Mgrpr larfler. Cross-Examination of the Wid ow of the Murdered Man by Gen. Coffroth. A REMARKABLE WITNESS. TERRIBLE, DAMAGING, DAMNING TES TIMONY OF LITTLE NANNIE HORNER. EXPUtlTLI IDENTIFIES IBE BISOSEKS IS THE PASTIES W HO FOtLLY Xl'EDERED HEE "KBASDPA. Minutely Describes their Appear ance and Dress. Astonishes and Amazes Jicoks, At- TORNBYS,Jl BOI AND AlDlESCK ByIIkB INTELLIGENT A NSW LBS AXU COLLECT ED AXD POSITIVE MaSXEK. TBI CttET IS WoKIXO Rapidly akd tuk COMMONWEALTH EXPECTS TO lltTI It Timio.iT all is r This Evnino. When Court opened Saturday morning. lire. Viuberuer. widow of the murdered man at;su took tbe stand. She was dressed in deep mourning and bad a haggard, pain ed expression of countenance. Mrs. Nancy Cmberger Cross-examined by General Coffroth I am C7 years old ; I can see pretty well ; Mr. Urubccger hod two pocket-books in bis vent; I saw hira put them there; he had a pocket in the in side of his vest; they were large. brown pocket books ; can't tell when I seen them last be fore that; did not count the money; lie often told me, how much money he had; I didn"t sec all the money ; could not tell what kind notes he had ; it was gold and "paper; kept some of it in tbe pocket book and some in a drawer ; the gold was In a ha? : I don't know the size of it ; there was some gold in the pocket-book, 1 think ; I don't know whether he put the pocket- book in bis vest or not ; I saw him take the two out of the drawer ; they were full ; ain't sure how thiik they were; can't tell the denominations of tbe notes; I seen the money within 2 or 3 years; don't know my 1 m-band exchanged his paper money for pold with Mr. Kink, I often seen him put i-snk notes in the pocket-book ; can't tell the nine of the notes; can't tell when I saw Lira put money in the pocket book last ; af ter he put the money in the pocket be wa'ktd out to the sitting room and I follow td (flit ; when I came cut he hallooed, "I want your money or your life;" I was a tittle behind my husband ; my husband Lallootd; I can't say what he said: they bmk.d him bixk ; te tal!c d and they bal luw4 toe ; the men t.allootd as loud as tbey muni &r bis money or his life ; I don't knew what be said ; didn't see bini attempt 1 pull tbe handkerchief off. Q. Didn't he make a grab at tbe hand kerchief, and call out a name known over hi that township, Faying, "Ant you going to rob bh7" A. 1 didn't bear what be raid: I won't ray whether there were four or five shots fired before I went ont ; just as I went out of ' the euor I beard one shot, and I heard one lust as 1 was in tbe kitchen : then I beard a shut yet, and then be came and tumbled etawa bra Hie me, dead ! there were shots in tl ceiling and perhaps some in the ef the room 1 1 didn't see them take any none eut ef his poi ktrts ; tlie shots were tired reiy fait ; hea I ran into the kitchen and rang the dinner bell; I rang tbe bell end kind of looked in; ! didn't e him cwme eut, but I heard him coining ; I stnop edeowa asked if be was hurt, but he was dead; drtia't search his pocket ; Albright IVets am tberej first after the men lift; 1 can't tell bow tong be lay on tbe floor; be Tayiag there tins Dtets came; he iaid there till after tbe inqiKsl ; that was not very laagl don't think it was two hours; '- 1 knew be bad no money when he fell down there; I felt and k Lowed the money was ft-me a ad tlie mm were gone; I didn't open tne vestfe see wnetiit-r po net-noon wrs gene ; tat) nan's fare was nearly all covered didn't notiee his hair; be had striped over alls a ; I didn't notice his other clothes ; . be bad Be hat cut when sitting there; think he bad hat on when be came in and took it eff; the little man seemed to have mask ; his hair was daik 01 gray; the beard didn't look natural ; it was above and below the mouth; J rtnild see his eyes, nose, fore head and checks ; I couldn't tell what kind ef hair; he had a hat on; didn't eve his hair; had kind ef daik- clothes on ; I couldn't tell what kind particularly bnl I think there was rrd and white in both handkerchiefs ; had never, erea defendants before that night; didn't bear the tall man talk at all ; 1 know , el him the moment I saw him; I saw him plainly 1 seen bis rye, nose and forehead w hen I saw them at Ranch's they were not d'sruised; they were the same six-; recognize little man by his size, eyes and nose; and I heard him speak, at Ranch's; I heard them both talk there; 1 didu't say at Rauch's I eonld not recognize tbe men; I didn't say there I could not be sure these were the men; T was not sworn as a witness at Rauch's I was a wi!neys at the hewing beiore J n,l.