Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 23, 1867, Image 1

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    OUR FAILURE
tY 'Mt AUT/I9R Or Rol TIIRORI
fes, we here failed ; That Inm wonl
Drove never home its bolt of fate
More ruthlesely than when it barred
All egress (ruin the prison gate
That eloped upon our sad estate
And left is powerlese—in the dark.
A tworld'a Teproaah—o nation'o math
Failed s.Aye, . criertioual_Elhat pain
Is put arida In pure amaze
As, at our weary length of oboinf
And eteel•gtrt path, we stand Sgate
With dark distrust or miming Gaye,
Mid marvel if we be the same
Who lit the Chriatiuti world to dame.
The same who owned this forely lend
How lying was tyrant's spoil,
And saw its stately ings eland
' qMid was ' e soil
Enriched by earthy eons of t P ` .
The princesat a proud est.o.
Now stricken, sterile, flautist.'
The 111010 r Whore be our legions now,
Where allude our bones sytecir and mina: -
Where rings each step, where beams each brber
Of those we loved, our martyred creed
To borne and qountry nobly vowed,
- Of sons and brothers—where the hopo
That wreathed our splendid horoscope ''
And whim the banner which on high
,{Ye flung with all tho pride of owe
An emblem from our Southern sky
Snatched from its sovereign dwelling, playa
Our deeds or arms to gild anti grare,
The flag our breezes loved to to toss-
Our ark of strength—our Southern Cron.
An buried in one common grave,
Are these the glories or the pent '
Let the swamp cypress o'et it wave
The bitter writ—the °dee rave.
" The etymon ...veep the midnight bind
Make rainier!. meet • the die is cant,
And we, who counted ill the cost,
Who ventured all, haae staked and lost.
What marvel, then, if in she burst
Of en incredulous despair,
When fate has seemed to do its worst,
And all proves false that seamed so lair,
Such words as these should mock the our
And that, mistrusting fate and fame,
We question, "Are wo still the same?"
Oh. morbid doubt' Oh, words of wind'
I mot ye forth an little worth.
Forgive them, Own ipreseent mind'
Forgive them, brothrrn, bound on earth
To one poor heritage of dearth,
And hear enovietion'n vole. proclaim
The potent troth, "We are the come."
The same who faced the northern Imes
With dauntless hearts and shining spears
The same who laughed to ecorn their boasts,
And proved the few the many's peers,
And did in days the work of years;
O'enchelmed—not conquered—overrun,
And deeola . te3 and undone I
Yet still the same, the very same,
Believe it, tremble and believe,
The, tyrants, who, with sword and theme
Advanced to slaughter and bereave,
Then stayed to torture sect deceive,
Am we, who, with a faith sublime
finders our fate—abide our time!
=l3
CONSPIRACY!
Stirtiting Metal Documents Tromthe At
torney-General.--Alleged Conspiracy
to Fabricate Impeachment Testimony.
--Full Details of the Plot.--Terrible
Charges against Congressman Ashley
and Butler.--Mr. Johnson to be Impli
cated by Suborned Witnesses in the
Lincoln Assassination.--Holt's Endorse.
. 4 %miet of the Informer.--The whole Di-
abolleal Scheme Revealed hi Extenso
WASHINGTON. Miguel 9.—The following
document hoe bison obtained from glEolol
ATTOPNRY OgNIIRALII OPIUM,
. August 5, 1887.
liejscst palsy The application of Chan.
A. Dunham having been referred to this
office, in the customary order of Executive
business, for the extmination and advisory
action of the Attorney General, it has be
come my duly, during the iodispoeition
and alumnae of the distinguished incumbent
of the Law Department, carefully to oonsid
er the case. In respectfully declining, es I
de, to offer at precept any recommendation
to the preintes, I beg to submit for your
eonaideration the reasons which constrain
me to reser'e advice and euspend judgment
until I shall have been further instructed
by your Excellency.
Dunham the person applying for pardon,
is the lame who has become notoriona un
der thb name of Sanford Conover. lie was
recently convicted of perjury in theDistriat
of Columbia, and is, as lam informed, now
inearotrrated, in scoordance with the sen
tence of the court. fin application seems
to be predicated, in part, upon a aupposed
technical irregularity in the constitution of
the jury, and is supported mainly by the
services which he is alleged to have render
ed the cause ofjustice in aiding the prase
outing counsel in tho colleotion of evidence
and otherwise upon the trial of John 11.
Murrill for murder.
The papers upon which bie application is
grounded, and by whlolt it is sustained,
nougat or four in a parcel, which, by en.
, : tfilrsdingot, appear to have reached the Er
aouti•e office on Saturday, the 27th ofJtvly,
1867. The first is dated the 22d of July,
and is written upon the ordinary notepaper
used by members of the House of }tore
feentatives, with an engraved vignette cap
tiort. The following is a copy :
FORTINTU CONCIRSOO
lieu's Or RNPBN.NNTATIVItI,
Il C July 22, IB67.—Gentlemen. I sug
gest that rt petition something hke the en
closed be prepared and signed by you for
the pardon of Mr. Dunham. I think be is
clearly eatitled to it, and hope you will aid
him all you can. Rwapsotfully,
J M. Astinny
Zion. J. Holt, Hou, A. 0. Riddle.
It would seem troth an Fxpinesion used
in this note that a draft of a petition stag
enolosed. It dolts not appear what petition
woe 01111 &Mowed.
The next paper is the followingfrom e
Into Representative in Congress from Ohio,
now a member of the Washington bar
Waswittarox, July 23, 1837.---To the
Prestdent of the United States—Sir: I was
early in April lint retained to aid the Gov
ernment in the prosecution of J 11.8ur
riot, and tool* the general management of
the preparatiob of the case.
The labor and difficulties of the oisto were
great, and the Government Is under great
übligatious to Charles A. Dunham for much
valuable-lnfilinationlioth an to the facts
and witnesses of the United States and for
Alie.itiotory of and foots concerning the wit
....lateen called (or the defence. Although to
jail be managed to keep Wormed of the
,progress of the case, and from time to time
,ionitounmsted important facts and awes-
Cons, and ssemiugly for the cola purpose of
fair inveitigation of the cue, whether it
would work for his bereft or not, ft semi
to me that for his sorvioes to this WWII am
Government eiould mark Its "appreciation
of them Ina way ant fo be Mistaken.
