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  • April 4, 1891
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  • AN ORATION.
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The Freemason, April 4, 1891: Page 11

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    Article AN ORATION. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article ST. MUNGO PRECEPTORY OF KNIGHTS OF MALTA. Page 1 of 1
    Article CYCLORAMA. OF JERUSALEM ON THE DAY OF THE CRUCIFIXION. Page 1 of 1
    Article CRYSTAL PALACE. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE THEATRES. Page 1 of 1
    Article Death. Page 1 of 1
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Page 11

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An Oration.

nd every g leam of comfort from his heart ? et them treat with contempt the conclusions of Mevvton , who esteemed the structure of the universe -o " comp lete a proof of the existence and Providence nf an Almighty , wise , and good Architect of Nature " that he " never pronounced the word God -without a

house : " Dl't be '' OURS to glory in the belief , in the thought , in the hope , in the power , and in the love of our own and our Nature ' s Guardian , God , feeling sure that a p lan must have a planner , a design a designer , and a world fearfully and wonderfully made must have had a maker who must rule that world .

He has made it , and thus vve conclude that as He has formed that world in wisdom , strength , and beautv , it is the truest progress to seek to do His will , and to feel that the true " Brotherhood of man " ( one of the stock phrases of the atheist ) , can only be founded on the Fatherhood- of God . Be it ours , brethren , whether vve

look to our present lot or oar future destiny , whether as Masons or men , to follow the precepts of the insp ired Prophet , " to do justly , to love mercy , and to walk humbly with our God , " and to echo with reverend and grateful hearts those words of the sweet Psalmist of Israel , the father

of our Grand Master Solomon , All Thy works praise Thee , O God , and Thy Saints give thanks unto Thee ; they shew the Glory of Thy kingdom and talk of Thy power ; that Thy power , Thy glory , and the mig htiness of Thy kingdom mi ght be known unto men , Thy kingdom is an everlasting kingdom , and Thy

dominion endurest throughout all ages . " And to the preacher's theoretical and empty progress let us say in well-known words on behalf of our united nations and our progressive race , the rulers vve honour are the people ' s choice—the laws vve reverence are our brave

fathers' legacy , the faith we follow teaches us to live in bonds of Charity with all mankind , and die with hope of bliss beyond the grave . Tell your " Progressists" this , and tell them , too , vve seek no change , and least of all such change as they would bring us .

St. Mungo Preceptory Of Knights Of Malta.

ST . MUNGO PRECEPTORY OF KNIGHTS OF MALTA .

This body , which was onl y founded about a year ago bv some fratres of the St . Mungo Priory of Knights Templar , has thus far had a most successful career . On Saturday , the 28 th ult ., a very interesting and enjoyable function vvas held in St . Mark ' s Hall , 213 , Buchanan-street , when Fratres Carruthers , Marshall ,

Richards , and Ruddock vvere dul y installed by the Venerable Preceptor , Frater Edward Macbean , assisted -b y Fratres D . R . Clark , M . A ., Captain . General ; John Foulds , Lieutenant-General ; W . S . Hunter , Chancellor ; and other officers . The ritual of this reli gious and Chivalric Order vvas rendered with

a precision and completeness that proclaim the energy and ability of those responsible for the rite , far surpassing anything hitherto attempted in Scotland . Five beautiful silk banners enhanced the appearance of the Chapter House , and elicited warm encomiums from the members , who congratulated Bro . James Marshall on

their production . The musical part of the service vvas under the direction of Frater Emile Berger , to whom the fratres , on the motion of the venerable Preceptor , accorded a presentation jewel in recognition of his continued kindness . Apologies for absence from several intending neophytes , and some routine business brought a very pleasant gathering to a conclusion .

Cyclorama. Of Jerusalem On The Day Of The Crucifixion.

CYCLORAMA . OF JERUSALEM ON THE DAY OF THE CRUCIFIXION .

