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Article Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Article Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Article Untitled Page 1 of 1 Article THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW YEAR. Page 1 of 2 Article THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW YEAR. Page 1 of 2 →
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Ar01308
¦ ¦ NOTICE . The Subscription lo T HE FREEMASON is now ios . per annum , post-free , payable m advance . Vol . I ., bound in cloth 4 s - 6 d . Vol . II ., ditto 7 s . 6 d . Vol . 3 III ., IV ., and V . ... ' each 15 s . od . Reading Cases to hold 5 ! numbers ... 2 s . Od . Ditto ditto 4 do . ... is . Od . United States of America . THE FREEMASON is delivered free in any part of the United States for 12 s . per annum , payable in advance . The Freemason is published on Saturday Mornings in time for the early trains . The price of the Freemason is Twopence per week ; annual subscription , ios . ( payable in advance . ) All communications , letters , & c , to be addressed to the Editor , 198 , Fleet-street , E . C . The Editorwill pay careful attention to all MSS . entrusted to him , but cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by postage stamps .
Ad01302
' r gusto to florresponknts . W . H . T . —Wc cannot at present g ive the information you require . An obituary notice has been received , but being without address of sender , cannot be inserted . REMITTANCES RECEIVED . W . E . SCRIVKN ( II . M . S . Triumph , Gibraltar ) , 12 s . 21 I .
Ar01309
NOTICE . All Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended / or insertion in the Number of the following Saturday , must reach the Office not later than 6 o ' clock on Wednesday evening .
Ad01303
GOOD DINNERS , GOOD WINES , AND MODERATE CHARGES , AT The Freemasons' Tavern , Great Queen-street , W . C . Apply to C . E . FRANCATELLI .
Ad01304
THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY , FROM ITS ORIGIN TO THE PRESENT DAY . Drawn from the best sources and the most recent investigations . BY J . G . FINDEL , ' Second Edition , Revised , and Preface written by Bro . D . MURRAY LYON . Oiie Vol ., 800 pages 8 vo ., with an Index . Cloth gilt . Price , 10 s . Oil . " This volume is the history of Masonry par excellence livery interested person may regard it , therefore , as the present text-book on the subject . "—Manchester Guardian " The author seems to have fairly exhausted the subject . "—The Athenaeum . " Of its value to Freemasons , as a detailed history of their Brotherhood , it is not possible to speak too highly . " — Pullic Opinion . Bro . GEORGE KENNING , JO S , FLEET STREET , LONDON , E . C .
Ad01305
Second Edition , Now Ready , 1 / 6 . A MASONIC MUSICAL SERVICE . In tlie key of C . for A ., T ., T „ B . Opening and Closing Odes . Oait Ccitmonics . Royal Arch Ceremony . Consecration Ceremony . Grace before and alter Meat . COMPOSED liV DR . , | . C . P . AKER , NO . 2 . | i . I ox DON . —Geo . Kenning , IIJU , Ficcl-itiect ; and 2 , 3 , and 4 , Little Biitain . ,, ] i . Spencer , 26 , Great Oumi- ; -trcct . I . IVKIII ' .. —Gen . Ruining , 2 , Monument-place . MANCIIKSTKU . — I ' .. Henry ! v Co ., : y , Deansgate . DUIII . IN . —C . Hedge-long , 2 ( 1 , Giiiftou-Micct GI . ASOOW . —Geo . Kenning , t ^ :,, Argjle-strcct . KniN'nuiKiii . —Geo . Kenning , 67 , I lauoivr-sti ' cet .
Ad01306
Pi ice ?/ - , post-free */ i . THE RED CROSS SONG , Words by Uro . R . \ V . Little . Music bv Hio . II . Parker . ( VI ICE . —intf , FLEET-STREET . MADAME TUSSAUD'S EXHIBITION 1 SAKKR STREET . K iv added , PORTRAIT MODELS of the SHAH of PERSIA , Marshal MacMahon , M . Thiers , and the late Charles Dickens . Theoiiginal autograph and testimonial , iviitten and pieseuied by the Shah to Messrs . Tus ' , aud , July 3 , 1873 , is exhibited . Adinis : i n is . Children 1111 ' cr ten , 01 . Extra Rooms , Gd . Open . Irom ten a . m . till ten p . m .
