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NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, MOVNDAY, JULY 23, 1566. b A — USRI RRES MR G 1 R AT 1 into etion te annikilsto space and tioe, and to make | o n sketeh in my last lotter, VT,T“‘ gr}n Im’t-xl?‘u Iya L conte and sar- a7 05t 0ne unluterewpted engngemenr. We iocti@ Lo but wes most obsti ik, ghen, £hat oo balapee @8 1n, favor of modern waclare. | s Tie pioseat wor Las lasted Bttle mope than o fut-l vance of the enemy & % Austrians 4, that H } at Hei r s of Hamilton, of vzt \v the 1sue 1s viviwlly decided, mud | y at i Tailorios, A 3 th for on toefee an nreer v 7 1 ) I they nttonath spest THE GERMAN PLAG, wrmte im0t nrdterm, o, g I driving ihe Prussians in tho samgo that does d i Furner processi wherever boer 1s dronk, tie Black-Red-und-Gold, 15 8 token_not to r was 8 bat sht f 1 more of the by v bila phiscss Sity~siba Fre duy week, thon the Dritish | app . Ver, U Say og._on both-side be altogethier lost sight of in these vielent times. Itdoats 1 on awioi o } psio thres months afterwar, | | yibk Phoult'h 1o -, 5 o0F FOlE ol e oy | OVor bio ball of fhe German Dict at Fraukiort, sud fa 3 forces ¢ . the commanders, the stalions of the dif- | e wssin huye gone down-before-her 126 tho 1 Eae T o ¢ ¥ cut o pieces « R fale Agsigataxi 1 “”,P““fff*"f“"f“"z‘l";‘: e e “maoner of 1he at. | tur (g sl gt Bl B pesosing SelCBelinnge, ;.. theee rogiments of Prus. inn infuntry. Soue of the battalions zfi‘hmlmm_ww. in rmd\met-rofl:r;gmd- with the fallen. N The Pru | tack, and the resistancs it met with, are all described by our | a has offered A & outer feslsfance is lis ouly Prussian self-reliance, which has been considerably | did great exccution with the bigonet, and with their § gom, n”"Y‘ v Heame, commandcr of the Eighth e petingoy ok e bstor of o | correspoudcat with an exictiews which assures us that we | {0 ual reverses and more iretries ablo Fui o -eoigthiened by the eveuts of the past weok, is el extolled | clubbed muskets. Several of the neighboring villazes | regangy e g $hynspnal oolgrs. ‘' bauner rep- b n top Mntr aflicars iy to the reservea and | have the muin inoidents of tho battie. All that ho saw he tells, | Prussan needie gnn is the kreat ey Litlouary power of th lioi: | Gazette | were winpped 10 flames. Ninoty pieces of artillory, o the |y, po e ich does not exist-cxcept in the hearts of o, 1n vals th0 Hafl oflicers f1 10 - the front. Tho | and hie miltary knowiedeo edabies ki to form o correo | present dry. AL shmole conteivance, by, whica coaminle - oy laarel wredihs with which woadorn the Balmets of | Prussvun shde, were in aperation at once. Iumaoy places, | o b o Meilensl partiament, with power to maintsia dark biae regiments multiply on al) sides and from thel | Judgmest of (o operations which were beyoid his own sur- | multiplied a{;m Duds fair o readjost tho prosest, wid pers | 0or brotbers i axws, the Living ns well as the dend. have s | yo battls wae o regular hand-to-hand fight, Every Prus- | and enforce it dictates, ks it wot significaut that botk mauently affect the future desting of Europe. Nothing is told | solemu siguifioance, Europe was surprised at tinding our | mi,m‘.m ‘took a-wtand of colors from the euemy, {Anunlmvnna':rw.. nuv':boen trying to outbid each other m : offering D about this” universal 1 o s pusketry, Their guns burrs vey. ;'j"-p:{irfl",‘;:":E:l::l:‘:hr\:.:’q';‘ ns on ‘S‘- extreme right | And what a battle it was us here desoribed within a fow | more remaskablo in histor§ than the fact that Prussia Las and the reserves in flank. They spread awny 10 the woods | hours after the Austrians bad hean & o0 the Prague sosd and fire futo the roar of the Austrian | whie the Proasiuns wero stll pursuing thel srmy suddenly vindieating the honor and mission of the coun * from tho field, and | allowed for so many years'to have in Eurcpo at least u wo T trar e by el L R avowed and secret, tho | Both sides evidently fought like tigers, aud the cATIgO. | hus an uivanced iiberal sentiment ovidently exists, sod was terrifie. Tho Prussiaus, though claiisivg thewictory, | it'has shown itself powerfal and. respectable i to o rotreating | oly of the breach-loading 1ifls. The ease -ult Bich this | axmy Was active at all_points of the extensive theater of ! i gunvers. Legious ! There has beow notbing like it in our time, and ouly | weapon quelled the insurrectionary movement in Baden 16 | at ono and the same tuue. Anarmy of young Warriors, it admit o loss of abont 5,000 men, including a large number | o, mand the obeisaices of the rival fendalists who a8 WEDGE PORCED INTO THE AUSTRIAN ARMY. onoe 1n the great war of the Frenca Empire has there been | ycars ago was uoticed at the time, yet, sirange to say, nobody | oonfidcutly attscked the formidablo eotossus of Austrian vet- | of their bravest officers. The Austrisn loss cannot Do | nreser g Thoe s wedge, growing (7 ader and driven in more deeply | su I O K wuch n carnage. The whole Prussian and | thought the los=on worth romemberfog. The vory Austrians | eraus, arrayed on batilnfelds chosen by the [mperial Generals | estimatod at o much lower figare. According to the 1stest Lf:r&g#;l:l‘m °",!,{, ':'fid each otker, while theiz every instant, wes forced into the very body of the Augtriun | Austiian armiss were enyag 1 that tuese litary | who stood by U0 ycars ago and Y g thes.mo | tiemssivea. The result is ia the mouth of every ono. Europe. | accounts, the first army corns of tho Austrians, and the | jyaif quietly of ok, A T opportunity to niyoke separating it at the Leart :nd dividing its left and cen- | ””".“.hllt;" lnn‘nwfmm l:n;:l»lu,:; ;‘lonfip‘eh hr<l:: :'hurf 'I;uc“v.r‘“t wpon the Das t d-‘-'n. & " :;- w:ui:“'nn onu-lvpi un"r:x: )n-?'mfll‘ll of rrx\:oml:“-;:: Saxon army corps were forced to fall back in the dirce- | iy ll“"{“"“n "‘:7“]. nchm:?“;.}‘n nl:ml flmm.h‘i‘ .l: iu the ficl] was there. ¢ onedok had enal b oms Ives, woal ag by their 00 more pregant than the praise bestowes n » R ] e 4 S ¢ c ste: ca or con w u the i o tion of Kdnigsgritz on the 80th of June, while tho | Sivor” thorein § see suficiont evideice of o popular, ir- o . e Ahe rigit, The troops in the center and ieft are dis. | ; } hearing the eremy’s guns in their re ooon | two main armjes of the Prussiaus, each one of them a nation: 1 | experience. Italy, desirous nbove o1 of an efiolent | courage of our men and the szilliul inteiligenos directing their i b + ¢ A L2l et of AH dasiren o0 | e combine, and, na thelr Tosses had not bern | ariny, aud meditating from the very first momcnt of ber united | worements i the fact that the kingdom of Prassn, theoreator | Fromians woro making suocessful progrcss 1 Bo | rosiatiblo toudency of those nations toward broudet and ved thesclidity | bemia. On Tucsday, July 3, we have the telographic | nore humane political institutions. oxposed 1o the firo which most of ¢l destroys the m soidiers alteady sbaken by surprise, The right, previc Droken up and discomfited. burry toward the Prague rond tein o (he taosvory of+| aadouaet ol iisnarviosablosrmny; A account of a battle on' the road between Konigsgiitz and 'SCENES. E sipe- | of hor structure and the vitality of 1ts institutions, This State, , which for the List 50 years has been at the head of the intel- | Josephstadt, which was at first favorublo to the Austrians, There something "Whiplk t e setmed Rk something like confuson and spread alarm amoog the reserves + wes f the conter and 1.ft. The regul 18 of the columps below | wap vi1slow the extent of gronnd over which these im vambers, but very choice in quality, nid theretore requiniag | lectual and matorial development of Germany, and, besides | but after a severe conflict of eight hours rosulted ina are gradually by e rainiret i takiuie the lead in scionce, art, and mooutacture, by its ariies | decided Prassian vietory. Tho Prassian loss was about ?:Jmfiafi'Tflfifl'i’ifl'fififl?’