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  • Nov. 12, 1859
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 12, 1859: Page 21

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    Article THE WEEK. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 21

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

The Week.

not , we regret to say . without the loss of twenty-four of our men ( among whom two officers ) and several wounded . The opposition to the Trader and Profession Bill is as strong in Bombay as Calcutta , and meetings of the Europeans and native gentlemen had been held on tho subject . On the whole , the opposition to the bill has been so hearty throughout India , that it is possible its passing may be postponed until Mr . AA'ilson shall have the opportunity of giving his opinion on it . Rao Ram Buksh ,

tnlookdar of Doondeah Khera , has been found guilty , and sentenced to be hanged . He is one of the many who treacherously betrayed unfortunate fugitives during the rebellion . Those from Cawnpore , who sought shelter upon his estate , were barbarously murdered by this monster , ivhose name will not be forgotten for ages . AVe have not heard of his actual execution , but thiuk it is hardly likely that even Lord Canning will pardon him . Rajah Jyelall Singh was also found guilty of abetting the murder of Miss JacksonMrs . Greenancl others .

, , He was convicted on the clearest and most conclusive evidence ; hosts of witnesses deposed not only to his having been the primary mover in the massacre of our countrymen and countrywomen , but also to his having stood by and witnessed , if not actually superintended , the brutal proceedings . It is entirely owing to the persevering exertions of Col . Bruce that the miscreant has not only been brought to trial , but his trial brought to so successful au issue . He initiated the proceedings ,

and he alone was in a position , and perhaps he alone had the sagacity , to collect witnesses from all parts of the country , as in conducting thc preliminary investigations their names transpired , and the nature of the evidence they were capable of giving became apparent . The execution was to take place at Lucknow on the 1 st inst ., at sunrise , ou the spot where his victims were murdered . A small monument marks it . It will be a relief when wo hear that the hangman has not been disappointed in disposing of these two friends . The case of Jyelall has

oxcited as much interest in Oude as did that of the Nawab of Furruekabad . The Nana is still , it is said , on tho north bank of the raptee , where its course from the hills flows westward . His followers , who have no money or supplies , plunder the inhabitants of the Deoghur A alley . A correspondent of the Lucknow Herald writes from the frontier more specifically : — " The Nana is now at Deoghur , and the Begum oue march beyond it . It is reported the Ranee of Lahore is iu camp . Tbe Begum has 200 rebel sepoys , and the Nana 500 , with one howitzer . He has also a small body of cavalry , numbering 150 sabres , 40 elephants , 40 camels , and 12 palkees , in which his and Bala Rao ' s families are conveyed . He has just made arrangements for tbe issue of three-quarters of a seer of coarse rice and one chittank of dhol . I am told that : i .

brigade of Ghoorkas from Kbatmandhoo have arrived at Dhang , with a view to drive the insurgents from the hills . The rebels frequently cross the border and plunder the inhabitants of Iurwah Koosaha , where there is a company of sepoys belonging to one of the talookdars . " Jung Bahadoor has at last , it is positively affirmed , ordered the Nana , Mummoo Khan , Beni Madho , and the rest of the principal rebels , to quit the Nepaul territories , under pain of being forcibly ejected by his troops . This will be service equivalent to the value of the tract of

country which it is in the contemplation of Government to make over to Nepaul . —The overland mail has also brought us correspondence and journals from Melbourne to Sept . 16 , and Sydney to Sept . 13 . Melbourne was in the midst of an election contest . The first batch of elections had gone against ministers . The law officers , Treasurer , and Commissiouer of Crown Lands , had been defeated ; but the Solicitor General was subsequently returned . The new Parliament of New South AVales met on the 30 th of Augustand was opened on the

fol-, lowing day by a speech from the Governor General iu person , and the address in return almost unanimously passed ; but on the first day of real business , the Government nominee , as chairman of committees , was rejected , and the opposition candidate chosen . On a subsequent day a motion was made by a Mr . Parkes to repeal the duties on tea and sugar , and opposed by the Government as an undue interference with their financial arrangements . The motion was , however , carried by a

majority of one , and the Cowper Ministry resigned . Mr . Murray was then sent for to form au administration , but failed in his commission , and ifr . Cowper resumed bis duties ; and , after an explanation to the Assembly of his position , moved the rescission of Mr . Parkes' motion , and the rescission was carried by a majority of 19 . Trade was rather dull in both colonies , and the supply of gold , though good , was not so plentiful as the previous year . GENERAL HOME NEWS . —The critical statu of affairs abroadand the

