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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Feb. 1, 1903
  • Page 14
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The Masonic Illustrated, Feb. 1, 1903: Page 14

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

Ar01400

The lodge , Glasgow Kihvinning , No . 4 , yvas one of the lodges represented at the formation of the Grand Lodge of Scotland in 173 6 , and it has not only had a long , but an honourable career under the Scottish Constitution . At the lodge meeting for the installation of office bearers recentlythe lodge room in the Anderston District of Glasgow

, yvas croyvded by brethren from many parts of Scotland , including a deputation from the Canongate Kilwinning Lodge , No . 2 , Edinburgh , from yvhich No . 4 originally hailed . In the course of the proceedings Bro . W . Brownlie , the Right Worshipful Master , in the name of the members ,

presented Bro . Andrew Fergus , the Immediate Past Master , with a Past Master ' s gold jewel , and set with a large diamond in the centre , and , at the same time , yvith a gold

BltO . ANllliKW FKRGUS .

watch and chain for his good lady . The gifts yvere the spontaneous offer of the brethren as a token of their goodyvill and high estimation of the recipients . Bro . Fergus joined Freemasonry in the year 18 94 , and has since been constant and active in his devotion to the Craft . He is a Past Provincial Junior Grand Warden in the Glasgoyv Province ;

he has served the Grand Lodge as Director of Ceremonies , and at present fills the office of Grand Bible Bearer . He is a Proxy Master in Grand Lodge for the Maybole Lodge , No . 11 , and Grand Representative in Scotland of the Grand Lodge of Arkansas . Bro . Fergus is also a Royal Arch Mason

and has filled the office of Benevolent Fund Treasurer in the St . Andreyv Chapter , No . 6 9 , and is a founder , and at present a Principal of the Maryhill Royal Arch Chapter , No . 296 , S . C .

* « »& Our veteran Bro . General John Carson Smith , Past Grand Master of Illinois , yvhose figure is not unknown in English Masonic circles , has contributed the folloyving sketch to an American Masonic contemporary . Its references are entirely to American Masonry , but are not wholly inapplicable to the

English Craft . As an argument in favour of limiting the members of a private lodge to a reasonable number it carries weight , and is deserving of serious consideration by those yvho desire to retain the family character , so to speak , of the Masonic home : — " The city brother , accustomed to visiting lodges

large in number of members and surrounded yvith all the evidences of luxury which a well-filled treasury can supply , the lodge in yvhich the officers appear in evening dress yvith the dainty boutonniere in left lapel of coat and dead letter perfect ritualism , enjoys a literary- feast or dramatic entertainment yvhich is pleasing , but becomes tiresome when repealed nightly to the exclusion of all social enjoyment . We yvould

not countenance an indifferent ritual nor yet a carelessness in dress , but yve yvould like to see less pressure to confer more Degrees than a previous Master , and more consideration given to an evening yvith friends . « s > $ >

" Speeches by distinguished brothers do not necessarily constitute a social evening , but rather to thrust one's legs under a pine table upon yvhich is a bit of plain fare and converse without restraint yvith the brethren around and about you . To hear one brother tell a story or sing a song and another

speak of those yvith whom he used to meet in his younger days , of the good Masonic yvork they had done , their unstinted offerings to the needy , and cheerful aid to the unfortunate . Hoyv , yvhen the city was but an overgrown village , before the days of the ' L' roads , ' trolleys , ' or , even

the old one-horse bob-car , they had to yvalk miles to reach the lodge and yvhen there the enjoyable time they had with friends . Then the brethren became acquainted yvith each other and friendships yvere formed yvhich lasted through life and yvere only terminated in death . Youth is the time in yvhich friendships are formed , in middle age yve make acquaintance .

«> «!> @ " Go noyv to a large lodge yvhere they are ' making Masons at sight , ' no matter hoyv perfect the ritualism , croyvding through ten or fifteen Degrees at one sitting of the lodge , and you make no friends and but feyv acquaintances . Go an half-hour early so as to meet the members and most likely

you will have to await the coming of the Tyler to open up . Sitting in a lodge one evening in the city of Chicago , when there yvere full 300 of the members present , the yvorthy Master informed me that he did not knoyv twenty-live of them . In such lodges the only attraction is that of a drama

yvhich , no matter hoyv yvell set or hoyv perfect the acting , becomes monotonous because of its repetition . Keep up your ' dead perfect' yvork , brethren , but do try to throyv in an occasional meeting in yvhich you can become acquainted yvith your oyvn members and take a feyv minutes to introduce

visitors . s 5 > 0 « S > "The writer has sat in lodges small in membership , scant in furniture , uncarpeted floor and unadorned stations , but large in a hearty brotherhood , and yvhere"They ' adn't good regalia , An' their lodge yvas old an' bare , Hut they knew the Ancient Landmarks , An' thev kep' ' em to a hair . "

