lilSS I .1 PEICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. ^m-^iftk"^ larttteim THE CIPHER DISPATCHES. Ahmys standing fast in the final citadel of Potver, the keen, bright sunlight of publicity. — [Maston Marble, Letter on " Tlie Electoral Cmnmission." EXTRA NO. 44. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Fage. INTRODUCTION 1 THE CIPHER SYSTEMS AND THEIR INTERPRETATION 2 THE FLORIDA TELEGRAMS 11 THE SOUTH CAROLINA TELEGRAMS 23 THE OREGON TELEGRAMS 35 LOCAL TELEGRAMS 41 He-w York ^-vlU THE CIPHER DISPATCHES 97 f 1 Always standing fast in the final citadel of Power, the keen, bright sunlight of piiblicity. — [Manton Marble, Letter on " Tlie Electoral Commission^' TRIBUNE EXTRA NO. 44. NEW-YOKK, 1879. £l($8i ^^3 Cfff^^ ^ , J . Ujwvui Lru ^ y INTRODUCTION. In the following pages an effort is made to present concisely a con- nected account of the translation of the cipher dispatches and of their rev- elations. We fii-st began dealing seriously with these dispatches diu-ing the Summer of 1878. The fact that the publication of the famous " Gobble " message had soon brought forward a person familiar with the cipher in which it was sent, led to the belief that a similar result might be reached again. Specimens of the various ciphers were accordingly published, from time to time, accompanied with comments, intended to attract to them wide attention. Our hope, however, was completely dis- appointed. No one seemed to know the key. Absolutely no help came fi-om any quarter. All manner of suggestions were received, and many were tried, but none proved in the end to be of the slightest practical value, save a single one commu^nicated by Secretary Kvarts. That gen- tleman suggested that possibly a thorough student of pm-e mathematics might be able to divine the law on which the ciphers were constructed. 1>;TR0DUCTI0N. Copies of a few of the dispatches were thereupon sent to a mathematical professor in a distant city, who had kindly offered to at- tempt a translation, on the condition that his name should under no cir- cumstances be made public ; and although (having comparatively little material to work with), he did not succeed in discovering the system upon which the ciphers were constnicted, and never sent a single trans- lation until after the same thing had been translated in the office,, his work had, nevertheless, cons' derable value, as corroborating the results attained by others, be i ore they had ]-eached the point where their work proved itself. Finally, I committed a large number of the disjiatches to Mr. John R. G. Hassard, Chief of The Tkibune Staff, and a serious and deter- mined effort for their translation was fairly begun. Sliortly afterward Colonel William M. Grosvenor, also of The Tribune Staff, who had be- come greatly interested in the specimen dispatches thrown out, asked for a chance at the same work, and a considerable number of the dispatches were confided to him. These gentlemen at first worked independently of each other, and without communication. For a time both groped blindly, if not hopelessly, in what seemed the impenetrable darkness of the ciphers. About the same date each began to get glimmerings of the system on which the double cipher was constructed. When, after weeks of labor, they first compared notes, Mr. Hassard had found two transposition keys and was just finishing a third, while Colonel Gros- venor had found thi-ee others. The system being thus discovered, the rest were found much more rapidly. The last was discovered by both gentlemen on the same evening, the one working at Litchfield, Conn., IXTUOPUCTION'. Ill the other at Eno-lewood, N. J. Each hastened to transmit the key to me, and the two letters came upon my table the next day within an , hour of each other. A dictionarv cipher baffled research much longer. Its chamcter was- easily detcniiined in the oflice, Hit the dictionary on which it was con- stracted could not be found. One circumstance, however, at last dem- onstrated that the dictionary in question must be some one of the editions of Webster, for one or two words occm-red in some of the dispatches, sent in this cipher which Avere not found in any of the modern Eng-- lish dictionaries, excepting Websters. Mr. Isaac N. Ford, of The Tribuxe. Staff, had meantime laboiiously gone through forty or fifty dictionaries^ of all sorts and sizes, omitting unluckily the very one which had at first been suspected, for the reason that it happened to be the only one not on the shelves of the downtown bookstore where these searches were made. Just as the hunt was narrowed down to this particular diction- ary, the mathematical professor telegi-aplied that this dictionary was the basis of the key, and in twenty-four hours the ciphers it contained were unlocked. After the main work had been done, a number of dispatches among local politicians at the South, apparently of minor importance, sent in ciphers of a different character from any previously translated, were at- tacked by Mr. Hassard. A mong these were the double number and the double letter ciphers. I had intrusted in all about 400 dispatches to Sir. Ilas- sard and Colonel Grosvenor. When they had finished their labors only thi-ee of that whole collection remained untranslated. These are in ciphers ry IXTRODUCTION. of wliicli there are no other examples, and they have not yet been -jnastered. In the original publications, it was found almost impossible to get any '■ considerable collection of cipher dispatches printed with entire typographical •accuracy. There being absolutely no guide from either the sense or the ■^ound, pnnters and proof-readers were alike liable to constant error, which only the most painstaking watchfulness by an expert could detect. In the following pages the ciphers have been revised and re-revised until they are now believed to be printed with eMire accui'acy. Valuable aid was rendered by many of the younger gentlemen in the ioffice, .and as the hunt became keener,* almost the entire Staff took part in it. The credit of tralislation, however, belongs absolutely to Mr. Hassard and Colonel Grosvenor.' They received no as- sistance from any outside quarter, excepting from m& mathematical pro- fessor before mentioned, and received from him no translation whatever, and DO important clew, imtil after they had discovered it themselves. Tribune Office, ) •Or i? U Jan., 18.79. ^ ^' EXTRA NO. 44. NEW- YORK, NOVEMBER 12, 1878. PRICE 25 CENTS. THE CIPHER DISPATCHES. " Shall I not ring fire-hell in night ? " — I Maston Masble, Cipher DUpatoh to W, T. Pelton, Nov. 1») l€7e:. The history of the electoral crisis in November and December, 1876^ as disclosed by the cipher dispatches of the Democratic leaders and their secret agents, covers a period of at out twenty-eight days, from the 8th of November, when it first became apparent that the Presidency depended upon the count of the vote in two or three doubtful States, un- til the 6th of December, when the electoral ballots were duly cast for Hayes and Wlieeler. By deciphering these telegi'ams The Tribune has. discovered that agents were at once sent out from No. 15 GramercyPark, the residence of Mr. Samuel J. Tilden, to South Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana, and that others, at the West, received telegraphic ordere to pro- ceed immediately to Oregon, in order to "capture" one or all of those^ States for the Democratic candidate. They all resorted to bribery,, communicating to Mr. Tilden's nephew, Colonel W. T, Pelton, the paX'* KeiD-York Tribune— Extra Ko. 44 — The Cipher Difpniciies. ticiilars of the bargains they concluded, and receiving from him a distinct and foi-mal approval. 1. In Florida the secret agents were Man ton Marble, C. W. Woolley, and John F, Coyle. Marble transmitted to Gramercy Park, first a propo- sition for the purchase of the Florida Returning Board at the price of $200,000. That was rejected as extravagant, and the figure was reduced to $50,000, at which price Colonel Pelton signified his willingness to close tlie transaction. It fell thi-ough in consequence of a delay in the receipt of the message of acceptance. 2. In South Carolina the purchasing agent was Smith M. Weed, He tele- gi'aphed to Colonel Pelton, on the very day of his arrival at Columbia, a pro- posal to buy the Canvassing Board for $30,000, to which Pelton appears to have readily assented. This figui-e was too low, and the negotiation, after lasting six days, was closed at the price of $80,000. It was ar- ranged that Weed should meet a messenger at Baltimore, who was to cany the money in three packages ; and he particularly requested that Colonel Pelton should act as tins messenger himself Weed accordingly aiTived in Baltimore from Columbia on the 20th of November, and Pelton an'ived there at the same time from New- York ; but again a little delay upset the scheme. Subsequently a plot was formed to buy fom- mem- bers of the South Carolina Legislature, for $20,000, and having thus ob- tained control of the State government, to put the Hayes electors in jail, and lock them up in sepai-ate cells until the day for casting the electoral votes had passed. The result of this villany would have been to de- prive South Cai'ohna of any vote, and to tlu'ow the choice of a Presi- dent into the House of Kepresentatives, which would have elected Tilden. The plan failed because the fom* members could not be bought. 3. In (Jregon the Democratic Governor withheld a certificate from one of the Hayes electors on the ground of ineligibility, and, instead of allo-\Wng the other electors to fill the vacancy, gave the certificate to a Tilden elector named Cronin, who had clearly been defeated. The secret agent in Oregon was one J. N. II. Patrick. He telegraphed to Colonel Pelton that it was necessary to "purchase a Ivepuljlican elector to recognize and act with" Cronin, and the price was $5,000. 