plain positions tfhich, even without such the priciplo of'tho appropriation proposed support, 1 cannot regard ns questionable. lin this bill. VVould not. the admission of; The third section or the fourth article of, such a power in Congress to dispose ofthe, the Constitution, is in the following terms: public domain, work the prncticle nbroga “The Congress shall have the power to tion of some of the most important provis dispose of, and make all needful regula-'ions of tho constitution ? If tho systemat tionß respecting the territory or other prop-1 ic reservation *6f n definite portion of tho erty of the United States; and nothing in 1 public lands, (the sixteenth section,) in this Constituticn shall bo so constructd as tho Slates, for tho purpose of education, to prejudice any claim of the Uuited States, ! and occasional grants for similar purposes or of any parfcular State.” Tho sixth bo cited as contradicting these conclusions article is ns follows, to wit: “All debtsJlho-answor, as it appears to me,is obvious contracted and engagements entered into,! and satisfactory.' before tho adoption of this Constitution,! Such reservations and grants, besides shall be as valid against tho United States, being a part of the conditions on -which under this .Constitution ns under tho Con- tho proprietory right of tho United States federation.” | is maintained, along with the eminent do- For a correct understanding of the terms . main of a particular State, and by which used in the third section of tho fourth nrti-1 the public land remains free from taxation cle above quoted, reference should be lmd l in the State in which it lies, ns lorfg ns it lo the history of tho times in which tho 'remains tho property of the United States Constitution was formed and adopted. It [ are the acts of a mero land holder, dispo was decided upon in convention on tho 17th 'sing of a small sharo of his property in a September, 1787, and by it Congress was‘way to augment tho vtlluo of his residue, empowered to “dispose of,” &c., “tho tor-; and in this mode to encourngo t)io early ritory or other property belonging to tho'occupation of it bv the industrious and in- United States.” Tho only territory thep j telligent pioneer. belonging to tho United States, was that! The great exnmplo of apparent donation then recently ceded by the several States,'of lands to tho States, likely to bo relied to wit; by New York in 1781, by Virgin-'upon as sustaining tho principlcs.of this iain 1784, by Massachusetts in 1786, and ' bill, is tho rolinquislinient or swamp lunds by South Carolina in August, 1787, only!to tho States in which they nro situated ; the month before tho formation of the Con- but this, also, like other grants already re stitution. Tho cession from Virginia con- forred to, was based expressly upon grounds tained the following provision : clearly distinguishable in principle from “That nil tho lands within tho territory ;any one which can be assumed for tho bill so ceded to tho United States, and not re-1 herewith returned, viz : upon tho interest served for, or appropriated to, any oftho nnd duty of tho proprietor. They were before mentioned purposes, or disposed ofj charged, and not without reason, to bo a in bounties to the officers and soldiers of nuisance to tho inhabitants of thestirroun the American nrmy, shall bo considered.a jding country. Tho measure was predic common fund for the uso nnd benefit of'tdted, not only upon the ground ol'ihcdis sUch of tho United States as have become ease inflicted upon tho people of tho States or.shall become members of the Confeder-: which tho United States conld not justify, ation or Federal alliance of the said Slates, 1 ns a just and honest proprietor, but a lso, Virginia included, according to their usu-j upon an pxpress limitation ol tho applico al respective proportions, in the general tion of the projeeds, in the first instance, to charge and expenditure,and shull be faith-' purposes of levees and drains, thus pro- Ihlly and bona fide disposed of for that pur-jtecting the health of tho inhabitants, and, ppse, nnd for qo other use or pusposo'at tho same lime, enhancing tho value of whatever.” - thoremaminglundsbelonging tothc Gencr- Congress whilo administering the public lands as a proprietor, within the principle | distinctly announced in my annunl mes