pari To check this profanation of the Lord's day be engaged four women, teachers of week day scbool. to Instruct such chil dren as lie should send them on the Sunday in reading and the church catechism, for which they were to receive ono shilling earn A vl.slblo Improvement being effected In a short timo. both In the manners and laoutln of thechOdrea. Mr ttaikes' scheme attracted general attention llor majesty VuiH'ii Charlotte admitted him to an audi t-neo. and expressed high approbation of Ills plan Numerous schools formed on tho same inodul sprangip In the principal towns, and a society, under high patron r was formed in Loudon in 1765 for the establishment and support of Sunday schools throughout the kingdom. This was tho first stage of the Sunday BchooL GUATUITUUB INSTRUCTION. A gmit lmjHidiment to prosperity was the exjK-nso of hiring tho teachers. It is Dot certain who first conceived the idea of gratuitous instruction, but this in time camo alx.ut. and the result was that by the year 100 teaching in tho Sunday school was almost universally without remuneration In I son tho Sunday School union was formed, which, by its numerous publica tion.- agents nnJ branch societies in tho different parts of tho kingdom, exercised u wide iuliuenco The Instituto of the Church of England, which operated In a like manner, is of a similar date. Scotland boasts of Sunday schools as early as 1742 Dut it was not till 1780, when tho Society for Promoting Religi ous Knowledge among the Poor was formed, that they were publicly recog nized, nor until 1707. when the first Free runday School society was organized, that tree Sunday schools became goneral. At first tLtso met with considerable op position from portions of the ecclesiasti cal court, but this coon vanished, and Sunday school unions existed in most of the largo towns Sunday schools in Ireland had been In a measure anticipated in County Down La 1770. but tho system pursued by Mr. ILiikes vra-J not adopted till about 17S3. bine which date its system has been similar to that of England In Ireland tho Sunday School society svas established in 1809. The Roman Catholics, In the Doited lungdooi at least, have numerous Sunday ochooia. TXIK FTEST IS AJTEKICA. The Flrt Day or Sunday School society, formed in Philadelphia la 17SI. U the first permanent Sunday school organization La the United States of which there is trust worthy record It was composed of members cf different denominations. Including the Society of Friends Its constitution re quired that reading and writing from the Bible and fcue.b other religious and moral books as the social y approved should fur nish the course of instruction. The New York Sunday School onion was organized La 3S1C. the Philadelphia Sunday and Adult ScL:x! union ouo year later These three societies recognized the vnioa of different denominations, and led to the organization .... . . t C .1 1 . ! . .4. ol lue American unuay ocuooi uuiuu i Philadelphia la 1S21 The object of this union was to concentrate the efforts of Sunday school societies in different sec tions of the United States, and to 6ta t school wherever there were children found in sullicient numbers toatteud them It naturally came about tuat as new states were settled and kite various denom inations were strengthened, increased attention was given by each to its own Sunday schools.and denominational unicc3 to promote these were formed As years passed, the question bock was added to tho original recitation, and at length In a great degree superseded it Later on came lesson helps, texts, maps, black board exercises, eto In the earlier schools reward tickets were given, and when these had Ruilieiently accumulated they were exchanged for books This stimulated the production of works of a character suitable to young minds, and from this has been developed the Sunday school library hiz Uita twist with hi lariat rouJ the horn of the saddle, drags the bawling little creature, extended at full length. up to tho fire, where It is held before it can make a struggle. A less skillful roper catches round the neck, and then, if the calf Is a large one. the man who seizes it has his hands full, as the bleating, bucking animal develop3 astonishing strength. cuts the wildest capers, and resists fran tically and with all its power. If there are seventy or eighty calves In a corral. the scene is one of the greatest confusion Tho ropers, spurring and checking the fierce little horses, drag the calves up so quickly that a dozen men can hardly hold hold them, the men with the irons. blackened with soot, run to and fro; the calf wrestlers, grimy with blood, dust and sweat, work like beavers; while with the voice of a stentor the tallyman shouts out the number and sex of each calf. The ust rises in clouds and the shouts, cheers, curses and laughter of the men unite wifch the lowing