- . ' '. . 'li'""' jj '''"' 'j'' ' E3a)oici to poliiics, literature, Slgriatlturc, Science, JHoralitn, anfc cncral Jntdligcucc. VOL is. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. NOVEMBER 4, 1858. NO. 46, Published by Theodore Schoch, TERMS.-Tw odolhirs per annum in advance-Two Moliars nd a q-jurter, half yuariv-and if not paid be- Yore the end of the voar, Two dollars and a half. No papers discontinued until all arrcarages.are paid, eaSSSo,,clinos)cr less, one.or throe insertions, si oo. Each additional inser- lion. 23 cents. Longer ones "in proportion. , , (Having a general assortment of large, plain and or Dumcntal Type, we are prepared to execute every de scription of Curds, Circulars, Hill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts, Justices. Legit i and other illanks, Pamphlets- fcc., pun led wlili neatness and despatch, on roason.ihlc terms 't this office. YE CAN CONQUER, IF YE "WILL. BY ANANIAS M. SAWYER. Hugged toiler son of labor Stoutly battling every day For existence 0, my brother, Tbou shalt triumph in the fray. On life's changeful field of action, Though defeat may oft appear, Thou shalt win the victor's la urels, If thou wilt but persevere. Though thou are obscure and lowly. Yc may reach the vi&bed for goal, Grasp the prizes, wealth and station, If thou hast a dauntless soul; If thou haft a resolution That misfortune cannot shake; One in which the angry surges An impression fail to make. Art thou sneered at and derided By the elf-stylcd lofty born! lleed ye not the fool's contumely, Or the weak mind's harmless scorn. Art thou friendless friends will gather, As do courtiers, kings around, When thou hast achieved distinction, AY hen thou hast position found. Strong in faith, let naught repel thee; Thou shalt in the end prevail; In life's trials, and iu its battles, None but dastard cowards fall; Noble natures prove ascend snt, In earth's tcighly contest rang; To renown from dark oblivion, Robed in glory up they sprang. What if years of fierce endeavor Have been spent by thee iu vain ? What if thou hast met disaster ! Up and take the field again. Wreck' and ruins all about thee, Give not up, but struggle still, Stubborn courge is resistless, Ye can conquer if ye will. Heat from the Stars. It is a startling fact that if the. earth were dependent alone upon the sun for hsat, it would not get enough to make the existence of animal and vegetable life upon its surface. It results from the re searches of Pouillct, that the stars fur nifh heat enough in the course of a year to melt a crust of ice S5 feet thick, al most as much as is supplied by the sun. This may appear strange when we con- ,dnr boirnvnr imme.isurab! v small must be the amount of heat received from any zens. have been lhc effects of permitting one of these distant bodies. Buttbeur- herself to be led, when she should have prise vanishes, when we remember that Placcd herself " the lead of indorsing the whole firmament is so thickly sown tbc opinions of others when she should with stars, that in some places thousands body have proclaimed her own. are crowded together within a space no The true Pennsylvania policy knows greater than that occupied by the full no 0,thi 110 South. East, no West moon.JDr. Larder. , lt bcl,,g tbat w,uch teuds 10 promote the . ; good of all, whether farmers, or planters, Heat of the SEoon. ', miners or manufacturers, makers of rail- Prof. Piazza Smith, the Astronomer ' radX or owners of ships. It is that pol Royal of Euglaud, iu his interesting ac- icj wbicb seeks to obtain perfect freedom count of a Tciontific expedition to the ' of commerce among ourselves, and with Peak of Teneriffe, has fcotatresttbo vex- world at large, by means of such ed question of the heat of moonlight. He . measures of protection as bhall enable all ays that his themomepcal instruments to unite in the effort to increase the pro were sensibly afiected by the moon's rays, ductivnoss of the labor of each aud all even at the lowest of two stations occu- ere being a perfect harmony in tho pied bv him at different elevation. In real and permanet interests of every sec tropica'l climates meat which is exposed tiou of country, and every portion of our to the moonlight rapidly becomes putrid, population. That the existence of suoh and in the Indies, the negroes ubo lie harmony may have tho chance of being sweltering end uncovered beneath the full ! lly demonstrated, but little is now re glare of tropical sun, carefully muffle ! qred, except another long pull, another their heads and faces when exposed to tho strong pull, and another pull all together, bv the men of tho Keystone State. To awelliug and distortion of their features, , and sometimes even blindness. Large Bells. Bayard Taylor, in an exceedingly in teresting letter from Moscow, gives an account of tho great bells of that city largest and most costly in the world. The Russians have a peculiar pencliant Jot large bells. The largest among them "which is on the town of Kremlin, was .cast by order of the Empress Annie, in 1730, and weighs one hundred and twen ty tons. It is twenty-one feet high, and twenty-two feet in diameter at the bottom. It cost one million and a half of dollars. There is another bell near it which weighs sixty-four tons. It takes three men to awing its tongue. It is only rang three times a year and then all the other bells are silent. It is said the vibration of the air which it causes when rung, is like the simultaneous discharge of a hundred can nons, - An editor up in Minnesota saya that iatas n rer Lpp7 but once in his life, and that was on Pa warm summer's day "hen he lay in the laps of two blooming Maidens, being fanned by a third, and pissed by all three. "Gouhl" 'to the people of Pennsylvania. FELLOW-CITIZENS: A great victory having been achieved, wc desire, on tho ; ; lOminittce 01 oevcnty-OIX, appointed at a meeting of tho friends of the National Industry in all its branches, held in this . . r , e T xr city on the loth of June, to oner you our congratulations, not only on the triumph itself, but on the proof it furnishes of the following fact1: That, in tho necessity for protecting the farmer in his efforts for bringing to his door the market for his products, and thereby economizing the tax ot transpor tation, Americans, Whigs, Democrats and Republicans have found the solid platform which they may securely stand, j That men of all pursuits of life farmers J and mechanics, miners and furnace-men, J laborers and capitalists, traders and ! transporters have arrived at the kuowl j edgo that they have a common interest in i endeavoring so to diversify tho demands ; for labor as to bring together the produ ccrs and consumers of the country, j That they awake to tho destructive ten- dencies of a system which burdens tho nation with a foreign debt that already ; counts by hundreds of millions rcquir- i . .. m 111 .1. inn tue remittance oi proDaniy tuirty millions of dollars annually, for tho pay ment of interest alone: That they are unwilling further to sus tain a policy which condemns their own coal and ore to remain useless in the ground, while draining the country of the precious metals to pay for foreign iron: That they do not desire longer to be compelled to pay lor foreign labor, while American laborers aro badly fed and badly clothed, because unemployed: That the belief is a necessity for total change in our domestic and foriugn pol , icy is rapidly becoming general through out the State: That it ueed but union among our selves to secure the permanent adoption of a system that shall restore prosperity to the people, harmony to the relations of the States, and dignity and character to the administration of the Federal Gov ernment. The power to accomplish such a change fellow-citizens, is in the hands of Penn sylvania, and it is needed only that she exercise it. Placed as she is, betweon the North and the South great as she is in her natural resources powerful as she is, by reason of her wealth and popula tion .-he may, if bho will, guide and di rect the policy of the Union. Blind, however, to her true interests, she has, but two often permitted herself to be har nessed to the car of some ambitious and unprincipled demagogue, who, in consid eration of favor to himself, has helped to sacrifice his dearest interests lending his aid to the closing of her mills and furnaces and to the expulsion of. her work- men, and thereby depriving her farmers of the advantage resulting from having a market near at hand. The consequen ces exhibit themselves in the fact that sbo has had no real influence in the Union her votes having been obtained by means of frauds like that of "Polk, Dallap, and the Tariff of '42," while bhe herself, when asking attention to her interests, has been treated as a mere pauper, scekins: to be fed at the public cost. Such, fellow-citi that end we invite your further coopera tion, pledging ourselves that, in the ef fort for its accomplishment, our city will fully perform its share. HENRY C. CAREY, JAMES MILLIKEN, WM. D, LEWIS, j Committee G. N. ECKERT, J- of J. W. O'NEILL, j Correspond WILLIAM ELDER, j ence. THOMAS BALCH, J Philadelphia, Oct. 20, 185S. Handsome Men. One of our exchanges contains tho fol lowing curious remarks relating to hand some men: "If you aro ever threatened with a handsome man in the family, just tako a clothes-pounder while be is yet in bed, and batter his head to a pumice. From some causo or another, handsome men are invariably asses; they cultivate their hair and complexion so much, tbat they fimfi to think nf their brains. By the time they reach thirty, their heads and hands are equally soft. Again, we say, if you wish to find an intelligent man 'just look for one w. h feature, so rough , that they might use his face for a nutmeg ,grater. "Water is Food. Tell the first man you meet that water is on the whole more nutritious than roast! is as much an eddiblo as the white of an egg, and it is probable that ho will throw anxious glances