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  • Aug. 26, 1876
  • Page 5
  • ODDS AND ENDS.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Aug. 26, 1876: Page 5

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Freemasonry And Promotion In The Army.

animus of the bandmaster , the quartermaster and the others in becoming members of our Society , the Avholo of his statement is utterly without value . We ask him for the proof of all this , for as yet he has vouchsafed us nothing but assertion . This , however , is far from being the Avholeof the

case , as stated by JUSTITIA . Having given us this delectable illustration of his Avisdom , he proceeds to announce his belief ' that it is " the intention of thoso who have authority in the corps to establish a Regimental Masonic Lodge . " This , of course , is only further evidence of J USTITIA '

lamentable ignorance of what he is Avriting about . A regiment is not ruled by a Commission or a Board of Guardians , but by its commanding officer , who is the highest in rank present with the corps . Again , it cannot be the intention of those in authority to establish a

Regimental Masonic Lodge . Masonic Lodges are not thus established . A certain procedure must be observed . App lication must be made in the proper quarter ; the reasons for such application must be given , aud must be such as Avill satisfy the Masonic authorities ; the petition

must be duly recommended , and then it is that , all things being deemed satisfactory , a Avarrant is issued for the Constitution of the Lodge . Thus J USTITIA ' S belief that it is the intention of the regimental authorities to establish a Lodge is simply an absurdity . They may intend

petitioning for a Warrant of Constitution , but they cannot intend doing what it is out of their power to do . Thus the Avhole of JUSTITIA ' case falls to the ground . He has come forward publicly , and made a serious accusation against the officers of a certain regiment" at present stationed in India . " This

charge is , that the Commanding officer , and the officers under him being Freemasons , those in the regiment Avho belong to the same society are favoured at the expense of those who are not . The proof he adduces of the truth of this is merely a statement of his own , which , being entirely unsupported ,

has not the slightest degree of value . A further abortion that men join the ranks of Freemasonry solely to gain some advantage is , if possible , more worthless still . We do not believe that a number of respectable men , wearing the uniform of an honourable service , Avould deliberately commit

perjury , and then be such fools as to let a man of tbe moral and mental calibre of JUSTITIA into the secret of their perjury . As to the announcement " there is no Freemason in the regiment under the rank of sergeant , " this ought not to have excited any suspicion in the mind of JUSTITIA bad he known

anything of the laws affecting Military Lodges . There is only one grade beneath that of sergeant which is eligible for admission to the rights and privileges of Regimental Masonic membership . The Master of a Military Lodge is " prohibited

from initiating any person Avhatever into Masonry under the rank of corporal , except as a serving brother , or by dispensation from the Grand Master , or Provincial Grand Master . " It is not stated Avhether the Masonio officers

and non-commissioned officers of this regiment are members of the same or different Lodges . It is not , however , very strange that , Avith the exception of the corporals—who may number some thirty , more or less—the privates in the regiment , Avho are not eligible for admission into a military Lodge , should not be Freemasons .

Were the public a little better informed as to the Constitutions of Freemasonry , Ave should not condescend to notice such paltry attacks as this of " JUSTITIA . " Under present circumstances , Ave consider it our duty to repel any and all charges that may be levelled against us .

Odds And Ends.

ODDS AND ENDS .

B Y W ALTER S PENCER , F . R . G . S ., & c . MR . FAIRHOLT , in " Tobacco ; its History and Associations " ( London 1876 ) says he once kneAV a man who smoked tea leaves . I remember doing so , in New-Zealand , for want of the genuine article , and found it not altogether disagreeable . Many a settler in the interior ,

when hard-up for the " nigger-bead ' or " nail-rod with Avhich his pipe Avas Avont to be replenished , has smoked the leaves of the "Mannkau , " a shrub which covers whole tracts of the country , ancl some got quite used to it . This same plant Avas used not infrequently instead of tea , its ; flavour is pleasant , but its strong diuretic property

embarrassing . I tried opium smoking in China , by medical advice , as a remedy for dysentery , but it failed to have any effect upon

Odds And Ends.

