CELINA, an incorporated village in western Ohio, U.S.A., on Grand reservoir (or Lake St. Marys) ; the county seat of Mer 'This more or less regular sale of licences by bishops and arch deacons flourished from the days of Gregory VII. to the 16th century ; see index to Lea, s.v., "Licences." Dr. Lea has, however, omitted the most striking authority of all. Gascoigne, the most dis tinguished Oxford chancellor of his day, writing about 145o of the Bishop of St. David's, says that he had refused to separate the clergy of his diocese from their concubines, giving publicly as his reason, "for then I, your bishop, should lose the 400 marks which I receive yearly in my diocese for the priests' lemans" (Gascoigne, Lib. Ver. ed. Rogers, p. 36) . Even Sir Thomas More, in his polemic against the Reformers, admitted that this concubinage was too often tolerated in Wales (English Works, ed. p. 231, cf. 619).
'Lea (ii. 339 ff.) gives a long series of quotations to this effect from church synods and orthodox disciplinary writers of modern times.
Ellis, A Study of British Genius, p. 8o (London, 1904) , "Even if we compare the Church with the other professions with which it is most usually classed, we find that the eminent children of the clergy considerably outnumber those of lawyers, doctors, and army officers put together." Mr. Ellis points out, however, that "the clerical profession . . . also produces more idiots than any other class." cer county. It is served by the Big Four, the Nickel Plate and tht Western Ohio (electric) railways. Pop. in 1930, 4,664. Celina is a summer resort, the commercial centre of a farming regior and an important furniture-manufacturing town. Stearic acid anc phonographs are also manufactured. The village was settled it 1834 and incorporated in 1885. Grand reservoir is an artificia lake, 9m. long by 3m. wide, built to feed the old Miami and Erie canal.