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  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • April 4, 1891
  • Page 2
  • BOYS' SCHOOL MANAGEMENT.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, April 4, 1891: Page 2

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    Article NEXT WEEK'S ELECTIONS. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article BOYS' SCHOOL MANAGEMENT. Page 1 of 1
    Article BOYS' SCHOOL MANAGEMENT. Page 1 of 1
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Next Week's Elections.

the Institution it should be worth consideration . It would bo a splendid feature to make capital of at the coming Festival , to show that in anticipation of tbo continued support of the Craft every candidate had been provided for , jind that for the fnturo there was a reasonable prospect of meeting claims as they arose .

With so few to be left out after the polling of Thursday next , thevo is not much need to analyse the list of candidates for the Girls' School . Naturally additional anxiety must bo felt on account of the eight children who now made their last application , and two others which seora to

call for special notice are Nos . 10 and 17 , each of whom is parentlcss . We hope these may be elected , as also the most deserving of the other candidates , but we also hope that our proposal to admit all as vacancies arise will be considered and ultimately ' adopted .

In the case of the Boys' School , the competition will be very different ; but hero also it is gratifying to find considorably more than half the candidates can be admitted . There are five last applications , No . 2 , H . J . Drewitt ; No . 4 , W . R . Binks ; No . 19 , N . M . Bolsover ; No . 28 ,

C . M . Hitchcock ; and No . 33 , R . A . Bonrdeanx . Of these , the first three have not at present secured much support , their record being 18 , 200 , and 1 G votes brought forward respectively . The lad Hitchcock is much better off in this respect ; he has a record of 1872 votes from the last contest , while the other is a first application case .

Three of the other new cases are parentlcss children , No . 36 , Metcalfe , being one of a family of seven ; No . 37 , Heath one of four ; and No . 44 , Phipps , one of two loft to the care of friends . It would seem specially needful that help should be accorded those poor orphans , although

as we have often pointed out , there may bo others on the list even more deserving of aid . Still , it seems no harder lot could be found for a family of young children than to be left parentlcss , with no proper provision for their maintenance , education and fair start in life , and

if the Masonic Order can only take these three candidates under its care at the coming election it will , without a doubt , have added one other to its already long list of favours conferred on the growing generation . We regret

that so many must go away from the Boys' election next Friday short of the privileges they seek , but let us hope that in each and every unsuccessful case there will be a possibility of further trial , with the ultimate reward of success .

Boys' School Management.

BOYS' SCHOOL MANAGEMENT .

THE PROVISIONAL COMMITTEE AND THEIR CENSORS .

IT is with something akin to " bated breath and whispering humbleness " that we venture to notice the article under this heading in last week ' s number of a contemporary . Fierce and unmeasured as were the denunciations hurled at the preceding administration of the

School , it is now regarded as little less than hardihood and ingratitude to criticise inquiringly , or to draw attention , however mildly , to statements of accounts set forth as unquestioned facts and purporting to bear the imprimatur of a " Chartered Accountant , " verified by a "Finance

Committee "—the accuracy of which ia vaunted in contrast to those published under the sanction of the old " Audit Committee . " It is difficult to gather who , or which , is to be held in the main responsible for the Balance-sheet and Accounts of the year 1890—the " Chartered Accountant "

or the " Finance Committee . Which of the twain is itwhether the dog wags the tail , or the tail waga the dog ! There was no donbt on this point under the old system , and whatever cavil could be made against the manner in which the accounts were then presented , there has never

been substantiated any allegation against the matter as regards accuracy . This " accuracy , " be it remembered , was more than vindicated by tho result of an unprecedented examination of eighteen months' accountsalready audited and vouched for — by a "Chartered

Accountant and his staff , ' who vainly sought for , but could not discover , error , malversation or wrong , and found themselves compelled to certify to that effect .

" Milk " may have its ludicrous surroundings and associations , but an erroneous account ia equally erroneous , whether associated with lacteal matter or any other item of more or less important expenditure , and we

Boys' School Management.

shall not be deterred from drawingattention to discrepancies or to point out attempts at misrepresentation from any fear of " ridicule , " which may probably more closely be allied

with those who , from their assumed lofty standpoint , feel themselves justified in charging us with " temerity" in discharging what we conceive to be a duty . We are not " partisans " in any sense—wo are lovers of fair play .

