E LANCASTER INTELLIGENCEP. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY BY H. G. SMITH & CO. H. SMITH. A. J. STEINMAN. GEMS—Two Dollars per annum payable all cases In advance. HE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLTOTRICER I bilxlicd every evening, Sunday excepted. at I ler annum In advance. ,FICE-SOLITIMFAT CORNER OV CENTRE ARE. Vortvp. A San 111111 l Day. shine over the theadow lands, Issilig the ta'llllHOlll . lOVCr, I Ilattlltillg lII° filly raps lid the yellow lines hang over ; I sunshine over the hazy hills, nd user the dimpling rlyer. d I Wlnhitti that the Still 1.11,1 munnivr day light shine :Ind last loreter. walked down by the tneudow path, he broad highway forsaking, • the quiet of that lovely spot el•Illed hell, for our love-mak ; .1 I Wan Siit•ilt and she woo shy, we walked down through the clover t we thought It the ftWOOLvtii, Ku HMI, day hat ever the 1,111 010111, over. • heard till birds 111 Ilio waving Rrnnv they twltterod to 0101 Other Hit the 505tH 1,110 . Itad hidden away, the cm) of call: glad hlrtl-,,other; we thought, US twunalor day h rough I Ito el , .ver bloomy+ ~s m iler, • Ll, al last the world WILY In perfect (um., a 1110 glad, 1.,r1g111 suallacr Nveal.ll,l•. mina lull what I meld to her wn walked keen-deep In clover; I I know that the robins merrily sang helr sweetest 01 sweet songs over, 1111011 heart love's OWII bird sang sem; that was gladder, sweeter, d Its 1.01111 flllll.l with the world's sweet hymn, 1111 11111.1111 t h e day completer. we ellI111• up the, meadow path ttr hearts .114 liver wul Over; swum, glad day ror Idosront ;11.1 bird lid f o r t•rery young Itrta!" II yet I know not the words tdp• said, r whetlar tant mpoltit at ; t of all slt..od days, I hat mlllllllll, WO' lent of all. (i 01) II r.t.r TIRE tbi help 010 SIMIII, liar nullity 11m1, c•rtinlivil 1.141 riven: “•11 . 111,1, 11n11Le11, cumitleretl, taxl , l -- ISy ruled I.lllllrivon ; 11111 i 111111 It :11,1)10 Th.! l'nf,lt'n I dent ; 11...1.0 . will cmni , Nylit•ii truth shall writ I'l/111 . fitlr, till warped stiwy. iald Lill . Si.lli.ll! C:{II 111 , rur Ih,•v1111I118(11111. bind 1101 . lINv , • 1. , 014 Nlcr , l t•rawlne , l 11,•I; .1111111111 , • 11 , •1111 lIUNV Cir F0r1,1,1, 11,1 lisr sre:Lry litrurs cif glo,nik A vall Lhle pa:.B.-111114 wroitcla , l IISLSOI) M 11101,11! IIII•Ir 11.1111 , s trail in thntl, ilt.canaa analink:l.ll• 111 . 1)10•n; :1•011.1.1.. 1111 llllterrial II( Thoilr trarrltoT•K heads ttre lying I 1.11.11..-11,1114 trinalt.arly lv ii, \VIII . II I ti•Lgwy crowned Inn.; A11!wlln 4 11:111 Icnnw 111 1. 111114 111 Y loss hits •Eliiill,l - I , il — it:Elkin ' . till sivelisliway, I.IIE, 11 . 1, , , i nnlllll3llll 51,L11 . 1 , 11 TIWY 111/111• tin 111 , 11 . 1 . , • 1111) 111131 111 rda 11.1.111 T., vliviriiii•E still 1 , 1 . 1 , 111 Ili. , milt Ivo 1111,111. ftliSCCitanfolls THE KINGS (IF WAR iviiitam 1., or Prussia sketch of 111% I.llo , —Hk ifn rrer ,t 4 Soldier. 1[1,104.1. I him; ---Itrigoint.; by Divine IthOkt" and I'io.l L..;; for Cer ttttt . Upon \\*iWain I, laig of Prussia anti ..•eutive I11•a.,1 of the North lioruuw an lederation, rest the eyes ttl' the ttriti, as one of the t \vo ventral figures the j.. , ,rep.1 at ruggle for supremacy jura iaugural.(:(i in Eurnpe. \‘'n therefore resent the Following sketch a his Ilirh Is 111 interest. pre5,a,,,..( only personal way, but as showing the radual prilgres:4 of I ermati unily,dur ig the period of his reign. 111 is. Early The son of Filltiericl: \V Whim 111 and the Prince:4s Louise of 1\ leclilentiorg Irelitz, lie W:l4 1)111'11 un lie '22tl et larch, 1797, 111 a lino. \Olen the conli ruL in lie turmoil or tho first Being a`younger in, lie \vit-i eiltivitteil as a soldier, pond, ;tv . ing ‘vittivAseil \\Awn hi:, cowl! ry, his family, and is father by the first. Napoleon, lie iinimeticeil he military career, while more youth, by participating, In tic tilipai!rii Anil Isls, against 'ranee. 'lima Irmo 11'n+ earliest years I. 1,1:14 010 Ilia:011 ow raeing hint lon Ili 1 / 1 1111(.1 of thl . thine, :111.1 especially against tire faini v apish again controls the tlestinles of , 'ranee. After lho Napoleonic wars out horn to rminate.l by the exile of heir insligalor 1., St. ilelentt, Villiain dial not llclire very prominent y until Iglu, in tchieli year lie was up minted I:overnor or vonwrallia. 'ln• 1te•%oln111111 of IS IN Sends lIIItI Into 'l'lll s post I, retained molt the out ,reak th, Rrvulutiun ~t• 18.18, WIII.11 ; IILVIIIL41.111111L1k1L1)' alienated the I,ll)er by his undisguised contempt 'or (lennier:wy and everything pet'taln ug il, lie \S'LIS furred tal:e refuge Iu L Ht. passed SL)11101110111.11M II ELIO:M.1; and ; having 111 May Of 1110 ante 3.0111* been I.lolll`ll it member of the 'onstittient .Issoinlily, soon tile von tired lo return to Berlin ; Itsstimlng 111 . s vat in the Assembly on tliuStlt of June. Il In Cann pa lipu n and et.. In .1111, or the following year Ile )V11.4 111:111,` C.,llllllll.lltiVr - ill-1 'Mot' of the Prus sian army operating against, the revolu tionary force in linden, and signalized himself by a merciless and triumphant campaign. In he NVILA appointed M ilitary 1 iovernor of itheni,i, rrussia, the very position now held by .Prince I .Anthony, Ilse father of Prince Leopold, of I lolienzollern, hut for whose existenco the present struggle would iniohalt(6)(„lNlltave commenced. I)uring his residence at Ilayettee iu lisle rapac ity, it. Is said that his arldtritry bearing and course did aimed tmvards increasing the disall'ection of the people of that city towards Prussian rule. 'rho I 'rinivan war, about this time, found Prussia on a neutral platform, 11111(.11 to Prince William's regret and opposition, lunging,' as he slid, to lead an army against donee at that lilac. e Ik Itewent in PCSS In IS•vos Lhe miml of his elder brothe I , retlerick \\Milani IV, gave wa and lie was l'il•Vatl.'4l to lilt' nominal p siLiuu of Itegcul, and actual IMSitiOII ruler or the kin g dom, with /111 illllllel prositt.ct or the siteeesidon the ennvii itself, as the royal luau was without 15510. The Ilr,d thing lie dld iv+ Itegeni \rag du rut luuse I•ii, Iho urkownit it party which he had hithertu affiliated, and b,p (he II 1110:1SIINIbly liberal pulley hilt! the basis ,r his future career. uo 4 . 1 . 0111V1 iii 111,4•11 iiill/4 by V. 111/v1 ALLOW' lit 1 , 61. VI . C111•1 • 11•IC llu• 2.1 .lanu:u•\•, int I and II) till' Hll'4llll' :1` \Viiimaill I. Vinci °nation tool; plat, at Ittnigsiturg, ()Itlohttr I.s following,antill nitwit punt King plt°•wd Hot crown up his own littatl wilh his o‘vti hands, at despite the liberal prnkssinns so recent ly wade, he fillOS ueeueiva omphati rally the divine rigid of kings, declaring that lie held his poNver, nut l'rom the:penple ”r the I'mlvtituLinn, but. " from l io i :done." INN A 11 , 1011111` POI ley-- A Sitrnirwle wit It==== The Liberal party, of course, ‘veredis appointed, and a desperate struggle be kveen the crown and the clitunbern was inaugurated at the very Outset or his reign. The King insisted imperatively upon a reform in the army, which, he wan sati-died by the recent Italian war, wan unequal to maintaining the posi tion of 1 , 1.11,t5h, n.A.meof thogreat powers or Europe. 'Ph,-t ihiihh , with the House of th , pkiti,, was precipitated by the haste which he ill carrying forw:n•d his scheme before the budget had been delinitvly acted upon. In Alareli, 1861, the House had by resolu tion insisted upon a more specille bud get, whereupon it was dissolved. 'Phu resignation of the Cabinet enlued, fol lowed, in Iti6`2, by the election of an overwhelming opposition majority to the House of Deputies. He Cnllx Hlo,iii rek to Ills Help The new ministry proved no stronger than their predecessors, and the eyes of the King were turned towards Bismarck, then Ambassador at Paris, as the man who could face the popular clamor at such a crisis. lie WILY not mistaken In the character of the man. The House of Peers sustained the policy of the King, but the Deputies persistently re fused to vote the increased military budget demanded, and Baron von der I leydt the Prime Minister, refusing to spend the money against this vote, re signed. In September following Bismarck was called from Paris to take his place. He made a show of conciliation and withdrew the obnoxious budget, " be cause," as he alleged, " the Govern ment considered it their duty not to al low the obstacles towards a settlement to increase in volume." The Polley or "Iron and Blood" An nounced. Then ho announced hispolicy. "It was," said Bismarck, echoing tho sen timents of the King, "owing to the VOLUME 71 great obstinacy of individuals that it was difficult to govern with the constitution In Prussia, Bavaria, Wurtemburg, and Baden might indulge in liberalism ; but they are not therefore called upon to play the part of Prussia. Prussia must hold her power together for the favora ble opportunity which has already been sometimes neglected ; the frontiers of Prussia were not favorable to a good State constitution. The great questions of the day were not to be decided by speeches and majorities—this had been the error of ISIS and ISlS—but by Iron and blood !" The House of Deputies having on Oc tober 7, declared all expenditures not Han etioneil by its unconstitutional, that body was dissolved on the 13th, and the theory, apparently sustained by the pe culiar constitution of Prussia, that the last budget voted would remain in force until harmony was restored between the two branches of the Legislature and a new budget voted by the Deputies and fully concurred in by the Upper House. Ho the King and his new Premier pro ceeded to 'reform" the army without legal sanction and in defiance of popular o Anion. Meanwhile troubles with Austria were arising, because of the assumption by the King and Bismarck of the right of Prussia to strengthen her position in (lent - limy by forming a closer union with