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    Article ANALYSIS OF THE RETURNS. ← Page 2 of 4
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Page 7

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

Analysis Of The Returns.

the Benevolent and Girls' School Festivals , and the latter at that of the Boys'School . Thus , without going further back , we find that Cornwall has been efficiently represented at each of the last ten Festivals , the sum total raised by it on these occasions being £ 1765 3 s . The 22 lodges in

CUMBERLAND AND WESTMORLAND sent up £ 102 12 s . 6 d . by the hands of Bro . Geo . Dalrymple on Wednesday , notwithstanding that last year it raised ^ 1050 for the Old People and £ 210 for the Girls' School . During the year of the Queen ' s Jubilee , it appears to have rested , only the Benevolent Institution receiving support to the modest extent of - £ 55 13 s . ; but in 1886 , with Bros . G . J . McKay and J . H .

Hogg as Stewards , it raised ^ 500 , for the Boys' School . In 1885 it was represented at the Benevolent and Boys' School Festivals , the sum of its subscriptions being £ 102 18 s . 6 d . ; in 1884 it entered no appearance at all , but in 1883 it raised £ 1050 for the Boys' School , so that if not a regular , it is unquestionably , a generous supporter of our Charities . The Province of

DERBYSHIRE , which also has 22 lodges on its roll , had two of them—the St . Oswald , No . 850 , Ashbourne , and the Phoenix Lodge of St . Ann , No . 1235 . Buxtonrepresented , the total of the two lists being ^ 32 1 is . But this is not to be wondered at , seeing that last year it raised a fraction over £ 891 , or ^ 40 ios . per lodge . Its record for the Jubilee year was also a good one , the three Institutions receiving amongst them a fraction under - £ 626 , of In its

which the Old People obtained ^ 387 14 s . 1886 contributions were on a small scale , and amounted for all three Festivals to only ^ 176 15 s . ; but the preceding year , when its chief , the Marquis of Hartington , presided at the Boys'Festival , it raised close on j £ i 547 for that Institution , so that in the four years , from 18 S 5-1 S 8 S both inclusive , it has distributed amongst our Charities £ 3240 12 s ., or on an average ^ 820 per year . As the Provincial Grand Master of

DEVONSHIRE , Bro . Viscount Ebrington , M . P ., did the honours as President at the Boys ' School Festival in June last , and compiled the excellent total of £ 840 , it is riot surprising that the Province should be for a time at rest , and that only a single Steward , representing Chapter No . 70 , should figure on Wednesday's list , the amount of his Return not being stated . The total for last

year , taking the three Festivals together , was ^ 1013 5 s ., which , even for a province with 52 lodges on its roll , is by no means an inconsiderable sum . In 1887 it helped the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution to the extent of £ 50 , and figured in the Returns of the same Institution , as well as in those of the Girls' School the year previous—for £ 157 10 $ . in the

former , and for £ 136 19 s . in the latter . These , perhaps , are not such heavy figures as might have been expected , but it must be borne in mind that Devonshire has both an Educational Institution and an Annuity Fund of its own , so that its support is divided between these and the Central Charities of the Society . Two out of the 13 lodges in

DORSETSHIRE . had Stewards on Wednesday , Bro . Sir R . N . Howard , one of the Junior Grand Deacons for the year , as representative of the Portland Lodge , No . 1037 , handing in a list of £$ 6 ios ., and Bro . S . R . Baskett , who frequently undertakes these duties , acting for the Beaminster Manor Lodge , No .

1367 , one of £ 100 , the sum for the two being ^ 156 ios . Last year the Province raised £ 294 for the Girls' School Centenary ; in 1887 , £ 113 3 s . for the R . M . B . I . ; and in 1886 , £ ' iSo ios . for the same Institution , and ^ 142 16 s . for the Girls' School , while in 18 S 5 Bro . Baskett raised £ g 6 12 s . tor the Girls' School , and Bro . Dugdale £ 68 5 s . for the Boys' School .

