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    Article ANALYSIS OF THE RETURNS. ← Page 2 of 3
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Page 6

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

Analysis Of The Returns.

already stated , over £ 1222 and £ 1050 respectively . But , nevertheless , there is ample matter for congratulation over this portion of the returns . Thus the list is svorthily headed by

BERKS AND BUCKS , With a total of £ 222 15 s . The Pros'ince can boast of 21 lodges , eleven of them being located in Berkshire , and the remaining ten in the adjoining county . Of these , four Berks lodges ( Nos . 209 and 771 , of Windsor , 414 , of Reading , and 1566 , of Maidenhead ) and tsvo Bucks ( the High Wycombe

and Slough Lodges ) , sent up Stesvards , tsvo brethren acting in that capacity for the Maidenhead Lodge . In 18 S 3 it gave £ 110 to the Benevolent , £ 18 3 to the Girls , and £ 178 to the Boys , or together , some £ 472 , svhile in 18 S 2 its success svas even greater , its contributions to thc three institutions totalling up to close on £ 620 . BRISTOL ,

Is a compact Province svith eight lodges , svhose loint contributions by the hands of Bro . W . Pumell amount to the very handsome sum of £ 293 I is . Last year Bro . Terry also had the benefit of its support to the extent of £ 217 , three of its lodges being represented by as many Stesvards , Bro . Purnell being one of the number . Of the 39 lodges included in the Province of

CHESHIRE , Four svere represented on Tuesday , namely , Nos . S 9 , 104 , and 537 , each by tsvo Stesvards , and No . 758 , the total thus far received , being £ 115 ios ., svith one list still unannounced . These same four ledges sent up Stesvards last year , namely , No . 8 9 to thc Girls' School , and the remaining three to

the Boys , and there svere six other lodges represented at one or other of thc same anniversaries . The amounts , hosvever , svere in no case considerable , nor , indeed , svould it be altogether reasonable to expect they should be , seeing that the Province has an Educational Institute of its osvn , svhich makes adequate provision for the children of its poorer or deceased members , and contributes tosvards their advancement on leaving school .

Bro . Controller Bake is evidentl y a very zealous supporter of all our Institutions , and in his hands it is evident the reputation of

CORNSVALL , And its 29 lodges svill be svorthily upheld . It is not a heavy list svhich appears against his name—onl y a modest sum of 45 guineas , but Bro . Bake svas Stesvard at all three Festivals in 1 S 83 , svhile on tsvo of the occasions he was ably seconded by Bro . Captain Colvill , their joint efforts resulting in a total of £ 243 ios . The transition from this Province to

DEVONSHIRE , Is easily accomplished , and if , in the opinion of our readers , a small list of £ 27 6 s . handed in by Bro . Pepprell , of the Jordan Lodge , No . 1402 , Torquay , is hardly svhat might have been looked for from a Province svith -50 lodges on its roll , we would remind them that Devonshire puts forth its strength on occasions , and svith considerable effect , as a total of only a fesv

pounds less than £ 600 raised in 1883 , and some £ 565 contributed the Crcvious year , testify most clearly and satisfactorily . It must be rememered , too , that it can fortunately point to tsvo indefatigable brethren in thc persons of Bros . Curteis and Godtschalk , svho , with Bro . Hughan to reinforce them , svill , sve doubt not , take care that Devonshire ' s aid shall alsvays be at hand svhen the occasion is imperative .

DORSETSHIRE , Which has 13 lodges , svas not unrepresented on Tuesday , though its Steward's list , that of Bro . Douglas Dugdale , of lodge No . 137 , who acted in the same capacity for the Boys' School last year , has not yet come to hand . Hosvever , from our past experience of this province and bearing in mind thai Bro . Dugdale on the last occasion received close on £ 60 , wc have

fesv , if any , misgivings about the return being a satisfactory one . It received £ 100 for this Institution in 1 SS 3 , svhen Bro . Howard was Stesvard , and it has given most liberally on other occasions . A West Hartlepool Lodge—the Harbour of Refuge , No . 764—is the only one of thc thirty

DURHAM , Lodges which contributed to the success of Tuesday , while Bro . C . S . Lane , svho svas Stesvard for the Benevolent and the Boys last year , gave his unattached services in conjunction with Bro . Wilson . Its totals for the last three ycars svere £ 265 in 1883 , £ 412 in 1882 , and £ 1024 in 1881 . The constituency is a strong one and doubtless sve shall hear again of its doings before the year 1 S 84 has run its course . At all events , sve hope so .

