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  • Jan. 11, 1862
  • Page 20
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 11, 1862: Page 20

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The Week.

tunate creature was in a state bordering upon starvation , and not morally responsible for her actions . The jury acquitted her on the ground of insanity , and she was ordered to be detained during her Majesty ' s pleasure . Alexander George Gray and AVilliam Oliver Gray , father and son , were charged with forgery and fraud . The particular charge which was gone into was that of feloniously altering a bill of lading for the delivery of a large quantity of alkali . The younger prisoner was acquitted

, and the elder prisoner was found guilty , but strongly recommended to mercy . Mr . Baron Martin , in consideration of this recommendation , as well as of his age , sentenced him to nine months' hard labour . Another accident has happened at a colliery—the Victoria Pit , Dukinfield . Two men were descending the shaft , when the chain of the balance rope gave way , and one of the men was seriously injured , but no life was

lost . The Warrior is now lying at anchor off Osborne , in attendance on her Majesty . It is proposed to light this leviathan ship by gas , and also to place on board the necessary apparatus for producing electric light .

FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —Various German journals publish summarized versions of the answer which the Prussian Government has given to the proposals of the Saxon Minister , Baron von Beust , for a reform in the constitution of the Germanic Confederation . The Prussian Government entirely disapproves of the scheme . Sicily is again disturbed by the reactionists , who have raised their banners at Castellamara . Troops had been'dispatched against them from Palermo , the inhabitants of

which city have offered to co-operate with the Government against the insurrectionary movement . The band of the reactionary chief Carbone had been dispersed . Garibaldi , in accepting the presidency of the Rifle Association of Genoa , exhorts the members to prepare themselves to take up arms ; " for the moment approaches when you will have to give fresh proofs of your fervour . " The French Chambers are not to meet till the 22 th—a fortnight later than expected—the delay ,

it is said , being occasioned by M . Fould not being ready with his financial plans . The Emperor Alexander has closed the University of St . Petersburg , and has dismissed all the professors and students . He has , however , permitted the students to continue their academical course at any other Russian University , and the professors may perhaps , " with the sanction of the authorities , " be restored to their posts when the St . Petersburg University shall he re-opened under the new regulations which are to be framed for its government .

AJIERICA . —The Ev . ropa arrived on Monday at Queenstowu but she brought nothing definite respecting the Mason-Slidell dimralty . During a debate in the Senate at AVashington , several senators opposed a surrender of the Confederate Commissioners . On AVednesday the City of Washington arrived with the gratifying intelligence that the AVashington Government had given up the Confederate Commissioners , and Lord Lyons , according to the Foreign-office despatch , was to receive

these gentlemen when and where he pleased . Simultaneously with the receipt of this most important and gratifying intelligence , we are apprised of new and vigorous measures of warlike character which are about to be instituted by the Federal Government . An expedition accompanied by an army of 12 , 000 men is about to sail from Annapolis , the object of which is to compel General Beauregard to divide his forces in Virginiaand thus to enable General M'Clellan the more surel

, y to strike a blow . The mouth of the Charleston harbour has been effectually closed . Two supposed Confederate agents have been seized by Federal steamers on board of the Eugenia Smith , a schooner bearing the British flag , which may create another difficulty . This vessel was overhauled on the coast of Texas . The text of the Prussian Government ' s note respecting the Trent affair has been published . Count Bevnstorff declares that the seizure of the Confederate Commissioners on board the

Trent was a violation of the right of neutrals , and that public opinion in Europe unanimously condemns it . According to a letter from St . Petersburg , thc- Russian Government , since the seizure of the Confederate Commissioners on board the Trent , has " employed ail its influence in . favour of peace , and has recently taken fresh steps to the same end . " The note respecting the Trent affair , addressed by Count Rechberg to the Austrian Envoy at AVashington , declares that

in the opinion of the Austrian Cabinet , " according to the doctrines of international law which are adopted by all the powers , and which the American Government has itself often taken as a basis for its conduct , England could not , in the present case , re-

The Week.

frain from protesting against the insult to her flag , and demanding a just reparation . " The Confederate steamer Sumter arrived at Cadiz on Saturday . The American Consul solicited the Spanish authorities to refuse her permission to enter the port ; but , after the orders of the Ministry at Madrid had been taken , she was allowed to come into the harbour , but was not saluted ~ by the forts . The Sumter is said to have had on board 42 prisoners , the crew s of three Federal merchant vessels which

have been destroyed by this audacious and successful cruiser since she escaped from Martinique iu spite of the presence of the Federal steamer Iroquois . INDIA AND CHINA . —The intelligence from India brought by the Bombay mail is very satisfactory . The health of the country generally was good ; trade and commerce were thriving ; cotton was being abundantly planted , and peace pervaded the whole country . The North-AVest Provincesso recentlravaged b

, y y famine , were covered with promising crops , and the people happy and contented . It is announced that the miscreant Nana Sahib has been captured at Kurrachee ; there is some doubt of his identity , but the evidence in favour of it is very strong . The murderer of the late Major Burton and his sons has been hung at Kotah , the scene of his crimes . Orders had been issued for tho creation of a chief commissioner of the central provinces . Accounts from Pekin state that the new Celestial