jshgc, may sometimes "liavo failed to distinguish accurately botweon objects which are and which are not within its constitutional powers. After tho most careful examination, I find but two examples in the act of Con gress which furnish any precedent for the present bill, and those examples will, in njy opinion, ’servo rather as a warning than os an inducement to tread in the same path. The first is the act of March 3d, 1819, granting u township of land to tho Con necticut asylum for tho education of tho deaf and dumb. The second that of April sth, 1820, ma king a similar grant Poland to tho: Ken-- dumb. The first more thun thirty years aftor the adoption of the Constitution, and tho second moie thann quarter ofacentury ago. ■These acts ore unimportant as to the amount appropriated, and so far as I can ascertain, wero passed on two grounds; first, that the object was a charitable one and secondly, that it was national. To say that it was a charitable object, is to say that it was an object of expenditure proper for tho competent authority ; but it no more tended to show that it was a proper object of expenditure by the United States, than is any other purely local ob ject, appealing to tho best sympathies of the human heart, in any of tho States.— And the suggestion that a school for the mental culture of thq deaf and dumb in. Connecticut, or Kentucky, is a nutiohnl, ! object, onlv shows bow loosely ii>;° | ipression has been used when the purpose was to procure appropriations by Congress, j It is not perceived how a school of this! character is otherwise national than is any | establishment of religious or moral in- 1 struction. I All the pursuits of industry, everything! | which promotes the material or intellcctu- j ol well-being of tho race, every ear of! corn or ball of cotton which grows, is na tional in the same senso, for oach one of these things goes to swell the uggregnto of national prosperity and happiness of tho United States ; but it confounds all mean ing of languago to say that these things are “national,” as equivalent to “Federal,” so as to come within nay of the classes of appropriation for which Congress is au thorized by the Constitution to legislate. It is a marked point in tho history ofthe Constitution, that when it is proposed to empower Congress to establish a univer sity,. the proposition was confined to the district intended for tho future seat ornment of tho United States, and that! even the proposed cluuso was omitted in! consideration of the exclusive powers con ferred on Congress to legislate for that dis trict. Could u moro decisive indication of tho true construction nnd the spirit of the Constitution in regard to ail matters of this naturo have been given?‘lt proves that such objects wero considered by the convention qs appertaining to local legis lation only, that they weronot comprehen ded, eithor expressly or in the grant of general power to Congrosß, and that, consequently, they remained with tho several States. nv?!! ,G 1 £ ene . nd result at ' v hie!i I ha ye ar nvEu iff mo, necessary, consequence of those views of t| )o relative rights, powers and duties of the States and of the Fed eral Government, yhich I have long en tortamed and often expressed, and in ref erence to which my convictions do but increase in force with time and experience d»L' a ? e ,IU3 dischar ged tho unwelcome JgASWfW'r. my Ejection, he vbnln Vvhlch 1 chcerfu| ly submit grLs ! 9 JeC ‘ ‘° lho , wiado '0 of Con- ■ >mw wwjW%/>w ivi II 11(011 lIIVOU lUUUO are to bo disposed of, is clearly set forth, and the power to dispose of them granted blithe third section of the fourth arliclo ofl the Constitution, clearly contemplate such disposition only. If such bo the fact, and in my mind' there can bo no doubt of it, tjten. you may have again,, not only no implication in favor of the contemplated grant, but the authority against it. 'Furthermore, this bill is in violation of the faith of the Government, pledged in tho act of January 28, 1847. The nino toenth section of the act declares, “That for the payment of the stock which may be created under the provisions of this act, the sales of the public lands are hereby pledged ; and it is hereby made the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury, to use and apply all monoys which may be re ceded into tho Treasury of tho sales of nub to pay the interest on all stocks issued by virtue of this act; and secondly to use the balance of said receipts, aftor paying the interest aforesaid, in tho purchase of said ■tocks at their market value,” &c. 