University of South Carolina Libraries
"*i4 Id.1i dm " o-. " . a+ - '^+ .-.y .r-.'M - - - . . . -- - ..- .. !-w. -. .. .. - ~ .. ,- .-:-- - . - Vill rr "l 1g~ ,, LAs Y O-BEDSEIAINO.UEU NE ~ i:-7. 7= 4L.A1L~ - -..WEDENSDAY MORNING,AUTJ S I 1 87 ...-~ ass8s, *es r.a.=Mm. IN C-URW poem hYaoe :." -:. -. POOVI&I 8s. * a, .o.. res s.nts,t. g e- eaae Cousirn Z , hen atesU had, aM-s as oasound-re +salt. - lc w e..ea iaer asona Brd yer w eve ne, antthm '6facblass ips. ":" 40 Relii Fair, bs 't year, ~rs." -0ne e man gY 'be well "is e Far e.-Bae Eving be -' i ~ e.ey'ast iberal pas-. saydeoted isnto con we r .to alw ptheiollowingt as * ~ ~ Iite claif&od pgie,.and any e etrar bsaaches: taagbt AnE.$' insttae. - Value, $400. -M*1YWai hofthe remgininghSouth r ne-seborship for 4u * 'lig&ss'&nmathF ha your e&orts,wiH be ~p~Lse-steisg ond asa g te expecta ions. * ~ y e~EULron , Principal. .The above,olas been re hewed ir?e .year, commencing th.186i7. Applica naid baddresed immedi p aleiy to the Principal of the Insti rtute, or to the Ladies' Southern fils Association of Baltimore. Will ou please extend notice of se your paper, for the benefit mjOUC as may wish to apply from ~ Its. BENJ. C. HOWABD,,. ~rp idt S. R. Ass'n of Maryl'd. - Baftvore, Auzgtrst 1st, 1867. Tidgaigp'e is a good * ea9e- making a -fre. -Every body eugnose,s.that he can-do it a 'ltebetter-.than'- anybody else. Wehave-seen people doubt their fitness for apple pedling, ox driv ing, and counting laths ; but in all ear expe-ience we never inet with that individual who did not think he could double the circulation of any paper in two months, A "tin" wedding was observed after en unusualannner, in Vermont, the otherday.The wife eloped witha course clsdthe festiva1. asnco Geriri-S nth.on -.our Duuty to the Sauth--Letter, to Thad deous Stevens. B'on Thaddeous Stevens Daa Sm.: You are reported in the New York Tribune as -baving recently said on the floor of Con gress . =Itis aow:ield by one of the ot 1biJand enlihtened gj tteme-in th6 country- -(I mean -Gerrit Smith): tEat' .ve should even pay a portion of the rebel Of rotise you do not mean that 1is6.so' Wy 'oten re peate pp piior;ia thah govern mer mlad or givognytjiQ to- the ohk tO.help. er. to ran upward tat-fcam the depths o her pov erty and elativon. By.- wat igi4you ere. able to construct from the letter of this proposition yenrs igurr of speech is for .you, -no me, to; explain. I an. truly sorry att s iu .your be:t to hold up to ide'ule. my 'reasQnable 0siUkn. IYon are too o14 and 7i0eeaci to~be nmraking -suc desdinsf. p;isao.Jif er dice; There are two-reasons why poor.-.very poor, a the North N1rj :largely 'espo nsible-Wr th6'povetp of-tie. .Soa Our fatheb3 'uited ti the.teis of ithe.S,lth inakinibis- k d of CAves; an1ipW our own day theT lgr"t ha$ gne with.the'6uth in ipho'di and~xI.enAing lilmery.. Untitlfe brea1inodt'.fhisar. every Congre.b was fr : 'j . Te-repeal e-t-he Missour -Comn pro atae was-th *oritf'the Nrl iweltts. of tihe=outj. t , WaMs :e .euac inent cf thi Xr-i nelSaitie Saver act, .wlah7 .eviuthe good. AhrahSi. Lineohr wa- ompeiled'by the ,p--slery sentirait-of the N*%b as weu- as V ie S6ti t - to';eforce so 'rigeal i With cotpa'ratirelq ap, pxegions, .e I vrhe:j offie ges, theoIQgwal seminaries, and political and religiou . pa:biest were on tje side of 4lxvery. The cpramerce of he-Nth' a' em phetieally.i the interes f'slaye ry, ryI' It.JWI of 'sich ficts if suirec4tait be. denie<f tiat "tbe, aid, ieglf egeljdes' for. -Amerien. Jdavery. ut the war came. of slavery.; and v.,and desolation of the .come of the ~.wari" .4n -ilee,'to 'the saie degree 'f at. the north was responsibte fr -slag ve ihe respoisible for the ~wgeii<i for its ruinous reeut to ths Seah. - .You call my sympathy withathe South, anerby desirytotave ~the North hefp hery- "siekly hu'imaa -t.'I calML tpfe:hengstyi. if his frenzy goes to teang ilwa~ my house, sh' in selfieiese -IioId :to' -God :that qug;&i si'e dst in wie-ayat;h as*reessia fi ediymillions oftibllare.to heCenAdetate&estes