DURHAM sent up two Stewards , one of whom , Bro . H . B . Olsen has often figured in these Returns before , and on Wednesday , acted for the Harbour of Refuge Lodge , No . 764 , West Hartlepool , whilst his colleague , Bro . W . B . Foxton represented the whole Province , their joint list amounting to £ 115 ios . In 1888 the Province did exceedingly well , its two Stewards , Bros . Hill

Drury and C . S . Lane taking up between them £ 252 ios . for the Boys ' School , while the Girls' School received £ 375 18 s ., Bros . Oisen , Foxton , Lane , and Drury , being among the Stewards who had a hand in raising it , and the Benevolent secured , per Bro . C . S . Lane , ^ 122 15 s ., the total lor the year being £ 75 1 3 s ., which is decidedly good , even for a Province which

can muster 31 lodges . In the three preceding years the totals averaged £ 230 per year , and in 1884 they amounted to ^ 45 2 , while in 1881 , when the late Marquis of Londonderry was Chairman for the Boys' School , Durham raised ^ 1024 during the year . It is only occasionally , and under special circumstances , that we find

ESSEX and its 28 lodges so thinly represented as it was on Wednesday , but we need not go very far afield to account for this . It commenced operations last year by subscribing ^ 146 9 s . 6 d . to this Institution , the number of its representatives being three , and the number of lodges on its roll 25 . At the Girls' School Centenary it sent up a contingent of 24 Stewards , headed

b y Bro . Lord Brooke , M . P ., P . G . M ., their lists amounting to ^ 874 6 s ., and at the Boys' School Festival , three weeks later , it contributed by the medium of five Stewards £ 27 6 8 s ., so that its sum total for 1888 was £ } 2 § 7 3 s . 6 d . In Jubilee year it raised ^ 873 7 s ., and the year previous £ 599 5 s ., so that its total for the last three years amounts to £ 276 9 15 s . 6 d ., or , on an average , ^ 923 5 s . per year . In 1884 , when t > ro . Lorc j Brooke presided as Chairman at the Girls' Festival , the Province raised

£ iooo , and , with what it subscribed to the two other Institutions , its total for the year was £ 1546 7 s . 6 d . On Wednesday Bro . Skingley , as steward for the United Lodge , No . 697 , Colchester , raised £ 57 15 s ., and f ° - Lennox Browne , who acted for the new Warner Lodge , No . 2256 , Uiigwell , and the Empire Lodge , No . 2108 , which meets in London , & 2 34 3 s ., the sum of the two being ^ , 291 iSs ., which is a capital Return for Ismail a representation , three of the 14 lodges in

GLOUCESTERSHIRE « nt up Stewards , and Bros . Vassar-Smith , D . P . G . M ., and the Baron de At th " R' , - * - ' acted Unattached , the total of the five lists being £ 94 ios . SOIP B ° y s' School Festival , in June last , Bro . Baron de Ferrieres was the thren h eSentalive ° f the Province » but at the Girls > Centenary the 17 bre-,, ] 0 ° acted as Stewards amongst them raised £ 520 18 s ., 11 out of the Febr ^ f . " ^ ' cna P attached to one of them being represented . In Whole ^ ,. four Stewards compiled a total of £ 79 5 s . 6 d ., the record for the e year being £ 621 3 s . 6 d . In 1887 , the figures were comparatively light ,

Analysis Of The Returns.

the amount distributed amongst the three Institutions being only £ 221 us ., but the total tor the three previous years reached £ 224 . 0 9 s ., the largeness of the sum being in great measure accounted for by the presidency of Bro . Sir M . E . Hicks Beach , Bart ., M . P ., at the Benevolent Festival , when ihe Province generously supported him to the extent of £ 1211 . Thus in the preceding five years this by no means strong Province has subscribed ^ 3083 4 s ., which yields an average per year of over £ 616 .

HANTS AND THE ISLE OF WIGHT , like Essex , has a smaller contingent of Stewards than usual , and the falling off must be attributed to the same cause . It has a strong muster of 47 lodges , and it has always maintained a high average of contributions . Thus , in 1884 it distributed . £ 1180 ios . 6 d . among our Institutions ; in 1885 , £ 1062 is . 6 d . ; in 1886 , £ 826 15 s . 6 d . ; in 1887 , £ 1882 19 s . 6 d ., of which the R . M . B . I . received £ 1785 9 s . 6 d ., the Prov . G . Master , Bro . W .

