would have happened to anyone. In Asaerioa who dared say anything so 
seditious during the war! Br. -aulsen of Copenhagen sent food 
right after the war and the Danish botanists mde up a mm togeth- 
er for the Vienna botanists, These wefi Bant to ih'au 9 for dis- 
trihution. Bar* Will© of lorway sent ooney once, alno. Bzeept 
for the soney scat hy Washington botanists that is all she knows 
about, ?rau S ot«as to he a recognized relief agency — it is odd 
iff should hare plowed her out, too. Because help has been sebt 
through her sh® is sosio times appealed t© when there is nothing 
to give, and it wrings her heart, when thore are children con- 
cerned— she aeons to think it isn't such a had thing for grown 
people to suffer a hit. She does not think much of Br. Sahl- 
bruckner because, with all the boxes ho received, he did not 
divide up with Tettstein and Teissier, and Teissier lias hinder, 
too, and Bahlbruekner hasn't, The Zs she says, were. very well 
off and are Making a fuss now tfstfri they have more than most. The 
night I wae at the Za they spoke of the Caechoslovaeks with hit- 
texaees, Prau a says Frau Z has an estate thore (she is a Ger- 
man of Bohemia) and they used to have an income from it, and had 
food sent down from the fana. How the- Czechs will not let a land- 
owner carry ft potato out of the country* Sough luck J Br, S is 
frora luagary, so the Brilliant work of the "peace " confer ano© Has 
cut hoth off froa their hones, i'hey arc going up to Prau %*» . 
hone over 3a»te*. The only way they can get anything frora the 
farm, if I understand aright, is to go t$er* and eat the produce, 
Neither »oney nor food can he taken out of the country. "leybe 
that isn't such a had solution of the ah sendee landlord problem, 
hut I do not suggest that, 1 look ii stressed over the Baseness 
of the Czechs. An* I have hoard dreadful tales of the way they 
search people at the frontier—I an glad I do not have to go 
