.- HASZARITSZ .GA ZE'|'TE, _'~.!U LY 7. from its fire. Presently a Russian came cnolly through an einbraaure right in front of them, and, stooping down here and there, seemed to be intent on a nearer acquaintance with the dead; his teinerity, or it may be liisavnrice, was repaid; a bullet tumbled him over, and he lay still—~euviosity quench‘ ed, if not life. Otir people meanwhile on the right attack were calmly shelling the Malalihofl' in a cool matter-of-business_ sort ot'wuy, but the eternal gun on its right, that has been endiied with nine months of strange vitality, launched an indirect response into the Mainelon. From and after ll o'clock the Russians, as usual, slsckened fire, nor was there any duel of artillery on a great scale after dark. During the greater part of the day we had the tiring very much to ourselves, and by consequence were con- tented with moderate discliarges. business occupied us, the tendnnco of our wounded. the burial of our dead. the suin- mary of our losses, the ooiiibiimtion of our itextgiforts. Lord Raglan in the afternoon went round the hospitals, and in the alter-. noon tnuuy a procession crossed the plain caring some Ollicei-’s body to its resting place. Our loss in oflicers killed has been great. The 88th have been the severest sulliirers, having three olliccrs killed, one missing and conjectiiretl to be killed, and four wounded——all indeed who were engag- t'tl. The killed, Major Bztllllig‘ Caiptairts Vvray and Curbet, were buried this evening on the left ofthe \Voi-on.’/.oil'i-nod, Captain ‘V(:l)l) is thou,-_-lit not to survive. The first Royals have lost Captain Motlcr. Lieu- tenant Irb_v, of the -litli, has had his foot carried away. Captain ;‘vlzirslial|, of the tltltli, was killed by a lruginciit of shot sti-ik- ing him on the licail. In the -llltll, l\In_ior Ariiistroiig wits blown up into the air, but luckily not olfthe earth ciitii-cl_\'; It foiigasse exploded tiiidur him, sent him llying, and he crime down ttltnost its iiiircco,«_r_iiizable as it boy who might go clean up ii cliiiiiiiey, Captain Lcclicrclinut iind Lictiteitaiits Hits. tacc and Young were lll\C“'lS9 wo_iiiiilt.-d, The four st-.iiioi-ollitgi-i-s ofthe tl'1«l were put /tors dc (‘0lllbt(['-C0lQllt‘l Sl_n-rin.in, .\l:i]ni- ]).l-V02‘; (l3"|!lait) F-)steI', killed; Capt. liigull, \\'DUll t.'t. *4-vw Rim‘ Auosn TH!-‘. “ Ntvvir.s" A1‘ rue CR\'$'t‘.\l. l’u.ic'i:.—On \\'c-tlm.-stlaiy ovi-n- ing, a very serious (ll:'llll'll.ll)C6 took place in the iinnit-diute vicinity of the Crystal Palace, Sydeiilium, between the Navvieii employed at the railway and other works in the neighboiirliood, nntl the police. It up- pearctl that two oftlie navvies stood out to light in the roadway, when one of the constables on duty near the spot came up to them, and ordered them away. "l‘hey then proceeded to a beer-sliop, win-re several oftlieir mates were at work. and about a quarter of an hour aftcrwartls, the constable who first interfered was pass- ing by, tlireo oftlie “ navvies" approaclicd him, and threatened to pitch into him. He took no notice of them, and walked away, but he had not proceeded far before he was struck in the then by one of the men. and nearly knocked down. Anotlicr constable came to his assistance, and struck the man as he was about to repeatstho blow. were immediately surrountlt-d by a number of navvies and overpowered, The scene then became one of great confusioii and alarm, there being in .-i you-y few minutes more than I! hundred navv-ics collected on the spot. 'l‘he police were l'(‘llll'tircc(I' am] atler a lengthy struggle between thirty and forty ofllte riugleailers were sccui'ed. Ono tifthe police constables was so seriously injured that his life was tlt-sptiirt-d of, and another, it was stated, had his legs fractn.