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Contents.

CONTENTS .

LEADERS 253 Consecration ot the John Carpenter I . odge , No . 1997 2 S 4 Provincial Grand Lodge of West Lancashire -Si Provincial Grand Mark Lodge of Leicestershire , Northamptonshire , and Derbyshire 357 Freemasonry in Bath .. ' 257

CoRRESl'ONllEXCEGirls'School Festival 258 Roval "Masonic Institution for Hoys 258 Orderof Precedence 25 S Type-i-cal Vagaries 2 J 8 Hire at Freemasons' Hall . —Proposed . Masonic Temple and "Museum 2 S 0 A Begging Mason 259 Reviews 259 Notes and Queries 259

REI ' ORTR OF MASONIC MEETINGSCraft Masonry 259 Instruction ain Royal Arch 261 Mark Masonry 261 Consecration of the lordan Mark I . odge , No . 319 261 Complimentary Concert to a Liverpool

Brother 362 Funeral of the Late Bro . \ V . H . Lucia , Prov . G . Secretary of Suffolk 262 Royal Masonic Institution for Girls 262 Obituary 26 3 The yEolnsWaterspray and General Ventilating Company ( Limited ) 26 3 The Theatres 263 Masonic and General Tidings 26 4 Lodge Meetings for Next Week iii .

Ar00100

WE congratulate all concerned on the result of the Girls' School Festival , and we rejoice to note that despite sundry needless criticisms and unseasonable remarks as regards the -finances of the Girls' School , 8 cc . ; the friends of the Institution rallied round its respected Chairman , and testified openly once again their approval of the School management and their

realization of the striking efficiency and utility of this great and remarkable Instituion . London has returned ^ 5162 19 s . gd . ; the provinces , ^ 5347 * 6 d . ; in all ^ 10 , 510 os . 3 d . The metropolis with 112 Stewards , has collected £ 5162 195 . gd ., as we just said , and the leading returns are as follows : Bro . Robert Gray , a member of the House Committee and

President of the Board of Stewards , Steward for St . Andrew ' s Lodge , No . 222 , heads the metropolitan list with £ 199 ios ., and he is succeeded by Bro . M . P . F . Caulfield , Friends in Council , No . 1383 , with £ 149 2 s . ; Bro . G . P . Festa , Montague Guest , No . 1900 , very quickly follows with under the special circumstances the praiseworthy amount of ^ 147 , and is

closely pressed by Bro . J . F . Porter , M . D ., Evening Star , No . I 719 , with £ 144 iSs . Bro . J . Neilson , Creaton , No . 1791 , comes next before us with £ 130 , and Bro . P . H . Waterlow , Athenaem , No . 149 1 , appears with £ 116 us . od , ; Bro . Walter Wood , Confidence , No . ig 3 , is ' very close behind indeed with £ 115 ios ., to whom next in order comes Bro . A . C . W

Bean , Ranelagh , No . 834 , with ^ 108 us . ; Bro . . Cleghorn , Great Northern , No . 1287 , is next in sequence with ^ 106 is ., while after him Bro . S . Benton , M . D ., Aldersgate , No . 1657 , also a striking return , advances with £ 105 ; Bro . H . B . Marshall , Treasurer of the Board of Stewards , Brixton , No . ig 49 , presses on the . last mentioned also

with £ 105 , while Bros . J . Boulton No . 1056 , and R . J . Vincent , Dukeof Albany , No . 1963 , return respectively £ 101 17 s . 6 d ., and / , ' ioo . The remaining lodges , though their returns are no doubt well worthy of note do not reach these figures . We observe that the Mouse Committee , including Bros . R . Grey and E . Letchworth , by a very

noteworthy custom in the Girls' School have collected the substantial sum of £ 646 17 s ., being one-eighth of the total amount subscribed by the London brethren , of this amount Bro . Lieut .-Col . J , Peters , Grand Sword Bearer , sends £ 105 , and Bro . Peter de Lande Long , P . G . D ., ^ 84 . The Unattached Stewards , 13 jn number , send £ 373 6 s .

