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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1923-4-26, Page 3VZRCI COR T ' TO STAR T P1OI;. ED. AGAIN ne flrte°,• ::I arfd Fifty Forniiielr h Chicoutimi Parish to be Dispessleised When Big Storagm .Darn' iI Completed at Ken ogMini. A despatch from Quebec Says i-- 9ne hundred ird fifty settler families in the parish of St, Cyriac have been notified that this la the last summer they will be able to farm the 'acres Which they hove wrested with devoted labor from the bush, Two years ago this municipality 'was Organized ,by ;pioneers who had gone to Chicoutimi •eounty' to carve out new homes for therneelyes.' fts soon as their harvest is gathered this fall the families will be moved with, their- et'oclt and their portable possessions to Begin town. yhip, whore they will begin again on tthe arduous labors of : settlers in 'Irgin country.. Then the little village they had built at St Cvriac, the fields they had won from the bash acre by acre, will be covered many feet deep by the water of the great new storage basin which will come into exietence when the huge dem et Kenogami Is completed, Four hundred and flye settlers' lots will be: expropriated: by the Quebec Running' Streams Comirtlesion to provide for. the flooding that the dam willclause in the townships of Itenogami, Jon - (adores, h,atce•iere, La Barre, Mesy and "Pleesy. A. survey board 'of three officials, is new engaged in estimating the values of the buildings and farms to be sacra, £iced and arranging for the amount of compensation, to be paid to the dis- possessed settlers. J(LW DYKE" BOYLE RAD BUSY • CAREER ADVENTUROUS' CANA- DIAN PASSED AWAY IN LONDON. volution, and for about a year nothing was heard of him. He next turned, up In Rumania, where he became promi• nent by his work in destroying the rich off wells In the face of the adyanc• tag Austrian army, so that' they would not fall Into enemy hands, I-le.bad many wonderful experiences ,there, He on one occasion saved eixty Ru. /Malian deputies from :death at the bands of Lite Bolshevists fit the riditof It was he who at great risk carried' 'Tnternatimnal' Figure of Repute the peace terms between Rumania and in, Europe Held Many lin. the Boishevi$ts from Jassy to Odessa. by aeroplane, and in doing so he sub. portant COmmi89ion8.• fered a stroke. ' He was nursed back to health,the 'A' cable was received an April 14 at by Queen of 'Rumania who' sent a Metter of grateful apprecia- tion to itis father, the late Charles Bayle, expressing her thanks tor the services of his son. Woodstock, Ont., announcing the sud- den death in London, England, of Col. Joe Boyle, known, the world over as Mon -dyke, pioneer and adventurer: of great resourceand courage. The late ;Colonel Boyle was born. in .Toronto on November 6, 1867, and• went with his' parents to Woodstock When a Toting lad,. Hie father, the late Charles'Bo?le, was known es the dean of thoroughlnred-hotae racing in Cana- da," and for years conducted a ,large racing stable. When the horses were sent to the United States racing tracks young Joe' was sent along as manager, but he did netstick iaug to.the-racing game.' for when he was but eighteen Jos Boyle 1 romantic figure passes•front Cana- dian lite In the person ob "Klondylte Boyle, who numbered eincmg ,his ad- ventures, the mailing. ot'peace terms- between Russia and Roumania H'e. was greatly loved by the lio,yai,Pamily of Rouniiania for his servi'oes to them and was: nursed by the Queen herself after suffering a stroke, which hollow edea strenuous, trip through:. the war zones from Russia, years of age he slipped away on a liter- chant vessel from New Arerk for a cruise around the world. Two years s or eh later he turned up again In Wood stock, and was, found around iris fath- er's race stable. Hitg`. Trail for Ktondyke. It was in 1898, in the early days of the gold rush to the liloiidylce, that Joe Boyle tell, in with Frinit Slavin (a a boxer of,somo repute in those,days,), and together they made •their way to Dawson City. -Things broke