y--esc ,f4ghem-so; muceh - of it~ as,-wstrl&e pepertknmete Iie pQpulaionawd -to' what she- lis suffbred-fi'oni the rav'sges of the. par ! T-Re-share- falling to each St te to be distributed through ou her territory in loans upon adequate security. This, by prov ing the lovesad ~pity .Qf the North for her would win the' heart of the South, and would thus produce a true and lastiDg peace between them. And then it would be worth to the nation, if only in a financial point of view, many times fifty millions of dol lars. Gold would no longer bear among us a premium orf forty per cent., and our government would no longer have to pay seven per cent., nor much more than half seven per cent, interest on its loans. Very respecfiully yours, - GERRIT SMITH. Peterboro,' July 15, 1867. The f'ollowing m'ay prove useful to many of our readers :-M. Kes sler has for many years been very successlul in engraving on fiint glass (crystal), by the agency of alkaline fluorides and acids. He has now succeeded in p'reparing an ink with hydrofluate of ammo nia and hydrochioric acid, proper ly thickened, with which, using any pen, ineffaceable chaxacters can be traced on glass. M. Peli; got communicated this and some other matters connected with the use of fluoric acid to the Academy The Social Evil--Its Cure. The Cincinnati Times, in corn rmentiag upon tlits topic,jwiic i,s now attracting .a much attentiop, says : The current literary and social -diversions of. women in the-$ret circles are only.oalculated- to .Ten der .them "atftractive - ohildren," though too many men .are found *ho do not resect - in thenr the _i y-of childhood. ' It' is-because (o the. "eakness which steh a life niicts upon them that they be co ne-as~"nothing" in thehnds of ,eertain:etaiss of attractive in-en, hbose c;-ief deliglisto'play with them- for such stakes as are easily 4weptr from tdhe board by tfrose :who-arerestrained ieither. .y con seieaee, by fearr or.by. pQhcy - -There is alassrof idle women, both-single and -those--who have 'ittle respect for their -marital re lations, who 'ima -ine "themnelves 's potent over the - weakness .of inen tli4ttl'ey eadf iake egngdttsts at'rtiieir pleasu;re. The gt r su& con4ugs, and ate1ut cvaig enougkto suppose ave made a congnest; when in faet, those .eom..thuy hg bio ave. en "ed .hav. _oly been. pluyp t 1t1O "atract ive hit eh." st nga 1d' 'dw to deal With" uets, - fatoe^ nt'Xl~aiXk ri ho paysi them dearlyfoi heir aihsa Napoleon4ho 0eat 'saitat' eatesmen shbuld' eb h'sought imong literary '-or seien-. tic.- men nf, wives omdng ee q attes: -M -en generally. know how to steer.elar -of:these daz zigg-damselL The sex -ahoufd rapuciate them as- thorngil,.as tey shouid-repudia ithe oorres inig 6les ot the masculine gende, who'aim at conquests with .fis'baer niotives. 6 f'au~nary a woman,". said the Roman'Consulto hi-son, "let 't bo one4ho'tas geen enotgh. to snperintend the-setd of a 'meaf of 'ictuals; -taste enoagh- to dress rerelfj pride enough to. wash- be fore breakfast,' snd sense-. eo.ugh. .o*hoia,heit when she has .dt hing .to - The great n the times is for a.system of moris apuled. as: riidi to nir as to'wjaan.fhere afould: no t dewn orthe v.Jr ue .reaf v1rdma , man sl e& be Tift eto I Ievel.. Be, 'sias thi,theoce of eais re-, seri ed- for. woman" is not belf( br@id eno. Female. .nrals,.as gegiarer 'n . a.e _ tie .udedLicane -c1 . . Io6 Aybuia tjeal .ae~ to thea gr p e.t preservapion of a h ete tdthe eiendaI of le'taughtt. - ats all'gd4, so.fairasit oee; b.ut the neg,lect of the lsolid cities el life occasons.nore violation of akpih alf.ether, ganses. epm 'whhasgoed .heiA is. indepen .dgtpnugl.to~ pserve herself. obeeini Thro~ eneel,eho traezs to ' tfiet1 4.