BY D. A. & C. H. MEHL= VOLUME XXVI. TUE DINNER PARTY. The Rev. Mr. W— wagon officiating clergyman, who bad charge of a little flock in the State of blassachusetts: Re was possessed of an excellent temper, gener °as feelings, and a cultivated mind ; but he was eccentric even to oddity. Ile was a powerful speaker, and his ministration was blessed to the conversion of many souls. At the age of thirty-font. ho be came convinced that it was not "good for man to be alone;" and for the purpose of hectoring his condition, he made proposals to Mary 13. , a beautiful, light-heart ed girl of seventeen, daughter of one of bis wealthiest parishioners, and who ima gined that to refuse the hand of the minis ter would be a sin bordering upon the un pardonable. In due time the marriage was consummated, the bride's snug por tion paid, and the happy husband, as hus h:tads in their first love are apt to do, gave up to the humor of his wife. and accompan ied her to several festive parties given by his wealthy neighbors in honor of his mar riage. One evening toward fpring, the happy couple were sitting together in their com fortable parlor. the reverend- gentleman ier ply hurried in the study, of the venera ble Bede, and his wife equally intent up• on a plate of fashions, when she suddenly looked up with a mingled expression of hope and fear, and thus undressed her companion. "My luar husband, I have one recpest to !nuke." Mary, anything consistent." +-You do not imagine that I wi•uld make tea illeon,islent request, surely?" not a request that you would con sider inconsistent. But come, what ?" "W Ity, my dear," and her voice trem bled a little. "we have been to several par ties among the neighboring gentry this winter, and now, I dank, that to maintain our pm.itien in society, we should give .a party also.'' The miuister looked blank. "What sort of a party, Mary ?" he at length Said. "Why," she replied, "such a party as those we have attended. We must have an elegant thinner, and dancing after it." "Danoiug, in a minister's house !" ex claimed 3lr: W., in surprise. ••Why. yes, certainly," replied his wife, coaxingly. "You wdl not dance, the par tpw ill he mine ; and :her we have been to similar rani, S all winter.'' rue. true," lie muttered, with a per-. phrx ea air, and : , at silent for some At. Jength he Yee. Mary, you may tivike a party, give a dinner, and, if the bae:as desire it, you may dance." "Thick you, Inc. thank you," cried his.th•lighted tcifc, throwing her arms a round his, neek, and itnpriuting a kiss up (.l, his cheek. Mit I have .onie stipulations to make aloutt it," Mr. %V , "I must se lem and invite the guesnt, and you , must 1111... v toe to place sonic of my favorite diskes on the guide." "As you please, love," she answered delightedly, ••but when shall it be r "Next WedLesday, if you pleaiLe." "But our-fartirdure and window draper ies are very old.fashioned. It is now time we had new." "I ,-Could thir.k it hard:y necessary to refurnklt our rooms, Mary. All our fur uitore is excellent of its kind." "But our smooth carpets, white draper ies, and cane chairs, have auc6 a cold look. Do you consent to have the rooms newly' . fitted ; we'can move these things to the untinislu3d chambers." "And of what use will they be in those rooms which we never occupy ? Besides, it is now nearly spring, and to fit up fur winter seems superfluous." "Well, I would nut care," she persisted. "wore it not that people will call us parsi monious and ungeuteel." "Oh, if that is all," he said : gaily, "I promise to spend one thousand dollars on the evening of the party ; not in furni ture, however. but in a manner far more gratifying to our gui ete, and profitable to ourselves, and which shall exhonorate us from all imputation of parsimony, and you may expend in dress, eatables, and dessert, just what sum you please, and do not forget the wines." And so the colloquy ended. The min ister resumed his studies, and his wife gave her mind to the consideration of the dress which would be the most becoming, and the viands that were the most expensive.— Then nest she went busily about her pre parations, wondering all the time how her husband would expend the thousand dol lars; but as she had learned something of the eccentricity of his character. she doubt •ed not that hq meant to give an agreeable surprise ; and her curiosity grew so great, that she could hardly'sleep during the in terval. At length the momentous day arrived. The arrangements were all complete, and Mrs. IV— retired, to perform the all. important business of arraying her fine person in fine attire. She lingered long :at the toilet, relying onthe fashionable un -punctuality of fashionable people; and at length, when everytLing was complete, she *eft the room, arrayed, like Judith of old, gloriously, to alhire the eyes of all 'who should look upon her, and full of sweet smiles and graces, notwithstanding the un .comfortable pinching of her shoes and corsets. Mer huaband met her in the halL • . • ‘Well, sy dem.. our guests have all at , rived," he said. and opened the door of the receivintroom. - Wonderful 1 what an assemSly There were congregated the crippled, the maimed, and the blind. the palsied. and the extreme aged. A group afthildren from the almshouse were also there ; who regarded the lady, some with spouths wide open. others with both hands thrust into their hair. while others peeped out from behind the furniture. to the covert sebieh theyhml scolistectfrout her dazzling pe . same. At first she was petrefied with astonishatect, then a displeasure crossed ber face, till, hiving run her eyea,mr the gtolptuefswinbly. she met the «mica , grate expression of her husband's counts- rs off .when she burst into a violent fit of laughter, during the paroxysms of which the bursting of. ber corset laces could be distinctly heard by therbompany. "Mary I" void her husband, sternly.