to drat. comeitbusa d ms®tialion! Wlen have they sem*.
It beggar deacephen. Bulhdlenai, wreh these real- amens. 11.the iPsr thirmehs reseal Th-dey wan
wets ad "downright Christianity" thet salvitioe
areaelering kern that writ. mirth. end neglect Let
and as the Ohm. enters into erten en there Item ft will w iper birders to repent. in dare coned dye that
e at tedy awe then, bet dells rill serve and sow elm
maple in Shia tawfd area. And it is %mooring •ppeesg i
We/re driven by God's Inantlingeloventa ko real union
ee,st me. grasp Ed seen espreseet a mass of .1r...ration in /Oh aiSbot Mends kir the arm of Ohristhethe
ear Chetah meth greeter then has Men euppeed. lt.
throughout die world. Steadily mid frarlmely we most
▪
J1121 5,
1917
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
meetly way te Pie the United thethediete, aa you base
ne mod, Per a tin thirtar, in. the lest. iram end Ma
go ea be the alliance ef all amistenne amine the
demithens Sat Modem monk* lib.* and lettia
euebea
d
the
mo. My Mond, Term SyineeL;
whim. Truly
te meld Ler smokes en the Brother
the baternol spirit of the Gomel of Jeans, if exemplified,
Medd. amolationiess roe woman, Gamiee coloradialup
believers would cement. al/ slinematte of the
Oar maim of
together for the common go
eervioes Mould Mee all the. abutted* of the Medea/
order enumerate Mb smarm bat Cluistet that no
His Church," mid it ie Mcleaved ellthe Brotherhood
movement Mende for, and to he eo =blies. that modem
ma embeitnee ..elmto ether Omisifelfiegdm.
I do not preen me to prescribe formals. We nth have our
pet ides, which, it pooled al paned by the inem of
candid iaMelignien, might to modem an amalgam ea&
m motionoilstone undue
Mandy 1,..0 bid. to UP
' diatinetame whim
delay. Men today wilt eel
kneaff the ranger
mean the time bow
germenee. a great. manna ie oerffimli
Ce the
Chridian life s thence unfettered by needleas divestone.—
FRED. CVOLOW.
Tome etc.,
Upton Park, le 6.
Almendro Randle Clinch 14,000
BABIlnipt Fund.
thet,The maker,. of thia therek went gm* cheered
by pm promus Menem et em ease m the Leader
• Nolen" of 4■183. than and &site hensin fo mime. their
termed
lance
write.
.
lteleWJFhIlt :a elt tTeretg
rtrele.thlel
likethael 10s, I with I mad take it amen Peer
ems M Bloat** deentholi—Mo•HT as damming as
le Ma make op the membarsbip
—. I Mew the
of the church were known,
of the church. II
ie wand be nand hew great a dam it her m connexion:1 help." A. e Well Wither' sends fie, and Mies
M. A. Schofield la. We hose oleo received etc* cloth for
Thiseletheada. If Ilia I. 11.10
ode freer Ma. K
inquim, I on mate maw modem time oar works, notwithamding their depleted ranks, me manly preparing
for their next sale of work. Such mite will be grist for
our oldl to mace the debt. One lain hopes, that this
lettes may catch the eye eI come friends whom promises
here not as yet been fuffi/fed. Our. is yet e a long, hog
trail." How many win help us to fighben mei shorten the
journey I Donatime please forwent to 141Ondow Drive,
J. J. llonowsom
Deminteen, Glasgow.—Tare, de.,
theme hat the geneeet demise ed all bee hem is Mad
and ennek. leuncoMonthee einem be netait wee Were
the me. Chntostalhontirem Ragtime, Methedide till
havero rearrermener leemmett mestbeer mer theamele.
la this to be done before Tonum comes back, or is it to be
left until, alter 1 II the Inter, it wet be fetal"
Me. Bradhery my.: " Itis treseeedemle important,
we should lame the mind of the eoldim
Neligion." That is vesy Me, Ie please the nal
bt ue len t ant/ the spiffier comes heat before ie
is learned, or he will be net. Tommy will never
le able to worship tinder some of the narrow couditions
of the pot lode antrook in life sled religien Ase become
brood and brotherly. He MR never dmken the dare of
the Marsh Semen ant to rival it. neighhone He dem
cot want any articular Ma or one deem:Mem n
than heather. 'Be has been living in an atmeaphere whre
on
minister, pare°. and print are one, and in we far as
principles will allow it it ha Llud stmembos wherein be
wants to remain. In the new age the one who preachers
will lake emend place to the one who line. The soldier
when he Marne will mot to Ind. the awl e,thorch,
cot a stage, end the Christian • Christian, not an rotor.
If he mold speak from Fiend/us and old Simi he would
my, "We shall not think of commune here mid we
lime heed the meld, led pow le beam in ther Chosh
scust uot think of esti/ den meld ther Mee Menneet"
The &nth& older bee net wind • realigned doctrine
and creeds, but the seligion el the Cm., MM. by OM
ameleMplenethads amekstemake him• better feline and
the world o better plus ler him to lire in. He newer
thought life was such a eerious thing until he came face
to face with ito facts, and now that, through /sacrifice tad
blood, he Ma been compelled te think, hewenn the
that
meal that life to him and alum his
ralenehip with his lord end Abater. Rehm discovered
after ell he iapredenined to walk in rte very, presence.
of hie Maker ; for, however had a MAO may ammo, there
is always one moment in his life when he walks es io
were with Clued to Broxems. He Mande mend at the
teeth tha Christ theoght him- worth dying kw. Not he
has /earned hole the lomat of the err eon be made the
highest of the high. Tommy and Thek, who am making
such tronvendms sacrifices, are moving towards the dame
When it breaks they will weak le find a world better for
their trmail, and. the religion that can complete their
work is going to be the relienon of to-morrow.
MARTIN W. Pmere.
909
Opening. al New Schools at Salisbury.
On Wednesday, June Mb the Delve.road friends
their
renew building scheme. In March laet we
we
rere,
ported the opening el the church, now the abode am
opeamd be beautiful teatime three children, in the
pregame of a large crowd of people, peeForated the opening ceremony. Jessie Cleland recited a few verges prepared for the occasion. Teemed Haagen., Mort speech,
as representing the bon. Then little Joyce Case said, "I
me open the doors. Just see me!" and suiting the act
to the word. Mod on tip-toe, turned the keyand opened
• doors.
doo. AD NM was prettily done, and the peasb
were fed trimaffie the birthing. The premise. are been of
concrete blocks, reieforced, and built between keel
Manchiene which carry the roof limbers. There ia a nem,
brighe airy min heft, two eleesecome. end e kitchen
Flectric light is installed. The coed with furnishing, is
about MO.. The origin/ plane cm fa. mote elabnates
Ind war condition. necessitated this alienate.
Bee. H. J. Taylor, el lontion, was the preacher, and
delivered a suitable meted Tea ma Mantled ber a large
ameMe, nodes the r.memento Mrs Geodwie anal Mos.
Shephent After tea a her meeting vas held is the
delude Mr. S. H. Persons mesided, and reprementativea
hem the redoes Free Moth Sunday-schools m
city
brought helpful messages. Rev.
J. Taylor else gave a
Timmr meede, which mm much appreenteel Rea J. G.
Cashing Mr, W. M. Thornley and J. Cleland also took
part Children and binds um berward with donagism,
and over SA6 wee contributed. In addition to the money
received, other gilts were forthcoming. Mrs Steepheri ten
behalf of the mothers' meeting). peesented a fine ask armchair and a beautiful bsptismal font (on m oak eethetel)
thus completing the furniture needed within the eemmullion rail, and the whole being the gift of the mothers'
meeting he the course of the maim e ergo awned
object Mae snangled into the thumb. and [hie mend to
be • Men thee
Cede, sen, emplaned on. net ble
the trestees a lee wile and himmell. TIM menatote gilt
e great eurprise. end evoked much meitament.
came
Min Museetwhile tested the tone of the instrument, don
led the assembly in the singingco/ the Doxology with the
Mao aecommaying Mn. Arthur Hopkins, m meter
trustee, acknowledged the gift in man &Malik term.
It weer n glonem dap!
Work Amend the Soldiers.
Our work mans the soldiens et Grantham produces
goad fruit in various ways. The kindly alternation of
Onneilks T. Alteliehme been neede'ehasamea of Within the hospinlity cool endeavour ol the I
et Corntoo Unban Deana CoonoB. The amendment* mine metal-mad eamele to make the endears feel at home
with it the J.P. He will atm the tomb ae Scanbaxpe. in the religions eerricee, the sing-song, end soldier.'
Kr. Mott, she I. the mian Mend at Wineries, ham, inhered them to give a firsecless concert. In*
The "Holborn Review."
in • royal and devoted official of the church Ha is tbe
Sta,-1 am ambit to-eny Weak Bee. W. Overtau, flunt Primitive Medealist in this part et North Linda Maier. of various ranks took an inteneeting part The
refreshments wem weD aerved by the soldiers, and at their
Fur oDmmgT Marion to the bet listens math meting abire who has received this hennas
own cost. The dent realised a net gain of 2,5 27. to the
of the PILS. hoesogiwted an Mamma Men mee ef the
Trust Fund. We are very grateful to err soldier friend.
e Hatboro Review,te >d Nat ally, I fen/ batmen/
for this mark of then appreciates. Soldiers him ahem
in this question, se it moon my sateen Shit **amend
• warm welcome to our place or vocable and to *enemas
the pahlioation woe changed to "The Holborn" and the
of our members. The minister and his wile are always
price seduced te he. &d seed he aroma meeting MAI
"at home" b soldiers! On Friday E.. T. McKenzie
et Southport. The reason ter this I harem need to dote,
epact the afternoon and evening at Belem Fork Qm.
m it is well lumen. The mutation to Mee the prim
Whilst venting the hula he of with maay bright
again to 2e. may be ode e temperer, arrangement, but
Christian lads. In the evening he preeind to. s large
an convinced, Imam* the beta m I do, that it meld
conmmy of soldiers, his subject being, " la there anything
pease to be a gnat Maurer. I do not depute the
•
tha
I ease de for ynt" When, he. saked, " Who eill
enmity of somethies .being done to meet the present
helpful had of Chrbat 1• owe moldier came homek, say.
Wears better than may linker aver man
finanial difficulty. Mat, I em marry to my, la unmeting,"I will," end gave himself to the Iord. Gospel eon.
Bot to income the pike is certainly net the my
th mcompliab that memo. It well meet efibotivety NW CAN NILE TIE IISAIS MW ININEENA. Wk end payer axe wind the soldiers like beet, ad ts
wRich they headily respond.
dime it. The "Review" most See on a reduced oir— INSTRUCTIONS. —
cohnen It Ma touched its limit men at le dd. The
better eilm. would he to name the member col peps and
BAZAAR.
keep. the price at atineseaL I here, as it es 10W known, L Get the boots bone dry.
for yens fought mend soy reduction M size or altatation Y. Hasp the sole termake it rough and hug.
Teignmouth Church has just held a most mecessful
in lore of Oh. publication. Bet I am not imandent,
ham, in aid of Mick nth Angliesn teed whim Menlo
a
Rough-shape
the
sole,
allowing
in.
overhang.
nor have I changed um opinion; but I think we Meld
rendered considessble hetp be the boy workers ed the
more to he method ea a tempomy nreessam—aw Oh Heat the prepared saltness of both boot and Church. As the malt ef the united effort held we Jaen
deethable though it may lo—to eave its orderthe Monne
Wan° at a hot-Hre ; plate bard quickly on 14th awl WM See. R. W. Beam win olds to announce
Mooned. conditions and increment con ofprmittetion
that about 8120 weed& be available for debt reductien,
the last and preas Wows. firmly to make the alter meeting all expenses. On Weelnoday, June 271h,
I widerstand the question of prize is not itheohrtely
cement. hind ea to theleathes.
final.
hope that undeestood, and that it will come
a thanksgiving service was held. A large gathering enhereto the Menegenient Clumeittee in November for
joyed the capital programme provided. Mies N. le. Pascoe
5. Nail with brads.
edification or *thereon. In that case the Manion may
me the arneerpenist It her been decided to make as
be amid. °Charlene, I an amid the ...Review ie kat, 6. Trim with a very sharp knife, bevelling inwards. annual effort to reduce the debt by £100. A huge num.
