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ervening space. The left hand one is occupied by Gen. McClellan, the other by his father-in-law, Gen. Marey, the Chief of Staff. Both are furnished alike, each has a stove, camp stools and table, corsage camp bed, desk and toilet materials, and various wine bottles lying about denote the means used even by Major- Generals to beguile weary hours and entertain visitors. In front of the General's tent a hundred feet wide street runs to the opposite side of the camp, where two or three peaked Sibley tents are pitched to accommodate the soldiers acting as the camp guard. On each side of this Street tents are pitched, whose occupants decrease in honor according as they are farther away from the General. There are the tents of the staff officers — the Provost Marshal General, the Adjutant General, the Quartermasters and Commissaries, the Aids to the Commander-in-chief, &c. A row behind these, on each side, is devoted to under officers and clerks, and a third row to servants. Outside