-e Bae-r and recognize them: I say I recognized 1 hem as the men that were at our house that niRht ; I described before jude I'1 llle kind of mask that was on the littie man'f face and I think I described the handker chief that was around tbe tall man's mouth; my husband was 71 or 72 years old; I bad been married to him about 30 yean-; we had or.erhihl; it' chad (objected to as not a cross examination) ; 1 was widow before 1 mar red Vmbergtr; had children before I married him; had .' children ; U of them are alive ; one is a girl and two of the boy live three miles from where Hive and the other one '.ives In Latrobe; I don't know age of one in Latrobe ; both ore grown men ; my daughter lives about half a mile from where I live; I'inberger was widower when I married him; he bad one child to a former wife ; it died before we were married; my husband was collecting in money coming to him ; 1 kuow some parties that came and paid him money; he was sickly during the winter; he was not able to feed the stock or do anything ; one of my grand children, Geo. Iloruer, was doing the feeding ; he is son of Noah Horner; Noah lives in Latrobe: George has been there a couple of months ; he went down to the grocery at Westlcy Griffith's a litter over a mile from our place towards Forwardstown ; we live three miles from Forwardstown and two from Jenner town ; he started a litter before dark ; the strangers came toon after he was gone ; he stayed with me tiil after the sale; a public road ran past the house where I lived at that time; I don't think there was prayer meeting that night ; I would know it if there was prayer meeting; there's a church in Jennertown; George Horner came hack that night about half an hour after t'm berger was shot ; he was back before the inquest ; I don't know who sent for the 'Squire to bold inquest ; Geo. Horner is pretty near IS years old ; he is not as large as a man. Ue-direct 1 went to tbe oflice of the lawyers and told my ttory before I went before Judge Ilaer. POStTlVK IDENTIFICATION. "Never in the forty-seven years that 1 have practice? Ia have I in any case, civil or criminal, seen or heard a better witness, in any court, than that little girl," w hispered "Uncle John" Cessna to a Herald reporter, as little Nannie Hor ner, the ten-year-aid grand-daughter of tbe murdered man, who witnessed the murder of her iftlirra, gray-haired grand father, left the witness stand. Her testi mony was clear, straight-for ward and to the point ; and her identification of the "short" man and "long," was most posi tive. Never was a witness in any case ever tried in a S jmcrset eoanty court subject ed to a more rigid, thorough, ingenious cross-examination than was she at the hands of General Coffroth, the senior counsel for the defense, but his failnre to elicit the slightest contradiction er varia tion from her exauiination-in chief, was most siirnal. She recounted tiie story of the two strangers coming to the lonely farm-bouse on the fatal February night ; of their representing that they were Red- ford county officials on the hnnt for stol en goods, and of their search of Mr.Um- berger's house ; told how the nnsuspect ing old farmer had shown them from room to room ; how, becoming suspicious of the strangers, he hail placed his pjek etbooks, containing a lifetime's hard earned savings iu his inside vest pocket ; their return to the family room, when the "little" man whipped out a revolver, ami, pointing it at Mr. Umbcrger, de manded HIS UOXIY OR IILS LIFE. She then told of the straggle and the firing of the fatal shot. Pointing to Joe Nioelv. the witness said : "There is the short man;"' and, pointing to Dave, "there is the long man." She described minutely how both men were dressed. She was shown an over coat that was found at the house of David Nicely at the time of hisarrest and iden tified it as the oat worn by the "long man'' on the night of tbe murder by a LITTLE BBOVVX F.lTt"!! on the side. "I know that tnese are the men by their size, eyes, noses, voices and motions," said the witness. S'le said the little man" wore a brown derby hat, with a piece out of tho rim, and was pos itive that the hat shown her (.the one Joseph Nicely was wearing when arrest ed,) was the one worn