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Contents.

CONTENTS .

U « 339 United Grand Lodge of England 330 provincial Grand Lodge of East Lancashire 331 Consecration of the Viator Lodge , No . 2308 331 Consecration of the Blagdon Chapter , No . 6 _ o , at Newcastle 333 Mark Grand Lodge 333 CoRR * sr ° NDI , NC ? ¦ Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 377 Royal Masonic Institution for Boys and the Carnarvon Lodge , No . 1573 33 8 Curious Certificate 338 Cottage Hospital for the Cure of Consumption 338 Notes and Queries 338 Reviews 339

RIPORTS of MASONIC MIITINOICraft Masonry 339 Instruction 34 ° Royal Arch 34 ° Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 341 Order of the Secret Monitor 343 Scotland 343 The Wakefield Masonic Literary Societv ... 343 Laying the Foundation Stone of a New Masonic Hall at West Bromwich 343 Mark Masonry 344 A Review of the True Lines of Rosicrucianism 344 Proposed Presentation to Bro . Madell 34 $ Dedication of New Masonic Premises at Sunderland 33 S Masonic and General Tidings 336 Lodge Meetings for Next Week iv .

Ar00101

THOUGH there was a tolerably full programme of business United ^ be transacted at the Ouarterly Communication of United Grand Lodge . — J Grand Lodge on Wednesday , there was nothing appointed to be done which was calculated to arouse any feeling of special interest or excitement , and the proceedings were carried out quietly and

harmoniously , as usual . The Reports of the Boards of General Purposes and Benevolence were received , while the result of the various elections will be found in another column . A recommendation was read from M . W . the GRAND M ASTER to the effect that the United Grand Lodge of Victoria , having been established by and with the consent of 140 out of the 142 lodges in the Colony , should be recognised , and the recommendation having been

acted upon immediately , it was further announced from the chair that his Royal Highness had been pleased to accept the office of Grand Patron of the newly-constituted Grand Lodge . We , therefore , congratulate our Victorian brethren on the admission of their United Grand Lodge into the

congregation of lawful Grand Lodges , and express the hope that the career on which it has thus entered may be a long and prosperous one , and be the means of strengthening and extending still further the welfare of the whole Craft .

* * * THE Special General Court of Governors and Subscribers Special General ., „ ,,, . , .. , -, ,., Court of the of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys which was summoned to meet at Freemasons' Tavern on Thursday , at noon ,

for the purpose of considering the Report of the PHILBRICK Committee of Inquiry , and taking such steps as might be determined , was very numerously attended , very many of the most influential brethren in the Provinces and London being present , and among them R . W . Bro . W . W . B . BEACH , M . P ., Prov . G . Master of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight , who

was invited to preside as Chairman , and very ably and impartially fulfilled the duty with which he was entrusted . The proceedings , too , were conducted , if not altogether in a spirit of harmony , at all events , in a manner which reflects no discredit on that impartiality—that love of fair play—which is characteristic of Englishmen , and which , though it may be occasionally

neutralised by a passing wave of anger , is sure , in the long run , to assert itself . There were , no doubt , some among those present who would like to nave seen a clean sweep made of everything and everybody , and , indeed , such a proposition , as the Report we publish elsewhere will show , was made an d seconded ; but the Chairman made it clear to the meeting that he was

