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    Article ANOTHER MASONIC MS. Page 1 of 1
    Article ROLL OF GRAND MASTERS OF IRELAND. Page 1 of 1
    Article ROLL OF GRAND MASTERS OF IRELAND. Page 1 of 1
    Article UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Page 1 of 2 →
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Ar00200

really onerous post of honorary Secretary . Similar Committees will , we trust , be formed under the auspices of the Grand Lodges of Ireland and Scotland ; nor , indeed , do we believe that in any English-speaking country the claims of Bro . GOULD will be forgotten . Even in America , there must be , at least , some among the thousands who have perused his famous

"History who cannot altogether approve of the manner in which it has been quietly " appropriated " without the leave or licence of the author , and these , we confidently anticipate , will mark their sympathy by subscribing

to the memorial . Neither can we doubt—and with this our present remarks must be brought to a close—that by our confreres of the Masonic Press in foreign countries the unequalled services of Bro . GOULD will be as ¦ warml y upheld as in our own .

* * * Th ^ Re P t published last week of the consecration , on the Bro . Tew * s Sth ult ., of the Armitage Lodge , No . 2261 , Milnsbridge , con-Addresses . tained in fuH the address which Bro _ TEW p . G . M . of West

Yorkshire , as his custom is on these occasions , delivered ; and though it is difficult for even so practised a speaker as he is to say anything that is not tolerably familiar to the brethren who are present at such ceremonies , we may be sure that his address contained matter calculated to impress the members of the new lodge with a full sense of the duties and responsibilities

they had undertaken . His remarks on that good fellowship , which it is one of the principal objects of Freemasonry to promote , were very felicitous , and we have no doubt will be taken to heart by all who had the privilege of hearing them . It is a quality in Freemasonry which does not always attract to itself quite so much attention as Bro . TEW was pleased to bestow

upon it , and yet , perhaps , it is the quality which it is most important that Freemasons should cultivate . It is the basis of—if , indeed , it is not synonymous with—that pure and disinterested friendship , on the establishment of which among men all moralists , both sacred and profane , have insisted so strongly . It is the feeling which prompts men to do good to others , and ,

as Bro . TEW was careful to point out , very much of "the happiness and purity of our lives" as Masons "depend on our admitting and making a wise choice of our members for the lodge . " VVe are aware that in saying this Bro . TEW was enunciating no new idea , for almost every brother who has played the part of Consecrating Officer has done his utmost

to impress the same truth on his hearers . But Bro . TEW has a way of his own in these matters , and it it is impossible for him to be always formulating new ideas , he is careful that even the well-established idea , as presented by him , shall be to the full as attractive as if it had never been presented b y any previous speaker . However , if the idea is not new , it contains advice

•which it is most desirable should be followed . A lodge depends chiefly , if not entirely , for its success on the character of those who are introduced into it as members , and Bro . TEW never gave better advice than when he told the members of the newly-consecrated Armitage Lodge to " choose their initiates for what they are , and not for what they have . "

Another Masonic Ms.

ANOTHER MASONIC MS .

Bro . Wm . Watson , of Leeds , has sent me for transcription another copy of the " Old Charges , " by desire and with the consent of Bro . Thomas W . Tew , P . G . D ., the esteemed Prov . G . M . of West Yorkshire . This parchment roll was presented , in October last , to the Masonic Library and Museum formed in that province , by Bro . J . W . Cocking , W . M . 2035 , in whose family the document has been preserved for several generations . It

is composed of three strips of parchment of over six inches in width , two being long and of about equal length , and the third , forming the concluding portion , being much shorter . The whole extends to some six and a half feet in length , and is well written , only at times not easily decipherable , as the roll is considerably worn or rubbed in some parts . Its age , apparently , is about two centuries , and the text is mainly of the ordinary kind ( save as

to several original additions and alterations ) until the conclusion is approached , when numerous departures may be noticed , and entirely fresh matter and new regulations are introduced , quite new to me , and making this valuable MS . a suigeneris . In consequence of this latter fact , Bro . Watson has obtained the

approval of the Prov . G . M . —after whom , and in whose honour , by desire of the donor , it has been most appropriately named—for its publication b y me in the Christmas number of the Freemason , in which paper , I feel assured , it will be a most attractive feature , and be welcomed by the ever-increasing band of Masonic Students .