W . B . Beach , M . P ., being the Chairman at its Festival ; and last year , £ 1355 is . 6 d ., of which £ 1149 13 s . 6 d . was raised for the Girls' Centenary . The total for the five years is ^ 630 7 7 s . 6 d ., which gives an average per year of £ 1261 and a fraction . On Wednesday , six of its lodges were represented by five Stewards , and the sum of their lists amounted to £ 135 os . 6 d . This , at all events , is a fair beginning for the current year , alter a series of such heavy totals . The Province of

HERTFORDSHIRE must be reckoned as among the most constant friends and supporters of the Institution of which Bro . Terry is the Secretary—a fact which is to be accounted for by the link which lor so many years has connected that worthy brother with the Province . It . assists all the Institutions with commendable impartiality , and only once in the last tight or ten years has been

unrepresented at one of these Anniversary gatherings . But Bro . lerry is one of its luminaries . He has presided as Master ol more than one of its lodges , was a Prov . G . Officer in the days of the late Bro . VV . Stuart , P . G . M ., and is a Past J . G . Warden , as well as the Prov . G . D . C . under Bro . Halsey . On Wednesday , six oi its 17 lodges sent Stewards , and Bro . C . E . Keyser

acted Unattached , the aggregate of their lists being £ 233 5 s . Last year it raised ^ 146 15 s . 6 d . for the R . M . B . I . and £ 649 19 s . tor the Girls ' Centenary , the total lor the year being ^ 795 14 s . 60 ., or in round figures £ 800 . In Jubilee year it distributed £ 606 7 s ., Bro . Terry securing the lion ' s share ; and in 1886 , £ 505 , of which £ 279 5 s . 6 d . was raised for the R . M . B . I ., the total for these tnree years being a fraction over ^ 1907 .

KENT occupies the front position among the contributing Provinces in the Returns of Wednesday , the number of , its Stewards being 16 , ol whom two were unattached , and the other 14 stood for 13 out of its 57 lodges . In June last it raised ^ 254 13 s . 6 d . for the Boys' School , and that , too , wilhin three weeks of contributing £ 3059 gs . 6 d . at the Girls' School Centenary ,

while in the preceding February its eight Stewards compiled £ 374 8 s . for this Institution , the total for the year being ^ 3 688 lis . In Jubilee year it raised £ 1227 17 s . 6 d . for the R . M . B . I ., £ 184 4 s . 6 d . for the Girls' School , and £ 508 14 s . 6 d . for the Buys' School , or . - £ 1920 16 s . 6 d . lor the year ; and in 1886 its contributions amounted

to ^ 1725 , the three years' total being £ 7334 7 s . 6 d . If we carried our researches still further back , we should still find this Province occupying as conspicuous a position , its total—to give only one instance—for the Boys * School Festival in 1883 , when Bro . Lord Amherst , P . G . M ., presided as Chairman , being £ 2316 5 s . 6 d . Thus the figu . es in Wednesday ' s list are worthy of the Province which lurnished them .

The Province which next claims our attention is the strongest as regards the number ot its lodges in England , and though it is only occasionally that it figures in proportion to its strength , theie are reasons which we have referred to in several previous analyses , and which fully explain the apparent disproportion between its numerical strength and the amount of its contributions to the Central Masonic Charities . The fact is that

LANCASHIRE—EASTERN DIVISION , with its roll of 100 lodges , or thereabouts , has a large membership , and it finds it more convenient to support a Charitable Association of us own , lor the benefits of which only members of the Province and the belongings of members are eligible . This is a relief to the Central Charities , and explains , as we have said , why it is that East Lancashire does not figure more

conspicuously in these Returns . On Wednesday it sent up 14 Stewards , who represented 11 lodges , and their lists reached a total of £ 171 3 s . In June of last year it raised £ 1350 16 s . 6 d . tor the Girls' School and £ 126 5 s . lor the Boys' School , ana in trie preceding February ^ 2873 1 is . 6 d . tor this Institution , the year ' s contributions thus amounting to X ' 4350 13 s .

