ye A Chinese Funeral. « s— 1 was disturbed one day during my mid-day meal at Hong Kong by a com- motion in a street adjoining the one in which I was residing, caused by a Chinese funeral of more than the usual pretentions. . As very little is known among foreigners, even those residing in China, in regard to “celestial” obse- quies and their meanings, I took some trouble to gather information regarding the strange pageantry which 1 that day witnessed. It is the general custom in China, when a man is about to die, for the eldest son to remove him from the bed to the floor of the principal room of the Louse, where he is laid with his feet tothe door. The inhabitants of the province of Fulekien are in the habit of placing a piece of silver in the mouth of the dying person—with which he may pay his fare into the next world-—and care- fully stopping up his nese and ears, In certain cases they make a hole in the roof to facilitate the exit of the spirits proc. e ling from the body, their belief being that each person posseses seven animal senses, which die with him, and three souls, one of which enters Elysium and receives judgment ; another abides with the tablet which is prepared to commemorate the deceased, and the third dwells in his tomb, Whether all these practices are ob- served in Hong Kong I am unable to say ; probably the tetting open of the windows and doors is regarded as a preferable proceeding to making a hole in the roof, more especially when the death happens to occur in the lowest room of a three-storied house. Here, however, as elsewhere, the intelligence of the death of the head of a family is communicated as speedily as possible to all his relatives, and the household is dressed in white-—the mourning color of China. Priest and women hired to mourn are sent for at the same time, and on their arrival a table is set out with meats, fruits, lighted candles and joss-sticks, for the delectation of the souls of the deceased and the wailing and weeping by the mourning-women is relieved at intervals by the intoned prayers of the priests or the discordant ‘ tom-tomming’’ of ‘musicians’ who have also been called to assist in the ceremonies. The women weep and la- ment with an energy and dolefulness which, if genuine, would be highly com- mendable ; but ungenerous ‘“‘barbari- ans” of extensive acquaintance with the Chinese assert that this apparently “overwhelming grief is, at least in the majority of cases, mere sham. In re- gard to the nearest relatives of the de- ceased it would be uncharitable to presume there is mot A considerable amount of real grief beneath all this weepihg and wailing : but hired mourn- ers, who are usually the most demon- strative on these occasions, can hardly be expected to launch every other day into convulsive lamentations of a genu- ine nature over the death of individuals } they hardly know by name. As it is, the priest usually directs these emo tional demonstrations much in the same way a8 a conductor controls the per- formance of a band of musicians ; now there are a few irregular wails ; then a burst of them, relieved in turn by a few nasal notes from the priest, the inte:- vals being filled up by the **tom-toms”’ and an occasional titter from the latest tomers, One of the strangest features in the obsequies I witnessed was the erec- tion of & structure in front of the house in which the death occurred, to enable the coffined body to be brought down to the roadway from the room in which it was lying. The house being a three-storied one, and the body lying in one of the topmost rooms the erection, which furnished sloping footway of planks from the room to the road, and a landing at the top, had necessarily not only to be lofty but sub- stantial, Communication was, of course, had with the room through the window. These structures are, I believe, erected for two reasons—first, because strange families in a house object, on supersti- tious grounds, to a corpee being taken through their rooms; and secondly, because it is almost impracticable to get a heavy Chinese coffin down the narrow, tortuous stairs of many of the native houses, For a similar reason no body in course of transportation from one part of China to another for the purpose of interment is allowed to pass through any walled town. No corpse, either, is ever allowed to be carried across a landing-place or to pass through a gateway which can in any way be constructed as pertaining to the Em perer. The Chinese are indeed so su- perstitious in regard to death as seldom to mention that word itself, perferring to take refuge in a circumlocution, for instance, as ‘‘having become im- mortal.” . What may be particularized as the public obsequies of the deceased, on the special occasion I refer to, were com- menced by a procession issuing from the house on the mission known as *‘ buying the water” wherewith to wash the “musicians ** (save the word); then a priest, wearing a long robe of a dark- red color and a sort of college cap, and, lastly, the white-clad mourners. On the mainland the procession would probably have repaired to the nearest river, well or even the wet ditch of the city for the water; but these antiquated conveni- ences being scarce in Hong Kong the sorrowful cortege on this occasion was compelled to wend its steps to the Gov- ernment hydrant at the end of the street | The leading actor in this cere- mony of ‘buying the water’ was, as usual, the eldest son of the deceased, a boy about seven or eight years of age. Notwithstanding his youth, however, his part