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    Article ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. ← Page 4 of 6
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Page 5

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

Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

namely : Bedfordshire ( five lodges ) , which , however , has been represented at two out of the three Festivals that have been held since it was erected into a Province towards ( he close of last year—that is to say , at the Benevolent in February , when it raised £ 53 ( 2 s , and at the Girls' Festival in May , when it was still more successful , and gave £ 134 13 s . : Devonshire ( 50 lodges ) , which sent up a Steward or Stewards both in February and May ,

while to go no farther back than 18 S 5 it raised-in that year ^ , 28 9 for this Institution , and £ 135 for the Benevolent ; and Dorsetshire ( 13 lodges ) , which , not unnaturally , considers it is entitled to some respite after distributing over £ 323 between the other two Institutions . Last year it helped the two Schools , and in 18 S 4 it returned a Steward to the Benevolent Institution—in short , it takes its share of the responsibility of supporting our

Charities with a liberal margin over for unforeseen contingencies . Herefordshire ( four lodges ) contributed close on £ 75 to the Girls' School in May last , and when it has greater confidence in its ability to give help on these occasions it will , no doubt , appear more frequently in our Festival returns . North Hants and Hunts ( 10 lodges ) , which has figured regularly as an absentee since June , 1884 , when it raised £ 215 for this Institution , was in

the same predicament on Wednesday . Northumberland ( 21 lodges ) , by the hands of its worthy Prov . G . Secretary , Bro . B . J . Thompson , compiled the very large total of £ 906 for the Girls' in May , and in 18 S 3 it helped Bro . Binckes to score his greatest success by contributing towards his list , and by the hands of the same Bro . Thompson , the very substantial total of £ 1222 . Last year , too , it swelled his returns wilh close on £ 163 , so

that , if it does not enter an appearance regularly , it does so very effectively on occasions , as if it preferred concentrating its efforts on a few Festivals , and then having an interval of rest . Of course , there is no need to be surprised at the absence of Shropshire ( 10 lodges ) , seeing that it will need all its strength in May , 1 SS 7 , when Sir Offley Wakeman , its Provincial Grand Master , presides at the 99 th

Festival of the Girls' School . It has been represented once since its establishment as a separate province , and when conjoined with North Wales , under the late Sir W . Williams-Wynn , it honourably bore its share of the burden of our Institutions . As regards jersey ( eight lodges ) , tnough it has had no part in this year's celebrations , it figured among the supporters

of the Benevolent in 1885 , and among ( hose of the Boys' School in 1 SS 3 . The Isle of Man ( five lodges ) will always be a welcome contributor ; but , as , owing to its distance , it seems to be outside the sphere of anniversary influences , we do not appear to look for its presence , and are not disappointed by its absence . The contributing Provinces are headed as usual—that is , as they used to be before Bedfordshire appeared amongst them—by

BERKS AND BUCKS , The total of its five Stewards' lists being , £ 199 ios . The Abbey Lodge , No . 945 , takes the place of honour with £ 59 17 s ., and the Union , No . 414 , Reading , stands next with £ " 55 13 s ., the Buckingham Lodge , No . 591 , Aylesbury , Bucks , being a good third with £ 47 5 s . In February four of its lodges raised £ 159 l is . 6 d ., and in May three lodges made up a sum cf

£ 228 Ss ., the total lor the whole year being £ 587 6 s . fid . One thing we notice about the Returns for the current year is that the represented lodges have figured at one Festival only , and consequently this £ 587 and a fraction has been compiled by 12 out of the 21 lodges on the roll of ihe Province . Last year the aggregate for the three Festivals was , in round figures , £ 590 ; in 1884 it stood at £ 453 ; in 1 S 83 , 31 X 472 ; and in 1882 , at £ 620 ; s 0 that

in the last five years Berks and Bucks has contributed moneys amounting to mere than £ 2700 . BRISTOL , With one of its eight lodges represented by Bro . Purnell , gives £ 26 5 s ., in addition to £ ^ 145 19 s . for the Girls' School in May , and £ 318 ios . for the Benevolent in F ' ebruary , making the total for the year £ 49 ° 14 s ., or an average per lodge of upwards of £ 61 . This is an immense increase upon its 1 S 85 record , when it gave the Benevolent £ 59 us ., and the Boys '

