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The Exeter Advocate, 1919-1-16, Page 7PALACE F VERSAILLES CENTRE OF THE WORLD'S INTEREST tapestries incl furniture, removes' to places of safety during the Late war, are now being put bele. In the gar- dens the camouflage coverings on the statues are being removed, and the cruciform grand canal, three-quarter. There William of Prussia Was Proclaimed x n peror. of fire Gur� of a mile long and its arms together half a mile long, which had been ?Garan Federation on January 18, 1871 --Scene of camouflaged in order. to prevent air, Many f3tlterastox�c'i'e][ItS; plane" raids, is being restored." Wreathe:, the meeting -place of the Peaoe Conference, is about Mel saute sizeas London, Ontario. Twelve' smalee southwest of Paris, with 'which, <fity tot eeormeoted by rail and tram,' it its the Capital of trio Department of 1 Seine -et -Oise, and has a population of fifty or Sixty thousand, The 'town' is well laid out, andewes its oxistenee to the wend'erful Palace built by Louis XIV. (1643-1715). The ambition of Le Grande Monarque was to construct pa•:u•ee larger than any contemporary lau:5d':'ng, big 'eaouglt to be ,a re -:videlicet t for awls Court and * seat for his Gov- ermmenrt. Thereupon, he erected this great resadenee, wing the old hunt -- log 'chateau of Louiee XIII, .::r a central point. No fewer than thirty-six, thoasaad hors v;c'ra el'gaf ed upon the oonsteuutrznn of the immense building, wsl itlx a; ; 4 ap<ah'M of accom- modating Cra-e'ten fhon-4 fld persene, and cost over a bundeel xrzil1: nu del - tare, Apart feeno the Pnlaaoe, thole are no let its izarae of interest in 'i"ersailtes; the Church of Notre Dame, built by his t^rain on; the P cte;:tacit Church and idea T'n1;,i, a C`It,•ape'I being the ire way lemarleelde. The celebrated ten'.: court- (Jen de, ''gargle), 'Where the Depatieie o1 the National Ass.: nitily took the oath. never bodienelve unt,:i they lead •g+ivei h'razree a toz., titut•ion, is 11ow used ae a antt:sYunn, ahaa•11 of Europe _arta considering" the fate of former Kaiser WY:+helm of Germany, isthe striking historical incident of leas than fifty year 'ago.: It was at Vere :Ile; during the I+'raneo-PrussianI+*ar of 1870-•18.71 that Wi;lieli;a L, King of Prussia, at the head of the Gexniaat farces, had Iris I1eadqu amerce and (''t was there that he was proclaimed Emperor of Germany on January 18, 1871. There also, on February 20, iS7.1, the pre- z a i ia'aries of peace were :signed be- tween Frame and Genanuiy after m~auy poignant iiitrviea's between Blemarck and Th::era.. A little later, Marrhai MacMahen directed from there the "Verilles army" of G ov- crntaxF troops ul»Gh suppressed the Commune in Pars. Until 1879 Vereedilee was the seat' o£ tho ]'reneh Government. Referring to the interior of the Pa'aaee of Versailles, ees, M'r. Baldwin ;stye: "Unless we poeellety except the tlaal:,ery of Battlee, of all the apart- ment -4 'in the Palace the 'Galerr:'e des G :tees is the most eta ileinY . Certainly it is the most h;:storie, Thies ma'„gn,tfi- ceat room is lighted on one silk by townie:en great wiix:lows :in 'white aatarb!a arcade -a, On the other side. seveabeen oerrc :pondant�" arande;s ern fi1-ie 1 with over three hunde ed, bev- elled mirrors, Strengthened by 'the'ir white marble eiwh'i nment, they IN A FRENCH Ho3VITAL. 500 Little Patient,) Victims of War and Mellish Through villages swarming with troops andepacked with ordnance we arrived at en old:caeerne, which had been converted into the children's hospital of the district, saysean Am- eriean writer, 'It is in eharge 'of one of the first of America's children specialists.. Here are 500 little patients. This barracks Converted into a 'hospital is full of babies, the youngest being only six days old when I was there, 1 no par- ents. of the childrenchildrenages ear- l ents. Others have lost their mothers.; j their fathers are • serving in the 1 trenches. It is not always "easy to find out how they came to beorphans; there are such plentiful chances of losing parents who live continually under shell fire. One little boy, on being asked where his mother was, replied gravely: "My mamma, she is dead, Les boehes, they put a gun to }'er head, She is finished. I have no mamma." t The =childlike stoicism of these children is appalling. X spent two days among them and heard no cry- ing. Those who ars sick lie :motion- less as waxen images in their cots. Those who are supposedly well sit all day brooding and saying nothing. When first they arrive their faces are earth Colored. The first thing they have to bo taught is bow to be el.il- dren. They have to ba coaxed and induced to play; even then they soon grow weary. They seem to regard mere playing as frivolous and in- decorous; and so it is in the light of the tragedies they have witnessed. Children of seven have seen more of horror in three years than 'most old man have read about in a lifetime. Many of Chem have been captured by and recaptured from the Huns. They have been in villages where the dead lay in piles and not even the women were spared. They have been present while indecencies were 'Worked upon their mothers. They have seen men hanged, shot, bayonetted, and flung to roast in burning houses. The pie - tures of all these things hang in their eyes. When they play it is out of politeness to the kind Americans, not because they derive any pleasure from it. Night is the 'troublesome time. The children hide under their beds with terror. The nurses have to go the rounds continually. If the children would only cry, they would give warning. But instead they creep silently out from between the sheets and crouch against tho floor like dumb animals! That is what -they are when first they are brought in. Their most primitive instincts for the beginnings of cleanliness seem to have vanished. They have been fished out of eaves, ruined dugouts, broken houses. They are full of. skin 'dis- eases as the beggar who sat outside Dives' gate, only they have had no dogs to lick their sores. They have lived on offal so long that they have the faces of the extremely aged. And their hatred! Directly you utter the word "boche" all the night -gowned figures sit up in their cots and curse. 4 tl .ter ,i' Bast':;, Palace of Ver—fines, The Meeting Pune, Carefeatnee. Pace of the T,ot' s XV. (171S-1774), who lived alai etas;' in the Paluee, "contracted the three treaties of i, e-sa;illles. with .Aus- tu :t there, Lianas XVI, and his 'wife, Muria Antehiette of Austria, also re- • sifted there. With thea 1 1., rang of ycare anil the Fren;,h ltevolutr'un mane Emperor Napoleon L (1804-181.5), who visited Versailles y infrequently. Then, under the guise of re Loring it, Louis Philippe .cla'sznantled the Palace grace- fully, but, xi w a e .icaiiy, he did re- store it •,sir ger: r is to something -of ices former e'a . sn•::or by eorverting it into a netteetnn. He collected an im- mense number , of paint}irgs and ecu1p- tures, which, aside frim the historical portraits in the Palace and certatin pieces .of acta,pture in the gardens, have no great artistic merit. This works of reetora'tion cent $5,000,000. To British and American 'tourists Versailles is most interesting as the place where, -on November 30, 1782, the preliminary