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The Huron Signal, 1884-8-22, Page 61 • 144,1•141140•64 kneweiert - , liitiViPere-rarerve ill, litti -dfle•ft•-••••15•922.121111 tif,. Si se J/ A 1 a W.. life, ' 111111Who Is thoughtful to - on ht4 Itailinaltla i kWho hangs up Lis sli Parra. br ugh and comb. il lira) . t.% try do) . V. Who will bring la the *after. the coal and the t A wu°d Nor grumble about it. and speak harsh and Vrude. Who cowing to supper, a• he does on .n. isle. lital•as not the tired wife I e ause be had to t wail ; thinks of her numberless steps- here and • , itri And pa) end iso help, grudges naught she may there. f gg ,tinir. ....14 : if Ha nine with those uualaios -blest with • wind That knows true from false- wants • wife. h. ' lil will and There are still a few left - wift and helpmeet VUlIIblflCd. Cie Poet s iLurner. Str• Seal aides of Sbi• neekibe• 4,,Va - .--...- • cu/1.1111ATIoi 14161.11110. hoSad -• wile who cam hila410 • 06.10tot. betook dews the cobwebs and ewe* up the Meal , Wart* does* boost that 1 fellow MS me- lee the harribla epeopouad yoa viverywhers meet . Who knows how to West to trIF 604 te 's- e • cup ot good boa arid a pianos uf WM: IA wisteria who washes. cooks, kens sod stitches. ecat•at ad aeon ap the ripe la • fellevreehl breeches ad resitos her owe garasessui-sa Ilea that crews Quite highly expansive. as •reo ow knows; 4 outuniou-seass creature. sad still with • *lad To tra...11 and zo etude t salted, ref:eked A suet of an angel and housewife combined. 4A coMillin•floN waLheal Put ND A. Wanted huslism-I who Meeks at bis wit* as the help, ..,4 11.. pe Me. got the ivy W hie of garepeas Nations t These are derived principally from , t seine particuler cause or object. For in - JI 4stance,Ireland- which Julius Caesar first called Hibernia -is a kind of modifies - • tion of Erin. r the country uf the west. Scot'and, from Scotia, a tribe which carne from IreLand. It was j% : t anciently called Caledonia, which mains a a mountainous country --forests and, ▪ lakes. . e Portugal. the ancient Lusitania, was • so named from a town un the river Douro, called Cale, opposite to which the I inhabitants built • city called Porto of IOporto. And when the country was ne covered from the Moors the inhabitants combined the words and called it the G ili nedoni of Portucale--hence Portugal. ' I g Spain, the ancient !Weise from the river theriu., or timpani.. from the Phoenician Spanigo. which sifies ( gni ' tabounding with labbits. which animals ii t are very numerous to that country- ; r" 1 j/hence Spain. 1 t I France, Erten the Franks, a pe pie of f Vts ancient name was Celta, Gaul or i t ermany, who conquered that c iuntry. . c i g Gallia-firecchata, the latter signifying I t stripped breeches which were worn by • the natives Switzerland, the ancient /I olvetia. was j j.o named by the Austrians, who called , • slim inhabitants of these mountainous . I. t countries Schwelters. I. Italy recetved its present name font a i 1 r brenowned Prince called halite 11 was , palled Hesperia', from tts western local- , ' it : t ALCOHOL AND liEALTH. a were liermes se Iresalea. twee tor leassillassa As uussiortuse testimonials will *bow then1s iso wait reliable can for dead- ness them Hagyerd • Yellow Oil. 11 1. ale. the beat remedy fur ear oohs, seat throat, Group, rheumatism., aad for pante tied howireese generally. Used isiternallv and easeenally. 2 ' The weessevaaes seashisse of Meese. Mr alai WIT A. 1414111illoillt L ase three • quarter of • watery the American mown was 111 flit ;NO The Burliagton iletoksge publiishos a great deal .4 atesestee, tag immiattusalt Iu Ile wa It Matta lialiaptitaill• faala Th. f• lowtiod is from • reach ago. booth of a protracted saaguinery condom. we speak of it ea -The War of the bullion."For four years the people the North &ad South were sere against vault other deadly hustilit And out mud hundreds .4 threesome' bad bow alma ois eattle-tields, tied in beamed*, was declared Donee this war "reersitrag°:ffitiss" w opened in all the lame towns and cu of the country, when num were enlist as *oilier*. Pur seldiers were in tiniest demand, not only 1.. augment army. but to snake up for the looses meted on battle -fields, and in hoop+ Not only did the country need • ler tinny, it waded an arias of stroeg healthy num. Su when a man had he Wei sent from the recruit radios to the "examining surgeon," 7. Ite- T4 kat would we de ewe it toot for the cranks t How slowly the end .4d world would moire, did nus the cranks keeps it rumbas* &Way Columbus as • eriusk Fed on the estoppel of Ainerseen lisetwery and c-trellsona•litation, aad at hem he met the fats of must creaks, wail thdrowit int., had primm, and died in poverty and die- . gram Oessitly venerated now ' Oh, ere yes„ Telemachus, we usually .stein ies wank nowt prelouudly after we otarve ed him to death. Harvey wadi • crank us ooto the subject .1 the arculatien .4 the the Mood ; wee an astronomical in• crank ; Felten waa a crank on the siste uad IIS e n - ins to undergo) rigid bodily inspection. If the surgeon found disarm in the heart, or lungs, ur brain, or 111 any pert of the body, if the enlisted man had defects of hearing, if be had lust a front toioth, mud could not cover the vent -hole of • cannot, if he wee ataimed,defornted, , defective or unsound le body, the Gov- erument refused to accept 1 as a sol- dier. He could not be "mastered tu." For the bunters, of war requires the highest bodily efficiency, and feeble er crippled men are not equal to its triemen• duus demands. Every young man sad maiden of our country is on the verge ef a longer and store important conflict than were the soldiers of the War of the Itebellion. For the world is • vast encamprueutoind every human being is a soldier. drafted for service No substitute can take another@ place, nor can a discharge be obtained from the battle of life till God grants it at death. "Wax gooAil Ira fare : to the order that rings down t make from the great Captain who co winds these hosts. Even inure important to success strensjth and efficiency t battle of lift-, where all do service, th they were in the War of the Rebottle where only a million were mustered i For a good physic -0 coadition is one the greet 1,r.:•10cluisitea to succeed living. Te live worthily ur happily, te acanup.ish much fur one's self or others, when suffering from disease and pain, is attended with So -eat difficulty. The very morals suffer from disease ef the body. "Every sick man is a ra•cal.' said t great Doctor Johnson. has already outrun t bodies of men and women Its comp! cated wore. tax bed d brain beyond endurance. In addition, t self-indul;ence of the age is so general and wadeful that it creates physical It 7 - he k. le for Ole increases, and the difficulties of earning a lirelihuod grow intenser with very generation. What 14) be done? The young must be taught the hygiene he netrotremeematiaess. ject of steam navigation Morse was • telegraph crank. All the old abate tioisets were omnks. The Pilgrim teth- ers were cranks, Jean Bunyan was a crank ; and man who doesu't think as you do, ray son, is a crank. end by and by the crank you dospase will have his Pante in every Matti 1•00th, anti a half completed inenguieut to his memory crumbling down in • dozen cities, while nobody outside of your native village will know that you ever lived. Deal gently with the crank, my boy. Of course, sou* cranks are crankier then ethers, but d.. pal be very slim to sneer at a man because be knows only one thing and you cant understand hirn A erank, Telemation, is thing that tarns suntething,at makes the wheels go rouse, 11 insures progress. True, it turns the the same wheel ell the time, and it can't do anything else, but that's what keeps the ship going *bead. The think that gi,e4 in to ,r variety, versatility, that changes it. posion a hundred tinges a dray. that is crank ; that is the weath- er van., son. What Y..0 never- theless thank heaven you are out a crank Dont do that Soli. May be you couldu be a crank if you would. heaven is not very particular when it wants a weather vane; almost any Mall will do for that. But when it wants a crank, my boy, it looks about very care- fully fur the best man in the communi- ty. Before you thank heaven that are not a crank, examine yourself carefully. and see what Is the great Orificiency that debars you from such an electlen. The Fruits ef Wetly. F.atints green *pad, •, cucumbers and unripe fruits generally melt be so, termed. Or. Feeler's Extrier ..1 Wild Streiberry cures all Summer Complaints. 3 he he degeneracy, and mental imbecility. crowds the hospitals, peoples the as urns, increases the tenants of alms- houses, fills the prisons, empties t }lurches, dethrones manhood, and br allots alike the rich and pour. I allud o the indulgence in intoxicating drill All the while, the severity of the strugg d intoxicating drink*. It must en tote thetr school education. They nom be carefully instructed in the demerit' physiological results of indulgence i he cider, beer and wine, so largely wed as beverages, and which, in the main become as destructive as the strong. alcoholic liquors. They must be train o maintain serene dominion over appe- ite-to lead lives of wholesomeness -to practice ririd total abstinence from all that can intoxicate. Plato laid down the rule that boys must not taste wine until they were eighteen years old. The early Romans forbade its use till a men had reached the age of thirty. Th Spartans denied intoxicating drinks t their sous, and compelled the @levee - the Helots --to get drunk- in presence o their young men, that they might witness the degradation of drunkenness Thei great atm was to develop a superb