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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1921-1-20, Page 7• Tile Tractor Tcol-134x, 1.'rnctieai Paragraphs. • If a•certain. old leuglish merchant is aboard, those travallere who begin their trensatiuntlo voyage at Montreal aro ifkoly to have.,a gill when the steaanshtp passes tinder She great bridge over the tete Lewiston at Que- bec, Keep the following things in the Use for Split Washers --Where Whets Quebec begins to bons up off tool box or somowheis Ohne at band: i crown 'ban's .and totter pins are not the port bow and tete outilae of the The Instruction Book: Keep it handy supplied in motor car construction bridge became distinct, the old gentle- at1d.study it each day 'until. you are .good, well tempered split washers may man privately puts on a aelior'a hat absolutely sure that you know the bo placed under the /leads of bolts to' 4110 an oncost and become to all ap- mac 11 ne from enol to end; and thele keep them front rattling loose. ipearances a member of the crow. That study it :some more. Spend about as Thermos Bottle Breakage --The done, he takes hie piece on 111e edge 1012011 time in this way every day as containers of thermos bottles fre- of the crowd of passengers that usual - you would in caring for a team, and quently break front the jolt of the ear, ly idle the boat deck. A little way off I will promise you that your troubles particularly in riding avec rather Mande au actual member of the crew will be few and easily remedied. ' rough made. If the bottles are pieced who acts ss hie coutederece. As the A Speed Indicator; 4CnoW what with the top end downwerd, so that great bridge coniee nearer and nearer, speed your engine is m sting. If it they will not move sideways, the he seems to be anoutally eetheatiug showed ran at 1,000 revolutions per :breakage well be obviated. . the distance of the ship from the • minute, do not expect it to etand uP Battery Oharging.--Never allow a bridgs and at aha proper moment to.ihe uresis when you are running it naked flame 1'1 Colne near the storage shouts to the genuine. mien, "Res tete 1,200 01> 1,600, Neither can you ex- •battery while it is being charged or oignal been given?" . peel it to deliver the power necessary immediately afterward.-• • 1 "Yes, sir," comes the respectful au- to do the work if you are running it Gauging Oil Level -In. cases where ewen at only '700 or 800 in place of the re- the motor truck devlops chronic oiling' "kl'mph l They'd better be getting commended 1,000, trouble ft is very impar' - Adjustable Wrenches -a complete ��''t re aseer- cosy up there." lain the exact level of the 1u'bricot t int At tbat the crowd invariably be- set.' Do not rely upon one :big monkey the ease, . It 1s a simple matter to' comes silent and turns its eyes on the wrench and a pair of pliers.. ,leave two gauge petcocks inserted in bridge , looming up, ahead 00 them, the Oise, one above the other, By this High as the bridge seems, the fore. Care of Truck Tires, locate a positive knowledge of the oil mast of theship seems even higher. Here is a set of rules for truck level may be hast, whereas any oil float The situation begins to look interest matte truck tires, formulated by the reading. f aeon i his voil drivers on the care of solid and pneu- is likely to stick and give a false ing Wit1C a liiiit'o i nervous ap»rehen techeical department of a tiro corn- Spring Breakage -Breakage pany fcr the benefit of truck owners; springs on motor trucks is usual] 1, All tru;•k tires have a load limit, caused by one of the fallowing/ Over a:> Constant s, , ht or occasional heavy , clips overloads shorten o n - e, the 01d mar ant, ,"You're aura tee signal hoe been given?" "lt has ixideod, sir," 'Teter have it repeated," "Ay, a3', efa:,, Gasps and alarmed whispers are audible in the crowd; 1110 ripple of laughter that likewise runs through the geeemblege seems out of place, As the ship giide'1 forward the bridge begins to Igoic jmpassably low; the towering mast seems to grow loftier at every moment. The kingifi tan throws more alarm into 11151 YWCA,. '"They'll never get tlxat„draw open In dine," he declares, • filen afraid not, sir," agrees the real sailor, "Our speed le twice what it ought to bo" "I think we're slowing down now, 811:" "1i'mp12i Too late for that." The paseeugex's begin to scatter, in order to give the mast plenty of room to fait when the inevitable crash comes: When the collision seems• im- minent a lniglxty moan goes up from the crowd,. • "Lower the mast!" roars the Eng - nehmen, Then the vessel glides gracefully be neath the bridge with some twenty or thirty feet of clearance. During the excitement the merchant doffs Iris hat and slicker and when he appears a moment later be Ls merely continues: a passenger like anyone else. tire life. C oti 2. Lu?stl'ibute the load in the truck body eat each tire will bear its propor- tiolia ., tc share of the weight carried. 