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le upon the sea as upon the land; and wound up with quoting a remark of one of his sailors to a Frenchman--"the Alabama's officers were Americans; her crew were Englishmen that is the reason we sent her to the bottom"--which was received with loud cheers. We understand Captain Winslow to mean by this that Englishmen can be more easily whipped than Confederates. The New York Tribune has another tidbit, which we respectfully recommend to Mr. Bull's digestion. Referring, editorially, to Seward's late letter to Minister Adams in regard to Lord Wharncliffe's request to contribute funds for the relief of Confederate prisoners in the United States, the Tribune says: "We know that we possess the power, without taking away a single soldier and facing the rebels, to brush away Canada like gossamer; and without taking a single vessel from our blockade to sink every ship in the British navy, as if they were but cockleshell. Yet we will have little or no trouble to put Englishmen on their