THE BEDFORD GAZETTE. Bedford, Jan. Js.Y.s. G. W. Bowman, Editor and Proprietor- QIAUTEREY MEETINGS. Meetings in the M. E. Church ol Bedford, and the Mount Smith Church about three miles noith of Bedford, will commence on next Saturday. Rev. Jolltl A. ( oilidS, the Presiding Elder, is expected to preach at Mount Smith on Saturday evening and Sunday morn ing, and in Bedford on Sunday evening. The public ace cordially invited to attend. All who love sound doctrine as well as eloquent preach ing can have their desires fully gratified bv sit ting under the sound of the voice ol John A. Collins, and we have no doubt the people will turn out in great numbers to bear him, as usual. BV reference to our advertising columns it will be seen that Messrs. A. B. CRAMER virtue to siander and traduce all who stand opposed to them; and men who would not condescend to do an unworthy act in the business relations of life, on any account, vio late the most solemn political pledges without the slightest hesitation—a state of afliiirs which is fast tendingto destroy a!! confidence between man and his fellow man. This is to be regret ted, deeply regretted, and it is high time that a vigorous effort were made to stay this pestilen tial political epidemic. The enthusiastic Democrat of to-day, who has heen fed and fattened bv his political associates, becomes the bitter enemy to all his former pro fessions to-morrow, merely on account of some disappointment in obtaining cilice: and so with the clamorous disappointed Whig and know- Nothing, w ho finds that ail his Patriotism unit love of Country are narrowed down to a love of self, growing out of an inordinate thirst for of fice 1 Under such circumstances it is no won der that good men are disinclined to take part in the political treachery which Iras found its way into party organizations. If Gov. Pollock "takes the Constitution for his guide," and metes out "equal and exact jus tice to JILL," we will esteem it a pleasure to commend his administration—and we most sin cerely wish he may he able to redeem the sacred Pledge with which he closes his Inaugural. The following paragraph, which we quote from an able aaticle in a late number of the Harrisburg I'nion, contains sentiments worthy the endorsement of every Democratic paper in Pennsylvania : "Mr. Pollock is now Governor of this fnmmon monwealth. Although politically opposed to us, we shall show him fair play. To misrepresent his official acts for the mere sake of obtaining a political triumph, or to abuse the public mind in order to ren tier turn arid his administration unpopular is a mean ness which we are above. We know a certain editor in ibis place who pursued this rotir-e with Gov. Bigler, hut he afloriis a bad political ex ample. Gov. Pollock has more to fear from the ful some adulation, of crawling sycophant-, than the bold and manly course of political opponents." Zuigioa't.'rs&t In the Senate, on Friday last, Mr. Killinger, of La hanon, offered a resolution instructing the Committee on Militia to inquire into the expediency of reporting a bill disbanding ail volunteer companies in the Stale, and ioibiihling the formation ol new ones, of which two-thirds of the members and officers are not Amrri rat* ham citiseu*. The resolution gave rise to an in teresting debate, but finally passed by a vote of 17 To 13, as follows : YKIS —Mes-rs. Crabb, Ferguson. Flenniker., Fra zer, Frick, llaldeman, Hendricks, Jordan, Killinger, Lewis, Mellinger, Price, Quiggle, Sellers, Shuman, Skinner and 'l'aggart—l7. NAYS —Messrs. Browne, Buckab-w, Cres-well, Darsie, Goodw in. Hamim, Hoge, Mc'Clintock, Piatt, Sager, Walton, Wherry and Hiester, Fpealrr —l3. Ir.t.ixois LEoisi.ATrKK.—The Illinois Senate have passed resolutions instructing the members ol Con gress from that State against a change in the natural ization laws—yeas 18, nays <5. Col. Morrison ad dressed the Senate for an hour and twenty minutes, in favor of the resolutions. An Apprentice, to learn the Printing, Will he taken at the office ol the Bedford Ga ze! L on favorable terms. [i/*We are called upon to record, with a sorrow which our entire community seems to have partaken of, the death of Mrs. MARGARET JAMISON, consort of Mr. Lawrence Jamison, ol this Borough, who suddenly departed this life on last Sabbath afternoon. A few days previ ously she had been out visiting some friends in her usual health !