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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Dec. 5, 1863
  • Page 19
  • THE WEEK.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 5, 1863: Page 19

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The Week.

were sufficiently worked out for practical adoption , though dif- I ferent members had different modes of expressing the common idea . Ultimately a motion to that effect by Mr . D'lffanger was adopted . The London Rifle Brigade and the London Scottish Rifles both met in great force on Saturday—the first at the Crystal Palace , the second at AA " estminster Hall—for the

distribution of prizes . In both cases the prizes were presented by the wives of the lieutenant-colonels of the regiment , and in both the lieutenant-colonels congratulated the corps on their healthy and efficient state . Lord Elcho stated that Sir Hope Grant hacl consented to become the colonel of the Scottish Rifles in place of Lord Clyde . Lady Elcho made a spirited address to the regiment .

-TheUniversity of Cambridge has been engaged in the election of a Professor of Political Economy . There were four candidates , hut the choice of the electors fell on Mr . Fawcett , a blind gentleman , who has been twice a candidate for a seat in Parliament , ancl is an active member of the Social Science Congresses . It would appear from a statement in the Times , that the

Admiralty , acting npon a report from the dockyard officials , sent an order down to Sheerness last week , directing the Rappahannock ( late Her Majesty's ship Victor ) to be detained . As in tho case of the Alabama , however , tbe Confederate agents were on the alert , and the order arrived " a few hours too late . " It is asserted that when the Victor was sold her new owners

alleged that they intended her for tho Chinese trade , and she was re-christened the " Seylla of London . " Like the Phainix and Cyclops she was sold with her engines , machinery , and the whole of her gear complete , and it was announced at the time of her sale that " she was to be docked to have her hull examined before being taken away . " She has ever since , apparently , been lying at Sheerness , and it would appear that she osVly left that dackyai-d when it became evident to her owners

that hers would be the fate of the Alexandra and the Birkenhead "rams" if she remained another day in an English port . A correspondent of the Times states that , in addition to the Victor , the Phainix , ancl the Cyclops , the Amp ' hion has recently been sold out of the Queen ' s service . The Amphion is a 26 gun screw frigate of 1474 tons . The guns ancl stores were removed from tbe vessels at the time of sale .

As six miners were being lowered clown a colliery shaft at Kilnburst , near Rotherham , the machinery appears to have got out of order , and the poor fellows were thrown to the bottom of the pit and killed . A curious trial has taken place at the Central Criminal Court . A man named Everett was found guilty some time ago of receiving stolen goods , the principal witness against

him being a convict of the name of Yates . The friends of Everett now put Yates on his trial for perjury , and they proved that on the clay when Yates said ho was at Everett ' s house and saw the stolen goods he was actually in gaol charged with an offence . The jury appeared to he satisfied , however , that Yates had only mistaken the date of his visit , ancl they returned a

verdict of not guilty . At the same court , Bridget Lord , 27 , charged with feloniously wounding Elizabeth Stout , was acquitted ; two labourers and a tailor , charged with robbery and personal violence , were found guilty , and sentenced to various terms of imprisonment ; Alexander Stewart , found guilty of exposing bad meat for sale , was sentenced to a fine of

£ 50 ; Fanny Woole , 23 , unmarried , charged with the murder of her illegitimate child , was acquitted ; and Edward Eeart , butcher , found guilty of forging and uttering a cheque for £ 25 , was sentenced to throe years penal servitude . The Court of Queen ' s Bench has been occupied five days with the hearing of a somewhat extraordinary case . A Mrs . Symm brought an action against two medical men for putting her -under restraint , and treating ber as a lunatic . The defence

was that she was really suffering from delirium tremens , and that it was necessary to adopt the precautions taken . The jury returned a verdict for the defendants . A begging advertisement writer has been caught and brought before the police magistrate at Southwark . A person calling himself the Rev . Wm . Hall had inserted an advertisement on behalf

of the widow and daughter of a country magistrate , who were reduced to tbe utmost destitution , and were starving in Lambeth . The Rev . Mr . Lingham , the rector of Lambeth , made inquiries aud found that the address to which the advertisement "writer gave a reference was a small coffee-shop , where the prisoner called for and took away the letters addressed to the

sham benevolent clergyman . AVhen taken into custody he denied that he was the Rev . Mr . Hall , but only an unconscious agent of his , though he was unable to give any intelligent account of his principal . On examination a copy of another advertisement which has also appeared , soliciting aid for a

distressed literary gentleman , was found . The prisoner was removed for further inquiries . Aia inquest bas been opened . ou the body of a young man , who was found in the Bridgewater Canal , near Runcorn , under circumstances that leave little doubt of his having been murdered . There were several knife wounds on his person , and by one of them his throat was cut in a manner that must have caused death in

a few moments . The young man has not been identified . The Bank of England has raised its rate of discount to eight per cent . In the Court of Queen's Bench , a young man named Frankel has recovered £ 2000 damages from the London and North-AVestern Railway Company , for injuries sustained by him while travelling on an omnibus employed by them at

