8SBW ESPPr,'wr frv . .... , Pwnrf - s $r ft'.cs,-, HfA-t. "33! .'-.- OR12.i --f j r?H-5'xs'i'sr-si 'ra fir r ' ( . . - V fc4 Vi tft' - li'itmiii.fii ii.id ya$ JhWstf flfi ! ii fca Hier SftlBMfl LEDttEK COMPANY 11 names Jr. it fctmws; jmimst. fi'',0. Martin, TrtaatiHft Charlt II. J,umrilert jfc dullle, JdhUJJ. wntAtft, Wreer.- i CVae H SC, CtntiK, Chairman. . UJMY,, ,.,,, Exeauilv Edlter ii i tiiimn mm II ir, i i i i i in ' im 1 Jfe,tAllTtJf. it . .detinral Xwlna Mnjer 5)lh4 aally! fti rcSHO Lttpta Building, , Artuepvnusncw oqunrv, a inifiuciim. r.NTJUi,. . .,.-, , .yroaa ana wiiimii mrema 1 ClII......... rmi-Unhn Dulldlng ref.. ....W....1T0-A. KMrooolltaA Ttmr sdii...., .. ..SIT Hems Insurance Building f?fr?..i8 tVaUrloo Place, rIt Jtil, B. tV. J?- J.TSW0 BtmEAUflf mim-Rv tlrnwD .Th Pofrfof DulMlnr fmnarotf iicmuq. . ..w . .. th pomi winding !k.i-orj upacAir. . ., ... 'jno.aiffiej jiuiining mn ; mcxio. ....... ......... .,no Fruaru Ichstrims Fab. t,m'HKp. ........ . 82 lltif Lout Ja Grand myjin - u arurt iiuhu ua..va.....a..M i nil .oihii rjnii. ni 11 . scnsciwrnoNTEnMS rfcatrler, Djrr.r riftt,T,ilxeMa. ny mall pott pal poatai M itff Me 'Of IWIiuWlphli, ftcpt where fortljm poaiagi Wltcqulrc-J, Du,i Onli, in month, (trtntr-flve cni BiiLT-osi.Tj ona rnr, threa dollars. Afl mall ub 1 ipjlant payabla In idratica. Mix, aooo wainut KRTSTOrfE. MAIN SOOO liifca AAdrmkt nil roMfrtunliriiffAw io Kvtntita I.iipr, tndepenimet Square, PMtadtlphla. "- "'" ' ,1' ' ' ' liffiKueo tl ins rmUDtunu rotmrricru arcoND- CT4a Mirt.lAtTM. jriiituU)BiriifA, rniDAn jawuakv i, 1913. L, I ' ' ' '.I ffljke on invpntori) of tlourielf today; you , mav flnd tohu pour frienpa take nd " ttocJc In pou. Vision, of Hope, $' I stand upon the threshold of tho now fitX-year my heart Is thrilling with Kratl- Kiudeito God for his manifold blcssincs during fctfiod year. Health, homo, food, raiment, j, social iciiowsiups, opportunity ior faMrylco to others, personal spiritual conquests rtheso nro some of the gifts of God which (.(iemand my profoundest gratitude. jiv': Men. let mo call your attention to the fact BjSjf i'that this has been a strategic .year In moral gWAj prm. xno war upon pouiicai gran una P'JgrSifters has been persistent. Tho day of aksffta.,niltni!A "ItAaEi' viiIa fin andit In mnnt S'Amorlcan municipalities. Men of charactor ijwt in demand, for public ofllce. Steadily an ''.'(awakened nubile. sentiment IS choking to Its fir'tldA&th thn ilnvtltFm rum hifatni.Rii. lfMril'tf' kniu vmi nnlli. thnt thi, nhrtntlnn Sjforces of the Hepubllo have secured a new 5- jajia-, conquering any in mp moiropoiitnn 'irpff'ssT Compare tho first .daily papers of 1.a-o. - Sen how sensational 'accounts of crime S&Jj&lwVo been curtailed. Seo how .descriptions EftvjOf 'domestic troubles and shocking recltalB of fvperrional Immoralities are almost utterly cx- .' eluded. Havo you noticed the attltudo of m ttfrie'ndllnos3 toward church Hfo and cnter- KlprtsestDo you appreciate the amount of space stho' papers aro giving to religious move- ffilme'ntsT Take, for oxample, tho space which ihs been given for weeks In our Philadelphia Si Vdailles to this coming campaign. I do not Sif-jknow5 whether you, people realize what a p. jp'owerful ally tho church has secured in tno .dnlly paper, or whether you realize that, for 'literary character, moral fibre, Christian jfef'tph'e and downright sympathetic helpfulness rrlnpyery Christian enterprise, wo have hero K'-XvK Philadelphia far and way tho best news- papers to pe jounu in xno kcpuoup. '.Jif anybody among- thes'o thousands is gjomy and tast down and pessimistic ebn cgrh'lng tomorrow, concerning tho better day 7ln tlfo political, economic, social, moral and i'-, I spiritual Hfo of our city and of the world, I ftpray they piay get a vision of hope, a vision 'of coming conqupsts. Ood pity the pessimis tic souls who Btand In tho blazing light of ..this best day and atllL persist In their pessl- ij&.'trniam, God raise up a mighty army of Chris- tian opumiHis, peopm 01 uuo nu tuuiu6 and