I am now carefully collating it with other MSS ., and hope to announce its peculiarities and distinctive character in time for the reproduction , so that the value of the " T . W . Tew MS . " may be fully appreciated , especially by the thousands of brethren in West Yorkshire , where Bro . Thomas W . Tew is so loved and respected . W . J . HUGHAN .

Roll Of Grand Masters Of Ireland.

ROLL OF GRAND MASTERS OF IRELAND .

( ARRANGED BY BRO . W . J . HUGHAN . ) The following roll of Grand Masters of the Grand Lodge of Ireland will be found to be more accurate than any preceding list , not even excepting that supplied in the official Calendar of the Grand Lodge for 1886 . Notwithstanding all the efforts I have made , it is not wholly satisfactory

and complete , but the publication of the series of old Irish warrants , through the assistance of Bro . C . P . Cooper , of Dundalk , Dr . Crossle , of Newry , and others , has enabled me to supply some new names , correct several errors , and furnish a more exact description of several of the noblemen who were at the head of the Craft for the period named .

The appointment of the Earl of Ross is first noted in Bro . Gould ' s history , based upon an extract from the London Journal of 17 th July , 1725 . " From the same kingdom [ Ireland ] we have advice that the Society of Free Masons had met , and chose the Earl of Ross Great Master for the year ensuing" ; who ( if any did ) held that office before , or whether it really

Roll Of Grand Masters Of Ireland.

meant Grand Master , it is impossible , under existing circumstances , to decide . The names of the Grand Masters of the " Grand Lodge for the Province of Munster" are obtained from existing records of that bod y kindly made known to me by Bro . Anderson Cooper , D . P . G . M . of Munster . Lord Kingston evidently acted in that capacity to 1733 , so that his lordshi p continued to be G . M . of Munster after he had ceased to be the chief at

Dublin . When the Grand Lodge for Munster { not Provincial Gran d Lodge ) was first formed I cannot tell , but there were several lodges on its roll in 1727 , and as a Grand Lodge , Bro . Gould claims most fairly , it ruled over a larger area than did that of England until 1724 , for from 1717 to that year , London and Westminster were only concerned in the prosperity of the premier Grand Lodge .

The list which I have compiled should be carefully compared with the particulars in Spratt ' s Constitutions , 175 1 ( Freemason , January 5 th , 1884 ) , and the lists in Bro . Furnell's Calendar of 1847 and the Grand Lod ge of 1886 , as reprinted by me lately in the Freemason .

" GREAT MASTER " IRELAND . 1 1725 , Earl of Ross . GRAND LODGE—PROVINCE OF MUNSTER . 1 1726 , Hon . James O'Brien . 2 1730 , Col . Wm . Maynard . 3 1731 , James , 4 th Baron Kingston . * GRAND LODGE OF IRELAND .

1 1730 , James , 4 th Baron Kingston . * 2 1732 , Nicholas , 5 th Viscount Netterville . 3 l ? 33 > Henry , 4 th Viscount Kingsland . (¦) ' 735 > James , 4 th Baron Kingston * ( see A . D . 1730 ) . 4 173 6 , Marcus , ist Viscount lyrone ( Earl of Tyrone ) . 5 1738 , Wm . Stewart , 3 rd Viscount Mountjoy ( ist Earl of Blessington ) . % 6 1740 , Arthur , 3 rd Viscount Doneraile .

7 1741 , Charles , 2 nd Baron Tullamore ( Earl of Charleville ) . 8 1743 , Thomas , 2 nd Baron Southwell . 9 1744 , John , 3 rd Viscount Allen . ( 0 " 745 ) James , 4 th Baron Kingston * ( see A . D . 1730 and 1735 ) . 10 1747 , Sir Marmaduke Wyville , 6 th Bart . 11 1749 , Robert , ist Baron Kingsborough . 12 1750 , Lord George Sackville . (?)

"S 1753 , Hon . Thomas Southwell ( 3 rd Baron and ist Viscount Southwell ) . " 4 I 757 > Rrinsley , Lord Newtonbutler ( 2 nd Earl of Lanesborough ) . 1 5 175 ^ 1 Charles , Lord Moore ( 6 th Earl and ist Marquess of Drogheda ) . ( 7 ) 1760 , Charles , 1 st Earl of Charleville ( see A . D . 1741 ) . 16 1761 , Sir Edward King , 5 th Bart . ( Visct . Kingsborough & ist Earl of Kingston ) 17 1763 , Thomas , 6 th Earl of Westmeath , K . P . 18 1767 , Ford , 5 th Earl of Cavan .

