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  • July 15, 1876
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  • ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS.
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The Freemason, July 15, 1876: Page 9

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

Original Correspondence.

• s f or an exposition of the general law in its practical anplical ion to cases constantly recurring . Should such a course be taken , however , I am far from saying ( and I am sure "W . S . L . " will agree with me ) that its legality would be absolutely unarguable , notwithstanding the eminent authority that has according to common report , put a gloss upon the constitution which

seems to go beyond the foundation afforded by the text . But I have promised to show that , to support what I may call head-quarters' reading , the text not only requires til ' s interpolation of the word " regular , " but the addition of the word " meeting . " I proceed to do so . In one sense it might be maintained perhaps that even an emergency meeting was a regular meeting . It is

certainly a regular lodge , for our traditional law teaches us that it cannot be duly held without a certain strictly defined formality being observed , compliance with which wc are taught alone renders the lodge regular , but the correctness of the contention of the authoritative expositors involves that a proposition for joining can only be made in open lodge at a regular lodge meeting , which is an

implied extension of the term lodge , for a lodge is made regular by the presence of that which must absolutely be materially and actually in the room at the time . Now this presence obviously cannot convert an emergency meeting into a regular lodge meeting , however essential it may he to render any lodge , ordinary or emergent , regular . A regular lodge includes both regular and emergency

meetings . A regular lodge meeting ( with one exception , to which I will presently refer ) must thus be ruled to be restricted to a meeting held on a day specified in the text ot the warrant or charter of incorporation . The exception js a consecration , which is commonly held on a day not specified in the charter , and would therefore , pi una . facie , seem to be a meeting coming within the

category of emergency , however it is well known ( I take it as conceded on all sides ) that propositions both for members jcliiing and initiating candidates are legally receivable at a consecration meeting ; but here the distinction is said to be that at a consecration the presence of the M . W . the G . M ., either in person or by duly constituted ileputy , renders the meeting regular . Still , I own myself not quite

satisfied on such a point as this , purely started as an illus tration ex hopolhesi , would such an attendance on another occasion than a consecration , convert what had been convened as an emergency meeting into a regular meeting , so as to legalize the receipt of propositions ? I hope I shall not be considered as writing dogmatically . I only profess to give the results of the information I have

taken some pains to acquire . I would not for a moment pretend to speak ex cathedra . The lex scripta and lex non ¦ xripta , alike bristle with difficulties ; and I am sure I for one most sincerely feel that all our thanks ari due to W . S . L . for re-directing attention to this most interesting part of Masonic jurisprudence . It is , I think , much to be regretted that our Book of

Constitutions is not examined and revised , so as to bring it more in ' . n accord with the present circumstances of the Craft , and in directness and simplicity more immediately availal b for the guidance of all its members . Good easy men , comparatively few in numbers , and less exposed , therefore , to complication of interests and clashing of objects , might , in the old times ,

have found no inconvenience in living under laws interpicted by inference , deduction , suggestion , and construction nf one section by another divided from it by a score or two uf pages ; but , in the present day , when our brotherhood is numbered by hundreds of thousands—when men of high education , of tact , shrewdness , and business ability , aio constantly under the necessity of referring for

direclii n to its lex scripta , it is in the last degree desirable that the source of their knowledge should appear in grammatical , exact , and unambiguous phraseology , and , if necessary and convenient for men personally able to construe language , how much more desirable is such clearness for our less highly-gifted brethren , who look to direct atlbority as a protection from bitter , profitless , and tedious

testual disputes ? A law that is hazy and equivocal , that can only bc interpreted by conjectures as to its meaning , by cross references , tradition often inaccuratelyhanded down . suggestion , inference , deduction , and , worst of all , the weak argument in justification of ambiguity ab inconveniendi , is a law that ,