ESSEX , With a nesv Provincial Grand Master in the person of Lord Brooke , M . P ., and an addition of tss * o lodges to its roll , appears determined to put forth its strength . Eight of its 22 lodges are represented by as many Stesvards and the aggregate of their lists falls short by a fesv shillings only of £ 400 ; Liberty of Havering Lodge , No . 1437 , of Romford , heading the array with £ 98 16 s .,

while Star in the East , No . 650 , Harsvich , per Bro . Richard Clowes—who by the way , will be found amongst the representatives of the London lodges —figures for £ 73 us ., and the Bagshaw Lodge , No . 1457 , Buckhurst Hill , for £ 63 . In 1883 Essex raised £ 490 , of which £ 235 found its way into the treasury of the Benevolent , £ 15 8 went to the Boys' School , and the rest to the Girls' School . Its contributions to the three Institutions in 1882

amounted together to £ 354 . There is only one slight drawback from the satisfaction sve feel in making this announcement . Seven of the eight lodges svhich figure in Tuesday's listandsixof the eight brethren acting as Stesvards took part in one of the Festivals of 1883 , svhile tsvo of the lodges svere represented tsvice . Is it not desirable that some of the other lodges should take their share of the burden 1 The next province in alp habetical order , that of

GLOUCESTERSHIRE , Considering it has only 14 lodges on its roll , may be said to have distinguished itself very greatly at the last Festival of the Boys' School . Its Deputy P . G . M ., Bro . Brook-Smith , played the part of an unattached Stesvard . Lodge Royal Union , No . 246 , Cheltenham , si'as represented by

five Stesvards , svho raised amongst them 107 guineas ( £ 112 7 s . ) . Royal Lebanon , No . 493 , Gloucester , contributed , per three Stesvards , £ 122 . The Cottessvold Lodge , No . 592 , Cirencester , per two Stewards , gave £ 111 6 s . ; the Royal Gloucestershire , No . 839 , Gloucester , per three Stesvards , raised £ 219 9 s . ; and Tyndall Lodge , No . 1363 , of Chipping Sodbury , added a comfortable £ 21 ; the total handed in by the fifteen Stewards , amounting to £ 601 17 s . The May previous it enriched the Girls to the extent of

Analysis Of The Returns.

£ 36 15 s ., and in February , 18 S 3 , the Benevolent benefited largely , its six Stesvards , the D . P . G . M . unattached , and five from as many lodges , contributing amongst them £ 213 3 s ., making a total for the year of £ 851 15 s . In 18 S 2 it raised £ 548 , and in 1 SS 1 , £ 1547 , so that in the three years this small province of only 14 lodges all told , returned but little short of £ 2958 . Under these circumstances , it svould have been most unreasonable to expect a \ ery large contribution . Hosvever , four Stesvards , acting for three

lodges , raised together £ 80 17 s ., so that Gloucestershire , lrrespectis-e of its previous performances , has the satisfaction of knosving that at the last ten Masonic Festivals it has been represented by one or more of its lodges or brethren . Again , hosvever , sve have to note that the three lodges svhich appeared on Tuesday figured at one of last year ' s Festivals , svhile one of the Stesvards , Bro . Vassar-Smith , served in that capacity for all the Institutions in 1 S 83 .