Holf-denlal, and helpfulness, and peron 5ilal hopefulness and of abundant good cheer: people who will next year compel the vastest moral victories of the ages. Bishop Berry at the idedlcatlon of the Tabernacle. Mince Pics in the Trenches ON CHRISTMAS DAY some of the British soldiers In Flanders carried a present of mlnco pie to their foes in tho German trenches, an act which was later reciprocated .by, Teutonic courtesies. Similar exchanges 'of' hospitality havo been reported from .GaUcla and other fields of action. Such Incidents only go to show that warfare Is Hjt" the' hostility of man to man. but an Rffalr of natlonB, in which racial or ter ritorial or imperialistic ambitions ore the (precipitating causes. It Is Impossible for tSien, to hate other men whom they have never een. "Warfare is an artificial barbarity In 'wjijch the essential elements of humanity "sure violated and outraged. Just In propor tion, -an governments becptno humanized avad democratized . do the chances of war decrease; It Is the aristocracies, tho autoc racies and the bureaucracies' that give oc Vcfialon.for international strife. A referen dum, on: whether a particular conflict should be waged tnlght well lead to avoidance of fwars. Floods of Wisdom aNOllANCEJ, If tt lingers among us, must -k Op UlUtnS IU BUJUVUIUIH UCCI'CX 11U uum ecura than bomb-proof shelters, "While Europe Is trying to blow itself to pieces by turning the energies of science to the work of destruction, America is adapting the re- -jfiarches of Its scientists to tho benefit of ms.nlty through Innumerable channels. At ens session of the American Association for the Advancement of 0cience, held In Phlla- 'JpMa this wekA no less than U5 erudite ,-pJ9ra were read by well-known experts. All W tfees Investigations, brought together and , .asHred,, are building up a new synthesis by whMh human life should be benefited. In ;im vr- pngipaj scieuunc rosearcnti - GkBiAiiau. now leads the world and Is uuttinirM 3s rsr3. r ...! .' -,Misj(n(i unrter an unnavable ohlle-aflnn f TV"" . w . f niir Treatment To and Frpm All iallns that there wjil be & quick; and k.fWeiifela settlement between Great Brlt- rijp tne. wnuea estates rJ4tlv to the t, our aUippins Is increasing. That nw ye bn any doubt whatever to friendly agrf ewsnt is rcmark- 4t 0 in the ftjstory pf the Re- iae puwne usvouon ip peae, neen ajf it now is. and only veits of 'MMg.. urdtntry clmrfteter julij lftiAin M jwrfw?, We, haw jtHUt urn to peubly pt, fair y&asu. UimtmUr Th sxigwWI Of ';m -trswiatr tk jrttfces, dlnlenjatlo of KuUoii to the breaking owW be unwi t to taJnl ! i0lMvnxm,$FMkyp .iky mmmf &ew, tMx &rni f firtpta mhm FfBT.ei4.rm , w m m- f 3iw"?JMttlBjftgR4' opportunity by th forelock when It selected A. period of excellent pood feeling, the Christ mas .season, 'tot present It protest. Nor should It be forgotten that thd straightfor ward way In which the President handled tha canal tolls affair Increased perceptibly respect for and confidence In this" Govern ment It makes It easier for the' British Cab inct to handle tho present problem. , Our rietw trai trade, as a. result, will bo freed from un necessary ; aclnfre, and there should bo greater security on the great trade routes. The spirit of Americanism glows through out the negotiations fnlr treatment to others and fair treatment for ourselves. Tho Nctv Ycnr THE! New Tear enters upon a heritage scarred with, dovastatlon and ruin. Halt the world is in the beat of tho blood lust. Humanity is staggering along In times so stressful -that weaklings drop In multitudes and strong men find tho turmoil almost bo yomt their endurance, The Character of tho raco is on the balances; civilization .and bar barism aro engaged in a titanic contest, and tho wnr god holds in his hands tho des tinies of nations and peoples, Amerlcn, tho melting pot, with its com posite citizenry, alono of tho great Powers retains Its equilibrium. The propaganda of peace, ridiculed a few years ago, has been n leaven of so great strongth that aversion to wnr and