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Article TO CORRESPONDENTS. ← Page 2 of 3 →
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To Correspondents.
on the G . O . M . table . Furthermore , the Brother was not present thereat . As to the next subject , we do not think that our correspon . Ie . it possesses moral courage enough to stir in it if he does , ho will find little mercy . « The words are legible and i ,, tcm Sibh" -yct here is a printed humbug that would , were not Justice asleep as well as Wind , cause the expulsion even of the .. ' A Dov . m MASON —A Past Grand S . D . could solve tho difficulty , if difficulty there he-and Sheerncss supply the means . DIOGENES —The filcher is mistaken-we fear not the seven psendo clausesancl
, are unwilling to share the honour ; alone we braved Hiem-antl alone would wear the laurel . A MASON is mistaken-we do not publish filenames of Brethren relieved by the Lnd « o of Benevolence , nor the Lodges they belong to , unless , indeed , in the cases remarkable for their deep interest , or the honour of the parties concerned . IVe will not sully the bright page of Charity hy apostacy noA . nkindness . The gauntlet recklessly thrown down has been withdrawn by the challenger in time ; the moral armour was being tempered , and a good fight would have heen maintained when the herald should shout . — " Freemasonry and Charity ! Alms and . Loan Society , to the tourney 1 "
_ A SUBSCRIBER —The hymn sung at the last festival of the Girls' School has been published in the F . Q . 11—we believe the words were not by Bro . Ramsbottom . A GRAND OFFICER , had he been present , would have known that the lists ( as approved ) for the Board , were circulated at the G . O . M . We seldom err in our information . e _ ER . ctre . -The only excuse ever offered for the address on the Church extension , delivered at Freemasons' Hall , in March , 1040 , was to term the denouncement of that address " AN AGGRAVATED SENSE OF PROPRIETY . "
A YARMOUTH MASON- should read the B _ . i _ Hv-. he will find that Dr . Crucefix , is not " out of Masonry . " BEI . „ THE CAT —We believe eighteen Masonic Lodges , fie . have profited by the plan . Bito . HERSEE . —We are requested by the kindest of his friends to offer his thanks for a mark of great personal respect , and his gratitude for a hi gh compliment . lino . BUSHELL —We aro desired to thank him for the communication . BAZA USE ... ADMIRER , is we fear right in his notion that neither of the six Prov ., or of the three Dep . P . G . M ' s . named , can open an E . A . Lodge ,- vet reward always goes by merit ( ' ) MOSESThe "triumviratethe learned '
— " , the distinguished , and thedeputed , should have a column of brass inscribed gratefully to wisdom , strength and beauty A WARW . CK . HIRE MASON should be cautious on any plan that hpeeuliarH , advantageous for securing loans . , A MASON OF SOMERSET —N O ! having seen any printed account we can give no opinion ou tlie application of the sum mentioned . BBO . N . P . C . LLOYD - ( P . G M . New Zealand . ) -The paper is important and interesting but being unaccompanied by a letter intimating a direction to publish , we await further correspondence .
BROS . CRUCEFIX AND LEB STEVENS . —WO are requested to convoy the Masonic regards of correspondents from provinces , also from Scotland and Ireland to these Brethren Bno . GEO . WATSON —We feel much gratified at having earned his good opinion . W . G . is right ; it is more gratifying to a man of right feeling to forgive an injury than to resent it—our course Is that of public justice , not of private quarrel . W . P .-It will require a still more inquisitorial edict to render the publication of addresses after Banquet Ivlasonieally illegal . A BEDFORDSHIRE MA . os-.-M _ . onry and Christianity in their mutual points are identical . B C continuation of his
RO . HAI . MI . RS . —A esteemed correspondence is requested THE LODGE or THE DEAD .-Facial Converse , and other articles are deferred for want of room . BRO . P . P . CHANT . — A communication has heen received and complied with . A . B . C .-Although without address , we will not be fastidious . There is an excellent Lodge in tho town post-marked on his letter ( if in Surrey ) , and the members ar- of the first society . In London the constituencies vary , and the charges ; the preliminary steps artvery simple . We will confer further as to Lodges , & c . on receiving name and address .
