rm THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. Be —————— OPENING THE BIBLE When the President Takes the Qath of Office. NO PLACE FIXED Ii ADVANCE. The Passage of Scripture Upon Which the Chief Executive Presscs His Lips Is Entirely a Matter of Chance—The Bible After the Ceremony. The president before he eu! the execution of his ofiice takes an oaih or affirmation that he “will faith- fully execute die office of presigeat of the United 1 will, to the best of my ability, preserve. protect and | .defead the const (ion of the United i States,” and this call is usually scal- ed or coniirmed by the Kissing of the Bible. The kissing of the Bible as part oi the inauguial ceremony is perhaps iol Jéwinz a very in it custom. lie E finns wil wed tor iba ith Yo. yoveichif i ) sey: y. a avaitie. he custom re Iy after the pros.ded the oath, with haud on the Bille. clerk of the States sup couit shall throw open the book, and the incoming chief magistrate shall im- plaut a kiss on one cf its open pages. Doubting Thomaases have always thought that there was no element of chance in this performance and that the passage of Scripture is carefully selected in advance, and the book is held by the clerk of the court in position so that the incoming chief will kiss the passage that it is intend- ed he shall kiss, but this supposition is entirely wrong. James D. Maher, clerk of the su- preme court, said that the opening of the book is entirely “haphazard” and that no man on earth has the slightest intimation in advance regarding the passage of Scripture that will be thus brought into notice. Usually the Bible that is used in ad- ministering the oath is bought by the clerk of the supreme court and paid for out of his pocket and is a small Oxford edition costing $10 to $15. The United " late James H. McKinney, for many years clerk of the supreme court, once said, “You see, congress expends mon- ey only by appropriation, and if we were to wait for congress to appro- priate the price of the book we might never get a Bible on time.” There have been exceptions, how- ever, when the Bible came from oth- er sources. For instance, when James A. Garfield was inaugurated March 4, 1881, he carried in his overcoat pocket to the capitol a well worn, leather pound volume which had been pre- sented to him by his mother. The book was taken from the White House and in a few years found its way to the stall of a bookseller in San Fran- cisco. How it got there has never been known, nor is it likely it ever vill be. A few years ago it was uf- fered for sale at a very high price. Chester A. Arthur took the oath of office just after midnight at his home th New York city Sept. 20, 1881. The Bible used was one belonging to the then chief justice of thé state of New York. It is cherished by the judge's family as an heirloom. On March 4, 1885, when Grover Cleveland was inaugurated president for the first time, he, like Garfield, kissed the Holy Book which was given £o him by his mother. It was a small volume, bound in red leather, and was presented to him many years before. #T'he book 1s now in the possession of Mr. Cleveland's married gister at To- jedo, O. The Bible upon which he took the oath in 1893, eight years later when he became president the second time, was one presented by -his beau- tiful wife, and she became its pos- Sessor. When Benjamin Harrison was made president March 4, 1889, the Bible used was one that his wife bad given him on the day of thelr marriage in Ox- ford, O., where President Harrison spent ‘his achool days. The" Harrison Bible is owned by Mrs. James R. Mc- Kee, the daughter ¢f ex-President Har- mn. President McKinley used a Bible that fad, heen presented to him by the negro bishops of the country. It was the biggest Bible ever seen at the clerk's office, and Clerk McKinney in relating the incident said: “The day before the inauguration one ‘of the bishops called at my office with the Bible. It was a huge affair of the ype known as family Bibles. It rested -4n an ornate box lined with purple vel- wet and ornamented with ‘gold. The box was fastened by loek and key. “When I rea that it would be my ‘Jot to’ carry that huge Bible from the _genate chamber clear ‘out to the front of the capitol my knees grew wellk gnd I could mot Yefrain from asking the bishop Jjekifgly where the wheel- barrow was that should go with it” The invariable custom is that on the day following the inauguration the clerk of the court takes the Bible to the White House and presents it to the first lady of the land as a keep- gake.—Exchange. Re-enforced ‘Concrete. The ark in which Moses was placed in the bulrushes, we are told in the second chapter of Exodus, was an ark of bulrushes daubed with slime and with pitch. This is probably the first recorded instance of a re-enforced con- crete structure. matters of wnscience first ts a1 natters of pru- best: always | Spanish Dc: loons. | Should oie ind a pirate’s buried { treasure hé would have to dispose o-, Tis Spanish gold at its chien valpe. for singe Aag. 1. 1603, when the com- ! mon crier mdde proclamation from the steps of Lhe Royal Exchange of Lon- don that uiter tiat date ire Coubloon woud ceas2 to be legal cencer, in the Wost Indies, inelnding British Guiana {Le doulloon has not been the precious thing it was. In 1730 and for a cei tury a‘ter it was wor. $3, more or 1 to be coined in its sain. and since 1908 y unpopile i dies, wher a long time it fi fin a mixed cid tion, embracing Brit. e 101 ; ish, United Bt and Spanish coins. | { Ini the interes of rom . however. | { the name at least must survive. It} i signitics nothing maore than that the ! coin was double the value of a pistole. but the "doi * was never such a mouth filling mockery as “pieces ol eight,” which cests great riches. | but means only Spanish silver dollars, pieces equivalent to eight reals.—Roch- ester Post-Express. A Famous Mew York Streot, Av oof Lae Lauasais f poopee who 1 and Jem v early bis u strest. And tt is a bronze tablet which the fallowin: streets eve rigot j tory of Ne at that cor gives in concise forz historical information: Street, Known Originally i as ‘the Street That Runs by the Pye | Woman, Was La :t About 1695 and » Was Named In Honor of the ilouse of | Nassau, Whose Head at That Time | Was William the Third, King of Eng- “Nassau public. Nassau Street Became Identi- fied With the Jewelry Trade More Than Half a Century Ago.” The bronze tablet is on the exterior of the building at the nortawest cor- ner of Nassau and John streets. It was erected by the Maiden Lane His- torieal sccicty in 1916.—New York Sun. William De Morgan. In spite of himself Williom De Mor- gan became famous. He