The three previous years its Returns were on a smaller scale , but in 1884 it distributed £ 1247 among the Charities , the R . M . B . I . obtaining one-half of it , while at the Boys' School Festival in 1883 it figured tor £ 2100 . The record , therefore , is very creditable . The same remarks must be applied to the adjoining Province of

LANCASHIRE—WESTERN DIVISION , which stands second in point of numerical strength , and has not one , but several , Provincial organisations of its own , which are necessaril y a relief to our Central Charities . On grand occasions West Lancashire gives us a taste ot its quality , the most recent case in point being last year , when it

sent up 85 Stewards , headed by Bro . the Earl of Lathom , D . G . M ., and Prov . G . M ., and their tale of contributions amounted to ^ 2440 2 s ., the total for the year being £ 2576 12 s . It has shown itsell similarly generous when its P . G . M . has taken the chair , and , therelore , the comparative modesty of its Wednesday ' s total— £ 93 95 . —is tully accounted for . The Province of

LINCOLNSHIRE is the more welcome , because two or three years since it did not do itself justice by appealing as frequently as other Provinces of equal character and strength . In 1888 it was represented to very good purpose at the Centenary of the Girls' School , its halt-dozen Stewards compiling amongst them the useful total of £ 202 2 s . 6 d ., while one of its 22 lodges—the Pelham Pillar ,

No . 792 , Grimsby—sent up Stewards and a list of £ 21 to the Royal Masonic Institution tor Boys , the total tor last year being £ 223 2 s . od . On Wednesday , Bro . H . E . Cousans took the Province generally under his charge , and had the satisfaction of handing in a list amounting to £ 3 J 4 7 s ., while the four other Stewards representing as many lodges were able to supplement this with a lurther £ 74 7 s ., so that Lincolnshire figures worthily in the Returns for ^ 448 14 s ,

“The Freemason: 1889-03-02, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_02031889/page/7/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 1
GRAND MARK LODGE. Article 2
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 3
STEWARDS' LISTS. Article 5
ANALYSIS OF THE RETURNS. Article 6
CONSECRATION OF THE BLUNDELLSANDS LODGE, No, 2289. Article 9
MASONIC FACTS, NOT FICTIONS. Article 9
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To Correspondents. Article 11
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Original Correspondence. Article 11
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 11
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 11
Untitled Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 13
Royal Arch. Article 14
INSTRUCTION. Article 14
Mark Masonry. Article 14
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 14
Rosicrucian Society of England. Article 14
Ireland. Article 14
Order of the Secret Manitor. Article 15
Malta. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MASONIC BANQUET TO THE R. W. THE MAYOR OF HULL, BRO. DR. SHERBURN. Article 15
THE ANNUAL FESTIVAL OF THE EMULATION LODGE OF IMPROVEMENT . Article 16
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MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 18
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 19
PROVINCIAL MASONIC MEETINGS Article 19
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Analysis Of The Returns.

the Benevolent and Girls' School Festivals , and the latter at that of the Boys'School . Thus , without going further back , we find that Cornwall has been efficiently represented at each of the last ten Festivals , the sum total raised by it on these occasions being £ 1765 3 s . The 22 lodges in

CUMBERLAND AND WESTMORLAND sent up £ 102 12 s . 6 d . by the hands of Bro . Geo . Dalrymple on Wednesday , notwithstanding that last year it raised ^ 1050 for the Old People and £ 210 for the Girls' School . During the year of the Queen ' s Jubilee , it appears to have rested , only the Benevolent Institution receiving support to the modest extent of - £ 55 13 s . ; but in 1886 , with Bros . G . J . McKay and J . H .

Hogg as Stewards , it raised ^ 500 , for the Boys' School . In 1885 it was represented at the Benevolent and Boys' School Festivals , the sum of its subscriptions being £ 102 18 s . 6 d . ; in 1884 it entered no appearance at all , but in 1883 it raised £ 1050 for the Boys' School , so that if not a regular , it is unquestionably , a generous supporter of our Charities . The Province of

