Page:Distinguished Churchmen.djvu/228

 192 DISTINGUISHED CHURCHMEN

&quot; But,&quot; continued Mr Carlile, &quot; I think one of the most extraordinary cases was that of a youth who had been in gaol seventeen times before he was twenty-one for stealing watches. From his earnings in the Labour Home he managed to save enough money to buy a watch and chain of his own. When he left us to go to Canada he happily remarked, It is nice to have a &quot;ticker&quot; which you airit afraid of the &quot;peeler&quot; a-looking on ! That youth had worked six weeks for his watch, and then it was only a second-hand Water bury. But you see what pride he felt in having a watch which was actually his own ! &quot;

&quot; But does your Church Army system admit of these rescued ones rising in the Army scale to become missioners ? &quot;

&quot; Not too rapidly,&quot; was Mr Carlile s reply. &quot; We are very slow in appointing our evangelists from the people who have been rescued by the Church Army. We find our supporters don t like the idea of it. We have all sorts as co- workers. We had one, a burglar who had been eighteen years in prison out of forty-two. He has been transformed into a most exemplary worker, and is doing excellent evangelistic work, though not paid for it. He is a voluntary agent.&quot;

&quot; With regard to your missioners, you enjoy special concessions in the Diocese of London ? &quot;

�� �