Baspeetfullp,
A. Cl. RIDDLE.
Nothing is among the papers from the
aloe of the District Auorney or from any
of the counsel in the Sarratt came,esoepthn
Mr. Riddle.
The next recommendation is from the
Vilma of Mllit►ry Justice:
Wasatiaiost, July 24. f 1865.-1 tumour
with the Hon. A. G. Riddle in his esthetes
of the 'taloa !mid importance of tie 'service
rendered by Charles A Dun Lam ,, as set
forth in the romping letter to the Presi
dent. A principle of public policy load
sovoromooto to onootarimo by all hanotoblo.
thr ~ ProStratit 'VoliiithinAn,
VO!A. xn.
menus, 111°4 charged with crimes to make
disclosures which mny and often do, result
in unmasking often greater offenders than
these who make 'them i and house ;ten
they stro l Oitud lON noted voluntarily
mean gotollattc, th; k 4ughtst public con
eide.roM tons require that their conduct shall
nerouely appreciated The .orrice of
Uunlient, with the details of which Mr
Riddle must he entirely familiar, MI one of
the counsel in the case, seem to have been
performed without solioitation, and in the
Interests of !nab and justine, in connection
with one ot the most important criminal
(male which has occurred in the history of
the country; and although his disclosures,
were not directly connected with the crimi
nality of which be himself has been convic
ted, yet it is believed that they do not tbo
lees bring his ease within the spirit and
Tenon or the rule of polio, referred to, and
hence it is for the Executive to determine
bow far they shall be accepted at onoe as a
proof of his repentance, anti as atonement
to the law, for whose violation he stands
condemned
Jostrii IIoLT
It way bo proper to remark that the rec
ommendation of the Judge Advocate Gener
al to written upou ono leaf of the same
abort with that of Mr Itlddle,/ind not upon
official paper.
It will ho observed that, notwithstanding
atilt man stood condemned for perjury, Mr
Riddle by aotstai experience, and Judge
Holt, upon eatiefootory grounds of belief,
have fully realised bin usefulbee in promo
ting by his 000per►tion with public agents
of justice the case of truth, on the occasion
of an investiAtion of national lutportauce
and also, that the latter intimates hie opin
ion that he had fairly ►toned to the offended
law, and bad' satisfactorily demonstrated
hie repentance It is remarkable that lion
ham himself, in his petition (which pur
ports to be Sn hie own handwriting) men
tions no such grounds, but trusts mainly to
a technicality. Itiß position Is an follows :
Wssuiitotott, July 2.6, 18117 —To his Es
nelleney Andrew Johnson, President of the
United states: The petition of Charles A,
Dunham reepentfully shows that in the
month of January last he was trled,convic
ted. and sentenced to the penitentiary for
perjury, alleged to have been comujitted be
fore the Judteiery Committee of the Rouse
of Representatives, during the investigation
by said committee of charges against Jeff.
Davis of complicity in the conspiraey to as
sassinate President [Almelo-
That the perjury assigned in the
indiel
ment against your petitioner was in baring
falsely testified that he bail no reason to
doubt, and did not doubt, the truthfulness
of certain depositions made by two persons
called Campbell and Bnevel, at the time
mild depositions were given by them in the
Bureau of Military Justine, and in testify
ing that he had beat seen said Campbell in
Canada in June 1865, and said Snevel in
Wilmington, N. C., in August, 180.
That on the trial of your petitioner, said
Campbell add Snevol deolared that their
real names were house and &Marts, and
that the depositions they had made and
sworn to in the Bureau of Military Justice
were absolutely melee from beginning to
end, and were known to be so by ►our peti : .
dotter, and that they were not at —; said
Campbell in Canada in June, 1865, or said
SnaTel in Wilmington in August, 1865, the
places at which your petitioner claimed to
have last seen them.
That it was entirely upon this testimony
of said self-convicted perjurers that your
petitioner was oonvioted, and that without
the said testimony of said permute, the jury
before whom your petitioner fifia `Med
could sot have Pounds verdict of guilty.
Your petitioner further says that he was
tried and oonvicied by a jury not qualified
to try him. That the jurors before whom he
was so tried and opiedomnixi were illegally
selected and drawn, as deoided by the Court
in the ease of John ll i .fitirratt—the manner
and form of seleoting the jurors in the case
of Surratt, and your petitioner being pen.
tioal—that In the discussion on the opening
of the trial of Surratt, as to the legal quali
fication of the jurors who had,heen empan
netted to try him, It was contended by the
prosecution and decided by the Court, that
said jurors were informally and irregularly
militated and drawn, and that any verdlot
they might render upon Any trial would be
absolutely void. •
Your petitioner further soya that uglier
the rules and practioe of the Supreme Court
of this District the above informally in the
selection and drawing of a jury does not•
after sentence under a verdict found by such
a jury, constitute a ground for a new trial
or oilier relief by the oourt, and that the
only remedy for snob en illegal oonviction
lice In an application to the Executive for
pardon
CAARse A. DUNEIAX
The above are all the papers which hay,
come to my knowledge in relation to th e
application for pardon. When considered
in connection with other papers, adventi
dowdy received, they ezoite peculiar Inter
est and command careful attention, and it
is the extraordinary gravity of the Import
of these paperi I ask Men Uoned in oonneotton
with the SOU the whence they Game, which
makes it my delicate duty to submit e thetit
contests for your studious consideration.
and suggest that some proper disposition
ought to be made of them in eimacTnatee
with the dignity of the tilosernment sad in
justice to all poetise.. Untroducp them as
toll owe : sir
Pint. A oommunication eddrassed to the
President of the United States, bearing date
Washington, July 20th, 1887, and signed
Charles A. Dunham. It will be seen that
this person,who-is testified to by gentlemen
of official and profeessional respontibility
acid of dtatinguished.pagaelty to by capable
of great sad valuable servionin.theillsolinv
urea otorlme, makes startling tissevarstiocui
dimody against prominent members of the
nearest Legislature.
WAISUOTON, jig, 29, 1887.—T0 his Bx
oellanoy, Andrew Johnson, Prelideneof the
United Btatee: In 'applying to your Exoal
limey for pardon,l had not intended tearer
any &talon:urea coneeratag the plotting of
your instals. againation whiob could be
regarded uau indnetitnent for granting my
application. I Insinineted my wife, in pre
senting ttok petition;, t/ to the conepir
,acy of Ashley and csompany so far only a.
