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  • Sept. 2, 1876
  • Page 9
  • OUR WEEKLY BUDGET.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Sept. 2, 1876: Page 9

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Our Weekly Budget.

officer who advanced the money , which enabled the Government to have this further inquiry . This is by no means the first time Ihis Department has been denounced for its contemptible meanness . More than once have the judges publicly rebuked its officials for similar conduct , on the

ground that such parsimony had a tendency to defeat the ends of justice . No doul . t this coroner's officer lias learnt wisdom by experience , and the next time an inquest , under similar circumstances , is held at the instance of the Government , will leave payment of disinterment fees , telegrams , notices , & c , & e . to the Government officials .

We abominate practical jokes , but a more cruel one was never perpetrated than that referred to the Marshland bench of magistrates on Tuesday . Three men , having , one Sunday evening , a few weeks since , dug up a wasp ' s nest , seized hold of a poor boy , aged thirteen years , who was

walking quietly to chapel . They took off his boots , tied his legs together with the laces and a piece of rope , and having also made fast his hands , flung the little fellow into the nest . He was fearfully stung , of course , and so agonising were his cries , that at length the defendants returned

to set him free , and the lad in terrible pain was led home and had his wounds dressed . The magistrates characterised the case as a brutal one , and fined each defendant one pound , and twelve shillings and sixpence costs . We consider this a most inadequate punishment . True , one of the

defendants was suffering from typhoid fever , and ought not , indeed , to have appeared in court ; but a sentence of some months' hard labour would have been a juster penalty to have inflicted . We have seldom read of a more disgraceful

case . Certainly , this justices justice which sends a poor lad or woman to prison for stealing a cabbage , and fines a man £ 1 , with 12 s 6 d costs , for binding a boy hand and foot , and then throwing him into a wasps' nest , is incomprehensible .

Birmingham has been enjoying its annual musical festival , and , as usual , there have been produced one or two new compositions of merit , which met with the heartiest applause from the audience . These were a cantata , by Mr . F . H . Cohen , entitled the Oorsair , and an oratorio , by

Professor Macfarren , called the ' Resurrection . Among the artistes—vocal and instrumental—may be mentioned Mdlle . Albani , Mdlle . Titiens , Signor Foli , Mr . Santley ,

M . Sainton , Mdme . Lemmens-Sherrington , Mdme . Patey , and Mr . Edward Lloyd . Bro . Sir Michael Costa was present also , and Mr . Walter Macfarren conducted for his brother during the performance of the latter ' s oratorio .

The contemplated race for the rowing Championship of the World appears to have collapsed in a very discreditable manner . Trickett having come all the way from Australia to test his powers against Sadler , proved victorious , and thus became Champion of the Thames . A Tynesider ,

named Lnmsden , then challenged Trickett , who was about starting for America to take part in the Centennial Regatta , the terms being arranged for £ 200 aside , and a staked bet of £ 200 . Lumsden's backers , however , a fewdays before that fixed for the race , gave in , and have

ordered the stakeholder not to pay over to Trickett either the staked bet , on the ground that such bet is illegal , or even the portion of the stakes so far paid up . Thus Trickett has lost his chance of winning a prize at Philadelphia , and will , further , have to remain in England some months , in

order to obtain the money he is so justly entitled to . We cannot congratulate the Tynesiders on their notions of honour . So long as our English sports are conducted honourably , so long as everything is done in such a manner as to exclude all chance of foul play , so long will

they be well , and even handsomely , supported . The moment , however , a suspicion attaches to any particular sport , that its professors are not acting honestly and straightforwardly , it will get into bad odour , as did the Prize Ring a few years ago .

The cricket season of 1876 is now ended . Many more matches , of course , will be played , but the legitimate season closed with the two great county return matches between Surrey and Gloucester , and Yorkshire and Notts , the former being left drawn , the rain coming clown in torrents

and stopping the play ; while in the latter Notts proved victorious by eight wickets . The result of the season is , that Gloucestershire is at the top of the list among the

counties , thanks , of course , to the wonderful powers of tbe Grace family ; while among individual players the highest average , we fancy , must fall to Mr . W . G . Grace . At all events , his performances this year have exceeded anything previously recorded in the annals of cricket . On

Our Weekly Budget.

three different occasions has this leviathan or championas he is variously called—exceeded the grandest achievement of former days—the well-known 278 score of Mr .

