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The Freemason's Chronicle, Sept. 11, 1880: Page 7

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    Article PERPETUAL JURISDICTION. ← Page 2 of 2
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Page 7

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

Perpetual Jurisdiction.

tho old fogyism of Bro . Snarler can t stand tho now fangled notions of Mr . Wilson ? Perpetual jurisdiction says , " Yes ; " common sense and justice say , " No . " Iu most Grand Lodge jurisdictions the rejected applicant is allowed to apply again after six or twelve months . Suppose , however , Mr . Wilson has removed from Gravcnhnrst , Ontario , and gone to Call-,

fornia . After a number of years , ho again knocks at tho door of a Lodge , is he to be refused ad mission because Snarler , of Gravcnhnrst has not got over his prejudices ? Mr . W . has resided years in California , is woll liked , has gained a reputation for honesty and uprightness of purpose , is a rising man and known to bo such ; is it right or just fchafc his application should bo refused , because years before ho

was rejected in a Lodge hundreds of miles away , through tho bigotry or narrow-mindedness of somo petty-sonled member ? Even supposing , for fcho sake of argument , thafc years before Mr . W . was nofc a fit ashlar for the Masonio Temple , is it just , honourable or right that former error of judgment is to be for ever maintained against him ? Are Masons so bigoted that they cannot believe a man

can reform ? Are we to bo more strict than the Synagogue of the Hebrew or the Chnrch of the Nazareno ? Tho Gentle Teacher taught Forgiveness , and surely we , the followers of Hiram , have no right to say , Mr . W ., years ago , committed a crime , lie has sorrowed and suffered days and nights , for weeks , months and years , for the evil passions that overcame him in the honr of temptation , but wo will

not forget or forgive the offence , wo will show no mercy , we will not extend tho hand of charity , but will , like the Pharisee of old , thank GOD that wo aro holier than he , ancl refuse our aid , our help and our succour , when he asks our assistance by seeking admission to our Lodge-rooms ? I answer , unhesitatingly , that such a system is pernicious in the extreme . It is well , of course , under all circumstances ,

to make the fullest inquiries relative to an applicant for our mysteries , but to argue that a Lodge has perpetual jurisdiction over the candidate that ifc has once blackballed is giving an individual Mason a power within his own hands to commit a wrong not only against the rejected ashlar , but against the Craft universal Have wo nofc all witnessed , afc times , the unfortunate position of

certain Lodges in which adiscordanfc element has most un-Masonically arisen , and where , to the disgrace of the Craft , the blackball has been mercilessly used ? Many of us must have witnessed , or at least heard of , such oases , and under these circumstances how unj usfc the law of perpetual jurisdiction proves itself to be ! It is erroneous in theory and wrong in practice . A man may have been blackballed in

spite ; he may also justly have been blackballed , but ho may have expiated his crime by a subsequent Godly and moral life . Surely such an one is nofc to be for ever excluded from our mysteries , which would help him to lead a truer , a better , and nobler career . Now , many eminent jurists are decidedly opposed to this theory , and advocate the system of perpetual jurisdiction , forgetting that in

so doing they aro giving a power too great for one | man to possess , if he is tainted with the the least particle of bigotry or sectarianism . Bro . Thomas Hardeman , in the Voice ( page 383 ) , in speaking of rejected material , says : | " If rejected , it is noticed , or shonld be , to tbe Fraternity at large that that stone has been tried by a skilful Master Builder ' s square and found unfit for the building , and no other builder

should take up that rejected stone and work it into the Temple , until he who first raised ifc from its quarry again applies his square and finds that the defect discovered in the first investigation has been removed , and gives his consent for the second builder to use ifc at his discretion . Jurisdiction once acquired by a Lodge , by voluntary act , inures to it perpetually , and although Grand Lodge enactment may

limit the time when a candidate may renew his application in that Lodge , ifc may not remove or limit the jurisdiction of the same , as it has not the constitutional power to do so . " This declaration that a Grand Lodge " may nofc remove or limit the jurisdiction of the same (" the Lodge rejecting ) , as it has not the constitutional power to do so , " is certainly erroneous . In former days

any seven Masons could initiate a candidate , and in 1717 , when Masonry assumed its present form , the theory of perpetual jurisdiction was not even mooted , and at the present time we find the Mother Grand Lodge of England and the older Grand Lodges of Europe accepting material , without any regard to territorial jurisdiction over the candidate for one year after the passing of the ballot upon the