Ihe subject of this Cyclorama , after the celebrated picture of Herr Bruno Piglhein , is closely associated with the present season , and the large number of visitors attracted by the splendid representation of the great event we are now about to commemorate clearl y TI ? h ° W the P llbl ' appreciate a genuine work of art . uetdiis

»> - 01 the picture have been carefully studied , < ncl ln the most vivid and realistic manner Oriental i'e and character are brought before the spectator . cr . H " Wlsh Hi - Priests , the Roman soldiers , the <> wds of common people , the group of women and fiples beneath the cross , the malefactors on either

¦ e ot the grand central figure of our Lord , must all seen to be fully apprec ' uted , as no description can ' justice to the marvellous reality with which the ms and surroundings of the first Good Friday are inter ' 1 T' riunter Bo > d S ives hlcid and _ _ v . tSUng - ectures at regular intervals during the day , ' ng evidentl y made himself thoroughly acouainted

m anv _ d . topo _ ra P hy OI ancient Jerusalem and the of ' cil 6 nt ° P lnioris of writers upon the actual site alont t ^' v " 6 exact route of the mourntul procession . ivef n Vla Crucls . other disputed points , he 1 ho ... " ^ " -considered reasons why the sites selected bv

inf 0 ' f - are P robab ' y correct . The lecture is full of event . t M a " d not the least interesting feature , at all Temnl , asons - is the description of King Solomon ' s "Pon its ' > th < J buildin g of Herod that now stands p * y a vi •' . We stron _ 1 y recommend the brethren to selv t 0 Y ork-street and see and hear for

them-Prtss Frer ) ? ? Wa , es > ' » o came to London vvith the Em-0 n VVedn . f _ nd J " _ l'ttr , returned to Sandringham hr : d . e ar . ; , / T- ' - ' * he same day the Duke of Cam-M . H ., is aU Ha " ' Where Bro ' Chr'stopher Sykes ,

Crystal Palace.

CRYSTAL PALACE .

The Great Triennial Handel Festival will be held at the Crystal Palace in June next . The " Messiah " and " Israel in Egypt" will , as on former occasions , be performed on the first and third days , while the middle day will be devoted to a selection from other sacred and secular works of the great composer . Some old

favourites will be given , such , for instance , as choruses and airs from " Acis and Galatea , " " Jep hthah , " "Samson , " "Solomon , " Ac . Among the numbers given for the first time will be a sonata for orchestra , air for tenor , and two choruses from the 95 th Psalm , overtures to " Semele " and " Giustino , " a charming minuet from " Berenice , " and a graceful bourree from the celebrated

Water Music . Mr . W . T . Best , of Liverpool , will play the Fourth Organ Concerto in F . The chorus and orchestra will number 4000 , while the solo music will be entrusted to such eminent artists as Mesdames Albani , Nordica , Macintyre , Marian McKenzie , Belle Cole , Messrs . Edward Lloyd , Barton McGuckin , Brereton , Bridson , and Santley , the great musical army being under the generalship of Mr . August Manns .

The Theatres.

THE THEATRES .

If at first you don t succeed try again has been practically carried out by Mr . H . Lee , who , after two failures at the Avenue , has a promise in Mr . Bronson Howard's comedy— "The Henrietta "—of some luck . On Saturday the audience received this play with warm approval on all sides . In this the author exposes the vice of gambling on the Stock Exchange . The scenes

are laid in New York . In America the comed y vvas received very favourably a few years ago . Whether the technicalities of Wall-street about " bulls and bears , " and the mysteries ot the telephone and the tape will be understood by a general audience is a question , but on Saturday everyone seemed to relish the vocabulary of stock operators . We take it that Mr . Howard had in his mind a well-known New York

millionaire financier when he wrote "The Henrietta , as the names of the chief character is good evidence to go by . The play , while it points a moral in its serious side , is well supplied with a number of comedy

scenes . Mr . Vanalstyne his two sons , the eldest is a partner in the stock broker ' s business and has his father ' s confidence , whilst the younger is looked upon by his parent as an idle scamp . But before the play ends the true character of each comes out and the

reverse is the case . 1 he elder son is proved to be a traitor to not onl y his father but a woman as well , and is so mean that he lays upon his younger brother his own delinquencies of honour . The revelation of his treachery is made known when he seeks to ruin his father by secretly " bearing " the market regarding

a mine called the Henrietta , ot vvhich his father is the possessor , in order that he may oust old Vanalstyne from his place as head of the Stock Exchange . ' The father having gone on a yachting trip , the son seizes the opportunity to bring his father ' s firm to bankruptcy . Here is the great scene of the play . The shares of