'J his proposal likewise was accepted, and the money was sent to Oregon, where it an-ived only on the 6th of December, just too late to be of any use. THE CIPHER TELEGRAMS. THE CODES USED, AND HOW THEY WERE DISCOVERED. AIwayB standing fast In ttiii final citadel of power, the keen bright sunlight of pabUoity.— [Mantoic MutBLa, LttUron " The Electoral CommisBion," August, 1878. • In the Snmmer of 1878 The New-York Tribcne found itself in possession of a mass of telegrapliic dispatches which had passed between certain lead- ers of the Democratic party in Xew-York City and their coufiucntial agents in various contested States, at tlie time of the canvass of the electoral votes in 187G, The wliolo number of these dis- patches was not far from 400. About lialf of them were in plain English ; these, although they were ■ometimes nscful in ddteimining the meaningot messages of anotlier kind, related generally to transactions of little importance. The rest were in cipher, and a sliglit examination was sufficient to show that they covered political secrets of the first consequence. They comprised : 1. Telegrams between the Democratic managers in New-York and their agents in California and Oregon, relative to the granting of a certificate to one of the Democratic eU'ctors who was not elected, and the "purchase of a Kepublican elector to recoguize and act with him." 2. Telecrams between the Democratic managers in New-York and their friends and secret agents in Florida during the progress of the count. 3. Telesrams between these JJew-York managers and their friends and secret agents in Louisiana daring the same critical perio conjecture we verify it by repeated comparisons. Little by little the fragments fall easily into their appropnate places, and as (hey fit themselves to- gether the hidden meaning shines forth, not simply in one dispatch, but simult.aneousiy in the whole group of dispatches. This, then, is the sequence obtained, after repeated experiment and close study, for the set of 30-word messages given .above: 17, 30, 26, 1, 11, 20, 25, 5, 10, 29, 27, 19, 28, 24, 4, 7, 13, 18, 12, 22, 21, 15, 3, 9, 14, 2, 6, 16. 23, 8;— that is to say, the seventeenth word of the cipher is the first word of the translated message, the thirtieth word of the cipher is the second word of the message, and so on. But there were many tests still to be applied to the solution. The key thus found was tried on a great many tr.anspositiou-ciphers, some belouging to the Florida correspondence, others to the South Carolina collection, others to the Louisiana bundle— dis- patches written to and from a number of persons. There were some which it did not tit, but it applied so perfectly to others, yielding at once an easy and intelligible translation without any forced construc- tion of sentences, that no .doubt remained of its strict accuracy. If the sequence had solved only two or three diopatches out of a large number, its application to those two or three might have been called an accident; but when it was found to suit twoor three dozen written by different persons at ditferent dates, and sent from ditierent places to dif- ferent persons, there could he no sort of question that it was a fixed rule. Furthermore, the sequence keys were not discovered by one person alone. Three investigators, working at a distance from each other, upon dilierent bundles of telegrams, and without iutertoinmunicatiou, reached iudepeu- deutly the same conclusions. Several of the keys were found by all three simultaneously. The system being established, sequences of 15, of 20. and of 25 words were fouud by the same plan pursued in constructing the longer one. COKKELATIVE KEYS, luthe course of this work it began to appear that for some of the groups of numbers, if not for all, there were ys are presented, one or more of which will rearrange any of the transposed dispatches. It is to be understood that the numbers represent the place of the words as they stand in the untranslated cipher, and the order of the numbers in each column is the order in which those cipher words must be arranged to give the meaning of the message : TABLE OF KEYS. 10 wi irds. 15 words. 30 word". 25 Tords. 30 words. I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. X. 9 4 8 3 G 12 G 18 17 4 3 7 4 7 9 18 12 12 30 26 6 1 12 3 3 ■jH 6 26 23 1 9 7 2 5 5 18 25 1 15 10 13 6 4 4 10 14 11 8 5 3 5 8 13 1 3 1 20 27 8 2 4 14 20 17 IH 25 16 7 10 1 20 10 20 11 5 30 4 1 11 11 10 o 15 21 10 24 8 5 14 15 12 19 19 5 29 9 9 9 17 13 8 15 27 5 3 14 1 10 •2 2 19 19 15 5 11 24 17 28 17 12 10 15 7 5 24 24 25 10 13 18 14 11 9 4 22 8 17 7 22 7 28 10 11 13 7 13 1 o 15 1 4 18 18 10 9 25 10 12 13 7 8 "9 16 21 14 4 8 23 20 3 13 IJ 22 21 15 3 9 11 6 16 23 8 S 21 20 29 14 7 3 11 13 10 2 8 New-yorh Tribune— Hxtr^ fl'o. i4^The Cipher Dispatches. THE SUBSTITUTION CIPHERS. After getting the solution of tlie transposition ciphers, the " blind words," or substitution ciptiers. had next to be considered. Many of them explained themsclvee, as soon as the dis- patches in which they occurred were arranged in proper order. Many were intenircted by the help of the newspaper files of the dates to ■which they belonged. Chosen arbitrarily as these words were, it might have been sup- posed that it would be necessary to rely almost wholly upon guess-work for thetr interpretation. This is so far from being the case that there is perhaps no part of the deeiplieriug process in which the proof of the meaning is so clear as when it deals with these arliitrary substitutions. An instance has been men- tioned in which the history of a day to which a cer- tain dispatch refers supplied a strong inference as to the signification ox the cipher-word " London." Inference, however, was not relied upon for the interpretation of this important word. To say noth- ingof tliescoresof instances in which the interpreta- tion ■' Canvassing Board," as a substitute for •' Lou- don" makes sense: there is one dispatch from New- Orleans, dated November 21, which settles the ques- tion beyond cavil. That dispatch reads in cipher : Committees none London sub with but met Mo- Belle canvassed our Thames admitted count tally counties. Being translated by Key IV, it yields ibe follow- ing : London met ; admitted none but Moselle suli- comuiiitoes. Thames counties canvassed tally with our count. ^'ow, itisknown as a matterof history, that on the 20th of November there was great anxiety as to the probable action of the Louisiana Returning Board in regard to holdinir secret sessions. The visiting politi- cians of both National parties asked to be admitted; so did the friends and representatives of various local candidates, and a score of other persons. When it met on the morning of the 21st the Board decided to admit only "tico sub-committees," i. e., a certain small number of the visiting Democrats and an equal number of the visiting Republicans. It tben took up tue returns, and three of the county returns which it canvassed were admitted bv the Democrats to be correct. Here, then, is an absolute demonstration of the meaning of (1) Lon- don = ReturiJiug Board ; (2) Moselle = two ; (3) Thames = three. We set these down in our vo- cabulary, and look for light elsewhere. "Russia" appears to denote some important personage. Ex- Governor Bigler.who was one of the Tilden visitors at New-Orleans, wished to communicate with Russia in New-Y(irk,and he intrusted his message to somebody to put into cipher. It begins therefore in this form : "Bigler to Russia." But about that time wo hud Colonel Pulton asking Smith M. Weed at Columbia to " Telegraph what is the majority on Rus- sia." Who was there in New-York who had been running for anything in South Carolina t Nobody but Mr. Tilden himself. And that he was Russia, there are a hundred tliiuas to show. Another South Carolina dispatch mentions a report that " America party are trading otr Russia;" and as a matter of fact we know that the papers were full just at that time of a scheme of the South Caro- lina Conservatives to trade off Tilden for Hampton. By a somewhat similar course of observation, which will be apparent from the translated dispatches, "Greece" was ascer- tained to be Hayes ; " Ithaca" was shown to stand for Democrats, and "Havana" for Republicans. "Rochester" was very often used, and here is a telegram which proves its meaning conclusively. Returning Board attempted to count electoral Eochfster this morning. We opposed, and thev ad- journed until 3. Think they are cnutrolkd [by] Havana party. They said they would count Hochea- ter as thev stood on face of returns, aud that was all Ithaca asked. "Rochestei^' of course can be nothing else but "votes" in this case, and there is certainly no diffi- culty in identifying "Ithaca" and "Havana," espec- ially as it is known that the Democrats in South Carolina were then clamoring for a count of the vote on the face of the returns. IDENTIFICATION OF NUMBERS. It has already been seen how the same Louisiana dispatch which established the meaning of "Lon- don" also demonstrated that "Thames" meant "three." and "Moselle" meant "two." The inter- preters soon saw reason to suspect that the names of rivers always represented numbers, and this turned out to be the case. Tlie proofs are complete and simple. For example, a telegram from New- York to Columbia states that " friend will go through on train leaving here to-night at Potomao o'clock." One had only to consult the railway time-tables of that month to find out at what hour the night train for the South left Jersey City, and so it was learned that Potomac meant " six." Re- peatedly figures of State or county majorities are given which can be interpreted by consulting the newspaper tiles, and so it was discovered that " Dan- ube " was " five " and " Schuylkill " " seven. " " River" is a very common word in connection with numbers. There is ene long dispatch which has so many rivers m it that until the key of transposi- tion was