*y~nd t qilifiek to eiin'$lefheir. time 't biefea faaer -As-said' oft&Devil;1-ia6 ofi I1the tuen he -fished for she~ liked, the idler best, because ha~ bit'the bare hook ; so-it may be-said-of the idle wo man in a still more emphatic sense. While our male moralists hold woman to such. strict chastity, and cast her off unless she be sbove suspicion, why. do not our female moralists exact the same fealty to virtue from man ? It is not necessary for him to be above suspicion, not by a considerable. There is no prospect of man's re laxing his views.s to woman, and we see no other 'mode of self-de fence for woman than to act on the principle of sauce for the goose shall be sauce also for the gander. Under the present social regime the women are all the time cherishing the serpents that sting them to death. "Alas! when evil men are strong, No life is good, no pleasure long." "Elder, will you have a drink of cider ?" inquired a farmer of an old temperance man who was spending an evening at his house. "Ah-hum-no, thank ye," said the old rman, never touch liquor of any kind-'specially cider; but if you'll call it apple-juice, I'll take a drop." ----e--+ A man died last week in Shrews bury, Mass., who had become so advanced in his second childhood, that for some months he had per sisted in carrying to bed with him each night a rag doll which be longed to one of his grand-chil Food for Animals. One vast source of food for farm animals is ani entire loss- to' the va-stpotions of thi South, a part of Virginia :and Tennessee being the only exceptiens-*e allude to the corn stalk. As invariably: practised - in the South the stalk is.left- to dry and rot or to be burned when dry in the field.. In the North the stalk is cut down -while the', blades are green and put up in shocks in the field, being'supported.bysome few stalks not cut, the tops brought together -and tied,- the cut corn stood up ai around and whei a stock is completed tied thiis, tbere to cure, and'when corn is dry it is "husked,"or as wecall -it,'shucked,' -hunled ato, the house -and . the stalkse-- also,-. the. latter passed through -a cutting box, steamed and fed to stock. Those who have bestowed attention to the natter know that more flour is made from wheat cu. when the grain is in t{ (ouih slte 12efore ripe, wen th'zmilk of jrrain has ma tni-ed into firmneFsj-st td a dough, mashing by thum~--and fmger than -'fthe grain be peimntted - to ipen xi a the-Ged.'At thlssme i ei<stahk and-blad.sen_haan"ritive natter where,- ae> when fully ripe, this itritive liatter is ased up'in. forming tbe woody matfet of e. st a:.. A!,grai for fedingh1d e eut ten.gr .ftee- days before maturity, because al.the food gi ing principles is theie an the in digestible woody fib~e-has tiot been inadn'at the -exp -'e3"-the s&ugar -ind gum -iri-tlii "pkat ;-of cours, if there'.be- wt6iy matter largely found in the cbn stalk, "ere was -la, y- of- suga and, gum to make- i;-and it:.hks been wade to the loss'. the principles which ae advaat gus asa fod. Rauy tb'ifr the.:eof swill $rive1" up and there willbe a (reat'Ioss-. Wer i c e not- h9:1' 1t ad coin..he. Southbut ve:aveai 'hundieds and'huo4rye' ofrieres eut -dwn-at the North and we have -no doubt that all corn-on t'riving Lrms is sodone if eats=be- cut .tes dae -before zpee know the $talk- will all be eaten if cut.up,. r;better. threshed and -cut up, a littlemeail apd sa:lt Mater.added. If there be ngtri tion i-a the stalk of,o~ats wf g..aot. in the stalk of cofn.? tere is n dabt of the factat f0 efeeieg atp oses small grain be out at eperm; ten or-Miee% -da tl s fore ripe; that thep'are greatly supioer ffeding and -we "-annot -see Wvhy corn- 8: an exception. or is-bRt Uio,mamoth grass;-ail grasses, we believe,.giv.e more nua tritige. matter if cut before. ripe. -Why shoultco6rn.be in exceptiqn ?. Our fatbers'ke a great (sal'nd they.are liofthfo f initation , in ail that is right at hn bet' they~ may notBfivs known .everythig, anTwe shodld -improve on what they have bequeathed um - s -We-hAVe a firm faith t'hat'in ~tenyears -we, of the- BSotith, will be on the highway of prosperity, and in twenty-flive. years or less, the South will again eo the .eor troling spirit in the extended- na tion, or .whatever. is the proper naie. N~ation ~it is now, but we hope ere long it will be once more. i republic. We would