by the "little man" thut night. While the witness was being examined the prisoners showed unusual signs of nervousness and unt?asines3, and their relief was apparent when she left the stand. Nannie Horner was called and testi fied that she was ten years old last July ; I knew and lived with Uinberger, and was there the night he was killed. Mr. Cessna " Begin the story in your own way, and tell me w hat happened that night and hour." There were two men came in ; I heard C-i them rap ; t h c 3 , V5 S. ires sat down close to the stove, on two chairs ; they sat there about one hour ; they talked some ; said tbey came from B e d- ford, and had a search warrant for to hnnt some jew elry that belonged to Mr. Mison, the peddler ; they took out a paper and read it ; the little man read it, and then put it in his pocket again ; they said they had searched Frank Heiple'a house; they were all in tbe sitting room; the light V9 was burning; grandpap said they could j look, but there was nothing there ; they j gotae-an'Ie and -.tatted in the parlor.! au.l the little mail, and grandpa and I went a!o.ig ; tho Uil man and KHa1 Steam was in the other roe us ; they look ed around in there and then went in the bedro mi, and the npir drawer of the bureau was ope ned ; they took all tlie thiugs out ; then they 0leued the lower, and then the next drawer was opened ; and the next one was opened, and there the money was laying; grandpap said that was a little mouey to pay his bands, and they had no business with it; after they shut the drawer they went out in the room, and then my grandpap and the little man went back and looked under the bed, and they wanted grandpap to pr.U the bureau forward, and he told me to go and tell grandma to come in, an i she came in and said they uiijtht puil it forward and look behind it ; they then pulled out a bureau drawer and could look down where the pocketbrK.ks were, and grandpa took them and put them in his vest and walked out in the r3om, and was followed by the l.ttle man, and 1 was behind him ; when they got ont the little man said : " VOlIt MONEY OR VOI R I.IKE;" he was pretty close to grandpa and had a revolver in his hands, pointed toward? grandpa ar.il grand pa faltered and looked un.ler the bed, and they wanted grandpa to pull the bureau forward, and be told me to go and tell grandma to conic in ; and she came in asid said that they could pull it forward and look be hind it ; then tlie-y took out a bureau drawer and they could look down where the pocket boaks were, ami grandpa took them out and put them in his vest and walked out in the room, and was followed by the littie man, and I was behind him ; and when they got out the little man said, " Your money or your life;" he was pretty close to grandpa, and had a revol ver in his hands p jinted towards grand pa; grandpa hollered and threw up his hands; one button was buttoned on his vest ; and then they began to shoot ; and when they shot tw ice I ran out and did not see any more. I went around the hou and when ont heard our bell ring; I heard the men running and then I ran around the house and in the front door; I found grandpap on the 2Kr in tho kitchen and he was dea 1 ; I do not kno-,v whether the pock etbooks were gone or not, but the men were gone. T'.ie stove is about in the middle of the room ; I wassittinr down while they were there ; the bijr man had a red and white! handkerchief tied around bis face, and had striped pants on ; both- had overcoatsoa; the hill man had a brown bleached coat on. An overcoat was there produced and witness asked to examine it. I saw that overcoat at our house that night ; the little man h.-ut on an overcoat not ss white as this one ; yes, the black one is the one the little man had on ; the sin. ill man had a brown hat on ; it had a hole torn in it on the rim ; it was on the little man's hea l ; I noticed the hole there. PICKS OIT THE II.XI)KK!! !IIEF. "Take this bunch of handkerchiefs and pick out the one that was around the man's face, if von can," said Mr. CVs-cna. Witness was handed a bunch of hand kerchiefs and picked out a red and n bite spotted one. This is the one the big man had on ; I do not know the others ; saw it taken out of his pocket at Ranch's ; saw Dave Nicely and Joe there, and heard them talk ; I was not at hearing here the other evening; they are lie-re; they a:e them. Witness went over and poiuted out the prisoners The little