found the investigators used to speak of it as " the river dispatch." When the words were rearranged in tlieir proper sequence thiee rivers came together after a numeral, thus " Danube (5) river river river." The dispatch evidently referred to a large amount, and to a lump sura ; clearly "river" could be nothing else than 0. There is a New-Orleans dispatch in which the Democrats claim a majority of 85 [Mi.ssissippi Danube] to 89 [Mississ- ippi Missouri] thousand. The meaning of " .Mias- issippi" and of "Danube" had been a.scertained bi;- fore that dispatch was rcachcil, but this was the first time of encountering " Missouri." Yet the interpretation was perfectly simple. The majority was Said to be from 85 to 8—, the last unit being unknown. It must be sometlung higber tUan 5, It was neither 6 nor 7 ; those numbers had been identified already; of course it was not 8, and there Identification of I'ersons—Dwnb tVords—Xumicr Cipher— Vocabulary. was notbing left bnt 9. This led the decipherers a Btep further. They had all the uuits except 1 and 4, and two rivers remained, "Rhine" and " Hudson." The meaning of " Rhine '' was speedily settled by a telegram in which, after giving the majority for the Hayes electors in South Carolina, "S." went on to say: "Jlhine of Tilden's within 230 of their lowest." The journals of the period will show that cue of the Tilden electors was said to be just that uumlicr of votes behind the lowest Re- publiciin elei'tor and so "Rhine" was determined as "one," and " Hudson " as the equivalent of " lour." " Glaseow" and " Kdinburgh" are frequently found preceded by numerals, and never found alone. It would have been e.isy to guess that thev stood for " hundred " and " thousand " lespertivrly, but gne.ssing is quite unnecessary ; the care with wliuli Mr. Tilden's agents telegraphed ih'i dguresof majorities supplied the proof of these Interpretations. IDENTIFICATION OF PERSONS. Tlie cipher dispatches were ranly signed by the feal names of the writers, and jet it was easy to de- feriuino who the writers were. The telegrams were liecessanly sent to a real address, and man}- of them either gave or called for an answer. Wlien a mes- sage of inquiry is signed "Moses" and addrcss^ed to Colonel I'eltou, and the answer to it is signed "Den- mark '''and addressed to Mr. Manton Marble, it needs no great sagacity to learn that JIarblo is "'Moses," and tliat Pelton is "Denmark." Moreover, a gri at m'any of the dispatches belonged to a con- tinued seri'es of communications, all relating to one transaction and unrRY HavemeYeb, No. 15 West nth-si. . N. T.: Ten Jacksonville Jacksonville it requested eleven place J have one Payne England notify twelve from one. If four immediately Daniels as not J you Italy. W. Call, J. J. Danieu Max. (Use Key VHI.) [Translation.] Have you provided five thousand three hundred dollars telegraphic credit Payne, as requested from Jacksonville ? If you have not, jdace it tele- graphic credit J. J. DauieU Jacksonville. Notify immediately. [17.1 TALLAIIASiSKE, NoV. 18. Henry Havemever, esq.. Ao. 15 West llth-st., X. Y.i Our particulars us Engliiud twenty slowly for for twenty twelve say progress some surely one friends seven wo news send Moses three Moses upon but Max. (Use Key Tin.) [Translation.! We progress slowly, but surely, our friends Bay. Marble telegraphs particulars. Draw upon twenty three far five hundred for Marble. Send us some news. Coyle. 118.] Tallahassee, Nov. 19. Col. Pelton, 15 Gramercy Park : To Russia repeating twenty-five cipher only returns demand our circuit know Herald what shall we of from will couutiea to Monday shall work news we hitherto apply Monday have to received London canvassing hope Louis also judge command from Emmons some for from to for restraining cooking for fairness Louis order opinion begin whose returns to Louis to we opinion us that Brown Louis soon canvasses notice ne thinks cooked promise to ob- tained London of yesterday publish very not give means meanwhile to I are returns and of rather London Greece Secretary declare State returns game because judge for is their all convening result inter- cept delays under voice ground declare that not has her to on he m authority and iiiay canvass that Louis lose Florida returns statute tlieu and super- seded has integrity ]>roceedinc Kasson will I him his Choate Barlow fool promptly he soon estimate Chandler upon see of O'Couors leaves for called they telegraphed visits Barlow we advised and Noyes wasted to shall Monday others are three otherwise proffer continue mean after cooperation to unless comptroller coming Robertson on Moses. (Use Key VII. seven times, beginning to number after the word " only.") [Translation.] To Tilden. repeating twenty five cipher only. Herald will have news of our work hitherto Mon- day. We shall demand to know from what counties returns received. Monday we shall apply to Circmt Judge, from whose fairness some hope for order re- straining Governor from cauvassing returns. Also tor command to Board to begin. Emmons cooking opinion for Governor that he. not Board, canvasses. We obtained yesterday promise of Governor to give us notice. Brown thinks Governor means very goon to publish cooked opinion and declare result lor Hayes. I judge their game is rather to intercept re- turns. .Si'i'i'etary of State meanwhile delaysconven- iiiL' Board hecan.'ie all returns are not in. Then Gover- nor, on ground that Florida may lose her voice, and that he lias authority under superseded statute to can- vass returns and deulare. 1 promptly called see Bar- low, proceeding upon O'Conor's estimate of his integ- rity. They will fool him. He has telegr.aphed for Choate. Chandler leaves soon. Kasson, Noyes are coming after Monday. We mean to proQer coopera- tion to Barlow, Robertson .and others. Wasted three visits on Controller. Shall contuiue unless olher- wise advised. Marble. Discovering the Situation. 15 119.1 New-Toee, Nov. 19. Manto» Marble : Or imisl disi)at('li li. for not received trust D Tliouuis that you Charles sends for. W. (Use Key IV.) [Translation.] Dispatch received. You must not trust B. or tliat for D. scuds for. Thomas Charles, w. [20.1 Tallahassee, Nov. 19. Col. Peltox, 15 Grnmercy I'ark: Havt us making ol honcstv purposed wilhuKness to-day only hi.s trusted internal 15 trould'jsomo nobody vrntos scoundrels France these to whether and in siiL'itestions writing to result should reeewo declare France as we wish or ascertain fo London make to belief went for elector.'^ presidential of over to-ilay vole out in Chaniiler this their France emia- sai'ics professes authority undouhtediv pauie shall in to local cook stale Jio.ses tire jirobably ni(rht I Prance backing for not bell cei-tilicato iiug in altet- ations. (Use Key V.) [Translation.! Purposed only niakin;j honesty of B. (Barlow) troublesonio to these infernal scoundrels. Have trusted nobody. (Joveruor to-day writes us his willingness to receive in -writing 8Ugt;estions wo ■wish to make as to whether Governor or Board should ascertain and declare resnlt of vote for Presidential electors. This their game nndonhtedly. Chandler professes belief in Governoi-'s aiithorit.y. T(/-i-rfeitly in hand, and every point guarded. Iliartily glail to see Perry Smith and Gibson, of course, who arrived to-ii.ay. Who is Parris t Judge liobertson returns home to-morrow. Everything looks well. Manton Marble. [21.1 Tallahassee, Nov. 21. Henry Ha VT.MEYER, i\"o. 1.1 West 17 Ik-Hi., A. T.: One proceedings culminating twenty legal W tells Moses matters by arrived reinforced ol yester- ilay Kadicais seven twelve Vi'allace others anil it to distance to g.ave agents Noyes hall Drew seulFranco for Kasson and for Max. (Use Keys IIL and VL) (Translation.] Marble's dispatch tells of leg.il proceedings. WOdUey arrived yesterday. Matters ciilininating. Kadicais reinforced by Noycs, Kasioii, Wallace and others. Drew for two hundred and a half. Gave it to Drew for agents sent to distance. COYIJJ. This draft of Mr. Coyle's on "Twcnty-tlireo" was not paid, aud he telegraphed the nest day to Colonel Pelton direct : [25.] 'lALUlIASSEE, Nov. 22. Colonel W. T. Pelton. \o. 59 l.tbnUj-at.. A. York: Caused is twelve William you am judge three Thomas France may notified embarrassment Daniel on Charles anil for twenty half Jane immediately draft i)rotcsteil correct. Max. (Use Key VH.) [Translation.] Am notified draft for two hundred and a half on twenty three is jirotested. You may judge em- barrassment caused. Correct immediately. Thomas Charles Jaue Daniel William. Coyle. Perry Smith added his remonstrances; Mr, Coyle's credit at headquarters being perhaps limited: [2G.] Tallahassee. Nov. 23. W. T. Pelton, FAerett House. JV. T. Why no.t answer Max dispatch yesterday. Impor- tant. Who is Pains that presents himself here with- out credentials f P. H. Smith. " Parris " was Mr. E. L. Parris, a New-Y'ork law- yer, who had just arrived to take a share in the labors of the campaign, and whom all the conspira- tors seemed at first inclined to distrust: [27.1 'lALLAnASSFE, Nov. 22. Henp.T Havemf.yer, Xo. 1.5 li'est 17ih-st.,S 1'. : With be to relations intimate cannot more other- wise consent much Moses act with strange in cau cheerfully command can Parisians Florida Chirles can probably useful Jaue discouraging in Anna critical at be more though Fox rate not any there useful. (Use Key V., twice.) [Translation.] Cannot consent to intimate relations with strange Parisians Can act chcerlully with ilarblo in command: otherwise can be lunch more useful in . Probably can bo more use' I there at any rate. Florida critical, tlio;u;h i ot dis- couraging. Fox (WooUey). Cliarlc-- Aui;:\ J.uio. 16 New-Tork Tribune— Extra No. 4:4:— The Cipher Dispatches. 