, Vfll\ not think tbo lost farewell I hear Is moro than a brief good-by that u friend ' ' "T / . paltb * Turning toward homo ; that to our homo lies t < < > near : ' , I wlll.not thinjc BO harshly of kind death. * i * * t I will not think tbo last looks of dear oyps Fades with the light that lades of our dim air , Butthnt the apparent glories of the skies Weigh down their lids with beams too bright to boar. Our dead have left us- for no dark , etrango ' ' lands , Unwelcomed there , and with no friends to meet ; But bands of angels bold the trembling " ' hands. And bands of angels guide the faltorlg feet. I will not think the , soul gropes dumb and blind , - A brief space through our world , death- doomed from birth I will not think that Love shall over find A fairer heaven than ho made on earth. PATIENCE. Hold thbu'mino hand , beloved , as wo sit Within the radiance of our winter flre. Watching the dainty shadows as they flit On wall and ceiling as the flames leanblghcr. Hold tbou mine hand , beloved , with tbo calm ' Closo'clasp of love assured and at rest. And let the peace at homo , a blessed balm. Fall on us , folding faithful breast to breast. Hold thou mine hand , beloved , while I speak Of all thy love hath done and berne for me , The stronger soul supporting still the weak , The good band giving royally and free ; The tender heart that put man's roughness by , To wipe weak tears from eyes too seldom dry. I touch ' this thing and that , the pretty gifts , Tho'sllver zone , the jeweled finger-ring , The outward symbols ofa love that lifts 3Iy fate and mo beyond life's buifoting ; Tetoh , thrice'generous giver ! there remains A thing for which I have not thanked tbce yet , Thy patience through the long years with their pains Thy pattenco with my weakness and regret. Ah , let mo thank tliee now with falling tears , Tears of great Joy , and deep serene content , And God be thanked that through the weary years Wo saw together ere our lives were blent , .Although the years were dcsolato and long , Thy patience matched thy love , and both were strong ! [ All The Year Round. MR. BULSTEAD'S SURPRISE. Mr. Bulstead's third and last letter tore the Oxford postmark ; as he opened it he frowned. His niece , who had long ago noted that particular letter with apprehension , helped him in haste to the hottest and choicest kidney on the dish. Maggie knew well that of late the contents of letters from Oxford were far from welcome. "Now , I will not stand this any long er ! " cried the irritable old gentleman , dashing his fist upon the table and narrowly missing the just arrived and juicy kidney. "Now , Master Tom has tried my patience oncn too often ! Bill after bill have I settled during the last three months , expecting each to be the last ; and , forsooth , listen to this , miss ! To 500 lawn-tennis , 12 10s. ; to rack ets , as p'er former account , 8 10s. ; to marking machines , 4 ; to good grac ious to half a ton of whiting , 4 ; total 29 ! Good gracious ! I say , does the young scapegrace live upon whiting ? " "Oh it must be a mistake uncle ! " "Mistake , indeed ! Why , did not I have a bill of 2 10. for dog collars ? Was that a mistake too ? And the wine bill , and Symond's bill for horse- hire ! All mistake , of course ! You .may thank your stars , young lady , " "cried" thVdld gentleman , abandoning the indignantly satrical for the savage ly personal tone , "that I would not let you tie yourself to this extravagant ' nephew of mine. Now I've done with Lira , and so have you. " Maggie rose from the table with a flushed face and looked from the win dow with eyes that saw little of the square outside through their tears. But , like a wise girl , she kept silence , and the kind-hearted old gentleman after storming once or twice up and down the room began to cast uneasy glances at the graceful figure by the window. Ifthere was one person whom Mr. Bulstead loved before and above the cause of his present anger it was his niece , Maggie Lloyd. " -"Well , well , said he , sitting down to his now cold kidney. "There , my dear , give me another cup of tea. Half a ton of whiting the lad must have gone mad ! " "It might have gone in worse things than whiting , " she suggested humbly , but with a humorous quiver at the cor ner of a pretty mouth. "So it might ; that's true. " The old gentleman was a little more straight- faced than most Londoners. "I'll tell you what , Maggie , I'll give you one more chance ; I'll go down to Oxford by the 11 o'clock train , giving him no notice , and see for myself what sort of life he is living. If he is doing nothing worse than wasting money I'll forgive him ; but if I find the young fellow is as vicious as some of those Oxford sparks , why then" and Mr. Bustead's voice assumed a quite unaccustomed tone of cool determination "I've done with nephew Tom. " Maggie trifled with the teaspoons , her eyes bent upon the plate. Her uncle's irritability was little to be fear ed ; it was more than neutralized by his kindness of heart. But she knew him to be on rare occasions , and in some matters , a man of great obstinacy ; and , loving her cousin with all her heart , she dreaded the result of her uncle's projected trip. Tom would be doing nothing dreadful , but he might be do ing something Mr. Bustead might ob jectto. To move her uncle from his resoive/once expressed in this way , she knew to be beyond even her influence ; the more as the old gentleman , who had a few months "before forbidden an express engagement between the cousins sins- was a little inclined to resent any influence she might try to exert in Tom's behalf. "I shall not want any more tea , thank you , so you may go to your mu sic lesson if you like. I shall just go to the 'Athenaeum for an hour , and then to Paddington. I'll leave orders about the carriage , and then if you like you can meet the six o'clock train with it . .When Mr. Bulstead reached his club ie found to his disgust , that his favor ite chair was occupied by a bishop. Had at been any one else , he would ilot have scrupled at attempting to oust him by one of those forms of strat egy so well known in club rooms ; but as it. was he ran his eye over the Times "all standing , " and took nis seat in a cab not in the best of tempers. "Half a ton of wliiting ! " " he muttered to * him self , in tones of fretful speculation , as ho passed through Hark lane. He felt a little like a spy as he hur ried across Canterbury Quad , and made with all speed for the bottom of Tom's staircase. The scout , old "Dot and go one , " as ho was called from his wooden leg , in vain essayed to detain him. Up went Mr. Bulstead two steps at a time to the second floor , where above the left-hand door , appeared , in white letters upon a black background , his own name. He knocked sharply , and hardly waiting for some one within to utter what might or might not be "Come in , " threw it open andentered. , Lounging upon one of the window seats in flannels and a cigarette injhis mouth , was a young fellow whose good looking face was rather manly and straight forward than handsome. He was alone and got up without much appearance of flurry. "How do you do uncle ? I thought it was vou crossing the quad. Take a seat. Why did you not let me know that you were coming ? " Mr. Bulstead took the proffered seat and panted as ho looked round. The stairs were steep and his wind was not so good as it had bee'n. "I thought I would come upon you bit Tom " he said without a by surprise , , , out any circumlocution. "The fact is , it is that whiting that has brought me. " "Whiting'uncle ! " ejaculated Tom , with his first show of surprise. "Half ton of ! " a whiting murmur ed his uncle , irresistibly impelled to dwell upon the mystery. "Half a ton of whiting ! Ay , here it is. " And he flourished the 'bill under the other's nose. Tom took it gingerly , and openefl it with a serious face. It seemed to Mr. Bulstead that he was not quite so much at his ease as he would have his uncle believe , and the old gentleman glanced suspiciously round the room. It cer tainly was not the room of a hard working , hard-reading student ; but still there was nothing objectionable in it. He turned his glance again upon Tom the latter was contempla ting the bill with a broad smile genuine enough. "Well , " said Mr. Bulstead , "what have you to say about it ? Half a ton of whiting , 'you ' know , Tom ? " The young man laughed loudly. "I am not at fault this time , sir ; it is the Lawn-Tennis Club's account sent in to me as secretary. I gave the ground-man the check to pay it last week , and why they should have had the impudence to send it in to you I can't imagine. " "Umph ? but how about the whiting , Tom ! What is that for ? " "Marking out the grounds"sir. " "Of course it is , Tom ! Very stupid of me. Well , I'm very glad of it , my boy , " said Mr. Bulstead , pleas antly. The mystery of the whiting was