PRIA Bellefonte, Pa., January 3, 1902 ss THE COUNTRY PAPER Amid the pile of papers, That swamp my desk each day And drives me weak with clipping And filing stuff away, ‘Comes once a week—on Thursday— The quaint old four page sheet That’s printed vp in Pelham, A drowsy county seat. You see, ‘twas up in Pelham That first I saw the light, And—well, my heart grows softer And I feel my eyes shine bright; Right reverent my touch is, It spreads the columns wide, The local’s what I'm seeking— The patented inside. Ah, here it is: “The County,” And “Jottings,” “Local News'— You learn who's traded horses And who have rented pews; It tells about the schoolhouse Where we used so sit and dream, A-watching dust specks dancing Insunlight’s shifty beam. The sturdy names of boyhood Come tumbling through our thought, «Of Tom and Brick and Patsey— How weloved and how we fought ! The friends when years grew graver, Called now beyond our ken, In the type-lines of the paper They live.and speak again. Oh, toilers in life's workshops, Are not those dream-mists sweet, Which memory casts about us When past and present meet ? And so, I love that paper From the village in the hills For the old life that wakens, For the weariness it stills, —Nathaniel S. Olds, in Rochester Post. HARPER'S NEW YEAR RESOLVE. Harper Benedict had a pleasant home; indeed, as far back as he could remember he had always had a pleasant home. Like a great many other boys—and girls, too, as well as ehildren of older growth—he ac- cepted his home as a matter of course, and never thought of putting himself in the place of someone else less fortunate. Hewas a boy of good principles, carefully brought up by a loving mother. His father had died when he was too young to remember him. Harper was a fine, manly lad, a de- voted son, to his lovely mother, an apt scholar, and a general favorite. He was an aetive member of the Epworth League, of Raymond Street Church, and often led the meetings. He led the meeting one night when his Unele Paul, his mother’s brother, was present, and at the close of the meeting the latter,nodding in the direction of a pale-faced lad, said : ‘‘Who is that bov 2? “I don’t know ”” Harper answered with- out any interest. “Don’t know !’’ repeated Uncle Paul 3 ‘‘well beg your pardon, you ought to know.” Harper's eyes opened wide in astonish- ment. ‘You don’t suppose I know every- one, do you ?”’ he said laughing. “You ought to make it a business to know every one who attends these meetings, you or some of the other leading mem- bers.” “Well, there is a committee to attend to such matters,’’ said Harper, “I hope they do their duty.”’ Bat the ‘“‘committee,’’ when questioned, admitted that no one had spoken to the pale-faced lad. ‘‘There isso much to at- tend to,” was their excuse. On the way home that night, Harper and Uncle Paul overtook the ‘‘stranger.’”” Har- per bowed and tipped his hat courteously, and was about to pass on; but Uncle Paul extended his hands, and took the boy’s in a friendly grasp. “Glad to see you at the League meet- ing,” hesaid genially, ‘I hope you’ll be there often.’’ A little flush crept into the pale face. “I wasn’t going again,” he said. *“Wasn’t going again,’ exclaimed Uncle Paul. ‘No,’’ his voice a little shaky with feel- ing, “I’ve been there three times, and— and—no one has spoken to me.’’ “Well I'm sorry for that, my boy,”’ Uncle Paul said kindly, ‘hut you’ll over- look it this time, and come again. The young folks would be glad to see you, I'm sure.’, “Indeed, we will,” added Harper in his cheery way; ‘‘promise me youn’ll come’ “I'll try to be there—good night !"? They had reached Mrs Grimes’—a cheap boarding-house; the ‘‘stranger’’ disappear- ed within the door. ‘Poor little chap!’ said Uncle Paul, ‘‘it looks as if he didn’t have any home, if he’s staying at Mrs. Grimes’.”’ Harper had a strange dream that night. He dreamed that he was an orphan living at Mrs. Grimes’. No one cared for him there; in fact, no one cared for him any- where. He went to the League of the Ray- mond Street Church one night, but no one spoke to him. He worked hard. He had poor fare and a miserable little tucked-up room. But worse than all else was his lone- liness. He wished he could die; he would rather die than live like that, with no ‘mother, no home, no friends. Oh, it was hard ! He awoke with a groan, and found ‘that his head ached. It was some time be- fore he was aroused sufficiently to realize that he was not that poor, homesick, lone- ly orphan of his dream. He crept out of bed, and falling upon his knees, he thank- ed God that he was Harper Benedict. The next evening he had rung Mrs. Grimes’ door-bell before it occurred to him that be did not know the name of the one he had come to see. A frowsy-headed Irish gizl opened the door. ‘I want to see a boy pale-faced boy said; is he in.” ‘Oh, you mean Arthur Stone. Yes, he is in; walk in, sir,’’ she said respectfully, wondering what a handsome, well-dressed boy wanted of ‘‘that shabby, lean boy.” She led him up two pair of dirty stairs, and throogh a long, narrow ball. **There,” she said, pointing to the door of a hall bedroom, “that’s his room.’ He rapped on the door, and presently, af- ter some confusion within, the door open- ed aud Arthur Stone with suspiciously red eyes stood revealed. His face lighted up at the sight of Harper. : “Come in,’” he said, throwing the doo wide open, “‘there isn’t much room, hut you’re welcome,’ He gave his guest the only cbaic in the room, he sitting down on the small bed. The room was so small that one could hard- ly turn around withons hitting the wall. They talked together as boys talk, and before long Harper knew that Arthur work- ed in the box-factory, earning fairly good wages. He was wondering why the poor who lodges here, a who limps slightly,” he fellow did not have a better room, when the latter said = “I’d like more room. I feel sometimes as if I were laid out here, but I can’t af- ford it—not now anyway, while Dorothy is seo sick.” ‘“Who is Dorothy 2’? “My little sister; she’s all I’ve got in the world.” “Where is she ?’’ with much interest. “‘She’s at Carmen, three miles out, youn know, she’s boarding in such a pretty little cottage. All summer long the flowers bloomed and the birds sang in the garden there,and Dorothy was so happy. Butsince winter came she isn’t so contented,and I’m all the time trying to think of something to make her happy.” Harper did not speak, there was some- thing in his throat that would not let him. ‘I wish you could see Dorothy,”’ Arthur continued, his pale face lighting up; ‘‘she’s | the prettiest little girl I ever saw.” Harper found his voice. ‘I'd like to see her,’” he said heartily. “Why couldn’t I go sometime when you do?” : “Would you go?’ in surprise. Wouldn’t I? Just try me, and see.”’ “Well, I go every Saturday night, and stay until Monday morning,’”’ his eyes shining; ““I’ll be glad to have you go with me any time.’ ‘“Who takes care of Dorothy ?’’ ‘Oh, I didn’t tell you, did I? It’s Miss Bwift; she takes in sewing, and she does everything she can for my little sister. I pay her, of course. Miss Swift is poor— only rents the cottage, you know,but she’s as good as gold. She has her own chick- ‘ens, and Dorethy has such deliciously fresh eggs. I have them too, when I’m there. I pay Miss Swift so much for each meal I have, and it seems so good to be there Sun- «days with Dorothy, and to have such good things te eat.’ ‘“You don’t have them here, do you 2’ “‘“What good things to eat? No never.’ Before Harper went away he had arrang- ed to call for Arthur on Tuesday even- ing on his way to the League meeting. Tuesday was New Year’s eve. Harper made a resolve before he went out, name- ly: “I will, the Lord helping me, make a Christian endeavor in behalf of Arthur Stone. I will do for him what I'd like to have him do for me if I were in his place and he in mine.” He had seen the officers of the League and the prominent members before Wed- nesday night, and the warm greeting ex- tended to Arthur so surprised him that he came near breaking down; but he was hap- py. The visit to Dorothy gave Harper ajdeep- er look into Arthur’s character. The slight, pale-faced lad seemed suddenly to grow strong when he met the little golden-bair- ed girl who elung to him and cried out, “Oh, Artie, dear :” And how pretty the little invalid was, with her fair face and big loving brown eyes shaded with dark lashes ! Miss Swift told Harper, confidentially, that ‘‘there never was another brother like Arthar Stone, never; but that he’d never be sorry for what he’d done and was doing bless him 1”? When Harper returned to the city, he wasted no time in calling upon Mrs Brown a widow, living on a pleasant street. Mrs, Brown, before her marriage was housekeep- er in Harper’s home, and he was very fond of her. He told her his story about Ar- thur and the little tucked-up bedroom, and the poor feod at Mrs. Grimes’. He told ber, too, of the beautiful little Doro- thy, whom Miss Swift was afraid would “soon find Ler wings.” “Now, Mrs. Brown,’ he said in coneclu- sion, ‘‘you’ll take Arthur in, won’t you ? —and give him a nice room and his meals; and you are such a fine cook that he'll think he’s in clover.” Mrs. Brown laughed. ‘‘None of your blarney, Harper,” she said. “But you will I’ he persisted. say vou will.”’ ‘Let me see, thoughtfully, “I'd like to please you and him, poor child! But how can the boy pay me any more than he pays Mrs. Grimes.” *He can’t, Mrs. Brown, and that’s what I want to explain. It’s a secret between you and mamma and me. What’s your price ?”’ ‘Six dollars I’d take him for, and he can have the pretty front room over the parlor.”’ “Then six itis, and when he comes around here, Mrs.. Brown. and asks you the price, you must say, ‘Pay me four dol- lars, and the room is yours. I will pay the rest out of my allowance.’ : Mrs. Brown got the room ready for her new lodger and ! oarder. It was a *‘pretty room,”’ as she had said, with pictures on the wall and a nice rug on the floor. It was large, too, and nicely furnished. Har- per sent up a small hookcase, well filled with books which he had read and reread. “It will keep Arthur from being lonely evenings,” he said. It was pathetic to see the hey when he called at Mrs. Brown’s and was shown his room. How beautiful it was! And how bright ! And the books! Ob, the books ! And the greeting which was almost moth- erly from kind Mrs. Brown ! Aud the sup- per! Oh, the supper served on the clean white linen, and so well cooked and appe- tizing ! ‘I feel as if I were in another world,’ he thought gratefully. And he was in an- other world, a world of affection, bronght about by a Christian endeavor for Christ’s sake. — Selected. ‘‘Please Aged Lady Bound and Gagged. A few days ago two strangers entered the house of Simon Miller in Northum- berland county, and upon learning that Mr. Miller was absent, bound and gagged Mrs. Miller and took $350 from the cup- board. The robbers escaped. Mr. Miller, when he returned home several hours later, found his wife in a stupefied condition. Engine’s Boller Exploded. When the engine which went down with the bridge spanning Lycoming creek was raised Saturday and laid along the shore, it was found an explosion had blown out the rear end of the boiler. As no trace of the bodies of the engineer and firemen were found, it is believed by some thas they wete blown to pieces by the explosion. Big Fire at Pottstown. The new east wing of the Hill prepara- tory school at Pottstown was destroyed by fire early Sunday morning, entailing a loss of $40,000. The wing contained the swim- ming pool, manual training room, class rooms and dormitory. Most of the con- tents of the rooms were saved. Best Way Oat. Yeast—Did you send anything to the donation party ? L Crimsonheak—Yes; sent my regrets. — Yonkers Statesman. The Whisky Insurrection How it Began and How it Ended—An Important Episode in the History of Pe:nsyloania. In 1794 southwestern Pennsylvania was the theater of stirring events. The **Whis- ky Insurrection,’’ which the state anthor- ities had been trying to quell grew so for- midable and aggressive that it was deemed necessary to invoke the military aid of the federal government. The commotion was neither sudden nor unexpected. It was the development of a pernicious germ that had been planted many years before, while the provincial government was still in ex- istence. It forced itself to the surface as early as 1738, when an act, passed that year, imposing an excise on rum, brandy, wine and other spirits, met with so much disfa- vor as to cause its repeal a few months af- ter its adoption. Another act of the same import, passed in the year 1744, shared a similar fate. Oneapproved in 1772, lay- ing an excise tax on both domestic and foreign spirits, could not be enforced, so far as it related to home-distilled spirits, until some time after the commencement of the Revolutionary struggle, when the collection of part of the revenue was ren- dered feasible, but toward the close of the war the law again became practically a dead letter and was repealed. The next legislation on this subject was the memorable act of Congress, passed March 3rd, 1791, which imposed a duty on spirits distilled within the United States. This measure produced much excitement both in and out of Congress. It was as- sailed by the country at large as being nec essary and tyrannical, ‘‘attended with infringements on liberty, partial in its op- erations, and liable to much ahuse.”’ South- ern and western members of Congress start- ed a movement looking to its early repeal. The legislatures of Pennsylvania, Mayry- land, Virginia and North Carolina con- demned the law in such emphatic terms as tended to increase aud intensify the nop- ular clamor and discontent, and the last named State assumed a position which fell little short of nullification. But the region in which the ferment was greatest was in the Pennsylvania counties of Allegheny, Fayette, Washington and Westmoreland, a locality in which were many advocates of an ultramontane empire, and from which had come the strongest opposition to the ratification of the constitution, so far at least as this State was concerned. The importation of foreign spirits having ceased altogether during the war of the Revolution, the farmers in the grain-grow- ing districts turned their attention to the manufacture of whisky and rum. This business, expanded rapidly, for not only was there a large home demand to be suap- plied, but spirits were also exported to Can- ada, and the trade asa consequence proved quite profitable. The ‘Western Country?’ as it was then called, was soon dotted over with distilleries, and so great was the cou- sumption of grain that ‘a famine of bread stuffs was at one time imminent. With a view of averting such a calamity, the use of all kinds of cereals for distilling purpos- es was prohibited by legislative action, but the restriction concerning rye and barley being afterwards repealed, the business was carried on as extensively as ever, and “whisky and rum were not only articles of commerce and consumption, but from the natural deficiency of specie in a wild coun- try, they were also used universally as car- rency. Payments were made in them, and they were received in satisfaction of debts. At the time the act of 1791 was to go in- to effect, efforts were made in several of the States to derive some benefit from the al- lowance which Congress in 1780 had propos- ed for men whoserved in the Revolutionary war, as a compensation for losses sustained through the depreciation of the currency with which they bad been paid. In Penn- sylvania all previous attempts to create a “depreciation fund’’ had for some reason or other proven failures, but when the law of 1791 was enacted, a portion of the revenue arising from it was set apart for this pur- pose,and those directly interested urged its speedy collection. If the prospects for re- alizing something on this occasion were en- couraging at the start, they were dispelled by the rapid growth of the opposition to the excise, and the measures adopted for a prompt enforcement of the law’s provisions only assisted in stimulating the feeling of hostility which prevailed in all parts of the country where distilleries were in oper- ation. In order to correctly understand the situation of affairs, it is necessary to take into consideration the kind and character of the population that dwelt in the coun- ties west of the mountains. Many of the inhabitants were the descendauts of sturdy Scotch-Irish stock, and inherited in no small degree the antipathies and prejudices of their progenitors. In their opinion, an exciseman was a person to be detested and shunved. The summary arrests, heartless treatment, and severe punishments which their forefathers had experienced through this class of officers in the old country, were kept green in the memories of these peo- ple, and it was only natural for them to hold in disesteem any excise law that might be enacted here. They probably did not at first think of resorting to open resistance, but eventually were led to it by hot-head- ed leaders who argued that, as the eastern coionists by resisting the stamp act and emptying the tea in Boston barbor had compelled the king of England to annul his odious laws, so the most expeditions and effective way of forcing Congress to re- peal the act of 1791, was to evade or pre- vent the collection of the duties levied un- der it. The fact that the enforcement of a similar law had been successfully resisted by a powerful combination in the adjoin- ing state of New Jersey, possibly influenced them considerably in pursuing the course suggested by their bad advisers. Inasmuch as some of the states manu- factured a comparatively small quantity of spirits, and others none at all, the barden of the excise rested most heavily on Penn-. sylvania, Maryland and Virginia; and it could therefore scarcely be expected that their citizens, especially those of western Pennsylvania, where distilling was carried on most extensively, would permit a statute which so materially affected their interests to pass quietly into operation. The pre- vailing discontent manifested itself fitst in the circulation of opinions unfavorable to the law. The next point aimed at was to. dissuade persons from accepting office un- der it. This was followed by pretended suspensions of distilling operations. Final- ly secret societies were organized, and the members pledged to abstain from comply- ing with the requirements of the law. This negative mode of opposition, although seemingly ineffectual, was persistently con- tinued and could not fail sooner or later to produce serious trouble. In June, 1791, the law was to be put in operation. The offices were in most in- stances accepted, and the excise was paid by some of the well-disposed distillers. In proportion as this was the case, and the disaffected realized that determined efforts would be made to enforce the law, the disposition to resistance be- came more turbulent, revenue officers were subjected to marks of contempt and insult, and after some time the threats made against them ripened into acts of ill-treat- ment and outrage. These acts of violence were, however, preceded by public meet- ings which adopted resolutions much more likely to ‘‘confirm, inflame and systematize the spirit of oppesition,’’ than to convince congress that it would be just and proper to repeal the objectionable statute. The first of these assemblages was held at Redstone Old Fort, now Brownsville, on the 17th of July, 1791, and a committee was appointed to correspond with citizens of other parts of the country, with a view of getting them to join in a petition setting forth their grievances and stating their demands. On the 23nd of August follow- ing, one of these committees met in Wash- ington county, and in their resolutions de- nounced all persons who