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Article TWO PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE SAME ARTIST. Page 1 of 1 Article MASONRY IN AMERICA. Page 1 of 6 →
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Two Photographs By The Same Artist.
TWO PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE SAME ARTIST .
LOOK UPON THIS PICTURE . — " CONSISTENCY is often held to be only another name for obstinacy ; but it was generally felt that the tergiversation of which Bro . Warren had been guilty had
placed him entirely out of the pale of membershi p with , brethren whose princi ples Bro . Warren had once espoused , & c ., ( fee . "—Bro , BINCKBS , P . M . No . 11 ; Letter dated May 28 th , 1859 , in Freemasons' Magazine , June 1 st .
AND ON THIS . " HE would read a letter from one present at the meeting—Bro . Warren , the Editor of the Freemasons' Magazine—who with that candouropennessand , manliness ,
, , which always distinguished him , said , & c , & c . "—Bro . BINCKES , P . M . No . 11 , in Grand Lodge ,
June 1 st , 1859 .
Masonry In America.
MASONRY IN AMERICA .
[ From a Special Correspondent ] , Louisville , Kentucky , April lGth , 1859 . DEAK SIR AND BKOTIIEI ? , —As my communication of February was deemed worthy of notice I shall endeavour to give you hereafter such news as I may be able to gather suitable for your truly valuable and widely circulated journal . Since I last wrote you I travelled 21 ) 00 miles ( going
and coining ) to attend a meeting of the Supreme Council of the 33 ° , for the southern jurisdiction of thc United States at thc Grand East of Charleston , South Carolina , The number of brethren present of course on such an occasion was not large , as the active members of that august body were but nine ( the same as in Ireland and Great Britain ) , if was the only one from a distance , with thc exception of the M . P . S . G . C , Bro . Albert Pike , who travelled from Washington , and was on his way to his
home iii Little Eock , Arkansas . Bro . Bike is more than an ordinary man in every way ; he is a lawyer of large and profitable practice , and counsel for the Creek , Choctaw , and Cherokee Indian tribes , for whom he has gained suits in the Federal Courts amounting to millions of dollars ; he is a great favourite with the Indians , who all love him ; he is very fond of hunting in their country , and as he sometimes stays for months among them he has often been reported deadand on three occasions has had his obituary
, notice published in every section of thc United States , and has had the satisfaction of knowing that his death would be innch regretted , and that the Masonic order would not alone mourn for him . He has been the subji . ct o ! " a book entitled " Thc fine Arkansaw gentleman that died before his time . " I know , of my own knowledge , one of the luminaries of our Order that mourned his death with tears which nothing could stop for several
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Two Photographs By The Same Artist.
TWO PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE SAME ARTIST .
LOOK UPON THIS PICTURE . — " CONSISTENCY is often held to be only another name for obstinacy ; but it was generally felt that the tergiversation of which Bro . Warren had been guilty had
placed him entirely out of the pale of membershi p with , brethren whose princi ples Bro . Warren had once espoused , & c ., ( fee . "—Bro , BINCKBS , P . M . No . 11 ; Letter dated May 28 th , 1859 , in Freemasons' Magazine , June 1 st .
AND ON THIS . " HE would read a letter from one present at the meeting—Bro . Warren , the Editor of the Freemasons' Magazine—who with that candouropennessand , manliness ,
, , which always distinguished him , said , & c , & c . "—Bro . BINCKES , P . M . No . 11 , in Grand Lodge ,
June 1 st , 1859 .
Masonry In America.
MASONRY IN AMERICA .
[ From a Special Correspondent ] , Louisville , Kentucky , April lGth , 1859 . DEAK SIR AND BKOTIIEI ? , —As my communication of February was deemed worthy of notice I shall endeavour to give you hereafter such news as I may be able to gather suitable for your truly valuable and widely circulated journal . Since I last wrote you I travelled 21 ) 00 miles ( going
and coining ) to attend a meeting of the Supreme Council of the 33 ° , for the southern jurisdiction of thc United States at thc Grand East of Charleston , South Carolina , The number of brethren present of course on such an occasion was not large , as the active members of that august body were but nine ( the same as in Ireland and Great Britain ) , if was the only one from a distance , with thc exception of the M . P . S . G . C , Bro . Albert Pike , who travelled from Washington , and was on his way to his
home iii Little Eock , Arkansas . Bro . Bike is more than an ordinary man in every way ; he is a lawyer of large and profitable practice , and counsel for the Creek , Choctaw , and Cherokee Indian tribes , for whom he has gained suits in the Federal Courts amounting to millions of dollars ; he is a great favourite with the Indians , who all love him ; he is very fond of hunting in their country , and as he sometimes stays for months among them he has often been reported deadand on three occasions has had his obituary
, notice published in every section of thc United States , and has had the satisfaction of knowing that his death would be innch regretted , and that the Masonic order would not alone mourn for him . He has been the subji . ct o ! " a book entitled " Thc fine Arkansaw gentleman that died before his time . " I know , of my own knowledge , one of the luminaries of our Order that mourned his death with tears which nothing could stop for several