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Old Abe and his Cabinet, by a flank movement by way of Baltimore. All that we can undertake to vouch for concerning this mysterious rebel invasion is that Gen. Sigel, by a body of rebels supposed to be several thousand strong, was frightened away from Martinsburg to Harper's Ferry, and from that place across the Potomac to tew from before Frederick on Thursday night; that General Wallace is so strongly reinforced that the safety of that place is secured, and that the position which Gen. Sigel took on Maryland Heights, after he ran away from Martinsburg, is above all chance of being molested by the rebels. Harper's Ferry has also been evacuated by thd, and the people seem confident that the danger has passed. Brig. Gen. A. P. Bowe had been appointed to command the troops in front of the rebels in place of Sigel, who had been ordered to report to Hunter, who was said to be at Hancock (in Morgan county, Va., 54 miles from Frederick by the stage road,) on the 8th inst.