Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • June 25, 1864
  • Page 20
  • TO CORRESPONDENTS.
Current:

The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, June 25, 1864: Page 20

  • Back to The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, June 25, 1864
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article THE WEEK. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article THE WEEK. Page 3 of 3
    Article TO CORRESPONDENTS. Page 1 of 1
Page 20

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

The Week.

was present . The report was , on the whole , satisfactory — eminently so as far as the progress and health of the scholars were concerned—but it was regretted that the annual subscriptions had fallen off . On the other hand , the number of regiments that contributed to the fund was on the increase . Several ofthe company present followed the example of the noble chairman , ancl increased the amount of their subscriptions . '

A case , which was decided in the Divorce Court on Saturday , discloses some features which will be abhorrent to the feeling of every Englishman . A man , who suspected his wife of misconduct , employed a spy to watch her conduct , and upon the evidence he furnished the petition was presented . It was however , altogether uncorroborated , and the judge , in dismissing

the application , made some severe comments on the impropriety of employing spies in such cases , who , he said , if they did not find evidence of guilt , were under the strongest possible temptation to manufacture it . ——In the Court of Common Pleas an action was brought against the proprietor of the Standard for an article which appeared in March last , ancl which the complainant alleged to be a libel on her character . It arose out of the fact that some unknown scoundrel wrote letters to

young women for immoral purposes , ancl asked them to communicate with him under the initials of " W . P ., " afc 151 , Cheapside . In commenting on this circumstance the Standard mentioned the names of fche parties living afc the specified address , which were patent to all the world in the London Directory . The friends of the plaintiff construed this into a libel , ancl the judge in summing up the case , while he exonerated

the writer from malice , leffc it to the jury to say whether there was such an insinuation on the lad y ' s personal character as required her to come forward to clear herself . The jury found for the plaintiff with 40 , s . damages . George Bryco , convicted upon trial at Edinburgh of the murder of a young woman

named Jane _ Seaton , has been executed . The culprit , during the latter portion of his confinement , showed a spirit of penitence and of acquiesence in the doom that awaited him . Ib will be recollected that efforts were made to obtain a commutation

of his sentence , on the ground of the low moral organisation in the character of the murderer , but tbe Home Secretary declined to interfere wifch the course of justice . The three foreigners who stand charged with defrauding a firm on the Continent of silk goods to the extent of £ 30 , 000 ancl with forgery , have been again brought up afc the Mansion House .

Further evidence was given in the case , after which the prisoners were again remanded . Bail was refused . An inquest has been held afc Sheffield , on the body of a woman named Myers , who was killed by her husband . The jury returned a verdict of wilful murder against the man . FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —The Conference sat on Wednesday ,

but could agree to no arrangement . England ' s proposal for mediation was rrjected by Austria and Prussia , and likewise by Denmark . The proposal is stated to have been made the subject of preliminary discussion between the Austrian ancl Prussian Governments , but they would only agree ' to accept the good office of a mediating Power on conditions to which

Denmark was not likely to assent . Furthermore , Prussia would not accept the mediation as in any way binding upon her . The result was that the meeting ended in nothing . It is stated that another sitting is to take place to-day . If no agreement can be adopted in the meantime , hostilities must then be resumed . A telegram from Copenhagen announces that the

differerences between the King , the Ministry , and the Privy Council are settled . The Dogblad says no Ministry recommending the formation of a Schleswig-Holstein estate can stand . The people will never suffer the sacrifice of Schleswig . Domi-

The Week.

ciliary visits were paid by the police at tho close of last week to the houses of two members of the Corps Legislatif , Messrs . Carnofc and Gamier Pages , ancl also to several other persons . Papers were searched and documents confiscated . This proceeding arose from the fact of the gentlemen being supposed to be concerned in forming an association of more than 20 persons for electioneering purposes . A number of individuals under 20 may , according to French law , so associate

themselves ; beyond that they become liable to prosecution . The visits were not confined to Paris , but took place simultaneously throughout France . The only result , it is thought , will be to increase the opposition minority , and to render the defeat of the Government certain in many of the elections for Councils General which have just commenced . The Japanese Ambassadors having signed the treaty—the object of their journey to Paris—are on their way back to their native country . Spain

, it is said , has decided to come to a peaceable solution of the misunderstanding with Peru . Such is reported to be the determination arrived at in a Ministerial Council just held at Madrid . The Memorial Diplomatique states thafc a circular note has been addressed by the Austrian Cabinet to its diplomatic agents denying that the meeting of the two Emperors at Kissengen has any reference to a Holy Alliance or the slightest hostile feeling towards any power whatever .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

P . M . AND P . PROV . G . W . —We have received a letter , signed as above , complaining of the large number of officers appointed in the Provincial Grand Lodge of Turkey , who have not served the office of Master or Wardens in their respective lodges , to their apparent exclusion . We have made inquiries on the subject , and find that every Master and Past Master iu the different lodges who would accept ifc have held Grand Lodge , and hence the undue preponderance of simple M . M . 's

in the appointments . We admit we think it would be better even to allow one brother to hold office for a series of years ) than to introduce a number of brethren into Grand Lodge , be it Supreme or Provincial , before they have been properly graduated in a private lodge , and in some instances we hold it to be illegal . On foreign ancl colonial stations , however , considerable latitude must be allowed , and we should be sorry on such stations to have the responsibility of appointing the officers , especially where the lodges lay at any distance one from another .

