.1 4 , .1" WEE • 4; •• 4 , ;• • . ‘C- 1 ... , ... ' ..144ii1t)441:4'-] •I• ' 4 .,•i• - • • ' , , • • • 1110111116 ..1.•:' ...7..... , •: f- ;,:.%;;••• • .;,' .:, 1 •:;.'...i.P...;:. •,o.; 1.,..:'‘...!•1•,::- .41';',: :.. ..- :J. ,:,' .:;:, ~,,* '..:ii:: • '. • •.: . :.. ''. i • -: •: .- • : . H.•*...,'. ''' '.'.•• • ~ • 0 .....: ....44.• ••••"; 4 :•. 0 1 , . ' ! ''.%'; ••:•:* 'Y' '' . .; ~,:%;-•;: . ", ~•••,... :' :::;;;;.: .2. , •- ...1,, ,:•,;.. ; , ..;,:... ..., . 1 ,. , .;. .... . ~...,.:,.. , ..k. ..:.::: • : !.....,.:,:,.: ;•.:: , d•., •• ;.: ...,:::• ::, :•-. ..-- Another Traitor Reported. thircorrespoodent at Fortreee Monroe MOIIIIOOI another of those painful rumor, of treachery which' hare already so often grated banally 'on the sensibilities of a loyal and patriotic public. Ono after another of these have some, from the beginning of this flagitious war even until now, and yet long-suffering people have looked on with a strange and unaccountable patience and for bearance at-the still more strange and un accountable 000lnees and apsthy with which illioes'on "Whom the responsibility devolved, met these instances of treachery. When their inemies. and the eneinies *of the coun try were propitiating war to tbs,kulfe against -the Onvernment and tbe Constitution and all their upholders, and were dlllog with iplei - the very offices in which the Goiern meat was trying to conduct the buskins of the coUntry, behold the wonder! and how this open war and this secret plotting of treisin.liave been-dealt with. Not certain. ly according to the rigorous and stern no ` ' neosulties of war, as their ought to have been, with unhesitating prompuiess,—but matte contrary, with all the teridarnese, hesitantly and timidity of a peace policy , — ' With all the fatal elnetnese and WOO' of Nino .of peace measures. Look at the +•-bitter (rally this true bath borne. If the Hitterse expedition could have been frustrated by timoue intelligence conveyed_ to enemy—it ran every risk of it, for - : • ;Nies had put the whole iteeret in possesalon of llierebelypoiernment loss before die ex .4,-,podition sailed. The Hatteras affair Weald s t a wooers . because the rebel, had not the Anion* to oppose it at that point—not be canoe they were taken:unawares, or that their spies at Washiogton and elsewhere, had fallettla their usitalmsidult7. ' But this 'was not the case at Manassas ,f;;;-, - 'There every movement of MCDowell was as Anown to Beauregard as to the General lit our army hicastlf—and the Bull Eau f 44,. leder !as Ottt deplorable and humiliating wait, , ? . :',:i . . -, .:;: . .••, .:'.. .:. : 'p.. 4.. • . r, •:4 4. • - • -A44••••-•!' •, •,°, '• • : .I;j2..}:v ; y 04. 9 , 11.'ti•‘••,; , ;,; 0: • ;44. 't"l,„ 14;•: •• ' :„ • ' 4 ..; : . '4%, 4 ' • : ,• • 4 . 1 K; i3 41?$! • :•::.:!*--4 , • 4 ',,,ve:^ANlN' ' .4; :44. 4'4. •• •:-.;•`.:!4:74':i.:.‘1;;;,-*, P . .};.4• 441