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Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Article TO ADVERTISERS. Page 1 of 1 Article To Correspondents. Page 1 of 1 Article TO OUR READERS. Page 1 of 1 Article Original Correspondence. Page 1 of 1 Article Original Correspondence. Page 1 of 1
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Ad00403
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION . FOR AGED FREEMASONS AND WIDOWS OF FREEMASONS , CROYDON . Patron and President : HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE OF WALES , K . u ., & c , M . W . G . M . THE ANNIVERSARY FESTIVAL Of this Institution will take place On WEDNESDAY , aSth FEBRUARY , 18 S 3 , AT FREEMASONS' TAVERN , GREAT OUEEN-STREET , LONDON , Upon which occasion G KN . J . STUDHOLME BROWNRIGG , C . B ., P . G . W ., R . W . PROV . G . M . TOR SURREY , Has been pleased to signify his intention of Presiding . Brethren are earnestly invited to accept the Office of Steward upon this occasion , and they will greatly oblige by forwarding their Names and Masonic Rank , as soon as convenient , to the Secretary , who will gladly give any information required . JAMES TERRY , P . Prov . G . S . W . Norths and Hunts , Secretary . * * # At the Election in May next there will be 120 Candidates for Election , whilst at the present time there are only Twelve Vacancies .
Ad00404
DREADNOUGHT SEAMENS ' HOSPITAL , Greenwich , S . E ., and DISPENSARY , Well-street , London Docks , E ., for Sailors of all Nations . No admission ticket or voting papers of any sort required , but both are entirely free to the whole maritime world , irrespective of race , creed , or nationality . Since establishment upwards of 225 , 000 have been relieved from no less than forty-two different countries , and the number of patients during 1 SS 1 , was 7132 , as compared with 4245 , the average of the preceding ten years . Qualification of a governor one guinea annually , or a donation of ten guineas . New annua ! subscriptions or contributions will be thankfully received by the bankers , Messrs . Williams , Deacon and Co ., 20 , Birchin-lane , E . C , or by the Secretary at the Hospital . Funds are urgently needed for this truly Cosmopolitan Charity , which is supported by voluntary contributions . W . T . EVANS , Secretary .
Ad00405
STABLING . —TO BE LET , excellent THREE-STALL STABLE and CARRIAGE HOUSE , with Cellars , in Parker-street . —Apply , Freemason Office , 16 , Great Queen-street , W . C .
Ad00407
TO Parents and Guardians—Vacancy occurs for a well educated youth as CHEMISTS ' APPRENTICE . Old established business . Every opportunity given for acquiring a thorough practical knowledge , comfortable home , moderate premium . —Apply Bro . T . Casely , A . P . S ., High-street , Camden Town , N . VV .
Ad00406
CARE of Offices , Chambers , or any place of trust . A SITUATION wanted by a brother age 43 , married , no family . —Address S . G . O . Office of Freemason , 16 , Great Queen-street , London , W . C .
Ad00409
Twelfth Edition , post-free , is . DR . WATTS on ASTHMA and BRONCHITIS . A Treatise on the only Successful Method of Curing these Diseases . By ROBERT G . WATTS , M . D ., F . R . S . L ., F . C . S ., & c , 5 , Bulstrode-street , Cavendish-square , London . London : C . Mitchell and Co ., Red Lion-court . Fleet-street .
Ad00408
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY , LIMITED . 7 , BANK BUILDINGS , LOTHBURY , E . C . General Accidents . I Personal Injuries Railway Accidents . | Deaths by Accident . C . HARDING , Manager .
To Advertisers.
TO ADVERTISERS .