cleared up ; but somehow it had made him suspicious. "Now " said Tom "will , , yon come with me to a shop I want to call at in the High not a hundred yards off , sir ? and by the time we come back lunch will be ready. " Was the dust of that whiting still in Mr. Bulstead's eyes ? At any rate- it seemed to him that his nephew w as peculiarly and restlessly anxious to get him out of the rooms. However , he rose. rose."Yes "Yes , Tom , certainly. Where did I put my umbrella ? Ah , here it is ; thank you. Why what the deuce is that ? " If it had been another half ton of whiting piled upon the sofa , the old gentleman's face could not have grown darker. The thing lying half hidden by the sofa cushion was a lady's parasol a dainty , tiny , wicked-looking sunshade of gray silk ; and by it was a glove , too , too apparent French kid. Mr. Bui- stead's worst fears were confirmed with a vengeance ; all along he had felt that there was something wrong ; this was the haunt of wicked dissipation he had half feared he should find it. Half a ton of whiting , indeed ! In a moment , and before he glanced at the young fellow's confused face , he thought the worst of him. "Well , sir , " he said and there was real sorrow as well as anger in. the tone "can you explain this with equal ease ? " "No , I cannot , sir ; but" "You can't ? Cannot say whose they are , or how they came to bo in your room ? Fie , sir , fie ! Or where their owner is now , I suppose ? he added , suddenly recalling the scout's seeming attempts to delay him at the foot of the stairs , and marking the doors that led to two inner rooms. "I cannot account for them. * ' "And will not , I suppose ? " "You can put it that way if you like , sir. All I can say is that I am innocent of what you are thinking of me. I ive you my word of honor , I am ; and can't say any more. " The old man was a little impressed by theyounger's earnestness. The ob noxious articles might have been left there innocently , of course. "Then let me have a look into your other rooms , young man , if you wish me to believe you. " . "No , I can't do that ! " cried Tom , springing as the other advanced , to ward the nearer door and setting his back against it. He was cooler now , and not a bit confused. The old gen tleman , even in his anger , noticed that he looked more handsome than ever before. "Don't be a fool , Tom ! " he cried imperatively. Then suddenly changing his tone to an appealing one ; "Make a clean breast of it and IU1 try to forgive you. " "There's nothing to forgive. " "Then open that door. You won't ? " "No. " "As I live , if you don't before I count three , I'll cut you off without a shilling. Now , sir ; one , two it's your las } ; chance three ! There , sir , I've done with you now , sir I've done with you I've done with you ! " And , clap ping on his hat , with ferocious haste and shaking steps the old gentleman ran down the stairs , and , his heart full of sorrow and anger , made for the sta tion. tion.Ah , Tom , Tom ! A minute later he opened the inner door and looked rath er anxiously at the half frigh't'enbo' , wholly pretty face that appeared at it. "Di'd you hear anything ? " he asked. "No , but'do lefrme get aWayi I am so nervous. He was very angry , wasn't he ? Yes , What was it about , Tom ? Bills ? "Yes , " was the somewhat halting reply ; "bills and other things. I dare say he'll cool down. If you hear any thing against me , youwon't believe it , will you ? " "O Tom , how can you ask ! " "Then there is no harm done , " an swered Tom , bravely and gallantly. And , after reconnoitering from the window , the two left the room.J To return to Mr. Bulstead , 'senior. ' Tt was a great trpuble to him. . Looking tack upon that half tonof , whiting , he wonderqd how that could have made him angry with the lad. If he would only have kept to that he could have forgiven him a ship-load'of whiting. But this was" a'different matter , and the more the oldrgentleman. thought of it , the worse it appeared to him. Still he was a just and fair man ; he had no real intention of cutting off the young pro fligate , as he termed him in his thoughts , with a shilling. He would make him a sufficient but small allowance , but near his house or near Maggie he would not have him. He made this last determination known to Maggie , merely adding that her cousin had behaved so ill that he had forbidden him the house. Th'e announcement was received with a ' remonstrances woman's , strongest silent fears. Altogether things were rather gloomy that June in Fitzroy Square. One morning Mr. Bulstead , made up his mind to see his lawyer about Tom. "I'll get it over , " he said to himself , with a sigh , as he seught for his um brella in the stand. It took him same time to.find it. "Bless the umbrella ! " he cried at length , fumbling among the heap. "Is that it ? No ! Nor this. Why , what's this ? Well , I am dashed ! " Only the word which he used was- stronger one , and one which seldom , even in moments of irritability escaped him. But now , at the sight of a sun shade in the umbrella stand , he solemn ly repeated it twice : "Well , I am dash ed ! " Then he stood in the hall for some minutes whistling softly to himself. This done , he went rather slowly and thoughtfully up to the drawing-room , and stood on the hearth-rug. "Were you at Oxford when I was there on the 28th of last month ? " "Yes , " answered. Maggie , horribly frightened , and yet relieved at getting the matter off her mind. She had not confessed simply because she was afraid of increasing her uncle's anger against Tom. "Yes , I was , uncle. You said you were going to put Tom to the test , and I was afraid he might be doing something to displease you. I went to warn him. " "And you were in his rooms while I was there ? " "Yes. It was foolish of me ; you fol lowed me so closely and I was afraid to face you. Tom put me in the scout's hole , as he called it. " "So you deceived me between you ? " said he , harshly. "No , sir ; I did. Tom knew nothing of my coming. He was afraid for me , not for himself. " "Did he tell you what I was angry about ? " "After you were gone ? " "Of course ! " snapped Mr. Bulstead , poking the fire vigorously. . "I think , " said Maggie , timidly , for now it was Tom's favor that was at stake , "he said it was about bills. He had nothing to do with my journey to Oxford. " "And a nice ladylike thing you con sider it , I suppos'e , gadding about to young men's rooms. Very well ; since you seem inclined to mix yourself up with his affairs , you will write to him at once and tell him to come up to town and call here. When you are both together I'll tell you what I think of it. A pretty pair of fools ! " And Mr. Bulstead fumed his way out of the room without much outward heat , and an angry expression of coun tenance. But the butler , who watched his exit with awe , and opined that there had been stormy weather upstairs , was amazed to hear him utter with an aud ible chuckle as he reached the darkest angle of the staircase , "Good lad ! good lad ! " Tom , of course , came up as fast as the Great Western would bring him ; and when they were both together Mr. Bulstead told the culprits what he thought of it. No happier trio sat down to dinner that day in London than the party presided over by our friend's butler. Somewhere in the old gentleman's nature was a large bump of the chivalrous , and for the sake of Tom's gallantry Maggie's deception was forgiven. In no long time he did visit his lawyer , but it was upon busi ness more pleasant both to himself and to that professional gentleman. "For a really paying piece of work , " the latter has often been heard to say in confidence , "give me a marriage set tlement. " Timber of the World. The timber interests of the world are reported to be in a bad way , the de mand for lumber everywhere being in excess of the supply. The forests of Sweden and Norway have been drawn on to excess ; those of Northern Russia fail to meet the demands even of St. Petersburg ; the 30,000 000 acres of woodland in Germany produce lumber of a poor quality ; the timber lands of Bohemia , Gallicia and Transylvania are not easily accessible ; the shores of the Atlantic are 'bare ; Great Britain has no merchantile lumber worth men tioning , and the forests of Central Af rica are too remote to give a supply. The aggregate woodland of Europe is estimated at 500,000,000 acres , or about 20 per cent , of the area of the conti nent. Under the circumstances it would be the proper thing for the people ple of the United States to husband their timber land to the last degree. He that observes his Sabbaths is sure he is in the right way , and that he loves God , because ne uses the means. [ W , Wogan. The , Planets In August. Prorldenca Journal. * Venus is morning star throughout the month , and easfly wins the- honor of being at the head ' of the planetary list , for she is