Emperor has arrived in his capital , and has taken measures which promise well for the maintenance of amicable relations between China and the European powers . Prince Kung , who is known to advocate a strict observance of the stipulations contained in the Treaty of Pekin , has been appointed ' Regent of the Empire ; " and the Supreme Council , which was composed of men attached to old Chinese ideas , and hostile to commerce and intercourse with Europeans , has been dissolved . This

administrative revolution has not been as bloodless as a minis-, terial crisis in Europe , for the President of the Finance Department has been publicly executed , and two other officialshave been compelled to commit suicide .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

To SUBSCRIEEES AND OTHEES . —All remittances by cheque , postoffice orders , & c , are to be made payable to the Proprietor ,. Mr . AVilliam Smith , C . E ., 19 , Salisbury-street , Strand . CojnrusTCATioNS for the EDITOR to be addressed to H . G . AVarren , Esq ., Salisbury-street , Strand . ALL OEDERS OR Communications with respect to the publishing

department to be addressed to the publisher , 19 , Salisburystreet , Strand . A . B . C . —The Scottish and the Irish Calendars may be both obtained from Bro . Speucer , Great Queen Street . J . AV . —AA e cannot tell which is the best and cheapest Masonic Jeweller . AVe do not believe that the cheapest is always

the best . S . S . —Signs and Symbols are best explained in lodge . AVe certainly cannot explain Masonic signs in the pages of the FEEEMASONS' MAGAZINE . NONPLUS is inexplicable . AA e have no idea what he means . J . T . R . —The last Prince of Wales , afterwards George IV ., was initiated in 17 S 7 .

FEEEMASON ' S HALL . —The first stone was laid in 1775 . CURIOUS . —Bro . Preston , the founder of the Prestonian Lecture , died in 1819 . P . G . M . —His late Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex , died on April 21 , 1843 . The Grand Festival consequently was not held that year . We never heard what became of the amount subscribed by the Grand Stewards . AA e supposed they

obtained the honour without the expense . P . M . —You have no authority in a lodge of which yon become a joining member , in right of having passed through the chair in another lodge . You are a Past Master in the lodge , but not of the lodge , and are eligible for the Master ' s chair without serving any other office in the lodge .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-01-11, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_11011862/page/20/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE LATE PRINCE CONSORT. Article 1
THE EARL OF YARBOROUGH, P.D.G.M. Article 1
THE MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 2
LIGHT. Article 3
ON EARLY PRINTED BOOKS. Article 4
MASONIC FACTS. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
GRAND LODGE. Article 13
THE GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINVIAL. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 17
IRELAND. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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The Week.

tunate creature was in a state bordering upon starvation , and not morally responsible for her actions . The jury acquitted her on the ground of insanity , and she was ordered to be detained during her Majesty ' s pleasure . Alexander George Gray and AVilliam Oliver Gray , father and son , were charged with forgery and fraud . The particular charge which was gone into was that of feloniously altering a bill of lading for the delivery of a large quantity of alkali . The younger prisoner was acquitted

, and the elder prisoner was found guilty , but strongly recommended to mercy . Mr . Baron Martin , in consideration of this recommendation , as well as of his age , sentenced him to nine months' hard labour . Another accident has happened at a colliery—the Victoria Pit , Dukinfield . Two men were descending the shaft , when the chain of the balance rope gave way , and one of the men was seriously injured , but no life was

lost . The Warrior is now lying at anchor off Osborne , in attendance on her Majesty . It is proposed to light this leviathan ship by gas , and also to place on board the necessary apparatus for producing electric light .

FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —Various German journals publish summarized versions of the answer which the Prussian Government has given to the proposals of the Saxon Minister , Baron von Beust , for a reform in the constitution of the Germanic Confederation . The Prussian Government entirely disapproves of the scheme . Sicily is again disturbed by the reactionists , who have raised their banners at Castellamara . Troops had been'dispatched against them from Palermo , the inhabitants of

which city have offered to co-operate with the Government against the insurrectionary movement . The band of the reactionary chief Carbone had been dispersed . Garibaldi , in accepting the presidency of the Rifle Association of Genoa , exhorts the members to prepare themselves to take up arms ; " for the moment approaches when you will have to give fresh proofs of your fervour . " The French Chambers are not to meet till the 22 th—a fortnight later than expected—the delay ,

it is said , being occasioned by M . Fould not being ready with his financial plans . The Emperor Alexander has closed the University of St . Petersburg , and has dismissed all the professors and students . He has , however , permitted the students to continue their academical course at any other Russian University , and the professors may perhaps , " with the sanction of the authorities , " be restored to their posts when the St . Petersburg University shall he re-opened under the new regulations which are to be framed for its government .