}ffi?flf“’ M‘fh:z,:_; are gradually bul siug out and are at last swallowed vp in dis- mense levies of men were spread, It is, indeed, wonderful | more. perhaps, thian suy one olse the appisnces needed to ordered muiltitude. ~ Officers galiop about trying to restore | that such extensive operations siould hiave been begun aud | maitl;ly the number of our Lliers, have deen eqa iy remise, | insured the pesce of the Confederacy—this State has agaio | 15000, During the week the Austrian loss isestimated at | 1 1 Where nearly 500,00 men aud | ard have nt foaad in our vaet milliary expenditure a few | proved to ita encmies and traducers biat on it are founded the | ochr 40 000, ing unwillingly out of Hanoverian domains under the ” pressure of threat and invasion from nn overawing, powde. large in the Lrevious encounters, they confronted tlo enemy | ¢Xistonoo & oawpaixi AgiMAL A | 240000 strong. ‘The Austriaus are supposed to have had an | Venetia, neglected this simple meaus of giviog hersel equal nmaber. A survey of the ficld of batile with a good | riority over her antagonist. We, possessine an army swall in 1,500 guns are in the fi us Lej; But the irzesisti onset of the Fru; order, Somo regiments bold together though they are losing | completed in a single_ day. e - SRS RTS Mt o ! b = W | Bliees of the G A o By thoir death on the bati]>-fold we might expoct'a contlict as lorg | bundr wnsaud pounds to make the troops we raise rea ly ws of the German fatare. By thoeir death on the bat 1:-fic! "Alaifs on the Rhioe, which have besn comparatively tul meighbor, leaving the u{ul in_husto, citizens Biteh. effective; and Franoe, which aspires to the first military powor taousiuds of mute witniesses have bor.e evidenoce to the truth " i T = s (" e of Arial Jost as | Lhat we I'russinns aro the nerve wnd muscle of pobtical life ln | quict until within a fow days past, Apposr.tp ba souing 8. L iyg. .h:,‘nhwl,,. % catnon to belp off with: them, strik st of Europe. The sdywtage whion | the center of Europe. They bavo demonstratod, too, that the | 8 crisis. Ahe EINFEY and steamboat communication has | % HISFECR 1B SOEE T O e Tingering affoctions efforts, but the formidable Anstriun cav.ly prevents any correspondest does justioe to the obstinacy and courage of tho | I'russia has thus faily and boow ab.y at'mined by better Julg- rinciple of monarohical goveriment is ul.ve and firmly rooted | bven wusponded, and’in many places the rails have been . hu(y‘m anll.u:h;lm demonstratiors on the part of the Prus. | Austrinns, but ru-a’- higher our bnllml:ayof their opponerts, | ment and wore o u.’.u expori m" course, only teaip xp- the old iron frame-work of oor State, Itis ll,ull’l’mlsm torn up. The p'«m-l and telegraphic intercourse by the ately "lbb‘;“rl the flouhdurm. umvms‘:uthnrnnd thither te sian right, whom 1ng continued fightiog and beavy losses | It is evident that the Austrians were very strongly posted, | rary, but while it lasts it 1s comploto, eonelusive, and irre. | of times long goio by, whoso colors protect our King and | usnal routes is cut off between Stuttgart, Frankfo d 06, stilL refusing to quit t! nwmmmn end must bave somewhet erervated. and that it waa 8 work of daring and endurance to dislodze | sistible. 1€ thinga hud boou allowed to g+on ulittle longor, | Commander i Chiel ity ‘ho midst of & hostile countey, With | other cities of the Confederation, sud the Prussian | 9 ' kingdom, though they might have been safe in the A LAST HOPE. lh’an Quly Generals baving compiote c:‘ufldenoa in thom- lh;’vu woull b M:huaxnmm mn:;nflmnm. n:' xmun:’ n; :lleeunmm; of t'm; ul‘t:‘l'm'u:‘n lhod:l"lhr;) ol‘Gl-{rRAny :m- Province on the Rhino, Bingin,is completely in the :unr necr:\x‘::;;-lov.:mlu lunhheraou{h‘ nnxflyhmlmha yot there was kope for the Austrians! There on the | selve and their troops would have vontured on such au en- | arbitrato upo d the Ewmperor of the ach, instead o peen ever identified, and on it depends the future of the entire ), o | . | by a pow force Bisenach aud gloriously hurling power of the Prussians, whose outposts extend to Kemp- | 45 3 4 " bloody battle; the next we bear ovewheluod 3 Prusatan front whevled a force of horse with which a Muras or | terprise. ~ Gen. Bonedek could have lattle b of sobiev- | pliying his favorite part as tio ulimate Court of Appesl, | nition. May Heaven biess our st ndard wherever it 1s raised, Kellerman, or a Seidlitz could have won a battle and saved ing the obj'ots of the war by akiog up . Ma $rouid have heen obliged to anbuwit to whatever Prossia eivuld | and favor ur war-cry, *With God for King aud Futheraud.”” ton. On Saturd vl night an_attack was M'g:xgwlfld on | ith pumbers, aid captuted cn masse. e are, will wnchaktn: ore ot loact 50,000 wen of | “partly' introuchod podition.” ~‘The Austrinns_ conid 5ot | ondain, uniil bo had ubiain:d time for piaciic n the bavds bt it Mainz, the cat of tho principal fortress of the Confedor- | ™o g iy ng George is reported to have ar- by holding their ground in Bohemia either deliver flanpver | his army suwe weupon whioh might put it on an equality with The Prussinn Scheme of Federal Reform. ation. The Prussians threaten to be in Frankfort within rived st Fran (wum“hflnq been rolessed by his captors i 8 week, The headquarters of the Commandor-in-Chief | iy o permission mn;{vorgnwhilhe;ww{ ne plquued. men in heps évery fnstant. The left wing is arrested in its onward | rogrese, The Prossian gen:r 1 in froat f them on the center, soeing their enemy waver, throw their their Generals decided the battle in a singe loug | of the cantinent, fin: tolions against them. and encou:age their artilery to fresh wday. The narrative of its incidents given by wiprovided ns o whom scarcely one had ever fired ashot. The indomntatls Austriau art llery still turned bundreds of muzzles op the | and the Duchies or make those conquests «f P nwian | the couquorors of Nortbern Gertiany and Bobowia. enemy’s uns, apd girt their men iu & band of fire, Tolet | territory which were to cusble them to cedo Venetia —— Cotrvapondence of Tho Loudon Thmes. o = = o 1ops | of $ho 8th Coufederato army corps, Prince Alexander, | 20 U PO K edom of Hanove wiih grace. But if their design bad becn mercly to protect Ob i s ok Bastic £ G i, Tuly 8, 1600, | | Bave bocn romoved. from Frankfort to Froidberg, o littls | 50 el Bob bn L RLRARIE - , they, perhaps, cou'd not have done better. 3 bl in th oro is no better &l A 4 run of g luck it | {5 o the vicinity, on the rulway to Giessen. '3 ! y knew better thau any other poten- d by slope and wood, and The following calendar of events, published in the A farther accesson of allics bas mccrued to Prassia. ‘A8 sdmirable DrAislon' for t?‘e eare. of the soldiers | tAte of sulerin Europe what was to Le feared from r artill Ty appears to bave | M.morial Diplomatigue, shows with whit ravidity gieat will- | The Sondevahausen, O'denburg, and Hamburg Pariamen gty e I:! found in o separate corps dotalled #ia's invidios desizus, avd like Massachusetts ki n the adeanci g Prossiaus, tary resulta are nohieved 1 the present duys b Nuve ratified te tréatics scling their aubereuce to the Bis. | FROSCH #itie 18 tou Pl e T high | Powder dry, morvover greased Lis trausportation axles and lves v el execution: d-oreed by the Germanio Diet, | mork grosranme of Federal reform. The Drunswick and | for that purpose. It i3 commanded by an officer of higl Dut his arscnals on wheels; therefore was not curprised the Prossisas 1nto Loipsio, Giessen, aud | Bremeu troops wil Juin the Prassian armics ina fow days, In | raok, and is furnished with a complete equipment of every- | § o 0iin cain tha night ‘fimo of the Prussisns into hig ton «f Lo . 1 lonbre, Brauswick, Dassag, a0d other espitals of northera | thing necessary to the effective discharge of the Good | 40 wion ong v Somalarly before them, teki ey of toe Prussian Gen, Vogel into the Haso- | tates, suls rl;vfl(vnl‘lzlnl‘b'.n opened for the support £ the | Samaritan duty with which it is intrusted. In the Con- it iyl mtdl e (fi un‘y;m st ".