articles of peace be- tween Great Britain and the United Staters 's'ore signed by Benjamin Frankl4in.. In the following yeah', on September 3, Britain, France and Spain signed the treaty which 'ended their war, while on the 'satire day Britain recogniz'e'd the independence of the United State's by the :treaty of Paris, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams and John Jay being the sign - ere. Of especial intere'a't• at .the present t'm'e, when rile repre eutatives of the victorious allies. are remaking the dazzlingly reflect the light, and give its name to the hall. Here it was that ti eyrie once said of the assemblages which used to gather within these walls: "Statesmen who 'sit in a glass hones; ehould net be •eurpr.isecd if na: trona throw stones." The great room is further decorated by trophies in gilded. and- chased copper, and on the ceiling ,ane paintings trae:n;g Louis XIV.is mi leafy history, paintings which took Le Brun four years to execute. In the Grand Monarque's time this hall must have bean spe- sial', worth :seeing, for all the furni- ture --the tables and charas and stools, the tubs for the orange trees (which were his delight) , the eandee ?a'cra and chnndellers--were of solid :silver and .enamel. "It was in this room that the pre- liminary agreement of 1871 was signed, and here it was that William of Prussia was proclaimed German Emperor. Perhaps in this very place a new treaty of peace will be sigrsed which, while bringing law and order to the whole world, will signalize the end of the German Em- pire. It thus will have found its of- ficial beginning and official end in this place. , "For a time the great palace of Versailles, and ' not Paris, was the real Capleai o'f Franoe: To -day, for the nonce, it may become the Capital of the world. Here and there work- men are invading apartments .which hitherto have seemed to be inhabited but byy the ghosts of kings. Precious When they have done cursing of their own accord theysing the "Marseil- laise." An Inspired Definition. A teacher was reading to her class when she carne to the word "unaware." She asked if anyone knew the mean- ing. One little girl timidly raised her -'nand and offered the following defini- tion "It's what you put on first and take off last." Chinese Womeri"Sotdiers. China had women soldiers long be- fore they were known in Russia. Dur- ing the Tae Ping rebellion 1,850 women as well as men. served in the ranks. In. Nanking, in 18t3, an army of. 500,000 women were recruited. They were divided'into brigades of 13,000 each and -were commanded .by women'ofii- cers, BRITAIN STILL A ALLIES MUST COMPLETELY DEFEAT - C EF AT.. - C ITOR NATION THE RUSSIAN BOLSIIEVin MotherlandWeakened r �.�. Not Vf�catwed icy More Than Two Thousand 14lBions, A des»ateh from London says— The Observer, which is well informed on financial subjects, publishes to -day a significant article en post-war in- ternational finance, which has direct interest for Canadians. After re- ferring to the "recoverable assets" Britain has at command, the writer goes onto say: "Behind lie the prob- lems of the sum that will ultimately be produced in repayment of our loan to Allies and dominions, and of the amount we shall get out of Germany against our bill for damages. All { these uncertainties affect not only the tfuesti!a of how meek the rovcroiment will 'ware to raise every year.in ta`;a- tion, but also the larger problem of our poiiiun in international finance, and of our power to maintain our prestige and to control of the ex- change." -change " ' Discussing the question of "How we stand now," the writer says: "We are, on paper, still