3, Overepeeding a tire hes the same harmful effect as overloading; Keep truck speed within preecribed limits. 4. Know, don't guess, your inflation pressures. Proper inflation pressure is as important as proper loads and speeds. 5. Tires aro limited" in shock ab- sorbing power. Careful, slow driving on rough: or natty roads will, reduce tire costa 6. Cheek your wheel alignment. Tires cannot give full service if sub- jected to the diagonal grind result- ing from improper mounting or from misalfgvied wheels. 7. Chains and other anti-skid de -1 ~ices injure tires. Use chains only as long as the traction wheels are likely to •slip, and apply them loosely. 8. Tires, especially pneumatics, are cut or scraped occasionally by bent fenders or improperly built bodies when the loaded truck travels over rough places. Carefully watch the earanee of your tires THE HOBO There carne a hobo to my door; as ceased the winter day; he said his poor old feet were sore, he'd walked a. weary wa7, and he would like a place to snore, a chance to hit elle hay, I to1131n1 victuals by the pail, leis urgent need In mind; when ho was'•fiiled he told a tale of fortunes most unkind; be Bald he'll like 4o earn Memo . kale, if he.. a: Job could. find, I Bald, ""You've reached soy, humble dao, I bid you linger here,, and you May earn some iron' Men to round out your career; I need a man ter Hord by bone-- lYl litre you by the year." And all the night I lay awake up - building pleasant plans; one homeless wanderer I'd take from ranks of also rano, and smooth -tile reed. tar one poor Jake to whom Fate tied °her case. And in the morixipg, at his door I rapped, and cried, "Arise! Tlfe t 111e groans 'neat. grub ga7oro, comprising prunes and pies; don t keep es wetting any more-; You'll hustle it you're wise," But none responded 'to any cane 'the bo had wandered thence; when standee of night enehx'ouded all, he jumped my resldsuee, and he had swiped. my basket ball, the clothesline and the fence. 011, most of we right gladly would relieve some human woe; but most of us at times' have stood for things like this, you know, and if we tire of doing good, it's"• not surprising, bo! reason assigned is her absence in, New Zealand. Among the big. mansions offered for rent is that of Esher Place, in Surrey, Which belongs to L rd d'Ab An even nxore remarkable and bet STO KED CASTLES The eighth Duke of Rutland, too, lei ter known place welch is to be rented as j loading, badlyrusted Leaves cls to tight, axle spring not properly f tened to the axle, and because th shackle is inoperative, due to a broken shackle bolt or stiff shackle. 'Standard Tires -Ona of the paten arguments against buying a numbe of trucks of different makes is t11 difference in tire sizesthatis usuall involved. The idealcondition for th truck fleet is.a single tire size for aI vehicles, and every operator ought to guard against multiplicity of tire sizes in his fleet. - Etching -The car owner may occa- sionally desire to put his naive or ini- tials on some metal place or surface, This is best done by etching, and if it is iron or steel mix a half ounce' nitric' acid„ ' Shake these well, when they are ready to.use. Cover the place to be etched with beeswax melt- ed, and when this is cold write who is desired be the wax, clear down to the metal, using a sharp instrument fur the purpose. Now apply the acid mixture with a feather, Being careful to fill each letter. Let the acid stand for ten minutes and pour water in it This stops the etching and the wax may he removes'. t OF OLD ENGLAND tl PUT UPON THE AUCTION y BLOCK. e , Many Landed Leaders of Bri- tish Society Now in Ranks of New Poor. England's big estates,• with their enormous game reserves,. golf linlce, of beautiful gardens and historic trad tions, are 'rapidly being broken up There are on the market today mor faInoeneold'manor houses, castles an ,country re -Menem) of British peers than there °have been at any previous time, " The end of the fox ane deer bunts Is in sight, Grain fields are telttug th place of hunting parks and the new owners refuse to have them overrun by packs of 'dogs end scores of -horse Unique Exhibition of Live Silver Foxes. Mare than 350 foxes, the very cream of the silver fox aristocracy of Amore ea. were dipslayed