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      The Waller Masonic Lodge
      #808 AF & AM   E-Newsletter

             July 2007


Lead Stories

I saw a few eye brows raise when a pancake supper was mentioned as a fund raiser. Maybe another one or two when a silent auction was added.

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September 18, 1848, the earthly remains of the 36 men who were killed with the Mier Expedition

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The Waller Masonic Lodge stated meeting on July 10, 2007 will be opened with the newly installed officers for the Masonic year 2007/2008.

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Students and university lecturers are to be encouraged to join the Freemasons as part of a drive to increase membership.

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"What's so Odd about the Odd Fellows?--- nothing"

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Departments

From The Secretary's Desk

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Hapenings At Waller Lodge

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This Months Humor

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This Months Funnies

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The Famous Masons Series

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The "Old Tiler Talks" Series

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A Message From The East
Worshipful Master "Jim" Brown

I will try and make this as short as possible. First I want to thank my wife Becky for her love and support through my Masonic endeavors. We as Masons sometimes forget that our wives, mothers and sisters are a huge part of our success.

Secondly, I would like to honor the Brother who this year should belong to. Brother Kelly Cox left this world on Christmas day of 2006. I can only speculate that God had a more important chair for him to be in. This and many other lodges in this area will remember him as a man of love, faith and discipline. All of those attributes are what we, as masons should strive to be.

As for this year, I am not going to make any promises that this will be the best year yet. I will however promise that with the help of the Brothers we will make a name for Waller lodge in the city of Waller and the district. My first act as worshipful master is to appointment my committees, which I hope, will support me and this lodges efforts to make a difference in the community.

I want to thank Wes for his wonderful introduction and for his leadership for this past year. Wes has worked hard on this lodge to make it a better place and for that we need to thank him.

If you will look around you will notice that a younger generation have assumed very important chairs in this lodge. My hope is that with youth comes new ideas in how to improve our lodge as a whole. This is not to say that our elder statesman’s ideas cannot help.

It will be one of the missions of this lodge to seek out decent young men to ensure that Waller lodge will be around long after we are all gone. It is incumbent however that all of the brothers participate in making this a year to remember for Waller lodge.

On a personal note, most of you know me as a very quiet person and sometimes very distant. I want to clear the record; I care about everything Masonic and all of the people involved. I am working on becoming more personable so please bear with me. I may say things at times that seem intrusive but always remember that I am only speaking from a heart that follows the principles of the obligation we swore to uphold.

Enough of all of that… It is my hope through hard work and dedication that Waller lodge will be known as an organization the community and more especially the brothers and their wives and the widows of masons can depend on for support. Thank you all again for coming and may God bless each of you in everything you do.


A minister parked his car in a no-parking zone in a large city because he was short of time and couldn't find a space with a meter. Then he put a note under the windshield wiper that read: "I have circled the block 10 times. If I don't park here, I'll miss my appointment. Forgive us our trespasses."

When he returned, he found a citation from a police officer along with this note "I've circled this block for 10 years. If I don't give you a ticket I'll lose my job. Lead us not into temptation."



The Big Pancake Supper
By Corky

Cooking Pancakes
Who would have thunk it???

I saw a few eye brows raise when a pancake supper was mentioned as a fund raiser. Maybe another one or two when a silent auction was added.

I think many of us had already learned a lesson after a bunch of eye brows raised (including mine) when Trey Wren proposed a Bull Ride as a fund raiser and pushed it through a few years ago.

Not counting the hours of volunteer work selling tickets and begging items for the silent auction, Waller Lodge made about $500 more with the three hour Pancake Supper and Silent Auction fundraiser then we did in last years three day long, Liendo Civil War Reenactment fundraiser.

Makes you wonder if we’ve been in the wrong kind of business all these years.

The Bigest Sale Items
Were Baseball Tickets
We can’t begin to thank everyone personally that donated items for the fundraiser and volunteered to help cook, serve and clean, but we do owe a special big vote of thank to P. W. M. Wes Mersiovsky and Liz, W. M. Jim Brown and Becky, S. W. Bob Podvin for putting it all together and getting most of the items for the auction.

The decision to pre-sell tickets for the fundraiser was a major part of the success and added over $500 to the total. It allowed members who live out of town or otherwise couldn’t participate an opportunity to help their Lodge. I heard that Jimmy Hooper actually sold all of his tickets and came back for more.