therefore urge our fellows to 'begin to~ hus band every resource, and call into our aid every improvement and fail not to take into count the small grains. If the corn cro.p can be made, as we hope and believe, entirely available, this grain alone will be a net income equal. to alt State expenses,-Southern Rura ist. Mr. Bourne, of her Majesty's customs, has patented a very sim ple contrivance, which effectually preserves the original character of any liquid to which it is applied. It is a contrivance for the entire exclusion of the atmosphere, the injurious action of which upon sensitive drinks as wines is well known to every one. Mr. Bourne's. invention is a diaphragm, or a thin membrane, made of a material or compotition very like india rub ber. It is fixed inside the vessel be it cask, or earthenware or glass reservoir-and is so loose that when the vessel is full it lines the upper half. As the liquid is drawn off, this thin covering descends on the surface, and follows it closely to the last drop, effectually ex cluding the slightest trace of air. A Frenchman who has been in India, speaking of tiger hunts', pleasantly remarks; "When zo Frenchman hunts ze tiger abh! ze sport is grand, magnifique! but when ze tiger hunts ze French man, zere is the very devil to A New Southern Staple. A new.plant has been added to the resources of vur tropical and semi-tropical regions.-a new tex tile, which will fuirnish the world with elothirg -aid the nneas 'of knowledge. We have seen, with' in a few days, Ing skeins of a cot ton-like fbre, cotton-like in white ness, softness 'and- fineness, but much stronger, which is now pro duced at the rate of five erops per year, in the State of Vera Cruz, Mexico, where it has b-en culti vated for ive yepra by- a Belgian naturaalist and be iist, who went there to pursue hisfavorite,studies and occupations in a soil and. cli mate which favor them. This plant, called the ramie, is a native of Java,. was introduced thence into thoJardin des Plantes, at Paris, by som4 - French savan, in 1844; was regarded then as simply <xhibiting the .wondkrful advantages, of- th -tropics, baing too~delicate$or'pen siEculture-in cofd elinates. But having been planted and trA in: wariner eli. iates than th ef Prance,yet not so equ0 <tal athat of Java, it habeen found to do. as -well in thept - It is due to MDr. Dey3-tk Roeil,. chief of the drutura'institute of $elgium-, now of .Santocon spram,. Ssn A<res 1u8tI. St.e of Vra Crug ieo; tl.at we'ein ne perionce It a naturalized plant f t&ib ketinent, and to his greecei st-telb#i eitwilr spee< ily oWe its sintroduction into the field c4t re of the Gulf States, to liicbit will permanently pertain. The ramie'.(ita..Javanese nae) is a plant like emp,. contains in' its _talk..the fibLkfoc .which jt ;is raisedt and ~wich. is- grown }ke the..ugar"cau,ror#i ,being 91atr Od in lengths o4-from its stb 1,e; with-this advas4age over thestub bk of the'eaO bt. each suceed E.gd i 'l-.better, and that ~andbs ii6e Meszco-it"-iillf fairnish Afre, and.here at least-htee t g a year. By a new -profess and some simple machine invented by Mr. S., The lint oes*b' prepared from the stalks, takeR- fresh :from thh .ound,-in twenty:four hours. We a ow that-months-of labor and the-entire discolrig-of the fibre f'llows the.treatmaent,by tie or-. .dinary process.of -a ane fbenip,. while the ramie 'ordes -out white, .in;. pure-and adiurt. iht hundeo'unds'of lint to the acte is -to be expected from each cutting 6f full growth; in-fair -land.- Eke nttre is similar to that-of canorbut as the plant, -when once set, is hard to eradicate, grows vigQoousy, andx dbfies the in#a.ene of grass or rival.. pats, cahi#ation~ is oaly needed. to pro mote its- growth. When ripe, it should be~ cut-; but. neglect toi do this cauises no special' damage, so that it.my 2wait days or - Weks the win the free -republicans'of [exico ttnd t'he Union. 