\ _ - »"‘~"Y‘o_i1`“fWl_|"nk° *hue pleasant is . ms - . __ _ g 'rap cHARLo'1'ra'rowN GUARDIAN mg; -pgqgi _ _ _ _ _ .. __ __ _ » H - ‘” ' .‘:l’-‘swf-l-= ' 3" E . ~ ~~ ~»,r‘;,.fL‘ ki wa ;;.1.1,_.,#,°.’:-_*gg »:.5,. -nf _ f- , . _ . _.--_ .-. --_. _ - - ` T .. -~_ _ , _ - _*_ ,_ N# " ' V' ', ‘ “ " 1 \- -'. _ . f '-_~ V- -'l’V# ~_»` ~'° 4 _ ~ ,_ .r-1'-_-' _ I' 1. _ .. A PENSLAR Doagces I Theiy are the most eilectivs relief or simple throat irrita- tion. huskiness, tickling sense. 1; tionso common at this season of the year. . Simply d_i§solye one or two of these antiseptic 'confections in the mouth and immediate relief will be felt. v Penslar Throat Doagees arc' packed in generous tins and sold only at our Penslar Store --250 a box. Fostcr’s Drugstore A Sloaris " Sl0an'l Liniment the I Punch that relieves rheumatic twinges 1 This we ni- mn ` - _ 5°°ii¢l’iI1§ cirg*ulat?on-s&mu‘l:gg;'i“e(ih- tdy penetrate: wilhoul rubbing right to _the aching spot and brings _quick "°h¢f» l\l~l`¢|Y. ¢|¢ll1l¥. A wonderful h¢|i>_ for _ external Jaarus, sprsins, strains, stiffness, hea ache, lumbago, bruises. p _ Get your bottle today-costs little, means much. Ask -y_our druggisi for If by Ming. Keep it handylfor the w_hole family. Made in Canada. The blg,huttlL.is-economy.--._» --A ` »-~. ifi rx iiuricn. Kills Pai r. g It 'is easier to find fault than to lose lt. ' Obllortunity and vacant lots must ’ Sunnyside be improved to make them pqallt- able . AGENTS WANTED clsssirirn invsarisrnsnrs <, osioas+a+sios»-ig saisorsanaunocs AGENTS WANTED PORTRAIT agents-a new line of proofs. First class finished portraits, frames at lowest prices. Call or write United Art Company. 4 Brunswick Ave. Toronto. » 1558-9-23MonME8i WAN LEU HELP... FEMALE GIRL WANTED- APPLY ARLING- _ ton Hotel 182 Great George Street. 1865-10-11M3lDd. WANTED AT ONCE FOR THE P. E. I. Hospital a smart girl for house- work. Apply Miss Kilburn, house- kveiwr- 1816-10-emu. : \ K . _ GIRL FOR GENERAL HOUSE- worli. Good wages. Apply to Mrs. P. C. Brown. 1486-9-17Mtf PHON 379 A.‘E. NELSON WHEN IN need of Hay or Oats. ‘ _ 1872-10-11m3l|.\d HATS AND TAMS MADE ALSO furs. 126 Dorchester Street. 1837-10-10M4lpil A FULL LINE OF HIGH CLASS ‘groceries at A. E. Nelson‘s Grafton Street East 1872-I0-11m3ipd BUY YOUR HAY AND OATB AT A. E; Nelson's. Phone 379 Grafton -Street East. 1871-10-11M6ipd. DOIVIINION EXPRESS MONEI Money Orders are on sale in five thousand offices throughout Oanodn. 1893-10-],4lneil WANTED TWO GIRLS FOR Davies Hotel, one for dining-room and one for chamber-maid. Apply Davies Hotel. FOR SALE AUCTION SALE OF STOCK AND Implements on farm of Daniel Mac- Donald, Clyde lliver, Thursday, Oct. l7t at 2 p.m. 1897-10-14-ln2lpd SECOND HAND KITCHEN STOVE for sale. Apply 26 Euston Street. 1864-10-11M3lpd. 1846-10-10-m3i FOR SALE MGLAUGHLIN CAR 4 Cylinders. thoroughly overhauled electric lights and self starter, in l’00d condition. Walter S. Grant. 1610-9-20ttf FOR SALE FA`RM SITUATED AT McEachern's Wharf,\ West River, consisting of 100 acres, with crop, stock and implements. Auction notice later. Apply to Hammond Crosby. Cornwall. 1885-10-12M3ipd. » HELP WANTl§l.k-MALE HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR BUT- ter and eggs. A. E. Nelson, Phone 379 Grafton ‘Street East. 1871-10-11M6iprl ARTHUR MORRISETTE, PIPE OR- gan Expert will- be ln this city Oct. 15th and will receive orders for ro pairing and tuning organs at the Revere Hotel. 