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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1876
  • Page 30
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1876: Page 30

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    Article SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 30

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

jredients which would better become the Llette than the palate ? Besides , one step tads to another , and a fictitious standard of appearance being thus got up and the „ ood article dressed in its artificial coat , ° vhat is to hinder the bad from finding a

ready market when presented under the same deceptive garb , and thus whilst satisfying the buyer yield the seller a still more handsome profit than he could otherwise obtain ? One other fault of purchasers may here

he fitly commented on , which is that one man sees another using an article , and he must forthwith , whether he can afford it or not , possess himself of the same ; but he sticks at the price of the genuine article and so one must be manufactured to meet his demand ; who is here the most to blame ?

Yet , once again , in these days of cuttingout and contracts , the purchaser , grasping to get more than his money ' s-worth for his money , encourages a class of reckless and unscrupulous traders , to whom honesty is a laughing-stock and bankruptcy a fortune .

If , then , in conclusion , we desire a really good article , let us remember that as price is regulated by supply and demand , every article has a definite worth , and that we must therefore pay a proper price for what we need .

Bo we want to be dealt with fairly ? Let us deal fairly ourselves ! We do not want to be cheated ? then let us not ourselves be over-reaching ! Let us , in short , always remember that money ' s worth is worth money ! and let us never forget that , hi all things , the best is , in the long-run , the cheapest !

The Women Of Our Time.

THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME .

BY CELEBS . CONCLUDING CHAPTER . 1 AM come to the last of my essays on this interesting subject , and I am like the ^ aveller at the end of his journev

looking aek on the road he has traversed ; and 'eel strong ly how imperfect these lucueations of mine are after all—how scant J stice they do to a most important subject ;

for what can be so important as that portion of society , which so contributes to the general happiness and domestic welfare of humankind ? Therefore as one who has a deep regard and respect for the woman , as

contradistinguished from the man , I think it right to point out what her many virtues are , and what her great value to us all alike is ; and where we often , in my opinion , are very hard on women , —how , in short , we often appear to overlook their intense

importance and prevailing blessedness in the social arrangements of the world . If , indeed , you were to judge by the contemptuous language in which some foolish men like sometimes to indulge , as regards women generally , you would have to

suppose that woman was an altogether inferior creature , hardly endowed with the same capacities , and certainl y not equal in intellect with man . Some have actually contended that women have " no souls , " and often have liked to treat them as if there was a marked difference in every respect between them and the " Lords of the Creation . "

We need not go into , to-day , the old sarcasms of other days , of the heavy wit of would-be facetious writers , because I , for one , hold that all such attacks on women are as puerile as they are pitiful . A good deal must be allowed for fair fun , for

innocent chaff , as regards the weaknesses and failings of our " clear sisters , " for even they have weaknesses and failings it must be admitted ; but the habitual abuse of the ignorant , or the frivolous sneer of emptyheaded coxcombsare neither subjects for

, laughter or approval . He is either radically bad or habitually profligate who seriously assails either the character or the goodness of woman . I do not even think we need notice such

amusing incriminations as those which aver that " There ' s nothing true they say ; there ' s nothing good they do . " Neither need we deal now with the charge , that "their principal concerns are dress and fashion ; " that a woman can ' t "hold her

tongue , can ' t keep a secret , can ' t understand business ; " that , as Lord Beaconsfield pictures so well in " Lothair , " the onl y season when they are really veracious in the twenty-four hours when they have " let down their back hair and are in dressing