'The debts then contracted ha.ve not been liqui dated, and the language of this section and the obligations of the United States under it, are too plain to need comment • J have been unable to discover any dis tinction, on constitutional grounds, or grounds of expediency, between an appro priation of ten millions of dollars, directly from the money in the Treasury for the object contemplated, and the appropriation pf lands presented for my sanction. And yet, I cannot doubt, that if the bill propo sed ten millions of dollars from the Treas ury of the United States, for the support of indigent insane in tho several States, that the constitutional ounsiion involv'd in | the act, would havo attracted forcibly the; attention of Congress. I respectfully submit, that, in a consti tutional point of view, it is wholly imma terial whether theappropriation be in mon ey or in land. The public domain is the common prop erty of tho Union, just as much as tho sur plus proceeds of that, and of duties on im ports remaining unexpended in tho Treas ury. As such, it has been pledged, is now pledged, and may need to be so pledged, again for public indebtedness. As property, it is distinguished from actual money-chiefly in this respect, that its profitable management sometimes re quire that portions of it be appropriated to local objects, in the State wherein it may happen to lie, as would be done by any' pru dent proprietor to enhance the sale of his private domain. All such grants of land Are, in fact, a disposal of it for value re ceived ; but they afford no precedent, or constitutional roason, for giving away the public lands. Still less do they givb,sanc tjon tonppropriationsforobjects which have pot been entrusted to the Federal Govern ment, and therefore belong exclusively to the States. ' To ossumo that the public lands aro ap plicable to ordinary Slate objects, whether of public structures, police, charity or ex peases of State administration, would be to disregard, to the amount of the value of the public lands, ali.ihe limitations of the Constitution, and confound to that extent, all distinctions between the rights and powers of the States, and those of the Uni ted-States For if the public lands may ■V?.^J?i'J l ®l,i o t the noor, ‘he'r proceeds be’nofsTbject To ion then a r 1,m,ta,,0n3 of ‘ho Constitu tion, then Congress possesses unqualified Power to provide for expendituj *0 mean ® of the public lands, oven *■ ,‘ho degree of defraying the salaries a f |dvernors, judges, and all other expenses •?u rD T nt ’ nnd inten > al odrninis ra «nt tt ’ Wi * )in ‘ho several States. iiSJof‘ ik > “ Cl |I 8 f 0 fr L om t,IQ general sur. hio ' V la ° , stlb J ec ( fe. tc mymind, nVSK I Bnd < l! oaeBtho question, both *'& , * 4nd expediency, so far as regards' ■ fkanklin pierce Washington, May 3, 1854. ' The Nebraska Bill Snstained'by the House, < Tho first trial of strength on the No-1 braskd bill yesterday, in the House of Representatives resulted, as wo i in tho completo triunfjph of the-friends ot popular sovereignty and Congressional non-intervention. Tho spectacle during tho voto was in tho highest degree exciting and gratifying. It recalled tho glorious scenes of 1850,■ when, with unitedund in trepid column, the supporters of the com jpromiso measures prevailed over the com bined assailants of constitutional princi jples. Tho voto of yeslerduy may well be i called an eloquent tribute to the salutary nnd ( saving example of those measures; I indeed, the extreme opinions of cxcilod | land irrituted men could scurcoly havo been | reconciled but for tho lesson taught and the doctrines established duringthoso mem jornblo days. We db not deem this to be, j the timo to recall tho events of yesterday’s contest. Rut wo cannot forbear an illu-1 sion ; in passing, to tho ennobling firmness, and fidelity of the vast majority of the! Democratic parly ,In tho House. | • No less cheering was tho great vote of j the Democratic members from tho freo IStutes. A majority of the Democratic reprosentativesoftho North and Northwest enrolled their names in its favor. Wo derivo special gratification