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  • May 1, 1904
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The Masonic Illustrated, May 1, 1904: Page 13

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    Article The Masonic Veteran. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Page 1 of 3 →
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The Masonic Veteran.

And , last of all , there may be conditions under which there will still be many P . M . ' s for whom no employment can be prescribed . Cannot they find employment for themselves ? Our lodges ought to be valuable , social , and even constitutional factors of the community at large . Without interfering either in politics or in religion , there are many ways in which

the dignity of the Order can be advanced , and the lodge come to be regarded as a real force in the life of the community . Just as the unemployed are likely to become a danger to the State , the existence of a large number of distinguished

brethren in the lodge for whom there is no prospect open is bound in the long run to have a prejudicial effect upon the fortunes of the lodge . When their Masonic zeal impels them to be regular in their attendance they not unnaturally become critics , and cases are not unknown where the Master

finds his worst troubles come , not from those below the dais , but from those who are on it . The east is the home of matured and thoughtful wisdom , and throughout all history the world has been illumined by wise men who have come from the east . Therefore our Past Masters must not think

that because their hands have ceased to wield a gavel their opportunities for usefulness are gone , never to return . On the contrary , they have but closed one chapter of their Masonic experience , but there are many more before the book be closed .

We have not considered at any length the wearers of the purple , but it ought to be understood that the distinction they have attained to only strengthens the obligation under which they lie to their lodges . The honour has not , as a rule , been clue to the Provincial Grand Master ' s perception

of their singular merit , but to his sense of what was due to the worth of the lodges they represent , and at the very least it may be said that one good turn deserves another .

At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar

At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar

The M . W . Grand Master , accompanied by the Duchess of Connaught and the Princesses Margaret and Patricia , paid a visit on the 19 th April to the Masonic Boys' Orphanage , Clonskeagh , Dublin , where they were received by Sir James Creed Meredith , Deputy Grand Master of Ireland , and shown

over the buildings . Her Royal Highness afterwards inspected the boys , numbering 90 , and it was announced that they would be given a holiday when the King visited Dublin . < s > 0 ® The ' coming Festival of the Royal Masonic Institution for

Girls on the nth May , to be presided over by the Provincial Grand Master for Cheshire , Bro . the Hon . Alan de Tatton Egerton , M . P ., will , we trust , prove a success , although , judging from the number comprising the Board of Stewards this year , a falling off from last year ' s amount must be

expected . Although numbers do not always represent strength , such a reduction as 3 60 to 370 from the figures of last year cannot but be indicative of a smaller total of subscriptions . There is still , however , time during the next week to recover much of the lost ground , and we trust that

in the result our misgivings will have been proved to be unjustifiable . < S > < $ > © The appointment of Mr . Justice Warrington as Deputy Grand Registrar comes to him almost at the same moment as his elevation to the bench , and his reception at Grand Lodge , when he with the other Grand Officers of the year

was appointed , was distinctly enthusiastic . The new judge has , since the retirement of Mr . Renshaw , K . C , had the largest practice in Mr . Justice Kekewich ' s Court , and he had almost , since he first took silk in 1895 , divided the bulk of business with that gentleman . At the most there were only about half a dozen " eligibles , " two being members of Parliament

and two ex-Liberal M . Ps . —so small is the field of choice according to present methods of selection . The new judge has the advantage of what on the bench is considered youth , being only some fifty-two or fifty-three . Educated at Rugby and Trinity College , Cambridge , he was bracketed first in the second class of the Classical Tripos in 18 73 .

< S » < 5 > «!> The installation of Major G . C . Davie as Provincial Grand Master of Devonshire , will take place at Exeter on Wednesday , June 13 th . The brethren have been anxiously waiting this announcement , and the great respect in which

the new ruler is deservedly held will probably ensure a record attendance from all parts of the province . The ceremony will be performed by the Right Hon . T . F . Halsey , M . P ., Deputy Grand Master , who will be accompanied by several other distinguished Grand Lodge Officers . The installation of Bro . F . B . Westlake as Deputy will immediately follow that of the Provincial Grand Master .

© >© © The announcement in the press that the veteran Provincial Grand Master of Warwickshire , who has , as usual , with Lady Leigh , been wintering on the Reviera , is in the best of health , will give much satisfaction to all the brethren of his province ,

as well as the Craft generally . He is returning this week , and has already made several public engagements in connection with Birmingham Charities and Masonic functions . It will be remembered that Lord Leigh celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of his appointment as Provincial Grand Master of Warwickshire about two years ago .