19 1768 , Cadivallader , gth Baron Blayney - | - ( resigned ) . ( iS ) 1768 , Ford , 5 th Earl of Cavan ( see A . D . 1767 ) . ( 16 ) 1769 , Edraard , 1 st Earl of Kingston ( see A . D . 1761 ) . 20 1770 , William , Marquess of Kildare ( 2 nd Duke of Leinster ) . 21 1772 , Randal , Viscount Dunluce ( 6 th Earl and ist Marquess of Antrim ) . % 22 1774 , George , Viscount Bellfield ( 2 nd Earl of Belvedere ^ . 2 3 177 6 , Garrett , ist Earl of Mornington . ( 20 ) 1777 , William , 2 nd Duke of Leinster ( see A . D . 1770 ) .

( 21 ) 177 S , Randal , 6 th Earl of Antrim ( Marquess of Antrim ) J ( see A . D . 1772 ) . 24 1782 , Richard , 2 nd Earl of Mornington ( Marquess of Wellesley ) . 25 17 S 3 , Robert , ist Baron Muskerry . 26 17 S 5 , Arthur , Viscount Kilwarlin ( 2 nd Marquess of Downshire ) . 27 1787 , Francis , 2 nd Viscount Glerawley ( ist Earl of Annesley ) . 28 17 S 9 , Richard , 2 nd Baron Donoughmore ( Earl of Donoughmore ) . 29 1 S 13 , Augustus Frederick , 3 rd Duke of Leinster . 30 1874 , James Hamilton , ist Duke of Abercorn . 31 1 SS 6 , James , 2 nd Duke of Abercorn .

United Grand Lodge Of England.

UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND .

1 he following is the business to be transacted in Grand Lodge on Wednesday next : 1 . The minutes of the Quarterly Communication of the 5 th September , 1888 , for confirmation .

2 . Com nunication from the Most Worshipful Grand Master , submitting and recommending an application from the Body styled "United Grand Lodge of New South Wales , " for recognition . 3 . Nomination of a Grand Master for the ensuing year . 4 . Nomination of a Grand Treasurer for the ensuing year .

5 . Appointment and Investment of a President of the Board of Benevolence . 6 . Election of a Senior and a Junior Vice-President of the Board of Benevolence .

7 . Election of 12 Past Masters to serve on the Board of Benevolence for the year ensuing . 8 . Report of the Board of Benevolence for the last quarter , in which are recommendations for the following grants , viz . : — £ s . d . A brother of the St . John the Baptist Lodge , No . 39 , Exeter ... 50 0 o The widow of a brother of the St . John ' s Lodge , No . 6 73

, Liverpool , ... 50 o o A brother of the Howe and Charnwood Lodge , No . 1007 , Loughborough 50 o o A brother of the Lodgeof Temperance , No . 169 , London ... 100 o o A brother of the Lodge of Justice , No . 147 , Deptford 50 o o A brother of the Lodgeof Emulation , No . 21 , London 75 o o

The widow of a brother of the St . Margaret ' s Lodge , No . 1 S 72 , Surbiton , ... 75 o 0 A brother of the Fort Lodge , No . 1528 , Newquay 50 o o A brother of the Royal Leopold Lodge , No . 166 9 , Camberwell ... 50 o o A brother ofthe Meridian Lodge of St . John , No . 729 , Melbourne ,

Victoria 100 0 o The widow of a brother of the All Souls' Lodge , No . 170 , Weymouth 50 0 o A brother of the Yarborough Lodge , No . 422 , Gainsborough ... 50 o o

9 . —REPORT OI * THE BOARD OF GENERAL PURPOSES . To the United Grand Lodge of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of England . The Board of General Purposes beg to submit a Statement of the Grand Lodge Accounts , at the meeting ol the Finance Committee , held on Friday , the 16 th day of November inst ., showing a Balance in the Bank

of England of £ 4026 os . 8 d ., and in the hands of the Grand Secretary for Petty Cash £ 100 , and for Servants' Wages £ 100 , and Balance of Annual Allowance for Library £ 24 8 s . 7 d . ( Signed ) ^ THOMAS FENN , President . Freemasons' Hall , London , W . C ., 20 th November . 1888 .