© < 5 » O For some time past a French assurance company—not a very large nor important concern—has been advertising in the Libre Parole and other anti-Semite and religious journals It heads its advertisements as folloyvs : — " NKITHKK J I-AVS XOK

FKKKMASOXS . " and goes on to state that it only issues policies to Frenchmen , and refuses both Jeyvs and Freemasons . This remarkable company , which is known as " La Co-operation , " is apparently in a perpetual state of issue ; it advertises its capital as folloyvs : — "Capital " 44 000 , yvith poyver to increase

^ , to _ £ 8 o , ooo , " and is continually making issues of its oyvn stock to the French public . This Company ' s circular is a perfect gem . Peter the Hermit preaching the Crusade yvas not so full of burning eloquence as is the " Co-operation " appealing for fresh capital . The opening paragraph runs as folloyvs : —

" When scoundrels are in difficulties they do not hesitate to liquidate their affairs even at the cost of a lire . " Three hundred lines folloyv in the same style , interlarded yvith virulent abuse of the unfortunate Israelite and trenchant remarks anent the unholy Freemasons . The " Co-operation "

is not lacking in audacity , for it offers its £ 4 shares to the public for £ 5 each . It is a comparatively neyv concern ; there is no market for its shares ; it has never paid a centime in dividend ; and its future is certainly of a problematic nature . Under the circumstances , to ask the public to pay 25 per

cent , premium for its scrip is scarcely in keeping yvith the language of its prospectus ; indeed , it smacks a great deal more of that " usury" yvhich it accuses the entire Jewish race of practising .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1903-02-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01021903/page/14/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Consecration of the Holden Lodge, No. 2946. Article 2
The Province of Dor set . In stallation of the Ri ght Hon. the Earl of Shaftesbury as Provincial Grand Master . Article 3
Installation Meeting of the Khartoum Lodge, No, 2877. Article 4
Installation Meeting of the Emblematic Lodge, No. 1321. Article 5
London Rifle Brigade Lodge, No. 1962. Article 5
Empire Lodge, No . 8. In stallation of Bro. Sidney T sift as Worshipful Master. Article 6
Installation Meeting of the Aldershot Camp Lodge, No. 1331. Article 8
Installation Meeting of the Sefton Lodge, No. 680. Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
The Roman Hierarchy and Masonry from 1814 to the Present Time. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Untitled Article 13
Bro. C. Christian Silberbauer. Article 15
An Oration to the Members of the Whitsan Lodge. Article 15
The Lodge and the Craft. Article 16
Untitled Article 16
Untitled Article 17
Histo ry of the Emulation Lod ge of Improvement , No . 256.——(Continued). Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar01400

The lodge , Glasgow Kihvinning , No . 4 , yvas one of the lodges represented at the formation of the Grand Lodge of Scotland in 173 6 , and it has not only had a long , but an honourable career under the Scottish Constitution . At the lodge meeting for the installation of office bearers recentlythe lodge room in the Anderston District of Glasgow

, yvas croyvded by brethren from many parts of Scotland , including a deputation from the Canongate Kilwinning Lodge , No . 2 , Edinburgh , from yvhich No . 4 originally hailed . In the course of the proceedings Bro . W . Brownlie , the Right Worshipful Master , in the name of the members ,

presented Bro . Andrew Fergus , the Immediate Past Master , with a Past Master ' s gold jewel , and set with a large diamond in the centre , and , at the same time , yvith a gold

BltO . ANllliKW FKRGUS .

watch and chain for his good lady . The gifts yvere the spontaneous offer of the brethren as a token of their goodyvill and high estimation of the recipients . Bro . Fergus joined Freemasonry in the year 18 94 , and has since been constant and active in his devotion to the Craft . He is a Past Provincial Junior Grand Warden in the Glasgoyv Province ;

he has served the Grand Lodge as Director of Ceremonies , and at present fills the office of Grand Bible Bearer . He is a Proxy Master in Grand Lodge for the Maybole Lodge , No . 11 , and Grand Representative in Scotland of the Grand Lodge of Arkansas . Bro . Fergus is also a Royal Arch Mason

and has filled the office of Benevolent Fund Treasurer in the St . Andreyv Chapter , No . 6 9 , and is a founder , and at present a Principal of the Maryhill Royal Arch Chapter , No . 296 , S . C .