— She suppressed her mirth, stamsmered an excuse, and added, "You will forgive me, and believe your selves quite Welcome." "That is well done," whispered Mr. ; then turning to the company, he said, "My friends, as my wife is not acquain ted with you, I will now make a few pre sentatione." Then leading her towards an emaciated creature, whose distorted limbs were una ble to support his body, he said : "This gentleman, Mary, is the Rev. Mr. Brown, who in his youth travelled much. and en dured much, in the cause of our common Master. A violent rheumatism, induced by colds contracted among the new settle ments of the West. where he was engaged in preaching the gospel to the poor, has reduced him to his present condition.— This lady: his wife, has piously sustained him, and by her own latter procured maintainance for herself and him. But she is old and feeble, as you see." Then turning to a group of silver locks. and threadbare boats, he continued : "These uro soldiers of the Revolution.— They wore all sons of rich men. They went nut in their young strength to de fend their oppressed country." "They endured hardships,,toils and suf ferings ; and such as we hardly deem it Testable for men to endure and live. They returned borne at the close of the war, maimed in their limbs, and with broken constitutions, to bud their patrimonies de stroyed by fire or the chance of war, or their property otherwise wrested from therm Aud these men live in poverty and neglect in the land for the, prosperity of which they sacrificed their all. These ven erable ladies are wives of these patriots, and widows of others who have gone to their reward. They could tell tales that would thrill your heart, and make it bet ter." Then turning to anothei. he said : "This is the learned and celebrated Dr. M—, who saved hundreds of lives du ring the spotted epidemic; but his great success roused the animosity of his medi cal brethren, who succeeded in ruining his practice ; and then blindness came up. on him, lie was forgotten by those whom he had delivered from death. This lovely creature is his only child, and she is moth erless. She daily leads him by the hand, and eurnt the food she sets before him.— i. her learning and accomplishments aro wonderful. She is the author of those exquisite poems which appear occasionally in the Magazine. "These children,' said he, turning to the group'efjuveniles who gathered at the other end of the room, "were orphaned in infancy by the Asiatic cholera, and their hearts have seldom seen cheered by a smile, or their palates regaled with deli ' emus food. Now dry your eyes, love and lead on to the dining room." She obeyed ; and, notwithstanding her emotions. the thumping of coarse shoes, and the rattling of canes, crutches, and wooden legs, behind her, well nigh threw her into another indecorous latigh. To di vert her attention, she glanced over the table. There stood the dishes for which her husband had stipulated, in the shape of two monstrous homely-looking meat pies, and two enormous platters of baked meats and vegetabl es, looking like mighty mountains among the delicate vi ands which she had prepared for Gre refin ed company which she expected. She took her place, and prepared to do the ta ble honors, but her husband, after a short thanksgiving to a bountiful God, address. ed the company with, "Now, brethren, help yourselves and one another, to such as you deem preferable. I will wait upon the children." I A hearty and jovial meal was made, the minister setting the example ; and as f the hearts of the old soldiers were warmed with wine, they became garrulous, and each recounted some wonderful or thrilling ad. venture of the revolutionary war ; and the old ladies their tales of privation and suf fering, interwoven with the histories of fathers, brothers, or lovers, who died for liberty. Mrs. W was sobbing convulsive ly. when her husband came round. He observed it. and touching her lightly on the stwulder, whispered : "My love, shall we have dancing ?' That word, with its ludicrous associa tion, fairly threw her into hysterics, and she laughed and wept at once. When she became quiescent, Mr. W thus addressed the company. "I fear, my friends, that yon will think my wife a frivilous and inconsistent crea ture, and I must therefore apologise for her. We were married only last fall, and attended several gay parties, which a our rich neighbors. gave, in honor of our nuptials, and my wife thought it would be genteel for us to give one in return. I consented, on conditions, one of which was, that I should be al. lowed to invite the guests. So, being professed minister of Him who was mails so lowly in heart, I' followed the words of the command : "But when thou makest a feast, call in the tutor, the lame, the maim ed, and the blind." Yon all recollect the passage. Mrs. W- . , not knowing who her guests were, was highly delighted with the ruse I had provided ; and I do not believe there has been so noble and hon orable a company assembled this winter.