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a modern invention Dotage a disqualification of candidates " meaning of the term Dues to lodges, a modern usage " non-payment of, does not disqualify from voting for candidates E. Emergency, rule upon the subject Entered Apprentice, rights of formerly a member of his lodge formerly permitted to attend the Grand Communications may sit in a lodge of his degree cannot speak or vote cannot be deprived of his rights without trial after trial may appeal to the Grand Lodge Erasure from lodge, a masonic punishment Evidence in masonic trials Examination of visitors how to be conducted Exclusion, a masonic punishment Executive powers of a Grand Lodge Expulsion is masonic death Expulsion, a masonic punishment should be inflicted by Grand Lodge or with its approval from higher degrees, its effect restoration from Extinct lodges, funds of, revert to the Grand Lodge F. Family distressed, of a Mason, entitled to relief Fellow Craft, rights of they formerly constituted the great body of the Fraternity formerly permitted to speak, but not vote Finishing candidates of one lodge in another Fool cannot be a Mason Free, a candidate must be, at the time of making Free-born, a Mason must be reason for the rule Funds of extinct lodges revert to the Grand Lodge G. General Assembly.
— from The Principles of Masonic Law A Treatise on the Constitutional Laws, Usages and Landmarks of Freemasonry by Albert Gallatin Mackey
The old gentleman looked earnestly in my face a moment.
— from Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXV, No. 3, September 1849 by Various
She was leaning on the gate, looking eagerly into my [Pg 83] eyes.
— from The Price of the Prairie: A Story of Kansas by Margaret Hill McCarter
I have looked out into the semi-darkness of the campus and seen that stately figure, with bowed head, walking up and down beneath the window of the infirmary, where some girl lay extremely ill, moving to and fro, far into the night, in a vigil, which, let me say it with reverence, has made it easier to believe that close to all earth's pains, "Standeth One within the shadow, Keeping watch above His own."
— from Charles Lewis Cocke, Founder of Hollins College by William Robert Lee Smith
There is shell-work jewellery indescribable, things that Japanese girls love, enchantments in mother-of-pearl, hair-pins carven in a hundred forms, brooches, necklaces.
— from Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan: First Series by Lafcadio Hearn
Go long early in morning before Black come back.
— from Jean, Our Little Australian Cousin by Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
He is a man of the greatest learning, especially in mathematics, and is regarded by the professors of that science here as one of their most distinguished men.
— from The Life and Letters of Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq, Volumes 1 and 2 by Ogier Ghislain de Busbecq
Cold Reason stood aside With folded arms to let a grand Love enter In my Soul’s secret chamber to abide.
— from Poems of Pleasure by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
He wrote frequently to Jane, and from her received long letters, which did him good, so redolent were they of the garden life, even in mid-winter, and so expressive of a frank, sweet, strong womanhood, like that of her who was no more.
— from Will Warburton by George Gissing
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