me whatever . I do not know even that it induced any extra sleep ; though on board of steamers laden with the drug , I have lived half stupified and sickened as though under a course of morphia . Description of a Chinese opium saloon has been too often given to bear repetition ,

ancl is certainly a revolting spectacle . The habit becomes a vice from abuse . I am quite prepared to believe that in some places and for some occupations , it may be only a pleasant sedative for an overworked Chinaman , necessary as ale and other sli ght stimulants are to our OAVU people in

this humid climate . Ifc should not be forgotten that the Chinese work every day Sunday included , and from dawn tdl night without cessation , except to snatch a hasty and frugal meal . They are by far the most laborious race in the world . For one class , however , opium smoking is

without doubt pernicious ; for domestic servants . The idle time on their hands gets more and more devoted to tbe pipe , which becoming more and more necessary to their comfort , causes a craving that ends in being insatiable , and in utterly wrecking the health and happiness of the victim .

Chewing tobacco is a means of staying hunger which I have also practically experienced , lt probably deadens the lining of the intestines , and though it cannot supply the waste of tissue , lessens the unpleasant cravings of the

patient . When in this condition , I used to indulge in delicious reveries of the dishes I would feast upon should I ever be so fortunate as to return to civilisation , and the recollection of it even now often doubles the zest with which I relish a good dinner .

I have a specimen of snuff of which the late Emperor of China was inordinately fond . It was said to be of Russian importation , and cost £ 5 an ounce in Pekin . I have tried in vain to get it manufactured in this country ,

with the , idea of starting a good speculation . It seems that the peculiar flavours of peculiar snuffs are most difficult to make up to the satisfaction of connoisseurs , who Avould at once detect an imitation .

Many travellers have remarked upon the strangeness experienced when first domiciled in rooms without windows . The old houses in Spanish America , as in Morocco and Syria , are constructed on this principle , the room doors either opening one into the other or into a central

courtyard . The latter , when planted or having trees or fountains , is a pleasant sight to which one soon gets accustomed : but I was once housed in what had formerly been a convent . It had no inner courtyard , and the room doors opened into dark , dreary corridors , lighted only by

skylights at each end . The rooms in this case , however , had narrow barred windows or rather apertures , but they were placed hi ^ h up in the wall , close under a lofty ceiling . They did serve to admit light and air , but their broad sills

( in walls four feet thick ) harboured scorpions , as I found to my cost . My bed Avas against the wall uuder one of these windows , ancl I found every night two or three small alacranes in the fold of the sheet , f Avas for some time

puzzled to account for their appearance , until I procured a ladder , by which to mount to the Aviudow . There , on the sill , I found Papa and Mamma with a numerous brood , which I immediately swept off to the outside . The little ones , in their infant gambols , had previously been used to

fall iuside on to my bed . Bats used to enter at night by the same aperture and flap round the room , with an unearthly noise . For several nights I awoke at intervals ,

to throw slippers and other articles at them , but finally gob used to their intrusions ; after which I generally found one or two in the morning snugly nestled amongst my clothes on a chair .

I have remarked that wherever snakes abounded , it was considered a good omen to have one domiciled in the roof . They exterminate all rats and mice , and resent the intrusion of cats on their preserves . Those thus domesticated , in the East , are a small species of boa , quite harmless to

the human inmates . When the ceilings are of canvas , their contortions and adventures can be plainly tracked by the undulations of that material . They probably descend occasionally at night-time , for chickens and puppies are sometimes unaccountably missing .

The Philippine Indians have a disgusting penchant for bad eggs—Avith the half-formed chick inside . It is well known from the higher price of those comestibles , but

I discovered it for myself . Every morning , at early breakfast , my " boy " placed on the table an egg , Avhich . invariably was sent away as a bad one , to be replaced , sometimes , by a second and third in the same condition . I marvelled and submitted , until one day when I rose suddenly and