States within the Confederation, lint! Prussia avenged herself for the op position of Austria by recognizing the kingdom of Italy. In 1863, the enmity of the Liberal party was still further aroused by au alliance with 'Russia for the suppression of the insurrection In Poland. Another Liberal victory at the polls encouraged the opposition In the Deputies to bring a fresh accusation against the King of violating the Con stitution by governing without a budget. The address containing this imputation the King refused to receive in person, Bismarck supporting him with the de claration that "constitutional conflicts may lie decided in other countries by a change of ministry, but such is not the custom in Prussia. With us," he con- tinned, with characteristic arrogance, " If two political bodies which cannot go to law are unable to agree, circum stances decide which of the two is the strongest !" The War Azolla..ll Denmark a war upon I )en mark diverted the Million of the people from their Mt- Tilled liberties for the time, and re iteiled them in a measure to the arbi ary poliey of the King. The death o rederiek VII of Denmark, November , led to the revival of (iceman aims upon the duellius of Schleswig olstein. order of the l;erinan Dirt, Federal uriuy entered Holstein' on eeend.er :13. Prussia, however, join hands with Austria and interfered early in ltini, without regarding the ac tion of the )ict, and in opposition to its NViSiWS. A hotly-contested cam paign ensued, the duchies were wrested Trout Denmark, and King Christian IX the successor of Frederick VII, was compelled to sign, by his representative at Vienna, on October :SO, I.tiltl, a treaty in which lie renounced all his claims to the sovereignty of :-.4vllleswig-1 tolstei and Lauenburg. The War Agallumit A eistrta—Dbotruptlott of the tie confederation. This accomplished, it was only neces sary to precipitate a quarrel with Aus tria to obtain an opportunity for seek ing to place Prussia at the head of the liernian States. King William, it must be confessed, entered into the wild and desperate i1t111,11112,1 Or Bismarck with much reluctance at the first. But he was gradually ',unguided to insist upon the of the duchies wrested from Denmark, with or without the consent of Austria, and the unscrupu lous liitilllarCk, prompted solely by the grand idea of I ierman unity, with Prus sia at the head of it, succeeded in enct natty estranging hint from the Emperor of Austria. The situation wns more critical by the short-sighted policy of the latter country. A conference 4,1' the great powers was held at Paris, but It failed to avert the impending struggle. Austria then appealed to 1.1 to other States represented in the Diet to assist her in maintaining her rights, to which Prussia responded by 111111011111111 g that favorable tudion would be the signal for war, The warning wits unheeded, and on the Pith or June, Mil ' orders were sent. by telegraph for the Prussian col umns to move. 'Phu King's last scru ples were removed, and he entered zealously into all the schemes of his Prime Minister, reassured by the Intense enthusiasm with which this decisive action was received I , y the people. The violated constitution:mid the unauthor ized budgets were lost night of in the grand uprising which fopoweil the King's appeal to his people—an uprising equalled only by the one which the re cent course of France on the Hohenzol lern candidacy l o ts provoked. The campaign which followed lasted but live weeks. War against Austria was formally declared en June 17, Italy joining in the aggression by a declara tion of war on tluiltilth. On the '2,lth was fought the battle of Custoza, and on the 30th the King, accompanied by Bis marck, left Berlin for the seat of war In company they fearlessly sought the front in every battle, and were present on the 3d of July, when Austria was fairly humbled in the dust on the fatal field of Sadowa. So utterly prostrated was Austria that she made. a mere show of resistance thereafter, and on the 2.11 d of August was signed the treaty of Prague, terminating hostilities between her and Prussia, the treaty ofiaNICU wills Italy being signed at Vienna on Oeto- her .1. Formotion of the North German Co 131211210212 The result of the grand system of i Ague conducted Wllisma'rck, and fo owed up so successfully oil the field ( battle, was the formation of the Nort ,lerinan Confederation, practically as now exists. Tic claims of Austria upon Schleswig-Holstein were yielded up to Prussia, which annexed also tile King dom of Hanover, the Electorate of Hesse- Cassel, the Duchy of Nll.4Sall, the Free City of Frankfort, and portions of Bava ria and Hesse-Darmstadt. Austria re nounnod all connection with the Get 1111111ic Confederation, and a new confed eration was formed, under the leader- ship of Prussia, consisting of all the States north of the river Main, including the kingdom of Saxony and twenty tither duchies, principalities, and fret! cities, Prussia, however, comprises more than four-tifths of the pipulation of the confederation. In the negotiations which followed the war and brought about this consolidation ltismarcl: was the master spirit, combining boldness and energy with kiresight and prudence, displaying moderation towards such of his adversaries only as he had not de cided to crush. A Polley °EP..., Prom that time up to the complica tions resulting from Prince Leopold's candidacy for the throne of Spain, the ostensible policy of the King and his Government has been one or peace. A long eid tedious negotiation was neces sary to arrange the boundaries of Prus sia and the new Confederation of North Germany, and great care and fore thought were demanded in the task of consolidating the power the former had gained. l'he dream of a united Germany Wll5 nearer realization than ever before, but Its achievement has been greatly retarded by the repressive policy adopt ed by the King's Government. Tho agreement made by Prussia by the treaty of London, May 11, 1807, to dismantle and neutral' 7.0 the stronghold of Lux umbourg, which 11nd been severed from Germany, threatened a conflict with France, but this Vas averted by the statecraft of Bismarck and an ostensible fulfillment of the treatyobligations. The Jeoloom! of FrttuCO Yet the growing power of Prussia has continued a bete noir to Napoleon, and since the humiliation of Austria in MA, which placed her rival in the po sition of leadership in Germany to which she had so long aspired, the Emperor 01 the French has been impatiently await ing the signal fur the conflict which the victory of Eadowa rendered a mere question of time. The Issue Joined with France The Luxutnbourg imbroglio in IBG7 found neither nation prepared for the war. The startling announcement, on the 51.1 t of thepresent month, that Gen. Prim had tendered the crown of Spain to Prince Leopold, a distant member of the royal house of Prussia, precipitated the struggle for which neither of the an tagonists are as fully prepared as they would like to be. Yet, each fearing that the other would gain greater accessions of strength by further delay, the aban donment by Prince Leopold of his can , didature was insufficient to allay the passions so long slumbering and at last fully aroused ; and when a reasona ble pretext :for:twar on the part of France was removed, Napoleon has insisted on its removal being followed by such pledges and guaran tees on the part of Prussia as it was utterly impossible for her to give; while Prussia, maintaining a dignified stand of reserve, impressed with the be lief that a conflict was inevitable in the end, has calmly refused to accede to the demands of France, and responded to Napoleon's declaration of war by a spontaneous and enthusiastic uprising and a jubilant shout of "On to the Rhine !"Phe arbitrary policy and ab solute tendencies of King William are as completely ignored by the whole peo ple of North Germany now as they were in June, 1566, when the cry of " On to Vienna!" AVM echoed from one end of the kingdom to the other. A striking exhibition of the unanimity of feeling in Prussia was shown by the grand es cort of 100,000 people which, with shouts and cheers and national songs, accompanied the King from the station to the palace, on his arrival iu Perlin on the night of the 15th. King . William'!‘ Pyrsonal Appearance ==l King William, now in his seventy fourth year, is a stalwart, deep-chested luau, with a square, rugged face, a heavy jaw, a bristling grey moustache, and a cold, glittering eye-the very beau-ideal of a veteran warrior who deems the sword the safest arbiter Of every point in dispute. His military education and hereditary hatred of the Bonaparte family have combined with the associations and circumstances of his stormy career to render him almost an undisguised foe of liberal tenden cies of all sorts, and a devout and un affected worshipper at the shrine of royalty. Believing that he wields the sceptre of divine right, he does not scruple to wield it as he wills, and it is the accident of his posi tion alone as the leader of the party of lerman unity that has kept him firm ly seated on the throne for the past nine years. If his ambition had led In in to a different direction, lie would doubtless ere this have been swept away. But the idea of German unity, which has so firmly possessed his soul, is as deeply rooted in the hearts of his people, and, so twig as tho aspiration of King and sub jects;thus coincides,he will be able to ral ly Germany at his back whenever ho is assailed from without. In times of . . peace, he is unpopular with the great MIMS of his people, because of his arbi trary tendencies and utter con tempt for all the formalities of law and constitutional guarantees which run counter to his will or whims; in times of war he becomes the embodiment of a national idea, and the people rise to his support as one man. Left to him self, lie might do either better or