h V 11 e r RKEU,vKfittor ana rropriotor. I WOULD RATHER BE SIGHT THAN lREBIDENT.--HK!iBT Clay -0LUME7. TS RMS: 3.00 PER -.AJC SSJ3I. X'2.00 IX ADVAXCE. NUMBER 18: be fH'JL-MUNDAY MURDER. Commonwealtli vs. John v(a,Tser ana uunici a user ..! I. Cambria to 04 si r 3 1 El x.C'urto Oyer and Terminer of C KtyUon. Geo. Taylor r F. J. CHARGE OP T-IIE' COTDRT. ' y ' fallen of the Jury : The prisori- iave been arraignea, ana are upon r : on TnilJrtmenfc wli'fih j rrwi, esthem witii the inuraer or rouy 1 on tuo. lu uaj V4 u uuwt ... r!e township, In this county ; aud you hbecn etupanneled and sworn jo try important issue. jo body of the deceased, a maiden ahout seventy vear3 of ae, who had i Ion" time resided upon and used and rolled as her own, and had generally Uied alone, a farm in Croyle township, junci ju rne staDio uu iuu tciuiaca y th day of June, by neighbors whose at ionhad been directed to the placo in the 5er disclosed in the evidence ; and, he orchard, a short distance from the :e and stable, the body of Catharine irl of about sixteen, the daugh- Liv, a g j 4 neighbor, and who was for the staying with Miss Paul learning to .:t. They were both dead. The skull ick froui the front around the side of D7 X ill iV t n: hcA, was broken and in a fragthent- taic, evidently caused by blows with !ub, ct some blunt instrument, as liutm testifies, which must, in his lion, have caused death instantly; or, fuse his vsctds, as'soon as if their heads beea severed from their' bodies by blow. Tiro club? were found, just e, eareuly fashioned, of " the same and tliesame kind of wood, one near bjJy of 3Iiss Mundy, in the orchard, ; tie other in the house, v.her-s the were found in disorder, and the rn up, aud upon the floor. ' Miss I'iuriug the long period sho bad.oc- ;t!ie property alone, had been sell- ::tcr and other "marketing," rais ed occasionally Belling siock,'and ijj for the neighbors: and is shewn jre sold timber from the laud, acd to received money in different sums, !Q different occasions. The reasona jpp.isition is, that she must have ae rated a considerable amount of mo- f: but none of her friends knew of her loaned any, and there was none IJ m tlxe house except 30 or $40 iu ocket oi a ureas bau'iu up against wall, ana a lew small pieces or gold scattered whete the bed was torn up; tne lloor. i the light of these facts, it is clear ad a doubt that aJiss Paul and Miss .iv, were both murdered by some per or persons; and tha, whoever did it. bsaurderof the highest grade, of the degree. 1 he unlawful killing of any an being with malice aforethought ss oi implied, is murder : and malice fclied ia every act of unlawful killing! v. ... i tuiigimuia, ciliict yjl LUKJ or second degree. All murder per iod by means of poisoD, or by lying if, or by any other" kind of willfuL wate, aud premeditated killing, or :i is committed iu the perpetration or -I'1 l-' jerpetrate any rape, arson. -'ji r robbery, is murder of the ifLTte. In all the cases epecified, and Tery other case iu which the taking other. fa6ts which fact prvo, or tend to prove, the fact in controversy. The evU dence here adduced and relied upon by the Commonwealth is of the latter kind ; or, entirely circumstantial. No one has been brought here to testify who witness- ea tne aeea. ino eye, nun me aii-Beeing eye' of God, and of - the devoted victims, beheld the horrid tragedy "; at least, no witness beheld if," who can recognize and point out the guilty actors. The little girl," Mary Stibiliskie, there can be no doubt, was, there-about the time; and, when sho 'heard the scream, or strange noise that alarmed her, and saw, in the evening twilight, two men in dark cloth ing ruuning towards, the barn, she, ; no doubt, saw the perpetrators, in the .very act of committing the crime; but she can not identify them, or tell who they were. There is uo direct and positive evidence of identity. : The evidence : adduced by the Commonwealth for this purpose, is, we repeat, entirely circumstantial: in other words, the Commonwealth has under takan to prove certain independent facts, which facts, it is alleged, cannot be reasona bly accounted for in any other waj than upon the supposition, that the prisoners are the two men seen by Mary Stibiliski, the men who provided and used tJie two clubs, and committed the crime" charged in the in dictment. The evidence is. not. any the less worthy of your serious and careful consideration. Secrecy is almost iiuiver- sally sought as a shelter from the penalty due to atrocious crime.' Almost evary deliberate murder, particularly of the character here charged, is perpetrated, it may be affirmed, in the belief, entertuiaed at the time, that it wiU never be detected. It was in that vie.w, there can bo no doubt, or to hide. and cover up the gujlt Of a rob bery, by sealing in death the lips of lljose who might have exposed it, that this un manly and revolting double muider was committed. . It often happens, therefore, that guilt and the guilty can only.' be brought to light and to punishmeut, .by the evidence of circumstances.