of the .ws and the frantic bleating of the ropeu calves to make a perfect BabeL Theodore Roose velt in The Century. Prisoners Placed on Parole. In Now York the court may send the prisoner to what is known as the state re formatory instead of the state prison. provided it is his first offense. lie goes to the reformatory for the maximum time fixed by law as the penalty for his crime For example, if the maximum term for burglary la twenty years and the mini mum term one year, his sentence is fixed at twenty years. At any time after one year that the directors become satisfied that the prisoner will lead an honest life they may, after providing employment for him, either by the board or bis friends. permit him to go out on parole. The con ditions are fcoma thing like this: lie shall report to the warden at the end of each moilth what amount he has earned, what expended, what his associates have been, and other matters pertaining to his life. This must be verified by his employer. If these conditions are faithfully observed daring the term stipulated in the parole. wnetner it De six or twelve coontija or longer, at the end of that tune he receives an absolute release, which restores him to citizenship. If he violates the conditions of his pa rcja he may be returned to the prison on an order tasked by the directors and be compelled to serve oat his ful term, or if incorrigible may be transferred to the state penitentiary and there be compelled to serve out the maximum term. In Ohio tho tr.src may be paroled at any time after serving the minimum term, but the parole continues In force until toe end of the maximum term is reached under siibslaa tially the same conditions as are in use In New York. Chicago Times Interview. Good Wonl for the Keporter. Reporters differ in many ways Some are purely descriptive, in some a bnmp of huntor is ma-u:2rently developed, some permeate a story, short or long, with La dices of personality Others are cast Iron In recital, and make their stories as piquant as 'an algebraical problem. A good reporter, gifted with natural spirits and health. Is a thing of beauty and a joy forever in any well regulated newspaper office Every door is open to him. and the Celd of life Ls spread before him with its 6u."hine and Its shadow In the course of an evening he talks with presidents and walks' with princes. He sits with the sorrowful axd mourns with the humble No place is too acred, none too lowly; no man is too high, too rich, too great for him to approach, none too poor, too hum ble for him to serve. lie is as much at home in the palace of a millionaire as in a hospital ward of a prison. He writes with aqual readiness the glib utterances of a oefrwled bishop and the harrowing confes sion of a poor devil in the Tombs. A good reporter must be discreet. How much he hears that he cannot tell; how much be knows that it would not be fair for htm to re veil- De sees the best and worst types of society, and has his band more constantly upon tho pulse of affairs than any ministar. lawyer, doctor or raert -ban u Joa Coward la. New - York Grapbia.- ' Tbe "Echo Maker" at Sea. Another device, which may be called the echo maker, that of Mr. Do la Torre, has been examined C7 9 to 3rd of naval ofu cers. of wnicn uxumonder Cambridge Iloff. United States navy, was the bead. and report was made to the navy depart ment of a somewhat favorable nature It may coii< cf s flaring funnel screwed on the muzzle of a rifta. li lj operated by firing the rifle in the direction of the supposed obstacle, such as a rock, an ice berg, another ship, or a cliff. If the ob stacle b tL.crp, the beam of sound pro jected through the iv&zl strikes the ob stacle and rebounds; and as iuo cuo li more or less perfect in proportion as the obstacle is more or less parallel to the ship from which the gun ls fired, and as It is near or teasels, the position of the obsta cle may thns be Inferred- The board reported that De la Torre's method was firing a blank cartridge from a nno 13 the presence of objects as small as a spar buoy and &s brire as a fort, and catching the return sound or frvho He elaitr.a that a sharp sound projected at or nearly at an object, and only when so directed, will hi every case return some of the sound sent, so that theoretically tbera will always te an echo, end the difference in tho time hot ween the sound sent and tho echo will indicate the remoteness cf the object. The board found that a ro turn sound could be heard from the side of a fort a half mile off, from passing steamers a quarter mile off if broadside to. from bluffs and sails of vessels about the same distance, and from spar buoys 200 yards away. Arnold Curves Johnson In Popular Science Monthly. The Races of Australia. The Inhabitants of the continent of Australia have always been a stumbling block in the classification of the