PEGASUS takes too wide a flight for our comprehension . J . B . ( Montreal ) . —We did advocate the cause yon allude to as warmly as anybody ; but having expressed our opinion that neither side were altogether in the right , we managed to offend both . No unusual thing for editors to do . J . W . —W Q should think Ireland . BETA . —We have no recollection of the letter to which you

allude . We doubt if ifc ever came to hand . AN APPRENTICE in London can have no difficulty in learning all that is requisite for him to know , and much more . He has only to visit any lodge of instruction , ancl he will find plenty of brethren able and willing to teach , if he will give the time to learn ,

A . B . to C . D . —There is no exact law that a Prov . G . Registrar shall be an Installed Master , but wc have no hesitation he should be , that qualification being required from the Grand Registrar ; and where there is no law to tho contrary , Provincial Grand Lodges are bound to follow the general laws of Grand Lodge . As to informing you , however , what a Prov . G . Master can do it is altogether out of our power , they being to all appearance virtually above the law , for when once

appointed no one can supersede them but the Grand Master , and a very strong case would have to be made out to induce so amiable a man as the Earl of Zetland to take such a course . That it was done once is true , but the case was very peculiar , and could not with due regard to the best interests of the Order well ho overlooked , although a more honourable or a bettev- ' mtentioned Mason did not exist in the Craft than the brother to whom we allude . His

office was parading Templary in a Craft Provincial Grand Lodge ; and though we are proud of being Templars ourselves , we are compelled to admit that the proceedings of the one Order must be kept distinct from the other .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1864-06-25, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_25061864/page/20/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE HIDDEN MYSTERIES OF NATURE AND SCIENCE.—PART IV. Article 1
Untitled Article 2
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—LXXVII. Article 3
THE INTERIOR OF A GOTHIC MINSTER. Article 4
ON SOME PECULIAR FEATURES IN THE ECCLESIASTICAL SCULPTURED DECORATIONS OP THE MIDDLE AGES. Article 6
ANTIQUITY OF THE THIRD DEGREE. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AMD CtUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED FREEMASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 15
Poetry. Article 17
Untitled Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

3 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

1 Article
Page 4

Page 4

2 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

3 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

3 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

2 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

2 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

3 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

3 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

1 Article
Page 15

Page 15

3 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

1 Article
Page 17

Page 17

4 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

1 Article
Page 20

Page 20

3 Articles
Page 20

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

The Week.

was present . The report was , on the whole , satisfactory — eminently so as far as the progress and health of the scholars were concerned—but it was regretted that the annual subscriptions had fallen off . On the other hand , the number of regiments that contributed to the fund was on the increase . Several ofthe company present followed the example of the noble chairman , ancl increased the amount of their subscriptions . '

A case , which was decided in the Divorce Court on Saturday , discloses some features which will be abhorrent to the feeling of every Englishman . A man , who suspected his wife of misconduct , employed a spy to watch her conduct , and upon the evidence he furnished the petition was presented . It was however , altogether uncorroborated , and the judge , in dismissing

the application , made some severe comments on the impropriety of employing spies in such cases , who , he said , if they did not find evidence of guilt , were under the strongest possible temptation to manufacture it . ——In the Court of Common Pleas an action was brought against the proprietor of the Standard for an article which appeared in March last , ancl which the complainant alleged to be a libel on her character . It arose out of the fact that some unknown scoundrel wrote letters to

young women for immoral purposes , ancl asked them to communicate with him under the initials of " W . P ., " afc 151 , Cheapside . In commenting on this circumstance the Standard mentioned the names of fche parties living afc the specified address , which were patent to all the world in the London Directory . The friends of the plaintiff construed this into a libel , ancl the judge in summing up the case , while he exonerated

the writer from malice , leffc it to the jury to say whether there was such an insinuation on the lad y ' s personal character as required her to come forward to clear herself . The jury found for the plaintiff with 40 , s . damages . George Bryco , convicted upon trial at Edinburgh of the murder of a young woman

named Jane _ Seaton , has been executed . The culprit , during the latter portion of his confinement , showed a spirit of penitence and of acquiesence in the doom that awaited him . Ib will be recollected that efforts were made to obtain a commutation

of his sentence , on the ground of the low moral organisation in the character of the murderer , but tbe Home Secretary declined to interfere wifch the course of justice . The three foreigners who stand charged with defrauding a firm on the Continent of silk goods to the extent of £ 30 , 000 ancl with forgery , have been again brought up afc the Mansion House .