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1876-08-26, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_26081876/page/5/.
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A FEW NOTES ON MASONIC JOURNALISM. Article 1
COLOURED MASONRY. Article 2
FREEMASONRY AND PROMOTION IN THE ARMY. Article 4
ODDS AND ENDS. Article 5
THE INSTALLATION PICTURE. Article 6
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS, WOOD GREEN. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
OLD WARRANTS. Article 6
LODGE No. 169. Article 6
MASONIC JURISPRUDENCE. Article 7
Untitled Ad 8
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Untitled Article 8
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
ORDER OF ST. LAWRENCE. Article 9
Old Warrants. Article 10
THE FIRST LODGE IN AMERICA. Article 10
REVIEWS. Article 11
SOME OF THE PECULIARITIES OF ANCIENT CRAFT MASONRY. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 12
RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE. Article 14
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Freemasonry And Promotion In The Army.

animus of the bandmaster , the quartermaster and the others in becoming members of our Society , the Avholo of his statement is utterly without value . We ask him for the proof of all this , for as yet he has vouchsafed us nothing but assertion . This , however , is far from being the Avholeof the

case , as stated by JUSTITIA . Having given us this delectable illustration of his Avisdom , he proceeds to announce his belief ' that it is " the intention of thoso who have authority in the corps to establish a Regimental Masonic Lodge . " This , of course , is only further evidence of J USTITIA '

lamentable ignorance of what he is Avriting about . A regiment is not ruled by a Commission or a Board of Guardians , but by its commanding officer , who is the highest in rank present with the corps . Again , it cannot be the intention of those in authority to establish a

Regimental Masonic Lodge . Masonic Lodges are not thus established . A certain procedure must be observed . App lication must be made in the proper quarter ; the reasons for such application must be given , aud must be such as Avill satisfy the Masonic authorities ; the petition

must be duly recommended , and then it is that , all things being deemed satisfactory , a Avarrant is issued for the Constitution of the Lodge . Thus J USTITIA ' S belief that it is the intention of the regimental authorities to establish a Lodge is simply an absurdity . They may intend

petitioning for a Warrant of Constitution , but they cannot intend doing what it is out of their power to do . Thus the Avhole of JUSTITIA ' case falls to the ground . He has come forward publicly , and made a serious accusation against the officers of a certain regiment" at present stationed in India . " This

charge is , that the Commanding officer , and the officers under him being Freemasons , those in the regiment Avho belong to the same society are favoured at the expense of those who are not . The proof he adduces of the truth of this is merely a statement of his own , which , being entirely unsupported ,

has not the slightest degree of value . A further abortion that men join the ranks of Freemasonry solely to gain some advantage is , if possible , more worthless still . We do not believe that a number of respectable men , wearing the uniform of an honourable service , Avould deliberately commit

perjury , and then be such fools as to let a man of tbe moral and mental calibre of JUSTITIA into the secret of their perjury . As to the announcement " there is no Freemason in the regiment under the rank of sergeant , " this ought not to have excited any suspicion in the mind of JUSTITIA bad he known

anything of the laws affecting Military Lodges . There is only one grade beneath that of sergeant which is eligible for admission to the rights and privileges of Regimental Masonic membership . The Master of a Military Lodge is " prohibited

from initiating any person Avhatever into Masonry under the rank of corporal , except as a serving brother , or by dispensation from the Grand Master , or Provincial Grand Master . " It is not stated Avhether the Masonio officers

and non-commissioned officers of this regiment are members of the same or different Lodges . It is not , however , very strange that , Avith the exception of the corporals—who may number some thirty , more or less—the privates in the regiment , Avho are not eligible for admission into a military Lodge , should not be Freemasons .

Were the public a little better informed as to the Constitutions of Freemasonry , Ave should not condescend to notice such paltry attacks as this of " JUSTITIA . " Under present circumstances , Ave consider it our duty to repel any and all charges that may be levelled against us .

Odds And Ends.

ODDS AND ENDS .