£ 115 ios ., or together £ 175 is . ; while in 1884 it contented itself with £ 293 11 s . to the Benevolent , and the year previous wilh about £ 217 to the same Institution . It is worthy of mention that Bro . Purnell has acted as Steward singly , or in conjunction with other brethren , at six out of the seven Festivals in which during these four years his Province of Bristol has taken part , the Girls' School Anniversary in May being the only one in which he has not lent a helping hand . There is no doubt that

CAMBRIDGESHIRE , Though it has a small array of only six lodges , is working tremendously hard , and with very great success , for our Charities . Its total for the current year is no less than " £ 547 5 s ., made up as follows : At the Benevolent Festival in February , £ 143 ; at that of the Girls' School in May , £ 273 ; and on Wednesday , £ 131 5 s . Last year it confined its efforts to the Royal in

Masonic Benevolent Institution , and raised for it ^ iofi us . 6 d . ; 1884 the Boys' School had its support to the extent of £ 174 6 s ., and the year previous the Girls' School was favoured to the extent of £ ^ 128 . Thus , instead of helping one Institution a year , turn and turn about , it has this year helped all three , and , what is still more creditable , its contributions in 1886 are more by some £ 130 than thev amounted to for llie vears ISS-J - I- *

put together . Our light blue friends deserve almost infinite kudos for this change of policy , and if they continue thus , as we hope they will , even Provinces that are considerably stronger will have to look to their laurels . CHESHIRE Has two of its 38 lodges represented in Wednesday ' s Returns , their joint contributions amounting to £ 47 5 s ., the De Tabley Lodge , No . 941 , Knutsford , figuring for £ ' 36 15 s ., raised by Bro . Wildgoose , and the Zetland

, No . 537 , Birkenhead , for £ 10 ios ., its representative being Bro . G . H . Brown , P . G . A . D . C . In May three lodges , the Zetland being one of them , and Bro . Brown being one of its Stewards , raised £ 78 15 s . ; and in February its total was £ 154 12 s ., the Zetland being again one of the three represented lod ges . This raises the total for 1 S 86 lo £ 280 12 s . as against £ 387 us . last year , and £ 680 in 1 SS 4 . These would be but poor returns tor so considerable a Province , were it not that it has an Educational Institute of its own of longstanding and approved merit .

I here can be no question that , under the able and persistent efforts of such men as Bros . Controller Bake , Charles Truscott , and some others , the Province of CORNWALL Has been doing admirable work for some time past . There is rarely a festival but it takes some part in it , while in the majority of cases its support is not only large-hearted , but substantial likewise . It commenced operations in 1 ebruary , under Bro . Bake , who put together a list of £ 152 53 ., and in Aiay the same worthy brother had a hand in the Girls' Festival , the amount ol his contribution being £ 31 ios . Cn Wednesday Bro . C , Truscott tried

Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

what he could do , as he has tried on many previous occasions , and as on those previous occasions he tried very successfully , the sum of his figures being £ 250 , sothatduring thepresentyearthis Province has distributed amongst our Charities £ 433 'S - Last year Bro . Truscott raised over £ 400 for the Girls ' and Benevolent Institution , so that he has the satisfaction of having lent a helping hand—and a strong one , too—to all our Institutions . Wc trust he has many similar successes awaiting him in the future . In our Analysis of the Girls' School Festival , in May , we remarked that it was desirable the Province of

CUMBERLAND AND WESTMORLAND , With its 21 lodges , should give evidence of its continued vitality by again entering an appearance in these Festival Returns . We are glad to see it has itself arrived at this conclusion , and that its two Stewards , of whom Bro . Geo . J . McKay , Provincial Grand Secretary , was one . between them raised the very handsome sum of £ 500 . This will go a long way towards

restoring it to its old footing as compared with other Provinces of about equal strength , as , with the exception of two contributions Inst year , amounting together to close on £ ^ 103 , and pretty impartially divided between the Benevolent and the Boys * School , it has not shown up since its memorable effort at the Festival of this Institution in 18 S 3 , when it compiled the fine total of

