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The number of asteroids discovered up to present date is 423. A number of these small planets have not been observed since their discovery, and are practically lost. Consequently it is now sometimes a matter of doubt, until the elements have been computed, whether the supposed new planet is really new, or only an old one rediscovered.

It is supposed that a Centauri, one of the brightest stars of the Southern Hemisphere, is the nearest of the fixed stars to the earth. The researches on its parallax by Henderson and Maclear gave, for its distance from the earth, in round numbers, twenty billions of miles. At the inconceivably rapid rate at which light is propagated through space, it would require more than four years to reach the earth from his star. -Whitaker.

The Moon.

THE mean distance of the Moon from the Earth is 238,850 miles; its mean sidereal revolution round the Earth is 27 days, 7 hours, 43 minutes, 11. 46 seconds; its mean synodical revolution, or the period from new moon to new moon, is 29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes, 2.87 seconds; the eccentricity of its orbit is 0.0549, and its diameter is 2,162 miles. The Earth being taken as unity, the density is. 61; mass, 1-81; volume,1-50, and gravity, 1-6; that is to say, the Earth would weigh as much as 81 Moons, is 50 times larger, and a pound of matter at the Moon's surface would, if transferred to the Earth, weigh 6 pounds.

Periodic Comets.

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6.5 2.07 10. 405 Halley

Easter Sunday.

A TABLE SHOWING THE DATE OF EASTER SUNDAY IN EACH YEAR OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY.

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1807-March 29.

1827-April 15.

1845-March 23.
1846-April 12.
1847-April 4.

1885-April 5.

1886-April 25.

1808-April 17.

1828-April 6.

1848-April 23.

1867-April 21.
1868-April 12.

1887-April 10.

1888-April 1.

1809-April 2.

1829-April 19.

1849-April 8.

1869-March 28.

1889-April 21.

1810-April 22.

1830-April 11.

1850-March 31.

1811-April 14.

1831-April 3,

1812-March 29.

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1832-April 22.
1833-April 7.
1834-March 30,
1835-April 19.
1836-April 3.

1851-April 20.
1852-April 11.

1870-April 17.
1871-April 9.

1890-April 6.

1891-March 29.

1853-March 27.
1854-April 16.
1855-April 8.

1872-March 31.
1873-April 13.
1874-April 5.

1892-April 17.

1893-April 2.

1894-March 25.

1875-March 28.

1895-April 14.

1856-March 23,

1817-April 6.

1837-March 26.

1838-April 15.

1857-April 12.
1858-April 4.

1876-April 16.
1877-April 1.

1896-Apri' 5.

1897-April 18.

1878-April 21.

1898-April 10.

1839-March 31.

1859-April 24.

1840-April 19.

1860-April 8.

1879-April 13.
1880-March 28,

1899-April 2,

1900-April 15.

1818-March 22. 1819-April 11. 1820-April 2.

The Ancient Hour.

THE early Egyptians divided the day and night each into twelve hours, a custom adopted by the Jews or Greeks probably from the Babylonians. The day is said to have first been divided into hours from B. C. 293, when a sun-dial was erected in the temple of Quirinus, at Rome. Previous to the invention of water-clocks, B. c. 158, the time was called at Rome by public criers. In early England one expedient for measuring time was by wax candles, three inches burning an hour. The first perfect mechanical clock was not made until about A. D. 1250. Day began at sunrise among most of the Northern nations, at sunset among the Athenians and Jews, at midnight among the Romans, as with us.

Legal Holidays in the Various States.

JANUARY 1 NEW YEAR'S DAY: In all the sylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
States (including the District of Columbia) ex- Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Wash-
cept Kentucky, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Newington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Hampshire, and Rhode Island.

SEPTEMBER 9. ADMISSION DAY: In Cali

JANUARY 8. ANNIVERSARY OF THE BATTLE fornia.
OF NEW ORLEANS: In Louisiana.
JANUARY 19. LEE'S BIRTHDAY: In Florida,
Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and
Virginia.

FEBRUARY 12 LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY: In Con-
necticut, Illinois, Minnesota, New Jersey, New
York, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, and Wash-
Ington (State).

FEBRUARY 15, 1898. SPRING ELECTION DAY: In Pennsylvania (from 12 o'clock noon).

FEBRUARY 22. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY: In all the States (including the District of Columbia) except Iowa and Mississippi.

FEBRUARY 22, 1898. MARDI-GRAS: In Alabama and the parish of Orleans, Louisiana. MARCH 2. ANNIVERSARY OF TEXAN INDEPENDENCE: In Texas,

APRIL 6 CONFEDERATE MEMORIAL DAY: In Louisiana.