accepted excise offices as being inimical to the country, aud recommended that they be treated with the outmost contempt, that every kind of intercourse with them be absolute- ly refused, and that ‘‘all aid, comfort and support,’ be withheld from them. Dele- gates from the counties of Allegheny, Fayette, Washington and Westmoreland held another meeting in Pittsburg, on the 7th of September, of the same year, and passed resolutions attacking the excise law, the national bank, the salaries of pub- lic officers, the public debt, and the ad- ministration itself. On the 6th of September, 1791, the day preceding the last mentioned meeting, the first act of open violence occurred. Robert Johnson, a collector of revenue for the counties of Allegheny and Washington, was seized at Pigeon creek by a body of armed men, who cut off his hair, stripped, tarred and feathered him, and withholding his horse, compelled him to travel on foot a considerable distance in that humiliating condition. Johuson made complaint tothe United States district court at Pittsburg, which issued a process against John Hamil- ton, John Roberts and Thomas McComb, three of the persons engaged in the ont- rage, but the deputy marshal who was to serve the warrant, was threatened with personal violence and met with such oppo- sition as prevented him from performing his duty. A private messenger, with whom the process was afterwards sent, but who was ignorant of the contents of the papers he had been requested to deliver, was seiz- ed, tarred and feathered, and after having his horse and watch taken, was tied, blind- folded, to a tree, where he remained sever- al hours before being released. Another officer of the government, My, Wells, the collector for Westmoreland and Fayette counties, was ill-treated at both Greensburg and Uniontown, shortly after the outrage upon Mr. Johuson. In the month of Oet. 1791, a feeble minded man named Wilson, who fancied himself a collector of revenue or invested with some office connected therewith, was taken out of his bed, con- veyed about live miles to a smith’s shop, there inhumanly burued with hot irons, and after being tarred and feathered, was held until daylight, when he was started home ‘‘naked, wounded and suffering.” The inhuman and fiendish treatment to which this victim of an imaginary duty was subjected, completely unsettied his reason—niade a maniac of him—and the af- fair is the more extraordinary from the fact that men of weight and consideration were understood to have taken part in the cruel outrage. The act of 1791, having been found de- fective in some respects, was brought up for revision in the congress which assembled in the ensuing month of October, but no decisive action seems to have been taken on it before the 8th of May, 1792, when the duties were reduced so as to obviate any complaint on that score, and some other changes favorable to the distillers were also made. The passage of this measure was well received hy some of the interested par- ties, but as it contained a provision requir- ing an office for collection in every county, the discontented, in their delusive zeal, concluded tbat if the establishing of these offices could be prevented, a great advan- tage would be gained by them. In order to deter persons from allowing their build- ings to be used for that purpose, threats of violence and destruction of property were freely indulged in, and in a short time it was almost impossible to obtain suitable places for the revenue offices. After much difficulty, General John Neville in the month of August, 1792, procured the house of William Faulkner, a eaptain in the army, for an office of inspection in Washington county. Assoon as this be- came known, a large number of persons called on Captain Faulkuer, and with a knife at his throat. threatened to scalp, tar and feather him, and to burn his property, if he did not at once annul his agreements with Gen. Neville. As resistance under the circumstances was out of the question, he agreed to comply with their demands and was thereupon set at liberty. While revenue officers and good citizens were being subjected to this kind of in- | timidation, another means of resistance, previously resorted to, was again put in operation. Agreeable to notice given, ‘‘a meeting of sundry inhabitants of the west- ern counties of Peunsylvania,”’ coniened at Pittsburg on the 21st of August, 1792, and on the following day a committee in their report declared ‘‘that a tax upon liquors, which are the common drink of the uation, operates in proportion to the number and not the wealth of the people, and of course is unjust in itself and op- pressive to the poor;”’ that internal taxes upon consumption must in the end destroy the liberties in every country in which they are introduced; that the late excise law, owing to the want of market for grain and the scarcity of a circulating medium would bring immediate distress and ruin on the western country; and that they thought