the Henrietta are steadily going down and a panic seems unavoidable , at the moment old Vanalstyne returns unexpectedly and discovers the traitor to be his own son , in whom he had trusted . Vanalstyne , jun ., having staked all is desperate , and whilst tbe tape instrument is clicking the rise in the shares owing

to the younger son having saved the firm , he falls out of his chair lifeless . This gruesome scene of the tick , tick of the telegraph in the presence of the corpse brings down the curtain upon a situation which caused deep applause amongst all sections of those in the auditorium . The play might well end at this—the third

act—for it is virtually over . A bye-play runs through the piece about Henrietta being a ballet girl , and the name of a filly , and thus causing unpleasantness between a pair of lovers . The acting is fairly good all round . standing out from the rest is the excellent representation of Mr . W . H . Vernon and Mr . Lewis Waller as Messrs . Vanalstyne , father and son . Messrs .

J . L . Shine and Yorke Stephens are not so well suited to their parts . Miss Fanny Brough , as usual , made quite a hit in a low comedy part , but Miss Florence West , Miss Marion Lea , and Miss M . Jocelyn scarcely helped the play . Mr . Bronson Howard received a vociferous call , vvhich he wisely responded to by merely coming forward and making a grateful bow without the inevitable speech .

* * * Bro . Edward Terry on Easter Monday revived one of his great successes , " The Rocket , " which Mr . Pinero wrote for him some eight years since , and became very popular at the Gaiety . As the Chevalier , Bro . Terry seems even better than before . As long as this

talented comedian is on the stage the fuu of the play never flags . The lessee is ably supported by the pretty Miss Eleanore Leyshon , Misses Sophie Larkin , Rose Dearing , and Adrienne Dairolles , and Messrs . R . Soutar , Ian Robertson , and H . V . Esmond . Many

will be glad to go to Terry s to refresh their memories vvith the humours of " The Rocket , " and there are numbers to whom Mr . Pinero ' s farcical comedy will be quite new . Another successful run may be expected , for " The Rocket . "

Death.

Death .

BARFIELD . —March 30 th , Sarah , the beloved wife of Asher Barfield , of 26 , Clarges-street , London , W ., and Maylings House , Fareham , Hants .

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NOW READY . PRICE 10 s . THOMAS DUNCKERLEY , HIS LIFE , LABOURS , AND LETTERS , INCLUDING SOME MASONIC AND NAVAL MEMORIALS Oh' THE ISTII CENTURY . By HENRY SADLER , AUTHOR OF "MASONIC FACTS AND FICTIONS , " With a Preface by WILLIAM HARRY RYLANDS , ESQ ., F . S . A . This Work contains numerous Letters , Extracts , & c , relating to Masonry in BRISTOL , DORSETSHIRE , ESSEX , GLOUCESTERSHIRE , HAMPSHIRE , HEREFORDSHIRE , THE ISLE OF WIGHT , SOMERSET , and WILTSIIIRK , of which Counties DUNCKERLEY was Prov . Grand Master ; also Portraits , reproduced by the autotype process , from rare mezzotint engravings in the British Museum of : — His Majesty King George II . of England ; Dunckerley ' s reputed father . H . R . H . Frederick Lewis , Prince of Wales , son of the above ; the First of the Royal Family vvho vvas made a Freemason . Thomas Dunckerley in Masonic regalia , vvith facsimile of his Autograph , Book-plate , Seals , & c . 340 Pages Demy Octavo , handsomely bound in cloth gilt , bevelled boards , red edges . London : GEORGE KENNING , 16 & IGAGL Queen-st ., W . C .

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Price Ss . MASONIC ORATIONS , by Bro . L . P . METHAM , P . G . D . Eng ., P . D . Prov . G . M Devon , __ c , delivered in Devon and Cornwall , from A . D . 1 S 66 , at the dedication of Masonic Halls , Consecration of Lodges and Chapters , Installations , & c . With an Introduction by Bro . WILLIAM J AMES HUGHAN , P . G . D . Eng ., P . Prov . S . G . W . and G . Sec . Cornwall , & c , on Freemasonry in Devon and Cornwall , from A . D . 1732 to 18 S 9 . Edited by Bro . J CHAPMAN , P . M . 1402 , & c , P . Prov . G . D . Devon , Author of "The Great Pyramid and Freemasonry . " LonJjn : GSOAGE KENNING , I 6 , Great Queen-st ., W . C .