128.1 New-York, Nov. 23. John F. Coyle, Tallahassee: One reliable— is roost— of Parris should Jano implicit him and reliance accorded. H. (Use Key III.) tTranslation.l Parris is one of (us) and most reliable. Implicit reliance should (be) accorded him. Jane. [29.1 New-York, Nov. 23. P. H. Smith, Tallnliassee : Ti-lt-eram received. Party you ask about entirely reliable ; a good lawyer and useful counsellor. W. T. P. [30.1 New-York. Nov. 23. C. W. WooLi.EY. Tallahassee: Refer can fetch as reliable the him me 8afe with is here if you you to talk War- saw possible lose perfectly with don't as party Europe here he cards to is of and old trustworthy poinlcd hold professes from me you as to Jane what out shuffler do an party. Three. (Use Key VIII., twice.) [Translati m.] Telegram here. The party you refer to is per- fectlv reliable. You can talk as safe with him as with me. Don't lose fetch if possible to hold. Is party from Louisiana you pointed out to me here as an old shuffler of cards trustworthy, and do what he professes? Jaue. [31.] Tallahassee, Nov. 21. Colonel FEVToy, 3'o. 15 Grumerey I'aik ; Use Hudson times Danube cipher knowlcdso counties past not belief local copies tweuty imbe- cility certitied of set till yesterday whole Schuyl- kili full situation Moses could accurately it Glas- gow Schuylkill twenty give not seventeen Potomac would Jli-ssissippi give Havana Syracuse Glasgow Syracuse estmiated and couuties twelve county re- fuse much throw to strain to scoundrels London whollv Ithaca Potomac out Moselle Kochester would Manatee only thirty Glasgow too and Moselle nine- teen Glasgow throw to sent out Hay narrow marg-.n Havana Rochester Moses Thompson is yesterday coiiuty Alachua to others pertect proofs our Alachua Moselle there to into fortify to to-day Moses us and Manatee thoroughly jurist dispatched workine Louisiana Moses not most other came regretting counties Wilkinson Fox been name Cole arrived leaving act yesterday arrived alreadv county questions working arrives Biddle .Sunday of com- municated IS power [one word dropped] for to- day Sellers purpose Barlow neighboring heretofore yesterday went suspend will never denounce will France downright unless but be Florida rope exercise may in London to Senate France, give to Moses tight close is fair no earliest unquestionably needs wise best and hard it stages possible at do will till and except powers full further Moses perfectly assistance discreet with- drawn for which will is trustworthy granted some taken be. [No sig.) (Use Key V. ten times.) [Translation.] Use four times live (i. e., 20-word) cipher. Local imbecility past belief. Not till yesterday ■could Marble get full knowledge of whole situation. Twenty-seven couuties, certified copies, give sis hundred twenty-seven Kepublican maiority. Twelve counties give estimated ac- curately eight huntlred and seventeen ma- jority. It would not strain Board much to throw out two hundred thirty-six Manatee County Democratic votes, only scoundrels would refuse wholly to throw out two hundred nineteen Kejuil)- licau votes Alachua County. Margin is too narrow. Marble yesterday sent Thompson and Hay to Alachua to perfect our proofs. To-day Marble dispatched jurist to Manatee to fortify us tho- roughly there, and others into two other counties Marble must not name. Cole already arrived been act (ively) working. Fox arrived yesterday, regret- ting leaving Louisiana. WilKinson came Sunday, IS working. Biddle arrives to-day. Sellers went yes- terday for neighboring county, [for] purpose hereto- fore communicated. Barlow questions power of Governor, but never will denounce exercise ; may give Governor rope to suspend Florida in Seiiite. Unless Board will be downright fair, unquestion- ably fight is close and hard. Will do best pos- sible to wiu it at earliest stages. Marble needs no further assistance, except lull powers, which will be taken tor granted till withdrawn. Is I'ome perfectly trustworthy and discreet? Maisble. [32.] Tailahassee, Nov. 21. Col. Pelton, 15 Gramcrey I'ark: All France next Biddle after man on restraint mentioned command he lust in last went upon brought for has dispatch France Wednesday lost re- turning life Loniiou Jloses associated nearly morn- ing shall have now better publish press gut docu- ments we fight. (Use Key V.) [Translation.] Man mentioned next after Biddle in last dispatch has just brought all he wentfor, restraint upon Gov- ernor, command on Board. Nearly lost life returning ; now better tight ; we have got Gover- nor. Shall publish documents iissociated press Wednesday morning. Marble. la the ex.act correspondence of the events here narrated, and results claimed by each party, with news dispatches published at the time, will be found conclusive proof of the correctness not only of the keys, but of the interpretations givou to cipher words. Mr. Sellers, for example, did go to the adjoining county, Gadsdeu, to the residence of Judge White, at Quincy, and obtained on tbe 20th temporary writs of injunction forbidding the count- ing of votes by the Governor, and mandamus re- quiring the Board to proceed to canvass, as the fol- lowing states : [33.] Tallahassee, Nov. 21. General 3. B. Gordon, Columbia, S. C'.-' Thanks ; yes. will use it expedient. Stearns con- templates usurping canvassing under old super- seded statute, and winning by cooked certificates. I expose hull North to-day, and that is not all. Good and sufficient force here now, well organized. Tell Kandolph that job he shoultl have let Fox- manage has been too engrossing night and day for me to telegraph. Will exchange news here- after. We shall put Uncle Sammy through, and end the reign of thieves. MANTO>i Malble. II. MANlFULATIi\0 JvETUHNS. Up to about November 22 it may have been possible for Mr. Marble and other visiting Democrats to be- lieve tbe assertion that Florida had voted for Mr. Tilden. But it must have been observed by the 22d that the local m.anagers were holding back heavy Democratic returns, while trying, even by mandamus of a circuit court, to compel tbe Board to open other returns before .all hadbeeu received, and thus enable the Democrats to ascortain exactly Manipulating Return$. 17 what majorities tbey had to iiiauufactuie. For gome days, Mr. W. E. Chaudler's dispatches to The Tribune hud hecn earuestly deniiinding the pro- duction of returns from Polk, Lrcvard and Lafay- ette counties, which finally gave 750 Democratic majority. From this time, not a line was sent by Mr. Marble, even in his most secret ciphers, or by any other Democratic operator in Florida, as far as we can learn, implying a belief that the Dem- ocrats had any right to the vote of the State ; the sole question was whether they could get it, right or no right. For some days, they clung to the plan of holdingback and altering returns, but Republican tactics defeated that game. Meanwhile, the sug- gestion in dispatch No. 30, from New-York, about "an old shuffler of cards," indicated the drift of thought in that quarter, and Mr. Woolley began to speak his mind thiough Mr. Marble, thus: [34.1 Tallahassee. Nov. 22. Colonel Pelton, No. 15 aramircy Park: Or in let Moses for Fox either immediatelv do say contingencies asks here answer got j'ou forces to together be not why me read Louisiana. (Use Key VII.) [Translation.! Woolley asks me to say. Let forces be got to- gether immediately in read (iness) for contingencies either here cr Louisiana. Why do you not answer? Makble. What sort of " forces " did Mr. Woolley want to have held in readiness J Armed forces? Had the suggestion come from Mr. Watterson, of Kentucky, "between the shtrry and the rhampagiie," that might have been the meaning. lint Mr. Woolley is not a man of blood. He is a man of business. The " forces " which he understands how to use can be carried in the vest pocket. As yet, however, there was some reliance on the returns, and -Coyle tele- graphed on Saturday, the 25th, as follows : [35.1 Taixaiia-ssee, Nov. 25. Henry Havemever, esq.. JN'o. 15 H'estlTlh-st., A'. I. Ten party for twelve Ensland count on despon- dent thirty to friends seven commences Monday confident of our to-day sixteen forty. Max. (Use Key VI.) [Translation.! Draw to-day for five hundred dollars expenses of party. Hoard commences to count on Monday. Our friends confident : Republicans despondent. Mr. Coyle, however, was not in the full confidence of either his associates in Florida or his employers , in New-York. The advice from Woolley and Mar- ble about "getting forces together" had been under- stood. Mr. Smith M. Weed, just returned to New- York from an unsuccessful expedition to South Car- olina, where he tried to buy the Returning Board, assumed the congenial duty of replying to this recommendation, and his telegram was addressed to the E. L. PaiTis mentioned in the recent inquiries from Tallahassee. The medium of communication was the "Dictionary Cipher," which Mr. Parris alone of the Florida agents seems to have possessed ; and the key is applied by turning back one page. This mode of translation converts the signature "Whip" into "Weed-" [36.] New-York, Nov. 24. E. D. Parris, Tallahassee: Recognize forewarning to peruse Socinian and ad- measurement us here car antipode of boon beehive prop signature interesting auditory appertain conple antiphou. Wnip. [Translation.] Read following to Peri [Perry] Smith, and ac- quaint us here. Cannot antagonism of Board b© prevented. Should instantei; at any cost. Answer. Weed. Mr. Woolley wasnot deceived about the situation: [37.1 Tallahasse, Nov. 26. Henry Havemeyer, Ao. 15 tl'est n-st.. A'. Y. Try Lieutenant weather shall here very Charles useful had captain to storm 1 stay be elsewhere or more the through. Fox. (Use Key V.) [Translation.] Very bad weather here. Shall I stay through the storm, or try to Ix^ more useful elsewhere. Lieuten- ant Captain Charles. WooiiEY. Apparently Mr. Woolley had expressed his view of the situation so freely to other Democratic work- ers in Florida that Mr. Marble became unhappy. It was the pl.an of Moses to put on airs of righteous- ness as long as possible, and, even if at the end votes must be bought, to buy them as a pious duty. Mr. Woolley, however, had no taste for thin self- deceptions, and the two did not wholly agree, but Gramercy Park a.ssnmed full responsibility for Mr. Woolley, and told him to stay, for reasons which Mr. Marble finally came to understand fully: [38.1 Tallahassee. Nov. 27. Colonel Pelton. 