badly for o the pair• la • the North country, and the Colonel was in dire straits. Boyle came' out to 'secure supplies for the starving miners, but.while organizing a. relief expedition times brightened, and the Woodstock man, went to Ot- taws and secured"largo land conces- slons, and went back once more to try hie luck. -Ha worked hard •until Ira made sure lie third „struck something• gootl, arid', their imerder to4evelo his clelms formed what was kn2bwn as the Cana. dlan tKlondylto :Mining Co.: With ln- creased financial assistance: good „pre- a E 0 0 THE, BRIDEGROOM AND_. HIS BRIDE One of the latest pictures to reach Canada of Prince Albert, the king's second son, and his bride, Lady:Ellizabeth Bowes -Lyon, whose marriage' took place on April 26, Prince Albert Is shortly; to be 'made • a Governor- General of one of the Dominions ta:treaenting the' King his. father. Adventured in Search of 011. Following the armistice . Colonel BCANADIAN NAD N eCONSUMER S E� Y . ll PAYS wee appointed �1i�� .: PZ d as extraordinary .::. °� commissioner ,for Rumania, and or-, banize;d a relief campaign for the .peo- ple of, that country, During the past year or'two 'he had been connected with the Royal Dutch and Shell Trane- port'Co, Inseeldng oil concess-ions•and developing oil wells in Mosul; Caucasla and other parts of the Near East. Last summer iia had another% exciting ex- 'peri0nee with the BolshesIsts, when he. secured.the release from a dungeon in Tiflis of a member of hds staff and Isis wife. He returned to :England 'Mast fall in,poor health, and had been under the care of doctors"and` nurses since then, CROP PROSPECTS GOOD IN RUSSIA Increased Area ; of 'Winter Grain Fields—Plentiful Sup- ply of Farm 'Labor. A. despatch from 'Moscow •says; -- Agricultural 'authorities in Russia concur in the opinion that the present winter`. has been ,favorable to :good. winter crops.. It is estimated that winter grain fields this year, in.,cons-. com- parison with last year, have increased their areas on an average of 18 ,per, cent; in famine districts, 42 per cent. - semi -starved, districts, 20. per cent; and in' the rest from 3 to:4 per cent. It is hoped the favorable conditions now prevailing may increase the area during' the coming spring _sowing time by 20 per cent. as compared with last year. -: The problem of farm labor'is not worrying Russia; there are more' hands' than the country can absorb at present. The Godernment has ad- vanced to:the agricultural, population about •20,0,00,000 puds of seeds, and to cover the lack of working Battle'the Government has: taken measures to obtain' it from Mongolia -and Kirghi teppes, Earth to Moon by Airplane in Eighty Days A. despatch from Paris saysi-Tho moon is 74 miles nearer the earth than stronomers thought. This discovery las bean made by Abbe Moreax, of the Bourges Observatory, as a result f special studies during the last south. In announcing his discovery, he il- lustrates the distance from earth, to moon -thirty times this • planet's dia- meter—but points out that at the speed of modern airplanes it could: be covered in eighty days, just. the .time it took Jules . Verne's hero to get around the -world. I0,COO;G00 Fish,Eggs Dumpeci„Irrto Lake Erie A despatch from Kingsville, Ont, ays:--Ten million eggs of whitefish nd herring, the largest hatch ever made here, will be carried ,out by the overnmetit,tugs' two miles into Lake tie and ttirned:loose. The moving out f the ice recently decidedthe, hatch- ry officials to make the "dump” with - tit further loss of time. groes was being made, when .the -war brolre out and halted development,. Provided Machine •Gun ;3attery. Col. Boyle equipped and `.sent over- e'oae a. machine gun battery composed of fifty picked nren, and this did splen" did service at the front. In1316he went over to London on business, and while there was commissioneii by the 'War Office to go. tO Russia to reorgam , fee •the transportation systetn'of • that country, 1 -le. was there during the :re- t.la,rmwus ,' Clear as Mud, "Did ho tell you the. way?" "No, he only gave me directions." '51-1 Lir YOUR •ae hS DUMMY, ARM iN A J1 PY'YOU'LL Cif.IN `t - SLUM83SRLANQ . ,a P i..E FOR UNITED STATES GOODS . GO® S A despatch from Ottawa says: How $100' worth of goods imported from the United States by a Canadian wholesaler, . under a duty of 35 per cent,: because of pyramiding of profits: on the cost of the geode, on profits and en' sales taxes paid, cost the consumer in Canada .