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  • The Freemason
  • March 25, 1876
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  • TO ADVERTISERS.
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The Freemason, March 25, 1876: Page 6

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    Article TO OUR READERS. Page 1 of 1
    Article TO ADVERTISERS. Page 1 of 1
    Article Answers to Correspondents. Page 1 of 1
    Article Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Page 1 of 1
    Article Untitled Page 1 of 1
    Article OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S RETURN. Page 1 of 1
    Article MASONIC OLD WOMEN. Page 1 of 1
    Article ANTI-MASONIC IMPERTINENCES. Page 1 of 2
    Article ANTI-MASONIC IMPERTINENCES. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 6

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

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen-page weekly newspaper , f rice 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 / -

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 Twelve Shillings ( payable in advance ) : —Africa , Australia , Bombay , Canada , Cape of

Good Hope , Ceylon , China , Constantinople , Demerara , France , Germany , Gibraltar , Jamaica , Malta , Newfoundland , New South Wales , New Zealand , Suez , Trinidad , United States of America , & c . P . O . O . ' s to be made payable at the chief office , London .

COLONIAL AND FOREIGN SUBSCRIBERS are informed that acknowledgments of remittances received are published in the first number of every month . NOTICE . —It is very necessary for our friends 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 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 .

NOW READY . Reading Covers , to take 52 numbers of the " Free mason , " price 2 / 6 , may be had at the office , 198 , Fleet street .

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 tha . r . 12 o ' clock on Wednesday morning . ERRATUM . —In the report of the Grand Conclave Red Cross on the nth inst ., for " Capt . Bartlett " read "Capt . Barnes . " NOTICE . —We do not find it necessary to issue a supplement this week .

Births, Marriages, And Deaths.

Births , Marriages , and Deaths .

[ The charge is 2 s . 6 d . for announcements , not exceed ing four lines , under this heading . ]

BIRTHS . WATSON . —On the 20 th inst ., at Holland-road , W ., the wife of Gerald T . Watson , of a son . ANOUS , Mrs . Joseph , at Eton-villas , Haverstock-hill , March 21 st , of a son . HEATHCOTE , the wife of Lieut .-Col . C T ., Bombay Staff Corps , at Belvedere-road , Upper Norwood , March 20 th , of daughter .

MARRIAGE . VANDER BYL—MvBtinGii . —On the 17 th ult ., by special licence , at Stellenbosch , Cape of Good Hope , by the Rev . Dr . Faure , assisted by his son , the Rev . Philip Faure , cf Claa William , P . G . Van dcr-Byl , Esq ., of 102 , Harl « -ystreet , London , to Johanna , youngest daughter of the late Ryk Myburgh , Esq ., of Elsenburgh , Cape of Good Hope .

DEATHS . COBB . —On the 19 th inst ., Stanley Rhodes , son of R . Cobb , Esq ., of Surbiton Lodge , Kingston-on-Thames , aged 10 . DURANT , lucinda , relict of Mr . George , of Tong Castle , Shropshire , at St . Romans , St . Leonard ' s-on-Sea , aged 67 , March 1 ith .

Ar00608

TheFreemason, SATURDAY , MAR . 25 , 1876 .

Our Royal Grand Master's Return.

OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S RETURN .

The "Times" informs us that the Serapis arrived at Aden , March 20 tb , with the Raleigh in ' . company . All are well . Will leave after coaling . The Osborne was sent ahead on the 17 th at noon to have all in readiness for her consort . From Bombay it has been very fine

weather . The thermometer was 80 deg . in the shade , and the sea quite smooth . The menagerie is quite comfortable . It contains 80 animals of all sorts . The elephants walk about the deck j the deer are very tame , and the tigers are domesticated , though they exhibit tendencies to

relapse . Thursday the calm continued , and the temperature was the same . The sea was as smooth as glass ; no ships , nor fish , nor birds were to be seen . Friday the sea and temperature remained the same as before . The

squadron has been averaging 272 miles in 24 hours . The Osborne ran under the quarter of the Serapis to exhibit her two elephants , which salaamed to the Prince as she passed ahead . We shall be next hearing of the Prince at Suez and at Malta .

Masonic Old Women.

MASONIC OLD WOMEN .