- That,-indeed, alone, would not be a: sufficient rea son for resorting to it, and resting impor tant conclusions upon it ; for no one should be;convicted of any crime, not to say one of the darkest in its guilt, and the most dreadful in its consequences, except upon sufficient and legal evidence. , But . the law regards circumstantial evidence, when the t'&zti from which inferences are drawn, are plainly established, and are irreconci lable with any other rational view of the case than that which they are adduced to f prove, as sulhcieut evidence. It is said was j laicly "contemplated and in Aich constitutes a willful, delibe ' SEJ premeditated killing, the tnurdpr ' lta FIRST nF.finvp.." And it ia thn ;cf tie jury, when they find a prison--'ty of murder, to ascertain and find ;e verdict, the degree of it. is clear beyond any doubt, we repeat, Miss laui and Miss Mundy, were t btS inj III 11 Vi . 1 I . . OTir -uiucreu : anu caua v clear ihiit Jji , WM W UUJUU fllve, in tie f.T.,,t:. ...... k nw ii ,vuliyu oi one criminal -ose, aDa by the Eame 3encv . and. it murder perDefrafP.J in i : ' Iff., - li . c-ymmis- "ulx tuereiore, a mur 1 re?BSTMG- The two clubs, utaeiosea on tne nd. vtv Vfc caa Doaies wpre ho T e"unceoi Mary Stibilis ao When himt i aedliH. "er cws, was a.en in a i , , ue nouse and Eaw I'ra , I c,lothlDS running towards "i ana whosp , 7 ot the mirder, would seem to 'I t ain it . r uiw, mat two persons, at ,' Tr6 COncorncd in tha A . "u'5. lhi mdirtman -,1 - -u a i rt 3 -onerawuh the innrdpr nf irT,. I' unA i j iL4 x , ' aQd, while the jury are to pass -.wtuce, anu uetcrmine all s of fact. in thn caQi. v, ,r about "ich there is any eontro- v ground of controversy, is, did th3 commit the crime ? .are they V'f tne UomrflOQ wealth to prove y aBency, aud by -evidence tat ir n reasonabIe doubt ; upon j l " v . mvi ire- CT C5 s tf -3 fj 4 'PI no Tea- There are evidence, by which any pro- ;:e Joubt of their guilt 4lfi'! r.l 'a &DV pfsf ;,.;i :i j ut criminal, tie tabl'iBLed in a Cmirt nf .Ti,. j D Psitve a3 where a wit t directly and positively to the (! I' andi,r"lpfiVe or cir ' 89 where the witness pvoyes I by 3Ir. Starkie,' a text-writer of high au thority, that " circumstantial evidence is allowed to prevail to the conviction of an offeuder, not because it is necessary and politic that it should be resorted to, but because it is,' in its own nature, capable of producing the highest degree.pl moral certaiuty in its application," And so, the judges of our Supreme Court have declar ed, not. only that it is legal evidencej but that it may exist in such am6unt,l.arid bo of iuch a character, as to be stronger tfian a given amount of direct testimony. And this accords with' the consciousness arid experience of every reflecting man. As if to provide for a case where circumstan tial is the only available evidence, God hath so ordained, and so constituted the human mind, that we thus reason to con clusions upon which the judgment rests, in matters of the highest personal con cernment to ourselves. ' - ' The convincing force and persuasive power of circumstances, consist in the known and experienced; conucxion be tween cause and, effect,, motive' and-' con duct, and the known, "natural, felt, and understood relation of things.' Every thing uecessarilj leading to and connected with a criminal act, all the circumstan ces of time, place, motive, means, oppor tunity,' and conduct, all join and harmo nize together, as part and parcel of one transaction. ' When brought together, they join and fit, like parts of a complica ted machine, or fragments of some broken thing. No part will fit elsewhere than in its own place; and, at the attempt to ac count for it otherwise, or falsely, truth usually asserts her prerogative, and expo ses the attempted deception. Such is the force and power, the beauty and harmony, of truth. , And so, 'gentlemen, when all