TERMS OF THE GLOBE. Per annum in advance Six months Three months 4 failure to notify a discontinuance at the oxpiriation of tlio term subscribed for will be considered a new engage ment. TERMS OE ADVERTISING. 1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do. Four lines or less, $ 25 $ 37V $ 50 One square, (12 lines,) ...... .... 50 75 100 Two squares, 1 00 1 50 2 00 Three squares, 1 50 2 25 3 00 , Over three week and loss than three months, 25 cents per square for each insertion. 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. Six lines or less, • $1 50 $3 00 -•45 00 One square, 3 00 5 00 7- 00 Two squares, 500 SOO - 10-00 Three squares, 7 00 10 00 15 00 Four squares, 9 00 13 00 20 00 Half a column, 12 00 16 00 ...... —.24 00 One column, ` O O 00 30 00.... ..... .50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, one year, $3 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, $1 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. ILIST OF GRAND JURORS for a 6 Court of Quarter Sessions to be held at Huntingdon n and for the county of Huntingdon, the second Monday and Sth day of August, 1859. Samuel Brickets, farmer, Jackson. :fames Ewing, farmer, Decree. Elisha Gil lam, farmer, Barree. James E. Glasgow, J. Clay. Henry Greenawalt, farmer, Brady. Henry Graft's, farmer, Porter. William Hoffman, Carpenter, llnnting,don.• John Huey, farmer, Brady. Michael hyper, farmer, Porter. Abraham Lewis, inn keeper, Shirley. Benjamin J. Laport, wagon maker, Franklin. Christian Miller, farmer, Cass. John T. Moore, miller, West, Michael Myers, farmer, Cromwell. William McDivit, boatman, Oneida. David McGarney, farmer, Shirley. Martin Orlady ' M. D., Walker. Alexander Port, coal dealer, Huntingdon. David Shingle, miller, Franklin. Martin. Walker, farmer, West. Andrew Wise, farmer, Union. Samuel Wigton, farmer, Franklin. . George B. Young, J. P., Porter. James Ozburn, farmer, Jackson. TRAVTIISE JURORS—rmsr WLEE. J. S. Africa, surveyor, Huntingdon. Samuel Brooks, Esq., cleric, Carbon. J. Nelson Ball, mechanic, Huntingdon. John A. Black, farmer, Clay. Jacob Baker, farmer, Springfield. Henry Cramer, founder, Brady. Algerson Clark, farmer, Tod. John Colder, sr., farmer, Porter. Amos Clark, farmer, Tud. John Copley, blacksmith, Wart iorsmark Thomas Duffey, farmer, Springfield. Samuel B. Donaldson, farmer, Carbon. Edward Dougherty, farmer, Shirley. George Eby. merchant, Brady. Adam Focht. farmer, Morris. Moses Greenland, farmer, Clay. Thomas Green, farmer, Cass. _Alexander Gilleland, farmer, Tell. Jacob Hetrick, farmer, Henderson. A. S. Harrison, J. P., Huntingdon. William Harman, carpenter. Porter. John R. Hunter, merchant, West. John Hostler, farmer, Morris. John Jacobs, butcher, Shirleysburg. James Lightner. M. D., Shirleysburg. „lames Lyons, farmer, Springfield. l'urter Livingston, farmer, Barret. Lym. mason, Springfield. Winchester J. McCarthy, diviner, Brady. Robert Madden, carpenter, Springfield. Charles H. Miller, tanner. Huntingdon. David B. Bong, tanner, Warriorsinark. George Muller. tanner, Ilend”rsiui. McGinley Neeley, tanner, Dublin. James Neeley, Esq,, tanner. Dublin. Franklin Conner, tailor, Alexandria. Daniel Prough, laborer. Henderson. Andrew Park, farmer, Cass. Henry Roberts, farmer, Shirley. .James J. Robison, laborer, Shirley. Hun. Wm. B. Smith, farmer, Jackson. l [envy Sheeder, fiirmer,yenn. James Smith, farmer. Jackson. George Sipes, Esq., merchant, Cromwell. Jacob Sellers, carpenter. Springfield. Samuel Secrist, farmer, Brady. G. G. nate. constable, Carbon. Thomas Wilson, Esq., farmer, _Barre°. TI IVERSE JURORS—sncoND wErs. • William H. Briggs. farmer, Tell. Janes S. Burket. inn-keeper, Cromwell. Christian Coasts, inn-keeper, Huntingdon John W. Cliilcote. thrmer, Cromwell. Jacob IL Dell, farmer, Cromwell. Asher Drake, jr.. farmer, Clay. Abraham Elias, farther, Tod. James Fleming. farmer, Jackson. Samuel Grove, farmer, Union. John Grafting, tanner.. Warriorsmark. K. L. Green, farmer. Clay. Jonathan Hoover, farmer, Cass. Peter Harnish, farmer, Morris. Thomas Hyskill, farmer, Warriorsmark. John Horning, farmer, Barree. Nicholas Isenberg,, brewer, Alexandria. John Jackson, farmer, Jackson. William Long, blacksmith, Huntingdon. Milos Lewis, farmer, West. Win. A. McCarthy, teacher, Brady. Joseph Morrison, inn-keeper, Carbon. James McCline, farmer, Porter. Peter N. Marks, carpenter, Huntingdon. George Patterson. farmer, Warriorsmark Christian Price, harmer, Tell. John Patterson, farmer, Warriorsmark. Levi Itedenour, farmer, Juniata. George Roland, farmer, Cass. James Reed. laborer, Carbon. George IL Stevens, plasterer. Clay. Solomon Si!knitter, teacher. Oneida. Alexander Scott, farmer. Tell. John J. Swan, farmer. Dublin. Peter Tippery. J. P., Morris. Clark Walker. merchant. Barret.. John Weston, machinist. Warriorsmark. limiting - An. July 20. 