*hide would be a bomiliation and a diegrace. Inn the
hem ham joined: the newly brined Thrift Club. We have
menthol the puhlioation am in bleary proloctien I will 7, To fmith. warm bees-war and apply to edgea; deo added two new members Dewleeh Church proved
run over with a warm iron ; then rub edyw then practical sympathy by prodding a weltstocited
cot enter mow, except to say Oct to my mind it immerge
higher in every way thin it is to-day, sod never more
with heel. balL Polish with a dada
which 'iodised elms! £310.
meetly el mer Char& Oct du high badinage of Be
pot, and if et me oulpeniensted as Maw moth, it
would have a eiserention of
lewst 3,000, Mated of
The rising wave of missienary enthusimm throughout
eight or atm hundred. 1 trot Bey. W. Over
womb SEE NOW - YOU OAR SAVE MONEY. our Church hoe been nowhere more marked than in the
on W. point will he taken to Meet,
North British district. During the last live years the
R. W. B. WISITEVAT.
minionary revenue has practically doubled, the avenge
PRICES.
"Cremyll," Little Helton, Belle..
per member increasing from le. 4d. to ea. fld. An Po.
portant rector in this solid advance has been the mend
THICK WAWA for Ordinary Wear:
Semple Shook emeggh for a parrot Melee Bate 2/S Dieniet Ifiesionary Cennedieu Mich, beads beef n
What In the Coming. Religion?
g/g great financial amen, has ponied to he of sermon* •
,..
Regalatleo Meek 22 i..n 11 in..
eduratimel value and stimulus This year' e Convention,
Sta—May I be Kneed to armee appeciation for the
mat make 4 peke Ahab sad a pairs Wommee Wee).
in September mat, prelim to eclipse all former efforts.- •
dimly Miele on eke alLIM abjad by'Bro. J. Beadle/re
A challenge offer by the veteran sonsiomm feeder and.
in year meet Menet Whilst mem sachems and organ. THIN WASCO for Ilene Skala
entiondest, Mr. Thomas Robinson, will evoke g humeral
lions of the community from a commend standmine
openm which it is mticipated will be at lean 40 per
have long ago laid foundatiom for their enter-win policy,
ot to dance of bet yesie An exceptionally steam
m yet we have only beard hem the pulpit and platform
platform her been seemed The prime meal maim will
talk about how the Church must meet the new age and
be the Pendent and Vito-President of Conlerence and
the Omen. teaks of the fatten le it not tine that the VERY TEICH WASCO for Reels
Evongb for pair (*Famed with other geode) 44 per pima Rev. Jobe A. Hutton, KA., DD., supported by Mr.
Churches. co-operated in Men* some defiaite mon paMe
Thomas Robineon, Mr. B. B. Buckley, and other dearth
het/Mary de mum is me her it or
Do. . Ordered eeparately)
a to be math.
ten. per Mee leaden, It will unquestionably be a great convention.
teas Fate" added to tbat tragic lin Mee* passed Ms
ALL POST FREE.
hinery 1 We are
t her before, many mom maim
The Leols-nad Fever Flospilal, Bradford, hes been
o
h peened we then to bask n row be®. This hod
sp idly equipped as • military hospital by the Beadfoed
Pr•WiliSP
oa the Wed flaCtitiM the e be: is the Meech meg •
hercpo Lion, and vme publicly hooded over to the Miner,
to amply the needs of the men Ma erne beak, or are
auiMO es on Mooday Ml. In appreciation of the
the nee going to *apply the needs of the Chnrch? It
eplendid *ernes rendered he the Lord 'Mayor it has been
met be me or the calm. This war tom changed may
CIRAYABE,
name en. Abeam Peel IdetspdaL"
ntrude
WASCO
RUING ARTERIAL
so
ROBERT H. WHITEHEAD,
tome. LC. B.
JULY 5, 1917
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
Services and
memory
of my indearelation
0 information
promptly la B..
husband, Corpl. Ed.
81,. full
Andrew's
Houseere64sent
Andrew's-rood,
Enfield,
London.
Smith,
13th loving,
Preachers. Church
Regt.,
The
London
muA
which
will he
at am and
agedfamily,
thirty.fivs
yeara.
Deeplykilled
mourned July 3rd, 1916,
wife
forwarded
to theeddr'nearest
....ter0. ofMoen,Clawed
11,
asenithutreat, Thornlay Colliery. " tether,
fn
racious keeping 1now they servant—sleeping."
Bnnwaear
Yanywn
•
0Z:‘L..,27
;f
,..1
0-00
W. R. Bird,
Barra.—Lo
Gloucester
by hie leA,11
oar
Thy g
T. A. Saha, 198, Wood And -road,
Birmingham.
FM Birmingham address. Amid he dated to Mails retreat
dirootion to he given. Salons and soldier. Mailed by Noma
SUNDAY, JULY 8th.
London and Suburbs.
BERMONDSEY, ST. GEORGE'S HALL, OLD KENT
ROAD, S.E. 0 and 6.80, Rev. H. J. Taylor)
Anniversary.
Cantata by Scholars. Sunday School
T. II
and 7, Ilea. Thomas
and 6.30, Rev. W. H.
1).1.4
11 and 6.30,
W Woo.
Upton
and 1130,
BRUNSWICK HALL, 210, Whltechmel Reed,
htelreon.
directed
ear
1 On to...wenearest
Church if notification I. sent to either
aries of the Council,
Pdammtersa Porerrers Ma-rooms, Councre.—Priontive
Methodists removing to Manchester will be
Rev. H. L Herod, ..U9, *Oarop.attee,
Broughton, Manch...ter, or Mr. W. T. Hall, 11, Emex-road.
Bale, Manchester.
CALEDONIAN ROAD. N. barn. of Market Road} 11
Wright.
SPECIAL, NOTICE.
CANNING TOWN. E. (Mary Street, Barking
Rev. J. Daetew
FOREST GATE, E.,
Lena 11
Barrios ;
& P.B.A.
BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, DEATHS.
FULHAM, Wandsworth Bridge Road. 11, Mr. Kendall;
0.30, Rev. A. Beeman
HAMMERSMITH. Dallies Road. 11 and 7, Captain
T. A. Reeky.
Maltiam Road. II and CM, Bev. K J. T.
Baena/
SURREY CHAPEL, Central Miselon, Blachlrisurs
Road, S.E. 11 and 7, Rev. J. Told]. Parr.
UPPER TOOTING, Lynwood Road, S.W.
&NA
Rev. J. W. ChappelL Visitor. welcomed.
Ministerial Changes and Engagements.
Chang.. to 0916.
Rev. B. Sage from Swindled, after tom Seers
Bev. G. Sutton Read from Gravesend, after four years.
Changes in 1919.
Rev. W. J. Hammersley from Wincheater, after five
year.
Engagement.
for 1918-19.
Rev. J. Keiehtley Dom Hoyland b Baradey Second.
Rev. A. T. Ogg from Wickhambrook to Hamoldevrick.
Rev. D. Dinning to Laney, a fourth year.
Rev. W. Atkimon
fmm Houghten.le.Spring to Thoreley.
of Births, M.riages, Death., Se, meat
reach the 01110e, 75, Farringdon Street, London.
E.C. 4, by lint post Tuesday morning,
Prepaid Terms i SO words and under, 9.. 94.0 each
additional 10 words or less, Mi.
Memoir., Report. of Marriage*, Re., MUST be
accompanied by s. prepaid
PERSONAL.
Notices
II and
6.30, Mr. A. Emmett. Yldrens
WEST NORWOOD, Knights BIN 14 Mr. J. H. Morton;
welcomed,
WOOLWICH, Robert Street (near Plunsetead Station).
11, Rev. J. W. Richardson ; 6.30, Private A. Hackie
leave
MARRIAGES.
Oldham Church Council he...pressed mucl regret that
the way had not been clear for the Conference of 1662
to be granted lo the town in aosociation with its centenary celebratimr. It recognisol, however, the friendly
spirit in which the Hull church. had considered .the
matter, though they had been unable to waive their right
to the Conference of that year. The Oldham church.es
still strongly desire to connect the visit of the chief coorl
wiW the centenary, and a regime/ is being made for the
C,onlerence of 1981. In many respects the centenary could
be as appropriately celebrated then m in 1910, and addihima interest would be crested by the fact that it would
alto be the
the Nerthem Cycliets
Corp, to Daisy Ella Holm., daughter of Cotmcillor and Mrs.
Hams,
Stafford.
of the Renshaw-attract
in which
liserna—Davra—June
26th,
at
Milton.
Church, Jobe A., tie proposedjubilee
to hold
and fiftyeaChurch,
years
eon of John anddaughter
the
Biro.
JWooler,
wastheheldsessions,
in the town,
the since the
leit Conference
Hatre—Elotne—At Snow Hill Church, Stafford, by Rev.
Bertram Pertnell, Pte. W. H. Book., of
BIRMINGHAM, Yardley Road. 11 and 0.80, Rm. A-
NorthumberRenshawland), to Jessie,
of Janes and Mrs. Davis (Raverieg,
Cumberland). Address, 6.34, Livelpeol.r.d, Platt Bridge, greet Church was opened for its reception. This decision
of the Council will necessarilyaffect the request which the
near Wigan.
recent Conference instructed the General Committee to
convey to Oldham to entertain the Conference of next
BI,ACIePOOL, Chapel Street (wane the Cannot Ptah
10.46 and 0.30, Bee. D. Oakley. Thursday, 7.30.
Redhill,
Provincial.
BIRMINGHAM, Briatol Hall, Bdsrel Street. 10.141 and
0.80, Rev. D. Dann
DEATHS.
Brioens.—On
Junehusband
101k, at fit. Luke's Home, Torquay,
Waller,
theagedbeloved
of Edith
Brooks, June 22nd. One of the most
forty.one.
Interred
at Ipswich
Coe.—On
June
6th,
his
residence,
2.5,and
MacAdamstreet,
Gateshead,
John
Cox, Gateshead
a devoted member
deals leader,
wee awarded 0 gmcluele scholarship 'es the
II. Circuit. Interred SaltWhiehall.road
Church,
well
Cemetery,
June
9.1.
boon
Dowsom—On
June
26th,
et
.11,
.RammonntTuesday, 7.30. W. Clayton. Devotional Hour, Armley,
berm,
Fellowship
value has
of prize,
£100.
awarded
a John
Leeds, Joseph Downing, in hie seventy.seventh
Hall. 10.30,
thisBlight
Fellowship,
whmhofisthea coveted
In accepting
June J.P.,
lath, nt{Parsley
the residence of her brother Mies Janes will devote a year's work to research.
llow-ey. P.S.A. 3. Sunday
Soho.2.30, and 8, Re, S. in-latr, Q. A. ((coney,
House, Ardwick, Man.
Mim
cheater,
the organisation,
hall
doneMary
whatEllen
elle Easthem,
could." aged seventy-two years. "She and is held in the
reat
nod 0.300 Mr. W.
Ftercnan—In
loving
gifts, but also for her devotion to the work.
Milled
and
eldeat
grandson
lest
week
by
the
lard
Mayor
of
the
late
Bev.
John
Pickwell.