petition of the applicant , and should the applicant remove to another jurisdiction , either subordinate or snpreme , these ' Grand Bodies hold that the Lodge rejecting or accepting said material has no claim whatever upon the same . This , I conceive to be the true spirit ; of Masonry . Ifc is only just . A man should never be subjected to the petty tyranny of a one-man power , and Freemasonry , with its

enlarged ideas and liberal principles , should not snbject itself to a tyranny worthy of despotic Russia or priest-ridden Spain . Whenever an applicant applies who has been rejected in another jurisdiction ifc is very easy to write and inquire regarding the antecedents of such an one , and without much difficulty his course of life in his former home is readily discovered . He is not likely to seek

admission a second time unless he has been imbued with a love for the princi ples of the Craft , nor is he likely to subject himself a second timo to a rebuff unless he feels very confident he will stand the test of the overseer ' s square . Such being the case , perpetual jurisdiction is , as before stated , a system thafc may and does verge into pett y tyranny and personal spite . Examples could easily be given to prove

such to be the case . It is placing in the hands of an unprincipled Mason a power that no one man should possess , and since we boast ol our liberal and enlightened principles , it behoves us in all cases and under all circumstances to act with fairness and justice , not only to those within the sanctum sanctorum , but also to those who are desirous of uniting themselves with us in the bonds of Brotherly Love , Relief

and Truth . Perpetual jurisdiction , therefore , is a contemptible ancl narrow-minded piece of jurisprudence thafc has only crept into the Craft within the past few years , and which is neither creditable tothc common sense of the Brotherhood , nor worthy of the support of the : Order . It is based upon a false hypothesis , and should be expunged from the statutes of a Fraternity whose watchword is Liberality and whose password is Charity .