““lr o 5 '"“‘Iu‘lu' h[\:f':":l; 0‘”"7;': l::‘lrllr::ldll‘li. M:,ll."b-'!la v|NI . Ifl fuderate :im' 'hol cv-rpadi. dil}hl!lllfih"fl :’y .l'.h“‘; bhlrlg:' 'BI’LICHX; w‘h Lg"lf:“\‘d In"uull'llnh‘ one tne worsin, {dl'lu I s - ey R Lot 24 with & red cross, instead of the national colors of black, d - i 1 et wiah to be on . telewiy’ s Gt with 1/ | Fed'ud gold, A similar corps is attachod t the Prassiai | UPTS b MU OLOR o ogy of the War in Germa sifp tiat oavalry oa buth sides of Klum, to crash throngh 1n- fantry and gund, seemed really worth doing, though failure | their own ter woull have made the difference botween defoat and nrout It | They hiad a position well prote would bavo been a supreme deed fit for such a force to accom- | they made a eood nse of 1t. 1 Ptish or to perish in attempting. Asd there were Lo patural | been exceloat. They mowed abstacles visible from tho tower to o grand charze, The | inflioting on them terrible losses, while they thems: Prussian 1isht separatod from its center and lefr, would hate | were almost univjured. From our correspondenty nc uit boen rolled down into the v-liey mnong the Austrian and ut- | we must judge that the Prossians did not win the day mercly | Ca terly crushed. and the Austrion center aud left have been | by the possession of a superor arm. Throgh a great part | JUNg 17— liberated to continuie their o with the enemy. Momeuts | of their advance the neccly-gun gave them po gupe veria oapital, were precious. The Austrians were protectod by the nature of JUNE I8 ~Ocouption of Marienthal, Ostrit and Louban, in pation of Bera A'";P’l’mmn fire bfi"'}"f”"" severe, the wavering of the ‘ tion, and munkm nl::- way xlm-m. st ll)'-m. Bl Bohewin. by L Prassian rogiments oe, g .. ] e - ustrians greater. ‘Tbe faling of trees on the FPrague road, | tare of the w above Sadown wes nccomplished by Teal | stadt by Frussian cavalry, Ovcupation of Dresden by the | northern compinious in araisus thoy wero beture the wook's . ’ “ g g e tush of fagitives, t9 ne.x Approach of the Prussian shelis | hard fishting. The Austrine wonld not retire, but wadted | Prassian fatal estrangemment. regiments, and accomplished excollout service inthe re- | 87050 S juntof the first hostile crossing of Prussism to tho place, some of them bursting over the ra for the stroggle, *The 27th Prossisn Regiment went in | Jusn li—Evionation of )(m-: ‘\'llhn-lr:l. by the Hanov rin Ay o solemn ln‘rvlc: - rem.m;n i‘n the Protosta Q{ cent bloody contlicts. troops into Saxon territory, Bismark and a ;mn{ur “ Yune were awful warnings of the stato of the batile, nearly 3 000 & Tong, with trovs. Pl Wiilism of Hansa made prisener, Caviiry | o' '8 ol countey 10 Tetuls thanks for the vicwry of g 2| et " (literally it polit v An Py locked up with retreating trains and | further side with only two o unter botweca the Austrians atd Prussisse apou the Rum- | Koiggil 2 Queen and Privocses attonded the Duo- | AUSTBIA OF HER KNEES—APPEAL TO LOULS NAPOLEON kers ufl,"zfl,{,’"':fl? g o ml'“" h,“’,‘“ “h,c':,i,:’:::: ::: ug duwn thel | men, standing; all the rest wero kilied or wonnded.” Agaio. | bore road. Kirche, whose faimous cheir #ang by of prawse. At the —PUBLIC OPINION—PROSPECT OF PEACE, pe \ B ato) the svent in fhe & t | when a second wood opposcd their prozress, “they advanced | —Nixdorf oconpied by 7,000 Prossinne. conclusion of the servic Of 101 guug was fired in the | 1 = army by telograph, celebrated U Oe‘vel\l 1 the upcfll,‘!n 1 o woods, and | against it. but did not at first make mu-h impression: for, ~Oceupition of Kamburi by the Pras-iane. square 1n fiont of the From an Occasional Correspondent. of the Mnf.’mu'r with boisterous * Ho's" and the “Bo ""‘f'""!‘{""‘ m ‘lm' s;, apuel Tt was ow some- | the Aust : five of n{!u- £ 2—Armistice between tho Hanoverian and Prosisa ¥ esteridny IH - ; wnvlt'pmv-d ;l of which ter- BAUYN Bapuy, Eriday, July 6, 1266, cherklavg. where aboat 2! o'clock, but it wa to note_time | needle guo did not tell, and a whol ed at tho for ) miunted 1t 1+ on the same day. The totat (f casedin Be, L he lotus-oate o8 on. we! snsantly THE NEWSPAPERS whea soch things were goinz on 80 our. Scarce could the | end of the wood fired through the trees ar e Pr _ Action vear Janebapslan, betwesn the Austrians | sitice tuo outvieak of the epidemio is 526; total of doaik Tho lotus-oaters of beautiful Baden wero pleasantly | quese littlo minerspi. shoots, comparsd with the lasa be dir-cted o cie piat cro nn cxclamation from a by- | af 0 Faake wih a fol effic'” Thesennd of ex sncidents m ik . The Prussiu troops vcoupisd kieichenberg, | acoused from thoir dreamy repose yostorduy by the an- | 00 o (50149 feet to 5x10 inches. Telographio ar- wore {=1'iof, bot that they were fulling in vais tail the | quence of a merely mechauical advants; The needie-zun nea of Prussia foarht Bavaris, Wurtember, Nassau and Hessian | this hus made the tour of Europe. Every recent stop of :lu:l-'u n;‘r:'\'n‘l; ‘;:;fl.’:fi' n\"vflllsl“:::.'ix:rr::n 1 " focim, ¥y o posh s be et ot Munie prepure Zollve: wtria L onided h isastel ' 0 threo 0l . ot al nt at Oswiecim, ¥ plew posentiaries beve met ot Musich (o prepure a new Austria Las been attended with signal disaster. The battle vocu s, you frequently bear it talked about on the §seucs for which un ewpire hud Eaiser Lis prople o the flola were being d a vein mmong the Southern Statos in case tue ol wnd w sive unon of U u can find any paper containing the facts, ¢ | crowning battle on the 34, of which the dotails have not | roet betore iyts near Loagousalza, € X ue L yet been published, appears to have crusbed ont all heart | Ay dotails, they never cowe, except in o fow good v n (Ra Steinmetz (hrows back 0. uud that the | Prossiaus had poaseased no such wenp | | oned its might and the 4 added, no doubt to the completeness of the vic ) | tolls of cenerations of emperors, warriors aud stitcsmen were | onset, aud the rkilinl arrang-menta by w about t st forever, The genius of tho Prussiaa was in | 1rny was hrought on to the flark rear of (he eaewy, wouid | upow Josephstndt. K prw | utiera Gerna flord to loso tho North | J 9 tbe asoenda. t have effoctunly dislodged the Ausirians trom their position. | Sixth and Eghth Awsirian corps, usder tue Archauke Leo- | Lot, i1 in very {nprowable that, whatever tho po- | 80d bope. Gen. Benedek telezraphs to_the Emperor that | panars like the Augsburg Algemeinc-Zeitun TNT DEFEAT. - < Pt 1 war, Wo commorcial ties of the mation | the awwmunition got damp, aud they were compelled to | T4 iy publication offices there ars queer sights, Was JUNE SB—Action near Trantenan. The troops of Priuce | wili beseverod. yieli to m»p-nnfiv- oxecution of the Prussian needle-guns | pdw of course attracts crowds, I uagine o narr Aroed {breveh-loading rifies, not even of the most approved ceu- | ang 20 people shoving cach other lusiily toward a tittie ‘The spirit of Bismark or b struetion). But it was not merely that they were unable | holo 10 inches square in an iron sbutter, through which was besitat nins roled tho battle-feld. The Retre g the Prossian was acting. d noar Munokengrata, L eteadnd waserewse, | OUR SPECIAL WAR CORRESPONDEN Frooeniok Charlos onpns E. While the Austriat wh c“'»"; in sight h.oml the right | ('o*lra-p-uhnreol The l.,nni]nn’hur-, i % 20— he Hanove o vul s below as if the earth yiclled them. iLrosiscnn, July 5.—All night the Austrian | Coptare of Gitchin by the Prossian aroy. to keep their powder dry that the” Austrians lost the da) ¢ I y filled x.h whole byckgrouud of the awful picture of which | army, cr what 18 ift of 1—still & prodig ous host—iias been JuNE 30— Actions at K rt, near Turnan, and at Chwalko- C —— Thers. ans m_l("'“‘mm& strong suspicions of sreschery ,_’n a{;\ buflnsu m’u‘: of l'm;l!.m‘r'u]ugml:ril‘ywlfal-f»"oe!t-lonl Klum weus the enter ssed down on the left of the | pouring t'rough this town and_siiil pours o, Witz between Kali g and Kivsiof. Ao Au GERMANY. e e pevoral of (1o loadlsg Glopbrals, three Of Whom | hewch porais nor bustle; the crowds are not viole rague road. In square, in colamn, deployed or wheeling | formed nil along the road, and efforts are made t under Gen, Clam-Galins 0.1 10 Totire up ity [ h sading i) though persistent; in poimt of fact, may be called soft, eg huve wiready been arrested on tho charge and sentto | )y are generally composed half or twothirds of plump ¥ I—Action at Gitsohin, k bimself is not free from cen- | voung women, who, in the absence of carriers, come regu- Ariienl of King William ot Gitsehin, Janotion | SURRENDER OF THE -HANOVERIAN ARMY—BATTLE oF | Vienna for trial, Ben Lither ard thither—-ver. wicre pouriog 1o showers of deadly | regiments, w iich are aided by the meo, Arxio {,hmho-“rc:;;mm:gmé whole liue of n.