“The Freemason: 1888-12-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_01121888/page/2/.
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
ANOTHER MASONIC MS. Article 2
ROLL OF GRAND MASTERS OF IRELAND. Article 2
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF ESSEX. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF OXFORDSHIRE. Article 4
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE, COUNTY DOWN, IRELAND. Article 4
Order of the Secret Monitor. Article 5
THE POET BURNS. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
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Untitled Ad 7
To Correspondents. Article 7
Untitled Article 8
Original Correspondence. Article 8
Masonic Notes and Queries: Article 8
Reports of Masonic Meetings. Article 8
Untitled Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Royal Arch. Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 13
Mark Masonry. Article 13
Knights Templar. Article 13
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 14
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 15
PROVINCIAL MASONIC MEETINGS Article 15
Untitled Article 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
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Ar00200

really onerous post of honorary Secretary . Similar Committees will , we trust , be formed under the auspices of the Grand Lodges of Ireland and Scotland ; nor , indeed , do we believe that in any English-speaking country the claims of Bro . GOULD will be forgotten . Even in America , there must be , at least , some among the thousands who have perused his famous

"History who cannot altogether approve of the manner in which it has been quietly " appropriated " without the leave or licence of the author , and these , we confidently anticipate , will mark their sympathy by subscribing

to the memorial . Neither can we doubt—and with this our present remarks must be brought to a close—that by our confreres of the Masonic Press in foreign countries the unequalled services of Bro . GOULD will be as ¦ warml y upheld as in our own .

* * * Th ^ Re P t published last week of the consecration , on the Bro . Tew * s Sth ult ., of the Armitage Lodge , No . 2261 , Milnsbridge , con-Addresses . tained in fuH the address which Bro _ TEW p . G . M . of West

Yorkshire , as his custom is on these occasions , delivered ; and though it is difficult for even so practised a speaker as he is to say anything that is not tolerably familiar to the brethren who are present at such ceremonies , we may be sure that his address contained matter calculated to impress the members of the new lodge with a full sense of the duties and responsibilities

they had undertaken . His remarks on that good fellowship , which it is one of the principal objects of Freemasonry to promote , were very felicitous , and we have no doubt will be taken to heart by all who had the privilege of hearing them . It is a quality in Freemasonry which does not always attract to itself quite so much attention as Bro . TEW was pleased to bestow

upon it , and yet , perhaps , it is the quality which it is most important that Freemasons should cultivate . It is the basis of—if , indeed , it is not synonymous with—that pure and disinterested friendship , on the establishment of which among men all moralists , both sacred and profane , have insisted so strongly . It is the feeling which prompts men to do good to others , and ,

as Bro . TEW was careful to point out , very much of "the happiness and purity of our lives" as Masons "depend on our admitting and making a wise choice of our members for the lodge . " VVe are aware that in saying this Bro . TEW was enunciating no new idea , for almost every brother who has played the part of Consecrating Officer has done his utmost

to impress the same truth on his hearers . But Bro . TEW has a way of his own in these matters , and it it is impossible for him to be always formulating new ideas , he is careful that even the well-established idea , as presented by him , shall be to the full as attractive as if it had never been presented b y any previous speaker . However , if the idea is not new , it contains advice

•which it is most desirable should be followed . A lodge depends chiefly , if not entirely , for its success on the character of those who are introduced into it as members , and Bro . TEW never gave better advice than when he told the members of the newly-consecrated Armitage Lodge to " choose their initiates for what they are , and not for what they have . "

Another Masonic Ms.

ANOTHER MASONIC MS .

Bro . Wm . Watson , of Leeds , has sent me for transcription another copy of the " Old Charges , " by desire and with the consent of Bro . Thomas W . Tew , P . G . D ., the esteemed Prov . G . M . of West Yorkshire . This parchment roll was presented , in October last , to the Masonic Library and Museum formed in that province , by Bro . J . W . Cocking , W . M . 2035 , in whose family the document has been preserved for several generations . It

is composed of three strips of parchment of over six inches in width , two being long and of about equal length , and the third , forming the concluding portion , being much shorter . The whole extends to some six and a half feet in length , and is well written , only at times not easily decipherable , as the roll is considerably worn or rubbed in some parts . Its age , apparently , is about two centuries , and the text is mainly of the ordinary kind ( save as

to several original additions and alterations ) until the conclusion is approached , when numerous departures may be noticed , and entirely fresh matter and new regulations are introduced , quite new to me , and making this valuable MS . a suigeneris . In consequence of this latter fact , Bro . Watson has obtained the

approval of the Prov . G . M . —after whom , and in whose honour , by desire of the donor , it has been most appropriately named—for its publication b y me in the Christmas number of the Freemason , in which paper , I feel assured , it will be a most attractive feature , and be welcomed by the ever-increasing band of Masonic Students .