15 Gramercy I'ark. You to by then telegrams you advise neglecting nersoii here that and counsels to causing result and diviiled trust one imperilling answer find Do will one authority in trust way 1 to least nobody's him and him possibly transfer calendar at two week to best for stand my Parris Rome copies here now about bo returns always certihe from from has hero to issuing of been certiriiate refrain Oregon telegraph Warsaw of elector iuelitrilile in Spain see favor to him not until advised O'Conors my obtain opinion ■why thereon. (Use Keys IV. and v.! [Translation.] It has been suggested from here to Governor of Oregon to refrain from issuing certificate in favor of ineliafible elector until advised thereon. Why not obtain telegraph him O'Conort opinion t See my dispatch to Spain. m. 141.1 Tallahassee, Nov. 28. To Colonel Pelton, 15 Gi-amercu Park, N. Y.: Plea-se yourself about economies suggested. Coyle exceetliugly usolul hitlierto. You did not answer niy inquiry about Paris, and only mention him at this late date. That iiromofcs unity of action, I sup- pose. Mention names of Florida friends when you ■wish to learn how much weight their several re- quests deserve. Fox impedes daily. It's no relief that you assume responsibility tor difficulties be makes. Don't fail to read message to Smith, fifteen and twenty eiuher. M. M. On tlio 28th day of November, the Democratic operators entered upon the tbird and final stage of their political "Eake's Progress." Tney were astounded when the returns were opened that day to find that, instead of the majority of 0.3 which fraudulent returns had been made to give tbem, they were beaten by 42 majority on the face of tbe returns. From Baker County, whicli they had counted 94 majority for Tilden, an official return gave 41 majority for Hayes. In order to overthrow that return, they would be compelled to affirm the power of a Keiiublican Board to cor- rect errors and frauds in the county returns, and then all the rascality of the returns from heavy Democratic counties like Manatee and Monroe would he exposed. In the end, tbe board did correct the Kepublican return from Baker, and gave the Democrats 136 votes more than tiie official return had given, but they also corrected the Democratic returns from Manatee and Monroe, cut- ting down the Democratic vote by 577. As ooou as it was known that the board must go behind the returns, or declare tbe State for Hayes, consternation reigned among the Dem- ocratic schemers gathered in that dingy room In a dilapidated State House at Talla- hassee. There ■were present, say press dis- patches of that date, besides Democrats of Florida, the following from abroail, every one of whom has been named in TiiE Tuibune's translated ciphers: Manton Marble, Paris, G. W. Biddle, D. W. Sellers, Sam G. Thompson, and M.alcolm Hay, of Pennsylvania; U. W. Woolley, of Ohio; Li!;verett Saltou-^tall, of Massachusetts; John F. Coyle, of Washington ; Perry W. Smith, of Chicago; Charles Gibson, of St. Lonis, and ex-Governor J. E. Brown, of Georgia. Any examination of the returns woidd inevitably uncover and defeat the Democratic frauds, if the members of tiie Board were honest. Then it was that Mr. Maible and Mr. Woolley proceeded to bus- iness. III. BUYING A VOTE. The earliest direct suggestions of brihery appear to be in the disp.atches of Woolley and " Whip," Nos. 34 and 36. These were scut before the operators in Florida knew that tbeir manipulations of re- turns had failed, and no direct replies appear. But only two days after the Board had opened the certificates, and found a majority for Hayes on the face of the returns, Mr. Woolley discovered that the pious and polysyll.abic Marble bad not only commenced "business," but was getting into the way of the worldly and "indiscreet" Woolley him- self. Therefore he telegrajihed: 142.1 TALLAnASSEE, NoV. 30. Henry Havemmei:, 15 Wc.xt lllli-at., Js'. Y.: Fetch Daniel to that see wire Charles private Moses Captain contracts abstain tbe children tUis Jane Irom is Israel of. i'ox. (Use Key V.) [Translation.! Wire Moses to see tliat tbe children of Israel ab- stain from fcteb Cdutraets. Tbis is private, ■lane Daniel Captain Cluirles. Wooi.ley. "Fetch "is one of tbe few words which have not oeen very satislaetorily translated ; it was not oven understood by Mr. Woolley's correspondent in No'sv- York. He replied : [43] New-York, Dec. 1, C. W. Wooi.ley. Tallahassee: Dont understand; explain. Havemeyer. Mr. Woollev was then kind enough to translate the word " fetch " in the following: [44.1 '1 AI.T.AIIASSEE, Doc. 1. Henry Havemeyer, 15 ff'cs/ 17ili-st., A. Y.: Making Jane said you to I William enemy pri- vately Daniel propositions Moses last night to Cap- tain from 1 lie stop to Fox. (Use Key V.) |Tr,inslation.] I privately s.aid to you last night to stop I.Iosea from niaking propos:tious to the enemy. Captain Jane Daniel William. AVoollky. Is it to bo believed that Mr. Woolley was sbockcd at tbe t bought of buying up a IJcpublican member of tiic Canvassing Board? in view of his dispatch about having " forces in readiness for contingencies either here or Louisiana," will anybody believe it * Or did Mr. Woolley really think that his chiei Buying a Vote. 19 Mr. TUden, wonld be shocked ? Had he conceived of Mr. Tildon the conception thus expressed by Jlr. Marble : " The signal and peculiar mark of that plan was this : his absolute trust in moral forces ; his entire faith in the people, their volitions and their power. And why, of all men in the United States, should not ho I" But what is to be said of Mr. Marble's virtue f lie transmitted in his cipher Mr. Woolley's request for "forces," and yet, five days afterward.s, was chiefly •worried because Mr. Woolley was " indiscreet." It was not the dishonor or criminality of such use of "forces" that troubled Mr. Marble, but the impres- sion that Mr. Woolley did not cover his busines.s with enough venceriui;. Why, then, should Mr. Woolley, the blunt and straiplitforward trader, want to stop the propositions of Mr. Marble, whose trading was veneered with patriotism and varnished with piety? Because, unfortunately, JJorbIc ami If'oollcy Kerehid- be who Smith with request has Daniel- •aii't telegram your and requiremeuts. P. (Use Key VII.) [Translation,] Yes. to your request, but consult with Daniel wlio h.is been supplied and may be able to meet re- quirements. Telegram to Smith can't be read. Pklkin. J. J. Daniel. , it was shown by dispatch No. 16, was the person through whom telegraphic transfers of money had been arranged November 18. [i7.J New-York, Dec. 2. J. F. CoYLE, Tallahassee : Twenty one nineteen unless you have uineteeu five again. H. [Translation.! Telegram received. Unless you have received will remit again. Have.meyer. Other dispatches, not of great importance, though tbey illustrate the later events, may best be iuserlcd here: [-18.] Tallahassee, Dee. 4. Henry Havembyep., esq.. So. 15 West nth-sl.,A\.T. Forty ten twenty Anna will vou cover twelve promptly one orobablv will all Jane and Capt.ain seven immeiliately Italy Greece Daniel me three which not.ity. Max. Use Key VU. [Translation.! You will supply imniediatelv telesrrapinc credit Coyle seven hundred dollars, WhicbVi 11 probably . cover all expenses. Notify me promptly. Captaiii Daniel Jane Anna. Coyle. [49.1 Tallahassee, Dec. 5. Henry HAVEMEYER.fsg., No. 15 rfcst 17th-af.. N.T.t Not iiotifv ten Thomas nine, tlu'oe Moses and this twelve, immediately Greece will place twenty, takes one Italy seven W. its auv and what need. Max. Use Key VII. [Translation.] Supply seven liundred dollars telegr.iphic credit Woolley and Coyle, and notify what bank iiiime- diat(^ly. Marble will not need any. This fakes its place. Thomiis. Coyle. Ihe Board had opened the returns on Tuesday tha 28th of Nov(!mber, had heard evidence on both sides patiently, and was obliged to reach a decision vrith- in a few days. From the beginning Attorney-Gen- eral Cocke had been counted safe by the Democrats. Dr. Cowgill, formerl}' of Delaware, was a staunch Union man, and Mr. Marble had said it was " wast- ing" time to call on him. Secretary of State Mc- Lin, for twenty-two years a resident of Florida, was once a Confederate, but afterward a Union man, and a Kepublican editor of reputation as an upright man, but the conspirators needed one vote, and what they tried to do let the secret dispatches show : [50.] C'crlili<'al«' require*! to Mosew dceisioB' liiive I>on«lon lioiar lor Itolivin, ol fust iintl I']iirKl> nt .Moselle lisiud :t any over 4jSlaNK'on' France rec'd. Bussm of Use Key VII. [Translation.] Talla., Dec. 2. Colonel Pelton", 15 Gramercy Park: Have .jiiMt received a proposition to liauti over :i t any honr required 'I'ilalen decision ol'ltoard andctirtUicate ot'4iiov> ernor lor 300,000. .Marble. Did Mr. Marble or Mr. Coyle actually receive such a startling proposition T ill. McLin has swom that such a piopc«ition was made to him, not by him. and theie has been an issue of veracity on the matter between him and Mr. Marble, who denies that he had any talk with McLin on the subject. But the question of grave importance is not whether Mr. Marble deceived others or himself, but what had Gramercy Vark to answir. This : [51.) New- York, Dec. 3. Manton Mawjle, Tallahassee : Warsaw here. Bolivia Brazil. (No sig.) [Translation.] Dispatch here. Proposition too hieh. (?) Mr. Marble was not satisfied witn this answer. Ho went to Mr. E. L. Parris and requested that gentle- man to represent that his " plan " must be acted upon immediately. Mr. Parris thereupon seems to b.ave sent the following dispatch in the "Dictionary Cipher." It is not signed, but as Parris w.", ; tbe only man in Florida, so far as can be learned, who used that cipher, there can be no difficulty in determinicK the authorship. The key is applied by taming back 20 Neic-Tork Trihune— Extra No. A^—The Cipher Dispatche*. one page, and tbe translation thus obtained for the ■word " match " is Marble. 