failing- any enforcible sanction and depending for its exposition on varying individual opinion , ceases to be useful as a rule of conduct , and as often mischievously misleads as properly directs . The joint under discussion is not the only one that gives rise to varying interpretations of our code , as any r . cmbcr of the two boards will bear me witness . lt

seems very plausible to say " Oh , our laws were never intended to be scanned by microscopic eyes—brethren , u ~ f , f honour , men of the world , would know well enough Wi -at it means j we don ' t want any legal technicalities , no iv . tyfogg ing hair splitting , " but the more honourable ncn are the more likely are they not to come to a conclusion without good reasons well thought out , and the less jl . © - ¦ - »*¦* •—*»• # »*•«__ # MVII fcllUU ^ IIV vuij U 1 IU int . UU

Kely they are to abandon a construction so conscientiously rrived at ; and , where phraseology is capable of two instructions , it must be looked for that , however honour-^ 'c men may be , they will sometimes differ as to which i I r ' ; ll is a cheap and easy indulgence to sneer at a ' yer s anxiety for clearness of definition and simplicity and curacy of expression , and perhaps professionally that ctyis

if f 1 ' n ° t unnaturally kept within sufficient control , for frien I T " makes his own W 'H ' s the lawyer ' s best tialc ¦ ' analo & yithe statute which is a compound of the } c en "E non-professional men thinking of one subject and bieh 8 ^ fcman desiderating another , should stand very prov . ' ? - i ? ffcctions of the lawyer , who has attained the tonnf-l thlrd stage in the legal career—a period when , ' neon , ¦ eu Phuistic » ll y > an augmentation of professional t icner ' a" ° biect not wh < % - indifferent to the practi-

Original Correspondence.

But to rule and govern the Craft by " it has always been understood , " or " it is implied , " or " we construe it thus or thus , " is a system which it can be no one ' s interest to maintain . lt reminds me of the old theory of the administration of equity . Two hundred years ago equity was derisively said to be as the size of the Chancellor ' s foot . Some Chancellor shall have

a wide foot , some a narrow , some a long foot , some a short , some a high instep , some a flat sole . According to the size and shape , of my lord's shoe so shall the Chancery suitor get his relief dealt unto him . " It is , however , no use discussing an evil without suggesting a remedy . Let Grand Lodge elect a committee from among the highly educated men who adorn it as

members , and instruct this body to make a thorough and careful revision of the whole code , suggesting corrections or even alterations where necessary , and not shrinking from expanding by explanations or definitions . When finished let the proof-sheets of the suggested new edition of the Book of Constitutions bc sent to every lodge under the English constitution , inviting suggestions and

commentaries . These received , let thcrn be considered by the committee , and their conclusions , in the shape of a report embodying the re-edited work , be laid before Grand Lodge to be dealt with according to its wisdom . Such an enterprise would take years to complete , but they would be years well employed . It would cost money , but it would bc money well spent , and the boon to the Craft at large

wouleTbe invaluable . However , rcvenono u nos nionlons , I think that with the kind assistance of "W . S . L . " we have at last get a true and plain reading of the exact law on the point we have had under discussion , which may be thus summarised : — A brother as a joining member must be viva voce proposed at one regular open lodge meeting and balloted

for at the next regular lodge meeting . To this rule there is no exception . A candidate for initiation must be vivi voce proposed at one regular lodge meeting , <»• at an emergency meeting , if the intention to propose him has been announced in the circular convening the emergency meeting , and balloted for at the next regular lodge meeting , or at an emergency meeting , if the intention to ballot for him has' with all

necessary particulars , been expressed in the circular convening such regular or emergency meeting . To this rule there is the exception that under ciicumstances of emergency , ot the stringency of which the W . M . is the sole judge , and certain well-known conditions being complied with , the nomination may be by writing out of lodge , instead of ri ' ra eoee in open lodge , and initiation , on a successful ballot , may take place at the next regular or emergency meeting uf the lodge . Yours fraternally , S . P ., P . M ., & c , & c .

Royal Masonic Institution For Girls.

ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS .

The Q laiterly Court uf the supporters of this Institution was held last Saturday in the Board-room , Freemasons ' Hall . Bro . J . M . Clabon , P . G . Deacon , presided over the meeting , which was composed of , among others , Bros . H . Hacker , C . F . Matier , Raynham W . Stewart , Pierce Egan , F . B . Davage , F . Adlard , R . Kenyon , Griffiths

Smith , A . 11 . Fothcrshall , H . A . Dubois , C . A . Cottebrune , Hyde Pullen , Capt . Philips , II . Moore , L . Ruf , G . Bolton , J . Roper , J . F . Peacock , G . M . E . Snow , S . G . Foxall , D . Beare , E . Harris , II . M . Smith , Dr . Hogg , R . W . Wheeler , W . Roebuck , T . Meggy , H . Massey , ( " Freemason" ) , W . Hedges , and R . W . Little , Secretary .

After the reading of the minutes of the meetings of the committees , the particulars of which have appeared in the " Freemason , " Bro . G . M . E . Snow rose to move " That commission be allowed to the collector upon such sums only as he collects and gives receipts for , and not upon donations or subscriptions paid to the Secretary . " He said that at a

late Quarterly Court , having a large cheque to hand in to the Institution , he asked the Chairman of the meeting whether if he paid it there and then to the Secretary the collector would receive his commission on ifc , and he was told that he would . This appeared » o him a great abuse , as well as an incentive to laziness , for instead of going out to collect subscriptions he might sit at home . Every

man was worthy of his hire ; but he should bc paid for what he did , and not for what he did not . Other institutions of a similar character to the Masonic Girls' School . had no such thing connected with them . In the Merchant Seamen ' s Orphan Asylum , which only admitted children of merchant seamen , there was no commission paid to the Secretary except on subscriptions which he was solely

instrumental in obtaining , and then it was only a small per centage , till it reached the sum of five shillings , and however large the subscription might be , the commission never exceeded the total sum of five shillings . At the Masonic Boys' School no commission was allowed to the collector if the subscription was paid at the office . Why , after a Steward had taken the trouble to go round to his

friends and obtain donations for the Institution , which he paid in at the Secretary ' s office , should commission be paid to the collector when he did not even know who sent the money ? it was wrong in principle , and he therefore brought forward his motion . If any brother suggested that a committee be appointed to enquire into the subject

of the collector ' s duties and remuneration , he would be pleased to support that if it was brought forward as a motion , and withdraw his own . Bro . Raynham W . Stewart said he should be happy to second the motion of Bro . Snow , but he mi ght say that as Bro . Muggeridge , the collector , had resigned , as they had just heard from the minutes , he thought a committee should

Royal Masonic Institution For Girls.

be appointed to consider the question of the collector ' s duties and pay , and whether it was necessary to have a collector at all . If Bro . Snow withdrew his original motion he , Bro . Stewart , would move in accordance with jtjiis view . Bro . Thomas W . White referred to the printed rules of the Institution , which provided that on the occurrence pf a

vacancy the General Committee might cause enquiries to be made into the office . The Chairman said he was unable to come to a conclusion that day on the subject , and he would suggest that there should be a general enquiry first . Bro . Snow would say that when he gave notice of his motion he did not know that Bro . Muggeridge was going

to resign . He should be happy to withdraw his motion . Bro . Snow ' s motion was then withdrawn . Bro . Raynham W . Stewart moved "That considering the satisfactory condition of the funds of this school , ten of the unsuccessful candidates at the last election highest on the poll be admitted without further election at the same time as those already elected , and that arrangements be

made for their reception in the infirmary until the alterations , now in progress at the school be completed . " In bringing the motion forward , he said he felt that ithe managers of the institution were bound to perform an act of justice to the subscribers , and spend the money subscribed towards supporting more of the children of Freemasons in the Girls' School than they did at present . It