AJIERICA . —The Ev . ropa arrived on Monday at Queenstowu but she brought nothing definite respecting the Mason-Slidell dimralty . During a debate in the Senate at AVashington , several senators opposed a surrender of the Confederate Commissioners . On AVednesday the City of Washington arrived with the gratifying intelligence that the AVashington Government had given up the Confederate Commissioners , and Lord Lyons , according to the Foreign-office despatch , was to receive

these gentlemen when and where he pleased . Simultaneously with the receipt of this most important and gratifying intelligence , we are apprised of new and vigorous measures of warlike character which are about to be instituted by the Federal Government . An expedition accompanied by an army of 12 , 000 men is about to sail from Annapolis , the object of which is to compel General Beauregard to divide his forces in Virginiaand thus to enable General M'Clellan the more surel

, y to strike a blow . The mouth of the Charleston harbour has been effectually closed . Two supposed Confederate agents have been seized by Federal steamers on board of the Eugenia Smith , a schooner bearing the British flag , which may create another difficulty . This vessel was overhauled on the coast of Texas . The text of the Prussian Government ' s note respecting the Trent affair has been published . Count Bevnstorff declares that the seizure of the Confederate Commissioners on board the

Trent was a violation of the right of neutrals , and that public opinion in Europe unanimously condemns it . According to a letter from St . Petersburg , thc- Russian Government , since the seizure of the Confederate Commissioners on board the Trent , has " employed ail its influence in . favour of peace , and has recently taken fresh steps to the same end . " The note respecting the Trent affair , addressed by Count Rechberg to the Austrian Envoy at AVashington , declares that

in the opinion of the Austrian Cabinet , " according to the doctrines of international law which are adopted by all the powers , and which the American Government has itself often taken as a basis for its conduct , England could not , in the present case , re-

The Week.

frain from protesting against the insult to her flag , and demanding a just reparation . " The Confederate steamer Sumter arrived at Cadiz on Saturday . The American Consul solicited the Spanish authorities to refuse her permission to enter the port ; but , after the orders of the Ministry at Madrid had been taken , she was allowed to come into the harbour , but was not saluted ~ by the forts . The Sumter is said to have had on board 42 prisoners , the crew s of three Federal merchant vessels which

have been destroyed by this audacious and successful cruiser since she escaped from Martinique iu spite of the presence of the Federal steamer Iroquois . INDIA AND CHINA . —The intelligence from India brought by the Bombay mail is very satisfactory . The health of the country generally was good ; trade and commerce were thriving ; cotton was being abundantly planted , and peace pervaded the whole country . The North-AVest Provincesso recentlravaged b

, y y famine , were covered with promising crops , and the people happy and contented . It is announced that the miscreant Nana Sahib has been captured at Kurrachee ; there is some doubt of his identity , but the evidence in favour of it is very strong . The murderer of the late Major Burton and his sons has been hung at Kotah , the scene of his crimes . Orders had been issued for tho creation of a chief commissioner of the central provinces . Accounts from Pekin state that the new Celestial

Emperor has arrived in his capital , and has taken measures which promise well for the maintenance of amicable relations between China and the European powers . Prince Kung , who is known to advocate a strict observance of the stipulations contained in the Treaty of Pekin , has been appointed ' Regent of the Empire ; " and the Supreme Council , which was composed of men attached to old Chinese ideas , and hostile to commerce and intercourse with Europeans , has been dissolved . This

administrative revolution has not been as bloodless as a minis-, terial crisis in Europe , for the President of the Finance Department has been publicly executed , and two other officialshave been compelled to commit suicide .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

To SUBSCRIEEES AND OTHEES . —All remittances by cheque , postoffice orders , & c , are to be made payable to the Proprietor ,. Mr . AVilliam Smith , C . E ., 19 , Salisbury-street , Strand . CojnrusTCATioNS for the EDITOR to be addressed to H . G . AVarren , Esq ., Salisbury-street , Strand . ALL OEDERS OR Communications with respect to the publishing

department to be addressed to the publisher , 19 , Salisburystreet , Strand . A . B . C . —The Scottish and the Irish Calendars may be both obtained from Bro . Speucer , Great Queen Street . J . AV . —AA e cannot tell which is the best and cheapest Masonic Jeweller . AVe do not believe that the cheapest is always

the best . S . S . —Signs and Symbols are best explained in lodge . AVe certainly cannot explain Masonic signs in the pages of the FEEEMASONS' MAGAZINE . NONPLUS is inexplicable . AA e have no idea what he means . J . T . R . —The last Prince of Wales , afterwards George IV ., was initiated in 17 S 7 .

FEEEMASON ' S HALL . —The first stone was laid in 1775 . CURIOUS . —Bro . Preston , the founder of the Prestonian Lecture , died in 1819 . P . G . M . —His late Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex , died on April 21 , 1843 . The Grand Festival consequently was not held that year . We never heard what became of the amount subscribed by the Grand Stewards . AA e supposed they

obtained the honour without the expense . P . M . —You have no authority in a lodge of which yon become a joining member , in right of having passed through the chair in another lodge . You are a Past Master in the lodge , but not of the lodge , and are eligible for the Master ' s chair without serving any other office in the lodge .

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