, impending congress , have made it necessary for several cabinet councils 1 ° be held this week , at which almost all tbe ministers have been in attendance . Though the weather was milder last week , the severity ° f the previous cold told on the health of tho metropolis , ancl the Registrar General's return for the week exhibits au increase of 272 deaths , the total number being 1 , 182 . Thc number of births was I , S 8 S . "T— - ^ -t the Court of Bankruptcy , the adjourned examination meeting in tbe

case of Messrs . Ayers and Melliss , who had traded as general merchants at Nottingham and New York , has been further adjourned for three months ; and a petition , praying for an order directing that the "Uardean Colliery Company should be wound up , was dismissed , all parties consenting . Permission was granted to sell property at J ' -nfield , belonging to J . E . Buller , the bankrupt solicitor , of Lincoln ' s"ui-fiehls , for the purpose of paying off the claim of an equitable mort-KJgoe thereon , Tbe sittings held for the last examination of George -Hontague Evmis , solicitor , late of Farnham , in Surrey , since cf R . ouloene :

of Richard Nicholson , an agricultural merchant , at Much Hadhain , in the county of Herts ; and of Ernest Levy , jeweller , of 352 , Strand , were adjourned . A strong opposition is anticipated in the latter ease . A deputation , headed by Sir C . Eardley , recently waited upon Lord John Russell , at the Foreign Office , with a view of making a representation regarding the Mortara ease . Their wish was that the subject should be brought formally under the notice of the various governments

of Europe . The Foreign Secretary promised to communicate with his colleagues in office , at the request of the deputation ; at the same time his lordship gave them to understand , what every one knows , that redress was uot to be looked for from Roman Catholic governments in such a case as this , where every natural tie must yield to the relentless claims of a fossilized religious monstrosit }' . The Peel Institution at Accrington held a meeting on Saturday night , for

the purpose of presenting the prizes to the candidates , which were awarded in the East Lancashire Union examinations . Lord Brougham presided , and the meetingAvas addressed by his lordship , Lord Stanley , and Canon Richson . Lorcl Brougham , iu the course of his address , denied that he was a convert to the Maine Liquor law . Tbe meeting was a very successful onb . Joseph Henry Jay , an income-tax collector , residing at Pearson-street , Kiugslaud-road , was placed beforo Mr . D'Eyncourt , at AYorship-strcet \ Police-court , charged with fraud in the

collection of that assessment . The magistrate remanded thc caso , and not considering the evidence offered of a very satisfactory kind , accepted bail in two sureties of £ 200 caeli :- ^—A dreadful accident happened on Saturday afternoon at what is called the . '' Big Pit , " in the neighbourhood of Far Green , near Hanley , by which we regret to state that ten persons lost their lives , and ten others were severely injured . It appears that a company of men employed at tbe pit were ascending in a cage , and from want of attention of the man at the wheelthc cageinstead of

stopping-, , when it reached the bank , was thrown over the wheel bottom upwards , by which ten persons were thrown out and killed on the spot , another dying soon afterwards . Another cage was descending with night hands , and into this the other cage fell , greatly injuring the persons therein , so that altogether ten other persons were severel j' hurt . A youth who was iu the ascei-ding ' eage escaped almost by a miracle , In reference to the late fire at the Paraffin Light Company ' s premises , Bucklersbury , the

solicitors of those interested have attended at the Mansion House to report to the Lord Mayor tho result of the coroner ' s inquest , and to come to an understanding as to how tho business should be conducted in future , so as to ensure the safety of contiguous property , and satisfy the neighbours as to their personal immunity from danger . Some discussion took place , and suggestions were entertained to secure the desired results , which are to be further considered when the arrangements have made some progress . The jury have returned a verdict of accidental death

at thc inquest on tbe body of . the unfortunate man Thomas Hine , who was killed by the explosion at the Surrey Consumers' Gas AVorks . The A en . Charles Mackenzie , M . A ., of Caius College , Cambridge , is about to resign the archdeaconry of Natal , which he has held for the last few years , for the purpose of putting himself at the head of the new African mission . He will be consecrated a bishop as soon as the necessary arrangements can be made , either in this country or by thc three bishops of Southern Africa ( Cape Town , Graham ' s Town , ancl Natal ); and the

mission will consist , in the first placo , of the bishop , six clergymen , a physician , a surgeon , and a number of artificers capable of conducting the various works of building , husbandry , and especially of the cultivation of the cotton plant . The new Lorcl Mayor ( Carter ) on AVednesday entered formally on his office . The procession left Guildhall about noon , and proceeded to AVestminster Hall , where the ceremony of presentation and taking tbe oaths was gone through . In the evening a grand banquet was given in the Guildhall . At a meeting , consisting of clergy and laymen , held at Cambridge on Monday last , it was resolved , " That tho persons present form themselves into a ' Church Defence

