a a CHINESE FUNERALS. QUEER FUNERAL CUSTOMS IN FAR CATHAY. Tombs Built to Last Forover. Fam. ily Coffins Provided for the Dear Departed’'s Future Wants, the Mail tomb to and last A Chinaman, Express, builds says his wash away in the first rain. A mansion is seldom repaired, and never re- stored. It shares the same fate as the hovel of the coglie and the hut of the savage. The grave. on the other hand, is cleaned and repaired every year and restored with great regular- ity and thoroug . Very early in life John Chinaman buvs himself a nice coflin, a roomy comfortable in which he can sleep the last sleep withot his knees and elbows affair it chafing If he has ever makes careful arrangements to have it inscribed on the ancestral tablets in his own family hall, and the tem- ple of his family and of his clan, so that future generations may render him reverence and so enliven the mo- yotony of his spiritual But in any and every case he picks out a good grave, pre-empts it the Chinese law and has it made ready for his reception This is a very cated proceeding in China as ncery suit in New Jersey, the latter, it has to be conducted by one of more professionals of the existence. ous an 1 d compli- is about as bad and, like highest standard. rl "also astrol ‘grave tellers, After this worthy has rave all well when another grave must for the wife. as select Foes until marriage, be picked This oes lestials will a separate place picked out wife hild and dependent witl his gates—a large-sized tery it il sO Ol 1 posse. Finally Azrael the graves come 3 The CO does and aeey- ¢ appear, one of to be pied. family undertaker looking affair, and some historic ten. n is brought from the ‘uriot 1 I Has 106 10rd lik ut grea o tree from it celain. 2 are simi nsub- stantiated, may use term, into Celestial wealth; that the paper | palace wlien consumed gives to the | dead man a real palace in the life to | the make-believe animals be- | come herds and flocks on the heaven: ly plains and tl tiny figures are | metamorphosed into servants, em- ployees, friends and companions, After the body has lain in state] the time allowed by custom or by law the priest appears upon the scene with his paraphernalia and re- tinue. There is a little statue sitting in a chair gorgeously painted and wonderfully carved and celored. It is carried by four men There are one or two banners which inform the public who the divine stranger is. There is 8 man who eurries a large gong, another man with cymbals, several with small gongs and tom- toms and always a wretch with dis- cordant and ear-splitting clarionet They partake of the refreshments and then the funeral cortege starts. Usually the head of the procession is a musician, whose notes give warning of his approach. He is followed by relatives and by the coffin, which is suspended from a framework of poles, whose ends rest upon the shoulders of stalwart carriers; by the family, hired mutes and mourn. ers, then by the little statue in his choir or summer house, the musi. clans, friends and neighbors, If it Is a poor coolie the coffin will be car- ried by eight men and there will be about twelve other persons in the procession. If he be a great mer. ehant or a mandarin the coffin will be borne by thirty, fifty and even sixty carriers, and the procession will conmin at least five hundred the come ; ie gouls. When they reach the burial ground the coffin stops alongside of the port- {able altar and the littie idol, while { three musicians march forward and {occupy the points of a triangle de- | signed by the astrologers, which in- | cludes the grave, the music and all { the members of the procession, | The moment they reach their post they execute a series of musical or non-musical sounds, while the coffin moves onward to the grave. They | repeat this until the earth has cov- ered all evidences of death, After that, if the deceased was a person of any prominence whatever, or was a father leaving his jame is inscribed with some compli: mentary remark upon the tablets in the ancestral hall of his former home and also of those in the halls of the family and clan temple. There- after at least once a year on the Ghost God's day, family go out to his grave and there spend When they reach the tomb y clean it from and weeds and the debris which gathers in the If the colored has touch up the color until it is new and bright. They trim the grass around the grave and ‘lean the ground of stones, brick and This done, they bring out their food and drink and serve his allotted quantity to dead. This of three cups of tea, three glasses of wine and plates of cold chicken, cold pork sau- sage and dried fish, fresh fis! served eggs, sweetmeats, and other hile the spirit issue, the IT1O8S open. lettering stores of consisds oer delicacies. Ww i8 supposed to be er ight jass-sticks the grave and artificial low. v then them in it with ti tation nsel money n and eat their ti intent aside for sit dow y with the ot 1 rg Chinese Fuel, The Chinese do not 1 and it is only that you houses says Frank G. Cary Fu instances heated vel uel is remarkably and everything is carefully save saw hundreds of ymen pullin stubble and gathering straw Ww fires of the chief businesses along the rtse- Kiang i vhich grow « parts « mined. “The Most Complete Man '' Dead? The man whom Henry Grady al- declared to be ever knew the most come the ablest Christian, the buried at Athens, other