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Arrival of the remains of General Ramseur. The body of Major-General Stephen D. Ramseur, who was mortally wounded and fell into the enemy's hands at the battle of Cedar creek, on the 19th of October last, was sent by the enemy into General Hoke's lines, on the Darbytown road, yesterday evening, and was brought to the city last night.--General Ramseur died on the 20th ultimo, the day after his capture, and, at the solicitation of his friends in Middletown, his body was embalmed by a Yankee artist. We presume his remains will be sent immediately to North Carolina, his native State and former home.
20th thinks it not uncharitable to suppose that the Federal accounts just now are made as favorable as possible, to suit the political emergency. It deplores the prospect of continued war as most melancholy and depressing to the whole world, and as presenting the greatest reproaches to mankind. The English financial crisis reached a point of great intensity on the 18th of October. Twenty mercantile firms, engaged in the American trade, failed between that day and the morning of the 20th instant. Other failures are reported from London and the English manufacturing towns. A London bank manager committed suicide in a fit of despair at his position, and we to-day detail the particulars of the suicide of Mr. Drosten, a corn merchant in London, from the same cause. Mr. Henry Lafoce, in a letter to the London Times, says: "I must positively contradict the assertion that Captain Semmes was a passenger in the Laurel. A United States man-of-war went in pursuit of the Laurel for t