at the exhibition -In Montreal, November 24th 25th and 26th, It was easily the largest exhibi- tion -of hocking ever held., anywhere and demonstrated that fox -ranching bee become firmly established in Canadaand the northern United State)), - Financial assistance was given lig the Federal Department of Agripxl- turn and the provincial' governments of Princo Edward Island, New Bruns- wick, Quebec and. Ontario, while the exhibition was managed by officials of the Commission of Conservation. Prince Edward Island easily held premier place in the numoer of ant mals exhibited and also in the num• bar of prizes won. However, foxes from northern Quebec and Nova Scotia captured some of the prizes rad in many other instances received e highly creditable scores. Foxes whose forbears were brought from Al - =kit made an excellent showing and, although few in number, carried off some of the leading Prizes. Quebec t ton'es also made a good showingand, with the experience gained at Mont- p real, their owners will provide still stronger competition at future exhi- bitions, Although exbibltors from the United 0 States were, admitted to the exhibi- tion on practically an equal' footing • with those from Canada, the number of animals from. American ranches was disappointingly small. - As a °observation measure, the ex- hibition was important. The rapid and. seemingly inevitable depletion af' fur-bearere• h the wild state makes it '1 essential that they be domesticated w sufficiently to permit of their being bred in captivity. The exhibiton will become an annual event and otbei ter - bearing animals, such as red, fox, Patch fox, mink, fisher, marten; beaver and muskrat, which are being "ranch- ed," will also be shove. • Migratory Bird Treaty Endorsed., - The Supreme. Court of Prince Ed- ward Island has rendered judgment, in an appeal from a decision of a lo- cal mag;strate, upholding the Jurisdic- tion of the Dominion Parliament In passing the Migratory Bird Conven- tion Act, and enabling act to confirm the provisions of the Migratory Bird Treaty, The originaldecision of the magistrate was based on the opinion that the birds found in the province were the property of the province. This Prince Edward Island Supreme Court decision endorses the opinion xpressed by the United States Su preme Court in rendering judgment in the 'ease of a similar appeal by the State of Missouri, to the effect that nitgratory birds traversed many of he states and provinces In their flights, that they were the common roperty of the public, and therefore a national and not sectional reapon sibility. The judgments of the Supreme Courts of Prince Edward Island end of the United States would seem to es- tablish the fact that the provisions of the Migratory Bird Treaty are amply secured by the enabling acts of the two countries concerned. Nineteen thousand tractors came nee Canada free of duty during the ars at a cost of $17,000,000. offering ere of Ills country seats for sale, Castle Hill, together with 01d Hall, and other; "parcels" in the town of Bakewell, w , Derbyshire, At Odibam are the remains. of an an- cient castle which is renowned in the history of England. .It is offered for sale by Sir Gerald Mildmay, baronet, togetber with some 4,600 acres sur- rounding the castle. In 1216, when Prince Louis, afterward Louis VIII. of France, pretender to the English throne, and in league with the power - tel barons who were in rebellion against young King henry III. of Eng- land, held most of the eastern part of England, Odiham Castle played a pro- s nllnennt part 1n behalf of King Henry, Another powerful castle which play- ed a moat prominent part ie. history d is that of Pembroke, the birthplace of Henry VII. Although now ea ruins, It was, in its day, strong enough to 'i+e• silt -'the all but irresistible- army of Oliver Cromwell, although the latter e led in person and made terrific effortse to carry the stronghold. Lack of w ter finally compelled the besieged to 5 give up. Its present owner, Sir Lewes ridden by sportsmen in red coats end silk hats. One London real estate firm ampere alone has cntry estates totaling neariy'200,0019 acres, to be offered for sale at public auction within the next few weeks,, and four times that amount to be disposed of by private treaty. While a tea,of the estates are being cold without being divided, the ma- jority of the largo ones and more than half those of less acreage aro offered 1n lots to suit the purchasers. Many of the landed leaders of Britishsoeiety have found themselves. -- within the ranks of the new poernd have been forced to 4011.. It Is contrary