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The very Latest. Through the courtesy of Captain Hatch, of Commissioner Ould's office, we have received New York papers of Monday, the 20th inst.--two days later. The news contained is not of great importance. The New York riot. On Sunday New York was perfectly quiet, with the exception of large bodies of troops arriving and being placed in position. The streets were patrolled by police and the military, batteries of artillery were standing with horses harnessed in the park, and off the foot of each street leading to the wharves lay one or more gunboats. The Tribune, of Monday, says: During yesterday and the day previous, New York was unusually quiet, the only movements calculated to attract the attention of the passer-by being the disposition of the thousands of soldiers who arrived in the city on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Squads and companies of infantry, cavalry, and artillery filed quietly through Broadway and other streets, without even their u