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ndred we cannot, from the abundant information before us, determine, nor tell the reader where they are, where they have been all this time, what they have accomplished, or whither bound. We congratulate the Administration that Washington may be considered out of danger, and we entertain the hope that this invisible invading rebel army of forty or fifty thousand men, more or less, as the case may be, will fall to gobble up the column of General Hunter in its retreat. We hope that Secretary Stanton will soon be sufficiently recovered to resume his war bulletins to General Dix, including some reliable account of this terrible rebel raid. In another article it characterizes the raid as "the final fruits of the President's interference with Gen. Grant's campaign, and of the consequent blunders and mismanagement, " and says: Had Gen. Grant's original plan been properly carried out no such advance as this could have been made; for the number of men allotted to the valley co