DERBYSHIRE , which also has 22 lodges on its roll , had two of them—the St . Oswald , No . 850 , Ashbourne , and the Phoenix Lodge of St . Ann , No . 1235 . Buxtonrepresented , the total of the two lists being ^ 32 1 is . But this is not to be wondered at , seeing that last year it raised a fraction over £ 891 , or ^ 40 ios . per lodge . Its record for the Jubilee year was also a good one , the three Institutions receiving amongst them a fraction under - £ 626 , of In its

which the Old People obtained ^ 387 14 s . 1886 contributions were on a small scale , and amounted for all three Festivals to only ^ 176 15 s . ; but the preceding year , when its chief , the Marquis of Hartington , presided at the Boys'Festival , it raised close on j £ i 547 for that Institution , so that in the four years , from 18 S 5-1 S 8 S both inclusive , it has distributed amongst our Charities £ 3240 12 s ., or on an average ^ 820 per year . As the Provincial Grand Master of

DEVONSHIRE , Bro . Viscount Ebrington , M . P ., did the honours as President at the Boys ' School Festival in June last , and compiled the excellent total of £ 840 , it is riot surprising that the Province should be for a time at rest , and that only a single Steward , representing Chapter No . 70 , should figure on Wednesday's list , the amount of his Return not being stated . The total for last

year , taking the three Festivals together , was ^ 1013 5 s ., which , even for a province with 52 lodges on its roll , is by no means an inconsiderable sum . In 1887 it helped the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution to the extent of £ 50 , and figured in the Returns of the same Institution , as well as in those of the Girls' School the year previous—for £ 157 10 $ . in the

former , and for £ 136 19 s . in the latter . These , perhaps , are not such heavy figures as might have been expected , but it must be borne in mind that Devonshire has both an Educational Institution and an Annuity Fund of its own , so that its support is divided between these and the Central Charities of the Society . Two out of the 13 lodges in

DORSETSHIRE . had Stewards on Wednesday , Bro . Sir R . N . Howard , one of the Junior Grand Deacons for the year , as representative of the Portland Lodge , No . 1037 , handing in a list of £$ 6 ios ., and Bro . S . R . Baskett , who frequently undertakes these duties , acting for the Beaminster Manor Lodge , No .

1367 , one of £ 100 , the sum for the two being ^ 156 ios . Last year the Province raised £ 294 for the Girls' School Centenary ; in 1887 , £ 113 3 s . for the R . M . B . I . ; and in 1886 , £ ' iSo ios . for the same Institution , and ^ 142 16 s . for the Girls' School , while in 18 S 5 Bro . Baskett raised £ g 6 12 s . tor the Girls' School , and Bro . Dugdale £ 68 5 s . for the Boys' School .

DURHAM sent up two Stewards , one of whom , Bro . H . B . Olsen has often figured in these Returns before , and on Wednesday , acted for the Harbour of Refuge Lodge , No . 764 , West Hartlepool , whilst his colleague , Bro . W . B . Foxton represented the whole Province , their joint list amounting to £ 115 ios . In 1888 the Province did exceedingly well , its two Stewards , Bros . Hill

Drury and C . S . Lane taking up between them £ 252 ios . for the Boys ' School , while the Girls' School received £ 375 18 s ., Bros . Oisen , Foxton , Lane , and Drury , being among the Stewards who had a hand in raising it , and the Benevolent secured , per Bro . C . S . Lane , ^ 122 15 s ., the total lor the year being £ 75 1 3 s ., which is decidedly good , even for a Province which

can muster 31 lodges . In the three preceding years the totals averaged £ 230 per year , and in 1884 they amounted to ^ 45 2 , while in 1881 , when the late Marquis of Londonderry was Chairman for the Boys' School , Durham raised ^ 1024 during the year . It is only occasionally , and under special circumstances , that we find

ESSEX and its 28 lodges so thinly represented as it was on Wednesday , but we need not go very far afield to account for this . It commenced operations last year by subscribing ^ 146 9 s . 6 d . to this Institution , the number of its representatives being three , and the number of lodges on its roll 25 . At the Girls' School Centenary it sent up a contingent of 24 Stewards , headed

b y Bro . Lord Brooke , M . P ., P . G . M ., their lists amounting to ^ 874 6 s ., and at the Boys' School Festival , three weeks later , it contributed by the medium of five Stewards £ 27 6 8 s ., so that its sum total for 1888 was £ } 2 § 7 3 s . 6 d . In Jubilee year it raised ^ 873 7 s ., and the year previous £ 599 5 s ., so that its total for the last three years amounts to £ 276 9 15 s . 6 d ., or , on an average , ^ 923 5 s . per year . In 1884 , when t > ro . Lorc j Brooke presided as Chairman at the Girls' Festival , the Province raised

