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  • Feb. 18, 1888
  • Page 8
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The Freemason, Feb. 18, 1888: Page 8

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    Article Original Correspondence. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES': Page 1 of 1
    Article REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Page 1 of 6
    Article REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Page 1 of 6 →
Page 8

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

Original Correspondence.

Pocket Companion , 1735 , which contains a List of 1734 , the lodge appears to have moved to the " Dolphin , in the City of Chichester " ( called a " Whale " in Smith ' s Pocket Companion of 1737 , in error ) , the Engraved List of 1734 also having " 31 , Dolphin , City of Chichester , Third Friday in the month . " In 1736 , while at the same place , the date of Constitution is for the first time noted as "Jul : 17 , 1724 . "

A MS . note on the official copy of the Engraved List of 1736 states " To the White Horse , " but as the 1737 List still has the " Dolphin , " the removal was probably not made until late in 1737 or ear ' y ' ' 73 8 , the Engraved List for the latter year recording " 31 , VVhite Horse , City of Chichester , Third Friday in the month . Jul : 17 , 1724 . " I shall be glad of any further information about this old lodge . —Yours fraternally , JNO . LANE . Torquay , February nth .

"A QUESTION OF CUSTOM . " To the Editor of the "Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , Referring to the letters of "Past Master" and "An Installing Master" in your issue of nth inst ., in reply to the enquiry of "Cap" in a previous issue , it is

not a little surprising that the opinions contained in the two letters above referred to should be so much at variance . Book of Constitutions , Clause 141 , puts the relative positions of the W . M ., I . P . M ., and Senior P . M ., I think , pretty clear , yet I know there are some who argue that it does not apply in the case of an installation , though why it does not they cannot tell—and this difference of opinion ,

1 am afraid , leads occasionally to jealousy and unpleasantness . One affirming the W . M . has the power to nominate thc Installing Master of his successor . Another says it is a matter for the W . M . elect to decide ; a third that it is the prerogative of the Senior P . M . of the lodge who knows thc ceremony ; and a fourth , that it is the right of the I . P . M . In an instance of this kind recently—in which a

Senior P . M . threatened to take the work out of the hands of the I . P . M . at a certain part of the ceremony , I sought the opinion of the greatest Masonic authority in the land , and this was his ruling— "If the W . M . does not instal , and therefore hands over the gavel , it is the clear right of the I . P . M . to assume the chair and perform the ceremony , and

having begun it , he is entitled to fimsn it without interruption . " _ This is a thoroughly constitutional and common sense view of the matter , and needs no comment . —Yours fraternally , W . M . February 13 th .

THE MASONIC CHARITIES .-A SUGGESTION . To the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , I think there is no doubt Bro . Vallentine has struck the right note in suggesting , in his letter of last week , that some general scheme should be formed and adopted for strengthening the permanent income of our Institutions .

If this part of their resources were enlarged , there would be less necessity for the tremendous appeals which it is the duty of the Secretaries to make annually for the funds required for the year . But I imagine his plan would be found difficult of execution . In the first place , the thing would have to be done voluntarily , and the proposition submitted to and approved by some 1500 lodg-es , the

Colonial lodges , I presume , Lemg excluded from the calculation . But will you succeed in inducing 1500 separate and distinct bodies to act unanimously in such a matter ; and if you do , what security is there that they will always be unanimous and the income required be permanently forthcoming ? You cannot compel a lodge , which has the right to alter and amend its own by-laws within the limits

of the general law , to give voluntarily a guinea per annum in perpetuity , and unless you can do this , or something of this kind , you will nut secure that permanency of income which is so desirable . Again , there are many lodges which may be said to be always giving , so frequent and so generous are their contributions , while others give nothing . But may you not , in your efforts to secure the

annual guineas of the latter , succeed in diverting from the coffers of the Institutions many of the periodically voted guineas of the former , which , though willing enough to give freely , may resent the notion of anything that esembles a forced levy ? Then there are sundry provinces which bear a great part of their own charitable burdens , to the relief of the Central Charities . Must these be

called upon to contribute equally with others which look entirely to the Central Charities for the assistance necessary for the distress in their midst ? I mention these things for the mere purpose of showing the difficulties in the way of adopting such a scheme as Bro . Vallentine suggests . But it is not because a thing is difficult that it should not be attempted , and if Bro . Vallentine thinks 1500 lodges

can be brought to agree upon his proposal , it would be worth making the trial . As regards the Girls' and Boys' Schools , which are less favourably circumstanced in the matter of permanent income than the Benevolent Institution , I think a better plan for strengthening them would be for Grand Lodge to increase its annual grant of X 150 , which has remained at

the same figure for half-a-century , while the Male Fund of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution has had its grant doubled since 1 S 42 , and the Widows' Fund has had its grant of £ 100 in 1 S 49 increased to ^ , ' Soo . When 50 years ago Grand Lodge arranged to make a fixed instead of a varying yearly contribution to the funds of each

school , the sum of £ 150 a year represented a fair and even liberal commutation for the varying capitation payments previously made ; but English Freemasonry and its Institutions have developed amazingly during the Victorian era , and £ 1000 would not be an excessive annual grant to each school now-a-days , while it might certainly be looked upon as permanent income . —Fraternally yours , 0 .