it their duty to persist in 1emon- strating congress. and ‘‘in every other le- gal measure that may obstruct the oper- ation of the law,’’ until its total repeal was obtained. David Bradford, James Marshal, Albert Gallatin, Peter Lisle and David Philips were authorized to draw up a memorial to congress, stating their ob- jeotions to the law, and praying for its re- peal. A committee of twenty-one was likewise appointed to correspond with com- mittees in other parts of the United States to call either general meetings of the peo- ple or conferences of the several commit- tees. The report of the committee ended in the declaration that in the future they would consider persons who accepted offices of collection ns unworthy of their friendship; that they would have no intercourse or dealings with them; that they would with- draw every assistance and withhold all the comforts of life which fellow citizens owe to each other; that upon all occasions they would treat them with the contempt they deserved; and recommended the people at large to follow the same line of conduct towards them. In the opinion of Secretary Hamilton, it was nos difficult to perceive that the a- nathema pronounced against the officers of the revenue placed the participants in this meeting ‘‘in a state of outlawry, and op- erated as a signal to all those who were hold enough to encounter the guilt and the danger to both their lives and their prop- erties,” and he therefore reported the pro- ceedings, as soon as known to President Washington. The latter, under date of Sept. 15th, 1792, issued a proclamation ad- monishing all persons to refrain from un- lawful combinations and proceedings tend- ing to obstruct the operations of the law, giving notice that all means would he used to bring infractors of the law to justice, and enjoining all persons to aid and assist in preserving the peace. Indictments were presented against those supposed to have been engaged in the Faulkner riot, but as some mistake was made as to the persons accused, the prosecutions were dropped. This result, instead of deterring, only en- couraged the lawless to renew their out- rages and redouble their efforts to prevent the establishment of collections offices, “and the officers were left to struggle against the stream of resistance, without the example of punishment to favor them in the discharge of their perplexing duties.’ In April, 1793, a party of disguised men went to the house of Collector Wells, in Fayette county, but finding him from home that night, they contented them- selves with forcing their way into the dwelling, and threatening, terrifying and abusing his family. Warrants were issued for the arrest of some of the rioters, but the sheriff refused to serve them, for which be was afterwards indicted, and so the matter also fell to the ground. On the 22d November, of the same year, another party of men, disguised and armed, again attack- ed and broke into Mr. Wells’ house’ and with a pistol at his head, forced him to surrender his commission and official papers and made him promise to publish his resignation within two weeks, time. June being the month for receiving the annual entries of stills, endeavors were made to open offices in Washington and Westmoreland counties where this had theretofore been found impracticable. Re- peated attacks were soon made in the night hy armed men on the one in Westmoreland hut it was so courageously defended by Mr. Wells, who had previously heen driven out of his house in Fayette county, and by Reagan, the owner of the property, that it was retained during the remainder of the month. The one in Washington did not fare so well. At midnight, on the 6th of June, a number of men, armed and paint- ed black, forced their way into the house of John Lynn, where the office was kept, seized the owner, carried him to the woods, cut off his hair. applied tar and feathers, and after making him swear that he would not permit his house to he used again for an office, and that he would neither again accept an agency in the excise nor disclose him naked to a tree, from which he did not extricate himself until morning. Not con- tent with maltreating him in this manner, the rioters pulled down his house,aud sub- sequently compelled him to become an ex- ile from his own home. In January, 1794, William Richmond, who had given information against some of the fiendish rioters in the Wilson affair, and Robert Shawhan, a complying distil- ler who had spoken favorably of the law. had each a barn, with all the grain and hay they contained, destroyed by fire; while in the ensuing May, James Kiddoe and Wil- liam Conghran, who had entered their stills, were made to suffer in another way, Kiddoe having parts of his grist mill carried away and thus rendered useless and Coughran having his distillery and mills damaged so greatly that heavy expense was incurred in getting them repaired. On the 5th of Juue, 1794, congress passed another act amendatory of the ex- cise