( Continued from first page.) to the Chapter, ami permission granted saii Cliapter to move to Elizabeth City tipon a cornpliauce with the (toiiatitntional provision regulating removals. The chartor of Mt. Energy Chapter, No. 37, Granville coun ty, was restored, with permission to move to Franklinton, on like conditions. The amendment to the constia tution piDviding that the Grand Chapter shall hold its annual con vocations “at such place as each succeeding Annual Convocati(.>n shall determine,” was adopted. Charlotte was selected as the place for the next Annual Convo cation. ' The gmendinent to the consti tution changing' the stiiieml s}'St- tem from Sl.h for each Chapter to Si per -capita on the membership of each Chapter, was laid on the table. d'he time for the annual elec tion of Grand Officers was chang ed from Wed)iesdaij to Tuesday. aftkEnoon sf.ssion. Election of Grand Officers.—The Grand Chapter proceeded to the election of Grand Officers for the ensuing year which resulted as follows : G. II. P.—Thos. S. Dewey, Charlotte. D. G. H. P.—Thos. S. Kenan, Wilson. G. K.—T: B. Hyman, Goldsbo ro. G. S.—A. Wronski, Wilming ton. G. T.—John Nicols, Raleigh. G. S.—I). W. Bain, Raleigh. G. C. II.—J. A. Hedrick, Salis bury. Grand Chaplain.—Rev. Theo dore Whitefield Charlotte, N. C. EVENISa .SESSION. The Grand High Priest elect made the following appointments of Grand Officers : W. T. Batley, Clinton, Grand Prin’i. Soj’r, Thos. J, Sloan, Greensboro, Grand Royal Arch Capt. Alex. Kicol, Kinston, Grand Master 3d Vail. Edwin Brace, .Hertford, Grand Master 2d Vail. W. H. Jones, Newborn, Grand Master 1st Vail, who, together with the officers elected this after noon, were installed by P. G. High Priest E. F. Watson. The Grand High Priest ap pointed C. C. Smith, of Charlotte, Grand Tiler, who, not being pres ent, was not installed. A well written and lengthy re port on Foreign Corresiiondence was presented by Comp. James Sonthgate, which will appear in the jmblislied Proceedings. Five hundred copies of Pro ceedings wore ordered to bo print ed with the constitution and laws of Grand Chapter. Appropriations were made as follows: Grand Secretary-i^for services jiast year, 850 ; Grandd^reasuror for services past year, Sl5; Grand Tiler for services present convocation, $10, exclusive ofe.x- penses. Comp. A. Wronski, of Wil mington, introduced resolutions tendering the thanks of the Grand Chapter to the several Rail Road Companies that have extended courtesies to delegates, to Raleigh Chapter for hospitalities, and to citizens of Raleigh for kind atten tions, which were unanimously ado])ted. The Grand 'ri-easnrer and Grand Secretary submitted their annual reports. Receipts during year, 8345. Balance in hands of Treasurer, 8320.00. Wedno.sday Morning, 9th June. The following standing com- ndiitees were announced : Finance: E. II. V'liite, B. 1’. Rogers, C. M. Van Or.sdell. Foreign Correspondence: James Southgate, II. II. Munson, T. B. Hyman. '^Jurisprudence : W. G. Hill, E. F. Watson, Geo. W. Blount. On motion of Comp. B. F. Rogers, the quest,i,in of eligibilit)' of the Grand High'Priest to the office of High Ih'iest of a subor dinate Chapter, ivas referred to the committee on Jurisprudence with instructions to report at the next Annual Convocation. The constitution and laws of the Grand Chapter having no pro vision on this subject there are precedents for holding both offi ces at same time. Thanks were returned to the retiring Grand Officers for faith fulness in the discharge of their Fespective duties. The Grand Chapter was closed in solemn form. I>CBiiorrafl; Kmperos'. The recent stor3’ of a well- known Duchess wdio waited half an hour for a porter rather than open a door herself, is hajipily not a just rejiresentatloii of courtly people’s habits: “During the journoj' of Empe ror Joseph II. to ItalA', one of the wheels of his coach broke down on the road, so that it was with difficult}' he reached a small vil lage at a short distance. On his arrival there, His majesty got out at the door of the only black smith’s shop the town afforded, and desired him to repairthe ivheel without delay. “ ‘That I would do willingly,’ repli'.'d the smith, ‘but it being holiday, all my men are at church; the very bo}' who blows the bel lows is not at home.’ “ ‘An excellent method then presents of warming oneself,’ re plied the Emperor, preserving his incognito; and he immediately set about blowing the bellows, while the blacksmith forged ih-e iron. The wheel being repaired six sols Avere demanded for the job, but the Emperor gave six ducats. “The blacksmith returned them to the traveler, saying, ‘Sir, you have made a mistake, and instead of six sols 3'ou have given me six pieces of gold, which no one in the village can change.’ “ ‘ Change them when 3-011 can,’ said the Emperor, stejiping into the carriage; ‘an Emperor should pay- for such a pleasure as that of blowing the bellows,’ ” An iBBistative CetcsEialg* The Sail Francisco' BuUetin says that a family' in the south ern part cf that city' recently- en gaged the service of a Celestial doinesticj whoso intelligence and industry were highly recommend ed. The lady of the house decid ed that the matting on tlie floor of the spacious kitchen needed re newing. The old matting, hav ing been patched, was a sorry sight; in fact it appeared to be made up of a dozen irregular pieces. The bright now matting was sent to the house, and John was requested to substitute it for the frayed and jiiitclied stulf. The family accepted an invitation to visit the interior, and left John a clear field for his operations. They- retui'iied to find that the now matting had been laid with methodical precision. There iwis the new matting to show for itself. But what a show ! John Lad cut it into irregular i>iecc3, [latched it and frayed the Oilges, until it was a counterpart of ihe old matting in evei'ything but age. THE ORITIANS’ FRIEND. Wodfaosduy, £6, iS’JS, The 3rd annual meeting of tlie Educational Association of North Carolina will be held in the city of Raleigh, commencing Wednes day, July- 14th, 1875.' A jjrogranune of proceedings will be published in a few days. Papers -friendly- to the Associa tion will jdease notice., By- order of the Exiicutive Com mittee. Joiis E. Dugger, ’ ' ' S'ecre.fary-. - S'!'. JOHK’S BAY. 1 , / The observance of the Anni- Iversary- of St. John the Bajitist, on ’riiursday-, 24th insL, tvill take place in Oxford,. as , heretofore .'Stated, under sometlniig like the' folloAving order of exorcises : All affiliatecl Masons are re quested to meet at the Hall of Tuscarora Lodge at 10 o’clock, a. m., Avhere ' a, procession ivill be formed and proceed to the Asy-- lum grounds. At the Asylum the exercises will consist otj’ one or more IMa- sonic orations’, singing by the Orphans, and tin independent pic- nic. ■ Every body- is invited to attend, and every- b(»iy, ivhq can do so, ■ is e.xpected to bring along a bas ket of edibles for themselves and friends, as no public dinner rvill be provided, the committee pre ferring to save that expense and bestOAv it on the Orjflians. Dr. Grissom will, during the day, or evening, deliver his lecture on Insamity and the Illustrious Insane. ’ Grand Master, George W. Blount, Avill deliver a Masonic Address ; others are invited but not y-et heard from. Ail Mas-inie L( dyes in the county-, (U'O invited to attend and join in the observance of the day- JIUALTH Or^TMB CUILBBEN. Among such a large number of cliildreii as are gathered here at the Asylum, it' could not be ex pected otherwise than that there should be, almost every- day-, cases of slight indisposition; but re cently Ave have had two or three cases of a more serious character —fever, apparently of a ty-phoid form ; but they- are noAv coiival- esceut. To all, the physicians of Oxford Ave are under obligation for gratuitous professional service Avhenover called iqion. During the continuance of the cases above alluded to, running through some four er flive Aveeks, Dr. George Landis, has not- failed a day- in making his regular calks and prescribing for our sick. l)rs. Paschall and.'Young have also made occasiopal,calls, and Avould have come'Tjfteher liad it -been necessary-. The institution is cer tainly under"'grbat obligation to