-- My wife desired new furniture, lest, we should be doe med parsimonious, I pledg ed myself to expend ono thousand dollars, in a manner morepleasing to our guests, and which should obviate any such imputation. "And now, to you, patriot fathers, and these nursing mothers of our country. I present the one thousand dollars. It is just one hundred dollars to each soldier, and soldier's widow. It is a mere trifle. Nolhanks, my friends." "Then-addressing the children, he said : "You will each be' removed tomorrow to excellent places ; and if:Ton continue to be industrious, and perfectly honest in GETTYSBURG, PA., FRIDAY EIENIN . G, JULY 6, 1865. word'and deed, you will become respecta ble members of society." he said: To Dr. M "To you, under God, I owe my life. I did - not know your locality. neither had I heard of your misfortune, until a few days since. I can never repay the debt I owe you; but if you and your daughter will accept the neatly furnished house adjoin. ing mine, I will see that you never want again." "You, Mr. Brown, are my father in the Lord., Under your preaching I first became convinced of sin, and it was your voice that brought to the words of salva tion. You will remain in my house. I have a pious servant to attend you. It is time that you were at peace, and your excellent lady relieved of her hasty bur ded." The crippled preacher fell prostrate on the floor, and poured out such_ thanksgiv ing and prayer as found way to the heart of Mrs. W , who ultimately became a meek and devout woman—a fit helpmate for a Gospel minister. And strange to say, she dates her conversion from the day of that comical. but not unprofitable, dinner party.—National Era. Snoring. A good anecdote well told, some years ago of a polite Southerner, an accomplish. ed and kind hearted gentleman : On one occasion he had been driving hard from morning till night, over the rough roads in the neighborhood of Col umbia, S. C., slighted at the only comfor table looking tavern in the place, very hun gry and very tired. Sticking his eye glass to his eye—his constant companion, lie being very near sighted—he demanded a roast fowl, some good wine, and a comfortable room for the night. The landlord was very sorry, but he "couldn't give him a comfortable room— the only place he could have to sleep in was a double-bedded room with another gentleman" •Very well; let us have the best you've got. No man can do more than that, sir." After discussing his supperi-he sought his chambers ; turned in,;and went to sleep. His slumbers were destined to be of very short duration. Before long he was a wakeoed by a call from the other bed, .sir ! Sir!' "Bless my soul !" cried D—thrust- Mg his glass to his eye, and endeavoring to peer through the dark,—"what's the matter, my dear sir ? is the house on fire, or are there bugs in your bed ?" "Neither, sir ; but, my dear sir, you snore so terribly that I cannot sleep, sir.— It is most terrific, sir !" "Bless my heart, my dear air, I am shocked that I r.hould have been so rude as to snore in a gentleman's presence, and he a stranger-to me. I ask your pardon. sir. and beg you'll overlook it. It wasn't intentional, I assure you." The apology was accepted, a egond night" exchanged, and both parties went to deep again. It was not long, however. before a rum. Wing sound was heard from the polite gen tleman 's bed, every moment growing loud er. until at last it ended in a thunderous diapason. The other lodger driven almost to madness, started up and exclaimed - "Good gracious ! this is too much ! I l i cant stand it ! I say, Sir ! Sir!! Sla ! I wake up. Sir !" "Bless my soul ! well, what's the mat ter now ? cried out the offender, starting, up in bed? "you seem to be very restless, Sir." "Restless I I believe you!" said the dis. turbed gentleman ; you've been snoring, Sir, worse than ever, and I cannot get to sleep. "You don't say so ! Have I been re peating my rudeness to a stranger 1 I am really extremely sorry, my dear sir, but was really asleep. Good night—night-- night—; very sor—sor—sor—ry:' And off ha drowsed again, and in five minutes began snoring as loudly as ever, until he was again awakened by his room• mate's complaints. "Snoring again, have I, Sir 1" said the unconscious offender. •Well, the fact is, I have had a hard day's journey and eaten a hearty supper—and if I snore, Sir, I can't help it. I have apologized twice and that is sufficient. lam about to go to sleep again 1 but allow me to inform you, Sir, that if you wake me up again, snoring or not snoring ; Sir, I shall .pro ceed to get up and give you the soundest thrashing you ever had in the whole course of your life ! • Good night Sir l' His slumbers !Fere undisturbed for the rest of that night. Aunts AT THE JuDownrr.