were selected, who, with a similar committee of gentlemen, undertook the general manage ment, of the Fair. The details were confided to various committees, each having charge of some special department of industry or art in which to gather contributions in money, or in articles of taste and utility. It was at first designed, as we have seen in our account of the Brooklyn Fair, to embrace not only New York city, hut all the populous towns in its immediate neighborhood, as a field of opera tions. It was found, however, that this was impracticable, principally owing to the neces sity of postponing the opening of the Fair beyond the time originally intended. This necessity arose from the daily increas ing proportions of the enterprise which had been undertaken. It soon became apparent that a space sufficiently large for a suitable display of all that the wealth and liberality of New York proposed to do for the soldier had not been selected. In addition to the building in Fourteenth street, two hundred feet square, with a very considerable space in the second story, it became necessary to erect another of large dimensions, on Union Square. Both were over-crowded during the continuance of Fair, with the choicest productions of taste and industry. The various departments re sembled very much those we have described at other Fairs, except that in many respects the display was far grander and more impo sing than had been seen elsewhere. The Foreign Department was peculiarly attractive. The collection of arms and trophies of all kinds reminded one of the most famous histo rical museums of Europe, while the Art Gal lery brought together a collection of pictures from private cabinets such as has never before been seen in this country. The striking incidents of the Fair appear to have been very few, the famjus sword contest being the only occurrence which rutiled at all the decorous, practical and business-like stylo in which the whole thing was conducted. But the result, in a pecuniary point of view, was unsurpassed, and worthy in every way of the Empire City. More than a million of dollars have been received as the net proceeds of the enterprize. The expenses were about $lOO,OOO. The loss from counterfeit and mutilated notes was less than three hundred dollars. One feature of the undertaking, well worth re marking, was the very large amount con tributed in cash, the Fair being looked upon not only as a place for the exposition and sale of goods, but also an occasion upon which all who could not offer articles of their own manu facture for the relief of the soldier, might ac complish the same object by gifts in money. We would call attention to the very beautiful album of sketches contributed by some of the most distinguished artistes of New York, Bos ton and Philadelphia to the Great Central Fair. OITB ID .A. ILY PABB. ITEMS BY A CAVALRY MAN, [For Our Daily Fare.] PAYING FOR AN OATH OF ALT.F.GIANCR While at Sparta, Tennessee, with Colonel Harrison’s ltegiment, (3'Jth Indiana Mounted Infantry), in the beginning of last January, 1 was detailed by Colonel 11. as Provost Mar shall, and part of my duty was to administer the oath of allegiance to such of the citizens as would take it voluntarily. One day a rough specimen of the chivalry came into my office and accosted me with “llow d'ye, stranger; are you the Provost?” I told him I was. “ Wa’al,” said he, squirting a mouth ful of fluid-weed on the stove, “ I recken I’ll take yer oath.” I soon had the oath admin istered in all due form and solemnity, the returning prodigal stumbling slightly at the words “mental reservation or evasion,” but being assured that they did not involve the surrender of his “bosses,” recovered his ground. I handed him his duplicate, properly signed and witnessed, and asked him a few questions. As he put on his hat to go, he pulled out an old greasy wallet, saying as he opened it: “Wa’al I reckon as how there’s suthin’ to pay, what mought you charge ? Not more’n half a dollar I reckon ?” I assured him we were not accustomed to charge a man anything for becoming loyal. “ Wa’al, Mister, that’s clever naow ; they alius used to charge for such at the Squire’s up yander,” and with a happy smile he went on his way rejoicing. Not long after, a man whose name sounded very much like Smclfungus, appeared in the doorway, and demanded a pass for “ liisself and these yer two other ladies” to go out of town. The party resisted the fascinations of the three-legged stool, which was all the fur niture my “office” could boast, and fortified with their pass, shortly departed, the “ two other ladies” flaunting their scant and aerial calico skirts with quite as much defiant grace as their sisters in Huntsville displayed with their silks and grenadines at the sight of a Yankee soldier. CHAMP FERGUSON, I have heard of certain fair ladies who live under the Stars and Stripes and read with the greatest interest the doings of “John Morgan and his gallant band.” “It’s so like Robin Ilood!” lisps Miss Cobra D. Capello. “Oh, I do dote on guerillas —such a lovely word, so Spanish, you know—why you can almost see the sombrero shading the splendid beard. I wish I lived on the Border.” I wish from my soul you did, my dear Miss Capello; then, perhaps, you would have had an opportunity of testing the gallantry and Robinhood-ative ness of the chivalric Rinaldinis of Tennessee. One of these wretches, the notorious Champ Ferguson, who had made himself obnoxious by robbing everybody—union men, sutlers, stores on the borders of Kentucky, and hen roosts within his own Tennessee —nearly fell into our hands last January. Col. Harrison (30th Indiana) came within an ace of captur ing him in his own house. As it was, he took to the mountain fastnesses in sight of our party, which arrived at his house in time to capture five horses, in charge of a negro, who was just about to follow Champ. Mrs. Fergu son was pathetic; “hoped the colonel would not take her last horse, as she would then have none to send to mill.” “My dear madam,” said Col. 11., in his quick way, “I would not willingly put you to any inconvenience; but your husband is an excellent business man, and, I have no doubt, can provide you with another horse immediately. Good morning.” Poor Mrs. Champ ! Shortly afterwards the Colonel found on her plantation about a thou sand dollars worth of goods belonging to a sut ler whom her husband’s band had killed a few weeks before, on the mountains. They were buried and hidden in straw sacks. Our men carried away what they could, andtheremainder was burned, much to Mrs. Champ’s chagrin. The people in this region are nearly all secesh, and harbor these murderers. Colonel 11. t alked to them severely, telling them he was now “throwing turf, but if that would not do he would soon try stones. He expected them to discountenance and rid their neighborhood of these men, and would return soon and see what had been done. He was determined that it should be stopped, and, if necessary, would lay waste the whole Calf-killer Valley.” Riding along that afternoon and discussing the Colonel’s oration, which was received with open mouths and witless brains by the prom ising inhabitants of the valley, we started a couple of wild does, which bounded across the road, tails up, “showing the cotton,” as hun ters say, and were soon out of sight in the forest. That night half a dozen of us spent with an old hunter on the mountain, and supped on broiled venison, and the next, morn ing breakfasted on wild turkey. The old man, Myers, who is a genuine descendant of the great Boone, so far as habits and mode of life go, said that in two years he had shot thirty deer and two hundred wild turkeys. Before parting with Champ Ferguson, who has, I am happy to say, since had his last row with Charon, I may mention one of his most brilliant and characteristic exploits. A mem ber of our regiment was coming into camp alone, and stopped at a farm-house to get breakfast. While there he was amazed by the apparition of Champ, who walked up to him, pistol in hand, and ordered him to surrender. Being entirely unarmed the poor fellow had no alternative, and was immediately marched out into an adjoining woods and shot, in cold blood, by this villain. Our colonel, on hearing of the outrage, sent out a party to scour the