HASZAR.D'S GAZETTE, JUNE 23. Latest News! Sllusroroa, J une 7.—The formidable fire of yegtgrday was kept up to-da with the greatest Int. and soon after six o’c ock this evening, t 0 French attacked and carried the White Tower and the Mamelcn. The greatestgallantry was displayed on all Iides. _ Casualties not yet known. _Ma.ximilian. brother of the Emperor of Aus- ‘|'|3. bad is private interview with the Pope, and the King ofNaples. Numerous political arrests have een made recently in the Roman States, and Piedmont. OCCUPATION OF THE SEA 01" AZOFF. Letters from Paris state, that it was under- stoofi. in circles generally well informed u on the intentions of Government, that the al ies will not occu y Kertcb, but fortify Yenikale, and loave 500 'l‘urks to defend it. Our flotilla will keep the Sea of Azoli, and probably visit Rosteck, Mariopol, and Tagan- Tn the Russian arsenal, near Kertch, the allies found incendiary buoys, and the electric wire to fire them, which the enemy had re- pared against our arrival, but had not been quick enough to lay them. May 27.—Lieut. General Baron von Wran- glc, commander of the troops in the peninsulii. of Kertch, announces that on the 24th some troops, which arrived from Sebastopol on board the enemy's fleet, elfected a descent near Kamysch Bournou, taking the batter Pavlovskaya, and occupyin Kertch and eni- kale. Oar garrison, after aving s iked the guns,and destroyed as much as possi le of the government stores and of the vessels, fell back without great loss upon the village of Arguine. RUSSIAN TELEGRAPH DEIPATCHES. A despatch from Prince Gortschakofl, of the 3d inst., states, that on the 30th of May the allied fleet. withdrew from Genitchi, and that the Russian authorities hope to be able to save a portion of the supplies which had been set on lire. Ssnssroron, May 26.—Yesterday, between 1 and 2 p. in. the enemy's fleet, with troops on board approached the Gulf of Kertch. This day, before Sebastopol, considerable forces of the enemy are established on the heights on the left bank of the Tchernaya, and have con- structed a camp there, which they appear to have the intention of fortifying. Advanced posts occupy the right bank of the same river. A report from Prince Gortscbakofi, dated Schustopol, June 1, makes the following an- nouncement -— Tlie enemy (the allies) have burnt our vessels and stores at (ienitchi and Berdiansk. the former on the 29th and theflatter on the 27th May. The following despatch has been published at St. Petersburg-—Scl.astopol, June 1. On the 27th ult., the enemy burnt, at Berdiansk, two houses, some coasting vessels, and a large depot of wheat. On the 29th, 17 of the enemy's vessels cannonaded (icnitchi, and burnt there some transports and some corn upon the coast. Two of our pieces forced the cnemy’s long- boats. from which the fire proceeded, to retire. On the 30th, the enemy had not undertaken anything new against Uenitsclii. THE FLEET BEFORE CRONSTADT. DANTZIC, Tliiirsday, June 7.—To day her Majcsty’s ship Bulldog, Captain Gor- don. urrivcd with mails from the fleet. The British and French fleets were on the 4th instant close to Cronstadt. The Russian ships were nearly all dis- mantled iii harbour; only three steamers were serviceable. Admiral Saunders Dun- this has been in the Merlin to get a nearer view ofthe fortifications, and to satisfy him- selfas to the propriety of an attack; it is said that he thinks it impracticable. New works have been added since last year. Sixteen Russian merchantmen, most of them loaded with timber, have been cap- of FURTHER SUCCESS IN TE] SEA OF Z A OFF. Intelligence has been received at the Admi- ralty from Sir E. Lyons, at Kertch, dated the 31st of May, to the elect that the squadron in the Sea of Ariel! had appeared before Genitehi, landed a bed of seamen and marines. and, after drivingt e Russian force from the lace, has destroyed all the de ts and vessels aden with corn and supplies or the Russian army. One man only was wounded. Since entering the Sea of Azolf four steamers of war and 240 vessels emplo ed in come ing supplies to the army in the Crimea have een destro ‘ed. The latest advices from the Sea of Azoffstate that the steam flotilla of the allies has destroy- ed above 200 vessels and six millions of rations of corn and flour destined for the Russian army at Sebastopol. 'icN.-cs, June 2,—A despatch from Prince Gortschakofl, dated the 29th, states, that the allies have occupied Kertch, but have not pushed inwards. He reports that in conse- quence of the measures which he has taken, the allies will not be able to cut olfthe communi- cations of the Russian army. The following are the terms in which the late operations of the allied forces in the Cri- mea liave been announced in the St. Peters- burg journals :— “ At two o’clock in the afternoon of the 24th the allied forces appeared in the Straits of Kertch. Near Sebastopol, considerable forces of the allied army have occupied the heights on the left bank of the Tchernay, and are establsh- ing a fortified camp there.” EVACUATYON OF SOUJAB KALI. “ SEBASTOPOL, June 3.