to cus- tom to raise the rent on the farms, although tales and other costs have almost doubled since leis. In order to be free from the Inv - milt of the annual rent the town of Shaftsbury a few months ago decided to buy its freedom in mueh the same manner as did the serfs of the• middle , ages: A local corporanon, purcheeed . tbo entire town 'from the lord of the adjoining mater, weo had owned it for years, and then,sold the houses and shops to the individual tenants. Many islands Changing Owners. Islands, both large and smell, have made up Part of the large estates that have changed hands recently or are still offered for sale. The islands of Rerme and Jethou, three mtles east of the IsIe of Guernsey, came under the hammer, as will a portion of the duchy of the Cornwall estate of the Prince of Wales, to which is an island of about seven acres. Others in the Shetland group known es the Brunner Isles, of 4,000 acres, and Parts of the Canaries are listed for sale. - Among the mettles to be sold, there is none with a more widespread tradi- tional'lustre in legendary lore than Edenitall, for many centuries the Dos- seesiou of the Musgrave family, The castle le fn Cumberland, T. Loved= Fuse, baronet, is offering it for sale. Osborne. Cottage For Sale. Even the seats of royalty are going under the hammer. Cabmen Cottage, long the Isle of Wight home of Prin- cess Beatrice of Saxe -Coburg, is up for sate. The princess, who was born April 20, 1884, was married in1909 to the Infante Alfonso Maria, of Orleans. It is believed that the recent death of the former Empress Eugenie, whose home was also on the Isle of Wight, is the reason for the decision to dispose of Osborne Cottage. - ley far the largest of the British es- tates which are to be auctioned off is that of Taymouth Castle, he the neigh- borhood of Kenmore, Aberfeldy and Amulreo, and watered by the River Tay, %n Perthshire, the Highlands of bonny Scotland- The land that goes with the castle is 60,000• acres in ex- tent, to visualize the magnitude of which just convert ft into miles and you have ninety -Linea square =lee of property spread before you. Not so bad, at aell A.11: this belongs to the Marquis of Breadalbane, who is seventh Earl of Breadelbano and incidohtaily also ba1•onet. - When the Taymouth Castle estate is deducted from, the marquis's other' holdings, his property will have shrunk to a mere 140,000 acres, which fa only about 219 square miles. Lady Tennyson, wife of Baron Hal- lam Tennyson, son of the poet, Alfred Tenaryeon, is looking far a purchaser of Monkshatob, a large manorial house near Guildford, in Surrey.• She ac- quired the property form her az-et hus- band, Andrew Hichens, who died in 1913. She became the wife of Baron Tennyson In 1918. Viscountess Jellioae, wife of the hero of the Scapa Flow fleet which de- feated the.Gerxmxn fleet in the North Sea, is offering tor sale St, Lawrence 13a11at Ventnor, Isle of Wight. The fs Newstead Abbey, the home of Lord Byron, the great poet. Its present owner is Sir e Oharlasar a hf lch m baron- et. o - rn et. Fate's Grim Jests. The strange tricks Fate plays with the iives of men iet illustrated by the recent ease of a diver who met his deatth;throughdrowning innnordinary bath, - 'The Incident cans to mind the case ref a sword -swallower who used to per- form outside public houses,-tbrusting a formidable blade ,several feet long down his throat ea often as his admin tag audience required him to-do- so. Yet [hie redoubtable eteel-eater died -from suffocation- as a result of swal- lowing a small fish -bone. There is an account of a Spaudsh bull -fighter who had earned consider- able repute in one quarter of Spain only to receive a fatal kick from a young steer on the farm of one of hie friends, A aImunlucky end was [bat of a circus peilarlyrrformer whose particular feat wee to plunge into a pond, chain- ed and manacled, and liberate himself before appearing on the surface. While taking a bath ora evening this performer took a dive into a river, and, becoming entangled in some weeds, lost his life, Hard Times, When you bought your pocket decry for 1921 you noticed that the first dollen pages or so contain a calendar of saints' days, holidays, and anni- versaries. Perhaps there is a remind- er when your fire insurance and other payments fell due. If, however, you had lived In the Middle Ages, and been as superstiti- ous as moat of your contemporaries, when you bought a calendar your first care would Have been to see what days were marked as, unlucky. Prior to the Reformation writers who claimed to know such lore drew up lists of Evil Days, so