Some people do not like to be called old , and a great many persons we kno , v do not relish being termed " old women . " But yet the clearness of truth compels us to say , that old women do exist and are many , and that we meet with them and confront them in various scenes and in

different walks of life . To suppose that we can be always young is alas a great fallacy ; to believe that youth , with its halcyon smiles , and living hopes , and active hours , is ever to wait upon us here , is but the baseless fabric of a deceiving dream . No , youth has to give way to

middle age , and middle age to old age , day-byday , and the weakness and perversity and querulousness of old age , often seem to tinge with dulness and gloominess , the early promise and the maturer excellence . Old age is then inevitable , and old men and old women have to

share with youth the pageant of the hour . But we are talking of old women . They sometimes unpolitely say , that old wom ° n , as the young Frenchman once gravely observed , are "de trop , " though we protest against any attack on real good old women . But we confess , as we

say this , that we have a dreadful souvenir of some Masonic old women who have been a heavy drawback on our lodges , a great stumbling block in the way of Freemasonry , and mournful obstacles to all improvement and progress . As a general rule the Masonic old woman is a

brother who has rot done a great deal for Freemasonry really and truly , though he thinks he has , and always tells young Masons that " things were better managed in his days . " He is very fond of hearing himself talk , and what he says is generally what a reporting brother

and friend of ours once ventured to term "didactic twaddle . " But where he most distinguishes himself is in his opposition to any movement for improvement , for progress , for light . Is it a library ?— ' * Books are expensive , " " Masons have no time for reading , "

" For his part he does not approve of publication , " " Money had better be spent in charity , " are the stereotype objections , the stock phrases of fogey ism , which fall from the lips of that respectable old woman . Is it a soiree ?— " Well , he prefers a lodge meeting , and his pipe and

glass of toddy afterwards . * ' He does not see why brethren are to come in evening dress . " "All this chopping and changing don ' t suit him . " " He never remembers such a proposal before ;" and so he damps the enthusiasm of the ardent , the zeal of the cultured , does this mischievous old

woman . Is it the admission of ladies r' He is "aghast at the idea . What would Bro . P . M . Popkins have said , or old ' Dont / or Bro . Jenks , or Bro . somebody else : And the lodge , accustomed to dictation , and Conservative in its respect for years and authority , goes with the old woman ,

and floors the young man . Now , we have cited no imaginary cases , we have drawn no ideal individual , though without any personal reflection ; but all lodges , we fancy , in a greater or lesser degree , are suffering from the infliction and pre - sence of Masonic old women at the present

time . Can nothing be done for remonstrant and despondent Masonic youth ? Is there no possibility of inducing these worthy and otherwise amiable old women to take a kindlier view of things and persons ? Alas ! we fear not ! Such as they are , such they

will be to the end of the story , and though the moralist may deprecate , and the cynic may scoff , and the young Mason may cry oat , the genus Masonic old woman is very flourishing amongst us , and is not , we fear , for a very long time indeed likely to leave that lodge life of ours , which its presence enfeebles and its perversity mars .

Anti-Masonic Impertinences.

ANTI-MASONIC IMPERTINENCES .

We have been much struck with the tendency of our opponents just now to assail our peaceful and useful Order with a plethora of mingled impertinence and falsehood . Indeed , nothing is

too hard or too bad to say of Freemasons , without a shadow of justification , without even the pretence of truth . It is simply , as fast young men say to-day , " calm lying , " nothing more and nothing less . These are serious words , and we

Anti-Masonic Impertinences.

are bound to prove them . In the " Weekly Examiner and Ulster Observer , " sent to us by a kind Hibernian brother , and which is , we may observe , a Roman Catholic paper , of date March nth , 1876 , published at Belfast , two letters are to be reid , unsigned , and apparently editorial ,

judging by their place and type , which constitute in themselves some very impertinent and untruthful charges against Freemasonry and Freemasons in that district . We mi ght , indeed , say to all our brethren there , " Risum teneatis fratres ; " we might bid them laugh

with Archdeacon Denison , " aslesto yeloli , " at such a mixture of balderdash and vulgarity . The weak and foolish person who penned these letters—we have grave doubts of his sanitymakes Freemasonry responsible , in his Ultramontane perspicuity , for recent commercial

embarrassments in Belfast , in " flax spinning , " principally , as it seems , because the " brethren monopolize one half of the alphabet in mere initial indication of the cacophonous Craft honours . " Now this , we beg to observe , is meant for wit and also sarcasm—Ultramontane wit and

Ultramontane sarcasm . Well , to say the truth , amid laughter-loving Paddies we never met with a " duller dog " than the writer of these childish invectives , and as for the sarcasm— "Heaven save the mark . '' If this is all the Ultramontanes can do , they must ba in a verv bad case ,

and the Freemasons in Belfast and the district will simply treat such an attack as we do , as another beautiful specimen of Ultramontane ignorance , impertinence , ' and mendacity . It is sad to have to use such words , but they are both , in our opinion , necessary and just , and ,

remembering that the Roman Catholic mot d'Ordre just now seems to be everywhere , at home and abroad , as regards Freemasonry without rhyme or reason , " Delendam esse Carthaginem , " we see no use in being mealymouthed , the more so as we are simply upholding the interests and

honour of our cruelly maligned Order . Our able contemporary , the " Masonic Advocate , " published at Indianapolis , Indiana , United States , tells us as follows : — " We have before us the prospectus for an anti-Masonic newspaper , to be published at Cincinnati , O ., by one J . H . H .