Association , ' aud also that the objects of tho association should be—1 . The circulation , by means of pamphlets and newspaper articles , of information respecting thc position , rights , and claims of the Church . 2 . The furnishing replies to all attacks made upon the Church , and especially those of the Society for the Liberation of Religion from State Control . 3 . The presentation of petitions to Parliament in all eases where such a course should seem desirable . " An inquiry , instituted bthc Board of Tradehas been commenced at the Greenwich

Policey , court , before Mr . Traill , the sitting magistrate , and Captain Hani ' s , nautical assessor , into the circumstances attending the wreck of the Royal Mail Steam Company ' s ship J'aramatta , on the 30 th June last , near the Alrgiu Islands . Captain Baynton , commander of the vessel , aud several of the subordinate officers , were examined , after which the inquiry was adjourned , that the men on watch at the time of the wreck might be brought forward . At the Court of Bankruptcy , third class

certificates were granted to Messrs . Hardwick and Jones , merchants , of Graceehureb-street ; but the Commissioner , in giving judgment , expressed his dissatisfaction at the course of trading pursued by the bankrupts , pronouncing it to have been of a reckless character . A further adjournment of a month was ordered in the case of Messrs . Francis and Freer , ale and wine merchants , of Great St . Helen ' s , to enable the assignees to furnish specific objections to the accounts .- At tho Metropolitan Free Hospital , Devonshire-square , City , the aggregate

number of patients relieved during the week ending Nov . 5 , was , medical , 715 ; surgical , 389 ; total , 1 , 004 ; of which 298 were new oases . , Some curious circumstances have transpired with yognrd ( 0 jijo relig ion ;;

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-11-12, Page 21” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_12111859/page/21/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY. —V. Article 1
BASILICA ANGLICANA Article 2
EARLY HISTORY OF MASONRY IN TEXAS. Article 4
ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 5
HOW TO DO GOOD. Article 5
EXCELSIOR, A BETTER MOTTO. Article 6
Literature. Article 6
EXCELSIOR, A BETTER MOTTO. Article 8
Literature. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 13
Poetry. Article 15
THE CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHER. Article 15
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 16
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
AMERICA. Article 19
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 20
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 22
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 22
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Week.

not , we regret to say . without the loss of twenty-four of our men ( among whom two officers ) and several wounded . The opposition to the Trader and Profession Bill is as strong in Bombay as Calcutta , and meetings of the Europeans and native gentlemen had been held on tho subject . On the whole , the opposition to the bill has been so hearty throughout India , that it is possible its passing may be postponed until Mr . AA'ilson shall have the opportunity of giving his opinion on it . Rao Ram Buksh ,

tnlookdar of Doondeah Khera , has been found guilty , and sentenced to be hanged . He is one of the many who treacherously betrayed unfortunate fugitives during the rebellion . Those from Cawnpore , who sought shelter upon his estate , were barbarously murdered by this monster , ivhose name will not be forgotten for ages . AVe have not heard of his actual execution , but thiuk it is hardly likely that even Lord Canning will pardon him . Rajah Jyelall Singh was also found guilty of abetting the murder of Miss JacksonMrs . Greenancl others .

, , He was convicted on the clearest and most conclusive evidence ; hosts of witnesses deposed not only to his having been the primary mover in the massacre of our countrymen and countrywomen , but also to his having stood by and witnessed , if not actually superintended , the brutal proceedings . It is entirely owing to the persevering exertions of Col . Bruce that the miscreant has not only been brought to trial , but his trial brought to so successful au issue . He initiated the proceedings ,

and he alone was in a position , and perhaps he alone had the sagacity , to collect witnesses from all parts of the country , as in conducting thc preliminary investigations their names transpired , and the nature of the evidence they were capable of giving became apparent . The execution was to take place at Lucknow on the 1 st inst ., at sunrise , ou the spot where his victims were murdered . A small monument marks it . It will be a relief when wo hear that the hangman has not been disappointed in disposing of these two friends . The case of Jyelall has

