B..; iv {sonar a} .Wiien' s p e e d o n d revelry turned their heorts to \'Ul"\'l-l II ARI) THEM! TIIEYWE liltOillli‘. D OVER D1051‘ ALL THE Blfi lt:\I)I0.S’T.-\TIONS_l.\' 1'. S. IMATINEE DAILY 315 P M. 16—26c\ Today Fri. Sat. HILL BILLY SONGS DANCING-ROPING COMEDY-MUSIC Direct from the Old Barn Dance Radio Sta- tion in Chicago and N. B. C. RlifslY REUBEN RANCH BUYS NOW! SEE AND HEAR TH EM ON THE STAGE Slightly Increased Prices for this Stage and Screen Program Y, Sept. lh-Genetics, the science which s"t out to discover the laws lment of hereditary traits. says Dr. ‘C. B. Davenport of the Carnegie I iIii-titution station for experimen- tal evolution here. 'I‘lie name of the packages is genes. Theyi ‘.I.l'€ very small bo es 2 , under the highest microscopic pow- - ler, and with ultra-violet light. There are thousands of them in each cell of the human body. Each cell's multitude of genes is a du- plication of those in every other cell-a. perfect copy of the orig- inal sets from father andmother. Heredity is too often thought of‘ narrowly as merely the transmis- sion of traits from parents to child. But heredity is, in its broader as- pect. the control of IDdiVldLiBl de- velopment, Dr. Davenport says. The development of the young of any animal, the unfolding of the egg-potentialities into the child, is one of nature's greatest miracles. llfvll; lBll;|[l\\' AMR‘@ 'L'N l0 I tlnlunll Picture Iilk Riliiiiitl! lIiilSiIi-ISAIELIEVIELI. IILPii ifllflll ~ Gilli Lilfllilill ADDED , . . . COMEDY WITII IRVING S. COBB TODAY-fRL-SAT. c A P '1' o L MAT. llc—2ilc. EYE. 2iic—il2c. i]. ililAilLi-IY iLco. AUCTIONEERS City and Country Sales attended to- 194 Grafton Street Phone 1010 L-8G45-3 mos. Iroiessiona Bards McLEOD t? BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. J. A. BENTLEY, K. C. Barristers and Attorneys-at-Law MONEY T0 LOAN Office: 180 Richmond Street. .l.i\. lilacilonald, ii.0. BARRISTER, SOLICITOIL In. Illley Building Charlottetown, I’. E. Island. Money to Loan and Collection: Elven tho very beat attention, 675-2-6-lmonth. A- J. HASLAM, B.A., LL.B. BARRISTER, SULICITOIt, ETC. MONEY T0 LOAN. New Brace Building MacGulgan & Tramor Mark It. MucGuigan, It. C. b C. it. Clltr Trainer, B. A. Barristers, Soiiciiorl. etc. MONEY 'I‘0 LOAN Office: Over Provincial Bunk, Richmond Street, Chnrlclletewn. 'H. F. MacPHEE, B.A. NOTARY. Ac. BARBISTIB, SOLICITOB Illley Btllldilll. Chlrlollntowll BELL t? MATH IESON ‘IL n. nu o. L. minim... tun ' lltrilten d Solicitors Honey to Loon 1.1 At every stage that unfolding is under control oi factors inside the eilg- . These (actors are in part the genes. The child develops like the i parents because he has the same i kind of genes that they have. The ‘broad headed person develops-a l broad head because his family pos- ksesses certain special genes for , broad head form. i, “The great question before gene- ‘iticists now is: Just how do the ‘genes control development? And first we must recognize that not l, the microscopic genes are the mat- ierlai out of which the body is ,bulit, but rather the eds," Dr. 1 Davenport goes on. , l "And the egg has to work with i i grcai. swlftness. To construct from ,."t fciv cells a mouse lbirtli 0f moving about, suckling, reacting to various stimulus; D05- iscswd of muscle, skeleton the be- ginnings of thousands oi hairs aiid numerous glands, the circula- ‘tory system, a. complicated ner- , vous system made up of many i millions of cells, takes about 260 hours." It is the next job of genetics to l work out. along these hypothetical i lines, the method of production ‘by igenes, of the various tissues with ,thclr respective qualities at the ipoper timh and place. Sill iiiiotlier dircrtion in which the genetics of the future Will move is toward a better under- standing of the relation between hereditary changes and evolution. Most of the hereditary changes (mutations: which occur under the eyes of the breeder are not such as are required for DYORFOSSIl/e evo- lution. But some are: at least some mutations occur that iit the or- ganism for n. new niche in nature if such should arise. For example. a mutation has been found in a water ilca that enables it to only. or best. iii hot springs. This mutation is useless where there are no hot springs; but if and where ‘it occurs there are no hot springs the species is in luck and a new special adapted to life in hot springs has arisen. In the future genetics will be more and more concerned with the mechanism by which mutations are produced and with the way in which mutations become built up into new, adapted. forms of ani- mal and plant life. COLWYN BAY, Sept. i0.