TilE FREGMASON has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe . In it the ollicial Reports of the Grand Lodges of Kngland , Ireland , anel Scotland are published vvith the special sanction of ^ the respective Grand Masters , and it contains a complete record of Masonic worn 111 this country , our Indian Empire , and the Colonies . The vast accession to the ranks nf the Order during the past few vcflrs , and the increasing interest manifested in its doings , has given the I ' rccmastin a portion and influence which few journals can lay claim to , and the proprietor can assert with confidence that announcements appearing in its columns challenge the attention of a very large and intluential body of readers . Advertisements for the current week ' s issue are received up to Six o ' clock on Wednesday evening .
To Correspondents.
To Correspondents .
P . M . —Under consideration . The following reports stand over till next week 1—Victoria Lodge , 105 C ; Langthorne Lodge , 1421 ; St . Mary Abbotts Lodge , 1974 . Confidence Lodge of Instruction ; New Concord Lodge of Instruction . BOOKS , & c . RECEIVED . "The Broad Arrow , " "Allen ' s Indian Mail , " "The Keystone , " " Masonia , " "The Citizen , " "The Hull Packet , " "The Court Circular , " "Tapis , " "The Royal Cornwall Gazette , " " Le Monde Maconmque , " "Ihe Freimaurer Zeitung , " " Proceedings of the Grand Commandery of Knight Templars of Ohio , " "The Freemason's Chronicle ( Sydney ); "La Revista Masonica , " "The Freemason" ( Sydney ) , * 'Thc Masonic Record , " "Monthly Notes Y . M . C . A . "
To Our Readers.
TO OUR READERS .
Tns FREEMASON is published every Friday morning , price 3 d ., and contains thc fullest and latest information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Subscriptions , including Postage : — United States ,
ir „ it .. i K-: „„ . Canada , the Continent , India , China , Ceylo n United Kingdom . the Colonies & c . Arabia ,, & c . 13 s . 6 d . 15 s . 6 d . 17 s . 6 d . Remittances may be made in Stamps , but Post Office Orders or Cheques are preferred , the former payable to GEORUE KENKINC , Chief OHice , London , the latter crossed London Joint Stock Bank ,
Original Correspondence.
Original Correspondence .
s ^ Aw ^ fel-k ^^ ^ _ AAAJ ^ AA $ p ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ TH ^^^^ T ^^ iharg ^ 'yifcg ^ ylrere v W % w ^^ int * ' * wyrea
SATURDAY , FEBRUARY 3 , 1883 .
[ We do not hold ourselves responsible for , or even approving of , the opinions expressed by ourcorfespondents , but we wish in aspirit of fairplay to all to permit—within certain necessary limits—free discussion . 1 ¦
THE REVISED CONSTITUTIONS . To the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — Can anyone explain the exact force of a portion of the verbiage employed in Section 141 ? It is as follows : " When a Warden rules the lodge he shall not occupy
the Master s chair , nor can initiations take place or Degrees be conferred unless the chair be occupied by a brother who is a Master or Past Master in the Craft . " What do these words really mean ? Are they intended to convey to us that the Master in the chair is to perform the
ceremony though the Warden rules the lodge ? or do they mean that the Warden is both to rule the lodge and perform the ceremony though a Past Master occupies the chair ? Is not the real meaning somewhat involved and dubious ? and what is thc true construction ? CURIOUS .