tho'most'beautiful object that adorns the eastern sky before the all-conquering sun commences his daily course. There is a reason why the fairest of the stars deserves special mention during the passage of the last month of summer. On the 17th she reaches her period ox greatest brilliancy as morning star , when she is so tran- cendently lovely that the trouble of rising early is mo're than rewarded by the beauty of the exhibition of . "Astarte's bediamoned crescent , ! Distinct with its duplicate horn. " Venus makes her appearance at that time soon after 2 o'clock in the morn ing , nearly three hours before sunrise , when such is the brilliancy of her shin ing that objects illumined "by her rays cast shadows , and even the great sun himself has no power to hide her en tirely from mortal view. It is difficult to find words to express the matchless loveliness of this bewitching star , as she hangs'low in the heavens in the soft summer mornings : She is rapidly receding from our neighborhood , and many months must wax and wane be fore she will again put on her glorious apparel. Jupiter may almost be numbered with the morning stars , for he is only evening star until the 7th. On that day , at 1 o'clock in the afternoon , he reaches one of his great epochs , being then in conjunction with the sun , ris ing and setting with him , and entirely hidden from view in his eclipsing rays , The planet that beamed so brightly in the evening sky has departed , but he is not lost. He has fulfilled his mission on the sun's eastern side , only to reap pear on the sun's western side , where he will soon emerge from his transient eclipse , to become the second brightest § em of the planetary trio made up of aturn , Venus and himself. Jupiter has deigned to give us little information concerning himself in his last synodic circuit. Even the red spot , the peep-hole into his glowing nucleus , is but a ghost of its former self. The cloud-atmosphere has neatly closed over it , and there will be no more tid ings until another rift shall arise and show farther glimpses of the chaotic mass , cooling and condensing into form and shape. We must wait till 1892 for Jupiter's next perihelion , when being 46,000,000 miles nearer the sun than at aphelion , we may hope that the ap proved telescopes of the period will pick up something worth knowing. Saturn is morning star , and is grow ing brighter and more conspicuous as he approaches the earth. It is , how ever , the day of small things in his his tory. Neptune is morning star , and leads the planetary choir in being the first to make his appearance above the hori zon. On the 14th at 11 o'clock in the evening he reaches the halfway house between conjunction and opposition , being then in quadrature , or 90 degrees west of the sun. Mercury is evening star during the month. On the 23d , at 5 o'clock in the evening , he reaches his greatest east ern elongation , when he is twenty- seven degrees twenty-one minutes east of the sun. It is a moderately favora ble opportunity for seeing him , on an exceptionally clear evening after sun set in the west. His southern declin ation will make him a difficult object to pick up. Uranus is evening star. His course is uneventful , except for the conjunc tion with Mercury on the 23d. Mars is evening star , and is of little account , as he slowly travels on his distant path , his rapidly increasing southern declination being the only noteworthy event in his course. The August moon fulls on the 6th , at six minutes after 6 o'clock in the even ing , standard time. She is in conjunc tion with Neptune on the 13th , the day of her last quarter , and with Saturn on the 16th. She makes a close conjunc tion with Venus on the 17th , at thirty- seven minutes after 4 o'clock in the af ternoon , being then 23 min. north. The waning crescent and the radiant morn ing star will make a lovely celestial picture on the morning of the 17th , though they are invisible at the time of nearest approach. Colds and Their Core. QoMon Rule. I think that one cause * of your fre quent colds may be too much confine ment in a hot room , with too little ex ercise "hovering. " You do not say what are your symptoms of a cold , whether there is a shriveled condition of the skin , a general feeling of chillness - ness , a quickened pulse , flashes of heat , etc. , or whether a sore throat , inflam mation of the nasal passages and the like , are the evidences. Let me say that these