! . - - - 1--- . - , • \ . - .6,,••••••• , ,'"..........." i )• 1 \ \ • 'b ~ ~ • L f , 1r t ' 1 \‘‘ 1 . ....,...,..., )) A family paper=--proola to Philo, gricalturt, fittrathrt, e3rience, Art, foreign, ilowestir oar Iran* jutelligena l ttr. 1 138TAIRalii'D IN 1813. IRE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER) rvsmslizn BY it. W. JONES be JAMES S, JENNINGS WAYNESEITRO, GREENE CO., PA MI - OFFICE NEARLY OPPOSITE THE PUBLIC sguAßE..ni iIIaIMUICt Suiscatrrtos.— WM in advance; $2.25 at the ex- Oration Of siX Months; $2.51:1 after the expirmion of the year. ADVERTINAMINTR inserted at $1.25 per square for tree insertions, and 25 cm. a square for each addition• al insertion; (ten lines or less counted a square.) frr ♦ liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. air Jon Paturtno, of all kinds, executed in the best style, and on reasonable terms, at the "Messenger" Job Mee. SO - No paper sent for a longer period than ONE YEAR without be ing paid for. 1141 quesburg giusintss earbs. IFilifflEs ALTTOBRZYS. Oft. L. WYLY. 3. A. .I. DIJCBAXAN, D. IL P. HUSS WYLY, BUCHNNAN & HUSS, ttorneys & Counsellors at Law, WAYNESBURG, Int 111 practice in the Courts of Greene and adjoining mutates. Collections and other legal business will re delve prompt attention. Office on the South side of Main street, in the Old Sank Building. Jan. 28, 1863.-13, 4. •• PURX•I4. 3 O. PURMAN & RITCHIE, ATTORNEYS AND couNenloßs AT LAW, Waynesburg, Pa. Or °Fru - lc—Main Street, one door east of the old Bink Building. grail Jusineu in Greene, Washington, and Fay sate Counties, entrusted to them, will receive promp. munition. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. R. W. DOWNWir, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW irrOlßee in I edwith's Building, opposite the Court Bonne, Waynesburg, Pa. B. A. I'CaNNELL, CONNELL 1111 V & ITTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LA IV Waynesburg, Pa. Ww"Office In the "Wright se." East Door. Collectioris, &c.. will receive prompt attention. Waynesburg. April 93, 1862-Iy. DAVID CRA WFORD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office on Main Street, Saw and nearly opposite the Bank, Waynesburg, Pa., July 30, 1863.—1 y. ME= BLACK & PHELAN, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW Office in the Court Douse. Waynesburg. {.pt. IL 1861-Ir. SOLDEBREP WAR CLAIMS! D.Nt.. MET:7IIIIEIs ATTORNEY AT LAW, WAYNESBURG, PRNNA., PAS received from the War Department at Wash- Wigan city. D. C., official copies of the several ws paned by Congress, and all the necessary Forum and Instructions for the prosecution and collection of pr e hrsio.4vx, BOUNTY, BACK PAY, due dis- AdiMIWWI and disabled soldiers, their widows, orphan Alkildnes, widowed mothers, fathers, sine's and broth , ors. whkh business, (upon due notice] will be attend ed to promptly. and accnnuely, if entrusted to his care. Office In the old Dank Building.—April 8, 1863. G. W. G. 1117,ADDSTAL, ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOR AT LAW, cirincE in Campbell's Row opposite the iiamilion ti„,,IF Roam, Waynesburg, Penns. &SAM.** of all Muds solicited. Um received official copies of all the Saws mimed by Congress, and other necessary instruc tions for the collection of PENSIONS, BOUNTIES, BACK PAY, Use dberharged and disabled soldiers, widows, Orphan etilkhern. kc.. which Mishima if intrusted to his cme 'dl t o promptly attended kJ. bitty 13. '63. Payll/011.ANS row A• G. moss WOULD very respectfully tender his services as a PUYSICIAN &ND SURGEON, to the people of Wayheaburg and vicinity. He hopes by a due appre ciates of hutnen life and health, and strict attention to Onaluess, to merit a share of public patronage. Wapepaburg. January 8. 1861.. Pa. A. J. IJOGY itISSPECTFULLY offers his services to the citizens of Waynesburg and vicinity, as a Physician and WWII- Offloe wpm* rise Republican of cc. Re hopes by a dim appreciation of*. laws of human lift riad health, so native medication, and strict attention to business, to merit a liberal sham of public patronage. April 9, 1902.. M. A. HARVEY, Druggist and Apothecary, and dealer H. Paints and Oils, the moot celebrated Patent Medicines, and Pure It; for medicinal purposes. .11,11161-Iy. WM. A. PORTER, Wheats.le and Retail Deals, in..r*la and Douses e Dry goods, Groceries, Notions, Ste., Main street. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. CLARK, Dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Queens mare and notions, in the H>•ptilten House, opposite MN Gourt House. Main street. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. MINOR & CO., Ditaieva in Foreign and botneatic Dry Goads, Oro itaft*, cineanawAra,Hardwant and Notions, opposite ilts.ardiaMain tapt. 11, 19111-Iy, !wow AND SNOB DILILINDS COSGRAY, Opel and Mute maker. Main street, nearly opposite Wirttler's and Drosses Bank." Every style of and 11b6es constantly on hand or tuade to order. *.llltipt. 11, 1861-Iy. OROCIMUMB & VARIZTIIS JOSEPH YATER, Dealer in 010CaiII and Confeetiewies. Alledletsee r rernmeries, Liverpool Wire, A.c.„ Mass nt aßFattalw and Gilt Nolaldiom and Looking oho, Plates. UDlob t naili forlialed *Wad Apples. efli—ly. - - ----- JOHN NIUNNELL, ~ropetin ini :s4 o ,l==m k i e Variety ateau. 4.111.101151115!!!!!19!lik ' romerzwir ' - .. orsN & DOWNEY, ,A t we tr - Fousdry. ea GISMO 011ile !Niel, M= 2 4 = 1- • 4 . ti: J. J. 1113/11IAN JOHN PHILA X Aokiticts istlitantots. A HINDOO SACRIFICE, The following account of the sacri fice of a llindoo woman, on the fun eral pile of her husband, is an ex tract of a ',letter from a young lady in Calcutta, to her friends in this country. The writer is a native of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, where her parents now reside : CALCUTTA, June 18. I open my letter, my dearest friends, to tell you I have witnessed one of the most extraordinary and horrid scenes ever performed by hu man beings, namely : • the self im molation of a womau on the funeral pile of her husband. The dreadful sacrifice has made an impression on my mind, that years will not efface. I thank God that I was born in a Christian land and instructed in the Christian religion. This event is so recent, I can hardly compose myself sufficiently to relate it. Last night I could not close my eyes, nor could I drive this martyred woman from my recollection. I am almost sick to-day, and I am sure you will not wonder at it. But this ceremony is so much celebrated, And by my countrymen so much doubted, that I was resolved to see if such "deeds could be." I hava seen; and the universe would not induce me to be present on a similar occasion—l cannot realize what I have seen—it seems like a horrible dream. Yesterday morning at 7 o'clock, this woman was brought in a pal anquin, to the place of sacrifice. It is on the banks of the Ganges, only two miler, from Calcutta. Her hus band had been previously brought to the river to expire, His disorder was hydrophobia—[think of the agony this must have occasioned him.] He had now been dead twen ty-four hours, and no person could prevail on the wife to save herself.— She had three children, whom she committed to the care of her mother. A woman, called to be undertaker, Was preparing the pile. It was com posed of bamboo tirwood, oils, rosin and a kind of flax,t altogether very combustible. It was elevated above the ground, I should say twenty inches, and supported by strong stakes. The dead body was lying on a rude couch, very near, covered with a white cloth. The oldest child a boy of seven years, who was to light the pile, was standing near the corpse. ' The woman sat perfectly un moved during all the preparations; apparently at prayer, and counting a string of beads, which she held in her hand. She was just thirty years old; her husband twenty-seven years older. The government threw every ob stacle in the way of this precedure. They were not strong enough to re sort to violent measures to prevent this abominable custom. Nothing but our religion can abolish it, and I do not believe there is a single particle of Christianity in the breast of a sin gle native in all India. These obstacles delayed the cere mony until five o'clock, when the permit trom one of the chief judges arrived. I".olice officers were station ed to prevent anything like compul• sion, and to secure the woman, at the last moment, should She , desire it. The corpse was now placed on the ground, in an upright posture, and clean linen crossed round the head, and around the waist, Holy water was then thrown over it by the child, and afterward oil by the Brahmins. it was then placed upon the pile, upon the left side. The woman now loft the palanquin, and walked into the river, supported by her brothers, who were agitated and required more support thin herself. She was di vested of all her ornaments; her hair hanging dishevelled about her face, which expressed perfect resig nation. Her forehead and feet were stained with a deep red. She bath ed in the river, and drank a little water, which was the only nourish ment she received after her husband's death. An oath was administered by the attending Brahmins, which is done by putting the band in holy water, and repeating from the