Ka Nupepa Kuokoa, Volume IV, Number 44, 4 November 1865 — FOREIGN NEWS. [ARTICLE]

FOREIGN NEWS.

Bv the Comet \ve have receiv«<i ior*s ;ll news as lateas Oct. 2ocffro(n San and as late as Sept. 90th frora New Vorl. Very little of iinportonce had accured siuc> our last dates. In VVashington the trinl o; Wirtz, the jailer of the And«rsonville priso n pen, \vas slowly going on. The evidm-«* against him is of the mo«t revolting ehan,-. ter. He who onee had thou?ands of d«HVnceless prisoneTs in his power, is now a pr»s y . ner himself. The very men whom he Ina starved nlmost to skeletons,*whoin he ha i hunted with bloo<l hounds, and who had their comrades die by thousands aroun»i th«vn of hunger and cold and sickness ar<» uow giving their test>mony against him. Thfhorrib!e barbarities >vhich are now proved on solemn oath are not puralle!eJ t \ any thing in the history of the worid. Close by that horrible pen are the £rrar»~ of 13500 Union soldie» who died of <orture in thnt heU ūpon esrth. €hn ton a lady, widely known by her bbor* n ministering to the wounded soldiers . hnjust returned from a visit to that b«ryitic ground. Accompanied by several fru»nds and a small guardi shehas placed a neat h«id board at*tevery one of the 13000 groves. wiih ttn inscription stating the name of the so!d!rr buried in it, with that of his company regiment. They also laid out the buryir»e ground wiih walks, planted trees, aod e«closed it with a neat fence. It is an important fact that the trial ot murāerer Boctb t nnd "that of thi.i p}} kfp>r. Wirfz, are botb bringing out erideme whieh wdl probably be u«ed on the tTi:i! ot Jeff. Davis. If either he or Gen. Lct: hn! lifted a finger to prevent the«e croeities would havebeen stopped. Proof is now beiac given that this was don« by the exprr*«s «r* delt of the rebel chief. Says a Philadelphia paper," Tl»e nttempt to convey the plague into our Northern by Dr Blackburn, the fiendish barbaritv of Wirtz. who seemed to revel in the murd.r o( his victims; the robberies «nd r*id>- *( Northern border, the plan to fire the the3tn - and hotels of New York, were only or one grand system and when as we(( to Jefferson Davis as the mutilations at Bu: : Run, the liorrible agonies of the pwonyr •■> the Libby and at Belle !sle, and th** ' < less ntrocities upon the eolored { In Mexico the party «f Maxin,:;in:i on the whole gained groucd. In t» k .e n.'n!. r» pnrt Gov. Pesquiera and M*fT . driven out of Sonora by the Fr«':u!. have taken«refuge in the Uuīh*d Pres»dent Jnarez ha? Wen t > - Ch)h/)nho/) w ihe n/mh east. r-it - .it. El Paso in tho e\treme north t»»-t v-vrn'-t Mejiico. On tbe other hand thc have gained some sma)l adrantnpes <m*r French. They capfured a tnirn e>f laden with silver on its way from Monter*v to Matamoras, defeated the gusrtl aotl wol, part of them as prisoners. Th« Tatest new> was that Gen. Negrete, a Mexican pe.wn', was besieging Matamor»s on tbe Rio llraatie with 2500 or 3000 meo. The Fwfirh landed 500 men.at Aeapuie<v on the we«t coast from two war steamers, and hare takea pcsesston of ihe port. It is *aid that Max:milian is enlu?ting many late rebei from the (Jnited States m his army. Sonl merica. In Peru the rebellion is goining prount} Tbe Government troopa have been Jn*e» back towards Lima, and the rebels tieet » threatening to bombord Callao. The war between Paraguav on rhe aoe side and Brazil and La Plata on the otber promises to be a bloodv one. Boih are resting and raising all the troops It is said that there are 100.000 one side. A terrible naval batth» had tak*" between the two ein the Parai•*» ! vtfr