-‘»i Austrisns, .:m et under their colors again. Connt’ Mensdorf bas jast MJ ¥ 2—-ink . Clrassc i 4. if not guilty of ¢ Be'h Teast lost hi ey coul | notforce their étubborn enemy to iy, On all sides | yived, and is now walking upand dewn outside the hu blainn the Crown Prince's aowy with that of Priaco Fredericl LB ATTLRS IN i . | sure, and, if not guilty of troason, he has atleast lost bis | [,y with cards to jut their tally on. Asfor cries Here's thep et bravo but Snfortansté men, Tosdy to die. 1f they | whers § am quartored. Spoakine (o the soldiers. and giving sho | Chares LANGENSALIA—BATTLES [N POUEMIA—TOTAL DE- | ropytation for ‘miltary capacity. he Austrian ranks havo | cho” Veusate ot o o Grome. Sechlackt,” fuo. JULY 3—The battle of Sudowa, PEAT OF THE AUSTRIANS—AFFAIRS ON THE RIINE. | been thinned by frequent desortions, especially among the you never hear s word of the kind. _Iu the nmgnmmm‘ could do o more. At the side of tbe Prague road the fight | weary, foutsore men Lttle g.fis of moury to get food and to- Italian recruits in whom cven the rigor of Austrian dis- | o¢ an office o boy will sometimes offer you a piper in an went on with incredible vehpmeuce. The Austrians bad still | bacen. A# yot there are no orders f.om headiuartora to wose, gt ; an immense force of artiller®, end althouga its concentrated yrectiof gt o A Fron an Uccasional Gortespondent. ! [ i ] e I e i L sl ot Haiut Tibbeey £ Havrx Bavew, Thunday, July 5, 16, | bl hus ot boen able bo duonch, B, 05 of PytrioL. | undertane, with'ha air s if o had atolén 1t be sebor hae o Po a0t o1 Vha Tistug Groand sbove, a0 ot last by 116 | omsther e wanted 10 60, 1s declared Unsate. and is Closed ani | _ In tho number of The Fortnightly Review, for July 1, | Tho surrender of the Hanevorian arm) to tho Prussisns s Tt is no wonder that the Emperor Francis Josoph | more than two or threo to sell. A New-York newsboy divergence 10 %0 may poiuts to anawer the encmy’s caunon. | wbandoned. Sach s i¢ht e st hud all the woods na | e find a paper by Dr. Max Sohiosiugor under tha ab ot s tound Limselt in a dilemma, and despaired of relieving his | rughing up the Burg or Wein Strusse under the inflaence Many Austriins must have fallen by their own astiller, Tor tweniy m 1w around presont wouid be worth a | Whick contains much entertaining circumstanti 1 which took place on Fridsy moruing (Jme 29) has been o | ruined fortunes. It must be a bitter repast of **humble 0,.,,.,..%.“1‘, would surely create the most lively con- Oace 1 Austrian col dx{[nrnll‘n'iu“;u{ from the Freat | pilerimage en masse of all the Royal Academy. u'n.,..‘.n._....m.u.,. W prooeed to make some extracts | xovers blow o the hopes of tho Confoderaion, which wers | pie n.’..; he M{'m'lfim«-d I fl!‘ He fully m-r--lvt-« lh‘; sternation. ¢ titude below, h I bayonets, led by its officers in ZWITTAU—4 p. m.~Jastarrived; town fu'l of & 1diers. . | from the papor: \ 3 4 » ’ .. | idess of Louis Napoleon expressed in the fumous letter o . font waving Gaps and sabers, woot straight t the wood | guge. and wouoded, Al the trains tek-n ML korvplons P IMABI’S POLITICAL RELIGION. t00 oxtravagantly elscod by the report of Austrlan suc- | jype )] 1o Drouyh de Lbuge, offors to plics Venolis at Th il o R i t arousd Kiam ani drove back ibe Prussian e, bt | §otrains for passorgern, Tho last oneinos aud carringes sro | = Tn hiv rocent dispiteh-s and circilors Moy Von Blemark | cosscs in Bolemin Tho docisivo battle was fought at | the disposal of thie Emperor of tho French, and solicits his | o¢oiird (00 v s g A (i gy begpond were staggered by farful voueys of musketry. Uttioers | fousing for the south (rlany, which ia -8 milos awas. Thero | has never forgotten to bring into proiaence the genernl 10- | §yneangalza op che 27th, tho Prussian troops under tho | mediatton for the establishment of peace between the bel- | Op SOU™ -ause they understand very well that they sre or wounded. T Down | ure no post horees on the o, we hear. Just as 1 was aboat o b s & gt o el ot Pl B o i g e ¥ e M tass 14 Sy the Diftscos:| Obigwl fo/ TEs pURIUERHIER X et UL 30 0 wiaus, but they were received on the bavenet | to take the chonce of our own tired horses, worn out by re- Y thorongh-golog # Ger command of @on. Flies, It is stated that ouly 6,000 Prue. | ligerents. Tus Ewperor hastens to aceept the overtirss | well corucred by strict laws makiug their parouts or fricnds point and wich clubbed muskets, and were driven back (0 the | poated marcbings, being sble to drag us to 1 i, Professor o specife Pro P 4 against abost 90,000 Banovorians well | OAUSS; 804 81000 RropoResn sLsuiecios ¢4 the Kings | roononsible for them under heavy p--un\)li:-«, that draX wed sotme were carried off prisonéds in tne | Dumiciolier, the great Vieunese surveon, camo as dews ez ma s pot together. What | &47% ¥ & Lk w8 well | Of Vrassia and Traly. - Whatever may be the result, Louis | Gufeiet Ul cereily voted uspiotubte. Occasionally fuis Of Prassians were oom | chind. I wantey 8 oarrisgo 10 £0 o boadquerte o e 4 e gin evided with traias of artillery and batteries. The | Napoleon will doubtless get u large slice of the loaf, and | ¢o 505 or o double row of seversl bundred farmers in , sbowin Bone, but Le offered to let ne and w1y compsnion go dow in % wed i 1849 08 siavghter on the sidoof the former was terrible, The | butter his broad on both sides. The on the ‘Ger- | TR it GO "Drocches and vl dab fili | e, ta this vistaliy'1s cortalnly exhilarsting, thongn | DISOK Shoopskin brooshos and velret Tonl 0N Sing . - ¥ ' &, thouglh | 4vo00 tho street in charge of single seornful looking™dr; ters of capitulation, whick wore arranged by Gen. Man- | fhec’y it LU rq s s " disuppod . - y they havo saffered too many disappointients to bo confi- | o goar wilh n note-book in his hand. If they come from the 2ith I trainn fll of wounded men and surgeons just nbout to start for .uglecox(nl\‘en are Bow in tr bx;;;h}:rlli:‘np.th + from right to | Airdenif we vould lead hln;u.e curia wwad hurses and drivor. - o, 16 Siuiine 60 Eh Clesta us uing, so that from tight t0 | The ba ¢ louked wel, toufh), wero signed on the mowing of the dont, much less sanguine. rybody sighs.for peace, ¢ 1o the flames of 10 villages, aud the fashes of guis und | Jeiy ¥ Hers wo nro 16 miles from Zuwittan, | but by Proas King sad Rogal s ot is detcetod 5 the game of politicians, and 1618 & s "".‘;‘.h“i"-"lk;-}{--l'll;ghlnml.-r.;ne ‘traveling ! at tho rate of 1} wiles an kour, and | sian soidier ca, but not within tg hard task to German good-aature to shed frateraal blood l"l::rflnnluir?l' nu'l:?u?:l':flnlu J&r?llliu:':}truf.‘. iag s, bed wusketgy, contended with the su that pierced the clouds for | We tave bees s0as of stoel, and the s of | the tralo w m of Haaover. The private prope, contest which seems to them unworthy of the sac; Driiling is coustantly kept up with the greatest coerzy ¢ not_get isto Bition till 9 o'elock a. m . if even | Prossinns, aud the honor li' 1il.min nuc‘.g th wge. It was 3'clock. The eff rts of tte Ausirans to | theo. The plce is ebokod wita carriages aud engine 1 olsimed in conciasion; er on another | v - A - 4 gy et e Sutir emter o Al snets e | ol e oy aior and brect 1o 1" | venied Ms abuse 0n fhe ‘tricolor, “ihe ciors of faeur: | IALAS 4T AU VIOFLY AL, The olies of \he army ¢ fice. I bave no doubt that, at tho iustance of Louis Na- | {4t froquent. platoon firing and charging double | parole not w serve iaus, bu e pere | poleor o A¥0 & LOIPOTATY Crasal : ) v Iy by the it and the | ¥ wus, but are per- | poldon, we shall huvo u temiporary cosation of arms, but | guicle '<{th whooping and 'm,,cgmgm,‘_mwmumm to look forn settled peace immediately appears to be THE AUSTRIANS premature. bave an omniwm gatherwm appearnnce as scen at the drivei down in & be.pless mass toward K wigei iz, quisering, | tnue now, for nothing can be doue but resign oueself to its | rection,” which are worn ¢ atior; as shot And. shell tare tLrough M. ‘Alles (5 | favors or its froWnS. " -4 oldier.” (Tha P “ pegretfully-obedien i their arma, horses “ll personal offi Vo o army wore t | Muitted to Fuap cocknig ©enjoy the same rights and 4 of | rman cocknde | They are " Artillery stili thuudered with a force and violence Biusy, July 6, 11 8. m.—As our train was ahunted tosllow | that time, a e already rennrke hich might have lod & Siranger 1o suoh Scencs o think 10 | & auleker oue 10 pas, I transforred mywalf 10.n horsa bos in | by 1be side of the Prussian.) How e the Prussian adiinistration - —.—— enemy could withstand. TLC Austrien cavalry stul hung {he 1atter, and arrived here about an buur ngo, but only to find | mark now order the Prusinn s soasod under the furmer G railroad dopot, I bave not learned to distingnish the White thauder-clonds on the fliuks, and threateed the front | that it 1s impossitl: to send u letier to Vienun to-day in tice | obedient.” 10 wear (he Germnn aud privates give np their arm BAVARIA. Croats, Serbians, and other Sclavonians apart, but some of of tho Prasiacs, keeping them in iquite aud solid oolumns | for ibe Enlsh mul, Hemdanariets uro cxpucted tobe evian | aot ouly on his helmet, but « oo bigined AR Arorpd g - — e et hies Benross, a4 obhers Chinese placing the Elbe and Adler between them and the enewy. o l,'.,’;..d.,'(“.-“';‘.m'; s u::::'\:-‘.fl-.n“’-fi'&,':,:,:,:".