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  • May 1, 1905
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The Masonic Illustrated, May 1, 1905: Page 13

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At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar

So far as Freemasonry is concerned , the Vice-President is energetically qualifying for the support of the initiated . He became a Mason soon after he was chosen for his present office , and he has taken the three symbolic blue lodge Degrees at Indianapolis recently , under a dispensation from the Grand

Ma _ ter of Indiana , in one day . Since the adjournment of the Senate , over which it is his chief duty to preside , he has similarly taken the chapter Degrees , and is going rapidly on to the highest mysteries , as during the present year he intends , it is said , to take the remaining Degrees of the York

Rite , ending with that of Knight Templar , and then to take the Scottish Kite Degrees , up to and including the thirtysecond . He will thus easily outstrip President Roosevelt , who became a member of an Oyster Bay Lodge soon after his election in 1900 , but owing to the pressure of public business has been unable to proceed to the Degrees of the Royal Arch Chapter for which he has been qualified .

- & < s > & Nearly all the Presidents , with the notable exception of President Cleveland , have been Masons . In the days of John Quincy Adams , the prejudice against the fraternity was very strong , and that Chief of the State denounced the secrecy of

the Order under Republican institutions both in speech and with pen . But the animosity has long since died away , and fraternities of every kind are to-day a power in the land . To be a Mason is for a presidential candidate an advantage similar to that of being a member of the Grand Army of the

Republic , like Garlield and McKinley , or a prominent member of the Methodist Church , like McKinley , Hayes and Grant , as are Fairbanks and Shaw themselves in the next Presidential campaign . Moreover Washington is a great Masonic centre . There are twenty-seven blue lodges in the

capital , fourteen Royal Arch Chapters , and live Commanderies of Knights Templar ; and the Scottish Rite bodies are also especially strong , as Washington is the head quarters of the southern jurisdiction of the Order . More than 8 7 per cent , of the House of Representatives and 80 per cent , of the

Senate are Masons , and it will be seen that the inlluence that may be indirectly exerted in Congress is not to be despised .

« __ < s > o Members of the Craft have some reason to complain of the constant misuse in the public press of the word Freemasonry . Whenever malpractices have to be exposed

involving a charge of collusion or conspiracy lo defraud it is described as '' Freemasonry" among this or that class of criminal . The latest specimen of this kind of thing appears in a provincial paper under the heading , " Three Tons of Coal Stolen ; Freemasonry among Boatmen . " If the reporters

vocabularly is so limited that lie can find no other word in the English language so ready to hand he might , we think , draw the line at something a little more heroic than " three tons of coal . "

> 3 » © < £ » A correspondent sends us the following from an American newspaper , which he thinks may be of interest to Masonic readers : — " Mason in Captivity . —Lawlon , Ok ., March 13 th .- — Frank Stratton of Mangum has discovered a small , flat stone ,

triangular in shape , the sides of which are about four inches in length . On one side are carved Masonic emblems—a gavel , an apron , a coffin , and three steps , with the letters

F . H . C . upon them . On the other side is the inscription , 'In Captive by Indians , J . Yanchue , London , Eng ., 1764 . ' The stone was found iu Greer Country , near the south source of Deer Creek , lying beside an old trail that passes through the brakes that cover the divide between Deer Creek and

Haystack Creek . ij > £ a ¦& Bro . Dr . W . F . Kuhn , Past Grand Master of Missouri tells , in his entertaining manner how Marcus Lodge , No . no , of Fredericktown , Mo ., suffered the loss of its charter and how it regained it . The incident is sufficiently amusing to be

reproduced in Bro . Kuhn's own language : — "It appears that this lodge kept its charter in at least a sacred spot , if not a secure one , between the leaves of the Bible . It happened , as it frequently does , that one of the brethren died , and while on the way to the cemetery the bearer of the Great Lights

fell down and unceremoniously spilled the Great Lights all over the county . A strong wind was blowing , and many of the leaves of the Bible being loose , as is very common in lodge Bibles , the wind spread the Gospel , and along with it

the charter , to the four quarters of the earth . I could not understand why the charter should be taken to the funeral , unless the dogma of the ' visible presence' of the charter had , like an ancient landmark , such a linn hold upon the members that thev believed that the deceased would not rest well without a strict constitutional interment . I was informed

that it was customary to keep the charter in the Bible , and if the brother had not fallen all would have been well . The Secretary volunteered the timely information that the bearer of the Great Lights was not intoxicated when he fell , as hewas a minister of the Gospel . I ordered strict search ( o be

made in and about Fredericktown to see if the charter might not be hidden in the recesses of the rocks . Search was made , the charter found , brought up and placed in a frame , no more to wander awav . "—American Tyler .

