NEW CALENDAR
Thirteen months in yeair
PROPOSAL FOR 1934. The most revolutionary change since the institution of summer time in the everyday lives of the world’s peoples has been planned to take place on January 1, 1934. • tAi new calendar, which will regulate our activities in every branch of business and social has been drawn up, and preparations for its introduction
have been going on quietly for a long t. time in all countries. There is soon to
be a special conference oi' experts of the League of Nations in Geneva, when a decision is practically certain to be taken in favour of “rationalising” the calendar year. .
lhe suggestion is that the new calendar should, begin on January 1, 1934. The expert committee -of The league consider that sufficient time will have elapsed' before January, 1934, for each country to outain the necessary Parliamentary endorsement for the amendment. 'Every-month under the new scheme will comprise twenty-eight days, and there will be thirteen months in a year.
An entirely new month—its name is not yet -chosen, but “Sol” is recommended—is to be interposed between June and July, The days of the week will fall always on exactly the same dates in each month each month coramencihg on a Sunday, and ending on A Saturday. After 1934 it should be possible/ says a London newspaper, always- to find out the date by thinking of the day,-or the day by remembering the date. Church festivals would fall on fixed dates. Easter Day, for example, would be always on Sunday, April 15, and Christmas Day‘would be observed always on Monday, December 23. Leaders of the Protestant Churches are sympathetically disposed toward the fixing of Christian’religious festivals. So also is the Greek Church, and.it is anticipated that the Roman Catnohc Church will fall into line.
Two international holidays will have to be introduced into the simplified calendar. The 365th day of each year will not beilong to December at all. It will, if the proposal is approved, be named “Year Day,” and will be observed as a holiday in all countries. Similarly, in the leap years the extra day will be placed at the end of June, and will be named “Leap Day.” It will have no date, and it, too, will be a holiday. The writer says: “Support from prominent businessmen; throughout the world has been collected by the League of Nations Committee in favour of the calendar change. Governments are united in favour of it. So strong is the (League of Nations for the change that ,evqry, one %!>, jib* new Calendar on January 1, 1934. J L—:
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Hokitika Guardian, 9 July 1931, Page 2
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434NEW CALENDAR Hokitika Guardian, 9 July 1931, Page 2
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