esirous of affording to every one " a fair field and no favour , " and in 1 e end , after a motion to the effect that the Report of the Committee of quiry be adopted had been carried without a dissentient voice , Bro . f « ' ^ ° ' ^ " Secretary ° f Wiltshire , proposed , and Bro . SMITHSON , _ West Yorkshire , seconded , and it was unanimously agreed , that a Provisional Committee , consisting of Bros . PHILBRICK , Q . C , Grand Reg . ; Col T NALD HANSON , Bart ., Sir R . N . FOWLER , Bart ., M . P ., Lieut .-•IHRALE PERKINS , GERARD FORD , Deputy Prov . Grand Master rj Ussex ; HENRY SMITH , Deputy Prov . Grand Master West Yorkshire ; to th TERR YJ G - Treas - 5 RICHARD EVE , Past G . Treas . ; and others Bo H num ' ° f about 20 should be appointed to act as an ad interim also ° mm ' ttee for carrying on the administration of the School , and the , Committee to consider and report to a Court of Governors as to mitt means ° f giving effect to the several recommendations of the Com-° f th lnc < uiry . The result is that there will be no disturbance has Present position of affairs until this Provisional Committee > n ord u P ° the measures which , in their opinion are necessary , time th ° reor £ an 'se the administration on a sound basis j and in the meanbfethre g ° ?? rnment of the Institution will be in the hands of a body of ^ glish r * ' thoroughly representative , and in which the whole 1 " the fullest and most entire confidence .

Ar00102

The Bo s' ^ NICB 1 uest ' nas arisen out of the proceedings of the School House General Committee of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys Committee . at its meeting at Freemasons' Hall on Saturday last . By the rules of the Institution , the management of the School is vested in a body of Governors , which is known as * ' the House Committee , " and consists of

"Twelve Life-Governors , being Freemasons , " " with the addition of the Treasurer and Trustees ; " the said twelve Life-Governors being elected "from the General Committee . " The law further provides that " nominations of brethren to serve on this "—the House— " Committee " must be made " at the General Committee in May , " and that " the election from

the brethren so nominated shall take p lace by ballot at the General Committee in June , " when " Scrutineers shall be appointed for the purpose of taking the Poll , which shall remain open until 5 o ' clock p . m . " This year , 17 brethren were nominated to serve on the House Committee at the General Committee in May , and in the ordinary course of business , 12

of these 17 brethren should have been elected at the General Committee on Saturday . But the discussion over the appointment of Scrutineers was so protracted , that the hour of 5 p . m . arrived without any election taking place , and the meeting was adjourned till the first Saturday in July . The points which have now to be considered are —( 1 ) Is there a

House Committee in existence ? ( 2 ) If not , how can one be elected without undue straining or infringement of the law ? As regards the former of these queries , we are of opinion , after a most careful consideration of the circumstances , that the answer must be in the negative , and that there is no longer any such body as a House Committee in existence as part of

the administrative machinery of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys . It has certainly been pointed out to us that the law which provides for the election of the House Committee does not , as in the case of the law concerning the election of the Finance and Audit Committee , lay it down absolutely , and in so many words , that the aforesaid " Twelve Life Governors ,

being Freemasons , shall be elected " annually . But this omission of the word " annually" is clearly the result of accident , as is shown ( a ) by the provision for the nomination in May and election in June ; and ( b ) by the fact of the election having been annual since the House Committee was instituted . Nor are we inclined to attach much importance to the opinion

that a House Committee exists in the persons of the Treasurer and Trustees , who , by virtue of their respective offices , are permanent members of the same . It may savour a little of hypercriticism , but it strikes us there is a marked difference between electing a number of persons " to act as a House Committee with the addition of the Treasurer and

Trustees , " and electing the same persons to act with the Treasurer and Trustees as a House Committee . In the former case , the House Committee is complete in itself , when the said persons have been elected , but the Treasurer and Trustees , being important functionaries , are allowed a voice in its deliberations . In the latter case , the Treasurer and Trustees would

constitute an integral part of the House Committee , or in other words , a House Committee which did not include the Treasurer and Trustees would be , ipso facto , incomplete . For these reasons , that is to say , because ( 1 ) the essential portion of the House Committee must be elected annually , and that which was elected in June , 1888 , has completed its term of service ; and