was performed with an exact- ness that must have resulted from a considerable amount of previous in- struction. Bearing in his hand a wand covered with white indented paper, sup- ported on each side by a female relative, and bending nearly double in token of his intense grief, this young scion of the deceased proceeded slowly and gravely in the direction of the hydrant, the ‘*band ’ meanwhile doing their best with the tom-toms and that close imitation of the Scotch bagpipe, the Chinese pipe. Arrived at the hydrant the party knelt around that useful ap- paratus; the *‘ musicians’ redoubled their exertions, and the priest his prayer ; more incense was burned, and a tremendous burst of wailing and la- mentation went up from the mourners, While these performances were in oper- ation, the youth to whom I have just referred drew, with the requisite pros- trations and solemnity, a basin of water from the hydrant, and then scattered a few coins on the ground by way of pay- ment. It is essential in this ceremony that the water should be paid for, The procession thereafter returned to the house, where, doubtless, the body of the deceased was washed by the boy, in compliance with the custom of his country. After the body of the deceased is washed in this manner it is dressed in the best clothes which belonged to the man in his lifetime, a hat being placed on his head, a fan in his hand and shoes on his feet, the idea being that he will be clothed in these bhabiliments in Elysium, and consequently that he must appear there as a respectable and supe- rior member of society. At intervals during these and subsequent ceremonies gilt and silvered paper in the shape of coins and sycee bars is burned, in the belief that it will also pass into the in- visible world, where it will be recoined, into solid ; and clothes, sedan- chairs, furmiture, buffaloes and horses, made of paper, are transferred on the same principle to the ‘better land” for the benfit of the dead. The body was now brought through the window and placed in the coffin on the top of the temporary wooden structure, It is the practice with the richer Chinese to keep the coffined bodies of their rela- tives in their houses for long periods, sometimes for years, This custom was not followed on this occasion, for the funeral took place immediately after the ceremony of “buying the water.” Large sums of money are expended on coffins by the ‘‘celestials,’’ and a dutiful son will see that his parents are provided with these melancholy receptacles some- times many years before their death. They are made of heavy boards, four or five inches in thickness, and rounded at the outer joints, and appear to invariably take the form, in this colony, of the polished trunk of a tree. Inside they appear to be lined with a sort of mor- tar | the joints are all carefully closed with a similar substance ; but a small hole is drilled through the coffin over the face of the deceased, so as to leave a channel of escape and entrance for the cash engaged in at the grave, so far as the priest, the mourners and especially the ‘‘musicians’’ were concerned, and those earlier in the day. The deceased's tab- let is carried back in procession to the house, and there set up in a room sp - other tablets of the family, Before prayers offered, The food carried in the procession is, we believe, commonly distributed among the poor ; sometimes, however, a portion of it is consumed in the house, The burial places are sometimes selected by necromancers, and if the family be rich this selection is often made a matter of considerable difficulty aud expense, A good view for the en- tombed spirit is one of the chief require- ments for a grave, near a hilltop are highly favored spots, -— Here and There a Gem, The power of a4 man’s virtue should not be measured by his special efforts, but by his ordinary doing. Pascal, | Be noble! and the nobleness that lies In other men, sleeping, but never dead, i Will rise in majesty to meet thine own, {| “He is faithful that hath promised, He'll surely come again ; He'll keep His tryst wi’ me, at what hour 1 dinna ken; jut He bids me still to wateh, and ready aye to be { To gang at any moment to my i nu tree.” ! { The secret of Mr. Wm. E. Dodge's | power lay in the first hour of every | morning. That hour he gave to God with his Bible, and on his knees ; and if he came down among business men | with his face shining with cheerfulness COoun~ { and loving kindness, it was because he | had been up in the mount in communion { with his Master, — Cuyler, trooping out to their tombs to repair and sweep them and make offerings. A Chinese tomb in the South of China seems invariably, so far as the outline on the ground is concerned, to take the form of the Greek letter Omega ; when raised to any height it and usually a round back, the coffin being placed in the seat, HT —————— a - Raiding the Chinese * Joints.” Even certain parties in the city of the crusade against the norrid depravity, the substance of which is concentrated and doubly distilled into that terrible vice of opium indulgence. Fortunately the excitement is confined {o Mott street, Now, the into Mott tion very much if the ‘old boy" street in that delectable siogan is, vicinage, jut the Chinese,” This is not, however, an uprising of the people against the Mon- golians as much as it is a gushing out of the mob venom that lurks in the gutters If they don't ha e the almond-eyed celestial brother they will wreak their upon class or classes of any foreign commu of all large cities. vengeance the nity, whose aims or labors may be in con- flict with their own. It a Dennis Kearney howling, ‘The Yes! any, all, any- is belligerency Chinese must go.’ sovereigns of the slums, A fellow loaded to the rum hiccoughs anathemas against imaginary enemy with his little pipe of opium, and, ushering from his fetid dive excoriates the pigtail citizen emerg- ng from his “joint.” mentary upon ous that we make slaughts muzzle with our most Vigorous on- upon apparent vices while the deep-sea soundings in the ocean of turbance to the reformaton This bhub-bub about with thelr is a farce. but, if the aggressive the empire city desire their faculties we would respect. fully suggest that there are portions of New York which horrible Opium op.um is bad reformers of to £1 OIE are the sanitary and moral prestige of the metropolis than all the stone throwing and dirt flinging at the harmless celes- tials, Improvements. A German has invented a safe which, spirits, It was a work of some dificulty to bring the coffined body down the steep foot-way from the window to the road ; but the task was finally accomplished without mishap, amidst the renewed wallings of the moarning-women, the shrieks of the pipe and the belaboring of the tom-toms. Awaiting the arrival of the coffin in the street were some twenty elaborately -carved and lavishly- gilded sedan chairs, constructed especi- ally for use on sueh occasions, These chairs contained meats, fruits and cakes —real and artificial-—in profusion. Among other articles displayed were two excellently cooked sucking pigs. Two or three altar-pieces, emblazoned with the name and age of the deceased, were also carried in the procession ; also banners, the deceased's tablet and pho- tograph, and other articles— Lhe bearers all being dressed more or less in mourn. ing costume, Before the procession started for the burial ground at Mount Davis there was more wailing, more incense burned, more shrieks from the “gusty pipe” and more prayers from the priest. One of the last acts of the mourners was to walk round the coffin, and then the procession moved off, the coffin taking the last place in the cor- tege. At Mount Davis the body was cone signed to the earth with much lamen- tation, incense-burning and praying. There was, however, apparently, but little difference between the ceremonies in addition to the customary walls and doors of steel, has an attachment that on being touched immediately flares an electric light on the scene, and at the same time uncovers a prepared plate on which the burglar’s photograph is taken while an alarm is sounded, Mr. BR. 1. Wadlow, a Brooklyn, Ga., man, after three vears' hard work and study, has finally invented and patented a new way of making shoes, The en- tire uppers of these shoes are of one piece, with no seams that touch the foot, They are made with an adjusta- ble instep and fastened with buckles of his own invention, A Turin jeweler has made a tiny boat formed of a single pearl, which shape it assumes in swell concavity, Its sail is of beaten gold, studded with dia- monds, and the biunacle light at the bow is a perfect ruby. An emerald serves as its rudder, and its stand is a slab of ivory. It weighs less than half an ounce. Its price is $5000, i ———— A reporter who had seen long service on English newspapers died in the per- son of George Hl. Kent, He began his career oni the London Morning Post in 1820, and he was afterward associated on the Morning Chionicle with Charles Dickens. He enjoyed the further dis tinction of having reported the first University boat race and the first regat- every yacht race during the last fifty | years his face was a familiar one, Work, for the night is coming f Work through the morning hours Work while the dew is sparkling ; Work ‘mid springing the GWErs Work when day grows brighter, work in the glowing sun, for the night is coming, work is done.” Work when man’ Knowledge is, indeed, that which next to virtue truly and essentially It human soul. | raises one wan above of the pleasant another, fin- It the ad- of It gives ease to solitude, Addi isnes one-half | wakes being to us, fills mind with entertaining views, and | ministers to it a perpetual series | gratifications, | and gracefulness to retirement. s0N., Prayer with and for others rrow out of our own private prayers, In the closet, with the door shut, we learn how to speak to our Father. He | prays best in public who prays best alone, must A congregation, however large, is a gathering of individual souls, ‘As in water, face answereth to face, 80 ths heart of man to nan, ’— Marling An Unexplored Region. Hearing the report around town that | valuable redwood and yellow-pine forest had been discovered by R, D. Cook, of this place, about eighty miles east of | town, we dropped in upon that gentle- | man and received full confirmation from him of the report. It seems that about three weeks ago he became alarmed at hd : - . . the long ary spell and in ¢ wilh MPAny started for head waters of the Sisquoc in search of another gentleman, he the food for hisstock. He reports the sce: « | ery along the route aftér he left civili | zation as exceedingly grand, rivaling { anything he ever saw in his life, 1e nformation that he had twice crossed the plains and had been and | | volunteered the { through Central America, After riding | as as they could they left their {| horses and footed it over the mountains ial and near one of the tributaries of { and through canyons, the headwaters of the Sisquoc they fousd themselves upon | the brink of a percipice over which the | waters of the creek poured with a deaf- | ening roar, falling a distance of six or He threw a rock to test the distance, and | seven hundred feet, brink waited to hear it strike the bottom, Lut | after waiting some time he concluded it had lodged onthe way down, and was turning to leave when the rambling in- | tonations told him it had just reached | the bottom. The view from this point | was grand and awe-inspiring, and if properly opened to the public would rival the Yosemite as an attraction. Fish and game abound, and to illustrate the plentifulness of the former he stated that his companion « n several occasions took a common guouy sack and fast. {ened it at a rifle, and would drive enough fish inte it while he was making a fire to serve them for a meal, In coming down a canyon they discovered a redwood forest that has never before been known to exist in that locality. He describes its extent to be from two and a half to three miles long and from three-quarters to a mile wide. The trees were from one to six feet in diam. eter, and, to use his own words ‘‘there is enough timber there to fence this valley into ten-acre lots,’’ On the outer edge of this grove he found a tree that had been felled years and Years ago by chopping around it with a tomahawk, the blade of which was not over llhree inches wide, He is confident that no other white manever stepped feet inside the grove, for, said he, it would have been impossible to have reached ita yesr ago ; but about that time a forest fire burned off the thick underbrush for miles this side and made it possible for th=m to reach the grove on foot. He does not think that the discovery of the forest or the magnificent falls will be of any value for years to come because of the difficulty of building roads to them, but, nevertheless, he intends to s.art out in a short time and further explore that interesting region.—San Luis (Cal) Republic, - - In the Supreme Court, at Providence, R. 1, Fanny Sprague was ordered to furnish bonds within twenty days to the amount of $300, 00 and Mary Sprague to the amount of $80,000 as assignees of the Quidneck Company's stock. 1 OVEN & ———— —— a ——— Agricultural, Growing Cabbage. Tate cabbage is a more important crop than that which is early, as it is which enables the grower to obtain season, when most vegetables are scarce Nor does the late crop require a ho's bed for forcing, nor come in competi- tion with the Southern product. The preparation of a field for cabbage should be very thorough, deep plowing and frequent harrowing being necessary to get the soil in proper condition, Asthe gunantity of manure may be used with. should be set in rows of the cultivation of the crop that grower must depend for success, Too much cultivation cannot be given cab- bage, for the oftener the soil is stirred the "OTL. better, and especially to grow in the field, as nothing suc- cumbs quicker to weeds than cabbage, The best manure for cabbage, if size without guality is desired, is that fiom the hog pen : but if good, crisp cabbage, of the stable that has become fine and well-rotted, is sure to give good results, Of fertilizers a mixture of superphos- phate, plaster and guano will be found excellent, and it 1s better to apply the fertilizer at intervals during the growth of the crop than at one operation. the cabbages al present is The obstacle in way of growing the cabbage- worm. So tenacious of life is this pest that no remedy is Known that may be The free dissolved in water considered entirely effectual. use of saltpetre, and sprinklec well over the plants, is recom- by if it the ravages of the worm, is mended some, and, does not an excellent substitute for the guano as a fertilizer. Paris green, Londen purple sllebore should not be used on as it IS dangero 1%, Profes- vant, in detailing the results Lurts of bis experiments, found that hot water applied to the cabbage destroyed a por- wm of the worms, but caused the leaves to turn vellow, The most satisfactory remedy. though not entirely effectina all cases, consisted of half a pound each in three Erowing cf leaves of hard soap and kerosene oil gallons of water: but as the ark 8 fa LCs 8 LNASS cabbage presents ¢ within which the worm may be cor- cealed, the application should be re peated occasionally. The worm will be killed if to reach it. the solution can only be made In saving seed select, late in the fall, heads, and cut then place the heads on which should be slightly the best off the stalks close to them ; the #levaled ground 1 with earth to As spring opens remove the covering, cut the knife and it wil single enbbage yielding quite a large quantity, It is necessary to give sone kind of support to the seed-stalks, how- ever, and the pods should be picked off, carried to the barn and the seeds beaten out on a clean place, and co vir vel protect during the winter. S00N 48 cabbage crossways with a sharp | soon sprout to seed, a Milk for Laying Hens. There is nothing better for laying hens in the spring than milk after the cream has been taken off, the Amerwcan Agriculturist thinks. “We bave tried t several seasons with complete success, With the milk given fresh from the dairy-room every day, the fowls will need no other drink, and it will supply everything required in the way of animal food. The pullets fed with milk and corn. and a mixture of corn meal and milk, through the cold weather, have given an abundant supply of eggs. Wheat bran is also a good article to mix with the milk. It is better to