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Written Specially For The Bulletin. The BEsthontans of Eurepean Rus- sia tell ws that the “Aged One” as thev call the Deity, placed on the fire & kettle of water: from the bwbbling and assing of which the various na- tions learned their lamgnages, ‘The Australans think that the giving ef names originated from the people hav- ing eaten an old weman, called Wu- rurul; whe went abeut at night gquench- ing fires with a damp stick. “Wura- i is suppesed to mesn the damp night wind, and the languages and names learned frem deveuring her are the guttural of wind-like reprodactions of natural sounds made by the material argund them. To judge from mome of the names we hear, we ean imagine a vast num- ber of participants suffered from a | chrenia state of indigestion. The pharse “Christian Name”’ eamoc from the eustem of the early christians, who named their children at baptism. primitive times. we know men and wo- men beasted of only one cognomen a witness the Biblical records. Some- times & new name was taken upun some important change in life, as Ab- raham for Abram It was not until the eleventh, or ev- | en feurteenth century that surnames became really stationary. The word itself has given rise to much Qisous- sion. It was often written Sirname untll some time in the last century. ‘There are two reasons given as to how the word originated; autherities aif- ter as to this. Some say from lax or- thegraphy. Willlamson and Steven- zom would be naturally Sir or Sire names, equivalent te som of Willlam and of Bteven. In the same way the peasantry of Russia affix the termination "witz’ as Pletrowitz, son of Peter. The employ “sky”’ in the same way. erewsky Adamski; and the like. Ameng the Baxons we find the end- Pad- ing “ing” denotes Qescent, to this or- | igin are due such names as Brown- ing, Willing, Deering, etc. The pat- renymic syllable “Mac” was used in a similar manner and. teo in Ireland the “O" signified grandsen, as O'Bul- liv Insisted on Surname. In the reign of Henry 1, a lady ob- jected to marrying a natural son of that menareh, beeause he had no sur- name, whereupon the King gave him the name of Fitz-Rey, eorrupten of Fil, sen of, The Welsh ofteri put the father's name in the pos- sessive ecase, ad George Willlams', or as it is naw written Willlams. o this erigin may be traced many names® ending in 8. 80 we see that in all lankuages many names originally Christlan have become surnames by adding the word son name. ing exists without a name, and every name is given to express some charaeteristic, we can understand how | The | | very important is the subject. Greeks bore a single name given the tenth day after birth, and usvally e pressing some admirable feature, as Sophren, the wise. The Romans much less @inibed than the Greeks derived their hames from ordinary employ- ments, as Porcius, Swine-herd, or from mome persenal peeuliarity, as Naso, long nosed. lecause of the rapid peopling of our globe, we find that surnames became an absolute necamsity to the individual from others bearing t =ame first name. The first step toward the adoptlon of first names arose with the growth of chivalry, through the hestowal of nick-names for bravery in war, for example, Charlemagne in Carolus Magnus. Richard Long- shanks, Coeur-de-Lion, and the llke. Many surnames of surpassing strange. ness appear in the “Domesday Book,’ =0 called because Its decision was fin al Net Used Some eommentator tion of Chauecer Chaueer's time in Chaucer's Time. Affirms in that probably surnames were 1 used. Among the olifer's in the nine teenth century they havea kind best name, whieh they put on and take off with their Sunday clothe For week-day purpeses a niekname an- swers very well. Hogarth's original name was Hogherd, which was changed into ogart and then into its resent form:. In Westmoreland where ogarth's ndfather owned a farm, in the first syllable of the name was pro- | nouneed like that of the demestic an- imais his aneestors propably herded Histery tells us that the early dwel- “WHEE! CORNS GONE” ‘GETSJIT’ DID IT!” Ever Try It Defore?