—At that solemn tribunal, each man will be trans parent before the searching eye of the Son of God, as if that man and Jesus were the only twain in the whole uni• verse: such will be the intense light of that day, that the lost will call out for the hills to cover them, and the mountains to overshadow them ; that they cannot bear the intensity ofthat unutterable splendour; and such will pe the dead silence of that moment, that ech man will hear the pill nation of his own heart, and if that heart be unregenerate, each pulse will sciund a death knell to his hopes and prospects for ever. There is no escape in the crowd ; there is no escape any away ; for "how if we neglects° great salvation," says the poetic, as satisfied that there is no escape whatever,•tshall we escape r—Da. Cum- MING. • CAS • STATE GET DRUNK I—ln the following item front the Boston Post it would seem that the 4 State," as represen ted, must have baen in a state of intoxi• cation : A few years ago the State Attor ney rola northern county in Vermont, al. though a man of great legal ability, wad fend of the bottle. On one occasion an important criminal case was called by the clerk, but the attorney with owl-like grav ity, kept his chair, being,'in fact not fairly able to stand on his feet. "Mr:Attorney, is the State ready to proceed?" said the judge. "Yea—hic—no—your honor." sithitnered . the lawyer, "the State— is not —in a state to try this cue to-day;..the State your honor is—drunk !" "FEARLESS ANA) FREE!, Impresilo, i)F,France We extraor from a recent letter of Mr. IGlreeley, the following pangraphe on France : France has more arable toil than almost any other country of equal extent, and it is very generally and laboriously though not thoroughly efficiently cultivated...-. Naturally fertile, it owes'.little to subse quent applications ; not one acre in a thousand is under-drainetl or subsoiled ; and while England has brought millions of dollar's worth of impeded fertalisers within the last thirty years, half a million would pay for all the pinto, bones,&e., imported into France. 'Oroughout this country you pass miles aftelmilesof grow ing grain or vegetables lifflelt promised fair to middling crops ; I never yet obser ved a French acre that pro:Anise', a luxu riant or great one. The rigorous division of a decendent't real esUnte among his heirs, which a fundatnentalkiw of the first Republic decrees, and whiclOto subsequent Monarchy line ared to repeal, exerts a salutary influence in mitiga(Uig destitution and diminishing beggary, Nit it does not tend to raise French Agrrulture "above the state of mediocrity into shich it seems to have been hopelessly Owned:. The dying peasant's acre must he divided a inoug his four or five children, who must cultivate their severii pittandes with spade and ~hoe only ; no !outliers can be bougt by the itnpoverishekOwners ; no animals employed ; her thin soil, slowly and' tbello wly turned overthy the rude exertion of human muscle, to sown, tilled and harvested in the same rude, slow fash ion, and the sheaves born on human ehoul. tiers to the distant threshing-floor. All is clumsy, feeble, hieffectiva, 'and I k i k ° that the grimes product of the . human I abur of •Trance is less than a buithel of grain *May.% Subtract from tliis the enor mous aggregate exacted for the support of Governiinit, with_ ice, 'salaried priests, and =seven hundred thousand janizaries, and it is plain that the subsistence of its nominal freeholdm g cultivators must be scanty indeed. I doubt that the peasant 'Aurelio of England who own no - land'fiCall: 'bin lire upon the' scanty wages accorded them by the ten.' alit farmers, are woke lodgml and foil than the millions of rural freholders in France who own and coltivate hiss than an acre each. It is mournful to see steep hillsides laboriously, tilled front year to year when tillage is certain tit wash and exaust them ; the eittistirof their cultiva tors is a noble, a beniticuit ; but the division of an acre atuciiig a hitlf a dozen heirs of the late cultivator. non; deceased, is not a happy illustration of it. Practi cally, it is found that the pail holdings are split up while the large Wales are held intact through sii'veraVviterations and even incteneed. by way of illustration that the fine estute of Lafayette, (La Grange,) comprising a fine chateau and 700 acres of good land in the heart of France, near this city, is now in the market, hi a son being dead and the property not well adapted to par tition among the heirs. Were it but one acre or so, each inherit would insist on having and holding his share of it. France, though rich and is silver, 13 es. sentially a • poor country—that is to say, the great mass of her people are poor.