 



Masons Play Part in Texas Heroes


Monument Hill
September 18, 1848, the earthly remains of the 36 men who were killed with the Mier Expedition and 18 executed after the Dawson Expedition men surrendered were placed in a sandstone crypt and buried with full military honors on Monument Hill in La Grange, with over 1,000 people in attendance. For decades afterward, the surviving veterans of the old Santa Fe and Mier Expeditions, and the few survivors of the Dawson Company would meet on and around Sept. 18 of each year to remember their comrades who had not made it back from either Mexico or Salado Creek near San Antonio. They met at various places, including La Grange, until they were too old to meet any more; much like our WWII vets meet today.

The decimation of the Dawson Company took place by the drawing of black and white beans from a small earthen mug. The white ones signified exemption, and the black death. One hundred and fifty-nine white beans were placed in a mug, and seventeen black ones placed upon the top of them.

A little over a year ago, La Grange's LaFayette Masonic Lodge secretary Norval Cummings did some digging at the lodge, and found the lodge minutes from 1848 in a cardboard box, under the stage in the old lodge building, and had been destroyed by silverfish. The goal in searching for the 1848 records was to determine if the Masonic Lodge had opened "A Lodge of Sorrow" and conveyed Masonic rites to those Masons among the men buried there that day. Although it could not be proved with lodge minutes, very good evidence that the Masons did perform the service is to be found in newspaper reports. of the event.

Regarding the proceedings that took place in La Grange 158 years ago, the Sept. 28th, 1848, "Democratic Telegraph" newspaper, published in Houston, reported:

"The hearses containing the remains, escorted by the military, under the command of Col. Martin K. Snell, of this city, who, being a soldier of the revolution, and early identified with the fortunes of the country, was kindly tendered the Command on the occasion; Pall bearers, then followed successively, the relatives and friends of the deceased; Masonic Fraternity, Officers of the State, County and citizens and strangers."

Later, regarding the end of the day's events, it states: "... the procession then moved on to town, The Masonic fraternity were escorted to the lodge by the military....."

It is very clear that Masons played an important role in the ceremonies at Monument Hill that day in 1848. There were many, many Master Masons involved in the Mier and Dawson Expeditions.

The two leaders of the Mier Expedition, William S. Fisher and Ewin Cameron, were both Master Masons, as were several of the martyred men, including Patrick Usher and William B. Middleton, who died on the march to Mexico City, and James N. Torrey of Rocky Mount Masonic Lodge No. 63, who drew a black bean at Rancho Salado, and whose body was among those re-buried that day.

There were 33 known Masons in the Mier campaign, including other notable Masons such as Thomas Jefferson Green, James Burke, Henry Clay Davis, G.W. Hancock, A.C. Hyde, William S. Oldham, and James C. Wilson, Virgil H. Phelps, John L.D. Blackburn, Orlando C. Phelps, Richard Brown, James Calvert, Freeman Douglass, William Dunbar, Alfred S. Thurmond, and Joseph D. Watkins.

Research is ongoing to identify the Masons among the Dawson Expedition, and what Masonic role Sam Houston took that September day in 1848. As the highest ranking Masonic leader in attendance that day, it is likely that he conducted, or at least participated in, the Masonic portion of the events.

The Masonic Funeral Service was performed by Frontier Lodge September 16, 2006 at Monument Hill in La Grange at the Heroes Day event, was based on the same ritual that was in common usage in 1848 in Texas. Aprons worn by the participants were patterned after aprons from that era that are on display at the Grand Lodge of Texas Museum.



Happenings At Waller Lodge
by John "Corky" Daut P.M.

Our new W.M. Jim Brown and Becky served an all you can eat Chicken Fried Steak dinner for nearly 50 people at the June 30th. called meeting to install the new officers. Sorry if you missed it.

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Senior Warden Bob Podvin, and Brother Ed Locklear joined Brother J.R. Hammack to represent Hempstead Lodge in presenting the Hempstead Lodge 749 Mirabeau B. Lamar Award of Excellence to teacher Carolyn Talley of Hempstead Elementary School.

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P.M. John Daut Sr. and wife Rebecca were welcomed at the Installation after a long absence.

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P.M. Ed and Betty Locklear were at the meeting even though Betty had been just released from the hospital that afternoon.