ELEUSINIAN MYSTERIES—PAPAL BULLS . To the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir , — I have to thank you for the Freemason that you have been good enough to send me , in which I see you have published my letter which appeared in the Times of
January 12 th , relative to the Greek inscription which I found at Eleusis . The inscription was on a marble column , probably the base of a statue set up at Eleusis at the command of the Athenian Government in honour of a citizen named Casianos , who , in spite of his Roman name
( Cassianus ) vvas an Athenian . He may be identical with the one mentioned in "Corpus Inscriptionum Atticarum , " vol . iii ., part 1 , No . 1194— 'E-rrl fipxovTos Kaaiavov UpoKripvms K . r . A . —and if so he belongs to the third century A . u . Thc family of the Kaeriai / oe of the deme SrtipieTr is well known from "Attic Inscriptions of
Imperial 'limes , see C . I . A ., vol . iii ., No . 810 , 1024 , 1063 . He had been as a boy initiated a < p' iariasa phrase which is not yet entirely understood , though it frequently occurs . The best discussion of it known to me is in Boeckh ' s " Corpus Inscriptionum Gracarum , " vol . i ., pp . 445-6 . At all events it was an honour for which one
child every year of noble Attic birth was selected at the Eleusinian Mysteries consisting of some point of ritual . He had afterwards been iepiienpv ^ ol the Eleusinian Deities . He had also gone on an embassy to Britain , probably at his own expense , for Athens . He had also borne the office of ayuvoBtrris—an expensive one—at thc games in honour of
Hadrian . He had held the office of trrparnyos , & c , but the man's " cursus honorum " and further services to the State here end , thc latter part of the inscription being lost . For a description of the Eleusinian Mysteries , I would refer you to Lobeck's " Aglaophamus . " The lesser Eleusinia were in reality only a preparation for thc real
mysteries , and the Mystre had to take an oath of sccresy , which was administered to them by the hicrophant . There can be no question that this lileusinian inscription , relating as it does to England , suggests the thought that the relationship which unites Freemasonry with those mysteries is a closer one than has sometimes been
supposeel . With regard to those more mysterious Papal Bulls and Indulgences said to have been granted to German Masons in 1502-17 , but which are not yet forthcoming , your correspondent , Mr . Speth , will make a search in vain for them in the muniment room of Strasburg Cathedral . In 1773 , during the Pontificate of Clement XIV ., a search was made
for these Bulls or Iudulgences , or any records of them , by command of his Holiness , at thc request of Governor Pownall , in thc Vatican Archives and elsewhere , but without result . Under the circumstances , I should not myself consider it necessary to revert to the Scotch verdict of " not proven , " if asked whether the Popes had published such Bulls , but should answer most emphatically " No . "—I am , sir , your very obedient . servant ,
HARTWELL D . GRISSELLL . Brascnose College , Oxford , January 27 th .
Original Correspondence.
THE ELEUSINIAN INSCRIPTION . To the Editor of the "Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — In answer to Bro . Wheelhouse , 1 beg to say that the inscription unfortunately is too mutilated to make it at present read connectedly , and the allusions to the "Sacred Herald , " the " Mustes , " or Mystagogue , and " Eis
Britannian , " to Britain afford a fair and reasonable presumption that , found at Eleusis , the inscription actually alludes to the introduction of the Eleusinian Mysteries into Britain . I refer Bro . Wheelhouse to Mr . Grissell ' s very interesting letter elsewhere , as he kindly gives him all our present available information . —Fraternally yours , MASONIC STUDENT .
VOLUNTEERING AND FREEMASONRY . To the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — My reply to "Doubtful ' s" first letter on this subject vvas given more particularly as a Freemason . I should like briefly to answer his last as a volunteer . My opinion
is not in any way authoritative and I may be wrong , but for whatever it may be worth here it is . A volunteer should appear in a lodge formed in connec . tion vvith a corps in the military or volunteer service , whether as a member or visitor , in uniform . It is a respectful duty ¦ to both corps and lodge that he should do so .
But to don the uniform for purposes of parade or show in lodges which are not connected with the royal or auxiliary services is to my mind , though not prohibited , in exceedingly bad taste . 1 know of instances where such a mistake has been made , and regretted that whispered comments on thc vanity and folly of the wearers had not been thundered into
their ears as a warning not to repeat the pompous exhibition . Will you permit me to ask your correspondent " Doubtful " to forward mc his address in confidence : I want to write to him . I should like also to be allowed to inform " A . M . D . "
that there is no question whatever as to " the validity of thc bye-law of Lodge 1216 " which refers to uniform . He should know that every lodge has a right to make its own bye-laws so long as no infringement of the Constitution laws of the Craft is caused thereby . —I am , dear Sir and Brother , youcs faithfully and fraternally ,
JAMES STEVENS , P . M ., P . Z . Clapham , January 30 th .
