GENERAL GRAND CHAPTER INFORMATION
ARE YOU PLANNING TO ATTEND GENERAL GRAND CHAPTER FOR 2006?
The following is some information that you may want to consider.
Transportation:
A travel package is available through AAA of Washington which includes the following:
Also if you are going, please make hotel reservations as soon as possible. The Washington group will be at the Minneapolis Marriot City Center.
If you are in need of this information please contact the same individuals as listed above.
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April 11 ... OES: Kitsap-Mason PM & PP Luncheon, Bremerton
April 11 … GL: Yancey C. Blaylock Lodge No. 265, Seattle; Visitation; 6:30 PM. TU
April 13 ... EKS: Scottish Rite Meeting (Remembrance and Renewal)
April 19 … GL: Grand Master’s Summit, Salem, OR; 6:00 PM. TU
April 21 … GL: IOJD Grand Sessions, SeaTac. Tux
April 22 ... OES: Southwest Washington Association Dinner
April 22 ... OES: Thurston County Past Matrons Brunch, Olympia
April 22 … GL: District 2 Meeting; 6:30 PM. TU/Ladies
April 24 … GL: EXCOM (Committee Chairs Invited); Des Moines. TU
April 24 … GL: Landmark on the Sound Trustee Meeting; Des Moines. TU
April 26 ... OES: Southeast Washington Past Matrons Luncheon, Vineland Chapter, Clarkston.
April 26 ... OES: Inland Empire PM & PP Dinner & Initiation, Spokane.
April 28 … GL: Grand Master Roast, Monroe; 6:30 PM. Casual/Ladies
April 28 ... OES: King County PM & PP Luncheon, Seattle.
April 28 - 30 ... OES: Leadership Workshop Retreat, Lake Chelan
April 29 ... OES: Reception for Jean Lindberg, Grand Esther, Ephrata.
April 29 … GL: Regional Workshop, Wenatchee Masonic Center; 9:00 AM. TU/Ladies
April 29 … GL: Loggers Degree, Port Angeles; 6:00 PM. Casual
OES: Events with Worthy Grand Matron
CTU = Casual Team Uniform - blue Masonic tee-shirt, slacks.
INLAND EMPIRE PAST MATRONS & PAST PATRONS ASSN.
Order of the Eastern Star
To: Junior Past Matrons and Junior Past Patrons
Past Matrons and Past Patrons
Grand Officers
Past Matrons and Past Patrons Filing for Elective Grand Office
We extend to you a most cordial invitation to join the Past Matrons and Past Patrons Association of the Inland Empire. Formal initiation will be on
Wednesday, April 26th, 2006, at 7:30 p.m. in the Rose Room of the Spokane Masonic Center, 1108 W. Riverside, Spokane. For those of you who are
already members of our Association, we hope you will attend and enjoy this evening.
Preceding the initiation will be a dinner at 6:15 p.m. in the Small Banquet Room of the Center. Price for the dinner is $11.00. The dinner main course
will be roast pork.
Dinner reservations are necessary and must be accompanied by your check by April 20th. Please send them to the Secretary, as listed above.
For those who don’t belong, we have enclosed an application form in the hopes that you will consider becoming a member. If your spouse is not a Past
Matron or Past Patron, she/he is still eligible to belong to the Association as an Associate Member. Please return the application with your check for the
fee and dues to the Secretary.
We are a social group, getting together once a month for dinner, a short dinner meeting and program. In this way, we keep in touch with each other even
though we may not be active in our various Chapters as an officer. We meet monthly, except June, July, August, and December.
Fee Schedule Past Matron/Patron Grand Officer
To join as an active member $2.00 $1.00
Dues per year (Jan 1 through Dec 31) $2.00 $1.00
Associate Member Dues (no fee to join) $2.00 $1.00
We look forward to your favorable response to this invitation.
Mary Callen, Worthy President
Ted Shrum, Worthy Advisor
_________________________
Joan Kershner, Secretary
19018 W Kershner Ln
Medical Lake WA 99022
509-244-2826 (joankersh@msn.com)
PAST DEPUTY INSTRUCTORS OF EASTERN WASHINGTON
INVITES YOU TO A SPRING LUNCHEON
ON SUNDAY, MAY 7, 2006
AT 1:00 P.M.
COST $8.00
Prepared by Ivanhoe Chapter #80 Members.
AUDUBON PARK MASONIC TEMPLE
2821 W. Northwest Blvd.
Spokane, WA
Our yearly Dues for 2006 will be due at the May meeting.
