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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Feb. 1, 1903
  • Page 13
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The Masonic Illustrated, Feb. 1, 1903: Page 13

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Ar01300

The same paper quotes a "high authority" in Masonic circles , as stating to a representative , " that the Act had singularly little application to London , yvhere there are absolutely no clubs , and dinners are almost invariably held on licensed premises . The experiment , " he said , " yvas made twenty or so years ago of forming a London Masonic club

in Queen Victoria Street , but after a trial of about three years the club yvas dissolved as impracticable . The premises are noyv in use as the head-quarters of the Salvation Army . In the provinces Masonic clubs had ahvavs been common , smaller toyvns having the advantage of London in such matters , and there the Act will have general application ,

and the Grand Registrar ' s digest will prove of the greatest utility . " -S < B » <& The Arts Lodge , No . 2751 , in common yvith a large number of Masonic bodies and individuals , has availed itself of the opportunity afforded b y the marriage of the Grand Secretary to offer him a token of the regard and esteem in yvhich he is held , and , as befits a body of men yvho , in addition

to Masonic ties , are bound together by art associations , the form of their gift has assumed the shape of a bronze basrelief executed by one of its members , the yvell knoyvn sculptor , Bro . Simr / ionds . The obverse is a life-like portrait in profile of Sir Edyvard Letchyvorth , and on the reverse a

( J'lln / ii .- Elite furl rail Co . ) graceful design representing Faith , Hope , and Charity , surrounded by the folloyving inscription : — " Presented as a yvedding gift and token of esteem and fraternal regard , 1 9 , from the Arts Lodge , No . 275 1 , to V . W . Bro . Echv . Letchyvorth . " The bronze is mounted on a handsome ebony stand .

On Wednesday , ] an nary 21 st , at the Masonic Temple , Margate , Bro . W . H . Bennett yvas installed as Worshipful Master of the Union Lodge , No . 127 , which enjoys the distinction of being one of the oldest lodges in the district . There yvas a large gathering of members of the Craft , including Past and Present Masters of other lodges in Kent and

Provincial Grand Officers , and the ceremony yvas very impressively performed by Bro . E . L . Dixson , P . M . 429 , P . P . G . D . C , the I . P . M ., yvho discharged the duties of Installing Master in a fautlcss manner . The neyv Worshipful Master appointed and invested his officers for the ensuing year as folloyvs : —Bros . E . L . Dixson , I . P . M . ; E . Coleman ,

S . W . ; G . W . Sexby , J . W . ; Rev . W . Taylor Jones , Chaplain ; F . W . Willett , Treasurer ; F . Stanley , Secretary ; C . E . Perret , S . D . ; E . Padget , J . D . ; T . W . Stigant , I . G . ; J . Moore , D . C . ; J . M . Mttnns , A . D . C . ; T . Coleman , Organist ; F . J . Doughty and E . S . Whitehead , Steyvards ; and George Layvrence , Tvler .

(©> q , . ©> The customary banquet took place at the Cliftonville Hotel , yvhere no efforts had been spared on the part of the management to make the repast a yvell-served and enjoyable one . The neyv Worshipful Master presided over a company numbering betyveen seventy and eighty , and the proceedings

yvere of a very enjoyable character . " & < s » 3 » ¦ The Law Courts at Montreal have had before it recently a case in yvhich a member of one of the three lodges still remaining in that territory under English jurisdiction

brought an action against a member of the same lodge for defamation of character and claimed S 500 damages . We are not concerned yvith the details of the case , but the plea to the action yvas from the Masonic point of view of considerable interest , and it yvas that the defendant had acted

in accordance yvith the rules of the Order by bringing the conduct of the plaintiff before the lodge , and that the trial in lodge yvhich followed the complaint had resulted in the plaintiff ' s charge being shoyvn to be unfounded , and his being excluded from the lodge until he had apologised .

« £ ¦ < S > © In rendering judgment the court held that the promotion of harmony betyveen the members of a lodge is one of the guiding principles of the Masonic Order , and , under Masonic rules , the defendant had the right to place his differences yvith the plaintiff before his lodge . Further , if plaintiff complained

of the decision of the lodge , he yvas obliged , under Masonic rules , to appeal to higher Masonic authority . The question was one coming within the jurisdiction of the Order . Under these circumstances the action yvas dismissed yvith costs .

The brethren ol the old lodge ot Edinburgh St . Andreyy , No . 4 8 , celebrated on the 12 th January the date of Burns ' visit to their lodge , on yvhich occasion he yvas hailed and toasted as " Caledonia ' s Bard , " Robert Burns . This yvas the first public recognition of his poetic genius and talent , and Burns , writing to his friend , James Ballantine , Banker , in

Ayr , described yvhat occurred : — "Iyvent to a Mason lodge yesternight , yvhere the Most Worshipful Grand Master , Charteris , and all the Grand Lodge of Scotland visited . The meeting yvas numerous and elegant ; all the different lodges about toyvn yvere present in all their pomp . The Grand Master , yvho presided yvith great solemnity and honour to

himself as a gentleman and Mason , among other general toasts gave ' Caledonia ' and ' Caledonia's Bard , Bro . Burns , ' yvhich ran through the yvhole assembly yvith multiplied honours and repeated acclamations . As I had no idea such a thing yvould happen , I yvas doyvnright thunderstruck-, and ,

trembling in every nerve , made the best return in my power . Just as I had finished , some of the Grand Officers said , so loud that I could hear , yvith a most comforting accent ' Very yveel indeed ! ' yvhich set me something in rights again . " The lodge possesses some very valuable relics , and not the least

interesting and valuable of these is the Right Worshipful Master ' s chair , yvhich yvas made b y the hands of George Meikle Kemp , the architect of the Scott monument , and presented by him to his mother lodge .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1903-02-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01021903/page/13/.
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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.