Ad01307
NOW READY , Price 2 s . 6 d . ; Post Free , 2 s . 8 d . Second Edition , Revised and Enlarged A FULL COLOURED ILLUSTRATED BOOK OF MASONIC CLOTHING AND JEWELS , From Master Mason to the 30 th Degree ( inclusive ) . Office , 198 , Fleet-street ..
Ad01310
SECOND EDITION . —NOW READY . Price One Shilling , Post-free , Revised and Enlarged . Freemasonry in Relation to Civil Authority and the Family Circle , ' BY BRO . CHALMERS I . PATON . ( Past Master , No . 303 , England . ) '"pHIS work is a perfect handbook of the principles of Freemasonry , founded on the Ancient Charges and Symbols , and will be found to be eminently practical and useful in the vindication and support of the Order . Office , 198 , Fleet-street .
Ad01311
Now Ready Post F ' rec 1 / 7 . THE MARK MASONS' SONG , Dedicated by permission to the Right Hon . the Earl Percy , M . P ., 30 ° , Rig ht Worshipful Provincial Grand Master of Freemasons for Northumberland Most Worshipful Grand Mark Master Mason of England . Words by Bro . T . Burdett Yeoman , Original Mark Lodge No . 1 ., composed by Bro . Henry Parker , Original Mark Lodge No . 1 . Office , iy 8 , Flect-strcct .
Ar01312
The Freemason , SATURDAY , J ANUARY 3 , 1874 .
The Old Year And The New Year.
THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW YEAR .
With the New Year , we beg most heartily and fraternally to offer our sincere good wishes to all our kind patrons , and friends , and readers . May 1874 be to them all a year of personal
happiness , and Masonic progress , and all that this world of ours counts best and pleasantest , be their lot , and that of all near and dear to them , in the as yet unrolled calendar of the new year .
And a new year , full as it is of pleasant sympathies and hopeful emotions , seems ever also to speak to us with a clear and prevailing message of solemnity and pathos . For a new year
reminds us of the old , of that period of our being which , whether in private relationships or public pursuits , is indissolnbly bound up with all our individual hopes and fears , and grievances and
struggles , and happiness , and sorrow . None of us , if we are wise , will allow a new year to succeed the old , or take part in the customary gaieties of the season , without , as it
were , a short and peaceful looking back on the hours and scenes which have slipped away , or the friends who have left us , and the joys which are no more , on the changes which have affected
our home circles , or our public relations , on the voidwhichadvancing timehas caston many circles and on the missing links which no longer make up our once united brotherhood of love . Indeed
it is impossible at the close of an old , or the opening of a new year , not to be sensibly impressed with the alterations , which even twelve short months have wrought for us and ours .
Those who were with us for instance , this time , twelvemonth , are with us no longer . Those who were standing at our sides , in all their freshness and fn-ice , in all their fulness of old , in all
the tenderness ol young affection , no longer adorn our humble hearth , or join the gladness of this festive time . On some households amontrst us . sorrow and
sadness have frllen in their darkening clouds , and have thrown both dimness and despondency , as well over tlie cheer ) ' associations of youth as over the iiiifaded euenyy of ripened ) ears .
The Old Year And The New Year.
So that , say what we will , the advent of a new year cannot be to any of us a subject of unmixed rejoicing , neither would it be well or wise in us , to let go these more sober thoughts , which the
lapse of time ever has , and ever must have for the considerate and the true hearted , and the reflecting . There is a voice speaking to us , from the grave of the old year , to which we may
all well listen , a voice ofjkindness and tenderness , and gentle recollection , and softening sympathy , which we should not drown in the loud gaiety of the world , or pass by unnoticed in the revelry of the hour .
