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EIGHTH HOUSE
63. All Brethren are entitled after death to the proper disposal of
their remains according to the rites of the Order and their grade in
it.
64. If the Brother so desire, the entire amount of the fees and
subscriptions which he has paid during his life will be handed over by
the Order to his heirs and legatees. The Order thus affords an
absolute system of insurance in addition to its other benefits.
NINTH HOUSE
65. The Order teaches the only perfect and satisfactory system of
philosophy, religion, and science, leading its members step by step to
knowledge and power hardly even dreamed of by the profane.
66. Brethren of the Order who take long journeys overseas are received
in places where they sojourn at the Profess-Houses of the Order for
the period of one month.
TENTH HOUSE
67. Women of the Order who are about to become mothers receive all
care, attention, and honour from all Brethren.
68. Special Profess-Houses will be established for their convenience,
should they wish to take advantage of them.
69. The Order offers great social advantages to its members, bringing
them as it does into constant association with men and women of high
rank.
70. The Order offers extraordinary opportunities to its members in
their trades, businesses, or professions, aiding them by co-operation,
and securing them clients or customers.
ELEVENTH HOUSE
71. The Order offers friendship to its members, bringing together men
and women of similar character, taste, and aspiration.
TWELFTH HOUSE
72. The secrecy of the Order provides it members with an inviolable
shroud of concealment.
73. The crime of slander, which causes so great a proportion of human
misery, is rendered extremely dangerous, if not impossible, within the
Order by a clause in the Obligation of the Third Degree.
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