( 2 ) the non-essential portion has no status whatever , until the essential has been elected—how is it possible to add to what does not exist ?—we are of the opinion , that at this present moment , the Boys' School is without a House Committee and will so remain until the default of Saturday last is made good . Our second question therefore follows—How can this

default be made good without undue straining or infringement of the law ? and to this our answer is immediate and decided . The nominations of the 17 brethren , which were made , in accordance with the prescriptions of Law 37 , " at the General Committee in May" remain valid ; while as Law 3 6 provides that the General Committee , by which the

House Committee is elected , " may adjourn from time to time , " and , as we understand the said General Committee , in the exercise of its discretion , did so adjourn to its next regular monthly meeting—that is , till the first Saturday in July—it follows that the business which was not dispatched as usual at the meeting on Saturday last , and which includes the election , by

ballot , of 12 out of the 17 brethren nominated " to act as a House Committee , " must be carried forward , and disposed of at the General Committee in July ; or if not then , at some subsequent meeting , to which the General Committee may think proper to direct a further adjournment . Of course the position has been altered by the result of the Special General Court of

Thursday , and the Management of the Institution may be said , at the present moment , to be as it were " in Commission ; " but we have not disturbed Our argument as above , because we know this question , arising out of Saturday ' s proceedings , has been freely discussed , and that there

are many of our readers who have not yet made up their minds as to the existence or non-existence of the House Committee after Saturday last , and until the appointment of a Provisional Committee of Management on Thursday .

“The Freemason: 1889-06-08, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_08061889/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF EAST LANCASHIRE. Article 3
CONSECRATION OF THE VIATOR LODGE, No. 2308. Article 3
CONSECRATION OF THE BLAGDON CHAPTER, No. 659, AT NEWCASTLE. Article 5
MARK GRAND LODGE. Article 5
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To Correspondents. Article 9
Untitled Article 9
Original Correspondence. Article 9
COTTAGE HOSPITAL FOR THE CURE OF CONSUMPTION. Article 10
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 10
REVIEWS Article 11
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 11
INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Royal Arch. Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Royal Masonic Institution for Boys. Article 13
Order of the Secret Monitor. Article 15
Scotland. Article 15
THE WAKEFIELD MASONIC LITERARY SOCIETY. Article 15
LAYING THE FOUNDATION-STONE OF A NEW MASONIC HALL AT WEST BROMWICH. Article 15
Mark MAasonry. Article 16
A REVIEW OF THE TRUE LINES OF ROSICRUCIANISM. Article 16
Proposed Presentation to Bro. Madell. Article 17
DEDICATION OF NEW MASONIC PREMISES AT SUNDERLAND. Article 17
THE GENERAL LIFE AND FIRE ASSURANCE COMPANY. Article 17
WILLING'S SELECTED THEATRICAL PROGRAMME. Article 17
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 18
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METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 20
PROVINCIAL MASONIC MEETINGS Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Contents.

CONTENTS .

U « 339 United Grand Lodge of England 330 provincial Grand Lodge of East Lancashire 331 Consecration of the Viator Lodge , No . 2308 331 Consecration of the Blagdon Chapter , No . 6 _ o , at Newcastle 333 Mark Grand Lodge 333 CoRR * sr ° NDI , NC ? ¦ Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 377 Royal Masonic Institution for Boys and the Carnarvon Lodge , No . 1573 33 8 Curious Certificate 338 Cottage Hospital for the Cure of Consumption 338 Notes and Queries 338 Reviews 339

RIPORTS of MASONIC MIITINOICraft Masonry 339 Instruction 34 ° Royal Arch 34 ° Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 341 Order of the Secret Monitor 343 Scotland 343 The Wakefield Masonic Literary Societv ... 343 Laying the Foundation Stone of a New Masonic Hall at West Bromwich 343 Mark Masonry 344 A Review of the True Lines of Rosicrucianism 344 Proposed Presentation to Bro . Madell 34 $ Dedication of New Masonic Premises at Sunderland 33 S Masonic and General Tidings 336 Lodge Meetings for Next Week iv .