"Too
dearly loved to be forgotten."
ol Manchester
T. &lathe...).
Theandhospital
Harrison. Pidlors
providesof (Alderman
accommodation
for 100 beds,
there
June the
20th,beloved
at 17,wife
IYArcy.etroe
t, Hough- isalready
II
the accommodation, possibly
a
prospect
ton-le.Spring,
Sueannah,
of
John
Francombe
Sir
Edward
Holt
declared
the
building
ma
and
mother
of
the
Rev.
J.
S.
Francrd
year.
ombe,
in
her
63
THIRD, Rehoboth
beet auxiliary hospiLsIs he hod seen. The
at Houghton-le.Spring, July led.
10.30 and 6.30, Rev. J. Marc. Brown. Visitors reel. Interred
Hennear—Downed
April 10thWilliam
on singing
of Hoepital
Ship Lord Mayor, before declaring the hospital open,
"Salta,"
Lance.Corporal
Anthony
Herbert,
R.A.M.C.
aged
twenty.aeven,
beloved
eon
of
11r.
and
Mrs.
Hart, AlderT. W. Herl.e.rt, Bournemouth.
2.1st. killed
in action
France in his twentyconveyed
second
year, Thomas
William
(Willis),inloved
Private,
rtiLtX
thanks to the trustees of Ha:L.11,7h Hart
shire
Regiment,
younger
and
dearly
son
of
Mr.
and
had
Mr.. William
Hicks, 7,. DeiLecy Blount, Kirketall, Leeds Ihrti est\ shl?mr orrhrhrosipnital.
of
Norwich)
The
member,
of
the
Sheffield
Ministers'
Fraternal
end
and 8.30, Services. Philters Chun* Blackleg. 1.0.30
"Life's dutybut feel the aadness.
on Friday,
their wives
held their
annual
picnic were
at Intake
10.10 an d 8.30, Rev.
ontertnined
by
Jane
29th,
when
over
forty
guests
roat day
James Burton. Monday, 7.30, Devotional
We shall eel share the gladness."
H.
and
Mrs.
Strong,
by
whom
for
upwards
Councillor
has
heen
continued.
A.
ofpleasant
twentyafternoon
year. andhospitality
Ptocauerr.—June
13th,
killed
in
action
on
the
Western
were epent
in the grounds
evening
front, William George, 12th Sherwood
dearly and an excellent tea wee
provided.
Appreciation
of the
end (doryForesters,
Jane Plucknett,
longeontinnad kindness of the host and hostess was exCarisbrooke, I. W., agedJesse
twenty-four.
Suoae-.—OnThomas
June 3011,
at twenty.six,
Deanhead,
Sum it, pressed
C. Higgins, in reply to which Mr. Strong expressed
Littleborough,
Shore,
aged eixty.nine
years.
the ministers and
yeem aChrist."
local
"A
servantFitofly their wives afforded him end Mrs. Strong,
Jesus
the invitation for next year.
lice.
W.
B.
in action, in France.
onandApril
2811,Light
Albert
1.300 Rev. G. T. Fawcett 0.30,
Mr.
Charles
Reynold.,
of
Greenbank
Church,
(Berl.)
H.
Pouch
Lance.Corporel,
Oxf.
Bucks.
In- ton, was presented by the membore and
and fantry,
friendsDnrlingof and
the
andCircuit,
beloved egad
son ofoventy.o.
Bin and Mreyears.
W. South,
8.80, llov. J. T.
Witney
with a
"Till choir
and 0.30, Rev. A. oftheChilson,
day break,
farewell!"
Mr. David
valuedservices to the choir and church.
ided.
Congratulatory
ry,
pres
Ormerod, the secreta
7th, at
Bishop
Auckland,
Ellen opeach
and 6.30, Thomas, the devoted
RIDGDodd Jackson.
ers were delivered by Rem. W. Barton, Wilfrid
end Miriam
Thompson:
Rev...0.
"Soule 'that of His own good life partake, He loves ea Hie Howarth, Messrs. W.
Rion& In making the prosenlation Mr.
own
self dear . His eye they to Him."
William Ffeslop, the veteran
Connexional Evangelists' Engagements.
in
action
in
Fran
ce
oil
ay
M
20th,
1917,
Pte. Fred Townend (Y. and L.-Regt.). beloved eon
MISS PERRETT, Maltby, dear Rotherham.
"He lived and died nobly."
Evangelists' Engagements.
that the
h
during
P the To7h.sor
lovingweememory inof anion
Pte.
John
Baker,
York
and
Lance.
Regt.,
who
July
MRS. J. B. HORTON and MISR RATE
aged
twenty.fivs years. " Day. of andness atilt come71.11,
o'er1616
tie:Tears
Thompson, Editor of the "Holborn
txgttl.r.3 0.:1°,:e`.1":70.!"r °' °n. r Review,"
Bev. J.
writes: "Referring to the letter of Rev. W.
Bap.
MR. JOS.
dearly
open your
croft Eaton, who"To
died beloved son of M. W. and H. Bear.
live in hearts we leave behindom iet
no'
I
memory of my dear hmsb
a nd, John
Hardeig, who paloving
ssed away
0111
Guernsey
Dateaon.
of 11.dvale,
on
Central Road. 10.40, Mr. A. Todd; 0.30, Rev.
Prince.
Egerton Road (North Shore). 10.40, Rev. R. Alma
worth; 370. Mr.
year.
BRADFORD, Central
Anniversary.
BRIGHTON, louden Road. 11 and C43. Bev. George
Remelt. Visitors welcomed.
CULLERCOATS. 10.80
Proadleek.
FLEETWOOD, Monet Road(1mIng Promenade). 10.43,
Mr. McKnight ; 0.30, Mr. W. Swim
EALITER11.—Chi
As
Jon.
treasurer of our Students' University Union
hag exercieed conaiderable influence over
highest esteem not only for her g
memory of Corpl. Cyril Fletcher,
in action, France, June 8th, 1917, only eon of V. and
E. E. Fletcher, Sheffield, aged twenty yoare and six month.,
GLASGOW FIRST, Alexandra Parade Church. 11 and
6.30. Rev. J. J.
welcomed.
HARROGATE. Dragon Parade. Church.
Itev. F. E. Blake.
LEEDS
convictions University dietinctions of
the year is that which hag recently been won by Min
Mabel. Jones at Manchester. Last year Miss Jones look
her RA., with Etat-class honours in English literature,
best
and
student in the examination. This year other honours
awaited ker. She hag Putt taken her MA., and
end 0.80,
The amilinry Red Croat Ilmpital established et Hartley
College was formally opened
FILOLCOklan.—On
extending
retired.
LEEDS NINTH, Itleanwood Road. 10.30 and 0.30, Mr.
E. Goldthorpe
Liarehill. Avenue. /0.48 and 0.30, Rev. M.
Pickering.
Wet Yore.
LIVERPOOL FIRST, PrInm'a Avenue Chunk I040
Mr. II. Fowler ; 0.30, ?Jr. W. D. Pugh.
odd it
wee pmsible that we might have to look forward to
great extension of hospital work. Among those who Loots
part were Sir Daniel McCabe, Dr. Wheeler
Hay, Dr. G. R. Gordon, Councillor blathewson
Wataon, arid Mr. G. Walker. Dr. Wheeler
(formerly
MANCHESTER. Barnee Gram
welcomed.
done al L....pone,
We can't
But wham/mil say at that g
MATLOCK, Bank Road Church.
rc
Roar.
J.
MORECAMBE. redder Street. 1080 and 6.30, Rev. R.
Shield.
Parliament MreeL 10.30 and 070.
this,
beof
loved youngest eon of
NEWCASTLE.ON-TYNE, Central Chnroh. 11180, Mr.
R. Allinson ; 0.900 Rev. E. Phillips..
NOTTINGHAM FIRST. Canaan, Broad Mn),, 1030
Mr. J. T. Ballwin : 0.80, Ka T. Mille.
reStreet (off Emlimreogh).
SCARBOROUGH, Sr. Sepulchre
Bayne°.
SOUTHPORT SECOND, Church Street 10.80
B.rkby.
ST. ANNES-ON.THE.SEA. 10.45
Campbell, F.L.S.
TUNB
to
to MO or
be one of the
Central Minden, Penh Lone.
in a resolution, proposed by Revs. S. 13arker and
the
preacher.
pleasure which this annual vIvit of
good end faithful
and warmly
repeated
S./Ca.—Killed
yOUngeirt
handoome clock in recognition of long
J.
TiLoga9.—June
the Manse,
friend of Mot
E WELLS, Camden Road. 11
H. Rycrof 1, J. Waters, W. Hellop,
are
On., and J. W.
of T. and
d, Rotherham, aged twenty.
choirmaster, 'poke highly of
Mr. 14371101de long service to the choir, twelve years in
the old Qamn-street Chapel and thirty-eight years in the
To...NO.—Killed
A E T w m d f D
eight years.
SISTER ELLEN. ApplicatIone for Sereices to 000, Lees
Road, Oldham.
DREW am
booked to September 22od.-89, Craven Park, N. W. 10.
;eriZi
choir purchased the organ at a cost of E400 and hapded
it over to the trustee,
Bman.—In
killed
MISS LOCKWOOD. Open for WeMende and Speeded
Miedona—Apply, Clarellle, 34, Denby Street, Feet brothels.
Dulwioh.
CAREY.—Apply, B. Booth Street, Thorn*. Royel Engineers,
Durbain
1916.
MIL TOM
TOMHOLLAND, and Family. Dean Bank, July
to 9th.
HaILDING.—In
lawn./ Ihnerrors Mernooter Connor,— Pernities
hlethodies removing le Leaden .01 be dueled boor mama.
te
IV 'MEMORIAM.
Rev. W. H. Holtby. M.A., of Beverley, took the B.D.
degree at Manchester last week.
mother, meter and
and
loving momory of
T. L. B. raft,
(on native mercies) inblue
J aly 6th, 1012.
we meet again in the realms of the bleat."
' ,
rret•
Day
Overton, in your last week's issue, on the question of
proposed increase of prim of 'Holborn Review' for neat
column. to a condensed
year may I ask you to
discussion on the whole subject? 7 should welcome the
am sure, would
franked expreesion of opinion, and so,
the sub-committee appointed."
During the four years' minietry of Rev. F. Jeff. in
Mrs. Jeffe has been a most prominent worker
JULY 5, 1917
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
in connection with the British Women's Temperance Association and one of its vice-presidents. In recognition of
her valuable services ehe has been presented with a purse
containing £21.
Lady Stormer, of Darlington, has undergone a very
lerious operation, and for several dare was in a very
critical condition. Saturday and Sunday were regerded
as crisis days, and these have mow pn.ed with very
favourable changes. Good hopes are now entertained for
recovery. Hearty congratalatione have been
recently
to Sir Charles and Lady •Starmer, .d
acrotrIrrree
ll
now in their sorrow and anxiety there in widespread eym.
pathy and prayerfulness manifested in their behalf.
We understand that the difficulti. at Higher Ardwick
Circuit, Manchester, which were occasioned by the decision of Conference to elation Rev. It H. Auty to Hell,
boon all been amicably settled. Rev. W. Cooper, of Leigh,
wh., suasede to the eaperintendency of the circuit, has
received many expression. of sympathy- in co
neequence
of the recent sad and tragic bereavement he has experienced in the loss of Mrs. Cooper.
The will of the late Mr. John Cow.d, J.P., of D.elin
Mount, Durham, as recently proved, was valued at
£19.375.
On June 29.h, 1016, Riflemen William Booth, one Of
Johndtreet (Sheffield) young men, wee billed in France.
For some time he was one of the lescrethriee of the young
men's class, and hie fellow workmate at Arthur Balfour
and Co.'s Engineers' Tool Works, have presented to Johnstreet Institute an enlarged and framed photo of him,
which is to be hung in the plass mom. Two -mn
ere
from the works to the institute on a recent Sunday afternoon and made the presentation on behalf of their shop
mates. expressing the high esteem in which William Booth
sis held by them all.