185.9. r____________ ti,,, .1, LIST FOR A U (1 UST T E 11:$1, ISS). FIRST WEEK. Andrew Patrick, t'3. Eby. Cunningham A: Herr. Jacob IL Lex. vs. Caldwell .tr. hoover. .Tacob Crisswell vs. IL Hare Powell. Leonard Weaver vs. 11. A: IL T. It. It. A: C. Co. .lolin Montgomery, vs. Jno. It. Closnell. Matson Walker, vs. Andrew AValker. L. S. Heel It. Clement's heirs Otasgou - S Bair .1. Butler Hamilton, James Chamberlain, Peter hltnire Nary - Irvin, D. B. Binmy, Fleming Holliday SECOND WEEK. Stewart Foster, et. al. vs. Win. roster's heirs. John Garner vs. John Savage. John Savage, vs. Matthew Truman. Same, vs. Fisher. A. S. A: E. Roberts, vs. ltobt. Speer's Admr. Miller Wallace, vs. Wm. McCanly, et. al. Mary McCauly, vs. West Branch in's. Co. J. B. McElroy, vs. henry Irvin. Win. 11. Gorsuch, vs. Cromwell Tp. School Dis. A. Port, Admr. lin• use, vs. Exrs. of Jas. Porter, doc'd Catharine Householder, vs. Abram Grub, et. al. Thomos Welsh, vs. Admr. of J. French, dee'd Huntingdon, July 20, 1859. _ _ SCHOOL BOOKS, FOB SALE AT LEWIS' ROOK, STATIONERY & MUSIC STORE, lIUNTIZZGDOI , Z, PA OSGOOD'S Speller, let, 2d. 3d, 4th and sth Readers. M'GUFFEVS Speller and Readers. SA ND MR'S do do do SWAN'S do do do COBB'S do do • do Smith's and Bullion's Grammar. Warren's Physical Geography. Mitchell's, Monteith and McNally's Geographies C Atlases. Webster's and Worcester's Dictionaries. Quackenbos' First Lessons in Composition. Greenleaf 's. Stoddard's, Ihmnerson's, Swan's and Colbunis Arithmeties. Greenleaf . ri and Stoddard's Keys. Davies' Algebra. Parker's Philosopliy. Upham's Mental Philosophy. Willard's History of the United States. 'Berard's " 4C Payson, Dunton and Scribuer's Penmanship, in eleven numbers. Academical, Controllers' and other Copy Books. Elements of Map Drawing, with plan for sketching maps by tri-angulatiOn and improved methods of projection. Davies' Elementary Geometry and Trigonometry. Davies' Legendre's Geometry. Fulton & Eastman's Book-keeping. Book „Keeping by Single Entry, by tranaford & Payson. Book _Keeping by Single and Double Entry, by Ilanaford & Payson. Other books will be ridded and furnished to order A full stock of School Stationery always on hand Huntingdon, April T. 1859. HYMN AND PRAYER BOOKS. Presbyterian. Baptist, Episcopal, Lutheran, Metho dist and German Reformed, for sale at LEWIa' Dom, STATIOXEILYAND MUSIC STORE. NNT RA.PPING PAPER ! A good article for sale at 1,1;W14 BOOK STORE. $1 50 vs. John Jamdion. vs. Jno. neCanle,s, et. al vs. Caleb Brown. vs. Fred. Crisman. vs. Waller Graham. vs. Jno. Shope. vs. Wm. Heed. vs. John Eby. vs. 11. & T. E. R. 8: C. Co WII;LIAM LEWIS, VOL. XV-. trztql. [From the lowa, City Republican.] LOUIS NAPOLEON. ET' - REV. o. o. 31. CLEAN Thou man of earth ! yet scepteed, crown'd To play thy part awhile, Then in death's mantle to be wound, So loathsome and so vile, To rot as do the meanest things, God soon shall lay thee with the }Zings, Who like thee had their day, And then were borne with curses deep— A few with blessings on their sleep, Forevermore away. Self-worshipper ! enshrined within Thyself, and mad upon Thine idol—thou (lost seek to win Worship around thy throne Front myriads, the many colored light Of glory draws from truth and right— Who through the ages sing, While trampling down in blood and fire, _Poor human hearts, as if but mire— " Long live—God save the liing." Dreamer! beneath flint gorg,eons dome* Where he whose name thou hast, sufferance -- was seen to come, And lay him down at last. flow low! De seems thy pride to mock, Pointing to that far distant rock, Where chain'd, he saw the sea, And long'd for freedom, till at length, Just as the storm passed in its strength,* Napoleon ceased to be. His tomb, oracular to thee, Speaks with prophetic power, Tells of the stroke of destiny, In his ascendant boor. While from each field, he lost or won, Where war's red hoof had trampled on The fle,h and souls of-men, &quilt:brill voices seem to say, No one of mortals ever may, " It 1111 such career again." He pas, , ,ed away, and with him passed The day of Empire then, Such empire as in fancy glassed. Thou seeks't with sword and pen, And Russian hate, once more to sway O'er millions of thy fellow clay. Thou'rt under Heaven's ban— And when thou'rt gone, in every clime There shall conic forth with might sublime The Individual Man. With all thy 'vanity and pomp, What bast thou but that name, Whose very sound, is like the tramp 01' victory and fame. That name that by the sulphurous breath Of Battle, was pealed forth in death— "'Vive Napoleon." Let men but cease to call thee so, nd soon the lowest of the low Thon'lt be beneath the Sun. What is thy power but a sword, And not thy subjects trust— Thy wisdom intrigue—and thy word Frail as the very dust. Pretence is written on thy brow— For shame ! that thou ean'st wear it now, Where Roman warriors stood. Avannt thee! with thy mark of Cain. And jewelled hands that wear the stain Of Freedom's priceless blood. ::..Nlapoleon's tomb in Paris. *The English permitted the French to remove His re mains from St. Helena. *Just as he breathed his last, a storm swept over the Island. 