Sinis ter a few lines. The oath was given seven Mmes. 1 forgot to say the child received an oath before the corpse was removed. The brothers also prayed over the body, and sprinkled themselves with consecra ted water. She then adjusted her own dress, which consisted of long clothes wrapped about her form, and partly over her head, but not so as to comae! her Sace. She bad in her hand a little box containing parting gifts, which she presented to her brothers, and to the Brahmins, with the greatest composure. Bed strings were then fastened roomd her wrists. Her child now pat a little rice in her mouth lirbieh was the last thing she receiv e 4 She raised her eyes to Heaven several times during the river ceremonies, which occupied ten or twenty minutes. She took , no no tice of her &Rd, Saviag taken leave of her *isle Weeds& 40 ebiltires (swig is the learning, A. little cap 0 14140110r*si . lialood by the *WI* , avow -an via7 .r . . , . to .. -.h i. IMO 11 1 016 01110011011.1 i VW UM illet WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, (863. of her husband, then, unaided, she passed three times around the pile. She now seemed excited by enthusiasm; some said of a religious nature, others, of affection for the dead. I do not pretend to say what motive actuated her, but she stepped up 'the pile with apparent delight, unassisted by any one, and threw herself by the side of the body, clasp ing his neck with her arm. The corpse was in the most horrid putrid state- She put her face close to his; a cord was slightly passed over both; light fagots and straw, with some combustible rosin, were then put upon the pile, and a strong bamboo pole confined the whole ; all this was done by her brothers. The child then applied the fire to the head of of the pile which was to consume both parents. The whole was in stantly on fire. The multitude shouted, but not a groan was heard from the pile. I hope and trust this poor victim expired immediately.— She undoubtedly died, without one struggle. Her feet ana arms were not confined ; and after the straw and fagots were burnt; we saw them in the same condition she had placed them. DRESSING WITH TASTE. It is stradge that with all the time American women bestow upon dress so few know how to prepare a simple toilet with taste. To be well dressed means, with most, to wear rich ma terial made up in rorgeous style, and with all the usual accessories of lace and jevelry, to add to the mag nificence of general effect. Never was a greater mistake. To be well dressed is only to have attire suited to the time, place and circumstances, made in a becoming manner. This attire may be a shilling calico or a rich silk, and yet in either, if it is adapted to the conditions we have mentioned, a woman may be well dressed. Where household duties have to be performed, and the care of children devolves upon the mis tress of a house, a neat dress, fitted gracefully to the person is much bet ter for morning wear than the faded remains of a more pretentious cos tume. Nothing looks more forbrn than to see a would-be lady per forming houshold offices, of not the most refined character, in an old torn or a dirty silk dress, or a soiled draggled wrapper. One of the se crate in dressing well is to dress ap propriately; another, to be careful of the details, the miniutice of the toilet. Indeed, a lady,whois particular about these minor matters can hardly ever be said to be ill dressed, as this deli cate refinement will 'not only excnse faults, but naturally show itself in the good taste which will guide her se lection, uo matter bow small the cost may be. Some persons have an ex treme horror of being "caught," as they call it, in a morning dresq.— Why they should be so sensitive on this point it is difficult to say. if it is clean, and adapted to the work in which t bey are engaged, th ere is no shame in wearing it, and, above all, it ought to be remembered that no attire is good enough for the family which is not good enough for mere acquaintances who may chance to favor you with their society. It is much better to be caugnt in a plai n morning-dress than to be caught very much over-dressed, as some un luktiky individuals are, at a small evening party. In one case there is real cause for mortification, in the other there is tzne. ?Kt DEATH OF GEL BARKSDALE. A correspondent of the Tribune, writing from tbe battle-fteLd of Get tysburg, July 6th, says • The following particulars of the death of the noted rebel General William Barksdale have just been communicated to me. Lieut. Col. Charles E. Livingston, of New York, A. A. G. on Major