Further evidence was given in the case , after which the prisoners were again remanded . Bail was refused . An inquest has been held afc Sheffield , on the body of a woman named Myers , who was killed by her husband . The jury returned a verdict of wilful murder against the man . FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —The Conference sat on Wednesday ,

but could agree to no arrangement . England ' s proposal for mediation was rrjected by Austria and Prussia , and likewise by Denmark . The proposal is stated to have been made the subject of preliminary discussion between the Austrian ancl Prussian Governments , but they would only agree ' to accept the good office of a mediating Power on conditions to which

Denmark was not likely to assent . Furthermore , Prussia would not accept the mediation as in any way binding upon her . The result was that the meeting ended in nothing . It is stated that another sitting is to take place to-day . If no agreement can be adopted in the meantime , hostilities must then be resumed . A telegram from Copenhagen announces that the

differerences between the King , the Ministry , and the Privy Council are settled . The Dogblad says no Ministry recommending the formation of a Schleswig-Holstein estate can stand . The people will never suffer the sacrifice of Schleswig . Domi-

The Week.

ciliary visits were paid by the police at tho close of last week to the houses of two members of the Corps Legislatif , Messrs . Carnofc and Gamier Pages , ancl also to several other persons . Papers were searched and documents confiscated . This proceeding arose from the fact of the gentlemen being supposed to be concerned in forming an association of more than 20 persons for electioneering purposes . A number of individuals under 20 may , according to French law , so associate

themselves ; beyond that they become liable to prosecution . The visits were not confined to Paris , but took place simultaneously throughout France . The only result , it is thought , will be to increase the opposition minority , and to render the defeat of the Government certain in many of the elections for Councils General which have just commenced . The Japanese Ambassadors having signed the treaty—the object of their journey to Paris—are on their way back to their native country . Spain

, it is said , has decided to come to a peaceable solution of the misunderstanding with Peru . Such is reported to be the determination arrived at in a Ministerial Council just held at Madrid . The Memorial Diplomatique states thafc a circular note has been addressed by the Austrian Cabinet to its diplomatic agents denying that the meeting of the two Emperors at Kissengen has any reference to a Holy Alliance or the slightest hostile feeling towards any power whatever .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

P . M . AND P . PROV . G . W . —We have received a letter , signed as above , complaining of the large number of officers appointed in the Provincial Grand Lodge of Turkey , who have not served the office of Master or Wardens in their respective lodges , to their apparent exclusion . We have made inquiries on the subject , and find that every Master and Past Master iu the different lodges who would accept ifc have held Grand Lodge , and hence the undue preponderance of simple M . M . 's

in the appointments . We admit we think it would be better even to allow one brother to hold office for a series of years ) than to introduce a number of brethren into Grand Lodge , be it Supreme or Provincial , before they have been properly graduated in a private lodge , and in some instances we hold it to be illegal . On foreign ancl colonial stations , however , considerable latitude must be allowed , and we should be sorry on such stations to have the responsibility of appointing the officers , especially where the lodges lay at any distance one from another .

PEGASUS takes too wide a flight for our comprehension . J . B . ( Montreal ) . —We did advocate the cause yon allude to as warmly as anybody ; but having expressed our opinion that neither side were altogether in the right , we managed to offend both . No unusual thing for editors to do . J . W . —W Q should think Ireland . BETA . —We have no recollection of the letter to which you

allude . We doubt if ifc ever came to hand . AN APPRENTICE in London can have no difficulty in learning all that is requisite for him to know , and much more . He has only to visit any lodge of instruction , ancl he will find plenty of brethren able and willing to teach , if he will give the time to learn ,

A . B . to C . D . —There is no exact law that a Prov . G . Registrar shall be an Installed Master , but wc have no hesitation he should be , that qualification being required from the Grand Registrar ; and where there is no law to tho contrary , Provincial Grand Lodges are bound to follow the general laws of Grand Lodge . As to informing you , however , what a Prov . G . Master can do it is altogether out of our power , they being to all appearance virtually above the law , for when once

appointed no one can supersede them but the Grand Master , and a very strong case would have to be made out to induce so amiable a man as the Earl of Zetland to take such a course . That it was done once is true , but the case was very peculiar , and could not with due regard to the best interests of the Order well ho overlooked , although a more honourable or a bettev- ' mtentioned Mason did not exist in the Craft than the brother to whom we allude . His

office was parading Templary in a Craft Provincial Grand Lodge ; and though we are proud of being Templars ourselves , we are compelled to admit that the proceedings of the one Order must be kept distinct from the other .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 19
  • You're on page20
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy