Slioboh of , Andy i9linson. tit Knox- vine. We think the following extract from Mr. Johnson's speech to his fellow-eiti lens at anoviille, some time since, will be read with new intereat, now that his name is presented to the people as a can didate for the office of Vice:Presiderit: For glowing patriotism and thrilling elo quence it is rarely equalled. "The time has arrived ,when treason must be made odious, when traitors n:ust be punished--impoverished; their pro perty taken from them, whether it be their houses, their lands, -or-their negroes, and given to the innocent, the honest, the loyal, upon whoni the calamities of this unprovoked and wicked rebellion have fallen with crushing weight. It is easy to stand here and declaim, but I am not uttering bombast. You know me. You know something l of what I have done for you—for Tennessee—for" East Tennessee. But I will tot speak of that. "If film made sacrifices, if I have en dured sufferings, if I have undergone hardships, so let it be. God grant t. at I may have helped you, and that I may help you again. Butyou must helpyour selves. You must join hand with me and with one another, and swear to do what .1 have already told you must be done— to make treason odious, [this he said with tremendous emphasis] and to make trai tors suffer, as you have suffered, as your wives and children have suffered, as your country has suffered. "What has brought this war upon us ? Let me answer in one word ; let me speak it so loud that the deafest man in this crowd can hear me : Slavery! [Hundreds of voiocs—'That's so.' That's a God's truth.'] Men talk about the Constitution and State rights. They sneer at the e• manoipation proclamation, and call it a tyrannical assumption of authority, a des potic usurpation of power. Listen to what I now say : All such talk is the language of treason. But lam not here to discuss tho unconstitutionality of sla very or the constitutionality of the Pros- • ident's proclamation of freedom. I am here to present facts , to address your in tellects, to appeal to your common sense. "Here is one fact to which I want you to attend : Why is the soil of your be loved Tennessee—a soil as rich as any in the world—so far behind the States of the North, in its productiveness ? Why have you but few such farms, but few such granaries, as they have all over In diana, Ohio and Pennsylvania ? Hero is ' the explanation, and let me speak it so loud that the deafest man in this multi- , tude can here me—Slavery ! Thank God that the people are beginning to see that slave labor has impoverished the soil of Tennessee long enough. [Cries of Good!' 'good !"that's so !'] "Men sneer at the doctrine of emanci pation. Let them sneer ; but this I lel you—murk me—it is the white man we propose to emancipate ; it is the white man that is even now being emancipated, and may Heaven hasten the work of e fnaneipation, and carry it on until all are free." [Loud and - prolonged applause.] The Cavalry Horse. The cavalry horse is quite as familiar with the long lists of varying triumpet signals as the rider himself; he stops in stantly when the signal for halting is sounded; passes from a walk to a trot or a gallop, without requiring any re minder from spur or rein. If his rider fall in battle, or lose his stirrups, he stops in a moment, and waits for him ; if he remain lying on the ground, he stoops his head, smells at him, and when he as certains that there is no hope of his re mounting, makes his way back to tiffs troop, wedges - lituself in his place in the ranks, and shares afterwards in the movements of the rest. Music has an amazing influence over him. If an air be suddenly struck up, you will see the worn nut and mortally tired horse raise his sick head, prick up his ears, become animated and move briskly forward to the front. During a halt, or when quartered for the night, the cavalry division stretched. out on the ground, lies sleeping con fusedly together, a jumbled mass, which it would be impossible to disentangle; mon and horses side by side, the rider using his horse as his pillow s or rolling himself beside it to shield himself from the :cold, the faithful creature seldom changing the position it has once taken. If it did so, it is with the greatest pre caution ; first it moves its head and legs, endeavoring gently to free itself; then it rises or turns itself very slowly and care fully, so as not to trample upon or dis turb those who surround it. If the halt take place when the ground is wet or fro zen, the rider will gladly•force his horse to one side after it has laid down awhile, which by that time is warm, if not dry. The most affectionate relationship sub sists between man and horse, as the re sult of their thus living together. The animal semis to understand everything connected with his rider; he knows his .master's.step, his peeuliar, ways ; knows how to seek him out from amen others; iii,a,-faithful i -disinterested oompanion and friend to him, and has this advantage over. many another good comrade—that he does not grow weary even of suffering for 'him. . . HEINTZLNMAN ON McOLELL.s.II.=-We Had . the followling 'capital hit of the old war dog, . Heintzelman, going . the rounds, and we judge itis a true story F . Two men were discussing McClellan, when ,oleo Of them pronoOcedium to lack courage.' 