But we did not intend , and we do not propose to preach a sermon , and therefore we will now proceed in our privileged Masonic greeting to our readers , with this closing 1873 , and with this
commencing 1874 . During the last twelve months , though oar English Freemasonry has gone on the even
and peaceful tenour of its way , under our excellent Grand Master , we have had to deplore the . loss of our old and time-honoured chief , Lord Zetland .
His death had been preceded during tho year that has vanished , by the death of a worthy and valued brother , his relative Bro . Frederick Dundas , and as the seasons came and went , the
news of Lord Zetland ' s decease fell upon the Craft , as a great shock . It was true indeed , that he died full of years and honours , that he passed away peacefully and calmly , in full possession
of his faculties to the last , amid the regrets of all who knew , and of many who honoured him . But we of this English Craft , who had known him so long and well , who had seen him preside
so often , so impartially and courteously over our long debates , we who had had good reason to appreciate his deep respect for law , and
his unfailing sense of justice , we felt that , in his loss , ours was a void which could not easily bs filled up .
Indeed it is almost impossible to estimate-yet r the debt of gratitude we owe , as an Order , to our late Iamemted Grand Master . While in other countries and under other
auspices , Fremasonry has been sometimes marked neither by a judicious administration nor decorous acts , while we in England could not but regret , that other ruling bodies did not adopt and imitate
our simple laws of purely Masonic aim and ; organization , we in ' this good land of ours , were ' enjoying , under Lord Zetland ' s firm yet temperate sway , the fullest measure both of material
prosperity and peaceful progress . Kept happily apart and at a distance / in our Craft system , and our lodge gatherings , from the passing polemics , and political controversies of
the hour , during Lord Zetland ' s " regime , " while our lodges have increased in a most remarkable ratio , ( a hundred per cent , ) we liave ? also witnessed the rapid growth of the warm and
unselfish principles and practices amongst us , of ready benevolence and fraternal charity . No nobler crown to his long Masonic : life , no happier testimony to the
progressive and expansive sympathies of Masonicbenevolence could be found , than the fact , that the very year which witnessed the removal of our old Grand Master from amongst us , witnessed also the donation and collection of
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Ar01308
¦ ¦ NOTICE . The Subscription lo T HE FREEMASON is now ios . per annum , post-free , payable m advance . Vol . I ., bound in cloth 4 s - 6 d . Vol . II ., ditto 7 s . 6 d . Vol . 3 III ., IV ., and V . ... ' each 15 s . od . Reading Cases to hold 5 ! numbers ... 2 s . Od . Ditto ditto 4 do . ... is . Od . United States of America . THE FREEMASON is delivered free in any part of the United States for 12 s . per annum , payable in advance . The Freemason is published on Saturday Mornings in time for the early trains . The price of the Freemason is Twopence per week ; annual subscription , ios . ( payable in advance . ) All communications , letters , & c , to be addressed to the Editor , 198 , Fleet-street , E . C . The Editorwill pay careful attention to all MSS . entrusted to him , but cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied by postage stamps .
Ad01302
' r gusto to florresponknts . W . H . T . —Wc cannot at present g ive the information you require . An obituary notice has been received , but being without address of sender , cannot be inserted . REMITTANCES RECEIVED . W . E . SCRIVKN ( II . M . S . Triumph , Gibraltar ) , 12 s . 21 I .
Ar01309
NOTICE . All Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended / or insertion in the Number of the following Saturday , must reach the Office not later than 6 o ' clock on Wednesday evening .
Ad01303
GOOD DINNERS , GOOD WINES , AND MODERATE CHARGES , AT The Freemasons' Tavern , Great Queen-street , W . C . Apply to C . E . FRANCATELLI .