1832~10-10I\i5I. vous Furuns FonE'roLD:si-:No dime. age, birrthdate for truthful ro- liable, convincing trial reading. Hazel Hause, P.O. Box 1408. Los Angeles, Cal. --1760-10-6 m sat Sipd TEACHER wfwwo ‘ ' WANTED TEACHER FOR ITONAGH School. No. 18, Supplement $50 for the reminder of the year. Apply Edwin Brazil, Secretary. 1883-10-12m3ipd WANTED WANTED A FEW CARS OF GOOD Timothy Hay, A.E. Nelson, Grafton Street East. 1872-10-11m3ipd WANTED-AN ASSISTANT CARE- taker for a Fox Ranch. Apply in writing P. O. Box 206, Charlotte- town, stating salary, age and ex- perience. giving references. 1870-10-11M3i. WI WILL PAY YOU |225 T0 DIS- tribute religious and patriotic liter- ature in your own community. Ex- perience not required. 90 days work. International Bible Press. Toronto. 1640-9-23M18i _ ’~'."'Ws'r'= S" '1 LOST ON MALPEQUE ROAD NAR. Broolrileld, Oct. Oth, spare -tyre and' rim, 30x3%. Please 'advise or leave; at oillce of W.K. Rogers, Ch‘town. ` isei-io-iimar STRAYED I-‘ROM .MY FARM ON' September 12t, two black heliers| calves. information kindly received by John Murray, North Wiltshire. _ _ _ _ 1894-10-lsmeli ' . , TENDERS _ ‘ ; u1Soa`lc‘c.l*i'llenderswiili'lbe rccviaivgldby e n uni. n n u a 0ct.u15i|i me purcolfase of be- tween 140 or 150 lambs and `l7 ` . - Tmders to specify how WANTED EXPERIENCED _HELP for ladies tailoring, one who can make pants or vests preferred. Ap- ply D. A. Bruce. 1849-10-M41. WANTED SMALL FURNISHED house or rooms for light house keeping. Apply J. A. Gillean Telephone Oilico. 1820-10-9M1wkpd WAREHOUSE WANTED. FAIR SIZE central, and dry. A large coach house would do. Write "Warehouse" box 128 City. 1714-10-2Mtf. TEACHER WANTED FOR 'SPRING field School, No. 12.-_ Supplement $60.00. Apply to Chester Easter, Soc'y, 0'Leary Road, Rjt. _ 1855-i0~~11frlm5i SALESMAN - EXCLUSIVE LINE for city. town or country. Big earn- ings guaranteed.Permanent all year job.No experience necessa.ry'.Wriic Luke Brothers. Limited, Montreal. 1896-10-14me0l PATRIOTIC, OTEADY, WELL PAID , employment at homo. in Wll' Of peace time-knit socks for us ou the fast. simple Auto Knitter. Per- ticulars today. Sc stamli- A\l¢° Kim' ggf Company, Dept. 0 B307 Collage 1\°f¢|,y,_ one 1541-9-ltllsti. .:‘:.“:fs:_..‘.‘;~...§:f’1.l;::.¥“°"°‘°*°","""T'El"""____ 0 _ - AUGUSTINE 0'NHELEY. Sec’y Farmers Instituto St. Peter's Bay. TU-LETA SIX ROOMED HOUSE. Apply 308 Grafton St. 1857-10-ilmti ooeooooooooooooowoooooooo beading Decadent Poet HIS ,Woo Greatest. Fame As s Fighter in the Air ®¢N APT. G. D'ANNUNZIlO, of the Royal Italian Flying Corps, has lived more intensely and more broadly, and has tasted s greater portion of glory, than any oi' the distinguished literary men of is time The whole range of sensa. .Ji . tion lies between the murk and swel- ter of the “Fuocos" and “Trlonfos della Morto" and the clear. hazardous air over Vienna.. whence the former- spostls of fetid sensuality showered -»¥10Wl\ “Pon the gaping populace ap- Poals to rise against its Hapsburg mllieri. i_\DlJ0&ls most likely of Gabriele d’Annunzio's own composi- tion. - ' When the poet steps out of the field of individual emotion to sing the deeds and triumphs of humanity, it is nearly always some other man's achievements from which he draws lllilliration, the warrior, the patriot statesman, the conqueror oi’ the seas or of the air. D‘Annunzio has not been content to absorb sensation by proxy. He mounted an airplane when aviation was still in its infancy, and is now completely one of the bird- men whom he turned into splendid copy.” To no literary