oxcited as much interest in Oude as did that of the Nawab of Furruekabad . The Nana is still , it is said , on tho north bank of the raptee , where its course from the hills flows westward . His followers , who have no money or supplies , plunder the inhabitants of the Deoghur A alley . A correspondent of the Lucknow Herald writes from the frontier more specifically : — " The Nana is now at Deoghur , and the Begum oue march beyond it . It is reported the Ranee of Lahore is iu camp . Tbe Begum has 200 rebel sepoys , and the Nana 500 , with one howitzer . He has also a small body of cavalry , numbering 150 sabres , 40 elephants , 40 camels , and 12 palkees , in which his and Bala Rao ' s families are conveyed . He has just made arrangements for tbe issue of three-quarters of a seer of coarse rice and one chittank of dhol . I am told that : i .

brigade of Ghoorkas from Kbatmandhoo have arrived at Dhang , with a view to drive the insurgents from the hills . The rebels frequently cross the border and plunder the inhabitants of Iurwah Koosaha , where there is a company of sepoys belonging to one of the talookdars . " Jung Bahadoor has at last , it is positively affirmed , ordered the Nana , Mummoo Khan , Beni Madho , and the rest of the principal rebels , to quit the Nepaul territories , under pain of being forcibly ejected by his troops . This will be service equivalent to the value of the tract of

country which it is in the contemplation of Government to make over to Nepaul . —The overland mail has also brought us correspondence and journals from Melbourne to Sept . 16 , and Sydney to Sept . 13 . Melbourne was in the midst of an election contest . The first batch of elections had gone against ministers . The law officers , Treasurer , and Commissiouer of Crown Lands , had been defeated ; but the Solicitor General was subsequently returned . The new Parliament of New South AVales met on the 30 th of Augustand was opened on the

fol-, lowing day by a speech from the Governor General iu person , and the address in return almost unanimously passed ; but on the first day of real business , the Government nominee , as chairman of committees , was rejected , and the opposition candidate chosen . On a subsequent day a motion was made by a Mr . Parkes to repeal the duties on tea and sugar , and opposed by the Government as an undue interference with their financial arrangements . The motion was , however , carried by a

majority of one , and the Cowper Ministry resigned . Mr . Murray was then sent for to form au administration , but failed in his commission , and ifr . Cowper resumed bis duties ; and , after an explanation to the Assembly of his position , moved the rescission of Mr . Parkes' motion , and the rescission was carried by a majority of 19 . Trade was rather dull in both colonies , and the supply of gold , though good , was not so plentiful as the previous year . GENERAL HOME NEWS . —The critical statu of affairs abroadand the

, impending congress , have made it necessary for several cabinet councils 1 ° be held this week , at which almost all tbe ministers have been in attendance . Though the weather was milder last week , the severity ° f the previous cold told on the health of tho metropolis , ancl the Registrar General's return for the week exhibits au increase of 272 deaths , the total number being 1 , 182 . Thc number of births was I , S 8 S . "T— - ^ -t the Court of Bankruptcy , the adjourned examination meeting in tbe

case of Messrs . Ayers and Melliss , who had traded as general merchants at Nottingham and New York , has been further adjourned for three months ; and a petition , praying for an order directing that the "Uardean Colliery Company should be wound up , was dismissed , all parties consenting . Permission was granted to sell property at J ' -nfield , belonging to J . E . Buller , the bankrupt solicitor , of Lincoln ' s"ui-fiehls , for the purpose of paying off the claim of an equitable mort-KJgoe thereon , Tbe sittings held for the last examination of George -Hontague Evmis , solicitor , late of Farnham , in Surrey , since cf R . ouloene :

of Richard Nicholson , an agricultural merchant , at Much Hadhain , in the county of Herts ; and of Ernest Levy , jeweller , of 352 , Strand , were adjourned . A strong opposition is anticipated in the latter ease . A deputation , headed by Sir C . Eardley , recently waited upon Lord John Russell , at the Foreign Office , with a view of making a representation regarding the Mortara ease . Their wish was that the subject should be brought formally under the notice of the various governments

of Europe . The Foreign Secretary promised to communicate with his colleagues in office , at the request of the deputation ; at the same time his lordship gave them to understand , what every one knows , that redress was uot to be looked for from Roman Catholic governments in such a case as this , where every natural tie must yield to the relentless claims of a fossilized religious monstrosit }' . The Peel Institution at Accrington held a meeting on Saturday night , for