from this fact, because it' is an emphatic answer to tho torrent'of calumny which has been pour ed out upon tho Nebraska bill, and because it may at tho sumo time, bo held up in healthy and instructive, contrast tothcfuct that not one Whig from tho free States voted with the-friends of tho menauro 1 — Forty-one Democrats from the great North and Northwest, and not one whig, voted I for tho bill. Wo should fuil to gve full 1 [expression to our feelings if wo did not re efer to the noble contrast ! furnished by the patriotic action of the ' groat body or the Southern Whigs, com -1 parared with the entire party from tho free States. Wo should bo doing o historical injustico if wo fuiled to notice the persistnni etlbrts ,i... Ovdca t and to onibur* rass tho passsage of the bill. But they toiled in vain. Compact and resolute, the friends of tho measure rallied to its sup port ; and from tho moment that Colonel Richardson, tho very able Chairman of tho Committee on Territories, made his motion to go into committee, throughout all his subsequent motions to lay over cer tain bills on tho Speaker’s tablo in order to reach tho Nebraska bill, every vote was a victory. Wo hail in these auspicious events not nlono tho speedy organization of tho now Territories, but the signal that marks tho entire and final termination of the slavery agitation in Congress. That issue will henceforwurd be referred to a higher trib unal, to the tribunal of the people. Triple benefits will flow upon tho country as tho result A raco ( p i £ - bravojirKj bold men will Peace and goodwill will mark the daltuer ations of the people’s representatives; and the trade of abolition, like other conbina jdigns against society und morals, vill bo j conducted by reckless men in midnight iConclavos. I .We hail the vole of yesterday, also, as an evidence that the organization of the Democratic party still stands firm. The [Democratic party spoko yesterday in the House ns it hud spoken previously in the Senate; and in the House, as in the Sen ate, it was aided by n gallant band of pat riotic Southern Whigs. This voice was the voice of triumph and of power. This action was the action that impcrrilled rights demanded; and our party will emerge from the remainder of the contest not only in uninpaired majesty, but stron ger from the struggle, and ready for new exertions for tlip constitution. Washington Union. I (K7“Mr. Secretary Murcy rocontly told jan anecdote at a dinner party in Wash ington, which runs thus. lie said that a I few weeks since Gov. Seymcur of New I York wrote to him, that since he had ve toed the liquor law ho had received various j letters from gentleman in various parts of J the State, both approving and disapproving ol his course in the premises.. Among them was one from an honest old deacon, who resided in the centre of the State, which commended his action in the strongest! terms. Tho old gentleman alluded lo°in-j formed the governor that ho wjs deeply! interested in the debates of both sides of I the question, and did not let ono “jot or j title ’ escape him. Ho had too, he said, “looked up” his biblo from Genesis to j Revelation, in order to see how the liquor question was there treated, andufter mature deliberation hocaino to tho conclusion that all the great nnd good men, as Noah, David, Solomon and Jesus, not weroj partakers of the “rosy,” but recommended it jo others; in a word, in his researches i ho only found ono intance (that of “Dives”) ! whero a man called for cold water, and that ho was in h—l, xvlierc he fught to be! j Killed Himself in a Fit If Passion. A suicide of ruther a strung cljarnctor took place recently in the littlo of Hamil ton, in Millcreek township, about six miles from the city. A man named Leonard Houslet was engaged in moulding candles, bunhe moulds leaking, bo became enraged, ana after a series of curpos, seized a shot gun,and rushing to a shed in thoyard, do-' iiu..„u,i jr mucked tho gun, placed the-muz-1 zle to his breast, and he expired in a few' minutes. Houslet’s wile was present du ring this horrible afluir, hut was so shock- ; ed by his expression of rage, that, through fear of her own life, she was prevented from thwarting her husband ia his sell? murder.