HANTS AND THE ISLE OF WIGHT Has recently increased its roll to 40 lodges , and notsvithstanding the very laudable efforts it made at last year ' s Girls' Festival to support its P . G . M ., Bro . W . W . B . Beach , M . P ., as thc Chairman of the day , six of its lodges sent up Stesvards on Tuesday , and tsvo other brethren gave their services unattached , one of them being Bro . John Mason , the svorthy and energetic

collector of the Institution . The sum of their efforts svas s'cry satisfactorily represented by £ 350 17 s ., Bro . Rastrick , of Prince Edss * ard of Saxe-Weimar Lodge , No . 1903 , taking the lead svith £ 89 5 s ., svhile Bro . Mason follosved him very closely svith £ ' 86 ios . In June , 1 S 83 , it raised a somesvhat larger amount— £ 375—for the Boys' School , and in February of the same year it helped Bro . Terry to the extent of some £ 150 . Its principal

performance , hosvever , svas the raising of about £ 1300 at the Girls' Festival , svhen the chair ss'as occupied by its popular and much respected chief . Thus the sum of over £ 1832 svas raised by this province in 1 SS 3 , and the good svork is follosved up at thc first occasion that presents itself in the current year by donations , Sec , amounting to £ 350 . Thc province that next claims our attention is that of

HERTFORDSHIRE , svith svhich Bro . Terry's name has been so long and so honourably associated , and such being the case , it is not to be svondered at that , svhen the Festival of the Royal Masonic Bcnes-olcnt Institution comes round , it should put forth its strength , as far as its resources svill allosv , in order to make his successes as complete as possible . It musters no more than 12 lodges , and it

cannot point to any large industrial centre being in its midst , yet its presence in a subscription list is invariably to some vcry good purpose , and sve dare say there are many of the stronger provinces—speaking numerically , of course —svhich svould only be too pleased if they could point to so much good svork so admirably carried out . This time seven out of its 12 lodges and one chapter sent up Stesvards , the senior lodge—the Hertford , No . 403—vcry

properly taking thc lead svith a list amounting to £ 68 2 s ., svhile the total for the province figures at £ 362 6 s . 6 d . In June last it raised for Bro . Binckes £ 105 , in May for Bro . Hedges , £ 158 us . 6 d ,, and this time last year for Bro . Terry over £ 233 . These sums make up together somesvhere about £ 49 6 , and in 1882 it raised nearly 1000 guineas , of svhich , as a matter of course , the lion ' s share helped to ssvell Bro . Terry's total . These seven festivals make up an aggregate of £ 1900 , which , considering , as sve have said ,

there are so few lodges on the roll , svill compare favourably svith the achievements even of provinces that are nearly tsvice the strength of Hertfordshire . We should like to see Bro . Halsey , M \ P ., the Prov . Grand Master , presiding at one of our annual festivals ; sve feel sure his province would support him loyally and handsomely , In ordinary cases a total of upsvards of £ 271 must be accounted as a respectable contribution even from a province svhich is numerically strong ; b - KENT

can boast of a svell-ordercd administration . Its lodges are svell looked after , and every encouragement is given them to svork in such a manner as to deserve svell of thc Craft generally , and their Prov . Grand Master , Bro . Viscount Holmesdale , in particular . Hence , Kent may be accounted as a certain contributor at all our Festivals , and svhen there are any special circumstances in svhich it is interested , as , for instance , last year svhen Lord

Holmesdale presided at the Boys' School Festival , it may be regarded as a matter of almost equal certainty that special efforts svorthy of the occasion svill be made , and , svhat is of still greater moment , from our point of viesv , that these efforts will be crosvned wilh success . Thus , though sve could not have foretold thc sum that svould be raised by this stronghold of Masonry in support of Lord Holmesdale , sve experienced no surprise svhatever svhen

in June last Bro . Binckes announced that the joint labours of the Kentish Stesvards had secured for him considerably over £ 2000—subsequent additions gave the actual figures as £ 2316 5 s . Other £ 374 was raised for the support of thc Girls' School andthe Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , so that the total contributed in 1883 svas only a little less than £ 2700 . On

Tuesday five of its 49 lodges sverc represented , and the sum of their exertions appeared in the shape of £ 271 8 s ., or about one-tenth of what it accomplished last year . But even strong provinces cannot go on raising moneys by the £ 1000 , and Kent- —albeit it it is entitled to rest for a time on the laurels it earned so well in June last—has seta good example by not adopting on this occasion the principle of total abstinence .