devotion to peaceful pursuits havo become our chief oharncterlstlo. Whatever the difference which havo arisen between oursolvcs and other nations, few seek to settle them with tho sword. This giant de mocracy, by tho very madness of other Gov ernments, Is being elevated Into a guiding star and tho final Instrument of arbitration. It Is hero that tho Now Year must begin Its ministry of healing and from America must come the means af rehabilitation In the Old World. At homo we still face a period of Industrial depression. But there is no crape on tho door and It is not locked to opportunity. We are not looking back. Our eyes aro to tho front. The burden of responsibility Is not too heavy for us. Wo carry It becauso wo must carry It. Our best thought Is being devoted to tho restoration of normal Industrial ..conditions. Public sentiment has been soberp'd. Practi cal men aro being looked to. Thoro Is a dis tance to the nation's perspective before un known. There Is a sobriety in Jts purposes and Its plans which recalls tho darkest days of tho Itopubllc. There Is tho old optimism, the ancient faith In the permanence of our Institutions, tho solidity of our Industrial foundations. The battle for prosperity Is subordinate to the' mightier struggle for peace, albeit our charity, In tho hour of need poured Into Europe, Is flowing, too, in goner oue mensuro at home. Philadelphia Is tho backbone of productive Industry in America, and, therefore, at this porlod', In the world. The conjunction of cir cumstances, if nothing else, must soon set the wheels to whirling. It is merely a ques tion now of how long. It may bo this month and It may be next; but tho revival of indus try casts Its shadow before It, and the auguries all point In one direction.. Tho very psychology of the calendar means a new'fn splratton, a renewed dedication of energy, at this beginning of a period. The old is dono with; It Is the new with which we are con cerned. A great push forward, a mighty effort In unison, a' restored determination, an adaptation of law to progress, deflnlto pur pose and courage these aro the thlngsl The New Year Is loaded 'With opportunity, for It comes Into a desert of hopes. Its days will be great days In .human chronicles, Slay it mark the end of an old era and the be ginning of a new and bo a bridge to a long period of substantial peace. Wo look to It for the consummation of these things, not desperately but hopefully. More Lightheadedness THE Government ship purchase scheme Is as crude a proposal to tap tho public till as has been given sanction In many years, but there Is one objection to It being urged which is even more unreasonable than the enterprise Itself. t Some timid souls havo pointed out that It would bo extremely dangerous for tho United States Government to purchase foreign mer chantmen becauso belligerent battleships might doubt the sincerity of the transfers to the American flag, seize United States ships thus purchased and treat them exactly as If they were enomy bottoms. Wo take It that England, Franco and every other nation would give no voice to suspicions of this character, If they had any. Purchase by tho Government Itself of merchantmen would be complete and conclusive proof of the sin cerity and legality of the transactions. There are too many real objections to Gov ernment participation In the shipping busi ness to bring forward so lame an argument In opposition. Hats off to 1915) .Millions uary 141 for transit! Remember Jan- The news is full of victories; but few defeats. 