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The Freemason, Oct. 2, 1875: Page 6

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    Article Untitled Page 1 of 1
    Article TO OUR READERS. Page 1 of 1
    Article TO ADVERTISERS. Page 1 of 1
    Article Answers to Correspondents. Page 1 of 1
    Article REMITTANCES RECEIVED. Page 1 of 1
    Article Untitled Page 1 of 1
    Article OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S VISIT TO INDIA. Page 1 of 1
    Article OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S VISIT TO INDIA. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE " MONTH " AND FREEMASONRY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 6

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar00600

NOTICE .

Many Bomplaints having been received of the difficulty experienced in procuring the Freemason in the West-end , the publisher begs lo append the following list , being a selected few cf the appointed agents : — Black , II . T ., 47 , Great Queen-street .

Jordan , G . W ., 1 ( 19 , Strand . Kirby and Knucan , 190 , Oxford-street . Nash and Teuten , Savile Place , Conduit-street . Phillips , D ., 67 , Great Portland-street . Utting , Wm ., 2 , Palsgrave-place , Strand , And at W . H . Smith and Son ' s bookstalls .

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen page weekly newspaper , price 2 d . It is published every Friday morning , and contains the most important anil useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Annual subscription in

the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / . Brethren 111 foreign parts , wishing to have this newspaper sent them regularly from ths office of publication , should , in sending their remittances , add te the 2 d . per week the postage on 2 oz . newspapers .

To Advertisers.

TO ADVERTISERS .

The Freemason has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . For terms , position , & c ., apply to GEORGE KENNING , 198 , Fleet-st .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

AU Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended for insertion in the Number of the following Saturday , must reach the Office not later than 12 o ' clock on Wednesday morning . Careful attention will be paid to all MSS . entrusted to

the Editor , but he cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by slampcil directed covers . If " Provincial " wHI send his name to the Editor at the office of "The Freemason , " in confidence , his communication can appear ; if not , not .

The following stand over : —Bro . Tudoi s interesting letter ; statement of accounts , Supreme Council ; Lodge of Lights , Warrington ; Public School , Kilwinning . P . G . L . Cheshire .

Remittances Received.

REMITTANCES RECEIVED .

£ s . d . Bones , W . E ,, Queensland ( P . O . O . ) 1 7 6 Dumbrille , John , Canada ( P . O . O . ) 090 Laurie , G ., Constantinople ( P . O . O . ) 093

Loche , H . 11 ., Calcutta ( Draft ) 200 Marshall , W ., Baimsdalc ( P . O . O . ) 022 Phillips , C . IL , Trinidad ( P . O . O . ) 012 6 Robinson , H ., New Zealand ( Cash ) o 10 o Watkins , James , Hamilton ( P . O . O . ) o 12 o Wctherill , H ., Constantinople ( P . O . O . ) 200

Ar00608

The Freemason , SATURDAY , OCT . 2 , 1875 .

Our Royal Grand Master's Visit To India.

OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S VISIT TO INDIA .

Much interest is felt in the Craft about the movements of our Royal and Illustrious Brother , and so we give the following particulars of his movements , which we understand are correct : — " According to present arrangements , His Royal Hig hness will leave London on the 12 th of

Oi'tober . via Dover and Calais , for Paris , where he will arrive on the 1 . 3 th . He will leave that ik \ on thi- same day , and travel by rail to Venice , win re he will arrive on the i ( 5 th . He will then i-nibaik on board his yacht , the "Osborne , "

which will convey him on board the " Serapis . " This vessel , owing to her draught , will anchor at a distance of about seven miles from that city . It is probable that the " Serapis " will proceed thence to Corfu , but on her doing so or not depends whether the Prince will remain two days

Our Royal Grand Master's Visit To India.

or thirty-six hours only at Athens , where he will pay a visit to his brother-in-law , King George of Greece . Leaving Athens , the vessel will make her way to Pert Said , and on arriving at Ismailia His Royal Highness will disembark and visit Cairo and other places in the neighbourhood , the