Prince Oscar of Sweden and Norway visited the West India Docks , on Monday afternoon , for the purpose of opening the Scandinavian Sailors' Temperance Home . His Royal Highness experienced a very enthusiastic reception , and expressed himself as being delighted with the jarrangements made for the comfort and convenience of the nmates of the new institution .

Masonic Notes And Queries':

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES' :

7 C 0 ] A NEW MS . CONSTITUTION . Students may be interested to learn that , having occasion to see Mr . Fenwick , of Cheltenham , respecting the so-called Wilson MSS . No . 1 and 2 , in his possession , I lately discovered a third version of the Old Charges in his extensive collection of 30 , 000 MSS . It is a thin Svo ., beautifully written in copperplate style , bound in a marbled paper

cover , and possesses some points of interest peculiar to it itself . It is catalogued Phillipps MS ., No . 18 , 851 , and probably of date circa 1750 . I am in possession of a transcript , which I have forwarded to Bro . Hughan for examination , with the request that he will report in these columns . The MSS . will appear in due course in Vol . III . of Quatuor

Coronati Reprints , which will contain in one volume exact transcripts of every known version of these documents . I am sorry to add that , for reasons too lengthy to enter into here , I am convinced that the version hitherto known to us all as the Wilson MS ., is not that celebrated document at all , which still awaits discovery . G . W . SPETH , Sec . Quatuor Coronal ! .

Reports Of Masonic Meetings.

REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS .

( Craft jlasourg , ROYAL ATHELSTAN LODGE ( No . 19 ) . — The installation meeting of this lodge ( date of Constitution 1769 ) was held on the gth inst ., at the Cannon-street Hotel . Ihere were present Bros . John Glenn , W . M . ; G . H . Hoyle , S . W . ; B . Starling , P . M ., Treas . ; C . B . Barnes , P . M ., Sec . ; £ N . Nicholson , S . D . ; Arthur Wormull , J . D . ; A . A . Angier , I . G . ; W . M . Bywater , P . M ., P . G . S . B .,

D . C ; William Pound , P . M ., Stwd . ; George Campion , P . M ., Stwd . ; H . Glenn , P . M . ; John Charles , P . M . ; G . Sneath , P . M . ; Daniel Nicholson , P . M . ; George Corderoy , P . M . ; James Dix , P . M . ; F . E . W . Collard , P . M . ; Arthur D . Green , A . R . Ramsey , W . Stauffer , F . Aires , H . Poston , W . S . Pound , E . G . Young , R . W . Bilby , M . Smith , F . W . W . Honischer , and others . Visitors : Bros . R . F . Gould , P . G . D . ; Dr . Woodman ,

P . G . Swd . Br . ; James Terry , P . G . S . B ., Secretary of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution ; J . H . Scholfield , P . M . 3 63 ; J . E . Sheffield , 1 S 97 ; R . H . Hepburn , 671 ; T . Coote , 373 ; W . Iron , H . D . Marshall , 771 ; W . Heath , 766 ; Geo . R . Green , 173 ; Chas . Kempton , 12 S 7 ; H . G . James , 1724 ; Chas . Browning , 1491 ; J . A . Fielden , 373 ; W . Lord , 30 S ; J . R . Clippertcn , 66 ; H .

Clarke , 1 S 27 ; Geo . Challen , 211 ; T . Archer , C . J . Hinton , A . Hoare , C . H . Crook , Stanley Smith , 1765 ; and George Kenning , P . M . 192 , 1657 , P . P . G . D . Middx . The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed . The Auditor's report was received and adopted . A Committee was appointed to take into consideration the most suitable way , permanently , to record the esteem and

veneration which the brethren feel for the father of the lodge , Bro . B . Starling , P . M ., on his retirement from the office of Treasurer , after 30 years service . Bro . Starling was initiated November , 1841 , served as VV . M . 184 S . Bro . John Glenn installed Bro . George Hardman Hoyle as W . M . for the ensuing year , the ceremony being very impressively performed . The newly installed W . M . appointed and invested his

officers as follows : Bros . John Glenn , I . P . M . ; W . Nicholson , S . VV . ; Arthur Wormall , J . W . ; W . M . Bywater , P . M ., Treas . j C . B . Barnes , P . M ., Sec ; Athelstan A . Angier , S . D . ; R . W . Bilby , J . D . ; A . R . Ramsey , I . G . ; W . Pound , P . M ., Stwd . ; John Charles , P . M ., D . C ; and G . Gilbert , Tyler . Bro . John Glenn presented a

beautiful banner ( manufactured by Bro . George Kenning ) , to the lodge to replace the one that had been lost . The brethren were exceedingly pleased and grateful for so valuable a gift . The brethren dined together , presided over by Bro . G . H . Hoyle . Bro . R . F . Gould , P . G . D ., responded for "The Grand Officers . "