£ iooo , and , with what it subscribed to the two other Institutions , its total for the year was £ 1546 7 s . 6 d . On Wednesday Bro . Skingley , as steward for the United Lodge , No . 697 , Colchester , raised £ 57 15 s ., and f ° - Lennox Browne , who acted for the new Warner Lodge , No . 2256 , Uiigwell , and the Empire Lodge , No . 2108 , which meets in London , & 2 34 3 s ., the sum of the two being ^ , 291 iSs ., which is a capital Return for Ismail a representation , three of the 14 lodges in

GLOUCESTERSHIRE « nt up Stewards , and Bros . Vassar-Smith , D . P . G . M ., and the Baron de At th " R' , - * - ' acted Unattached , the total of the five lists being £ 94 ios . SOIP B ° y s' School Festival , in June last , Bro . Baron de Ferrieres was the thren h eSentalive ° f the Province » but at the Girls > Centenary the 17 bre-,, ] 0 ° acted as Stewards amongst them raised £ 520 18 s ., 11 out of the Febr ^ f . " ^ ' cna P attached to one of them being represented . In Whole ^ ,. four Stewards compiled a total of £ 79 5 s . 6 d ., the record for the e year being £ 621 3 s . 6 d . In 1887 , the figures were comparatively light ,

Analysis Of The Returns.

the amount distributed amongst the three Institutions being only £ 221 us ., but the total tor the three previous years reached £ 224 . 0 9 s ., the largeness of the sum being in great measure accounted for by the presidency of Bro . Sir M . E . Hicks Beach , Bart ., M . P ., at the Benevolent Festival , when ihe Province generously supported him to the extent of £ 1211 . Thus in the preceding five years this by no means strong Province has subscribed ^ 3083 4 s ., which yields an average per year of over £ 616 .

HANTS AND THE ISLE OF WIGHT , like Essex , has a smaller contingent of Stewards than usual , and the falling off must be attributed to the same cause . It has a strong muster of 47 lodges , and it has always maintained a high average of contributions . Thus , in 1884 it distributed . £ 1180 ios . 6 d . among our Institutions ; in 1885 , £ 1062 is . 6 d . ; in 1886 , £ 826 15 s . 6 d . ; in 1887 , £ 1882 19 s . 6 d ., of which the R . M . B . I . received £ 1785 9 s . 6 d ., the Prov . G . Master , Bro . W .

W . B . Beach , M . P ., being the Chairman at its Festival ; and last year , £ 1355 is . 6 d ., of which £ 1149 13 s . 6 d . was raised for the Girls' Centenary . The total for the five years is ^ 630 7 7 s . 6 d ., which gives an average per year of £ 1261 and a fraction . On Wednesday , six of its lodges were represented by five Stewards , and the sum of their lists amounted to £ 135 os . 6 d . This , at all events , is a fair beginning for the current year , alter a series of such heavy totals . The Province of

HERTFORDSHIRE must be reckoned as among the most constant friends and supporters of the Institution of which Bro . Terry is the Secretary—a fact which is to be accounted for by the link which lor so many years has connected that worthy brother with the Province . It . assists all the Institutions with commendable impartiality , and only once in the last tight or ten years has been

unrepresented at one of these Anniversary gatherings . But Bro . lerry is one of its luminaries . He has presided as Master ol more than one of its lodges , was a Prov . G . Officer in the days of the late Bro . VV . Stuart , P . G . M ., and is a Past J . G . Warden , as well as the Prov . G . D . C . under Bro . Halsey . On Wednesday , six oi its 17 lodges sent Stewards , and Bro . C . E . Keyser

acted Unattached , the aggregate of their lists being £ 233 5 s . Last year it raised ^ 146 15 s . 6 d . for the R . M . B . I . and £ 649 19 s . tor the Girls ' Centenary , the total lor the year being ^ 795 14 s . 60 ., or in round figures £ 800 . In Jubilee year it distributed £ 606 7 s ., Bro . Terry securing the lion ' s share ; and in 1886 , £ 505 , of which £ 279 5 s . 6 d . was raised for the R . M . B . I ., the total for these tnree years being a fraction over ^ 1907 .

