THE BEDFORD GAZETTE, j Kcdtord, \ >ril I G. W. Bowman, Editor and Proprietor, j 0- s "E'iour in the East. $lO 75a sll and 11 lor, extra brands. Wheat $2 00 lur red. and $2 ill lor j best White. Rye $l4O. Corn sla $1 05. Sale of Valuable Properly ! C7-We would call particular attention to the ad- ; vertiaement of Col. John W. Geary. He offers, rare chances lor capitalists. Ihe valuable coal pro perties have much to recommend Them for ready ; sales. Their proximity to rail roads, giving easy ac- j ee-s to market, and being part- of the most important Big Veins in the coal region, they present the be-t chances for speculation we have ever been called up on to recommend. Also, the >t. Nicholas Hotel, so well known to the travelling public, a- the best furn ished, and most commodious Hotel in the State, it has also advantages to recommend it. Situate near ly oppo-ire the proposed depot ol the Pittsburg and Connellsville Railroad, and adjacent to the new De pot of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road, it- pureha-e j will in a short time yield the most profitable return. The Auti-s.ic.Mise Law. We publish in the Gazette of to-day the much talk- j ed of Liquor Law' as it passed both branches ol the j Legislature—which, having been approved by Gov. , I'oi.i.ock, is now the law of the Commonwealth. Ihe j Bill passed the Senate by the following vote: y,. a - Messrs. Brown, Crnbb, Darsie, I'lenniken, l'ra/.er. Hamlin, Hoge, Jamison, Jordan, Lew is, Piatt, Price, Quiggly, Taggart and Wherry—l'. Nays—Me-srs. Buckalew, Ore. swell, fry. Good-j win, Halderninn, Hendricks, Killinger, McClintock. Milliliter, Sager. Seller-, Stuirnan, Walton and Hie.- ter, (Speaker)—l4. Mes-rs. Ferguson, Prick, Pratt and Skinner did not vote. The I louse passed The Senate Bill—yeas -id, nays ."5,7—1 r> doJgimf. We have not yet seen a report of the vote in tlie House. We will give it next week. This Bill cannot be regarded as containing the true elements of reform, and all rational tnen will agree wijli the Pott -vii 1 e llr- ening throughout its members that its platform must be shorn of its intolerant features: that its system of government must be liberalized so as to ignore its extra-judicial oaths and ridiculous penalties, and that it must in ali essential fea tures he popularized to conform to the impera tn e demands of public sentiment, or it must i tin a brief career anil he swept from existence by the returning wave of popular opinion. We do not indulge in v.iiti speculations based upon common rumor or imagination. It is a notor ious truth that an earnest struggle is now pro gressing in the order, the aim cd which is to ef fect an open organization on a liberal American platform, and go before the world in defence ol it. This wise reform has enlisted in its interest tiie great mass of disinterested Americans, who look beyond personal preferment to the general welfare, while it is sternly resisted by every demagogue who hopes to gain power in defiance of the popular will, and by every new-fledged leader who fears the loss of his presumed impor tance. Thus far the latter class has prevailed, and it is well understood that at the late Know Nothing Stab- Convention at Lancaster, it for mally established its supr-macy, and gave the "expression oi the party in Pennsylvania in favor of a continuance of its present pioscript i ve, ant i repuhlican and justly odious suteiri of govern ment. We are aware tiiat we I read upon forbidden ground in thus discussing plainly the position of tiie American party : but we are used to forbid den ground ami hope never to respect it while we conduct the columns of a public Journal.— We have heretofore, when we had reason to be lieve that our opinions on this subject were en tilled to at least common respect from those ad dressed, referred iri candid terms to the dangers to be apprehended from the rigid discipline and extreme platform of the party in question : but i/v only grew wiser bv the effort, as we were repaid for our presumption in systematic defa mation. Our humble suggestions therefore were not without their uses, however contrary to our desgin : and we can now tiaverse the field with a better sense of its dangers than be fore. But until this journal ceases to be itself, it can know no difference to a sentiment that . would proscribe it for its freedom of discussion: : nor can it wield its favor to a political element 1 that is susceptible of the grossest abuses without the shadow of a remedy, and that strike at our very manhood both in and out of its exclusive circle. We have always heartily responded to the principle that our country needs to he Americanized— that our political struggles have been debased by the shameful pandering of pol iticians to foreign prejudices, and that our kg islation should respert only Ameriran interests: and wh arc no less earnest now in our desire to maintain that position than ever before. We have steadily at rugs led and voted against near ly every feature ot the political policy sustain ed by ttie mass of