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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • March 1, 1877
  • Page 19
  • SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION.
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1877: Page 19

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    Article SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. ← Page 4 of 5 →
Page 19

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

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

vided to prevent the admission of dust , etc ; this should be glazed , if of earthenware , to prevent evaporation otherwise than by the porous sides of the pot , which slight evaporation will have the effect of cooling the water . The apparatus should now be

set in a stand ( a sort of rough threelegged stool , through the board of which the pot can be placed , will answer admirably ) , of such a height that the water oozing through the lower sponge may have a drop of about two feet . This fiill

through the air will replace in the water any oxygen that it may have lost during the processes of boiling and filtering , and so correct that peculiar disagreeable flatness so noticeable in filtered water . The total cost of this filter need not exceed

one shilling . The charcoal and sand will of course require occasional renewal , but this will not be often if the upper pot be kept thoroughly clean and its sponge be frequently taken out and washed . Hardnessso-calledof waterwhenever it

, , , exists , may be remedied by the addition of a small quantity of bicarbonate of potash before use ; we recommend potash rather than soda because it does not give the

water the same disagreeable taste , whilst , what is of more consequence even than this , it is more soluble in the stomach . Whilst discussing the subject of water iu connexion with the house-supply , our mind , intent upon the greater comfort of our cottager friendssomewhat naturall

, y turns to that greatest of all discomforts" Washing-day . " AVe see , even as we write the detested word , the little house reeking with steam , filled with a mingled and execrable odour in which soap predominates , and choked with smoke from

the faulty copper flue , the entire upper part of the room a perfect network of wet , dabbling clothes , and the bottom a mingled chaos of baskets , dirty clothes , buckets , and small children ; add to this a wife—well , slightly irate and very

disagreeable from over work and worry , and no dinner ready , and can we wonder that the poor man sighs , turns his back on his home—if now for the first time , almost certainl y not for the last—and wends his way to the taproom that he has but just now manfully passed . And all this misery , for misery it is and greater misery it will be in the future , might be

prevented by erecting a public wash house for the entire population . If , again , to this public wash-house , good baths could be added , what a boon would be conferred upon the public , what a long way traversed on the road to securing public health .

But one thing remains to be noticed , and that is the spread of epidemic diseases , which may be introduced , generated they can hardly be , if the foregoing directions shall have been followed . Should any infectious disorder then manifest itself , the

case should be completely isolated at once . The best moans of doing this is by the establishment of a small cottage hospital in every place , such as a village , where no public provision is made , entirely for infectious and contagious disorders , to which the sufferer should be instantly removed .

Oue such , the site of which should be airy and removed as far from ordinary dwellings as possible , should be maintained in every village . After the first outlay the cost would be but trifling , and might he regarded entirely in the light of a

healthinsurance premium . Besides removing the patient , steps should be taken to thoroughly disinfect , by means of fumigation and otherwise , all bedding , furniture , and the like with which the person suffering from disease may have come into

contact . Should there be no possibility of removing the patient , then all healthy occupants of the house beyond those required for nursing , should leave the house , with which no more communication than is absolutely necessary should be maintained . Disinfectants should be freely used ; all refuse from the sick room should bo

burned ; whilst the doors through which anyone must pass should be covered , by way of curtains , with sheets or other hang ings saturated with some disinfecting fluid . These suggestions may be crude , yet to try them is a step in the right direction .

The start is the main thing , for the " vis inertia ; " is great indeed . Surely , however , there is at least one person in every parish , however small , who has sufficient leisure and enterprise to embark upon such a sanitary crusade as we have sketched

out , whose spare moments might well be whiled away in seeing to such of these matters , as oue of the public would be per-2 II 2