152.] Tallahasse, Dec. 4. Hknrt Havemeter, 15 West nth-st., N. x.: Scarify secured shear distances settee you ad- vanced to husky heart atfectioued with functionary sleeper sauce-box exempt tidewater undertaker match school plinth settee you scarify nascent bee- hive admonish upon imnlacable overhung worry iin- derbrush plinth uulaudlockid to untransomed. Six- teen twentv-one twenty-three kneel preeminenced your lightning. INo sig.J LTranslation.] Saturday secured. Several dispatches sent you ad- dressed to house. Have advised witli friend, f^ltu- ationsarae; everything unferlain. Marble says plan sent yoii Salurday must l»e acted upon iiiinie«liately ; otlierwlse unavailing. Plan unknown to undersigned. Sixteen, twenty-one, twenty-three just presented your letter. What was "secured Saturday"! That day (De- cember 2) was the date of Marble's proposal to pui- ehase the Board for $200,000. Mr. Blarble asserts that he transmitted the offer indeed as a matter of news, but that he indignantly repelled it " on the spot," and yet here he urges that it be acted upon immediately. Gramercy Park, however, had reasons not known to Mr. Marble for considering his '" Bo- livia" decidedly " Bra/il," for on the preceding day the following had come from Mr. Woolley : [53.1 Tallahassee, Dec. 1. Henry Havemeter, 15 West llth-st., N. T. Sixteen KotoU may maUe thirteen ibrly of lialfol" a fwelve eleven ten. Cun you say t,\ro in nine immediately ii twenty. Fox. [Translation.) Board Fetch may maWc necessary ex- peuse of half of a hundred thousand dollars. «'au you say will deposit iu bank immediately if ag-reed ? Whatever significance may be given to the word "fetch," which, it will be remembered, Mr. Have- meyer (or Pelton) failed on a former occasion to understand, there can be very little doubt as to the meaning of the proposal. And the reply of Gramercy Park was: [54.J 2:25 p. m. New-York, 1 Dec. C. W. WooLLET, TaVahassce. Twenty one nineteen two ten tw^enty cannot however seven l>etore twenty four thirty seven nineteen reply forly ■ix. "• , [Translation.! ! XelCKram received, tf ill deposit dol- lars agreed ; (you) cannot, however, dra'W l>efoi-c vote member received. Re- ply promptly. We have no evidence that Mr. Havemeyer ever Hat this damning answer, or that he ever read •ither the answer or the dispatch to which a reply tigned •' H." was sent. He received disp.atches; it to probable that Gramercy Park read and answered tiiem all. But it is now apparent why the Maible- Coyle $200,000 "Bolivia" was not held good. Probably. Mr. Woolley learned that bargains were going on Dehind his back, for he telegraphed: [55.1 Tallahassee. Dec. 2. Henry Havemeyer, 15 West lHh-sl., jV. y.: More in select have have whom some you you in confidence one winning evidently than. Fox. (Use Key IV.) [Translation.! Select some one in whom you nave more confidence than you evidently have in WooUey. Woolley. The reply, signed " W.," might probably as well have been signed W. T. Pelton, and needs careful reading: [56.1 New- York, Doc. 3. C. W. Woolley, Tallaliassee: Perfect you what power we coula and answer you caiiiicil l>i-lu-f declined all telegraphed dodo all application no in and stay private has you have needless other prevent here W. (Use Key IX.) [Translation.] All here have perfect belief in you. We cannot prevent needless. No other has power, and all application decunep. stay and do what you telegraphed you could do. Private. Answer. w. "AH here" at Gramercy Park— what does that mean? What was it that Mr. Woolley "telegraphed he could do," which needed not only the secresy of a cipher, but the injunction "Private" within that cipher ? Mr. Woolley was private — so private that the following dispatches, covering precisely the same proposition, went to Gramercy Park in two distinct ciphers. [57.] Tallahassee, Dec. 3. Colonel Pelton, 15 Gramercy Parle. N. Y. Preventinjsr Ifloses best Uolivia or from Calass'Otv vote London documents united Kochester slates half g;iviii{j [one word dropped] concurrence electors his cast being: court either of in received of ac- tion for Havana. (Use Key X.) [Translation.] Proposition received either j^iTing; vole of [line?] Republican of Itoard, or his concurrence in Court action preventing; electors' vote from being- cast, for half hundred best I nitetl States do<'ii>uenls. [For g^50,«00 in IJ. S. notes]. Miarble. I58.J Tali^iiassee, Dec. 4, Henry Havemeyer, 15 West nth-st., y. T. aialf Twelve may less thirty eleven -wiiiniiis ten additional seven for Rive lieutenant sixteen Russia. Fox. (Use Key IV., and after traiispusitiou translate the numerals in aceordauce with tlieir meaning, in all other dispatches In the same cipher.) [Translation.] :9Day IViuning [i. e., WooUey] giye hun- dred thousand dollars less half for XiN den sidditioMUl tSoard mcmb<-rV Lieu- tenant. Woolley. Tnere is not much room to doubt what either ol Buyivfi a Vote. 21 theoe propositinna means. " Hundred thousaml dollars less half," means exactly the same as " half hnudrod l)e8t United States documents." Mr. Marble cannot deny the authorship of the above dispatches signed (within the cipher) ''Moses." For it will be found hereafter (see dispatch No. GO) that he said on the oth of December, in plain En- glish and over his own signature, " Finished yester- day afternoon responsibility (as) Moses." These, however, it may be said, were only propositions. How did Gramercy Park reply f The conspnators waited, devoured with anxiety. To WooUey came only this answer— to his impatient soul how tortur- ing I [59.1 Nkw-York, Dec. 4. Col. C. W. WooiXKY, Tallahamx : Act difulttl time ruin Aim vounaets each all impor- tant you in Wamaw oilier of you may ace have or con- junction consult him lose uill with and coincide you must Israel. [No signature.) (Use Key LX.) (Translation.] See Israel aucl act in conjunction with him. Tou must coincide, or you will ruin each other. Have telegraphed him consult you. Time important, hivided councils may lose all. Mr. WooUey rushed to " Israel," or " Moses," or Marble, but not one word had he received except the folloicing unintelligible dispatch: 1 00.1 New- York, Dec. 3. Manton Marble, Tallahassee : Lima should important in once be concert coun- cils and better if trust you can fox done time hnu divideU act only iiolivia with and consult here. (No signatjire.) Mr. Marble could not read this. No one of the conspirators could read it. The day was slipping away, and the Board might decide on the morrow. Mr. Marble telegraphed : 161. 1 Tallahassee, Dec. 3. Col. Pklton, 15 Gramercy Pirk, 2f. Y.: Tell Spam to repeat his message in my cipher. It is unintelligible. ilANTON >1arble. Meanwhile Mr. WooUey received the foUowing ; [62.1 New-York, Dec. 4. Colonel C. W. Woollky, Tallahasse. Given Jiochesler that have London will not fully ad- vise you use reported so need Lima, Bhine to here if us. (Use Key VI.) (Translation.] Beported here that Board have given us one vote. If to you will not need to use acceptance. Advise fully. This plainly impUed that power to draw and use money had been sent to somebody, but to whom ? Mr. WooUey could not learn, and in hot haste he denied knowing anything about the " Rhine " (one) vote, or the '• Lima" (acceptance) said to have been sent. 163.] rAILAHASSEE, DeC. 5. Henrt Havemeyer. Xo. 15 West 17 th^st.. A'. Y.: No one here knows meaning of words Lima Rhine. Fox- But at last came the answer to Manton MarWo himself. Let " the keen bright sunlight of publici- ty" faU npon it. 164.1 New- York, Dec. 4. MAjrrON Mai;ble. Tallahassee : laiiiist xilioiiUI iinportnnt in once be con- cert coiiiK'il nntl belleririrn^t you tliere very no W:ir>.j»M- «-iin Fox done time liini t in an lioiicst, skilful performance of oiHclal trust must not be sacrificed to the usufruct of the incumbents.— fSAliLEL J. Tildex. Letter Acce/iting the Fresidentiat domination. July 31, 1876. A few thousand dollars, and the whole atrocious conspirjcy would have been tnirstcd like a puff-ball and blown away in dust.— But I apolofrizr for ihe sustccstion. First, I apologizi^ to (5overnor Tildun for coiifrontiuK his char- acter with the morally mipotsiblc.— IJI AMOS JIakele. Xctttr West nth-sL, New-iork. Absolutely Petersburg can |iro( ured be Copenha- gen may Thomas prompt Kdm.iurgh must if river take be you less London Thames will. W. (Use key VI.) [Translation.] Sr lEctiirning: Roiirtl can be procured nl>«.olci!<-l.v. >vill yon deposit 30,000 el«>II«jr«. V .