worse than he has done ; for his policy, as well as for his success during the past eight years, lie is immeasurably indebted to the wily Bismarck who stands behind his throne, and is accused, not entirely without reason, of mouldi n g his will and dictating his course with as much facility as if he were a mere automaton. lilng William's Family On the 11th of Juno, IS'!l, the Kin , arried the Princess Augusta, laugh he of Charles Frederick, the I ;rand Duke of Weimar, by whom he has had two children, Frederick William, the Crown Prince burn October Is, 1531, and mar ried January 25, I,s5S, to Victoria Ade laide, Princess (loyal of Great liritain, and eldest child of Queutt Victoria; and the Princess Louise Mary, born Decem ber 3, 1538, and married September 20, 185(1, to Frederick William, the Grand Duke of Baden. The Crown Prince has already live children, the eldest, Prince Frederick 'William, born January 27, anti the youngest, a doughtier, horn a few weeks ago. Napoleon 111, Emperor or the trend Facts that are Stranger than Fiction 'I he Doubtful ••Nepnew of ii is Uncle. and His It le Career—Forty Year. of Exile and RO lerluW..Slinsnul dli Attempts at Mounting the Throne-- Prince, President, Dictator. I Em peror at Last—The N .onie Idea of Democracy and Imperialism. With the career of the French Empe ror, who has at lest appealed to arms to put some bounds to what he considers the grasping policy: of the Prussian King, the people of this country are more fa miliar than with that of his antagonist. A brief outline of the leading events of his romantic life, however, will not be without Interest. Ills Questionable Parentage and Early Lift,. Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte is the third son of Queen I tortense, the daughter of the Empress Josephine by her first marriage and husband of Louis Bonaparte, younger brother of the first Napoleon, and at one time King of I lel land. Presumably, also, he is the son of the ex-King of llolland ; but grave doubts of his claim to this distinction have been frequently expressed. Queen Hortense, like all the females of the Beauharnals family, had the reputation of being not over scrupulous in the fa vors she extended to the gay noblemen and soldiers by whom she was surround ed, and the scandal of more titan half a century has credited the paternal pa rentage of her third son to a certain Count Flahault, with whom she was very intimate, and by whom site had already had a son, the late Due de :gor ily. 'Phis scandal has been strengthen ed by a singular resemblance between Count Flahault and the present Empe ror of the French. He was born, however, in the midst of unquestionable surroundings, hav ing first seen the light in the Palace of the Tuilleries, on the 20th of April, 1808. This renders him about eleven years younger than the hurl featured, stern-eyed monarch who is glaring at him front across the Rhine. The first Napoleon had been one of his sponsors at baptism, and received him into high favor from the day of his birth. After the return front Elba, he was taken by his uncle to the Champ de Mars, and there, at the age of seven, presefited to the deputies of the people and tiro army. When Napoleon embraced hint for the last time ut Malmaison, previous to his departure for St. Helena, both were much affected, the child wishing to fol low his uncle, and being pacified with great difficulty by his mother. An Exile Among the Alps. Going into exile with the rest of the Bonaparte family, Queen I fortense and her son, after living for a time at Aug borg, took up their abode in Switzer land, where Louis was admitted to citi zenship, permitted to serve in the Swiss army, and studied gunnery at the Mili tary Academy on the shores of Lake Thum The elevation of Louis Philippe to the throne by the Revolution of July, 1830, caused him to apply, first for permission to return to France, and then to serve as a private soldier in the French army, both of which requests were refused. A Wanderer on the Continent and In England. 111 1831 he find his elder brother set tled In Tuscany, and took part in the Insurrection at Rome. Nisbrotherdied on the 17th of March, and he escaped to England. In a short time he retired to the castle of Ahrenenberg, in Thurgau, Switzerland, devoting his lease re in 1832-33 to literary labors, and publish ing successively " Political Reveries," "Political and Military Considerations on Switzerland," and a "Manual on Artillery." In the first-mooed work he declared his belief that France could be regenerated only by one of Napoleon's descendants, as they alone could recon cile republican principles with the mil itary aspirations of the nation. Ile Becomes the Heir of the First Napo leon. Before Louis Philippe was firmly es tablished on the throne, the Due du Reiehstadt, the imbecile son of the first Napoleon, was on the point of becom ing the leader of a disaffected party in France ; but his death and that of his eldest cousin transferred the heirship of the exile of St. Helena to Louis, whose hopes of ultimately ascending to the throne, when once aroused, never abated. The Attempt upon Strasburg. In the early part of 1835 his designs became evident, and, after maturing his plans, he left Ahrenenberg in June, 1830, for Baden-Baden. In August he paid a secret visit to Strasburg, which he re garded as the most vulnerable point for his attempt, and after securing promis ed co-operation from fifteen of the of ficers of the garrison, proceeded to Switzerland, while his adherents were perfecting the plot. The project, how ever, was a miserable failure, and Louis was taken prisoner, detained at Stras burg from October 30 till November 9, and then conducted to Paris. His life was spared on condition of his going to the United States. This he did, under protest but soon returned to Europe to rind his mother on her deathbed In Switzerland. LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING JULY 27. 1570 Driven from Switzerland, he Makes an Attempt upon Boulogne. In 1838 the French Government be came alarmed at his presence in Swit zerland, and demanded that he should be driven from that country. The de mand was backed up by the appearance of an army on the borders, wherupon Louis fled to England, taking up his residence in London. In 1839 he pub lished there his celebrated work " Des Idees Napoleoniennes." This was fol lowed by another attempt to secure the crown. On the 6th of August, 1840, lie landed near Boulogne, at the head of a party of fifty-five adherents, including Count Montholon and General Voison. But one man in the garrison responded to his summons to join hi.s standard, and after some mauwuvring about the town, he was captured while trying to escape to his steamer. In October he was put upon his trial before about 160 of the Peers of France, many of whom were indebted to his uncle for their ranks and titles. A Prisoner at Ilam. The skilful defence made by M. Berry er was in vain, and Louis was sentenced to perpetual imprisonment in a fortress in France, his companions being award ed various terms of imprisonment. He was immured in the Citadel of 11am, where ho remained in confinement six years. On the 25th of May, ISA he made his escape from the castle, in the disguise of a workman, crossed the fron tier into Belgium, and for the third time sought refuge in England, where he continued to reside until the revolu tion of IS-Is and the downfall of Louis Elected Prince Presldentof the French Republic. lie was at once elected 'a representa tive on the National Assembly and soon after Prime President of the French Itepublic by an overwhelming vote. At this period he had a difficult game to play. 'While embracing every oppor tunity to revive the most agreeable and glorious recollections of his uncle's rule it was necessary for him to make the most earnest protestations of devotion to republican principles and the most zealous disavowals of all ambitious de signs. The Coup d'Etat nod the Empire. But this deception lasted scarcely three years, and on Decem 1851, having imprisoned every statesman in Paris from whom he would be likely to encounter opposition, dissolved the As sembly, and seized the most distinguish ed generals who were suspected of disaffection, he proclaimed himself Dic tator. Ile then offered himself to the people as a candidate for the office of President fur the term of ten years, and, tolerating no opponent, was, of course, triumphantly elected. A constitution conferring upon him absolute sovereign power was proclaimed, and under it he ruled for one year. Then he appealed to the people again, and in response the Empire was restored, with himself upon the throne, by such a majority as made the vote practically unanimous. The goal at last was reach ed, and the Second Empire was pro claimed on December 2, 1852, the anni versary of the coup d'etat, and Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte ascended the throne as " Napoleon 111, Emperor of the French, by the grace of God and the will of the People." The recognition of his imperial station was gradually made by the leading powers of Europe, Ureat Britain taking the lead, and for nearly eighteen years he has reigned without interruption front within or without. It 114 impossible to do more than glance at the events of his reign in this eon nection. In 1854 ho embarked in the war against Russia, which was waged iu alliance with England; Sardinia, and Turkey, and terminated successfully by the fall of Sebastopol in 1850. On Eng land fell the hardest part of the light ing, while France reaped the greater share of the glory and profit resulting front it. On the 10th of January, 1853, he had married Eugenie Marie de titizman, Countess de Teba, a scion of an old noble family of Spain. In company with her he paid a visit to England in April, 1855, being received with general favor by both the court and the people, and made a Knight of the (tarter by the queen. On March ,„16, 1850, the Empress gave birth to a boy, known us the Prince Im perial, and bearing the special cogno mens of Napoleon Eugene Louis Jean Joseph. The birth of this " blessed baby" was the occasion of great rejoic ings throughout France. Early in 1838 an attempt was made upon the Emperor's life by one Orsini, who had concocted his plans In Eng land in connection with Dr. Bernard, a Frenchman residing in London. Lord Palmerston, therefore, attempted to amend the English criminal code so that it would apply effectively to such con spiracies, and his defeat In Parliament led to a temporary suspension of the cordial relations between the two coun tries. But these were soon restored, although Dr. Bernard was acquitted by an English jury. In 1850-60, the Emperor espoused the cause of Victor Emanuel against Austria, and inperson led an army to his assist ance, defeating the enemy on several decisive fields, and terminating the war by the victory of Solferino, Juno 14, 180 e. By the peace of Villa Franca, July 11, :Austria ceded Lombardy to Victor Emanuel, whose territory was further increased by the annexation of the duchies, Napoleon being recom pensed by the cession of Savoy and some neutral; Swiss territory to Prance. In 1551, he became a party with England and Spain in the outrageous assault it the Mexican republic. When his allies discovered that he had ulterior ob jects in view, and way intent upon some thing more than . the niers vindication of the right of foreigners, they abandon ed him ; but Napoleon caused his troops to remain, and persisted in an effort at setting up the Archduke Maximilian of Austria as Emperor. The whole project was a wretched failure, not less for France than for Maximillian, and great dissatisfaction was expressed at home because of the Emporer's interference. Finally lie abandoned Mexico, leaving the unfortunate Archduke to his fate,!in answer to the repeated protests of the tiovernment of the United States, the last detachment of the Frence troops evacuating the country early hi 1867. Once after his ascent of the throne the Emperor returned to his literary labors, publishing in 1885 the first vol ume of an elaborate work entitled "llis toi re de Jules Cesar." The literary and historical merits of this work were un questioned, as its imperial author en joyed unusual facilities in its prepara tion. It was printed at the Imperial Printing Office, and the preface bore the ,late d'f March 20 1001. English and French editions of it were soon brought out both in this country and England. MN General Polley, from the outset of his reign until with in tt year past, has been one of absolut ism. Freedom of speech and of the press were unknown, the Senate was a mere instrument of his will, and the election of delegates to the Corps Legislatif were so manipulated as to render that body almost equally subservient. But the vote polled by the opposition in May, 1868, showed such an alarming increase that Napoleon at once became alarmed, and proclaimed, in the Senatus Consul tum of September, certain reforms in answer to the demands of the people . . Still further warned by the boldness of the Liberal party in the Corps Legislatif, he finally professed to aban don the system of personal govern ment and an irresponsible ministry, which had been inaugurated by the coup d'clut of 1851, and on the Id of January of the present year, M. Emile 011ivier, the leader of the more moder ate Liberals, was called to tho head of the ministry. But this concession did not servo to satisfy the people, and in the disturbance which followed, the ar rest and imprisonment of Itochefort, the editor of La Marsallaisc, in January last, a formidable uprising in Paris was only averted by the presence of a veteran army of 100,000 men. When Rochefort was safely disposed of for six months, another appeal to the people was made, and plebiscaum of May, which received about 7,350,000 affirmative to about 1,- 550,000 negative votes,nominally ratified the so-called reforms in the Constitution which had been inaugurated by the Emperor at various times. Simultane ous with this came an alleged conspira cy against his life, and numerous ar rests, especially of mon connected with the workingmen's organizations, were made. The Trouble with Prussia. Before all the implicated parties could be brought to trial, and while the ques tion of a possible encounter with Prus sia was being broached in the Corps Legislatif, during the debate on the army contingent, the candidacy of Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern for the throne of Spain fully aroused the great majority of the French people, not less than the Emperor himself. Napoleon demanded of the King of Prussia, the withdrawal of Prince Leopold. This demand was acceded to, Prince Leopold withdrawing unconditionally as soon as the peace of Europe was threatened. Napoleon then demanded that William 1, as King of Prussia, as well as the head of the House of Hohenzollern, should renounce forever all pretensions to the throne of Spain on the part of any member of the Hohenzollern family.— To this demand King William in a dig nified manner responded that he had nothing to do with the candidature of Prince I..ipold, and on the 14th finally declined to hold any further eommum cation with the French Ambassador on the subject. It was evident from the start that the candidature of the Prince of Hohenzol testi was a mere pretext ; that Napoleon, remembering how he was outwitted in 1867 on the Luxembourg question, jeal ous of the growing power of Prussia, and longing for an occasion to humble King William, and at the same time push the boundaries of France to the Rhine, was determined upon going to war. So, at o'clock on the afternoon of the 11th, the Corps Legislatif formally declared war against Prussia, and the preparations for the impending struggle which were already in progress were at once pushed forward with all possible celerity, the French people responding to the cry of "On to the Rhine!" With quite its much IMAM hu ity and enthusiasm as those' of Prussia. Alexander IL Stephens on the Treat went of Prisoners of War. We present to our readers the follow lig views of Mr. Stephens on the sub eet of the treatment of prisoners on ,oth sides, during the late war, taken 'rout the second volume of his work : Mr. Stephens—This whole subject of the treatment of prisoners, which has become so prominent a feature in con sidering the conduct of the war on both sides, from the turn which has been given to it, I may us well dispose of here, at once and finally. This Ido by stating broadly that the charge of cru elty and inhumanity towards prisoners, which has been so extensively made at the North against Mr. Davis and the Confederate authorities, is utterly with out foundation in fact. From the com mencement and throughout the war, the whole course of Mr. Davis towards prisoners shows conclusively the per fect recklessness of the charge. His position on the subject, In the beginning clearly appears from what we have seen, and that fully sustains this statement. The efforts which have been so indus triously made to fix the odium of cruel ty and barbarity upon lihn, and other high officials under the Confederate Government, in the matter of prisoners, in the face of all the facts, constitute one of the boldest and baldest attempt ed outrages upon the truth of history, which has ever been essayed; not less so than the infamous attempt to fix upon Min, and other high officials on the Confederate side, the guilt of Mr. Lincoln's assassination? Whatever unnecessary privations and sufferings prisoners on both sides were subjected to, the responsibility of the whole rest ed not upon Mr. Davis or the Confeder ate authorities. It is not my purpose to go into a full history of the subject This would take more time than is at all necessary. A few leading fails will settle the matter. Let it be borne in mind, then, that the Confederates were ever anxious for a speedy exchange, and that after the interruption of Ow exeh:utge, under the cartel first agreed mum, as t”•fore stated, another arrangement was entered into by the Feilerals, under pressure of pub lic sentiment at the North; WIWI' the excess was against them. 'Phis was, afterwards, likewise broken. It was broken, not by the Confederates, but by the Federals, upon some pretext or other. Throughout the struggle, Mr• Davis' conduct and bearing upon this point, not only challenges the severest scrutiny of the fair-minded of this day, but will command the adrairation of the Just and generous for all time to conic. In addition to what has been shown heretofore, what higher evidence on this point could he desired than that fur nished by Ids congratulatory address to the army of Gen. Lee, for the successes achieved In the battles around Rich mond when McClellan, with Ills newly organized hosts of at least one hundred and twenty thousand men, made the second unsuccessful attempt to take the Confederate Capital in Na, and when over ten thousand Federal prisoners had fallen into their hands. In this hour of triumph, mark tho significant HA well as magnanimous, and eve: chivalrous language which came upon taneously from his heart on that occa _ " You are lighting for all that Is ,lear est to men ; and though opposed by a foe who disregards many of the usages of civilized war, your humanity to the wounded and to the prisoners was the lit and crowning glory to your valor." Prof. Norton—Yes, but how did he act towards the same prisoners after wards? What did he do to relieve the horrors they suffered in Libby and on Bello Isle, almost in the range of his sight; to say nothing of the suffering of those at Salisbury and Andersonville, of which he must have been apprised? Why was his humanity and magnani mity so deaf to the appeals and dying wails of these men, Which went up front those places, so near his own doors, and almost within his herring': Mr. Stephens—The horrors of Libby and Belle Island, as well as of Salisbury and Andersonville, so pathetically set forth by many, and great as they really were, were not his fault, or in any way justly chargeable upon him. Prof. Norton.