Matlock . The omnibus began racing with a rival vehicle , by which the complainant was thrown out , and he appeared in court a mere wreck of humanity . A mysterious case of poisoning , the victim being a young lady , near Droitwich , has produced considerable sensation . She was about to become a mother

before she was a wife , and the taking of a dose of arsenic put an end to her wretched life . Under what immediate circumstances , however , the poison was taken is left an open point . The death of another young lady , who was found drowned near Brighton , has also occupied the attention of a coroner ' s jury , but the inquest has been adjourned for further evidence . FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —The Emperor presided over a

Council of Ministers on . Monday at Paris , avid received the Papal Nuncio and the Russian and Spanish ambassadors , who handed to his Majesty the replies of their respective Governments to the invitation to the Congress . The Jlioiii'eitr has -published the diplomatic correspondence which was closed by Earl Russell's announcement that England will not take part in the European

Congress proposed by the Emperor Napoleon , ancl has not appended a single word of comment . The same paper has officially denied that the French Government has any connection with the publication of a pamphlet entitled , " Napoleon III . et le Congres , " which seems to have been framed on the model of tho pamphlets that have once or twice foreshadowed the Emperor's

policy , and which maintains that if there be no Congress there must and will be an European war . The Paris journals , even those which are not directly connected with the Government , appear to be greatly annoyed by the English Cabinet's refusal to take part in a Congress , and their annoyance is understood to be fully shared by tho Imperial officials . Advices from Copen »

hagen state that the majority of the municipal councils and nearly all the officials of Schleswig have testified their loyalty 1 to King Christian , the latter by taking the oaths of alle glance , and the former by congratulatory deputations . The Duke of Brunswick is now to be numbered with those Princes

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-12-05, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05121863/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
MOTHER KILWINNING. Article 1
MANCHESTER MASONIC RELIEF COMMITTEE. Article 4
ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED FREEMASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 4
OLD DUNDEE LODGE (No. 18). Article 6
Untitled Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND OTJEKIE8. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
MASONIC CHARITY. Article 10
LODGE OF HARMONY (No. 600). Article 11
THE ANTIQUITY OF MASONIC DEGREES. Article 11
THE SUSPENSIONS IN JERSEY. Article 11
WESTERN INDIA. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 16
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
Untitled Article 17
SCOTLAND. Article 18
IRELAND. Article 18
ASIA MINOR. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Week.

were sufficiently worked out for practical adoption , though dif- I ferent members had different modes of expressing the common idea . Ultimately a motion to that effect by Mr . D'lffanger was adopted . The London Rifle Brigade and the London Scottish Rifles both met in great force on Saturday—the first at the Crystal Palace , the second at AA " estminster Hall—for the

distribution of prizes . In both cases the prizes were presented by the wives of the lieutenant-colonels of the regiment , and in both the lieutenant-colonels congratulated the corps on their healthy and efficient state . Lord Elcho stated that Sir Hope Grant hacl consented to become the colonel of the Scottish Rifles in place of Lord Clyde . Lady Elcho made a spirited address to the regiment .

-TheUniversity of Cambridge has been engaged in the election of a Professor of Political Economy . There were four candidates , hut the choice of the electors fell on Mr . Fawcett , a blind gentleman , who has been twice a candidate for a seat in Parliament , ancl is an active member of the Social Science Congresses . It would appear from a statement in the Times , that the

Admiralty , acting npon a report from the dockyard officials , sent an order down to Sheerness last week , directing the Rappahannock ( late Her Majesty's ship Victor ) to be detained . As in tho case of the Alabama , however , tbe Confederate agents were on the alert , and the order arrived " a few hours too late . " It is asserted that when the Victor was sold her new owners

alleged that they intended her for tho Chinese trade , and she was re-christened the " Seylla of London . " Like the Phainix and Cyclops she was sold with her engines , machinery , and the whole of her gear complete , and it was announced at the time of her sale that " she was to be docked to have her hull examined before being taken away . " She has ever since , apparently , been lying at Sheerness , and it would appear that she osVly left that dackyai-d when it became evident to her owners

that hers would be the fate of the Alexandra and the Birkenhead "rams" if she remained another day in an English port . A correspondent of the Times states that , in addition to the Victor , the Phainix , ancl the Cyclops , the Amp ' hion has recently been sold out of the Queen ' s service . The Amphion is a 26 gun screw frigate of 1474 tons . The guns ancl stores were removed from tbe vessels at the time of sale .