I am now carefully collating it with other MSS ., and hope to announce its peculiarities and distinctive character in time for the reproduction , so that the value of the " T . W . Tew MS . " may be fully appreciated , especially by the thousands of brethren in West Yorkshire , where Bro . Thomas W . Tew is so loved and respected . W . J . HUGHAN .

Roll Of Grand Masters Of Ireland.

ROLL OF GRAND MASTERS OF IRELAND .

( ARRANGED BY BRO . W . J . HUGHAN . ) The following roll of Grand Masters of the Grand Lodge of Ireland will be found to be more accurate than any preceding list , not even excepting that supplied in the official Calendar of the Grand Lodge for 1886 . Notwithstanding all the efforts I have made , it is not wholly satisfactory

and complete , but the publication of the series of old Irish warrants , through the assistance of Bro . C . P . Cooper , of Dundalk , Dr . Crossle , of Newry , and others , has enabled me to supply some new names , correct several errors , and furnish a more exact description of several of the noblemen who were at the head of the Craft for the period named .

The appointment of the Earl of Ross is first noted in Bro . Gould ' s history , based upon an extract from the London Journal of 17 th July , 1725 . " From the same kingdom [ Ireland ] we have advice that the Society of Free Masons had met , and chose the Earl of Ross Great Master for the year ensuing" ; who ( if any did ) held that office before , or whether it really

Roll Of Grand Masters Of Ireland.

meant Grand Master , it is impossible , under existing circumstances , to decide . The names of the Grand Masters of the " Grand Lodge for the Province of Munster" are obtained from existing records of that bod y kindly made known to me by Bro . Anderson Cooper , D . P . G . M . of Munster . Lord Kingston evidently acted in that capacity to 1733 , so that his lordshi p continued to be G . M . of Munster after he had ceased to be the chief at

Dublin . When the Grand Lodge for Munster { not Provincial Gran d Lodge ) was first formed I cannot tell , but there were several lodges on its roll in 1727 , and as a Grand Lodge , Bro . Gould claims most fairly , it ruled over a larger area than did that of England until 1724 , for from 1717 to that year , London and Westminster were only concerned in the prosperity of the premier Grand Lodge .

The list which I have compiled should be carefully compared with the particulars in Spratt ' s Constitutions , 175 1 ( Freemason , January 5 th , 1884 ) , and the lists in Bro . Furnell's Calendar of 1847 and the Grand Lod ge of 1886 , as reprinted by me lately in the Freemason .

" GREAT MASTER " IRELAND . 1 1725 , Earl of Ross . GRAND LODGE—PROVINCE OF MUNSTER . 1 1726 , Hon . James O'Brien . 2 1730 , Col . Wm . Maynard . 3 1731 , James , 4 th Baron Kingston . * GRAND LODGE OF IRELAND .

1 1730 , James , 4 th Baron Kingston . * 2 1732 , Nicholas , 5 th Viscount Netterville . 3 l ? 33 > Henry , 4 th Viscount Kingsland . (¦) ' 735 > James , 4 th Baron Kingston * ( see A . D . 1730 ) . 4 173 6 , Marcus , ist Viscount lyrone ( Earl of Tyrone ) . 5 1738 , Wm . Stewart , 3 rd Viscount Mountjoy ( ist Earl of Blessington ) . % 6 1740 , Arthur , 3 rd Viscount Doneraile .

7 1741 , Charles , 2 nd Baron Tullamore ( Earl of Charleville ) . 8 1743 , Thomas , 2 nd Baron Southwell . 9 1744 , John , 3 rd Viscount Allen . ( 0 " 745 ) James , 4 th Baron Kingston * ( see A . D . 1730 and 1735 ) . 10 1747 , Sir Marmaduke Wyville , 6 th Bart . 11 1749 , Robert , ist Baron Kingsborough . 12 1750 , Lord George Sackville . (?)

"S 1753 , Hon . Thomas Southwell ( 3 rd Baron and ist Viscount Southwell ) . " 4 I 757 > Rrinsley , Lord Newtonbutler ( 2 nd Earl of Lanesborough ) . 1 5 175 ^ 1 Charles , Lord Moore ( 6 th Earl and ist Marquess of Drogheda ) . ( 7 ) 1760 , Charles , 1 st Earl of Charleville ( see A . D . 1741 ) . 16 1761 , Sir Edward King , 5 th Bart . ( Visct . Kingsborough & ist Earl of Kingston ) 17 1763 , Thomas , 6 th Earl of Westmeath , K . P . 18 1767 , Ford , 5 th Earl of Cavan .

