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Page 6

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

Ad00611

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 . ADVERTISEMENTS should reach the Office , 19 S , Fleetstreet , London , by 12 o ' clock on Wednesdays .

Ar00600

NOTICE .

To prevent delay or miscarriage , it is particularly requested that ALL communications for the FRUF . MASON , may be addressed to the Office , ro 8 , Fie-t-street , London .

Ar00601

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

COLONIAL and FOREIGN SUBSCRIBERS are informed that acknowledgments of remittances received are published in the first number of every month .

It is very necessary for our readers to advise us of all money orders they remit , more especially those from the United States of America and India ; otherwise we cannot tell where to credit them .

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 , interesting , and useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / 6 . P . O . O . ' s to be made payable at the chief office , London .

NEW POSTAL RATES . Owing to a reduction in the Postal Rates , the publisher is now enabled to send the " Freemason" to the following parts abroad for One Year for Thirteen Shillings ( payable in

advance ) : —Africa , Australia , Bombay , Canada , Cape oi Good Hope , Ceylon , China , Constantinople , Demerara , France , Germany , Gibraltar , Jamaica , Malta , Newfoundland , New South Wales , New Zealand , Suez , Trinidad , United States of America , & c .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

BOOKS , & c , RECEIVED . " Masonic Record for Western India . " " Church Memorial on Intemperance . " " Masonic Advocate . " " Keystone . " " New York Dispatch . " Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Virginia .

Births ,Marriages And Deaths.

Births , Marriages and Deaths .

[ Tne charge is 2 s . 6 d . for announcements , not exceedl * f four lines , under this heading . ]

i BIRI HS . VHRETT . — On the nth inst ., at 2 , Wilton-villas , Forestj hill , S . E ., the wife of Richard H . Barrett , of a daugh-I ter . OWN . —On the iolh inst ., at Caversham-road , N . W .,

i the wife of J . R . Brown , of a son . }«•'• —On thc Cth inst ., at Stanninglcy Rectory , the "T > vife of thc Rev . E . C . Lister , of a daughter . . _ lev . *—On the 9 th inst ., Countess Percy , of a son . WniTEiii- AP . — On the 10 th inst ., at Barming House , the wife , ° f C . Whitehead , Esq ., of a daughter .

- . r - " MARRIAGE . CI . AV- 3 L ) e I 0 tl 1 'nst * ' at *"'• Marylcbone G . = 1 \ Esq ., of Seymour-street , Portmansa . ~ . okes . of Burleigh House , Loudounro _ - v

, -5 DEATHS . CAMI ' DFA 5 Mnst ., at Hastings , John Archibalif . % aged 33 . COE . —Oii- ^ - / i , Langton-road , Vassal-road , North * S- . Frederic Coe , in the 62 nd year of his ~ ¦ ¦ will kindly accept this

intiniatior ^* HOHAIIT . —i . i ' arch 7 , at 9 6 , Phythidii-stre . t , Liverpool , Sarah , the wife of Bro . R . N . Ilobart , one of the best known anil most appreciated brethren in the Liveroool district .

SLACK . —On the 13 th Jan ., at Rangoon , of cholera , Bro . Capt . Slack , of the British ship Mendora . THOMPSON . —March (¦*'• . at 125 , Park-road , Liverpool , Bro . W . II ) n - _^ ' P * ^* y antl Ripon Lodge-, N .. itere __ .

Ar00612

The Freemason , SATURDAY , MAR . 1 ,, 1877 .

An Important Announcement.

AN IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT .

It will be seen in our correspondence last week that the Secretary to the Board of Inland Revenue has , in reply to a query , stated that for ali payments above g £ i stamped receipts must le given . We therefore think it well to call the notice of our

W . M . ' s and Treasurers of lodges to this serious and pressing question , since , as Freemasons , we always obey the laws of the land , we must not actually , or even by implication , appear to break them .

The Last Quarterly Communication.

THE LAST QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION .

Our last Quarterly Communication passed over , amid a brilliant gathering , with great unanimity and eclat . Our Royal Grand Master was unanimously and enthusiastically re-elected , and duly proclaimed by our distinguished Bro . Sir Albert Woods . Our most esteemed Grand

Treasurer , to whom the best thanks of the Craft are due , was also unanimously re-elected , with loud demonstrations of hearty acceptance and applause . The grant of £ __) . ooo for the two lifeboats , as a grateful act of recognition , was unanimously agreed to , and the picture of our Royal Grand Master , painted by Bro . 'Desanges . a gift of

the Lodge of Friendship , No . 6 , was unveiled amid the hearty cheers of Grand Lodge . The needful business was transacted , two appeals were decided after the lucid explanations of our distinguished Grand Registrar , and then the Grand Lodge took up the notices of motion . Our Excellent Bro . Hatch could not find a

seconder to his motion , which , as we ventured to say last week , was inopportune , and could hardly be seriously argued ( with all respect to our good brother ) and so it fell to the ground . Bro . Mallam wisely withdrew his motion , and the

proceedings of Grand Lodge , which had began in peace and goodwill , ended in hearty unanimity and concord , to the entire satisfaction of all present . Long may our Masonic Parliament pursue the even tenour of its way in all of genial harmony and brotherly love .

The Cambridge Local Examination And The Boys' School.

THE CAMBRIDGE LOCAL EXAMINATION AND THE BOYS ' SCHOOL .

We rejoice much to hear of the successful result of this examination as regards the Boys ' School . Out of ^ aS candidates 26 passed , a very large proportion , and of these 26 , 1 was on the senior and 25 were on the junior list . 14 of the 25 juniors gained a place on the honour list , 2 in the ist class , 3 in the 2 nd class , 0 in the 3 rd class .

Such a report perhaps tells ns , as well as anything can tell , especially to " experts , " as to the quality of the work and the steady " all-through system " of the school : and we congratulate the executive and thc master , Dr . Morris , on this striking test and happy evidence of meritorious labours and scholastic attainments .

The Hebrew Question In Germany.

THE HEBREW QUESTION IN GERMANY .

We are somewhat taken to task by a writer , C . H ., in the Bauliulte , March 10 , for the ignorance in England , and editorially of the exact state of affairs in Germany . But if he will read with reference to this question the ai tides over again carefully , he will see that we only wished to make " assurance doubly sure , " as we had

ourselves no doubt whatever of the real position of the controversy . No doubt much ignorance exists in England as to the exactness of the allegations made , simply because so many contradictory statements are put forward , and by German Masons , too , in England and the United State ? , in letters to newspapers , in articles in

The Hebrew Question In Germany.

magazines . It is , then , a fact , as we understood it , that the " Great Countries Lodge " of Germany is the only Grand Lodge in which Hebrews cannot be admitted to initiation , though they can be admitted as visiting brethren . Under all the other seven Grand Lodges and the five separate

lodges Hebrews are admitted into Freemasonry . The Great Countries Lodge , the " Gr . Landes Loge von Deutschland , " still formally excludes Hebrews , inasmuch as the required majority of two-thirds was not forthcoming at the last effort to alter the Constitution . This is

exactly how we understand the case to be , but we wrote " ad referendum , " and for information , as we were unwilling to seem dog . matically to contradict others who affected to be well acquainted with the present state of German Freemasonry . We are still in hopes

that the "Great Countries Lodge " will , like the other Grand Lodges , do away with ( on the grounds of justice , fairness , true toleration , and Cosmopolitan Freemasonry ) , the exclusion of Hebrews , and then , as far as we are ourselves concerned in England , our interest in the matter

will cease . For we cannot go along with C . H . in attacking the High Grade System , because it is a High Grade System . We believe that Freemasonry teaches us toleration , and that we should be tolerant of the High Grade System , or of anything else from which we differ . We

speak freely on the subiect , as we are only pure Craft Masons ourselves , and do not belong to the High Grades . But we do say this distinctly , that the High Grades have as much a right "ipse facto , " to exist , as Craft Masonry , and though C . H . evidently does not like the High Grades ,

that is nothing to the point , as it is only after all the expression of private judgment "quantum valet . " We cannot dogmatise on the subject , and seek to excommunicate High Grade Masons , because we dislike their teaching , for when we do so we only imitate the bigotry of the Ultramontanes .

As for waging a war against the Gr . Landes Loge von Deutschland , because it maintains the teaching of a High Grade system , and has united it with symbolical Masonry , we have no mission to do so , inasmuch as it is a legal Grand Lodge , and has a right to make its own laws , and use

its own system . Neither do we wish to enter into the actual contest between Bro . Schiffmann and the Great Countries Lodge . Bro . Schiffmann is no doubt a most honest and conscientious brother , and on the abstract question of actual intolerance we heartily go with him , but

we do not see our way , to join those who are attacking the Gr . Landes Loge , not for what it has done , but for what it is per se . We disapprove heartily of its existing constitution , and wish it speedily amended , and trust that the necessary majority of two-thirds

may be ere long obtained , but we do not attack any system because it is a system which we differ from , and with which we do not sympathise . Vain , then , would be all our professions of unlimited toleration ! In fact , we go back to our old position . The

whole mischief arises from the attempt to combine two antagonistic systems . We repeat what wesaidbefore , that High Grades and Craft Grades cannot be governed by the same authority , and must be separated , and then no such question can arise . We in England are very practical ,

and merely look at things from their concrete side . We wish equal rights for all , and while we regret deeply the exclusion of the Hebrews as a great mistake , and as a greater wrong , we feel that the High Grades , ( though altogether beyond Craft Masonry ) , hi * ve a right to be tolerated and upheld as well as anybody else .

A Breach Of Promise.

A BREACH OF PROMISE .

The newspapers record an amusing trial which has taken place at Bodmin before Mr . Justice Hawkins , and which suggests some considera tions which strike us as alike novel and

improving . The case , says the report , w ' principally remarkable for the age of the intended bride and bridegroom . The p laintiff was not pressed as to her age , but she admitted she was more than 70 . The defendant avowed himself to be 67 , and volunteered the informs-

“The Freemason: 1877-03-17, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_17031877/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Royal Arch. Article 3
Red Cross of Constantine. Article 4
STATISTICS OF MASONRY IN GERMANY. Article 4
DISTRlCT GRAND LODGE OF BRITISH BURMAH. Article 5
FIRST THINGS IN PHILADELPHIA. Article 5
THE LODGE AND THE WORLD. Article 5
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
TO OUR READERS. Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
Births ,Marriages and Deaths. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
AN IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT. Article 6
THE LAST QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 6
THE CAMBRIDGE LOCAL EXAMINATION AND THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 6
THE HEBREW QUESTION IN GERMANY. Article 6
A BREACH OF PROMISE. Article 6
Original Correspondence. Article 7
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 7
GRAND LODGE. Article 8
THE LANGTHORNE MASONIC CHARITABLE ASSOCIATION. Article 8
CONSECRATION OF THE CROYDON MARK MASTER'S LODGE, No. 198. Article 8
THE EXCLUSION OF THE HEBREW'S. Article 8
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 9
PRESENTATION TO BRO. J. HANNAH. Article 9
FREEMASONRY IN NEW ZEALAND. Article 9
Obituary. Article 9
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 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.

Ad00611

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 . ADVERTISEMENTS should reach the Office , 19 S , Fleetstreet , London , by 12 o ' clock on Wednesdays .

Ar00600

NOTICE .

To prevent delay or miscarriage , it is particularly requested that ALL communications for the FRUF . MASON , may be addressed to the Office , ro 8 , Fie-t-street , London .

Ar00601

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

COLONIAL and FOREIGN SUBSCRIBERS are informed that acknowledgments of remittances received are published in the first number of every month .

It is very necessary for our readers to advise us of all money orders they remit , more especially those from the United States of America and India ; otherwise we cannot tell where to credit them .

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 , interesting , and useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / 6 . P . O . O . ' s to be made payable at the chief office , London .

NEW POSTAL RATES . Owing to a reduction in the Postal Rates , the publisher is now enabled to send the " Freemason" to the following parts abroad for One Year for Thirteen Shillings ( payable in

advance ) : —Africa , Australia , Bombay , Canada , Cape oi Good Hope , Ceylon , China , Constantinople , Demerara , France , Germany , Gibraltar , Jamaica , Malta , Newfoundland , New South Wales , New Zealand , Suez , Trinidad , United States of America , & c .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

BOOKS , & c , RECEIVED . " Masonic Record for Western India . " " Church Memorial on Intemperance . " " Masonic Advocate . " " Keystone . " " New York Dispatch . " Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Virginia .

Births ,Marriages And Deaths.

Births , Marriages and Deaths .

[ Tne charge is 2 s . 6 d . for announcements , not exceedl * f four lines , under this heading . ]

i BIRI HS . VHRETT . — On the nth inst ., at 2 , Wilton-villas , Forestj hill , S . E ., the wife of Richard H . Barrett , of a daugh-I ter . OWN . —On the iolh inst ., at Caversham-road , N . W .,

i the wife of J . R . Brown , of a son . }«•'• —On thc Cth inst ., at Stanninglcy Rectory , the "T > vife of thc Rev . E . C . Lister , of a daughter . . _ lev . *—On the 9 th inst ., Countess Percy , of a son . WniTEiii- AP . — On the 10 th inst ., at Barming House , the wife , ° f C . Whitehead , Esq ., of a daughter .

- . r - " MARRIAGE . CI . AV- 3 L ) e I 0 tl 1 'nst * ' at *"'• Marylcbone G . = 1 \ Esq ., of Seymour-street , Portmansa . ~ . okes . of Burleigh House , Loudounro _ - v

, -5 DEATHS . CAMI ' DFA 5 Mnst ., at Hastings , John Archibalif . % aged 33 . COE . —Oii- ^ - / i , Langton-road , Vassal-road , North * S- . Frederic Coe , in the 62 nd year of his ~ ¦ ¦ will kindly accept this

intiniatior ^* HOHAIIT . —i . i ' arch 7 , at 9 6 , Phythidii-stre . t , Liverpool , Sarah , the wife of Bro . R . N . Ilobart , one of the best known anil most appreciated brethren in the Liveroool district .

SLACK . —On the 13 th Jan ., at Rangoon , of cholera , Bro . Capt . Slack , of the British ship Mendora . THOMPSON . —March (¦*'• . at 125 , Park-road , Liverpool , Bro . W . II ) n - _^ ' P * ^* y antl Ripon Lodge-, N .. itere __ .

Ar00612

The Freemason , SATURDAY , MAR . 1 ,, 1877 .

An Important Announcement.

AN IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT .

It will be seen in our correspondence last week that the Secretary to the Board of Inland Revenue has , in reply to a query , stated that for ali payments above g £ i stamped receipts must le given . We therefore think it well to call the notice of our

W . M . ' s and Treasurers of lodges to this serious and pressing question , since , as Freemasons , we always obey the laws of the land , we must not actually , or even by implication , appear to break them .

The Last Quarterly Communication.

THE LAST QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION .

Our last Quarterly Communication passed over , amid a brilliant gathering , with great unanimity and eclat . Our Royal Grand Master was unanimously and enthusiastically re-elected , and duly proclaimed by our distinguished Bro . Sir Albert Woods . Our most esteemed Grand

Treasurer , to whom the best thanks of the Craft are due , was also unanimously re-elected , with loud demonstrations of hearty acceptance and applause . The grant of £ __) . ooo for the two lifeboats , as a grateful act of recognition , was unanimously agreed to , and the picture of our Royal Grand Master , painted by Bro . 'Desanges . a gift of

the Lodge of Friendship , No . 6 , was unveiled amid the hearty cheers of Grand Lodge . The needful business was transacted , two appeals were decided after the lucid explanations of our distinguished Grand Registrar , and then the Grand Lodge took up the notices of motion . Our Excellent Bro . Hatch could not find a

seconder to his motion , which , as we ventured to say last week , was inopportune , and could hardly be seriously argued ( with all respect to our good brother ) and so it fell to the ground . Bro . Mallam wisely withdrew his motion , and the

proceedings of Grand Lodge , which had began in peace and goodwill , ended in hearty unanimity and concord , to the entire satisfaction of all present . Long may our Masonic Parliament pursue the even tenour of its way in all of genial harmony and brotherly love .

The Cambridge Local Examination And The Boys' School.

THE CAMBRIDGE LOCAL EXAMINATION AND THE BOYS ' SCHOOL .

We rejoice much to hear of the successful result of this examination as regards the Boys ' School . Out of ^ aS candidates 26 passed , a very large proportion , and of these 26 , 1 was on the senior and 25 were on the junior list . 14 of the 25 juniors gained a place on the honour list , 2 in the ist class , 3 in the 2 nd class , 0 in the 3 rd class .