-- ed, and others were inure or less wounded, The late eminontcslogolist. G. I). Grconough, I has lefta fortune of .L'lS(l,(lll0 an derived, of is said. from lns father. it iuanufaeturer of' v The railway about to be laid across the Path. mus of Suez will be 84 miles long. A contract has been made to construct a line of telegraph igetween Constantinople and Egypt. The London papers speak or‘ an invention which has 'ust been submitted to the test by. the suiept c.au.tliori,ties-ru -lo,-iither tgcnient, so‘ strong and adhesive that is andsbsss ara,, made with it. in which not ,a single stitch i ‘ seen or required, and the process it ‘mending isi so simple that every man may be. ifnot his. boot-uiaker, at least his own boot-iscnder. . Another , Giizsattsi. fi:i.ississ.--In the same degree that the French arm was dissatisfied with its General-in-Cliief, it is proud and happy in ttl new Commander. and his nee has revived its confidence. lie is endeared to them by his d qualities; and even his defects are In accordance with the actual disposition of the troops, and the anions which agitate them. lt‘Gencral tlunrolwrt is hesitating or over pru- dent, General llelissier knows not what doubt or hesitation means; he is intrepid. bold, and audacious. [Is is ofa character that brooks no delay, rscoils at no obstacle; the slowness of the siege does not suit his lierv temper; and it is A matter ofindllference to him. what men are lost in it amp do main. provided it sue- } coeds. As he is as regardless of his own life as lot‘ that of others. and as he is always. by day ; or by night, as foremost in danger as a. young l sub-lieutenant who longs for “ the cross ot' Q honor,” and for rotnotion. no one finds it i cxtraordinn _, or deserving of blaino. that he is as reckless of others as he is ofltis own person. ‘ Those are the qualities which distinguish him, : and make him popular. llc is us grcata favor- : its with the army, as his predecessor was the l contrary ; an us it is in oint ot' fact Inrmy which removed General Canrobert, so it »is the nrniy which named General Pelisster. ,'l.‘he I-Iinpiror could no more l’\.tVt§ given it to any , other chief, than he could have continued (is- l uerul ‘.'nnrobcrt in the eoinniaud. General Polissier has won the admiration ol the men by ' his incouipait-able lirut'cry. his intelligeiice, and i dctcrinination. Wlnitcvcr has been done l the Fr:-itoli worthy of notice since the days of ;AllIlt| and liik-.-rni.tnn, is due to hiiu ; it is he lwho has ever taken the initiative, and who has 'acted soiuctinics in spite of the orders of Gene. jrnl t.‘:i.nro‘iert. twais he, as lhnvc already stated. who first conceived the idea of the night ll|l.iilt'l(I of the ',‘-l against the approaches which 3 the l{ussi:ins had erected against tho left of the 2. E C‘ ‘< THE NEWS FROM EUROPE. (From ll’il»ur't European Titan.) Very distressing intelligence was oom- fltlmicatetl by Lord Piininure to the British, public at an early hour yesterday morning‘, to the ell‘eot that at daylight on the morn- ing of the l8th the English troops attacked the Reditn and the Frenoli the Malaltolf Tower without success. He adds, “Both the French and ourselves have sul’l‘ei\t-d considerably.” The 18th was the anniver- sary of the Battle of \Vuterloo, the very day on wliioli people at home were calcu- lating that a great avid it was hoped it suc- cessful and linal eliiwt would be made to possess Sebastopol. And this intelligence now comes to dissipate all the liopes that have been awakened, and to show the folly of sanguine antioipations. The very bre- vity of Lord i’aninure's despntcli will ho viewed as aluriuing. His lordship is in possession ofthe iiaine.-1 of the ollicers who have fallen in this ill-omcnctl assault, but he witholtls them from the public until he has lii-st oommunicatetl the inclanclioly ti- dings to their relative.-:. This is conside- rate enough, and no one will he so onllous as to quarrel with the brief dc.