© © © Lord Grenfell , who is to succeed the Duke of Connaught as commander of the English forces in Ireland , is descended in the female line from the piratical St . Legers , whose bloody accomplishinents in Ireland in the sixteenth and seventeenth

centuries earned for them a most unenviable reputation among the native Irish . Lord Grenfell ' s grandmother was granddaughter of the Elizabeth St . Leger who was initiated as a Freemason in a room in Donei-aile Court , which is part of the property Lord Castletown received with his wife , the daughter of the last of the St . Legers , Lord Doneraile .

& o <@> The Scientific Lodge , No . 58 , Cambridge , celebrated its one hundred and fiftieth anniversary on Monday , April nth , in a manner which will be memorable to all who were privileged to take part in its proceedings . After the

transaction of business and the initiation of a candidate , an exhibition of Masonic curiosities and properties of the lodge from 1760 to 1904 had been arranged by Bro . A . R . Hill , P . M ., and was of an interesting character . The central exhibit was a beautifully bound volume of manuscript records of the

lodge ' s proceedings from 1760 to 1803 , which contained many quaint entries . Two of the old minute books were exhibited , showing particulars of the initiation of many distinguished brethren , including the Duke of Devonshire when Lord Cavendish ( in 1853 ) , his Grace ' s grandfather ( in

1802 ) , and Sir John Gorst ( in 1855 ) . Further records opened for inspection related to the visit of the late Duke of Sussex to Cambridge when his Highness was Grand Master of the Order in 1818 , and the stylish uniform worn by members of a Cambridge lodge ( now extinct ) in 1793 . Other objects of

interest were an old copper plate presented by the late Bro . Place when Secretary in 1770 ( and it is interesting to note that the front page of the lodge summonses is still printed therefrom ) ; a Masonic punch ladle , presented by the late Bro . John Swan in 1830 ; some Masonic champagne glasses ,

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1904-05-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01051904/page/13/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
United Grand Lodge of England. Article 2
The New Grand Officers. Article 2
Installation Meeting of the Galen Lodge, No.2394. Article 9
Installation Meeting of the St. Martin's Lodge, No. 2455. Article 10
Installation Meeting of the Borough of Bethnal Green Lodge, No. 2896. Article 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
The Masonic Veteran. Article 12
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 13
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Installation Meeting of the Willing Lodge, No. 2893. Article 16
Untitled Article 16
An American Host. Article 17
Untitled Ad 17
Untitled Ad 17
Consecration of the Vincent Lodge, No. 3031. Article 18
Untitled Ad 18
Grand Lodge of Scotland. Article 18
Untitled Article 18
Untitled Ad 18
Some Memorials of the Globe Lodge, No. 23, and of the "Red Apron.'' Article 19
A Concise History of Freemasonry. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 24
Masonic Benevolence in West Yorkshire. Article 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Masonic Veteran.

And , last of all , there may be conditions under which there will still be many P . M . ' s for whom no employment can be prescribed . Cannot they find employment for themselves ? Our lodges ought to be valuable , social , and even constitutional factors of the community at large . Without interfering either in politics or in religion , there are many ways in which

the dignity of the Order can be advanced , and the lodge come to be regarded as a real force in the life of the community . Just as the unemployed are likely to become a danger to the State , the existence of a large number of distinguished

brethren in the lodge for whom there is no prospect open is bound in the long run to have a prejudicial effect upon the fortunes of the lodge . When their Masonic zeal impels them to be regular in their attendance they not unnaturally become critics , and cases are not unknown where the Master

finds his worst troubles come , not from those below the dais , but from those who are on it . The east is the home of matured and thoughtful wisdom , and throughout all history the world has been illumined by wise men who have come from the east . Therefore our Past Masters must not think

that because their hands have ceased to wield a gavel their opportunities for usefulness are gone , never to return . On the contrary , they have but closed one chapter of their Masonic experience , but there are many more before the book be closed .

We have not considered at any length the wearers of the purple , but it ought to be understood that the distinction they have attained to only strengthens the obligation under which they lie to their lodges . The honour has not , as a rule , been clue to the Provincial Grand Master ' s perception

of their singular merit , but to his sense of what was due to the worth of the lodges they represent , and at the very least it may be said that one good turn deserves another .