Yearly dues are $5.00 a year.
RSVP: By April 30, 2006
Ada Anderson, 509-325-3846 adapoo@mail.asisna.com
Eleanor Knapp, 509-276-5529 tvgm@msn.com
Charity……….. The fragrance always stays in the hand that gives the rose…………….. Hada Bejar
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Baseball’s Hall of Fame contains eleven Freemasons….. Ty Cobb, Christy Mathewson, Tris Speaker, “Pie” Tranor, Mickey Cochran, Eddie Collins, Jimmie Foxx, Lefty Grove, Walter Johnson, Herb Pennock and Rogers Hornsby
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Without continual growth and progress, such words as improvement, achievement, and success have no meaning.- - Bro. Benjamin Franklin
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There is one sure way to make God laugh……………Plan
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The term “sharp shooter” comes from the Sharps rifle, the famous breechloader of the Civil War invented by Bro. Christian Sharps, Meridian Sun #158, and Philadelphia.
DEER PARK LODGE NO. 134 ... Jerry Gendreau, WM
From the Short
Talk Bulletin of the Masonic Service Association of the United States and “A
Page About Freemasonry”
http://web.mit.edu/dryfoo/Masonry/
What do the Masons do?
In either case, the Brother is challenged by the realization that there
is no simple answer which he can rattle off "from the top of his head,"....
Some of these considerations arouse the fraternal doubt that "you can't
tell that," or "that's secret," so that the Brother's reply is marked by
hesitation or reluctance to explain.
Puzzled by the difficulty of knowing what facets of the vast subject of
Freemasonry the questioner is really inquiring about, the Mason "just doesn't
know where to begin, " and too often may avoid a simple statement of facts. He
isn't sure of what to say...
What’s your answer?
Some of these considerations arouse the fraternal doubt that "you can't
tell that," or "that's secret," so that the Brother's reply is marked by
hesitation or reluctance to explain.
Puzzled by the difficulty of knowing what facets of the vast subject of
Freemasonry the questioner is really inquiring about, the Mason "just doesn't
know where to begin, " and too often may avoid a simple statement of facts. He
isn't sure of what to say.
Or, knowing that his questioner is a "practical man of affairs" who
measures outcomes quantitatively, in materialistic terms, he realizes that
Freemasonry's reputation cannot be explained by charts, statistics, or
financial statements, because the Fraternity's real worth can be expressed
only in spiritual terms, and that is rather difficult to explain to the
uninitiated. Masonic terminology, the most comfortable words with which to
reply seems inadequate or out of place. Masonic "secrecy" gets in the way.
Embarrassment is probably the commonest cause of a Brother's difficulty
in replying to the question. He is embarrassed because he realizes that he
doesn't really know enough about the Fraternity to give a good simple reply.
He knows that there is much more Masonic activity going on in other lodges all
over the country and throughout the world, but he has never taken the time to
experience some of it or to read about it with real interest. He hasn't given
much thought to the subject. He never expected to be asked such a question by
a non-Mason outside the lodge. Even though he has experienced Masonry, he has
never tried to express in words just what Freemasonry means to himself.
A well-informed Brother, therefore, will prepare himself for the
possibility of being asked such a question. Even though no one ever asks the
question, he will have the confidence of knowing what Freemasonry means,
especially to himself.
First of all, he will determine to give a Masonic answer, one which asserts
the real nature of the Fraternity as a spiritual force, as "a way of life"
which seeks
to
improve men morally and spiritually, by associating with other idealistic men
who want to improve the quality of life around them by means of a brotherhood
which emphasizes the Fatherhood of God.
In an age which derides ideals, absolutes, the concepts of law and order,
and advocates relativism instead of standards of excellence, which angrily
demands rights instead of responsibility, and which preaches a nihilistic doctrine of individualism (doing your own thing), Masons find it difficult to explain
the
Fraternity's idealism and its charitable and educational purposes. But it must
be done. A Mason must give a Masonic answer to the question, "What are the
Masons."
There are really so few "secrets" which a Mason is required to keep, and
so much that he should be proud to proclaim to others, that his principal
concern
in
answering questions is probably the doubt that he can give an adequate Masonic
reply.
The esoteric parts of the ritual work, the grips and pass-words of the
three degrees, these are really the only "secrets" which should be kept
inviolate. Because it is impossible to communicate to the uninitiated the joys
and satisfactions of brotherhood experienced in "the labors of the lodge,"
this too becomes
a
secret because it is inexpressible.