—You'll Marvel Hew It Makes Corms Vanish, Thete neve was apything like GETN-T T cor and there isn't anything ifke it now: It is the corn “Une T" for Cormns Patsh—And Nothing But Remains!” and Thelr Pleasure cure on A new pri eorn in two second corn begins to shr ver fails. w. No fussy s, salves to turn healthy fesh * and raw, no plasters that m eel corns buige ouf, Your corns “pull” and .hurt ‘way up to your } Lay aside your knife and razor. more digaing and Lugging and winc Ro more bleeding, no more danger o blood polson. “GETS-IT” never hurt Reaithy flesh; it fe, painie slmple, sure.” For warls, callou basi too, -1T~ is sold at all druggists’ at 25 ceats a bottle, or sent on receipt of price by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago. I | Fitz being a | the father’s | When we consider that neth- | that | dlstinguish | "C edi- | of | firse | lers of lakes, aleng the banks ef riv- ers, or clese by the sea frem which source so much of their food was drawn, makes the comnectien quite obvious when we find sueh names as Fishe, ook, Bates, Sheles, Delphin, Bels, Conger, Salmon, Bass, Codman, Pike Roach, Herring and Crabbe, alt of them goed English names. Trades and occupations bave given names to more inhabitants of the earth than any other cause, derived from the An- glo-Saxon, to smite. Some vears ago a philologlst undertook to enlighten the public as to the extra~ ordinary extension of this name. After thirty columns he threw down his pen in despair declaring the sub- ject exhaustless. To gquote his own words: “From what has hitherto been discovered, it appears that the great apd formidable family of Smith are the veritable descendants, in a direct line, from Shem, e son of Noah. Note please the derivation, Shem, Shemit, Shmit and Smith!” Trade | also guve names to the Taylors, Car- anters , Masons ewers, Bakers, laters, Sawyer: ndiers and Col- liers, Webb Family Old Time Weavers. t | aid a Sussex family by the Webb has carried on the trade nce the thirteenth cen- Spencer is from dispensator rt, Grosvenor from gros veneur, grand huntsman with these we may mention names from signs of inns, as | jull and | which wer | into Will Bull and George horse | |~ The present royal family of England | has never adopted an unchangeable | surname. This Is so in many other | | distinguished houses, as those of Nas- sau, | on and Orleans. In Spain | the wife does not change her surname, | and the son takes the.nante of both 2 joining them with -conjunc- According to German cus- s sometimes allowed to name. I was with a in Berlin, in which the matern- al name had been perpetuated for five | centurle for fear it might become ex- tinct. We find a similar case In John | Gutenberg's life. He was the son of Frielo Gansflelsch (Goose flesh) and We do not blame him | rring Goodhill to Gooseflesh, ainly more euphonious. Some- | | times it is most amusing to follow the | herg {it is ce | corruption of names as for instance, \ 1se from Woodus, Bachouse 3 hus. From the French Des comes our more pleblan | sou Mull How subtle are the {clues one fing From wood is de- | | rived Atwood, -Bywood, Underwood, | Neth, and Jenner is an old for uer, Milner of Miller. Ban- i e keeper of a bath. We find of Picher means, “a maker a warm Kkind of upper-gar- » great coat of the fourteenth d or Woolard still exists. slward” was to undergo the wearing the outer woolen i 1y linen underdress. It | 3 ed by the priesthood, | Labor Lost” when Armado { was urged to fight, he refused to un- dress, glving as his reason:“The naked | truth of it is, I have no shirt, I go | woolward for penance.” Crocker means of pottery, from the word in provincial dialect > jar. Ward indicates Woodward, forest keeper. | as Durward, doorkeeper; | Hayward, or Hereward, Keeper of the | | town cattle; Millward, keeper of a mill; | | Kenward, dog keepers; Aylward, ale | keepers, Formerly if one dwelt upon | at he wouid e himself Attehill, | | or Athill; If near a moor Attmoor. | Color and Corgplexion. We find eolor and complexion have ny surpames as Black, own and Redman. The 1air must also have been we innumeral Redlies nd Whitehead d added a few | find 4 eads. Not from the head alone names been taken, | | fellow, Tallman, Prettyman, Free- | man, Pullman and Pennyman conjure | up for us length, height, and pennies. The termination kin perhaps it is un- essary to state is a _diminutive, | Timpkin _ standing for little Tim, Charles Lamb (in reply to the ues- | tion “whe first imposed thee gentle { name?”) to the conelusion his | [ were shepherde, | | An authority on ames gives the [ following authentic story: One of the ular names I ever heard was aii of fortune in Kent. » was Dlear, and hav- by the name ntlen m ood es frc Blue three Uncle the suggestive | patriotism is innumerable Wo "here is enough artment to suit the Coats, two Bon- pair of Shoes, two So. Buttons, two Cuf a number of 1d one Silk’ The Human Family. Infant and the name ibbe are fair to of names t for many having a had to give another i meant the keeper cattle, called yward or Coward, outhey's doctor would say, “what name is Lamb for a soldier, Joy for | an undertaker, -Rich for a pauper, Sweet for one who h; a vinegar face, Younghusband for an old bachelor, Goodenough for a person no better SOUP TO NUTS! 