£ 1050 . This gives it an average of about £ 400 per annum during the quadrennial period , 1883-6 , which , having regard toils being an agricultural rather than a commercial district , is very creditable . We must congratulate Bro . McKay , who has raised the lion ' s share of the four years' total , on this further triumph of his energy as a Festival Steward . Two of the 21 lodges of

DERBYSHIRE Appear in the list of Wednesday—the Royal Sussex , No . 353 , Winshill , which contributes per Bro . J . Cooper Webb £ 48 6 s ., and the Lodge of Repose , No . 802 , Derby , whose representative , Bro . Edwin Belfield , handed in a list of , £ 27 iSs . 6 d ., making the total £ 7 6 4 s . fid . In May two other lodges—Nos . 10 S 5 and 1688- —raised £ 37 ios . 6 d ., and in February

Bro . J . E . Harrison , acting lor No . 1235 , raised £ 63 , making the total for the current year £ 17 6 15 s ., which , after the grand contribution of , £ 1546 17 s . at the Boys' Festival last year , when the Marquis of Harlington , who is Grand Master of the Province , acted as Chairman , is the more welcome , because it might have claimed a generous measure of indulgence during the year 1 SS 6 . However , it is in keeping with most people ' s

experience that those who work hardest are most in love with hard work , and so with our labours of love in Masonry , those pursue them most eagerly on whom the greatest share of them devolves . Derbyshire has invariably shown well on these occasions , and the more it has of our Festival work , the more desirous it seems of undertaking it . We could wish the Returns that are credited to

DURHAM Were somewhat , heavier , and as it has 31 lodges on its roll , it might venture on the experiment and see if the idea might not be carried . It deserves great credit for the regularity of its contributions , and on Wednesday , Bro . C . D . Hill-Drury , who was no doubt influenced to the step through being a Norfolk as well as a Durham brother , entered a list of £ 63 its previous

con-, tiibutions for the year being £ io 5 per Bro . Hans B . Olsen , to the Benevolent Fund ; and £ 68 5 s . to the Girls' School , the total for the j ear being £ 236 5 s . This is slightly in excess of what it did in 1 S 85 , but considerably below the total of its performances in the previous year , when its aggregate was within a fraction of £ 452 . We can hardly realise what a Table of Stewards' Returns would bs like if

ESSEX Or some of its 24 lodges were not included in it . With a few exceptions , its lodges are held in places of comparatively small importance . Yet it always makes a very good show at our anniversary meetings , and every now and then takes quite a foremost place among our contributing provinces . This year , for instance , it had already raised £ 115 3 s . fid . for the Benevolent

and £ 245 14 s . for the Girls' School , when on Wednesday six of its lodges , represented by seven Stewards amongst them contributed a further amount ° f £ 3 - 6 d ., giving a total for the year of £ ' 593 . Last year it raised £ 45 6 13 s . 6 d . for the Benevolent Institution , £ 86 2 s . for the Girls ' School , and £ ' 253 for the Boys' School , or together £ 79 = ; 15 s . 6 d . ; while in

1884 , when its Prov . Grand Master took the chair at the Girls' Festival , its subscriptions to the three Charities amounted to £ 1546 17 s . 6 d ., of which £ 1000 very properly passed into the Girls'School coffers , and in 1 S 83 its total , distributed in like manner among all three Charities , was , in round figures , £ 490 . This gives a result for the last four years of £ 3425 13 s ., or an average per year of £ S 6 i 5 s . Well done , Essex !

GLOUCESTERSHIRE And its 14 lodges have done capitally this year . Its figure in February last was a small one , only £ 39 18 s . all told , but at the Girls' Festival in May , though only three of its lodges were represented and one of its five Stewards placed his personal contribution on the list of a brother Steward , it was entered for £ 222 12 s . On Wednesday , three brethren , acting for as many

lodges , compiled amongst them £ 133 is . fid . This raises the sum for the year t 0 £ 395 Is - Gd . which , following upon its £ 1247 Ss . 6 d . in 18 S 5 , when its Prov . Grand Master , R . W . Bro . Sir M . E . Hicks-Beach , Bart ., M . P ., occupied the chair at the Benevolent , and its contributions exceeded . £ 1210 , speaks well for the large-hearted generosity of the Province . In 1884 it subscribed over £ 600 , in 1883 some £ 850 , in 1882 , £ 548 , and in 1881 , when its chief

won his spurs as a Masonic Festival chairman , £ 1547 , the Girls' School , for which he presided , receiving £ ' 1000 . This gives a grand total for the last six years of some £ 5 190 , or an average of more than £ 86 5 per year . Yet the number of lodges on its roll is only 14 . It strikes us there must be a splendid amount of energy and goodwill in this part of the country . The next stage brings us to