Bro . W . M . Bywater proposed the toast of "The Visitors , " to which Bro . Dr . Woodman , P . G . S . B ., replied . The toast of " The Charities " was proposed in a forcible speech by Bro . H . Glenn , P . M ., and responded to by Bro . James Terry , P . G . S . B ., Secretary Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution . A programme of music was performed , under the direction

of Bro . A . W . S . Hoare , assisted by Bros . G . Hoare , John King , W . Kessell , S . Smith , and M . Wilkinson . The banquet was admirably served under the superintendence of Bro . H . P . Kilby . A gold P . M . ' s jewel was presented to Bro . John Glenn , in recognition of the able services rendered to the lodge during the past year . We congratulate the lodge on its election of Bro . W . M .

Bywater as Treasurer , in succession to Bro . Starling , father of the lodge , who has resigned the office after an unbroken tenure of 30 years . Bro . Bywater has not only achieved distinction in thelodge , and been rewarded for his long and faithful services with the purple of Grand Lodge , but he is also well-known in Masonic literary circles , by his biographical sketch of Lawrence , and , what is more to the

purpose on the present occasion , by his short , but admirable , " History of the Royal Athelstan Lodge , " which he compiled and read at its Centenary Festival on the 27 th February , 1 S 69 , and for which and for his other services he was subsequently honoured by the lodge with a special vote of thanks and testimonial . This history , though

written at a time when the same degree of interest as now was not taken in such compilations , is a creditable performance , being clear and accurate , without being overladen with detail , and we trust its worthy author ' s connection with the lodge , whose career he has so ably sketched , may be prolonged for many years .

ROBERT BURNS LODGE ( No . 25 ) . —The usual monthly meeting of this lodge was held at the Freemasons' Hall , on Monday , the 6 th inst ., when there were present Bros . Walter Wingham , W . M . j G . Deaton , S . W . ; E . J . Wall , J . W . ; J . Lindner , Treas . ; John

Reports Of Masonic Meetings.

mmmm Dyte , Sec ; J . L . Jaquet , J . D . ; H . R . Maynard , I . G . j G . F . Smith , Org . ; J . C . Hodson , Assist . Sec ; T . ] Robins , P . M . ; G . Moorcroft , P . M . j J . W . Harvey P . M . j F . G . Baker , P . M . ; Thos . Hawkins , P . M . ; F . G . Deaton , R . S . Home , A . Wingham , and S . Burton . Visitors : Bros . J . Shipley , P . M . 30 J F . j ' Eedle , W . M . elect 1441 j and Wm . Roots , 1273 . The lodge was opened , and the minutes of the last

meeting read and confirmed . Bro . R . S . Home was raised to the Degree of M . M ., and Bros . Arthur Wingham and S . E . Burton passed to the Second Degree . After the despatch of other business the lodge was closed . The brethren then adjourned to the Freemasons' Tavern and enjoyed a capital supper , followed by a few short speeches and many excellent songs , amongst which Burns ' " Auld lang syne " was made a feature .

TEMPLE LODGE ( No . 101 ) . —The installation meeting of this old lodge was held on Tuesday evening , the 7 th inst ., at thc Ship and Turtle , under the presidency of the W . M ., Bro . E . S . Lardner . The meeting was numerously attended , and the W . M . was supported byamong others—the following * brethren : Bros . T . A . Bullock I . P . M . ; J . Round , S . W . ; T . G . Beard , J . W . j J . ivi

nono , r .., rreas . j n . J . Keynolds , F . M ., Sec ; R . J . P . Wilson , S . D . ; S . Blofeld , I . G . j F . N . Isaacson , Org . ; F . Williams , Steward ; H . Brandon White , P . M . ; J . Henwood Thomas , P . M . ; T . E . Taylor , P . M . ; H F . Youle , P . M . ; H . J . Hastelow , P . M . ; and E . J . Altman , P . M . The visitors were Bros . Sidney Martin , I . P . M . 404 F . Oldfield , J . W . 134 ; W . M . Scarlett , I . G . 1471 j E Prendergast , 569 ; H . Massey , P . M . 610 and J 92 S ; E

Isaacson , iSS ; A . J . Berry , P . M . 1695 ; L . Lazarus , P . M . and Sec ; L . M . Myers , P . M . j and I . Myers , S . D ., of iSS ; A . Durrant , I . P . M . 569 ; J . M . Bastone , P . M . I 86 IJ H . C . Richards , 2029 j R . Birkett , 569 ; and J . K . Boddy , 1922 . After the formal opening of the lodge and the confirmation of the minutes of the last regular and emergency

meetings , the W . M . had presented to him by Bro . Hastelow , P . M ., Bro . John Round , who had been duly elected to serve as Master of the lodge for the ensuing year . Bro . Lardner then proceeded with the early part of the ceremony , and installed Bro . Round as Master of the lodge for the year . The following brethren were invested as his officers : Bros . Geo . Beard , S . W . ; R . 1 . P .

