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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-1-9, Page 6SIR ROBERT BORDENWILL MEND CONFERENCE OF NATIONS yz•iti::i i Dominions Will Receive Consideration Commensur With Their Participation an the War and Their. to Staters in British Commonwealth. A despatch from London says:— presenting. t The conference of representatives of presentatives,lxeir views by their re- the allied nations which was to began I The Brio at PArhs on January fl has been post- poned British delegation for one week owing to the de- velopment of the Cabinet crisis in Italy, It is now expected to meet en January 13; and arrangements to that end are being completed. The character and scope of this .conference is not likely to be defined Until it tuella me d y Mx•, Lloyd George, Mr. Bonar Law and . Mr, . Balfour, but there will be attached an extensive retinue of officials from the Foreign Office and from the various services, The Canadian Mission will proceed to Paris in time for this conference and the Prime Minister, Sir Robert Borden, will represent Canada inI ac these preliminary and important alis» view that it should ebets a formal isgthe I cucsions. Bring with a definite agenda to be ll! eongressahas notte for the official peace eonsidered, and offering a public re- can be calledshortor born fix as e port of conclusions to be reached in tattend it are An alternative p ,and delegates who are to attend it are conference t h- pIrod bosal is that this now in Paris, or on -their way there. e completely in- The belief is that the inter -allied con_I formal alicl given up to the freest ferences will require about a fort. possible consideration of all questions ria of peace as they affect the attitude Terence will beginth�tscwo k about the GERMANS which thepeace eon- WI,ED allied nations will take at first of. February., the Peace Conference. The questions of the representa- tion of the various countries entitled to be present at this congress h Atter 47 Years -Thio famous A closed in 1871 after the Prussians d cession, is to be re -opened for a gr year. prob- abilities are onherence. The wilI be followed the lendinglatter course more readilytoas itself o adjustment the "purposes in view: of aII differences be- tween the aIlee MA :� x AIRPLANES. not yet beeng ss avec fully settled, and may t British Army. of Occupation at xtot be until they are considered b Cbiegne Finds Skelton of • Huge Gotha. • A despatch frons London says:: Many German airplanes eve c so that they can " Y into the Peace Congressgo I the inter -allied conference, but it agreed with an f may be said that the British Do= programme. There is• no minions Will receive consideration difficulty about the representation at; commensurate with their participa- this conference as all the allied coun- I tion in the war, and their status tries will have ample oPPor`un•• L of the familyof British , ' � evacuated Cologne, according to 1 troyed m part by the Germans=` when when ------------------ _ nZiloils they ^vac 1 C 1 a —_�——"----� - I reports from British c'orr'espondents in the British area of occupation. . Among the dismantled machines is r T gTO II the skeleton of a huge Gothr.. It was l 1 .. � I l built to early 14 men, and on its �^ broad sings are �vn}ks, while little National Congress ----- iron ladders lead to the upper plane Favors the Group Under • where the machine • es 'Lague of Nations Idea. Commander Mu- . gunners were lock �% �•; posted, � Another machine ane for use in alt' LOYAL AAD re de Triomphe, Paris, which wag. efiled it by passing through in pro. eat 'Victory procession early in thei Ila t'.� FOR Brea tuffe BEFO. arkets of the World TUfaS VANISH M. GERMAN, v 1�►111?!8 Toz'oxxta, Jixix, 7 1Zlariikoba wheat li.., AWES 11.,i '' No, .1 Northern$2..2,4%;No. 2111 Northern $2.21 Nort ?! %; No. 3 Northern, £ ' `_ No, 4 wheat, $2.11%, in, Mienby.'S Report on Eastern store] Fort William, not includin 1• ,, , taxc, g Campaign Shows ,Ambitious, Manitoba oats --No. 2 C.W, ?fix%; L'inn, No, 3 C.W,, 71%c; extra No, 1 feed, 72%c; extra No, 1 'feed,71ij despatell £ruin Iaoiiclon say'-- store Fort William. bs, , in Details of what was,• American corn --No. 3 yellow, the most spectaculars operations e of $1.70; 1. 