that prudent men should know when to avoid set- ting off on a journey, starting a piece of work, or getting married. It was, too, more than usually dangerous to fall 111 at these times. Here Is a complete list of these days: Jaxivary 1,'i, 4,, 5, 7, 10, 15; February 6, 7, 13; March 1, 6, 8; April 6, 11; May 3, 6, 7; June 7, 15; July 5, 19; August 15, 19; September 6,7; October 6; November 15, 16; December 15, 16, 17. Adversityo Binds. When two have taedo j y together g they Their gain may be their loss; Love only binds them with a tether Light as frail wreathed'inoss. When two have tasted grief together Their loss may be their gain; Love binds them so nor wind nor weather Has power to break his chain, Those ,Eoundary. Lines. Teoarlines the IRepwblie of ThArmbeundnia, array nged for . py President Wilson at the egelioitation of that little; stri •k c en country, have at this time scarcely more ehan'a curious historic interest, says an editorial in the Phil- adelphia adelpin Poetise Ledger. The legend is that of what might have been. As outlined on the map, we seethe 'liberal apportionment of territory giving this ancient Christian land the outlets to the Black Sea onthe one., hand and the Mediterranean on the other, which were. sorely needed 'if Armenia was to maintain a contact with the family of civilized nations, whereunto the United States had given her official welcome. During the two and a half years of Armenia's existence as a re- public the United States has not offi- cially lifted a finger to end the harry- ing or to mend the deplorable social condition. All that she has done for Armenis has been done in the name of the Near East Relief, with funds contributed by .American private gen- erosity. The outpouring of money to this land, more than 6,000 miles away, Is one of the finest recorded instances of the charity of a nation whose good - nen to distress at a distance, as 'cell as to the needy at home, is w•ithbut historic parallel, - - With the incessant turmoil in Asia Minor, due to the contention of Turks, Greeks, Bolshevists, Kurds, Tartars, Armenians and other races, afflicted or afflicting, slight sigaiflcance at- taches to the fact that in far-off Washington a reapportionment in favor of the weakest of these peoples has been suggested. Mr. Wilson has appointed 11r. Margenthau as medi- ator in his name, and Mr. Morgenthau is the ideal personal agent, but he is powerless to act alone against roving hordes of banditti who droop' across deserts or dawn from mountain faat- nesses and take what they will, when they please. At present they have turned the Armenian Government into the rubber stamp of a Soviet adminis- tration. '`hat rule does not -represent. the will of the people, but they sub- mit to it to save their lives. The com- nran enemy gf Armenia and America has'a certain fear of losing our trade in tobacco and •oil, and it is forced to admit that the missionary effort of America in the Levant is unselfish, i Otherwise, it will not do anything at our request except under compulsion: 1 Still Armed, The ijeople of "Germany-,µnes many Persons outside Ger9any,-ire watch- ;ing with deep interest the Coale of 241781rs in ;Bavaria, That country o12 pears to. 'be the moat conservative and the leas ropli'blicen of any in the old , German Empire, Munich, like orb f . i German' cities, had its ravolutientia:x upheaval in 1018; but ablee the death of ISurt!Eisner, the 'Socialist premier, it hes reverted to something like re- action,Tho Bavarian countryside is Ronan • Catholic, old- fashioifed and;:by; no meatis in love the modern political' theories that rule Berlin, Bavaria has not: yet disarmed, 'IS the rest; of Germany has, There are hundreds of thousands of rifles still in. private +hands in Bavaria. Most of. thorn aro in the hands of members of the Ein+rciinerwehi, or Citi 2,ns' Civi1 Guard, which i$ a mysterious organ-,.. i nation ' of controlled by the govern- ment. It was'erganized and is led by one Gsgrge Escherich, a .university. gradus.