" Serapis going on to Suez , her arrival at which port will be telegraphed to the Royal party , who will then hasten on by rail to rejoin her . Aden will be the last place of call , and , after a few hours' stay the " Serapis " will go on to Bombay , where she is due on the Sth of November . The

Prince will remain about eight or nine days in the Bombay Presidency , at the end of which time he will embark on board the "Serapis" for Calicut , where he will land and pay a visit to Mysore . Thence he will proceed by water to Tuticorin , on leaving which place the " Serapis "

will make direct for Colombo , where she will stay ten days . She will next go on to Trincomalee , the chief naval port of Ceylon , to coal , and will then proceed to Calcutta , where the Prince is due a day or two before Christmas . His Royal Highness will then visit Delhi , Lucknow , and other

places of interest , and will gradually work his way back to Bombay , where he is expected on the i / th of March . He will at once embark in the " Serapis , " and return by the same route as that taken on the outward trip , the proposed voyage round the Cape having been given up .

His Royal Highness will probably reach this country about the 7 th or Sth of April . Canon Duckwork will be Chaplain in attendance on His Royal Highness during his Eastern visit . The following is understood to be the route which the Prince will pursue on landing in India : —Leave

Aden for Bombay , Nov . 2 ; visit Bombay , Nov . 8 ; visit Beypoor , Nov . 23 ; Bangalore , Dec . 2 ; Madras , Dec . 6 j Tuticorin , Dec . 8 ; Colombo , Dec . 11 ; Trincomalee , jDec . 17 ; Calcutta , Dec . 23 ; Barrackur , Jan . 4 ; Benares , fan . 4 ; Lucknow , Jan . 6 ; Cawnpore , Jan . 10 ; Delhi , Jan .

11 ; Umritsur , Jan . 20 ; Lahore , Jan . 21 ; Jamoo , Jan . 24 j Lahore , Jan . 275 Stiharunpore , Jan . 28 ; Paneeput , Jan . 28 ; Agra , Jan . 29 ; Gwalior , Feb . 3 ; Agra , Feb . . 5 ; Ajmere , Feb . 7 ; Jeypore , Feb . 11 ; Bareilly , Feb . 13 ; Lucknow , Feb . 29 ; Allahabad , Feb . 29 ; Jubbulpore , Maich 2 ;

Kudwah , March 7 j Indore , March 9 ; Kundwah , March ir ; Ellora , March 12 ; Dowlutabad , March 14 ; Bombay , March 15 ; Poona , March lg ; and Sattara , March 19 . The "Serapis " left on Sunday , and the " Osborne " will shortly follow . The following

description of the " Serapis " may interest some of our readers . The " Serapis" is now ready for sea , the Prince ' s apartments having been finished . The Royal furniture is all of unpolished English oak , and the sofas , chairs , tables , & c , are covered with brown morocco leather stamped with the

Prince s arms and initials , the tables having a broad band of gold , the design being the rose , shamrock , and thistle , and the three feathers in each corner . The saloon is white , with pale blue and gold , and medallions of the Indian troop-ship ' s crest , the sides are ornamented b y

eight pier-glasses , the Brussels carpet is of Persian pattern , and the table cloths Indian . The windows are shaded by dark green silk blinds and lace curtains . The Prince has a double set of private apartments , on one side of the vessel for the outward , and on the other for the

homeward voyage . Sixty guests can be accommodated at the principal dining table , but a smaller one for 24 persons will be generally used . The " Serapis " has been painted white , while round her runs a gold moulding , edged each side with a blue ribbon . Owing to the superior speed of

the " Serapis the Flying Squadron will meet her at Bombay instead of Aden . We are further told that their Royal Highnesses the Prince and Princess of Wales , with Princes Albert Victor and George , and Princesses Louise Victoria and Maud , attended by Miss Knollys , Lieutenant

Colonel Teesdale , Mr . Francis Knollys , Mr . Holzmann , and the Rev . J . N . Dalton , arrived at Sandringham on Friday evening from London . Their Royal Highnesses will probably remain at Sandringham till the Prince ' s departure for

India . We shall continue to keep the Craft informed of our Royal Grand Master ' s movements , as in his visit to India he goes accompanied by the "hearty good wishes" of our entire brotherhood .

