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mile of Fort Sumter. He is confident of reducing both Sumter and Wagner in a short time. Outrage on Confederate officers — Morgat treated as a Convict. The New York World, of Monday, has an editorial on the conduct of Gen. Burnsides, from which we learn that Morgan and his officers, now in the Ohio penitentiary, are treated like convicts, and their heads have been shaved. The following is a paragraph: After several months of junketing, his army finally moved out to the Kentucky river, but never came near an enemy. The only enemy in Kentucky was allowed to pass directly through the State. In the face of Burnside and of all his troops, Morgan was permitted to ride by him almost unmolested, and to cross into Indiana and Ohio, and not until the citizens of those States hadrailled in sufficient numbers was the bold marauder captured. But if Burnside had nothing to do with catching the hare, upon his light to cook it when caught. The commander of the Department of