APRIL 6, 1898. STATE ELECTION DAY: In Rhode Island.

APRIL 8, 1898. GOOD FRIDAY: In Alabama, Louisiana, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Tennessee. APRIL 19. PATRIOTS' DAY: In Massachusetts. APRIL 21. ANNIVERSARY OF THE BATTLE OF SAN JACINTO: In Texas.

APRIL 26. CONFEDERATE MEMORIAL DAY: In Alabama, Florida, and Georgia.

MAY 10. CONFEDERATE MEMORIAL DAY: In North Carolina and South Carolina.

MAY 20. ANNIVERSARY OF THE SIGNING OF THE MECKLENBURG DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE: In North Carolina,

MAY 30. DECORATION DAY: In Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Wisconsin, Washington, and Wyoming.

JUNE 3. JEFFERSON DAVIS'S BIRTHDAY: In Florida and Georgia.

JULY 4. INDEPENDENCE DAY: In all States and the District of Columbia.

the

JULY 24. PIONEERS' DAY: In Utah.
AUGUST 16. BENNINGTON BATTLE DAY: In
Vermont.

NOVEMBER 1. ALLSAINTS' DAY: In Louisiana. NOVEMBER GENERAL ELECTION DAY: In Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, in the years when elections are held in these States, In 1898 the date is November 8.

NOVEMBER 25. LABOR DAY: In Louisiana. NOVEMBER 24, 1898. THANKSGIVING DAY: Is observed in all the States, and in the District of Columbia, though in some States it is not a statutory holiday.

DECEMBER 25. CHRISTMAS DAY: In all the States, and in the District of Columbia,

Sundays and Fast Days are legal holidays in all the States which designate them as such.

There are no statutory holidays in Mississippi, Kansas, and Nevada, but by common consent the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving, and Christmas are observed as holidays in Mississippi, and Decoration Day, Labor Day, and Arbor Day in addition in Kansas,

ARBOR DAY is a legal holiday in Colorado, Kansas, Minnesota, North Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, the day being set by the Governor; in Texas, February 22; in Nebraska, April 22; Montana, third Tuesday in April; Utah, April 15; Rhode Island, first Friday in May; Idaho, on Friday after May 1; Florida, February 7; Georgia, first Friday in December.

Every Saturday after 12 o'clock noon is a legal holiday in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia, the city of New Orleans, and in Newcastle County, Del., except in St. George's Hundred; in Louisiana and Missouri in cities of 100,000 or more inhabitants; in Ohio in cities of 50,000 or more inhabitants; and June 1 to September 30 in Denver, Col. In Connecticut banks close at 12 noon on Saturdays.

There is no national holiday, not even the Fourth of July. Congress has at various times appointed special holidays. In the second session of the Fifty-third Congress it passed an act making Labor Day a public holiday in the District of Columbia, and it has recognized the existence of certain days as holidays, for commercial purposes, in such legislation as the Bankruptcy act, but, with the exception named, there is no general statute on the subject. The proclamation of the President designating a day of Thanksgiving only makes it a legal holiday in those States which

SEPTEMBER 5.1898. LABOR DAY: In Alabama,
California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Dis-
trict of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois,
Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massa-
chusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri. Mon-
tana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey,
New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Penn-provide by law for it.

Old English Holidays.

THESE holidays, with their names, had their origin in medieval England when the State religion was that of the Church of Rome, and they are still observed generally or in some parts of England, Scotland, and Ireland.

JANUARY 6. TWELFTH DAY, or Twelfth-tide, sometimes alled Old Christmas Day, the sam as Epiphany. The previous mening is Twelfth Night, with which many social rites have long been connected.

FEBRUARY 2. CANDLEMAS: Festival of the Purification of the Virgin. Consecration of the lighted candles to be used in the durch during the year.

FEBRUARY 14. OLD CANDLEMAS: St. Valentine's Day.
MARCH 25. LADY DAY: Annunciation of the Virgin. April
e old Lady Day.

Jun 94. MIDSUMMER DAY: Feast of the Nativity of John the
Baptist. July 7 is old Midsummer Day.

JULY 15. ST. SWITHIN'S DAY. There was an old superstition
that if rain fell on this day it would continue forty days.
Avover 1. LAMMAS DAY: Originally in England the festival
the wheat harvest. In the Church the festival of St. Peter's
niculous deliverance from prison. Old Lammas Day is
August 13.

SEPTEMBER 29. MICHAELMAS: Feast of St. Michael, the
Archangel. Old Michaelmas is October 11.