the circumstances of time, place, motive, means, opportunity and conduct coincide with, the supposition that a party is guilty, and cannot be accounted for on any other reasonable supposition, their irresistible tendency is, to convince the mind, eatisfy the judgment, and fix belief. "When the known and ascertained facts," says .Mr. Starkie, "so coincide and agree with the hypothesis that the dis puted fact is true, as to' render the truth of any other hypothesis, on the principles of reason and experience, extremely re mote and improbable and morally, though not absolutely impossible, the hypothesis is established as morally true." It is also said by the same, authority that "the na turo and degree of coincidence between the circumstances and the hypothesis may oftentimes be sufficient to exclude all reasonable doubt, and thus generate full conviction and belief, although it be not, as in the former case, of an absolute and demonstrative nature," ' It was said, also, by the late 'distinguished Chief Justice Uibson, that "the law enacts a conviction prisoner's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt;" and that "circumstantial evidence is legal evidence," and "is sufficient for the purpose when it i excludes disbelief : that is, actual, and not technical disbelief; for he who is to pajs upon, the question is not at liberty to disbelieve as a juror, what he Relieves as a man.: It tia enough: that' his conscience is clear."' And' hence, gentlemen, the legal test is, f'the sufficien cy of the evidence to satisfy the judgment and conscience of the jury." .-;:;!. : It is to be observed and borne in mind, on the other hand, that the facts from which conclusions of guilt are sought to be drawn, should be satisfactorily proven, and, in a criminal case, to warrant a con viction,1 should be sufficient to exclude every other rational supposition, suggested or supported by any evidence, but the supposition that the accused ia guilty. Such is the view which the law takes , of circumstantial evidence ; such the : rules and caution which it suggests to guide a jury in passing upon it, and deducing im portant conclusions from it. And, accor dinS'y Jou gentlemen, regarding this rule and caution, must judge of the truth of the facto and circum&tances from which conclusions are sought to be drawn ; de termine, if you find them to be true, whether there is any reasonable explana tion ; and: what conclusions, if true, and unexplained and unaccounted for, they reasonably support. You must thus think, scrutinize, and reason, at every step in the investigation ; for ) your verdict, at last, must be your judgment formed upon the law and the evidence; and the. test estab lished by the law, as It we have seen, b, the sufficiency of the evidence to satisfy your judgment and conscience. : r ; We recur now to the inquiry, are these prison ers-ihe guiUy men? and does the evidence prove it : beyond a. reasonable doubt? ' , ; :-,: : ' . ' The allegation, or theory, of the com monwealth is, that these prisoners, who it appears had been in the Western Peniten tiary for some time , prior . to the 17th of .May, when their term of. imprisonment expired, and who had been companions before and have been since, ; while in the Penitentiary, obtained information from a certain Philip Fulgert, ;also a convict taken from. Cambria couniy in. 1801, and whose wife. before his marriage had lived with Polly. Paul, ,'of the lonely and seclu ded residence and of the circumstances of Polly Paul ;. and that it was there, in the Penitentiary, plotted and agreed that when the prisoners should be released, they would Kob, her though they should have to commit murder iu doing it, and appro priate a portion of the money they might obtain for the purpose.of procuring a par don for Fulgert, and releasing him from prison: That they were released on the 17th of May; and that on the 25th of May, John 13. Ilouser, one of the prison ers, was in the neighborhood of Summer hill,. Cambria county, a few miles from the residence: , of the deceased,-moving from one place to another, inquiring for some widow, and acting iu a noticeably singular manner, endeavoring, as the oouusel of the. Commonwealth surmise and allege, preparatory to the execution of the alleged criminal purpose, to explore the neighborhood, and iiud the residence of the deceased : xThat a few days after wards, or about the 28th or 20th of May, the prisoners went together to the house of a Mrs.; Miller