,appeared neoesaary to recoove affiynntritutd
ly f.eligg thsantight hint %own engendered
within gip toward me , t• 7: the conrsgcrog
report. that I had sniped ' to mocha your
nnem les in their nefarious designs. 1 adop
led thin reserve in the belief that the Per
♦ice, 1 Lad rendered ale Government. os
certified ro by Judge Holt, the lion Mr.
Riddle and Mr Anhley, would,in your ore
and judgmlenk render me dererving
eoutive lietneney ; and because 1 lucked me to col
that it should appear on the record, and on Changes , otid necessary ex p i4lllOllllll 111 wt
the face of my pardon, that clemency had lug to enable them to incorporate 01° , 0
been imparted to me lintel, Weousidetution change. , in their original statements with
of toy services to the Government, and ex- , out leading to contusion or contratlietion,
elusively on the recommendation of proud- t wits found necessary fat somebody else 1
neut ttadietala,to the end that,when I shoo ld 'take toy office of preceptor, &c Thin with
come to expose the ntrocionv plot of Ashley , slight hesitation, was done by Ilr Ashley,
and company, the Radicals would tot be in mt toy sionranee that the pieties were gad
• position or able to charge me with doing wale, , l) e.l in the wool. and men of honor,
so in oonstderatton of is pardon. m that the in-whom Ito Coll ItLassfely repose confidence
President had pardoned toe on condi:ion of tee trained both front Ashley nod the
my implitmling his enemies in an nifitnoic, •. themselves what was said and done
conspiracy. Ind ireeni . innii in the [Limier , The statements
pop the moment Ives forced tub need- they nor; desired to make werorevised and
elation with these traitors and oonspirators„ Mr \ 4111ey anti they were assured by hint
I deierminedeas soon as I shouldbo colons- mini In 0n,3 It %iota,' be detArnkned to ox
en], to plane in the hand of ymlr Excellencl utunte t:.t.to before ihr comanteethey rheum Id
or lay before the public a complete ropes- tm vientlidly rewarded
uro of their diabolical de'signs and 01001 , Atiltley 11.130 dISCOIII,mI to them on
astounding proceeding,. This, I believe, ' the propriety andinvice of the cause IL
would be my sawed ditty '', for, although was prop.ried ijuisue to mate rent tin of
11
accused orerimo, IRN not to destitute of , the 1111WiabziFI of the President node
honor and patriotism as 1101 10 feel Settle In- clared that yoo were a traitor to your par
terest in and obligations to my country ty and conotty, Sc 'fund t 10.4 was no
The interest those person have fell, and , doubt of yam Lomplicily 10 the .li...esti.,
the effort they have made (which would lion conspiracy, but that the evidence oes
Anse suomiedod ere this but for the blunder in the hands of your tetentle and could not
of one of them), and which they still pro ell be got .it That enough, howe•er, had
rose to make for my releas e (II 0), lice. bocuied to selliify ILr 11109 t reasonable
know were prompted by the most aolfi th, men ofyeerguitti but thatut order to satisfy
motives, in order that they might use me e.oetlng. the `,Thl'en.l.ll" of 'h""
an instrument to accomplish their devilish j e'utintit'oe Auld be re
designs: and I not, therkie, he 1 1 0.011 e Thal t'a't telly ~uonfiou Iho
guilty of ingratitude in abandoning and ex- Ittoooli and root curry mat wh"cootelbnied
posing their •illaniy. 'in This wity to tie impeachment of III 1• Pre.-
My wife ben, I believe, explained to you ident wouhl deter , ' well of the rotatory:"
how _Ashley, first through his man Friday, Dud that he (Th "4.'1) would we
iLcm
klatchelt arArrwards in person. MILO- lowa . led tenfold when your sue,iiiisr
aged to 11111 0 nown to me his 1114811e.1. Mlllll , l 01004 ono. , it to Dower
and purposes. and enlist me, tar far its 1116 Were pi 1 4ented
forced promise worldno. in I+olerpri,. 1, . end dun
I shall, therefore, only advert hem to ” 0111 . 11,0 11..e4 by lion, wire 11111,411teil liv
him
things which nave been said and done by 1104 \.411,y 10 %embers
the nonspirsters, which ore susceptible of `it the House, who, it was understood, boil
being provel against them lip the 0001 ir. hitherto &nide., the ex buyinie or 1,01..110e
reputiblo evidence s imphr sting you iu !lie assassination tun
After obtaining my promises to render i spkrocy met who mforomily inn errogl tell
all the ansisstaoce In my power. Mr Ash- them as lo the mat tore uponwhlch Mee Lnd
ley explained h., me the kind of evidence he been ins,: uel ml j X
thought it roost advisable I. present “Al r, it e per desired to hoer mken tho
against you. Ile thought it would be very depo.itioler of these men nt the time, but
plausible to pro, . r would riot consent to its being done nut tl I
First That Booth had on several nowt- 01nold br irtenved, no at first up...d
elimis paid you familiar visits at the Kirk- '. • floor facts can he proved by then.. Ihi cr
wood• This. it was hoped, I might be able nervous, and alto by toy wife, whove char.
to indoor some of the old female servants actor for It uth.,and varnoity is not tufermr
to testify to. If This could not be done, to Mr and I ell" tae li7. 1 e""" ,
then it should be proved by some of my if at libe•riy, in producing thorn before any
friends who happened to be at the house nt 00MM at, nr tribunal for the impeachment
the time, who knew Booth, ,Qt-• , and Raw nl the•impcuchero
the visit •• But the evidence ofthia conspiracy doen
Secondly Thatyour correspondence with_ bet depot, entirely upon oral proof The
Booth, which should he shown by one or letters froni kehley. limewith enclosed, is
more persons who had taken notes fre t . themselves Que,,lt "chimes What statement
Booth to you, and your replies (contents (11) trout me could he have wanted, and for
unknown) thereto to Booth. The wttnesses wits , Perresc AnYtt.eg tt wat ,, in lily
should be persons who would profesd to power to stns. 10 61111 could have been VI,
have been intimate with Booth, and to have tel to him °tally a doe to times during his
been enlisted by him to take port iit the previous snits in 111 e
assassination. stattneui he want was this, and for
Third. That the planing of A scroll. Ilse purtimie. Tito, were many prominent
weapons, at the Kirkwood House wan only Iladicals. and eato•cially among 111, 1.11
a sham—to make it appear that you, were ennetitueni,, who ,were luke-werto on the
intended as a victitn, and then distract all subject of impeachment, anti who were lint
suspicion from you oftionniving at Linooln's prepared to belicie that you were privy to
murder. This. a lso. It was suggested. th e murder of Lincoln, and whose to opera
could be proved by persons who could Le.- non who greatly needed Ashley therefore
lift' that they had hoentMuceil to enter in- • deitirrl to be able to place before them on
to the /epapiracy with Booth, and hid per- 0111 1,10,0 111.11 lill l 14041 141111411 1 8110111.11/I‘.