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Novo Ready . Price Is . Post Free , is . id . THE MASTER MASON'S HANDBOOK , by Bro . FRED . J . VV . CROWE , with an Introduction by _ ro . W . J . HUGHAN , P . G . D ., & c . The Master Mason's Handbook is a compendium of all information necessary to a knowledge of English Masonry , comprising—An Historical Sketch of Freemasonry—The Grand Lodge : Its Origin and Constitution—Private Lodges , Metropolitan and Provincial—Visiting Private Lodges-Titles , their uses and abbreviations—The Great Masonic Institutions—The " Higher " or additional Degrees , and how to obtain them . London : GEORGE _ KENNING , 16 , Great Queen-street , W . C .

“The Freemason: 1891-04-04, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_04041891/page/11/.
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THE APPROACHING GIRLS' SCHOOL FESTIVAL. Article 1
COLUMBIA LODGE, No. 2397. Article 1
THE GRAND MASTER OF CANADA ON THE CEREMONIES OF THE CRAFT. Article 1
CONSECRATION OF THE GALEN LODGE, No. 2394. Article 2
SUPREME GRAND ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER OF SCOTLAND. Article 3
DIFFERENCE OF OPINION. Article 3
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Masonic Notes. Article 5
Correspondence. Article 6
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 6
PROVINCIAL MEETINGS. Article 7
Royal Arch. Article 8
Mark Masonry. Article 8
Lodges and Chapters of Instruction. Article 9
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 9
AN "AT HOME" OF THE ST. CECILIA LODGE, No. 1636, BRIGHTON. Article 10
MASONIC LECTURE BY BRO. R. F. GOULD; P.G.D. Article 10
AN ORATION. Article 10
ST. MUNGO PRECEPTORY OF KNIGHTS OF MALTA. Article 11
CYCLORAMA. OF JERUSALEM ON THE DAY OF THE CRUCIFIXION. Article 11
CRYSTAL PALACE. Article 11
THE THEATRES. Article 11
Death. Article 11
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

An Oration.

nd every g leam of comfort from his heart ? et them treat with contempt the conclusions of Mevvton , who esteemed the structure of the universe -o " comp lete a proof of the existence and Providence nf an Almighty , wise , and good Architect of Nature " that he " never pronounced the word God -without a

house : " Dl't be '' OURS to glory in the belief , in the thought , in the hope , in the power , and in the love of our own and our Nature ' s Guardian , God , feeling sure that a p lan must have a planner , a design a designer , and a world fearfully and wonderfully made must have had a maker who must rule that world .

He has made it , and thus vve conclude that as He has formed that world in wisdom , strength , and beautv , it is the truest progress to seek to do His will , and to feel that the true " Brotherhood of man " ( one of the stock phrases of the atheist ) , can only be founded on the Fatherhood- of God . Be it ours , brethren , whether vve

look to our present lot or oar future destiny , whether as Masons or men , to follow the precepts of the insp ired Prophet , " to do justly , to love mercy , and to walk humbly with our God , " and to echo with reverend and grateful hearts those words of the sweet Psalmist of Israel , the father

of our Grand Master Solomon , All Thy works praise Thee , O God , and Thy Saints give thanks unto Thee ; they shew the Glory of Thy kingdom and talk of Thy power ; that Thy power , Thy glory , and the mig htiness of Thy kingdom mi ght be known unto men , Thy kingdom is an everlasting kingdom , and Thy

dominion endurest throughout all ages . " And to the preacher's theoretical and empty progress let us say in well-known words on behalf of our united nations and our progressive race , the rulers vve honour are the people ' s choice—the laws vve reverence are our brave

fathers' legacy , the faith we follow teaches us to live in bonds of Charity with all mankind , and die with hope of bliss beyond the grave . Tell your " Progressists" this , and tell them , too , vve seek no change , and least of all such change as they would bring us .