The next stage on our journey carries us to the north-west of England , to a busy and svealthy part ol the country , svhere lodges are both numerous and strong in point of membership , and svhere we look to see a considerable display of activity svhenever one of our three Festivals is on the es * e of taking place . Our visit on the present occasion is certainly not disappointing , for though

LANCASHIRE—EASTERN DIVISION , has a roll of gj , lodges , of which 18 belong to Manchester alone , the total of its contribution on Tuesday , £ 640 2 s . 6 d . must be described as satisfactory , even though it may not compare relatively svith its Masonic strength so well as some of the other Provincial totals . But in the first place there is a flourishing local Masonic Institution svhich is of material service to our poor

East Lancashire brethren , and in the next it raised £ 2 , 100 for Bro . Binckes ' s Festival in June last . Therefore we hold it to be a vcry creditable performance that 17 of its lodges represented by 25 Stesvards should have raised amongst them this sum of £ 640 , the efforts of the lodge 44—Friendship , of Manchester—svhich per Bro . Woodall as Stesvard figures for £ 325 ios ., or rather

more than one half , being especially worthy of praise . On the other hand , sve fail to see why even a young lodge—No . 1993—should venture on making its appearance in such excellent company svith so trifling a contribution as 5 s . It was hardly svorth svhile for Bro . Edsvards to pay a Stesvard's fee of . tsvo guineas in order to remit such an amount . A postal order would have

“The Freemason: 1884-03-01, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 Sept. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_01031884/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 2
ANNUAL FESTIVAL OF THE ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 2
STEWARDS' LISTS. Article 4
ANALYSIS OF THE RETURNS. Article 5
THE ROYAL VISIT TO SEAHAM HARBOUR. Article 7
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To Correspondents. Article 9
THE Freemason Article 9
REVIEWS. Article 10
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 11
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 11
RECONCILIATION OF THE BELGIAN AND DUTCH MASONS. Article 11
MASONIC BALLS. Article 11
ROSICRUCIAN SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. Article 11
Obituary. Article 12
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 13
Royal Arch. Article 13
Mark Masonry. Article 13
Rosicrucian Society. Article 13
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Analysis Of The Returns.

already stated , over £ 1222 and £ 1050 respectively . But , nevertheless , there is ample matter for congratulation over this portion of the returns . Thus the list is svorthily headed by

BERKS AND BUCKS , With a total of £ 222 15 s . The Pros'ince can boast of 21 lodges , eleven of them being located in Berkshire , and the remaining ten in the adjoining county . Of these , four Berks lodges ( Nos . 209 and 771 , of Windsor , 414 , of Reading , and 1566 , of Maidenhead ) and tsvo Bucks ( the High Wycombe

and Slough Lodges ) , sent up Stesvards , tsvo brethren acting in that capacity for the Maidenhead Lodge . In 18 S 3 it gave £ 110 to the Benevolent , £ 18 3 to the Girls , and £ 178 to the Boys , or together , some £ 472 , svhile in 18 S 2 its success svas even greater , its contributions to thc three institutions totalling up to close on £ 620 . BRISTOL ,

Is a compact Province svith eight lodges , svhose loint contributions by the hands of Bro . W . Pumell amount to the very handsome sum of £ 293 I is . Last year Bro . Terry also had the benefit of its support to the extent of £ 217 , three of its lodges being represented by as many Stesvards , Bro . Purnell being one of the number . Of the 39 lodges included in the Province of

CHESHIRE , Four svere represented on Tuesday , namely , Nos . S 9 , 104 , and 537 , each by tsvo Stesvards , and No . 758 , the total thus far received , being £ 115 ios ., svith one list still unannounced . These same four ledges sent up Stesvards last year , namely , No . 8 9 to thc Girls' School , and the remaining three to

the Boys , and there svere six other lodges represented at one or other of thc same anniversaries . The amounts , hosvever , svere in no case considerable , nor , indeed , svould it be altogether reasonable to expect they should be , seeing that the Province has an Educational Institute of its osvn , svhich makes adequate provision for the children of its poorer or deceased members , and contributes tosvards their advancement on leaving school .

