CALCULATIONS FOR THE YEAR 1844. PREPARED EXPRESSLY FOR THE WHIG ALMANAC. BY DAVID YOUNG, PHILOM. There will be five Eclipses this year; three of the Sun and two of the Moon. 2 6557 D. H. M. .20 6 59 M ..21 3 50 M ..22 6 0 ES .21 11 34 M I. There will be an Eclipse of the Moon at the time of her full on the evening of the 31st of May. This Eclipse will be altogether invisible at St. Louis, Natchez, New-Orleans, Cincinnati, and throughout the greatest part of the United States; but at the following places the Moon will rise a few minutes before her last contact with the Earth's shadow, with a small Eclipse on her upper limb, as stated below: II. There will be an Eclipse of the Sun at the time of New Moon, June 15th, in the evening, invisible in the United States; visible in the South Pacific and Great Southern Oceans. III. There will be an Eclipse of the Sun at the time of New Moon, November 10th, in the morning, invisible. This Eclipse will be visible only in a very small portion of the Great Southern Ocean. IV. There will be a total Eclipse of the Moon on Sunday, November 24th, in the evening, visible and chiefly visible in the United States. Whole duration (where the whole is visible) 3h. 50m. Duration of total darkness, 1h. 33m. Depth of immersion in the Earth's shadow, 17.22 digits from the northern side. V. There will be a small Eclipse on the northern limb of the Sun on the 9th of December in the afternoon, visible and chiefly visible in the United States. The Sun will be 2 digits eclipsed at setting at Boston, and 1 digit and one-eighth part of a digit at New-York. ds. h.m. h.m. Calendar for Calendar Boston; N. York City; Baltmr NEW ENGLAND, CONN. N. JER-VIRGINI SAN & IOWA. IND & ILL. AND MISSOUE 85 20 75 22 ri 65 23 55 248 45 25 35 26 10 25 28 11 15 29 m 25 28 1 13 1 1 387 05 30 1 15 29 2 20 2 366 595 312 3 21 3 536 575 32 3 Melancthon born, 1497. 0376 505 38 1 126 49 5 40 9 20 11 76 475 41 436 48 5 41 10 19 11 396 465 42 10 156 465 42 11 18 mor. 6 445 44 11 456 455 43 mor. 8 20 10 36 6 495 408 0 96 435 45 m 2 186 435 44 0 16 0 426 425 46 0 3 526 425 46 1 11 Pes-6 425 45 294 376 405 47 2 4 [talozzi died, 1827.16 405 46 2 57 of a clergyman, who, having received a public document which was ordered to be 1 166 405 47 1 2 16 395 48 2 2 576 375 492 4 216 36 5 50 3 shrewdly told his congregation that orders to read the 5 cmer ground of amerence is, that, wnue the capital of peck. When is a fowl's neck like a bell? some of these crafts-men and crafts-women consists in their skill, or two hands and ten fingers, or brains and sinews, that of others consists in their money, which employs the skill, hands, fingers, brains, and sinews of their neighbors. If either of these more properly merits the name of manufacturer, it is he who does the work, and the workers are they to whom these crafts are most essential for a living, and as the foundation of wealth. To oppose manufactures, is therefore to oppose every man who depends on handycraft for a livelyhood it is to oppose the march of civilization. Σ 3 426 166 4 5 18 6 146 5 6 426 13 6 416 116 824 246 106 8 86 9 sets.. 9 36 86 9 75 10 7 9 9 356 76 10 586 16 12 02 155 586 15 11 55 mor. 5 59 6 15 QUTILITY OF LAUGHTER-A hearty laugh is occasionally | brains, and the hypochondria from Jan act of wisdom; it shakes the cobwebs out of a man's ually than either champagne or bl |