—Whose fault was It? Was he not at the head of the Govern ment? Did he not know of these suf ferings, and who but himself could be justly responsible for them'? Mr. Stephens—lt was the fault of the Federal authorities in not agreeing to, and carrying out an immediate ex change, which Mr. Davis, was, at all times, anxious to do. The men at the head of allkirs at Washington were solely responsible for all these suffer ings. Upon these officials, and upon them only, can these sufferings be justly charged ! Neither Libby, nor Belle Isl and, nor Salisbury, nor Andersonville, would have Lad a groaning prisoner of war, but for the refusal of the Federal authorities to comply with the earnest desire of the Richmond Government, for an immediate exchange, upon the most liberal and humane principles. Had Mr. Davis' repeated oilers been ac cepted, no prisoner on either side would have been retained In confinement day. This all the facts clearl show.— All the sufferings and loss of life, there fore, during the entire war, growing out of these imprisonments on both sides and they were great on both sides (it is not my wish to understate or underrate them on either), are justly chargeable to but one side, and that is the Federal side. Prof. Norton—l let if the Federal au thorities did refuse to carry out an ex change of prisoners, for any cause what ever, this certainly did not justify the Confederates in a regular sys tematic policy of starving the unfortun ate men taken by them in arms, and of withholding proper medical remedies and attention front the wounded and sick, nor mitigate, in the least, the savage cruelties which were perpetrated upon them by such men as \Virz? Mr. Stephens.—lt certainly did not, or would not have justified such policy or acts. But it is not true that there - _ was any such thing as the systematic policy yuu speak of, either in starving the well, or withholding medical reme dies and attention from the sick and wounded. The policy of the Confeder ates in these particulars was established by law. By an act of Congress, passed soon after the war was inaugurated, as I have shown, it was provided that pris oners of war should have the same ra tions, in quantity and quality, as Con federate soldiers in the field. By an act afterwards passed, all hospitals for sick and wounded prisoners were put upon the same footing with hospitals for sick and wounded Confederates.— This policy was never changed.— There was no discrimination in either particular between Federal prisoners and Confederate soldiers. What food or fare the Con federate soldiers had, wheth er good or bad, full or short, the Federal prisoners shared equally with them. Whatever medical attention the sick and wounded Confederate soldiers had, the Federal prisoners in like condition also received. When the supply of the usual standard medicines was exhausted and could not he replenished, in conse quence of the action of the Federal Gov ernment in holding them to be contra- band of War, and in preventing their in troduction by blockade and severe pen alties—when resort was had,to the virtue of the healing herbs of the country us substitutes for more efficient remedial agents, the suffering Federals shared these equally with like suffering Con federates! bid the requirements of per fect justice and right go beyond this? Could humanity ask more? As or particular instances of cruelty on the part of subordinates who may have been untrue to their trusts, that is a very different matter. There were unquestionably very great wrongs of this sort on both sides. Wirz, to whom you have alluded, may have committed some of these. How this was was I really do not know. He, by and by was not one of our people. He was 3 European by birth, who obtained posi tion in our service, through letters of recommendation, which warranted con fidence in his intelligence and good character. I know nothing to his dis credit in either of these respects, except the allegations you refer to. Whether they were true or false, as I have said, I do not know. It is due to his memory however, to recollect that his own dy • big declarations were against the truth of these accusations. This, moreover, I can, and do venture to say that acts of much greater cruelty and barbarity than any which were proven against him, could have been easily establish ed, and would have been established on his trial against numerous subordinates on the Federal' side, If the tendered proof had not been rejected. I have been informed by returned Confederate prisoners of unquestionable truth and veracity from Camp Douglas, Hoek Is land, Elmira and Port Lookout, on nu merous instances which came under their Immediate observation of much I greater atrocity than anything alleged against Wirz. These acts, many of which were of the most inhuman and barbarous character, were perpetra- ted by, Federal subordinates hav ing control of Confederate pris oners at these points. There may have been, therefore, and I do not ques tion but that there were, great wrongs of this sort on the part of Confederate subordinates, as there certainly were on the part of the Federals. But what I maintain is,tbat such conduct never met the approval of the Confederate authori ties. They never, in a single instance, danedoned, much less ordered, well de meaning and unoffending prisoners of war to be confined in unwholesome dungeons, and to be manacled with cuffs and irons as was repeatedly done by or ders from the authorities at Washington in utter violation of the well established usages of modern civilized warfare ; But apart front this marked difference be tween the two Governments in their highest official character in sanctioning and ordering acts of wanton cruelty, insist upon the Irrefutable fact that but for the refusal of the Federals to carry out an exchange, none of the wrongs ur outrages you speak of, and none of the sufferings incident to prison life on either side could have occurred. Prof. Norton.—lf there was no such systematic purpose to torture and liter ally to kill Federal prisoners, why were thirty thousand of them huddled to gether at Andersonville, in the sickly region of Southwestern Georgia, where from 0 . imalariousinfluences prevailing uncle a burning sun, so many of them died, as must have been necessarily ex pected? Mr. Stephens—Large numbers of them were taken to Southwestern Georgia in MI, because it was a section most re mote and secure from the invading Federal armies, and because, too, it was a country of all others, then within the Confederate limits, not thus threatened with an invasion, most abundant with food, and all the resources at command for tile health and comfort of prisoners. They were put In one stockade for the want of men to guard more than one.— The section of country, moreover, was not regarded as more unhealthy, or more subject to malarious influences than ally in the central part of the State. The official order for the erection of the stockade enjoined that it should be in "a Healthy locality, plenty of pure water, a running stream, and, If possible, shade trees, and In the immediate neighbor hood of grist or saw mills." The very selection of the locality, so far front being as you suppose, made with cruel designs against the prisoners, was gov erned by the most humane considera tions. Your question might with much more point, be retorted by asking, why were Southern prisoners taken in the dead of Winter, with their thin clothing, to Camp Douglass, Hock Island, and John son's Island—icy regions of the North —where it is a notorious fact that many of them actually froze to death? As far as mortuary returns afford evi dence of the general treatment of pris oners on both sides, the figures show nothing to the disadvantage of the Con federates, notwithstanding the limited supplies of all kinds, and notwithstand ing all that has been said of the horrible sacrifice of life at Andersonville. It now appears that a larger numberof Confederates died In Northern, than Of Federals in Southern prisons, or stock ades. The Report of Mr. Stanton, as Secretary of War, on the 19th of July, 1869, exhibits the fact that of the Fed eral prisoners in Confederate hands dur ing the war, only 22,579 died ; while of the Confederate prisoners in Federal hands, 26,438 died. This report does not set forth the exact number of prison ers held by each side respectively. These facts were given more in detail in a sub sequent report by Surgeon-General Barnes, of the United States Army. Ills report I have not seen, but according to a statement, editorially, in the National Intelligenecr—very high authority—it appears from the Surgeon-General's re port, that the whole number of Federal prisoners captured by the Confederates and held inSouthern prisons,from first to last during the war, was in round num bers 270,000 ; while the whole number of Confederates captured and held in prisons by the Federals was, in like round numbers, only 220,000. Front these two reports It appears that, with 50,000 more prisoners in Southern stock ades, or other modes of confinement, the deaths were nearly 4,000 less! Accord ing to - these figures, the per maim of Federal' deaths in Southern prisons was under nine! while the per centum of Confederate deaths In Northern prisons was over twelve ! These mortality sta tistics are of no small weight In deter mining on which side there was the most neglect, cruelty, and humanity ! But the great question in this matter is, upon whom rests the tremendous re sponsibility of all this sacrifice of hu man life, with all its indescribabfo mis eries and sufferings ? The facts, beyond question or doubt, show that it rests en tirely upon the authorities at Washing ton! It is now well understood to have been a part of their settled policy i conducting the war, not to exchange prisoners. The grounds upon which this extraordinary course was adopted were, that it was humanity to the men in the field, on their side, to let their captured comrades perish In prison, rather than to let an equal number of Confederate soldiers be released on ex change to meet them in battle! Upon the Federal authorities, and upon them only, with this policy as their excuse, rests the whole of this responsibility.