Bro . Controller Bake is evidentl y a very zealous supporter of all our Institutions , and in his hands it is evident the reputation of

CORNSVALL , And its 29 lodges svill be svorthily upheld . It is not a heavy list svhich appears against his name—onl y a modest sum of 45 guineas , but Bro . Bake svas Stesvard at all three Festivals in 1 S 83 , svhile on tsvo of the occasions he was ably seconded by Bro . Captain Colvill , their joint efforts resulting in a total of £ 243 ios . The transition from this Province to

DEVONSHIRE , Is easily accomplished , and if , in the opinion of our readers , a small list of £ 27 6 s . handed in by Bro . Pepprell , of the Jordan Lodge , No . 1402 , Torquay , is hardly svhat might have been looked for from a Province svith -50 lodges on its roll , we would remind them that Devonshire puts forth its strength on occasions , and svith considerable effect , as a total of only a fesv

pounds less than £ 600 raised in 1883 , and some £ 565 contributed the Crcvious year , testify most clearly and satisfactorily . It must be rememered , too , that it can fortunately point to tsvo indefatigable brethren in thc persons of Bros . Curteis and Godtschalk , svho , with Bro . Hughan to reinforce them , svill , sve doubt not , take care that Devonshire ' s aid shall alsvays be at hand svhen the occasion is imperative .

DORSETSHIRE , Which has 13 lodges , svas not unrepresented on Tuesday , though its Steward's list , that of Bro . Douglas Dugdale , of lodge No . 137 , who acted in the same capacity for the Boys' School last year , has not yet come to hand . Hosvever , from our past experience of this province and bearing in mind thai Bro . Dugdale on the last occasion received close on £ 60 , wc have

fesv , if any , misgivings about the return being a satisfactory one . It received £ 100 for this Institution in 1 SS 3 , svhen Bro . Howard was Stesvard , and it has given most liberally on other occasions . A West Hartlepool Lodge—the Harbour of Refuge , No . 764—is the only one of thc thirty

DURHAM , Lodges which contributed to the success of Tuesday , while Bro . C . S . Lane , svho svas Stesvard for the Benevolent and the Boys last year , gave his unattached services in conjunction with Bro . Wilson . Its totals for the last three ycars svere £ 265 in 1883 , £ 412 in 1882 , and £ 1024 in 1881 . The constituency is a strong one and doubtless sve shall hear again of its doings before the year 1 S 84 has run its course . At all events , sve hope so .

ESSEX , With a nesv Provincial Grand Master in the person of Lord Brooke , M . P ., and an addition of tss * o lodges to its roll , appears determined to put forth its strength . Eight of its 22 lodges are represented by as many Stesvards and the aggregate of their lists falls short by a fesv shillings only of £ 400 ; Liberty of Havering Lodge , No . 1437 , of Romford , heading the array with £ 98 16 s .,

while Star in the East , No . 650 , Harsvich , per Bro . Richard Clowes—who by the way , will be found amongst the representatives of the London lodges —figures for £ 73 us ., and the Bagshaw Lodge , No . 1457 , Buckhurst Hill , for £ 63 . In 1883 Essex raised £ 490 , of which £ 235 found its way into the treasury of the Benevolent , £ 15 8 went to the Boys' School , and the rest to the Girls' School . Its contributions to the three Institutions in 1882

amounted together to £ 354 . There is only one slight drawback from the satisfaction sve feel in making this announcement . Seven of the eight lodges svhich figure in Tuesday's listandsixof the eight brethren acting as Stesvards took part in one of the Festivals of 1883 , svhile tsvo of the lodges svere represented tsvice . Is it not desirable that some of the other lodges should take their share of the burden 1 The next province in alp habetical order , that of

