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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1857
  • Page 22
  • GOEIEBPOKBENGE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 1, 1857: Page 22

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    Article GOEIEBPOKBENGE. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article MASONIC INCIDENT. Page 1 of 1
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Goeiebpokbenge.

could nqt be present ) knew anything about it , the Warrant was on its way to England , where probably more of this piece of sharp practice will be heard of officially . One thing more . Who is the new Grand Master ? Sir Allan Napier Macnab I of whom all the complaints for incompetencyr and inattention were made to your Grand Lodge by the very men who have just elected him . Yours fraternally , Canada West , Sept 15 , 1857 . A Canadian Mason .

YOBKSHIEE . —PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGK TO THE EDITOR OF THE EREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND KASONIC MIRROR . Dear Sir and Brother , —I cannot tacitly allow the remarks of our worthy and Y . W . Prov . G ; Bee , Bro . Stark , respecting the arrangements at the Prov . Grand banquet , held at Mull , on the 30 th Septembery to pass , without the expression of my dissent thereto , in which I am satisfied I am joined by a large number of the Brethren who were present on that occasion .

Bro > Stark , in a circular , dated Mull , October 10 th , after stating , that at " six o ' clock upwards of 150 Brethren partook of an excellent banquet , and & most agreeable evening was spent , " proceeds to say , " that the entire arrangements were most satisfactory , and that the W . M . and Brethren of the Minerva Lodge could not but be gratified at the admirable results which attended their arduous exertions . ^

To the foregoing remarks of Bro . Stark I must demur , for the following reasons : 1 st . The want of punctuality , for the Brethren did not sit down until 6 * 45 p . m . ; the consequence of which was , that many who might otherwise have reached their homes that evening were either compelled to stay in Hull all night or leave before the proceedings were half over . 2 nd ; The great paucity of waiters , and the utter

inefficiency of the few who were there , prevented many of the Brethren , myself included , from obtaining even an apology for a dinner . 3 rd , and last . The quality of the wines , which would not have been tolerated in a fourth-rate tavern , added to which a singular anomaly in the value of the wine-tickets combined to produce an effect the very reverse of satisfactory .

Should a similar line of conduct be pursued at future Prov . Grand meetings a large number of the Brethren who attend the Lodge will be driven to abstain from joining the banquet . I have penned these remarks in no unfraternal feeling , but with a pure desire that such irregularities may by being brought into notice be avoided in the future . —Yours fraternally , Veritas .

Masonic Incident.

MASONIC INCIDENT .

Henry D . Garrett , who was made a Mason in the Monmouth Lodge , Jtfo . 37 , emigrated , a few years since , to Oregon , where he was an officer in the Lafayette Lodge , under the California jurisdiction . His health failing , he emigrated to the Sandwich Islands , where he died . Before leaving Illinois , he borrowed live hundred dollars of Jacob Garrett , his father , of Fulton county ; and , on his death-bed , he deposited five hundred dollars with the Brethren of the Hawaiian Lodge , at Honolulu , with the request that the sum might be sent to his father . The

Brethren there paid the expenses of his sickness and burial , put the money to use , and upon the first opportunity , forwarded a bill of exchange on the New Bedford Bank to the G . Sec . of the Grand Lodge of California . The bill was negotiated by the Hon . James Knox , without charge , and the sum of five hundred and fifty dollars was paid to Mr . Garrett . Thus , we see that , no matter where a Brother may be—whether in the east , or west , or in the far-off dsles of the ocean—he is cared for in his last moments , consoled and comforted on his last lonely journey , and his-dying requests scrupulously executed by his Brethren of the " mystic tie *"