across the street to as sure himself that your keeper is at hand. Mako the same statements to the first man of science you meet, aud the chan ces are that he will think you very igno- rant of orgauic chemistry or that you are nlavinc with a Daradox. Nevertheless, it is demonstrably true, and neer would city, was enacted at 217 West Thirtieth : ing kindly furnished our reporter with a have worn the air of a paradox, if men street, last night. Francis A. Gouldy, ' verbal statement of tho several cases, as had steadily conceived the nature of an a young man twenty years old, -literally 'follows : elementary substance. That it is an ail- butchered the family, undoubtedly killing j Mr. Gouldy, the father, was struck up ment that nourishes; whatever we find in is father and ono servant girl, inflicting .on the left side of his skull, in two places, the organism, as a constant and integral .injuries which may prove fatal to his step; the axe entering into the substance of the either forming a part of its structure, or J mother, two brothers, and another serv-j brain. A large piece of bone, nearly as one of tho conditions of vital processes , ant girl, and crowning the terrible crime tlarge as the palm of one's hand, was do tbat, and that only, deserves tho name of with self-murder. jtached by the surgeon, and with it came ailment. If, "to nourish tho body") The family consisted of Francis Gouldy; ' portions of the substance of the brain. means'to sustain its waste if food enter8(Jaue A., his secoud wife, three sons, 1 The wound was partially closed, a suffi iuto the living structure and if all the Francis A., the homicide; Nathan, four-jcient opening being left for the passage integral constitnents of that structure aro teen years old; Charles Wesley, five years of fluids. ' The case is considered hope derived from food there can bo nothing j old; a daughter, Mary Eliza, fifteen; two'esse The patient is wholly unconscious, improper in designation as nutritious small children, two aud four years old, j aod iu all probability cannot recover, those eubstances which have an enormous ' and two servant girls, Elizabeth Carrand j Mrs. Gouldy, the mother, who is end preponderance among the integral con-, Joanna Murphy. ente received three wounds upon the bead, stitucnts. People who think it paradox- It appears that the young man Fran-,two of which were scalp wounds, from one iesil fn fi.ill wat,(p frmrl will Annan their cis had contractfid fiomn h.ihifs which dis. i to two inches in leu2th. The third wound surpriso on learning that water forms two-tuirds ot the living body. Is that also Thine. A beautiful replv is recorded of a Dal- ecarlian peasant, whose master was dis - playing to him the grandeur -of his es- tates. inarms, nouses, and torests were, pointed out in succession, on every hand, as the property of the rich proprietor who summed up fiually by saying: "In short all that you can see in every direction belongs to me. The poor man looked thoughtful for a moment, then pointing up to heaven, solemnly replied, "And is Tiiat also thine?" And is not this a question which may well be addressed to every one who is re joicing in the multitude of his riches; who as he looks around him, sees tho mercies that have been poured into his lap; may he not be asked "Is heaven also thine?" And if such a question may be asked of the rich, may it not be asked of all, whether rich or poor! And may we not in all sincerity ak the reader to weigh well the words "Is Heaven also thincV Heavy on the Foot. An Iowa paper reports a ladie's foot race which came off on the 20th of Sep tember, at Iowa City, the prize for which was a very handsome silver cake basket. The distance was one hundred yards, and there were seven entries. Miss Handy and Mrs. Cross led the field handsomely, and they ran so even breast and breast that when they came in the judges were of opinion that it was a dead heat. In deed, on measuring their tracks as im printed on the score, the heels of both wero found exactly parallel, but Miss Handy's foot extending by reason of its length four inches in advance of Mrs. Cross, the prize was given in her favor. Cure for Bronchitis. One of our cleverest and most reliable friends, says the Holy Springs Herald, in forms us that mullen leaves smoked iu a new pipe one in which tobacco has nev er been used is a sure and certain cure for bronchittis. The remedy is simple and innocent aud within the reach of all. Recollect that this is no retired physician's remedy, but is given to us by a citizen ofjher door and remained in her our county, who has tried it himself; and has never known it to fail iu effecting a permanent euro. An Irish housemaid who was sent to call a gentleman to dinner found him en gaged in using a toothbrush. "Well, is he coming?" said tho lady of the house, as the servant returned. "Yes, ma'am, directly," was the larconio reply; "bo's sharpening bis teeth." Die "Swaetz'' Republikans haben ein3ial alt berks gewunne! Gottim liimmel, wits hat der Comet getkan! Es ist cin umlaufendcr bericht das wo die Schulc Hyatem nicht sehr pop ular ist, and besonders do unten "Alt Berks" das die neulich Wahl gross oin fiuss gehat habe von dem feuriche Comet, wo stossend durch den himmel farht, mit "zehn hundcrttausend meile Kopf, und billiono bundniss von eim Schawnz." 