NOVEMBER 1. ALLHALLOWMAS: All-hallows, or All Saints'
Day. The previous evening is All-hallow-e'en, observed by home
gatherings and old-time festive rites.
NOVEMBER 2. ALL SOULS' DAY: Day of prayer for the souls

of the dead.

NOVEMBER 11. MARTINMAS: Feast of St. Martin. Old Martinmas is November 23.

DECEMBER 28. CHILDERMAS: Holy Innocents Day.
Lady Day, Midsummer Day, Michaelmas, and Christmas are
quarter (rent) days in England, and Whitsunday, Martinmas,
Candlemss, and Lammas Day in Scotland.

Shrove Tuesday, the day before Ash Wednesday, and Maundy Thursday, the day before Good Friday, are observed by the Church. Mothering Sunday is Mid-Lent Sunday, in which the old rural custom obtains of visiting one's parents and making them presents.

Opening and Closing of Navigation.

ON THE HUDSON RIVER AND THE ERIE CANAL, AND OPENING OF LAKE ERIE

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283

802

251

April 30, 1824... Dec. 4.
April 12, 1825... Dec. 5...
April 25, 1826... Dec. 18.
April 22, 1827... Dec. 18.
Mar, 27, 1828... Dec. 20..
May 2, 1829... Dec. 17..
April 30, 1830... Dec, 17.
April 16, 1831... Dec. 1.
April 25, 1832... Dec. 21.
April 19, 1833... Dec. 12.
April 17, 1834... Dec. 12.

219

238

243

241

April 21, 1827

269

April 1, 1828

230

May 10, 1829

242

May 5, 1830

230

May 8, 1831

241

April 27, 1832

238

April 23, 1833

240

April 6, 1834

268
244

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May 8, 1835

216

April 27, 1836

April 20, 1837...

Dec. 9.

234

May 16, 1837

April 11, 1838...

Nov. 25.

228

Mar. 31, 1838

April 20, 1839...

Dec. 16.

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April 20, 1840... Dec. 9.

228

April 27, 1840

April 24, 1841...

Nov, 30..

221

April 14, 1841

April 20, 1842...

Nov. 28.

222

March 7, 1842

May 1, 1843...

Nov. 30.

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April 18, 1844...

Nov. 26.

222

Mar. 14, 1844

April 15, 1845...

Nov. 29.

228

April 3, 1845

275

April 16, 1846...

Nov. 25.

234

April 11, 1846

263

May 1, 1847...

Nov. 30.

214

April 23, 1847

292

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May 1, 1848... Dec. 9.
1, 1849... Dec. 5.

223

April 9, 1848

219

Mar. 25, 1849

282

April 22, 1850...

Dec. 11.

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April 15, 1851...

Dec. 5.

235

April 2, 1851

April 20, 1852...

Dec. 16.

239

April 20, 1852

April 20, 1853... Dec. 20.

245

April 14, 1853

May 1, 1854... Dec. 3.
May 1, 1855... Dec. 10.

217

April 29, 1854

224

April 21, 1855

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May 5, 1856... Dec. 4.
6, 1857... Dec. 15.

214

May 2, 1856

223

April 27, 1857

273

273

283

294

May

April 28, 1858... Dec. 8.
April 15, 1859... Dec. 12..
April 25, 1860... Dec. 12...
1, 1861... Dec. 10.

225

April 15, 1858

April 7, 1859

April 17, 1860

224

April 13, 1861

259

May 1, 1862... Dec. 10..

April 15, 1862

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May 1, 1863... Dec. 9...
April 30, 1864... Dec.

April 3, 1863

8.

April 13, 1864

May

1, 1865... Dec. 12.

226

April 26, 1865

May 1, 1866... Dec. 12.
May 6, 1867... Dec. 20.
May 4, 1868... Dec. 7.
May 6, 1869... Dec. 10.
May 10, 1870... Dec. 8.
April 24, 1871... Dec.
May 13, 1872... Dec.
May 15, 1873... Dec.

226

April 28, 1866

229

April 21, 1867

217

April 19, 1868

218

May 1, 1869

213

April 16, 1870

1

220

May 5, 1874... Dec.

May 18, 1875... Nov. 30(byice)
May 4, 1876... Dec. 1.
May 8, 1877... Dec. 7.
April 15, 1878... Dec. 7.
May 8, 1879... Dec. 6.
April 20, 1880... Nov. 21(by ice)
May 17, 1881... Dec. 8..
April 11, 1882... Dec.
May 7, 1883... Dec.
May 6, 1884... Dec.
May 11, 1885... Dec. 1.
May 1, 1886... Dec.
May 7, 1887... Dec. 1.
May 10, 1888... Dec. 3.
May 1, 1889... Nov. 30..