B Y W ALTER S PENCER , F . R . G . S ., & c . MR . FAIRHOLT , in " Tobacco ; its History and Associations " ( London 1876 ) says he once kneAV a man who smoked tea leaves . I remember doing so , in New-Zealand , for want of the genuine article , and found it not altogether disagreeable . Many a settler in the interior ,

when hard-up for the " nigger-bead ' or " nail-rod with Avhich his pipe Avas Avont to be replenished , has smoked the leaves of the "Mannkau , " a shrub which covers whole tracts of the country , ancl some got quite used to it . This same plant Avas used not infrequently instead of tea , its ; flavour is pleasant , but its strong diuretic property

embarrassing . I tried opium smoking in China , by medical advice , as a remedy for dysentery , but it failed to have any effect upon

Odds And Ends.

me whatever . I do not know even that it induced any extra sleep ; though on board of steamers laden with the drug , I have lived half stupified and sickened as though under a course of morphia . Description of a Chinese opium saloon has been too often given to bear repetition ,

ancl is certainly a revolting spectacle . The habit becomes a vice from abuse . I am quite prepared to believe that in some places and for some occupations , it may be only a pleasant sedative for an overworked Chinaman , necessary as ale and other sli ght stimulants are to our OAVU people in

this humid climate . Ifc should not be forgotten that the Chinese work every day Sunday included , and from dawn tdl night without cessation , except to snatch a hasty and frugal meal . They are by far the most laborious race in the world . For one class , however , opium smoking is

without doubt pernicious ; for domestic servants . The idle time on their hands gets more and more devoted to tbe pipe , which becoming more and more necessary to their comfort , causes a craving that ends in being insatiable , and in utterly wrecking the health and happiness of the victim .

Chewing tobacco is a means of staying hunger which I have also practically experienced , lt probably deadens the lining of the intestines , and though it cannot supply the waste of tissue , lessens the unpleasant cravings of the

patient . When in this condition , I used to indulge in delicious reveries of the dishes I would feast upon should I ever be so fortunate as to return to civilisation , and the recollection of it even now often doubles the zest with which I relish a good dinner .

I have a specimen of snuff of which the late Emperor of China was inordinately fond . It was said to be of Russian importation , and cost £ 5 an ounce in Pekin . I have tried in vain to get it manufactured in this country ,

with the , idea of starting a good speculation . It seems that the peculiar flavours of peculiar snuffs are most difficult to make up to the satisfaction of connoisseurs , who Avould at once detect an imitation .

Many travellers have remarked upon the strangeness experienced when first domiciled in rooms without windows . The old houses in Spanish America , as in Morocco and Syria , are constructed on this principle , the room doors either opening one into the other or into a central

courtyard . The latter , when planted or having trees or fountains , is a pleasant sight to which one soon gets accustomed : but I was once housed in what had formerly been a convent . It had no inner courtyard , and the room doors opened into dark , dreary corridors , lighted only by

skylights at each end . The rooms in this case , however , had narrow barred windows or rather apertures , but they were placed hi ^ h up in the wall , close under a lofty ceiling . They did serve to admit light and air , but their broad sills

( in walls four feet thick ) harboured scorpions , as I found to my cost . My bed Avas against the wall uuder one of these windows , ancl I found every night two or three small alacranes in the fold of the sheet , f Avas for some time

puzzled to account for their appearance , until I procured a ladder , by which to mount to the Aviudow . There , on the sill , I found Papa and Mamma with a numerous brood , which I immediately swept off to the outside . The little ones , in their infant gambols , had previously been used to

fall iuside on to my bed . Bats used to enter at night by the same aperture and flap round the room , with an unearthly noise . For several nights I awoke at intervals ,

to throw slippers and other articles at them , but finally gob used to their intrusions ; after which I generally found one or two in the morning snugly nestled amongst my clothes on a chair .

I have remarked that wherever snakes abounded , it was considered a good omen to have one domiciled in the roof . They exterminate all rats and mice , and resent the intrusion of cats on their preserves . Those thus domesticated , in the East , are a small species of boa , quite harmless to

the human inmates . When the ceilings are of canvas , their contortions and adventures can be plainly tracked by the undulations of that material . They probably descend occasionally at night-time , for chickens and puppies are sometimes unaccountably missing .

The Philippine Indians have a disgusting penchant for bad eggs—Avith the half-formed chick inside . It is well known from the higher price of those comestibles , but

I discovered it for myself . Every morning , at early breakfast , my " boy " placed on the table an egg , Avhich . invariably was sent away as a bad one , to be replaced , sometimes , by a second and third in the same condition . I marvelled and submitted , until one day when I rose suddenly and

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