—- Cincinnati Enquirer. j _ fcpTTho I/iberto, pf Lille, states that the ! iurkish ambassador ip Paris has demand ed from thp-French bishops aid and pro tection for a Capuchin father,• who is now in France collecting the iffeans for building a Catholic church at Constantinople. I ONE WEEK LATER FROM EUROFE. Arrival of the Canada at Halifax. ‘ Halifax, May 10.—The Royal Mail ■ steamship Canada, Captain Stone, from Liverpool on Saturday, tho 30th, April, at rived at this port at 7 o’clock this evening, brings 250 passengers. , Thero is no intelligencb of tho missing steamer City of Glasgow. Tho Collins stenmship Atlantic arrived at Liverpool at 2 o’clock on Friday aftei noon, the 28th ult. The news from liiosentof war indicates increased vigor on tho part of tho allies. Twenty thousand French and 8,000 En glish troops had landed at Gnllipoli. i No event of importnneo had occurred. A sanguinary engagement had taken placo near Kalafut without decisive results. It was reported that tho Russians had been del'outcd at Pattschcrnarodn, and that 1 they had evacuated Little Wullachia, | Sir Charles Napier was at Stockholm on | thq 27th of April, and his fleet was about ! fifty miles off. Tho allied fleets in tho Black Sea were ■ at anchor oft’ Odcsn on tho 26th of April. 1 The Russian force was withdrawing from 'Kalafut. 1 Russian decrees give French and En glish vessels six Weeks Irom tho 19th of 'April to escape from Russian ports in tho ! Black Sea—and six weeks (rem May 7th to leave the Buliic ports. Enemy’s proper ly in neutral bottoms is to be regarded ns inviolable —and the subjects of neutral pow ders on board the enemy’s ships uro not to : be molested. .! Twelvo Russian merchantmen had been captured by Turkish cruisers, AN IMPORTANT LAW Tl.c following bill has passed tho Legis la lure : AN ACT to protect certain domestic and private Rights and . prevent Abuses hi the Sale and Use of intoxicating Drink. Sec. I. Be it enacted &c., Thut wilfully furnishing intoxicating drinks by sale, gilt, or otherwise, to any person of known intern• jicrnio habits ton” minor o*to an insano person, for use as a beverage, shall bo held and deemed a misdemeanor, and upon con viction thereof the offender sliull be find not less then ten or more than fifty dollars, and undergo an imprisonment of not less than ten or more than sixty days; and the wilful furnishing of intoxicating drinks ns a beverage to any person when drunk or intoxicated,shallbe deemed a misdemeanor, I punishable as aforesaid. Sec. 2. That it shall be lawful for nny| member of tho fumily, or blood relative, ofj an intemperate person, or any overseer of the poor, or magistrate of the district in which such intemperate person resides, on an legal settlement, or the committee of an ; habitual drunkard, to give distinct notice,! verbal or .written to any inn-keeper, mer- ! [chant grocer, distiller, brewer, or other persons manufacturing, selling, or having iunnshtiig such intemporaie person, or ha bitual drunkard, witli intoxicating drinks or liquors; and if within three months alter such notice, any one to whom the same is given shall furnish, or cause to be furnish ed, intoxicting liquors to such intemperate persons, or hubitual drunkard, to be used ns a beverage he shull ho deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction there of shall be punished ns provided in the first section of this act. i Sec. 3. That any person furnishing in | toxicating drinks to any other person in v,. olalion of any existing luw, or of the pro vision of this act, shall be.civily responsi ble for ony injury to person or property in consequence of such furnishing, and any one aggrieved may recover full damages pgainstsuch persons so furnishing by action on the case, instituted in any court having jurisdiction of such form of action fn this commonwealth. ! See. 4. That nny justice or clergyman ! who shall perform the marriage coremony 'between parties when either of said party is intoxicated, shall be deemed guilty of a ! misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof ; shall pay a fine of filly dollurs and bo im. prisoned at the discretiou of the Court not i exceeding sixty days, j Sec. 5. That any wilful adulteration and corruption of spirituous, vinous or mall : liquors, manufactured or intended as u bev leruge, whereby the snmoare essentially ren dered unwholesome, noxious and injurious to health, or nny sale of such liquors for use as a