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Fri.

Sat.

Sun. 1765 Eli Whitney born.

Mon. 1807 American ports closed to the

British.

Tues. 1817 Mississippi admitted to the

Union.

11 Wed. 1816 Indiana admitted to the Union. Thur. 1787 Pennsylvania ratified the Con

stitution.

1850 Territory of N. Mexico orga'd. 1819 Alabama admitted to the Union Sun. 1814 The Hartford Convention met. Mon. 1773 Destruction of tea in Boston harbor.

17 Tues. 1770 Beethoven born.

64 38 6 6

7

7

4 38 rises.

7

8

4 38 5 23

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Wed. 1865 Amendment abolishing slavery
declared adopted.

7 14 4 40

114

Fri.

Sat.

Thur. 1154 Henry II. of England crowned.
1767 Emmerich Vattel died.

1639 Jean Racine born.

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1595 Sir Francis Drake died.

1846 Iowa admitted to the Union.

Sun. 1845 Texas admitted to the Union.

30 Mon. 1870 Juan Prim died.

31 Tues. 1814 Jules Simon born.

7.17 4 447 55
7 18 4 45 8 59
7 18 4 46 10 0
7 18 4 4711
7 19 4 4711 57

0

7 19 4 48 morn.

7 16

4 43

7 12

7 17 4 43 sets.

7 17 4 44 G 48

HEADS OF THE PRINCIPAL NATIONS OF THE WORLD IN 1878.

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A BRIEF HISTORY OF ALMANACS.

AMONG the most ancient as well as the most widely diffused productions of the press, the Almanac holds a conspicuous place. The word is generally derived from the Arabic al-manah, the reckoning ; and the book commonly embraces the calendar for one year, with a more or less extended ephemeris of the movements of the planetary system, and a record of the eclipses, festivals, or special days, etc., to which is sometimes added statistical matter or general information. Frequently, however, almanacs have been made the vehicle for superstitions, weather predictions, superannuated jokes, vulgar allusions, and prophetical impostures. The credulity of the uneducated has been imposed on in all ages by prognostics of the weather, every day of the year being set down as a propitious or unpropitious season for certain transactions. Even modern almanacs prepared for country circulation continue to perpetuate this absurd and misleading practice. The utmost which science can effect in forecasting the weather barely extends to the twenty-four hours' "probabilities," now termed "weather indications," published by the Signal Office of the United States Army. The science of meteorology affords no means for almanac predictions of the weather set down a year in advance, and all such pretended forecasts are impositions upon popular credulity.

Ages before the invention of printing, something akin to the almanac was in use among all civilized nations of antiquity-the Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, etc. The Chinese also used them from time immemorial. The earliest manuscript almanacs noticed date from A.D. 1150, and several of the fourteenth century are found in English libraries. In France, the noted astrologer Nostradamus began the publication of the almanac which bore his name in 1550; and the celebrated Almanach de Liége, by Laensberg, dates from 1635. Its great success led to numerous imitations, and the Double or Triple Liégeois, the patriarch of French almanacs, has maintained itself to this day in the favor of the common people, although representing little but tradition, ignorance, and prejudice. The French press now annually swarms with almanacs in every variety of attractiveness of

title, price, and style of manufacture. There is the Almanach comique, the Almanach pittoresque, dramatique, critique, lunatique, prophétique, chanton, satirique, démocratique, astrologique, anecdotique, astronomique, etc. There is the Almanach du laboreur, du cultivateur, du jardinier, des dames, des muses, and so on. The Almanach Royal, founded in 1699, and known variously as the Almanach Imperial, Royal or National according to the changes of the government, is the principal official almanac now printed in France, though the Almanach de France has also a large circulation.

In Germany, the celebrated Almanach de Gotha, which first appeared in 1764, and has been continuously published and enlarged for 114 years, has become recognized as an authority upon the genealogy of the royal and noble families of Europe, while its official lists and statistical information (not always accurate) regarding the organization, finances, etc., of all the governments of the world render it a much-sought-for book of reference.