very much ' a creditor country. The Chancellor boasted, kith vary just pride, in hie budget speech last April, that all we had borrowed abroad during the war we 'tad borrowed In order to retool to Aliic: , so that with regard to our Iowa way cost wvo had been self-suftle- ing, The figures officially published, iii so far as they can be understood, more than bear out this statement," i The ar'taele suggests that Great I Britain should entirely wipe out her loan; to her Allies, Russia, France, Italy, Belgium, Serbia, , and others, "making; a present to our late bro- thers in areas, much harder hit than we are, of their promises" to pay, "We do not seem to have weakened our international position to the ex- ttnt ri much more than 2,00p mil- Ucn;, ley borrowing abroad and salez of securities;" says the article, "and 2,000 minions is only half the sum that was usually accepted before the war ae the amount of our overseas investments. So that we are still nearly half ou much a creditor coun- try as before the war, even after wip- ing out our Joann to Allies. Relative - e, of cour_e, 'tho weakening is great- er, because America and many neu- trals have increased their -wealth very rapidly during the war, while we have Igen losing; but there seems to be no reason for the vicw that we are no longer a creditor country, especially as we have another foreign aceount in our claim on Germany." SUITABLE MEMORIALS FOR • THE EMPIRE DEAD A despatch from Loudon says:-- °At -a meeting of the Imperial Graves Commission over which Right Hon. Walter Long, Colonial Secretary, pre- sided, and at which all British over- seas representatives were present, the chairman states that all overseas Governments had unreservedly agreed to bear their share of whatever ex- pense was involved in worthily honor- ing the memory of their dead. The commission, therefore, was free to discharge its task in no ungrudging or niggardly spirit. The commission adopted the recommendation that the most .suitable method of honoring those whose graves could not be found or identified would be to place a tab- let, appropriately inscribed, in a oeme- tery near the soot where it is believed the men were killed. It is estimated that there will be at least a thousand cemeteries, The commission decided to gels the Indian Government to formulate proposals for the 'establish- ment' of an agency in India for the care of British graves there. The commission also warmly thanked the Union of South Africa Government for its most generous offer to :Deet the entire cost of cemeteries anal for the provision of memorials to officers and Hien of the Imperial forces dying within the Union. see BRITAIN: ACQUIRES ORDNANCE STORES pongee of a World Revolution, Say Foz•zer Danish Minister . Just Arrived in London Front Russia, A despatch from London 'says:_.. by supplying the Germans with more Mr, Belie -eines, former bete h mine food and sending a feafficie:tt force to expel the Bolsbeviets Tram Petrograd ASO Moscow. Such e; force need riot be big because the whole population wos opposed to Boshevism..A.s soon as the Bolshevists were expelled from Petro- grad and Moscow the whole move- ment would collapse. He was sure an arrangement could be made with Fin- land to send volunteers for this pur- pose. The great danger was that if Bolshevism won that Germany would join Russia and Europe would be withoatt peace for a long time. That was why it was important to Enid' with Bolshevism inniediaatclo. ister, who has just arrives' in London from Russia, ,interviewed by Reuter's correspondent, said that the situation in Russia was hopeless as long as the Allies took no steps to end Bol- shevism, which was a real interna- tional danger and growing stronger every day; for the Bolshevist:e were marvelous propagandists and were working in all countries with the ob- ject ofcausing a world revolution. Ile was sure the Bolshevists would win in Getmaiiy unless the Allies took immediate steps to stop them Maskets *of the World . Breadstuffs i Toronto, Jan. 1a.