8gy"I say, friend, your horse is a II fi le contrary, is ho not?" "No, sir-ee." "What makes him stop, then?" "He's afraid somebody will say whoa, and he won't hear it." BST"Jane, what letter in the allaphot;a gCenA of blood and horror too painful do you like tbo best?" "Well, I don't like to say, Mr. Snooks." "Pooh, nonsense, tell right out, Jane; which do you like beat?" "Well, (blushing and drooping her eyes) I liko U the best." To Remove Ink. Spots. To remove ink spots from linen, take a piece of tal low, melt it, and dip the spotted part of the linen into the melted tallow; the linen may then bo washed, and the spot will disappear without injusing the linen. HORRIBLE TRAGEDY IN THIRTI - IflTJI flTHIWi ftlfonV VAIffi , rn... O j "- 7- r7 7.7-. 71T 7 7 , j.uu otv vuuo vrtris j. rrouuuii m utitu. Ihclimmcidebloivsout his own brains The carpets an(J furnUuro in , with a Pistol Appearance of tliepar.xoom through which the murderer had ties and premises. Great Ezcttement. passed! ere 5tained wilh bloo(L lull Particulars. j Dr. john G Sewa)lj 234 West 30th From the New York Post, Oct. 27th. I street, was callod in, with some other phy- One of the most bloody and horrible tragedies which ever took place in this ! pleased his father. He was out too late nigtits and wanted too much money, ilisj lather refused to give him a night key, ! J-nrce small pieces or Done were removed, but would get up and let him inwhen he:and tue wounds closed. In addition to came home of nights, and, perhaps, re-'these, she received two punctured blows buke him for his unseasonable hours. It UP0D her right arm, causing severe con- 'ia stated, also, that Frank, as he was oall-, ed, yesterday took a bank book from his father s drawer, which the old frpntlpmnn ' i i - w -w i pronounced no better than stealing. Whatever the provocation or cause,tParatlvey comfortable, but her condition Frank went home about ten o'clock last extremely critical, and her injuries ve- t night The family had retired, with the exception ot tbo father, who was sitting in a front room on the second floor. His wife was in bed in the room adjoining in the rear, and the two small children were in a crib in the room with their mother. Mrs. Gouldy says that as Frank came in, she was just retiring, and he said to her, "Why, mother, aro you up yet?" "Yes, Frank," was the reply, "I am up yet." He then passed into the room where Mr. Gouldy was, and she heard some un pleasant words pass between the two', and fiually heard a heavy fall on the floor. She had just got into bed, and thought to herself, "Is it -possible Frank has struck hia father TV and at that moment Frank came into her room, partially raised the netting from around the bed, and dealt her a heavy blow on tho head with a hatchet. She screamed and sprang up, and he repeaten the blow twice, when she fell heavily to the floor, breaking down tho netting as she fell. The murderer then passed through the hall bedroom where his two brothers slept. They had both gotten up, hearing the noise, and he struck each a murderous blow on the head with the same hatchet ho had used upon his father and mother. He left them both prostrate and covered with blood, and passed on to tho stairs and ascended to tbo third floor. Tho apartments on the third floor were occupied by himself, his sister Mary, and the two servants. The servants had heard the noise, and were in the hall of tho upper floor as he went up stairs. He immediately attacked them with the same fatal hatchet prostrating each with a frightful blow upon tho head. Mary bearing tho struggle and screams of the servants, opened her door, and looking out, saw tho girls covered with blood, but did not recognize her brother. Believing it to bo a burglar, sho locked room. Had sho known it was her brother, she would have rushed out; in which case she would probably have been murdered. After committing this series of atro cious crime, it is believed the himicidc wont down stairs, pulled off his boots and coat, and donned slippers and morning gown, in which costume ho returned to his room. But Mary, meantime, had not been i dlo. She had raised her window, and cried "murder I" And officers Morehouse and Hull, of the Twentieth Ward Police, who were standing on the corner of Ninth avenue and Thirty-first street, heard her cries, her room being in the rear of the house. They immediately wont to the house, but tho door was locked; which delayed their entrance for some time,but they suc ceeded, with some labor, in forcing the door. It is probable that Frank heard them, and found that ho was detected. Be this as it may, before they found him ho took a three-shooter, which was