‘ff e Erassias Goversmen and retuen homo under thelr 44er :”w“",""‘;_':;"y teom GANOTITER CRAPTER BEGUN AND FINIS' . as much as they do 8oy comumon specimen of the clean L be yrip of tio Prossians conld Lot be shaken, Word was | cry of (he poopie, 8ad i is only to be hoped that the blsme may | in Erfurt looked npon the prescoce of thea ™ not to serve againg, Provetds e Kine of Haftokr fas | £rom Ovosiiy Gorrespondeat. white man, Among the Hungarian officers which 1 have brought to me to leave at once, for the city gutes were about | rest on the right person, whoeverse may be, fai sign of the times” It be ooty conld thereby lure th | ndition® L otted fr e Mowics, July 5 1005 | 9060 were vory dsiniy bodies wilh thin walsts, peculiar Deing cloaed, and the gunners on the wails wero laying their i ‘e sl and the hesgt of Germany into bis eamp. He wil | ! o arestyvor S The second €, , Joly 5 1560 | pative luhmnololnmng,andnry high heels, ending in & pieces to cover the funndations aud the causewavs. Oae more A Diepateh from the Avehdate A » even yet s e 10 do bitter pennuce for the contemp | Wehave sccounts of tho results of the [ o 5T Sater of the European drama handsomely | point a little more than half an inch in diameter. A regis Hlance sbowed a very hell of fire—carnficlds, highwags, slopes. P roun the Avehdabe Sibrecht. |..‘.u...‘... wher umty which he fn former tmes ro ften | exciting » emian and 8 nds just in time 10« y0 ot sond you s fow memo- | mentor two of Italians also passed through here; they m:;‘x;-x;.(, nAv:‘! ‘;‘ l;h-‘sl(-or;-rv}l"‘!ulxhdnlm sl “-nl ride un:]l Archduke Albrecht on learning the news of the | eyn y,--g.MMm.e o1 wiahes bo then exprescd has | gronties | ¢ “l‘“’ = I'fl" g m'~” is Jd- rived | randa by this week’s steame:. 5 were jolly enough, snd were otlicered by Italiaus, who, in i Avsiria shaiyered aad, M@ low, it Lappened | battlo at Sadowa sent the subjoined tel gram to the Empor Veon fulilied. Blood and fron are now to unde the ket in privato leliers ~which are published more nd a stirring chapter it has bees takiug their coffee at the Ober Pollinger, jabbored vor mofe Tean only el T3 bearsor, e T dm toid i the | i Fieid Marsbal A ronanke Allreokt to Tils Majosty the | whose p L raveling he bad tever b lieted—whether in PRIy L The: Jemil Dat ahlay are yesi], -oANd A Biris Ghepes 8 DR . iy preliminary ten | fust in their own langungo without appesriug to be v luat the, .-f;;;':."m?e'.fi:&";%of.‘u?".fr was not lost, and in ¢ Emperor. favor of Pr question whioh t:me lune caa & s o preacut & distinet and harwonious pietyre | 978 of quiet, when the armies hustened & ,y.0 ooy of | contented with their ot That the gutrors threw their picces ioto the Eibe and 1210 hd mx.ff:'.fi\g'i-’;a‘i.o;:‘:;.‘cdf'lTm'#::niofi” .f " ytzyn":r!lv:: :"-m';l“lll; rjlesume, b—f;';-'-nm‘,'n 'uu el Qoo al state of affain A ‘Ir: llltnhll:h'l‘;hun ver, that the | the mountains dividing the North from the Soutu, =, the TOWN TALK. Lr:lr':‘dr:'&“ ::l-:;:! ‘L-hr(:.’w'd’.f.’xt.'\-r;l;n,lx:{‘.,‘(.;“fl?.:f'mil"ml“]dxl;‘ efent at Katisbon fn 187 came the brilliant victory at Aspern, | and does still is in eryiung Tmuu!ulzm 5 MJM"';" } Y “‘l‘ ,w',"r porbatin, of war m-v( people refused to realize that Geriany would enact an) Out of some 1,200 students at the University, 600 havo X y over p ridges hastily Inid, \er the army nor the nation loses courage our prospects | thea thoug l_nnnd -..4‘?- ho _atragsis Wootty net of | briof summary of the events of Lt A| thiug more than a parliamentary skirmish, broke, not wul- £ me idto the urmy as officers, If they can seo st t, Holstein, which Le el o pted as officers on_application, presumed 10 naliily Qo .l,,,,,.m. denly, indeed, but, like the drizzle of o * north-caster,” b'mluu ro finst drilled, then placed in command over appears that tho Fussiun | ut first a shower of outpost engugements along the sunny | ‘he peasints, Wiy have no encouragement to aspire o Herwartd, touk up their e of | ido of the Ginnt Mountains in Bobenis, then it ineroused | Fruayd 018 Thestudents hero ate all oposed ta 1 | eeadually, day by day, withont ever ccusing, as regularly | elocted by the poople. Ital ;"f_ o lm’l‘:r‘:ulk:-l' :{;“:u!. and sunk or burnt ere the columns could cross over ; that luc- & favurabio now as they were then, - co irains, Teserve ammunition, guns, aud prisoners, the | | The son and beir of the Field-Marshal Archdoke Charles | revolution, and an sttack on written rights.” | to comprehiid more Spoils of that enormous host fell into the hands of the victors, | geews to have entirely forgotten that the Freuch tovk powes. | bo afterward carriod on 0p ¥ ewn pocount, notwithstand: | which are in preparat who remained mesters of that hard fought field, covered fof | sion of Vieuna soon after the battle of Aspern, and that the | Ing these same rights and fh0 remonstrances of Europe wiue mil 8 with myriads of the slun, Well might Benedek | 1s ¢ Ewperor Fraucis 1. of Austria was forced to sign an ig- | tria, whom be o Lest Tederal ally of Fro | ive of the urmy eorps under | March from Dresden scient power of Germany,” ' Allis lost but my life ! Would to God Ibed lost | powinious peace ou the 14th October, 1509, and the ""”."-“n‘m a1l the military force at his | direction toward Bobems, ichaw, Gabel, and . be now atisek - oo - | tows he inte 1 5 tho sun as s to its meridian, until the combined op- 1, if i e ben writing my sad parrative, such as it is. from my T M ioee her oot of Germany, With Italy. theofyring | other suiall tows in Saxouy the inter o 3 ued op- | and, if tpoosed, it is only on the grouna f ita | an notes taken whilo the battle raged in the town of Kouiegriz The Needle-Gu e e o, who s tarnod bail a dusen of diviae-nighted | of tho westorn road raree _"”"f""fl"" oo mh,mm, shen 000 | ally of Frumie, Vm'“z"b‘“"“s tion has been Homie in the intervais afforded by a depressing retreat—in foroed Paris Correspondence cf The London Times. -uml7nlmuuldwr-. e s now in elown aiiasce; and Littau, aud at Danon, o s oulsy uid Beally comes the grand crash of yesterday our | fosted at the tpolutment of & superannuated Prince to Balts, amid choking dust, 1o nairow roads—by the sides of | PARIs, July 7.—The famous needle-gun was to-day | baviug for 14 years declared Bimseit the arch ewemy of all | they encamped. On the 27t 3 b} which, according to the brusque | the command of ths army of the Confederation, (ireat ' iata, he now regards Garibalds, the oo of all mea | gl Prossian army was ut Hithnerwasser, wh telegrams, there Were nat Jess than 600,000 more or less | exertions are being maos ¢o forward additional troops te actively engaged, and the¥illed and wounded figure up | Fraukfort, ., Austrians 30,000, Prussians 20,000, The — e ve; the Austrisus are prossed buck to the MILAN. middle of Bohemia (on a line from™ Prague east), their ——— corafields—in rooms in country villages, at every momeut ot | exhibited in an armorer's shop window in the Rue Ricbeliot. recolution! vest. All telegraphs apd mails and traing are stopped, and | It ustracted groups ot people, woldiers and civitiaus, to the | that most deserves to b T ¥ ‘when those lines may see the light, if ever, I kuow not. 3 eritic .l:' and .‘-."2' uuul.-nnrl";:'r:r‘«:u -l'he'u':?:;::!':uy’l:duj:m jes. YFin TUE RETREAT. J taple of the gzrnfll&l}m e e e, which Lo has calied the representative of the rev placo between o small body of Austrisn bussass and a squadron of Prussian cavalry. The conflict was severe, and the Austrisns wero cowpelled to give way before the 1 sball continne my story. It was in sorrow, if not in si. > ' - . > ‘ bl o s apy o by Count Bismark | superior Prassian foreo. The next day (Juno 2¥), the f fonce, onr escort passed through the Marimsohes-Thor of 10 € in evs 1 you | order and law, ure now ppealed to by ~ : strongholds, Josephstadt and Koniggris “Kbaggr o noouseivable olamor of artil | hurd] D acquaintanes who Mot stop to explaii to | uuder the irresistible pressure of the moment. Noiwifiscand- | Prussians advanced to Minchengriitz, where 8 desperate | STORE » g Oniggrita, and their com- pave ETW igetlis 1n the il of o4 B e Ak yuul‘fw:whun-'fm-'w'hm'nwn. P e saways | ing thas. he is aaything but vacilating and ch le. U | struggle took place, and they were forced te ful Lack, | munications in the Eibo valley, connectite Prague aud T AL AR TN 3 o weans, be is udahakea dn his | The Austrians fired upon them from the windown of the | Vieona, are lost; Prague is abandoned, only the Prus- AUSTRIANS AT MOUNT SUELLO—TIIE AUSTRIAN cipled in the choice of ‘1.l is nsaiaks conviction that the power of Prussia must decline if sbe J houses, a8 they came up from Hihnerwasser, and made Dot [ncroase bor territory o Gerineay by waln force, Thie | terrible havoc in their ranks, A spirited ougugement olso wove on. convie*ion ia the sum total of his politleal religion. On thin | [CTnR b0 O BT A Shout o mle aua & half % Faris correspondent of The Liverpool Journal narrates | poiut he is, with all his trivoliv troe faratic; and for | o b v o ster, ul a o ha s follows the toils and disappointments of the inventor of the | tuis vlject be is ready to muke any sacrifice, and brave every | from Minchengribta, One Austrian regiment drew the enemy between two fires, and made bloody work enough “traius. borss and foot, and wag -} o and ‘the onomy wero alrex nd til nigbtfall | aro thronged U.Lw-!