•
The General Orphanage Secretary gratefully acknowledges a donation of 10% left at Harrogate Honsan recently by " A. F. P."
At a large prohibition meeting, held in the Durham
Town Hell, the Bishop of Durham (Dr. Motile) being the
chief speaker, two of our local preaches, 31r.'3. Cockburn
end Ste. J. T. Emmerson, took a prominent pert. They
upheld the best tradition., of our Church.
If any reader could give Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Plucknett,
of Carisbrooke, Isle of Wight, any information respecting
the death of their son--Pte. William George Plucknett
7(486, 12th Batt Sherwood Foresters, D Co., 16th
Platoon killedby a shell on the Western front in the
early morning of June 5th, it would be most gmtedylly
receival and deeply appreciated.
Sergi. Tom Moore, R.GA.. son of file and Nfre. Joseph
bl.re, Church Greeley, is now, we are glad to learn,
recovering from gun-shot wound received in France, and is
at present in a convalescent home in Perthshire, Scotland.
The test case relating to theological students, in which
several colleges, including Hartley College, united in
lighting, was heed at Manchester on Thursday. The
Baptist student immediately concerned was ordered to
report for military service.
It is expected that thin
decision will effect all theological students, including our
age of twelve she won a junior city echfflarship tenable at
the West leeda High School for lour yeers, which was
akerwards extended for another year, and on matriculating in 1914 she entered Leeds Univeraity as a King's
scKolar. She is au enthusiastic worker at Mori. Church,
Lee.de Fifth Circuit, and is superintend.t of the PrimaryDepartmeoL
Miss Eva W. Johnson, BA. of Meehan, daughter of
Rev. M. Johnson, has ob.ined the diploma in the theory
and ?mace of secondary teething. For ...ice' erpos. she b. been attached to the Newo.tle High School
clueing the leer twelve months.
Mr. A. Lightley, of Wathon-Dearne, in the Boyhood
Circuit, who is an acceptable local pr.cher, after about
two years of service, has been gamtted Second Lieut., and
attache.d to the 3rd Batt. Fast Yorks. Regt. at Hedon,
near IluD.
Heeler Ridley Waugh, son of Mr. and Mn. J. K
Waugh, of Haltwistle Circuit, h. gained a County
Council scholarship, tenable for three years, et the Queen
Elizabeth Grammar School, Hetham.
Corporal N. A. Cutlery, son of the ex-President of
Conference, has row recovered from wounds, and has been
...led a &vend Lieutenant in the R.C.A.
The address of Rev. F. Smith is 6, Cheltenhasn.x.d,
North Shore, Blackpool.
Miss Pattie Williamson, of Hillsbni, hes passed the
Sheffield preliminary examination be the Teachers' Certificate, obtaining distinctions in Science and History.
Mies Evelyn Rhoda Howson, daughter of Rev. T.
DOwmn, of Pateley Bri Ige, hoe gained the degree of B.A.
with first-class honours m modern language+ and litera•
dire at the University of Leeds. . She has also been
awarded a University scholarship of £50 for the purp.o
of continuing her etudi. in Fr.ce when practicable.
Mr. Peter Ilda'hoil (son of Rev. P. McPhail) Look his
B.A. with honours in philosophy last year at M.chester
University, and attended the Degree Day loot Saturday
to receive his M.A. degree. He in nerving ea e teacher
in Elmfield College, and renders excellent service as a
preacher in York First Circuit, taking services on Sundays
and week-days Hie brother, Second Lieuten.t Argon
McPhail, of the Black Welsh, left for France last Friday.
OUR ROLL OF HONOUR.
Lance.Corporal Albert H. Sends
Mr. and Mrs. W. South, of Chilson (Wilsey Circuit),
have suffered severe bereavement by the death, in action,
on the Western Front of their youngest eon, Bert. It
was on April 213th that our friend laid down his life in a
sue that he believed to be right. He wen only twentyone yeam of age when the eel) reached him to enter upon
,P= tiLlh en ex end
2-Siding,
;41character. Hie
and while residing at Swinbrook he was the life
of the school. His letters Dom the Front were invariably
happy, and never did he conclude without writing "994"
(" God be with you till we meet again "). His parents
The increase of money. raised by the Women's Mia- and aisters and brother will certainly End that prayer,
'denary Federation last yeer was £484
end not uttered in eueh an atmosphere, and in the face of
£184 2a. 3d., as stated hot week. The Federation has peril, will he richly and abidingly answered.
completed the eighth year of its existence, during the
whole 01 which period Mrs. J. E. Leuty has been secretary.
Lance-Corporal W. A. Herbert.
In connection with the recent manifesto the Strength of
Through the death of LumeCorporal William Anthony
Britain Alovemeid in holding a Nationel Convention at Herbert, R,A.M.C., the Herridge Memorial Church,
Caxton Hell, Weetinineter, on Saturday, July 7th. There Bournemouth,
Bournemouth, lows one of as brightest and most gibed
will be two sessions—one et 2.30, and another et 6. The members. He became a scholar in the school of the old
programme for a "big push" in order to achieve the church about s.enteen years ago, and later a teacher.
object of the movement within a short apace of time will He was a member of the choir, and took great interred
be put before the Convention, and the conetructive policy in the adult Bible-class,
Be the orchestra, and
isting
of the movement will also be oetlined. Papers on "Our sometimes giving the address Il was also an active
Immediate Duty," by Captain Owen Jones, and. " After- member of the End.v.r Society. - -Be was on attire
War Conetruction Peobleme," by ?dr. A. E. Goodwin, will seniee from the commencement of the war, making meny
be reed. Amongst othen expected to take part are journeys, both east and west, an the "Carisbroeke fetelle,"
Aneurin Williema, Esq., M.P., Admiral Sir George King until trandened to the
" Salta," which struck
Hall, Major McAdam Weeles, Sir Alfred Pearce Gould.
mine and eank on April 10th. He Wee Brat reported
Mr. Herbert Casson, Dr. C. W. Seleeby and Mr. Henry missing end believed to be drowned. News is new received
Bendel]. The Convention in open to all sympathiesn and of the recovery of hie body from the sea at Havre, where
delegate of societies, and regietration fee for the Conven- he has been buried. His relative. end friends mourn his
tion is Is. 6d. for eech member. All particular. from tom, but have the tonmlation of knowing that he laid
Strength of Britain Movement, SO, Denman-stems, W.
down hie life doing his duty for his country.
Two Hartley College students, Mr. A. J. Wigley and Mr.
Private Fred Tomneed.
S. T. Wilkinson, who wars appointed to circuits at the
Our beloved brother has fallen in battle to the grief
mceeat London Conference, have Piet 'taken their B.A.
degree at Manchester University. Mr. Wigley in the non and tampeekable lose of a host of friends. He died, as he
of Rev. A. J. Wigley, of Southport. Mr. Wilkineon's had lived, boldly, unselfishly, thinking of others. Severely
lather was a dented layman of the Church up to the time wounded, he dressed the wounds of one of hie often
under s hail of heavy thell.fire. Noticing oho peril.s
of his decease, which occurred a few months ago.
On Tuesday last at Durham University the medicel poaition of his company, he rushed to the rescue el the
degrees of M.B. and 'B.S. were entered on Mine Phyllis in.hine gun (all the gu.enihaving been killed), and was
Marriott, daughter of Mr. J. G. Mnriott, of Bowdon, .rrying rt sway when he was allot deed. Well trained
m21...TrIts
.
l
iather end eldest broth r
s devoted PAIdla.
Cheshire. Miss Marriott is now acting ae medical praa
titioner fora ;hint per.d at the Floyd Victoria Infirmary,
wo
n Gli
reurch,raan
nrgav
p "ate love for hisheo'
te
Newcastle-one. Mr. Marriott hes two none in the' h
Army. The el est, Second. Ramie' Marriott, after
being
of
and returned to the front, has more recently been invalided home with the. tremble, but is
DELICIOUS
and exports to go out again shortly. The second
second
n Clifford, in at the moment applying for • communion
aon,
in the Royal Flying Corp..
The order of merit obtaided by Captain Kithaldy, as
reported been w.11, was ehat of the Distinguiehed Service
Cross (DS.C.), and not the D.S.O.
lies 'Dobson, of the Jubilee Chinch, Durham+, bee
obtained the M.Sc. degree. During all the years of study
Miss Dobson has been actively engaged in the work of
the Charch.
COFFEE.
Mies Betsy (Marguerite Thornton, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Thor.., Bn.dey, Leeds, hen passed the
6.111.A. examination of Leeds University, 11:i. Thorn.
ton has had is Most successful scholastic caner. At the
RED
WHITE
BLUE
Far Breakfast & after Dinner.
406
himself to Sunday-school work, first at Eastwood View,
Rotherham First Circuit and afterwards et the new
use at Dalton Brook, with rare abandonment end much
BUCCB113, winning the love and high remised of teachers end
scholars alike, which was teuchuigly ,shown by the letho
and sorrowing ...pan, that attended the memorial service. Relatives and friends are gladdened by the memory
of his brief but fruitful Life.
Private W. G. Pleekeett.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Plucknett, officials of our church at
Cariebrooke, have received official intimation that their
youngest son, William, was killed in action in Frame on
June 1111, et the age of twenty-lour. William joined the
Army Ordnance Corps in May, 1916. He went to Ewers in
October, and after eleven months' service was transferred
to the Sherwood Forester.. He returned to France
January, 1917, after too months in Engladd. He was •
scKolar in the Newport end Carisbrooke Sunday-sch.le.
His genial disposition endeared him to all beards His
officer, writing to the family, mid: "We were out on a
working party when y.r boy and two others were killed.
We buried them all in the same place, and the next night
we took up a cease which we had made and which had
their nemea and numbers painted on, I feel bin lose only
much." Great sympathy is felt for his family, who are
most highly respected. He was brother-in.law of Rev.
P. S. Button.
•IN MEMORIAM.
Mr. Walter Brooks.
Our church et Meadvale, Itedhill Circuit, has eustained •
a great lose in the passing of our brother, Mr. Welter
Brooks. He was a local preacher and Sunday-school secretary at Wiebech before he removed to Redhill, fifteen
yinago. A. experintentlent of the Redhill School he
rendered. distinguished and memorable service. Hie effort
to resuscitate our cause et Monmn-road was none the less
praiseworthy became it did not meet with ultimate success.
Failing health caused hie removal to 111.dvale, and for
the last five years he hoe been compelled to pend the
winter at Torquay. On the very day that he had arranged
to return to his home for the aummer months the blaster
coiled him to the Heavenly Home. The remains were
interred at Ipswich, Rev, F. C. France conducting the service. Our einegre aympathiee are ext.ded to the widow
who is left to down hie lose.
Mr. Mary Ellen Eatt.m.
By the death of Men Eastham the Higher Ardwick
Church, Manchester, hen suffered a greet bereavement.
With her sister., Mrs. Genney and Mrs. Charlesworth,
she was a faithful member of the church. and a generous
supporter of ire funds. She began her Christian work et
Ogdenatreet Sunday.school fifty-five years no. Many
now in religioue fellowship with vs vane under her influence in their early days. She was a woman of devout
character, and had a singularly sweet and winsome disposition, which made many friendship. p.eihle. Since the
tragic circumstances ender which she lost her handsome
and only son the hee resided with her brother-in-law, Mr.
G. A. Genney, J.P., at %ord. House, Ardwick. Alter
a long and tedious illnesa she paned away to the
"Homeland " on Tuesday, June 19th, in her seventy.third
year. The funeral eervice at Higher Ardwick wee attended
by the choir and many friends. Rev. W. Barker gave en
appropriate addrese, end Rev. Prol.sor A. L. Humphries, MA., offered prayer. Rev. R. 1i. Ally conducted
thenrvice and the interment at SL. Bernabes' Churchyard, Openehaw. To her eistere and family we extend our
deepest sympathy.