Gen. Doubleday's staff, on the night of Thursday, July 3d, wtnt out in the extreme front to discover if possible the body, he hav ing been informed by a prisoner of the locality where Barksdale was shot. The spot was about a quarter of a mile in advance of our pickets, and Colonel Livingston, with his par ty of stretchbearers was once driven in by rebel scouts. but on a second attempt was so fortunate as to be suc cessful. The body of the General was found; life was not extinet, but his wound was a mortal one. He was lifted upon the stretcher, and being a very heavy, person, eight men wore re quired to bear his weight. Ho de clared with his last breath that he was proud of the cause ho died in fighting for; proud of the manner in which he received his death wound ; that the rebels were invincible, and although repulsed to-day, they were sure of victory on •tbe morrow. He left with Col. Livingston his watch, pocket-book, and a few other trinkets, to be sent to his friends in Mississip. Pi. OfirGovernor Harding says that Brigham. Young is probably the rieb eat man in. A..neries. The is hole Morino° tribe •pay -to , lam at the rate of *boat 1140 palmed. aanneilly. At toe iprepor time of thayner, histeinno Wass nee wet oft to wither in Ike adisen of the harvest loolosiint to the Lord, i. e. his prophet Brigham. RIM BEGGARS. ( dance with the solemn season of There are multitudes of instances death. of beggars who, amid squalor, rags,', One curious circumstance regard and dirt, utterly miserable, contrive ing a beggar connected with the to amass considerable sums of money. town of Dumfries we can mention on For obvious reasons, they generally excellent authority; a son of his conceal their wealth during life, and passed through the class of Hurnani it is only when the breath is out of , ty, (Latin,) in the University of Ed their body that the golden hypocrisy ; in burgh, under the care of the prec is discovered. Usually the hoarded i ent Professor, 1863, Mr. Phillans." coins are found sewn up in rags or i ------------- straw beds, or otherwise hid in holes i A SAD CASE. and corners ;it is only in a few in- ; Night before last a scene took place stances that the beggar ventures to a t th e Mayor's office that brought inv e st his money in a bank. Chain- tears to the eyes of those who, a.:eus bers Book of Days, in discussing the tomed to the sight of trtan misery, subject, reports a few instances of seldom weep. On the floor of the this class of people. We quote : ' office lay the clothes of young Hobell "Among the many rceorded ex- ; who was drowned on Wednesday, aruples of rich beggars have been they having been brought there by a Daniel Eagle, who begged for thirty ; little boy who was with him when he years in London, and lived in a room was drowned, and who bad taken which was never entered by any them there, not knowing where his one but himself, and never cleaned mother lived. About dark, a poor during the whole period. After his but respectable woman entered the death coins to the value of twenty- , office, but no sooner did her eye five pounds sterling were found. I catch sight of the bundle of clothes Margaret Coles, who died in than recognizing them she threw wretched filth in St. Giles's, at the herself beside them, and for half an age of one hundred and one, and in ' hour her shrieks rent the air, and whose hovel was found thirty pounds her poor grief-laden heart seemed as in gold and silver, and ten pounds in though it would burst. At length copper. partially recovering herself, she told Margaret Everett, an equally her sad story. She was the mother sqalid beggar, who left one hundred of John Hobell. She had sent him and fifty sounds behind her. out in the morning at seven o'clock .Esher Davis, who died in London atto look after work, giving him strict the advanced age of one hundred orders not to go near the river for fear he might be drowned. Instead and three, and who, for thirty years, had the double chances of a street , ' beggar and a parish . pauper. She !of going in search of work he had gone to the river and her worst an left one haudred and sixty pounds. ' ticipations were realized. She had Mary Wilkiuson, beggar and bone- i re grubber, whose rags of clothing con- ; waited patiently all day for the cealed three hundred pounds in turn of her absent son, when becom ing alarmed, rho had started out in money. search of him, visiting the Mayor's Alice Bond. who had risen to the office in hopes of hearing of hi m .