VVilson , J . W . j J . Henwood Thomas , P . M ., Treas . ; Edwin S . Lardner , I . P . M ., Sec ; S . Blofeld , S . D . ; Jas . Minter Flegg , J . D . ; H . Vernon , I . G . j H . Hastelow , P . M ., D . C ; Frank Williams , Stwd . ; Frank Isaacson , Org . ; and Robt . F . Potter , P . M . 749 , Tyler . The I . P . M . next delivered the addresses , and completed one of the finest performances of the ceremony of installation ever

witnessed , with as great success as he had commenced it . He was loudly applauded by the brethren when he resumed his seat to the lelt of the W . M . . Bro . Taylor , P . M ., next proposed , and Bro . J . J . Carney seconded , a vote of thanks to bro . Bond , Past Treasurer , and Bro . Reynolds , Past Secretary , for the admirable way in which they had served the lodge in their respective posts for several

years . The motion was most heartily agreed to , and Bros . Bond and Reynolds acknowledged the compliment in graceful terms , assuring the brethren that though they retired after many years of active duty , their only reason for doing so was to give other brethren a chance , and they felt assured that , in the hands of Bros . Thomas and Lardner , both P . M . 's of thelodge , the interests of the lodge would

be well looked alter . A vote of condolence to Bro . j . Horatio Wynne , on the death of his brother William , was also passed . The lodge afterwards was closed , and the brethren adjourned to a sumptuous banquet , provided by Bros . C . and A . Painter , and superintended by their popular manager , Bro . E . Ashby , with his accustomed activity and attention .

The usual toasts followed , interspersed with some beautiful singing by Miss Rose Jacobs and Miss May Isaacson , Bro . James Minter Flegg , and Bro . Frank Williams , with Bro . Isaacson , Organist , at the piano , who also played some lovely solos . After the toasts of " The Queen and the Craft ; " " The M . W . G . M . ; " "The Pro G . M ., and the other Grand

Officers , Present and Past , " had been honoured , Bro . Lardner proposed "The W . M ., " and in doing so he said that under the circumstance of being a king dethroned he occupied rather an awkward position . Perhaps one of the most peculiar positions a king had been known to occupy , was , when it was said "The King is dead ;" " Long live the King ; " but the position of a dethroned

king in a lodge was that he was still among the brethren to hear what the brethren had to say with respect to the monarch who had recently left the chair . He had to propose the health of the VV . M . The W . M . 's of all lodges required at the hands of all the brethren a help and guidance which could only come from experience , and he trusted the brethren would all be prepared to help the

W . M . through the coming year , in order that it might be a happy and prosperous year to the lodge . Of course he spoke in an interested view , having assumed new duties , but he felt it more to his heart at the present time that they hoped and trusted the coming year would a prosperous year , for the Master a happy year , and for the lodge a pleasant year , and that it might redound to the prosperity

of the lodge was his dearest wish . TheW . M ., in reply , said he had been onlv seven years in the lodge . He had filled thedifferentofficesof thelodge , and he had tried in each office to fill it in rotation . He trusted he had done so to the satisfaction of the brethren . He had attained to the position of W . M ., and in that position he hoped he should do so to the best of his ability .

If he attained to the position of P . M ., he should do his best to support the W . M . He hoped the officers would stand by him during his year of office . The Worshipful Master , in proposing " The I . P . M . and Installing Master , " said the way the work had been done that evening by the I . P . M . reflected great credit on the lodge . He was happy to find that the officers went on in rotation . He was sure no one would find fault with the

way in which Bro . Lardner performed his work , and he had much pleasure in investing him with a P . M . 's jewel , which had been voted by the members of the lodge , for there never was a lodge more grateful for the offices rendered , and never was there a jewel more worthily or properly earned . He now placed the jewel on Bro . Lardner ' s breast , and he could only say that Bro . Lardner had been a credit to the lodge . He was sure he would continue to be so ,

“The Freemason: 1888-02-18, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_18021888/page/8/.
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
DRURY LANE LODGE, No. 2127. Article 2
CONSECRATION OF THE CONCORD CHAPTER, No. 632. Article 5
"ARS QUATUOR CORONATORUM." Article 5
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To Correspondents. Article 7
Untitled Article 7
Original Correspondence. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES': Article 8
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 8
INSTRUCTION. Article 13
Royal Arch. Article 14
INSTRUCTION. Article 14
Mark Masonry. Article 14
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 14
THE THIRD ANNUAL BALL OF THE SELWYN LODGE, No. 1901. Article 15
MASONIC BALL, LEICESTER. Article 15
THE LIVERPOOL MASONIC HALL. Article 15
WEST LANCASHIRE MASONIC EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION. Article 15
ALPASS BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 15
HISTORY OF THE LODGE OF UNANIMITY AND SINCERITY, No. 26I. Article 15
Obituary. Article 15
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 16
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Original Correspondence.

