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id their visits. He says it is it true, as published in the Northern papers, that it was not uncommon to see wounded Southerners surrounded by groups of ladies in rustling silks, furnishing them all sorts of delicacies, books, papers, &c., while many poor Northern hirelings lay with such attendance as the hospital furnished. After leaving the prison, he lived at Brown's Hotel, without being troubled with "your bill," and had his pocket full of money. The Doctor saw the great magician, Seward, who pulls the wires, and Old Abe and Mrs. Lincoln, several times. Old Abe he describes, as everybody else does, as a long, awkward, and kangaroo-looking person. Mrs. Lincoln was out in her carriage frequently, and is a genteel quiet, amiable looking, middle-aged lady.--The Doctor thinks she has been misrepresented by newspaper correspondents. He did not hear a single Secession lady-speak disrespectfully or unkindly of her. The newspaper writers, politicians, and wire-pullers of the