last are no evidences , only in dications , since they may result from various causes. A stomach derange ment produces more inflamed sore throats than colds , for a reason easily understood. First , the stomach is in flamed , and then , by a law that all con tiguous membranes are similarly effec ted , the inflammation extends upward , effecting the throat , eventually appear ing on the tongue , which is the reason why we examine the tongue so care fully to learn the state of the stem ach. ach.What What shall be done ? I hope that you do not bathe in the "heroic" style , in ice water , and that you do not vibrxto to the other extreme , having "hydro phobia , " never using any water to bathe , aside from hot. Those who "baby themselves" will have colds , while those most in the cold air , well clad , will have the fewest. The lum ber men who sleep on pine boughs , in a rude hut , far from human habita tions , seldom have colds , though a bet ter room would be better for them , with their abundance of cool , bracing , life-giving air ! It may be that your colds result from the too free use of lard , butter , sugar and the like , irrita ting the stomach and the throat. ( I think that my "health rules" and "good digestion" would aid you in avoiding such colds. ) But , in addition , I would advise the thorough use of the flesh-brush as a substitute for a good bath , especially ityou have been in the habit of using warm water. While there are a few who cannot , with safety , bathe in cold water , all raay use the brush with safe ty , comfort , and with good results. The dust which is accumulates in the brush proves that a great deal of waste mat ter flows to the surface , which cleanli ness , at least , demands should be re moved. The thorough use of tlo brush removes the dead and poisonous mat ter constantly accumulating on the sur face , opening the pores , stimulating them to remain open a cold is closed pores inviting the warm blood from the heart to the surface , where about one-half of the contents of the body should be , of necessity , equalizing the circulation , relieving internal congest ed organs , and promoting the general warmth of the body. I can conceive of no harm from a general use of the brush. ( If allowed to refer to person al experience , I will say that I have used two of "Adams' " brushes the hand , excellent , and the long , curved one for many years with great advan tage , and see no reason why they will not last longer than I shall survive. I will add that , as I "break colds" in this way , not deeming it safe for me , a for mer consumptive , to neglect a cold , I have not been so sick for thirty years , that I could not attend to others , not for a whole day ! ) I recommend my custom of taking a very light supper , often but the simple juices of food , as of an apple , the grains , etc. One More Lincoln Story. Denver Tribune. An amusing incident in the unvrrit- ten history of Abraham Lincoln is told by the Hon. Ward H. Lamon , of this city : While the gentlemen were law part ners in Illinois , and before Lincoln was thought of for president of the United States , they happened to visit an agricultural fair in an inland town of Tennessee. Lincoln was in high spirits and seemed bent on fun. While casting about for such amusement as the ex hibition afforded Lincoln discovered an attraction in the shape of. a turned- down flour barrel containing a badger. "Fifty dollars for a dog that will haul the badger out of the barrel , " shouted the red-headed man who owned the outfit. "Fifty dollars , I say , to the dog that can haul out the badger. " There were a few takers of the badg er man's offer , but the luckless dog- owners who invested 25 cents in the ex periment invariably lost in the specula tion , for the badger's teeth were sharp , and every dog that entered its strong hold came out in a jiffy , while the fero cious animal inside held the fort and grinned all over. Mr. Lincoln hit upon a happy thought. Taking Ward to one side they found a lank countryman with a still Linker mastiff * . "Want to make $50 with that dog ? " asked Lincoln. "Course I do , " replied the hayseed. "The dog was bartered for , and as Lincoln approached the badger man , elbowing his way through the crowd , he said : "I'll invest a quarter in your game , sir. " The badger man looked at Lincoln's hungry dog and smiled as he took the silver quarter. Lincoln caught the dog and led it up to the barrel. Hastily