boveruge,witb knowledge that the same is adulterated and corrupted, shall subject tlio offender for a first offence to a fine of fifty dollurs, and for a second and subse quent offence to a fino of one hundred dol lars and imprisonment not cxceoding sixty days. Sec. 0. Any person prosecuting for an offense indictable undo/ this act shull, upon conviction of the offender, recejvo such reasonable sum for expenses, services and timo expended, ns may be directed by the court, not oxceeding twenty dollars, to bo taxed and paid as a part of the costs in tho case ; such allowanco to bo exclusive as compensation to such prosecutor ns wit ness under existing laws. Provided, That such allowance shall not bo made in more than ono case at tho samo term to ono person. | Sec. 7. That no action shall be main tained or recovery had in nny case for liquors sold in violation of this act, and de fence may bo taken in any case against [such recovery without special plea or notice. J Sec. 0. That it shall bo lawful for the .Courts of Quarter Sessions to revoke nny liconso granted Jby them for tho sajg of ■ liquors, wherever the party holding a li cense shall bo proved to have violated nny law of this commonwealth regulating the sale of liquors, or the premises of such party shall become tho rosortof idloordis orderly persons so ns to disturb the genor ol peace of the neighborhood. o>f~ A Petition is in circulation in f'Jow Bedford, Mass,, asking tho Mayor and Al derman to j>|ace the names of colored citi zens in the jury box. I [From tho Boston Times, of Monduy.] RIOT IN CIIEtSEA. "Angel Gabriel" Stoned!—The Catholic Church Attacked l— The Milatary Cal. led Out !—Arrests, tyc. The street preacher known .ns tho “An gel Gubricl,” visited Medford yesterdny, for tho purpose of making n street hainn guo ngainst Catholicism, but was notified by the authorities that ho would not bo al lowed to proceed. He then went to Chel sea in nbuggy,nccompaniedby a sixhorso team load of sympathisers, but concluded not to preach theraj so they proceeded on to Eagle Hill, cast 1 Boston, whore he wus about to proclaim tho gospel, when tho po lico notified him that if ho attempted to preach in the streets they should arrest him. lie consulted with his friends, about fif ty in number, and concluded to return to Chelsea,, und did so without any eorious trouble, although the.lrish assembled in largo numbers, and a disturbance was threatened. Upon arriving ut Chelsea,the pa'rty went upon a high point of land east of Ml. Bellingham where they were quiet ly talking among themselves, when a par ty of Irishmen, numbering about seventy live, app/oachcd them and mndo an attack with stones. Tho Americans being un prepared for such treatment, retreated to Mt. Bellingham cind sent a messenger for assistance. Tho Americans were sooti strengthened by an increase of numbors. A squad of Irish also joined their friends from the “Fifty Houses,” so called in Choi sea, occupied by the workinon employed at tho Glendon Rolling Mills, and another party of Irish came to the rescue from “Mutthewsville.” The Americans then pursued the Irish and drove them into the “Fifty Houses.” The fight did not result very seriously, as no persons were injured, although stones were thrown and several pistols were dis charged. By this time the police of Chel sea, assisted by a large posso of citizens together with the Selectmen, were on the spot. Tho Americans becoming enraged proceeded to the Catholic church, in Cot tage street, nnd attempted to tear the edi fice down, but were prevented by the active exertions of the citizens. During the ex citement, n lad from East Boston, by the name of Williams, ascended the lightning rod nnd tor# down the cross, and alter wa ving it above his head, threw it on the |ground, when it wng seized, cut up, nnd | the fragments divided among the crowd. Deputy Sheriff Rugg, theChuirman of the j Selectmen, appeared with a posse and read [the Riot Act, und ordered the peoplg to I disperse. The order was very reluctent | ly obeyed. i The “Fifty Houses” were considerably i battered when tho Irish were driven, into j them. Several persons cuno out of the i houses with dungerous weapons, and were j arrested. One of them was a woman, ifxhu feff-gw^roirTiro'iiHr^rtS (evening, only five'persons were arrested ( —four Irishmen and the female alluded 'to. The greatest excitement prevailed i among tho inhabitants. 