rvl
formed a part. In organising it, etc , which denim at your guilt could be produced lie
perions, it was to he understood, worn m therefore t ei t iie4terl one to prepare an Oahe
dotted to testify under an assuranoe from rate paper, setting rot th that such titui ouch
the Government that . they should not be persons catnt be produced who knew and
prosecuted (or any part they had token, would testify to Ihle, 11161 and the other
''The resolution under which Butler's thing. 1110111 d lug Inn prctenstons that liooth
committee was ilippoiated, it will be obsers - • bail Mom seen so your room nevem! imbue :
ed, provides for the protection of such per- that you had oorreaponded with hint and
sons—who are nitat.hed with a good "- with parties w ItiClittiond and that the
once for not coming forward beforo—by
offering immunity to all who were somatic- permits whocould testify tu these lucto
were of the most respectable Wending, and
tent with t he 00.1. 1 31,4. 1 -1,10 will now °°.° would corer forward and tell all they knew.
forward and disclose their knowledge on i if protected by the government fie washed
the subject. ,hail to put it in a otylo and tone that would
.'Fourthly, That Itcoth, just after tint ;he auto to curry conviction with it 110 de
4th of Maroli, stated to intimate friend. in sir ed th,g, w g,ddgggogg to th e p o ints of eei-
New York, whom he endeavored to en h o d conferred a bout, t oy m a ternal
the conspiracy, that he was acting with the n contain ethers, and lie gave MA a
knowledge of the Vice President, and that memor . o a lum of other point., which he re
it had been arrauged to kill Lioc.!, on the quested n o . to incorporate in lily statement
day of the inaugural ion, which would tic- i(tt„) This inemoatindum I enclose, and I
count for Mr Johne.m's strange coaduct on believe it is in Malchett's hand-writing (A )
that occasion, which had provoked so much A (ter pi...paring the statement I sent it to
comment in the preen . That y ou expected ' hint at Toledo when he wished to make use
the tragedy to be enacted then, and had f of it )
tilted several potations to compose and verve
There is anoilfer note from Ashley to.
you for the event ; and that you were not
chwoot
worthy of httohthm, It Itt to po w
2 :d7 uch inL°lleated Ito
nervous snd "c". ant wise wmtem. ut. the cane ofJudgh Car,
ter, tE. F.) after the failure, through the
"I feel much delicacy in referring to
blundertng of Matchett, to secure my re ,
Such topics. but I cannot inform you el,
lease lathe thueprototed because I was au
your enemies, plane and projects without
gry r ind used pretty severs language to
being plain, and lam obliged to write in t Itatelit•i I lie went to Ashley anibilutlerin
too great haste to be elioinein my language 1
I alarm and reported that I was going to ex'
^I assured Ashley that I should have no
pone the entire scheme to you.
difficulty in finding persons•Sfgood standing , 'After the persons I hid sent for to New
end moral charseterto prove these matters,
1 ork . w itneasethit ad returned,lllttioltett 'n
and it was agreed that I would do seas soon
• 6:Avenel without my knowledge topereuaile
as roles/Md. [A :' - ii'. O.]
' fifilm to come beroaglitr, end in his letters
"As em earnest that I possessed the shill- -
to two of them he thoughtlessly suggested
ty to do what I engaged, and in order to
some
ed,,,,,eee that it was desired they
satisfy tome of their partl• who doubted the
should make to Choir statements. He made
existence of evidence to connect you with
these suggestions by letter, midis letters ex
the sem "' in"i " censPirl ' eY• Ashley owl ' plained because he was not certain that he
Bailee , denited and pressed me to send for , „, u ,
xatonta h o whim they arrived, or they"
"r° or '11". preens of Wh°Se lutellidelree +eight meet Judge Bingham, or some other
and qualifications they could astisfy them-
pereos they had been introduced to when
selves. and whom they could parade before
reviously here, before he could see them
their ineredulous friends. itud give them pfiints, and he therefore wen
..l oonsen led, end Ashley supplied the tod teem „ posted. "
feats it was desired they *quid know and , .A fter my 'milting tu him op severely on
repast, And I forwarded them to a trusty account of the failure to have Me released
friend, with esaret explantatitum as to my ;
at the lime promised, D. F. Matokett beam.
own purposes, sod lastraatf " a for him to t frightened, and seemed to get the idea that
proouro trio other, ~frisade to commit to I had h i s letter . ~, those parties, and ha d
memory the statanient enolostsd to Nat, and
Cent them, or copies of them, to you. rossi- 1
When tent for to some here andrspeat them bly,in my anger,/ thus uttered as numb.
(but not under Mtn) to smelt persons as /
Het en made known his fears to Ashley
should ladloate- and Butler, and Ambler endeavored by this
- - -
"After allowing iny friends sugloient note to obtain the letters.
time to learn their parte, the g e e. Mr, have just been ordered to get ready for
11th:het (11).wse sent for then, to order the penitentiary. .
that it might be said that he, agent for the "Clients' A. DoauAr•"
impeachers, had found the Witnesses, and The following are the 1 papers
that their character for vei►oit7 was above which aecempany the above. The letters
suspicion. ' or referenae imagist' in the foregoing tad
"On arriving hero these persons were in- . annexed to the auttesweling are not open the
specked by Ashley and Butler, and were original, but are Introdused solely tbr your
found to p the requisite gaalldntlon ' convenience in perusing the report.
as to Intolllgepoe and peraonel appearance The enhjoined paper, headed nunnorandiute
but unfortunately for the inepootore, It was 1 by the band that wrote It bears internal
iirente4 leavasary to tasks sons obtain, satdasaa at balsa be* Rltillited as a
"S'liTr. EIGHTS AND PEDAL lINXOII/."