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Bob Scarborough is recovering well from knee surgery and walking pretty spry again.




Waller Lodge Opens Under New Management

The Waller Masonic Lodge stated meeting on July 10, 2007 will be opened with the newly installed officers for the Masonic year 2007/2008.

Worshipful Master - James Brown
Senior Warden - Robert Podvin
Junior Warden - Dave Reagan
Treasurer - Herman Flannigan
Secretary - John “Corky” Daut
Senior Deacon - Bart Harvey
Junior Deacon - Brack Whitehead
Chaplin - Doyle Sitton
Tiler - Jimmy Hooper
M. C. - Regan Rape

We are very happy to see the involvement in Masonry and Waller Lodge in particular, by some of our newest members. Our new officers for 2007/2008 are leading the way for Masonry with five of the officers, including the top three have been Waller members for less then four years and four of the five have been Masons less then four years.



From The Secretary's Desk
By Corky

As some of you know, Brother Bob Scarborough, after 15 years of serving Waller Lodge as the Secretary decided to retire. I would like to personally thank Bob for a job well done.

If you happened to notice Richard Ventrca and Herman Flannagan helping me out of the straight chair during the Installation and didn’t know why, it was true Freemasonry at work, Brothers helping a Brother after my knee replacement.



This Month's Humor

"Hello, is this the Sheriff's Office?"

"Yes. What can I do for you?"

"I'm calling to report 'bout my neighbor Virgil Smith.... He's hidin' marijuana inside his firewood! Don't quite know how he gets it inside the logs, but he's hidin' it there."

" Thank you very much for the call, sir."

The next day, the Sheriff's Deputies descend on Virgil's house. They search the shed where the firewood is kept. Using axes, they bust open every piece of wood, but find no marijuana. They sneer at Virgil - and leave.

Shortly thereafter, the phone rings at Virgil's house.

"Hey, Virgil! This is Floyd.... Did the Sheriff come?"

"Yeah!"

"Did they chop your firewood?"

"Yep!"

"Happy Birthday, buddy!"




THE ODD FELLOWS
First published Dec.2003 on "The Northern Light", Scottish Rite Freemasonry, Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, USA

“There's Nothing Odd about these Fellows”
“What's so Odd about the Odd Fellows?--- nothing”

What was the largest fraternal organization during the so-called “Golden Age of Fraternalism” (1870-1910)?  You may be surprised to know it was not Freemasonry but the Odd Fellows. In 1890 Freemasonry had 609,000 brothers while the Odd Fellows had over 672,000. You may also be surprised to know the Scottish Rite Masonic National Heritage Museum probably holds the largest public collection of Odd Fellows artifacts, and materials in the county; some 700 items. Just as many men joined both the Craft and the Odd Fellows, so our museum collections both Masonic and other American fraternal history. Indeed the relationship between the Freemasonry and Odd Fellowship was quite similar and often truly fraternal.

As with Freemasonry, the Odd Fellows is a British institution. They began in England in the late 1700s as a “friendly society” for working class men and artisans. Meeting in taverns to socialize they also pooled their recourses to help each other in times of need and for burial fees. That such an “odd” assortment of men would organize for such benevolent purposes was considered “odd” for the times and from which perhaps their name sprang. That they also practiced such broad charity may have also caused these fellows to be considered “odd.” Whatever the origin of the name the first lodge proudly adopted the title and have continued to care for each other for well over 200 years.

Like Freemasonry there were individual Odd Fellows in the United States prior to the first lodge forming in 1819. The revered founder and first “Grand Sire” of the American Odd Fellows is Thomas Wildey (1782-1861).  A coach-spring maker, he became an Odd Fellow in London before immigrating to America in 1817. Through his efforts he organized the first lodge in Baltimore and received a charter from the English Grand Lodge to spread the fraternity in the United States. Blessed by boundless energy and a dedication to help those in distress between 1819 and 1840 he started 155 lodges in 14 states that initiated over 11,000 brothers. Its great national Grand Secretary Thomas Ridgely who served the fraternity from 1833 to 1880 further supported Wildey's fledgling order.

So successful was American Odd Fellowship that it came in conflict with the Odd Fellow's “world headquarters” or the Grand Lodge of England.   After the separation in 1843 they changed their name to the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and within ten years the number of lodges leaped to 2,941 in 33 states and a total of 193,000 brothers.