19161 A Job for evpry man who wants one and every woman, tool Tho unemployed could make the 150,000 last a week by putting it Into the soup. The United States will make the manifests all right if England does not bother the cargoes. When t cornea to raising money the Wel lesjey alumnae make alumni In general re semble a quarter w(h a. nickel added, - It wpuld not have tp be much of a year to ba a better pne than the old reprobate that managed to escape lost midnight. The Austrians can stand more beatings than any other nation under the sun- Their armU have already been annihilated aj-least Jj0 time's. It cost 460,tTt officially for recent candi dates to get inte theiSenate, and It la going tp cost many times more than that to get th out ajini .ima.i hjsi mi-iil. ..h.u.,1 Thf Sut6 intends to hve a literacy test, $p matter what the President thinks, but the Snttt&'ii Intentions before this have fMWoujltJ w IHU more than sows ot its rtfJKt'esf. " - .j- t4 iuuiwi tit KiJk-mm SUa4 -MM M UMMaSjlH. fHUli JtmiM"! St gmalm tar imobwh v$a mf epassttw te asw ttp-W,ljl: i&L:W!f "MONKEY BUSINESS" ltf CONGRESS HAS HISTORY Ceremony of House Mace Dates Back ThouBnrids of YcriM Una Prevented Riots Among Members $2S,000 for "Mistcra'. ByE.W.TOWNSEND IN A prevldus letter I wrote casually of the mighty force of precedents In the way the machinery, of Congress, both Houses, is run Is, permitted to run, 'But to a now mem ber or ' an outsider there aro many oven more interesting ways in which precedent! or perhaps, in some respects it is more cor rect to say custom, rules in Congress, I pro sumo more visitors' to tho House galleries have asked questions nbout the performance of an assistant sorgeant-at-arms with the maco than-about anjr other one thing they have observed, Tho Houso maco, symbol of tho Speaker's authority, differs In form but Httlo from "similar symbols found In nearly every modern parliament, and they aro alt much like that used In tho Senate of ancient Rome, and oven thon It was1 an an cient survival, then, as .now, a symbol of power, of a very concreto form of power, a conventionalized form of a club, a war club. Juit So and Never Otherwise The obony silver-bound maco of the House Is surmounted by a globo, upon which Is perched an eagle with outstretched wings. Whbn the House Is not In session It has a place of honor and safekeeping in the ofllco of tho sergcant-at-nrms, from which It Is borno by an assistant Into tho House Cham ber a few minutes before the opening of each day's session, and deposited by the side of a marble pedestal. Just ns tho Speaker places a foot upon the first of the stops leading to his desk tho assistant In charge of the maco ceremoniously elevates tt to Its pedestal. Ho docs this because he has been told to do It, and how. Probably ho Is unconscious of tho fact that he Is doing the samo thing In much the samo way other men holding a like of fice have dono for thousands of years with the same purpose; to proclaim to all con cerned tho power and authority of a pre siding officer. Presently, perhaps In a few minutes, tho House goes Into the Committee of tho Wholo House, and thon the business is conducted not by the Spoaker but by a chairman desig nated by tho Speaker. As tho latter leaves his desk, and Just ns his foot reaches tho first stop In descent, tho mace Is taken down to Its place by the side of the pedestal. Business may have proceeded but a few minutes when there appears at tho chamber entrance opposite tho Speaker's desk a mes senger from the Senate. . He stands at at tention until he Is Joined by the House door keoper. Then tho chairman says: "Tho com mittee will rise Informally to receive a mes sago from the Senate." He motions to some member who takes the chairman's place, but as this' member places his foot upon tho first step tho as sistant sergeant -nt-arms raises tho maco to Its pedestal. Ths Is momentarily to place tho mantle of speakership authority upon tho acting Speaker. The latter nods to the doorkeeper, who announces, "Mr. Speaker, a message frpm the Senate," Tho "Speaker" says, ''Mr, Secretary." Tho Senate messenger says, "Mr. Speaker," and proceeds with his message, Then the "Speaker'1 for a minute descends, and with him the mace, too, comes down again. All of -which is becauso the corqmlt tco could not receive a message from tho Senate; only the House can do that, and the mace must be In place to show that the au thority of the Speaker Is exercised hence the House, not the committee, Is in session. Serious "Monkey