Pocket Companion , 1735 , which contains a List of 1734 , the lodge appears to have moved to the " Dolphin , in the City of Chichester " ( called a " Whale " in Smith ' s Pocket Companion of 1737 , in error ) , the Engraved List of 1734 also having " 31 , Dolphin , City of Chichester , Third Friday in the month . " In 1736 , while at the same place , the date of Constitution is for the first time noted as "Jul : 17 , 1724 . "

A MS . note on the official copy of the Engraved List of 1736 states " To the White Horse , " but as the 1737 List still has the " Dolphin , " the removal was probably not made until late in 1737 or ear ' y ' ' 73 8 , the Engraved List for the latter year recording " 31 , VVhite Horse , City of Chichester , Third Friday in the month . Jul : 17 , 1724 . " I shall be glad of any further information about this old lodge . —Yours fraternally , JNO . LANE . Torquay , February nth .

"A QUESTION OF CUSTOM . " To the Editor of the "Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , Referring to the letters of "Past Master" and "An Installing Master" in your issue of nth inst ., in reply to the enquiry of "Cap" in a previous issue , it is

not a little surprising that the opinions contained in the two letters above referred to should be so much at variance . Book of Constitutions , Clause 141 , puts the relative positions of the W . M ., I . P . M ., and Senior P . M ., I think , pretty clear , yet I know there are some who argue that it does not apply in the case of an installation , though why it does not they cannot tell—and this difference of opinion ,

1 am afraid , leads occasionally to jealousy and unpleasantness . One affirming the W . M . has the power to nominate thc Installing Master of his successor . Another says it is a matter for the W . M . elect to decide ; a third that it is the prerogative of the Senior P . M . of the lodge who knows thc ceremony ; and a fourth , that it is the right of the I . P . M . In an instance of this kind recently—in which a

Senior P . M . threatened to take the work out of the hands of the I . P . M . at a certain part of the ceremony , I sought the opinion of the greatest Masonic authority in the land , and this was his ruling— "If the W . M . does not instal , and therefore hands over the gavel , it is the clear right of the I . P . M . to assume the chair and perform the ceremony , and

having begun it , he is entitled to fimsn it without interruption . " _ This is a thoroughly constitutional and common sense view of the matter , and needs no comment . —Yours fraternally , W . M . February 13 th .

THE MASONIC CHARITIES .-A SUGGESTION . To the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , I think there is no doubt Bro . Vallentine has struck the right note in suggesting , in his letter of last week , that some general scheme should be formed and adopted for strengthening the permanent income of our Institutions .

If this part of their resources were enlarged , there would be less necessity for the tremendous appeals which it is the duty of the Secretaries to make annually for the funds required for the year . But I imagine his plan would be found difficult of execution . In the first place , the thing would have to be done voluntarily , and the proposition submitted to and approved by some 1500 lodg-es , the

Colonial lodges , I presume , Lemg excluded from the calculation . But will you succeed in inducing 1500 separate and distinct bodies to act unanimously in such a matter ; and if you do , what security is there that they will always be unanimous and the income required be permanently forthcoming ? You cannot compel a lodge , which has the right to alter and amend its own by-laws within the limits

of the general law , to give voluntarily a guinea per annum in perpetuity , and unless you can do this , or something of this kind , you will nut secure that permanency of income which is so desirable . Again , there are many lodges which may be said to be always giving , so frequent and so generous are their contributions , while others give nothing . But may you not , in your efforts to secure the

annual guineas of the latter , succeed in diverting from the coffers of the Institutions many of the periodically voted guineas of the former , which , though willing enough to give freely , may resent the notion of anything that esembles a forced levy ? Then there are sundry provinces which bear a great part of their own charitable burdens , to the relief of the Central Charities . Must these be

called upon to contribute equally with others which look entirely to the Central Charities for the assistance necessary for the distress in their midst ? I mention these things for the mere purpose of showing the difficulties in the way of adopting such a scheme as Bro . Vallentine suggests . But it is not because a thing is difficult that it should not be attempted , and if Bro . Vallentine thinks 1500 lodges