'Th'e tbi:e igloiig, f166, and-skong; the plane easy to rise,an&hardy in a th yrn latitnte ;-.is - preparat~ for ~marketis simpleeand eheff'En cost. Uffder these circumstancee,-we miay safely pronounce that itCwill at.ans early day utake high.. rank among our staples.-V 0& Pica yune. A horrible suicide is reported frora Lerida, in Spain. A few days ago, anman was brought into the hospital of that place in a dread ful state of mutilation. It appear ed that he had locked himself up in his room, ripped himself open with a knife,-an dtore out his in testines, eutting them- into frag ments and throwing them about' the room. He then opened the door and called in his wife, whose horror may be easily conceived. He lived until the following day. An Austrian chemist, M. Lein elbrock, has discovered a way of enclosing electricity in small glass capsules, which will explode under the influence of the slightest shock. The capsule is inclosed in a steel cone, so that if shot from a rifle it will enter the flesh, and the explosion which follows is suffi cient to kill a man, Experiments have been made on oxen and horses with perfect success, these animals hating fallen down as if struck with lightning. A German count is under arrest in Louisville, Kentucky, for mar rying three women there, two in Batinore, and an entire -brigade of. ladies in New. York.-The pa pers say he has "wife on the brain." HEAVY FAILURE.-The third dry goods house in New York.ia point of business, that of George A. Wicks, failed on Satur day, with liabilities estimated at nearly two million dollars. Young Men on the Farn' The "Southern Planter" col lects-some statislics *showing that there re about nine million acre of improved -and eleven mifliin acres of unimproved lands in the State of Virgiaiia ;.and that t1re are a little- more- than -one -hun dred thousand - male laborers.. that is between the age of, twelve and sixty years. . Hence,. there ie only one laborer. to. about eighty eight acres of improved ad ara ble randin the State The defi cionc of labor as,omjpared with. needs of the agriculturists is engr-. mous I Where says the' "Plater," s'hall we find the 'remedy ? -,It is:plainly the duty of our7 yo*ng men to meet their pressing exigency. They constitute the only remaining- resoUrce4fdr thoe immediate supply-of any -edside rable amot -of labor. Let - thein strip themstlves ?r.the conflint ; t them "roK up , th seir 5leevge,'T ,ad."git p tleir. loins," for the roble work.:of resusctatiig 4.4r, ginfron-her-present - tralyzed andg.rostrite- diion ; iet them labor *lth-'tt~e- same sef-denial and indomitalT-conrage'int Ver. severauee with wvhk e xtet fd.th to meet her-assaila=t.ii .he stern con0icts of the battledel, and the work wil soon be .aceoi pi hed. The openings- 'r .the ,mploymentof or..yating gn in their accustomed occupat6ens are all fhlld to. repletiou, .,a4d there yet remains a large r tunber with buatemployminL. To continue in idIness-demoralizirig and ener vati'n idlenesS -'rs'a thitig 'fo~ abhorred by eerfv- ingenioue,. high4ninided, "honorable : -young maiti and-to eat'the bread- of de pendence oyght to be- 'more -galla ing to his pride tban4he'perforna anee of comparatively menial- dd-= .ties..if sneh were "ecesiariy:.o. eneoantered, in puts iirg..the ver. .audsa'le object,.o , obtaiing,.fo. himselfan.hQnest lijelihocd and inpromotingwfth patriotic .adr. hd'disinteresfness the honbi 'aid prosperity ofoh'e ~$ate But o suoh humiiliation'awaits oui-yoting inen.: They will rather' -contri bite honor and dignity to their4 calling, and. bring to thpir aid:. ai arr i edieated- # teiligene whk will grea4Ly ace et.h mareli. of naprovgment..; They will soon Acquire a degree of.prae tical skill, which aided bjr thir, eniferidi- kooWrledge, .wilT id them in the lftrodeution sirr 'manaint of 'such; mnehari'ear kelps as their own 'di'glite l experience m.y su'gest, .o-' the' inventive genine pf -the couty may supply; and -thus- -contriburt to. lighten-the burden of birnn toil, remit the, mind frora .. tile drudgerf of. d.ebasing labor, arLd elevate it into the more enno.bling spheres of 'actjvity, whereo cere fies of hength