\lai' take less. Must lie prompt. Tlioni.a.H. Colonel PeUon's reply to this inquiry has not been found ; but the nature of it is plain enough from Mr. Weed's rejoinder : [6.] Coi.rjraiA, Nov. 14. Henry Havemeyer, 15 Weal nih-st., Xew-Fork. lo situation prospects and Africa desperate in- ti'ud Tuanies soon Europe, report every mischief the Warsaw in dispatch in acting this will state all concert miirniug parties France in aud received. (Use Key IX.) \V. [Translation.] Dispatch received. I'artiea lo report tkismonnug. C'hamberl. in, Kellogg and Steams acting in con- cert, aud intend mischief in every State. Will tele- gvaph prospect soon. The situation desperate in all three. It is to be observed that Smith Weed never flat- tered Mr. I ilden with assurances that he had car- ried the State of South Carolina, or any other of the doubtful St. ates. He was evidently in telegraphic communication with his fellow-laborers in New- Orleans and Tallahassee, so that " Africa, Europe and France " were not the only persons who ".acted In concert " and "intended mischief." Aud while Mr. .Marble was protesting that Florida rightfully belouged to the Democrats, and that they were ras- 26 Xcw-Toric Tribune— Extra Ko. 4:4:— The Ciplier Dispatches. cals ■who -nouUl keep it from liim, and that lie •\Tonld "put Uncle Sammy through and end the reign of thieves," Weed iuTariably admitted that "Uncle Sammy" had failed to get enough votes. While every Democratic paper and Democratic ora- tor throughout tlie land ivas claiming Tildeu had carried South Carolina, and Hampton vras tele- graphing a similar assertion to the New-York press, Smith M. Weed dispatched a very different sort of intelligence to Gramercy Park. Remember that Hampton himself only claimed a majority of 1,400, and then read the following : [7.1 COT.UMRIA. Nov. 14. Hemut Havkmeter, 15 West 17thrst., N. T. Figure France capture and over vrbat si:c answer Europe Moselle Kn.ssia shall little :md appearances about best hope Glasgow will up keep Oregon Amer- ica be can Potomac behind Edinburg I. w. (Use Key IX.) LTranslation.J Best I can figure, Tilden will be over 2,600 behind Hampton, and see little hope ; shall keep up appear- ances. Capture Louisiana and Florida. What about Oregon? Answer. The Oregon scheme -was set on foot just at this time. Mr. Marble telegraphed to Governor Grover about the end of November, suggesting that a cer- tificate should be withheld from the post-office elector in that State, evidently supposing that the idea was novel and imiiortant ; b>it the plot had al- ready been -working tor a fortnight, and had nearly reached the poiut of "purchasing a Republican elector to recognizB and act -with" Cronin, when Moses offered his advice. The hand of ex-Senator Gwin, "Duke Gwiu," appears in the early part of the Oregon mauosuvrcs. It was seen likewise in Florida. It appears repeatedly in South Carolina. "Draw on me for whatever you need," he telegraphed to Wade Hampton, two days after the election ; and later there are mysterious references to " G win's plan," by which at the very last moment South Car- olina was to be taken awiiy from the Republican column. Wherever there were secret transactions in those days, one heard of Duke Gwin. On the 14th of November Mr. Pelton received dis- couraging news from Ijouisiana. Nothing had yet been done in Florida, Marble and Coyle being some- where on the road between Jacksonville and Talla- hassee. The situation indeed looked dark. Weed's "parties" probably did not "report" as promptly as he expected m the morning, and from the follow- ing curt message he appears to have lost patience with them : 18.1 Columbia, Nov. 14. Hexrt Havemryer, 15 Westl7th-.if.. .\cw-York. Warsaw they read all unchanged last are idiots can't sitnatiim. W. (Use Key I.) [Transl.ation.] Can't read last telegram. Situation unchanged. They are all idiots. Moreover Jlr. Weed's movements began to excite suspii'ioii in Columbia, and his position grew un- comfortable. He proposed to hurry mutters, and then to turn over the negotiation to somebody else [9.1 CoLii>rBtA, Nov. 14. Hknut Havemeter, Xo. 15 West lltlt-st., N. Y. Things our yet working but, party are believe dont America," Russia nothing claims trading I here off' definite party mixed seem I select if party in Edinburgli to Danube rerjutrcd disturb proceed- ings good don't shall to increase it man sure Africa river make to court as watched to better ■way down think over as turn is send Louis reciiiircd am that and to Randolph here onlv well matter if if. -w. (Use Key VI ; then Key VIIT. twice.) [Translation.] Nothing definite yet, hut workine. Things mixed lieiv. Our p^iriy oiaims Haa-;pton paity are ti.idmg oft' Tiblen. I don't btl ^■V(^ it. I'r'iceediijjrs in co'.srt lion't seem todisturi' O'ham- b -vlaiii party. ^Iisa!! I iiiiT«'a>.« So A'>,000 »r roqiiju-etl, !o innKv sure V Selcci iiood :r;an to s.-nd down if required, as ih.it is thi: only way, J?n KJa/c7i<>rf, and if as well tliii-k beldr turn over lualter here io Governor Raudtdph. DENMARK ACCEPTS. The answer this time was oronipt and positive; for Gramercy Park too was becoming uneasy : [10.1 New-York, Nov. 14. Smith Weed, Cohimh'w : River can Warsaw Danube future go here to per- haps prospects if you for use necessary trhst assist should some done person others must not to be to able and you that doubt it I name you yon but ia whether part see can Kennedy Utica on him here when advised with leaving y*e rmiire pros* pects lor some pni't, but you must see that trailing is not done. I doubt whether vou can trust it to person you name. Kennedy and others should be able to as.-iist. When do y..u think you can reach conclusion ? Keep me advised. Telegraph what the inajorily is onlilden. Frii-ud will go through on train leaving here six to-night. See him. " You can go to fifty if necessary ; !)erhaps use fu- ture prospects for some part." Was there not in the famous letter of Mr. Manton Marble on the Elec- toral Commission a scarifying denunciation of ihe infani y that would reward the " deputized go- betweens and real principals in the crime of revers- ing the actual returns." not merely with " the pur- chaser s own funds," but with " more immoral pay- ments—public otfices possessed through a ciiiue and then prostituted for its reward," etc.i The reference to Governor Randolph in the two dispatches last quoted deserves a word of men- tion. Weed evidently did not know the character of that honorable and straightforward gentleman. Colonel Pelton evidently did. "Denmark" was prudent not to " trust" such a man with an alVair of bribery. And that Governor Randolph knew nothing of this secret business, and had no in- timacy with Smith Weed is evident from the follow- ing telegram dated only a day later, and bearing his initials, which shows that he supposed nothing was doing i.i South Carolina, just when the negotiations tor the purchasa of that State were coming to a jDenmark Accepts. 27 head. Itwillbe noticed that in reckoning up the Democratic Tvorkers he has not mentioned Weed. The message is not in cipher : [11.] Columbia, Nov. 15. Colonel W. T. Pelto>c Everett Home, A'. I'.; Stuart has pone home : Bhiir has to return to- morrow; Fox probably. This leaves me. I aijam repeat that this most important point isoteilookcd. Louisiana overcrowih'd. You cannot I'stimati' the importance of semling a few well-known inllin'iitial men by to-night's train. Argument before Court wiU run through Friday, and perhaps Saturday. We feel very well. T. F. it. "Overlooked " ! One would hardly think so. But it may be doubted whether the Keformer in Gramcrcy Park "felt very well" when the lollowing frank statement of his defeat came from his confidential man at Columbia: [12.1 Columbia. Nov. 15. Henet HaVEMF.yer, No. 15 J\rst llth-^l., V. J. : Cart lul returns of received copies from examin.v tion Warsaw out Monroe Moselle Moselle certified Rhine Thames America Glasgow Ehine state Khine of Ithaca behind Russia officers by estiui.ate Missis- sippi show Hudson elected Syracuse and Glasgow from aljontand America and balance full and as change exactly Edinburgh to in compel front and Moselle to have to-night returns it to power to-mor- row know us court may shall state it over .aiul electors we can Utica clearly hope to-night of we eet certain their London London as officers out Russia the also Rochester can will a as defeat the we London Moselle for of its districts although of Schuykill it Syracuse uncertain save here all France in this care efibrts where redouble places America don't live stay is with secret they Thomas and Louis your Europe here to. w. (Use Key III ; then Key VIII twice ; then Key VI; then Key VIII aeain twice.) [Translation.! Telegram received. Careftil examination certified copies r3turns from 21 out of 32 counties, and esti- mate of balance, show Hami)ton elected by about 1,400 majority, and Tildeu and Democratic State officers behind Hampton from 1,800 to 2,000. Shall have full returns and know exactly to-niglit, aiul it may eompd us to change front in court to-morrow as topoioerof Canvassing Board over electors and !r yoles ai-e [taM]. an«l a"- otlifi- portion alVor linal result. Upiibt- less good taith is intended; but tliere should be some sufficient guarantee accepted. Both the.se con- ditions are very important. Telegraph result, and what you want done. [15.1 C'lLUMBIA. Nov. 17. Henry Havemeyf.h, 13 West 17 Ih-st.. Nmv-York: For this Warsaw the anv way misunderstood all state lake Ithaca is have deliuite Warsaw and Amer- ica plan nnist soon will sure i u officers would tormer. (Use Key VUl.) *• [Translation.] Must have misunderstood former telegram, for Hampton is sure any way. and this plan would take in all the Democratic t?tate officers. W ill telegraph definitejlyj soou No. 15 is given hero because it is evidently a reply to No. 14 ; but the messages often crossed one another on the way, and before the above lines were sent Mr. Weed had. niado rapid progress. COMING TO TERMS. The argument ou the mandamus was set for the 16th, and ou the night of the 15th Weed succeeded in obtaining from certain members of the Cauvassing Board a definite proposition, though the terms were higher than he had been led to expect. [16.1 Columbia, Nov. 16. Henry Havemeyer. 15 TTest ITtli-sf., Xew-Tork. Too last do received answer uiglit late War.saw underst.and mo don't want to quite you France Schuylkill Thames for night to Copenhagen us river giving late go electors of demand L(mdon Dinube to the or last river Moselle river home think do least party shall want America to aid who river will are liesides I Rhine get mterctder in- different the what from say no something. w. (Use Key lU : then Kev VIII twice.) [Translation.] Telegram received too late to answer last nieht. Don't quite understand. Doynuwant me to go to home of Stearns [Fliu-idnl ? ISoard late last nin-Iit tleniainieal J.l.OOO dollars for "-iyin"- ns t«'0 o<- ti«re«' ele»-Sor!*. 