! THE NEW PRIVY COUNCILLORS
... THE NEW PRIVY COUNCILLORS. The King has been pleaged to direct that the follow™ ig be sworn of the Privy Council:— Mr Charles Booth. Colonel W. 8. Kenyon-Blaney, M.P. Mr James Parker-Bmith, M.P. ...
... THE NEW PRIVY COUNCILLORS. The King has been pleaged to direct that the follow™ ig be sworn of the Privy Council:— Mr Charles Booth. Colonel W. 8. Kenyon-Blaney, M.P. Mr James Parker-Bmith, M.P. ...
... POy e . - ...
... the wages paid 1o certain classes of postal servants: - ®ir Edward Bradford, Bart.,, G.C.8., K.C.8.1.. chairman. : Mr Charles Booth, F.R.S. Mr Samuel Fay. Mr Thomas Brodrick. Mr R. Burbidge. Sir J¥dward Bradiord was until lately Commissioner of the M ...
... district presided. Addresses were given by the Rev. Dr Moss on “‘The Ministry of the Future,” the Rev. S. E. Keeble on “ Mr Charles Booth on Wesleyan Methodism,” and Dr A. T. Wilkinson on ‘‘The Methodist Testimony.” ...
... y stated that the latter is the better and more correct system to work upon,—From ‘ The Magazine of Art” for July. Mr Charles Booth has completed his great inquiry into the conditions of ‘‘life and labour” in London, and, thanks to him, the organic life ...
... represomting maty thousands of workers. Mr Edward Byrne, of the Ashton Trades Ceouno), occunted the chair, and referred to Charles Booth’s scheme. It had proved it would wtand the test of eriticism, ard would be the groundwork of any future scheme. Mt Frederick ...
... “Poverty: A study of town life.”” This bock is beheved to be the most . important contribufion to praetical sociology since Mr Charles Booth’s great work on “life and Lebour in London.” When Mr Booth, after years of labortous investigation, made clear that over ...