—and hence her sudden de cease has fallen heavily not only upon those near and dear to her, hut upon all who knew her. She was an amiable, lovely woman: an af fectionate wife, a fond mother, a benevolent neighbor, and an ornament to society. If deep sympathy could remove the distress of the af flicted husband and children, they have many tears mingling with theirs in token ol heart—l l sorrow in view o! this melancholy bereave ment. We trust some other pen will write an obituary suitable to the occasion. 'Flic 23i5>2c! It is becoming fashionable at the present day for persons making no pretensions to piety, much less Christianity, to form themselves into Christian Associations —whilst others whose every day walk and conversation repudiate the teachings of Holy Writ make the Bible a cloak to cover iniquity of the deepest dye! 'hat men should pretend to make the Bible their "Text-Book " who can daily and deliberately utter the most profane oaths, even in ordi nary conversation—who are seldom if ever seen in the house of God—who violate the Sabbath with perfect impunity—who scoff' at every form of religious worship—who riot in intem perance and the debaucheries which necessari ly follow this deplorable vice—we repeat, that such men should proclaim tiie Bible as their text-book is a species of blasphemy too horrible for contemplation—and yet it is a fact which cannot be successfully denied that just such per sons as we have described are to be found in every community in the land heading associa tions professedly for the sole purpose of protect ing and promulgating the doctrines of the Bible —and thousands of honest and good men seem to be following their lead without stopping to consider the awful consequences they are trea suring up to crush their dearest hopes in a dy ing hour! Let men go to Christ's Church to learn of the Bible—of Holiness—of Heaven— and eschew all political organizations wearing ! the livery of Heaven to serve the Devil in ! The Philadelphia News, in trilling with this ; sacred subject, savs, "the doctrine that the Bi ' bit' ought to be recognized as the text-book ol the American Statesman does not seem to he re lished by Loco Focoism." Now, were we to judge of our opponents' love of the Bible by the gross recklessness of the editorial columns of the .Veii\s, we might weli exclaim that the doctrines of the Bible had little to do with their medita tions—but we would blush to make so uncha ritable a declaration. No man, let liiin be De mocrat, Whig, Know-Nothing, Antimason, or even a member of a Christian association, "re lishes the doctrines of the Bible" unless the ho ly Spirit has passed upon his heart and renewed his nature, and this will manifest itself in the fife of every man who has thus passed from death unto life.' All others who profess to love the Bible, are, in the language of Scripture, "Hypocrites ," let them belong to whatever par ty or church they may. Oh ! let not the Bible become a hebbv tor politicians to trifle with and iet none claim to be its friend whose dothj deportment denies its teachings. IXOJKL TE;BV;:4! KF*Tlie Philadelphia -Vms of Monday last copies a paragraph from an "exchange" in which a belief is expressed that the present Le gislature will elect Gen. Cameron to the Senate of the United States: in reply to which Mr. Fianigen delivers himself of the follow ing signi ficant Threat, which members would do well to observe: "WE would like to see. the present Legist'fi lature make the JtTTE.MFI to justify any such action." This looks as if something terrible w as brew ing in the ranks of our opponents, not on the subject of "Americans ruling America," but on the special subject of who shall rule the 1.. S. Senator Question! It is very evident that all the aspirants fear the General. Q[/"* The Penna. Senate could not proceed to business on Saturday last for w ant ot a quo rum—neither was the House in session ! QyThe Know-Nothings of New Hampshire have nominated Rev. John Moore, a I niversal it Clergyman, as their candidate for Governor! State Temperance Convection A corrc spendetif of the Daily A'rtrs, writing from Ilarrishurg under date of January 10, 18-55, thus ridi cules the action of the State Temperance Convention then in session. Dow Conn. Rep. 171. Chief Justice Kent in his Commentanes ?