BELLEFONTE, PA:, FRIDAY AUGUST 23, 1867
WO a 111(.1111004'111 110010 114141 14111101000 t 0 01114
or porlions of their statetociiht. before pre
venting them to the hike -leant , . 4 1
111144 11i01r iniontiou to inflame It brio •
linpractioeble fur the met. to err toe IA it 4
jail MI a itch 11111111.1e,5, orol equally en fur
guide to Mono perloll or person. who were
.... 1 1 1,,te& to fabricate corresponding teoti.
norandiun —Shortly before the
toll 01 I..noolii and Junnson. the
oiigh or in connootion with Ilegth
augur,'
Cr, 01,
lettere to the Confederacy,' one
of which. was intended for - Jefferson Davis
These letters were borne by a messenger
named Allen, who had been noting as a spy
for one of the Union generals Allen was
provided with it it ate conitlict through our
picket lines, on 1 was supposed to have been,
sent un secret duty in oouoecl•ou with his
command lle was also provided with pa
pers from a rebel emissary at the North to
insure his proper treatment when lie should
crater the Confederate line. After deriver
his mail in Ihdhmond, no returned, hearing
several letters. whion Ins g enereel from J
it, Benjamin These letters were enclosed
to Booth "
..On returning to Washington. Allen call
ed on Booth and delivered the the package
and Itooth,after examining sm. o rthe letters
went out, as he said in s..nroli of hi. me.,
rouser. Thu messenger could not be found
and Booth asked Allen if lie was too tired to
walk as far as the Kirkwood house Allen
replied itt the negative, WHIM Booth, draw
ing forth the package winch had Mum
brought from Ittchinond, selected a letter
addressed to Andrew lolinerin.pißbei
dent of the Untied States, land asked Allen
to deltvor it. Allen promised to do no, and
then accompanied (tooth to the barroom to
first take .a drink
••llorei Allen met a friend, who wan to•i
ed to join them itt taking a drink, and after
wards accompanied him in the Kirkwood
Ilmise, and hea-d him inquire
, if Mr John
son was In, !Lod caw Finn gn'into his (John
eon's) room friend waited until Alen
onme nitwit at airs when he asked him
joculaily, with in Old bitines4 he
Ladle do with Johnson, if he was already
Legging for an office
"Allen man he produced as well as the
friend who .tectinui trued him to the Kirk
wood House with itnoth before go
ing in Richmond had It •ou led by Booth to
behave that he was it confidential and so-
Orel agent of the (lo•etanneln, and Baal the
letters born by him nod reference in peace
propositions which would speedily rend to
a suspension of hoNttlittes and ilie rcator,
Lion tit the Union. toil abut, nh tt can
further he proved by two persons, torrnorly
rebel soldiers. that 1400111, Oil the first or
iteeond day before his death, fell in with
them near fisrretrs, and asked their advice
and assistance in his efforts to escape Ife
,ufortned theta that he had ktlloil Lincoln,
and thereby made a good Southern man
President
"One of the wiles, whose name is Daw
son, said to him that if he meant that he
made Andy Johnson President. he had
done the worst possible thing for the worth•
as he woe more extreme in his views, and a
greater enemy to the South titan Linooln.
Booth replied that it was . 6161414 e; that
Johnson no a candidate or otfice•eeeter bad
to say a great many things, but that as
President he could do as he pleased, iltathe
watt hound to be a triend to the Routh, and
that if Ito went back on him I Booth) he
would have him hung higher than Haman.
These men belong to good families and have
excelent oheireoters, and can be produced
as witnesses "
More the 'toper Jah but the following
which Was originalfy the final clause and
to now cancelled, is still doaible
"For the cameo of Dawson and I.llen, is
etl abate, leave blocks, ur subeoltifle the
umnee of such pervous so you know will
tithe their parte "
, illl3 Timmins , )4100.1,111,
Da4n Stn . —.l telegram cells tue to phil
adelputa, and I go on the II 0' olock u m.
train-. I therefore send you an evenlope to
which you can send me by mail your stnte
nl
...4 .. p0p0 you win be able to put it in the
°Omthin evening, nn trot 10111 get it next
Ilunclny Wl4l4ing you every SIMCOII9. I 11111
yrs t ruly.
\f Aent.n
(At sod Mier the Word n /lIalelllelit"nboo
the words incorporating verbal " ure
stricken studiously out ]
Tourno, Ohio, Aprile 28, mu
WIAR Sin . —On my return home to
day I found your favor isud the pt outised
statement inclosed. I expect lobe in Wash
ington on Thursday, end witi not you that
day or the next morning —Trttly your
friend,
J M AMILET."
:4" A. Dunham, Eaq , Washington "
"Thit letter seetna4n hare come here in a
common eave'ope subscribed "C. :4. Dun
ham, Pres iden t," and is much Hooked-soiled
Tht mine applies to the following
"DRAB. trite :—Your note ie just received
Let your counsel sot as be deem best, tak
ing advantage of every legal point which
may be presented, I think the course pro
poeed by them la all that we want Truly,
AI Ammer "
Neat we have the following :
'Hove' or^ illtraidaNTArivice,
_y 4 July 8, 1847
"My n•ka Bta I bare font Been your
wife, abd hare your letter. You may rest
fissured that I do not credit the fain and
*Ovid repots made against you lt you
had the let I know you would never
coed oopies J—. If you coo put the
originals in may baud. I will soy that no
one shall take or destroy them without
tour express order is writing. exoept you,
Ire released Will see your wife again this
evening. Respectfully ,
J. M. Ammar
'C. A. Duoham
This note is not written in tak, but in
pencil, ►ud though tinted ''Hpuse !tops " is
upon a half sheet of pinln note paper, ap•
panuttly torn form soots note whloh had
been earrled in his pooket. It comes here
in an envelope, subloribed “0. A. Dunham.
Esq , Prestent." The envelOpe also shows
some apparently Idle scribbling
?aram,26, '67,
..Dunham: It li all rigth. The matter
will mat for the present, or until the thing
isytrgued in May. You will not Imre the
,elky ad interim. Mr. A. will return next
week, when Shy other matter* will be ad-
justed. Yours, W. B. DI."