heavily load ed, and placiug the muzzle to his head he fired. Tho ball entered just above tho right ear, and passed out just over the left eye, causing instantaneous death. The alarm having been given, the neighbors rushed to the spyt. and beheld to describe. Tho father lay upon the floor entirely uncouscious with hia face Bnd nead Datti- ed in blood. In the next room tho moth- am Inn linlnlnco o tl fl 111 Mlf hfl.ll llPfl VCif TTI tho two boys were prostrato, and one of! and ho began to contemplate more deci tlinm onncnlosq nnri in t.lifi tinner hflll theided action, ne had a fearful altercation two servants lay also covered with blood, one of them tossing her arms in delirium; while the author of the appalling tragedy Inv liffflnH8To'ri the flnnr nf his ownrOOtn still graspirig'the fatal pistoHri his right jjau ! The two small children and Mary were 'the 0Dhr ones unharmed. As the affrih- tea neighbors passed throueu the i room two years old, sprang up and said pleasantly, ij m nf i.ri sicians, whoso names we did not learn. He oxamined the wounds, and this morn- penetrated the substance of the brain, a- ooul lwo mcnes aoove tue rigut ear. tusions. The patient complains of more Pa'D from the wounds upon her arms than r om tuose on tier ueuu. Jiopes are en- . tertamed of her recovery, as she is com rJ dangerous jluo Doy rsatuan received a blow on the right side of the head, cutting up the scalp' for three inches, and detaching a large piece of the temporal bone, with portions of the parietal bone, several pie ces of whioh were removed. His condi tion is also extremely critical. Conscious ness, however, is perfect. Charlie, the boy of five, received a blow about an inch and a half from the medi an liBe near the vertex, which communi cated with the substance of the brain. The edge of the wound were brought to gether, and the condition of the patient is comfortable but dangerous. The servants were taken to the Hospit al immediately in a carriage, where Jo anna Murphy died of her injuries this mi i xt i i i morning. Tho girl, Elizabeth Carr, was danger ously wounded, and probaply cannot re cover. Indeed the condition of all the victims of this unnatural crime is extremely crit ical, and it would not be a matter of sur prise if none of them should recover. When-Frank, the homicide shot him self the ball entered about two inches a bovc the right car, making a frighful wound, and fracturing the skull in vari ous directions. From tho wounds the brains flowed freely and lodged on the floor, mingled with clotted blood. Mr. Gouldy is about fifty years of age. He is a trustee in the Methodist Church, of which Mr. Crawford, the man who was shot at in his pulpit by an insane man a week ago last Sunday evening is pastor. He was formerly a lumber merchant, and had retired from business with an ample fortune. He was esteemed by his church as an oxcmplary Christian, and by all who know him as an upright honorable citizen. His wife and daugtcr, wo be lieve, are also members of the same church. Frank, the murderer, was awakened by tho revival last winter, and joined the church on probation, or "on trial," aB it is more generally callod. Bat he soon apparently lost all interest in religion, and returned to the habits which his father hoped he had renounced forever. It is said his father has urged him to attend family prayer in tho eveuing but that ho has of late refused to do so. Ho had been placcd in a lawyer's office, but, uot liking tho profession, had been taken a way, and a situation procured for him in a hardware store. Captain Curry, of tho Twentieth Precinct, states that he was well acquainted with him, and bad him with himself in a real estnto office, in the lower part of towu, some years ago, just before ho had decided to choose mercan tile pursuits. Tho young man had not acquired bad habits at the time, andjs said to have been free from tho use of in toxicatinng drink. It appears, however, that for some time past he had been ac customed to stay from home late at night, which had been the source of much ap prehension in the family. His father had, repeatedly admonished and chided him, assuring bim that he would destroy his character, and ruin his future prospect-', by such irregularities. There bciug no amendment of his conduct, the father as sured him that it could not be tolerated; that he must become steady and regular. Rumors came at leugth to his parents that Francis had been seen at disreputa bio places, and in impropper company. I This roused the old centlcman's temper with his son, who loft the house, mOroso and sulky, muttering vengeance. JNo re formation ensued. Last night the family liad retired except tho father, who sat' up ! in waiting. The young man earn a home, U little past two, and being admitted, was again chided, and went up stairs in a fit of rage. A few moment afterward he came down again, and perpetrated tho awful deeds just narrated. About nine o'clock last night, Mr. Campbell, who lives next door to thV scene