<•!!- u the established inference in law i- that a conveyance of land bounded on a public highway carries with it the fee to the centre of the road. The idea ot an in tention in a Grantor to withhold his interest to the middle ( .l it. after having parted with all his right ; arid title to theadjotniug land is not to be pre-umed. : 3 vol. 433. | It is i-aul that this is a vexed question! Il it is so, ;it i- high time that it should be set at re-t. Il it is without "apt purr,lent/ it i- in precisely the same po-ition that alt other ca=es were in when fir-t they were agitated. It being without precedent (il such I is the case) furnishes an ah-olute and moral necessi ty for e-tabli-hing a precedent row. riierefore \ Judgment for the Plaintiff and writ of enquiry awar ! ded. Lager Kerr Hill. It will he remembered (hat cluriti£r sum mer, and as a means to indue* temperance men throughout the Commonwealth to vote against Gov. Bigler, it ius alleged against him that he refused to sanction the lull passed by the last Legislature, denominated the "lager beer hill." It was also a favorite theme with certain editors 1 in this place to belch forth their anathemas against the Executive, and give to the world, what the world will some day find out, a per fect specimen >f their hypocrisy and deceit. So miserably was this hill drawn up, so hasty was its passage, that had it been approved by the | executive, it would have been a statute too ri i diculntis for serious contemplation. It is too [ true that fanatics, w hen they undertake to re | form, olteji overshoot the mark, and entail evils 1 on community, lar greater than those they pro | pose to remedy ; while again, the legislator j who. to keep up a popularity acquired by ca | terms to the crude and undigested notions of • demagogues, gives his sanction to an v and every measure, it matter- til l whether it he right or ! wrong. The Governor sent to the Senate his veto of this bill, and it was a document which proved the bill to he a wrongful measure, as clear as the sun at noon-da v. The Senate, in acting | upon t-he tit!! according to the requirements of the Constitution, sustained the veto . y a vote of nintle.vn to ten . The vote for the bill was as | follows: Yeas.—Messrs. Darsie, Fiirgn-on. Flenniken, Fra zor, Friek, Lewis, Mellinger, Shaman, Skinner and Taggart—lo. Nays —Messrs. Browne. Buekalew, Cresswell, Fry. Gooitwm, Halib-miui, Hamlin, .Tamt-nn, Jordan, KilliiigT, M'Clintoek, i'liot, Price, Qmg gle, Sager, Walton, Wherry and Hiester, Speaker— ; 19. This was a very decided vote, and showed I that the position assumed by the Governor was I correct. But our object in calling public atten tion to this matter, was not to show how wrong the bill was, nor bring to remembrance the un fair and hypocritical course pursued bv psitcdo j temperance men in relation to the action of | Gov. Biglf.b, but to inquire upon what prin | cipie the ten Senators voted to sustain the bill, notwithstanding the veto. In the case of a { hank, railroad, canal, or other measure, where i the policy or impolicy of the measure is the question, we can readily see how such a vote ; might be given ;or where all agree as to the i policy of a measure, but disagree as to its d<— j tails, we could see tin* same thing r but, on a ; question like the one involved in this hill, there could not be two opinions. The manner in I which the bill was drawn, absolutely rendered 1 it inoperative, and the benefits expected to flow from it would have been converted into the; worst of'evils, yet Senators ret use to wistain a veto which was the result of an act of justice to temperance men! This is the fruits of ca tering to a miserable popularity, or to a dogma right or wrong; to give the public an evidence of temperance pi inciples. We take it that the best course in the long! run, is for legislators to be governed by print i- I i pies far above those which seek to appease the fanaticism of any s-t of men. Let them do that which is right, and which they are always aide to