,'k- ■; col, a. kuiMaAN. ijj ; - TWfbll*wi4g sketch of Cul.jJhmes A. Mul ligan, the' of Lexington, .'Mo,, wc learn ftomjja gentlemah of this city, who has been intimatejyhequaiDted with him for the part five or si# years s j\ CoV James JL Muyigsy eras bom in the city of Utios, New York, in she:. year 1829,-and is onns*qoontiy |ln' hi« thirty-second stps parents werelhatives of- Ireland.,., His mother, after the death of jhis fathefti which took- place when be wnßq«bild, to Chicago, where aba has resided with eoti for the past 23 years. Sheraaitried a respectable Irish Amer ican Lanlry, wfm b«a a- father’s solicitude tin soldier. He was-edodated at tbs Catholic College of .North Chicago, hnder the superintendence of the Rev. Mr. 1 .Kinsellar bf New YorkLCity. In 1851, 1853 and 1854, he read law in the law office of the honorable Isaac N. Arnold, Con gressman from the Chicago District. If or ' n short time hejedited thc Wes Urn Tabltt, a semi religions weekly newspaper, in Chicago. In 1856, he admitted an attorney-at-law.in Chicago, t ! ■ S At this tinie he beldtbe position of Second Lieotennnt in the Chicago 'Shields Guards, one of the companies attached to the Irish brigade now in Missr nri, and which has done so well at Islington. In 1857, Senator Fitch of Indiana, tendered him a clerkship in the Department cf the Interior. He accepted it and spent the win-, ter at Washington. -After his return from Washington, he was elected Captain of the Shields Guards. . On the arriving of the bombardment of Supiter, he'tbrSw hiasonlinto the national sense. ■■ ijbe Irish American com panies held t meeting;k which he whs shortly afterwards b 5 went tb ’Yasfiingtoß with a letter, written hy tie late ! Spimatjor Dq-bglas on his death-bed, to the President, tencferingT a regi ment to be culled the flrish Brigade.” He!was elected Colonel, and Jibrnediately went to work With a will. , Cub Mulligan is worthy 1 of all praise, A I purer, a better man, dies not live in the State | of Illinois. Since he' was able to tell the differ- j enoe between aldand t.’afer.a glass of spiritu- J mis or malt liquor has'pot passed his lips. Her is about si:: feet j"; hrtiglit, with a wiry,' elastic frame Honor ble in ail relations, and | respected by all, be hr.) won bis way by unit!- j ring industry and umftestionable courage. On i the 26th day of Octob r, 1859. be was married | to Miss Marfan Nagel t, by the Roman Catholic . Bishop of Chicago. H> • 'I A fine schjolirr, ft \ ghod speaker, a brilliant writer, a promising'! lawyer, was he when the | banner of the Union was insulted. Now he is : —long may he con tin oe so—one of the brave defenders of;the Union., • In one of his last let- 1 tear* received by the; gentleman above alluded | -to, ha says“if I die, if I fall in defense of, our laws ftnd Constitution, lot my example be , followed by,kit—by.jßvery man who loves; tho'l fame and renown of the.'fathers who madOiUs a i great and honorable people.” —Detroit Tribune. | - PABSON BBPW’ETEOW’S ATTITUDE. | The Knoiville WAig 'at ihb 7th u[fc., confa!ns a-eard fro,m Mr. Brownlow, designed to correct - some eroneops notions tijftt prevail in regard to ~K5s positnman the wariiquestion. ' lie says I e entertains tbs sane position lie always has 'of “Ibeherwy of Secession and ■the leading men who brought about a dissolution of the Onion, i and of .tbb natives' that 1 prompted them.”-: lie' ‘•can never sanction tbe-one-nor confide in the other.” Ha wishes. It understood, however, ! that, inasmuch as fe.ia'not. a “candidate for nnwtyrdorai ok in»p]4sobment”-during' the - -war, 1 and has been’over||mered by the action of the State at the pallet 1 >oi, and by the strong: arm of tbe militqrj'. he has determined to “moder ate in his tone,” tc “cease the course of war fare” he hosjwagei i,and'to “yield to the neces sity upon nsir-a nf irssity none of tis can avert.” After pledging bio »lf to devote more attention hereafter, to (tiring ?iis readers the current news, he say*; “I novBT iinght editorially. As long ns I could sceompliel 1 anything by fighting, and >H my retirement fo a position of neutrnlity. I entry with ijie- pig unchanged principles , and shsH-eherish thein totty latest hours in life !” lie fbrther addb t “So far as I am indtridnally concerned, I will .not bo a party to any ibad scheme of rebellion, gotten up at this late day, or to ony insane at tempt to invade this end of the State with.Fed ieral troops. I And any portion of the Union men of East Tennessee who mny be crazy enough toembark ih dther enterprise, ansi snf : far utter ruin, As. bdey are bound to do,| shall 1 not, when “the time t pf these' calamities be orerpnst,” reflect pf (die for having advised 'such a course. T “I hove many qljt friends and co-laborers in - tthe Union pause; dispersed throughout' East Tennessee; vtho thi ife that I ought weekly to pitch into the State' tad the Confederate Govern ments,, and into evt tything and everybody con-j neoted with Secess] in, regardless of consequen-| CesVnnd the more-iso, as I conduct the' onlyl UniotKpaper'lleft inithe Southern Confederacy.! Not being impressed with any such sense of] duty, I most respectfully decline the honors? and hazards! of so brave and independent af course. there is any gentleman in the ■ Union ranks an this end of tho St,ate, who is de sirous to.try his hand in it, I will cheerfully ; yield him my position 1 But before be embarks, n* a new begtnnek, I will apprise him of the fact that we lire jn the midst of n fearful revo-l lution and rebellion —that the civil law has giv- j rn way to millitary rule—and that, if be is fool enough to attempt such, a course, the military authorities of the, South ire not fools enough to I tolerate it. ! I come downfrom my extreme po-1 sition, not of choice, but of necessity, and I frank-, ly confess that I have not the courage to ! meet, in open combat, unarmed as I am, eleven States; ia arms, add in full uniform.” 4 - Tbs Haetest os Death. — Dr. Lyon, brigadd surgeon under General Lyon at the battle of WiUon erejsk, was witness to the following ex'* traurdinory'lncident: “A tall rebel soldier wared a large and costly Secession flag defij »ntly, when a cannon ball struck him: to thif earth, dead- A second soldier instantly picked up the prqstrate flag, and waved it again— i| cannon baU shattered bis body. A third suit | dier raised and waived the flag, andji third ■ CUnon ball crashed into his breast nndllie feiij dead. Yet the fourth time was the flag raisi-d; ' the soldietj wared it, and' turned to climb ovef j the fence frith it into the woods. As ha stood | astride the! fence a"moment, balancing to keep ! the heavy flag upright, h fourth cannon hall' •track hiioi In the Bide cutting biro cuiwp!etel| in two, to that ono-balf of hi* body fell on onf ; eide of the fence and the other half .the other eide, wbile tbs flag itself lodged on the ' and wm captured Is a few minutes afterwards ' tp6fftncjp.» U ■ • V i vie. IHE MlTAttiß, jngon * - - 1 "wELLSBOBOUGB, PA., I 1861." I County t^bmliationfi. 1 ’ FOB PEESIDEST 2CDUB. f ROBERT G. WHITE, o/ JJWsboro. [ Poa ABSOCIAT rROYAL WHEELER, |-VICTOR OASB, .1 , FOE REPRESS fr-S, B. EIiLIOTT, I B. B. STRANjG, j . FOE 6HEI I H. STOVTEEII J ; FOE T lEA | HENRY B ; . CAR I ; ■ FOB COIUI.' f -JOB REXFOiiDj ""hji - • - * J ■ I ( T FOB BCD) M. -BCLUEI CIIAS. GOLDSMIT’ J . RESOLUTIONS. JVherear, Civil War with all its horror? and at f tendant evil? now exis £ in our country—war waged | against the existing 'bvcrnineut nml againbt'frce f institutions by armed legions of rebels and traitors I in the South, and by those, who, in the free JJorth, | pnlliato and excuse th 3m, thus giving them aid und, ! comfort: And ll’Aerer« all former party issues, vi- I tal «s they arc in themselves, have sunk into insig j- liificonce by the side o * the great question of Union | or Disunion. Therefore be it • \ Uewlotd, That until seaco shall he again restored py a vigorous and succWfnl war, there can be but v\o parties—one maiuti .iniug inviolate the Constitu ion and the Union, and the government established >y it; and the other dinctly in arms, or indirectly by meeting