Air. Henry Lyons.
The eel new. of the "loaning" of Mr. Henry Lyons,
who died suddenly at Beverley, June 19th, we received
Driffield end the termer town with sincere regret. Mr.
Lyons was for upward of thirty years an honoured member
and ofhcial in the George-street Church, Driffield. Some
few years ago, upon his retirement from business, he went
reeide in Beverley. There he became a member, and
as often as hie physical affliction would permit he was in
his place ce a worshipper. In Ins home church he was
ever highly respected, and although extremely unaseuming
he was chosen to the important offices of assistant a.iety
stew.d and clans feeder, places which he honoured with
Among his rich reminimencee
diligenn and efficiency.
were thoee in which many of our aged mieisters were
prominent, vie. Revs. R. Harrison, Jame. Shaw, J. W.
Uele, Henry Oliver, Jo. Prince cod others. His
Chriatien life was noted in his everyday life and conversation. He wee interred in the cemetery of Driffield
on June 22nd, the officiating minister being Rev.
J. W. Middlemis. The first part ol the service was
taken in the George-etr.t Church, the madder giving
en appropriate addrese-
Mr. G. W. Brow,
With the deepest regret do we record the peseing of
Mr. George W. Breen, Wavme on June Effnd, the day
following his fortieth birthday. A membif one of our
rd Circuit,
moot loyal and devoted families in the Hul
he maintained a steady and increasing interest in the
progress of the wore of God. From the age of fifteen he
was in membership with our Church in his native village,
faithful in has en...genre at the Mae. of Grace, and
generous in hie support ofall good enterpri.. In the
oillaae and the surrounding district he was well known
.dswidele respected ec o moo of keen intelligence, warm
sympathies and epollen integrity. He will be meetly
missed by may but most of all by he widowing wife .d
little one. He one intoned in the We.. Churchyard on
June 22nd. The aervim w. conducted by the vicar (Rev.
G., A. England), waisted by Rev. F. 8. Bullough. On
SEnday, June 30th, amemorial semce was held in the
Wawne Church, conducted by Rev, F. H. Bullough.
496
JULY 5, 1917
= THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
Mew Erogenic.
After .Ofeka of greed miming patient', borne Mnu
Fremantle, wife of Mr. John Fnmoseal. of Iflomethele.Spring, passed to her rat in ha Arty-rtia year.
imaginal ar fife ohs had ineemealy toiled. Timken
ii her depletion to husband end handy, her days were
of oath. sorrifre. Reseryed sed quiet, her hoe waa
her kingdom. Deeply intertidal in the omega clad
movements of our Church, she closely waded the many
activitim. She gave one son, ltee. J. S. Frame., to
the ministry. Her membemhip -lambed hock to law ad.
bred Bar memories other days WWII cherished end
recalled in dm later dam w mama and pain teak
seasthion end delight To the mews el good her ready
sympathy was gine. The lawn as her motherhood
ware mooed with )0y when every child, bre am and
I.r cianghtere, mood into the memberthip of our
Ganda
MARRIAGE:
De, J. A. Halle yea married, at Millen Genoa, to
Miss Jessie Davis on Tuesday, June 2611. The ova
em Moral, aonducted by flee. S. Dais (brother of the
bride\ assisted by Rev. IL W. Shirtaitte, Mr. W. Dredge
prealtret al the organ. The bride wore • chaos Of Whit.
ile, wi h picture hat to match, and carried a Wont of
pink oarnatione. She was attended by her sister, Mira
Liede Davis, with the Mimes Johnston and Doyle, who
waled shave. of pink carnations and lilies. Mr. G.
Davis was groomensan. The reception wee/mid at Caked
House.
honeym.n M being spent At the bridegr.m's home in the Bonier country. Amongst the
presents cos a case of Treasury notes from Holborn Hid
of whelk ohurth the brides.= hex been Wader diming
the four years of hie probed.. There were elm ea..
from the Hemet. !Scorch sad Soda-wheel, with whab,
the bride has been...Med in service for semen yam
•
A VILLAGE STALWART.
Mr. Charles Stramon.
•
HEZEILIAIL THE FAITHFUL, HMG.
interentleol Leeson Ier Beedath duly M. 191 T.
2 Wren. ma 0.T., Hebrew no. fib.
Guild
Kind
of
Hearts.
By Way .1. Pickett
1.—The towhee dead Wrothae the hew by remind,
ing the chars of the keine Orange left to Ifesekioh by
fda nicked father, dhot. The whole nation had been
somplort. and hope must have almost died out. We do
use. livetoonowase, Tie wrong we do lime eller us, end
malresehews, of moat pmgledif&ulh Itheekieh sea
have had considerable strength of will, muoh coroge,
sheathes feilh, Jed Ma mond% to strike oat as le
did as vs path A rake.. referm. Ilee political and
religioas feeders sad coureelloss mound the throne were
divided into three partite (1) Art Assyrian party, who
coluteriled submission to the powerful Modem of the
North. (2) An Egyptian pasty, who advocated aliana
with the power on the Nde, believing that in such union
the aggressivenese of Assyria could be marcembilly
resisted. (3) elm raigioso section, pees fully led by
grid, eappoded by Micah and the nom to
kw
who bad "an bowed the knee to Ban.. nab- macaw'
" loyalty to Jelmmh i" Reliance upon DiWilb help.
liappdy forth. new king and hie kingdom, he made Dane
his leMad! H
.for re who we make the kande of
God
oureye
IL—To yes tam our lest study into dais chapter. is
bke
loom the drearat winter into the WA orating spring. The hie of separation from God is ideas
Decompose/I by winter larreanese. The preiodol return
to God is always as 11.'on breath of new life. lets the
entrance into summer conditions. We shall beet over the
deal of the lesson terms es m lay Press upon the
premonent not. of any toe tellgie. meal, personal
end national. It starts with the all to worship, or, in other
mete with the recognition of God's supremecy end claim
(vas. 1, 5). The look of eery genuine reformation is thel,
Goiter! rd. It awes the einem A the firm Comm.dment, first in importance no well min order. This chock
mg neglect el God led been the eonst of went nthfortuna in Judah. The call to worship carried with A
(1) acknowledgment of Divine authority ; (2) a true centre
and ideal a the. aligioes Wart or faculty ; (3) the
true eseset mod armee el daily sustenance.
thia
true .Ell to the lett
er. The wort tendency in Bked,
war coaditiome nawithiLseding, to ignore ownemon
with Cal and regal with indifferent. theca. of GO
to ant adoration aid oolhaive worship le 1091 of peril
he areal is it tat no swam in or all campmate
for it. No elaim of hems, er of compearions, or of basin.. Porte., ration of wordily 'Happy the tram
who God is the lad." Bet Gods not to be demean
by mow and professions.
He is nerdy our God, we
shall And thee So cow& wall HO So far hum oncoming upon the thiblesh, ea shell be driven by the
hunger of We •eral to make some }RHO of eyeo day
Sehtrta, mid torn wayside paths LnW ere, Boom walk
with Jesus.
The village churches of Primitive Methodism have
deeps been the centre of gravity of our denemirmtional
life. There ere denominations reporting a larger amber
of ndherents, but among the Free Churchee, Primitive
Methodiam stands world only in the queenly of pulpits
provided end supplied. Apart from a not very long list of
e than circuits, them me few of our elms that do not
show a preponderance of smaller church.. Upon the
maintenenee of our hold upon the village, especially in
view of the altering prospects of the village orker, our
Intera importance in the national life depends. To a
host of faithful moo and women, whose orrice and
fidelity bee given us our Banding es e spiritual low in
the val.es, a debt is awing that cannot be expressed.
One of our 0.0 vigorous village churches is to be food
at Mister., . in the Gainsborough Circuit. Eetioneled
from every point of view—its attendance at the sarvire,
its spiritmlity,
braitutione, is contributions, lie
interest stemmrence and other reforme—its record in
mod end has been continuously good for many years.
'tare M a fine body of yomg members (recently increased
by a good work in the Sunday-school); ad OM have had
the privilege of being bre...gist up in. the midst of a vied,
ILL—It wilt a alike named:.g and useful to made
life, their profiting by which is mended i0 then,.
the 1.00117.112.11A211■111E of worship. This compels to the
The good man wane name is tt the heed of this sketch montront look of every genuine mend. Ito firm work a
is an of the Inhere of this Church. Codes Strawan the atting right of perene re/Mionship with the Divine.
is one of the grand old mew of village Methodism. We Bet, while rhea peleonel, it isnmr selfish nor exhave met many useful m., but of none is it possible lo clusive. A. genuine roman for the wifely and right of
speak with reom unqualified moral admiration. Mr. others is the second work of a tree Oslo to God. This
• areal00 was bore on the Lincolnshire side of the cir- coven rem 612 of thie caner. They suggest (1) MO.
cuit ; was one of the first scholars in the Springtime-pa hels,, (2) kthare.
eethelieity. We wood hems per.
Sunday-Wool, .d there became a member and worker. mama. notee of adornetion.inn acient story tithe en
I. his early married life, forty-eight mom ago, he removed W modern code and ronditions. What yearning of sea
to dlimerto, ad at 0.0 emaciated himself with the these verse. represent! The ewe of Woe and defeat
sway. From that times the present, he has served the isopast largetlames of- Divine tom! The pityieg co.
sot God in the church, the village, and the circuit, paean for those not yet reenkmed to their sew of ins
th awning demotion. Mn bee been • Sunday-wheel saJ danger I Hanticipates the presser. of Jesus Himself.
mmerintendent forty-an years, and secretary forty-two. " He wee eared with comps...ion." "1 molapreech bbe
He a • trustee and trust treasurer, and link a hang Kingdom of rod is other uthiee cols." And tehmeodyity
pat in the erection of the present excellent aura and is a in ISIL*0111 Never before lad the "pods of the
mad premises. lie hoe been, for cosy years, • dam land been so delisthaulty employed!,(ver. 6). Revived is
leader. He held the circuit etarardship for ewe fifteen not only the Wurn of man to God and the gilt of peryear, rereiying up. hie retirement. from the office an sonal reconciliation. It fellows, a. the day the night, that
illundeated address. He makes a point of hang present nee nerms mit .th can in e mann, of inviteeoe and
at Circuit Sanday.sch.1 conferences, end represent. the kelp. God gets His oppettunity through Hie (pitheaed
circuit on the District Sunday School, and ether cononit. withessa, wee now fdel they wet "tell out" Ithe good
tees. He is an earnest temperance reformer, and was news ol Redeeming love. And as for the-third Who,
swim in the emotion of the Misted. Temper.. Hell it no deligledal to math it I.e. Especiallymmembering
Time is s Arens temperance sentiments the village, and the log gemersthos of feud and cleavage between lend
this ha kw fostered by natation with the great national and Judah. &mai& I nor mentioned here, bemuse in
teammate leagues, in which Mr. Strawy has always 176 me. thew. had awed to exist, and this wind no
belayed, asa ehich was, at one time, recommended in the
Conlerence rules. Mr. Strewn het also taken no active r"
t
part on the educational cod charity bonds of the villea, the ani""
onth14
Tont:sitotc we
miming
midnt other forms of ire public life.