0;feNo 4 yyeellow, $1.65; sample the war became known recently when Toronto. x,50, track General Allenby's report on the Pal- onto.o.,:oats,' new oro estine campaign was published. Brit - white; 7o to, ?Se, No. 3 white, No, to ish, Indian, French, Itali"aii conthn- 72e, according to ouside. , gents participated • in -the fighting, Ontario wheato freights 1 and, in addition Arab forces frons car lot, $2.14 to Winter, per east of the Jordan rendered effective X2.11 to $2,2? No, . 2 $2.19; No. 3 Spring, $2.02 assistance. The British navy also to' $2,10, f.o.b., shipping points, ac had a share in the operations. cording to freights. p +tions.. Pori --No. 2, $2.00. I General Allenby's plan was ambi- Barley—Malting, NMalting, now crop, 90 to tions. He •sought to break the Turlc- 950, according to freights outside.ish lines, send his cavalry through Buckwheat—No. 2, $,1,36.and encompass what he describes as Rye --No. 2, $1,54, nominal. " a rectangle five miles in length and Manitoba flour—:01d crop, war 'twelve in depth, in whielt the Turkish quality $11,35, Toronto• troops were -crowded." By this stroke Ontario flour -War quality, old he planned to' cut the enemy's coin - BRITISH $10.25, in bags, Montreal and munication and . complete his discom- , Toronto, prompt shipment, I<T`1lreed--Car lots, •delivered Mont_' fiture by joining hands with the Teal freigl ' p37 25• Field Marshal Haig and Admiral Beatty Rewarded With Earldoms. . A despatch from London ~"t:oya:— E conferred on Field Beatty,- mire ion oftheir serv- pea' ton; shorts, $42.25 per ' A force vastly • superior to- the ton.Turkish armies was gathered against ed, $20.00 1,$$1 00 per ton; mix-; the right wing of the enemy's army, $20.00 to per. ton, track near the Mediterranean coast. ' On Toronto. ; the morning of September 19, ,after Straw -_Car rots, $9.50` to ,$10:50,' ani intense bombardment lasting only track Toronto. fifteen the ' ' rallied infantry ..-- eexx minutes ll' 1 arldoxn5 will be d c Country Produce -;--Wholesale • attacked. A great map was: torn ' Marshal Haig Eggs—No.in. 3t1 -t dhe u ' �.• T r Vic1 k oish Ad.to linesand 1C � ,n selected storage, 54 to 5throughhiit were recognition h storage, 58 to 60c• cartons,;;ant masses. of cavalry which had ices during the wax, according new laid, 75 to 78c, . ' been held in leash until the moment The iIaiI, to Butter. -Creamery, solids, 51 toihadarrived.•" �3e; do prints, 53 to 55e; • choice dairy • '"Within thirty-six hours," says It is stated that Generale Horne, prints, 45 Plunger $ n� ri to 4?c; ordinary dairy General Allenby, "all the main ave- , Dyng, Rawliel v Birdwthd !prints, to 40c; bakers'; 30 to 33c, noes of escape for the Seventh and and Allenby will be elevated a the ! garine (best Peerage, 34c, grade), 32 to, Eighth Turkish Armies had been The newspapers say that these' 'twine, Cheese --New, large, 27 to 28c•closed." by Hors will probably be accompanied large, 28 to 2 8%e; spring made, ( All organized enemy resistance grants of money. 3L to 9c• twins, 29 to 29xe,•ceased and roads •syer6 blocked by re - Immediate announcement of these to $5m 0 perdozen;r Y home, 16 oz., $4.50 treating men and transport. Then non is said .by The Mail to be $4 per dozen, 1- oz., $3.50 toy the allied air forces hurled them- robable, as Field Marshal Hai Maple S ru • , $ selves at the huddled masses of fees to remain in command of Y P In, 5 -gal' tins 3.25. Turks. . British armies until the Provisions—Wholesale "The Turkiarmies treaty ons—Wholesale sli melted into �eaco is signed and the army is Barrelled Meats—Pickled nothingness," says the report �,A nstructed on a peace basis, a $43; mess pork,- $47 Pork,, iii which he is taking Green Meats—Out of pickle, 1c less ~est, a deep ;than smoked. is recalled that Lord Roberts t hams Smoked Meats—Roll's, 32 to 33e. Winnipeg Had Plans I armored airplane ` e is an t A despatch from Delhi, India, I Completed When oolThg says:—Six thousand delegates•Peace C2aIi3e, trenches with machine guns. The ; ho says:—Six the National Gond' A despatch. from London says:-- wings are of corrugated steel and ; im gross here, from which the Moderates the e worlko Trenchard, in his report on steel plates a quarter of an inch thick' pry mostly abstained. 