the physicians of the toiA-n for their prompt and liberal jirofes- sional. attention.: Are not many- j)arents committirg' a sad mistake in regard to the manijer in Avhicii they alloAV their cLiltlren t>) it{)eiid tlie S;il)bath ? d’ho inquiry is, of course, based upon the,'- admitted fact that Ave ;u'e a Oliristia.n peo;)le and believe the Bible to be the revealed Avil! of God to man. If all that is memit hy this bo tine, and the 'olessings mul curses laid down in the ilible as the reauit of one course or another, in the matter of training nj) children, ma.'y ho expecied to follo v, then the in quiry- above becomes important, because it iin-olves questions of tlie Avelfare of the rising' genera tion for this life and the iite to come. If children are permitted to en tertain loose views of the claims of the Bible and their obligation to reverence and obey its precepts, as emanating from God, Avill they not,: in after years, ignore the re straints of moral obligation as laid doAvn in that holy- book, and fi nally lose sight of resjioiisihility to God for their actions in this world ? And if parents, from mere indolence in this matter, or from Avant of a proper concejitiou of duty- on tlie subject, directly or indirectly- connive at the forma tion of- -these loose notions of sa cred obligation on the part of their children, and snft'er them to groAA- up Avithont other moral re straint than Avhat the ojiinion of t .e Avorld impO'Ses, do they not as Ave have suggested, commit a sad mistake—a mistake that Avill affect the Avelfare of their children for time and for eternity, a mis take, (or neglect) for Avhieh they Avill have to acco.unt, on that great day- AA'lien the flimsy- excuses for neglect of duty-, so often advanc ed in this Avorld, Avill not avail. Crops.—Ave plant no seeds in Spring, Ave shall harvest no crops in Autumn. This has been ,said so often that every- body- knoAvs it, and it is such a self-evident fact that every- body Avonld knoAv it Avhether it had ever been said or not. And yet there are many Avho seem to forget tiiat it is ne cessary- to soAv the seeds of truth and virtue in the heart in y-oiith In order to reap honor and re spectability in riper years, and that it is equally necessary- to soav the seeds of religion and piety- in the soul in this Avorld, in order to reap a happy immortality in the world to come. 'I'lIB SABBAI'H. Walking about tho. streets of some of our inland tOAvns and vil lages, of the size of Oxford, for in stance, on the Sabbath day-, and seeing tho number of hoys bo- tAveen the ages of five and tAvonty- years, A\-ho seem to attend no Sabbath School, hut, on the con trary-, to bo amusing themselves in various Avays, some rambling about the suburbs, some off to the creeks bathing, some gathered in gToujis engaged in conversations tlicA' Avonid not like for their pa rents to hear, naturally suggests to the 'huikin"; tu- -Lthe inquiry, It, BO doubt, scorns to many an outsider, a very easy and simple matter to edit and pub lish a little paj)cr like tho ‘Orphans’ Fribxi),’ but tho call of tho priuter for “copy” and the uecossity of funiishhig it right away, of the right sort, would soon convince one who would uudortako it, that it is not so easy a matter as might bo imagined, when it is rememhored what narrow limits arc prescribed to it. It is not, in modern acceptation, a re.icspa- per, and therefore cannot draw on the usual soui’ccs of telegraphic items and “latest news’' paragraphs of its exchanges for matter to fill its columns. It is not political, and hence tho great body of reading matter found in most of the secular papers, is of no use to it in making up its se lections. It is not religious in a denominational or sectarian sense, and has to be very cautious in its selections from tho organs of any one dc- nomiuatiou lest it give offence to tlmso of its readers who may belong to some other deiioui- ination. It is not sensational, and, consofiucntly has no jdace for a largo amount of a particular sort of literature on which th.c public mind, in the present day, seems to feed and fatten, like crows on the carcass of a decaying dray horse- It is not sufficiently sentimental to make a- vailable to its columns the love-.sick nonsense that tills Iwo-lhirds of our fashionable maga zines, the writers of which, while they make bread fur themselves arc uistilling poison foi' 'the minds of tho youths and maidens of the country. Puffing, a common source of long para graphs on slender foundations, for many news ])a))ers iiow-a-days, is not in its line. A bot tle of wliisk'‘y_.'