man had a beard on bis face ; it was a gray Ward ; don't know w heth er it grew fast or not ; it came up to his nos3 and down his cheeks; the hair was kind of currV ; I heard the man talk at Rauch's; the sizi1, voice, and motion oi the two men look alike; voice is just the same. Cross examination One of the pocket books had a gum band around it, and the other a leather string ; tiie big man had a cap on ; the small man a hat ; he took his cap oil'; I am positive that that is the handkerchief ; I was sitting right behind him, but could see tho siiots; I have seen it threj times at Rauch's, that night, and here ; saw them pull it out of Dave Nicely 's pocket, and Ella -Steam said it was the handkerchief and I said so, too ; the overcoat the big man ha-l on had a p::t;h on it: saw one of the coats at Kooser s ollice; did not see the handkerchief there; saw the black coat there; did not see the light one; the little man had the light coat on ; it had one of the buttons offand a little brown patch on it ou the side; I have not seen that coat before since the man had it on at our house ; I heard them talk at our bouse and at Squire Ranch's ; I recognized U19 men then;. If it was not a beard be had on it w.n not the man that was at our home ; it was the man ; the beard came up to his ears close ; be may have been shaved. Reexamined Whose pocket wad the handkerchief taken out of? "Dave Nicely'. These pants here was the ones Dave had on." wit T mie nusr bays s:ik LtT say. Cross elimination by General Offroth. Went into the room with the little man and grandpa ; th-jre was two pocketbooks ; one was kind of a brown and the other kind ofa black; th; big one was black; gum band nnmd in- and linSticr -.trins a"-,oii-l lite other ; the hi if one had the leat'ier string ar.mul it; Mr. Tnilx-rer put the pocket books in liis vest ; put them in bis vest tbe -wv-iiid lime he was in the room : I run out of the room afier two shots had boen tired ; did not see anybody take tlie p icketUx-ks ; when i came back urandsa was lying on the Hour d-ad ; do not know whether the pock etiMnks were -in bi-u then or. not; .- the men onus i.ito the lions?; the hfT nun had acapon : Ihesiull mtir bad on a hat ; ihe tall man i-anie into the room-and then took off bis cap : tbe small man kept hit hat oil ; tlie buY'e roau had a handker chief around his head ; reeagniz; the red aud white handkerchie f ahown : was c'.-a? enough to see the spots; never saw any like it ; am certain it is tbe handkerchief ; have seen the handkerchief three times; seen it that n'ght, seen it at. Itau ;li's and see it now ; have not ae-eu it since I was at Som.-rs.-t ; did not see it at the bote! ; saw it at Mr. Ranch's oillce ; Eda sai 1 it was the handkerclaer anil i uo it wn, too ; did not say it was because shu -aid so ; Klla said it first and I said so, too : did not see it at all in S-mjerset; spoke to Mr. Cessna about the case; tuld Mr. Ranch alwut it '; told the men w!i-camo over from Johnstown; do not know what the'.r names were; did not say tliat one man had.a black hat on with a hoie out of the rim; -lid not know who they were until I saw them ; they did not say they were hunting for money : thc-y sat down to get warm ; Ik-iIi men sat ly the stove ; I walked around behind the stove ; the lamp was on the table aliout ten feet from Mm stove; I walked pa-t tlie-in and stoo l be hind the stove to warm my feet ; saw one of the overcoats shown at Kaurh's; cannot say which one: saw one at Mr. Kooser's oth ; did not sec the handke-r.'hief at Kinwr's of lice; saw tlu dark out at .Kuoaer's oTic ; saw the light coat at our place that evening ; the little man had on a dark coat : there were one or two buttons off the light coat ; there was a patch on the side of the lig'it coat ; seen the patch tbal niht : nobody told me that there was a patch on it: was near the coat at mire Rauch's : the big man had no overcoat on at squuv Ranch's ; the little man had ; could not fay wlielher it w.11 the light or dark one : they did it teil me to look at it w'im I was ai Rauch's ; look- at it at our house Iwca use I had nothing else to look at ; bad a caudle and a lamp; the stove door was also open which made some Iilit ; heard the bin man talk when be came out of tbe room : the large man said "are you going up stairs'' and the 'little man" says "it is not worth while" ; beard the big man talk at Squire lauch's;I recc-ifinzesl his