. • t f a — 4l • • 7 liiiiIIIFZ, WEIGHT, Editor and Proprietor, VOLUME XXXIV, NUMBER 15.] • MIRED EVERS' SATURDAY MORNING. 'Office in Carpet Hall, Hortlt-toestcorner of IFront and Locust streets. Versus of Subscription. Copy p e raucum,i f paidin acivance.. " i f uoi puid withinthree s,monthafromeommencementofthe year, :2 00 C7e•zstiss • Not ohecraption received lore leas time than six mouths; and no paper I be di4contittued anal nil w.evasorages.areplud,usi4estat the optionof the pub. is her. iD"MoneYnayb vet mit le (lb mailauhepabiiaL . u ar • a risk. Rates of Advertising. quar 46. i nes]one week, 4 1, *O5B three week's. 75 eacktultsequentinsertion, 10 • ' ' - (l4.inesioneereek. 50 three weeks, 1.00 enehtubsequentiattertion. fa , zerperadeertkementtin proportion Al 'Peru I Ikeountwil lite made to quarterly, half v eit leotreislytrieertideromno are Is trictl)eoufined °their business. 11. M. NORTH, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW coiumbia,Pa. Callectsons romptlymade,i aLancaste land York Semmes. ,Columbia,llla 138=1 DR. HOFFER, - T\ENTIST.--OFFICB, Front Street an doer LJ tom hamlet. over Saylor & hiellonahl'e Honk cto e — Columt 111, Pa t V"Entrance, borne as iCliieri• I'h oar. h Gallery. [Augur' 21. 'RN Harrison's Conmbian Ink 'WHICH is a superior article, permanently black, /IV and not corroding the pen, can be bud in ant oantity. at the Family Medicine Store, and blacker ♦et an tient English Hoot Polish. Columbia..l.,an 9.1999 Itousakeepees, a Word! TUST Received. a full Flock of bleached and 'ln a bleached Illuzlinn, Ticking 4, Cheeks. tiinghams and Print!, inn word, everything pertaining - to do e:wine tide. Cull and examine for yourselves, at *TRACY A BOW CIAS. cor id and Locust St•. Jcne.7, 1562 Lawns, Lawns, Lawns. T ADIFS oe:1 mud eee our brautifol I 2 emit Lowile, :1 14.10 FP, IA STMACV & BOWERS. Juue ,Oppoehe Odd reamer.' flail. HOOPED SHIRTS. ANEW and splendid style of Hooped Skirls, just received; Also, a full assortment of oilier ci . yies, very ellen p AIALTBY & CASE. Columbia, April 28,1E62. Locintt :Street. • TOR SALE,. .150 07 j e y k ;t C. A. Salt, 100 Sucks 11 , 15 1 141 . 1;I; s Ap- Warehouse, Cupal 13ncin. Columbia, Dec. 29, 1961. NOW FOR BARGAINS. - 1 1 7„ E have just received another lot of nil-wool De -7V Joiner; and plaid Mosuminques. which we offer ut radsteed prices. STEACV & DOWIRRA, Cola. Juhe 23, leff2 Cor. 2d and Locust Sts. FOLD CREAN OF 111ACERINIL—For the eurr and prevention ft) chapped hand., &c. Vol na 't ut the )LUEN MOLZTAR DRUG' STORK Dee. 3,16510 r, nut tweet. CA'lLlnl.a. NOTICE. It F. undersigned would give notice that 1.0 intends e readier to do u and will e ' l ll',, above u', Here's a heart for every fate," To each and all a merry - Christmas, and a happy Now Year. King George C. 11., Va., 1 Dec. 231, 1862. f PEON THE 45TH PENNA CALI" OUPOSITE FREDERICKSBURG, VA., 1 January 4th, 1863. DEAR Sm—Christmas has passed, so has New Year's day, nod still we are quietly looking at Fredericksburg, and wondering what nest will be the move on the m ilitary chess board. Twelve Major and Brigadier Generals are formed into a mutual admira tion society at Washington, more familiarly styled "McDowell and Porter Courts of In quiry:" they summ,n the other Generals to Washington to give in their experience and assist them to drink the Washington whis ky. Everybody knows that after long sit tinge and wise looks they will find the cul prits not guilty and pronounce them the greatest of modern Generals. Why this farce? Why should those old fogies not be dismissed—they aro an incumbrance and should be lopped off to make room for more vigorous moo, who would lead our armies to victory. The 46th is in :Wu quo; that means that we arelliving snugly in huts, caves, with plenty of crackers. pork, beaus, sugar, coffee and the other delacacies of Uncle Sam's larder: whisky rations added, and we would be truly happy. You know that ardent is contraband in camp, except for officers; yet we occasionally euchre the com missary out of a small supply. Two of our Sergeants did him in a small way on New Year's day. I did them, and the result was all three of us became elevated. The Ser geants got noisy; I smelled a rat (the old Colonel,) and kept quiet. Next morning Sergeants were reduced to the ranks; the order read "for the sake of good example." lam glad of it; and now that vacancies ex ist I am almost sure of my promotion. or - Jorps is to he reviewed at two o'clock this atrernoon by Major Genera/ 13urnside. This may indicate a movement, as "Old Burny" dont often review except on very important occosions. Rumor says that our Corps is to go to Washington to relieve the new troops there, who aro all to be sent to the front, to put in the balance of their time fighting the enemy. If so, no doubt the 45th will be selected to do duty around the White House, as it is said that Mrs. Lincoln is partial to good looking men. I hope this may be correct, as our friends in the 135th would not like to return to their homes without having won reputation at the cannon mouth. We are glad to see the President's procla mation freeing the darkies. Now let us have the darkey soldier; send us on two companies from Tow LIM; we'll train them; we'll give them a chance to try their pluck. Stir up my old chucks, Bill Brown, Nate Smith, Uncle Cmsar and the others. I'll be their Captiug and show them how to charge on double quick; so send them along or we'll be after them. Should they not fight for freedom and a free country? or will the Home Guard say no? lam in earnest; the Rebels use the negro, why should we not do the same? In a few months the Regi menta enlisted for two years will have to be discharged; clittle later and the nine month area will go out of service. All this will reduce our army to about 250,000 men. Flow are we to increase it? Either force out the Home Guard or the darkies, and as the negro is the cause of the war let them participate in its-glories; make Ahem fight fortheenselves; I know your town can easily spare two hundred; enrol thorn at once. The weather is •vary -pleasant, and the health of our regiment is almost-perfee Oar Regimental Hospital has not a -single patient. .Our 'company Ana-seventy men, present for duty, and not s single man • oat the sick list. I vesture to assert that not a regiosentora sotopsey in the terries can present so fasarable•s record of ..butt ae [WHOLE NUMBER 1,69 this. Our huts aro inigue, but comfortable, and mighty clean. •Cleadlidees ensures health. 