can be brought to agree upon his proposal , it would be worth making the trial . As regards the Girls' and Boys' Schools , which are less favourably circumstanced in the matter of permanent income than the Benevolent Institution , I think a better plan for strengthening them would be for Grand Lodge to increase its annual grant of X 150 , which has remained at

the same figure for half-a-century , while the Male Fund of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution has had its grant doubled since 1 S 42 , and the Widows' Fund has had its grant of £ 100 in 1 S 49 increased to ^ , ' Soo . When 50 years ago Grand Lodge arranged to make a fixed instead of a varying yearly contribution to the funds of each

school , the sum of £ 150 a year represented a fair and even liberal commutation for the varying capitation payments previously made ; but English Freemasonry and its Institutions have developed amazingly during the Victorian era , and £ 1000 would not be an excessive annual grant to each school now-a-days , while it might certainly be looked upon as permanent income . —Fraternally yours , 0 .

Prince Oscar of Sweden and Norway visited the West India Docks , on Monday afternoon , for the purpose of opening the Scandinavian Sailors' Temperance Home . His Royal Highness experienced a very enthusiastic reception , and expressed himself as being delighted with the jarrangements made for the comfort and convenience of the nmates of the new institution .

Masonic Notes And Queries':

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES' :

7 C 0 ] A NEW MS . CONSTITUTION . Students may be interested to learn that , having occasion to see Mr . Fenwick , of Cheltenham , respecting the so-called Wilson MSS . No . 1 and 2 , in his possession , I lately discovered a third version of the Old Charges in his extensive collection of 30 , 000 MSS . It is a thin Svo ., beautifully written in copperplate style , bound in a marbled paper

cover , and possesses some points of interest peculiar to it itself . It is catalogued Phillipps MS ., No . 18 , 851 , and probably of date circa 1750 . I am in possession of a transcript , which I have forwarded to Bro . Hughan for examination , with the request that he will report in these columns . The MSS . will appear in due course in Vol . III . of Quatuor

Coronati Reprints , which will contain in one volume exact transcripts of every known version of these documents . I am sorry to add that , for reasons too lengthy to enter into here , I am convinced that the version hitherto known to us all as the Wilson MS ., is not that celebrated document at all , which still awaits discovery . G . W . SPETH , Sec . Quatuor Coronal ! .

Reports Of Masonic Meetings.

REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS .

( Craft jlasourg , ROYAL ATHELSTAN LODGE ( No . 19 ) . — The installation meeting of this lodge ( date of Constitution 1769 ) was held on the gth inst ., at the Cannon-street Hotel . Ihere were present Bros . John Glenn , W . M . ; G . H . Hoyle , S . W . ; B . Starling , P . M ., Treas . ; C . B . Barnes , P . M ., Sec . ; £ N . Nicholson , S . D . ; Arthur Wormull , J . D . ; A . A . Angier , I . G . ; W . M . Bywater , P . M ., P . G . S . B .,

D . C ; William Pound , P . M ., Stwd . ; George Campion , P . M ., Stwd . ; H . Glenn , P . M . ; John Charles , P . M . ; G . Sneath , P . M . ; Daniel Nicholson , P . M . ; George Corderoy , P . M . ; James Dix , P . M . ; F . E . W . Collard , P . M . ; Arthur D . Green , A . R . Ramsey , W . Stauffer , F . Aires , H . Poston , W . S . Pound , E . G . Young , R . W . Bilby , M . Smith , F . W . W . Honischer , and others . Visitors : Bros . R . F . Gould , P . G . D . ; Dr . Woodman ,

P . G . Swd . Br . ; James Terry , P . G . S . B ., Secretary of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution ; J . H . Scholfield , P . M . 3 63 ; J . E . Sheffield , 1 S 97 ; R . H . Hepburn , 671 ; T . Coote , 373 ; W . Iron , H . D . Marshall , 771 ; W . Heath , 766 ; Geo . R . Green , 173 ; Chas . Kempton , 12 S 7 ; H . G . James , 1724 ; Chas . Browning , 1491 ; J . A . Fielden , 373 ; W . Lord , 30 S ; J . R . Clippertcn , 66 ; H .

Clarke , 1 S 27 ; Geo . Challen , 211 ; T . Archer , C . J . Hinton , A . Hoare , C . H . Crook , Stanley Smith , 1765 ; and George Kenning , P . M . 192 , 1657 , P . P . G . D . Middx . The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed . The Auditor's report was received and adopted . A Committee was appointed to take into consideration the most suitable way , permanently , to record the esteem and

veneration which the brethren feel for the father of the lodge , Bro . B . Starling , P . M ., on his retirement from the office of Treasurer , after 30 years service . Bro . Starling was initiated November , 1841 , served as VV . M . 184 S . Bro . John Glenn installed Bro . George Hardman Hoyle as W . M . for the ensuing year , the ceremony being very impressively performed . The newly installed W . M . appointed and invested his