HAMPSHIRE AND THE ISLE OF WIGHT , Whose lodges—42 in number—are as generous in supporting our Institutions as thev are regular in sending up Stewards and impartial in the distribution of their moneys . On Wednesday seven of its lodgss were represented , two of them—the Royal Gloucester , No . 130 , and the Clausenturn , No . 1461—by Bro . George J . Tilling , and the other five each by a separate Steward . The total £ 496 15 s . 6 d ., must beset down as a good one ,

even for so strong a province as this , its previous contributions during vhe current year having been £ 142 5 s . to the Benevolent Institution in February , and £ 177 5 s . for the Girls' in May , raising the total for 1886 to £ 816 5 s . 6 d . Last year it contributed altogether £ 1025 6 s . Sd ., of which the Benevolent was fortunate enough to secure £ 550 14 s . 8 d ., while the Girls' received . £ 240 7 s ., and the Boys' £ 234 53 . In 188 4 it raised £ 'iiSo ios . 6 d ., and in 1883 something like £ 1832 , making £ 4834 for the quadrennial , or an

“The Freemason: 1886-07-03, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_03071886/page/5/.
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Untitled Article 1
GRAND LODGE OF MARK MASTER MASONS. Article 1
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 2
THE ANNUAL FETE AND STEWARDS' VISIT. Article 7
THE EMPIRE LODGE, No. 2108. Article 8
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF BERKS AND BUCKS, AT AYLESBURY. Article 10
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF MIDDLESEX AND SURREY. Article 11
PAST MASTERS (ENGLAND). Article 11
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To Correspondents. Article 13
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 13
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 13
INSTRUCTION. Article 16
Royal Arch. Article 16
INSTRUCTION. Article 16
PROPOSED CHAPTER OF IMPROVEMENT FOR SOUTH LONDON. Article 16
Allied Masonic Degrees. Article 16
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 17
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WHO IS MOTHER SEIGEL? Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

namely : Bedfordshire ( five lodges ) , which , however , has been represented at two out of the three Festivals that have been held since it was erected into a Province towards ( he close of last year—that is to say , at the Benevolent in February , when it raised £ 53 ( 2 s , and at the Girls' Festival in May , when it was still more successful , and gave £ 134 13 s . : Devonshire ( 50 lodges ) , which sent up a Steward or Stewards both in February and May ,

while to go no farther back than 18 S 5 it raised-in that year ^ , 28 9 for this Institution , and £ 135 for the Benevolent ; and Dorsetshire ( 13 lodges ) , which , not unnaturally , considers it is entitled to some respite after distributing over £ 323 between the other two Institutions . Last year it helped the two Schools , and in 18 S 4 it returned a Steward to the Benevolent Institution—in short , it takes its share of the responsibility of supporting our

Charities with a liberal margin over for unforeseen contingencies . Herefordshire ( four lodges ) contributed close on £ 75 to the Girls' School in May last , and when it has greater confidence in its ability to give help on these occasions it will , no doubt , appear more frequently in our Festival returns . North Hants and Hunts ( 10 lodges ) , which has figured regularly as an absentee since June , 1884 , when it raised £ 215 for this Institution , was in

the same predicament on Wednesday . Northumberland ( 21 lodges ) , by the hands of its worthy Prov . G . Secretary , Bro . B . J . Thompson , compiled the very large total of £ 906 for the Girls' in May , and in 18 S 3 it helped Bro . Binckes to score his greatest success by contributing towards his list , and by the hands of the same Bro . Thompson , the very substantial total of £ 1222 . Last year , too , it swelled his returns wilh close on £ 163 , so

that , if it does not enter an appearance regularly , it does so very effectively on occasions , as if it preferred concentrating its efforts on a few Festivals , and then having an interval of rest . Of course , there is no need to be surprised at the absence of Shropshire ( 10 lodges ) , seeing that it will need all its strength in May , 1 SS 7 , when Sir Offley Wakeman , its Provincial Grand Master , presides at the 99 th