Ar00101

THOUGH there was a tolerably full programme of business United ^ be transacted at the Ouarterly Communication of United Grand Lodge . — J Grand Lodge on Wednesday , there was nothing appointed to be done which was calculated to arouse any feeling of special interest or excitement , and the proceedings were carried out quietly and

harmoniously , as usual . The Reports of the Boards of General Purposes and Benevolence were received , while the result of the various elections will be found in another column . A recommendation was read from M . W . the GRAND M ASTER to the effect that the United Grand Lodge of Victoria , having been established by and with the consent of 140 out of the 142 lodges in the Colony , should be recognised , and the recommendation having been

acted upon immediately , it was further announced from the chair that his Royal Highness had been pleased to accept the office of Grand Patron of the newly-constituted Grand Lodge . We , therefore , congratulate our Victorian brethren on the admission of their United Grand Lodge into the

congregation of lawful Grand Lodges , and express the hope that the career on which it has thus entered may be a long and prosperous one , and be the means of strengthening and extending still further the welfare of the whole Craft .

* * * THE Special General Court of Governors and Subscribers Special General ., „ ,,, . , .. , -, ,., Court of the of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys which was summoned to meet at Freemasons' Tavern on Thursday , at noon ,

for the purpose of considering the Report of the PHILBRICK Committee of Inquiry , and taking such steps as might be determined , was very numerously attended , very many of the most influential brethren in the Provinces and London being present , and among them R . W . Bro . W . W . B . BEACH , M . P ., Prov . G . Master of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight , who

was invited to preside as Chairman , and very ably and impartially fulfilled the duty with which he was entrusted . The proceedings , too , were conducted , if not altogether in a spirit of harmony , at all events , in a manner which reflects no discredit on that impartiality—that love of fair play—which is characteristic of Englishmen , and which , though it may be occasionally

neutralised by a passing wave of anger , is sure , in the long run , to assert itself . There were , no doubt , some among those present who would like to nave seen a clean sweep made of everything and everybody , and , indeed , such a proposition , as the Report we publish elsewhere will show , was made an d seconded ; but the Chairman made it clear to the meeting that he was

esirous of affording to every one " a fair field and no favour , " and in 1 e end , after a motion to the effect that the Report of the Committee of quiry be adopted had been carried without a dissentient voice , Bro . f « ' ^ ° ' ^ " Secretary ° f Wiltshire , proposed , and Bro . SMITHSON , _ West Yorkshire , seconded , and it was unanimously agreed , that a Provisional Committee , consisting of Bros . PHILBRICK , Q . C , Grand Reg . ; Col T NALD HANSON , Bart ., Sir R . N . FOWLER , Bart ., M . P ., Lieut .-•IHRALE PERKINS , GERARD FORD , Deputy Prov . Grand Master rj Ussex ; HENRY SMITH , Deputy Prov . Grand Master West Yorkshire ; to th TERR YJ G - Treas - 5 RICHARD EVE , Past G . Treas . ; and others Bo H num ' ° f about 20 should be appointed to act as an ad interim also ° mm ' ttee for carrying on the administration of the School , and the , Committee to consider and report to a Court of Governors as to mitt means ° f giving effect to the several recommendations of the Com-° f th lnc < uiry . The result is that there will be no disturbance has Present position of affairs until this Provisional Committee > n ord u P ° the measures which , in their opinion are necessary , time th ° reor £ an 'se the administration on a sound basis j and in the meanbfethre g ° ?? rnment of the Institution will be in the hands of a body of ^ glish r * ' thoroughly representative , and in which the whole 1 " the fullest and most entire confidence .

Ar00102

The Bo s' ^ NICB 1 uest ' nas arisen out of the proceedings of the School House General Committee of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys Committee . at its meeting at Freemasons' Hall on Saturday last . By the rules of the Institution , the management of the School is vested in a body of Governors , which is known as * ' the House Committee , " and consists of

"Twelve Life-Governors , being Freemasons , " " with the addition of the Treasurer and Trustees ; " the said twelve Life-Governors being elected "from the General Committee . " The law further provides that " nominations of brethren to serve on this "—the House— " Committee " must be made " at the General Committee in May , " and that " the election from

the brethren so nominated shall take p lace by ballot at the General Committee in June , " when " Scrutineers shall be appointed for the purpose of taking the Poll , which shall remain open until 5 o ' clock p . m . " This year , 17 brethren were nominated to serve on the House Committee at the General Committee in May , and in the ordinary course of business , 12

of these 17 brethren should have been elected at the General Committee on Saturday . But the discussion over the appointment of Scrutineers was so protracted , that the hour of 5 p . m . arrived without any election taking place , and the meeting was adjourned till the first Saturday in July . The points which have now to be considered are —( 1 ) Is there a

House Committee in existence ? ( 2 ) If not , how can one be elected without undue straining or infringement of the law ? As regards the former of these queries , we are of opinion , after a most careful consideration of the circumstances , that the answer must be in the negative , and that there is no longer any such body as a House Committee in existence as part of

the administrative machinery of the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys . It has certainly been pointed out to us that the law which provides for the election of the House Committee does not , as in the case of the law concerning the election of the Finance and Audit Committee , lay it down absolutely , and in so many words , that the aforesaid " Twelve Life Governors ,

being Freemasons , shall be elected " annually . But this omission of the word " annually" is clearly the result of accident , as is shown ( a ) by the provision for the nomination in May and election in June ; and ( b ) by the fact of the election having been annual since the House Committee was instituted . Nor are we inclined to attach much importance to the opinion

that a House Committee exists in the persons of the Treasurer and Trustees , who , by virtue of their respective offices , are permanent members of the same . It may savour a little of hypercriticism , but it strikes us there is a marked difference between electing a number of persons " to act as a House Committee with the addition of the Treasurer and

Trustees , " and electing the same persons to act with the Treasurer and Trustees as a House Committee . In the former case , the House Committee is complete in itself , when the said persons have been elected , but the Treasurer and Trustees , being important functionaries , are allowed a voice in its deliberations . In the latter case , the Treasurer and Trustees would

constitute an integral part of the House Committee , or in other words , a House Committee which did not include the Treasurer and Trustees would be , ipso facto , incomplete . For these reasons , that is to say , because ( 1 ) the essential portion of the House Committee must be elected annually , and that which was elected in June , 1888 , has completed its term of service ; and

( 2 ) the non-essential portion has no status whatever , until the essential has been elected—how is it possible to add to what does not exist ?—we are of the opinion , that at this present moment , the Boys' School is without a House Committee and will so remain until the default of Saturday last is made good . Our second question therefore follows—How can this

default be made good without undue straining or infringement of the law ? and to this our answer is immediate and decided . The nominations of the 17 brethren , which were made , in accordance with the prescriptions of Law 37 , " at the General Committee in May" remain valid ; while as Law 3 6 provides that the General Committee , by which the

House Committee is elected , " may adjourn from time to time , " and , as we understand the said General Committee , in the exercise of its discretion , did so adjourn to its next regular monthly meeting—that is , till the first Saturday in July—it follows that the business which was not dispatched as usual at the meeting on Saturday last , and which includes the election , by

ballot , of 12 out of the 17 brethren nominated " to act as a House Committee , " must be carried forward , and disposed of at the General Committee in July ; or if not then , at some subsequent meeting , to which the General Committee may think proper to direct a further adjournment . Of course the position has been altered by the result of the Special General Court of

Thursday , and the Management of the Institution may be said , at the present moment , to be as it were " in Commission ; " but we have not disturbed Our argument as above , because we know this question , arising out of Saturday ' s proceedings , has been freely discussed , and that there

are many of our readers who have not yet made up their minds as to the existence or non-existence of the House Committee after Saturday last , and until the appointment of a Provisional Committee of Management on Thursday .

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