the purpose of presenting the prizes to the candidates , which were awarded in the East Lancashire Union examinations . Lord Brougham presided , and the meetingAvas addressed by his lordship , Lord Stanley , and Canon Richson . Lorcl Brougham , iu the course of his address , denied that he was a convert to the Maine Liquor law . Tbe meeting was a very successful onb . Joseph Henry Jay , an income-tax collector , residing at Pearson-street , Kiugslaud-road , was placed beforo Mr . D'Eyncourt , at AYorship-strcet \ Police-court , charged with fraud in the

collection of that assessment . The magistrate remanded thc caso , and not considering the evidence offered of a very satisfactory kind , accepted bail in two sureties of £ 200 caeli :- ^—A dreadful accident happened on Saturday afternoon at what is called the . '' Big Pit , " in the neighbourhood of Far Green , near Hanley , by which we regret to state that ten persons lost their lives , and ten others were severely injured . It appears that a company of men employed at tbe pit were ascending in a cage , and from want of attention of the man at the wheelthc cageinstead of

stopping-, , when it reached the bank , was thrown over the wheel bottom upwards , by which ten persons were thrown out and killed on the spot , another dying soon afterwards . Another cage was descending with night hands , and into this the other cage fell , greatly injuring the persons therein , so that altogether ten other persons were severel j' hurt . A youth who was iu the ascei-ding ' eage escaped almost by a miracle , In reference to the late fire at the Paraffin Light Company ' s premises , Bucklersbury , the

solicitors of those interested have attended at the Mansion House to report to the Lord Mayor tho result of the coroner ' s inquest , and to come to an understanding as to how tho business should be conducted in future , so as to ensure the safety of contiguous property , and satisfy the neighbours as to their personal immunity from danger . Some discussion took place , and suggestions were entertained to secure the desired results , which are to be further considered when the arrangements have made some progress . The jury have returned a verdict of accidental death

at thc inquest on tbe body of . the unfortunate man Thomas Hine , who was killed by the explosion at the Surrey Consumers' Gas AVorks . The A en . Charles Mackenzie , M . A ., of Caius College , Cambridge , is about to resign the archdeaconry of Natal , which he has held for the last few years , for the purpose of putting himself at the head of the new African mission . He will be consecrated a bishop as soon as the necessary arrangements can be made , either in this country or by thc three bishops of Southern Africa ( Cape Town , Graham ' s Town , ancl Natal ); and the

mission will consist , in the first placo , of the bishop , six clergymen , a physician , a surgeon , and a number of artificers capable of conducting the various works of building , husbandry , and especially of the cultivation of the cotton plant . The new Lorcl Mayor ( Carter ) on AVednesday entered formally on his office . The procession left Guildhall about noon , and proceeded to AVestminster Hall , where the ceremony of presentation and taking tbe oaths was gone through . In the evening a grand banquet was given in the Guildhall . At a meeting , consisting of clergy and laymen , held at Cambridge on Monday last , it was resolved , " That tho persons present form themselves into a ' Church Defence

Association , ' aud also that the objects of tho association should be—1 . The circulation , by means of pamphlets and newspaper articles , of information respecting thc position , rights , and claims of the Church . 2 . The furnishing replies to all attacks made upon the Church , and especially those of the Society for the Liberation of Religion from State Control . 3 . The presentation of petitions to Parliament in all eases where such a course should seem desirable . " An inquiry , instituted bthc Board of Tradehas been commenced at the Greenwich

Policey , court , before Mr . Traill , the sitting magistrate , and Captain Hani ' s , nautical assessor , into the circumstances attending the wreck of the Royal Mail Steam Company ' s ship J'aramatta , on the 30 th June last , near the Alrgiu Islands . Captain Baynton , commander of the vessel , aud several of the subordinate officers , were examined , after which the inquiry was adjourned , that the men on watch at the time of the wreck might be brought forward . At the Court of Bankruptcy , third class

certificates were granted to Messrs . Hardwick and Jones , merchants , of Graceehureb-street ; but the Commissioner , in giving judgment , expressed his dissatisfaction at the course of trading pursued by the bankrupts , pronouncing it to have been of a reckless character . A further adjournment of a month was ordered in the case of Messrs . Francis and Freer , ale and wine merchants , of Great St . Helen ' s , to enable the assignees to furnish specific objections to the accounts .- At tho Metropolitan Free Hospital , Devonshire-square , City , the aggregate

number of patients relieved during the week ending Nov . 5 , was , medical , 715 ; surgical , 389 ; total , 1 , 004 ; of which 298 were new oases . , Some curious circumstances have transpired with yognrd ( 0 jijo relig ion ;;

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