Similar to Prince Hall Freemasonry, African Americans have their own Odd Fellows lodges. In 1842 the English Odd Fellow Grand Lodges issued a warrant to black sailor named Peter Ogden from New York City. Unlike Wildey however, Ogden never separated his lodges from England and to this day it remains part of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows. When Ogden died in 1852 there were 32 lodges, by 1863 there were 50 and by 1900 2,253 with 70,000 members. The GUOOF continues to this day and are headquartered in Philadelphia.

Although heavily influenced by Freemasonry's rituals, symbols and tenets, a large measure of the Odd Fellows' success came from its dedication to serve its members. Its three secret ritual initiations taught the “three links” of fraternity as “Friendship, Love and Truth” and commanded its brothers to “Visit the Sick, Relieve the Distressed, Bury the Dead, Care for the Widow, and Educate the Orphan.”  In the forty years between the founding of Wildey's first American lodge and his death in 1861, Odd Fellow's paid out nearly $9,000,000 in relief. After the Civil War State grand Lodges began building homes for widows and orphans. With the first opening in Meadville, PA in 1872 by 1927 there were 62 home in the United States. Between 1830 and 1936 the fraternity had paid out over $247 million in relief.

In other ways the Odd Fellows innovated before Freemasonry. Before the Order of the Eastern Star for female relatives of Masons the Odd Fellows started the first women's auxiliary.  Call the Daughters of Rebekah it was begun by future Vice President of the United States (and Freemason) Schuley Colfax in 1851. The Rebekahs have one initiation degree based on wife of the Hebrew patriarch Isaac. Within 50 years of its founding it had over 340,000 daughters and it membership peaked in 1925 at just over one million. In 1932 Rebekahs formed their girls' youth group called Theta Rho.

Similar to the Masonic Royal Arch Degrees of the York Rite, the Odd Fellows established “higher” degrees in the Encampment. Containing three degrees, the Patriarchal, the Golden Rule and the Royal Purple they originated in England and were first performed in the United States in the 1820s. Like the Royal Arch the Encampment had its own state and national hierarchy but ultimately remain subordinate to state and national grand lodges.

Building upon the success of the Encampment, in the 1870s and 80s the Odd Fellows established their own Masonic Knights Templar-like order. Call the Patriarch Militant it officially became part of the Order in 1886. Rather than commanderies, the Patriarch militants met in Cantons. Individual members were titled chevaliers and within three years of its organization it had over 12,073 members in 356 cantons. The Militants' mottos are “Justitia Universalis” (Universal Justice) and “Pax aut Bellum” (Peace or War) and its insignia is the crossed crock and sword with crown. Several factors led to the Militants success; a love of marching and military music after the Civil War, a fear of labor unrest and riots after 1877 and a huge war surplus of uniforms and swords.

The Odd Fellows even created their own Shriner's in the early 1900s. Several different groups were attempted, called the Order of Muscovites, Prophets of Bagdad and the Knights of Oriental Splendor. The successor of these and most successful were the Ancient Mystic Order of Samaritans or AMOS who wore red fezs with the motto “We Never Sleep.”

The Odd Fellows membership peaked in 1920 at 1.7 million brothers. While still strong during the Roaring '20 the Great Depression nearly bankrupted the fraternity. The Stock market crash caused families to drop their membership, lodges to fail to meet their mortgages and homes to lose donations.  The advent of social security, welfare, private health insurance and other forms of relief made most of the Odd Fellows' charity obsolete. The popularity of radio, movies, and later TV and other forms of leisure all help to erode Odd Fellow, and most other fraternal orders' membership.  By 1960 the Odd fellows had half the members they did in 1920.  Today there are still many active Odd Fellow lodges across the country, mostly in small town and rural communities, yet firmly linked by “Friendship, Love and Truth.”




The Famous Masons Series  


Jonathan Swift

[Jonathan Swift]

November 30, 1667 - October 19, 1745

Born in Dublin, Swift took religious orders in 1694 and was appointed Dean of Saint Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin in 1713.

Author of such social satires as Gulliver's Travels (1726) and A Modest Proposal, Swift is recorded as having expended a third of his income on charity.

Member: Lodge Goat-at-the-Foot-of-the-Haymarket, No. 16, London .