— dignity of three hundred pounds in The first thing that greeted her vie the funds, besides fifty in guineas. ion as she entered was his cicthes, and seven-shilling pieces, and twen- which were immediately recognized ty-three pounds in silver. iby the fond and doting mother. Who Francis Beet, whose bed and rick- can describe her anguish, or realize ety furniture yielded a booty of no her agony? No wonder that the less than eight hundred pounds. hardened cheeks of the by-stauders And 'Poor Joe all alone,' a famous were bedewed with tears. character about a century ago, wore a long beard, and had not i in a bed for fifty years; he left th. thousand pounds, and with it a wi by which be bequeathed all tl money to certain widows and o phans. Foreign countries are nest witho instances of like kind. Witness II case of Dandon, of Berlin, who dii in 1812. He was competent to teal as a professor of languages duri , the day, and want out begging night. After his death, twenty tbo sand crowns were found secret' under the floor of his room. He b refused to see a brother for thirt. seven years, because he once sef him a letter without prepaying tl postage. This Dandon, however, was example rather of the miser than . the beggar, popularly so considered Some beggars have been remarkr ble quite as much for their eccentric ity as for the amount of money they left behind them. Such was the case of William Ste venson, who died at Kilmarnock, on the 17th day of July, 1817. Although bred a mason, the greater part of his life was spent as a beggar.— About the year 1787 ; he and his wife separated, making this strange agree. ment—that whichever of them wt the first to propose a re-union shou!( forfeit one hundred pounds to the other. ...According to the statement in the Scotch pipers, there is no ev. deuce that they ever saw each othi again. In 1815, when about eight' Ave years old, Stevenson was seii with an incurable disease, and nonfinefi to his bed. A few days before his death, feel ing his end to be near, be sent for a baker, and ordered twelve dozen burial-eakes, a large quantity of su gar.ed biscuits, and a good supply of wane and spirits. He next sent, for a joiner, and instructed him to make a good, sound, dry, roomy, 'comfort able' coffin. Next he summoned a grave-digger, whom he requested to select a favorable spot in the church yard of Riccarton, and there dig a roomy and comfortable grave. This done, be ordered an old woman who attended him, to go to a certain nook, and bring him out nine pounds, to pay all these preliminary expen ses; assuring her that she was re membered in his will. Shortly after this he died. .4 neighbor came in to search for his wea lth, wbith had been shrouded in much mystery. In one bag was fbund large silver pieces, such se dol lars and half dollars, crowns and half-crowns; in a heap of musty rage was found acollection of guin eas and seven-shilling pieces; and in a box were found bonds ofvarious amounts, including one for three hundred pounds:—gsving altogether a sum of about nine hundred p oun d s. A . will was a lso found, begneathinii twenty pounds to the old woman, and most , of the remainder to distant relations, setting anedo.aialanier4 1,0 give 3 bast to aik OWb Uara ieba obese to name noftnee aoo4y else in state.' Tisminles Nip *wow; sa d, a Aer wan Sananasalt MOW, VI a bank wok& bAld b5e1106141114 , 11% the ocesaion ; and thene.4440040., ged la reveirla Ws little in weer- ONUS BY TIIE REBELS. Federal prisoners captured at Win chester, and recently paroled at Rich mond say the ladies captured, who were wives of officers, some twelve in number, were regarded as pris oners of war and have been subject ed to the most cruel treatment In Winchester they were confined by mbels in a small 'fort promiscuously with other prisoners, and on being releaßed wore furnished with accom odations for transit. to Richmond, several ladies being obliged to walk twenty or thirty miles. At every place they were booted at, insulted, and universally looked upon as Yan kee curiosities. On arriving at Rich mond they were closely imprisoned and treated as most of our prison ers have been before them. TOUCLUNO WAR INCIDENT.-A let ter from peel:lard, Tenn, says.