* « »& Our veteran Bro . General John Carson Smith , Past Grand Master of Illinois , yvhose figure is not unknown in English Masonic circles , has contributed the folloyving sketch to an American Masonic contemporary . Its references are entirely to American Masonry , but are not wholly inapplicable to the

English Craft . As an argument in favour of limiting the members of a private lodge to a reasonable number it carries weight , and is deserving of serious consideration by those yvho desire to retain the family character , so to speak , of the Masonic home : — " The city brother , accustomed to visiting lodges

large in number of members and surrounded yvith all the evidences of luxury which a well-filled treasury can supply , the lodge in yvhich the officers appear in evening dress yvith the dainty boutonniere in left lapel of coat and dead letter perfect ritualism , enjoys a literary- feast or dramatic entertainment yvhich is pleasing , but becomes tiresome when repealed nightly to the exclusion of all social enjoyment . We yvould

not countenance an indifferent ritual nor yet a carelessness in dress , but yve yvould like to see less pressure to confer more Degrees than a previous Master , and more consideration given to an evening yvith friends . « s > $ >

" Speeches by distinguished brothers do not necessarily constitute a social evening , but rather to thrust one's legs under a pine table upon yvhich is a bit of plain fare and converse without restraint yvith the brethren around and about you . To hear one brother tell a story or sing a song and another

speak of those yvith whom he used to meet in his younger days , of the good Masonic yvork they had done , their unstinted offerings to the needy , and cheerful aid to the unfortunate . Hoyv , yvhen the city was but an overgrown village , before the days of the ' L' roads , ' trolleys , ' or , even

the old one-horse bob-car , they had to yvalk miles to reach the lodge and yvhen there the enjoyable time they had with friends . Then the brethren became acquainted yvith each other and friendships yvere formed yvhich lasted through life and yvere only terminated in death . Youth is the time in yvhich friendships are formed , in middle age yve make acquaintance .

«> «!> @ " Go noyv to a large lodge yvhere they are ' making Masons at sight , ' no matter hoyv perfect the ritualism , croyvding through ten or fifteen Degrees at one sitting of the lodge , and you make no friends and but feyv acquaintances . Go an half-hour early so as to meet the members and most likely

you will have to await the coming of the Tyler to open up . Sitting in a lodge one evening in the city of Chicago , when there yvere full 300 of the members present , the yvorthy Master informed me that he did not knoyv twenty-live of them . In such lodges the only attraction is that of a drama

yvhich , no matter hoyv yvell set or hoyv perfect the acting , becomes monotonous because of its repetition . Keep up your ' dead perfect' yvork , brethren , but do try to throyv in an occasional meeting in yvhich you can become acquainted yvith your oyvn members and take a feyv minutes to introduce

visitors . s 5 > 0 « S > "The writer has sat in lodges small in membership , scant in furniture , uncarpeted floor and unadorned stations , but large in a hearty brotherhood , and yvhere"They ' adn't good regalia , An' their lodge yvas old an' bare , Hut they knew the Ancient Landmarks , An' thev kep' ' em to a hair . "

© < 5 » O For some time past a French assurance company—not a very large nor important concern—has been advertising in the Libre Parole and other anti-Semite and religious journals It heads its advertisements as folloyvs : — " NKITHKK J I-AVS XOK

FKKKMASOXS . " and goes on to state that it only issues policies to Frenchmen , and refuses both Jeyvs and Freemasons . This remarkable company , which is known as " La Co-operation , " is apparently in a perpetual state of issue ; it advertises its capital as folloyvs : — "Capital " 44 000 , yvith poyver to increase

^ , to _ £ 8 o , ooo , " and is continually making issues of its oyvn stock to the French public . This Company ' s circular is a perfect gem . Peter the Hermit preaching the Crusade yvas not so full of burning eloquence as is the " Co-operation " appealing for fresh capital . The opening paragraph runs as folloyvs : —

" When scoundrels are in difficulties they do not hesitate to liquidate their affairs even at the cost of a lire . " Three hundred lines folloyv in the same style , interlarded yvith virulent abuse of the unfortunate Israelite and trenchant remarks anent the unholy Freemasons . The " Co-operation "

is not lacking in audacity , for it offers its £ 4 shares to the public for £ 5 each . It is a comparatively neyv concern ; there is no market for its shares ; it has never paid a centime in dividend ; and its future is certainly of a problematic nature . Under the circumstances , to ask the public to pay 25 per

cent , premium for its scrip is scarcely in keeping yvith the language of its prospectus ; indeed , it smacks a great deal more of that " usury" yvhich it accuses the entire Jewish race of practising .

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