Voice; when be was at t'nibergc r's he had a handkerchief tied over his mouth ; they tied a handker chief around his mouth at Squire Ranch's: Klla Stern tied it around ; he talked while il was around his mouth : they asked him if it was too tight and he said '"no 'taint" ; posi tive I recognized tbe voice; could, not le mistaken ; nobody told rue he.was the man ; Klla Stearu did not tell me.it was tho man ; heard the little man talk at grandpa's and aain at Rauch's; cljiiot kn whether he ha I a mask or not ; he had a beard ; do Hot believe the beard was fast to him; if the beard and hair of the.little man on the night of the murder was natural he must have shaved it off before I saw him at Ranch's : he did not have a beard at R inch's; am positive it was his voice: do not think I am mistaken ; talked to lots of peop'e about the case ; they asked me how the men looked : told them how tbey looked; Ella toid tiiecn they had masks on ; but 1 did not say that ; there was no strangers at the house on I he day of the murder; there was strangeis there the week before; did not see two men come to tbe bouse that day; the pe-d l'.er Maxom went past the house the evenin ; of the murder; he was in a wagon, said he wanted to stop but did not s--e anybody when he passed ; I did not see him going past ; K'.la saw him. Re-direct Know Mr. Ram h ; be ptilVd the handkerchief out of Dave Nicety's p ick - et; saw the handkerchief on the niifht of the murder; saw it again at Ranch's and aii 11 here : did not see it any where else ; Witness was shown light overcoat and found patch on it. Was shown dark overciat and t-aid she identified it by the torn buttonholes ; also identified the overalls ; the overalls were worn by Dave Nicely: think it was the dark overcoat tbatl saw at Riuch's but am not sure. Dr. W. F. AValker Am a practicing physician; practiced since 1S." ; knew Herman I'uiberger; made examination of the body and found two bullet holes one in the rigr-t shoulder and one below the left shoulder; found this bullet le t.veen the shirt and body; (exhibits bullet) the bullet went into the body between the seventh and eighth ribs; probed, but conld not find it; I would consider it a fatal wound ; have no doubt about the cause of his death ; died from a bnllet wound ; could not say whether from a gun or pistol might lie either; made examination about 2 hours after the murder ; attended Coroner's inquest ; was notihed by same txpiire Henry Raurh ; the bullet between the ribs went in the direction of the heart. Cross ex amination Was called to Umberser's about 9 or 10 o'clock ; notified by Squire Rauch. Henry Rauch Was Justice of the Peace on February last ; the inquest was held under my direction ; was there when Dr. Walker made the examination ; saw the probing. . Hammer Cauffield On the 27 of Fel ruary was at school am a school teacher ; board at Peter Gaiighman's. On the even ing of 27 of February Mrs. llaughman heard the bell out on the porch ; called my attention to it; I then heard the bell myself; we then conclude,! that there was something wrong ; Peter Kaughman and myself started in the direction of the bell ; went on to Herman Umber ger's;when we got there found Mrs. Uniberger, Nellie Steam, E l. Friedline and several other parties I am unable to name ; in n 1 ".: ouite a coiimioti-; lying on ' V ; h:m across toe I tracks wiih t!ie jwere tn.-t then j measure tiie tracks i February 27th ; . on the no f.irther that evening : 'iir.t.mj. in exi-t. n., 'I not tracks or stridi jtit:ge uy my hut as iJr3t eye, they Brr- did not measure any traits hi. esl on my e-y?s ; j i !' . fr, sv :n- in :;aw mere- r SS4.Y M". i'illln'-WT he i! K-r of tht kitihcn; think be was dead from l.:s j;-tH-.ir.it -. v : slion ly af'.er iit-ui otit t-i.-cit ae eel d tin.! any tra. ks; found tracks up l lie P''; followed the tracks 'J or !i rxls Dika onlv that evening; mad in-i'sirv or examination next lii.iriiinK .:'. t back to I .uLerg.