law, one section of which gave state courts jurisdiction over offenses against the revenue laws in certain cases; but as the discontented wanted absolute repeal and not amendments, they became only the more reckless and violent, until the gov- ernment found itself compelled to meet their opposition in a more decisive and ef- fectnal manner than it had previously dis- played. It accordingly issued processes against nonconplying distillers and others, among them Robert Smilie aud Jno. Me- Calloch, two of the most notorious and prominent participants in the attack on Collector Wells in Fayette county. The friends of these men, having determined to prevent the serving of the prucesses, sent out a party, headed by a Capt. Pearsol, to intercept Marshal Lenox, but the latter managed to elude them and executed his trust without interruption. On the 15th of July, the marshal, in company with In- spector Neville, baving served his last writ on a distiller named Miller, near Peter’s creek, was returning home when he was met by a party of forty men who fired upon them but without doing any injury. Gen. Neville had meanwhile received warnings that an attack on his house was contemplated. He, therefore, made prep- arations for resistance, filling up the win- dows with thick plank and supplying his negroes plentifully with arms. These prep- arations bad been made none too soon for at daybreak on the 16th of June, a party of at least 500 men from Mingo creek, many of them wellarmed, and headed by John Holeroft, who hore the sobriquet of *“Tom the Tinker,”” assembled in front of the house and demanded the surrender of his commission and official papers. This being refused, the firing began and was kept up for some time by both assailants and as- sailed, that of the former being under the direction of Major Jas. Macfarlane, who bad been chosen to command the attacking force. Whilst the fight was in progress a horn was sounded in the house, and as this was probably a pre-arranged signal, it was followed by a discharge of firearms from the negro quarters, which stood apart from the mansion house. By this unexpected volley, six of the insurgents were wounded and one was killed. The members of the inspectoi’s house received no injury. The assanlt thus far had been successful- ly resisted, but General Neville was well persuaded that a renewed and more dan- gerous attack would again bemade. Leav- ing his house unperceived by the rioters, he applied to the civil authorities for protec- tion, bat they informed him that they were powerless to furnish him the needed aid. A detachment of eleven regulars, un- der command of Major Kirkpatrick, a rela- tive of Gen. Neville, was, however, started out from Fort Pitt for the defence of the house and its inmates, and succeed- ed in gaining admittance to the dwelling during the night. On the morning of the 17th the attacking party again made their appearance, and sent David Hamilton with a flag of trace to de- mand from the inspector his resignation and official papers, accompanied by the threat that it not promptly delivered they would be taken by force. Being informed that Gen. Neville was absent and that their demand could not be complied with, time was given by the insurgents for the wom- en and children to take their departure, when the attack was renewed in a most spirited and determined manner. After the fight bad continued for perhaps a quar- ter of an hour, the firing from the house ceased, and a call that was heard coming from it was mistaken by the assailants as a the names of his assailants, they bound | request for a parley. Their leader, Major James McFarlane, evidently thinking so, stepped from behind a tree which served as a protection and was ordering his men to cease firing when a musket ball hit and instantly killed him. This incensed his followers, who recommenced firing, and while some were talking about storming the house others set fire to the barn and outbuildings, and soon the intensity of the heat was so great as to threaten a speedy destruction of the housealso. In this ec- tremity Major Kirkpatrick and his men, three of whom had been wounded, felt them- selves constrained to surrender. The ma- jor was forcibly disarmed and detained as a prisoner, but the privates were permitted to depart, after which the mansion house was set on fire, and while the flames were consuming it the rioters broke into the cel- lar, drank up the wine, and carried away many articles of value. Among other things two certificates of the three per cent. fund- ed debt of the United States, aggregating $4,611, were either stolen or burned, of which Gen. Neville afterwards gave public notice and cautioned persons against pur- chasing or taking assignments of the same. Whilst the fight was in progress, United States Marshal Lenox, Colonel Presley Neville, son of General Neville, and sever- al others, were intercepted on their way to the house, but all avoided capture except the two first named. In the course of his detention the marshal suffered severe and humiliating treatment, and was several times in imminent danger of losing his life. Nor could he obtain safety or liberty until he promised under threats of immediate death, that he would not in the future serve any process west of the mountains. He and Colonel Neville were then permit- ted to go, but they were unfortunate enough to fall in with another party, most of whom were intoxicated, when they were subjected to additional insults and perils, but succeeded about 2 o’clock in the morning in making a final escape.