races, owing to their exhibiting in a mixed form soma of the characteristics of two distinct races. Their complexion, features and peculiarities of the skeleton are distinctly negro like, yot the frizzly hair so charac teristic of that race is not found In the 'Australian. The supposition Is that they are not a distinct race at all, but a cross between two branches of two primitive stocks It has been supposed that the frizzly haired Melanesians or Oceanio negroes, which include the Papuans of New Guinea end the Inhabitants of the Western Pacific islands, originally peopled the Australian continent, and that a modification of their physical characteris tics was brought about to some degree by the infusion of a low form of Caucasian, such as I now found in the interior of tho southern parts of India, among the modifications being the change to straight hair. J lobe Democrat. . , paved substantial build- Ia rnanifiiiLi hmilaTnpn filinlivl by' leafy birches and poplars; tho canal, spanned a.t intervals by graceful bridges; the picturesque tower of tho water works; the enormous cathedral of Alexander Nevski; the bourse; tho theatres; the hotels; the market idaces all seem to indicate a great populous center of life and commercial activity: but of liviuz inhabitants there is not a sign. Grass and Meeds are growing in tho middle of the empty streets and in the chinks of the-travel-worn sidewalks; birds are singing fearlessly in the trees that shade the lonely and defaced boulevard; tha count less shops and warehouses are all closed, haired, and itadlocked; the bells are silent in the gilded belfries of the churches, and the astonished stranger may perhaps wander for a 111110 between solid Mocks 01 uuumii'-s without seeing an open door, a vehicle, or a single human being. The city seems to have been stricken by a pestilence and deserted. If tho newcomer remembers for what Nizhni Novgorod is celebrated, he is not long, of course, in coming to the conclusion that he is on the site of the famous fair; but tho first realization of tho fact that the fair is in itself a separate and independent city, and a city which during nine months of every year stands empty and deserted, comes to him with the shock of a great surprise. The fair city of Nizuni Novgorod is situated on a low peninsula between the rivers Oka and Volga, Just above their junction, very much as New York city is situated on Manhattan Island, letween East River and the Hudson. In geographical position it bears the same relation to the old town of Nizhni Novgorod that New York would bear to Jersey City if the latter were elevated on a steep terraced bluff 400 feet above the level of the Hudson. AN EPHEMERAL LIFE. The Russian fair city, however, differs from New York city in that ft is a mere temporary market a huge commercial enra vansary where 500,000 trailers assemble every year to buy and sell commodities. In Se) tember it has frequently a population of more than 100,000 souls, and contains mer cnanoise vaiuea at o,ouu,uuu; wnue in January, February or March all of its in habitants might be fed and sheltered in the smallest cf .its hotels, and all pf its goods might be put into a single one or its in numerable shops. Its life, therefore, is a sort of intermittent commercial fever, in which an annual paroxysm of intense and unnatural activity is followed by a long interval of torpor and stagnation. It seems almost incredible at first that a city of such magnitude a city which con tains churches, mosques, theatres, markets, banks, hotels, a merchants' extLangp and nearly 7,000 shops and inhabitable buildings, should have so ephemeral a life, and should be so completely abandoned every year after it has served the purpose for which it was created. V hen I saw this unique city ror tne nrsr time, on a clear frosty night in January, 1868, it presented an extraordinai y picture of loneliness and desolation. Tho moonlight streamed down into its long empty streets where tho un broken snow lay two feet deep upon the side walks; it touched with silver the white walls and swelling domes of the old fair cathedral, from those tow&rs there came no clangor of bells; it sparkled on great snowdrifts heaped up against the doors of the empty houses, and poured a flood of pale light over thou sands of snow-covered roofs; but it did not reveal anywhere a sign of a human being. The city seemed to be not only uninhabited, but wholly abandoned to the arctic spirits of solitude and frost. A Busr MULTlTUi. When I saw it next, at the height of tho annual fair in the autumn of 1S70, it was so changed as to be almost unrecognizable. It was then surrounded by a great forest of shipping; its hot, dusty atmosphere thrilled with tUo iiCfeS&nt wh'Sthnj' of steamers: merchandise to the' value of i-25,C(Q,0(.'0 rubles lav on its shores Or was packed into its 6,000 