-lay; but he might have stated the nuuiber who had fal- len, without iiiiy outi-tigc to the living or the dead, and we can well conceive the alarm which we are told provailed in the metropo- lis tlirougliout the whole of _V('StL‘l‘(llt_V, on the rcceipl of news at once disastrous lllltl unexpected. .-\II the previous aeconiitu led to the aiiticipntioii of a comparatively ens ,triiiinph, tin‘ wo were iuiliicod to lieliovu the : 1«‘,-.-nch iiriuy. Vhnt l have iilifeady mentioned is fully corrohorntetl in letters now before me. . ' his plans of that t|.l.Dt('l.{ to_ llo coininunit-titc ;tionernl Canrohert. who emlcd by approving them. Pt-liiisit-r, in eonsctiucnce, made his ' preparations. The attack was to coiniucnce at ‘ tcn o'clock at night. At six o'clock, an. aide- ? do-cuinp cunie to l’elissier's quarters with or- 'tlers from Ueiicrail Canrulicrt. not to l'l'tl.(‘9tJll lwith the operations for the present, "- It is Hot) ate," was the reply. " We begin otir , work in four hours," He ltept his word : and the result was not only glorious but use-lul. A ll took nino mortars from the Russians, which T were nlr.-:itl_v in battery. and the font is, I be- ‘lieve. vvitliout-oxztniplo in the C-’IIIl]\'|lgn- Ti 0 .t‘4l1£P lillvyd the inoasure of tlenernl t}.i.nro"»ct-t's ;uupopul-.irity; it placed Pelissier where he i.-, ‘and we may now indeed eunlitlently anticipate ‘that the war will enter into it new plxaac.—- ‘ coiiununicatioiis wliir:li have since :ippc:ii'cd' , Correspondent afllie Tinws. ; (.ilt.\'ER.tI. C.txiion:irr.-—.\ correspondent of the uil_i/ News, writing from the CI'llHt‘:l. endeavours to account for General Unnrobcrt's resignation of his command in this wiso:— it‘ There were two pi-lnoi il schemes for action. ; One, suggested by the lumperor, was the send- ; ing ot‘a number of troops to Htlpflioblat, and It , march from north to south to cllect tl junction lt2|t‘l‘t)38 the Riissien lines with tho besicging ‘arm Another, which was the plan conceived by General (.‘:tn,rohcrt liiinself, was to march from south to nortli—to reverse. in fact, the "9 ’ turning march pcrforincd after the battle at: .-\lui:t. the way of the l‘linpcror's proposal‘, but made gient and iiiisucci~ssl'til efforts to induce ‘ Lord Rnghin to concur in his own. Two coun- cils of war were held in uick succession. at the second of which tlinnr Pacha w:is present. .~\t this second council lioril Raglan with dilli— culty was brought to, ciiugent to t but the next day he sent word to Ut.’nL'I'tll Cun- 'I'hn ' robcrt that he could not spare it man from the? ; trenches. t,':inrobcrt was so tlisliciirtcncd at ;thls, tliat he soot otfnt once the telegraphic dos; patch roqiiesting to be superseded." Lieutenant Gonestc, Dr. l-Inston, and Mr. :Sullivan are prisoners, but wounded. A Connecticut farmer, whoa few years ago- pletlgt-d hiinself never to sell potatties higher than fifty cents per bushel‘, sold all his lot last winter at that price. A Springfield paper wishes the disorder infectious. Pairiclt Murphy was haiuling a pot of pom.-I to Terence 0’tlmly—a cannon ball pruned the rim of the iiwsi-ms and carried away the froth. without doing any injury to eimer of uigm, j " llere's lut-k in yr, my jewel!" says 'l.'eieuce; ‘ " ye took that head oil‘ well !” 1 Holloway’: Pills unqttcslionahl the moat silica- ‘ cions Remedy in_ the \Vurld‘(or Asthinntic Compliqintq ,: nod Ct ugh: —'l‘he number ol'ci_irsn~ these wonderful I Pills have effected in ii?l- parts of Oansda, more par. ; iiculsrly in cases of, asthma oi long standing, sinitj cough-.°|JIvu, no. cl»-ab! upon, the inipti or all who‘ have us them that they surpass any thing of the} lsinil ever inails known; by a perseverance with this l admirable remedy. the sail}.-rer is quickly restored to be.-ilth. after every other iueans have failed; and it is a truth beyond» dispute, tltlt here is no case I hilinus disorder, or liver coaiplsinta, but that will-‘ quickly yield to tlis powers ofthis nngtity medicine. l General tlztiirolrert sztw dillicultics in he proposition : ‘ I ' ll gut-risoii was cnfeliloil by tlisease, and that , iii atltlitioii to the |iorroi'.