As six miners were being lowered clown a colliery shaft at Kilnburst , near Rotherham , the machinery appears to have got out of order , and the poor fellows were thrown to the bottom of the pit and killed . A curious trial has taken place at the Central Criminal Court . A man named Everett was found guilty some time ago of receiving stolen goods , the principal witness against

him being a convict of the name of Yates . The friends of Everett now put Yates on his trial for perjury , and they proved that on the clay when Yates said ho was at Everett ' s house and saw the stolen goods he was actually in gaol charged with an offence . The jury appeared to he satisfied , however , that Yates had only mistaken the date of his visit , ancl they returned a

verdict of not guilty . At the same court , Bridget Lord , 27 , charged with feloniously wounding Elizabeth Stout , was acquitted ; two labourers and a tailor , charged with robbery and personal violence , were found guilty , and sentenced to various terms of imprisonment ; Alexander Stewart , found guilty of exposing bad meat for sale , was sentenced to a fine of

£ 50 ; Fanny Woole , 23 , unmarried , charged with the murder of her illegitimate child , was acquitted ; and Edward Eeart , butcher , found guilty of forging and uttering a cheque for £ 25 , was sentenced to throe years penal servitude . The Court of Queen ' s Bench has been occupied five days with the hearing of a somewhat extraordinary case . A Mrs . Symm brought an action against two medical men for putting her -under restraint , and treating ber as a lunatic . The defence

was that she was really suffering from delirium tremens , and that it was necessary to adopt the precautions taken . The jury returned a verdict for the defendants . A begging advertisement writer has been caught and brought before the police magistrate at Southwark . A person calling himself the Rev . Wm . Hall had inserted an advertisement on behalf

of the widow and daughter of a country magistrate , who were reduced to tbe utmost destitution , and were starving in Lambeth . The Rev . Mr . Lingham , the rector of Lambeth , made inquiries aud found that the address to which the advertisement "writer gave a reference was a small coffee-shop , where the prisoner called for and took away the letters addressed to the

sham benevolent clergyman . AVhen taken into custody he denied that he was the Rev . Mr . Hall , but only an unconscious agent of his , though he was unable to give any intelligent account of his principal . On examination a copy of another advertisement which has also appeared , soliciting aid for a

distressed literary gentleman , was found . The prisoner was removed for further inquiries . Aia inquest bas been opened . ou the body of a young man , who was found in the Bridgewater Canal , near Runcorn , under circumstances that leave little doubt of his having been murdered . There were several knife wounds on his person , and by one of them his throat was cut in a manner that must have caused death in

a few moments . The young man has not been identified . The Bank of England has raised its rate of discount to eight per cent . In the Court of Queen's Bench , a young man named Frankel has recovered £ 2000 damages from the London and North-AVestern Railway Company , for injuries sustained by him while travelling on an omnibus employed by them at

Matlock . The omnibus began racing with a rival vehicle , by which the complainant was thrown out , and he appeared in court a mere wreck of humanity . A mysterious case of poisoning , the victim being a young lady , near Droitwich , has produced considerable sensation . She was about to become a mother

before she was a wife , and the taking of a dose of arsenic put an end to her wretched life . Under what immediate circumstances , however , the poison was taken is left an open point . The death of another young lady , who was found drowned near Brighton , has also occupied the attention of a coroner ' s jury , but the inquest has been adjourned for further evidence . FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —The Emperor presided over a

Council of Ministers on . Monday at Paris , avid received the Papal Nuncio and the Russian and Spanish ambassadors , who handed to his Majesty the replies of their respective Governments to the invitation to the Congress . The Jlioiii'eitr has -published the diplomatic correspondence which was closed by Earl Russell's announcement that England will not take part in the European

Congress proposed by the Emperor Napoleon , ancl has not appended a single word of comment . The same paper has officially denied that the French Government has any connection with the publication of a pamphlet entitled , " Napoleon III . et le Congres , " which seems to have been framed on the model of tho pamphlets that have once or twice foreshadowed the Emperor's

policy , and which maintains that if there be no Congress there must and will be an European war . The Paris journals , even those which are not directly connected with the Government , appear to be greatly annoyed by the English Cabinet's refusal to take part in a Congress , and their annoyance is understood to be fully shared by tho Imperial officials . Advices from Copen »

hagen state that the majority of the municipal councils and nearly all the officials of Schleswig have testified their loyalty 1 to King Christian , the latter by taking the oaths of alle glance , and the former by congratulatory deputations . The Duke of Brunswick is now to be numbered with those Princes

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