Ward . In one case he made 400 against a twenty-two of Grimsby . At Canterbury he compiled a total of 346 in a match between the M . C . 0 . and Kent , But the grandest of all was his 3 IS nob out in the return match between

Gloucestershire and Yorkshire , against the bowling of Hill , Emmett , Ulyett , Clayton , Myers—among the best bowlers to be fonnd in England . On other occasions Mr . W . G . has made his nineties or his hundreds , or hundred and fifties , but such scores as these will cease to be of any

account now that he has taken to scoring over three hundred . Certainly he and his brothers , and his cousin , Mr . Gilbert , have raised Gloucestershire to a height never before attained by any county . By way of contrast to these brilliant perfoi'mance 3 of

Gloucestershire , we note that in the return match between Surrey and Notts , the whole of the former team were out for 26 , of which one was an extra , the highest individual score being seven . At the time of writing , Notts had lost one wicket for 39 runs .

The authorities at Chatham appear to have received warning that an attempt was about to be made to release some of the convicts detained there . Accordingly , all possible precautions have been taken to prevent improper communication with the prisoners . The warders are all armed ,

and a cordon of troops by night and day is drawn round the prison , no one under any pretence whatever being allowed to approach within a certain distance , so that no preconcerted signal can be given , as was done at the time of the Clerkenwell explosion .

In our early days—we regret to say how long since—we remember to have made the acquaintance , at the Egyptian Hall , of certain Ojibbeway Indians , brought over to this country under the auspices of a Mr . Catlin . A year or two later , we saw another set of the same interesting

people , who went through a series of performances at Vauxhall Gardens . And yet a third group of these uncivilised fellows has arrived , and is now on view at the Alexandra Palace , where we presume they will for some time to come be held out as one of the chief attractions .

The party are eight in number , four men and four womenj with , we believe , a papoose thrown in as a kind of makeweight . A Captain McDonald has brought them over ,

and he puts them through a number of military exercises , all of which are performed with marvellous skill and dexterity . The rehearsal was applauded , and no doubt the exhibition will prove highly attractive .

Murad V . has been deposed , and Sultan Abdul Hamid reigns in his stead . The event has long been expected , and has created , therefore , no great excitement . In a country like Turkey , where the sovereign plays an important part in the conduct of public affairs , the retention

on the throne , for any length of time , of an imbecile was clearly impossible , Whether the new Sultan will be any improvement on Abdul Aziz remains to be seen , as news of his proclamation has only just reached us . As regards news from the seat of war , there is little additional matter

to record . If we are to put any faith in Servian advices , the Turks ought , by this time , to have been , if not annihilated , at all events , driven back , pele-melc , into their own country . On the other hand , the Turks say they are still in the neighbourhood of Alexinatz , and aro gradually

pressing closer and closer upon that j > lace . Servian entrenchments and redoubts , almost without number , have been stormed and carried , and if these advices are to be credited , the destruction of the chief Servian army must be nigh at hand . On the Montenegrin frontier , Turkey

has been concentrating fresh forces , and is formidable , both as regards men and guns . Meanwhile , an attempt is being made , or said to be in contemplation , to bring about peace . The Great Powers have indeed been invited , by Prince Milan , to use their good offices with Turkey , and

there is talk of an armistice having been proposed , but the Turkish Ministry is unwilling to accept it . It is desirous of terminating the struggle—there are obvious reasons , indeed , why this should be the case—but she objects to stay tier warlike operations , till a proper basis for negociacions has been settled . We thiuk this conduct not

unreasonable . Other foreign news is of comparatively little importance . Marshal McMahon is on a tour of military inspection , visiting Chalons and other military centres , while Spain is on the point of dispatching heavy reinforce * ments to Cuba , mtb . a -new to putting clown the insurrection .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1876-09-02, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_02091876/page/9/.
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Title Category Page
MASONIC TWADDLE. Article 1
OPERATIVE AND SPECULATIVE MASONRY. Article 2
THE WANDERING FREEMASON. Article 3
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION OF GRAND LODGE. Article 5
DEATH OF BRO. T. SOLOMON, OF TRURO. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE TREDEGAR LODGE, No. 1625. Article 6
BUCKINGHAM GALLERY OF FINE ARTS. Article 6
Untitled Ad 6
REVIEWS. Article 7
IS MASONRY DOING ITS DUTY? Article 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
VISIT OF H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES TO GLASGOW. Article 10
Old Warrants. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 13
Untitled Article 14
Untitled Article 14
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK MASONS FOR SURREY. Article 14
NEW ZEALAND. Article 14
FUNERAL OF THE LATE BRO. J. H. LEVIEN, OF NELSON. Article 14
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 14
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Our Weekly Budget.