of tho murder, saw him at the cor ner of Thirtieth st. and Eighth avenue, apparently much excited, carrying some thing in hi&hnud wrapped in paper, and oing hurriedly towards home. He be lieves it to bare been the hatchet. Subsequently to this however, he was seeu in Showler's oyster saloon, No. 355, Eighth avenue, where he took refresh ments, and conversed pleasantly. Ho was in company with a son of tho late Dr. Doane, and Mr. Horn, a nephew of Mayor Tiemann. He made an appoint ment while there to meet an acquaintance to-day. The Latchet which he used in the exe cution of his murderous designs is dull, and has the appearance of having been? used for opening boxes. The knife is an ugly weapon a butch er's knife with an inch and a half blade, six inches long and four-inch handle. Ic looks like a new weapon, and haB lately been made very sharp. The Recent Brutal Prize Fight. The fight between Morrisey and Hee nan for ($2500 a side, which took place in Canada, on the 20th ult., termiriaterf in favor of Morrissey. Heenan was not in a healthy condition, having been con fined to his bed for a few days before tho fight from the effects of an ulcer on tho shin, caused years ago, by a b!w from a pickaxe in California. The fight took place on a barren sand1 bank, at Long Point, Canada, 78 miles from Buffalo, the parties being conveyed there in three steamboats. About twelve hundred persons were present, and eleven rounds were fought when both men were evidently worn out with fatiguo. Heenan exhausted himself by his previous efforts, and in striking at bis opponent missed him, spun round with the force of his own blow, and fell in a fainting fit. His seconds wero unable to revive bim for the next round when the time was called he was unable to stand, and a3 Morris sey appeared at the scratch he was de clared the victor. The rini: was imme diately filled with Morrissey's friends, who surrounded bim yelling and scream ing their congratulations in his ears. He was too far goue to speak, but he made an attempt to smile, which was a most ghastly thing to see, His eye was near closed; his mouth cut, and lips swollen' his tongue vissible through the blood; and his nose literally battered flat to his face. Heenan save hiss wollcn lips from the severe "upper cut" he received, scarcely showed a mark. His exhaustion was en tirely due to his being out of condition aud to his own tremendous exertioos,and not to any punishment he received from' his adversary. Ileeuaii eame within an ace of whip ping Morrissey inthefintround. The first blow ho made was with his righthand, catch' ing Morrissey fairly on hiseye,and instant ly followed with a terrifscielt-handed blow on the nose, staggering Morristey and drawiug the first blood. Heenan then followed Morrissey to the ropes, adminis tering such a series of terrible blows that Moriissey was as helpless as a child before him. When he got Morrissey to the ropea he aimed at him oue of his most powerful left-hand blows, whioh, had it taken effect would instantly have ended the fight, but Morrisey dodged aud Heenan's hand struck one of the stakes with such force as to break the third and fourth knuckles of his hand. Morrissey saw his danger and closed, but was thrown by Heenan with perfect ease. This round astonished not only Morrissey but all his friends; they had anticipated an easy victory, but every one -saw that Morrissey was even now almost whipped. This round lasted' 4i minutes, and is said by those who pro fess to know, to have no equal in the an nals of tho ring for powerful and persist ent hitting. Tho feeling of all who witnessed the battle is that Morrissey's winning was' solel' due to his undoubted pluck and as tonishing power of enduring severe pun ishment, and not in tho least degree to tho scieuco displayed by him. Ail the fighting was done by Heenan, who recei ved not ono blow to Morrissey's twenty, aud had he bceu in a proper condition to fight the result ttight have been very dif ferent. Within eight hours after the bat tle Heenan offered S1C00 to $S0O that Morrissey is not the better mau of theu two, the point to be decided iu tho ring' within three months, but he found no takers. Morrissey has declared his intention' to retire from tho ring and to fight no more, but Hceuan will never rest satfsfkd until h has either beaten Mr. Morrissey or until that gentleman has pummelled into him a thorough convictiou that the Benicia Boy cau never become the Cham pion of America. After the fight, the parties, with their friends aud admirers, filliug three steam--boats, returned to Buffalo. Upon land ing at the wharf, Heenan immediately' proceeded to tho Bloomer Houso where he washed his face, aud then took supper with some friends. His face showed no marks save a very slight discoloration un der ono eye, and bis lips wero slighly swollen from a blow which cut his lips a gaiust his teeth. His left baud was bound; up, tho two knuckles being broken.'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers