Look Our Pric Club Bags . . . . . .. . . . . . . . Men's Working Shirts all Men's Overalls, all sizes .. CLOTHING PRICES A _ Eastern Guardian . ncasranlv AGENT-Mr. .1. Men's Blue and Khaki Combination Overalls $2.35 to $5.50 Men's Working Socks 4 Mir for 81-09- aiul.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..2pairior$l.00 Men's Heavy Braces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 28c, 39c. 50c Men's Fleoced Lined Underwear . . . . . . . . .. 75c per garment Mill's Heavy Ribbed Underwear . . . . . . .. $1.25 each garment Men's Heavy Pure Wool Underwear . I . $1.75 each gannent Men's Caps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 'i5c to $2.50 Men's W 1., Gloves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $1.25 to $1.15 Men's Hollie-made Mitts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 50c Men's Harvest Pants, Khaki, Blue and Black and Striped . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........$l.50to82.50 Suit Cases. special $1.50. Other lines ...... .. $1.15 to $15.00 MEN DON'T FORGET OUR MEN ’S LOWEST HERE Prowse Bros - THE ONE PRICE STORE rvest l-ixou rsion iuousi an. MAKE‘ THIS STORE YOUR HEADQUARTERS BEFORE LEAVING r012 THE WEST WE CAN SUPPLY YOU WITH ALL YOUR WANTS EXCEPT FOOTWEAR es Over. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.50 to $20.00 sizes . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $1.00 to $2.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $1.00 to $3.00 3 pal! I01’ $1.00 DEPARTMENT. LWAYS THE ing could do was done for her but she bore her sufferings with Christ- ian patience and resignation to the w_ divine will fortified by all the ritas g d“ m m Monflof the I-loly Mother Church her soul Jag: u, fegelyg pasmd peacefully away. Her grave news ‘mum advermmg’ new and is not a grave it is a shrine where Mrs J. C. Manuel renewal subscriptions. GEORGETOWNJ- In gr innocence reposes bright over which [God's stars must love to shine and They Will Convince You. y ..'Mrs. Costello Dicks Charlotte- town ‘is visiting her uncle Capt. i Dicks. Georgetown. _____ ..'Mr John Fraser Bummerside re- = _ 3M1“ BENNETT’; V1511‘ 1'0 where when winter closes fair cpl-ins rcently Vlfllfbfl Gewfstown. the 8119511 connection shall come and in her garland twine lof his daughter Mrs. James is", g n; H _ R“ B, just like the heart of mine the chllder. glegimtghin: “i; Bgnnerfnon m-i-lwhitest of white roses. So must tho “m August m me Ladies com. friends feel as they go to the lowly f Li“ lgonsm-vggivg grave of this young women who . ‘gtigehgvemairameaaa meeting for-after a short illness was called toald. recently visited Georgetown immn w be addressed by Mggga still brighten home beyond there T H ll t 2" §°',',',‘_°',{,,"},,§{‘; af,,'"§,,,d‘,‘,“y“ "wit. beloved ones on earth. Besides her is vlsitln ed to this meeting when an Oppof-flfief stricken husband and father N. B. _30 to be the Guardian Angel of her tunity will be given for introduc- he" ‘"8 1e“ l>° m°um "V" 519W" - tions to Miss Bennett. k . JISLANDEB DEAD-The dea t m u, Georgetown. The many occured in Boston on Tuesday Julymvqueis mums and letters o! mn- 3i of Mrs. Howe formerly Pr-lsollinilrst-hv shown the Nah esteem 1n King daughter of Mr. John King Georgetown, after a short lllneorhluthe Word for n8- the medical skill and tender nurs- Carter's Bookstore loading departments for lsinmer are ' Sporting Goods. Sea Shore Goods oglwhlch she was held Adiew such is Tis more than words can say They do not part who do part thus for God is every where. 0. i<+>-——- PERSONALS . ..'lvllaster John Roach. Charlotte- town, is visiting friends in George! town. ..‘Mrs. Fred Chandler recently vis- .itcd Georgetown the guest oi her parents Mr and Mrs. Murdock Mc- yLean. A i ..'J. E. Locker-y, who has been pending ii vamtlon in Gooigetown left Tuesday for his home in WsstA- ~ ‘Souvenirs '“'°°“~ "- ‘- '___ News‘ B°°kfi i.'.lr‘r‘.'ri'.f“l‘..i;.fl’°friillli‘.fif"lllfi Mamin“ ~' $3.3"? 3.111112% ‘£3521? .‘I‘...’.'.°'.’.2 Newspapers. °*°'"““'"- . » A Up ' to ' date Stings and Bites Stationery The pain of insect bites disa - OiIicmSupplies ' 5.121. ‘"5"’ "'“‘ i“ 23?’; ' School Supplies “m” Prices always the lowest \ CARTER 8i C0. or’ » LIMITED. nnie in Boston and Jennie with . the firm of A. A. McDonald brothers land Hospital is spending herva- spiritual cation at her home in Georilttown ..‘Miss Mary Currie. Georgetown. g friends in New Glasgow. ..'M.r Wallace Crossman, Boston Mass, is visiting in Georgetown the 9177B“ gusts iof lier sister Mrs. G Yorstor. . Mr and Mrs. William White and daughter Phyllis of Borden motored to Georgetown recently -A-- ..‘Mi' Hllflflll Lavardier and his father. motored from Nova Scotia A to Georgetown recently- ..'Mr Alfred Clow. New Glasgow. N. B. spent the week end in George- town the guest of his sister. Mrs. Joseph Currie. Briifging Up Father ..'Mre. Refuse. Charlottetown. visiting in Georgetown the guest of. .'Mr and Mrs. James Allen, Emer- A .’Miss Cassie Daizlel R. N. P. E Ls- _-DANQE STRAND music Good time -B088-MILLBB Al} rurrx Biscuit, due to arrive Aug- ust 'lth at Bruce's. .-ANGLICAN SERVICIBP- 1!! 12th. inst. will be as follows: Bur- School l0 am. . __,_ --FOB SALE -- In the Town of Kenglngtcn, property of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Malone, consisting oi dwelling house, barn and lot. sizo 100 it. by 260 feet. If not sold on or before August 9th. it. will then Profltt, Kensingfon. —SUDDEN DEATII- At lndlln River on Wednesday. August 1, MYS- Roderick McLellan. Deceaped W118 the moment of death, which was most sudden. Her funeral was held On August 3. and was attended bi’ the many estimable friends that the family had in Indian River and other parts of the Province. Y a at 8 o'clock for the purpose of in- ducting Rev. _ the pggboffl] charge oi that congre- gation. Rev, R. H. Btavert will pre- side, luv. 'r. A. RodKer will Preach the sermon, Rev. W. Bruce Muir will address the minister. Rev. M. Scott Fulton, will address the peo- ple. Rev. Andrew Brown will induct. —PLEASAN'I VISIT.—MI'. Don- ald Walter Thompson of Edmonton. Alberta, one of the contributors to MBOLGEITS Magazine, is visiting the Island. l-le arrived here on ‘Saturday and leaves this morning ior Mont- real. Unfortunately Mr. Thompson's visit is altogether too brief to see the beauties and the productiveness of this Province. and besides it has rained almost ever since he reached our shores. During the last session of the Dominion Parliament he was engaged on Orders-oi-the-Day, as- sistant to the chief of that depart- ment. For, the past month he has been touring the Maritime Provinces Thomson is a nephew of Mr. Mal- colm Maclntyre, of Halifax. tending the railway wharf construc- tion here. - the North Shore. PERSONALS —Lawyer J. I... P. Saint Coour, of Iloston, and Madame J. L. P. Saint Cocur and Arthur LeBlanc are in Mlscouche with Mr. Martin Saint ,Coeur. i —-Mr. Albert Larkin, formerly of Alberton, and now of Syracuse, N. Y., returned to ‘his home on Thurs- day morning, after a brief visit to his old home and friends here. He holds a lucrative position as super- intendent of the Hydro Electric Company in Syracuse. —-Mrs. M rgaret ‘Prainor and daughter A elalde and son Lewis motored from Fall River, Mass, and are enjoying a pleasant visit with friends in Kinkora and Middleton. I scorpion. Western Guardian-t“ ' Till SOCIAL MENACE (Continued From “Page l) liililill‘. food, and other drinks; in- cldentslly she is ts provide esthotic, _ and sexual entertainment forthe men customers. . ‘Her sex appeal largely accounts for her success. Bhe is the succes- sor oi the old-tline rustler who worked in bars on a commission basis many years ago. divorced from the ‘ long before the Volstead Law went into effect. chief accomplishments of the Com- mittee in its early days . "The speak-scales and night clubs are now too numerous to succeed from the sale of liquor without the added attraction of ‘hostesses.’ Their use in these places did not become general until the last two or three years. The greatest demand ap- peared in the Fall oi 192'! when agencies and clubs became bold enough to advertise for recruits. So far as is known the only paper to accept these advertisements is one daily tabloid. “These advertisements have had the result of drawing not. only local girls into this occupation. but also girls from outside places in various parts of the United States. “Other hostesses from ‘closed’ dance. halls which in advertise ‘young, attractive girls over eighteen, experience unnecessary.’ Still others are known to have been inmates of houses in Albany, Troy, Detroit, and other cities still tolerating such re- —CIIABDOAL up ALPALIA Meal for foxes in stock at Bruce's. Kcnsington, Wed. eve. Aug‘. dnGmd . , 10030 the Parish oi New London on the lington 10.80 am. French River 2.80 p.m. with I-Ioly Communion. Sunday School one hour before those. two service. Kellsingturr 7 pm. Sunday be sold by Public-Auction on that date at 2 p. m. Apply to Louis O’- Connor, Executor, Clinton, or J. F. enjoying excellent health up to "It is believed that the night club and speak-easy have been directly responsible for a marked increase in the volume of vice. ally true, because they provide a place for operations. places have existed since the days oi the Rsines-law hotel and the saloon with back rooms." It is in respect to the generation of this day that the feels that the speak-easies bring about conditions in some respectsas serious, if not more so than, Ralnes-law-hotel situation, —THE PRESBYTERY of Prince Edward Island will meet in Keir Memorial Presbyterian Church. M111- peque onwednesday evening. A118- Fred Williamson to "For one thingnthey are attract- ing young men and young women of a class who never would have visited the old-time Rallies-law ho- tel. Some of these ‘clubs’ are cloak- cd with an apparent respectability which is likely to throw the unso- phisticated off their guard. saloons or the Ralnes-law hotels never catered to young persons of that class. and yet in later years were not permitted to go to such This is a matter for the people of New York to consider most seriously." The report states that of the 157 might clubs and speak-casles investi- jgated in 1927, 132, or nearly 85 per who is,cent., were identified with commer- cial vice, and that of the 441 women observed in these places 291, or 68 Major MacKenzie is per cent., were known to be of this showing Mr. Thomson the most in-l character. teresting parts of the City and its all hostesses whom the Committee's suburbs. This afternoon they visited lnvestisstvrfl did not question. as, the expense of repeated visits to ob-i tain evidence was prohibitive. A heavy fire "is directed at the’ the dance studios, which are alleg- ed, in fact, to be brazen halls of ,wlth a view perhaps to writing up. the principal points oi interest. Mini at present on the Island supcrlm‘ read. "ls a growing menace; it is here that the largest number of girls Commenting on another develop- ment, the report tells us that "a new cloak has been found in the private dance studio where the so- called ‘instructress’ takes the seek- cr for instruction into a private room and locks the door. lt is dif- ficult to find a legitimate reason for instruction so strictly private asi this; on the other hand, in six of. these places which were investigat-I ed by our men they were invariably solicited by the so-called ‘instruc- The success of these dance halls is said to be almost immedi- ate, as the number of their adver- —-Mlss Anna B. Hammil R. N- and Miss Ethel M. Hammil, arlgho‘ on. Mass, are spending their vaca- A tion with their parents Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Hammil, Ccntmli Bedcque. ‘ Bat- —Mrs. Robert Glover and Mrs. A- H. Hartwell Brighton, Maser, are visiting friends in Sea View. the A guests of their sister-in-law, Mrs. Joseph Stewart. It is twenty years since these people visited their 118.7.- ive province and are pleased to sec so much ‘progress made in that - A time. v A’. A tlscments in the same afternoon tabloid which advertises for hos- tesses for night clubs jumped from eight to twcnty-threeina compara- tively short time. Police Commissioner Warren. as quoted in the press, denies that in- lquity is as wide-spread as charged in the Committee of Fourteens ro- port with the laconic, "It's not so." But Mr. Worthington reiterates the charges, emphasizing that "condi- tions are worse than they were im- mediately before Prohibition." does not say, however, that Prohi- bition is at fault. g that "the condition arises from the non-enforcements of Prohibition, and it appears to be practically im- possible to enforci: it." "Such a blazing torch of ment» flung upon the wind does not set New York aflre, and there is no denial that speak-easles and dance halls exist as something more than and doctors searching and shock- window dressing for the devil. But Prohibition is held by some of the ; press on both sides of the political ~ fence to be the chief immediate cause which has pl ‘uced this mushroom growth of iniquity. The report. declares the New York Even- ing World striking indictment of the Prohibition 0n vice in New Yorkrqfonn, 50mg day these repgated City-as everywhere else": ._-.___ That was one of the are recruited extensively for This is especi- No similar Committee the which called the Committee into existence wmebmiy": nearly twenty-five years ago. Of the “It, thi speak-castes‘ menace we read: s 5 up. Look at herl" The The remaining 150 were and independent serv Castrol sign. This type of hall, we and serious get their start." T°"°""° WAKEFIELD ASTR MOTOR OI 0 O A Ila picnic ‘A warn?‘ ,“What's wrong“ now‘! More trouble? ’We had to come back ten miles. Thought you'd crashed car again. Engirie's all heated “Don't blame the car. Blame yourself. You, WILL use ordinary oil. I've told you a dozen times to put in a filling of réallytgood-oil-r. . .' There's a Castro! sign just up the road. Climb aboard that furnace of yours and bring it along and we'll cool it off with a nice, sweet filling of Castrol." For cool, sweet running in hotweather, Wakefield Castrol is ideal. You can make a long, fast country run and arrive at your destination with an engine giving maximum power. lMPOFtTANT-Castrol is sold onl ice stations. C. C. WAKEFIELD 8t CO. LIMITED "n.- All-British Firm HEAD_ OFFICE: LONDON ENGLAND Montreal __0l r.~' ti!!! by garages atch for the » ' 2w" "The commonplace drinking in colleges, the increased drinking on social occasions. the enormous in- crease in heavy drinking among women who drank little or not at all before Prohibition are well- known. Naturally the speak-easy and the worse type of night club run true to the spirit of the times, born ofthe foolish attempt to force upon millions of people a law which runs counter to human nature. It isthrcugh just such reports as these that the friends of temperance and decency will ultimately be forccdto the conclusion that some better way than Prohibition must be found to get at the evils of lntemperanoe. The realities and human nature can not be forever ignored." "We have had ‘from notable or- gsnizations of churchmen. lawyers, convince our turn to the temperance H0 He does assert the entire res indict the Volstead the r ahd worse ing condomhations of conditions produced in America by the well- nieant experiment of national Pro- hibitionflvcomments the New York Evening Post (Rep) "To these vor- dlcis we now must add the indirect yet none the less effective condem- nation of one oi t_ho oldest and most " 0M Ofmilitant cf our agencies for social and a gene prostitution." (Dem), “presents a ‘respectsblezlleas for change must nllgheg nothing beneficial realities of pretenses of Prohibition." trogrcssioh" reported by the Com- mittee of'Fourteen, observes New York Herald Tribune (Rep) “is quite in line with sions formed by the casual obser-v. er who can remember the extraor- dinary advance toward temperance and decency that marked the de- cade preceding the adoption of the Eighteenth Amendment, not onlyin this city, but everywhere else in the country." However, the New York Times (Ind. Dem.) says‘ that "not dance-hall, we are told, "is part of r to the demand for more dancing. was bound to subply a flcld of op- erations for the once-famous ‘cadet’ the problem is not essentialy ‘con- nected wtih liquor. Without Prohi- bition we should still have to take cognizance of the promiscuity of the dance ‘Palace’ and its facilities for what a more Puritan age used to call ‘temptation.’ " people that we must ington Post, the report will "pro- and quit the deadly The "re- the the impres- ponsibility rests with Law." The public Inevitably it ral market-place for But "this phase of If it locom- vide plenty of ammunition to both sides of the Prohibition issue.“ Mention should be made of one phase of New York's new under- world to which the Jersey city Journal, in the metropolitan area. calls attention. Chivalry revives with thisf "Even if the Committee's broad charge against the night clubs can be challenged, there is no doubt that "its pointing out of tho unde- sirabillty of any system that We‘ sents women's attractiveness M means of increasing sales of liquor . and food is justified. The type of employment that the Committee describes as havlnii B hardening and commercializing ef- fect upon the girl has no vim 1" the American system. "Ii the continued uxisterlceoftho night clubs is to moan the develop- ment of a Geisha girl class here. fill} clubs must go. and go in a hurry- -i-~Q-00-————— FREELAND. Institute met at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth Palmer f0? the July meeting. Eight membe" and six visitors were present- " W” moved and passed that the Insti- tute buy sugar and nuts to m!!!" else. says the Wash- fudae to be sold at the pInY- __ ' ow coLw-‘ri-ienss e mil h, inl‘! Frau.- an..." u in (‘la-oi Brim-ta “m”; WELL" MlKi ' WHAT‘§ THE GAN- Fri’: N 5 iNCE \'v a $12M iilfltj, .24. *B1:lmlinl.l~i-eim~.r.- ., NOT e0 (i000- . IN one or MY News VglTl-i ssrzerwsnu" ~ WEAK M°MENT6 o u AN i sue-r acn- - --.-.~..~..-.._, orx CAUGHT Ms 192.8