officer who advanced the money , which enabled the Government to have this further inquiry . This is by no means the first time Ihis Department has been denounced for its contemptible meanness . More than once have the judges publicly rebuked its officials for similar conduct , on the

ground that such parsimony had a tendency to defeat the ends of justice . No doul . t this coroner's officer lias learnt wisdom by experience , and the next time an inquest , under similar circumstances , is held at the instance of the Government , will leave payment of disinterment fees , telegrams , notices , & c , & e . to the Government officials .

We abominate practical jokes , but a more cruel one was never perpetrated than that referred to the Marshland bench of magistrates on Tuesday . Three men , having , one Sunday evening , a few weeks since , dug up a wasp ' s nest , seized hold of a poor boy , aged thirteen years , who was

walking quietly to chapel . They took off his boots , tied his legs together with the laces and a piece of rope , and having also made fast his hands , flung the little fellow into the nest . He was fearfully stung , of course , and so agonising were his cries , that at length the defendants returned

to set him free , and the lad in terrible pain was led home and had his wounds dressed . The magistrates characterised the case as a brutal one , and fined each defendant one pound , and twelve shillings and sixpence costs . We consider this a most inadequate punishment . True , one of the

defendants was suffering from typhoid fever , and ought not , indeed , to have appeared in court ; but a sentence of some months' hard labour would have been a juster penalty to have inflicted . We have seldom read of a more disgraceful

case . Certainly , this justices justice which sends a poor lad or woman to prison for stealing a cabbage , and fines a man £ 1 , with 12 s 6 d costs , for binding a boy hand and foot , and then throwing him into a wasps' nest , is incomprehensible .

Birmingham has been enjoying its annual musical festival , and , as usual , there have been produced one or two new compositions of merit , which met with the heartiest applause from the audience . These were a cantata , by Mr . F . H . Cohen , entitled the Oorsair , and an oratorio , by

Professor Macfarren , called the ' Resurrection . Among the artistes—vocal and instrumental—may be mentioned Mdlle . Albani , Mdlle . Titiens , Signor Foli , Mr . Santley ,

M . Sainton , Mdme . Lemmens-Sherrington , Mdme . Patey , and Mr . Edward Lloyd . Bro . Sir Michael Costa was present also , and Mr . Walter Macfarren conducted for his brother during the performance of the latter ' s oratorio .

The contemplated race for the rowing Championship of the World appears to have collapsed in a very discreditable manner . Trickett having come all the way from Australia to test his powers against Sadler , proved victorious , and thus became Champion of the Thames . A Tynesider ,

named Lnmsden , then challenged Trickett , who was about starting for America to take part in the Centennial Regatta , the terms being arranged for £ 200 aside , and a staked bet of £ 200 . Lumsden's backers , however , a fewdays before that fixed for the race , gave in , and have

ordered the stakeholder not to pay over to Trickett either the staked bet , on the ground that such bet is illegal , or even the portion of the stakes so far paid up . Thus Trickett has lost his chance of winning a prize at Philadelphia , and will , further , have to remain in England some months , in

order to obtain the money he is so justly entitled to . We cannot congratulate the Tynesiders on their notions of honour . So long as our English sports are conducted honourably , so long as everything is done in such a manner as to exclude all chance of foul play , so long will

they be well , and even handsomely , supported . The moment , however , a suspicion attaches to any particular sport , that its professors are not acting honestly and straightforwardly , it will get into bad odour , as did the Prize Ring a few years ago .