'Tho military— ! the Chelsea Light Infantry—wero on duty ■at their armory, provided with ball cart ridge, and the firemen were all deputized • as.speciul police. Besides, there was about ono hundred special policemen on active duty. The “Fifty Houses” were thronged with Irishmen uptoeleven o’clock fist evening, when our reporter left. The Selectmen were in session, nnd every pre caution was used against an outbreuk. — Wo regret to learn that Constable Milton, while endeavoring to quiet the mob, was struck in tho back of tho head with a stone thrown from a crowd of Irishmen, receiv ing a severe injury.. At the Cntholic church, an effort was made to find Mr. Struil], tho Catholic priest, but tu no purpose, us it wus Jin nounced that ho hud gone to Lynn. The difficulty at the church was about 4 o’clock worship having concluded. ~ ' Nai>oleon Wants a Divohce.—Tho Puris correspondent of tho Montreal Wit ness writes as follows : "The great question which occupies nl present the Court of France, is the divorce of the Emperor, lie no longer hopes to have any children by his present wife,nnd it is said ho thffiks of taking another. The report is not official, but as it hasuppeared in several licensed papers, the truth of it can scarcely be questioned. Napoleon HI. ' is, howover, very fond of his wife, and the divorce will resemble in every point that of his uncle and Josephine, who were, ns you know, separated for the sumo reusou.— Whether from this motivo or any o'her, the Empress of the French is looking very melancholy. It is impossible to see her without being struck by her expression of sadness. As to the Emperor, ho appears constantly calm and imperturablo. Pum.ic Suffocation. —Thoy squeeze us to death in rail-cars ; they poison us with carbonic acid gas in" fushionnblo churches; they choke us with tho fumes of tobacco, brandy, whiskey and onions, dis tilled through thousands of lungs in thea tres, and other places of public amusement. I It is really nt the risk of one’s health, if) not his life, that one ventures into crowd-1 ed public places nt all. It is surprising that, with nil the activity at present existing in the scientific world, the subject of ven tilation should havo beon so ontirely bvoi‘- lookjCcK'' • „ FnoM Fay al.— Noneivs of the steamship Cit'H of Clasgow. —Advices from Faynl to Aptil 12, nine days later than previous dales, has been reciveed. Up to that time thero had been not one word heard of tlio City of Glasgow, then in her forty-second day out from Liverpool. . It is now seventy days since the City ol Glasgow snjled from Liverpool for Phija. delphio, and the utter absence of nows ip regard to her ever since she sailed, arid the fajlure to her at the Azarep, es nearly tho last hop 6 of her safety? THE NEW LICENSE LAW. Wo givo below tho now Liconso Law; passed by the Legislature of this State,tn-i titled “An act for tho better regulation ot\ Spirituous and Malt Liquors . . i Sec. 1. Boit enneted, &c., That from 1 and after tho passage of this act, no porson j or persons shall sell or expose to sale any beer, nio, porter or other malt liquors, with out a license for that purpose first bad and obtained from the Court of Quarter Scs. sionsof tho proper counjy, in the same way and subject to tho snrrio rules and regula- ■ tions as regards the licensing and keeping : of suid beer houses and tho payment of the licer.so fees to tho Commonwealth as are now applied by law to tho keepors of licen sed inns'and taverns. Sec. 2. That from and after tho passngo of this act, no liconse shall bo granted by tho Treasurer of any county to any per son or persons, to sell spirituous liquors by tho quart, or otherwise, within the said county, unless tho person or persons ap plying for such liconse shall bu retailors of foreign or domestic goods, wares and mer. 