Friday, February 14th, 1919. THE RELIGIOUS PRESS. By REV. SEAWARD BEDDOW A writer in one of the religious journals discusses the question, " What is Christianity ?" He soon reaches the conclusion that Christianity, as reflected in the Gospels, is not a system or a code, but a sp
February 14, 1919 - New Crusader - London, London, England
few prize-winners. Y is, he would be a of all should be ei locomotion. The great Pari world reconciliatic be founded there come into the arer Their attempts tc excitement. A ,fe The foremost Ai there, and he will The most clear-si ever, that the go are not taken off. What are th
February 14, 1919 - New Crusader - London, London, England
the significance of the following quotation from a paper which has supported the war throughout : " What is the crude paradox that fronts us ? There is victory without final security or anything like it. Far and wide there is peace without pacification. There is no national unio
February 28, 1919 - New Crusader - London, London, England
We still want many things, donations towards our £l,OOO fund, regular subscribers, paper sellers at meetings, and the CRUSADER on the literature stall of every progressive gathering. If you can help in any or all the ways, please write to Yours in the Cause, J. CLIFFORD ROWE, Bu
February 28, 1919 - New Crusader - London, London, England
The King's Speech, in its closing sentence, gives us the clue to the policy of our present rulers. In aealing with the industrial problems, the Government is reminded that " It is your duty, while firmly Maintaining security for property and person, to spare no effort in healing
February 21, 1919 - New Crusader - London, London, England
We listen, with our hearing made acute by fear, for what may come from Paris and London, Prague, Rome, and Agram, and with dismay we are beginning to suspect that there they are also beginning to fall under the curse of victory. They are beginning to partition countries, to tear
February 7, 1919 - New Crusader - London, London, England
How should any political talents be developed when the Government of the country was by an inherited prejudice given into the hands of the aged and the infants merely because a distant ancestor had bequeathed the purple to them. How should talent find its right place when every
February 7, 1919 - New Crusader - London, London, England