is gined 'by the egercise of its p53wers, and ,wJereg it suecoessfuJ1y conserv,.ea h.pe gress of enciety in - eiyili.zaion, wealth and social happiness... A Baby's. Bo5aphy~ An editor thus does uy the .bi egraphy- 'of a recent aecessi(,a to his liousehold : We have hacf so many . kind' friends asking about- the. baby, that we thought it npeeseary- to~ biograph the chap briefly, anti somewhat after the current style of the-day : 'it's a boy." -He's a buster. Weighs nine pouns and a quar ter, and old women tell us that he will grow heavier as his weight increases. He's the first boy of which we have been proprietor, and of course is the only baby in town. The old woman--hefore mention ed declares him the very image of his pa : 'A faithful copy of his faithful sire. In face and gesture.' But in justice to the youth, we must say we think him an im provement on the original--a world of progress, you know. This young American is as old as could be expected, censidering the time he was born, and will doubtless be too old for his father in a few years, if he has good luck. He is quite reticent on politics, and only wants to be let alone. He thinks he favors Mrs. Wins low's policy. We hav'nt DaTned him yet ; we want to give him a distinguished cognomen, but the fame of our great men is at present so preca rious that we don't like the riak It is perhaps unnecessary to say, as all biogrophers do of dis tinguished personages, that the subject of this sketok was born at an early age, of 'poor but r-espec t.able parents.' Druinawlge -- The stagnatid, t trade has been sever -Pe 1df busineps clase l' 'eur ' felo r :ordat es knlow as "cdrumnis ? . asi ing aesren, despite thior Amas"t inexhausti'ble -i etio . - source, have be efck sionally to yield to reg f of th'e time. One of these genf the ; d has redenty returnei feorn m''ir$ for T isl g (:., of this liese e sl -eof t ieed hi-byhb irm, and r, Td, after- l6oking- over-Mr r, said: - .A "Mr. Ratap'an, I am atuid 4i do fat appreach the d ftsea.)Eae right,.. eI used to be er q cesafat In- tis line.. 2 tst snppose me to be yr a offi ,.. Sellout, '112., and itsow me te way you.intrd i'se.th.e house." Aer:ordingfy, lawaplan , gsped *- af ha* is nnae,-eeid ithis repret tbe aese Of.R AV4a-- &-U94 d 30pto - 6.tie, in hi chJactef chant,'hereorose pleaare at, sti .) "t-h st eca the"see ,sel F neat speebh iw - h&tae; e rh p - ecye ye ".4gid not urider ti2d e - tern mer ua& ndir. Sap, poe , ou .e$ -'' es ;wib lIAear "Cran y, v ae & T' WtIA p.ki'p- bt 1ea d ou ta i rna. ta plart : )at cocegd'ke1ywgi- is4 sk g h ' ed ea pa, blo*ing a ek. pere Coneoient -Iiie ite^ ~ s i 'GIrepresent trh~ogged -This .tle3r0s;.C sadhr sai on oftt eonce!n'.* :o 4ifan. no,-i ii that-yoi aFe- Dot.h O twio drummuela-to one-enetominI :mIy storg 4y -the. laA ty.ntte, an.ifLeuld get.h <ten f if I woukdn't Boof ~ clneanjont oth^4 town~6f Se1l6at? plan," safd This e{ M*irav no dobt'yo did th1-best ee'nkd for the interest - of' .t -house. Trade is a little dull." ANoTHER TaaA 0F COltIspA TION.-A dispatch fi'om de ing ton says A -recent letter from Hon. Thaddeus Stevens~ to a Radical friend in this city states that a bill will be p resented at the opening 'of the November Con gressional session fbr confscati.ng the property of all Souithernoex slaveholders . who diamiss,.nthe freedmen for voting the .fepubli can ticket. Senator Wilson, it is understood, strongly favours this course. The names of ex-rebels are to be collected by the military commanders for referenice~ M. Gousset, the great champagne grower, has inaugurated a new system, which those who wish to tste his wines will appreefate, and which probably will conse:nto general use. By meai of a new system, of coi'k and cor aciew a glass of champagne can be taken from a bottle without injuring the remaining contents;. thus - .the perishable wine can henceforth be enjoyed in a small quantity wRith out the waste of a whole bottle., Pea straw is richer in oil, albu minous or flesh forming matter, tan the straw of the cereals.