4uttresfing Blistellitn,ll.. Wtr_tr CAN BE DoNE WITH PAPER. —A writer in Blackwood's Magazine says, it is wonderful to see the thousand useful as well as ornamental purposes to which paper is ap plicable in the hands of the Japanese. He states that he saw it made into materials so closely resembling Russian and Morocco leather and pig skin, that it was difficult to detect the difference. With the aid of lacker varnish and skillful painting, paper made excellent trunks, tobacco bags, cigar cases, saddles, telescope cases, the frames of micro scopes ; and he even saw and used excellent water-proof coats made of simple paper, which did keep out the rain, and were as supple as the best Mackintosh. The Japan ese use neither silk nor cotton handkerchiefs, towels nor dusters ; paper in their hands serves as an excellent substitute. It is soft, thin, tough, of a pale yellow color, very plen tiful and very cheap. The inner walls of many a Japanese apartment are formed of paper, being nothing more than painted screens; their windows are covered with a fine translucent description of the same ma terial; it enters largely into the manufacture of nearly everything in Japanese households; and he saw what seemed to be balls of twine, but which were nothing but long shreds of tough paper rolled up. If a shopkeeper had a parcel to tie up, he would take a strip of paper, roll it quickly between his hand, and use it for the purpose ; and it was quite as strong as the ordinary string used at home. In short, without paper, all Japanese would come to a dead lock; and indeed, lest by the arbitrary exercise of his authority, a tyran nical husband should stop his wife's paper, the sage Japanese mothers-in-law invariably stipulate in the marriage settlement, that the bride is to be allowed a certain quantity of paper. - Iler`tlnseets generally must lead a truly jovial life. Think what it must be to lodge in a lily ! Imagine a palace of ivory or pearl, with pillars of silver and capitals of gold, all exhaling such a perfume as never rose from human censor ! Fancy, again, the fun of tucking yourself up for the night in the folds of a rose, rocked to sleep by the genial sighs of a summer's air, and nothing to do when you awake but to wash yourself in a dew drop and fall to and eat your bed-clothes ! ger Never be idle. If your hands cannot be usefully employed, attend to the cultiva tion of your mind. lowA Ctrr , Time 24, 1550 _ The Beauty of Cheerfulness "A joyous laugh, a pleasant smile, How much of care they can beguile." It is probable that the happiest people in the world, are the individuals whose promi nent traits of character are cheerfulness and good nature. We may be mistaken, but it seems to us that the ill-natured, the malicious, the wicked, and the evil-disposed cannot be cheerful as a general rule. They cannot feel easy in mind. The monitor within, the con sciousness of wrong-doing must trouble them and cast a cloud over their happiest mo ments. Guilt of every description will be punished sooner or later. The malice of to day will meet with its penalty to-morrow, and the unkindness or ingratitude which some individuals seem to delight in inflicting upon friends and , neighbors will, in the end, come back in dreadful retaliation. It has been said that the truly good are'the only truly happy, and in nine cases out of ten the cheerful constitutionally, if we may -so ex press it, are the persons- who, have little to trouble them because of former conduct, and then they endeavor to afford and diffuse as much pleasure as possible, and take delight in ministering to the comfort of their fellow ! creatures. Cheerfulness of disposition is the real sunshine of the heart. It seems as a mirror to reflect the spirit of the man. In misfortune's gloomiest hour it gives courage and hope, and robs the future of many of its darkest clouds. But how frequently do we see individuals who are not only notcheerful I themselves, but who seem to envy a benevo lent and kindly disposition in others. They appear to exult in making bad worse, and in mingling bitterness with every cup of joy.