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ifling our merchantmen. We cannot, nor could double the number of vessels, prevent this. Our gun-boats are really of more service in such business than the first-class frigates. --We rejoice they are fitting out so rapidly and daily arriving at their stations. The Females under arrest at Washington. The Washington correspondent of the New York Express, after noting the arrest of Mrs. Green how and Mrs. Phillips, says: Mrs. Greenhow is a sister of Mrs. Cutts, the mother of Mrs. Douglas. Mrs. Phillips is a daughter of Mr. J. C. Levy, now of Savannah, but a native, and for the greater portion of his life a resident, of Charleston; a gentleman well known at the North, and esteemed wherever known for his literary acquirements, the courtesy of his manners, and his open-handed hospitality. In the days of nullification, Mr. Levy was a firm Union man, as also was Mr. Phillips, then a young lawyer at the Charleston bar. At the close of the war of nullification Mr. Phillips remo