® o THE BRITISH HOMES ASSURANCE CORPORATION , LIMITED . We have again the pleasure of congratulating the Corporation upon the excellent results obtained in 1904 . On going through the Annual Report we iind that the new proposals received during the past year

amount to . £ 2 , 484 , 10 7 , being the largest ever recorded . Another very satisfactory feature is the steady growth of the premium income and the funds , the latter ( exclusive of the paid-up capital ) having increased in six years £ 181 , 032 , while the premium income has increased £ 8034 8 . The total

, income for the year was £ 127 , 661 , being an increase over that for 1903 of £ 20 , 783 . The claims which arose during the year in the various departments amounted in the aggregate to the sum of £ 19 , 156 4 s . 3 d . divided as

follows : —Life Department , £ 3 , 161 18 s . yd . ; Endowment Certilicate , including claims by death and Matured Certificates , £ 6 , 6 39 I 5 - 1 IC ' - '< Endowment Certilicate Premiums , credited in reduction of mortgage loans in accordance with the regulations of the Corporation £ 9 , 334 9 s . 1 id . The dividend declared was at the rate of 5 per cent , per annum .

We feel sure that Mr . M . Gregory , the Managing Director , and all concerned in the operations of the Corporation will be very satisfied to iind their efforts rewarded with such success . The annual meeting of shareholders was held under the presidency of Mr . N . W . Hubbard , J . P .,

L . C . C . The report and accounts were unanimously adopted , and the declaration of a reversonary bonus to the participating policy and certificate holder , equal to 10 per cent ., was also unanimously agreed to .

Ad01301

^ « poiNT * „ t . R * ° F APPOIN ~ * . * . . „ T OF WPOINT / lje . <¦ * ^ JL ' * N CONNOISSEURS SMOKE ^" ' ^ , ** t , ^ - < "^ *§_ f _____ S & S . __¦_______¦ ¦¦_____¦ ______________ _____¦___¦ _ w __ v a ___ a ¦¦ EH . jgB __*_ . A ' % _ mmm TTBTOITABVIFQ #€ §^ 'f | if'ILurMni o MSM^ IlillSllfii ^ TEOFANI & , CO . 'S Cigarettes receive the Highest awards at all jPv ^^^^ l ^^^ l ^* s ||| j » K > K ^ International Exhibitions , and are sold by all Leading Purveyors through- * , ^& W * % 08 % S $ ^' s r v \ ^ tog ^ -v out the WORLD , * % .. ^ ^^ ^> . / " « T „ KHED'VE ° * r , ^ - ^ *

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1905-05-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01051905/page/13/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
United Grand Lodge of England. Article 2
The New Grand Officers. Article 2
Untitled Ad 7
The New Scottish Constitutions. Article 8
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
The Royal Masonic Institution for Boys. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 13
Consecration of the Aldwych Lodge, No. 3096. Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 15
Lodge Italia, N. 2687 Article 16
Untitled Ad 17
Some Notes on Freemasonry in Australasia.– –(Continued). Article 18
Untitled Ad 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar

So far as Freemasonry is concerned , the Vice-President is energetically qualifying for the support of the initiated . He became a Mason soon after he was chosen for his present office , and he has taken the three symbolic blue lodge Degrees at Indianapolis recently , under a dispensation from the Grand

Ma _ ter of Indiana , in one day . Since the adjournment of the Senate , over which it is his chief duty to preside , he has similarly taken the chapter Degrees , and is going rapidly on to the highest mysteries , as during the present year he intends , it is said , to take the remaining Degrees of the York

Rite , ending with that of Knight Templar , and then to take the Scottish Kite Degrees , up to and including the thirtysecond . He will thus easily outstrip President Roosevelt , who became a member of an Oyster Bay Lodge soon after his election in 1900 , but owing to the pressure of public business has been unable to proceed to the Degrees of the Royal Arch Chapter for which he has been qualified .

- & < s > & Nearly all the Presidents , with the notable exception of President Cleveland , have been Masons . In the days of John Quincy Adams , the prejudice against the fraternity was very strong , and that Chief of the State denounced the secrecy of

the Order under Republican institutions both in speech and with pen . But the animosity has long since died away , and fraternities of every kind are to-day a power in the land . To be a Mason is for a presidential candidate an advantage similar to that of being a member of the Grand Army of the

Republic , like Garlield and McKinley , or a prominent member of the Methodist Church , like McKinley , Hayes and Grant , as are Fairbanks and Shaw themselves in the next Presidential campaign . Moreover Washington is a great Masonic centre . There are twenty-seven blue lodges in the

capital , fourteen Royal Arch Chapters , and live Commanderies of Knights Templar ; and the Scottish Rite bodies are also especially strong , as Washington is the head quarters of the southern jurisdiction of the Order . More than 8 7 per cent , of the House of Representatives and 80 per cent , of the

Senate are Masons , and it will be seen that the inlluence that may be indirectly exerted in Congress is not to be despised .