'Grim old'Gen. Helutaelmall-was a listener. Turning to the gentleman who WU borating the courage of McClellan, ho' said in his pe culiar wend. tone: "How do you know sir, that he'lbasnq courage? Gen: McClellan bas never been under lire, and you can't tell whether a mart is a coward or not until he passed that ordeal. Tau quota of Penneylvania'under the live hundred tliousaud call is, sixty=iane tilouSind Rad seven hundred.. West Point. 'REVIEW OP M'CLELLAN . I3 LATE ORATION'. [From flier ribune; • That commanders of armies should be theoretically acquainted with the art of war, as much as a physician or a lawyer should know with accuracy the science of medicine or the law, need not be pompouslyenunciat ed. But the application intended by the orator is, that such theoretical knowledge can only bo acquired'd - West Point, and can only be well known to a pupilof the Acade my. With the memory of Washington the Surveyor, and Greene the Physician, of the Revolution ; Jackson the Lawyer, and Har rison the Farmer, of the later war with Great Britain; to say nothing of Scott the Lawyer, Wool the merchant, and Taylor - The Planter, of the Mexican war ; and in mercy sparing the orator any analysis of the a chievements of West Point in this rebellion, only stopping to say that no West Pointer, including the orator himself, has achieved any prominent distinction even in disaster, who had not left the army for the pursuits of civil, life,_ how. could McC,lellan,_withßlls, worth, Dahlgren, Winthrop, Shaw, and Wadsworth "yet green in earth," put on record on such an occasion, and in such con nection, this taunt upon the volunteer offi cers of the army of the United States? What should we say as to the propriety of employing a lawyer to argue the intricacies of a contested land title ; or a physician in the more difficult operations of injecting the life-blood of the young and vigorous into the veins of the aged and enfeebled, if he, a "Story or a Kent," or an Abernethy, after having been carefully educated in the rudi ments of law, or surgery, had abandoned all practice of his profession and taken to, the running a railroad for a living ? Should we not rather entiaq solne farmer or soldier with taste and aptitude for law or medicine. who, in the full application of a disciplined and vigorous intellect, had chosen the pro fession of his love, and spent years in en deavoring to master its theory and its prac- BEM Show us a man whom God has fitted to or ganize and command, and we shall find that he will illustrate and adorn any profession. If a soldier, Wet Point will aid him ; if a surgeon, West Point will not harm him ; if a railroad engineer, he will succeed with or without West Point. But if God has not gifted him with intellectual vigor and fore thought, he will not manage a railroad or command an army, either with or without West Point, any hotter or worse than Mc- Clellan or Banks. Ti. is said that the pecu liar merit of the Academy consists in train ing engineers of ability and resource, fitted for the emergencies of war. This is their specialty. But when Porter's fleet was im periled in the shallows of the Bed river, al though surrounded by an army swarming with West Point engineers, the honor was reserved to Lieutenant Colonel Bailey, from the forests of \Vinconsin—not even a civil engineer—the act where West Point, failed, and there to achieve the greatest engineer ing feat of the war. We have no quarrel with West Point; we believe in if, in its proper place, for its pro per purposes ; we would not decry its merits and uses : we would have the country cher ish it ; we only desire to record our believe, in the language of Sancho Panza, the West Point •'cannot make a silk purse from a sow's ear." Gen. McClellan and the King's English. Now, we knew before that General Mc- Clellan's-strong points were neither military activity during attack nor writing good E nglish, and should have made no remark up on the construction of his sentences, haying much more important matters than his style to look after, had not the Iler(71,1 and other opposition journals, in articles of fulsome eulogy of the West Point oration, compared it to ••the sublimest periods of Pericles," 'the equal of Everett in his mo , t masterly oratorical conceptions," "carrying us baci: to those times when orators NVl`relliillliglidS. It, is supposed that Pori, les spoke and wrote the Greek language currently. Eve rett certainly writes accurate and elegant English. We are not intimately acquaint ed with the acquirements of the -demigods" in grammar, but 'non Dci, non homineN," -neither Gods nor men." can tolerate such sentences as these of McClellan's. "Alas! our natiot possesses few such sons like true John Sedgwick." -What have you them my good woman ?" —Tomatuses, sir, and rich like." Or this : "For there were many of them who merited as proud a distinction us that accorded to the first Grenadier of France, or to that other H essian soldier who gave his life for his comrade." "John how many are there in yonr class at school?" "Only another little girl and me, sir." 0 Or this: "Young Bayard, so like the most renowned of his name, that Knight above fear and above reproach," The motto of the Bayard wok.; : "Sans peuret sans reproehe„ "without fear and ivithoid reproach," not above fear aml reproach. That would im ply want of that temptation which the Bayard's virtue had withstood. When Shakspeare describes old age as "sans eyes, sans teeth, sans everything," the poet does not mean that old age is above eyes above teeth, and all else that is vigorous in man hood. Will the demigod make a note of this?