$247.20 by the time the goods had' passed through various hands was drown to the special Agri. cultural Committee of the house on Thursday by Isaac E. Pedlow, retail merchant,'; of Renfrew,` Ont,, and former member of the Commons. In the case of goods i�n�mported by a wholesaler and. sold Sy him to a manufacturer and then, in manufac- tured form, passing hi turn -through Natural Re,oureer 8ul1e ire The Natural Itemolitce$',tntel- ligenco Service of the Depart. Ment of the Interior at Ottawa says; In order to assure the con•. tinuence of the forests of On. tarso, prordnciel and other nurseries are making' prepare.. tione to produce up to twenty million seedlings per year. There aro large areas in the province which are suitable only to the production of timber, and it is a portion of the'pro gram " of the Ontario Forest Branch to replant these areas. This, however, is but one means of continuing the ,forest production. The more import- ant and at the came time the most 'productive methed• is to protect the forests already ex- isting and encourage natural reproduction. To do prig it is,.. essential that Baro be exercised and forest fires prevented; The Forest Branch is doing good, work but needs the help of all interested in the province's welfare. y SIEGE OF IRISH CAVE . HAS DRAMATIC END Three Republicans Drowned While Endeavoring' to Es- cape and Four Captured. A despatch from London says:- The spectacular siege of thelittle band of Irish Republicans, which had been holding out against the Free State forces in a cave 100 feet from the top of the Clashreeelcon Cliff, on the wild shore of the Shannon, in County Kerry, has come to a sensational ending. Two of the men who had been fight- ing under a continuous machine gun fire sinceMonday night, fell from the cliff into the Shannon while trying to escape in the darkness of Wednesday night, and were drowned; Commander Lyons of the. hillside fortress, dropped. 100 feet to the beach while being haul- d up the cliff, but rose and was shot nd killed while trying to escape, and the four others of the little party, in eluding Walter: Stevens, of London, the hands' of wholesaler and. retailer, e to consumer, the pyramiding was even' a greater, and the $100 worth of goods,l without allowance for `cost of mann- fact'ue, ; cost by pyramiding alone'. Of the added cost through salos tax and...duties, in the first instance the 1 Treasury collected a' total. of 344.11, e while the consumer paid $69.94. In b were captured, according to a despatch to the Central News from-Tralee. The men in the: cave, evidently be. ieving their positions, insecure, were ndeavoring to sally forth and reach the protection of an adjoining cavo when the - casualties occurred. , The ody of Commander Lyons vies wash- ed out to sea by .the rising: tide, the latter case, the goods being handl- ed through . additional channels, the. Treasury received $19;73 in sales taxes while the -consumer' paid $32,55 in sales taxes and profits on same, The Treasury` received ;$35 in duty, while the consumer paid c377.77' in respect to duty and profits on duty. A Chapter's End? Are the sands of Irish 'rebellion at last running out? Charles Burgess, Erskine Childers and Rory O'Connor, are dead: When Childers, the' real brains of the rebellion, was executed Lliam Lynch took his place. And now 'Lynch has been shot to death in a running fight. .'Eamon de Valera. :is fleeing to some new hiding place and the women supporters of his rebellion and his few -faithful lierften- ants have been scattered, ' Ten thousand "irregulars", ore in Irish jails. Sixty-seven of their lead- ers have been executed. Lynch, the last first-class