Bro . Edgar Bowyer heading the list with ^ 94 . Fro m 1700 , 14 lodges have sent up Stewards and returns , while from 1 to 1700 , 74 have have done so , in all 88 of the London lodges . There is still a needful margin for the younger lodges—may we not say for all London lodges . In the Provincial returns which amount to £ 5347 ios . 6 . The Stewards list is headed

happily and necessarily by Hampshire . There were 132 Provincial Stewards . Hampshire and the Isle of Wight have returned the goodly sum of £ 1306 12 s . The Province has done very well indeed . West Yorkshire comes next with £ 400 , and is followed , though at some little distance , by Sussex with X ' 3 6 3 ; Staffordshire appears with

£ 272 6 d . and is succeeded by West Lancashire with £ 244 13 s . ; Monmouthshire follows suit with £ 236 5 s . ; and Kent is not far off with £ 328 8 s . ; South Wales ( East Division ) and Worcestershire like the " gemini" next put in an appearance with £ 217 7 s . each , while Devonshire claims our attention with £ 203 . Berks and Bucks evince their

Masonic life by £ ig 3 us . ; Hertfordshire appears with £ 158 us . 6 d . ; Suffolk also with £ 136 ios . ; Cambridgeshire comes next with ^ 128 25 . ; Middlesex is represeuted by £ 117 13 s . ; and Surrey last but not least with / iogios . In the provinces only twelve lodges from No . 1700 are represented . We shall probably have something to say on this topic later .

* * IN view of the tempting inducements offered the Craft to divert the stream of their benevolence into another , though no less worthy channel , we venture to congratulate on the success of the Festival , not only the general body of Stewards who worked so well to achieve the result , but also the indefatigable SECRETARY of the Institution , and more particularly those members of the

Ar00101

House Committee whose support , as it has been observed , was of a more substantial character than empty words .

* * WE hope that our friends the Secretaries of the Masonic Institutions will take it in good part when we repeat a request that the Provincial returns at the festivals shall all be added up . We never could understand why , as the " totals " of each province are given out in the hall , such a summing up

should not be repeated in the lists issued from the office . It is often a great trial to a weary scribe to add up a long row of figures in print , and we cannot even now realize wh y such a system should be persevered in , which is satisfactory to none , and misleading to all . Hence arise imperfect " tottling up , " angry complaints , and much annoyance .

# "« BEFORE we again greet our readers the election for the Royal Masonic Benevo-lent Institution will be past and gone for 1883 . We hear remarkable stories of exchanges , of much pressure for votes , and of probable high polling . When next the Freemason appears all these things will be matters

of history . We again press on our readers , one and all , the advisability of looking well at their fating papers before they are deposited in the "fatal urn , " as the recurrence of such childish carelessness as the Scrutineers have to notice and punish , election after election , seems to point , kind readers all , to the unenviable conclusion that in our cultivated and excellent Order some Masonic Dogberrys are to be found . "Absit Omen 1 "

* * THE opening of the Fisheries Exhibition was most admirably conceived , as it was effectively carried out . It was at once simple and elaborate , unpretending and stately , a most rare and happy conjunction , and the addresses of the Duke of RICHMOND and the reply of H . R . H . the Prince of WALES

were most appropriate and striking in themselves . Few more satisfactory and well-arranged public ceremonials have ever been planned and perfected , and we congratulate all concerned on the excellent impression made on an admiring public . We feel sure the exhibition is alike useful and needful , and will lead , we also trust , to many

beneficial results . The health and safety of our lisher population is a subject of deep interest to all who realize how greatly we are indebted to them for the luxuries , nay , the necessaries of life . Their calling is a very dangerous one necessarily , sometimes little remunerative ; and the

popularity of the Royal brothers will be sensibly increased by the evident warm-hearted and anxious interest they evince in the welfare of our hard y fisherman population . The speech of H . R . H . the Prince of WALES , though couched in official tones , was most welcome in its warm-heartedness and most effective in its delivery . It was heard by all .