give the mixture a boiling and to feed it in the warm state, but this is not necessary. We have also found the milk one of the best kind of diet for young chickens soon after they come from the nest, to promote their health and mpid growth. Indian meal, ground coarse and scalded with milk, is perfect food for them. As they grow older, grass, cabbage or onions may be chopped fine and added to the daily rations, A portion of the milk on dairy farms usually going to the pig-trough may be diverted to the chicken-coop with great advantage. Eggs are worth 25 cents a dozen, and poultry 20 cents a pound, when pork brings but 10 cents a pound in the mar- ket. The "Coming Cow." The position that the ‘‘coming cow’ is to be one well adapted for both beef and milk production we believe to be correct, if it Le not pushed too far, There is an increasing number of dairy farmers who find it best to give almost exclusive attention to the quantity and quality of the milk given by their cows, caring little abort their merits as beef makers. So there are beef-producing farmers who properly count it a disad- vantage if a cow gives a large flow of milk, This is true on the Western plains, It is true of such farmers as J. D. Gillette, whe only asks for a cow that shall produce and feed a calf each year. Both these elasres form but a minority of cattle raisers. The most successful dairymen and the producers found in these classes: but the great majority of cows and of steers for beef are, and long will contisine to Le, raised by men who capnot afturd to ignore either the milk-giving or the meat-pro ducing quality, For men the popular breed must be one with desery- such It is quite possible that several breeds may, in the future, be claimants for this double pur pose, but the course of breeding now the other. The Shorthorn has been surpassed, if equaled as al “gener Lever Ought she 10 lose a An Objection to Mulching There is a growing suspicion that the affect found Nn ths insect troubles strawberry way be practice of mulching, and there are ce ¥ this v On careful inquiry of many strawberry men who ship their fruit at ew likely to prove the true one this point heir fields § l that 14 thal 1h and from an examination of and fruit, it is ascertained OS fields unmulched have been neariv or free from the which has entirely wrought such ruin o mulched fields. Captain H. Andrews brought us sev- eral plants thick with berries in al stages of growth and without any = of bug work. splendid berries and used no mulching ¥ He has a heavy crop of H., J. Hileman has a large patch of fins mulched, Drake Tus who neglected to mulch | of thoroughly mulched and are alive wi Dr. A. D. Finch I also full of the festive bug ana berries that were not Rendlewman, Perry ner and others i wve good crops berries. Mr, Earl's fields were tl the bug. 's fields were muiched Others who mulched have suffered ina similar way. The i ing beneath the winte: frait-grower nsects have been actively breed mu'cl during all the now the carefu’ At To mulch a strawberry field looks, as one growel like frying pan into the 1 wile and Spring, and finds his labor lost, least it has that appearance, expresses it, jumping from the Considering probability of the mulch acting as a harbor and tory for the bug, will it not be + to put on the mulch late in the fire. possibility or rathes fa better spring instead of in the fall ? Feeding Value of Ensilage. We feeding value of ensilage, some of which have inquiries concerning the show some confusion of mind in regard to the subijact general principles will help to a bette: understanding First. The value of food preserved in a silo depends very greatly on was put in—its nature and condition. The material used and the degree of maturity of the crop greatly affect the value, Second. [DPutting grass, cornstalks or other substance into a silo does not add anything to the nutriment contained in the material. We cannot take what we did not put in. Catling storing the green food im a silo may make it more digestible ; may, and often does make it more palatable than when the food is dried in the open air. Let ting the moisture dry from meadow grass or from green cornstalks in itself should not make these substances less desirable as food. In fact, it does make them less palatable. Preserving much of this moisture in the ensilaged food may be a help. Third. If fermentation goes on in the silo to any considerable extent there is absolute loss of food value, Fourth. Reason and experience alike lead us to conclude that we cannot make ensilaged grass or cornstalks alone take the place of good grain feed, The latter should be given in connection with the former. Fifth. Reason and experience alike show that almost any palatable, nutri- tious, succulent plant kept in a silo, with reasonable exclusion of the air, makes palatable and fairly satisfactory food. wd is— Bearing in mind a few what will out and CURRANT JAM, Mash two quarts of currants with one guart of raspberries together in a bright preserving pan. ‘This admixture of raspberries adds greatly to the flavor of the jam. Now add sugar in the propertion of one pound to each pint of pulp; place over the fire and stir constantly for twenty min- utes witha long-handled wooden spatula. Remove the scum and transfer the jam to china pots or glasses. When cold cover with paper or biadder, and set away for future consideration, The Italian Government refuses to allow the importation of any patent medicine unless sanctioned in some properly authorized pharmacopoeia.