GLOUCESTERSHIRE , Considering it has only 14 lodges on its roll , may be said to have distinguished itself very greatly at the last Festival of the Boys' School . Its Deputy P . G . M ., Bro . Brook-Smith , played the part of an unattached Stesvard . Lodge Royal Union , No . 246 , Cheltenham , si'as represented by

five Stesvards , svho raised amongst them 107 guineas ( £ 112 7 s . ) . Royal Lebanon , No . 493 , Gloucester , contributed , per three Stesvards , £ 122 . The Cottessvold Lodge , No . 592 , Cirencester , per two Stewards , gave £ 111 6 s . ; the Royal Gloucestershire , No . 839 , Gloucester , per three Stesvards , raised £ 219 9 s . ; and Tyndall Lodge , No . 1363 , of Chipping Sodbury , added a comfortable £ 21 ; the total handed in by the fifteen Stewards , amounting to £ 601 17 s . The May previous it enriched the Girls to the extent of

Analysis Of The Returns.

£ 36 15 s ., and in February , 18 S 3 , the Benevolent benefited largely , its six Stesvards , the D . P . G . M . unattached , and five from as many lodges , contributing amongst them £ 213 3 s ., making a total for the year of £ 851 15 s . In 18 S 2 it raised £ 548 , and in 1 SS 1 , £ 1547 , so that in the three years this small province of only 14 lodges all told , returned but little short of £ 2958 . Under these circumstances , it svould have been most unreasonable to expect a \ ery large contribution . Hosvever , four Stesvards , acting for three

lodges , raised together £ 80 17 s ., so that Gloucestershire , lrrespectis-e of its previous performances , has the satisfaction of knosving that at the last ten Masonic Festivals it has been represented by one or more of its lodges or brethren . Again , hosvever , sve have to note that the three lodges svhich appeared on Tuesday figured at one of last year ' s Festivals , svhile one of the Stesvards , Bro . Vassar-Smith , served in that capacity for all the Institutions in 1 S 83 .

HANTS AND THE ISLE OF WIGHT Has recently increased its roll to 40 lodges , and notsvithstanding the very laudable efforts it made at last year ' s Girls' Festival to support its P . G . M ., Bro . W . W . B . Beach , M . P ., as thc Chairman of the day , six of its lodges sent up Stesvards on Tuesday , and tsvo other brethren gave their services unattached , one of them being Bro . John Mason , the svorthy and energetic

collector of the Institution . The sum of their efforts svas s'cry satisfactorily represented by £ 350 17 s ., Bro . Rastrick , of Prince Edss * ard of Saxe-Weimar Lodge , No . 1903 , taking the lead svith £ 89 5 s ., svhile Bro . Mason follosved him very closely svith £ ' 86 ios . In June , 1 S 83 , it raised a somesvhat larger amount— £ 375—for the Boys' School , and in February of the same year it helped Bro . Terry to the extent of some £ 150 . Its principal

performance , hosvever , svas the raising of about £ 1300 at the Girls' Festival , svhen the chair ss'as occupied by its popular and much respected chief . Thus the sum of over £ 1832 svas raised by this province in 1 SS 3 , and the good svork is follosved up at thc first occasion that presents itself in the current year by donations , Sec , amounting to £ 350 . Thc province that next claims our attention is that of

HERTFORDSHIRE , svith svhich Bro . Terry's name has been so long and so honourably associated , and such being the case , it is not to be svondered at that , svhen the Festival of the Royal Masonic Bcnes-olcnt Institution comes round , it should put forth its strength , as far as its resources svill allosv , in order to make his successes as complete as possible . It musters no more than 12 lodges , and it

cannot point to any large industrial centre being in its midst , yet its presence in a subscription list is invariably to some vcry good purpose , and sve dare say there are many of the stronger provinces—speaking numerically , of course —svhich svould only be too pleased if they could point to so much good svork so admirably carried out . This time seven out of its 12 lodges and one chapter sent up Stesvards , the senior lodge—the Hertford , No . 403—vcry