—&S. B. Row. (Continued next week.) Embaiming Fluid Poisons Mourners. Powerful Acid was spilled on Candy, of Which Many Persons Ate. Four Women May Die. Word has just been received from Blue Knob, Freedom township, in Blair county, an isolated country village, that four wom- en there are at the point of death,as a result of having eaten poisoned candy. The women are Mrs. George F. Noffsker, her grand-daughter, Mis. John Allison, and two sisters of the latter, Rose and Viola Ickes. On Christmas Day the infant twins of Mrs. Allisons died, and a country under- taker was called to embalm their bodies. - A highly poisonous filnid was improvised. The bottle was half emptied, when the un- dertaker’s assistant accidentally dropped it and its contents were spilled into a wooden sink, the lower portion of which was used as a cupboard. In this cupboard was a box of soft candy that had been bought for the twins, but was unused, on account of their sudden and fatal illness. The poison leaked through a crack in the boards and saturated the candy. The funeral occurred Friday. When the mourners returned home the candy was passed around. Quite a namber of the party ate of it. Simultaneously, all shriek- ed with pain. The aged Mrs. Noffsker, her granddaughter, and the Ickes sisters were rendered unconscious by pain. all having swallowed some of the poison. Their tongues and tonsils were eaten out by the acid. Physicians were unable to relieve their sufferings, except by the administration of powerful narcotics. At last accounts all four of the women were still unconscious, their lives despaired of. Others who ate of the candy are suf- fering from burned months. Her Gift is a Huge Fortune. Thirty Million Dollars in Real and Personal Property Mrs. Stanford's Offering to University. Mrs. Jane L. Stanford, widow of the late Senator Leland Stanford, has trans- ferred to the Stanford University by deed, bonds, stocks and real estate valued at $30,000,000, the largest single gift ever be- stowed on any institution of learning, Of this amount half consists of gilt-edged bonds and stocks paying a large revenue. The real estate deeded to the University comprises much of the property originally given by Senator Stanford, but the deeds of which were found to be illegal. The bonds include many securities that have doubled in value within a few years, and the accumulation of these and other stocks since the death of her husband. The real es- state property deeded includes no less than 900,000 acres in about twelve counties of California, and comprises the great Vina ranch of 52,000 acres. GIVES LIER HOME TO THE UNIVERSITY A third deed conveys to the University Mrs. Stanford’s home, on the summit of Nob Hill; one of the most finely decorated houses in San Francisco, which, with the big lot, is worth $400,000. This will event- ually be converted into an art gallery and museum. Despite these big gifts, Mrs. Stanford has retained property worth sev- eral millions, so that she will be able to provide for many charities. This gift places Stanford University in the first financial rank among the great universities of the world, and will enable it to carry out many projected improve- ments. Sampson to Be Taken South. A Washington Dispatch states that Rear- Admiral Sampson will be taken to Florida or some other warm climate as soon as he is well enough to travel. His condition is not dangerous, if is said, but his physicians ‘want him to be where he can have more absolute rest. The Rear-Admiral ate din- ner with his family on Christmas and the doctors say he is holding his own. He gives no heed to current events at Wash- ington. Mr. and Mrs. W. 1. Adams. Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Adams, an aged Windber couple, died within seven hours of each other Christmas afternoon, the former at 12:30 o’clock and the latter at 6:50 o'clock, in ignorance that she was a widow. Stomach trouble was the cause of Mr. Adams’ death and pneumonia that of his wife’s. Mr. Adams was sixty-three years old and Mrs. Adams was in her sixty- sixth year. Gave Life by Helping Smailpox Vic- tims. Councilman Fred Payne, of Plymouth, Luzerne county, has sacrificed his life in his efforts to make comfortable the small- pox victims in the pest house there. He wasa member of the small-pox committee, and took such risks in providing for the victims that he took the disease and died on Tuesday.