— Labor is less effective here than in Amer ica, and us not so well paid for what it ac tually accomplishes. There are millions of Frenchmen who earn less titan a franc per day when they work, and cannot get work at any price during a good part of each year. Oi course there are the more ignorant and ill-placed as well as ineffi cient ; but two francs (forty cents)per day for the men and half as much,for the wo men exceed the actual average earnings of the laboring class throughout the Empire of Louis Napoleon. Yet it is held to be a crime, under the Government of the man who tries to ingratiate himself with the toiling millions by dabling with the price' of bread, and opening for a day the Pal,' ace of lndnstry at his own cost to the poor, for those recipients of his bounty to demand peaceably an increase of their petty wages. The subjoined will be seen to be strik ingly corroborative of our description lest week of the general condition of the Eu- ropean populace, who are now prim:ilia:ly the emigrants to this country : France anually produces more elegant andtastellul fabrics than any other country; yet her people are closely clad she largely grows and • manufactures Silks yet the great majority .of her population, and even of her silk-producers, cannot afford to! wear them : she exports rare and costly! furniture to the ends of the earth, yet the homes of the great mass of her people con- Utiii only a few rude and clumsy articles, inferior in cost and convenience to the contents of our newest lorcabitis: but she produces also vast quantities of Wine, and of this, though much of the best is exported, a far larger quantity is consumed on her own soil. The Poor seldom pos sess elegant Furniture nor costly 'Fabrics ; but few Frenchmen are so poor as not to drink Wine. The day laborer, whose entire subsist ence must be eked out of less than eighty dollars a year• In a country where the coat of food is usually twice as high as in Auterica. washes down his dinner of dry bread with half a pint of red' liquid whichints the smellof weak vinegar and the name of wine—yin ordinaire they call it, and very ordinary I judge it must be. The work•girl living on her bard earned franc a day in her miserable Pa risian garret, buys'bread and shelter with her wages; while her youth and comeli nese endure, she wins clothes and finery, balls and wines, in another manner, less creditable, and more ruinous. Wine, wine ! In the Provinces, the vine is the leading staple of agriculture ; in the cities wine is the great basis, of commerce. I estimato that "March and de Vine" is written over the door of one fourth of all the places of trade in Paris ; certainly there to no other sign half so common as this. I may exaggerate in judging that one-fourth of the cultivated land in Franca and an equal proportion of the rural labbr us devoted to the Vine ; but the proper-, (ion is so great as to seem incredible in a country like ours. ; , The American Bald Emile The editor of the Ameirlean Agricultur ist has a wall written article in the last number of that journal o n the Nato ral History of the American white head or Bald Eagle, in tho course of which he re• lates an encounter he had with a bird of this kind. the particulars of which we annex : When about eighteen years old, spend iegsome time in Me vicinity of one o!, tho great lakes, one fine May mnrning, We, went with a companion dawn to the shore where a fisherman had put op a shanty. and with his wife and inlaid child, had ta ken up their summer risidenee. ' On our way down, and about a hundred rods front the water, in the topmost branchae of an enormona oak, we spied,an .eagles .nest. and as the old eagles were wheeling about, it, we concluded the neat had either eggs or young within it. and 'Which of the two we soon determined to ascertain. As our coMpanion was a middle-aged man, and had no special taste for climbieg.the adven, lure was left for rue. alone. The tree on which the nest was built had no limbs for thirty feet or more from tho ground, hut, ftwitmately, , a smaller tree near it had been felled, and its top had lodged midway up among the branches of the oak. Ascend ing the fallen tree, I soon reached the oak, and catching the huge limbs ahove me, I swung up one after another until I stood on one a few feet tumoral' the trio of bran ches on which the neat lay. , During my j ascent one, of the eagles, with vociferous cries, often wheeled within a dozen feet of my head; hut, like other yonesters, as I had at that time quite as much courage as conduct, I stood in little danger of an attack. Well posted on a strong liutb,xitb a near branch. to-hold on 4,1 looked-Into -I the neit. It was built of strong, heavy sticky, laid cross-wise, perhaps two.feet in thickness from bottom to top; and four or five feet wide on the surface, covered with long, dry grass,. and : leaves, way on the nest lay two young eagles, one somewhat larOir that the 'other, about th s size of hull grown goslings, and, cav ern(' with the seine sort* of down, it color anfftippearence. Close by them lay two. or three dead fish, half covered with; 'blue hottle-fiies, and giving off an intolerable stench. With a stick, which 1 drew out of the lower part of the:, nest, I tried to puke one of the young towards me; but they turned up their claws in defiance, with a sort of hise,and edged 'untie,. away. r During this time one of the old eagles had left the premises altogether, while the other still kept wheeling and diving around but approached no nearerthco. fvFfiltiit iitiotteltefeeftif:!" - A ffbrifAittrigi,cii6" tinned pokinglai the young ones (waxes aerated one of them, that ho seized my stick so firmly with his claws that I drew him within reach. Determined to hold divided empire with the old eaglet' in the possession of their young, the next pro cess was to get the bird to the ground without damage: as I had no sack or bas ket in which to deposit and let him safe ly down ; but. like other