-—Mir>s Olive Haxton. the twcnty-year-old 2300000 heiress grand-daughter of the late Barney Bamato, the South African diamond magnate. is to be married to Mr. Fitzroy Puget Upsall Phillips. It, was announced last year that she was going to marry Mr. Ncvlli Melland, biit'the engagement was broken off. ' "It. was very short and sweet," Min Haxton said. "f was unoffi- cially engaged to Mr. Meliand for two weeks, then the marriage was announced. A week later we agrccd "to break it ofl‘. "f shall be married on September 2'1 at 8t. Mark's Church, North Audley street. "The honeymoon will be spent. in South America or South Africa. I have known Mr. Phillips for two and I half years. He was a friend ,of mine when my first engagement was announced." Iliad Hutton iii staying here with ,her grlndmother, Mrs. Barney Bar- nato. i-ler mother. who died in 1933. on "Tho Queen of Dis- 1m mflli” A SconicISiiots iitiiiiiiylliiiidlilisiifillélfi Traits In Traiisit-ionl COLD. seams HARBOR, N. , ,of heredity, has found the pztck- i '- iages, transmitted from parents to I ‘child, containing the entire assort- l in living cells. The genes lies close ‘ V. -to the limits of photographabilitl‘ live ‘ Missionary Work i, HWAIKING, Honan Province, China. Sept. 1l—D5.‘S])li(‘ sharp lshriiikage in revenues from abroad ‘Canadian mlssionazy activities in China are being pushed with fgreater vigor than ever before in ' their history. The expansion of mission enter- isubsidence of the wave 0f anti- ‘ioreignism which swept the coun- ‘try from 1927 to 1930. Government officials, under orders from Gen- eral Chiiing Kai-slick, are putting themselves out to bc accommodat- ing to missionazies. Year by year the Canadian mis- sionaries are pushing their work deeper into the backward rural districts of this north China pro- vinece. which has a population of more than 30,000,000. Because of the evangelical work of such mis- slonaries as Dr- G. M. Ross of Halifax, N. S., Dr. W. H. Grant oi Toionto and Miss Bertha Hodge of London. Ont., the mission was able to report that it had had more baptlsms during the past. year than in any similar period for 10 years. Two new schools have been op- ened by the Church of Canada Mission during the past year with the help of a $1.000 grant from the provincial government. The Canadian church is also co-oper- atlng with the government in its nationwide drive to reduce illiter- acy in China. Over wide areas in Honan, the Canadian missionaries are starting classes. This work is being carried into the interior, iere conditions are much the same as they were 500 or 1.000 years ago. Thousands have been taught to read and write the basic Chinese characters. The pinnce: in this new educa- tional work was the late Rev. J. H. Bruce of Alisa. Craig, Ont., who l died in i933 of typhus, while open- i l i Gamble’ M‘ ing a new project. The undertak- ling he started is being carried on land is expanding, however, under Miss Minnie Shipley of London, Rev. G. K. King of Fredericton. N. B.. R/ev. E. B. Copeland of Montreal, Miss J. H. Sommervllle of Saint John, N. B.,- and Mia Helen McDougall of Sarnla. Ont. The three hospitals of the Hon- an mission are today handling more patients than they ever did in the past. Equipment of the in- stitutions is being constantly im- pioved. Dr. G, G. Striithers of Gait and Hamilton, Ont., and Dr. R. B. McClure of Toronto, are among those who have had most l to do with llie development of hos- ipltal facilities of_ the Canadian l mission. i In the field of rural rchbbllita- tion, Rev. D. K. Garls of Aurora. ’Ont,, is showing Chinese