Ad01304
THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY , FROM ITS ORIGIN TO THE PRESENT DAY . Drawn from the best sources and the most recent investigations . BY J . G . FINDEL , ' Second Edition , Revised , and Preface written by Bro . D . MURRAY LYON . Oiie Vol ., 800 pages 8 vo ., with an Index . Cloth gilt . Price , 10 s . Oil . " This volume is the history of Masonry par excellence livery interested person may regard it , therefore , as the present text-book on the subject . "—Manchester Guardian " The author seems to have fairly exhausted the subject . "—The Athenaeum . " Of its value to Freemasons , as a detailed history of their Brotherhood , it is not possible to speak too highly . " — Pullic Opinion . Bro . GEORGE KENNING , JO S , FLEET STREET , LONDON , E . C .
Ad01305
Second Edition , Now Ready , 1 / 6 . A MASONIC MUSICAL SERVICE . In tlie key of C . for A ., T ., T „ B . Opening and Closing Odes . Oait Ccitmonics . Royal Arch Ceremony . Consecration Ceremony . Grace before and alter Meat . COMPOSED liV DR . , | . C . P . AKER , NO . 2 . | i . I ox DON . —Geo . Kenning , IIJU , Ficcl-itiect ; and 2 , 3 , and 4 , Little Biitain . ,, ] i . Spencer , 26 , Great Oumi- ; -trcct . I . IVKIII ' .. —Gen . Ruining , 2 , Monument-place . MANCIIKSTKU . — I ' .. Henry ! v Co ., : y , Deansgate . DUIII . IN . —C . Hedge-long , 2 ( 1 , Giiiftou-Micct GI . ASOOW . —Geo . Kenning , t ^ :,, Argjle-strcct . KniN'nuiKiii . —Geo . Kenning , 67 , I lauoivr-sti ' cet .
Ad01306
Pi ice ?/ - , post-free */ i . THE RED CROSS SONG , Words by Uro . R . \ V . Little . Music bv Hio . II . Parker . ( VI ICE . —intf , FLEET-STREET . MADAME TUSSAUD'S EXHIBITION 1 SAKKR STREET . K iv added , PORTRAIT MODELS of the SHAH of PERSIA , Marshal MacMahon , M . Thiers , and the late Charles Dickens . Theoiiginal autograph and testimonial , iviitten and pieseuied by the Shah to Messrs . Tus ' , aud , July 3 , 1873 , is exhibited . Adinis : i n is . Children 1111 ' cr ten , 01 . Extra Rooms , Gd . Open . Irom ten a . m . till ten p . m .
Ad01307
NOW READY , Price 2 s . 6 d . ; Post Free , 2 s . 8 d . Second Edition , Revised and Enlarged A FULL COLOURED ILLUSTRATED BOOK OF MASONIC CLOTHING AND JEWELS , From Master Mason to the 30 th Degree ( inclusive ) . Office , 198 , Fleet-street ..
Ad01310
SECOND EDITION . —NOW READY . Price One Shilling , Post-free , Revised and Enlarged . Freemasonry in Relation to Civil Authority and the Family Circle , ' BY BRO . CHALMERS I . PATON . ( Past Master , No . 303 , England . ) '"pHIS work is a perfect handbook of the principles of Freemasonry , founded on the Ancient Charges and Symbols , and will be found to be eminently practical and useful in the vindication and support of the Order . Office , 198 , Fleet-street .
Ad01311
Now Ready Post F ' rec 1 / 7 . THE MARK MASONS' SONG , Dedicated by permission to the Right Hon . the Earl Percy , M . P ., 30 ° , Rig ht Worshipful Provincial Grand Master of Freemasons for Northumberland Most Worshipful Grand Mark Master Mason of England . Words by Bro . T . Burdett Yeoman , Original Mark Lodge No . 1 ., composed by Bro . Henry Parker , Original Mark Lodge No . 1 . Office , iy 8 , Flect-strcct .
Ar01312
The Freemason , SATURDAY , J ANUARY 3 , 1874 .
The Old Year And The New Year.
THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW YEAR .
With the New Year , we beg most heartily and fraternally to offer our sincere good wishes to all our kind patrons , and friends , and readers . May 1874 be to them all a year of personal
happiness , and Masonic progress , and all that this world of ours counts best and pleasantest , be their lot , and that of all near and dear to them , in the as yet unrolled calendar of the new year .