-.._^'”u’t of blackberries would not jtrove sufficiently insj/iriiig to draw out a tw .-slick laudation in superlative adjectives of tlte donor, nor justify the advertising a doubt ful bus;u:’;-s for such jo ir pay. XoW; iVoin ; u.'h a uiiugled ma.'-'S of ancongen- i.il iiiatcricil to cull the tit-bits that shall feed without cloying, noiirish without poisoning t’ui mimls of that interesting class fur whoso henelil the jmbliciitiou of the paper is chiefly dcsignc.!, is no ca.sy, and no trifling u-ork, but ouetliut I'Kpiiros care, study and prayer to perform properly and succe ssfully. It is a W(ir!c that must not be clone lieedles.sly nor with indifference. A paper read by a child from week to week, exercises no little influ ence in funning the 'haracter of that child h j. life. Wliutaii awful responsibility, tbeii, rests upon him or her, whose duty it is to write and select tho reading matter that is to fill the crul- Limiis of such a paper, and liow peculiarly careful ought ho or she to be not to insert an article or paragraph that shall impair the rev erence of the child for the great -princijiles of truth, honesty, integrity, monility yr religion. A SEWIRfU “BEEP’ ■ “Spelling Bees” liave become so much tiio fiishion of late that almost every town and village in the coimtry has had one. Oxford has not had one yet that we have heard of, but it htis had something better, and that is, a “sewing bee.” A number of ladies of the towp, every one of which has made, is now making, or would make, if tried, a splendid - house-keeper, knowing that v'e were a little, (yes, “right smart”) behindha\;d ill ha.viug sunimer clotUyig .made up for tho children of the Urjihan xVsylum, notified the officers, last week, tliat if tho material weie sent to a certain place, the}' would devote two or tliree days to the making it up into suitable gai- inentsfortho children. The goods were sent accordingly, and hy Saturday night we. liad a large nuhiber of new ready made gar ments for tho children to wear to Sunday School next day. Mrs. S. A. ‘Elliott took a lead ing }iart. in the movement, and had the ready and expert cooper-, ation of the following ladies;' Miss Maggie Taylor, Mrs, A. H. A. Williams, Misses Minnie and Letta Kittrell, Misses Mar}’ and Maggie Kingsbury, Miss Eliza Pool, Jiliss Lena Ta}'lor, Misses Mary and Ella Blacknall, IMiss Bettie Sjiencer, Miss Mary Young, Mrs. J. T. Hunt, l^liss Flora vliint, Miss Pattie Miner, l\lisses Sue and Mittie Hall, Miss Lillie l\litchell. To tliesG ladies we desire to tender the thanks of the officers of the institution, and of the children so oj^portiinel}’ benefited by their kindness, and particularly, as they promise to duplicate the favor at an early day. COI^VO€ATIOi\ OF FHE OKANB ClfiAPTEK OF IV. €. We devote a good deal of our space this week to a rei^ort of the proceedings of the Grand Chap ter of tho State, which convened in Raleigh last week. AVhile that sort of matter may not prove vei y interesting to some of our readers, it must be remembered that to others it ■will, and we must try to please every body in the long run by pleasing a part at a time. Decoka'I’IDN.—On Eriday of this week, at bj p. m. tlie ladies of Oxford will attend to the dec oration of tho graves of Confeder ate soldiers at the cemetery in town. We are not informed as to the programme of the occasion, l)ut sujipose it will bo simply an informal votive ollering to the memory of the dead h-jroes huAed there. At the 5}>lh anniversary of tho Bible Sr-.do- ty belli ill (.’Iiicago recently, tho report .^hows the receipts iluring the year to liavi* been .Sh}), oxpeu'liliires 8ijo3,714. Tho total miia her of Bibles distributed was 920,05o.