Business" I've heard a gallery visitor ask, having watched this ceremony repeated several times, "What's all that monkey business?" Well, If one feels about It that way, that Is the way one feels about It. Not the mem bers, though. Once tho assistant was inat tentive and tho maco did not go up with the Speaker. You might suppose that ,no member would notice the omission, but in stantly, and all over the chamber there were anxious exclamations: "The mace I The mace!" The assistant, aroused, hurriedly performed his duty. The mace has Berved a practical purpose more than onco In the history of tho House. There have been tlmeB when tempers have been so wholly lost and passions run so high that tho mere command of the Speaker, em phasized by his banging gavel, has failed to restore order, failed to quell approaching riot. Then the Speaker, whoever he may have been, has ordered the sorgeant-at-arms to proceed with the mace and compel mem bers to take their seats in order. Old mem bers, who have seen this twice, corroborate stories of similar ructions running- back pretty nearly through the history of Con gress. Members fighting mad and trying to fight, shouting In rage, heedless of the Speaker's threatening voice, have never in any knewn instances and In some Instances blows had already been struck failed to retreat to their seats, melt away, as it were, before the sign of authority, the mace. Why? Is It heredity; an inborn respect for the authority of rank, or its symbol? Let the psychologists answer, President Never "Told" There are many fixed forms of language required by precedent. Once a secretary of the Senate, haying been duly announced, pro ceeded with his message to the effect that a special committee of the Senate, having been appointed for the purpose, had called upon the President and "told" him that the Sen ate was ready to proceed with business. There was an Instant titter all through trie House. The President Is never officially ,"tpld" anything by Congress; he Is "in formed," The substitution of one single word fpr another in a formal message no one is supposed to listen to,' had struck the ears of all like a violent discord strikes a listener to music. The scarlet and abashed secretary retired to be unmercifully! guyed by his fallows. He had departed from prece dent! In the Senate the pages, when not In serv ice, sit about at the foot of the presiding .of ficer's, desk, When a, Senator wants a page he sumnjqns him by clapping his hands. In the House the pages are corralled when not In service in the two corners at the rear of the chamber and are summoned by electric belU. It would, b infinitely more convenient tt fcav the useful little fellows herded $& ! .Bw, rnimf .two, ( ??"2' "ssr mk "imy waip si tpr S- Ha -fpi T ? "ittjflkHaSV -w1 z JU1H .r!!Wif " -HLP - lBiii wuni.: )m:w mm - - ' iMgi7-" lii mi i,yt MSi - tt- '' ? SRV'W S ' N4lailaHalWy 'K '3 LTV. $&M(w MkW$F M .j. ANIHKulP- lT J ft m V' jffmW ?WpMi I.J ii ' wSSB$S9ffi&r HHEaf1 JftM ' 1 $:i5fcD JSto llii'w 'I Ashurst, Bacon, Bankhead," &c. After tho Btart tho natnos are run off without any pre fix. Until tho second session of this Con gress tho House roll-call form has required the "Mr." befora each name. On tho first call the cleric repeats "Mister" 486 times. If 60 answer on tho first call ho repeats It 886 times on tho second call. That Is, on an average roll-call tho word Is repeated 820 times t About two years ago I suggested to Speaker Clark that ho direct the clerks to cut out tho "mister" after tho first name. It startled him. Why? That was tho way tho roll always had been called! It would be contrary to precedent to drop tho 820 misters. I was persistent, and finally he said he'd think It over. He did, for a year! Then he gavo tho order. It was obeyed. No ono died of surprise, although somo members had serious turns. I mention this because when my esteemed renders build that monument to my memory I want It Inscribed, "Ho saved his country $26,000 a year by taking 'mister' out of Congress." Fancy how