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Friday evening. y than he should be, Togood for any hu- | kins, which in time became Yankee.|more humiliating than a calm consid- | ships that ply North sea| Napoleon's last home on the islank man being, and Best for a subject who | The Duich did not like the people of |eration of the questlon proposed by and the Balti In September ithey JofosE: Ficlsna 18iin’a deplorable’ cons 18 perhaps t00 bad to be endured.” The [ NeW Ingland and there was an in-|the jester to the Emepror Max\miliah | sattie on yard arms or on deck, rath- | ditions The doors are open night and Chicago city directory contains one | grioeth SUeer o F0C WORG: (S o | Bis. pedis: S er tired, and the tch flies | day. “AlL the rooms ‘are empty, save 0 Deddmen, Woolycmx ChEUm b Tall, SaTnd, malf 1t wan 5 itaodk masd PR 1 ofman Aliam dslved mud Bve and collect them _ les for | tha one in which the exilled emperor There e “{'wenfy regnt | Sextons. | they adopted it. 1f a man had a good | Where was then the gentleman. the benefit of the birds. : breathed his last. This contains fousness, Heartburn, Water brash Pain - Y | horse he called it a Yankee horse. bR £ Concerning the Tarahumare Indians | small altar and a bust of the con- 10 Staghcl imud. tht 2 Heataches | Rorner SRl fiioen usliowa, to) ten LUCY B BAYEES.C for » London Chronicle seri- | queror of Burope. The historic n stomach and nes. Headaches | gimmers, More spiritually inclined | We have all of all heard the story of e preadtoch ey Indians, of | house is going to rack and ruin. from stomach are absolutely unknown | we will ‘mention seventy-five Loves hild picked up in the streets | ously ob; rese n Bouse. isgolng ito. | nd ruin. Where Pape's Diapepsin is used. . 1It|gng ‘two-hundred and twenty Saints upon-trent, who received STORIES OF PLACES. | Whom 15,000 survive in Mexico in|Longwood and the ! surrounding really does digest your meals When | Bupiiion weighed very heavily on the | fromi its Inhabitants the whimsical Sl . |great demand as government ¢ s | grounds, including the first tomb. of your stomach can’t, It leaves nothing | haheq bhrought to the baptismal font, |hame of Tom-among-Us. This found- | During many of the nights in Sep- | for they cun casily cover 170 miles in | Napoleon, were purchaseq from the to ferment, sour and upset the StOm- | e name of Praise God Barabones | lIing begame an eminent man and Dr, | tember the inhabitants of the island |a day on foot, and have been known | Britlsh government by Napoleon IIL, nan and his son, If Jesus Christ had not | Thomas Magnus was the name he |of Heligoland are astic with big lan- | 1o run 600 miles in five days When | in 185, The French government stiil Get & large G0-cent case of Papes|ifeq for thes thou hads't ‘been damned | adopted. In grateful recognition for |terns and a kind of enormous butter-|short of awmmunition writes G. (f]paysa carelaker, but no funds for up- Diapepsin trom your druggist, then eat | Barehone, are veritable names borne | the kindness he had receivéd from |fly net, the former to attract and daz- | Terry, “the Tarahumare Indians will}leep are provide thing you want without the slight- | v the flesh and blood mortals. the people of Newark, he erected a |zle the migrating birds when they | run down a deer. Half a dozen men i 5 S shsfont on pALANEY, SDoRiCon, o e grammar school there which I believe | come to earth to rest, and the lattle to | willtuke part in the chase. They head D At ety particle of impurity and Gas that Origin of Word Yankee. is still in existence. “What's in a |secure them. Mr, Seebohm, the|off the animal, taking up the pursuit 5 . n uek, in your stomach and intestines will The origin of the word Yankee -is [ name?’ seems a mere pieasaniry after | great authority on bird migration. [in relays, until finally the poor beast With Anthony Comstock disapprov- <is. : " most amusing. It seems there were |all, when we realize they are burs to |states that he has known as many as |running in ever-narrowing circles, | ing her, Mre, Pankhurst may hope for uild you be suffering now frem|so many Johns in New England that | make or mar at our will 15,000 skylarks to be caught on the|drops from sheer exhaustion. They | almiont s mush eAvertistng. . as Indigestion or stomach disorder, | their Dutch neighbors in New Yerk | For pride of ancestry, there is per- |island in a single night. The migrat- |also chase and capture wild aur- | “September Morn” recelved.—Wash~ called them a nation of Jehn ¢r Jan- ' baps no antidote more saulary, er'ing birds are always interesting to Lhe’ key in the same manner, ington Star you can get relief in five minutes,