---Mafa:i<44u 'wheat —No. 1. Nok thorn, $2.24%; No. 2 N3crthersa,NT$2.21i; . 3 .Ni �/3 .; No. 4 nh es 11 iii,, zn -tee.) Feet Wiliam, not hie.b,:t,ng tax. Minitel* oats—No. 2 C.W;, 781,,to;: No. 3 C.W,, 74e; extra. No. 1. feeJ,' 7:i;•sai No. 1 feed, 741.1c, in MYore Fort li : iiam, • Atnnr is sen earn '-- '.. 3 :•"-ow, 1c,1•:'a;elif,yellow,No,yellow, $1.70, J.ih:tart' , �tn Oetariso cats, :Ins" er4oj4•- .a, White, it_, 71 to 74e; No e3 white, 70 i o 78c, .aeoording :txr fteights ou'tFid°e. 1 Or int •o wheat—No 1 Winter, per . car -lot, $2.11 to $2.22; No'2:. do," $`2.11 to $2.19; No.3, do, x2.07 to $2,15; No. 1 Sprbig, ''; 09 No. 2 Spring, 52.06 to $2.1.4; No a •Spring, $2,0' to $2.10 f,tab, h - Icing points, according to frc,gi.g. f Peau --No. 2, $2.00 Bei,e— &tiaig. new erop, 92 to y31'4a 97e. a3eor;ling to freights 'oat. ides i Buckwheat—No. 2, $1.30. Rye --No, 2 ,$1.54, noinir.'el. Mn &tubaa floor --01J crop; war, clua:t, y, $11..35, Torrnto. j Ontario flour—War quu'*.y, a,13i crop, ^10.25, in bags, Montreal art' Toronto, prompt =shipment. Mi:;cess::-•--Car lots, delivered Mont. -1, real freights, bags ine:udeJ. Bran,1 $37,..o per tin, senor ts, $42...5 I;.,1 tog, hay --No. 1, $21 to $-2 per ton;; mixed $10 to $20 per ten, track Tor- onto.. Straw --Car Iota, 89.50 to $10.50,1 track Teroaito. I Country .Produce ---Wholesale i t Egg;' --No. 1 »tor'age, iiia to "6a, eel:feted, storage, 58 to '00e; carton ,', new laid, 75 to 78c. Butter:_+ -Creamery. steliis, 71 to do. printsr"'; , 53 td? ,asst., Choice ales a r , prints, 45 dto 47e; ordinary da ry, pinta 38 to 40e bakers', 30 to 33c; ; Oleem.argarine (beet gaa,le), 32 i'a • • 34c. Choc '0- Nem large 271 to 23e; twine 28 'Le 23iee; strain,; male, large, 28'v to 29e; twins 29 to 29See. Conib honey--CNhaiee, 16 oz., $4.50 to $5.00 per dozen; 12 ox., .$3.50 to .4.00 pee d'ozon. Maple Syrup In -ra:'^n taxis, :$3,25. Provisions—Wholesale Baw'e lect :h'e'at= -- Pickled park, 1,848; nacre pork, .$47. Green blew` --Or!' of p:ek-e, lc less' than sna,olecd. �* Smoked Meats --Rolls, 32c to 33e; kions, medium,' 38 to '39c; heavy. 30 to 31c; cooked hams. 51 to 52c; backs. 'Plain, 46 to 47,-; backs, bcaarires, 50' to 52e. B'rer.kfa: t bacon, 42 to 47c. Cottage a ole s, 35 to 36c. Drq Salted' M;eeta— Long Bears.i'tta tons, 80c; in easy-;, 301%•c; 'Rax be:— lies, 28 to 28%c; fat backs:, 25c. Lard—Pure, tiercee, 291.E to 30c; tubs'. 30 to 303c; pai'+s, 3011: to 30%e prints, 81 to 311fic. Shortening, tierces, 2514 to 25?! c; tube, 25% to 26c; pail's, 26 to 261Ic; 1 I'b. prints, ' 27 to 27 tic Montreal Markets 1 Montreal;, Jan. 1.1.—Oats+—Extra. 1 No. 1 feed . 90•e. Fame—New Ishtar- ; dard grade, $11.25 to $11.35. Relit- ' e doate—bags, 90 lbs. $4.25 to $4.50. 13 "ran. $37.25. Shortt. $42.25. Mon?lie, $68.00 to $70.00. -Hay—No. 2, per ton, car 4tota• $20.00 to $21.00. Cheese --Finest ea.sierns, 24 to 25e. Butter Ch.oieost, creamery, 52% to 531 c Eggs—Ce ected, 56 to 57c; No. 1:stock, 50c. Potatoes—Peer b'ag,• car Iota $1.70. Dre(s,se:d h'og's —Abatit,oir killed p25.50- to $26.00. :earn'—Pure, 'wood pails, 20 lbs. net, 31 to 32?£e. u Live Stock 'Markets par equipment. Toronto,, Jan, 14.