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1857-11-01, Page 22” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01111857/page/22/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE CANADAS. Article 1
ON THE UNIVERSALITY OF THE GRAND MASONIC TRIUNITY. Article 3
THE KADIRI ORDER OF EL TASAWUF IN ARABIA. Article 9
TIDINGS FROM THE CRAFT IN THE UNITED STATES Article 12
LONDON AND MIDDLESEX ARCHEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Article 14
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 19
MASONIC INCIDENT. Article 22
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 23
METROPOLITAN Article 26
PROVINCIAL Article 34
ROYAL ARCH. Article 69
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 72
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR Article 73
MARK MASONRY. Article 73
SCOTLAND. Article 77
IRELAND Article 80
COLONIAL. Article 80
INDIA. Article 81
WEST INDIES Article 82
SUMMARY OE NEWS FOR OCTOBER Article 85
NOTICE. Article 91
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Page 22

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

Goeiebpokbenge.

could nqt be present ) knew anything about it , the Warrant was on its way to England , where probably more of this piece of sharp practice will be heard of officially . One thing more . Who is the new Grand Master ? Sir Allan Napier Macnab I of whom all the complaints for incompetencyr and inattention were made to your Grand Lodge by the very men who have just elected him . Yours fraternally , Canada West , Sept 15 , 1857 . A Canadian Mason .

YOBKSHIEE . —PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGK TO THE EDITOR OF THE EREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND KASONIC MIRROR . Dear Sir and Brother , —I cannot tacitly allow the remarks of our worthy and Y . W . Prov . G ; Bee , Bro . Stark , respecting the arrangements at the Prov . Grand banquet , held at Mull , on the 30 th Septembery to pass , without the expression of my dissent thereto , in which I am satisfied I am joined by a large number of the Brethren who were present on that occasion .

Bro > Stark , in a circular , dated Mull , October 10 th , after stating , that at " six o ' clock upwards of 150 Brethren partook of an excellent banquet , and & most agreeable evening was spent , " proceeds to say , " that the entire arrangements were most satisfactory , and that the W . M . and Brethren of the Minerva Lodge could not but be gratified at the admirable results which attended their arduous exertions . ^

To the foregoing remarks of Bro . Stark I must demur , for the following reasons : 1 st . The want of punctuality , for the Brethren did not sit down until 6 * 45 p . m . ; the consequence of which was , that many who might otherwise have reached their homes that evening were either compelled to stay in Hull all night or leave before the proceedings were half over . 2 nd ; The great paucity of waiters , and the utter

inefficiency of the few who were there , prevented many of the Brethren , myself included , from obtaining even an apology for a dinner . 3 rd , and last . The quality of the wines , which would not have been tolerated in a fourth-rate tavern , added to which a singular anomaly in the value of the wine-tickets combined to produce an effect the very reverse of satisfactory .

Should a similar line of conduct be pursued at future Prov . Grand meetings a large number of the Brethren who attend the Lodge will be driven to abstain from joining the banquet . I have penned these remarks in no unfraternal feeling , but with a pure desire that such irregularities may by being brought into notice be avoided in the future . —Yours fraternally , Veritas .

Masonic Incident.

MASONIC INCIDENT .

Henry D . Garrett , who was made a Mason in the Monmouth Lodge , Jtfo . 37 , emigrated , a few years since , to Oregon , where he was an officer in the Lafayette Lodge , under the California jurisdiction . His health failing , he emigrated to the Sandwich Islands , where he died . Before leaving Illinois , he borrowed live hundred dollars of Jacob Garrett , his father , of Fulton county ; and , on his death-bed , he deposited five hundred dollars with the Brethren of the Hawaiian Lodge , at Honolulu , with the request that the sum might be sent to his father . The

Brethren there paid the expenses of his sickness and burial , put the money to use , and upon the first opportunity , forwarded a bill of exchange on the New Bedford Bank to the G . Sec . of the Grand Lodge of California . The bill was negotiated by the Hon . James Knox , without charge , and the sum of five hundred and fifty dollars was paid to Mr . Garrett . Thus , we see that , no matter where a Brother may be—whether in the east , or west , or in the far-off dsles of the ocean—he is cared for in his last moments , consoled and comforted on his last lonely journey , and his-dying requests scrupulously executed by his Brethren of the " mystic tie *"

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