-h-uu at the specimens exhibi whops, the roar of caunon never stopped for a moment, for the A tae armorers and the nconvenience is sometime: trian guusers outsige and luside covered the retreat till tie greot that seraents de vile have repeatedly to *iuvite” the w0 sians seem not inclined to enter it lest it should prove a GUNSBOATS ON LAKE GARDA—TIE MILITARY trap; and the army of Benedek, ntterly defeateq, spinning snd whirling toward the hightinds lying SITUATION UNCHANGED— THE HAPSBURG PRIDE unction of the two ranges, the Ludetea and Maerish CERT, glnunllh\-, which together form the castem angle of Ro- | pron, :", ::I_;“z::.l:;“'_ through New Kinig- t. Our route lay toward the south-en e D scen sl s fun: The noodle gun is well known to be the produce | danger B Cveitvos told us the it had £o abandan hellrilo st | of the log study and perseverance of au Enlish officer who MISMARK A8 A DEFUTY, Of it The Prussians were niso exposed to 8 hos firo from | hewis: thelr rear, Bowever, connccted diructly with Sl TR S ‘ stationed at a solitary outpost in Canado, amused his w0 ordor more frequently | sharp-shooters in the Waldstein Castle. Tho bridge at icnna by raliroad. = . : o S PO SO The result of all this is that Count Mensdorf, Austrian o wis quite s skirmish on the afiernoon of the 34 de zh the inundations, Thoe 1y & was not | wh C " nn‘:‘zh‘;:fi ::rn‘::%‘cnmn. A’: :5 o m. ted (July 4):| leisure hours with experiments ju tho rough construction of a | Gen, Denedek and b came in some- | substitute for the rifle which he had damaged by letting it o g ¢ r,"h-lfi? ot e 06 1o eventug of the | drop down a procipice Wil i pursuit of @ bear. It was mons has frand it u Kloster was bumed. Every place in the vRinity r h I grieved | had been dreadfully raveged by the Prussians Minister "”““"f_"‘ nirs, hastons to-day to K‘"l"f with | ot Mt Suen. ahoye Lake Idso, between the Garibaldians osts of | g their march. ‘{’lm fight continued to rage ng Willism of Prussia, and Bismark, at Reichenborg, in | and Austrians, to .oy : N ¥ rthera Bohemia, in referenee to sowe fmportant uter- | noran oo o battlos b ,,"" official bulletius givo the im- national considerations which have just at this moment | POTtance of 8 Battie; DUV S.yong the fact that Garibaldi In the |yl Friday, the 26th of June. The Austrians aid he will give sp command. The staff | ¢1uvost b{ wccident that the diseovery became pilpable to the | ; all " more beciuse the day was | solitary bunter in the woods, But no seoner did it become | same year, | Ivocate of the old | Ly o e amtie, Sadaned the TRkt won but for the fata O itnimtlo very centor of the | mnuifeet (0 his seuses than be resigned bis commission in tho | system of cuwme ra back i e widdlo | 7 U enghis to leavectbs olty. Babitants | pecurred to Franeis Joseph; the objeot of which is—now | Was on the ground, and WaS Eie-. by g spent ball, the ol a tied | it the Lives of tens of ‘thousand of quiet Germans are | affuir bardly deserves meution. Tt 8eCu... pguygver % o Tent unguarded. - Bene. | army, roturned to Europe, and, as a matter of course, burricd | agcw, he Lyudly exp fom which Was 80 f8eCO0D! " to the War Office with bis iavention. For more than a year | consider the progres but the physieian and the dean. The Austrians he 9 sucrificed—to sea whether the jealous monarchs can aeree | jp relief the strategy of Garibaldi and to show P “ ~ he has e s o e Wit ol ard. o = ¥or more thana y ey el e | @ i both of the & 1 the castlo f alry and T are ng the road, bur sty there was the inveutor ph D suspense. o was bandied sbout | my during the present cent t every trads should lhimi disturbed possession ol ol e town and the eastle fora 0 0 truce, or even F - = B - 3 A ol " - 3 ere ay 1 5 2 \ perhaps to 4 eivil arrangement of the #uh}n-hnn ay cat in on our line by a cross- | from one official to another during all this time, merely to b | tho number of ita appreatio but were driven out before Saturday night, the 3uth, question us to wEko lhnll':nlu Germany and who shall get thus far managed to keep a large force of the enemy on tue On the 20 ho was apparently L od by law to fix | and the strong guard with us constantly on the alert. | told at last that Government did not feel disposed to aiter the | a price for each quality of t ir loss is reprosented by Prussian nccounts o amount 4 £ d | 4 18 probubly an exaggoration, Mean. | Ontofit. 3 ’ walch for his movements, | 04 In short, the air is flled with the rumors of peace. Now | retreating from his positions on Lake Gorda and concsn. | a1t . people gathered in tho streets and at the cross | principle (f the arms employed. b the only modo of protec oo to 2,000 wen, but t oo watch the e stream with dism Tt was then that in disgust he bronght his invention to Paris, | the oppression of capitel sts Oue of the ehief subjeots of dis- | whife whout' 6,000 Prussians are sald to have entered J ) it is that ce loows up. Telegrams are said to have " been interchanged between Poris and Vienna, and propo- trating on-the extreme left of the Italian army. On tre “Thero is a railwa. from this, but all | and he obtained an interview with the Emparor, who listened I that year was the establishwent of the Tight of the | yo i .'flTln- and ;; ng xme boenn:‘le-l nn;. There s no withflur:«m- arent fjnm-‘t“m':u d;wnpfl«m n':‘ the ::un’:“:!l:er uv‘vm’t the lvle';"“h: and during the dehates on this b "'h"“l".(fll::m:lu::;: :;l.l.m,.‘:! ?.‘,‘:’;‘C:::‘m::n(“bl.l:; » ; the telegraph is officially ocen) At . our T UL, eXALIN e plans and sections brought by the of ointit Bismark, who, by b1 cOUtemp ucus AZgress ve cou- o, " . rsnllopt Vel ias ing ol o he elgrapd f offcaly oceapled. At4 . . our o | gon, exsiinsd b s G, eLORTTALL 108, Gkers | B gare s 19 Som, on DT, | cuntnulited.. G peovailaa sy Eragne.tn con | M amirod-ah somevhed e thier hnete aedisl | moming of e 31 b wis appurwmlly pack seuit e e paintel and slow, - Wounded on all sides, fragmonts of | whioh had boen laid before him, declared it wemed to him | Ho 'dented, ns be afurward did when e beoamo a h of the Prussians, and vigorous | B0 e tekrbbdre ol i aud | along Lake Gorda. On the same day, st 1 o'clock p. m., be LAl A o e rosistaes Lined with weary suldiors | Tiabie to the grest objoction of being too delicate for feid use, | Minister, that the Houso could cltim this right, which is | measires were wdipied to give them & waria reception, | Austris ofers to accopt the intervertion of France, to give | 1 10,000 men at the foot of Mt. Suello, whero on Aus. e woandaror coaling their foas, on both | and abraply sounded sholiitle gong whioh stauds upon bis | tho surcst guaranty of ite existenco, aud ite most powertul | Yuraing to anotlier quarter of Hohemia, und going back up Venetia to Fruice, on condition fat Prossia sball not | trian foreo neld a fortitiedposition The' vides of us wagous. guns, cavaley of all kinds, Tyrolese Jizers, | bureay, ‘aod slightly rising when tho sher entered at his sum. | d¢fonse against any unconstitutional aftack from the other r dates (which 1 shall endes ! Make distinet, | bo allowed to retain Saxouy and Hatover. Ruwor travels BN sition. ' The *"{L‘"fl“"" of Humeariann, Gronts. 1aiians, TFur uine milb we traversed & | mons, dismiseed the visitor to admit other importanates. It | States 8T e was. soforred 10 1he oo | theri pih ot a liiilo diflontty) to i to make distinet, | po iy tho news of yesterday—and tmorrow. tho movement seems to be that the retreat of the 24 was e couriry 10 1 tomiscll, & considerable town. wbich | wad then that he belook bimself, nrined with bis needio gun, | witution which tho Kicg hud sworn o proacrye, bo rejLied i i AR diffeulty) to tho evening of Tues- | “puy it is doubted whether William ma Bismark will | § feint, and that the three rogiments who marchied to Mt. we entered early In the eveniog. The streets wero filled with | to Holiaud. But when arrived t tbe Hague he found that his | bis usual frivolous au offhand way that bo did not see why | £4F 1UB¢ ‘l’:" wo find de 5x|min Al rli" lzunud :.