grabbing the mastiff" , he threw it into the open ing 'tother end first. There was a pause only for a second , and then followed a lively scrape inside the barrel. "Hold on there , " cried the manager. "Fair play. " But he was too late with his remon strance. Out sprang the badly fright ened dog with the badger sticking to his hind quarters. The crowd parted , and away went the dog and badger into the inner field of the race-track. The badger stuck like a brother , teams ran away , women fainted and the crowd roared. Lincoln .fairly went into spasms of mirth , the fun was so enjoy able. able.The The countryman owning the dog was paralyzed , as was the badger owner , who set up a great howl and was mad enough to fight. "Produce your $50 , " said Lincoln to the badger keeper. "Foul play , foul play ! " cried the chagrined gamester , "and I'll never pay it. " Here is where Lamon came in ser viceable. Catching the badger's friend by the neck , he cried : "Give up the $50 or I'll wallup you. " Lamon's i herculean proportions were too argurncntary to be trilled with , and the money was handed to Mr. Lincoln , who in turn gave it to the countryman. The dog was well paid for , and the badger business closed up for the want of a badger. A Close Call. Albion News. Oae of the most remarkable cases of narrow escapes we ever heard of trans pired near town last Sunday after noon. Mr. John Garrigan was out in his field cutting wheat. The storm coming up , he unhitched his horses , got onto one of them , and started for home leading the other. A bolt of lightning killed both his horses and came as near killing him as could well possibly be. It struck his head , tear ing a "hole in his hat large enough to run one's fist through , and made a mark about two inches long on his scalp. The horse he was riding fell on him , in which condition he was found some time after. He was taken to the house and Dr. Brown was called. He acted like a man afflicted with cerebrospinal - ebro-spinal meningitis , and jt took sev eral men to hold him. The doctor soon brought him out of that and he lay in a sort of drowsy sleep , from which he could only be aroused by considerable effort , but was not in his right mind. The last report we had from him was that he was up around , apparently in his right mind , but could remember nothing previous to the stroke. He is impressed with the idea that he was kicked by a mule. The lightning bolt must have first struck his head , and then glanced and killed the horses. It was indeed a close call. The doctor thinks he will , in time , entirely recover. Grand Army En- A Scene at the Recent eampment , Toledo Telex ram. Major W. W. Alcorn , who was pres ent at the Grand Army encampment i in Minneapolis last week , relates the j following incident : An exciting scene in the Grand Army l encampment occurred Friday morning j last. The encampment being called to order , and being about to proceed \ to the general order of business ( elec- f tion of commander-in-chief ) , Corporal Tanner , of New York , advanced to the stao-e , and asked unanimous consent | to introduce a matter of some importance - . He thereupon - ance , which was granted. which is accredited - upon delivered the speech f credited to Commander - in - chief f , Kountz as a speech of acceptance , in the papers all over the country , in { which he stated that a comrade from I Dakota , being in the city attending the reunion of his old regiment ( the 1st Minnesota ) , had been run over by a street car the day before and injured to such an extent as to necessitate the amputation of one of his limbs , and jj moved that the encampment appropri- I j ate $500 to assist him in his going ' , through life. } ! When the cheers subsided , Commodore - i dore Lloyd , of Ohio , ascended the platform - ' ; form and closed a neat speech by i' seconding the motion with a donation of $100 [ cheers ] from the department of Ohio. A delegate from New York * - also begged leave to second with $100 ' , , from New York. An Illinois delegate I * arose and said the department of llli- , , nois seconds the nomination with $200. [ Great applause. ] The New York delegate - ( egate , again on his feet , said , I find ' that I have not half represented my -v | , j delegation , who authorizes $200 from . 