Festival of the Girls' School . It has been represented once since its establishment as a separate province , and when conjoined with North Wales , under the late Sir W . Williams-Wynn , it honourably bore its share of the burden of our Institutions . As regards jersey ( eight lodges ) , tnough it has had no part in this year's celebrations , it figured among the supporters

of the Benevolent in 1885 , and among ( hose of the Boys' School in 1 SS 3 . The Isle of Man ( five lodges ) will always be a welcome contributor ; but , as , owing to its distance , it seems to be outside the sphere of anniversary influences , we do not appear to look for its presence , and are not disappointed by its absence . The contributing Provinces are headed as usual—that is , as they used to be before Bedfordshire appeared amongst them—by

BERKS AND BUCKS , The total of its five Stewards' lists being , £ 199 ios . The Abbey Lodge , No . 945 , takes the place of honour with £ 59 17 s ., and the Union , No . 414 , Reading , stands next with £ " 55 13 s ., the Buckingham Lodge , No . 591 , Aylesbury , Bucks , being a good third with £ 47 5 s . In February four of its lodges raised £ 159 l is . 6 d ., and in May three lodges made up a sum cf

£ 228 Ss ., the total lor the whole year being £ 587 6 s . fid . One thing we notice about the Returns for the current year is that the represented lodges have figured at one Festival only , and consequently this £ 587 and a fraction has been compiled by 12 out of the 21 lodges on the roll of ihe Province . Last year the aggregate for the three Festivals was , in round figures , £ 590 ; in 1884 it stood at £ 453 ; in 1 S 83 , 31 X 472 ; and in 1882 , at £ 620 ; s 0 that

in the last five years Berks and Bucks has contributed moneys amounting to mere than £ 2700 . BRISTOL , With one of its eight lodges represented by Bro . Purnell , gives £ 26 5 s ., in addition to £ ^ 145 19 s . for the Girls' School in May , and £ 318 ios . for the Benevolent in F ' ebruary , making the total for the year £ 49 ° 14 s ., or an average per lodge of upwards of £ 61 . This is an immense increase upon its 1 S 85 record , when it gave the Benevolent £ 59 us ., and the Boys '

£ 115 ios ., or together £ 175 is . ; while in 1884 it contented itself with £ 293 11 s . to the Benevolent , and the year previous wilh about £ 217 to the same Institution . It is worthy of mention that Bro . Purnell has acted as Steward singly , or in conjunction with other brethren , at six out of the seven Festivals in which during these four years his Province of Bristol has taken part , the Girls' School Anniversary in May being the only one in which he has not lent a helping hand . There is no doubt that

CAMBRIDGESHIRE , Though it has a small array of only six lodges , is working tremendously hard , and with very great success , for our Charities . Its total for the current year is no less than " £ 547 5 s ., made up as follows : At the Benevolent Festival in February , £ 143 ; at that of the Girls' School in May , £ 273 ; and on Wednesday , £ 131 5 s . Last year it confined its efforts to the Royal in

Masonic Benevolent Institution , and raised for it ^ iofi us . 6 d . ; 1884 the Boys' School had its support to the extent of £ 174 6 s ., and the year previous the Girls' School was favoured to the extent of £ ^ 128 . Thus , instead of helping one Institution a year , turn and turn about , it has this year helped all three , and , what is still more creditable , its contributions in 1886 are more by some £ 130 than thev amounted to for llie vears ISS-J - I- *

put together . Our light blue friends deserve almost infinite kudos for this change of policy , and if they continue thus , as we hope they will , even Provinces that are considerably stronger will have to look to their laurels . CHESHIRE Has two of its 38 lodges represented in Wednesday ' s Returns , their joint contributions amounting to £ 47 5 s ., the De Tabley Lodge , No . 941 , Knutsford , figuring for £ ' 36 15 s ., raised by Bro . Wildgoose , and the Zetland