-r's of steps would say they w-,-will, Mr. Kittle a.. l from 'here Mr. did not measure tra. ks );n. :1, . Mowry went upon the 1.1:1 w Ui me iron the pike ;saw tracks of two putu-s leav- j the steps that tiiey were xj ing pike abo'it 20 to 30 yards fro-n I'm- j Cross-examined Was or.eaf ,;t bergcr's across the field into tho woods j ties that helped to work np on the east side of tbe pike; the tracks. not know that there wis , v were coming toward UmWrger' house ; j offered ; did not say that I the tracks led from tiio pike into the j anything for it ; suppose I aj, woods, then back again to the -ike near-1 yer and will Uko anything I er Vmberger's house; from the tracks j the boots from David Nicely ,A .w ... l-....lJ I .r r ir,-l. in tlia r.m . would sav lliflt one man wore g-iui ui-ju --. .r. i. and the other leather boots or shoi s ; -Mr. , L'aiberger's house was in view b om point in the woods to which tho tracks lew; the front of the ho-.isj facing tho pike; could see qtiito a distance on tiie pike in both directions. Tlie witu-.-ss then c.e- taiied in fuil the tracking of t it- parties to a point called Burnt Cabin ; the tracks were distinct and plain : ua I bet a mane in wet snow and being fr-z-jn during tiie night left thc-ui very distinct ; tr.u ks on the east and west si.le of tiie Johnstown pike were the same; length of steps were about the same ; did no: measure the tracks orsteps ; from their length ot stride would judge that they w.'ie going at a rate to make a rcanonab e speed ; 1 tracks to llurnt Cabin ; true ks ,i. followed the trac ks fioci brid.-o over by two men ; one with lea:i,rr Stream below Jenn 'rto.vn ; the bridge is j shoes, and the other with gum '- over streitu nearest .T?niiertovni ; it is j tra ks on the uionnlaiu were !. the first stream cast of Jenneit )-.vn ; we:it the bottom ; Caudield a:vi 1; e- lauti county ; got, mem :a in,.. was a shoemaker; had them lo :i.t where he was working, lie piitti, on ; he was here at tlie ii-ir;: Judge Uacr; the bx.ts re Dave Nicely had them on hrn over the mountains; the li, 1 marked before he put them .,n. - Re-direct I marlied the li.ti Iv's house ; the mark inslii! there- ' Alix-rt 1 (oilman On tiie nij,; t 2Ttii of Febru -ry was at tl.e 1 or post-oihee : w e-nt over h- 1 the next morning after the n,-iri. ? not look for tra. ks until we bri.'.e near Jenner; fn .Mllie followed the tracka along the stream on the n rth side. Cross-examination Cone o.cr to I'uiberger's early in the evening and made an examination of the tracks that night ; examined trM-k-ft r lOrodsahove the house towards Jcnncrto'.vu ; mi the mountain about 4 mil. s from Cmbcr ger's f mnd tracks going wcstaaid; did not find tracks g"ing west ui til next moru ng;the cart tra. ks turned off at elbow of road above licking's. Dr. Walker recalled II.ie two ..ulle-ts in my postession ; th y urc bo! 1 centre fire bu' lets ; tiiere !s a larg.-r cav ii y in one than the other. Cross-exatiiination Never discovered that different eize bullets came in the same box of cartridges ; they are put up in regular sues. 1 Toe bullets were then place.! in charge ol the Ce-uit Stenograph er for keeping 1 Henry Kiuch j'xamined the bulict hoic-s in the house ; saw one place where bullet struck tiie joist and glanced ; two bullets stuck in the wall between the bookcase a"d the kitchen d-ir; about nine feet high from the tl nir; tliry were alxiuJ live inches apart ; have t le two bullets ia my possessiou that wer-s taken out of th wail t;ie next day. Made draft Eubmilted to Mr. CauMi -1-1 showing Jennertown road and pike from were along. r j Cross examination The trait, t tsj alike; should say it as nji , miles from l'.urnt II "Use to t;f ; ( found tracks going m-t 't.U: , ?b fourths of iiiile from Waiters;;., cj !tieasiir iut-nt of the tra. ks. -3 Solomon Row man Was at the- f tl wns nu n: 1 r of the inquest d$ inq.iest was held Iwtween lit o'clock ; Kerry Rauc'u was th. $t of the Peace; the docti-r us fy' Walker; saw him examine tl- f man : looked for tracks ; went t I ike from 1'iubergcr's alK.,it liiltr:- si then went back to the hmw.. St Detty then come with a lantern ; i ip went up the hi!! and tracked t 5 :-f "ruin the pike through the iiei-i: tji my building; followed the Iran i i' way throutfh the w(s!s w her' ? i stojiped lies! do a small, fallen tnv . i as though they had sat . I a , 4l a pajier sack there, b'lt nothlns t 4 " think they had a Iiuh-Ii in it f4i there was crackers and cht-ese In i f bag was .greasy w hich makes a- 4r there was cheese in it : the tnun i- straight back to the l ite airala cr.t 4- bergcr's ; the track were men ; it appeared to me th were made bv a leather boot a gum boot ; the tracks w a. a nr.; ua.!e - 4- ,a, tM l- t or s - tf I'mberger's over tiie mountain to We.it- .pg and enniir.g from rinis-ry uiorelan l count v. Tiie 111:111 is a correct representation showing bridge?, ttieams etc. Rufus Ranch I examined for tracks coming to or going from UiuUrgcr's ; found tracks going to I'm burger's -m the north side of bridge w-.