* * # THE arrangement and the grouping of the departments in the Fisheries Exhibition have been much admired . Among those special points to which our daily contempories draw notice is the pavilion set apart for our Royal

Grand Master , one of the salient features of which is a grotto lighted up by electric lamps , amid ferns and flowers , & c , and which is specially commended to notice and admiration . This , we understand , has been designed and executed by our Bro . DICK RADCLYVFF .

# * No doubt many of our brethren will pay the Exhibition a visit , admire the p iscatorial industry of all nations ; take a glance , but a glance only , at the fisher maidens , and investigate the culinary mysteries of a fish dinner . * * *

THE gross insult to our ROYAL GRAND MASTER and the Princess of WALES , as recorded in the papers , will be noted with much loyal indignation by all classes as well as by our entire Order . Mr . VAUGHAN ' s last bold words will be entirely approved of by all , and the subject and the offender are really utterly beneath notice . The popular feeling was very strongly manifested on the occasion .

* * * Bro . EDWARD TERRY repeated on Tuesday before the Prince and Princess of W ALES , always sympathetic , some very effective lines in respect of poor Bro . ROYCE , a great popular favourite , We call attention to them elsewhere ,

“The Freemason: 1883-05-19, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_19051883/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
CONSECRATION OF THE JOHN CARPENTER LODGE, No. 1997. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF EAST LANCASHIRE. Article 4
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF LEICESTERSHIRE, NORTHAMPTONSHIRE, AND DERBYSHIRE. Article 5
FREEMASONRY IN BATH. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
To Correspondents. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Original Correspondence. Article 6
REVIEWS Article 7
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 7
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 7
INSTRUCTION. Article 9
Mo^al <&vct). Article 9
iftarfc J-Hasanrg, Article 9
CONSECRATION OF THE JORDAN MARK LODGE, No. 319. Article 10
COMPLIMENTARY CONCERT TO A LIVERPOOL BROTHER. Article 10
FUNERAL OF THE LATE BRO. W. H. LUCIA, PROV. G. SECRETARY OF SUFFOLK. Article 10
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 10
Obituary. Article 11
THE ÆOLUS WATERSPRAY & GENERAL VENTILATING COMPANY (LIMITED). Article 11
THE THEATRES. Article 11
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Contents.

CONTENTS .

LEADERS 253 Consecration ot the John Carpenter I . odge , No . 1997 2 S 4 Provincial Grand Lodge of West Lancashire -Si Provincial Grand Mark Lodge of Leicestershire , Northamptonshire , and Derbyshire 357 Freemasonry in Bath .. ' 257

CoRRESl'ONllEXCEGirls'School Festival 258 Roval "Masonic Institution for Hoys 258 Orderof Precedence 25 S Type-i-cal Vagaries 2 J 8 Hire at Freemasons' Hall . —Proposed . Masonic Temple and "Museum 2 S 0 A Begging Mason 259 Reviews 259 Notes and Queries 259

REI ' ORTR OF MASONIC MEETINGSCraft Masonry 259 Instruction ain Royal Arch 261 Mark Masonry 261 Consecration of the lordan Mark I . odge , No . 319 261 Complimentary Concert to a Liverpool

Brother 362 Funeral of the Late Bro . \ V . H . Lucia , Prov . G . Secretary of Suffolk 262 Royal Masonic Institution for Girls 262 Obituary 26 3 The yEolnsWaterspray and General Ventilating Company ( Limited ) 26 3 The Theatres 263 Masonic and General Tidings 26 4 Lodge Meetings for Next Week iii .