in Allegheny city, where they remained as boarders, until Monday the 5th of June, when they both left to gether, carrying with them a tin box con taining their instruments as cuppers and leechers, which they professed to bo, and a largo, black oil. cloth sack: That,. on Tuesday, the Cth of June, the. day before the murder, Howser again made his ap pearance in Cambria county, at the house occupied by Susan Preall.'on the road from Summerhill to or past Isaac Paul's, carry ing a tin box similar to that produced here .belonging to the "prisoners, and inquired if they wanted any cupping or leeching done, aod. afterwards went on", towards Isaac Paul's, about three-fourths of. a mile from Polly Paul's, where he. made partic ular inquiries about, Polly Paul, whether -she was alone, and whether she-was alone at that time, and whether there Jwas any man about her house, and whether he would have to. pass . the saw-mill to go there; and after inquiring whether they had any cupping, leeching, or tooth-drawing to do, went back the road he came, towards Summerhill : That on Friday or Saturday after the murder, or.On.thij )th or 10th of June, the, prisoners returned together, as they had left, to Mrs. Miller's in ; Allegheny city when Howser's feet were sore and swollen, and his appearance and' conduct. that of a dejected and dis tressed, man; that in a conversation heard between them afterwards in Mrs. Miller's house, in which they disputed, Ilouser asked Buser to get the money they bad and give : him his share, stating that he wanted to leave him. and. go to his father; to which Buser replied that iff he would get the ; money-then, it might get them both into-trouble That they had but little . money when th ey left Allegheny city,; and claimed to have money, although they, did not exhibit any, after. their re turn : That they left Allegheny city to go . tf up , the iliailroad, - " towards , the mountain ;' and that, while they .were away the specific- crime planned, and pur-; where there is legal evidence tQ phow'the 'ipoaed ia .thoprison .was committed by ... .... .. , - i . ; ........ , i . someagency, andia tho manner purposed, the purpose being to rob Polly Paul if it should; be necessary, to murder her to lo it, and " hpr bed:: ,even. in which uigert said " she kept her money," oemg jouna , torn up : And: that" they, have .utterly failed to shew, where they were, or what they-were doing, or to give any occount of themselves, between Mon day and Friday of tie week of the mur der.:;:, T : ; -. ; r ...rr- r , These are the circumstances, alleg ed, and . claimed to be proven, on the part .or.:: the Commonwealth".- It is for you, gentlemen, to determine whether the testimony of the witnesses establishes the facts'alleged ;:and what r conclusions, if found to be true, they' fairly support. It is denied, on behalf of the prUoners,: that these allegations, or the most prominent and important of them, are true, or estab lished by1 the testimony in the case; and denied, also, that if proved, or assumed to- be true, they warrant the conclusion claimed to result, from them ; or are suf ficient to exclude every other reasonable hypothesis, and prove the guilty agency of the. prisoners, or. of either of them, in the murder. . ; . , To piove the alleged conspiracy and plot in tho prison, tho Commonwealth produced and examined William M'Crea ry, a convict at the same time, in the Western : Penitentiary. Philip Fulgert, tho two prisoners, and this witness, were all at the same lime in that prison ; and the testimony of the witness purports to be a disclosure of what was communicated to him, or heard by him, within its walls. It is, indeed, if true, a startling thought, and oue which should excite public atten tion, that the place provided' and tnain tain6d' by the State for the, punishment and reformation of felons, may, from de fective construction, or any other cause, become a place where ;rime is concocted ! But we have only; to do w:th the question of fact as' it bears upon this issue. - William M'Cieary testifies: . "I was an inmate Of the Western Peni tentiary for some time prior to tho 17th of last May. 1 have seen John B. Houser there, and never saw him auy where- else I had been acquainted with Buser. After he .was committed, he told me there he came from Allegheny county. Buser was confined or . put in the second cell from me, and after he had been there some time it "is customary when one- comes to put . him in with an old one who has been there some time to instruct him in shoemaking. Buser was put in the adjoining cell, with a man adjoining me. '. After he had been there some timc,;prorjably a week, he rec ognized me as a person that.' had stopped on lis trading boat in 1855.