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  • Jan. 1, 1890
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The Masonic Review, Jan. 1, 1890: Page 3

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Round And About.

attitude Bro . Binckes hns assumed in this matter is highly gratifying to the Provisional Management Committee , and lends very materially to assist such an amicable and satisfactory settlement . * * * The Quarterly Court will be held on the last day of the present month , when Bro . E . V . Greatbach will move : — " That the Provisional Committee are hereby empowered to give Bro . Binckes

such honorarium as they may deem expedient , not exceeding the sum of ; £ i , ooo , out of the funds of the Institution , on his retirement from the office of Secretary , " Bro . Hawkins previously moving the reconsideration and rescinding of the resolution as to pensions declared to be carried at the last Court . * * *

Whether ^ 350 per annum too much burden a charity with is a question upon which minds will differ , and the subscribers to the charity have a very sound case in opposing the proposed pension . I think this idea of commutation an excellent one , and one that can easily be fulfilled . I was in Yorkshire the other day , and broke my journey home , at Ponrefract , where I called at the banking

establishment of Bro . Tew , the Prov . Grand Master for West Yorkshire . Bro . Tew , like most people at this season of the year , had just left , with his children , for Leeds , to witness the pantomime there , so that I did not see him , but his representative at the bank told me that Bro . Tew had opened an account for the purpose of

raising this ^ 2 , 500 , and that subscriptions were coming in very fast . I am afraid this is the explanation of Bro . Langton ' s announcement that a distinguished Brother has munificently placed this large sum at the disposal of the Committee . There is something rather extraordinary about this , as the Yorkshire folk are dead

against the pension , and their champion is the Prov . Grand Master of West Yorkshire , the gentleman who is supposed to have made this offer to the Provisional Committee . Whatever happens , and whatever conclusion the subscribers may arrive at , one thing is most evident , that a speedy solution of the difficulty is absolutely necessary . Everybody connected with the affair seems stuck on the horns of a dilemma .

* * * One gentleman , who signs himself " Veto " in a letter to me bearing no address , but the postal stamp of Ipswich upon the envelope , thinks I am interested in Mr . Binckes ' s favor , and advises me that " a . public journal should take the popular side in

matters of this sort . " I am only with Mr . Binckes in so much as hose subscribers who have expressed their pleasure in sweetening the remaining years of his life . Was he a man who had made provision for the future , he could not for an instant continue in the invidious position he is now placed , at the mercy and caprice

of a section of the charity biassed by a report which is a blot upon the escutcheon of Freemasonry , and a section who makes him the scapegoat for the shortcomings of a body of Committeemen . What Bro . Binckes may be personally I do not know , for I have not the pleasure of his personal acquaintance .

* * * i . Sir Algernon Borthwick , Bart ., is one of those very few men willing to admit he has not done his duty by the Craft . His career has been so eventful , however , that excuses may be made if he has not found time to pay more attention to it . He is the proprietor of the Morning Fust , which has risen to be a very valuable property

since it was reduced to the price of a humble penny . Sir Algernon has a fine mansion in Piccadilly , and an historical place in Scotland . He is a man of but medium height and age . He was knighted in 1880 , and made a Baronet seven years later , and has been M . P . for South Kensington since 1885 . In personality he is of a kind and courteous disposition , has made tons of money , and knows how to keep it . He is a Scotchman by birth .

* * -it-There still seems to be a very widespread belief that the President of the Royal Academy is one of us . I am afraid Sir Frederick Leighton has no very high opinion of the Craft , for he tells me of an insulting letter he received a little time back

from a disappointed student of the Academy Schools , upbraiding him for his want of Masonic obligation in not awarding the writer a prize he felt himself entitled to . These cases of Craft etiquetteor want of it—should be brought before some tribunal at Great Queen-street , and dealt with in a prompt and emphatic manner . * * *

Mr . Edward Terry , as soon as his Grand Treasurcrship expires , intends to spend the remainder of the year in India , through which he will make a tour , accompanied by his wife . Mr . Terry is very fond of travel , and gets quite enthusiastic over the lions of the place he happens to be visiting . On one occasion , whilst yachting in the Mediterranean , his party saved a young Russian who had

happened upon some calamity of shipwreck or something of that sort , and , although Mr . Terry has never seen him Since , a yearly gift of cigarettes and tobacco testifies his thankfulness to his benefactor .

* * * The 1 st of next month is the last performance of " Sweet Lavender , " out of which Bro . Terry has secured a very handsome fortune , exceeded in recent years but by the phenomenal receipts of " Dorothy . " In Mr . Terry we may centre the rise and fall of

English burlesque ; so eventful has been his career , and so highlyinteresting and instructive it is , that his friends have outweighed his scruples , and he has at last consented to allow his reminiscences to be written .