Al the present eat Mord. it. The that Mere IV. 014. 0.11MIMMitille“
time he a the surreyer of roads, and eanitary inspector. Northern latitudes, Mowing the wag he wider and
All One represents an immense arpourt of mildewing making possible or leseesa. S. when the oath of
o
•
dove in fell, it run. over ead meth our hey repartee,
re, Mr. Shawn scarcely ear Divine
For mere than forty
ithmereng our artificial barrio.
mined Menden. at the early Sody morning prayer
Tr —Tete. 13 to 27, excluding the mockers ol wer. 10—
One of his most beautiful cludocleritha is ins '
Ile
elan
here we meet yeah the two claseeeof taxon Jens
in malt
eagerness to encourage young people. He is
He s speaks no site., theme who head mul those who Woes—
pat tires sort and len, but poop en spree.
quick te note the promo of riseWnese m awy pram man are lull Of the toe jey of Kforan Gad s even Ma place
end
loyalty
to Wm oemlitio trot woe leer. Tem. 21,
or. aiden, and le brag them out into earners He and
beloved wife, who is invalided, end orb alone 23 and 26 me typical. The lite el aria with God its lets
hie '
by her prayers, are ...teemed by all who know them life d pothratLesith. Even the lain of morrow and herd
amoothanon is bunted isdo blessing when we knew that
as
a s "the exedlent of the earth." Happily oar friend
hide and Wrong, end ebbs to martian ell his • the joy dare Lord isear akength.' Le the close of th is
May his how kng abide in strength! loll darter beetsneeekath with the gloom of our last Wady l
outi..iti
From every pail of riew Are file of safinknom end dast oo areharles Stramon see s treasure to any clear de, sae olediame
the worst folly. The life of Mediums it in
if Primitive Methediem continues to grow each men its
mere OW.. leo tile of the greaten delight.
future saws and poseur will be assured. .
wi
'Lir—
. -11a
at
THE BUTTERFLY . MONTHMany rhos have been said about the month of July.
It het been described as "Hot July, boiling like to fire,"
and wo expect hot days the month. We need Win Olin the hey and corn and fruit But July is the peel
monk of the year for butterttior end Mom A tiny girl
who how that peneles were, when the sew • big anent.
folly Owed balmily coated it • lying posy. The
butterflies and the flowers seem Stted for each other.
Their rich and varied colours make them to be objerdn of
alight. Whet boy has not chased • bakrayl
those who have elbsereed end studied them tales only
thing. about the bratterly's wisdom. Butterflies de eel
Live long, but they not wise to slat the lest placer to ley
their eggs. On the odereitho of a abbey 1st, where the
sharpoyed births canna ea them they place their egg,
which quickly /mkh out into hungry caterpillar, end
very soon broom, attention A friend was telling teethe
other day that he wee redly eurprieed with what be had
learned about butterflies. Head always thought them
to be each pretty, Oultering, harmless things, but the
year he hes got an allotment, and men have canted hint
that if he do not keep a patch, otapillso coal eat.eP
all hie abbeys. So now he will catch—if he an—mary
butterfly that doe to come into.his garden. Well, perhaps a butterfly is out of plea in a vegetable garden, and
it in not nice to have a plague of airy caterpillar., se
them is a few miles from where I live, bet One of on would
wish to have the world domed of buttedlise. Like the
bee, they have honey, and the flowers yield enough both
for the beea and for them- The butolies and the moths
hare a long trunk, no elephants here.- When they are
Dyne, they roll their trunks op under their heeds, unretieg them when they want to suck up the honey from
a Bo r. Butterflies love the soda. ; moths km the
duele71 teenier., and them eve many ketone which boys
end girls can kern Irma them winged bantiee. Let
every boy end girl keep their eyes open and their wits
at work, and the lane and the garden and the field will
be like fairy whoolroonnwhere you will learn men,
whit things in a most delightful way.
Yon will leein to spmemate the wonder and beauty
that me in the world. Idea Aowers are formed like
buLterflieshe sweet pee Bower being one. Some of the
smallest Bowers are the meet beautiful. Look on the wayside and yo will noon fled some of -these. Last July,
along a mem. lane, o found, growing
wild, ewe
wild,
wad of the biggset and pada flowers I ever aw.
Oa doom lot amine
Few gardens in Fed
Boo boye pawed me, and they wens carrying big bocas
. whioh awed to brighten up the road. A
of wild roses,
Willthire, who loves the Guild el Hind
good woman
Heerte, sent me mks dam ago a box of lovely flowers out
of her Nathan. For days—the sweet harm. of pinks
sod lad's-love wee all over the home. I eon loop I emelt
thee. flowgre now. The farmer may not-tike poppies
hie Wan, but few things am prettier than
iu it God mot lore
with a hoof red
eerrO
'
not bare se muth
lour end booty, or the
in it.
Ir
v. lovas thew:m.7.
sel
.
t.tals
.
d
eila
tki
,en
it
teach. nil that it is God wise yes to the find doom
thdr wandertal glory, and if He wee re meek for the
flower., .merly of which auk live • day or two, how mob
moat v311 Re saes for no, idiom He hair made and to
deemed, tbst we may live with Him fur ever out am.
How we ought to love Him!
Our Gelid Reg.
We welcome IRM Sydney Hugisaw. MSS r.....:Froda
e t' Sangldl
br GIrrilogles. All konse
h
Alni Mith,Ro
hall S.dayechool, Chester Second Circuit
Do pia with to join the Guild of Kind Martel Thad
send on name, age and adios, with a promise that yen
will ho kind be dodo animals and :milady. If sorer
ea s senior
sixteen year of ap yon will be
member. Beautfful badges me supplied for nearing on
the coat or dew '10 SWIM these, ord-one penny=4
lee each badge required, and another stamp (or
addressed envelope) for return postage, In Her. Anmemo
•
JOBB, 2.12, Chipanglionamed, Sheffiekl.
The Government Ma Temperance.
The following tosoatien ea said et the medal a
the Ewan° of the Connexion Temperance Committee
Tat we offer or stow protest
on Friday lest
again. the pooped el the firms:woo. to knorroso the
goaatity of Ira towed and sepplial to Ow bho. In
of 9teir repeated dadeedies that there k• wives
rod orb., and the pone. calls to wenerny. regard
Ws Fero/ m Indeed moment an the lidos of doe
Food Clankeller. When the continued and wdely-greed
mile for Prohibition are xemembered, we regard Idn. act
gnome insult to the moral seam of the community.
We cal upon the Government In mete plain,' with the
We
wthy
drink problem end to take such anion ea trill bed
of therneetves,' end appropriate to the crisis through ehich
the nation is posing."
JULY 5, 1917
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST
HARDSHIP THROUGH SERVICE.
Endeavons Topic ter Wash beigiaming July B:
Isde men. 24...
1S0 Disciples' Dullmes—The mime ie laid in the upper
seen. The time—el ter the last supper. A geared about
evseminenee en nth en oreeeken Beans an incredible °M.. Surely the heart ol the Master ma. .lissie been
wellaigh Mrteected by thee Whigs tektites... The
.bedew ef the Cm. was upon If Sewed there vim • dispute among Mon, which of them should. be ...Med
pealed, Sneh a meantime as asacrilege it war the
donne.. of depraved ambition. Mataralism in •
grdeeque garb. Strange that, this incident is linked op
by Luke with the desist. It suggests a moth. Judea
had longed foe promotion arid had dyne lee beet.--and
wont—to moire it "And there was a strife among
them, which of lima ahortld In the greatest If we
M.O. we me, draw this conclusion.
esiyhme.
A needed to watch lest the germ which had
fruit in Nam shads/ develop in them. Desire for
prieminenee
step to dental Trompliog ow
thoae:ie. it mma
s life and makes it adoring and
in the
eniored.
- The lessfer's Patience.—Such a contention merited gnu
condemnation, but the Mader, though pen., dealt with
the ideation with patient lova. He war Leo sad to.be
sever. The approaching Judo= mita-nod His rebuke.
He talks to them of the greatness—not of getting, but
giving, the might of meekness, the splendour of service,
the lordship of towline.. Thus does greatness in Hie
Heigh.eventing, difler from that in which the world
delights. The world too often caricstures greatness, ore
hieing it with fame and power and hoiden. Great.. le
not Wee. A ma. is &moue when spoken well of by others
—he U great aewording to Chrieee recleaning when ice
. terms welt lowly .burden. Greg.. to tel to be wen
borne such
bitter
m a he
407
LEADER.
bynotoriety but .by child-lite handily. Claret'. sanded and that ol the world are here in .Beep contrast.
Worldly lordship accome seri. by men nurterial poem.
Men ore judged by their establishment. Amara. to
Christ true lordship is mewed, eat by exacting service but
by rendering it. v. highest returnee
lowest place.
We stoop to conquer.
The Object Lessee.—..I ant among yen as He that
wreath." He " teak the foam of • snare," and ales
bemire Supreme Land el imennity. He Ma pewee to
cornmeal—but Hie ferdehip mut won through Mis
, dD
ingress to mime IL aseglnians of Christ Mai. led er
but how orelchlevally heavenly and tender the Ines wkiek
stooped to ...la- our feet True deity dares to demand.
Thoumods haws recently taught that laird. Scholar.
have eerved in kitchen. wither. • mem td oedema..w
ow dishonor. Only the Willem. who
by
standing on hie dignity chafes st body Eon..
tries re he UM
Sang George MacDanald :—
--
NEWS FROM THE DISTRICTS.
Ear. E. B. Shur presided over. the main. committee
at Qeeen.e-roact, Norwich, on June 28th. The Tempersass temonitlee tweed resolutions protesting egamst
lb bream in beer production, the inaction of the
Comeau. in dealing with the drink tralfic, and its
dimmer., in leaving commanicationa wureknowledged.
The Onploompi Committee ansideral and . npinemd
apple... ter the Idmiraioo of two clEiltiwn IDA the
Wymazdhant Clrevit Propoals vivre brought to thel:naSib Carmiltee by Rev. F. C France for celebratieg the
oantessry
the District in 1020, including en evengeJetie campaign and the tnihlicstion ol a -"Hider,"
d emonism am le be invited from the September quarterly
arne
.t
.mecpial coinum
er: tee will repor t
z
tT 00100
le the Peptembe quarterly meetings for She establ
lishment of a. District Perposes Fixed 0e the hese
newellimy. Rev. R. B. Steer pare a brief riteuni of
riludareme breduese. Rev. J. H. Hose was congrundated
on lib eppointreent to Cambridge. Bogen ewe ecymard
whet hie services weld be lost to the District. The Mi=.
simbry Cbiunittee meeived the report. Irmo the Asides]
Mali, and pmwed suitable revolutions. A melee n
d thanks to de 1.1. secretary for his services was pawed.
Wu Badding Committee received and epproved appla.16Ams for gnu. from the G.C.F. for Sproweboaroad nod
N®
Tree. (Yorwieh Seemed Clreuit), the
arnibtiens having been met. Rev. C. N. Sheldreke wins
cougnandated . his successful work an Congabseren.
The gesefervad friends were thanked for their hospitality.
" The Han who was Lard of late,
Born in an os's nail,
•
Woe great because He wan much toe greet
To care about greatneart at all.
"Eves mad only He sought
The will of Hi. Father good,
Never of what was high He therm.,
But of what Hie Felber would. •
gnat: Pm. tag
"You long So be
You feel yourself arid. dig:
In the name of Gil let ambition die;
let H. make you what He will.
"Who does the natl, it one
With the living Truth abuse
.Be God'. obedient little een,
Le ambition die in Tom."
PERCY S. Oren..
Ws Cyril A. Humphries, Ron of Professor I. L. Hunpleas,
MA., hes been prenatal to a second-liedevancy
and ie serving with the lerces in France.
than ever before. On the Monday evening Sand.. Jana 174 Preedues, Mir. W. H. Bertoi.on-Trent First.
Church News. the
chair wee taken by Mr. Horatio Hits Barley, al Long
. The .Chalon pro.