St. Mungo Preceptory Of Knights Of Malta.

ST . MUNGO PRECEPTORY OF KNIGHTS OF MALTA .

This body , which was onl y founded about a year ago bv some fratres of the St . Mungo Priory of Knights Templar , has thus far had a most successful career . On Saturday , the 28 th ult ., a very interesting and enjoyable function vvas held in St . Mark ' s Hall , 213 , Buchanan-street , when Fratres Carruthers , Marshall ,

Richards , and Ruddock vvere dul y installed by the Venerable Preceptor , Frater Edward Macbean , assisted -b y Fratres D . R . Clark , M . A ., Captain . General ; John Foulds , Lieutenant-General ; W . S . Hunter , Chancellor ; and other officers . The ritual of this reli gious and Chivalric Order vvas rendered with

a precision and completeness that proclaim the energy and ability of those responsible for the rite , far surpassing anything hitherto attempted in Scotland . Five beautiful silk banners enhanced the appearance of the Chapter House , and elicited warm encomiums from the members , who congratulated Bro . James Marshall on

their production . The musical part of the service vvas under the direction of Frater Emile Berger , to whom the fratres , on the motion of the venerable Preceptor , accorded a presentation jewel in recognition of his continued kindness . Apologies for absence from several intending neophytes , and some routine business brought a very pleasant gathering to a conclusion .

Cyclorama. Of Jerusalem On The Day Of The Crucifixion.

CYCLORAMA . OF JERUSALEM ON THE DAY OF THE CRUCIFIXION .

Ihe subject of this Cyclorama , after the celebrated picture of Herr Bruno Piglhein , is closely associated with the present season , and the large number of visitors attracted by the splendid representation of the great event we are now about to commemorate clearl y TI ? h ° W the P llbl ' appreciate a genuine work of art . uetdiis

»> - 01 the picture have been carefully studied , < ncl ln the most vivid and realistic manner Oriental i'e and character are brought before the spectator . cr . H " Wlsh Hi - Priests , the Roman soldiers , the <> wds of common people , the group of women and fiples beneath the cross , the malefactors on either

¦ e ot the grand central figure of our Lord , must all seen to be fully apprec ' uted , as no description can ' justice to the marvellous reality with which the ms and surroundings of the first Good Friday are inter ' 1 T' riunter Bo > d S ives hlcid and _ _ v . tSUng - ectures at regular intervals during the day , ' ng evidentl y made himself thoroughly acouainted

m anv _ d . topo _ ra P hy OI ancient Jerusalem and the of ' cil 6 nt ° P lnioris of writers upon the actual site alont t ^' v " 6 exact route of the mourntul procession . ivef n Vla Crucls . other disputed points , he 1 ho ... " ^ " -considered reasons why the sites selected bv

inf 0 ' f - are P robab ' y correct . The lecture is full of event . t M a " d not the least interesting feature , at all Temnl , asons - is the description of King Solomon ' s "Pon its ' > th < J buildin g of Herod that now stands p * y a vi •' . We stron _ 1 y recommend the brethren to selv t 0 Y ork-street and see and hear for

them-Prtss Frer ) ? ? Wa , es > ' » o came to London vvith the Em-0 n VVedn . f _ nd J " _ l'ttr , returned to Sandringham hr : d . e ar . ; , / T- ' - ' * he same day the Duke of Cam-M . H ., is aU Ha " ' Where Bro ' Chr'stopher Sykes ,

Crystal Palace.

CRYSTAL PALACE .

The Great Triennial Handel Festival will be held at the Crystal Palace in June next . The " Messiah " and " Israel in Egypt" will , as on former occasions , be performed on the first and third days , while the middle day will be devoted to a selection from other sacred and secular works of the great composer . Some old

favourites will be given , such , for instance , as choruses and airs from " Acis and Galatea , " " Jep hthah , " "Samson , " "Solomon , " Ac . Among the numbers given for the first time will be a sonata for orchestra , air for tenor , and two choruses from the 95 th Psalm , overtures to " Semele " and " Giustino , " a charming minuet from " Berenice , " and a graceful bourree from the celebrated

Water Music . Mr . W . T . Best , of Liverpool , will play the Fourth Organ Concerto in F . The chorus and orchestra will number 4000 , while the solo music will be entrusted to such eminent artists as Mesdames Albani , Nordica , Macintyre , Marian McKenzie , Belle Cole , Messrs . Edward Lloyd , Barton McGuckin , Brereton , Bridson , and Santley , the great musical army being under the generalship of Mr . August Manns .