—Near this place resides a lady who bas two eons in the rebel army, who one day last week, passed through her yard in a line of skirmishers in General Bragg's army. About fif teen minutes after two other sons in our army, in. an Illin9is regiment, passed the house with their regi ment. She bad not seen some of them for several years, and now met two in pursuit of the other two, fifteen minutes in the rear only, brother against bother. sirlefaisey it the ttay-dtwa ; youth is the, We rising ; insertit 'is the aunt is the seittaie*s. adrassemearaeasseeett thee. hass‘eil • may modem* tkii. CELEBRATED MANIACS. Dr. Winslow, in his work on "Ob scure Diseases of the Brain," seems inclined to think that many histor ical characters, "celebrated either for their crimes, brutality, tyranny, or vice, were probably of unsound mind, and that in many, undetected, unrecognized, unperceived mental diseases, in all probability, arose from cerebral irritation, or physical ill health." Frederick William, the father of Frederick the Great, the debauchee and drunkard, who treated his chil dren with marked cruelty, compell ing them to eat the most unwhole some and disgusting food, and crown ed his brutality by spitting upon it suffered from hypocbondriasis and great mental depression, once at tempting suicide. Judge Jeffreys was tortured by a cruel internal malady aggravated by intemperance. Damien persisted in declaring that had he been bled in the morning, as he wished, he never would have at tempted the r assassination of Louis XV. Caligula commenced his reign with mildness, and it was after a violent attack of bodily illness he began his career of cruelty, vice and crime. Frequently, long before an attack of insanity is clearly defined, the pa tient admits be is under the influence of certain vague apprehensions, un definable misgivings, and anxious sus picions as to the sane character of his emotions. Such sad doubts, fear ful apprehensions, mysterious, inex plitable forebodings, and distressing misgivings as to the healthy condi tion of the mind often induce the heart broken sufferer, convulsed with pain, and choking with anguish, prayerfully, and in accents of wild and frenzied despair, to ejaculate with King Lear: "0 let me not be mad, not mad, sweet !lessen : Keep me in tcmper-1 would not be swtd." Dean Swift had a singular present iment of his imbecility. Dr. Young walking one day with Dean Swift, sofne short distance from Dublin, suddenly missed Dean, who bad lag ged behind. He found him at a distance gazing in a solemn state of abstraction at the top of a lofty elm, whose. head had been blasted by a lrricane. He directed Dr. Young's ,tention to the summit of the tree, id, heaving a heavy sigh, exclaim "l shall he like that tree—l shall ,e at the top first." These words convey a solemn irning, in these days of fast living d perpetual mental toil, It be- _sores us all to take care we do not die at the top first," when a little `tention to what is going on within will keep up a healthy circulation the sap. NO DANGER OF ME. The inehriate's place *4"115 cr anticipated being; never thought it possible for him to occupy so low a place ; counted it among the remotest im probabilities of ever becoming a loath; - ime drunkard. "Alt !" says he, exult ,gly, "I can drink or let it alone, as I choose ; no danger of me ; other persons may be in danger, but I—no never 1" So thousands have talked and reasoned with `leinselves and friends, and then tope ail like the lamb to the slaughter, kiss ig the hand just raised to shed his blood. lrsons now in the last stages of drunken is would, ten years ago, have repelled ,e assertion as a gross insult, it their .esent condition had been foretold and inted out. If we were to say to young who occasionally take a social .:138 : Ten or fifteen years hence, if life is prolonged and the practice continued, you will have, become a gutter drunkard, equally vita and repulsive as others—un- doubtedly such persons feel themselves grossly insulted, and might leave utt in a rage. Yet have we not equal grounds of pre dicting such of you as of those who filled precisely your present place ten years ago, but now advanced to the vortex of ruin ? Do you claim for yourselves a better edu cation, a stronger mind and greater powers of resistance that those who have fallen t How do we know each to be the case ? By what standard is our strength meas ured? Did not they utter the same things when in our place ? And where are they now ? Just where their self-deception and tippling habits have brought them.— Many, very many stronger aim our selves. have, notwithstanding their boast ed ability, made the terrible plutge.— Pereons of ripe and finished education, of the highest order of talent, brought up at t he feet of divine instruction, tilling scale of the most lucrative and responsible po sitions either in Chuxuls or State, have, from the practice of early social drinking, bowel to the fate of unalterable intemper ance.