farmers how they can bolster their income ‘by planting crops which have i heretofore not been grown in this \ territory. Rev. J. C. Matliicson of _ Winnipeg is taking the lead lii the iestablishment a’ rural co-opera- l tivc societies in this province. ‘Money, Valuables Astray in Mails Money and articles worth $385,850 were found in letters which had to be sent to the Dead Letter Office in Australia last year. For the year more than 3.000000 letters had to be aent to the Dead Letter Offices of the Common- wealth. Of these 4i 000 were posted with- out addresses. The unadclresscd let- ters contained money and valuables worth nearly $20.000.-- Australian Press Bureau. AUSTRALIA AGAIN SHOWS A SURPLUS CANBERRA, Sept. il-Australiirs remarkable recovery from depres- sion is, again evident in the Fed- eral Government's budgetary posi- tion which is expected to show a surplus or between $5.000,000 and $5,250,000, when the accounts are presented to parliament. against an estimated surplus of only $60,000. Even this does not disclose the full position, as provision has been mode for helping wheat growers to the extent of-$ll.000.000 from 0r- dlmry revenue, an amount which was not budseted. i- All the States‘ accounts, under the financial recovery plan, was allowed deficits this. year. but two of them, Quenrland and South Australia. are expected JG!!! i! .. V In North China l tortuflllltluflutiiifilisssrnoum o . CHESTER MORRIS VIRGINIA BRUCE ROBERT TAYLOR RILLVLE BURKE c) l. i ADDED . . . TODD — KELLY COMEDY AND MUSICAL A. & P. GYPSIES EVENING STARTS 7 P.l\I.-26c—-'!7c-45c, i Famous Firm Names l | Worthless at B a. n k ‘ HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Sept. 11- ‘ Names are names but ii the name of Dick PnivellfBette Davis. Paul i Muni or Warren William were signed to checks they would not ' be honoicd at any bank in the world. l Not that the forementloneo ‘ fifm players are not financially ‘responsible but because those are inot the names they use in busi- i ness transactions. i Forpnstanoe Dick Powell's bank [name is Richard E. Powell. Miss i Davis signs her Mrs. Harmon O. l Nelson. i, Paul Mum's legal signature is Muni Weisenfreund while Warren William's real name is W. W. Kiech. Jean Muir Fullerton is the real name of Jean Muir. Pat 0‘Erien signs his documents William Pat- rick O‘Brien and the name Ann Fenton is to be found on a check written by Ann Dvorak- . Margaret Lindsay's financial rating is-listed under the name of Margaret Kies. James Cagney has no other name but the amount of money kept in the bank in his name is small. A check for any considerable amount must be sign- ed and counterslgncd by his rep- resentatives, for Jimmy wants to save, and forces himself to do it. There must be a half a million samples of Joe E. Brown's signa- ture on baseballs, shirt fronts, theatre programs and ladies’ handbags. but none would be hon- ored at the bank. The name that spells money in that family is the signature of Joe's wife, Kathryn Brown. Rudy Valee is a moneyed man but the signature that unlocks his money bags is Hubert Prior Val- lee. It is no wonder then that fora- ers have a hard time oi it in Hollywood and that forgery of the stars‘ names is practically un- known here. Those autographs look fine in albums-but they are so much wasted ink at a bank. ALFONSUS MARRIAGE AN- NULLED BY VATICAN, LONDON HEARS LONDON, Scpt. il—-Formci- King Alfonso of Spain has received an annulment of his marriage from the Holy Rota of the Vatican. “The Sunday Referee" said in a dispatch from Rome. The rumor llns been recurrent for months that Alfonso was seek- ing an annulment, but it has been dciilcd repeatedly. "The Refciee" said that since the annulment was granted by the secret Rota tribunal. “ublicity had been excluded. The Vatican neither confirmed nor denies the report, it said. Princess Victoria Eugenia iknown as Ena), a niece of King Edward VII of England. They had six children, the boys being afflicted with 1'0 hereditary blood disease of haemophilia tuncontrollable bleeding from a cut.» Deeply in love early in their marriage, Alfonso and