was not their duly to accumulate the subscriptions . The Girls' School hael now . £ 39 , 000 invested . It was not doing their duty to allow this sum to realise three per cent . ; it ought to bc spent on the children . It had be ea said that' £ 10 , 000 was about to be spent in alterations iand enlargements at the school , and that this would reduce the invested sum to £ 29 , 000 . But let them at once take

in more girls , and not wait for the completion of the alterations . He was only going to ask them to take in ten more girls . There were now 132 girls in the school . He wanted them to make it 162 ; and he was quite certain that by so doing they would be conferring a benefit on the Craft , the institution , the widows who were left with the children , and on the children themselves by fitting them

for the performance of the duties of life . The thing so commended itself to the reason and feelings of the brethren , and to their favourable consideration , that he would not waste time by saying more upon the subject . Bro . Robert Kenyon seconded the motion . He thought it recommended itself to the good heart of every Governor of this institution , arid he was quite sure it recommended

itself to their intelligence . Bro . Thomas VV . White , a member of the House Committee , and its chairman for the month , thought it was a great pity that Bro . Stewart had not given the House Committee some inkling of his intention to bring this motion forward , that they might have been able to discusss it at their last meeting . They were now building at

considerable expense large additional buildings . The contract was signed , and the building was to bc completed by lhe ist of May . There was the usual strike clause in the contract , so that if a strike occurred the work might be delayed a few months longer . There would be a junction with one of the dormitories which held ig children , and when the wall of that dormitory was broken through

the 19 children would be removed into the infirmary . Already there were five childrcnthere , and this would increase the number to 24 . It would hold 49 , half in the infectious and half in the non-infectious ward . The two were cut off from each other ; and as it would not be desirable to place the children in the infectious ward , 24 would fill tbe non-infectious . He did not therefore see how they could

make room for another ten , and he hoped the brethren would pause before passing this resolution . Bro . Pierce Egan could not see that this was a question for the House Committee at all , but for the . Governors . There were great appliances at the institution which ought to bc utilised . He had been a Mason thirty years , and had watched with great interest the progress of the schools .

T he Boys' School owing to the great enterprise of Bro . Binckes , and thanks to the brethren who supported him , they were able to increase the number of boys in the school to 181 , and every year the subscriptions which came in were something startling . He remembered the time when it was considered a most gratifying result of a festival if they give £ 3500 . The Boys' School festival of

this year had just produced £ 12 , 300 ; and the three institutions altogether had received £ 32 , 000 this * year . ~ i , With such a fact before them he thought the brethren need l ^ avc no fear of the future , which would probably give them the power to have 200 children in the school . These were only small difficulties about not having room . There was always a way across a stream , even if there was not a

bridge ; but this difficulty about not having room was only a puddle which might be stepped over . I lis feelings were very strong against a large sum such as the Girls ' School had , being shut up . Bro . Meggy hoped that the admission of the proposed ten girls would not lessen the number of those who were to be elected in October . The Chairman : No I

Bro . C . F . Matier thought the ail mission of the extra number of girls would be satisfactory to thebrethren throughout the counlry . The Chairman said that he found instead of the Institution having £ 30 , , it had £ 42 , 000 . The resolution need not be negatived on the ground of want of funds . The only question was the accommodation in the infirmary .

He gathered that there was room for forty-nine girls there . He thought that the ten might be accommodated somehow , a partition being put between the infectious wards and the non-infectious . There was one thing he regretted . He thought it a pity that Bro . Stewart did not first go to the House Committee before bringing on his motion , ^ nd lay the matter before them . However , this was n 6 reason

“The Freemason: 1876-07-15, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_15071876/page/9/.
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Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Mark Masonry. Article 4
Red Cross of Constantine. Article 4
Scotland. Article 4
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF HERTFORD. Article 4
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 5
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 5
Untitled Article 6
TO OUR READERS. Article 6
TO ADVERTISERS. Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
THE PROGRESS OF THE CONTROVERSY. Article 6
PEACE OR WAR. Article 6
NOTICE TO CONTRIBUTORS AND CORRESPONDENTS. Article 6
ANOTHER PAMPHLET. Article 7
Original Correspondence. Article 8
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 9
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 10
Obituary. Article 10
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN GLASGOW AND WEST OF SCOTLAND. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN EDINBURGH AND VICINITY. Article 10
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Original Correspondence.