man of his time has lt been gi-ven to' make himself such a. living national force. He was a leader of the nationalistic move- ment which brought Italy into the war in the face of extraordinary diili- cultles. We must go back to his fellow-Latin, Lamartine, for a paral- CAPT. GABBIELE D'ANNUNZIO. iel to the apotheosis which d'Annun- :lo won three years ago in the not- able fete at Genoa at the dedication of the monument to Garibaldi and his Thousand. There the poet deliv- ered, iu the presence of the King and a vast multitude, the oration which was everywhere accepted as Italy’a challenge to the Central Powers. D'Annunzio’s is not the case of the man snawhed by catastrophe from the cultivation of his own walled garden of pleasure or thought to a realisation of his kinship with lin- manity at large. War has always done that to the decadents, the cy- nios, and the rebel snarchs of art. During the first days of the war Ger- `hs.rdt Hauptmann emerged from the dank atmosphere of neufophatic lit- erature to put Germany’s case before the world as stoutly as the best of the Junkers. The war has brought Ana- tole France out oi' his cloistered skepticism to utter the same execra- tion of German designs that the sim- plest of his fellow-Parisians might gije expression -to. This, by the way, was the second time Anatole France came down from the higher atmos- phere to march shoulder to shoulder with his fellow-man; the earlier' cc- casion was Dreyfus, twenty years ago. The war has swept that most “Euro- pean” of all critics, Georg Brandes, from a state of lofty neutrality to hearty condemnation of German im- perialism. Of international literary figures Romain Rolland alone re- mains “above the turmoll”; and with him, too, thero was a moment when he more than wavered. That was when Ha\iptmann’s apology for Ger- many brought from Rolland a pas- sionate denunciatlon of German in- iqulties in Belgium. With d'Annunzio it has not been a sudden conversion. Lang before the war, he ga-ve signs oi’ wearylng of his musky arbors of passion. From the sensations of his own body he turned to sing the "Laudl" of nature and of heroes. It was, to be sure, still the gloriilcation of the individual in his indnlte capacities, but the step was easier to the next stage-from sky and sea. and heroism to the specific Italian sky and sea and the heroes of the Latin soil. The egolst became aware of his fellow-men, and oi' a higher entity than his own body and soul, namely, hisacountry, its past and its future. As rly as 1908 we ilnd him at work on a trilogy of national greatness beginning with “La Nays," which symbolized the glory of Ven/loo. lt is to d‘Annunzi":= credit that the failure of his nei I nture, from the point of view of i I it-.riai success. did not drive him b: It altogether to the enormously protimblo romances of lust and ilesh and sulti, death. The Lenser Expense. "1 hear that you have brought your daughter an automobile. Pretty expensive game, isn't it?" "No, it's a matter of economy. I lgilred that the car will keep liar away from bridl¢\pertiea." If you want to get up with the lark, go to bed without one! ity ie immortal. _ I . » k .,._ r. i Faith and hope may die. but char- uuils says Price Germany Has Asked 4 For an Armistice. - Prince llaxiiiiillan of Baden, the lm- Dslfhl Sends Nota to President Wilson, Asking I-lim en Assume Role of Mediator- Teu- wnl Odor to Accept Basis gl Peace Outlined by Allies. LONDON. Oct. 7.