Woodward , accompanied by a circular letter , which says , ' We want you for a good , permanent , cash-paying subscriber , and solicit your money , your aid , and your influence . ' It is safe to presume that this was not intended for us , and as safe to wager that we will give nothing

of this sort . We think a great deal of Masonry . We love it for the good it has already done , and we want to perpetuate it for the good it will do in the future . The greatest fears we have ever had for the institution were in its popularity and too rapid growth . VVe want no more recruiting

agents in the shape of anti-Masonic papers and crusaders against Masonry , for they are sure to create a more favourable opinion of the Order , and greatly increase the number of those seeking admission . When renegades unite with rejected applicants in defaming the institution of

Freemasonry , which is uphold by the reputation of more than half a million of the best citizens of this country , they soon succeed in convincing intelligent , honest people that they themselves are liars and slanderers of the worst character . The documents before us establish the fact that the author of them is no exception to the rule .

We give a short extract from them , that those who know anything of Masonry may be able to judge for themselves : — ' Masonry is aggressive , and interferes with every one . The fearfully depressing times we now experience is her handywork , the result of her counsels , machinations , and plots . The

confidence of man in man can never be restored so long as Masonic principles prevail . Every Mason imbued with the principles of his Order feels that every other Mason is a rascal , and that the entire race of man is an institution of perverse wickedness , and carries his idea into the daily walks of his life , and thus Masonry , from

the number of her votaries , acting upon this principle , has sown the seeds of universal distrust broadcast over the whole land . Good times can never again prevail in this country until the heresies of Masonry are destroyed , and a general and neig hbourly confidence is restored among the people . Masonry forbids neig hbourly

“The Freemason: 1876-03-25, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_25031876/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Royal Arch. Article 4
Knights Templar. Article 4
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 5
Red Cross of Constantine. Article 5
Reviews. Article 5
BRO. H.R.H. THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT AND THE ROSE CROIX. Article 5
LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 5
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 5
TO OUR READERS. Article 6
TO ADVERTISERS. Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S RETURN. Article 6
MASONIC OLD WOMEN. Article 6
ANTI-MASONIC IMPERTINENCES. Article 6
Original Correspondence. Article 7
Multum in Parbo; or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 7
CONSECRATION OF THE ROYAL COMMEMORATION LODGE, No. 1585. Article 8
Scotland. Article 8
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN GLASGOW AND WEST OF SCOTLAND. 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
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12 Articles
Page 6

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

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen-page weekly newspaper , f rice 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 / -

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 Twelve Shillings ( payable in advance ) : —Africa , Australia , Bombay , Canada , Cape of

Good Hope , Ceylon , China , Constantinople , Demerara , France , Germany , Gibraltar , Jamaica , Malta , Newfoundland , New South Wales , New Zealand , Suez , Trinidad , United States of America , & c . P . O . O . ' s to be made payable at the chief office , London .

COLONIAL AND FOREIGN SUBSCRIBERS are informed that acknowledgments of remittances received are published in the first number of every month . NOTICE . —It is very necessary for our friends 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 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 .

NOW READY . Reading Covers , to take 52 numbers of the " Free mason , " price 2 / 6 , may be had at the office , 198 , Fleet street .

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 tha . r . 12 o ' clock on Wednesday morning . ERRATUM . —In the report of the Grand Conclave Red Cross on the nth inst ., for " Capt . Bartlett " read "Capt . Barnes . " NOTICE . —We do not find it necessary to issue a supplement this week .

Births, Marriages, And Deaths.

Births , Marriages , and Deaths .

[ The charge is 2 s . 6 d . for announcements , not exceed ing four lines , under this heading . ]

BIRTHS . WATSON . —On the 20 th inst ., at Holland-road , W ., the wife of Gerald T . Watson , of a son . ANOUS , Mrs . Joseph , at Eton-villas , Haverstock-hill , March 21 st , of a son . HEATHCOTE , the wife of Lieut .-Col . C T ., Bombay Staff Corps , at Belvedere-road , Upper Norwood , March 20 th , of daughter .