-q‘.n consent to any postponewent of hostilijes, as Prussin Suello passed across from Salo, mmhxgfi from the even- the ddbris of the army. Fortanate for us the Prossians had re- | resources had dwindled away to such au extont that he was | all that relates to the constitution should be surrounded by u | SFIY COTpA hammering away o tho Austrinus and Saxons | o1y only lose thereby the ndvantagos it hus guined; and w{ollhe 2d until the afternoon of the 3d with scarcely & *snob a wholesome lesson fiom the Austrian cavalry. eompc:l»:dwdvlazm- prosentation to the King for want of | sort of halo, and every joke upon it be “!.,.1,4,"4,,.”, near the liitle Bobewian villages of Podol and Turnau, | (0 ious truco would enablo Austry to arm it halt to take breath, When the attack came to be made it propen costume ©o appear 0. Meanwhile he becamo ncct- | tion. Iie himsell bad sworn, sad be, o the consiittion—not | The ‘o (Bohiemian for valley—podol—which name m{m'mmu note famous touch-needle gun, % | waa found that only a part of the volunteers eould get inta entally scquainted with one of the geutiemon attached to tha | to the existing one only, but also any futuro constitation, wi 1 to 1wore than twenty localities in Bohem P action from the nuture of the position, and a storm in Prassisn Lexation at the Hague, and to whom he recousted | oll iis amendments. 1io would, therefore, treat with utter | uated in deep meadow on the Iser which is there n_nar- THE PRUSSIAN GUXN. those mouptaing came on with & drenching rain, which 0 2 rendet | I Docs any one call the Austrians cowandly because they dered the ratarod guns of tho Italian .flim entirel tion nine miles a! uos of extraurdinay agiiation. quence of the ap “There s no pursuit, atile of Modern Times Wow the Greatest Frosss : e - ievances. . conterupt the righteous anger of the rals at bis turuing | row stream only about 30 feet wide, but deep e h o J was Wes. B DAL G TaDOs, i enod o with faterest, The brother-in: | So somtltution luto fidicaie, When Count Schwerlo, who | drown a man. A D o beid o JeAds et -0 tho south. | have ogain adopted tho herotofore successful maetiod of | uscless. Tho volynice From The Londoa Tinace, July 10. Lo THis e b s et o e e G o | o000t ha. presbdentia) ohair, upon.thie Tomarked thet bo | r2'e0d of tho village. Tho deft bank i bordered with | saving the House of Hapsbung by rupaiug 1 euch 6o | lantly, and the e RSAALY R o hava bohared yuey gsb * e dotails of & great battle like that of Konig- | Beriin, and bo lost uotime in repairing with the Engliatwan | would bo obliged to eall the Lonorublo wember b order if bo y ? ol Sonnw 1, and very unfui to as Pravo an army ' he BEht was to compel the” Aus- ' nig 1 ot meadows of great extent, the right is cov clusion would be rash, and very un R ¥ | trians to abandon the position una, } i arbiaor Bodowa are not quickly lsarned. Few havo au op. | $0 Berlia. The needle gun was tried, cxamined: sndsecepted | mads the conuitiotion of 1 countsy an otject of devialon, be | L0l o, which usgally in the val KBt I8 fo¥eir | =1 know of some American oficers ix 1y dud ibis theif | Tho War.Ofice has undertakn o v T i poesible space asole ot 80 ) i ” ! ] e - ehe " _undertakes o LRI e o e e oy | Iy rewarded, and epcouragod 1o establish himself n Prumis.” | that Pl b O eshdent g vocasion £ cal | Bttain to remarkable luxurinnico and beanty. On a hight | opiulon s any on o Continent, EBy bad g0od easot | wholo truth, and nothing but the truth e o s p e e oo, o tha other hand, says: *The Frumian | pinsto orders and when the Presulent carriod oat Lis threat | above Podol is the littlo cluster of stouo Louses called | b rins if reports tell tho truth of 5t o e, | bus it ie an open queation whether the ordinary method of 4 y ol Gen. | official Iying is not better than the method of iruth-teliing o as well ag in the importance of the interests at stal P, ading B o e e ot e o Moy a ctor | Heedio guo resemblos, n ol casentlal respects an arm invented | e shook bimselfliko & dog who hus Just come ont of the water, | Swigaw, affording exttaordinary means of defonse, ‘The | tho Prussian breach-loading " fosotl the nte batie b seldom boen surpasted, Ny &g | by two kiaglishmen; Messr. Hanson snd Golden of Haddere: | and mado some moro emarks, which wo Wil not repant Lere. | feht wis commercod on the Prissian sideabout Do clock in Gablontz, which was deputes (0 provent, the junction of | ghus fur porsued. For example, in this affair of t. Suello, OFer & §roas expanne of country,and were lod by Roval Gener. | feld, and patented by tnecy fn §178 SORECEY R S ot Horen- PISMAUK AB A DIPLOMATIST, the evening (Tuesday, June 26) and continued moro or less | the advancing Prussiant. Sy Top o it &t | the report first published mado it appear o battlo of some AT ot Tadcy ooy comimaale Aprafiegy | ber,1odl. I s sad that Mr. Goldea roeived an ordor from | e dglomatiefe dates from e Suomer of the year 1851, | violently throughiout the uight, At firstthe Austrians op- | 00 the contrary,® was MRS K6 LT T efore equal | jmportance, in which Garibaldi was wonnded and bis wen bistorians have disputed for haf a oontary ahout the incidents | 1 Kiog of Frussis fo° BEh MS C00 Sty o these models | Jie had long given up that voneration, or. 84 be eade hiitwelf | jou0d buta singlo brigado to the superior foree of the onom Numbers of infautry, This €00 shoots six times & minute, | Jefoated. It throw a chill over the country, and created of Leipsic and Waterloo, it may bo that tbis battls, whieh {n | the so-called Pri L] .l outions, | expressod it, * adoration of Auatris, whiel be bad mbived | K5 00U GG ction on both sides of T | and keeps in order < “"‘l SRelde. other gun in use. But | pow distrusts of ability of the general m:{n‘,‘cm of the Wil M moiber's k. This feline b been veplaced by | 00 BTN REEOE, MO8 T OF e nignt | the dend lo o the BAE felds=threo or four to oue of | war, - One of the most intelligent men in the couniry sid 3 whom a0 Austrians—speak most eloquently on the sub- | 1o e after reading the bulletin; * Itis not » defeat which Tmaguitude equals Leipsic and far surpasses Waterloo, will for | Wee made.” TaSy & yeor be the subject of ontroversy. But we are happ) T the convietion that Prassia cauld not fulfill itn mission in Ger. | ael 110t Fibsiyd ORI D ‘iriven outof the Bund, Hohadal | they were refuforced by two Saxon brigades, who at- | Woe™ Ajready the Soutiern German b i '-;"l‘h"! saddens me; it i8 the want of concert of action. Aay 12 whether | child knows we ought to strike four blows at once. Duf, T having at the seat of war a correspondent who is well quull- | Modern Warfare—The Prussian Needle Guu, | wany until Austrin o ot te o Pro; v his s o0 bis sl *\\ll povepal | tempted to drive the Prossians across the river. This wao | 44 0y Henry's and oter riffes, and are mt. oish them two or instead of lh-'ll‘ La Marmora fights on the 24th of June at Bed to form a Judgment on such operations, and Wko has ps ready bad . mes, Jaly & y bad long copyorsatio) h cipk From The Lendon Times, Joly furfuting #rr o0 arab, and Ll |t uct successtul, and many of tho onenay ware ¥ | 0N ericans conld ot b ot o fur doced |8 description, which, conriderto mnlrcum:llnoelun: s Toht be writte the effects of | Lgeders of the Gpponit jor W/ was en, is & marvel of aocurate ohservation. A eurious essay mig] n on the effects of | diplomatic action at Frankfort did indsed chicfly consist in | tated into the water and drowned. They still worse " e Tt is not 00 muck to say that we Jearn from bis letter more | eivilization in -.n?..u.