-Prince Maxi- milian of Baden, the German Imper- ial Chaiicellor, announced in the R¢l¢\1BlBB Saturday that he had sent a note, through the Swiss Govern- ment, to President Wilson, in which Mr. Wilscrwas- requested toialse up" -~ the brlnsins about or peace and to communicate upon ine subject with the other belllgerents. Austriaand Turkey will talre the same .step as Germany. The basis of the new Ger- H19-I1 DBMS Proposal is complete re- habilitation of Belgium, creation ui' popular assemblies in the Baltic pro- vinces, Lithuanin and Poland, and establishment of an independent fed- eral state of Alsace~Lorrs.ine. The text of the note forwarded by the Imperial German Chancellor, Prince Maximilian, to President Wil- son, through the Swiss Government, follows: - “The Gorman Government requests the President of the United States to take in hand the restoration of peace, acquaint all the belligerent states of this request, and invite them to send plenlpotentiaries for the purpose of opening negotiations. _ "It accepts the program set forth by the President of the United States ln his message to Congress on Jan. 8, and in his later pronouncements, es- pecially his speech of Sept. 27, as a basis for peace negotiations. "With a view to avoiding further bloodshed, the German Government requests the immediate conclusion of an armistice on land and sea, and ln the air." _ It is announced that Turkey will take a similar step. Austria-Hungary has resolved to ask President Wilson to make repre- sentation in their interest for a gen- eral armistlce and negotiations for rl general peace, according to a Berne despatch to the Havas Agency. The text of the Austrian proposal follows: “The Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, which has made only defensive war- iarc, and has borne witness several times to its desire to put an end to the bloodshed and conclude an honor- able peace, proposes by presentation to President Wilson to conclude im- mediately with him and his Allies a general armistice on land, on sea and in the air, and start without delay negotiations for peace. "These negotiations will be based on the fourteen points ln President Wilson’a msaage of Jan. 8, and the four points of his speech of Feb. 12 (Feb. 11), 1918, and those equally of Sept. 27, 1918." , The new peace note of Baron Bur- ian, Austro-Hungarian Foreign Min- ister, will declare that all of Qresi- dent Wilson's terms have been ac- cepted, according to s. Vienna ide- spatch, which is published in the Dutch press. Has Not Renclied President. __ WASHINGTON. Oct. 7. - Ger- many’s newest peace oiIer--propo:i- ing an armlstice while President Wil- son considers and conveys to the Allies a proposal on the basis of the terms laid down by the President himself--had not reached Washing- ton in omcial form, and there was, therefore, no authorized statement of how it was regarded by the United States. ___._‘_.... SERBS PURSUE ENEMY. Teutona Retire In Disorder In the Balkans. LONDON, Oct. 7.-Serbian forces after violent lighting on Friday en- tered Vranje, 50 miles northeast of Uskub, according to a Serbian omclal statement issu'ed yesterday. Several hundred prisoners were taken by the Serbs. The enemy is retiring in dis- order towards the north. The Serb- ian statement reads: . ~ "After violent lighting our advanc- ed guards entered Vranje on Friday. Several hundred prisoners and many guns were captured. The enemy is withdrawing northwards in dis- order." German troops which have been ilghting in the ranksof