1ii'h the Malawi a e Independent Air protect all vital points as well as seats i th member f th Y Force makes two Council, e- tion how Berlin narrowly escaped a a- down through the uns pointof >_ ed the presidential dd o e Viceregal Cou '1 de- ' a -es an irrowl es roti i for men Two machine I e liver address and ape be -bottom ofthe fuse_ offered )n bomb o mb Io g ed re al b la co Y an a s e, dd u f' t f greetings o famous airman, Commanderd I wont is Majesty upon -- •� USING ARMY GARBAGE h u i ul greet t f -q ron under the P the successful R H ter Winnipeg. I urination or the war, "The 27th, group was established It glad to think, while des- ` in England," says General Trench- ( r pone monarchs were disappearin and " the K' • Com- ing -Emperor sat ever g' under the command of Com - firmly on the affections of his people. bombingBerlin re mender Mulock for the purpose of He suggested that the Congress and other cent Twofold Saving in Feeding Waste to £100, Swine. was Perhaps never before in the history Afri send is res. j of 4meiica, not to say the world, has ; ad.dr a message to the Peace Congress that capablerof carrying machines t India ryasY g out this work' the conservation of material, and the I thIt 1 epared to contribute in at the end of October. Although all salvageaof unavoidable waste, been every way posse a towards its sue- ranks had worked night and day to cess, and to su t Practiced so consistenlyperi and generals Beat pporl •i4he League of get the machines ready for aback_, as during the war period. Consider, Adm' Nations. lie thought la's repro- ing Berlin, they only completed the' for instance, the action of the corn- ;coin sentation at the Congress Quid be work three days before the signing mandant of one of our training c more numerous. Referring .to`-�,nSir J gree contribution to the war, armistice." who, realized that the' trice spirit of ' the ti asked how far I he Commander 14Iu1'ock received conservation is utilization. Tire CITY OF NALICZ BURNED IN SPITE,' SAYS CAPITALIST All Industries. Were Ruthlessly Strip. ped of Machinery and Materia'' --$2,000,400,000 -Damage. Poland was stripped of all material and machinery during the German oc- cupancy,' which ended November 11. On that day a few thousand soldiers of the Polish legion, aided by, the population of Warsaw, disarmed more than 20,000 German soldiers wh had planned a revolt against theirQ own oifieers. All food and all telephone Wires were removed` by the Germans. • All industrial plants were robbed and dismantled with the result that Poland will have a hard job to start in again even if financial and political conditions were of the.hest, observers say. Discussing the economic situa- tion in Poland, Stanislav Larlowski, 'director of the Commercial Bank of Warsaw, said to the correspondent: "It will take t nearly $2,000,000,000 to repair the damage done during the German occupation and to put us' on our feet properly and to' develop our great g natural resources. Our oil pro- ducts return. 500,000,000 marks annu- ally, and we are rih'in coal and salt mines;: potash, forests and agricul- tural products. Stable Regime Essential. "First, we must establish a sound government which will have` the con- fidence of the outside works. Any got.. eminent must have money to run itself, but it cannot get money with- out confidence. When such a govern- ment is established we will put out foreign loans for the purpose of buy- ing materials and starting up factor- ies. 