, No . 537 , Birkenhead , for £ 10 ios ., its representative being Bro . G . H . Brown , P . G . A . D . C . In May three lodges , the Zetland being one of them , and Bro . Brown being one of its Stewards , raised £ 78 15 s . ; and in February its total was £ 154 12 s ., the Zetland being again one of the three represented lod ges . This raises the total for 1 S 86 lo £ 280 12 s . as against £ 387 us . last year , and £ 680 in 1 SS 4 . These would be but poor returns tor so considerable a Province , were it not that it has an Educational Institute of its own of longstanding and approved merit .

I here can be no question that , under the able and persistent efforts of such men as Bros . Controller Bake , Charles Truscott , and some others , the Province of CORNWALL Has been doing admirable work for some time past . There is rarely a festival but it takes some part in it , while in the majority of cases its support is not only large-hearted , but substantial likewise . It commenced operations in 1 ebruary , under Bro . Bake , who put together a list of £ 152 53 ., and in Aiay the same worthy brother had a hand in the Girls' Festival , the amount ol his contribution being £ 31 ios . Cn Wednesday Bro . C , Truscott tried

Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

what he could do , as he has tried on many previous occasions , and as on those previous occasions he tried very successfully , the sum of his figures being £ 250 , sothatduring thepresentyearthis Province has distributed amongst our Charities £ 433 'S - Last year Bro . Truscott raised over £ 400 for the Girls ' and Benevolent Institution , so that he has the satisfaction of having lent a helping hand—and a strong one , too—to all our Institutions . Wc trust he has many similar successes awaiting him in the future . In our Analysis of the Girls' School Festival , in May , we remarked that it was desirable the Province of

CUMBERLAND AND WESTMORLAND , With its 21 lodges , should give evidence of its continued vitality by again entering an appearance in these Festival Returns . We are glad to see it has itself arrived at this conclusion , and that its two Stewards , of whom Bro . Geo . J . McKay , Provincial Grand Secretary , was one . between them raised the very handsome sum of £ 500 . This will go a long way towards

restoring it to its old footing as compared with other Provinces of about equal strength , as , with the exception of two contributions Inst year , amounting together to close on £ ^ 103 , and pretty impartially divided between the Benevolent and the Boys * School , it has not shown up since its memorable effort at the Festival of this Institution in 18 S 3 , when it compiled the fine total of

£ 1050 . This gives it an average of about £ 400 per annum during the quadrennial period , 1883-6 , which , having regard toils being an agricultural rather than a commercial district , is very creditable . We must congratulate Bro . McKay , who has raised the lion ' s share of the four years' total , on this further triumph of his energy as a Festival Steward . Two of the 21 lodges of

DERBYSHIRE Appear in the list of Wednesday—the Royal Sussex , No . 353 , Winshill , which contributes per Bro . J . Cooper Webb £ 48 6 s ., and the Lodge of Repose , No . 802 , Derby , whose representative , Bro . Edwin Belfield , handed in a list of , £ 27 iSs . 6 d ., making the total £ 7 6 4 s . fid . In May two other lodges—Nos . 10 S 5 and 1688- —raised £ 37 ios . 6 d ., and in February

Bro . J . E . Harrison , acting lor No . 1235 , raised £ 63 , making the total for the current year £ 17 6 15 s ., which , after the grand contribution of , £ 1546 17 s . at the Boys' Festival last year , when the Marquis of Harlington , who is Grand Master of the Province , acted as Chairman , is the more welcome , because it might have claimed a generous measure of indulgence during the year 1 SS 6 . However , it is in keeping with most people ' s

experience that those who work hardest are most in love with hard work , and so with our labours of love in Masonry , those pursue them most eagerly on whom the greatest share of them devolves . Derbyshire has invariably shown well on these occasions , and the more it has of our Festival work , the more desirous it seems of undertaking it . We could wish the Returns that are credited to