Ar01300

The same paper quotes a "high authority" in Masonic circles , as stating to a representative , " that the Act had singularly little application to London , yvhere there are absolutely no clubs , and dinners are almost invariably held on licensed premises . The experiment , " he said , " yvas made twenty or so years ago of forming a London Masonic club

in Queen Victoria Street , but after a trial of about three years the club yvas dissolved as impracticable . The premises are noyv in use as the head-quarters of the Salvation Army . In the provinces Masonic clubs had ahvavs been common , smaller toyvns having the advantage of London in such matters , and there the Act will have general application ,

and the Grand Registrar ' s digest will prove of the greatest utility . " -S < B » <& The Arts Lodge , No . 2751 , in common yvith a large number of Masonic bodies and individuals , has availed itself of the opportunity afforded b y the marriage of the Grand Secretary to offer him a token of the regard and esteem in yvhich he is held , and , as befits a body of men yvho , in addition

to Masonic ties , are bound together by art associations , the form of their gift has assumed the shape of a bronze basrelief executed by one of its members , the yvell knoyvn sculptor , Bro . Simr / ionds . The obverse is a life-like portrait in profile of Sir Edyvard Letchyvorth , and on the reverse a

( J'lln / ii .- Elite furl rail Co . ) graceful design representing Faith , Hope , and Charity , surrounded by the folloyving inscription : — " Presented as a yvedding gift and token of esteem and fraternal regard , 1 9 , from the Arts Lodge , No . 275 1 , to V . W . Bro . Echv . Letchyvorth . " The bronze is mounted on a handsome ebony stand .

On Wednesday , ] an nary 21 st , at the Masonic Temple , Margate , Bro . W . H . Bennett yvas installed as Worshipful Master of the Union Lodge , No . 127 , which enjoys the distinction of being one of the oldest lodges in the district . There yvas a large gathering of members of the Craft , including Past and Present Masters of other lodges in Kent and

Provincial Grand Officers , and the ceremony yvas very impressively performed by Bro . E . L . Dixson , P . M . 429 , P . P . G . D . C , the I . P . M ., yvho discharged the duties of Installing Master in a fautlcss manner . The neyv Worshipful Master appointed and invested his officers for the ensuing year as folloyvs : —Bros . E . L . Dixson , I . P . M . ; E . Coleman ,

S . W . ; G . W . Sexby , J . W . ; Rev . W . Taylor Jones , Chaplain ; F . W . Willett , Treasurer ; F . Stanley , Secretary ; C . E . Perret , S . D . ; E . Padget , J . D . ; T . W . Stigant , I . G . ; J . Moore , D . C . ; J . M . Mttnns , A . D . C . ; T . Coleman , Organist ; F . J . Doughty and E . S . Whitehead , Steyvards ; and George Layvrence , Tvler .

(©> q , . ©> The customary banquet took place at the Cliftonville Hotel , yvhere no efforts had been spared on the part of the management to make the repast a yvell-served and enjoyable one . The neyv Worshipful Master presided over a company numbering betyveen seventy and eighty , and the proceedings

yvere of a very enjoyable character . " & < s » 3 » ¦ The Law Courts at Montreal have had before it recently a case in yvhich a member of one of the three lodges still remaining in that territory under English jurisdiction

brought an action against a member of the same lodge for defamation of character and claimed S 500 damages . We are not concerned yvith the details of the case , but the plea to the action yvas from the Masonic point of view of considerable interest , and it yvas that the defendant had acted

in accordance yvith the rules of the Order by bringing the conduct of the plaintiff before the lodge , and that the trial in lodge yvhich followed the complaint had resulted in the plaintiff ' s charge being shoyvn to be unfounded , and his being excluded from the lodge until he had apologised .

« £ ¦ < S > © In rendering judgment the court held that the promotion of harmony betyveen the members of a lodge is one of the guiding principles of the Masonic Order , and , under Masonic rules , the defendant had the right to place his differences yvith the plaintiff before his lodge . Further , if plaintiff complained

of the decision of the lodge , he yvas obliged , under Masonic rules , to appeal to higher Masonic authority . The question was one coming within the jurisdiction of the Order . Under these circumstances the action yvas dismissed yvith costs .

The brethren ol the old lodge ot Edinburgh St . Andreyy , No . 4 8 , celebrated on the 12 th January the date of Burns ' visit to their lodge , on yvhich occasion he yvas hailed and toasted as " Caledonia ' s Bard , " Robert Burns . This yvas the first public recognition of his poetic genius and talent , and Burns , writing to his friend , James Ballantine , Banker , in

Ayr , described yvhat occurred : — "Iyvent to a Mason lodge yesternight , yvhere the Most Worshipful Grand Master , Charteris , and all the Grand Lodge of Scotland visited . The meeting yvas numerous and elegant ; all the different lodges about toyvn yvere present in all their pomp . The Grand Master , yvho presided yvith great solemnity and honour to

himself as a gentleman and Mason , among other general toasts gave ' Caledonia ' and ' Caledonia's Bard , Bro . Burns , ' yvhich ran through the yvhole assembly yvith multiplied honours and repeated acclamations . As I had no idea such a thing yvould happen , I yvas doyvnright thunderstruck-, and ,

trembling in every nerve , made the best return in my power . Just as I had finished , some of the Grand Officers said , so loud that I could hear , yvith a most comforting accent ' Very yveel indeed ! ' yvhich set me something in rights again . " The lodge possesses some very valuable relics , and not the least

interesting and valuable of these is the Right Worshipful Master ' s chair , yvhich yvas made b y the hands of George Meikle Kemp , the architect of the Scott monument , and presented by him to his mother lodge .

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