'It is even necessary for us to obtain loans in order to buy clothes, - also machinery and locomotives. Everything in the country must be junction was made- with the Arabs, rebuilt along new lines. and the way to Damascus and Alep- "The Germans transported home all po was open." the machinery from the industrial me tum, 38 to 39c; heavy, 3p �` • city of ICalicz, and then set fire to ed a Parliamentary grant of to 31c; cooked' hams b1 t o SWORD -MAKING IN JAPAN the -City. This was one of their great 000, and that . Lord Kitchener 4S to 47c; bacics; 'boneless, 50'toa52c, crimes in 1914, given £50,000 after the . South Breakfast bacon, 42 to 47c. Every Process in 14lanufacture Has a g They did this I cats War. The rolls,35 to 36c. Cottage though there was no battle fought • These grants were inReligious Ceremonial, there. They drove, out the people by to the titles conferred upon .. Dry Salted Meats --Long clears, in bombing the oily and then robbed it tons, 30c; in cases, 3031 e; clear beI- The Field Marshal's sword which methodic illy, is reported that Vice -Admiral Ines, 28 to 28x�c;, fat backs, 25c. was recently presented to King "The Germans also requisitioned all ty will be Lard pure, tierces, 30 'to 303sc; George by Prince Yorihito is a speci-!the factories and machinery in given the rank of full tubs, 30x to 31c; pail's, 30% to men of one of the most curious arts i which is the PolishLodz; xrah Since he took over the 31x/�c; prints, 31x/s to 32c; shorten,. in the world. Japanese sword it machinery of the British fleet from ing, tierces, 2614 to 253 c; tubs, 25% 1 Manchester, with ol.n R. Jellicoe Ie has borne to• 26c; pails, 26 to 263.c; 1 -lb. tie of "Acting Admiral" prints, 27 to 27c. Marquis of 14lilfoxdhaven, coin-� Montreal Markets, ng the second cruiser squadron, 1 Montreal, Jan. 7,Oats, extra No t g dies sof the t „ h• g amps India would share in D.S.O. in 1916, the Chevalieren The anon, He estab the fruits of victor P gl fished a well-planned hog farm near' mazzdi as y He repudiated Legion of Honor 1918, the camp so that the waste from thea and f insulting the suggestion that In_ . twice mentioned in idespdespatches. He diens were unfit to govern them- married a Birmingham lady last selves, and hoped that the principles , month. of autonomy and self-determination would be extended to India. SURRENDERED U-BOATS ARE BEING DIVIDED U A MODEL KITCHEN Draught Closet Keeps Odors Away From Living -Rooms. .. -p When the housewife boils ham or A despatch from London says:— German submarines which have bee surrendered are being divided among the allies, according to The Mail, The newspaper says that fifteen Prance, ten to Italy, seven to Japan and four to the 'United States. The U-boats turned over to the United States are said to be now on their way r cross the Atlantic. The newspaper does not specify the manner in which the rest of the 127 surrendered submarines are to be alloted, FRENCH SOLDIERS OCCUPY THE HUNGARIAN CAPITAL A despatch from Paris says—Two r thousand French soldiers have enter- ed Budapest, the Hungarian capital, i according to a telegram from Zurich to the Temps. One detachment oc- i cupied the castle of Count Karolyi,1 where Field Marshal von Mackensen,1 of the German army, is interned. Gen. l Berthelot, commander of the allied . a forces in Roumania, is making a tour I P through Hungary to insure the proper ) a carrying out of the armistice. •t cabbage, everybody in the 1 an to be loved: =Mae_ • army xxtcllens might be profitably utilized. It is hardly necessary to mention that a plan of this kind re- presents a twofold saving, for in addi- tion to changing loss to profit, it eliminates most of the trouble and expense otherwise involved in gar- bage disposal. .r— "To be trusty • is a greater com- said toe nal any s are s vast cotton an woolen mills. q 3 made in Western ing their entire occupation they world; and the number of processes tinned to loot Lodz. Even last which they undergo before they ``pass tember they carried away all the the censor is greater than the more plates and floorings from the fa prosaic Western swordsmith ever les:' city, has been placed on the refixed shorts tol $11.35; rolled oats, �a e t imagined. 