often in future ages It will be asked, "Mr. Who?" There came precious near to being a knock down and drogout finis to tho pre-recess session. When J. Hampton Moore, of Penn sylvania, rose on Wednesdny after prohibi tion Tuesday to attend to Bryan, of Wash ington it was pretty generally known by "members that Moore would have preferred to use his fist rather than his voice to answer the outrageous language of the Seattle mem ber. It was Interesting to observe that of tho scoro or two members who plainly showed a desire to hnve Bryan's seat declared vacant as many were on tho Democratic as upon tho Republican side of tho chamber. Scott's View of a New Year From Harper's Weekly. Man la a conventional animal. He thinks one thing on the Fourth of July, another at Easter, another at Thanksgiving. AVhen ho hears of a particular death he grieves, though he knows that thousands die dally. He Is a likable crea ture, but a machine. Something Ilko this, though Infinitely better expressed, passed through the mind of one of the great on Jan uary 1, 1820, whereupon he put it in his Journal. The. Journai of Sir Walter Is ono of the books that Inspire, that nourish, that one never ex hausts. Says Scott: A year hns passed another has commenced. These solemn divisions of time influence our feelings as they occur. Yet there is nothing In It, for every day In the year closes a 12th-month as well as the Slat of Decem ber. The latter day Is only the solemn pause, as when a guide, showing a wild and moun tainous road, calls on a party to pause and look back at the scenes which they have Just passed. Yes, every day 1b a day of, beginning and a day of doom; a day of tragedy and a day of new life; a day of disillusion and day of hope. How little Is man, and how much! Everything Is trye, and Its opposite also. In the midst of upheaval, philosophy steadies and comforts, philosophy that finds sermons In stones, sorrow In sunlight and In everything some degree of happiness. NEW YEAR AS PEACEMAKER 1' HAVES made peace with my foes, peace with the lost and the slain; Hope and the future are mine; over the liv ing I reign. For I have burled the old, burled and put away, And the whisper and curse of wrong I suffer to fail today. And the sorrow of dark regret, and the dread of the vampire past, Are dead on the white highways where the Old Year breathed his last. I am the glad New Year. Songs of the morn I sing; Songs of the triumph soul, with the par dot) and peace I bring. Frank Walcott Hutt, OPPORTUNITY This. I beheld, pr dreamed It In a dream : There -spread a cloud of dust along a plain; And underneath the cloud, or in it, raged A furious battle, and men yelled, and swords Shocked upon swqrds and shields, A prince's banner Wavered, then staggered backward, hemmed by foes, A cravfn hung olohg the battle's edge And thought: "Had I . a" sword of keeper steej-f i ! That.trua blade that the king's son bears but this Blunt thingl" Ha snapt and flung it from his band, And, lowering, crept away and left the Held, Then came the king's son, wounded, sore bet, jf 4A ywapflwiff, and saw th broken, sword. IIHt.iKW4 JfrOw.&?y and lh4mill'. A a4i39i43bd it, Md vritth $. imi 4rffc, be hm-iA Ma mr wn. "YOU'RE FIFTEEN ToifUY, OLD ENOUGH KEEPING THE CALENDAR TRUE TO THE SIM It aaa Llatt a vagarious, ivoraanuc Twisted All Out of Shape Many Times and Never Entirely Straightened Out. By R. MANY people aro dissatisfied with tho cal endar. They propose to tako it back and chango it. They would havo to go back to an net of the British Parliament In 1761 that Is, English-speaking folk would and then bIIU farther into the recesses of time. It was i that statute which later led American school boys into doubt as to whether Qoorge Wash ington was born, on February 22 or Fobruary 11. Eloven days wero lost between Julius Caesar and George Washington, but that hardly seems appalling enough, after all, to Justify so many preachments on tho subject of lost time, docs It? The way things aro ar ranged now it will bo 2500 years or moro before