Ar00100

WE congratulate all concerned on the result of the Girls' School Festival , and we rejoice to note that despite sundry needless criticisms and unseasonable remarks as regards the -finances of the Girls' School , 8 cc . ; the friends of the Institution rallied round its respected Chairman , and testified openly once again their approval of the School management and their

realization of the striking efficiency and utility of this great and remarkable Instituion . London has returned ^ 5162 19 s . gd . ; the provinces , ^ 5347 * 6 d . ; in all ^ 10 , 510 os . 3 d . The metropolis with 112 Stewards , has collected £ 5162 195 . gd ., as we just said , and the leading returns are as follows : Bro . Robert Gray , a member of the House Committee and

President of the Board of Stewards , Steward for St . Andrew ' s Lodge , No . 222 , heads the metropolitan list with £ 199 ios ., and he is succeeded by Bro . M . P . F . Caulfield , Friends in Council , No . 1383 , with £ 149 2 s . ; Bro . G . P . Festa , Montague Guest , No . 1900 , very quickly follows with under the special circumstances the praiseworthy amount of ^ 147 , and is

closely pressed by Bro . J . F . Porter , M . D ., Evening Star , No . I 719 , with £ 144 iSs . Bro . J . Neilson , Creaton , No . 1791 , comes next before us with £ 130 , and Bro . P . H . Waterlow , Athenaem , No . 149 1 , appears with £ 116 us . od , ; Bro . Walter Wood , Confidence , No . ig 3 , is ' very close behind indeed with £ 115 ios ., to whom next in order comes Bro . A . C . W

Bean , Ranelagh , No . 834 , with ^ 108 us . ; Bro . . Cleghorn , Great Northern , No . 1287 , is next in sequence with ^ 106 is ., while after him Bro . S . Benton , M . D ., Aldersgate , No . 1657 , also a striking return , advances with £ 105 ; Bro . H . B . Marshall , Treasurer of the Board of Stewards , Brixton , No . ig 49 , presses on the . last mentioned also

with £ 105 , while Bros . J . Boulton No . 1056 , and R . J . Vincent , Dukeof Albany , No . 1963 , return respectively £ 101 17 s . 6 d ., and / , ' ioo . The remaining lodges , though their returns are no doubt well worthy of note do not reach these figures . We observe that the Mouse Committee , including Bros . R . Grey and E . Letchworth , by a very

noteworthy custom in the Girls' School have collected the substantial sum of £ 646 17 s ., being one-eighth of the total amount subscribed by the London brethren , of this amount Bro . Lieut .-Col . J , Peters , Grand Sword Bearer , sends £ 105 , and Bro . Peter de Lande Long , P . G . D ., ^ 84 . The Unattached Stewards , 13 jn number , send £ 373 6 s .

Bro . Edgar Bowyer heading the list with ^ 94 . Fro m 1700 , 14 lodges have sent up Stewards and returns , while from 1 to 1700 , 74 have have done so , in all 88 of the London lodges . There is still a needful margin for the younger lodges—may we not say for all London lodges . In the Provincial returns which amount to £ 5347 ios . 6 . The Stewards list is headed

happily and necessarily by Hampshire . There were 132 Provincial Stewards . Hampshire and the Isle of Wight have returned the goodly sum of £ 1306 12 s . The Province has done very well indeed . West Yorkshire comes next with £ 400 , and is followed , though at some little distance , by Sussex with X ' 3 6 3 ; Staffordshire appears with

£ 272 6 d . and is succeeded by West Lancashire with £ 244 13 s . ; Monmouthshire follows suit with £ 236 5 s . ; and Kent is not far off with £ 328 8 s . ; South Wales ( East Division ) and Worcestershire like the " gemini" next put in an appearance with £ 217 7 s . each , while Devonshire claims our attention with £ 203 . Berks and Bucks evince their

Masonic life by £ ig 3 us . ; Hertfordshire appears with £ 158 us . 6 d . ; Suffolk also with £ 136 ios . ; Cambridgeshire comes next with ^ 128 25 . ; Middlesex is represeuted by £ 117 13 s . ; and Surrey last but not least with / iogios . In the provinces only twelve lodges from No . 1700 are represented . We shall probably have something to say on this topic later .