day, death having ‘ome at the early age of thirty-eight He was Hon. George Dudley Thomas, Mr. Grady’'s estimate of the A plete man he the consisten best citizen, was Ga., the ple of Geogia. He was classmate of (iovernor Atkinson in the State Uni. versity. He was universally recog nized as an eminent lawyer. For nine years, or until his health failed a year ago, he was a professor the law department of the nniversity He was a partner with ex-United nn i The Trade Winds. The trade winds are the prime mo- tors of ocean currents. They cause a surface drift of no great velocity over vast areas of water in the same general direction as that in which they blow. These drifts, after meet. ing and combining their forces, event. ually impinge on the lapd. They are diverted and concentrated and in- creased in speed. They either pour through passages between islands, as in the Caribbean Sea; are pressed up by the land and escape by the only outlets possible, as, for example, the Strait of Florida, and form a great ocean current like the Gull Stream. Ea a] He Copied Them, A teacher in a Philadelphia school recently gave her scholars a lesson to mark on their slates the Roman nu- merals from 1 to42. In about three minutes one of the boys held up his hand, signifying that he had accom- plished the'work. ‘ Why, Johnny,’ said the teacher, ''you are real smart, None of the other scholars are half done. Now. tell us how you cam: to finish so quickly.”” Johnny, in great glee, replied: ** I copied them from the clock on the wall up there.” HAWKS AND RATS. The dents. solved R. Hallstead of Elkland town- ship, Penn., saw a large white- breasted hawk dart to a sashless window near the peak of a wagon barn that he had finished building a few days before. It flew out moment with a squealing rat in each claw, and the interested farmey watched it till it met another hawk in midair. The two circled and un- dulated side by side for a spell, when the one with the rats resumed its flight toward the forest. The other hawk immediately pointed for the barn, shot through the window, flit. ted out a few struggline rat in talon, and sailed off in the same direction. Mr. Halstead started to tell his wife about what he had seen a pair exactly itl later 1 each seconds when the hawks or them, flew into the barn window, and came out short- ly IKE y with their claws full of rs I'here was the new barn dered where sue or hay farmer came Lis, no grain and the all the rats He was also in a quandry as the fierce forest birds knew where to find rats under a roof On going int barn Mr. Hallstead rats scampering and the was solved. after the roune WDE Ing people in- pI. { ir to how ) the uppe part of the saw scores of the floor, l on of their presence } f Delorean Around mystery Two nights barn ht been ) of the i yall He Con ries tid Nanas o rea it is country mouniain that the its inaterind mysterious power appertaining throngh being produced wholly ap: from human under care of a beneficent spirit jut while the Chinese will pay any price for this root, and will consume all that can be produced, the medical men of Europe and America have never found any curative power in it. Our Indian tribes, however, agree with the Chinese and regard gin- nfluence Winter Proverbs. A snow year, a rich year. Winter finds what summer lays up Aftera rainy winter follows a frait- ful spring. Winter's back breaks about the middle of February. December cold, with snow, brings rye everywhere. In winter expect not fair weather from one night's ice. He that drops a coat on a winter day, Will gladly put it on in May. Winter thunder, Poor man’s death and rich man’s hunger. December changeable and mild, The whole winter will remain a child. —————— pos Poison on Bank Notes. A bank teller of Vienna recently died from the effects of moistening his fingers with saliva at the lips when counting money. At the first revision of the vaults it fell to his lot to count a large number of small bills and, although repeatedly warned, continued mechanically to touch his lips when his fingers became too dry. fu | That evening he felt asmarting pain in { his lips, but did not attend to it until a swelling had set in the next day. | He then consulted a surgeon, who insisted upon an immediate opera- tion on the tumor, that had in the meantime assumed alarming propor- tions, as indispensable. A consulta- | tion of eminent specialists declared | his condition critical, but decided upon the operation as a possible chance, In spite of the operation the patient died three days after of blood poisoning. THE FIREWEED it Disguises the Ruin Wronght by Forest Conflagrations. August comes on, one finds quiet country roadsides and in openings, a tall plant, six feet vihose gingle gled red and green color r feathered with long, nar bearing a striking resems- those As f/ailon WOO from ir £ i n often to in i or even stem « row les blance of the common wil- the top waves a handsome lume about a foot long of deep pink a feature of race and beauty that flowers compare 1 8] ! flowers shaded purple, sucl h a few of our wild with it. The extr can He or sme tip of this plu: | bunch 1 i fi Closely clustered it nase o it : the decorated or pods of Between these is the same color as two wenty-five are blossom s—t group, the pods 1 shape nda leaves A Cosmonolitan City. Ne¢ York cosmopolitan population. 