at the efforts of the administration to enforce :ho law?, ai.d pulliatirg, excusing, opologizing, or pympalhlzing with rebellion, conspiring to overthrow Ihe Constitution and thdreby destroy the Union of the State*. | JietoUed, That while |vo hnvo the utmost confidence |.n President Lincoln—ip his ability, wisdom, and in- Icgnfy—rnnd in lhe,prinpiple? on v, bleb be was elected So the first office in the 5 world; nevertheless, wo bc ievc it to bo the*duty of all men .to merge the parti* jtaa in the patriot, and therefore we are willing to fncet till men upon a cun man platform : The Uxios, for the sake of the blessings of freedom and good government; the Coss’ttutios and the war for its pnintenancc until the rebels lay down their arms,* tuid the ENFORCEMENT OP THE LAWS, 6V6D to the hanging of traitor leade’s/ This w our only platform nml wo invite all men to anitevith us,'no matter what nnrty they may have belonged to* beretoforo in sup port of these principles/! f J!etulced. That if tb County shall unijc with . Ihe’platf'rm stated in tl |i.»ve manfully united w| f' ears for the War, we sbl f uif good faith, reqnij capability in the dittri. fcard to party nntsc.4. if Jletolredy That ‘'the >rattiee which /eGhIS to hiite rown up io this county for the last ten year?, of per ons selecting tlufiuselw * for office, advertising their ,ames to the public” through the county papers, ns aniHdate®, is, of ItsfU right and proper ,*'but (hat ( j** the practice of traveling over the county in all di | rccijon l ' beggirg and pleading the people to elect del legates instructed for t icro, has become a nuisance, pud ought to be” abulia tod ; that 4 * the effect of such a practice ie demoralizing, tending to promote bar gains between the candidates; to provoke strife ond pciirc ird, and ip the cod :o place candidates before the ipubUc who are unworthy of public trust;” jthat the people thenisi Ives, and rot political wire fpullcrs who take advantage of a bad system to pro ijinvle their own selfish euls. should be allowed to say She their candidates foj office shall be. That-to rc iovo these, and other abuses, this Convention hereby ijolisbes, so far as the bounty Repnblieiin organiza tion in concerned, the - pi esent Convention system, end jitluit we hereby adopt it e, following in its stead : ( |' Tbe people of each tovnsbipaud borough wjll meet fat the usual place of h» Iding ejections, and at a eer ion-Suvcrs, and so did his co-laborers for His paper is rightly named the “ Agiww l It was established, and like many otto* like strips in the North, its, sole object to agitate the slavery/ question —to prcjinM Korthern people against the Sjuihern;to v hitierness and a bale between therx. SECT HAS BEEN ACCOMPLISHED; SE THIS WICKED REBELLION CPO> LJ After the capture of Fort Jl.ittcms,» , the shells was found to have pierced s powder magazine, without bursting, animation, it appeared that the gunner, , duty it was, had forgotten to tear on 1 leather cap, ordinary yiut on lor safety- . was the only shell thrown that did Had the cap been removed, the tor 1 ‘ would have been blown up; and not a 1 of prisoners left alive to be. captured as p ers of war. How to get up A Regiment.—.D 3 ' 1 Onion candidate for Governor of about ten thousand dollars in get* iment for the war, and his son bti and carries a musket. Of course was a jnan of distinction and irei ■pould have had ft commission. wb( of any account or not. But that Dave’s way. His son go i nl — Cin. Gazette. The Mozart wing of the Democi Yortftity. derided by a vote of o> port the Republican Union State 1 “ regular” Democratic Ticket than ever, this year, in 'all the Fre< It seems thldt John A. olnted with the hones of the iH u9 . tr ' of Mount Vernon, was killed whij ( a Rebel. His body was given over t< When will the Rebels give up the Cameron f - Macdonald, the-owner of attempting to prove that he i« D 0 iet.'su that he may recover Flora- In San Francisco, ont of Republican-Union candidate f« r ceived 11,000. [From the Wellsboio Democrat AagnstUtL] ... The War Against the South