-i of‘ sickness, were supt-rntlded the inisery arisin,->_v front l‘.iiniuc, or at least st:=ii'city. The (:lI'(2lIlll.~'lCllC(.‘:3 ltoo, under which this puiiillil intelligence ‘has lit-eii _:_;iveii to the public, will we hope receive, as it tlo-iuimls, it prompt and in-. 'tisfactor_v t-.\'pliimitioii. As early as Tiit-s—. day last r-iiiuonrs of i~t-vr-rsos wt-ro cui-rt-iiti liu l’.'iri.~i, and it was said, with soinetliingi ;like coiilitlciiet‘, that it great luittle lintl ' bi-on fought before St-ha.-‘t--pol, in which the‘. allies were tlt-ti.-ntoil. 'l‘l-,ir.4e ruinours us-.1 suiutul ii slrtpo so tlelinito as to st-riousl_vl alfect lIti)IN’l1ll‘_\’ trziiuticti-uiis on the l’.oiii-so. "hut tlit-y wt-re ht.-lievetl in the l*'rcn.-sli uie-. .ti'opolis is evitlt.-nt llwnu the tone of ijarions ‘ in the columns of the London lllitflllllg pa- pers. \\'as this iiifuriiiation in l)().!'SP.~'.slUfl oftlie Grworuiiit-iil at the time, and, if so, why has it been witliliclil for more than two days.‘ On Tliiir.-‘(lay evening, the '.‘l.~t, ‘Lord Puliiicr.~'tou asstircil the lloiise of Commons that the telr-_«_zi-npli was again open, and that on the l7tli Lord ltziulitii . had writtcii to say that ll|t'l'P. was eonside-. rahle tiring between our siege hnttei-icr. and the liussinn works, but that nothiu_«_; of importance had occiirrctl. lit a few hours .after came Lord l{aglan‘s (lt‘>'pItlt'lI an- nouncing the repulse icft-rrctl to which re- verse occurt-ed, be it l't‘lllt.‘ll|l)tlI't:‘tl, on the ism. ‘Ml this may be capable of a satis- ‘fzictory clearing up, but at pit-seiit it stilli- cicnt iiiystei-_v liaugs nhoot the event, to , which the ctuiliisioii of dates ittltl-is ntldirionul- aiuioyaiicc. ‘ lint passing ll-oiii this moot point tit the actiiitlities, few rt:cord:i of ancient or ino- ‘tllffll ivnrfnre exert-tl in intt-re.-t the thril- fling ii:iri'ntivt.-s\vli'.cJi have just come to ihaiid respoctiiiv_v the I-'i-cneli and English ifllltlcki on the |‘i‘th. it is siii-mist-d, wiili a j good tlettlofplatisihility, tinLt,iftl1e l<‘i-encii attack had been ca:-riotl it stop fuirtlu-r. the Malaliotl Tutver, which is the kcv of the position, iiiiglit liavo born taken. and re- taiuetl’, aiitlv that the l‘}iigl-isli might also iave possessml tln.-iiiselvt-s ofihe Rctlau as they did oflhc Quarries, which are crown- ed by the Radon. In fact, the French were it: one time in no.-'sc:‘sioit ofthe :\l:i|u- kotf, and, after spiking st?\'('.I| of the guns, fell back upon the .\l:iiiiclon.. Upon the plateau which connects these two works the French snlferstl most severely. There the carnage was dreadful, for the impetu- csity of our brave nlhcs outstripped the original o,ti_'ycc_t of attack; and it noii-militn- ry reader arrives at the conclusion that in have possessed the gieater woi-ks,—il‘ the pl!!!) of attack had originally embraced theni,—-would, under the circumstances, ave been as easy as the possession of the miner works. It is in these details ot'wiii- is seen to the highest advantage; and it now seems probable that the loss of life in the first attack would have been less had the allied commanders determined upon seizing, the one the Redan, the other the Malakoff; for in returning after an interval ofnearly It fortnight to the possession of the prizes so nearly, without pretneditati- on, in their grasp, they suffered the deplo- rable reverses inentioned in the despatcli published yesterday. In the attack of the 7th, the English are stated to have lost more than they did at the Alina; ‘ while the French loss is put down at 1,500 men, and according to some rumours, double that number will not cover their disasters‘ When the details of the lath arrive, the blunder which is believed to have been committed will swell out to tl magnitude which cannot fail to