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-03-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031877/page/19/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE "ARMS" OF THE FREEMASONS IN ENGLAND. Article 2
THE REV. MR. PANDI AND FREEMASONRY. Article 3
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 4
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE OF OHIO. Article 8
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 11
LIFE'S LESSON. Article 14
LIFE'S ROLL-CALL. Article 14
A SOFT ANSWER. Article 16
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 16
SONNET. Article 20
AN ORATION UPON MASONRY. Article 20
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 23
A CENTENNIAL CURIOSITY. Article 26
A LONDONER'S VISIT TO A NORTH YORK DALE. Article 27
DONT TAKE IT TO HEART. Article 29
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. Article 30
THE LADY MURIEL. Article 32
THIS MORGAN AFFAIR. Article 36
FREEMASONRY IN AMERICA. Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 41
LEEDLE YACOB STRAUSS. Article 44
NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. Article 45
Hunt's Playing Cards. Article 49
Dick Radclyffe and Co's Illustrated Catalogue of Seeds. Article 49
The Cosmopolitan Masonic Calendar, Diary, and Pocket Book for 1877. Article 49
GEORGE KENNING, MASONIC PUBLISHER Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

vided to prevent the admission of dust , etc ; this should be glazed , if of earthenware , to prevent evaporation otherwise than by the porous sides of the pot , which slight evaporation will have the effect of cooling the water . The apparatus should now be

set in a stand ( a sort of rough threelegged stool , through the board of which the pot can be placed , will answer admirably ) , of such a height that the water oozing through the lower sponge may have a drop of about two feet . This fiill

through the air will replace in the water any oxygen that it may have lost during the processes of boiling and filtering , and so correct that peculiar disagreeable flatness so noticeable in filtered water . The total cost of this filter need not exceed

one shilling . The charcoal and sand will of course require occasional renewal , but this will not be often if the upper pot be kept thoroughly clean and its sponge be frequently taken out and washed . Hardnessso-calledof waterwhenever it

, , , exists , may be remedied by the addition of a small quantity of bicarbonate of potash before use ; we recommend potash rather than soda because it does not give the

water the same disagreeable taste , whilst , what is of more consequence even than this , it is more soluble in the stomach . Whilst discussing the subject of water iu connexion with the house-supply , our mind , intent upon the greater comfort of our cottager friendssomewhat naturall

, y turns to that greatest of all discomforts" Washing-day . " AVe see , even as we write the detested word , the little house reeking with steam , filled with a mingled and execrable odour in which soap predominates , and choked with smoke from

the faulty copper flue , the entire upper part of the room a perfect network of wet , dabbling clothes , and the bottom a mingled chaos of baskets , dirty clothes , buckets , and small children ; add to this a wife—well , slightly irate and very

disagreeable from over work and worry , and no dinner ready , and can we wonder that the poor man sighs , turns his back on his home—if now for the first time , almost certainl y not for the last—and wends his way to the taproom that he has but just now manfully passed . And all this misery , for misery it is and greater misery it will be in the future , might be

prevented by erecting a public wash house for the entire population . If , again , to this public wash-house , good baths could be added , what a boon would be conferred upon the public , what a long way traversed on the road to securing public health .

But one thing remains to be noticed , and that is the spread of epidemic diseases , which may be introduced , generated they can hardly be , if the foregoing directions shall have been followed . Should any infectious disorder then manifest itself , the

case should be completely isolated at once . The best moans of doing this is by the establishment of a small cottage hospital in every place , such as a village , where no public provision is made , entirely for infectious and contagious disorders , to which the sufferer should be instantly removed .

Oue such , the site of which should be airy and removed as far from ordinary dwellings as possible , should be maintained in every village . After the first outlay the cost would be but trifling , and might he regarded entirely in the light of a

healthinsurance premium . Besides removing the patient , steps should be taken to thoroughly disinfect , by means of fumigation and otherwise , all bedding , furniture , and the like with which the person suffering from disease may have come into

contact . Should there be no possibility of removing the patient , then all healthy occupants of the house beyond those required for nursing , should leave the house , with which no more communication than is absolutely necessary should be maintained . Disinfectants should be freely used ; all refuse from the sick room should bo

burned ; whilst the doors through which anyone must pass should be covered , by way of curtains , with sheets or other hang ings saturated with some disinfecting fluid . These suggestions may be crude , yet to try them is a step in the right direction .

The start is the main thing , for the " vis inertia ; " is great indeed . Surely , however , there is at least one person in every parish , however small , who has sufficient leisure and enterprise to embark upon such a sanitary crusade as we have sketched

out , whose spare moments might well be whiled away in seeing to such of these matters , as oue of the public would be per-2 II 2

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