— Even the prosperity of a neighbor is a source of dissatisfaction. They never describe a .character without giving it dark tints ; they seldom hear of a lucky turn of fortune in the history of a friend, without exclaiming, in a moody and prophetic spirit—" Well, the high er you ascend the more fearful will be your downfall." They cannot be happy them selves, and they seem to be anxious to make every one around them as gloomy as possible. Perhaps many of these unfortunates cannot help or correct their disagreeable infirmity, but all who desire to glide through the world smoothly and quietly, should have as little to do with them as possible. They are the croakers of society, the drawbacks of exis tence. They render circles cloudy and dis contented which would otherwise be gay and animated. They infuse distrust and suspi cion. in to Minds,. which, but for their asperity or malevolence, would be all confidence and faith. The cheerful on the other hand, the kind-hearted and good-natured, are the mes sengers and ministers of joy. They are al ways welcome, for they are always ready to dispel gloom, to chase away melancholy, and to laugh at the trifling cares of the world.— They rejoice with the prosperous, are happy with childhood, and, even endeavor to cheat old age of its graVitY and despondency.— Contentment is for them better than riches, even 'as an easy 'mind is better than the choicest luxuries of sight, sense or taste.— Who cannot remember such buoyant and hopeful individuals among their friends and acquaintances? No malice, no unkinkness, no ill-will marks their conduct ; poverty to them has few terrors, comparatively speak ing; they are always welcomed with a smile ; and wherever they mingle they exercise a kindly influence. " A quiet and contented mind," says a modern philosopher, "is the utmost felicity man is capable -of in this world ; it is the very crown and glory of wis dom. A happy disposition finds materials of s enjoyment every where—in the city or in the country—in society or in solitude—in the theatre, or the forest—in the hum of the mul titude, or the silence of the mountains, are alike materials of reflection and elements of pleasure. It is one mode of pleasure to lis ten to the music of Don Giovanni, in a thea tre, glistening with light, and crowded with elegance and beauty; it is another to glide at sunset over the bosom of a lonely lake, where no sound disturbs the silence but the motion of the boat through the waters. A happy disposition derives pleasure from both ; a discontented temper from neither."—Penn saleania, Inquirer. ANECDOTE OF THE BRITISH QUEEN.—Frank B. Fay, of Chelsea, who visited Europe last summer, delivered a narrative of his travels, in a lecture to - the Chelsea Library Associa tion last week. In the tours© of his lecture he related the following anecdote of Queen Victoria : "It is reported that her Majesty has a sweet little temper of her own, and that her eara sposa, like a prudent man, generally re tires before the storm, and locks himself in his private cabinet until the sky is clear and sunshine again illumines the classic shades of St. James of Windsor.• After one of these ebulitions, the Queen gave thundering knock" at the door of the room where Prince Albert had taken refuge, and upon being asked, 'who's there?' responded, 'the Queen.' `TheQueen cannot enter here,' responded the hen-pecked. After the lapse of half an hour a gentle rap was heard upon door. ' Who's there ?' asked Prince Albert. Four responded Victoria. ' . .My wife is always wel come! was the gallant reply." BEAUTIFUL EXTRACT.—The velvet moss grows on a sterile rock, the mistletoe flour ishes on the naked branches, the ivy clings to the mouldering ruins, the pine and cedar remain fresh and fadeless amid the mutations of the receding year ; and Heaven be praised, something green, something beautiful to see and grateful to the soul will, in the darkest hour of fate, still twine its tendrills around the crumbling alters and broken arches of the desolate temple of the human heart. 11E5— With a true wife, a husband's faults should be sacred. A woman forgets .what is due to herself when she condescends to that refuge of weakness—a female confidant. air A firm faith- is the best philosophy ; a clear conscience the best law; honesty the best physic. -PERSEVERE.- HUNTINGDON, PA., JULY 27, 1859, glizttliatregits 11,tius. The Naturalization Question Extract of a despatch, from the Department of State to the Minister of the United States at Berlin, dated. July 8, 1859. The right of expatriation cannot at this day be doubted or denied in the United States. The idea has been repudiated ever since the origin of our Government, that a. man is bound to remain forever in the coun try'of his birth, and that he has no right to exercise his free will and consult his own happiness by selecting a new home. The most eminent writers on public law recognize the right of expatriation. This can only be contested by those who in the nineteenth century are still devoted to the ancient feudal law with all its oppression. The doctrine of perpetual allegiance is a relic of barbar ism which has been, gradually disappear ing from Christendom during the last cen tury. The Constitution of the United States rec ognizes the natural right of expatriation, by conferring upon Congress the power " to es tablish a uniform rule of naturalization."