fighting man in the rebel ranks, .is gone. De"Valera no longer counts. ` The rebellion he has fostered seems to be burning itself out where it not be- ing smothered by the Free State. The archives of the 'Republican ` Govern- ment are in the pockets'' of De Valera; its headquarters are wherever he hangs up his bat. If he ever had any authority over his semi -bandit leaders and his wild guerrilla ` men, it has gone. The Free State Briny has been strengthened and - taught discipline.. Dublin is quiet. Trish railways again. are .maintaining their schedules. Bridge burnings, ambushes and dyna- mitings grow fewer. There is more peace in South Ireland now than there has been in months.;` - , The issue is not decided; but it does appear that: the .policy -of executions, reluctantly and 'Sorrowfully begun by the Cosgrave government,, has justi- fied itself. "President. Cosgrave came to a place where he had `either to gov- ern or go. If he went, the Free Stat would have gone with him, the Anglo- Irish pact would have become a scrap of paper and Ireland would have gone back again to whore she has been at any time these 700 years. • ; If Cosgrave was to govern, the re- bellion had to be put down. Execu- tions- and. reprisals seemed the only way. If tile' fight of the Irish rebels has 'come to its, final stage,only the enemies of Ireland will mourn over the. news. Halifax Rupert t Linked ,by Radio A 'des atoll from Prince ce. Rupert; B. C., says: -Radio coinmunication tests between Prince Rupert and Halifax, N.S., have proved successful,: The tests were carried out by Jack Bar'nsley,eof this city, communication being _estab- lished in a few hours. HAPPY ONCE MORE To the' thousand f s o Canadians, who leve ,the outdoorsand especially the Sport of fishing spring..sells freedom n d fit t 0 seek and prepare: their food in the el/en for preeloss week -ends. The three fishermen in the picture are about'to enjoy the success o.:their day's. ,tishingin ,salinop cooked over a camp fire, , Roughing it Poi• a night or two is the nearest many modern men can get to an expression of their pioneering instincts. Wl1.RP.'S SI0i4)BER,LANU, MA? IN RABBITBORO The Sultan Hits Back; The exiled. Mohammed VI., who ea. caped from Turkey upoa.a British war- ship, has made an appeal to: 300,000,000. Moslems to sustain him in his rank of Sultan and Caliph in spite of the de- cision of the Kemalis•ts whom he des. e eribes-as "men of mixed ancestry, of 1 no religion and no patriotism." An Efficient Librarian. • Weeks Market .Report TORONT4. ;. 1M•nnitoba wheat --.-1'o, 1 Northern, $1°,81?/ . a-renitobe oath-•-Nornitlai, ' '3�nitaila Oarieg---Nominal All the.abovo track; Bay arts, Ani. corn= -No, 8 yellow, 181,4; No. 2, 97c; L'ariey—$Salting, 69 to 61c, accord- 1is fe frai2hts eutekiIY Buckwheat---ITo. 2; 70, to 78e. Rye ---No. 2, 799 to 81c, Peas. -No, 2„ 31,45 to 31 50 h3111feed—Del„ Montreal freights, bege"included:'.Bran,per too, 929; shorts per ton, $81;' rniddlin e, 380; good feedflour,$2.15 to 32.26. Ontario wheat—No, 2 white, 31.20 to $1.22, according to freights outside. Ontario No, 2 white oats --•40 to 61e. Ontario, corn -Nominal, Ontarlo fieur—Ninetyy per cent, pat., 3n' jute bugs, 'Montreal, prompt shlp- ment, 36„10 to 35.20; Toronto basis, 33.05 to 35.15; bulk seaboard, $4.95, to Manitoba flour -1st pats., in cotton sacks;. $7.10 per barrel; 2nd pats„ $6,6b. Hay—Extra . No. 2, per ton, track, Toronto, $14 nixed, $11 clover, 33. Straw—Car lots, per ton, trach, To. ronto, 39. Cheese -New, large, 26c; twine, 2643c; triplets, 28c; Stiltons, 29c. Old, large, ; 81- to 32e; twine, 33 to 31e; Stiltons, 35e; Butter—Finest creamery .prints, 42 to 436;' ordinary creamery prints, 41" to 42c; dairy, 26 to 27c; cooking, 24c. Eggs—New laids, loose, 83 to 84e; new laids, in cartons, 37 to 38c. Live poultry -Chickens, milk:fed, over 5 lbs.,25c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 25c; do, over 5 11es., 24e; do, 4 to 5 Ibs., 2 •to'24c; do, 2, to 4 lbs., 18 to 21e; hens, Over" 5: lbs., 28c`; do, 4 to 5 Ibs,,..26e; do, 8 be 4 lbs., 22c; roosters, 17c ducklings, -over 5 Ibs., 30e; do, 4 to :6 lbs,, 28e; turkeys, young, 10 lbs, and up, 30c. pressed Poultry—Chickens, milk ed e b f , ov r 5 l s„ -360; do,'4 to 83c; de, Over 5: lbs., 30c; do, 4,to 51bs., 25c; clo, 2' -to 4: lbs., 25c; hens, over'5 lbs.,,80c; do, 410 5 lbs:, 23c; do, 3'10 4 lbs., 24c; 3roosters, 24c; ducklings, over 5 lbs., 0c; do, 4 to 5 lbs,, ,29c; turkeys, young, 10 lbs. Arid up, 40c. Beans—Can., hand-picked, lb.;. 