'Put•all that together and join me in a "hurrah for the 45th. Yours, &c. • .4522 News From The Gorilla Country; Mr. Winwood Reade and "The Old She karry," who went out to the Gabeen clown a year ago, arrived in the cdlony in early Spring. and went over the ground described in M. du Chaillu's book. The Atheneum publiebee the following letter from Mr. Reade,: Raving spent five active months in the Gorilla country, I am in a position to state that M. du Chaillu has shot neither leopards, buffaloes, nor gorillas; that the gorilla does not beat his breast like a drum; that thb kulu-kamba does not utter the cry of "koo loo" or anything like it; that the young gorilla in captivity is not savage; and that while N. du Chaillu affects to have bees a "poor fever-stricken wretch" at Camma (June 1, 1859,) he was really residing in robust health at the Gaboon. Mongilotraba, who is not a native hunter at all, and who was in my service three months as steward and niturel history assistant, duped Mr. R. B. Walker in asserting that M. du Chaillu had killed two gorillas; nor did he ever ac company that gentlemen except in the above capacity. From the Balengi of the Muni, from the Shekani and Fans of the Gaboon, from the Commi Bakele, Sec., of the Fernand Vaz, upon the banks of which rivers I have hunted (always unsuccessfully) gorillas, examining those only who were hunters, and reserving alone such evidence as was corroborative, I have gleaned the following facts respecting this ape of con tention. The gorilla dwells only in the den set parts of the forests; he feeds exclusively on vegetable matter, and one kind of grass, is a sure indication of his proximity ; st noon and era ho approaches the village . plantations for the sake of the plantains, oceasionlly (uttering a wild kind of cry, but which in rage (as imitated by Etia) bo comes a quick sharp hark. By day he moves along the ground on all fours (as having crawled for hours on their tracks, I can testify,) sottetimes ascending the trees. By night he chooses a large tree to sleep in. lie is exceedingly wary and keen of scent. When the female is pregnant, he. builds a nest (as do also the kulu-kaniba and the chimpanzee,) where she is delivered, and which is then abandoned. These nests, several of which I have seen, are simply rude layers of dry sticks, and of small branches evidently torn off the live-tree by the hand. With regard to his ferocity, as' a rule, when missed or wounded he Will charge. His charge, from which the na tives often escape, being themselves nimble as apes, is made on all fours. Min, whose left hand has been severely crippled, in formed me that the gorilla seized his wrist with his hind foot, and draged his band in to his mouth as he would have dents e bunch' of plantains, Two things are at least cer= tain—that the gorilla is less feared than the leopard ; and the story of a man killed by a gorilla at Catania is a complete fabrication: Traditional accounts of Such en incident exist, but nothing of the kind has hap pened within the memory of man. • The tale of the gorilla assuming a boxing atti tude, and beating his breast like a dram; originated from Quengueza, and was unan imously refuted by all hunters from the Mani on the north to the Fernand Yes on the south. Thus in an obscure African village an old savage could tell a lie, which has blazed through Europe. The Apingi country, which is the Ultima Thule of N. du Maine's explorations, is distant] from the Gumbi (Nigumbi) four days foot journey, in a southern direction. In tracing the course of •the Renibo, hose - ever, he adopted a longer route. ' Ilis de scription of the Fans (Bafanh,) whom he visited in company with Mr. Mackay, of Cerise°, is very good. In ascending the Gaboon to its rapids, in the bosom of -the of the Sierra del Crystal, I advanced some I distance into their country, and found them gentle, hospitable, but cannibals undoubt edly, as one of them confessed to me. Bien the account of their ghoul-like propensities is in one case supported by evidence which I find it impossible to disbelieve. This book—so strange a melange of truth and fiction—was prepared by a gentleman well known in the New York literary world, from copious notes made by M. du Chaillu, when engaged in these expeditions. And I must do the latter the justice to confess that from the same sources which afforded me proofs of his impostures, I learn that be is a good marksman; possessed of no common courage or endurance; that he has suffered many misfortunes and privations, of which Im has said nothing; that his character as.a trader has been unjustly blamishedi that his labors as a naturalist have been very remarkable; and that during his residence in Africa .he won the affection of the natives and the ell teem of those who most merit to he esteemed —the missionaries. And a fellow-laborer, thoughein humble one„.may be permitted to regret that, actuated by.a foolish..innity or ill-advice, he should have attearptaktwedd artificial flowers tolls .bnie.wreatkriflutrels which he.‘bad , fairty istnt :hardlrearned. CAPS LIUST: gtierlinto. LOANDA, September '','