By Senator Yutzy:
Q. Did you call upon the mayor for assistance before you called upon the sheriff?
A. I did not personally. Mr. Watt informed me he did. He can give you that.
Q. Was General Pearson connected with the sheriff's office at that time as a deputy?
A. I don't know.
Q. You stated he was counsel for the sheriff?
A. Oh, no. I stated to the sheriff that I was calling upon him as counsel for the railroad company, and I insisted that he ought to have his own counsel to guide him in determining his duty in this emergency; but, saying that Mr. Carnahan was his regular counsel, and that he could not send for him, he went to the depot without him, with a deputy named Haymaker. When we reached the depot General Pearson was there, saying he had been requested by the Adjutant General to be there. When Sheriff Fife saw him there, he turned to me and said: "Mr. Scott, I know him, and for this occasion I will be governed by his counsel." General Pearson was not there as a deputy or a clerk, but in obedience to the dispatch of the Adjutant General, and the sheriff, finding him there, was governed by his counsel at that time.
By Senator Reyburn:
Q. Have you any knowledge as to who sent for the troops at Philadelphia, who ordered them here?
A. I have no other knowledge of it than that which came in the dispatches that night, which was that the Adjutant General had ordered them. A dispatch came from Mr. Quay saying that the Governor had ordered out the militia.