• s f or an exposition of the general law in its practical anplical ion to cases constantly recurring . Should such a course be taken , however , I am far from saying ( and I am sure "W . S . L . " will agree with me ) that its legality would be absolutely unarguable , notwithstanding the eminent authority that has according to common report , put a gloss upon the constitution which

seems to go beyond the foundation afforded by the text . But I have promised to show that , to support what I may call head-quarters' reading , the text not only requires til ' s interpolation of the word " regular , " but the addition of the word " meeting . " I proceed to do so . In one sense it might be maintained perhaps that even an emergency meeting was a regular meeting . It is

certainly a regular lodge , for our traditional law teaches us that it cannot be duly held without a certain strictly defined formality being observed , compliance with which wc are taught alone renders the lodge regular , but the correctness of the contention of the authoritative expositors involves that a proposition for joining can only be made in open lodge at a regular lodge meeting , which is an

implied extension of the term lodge , for a lodge is made regular by the presence of that which must absolutely be materially and actually in the room at the time . Now this presence obviously cannot convert an emergency meeting into a regular lodge meeting , however essential it may he to render any lodge , ordinary or emergent , regular . A regular lodge includes both regular and emergency

meetings . A regular lodge meeting ( with one exception , to which I will presently refer ) must thus be ruled to be restricted to a meeting held on a day specified in the text ot the warrant or charter of incorporation . The exception js a consecration , which is commonly held on a day not specified in the charter , and would therefore , pi una . facie , seem to be a meeting coming within the

category of emergency , however it is well known ( I take it as conceded on all sides ) that propositions both for members jcliiing and initiating candidates are legally receivable at a consecration meeting ; but here the distinction is said to be that at a consecration the presence of the M . W . the G . M ., either in person or by duly constituted ileputy , renders the meeting regular . Still , I own myself not quite

satisfied on such a point as this , purely started as an illus tration ex hopolhesi , would such an attendance on another occasion than a consecration , convert what had been convened as an emergency meeting into a regular meeting , so as to legalize the receipt of propositions ? I hope I shall not be considered as writing dogmatically . I only profess to give the results of the information I have

taken some pains to acquire . I would not for a moment pretend to speak ex cathedra . The lex scripta and lex non ¦ xripta , alike bristle with difficulties ; and I am sure I for one most sincerely feel that all our thanks ari due to W . S . L . for re-directing attention to this most interesting part of Masonic jurisprudence . It is , I think , much to be regretted that our Book of

Constitutions is not examined and revised , so as to bring it more in ' . n accord with the present circumstances of the Craft , and in directness and simplicity more immediately availal b for the guidance of all its members . Good easy men , comparatively few in numbers , and less exposed , therefore , to complication of interests and clashing of objects , might , in the old times ,

have found no inconvenience in living under laws interpicted by inference , deduction , suggestion , and construction nf one section by another divided from it by a score or two uf pages ; but , in the present day , when our brotherhood is numbered by hundreds of thousands—when men of high education , of tact , shrewdness , and business ability , aio constantly under the necessity of referring for

direclii n to its lex scripta , it is in the last degree desirable that the source of their knowledge should appear in grammatical , exact , and unambiguous phraseology , and , if necessary and convenient for men personally able to construe language , how much more desirable is such clearness for our less highly-gifted brethren , who look to direct atlbority as a protection from bitter , profitless , and tedious

