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Article TO CORRESPONDENTS. Page 1 of 5 →
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
To Correspondents.
TO CORRESPONDENTS .
SOME letters of peculiar interest have been received , but we take no other notice of them than to state our determination to insert nothing contrary to our duty to GOD , nor offensive to the eye of WOMAN . The paltry annoyances we have latel y been subjected to may give us trouble in reading , but shall not dispose us to enter into any disgraceful controversy .
Several foreign letters have been declined altogether , being unpaid . Two that were marked " paid" we retained , considering the parties acted under mistake . The " seven" packets , containing circulars from the " creeping and unclean , " have been used as directed . Name and address are indispensable to insure attention .
THE CRUCEFIX TESTIMONIAL . —We have , in reply to several letters oil this subject , to request that all correspondence may be sent to the committee , to whom we have forwarded those that we have received , ( vide advertisement ) , and who will readily give all necessary information .
THE SHADE OP BONNOR . —We know not if our correspondent is using his designation figuratively , or if the Brother quoted be deceased . He is quite correct in his idea that it was contemplated that the " prisoners" should , in addition to taking IMPROPER obligations , also appear on the FLOOR , without their Masonic clothing , and that their respective suits should be placed publickly before them . Could anything be better
calculated to remind an assembly of Masons of the Tyburn clays than this Masonic construction of the CART , CONTAINING THE OFFICIALS , THE MALEFACTORS , AND THEIR COFFINS ?—Start not ! More than one learned counsel declared that precedent justified the case . Indeed ! then wh y was not the feat attempted on the third ? Because the second precedent was a dangerous experiment- —the " persecuted'' were not the " MALEFACTORS . "
A PROVINCIAL GRAND OFFICER . —There is more meant in the insinuation than in the fact of the falsehood told by a public functionary that wo manufacture our correspondence;—he knows that we have declined many articles that could not he otherwise acknowledged to have been received . Forbearance has its limits , and we may feel compelled to publish some correspondence , in the manufacture of which ice have had no share , but in which the functionary niay appear in a conspicuous character . A STEWARD OF THK GIRLS' SCHOOL . —Thc simple facts are these : —At a meeting the "hero " declared it was the order of the Hoard ; Ihe next day , at the Hoard , on being challenged , the " hero" said he thought it best to say so , thereby proving that he had not even looked askant at the ch . in Proverbs , v .
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
To Correspondents.
TO CORRESPONDENTS .
SOME letters of peculiar interest have been received , but we take no other notice of them than to state our determination to insert nothing contrary to our duty to GOD , nor offensive to the eye of WOMAN . The paltry annoyances we have latel y been subjected to may give us trouble in reading , but shall not dispose us to enter into any disgraceful controversy .
Several foreign letters have been declined altogether , being unpaid . Two that were marked " paid" we retained , considering the parties acted under mistake . The " seven" packets , containing circulars from the " creeping and unclean , " have been used as directed . Name and address are indispensable to insure attention .
THE CRUCEFIX TESTIMONIAL . —We have , in reply to several letters oil this subject , to request that all correspondence may be sent to the committee , to whom we have forwarded those that we have received , ( vide advertisement ) , and who will readily give all necessary information .
THE SHADE OP BONNOR . —We know not if our correspondent is using his designation figuratively , or if the Brother quoted be deceased . He is quite correct in his idea that it was contemplated that the " prisoners" should , in addition to taking IMPROPER obligations , also appear on the FLOOR , without their Masonic clothing , and that their respective suits should be placed publickly before them . Could anything be better
calculated to remind an assembly of Masons of the Tyburn clays than this Masonic construction of the CART , CONTAINING THE OFFICIALS , THE MALEFACTORS , AND THEIR COFFINS ?—Start not ! More than one learned counsel declared that precedent justified the case . Indeed ! then wh y was not the feat attempted on the third ? Because the second precedent was a dangerous experiment- —the " persecuted'' were not the " MALEFACTORS . "
A PROVINCIAL GRAND OFFICER . —There is more meant in the insinuation than in the fact of the falsehood told by a public functionary that wo manufacture our correspondence;—he knows that we have declined many articles that could not he otherwise acknowledged to have been received . Forbearance has its limits , and we may feel compelled to publish some correspondence , in the manufacture of which ice have had no share , but in which the functionary niay appear in a conspicuous character . A STEWARD OF THK GIRLS' SCHOOL . —Thc simple facts are these : —At a meeting the "hero " declared it was the order of the Hoard ; Ihe next day , at the Hoard , on being challenged , the " hero" said he thought it best to say so , thereby proving that he had not even looked askant at the ch . in Proverbs , v .