r : 4 7 '-' , the be a silt of .inleritaii .Pall Mail fie- . American - Citlienahlp Abroad-Alin !Few 40e. .. ' The fatter joilia ai,,anwittriced l'il ,s it* S - ''. 'Treat's" with North Germany# .. before ouriieaders the important I prospecths - that it waati'paper " for gentle- Wesley' men by gentlemen.", ' \ , treaty recently concluded, at Berlin . , by our ter, 111. Bancroft- - with the .King of —New York City has three thoOsand ser- 1 Mi nis Distressing Prussia in the name of the North German vent girls out of employment. Confederation. The treaty has ben trans-, as this fact is, it may have the good effect milted to the Senate hy President ifoliiisoni of making situations so desirable that ser- kiiti wlll 14 '‘iiibiiitcita iefvaiiti, although and awaitsour.ratification -W-pi47,:ct-te*t they. are in Amend 1- ' as Mows :, e Pres . ident of the . United Statei_ to His -:-Valland,ightunissuspectecioffavoririgthe ...--Th majesty, King of Prussia, in the name of conviction, as lie has hopes of being elected the North German Confederation, led by a United,tlieNorth to fill Ben. Wade's I; Senatorial- chair -in wish to regulate the citizenship of thoseper. case that gentleman 'should go up Ingher. . s°ns Confederation whoemlgr4 to te tte °l3l S g t.:t rin es . 111j oi , Val. would probably . share the fate of ',America, and from the United States of I Thomas, of Maryland, if he got the election. America to the terfitery of the North Ger --Barnum, after all his loSses by fire, and inert Confederation, have resolved to treat they have been veiy heavy—one museum'in on this subjectiand have for this purpose Philadelphia, two in New york andp his - el _ appointed plenipotentiaries to conclude •a• convention; that is to say the President .of ace. Iranistan,•all gone-;-has, half .a 'million - the United States t of America, eorge Ban -------------- of money still left, and he is going to .invest croft, Envoy ,Extraordinary, a d Illinister EPECIMM IS • it in some moreffed monkeys and grizzly the stu PlenipOtentieryfrorn the said rates, near King of Prussia and the No , German ..... ..0 uscheel,,lias got as far as ' Detroit. ~, • • Cotifedertition . " find Els Mejesty ' 'the King ners- the Little Aetna/ , Tis • Bernhard, ' sr. ,-;_/- '',.,,. .."-- -i t s • i n N evi , —.lwo penny Pa.,---- - , of .. russia, n.ce .crivy . "...aim -Kate Fisher is Frenc pying - and the Litlte Press, are the most widely cir- senor of the Legation, who-have agreed to York culateil of any in Rustia. The former has a and signed the tollowing articles: • - .---':Orpheus C. Kerr has abandoned lour- , . • 200,000 • t h Awriccr. 1. Citizens of ' the North Ger regular circulation of copies, e Confederationh h become natio midis e , • , , • 6 nip . w o ave --- - latter has 200, 00 regular buyers. They sell ----Carlisle is readyand willing talk incur K opeks , aimed citizens of the Unie_States of Amer bleb •aboutequal to ' • ' a hail haveresided Atm tal • . . for 8 n apiece, w is lca an e nt,errup e 3, posted as a City. , ~. • within the United States five years, shall, be i one t. • , 'ksthat he nether smokes =Louis Blanc sa i • . ni t \ _ - —Mark Twain, the jo es , funniest, nor smuggles tobacco. • • . be American citizens, and shall be treated wittiest of Americans, the only worthy „ such; --I:hree women editors run as manyreciprocally. citizen of the United successor to e Immo cen x,Stateso whobecome .the • rtal Ph 1 the f America,naturalized politiad papers in lowa. man who has made more men laugh who citizens of the North German Confedera- Janauscheck is to play agr.in in Philadel- ; tion, and shall have resided uninterruptedly striow when not to laugh•than any other plait, beginning April Ist. --- • with North Germany five years, shall be • now living, is gone from -among us. He was a held by the United States to lie North Ger- Bristol In •lna, - has a female engineer '' Ill ' , - passseneer on the last steamer for California. man citizens , and shall be treated as such. who attends to a saw milt. - • ° troubled • h The declaration of an intention to become a I .