To thc Editor of the "Freemason , " Dear Sir and Brother , — Some correspondence having appeared in your paper respecting the wearing of uniform in lodges not attached to a military body , 1 think a very good answer to ' the question as to its being Masonic so to do might be
given if you will allow some member of the Rifle Brigade Lodge , No . 19 G 2 , to answer it . 1 saw in your last issue the report of the installation meeting , but no mention was made ot uniform being- worn . Did the members do so or were they simply in evening dress . —Yours fraternally . January 31 st . A . J . F .
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS . To the Editor of the "Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — My attention has been drawn to a report in your last issue of an after ^ Hinner speech at a lodge meeting , in which a well-known brother in responding to the toast of
" The Charities " is represented as having referred to this Institution as "the Girls' School , which did not know how to spend its money ; " and , again , as saying " he was told they ( the Committee ) had 25 spare places after every candidate had been taken in . " Now , the first of these statements , taken in conjunction
with the remainder of the report , implies that the Girls ' School does not require thc active support and assistance of the Craft , and the second that if thc Committee saw fit they could even now extend the benefits of the Institution to at least an additional 25 children . Having regard to the official position of the brother from
whom these remarks emanated , I hasten officially and in thc most unequivocal manner possible to say that they are absolutely and entirely incorrect , and arc totally without the least justification in fact . As such reports have done and must do incalculable injury to the Institution I feel obliged to ask you to give this letter the same publicity which you have given the
statements referred to . As to the remarks of the same speaker that very little is seen of the Secretary of thc Girls' School , I would only observe that the supporters of the Institution will I trust always find him attending to his duties . —I am , dear Sir and Brother , yours faithfully and fraternally , January 31 st . F . R . VV . HEDGES , Secretary .
CITY MASONIC CLUB . To thc Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — I believe a good non-proprietary City club for the
use of Freemasons only would be a success as a club and a convenience and a comfort to its members . Will those brethren who think with me kindly communicate their ideas through these columns ?—Yours fraternally , C . M . C . January 20 th .
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Ad00403
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION . FOR AGED FREEMASONS AND WIDOWS OF FREEMASONS , CROYDON . Patron and President : HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE OF WALES , K . u ., & c , M . W . G . M . THE ANNIVERSARY FESTIVAL Of this Institution will take place On WEDNESDAY , aSth FEBRUARY , 18 S 3 , AT FREEMASONS' TAVERN , GREAT OUEEN-STREET , LONDON , Upon which occasion G KN . J . STUDHOLME BROWNRIGG , C . B ., P . G . W ., R . W . PROV . G . M . TOR SURREY , Has been pleased to signify his intention of Presiding . Brethren are earnestly invited to accept the Office of Steward upon this occasion , and they will greatly oblige by forwarding their Names and Masonic Rank , as soon as convenient , to the Secretary , who will gladly give any information required . JAMES TERRY , P . Prov . G . S . W . Norths and Hunts , Secretary . * * # At the Election in May next there will be 120 Candidates for Election , whilst at the present time there are only Twelve Vacancies .
Ad00404
DREADNOUGHT SEAMENS ' HOSPITAL , Greenwich , S . E ., and DISPENSARY , Well-street , London Docks , E ., for Sailors of all Nations . No admission ticket or voting papers of any sort required , but both are entirely free to the whole maritime world , irrespective of race , creed , or nationality . Since establishment upwards of 225 , 000 have been relieved from no less than forty-two different countries , and the number of patients during 1 SS 1 , was 7132 , as compared with 4245 , the average of the preceding ten years . Qualification of a governor one guinea annually , or a donation of ten guineas . New annua ! subscriptions or contributions will be thankfully received by the bankers , Messrs . Williams , Deacon and Co ., 20 , Birchin-lane , E . C , or by the Secretary at the Hospital . Funds are urgently needed for this truly Cosmopolitan Charity , which is supported by voluntary contributions . W . T . EVANS , Secretary .