show is right, and they will never incur the regrets which come from th perpetration ol error. Let them cast isms to the winds, as ; worthless chaff, without a single grain of priori- j pie in them, and instead thereof, h t them look j only to the enactment of good and wholesome: ; laws which will promote the happiness ol the j whole people. Such a course may not fin a time meet with the current of popular appro! a- ' tion, tor the world, it seems, estimates m-n now I ! only according to tin-ir standard as humbugs, j but the time will come when their honesty will J he known, and their services appreciated. It may do well to throw- together a heteroge neous mass ol discordant political mateiial, ele vated in popular by a ministration to the hum bugs of the day, but we doubt very much if good can come out of such a Nazareth. If all the new iangled notions which have been thrown to the surface of politics, are to be made a part and parcel of Pennsylvania law, we shall have a beautiful time of it. Vv • hope, however, it may he done. The best way to barn Un people sense, is to teach tlieni by experience. We never saw thiown together in one bill, as much nonsense as the lager beer bill contained. I It was a l atch of inconsistencies, filter to i.e laughed at than anything else. We say tins,; not on account of any opposition to a reform in j the question of selling "lager I t er," but ta - i cause of tlm manner in win h the lull w a.- j framed : and anv one can sthe correct; ess of our jit mii who w til .ilhe hi h. 1 rom tie s<- . who w ill not ivu I the bill, or, bavii.g read it. !ri (use to tell C'",rnmii..itx tVir h- : •■.-! convic tions, nothing can !••• ex: - $ ted. Bui the d r, thinking men of the Slate should g t it, and sm . how p-ditical tei.ipci ance men diddled then . j Hnrriaburg i7/ ion. ion;ffress. Washington, Jan. 17. Senate.—Mr. Seward presented the petition ; of citizens ol Cneiila county, New Y<-rk, asking | the mediation of our (Government in relation to j the war with Europe. Referred to the Com i rnittee on Foreign Relations. Mr. Seward also presented a petition from ci- ! iiz*-ns of New York, who served in the warof j IS I'd, for additional bounty lands: referred to j t!:e Committee on Pensions. Mr. Fessenden presented the memorial of a | large number of citizens of Maine, praying foi the repeal of tlm Fugitive Slave Law. Mr. Dodge, of Wisconsin, presented a biiD-s- j tablishing Rock Island, lowa, as a port of deli ■ very. Mr. Bayard presented a bill to provide for the extension of the (Genera! Post oii.ee build- : . mg. l lie sum 0f5300,000 was insetted as the ; an ount er note, similar to that she had sent him at the f j store. All Ijer clothing and some valuable fam- j • 1 ily relics, together with a small sum of money J , ! kept in the bureau, were gone. i The thought struck him that she had eloped, ' - and with a view of ascertaining the fact, in a ? ! state of unusual excitement, lie went into an ■ adjoining house and inquired whether (hey had 1 : noticed anything peculiar going on about his - house that day. No person seemed to know i anything more than that about one o'clock a ■ | carriage stopped there a few moments and then i drove off. They did not know who was in if, i or whether any person got out or in. He then • I related the circumstances of his position to the lady of the house, and she informed him, on rt llection, that for the last ent times, she had not iced a tairiage stop at the door, ami a man alight and go into the hot,.-, stopping tin-1e a short time, and then returnii,.' to Jus carriage. He was advised to go into [|" ot}•"■! adjoining house and make inquired tin-re. He did so, and th.-n learned very m-ai iy the whole fact of this singular proceeding. They stated that the man noticed by their neighbor t"> enter Ins house had been introduced to them hv his wiie as a Mr. W'ifliam Thornton, ot Charles ton, S. C ,asa relative of his family, putting up at the Howard House, and visiting different connect .ins and acquaintances in tins city.