grieve the national heart. A brave foe is always entitled to respect, but whatever credit may be due to the Russians for gallantry in "the Crimea, they have sacrificed by treachery and murder in the Baltic. One ot'tlie most nefarious, the most -cowardly, and inhuman acts in the whole history of civilised nations, was the oonduotofthe Russians in the matter ofthe Cossack's boat in the Bay of Hitogo This boat reached the Russian shores under it [lag of truce, for the purpose of deliver- ing up seven Finnish seamen who had been vnpturcil, and was filled, in addition, with sixteen British seamen, including three otliccrs. The Eiiglisli version is this,—— that thc moment the boat arrived, several hundred men sprang from a lurking place behind rocks, and their commander, who cur.-ietl the Englisli, said the Russians would show them how to light, and ordered his troops to tire on the defencelcss men! This occurred, too, after the English lieutenant had explained the object of his mission,- tvliich was one of mercy. All the boat‘! crew except one man, it black, were killed, and the survivor, who lay at the bottom of the boat, and feig_vncd death, succeeded in culling back to the Cossack. The Russian version, every line of which is stamped_ with tiilcslinotl, declares that the Cossack’O bout effected a hostile landing, the men nrmr.-vl, and that as enemies they were ltrt.-utctl,—five were killedxfour wounded, ‘and one ollicer, one surgeon, and nine sailors made prisoners. This affair has ht-mi rcft-rretl to in both Houses, and the iiitlignation ofthe Legislature, like that o the British public, knows no bounds. lit the Peers, the members who spoke vied with each other in exccrating an act which will stamp Rllssl-‘Ill rule with infamy in all future time, ifthc cowardly and brutal murderers are not punished accordingly to their desserts. Lord Clarendon has called the attention of the Russian Court to the dastardly affair, through the medium ofthe Danish Government, and, pending the in- qniry, our Govertunent will forego repi-isals. No event of modern times has produced such a sensation throughout the empire. Louis Napoleon, who was ill a few dayj back, is now convalescent, and the Empress S .is, on undoubted__authority, cnreinlq. The Great American Hair Tonic. Bach's celebtiitnl llyperion Fluid, for the growth and preservation of the Hair is well known to be willi- oiit a rival on this eontineiit. Hundreds oF imitations av-9 started into an eplieineriil existence since tho intrmliseiion of this unrivalled llsir restorstiue, and their ilooin been sealed, whilst Dnglllfili llyperimi llair Fluid, with it popularity novel attained by any nt|n~r article, goes on “ cnnqneping and to cot:quer."’ There is no iiialstl , which can elect the Hair but can be cured by this iiicoiiipitrable p:Qp.’trllllOfl. To Indies it is invaluable; andon ctu'ldren‘s ltcntls it lay s the I‘-iuntlation ofa good head of Hair, lt is now tronized by ller ."lIjptIl._\'. the Queen offlreat llritnin, and eomiiuimls an extensive sale throughout Europe. Birgit‘: Electric Hair Dye converts red or grey hair into it ht-viutiful bl:iek or brown, the moment it id applied, literally tl_\,0")‘_7, the hair without staining the skin and leaves the Hair soft and glossy without injuring its tenure in the least; a decided superiority over all other lliiir di es. Boz'e‘s Ainele Shaving compound renders that usually unpleasant operation (shaving) a decided xur . « - lloglsht Ilebcniona removes Frscltlss and tan from the face in the shortest possible time, and isyicknouz. lodged to he the very best article for baauiiyipg the qoinplexinii. 'L‘q,hu had, ivliolesale or retail, at “L Boglo, Q21: \Yashington street, n0l|t9tl,_U. S. Andby i\_l| I,)yuggi«ts,anil perfnint-as tltrcttghotit the (hiiisilai-,b'iiitsd states and‘ Great Britain. W. I. fare that the genius of a great commander W.-\'l‘S()N. Ag:-nt for I’. E. I. June l9tli. } yw