‘ ‘or inereasing the horrors of war, | offeriag hostile opposition Yo Autrin o every possible occa- | in the ,,",,,.,”,, to otorm Vool The Austrians did not sue- | threo humlrw'l thousind I‘li €3 il skt order. Custozza, Garibalds on the 3d of July at Mt, Sucllo, and on the other side TUE BAARIAND FIGHTING, 700, probably, Cialdini somowbers to-morrow; and wben all than was known of the action by iLe gre.t majority of those | There is no doubt, on the one band, that the cultivation of | sion. H the I be awed by the stiff bearing of sad. howeve: snln s Pru who took part o it “The pubic in, kdeeds wed seryed Uy | cionco and the dévelopent of ineesnity provide us with a- | Count Bos the laat ma o e had with bim were not feas | S6°1h BOVOYCT, I o g L hedige (whiok had b Ihnmnrn_umsewondnml events of war almost befure | struments of destruction infinitely more terrible than any | piquant in their way than Lis foroer encounters with Ierr b ‘fx oy -{u 1;,‘.. ard in the digection of Gitsehin, D B eed away. from tha bettie 14, We learn | which havo been kaown to former eés. The caunon, 1tsel s | Von Vincke and Connt Sehwerus, and bin moro vecent gnes | burted) wud berst BFRNT Ho (oq fiawl G of By oy Simultaneously wth the gieat battle in Bohemia, the | the rest have fini vi D | o Kindios up betwen Erfust and Fulda, near Frankfort. | et When :’fii}‘;‘flp.fi'fl'.’;fi'f,l Ry Letbargie as the Bvarians bave seemed thus far, their | Garibaldi bed been o tritlo and had sehieved its object, 30 speedily and with snch ‘comparative accuracy the general | long the most f-a:fal engine of mod o Virel Terr Von Bokum-Dolffs, With o B s e are oeh o Tamdk bow seoras | Mkl £ pio Lo 00 repoating tie. aad. 1he oecaageof whaks | Tier oo Visoko oo be e S e ek witeh, howeyer. | Were at firs® ropulsed by a stron foreo of cavaliy, but tho | Sret action—thank to the Prussians for attacking-—eauses | tho pogula impatiercs toned dowa a gool dea, bt tird shese advantages b been, aud to undervalue the as- | salvos of artidery nho{u outdone by a few cartridges fired | was followed by no serious 1ceulte, slihough Bismark isan | nevt day (Friday, 29thj they received a réenforecment and universal rejoicin in lv'mll . The musterly inactivity of | remaius # grave doubt whether our Generals will learn to e e hick “tho. martaive of & competent eyswit. | from a gun less weigh(y and eumbrous’ than an ordinary fowl. | excellent sbot, whils Von Vigc'e. being short-alghted, Ir but | took o nof the town; but befor 9 o' | old Princo Cart leting the Hanoverian ariy be captured | pull togotlier. Some say the War-Ofties heized tho op; ‘only doe under his nose, vaen he had troops enough, and only eight | portunity of representing that Garibaldi Lad been defeated mess, written on the very fleld and op the very day | ing-piece. Butnot sclence improve tbe means of | moderatel; 0 of dueling. But even Coant | i £ o pranatathors o otemorarie, bt o e | dekirciar ke o vaely ucriaes (58 wumbers o ol ek pensmaroes s b, v aanlicd by bim that & ehalienge | buck toward Tarsiu, Tho fatest aecounts roport. that the Bistorians. The fathers of the present generation were | stroyed. The rallway is the feeder of the battl:ficldy the | seemed to be inevitabl T tunately, the friends of both fu | AT ATEE +ble to hold their adya ,‘ H1 the bitterest muedictions; and suspicion even aross as to | than the le ar Army. The inten yery diffecently sfianted with reapect to the batles Which dis | power which it gives of concentrating vast maswes of troops | texfered unl proveated the scandal, On another ccasion the SERERES B AN o r b the intetionwe tho Government to such o degroo that 1 - 1086 0 = Singuished the carly pact of the present century. Whon Napo. | on & siagle point requires that operation sbould be andertakon | Imperial Presideat of e Ao hetver sceidentally or pur, | Auother engagement of considerablo importance fook |/ Hho InLEBtORAL o s veach s nlimas 1 our Generals us to_new operations are not ve Jeon orushed the two Emperors at Austerlitz or broke uo. l(; masses equally n-rwl-g. and so the gigautic battles of | poscly is not kuow n_npp:n'mlunn- of itx sittings, contrary phud-.- on the 2 th nl‘.hln«l\‘{;n‘ilnrmh alt ‘l'rnul(-lmn“l‘v]u the :mlu h'llt'r,.'.l..':’tyon“ mm“:gwh ::‘ ;‘ : .‘.'?.:.fl‘:,";f,",]f ‘klnuw fi:)n\l personal «.hs.-m:(.:n that boats Tl - power of Prossia st Jena, there was no such clear conception Napoleon sik isto insigaificance before conflicts which | to cust: 1n . It might been ono of | Toad from Landeshut to Bobemia, It comment w6 3 useh ~ " - | down to Peschiera upon railroad, and I infer tha S0 ha o s A 1<ference o th prc of the Dl | v by ragig o th pat ek nar ke orienst fru- | hose b GrEet ! Fachenbeimetr Gaisc, at | 0'clock in the morsing, aud afler tbree hours sharp feht- | Lend Baviriorér allof South Gérmang f o would tur | crossing the Po in Imposing foree i the objsetof thia o ) ly aud armies more | abie material for the futnre, still it wil remembered in il the troops of the tenth army corps took part in the bat- | fult &1 J . ictates - | came from Furin, showing it the whole len palgne. A a” e vio e mldo: s‘&""'%'.?n 'l:- -m Jumasoas -&:- mm wo;m-xmu modern traditions. uu;‘vi.nlcmnnt 'of 1he Preyidest's moroing-coat. The emby tle. Ahu:!p (.,.f, o'clock in the llwrnoon',‘:he Prussians | grandiz '“‘““"’ ",'l,‘l: "'hfll'-mflsunmy with the Royal | river has been scoured for transports. This jutention i Krow the Anmber of mon eng s aiaioiirione it | severily BpD BoR-SOmDMARLL, e “h‘:r‘:::&“.&::hfl‘t:: .noe’ua'g:;:r”'fif"“"'T'fm'fu:fiz.whh;,:e“b:e: Hp‘r‘l' st out a stroug biigade {o threaten tho Austrian fnk | HUS0 B 'nr-?::.:.}uimi:)y“fit:;.I:npy.«‘.mfi: m?fidm? e '“"2" mhfdh' gy .-nnn::‘n-;,l:';‘{r 'rt Al“l‘"l: i Y og this coat, Which S o " | and s Aled the latter to leave Trautenau ersely! 3 by ‘s proc- | works which cover the Brid forte, U1 Seserais the conduct of the soidiem, and the variout de- | to jlico with (b6 uimort Tapidity by the stoam engioe, aud | werved i spinis, togethor wirh Frince Monclikofs fagons lk;w'_f"'""b",“nnl';l:l:“'w"’ Oriaaloy Kol ek “;',,;;“:;',‘, on | lamatig# iu favor of united Geruany, wgree in. prophecy- | other hand, ho ver, th Austriang, who had established ing foiSavaria devided continued support of the Bund, | some cavalry outjostson this side of the Minejo, ha vo THE MAP OF EUROPE. souo back, and thire are some signs of a resumption of 1 vere again driven out by the Austrians, and forced 8 ere aga ¢ ¥ the Austrians, and fore milos to go to reve them, Lad called forth in Bavaria | in order to show thot the puru]u idol was no more able der of the Regul Latls of the sction. News eame stroggling homeward that the | the, mecting almost luunediately in nter, s i ® i oumpsign m;u-.mmmunm".'.‘.um nnuhu‘ & | Lave 1o time for that eystomatic 2d methodioal pm.':":n'fen' nl‘o".‘-"bfn'd"e%:;'m.'g'..?fl:d H.'.."L.#‘::..‘fl;‘f;i::‘.‘:‘:w. the 1'ghts south-west of the town where they deemed great firm fn the city had 1t that uadt won apathor | used to be the delight of the soldier aud the despair of the | and offered anothes pof fely t0bis Beigabor. Everyoneunder- | themselves secure from further attack. The Prussians i s 0 Jietory, sad thet an armistioe, and then o ‘warikcly | presaat, Molern scieuce ecopomiaes time, and. briogs to . | #100d the kint, and o morsing coat bas ever been seen at o | represcit the aflair us o decided victory on their side, £h is the subject now under consideration, not by the | Italian operations on that line. : o result. contradioted 1w, the. publio weeks what ased 10,0000y 88 many years. Tho | sitting of the Bead since Tie thus, a8 we Luve observed, cor- | According to their assertions, they took several thousand eopt, but by the ralers of the people, hereditary and | ‘The Austrian guaboats on Lake Gorda are superior to tisuged; not openly, but iu thy strictest secrecy of Cabi- | the Italian, and have pombarded several villages on was warned 1ot to believo sl; rumors, and it was shown priori how 1 ible it was thet the s' I mm combinations of . 0f o whole Beven Years' War may now be crowded into | ti Government, until at les th ity i " ) isions. fatled, At ast, nfter T et ol to Siuiae Sromis end Szt and to asked g towiid B ol ot '-':'-'a-'.'fn'i.".?..h‘J!‘.'.é‘&‘.‘«'.‘r"l'.'.?'r'.'lflfi'&'.“i&:.'?n'.‘.':" D mothiw | Detsand by Cabinetmakers’ cliquee. Tho first groat bat- | one side. 'In_several rlnufimor the land batteries ponte, b worsh 8 O | A v e} Suprs oy T In ‘slower times t0 re- | wasill regared 1 Beriin, led &) King to recall him from | RUC (€0 NIRRT B roops, who fought with updl- | tIe hiving becn mfh" the 'ln-rnlhm-nd the Bismarks | have replied with effect, and b mofl the enemy. They -Of| but even then m vnb:.la . B0 mecount of | The fate of Northern German m' n mu".:u- fort. | St. p:.'::‘ :;'2 '{L“.‘.‘fl:.r'.- ly I:'u urx::'l;h:':i fi: assed bravery, prevented thom from completely » & :.r:xfl?‘hnnmmm {taa'v‘::u:fll’r?;nh &“’Lfl'fi?‘&‘f’.‘& ‘T”m"‘i’»"‘fi fltwm 5.‘:'.%?".’“3.'-"" matter o trustworthy then Napoleow's bul- | night, the destiny o the Auairlan Empire has been settied in | placs fof the . ndiscunont 81 Prussia, and strovs o obtein | [atin; tho enémy. R v B = 4 shw = ) - e e 8 < nisem: : e bad 1 have obtuited pretty o lota detailn of battle of | Geruany, aud Bavaria the rest; or whethor this groat | kept up. ‘ncruulvlhlruhlhhrhlhlm, e e, o e e e | Saa he whs s f g ad oory oo | bt sh AaASo 9 N0 ANV vive of | GRS (Wadaagt g o S Wi PO 100 0 QUL dulot Ll repgBNTL KOTINBARS WD 93 Bl de 24 Qe B Bz war, T S & i t !