This is •eitton on o mall early, In Ink,
anbutortbed •C. A. Denham, Provident.'
On a mill smaller end mob solid scrap, In
wail. bat evidently by the mum band, Is
this memorandum, or ..planation s
"1. The (Watt cannot loot without
helot o partfeart
2 Congirtot rII. ✓ the proper limr
ionrease its powtir
—3 Witnesses wnll•be fires a tHeil hotllre
III!!!1=1
19,1... sir. vompleten the full find literal
rectal of all the papers or other adhering
'data beiere toe The parcel noinprising all
but the nardon plp-r9 +Med this office
in an envelope from the l'Aecut ire Manition
endorsed, ••Iteceived from Mrs Dunham,
July 30, 184 " The papers haring some
front tlto hands of a person whose &prams
lion fur p.rd , r wan itlede . rgoing ofsmal
(mammalian Dire, Were, for ovary obvious
reason., agsomateti with it in constilering
the matter Struck by the thiiir extraordi
nary character, yet remembering in bow
unexpected and casual a manner they had
been receive,( at the Ex - t i l l :if office,
immediately determined that ill I should
ha•o made this report, their quality and
eiguificance, vrliaterer these may he, ehould
remain unchanged by inveinigation, or by
any Catralleolla CUOUtC,IIOII Or association
whaler., not only of record, luit, an far as
practicable in toy own mind Thin course
it m necesslty to bear in recollection lathe
act of einitunting the probable weight or
valqe4f the allegations Never haying
tees the inind.writinglite lion Mr Ash
ley, I thought it due to him that I !Mould
nut prance! without aeriutrtaz a aOttea of
111.9 genuine chirography I, therefore,
exhibaed that letter, which was written m oy
Mr Ashley to recomend the pardon of
Dunham to a gentleman acquainted with hie
handwriting. The latter witlion) hesitation
recognised the letter S. genuine The inh
erit strikingly resemble it
In conclusion. I hog lance to'esprelti ;he
profound sentibilities with which I find my
self obliged to bring to the serum notice
of the President of the United Staten no.
eusations and papers which must occasion
him painful embarrassment They espose
prominent members of the Legislature of
the Union to the shocking suspicion of
hnrutg conspired with a consOoted perjurer
for a stupendous implisitipn. first upon the
11 on nie of Representative,. 'then open the
people and Nen upon the Senate of the
United Slates, for the purpose of effecting
the I limeachinent and removal from office of
rronotiont of the United States, solely
upon subunned re — siiinony. I need not say
how greatly ostonuthed mankind would be,
was it charged that 4.llPbellie no abonmiable
woe beightetimi by the peculiar wialreekese
of entlemptfdg to Maitre the intended elation
litcriself,=Through appmnis to lute aiqmency,
to nimbly by a portion, with consequent
competency to act end testify, the principal
instrument of tho imposture.
lint, impommible an the existence of snob
conspiracy tiny seem, in not the Provident
exposed to a grave neeounlibliily for what
ever consequences moy possibly follow an
incredulity far too generone in the promises
to be indulged merely because these adven
titious data have been thrown upon hie cas
ual notiocaby a party who has been dishon
ored by nacritninal 'enlist, but who is still,
in the expressed opinion of competent pro
fessional persons, qualified to be a vehicle
of truth in a court of justice!
• 1 thus hay the whore wetter before your
Excellency for your bettor judgement he
the meantime it., application for pardon
will be suspended
Very respectfully. your obed't servant
John TI. DimwitLin'
ksetetnnt Attorney (loners'
To Andrew Johnson, President of the
United States
111,1111.113 or Musiinsi,iss
—JAUltlioa, coca the glory of }lector Hall,
and “Mural idement," furnishes taeandant
°videoce of what may be expected to this
country, should the people submit to the
domination of niongrelists A private let
ter, partly printed in the hal Mof Urartte,
says that the writer, who to an old resident,
"never knew Jamaica in such a state of
de
spondency. None of the better clams—no
Mlucated person—would remain 11 they
could manage to get away The country le
deeply in debt, no effort Is made to develop
her resources, and taxation is largely in
creased " Regret Is expreamod that the
colonist no longer possess "anything Me
self government," The Parish of St, Ann.
that in IS4O contained thirty sugar estates,
now has thirteen, tuad of these several ate
on the pOitit of abandonment. Of fifty-three
coffee properties, there are only four re
ma inin g. —There is lid market for horses,
mules, and cattle The prinoiple crop, pi
menta..peonsises to perish ungsthered.
Jamaica has been '•reconstrueied " It
presents a faint picture of the point to
which Radicalism ie endeavoring to reduce
our own once wealthy and thriving Souht
ern States.— Watchaar Jcfersonian.
Niercdtua. s very common
expression, when the Mongrele undertook
to doctor the Banking system, that National
Banks could not tail. The following fiat
embraces some of the suspensions and fail
ures 'wile January 1867
M►rob 2.—The National Bank of Newton,
Mass , tailed with liabilities amounting to
$llO,OOO.
March 2. 2 -The National Bank ollillson,
N. Y.. dleoovered an embezzlement by the
oat/tier to the amount of $60,000. The con
cern revived after several week. suspension,
and resumed business
March 4.—ltirst National Bank of hied lbw
kfo., felted with liabilities of $82,000.
Keret 4 —The kfeehaeles'ilationalßabk
of Baltimore, broke dow from the effebte of
• aeries of tlefalentions.Neeweisd on for •
long time by two °Moms of the iaelltutlon.
July 24 —The Weedsport (Cayuga Conn
ty) National Bank olosed doors, Its liablll.
ties being $1126,000,
July 28.—The kiatjonal Bank of Thad Ills,
Otsego County, foiled, its liabilities being
$200,000. '
July.27.—The Pequonnook Bank of Bridge
port, Conn., suspended business and offered
• reward of $6OO for Site fugitive snakier,
W. Hamilton Barnum, wko Amended whb
$50,000.
In the above brief statement. the lessons
for the difficulties of the National Banks, in
quastiou are too lomeotably obvious to
mood farther (lomat:tut.— WesteAssier J{da•
—ls (11mrsling a aim bony foil oat of ■
'dude , unit nearly WWI • gagman naming
along Um stmt.