'chnndisc other than spirituous liquors eu tilled lobe classed cquul with the fourteenth class, und lmvo been thus regularly class ed cquul with the fourteenlh'class, and have been thus regularly classed by the Apprais er of Mercantile taxes. Sec. 3. That any person or persons vending spirituous or malt liquor without a license for that purpose first had and ob tained, according to the provisions herein before provided and any porson of per sons violating any of tho provisions of this uct, shall be subject to the same penalties that arc now by law provided against the keepers of unlicensed tippling houses; Provided, That this act shall not be so con structed os to apply to tho brewers oT malt liquorsor the manufacturers or rectilieisof spirituous liquors for wholesule purposes. I’/ovidc'l, That tho npplicunt for license under this net shall not be required to givo notice thereof by advertising in the news papers of the proper county, and said Courts shall have power to grant said li jcenses at any term at which petitions may Ibe presented : And provided , That no thing in this net contained shall eliunge the iclassification of venders of spirituous and | malt liquors in the city and county of Phil judclptun, or reduce the amount of tho ii 'cense fees thereof. From the Wtushinyton Union, J lay H OUR RELATIONS WITH SFAIN. If the rumors which were current at Madrid at our latest dates bo reliable, the Spanish cabinet had declined to uflbrd prompt reparation for the wrongs commit ted against tho flug of the United Slates in the instance ol the Black Warrior. Ihe I intelligence from the belief that it is true, jis justly producing a mighty sensation | throughout the Union. Thu period for di . plomatizing at a, distance oi four tnousand ‘miles lor redress lor unprovoked, flagrant insults and injuries sustained by our court i try at tho hands of the insolent, and so far ns wc arc concerned, irresponsible authori ties at Havana, has at length passed by. — Duty to ourselves require that we should 'prepare for settling upon the spot wiicro they aro perpotrnted •the offences to our honor and rights. Wc are quite freo to state —and in terms I so emphutic and unequivocaT as to admit of no misinterpretation—that if ample sa tisfaction is not allowed for the piratical seizure of tho Blacjr Wurrior, we shall ad vocate an immediulo blockade of the is land. That justico which wo tnmporately appealed for to the homo government ol her Catholic Majesty it is imperative upon us now to exact. Outrages upon this na tion, alfecling even its honor, arc of inces sant accumulation in Cuba ; mid i: L pal pably distinct llmt thero is but a solitary manner left to us.for remedying them. — That man nor is the energetic and judicious employment of such resources us happily are at our disposal. The situation has be come too grave to longer permit of tempor izing negotiations. Our complaining voice has been lieurd sufficiently long ; we must now make ns expressions felt. ?■ * * * - i The vehement language of Pczuela, [lie captain-general of Cuba,’as contained i:i j the official Gazette against the Executive | of the United States, because of the scnii ! ment expressed in the message to Congress j concerning ihu Black Warrior atliiir, ren ders tho establishment of good relations i with Spain, and friendly intercourse with her possessions almost impossible while tliut functionary is retained. Every true hearted American considers it exceedingly insulting to the republic, and would resent it as indignantly, if an occasion offered, as did our ucting consul and Commodore Newton. Tho most ordinary regard for international civilities requires that such impertinence should be punished by the Queen with deprivation of office. A Man Befobe Adah.—A conglomer ato work, to use.u geolfigicul phrase, has lutely been published,entitled, “The Types of Mankind,” made up of contributions from the late Dr. Morton, Agassiz, Usher, Nott.and Gliddon. This work is destined to creato something of a commotion in tho religious world. Tho idea of iho unity of tho r co of man is totally discarded by tho authors, one and all. Dr. Usher mukes the astounding statement in this work) that a human fossil has been found in Now Or leans, in the course of some excavations in that city,-to which a pre-Adumito age is attributed.—According to this authority, -the’skeleton of a'man of tho conformation of native Indians, was discoveredat a Uoplli of 16 leet lying below a succession of four lossil cypress forests to each of which the age of 14,400 years is given. Agassiz is 6aid fe have accepted this as a fact, and bused upon it his assertion, that man ox ist.ed.upon the earth at least 160,000 years ago—The theologian,must oither disprove this statement* or be qpmpclled (o admit a new exegesis of Holy 'Writ.