At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar

At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar

The M . W . Grand Master , accompanied by the Duchess of Connaught and the Princesses Margaret and Patricia , paid a visit on the 19 th April to the Masonic Boys' Orphanage , Clonskeagh , Dublin , where they were received by Sir James Creed Meredith , Deputy Grand Master of Ireland , and shown

over the buildings . Her Royal Highness afterwards inspected the boys , numbering 90 , and it was announced that they would be given a holiday when the King visited Dublin . < s > 0 ® The ' coming Festival of the Royal Masonic Institution for

Girls on the nth May , to be presided over by the Provincial Grand Master for Cheshire , Bro . the Hon . Alan de Tatton Egerton , M . P ., will , we trust , prove a success , although , judging from the number comprising the Board of Stewards this year , a falling off from last year ' s amount must be

expected . Although numbers do not always represent strength , such a reduction as 3 60 to 370 from the figures of last year cannot but be indicative of a smaller total of subscriptions . There is still , however , time during the next week to recover much of the lost ground , and we trust that

in the result our misgivings will have been proved to be unjustifiable . < S > < $ > © The appointment of Mr . Justice Warrington as Deputy Grand Registrar comes to him almost at the same moment as his elevation to the bench , and his reception at Grand Lodge , when he with the other Grand Officers of the year

was appointed , was distinctly enthusiastic . The new judge has , since the retirement of Mr . Renshaw , K . C , had the largest practice in Mr . Justice Kekewich ' s Court , and he had almost , since he first took silk in 1895 , divided the bulk of business with that gentleman . At the most there were only about half a dozen " eligibles , " two being members of Parliament

and two ex-Liberal M . Ps . —so small is the field of choice according to present methods of selection . The new judge has the advantage of what on the bench is considered youth , being only some fifty-two or fifty-three . Educated at Rugby and Trinity College , Cambridge , he was bracketed first in the second class of the Classical Tripos in 18 73 .

< S » < 5 > «!> The installation of Major G . C . Davie as Provincial Grand Master of Devonshire , will take place at Exeter on Wednesday , June 13 th . The brethren have been anxiously waiting this announcement , and the great respect in which

the new ruler is deservedly held will probably ensure a record attendance from all parts of the province . The ceremony will be performed by the Right Hon . T . F . Halsey , M . P ., Deputy Grand Master , who will be accompanied by several other distinguished Grand Lodge Officers . The installation of Bro . F . B . Westlake as Deputy will immediately follow that of the Provincial Grand Master .

© >© © The announcement in the press that the veteran Provincial Grand Master of Warwickshire , who has , as usual , with Lady Leigh , been wintering on the Reviera , is in the best of health , will give much satisfaction to all the brethren of his province ,

as well as the Craft generally . He is returning this week , and has already made several public engagements in connection with Birmingham Charities and Masonic functions . It will be remembered that Lord Leigh celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of his appointment as Provincial Grand Master of Warwickshire about two years ago .

© © © Lord Grenfell , who is to succeed the Duke of Connaught as commander of the English forces in Ireland , is descended in the female line from the piratical St . Legers , whose bloody accomplishinents in Ireland in the sixteenth and seventeenth

centuries earned for them a most unenviable reputation among the native Irish . Lord Grenfell ' s grandmother was granddaughter of the Elizabeth St . Leger who was initiated as a Freemason in a room in Donei-aile Court , which is part of the property Lord Castletown received with his wife , the daughter of the last of the St . Legers , Lord Doneraile .

& o <@> The Scientific Lodge , No . 58 , Cambridge , celebrated its one hundred and fiftieth anniversary on Monday , April nth , in a manner which will be memorable to all who were privileged to take part in its proceedings . After the

transaction of business and the initiation of a candidate , an exhibition of Masonic curiosities and properties of the lodge from 1760 to 1904 had been arranged by Bro . A . R . Hill , P . M ., and was of an interesting character . The central exhibit was a beautifully bound volume of manuscript records of the

lodge ' s proceedings from 1760 to 1803 , which contained many quaint entries . Two of the old minute books were exhibited , showing particulars of the initiation of many distinguished brethren , including the Duke of Devonshire when Lord Cavendish ( in 1853 ) , his Grace ' s grandfather ( in

1802 ) , and Sir John Gorst ( in 1855 ) . Further records opened for inspection related to the visit of the late Duke of Sussex to Cambridge when his Highness was Grand Master of the Order in 1818 , and the stylish uniform worn by members of a Cambridge lodge ( now extinct ) in 1793 . Other objects of

interest were an old copper plate presented by the late Bro . Place when Secretary in 1770 ( and it is interesting to note that the front page of the lodge summonses is still printed therefrom ) ; a Masonic punch ladle , presented by the late Bro . John Swan in 1830 ; some Masonic champagne glasses ,

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