—Malwaukee has been with a • - -;-Gobblediek is the euphonious name of,a . citizen of one or the other country has not- New Orleans newspaper men. • , . for either partjethe effect of naturalization. One family had their house moved fifty feet alcr• e• A naturalized citizen of one par --New York's new Jewish synanteme •-• , - ,• . . ' ' * and can't get it back again into place. The ty, on his return to the territory of the other 4. cost one million of dollars. canal was damaged - to the extent of five 1 Party, remains liable to trial and punish •'--The Hartford joiirnalists have a club d .' ' went for an action punishable by the laws of 1 . thousand dollars, and other thousan s were 1 . . . , . -9, „ hich gives very pleasant sociables. - , his original countr3,. arl committed before lost in other ways. General Grant's favoiite costume • • 1 his emigration, his s ing always the limits _ —Newspaper strictures have their effect, ion established y rile o his original . i' • d b 'lawsf I' • • 1 is black velvet with amethist jewelry. " and Jefferson Brick can force even lir. country. . ; --George Augustus Sala is defending Miss Any. S. The convention for, the mutual Die his • and distributehis kens to open purse s - Braddon's sensationalism. Poor Brad. deliveryof criminals fu"itiyes from jutstice gold. Mr. Dickens has sent five thousand • • --Mame had as old woman who was so in certain cases, as concluded between e dollars to his sister-in-law, in Chicago, who United States on the one part, and Prussia deaf that she never heard of the late war. • --recommended hischarity-li the - and the other States of Germany on_the , was to y I --Bonner's new buildings of mar- 4 . ' other part, on the 16th day of June, 1852,19 t P of this country. ble and is supposed to be entirely fire-pnoof. 1 States of the I —Brigham - Young wants badly to be hereby extended , e lidee„itit?edalltioll! 1 - -z - -• —Newark has Monnons. Newark has I / also the Northern Monthly and the steam . Governor of the State of Utah. '''Congress Aler. s. If a German naturalized in Amer- , sn uld 1 -asideallof views and 3 ice renews his residence in .'N'ohli Germany 1 o a 3 narrowness man.. '' -'• - - admit the saints at once," says this abomin- without intent to returnto Anienea, he shall —The New York Boulevards will be in i ; able old patriarch, who begins to fear that be held to have renounced his n aturalization 1 existence in three years; at least so it is I . . "be for _ 'n rho United states_; . reciprocally, d an .l ., his question may yet come up beiore Con- I Amencan, natiuulized in North toernuin), , - said - 1 . • N . g rass and he decided against him. ,_ returns to his residence in the United States 3 - _., _____ _ ---Prince Poniatowski, has written an 1 , —Among other curiosities in New York without intent to return to North Germany, _Tom A. STRAI, opera which. is shortly to be brought out in i ~..k e , he shall be held to have renounced _ i his_natu- t I c-P I j oux,EitiewAN, 1 City there are five thousand lklormons. - Paris- ----. I - - .... . _ , I ralization to 'North Gemany...Tl e intent , idea for Barnum lies women nere. isuppo_e 1 not to return may be held to exist w in the —Highway robberies in the City of. Mex ' he were to make a collection of members 'of ' person naturalized in one country resides ico take place in the Principal streets in the ; • • • 1 all the nations of a open day . ' -1 , liefs represented in New York, and have I . on shall , n) 1 ART. 5. The plesent conventi _ 4 ~, In the great Prussian iron rhea- . • into effect Immediately upon the ec lung ""foundry them in cages, each performing his or her ' - of ratification. and shall continue in tort e I ing constructed a ha , mar-with a d I . , -:. Id ' •makeSensatio n ''' ;tenlf -•t1 ( hall have given to 1 ' specialty, soun t it a . y ea rs. ne i ler s weighing 120 tons, -- 1 I -- - Itiessrs. D. Appleton & Co• have sent 3 the. Zither six months' notice of its intention ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, , Vinnie Ream is devoting her leisure 1 I i then to terminate the. same, it shall further - . us a very excellent engrwc - ing of the hero ofl No, s 7 Fifth .treet. liciurs Qs the pursuit of yotmg Mr. Mills, son ; remain In force until the end . of twelve months , I. the - inter, Mr Charles Dickens. With fell I -or Clark of that ilk.