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urday. He reports that there are no troops, not even a guard, in Suffolk; also, that there are no troops in Richmond, but the streets are filled with rebel officers. He saw no gunboats in the harbor at Richmond, but knows that they are building two iron-clads, though he does not know how far they were advanced. The doctor was in Richmond five weeks, and complains of the high price of board, $120 per week, and hard fare at that. The Boston papers publish the protest addressed to Secretary Seward of the Messrs. Upton, owners of the ship Nora, which was destroyed not long since by the pirate Alabama, and for which the owners hold the British Government accountable. The barque Good Hope, from Boston for the Cape of Good Hope, was captured by the C. S. steamer Georgia on the 13th of June, in int; 22.49, long 40.00, and burned the next day. The crew and passengers were transferred to the barque J. W. Sewer, from Boston for the Amoy river, and landed at Rio Janeiro. The Confed