We may have occasion to recur to this and cognate matters in connection with the Institution , not omitting the improvement claimed in the Educational Department .

and in tho general demeanour , & c . of the boys . On these subjects , so closely dependent on a Head-Master and his staff , reference is invited to the Report of tho " Committee of Investigation . "

Bro . James Terry P . G . S . B ., Secretary Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , will rehearse the ceremonies of consecration and installation in the Hornsey Lodge of Instruction , No . 890 , on Thursday , the 16 th inst ., at

7 p . m ., at the Masonic Rooms , White Hart Hotel , High Street , Lewisham , S . E . Brethren are to attend in morning dress with Craft clothing . A large attendance of the Craft is anticipated , and tho occasion ia likely to prove of great interest .

From latest advices wo are able to report that Bro . John Lane , of Torquay , is rapidly improving . The dangerous symptoms have left , and Bro . Lane ' s doctor anticipates that a few days more will see our good friend at his post again .

Early next month the Provincial Grand Master of Cheshire ( Lord Egerton of Tatton ) will consecrate the Avondale Lodge , No . 2389 , at the Town Hall , Middlewich . This will make the number of Lod ges in Cheshire 44 .

The first W . M . of the new Lodge will be Bro . John Plant , Bros . R S . Cross S . W ., and Peter Hancock J . W . His lordship will be assisted by Bros . Sir Horatio Lloyd D . D . M ., James Salmon P . G . S . W ., J . Clayton P . G . J . W ., and other Provincial Grand Officers .

On Tuesday , 24 th ult ., Bro . J . B . Groom was installed as Worshi pful Master of the Robinson Mark Lodge , No . 255 . The interesting ceremony was admirably performed by Bro F . W . Wright P . M . P . P . G . J . W . Secretary . His delivery of the various charges was worthy of the best traditions of the Order .

At the Masonic Hall , Driffield , on Wednesday afternoon , Bro . C . Gray P . P . G . S . B . ( Bridlington ) was installed W . M . of the Drifelt Mark Lodge , 291 , by Colonel B . G . Smith Deputy Prov . Grand Master , after which the following were invested as Officers : —Bros . W . Highmoor I . P . M ., J . Rennard S . W ., Jos . Kirby J . W ., J . Moore M . O .,

Overend S . O ., J . Elgey P . M . Treasurer , Potts P . P . G . S . B . Secretary , Jno . Dunn P . M . P . P . G . St . B . Dir . of Cers ., R . Featherston Tyler .

The Medway Lodge of Freemasons have arranged for a ball in aid of the Masonic Charities , to be held at tho Public Hall , Maidstone , on the 14 th inst . The affair is under the immediate patronage of the Prov . Grand Master and Deputy Prov . Grand Master of Kent . Masonic cloth , ing will be worn , and the band of the Royal Engineers is engaged .

Bro . James Stevens was appointed to deliver a second portion of his lecture on the Ritual and Ceremonial of Symbolic Freemasonry last evening , in the Priory Lodge of Instruction , No . 1000 , at Southend-on-Sea . A report will appear in our next issue .

Mount . Sinai Lodge ( Penzance ) find their Lodge-room too small . Directly over it is the more spacious museum of the Penzance Natural History and Antiquarian Society . The Lodge desires an exchange of apartments with the Society , offering to defray the cost . The council of the latter , seeing that the Lodge-room and an