1 1.800.000 inhabitants reported by ti remarkable for its £3 %] Ww is last State census, 377.000 are aliens Nearly everyone in five is not a citi- But thousands of ywreign born and still tive language and customs American born are, in fact, in a small minority, numbering only 385,000 There are more Germans and more Irish in New York than there are na- tive born. The Russian colony (in- cluding Poles) numbers 80,000, and there are 54,000 Italians. Nearly | every race, religion and language are represented here. Certain sections | of the city are as distinctly foreign | in character and population as any | foreign city could be. This is one of the things that makes New York so interesting, and also so difficult to govern. en ¢ citizens are — Relics of the Saxons. Saxon relies have been found in great abundance lately in a cemetery in Sussex. England. In one grave were two elaborately ornamented ves. gels and a trumpet-shaped glass utensil. In other graves were found | a spear, a circular bronze brooch, bronze knife and knife sheath, a | bronze ring, with two toothpicks and | one earpick attached, a drinking cup of clay and a number of colored beads. Upon a skeleton there were 151 beads of clay and glass suspend: | ed on a string from the neck to the waist. The waist being the most import ant and conspicuous portion of the gown of to-day, all the labor and adornment seems to be spent upon it, leaving the skirts, for the most part. quite plain. The one thing essential is to have the skirt well fitted at the top. The amount of material at its foot may be varied from three to eight yards. The latter are extreme, . FOR THE YOUNG FOLKS, BROW. Oh, what do you think eame down last night, And spread abroad a mantle of white? The jolly, glorious snow Ho! ho! And what do you think we'll do to- night, When the moon alight We boys—wou know? and stars are id like you Ho! he! iangh and whoop of rare light With bounding hea bright, Adown ris aad with fad the hill we’ Ho! ho! OF WAR. Logs of war with atigura- It has remained decade significance ‘hicago Inter Oc **The German war dogs. ean s trained each dor 1 is required Dac army now na On march is led by his master an to carry a heavy Dogs of a dark because nemy bye (rérmans HISTORICAL WALES, and girls have more than of Philadelphia boys the mcee urged trips about the points of “Historical Walks,” occupation, in this department gity to various call them and the fashion taken a strong hold upon the this neighboring city. A party of young persons appoint time and place of meeting and, with one older and responsible guide, make a tour of places in and about the that are interesting from association or other reasons. The idea has been sopied here in New-York, and this holiday-time, when the day following the Christmas excitement are apt to be hard to fill, many such parties have been seen on their trips of in. gpection and frolic. More are planned for this week. Some are going to the Metropolitan and Nat. aral History Museums, and others will visit the upper part of the and, Washington Heights, and High the interast hey has Boulevard and Hundred and Fifty-third Street, where are the Astor and Audubon vaults. The former home of Audu- bon is very near this cemetery, a little north, and all about is historic ground. A stranger in the party adds to the interest, as all find pleasure in pointing out to him or her special places of interest, It is excellent amusement for those quite young, who know very little about the city. Brooklyn is full of historic places, and can give more than a day’s occupation in looking them up. A party went last week to the Jersey Heights, and tramped over the newly- developed district, taking a trolly ear down to Hoboken Ferry from Hudson Heights. Try these “his. torical walks.” There is hardly any- thing jollier for a party of boys and girls than to be out for a good tramp tery, at the Hazenbeel with to ex. but were tt and per- yiaths, The the tooth y fosw ny FOOWnH Baby's Elastic Vocabulary. ther had come to pay by the a companied HIS Nurse, to appear in an id she, "but, really, fora child of 16 months, I consider Alger non a marvel of intelligen He un- derstands every word that is said, and the conversation with a sa that almost alarms me at Speak to the lady. Algernon.” Boo-boo,’’ said Algernon “listen to that!’ eried the delight. ed mother. ‘He means, ‘How do you Isn’t it wonderful? Now, Alger non, ask the lady to play for vou the piano. Now, Algie, dear.” (very coaxingly) ‘“‘Boo-boo.” said Algernon. “He means music by that, Isn't he too smmit for anything? Now, love, tell the lady mamma 8 name." “Boo-boo,”’ said Algernoh. “That's right, ‘Boo-boo--Louise.’ Louise, you know. Bless his little darling heart. Isn't hea y way oe 10ins in city "a, The Vinegar Habit. “One of the most difficult habits to cure is that of drinking vinegar.” said Dr. L. C. Aiken, at the Emery, “ A good many women drink vinegar for the complexion, and in some cases it creates a craving for it even more insatiable than that for liquor, As the habit grows the victim is no longer contented with ordinary vine gar, but demands it stronger and stronger until they drink acetic acid with very little dilution. Itburns out the stomach within a very few years, and itis seldom that a vinegar fiend lives even until middie age It can be detected by the peculiar pals lor of the countenance, but no anti dote has ever been discovered by which the habit can be cured.”