5 to $4.50 bran g Count Adam Tarnowski von Tar - list at his o•,vn request. shorts e r . s $37.25; Sword -making in Japan is a relig- now, Austro Hungarian represents - shorts 2a, Mouillie, $68.00 to loos art, and ever p $70.00; hay, No. 2, per ton, car rots I ligious ceremoniai, The chut ess linswhi h diplomatic relations a re- tive in the States at the time GERMANS EVACUATE RIGA $20.00 to $21.00. Cheese finest, TO ESCAPE BOLSH eastern the work is done contains lura e f that h were broken, said 24 to 2bc. Butter, choicest I creamery, 52 to 53e. Egg's, select - A despatch from Copenhagen per 9 No. 1 stock, 51c. Potatoes, says:—Owing to the advance of sup- hogs $'att .lots $1 70 Dressed 'rmer First Lord of the Ad feed 88c; flour, new standar Dure con- „ Sep - iron ctor- the s a e felt keenly that the Allied god of the sword-inalcer and the Governments had not recognized chief goddess of the Shintos. Bits of Poland. 's `paper and wx ps of straw are also The program of the present esepr forces of •Bolsheviks, says a $25.50. Lard, killed, $25.00 to employed to drive away evil spirits.' eminent for the division of lands and despatch from Berlin, the German'] lbs. net, 31 to 2pxr�ivae' wood pails, 20j No woman may enter the place, for the ownership of ave been compelled to evacu-I ows it. If the cooking rouse • troops h is done in pliment than the diminutive kitchenette of a mod- l do aid ate Ri ern apartment, a small edition of a . head of the Gulf German gas attack is very apt to be the result. r..:: . I Th who designed '• •� Rig the Livonian port at the Live Stock Market of Riga. Toronto, Jan, 7 --Choice I $le 00 e: architect the model kitchen recently installed in Paris, solved the cooking -odor prob- i Iem by. borrowing an idea utilized for many ! chemical elaboratoiiears in s Manwell-equipped cl ern seri operations are accompanied by disagreeable and often highly injur- ious fumes. Such operations are car- ried on in socalled draught -closets. The draught -closet of the model kitchen is very similar in construc- tion to the chemical draught -closet. It has glass doors through which the progress of the cooking opera- tions on the gas stove can be watched. A slit in the lower part of the glass doors admits air, and the heat, steam, smoke and cooking .odors escape through a flue placed in the upper part of the cabinet. If the draught -closet in kitchen or kitchenette is properly constructed nd provided with a good flue, it will revent even the odor of corned beef nd cabbage from penetrating into he living -rooms of the apartment. HERE'S A LETTER FROM OUR SON IN FRAtyCE- £IIS NEXT LETTER WILL ere FROM f�01—it,l• ra A "iVIYSTERY SHIP " d all in - a woman would bring a demon in her dustries, Count Tarnowskimines i thought, train, and imperil the mission of the . would lead to an economic stress in weapon. Poland, because it was too early to steers, choice, to $13.25• leave Before the worse begins prayer is put such laps into execution. cattle, , butchers offered° and various religious rites p $11.50 to $12.25; d'o, are observed exe the blade is said to FAITH IN DREAMS good, .$10.75 to $11.25; do. Hied}rim $9.50 to $9.75; do, common, $8,pp be well and truly made: After, the, $1 $8.25; bulls, choice, $10,.7 to weauoxx is polished and sharpened it ' -Lives Saved by Following Dream $9.25; do, rough bulls,$7.50 to 8.00; blessed, with offerings of saki rice Warning; pew,. butchers' cows, choce, $10.25 to or sweetmeats afterwardsThe faith of some people in dreams $10,75; do. good, $9.50 to $9.75• prayer- is strilcingillustrated by the story do, medium, $8.26 to $8.5a; do, coin' scrolls are read --and the sword is i mon, $7.00 to $7,, 76; stockers, $7.76 finished. ' Mrs. Fry, of Lewes, who, although to $10.50; feed'e to $10.25 to $11.25•! -------'+-- repeatedly informed by the War Of- . canners, $5.50 $5.85; milkers, CANADIAN MAIL FOR fico, the commanding officer, and sonhe good to choice, $90.00 io $150.00 chaplain of His company that her do.. corn. and med., $65.00 to $75.00; FORCES IN SIBERIA was killed fifteen months ago, 'springers, $r0 ,00 to $150,00 g , ewes,tead- $9.00 to $10,00. light A despatch from simply refused to believe he was dead, . to ; yearlings, Vladivostok ' because she dreamt he was 1.50; spring lambs, says:—The steamer Neign Chow has alive. $15.00 to $16,00; calves, good to arrived here with a cargo of military ' choice, $14:00 to $17.00, hogs, fed supplies and 61 sacks of mail for the i Constant dreams of her son buoyed and watered,18.00up her slopes, and she expressed 21 $ , , $17.00. weighed off Canadian forces in Siberia her - cars, $18.25; do. f.o.b, I Th • This is one of the "Mystery ships" which looks like an ordinary tramp steamer. In reality she is a vessel of an entirelynovel type, armed with guns which are concealed and can bunmask. in ha afew seconds. In addition she has a very heavy armament of torpedoes and depth charge throwers, but she is built with a draught of only 3x feet which made her practically immune from submarine attack. It is an- nounced that one of these ships will be sent on a tour' of the Empire and that it is hoped her light draught will enable her to pass through the St. Lawrence canal's and he brought to lake ports. HE'S JUST 1_IKOt,I.1 TOLD HIM TO WEAR H1S HEAVY SOCKS AND WOOLENS tty i'HE. TRENCHES AND KEEP + IUI.1DLED UP- I I or 4 , as I WRITE HIM A<rAIN - 1 -IE MuAT 00 Ae , I TELL HIM• WHY DO KEEP NAGG ' T THE r Neign Chow also brought equipment self in no way astonished when at glast she heard that he was a prisoner • for the Vladivostok branch ',of the in Germany. Royal Bank of Canada, the first Cana- I Ten days before the Titanic dis- ILL VISIT U.S. I dian financial institution to. ire repro- t e. Rae arrived i eon, vice - PRINCE OF WALES WILL dater the Hon. J C Middleton, t ---- j seined her Manager" A despatch from London says:—It eek ago e. way of Japan, a president -of the Akron -Canton irai understood:Ohio, who had booked a pas- isway in 01 h that King George ands Queen Mary assured" President Wil- I Seaweed offers a prolific source of ; sage on the ill-fated liner, dreamt he son that the Prince of Wales will visit ;fuel oil whenes t saw the ship capsized in mid -ocean the United States during his comingexhausted, accordingltosanpliEn English re and a lot of passengers struggling inn trip through g the water. The following night he the British Dominions,r professor, who has obtained seven dreamt exactly the same i;hing, and • according to a Paris despatch to The gallons from a ton vegetable mat- Mail I ter• this so impressed him that'he decided �.. _ to cancel his — ,. .....,: ,. Passage, „ Mr. Melton Prior, the famous war • correspondent, once told the writes, how, on two occasions while in Africa, '(Cui at the time of the Zulu War, he IN' ry dreamt he saw himself shot and d �vit- OY - B' LET Nlih•nessed his own funeral.( Later, on >< THE WAR!!' arrival east: at Durban, he received_a let- ter from his mother stating that she rn //// 7-n T, `liad hada precisely simile,: dream, e'••\% rn and begging him not to go with a certain expedition, The coincidence so impressed hint that he obtained a substitute, who was killed with the r y1r, rest of the members of the expeclit.Ioti, it�l�r ��st�t�.At "• ►Gla The Spirit of the Nurses. A nurse who had been on 'board ytjir,'b ^t ,u tl a .torpedoed vessel, and who had p�'ui+sI!tr1$i'+'ltat�'�` drifted about in an open boat for uta + y ,{�•P���p�a p some time, was asked, in awstruek tones: "'We, en'ii you frightened?" "No," she .laughed, "We sang �evei'y comic song we could possibly think of, amid got the, wounded soldiers ly- ing in the, boat to 'join in de' choir, 'uses." 5, t S , :r wt -1Y DON'T - ENLDY t of. C Ea c flhTh I