DURHAM Were somewhat , heavier , and as it has 31 lodges on its roll , it might venture on the experiment and see if the idea might not be carried . It deserves great credit for the regularity of its contributions , and on Wednesday , Bro . C . D . Hill-Drury , who was no doubt influenced to the step through being a Norfolk as well as a Durham brother , entered a list of £ 63 its previous

con-, tiibutions for the year being £ io 5 per Bro . Hans B . Olsen , to the Benevolent Fund ; and £ 68 5 s . to the Girls' School , the total for the j ear being £ 236 5 s . This is slightly in excess of what it did in 1 S 85 , but considerably below the total of its performances in the previous year , when its aggregate was within a fraction of £ 452 . We can hardly realise what a Table of Stewards' Returns would bs like if

ESSEX Or some of its 24 lodges were not included in it . With a few exceptions , its lodges are held in places of comparatively small importance . Yet it always makes a very good show at our anniversary meetings , and every now and then takes quite a foremost place among our contributing provinces . This year , for instance , it had already raised £ 115 3 s . fid . for the Benevolent

and £ 245 14 s . for the Girls' School , when on Wednesday six of its lodges , represented by seven Stewards amongst them contributed a further amount ° f £ 3 - 6 d ., giving a total for the year of £ ' 593 . Last year it raised £ 45 6 13 s . 6 d . for the Benevolent Institution , £ 86 2 s . for the Girls ' School , and £ ' 253 for the Boys' School , or together £ 79 = ; 15 s . 6 d . ; while in

1884 , when its Prov . Grand Master took the chair at the Girls' Festival , its subscriptions to the three Charities amounted to £ 1546 17 s . 6 d ., of which £ 1000 very properly passed into the Girls'School coffers , and in 1 S 83 its total , distributed in like manner among all three Charities , was , in round figures , £ 490 . This gives a result for the last four years of £ 3425 13 s ., or an average per year of £ S 6 i 5 s . Well done , Essex !

GLOUCESTERSHIRE And its 14 lodges have done capitally this year . Its figure in February last was a small one , only £ 39 18 s . all told , but at the Girls' Festival in May , though only three of its lodges were represented and one of its five Stewards placed his personal contribution on the list of a brother Steward , it was entered for £ 222 12 s . On Wednesday , three brethren , acting for as many

lodges , compiled amongst them £ 133 is . fid . This raises the sum for the year t 0 £ 395 Is - Gd . which , following upon its £ 1247 Ss . 6 d . in 18 S 5 , when its Prov . Grand Master , R . W . Bro . Sir M . E . Hicks-Beach , Bart ., M . P ., occupied the chair at the Benevolent , and its contributions exceeded . £ 1210 , speaks well for the large-hearted generosity of the Province . In 1884 it subscribed over £ 600 , in 1883 some £ 850 , in 1882 , £ 548 , and in 1881 , when its chief

won his spurs as a Masonic Festival chairman , £ 1547 , the Girls' School , for which he presided , receiving £ ' 1000 . This gives a grand total for the last six years of some £ 5 190 , or an average of more than £ 86 5 per year . Yet the number of lodges on its roll is only 14 . It strikes us there must be a splendid amount of energy and goodwill in this part of the country . The next stage brings us to

HAMPSHIRE AND THE ISLE OF WIGHT , Whose lodges—42 in number—are as generous in supporting our Institutions as thev are regular in sending up Stewards and impartial in the distribution of their moneys . On Wednesday seven of its lodgss were represented , two of them—the Royal Gloucester , No . 130 , and the Clausenturn , No . 1461—by Bro . George J . Tilling , and the other five each by a separate Steward . The total £ 496 15 s . 6 d ., must beset down as a good one ,

even for so strong a province as this , its previous contributions during vhe current year having been £ 142 5 s . to the Benevolent Institution in February , and £ 177 5 s . for the Girls' in May , raising the total for 1886 to £ 816 5 s . 6 d . Last year it contributed altogether £ 1025 6 s . Sd ., of which the Benevolent was fortunate enough to secure £ 550 14 s . 8 d ., while the Girls' received . £ 240 7 s ., and the Boys' £ 234 53 . In 188 4 it raised £ 'iiSo ios . 6 d ., and in 1883 something like £ 1832 , making £ 4834 for the quadrennial , or an

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