antechamber are as well lighted and have as much wall space as the present museum , consent to the change on certain conditions , one of which is a payment of £ 5 , presumably to open a central window in the Lodge-room , which is now blocked , and is part of the background of the W . M . ' chair .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1891-04-04, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_04041891/page/2/.
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Title Category Page
THE NEXT CHARITY FESTIVAL. Article 1
NEXT WEEK'S ELECTIONS. Article 1
BOYS' SCHOOL MANAGEMENT. Article 2
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 3
NEW MASONIC HALL AT WALLSEND. Article 3
MALEVOLENT UTTERANCES REBUKED. Article 4
DEATH. Article 6
MARK MASONRY. Article 6
THE THEATRES. &c. Article 6
Untitled Ad 7
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Untitled Ad 8
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Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 9
Untitled Article 9
" LA MORT DU PRINCE IMPERIAL." Article 9
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 10
KENSINGTON LODGE, No. 1767. Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Untitled Ad 13
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Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
LIST OF RARE AND VALUABLE WORKS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
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THE THEATRES, AMUSEMENTS, &c. Article 15
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Next Week's Elections.

the Institution it should be worth consideration . It would bo a splendid feature to make capital of at the coming Festival , to show that in anticipation of tbo continued support of the Craft every candidate had been provided for , jind that for the fnturo there was a reasonable prospect of meeting claims as they arose .

With so few to be left out after the polling of Thursday next , thevo is not much need to analyse the list of candidates for the Girls' School . Naturally additional anxiety must bo felt on account of the eight children who now made their last application , and two others which seora to

call for special notice are Nos . 10 and 17 , each of whom is parentlcss . We hope these may be elected , as also the most deserving of the other candidates , but we also hope that our proposal to admit all as vacancies arise will be considered and ultimately ' adopted .

In the case of the Boys' School , the competition will be very different ; but hero also it is gratifying to find considorably more than half the candidates can be admitted . There are five last applications , No . 2 , H . J . Drewitt ; No . 4 , W . R . Binks ; No . 19 , N . M . Bolsover ; No . 28 ,

C . M . Hitchcock ; and No . 33 , R . A . Bonrdeanx . Of these , the first three have not at present secured much support , their record being 18 , 200 , and 1 G votes brought forward respectively . The lad Hitchcock is much better off in this respect ; he has a record of 1872 votes from the last contest , while the other is a first application case .

Three of the other new cases are parentlcss children , No . 36 , Metcalfe , being one of a family of seven ; No . 37 , Heath one of four ; and No . 44 , Phipps , one of two loft to the care of friends . It would seem specially needful that help should be accorded those poor orphans , although

as we have often pointed out , there may bo others on the list even more deserving of aid . Still , it seems no harder lot could be found for a family of young children than to be left parentlcss , with no proper provision for their maintenance , education and fair start in life , and

if the Masonic Order can only take these three candidates under its care at the coming election it will , without a doubt , have added one other to its already long list of favours conferred on the growing generation . We regret

that so many must go away from the Boys' election next Friday short of the privileges they seek , but let us hope that in each and every unsuccessful case there will be a possibility of further trial , with the ultimate reward of success .

Boys' School Management.

BOYS' SCHOOL MANAGEMENT .

THE PROVISIONAL COMMITTEE AND THEIR CENSORS .

IT is with something akin to " bated breath and whispering humbleness " that we venture to notice the article under this heading in last week ' s number of a contemporary . Fierce and unmeasured as were the denunciations hurled at the preceding administration of the

School , it is now regarded as little less than hardihood and ingratitude to criticise inquiringly , or to draw attention , however mildly , to statements of accounts set forth as unquestioned facts and purporting to bear the imprimatur of a " Chartered Accountant , " verified by a "Finance

Committee "—the accuracy of which ia vaunted in contrast to those published under the sanction of the old " Audit Committee . " It is difficult to gather who , or which , is to be held in the main responsible for the Balance-sheet and Accounts of the year 1890—the " Chartered Accountant "

or the " Finance Committee . Which of the twain is itwhether the dog wags the tail , or the tail waga the dog ! There was no donbt on this point under the old system , and whatever cavil could be made against the manner in which the accounts were then presented , there has never

been substantiated any allegation against the matter as regards accuracy . This " accuracy , " be it remembered , was more than vindicated by tho result of an unprecedented examination of eighteen months' accountsalready audited and vouched for — by a "Chartered

Accountant and his staff , ' who vainly sought for , but could not discover , error , malversation or wrong , and found themselves compelled to certify to that effect .