NO: 33
LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
The nom.; river leaped add snug
Full hitt/lel, in the perfect weather.
All crown) the litoUllt4loll echoer ram;,
Ent blue and green were gla.ltugerber.
This rains out light from every part,
And that with singe of joy was thrilling,.
Sol in the hollow amp heart
There .irked a place that walip44llln . ,ir„ .
Secure the 11.11Tb/et meat,
AS4l.l.appl ;lonia are wet and glisten,
I heard n wolnd of laughter ravel,
And pawed to like It, and to listen
I heard the chanting waters flow,
The cushat's note, the bee's low humming—
Then turned the beige, and did not know—
How caul.' I—that my time was coming.
A girl upon the nighrot atone,
Half doubtful of the deed wait 'landing,
tf far the shadow flood had down
Beyond the 'euet.unad leap of landing
She knew not any need of me,
Yet macho wanted all entreating:
We thought not I had ,rooleti the gee,
And half the vphere to give her meet lag
I traded out. her eye. I met.
t I ached the mnmentr had been batter
leek her in my arum, and net
Her dainty feet altlong the flower,
fellessAnable in copse and lane,
etlll methinks. I hear them rellinK
The srintl's soft whisper in the plain,
That ru.hrt'e r((((, the iirate , li felling
Hilt now it is a year ago,
But now possession crowns enilsai or
T took her In my heart to grow
And fill the hollow place forever.
-i.,.0.1 qr
THIS, THAT A , !/2THE OTHER
--"Ca•h ndroncor'' cilorting a rich young
orOlour
—The uterriage hrokere of Parid guarantee
haypfneas fur a year
—Cholera and .mall-part are ravaging the
English army to India.
--There are eight or ten eirgrrtem in the
Conneetteut Legialature.
--There now reline.) ond irpored of
4a0,000, scree of U. S , public lends.
--It is not whet we read, btu Whitt we re
rnember,tbst make. ue w
terrible earthquake lon 'occurred at
lljokflea, Java Numerous line were loot..
--To prorout your hair from rowing out,
never let your wife catch you kissing another
---1 S: tiovernor Jehnsen ,of deorgla, µM
oee the people not to •ooept the despot hill. Ile
is right.
--Advice, like snow, the softer It f.lls, the
longer a dwells upon, and the deeper It etoke
tnlo, the wand,
--A negro Had ica I has offered h Impair aa
candidate fur Coerces from the Cheney distriet
1,1 South Carolina.
--Wo are told that our Gorerument Is the
beet la the world, It ought to he if Ito extol
)0I1141 is .cording.totto
—Th e aeveateen year locust has duly made
its appearance to Virginia, and is doing consid
erable damage, mainly to the forests.
—A Radical &tate convention. composed of
SOO nevus's and 100 whites was held in Rich
mond last Wednesday. "Sick is life."
--"Show we the man," says Prentiee,"wbo
lost hts ell In the late war eed VII show yOn
&asp niggers who never net their (•) vent."
—The cost of supportintg the army in the
Southern States during the present year a esti
mated by the Treasury Department at V 5 ,000
000, to $40,000,000
--The bfougrele do coy hke to hear :hat
they were eo hard up, a. to he compelled to im
port a Connecticut Yankee. for their candidate
for Supremo Judge.
--Among the latest arrivals at Asratoga,
set two young ladles from Rev.., known se
the "Charms of Cuba," and wearing diamonds
to the value of $250,000.
—The Phut Africa, Church In ,Richmond
is supposed to be the largest on the continent.
It has over 4,000 names on its record, and over
3,000 resident members.
--The population of China is about four
hundred millions; that of Japan forty millions
more. These two eountriea coolant nearly half
the population of the globe.
—no freedmen of Colombia, ?disc, song
the 'Bonnie Moe Flag" on the Fourth with all
the gusto, of the "rebels" themselves. They
were trying to be white won.
—An individual who was sent to jail for
marrying two wires, exonstd him elf by saying
that when he had one rho fought him,but when
he had two they fought each other.
—Wendell Phillip. my. that he would
rather aoot he then irritate-the Booth. Proutlee
reepond• ; "Oh ye., he would no doubt rockher
to rat Just u wu done to St. Stephen.
—Twirl, during the Teenagee canvass the
Stars and Stripe. hive been tyro frota the gaud
where Etheridge wu to .peak sod trampled In
to ebrede by the Halm& Nilo support Brown
low.
—Mr. Sudden, the ex-Confederate Secreta
ry or Was is working his hue form to Hooch
land County, Vs. He does not meddle with
public Maim, and goys he Is out of the polities'
ring.
—The editor of the Dossier (lAttillana
Donee, say. that when be gets through with ►4
exper lane° of District No. 5, ender Gamed
Sheridan, he will bo able "to stand hell-Les yin
readily,"
—A Missouri editor says tbat the Balm&
to Congress wilt O(1011 1111tet s law sequtriag
mimes sloths* to be made without pockets, than
will be so use of them. That editor besets
sound. "you bat."
---.4 WTI) boy leas driving a male is Ja
mauls, what the animal suddenly stopped and
Mused to badge. , Won't you go eh ?' said
the boy. Teel grand do you / I Wove you
you forgekyor (adder nu a Jaokam. '
-4oeepl R. Bolton, • funelsont nenleer
Azt. 4
of the Temperanee', order le Phnedelphia . bse
been arreated fee entneellng Rev thounud 1-
nes of the Widows sad Oephase feud, of le
Odd Fellows lodge, o(whtohla Lea Pent" •
--Lord Lyttletan prat/Nod $ mad t-
Musty amendment to the • Intgltalt Redone bill
which, If tt paned would ellsfroooltee It We
nilsorlry of the rested men In the kingdom.
No one In to vote who cannot unto * legibb
bind.
—The Radical, and negnoes hold Arrow
*Wing at Charlesteaiath %relish hat
wash, as "nisi and brethren," and resorrad for
Congresstonal retionstruotion. ollowlecid and
how pleasant it is for blethrou to dwell torah.
Sr in unity'
—A emanates or ► newspoper, spentini
of a oontemporsay, Wok: Irma tonnerly 11
issesbor or Ooniposs, etc midi" ross till Ise
Wood • esspisstaig. position as to editor—a
onbloosuunpin of persoyeesase vain dapssonsf
olosankanness."