youngsters, who are seldom at a loss for expedients in mis-, chief, a plan was soon invented. Taking off my hat; coat and vest, and laying them on an adjacent limb, my shirt was rapidly drawn over my head, the sleeves tied;to gethet at the,wristbands, and thrown o ver my neck, the skitte bound into a knot, thus making a sack, and the open collar and bosom forming- its mouth. In this con amore receptacle or bellidose "Young America" was rapidly thrust, my outer garments replaced, and flushed with vic tory' I made a rapid decent down the tree. No triumphant plOnderer ever' felt proud der of his trophy thap I, and, like the kilt ed Highlander in Rob Roy. I could sing: The eagle, he was lord above, And Rob was lord of all below I" I took the eagle down to the fish er man's hut, and after spending an hour or two, began to consider what to do with the young ruffian I had so wantonly caught, for I had neither a suitable place nor proviesions on which to keep him, and wisely concluding that the second, if not the better part of valor was discreetion. I gave him to the owner of the hut, for his own pastime. I saw no more of the eagle for some weeks, when I again visited the fisher man, and found the young, tawny-looking thing an enormous bird, lounging about the door, and grown stout and saucy from generous treatment and the fish garbage on which he had been profusely fed. the next report I heard from the young savage, few weeks since, was near being a tragic one. The wife of the fisherman having occasion one day to go to the shore, a few rods distant, after a bucket of water, while there she heard a scream from her child, which in her caution she bad placed upon the bed when she left the room. •Rushing back, she found the child postai() on the floor, screaming in terror and agony, the eagle on its breast, with one claw , transfixed into its lace, and the other, as she approach ed, turned up, with open beak, in defiance at the mother's approach. With the quick energy of a, woman in extremity, she struck the eagle off with her foot, and caught tip the child, its face badly cut and bleeding, and, deposited it at once' in a place of safety. This done. an axe lay at the door, and that eagle died probably as sudden a death as ever malefactor did i "on execution of any sort whatever. The little sufferer, after a few'week's careful attention. recovered of its wound, but with a lasting scar on its temple. That• was the first and the last of the race that we ever attempted to tame, and long will the bald eagle '.tower" over our homestead in his '4pride of place," ere we shall seek to disturb his authorty. The quill of the bald eagle is peculiar ly hard and elastic, and tq those who pre fer a quill to a metal pen, like ourselves. we commend their use when they can be obtained. We have Ling used , them. . Tnith is beauty--basal; jath: General !ivied of the Latham Church. This body, which met at Dayton, Ohio, on the 14th ult., closed its labors on the 20th, aftef an interesting session of one week. Among the measures acted on at the present session, the moat important sink the following : The subject of ;Church Extension was debated at length, and it was resolved to make another effort to raise the fund of $50,000, originally contemplated by the founders of the Society. Sermons are to be preached in all the Lutheran churches throughout the country, on the 31st of ()e -toher, the anniversary of the Reformation, and collections are to be taken up. Great, •nfdence was expressed in the ultimate! incoess of the Society. It was resolved, if possible, to establish a Lutheran Mission in Africa, and the neces sary incipient steps were adopted. The objects of the Lutheran Tra i ns!alien and Publication Society, whose depository into be located in Philadelphia, were ap proved, so soon as opportunity shall be af forded to - the General Synod to have a rep resentation in its Executive Board. The office of General Agent and Corres ponding Secretary a the Home Missionary Society ants created, and was filled by the election of the Rev. F. W. Conrad, one of the profes'sors in Wittenberg College. - The sums collected and subscribed, at the present meeting of the Synod, for the dif ferent societies, chiefly by 'the citizens of Winchester and delegates in attendance, wore as follows :—Foreign Missions, 8454; Home 'Missions, ; Parent Education Society, sl,sso—total $3,004 These are very liberal contributions to Fe raised on such an occasion. The amounts annually paid to these various objects by the entire church are very large, and are annually augmenting. A fond for the relief of disabled pastors, and widows and orphalts of deceased clergy man,- haeliecn established ; -and a board of trustees for its disbursement hat( been ap.