The Theatres.

THE THEATRES .

If at first you don t succeed try again has been practically carried out by Mr . H . Lee , who , after two failures at the Avenue , has a promise in Mr . Bronson Howard's comedy— "The Henrietta "—of some luck . On Saturday the audience received this play with warm approval on all sides . In this the author exposes the vice of gambling on the Stock Exchange . The scenes

are laid in New York . In America the comed y vvas received very favourably a few years ago . Whether the technicalities of Wall-street about " bulls and bears , " and the mysteries ot the telephone and the tape will be understood by a general audience is a question , but on Saturday everyone seemed to relish the vocabulary of stock operators . We take it that Mr . Howard had in his mind a well-known New York

millionaire financier when he wrote "The Henrietta , as the names of the chief character is good evidence to go by . The play , while it points a moral in its serious side , is well supplied with a number of comedy

scenes . Mr . Vanalstyne his two sons , the eldest is a partner in the stock broker ' s business and has his father ' s confidence , whilst the younger is looked upon by his parent as an idle scamp . But before the play ends the true character of each comes out and the

reverse is the case . 1 he elder son is proved to be a traitor to not onl y his father but a woman as well , and is so mean that he lays upon his younger brother his own delinquencies of honour . The revelation of his treachery is made known when he seeks to ruin his father by secretly " bearing " the market regarding

a mine called the Henrietta , ot vvhich his father is the possessor , in order that he may oust old Vanalstyne from his place as head of the Stock Exchange . ' The father having gone on a yachting trip , the son seizes the opportunity to bring his father ' s firm to bankruptcy . Here is the great scene of the play . The shares of

the Henrietta are steadily going down and a panic seems unavoidable , at the moment old Vanalstyne returns unexpectedly and discovers the traitor to be his own son , in whom he had trusted . Vanalstyne , jun ., having staked all is desperate , and whilst tbe tape instrument is clicking the rise in the shares owing

to the younger son having saved the firm , he falls out of his chair lifeless . This gruesome scene of the tick , tick of the telegraph in the presence of the corpse brings down the curtain upon a situation which caused deep applause amongst all sections of those in the auditorium . The play might well end at this—the third

act—for it is virtually over . A bye-play runs through the piece about Henrietta being a ballet girl , and the name of a filly , and thus causing unpleasantness between a pair of lovers . The acting is fairly good all round . standing out from the rest is the excellent representation of Mr . W . H . Vernon and Mr . Lewis Waller as Messrs . Vanalstyne , father and son . Messrs .

J . L . Shine and Yorke Stephens are not so well suited to their parts . Miss Fanny Brough , as usual , made quite a hit in a low comedy part , but Miss Florence West , Miss Marion Lea , and Miss M . Jocelyn scarcely helped the play . Mr . Bronson Howard received a vociferous call , vvhich he wisely responded to by merely coming forward and making a grateful bow without the inevitable speech .

* * * Bro . Edward Terry on Easter Monday revived one of his great successes , " The Rocket , " which Mr . Pinero wrote for him some eight years since , and became very popular at the Gaiety . As the Chevalier , Bro . Terry seems even better than before . As long as this

talented comedian is on the stage the fuu of the play never flags . The lessee is ably supported by the pretty Miss Eleanore Leyshon , Misses Sophie Larkin , Rose Dearing , and Adrienne Dairolles , and Messrs . R . Soutar , Ian Robertson , and H . V . Esmond . Many

will be glad to go to Terry s to refresh their memories vvith the humours of " The Rocket , " and there are numbers to whom Mr . Pinero ' s farcical comedy will be quite new . Another successful run may be expected , for " The Rocket . "

Death.

Death .

BARFIELD . —March 30 th , Sarah , the beloved wife of Asher Barfield , of 26 , Clarges-street , London , W ., and Maylings House , Fareham , Hants .

