-
Articles/Ads
Article TO CORRESPONDENTS. ← Page 3 of 5 →
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
To Correspondents.
24 o\—Without name and address we can only notice the letter thus : —1 . Justifiable caso for the Board of General Purposes . _> . Ditto , , 'J . No . 4 . No . 5 . Case for Board . G . Yes , 7 . No , « . No . PROTEUS is hardly fair to us , —but we yield . PILGRIM is requested to continue the examination so interesting . His last letter came too late . A MEMBER OF THE G . S . L . —The fact is just the reverse . The majority decided in
favour of Dr . Crucefix having the honour of entertaining the Lord Mayor of Dublin and his distinguished friends , at the Grand Stewards' Lodge , in May last . BRO . JAS . DUNN—The melancholy account is inserted . A LIVERPOOL MASON . —The article from the mail appeared , p . 514 , 1039 . A STEWARD . —Tlie freaks of the " distinguished" are no secret . A PAST STEWARD is in error ; Dr . Crucefix has served twice on the Birthday Festival ; the first time with the late Sir Thomas Farquhar , Brother Prescott , and others ; last year , with and others
Lorcl Worsley , Brother R . Steuart , M . P ., . AN ARTIST . —The portraits of the "Four Brothers" complaining to , are capitally sketched , but are reserved for better colouring ; at present they look too snappish . A QUONDAM MEMRER OFTHE BOARD . —The bad man fears , —the upright man scorns . CAMBRIDGE ADVERTISER—There being two other papers in the town , the proposition , if accepted , would subject us to similar arrangements with the other papers . A MASON , —Not having seen the allegorical prints , we can give no opinion . BRO . EALES WHITE . —The particulars relating to the Duke of Wellington have already appeared : vide p . 442 , 1 U 30 '«
BRO . G . P . PHILIPE . —The report was taken from a Chester paper , especially forwarded ; whose reporter should be written to . Has ourcorrespondent so written ? . The letter to us does not mend the matter . BRO , FERGUSON . —The obliging communication has been received and acted on . BRO - HILL ( Weymouth ) . —The courteous letter is duly acknowledged . BRO- SHAPLAND . —Kindness was never more acceptable . Want of room prevents us from inserting his contribution .
K . —A dozen will be useless ; 1500 of the * ' Pseudo-principle prospectus" is necessary , and we would give them a better publicity than being burnt by the Tylers of Lodges . TIM . —Zoological portraits are not in our way ; the kangaroo is a good one—so is the ferret—the others are but so-io . TIM—TIM—he cautious , there is a " tendency . " MASK . —The sycophant was excluded for non-payment of dues . THE GHOST OF SHEM . —Should himself state how many creeping and unclean things entered the ark . —He may be aware that it was before our time . True , " coming events cast
their shadows before them . " PARAPHRASE . —The fable of the lion and the mouse are not bad , but the allusion is too strong . According to the spelling-book fabulist , the lion was grateful;—Paraphrase rules the story otherwise . BRO . COLLIER . —Want of room prevents us at present from availing ourselves of his con * tribution . Quiz . —True , by the ghost of Gilkes!—The gad-fly tried it on , but there is virtue in the scratch of a pen .
Buz . —True again . —The " fire among the straw" was in the ascendant . J . W- B . —Name and address aro indispensable to publication . The Brother alluded to has been active , zealous , and enterprising , and has made Masonry to shine in his district with unprecedented lustre ; his retirement ( if such be the case ) will be regretted by none more sincerely than by ourselves , to whom he may probably develop his reasons . A MASON . —We regret that we have no communication from Birmingham through the usual channel .
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
To Correspondents.
24 o\—Without name and address we can only notice the letter thus : —1 . Justifiable caso for the Board of General Purposes . _> . Ditto , , 'J . No . 4 . No . 5 . Case for Board . G . Yes , 7 . No , « . No . PROTEUS is hardly fair to us , —but we yield . PILGRIM is requested to continue the examination so interesting . His last letter came too late . A MEMBER OF THE G . S . L . —The fact is just the reverse . The majority decided in
favour of Dr . Crucefix having the honour of entertaining the Lord Mayor of Dublin and his distinguished friends , at the Grand Stewards' Lodge , in May last . BRO . JAS . DUNN—The melancholy account is inserted . A LIVERPOOL MASON . —The article from the mail appeared , p . 514 , 1039 . A STEWARD . —Tlie freaks of the " distinguished" are no secret . A PAST STEWARD is in error ; Dr . Crucefix has served twice on the Birthday Festival ; the first time with the late Sir Thomas Farquhar , Brother Prescott , and others ; last year , with and others
Lorcl Worsley , Brother R . Steuart , M . P ., . AN ARTIST . —The portraits of the "Four Brothers" complaining to , are capitally sketched , but are reserved for better colouring ; at present they look too snappish . A QUONDAM MEMRER OFTHE BOARD . —The bad man fears , —the upright man scorns . CAMBRIDGE ADVERTISER—There being two other papers in the town , the proposition , if accepted , would subject us to similar arrangements with the other papers . A MASON , —Not having seen the allegorical prints , we can give no opinion . BRO . EALES WHITE . —The particulars relating to the Duke of Wellington have already appeared : vide p . 442 , 1 U 30 '«
BRO . G . P . PHILIPE . —The report was taken from a Chester paper , especially forwarded ; whose reporter should be written to . Has ourcorrespondent so written ? . The letter to us does not mend the matter . BRO , FERGUSON . —The obliging communication has been received and acted on . BRO - HILL ( Weymouth ) . —The courteous letter is duly acknowledged . BRO- SHAPLAND . —Kindness was never more acceptable . Want of room prevents us from inserting his contribution .
K . —A dozen will be useless ; 1500 of the * ' Pseudo-principle prospectus" is necessary , and we would give them a better publicity than being burnt by the Tylers of Lodges . TIM . —Zoological portraits are not in our way ; the kangaroo is a good one—so is the ferret—the others are but so-io . TIM—TIM—he cautious , there is a " tendency . " MASK . —The sycophant was excluded for non-payment of dues . THE GHOST OF SHEM . —Should himself state how many creeping and unclean things entered the ark . —He may be aware that it was before our time . True , " coming events cast
their shadows before them . " PARAPHRASE . —The fable of the lion and the mouse are not bad , but the allusion is too strong . According to the spelling-book fabulist , the lion was grateful;—Paraphrase rules the story otherwise . BRO . COLLIER . —Want of room prevents us at present from availing ourselves of his con * tribution . Quiz . —True , by the ghost of Gilkes!—The gad-fly tried it on , but there is virtue in the scratch of a pen .
Buz . —True again . —The " fire among the straw" was in the ascendant . J . W- B . —Name and address aro indispensable to publication . The Brother alluded to has been active , zealous , and enterprising , and has made Masonry to shine in his district with unprecedented lustre ; his retirement ( if such be the case ) will be regretted by none more sincerely than by ourselves , to whom he may probably develop his reasons . A MASON . —We regret that we have no communication from Birmingham through the usual channel .