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indignant at "Banks men," whom he alleges passed it upon him. Among the contrabands who have found their way into our camps is one "Ned," now with General Ricketts division, who used to wait upon the General while he was in the tobacco warehouse at Richmond. He seemed highly elated to find the General escaped, and in a position where he can go soon again to Richmond. Near Hedgeman's river is a tract of land, several miles square, known as the Marshall Place. It beings to the widow Marshall, who has three sons in the rebel army and one at home. There are over 3,000 bushels of wheat in the garners and fifty cattle, besides hundreds of acres of hay, corn and oats. The son at home says he was a Union man while there was any Union men, but now there was none. He admits that Virginia is ruined, and that she can not recover from the losses she has sustained in 25 years. He says that slavery in Virginia is practically abolished; that the few they now hold will never be of a