•ts with the title of I)oeter, who' has been superintendent of AO 13a- '`. varies), irorests and' who has a reputa- tion as air Attic= e-icpener and game hunter.. Locally it is called the Orgese/i, which isa convenient word coined i'rom the Rist syllables "of the woods ',Organization Escherich." The Orgesch is officered wholly with veteran soldiers; it drills openly, holds shooting tournaments and owes allegiance to none but Kerr Escherich,; who says that his militia force is're- ca:uited solely to rdsrst the Arend of Bolshevism, But Bolshevism is not a dan r ge that anyone in Germany sari•- ously forms to -day, whereas- the Orgesch thrives and grows' steadily more formidable, da1i1 e, M estpop o Toth i nk that it is kept in condition -to be used for the restoration of the monarchy, in Germany; steer tarn it is that; wh en; an attempt was nla'de to - ex -tend its organization to. Prussic its sponsors there were . men of such well-known monarchical vieM1vs• that the present Prussian government 'suppressed it firmly. The same, thing occurred in Saxony not long ago.. The real re-' publicans in Gexmaliy distrust Herr Escherich and are kept in un- easiness by rumors of approaching revolt in Bavaria. The name of Gen. Ludendarf3 comes now and then to the surface when such rumors are afloat; he is suspected of being Herr Esehcr- ich's military adviser. At the same time it is whispered that France 13 net entirely hostile to, the 01463011 and that its representatives have winked at the refusal of'Bavaria to give up, its rifles and pistols, because. the French believe that they could get along amicably with a Germany in which Bavaria was the chief power, though they are implacably,suspicio^as of Prussia and hostile to it. Much is going on 'beneath the stir face of German politics that we darn enly guess at, but whenever another eruption occurs we may expect to fled Herr Escherich and his otgar:izatiea near the centre of disturban-c. Red Teaching. European magazines for ,liiltirrn are making their appearance i:, ',1111,..h. the effort is made to sweep away all "superstitions" about God 14111 the church and to sort- in all directione.the, seed of class hatred. The child is taught to believe that the employer is the enemy of the employed an l that the rich have no heart for the paov:' and no right to any ac*nnrulation of possessions. There is to be no rising by honest toil and the sweat of he brow to any post of vantage above the general level of mediocrity. Ambition a delusion, and the.. will to, ei4ee;I points the way to misery for theze eft behind in tho race, There will be no incentive of reward and nno can1- etition, - In their effort to invert the natural laws and upset :divine ordainment the, Bolshevists ignore the teachings of history, the results of human exper- enee,- The schools in Russia to -day re founded on ethe shifting sand of theism, at the extreme of the reas- on from the once impregnable con- servatism of the orthodox church, 0 Ba1511evists have a song evimee Mozart a Composer at Four. 1 Mozart, the famous musician, com- posed pieces at tour and performed in public at five. The Chippewa Hydro Power Canal, of 185i miles, is one of the greatest engineering feats of modern times, as a a it will develop 500,000 horsepower at ti all estimated cost of $40;000,000, with Th burden ie, "We have got rid of God, now let us go after the priests." In the December issue of "The Red • Dawn" is this passage: "We despise their mythical Christ - nate; we despise their ehurch and Howe in New Brunswick, Port Anne in Nova Scotia, St, -Lawrence Islands, 1 Point Pelee and Broder in Ontario. P a 800 -foot fell of Water at •Queensten. Canada has 14 national parks, viz„ Rooky Mountains, Jasper, Buffalo, Waterton Lukes and Elk Island in Al- berta, Yoho Gluier,Revelstoke and Kootenay in British Columbia; Fort 4114WIC A+ RAzxeemef sopa Ari' fl)4 OP A pose. ©t= cAST'CR OIL 505 'YOU c1 p44r Ir `Ti'iATs A DANDY SOBA M1STE.R.-- HOW d1MMt: Tai C'AS' fl R. Alio Nos, i•o011110 1, REGLARFELLERS:-By Gene Byrnes c; `l7 i cASTak- It. WiNst'I'Y t' tNe• tT ti tics i;7R MY • a pRESCRiPTlO4045 13UR SPi ciAL,'tY }:err state, their army end their navy, heir artists and their poets, their tiros adios and their great Wren; we dos- ise them root and branch We laugh at them and all their flunkeys, wheth- it he a bishop or a god; for they aro not ours," The Bolshevists are jealous of the invasion of what they eoneider their bailiwick, by the Friends, or by the Salvation Army, or by any other hotly whose influence goes to contravene the teachings of destruction, hatred, ir- religion. The ghastly mischief is that the Bolshevists spread the poison of their doctrine' among the youngest and the most suscoptdble. The chil- dren are allowed to hear nothing ekes and they believe what they are told. The futnire offers a ,deplorable pros - Peet of a lend or•ergrowri by the tares of vicious doctrine where good wheat might have been planted. Even the cruelties inflicted on evicted aristo- crats are not so dreadful as the sys- tematic debauchery of the minds of the young under pretense of liberty. end enlightenment, There area 20,00c more millionaires in the United- States than before, the war.