our adopted citizens, and no man Felt IUOI e keenly than the writer of this article when the great American Statesman of the West fell a ruaityr to foreign bigotry, and with him every \ ital principle of American progress. But in the honest and earnest sup port of this piatorm we have known no change. , We cannot share the zeal that leads to infatua tion, and would make a man and a party the creature d one idea, ami much less can we as sent to a svstem of [xditical regulation that might tiring the blush to the cheek of the veri est Autocrat. We might vote for candidates ; designated by such political machinery, if there by we could best attain the ends we desired;! but the system confronts ttm professions of the; party at the very threshhold, and is itself a libel .upon everything claiming to be American. Its thorough modification lias already been demand- > ed in the most unequivocal language by every i respectable American journal in the State, and ] nearly every politician of common discernment, who has no selfish purposes to gratify, has heartily sanctioned the movement. Why, then, has it not' been accomplished ? We answer that the honest sentiments of the party has been stultified by designing and ambitious men— j men whose only hope of political success is based upon a system of organization wherein a few can govern and none dare question. This is tlie vcret, and we should riot go beyond tli limits of our own county, or it mav be our | own town, to demonstiatate the correctness ot our position, did the occasion demand it. YVe shall soon have an open American par- ! ty, inviting public favor on the merits of its principles and defying the severest criticism, or the dav is not far distant when Americanism, in it-: common acceptation, will be a stinging re proach. Let those who doubt it wait and see! Chumbersbvrg Repository and II h:g. A SIUISCRII!KR OvERBOAItl). —lt is Well for Editors to he "brought op standing"' once in a while bv the more discerning of their subscri bers. It brightens their ideas, refreshes their deference for public sentiment, and enables them to correct the errors into which thev are so lia ble to (all. For the life of us we never knew until the following delectable epistle gravely in formed us of the fact, that we have been build ing up either the foreign or catholic interest indeed we have been laboring under a singular hallucination that we have uniformly leaned the other wav : but it is evident that a gentle man so tboioughly versed in our language—so liberal and enlightened in his views, and patri otic in his aspirations, cannot he mistaken : and we defer as complacent I v as we can while we aflectionatalv commend him to the more con genial rays of the Transcript. We omit the name for the sake of the writer's* children : Mercershurg March 29 rnr A K McClure Dear Sir at the ciosp of my subscription for your paper wich is the first mav I wish it to stop as I dont wish to take it any longer at present a.- your corse of late-in the American reform do.? not meat with my ap probation 1 hope vou wount call this proscrip tion he cause I cant help your to pull down the anr.erican party and hi id up the fur ran and ro mancathlicli party. yours The gentleman is probably opposed to the English language because it is of "forran" ori gin.—<'i hambsrsburg Repository and Whiig. !, V *ln the House, the Governor's veto of the Pnttstown Bank has riot vet been considered. What the real cause may be for this unusual course of that hodv, it is not fir us to say : hut it is clear to the most casual observer, that con siderations not properly connected with the try a sure have controlled its action. Independent of the very questionable parliamentary sanction lor such delav, there is an obvious propriety, if not a generally accepted standard of courtesy, that would dictate an early and final considera tion of such a message: and until there is evi dence to (tie contrary, the popular acceptation of it will he anything but cieditable to the leg islature. If the House considered the veto of the Pottstown hank wrong, it was its duty to pass the bill by the constitutional majority, on its own merits, disconnected from all other mea sures:—or, if it considered the veto right, it was due alike to the Executive and the House that its approval he placed promptly on the re cord. The public will watch with interest for a developement of the caiis- s which have kept the expression of the House smothered, and we hazard nothing in saving that it will require considerations of no trivial character to vindi cate that body fully in the estimation of the people.. If log-rolling is Jo he the game—show your hands, gentlemen! The press will see that daylight penetrates the arrangement! C kambersburg Repository and Whig. We must be excused from kicking every whelp into notoriety who keeps barking at our heels. Because we may occasionally feel cal led upon to correct flagrant falsehoods and du plicity affecting questions of public interest, it must not be supposed that we can follow the