Ad00405
STABLING . —TO BE LET , excellent THREE-STALL STABLE and CARRIAGE HOUSE , with Cellars , in Parker-street . —Apply , Freemason Office , 16 , Great Queen-street , W . C .
Ad00407
TO Parents and Guardians—Vacancy occurs for a well educated youth as CHEMISTS ' APPRENTICE . Old established business . Every opportunity given for acquiring a thorough practical knowledge , comfortable home , moderate premium . —Apply Bro . T . Casely , A . P . S ., High-street , Camden Town , N . VV .
Ad00406
CARE of Offices , Chambers , or any place of trust . A SITUATION wanted by a brother age 43 , married , no family . —Address S . G . O . Office of Freemason , 16 , Great Queen-street , London , W . C .
Ad00409
Twelfth Edition , post-free , is . DR . WATTS on ASTHMA and BRONCHITIS . A Treatise on the only Successful Method of Curing these Diseases . By ROBERT G . WATTS , M . D ., F . R . S . L ., F . C . S ., & c , 5 , Bulstrode-street , Cavendish-square , London . London : C . Mitchell and Co ., Red Lion-court . Fleet-street .
Ad00408
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY , LIMITED . 7 , BANK BUILDINGS , LOTHBURY , E . C . General Accidents . I Personal Injuries Railway Accidents . | Deaths by Accident . C . HARDING , Manager .
To Advertisers.
TO ADVERTISERS .
TilE FREGMASON has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe . In it the ollicial Reports of the Grand Lodges of Kngland , Ireland , anel Scotland are published vvith the special sanction of ^ the respective Grand Masters , and it contains a complete record of Masonic worn 111 this country , our Indian Empire , and the Colonies . The vast accession to the ranks nf the Order during the past few vcflrs , and the increasing interest manifested in its doings , has given the I ' rccmastin a portion and influence which few journals can lay claim to , and the proprietor can assert with confidence that announcements appearing in its columns challenge the attention of a very large and intluential body of readers . Advertisements for the current week ' s issue are received up to Six o ' clock on Wednesday evening .
To Correspondents.
To Correspondents .
P . M . —Under consideration . The following reports stand over till next week 1—Victoria Lodge , 105 C ; Langthorne Lodge , 1421 ; St . Mary Abbotts Lodge , 1974 . Confidence Lodge of Instruction ; New Concord Lodge of Instruction . BOOKS , & c . RECEIVED . "The Broad Arrow , " "Allen ' s Indian Mail , " "The Keystone , " " Masonia , " "The Citizen , " "The Hull Packet , " "The Court Circular , " "Tapis , " "The Royal Cornwall Gazette , " " Le Monde Maconmque , " "Ihe Freimaurer Zeitung , " " Proceedings of the Grand Commandery of Knight Templars of Ohio , " "The Freemason's Chronicle ( Sydney ); "La Revista Masonica , " "The Freemason" ( Sydney ) , * 'Thc Masonic Record , " "Monthly Notes Y . M . C . A . "
To Our Readers.
TO OUR READERS .
Tns FREEMASON is published every Friday morning , price 3 d ., and contains thc fullest and latest information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Subscriptions , including Postage : — United States ,
ir „ it .. i K-: „„ . Canada , the Continent , India , China , Ceylo n United Kingdom . the Colonies & c . Arabia ,, & c . 13 s . 6 d . 15 s . 6 d . 17 s . 6 d . Remittances may be made in Stamps , but Post Office Orders or Cheques are preferred , the former payable to GEORUE KENKINC , Chief OHice , London , the latter crossed London Joint Stock Bank ,
Original Correspondence.
Original Correspondence .
s ^ Aw ^ fel-k ^^ ^ _ AAAJ ^ AA $ p ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ TH ^^^^ T ^^ iharg ^ 'yifcg ^ ylrere v W % w ^^ int * ' * wyrea
SATURDAY , FEBRUARY 3 , 1883 .