officers as follows : Bros . John Glenn , I . P . M . ; W . Nicholson , S . VV . ; Arthur Wormall , J . W . ; W . M . Bywater , P . M ., Treas . j C . B . Barnes , P . M ., Sec ; Athelstan A . Angier , S . D . ; R . W . Bilby , J . D . ; A . R . Ramsey , I . G . ; W . Pound , P . M ., Stwd . ; John Charles , P . M ., D . C ; and G . Gilbert , Tyler . Bro . John Glenn presented a

beautiful banner ( manufactured by Bro . George Kenning ) , to the lodge to replace the one that had been lost . The brethren were exceedingly pleased and grateful for so valuable a gift . The brethren dined together , presided over by Bro . G . H . Hoyle . Bro . R . F . Gould , P . G . D ., responded for "The Grand Officers . "

Bro . W . M . Bywater proposed the toast of "The Visitors , " to which Bro . Dr . Woodman , P . G . S . B ., replied . The toast of " The Charities " was proposed in a forcible speech by Bro . H . Glenn , P . M ., and responded to by Bro . James Terry , P . G . S . B ., Secretary Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution . A programme of music was performed , under the direction

of Bro . A . W . S . Hoare , assisted by Bros . G . Hoare , John King , W . Kessell , S . Smith , and M . Wilkinson . The banquet was admirably served under the superintendence of Bro . H . P . Kilby . A gold P . M . ' s jewel was presented to Bro . John Glenn , in recognition of the able services rendered to the lodge during the past year . We congratulate the lodge on its election of Bro . W . M .

Bywater as Treasurer , in succession to Bro . Starling , father of the lodge , who has resigned the office after an unbroken tenure of 30 years . Bro . Bywater has not only achieved distinction in thelodge , and been rewarded for his long and faithful services with the purple of Grand Lodge , but he is also well-known in Masonic literary circles , by his biographical sketch of Lawrence , and , what is more to the

purpose on the present occasion , by his short , but admirable , " History of the Royal Athelstan Lodge , " which he compiled and read at its Centenary Festival on the 27 th February , 1 S 69 , and for which and for his other services he was subsequently honoured by the lodge with a special vote of thanks and testimonial . This history , though

written at a time when the same degree of interest as now was not taken in such compilations , is a creditable performance , being clear and accurate , without being overladen with detail , and we trust its worthy author ' s connection with the lodge , whose career he has so ably sketched , may be prolonged for many years .

ROBERT BURNS LODGE ( No . 25 ) . —The usual monthly meeting of this lodge was held at the Freemasons' Hall , on Monday , the 6 th inst ., when there were present Bros . Walter Wingham , W . M . j G . Deaton , S . W . ; E . J . Wall , J . W . ; J . Lindner , Treas . ; John

Reports Of Masonic Meetings.

mmmm Dyte , Sec ; J . L . Jaquet , J . D . ; H . R . Maynard , I . G . j G . F . Smith , Org . ; J . C . Hodson , Assist . Sec ; T . ] Robins , P . M . ; G . Moorcroft , P . M . j J . W . Harvey P . M . j F . G . Baker , P . M . ; Thos . Hawkins , P . M . ; F . G . Deaton , R . S . Home , A . Wingham , and S . Burton . Visitors : Bros . J . Shipley , P . M . 30 J F . j ' Eedle , W . M . elect 1441 j and Wm . Roots , 1273 . The lodge was opened , and the minutes of the last

meeting read and confirmed . Bro . R . S . Home was raised to the Degree of M . M ., and Bros . Arthur Wingham and S . E . Burton passed to the Second Degree . After the despatch of other business the lodge was closed . The brethren then adjourned to the Freemasons' Tavern and enjoyed a capital supper , followed by a few short speeches and many excellent songs , amongst which Burns ' " Auld lang syne " was made a feature .

TEMPLE LODGE ( No . 101 ) . —The installation meeting of this old lodge was held on Tuesday evening , the 7 th inst ., at thc Ship and Turtle , under the presidency of the W . M ., Bro . E . S . Lardner . The meeting was numerously attended , and the W . M . was supported byamong others—the following * brethren : Bros . T . A . Bullock I . P . M . ; J . Round , S . W . ; T . G . Beard , J . W . j J . ivi

nono , r .., rreas . j n . J . Keynolds , F . M ., Sec ; R . J . P . Wilson , S . D . ; S . Blofeld , I . G . j F . N . Isaacson , Org . ; F . Williams , Steward ; H . Brandon White , P . M . ; J . Henwood Thomas , P . M . ; T . E . Taylor , P . M . ; H F . Youle , P . M . ; H . J . Hastelow , P . M . ; and E . J . Altman , P . M . The visitors were Bros . Sidney Martin , I . P . M . 404 F . Oldfield , J . W . 134 ; W . M . Scarlett , I . G . 1471 j E Prendergast , 569 ; H . Massey , P . M . 610 and J 92 S ; E