And a new year , full as it is of pleasant sympathies and hopeful emotions , seems ever also to speak to us with a clear and prevailing message of solemnity and pathos . For a new year
reminds us of the old , of that period of our being which , whether in private relationships or public pursuits , is indissolnbly bound up with all our individual hopes and fears , and grievances and
struggles , and happiness , and sorrow . None of us , if we are wise , will allow a new year to succeed the old , or take part in the customary gaieties of the season , without , as it
were , a short and peaceful looking back on the hours and scenes which have slipped away , or the friends who have left us , and the joys which are no more , on the changes which have affected
our home circles , or our public relations , on the voidwhichadvancing timehas caston many circles and on the missing links which no longer make up our once united brotherhood of love . Indeed
it is impossible at the close of an old , or the opening of a new year , not to be sensibly impressed with the alterations , which even twelve short months have wrought for us and ours .
Those who were with us for instance , this time , twelvemonth , are with us no longer . Those who were standing at our sides , in all their freshness and fn-ice , in all their fulness of old , in all
the tenderness ol young affection , no longer adorn our humble hearth , or join the gladness of this festive time . On some households amontrst us . sorrow and
sadness have frllen in their darkening clouds , and have thrown both dimness and despondency , as well over tlie cheer ) ' associations of youth as over the iiiifaded euenyy of ripened ) ears .
The Old Year And The New Year.
So that , say what we will , the advent of a new year cannot be to any of us a subject of unmixed rejoicing , neither would it be well or wise in us , to let go these more sober thoughts , which the
lapse of time ever has , and ever must have for the considerate and the true hearted , and the reflecting . There is a voice speaking to us , from the grave of the old year , to which we may
all well listen , a voice ofjkindness and tenderness , and gentle recollection , and softening sympathy , which we should not drown in the loud gaiety of the world , or pass by unnoticed in the revelry of the hour .
But we did not intend , and we do not propose to preach a sermon , and therefore we will now proceed in our privileged Masonic greeting to our readers , with this closing 1873 , and with this
commencing 1874 . During the last twelve months , though oar English Freemasonry has gone on the even
and peaceful tenour of its way , under our excellent Grand Master , we have had to deplore the . loss of our old and time-honoured chief , Lord Zetland .
His death had been preceded during tho year that has vanished , by the death of a worthy and valued brother , his relative Bro . Frederick Dundas , and as the seasons came and went , the
news of Lord Zetland ' s decease fell upon the Craft , as a great shock . It was true indeed , that he died full of years and honours , that he passed away peacefully and calmly , in full possession
of his faculties to the last , amid the regrets of all who knew , and of many who honoured him . But we of this English Craft , who had known him so long and well , who had seen him preside
so often , so impartially and courteously over our long debates , we who had had good reason to appreciate his deep respect for law , and
his unfailing sense of justice , we felt that , in his loss , ours was a void which could not easily bs filled up .
Indeed it is almost impossible to estimate-yet r the debt of gratitude we owe , as an Order , to our late Iamemted Grand Master . While in other countries and under other
auspices , Fremasonry has been sometimes marked neither by a judicious administration nor decorous acts , while we in England could not but regret , that other ruling bodies did not adopt and imitate
our simple laws of purely Masonic aim and ; organization , we in ' this good land of ours , were ' enjoying , under Lord Zetland ' s firm yet temperate sway , the fullest measure both of material
prosperity and peaceful progress . Kept happily apart and at a distance / in our Craft system , and our lodge gatherings , from the passing polemics , and political controversies of
the hour , during Lord Zetland ' s " regime , " while our lodges have increased in a most remarkable ratio , ( a hundred per cent , ) we liave ? also witnessed the rapid growth of the warm and
unselfish principles and practices amongst us , of ready benevolence and fraternal charity . No nobler crown to his long Masonic : life , no happier testimony to the
progressive and expansive sympathies of Masonicbenevolence could be found , than the fact , that the very year which witnessed the removal of our old Grand Master from amongst us , witnessed also the donation and collection of