'I New York. [ Laughter and cheers. ] Gen. Wagner , of Pennsylvania , took . f the platform and said , the Pennsylvania - > nia delegation desire to "see" the gen- ( ; men from New York and Illinois and -J will "go $50 better , " and second the f motion with $250. [ Long and loud I applause. ] Commander Lloyd , taking f position on the platform said , the Ohio ; soldiers , in the days of the war , never took position in the rear , and they do not on this occasion. Ohio "calls" Pennsylvania and makes her contribution - tion $250. [ Fever heat. ] Corporal i' , Tanner , of New York , again on his feet , ' ' said : I am very much confused by the terms used by our comrades from Ohio and Pennsylvania [ laughter ] , but I have a dim recollection of having heard them in my early experience in the army , and , desiring to answer in the same vernacular , my friend who is at my side says tell them you "see" them $250. [ Cheers. * ] Then followed like contributions from nearly all the various - ous departments , in sums ranging from ' $25 to $100 , until over $4,000 was i ' raised , and by resolution turned over to the department of Dakota , with instructions - , structions to use it as in their judgment { . seemed best for the disabled comrade. , The scene occupied less than half an j1 hour , and was characterized by con- I slant outbreaks on every new donation rj hats in air and delegates standing. J It was a scene worth visiting so distant - 1 tant a city as Minneapolis to see. ' \ \ "What We Have Learned From * J Animals. ' ] ( Cincinnati Knanlrer. It is a favorite theory of some that animals - ' , ' , ] imals are imitative , and what man does V they follow and try to perform. Possibly - ' bly man learned lirst from the animals. Many animals are born armed and weaponed both for offense , capture and defense when attacked or pursued. The gorillas of Africa fought the sol- j\ \ diers of Hanno , and apes use hand- j stones to crack nuts. In the days of { Strabo , that historian tells us. that Indian - * dian monkeys climbed mountains and rolled stones down on their pursuers. J Take throwing , for example. The primitive - itive man learned it from beasts. The I squid ( cuttle fish ) defends itself by discharging - ' charging its ink-bag , imbedded in the liver , and escapes in the blackened water. The toxotes or archer brings , down insects with a drop of water when they are three or four feet high in 'the air. The archer fish of Japan is kept < in a glass jar and fed by holding flies at the end of a rod a few inches from | the surface of the water , and it never . fails to hit them. The lima or guanaco ' j throw their acrid and fetid saliva some IJ distance and with accurate aim. Men j would learn to strike by watching the r blow of the bear , and the kick of those animals which defend themselves by kicking , as the horse , zebra , the camel and giraffe , while the ostrich , eagle and larger birds of prey would teach him a lesson in assaulting witk ready wings. The whale raises its head with such force that it has sunk a whaler. . Combats of goats , stags , buffaloes and wild bulls , all of which rush forward with their heads down and drive their horns into their enemy's body , would suggest the thrust. ' The bittern , the peacock and the Amer ican white crane stab at the eye. And the black rhinoceros , the fiercest of any , when angered his horn becomes hard and erect , and , diving beneath the canoe , he pierces a hole in its bottom tom and sinks it , and with the same weapon attacks and rips open the huge and ungainly elephant. The pheasant and partridge , the cock and quail , would suggest , with their spurs , the use of the poniard. Pliny says that dolphins phins which enter the Nile have a knife- edged spur on their backs to protect them from the crocodiles. The bull head fish has a many-barbed horn on its dorsum which must have taught the Equimaux a.nd savages of South Amer ica and Australia the use of theirspears. Poisoned dagger-makers took a hint from the sting-fish , or adder-pike , J whose dorsals and spines have double r grooves , in which a poisonous secretion - ' f tion is found. The sting-rays twist ! their long slender tails round their en emy and cut the surface , inflicting a wound not easily healed. The stino- sometimes breaks off in the wound ! The Fiji Islanders , the Samoans and Tahitians use this poison extensively. > These things in animals would suggest the poisoned dagger with which the Italians of the middle ages were so handy. I feel as if God had , by givin ° - the Sabbath , given fifty-two springs in every year. [ Coleridge.