Isaacson , iSS ; A . J . Berry , P . M . 1695 ; L . Lazarus , P . M . and Sec ; L . M . Myers , P . M . j and I . Myers , S . D ., of iSS ; A . Durrant , I . P . M . 569 ; J . M . Bastone , P . M . I 86 IJ H . C . Richards , 2029 j R . Birkett , 569 ; and J . K . Boddy , 1922 . After the formal opening of the lodge and the confirmation of the minutes of the last regular and emergency

meetings , the W . M . had presented to him by Bro . Hastelow , P . M ., Bro . John Round , who had been duly elected to serve as Master of the lodge for the ensuing year . Bro . Lardner then proceeded with the early part of the ceremony , and installed Bro . Round as Master of the lodge for the year . The following brethren were invested as his officers : Bros . Geo . Beard , S . W . ; R . 1 . P .

VVilson , J . W . j J . Henwood Thomas , P . M ., Treas . ; Edwin S . Lardner , I . P . M ., Sec ; S . Blofeld , S . D . ; Jas . Minter Flegg , J . D . ; H . Vernon , I . G . j H . Hastelow , P . M ., D . C ; Frank Williams , Stwd . ; Frank Isaacson , Org . ; and Robt . F . Potter , P . M . 749 , Tyler . The I . P . M . next delivered the addresses , and completed one of the finest performances of the ceremony of installation ever

witnessed , with as great success as he had commenced it . He was loudly applauded by the brethren when he resumed his seat to the lelt of the W . M . . Bro . Taylor , P . M ., next proposed , and Bro . J . J . Carney seconded , a vote of thanks to bro . Bond , Past Treasurer , and Bro . Reynolds , Past Secretary , for the admirable way in which they had served the lodge in their respective posts for several

years . The motion was most heartily agreed to , and Bros . Bond and Reynolds acknowledged the compliment in graceful terms , assuring the brethren that though they retired after many years of active duty , their only reason for doing so was to give other brethren a chance , and they felt assured that , in the hands of Bros . Thomas and Lardner , both P . M . 's of thelodge , the interests of the lodge would

be well looked alter . A vote of condolence to Bro . j . Horatio Wynne , on the death of his brother William , was also passed . The lodge afterwards was closed , and the brethren adjourned to a sumptuous banquet , provided by Bros . C . and A . Painter , and superintended by their popular manager , Bro . E . Ashby , with his accustomed activity and attention .

The usual toasts followed , interspersed with some beautiful singing by Miss Rose Jacobs and Miss May Isaacson , Bro . James Minter Flegg , and Bro . Frank Williams , with Bro . Isaacson , Organist , at the piano , who also played some lovely solos . After the toasts of " The Queen and the Craft ; " " The M . W . G . M . ; " "The Pro G . M ., and the other Grand

Officers , Present and Past , " had been honoured , Bro . Lardner proposed "The W . M ., " and in doing so he said that under the circumstance of being a king dethroned he occupied rather an awkward position . Perhaps one of the most peculiar positions a king had been known to occupy , was , when it was said "The King is dead ;" " Long live the King ; " but the position of a dethroned

king in a lodge was that he was still among the brethren to hear what the brethren had to say with respect to the monarch who had recently left the chair . He had to propose the health of the VV . M . The W . M . 's of all lodges required at the hands of all the brethren a help and guidance which could only come from experience , and he trusted the brethren would all be prepared to help the

W . M . through the coming year , in order that it might be a happy and prosperous year to the lodge . Of course he spoke in an interested view , having assumed new duties , but he felt it more to his heart at the present time that they hoped and trusted the coming year would a prosperous year , for the Master a happy year , and for the lodge a pleasant year , and that it might redound to the prosperity

of the lodge was his dearest wish . TheW . M ., in reply , said he had been onlv seven years in the lodge . He had filled thedifferentofficesof thelodge , and he had tried in each office to fill it in rotation . He trusted he had done so to the satisfaction of the brethren . He had attained to the position of W . M ., and in that position he hoped he should do so to the best of his ability .

If he attained to the position of P . M ., he should do his best to support the W . M . He hoped the officers would stand by him during his year of office . The Worshipful Master , in proposing " The I . P . M . and Installing Master , " said the way the work had been done that evening by the I . P . M . reflected great credit on the lodge . He was happy to find that the officers went on in rotation . He was sure no one would find fault with the

way in which Bro . Lardner performed his work , and he had much pleasure in investing him with a P . M . 's jewel , which had been voted by the members of the lodge , for there never was a lodge more grateful for the offices rendered , and never was there a jewel more worthily or properly earned . He now placed the jewel on Bro . Lardner ' s breast , and he could only say that Bro . Lardner had been a credit to the lodge . He was sure he would continue to be so ,

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