— Indeed, it was one of the grievances alleged against the British King in the Declaration of Independence, that he had " endeavored to prevent the population of these States— for that purpose obstructing the laws of nat uralization of foreigners, refusing to pass oth ers to encourage their migration hither," &e., &e. The Constitution thus recognizes the principle of expatriation in the strongest manner. It would have been inconsistent in itself and unworthy of the character of the authors of that instrument, to hold out in -ducements to foreigners to abandon their na tive land, to renounce their allegiance to their native government and become citizens of the United States, if they had not been convinced of the absolute and unconditional right of ex patriation. Congress have uniformly acted upon .this principle ever since the commencement of the Federal Government. They established " a uniform rule of naturalization" nearly sev enty years ago. There has since been no pe riod in our history when laws for this pur pose. did not exist, though their provisions have undergone successive changes. The alien, in order to become a citizen, must de clare on oath or affirmation that he will sup port the Constitution of the United States ; and, at the same time, he is required to ab solutely 'and eritirely'renounde and - adjure all allegiance and fidelity to every foreign prince, potentate, State or sovereignty whatever, and particularly by name, the prince, potentate, State or sovereignty whereof he was before a citizen. The exercise of the right of naturalization, and the consequent recognition of the princi ple of expatriation, are not confined to the Government of the United. States.' There is not a country in Europe, I believe, at the present moment, where the law does not au thorize the naturalization of foreigners in one form or other. Indeed, in some of these countries this law is more liberal than our own towards foreigners. -The question then arises, what rights do our laws confer upon a foreigner by granting him naturalization ? I answer, all the rights, privileges and immunities which belong to a native-born citizen, in their full extent, with the single qualification that, under the Con stitution, " no person except a natural-born citizen is eligible to the office of President." I With this exception, the naturalized citizen from and after the date of his naturalization, both at home and abroad, is placed upon the very same footing with the native citizen.— He is neither in a better nor a worse condi tion. If a native citizen chooses to take up his residence in a foreign country, for the purpose of advancing his fortune or promo ting his happiness, he is, whilst there, bound to obey its municipal laws, equally with those who have lived in it all their lives.— Ile goes abroad with his eyes open ; and if laws be arbitrary and unjust, he has chosen to abide by the consequences. If they arc administered in an equal spirit towards him self and towards native subjects, this govern ment have no right to interfere authoritative ly in his behalf. To do this would be to vio late the right of an independent nation to legislate within its own Territories. If this government were to undertake such a task, we might soon be involved in trouble with nearly the whole world. To protect our citi zens against the application of this principle of universal law, in its full extent, we have treaties with several nations, securing exemp tion to American citizens when residing abroad, from some of the 'onerous duties re quired from their own subjects. Where no such treaty exists, and an American citizen has committed a crime or incurred a penalty for violating any municipal law whatever, of the country of his temporary residence, he is just as liable to be tried and punished for his offence as though he had resided in it from the day of his birth. If this had not been done before his departure, and lie should voluntarily return under the same jurisdic tion, he may be tried and punished for the offence upon principles of universal law. Under such circumstances, no person would think of contending that an intermediate resi dence in his own country for years would de prive the government whose laws he had vio lated of the power to enforce their