- I had-not seearhiin or heard of him afterwards. We talked about different things. In the meantime Philip Fuller was further up the range or tier. He came down and wasiput in a cell adjoining the one Buer occapied. ,'After Buser became acquain ted, with Philip Fulger he was a Ger mai from' Cambria county;" at least he told meiso Buser stated that he had got some 'points which the witness here ex plained to'- be places where there was money, and that they he and his part ner were going to make some, of .those 'points,'' and if they succeeded in making any of thoie 'points,', they intended to put up. some of the money for Fulger . to get out of prison. We bad different conver sations in regard to this; I don't know how many. ; He told me there were sev eral places : one was an' aunt of Fulgcr's wif,'Buser told me; there was another old lady that lived by herself, a weaver, of the name of Paul; I think he called her 'Mary Paul.' ' ; ; : ; t "1 remained in that cell fifteen months, ind part of the time Buser was in an ad joining cell. At the end of 'that fifteen months, I moved up that tier to the ad- joiniag' cell to Philip- Fulger. Fulger and Buser worked by spells in the sauie cell, hob-nailing shoes, till Buser went out.' Fulger remained in the cell. . About four, probably six weeks in. the spring, -after winter had crone by, before Baser went out" t he witness here referred to ', the difficulty of noting there the lapse, of time; and, after stating that VVisoners frequently got together, to jr Iheir hair cut, or some:tUin. of th't kind,' and ex plaining how communication was kept up by meaps of, 'the steam pipes, he went on to relate a conversation heard by him be tween, Buser and Fulger in a cell at the time referred to. ... ' ,"I did not," he says, "hear the first. of the conversation.- They were talking when I came down.; vBuserwas sitting in the middle of the cell ; thei one about nine, the other about five feet from me, including the thickness of the wall. .The first.. I; heard,: Buser said," Philip, if I make any of those points, you can depend on us doing what I promised.' : He said 'you can be got out, and you will not have longer to stay than August ; you. will be got out by August,; Fulger , says, the old woman's, the weaver's; you can get that: there. will be;no one there to stop you:. He remarked that he thought she kept her money in her bed. He said 'I think you will find her money in her bed.' He. called her . 'the old.weayer.' ;i I think he ( did not name, her ,then. .Buser said, ,' Johnny and I, will make sure. of that, if we Lave; to mirder,her tOjgetit , That was th principal part of the. conversation with 1 remarked .'do vou think vOU m,, I'- Tie Said 'oh. VCS. thprp ia a tIIo g on "me Said I. -in Cambria V tions with Fulger informed by the Court that they would not be evidence. The intention was to go as soon as they got out; as soon as they could make ar rangements. .. . ; "There.was a man, a cooper by trade, not by name, in the neighborhood, spokeu of. This was jn the first conversation Bu ser. talked about those points that might be made." - . . lie .then states a - conversation Houser on one Sunday in March : "I asked Ilouser if he was going to send some 'weed' tobacco in after he went out: He said be could not then ; he was hard up.;. He would have to make a raise nrst. do that waitin lie did not speak ; nodded. I think I made some remark that let him know that T understood. r V ; "I never heard any . conversation be tween Ilouser; nd Buser about Cambria county, that I could . understand. Some times they talked in German. . Twica r can remember of them uting the word lCa7nbria.' It was on Sunday each time." "When re-called, he stated that he had never resided in Cambiia county ; how he heard of the ywirder, "n the latter part of June, probably between the loth and 25ih," and that he coinmunicatjed the lacts testified to here, the same day . to the War den ; and that ."there was no promise of a pardon or any other inducement held out to him to testify in this case." To a ques tion put by the Court, he said the first he knew of being pardoned, "detective Ila-rue told me on the way my pardon was here." Wc have: -thus, because, of. its