MARRIAGE . VANDER BYL—MvBtinGii . —On the 17 th ult ., by special licence , at Stellenbosch , Cape of Good Hope , by the Rev . Dr . Faure , assisted by his son , the Rev . Philip Faure , cf Claa William , P . G . Van dcr-Byl , Esq ., of 102 , Harl « -ystreet , London , to Johanna , youngest daughter of the late Ryk Myburgh , Esq ., of Elsenburgh , Cape of Good Hope .

DEATHS . COBB . —On the 19 th inst ., Stanley Rhodes , son of R . Cobb , Esq ., of Surbiton Lodge , Kingston-on-Thames , aged 10 . DURANT , lucinda , relict of Mr . George , of Tong Castle , Shropshire , at St . Romans , St . Leonard ' s-on-Sea , aged 67 , March 1 ith .

Ar00608

TheFreemason, SATURDAY , MAR . 25 , 1876 .

Our Royal Grand Master's Return.

OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S RETURN .

The "Times" informs us that the Serapis arrived at Aden , March 20 tb , with the Raleigh in ' . company . All are well . Will leave after coaling . The Osborne was sent ahead on the 17 th at noon to have all in readiness for her consort . From Bombay it has been very fine

weather . The thermometer was 80 deg . in the shade , and the sea quite smooth . The menagerie is quite comfortable . It contains 80 animals of all sorts . The elephants walk about the deck j the deer are very tame , and the tigers are domesticated , though they exhibit tendencies to

relapse . Thursday the calm continued , and the temperature was the same . The sea was as smooth as glass ; no ships , nor fish , nor birds were to be seen . Friday the sea and temperature remained the same as before . The

squadron has been averaging 272 miles in 24 hours . The Osborne ran under the quarter of the Serapis to exhibit her two elephants , which salaamed to the Prince as she passed ahead . We shall be next hearing of the Prince at Suez and at Malta .

Masonic Old Women.

MASONIC OLD WOMEN .

Some people do not like to be called old , and a great many persons we kno , v do not relish being termed " old women . " But yet the clearness of truth compels us to say , that old women do exist and are many , and that we meet with them and confront them in various scenes and in

different walks of life . To suppose that we can be always young is alas a great fallacy ; to believe that youth , with its halcyon smiles , and living hopes , and active hours , is ever to wait upon us here , is but the baseless fabric of a deceiving dream . No , youth has to give way to

middle age , and middle age to old age , day-byday , and the weakness and perversity and querulousness of old age , often seem to tinge with dulness and gloominess , the early promise and the maturer excellence . Old age is then inevitable , and old men and old women have to

share with youth the pageant of the hour . But we are talking of old women . They sometimes unpolitely say , that old wom ° n , as the young Frenchman once gravely observed , are "de trop , " though we protest against any attack on real good old women . But we confess , as we

say this , that we have a dreadful souvenir of some Masonic old women who have been a heavy drawback on our lodges , a great stumbling block in the way of Freemasonry , and mournful obstacles to all improvement and progress . As a general rule the Masonic old woman is a

brother who has rot done a great deal for Freemasonry really and truly , though he thinks he has , and always tells young Masons that " things were better managed in his days . " He is very fond of hearing himself talk , and what he says is generally what a reporting brother

and friend of ours once ventured to term "didactic twaddle . " But where he most distinguishes himself is in his opposition to any movement for improvement , for progress , for light . Is it a library ?— ' * Books are expensive , " " Masons have no time for reading , "

" For his part he does not approve of publication , " " Money had better be spent in charity , " are the stereotype objections , the stock phrases of fogey ism , which fall from the lips of that respectable old woman . Is it a soiree ?— " Well , he prefers a lodge meeting , and his pipe and

glass of toddy afterwards . * ' He does not see why brethren are to come in evening dress . " "All this chopping and changing don ' t suit him . " " He never remembers such a proposal before ;" and so he damps the enthusiasm of the ardent , the zeal of the cultured , does this mischievous old

woman . Is it the admission of ladies r' He is "aghast at the idea . What would Bro . P . M . Popkins have said , or old ' Dont / or Bro . Jenks , or Bro . somebody else : And the lodge , accustomed to dictation , and Conservative in its respect for years and authority , goes with the old woman ,

and floors the young man . Now , we have cited no imaginary cases , we have drawn no ideal individual , though without any personal reflection ; but all lodges , we fancy , in a greater or lesser degree , are suffering from the infliction and pre - sence of Masonic old women at the present

time . Can nothing be done for remonstrant and despondent Masonic youth ? Is there no possibility of inducing these worthy and otherwise amiable old women to take a kindlier view of things and persons ? Alas ! we fear not ! Such as they are , such they

will be to the end of the story , and though the moralist may deprecate , and the cynic may scoff , and the young Mason may cry oat , the genus Masonic old woman is very flourishing amongst us , and is not , we fear , for a very long time indeed likely to leave that lodge life of ours , which its presence enfeebles and its perversity mars .