execution. The very same principle, and no other, is ap plicable to the case of a naturalized citizen, should he choose to return to his native coun try. In that case, if he had committed an offence against the law before his departure, he is resoonsible for it in the same manner as the mtive-American citizen to whom I have referred. In the language of the late Mr. Marcy, in his letter of the 10th January, 1354, to .Mr. Jackson, then our charge d'affaires to Vienna, when speaking of Tousig's case, "every na tion, whenever its laws are violated by any one owing obedience to them, whether he be a citizen or a stranger, has a right to inflict the penalties incurred by the trangressor, if found within its jurisdiction." This princi ple is too well established to admit of serious controversy. If one of our native or natu 1 I - ‘ .. i ,? . . , NF , ... .. , t-,..., ...-. ~„ -,-: ralized citizens were to expose himself to punishment by the commission of an offence against any of our laws, State or National, and afterwards become a naturalized subject -of a foreign country, he would not have the hardihood to contend, upon voluntarily re turning within our jurisidiction, that his nat uralization relieved him from the punishment due to his crime; • much less could he appeal to the government of his adopted country to protect him against his responsibilities to the United States, or any of the States. This Government would not for a moment listen to such an appeal. Whilst these principles cannot he contested, great care should be taken in their applica tion, especially to our naturalized citizens.— The moment a foreigner becomes naturalized, his allegiance to his native country is severed forever. He experiences a new political birth. A broad and impassable line separates him from his native country. He is no more res ponsible for anything he may say or do, or omit to say or do, after assuming his new character, than if lie had been born in the United States. Should he return to his na tive country, he returns as an American citi zen, and in no other character. In order to entitle his original government to punish him for an offence, this must have been commit ted whilst he was a subject and owed alle giance to that government. The offence must have been complete before his expatriation. It must have been of such a character that he might have been tried and punished for it at the moment of his departure. A future liability to serve in the army will not be sufficient ; because, before the time can arrive for such service, he has changed l.is allegiance, and • has become a citizen of the United States.— ; It would be quite absurd to contend that a boy I brought to this country from a foreign coun try with his father's family when but twelve years of age and naturalized here, who should afterwards visit the country of his birth when he had become a man, might then be seized and compelled to perform military service. To submit to such a principle would be to make an odious distinction between our nat uralized and native citizens. For this reason, in my dispatch to you of May 12, 1859, and again in my letter to Mr. Hofer of the 14th ultimo, I confide the' foreign jurisdiction in regard to our naturalized citizens to such of them as "were in the army or actually called into it" at the time they left Prussia. That is, to the case of actual desertion or a refusal to enter into the army after having been reg ularly drafted and called into it by the gov ernment to which at the time they owed alle giance. It is presumed that neither of theseca ses presents any difficulty in point of principle. If a soldier or sailor were to desert from our army or navy, for which offence he is lia ble to a severe punishment, and, after having become a naturalized subject of another coun try, should return to the United States, it would be a singular defence for him to make that he was absolved from crime because, af ter its commission, he had become a subject of another government. It would be still more strange were that oovernment to inter pose in his behalf for any such reaSon.