impor tance, brought to your recol'.ectiou the en tire testimony of thjs witness, as we noted it down, except only some explanatory and unimportant statements, . which we. .were not careful, to preserve.; It is a most im portant and material part of the evidence of the Commonwealth ; since, if true, and believed, it reveals a motive and a pur pose,, on the part of. the prisoners, to com mit the crime charged in the iudictmeut. It should receive, therefore, the, most careful scrutiny'and examination. After , this witness had been called to the stand,1 acd sworn to testify in the cause, it was elicited from him, in answer to a question, asked without objection by the'. prisoners'Veonnsel, that he . had '-'recently got ouf of the. penitentiary;" that he had been. tried in W'asbiugtou county, and" had been "convicted on a charge of burglary ;" and that he h;:d been in before on the same charge,' and that he "was convicted and pardoned on the first charge on the ground that he was not guilty of. tne onence. it was here objected by the prisouers counsel that he was hot a com petent witness. A pardon, by the Gover nor was then 'produced and read. ' It" was still ! objected "that the pardon produced for the last conviction "did not remove the disability occasioned by the first." It was apparent, however, that the first term of imprisonment must have been, iu some way, terminated ; and it wr.s our. impres sion; moreover, that the pardon was as well proved as the conviction, if it would be correct to say that cither was properly or sufficiently proven ; and that, shewn as it was, that conviction could only affect his credibility, and could, not be allowed en tirely to exclude' his testimony a3 incom petent. He was allowed,, therefore,' to testify ; aud, upon the prayer of the coun sel of. the prisoners, a bill of exceptions was sealed. The examination which we have since given the question, has satisfied us that we were right. If, however, we erred in this ruling, we rejoice to know that the. prisoners are not without a reme dy. - We now instruct you that he is a competent witness, ar.d hi j testimony to be regarded by you as legal and proper evidence, if, iu view, of the attitude he occupies, and of everything urged against him calculated to affect his credit, you believe it. He. stands beforo you uj.on his" own admission, twice convicted 'of a felony; Enough the admission, with're-sVe-Vc to one of the convictions, is qualified oy a denial of his guilt. His character for truth and veracity, on. the other' hand, has Jnot , beer, directly assailed ; and the counsel of the prisouers declined to sub ject his statements to the test of a cross examination. You witnessed his manner of testifying, and will scrutinize carefully the subject matter of his testimony. It is argued -against it that the confinement in the peniteutiavy is "separate and solitary ;" and that he could not, consequently, have heard what he has undertaken to detail; and that neither the Warden, nor any other witness, has been called to corrobo rate him, by showing that he could. On the other hand, you have been reminded that while ' the Warden joiued in asking his pardon,-no witness has been called to contradict him, by showing that he could not; arid you have been asked to inquire how he could have invented the story. All wo have to say to you, is, he is a com petent witness : do you believe his testi mony ? ' ' ' . . To shew the alleged conduct of the pris oners in Allegheny city, shortly before and 'after the murder, and the. time aud 'mauner of" their leaving and return, the Commonwealth has called and examined . as witnesses ' Elizabeth Graham, Martha .Barnes, and John o. 'Johnston. Elizabeth Graham testifies: ' - Iwithj Buser.,,.! had frequent, coayersa-1 ; 1 WSifo : in Allegheny city, Third . 