V DEFENCE 317 



preceding pages ; and those who do will need no 

 help from me. 



I fear, however, that in justice to other people 

 I must put one of Dr. Greenwood's paragraphs in 

 the pillory. He says that I have " built up, on 

 the flimsy foundation of stories told by three or 

 four deserters from the Army " (p. 114), a sweeping 

 indictment against General Booth. This is the 

 sort of thing to which I am well accustomed at 

 the hands of anonymous newspaper writers. But 

 in view of the following easily verifiable state 

 ments, I do not think that an educated and, I 

 have no doubt, highly respectable gentleman like 

 Dr. Greenwood can, in cold blood, contemplate 

 that assertion with satisfaction. 



The persons here alluded to as " three or four 

 deserters from the army " are : 



(1) Mr. Redstone, for whose character Dr. 

 Cunningham Geikie is guarantee, and whom it 

 has been left to Dr. Greenwood to attempt to 

 besmirch. 



(2) Mr. Sumner, who is a gentleman quite as 

 worthy of respect as Dr. Greenwood, and whose 

 published evidence not one of the champions of 

 the Salvation Army has yet ventured to impugn. 



(3) Mr. Hodges, similarly libelled by that un 

 happy meddler Mr. Trotter, who was compelled 

 to the prompt confession of his error (see p. 277). 



(4) Notwithstanding this evidence of Mr. 

 Trotter's claims to attention, Dr. Greenwood 