-- 7 - Again, during the last war with Great in.several of the States—l Might mention Pennsylvania in particular—the militia-man who was drafted and called into the service was exposed to severe 'penalty if lie did not obey the draft and muster himself into the service, or, in default thereof, procure a sub stitute. Suppose such an individual, after having incurred this penalty, had gone to a foreign country and become naturalized there and then returned to Pennsylvania, is it pos ble to imagine that for this reason the arm of the State authorities would be paralyzed, ' and that they could not exact the penalty I state these examples to show more clearly both the extent and the limitation of rightful Hanoverian jurisdiction in such eases. It is impossible to foresee all the varying circum stances which may attend cases as they may arise ; but it is believed that the principles laid down may generally be sufficient to guide your conduct. It is to be ,deeply regretted that German governments evince so much tenacity on this subject.. It would be better, far better, for them, considering the comparatively small number of their native subjects who return to their dominions after being naturalized in this country, not to attempt to exact military service from them. They will prove to be most reluctant soldiers. If they violate any law of their native country during their visit, they are, of course, amenable like other Amer ican citizens. It would be a sad misfortune if, for the sake of an advantage so trifling to such governMents, they should involve them selves in serious difficulties with a country so desirous as we are of maintaining with them the most friendly relations. It is fortunate that serious difficulties of this kind are main ly eon - fined to the German States—and espe cially 'that the laws of Great Britain do not authorize any compulsory military service whatever.' Letter From Hon. Daniel E. Sickles. NEW YORK, July 20. The Herald of to-day contains a letter to the editor from Hon. Daniel E. Sickles, in which he corrects a statement . made in that paper yesterday, regarding the recent event in his domestic relations. "The reconcilia tion," he says, "was my own act without con sultation with any relative, connection, friend or advisor. 'Whatever blame, if any, belongs to the step, should fall upon me . 1 . I am prepa red to defend what I have done before the only tribunal I recognize as having the slight est claim to jurisdiction over the subject--my own conscience and the bar of Heaven. I am not aware of any statute or code of morals which makes it infamous to forgive a woman, nor is it usual to make our domestic life a sub ject of consultation with friends, no matter how near and clear to us, and I cannot allow even all the world combined to dictate to me the repudiation of my wife, when I thinkvt right to forgive her and restore her to my confidence, and protection. If I ever failed to comprehend the utterly desolate position of an offending, though penitent woman, the hopeless future, with all its dark possibilities of danger, to which she is doomed, when pro scribed as an outcast, I can, now see plainly Editor and Proprietor. NO, 5. enough in the almost universal howl of de nunciation with which she is followed to my threshold, the misery and perils from which I have rescued the mother of my child, and although it is very sad for me to incur the re proaches of many wise and good people, I shall strive to prove to all who feel any in terest in me that if I am the first man to say to the world that an erring wife and mother may be forgiven and redeemed, that in spite of all the obstacles in my path, the _good re sults of this example shall entitle it to the imitation of the generous and the commen dation of the just. "'There are niany who think that an act of duty, proceeding solely from affection, which can only be comprehended in the heart of a husband and father, is to be fatal to my pro fessional, political and social standing. If this be so, then so be it. Political station ; professional success and social recognition, are not the only prizes of ambition, and so long as I do nothing worse than to reunite my fam ily under the roof where they may find shel ter from contumely and persecution, I do not fear the noisy but fleeting voice of popular clamor. The multitude accept their first impression from a few. " But in the end men think for themselves, and if I know the human heart—in sunshine and storm, I have sounded nearly all its depths —then I may reassure those who look with reluctant foreboding upon my future, to be of good cheer, for I will not cease to vindicate a just claim to the respect of my fellows, while to those worthy groups here and there who look upon my misfortunes only as weap ons to be employed for my destruction, to. those I say, once for all, if a man make a good use of his enemies they will be as ser viceable to him as his friends. In conclusion, let me ask only one favor of those who, from whatever motive, may deem it necessary or agreeable to comment in public or private upon this sad history, and that is to aim all their arrows at my breast, and for the sake of my innocent child to spare her yet youth ful mother while she seeks in sorrow and con trition, the mercy and the pardon of Him to whom sooner or later we must all appeal." Extraordinary Exhibition---A Man of Leather. [Front tho