— To avert the indignation which the open avowal of this policy by them, at the time, would have excited throughout the North, and throughout the civilized world, the false cry of cruelty towards prisoners was raised against the Confed erates. This was but a pretext to cover their own violation of the usages of war in this respect among civilized nations. Other monstrous violations of like usages wee not attempted to be palliated by them, or even covered by a pretext. These were, as you must admit, open, avowed, and notorious! I refer not only to the general sacking of private houses—the pillaging of money plate, jewels, and other light articles of value, with the destruction of books, works of art, paintings, pictures, private manu scripts and family relics ; but I allude, besides these things, especially to the hostile acts directly against property of all kinds, as well as outrages upon non combatants—to:the laying wasteof whole sections of country ; the attempted anni hilation of the necessaries of life ; to the wanton killing, in many Instances, of farm stock and domestic animals ; the burning of mills, factories, and barns, with their contents of grain and forage, not sparing orchards or growing crops, or the implements of husbandry; the mutilation of county and municipal re cords of great value ; the extraordinary efforts made to stir up servile Insurrec tions, involving the wide-spread slaugh ter of women and children ; the Impious profanation of temples of worship, and even the brutish desecration of the sanc tuaries of the dead. All these enormities of a savage char acter against the very existence of civ ilized society, and so revolting to the I natural sentiments of mankind, when I not thoroughly infuriated by the worst passions, and in open violation of mod ern usages in war, were perpetrated by the Federal armies in many places throughout the conflict, its legilimat C ilmtns iu putting down the rebellion, s.f-called ! Ntajor h ter—Vouu re SPV , TO agai !ISt Iles general conduct of lime Nvar on our side. Mr. Stephens—Yes; these aro severe comments, and I must ask you for a lit tle indulgence to me in expressing my self as I do. It is a sad thing to me to think of these subjects, and a still sadder thing to speak of them as I ant compell ed to do on this occasion. Severe as these comments are, there is, however, nothing extravagant in anything which I have said. It is all most lamentably true ! All that I have stated, and much more, too, of a like character, were woefully realized by those who suffered front the deeds of SLeridan's men in the Valley of •Virginia, and by those who came within the range of the atrocities attending Sherman's conflagrations and devastations in his " grand march" through ficorgia and South Carolinas, 144 welt as by those who were subjected to the merciless 1-11X£146...S of Wilson's and Palmer's marauders afterwards ! Facts which have come to my own knowledge, established by indisputable proof, verify, the statement in full, both to the letter and spirit. Private houses were sucked, pillaged and then burnt ; and alter all family supplies were destroyed, or ren dered until for use, helpless women and hungry children were left destitute alike of shelter and food. I knew men—old nun, non-combatants, men who hail nothing to do with the war, further than to indulge in that sympathy which na ture prompted—who were seized by a licensed soldiery and put to brutal tor ture, to compel them to disclose and to deliver up treasure that it was supposed they possessed. They were ill many instances hung by the neck until life was nearly extinguished. and then cut down with the promise to desist if their demands were complied with, anti threats of repeating the operation to death If theylwere not! Judge Hiram Warner, one of the most upright and unoffeuding, as well as one of the most - - . distinguished citizens of this State, was the victim of an outrage of this sort. He had had nothing to do with the war ; but it was supposed he had money, and that was what these "tru ly loyal " " Union Restorers," so-called were most eager to secure. Specifica tions, however, are unnecessary. In stances of a similar character are nu merous and notorious. In some eases, where parties resisted, their livesas well as their purses, watches and other arti cles of value were taken ! Major Heisler.—As to the burnings and conflagrations, and the destruction of private property, if they are to be set down as evidences of savage warfare, these outrages were certainly not perpe trated exclusively by the Federals, or confined to their side. The Confeder ates did a good deal of this kind of work themselves in Maryland and Pennsyl vania, to say nothing of other places. Mr. Stephens.—That to a limited ex tent, is, also, most lamentably true!— But these acts of the Confederates, were, as is well known, committed upon the avowed principle of retaliation. To this savage practice, if you please, and upon this principle only, they were most re luctantly compelled ultimately to resort. The " icr talioniz" is recognized in such cases by the most civilized nations, though it be savage in its character. The truth is, gentivmen, wars in their most mitigated form—viewed In soy light whatever—haven great deal of the savage character about them. They are most horrible scourges. They always spring from huge crimes against hu manity, On one silo or the other. They often, I admit, call forth the exercise of the highest faculties of the human In tellect, mid sometimes exhibit the noblest qualities of the hunnalwart in the display of fortitude, endurance, he roism, and the divine virtue of self sacrifice for the good of others ; but they are ever, upon the whole, even when most Justifiable waged and humanely conducted, exceedingly demoralising In their general tendencies and effects.— They arouse and put Into *talon the mi. fiendish (dements of coin )(mud nature. Their almost universal endeney Is to make demons of men.— ley are, the last Instrumentalities that any people devoted to Constitutional berty, or the prinelplemof ltepreseuta- Ive Government, should ever resort to or the purpose of maintaining and se- curing their objects. They sometimes, as I said In the speech from which I read, necessary evils, looking to these ends. This was the character of the war on the Confederate side. No re sistance by arms, in my opinion could bo more just than this was on their part. But the great objects aimed at In all such eases are much oftener lost than attained by such resorts, even under such circumstances. This Is my delib erate judgment. It was my judgment before the States were involved in this war, about which we can now neither speak nor think without the most mel ancholy reflections. Everything at tending It, the long series of antecedents leading to it, it.s well as its general mil duct on both sides, with its results up to this time, without considering . the pros pect of the future, all tend greatly to confirm me in that judgment. Ido most earnestly hope, you may be as sured that the country may never be cursed with another. If the present and future generations in all the States will but profit, as they should, by the experience of the last eight years, they certainly never will be again so cursed. The only way, however, in which this experience can be rendered profitable to those who now live, as well as those who shall come after us, Is by fully and clearly understanding and studying the facts and truths which marked and characterized these most , pregnant events from the beginning to the end, and by rigidly practicing the lessons which they Inculcate. Many questions ignored and principles reject ed by the leading public men in the Federal Councils of this day, must be considered and reconsidered. The Gov ernment, under dlftbrent counsels, must be brought back to the principles upon which It was established, if a repetition of this great scourge is to be hereafter averted. This is also my deliberate judgment. The only way In which wars are to be avoided in this country, is fur rulers to abstain from usurpations of power. Magna Charta was trampled under foot for centuries in England but its principles died . not—they lived on, and though at the cost of the terri ble scourge of many sanguinary con flicts, ultimately triumphed. So It may expected to be with the everliving, im perishable principles of American free Institutions! But what I had In mind to say a mo ment ago In this connection, and in con clusion, on the point now under our im mediate consideration, is that, however horrible wars naturally and necessarily are in themselves; yet, in modern times, under the tempering and redeeming in fluences of the Christian religion, civil ized nations have by common consent, agreed upon certain customs and usages to which they conform in this resort, savage as it is at best . These are the usages of civilized nations to which I al luded, and which were so wantonly vio lated by the Federate, not only in their course upon the subject of prisoners, but In the other acts I mentioned. Now, what I affirm is, that in no in stance that I am aware of throughout the late war did the Confederate author ities countenance, much less sanction or order a violation of a single one of these recognized Christian and humane usages, not oven in