KENT occupies the front position among the contributing Provinces in the Returns of Wednesday , the number of , its Stewards being 16 , ol whom two were unattached , and the other 14 stood for 13 out of its 57 lodges . In June last it raised ^ 254 13 s . 6 d . for the Boys' School , and that , too , wilhin three weeks of contributing £ 3059 gs . 6 d . at the Girls' School Centenary ,

while in the preceding February its eight Stewards compiled £ 374 8 s . for this Institution , the total for the year being ^ 3 688 lis . In Jubilee year it raised £ 1227 17 s . 6 d . for the R . M . B . I ., £ 184 4 s . 6 d . for the Girls' School , and £ 508 14 s . 6 d . for the Buys' School , or . - £ 1920 16 s . 6 d . lor the year ; and in 1886 its contributions amounted

to ^ 1725 , the three years' total being £ 7334 7 s . 6 d . If we carried our researches still further back , we should still find this Province occupying as conspicuous a position , its total—to give only one instance—for the Boys * School Festival in 1883 , when Bro . Lord Amherst , P . G . M ., presided as Chairman , being £ 2316 5 s . 6 d . Thus the figu . es in Wednesday ' s list are worthy of the Province which lurnished them .

The Province which next claims our attention is the strongest as regards the number ot its lodges in England , and though it is only occasionally that it figures in proportion to its strength , theie are reasons which we have referred to in several previous analyses , and which fully explain the apparent disproportion between its numerical strength and the amount of its contributions to the Central Masonic Charities . The fact is that

LANCASHIRE—EASTERN DIVISION , with its roll of 100 lodges , or thereabouts , has a large membership , and it finds it more convenient to support a Charitable Association of us own , lor the benefits of which only members of the Province and the belongings of members are eligible . This is a relief to the Central Charities , and explains , as we have said , why it is that East Lancashire does not figure more

conspicuously in these Returns . On Wednesday it sent up 14 Stewards , who represented 11 lodges , and their lists reached a total of £ 171 3 s . In June of last year it raised £ 1350 16 s . 6 d . tor the Girls' School and £ 126 5 s . lor the Boys' School , ana in trie preceding February ^ 2873 1 is . 6 d . tor this Institution , the year ' s contributions thus amounting to X ' 4350 13 s .

The three previous years its Returns were on a smaller scale , but in 1884 it distributed £ 1247 among the Charities , the R . M . B . I . obtaining one-half of it , while at the Boys' School Festival in 1883 it figured tor £ 2100 . The record , therefore , is very creditable . The same remarks must be applied to the adjoining Province of

LANCASHIRE—WESTERN DIVISION , which stands second in point of numerical strength , and has not one , but several , Provincial organisations of its own , which are necessaril y a relief to our Central Charities . On grand occasions West Lancashire gives us a taste ot its quality , the most recent case in point being last year , when it

sent up 85 Stewards , headed by Bro . the Earl of Lathom , D . G . M ., and Prov . G . M ., and their tale of contributions amounted to ^ 2440 2 s ., the total for the year being £ 2576 12 s . It has shown itsell similarly generous when its P . G . M . has taken the chair , and , therelore , the comparative modesty of its Wednesday ' s total— £ 93 95 . —is tully accounted for . The Province of

LINCOLNSHIRE is the more welcome , because two or three years since it did not do itself justice by appealing as frequently as other Provinces of equal character and strength . In 1888 it was represented to very good purpose at the Centenary of the Girls' School , its halt-dozen Stewards compiling amongst them the useful total of £ 202 2 s . 6 d ., while one of its 22 lodges—the Pelham Pillar ,

No . 792 , Grimsby—sent up Stewards and a list of £ 21 to the Royal Masonic Institution tor Boys , the total tor last year being £ 223 2 s . od . On Wednesday , Bro . H . E . Cousans took the Province generally under his charge , and had the satisfaction of handing in a list amounting to £ 3 J 4 7 s ., while the four other Stewards representing as many lodges were able to supplement this with a lurther £ 74 7 s ., so that Lincolnshire figures worthily in the Returns for ^ 448 14 s ,

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