* * * Tucked out of sight in the High-street of Ponteftract , close to the Market-place and opposite the " Lion " —the cleanest hostelry south of the Tweed , and superbly managed by Mr . Sweeting and his two charming daughters , well known of hunting squires — and

behind a quaint shop front , is to be found , surrounded by his books and old-world stationery , Bro . Holmes and his family of eleven sons . Bro . Holmes is the proprietor and editor of the Pontc fract Advertise ); but the curious fact about this publication is that the entire production from week to week is the work of himself and his

boys . His youngest compositor is a lad of nine , who , wonderful to relate , can set up anything in the most expert manner . The little chap loves the work , and struts about the place with the dignity of a grey-haired comp . engaged by Hansard . In his quiet , uneventful li . ' e , Bro . Holmes has opportunities of exercising his love for

antiquarian research , and besides being a prominent member of several Yorkshire Antiquarian Societies of renown , he has written a history of his native town and published an exhaustive work upon " Pontefract Castle , " the guide-book to which is from his pen . Bro . Holmes is not very communicative , but when you have managed to " draw "

him you will be sure to hear his admiration for his neighbor and patron , Bro . W . Tew , the Provincial Grand Master for West Yorkshire .

The Chairman at the anniversary festival of the Benevolent Institution , to be held on the 2 Gth prox . at tlie Freemasons' Tavern will make himself famous if he can suggest a means whereby the enormous number' of applicants for admission into the Institution can be comforted in their old age . That for each vacancy that

occurs there exist from fifteen to twenty applicants reveals a most unpleasant condition of affairs . It is easy , indeed , to reduce the numbers of eligible inmates by increasing the minimum age at which a man or woman becomes eligible , but such a means is very uncharitable and extremely unfair . The question of degree , solely

from the point of age , has no weight when threescore years are reached and passed . It should be a matter of worthiness first , of destitution second , and age last . * * * A lady of my recent acquaintance , who , though not a rich woman by any meansis possessed of property and an income that to many

, would be considered an ample one , had a son for some years a student at the Boys' Schools . This young gentleman was elected by a large majority of votes , and since his retirement from the school has been articled to a profession in which he is expected to , and

“The Masonic Review: 1890-01-01, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msr/issues/msr_01011890/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
CHARITY. Article 1
Round and About. Article 2
Masonic Mems. Article 4
Untitled Article 8
Eminent Masons at Home. Article 8
THE SENIOR DEACON. Article 10
ROBERT BURNS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 11
Facts and Fancies. Article 12
Among the Bohemians. Article 14
Colonial and Foreign. Article 15
Gathered Chips. Article 16
Answers to Correspondents. Article 16
BOOKS AND PERIODICALS RECEIVED. Article 16
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Round And About.

attitude Bro . Binckes hns assumed in this matter is highly gratifying to the Provisional Management Committee , and lends very materially to assist such an amicable and satisfactory settlement . * * * The Quarterly Court will be held on the last day of the present month , when Bro . E . V . Greatbach will move : — " That the Provisional Committee are hereby empowered to give Bro . Binckes

such honorarium as they may deem expedient , not exceeding the sum of ; £ i , ooo , out of the funds of the Institution , on his retirement from the office of Secretary , " Bro . Hawkins previously moving the reconsideration and rescinding of the resolution as to pensions declared to be carried at the last Court . * * *

Whether ^ 350 per annum too much burden a charity with is a question upon which minds will differ , and the subscribers to the charity have a very sound case in opposing the proposed pension . I think this idea of commutation an excellent one , and one that can easily be fulfilled . I was in Yorkshire the other day , and broke my journey home , at Ponrefract , where I called at the banking

establishment of Bro . Tew , the Prov . Grand Master for West Yorkshire . Bro . Tew , like most people at this season of the year , had just left , with his children , for Leeds , to witness the pantomime there , so that I did not see him , but his representative at the bank told me that Bro . Tew had opened an account for the purpose of

raising this ^ 2 , 500 , and that subscriptions were coming in very fast . I am afraid this is the explanation of Bro . Langton ' s announcement that a distinguished Brother has munificently placed this large sum at the disposal of the Committee . There is something rather extraordinary about this , as the Yorkshire folk are dead

against the pension , and their champion is the Prov . Grand Master of West Yorkshire , the gentleman who is supposed to have made this offer to the Provisional Committee . Whatever happens , and whatever conclusion the subscribers may arrive at , one thing is most evident , that a speedy solution of the difficulty is absolutely necessary . Everybody connected with the affair seems stuck on the horns of a dilemma .