testual disputes ? A law that is hazy and equivocal , that can only bc interpreted by conjectures as to its meaning , by cross references , tradition often inaccuratelyhanded down . suggestion , inference , deduction , and , worst of all , the weak argument in justification of ambiguity ab inconveniendi , is a law that ,

failing- any enforcible sanction and depending for its exposition on varying individual opinion , ceases to be useful as a rule of conduct , and as often mischievously misleads as properly directs . The joint under discussion is not the only one that gives rise to varying interpretations of our code , as any r . cmbcr of the two boards will bear me witness . lt

seems very plausible to say " Oh , our laws were never intended to be scanned by microscopic eyes—brethren , u ~ f , f honour , men of the world , would know well enough Wi -at it means j we don ' t want any legal technicalities , no iv . tyfogg ing hair splitting , " but the more honourable ncn are the more likely are they not to come to a conclusion without good reasons well thought out , and the less jl . © - ¦ - »*¦* •—*»• # »*•«__ # MVII fcllUU ^ IIV vuij U 1 IU int . UU

Kely they are to abandon a construction so conscientiously rrived at ; and , where phraseology is capable of two instructions , it must be looked for that , however honour-^ 'c men may be , they will sometimes differ as to which i I r ' ; ll is a cheap and easy indulgence to sneer at a ' yer s anxiety for clearness of definition and simplicity and curacy of expression , and perhaps professionally that ctyis

if f 1 ' n ° t unnaturally kept within sufficient control , for frien I T " makes his own W 'H ' s the lawyer ' s best tialc ¦ ' analo & yithe statute which is a compound of the } c en "E non-professional men thinking of one subject and bieh 8 ^ fcman desiderating another , should stand very prov . ' ? - i ? ffcctions of the lawyer , who has attained the tonnf-l thlrd stage in the legal career—a period when , ' neon , ¦ eu Phuistic » ll y > an augmentation of professional t icner ' a" ° biect not wh < % - indifferent to the practi-

Original Correspondence.

But to rule and govern the Craft by " it has always been understood , " or " it is implied , " or " we construe it thus or thus , " is a system which it can be no one ' s interest to maintain . lt reminds me of the old theory of the administration of equity . Two hundred years ago equity was derisively said to be as the size of the Chancellor ' s foot . Some Chancellor shall have

a wide foot , some a narrow , some a long foot , some a short , some a high instep , some a flat sole . According to the size and shape , of my lord's shoe so shall the Chancery suitor get his relief dealt unto him . " It is , however , no use discussing an evil without suggesting a remedy . Let Grand Lodge elect a committee from among the highly educated men who adorn it as

members , and instruct this body to make a thorough and careful revision of the whole code , suggesting corrections or even alterations where necessary , and not shrinking from expanding by explanations or definitions . When finished let the proof-sheets of the suggested new edition of the Book of Constitutions bc sent to every lodge under the English constitution , inviting suggestions and

commentaries . These received , let thcrn be considered by the committee , and their conclusions , in the shape of a report embodying the re-edited work , be laid before Grand Lodge to be dealt with according to its wisdom . Such an enterprise would take years to complete , but they would be years well employed . It would cost money , but it would bc money well spent , and the boon to the Craft at large

wouleTbe invaluable . However , rcvenono u nos nionlons , I think that with the kind assistance of "W . S . L . " we have at last get a true and plain reading of the exact law on the point we have had under discussion , which may be thus summarised : — A brother as a joining member must be viva voce proposed at one regular open lodge meeting and balloted

for at the next regular lodge meeting . To this rule there is no exception . A candidate for initiation must be vivi voce proposed at one regular lodge meeting , <»• at an emergency meeting , if the intention to propose him has been announced in the circular convening the emergency meeting , and balloted for at the next regular lodge meeting , or at an emergency meeting , if the intention to ballot for him has' with all

necessary particulars , been expressed in the circular convening such regular or emergency meeting . To this rule there is the exception that under ciicumstances of emergency , ot the stringency of which the W . M . is the sole judge , and certain well-known conditions being complied with , the nomination may be by writing out of lodge , instead of ri ' ra eoee in open lodge , and initiation , on a successful ballot , may take place at the next regular or emergency meeting uf the lodge . Yours fraternally , S . P ., P . M ., & c , & c .