7e; primes, 6e. Maple products—Syrup, per imp. gal:, $2.50; per 5 -gal. tin, $2.40 per gal: Maple sugary lb., 23 to ?bc, Honey -60 -lb. ;tins, 11'1s to 12c per 1b:; 5..2% -lb. tins; 123t to 131/ c er ib. Ontario comb honey, per dozen, Potatoes, Qnttp1os-;: To. 1, 31,0.5 to $L100 87o, 2, 31 to 31.,00 Nmolfed mhsts- •7Flains, sleds 26 Yp R7g ; welted hams, eG to 400; smoked rolls, 26 to 213e; cottage rolls, ; 8 to 20e; breakfast bison; 30 to 880; apt;«. offal brand breakfast bacon, 35 to 880; bacilli bon,ee64 , 84 to 40e. Oared' me Long clear bacon, 50. to4 40 lbs., $1,3 50; 70 to 90 Ibb,, 3131' 90 ibe; and up, $17• ligh{,weight rolls, in barrels, 388; iteavyweigiit roti r, 335; ard--euro tierces, 16 to 161,l,el tuba, 6% to 17e; ails, 17 to 17,re; prints,. 18%c. $hort:oning tierces, 14x3 to iSitic; tubs, '1,514, to 15%e; palls, 130 to 16r/,jc; prints, 17% to 183'ac, Heavy steers, choice, $7.50 to 38; butcher etee0H, choice, 36,75 to 37.50; do, good, 36 to $6.50; do, mad., $5.25 to 3)1; do, cgin,, $4,50 to 35; butcher co heieed„rs36. , ctho $6oice,;50; 30.75do, ' tocon $7, $,20334,50. do 1p $5i butcher cows, chorea, $4,50 to 3150; do, melt., $8.50 to 34.50; can- ners and cutters, 31.50' to 32; butcher bullsbulls good, '$4 to 35; do, cons„ 33 to' $4; , steers, good, $6 to $6.50• do, fair, 35;60 to 10; stockers, goo $5 -to $5,50; db, fai3l•, $4 to $3' calves, choice, 310 to $11.50; db, meta„ $6 to $7; do, coma, 34 to $5; mileh cows, cho380ice,to 370$100;to 390;lambsspringe,rchoice,s, $14.0hgioef td 315.50; do, springs, $15 to 313; sheep, choice, $8 to $9; do, culls, $4 to 35; hogs, . fed and watered, 311.10 to $11.25; do, f.o.b. 310.35 to $10.50; do, country points, 310,10 ;to •310.25: ASONTRE,. Corn, Am. No, 2 yA,Iellow, 31,02' to $1.03. Oats, Can. West,, No. -2, 68 M 69e; do, No. 8, 68 to 64e; extra No. 1 feed, 6134 to 62c; No. 2 local. white,' 60%•to 61c; 'Flour, Man,spring wheat pats„ 1sts, $7.30; 2nds,; 36.80; strong bakers', 86,60; winter pats., choice, $5.90 to $6. Rolled oats,. bag -90 lbs. pII_.10 to $8.20.. Bran, $28. Shorts, $30. Middlings, 3$5. Hay, No. 2,per ton car lots, 313 to: 314. p, Cheese finest' easteres, 17r/a rn to 18%e Cheese, choicest creamery, 56 to 37e. Eggs, selected, 36c: Potatoes, per bag, car lots, 31.30 to 31.36. Fairly good steers, averaging 1,090 lbs;, 36:75; poorer steers, 36:25; .do, corn., 35.50; cops, and hied. dairy cows, '3 to $4; ecru. Dulls, 33 and up; calves, ,5 to 35.75, fairly good and med.;:do some 34 to .34.50;, ,do, very coin. and. cull lots, 33.50 and $3:75. Hogs, good lots,' 312; sows, 38.50' to 39; mixed heavy and rough hogs, depending on - quality, 311,50 to 311.75. NEWF'OCLEAUNADLANDREDBY. COASTGA Ice : Barrier_ is Removed and Food Cargoes .Can Reach ,Settlements.. A despatchw•on, says'' -A heavyfrom gale St. has J _cleareh'sd Nafld., away in part the ise- barrier that had isolat- ed many points on the south coast :of Newfoundland for many weeks,,; Set- tleinents: that had been strut off from the outside', world since January and whose people had been suffering 'front hunger, were placed within 'reach of relief, The steamer Kyle, frozen inatLamaline Harobr, is•still fast, but ex- pected to work free hila flay -or two. In addition toa cargoof food for the hungry settlements along the coast, the Kyle has on board the candidates representing the Government and Op- position, who will contest two west coast divisions in the election of May 8, as web as all the election lists, .ba1=: lot b'oxes'and other electionmaterial for these districts. Next Monday. is nomination day when candidates trust be present if they wish to figure