[4] "Social Relief Work of the S. A. in the U. S."
[5] "Sesame and Lillies," p. 101. Cf. also "The New Movement in Charity," Am. Jour. Soc. III, p. 596.
[6] "In Darkest England," pp. 85-87.
[7] Ibid., preface.
[8] Ibid., p. 15.
[9] "Social Diseases and Worse Remedies."
[10] "The committee of 1902 which inquired into certain aspects of the Darkest England Scheme two years after its initiation, were careful to state that they did not enter upon any consideration of the many economic questions affecting the maintenance of the system sought to be carried out." (The Salvation Army and the Public, p. 121.)
[11] "London Daily Telegraph," July 6, 1904.
[12] In fifteen years, from 1890 to 1905, the social work grew from a few small scattered institutions, to 687 institutions, many of which alone would have greater accommodation than the total in 1890.
[13] See "The S. A. and the Public," ch. 3.