'S li«^ rntere<'d«'r-\viU -waul sonietliiiic Itesidcs: tUinU ten (iJioiisand). \\ hat shall I do t Get no aid from Hampton party, wlio. to say the least, are indifferent. [17.) Columbia. Nov. 16. Henry Havkmeyf.r, 15 u est l~lli-xt .\tw-loik: France Mo.selle over man ureatesr rivi-r with am Ehine exertions is there lull in not here am power made state are chances but you where that be have BlHuibieuiiiiileiitKhiueto monmig m France be coucert success la are Afiica i the all this condi- tional working authority communication Europ« for Warsawed on act and that close and in for. s. {Use Kev IX twice.) [Translation.} Am confident that Florida is State where greatest exertions should be made. Have you man with full power there? Chances are not over one in twenty here, but am working for that one. Chamberlain, Killoeg and Stearns, are in close communication, and act m concert. The authorUy I lelegraiihed for this morning all to be conditional on suicess. Mr. Pelton replied to both these telegrams at once, and his answer needs not a word of com- ment: (18.) New- York, Nov. 16. Smith W^eeh, Colnmhia. Lima should Hudson to London be Warsaw willing Africa unite believe here to and if to it this prevent of best fix was success leave con- tingently France or can Chicago dependent iu think Russia if soil am and final March Utica made inclined yon on can't Jane to night open immediately to condition reliable Fr.ance Anna Cap- tain others Lieutenant exact in you that get see give go friends or visit our safely bands remain me better !>• (Use Key IV ; then X twice.) [Translation.! Four felejSfraius Iiere. Slionld l>e yyill- ingr to aceept, l>elieye, il" 4'lianil>erlain and Itoard unite to prgyent trading: and expense yyas made dependent on final sHoeess of Tilden iu Marcli. Am in- clined to think Florida best soil. If you can fix this contingeutlv or leave it open safely, or in reli- able hands, you better visit Florida immediately. See that our friends remain ; can't get others to go. Give me exact condition to-night. Captain Lieuten- ant Anna Jane. The first agreement was for two or three of the electoral votes, to be obtained, we perhaps, by the process of trading districts, hinted at in Dispatch No. 12. Further negotiation was necessary in con- sequence of Pelton's insisting that the oblig.ation should be made "contingent on the result in March." To this the Board ofiScers would not con- sent, but they agreed to give good measure, pro- vided they got prompt pay, and to turn over all the seven electoral votes of South Carolina instead of the two or three origin.ally piomised. [19.1 Columbia. Nov. 16. Henry Havemeyer, A^o. 15 West lllh-st., A. V. Now bring safe river thing stuff river Warsaw man would as all Copenhagen to have on Warsaw for Schuylkill though Rochester Schuylkill receiv- ing river the looks at Danube Nvork received now LiiiKlou regular make him andit the certificates with I March depend of on other in on Baltimore will would but officers not meet think at could party morning that stakes to-night Thames have, and which but they agreed Moselle majority is sot re- Iiort 1 exact a consulting of will ami assented the London is are with and status Warsawed answer Warsaw to spare me go definite you no Africa but to to-night and soon can France late to-day see will and me to Portugal its for Chicago withdraw (Use Key IX four times.) 8. [Translation.] Telegram received, i.oolcs no-w as tIioug:h tlie tliins -lyould >vork at 75.000 tlollurs. for all sev«-u yotes. Uaye safe man to brius stiilf ou reociying tele- "•rain iu iiiornins. 'I'Uinii now I yyill meet liiiu witU party at Italtimore. The Contract Closed. 29 C'oiild not inalio it jlepeJUl on Marcli. I»ut -would on res'tilsn- corsiJiOnte of lto:irvill re- port lo-niglal. Tlx'j" sot stakes an«l I as:scntcd, but can -tFltlidra^r. Por- tnial telegiaphed Ajfrioa to-day to spare no eost. It's late for me to t;o to Florida but will see aud telo- gnipli you to-night. Answer me soon and deli- nitelv. 120.] COI.l^MBIA, Nov. 17. Hkxry Havkmeyer, 15 M'est lllh-sl., JSeic-York. Waitins its very anxiously until receipt your am time decision am expect Warsaw powerless im- portant liavolet to-day you if I will Thomas im- mediately and France from go go answer else- where to court this certainty. W. (Use Keys ill and VI.) iTr.anslation.l Am anxiously waiting your telepram. Until its receipt am powerless. 'J ime very important. Ex- pect decision frum court to-day. If you have cer- tainty elsewhere let tins go, audi will go to Flor- ida. Answer imniediatelv. Thomas. 121.1 NEW-Y.)iiK, Nov. 17. Smith WekI), Cohimlyia: Morning Jones Thames here Danube Warsaw Anna Thomas of Cantain speak Moselle full War- saw when Charles this received before left. H. (Use KeyV.) [ rranslation.] Telegram of 35 [words] here. Full telegram left before 2 this muining; speak when received. Thomas Charles Jones Captain Anna. Unfortunately this "full telegram " has not been found, but the nature of it may be inferred with perfect assurance from the alacrity of Mr. Weed's rejoinder; 122.] Coi.ujiniA, Nov. 17. Henry Havkmeyer, 15 fTcst nth-nt.. Aeiv-¥ork: See Moselle try received perhaps Iiours parties Wars.aw will conditions befon^ get instantly answer and. S. (Use Key III.) (Translation. j Telegram received. [Will f] see parlies instantly, perhaps two hours before answer. Will try and get conditions. ON THE FAGGED EDGE. It is an interesting cireuinstance that althoiigli tbe negotiator apparently entertained no doubt of the " good faith" of the persons with whom he was dealing, he had little confidence in the value of the proposed purchnfc, and he constantly pressed bis princinals in New-York to buy elsewhere if they could. For one thing, he was embarrassed by the line of argument which the Ueir.ocratic counsel had adopted in the mandaams case. Since his " careful examination " of the votes had revealed the " des- perate " character of the situation, showing thnt Hayes was elected even on (he face of the county returns, the)'e ivas nothing he dreaded so much as that the. Court might grant the writ which his own party anTced for, aud prohibit the Bo.ard from exercising judici.al functions. If it did this, and the Board obeyed, there would be no possibility of delivering the pur- chased votes; aud to "change fiont in court" at this stage of the proceedings was not easy, even supposing that the lawyers, who were probably not aware of the secret negotiations, were willing to agree to it. This was a serious hitch in the arrange- lueut. 123.] CoItTMBIA. Nov. 17. Hrni!Y HaVEMETKR, 15 West nth-st.. Km-York. Yet will have closed not act ministerially ar- rangements other to prevent my London which un- less court miiy parties com pell fear works Chili ot Monroe Rhine, simply left Blair certainty Ran- dolph with no a aud otlierwheres hope Bremen for PICKS. W. (Use Key VI., twice.) [Translation.] My parties have not closed yet. Fear Court will compel Returning Hoard to act ministerially, which mav prevent, unless other arrangtmicnt with com- missioners ot one county works. Press otherwlierea Chili, for no certainty here, simply a hope. Ran- dolph aud Blair left. The case was argued on the IGth. and on the 17th the Court issued an intermediary order, instructing the lioard to "canvass" the returns ministerially, in order to save time, and then to report the result to the Court. This was not a final decision of the cause; it only provided for a tabulation of the fig- ures as they stood, leaving open tbe question of the power of the board to revise and correct them. The work of tabulation was performed immediately, and showed a m.ajority for the Hayes electors ranginK from 230 to 1,133, the average being 800, and a mar jority for Hampton of 1,141. And hereupon the Democratic counsel did promptly "change front in court" aud demand that the board should be in- structed to go behind the returns and correct " man- ifest errors'" by tlie precinct reports which were in their possession! It was supposed that this was giving them just rope enough to let in Tilden but not enough to endanger the Democratic State ticket by allowing them to reject the intimidated counties of Edgefield and Laureus. The way being thus cleared. Smith Weed pushed his negotiations zealously. The following is not transposed : [24.] Columbia, raniEl>e Potomac river sent Cliicago L.oudou Edinbargh I»e river of Uauuke Kocliester given notes l>e of to America up Wanube EdinbnrgfU MS be upon smd land and Peters- burg Rliine a Jl S^ima parties of Amster- dam to of or Edinbiirgli tjlasgo^v Rliine BSussia's secure sball to-misUt packs so NetB-YorJc Tribune — Extra No. i4,—The Cipher Dispaiches. «Tery unless tbe try slioiild friends ■Warsa^v you to countermanding: tliingf beingp receive ^vltliout tlie ine from b}' and Xliames to sent inscription be sT'v^en the tor intimidation I and Ood's tear ft of Itararia friends and tiieir Liondon and sake plan Copenbasen in of wiitcii- inar careful let and Africa Petersburg- liere force are of can'»vUetIi«-r night and I^rance it have done '%Tarsa>v or be to Copenhagen deeidetl ^iunday -will go readj- tliis safe Btallimorc reach be once in you do at Africa li^ W. (Use Key IX., five times.) [Translation.! Majority of Itoiird have been se- cured! Cost is SO.OttO, to be sent as follows: One pat-eel of Uo.OOO ilnl- lars. one of 1«,000, :iud ont^ of S,000; all to be five bundred or one thousand bills ; notes to be de- posited as parties accept, and giveu up upon vote of land of aSampton \i. e. State of South Carolina] being given to Xilden's friends. 'I'he three ]>a4-]£s should be sent fvithout inscription, and to-night, unless you receive telegram from lue countermanding. Shall try to secure everything by tlie plan ol deposit. Ihe friends oi Chamberlain and Kavaria [?1 are here in force, and I fear tbeir money and careful vvatcliiiig and intimidation of Uoard. For <>;oo this at once, and have cash ready to reach ISalti- more Sunday night. Telegraph