gia4 Etiegrapt HARRISBURG, PA FRIDAY EYENING, OCTOBER 14, 1864, NATIONAL UNION TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, Abraham Lincoln, OF XLWOI& FOR VICE PRESIDENT. Andrew Johnon, OP TEIRTP.SSEE County Committee. The members •of the County ,Committee are requested to meet on Saturday afternoon next, at two o'clock, at the office of the Sec retary, J. M. Wiestling, Esq. A punctual at tendance is requested. 3NO. 3. SHOEMAKER, Chairman. John Walker Jackson at the Court Flonse To-night. It is, of course, well understood that the Rev. John Walker Jackson will speak at the Court House this evening, and the fact will. undoubtedly attract the largest audience ever assembled in that building. The exalted Christian character of the man—his thrilling eloquence, noble patriotism, and unswerving devotion to the government, have invested him with an influence almost irresistible. Hie effort to-night will, no doubt, be one of great oratorical splendor and argumentative power. He will speak fur his eountry as only a man of God can talk. Let no man or wo man, then, honestly loving their country and ready to countenance and encourage its de fenders, fail to hear Rev. J. Walker Jackson to-night. = The Result of the Election in intliono— A Solemn Warning to the People of the Free States. There is something so earnest, so irresisti• bly patriotic and solemn in the result of the late election in Indiana, as to render it at once an appeal and a warning to the people of all the States. Indiana has always been Dem ocratic. It has been within the entire control of the traitors from the hour the rebellion burst upon the country. In 18G0 it had a delegation in Congress which acted in har mony with the leading conspirators; since then its public men have done all that they could do to secure the success of the rebellion. Jesse D. Bright, a Senator from Indiana, was expelled from the Senate, after a fair trial and conviction as a traitor. Under the council of such men as Bright and Dan Voorhees, the traitors of Indiana were organized and only needed a signal to do battle for the slave holders' cause. Indeed, the conspirator?, of Indiana insisted that they could place that State in the confederacy just when they pleasid, but they considered that they Could do more goad for the Routh by remaining in the old Union, to-assist there in sapping its foundations and ruining its supports. In the midst of this influence, and while thus over shadowed by treason, the people of Indiana threw off the yoke of party, and boldly pro. claimed their adhesion to the Government. Indiana' perfectly understood what she was doing, when her masses repudiated the Dem ocratic leaders. With a wicked conspiracy arming in her midst—with the fact clear be fore her people, that the Democratic leaders Were "playing into the hands" of the rebel, chiefs, the masses of Indiana suddenly wheeled into their old paths: and are now as firmly re solved to stand by the Government, as are the brave Indianians in the ranks of the army. The result in Indiana is worth more than all the speeches or editorials which can be made or written between this and the elec tion. It teaches us that when the people un derstand fully the objects and the terms of treason, they never hesitate to repudiate trai tors. It is a warning to Pennsylvania, a warn ing to all the States, to go and do likewise at the November election. "The Home Vote." Like many of our ootemporaries, we have permitted ourselves to indulge in an invidious distinction in the terms by which to distin- . guish the vote cast at the late State election, denoing that cast in the State, The Home: Vote—and that in the Camps, the Soldiers' Vote. A moment's reflection, exhibits the injustice of these denominations. It is all a home vote. Wherever the flag of Pennsylvania floats in the same breeze beside the Stars and Stripes, the Pennsylvanian who fights beneath their folds is at home. So that the elections lately held in camp by Penn.sylvania soldiers, may be regarded as having been held at home as literally as if every voter thereat polled his ballot at the proper precinct, ward or town ship within the limits of the Common wealth. Let us then have no more of this distinction on the subject of the home and the soldiers' vote. We consider our brave boys at home wherever they follow our flag in this broad Union. We consider the vote of the army as ranch a home vote as that polled within the State. Our soldiers, God bless them, will hereafter be at home everywhere. The whole broad Union is their home, and the blessings, the rights, comforts and honor thereof, their's by a title made good in perils such as through which no people have ever passed. We re peat, then, the trust that our loyal cotempo series will hereafter avoid this offensive dis tinction in denoting the vote of the soldiers and the citizens. Is' any L-au doubts the complicity of the Capperhrad party with the organization of treason in Indiana, let him reflect that the Grand Commander of the Order in Indiana, a Copperhead, on trial for treason, made his es cape, thereby confessing his guilt. Gen.. ltioChaumar's military career is a puz zle to many. The truth is, he was' always making "immediate efforts fora cessation of hostilities." How -could he'do that and fight vigorouSly? That accounts for the war being fidltire'oa his part. ' ' The Effect of the October . en the 'Presi. dential Election, The New York Tribun, , says very truly, that the Unionists of Indiana have settled all question as to the vote of their State for President. We considered her, after Ken tucky, Missouri,' Delaware 'and New Jersey, the Statrit,mosi likely to cast her vote for Mo Clellan; and we felt certain (as we now do) that no fifty Electoral Votes can be given to the Chicago ticket unless by the aid of this State. And yet there lives to-day no Ameri can, qualified to sit on a jary, who dime not know that she will choose Lincoln electors on the Bth of next month. Let us here state a fact that has casually come to our knowledge, and which is illustra tive of the late and the pending canvass: The Unionists of Indian% feeling that they had a right to the votes of their fellow-citizens serving their country in the field, and that they were likely to need them, dispatched, some two or three weeks since, a gentleinin of high character to Washington to solicit furloughs for all the soldiers from that State— or, if all could not be spared, then for so many of them as could be. They degred no partiality—no picking and culling—they wish ed regiments in full sent home indiscrimi nately, and the more the better. Their agent was cordially welcomed, admitted confiden tially to an inside view of the military situa tion, and asked whether he could conscien tiously advise the withdrawal, even for a week, of even one regiment from the service. He could not respond affirmatively; he gave up the quest and went on his way. And our armies in the field have not been weakened by a single regiment to stregthen the Union cause for the recent elections. ,4 few soldiers have been furloughed, mainly 'from hospitals; but the Indianians deprived of their votes by . reason of their absence from home in the Na tional service, would have given nearer Twen ty Thousand than Ten Thousand majority for the Union ticket: Yet Indiana is carried high and dry'by the Unionists, who have made a cleaner sweep of the State than any party ever made before. Their Presidentialcanvass is virtually.ended, and they can henceforth help their less fortunate neighbors. • And all do know that, when Indiana goes this way, neither Illinois nor any other : State of the Free West is likely to go the other. Of Ohio, less need be said, because her: Unionists have neither .been distrustful not: distrusted. Nobody imagined that they would again pile up such J an, enormous majority as that whereby she last year elected Vallandig ham to stay in Canada ; but all felt that she must go as she went last year, though not so overwhelmingly.. 'Vat, the result has far sur . passed our most sanguine hopes. The aggre gate popular majority cannot fall below sixty thousand, when the Soldiers' Vote shall have been returned, while our, gain of Members of Congress is certainly tea and may be twelve or oven In. other words, we have fifteen to seven teen Unionisis chosen to the next House, in stead of five (to fourteen) in this; and the four teen include Pendleton, Long, S. S. Coi., and other of the fiercest foes of the Administration. The -victor); is so thorough that Ohio, too, is' henceforth practically out of the Presidential contest. Pennsylvania is not ; and yet ails has given a large Lincoln majority at this electionovhild the votes of her great Union strongholds—Alle2:. ghney,Lancaster,Chester, Indiana, Erie, &c.—are not nearly polled out, because no ..1-! equate motive for exertion was presented to many Unionists. Allegheny county will give ten thousand majority for Lincoln, though she has now (exclusive pf the soldiers' vote) given much less; Lancaster is good for 6,000, though she has noNv,given but 4,000. Philadelphia on our side, Barks on the other, were well fought; but Philadelphia was an exception to the, gi=n eral rule. When the soldiers' votes are all-in and counted, the,State will be found to have given not less than 10,000 and probably nearer 20,000, majority for the Union ticket, electing sixteen to eighteen Union Representatives in Congress out of twenty-four, which stand . equally divided in the present Rouse, and there is no doubt of a decided Union majority in both branches of the Legislature.' We can do a great deal better than this in-November ; but this is enough for the present. "Pennayl vania has no more idea of voting for.McClellan than for Jeff. Davis himsof. ' • Unionistfi. of all the States ! we cap. sweep the deck if we will! New Jersey is going with us Maryland is clearly for us; the hardest States to carry for Lincoln are Kentucky, Delaware' and Missouri. But Price will soon be skedad dling from Misouri,vith half the Copperheads of that State in his train ; Delaware will now go right; and even Kentucky will yield to the majestic cnrrrent. Let us resolve to carry every State not under the heel of Jeff. Davis! We can if we will. . . . . What we Have Done, and What we Have Gained at the October 'Election. In Pennsylvania there is, pospeet of a small Union majority on the - Herne Vote; but it may be, is most likely to he, _ the other way. We gain three or four Congressmen, and the Soldiers' Vote may give us one or two more. The soldier:3' Vote till make the ma jority in the State largerthan the 15,000 for Curtin last year. Ohio gives, us on the. Home Tote over 40, 000 majority;and shc r tll gain 11 or 12 mem hers of Congress. Indiana will give between 15,•000 and 20,000 Union majority, and, - send in 0, and possibly 8 Union Congressmen: ..Colfax is:. re-eleoied by 1,500 majority.. It is thought that Dan. Voorhees, the great Copperhead, is defeated, but it is not certain. Maryland will doubtless adopt her Free Constitution, (the vote is contirmed.to-day,) Baltimore having given st heavy majority therefor. • • To beat the Demoe,ravir of Pennsylvania, , crush the _ comerh i rds in Indiana, annihilate the2oaie .7 part , ri - Ohio, and redeem Mary land 'from of Slavery, dnd add tw eli ty l ventibers•icintir strength in Coniress, prettiWid* - 004 -7 the .. 06tOber elections. .4 0 efil ..4 0 !;$ tl 1 :1 1 . ®$ ~my 1.-• p•• I. cDPP r iT-.,, g v,,R.. 8 Pg., ..1P,,1gg...p r.ifrt , 4 45 . 5.4 rdh, talF,.L' t , , . ° ~ , , g 7P› - 14w bliT4 'jail ri:qm•L'. - '.. , a6 tjrg 40 Id 43 n X. 20 ' MN 1 .* 1 Pa' r '' 01 • ' d 4.11 0, ~„ c.,4 14 4 „, 4 .4 tit wui t -a ~.vsg• - ii , gazl, c ,Et.si 4 5 rra rvig al '"*/ 4 '' .- hi b,'" CD ..., t 2 Arl M E s gOl ... v o rfCt ' 4-• eh P m ci• eD d 1.1 . - 1! - w Pi.r '',lv H 6 00 . ', 3%! - . • o.•p cl • e i .:4 :I ;; ; " i cri O. • • • P. . : : : : : . . P: P: : : n• • . P. 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