The cricket season of 1876 is now ended . Many more matches , of course , will be played , but the legitimate season closed with the two great county return matches between Surrey and Gloucester , and Yorkshire and Notts , the former being left drawn , the rain coming clown in torrents

and stopping the play ; while in the latter Notts proved victorious by eight wickets . The result of the season is , that Gloucestershire is at the top of the list among the

counties , thanks , of course , to the wonderful powers of tbe Grace family ; while among individual players the highest average , we fancy , must fall to Mr . W . G . Grace . At all events , his performances this year have exceeded anything previously recorded in the annals of cricket . On

Our Weekly Budget.

three different occasions has this leviathan or championas he is variously called—exceeded the grandest achievement of former days—the well-known 278 score of Mr .

Ward . In one case he made 400 against a twenty-two of Grimsby . At Canterbury he compiled a total of 346 in a match between the M . C . 0 . and Kent , But the grandest of all was his 3 IS nob out in the return match between

Gloucestershire and Yorkshire , against the bowling of Hill , Emmett , Ulyett , Clayton , Myers—among the best bowlers to be fonnd in England . On other occasions Mr . W . G . has made his nineties or his hundreds , or hundred and fifties , but such scores as these will cease to be of any

account now that he has taken to scoring over three hundred . Certainly he and his brothers , and his cousin , Mr . Gilbert , have raised Gloucestershire to a height never before attained by any county . By way of contrast to these brilliant perfoi'mance 3 of

Gloucestershire , we note that in the return match between Surrey and Notts , the whole of the former team were out for 26 , of which one was an extra , the highest individual score being seven . At the time of writing , Notts had lost one wicket for 39 runs .

The authorities at Chatham appear to have received warning that an attempt was about to be made to release some of the convicts detained there . Accordingly , all possible precautions have been taken to prevent improper communication with the prisoners . The warders are all armed ,

and a cordon of troops by night and day is drawn round the prison , no one under any pretence whatever being allowed to approach within a certain distance , so that no preconcerted signal can be given , as was done at the time of the Clerkenwell explosion .

In our early days—we regret to say how long since—we remember to have made the acquaintance , at the Egyptian Hall , of certain Ojibbeway Indians , brought over to this country under the auspices of a Mr . Catlin . A year or two later , we saw another set of the same interesting

people , who went through a series of performances at Vauxhall Gardens . And yet a third group of these uncivilised fellows has arrived , and is now on view at the Alexandra Palace , where we presume they will for some time to come be held out as one of the chief attractions .

The party are eight in number , four men and four womenj with , we believe , a papoose thrown in as a kind of makeweight . A Captain McDonald has brought them over ,

and he puts them through a number of military exercises , all of which are performed with marvellous skill and dexterity . The rehearsal was applauded , and no doubt the exhibition will prove highly attractive .

Murad V . has been deposed , and Sultan Abdul Hamid reigns in his stead . The event has long been expected , and has created , therefore , no great excitement . In a country like Turkey , where the sovereign plays an important part in the conduct of public affairs , the retention

on the throne , for any length of time , of an imbecile was clearly impossible , Whether the new Sultan will be any improvement on Abdul Aziz remains to be seen , as news of his proclamation has only just reached us . As regards news from the seat of war , there is little additional matter

to record . If we are to put any faith in Servian advices , the Turks ought , by this time , to have been , if not annihilated , at all events , driven back , pele-melc , into their own country . On the other hand , the Turks say they are still in the neighbourhood of Alexinatz , and aro gradually

pressing closer and closer upon that j > lace . Servian entrenchments and redoubts , almost without number , have been stormed and carried , and if these advices are to be credited , the destruction of the chief Servian army must be nigh at hand . On the Montenegrin frontier , Turkey

has been concentrating fresh forces , and is formidable , both as regards men and guns . Meanwhile , an attempt is being made , or said to be in contemplation , to bring about peace . The Great Powers have indeed been invited , by Prince Milan , to use their good offices with Turkey , and

there is talk of an armistice having been proposed , but the Turkish Ministry is unwilling to accept it . It is desirous of terminating the struggle—there are obvious reasons , indeed , why this should be the case—but she objects to stay tier warlike operations , till a proper basis for negociacions has been settled . We thiuk this conduct not

unreasonable . Other foreign news is of comparatively little importance . Marshal McMahon is on a tour of military inspection , visiting Chalons and other military centres , while Spain is on the point of dispatching heavy reinforce * ments to Cuba , mtb . a -new to putting clown the insurrection .

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