Anti-Masonic Impertinences.

ANTI-MASONIC IMPERTINENCES .

We have been much struck with the tendency of our opponents just now to assail our peaceful and useful Order with a plethora of mingled impertinence and falsehood . Indeed , nothing is

too hard or too bad to say of Freemasons , without a shadow of justification , without even the pretence of truth . It is simply , as fast young men say to-day , " calm lying , " nothing more and nothing less . These are serious words , and we

Anti-Masonic Impertinences.

are bound to prove them . In the " Weekly Examiner and Ulster Observer , " sent to us by a kind Hibernian brother , and which is , we may observe , a Roman Catholic paper , of date March nth , 1876 , published at Belfast , two letters are to be reid , unsigned , and apparently editorial ,

judging by their place and type , which constitute in themselves some very impertinent and untruthful charges against Freemasonry and Freemasons in that district . We mi ght , indeed , say to all our brethren there , " Risum teneatis fratres ; " we might bid them laugh

with Archdeacon Denison , " aslesto yeloli , " at such a mixture of balderdash and vulgarity . The weak and foolish person who penned these letters—we have grave doubts of his sanitymakes Freemasonry responsible , in his Ultramontane perspicuity , for recent commercial

embarrassments in Belfast , in " flax spinning , " principally , as it seems , because the " brethren monopolize one half of the alphabet in mere initial indication of the cacophonous Craft honours . " Now this , we beg to observe , is meant for wit and also sarcasm—Ultramontane wit and

Ultramontane sarcasm . Well , to say the truth , amid laughter-loving Paddies we never met with a " duller dog " than the writer of these childish invectives , and as for the sarcasm— "Heaven save the mark . '' If this is all the Ultramontanes can do , they must ba in a verv bad case ,

and the Freemasons in Belfast and the district will simply treat such an attack as we do , as another beautiful specimen of Ultramontane ignorance , impertinence , ' and mendacity . It is sad to have to use such words , but they are both , in our opinion , necessary and just , and ,

remembering that the Roman Catholic mot d'Ordre just now seems to be everywhere , at home and abroad , as regards Freemasonry without rhyme or reason , " Delendam esse Carthaginem , " we see no use in being mealymouthed , the more so as we are simply upholding the interests and

honour of our cruelly maligned Order . Our able contemporary , the " Masonic Advocate , " published at Indianapolis , Indiana , United States , tells us as follows : — " We have before us the prospectus for an anti-Masonic newspaper , to be published at Cincinnati , O ., by one J . H . H .

Woodward , accompanied by a circular letter , which says , ' We want you for a good , permanent , cash-paying subscriber , and solicit your money , your aid , and your influence . ' It is safe to presume that this was not intended for us , and as safe to wager that we will give nothing

of this sort . We think a great deal of Masonry . We love it for the good it has already done , and we want to perpetuate it for the good it will do in the future . The greatest fears we have ever had for the institution were in its popularity and too rapid growth . VVe want no more recruiting

agents in the shape of anti-Masonic papers and crusaders against Masonry , for they are sure to create a more favourable opinion of the Order , and greatly increase the number of those seeking admission . When renegades unite with rejected applicants in defaming the institution of

Freemasonry , which is uphold by the reputation of more than half a million of the best citizens of this country , they soon succeed in convincing intelligent , honest people that they themselves are liars and slanderers of the worst character . The documents before us establish the fact that the author of them is no exception to the rule .

We give a short extract from them , that those who know anything of Masonry may be able to judge for themselves : — ' Masonry is aggressive , and interferes with every one . The fearfully depressing times we now experience is her handywork , the result of her counsels , machinations , and plots . The

confidence of man in man can never be restored so long as Masonic principles prevail . Every Mason imbued with the principles of his Order feels that every other Mason is a rascal , and that the entire race of man is an institution of perverse wickedness , and carries his idea into the daily walks of his life , and thus Masonry , from

the number of her votaries , acting upon this principle , has sown the seeds of universal distrust broadcast over the whole land . Good times can never again prevail in this country until the heresies of Masonry are destroyed , and a general and neig hbourly confidence is restored among the people . Masonry forbids neig hbourly

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