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Second Series , now ready , Grown Svo , Chilly price 3 , s- 6 V / , post free . MASONIC PORTRAITS . SKETCHES op DISTINGUISHED FEEEMASONS . REPRINTED FROM "TUB FREEMASON ' CHRONICLE . " BY G . BLIZAED ABBOTT , OF LODGE NO . 1385 , ASSOCIATE or KING ' S COLLEGE , LONDON . LISI . ' OFIPORTRAITH NESTOR AN INSTAL LINO MASTER ( Bro . 'W . Hyde Pullen , 33 cleg .. Past ( Bro . W . Biggs , Past Prov . G . S . AV . G . S . B ., Past Dep . P . G . M . Hunts , Wilts * , unci Past Pvov . G . Sec . Assistant Secretary Sup . Couti- Berks and Bucks ) , cil A . and A . Rite . ) A VETERAN TlIE STATESMAN ( llm , AV . Kelly , Past Prov . G . M . and ( The Right Hon . Earl of Carnarvon , Prov . G . Sup . Leicestershire and 33 deg ., Pro Grand "Muster , Pro j Rutland , Prov . G . M . M . M . Lei-Grand Z ., Past G . M . M . M ., and cestcrsliire ) . Past M . P . S . G . Commander A . A GRAND STEAVARO and A . Rite . ( Bro John AVordsworth , 30 dog ., THE TREASURER r , G . Steward , Past Prov . ( Bro . F . Adlarrl , P . M . and'Trcasurer G J . AV . AV . Yorkshire , and Prov . Royal York Lodge of Porscver- G . M . M . M . AV . Yorkshire ) , anco , No . 7 ) . ViR Veri'txs THE DEPUTY ( BVO . G . AVard Verry , P . M and Past ( Tho RiglitHou . Lord Skelmersdale , Prov . Grand . Soj . [ Arch ] Herts ) . 33 dcg ., Deputy G . Mastcr . Grand AcniLLES H ., G . M . M . M ., Great Prior of ( Bro . K j . Morris , Past G . J . D ., and the Temple , and MP Sov . G . £ > . rjep . p . G . M . of Eastern Commander A . and A . Rito . ) Division of South AVales ) . A PROVINCIAL MAGNATE A DEVON CRAFTSMAN ( Bro W . W B . Beach , MP ., Prov . ( Bro - j , Curteis , 30 do-., Past ¥ WM 1 ; I' ?^ M ? ( 1 , S' rrov . G . S . Warden Devon ) , of AATight , Past G . M . M . M . and s T ... . _ . . NTtT Prov . G . Prior of tho Temple , for bI , 'i T ^ r T , u , . jrant , s \ ( Bro . J . M . Pultonoy Montagu , J . P . i TIME - HONOURED LANCASTER ^ 'C . &^ aiSXv ( Bro A o 4 anc 1 asttS" If 1 ? 0 ' * * , - i \ Vl G- Sup . Dorsetshire , and G . G . S . Warden East Lancashire ) . Chancellor Supreme Council A . THE SCHOLAR and A . Rite ) . ( Bro . John Newton , F . R . A . S ., P . M ., HIPPOCRATES P . Z ., Author of Works on Navi- ( Gro . Voslrson Hell , M . D ., Pasfc gation ) . G . Deacon , Dep . Prov . G . M . and OUR NOBLE CRITIC prov . G . Sup . N . and E . York-( The Right Hon . Lord Leigh , 30 dog , shire ) . Prov . G . M . ancl G . Sup . War- A CESTRIAN CHIEF wicksmro , Past G . M . M . M . ) ( The m „ lxt IIon Lm . i ( lo Tabley , Ouu PERIPATETIC BROTHER pnst G . S . ., p rov . G . M . Che . ( Bro . C . Fitz Gerald Matier , 30 deg ., shire , Grand J ., ancl Prov . G . G . Steward Scotland , ancl Past Sup . Cheshire ) . G . S . Warden Greece ) . A HARBINGER OP PEACE A BOLTON LUMINARY ( Bro . Charles Lacey , P . M ., Past ( Bro . G . Parker Brockbank , 31 deg ., Prov . G . J . D . Herts ) . Past Prov . G . S . D ., and P . Prov . THE LORD OF UNDERLEY G . Treas-. [ Arch ] E . Lancashire . < Tho Vl . lr ] : of Bective , M . P ., Prov . A WARDEN OF THE FENS G . M ., Prov . G . Sup ., and Prov . ( Tho lato Bvo . John Sutcliffe , Past G . M . M . M . Cumberland and Prov . G . S . Warden , and Prov . AVestmorcland , and Past . G . G . M . M . M . Lincolnshire ) . Sov . of tho Orclorjof Rome and A WARDEN OF MARK Rod Cross of Constantino ) . ( The Right Hon . the Earl oi Don- A BOON COMPANION oughmore , 32 deg ., Past G . S . ( Bro . E . C . AVoodward , P . M . 382 , AVarden , ancl Dep . G . M . M . M ) . 1637 , & c . ) A MASTER OF CEREMONIAL A GRAND SUPERINTENDENT ( Bro . Thos . Entwisle , 30 deg ., Past ( Sir Daniel Gooch , Bart ., M . P ., 30 Prov . G . S . of WorksB . Lan . ) dog ., Prov . G . M . and G . Sep , OUR COSMOPOLITAN BROTHER Berks and Bucks ) . ( Bro . Samuel Rawson , 33 dog ., Past JESCULAPIUS Dist . G . M . and G . Sup . China ) . ( jjro . j . Daniel Moore , M . D ., 33 A GREAT ARITHMETICIAN deg ., Past G . S . B ., Craft , ancl ( Bro . R . B . AVebster , Member of the Past G . St . B ., Arch , Intendant Finance and Audit Committees General Order of Rome and Red of tho R . M . Girls' and Boys' Cross of Constantiue for North Schools . ) Lancashire ) .

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“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1880-09-11, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_11091880/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
RESUMPTION OF WORK. Article 1
MORE LITIGATION. Article 2
AFLOAT. Article 2
RIPPINGILLE'S MINERAL OIL COOKING STOVES AND KITCHENERS. Article 3
IS FREEMASONRY PERFORMING HER MISSION. Article 3
LODGE HISTORIES. Article 4
Untitled Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 5
THE LATE MASONIC TRIAL. Article 5
THE UN-MASONIC TRIAL. Article 6
A BEGGING MASON. Article 6
AN EXCURSION TO THE PROVINCES. Article 6
COMMITTEE MEETING OF THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 6
COMMITTEE MEETING OF THE BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 6
PERPETUAL JURISDICTION. Article 6
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Gleanings From Old Chronicles, &c. Article 8
THE LAST TESTIMONY. Article 9
INSTALLATION MEETINGS, &c. Article 10
ST. JAMES'S LODGE, No. 482. Article 10
VISITATION OF GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND TO ABERDEEN. Article 11
THE ELEMENT OF SECRECY IN THE MASONIC INSTITUTION. Article 11
THE MOHAWK MINSTRELS. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
Untitled Article 13
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Page 7

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

Perpetual Jurisdiction.