—V. Y. Tribune. JAMES A. DUNBAR, Attorney at Law, Carlisle, Pa. Office on the south side of the Court House, adjoinin g the "American Pilutin g Office." July 1, 1864-Iy. j M. WEAKLEY, Attorney at Law, ty • Office on south Hanover street, adjoining the office of Judge Graham. All professional business en trusted to him will be promptly attended to. July I, 113114. ADIVEL HEPBURN, Jr., Attorney jet Law. Offico with Hon. Samuel Hepburn, Main nt. Carlisle Pa, July 1, 1884. RUFUS E. SHAPLEY, Attorney at Carlisle Pa. Attends to securing and col leeting So:diers' Pay, Ilnunties. and Pensiena. °Mae th on Sou llanover Street, opposite Bents's Store. July 1, 1864. LAW CARD.-CHARLES E. MA a LAM' lILIN, Atturnoy at Law, Office la InholT's building, just opposite the Market House. July 1, 1804-Iy. el P. HUMERICH, ttorney at Law kJ. Mike on North Hanover s reef, is tow doors north of hotel. All buslues' entrusted to hlm will bo promptly attended to. July 1, 1804. Dr. I. C. LOOMIS - um. Pomfi et Street row doorA "1.147tr1r... below South Hanover At July 1,1863.. TOSEPH RITNER, Jr.; Attorney at Law and Surveyor,Mechanicsburg, P. OMNI on l Road Street, two oors north of the Dank.. as.Duelness promptly attended to.„. . July.l, 1964. GEO—W._ NEIDICH, D. D. S--- Lato Demonstrator oftlperativo Dent!dry of the. rittileurga'r,"°" of Offico at Ids residenc e opposite Marlon Han, West Main et root, Cat Ildo, 140 July t,18541. .. ~ . TAW/GEORGE S. S.A -•2 • • Isll. • • I_,)!JtICIFIT, Dentlet, from the Zan g' a/1 is utore Oollagerof Deutal Surgery, /, t *9...Wee at the readende of hie .roother t Weft Loather, street, three doors below Bedford. . July, 1, 1864. , , DR. WIZ, H. COOK, 'HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN, Surgeon and decouchour ' • OF,FICE •at his residence in Pitt street adjoining the Methodist Church. • 16011 MAN'S PHOI i OGRAKIIO— • GALLERY. lu street, opposite the National Ilanki In um Norg • July 22, ' • UNIVERSAL CLOTHES 'WRINGER. No Iron Frame to Break, or Rust, andSpozi the Clothes. 53,818 sour IN 1863. 'iXT was pronouneed4aperior to all others at th 6 World's Fair at London, ' 1802. It took the nt Premium at the great Fair of the American In stitute, in N. York City, 1863, and wherevor exhibited; Self-Adjusting and Adjustable! 7 ir The only Wringer with the-PritenteClG , HEEL TIE. OULATOR, which positively_prevente th . rolls from BREAKING OR TWISTING ON TRH SHAFT. Without Cog wheels, the whole strain of orcing tho cloth through the ;Redline is put upon the lower roll causing three times as much strain upon the tower roll as when Cog wheels with our Patent Regulator are used, besides the extra strain upon the cloth. " In roply,to the question, " Row Long will it 'Last!" we can only say, "As long as awash tub, cooking stove, or any other family utensil." See testimony of Orange Judd, of the American Agriculturist, No. 41 Park Row, N. Y., who says of the UNIVETSAL CLOTHES WRINGER.-- "1170 think the machine much more than PAYS FOR IT SELF EVERY YEAR in the saving of garment We consider it importan' that the Wringer be fitted with Cogs, otherwise a mass of garments may slog the rollers, and the rollers upon the crank-shaft slip and tear the clothes, or the rudder break 'loose the shaft.— Our own is one of the first made, and it le as GOOD AS NEW after nearly FOUR YEARS' CONSTANIII USE." IT SLVFI3 TIME, LABOR, CLOTIDIS AND MONEY It is easily and firmly secured to the tub or washing machine, and will Olt tuba of any size or shape. --It will savo.ita cost every aix months-la—the saving of clothbs Those with COG WHEELS AIM WAR RANTED in ovory particular. This moans, especially, that after a few months'uso the lower roll WILL NOT TWIST ON TRH SHAFT, and tear the clothing. Furnished to families, on trial, free °response, by JOHN CA MPRELL Agent, Rail Road Office, Carlisle. Aprilll,lB64—tf. EXCITING NEWS. JUST opened at the New and Cheap Store of Leidich and. Miller, Another large Supply of Spring and Summer Goods (frail the Newest and most desirable kinds and qualities Suitable for the Seasons, consisting of every variety and description of Ladies Dross Goods Silks, Mantillas, Summer :bawls, b:mbrobleries, Hooped Skirts, of Newest invention, (Double Deploy Illiptic Spring) Summer inamorata. Sun Umbrellas, Parasols Corsetta. Notions of every de scription Black Cloths and Cassimers, Fancy Cassl mores. Vestings,Cottonetries, Liner, Drillings, Tickings, Calicoes Ginghams, Muslins Checks, NIMItOOIIR, ,40., Carpets, Oil cloths, Window Shades. Rugs, Looking Glasses, and an endless variety t f Our ds too numerous to mention. Fooling very thanklill to the community for their kind and liberal patronage so far extended to the (New Fit m, ) we earnestly Solicit. n continuance of the Same, vs we feel assured that we are fully prepared to offer to the public the most complete and desirable Stock of Goods that can be found in the Country. Please ro member the Store Is on the corner, of toe public Square (directly) opposite Irvine's ShoeS tore. LEIDICII & AIILLER, Carlisle, May 20 14f+4, Di (Gr C)