But there is so much that can be told about Freemasonry, about the
particular lodge, about the individual Mason, that the real problem in
answering the question, "What do the Masons do?" is to say only enough to
satisfy the questioner without boring or distracting him.
He can point out that Freemasonry is an educational organization. By
means of the ritualistic ceremonies and other educational programs, Masons
learn and teach the truths of morality, justice, patriotism, and the necessity
of brotherly love to achieve those universal ideals. Reverence for the Great
Architect is inculcated because men are brothers only if they are related to
God as the, sons of the Creator Father.
He can explain that Masonic meetings, while resembling the meetings of
any organized society, have a distinctly Masonic character. They are opened
and closed with prayer. They are patriotic because the nation's flag is kept
in an honored place in the lodge and properly saluted with the pledge of
allegiance.
They are opened and closed with Masonic ceremonies to remind the members of the principal purposes of the Fraternity, which are to develop brotherly love
and
respect for truth, not the truths of scientific facts or history, but the
truths which guide a man to live happily and harmoniously with his fellow man.
For that reason Masonic meetings do not permit the introduction of
discussions about sectarian religious differences or partisan political
opinions. A
Masonic lodge, if it is working seriously, teaches its members the principles
involved in attaining a universal Brotherhood of Man under the Fatherhood of
God.
A Mason is also free to explain that Freemasonry is a charitable
organization, which acts to relieve the distress of local individuals who are
victims of calamity, and that it has created programs and institutions to care
for its needy senior citizens, or to provide scholarship aid for worthy and
needy young
people in college. Masonic Homes and Hospitals, Grand Lodge Scholarship Programs, Charity Funds, and the Hospital Visitation Program of the Masonic
Service Association are examples of such achievements.
Freemasonry is also, but not primarily, a social organization, which
arranges special meetings to which are invited wives, children, neighbors and
friends
for
the purposes of entertainment and sociability. Masons seek the pleasure of
associating with other members of the community, hoping thereby to reveal the
serious and idealistic nature of the Fraternity's objectives.
There is so much that a Mason can tell about his beloved Fraternity. But
the way in which he tells it is more important than what he tells. When a
Mason is conscious and proud of the moral and spiritual achievements he has
made through Masonry, when he has been inspired to display the beauties of
friendship, morality, and brotherly love, when he realizes that his own
personal life is the most important evidence he can give to show what a Mason
is, he usually finds it very easy to talk about the Fraternity to his
non-Masonic friends. When he knows that his lodge is a spiritual force, when
it is learning and teaching its
members the universal ideals of the Craft, when it is actively promoting
charitable programs and pursuing truth, he will tell what Freemasonry is with
conviction and enthusiasm.
But he must know what he is talking about. This essay suggests only in
general terms what he can talk about. He should be prepared to fill in the
details. When he is convinced that he can supply those details, he is ready to
answer the questions, "What do the Masons do?" and "What are the Masons?"
When he is asked the question he must then decide on how much or how
little to say. A brief but adequate reply is advised, for if the questioner is
not satisfied, he will undoubtedly ask for further information. The following
answer is only a suggestion.
"Masons are men who voluntarily asked to join a lodge. They were accepted
because they were good men who believe in God and hold high ethical and moral
ideals. They go to meetings which they call the lodge, in order to learn and
to teach what 'friendship, morality, and truth really involve, and to practice
on a small scale the reality of brotherhood. They also have meetings open to
their wives, children, and friends where they promote an understanding of the
serious nature of the Fraternity by entertainment and sociability. Practical
programs for charity and relief are planned and executed. The special kinship
they feel for each other as a brotherhood is their deepest satisfaction."
Inquiry of worthy, qualified persons
Masons under the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Washington may
properly inquire of a worthy, qualified person “if he had ever considered
petitioning for membership in Freemasonry?” This, or a similarly phrased
question, is a proper question to determine intent; this in addition to
advising said person that “he must petition of his own initiative – that he
will not be asked to petition”. Further, “that enlightening Masonic literature
is available and may be furnished upon request.”
http://www.hiram.net/webs/MASONIC/ewmasons/index.html
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Quick Repair For Small Wall Holes: If you take nails out of the wall, you can fill the holes in white plaster walls with a paste of crushed aspirin and water or white regular toothpaste pushed into the hole.
When You Travel: Be sure to put stick-on address labels on your camera, computer, cell phone, PDA and anything else you are carrying that could be left behind. This way someone who finds your lost item can more easily know how to return it to you.
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