The " Month " And Freemasonry.

THE " MONTH " AND FREEMASONRY .

The "Month and Catholic Review , " as it terms itself , is a monthly periodical of some literary pretensions , belonging to the Roman Catholic communion . The number for September besides some very able and interesting articles in themselves , contains one on Freemasonry ,

' •' communicated , as the editor takes pains to point out . It seems that the writer is an Ani'li . can-Ritualist , that the article itself" has been refused insertion in more than one Protestant or . gan of influence , " on account , as the editor naively adds , " we may fairly presume , of its

candid witness about the tendency of Freemasonry . " We confess that we feel some astonishment that ouv " confrere " did not see at once that some other reason might be alleged for the rejection of this high-spiced article . We fancythat the cause is not far to seek , namely , its

worthlessness as a fair treatment of a remarkable subject , its obvious unreliability as a statement of facts , and , above all , its intense weakness of argument from first to last . We think also that if we were Roman Catholics we should prefer to fight under our own banners , and not

adopt that very piebald one , under which some few of our modern ritualists are content to fig ht to-day . We believe , however , that as regards Freemasonry the " Catholic School , " as it calls itself , in the Church of England is greatly divided , and we therefore . henceforth shall not

treat such utterances as the utterances of a party , but only of individuals . The present attack on Freemasonry is a very weak and incoherent one , Cribbing the idea from a Roman Catholic Abbe , the writer declares . that Masonic signs and symbols are Gnostic , and that Freemasonry and

Gnosticism have joined hands . Begging the writer ' s pardon , a greater piece of nonsense never was put forth ; a more hopeless betrayal of ignorance of historical accuracy never was made . Freemasonry has about as much to do with the Gnostics as the writer of the article has to do

with Druidism , or any other ism . It is simply a piece of Roman Catholic " chaff , " which we wonder at a grave Anglican taking up , though , as Horace Walpole once wittily observed to some Roman Catholic friends who refused meat on a "jour maigre , " " you eat nothing , but you

swallow everything . So at this moment , some of our young Ritual-Catholic friends have a very capacious swallow for all that appertains to Romish attacks on Freemasonry . Though why we know not , and cannot for the life of us understand . Among other objections the writer

makes is that Christianity is ignored , and that it is " un-Masonic" to use our Saviour ' s name . The fact is that many Chaplains do just the contrary , and there is nothing in our "formularies" to prevent or forbid the use of a Christian prayer , It is true that since 1813 the

general rule has been to make our prayers Theistic , on the principle of the Lord ' s Prayer , and as best according with the universality of our Order . But this argument , it appears to us , though good , no doubt , for a Christian place of worship , is out of court in a Freemasons' lodge ,

and if the objector is consistent to his own princip les he must object to the use of the Lord ' s Prayer altogether . It is , to our own mind , perfectly plain that the position of the Chaplain iii Freemasonry is very easy and simple , and that he is perfectly consistent , and doing his duty ,

when he offers up a prayer in which all believers in God can join , alike for the promotion of a social brotherhood and the practice of humanitarian charity , The writer says Freemasons never use the New Testament in lodges . He is

quite in error . In a good provincial lodge which we know well the 13 th chapter of the ist Ep istle to the Corinthians is read regularly before business , with unanimous approval , both of Christian and Hebrew brethren . This writer ,

who signs " Joabert M ., " need not be inanyappri ! - hension of Freemasons , though he says , pag 101 , " unless before the month come tound I be burked at a railway station , or throttled in a crowd by one of the social brethren sworn to vengeance on his way home from a Grand Lodge dinner at Freemasons' Tavern . " After this we

may have some doubt of his " sanity , at any rate , we can have none of his utter incompetency to discuss a very deep question , though he

