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  • March 1, 1856
  • Page 32
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 1, 1856: Page 32

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shows it to be . inevitable under certain relations of tilings . His concluding address to all , as Christians warring with far worse foes spiritually , than merely nations or their politics , is forcible and practical . Indeed , the whole sermon is replete with evangelical truth and encouragement , and must earn the writer distinction in these days of such general driveldom and inconsistent incompetency .

The Indian Freemasons' Friend . Wo . XII , December 1 , 1855 . Thacker and Co .: Calcutta and London . — -This valuable Masonic publication contains a history of the Lodge No . 279 , and has some admirable remarks upon the necessity of concentrating colonial Grand Lodges , drawn from the evils incident to the Canadian and

Australian Lodges , and from our comments upon the secession of the former . It shows well that the P . G . M . should everywhere be elective , which system prevails tinder the Grand Lodges of Scotland and Ireland ; but England forms the exception : so that while the P . G . M . of Grenada , under the Scottish constitution , can declare that

" the kind suffrages of his Brethren have raised him to his elevated station , " and the P . G . M . of Armagh felicitates himself as being " elected unanimously to his distinguished station , the P . G . M . of Essex is obliged to confess that " his strongest title to that dignity was derivable from the friendly partiality of the G . M . "

Our Indian Brother is quite right , and the success of his periodical we hail most heartily ; it is conducted with equal talent , zeal , and prudence . Doubtless the system in England is toadyism personified ; and if the Brethen permit such a state of rottenness to continue , they deserve to lose the attachment of the colonies , the respect of continental Masons , and the very elements of domestic efficiency and self-esteem .

Putnam s Monthly Magazine of Literature , Science , and Art . New York ; : Dix and Edwards . London : Sampson Low and Son . —This periodical presents to us a startling theory , powerfully but somewhat mistily conceived , as to the author of the plays commonly known as Shakspeare ' s ; a thrilling " ghost ' story ; animated descriptions of the Virginian springs ; low life in the Pampas ; Scamparias

( reeking of Yankee-doodle ) ; a sketch , called Owlcopse ; and some clever poetry and reviews . The latter are particularly worth notice ; and the poetry , also , is far above the ordinary standard . It is a decidedly " go-a-head" publication , and while seeking to amuse and instruct , professes itself the friend of good morals , sound learning , and the most liberal and earnest discussion .

An Address on the Moral and Physical Fvils resulting from a neglect of Sanitary Measures . Delivered by R . IIakiajstd Whiteman , Surgeon . London : Brettell . —The facts that ten thousand deaths and a quarter of a million of cases of sickness occur in the metropolis in one short year , most of them probably preventable : that the annual slaughter in England alone , by causes that are preventable , producing only one disease , viz . typhus fever , is more than

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-03-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01031856/page/32/.
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Title Category Page
FICTION AND FACT. Article 1
NOTES OF A YACHT'S CRUISE TO BALAKLAVA. Article 4
SECEET POISONS. Article 10
CASE OF THE CARNATIC STIPENDIARIES. Article 14
SATURDAY HALF-HOLIDAYS, AND THE BETTER OBSERVANCE OF THE LORD'S DAY. Article 15
ADDRESS Article 17
TO THE EDITOR 0£ THE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE. Article 24
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 26
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 34
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 35
PROVINCIAL GRAND OFFICERS. Article 36
GRAND LODGE OF CANADA. Article 36
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 39
METROPOLITAN. Article 39
INSTRUCTION. Article 48
PROVINCIAL. Article 49
ROYAL ABCH. Article 65
THE MARK DEGREE. Article 68
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 68
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 68
SCOTLAND Article 69
FRANCE. Article 70
PRUSSIA. Article 70
COLONIAL. Article 71
INDIA. Article 71
AMERICA. Article 73
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR FEBRUARY. Article 74
0bituary. Article 77
NOTICE. Article 79
TO COEEESPONDENTS. Article 79
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

shows it to be . inevitable under certain relations of tilings . His concluding address to all , as Christians warring with far worse foes spiritually , than merely nations or their politics , is forcible and practical . Indeed , the whole sermon is replete with evangelical truth and encouragement , and must earn the writer distinction in these days of such general driveldom and inconsistent incompetency .

The Indian Freemasons' Friend . Wo . XII , December 1 , 1855 . Thacker and Co .: Calcutta and London . — -This valuable Masonic publication contains a history of the Lodge No . 279 , and has some admirable remarks upon the necessity of concentrating colonial Grand Lodges , drawn from the evils incident to the Canadian and

Australian Lodges , and from our comments upon the secession of the former . It shows well that the P . G . M . should everywhere be elective , which system prevails tinder the Grand Lodges of Scotland and Ireland ; but England forms the exception : so that while the P . G . M . of Grenada , under the Scottish constitution , can declare that

" the kind suffrages of his Brethren have raised him to his elevated station , " and the P . G . M . of Armagh felicitates himself as being " elected unanimously to his distinguished station , the P . G . M . of Essex is obliged to confess that " his strongest title to that dignity was derivable from the friendly partiality of the G . M . "

Our Indian Brother is quite right , and the success of his periodical we hail most heartily ; it is conducted with equal talent , zeal , and prudence . Doubtless the system in England is toadyism personified ; and if the Brethen permit such a state of rottenness to continue , they deserve to lose the attachment of the colonies , the respect of continental Masons , and the very elements of domestic efficiency and self-esteem .

Putnam s Monthly Magazine of Literature , Science , and Art . New York ; : Dix and Edwards . London : Sampson Low and Son . —This periodical presents to us a startling theory , powerfully but somewhat mistily conceived , as to the author of the plays commonly known as Shakspeare ' s ; a thrilling " ghost ' story ; animated descriptions of the Virginian springs ; low life in the Pampas ; Scamparias

( reeking of Yankee-doodle ) ; a sketch , called Owlcopse ; and some clever poetry and reviews . The latter are particularly worth notice ; and the poetry , also , is far above the ordinary standard . It is a decidedly " go-a-head" publication , and while seeking to amuse and instruct , professes itself the friend of good morals , sound learning , and the most liberal and earnest discussion .

An Address on the Moral and Physical Fvils resulting from a neglect of Sanitary Measures . Delivered by R . IIakiajstd Whiteman , Surgeon . London : Brettell . —The facts that ten thousand deaths and a quarter of a million of cases of sickness occur in the metropolis in one short year , most of them probably preventable : that the annual slaughter in England alone , by causes that are preventable , producing only one disease , viz . typhus fever , is more than

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