11660

April 1, 1871

202

May 6, 1872

5...

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5.

215

April 18, 1874

297

May 12, 1875

211

May 4, 1876

214

April 17, 1877

237

Mar. 24, 1878

212

April 24, 1879

216

Mar. 19, 1880

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Mar. 3, 1824... Jan. 5, 1825...
Mar. 6, 1825... Dec. 13, 1825...
Feb. 25, 1826... Dec. 18, 1826...
Mar. 20, 1827... Nov. 25, 1827...
Feb. 8, 1828... Dec. 23, 1828... 220
April 1, 1829... Jan. 14, 1830... 286
Mar. 15, 1830... Dec. 25, 1830... 283
Mar. 15, 1831... Dec. 6, 1831... 262
Mar. 25, 1832... Dec. 21, 1832... 289
Mar. 21, 1833... Dec. 13, 1833... 277
Feb. 29, 1834... Dec. 15, 1834... 291
Mar. 25, 1835... Nov. 30, 1835...
April 4, 1836... Dec. 7, 1836...
Mar. 27, 1837... Dec. 14, 1837... 261
Mar. 19, 1838... Nov. 25, 1838... 257
Mar. 25, 1839... Nov. 18, 1839... 286
Feb. 25, 1840... Nov. 5, 1840... 285
Mar. 24, 1841... Nov. 19, 1841... 286
Feb. 4, 1842... Nov. 28, 1842... 308
April 13, 1843... Dec. 10, 1843... 242
Mar. 18, 1844... Dec. 17, 1844... 278
Feb. 24, 1845... Dec. 3, 1845... 283
Mar. 18, 1846... Dec. 14, 1846...
April 7, 1847... Dec. 25, 1847...
Mar. 22, 1848... Dec. 27, 1848...
Mar. 19, 1849... Dec. 26, 1849...
Mar. 10, 1850... Dec. 17, 1850...
Feb. 25, 1851... Dec, 14, 1851... 293
Mar. 28, 1852... Dec. 23, 1852... 270
Mar. 23, 1853... Dec. 21, 1853... 274
Mar. 17, 1854... Dec. 8, 1854... 266
Mar. 27, 1855... Dec. 20, 1855... 268
April 11, 1856... Dec. 14, 1856... 248
Feb. 27, 1857... Dec. 27, 1857...
Mar. 20, 1858... Dec. 17, 1858...
Mar. 13, 1859... Dec. 10, 1859...
Mar. 6, 1860... Dec. 14, 1860...
Mar. 5, 1861... Dec. 23, 1861...
April 4, 1862... Dec. 19, 1862...
April 3, 1863... Dec. 11, 1863...
Mar. 11, 1864... Dec. 12, 1864...
Mar. 22, 1865... Dec. 16, 1865... 270
Mar. 20, 1866... Dec. 15, 1866... 270
Mar. 26, 1867... Dec. 8, 1867... 257
Mar. 24, 1868... Dec. 5, 1868... 252
April 5, 1869... Dec. 9, 1869... 248
Mar. 31, 1870... Dec. 17, 1870... 261
Mar. 12, 1871... Nov. 29, 1871... 263
April 7, 1872... Dec. 9, 1872... 247
April 16, 1873... Nov. 22, 1873... 221
Mar. 19, 1874... Dec. 12, 1874... 269
April 13, 1875... Nov. 29, 1875... 229
April 1, 1876... Dec. 2, 1876... 245
Mar. 30, 1877... Dec. 31, 1877... 277
Mar. 14, 1878... Dec. 20, 1878... 282
April 4, 1879...] Dec. 20, 1879... 261
Mar. 5, 1880... Nov. 25, 1880... 266
Mar. 21, 1881... Jan. 2, 1882... 288
Mar. 8, 1882... Dec. 5, 1882... 273
Mar. 29, 1883... Dec. 15, 1883... 261
Mar. 25, 1884... Dec. 19, 1884... 269
April 7, 1885... Dec. 7, 1885... 247
Mar. 30, 1886... Dec. 3, 1886... 248
April 6, 1887... Dec. 20, 1887... 258
April 7, 1888... Dec. 14, 1888... 252
Mar. 19, 1889... Open all winter. 286
Open entire year Dec. 2, 1890... 337
Mar. 24, 1891... Dec, 24, 1891... 277
April 1, 1892... Dec. 22, 1892... 266
April 1, 1893... Dec. 6, 1893... 250
Mar. 18, 1894... Dec. 24, 1894... 281
April 2, 1895... Dec. 9, 1895... 252
April 7, 1896... Dec. 19, 1896...) 256
* At Buffalo. The record in the above table is kept by the State Superintendent of Public Works.