tho old fogyism of Bro . Snarler can t stand tho now fangled notions of Mr . Wilson ? Perpetual jurisdiction says , " Yes ; " common sense and justice say , " No . " Iu most Grand Lodge jurisdictions the rejected applicant is allowed to apply again after six or twelve months . Suppose , however , Mr . Wilson has removed from Gravcnhnrst , Ontario , and gone to Call-,

fornia . After a number of years , ho again knocks at tho door of a Lodge , is he to be refused ad mission because Snarler , of Gravcnhnrst has not got over his prejudices ? Mr . W . has resided years in California , is woll liked , has gained a reputation for honesty and uprightness of purpose , is a rising man and known to bo such ; is it right or just fchafc his application should bo refused , because years before ho

was rejected in a Lodge hundreds of miles away , through tho bigotry or narrow-mindedness of somo petty-sonled member ? Even supposing , for fcho sake of argument , thafc years before Mr . W . was nofc a fit ashlar for the Masonio Temple , is it just , honourable or right that former error of judgment is to be for ever maintained against him ? Are Masons so bigoted that they cannot believe a man

can reform ? Are we to bo more strict than the Synagogue of the Hebrew or the Chnrch of the Nazareno ? Tho Gentle Teacher taught Forgiveness , and surely we , the followers of Hiram , have no right to say , Mr . W ., years ago , committed a crime , lie has sorrowed and suffered days and nights , for weeks , months and years , for the evil passions that overcame him in the honr of temptation , but wo will

not forget or forgive the offence , wo will show no mercy , we will not extend tho hand of charity , but will , like the Pharisee of old , thank GOD that wo aro holier than he , ancl refuse our aid , our help and our succour , when he asks our assistance by seeking admission to our Lodge-rooms ? I answer , unhesitatingly , that such a system is pernicious in the extreme . It is well , of course , under all circumstances ,

to make the fullest inquiries relative to an applicant for our mysteries , but to argue that a Lodge has perpetual jurisdiction over the candidate that ifc has once blackballed is giving an individual Mason a power within his own hands to commit a wrong not only against the rejected ashlar , but against the Craft universal Have wo nofc all witnessed , afc times , the unfortunate position of

certain Lodges in which adiscordanfc element has most un-Masonically arisen , and where , to the disgrace of the Craft , the blackball has been mercilessly used ? Many of us must have witnessed , or at least heard of , such oases , and under these circumstances how unj usfc the law of perpetual jurisdiction proves itself to be ! It is erroneous in theory and wrong in practice . A man may have been blackballed in

spite ; he may also justly have been blackballed , but ho may have expiated his crime by a subsequent Godly and moral life . Surely such an one is nofc to be for ever excluded from our mysteries , which would help him to lead a truer , a better , and nobler career . Now , many eminent jurists are decidedly opposed to this theory , and advocate the system of perpetual jurisdiction , forgetting that in

so doing they aro giving a power too great for one | man to possess , if he is tainted with the the least particle of bigotry or sectarianism . Bro . Thomas Hardeman , in the Voice ( page 383 ) , in speaking of rejected material , says : | " If rejected , it is noticed , or shonld be , to tbe Fraternity at large that that stone has been tried by a skilful Master Builder ' s square and found unfit for the building , and no other builder

should take up that rejected stone and work it into the Temple , until he who first raised ifc from its quarry again applies his square and finds that the defect discovered in the first investigation has been removed , and gives his consent for the second builder to use ifc at his discretion . Jurisdiction once acquired by a Lodge , by voluntary act , inures to it perpetually , and although Grand Lodge enactment may

limit the time when a candidate may renew his application in that Lodge , ifc may not remove or limit the jurisdiction of the same , as it has not the constitutional power to do so . " This declaration that a Grand Lodge " may nofc remove or limit the jurisdiction of the same (" the Lodge rejecting ) , as it has not the constitutional power to do so , " is certainly erroneous . In former days

any seven Masons could initiate a candidate , and in 1717 , when Masonry assumed its present form , the theory of perpetual jurisdiction was not even mooted , and at the present time we find the Mother Grand Lodge of England and the older Grand Lodges of Europe accepting material , without any regard to territorial jurisdiction over the candidate for one year after the passing of the ballot upon the

petition of the applicant , and should the applicant remove to another jurisdiction , either subordinate or snpreme , these ' Grand Bodies hold that the Lodge rejecting or accepting said material has no claim whatever upon the same . This , I conceive to be the true spirit ; of Masonry . Ifc is only just . A man should never be subjected to the petty tyranny of a one-man power , and Freemasonry , with its