—News from Kertch of the 2nd instant. Everything is going on satis- fiietoril . Captain Moore had arrived from Circassia with the intelligence that Sou’ h Cali was evacuated on the 28th May. "he Russians had burnt the principal buildings, and abandoned 60 ans and six mortars, hav- ing first rendered t em unserviceable.” Al)lt[RAl.'l'Y, June 5.—The following intelli- gence, date June 4, has been received from Rear-Admiral Sir Edmund Lyons ,—“Ca tain Moore. of H. M. S. llighflyer, who ha just returned from the coast of Circassia, reports that the enemy had entirely evacuated Soujah Kali, after destroying all the public buildings, 60 guns and six mortars. The enemy appears to be concentrating at Anapa, and to be strengthening his works there. The fort on the road between Soujah Kali and Anapa is also evacuated." PARIS, June 5.—The Moniteur announces that the Minister of War has received the following despatch from General Pclissicr :— “Criinea, June 2, l(‘ .m.——Advices re- ceived from Kertcli, dated the 31st of May, announce that, on the refusal of the military « authorities of Genitchi, situate on the northern extremity ofthe tongue ofland of Arabat,to give up the government stores and 90 vessels laden with provisions for the Russian army in the Crimea, the s uadron, under the orders of ‘aptaiii Lyons, oinbarded the place, drove out the troops. and destroyed all the stores. " The enemy has thus lost, in four diiys, an immense quantit of provisions, four war stcaincrs, and 240 vessels employed exclusively in provisioning the troopsin the Crimea.” LATl-SST OPERATIONS IN THE CRIMEA. The temporary interruption of the electric telegraph between Varna and Balaklava has already been repaired, and the first message received by the Government announces the im- portant fact that the bombardment ofsebastopol l'6CUlnl'ut‘llC0d on the afternoon of the 6th inst. in this interval of time, however, the ordinary mails have brought us despatches of the highest interest with reference to the action fought by the French on the nights of the 22d and 23d of May, the advance of the army to the Tchernaya, and the Kcrtcli expedition. The assault made by the French upon the Russian lines of counter-approacli in front of the left attack was, without doubt, one ofthe most gallant and sanguinary actions of the war. Many a battle has been fought with less daring and won at it less cost. The Russians disputed tured and destroyed near Cronstadt, and others run ashore and burned. A correspondent ofthe Tiincs, at Konigs- berg, writes that the commercial advantages which Prussia is deriving from its neutrality are neither so great nor so decided as they are believed to be. On the general and regular commerce of the country, the war has acted like a blight. The news of the entrance of the allied fleets into the Sea of Azoff has caused al great sensation at St. Petersburg. The Government is accused of having neglected this last refuge of the Commercial flag o I Russia, and of having spent millions on Se-‘l bastopol, while nothing was done for thef protection ofthe Sea of Azotf. A letter from Berlin, in the Journal du. Debates, says that the health of his Majesty ’ is by no means satisfactory. l every inch of ground with the utmost courage and tenacity. The troops fought under the fire 0 an immense range of guns in position. and the obscurity of the night added to the gloom and horror of this tremendous contest. After the cessation of the fire on the second morning the works which had been thus firmly dispute were found strewn with l,200 Russian dead. and the total loss of the enemy in killed and wounded must have exceeded 6,000 men. The French on their side admit a loss of 650 men killed and nearly 2,000 wounded, among whom the Voltigeurs ofthe lmperialGuard may claim at once the heaviest amount of casualties and the most brilliant share in the victory. The Russian engineers had endeavoured to form an extensive outer-work on the left of the French attack by lines starting from the bottom of the bay in front of the Quarantine Battery, skirting the side of the Cemetery, and connected by a long covered way with the lunette of the (Jen- tral Bastion. This extraordinary work, which would have enabled the enemy to entreneb an army on the left of the French position, was: marked out and rudel thrown up in the night of the 21st of May. eneral Pelissier instantly resolved to attack it, before it approached com- pletion, and to turn the work against the ene- my—in other words, to storm it, to hold it, and to reverse it. This diflicult and formidable operation was efected after two ni hts of in- cessant flghtin by the daring and rmness of the French. ‘he works were taken and re- taken successively at the point of the bayonet, and it was not until they had sustained enor- mous losses that the Russians gave in. In front of the Cemetery. more especially, twelve or fifteen Russian battalions were collected un- der General Chrulofl, with a view of making a sortie on the same