Such a report perhaps tells ns , as well as anything can tell , especially to " experts , " as to the quality of the work and the steady " all-through system " of the school : and we congratulate the executive and thc master , Dr . Morris , on this striking test and happy evidence of meritorious labours and scholastic attainments .

The Hebrew Question In Germany.

THE HEBREW QUESTION IN GERMANY .

We are somewhat taken to task by a writer , C . H ., in the Bauliulte , March 10 , for the ignorance in England , and editorially of the exact state of affairs in Germany . But if he will read with reference to this question the ai tides over again carefully , he will see that we only wished to make " assurance doubly sure , " as we had

ourselves no doubt whatever of the real position of the controversy . No doubt much ignorance exists in England as to the exactness of the allegations made , simply because so many contradictory statements are put forward , and by German Masons , too , in England and the United State ? , in letters to newspapers , in articles in

The Hebrew Question In Germany.

magazines . It is , then , a fact , as we understood it , that the " Great Countries Lodge " of Germany is the only Grand Lodge in which Hebrews cannot be admitted to initiation , though they can be admitted as visiting brethren . Under all the other seven Grand Lodges and the five separate

lodges Hebrews are admitted into Freemasonry . The Great Countries Lodge , the " Gr . Landes Loge von Deutschland , " still formally excludes Hebrews , inasmuch as the required majority of two-thirds was not forthcoming at the last effort to alter the Constitution . This is

exactly how we understand the case to be , but we wrote " ad referendum , " and for information , as we were unwilling to seem dog . matically to contradict others who affected to be well acquainted with the present state of German Freemasonry . We are still in hopes

that the "Great Countries Lodge " will , like the other Grand Lodges , do away with ( on the grounds of justice , fairness , true toleration , and Cosmopolitan Freemasonry ) , the exclusion of Hebrews , and then , as far as we are ourselves concerned in England , our interest in the matter

will cease . For we cannot go along with C . H . in attacking the High Grade System , because it is a High Grade System . We believe that Freemasonry teaches us toleration , and that we should be tolerant of the High Grade System , or of anything else from which we differ . We

speak freely on the subiect , as we are only pure Craft Masons ourselves , and do not belong to the High Grades . But we do say this distinctly , that the High Grades have as much a right "ipse facto , " to exist , as Craft Masonry , and though C . H . evidently does not like the High Grades ,

that is nothing to the point , as it is only after all the expression of private judgment "quantum valet . " We cannot dogmatise on the subject , and seek to excommunicate High Grade Masons , because we dislike their teaching , for when we do so we only imitate the bigotry of the Ultramontanes .

As for waging a war against the Gr . Landes Loge von Deutschland , because it maintains the teaching of a High Grade system , and has united it with symbolical Masonry , we have no mission to do so , inasmuch as it is a legal Grand Lodge , and has a right to make its own laws , and use

its own system . Neither do we wish to enter into the actual contest between Bro . Schiffmann and the Great Countries Lodge . Bro . Schiffmann is no doubt a most honest and conscientious brother , and on the abstract question of actual intolerance we heartily go with him , but

we do not see our way , to join those who are attacking the Gr . Landes Loge , not for what it has done , but for what it is per se . We disapprove heartily of its existing constitution , and wish it speedily amended , and trust that the necessary majority of two-thirds

may be ere long obtained , but we do not attack any system because it is a system which we differ from , and with which we do not sympathise . Vain , then , would be all our professions of unlimited toleration ! In fact , we go back to our old position . The

whole mischief arises from the attempt to combine two antagonistic systems . We repeat what wesaidbefore , that High Grades and Craft Grades cannot be governed by the same authority , and must be separated , and then no such question can arise . We in England are very practical ,

and merely look at things from their concrete side . We wish equal rights for all , and while we regret deeply the exclusion of the Hebrews as a great mistake , and as a greater wrong , we feel that the High Grades , ( though altogether beyond Craft Masonry ) , hi * ve a right to be tolerated and upheld as well as anybody else .

A Breach Of Promise.

A BREACH OF PROMISE .

The newspapers record an amusing trial which has taken place at Bodmin before Mr . Justice Hawkins , and which suggests some considera tions which strike us as alike novel and

improving . The case , says the report , w ' principally remarkable for the age of the intended bride and bridegroom . The p laintiff was not pressed as to her age , but she admitted she was more than 70 . The defendant avowed himself to be 67 , and volunteered the informs-

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