A Ready Reference Calendar.

For ascertaining any Day of the Week for any given Time within Two Hundred Years from the introduction of the New Style, 1752, to 1952 inclusive.

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which refer to the same Tuesday 2 Wednesday 2 Thursday figures at the head of the Wednesday 3 Thursday 3 Friday

Thursday

4

Thursday
2 Friday
3 Saturday
4SUNDAY

5.

1 Friday

1 Saturday

2 SUNDAY

2 Saturday
3SUNDAY 3 Monday
4 Monday 4 Tuesday

4 Friday 4 Saturday
5 Saturday
5 SUNDAY 5 Monday 5 Tuesday
6 SUNDAY 6 Monday 6 Tuesday
7 Tuesday 7 Wednesday
SWednesday 8 Thursday

6

7

1 SUNDAY 1

2 Monday

2

3 Tuesday

3

4 Wednesday 4

5

6

7

8 SUNDAY 8

5 Wednesday 5 Thursday 6 Friday

7 Saturday

9 10

16 17

table of Days. For ex- Friday ample: To know on what Saturday 6 Wednesday 6 Thursday day July 4, 1898, will SUNDAY 7 Monday Thursday 7 Friday Monday 8 Tuesday 8 Friday 8 Saturday fall look for 1898 in the Tuesday 9 Wednesd. 9 Thursday 9 Friday 9 Saturday 9 SUNDAY 9 Monday table of Years. The let-Wednesd. 10 Thursday 10 Friday 10 Saturday 10 SUNDAY 10 Monday 10 Tuesday 11 Saturday 11 SUNDAY 11 Monday 11 Tuesday 11 Wednesd. 11 ter c is attached. Look Thursday 11 Friday Friday 12 Saturday 12 SUNDAY 12 Monday 12 Tuesday 12 Wednesd. 12 Thursday 12 for the same letter in the Saturday 13 SUNDAY 13 Monday 13 Tuesday 13 Wednesd. 13 Thursday 13 Friday 13 table of Months and in a SUNDAY 14 Monday 14 Tuesday 14 Wednesd. 14 Thursday 14 Friday 14 Saturday 14 parallel line under July is Monday 15 Tuesday 15 Wednesd. 15 Thursday 15 Friday 15 Saturday 15 SUNDAY 15 Tuesday 16 Wednesd. 16 Thursday 16 Friday 16 Saturday 16 SUNDAY 16 Monday the figure 5, which di- Wednesd. 17 Thursday 17 Friday 17 Saturday 17 SUNDAY 17 Monday 17 Tuesday rects to column 5 in the Thursday 18 Friday 18 Saturday 18 SUNDAY 18 Monday 18 Tuesday 18 Wednesd. 18 table of Days below, in Friday 19 Saturday 19 SUNDAY 19 Monday 19 Tuesday 19 Wednesd. 19 Thursday 19 20 Tuesday Saturday 20 SUNDAY 20 Monday which it will be seen SUNDAY 21 Monday 20 20 Wednesd. 20 Thursday 20 Friday 21 Tuesday 21 Wednesd. 21 Thursday 21 Friday 21 Saturday 21 that July 4 falls on Mon-Monday 22 Tuesday 22 Wednesd. 22 Thursday 22 Friday 92 Saturday 22 SUNDAY 22 Tuesday day. 23 Wednesd. 23 Thursday 23 Friday 23 Saturday 23 SUNDAY 23 Monday Wednesd. 24 Thursday 24 Friday 24 Saturday 24 SUNDAY 24 Monday 24 Tuesday Thursday 25 Friday 25 Saturday 25 SUNDAY 25 Monday 25 Tuesday 25 Wednesd. 25 Friday 26 Saturday 26 SUNDAY 26 Monday 26 Tuesday 26 Wednesd. 26 Thursday 26 Saturday 27 SUNDAY 27 Monday 27 Tuesday 27 Wednesd. 27 Thursday 27 Friday SUNDAY 98 Monday 28 Tuesday 28 Wednesd. 28 Thursday 28 Friday 28 Saturday 28 Monday 29 Tuesday 29 Wednesd. 29 Thursday 29 Friday 29 Saturday 29 SUNDAY 29 Tuesday 30 Wednesd. 30 Thursday 30 Friday 30 Saturday 30 SUNDAY 30 Monday Wednesd. 31 Thursday 31 Friday 31 Saturday 31 SUNDAY 31 Monday 31 Tuesday 31

This improved calendar was made for THE WORLD ALMANAC by Arthur Cunningham, of Columbas, O.

23 24

27

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