night, and it was here that General I’ale‘s division advanced to the attack. or six mortal hours of the night the battle continued; and when inornin dawned, and coiupelled the combatants to withdraw from the tire of the batteries, the battle was but half won. On the following evening, however, General Levaillant‘s division renewed the at- tack in the same place, and in three quarters ofan hour the French had carried everything before them. The engineers than established themselves in the work, which enables the French guns to enfilade the Flagstaff Battery and several other important positions of the enemy. This affair does the highest honor to the French army. It shows of what those gal- lant troops are capable under an energetic commander, and, at the same time, it demon- strates the necessity of advancing with caution and with all the resources of scientific warfare against an enem who defends even his lines of counter-approaci as resolutely as he defended in 1812 the batteries at the Borodino. The information we possess of General Csnro- bi-rt’s movement on the 'l‘chernsys on the 25th of May is less complete, and it does not extend to the whole nprrallori, which has since been made known to us by telegraph. On that day a corps consisiinu of 25,000 men, including the Ssrdinisn Bersaglieri, a Turkish division, and the British cavalry. to support the French in- fsnli_v, crossed the river without opposition, drove back five or six Russian battalions on the other side, and reconnoitred the country to Tchorgoun, after which the French withdrew to the left bank of ilie stream. General Pelissier’s telegraphic ilespaich of the 27ih had led us to suppose. that the French had ihen entrenched themselves at Tchergoun. on the further side of the Tchsrnaya, but this is not yet confirnied by the despalches. ll. is, however. certain. that the allied troops occupy the whole valley—s position which forms amost agreeable contrast to the aspect of the camp on the plateau before Sebsstopol. These operations, though eminently successful, are still of an undecided character; but the naval enterprise which has been conducted with so much spirit by Sir E. Lyons and Adniirsl Brunt has led to more immediate resulis, and the vivid Rsarissiinns in Nova Soc-ru.—As a proof tllIh.6Il'hl!lq|IllROI are the result of operation. going on n the m of the earth in conss. quence of subterranean combinations and 9;. plosions, I beg to call our notice to an extra- ordinary phenomenon eveloping itself‘ in Nov, Seotia, on the South-cast side of the Granville mountain. I do not know the distance from the waters of the basin.-an opening took place, and a large quantity ofsmoke was seen to issue during the remain or of the day. Suppoged_ however, to be a mist or vapor arising, it at. tracted no particular notice, until about . fortnight since the ground in the neighbour. hood was violentl shaken; a chasm suddenly opened, and ii vo ume of smoke continued to issue for some time. Agitatious of the surface kept going on, till the sloping ascent for some distance is converted into a level steppe, hm. ing from Digby the uppearuiicc of a well. ploughed field. Not long after the cliiisin thus opened, there issued with great violence 3, hugh fragment of rock, which precipitated itself down the hill with such vu ocity as to completely penetrate the side of an inhabited cottage, the occupant of which, startled by such an extraordinary visilunt, immediately removed to a distance. The chasm still remains open, and similar eruptions have since been going on, no person ventuning close enough for a minute cxaniination.—-Cor. qf Morning cw: N. CANADA. Qusarc, May 25. A doubt has been expressed by some of our contemporaries, that it will be scarcely pos- sible to retain a suflicient llouse to hurr through a simple measure in acquiescence with the wish of t e Imperial Government concern- ing a grant of one million of acres, that ller Majest may be enabled to offer settlements in this co ony to foreign legionuries. 'l‘liis wish has been expressed in a tone so moderate and conciliatory. so complimentary to the inhabi- tants of the Province, so confidentially trustful of their professed loyalty, that a Bill in ac- cordance wit the wish should be pushed through the Legislature with the utmost zeal and cordiality. There is an area of nearly twelve millions of acres about to be opened for colonization in a part of this Province most important as a connecting bond between the Eastern and Western sections. and destined to beef the greatest value in future times. To get this district speedily and t-fliciently settled is an object ofextremc conseqiiciicu to Canada. The district extends from the Georgian llay on Lake lluron to the Ottawa. from the countries fronting on Lake Ontario to Lake Nipissing and the French River. Of these twelve mil- lions of acres the Home Government ask for one million, not for any selfish purposes of ag- grandisement, but with the ulterior view of supplying the colony with a class of emigrants do-scripiion ofthe arrival of