To raise lands for Mosley-street Cberrh,
bard, and the speakers were Mr. Parsons cease.. the net gMwoehood, led by Hen Hurten-on-Trent a rale or minket was
arid Rev. It. F. Skinner. le spite of the H. ManRom and Mr. John Bradley, while movisimunly fixed for May 23,d, but mei.g
AIderattel.
inging. An mainly to the restrictions imposed by rho
loss oflecellent workers the ached is doing Mr. J. Pearson conducted
ercellent sermen. was delivertd by Mr. wee it was decided to postpone the sale
At a large meted Redrahite Fete an remarkably welL
Taring m 2.30. The ringing by the and bare
Wedneed•y, June 24h, our Hotrods Band Metlinglea.
•
Gift Day." Ibis ha. taken
children
and choir was a delightful place. The Mayoress
el Mope distinguished itself greatly. 10
(Mrs. J. W. A. Bas•
A special meted on Weal! of the 1110113. feature, and solos rendered by Mire any- sett) attended and receives] the gilts. Mos.
the tables. competition it seemed the
firer pa., and received the second awed time of the cheats and shoot absent on ton sad Mr. ilea Obryten, Adger., W. D. Judson, the minister's rife,
ter ire roar. pad" The children had militory service was nude during the 1st were mach appreeded. Hie proceeds sided. An excellent concert arran
by
the choirmaster (Mr. W. Radio ) was
hem ...red for the competitions by Me.. week. Conk.. rise had been received by mere • reword Neel of over 1720.
n in the school tom, tastefully
Hull and Miss D. Hatton. We also pro. various represendativea, end the ego. 0.13enday bat Bower wee. were con
decorated by Mrs, I. Radford. Dining the
aided the chairomn at the evening demaa culminated in a ma.. rani., under the ducted al. Dollington by Rm. H. ISMOsm. Ore
presidency
ef
Mate.
B.
Satoh&
(Mamie.
hi
doe
afternoon
a
Pond
service
wee
held, interval the friends handed to the Mayoress
which Mr. Tom Wing, 11.P.,
strati.,
pporhd by Rev. H. H.R..m .whieli • series of iftimbetive mailings their gills. Mr. Councillor I.. Radford
see the chief speaker, that preitien being 1.10,
Meese.. W. H. Metered A, E. &tape. Roe were given by Mr.. H. Welton Ilea B. announced the total as 129. Mr. 3. B.
filled by Councillor IL Ainger.
H. Madrow cove intending dotage el King rendered lb. solo, "Consider the Chapman (Town Clerk of Ron.), in
Mod sneceesint school anniversary eve oonelmnication. Iran de meas.
Litiee,' and .'choir of scholars rendered inswing a vole of thanks to the ltaymess
have best bald et Ona. Rev. R. H. meat presented at Um class Pureed • suitable hymns, under the goidence of Mr. mid Mrs. Judson and others, maderefervices
Parana
or the preacher, this being his meter of £10 to hare been 'Eased, F C altr.r. In Oils eervice ever one ent. to the impending departure of Mr.
twelfth Amnia nit Mc. Persons did eluding a contribution ban the mends. hundred eggs were also presented for use and Mrs. Jarlsoe, specialty thanking Mre.
splendidly ae ado.. The congregate. d the choir. At Whiteley Green me.. among the sick poor and &littering soldiers Judean for her splendid services in the
were large, and the financial maulis beam tat anniversary. services ware hold en of the local ',sanitary hospital.
circuit during the paid four years.
NM Hill
e I l.111.
7 Pite.
COMMENDED
BYe010(3,000
USERS. orB*;1kkind pea
atOMI or Bols '3"NLIos Sawal
PtahFranneag
het a boa /mica
today.Maihercha
(141.
Inn per atom
CONSUMPTION
( rorland (bit
hem
Dealt Kith with order)Either
:—
/AD 1.100 Lueso D.RAIMAIS
AMOADIMAL TIMATIANT.
RISHER & GO,
75, Margery Park Road, FOREST CATE, E.
AL T. CAMIATIL)
• OA A IAA As mw An no Ss A On 3.3
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A tab 'eursona m ths.
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Vie.
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means
to tad••
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b ; Bea or ORMSBY FISOL—Enma of the bed
atm .. omen.. am, a gra=
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A tonas ma A ad Itlo AMIN nal.
Mums AMA 1.31.11.■
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A Delighttul Sweetmeat
F
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Thom' MAIM 0100 111.
DEVONSHIRE
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CLOTTED CREAM
CONFECTIONS.
...fa or no
Imme mama. or
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CLEARANCE SALE.
Fine Plants.
3d. A LOT. 12 LOTS, 2/6.
011 orden.A..apaya. SnollasemA ADA An
M ANA 01180 a A
UNRIVALLED FOR
Hon yea any] I will ay lib la soh tooth ABSOLUTE PURITY
EXQUISITE FLAVOUR.
kap
aghast
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LAD
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Nan WOKLIT,
mph.
SOLE MAKERS.
raft:rlyirexhieeleni.r.dejataledal let
CLEAVE & SONS, 111.
67r ehre eay yes full vane JIRIN
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B.1 ELEA. Badly mention
ZADIDM ID De awes.
..
CREDITOR, DEVON.
n, Loath=
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1878
mr.,gulicia mow. A Mg. Unsmoked
MEAT CHEAPER—Salve the Pool Queadon Problem. Reduce your Retake ...Mk Try
ear Mild Cared HAMS, 8 lb. to /2 lk weight, I. St per
Mildewed Streaky Breakhet
BACON (Bellies) 9 lb le 1010. weight. la 46 per lb, carriage paid—Cult with order. to
BILLITT & WARD, Bacon' Factors, SPALDING.
i roue.
ash en agar; Se cob
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szldj4.velcaults;
etch reat
ladmon ChM
•
(Lifelong Primitives)
Refer..
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A MR THAT WILL PLEASE
ram
A Splendid Teachers Bible,
bound to Perelan Morose, yapped. hrten MA,
1...1.13.. Moe
red gilt edges, et...ming the beet Modem
Heim, Penne, Mara de.,
•
A anon. IIMML
WELL Mt 01.11 TO BAT0311 WM San/
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21130Allm,
22 Scanwellne
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12 0Arnro, assay
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ADVERTISEMENT SCALE
Peg.
Skil
Page
404
52
Per
Inch
column)
Per
Inch (aide
burrow
token& - as
AAA, Man. 0.101 Death. MO
PrepsEd Smalls Olpeal.1), 08
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Special maims by mehteeeeet.
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4. LabiateleChess.
E.G.
T. M. DIDDOLET.
•
408
THE PRIMITIVE METHODIST LEADER.
Canterbury and Whitstable.
A sale of work was held in the Whitetable Schoolroom on Wednesday, June
27th. Beautiful weather favoured . the
occasion, and a large company came together.
Mr.. A, Daniels, who was Replanted by Mr. A. Colter, was introduced by
lice. R. Walter, superintendent minister,
to open dm sale. During the evening
piamforte and violin edoe, recitations,
once and monologues by aoldier frienda
end huller of the town afforded great enjoyment to a crowded audience, Proud. for
the day, £33 Is.
Crone Says..
-- With two splendid sermons preached at
Ricca Bev. Pock A. Mayes closed his
W in this circuit on Sunday, followed
en Wednesday by a valedictory meeting.
Councillor Tom Pritchard, J.P. society
nomad, preeided, and epoke of the effective miniatry of totr. Mayes in every part
of the Church'. activities. Addressee were
also given by Memo G. J. Evan% A. Guy,
F. Pettylord, L. Bushell (circuit steward),
and Rev. J. Griffin (superintendent). Mies
Minny Evens, on behalf of the chock presented Mr. Mayes with a wallet of Treasury
notes, and referred to the gilt as a email
token of the high esteem in which he wee
held by their church, school, Endeavour,
and friend. Rev. F. A. Mayo suitably
replied.
yard. The afternoon flower son.. was of Oldham.
• moat inMosting character. A timely
The Washbrook adool annivereary was
adders. wee given by Mr. Joe Butler. The held on June 24th. The preacher for the
collections amounted to £14 5s.
past twenty years hae been Rev doe
Prestwich,
of Blackpool. but en Us' ".
Letchworth.
9,
Mon, through ill.heallh, he was not able to
The school annivireary was very be with us. At very ehort notice oar
mconand. Rev. J. W. Slack, of Poplar, miniater, Rev. G. R. Brake, filled the
preached very fine ormons and he Moir vacancy ith much credit to the church.
end scholars ung. and won' high apprecia- Tin A. Partingion preeided in the aftertion by their Moms. In the &Remount • noon, and an inspieng address wee given
Al
musioad service sea held. Mr. George by dermen
W. G. Tonend, of MiddleTogs, of Machin, gave the addreu, and ton. The children sang in very creditable
Mies Dolly Waller and MademUeelle manner, Mr. Stafford being the leader.
A
feature
at
the anniversary was the OlenHardy rendered excellent solos. On the
Monday the an nivernry meeting was held- did servio rendered by Lhe choir, Mr.
Mr. F. B. longley presided, and addresses Howarth being conductor and Mr. Garside
were given by Revs. L M. Heyward, B.A., organiet There were good conirmations
RD., and J. W. Slack. Proceed., at each service. Collections over £35, beieg
£12 10s. lid., a great advance on last year. £1 in advance of lest year.
London (Balhand.
•
LynWood.road, Upper Tooting, school
was held June 24tb and 27th,
an
and wo the best for some years. Rev.
W. W. Bacon, of the Bermondsey Settlement, and Rev. J. W. Chopell were the
poachers on the Sunday. In the afternoon a scholars' exercise, "A Children's
Tribute," waa finely rendered under the
presidency of Mr. E. Hayward, superintendent. A public meeting, with Mr. B.
Pritchard in the chair, was held on the
Wednesday. The children sang well
throughout the anniversary under the
Darfaistoe
leadership of Mr. W. J. Berra.. Proceed.
Central Church, Slateestreet, has just in advance of last you. The ...Oen'n
held their ohool anniversary, which wee a report showed progress in every departconspiettos success.
In themorning • ment of the achoot
large company of oholare, teachers, and
officials paraded the town, led by the Dar- London [Forest W11)
Intim Prize Bend. We were favoured
Most successful school anniversary urwith the presence of Principal H. J. sine were held at Forest Hill on Sunday
Pickett as preacher morning and evening, and Monday, June 24th and Nth. The
and hie discoursee wens rich and inspiring, preacher on Sunday we, Rev. G. Armitage,
and a benediction to all. Her. Enoch Allsuperintendent musurter. The afternoon
port, of Old Hill, was the preacher in the meeting, presided over by Hr. J. Wyatt,
afternoon, and his menage was most helpful. The Ringing of Lhe children was ex- auperintendent, teas addressed by Rev. J.
Boon (Congregationalist). On Monday the
cellent, and they were ably led by our
talented, lady-organist, Tire. F. Nicholls. speaker was Rev. George Bennett, who
Principal Pickett expressed his joy at find- game a charecteristic address. Mr. W. E
ing one of Lice largest companies ol Curtis, of Hamilton-rued Church, presided
children he had ever seen at a morning in place of his son-in-law, Mr. George
iservice. The day was very wet, but large Mitchenall, who he. recently been-called
congregations anembled. and the .11ec- up for military service. The children
dons for the day realised. with donation, took part in all the services, end'Lhe singeta., nearly cgo. A big advance on pre- ing wee of en exceptionally high obis
vious year.
London (M aaaaa bone).
Halifax Third.
The semi-jubilee ministerial annivereary
In onnection with the termination of of the minieter, Rev. T. H. Bickerton, was
celebrated by a Circuit "At Home" in the
the ministry of Rev. W. J. Robson,
memorable gathering tack place at Shelf Harrow-road Church on Wellesley last.
on June 23rd. The tea was followed by an The chairman was Mr. Cl J. Means (circuit
exceptionally good meeting. Mr. J. Sin- steward On Lhe platform with him were
field presided. After bearing testimony to Revs. G. Shapcott, J. Bowran, and S.