« __ < s > o Members of the Craft have some reason to complain of the constant misuse in the public press of the word Freemasonry . Whenever malpractices have to be exposed

involving a charge of collusion or conspiracy lo defraud it is described as '' Freemasonry" among this or that class of criminal . The latest specimen of this kind of thing appears in a provincial paper under the heading , " Three Tons of Coal Stolen ; Freemasonry among Boatmen . " If the reporters

vocabularly is so limited that lie can find no other word in the English language so ready to hand he might , we think , draw the line at something a little more heroic than " three tons of coal . "

> 3 » © < £ » A correspondent sends us the following from an American newspaper , which he thinks may be of interest to Masonic readers : — " Mason in Captivity . —Lawlon , Ok ., March 13 th .- — Frank Stratton of Mangum has discovered a small , flat stone ,

triangular in shape , the sides of which are about four inches in length . On one side are carved Masonic emblems—a gavel , an apron , a coffin , and three steps , with the letters

F . H . C . upon them . On the other side is the inscription , 'In Captive by Indians , J . Yanchue , London , Eng ., 1764 . ' The stone was found iu Greer Country , near the south source of Deer Creek , lying beside an old trail that passes through the brakes that cover the divide between Deer Creek and

Haystack Creek . ij > £ a ¦& Bro . Dr . W . F . Kuhn , Past Grand Master of Missouri tells , in his entertaining manner how Marcus Lodge , No . no , of Fredericktown , Mo ., suffered the loss of its charter and how it regained it . The incident is sufficiently amusing to be

reproduced in Bro . Kuhn's own language : — "It appears that this lodge kept its charter in at least a sacred spot , if not a secure one , between the leaves of the Bible . It happened , as it frequently does , that one of the brethren died , and while on the way to the cemetery the bearer of the Great Lights

fell down and unceremoniously spilled the Great Lights all over the county . A strong wind was blowing , and many of the leaves of the Bible being loose , as is very common in lodge Bibles , the wind spread the Gospel , and along with it

the charter , to the four quarters of the earth . I could not understand why the charter should be taken to the funeral , unless the dogma of the ' visible presence' of the charter had , like an ancient landmark , such a linn hold upon the members that thev believed that the deceased would not rest well without a strict constitutional interment . I was informed

that it was customary to keep the charter in the Bible , and if the brother had not fallen all would have been well . The Secretary volunteered the timely information that the bearer of the Great Lights was not intoxicated when he fell , as hewas a minister of the Gospel . I ordered strict search ( o be

made in and about Fredericktown to see if the charter might not be hidden in the recesses of the rocks . Search was made , the charter found , brought up and placed in a frame , no more to wander awav . "—American Tyler .

® o THE BRITISH HOMES ASSURANCE CORPORATION , LIMITED . We have again the pleasure of congratulating the Corporation upon the excellent results obtained in 1904 . On going through the Annual Report we iind that the new proposals received during the past year

amount to . £ 2 , 484 , 10 7 , being the largest ever recorded . Another very satisfactory feature is the steady growth of the premium income and the funds , the latter ( exclusive of the paid-up capital ) having increased in six years £ 181 , 032 , while the premium income has increased £ 8034 8 . The total

, income for the year was £ 127 , 661 , being an increase over that for 1903 of £ 20 , 783 . The claims which arose during the year in the various departments amounted in the aggregate to the sum of £ 19 , 156 4 s . 3 d . divided as

follows : —Life Department , £ 3 , 161 18 s . yd . ; Endowment Certilicate , including claims by death and Matured Certificates , £ 6 , 6 39 I 5 - 1 IC ' - '< Endowment Certilicate Premiums , credited in reduction of mortgage loans in accordance with the regulations of the Corporation £ 9 , 334 9 s . 1 id . The dividend declared was at the rate of 5 per cent , per annum .

We feel sure that Mr . M . Gregory , the Managing Director , and all concerned in the operations of the Corporation will be very satisfied to iind their efforts rewarded with such success . The annual meeting of shareholders was held under the presidency of Mr . N . W . Hubbard , J . P .,

L . C . C . The report and accounts were unanimously adopted , and the declaration of a reversonary bonus to the participating policy and certificate holder , equal to 10 per cent ., was also unanimously agreed to .

Ad01301

^ « poiNT * „ t . R * ° F APPOIN ~ * . * . . „ T OF WPOINT / lje . <¦ * ^ JL ' * N CONNOISSEURS SMOKE ^" ' ^ , ** t , ^ - < "^ *§_ f _____ S & S . __¦_______¦ ¦¦_____¦ ______________ _____¦___¦ _ w __ v a ___ a ¦¦ EH . jgB __*_ . A ' % _ mmm TTBTOITABVIFQ #€ §^ 'f | if'ILurMni o MSM^ IlillSllfii ^ TEOFANI & , CO . 'S Cigarettes receive the Highest awards at all jPv ^^^^ l ^^^ l ^* s ||| j » K > K ^ International Exhibitions , and are sold by all Leading Purveyors through- * , ^& W * % 08 % S $ ^' s r v \ ^ tog ^ -v out the WORLD , * % .. ^ ^^ ^> . / " « T „ KHED'VE ° * r , ^ - ^ *

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