Dave Thomas

July 2, 1932 - January 7, 2002

American businessman and founder of the Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption, Rex David Thomas, was born in Atlantic City and adopted at six weeks. As founder of the Wendy's restaurant chain, his appearances as spokesperson have made their advertising campaign the longest running in history.

Initiated: April 13, 1959
Passed: April 20, 1959
Raised: May 25, 1959
Sol. D. Bayless Lodge No 359, Fort Wayne, Indiana





Danny Thomas

January 6, 1914 - February 6, 1991

Born Muzyad Yakhoob in Dearborn, Michigan, and later known as Amos Jacobs, Danny Thomas was best known for his television portrayal of Danny Williams on Make Room For Daddy. He appeared in many films and television shows, and partnered with Sheldon Leonard and Aaron Spelling to create shows such as The Dick Van Dyke Show, The Andy Griffith Show, and The Mod Squad. Danny Thomas also founded the St. Jude's Children Research Hospital in Memphis in 1962 and raised $12 million annually to keep it operating.

Brother Thomas' initiation on March 15, 1984 led to a brief withdrawal of recognition by the Grand Lodge of California of the Grand Lodge of New Jersey from August 29, 1984 to October 19, 1984, as Thomas was a resident of California at the time. This incident did not prevent him from going on to be an active Shriner and to publicly speak glowingly about Freemasonry.

Initiated: March 15, 1984
Grand Lodge of New Jersey





Masons Target Universities To Swell Numbers

By Miles Goslett, Sunday Telegraph (United Kingdom)
Last Updated: 12:34am BST 05/27/2007

Students and university lecturers are to be encouraged to join the Freemasons as part of a drive to increase membership.

The organisation, more popularly connected with policemen, lawyers, and businessmen, has changed its constitution - lowering the age limit of candidates from 21 to 18 - and established the Universities Scheme.

Seven universities across England have been targeted, with lodges in the respective cities agreeing to "promote and encourage freemasonry among undergraduates and other university members". If successful, the project will be expanded.

"This is a challenge for the lodges that have chosen to participate," said David Williamson, Assistant Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England, masonry's governing body, discussing the scheme on the Freemasons' website.

"Young masons under 25 make up only about 0.25 per cent of the membership of the Craft in this country, so we want to make the Craft more accessible to young men."

Lodges in Bath, Birmingham, Bristol, Durham, Exeter, Manchester and Sheffield have signed up to consider accepting younger members willing to declare their belief in a Supreme Being and brotherly love.

One mason from the University of Birmingham Lodge, who asked not to be named, said it was a two-year scheme which was in the early stages of development.

"Young members pay half dues and the dining fee is also reduced," he said. "A few members of staff have been initiated already."

"It's good for undergraduates to join because we have members from all walks of life - doctors, policemen, magistrates, clerks," said another, who belongs to the lodge of St Peter in Exeter.

A spokesman for Exeter University said: "The university is not aware of any official approach being made to senior management or the Guild of Students under the new University Lodges Scheme. We assume that recruitment is being done along the lines of individual invitations and recommendation."

Modern masonry's origins date back to 1646, when Elias Ashmole, the antiquarian, became the first recorded mason in England. The United Grand Lodge estimates that there are now 270,000 masons in Britain.

The universities of Oxford and Cambridge have masonic links dating back to the 19th century, although the Universities Scheme is being used to try to increase membership.

A spokesman for Oxford University said: "While it is not a body officially affiliated with the university, there has been a lodge at Oxford since 1819. As with any other society, as long as members obey the law and membership does not interfere with the business or procedures of the university, then we have no objection to students or staff joining."

Freemasons have a long history of involvement in education. They operate The Royal Masonic School for Girls, in Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, and ran the Royal Masonic School for Boys at nearby Bushey until it closed in 1977.

The organisation also sponsors the education of many children through The Royal Masonic Trust.





I recently discovered an excellent source of cartoons that were printed in newspapers during the 1900's, 1910's and 1920's. I thought we might enjoy seeing the "funnies" our grandparents enjoyed.