* * * One gentleman , who signs himself " Veto " in a letter to me bearing no address , but the postal stamp of Ipswich upon the envelope , thinks I am interested in Mr . Binckes ' s favor , and advises me that " a . public journal should take the popular side in

matters of this sort . " I am only with Mr . Binckes in so much as hose subscribers who have expressed their pleasure in sweetening the remaining years of his life . Was he a man who had made provision for the future , he could not for an instant continue in the invidious position he is now placed , at the mercy and caprice

of a section of the charity biassed by a report which is a blot upon the escutcheon of Freemasonry , and a section who makes him the scapegoat for the shortcomings of a body of Committeemen . What Bro . Binckes may be personally I do not know , for I have not the pleasure of his personal acquaintance .

* * * i . Sir Algernon Borthwick , Bart ., is one of those very few men willing to admit he has not done his duty by the Craft . His career has been so eventful , however , that excuses may be made if he has not found time to pay more attention to it . He is the proprietor of the Morning Fust , which has risen to be a very valuable property

since it was reduced to the price of a humble penny . Sir Algernon has a fine mansion in Piccadilly , and an historical place in Scotland . He is a man of but medium height and age . He was knighted in 1880 , and made a Baronet seven years later , and has been M . P . for South Kensington since 1885 . In personality he is of a kind and courteous disposition , has made tons of money , and knows how to keep it . He is a Scotchman by birth .

* * -it-There still seems to be a very widespread belief that the President of the Royal Academy is one of us . I am afraid Sir Frederick Leighton has no very high opinion of the Craft , for he tells me of an insulting letter he received a little time back

from a disappointed student of the Academy Schools , upbraiding him for his want of Masonic obligation in not awarding the writer a prize he felt himself entitled to . These cases of Craft etiquetteor want of it—should be brought before some tribunal at Great Queen-street , and dealt with in a prompt and emphatic manner . * * *

Mr . Edward Terry , as soon as his Grand Treasurcrship expires , intends to spend the remainder of the year in India , through which he will make a tour , accompanied by his wife . Mr . Terry is very fond of travel , and gets quite enthusiastic over the lions of the place he happens to be visiting . On one occasion , whilst yachting in the Mediterranean , his party saved a young Russian who had

happened upon some calamity of shipwreck or something of that sort , and , although Mr . Terry has never seen him Since , a yearly gift of cigarettes and tobacco testifies his thankfulness to his benefactor .

* * * The 1 st of next month is the last performance of " Sweet Lavender , " out of which Bro . Terry has secured a very handsome fortune , exceeded in recent years but by the phenomenal receipts of " Dorothy . " In Mr . Terry we may centre the rise and fall of

English burlesque ; so eventful has been his career , and so highlyinteresting and instructive it is , that his friends have outweighed his scruples , and he has at last consented to allow his reminiscences to be written .

* * * Tucked out of sight in the High-street of Ponteftract , close to the Market-place and opposite the " Lion " —the cleanest hostelry south of the Tweed , and superbly managed by Mr . Sweeting and his two charming daughters , well known of hunting squires — and

behind a quaint shop front , is to be found , surrounded by his books and old-world stationery , Bro . Holmes and his family of eleven sons . Bro . Holmes is the proprietor and editor of the Pontc fract Advertise ); but the curious fact about this publication is that the entire production from week to week is the work of himself and his

boys . His youngest compositor is a lad of nine , who , wonderful to relate , can set up anything in the most expert manner . The little chap loves the work , and struts about the place with the dignity of a grey-haired comp . engaged by Hansard . In his quiet , uneventful li . ' e , Bro . Holmes has opportunities of exercising his love for

antiquarian research , and besides being a prominent member of several Yorkshire Antiquarian Societies of renown , he has written a history of his native town and published an exhaustive work upon " Pontefract Castle , " the guide-book to which is from his pen . Bro . Holmes is not very communicative , but when you have managed to " draw "

him you will be sure to hear his admiration for his neighbor and patron , Bro . W . Tew , the Provincial Grand Master for West Yorkshire .

The Chairman at the anniversary festival of the Benevolent Institution , to be held on the 2 Gth prox . at tlie Freemasons' Tavern will make himself famous if he can suggest a means whereby the enormous number' of applicants for admission into the Institution can be comforted in their old age . That for each vacancy that

occurs there exist from fifteen to twenty applicants reveals a most unpleasant condition of affairs . It is easy , indeed , to reduce the numbers of eligible inmates by increasing the minimum age at which a man or woman becomes eligible , but such a means is very uncharitable and extremely unfair . The question of degree , solely

from the point of age , has no weight when threescore years are reached and passed . It should be a matter of worthiness first , of destitution second , and age last . * * * A lady of my recent acquaintance , who , though not a rich woman by any meansis possessed of property and an income that to many

, would be considered an ample one , had a son for some years a student at the Boys' Schools . This young gentleman was elected by a large majority of votes , and since his retirement from the school has been articled to a profession in which he is expected to , and

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