Ena began to have disagreements and, after years of friction, separated defin- iiely last year. The former Queen went back to llfngland and Alfonso remained on the continent. NAZISM WON'T GO AMONG AUSTRALIANS Germans resident and naturalized in Australia are not enthusiastic Nazis. Recently Professor Mannhardt of Marburg University, speakin; to the National German Council at. Kiel deplored the fact that the 40,000 Germans who had emigrated . to Australia. in the past, century had become divided and that German culture was flpldly disappearing amon their descendants. He out- lined n pllfl to imbue Germans in Australia. with the Nazi spirit to re-unite them and keep Germantsm alive in the Common lt.h., German residents there, however, are not inclined to be enthusiastic. report; show. The German Consul and the president of the Deutschel’ Turnvenin in Brisbane, for in- stance, have made it qlear that they have no wish to take an in- terest in the internal polltici of their olhmtry. The younger gen- eration 0f Austral-Germans have up in on Australian atmq. sphere with a puseh- Australian outwit-Australian Press Buregu, Alfonso was married in i006 to ' Opel; $5.3}? Flock T0 Movie Studios HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 11-11mm is music in the Hollywood air these days. The stars of opera are flock- iiig to the movie studios. The frantic scramble to sign Madame Ernestine Schumann- Helnk to a contract, which ended in a transcontinental race between two film executives, was only the climax oi a cycle that began when Grace Moore caroled a little opera in "One Night of Love." Since then no studio has been complete without a singer of two on its contract list. Already in pictures or contracted for appear- ances are Lily ‘lions, Marian Talley, Gladys Swztrtiiout, Helen Jepson, Grace Moore, Madame Schumann- Helnk- Nelson Eddy, Lawrence Tib- bett, and Nino Martini. The effect of this marriage of music and the movies, independent observers believe, will be two-fold: l. "It will be a tremendous force for the spreading of the standards of appreciation oi good music,” said Bernardino Molinari, noted conductor. 2. "Undoubtedly, it will improve our popular music," said Otto Klemnerer, equally renowned con- ductor. ~ “Hcreioforefl he said, "a movie studio composer was terribly re- stricted in his writing to the voice- range of the people who were to sing his songs. I would say he had to stay with in octave range. "With better singers, we will get better songs. It. seems to me the emergence of American popular music from barbarism into civiliz- atlon is just beginning." PROMIN NT YARMOUTII SHIPPING MAN PASSES YARMOUTH. N. 5.. Sept. l0.-- (C.P.): Charles W. Cann. pronun- ent. Yarmouth shipping man, suf- fered a heart attack and dropped dead Sunday at his summer home at Deerficld. YarmouI-h County, it ‘was learned here today. President of the Hugh Cann and Son Steamship Company for many years, Mr. Conn was well known in Canadian ivntcrs where his ships operated principally as coastal ves- sels. Mr. Caiin has been retired several years. his firm having been taken over by another company. Surviving are his third wife, Elizabeth Coulson Cann, formerly oi Worcester. Mass, two children by his second wife and two sisters, all residents of Yarmouth. DRAMATIC A class in English was given the task of writing folir lilies of dra- matic poetry, The results were var- ious, and, selecting the verse of a usually bright boy, the teacher read: A boy was ivalking down the track. The train iviis coming fast. The boy stepped ofi the railroad track To let the train go past. "This verse is very well done,’ said the teacher, "but it lacks drama. Try again. Johnny, and make it more dramatic" Where- upon, in a surprisingly short time. Johnny produced the following: A boy was walking down the track, The train was coming fast, » The train jumped off the railroad track To let the boy go past. ULM CO-PILOTKS WILL IS PROBATED SYDNEY, Sept. i0—-Co-pilot with Fflight-Lieut. Ulm in his tru- gic trans-Pacific flight last year. George McOoi-quodsle Littleiohn- 30, late of Balmoral, _left estate valued for probate purposes at $00,585. Leave to swear of his death was allowed and probate of the will was recently granted. Littlejohn bequeathed to the "committee. directors or ma‘- agers" of the Aero Olub his l0 de- bentures, each of the nominal value of i125, and left the residue of his estate in trust for the bene- fit. of his wife. Taking It LiteI-h-i-ly The new omce boy had bom ill- structod how to answer cfllorl. Just bofotie noon a man asked. "I! EM boos in?" _ "Ara you a salesman. o bill col- lector, or A friend of his?" the b0! inquired. _ "All three.