— The injured man immediately went to the tele graph office, and i ad despatches forwarded to Host on and Philadelphia, describing both par ties, with directions to tfie police to stop them both if so the car. He has always lived plea santly with ins wife, and keenly (eels the wnma she has done him. He is one of the oldest pre vision dealers in the city, as wel! as one of the wealthiest, and is determined to make an exam ple ot the partips if it be pos.-ibie. Lamentable Occurrence—Jl Student of .Medi cine Burnt to Death and another seriously in jured.—About 2 o'clock this morn ing, a fire broke out in the boarding house of Mis. Ed w aids, on the south side ot Chesuut street, alx.ie Thirteenth. It originated in the basement and was discovered by one ol the [arlice in thestieet who alarmed the house. By thi- tirne the house vvas filled with smoke, and ihe tire had made considerable progress. Besides the servants in the house tliere Were an old lady named Join s, and her sou, a Frenchman named S-n --tatme and his son, and Mr. Bowman. „M r . ■ bowman and young Mr. Jones occupied a I room on the third floor front. The Fiencbmen wer.- on the second floor tack ;. and the rest of the family (except Mrs. Edwards, who is in 1 New York) were in different port; ns of the , house. I jon the smoke reaching the room of Bowman and Jones tin-v honied out of Led, ami made for the 1 iver portion of the house.— .'..-th wvut together as far the >ec.,n fierson College, j and was universally esteemed by his feilovv j Students. Ytiung Jones, who came down to the second floor with Bowman, it-aped from the second story window into'the yard, a distance ol about ; twenty feet, and injured one of his legs. He i was taken to the hospital, where he now i>.— j The Fieuchntan lowered his son, a small boy, from the window, with the bed-clothiug, a.d h-aj i d tint himself upon a bed, escaping unliurt: ' the servant girls made their way out into the ; yard, where the police found them, with noth ing hut their under-clothing on them, and in their bare feet ; Mrs. Jones, the old lady who j had been left in charge of the house, by N!rs. Edw artls, bad the servant girls taken into custo dy, under a supposition that the fire was attend ed with such circumstances of suspicion as tli— I manded an investigation. Tlu-v were taken t > to tin- Eighth Ward Police Station, where they ! now are. The fire did considerable damage.— It began in the cellar, immediately over Ik stove, as it appears, and extended thumgh | the pailor above. How it originated is not yet i deterinim-d, though there being fire in the sieve vv fieii ihe family went to bed, it is by no means ; improbable it was accidental, though trie lull ( that an attempt was mace to burn the house ; some weeks since has led to suspicions that it j was fired this morning.— Phil. .li-gm. Jan. IN THE MARKETS. PHILADELPHIA Dec. 23.—There is s good ' were ilispo ed of in small lots at these figures, a '' j 1100 bushels poor Southern white at $! 90. live - scarce and wanted at our la't (piotations. Corn -.- I not so active—Sales of 300 bushels nevv yellow i cents, iii store, and 5000 bushels, atloat, at the same : price. In Oats nothing doing. REMOVAL. — '' lt> uudcrsigtn'd resp-cf i fuily inform their friends ami customers that j tltey have removed their Store to Eschard- I Building, where it will afJGiid us pleasure lo il- I fer (Goods of everv description, at the lowest ! prices, to all who mav favor u< with a call. A". 15. CRAMER N CO. HALF PRIC?!-^ 1 mnants of D- Laou-s, ! and other (Goods on hand, which we are selling at about halftheir value. A. B. CRAMER & CO. Jan. 26. Exchange Building — | | ■* f" ■ • 't" 1 ' ' '■'-7N 5 ?• • ' ••• \ iw..- - '.N If-/,- --—f.fs: ' - jMMm & K D: In this Borough on the 19th inst.. of Croup, M. daughter of Daniel J. is Fllen Shuck, S CU | yea is, and 7 days. "See Israel's gentle Shppherd stands With all engaging charm-, Hark ! how he call- the tender lambs And lolds them in his arms." In this Borough on the 22d inst., at-o of ' John Wii.i.iam, eldest son of A. J. & Harriet - sonri, aged 3 years, vi months and 13 day-. 'Ti (God that lifts our comforts high Or sinks them in the grave, He gives and (hles-ed be his name,) He takes but what he gave." In West Brownsville Washington County, the 11 lb inst. Mr. CiuusriAN S.nidkh, lorrtien) Bedford county, in the 71st year of his age. V. well known in Bedford county, and bcloveu •■} who knew liitn.