—Rev. J. S. .8109648. The happiest man is the benevo lent one, for he owns etoek in the happiness of mankind. NiirA conceit of knowldge is the great est enemy to knowledge, and the greatest Irgellasat of ignOrrisetk Ilifr•We are never well informed of the troth, till wear@ cootormod to the truth. NEW SERIES.--VOL, 5, NO. 9. From Washington—The Draft WASHINGTON, Friday, July 20,'63. —The following are announced as rendezvous for drafted men for the States named : Maine—Portland. New Hampshire—Concord. Vermont— -Brattleboro. Massachusetts—Springfield. New York—Buffalo, Elmira, Rik er's Island, New York City. Pennsylvania—Philadelphia, York and Pittsburgh. New Jersey—Trenton. Maryland—Annapolis Junction . Ohio--Camp Chabe, Columbus, Camp Dennison, Cincinnati. For the pdrpose of receiving and conducting to the several regiments the dratted men assigned to fill them up, commanding Generals of Depart ments and Armies will immediately detail from each three years' regi ment in their commands belonging to the States above enumerated, three commissioned officers and six enlist ed men, and direct them to report without delay to the commanding officer at the rendezvous for their State. In States which have more than one rendezvous, detachments for their respective regiments will be instructed to report to the command ing officer of the rendezvous nearest where the regiment was recruited and organized. Commandants of rendezvous will be informed of the number of drafted men to be sent to the regiment. They will lose no time in preparing detachments and placing en route regiments as soon as the requisite number can be made up. The Dangers of a Rattle-Mehl. The Harrisburg Union says:— "There are many dangers connected with the battle field, even after 'the burly burly's done, and the battle lost and won.' Loaded guns and small arms of all kinds, and unexplod ed shells, which burst with the alight ost blow upon their percusion caps, lay thickly over the deserted field ready to hurl down death among careless saunterers and curiosity seekers. Several fatal accidents of this nature have already occurred at the scene of the late battle at Gettys burg. On Friday morning last, Mr. Solomon Warner, of York, who was engaged in hauling muskets off the field, waci killed by the accidental die charge of one of the guns whilst un loading .it. The ball went through the heart, killing him. Edward si. Woods, son of Alexander Woods, liv ing near Gettysbnrg,accidcntalky ahot his brother, one day last week, whilst playing with a gun picked ofrthe bat tle-field. Who Is Reopoosibtel As to the responsibility tor the es cape of Les e i m u tr_ _4k:7 fates absolutely BO In may ea atatea absolutely, says a Herald despatch, that General Meade telegraphed to Washington on Sunday evening that ho should attack tfie enemyy next morning. Had he done so, half of Lee's army would have been destroy ed. Subsequent to the telegraph of Gen. Meade that he should attack Lee on Monday morning. ar council of war was held, at which a majority of the Generals decided -against such attack. Napoleoale. Persons searching to know a good thing done by the General-in-Chief, can be gratified in atleast one partic ular. During the hesitancy to at tack Lee, while the latter was escap ing, Gen. Meade telegraphed to Gen. nalleck the divided opinion of his council of war. The following is the substance of Gen. Ilalleck's reply:— "It is proverbial that councils of war never fight. Attack the enemy at once, and hold your councils of war afterwards." It was a plagiarism from Napoleon, but we ought to be thankful for anything Napoleonic. Female Brutality. During the progress of the riot in New York, some of the women muti lated the rougher sex in brutality.— A gentleman living in the neigbor bo d where the incident occurred, re lates the following : In the Seventh avenue. just above Fortieth street, three of the Provost guard bad fallen behind the rest. They were set up on and beaten to the earth. Two women came up, and seized the bayo net belonging to one of men, and taking it from the musket in their hands stabbed him again and again with their united strength, mangling the body terribly. Prisoners in Our The following statement of rebel prisoners now in our hands is be lieved to be nearly if not quite cor rect : On hand at Memphis, 4,000; at Fort Delaware, 5,000; taken b y Meade at Gettysburg, inocavairy tights since, and at Williamsport, 24,1' 000 ; by Gen. Grant, 31,000; by Wen. Banks, 12.000; by lieu. Koh , • 4,000 ; by Gen. Sherman. 2,000; by Gen. Prentiss, 2,000; making in aIV a total or 86,000-71,00 Q of loos were taken ea and since the 3rti of July. We now have over firs thou : sand rebel officers in our bands, from Gauen/00m/.