the retaliatory burn- Ings In Maryland and Pennsylvania, and elsewhere. A comparison between the acts of the two governments:in these particulars during the whole conduct of the war, will forever exhibit on which side in the contest was the higher stand ard of " moral Ideas " and with it the higher typo of civilization, if you will excuse me for saying it, at this period in the common history of the people or the United States, so far as these were indicated by those who controlled the conduct of public affairs on the the re spective sides. However disastrous the results were to the Confederates ; however extensive the misfortunes, losses, sufferings and sacri fices which attended and befell them in this second bloody conflict for the sove reign rights of local self-government, on the part of the people of the several States of this Fedemi Republic, whether composed of thirteen, thirty-three, oran y other number ; however utterly they fail ed to maintain this important principle, to which all that it is truly great in the NUMBER 30 former history of the States Is mainly attributable, and on which alone all sure hopes for general peace, prosperity, and happiness, with good government for the whole in future, must be placed ; however fruitless their eflbrts and blast ed were their fondest anticipations in their highest objects of patriotic Min ; however deplorable their present condi tion is, bereft of their estates and out lawed by the Government ; and how• ever worse the e,mdition still to come may be lor them, yet, notwithstanding all this, they have left to them that which is inestimable in value, far above riches, wealth or power, and of which no oppression or tyranny can deprive them, and that is a public character, which, after having passed the severest ordeal that can "try men's :soul's" stands forth with that moral grandeur which is ever Imparted to the reputa tion of States as of individuals, by wiglitness iu eilitthiet, integrity purpose truthfulness in Nvffills, and " crowning glory " of unsullied lion- or. Whatever other errors, faults. fail ings, or shortcomings they may have had, no act of treachery, of perlidity, of hypocrisy or deceit, or breach or faith, or of turpitude -nothing of a low, mean sordid or unmanly nature, can ever be Justly laid to their charge in their State or Confederate organizations, either he fore or during the war; neither in the antecedents which led to it, nor In all the fury which marked its progreKs. Their whole public course:shows them to have been a people as sure, as brave, as generous, as frank, as refilled, as magnanimous,as !floral, as rtdigious, and with all as honorable and patriotic in the highest and noblest sense of theseyords, as ever struggled against odds, and thus struggling, fell in battling l'or the right. So the truth of history stands and will continue to stand forever:' fliese are facts which lime will never obliterateor destroy. This record of their past is no small heritage, if they have nothing else left for them to trausmit to their claildrem and to their chililren's chil dren, or generations to conic! About Canning Fruit So much has been said about preserv ing fruit in air-tight cans er jars, that we are surprised that the inquiries still come for descriptions of the pnwess.— As our circle of readers widens, It each year includes new ones who& not seem to have practised this admirable house hold economy. Only a short time ago a letter came, front Africa, saying that the writer had seen peaches front Amer ica put up in a thin liquid, and asking if we could find out how it was done. In our families the canning of fruit is a matter of course, and we advise all who have never tried it to do soot once; they will be sure to keep up the prac tice afterwards. The principle should be understood, order to work intelligently. The . . fruit is preserved by phn ing it in a ves sel from which the external air is en- tirely excluded. This is ellieted by surrounding the fruit with liquid, and by the use of heat to rarity and expel the air that may be entangled in the fruit or lodged in its pores. The pre servation does not dopend upon sugar, though enough of this is used in the lit uid which covers the fruit to make It adatable. 'the heat answers another mrpose ' • It destroys the ferment which ruits naturally contain, and as long as hey are kept from contact with the ex ernal air they do not decompose. The vessels in which fruits are pre erved are tin, glass, and earthenware. Phis is used in factories where large . . quantities are put up for commerce, but is seldom used in families, as more skill in soldering is required than most per sons possess. ltesides, the tins are not generally safe to use inure than once.— Glass is the preferable material, and it is readily cleaned and allows the inte rior to be frequently Inspected. Any kind of little or jar that has a mouth wide enough to admit the fruit and t h at can be securely stopped, positively air tight—which is much closer tllllll water tight,—will answer. Jars of various patterns anti patents are made for this purpose, and are sold id the crockery and grocery stores. Tin... have wide mouths, and a glass or metallic cap which is made to lit very tightly by MI Indian-rubber ring between the metal and the glass. 'rite devices for these caps are numerous, and much ingenui ty is displayed inventing them. We have used many patterns without much difference hi success, but have found there was suite difference in the facili ty with which the jars could be opened and closed. The best are those in which atinospheric pressure helps the sealing, and where the sole dependence is not upon screws and clamps. To test a jar, light a slip of paper and hold It within it. The lwat tit' the flames will expand the air and drive out a portion of it.— Now put on the cap ; when the jar be comes cool, the air within will contract and the pressure of the external air should hold the cover on so firmly that It cannot be pulled oil' without lint let ting the air in by pressing aside the rubber or by such other means as Is provided in the construction of the jar. When regular fruit jars are not used, good corks anti cement must be pro vided. Cement, I. ii by melting 1.1 oz. of tallow with 1 lb. of rosin. Thu of the cement may be governed by the use of more or less tallow. After the jar is corked, tie a piece of stout drilling over the mouth. Dip the cloth en the mouth of the jar Into the melted ce ment, press on the cloth with a stick to ' break up the bubbles, and leave a loose covering. Everything should be In readiness, the jars clean, the covers well fitted, the fruit picked over and otherwise prepar ed, and cement and corks, if they are used, in hand. As the bottles or jars are to receive a very hot liquid, they must be gradually warmed beforehand, by placing warm water in them, to which boiling water is slowly added.— Commence by making 11 syrup in the proportion of a pound of white sugar to a pint of water, using less sugar if this quantity will make the fruit to() sweat. When the syrup boils, add as much fruit as it will cover, let the fruit heat In the syrup gradually, and when it comes to a boil ladle it into the jars or bottles which have been warmed as above di rected. Put in UM much fruit as possi ble, and then add the syrup to till up all the interstices among the fruit; then put on the cover or insert the stopper as soon as possible. Have a cloth at hand dampened in hot water to wipe the necks of the jars. When one lot has been bottled, proceed with noire, ad ding more sugar and water If more syr up is required. Juicy fruits will di mi 11- ish the syrup much less than others. When the bottles are cold, put them away in a cool, dry, and dark place, Do not tamper with the covers In any way. The bottles should be inspected every day for a week or so, in order to discover if any are imperfect. If fer mentation has commenced, bubbles will be seen in the syrup and the covers will be loosened. If taken at once, the con tents may be saved by thoroughly re heating. Another way Is to prepare a syrup and allow it to cool. Place the fruit in the bottles, cover with the syr up, and then set the bottles nearly up to their rims in a boiler of cold water. Some wooden slats should be placed at the bottom of the boiler to keep the bottles from contact with it. ;The water in the boiler is then heated and kept boiling until the fruit In the bottles is thoroughly heated through, when the covers are put 011, and the bottles allowed to cool. It is claimed that the flavor of the fruit is better pro served In this way than any other. All the fruits that are used lit their fresh state for pies, etc., and Rhubarb or Pie-plant, and Tonnitoes, Green Peas and Corn cannot be readily preserved In families, as they require special appar atus. Strawberries.—Hard fleshed sour varieties, such as the Wilson, are better than the more delicate kinds. Direc tions for these, as well tui for Raspber ries will be found In a Basket item. Currants need more sugar than the foregoing. Blackberries and Huckle berries arc both very satisfactorily pre served, and make capital pies. Cherries and plums need only picking over.— Peaches need peeling and quartering. The skin luny be removed from ripe peaches by scalding them in water or weak lye for a few seconds, and then transferring them to cold water.— Some obtain a strong peach flavor by boiling a few peach meats in the syrup. We have had peaches keep three years, and were then better than those sold at the stores.— Pears are peared and halved, or quarter ed, and the core removed. The best high-flavored and melting varieties only should be used. Coarse baking pear are unsatisfactory. Apples. Very few put up these. Try some high-flavored ILLTE. O.6..&DVERAISING BUSS:MSS ADYFUTI9EMP:NII4, 412 a year per nquro of ton Ilnea; fa per year for each mill• tional Square. REAL ESTATE AAYEETTUIPIO, 10 rents n line 0,, um neat, and 5 cents for ellen subsequent Insertion. GENERAL ADVERTISING. 