ONE OF FiFTv .-We are glad to hear the Ambassador is so cheerful-better so than rueful . P . M . ( Duhliii . ) -Tlie anecdote has already appeared . With private mailers we have nothing to clo ; less meddling and more study may make Ihe party endurable , and we hope he will al least tick to the truth . "
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
To Correspondents.
on the G . O . M . table . Furthermore , the Brother was not present thereat . As to the next subject , we do not think that our correspon . Ie . it possesses moral courage enough to stir in it if he does , ho will find little mercy . « The words are legible and i ,, tcm Sibh" -yct here is a printed humbug that would , were not Justice asleep as well as Wind , cause the expulsion even of the .. ' A Dov . m MASON —A Past Grand S . D . could solve tho difficulty , if difficulty there he-and Sheerncss supply the means . DIOGENES —The filcher is mistaken-we fear not the seven psendo clausesancl
, are unwilling to share the honour ; alone we braved Hiem-antl alone would wear the laurel . A MASON is mistaken-we do not publish filenames of Brethren relieved by the Lnd « o of Benevolence , nor the Lodges they belong to , unless , indeed , in the cases remarkable for their deep interest , or the honour of the parties concerned . IVe will not sully the bright page of Charity hy apostacy noA . nkindness . The gauntlet recklessly thrown down has been withdrawn by the challenger in time ; the moral armour was being tempered , and a good fight would have heen maintained when the herald should shout . — " Freemasonry and Charity ! Alms and . Loan Society , to the tourney 1 "
_ A SUBSCRIBER —The hymn sung at the last festival of the Girls' School has been published in the F . Q . 11—we believe the words were not by Bro . Ramsbottom . A GRAND OFFICER , had he been present , would have known that the lists ( as approved ) for the Board , were circulated at the G . O . M . We seldom err in our information . e _ ER . ctre . -The only excuse ever offered for the address on the Church extension , delivered at Freemasons' Hall , in March , 1040 , was to term the denouncement of that address " AN AGGRAVATED SENSE OF PROPRIETY . "
A YARMOUTH MASON- should read the B _ . i _ Hv-. he will find that Dr . Crucefix , is not " out of Masonry . " BEI . „ THE CAT —We believe eighteen Masonic Lodges , fie . have profited by the plan . Bito . HERSEE . —We are requested by the kindest of his friends to offer his thanks for a mark of great personal respect , and his gratitude for a hi gh compliment . lino . BUSHELL —We aro desired to thank him for the communication . BAZA USE ... ADMIRER , is we fear right in his notion that neither of the six Prov ., or of the three Dep . P . G . M ' s . named , can open an E . A . Lodge ,- vet reward always goes by merit ( ' ) MOSESThe "triumviratethe learned '
— " , the distinguished , and thedeputed , should have a column of brass inscribed gratefully to wisdom , strength and beauty A WARW . CK . HIRE MASON should be cautious on any plan that hpeeuliarH , advantageous for securing loans . , A MASON OF SOMERSET —N O ! having seen any printed account we can give no opinion ou tlie application of the sum mentioned . BBO . N . P . C . LLOYD - ( P . G M . New Zealand . ) -The paper is important and interesting but being unaccompanied by a letter intimating a direction to publish , we await further correspondence .
BROS . CRUCEFIX AND LEB STEVENS . —WO are requested to convoy the Masonic regards of correspondents from provinces , also from Scotland and Ireland to these Brethren Bno . GEO . WATSON —We feel much gratified at having earned his good opinion . W . G . is right ; it is more gratifying to a man of right feeling to forgive an injury than to resent it—our course Is that of public justice , not of private quarrel . W . P .-It will require a still more inquisitorial edict to render the publication of addresses after Banquet Ivlasonieally illegal . A BEDFORDSHIRE MA . os-.-M _ . onry and Christianity in their mutual points are identical . B C continuation of his
RO . HAI . MI . RS . —A esteemed correspondence is requested THE LODGE or THE DEAD .-Facial Converse , and other articles are deferred for want of room . BRO . P . P . CHANT . — A communication has heen received and complied with . A . B . C .-Although without address , we will not be fastidious . There is an excellent Lodge in tho town post-marked on his letter ( if in Surrey ) , and the members ar- of the first society . In London the constituencies vary , and the charges ; the preliminary steps artvery simple . We will confer further as to Lodges , & c . on receiving name and address .
ONE OF FiFTv .-We are glad to hear the Ambassador is so cheerful-better so than rueful . P . M . ( Duhliii . ) -Tlie anecdote has already appeared . With private mailers we have nothing to clo ; less meddling and more study may make Ihe party endurable , and we hope he will al least tick to the truth . "