Lexington (Ky.) Observer.] An exhibition of a very remarkable and unnatural character attracted a small but highly respectable audience at the Melodeon on Thursday evening last. A young man by the name of James Stevens had advertised that he would do many wonderful things in• the way of cutting himself up with knives,• nailing his feet, arms and legs to chairs, to the wall, &c., which astounding exploits he proceeded to exhibit at the appointed h3ur, in the presence of a number of physicians of celebrity, including members of the medical faculty of Transylvania University, and other learned professors, who were invited to the stand that they might detect any fraud or deception, if practised. He began by stick ing a handful of pins, up to the head, in his legs, then drove an awl through the middle of his wrist into a chair; drove a knife• through the muscle of his leg; nailed his foot to a wooden shoe, the nail or awl pass ing through the middle of the foot, and so walked about the stage ; cut his dexter finger through the flesh exhibiting the naked bone, and concluded by passing a knife through his check, the blade protruding through, his mouth. In all this but little blood' was- drawn. He also offered to drive a knife throngh! each leg and hang himself from the wall,. which the audience mercifully excused him from doing, feeling satisfied that he could ac complish whatever he proposed. About the whole procedure there was no sort of humbug, as the eyes of divers gentlemen, who were upon the stand, were steadily fixed upon him,. and any "unbelieving Thomas" had an op portunity to touch the knife blade on the' opposite side to that into which it had been thrust, of the leg, wrist or hand: Ile used a: few galvanic rings about his person, which was probably .more for show than anything else, as they couldb effect nothing. Mr. Ste vens looks to be not more than twenty or twenty-one years of age. Before closing, he proposed to operate in a similar manner upon• any one of the audience, agreeing to forfeit' $l,OOO if he inflicted pain. This, however, was prudently declined. We 'saw this man of leather early yesterday morning, looking as fresh and whole, as though knife or nail had never penetrated his elastic body. Southern Sentiment. We are glad to see that several influential Southern papers are becoming fully alive to the absurdity of enacting a slave code, and the injustice and folly of the demand that property in slaves in the Territories should be placed upon any higher or more sacred basis than any other kind of property. Thus the Mobile Register says : " The true doctrine is to regard and treat slaves as property, and afford them all the protection by law to which any other species of property is entitled. The 'theory' that is in our opinion 'untenable' is to discriminate be tween this and other kinds of property.— There is no warrant for the distinction that we can find, in the Constitution or elsewhere. We see no more claim to call upon Congress to make a 'slave code' for the Territories than to make a 'horse code,' and if Congress were' to make forty thousand such codes, there would be neither slaves nor horses in the Ter ritories if the people did not want them there; and if the people did want them, there would be no occasion for any such Congressional code. This is just one of those stubborn facts , that are proof against philology, casuistry, or' The dispute is about nothing, and• will come to nothing. Before the Charleston Convention meet the people of America will, find this out. Let the politicians look out, for; as Senator Thompson, of Kentucky, says, 'it will be dangerous to stand on the outside platform when the cars are in motion. " With the exception of a few noisy ultraists at the South, and the sycophants of the Ad ministration at the North, who avow extreme . doctrines mainly, to prove by some sort of log-- ical hocus-pocus that those who have rebuked the treacheries of the President to the pledges - of 1856 are traitors to the Democratic party,. a sound and healthy sentiment prevails al-- most everywhere in the Democratic ranks,. and a soon as it casts from itself the incubus of Buchananism and emphatically reaffirms its old principles, Democracy will once more become a giant power in the nation. gar A young man,. aged 25 years, by they name of Otto Home, a native of Berlin in Prussia, who was for some time a resident of . Patterson, N. J., some three months since left for Berlin to take possession of property worth from. $15,000 to $20,000 left by an uncle, and' on the second day of his arrival he was put into the army. The Bible Union has purchased $12,- 000 worth, or 1?0,000 copies of the New Tes tament, for circulation among the soldiers of the armies now at war.