Mr. Robson's successful minietry, several Horton. Each contributed a brief address,
others spoke of Mr. Hobon's geniality and in which kindly references were made to
seal, hie loving heart having endeared him Mr. end Mr. Bickerton. Menem T.
to all. In hie ministry he hes been greedy Nicholas and H. Pedlar (society stewards)
helped by Mn. Robson. Mr. Chas. Brook aled spoke. The onusiol item. consiates
(society steward) presented Mr. and Mrs. of songs t■y Mrs. G. Burrows and violin
Robson with a wallet of notes, and soles by Mr. James lemon. A vote of
Dorothy Barraelougls on behalf of the ompatly with Mr. W. J. Nelson in hie
ohool, handed
Robson a fountain llness was heartily carried. In his address
pen. Mr. Robson very feelingly acknow- Mr, Bickerton briefly referred to the
ledged the gills.
twenty-five years' ministry, eixteen of them
having been spent in metropolitan circuits.
Key-worth.
The current. plan issue ehdwe an increoe
The school anniversary, held on June of five members and £1 16s. balance in
24th, was conducted by Rev. G. W. Wilson hand on the circuit account. This, after
The ranging of the children, ambled by Mr. raising the stipend and granting a war
S. B. Prio,was of the nod high standard boo of f.6 quarterly, is very encouraging.
The solo. by Mies Connie Armstrong were Fowelletreet Church offered badly in conwell rendered. Mr. R. Forrest, of West sequence of the holy thunderstorm a fortBridgford, presided at the children's ser- night ago. An almost new piano (just paid
ce in the afternoon. The recitationa by for)was submerged. A hoo harmonium
e children were a credit to their Boated on to a cupboard. Other damage
trainees. Mies P. Lacey, at the organ, ren- also was done.
dered excellent orvice. The proceeds were
Manchester Third.
in advance of totem,
i
ti
Leeds Fifth.
Bramley Morgan School Anne/entry
services were held on June 23rd and 24ok
when they were favoured with e visit Iron
Rev. E. W. Poe,a forma minio. Te
oelebation
mened on fiatardey
with a recital by Mr. Pace hom Ian
McLaren'. book, "Beside the Bonnie Briar
Bash." Mr. A. H. Franldand presided
over a good audience. Mr. Pape held the
congregation spellbound, . with mingled
humour and pathos he described the re.
marbable character of Dr. William
McClure. During the evening songs were
sung by Madam Tiffany and Mr. J. W.
Haley, with Motor Gerald Speak at the
ergo. On Sundayeloquent sermons wens
preached by Rev. E. W. Pao, the services
being of a high spiritual order. The choir
rendered excellent service. At the morning service the Moriah B.P. Soots held •
March parade in honour cd their former
Marla., who at the close of the orrice
made • few suitable remarks to he " Wolf
Cote" who had assembled in the chapel
Rev. A. Meech, of Hinckley, preached
the sob.' anniversary sermons at Broad...rot, Pendleton, on Sunday, June 244.
The Mayoress of Salted corded over the
afternoon Barrio and the Mayor gave the
address. Speoial hymns were sung by the
children and anthems by the Moir. Con.
duct°, Mr. Ernest Selthoun organist,
Mies Myra Robison, A.LC.M. Large .
greotions assembled throughout the day
and Umpiring nrUces were held. The proceeds amounted to nearly £27.
•
Monmouth.
Pruloy and Stanoingley.
Quarterly Meeting gave serious attention to the ore of Roker-lane, where the
only remaining male worker hue teen
called up foi military !service. A tuna increase of mambos era reported, and en
encouraging advoce in miesioory and
Connemonal funds gmorally. It wae
decided to advent. the ministeee okay
£10 per year.
Rochdale.
Jarvis-dread School anniversary wee held
on Sunday, June 23rd, when Rev. H. L.
Herod, of Manchester, preached morning
end evening, and gave an &Melo in the
afternoon. Miss Mergery Ledrion and Mias
Marion ALIO were theepscial soloists. An
..ted Moir, Offilither with the
..ff.
children, rendered suitable miuric Mr.
Jae. Whitehead was the organist and conductor. There were large congregations,
splendid noise% and a record collection
ol over £26,
South Shield.
On Jerre 20th an nitres/Ming event took
plain inIaygete Church. Rev. Joe Rowley, who is leaving the circuit for Elmfield
College, York, delivered a vbry able and
instructing lecture entitled " After the
War: A New Era for the People." At the
cIce of the lecture Mr. Comet presented
Mr. Rowley with • beautiful timepiece
and a wallet of Treasury notes on behalf
of the society. At • previous meeting of
the Sisterhood he wee Use recipient of gifts
of a revolving book..., week-end bag, coo
of silver hurt Inners, and case containing
brush and comb. The West Perk Veterans
aleo acknowledged their appreciation of
Rev. Joe Burley
the gift of a beautiful
eilver-mounted w • .tick, which was
handed over by Mr. ardiner at one of
their meeting.. Mr. Readey suitably
essponded.
Stockton.
Paradise-row school annivereary wart held
on June 24th. In the &borne of Rev. J.
Ton, through affliction, Rev. T. Elliott, of
Northallerton, was a eplendid substitute.
He preached morning and evening. In the
afternoon the scholars, trained by Mr.
W. H. Sodon. gave some choio recitations. Mr. F. Jewitt presided. The tinging wee delightful, and the choir and
children did credit to the conductor, Mr.
of
gir7TIVIA7r, w1.1Voeh7egrptile'dheet'rrg
• thirty successive oniverearie:. *
Shield., however, earned us with ability in
hie piece. On Monday a fine congregation
aasembled to her the scholars rang and
recite. Aldermen Wilson, anold scholar,
was in the chair. Mr. Athloon gave a,
pleasing report of the sMool's prosperity,
andi.Rev. G. J. ram addressed the
d ca.
Wigan.
Each society hew lately held occeasful
otool eoivereary orvIto. Al Central
Hall Rev. L J. Jackson war the poacher.
Proceeds were £43. Crooke reined £33, and
were ocedlently served by Reg. F. W.
Moduli. Douglas Bank (preacher, Mr. J.
Thompson) effort realised RAG At the
recent Quarterly Meeting satiefaction wee
opreseed at the undoubted nom,
aptritiod and 1111=64 al the Liverpool
District Synod ...Mined by as. R. wo
decided to deer off the long-standing cu• t debt by the end of the year, eel from
that time to increase Me minister's salary.
W.M. Federation.
The Sunday-school oniversar
werey wee held York Flesh
on June 241h.251.h. Services
conducted
by Rev. F. J. Pennock
Montle Shootgriclizreheld r.
Clark.
The church was full both aiternoon and
evening. The children sang special hymns, preached on June 3rd by Ran. Cl Jumble,
orieted by the choir, and gave recitation., and in the afternoon there wars special
dialogue., ate Mr. G. Meredith conducted hildren's Famine. Chairman, Mr. G.
the amain, Mies G. Hunt ;sledded at the Yoke. (Claxton). On Sunday, June 100,
ergo, Mrs. F. J. Pennock being respon. the preacher was Rev. W. Ashby, when
aible for the roitations, etc. Site effort collections morning and evening Were Inc
wee one of the beet known in the history the circuit fund. In the al ter000n a
the church. Precede over LA
children'. Bower service wee held, presided
of
Loden. Pee
led
JULY 5, 1917
over by Mr. G. Fox, of York. The cervices
were brought toe conclusion on June i3rh,
when the oholara gave a special -musical
orvice entitled " Madcap Months,"
arroged by Miss G. Orolt, and presided
over by Mr. J. Inhere (York). The financial moult for the school hind amounted
to £26 lfe. 10d.
Women's Missionary
Federation.
Ashinglon.
The monthly meeting wee held at Gable
Poet, the ladle of the chinch generously
providing tea. The meeting was conducted ,
by Mre. R. Hogg, and the mission.?
letter was read by Mrs. J. E. Wheatley,
thesoloists being M.Peggs end Mr.
Buck, him Dawson being the axone
pod, The address wars given by Mrs.
J. Tao, an
and a subdantial eon we. raised
for the Miesionary Fund.
Birkenhead.
The monthly meeting was held at Soopsbe, presided our by Mm. IAaru
Rev. J. Merryman 'Baylor, MA., addre.aed
the meeting, and MM. Harold Gonlden
rendered two solo. The missionary letter
wee read by Mre. W. Grantham, Rev. Geo.
Fawcett baking part Proceeds. £314a. Sd.
On June 6th s picnic woo held at. Bideton.
Alter tea a .very interesting meeting mu
&nosed in the field adjong,. Alderman
Swanwick, Mr. Tunner, Mra. Donde, Mit
Cubbin and aeveral other laddee taking
H. Prooeeds for president's missionary
sket, 4110s,
Bristol.
The monthly meeting was held.at the
reeideno of Councillor H. J. Mime,
Bristol Fond:II- Circuit, Mrs F. H. Sump.
son molding. Rev. G: Lee offered prayer.
Rev. A. Sutcliffe also took part.. An interesting address on "Mary Sleasor wee
given by Sister Edith, of the Weeleyan
Mission. Met Taverner read the minletter, and solos were hate'
ully ere
rendered by Min Ivy Magge. Tea
was generously provided by Mrs. Moo
Collection taken for missionary funds.
C
f
Cleethorpea.
The monthly "At Home" wee held
under the presidency of hire. T. W.
Broughton. Moe. W. J. Ward gave the
addreee, and once again sucoeded in
arousing strong interest moot. the members by her thrilling storied ofmissionary
life in Nigeria: The letter was red by
Mrs. R. G !lobbyers and the lesion by
Mrs. Ben Grant Mrs. W. Mudd, jun.,
provided afternoon te.
Crook.
The monthly meeting. was. held
at. yiel-
'
.P.‘trooZZ;vcIr°11P7nryrr'.d 117;
monthly letter from W. H. Collins,
Fernando Pro, wee Mad by the secretary,
Min Armstrong. A most interesting and
helpful address on the missions at Fernando Poo waa given by Mrs. H. TT Conk,
r atia
the :Y:13,1"di uT
Z,
taken for the minionery funds. Financial
result £2 fla
.
Rochdale.
The monthly meeting wee held in oar
Bridge Mills Church. Mies Brierly presided and Mrs. Broadhern gave • very
intending address. Miss Frances Chadwick from Durham.street Church, ren
Collectio
dered two very nice singe.
in aid of foreign
Sheffield..
On Thursday, June Met, the Indio. of
Altera& Dread. gave a god.. Ode al
the Grange Farm, Brinsworth (kindly lent
O Mr. and Me.. G. Barber),, the ',nab
e.
tal
f. inspirimettress
of the
green
Don e
' a H. Hobeon
rodered bliEs
i
and
t wo eon and Mica
and Mile E.
gave two eoellent recitation.
thorpes, presided.
Mrs. Heat Adams, of
. W. Richardson also
Revs. A. Jubb and J.
took part. The effort rolled £7 S. 6d.
Stockton-on-Tees.
The monthly meeting wo held at Solar:lige Much. with Mrs. lane as president.
Mr. Wilkinson read the loon, and Mies
Coffin rendered a beautiful solo accom..rdno. The mapanied by Min M. 40.
denary letter wa. read by Mu Henderson.
Rev. J. P. Oliver, who ma emaciated with
a Newcastle Forward Medan, interested
Lhe .mpoy with reminiscences of hls
amongst the euhmerged, tenth on
Tyneside
Tyneside
. Inajy
ConsontcL.ili=e
rrizerilz.S re. L G.
• The.
Aste
..ieitri. TiLtodAst Newe
rr
imis.