wo lose another day. Tho scientist, howover, is never satisfied with anything less than accuracy, and ho' wants a perfect calendar. Ho has tnken his Ideas of reform Into tho legislatures of sev eral nations, but nothing hns happened yet, Reform Is sure' to got Into trouble, anyway, when It gets Into politics. But truth, crushed to. earth, shall rise again, and maybe the dream of the scientist will como true. Tho first day of every month will fall on the first day of the week, and so forth. Tho .printed calendar which comes from the Insurance company or the grocery store will bo Just as good one year as another, and the months will bo all allko. Probably a more durable form will bo Invented, so that It will last a lifetime, bo moved from houso to house With the rest of tho furniture and be handed down tp future generations as an holrloom. Time, "with such a calendar, wouldn't Becm so flighty. The Jilting of the Jloon The calendar as an Institution has passed through so many vicissitudes thnt it really deserves a rest from meddling, after ono last attempt has been made to set it right forever. It originated away back In the earliest ages. At first It was merely a record of events In the life of nn Individual or tho history of a tribe, and consisted of curious Inscriptions on trees, or pieces of bark, or of a succession of notches and symbols on wnnds or canes, But after awhile It became a method of reck oning future as well as past tlmo. The. changes of tho moon furnished tho obylous mqthod and tho one which was most universally adopted among primitive peoples. Tho reason la said to have been that tho old agriculturalists had a special Interest In tho moon, which presided over the fato of crops and furnished enough lunar superstition to last even unto this present. Months of 29 and 30 days wero Instituted. Then it was discovered that tho seasons furnished a more serviceable mode of divi sion, and years came Into existence. Civil years, of course, not truly solar. The moon, the first love of the calendar makers, fared badly. It wns supplanted by the sun. The months were retained as sub divisions of years, but when it was ob served how the splar year and the 12 lunar months failed to coincide, and how the first day of the yeor kept sliding along into the wrong season, the ancient scientists decided to regulate the calendar by the sun, and it was so. Thus tho moon wasleft out of consideration, and the month -became only an arbitrary affair. The Jiyfng so far as concerns the hlst'ory of pur own calendar, which traces its ancestry Jpack through that of the Romans was completed In the first cejitury B, C. by Catus Julius Caesar and n qreek astronomer wliom he Imported from Alexandria, Soalgenes, by name. And the ancients flld have . hard time trying to get the. calendar flxed'up. Supplementary days at the end of the year and the occaslqnal Introduction oflntercalary months were the favorite means of accommodating the cal endar tq the aqn, which wouldn't ac commodateitself to the calendar. ( Romulus,, the builder of Rome, divided the year Into' 10 mpnths. That Is, If history can Place any reliance on tradition. There were 804 days under his arrangement, and what became of the rest of them neither history nojF tradition payeth. A little later the Romans had tt month, with an occasional Intercalary month. This, was a Junai- year .of 385 days, It Was Numa Porapllius mythlo history again. who added the two extra months, January and February. March had previously started, the calendar, and was ngw displaced by January, February taking ff6- February was ressuad. from this igpqjBtny.wfcjH!, $q yeajm itert tla decern. vim mvai it yp to aaoni position. But ft&r Fruryi om wor tnmMeg wmt, yej to cetne. Tn month wr tti $ dy altwrnateiy, making- in u r, day fms 444 j?twitir tt, vmki TO BEHAVE!" ana ooincumcs niuiug j-iiaiorj,j G. F. tho number odd for good luck. This chSJ year differed from tho solar year byilJj days and a fraction, and an Intercalary montti tween tho 23d and 24th of February. Era