- - ' not:hold - 1 beard and moustache, and with his head I have , given notice to the other oi suchinten- 1 edllsoAld. —A wild woman or. the woods, covered , , . hishand the portrait is a stink- lien-. ----- of bhtdr - rillung on 'until a wild a ' -isitle- in ;oife, and'woind 146 k -well hung up-in la HANT I" 11 be I wrERC TAILORS. RT. 6. The present convention Shall , _..._ - 7 ..,.._ _ __ ___ latest T e xan t a stcriety: .t . ; . . ! library where any one of the fine editions I pl.licAliDLE, ,the eastern part of • . Plumbago found in advice and con of the' Senate of the '-• - I , of the volrunrnolis an garrulous_ oz s ride States, an j s_aes 1 ; the King ~ . dB ha il . •dS db-Hi 11j t• - II 'NT Fr sai,ort - , ORT ONVIL Sate is said to lie superior to ,y • of Prussia, in the name of the North Ger- .. - n - x-mc- -' - 4 , . - ' i founder place. .. any other for lead pencils: - , $, — 1 it i• ma.nConfedgration, and the ratification shall Can gime way not be discovered to dis -A female, a Mrs". Darragh, has been-ep- ' 3 ..MITIIFIF.E.D raltEvl'. PITTSSVCR,GII. ,be exchanged at Berlin within si_x mon th s o N ''. , ti auisli bet Ween the various Thom who 't d_ inspector -of • tob*co snuff and I II- prominent ,-; • 1 from the date hereof. po in-e ' i are now ? John Smith can spell 1• ,In faith whereof, the • Plenipotentiaries ni cps constantly on hand a tine assortment of - cigars in the, fourth Indiana district. + his name Sthigth.• But Thomas is, worse. t:have signed and sealed this convention at 11 . --Gottschalk, a star,, dimmed „by long , G ra i, 1 Berlin, the 2311 of 'February, 1808. - th t IWe `might calle grea one title 1 ~ _, , ,„ - CIIrIRS CASSIMERES & VESTING% • edi absence from the umn ate firmament, is at , Thomas,, -"ea' .1 . (*count BANCROFT. I and the'little one, on account of his Buenos Ayres- so' too is the cholera -- i ~ . . [heal.] • ER:SHARD CENIO. . , gh be C-led. D dim k " ' 1 doubtful position, ma t s . ), y us, .....--- '-'s Al o, WENT'S FURNISIfING GOOD. GENT'S —Mark Twain during his absence in (-corm S. 0 JiADE TO ORDER, the taitst atYle. ,and the - would-be Senator from Maryland • il j ornia, which will 'only be until June, will ; could ge as Tommy iiilieu of .abetter cog ' correspond with theUhicago Repubifean. 1 nomen. But if we get a few more what ' —The one handfed - Caned. n Zouaves ' 1 should we call them? 'who rallied to the support of the Pope, , _ ( Hon. Thomas Williams is - not the lees have - succeeded in Jollying as far as Rome. ' brilliant or, learned of the Impeachment —Dr. Bissell, the recently elected susses- 1 Managers,. His manners are probably even ' sot to the late Bishop Hopkins, of Vermont, 1 than,these f thek • more elegant ose o knowing -• f T ' ' , nes pastor of, nutty Church, Geneva, 1• k liresembles 2 • „ - , gentleman_ .who ton s e a-Lan , , 1 tashire farmer, nor is his face disagreeableto —Ex-Governor-Eyre,of Jamaica fame or I look upon, and yet an illustrated weekly; in infamy, as the Ise'' maybe, is to be arre s ted presenting to its readers a picture contain , .in London for the murder of Rev. George ing portraits of the Impeach lent managers, Wm. Gordon. , iback of 1 sees fit to show only the the mem ' —Oniaha is the preserit depot for the re ; ber from AllePeny. An insult wa.s, in. all ceipt of large quar..nnes of iron and other , - \ materials , for the summer wo on the obabilit never intended, but the fact is scarcely less noticeable on that account. • . Pacific Tail " _.-- • .'' —A man in Cincinnati, hearing a noise in —The Delleenitic ,papers are all azaleas , his oack yard on Thursday night, went •out that Therldeui Stevens should 'die. The I 1 with a club. He thought he saw a man ly T r _„n rid IS asi,)e-9anY so ' as /i has 'his obituary lin b hischickencoop and he hit at him. • g y aareadY written- 3 ' - -3 ' '' IHe wasimmediefily knocked down and well —Henry. Clay Dean wanted to conic to i licked _ in tho•fooe • h ,„ 3 a huge black bear, the Albany' (103Te3Ateni but he a Ivas tale-.• who hogged him ,and wa r s proceeding to graphed to stay ii ay ai Seymour's speech' I, harsher measures when an excited chicken was all they‘could stand. -;' , .. I attracted his attention long-enough to allow • - T he ' isi.e 'r, York 81111 says, that with al l the man to escape. Returning, howevef; to , ' little more Practide l , al -- a ieader,r s i Clinl l c t' the attack, reinforced and armed with suita , Dickens `.;sill . nlak ; tile: ‘tearliblinu ` sl I , ble weapons, the man succeeded in driving worst one that was ever know n.'