“The Freemason: 1875-10-02, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_02101875/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Royal Arch. Article 1
Scotland. Article 1
FREEMASONRY IN THE ISLE OF MAN. Article 2
EARLY GRAND ENCAMPMENT, SCOTLAND. Article 2
AN ORATION Article 2
Reviews. Article 3
PUBLIC HEALTH CONGRESS AT BRUSSELS. Article 3
Multum in Parbo; or Masonic Queries. Article 4
Masonic and Genaral Tiding. Article 4
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 5
Obituary. Article 5
Untitled Article 6
TO OUR READERS. Article 6
TO ADVERTISERS. Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
REMITTANCES RECEIVED. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S VISIT TO INDIA. Article 6
THE " MONTH " AND FREEMASONRY. Article 6
ARCHÆOLOGICAL PROGRESS. Article 7
PLAGIARISM. Article 7
THE ILLUSIONS OF LIFE. Article 7
OLD MASONIC APRON. Article 8
Original Correspondence. Article 8
OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER AT SHEFFIELD. Article 9
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 9
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN GLASGOW AND VICINITY. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN EDINBURGH AND VICINITY. Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar00600

NOTICE .

Many Bomplaints having been received of the difficulty experienced in procuring the Freemason in the West-end , the publisher begs lo append the following list , being a selected few cf the appointed agents : — Black , II . T ., 47 , Great Queen-street .

Jordan , G . W ., 1 ( 19 , Strand . Kirby and Knucan , 190 , Oxford-street . Nash and Teuten , Savile Place , Conduit-street . Phillips , D ., 67 , Great Portland-street . Utting , Wm ., 2 , Palsgrave-place , Strand , And at W . H . Smith and Son ' s bookstalls .

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen page weekly newspaper , price 2 d . It is published every Friday morning , and contains the most important anil useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Annual subscription in

the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / . Brethren 111 foreign parts , wishing to have this newspaper sent them regularly from ths office of publication , should , in sending their remittances , add te the 2 d . per week the postage on 2 oz . newspapers .

To Advertisers.

TO ADVERTISERS .

The Freemason has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . For terms , position , & c ., apply to GEORGE KENNING , 198 , Fleet-st .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

AU Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended for insertion in the Number of the following Saturday , must reach the Office not later than 12 o ' clock on Wednesday morning . Careful attention will be paid to all MSS . entrusted to

the Editor , but he cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by slampcil directed covers . If " Provincial " wHI send his name to the Editor at the office of "The Freemason , " in confidence , his communication can appear ; if not , not .

The following stand over : —Bro . Tudoi s interesting letter ; statement of accounts , Supreme Council ; Lodge of Lights , Warrington ; Public School , Kilwinning . P . G . L . Cheshire .

Remittances Received.

REMITTANCES RECEIVED .

£ s . d . Bones , W . E ,, Queensland ( P . O . O . ) 1 7 6 Dumbrille , John , Canada ( P . O . O . ) 090 Laurie , G ., Constantinople ( P . O . O . ) 093

Loche , H . 11 ., Calcutta ( Draft ) 200 Marshall , W ., Baimsdalc ( P . O . O . ) 022 Phillips , C . IL , Trinidad ( P . O . O . ) 012 6 Robinson , H ., New Zealand ( Cash ) o 10 o Watkins , James , Hamilton ( P . O . O . ) o 12 o Wctherill , H ., Constantinople ( P . O . O . ) 200

Ar00608

The Freemason , SATURDAY , OCT . 2 , 1875 .

Our Royal Grand Master's Visit To India.

OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S VISIT TO INDIA .

Much interest is felt in the Craft about the movements of our Royal and Illustrious Brother , and so we give the following particulars of his movements , which we understand are correct : — " According to present arrangements , His Royal Hig hness will leave London on the 12 th of

Oi'tober . via Dover and Calais , for Paris , where he will arrive on the 1 . 3 th . He will leave that ik \ on thi- same day , and travel by rail to Venice , win re he will arrive on the i ( 5 th . He will then i-nibaik on board his yacht , the "Osborne , "

which will convey him on board the " Serapis . " This vessel , owing to her draught , will anchor at a distance of about seven miles from that city . It is probable that the " Serapis " will proceed thence to Corfu , but on her doing so or not depends whether the Prince will remain two days

Our Royal Grand Master's Visit To India.