[ We do not hold ourselves responsible for , or even approving of , the opinions expressed by ourcorfespondents , but we wish in aspirit of fairplay to all to permit—within certain necessary limits—free discussion . 1 ¦
THE REVISED CONSTITUTIONS . To the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — Can anyone explain the exact force of a portion of the verbiage employed in Section 141 ? It is as follows : " When a Warden rules the lodge he shall not occupy
the Master s chair , nor can initiations take place or Degrees be conferred unless the chair be occupied by a brother who is a Master or Past Master in the Craft . " What do these words really mean ? Are they intended to convey to us that the Master in the chair is to perform the
ceremony though the Warden rules the lodge ? or do they mean that the Warden is both to rule the lodge and perform the ceremony though a Past Master occupies the chair ? Is not the real meaning somewhat involved and dubious ? and what is thc true construction ? CURIOUS .
ELEUSINIAN MYSTERIES—PAPAL BULLS . To the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir , — I have to thank you for the Freemason that you have been good enough to send me , in which I see you have published my letter which appeared in the Times of
January 12 th , relative to the Greek inscription which I found at Eleusis . The inscription was on a marble column , probably the base of a statue set up at Eleusis at the command of the Athenian Government in honour of a citizen named Casianos , who , in spite of his Roman name
( Cassianus ) vvas an Athenian . He may be identical with the one mentioned in "Corpus Inscriptionum Atticarum , " vol . iii ., part 1 , No . 1194— 'E-rrl fipxovTos Kaaiavov UpoKripvms K . r . A . —and if so he belongs to the third century A . u . Thc family of the Kaeriai / oe of the deme SrtipieTr is well known from "Attic Inscriptions of
Imperial 'limes , see C . I . A ., vol . iii ., No . 810 , 1024 , 1063 . He had been as a boy initiated a < p' iariasa phrase which is not yet entirely understood , though it frequently occurs . The best discussion of it known to me is in Boeckh ' s " Corpus Inscriptionum Gracarum , " vol . i ., pp . 445-6 . At all events it was an honour for which one
child every year of noble Attic birth was selected at the Eleusinian Mysteries consisting of some point of ritual . He had afterwards been iepiienpv ^ ol the Eleusinian Deities . He had also gone on an embassy to Britain , probably at his own expense , for Athens . He had also borne the office of ayuvoBtrris—an expensive one—at thc games in honour of
Hadrian . He had held the office of trrparnyos , & c , but the man's " cursus honorum " and further services to the State here end , thc latter part of the inscription being lost . For a description of the Eleusinian Mysteries , I would refer you to Lobeck's " Aglaophamus . " The lesser Eleusinia were in reality only a preparation for thc real
mysteries , and the Mystre had to take an oath of sccresy , which was administered to them by the hicrophant . There can be no question that this lileusinian inscription , relating as it does to England , suggests the thought that the relationship which unites Freemasonry with those mysteries is a closer one than has sometimes been
supposeel . With regard to those more mysterious Papal Bulls and Indulgences said to have been granted to German Masons in 1502-17 , but which are not yet forthcoming , your correspondent , Mr . Speth , will make a search in vain for them in the muniment room of Strasburg Cathedral . In 1773 , during the Pontificate of Clement XIV ., a search was made
for these Bulls or Iudulgences , or any records of them , by command of his Holiness , at thc request of Governor Pownall , in thc Vatican Archives and elsewhere , but without result . Under the circumstances , I should not myself consider it necessary to revert to the Scotch verdict of " not proven , " if asked whether the Popes had published such Bulls , but should answer most emphatically " No . "—I am , sir , your very obedient . servant ,
HARTWELL D . GRISSELLL . Brascnose College , Oxford , January 27 th .
Original Correspondence.