siiops; every buiiuing witnm its limits was crowded; 00,000 people were crossing every day the pontoon bridge which connected it with th"J ( d town ; a military band was playing airs from Offenbach's operas on the great boulevard in front of tho governor's house, and through all the streets of tho re animated and reawakened city poured a great tumultuous flood of human life. J did rot see the fair city again until June, IS? 5, when I found ip almost; as completely deserted as on the occasion of my first visit, but in other ways greatly changed and im proved. Substantial brick buildiugs had t?t-en the place of the long rows of inflam mable wooden shops and 6hods; the streets in many parts of the city had been neatly paved; the number of stores and warehouses hid largely increased, and the lower end of the peninsula had been improved and digni fied by the erection of the groat Alexander Nevski cathedral. George Kennan in The Century, - uHppen in in Tbe one showing 3 just at this time -end her colony of -lug the simplocir (.iAindance of rabbits, t the laboring class of . .obtain sufficient auiiuul - ,or meat for themselves and -ny go by night to catch a rabbit When game-keepers, or police step 3 poor, fellows are sent to prison and aded as poachers. The government of .jw South "Wales, instead of securing these experts in the art of snaring, "and canning the meat as fast as tho rabbits are caught, are inviting men who, with vilo poison, arealjotit to spreud disease among the ioor creatures, so that they may die an awful, lingering death, the flesh and skin also being wasted. The English government and 'gentry" are at great ex pen&e in watching and punishing tho very men in England who would Ijo in valuable in Australia. If they would give these "poachers" a free passage to Svdney, and the heads of government thero would t<dthcm by contracting to present thcn with a homestead, when tho rabbits were caught, they would do it rijrht away, ten times faster than these poisonous cholera doctors. By employing artists in cunning millions of dollars might be made of tho pre served rabbit meat. How much more sens ible to make money of the flesh and skins? If the quantity should bo immense and put tho trice down very low so much the better. The poachers would make money at even five cents per rabbit, as they would catch on t ri average of 200 every d.-.y, ::;: .l n ir.i.. v,; t . ; number' at first. The uelicious food could then bo taken to England and sold at a prico within reach of every half starved agricul tural or other laborer. George Garduer in New York Herald. Forming u Town Lot Syndicate. A Lincoln man who has just returned from an extended tour of the country re cently struck a small town in Missouri where the shanties composing tho metropolis were surrounded by numerous ucresof land staked off into lots, liefore one of tho magnificent trade 'emporiums sat ail old man smoking a. corn cob pipe and apparently plunged in meditation. The Lincoln man assumed an air of profound innocence and accosted him, when this dialogue ensued; " V hat are these stakes here for?" "Town lots, stranger Thi3 hvar town Ls just er goin' to have a boom. An opcry house will be built thar, cf nothin' happens." vv 110 owns this property:' "A syndicut. Ye won't sec ary flies on this town." "What i" a syndlpalut "Why, -ye see, a syndicut is er lot of fel lers in ther city what has mone3', and they sorter get together and buy up a farm, and they stake it off, ye see, an' start a Ioom. That thar land was ther Widder Mnguiro farm, but ther syndicut bought it, ovA staked it off " "And how does the syndicate do its boom ing' " Wal, one feller in ther syndicut cots con trol of it all, ye see, and he sells a lot to an other feller, an' it goes round an' round, an' every time it goes rouud tho price is riz." But then it would never be sold out of that body." It wouldn't, eh? Stranarer. ver vion-r Finally, er lot is. sold to some outside folkr' and then it's deddycated, ye see, an' don't go ouna no more." "Thanks; now I know all about it." Ne braska State Journal. The Plattsmouth Herald Is on joying aEoomin both, its . AND WEEKLY DITIONS. 