that surgical operation left tho calendared i of Joint. The Calendar in Politics Tho pontiffs, at some tlmo or other,- iffi lmrusica wun mo care or. ma cuienuar, sm they mixed It up with politics, wofully.w was their privilege to Intercalate fewerwh moro days as the celestial motions mlisty warrant, xney auusea moir poweri o larai belonged also the opportunity of runpltj political machines, when they wanted nrnlnnn tho fprm nt n mmrlntrsinv- nr hftufe? the annual elections, or reward favorit3w punish polltcal foes, they simply doctoreKJ calendar. Think what that would meairiln American politics today! You think oiiij.1 can't. .VJ So when .Caesar took up tho imperial relni he found the calendar ip a mess. The wjptjj inonms wero coming in autumn, una aumnjn was summer. Something had to be dojjg and Caesar did it. Ho abolished the moon and decided to go entirely by the sun. Bio i ,i ,... . .. . ' .... '. it? transit gioria iunae. Me also aDojisnca tw Intercalary month, which after serving, jjai long ages as a a gp3ai convenience, w&bjw last declared a public nulsanco. '$ In making up the table of month! jM cal'lated as follows: Thirty days hath April, June, Aucust, October and' December; All tho rest have thlrty-ono, Excepting February alone, Which hnth but twenty-nine. In fine. Till every fourth year (they didn't call It !ej year then) gives it thirty. That was Caesar's imperious way, ,w Augustus didn't like it. His vanity vosiur Why should his month ha-a one less .cm knn T.,1..o mi, T..lt.. . I.- ' A... Ss "inn w"j aich uuitup luyil uttjy kr,Q February and gavo It to August. It pwjr havo mado Augustus feel better, but Julfuj Dccauso no wanted tno months of 30 aays'jo alternate witii tho months of 31 days, had.J reduce Soptombe'r and Noyember, tp 30 dayi and give the pxtros to , October and Deiiemj ber. And after all that fuss by the greJ Caesar, tho calendar;qucstlpn waant seltle,4 It kept bobbing up for centuries, and tU bobs. f $ xno most important bob was In ib, an ropo uregory.tm attended to it The Julias calendar had prevailed among tpP Cbri3j nan nations until the accumulation of ei amounted to ten complete days. The 'IffiS or the ceiooratlon of Easter, and hence of tho movable feasts, had been unfixed. PPgl Gregory, taking advjee of the astronPpj ij avius, orqainea tnat tn days snouiap deducted from the current year. Accqrdlnra me om oi uotoDcr became the 15th. Tj Julian calendar wns further amended by creeing that Jf a, year ended in two ciphers. should net be counted a leap-year unless S visible by four, hundred instead of four. Why Worry? Caesar's reckoning had disarranged mat ters because he assumed a year of 365U dayi whereas the correct figures are. $85 day4! hours, is minutes, seconds, qr U mln"!1 l seconds less. What a difference Ju(t minutes it seconds made. wMio generate lived and died! Under Gregory's math' matlcs there will be one day unaccounted t about 4500 A. D. In some countries, however, even (n Eo rope, tne pope's mandate was npt observf wa o me .uow countries didn't get arou to change until the lath century, and tf they had U days to pubtract. In Qreat Utf aln, after conjnerce $md people had nndf gone great inconvenience in 'foreign dealin Parliament equalised the style of reolfonlil wun me usage or other leading purope, nations, ltussia, ureoce and Tuscany, ho eveh still stiok to the old way, and r ", is aays aneaq or us, of behind us. accordl' as you Judge by the calendar or by tho su vi course, in. different parts of the Wflrl there are numerous calendar variations. vipinese ew gear's, for Instance, cornea our February 18. The Jewish system ( stuoy in intercaiarits. We-raost Europeans and Ameripant-a ie me ancient Egyptians in regardlns; ni wsm as ine Beginning of day. The aajr mere, after the example of Ptoleray and uroanway ceiprant, 'begin It at noon. T iuo4t!ji qreoka, like the sncient Chaldean eo sunrise.; the Italians and fei-hmuai' jppeo the day to befln at onset B'nfl diviioa or the dy except swrne i i' and mmy. We divide Wt ..q t.iii