* * IN view of the tempting inducements offered the Craft to divert the stream of their benevolence into another , though no less worthy channel , we venture to congratulate on the success of the Festival , not only the general body of Stewards who worked so well to achieve the result , but also the indefatigable SECRETARY of the Institution , and more particularly those members of the

Ar00101

House Committee whose support , as it has been observed , was of a more substantial character than empty words .

* * WE hope that our friends the Secretaries of the Masonic Institutions will take it in good part when we repeat a request that the Provincial returns at the festivals shall all be added up . We never could understand why , as the " totals " of each province are given out in the hall , such a summing up

should not be repeated in the lists issued from the office . It is often a great trial to a weary scribe to add up a long row of figures in print , and we cannot even now realize wh y such a system should be persevered in , which is satisfactory to none , and misleading to all . Hence arise imperfect " tottling up , " angry complaints , and much annoyance .

# "« BEFORE we again greet our readers the election for the Royal Masonic Benevo-lent Institution will be past and gone for 1883 . We hear remarkable stories of exchanges , of much pressure for votes , and of probable high polling . When next the Freemason appears all these things will be matters

of history . We again press on our readers , one and all , the advisability of looking well at their fating papers before they are deposited in the "fatal urn , " as the recurrence of such childish carelessness as the Scrutineers have to notice and punish , election after election , seems to point , kind readers all , to the unenviable conclusion that in our cultivated and excellent Order some Masonic Dogberrys are to be found . "Absit Omen 1 "

* * THE opening of the Fisheries Exhibition was most admirably conceived , as it was effectively carried out . It was at once simple and elaborate , unpretending and stately , a most rare and happy conjunction , and the addresses of the Duke of RICHMOND and the reply of H . R . H . the Prince of WALES

were most appropriate and striking in themselves . Few more satisfactory and well-arranged public ceremonials have ever been planned and perfected , and we congratulate all concerned on the excellent impression made on an admiring public . We feel sure the exhibition is alike useful and needful , and will lead , we also trust , to many

beneficial results . The health and safety of our lisher population is a subject of deep interest to all who realize how greatly we are indebted to them for the luxuries , nay , the necessaries of life . Their calling is a very dangerous one necessarily , sometimes little remunerative ; and the

popularity of the Royal brothers will be sensibly increased by the evident warm-hearted and anxious interest they evince in the welfare of our hard y fisherman population . The speech of H . R . H . the Prince of WALES , though couched in official tones , was most welcome in its warm-heartedness and most effective in its delivery . It was heard by all .

* * # THE arrangement and the grouping of the departments in the Fisheries Exhibition have been much admired . Among those special points to which our daily contempories draw notice is the pavilion set apart for our Royal

Grand Master , one of the salient features of which is a grotto lighted up by electric lamps , amid ferns and flowers , & c , and which is specially commended to notice and admiration . This , we understand , has been designed and executed by our Bro . DICK RADCLYVFF .

# * No doubt many of our brethren will pay the Exhibition a visit , admire the p iscatorial industry of all nations ; take a glance , but a glance only , at the fisher maidens , and investigate the culinary mysteries of a fish dinner . * * *

THE gross insult to our ROYAL GRAND MASTER and the Princess of WALES , as recorded in the papers , will be noted with much loyal indignation by all classes as well as by our entire Order . Mr . VAUGHAN ' s last bold words will be entirely approved of by all , and the subject and the offender are really utterly beneath notice . The popular feeling was very strongly manifested on the occasion .

* * * Bro . EDWARD TERRY repeated on Tuesday before the Prince and Princess of W ALES , always sympathetic , some very effective lines in respect of poor Bro . ROYCE , a great popular favourite , We call attention to them elsewhere ,

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