- pointed, all located in- Philadelphia. to con sist of Rev. E. W. Illutter, Rev. B. Keller, Daniel. K. Grim, Wm. Moped', J. Leh. Rev. George Diehl, of Frederick, Md., was appointed to deliver the next biennial address before the Historieal Society con nected-with the General Synod—Rev. J. A. Siess, of Baltimore, alternate. A union of interest, not heretofore exist ing; has been effected to a gratifying extent between the different theological and colle giate institutions of_ the Lutheran chiaroh, more particularly the college and seminary at Gettysburg, Wittenberg College, at Springfield, Ohio, and Illinois University, at Springfield, 111. Rev. W. D. Strobel, of New York, was appointed .the delegate to represent this .41.5sembly of the reitiy - terian tßiiicbriiid Rev. F. R Ans- Paoli to represent it in the General Synod of the German Reformed Church. The Geneva Synod resolved to hold its ni3rt biennisfmeeting, commencing on the second Thursday of the month of May, 1857, in the city of Beading, Berks county., Pa. A Mammoth Ocean Steamer. The new' steamer Leviathan, which is now being constructed in London, promises, when finished, to be the wonder of the ago. To grasp the idea of a vessel measuring more than an eighth of a mile in length, Iwith a capacity of twenty thousand tons, and room enough besides for four thousand passengere, with all their luggage, certainly requires some mental effort ; but to con ceive of such a monster grappling with wind and tide, and triumphantly forcing his way through the mighty billows of the Atlantic, becomes a task quite sufficient to stagger any ordinary intellect, and niore than suffi cient to exhaust the faith of the most cred ulous. If the Leviathan shall be able to show a full list or passengers for her visit to our shores; it will certainly appear that I the people of this day have more confidence in art •and science than their ancestors, whom Fulton attempted to "humbug" with his "foolish invention." Bat science has achieved so much since the days of Fultcio, that any want of faith in the success of this; great ; enterprise would smatter of "old fogy iem ;" nevertheless, in view of the fact that ; the sea has a way of knocking to pieces 1 , sometimes vessels of all sizes, and leaving i no possible way of escape for humanity, a little hesitation in a matter of this kind is pardonable. The engines of the Leviathan, although said to , be of 2,600 horse power, will, in reality be capable of being worked up to 10,000 horse power. The united !strength of 10,000 horses would seem to 'be power enough to move a small sized globe, if not such a one as oars, at least an asteroid.' It is, confidently predicted that, notwithstanding the . great length of this steamer, she will be enabled to pass through 'the water at an average speed, in all weath ers, of fifteen knots an hour, and with a smaller, power in proportion to tonnage than ordinary vessels now require to make ten knots. The contract speed of most ocean mail steamers is eight knot,. A ship of this huge capacity can carry 12,000 tons of coal; quite sufficient, it is said, for her oat- ward and homeward voyages. She will be I launched unlike any other ship—broadside ! ba the water, by means of hydraulic power, and early in next spring is expected to make a trip to, the United States, and back, in al fortnight. Sixty feet of Datighters.—ln the Half Century Sermon of Rev. Dr. Brace, of New ington Connecticut, we find a fact respect ing the Edwards family which' we do not re member .to have Seen elsewhere stated.— Speaking of Mr. Backus, one of his prede cessors, he says : "His wife was one of ten daughters, every one of whom has been said to be six feet tall—making sixty feet of daughters, and all of them strong in mind —children of Rev. Timothy Edwards, of East Windsor." That man who had sixty feet of daughters, and besides them one son who had more than sixty. feet of intellect. must, according to the Psalmist's view of things, have been a very happy man. Rev. Mr. Boeld, a Catholic priest. •a thrown from his hone and killed in Cam bria county. Pa.,lut Tuesday. TWO IVMMN NUMBEI 17, • roa FLoamari.--As the whatweath er approaches. crowds of persons resort to the river and ponds ht' the vicinity to blithe, STA indulge in sailing and othiltsqoatie 'Torts; by which, many careless persona will endanger their lives, as usual. As it may be of some service to those who do not understand bow to conduct themselves in the perilous struggles in water, we re-publish the following dire*. lions from the Spirit of the Times:-"Any hu man being who will have the presence of mind to clasp the hands behind the beck, Isnd Nan the face towards the zenith, may Mat at ease lied in perfect safety in tolerably stip water— aye, and !lap there, no matter how. long. If, nokknowing how to swim; you would escape. ( drowning, when you find yourself in deep we t ter, you have only to consider yourself an nip ' ty pitcher—let your mouth and 'nose. not the :top of your heavy bead, be the highest part of you and you , are Vb.. But thrust up one; of yourbony. ,lugolt and down you go : turnimi .the handle tips over the pitcher.. Baring the happiness to prevent one or two , r drowning by this simple instrnotionNe pia>. I lish it for the benefit of all who 'either lava aquatic sports or druid them." [l:7The Saha Public of j.yons gives the firl-. lowing most strange story: ..A few days ago a certain number of Et lishmen established in this city gave • splend d banquet to a' countryman of theirs, tl Mr. Arther Fleming, a rich merchant of London, then at Lyons, and who had just completed a residence of eleven months in the 'prison of Frankfort, in which be has been placed under the following circumstances:—About a twelve month ago. Mr. Fleming stopped for