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-12-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121876/page/30/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Sumnary. Article 2
SOME FURTHER REMARKS ON THE EXTRACTS FROM THE SHEFFIELD CHAPTER OF PARADISE MINUTE BOOKS.* Article 3
FATHER FOY ON SECRET SOCIETIES. Article 5
PRINCE BOLTIKOFF: Article 12
A VOICE IN NATURE. Article 16
"THE ALBURY MS."AN ANALYSIS. Article 18
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 22
TWO SIDES. Article 24
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 26
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 30
GERARD MONTAGU; Article 32
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 35
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 37
LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOUR. Article 39
RETURN OF THE ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Article 40
A MEMORY. Article 41
DURHAM CATHEDRAL. Article 42
TRIFLES. Article 45
OLD GREGORY'S GHOST: Article 45
FURNESS ABBEY. Article 49
THE DAYS TO COME. Article 50
GRUMBLE NOT, BROTHER. Article 51
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 51
A Review. Article 54
FREEMASONRY! Article 59
POETS' CORNER. Article 59
PARIS RESTAURANTS. Article 63
MASONIC CENTENNIAL SONG. Article 65
THE MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. Article 65
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 67
LOST. Article 70
AN ESSAY ON EPITAPHS. Article 71
A PARABLE. Article 74
ADDRESS OF P.G.M. BRO. HON. RICHARD VAUX, AT CENTENNIAL OF AMERICAN UNION LODGE. Article 75
SHORT IS THE WAY. Article 76
ADDRESS OF THE GRAND MASTER, J. H. GRAHAM, L.L.D., &c. Article 77
A PAGE FROM LIFE'S BOOK. Article 81
Correspondence. Article 82
REUNION. Article 85
ADDRESS OF THE V. H. AND E. SIR KT. COL. W. J. B. MACLEOD MOORE, OF THE GRAND CROSS OF THE TEMPLE, GRAND PRIOR OF THE DOMINION OF CANADA, Article 86
MASONRY EVERYWHERE. Article 93
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 93
ARE THE CHILDREN AT HOME. Article 97
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

jredients which would better become the Llette than the palate ? Besides , one step tads to another , and a fictitious standard of appearance being thus got up and the „ ood article dressed in its artificial coat , ° vhat is to hinder the bad from finding a

ready market when presented under the same deceptive garb , and thus whilst satisfying the buyer yield the seller a still more handsome profit than he could otherwise obtain ? One other fault of purchasers may here

he fitly commented on , which is that one man sees another using an article , and he must forthwith , whether he can afford it or not , possess himself of the same ; but he sticks at the price of the genuine article and so one must be manufactured to meet his demand ; who is here the most to blame ?

Yet , once again , in these days of cuttingout and contracts , the purchaser , grasping to get more than his money ' s-worth for his money , encourages a class of reckless and unscrupulous traders , to whom honesty is a laughing-stock and bankruptcy a fortune .

If , then , in conclusion , we desire a really good article , let us remember that as price is regulated by supply and demand , every article has a definite worth , and that we must therefore pay a proper price for what we need .

Bo we want to be dealt with fairly ? Let us deal fairly ourselves ! We do not want to be cheated ? then let us not ourselves be over-reaching ! Let us , in short , always remember that money ' s worth is worth money ! and let us never forget that , hi all things , the best is , in the long-run , the cheapest !

The Women Of Our Time.

THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME .

BY CELEBS . CONCLUDING CHAPTER . 1 AM come to the last of my essays on this interesting subject , and I am like the ^ aveller at the end of his journev

looking aek on the road he has traversed ; and 'eel strong ly how imperfect these lucueations of mine are after all—how scant J stice they do to a most important subject ;

for what can be so important as that portion of society , which so contributes to the general happiness and domestic welfare of humankind ? Therefore as one who has a deep regard and respect for the woman , as

contradistinguished from the man , I think it right to point out what her many virtues are , and what her great value to us all alike is ; and where we often , in my opinion , are very hard on women , —how , in short , we often appear to overlook their intense

importance and prevailing blessedness in the social arrangements of the world . If , indeed , you were to judge by the contemptuous language in which some foolish men like sometimes to indulge , as regards women generally , you would have to

suppose that woman was an altogether inferior creature , hardly endowed with the same capacities , and certainl y not equal in intellect with man . Some have actually contended that women have " no souls , " and often have liked to treat them as if there was a marked difference in every respect between them and the " Lords of the Creation . "

We need not go into , to-day , the old sarcasms of other days , of the heavy wit of would-be facetious writers , because I , for one , hold that all such attacks on women are as puerile as they are pitiful . A good deal must be allowed for fair fun , for

innocent chaff , as regards the weaknesses and failings of our " clear sisters , " for even they have weaknesses and failings it must be admitted ; but the habitual abuse of the ignorant , or the frivolous sneer of emptyheaded coxcombsare neither subjects for

, laughter or approval . He is either radically bad or habitually profligate who seriously assails either the character or the goodness of woman . I do not even think we need notice such

amusing incriminations as those which aver that " There ' s nothing true they say ; there ' s nothing good they do . " Neither need we deal now with the charge , that "their principal concerns are dress and fashion ; " that a woman can ' t "hold her

tongue , can ' t keep a secret , can ' t understand business ; " that , as Lord Beaconsfield pictures so well in " Lothair , " the onl y season when they are really veracious in the twenty-four hours when they have " let down their back hair and are in dressing

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