John

The earliest English almanacs are of the sixteenth century, and for two hundred years most almanacs were issued by pretended astrologers, one of the most famous of whom was William Lilly, who began to print his Ephemeris in 1644. Another famed English almanac was that of "Francis Moore, Physician," a quack doctor of Westminster, who began his career of imposture in 1698. Poor Robin's Almanack began in 1663, and is still published. Partridge's Merlinus Liberatus was started in 1681. R. White's Celestial Atlas or Ephemeris began in 1750, and is still published. These almanacs abounded in direful portents of the baneful effects of comets or blazing stars, and were filled with absurdities about lucky and unlucky days, nativities, judgments of things to come, epidemic diseases, murrain in cattle, prodigious shipwrecks, monstrous floods, and other events referred to supernatural or planetary agencies which are directly due to natural causes. In short, it may be said of the almanacs of earlier days (and even of some still circulated) that they are simply repositories for all the errors of antiquity.

Not until the year 1827 was there a single almanac printed in Great Britain free from these anachronisms and absurdities. In that year Charles Knight, the industrious writer and printer, and publisher for the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, conceived the idea of bringing out the British Almanac. The market was then filled with Poor Robin's, Francis Moore's, Lilly's, and Partridge's astronomical almanacs, which had been published from the time of James I., under the monopoly of the London Stationers' Company, till their exclusive privilege was broken up in 1775 by a famous suit, in which the Court decided against the legality of the patent for printing almanacs. The powerful Stationers' Company, however, by buying up competitors, contrived to continue possessed of an exclusive market for stamped almanacs, and with a reckless

ness disgraceful to the age, were still perpetuating the follies and indecencies to which we have referred. Not only so, but the British Government levied a tax of nearly thirty cents on every almanac issued in Great Britain, and the number sold, even with this heavy im. position, exceeded 450,000 copies annually. Says Mr. Knight:

"In 1827, when the almanac stamp was fifteen pence, the people of England, calling themselves enlightened, voluntarily taxed themselves to pay an annual sum of fifteen thousand pounds to the Government for permission to read the trash which first obtained currency and belief when every village had its witch and every churchyard its ghost; when agues were cured by charms and stolen spoons discovered by incantation. * * * *

"I immediately went to work to elaborate the scheme of a rational and useful almanac. It was completed in a few days, and I took it to consult Mr. Brougham. What an incalculable source of satisfaction to a projector, even of so apparently humble a work as an almanac, to find a man of ardent and capacious mind, quick to comprehend, frank to approve, not deeming a difficult undertaking impossible, ready not only for counsel, but for action! It is now the middle of November,' said the rapid genius of unprocrastinating labor; can you have your almanac out before the end of the year?' 'Yes, with a little help in the scientific matters.' Then tell Mr. Coates to call a meeting of the General Committee at my chambers at half-past eight to-morrow morning.. You shall have help enough. You may have your choice of good men for your astronomy and meteorology, your tides and your eclipses. Go to work, and never fear.'

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"The British Almanac was published before the 1st of January. Late as it was in the field, high as was its unavoidable price-half-a-crown, to cover the heavy stamp duty and allow a profit to the retailers-ten thousand were sold in a week. * * **The two objects which have been always kept in view were set forth in 1828: First, That the subjects selected shall be generally useful, either for pres ent information or future reference. Secondly, That the knowledge conveyed shall be given in the most condensed and explicit manner, so as to be valuable to every class of readers."-[Passages of a Working Life, by Charles Knight.]

The marked success of the British Almanac has been permanent; and this is due to the fact that its high character has been maintained, and many articles of permanent value have enriched its columns during every year of the half-century since its foundation. The stamp duty on almanacs (one of those odious taxes on the spread of intelligence which so long survived) was repealed in 1834, and this, with the example of the British Almanac, has tended steadily to improve the standard of these publications. Among the most useful and comprehensive of the English almanacs are Whitaker's Almanac, first issued in 1869; Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory of Great Britain and Ireland, begun in 1844; Oliver & Boyd's Edinburgh Almanac, established 1816; the Financial Reform Almanac, started in 1867; and the Statesman's Year-Book, first published in 1864.

The annals of almanacs in America begin with the first introduction of printing in the New World north of Mexico. In 1639 appeared at Cambridge "an Almanac calculated for New England, by Mr. William Pierce, Mariner." This was printed by Stephen Daye, and no copy of it has been preserved. It was the first book printed in the colonies, preceding by a twelvemonth the famous Bay Psalm Book, or New England Version of the Psalms, published by the same printer at Cambridge in 1640. Cambridge continued to issue almanacs almost every year. and in 1676 the first

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