enlarged ideas and liberal principles , should not snbject itself to a tyranny worthy of despotic Russia or priest-ridden Spain . Whenever an applicant applies who has been rejected in another jurisdiction ifc is very easy to write and inquire regarding the antecedents of such an one , and without much difficulty his course of life in his former home is readily discovered . He is not likely to seek

admission a second time unless he has been imbued with a love for the princi ples of the Craft , nor is he likely to subject himself a second timo to a rebuff unless he feels very confident he will stand the test of the overseer ' s square . Such being the case , perpetual jurisdiction is , as before stated , a system thafc may and does verge into pett y tyranny and personal spite . Examples could easily be given to prove

such to be the case . It is placing in the hands of an unprincipled Mason a power that no one man should possess , and since we boast ol our liberal and enlightened principles , it behoves us in all cases and under all circumstances to act with fairness and justice , not only to those within the sanctum sanctorum , but also to those who are desirous of uniting themselves with us in the bonds of Brotherly Love , Relief

and Truth . Perpetual jurisdiction , therefore , is a contemptible ancl narrow-minded piece of jurisprudence thafc has only crept into the Craft within the past few years , and which is neither creditable tothc common sense of the Brotherhood , nor worthy of the support of the : Order . It is based upon a false hypothesis , and should be expunged from the statutes of a Fraternity whose watchword is Liberality and whose password is Charity .

Ad00701

Second Series , now ready , Grown Svo , Chilly price 3 , s- 6 V / , post free . MASONIC PORTRAITS . SKETCHES op DISTINGUISHED FEEEMASONS . REPRINTED FROM "TUB FREEMASON ' CHRONICLE . " BY G . BLIZAED ABBOTT , OF LODGE NO . 1385 , ASSOCIATE or KING ' S COLLEGE , LONDON . LISI . ' OFIPORTRAITH NESTOR AN INSTAL LINO MASTER ( Bro . 'W . Hyde Pullen , 33 cleg .. Past ( Bro . W . Biggs , Past Prov . G . S . AV . G . S . B ., Past Dep . P . G . M . Hunts , Wilts * , unci Past Pvov . G . Sec . Assistant Secretary Sup . Couti- Berks and Bucks ) , cil A . and A . Rite . ) A VETERAN TlIE STATESMAN ( llm , AV . Kelly , Past Prov . G . M . and ( The Right Hon . Earl of Carnarvon , Prov . G . Sup . Leicestershire and 33 deg ., Pro Grand "Muster , Pro j Rutland , Prov . G . M . M . M . Lei-Grand Z ., Past G . M . M . M ., and cestcrsliire ) . Past M . P . S . G . Commander A . A GRAND STEAVARO and A . Rite . ( Bro John AVordsworth , 30 dog ., THE TREASURER r , G . Steward , Past Prov . ( Bro . F . Adlarrl , P . M . and'Trcasurer G J . AV . AV . Yorkshire , and Prov . Royal York Lodge of Porscver- G . M . M . M . AV . Yorkshire ) , anco , No . 7 ) . ViR Veri'txs THE DEPUTY ( BVO . G . AVard Verry , P . M and Past ( Tho RiglitHou . Lord Skelmersdale , Prov . Grand . Soj . [ Arch ] Herts ) . 33 dcg ., Deputy G . Mastcr . Grand AcniLLES H ., G . M . M . M ., Great Prior of ( Bro . K j . Morris , Past G . J . D ., and the Temple , and MP Sov . G . £ > . rjep . p . G . M . of Eastern Commander A . and A . Rito . ) Division of South AVales ) . A PROVINCIAL MAGNATE A DEVON CRAFTSMAN ( Bro W . W B . Beach , MP ., Prov . ( Bro - j , Curteis , 30 do-., Past ¥ WM 1 ; I' ?^ M ? ( 1 , S' rrov . G . S . Warden Devon ) , of AATight , Past G . M . M . M . and s T ... . _ . . NTtT Prov . G . Prior of tho Temple , for bI , 'i T ^ r T , u , . jrant , s \ ( Bro . J . M . Pultonoy Montagu , J . P . i TIME - HONOURED LANCASTER ^ 'C . &^ aiSXv ( Bro A o 4 anc 1 asttS" If 1 ? 0 ' * * , - i \ Vl G- Sup . Dorsetshire , and G . G . S . Warden East Lancashire ) . Chancellor Supreme Council A . THE SCHOLAR and A . Rite ) . ( Bro . John Newton , F . R . A . S ., P . M ., HIPPOCRATES P . Z ., Author of Works on Navi- ( Gro . Voslrson Hell , M . D ., Pasfc gation ) . G . Deacon , Dep . Prov . G . M . and OUR NOBLE CRITIC prov . G . Sup . N . and E . York-( The Right Hon . Lord Leigh , 30 dog , shire ) . Prov . G . M . ancl G . Sup . War- A CESTRIAN CHIEF wicksmro , Past G . M . M . M . ) ( The m „ lxt IIon Lm . i ( lo Tabley , Ouu PERIPATETIC BROTHER pnst G . S . ., p rov . G . M . Che . ( Bro . C . Fitz Gerald Matier , 30 deg ., shire , Grand J ., ancl Prov . G . G . Steward Scotland , ancl Past Sup . Cheshire ) . G . S . Warden Greece ) . A HARBINGER OP PEACE A BOLTON LUMINARY ( Bro . Charles Lacey , P . M ., Past ( Bro . G . Parker Brockbank , 31 deg ., Prov . G . J . D . Herts ) . Past Prov . G . S . D ., and P . Prov . THE LORD OF UNDERLEY G . Treas-. [ Arch ] E . Lancashire . < Tho Vl . lr ] : of Bective , M . P ., Prov . A WARDEN OF THE FENS G . M ., Prov . G . Sup ., and Prov . ( Tho lato Bvo . John Sutcliffe , Past G . M . M . M . Cumberland and Prov . G . S . Warden , and Prov . AVestmorcland , and Past . G . G . M . M . M . Lincolnshire ) . Sov . of tho Orclorjof Rome and A WARDEN OF MARK Rod Cross of Constantino ) . ( The Right Hon . the Earl oi Don- A BOON COMPANION oughmore , 32 deg ., Past G . S . ( Bro . E . C . AVoodward , P . M . 382 , AVarden , ancl Dep . G . M . M . M ) . 1637 , & c . ) A MASTER OF CEREMONIAL A GRAND SUPERINTENDENT ( Bro . Thos . Entwisle , 30 deg ., Past ( Sir Daniel Gooch , Bart ., M . P ., 30 Prov . G . S . of WorksB . Lan . ) dog ., Prov . G . M . and G . Sep , OUR COSMOPOLITAN BROTHER Berks and Bucks ) . ( Bro . Samuel Rawson , 33 dog ., Past JESCULAPIUS Dist . G . M . and G . Sup . China ) . ( jjro . j . Daniel Moore , M . D ., 33 A GREAT ARITHMETICIAN deg ., Past G . S . B ., Craft , ancl ( Bro . R . B . AVebster , Member of the Past G . St . B ., Arch , Intendant Finance and Audit Committees General Order of Rome and Red of tho R . M . Girls' and Boys' Cross of Constantiue for North Schools . ) Lancashire ) .