2 -. . , - r . - - - . ji'i i Ward. I am acouainrnrl with tU.. prisoners. I was boarding at Mrs. Mil ler's, aud they came there about the 28th or .29th of last May. Thev stayed till tho 3rd day of June. The 3rd of June they cupped me. They were together. at that time. ,.Ou the next day, -on Sunday Mr. Barnes, the nest door neighbor, ot his hand cut. Taey cresscd his hand. Buser said if thev didn't go away on Mon day they would dress- it again. He went early on Monday moruing and dressed his hand. He borrowed one dollar of me ; said he wanted to. go -to the drug store! and get some medicine. Ile.toldme he had some.nioney, put he wauted that to pay (or a ticket to ride a piece on the ears. They wanted to go to the country. , IIoul ser was present at that time. That after noon thev both left ; about 2 or 3 o'clock in the afternoon. They took a carpet sack and a tin box. It was a brown tin box. It was such a looking one as that. One produced in court. Never had the box- in my hands. It was a black'oil cloth carpet sack. - "They came back on the next Satur day in the alteruoon ; Houser's feet were very sore. They. wore both blistered and swelled. He stayed :n the house for over a week after that. He said his feet wore too sore ;. he couldn't get out. Buser wa3 out ; ho brought sour-kraut several times. He cupped his feet with one hand. : " They followed cupping, and bleeding, and leeching, while they , were there. They had no money before they left. Dan said they had money now, but it wouldn't ilo lor tli iii to. 6 t that. I was laving ia the room on a lounge ;' I was sick ; and the two were in the room. They had a few words; got to quarreiiug in the room. Hcuer told Buser he wanted him to go aud get that mouey they had, and give him his share. Houser said he wanted to go to his father; he would leave Buser. Buser said, putting his finger to his eye, 'do you see anything green V Buser said it wouldn't do for him to go aud get that money ; it might get them both into trou ble. I didn't hear any more. " Ilouser appeared to mc after he came ' back like a man that was distressed ia mind.- He would get up from the kitchen and go into the room, and lay down. Ha was not jolly and jokev, like he, had been before' ,: . . , " This is .her testimony in chief. Iu what she said "in-'her. cross-examination, which, as you will recollet, was 'mainly "directed to other thiogs, urged Hero against her credibility, there is nothing which varies her statements respecting the prisouers.. You heard her cross-ex- -aruination, and have' heard the comments -of the prisoners' counsel upon that part of her lesfityony. . Martha Barnes testifies that she "seen these 'two. men -when they .first came to Mrs. Miller's, aud thiuks it was iu. May or June." . . , . " I thick," sl.e says, " it was on tho 3rd of June they cupped Mrs. Graham ; it was on Saturday. I seen them on Sun day. . On 'Suuday ' my ' husband got hia haud'eut. On Sunday Busr came arid dressed it by candle lip,Iit. Then camo the next luoruiug and took a plaster off, and dressed it. He dressed is oa Mon day; then they were round, there. He dressed it twice. He said' they" had to go away of they r;cuid attend to it more. .1 can't tell'how long it was till they came back agiiin. "Mrs. . Miller moved away, and lluser . bought furniture to . go to house keeping, if is wife gave him tho" money; so she said. She cried about rs afterwards. Mrs. fJraham was cupped on Saturday; Mrs. filler moved the next Saturday. Mr. Graham came home from the army, and they got married.' I' be lieve that to be the very same box." On cross-examiuation, she stated that " Buser moved into the house : on Satur day, and the furniture 'was bought a day or. two before.' It was on. Monday he was there and dressed iriy husband's hand. He seen and dressed it twice ; ou Monday aud Sunday evening. I think he was round there afterwards; didn't pay much attention." She stated further, that " they were both there, and said they ha,d to go away." " John S. Johnston testifies: "I am not much acquainted with the prisoners ; I have saw them. I saw Hou ser first in 18G2 in the Western Peniten tiary. Explains how. I have saw them both. 1 have seen them sincb the 17th of May. I saw these men at Mrs. Mil ler's house. I didn't know Buser: he had a large mustache. I did know them when they were' living at the house of "Mrs. Miller. They went under the occupation of what they called cuppers and leechers. I recollect the time they cupped Mrs. Graham. It was on the 3rd of June, 18G5. They left Mrs. Miller's house Monday about dinner time; I saw them about 11 o'clock, not afterwards, that day. They returned Friday following; Friday they returned, no nlitter what day of the "month it was. ' ".They had no money when, they left, or but very little; all that seen them have didn't amount to a xlollar. They may have had more. I d'.daV know di rectly what their circumstances were after they returned. Daniel Buser asked me what 1 would take for the house. I told him 1,600 in greenbacks. He said fhac was more than his pile would reach. e eaid he would give me 5500 in hand, fhg o ill ' ' ' ,'''''