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Examples

  • Whether it be in the home circle, lodge-room, or in some distant land, it sends the same soothing thrill of joy to the heart.

    The Jericho Road W. Bion Adkins

  • No true Odd-Fellow crosses the threshold of his lodge-room but he feels he is treading on more sacred ground than the busy marts of trade, or in the office or counting house; he feels that he is coming home where dwells the purest principles of humanity -- friendship, love and truth.

    The Jericho Road W. Bion Adkins

  • I want to say here what I have often said in the lodge-room.

    The Jericho Road W. Bion Adkins

  • His first sight into a lodge-room catches sight of that divine missive to man.

    The Jericho Road W. Bion Adkins

  • If Odd-Fellowship had more in it than the social and restraining influence one meets and is subjected to in the lodge-room, it would be sufficient inducement to organize and perpetuate lodges.

    The Jericho Road W. Bion Adkins

  • When the rest of the troop gathered in their lodge-room at the called meeting, and heard a detailed account of what had happened in that far-away land along the shores of the greatest bay in all the world, they united in declaring that Ned and his four chums had done the whole organization credit, in finding out the truth in connection with the supposed mine.

    Boy Scouts on Hudson Bay The Disappearing Fleet 1909

  • Much as one might enter a lodge-room, the two radicals showed their faces at a port-hole in a door, after which they passed guards with masklike helmets.

    The Devolutionist and the Emancipatrix Homer Eon Flint 1908

  • This is a secret concern, whose lodge-room is in the hall on Fourteenth street, near Third avenue.

    The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 10 1905

  • Then all (except Amidon) in awesome accents intoned, "Be brave and obedient, and all may yet be well!" and they passed back into the lodge-room.

    Double Trouble Or, Every Hero His Own Villain Herbert Quick 1893

  • In the chords (which are heard again in the temple scene, at which the hero is admitted as a novice and permitted to begin his probation), the analysts who seek to find as much symbolism as possible in the opera, see an allusion to the signals given by knocking at the door of the lodge-room.

    A Book of Operas Their Histories, Their Plots, and Their Music Henry Edward Krehbiel 1888

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