in the election, Competition of BabyAir- planes to be Held in n land • A despatch 'from London says:— The Daily Mail offers a prize of 01,000 for the longest flight—not less than fifty miles—of at airplane: with an, ngine 80 7% horsepower and one gal - on of fuel, The competition is open tp the world, and will. taico. place 'in England next'September•. A school teacher in a western town, wishing to leans more about the stories of Jidgar Allan Poe, inquired at the delivery desk of •the' rural, library for. the Geld Bug, and added: "I' can't seem to find it in tate catalogue,'but 3 am sure yoit•have it. A friend of mine had it out last week•"' The libi'arian, who was new and very young,,,glanced at the ds'twer of the card catalogue: over which, ' the teacher; had beau pouring and then smiled. "No wonder, Mies ;Snaith," she ex- tla7nod with patient' gentleness. "You were looking under''ftotion.' I think ;that if',yip. turn Co: 'entdinology .'You Won't, have•.any trowibio' Fitted for the Scaffold, - A dinner•was given to eelel a•ate• the completion .of a new church. When the health of the builder was proposed, Ire. rose to his feot,'coughed, and said: "Gentlemen, I am more fitted for the scaffold than for public speaking," Incomplete Returns, "What "did you get for Christmas, Bobbie?" •• "I got a lot of stuff, but pa ain't tbsough platin' with it." A Canadian Explorer Vilhlalmur Stefansson,, Who is now visiting Toronto, says that'Canada has an area twice as large as the United States to be developed in the north, and recalls the -time when Europeans believed the world uninhabitable north of the Alps, . . s10 • • Signs Emigration -Agreement The Duke oP -Devonshire; formerly Governor-General' of Canada, and now Colonial- Secretary in the Boner Law government, has; signed the.. Empire Settlement Scheme of Bhnigration. It provides, for the settlement in Canada of 5,000 children under fourteen -years of age :within the first year, 4,000 wo- men and a limited number' of families 'Traffic Signals. `ire crowd, afoot or awheel, has had to learn to obey orders at the street intersections of our large cities in. order that time may be saved; 'con- fueion avoided and accident minimized. There had to be traffic rules. It liad to be learned that the arm of the law is that of a man who stands at the intersection of the ways and says! when, for drivers and foot passer gers, Those " permissions .and prohlbltions have to be respected; and the roan. • who disregards the • warning runs headlong Into trouble right away, Even so in the matter .of the plain business of everyday livingr 'We tiro ,bouncl;:as we live to heed the traffic signals, : or—somehow,' soinewhero, sooner:: or later=pay the line for,dis-' obedience,. There aro rules' of hygiene that the,richest man alive,cannot af. ford. to ignore., The natural edicts, however they may seem to be bent or broken for the individual beneht, are actually infloxible and unpartial, There is a way,,,ancl we must -walk in it, and if we do not we shall be pun. fished. Nature does not, incline her • ear, solicitous to know how .we like what silo ;does, The whole history 90 the race is a legend of ..precaution, which he who rune to -day may road if he will. Wa might leal'n by some ancient, sorrow* ful failure, if We would; we might avoid in our time a mistake of Tu- tenkltamun's era. Mdst'of us, in fac learn more by error ---whether it b our own or that of'another—than bid" any glory of victory. We are obliged to those autobiographers who present neither the "chocolate candy seraph" net the :'barley -sugar image," but the than in his image as 54 lived, that we may know the mistakes ho made and avoid the similar pitfalls Le we. eat. A large part of tho.wor9e of doctors eons'st s in getting their elitists to obey blain warnings and not to proceed de. 3ently in the very bee of tem, Tho patient often listens with (ap3areu3 eeility, pays for rho lecture and fol. 5105 a tli'0Tot'ent Eotitee, There nod, 5 no 5151s:rise if thane is pileislnneti8 s the sequel 'to an arrant dia. abedieiice, . d 1 lr u