properly taking thc lead svith a list amounting to £ 68 2 s ., svhile the total for the province figures at £ 362 6 s . 6 d . In June last it raised for Bro . Binckes £ 105 , in May for Bro . Hedges , £ 158 us . 6 d ,, and this time last year for Bro . Terry over £ 233 . These sums make up together somesvhere about £ 49 6 , and in 1882 it raised nearly 1000 guineas , of svhich , as a matter of course , the lion ' s share helped to ssvell Bro . Terry's total . These seven festivals make up an aggregate of £ 1900 , which , considering , as sve have said ,

there are so few lodges on the roll , svill compare favourably svith the achievements even of provinces that are nearly tsvice the strength of Hertfordshire . We should like to see Bro . Halsey , M \ P ., the Prov . Grand Master , presiding at one of our annual festivals ; sve feel sure his province would support him loyally and handsomely , In ordinary cases a total of upsvards of £ 271 must be accounted as a respectable contribution even from a province svhich is numerically strong ; b - KENT

can boast of a svell-ordercd administration . Its lodges are svell looked after , and every encouragement is given them to svork in such a manner as to deserve svell of thc Craft generally , and their Prov . Grand Master , Bro . Viscount Holmesdale , in particular . Hence , Kent may be accounted as a certain contributor at all our Festivals , and svhen there are any special circumstances in svhich it is interested , as , for instance , last year svhen Lord

Holmesdale presided at the Boys' School Festival , it may be regarded as a matter of almost equal certainty that special efforts svorthy of the occasion svill be made , and , svhat is of still greater moment , from our point of viesv , that these efforts will be crosvned wilh success . Thus , though sve could not have foretold thc sum that svould be raised by this stronghold of Masonry in support of Lord Holmesdale , sve experienced no surprise svhatever svhen

in June last Bro . Binckes announced that the joint labours of the Kentish Stesvards had secured for him considerably over £ 2000—subsequent additions gave the actual figures as £ 2316 5 s . Other £ 374 was raised for the support of thc Girls' School andthe Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , so that the total contributed in 1883 svas only a little less than £ 2700 . On

Tuesday five of its 49 lodges sverc represented , and the sum of their exertions appeared in the shape of £ 271 8 s ., or about one-tenth of what it accomplished last year . But even strong provinces cannot go on raising moneys by the £ 1000 , and Kent- —albeit it it is entitled to rest for a time on the laurels it earned so well in June last—has seta good example by not adopting on this occasion the principle of total abstinence .

The next stage on our journey carries us to the north-west of England , to a busy and svealthy part ol the country , svhere lodges are both numerous and strong in point of membership , and svhere we look to see a considerable display of activity svhenever one of our three Festivals is on the es * e of taking place . Our visit on the present occasion is certainly not disappointing , for though

LANCASHIRE—EASTERN DIVISION , has a roll of gj , lodges , of which 18 belong to Manchester alone , the total of its contribution on Tuesday , £ 640 2 s . 6 d . must be described as satisfactory , even though it may not compare relatively svith its Masonic strength so well as some of the other Provincial totals . But in the first place there is a flourishing local Masonic Institution svhich is of material service to our poor

East Lancashire brethren , and in the next it raised £ 2 , 100 for Bro . Binckes ' s Festival in June last . Therefore we hold it to be a vcry creditable performance that 17 of its lodges represented by 25 Stesvards should have raised amongst them this sum of £ 640 , the efforts of the lodge 44—Friendship , of Manchester—svhich per Bro . Woodall as Stesvard figures for £ 325 ios ., or rather

more than one half , being especially worthy of praise . On the other hand , sve fail to see why even a young lodge—No . 1993—should venture on making its appearance in such excellent company svith so trifling a contribution as 5 s . It was hardly svorth svhile for Bro . Edsvards to pay a Stesvard's fee of . tsvo guineas in order to remit such an amount . A postal order would have

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