THE ELEUSINIAN INSCRIPTION . To the Editor of the "Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — In answer to Bro . Wheelhouse , 1 beg to say that the inscription unfortunately is too mutilated to make it at present read connectedly , and the allusions to the "Sacred Herald , " the " Mustes , " or Mystagogue , and " Eis
Britannian , " to Britain afford a fair and reasonable presumption that , found at Eleusis , the inscription actually alludes to the introduction of the Eleusinian Mysteries into Britain . I refer Bro . Wheelhouse to Mr . Grissell ' s very interesting letter elsewhere , as he kindly gives him all our present available information . —Fraternally yours , MASONIC STUDENT .
VOLUNTEERING AND FREEMASONRY . To the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — My reply to "Doubtful ' s" first letter on this subject vvas given more particularly as a Freemason . I should like briefly to answer his last as a volunteer . My opinion
is not in any way authoritative and I may be wrong , but for whatever it may be worth here it is . A volunteer should appear in a lodge formed in connec . tion vvith a corps in the military or volunteer service , whether as a member or visitor , in uniform . It is a respectful duty ¦ to both corps and lodge that he should do so .
But to don the uniform for purposes of parade or show in lodges which are not connected with the royal or auxiliary services is to my mind , though not prohibited , in exceedingly bad taste . 1 know of instances where such a mistake has been made , and regretted that whispered comments on thc vanity and folly of the wearers had not been thundered into
their ears as a warning not to repeat the pompous exhibition . Will you permit me to ask your correspondent " Doubtful " to forward mc his address in confidence : I want to write to him . I should like also to be allowed to inform " A . M . D . "
that there is no question whatever as to " the validity of thc bye-law of Lodge 1216 " which refers to uniform . He should know that every lodge has a right to make its own bye-laws so long as no infringement of the Constitution laws of the Craft is caused thereby . —I am , dear Sir and Brother , youcs faithfully and fraternally ,
JAMES STEVENS , P . M ., P . Z . Clapham , January 30 th .
To thc Editor of the "Freemason , " Dear Sir and Brother , — Some correspondence having appeared in your paper respecting the wearing of uniform in lodges not attached to a military body , 1 think a very good answer to ' the question as to its being Masonic so to do might be
given if you will allow some member of the Rifle Brigade Lodge , No . 19 G 2 , to answer it . 1 saw in your last issue the report of the installation meeting , but no mention was made ot uniform being- worn . Did the members do so or were they simply in evening dress . —Yours fraternally . January 31 st . A . J . F .
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS . To the Editor of the "Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — My attention has been drawn to a report in your last issue of an after ^ Hinner speech at a lodge meeting , in which a well-known brother in responding to the toast of
" The Charities " is represented as having referred to this Institution as "the Girls' School , which did not know how to spend its money ; " and , again , as saying " he was told they ( the Committee ) had 25 spare places after every candidate had been taken in . " Now , the first of these statements , taken in conjunction
with the remainder of the report , implies that the Girls ' School does not require thc active support and assistance of the Craft , and the second that if thc Committee saw fit they could even now extend the benefits of the Institution to at least an additional 25 children . Having regard to the official position of the brother from
whom these remarks emanated , I hasten officially and in thc most unequivocal manner possible to say that they are absolutely and entirely incorrect , and arc totally without the least justification in fact . As such reports have done and must do incalculable injury to the Institution I feel obliged to ask you to give this letter the same publicity which you have given the
statements referred to . As to the remarks of the same speaker that very little is seen of the Secretary of thc Girls' School , I would only observe that the supporters of the Institution will I trust always find him attending to his duties . —I am , dear Sir and Brother , yours faithfully and fraternally , January 31 st . F . R . VV . HEDGES , Secretary .
CITY MASONIC CLUB . To thc Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — I believe a good non-proprietary City club for the
use of Freemasons only would be a success as a club and a convenience and a comfort to its members . Will those brethren who think with me kindly communicate their ideas through these columns ?—Yours fraternally , C . M . C . January 20 th .