Out Our Way




Masons, both young and old can still benefit from the "Old Tiler Talks" stories that started in 1921. It's funny how these stories (lessons) that taught our Masonic grandfathers, are just as significant today as they were 80 years ago. The book with with 70 of the "Old Tiler Talks" stories and 2 other Carl Claudy Masonic books may still be purchased from Temple Books


He Found Out
By Carl Claudy

From the Old Tiler's Talk - by Carl H. Claudy, The Temple Publishers

"Old Tyler I can save you some trouble!" announced the New Brother.

The Old Tyler leaned his sword up against the wall and motioned the New Brother to a seat. "I am never adverse to anyone saving me trouble!"

"A petition was read in lodge tonight," continued the New Brother. "Man by the name of Ned Brinkley. I have known old Brinkley for years. I heard your name on his committee. I can tell you anything you want to know."

"Nice of you!" repeated the Old Tyler. "Why does Mr. Brinkley want to be a Mason?"

"Oh, I don't know... same reason we all do, I guess."

"You speak of him as 'Old Brinkley.' How old is he?"

"Must be all of 65, or maybe 68. Carpenter by trade, he is; worked for me off and on for years. The wife never wants a shelf put up or a hinge mended or a fence painted or the gutter spout fixed that we don't call on old Brinkley. He's a fine old chap, very religious too. I rather wondered at the Master putting you on his petition."

"Why?" asked the Old Tyler.

"I know your reputation as a committeeman!" smiled the New Brother. "You dig to the bottom. They don't waste you on people everyone knows about. Brinkley is a dead open-and-shut proposition. Everyone in town knows him, I guess. I don't see why they put an old ferret like you on his trail. But I can tell you anything you want to know about him."

"Except why he wants to be a Mason!" answered the Old Tyler, dryly.

"Well, that isn't important in this case. He is a very religious man, and I suppose wants the religious part of lodge work."

"You suppose! Suppositions are not good enough for me. How does friend Brinkley know there is anything religious about a lodge or Masonry? Why does a very religious man find his church insufficient to supply his religion? Why does he wait until he is 65 years old to want to be a Mason? Those are questions I want answered. You know Brinkley as a workman, an obliging tinkerer with shelves and gutter spouts. But apparently you know nothing else about him except that he is religious. Suppose you tell me how you know that much."

"How do I know he is religious? Why, he goes to church every Sunday and he talks a great deal about it... I don't know!"

"I'll say you don't know! You don't really know anything about Brinkley, do you? Your attitude is too sadly common for the good of Masonry. You are familiar with Brinkley's name and his appearance and his looks; he has worked for you as an odd job man for years. Because he never stole your silver or beat your dog you think he is a good man. Because he talks religion and goes to church you term him religious. He is a part... a small part, but yet a part... of your life, and therefore he is all right for your lodge! Oh, conceited man! As if you couldn't be fooled and taken in and hornswoggled and deceived like anyone else!

"I happen to know considerable about Brinkley. I heard he was going to petition this lodge and I made it my business to find out. Listen, and see how much damage you might have done if I had been less well informed and had taken your estimate of Brinkley for truth!

"Brinkley owes a lot of money. His credit is exhausted. There is nothing bad about the man; he is a well-meaning but shiftless person, who has never either the ambition or the ability to rise above sporadic day wages and occasional jobs. He is weak, so he borrows right and left and runs accounts which he seldom pays, not that he isn't honest, but that he is careless.

"A few years ago he got into difficulties, and seeing no other way out, attempted to become a Catholic. But the good fathers of the church turned him inside out in no time and found out that he had been, at various times, a member of at least four other churches, all for the work he could get and the charity he could receive from their organizations. He has been a member of the Odd Fellows, the Pythians, the Red Men and a few others, in all of which organizations he has been dropped for N.P.D.

"At 65 or more years of age he suddenly conceives a great regard for the Masonic fraternity and wants to join our lodge. Why, I don't know, but I strongly suspect! And my suspicions are well founded in evidence that Mr. Brinkley wants to become a Mason for what he can get out of Masonry in a material way that I shall register a loud, round, and emphatic negative on my report, and I very much suspect that both other committeemen will do the same thing!"

"Oh, well, of course!" answered the New Brother. "I didn't know!"

"Of course you didn't! And because you only guessed and hoped and believed and had no real knowledge, you would have done this lodge a great injury if all the committeemen had depended solely on your report!"

"But I know now... and I won't do it anymore!" pleaded the New Brother.

The Old Tyler grunted.




See You Next Month

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