two days at ono of the prineipal hotels at Frankfort.on. the• Maine. and on the third day, when about to leave. called for his bill,.which to his as tonishmest, amounted to about -250 francs. Indignant at this demtud, which he considered exorbitant, be tendered era half ern, but the landlord persisted in his demand, and threat ened to send his customerio prism, as the law of the place allowed him to do. the'English man. however, was obstinate, and suffered himself to be arrested and kicked up. • Al though the laws of Frankfort give this power to creditors. they at the same time impose' 011 them the necessity of supporting their debtors while in prison, and also, to furnish them with clothes and o4ier articles suitable to them he life.. This thelotel keeper was compelled to do in J7r. Fleming's case, and ea little care did the Englishman take of the articles supplied to him, that the former at last, found himself minus $ sum of nearly' 20,000 f., and thinking that amount quite enough to expend for his obstinacy, he ordered the release of his cap tive. Mr. Fleming, not wishing to triumph over his creditor. Immediately on his release gave a sum to the poor of Frankfort amounting to double that exuended by the hotel keeper. A GATHERING or THE CLANS.—Among other queer things that have sprung out of the Na tional Baby Show. is an •.enterprise" the like of which, if successfully carried out, the world will never have seen before. Several gentle men, it seems, have associated together and subscribed $lOO,OOO, to be expended in getting together a ..Congress of Nations," that la to ray. living specimens. male and female, Of eve. ry nation on the habitable globe, all in their native costume. except when they are node. tlreat care will be tak.en in selecting the !beet specimens, and when convenient. pre*rence will be given to such persons es ploy upon some iusuument of music. Such & study was of course never before brought under the eye of mortal man. • The Congress of Nations will necessarily include all the various tribes of Indians in the world—lam quimaux, Japanese, Laplanders, Persians. Cir cassians, Turks, Arabs, Hottentots; Bushmen. Kadin, all the Asiatics, dm, km Some 18 months or more may be required to make the entire collection, but interesting portions of it. it is thought, can be obtained at s much earlier period. SAILS OF A COSTLY Snewt..—The great cabby mere shawl—the finest needle-work shawl ev er seen in America—which cost 32,700 at Con stantinople. and was imported expressly for Exhibition at the World's Fair. was sold at auction, in New York, few days , since, kr one thousand and twenty-live dollars. The purchaser's name was given as Jae. DeWolts. Another sold for 8500. • WHO WANTS WOHICT—The tummy Oat West are complaining bitterly of the lack of laborers to do harvesting work. A letter from Eaton. (Ohio,) dated June 18th.says: "Several thousand able-bodied men are needed. here. They would receive $l2 to $lB a. month and found. Several hundred could find employ tnent in this section from now until fall. and receive good wages, and be otherwise well cared fur. WEEVIL IN WITICAT.—The Columbia (Pa) Democrat says Mr. aacob Gerard, of Rohn burg. in thatcounty, claims to have disoovered a core for the weevil in wheat. #io says that several days ago, observing that the weevil was destroying his crop, he sowed over the Held a moderate quantity of slaked lime. and since that time their ravages seem to have ceased entirely. LOANING NIFIWSPAPERS. —.SUbsouibeni to newspapers make complaint of the non-arrival of their papers, and, in some Instances,' inti mate that the loss is occasioned the &Os of the postmaster loaning to his neighbors the papers of others for perusal. 'The papers fail to be returned to the proper place. and. the dissatisfaction. Postmasters are forbidden to loan newspapers that are in their office for delivery.—Union. A Cnow Sronr.—A man io Pawlet, Vt. of. ter having his corn destroyed and his wined field attacked by the sable depredators. sad having tried every kind of scare crow. to no purpose. procured strychni no. in which he teak. ed some corm and strewed it over his field. As a result of the first day's effects °flit; prevent• adve, ho found the dead carcasses of 200 crows in and about the field. Ter Tamastivri.—The tamarind has been grown in Virginia from seeds, led is highly spoken of as promising to be a vablable rm. quisition to the fruit trees, eipsoiall3i on the prairie lands of the West. Its growth le rapid, its appearance very ornamental, sad Is is perfectly free from blight and from ths depredations of insects. last season theism* in Virginia p ro duced fruit as good La the kW. ported. rreapt. Rodman. the comniaedant of tho Ordnance Department at Baton Rouge. Lm. has invented a machine by which aisty3ihinho rifle balls per minute eon be out. .Thir Bar liah machine cuts only forty per minute.' &Timm Cnintinta.—An English nide. madden. named Balllly. berg calculated the weight of the earth to be 1.25&195= 000.000.000,000. or. in words. m a i iwo hundred end flfty-six tbouss seas bar died and ninth fire trillions, six he siventren no a 'taw avoirOpeisr. The lfissiseippi p stsft, N di hs!, show= of kiwi* ye Withiago within the hut Ore Mee tom**, s • sad mien to be imeise.