—Choice heavy sitee'r,s, $13.00. to $13.50; • butchers' p . despatch from London sa ys Canadian ordnanee stores on this side have been sold to the Imperial authori- ties ender an arrangement insuring that the Canadian Government should receive 100 ecent.''ewes •t $: t e a.t l' c 4{a:4i 11 ,? t�: �a .5 go. -d, $11,00 to $11.50; do, medium $10.00 t .• • 810.25; do. •con m„n, to $8.50; lxt, 4 eirelee, $19.; 6 tc 811,,o0.; ,ia, naeJb,tna bills. $0.00 to r, $9.5t'; renal) bar; -e, :.,7.50 to.$8,00; but -.b '.s came. c:; Mw, $10.25 .,t;0. $10.75; d,a. gaol, $9.50 to $10',00; Aida. meei.'vna, .$8.50 to $8,75; da, rim:rete $7,00 't• $7.75 enker, $8,00 to • $'10 00; ftaede:'s, • $1U,50 to $,1,1,50; ca'ra s a`e, $f1.25 to $6.50; 0;. its kers::;, ,g. oa's to ehoico, $90,00 to $140.00; do. dein, and pied, $66.00 to $75,00: p:'ring. er , $00.OU ,'v> $140.00; �t"rl' •ivea,. 0.00 t, $13.50; y • er..i.Q , 23,0 't,' 813.50; e•pa,aig 'art's;, • $15.60 816.50; cake•.°, goad to Cre,.,e, $$i6.0f to $1.8.00; hag.:, f<ai and 'gat•* eel. $18..0 t $13.75; do. wotgho4 cfl care, $1.8.75 to $19.00; 4), ccantrV por.te, $18.25 to $1$.:0. Montreal, rejai Jen. 14.e-Cliente etsers $12 to $!3, n c;aa= $10.50 to $11.50 medium. $10.60 to $10; cbo ee butehaa $9 to 81.0; g., d bat"'•s, 8,50- nize suns $7.50, to $3 Cl1 'ee bet- tiler 1t-tiler caws, $3.50 to $10.50od;l, $' to $9; medium,. $7 to $7.50. C:a o ter,:, •eait,:e $5 to .$6. Sim,p, t9 t' $11,.l,ambs, $11 to $14; iri ii, cash calves, 812 to $15; ,mass fel. $it fir $7. Choice evlect hog_', off car. 813 to $1.8.50; *there, necor ling• t comity, ceie1h to $14. SNOWSItOED 106 SMILES TO ENLIST WITH C.1NA.DIANS A despateli from Londa,n sayst-- Captain John ).laeGregor, of the Can- adian Mounted Rifles, who was re- cently awarded the Victoria Cross. was a native of Cawdor, Nairnshire, Scotland, where his mother lives. At the outbreak of the war he snowshoed 100 miles to enlist. For leading the charge at Viiny Ridge in 1917 110 re- ceived the: D.C.M. and Ms comm: cion. and in January of last year won the Military Grose and a captaincy for his dc:ternain tion and gallantry at Hill 70, »g. Germany rails to Turn Over Illuge Quantities of Gene A despatch from London * ass:— Get7nany has fallen behind in the last month in turning over :material re- quired by the terms of the, arnaietic0. A checking to date shows a shortage of 685 heavy ;ens, 7,000 machine guns, 1,000 trench mortars, 600 nix- planes, 4,736 engines, 5,000 motor lorries and 130.000 railroad cars. Three Canadian Delegates. At Inter -Allied Conferences A despatch from Paris says:—La Liberty says it understands that Great Britain will have three special delegates for each of its Dominions, ineludi'aa; Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. The news- paper asks why the French protee- torates of Moopcco, Tunis and possi- bly Algeria, has no special represen- tation. A Promising Recruit. During his tour of duty, the officer of the day paused to question a sentry who was a new recruit. "If you should see an armed party approaching, what world you do?" asked the officer; "Turn out the guard, sir." "Very well. Suppose you saw a bat- tleship conning across the parade ground, what would you do?" "I should report at once to the hos. pital for examination; sir," was the prompt reply. Do not add salt to de soup in.:cook-- ing until it is thoroughly skimmed. • The salt will prevent the scrim from rising. *---......—.--- ` nAY DOL-.. O,z It THP'',KIND ' 'WOULDN'T LET OF A.DOG 1S Tri/�T YOUi'v 1 iM�1i bOG fIY.MY J WIFE. '-10uS , zJiFE IS 1->±ADIN' AROUND•--- ��ua-w /i�f YOU'RE .1GMl'LOYS' i'M G,OIN' NON,/ • WHAT t'S THE MATTER-WI-IERE• iS i"IiAT DOG? .. 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