or thirty-six hours only at Athens , where he will pay a visit to his brother-in-law , King George of Greece . Leaving Athens , the vessel will make her way to Pert Said , and on arriving at Ismailia His Royal Highness will disembark and visit Cairo and other places in the neighbourhood , the

" Serapis going on to Suez , her arrival at which port will be telegraphed to the Royal party , who will then hasten on by rail to rejoin her . Aden will be the last place of call , and , after a few hours' stay the " Serapis " will go on to Bombay , where she is due on the Sth of November . The

Prince will remain about eight or nine days in the Bombay Presidency , at the end of which time he will embark on board the "Serapis" for Calicut , where he will land and pay a visit to Mysore . Thence he will proceed by water to Tuticorin , on leaving which place the " Serapis "

will make direct for Colombo , where she will stay ten days . She will next go on to Trincomalee , the chief naval port of Ceylon , to coal , and will then proceed to Calcutta , where the Prince is due a day or two before Christmas . His Royal Highness will then visit Delhi , Lucknow , and other

places of interest , and will gradually work his way back to Bombay , where he is expected on the i / th of March . He will at once embark in the " Serapis , " and return by the same route as that taken on the outward trip , the proposed voyage round the Cape having been given up .

His Royal Highness will probably reach this country about the 7 th or Sth of April . Canon Duckwork will be Chaplain in attendance on His Royal Highness during his Eastern visit . The following is understood to be the route which the Prince will pursue on landing in India : —Leave

Aden for Bombay , Nov . 2 ; visit Bombay , Nov . 8 ; visit Beypoor , Nov . 23 ; Bangalore , Dec . 2 ; Madras , Dec . 6 j Tuticorin , Dec . 8 ; Colombo , Dec . 11 ; Trincomalee , jDec . 17 ; Calcutta , Dec . 23 ; Barrackur , Jan . 4 ; Benares , fan . 4 ; Lucknow , Jan . 6 ; Cawnpore , Jan . 10 ; Delhi , Jan .

11 ; Umritsur , Jan . 20 ; Lahore , Jan . 21 ; Jamoo , Jan . 24 j Lahore , Jan . 275 Stiharunpore , Jan . 28 ; Paneeput , Jan . 28 ; Agra , Jan . 29 ; Gwalior , Feb . 3 ; Agra , Feb . . 5 ; Ajmere , Feb . 7 ; Jeypore , Feb . 11 ; Bareilly , Feb . 13 ; Lucknow , Feb . 29 ; Allahabad , Feb . 29 ; Jubbulpore , Maich 2 ;

Kudwah , March 7 j Indore , March 9 ; Kundwah , March ir ; Ellora , March 12 ; Dowlutabad , March 14 ; Bombay , March 15 ; Poona , March lg ; and Sattara , March 19 . The "Serapis " left on Sunday , and the " Osborne " will shortly follow . The following

description of the " Serapis " may interest some of our readers . The " Serapis" is now ready for sea , the Prince ' s apartments having been finished . The Royal furniture is all of unpolished English oak , and the sofas , chairs , tables , & c , are covered with brown morocco leather stamped with the

Prince s arms and initials , the tables having a broad band of gold , the design being the rose , shamrock , and thistle , and the three feathers in each corner . The saloon is white , with pale blue and gold , and medallions of the Indian troop-ship ' s crest , the sides are ornamented b y

eight pier-glasses , the Brussels carpet is of Persian pattern , and the table cloths Indian . The windows are shaded by dark green silk blinds and lace curtains . The Prince has a double set of private apartments , on one side of the vessel for the outward , and on the other for the

homeward voyage . Sixty guests can be accommodated at the principal dining table , but a smaller one for 24 persons will be generally used . The " Serapis " has been painted white , while round her runs a gold moulding , edged each side with a blue ribbon . Owing to the superior speed of

the " Serapis the Flying Squadron will meet her at Bombay instead of Aden . We are further told that their Royal Highnesses the Prince and Princess of Wales , with Princes Albert Victor and George , and Princesses Louise Victoria and Maud , attended by Miss Knollys , Lieutenant

Colonel Teesdale , Mr . Francis Knollys , Mr . Holzmann , and the Rev . J . N . Dalton , arrived at Sandringham on Friday evening from London . Their Royal Highnesses will probably remain at Sandringham till the Prince ' s departure for

India . We shall continue to keep the Craft informed of our Royal Grand Master ' s movements , as in his visit to India he goes accompanied by the "hearty good wishes" of our entire brotherhood .