the combined forces off the Straits of Yenikiile, which we have received from our Crimean correspondent, will he read with the greatest interest. Although ihe success ofthe expedition was in ihe highest degree prompt, complete, and bloodless, ii is evident that the Russians were by no means unprepared for a much more formidable resistance. The garrison of the forts at the Straits amounted to 10,000 men ; these works were armed with new guns of heavy metal, which opened without much success upon our uunboais; and the stores of powder and munitions of war destroyed by the enemy in his retreat were immense. It seems, also, from Sir 1'}. l.yons's despatch, that the Russians had sunk no less than 40 vessels last year to block up the passage of the straits, but that these obstacles were carried away by the current and the ice during the winter, and had not yet been replaced. This fact serves in part to account for the previous delay ofthe expedition, and shows that it could not have been attempted at is more favourable moment. The absence of wind placed the Rue- sizin ships at ilie mercy of the steam giiiiboals. but nothing can surpass the gallantry and nautical skill with which Lieutenant M'Killop, in commsiid ofihe Snake, succeeded in bsflling and cutting ivffihree sail of the enemy, under the fire of their own batteries and in the presence of the whole 2 D O as it would seem that the magnitude of the ex- pedition, consisting of twelve line-of-battle sliipa. l-Inglisli and French, and abopt fifty sail of frigatcs and smaller craft, coinplelely daunled ilic enemy; ollieri-vise there was no reason for the immediate ev:icu.ilioii of positions which were certainly capable of (l(>'r8llCe. The systems of the Russians seems to be, however, to destroy rather than to cnpilnlste; and we shall not be surprised to find that even at Sebsslopol they are preparing to blow up the works they can no longer hold The has already inflicted on the enemy by Ilie Kerlch expedition must be enormous. and. train the quantities of gunpowder and arms accumulat- ed there, as well as from ilie state of the military liospilals, the town of Kc-rich seems to have bi-en used for one of the depois of the Crimean army. As this town. which is a flourishing and well built place of I2,000 inhabitants. is now in the power of a valuable character— men who shall have fought by the side of British subjects in the cause of liberty, trained to order and disci- gline under the British standard. As Lord rey in his dcspatcli observes, the promise ofa future settlement in a British Colony would to such people an inducement ofa peculiar value, because attractive chiefly to that class, which it is most desirable to enlist, men of steady habits and honorable character. Cans- da will never be the stable and united Canada which it ought to be, till the extensive regions forming its northern cordon are settled. per- forated by roads connecting the East and Vi est by routes much shorter than those at present available. The strength and stability of the country would be greatly increased both in a civil and iuilitiiry view by connected settle- ments ulong this central line of communication. Tux i.ns Arrusrr 'ro Asssssiiurs -rus El- rssoa N.\I'0Ll-2t)N.—Tll0 assassin l'ianori has been sent to his account. He was decapitated on .\lou:l:iy morning at 5 o'clock, in the usual place of execution of the prison of Roquctte, nor far from the Bastile. The spectators were not many at that early hour, and it was only on Sunday evening, that orders were sent round to the police agents to be ready for duty. 'l‘lie Avocat-General visited him an hour before his execution, to learn whether at that terrible moment. when the world was about to close on him, he lind any disclosures to make. 'l‘o the question of the advocate, he answered by a stern and single negative. lle died, and niado no sign. He was led to the scuflbld, which was in the square of the prison, in the costume of parricidcs—a black veil thrown over his fiice, a long sliirtcovcring him, and his feet naked. lie was pale, but his features were calm; yet the effort must have been’ strong which pro- duced that calmness, for on his cheek bones was a bright hectic spot, which told what passed within. As he stood on the scaflold he cried " Viva la Republique.” and the plankto which he was bound turned the moment he was about to repeat the cry. Yet Pianori can- not be considered, even by the most ultra party» it political isartyr ; he was a vulgar iuiscreant, who had already committed crimes suflieicnt to earn such a doom. In tho faubourgs it is ru- ofihe sllies. we shall probably obtain more in formaiiun ihan we have yet acquired as to the mode in which the war is carried on by the Rue- sians, and the next do-spiiiehes will be of the grcatcs inieieai as respects the sflict of these eps- riitions on the enemy. moured that it was not Pianori, but a manne- ~qui'n, that was guillotined, and that the roll * erson (who, of course, wasa police iigent) llll been sent out of the country with a passport!