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Show ARISTOCRACY HURT BY WAR'S CHANGES; (N. B. . staff Special.) LONDON. Ecr. 12. The backbone of the aristocracy ln England has been broken, states G-eorge 8. Street ln the Nineteenth Century. S ConsSTVattVS rrutgozlne with traditions Society us a swlectK element exercising exer-cising a force ln morals, politics, nnd religion no longer exists. Individuals there are of power, of dlrectivo force but the caste system no longer Is to be found. 'General society." ho writes, as an institution Is gone Nobody carea Tho prophecv that the experiences of war would tend to break down distinctions distinc-tions of claaa hoa been Justified on the whole but apart from that, w have been growing for fong so like one an-other an-other that airs of social superiority tend to absurdity, ijnly tho old-fashion". 1 i.oop them up. "Tim monotony of communism Is I never likely to b ours. One in.n is more powerful, one richer, one has better brains and their fellow treat them accordingly. But mere 'social position' is not a matter about which roasonabls peoplo are still concerned." Thus ln England titles now aro ob-Jsolete ob-Jsolete adornments I But, despite Street's arguments, Ithey're still crowding for the "entrw" and titles Just the same |