"RECONSTRUCTION ,KIOISISFE",
Several leading m in the South, it is
mild, have followed the source of Oen.
Longstreet, and gone in for the "Military
Recenstruction 11111," on the pretence or
'yeller that it le the 'hottest way Legit back
Into the' "Union," The Union forsooth!—
Mr Union ii utterly and f Impound*
of neeeeeity, under that bill. The Union ie
a union
. 11 moque 1 States, °emptied of
wintepeofe, and its i refterstlon only Reedit
withdrawal or the arfeY, abolition of ik.
Nigger Bares% In • word, only need' the
removal of the northern princeeret from the
South, nod thus permitting' the Slater to
regulate their owe &Noire, jinn ae the Con-,
ititution provider, and just an they did
from 1787 to 1880. If, therefore, some su
pernatural power were to instantly annihi
late Steklen, Sheridan, Howard, the eeboo
maim' and the ' rota eneeokbld , r lunatics
traitors and vitiate/ that now oppress the -
South, Ma lino. would !pootaaroustpror
store itself in a weeek, ju•t as a 03 , 61,1 of
good constitution, kept down on hi. bed by
the dosing of an infernal quick, would get
up and walk when the fool was kicked oat
of the house .But the r atrocious villains
who hero eartelliced • 11110109 01 lives. un
der pretence of restoring the Union, keep
Sickles. and Meriden. and Howard, and the
accursed thing they calla Bureau, In the
South, for the very and sole potpies of pre
venting its restoration. Still they 'Wit a
Union, and dream of a Union, a Mongrel
Union, a Union where whiten and °ernes
"enjoy" "impartial freedom," and they are
at work with •11 their might to do • thing
that, to the nature of thistgecennot be dons
If a man were sink, nick unto death, not
from defective constitution, but from quilt
ery,all that weruipeded to reaterehisher.lth
would be e to diroharge she quack, bat U
some professed friend were to any, "I want
you to get well, but hereafter, inetead of
• white man you must be • timbales and a
better twin that ever, " then such professed
friend would correnpond exactly with the
advocates of ttrreonstruci ion." It cannot be
done . the utuo may die, as the nation may
perish but he cannot bee mulatto. nor can
reconstruction" one Mongrel basis every
be possible; ' , the Union as it was" or na
tional death are the sole possibilidlec—Dity
Book.
IMPORTATION OF NEGRO VOTERS.
The Cleveland Phaedraler say. the resid
ence's Bureau is busy now sending large
numbers of future colored oithens Into the
Western Stoles. Care is taken to put them
into the hands of toys! Radiants, who will
are that they ail rote right. This hi a game
which could be worked to decided advan
tage in Penurylrouta. With the Vallee
Williams un the bomb of our Supreme Court
an act of Cougress mskiog Negroes Tonna
to Penusylven in would at once be declared
to be constitutional aid binding. Thoughts
Radicals would not only be relators:red by
16,000 or 20.000 adult mete smarms already
in this Suite, but es moot' ore eis might be
needed in any emergency trould be at ones
imported from the South Along the bor
ders they would be crowded into the noun
ties of Lancaster, Chester. Lebanon, Dela
ware, Somerset and Allegheny, and would •
be pushed north into Bradford, Tinge and
6ther radicaledistriote Let no man suppose
the party now in power would hesitate for
moment about ti eking an attempt thus to
overpower the will of the white voters of
this State Such action Or the Radloile
would be made perfectly legal the moment
'the right of the negro to vote In Pennsylva
nia woe recognised, The Pillage Record, a
radical paper very well known In Southern
and Central Penneyltanist, bee openly de
clared that a resolution pledging the Re
publican party to advocate the enfranchise
meat of the *egress in this State, failed to
be reported by Wm Committee on Iteaalo-
Lions, tweeter it wes there aullorUalioely eta•
fed that Crowe** would sows paw a general
law waken/ Negroes voter, en every Mote. The
seventh resolution of the Radical platform
biudo Judge Willlants,should be be sleeted,
to decide such a law to be cenatitutiottal.
The whitemen of Pennsylvania OMR DUMP
whet is in store for . them should Judge
Shorewood be defeated Not only will all
the negroes now In the Stale ber made vo
tere by the sot of Congress, but the Freed
men's Bureau will be ready to ell any or
der for negro vetch whenever called upon.
We think the white men of the Keystone
Stale will hesitate a long lima before they
elevate to the bench of the Supreme Court
• Connecticut Yankee who stand, pledged
to carry out sued a programtne.—Lonender
Intellegeneer.
The spectacle which the United
Steles presents to the eyeof mankind at the
present moment, we me, taxes both the en
? Los ity and amazement of European journal
lots They have been familiar with the
names of Weds, Sumner, Phillips , and their
like, and they knew that they were without
character and without inflow*. But now
these men, like devilestartimg up out of the
earth, seem to rule the lead with absolute
I sway. The thing ismoreinexplicible from
O. toot that these evil sprits are without
great ability. But the morel is, that the
1 people bane been, to a great *steak &SU
complies' of them malcontents. The meet
isoapnble, usrracious, prelligsle, and now
' ardlY wratehes, lavrated with priedr sad
masters of the purse, wilt be sulkiest for
any work where the people are statempliess.
1 Avarice or luxury is rapaeloom ; let them
feed it. The mere It is fed, the more pre
fuse it will grow. Want Is the tooneognease
1 of profusion,' or, venality of weak, end de
pendence- of both. By thisprevesaioa, the
drat men in the nation became the pongee
ascot o,lemet, and he who has toilets the
elmpleit tool of him who has none. The
distemper soon descends, not Indeed lo make
• deposit betas, bat to speed itnelfellivoed
pervade the wholi body. This l e the Phil
osophy of the power which ''anal 111-bad
wretches as the malisasata of Cliamgrem
wield. It Is preolnly &spree's' **him
many tattoos have UM their libertj.
English nation \ has been brawn to pfeein,
two or three times in the same way. pi.
devil ofßemtdMadJsw belonged he the same
flatly as this devil of eat, at Ile present
time. Be le no itsempres this ale, end
has net bees for dues mud floe litemtend
peen ef !Astarte slas.--Atif Niue
DisoßlDlziell AID DIAII6-4 Adaliond
dont happened to s boy maned Webber, at •
pia -111, at Milan MIN, bit hostitgAiiiid
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