the Bulgar- ian army have been withdrawn and are now marching back toward their headquarters, says the ofliclal state- ment by the German General Army Headquarters. ` The text of this section of the German statement says: "Our troops, which hitherto had been lighting in the ranks of the Bulgarian army, have been with- drawn and are marching back toward their headquarters. They have com- pletely met the high demands made upon them and have accomplished ex- cellent work.” The Austrian War Olllce admits the withdrawal of Austrian troops from Vranje. An olllcial stltolllellt issued yesterday says: "On the Serbian front our advanc- ed troops have been wlthdrawn from Vrauje. "Near Neumarkt, in Southern Ty- rol, as a result of an Italian air raid on a prisoners' camp numerous Ital- ians were killed and Wounded." Two Important Reds-ements. LoNi5oN. oct. 7.-'rwo important enemy retirempnts are in proves!- The ilrst of these is on a seven-mils front south of Cambfili- Il iii due ¢° British pressure from the south in the direction of Le Oateau. and has amounted to between one and two miles. It is expected this retirement will have as its sequel the abandon- ment of Oambrai. here are increasing indications of T a probable retirement of the enemy from the Douai sector. _ . Only a good brass band can play all the airs the drum major puts on. If-_Fi if a msn's first love is himself, he never finds s sstlshctory successor. _ , ‘ \ A, ’ . - »'. '|1’:-- -""i» "`\_ 'I_' A: -1 /. I E Y. Q ,__ P i i. v gm L , ' Wy :I ocam ' _ The best way to get the most work out of the "human _ 44, engine" is to give it the food that has thc most energy ig ` in it. Of all foods, certainly this means FRY'S COCOA Quai. Q -the great food beverage that is all delicious nourish- I Arms' mcnt. If you have to work harder these days, try ‘a .. 1 regular course of FRY’S. .You will need less of other -ri Z .is,“,{§"f~;~5__A. . '_ and more expensive foods. _ There is concentrated 3: ,_ strength for muscle and brain in every single cup. l 3 -9 6 ` - -i` /' ` Truest economy-use FR Y’S 5” ' ioi I 1'*--_ .,.,,... -~ ~ -.-- _ . its Heater Week in Canada Learn this week how to keep warm the Pi»:nrrcrioNWAY Why People Buy Perfection Oil Heaters They give instaiit, economical, cheery warmth-in the bedroom, bath- room, sparcroom, sickroom, every room. 2. Provide quick and cheerful warmth for the cold office or shop. 3. Free you from coal-hod, ash-pan slavery-~a.~'sure you satisfactory dependable hcat when fuel fails, coal runs short, or when gas pressure runslow. 4. Smokeless, odorlcss, easy to keep clean, fill and light. ti 5. Easily and quicl-:ly re-wicked-with automatic wick stop to properly F regulate size of flame, also top draught regulator. 6. Made with hinged top and large oil fount that con\'en`cntly lifts out. ' 7. Neat, tidy, handsome, an ornament to any room-well finished and durable. They pay for themselves the first week-return their cost many times before wearing out. 9. Perfection Oil Heaters are not a luxury. They are a staple, dependable necessity for any building where people and cold meet. Examine the Perfection Oil Heater this wcclc at your »§ 1 _ I *_ -,V _.D-_~ .,~. W 1 “_ I. _ ,,.,z.,._-*pr/f, ._f.. ._, .,.- ,I ~" ~, p ,_ . ,.,, ,_ _,__ ,._ __¢ i .. .i P 1 - "'-»“‘ ‘ ~ ».'...’».'~%. inf" .F-`»f.»:-’;}:.1.f.'.‘.»1;,.;i't.§.;.¥» »1~f’»» ,.»,,» f- --- --1' - - _ ian 1>i;;i2Fi-_TCTIO ‘ ' ‘1-'< » ‘ i - .~¢I".>i i~‘on'sAi.E ni' nnAi.EnS Evan'-' wimnn `- ' I ~ ‘ \ 1 ' . ~