physa cal manhood. Science today teaches that alchul only not • food, but poisoned. For ou word "intoxicate.. COMM from the Logi word,"toxicurn," which means poison Front this we hare the word "tozicol ogy," which is the science that treats o poisons. If one takes into the swim. meat, bread, pouitues, or other food, i is digested, and converted into muscle brain, bone, or some other part of the body. Thus by food. the waste of th human system is repaired, which is re mooned by the work of life. But when alcohol is taken into the stomach," that organ meets its intrusion, and drama it into the liver, which, in turn, fumes it to the heart, and that throws it into the Itnig -and so it /OM OD, in its un• welcame and etompulsory tour through the body. Every (even rejects and .z - is it, the liver, bowels, kidneys, lunge and skin all throwing nut. portion of at, u ntil the system is rid rof it. In this process ef expulsiot, ever orean, by and by, becomes seriously damaged. At last, both body and mind are rein- ed. The perceptions are bewildered,the memory weakened, the reasoning p..wer clouded, the moral sense benumbs], the will dethroned, the self-respect dea.land there is no etc' or crime to which the victim is not liable. A terrible dipso- mania is established, where there is only an insatiate zraving for alcehol, that knows no bounds, and for which there It w.metimes happens that the people , . w .. are icted with it mistake their own symptoms, anti miscall their own state. They think themselves diffident timid, deplore their want .1 self -posers - (lion even even, and never dream that the trouble lies in their inability to for- get themselves. 'What courage you have !: said nne young lady to another. 'I could DOI have cniesed this cn.wded room before all these people. as you did just now un- der any circumstances.' 'It did not re- quire way courage. replied her fnend, smiling. It never occurred to me that any one.weuld notice my movements. And that the whole secret. It is but ter a nervous sense of our conspicuousness t which makes us Bit keenly alive to the Gi- g fact of our words and acts. If we really n believe that we are unimpertant-if we feel that our fellow creatures have more engrussing subjects of amtemplation ✓ than ourselves -we shall hardly be likely se to suffer from any dread of their critic- isms. Besides, self-ceneciousness de- steys independence of thought and action. The unfortunates who feel them- selves the centre of interest and obser- vation, will continually, acl;usting their werde and ways to suit their beholders. I Y. Holland, the ancient Batavi, a warlike •'people, were so hauled from the Gentian l wcrd hotel, the English of which is hol-; . low, implying a very low country. The J ',inhabitants are called Dutch, from the ji German dew twit or le utsch. - , i Sweden and Norway were anciently ' stalled Scandinavia, which the modes:: . il antiquarians think means a country the . I iw°Dal of which have been burnt or die ..i stroyed. The appellation Sweden is de - 1. rived from Slctuna, or Suitheod. The . _native term Norwey, or the northern - I !way, explains itself. ; 1 1 Preemie from Peuzzi, • Selavenic race: i # but some writers suppose it took its i t .4! mode from !tussle, and the Sclavonic t, A syllable po, which means adjacent, or 1 , 6 near. I Ill Danmark means the marches, territor- ' S ies er beundaries of the Danes. lill Russia is the ancient Sarmatia, which 'has been subaeluently named Mn.covy, II It derived its present name from Reese, Slavonic tribe who founded the Russian monarchy. The original savage inhabe • tante used ei paint their bodies in order •e, to appear inure terrible in battle. They ,li generally lived in the niountsins. and aneeedirongcesnuareitiyi belonged itmihet.i.rtheenIticyy htahb iansita- tions. or Turcomans, which signifies waederers, Turkey took its name from the Turks, tehreTi re:: nroc.i pal: It jowls simmer.. times called the Ottoman Empire, from Othornan, one of Leant 1. itsy 11 1. of great importsage to a man's I pesos and well beintethat he should be able to say 'No' at the right *le. Many are ruined because they reeoot ..r du not say it. Vice often gain. a feoting within os, because we will not summon up the coumge to say 'N.... We offer It. ourselves too often as willing eacritiees to the fashion of the world, because we im.lhave not the honesty to pronounce the t, little word. The duellist dare net say 'No, fee he woe's! be 'cut.• The beau- t. ty sedotm,.0 to say it when mine rich bit,ekhetul idlers her his hand, because he hat net her ambition for an 'eolith - 11: !ailment.. The courtier will net my it, are or he must amine and promise to all #1 • fo Not bad. • It is an agreeable that even an infant will take it. For coughs, colds, hoarse f new, croup, asthma and bronchitis, Hag - yard's Pectoral 'Salaam is reliable for ✓