19 1768 , Cadivallader , gth Baron Blayney - | - ( resigned ) . ( iS ) 1768 , Ford , 5 th Earl of Cavan ( see A . D . 1767 ) . ( 16 ) 1769 , Edraard , 1 st Earl of Kingston ( see A . D . 1761 ) . 20 1770 , William , Marquess of Kildare ( 2 nd Duke of Leinster ) . 21 1772 , Randal , Viscount Dunluce ( 6 th Earl and ist Marquess of Antrim ) . % 22 1774 , George , Viscount Bellfield ( 2 nd Earl of Belvedere ^ . 2 3 177 6 , Garrett , ist Earl of Mornington . ( 20 ) 1777 , William , 2 nd Duke of Leinster ( see A . D . 1770 ) .

( 21 ) 177 S , Randal , 6 th Earl of Antrim ( Marquess of Antrim ) J ( see A . D . 1772 ) . 24 1782 , Richard , 2 nd Earl of Mornington ( Marquess of Wellesley ) . 25 17 S 3 , Robert , ist Baron Muskerry . 26 17 S 5 , Arthur , Viscount Kilwarlin ( 2 nd Marquess of Downshire ) . 27 1787 , Francis , 2 nd Viscount Glerawley ( ist Earl of Annesley ) . 28 17 S 9 , Richard , 2 nd Baron Donoughmore ( Earl of Donoughmore ) . 29 1 S 13 , Augustus Frederick , 3 rd Duke of Leinster . 30 1874 , James Hamilton , ist Duke of Abercorn . 31 1 SS 6 , James , 2 nd Duke of Abercorn .

United Grand Lodge Of England.

UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND .

1 he following is the business to be transacted in Grand Lodge on Wednesday next : 1 . The minutes of the Quarterly Communication of the 5 th September , 1888 , for confirmation .

2 . Com nunication from the Most Worshipful Grand Master , submitting and recommending an application from the Body styled "United Grand Lodge of New South Wales , " for recognition . 3 . Nomination of a Grand Master for the ensuing year . 4 . Nomination of a Grand Treasurer for the ensuing year .

5 . Appointment and Investment of a President of the Board of Benevolence . 6 . Election of a Senior and a Junior Vice-President of the Board of Benevolence .

7 . Election of 12 Past Masters to serve on the Board of Benevolence for the year ensuing . 8 . Report of the Board of Benevolence for the last quarter , in which are recommendations for the following grants , viz . : — £ s . d . A brother of the St . John the Baptist Lodge , No . 39 , Exeter ... 50 0 o The widow of a brother of the St . John ' s Lodge , No . 6 73

, Liverpool , ... 50 o o A brother of the Howe and Charnwood Lodge , No . 1007 , Loughborough 50 o o A brother of the Lodgeof Temperance , No . 169 , London ... 100 o o A brother of the Lodge of Justice , No . 147 , Deptford 50 o o A brother of the Lodgeof Emulation , No . 21 , London 75 o o

The widow of a brother of the St . Margaret ' s Lodge , No . 1 S 72 , Surbiton , ... 75 o 0 A brother of the Fort Lodge , No . 1528 , Newquay 50 o o A brother of the Royal Leopold Lodge , No . 166 9 , Camberwell ... 50 o o A brother ofthe Meridian Lodge of St . John , No . 729 , Melbourne ,

Victoria 100 0 o The widow of a brother of the All Souls' Lodge , No . 170 , Weymouth 50 0 o A brother of the Yarborough Lodge , No . 422 , Gainsborough ... 50 o o

9 . —REPORT OI * THE BOARD OF GENERAL PURPOSES . To the United Grand Lodge of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of England . The Board of General Purposes beg to submit a Statement of the Grand Lodge Accounts , at the meeting ol the Finance Committee , held on Friday , the 16 th day of November inst ., showing a Balance in the Bank

of England of £ 4026 os . 8 d ., and in the hands of the Grand Secretary for Petty Cash £ 100 , and for Servants' Wages £ 100 , and Balance of Annual Allowance for Library £ 24 8 s . 7 d . ( Signed ) ^ THOMAS FENN , President . Freemasons' Hall , London , W . C ., 20 th November . 1888 .

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