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NOW READY . PRICE 10 s . THOMAS DUNCKERLEY , HIS LIFE , LABOURS , AND LETTERS , INCLUDING SOME MASONIC AND NAVAL MEMORIALS Oh' THE ISTII CENTURY . By HENRY SADLER , AUTHOR OF "MASONIC FACTS AND FICTIONS , " With a Preface by WILLIAM HARRY RYLANDS , ESQ ., F . S . A . This Work contains numerous Letters , Extracts , & c , relating to Masonry in BRISTOL , DORSETSHIRE , ESSEX , GLOUCESTERSHIRE , HAMPSHIRE , HEREFORDSHIRE , THE ISLE OF WIGHT , SOMERSET , and WILTSIIIRK , of which Counties DUNCKERLEY was Prov . Grand Master ; also Portraits , reproduced by the autotype process , from rare mezzotint engravings in the British Museum of : — His Majesty King George II . of England ; Dunckerley ' s reputed father . H . R . H . Frederick Lewis , Prince of Wales , son of the above ; the First of the Royal Family vvho vvas made a Freemason . Thomas Dunckerley in Masonic regalia , vvith facsimile of his Autograph , Book-plate , Seals , & c . 340 Pages Demy Octavo , handsomely bound in cloth gilt , bevelled boards , red edges . London : GEORGE KENNING , 16 & IGAGL Queen-st ., W . C .

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Price 7 s 6 d . A HANDY BOOK to the Study of the ENGRAVED , PRINTED , and MANUSCRIPT LISTS OF LODGES of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of England ( "Moderns" and "Ancients" ) from 1723 to 1 S 14 , vvith an Appendix and Valuable Statistical Tables . By Bro . JOHN LANE , F . C . A ., P . M . 1402 , Past Senior Grand Warden of Iowa , Past Prov . Grand Registrar of Devonshire , 81 c , & c ., & c , Author of " Masonic Records , 1717-1886 , " "Masters' Lodges , " & c , & c , and dedicated to Bro . WILLIAM J AMES HUGHAN , P . S . G . D . England . London : GEORGE KENNING , 16 , Great Queen-st ., W . C .

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Price Ss . MASONIC ORATIONS , by Bro . L . P . METHAM , P . G . D . Eng ., P . D . Prov . G . M Devon , __ c , delivered in Devon and Cornwall , from A . D . 1 S 66 , at the dedication of Masonic Halls , Consecration of Lodges and Chapters , Installations , & c . With an Introduction by Bro . WILLIAM J AMES HUGHAN , P . G . D . Eng ., P . Prov . S . G . W . and G . Sec . Cornwall , & c , on Freemasonry in Devon and Cornwall , from A . D . 1732 to 18 S 9 . Edited by Bro . J CHAPMAN , P . M . 1402 , & c , P . Prov . G . D . Devon , Author of "The Great Pyramid and Freemasonry . " LonJjn : GSOAGE KENNING , I 6 , Great Queen-st ., W . C .

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Price $ s . HISTORY OF THE APOLLO LODGE , YORK , in relation to Craft and Royal Arch Masonry ; vvith Brief Sketches of its Local Predecessors and Contemporaries ; the "Grand Lodge of All England" ( York Masons ); the Provincial Grand Lodge ; and various Lodges from 1705 to 1805 . By WILLIAM J AMES HUGHAN , Author of " Origin of the English Rite of Freemasonry , " & c . With valuable Appendices . 1 ondon : GEORGE KENNING , 16 , Great Queen-st ., W . C .

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Novo Ready . Price Is . Post Free , is . id . THE MASTER MASON'S HANDBOOK , by Bro . FRED . J . VV . CROWE , with an Introduction by _ ro . W . J . HUGHAN , P . G . D ., & c . The Master Mason's Handbook is a compendium of all information necessary to a knowledge of English Masonry , comprising—An Historical Sketch of Freemasonry—The Grand Lodge : Its Origin and Constitution—Private Lodges , Metropolitan and Provincial—Visiting Private Lodges-Titles , their uses and abbreviations—The Great Masonic Institutions—The " Higher " or additional Degrees , and how to obtain them . London : GEORGE _ KENNING , 16 , Great Queen-street , W . C .

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