Royal Masonic Institution For Girls.

ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS .

The Q laiterly Court uf the supporters of this Institution was held last Saturday in the Board-room , Freemasons ' Hall . Bro . J . M . Clabon , P . G . Deacon , presided over the meeting , which was composed of , among others , Bros . H . Hacker , C . F . Matier , Raynham W . Stewart , Pierce Egan , F . B . Davage , F . Adlard , R . Kenyon , Griffiths

Smith , A . 11 . Fothcrshall , H . A . Dubois , C . A . Cottebrune , Hyde Pullen , Capt . Philips , II . Moore , L . Ruf , G . Bolton , J . Roper , J . F . Peacock , G . M . E . Snow , S . G . Foxall , D . Beare , E . Harris , II . M . Smith , Dr . Hogg , R . W . Wheeler , W . Roebuck , T . Meggy , H . Massey , ( " Freemason" ) , W . Hedges , and R . W . Little , Secretary .

After the reading of the minutes of the meetings of the committees , the particulars of which have appeared in the " Freemason , " Bro . G . M . E . Snow rose to move " That commission be allowed to the collector upon such sums only as he collects and gives receipts for , and not upon donations or subscriptions paid to the Secretary . " He said that at a

late Quarterly Court , having a large cheque to hand in to the Institution , he asked the Chairman of the meeting whether if he paid it there and then to the Secretary the collector would receive his commission on ifc , and he was told that he would . This appeared » o him a great abuse , as well as an incentive to laziness , for instead of going out to collect subscriptions he might sit at home . Every

man was worthy of his hire ; but he should bc paid for what he did , and not for what he did not . Other institutions of a similar character to the Masonic Girls' School . had no such thing connected with them . In the Merchant Seamen ' s Orphan Asylum , which only admitted children of merchant seamen , there was no commission paid to the Secretary except on subscriptions which he was solely

instrumental in obtaining , and then it was only a small per centage , till it reached the sum of five shillings , and however large the subscription might be , the commission never exceeded the total sum of five shillings . At the Masonic Boys' School no commission was allowed to the collector if the subscription was paid at the office . Why , after a Steward had taken the trouble to go round to his

friends and obtain donations for the Institution , which he paid in at the Secretary ' s office , should commission be paid to the collector when he did not even know who sent the money ? it was wrong in principle , and he therefore brought forward his motion . If any brother suggested that a committee be appointed to enquire into the subject

of the collector ' s duties and remuneration , he would be pleased to support that if it was brought forward as a motion , and withdraw his own . Bro . Raynham W . Stewart said he should be happy to second the motion of Bro . Snow , but he mi ght say that as Bro . Muggeridge , the collector , had resigned , as they had just heard from the minutes , he thought a committee should

Royal Masonic Institution For Girls.

be appointed to consider the question of the collector ' s duties and pay , and whether it was necessary to have a collector at all . If Bro . Snow withdrew his original motion he , Bro . Stewart , would move in accordance with jtjiis view . Bro . Thomas W . White referred to the printed rules of the Institution , which provided that on the occurrence pf a

vacancy the General Committee might cause enquiries to be made into the office . The Chairman said he was unable to come to a conclusion that day on the subject , and he would suggest that there should be a general enquiry first . Bro . Snow would say that when he gave notice of his motion he did not know that Bro . Muggeridge was going

to resign . He should be happy to withdraw his motion . Bro . Snow ' s motion was then withdrawn . Bro . Raynham W . Stewart moved "That considering the satisfactory condition of the funds of this school , ten of the unsuccessful candidates at the last election highest on the poll be admitted without further election at the same time as those already elected , and that arrangements be

