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That he, and not Tiberius, was the author of this law, now appears from Fronto in the letters to Verus, init. Comp. Gracchus ap. Gell. xi. 10; Cic. de. Rep. iii. 29, and Verr. iii. 6, 12; Vellei. ii. 6. IV. III. Modifications of the Penal Law

'Certainly. Apollo is put first because he has been accepted as Patrôos. But see R. G. E., p. 49, n. Plut. Q. Conv. ix. 6; Paus. ii. 1. 6; 4. 6; 15. 5; 30. 6. Troades init. In the Iliad he is made an enemy of Troy, like Athena, who is none the less the Guardian of the city. Themis, pp. 295, 296. Review, 1906, pp. 365 and 416.

He adds, "I pass over the other inventions of this age which, though wonderful, form rather a development of ancient arts than surpass the intellects of our ancestors." De subtilitate, lib. 3 ad init. VII., pp. 359-61.

Vit. Pythag, cap. iii., iv. "The sacred words were intrusted to him, of which the Ineffable Tetractys, or name of God, was the chief." OLIVER, Hist. Init. p. 109.

The gamma, Γ, or Greek letter G, is said to have been sacred among the Pythagoreans as the initial of Γεωμειρία or Geometry. Vide Oliver, Hist. Init. p. 68, note.

T. W. Rolleston, Parallel Paths. Phys. ii. 8, 198 16-34. Pp. 28-9. Phys. ii, c. De Part. An., Bk. i, c. 5. Phys. ii. I, init. De Anima, init. Meteor, iv. 1. 378. See Zeller's Aristotle, vol. i, fin. Polit. 1253 a; Eth. 1162 a. Gen. An. ii. 3. 737.

Lucullus, 2; de Fin. i. 1-3; Tusc Quæst. ii. 1, 2; iii. 2; v. 2; de Legg. i. 22-24; de Off. ii. 2; de Orat. 41, etc. Middleton's Life, vol. ii. p. 254. Ad Quinct. fratr. iii. 3. Tusc. Quæst, v. 2. De Off. i. 5. init.

The one difficulty was that he knew absolutely nothing of the business of gas its practical manufacture and distribution and had never been particularly interested init. Street-railroading, his favorite form of municipal profit-seeking, and one upon which he had acquired an almost endless fund of specialized information, offered no present practical opportunity for him here in Chicago.

The first compares an army following its general across a river to a herd of cattle following the leading bull: "Ac velut ignotum si quando armenta per amnem Pastor agit, stat triste pecus, procul altera tellus Omnibus, et late medius timor: ast ubi ductor Taurus init fecitque vadum, tune mollior unda, Tunc faciles saltus, visaeque accedere ripae."

He was the author of a poem on Aetna, which in the opinion of many competent judges is the poem which has come down to us, and has been attributed to Varus, Virgil, and others. It has been admirably edited by Mr. Munro. Quaest., iv. ad init.