-st of Pi-kiog'.s at the bend of the road ; they went through the field and bottom : there is a i-trea 11 there; thtracks were some'lime? close to the stream and sometime;! further away; followed tlu tracks three i laiters of a mile; this brougiit as to Waiters, they did not go any furtiier west ; track:) v. ere 4- . It Hamilton Smith Live in I., know the two prisoners; have them pretty much all their live live about three miles from L: have seen Dave Niceley slur; la.-t six months. The last ' saw him was the inornin: lie was arrested ; saw hitn -morning of the 27th of Fehnu made by two men, one w tth leather boots ; a.vnv ,m Tnesdav or shoes and the cither with ruboer biniis ; the leather hoot track was longer tiian the rubix-r lioot track ; measured thein at different places about a doz-.-n tines Cross-exauiiiied Was going wt-st and found the tricks co;ni:ig eist fro 11 tlie mountain to tlie.Ienne-rtow r. pike ; follow ed the Jennertown pike n uth and found firs-t tracks at bridge just beyond Jenner town. Rufus Shaffer Made an examiration of the trac ks above Mr. I'mbcrgt-r's w be re they went into the field : saw the tracks wl.cie they -anie out this fide of Jenner towards rmberger's ; !- win) on hoiFt-f-aek; went opto Squire R.inh'i.to put up my horse ; went from there ::orocss the bottom End came out on the pike above Picking's; we lost the tracks at the Haines Church; could not find the tracks again until we pit to Walter's, whic h was about half a mile frori Ihe church ; followed them up tiie inoti itain and came down the other side until we came to l'.nrnt Cabin or Stone Riidge; then we lost the gnu liesit trai ks ; the Know w as partly gone: the one with leather boots e-r i-h-ies left the pike and went np behind a lauril bush on the other side of liuriit Hoti.se; we went further, saw tracks, hut could not say they were the same track?, because the fiiow was thin ; saw Ihe tracks above Waltei's nlsint three;-i tart John A. Kimmel Live in tt--land County in Liironier Val!- two and one-half miles froml.' ! know I'avi-l and Jost t-h Mofl f was at m v place on the 2"th of 1 - sawing wood; I asked hiin t--'t me tlie next day ; said he c--ul.. i he was going away; said hep t help nie either Tuesday or U f bc-e-ause he w:is going away. f Tl C'.-..-s-examination ('id n -t fx- i he was going; did not say he 4 t-i to Pittsburgh to see a d.-tir e he was ssck ; just said he 1 3 i 1:1 1 a tween 11 and 12 o'clock ; Seal 1' : j. ,, w:is w"ith rue; we were in Mr. iy,- store on the corner of the dir.mc: Harnett says S.idth it is about ti - cor to dinner and we started out oft "- towards home and as soon as ont on the pavement saw I'ave comiii'' cat-exvimer acrose the .1 "III. llVUIt Mil', IIIJ .IU . bad g it the mail, I went hack for the mail ; saw Dave Nicely . direction of Stoystown pike; tlu: pike leading into Smierset en; was in the neighWhood of II the mail time isab mt 11 oVl was on the second soiiare fr Diauion 1 when 11 him: lie-- : ing alone ; it is not the way : when they go home ; they live west fruu Ligonier; he had una ' Cross-examined. He was nt : from the (tiamond uastre,-!; b- get to Carrons that wav by crt- u - Cu creek. Re-direct. AVas w ithin I' or -him : he had a cap an I an ove-- V-.i a.-, T a h r-j, ke at 5 to T:,. era of a mile ; these tracks followed c'oe- !y are! icgiilar'y until we got over to the ' grarish colors the witness r- ISiirnt Hcuse; one of the tracks was , identify the cap n-r the overfat made by a leather Unit or shcx', and the I him, but said it locjke-1 i:ke the other by a lubber toot ; saw tmrks g. j hibite-d in court : ing eaot and west, and as near as 1 can j Seal P.urnett. Live in I. 'goEic tell they were the fame tracks; 1 ave ! Hamilton Smith ; can n.4 say seen Ihivo Nievly's track since tl; en ; ; ( was with Mr. Smith .-r; the saw them on the ."th of March; ho h:il j February. Mr. Smith and I on a pair of leather boots. Witness whs bors all winterand l.-aw him n shown pair of boots which he ide nti:!.;.! could not say that 1 was with h. as worn by Nicely on the oth of Marc h. he saw Mr. Xie-ely ; Mr. Cer-t-Saw the boots on the fe e t of Dave Nie-eiy him if he had not ha-1 a c-'-m on the 5th of March when we brought with him which was ot-j. cted t- aii? pat of s icn