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Uniform ivith above , price Bs 6 cl , Crown Svo , cloth , gilt . MASONIC PORTRAITS , FIEST SEEIES . REPRINTED EROM " THE FREEMASON ' CHRONICLE . " LIST OF THE POETKAITS . 1 OUR LITERARY BROTHER . 17 THB CHUISTIA . IT M INISTER 2 A DISTINGUISHED MASON . ! 18 THE MYSTIC . 3 THE MAN OF ENERGY . 19 A MODEL MASON . ¦ 1 FATHER TIME . 20 A CHIP FROM JOPPA 5 A CORNER STONE . : 21 A PILLAR OF MASONRY . 6 THE CRAFTSMAN . 22 BAYARD . 7 THE GOWNSMAN . I 23 A RIGHT HASH MAN . 8 AN EASTERN STAR . ' 21 OUR CITIZEN BROTHER . 9 THE KNIGHT ERRANT . 25 AN ABLE PRECESTOR . 10 THE OCTOGENARIAN . ; 2 fi AN ANCIENT BRITON . 11 A ZEALOUS OFFICER . i 27 THE ARTIST . 12 THE SOLDIER . i 28 THE FATHER OF THE LODGE . 13 FROM UNDER THE CROW . j 29 A SHINING LIGHT . It OUR HERCULES . > 30 AN ART STUDENT . 15 A MERCHANT PRINCE . I 31 THE MARINER . 10 THE CHURCHMAN . 32 SOLDIER OF FORTUNE . 33 . "OLD MUG . " London : W . W . MOEGAW . By Order of all Booksellers , or will be sent direct , by post , from the Office , 23 Great Queen Street , London , W . C .

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