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Show INKLING. I .: r;i. .. i .. ;. . . : ir : :-. it I.. : i .V; : A : . . i-.iY. : : AC,. iL i'.i-.L- 1 1- i i' - r i t-.. Li. ol- !' i-:::.- t.-.' a'.:.:-:. i a a: - : W.,c 1'..-,:. A , -. --- t.-L: i .: 1' (' : A ..i t : - t i:.ed . : .-r -:...' a f.-.y i5 c:..:w..-i c . j ;:i ...... L.'. '.' , 7j. I....u..-i !V.: a-.-h 1. ;i-t !'! tLr . 3c I "-!iir. 1 -i 1 V J'!. .("!: - r .. v.- . r.;:..;.. t:.. r . ; r ; ; : . .- !Lit.;'. ( . . li.!. i! .: : . v ' i.;- l . u u a--:..- a; A T;ni e av a I y ..j iv.ci.v.-L.r.e -N j H I i.-.-it raic-p-o.-at.yl.r iu:: i. A -i l-.rU- T-.ri.iy u.j oi l.' .i.i.:; at It.-aJlL. :.. t,L.'.r Ji.', a .t:.: !! a'.l ..-r:'i- !. in ti.e u.nr-tar. u.nr-tar. 'a:.-.-:-.- h i . j i r ; r. r.rayuj. ii' - t'l itii.o. a. r.; ? tf t'a rL.:::: lJ u::..t J.:.:!- L-rc L!..wn I'rum t-i.-' i. .u. L.L-r iwciy miles n .rt!iu:d ly tl.e rveeiit t.jniai j. The -cvere wiut-.-r Lu j.rowl ini'iri-uu- to the wheat enp if IS.'iuiu. and in the ..Ti-arcr irf cf th it oui-try oui-try it will he n-ce.-sarr to re-..w the j.jj. tfll j.u4! of cue ..f the j.uMic schools of JjOuivi;le, Ky., have ren dijmi-d for refusing to study ''The Southern History of the United States." Mr. MeEL-ey, of We.-t WinJ...,r, Conn., was struct by Iichtnini; a few days since, lie describes the sen-alien as "iyinu' ero-iwi-e on a red-hot store and unable to ;et off' A boy eirlit years oM. in one of our public schools, bavins been tuld that a reptile ' is an animal that creeps'' , ; on being a.-ked to name one on exami-1 nation aav, promptly replied, 'The; baby." ' ! Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, author of; "Gates Ajar," is endowed with a set! of dclichttully to'inentins nerves. The chirping of a cricket in her room will keep her awake a'l night. To such an i organization a hu-band would be an) unendurable nuisance, of course. To : be compelled to lie awake listening to i the trumpet-toned snoring of a great, j awful, unsentimental, unnervous sav- age of a man! Intolerable! A female domestic living with a ! family a few miles west of New Haven, on the Derby rnad, has been iu a clairvoyant clair-voyant state fur a nnniber of days. She has taken no food and lays per-feet'y per-feet'y still with her arms upon her . breast. She has been interrogated, . and has answered that she saw the "place of endless torments, that the doors were open, and the inmates were I crying for water." I |