. l i ; bruin from his.yard and capturing him. -Lord 'Jo hn Ra' t el l ha t he g randfather ed. =Forty Years ;ago, in Kentucky,. two • twins He likes it - i3oW 'thee tivinS , Stand ' ':- , • 1 lovedin;, truly,and • •, • 1,, ,i r young peop eeach. ... it is as yet c.roftemd ,and awful mystery . , eternally, :tit,. things on, this earth go. The: • on this side of theibroral Atlantic, , , , , eitnff man -was thirty years of age; the —Mi. Vickeii, thereoetaly elected Senator , " ohil'i woman ;nuns tw e nty. marriage Susie: from Maryland, had one son i the I: n - 14 • ni° icon templated, but an adverse fate kept them a' the:rebel iiimY One leg army an onoin:•• ~,, .1 asuinler.„ This gimp fell ; Goddess ' seems to on one side of the' fence, and one • (41:1 • me I have 'petaled them through life 'with an other. - _,-• , ' . ' flinching perseyerance; for thou : o,44[r , -, --Blondeiiindltinneil lueve eath had their' - . a) ,. 6 0 0 , .*: 'steadfast ' " they . were day and now PA;is isigoing tf),tnia' 0-tn.s, a, g. ne ver untied; until lath. q veek: - ' l irgrilia • little by forcing lachea l towoir illnet h __3lT art of seienty ledliii laride 'of three; f ourth to the light on the ganiclliead. 'Black plaits and a lt a r fi g happily - linot,:as gaily, sttbe3v,otild; i ' blond Cuila arenOWAlie.iiige. /f -' - lave•dbite - if Iliele li'Vew had, rtr._toget lit ber ..-;.-The IllinoiaCentrai Mimed, *lshii:is, se° . Ye . = ; to approach the Ditlauque bridge, A going to. do so,• through %tunnel -nine hundred feet' long through the solid rock. -The tunnel. is/ now A being-001196_ constructed • , ~ -- grand raid .on the till'', , )494 8 C, 0 4 rt , „ L47 sago was made on- Thursday.: eirenuigt- an d -'nearly one bundredpersons engagedin fight.' • ing the tiger, a 9 well 4 aS :... til l _ l.l 4,49A lti lh el A 1, . - * were taken in cluargeby..Pe Wang- ...MI ,r 4, I .). —"Hairline is becoming notorions . for. Met. • 'frequency and the fefir4l nature; of the! 4. tragedies 'itch occur the - Cubans bot-blooded people t and Nei:RAO lIP‘or*FM - .1 -•- ' ;liar Corsican disposition for orenengeroa The a lioidon'questiori is Once more lig: r- - • - t ,--- itating - the British` 'House of Conimons. . ] ' Thii time it is the death penalty 'which is to lie ibolished. ,An excellent initiatory step *---''' Would be the aboldiOn of murders and mur. -'- - • - ernomit Um new New York Alr • -- , --- tateninz per': =is to be a quarto, and la ~ I A LOCK OtrCIZAIAAIR.'=,'-.- r . k p, 1,.: , -;.. 'T'An earthly rege„left VI; of one "I -I Of - *hem all other mortal trace lite gOnet. ..;::: 7 ; , '.1,... Something Ftill held of the dear form she bore. : Looking as it may oft hare looked of ),•ore. Ere she bad trodden on the unknown shore. Yet riot the same—there Is a mist of tears. of tender memories of 'bygone years:, • • i : A sense of grief and 'Q.'s. neath which we bow, That hangs around that sacred relic now. i • tnthonglit or when it lay upon her brow. Ah 1 heautifutitlis„,,though earthly:' the was fair ' "As even for ofeartles-gifted dangliters Met" ' " , ft'irt . ; ,..- And ves.the tuoldl2.er form was fashioned in "+ Was but the:spirit - 5 true interpreting. She a-N.11;15"s daughter, "gloTlous within:" • There beerrlS to fill upon this ;tress of .gray„ • r •Light; lat front another, purer day, A day to which the mounted through the tright -• : Of:earthly trialt us-the locks grew white. The soul was . strettiting forward to the light.; . is , And now the hill is 'climbed, the has is car; - • - 'The shades of death, through whica we canuotpetr, k , ' Encircle us.' not her—ours hi the tiro gloom. The darkness. and the mystery of.the tomb, Through which the "spectres that atitight us teem. , 1 ' •• • • Here is U.' gloriousllestarietion Lite::: 't+:: .. .• . Battihrg with death, triumphant Ihrthe Strife.. We mourn her loss, weep for her 'vacant place, ` • ' And love her every footstep to retrade,race: • , While she rests nuldlf. having won the _ . • ("copies Magazine. . EMI MI IMRE • ,H 1 , 1868 .GIZETTE •14.,...- ~..5k, , , 7 , ,,.. - .. .7.4?,..... , - . ::::...-?.. , 5.2,-.-:- ' , -- . , ' ... !.-..i2.. -V -:..‹`"?. 1 s'; 4 . ,:-.,.. ' - 'i.!; , ...': . -,-L ., ... ... . .. . 0 MR.; Pr.smobVs Gtrri...,The. trustees of Mr:Peabodyts• first gift of ,1.00,000 to'the' , lxior of LondOmpierxdtterthe'ett*lB¢Ttluit ' theigift hag been fully: emplOyed; Pat ' thti,.; 'lsattititrromtdition -of-the houses tuttlClS,ek., "cettett;