7 contr.; ri lino fo Intoo tirut, owl 4 001110 for each nalbsogilent r- SPEd AI. NCYTICIN 1110:LT1(Y! in r.orm 15 yenta lair 1111, SPECIAL Nortev. preeull I uwvringey nut deaths, IU eunty per UM) for first insert In 0, and 5 amts for usury subsequent Insertion. LEGAL AND aritult :`.7 , Yricus— . Exocutors' DOLICes 2 Ili Administrators' notice 2 [4l AVAtiDleile notices 2 sti Auditors' notices . 2 utl Other " Notices," um lines, or less, throe times ~.., I 50 ones, and you will be pleased with t hem Quinces. There is a great contrast be tween quinces preserved in this way and thoso done up in the old way of pound for pound. They do out become hard, and they remain of a line light color. Tomatoes require cooking 11,11gt•r than the fruits proper. .Any intelligent pen:on who understands the principle 111 , 011 vhl h fruit is preserved iu this wily, \rill srnat liurl the mechanical part easy or ex,,vutioi, nnrl the factory. The Philosophy of linking . Ila 3 'rho ehoieest quality of hay consists of green grass simply dried. 'lto Parnicr says— tund truthfully that making hay, clientivally speaking, is rt distillatory or evaporative process. It Is doing with succulent vegetable stances, what the saltinaker does with his saline Waters, or the stigarinaker with his saccharine juices. The objetd is to driveotr surplus waters, which hold the valuable principles in solution; to gut rid of worthless and interfering substan ces, and retain all the deAlintile ones. The sugarniaker may apply t,,0 inteme heat, or direct tlainelo his evaporating pans, and burn or spoil hi, products; so the farmer may teal his hay 100 much in the blazing rays of the sun, and greatly injure the rich nutrient prrhciples upon whieh its value depends. Certain it is, WO Cannot control all the vonditions upon which the produel of perfectly cured hay depends; but we van control them much more decidedly lion wedo. A ton or well-cured or prop erly dried hay is \eollll more in the mow than ttt•o tons of that which is cut at all improper time and cured in an Imperfect manner, \Viten grass is dried too the woody fibre, or ligneous part, Ile ennies ;hard uu l tough ; nod animals do not like it 11113' better than we like over-baked bread. The nutritive iortions are not Cl readily eliminated, ing through the assimilating organs. I is not necessary to dry bay so thoroughly in order to preserve it from putrefact lye change In the mow. If the \ yea( her Is clearand warml I may safely be stored the same day It Is cut, provided it is not col in the early morning, while loaded with dew. If grass could lie mown after the dew Is gone, and spread upon a dry par cel of ground, four or live hours' expo sure to sun and air will at it for the barn. All moisture proceeding front dew or ruin must he removed, as well as all the moisture in the sap, that will promote heating In thenmw•or:stack, !e it always injures hay to heat or to " sweat," quito is much as it will Injure grain to lu•at iu tho bin. NO ;11111.11 :111101111E of mischief has been perpetrated by the annual promulgation of error, In certain agricultural journals, touching the process of curing hay in the 1110 W. The starch, sugar uml guns in the newly mown grass, when the hay is about half made, are in a semi-thiiil or a plastic condition, sonnuehat like still . dough. If the moisture in the hay be evaporated, by drying wind and sun shine, the hay will be fragrant :mil id most as valuable as good grass, provided the grass were mowed lieMre the bins some have fallen. On (lie contrary, ii the moisture must be driven la by the heat generated in the mow, the hay will be injuredjustin proportion In the iman tity of moisture remaining when the hay is stored. The Writ of Ilaberm t'orpopi Blitrettoril ril—lnfluentilil Citizen,. limier A rre.ti. Itni,num, July 1:1.—TIto counsel 114 r tile el Lizmns arrested int A lamance county by H. irk, who, by order of uuv. III)I,Ien, rec . . - KOS It, regard Writs Of bailees the matter before the Justice to-day. The I iovereer•:, counsel will elms,, till, Ilr gunieutto-morrow. The feeling is intents°. News received this afternoon shows that tiraliann, the county seat if A teekeee, been placed under martial law by I:Irk. The Court I !MINS, wits seized, and the whole town is strietly guarded. A military eom ulisninn has been organized, consisting mainly of Kirk and his olllcers, to try 4-iti zens 110 W under arrest.' Additional news lIILS brew reerlved hurt OW non. Jelin Kerr, the Hen. S. P. 11111, Sineritflirilllth and movoral other prumilwia "mmervittivo citizens of Caswell county wore arrested at Yancoville yesterday by IC Irk. The congre.sienet eeedld,lrs be that district wore speaking inn the Court I louse, when Kirk surrounded IL with sal - tilers and made the arrests. BALI-own, July 20.--The /if bcrtA case of Lll4l eitizens, arrested by Is irk in A Humane°, was continued before the I 'hie!' Jostle° to-day, and will Is, argued toentor row, when, it Is ex weird, the argumen I will close. Inter anlvlees front Cstswell county state that 130 to 200 eitizens were kept in Lho Court 11,1111 , 0 front I% NI. to 11 , 10 I'. 0. \V. D. Bowie, one of those arrested, demanded Le know why hi , was arrested without It warrant, when he was knocked down and dragged oil. Anoth er prisoner, Mr. Willey, wins plowing in Ids field when arrested. Ile refused to go with them without a warrant, and was knocked down, put on his Merl horse with his feet tied under the horsn's belly, his hands tied behind his back, anti carried Le Kirk's Court. 'The sentinels under the window of Judge i;.orr's prison nonuse themselves by cursing and reviling him. Ladles are insulted, and with their children are 'lying to Virginia fur protection. Among other arrivals of 114)111401's troops hero, last night, was a company ofnegroes, commanded by negro officers. Beth par ties aro denouncing thin outrage as unlaw ful, despotic and unnecessary. It MOND, July 211--A telegram from Danville, Virginia, says a large number of citizens of Caswell county, North Civet ilia, have lied to that place for safety from Col. I:Irk and the North Carolina troops.- I ion. Bedford Brown has gone to Washington to see I're44l4lent tirant, and ex-4ffireriner Itratew will meet hint there. Mont Mono poly In Chicago and New Orleans the exel it • Hire privilege of slaughtering beef is given to a single firm. The following sketel: condensed from the Chicago Timex will show how the system worked In that city, and according to the lieu ynne the meat in New Orleans Is just es villainously man aged: In Chicago, the slaughter-house monop olists assort cattle like decayed and decay ing fruit. The choicest aro called "tops," and reserved for the nabobs • then conies the "fnediurns," which are f:hipped East, and then the "scallawags," which are re served for hungry Chicitgolans. Even then they are deceived by those "seallawags," just as Southerners are by the biped order of the same Aisne. When they purviw, a seemingly grxtql fat roast, it turns nut to be only a "fluffy flit," produced by swill front distilleries. Wribn they wish to change from fluffy fat to tender lamb, the are supplied with "scorbutic mutton." - Then they have "precious or bob veal," and are spared the trouble of inviting the farmers to their hospitable boards, for none of the honest tillers of the soil will accept an invitation to dine "unless ho Is drunk or insane." 'rho skill of the slaughter house monopolists Is wonderful. The pro cess of "blowing" should be understood. As soon WY the animal is killed, the artist makes an incision in the flank, just be neath the skin. Ho then applies his mouth to the aperture and Injects his breath until the stubby skin is swollen out to an unwonted fullness, and a plump, rotund appearance of fatness is given to the "scal awag." Then the gall of the defunct quad ruped is used in washing, as itgives " glossy appearance to the ineatAndyeinov:H or conceals the livid spots or bruised places." " Fronting" Is the nest process, which consists in covering those portions where the fat ought to be, but is not, with the fat of another animal. The mode "frosting" is ingenious. The fat is first melted, :nol when it becomes sufficiently cool, the "painter" charges his mouth, and then spirts it upon theart or the moat to be frosted. Occasiona lly "paint ing" is restored to, and nit artist, by a skillful use of the brush, can ; give to the tough and antiquated bovine a ;tneek and tender appearance. Sometime the process of "rejuvenating" conies Into play, and the fatless and fleshless meat is " blowed and frosted." iStutton is made to appear tein piing to the appetite by an artistic movement called "borrowing the This is done by re moving the kidneys and the caul thereto attached from one aniinal, and placing it on another. The slaughter-house monop olist is also very tender-hearted, and rulmin inters narcotics before he kills; and it mat ters not whether the narcotic in wholesome or Fatal Affray—Colonel F. C. Randolph Shot. Dead. LVNCIIIWRO. July •20.—C01. C. P. Ran dolph, proprietor of the Piedmont Land Agency, a emu of some prominenco and large moans, WILY shot dead to-day, in a difficulty with Lewis Wont Mall and John Witold:lh, Jr. The latter received a slight would in the head. SOIIIO 111011i1114 ago, Randolph sold to a man named Moe, of Now Jersey, the valuable Ureen 11111 farm, on Staunton river, holonglin to Colonel John Wimbish, Sr., fur securit ies nominal ly worth 1;60,000. 'rho securities aro said to have proved worthless. Colonel Wink blab was attempting to recover the farm, claiming that the transfer was a fraudulent transaction. The immediate case of the shooting was an insulting letter front Ran dolph to young John Wimbish iu regard to the controversy. Randolph ryas killed in his •otlice, receiving live wounds. The Wimbloho have been arrested. •