made for their reception in the infirmary until the alterations , now in progress at the school be completed . " In bringing the motion forward , he said he felt that ithe managers of the institution were bound to perform an act of justice to the subscribers , and spend the money subscribed towards supporting more of the children of Freemasons in the Girls' School than they did at present . It

was not their duly to accumulate the subscriptions . The Girls' School hael now . £ 39 , 000 invested . It was not doing their duty to allow this sum to realise three per cent . ; it ought to bc spent on the children . It had be ea said that' £ 10 , 000 was about to be spent in alterations iand enlargements at the school , and that this would reduce the invested sum to £ 29 , 000 . But let them at once take

in more girls , and not wait for the completion of the alterations . He was only going to ask them to take in ten more girls . There were now 132 girls in the school . He wanted them to make it 162 ; and he was quite certain that by so doing they would be conferring a benefit on the Craft , the institution , the widows who were left with the children , and on the children themselves by fitting them

for the performance of the duties of life . The thing so commended itself to the reason and feelings of the brethren , and to their favourable consideration , that he would not waste time by saying more upon the subject . Bro . Robert Kenyon seconded the motion . He thought it recommended itself to the good heart of every Governor of this institution , arid he was quite sure it recommended

itself to their intelligence . Bro . Thomas VV . White , a member of the House Committee , and its chairman for the month , thought it was a great pity that Bro . Stewart had not given the House Committee some inkling of his intention to bring this motion forward , that they might have been able to discusss it at their last meeting . They were now building at

considerable expense large additional buildings . The contract was signed , and the building was to bc completed by lhe ist of May . There was the usual strike clause in the contract , so that if a strike occurred the work might be delayed a few months longer . There would be a junction with one of the dormitories which held ig children , and when the wall of that dormitory was broken through

the 19 children would be removed into the infirmary . Already there were five childrcnthere , and this would increase the number to 24 . It would hold 49 , half in the infectious and half in the non-infectious ward . The two were cut off from each other ; and as it would not be desirable to place the children in the infectious ward , 24 would fill tbe non-infectious . He did not therefore see how they could

make room for another ten , and he hoped the brethren would pause before passing this resolution . Bro . Pierce Egan could not see that this was a question for the House Committee at all , but for the . Governors . There were great appliances at the institution which ought to bc utilised . He had been a Mason thirty years , and had watched with great interest the progress of the schools .

T he Boys' School owing to the great enterprise of Bro . Binckes , and thanks to the brethren who supported him , they were able to increase the number of boys in the school to 181 , and every year the subscriptions which came in were something startling . He remembered the time when it was considered a most gratifying result of a festival if they give £ 3500 . The Boys' School festival of

this year had just produced £ 12 , 300 ; and the three institutions altogether had received £ 32 , 000 this * year . ~ i , With such a fact before them he thought the brethren need l ^ avc no fear of the future , which would probably give them the power to have 200 children in the school . These were only small difficulties about not having room . There was always a way across a stream , even if there was not a

bridge ; but this difficulty about not having room was only a puddle which might be stepped over . I lis feelings were very strong against a large sum such as the Girls ' School had , being shut up . Bro . Meggy hoped that the admission of the proposed ten girls would not lessen the number of those who were to be elected in October . The Chairman : No I

Bro . C . F . Matier thought the ail mission of the extra number of girls would be satisfactory to thebrethren throughout the counlry . The Chairman said that he found instead of the Institution having £ 30 , , it had £ 42 , 000 . The resolution need not be negatived on the ground of want of funds . The only question was the accommodation in the infirmary .

He gathered that there was room for forty-nine girls there . He thought that the ten might be accommodated somehow , a partition being put between the infectious wards and the non-infectious . There was one thing he regretted . He thought it a pity that Bro . Stewart did not first go to the House Committee before bringing on his motion , ^ nd lay the matter before them . However , this was n 6 reason

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