" Milk " may have its ludicrous surroundings and associations , but an erroneous account ia equally erroneous , whether associated with lacteal matter or any other item of more or less important expenditure , and we

Boys' School Management.

shall not be deterred from drawingattention to discrepancies or to point out attempts at misrepresentation from any fear of " ridicule , " which may probably more closely be allied

with those who , from their assumed lofty standpoint , feel themselves justified in charging us with " temerity" in discharging what we conceive to be a duty . We are not " partisans " in any sense—wo are lovers of fair play .

We may have occasion to recur to this and cognate matters in connection with the Institution , not omitting the improvement claimed in the Educational Department .

and in tho general demeanour , & c . of the boys . On these subjects , so closely dependent on a Head-Master and his staff , reference is invited to the Report of tho " Committee of Investigation . "

Bro . James Terry P . G . S . B ., Secretary Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , will rehearse the ceremonies of consecration and installation in the Hornsey Lodge of Instruction , No . 890 , on Thursday , the 16 th inst ., at

7 p . m ., at the Masonic Rooms , White Hart Hotel , High Street , Lewisham , S . E . Brethren are to attend in morning dress with Craft clothing . A large attendance of the Craft is anticipated , and tho occasion ia likely to prove of great interest .

From latest advices wo are able to report that Bro . John Lane , of Torquay , is rapidly improving . The dangerous symptoms have left , and Bro . Lane ' s doctor anticipates that a few days more will see our good friend at his post again .

Early next month the Provincial Grand Master of Cheshire ( Lord Egerton of Tatton ) will consecrate the Avondale Lodge , No . 2389 , at the Town Hall , Middlewich . This will make the number of Lod ges in Cheshire 44 .

The first W . M . of the new Lodge will be Bro . John Plant , Bros . R S . Cross S . W ., and Peter Hancock J . W . His lordship will be assisted by Bros . Sir Horatio Lloyd D . D . M ., James Salmon P . G . S . W ., J . Clayton P . G . J . W ., and other Provincial Grand Officers .

On Tuesday , 24 th ult ., Bro . J . B . Groom was installed as Worshi pful Master of the Robinson Mark Lodge , No . 255 . The interesting ceremony was admirably performed by Bro F . W . Wright P . M . P . P . G . J . W . Secretary . His delivery of the various charges was worthy of the best traditions of the Order .

At the Masonic Hall , Driffield , on Wednesday afternoon , Bro . C . Gray P . P . G . S . B . ( Bridlington ) was installed W . M . of the Drifelt Mark Lodge , 291 , by Colonel B . G . Smith Deputy Prov . Grand Master , after which the following were invested as Officers : —Bros . W . Highmoor I . P . M ., J . Rennard S . W ., Jos . Kirby J . W ., J . Moore M . O .,

Overend S . O ., J . Elgey P . M . Treasurer , Potts P . P . G . S . B . Secretary , Jno . Dunn P . M . P . P . G . St . B . Dir . of Cers ., R . Featherston Tyler .

The Medway Lodge of Freemasons have arranged for a ball in aid of the Masonic Charities , to be held at tho Public Hall , Maidstone , on the 14 th inst . The affair is under the immediate patronage of the Prov . Grand Master and Deputy Prov . Grand Master of Kent . Masonic cloth , ing will be worn , and the band of the Royal Engineers is engaged .

Bro . James Stevens was appointed to deliver a second portion of his lecture on the Ritual and Ceremonial of Symbolic Freemasonry last evening , in the Priory Lodge of Instruction , No . 1000 , at Southend-on-Sea . A report will appear in our next issue .

Mount . Sinai Lodge ( Penzance ) find their Lodge-room too small . Directly over it is the more spacious museum of the Penzance Natural History and Antiquarian Society . The Lodge desires an exchange of apartments with the Society , offering to defray the cost . The council of the latter , seeing that the Lodge-room and an

antechamber are as well lighted and have as much wall space as the present museum , consent to the change on certain conditions , one of which is a payment of £ 5 , presumably to open a central window in the Lodge-room , which is now blocked , and is part of the background of the W . M . ' chair .

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