The " Month " And Freemasonry.

THE " MONTH " AND FREEMASONRY .

The "Month and Catholic Review , " as it terms itself , is a monthly periodical of some literary pretensions , belonging to the Roman Catholic communion . The number for September besides some very able and interesting articles in themselves , contains one on Freemasonry ,

' •' communicated , as the editor takes pains to point out . It seems that the writer is an Ani'li . can-Ritualist , that the article itself" has been refused insertion in more than one Protestant or . gan of influence , " on account , as the editor naively adds , " we may fairly presume , of its

candid witness about the tendency of Freemasonry . " We confess that we feel some astonishment that ouv " confrere " did not see at once that some other reason might be alleged for the rejection of this high-spiced article . We fancythat the cause is not far to seek , namely , its

worthlessness as a fair treatment of a remarkable subject , its obvious unreliability as a statement of facts , and , above all , its intense weakness of argument from first to last . We think also that if we were Roman Catholics we should prefer to fight under our own banners , and not

adopt that very piebald one , under which some few of our modern ritualists are content to fig ht to-day . We believe , however , that as regards Freemasonry the " Catholic School , " as it calls itself , in the Church of England is greatly divided , and we therefore . henceforth shall not

treat such utterances as the utterances of a party , but only of individuals . The present attack on Freemasonry is a very weak and incoherent one , Cribbing the idea from a Roman Catholic Abbe , the writer declares . that Masonic signs and symbols are Gnostic , and that Freemasonry and

Gnosticism have joined hands . Begging the writer ' s pardon , a greater piece of nonsense never was put forth ; a more hopeless betrayal of ignorance of historical accuracy never was made . Freemasonry has about as much to do with the Gnostics as the writer of the article has to do

with Druidism , or any other ism . It is simply a piece of Roman Catholic " chaff , " which we wonder at a grave Anglican taking up , though , as Horace Walpole once wittily observed to some Roman Catholic friends who refused meat on a "jour maigre , " " you eat nothing , but you

swallow everything . So at this moment , some of our young Ritual-Catholic friends have a very capacious swallow for all that appertains to Romish attacks on Freemasonry . Though why we know not , and cannot for the life of us understand . Among other objections the writer

makes is that Christianity is ignored , and that it is " un-Masonic" to use our Saviour ' s name . The fact is that many Chaplains do just the contrary , and there is nothing in our "formularies" to prevent or forbid the use of a Christian prayer , It is true that since 1813 the

general rule has been to make our prayers Theistic , on the principle of the Lord ' s Prayer , and as best according with the universality of our Order . But this argument , it appears to us , though good , no doubt , for a Christian place of worship , is out of court in a Freemasons' lodge ,

and if the objector is consistent to his own princip les he must object to the use of the Lord ' s Prayer altogether . It is , to our own mind , perfectly plain that the position of the Chaplain iii Freemasonry is very easy and simple , and that he is perfectly consistent , and doing his duty ,

when he offers up a prayer in which all believers in God can join , alike for the promotion of a social brotherhood and the practice of humanitarian charity , The writer says Freemasons never use the New Testament in lodges . He is

quite in error . In a good provincial lodge which we know well the 13 th chapter of the ist Ep istle to the Corinthians is read regularly before business , with unanimous approval , both of Christian and Hebrew brethren . This writer ,

who signs " Joabert M ., " need not be inanyappri ! - hension of Freemasons , though he says , pag 101 , " unless before the month come tound I be burked at a railway station , or throttled in a crowd by one of the social brethren sworn to vengeance on his way home from a Grand Lodge dinner at Freemasons' Tavern . " After this we

may have some doubt of his " sanity , at any rate , we can have none of his utter incompetency to discuss a very deep question , though he

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