32M KIRBi aaal alii iL Jul 1888 Will le one during which the subjects of national interest and importance will le strongly agitated and the election ol' a President will take place. Hie people of Cass County who would like to learn of Political, Commercial and Social Transactions of this year tmd the times would keep should i'.p; ice with Overworked Locomotive Engineers. The greatest precaution that railroad com panies have taJea or years to guard against the possibility of accidents has been tho allowance to engineers of eisht hours' sleep and rest between each trip. Many a lime both my fireman and myself have, una wares dropped asleep from fatigue and ex haustion, while our train was rushing along tho track with its precious cargo of human freight. But none of those aboard the train knew of the negligence save ourselves. Of course, we did not take these naps knowingly or purposely, but would drop asleep uncon sciously, and not awake till tlfal engine passed a switch or rustic depot, Causing an echoing noise that served to bring us to our senses. This was particularly the case in the seas ons of excursions, when an engineer, after making one long trip, would go home, eat bis frugal meal and prepare to take a much needed rest, when suddenly a messenger would arrive and summon him to report at once for another long trip. The order was imperative, for if the engineer refused he would forfeit his position, Many accidents have occurred in this way which were at tributed to other sources. One night I ran two miles post an important station before awakening, and when the conductor asked me the reason, I replied that the air brake refused to work because the rubber hose had burst. Then I had to take a hatchet and Cla and rain a section of hose to verify my re port, which was wade in writing to the cQ-cei-s of the company. Engineer In Globe Cfittpcjat. ' Scorcliinj; a Hindoo Priest. In a temple within the palace enclosure a daily offering of ft goat is n;ad to the blood loving goddess "Kali." AVe did not sec 1 ho day's sacriflce, but the blood was yet fresh which flowed from the neck of tho lit!.!.; offering, which is severed by one blow from the high priest. I was looking at the goddess with her necklace of skulk tLiough my opera glaas. i" saw the' priest auspe'eted me of some disrespect to tho doit-. I gave hirn the uss. He marveled at the huge size tho image assumed. I then turned the glass and made him look through tho diminishing end. "Wow! Wow! W-o-wPwas his exclama tion of surprise. After making our offering I was abc.u; to lighi, my ciga in the couri'with a magnify ing or sun glass. I saw his reverence wanted to see the tWTTg. I motioned him to hold out his hand. His face wore an expression of sweet innocence as the rays of the sun began to brighten on the back of his fist, but whor they got to a little focus and sh.t ,7 hot sv-l?i mi-j ms Lrovu0&h.m ho utterc-U aiiotii-r: "Wow! wow J' oh, wow! w-o-wl" I never saw such merriment as the other priests and attendants exhibited, and the good old chap seemed hugely to relish tho joke. But I noticed that every now and then he voi;;-i look a thfi liuio ruasid rpot and rub it wim his other hand. He will know a sun glass hereafter. Carter Harrison in Chicago Mail. SUBSO HISS: -FOR EITIIRi: THE Daily ! ifli S f 52 p I I Now while we have the puhject before tlie people we will venture to tpeak of our r The "Three Sixes" Alarm. Speaking of fires. onr 'occasionally hearo the ' remark that tno- alarm sounded "three sixes." Now what is meant by "three sixes" is an enigma to most 'persons. It is popu larly supposed it is a general alarm, and will bring to the scene of action all the fire ap paratus in the city. This is a mistake, fin iahtee sixes" are substantially equivalent tci double third alarm. Fh3 and AVater, v journal devoted to the firemen's inttU'i-it-J, explains that ordinarily a third t.l.11 iu eallij out on average f eleven engino companies and four hook and ladder companies. Tho "three sixes'' sent out after a third o'--.m Eas boon eens in will bri- oufct ord"inariiVf twenty-two --gines eisht Look and ladder companies, two water towers, tho chief, two assistant chiefs and several chiefs of bat talions. These numbers might vary a liulo according to the location of tha fire. The full force of the New- York city de: partruent consists of fifty-five engine conir panies, eighteen hook and ladder eoinpaniesj two water towers, two fire boats, one chief of department, two assistant chiefs and twelve chiefs of battalions. Scientific Anier can. ' Wives of Newspaper Men. There are not a few newspaper men whose" wives ore constant helpmates in their profes sion. The wife of Frank Q. Carpenter, the Washington correspondent,used to clip,every day, from a score or more of newspapers, articles which might in future be of use to her husband. These she would date and then file away in envelopes in a cabinet made for the purpose. Consequently, Mr. Carpenter has lots of clippings on any subject that was ever written about in the public press. lie says it is the best thing of it3 kind in exist ence, and his wife is responsible for it. New York AVorld. m EF9 mmmFir?mnB&a Which is first-cl?K5 ir Alt respects and from Avhioh our job printers are turning out much satisfactory Avork. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. Quickly Disposed Of. Magistrate (to prisoner) Drunk and disor derly; what's your name! Prisoner Gawge Washington (hie) John sou, sah. liagistrata Well,' Gawge Washington Hick Johnson, it's $10 or thirty days. The Ejpoch. r