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e another man has arrived from Washington. He says McClellan has near 25,000 cavalry. The Federals are expecting an advance from us. They do not understand the evacuation of the line of hills by Falls Church. A day or two ago a party of our pickets was wounded by the enemy. Some scouts crept upon them, and succeeded in capturing two and wounding two others. One of them was shot through the arm, the other through the chest. The men were from Shepherdstown, I believe, and belonged to Stuart's Cavalry. Yesterday, for the first time, the mail was carried to Fairfax Station, and thence to Manassas, on the cars. The contract has been awarded, and hereafter letters mailed here before 5 o'clock in the evening will leave for the Station at 3 the next morning, and arrive in Richmond the same evening. This will be a great convenience to the public. The breaking of a bridge somewhere below Manassas has interrupted the mails, and for two days we have had none. The papers have
re, which they did without the loss of a man, and bringing with them four rebel cavalry horses, thirteen pistols, four sabres, one Hall's carbine, several blankets, and one prisoner — a young man named Charles H. Knott, a private in Company F, Col. Stuart's First Virginia Cavalry. Knott states that he is a native of Jefferson county, Virginia, and that he has seen soldiering enough to retire. He says that Col. Stuart's headquarters are between four and five miles from Falls Church, on the FaiCol. Stuart's headquarters are between four and five miles from Falls Church, on the Fairfax road, to the right of Annandale. He states also that the rebels are not present in any force near our lines. On Knott was found a letter written by a pious mother to some soldier, which contains the following extracts, that sound strangely when read together: "I trust that prayer-meetings are still kept up, and that they will result in great good.--God has promised that His Word shall not return to Him void, but shall accomplish that for which he sent it. "Bob says, Tell Massa