“ was tho onlwfl‘. "Well, he's in a business confer- ence. He's out of town. Si» in AM XIIQ.” - The iiontral Guardian IUNIIAI. of the lute Mn. Boll Gillan will be held from Bt. James Church Friday at 2 o'clock to Sherwood Cemetery. POLICE DOUBT-At the Police 9°!" Volta-day morning o mm fill-Vlad with being drunk and in- capable was remanded till today. A mm charged with bfCMh of the Customs Act was fined $50 and costs 0! W0 months and with breach of the Prohibition Act $300 and costs or three months. LOOKING FOB HEIRS-The Heirs Research and Recovery Bur- eau of 316 Homer Laughlin Bldm, l“ Armies, Oulifdmia, are trying to locate the heirs of one Thomas David Warwick who was born on P111166 Edward Island in 1845, and was the son of Samuel J. Warwick and Mary Anderson. and who had a nieoo named Bel} Napier living in - Illinois. Anyone who knows of this family please communicate at once with the above named firm, FUNERAL SERVICE-The fun- eral of W. S. McKie, which was largely attended, was held from his residence, 254 Kent Street Tuesday afternoon to the Peoples‘ Cemetery. Services at the house and grave were conducted by Rev. W. L. Out- house, assisted by Rev. Carlyle Web- ster. The pallbearers were Col, H. M. Davison, Col. D. A. McKinnon, D.S.O., Messrs. W. H. Stevenson, Harry Williams, Henry Lowe and C. W. Patterson. JIECEIVES SAD NEWS-Mr, W. N- Tint-On. Jeweler, of this city, yesterday received a telegram an- nouncing the death of his sister Gertrude, Mrs. J. C. Rand, of 28 Sammont Street, Everett, Mass. Mrs, Rand had been in poor health for some time but able to go short time ago. The deceased leaves a sorrowing husband and one daughter, Hazel. and two sisters, Lavinia (Mrs. J. F. McKay) Arl- ington, Mass, and Clara, Mrs. A. R. Robertson, Everett, Mass, and‘ one brother. W. N. Tanton of this city. The deceased was a daughter or the late George P- Tanton and Mrs. Tanton oi this city. TAKES TEACHING POSITION —Mr. Winston J. Mayne, MA. Em‘ erald, left on Wednesday morning to take a position as assistant pro- fessor in Mathematics at .Brown University. Providence, RI. Mr. Mayne graduated from Prince of Wales College in 1032 with a High Honour Diploma, and from Acadia University in 1934. receiving a spe- cial prize in Mathematics. Last year he returned to Acadia to com- plete his work for the MA. de- gree, In addition to being a most successful student. he is an athlete of seine note, excelling in the pole vault, the high jump and the 100 yards dash. For several years he was located at Clinton where he taught school. Miuudh- Linlment cute Greuu PERSONALS “Mrs. Artemas Lord of Souris is spending two weeks with her friend, Mrs. Dean at Brighton Shore. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. McTague ne- turned to Tignish after a pleasant visit to Georgetown. Miss Margaret Conroy, Tlgnish was a. visitor to Charlottetown this week. Mr. C. Leard Jay of the C. N. Hotel staff accompanied by Mrs. Jay left this morning on a vac- ation trip to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. Mrs. Gilbert P. Brown, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J, C. Sims for lihe past three weeks, left yesterday ntoming on re- turn to her home in Bridgewaicr, N. S. Will Test Skill As Native Cooks (By The Canadian Press) NEW YORK. Sept. l1--Club wo- men represcnting the 4B states will demonstrate their rkill in cooking favorite dishes in a native states culinary contest sponsored by the Women's Exposition of Arts and Industries at its 14th annual expo- sition to open here Sept. 30. Women from the north will show their mastery of devil's food cake, pumpkin pie and butter cookies. Southcmers will compete on the second dly in baking sponge cake, pecan pie and corn bread. Western cooks will be tested by angel food cake, lemon pie and white bread. Native New Yorkers will compete on entries of jelly rolls, apple pies and doughnuts. The culinary wniest will be but one feature of the exposition, which will have the aspect of a consum- ers‘ convention, REFOIIESTATION IS AUS- TRALIAN PLAN Following a conference in Mel- bourne of Australian Common- wealth and static forestry auth- orities, 8500.000 has been made Available jointly by the Federal and New South Wales Govern- ment. for work in this State to begin immediately. t will absorb many men. A scheme for fin protection in one mo alone will provide 100 Jobs.- Australian Press Bureau. BROUGHT CLAIM LORNE PAR-K. Ont., BCDL IO- A 11010116 claim against the muni- @1951 council has been received from Mrs. M. Mwluuland who bo- lleves the tAWIiBhlp should ply for of her drawing room, marking fur- riltun and emu chine. claimed the pilsiier was loosened district were not dunayd, II-IDAY—Tho funeral around when last heard from, a ‘ plaster which foil from the coiling Bhd if! vibration set up by the town- IMP Fidel’. Oiber houses in the AAA AAA‘ s a HEAR » STEVENS 5 . Reconstruction Party FORUM . g - FRIDAY——13th-—8 P. M. ih§dO4§4§§0OOQ§§§§flOOQ§OfOOfiO4 Halifax Port Arrivals, ARRIVALS ODQOBDIIOID from Queensport. Pentlond from local harbour. vimy Ridge to local harbour. Foundation Jupiter to local bar. Coalapolis to local harbour. Novallte to local harbour. OIea-ry Lee to local harbour. Sherman B. to local harbour. Mary Currie to local harbour. Acadian to local harbour. SAILINGS ColbomeJo nw. Iiidies. Chedabucto to local harbour. Pentlimd to local harbour. vimy Ridge to local harbour. Foundation Jupiter to local bar. Coalapolls to local harbour- O'Leary Lee to local harbour, Novalite to local harbour. Sherman B; to local harbour. Mary Currie to local harbour. Acadian to local harbour. VESSELS IN BERTI-I Pentland discharging. Vlmy Ridge discharging. Acadian berth. Colborne berth. Portia loading. Foundation Jupiter loading. Coalopolis bunkering. Chedabucto bunkerlng. City of Mobile discharging. Sherman B. discharging. . Oddvar discharging. Magnhlld loading. Novalile loading. OLeary Lee discharging. Bulkarler discharging. Agnete MEG!!! ‘um. VESSELS DUE T0 ARRIVE 51-111. i0—H.avso from Immingham. City of Rangoon from Calcutta Magdalen from Halifax. Reo from Halifax. ll-Siamese Prince from For East. .Marlis from Halifax. 12-benariish from Halifax. Lossiebank from Far East. Ciss from Halifax. Farnorth from Boston. 14_Dom. Shipper from Halifax. Heroy from Montreal. I5—Chedabucto from E-C. Ports. Man. Commerce from Montreal. 16—Cave1ier from Montreal. Dominica from St. John's; Nova Scotia from Liverpool. Cairnmona from Saint John. MRS. DANIEL BULMAN At Rustioo on Thursday, Septem- ber fifth, there passed to her eter- nal reward Mary Ross, dearly be- loved wiie of Daniel Bulman, She leaves to mourn besides her hus- band, an adopted daughter, Mrs. Cyril Toombs. an aged mother, four sisters and two brothers. The late Mrs. Bulman was a lady of rare personal charm and splendid qualities of mind and heart. With- in the home she was a model of in- dustry and hospitality. Her passing will be deeply mourned not. only by her bereaved family but by her many warm friends and acquaint- ances. Beautiful flowers covered her casket, a silent tribute of love and respect from her family and friends. The funeral, which was very largely attended took place Satur- day afternoon to St. Mark's Cem- etery, Rustico. The aervioe was taken by Rev. E. A. Lancaster of Milton and Rev. J. W. Patterson, Cavendish. The pail bearers were Messrs Ernest Bulman, John Clerk, Fred Toombs, Garfield IePage, Charles Houston. Edison Railings. AUSTRALIANS WOULD WEAVE WOOLLENS MELBOURNE. Sept‘. lib-Woollen goods manufactured in Australia are equal to the world's best, ac- cording to E. J. Fgirnie, n member of the wool week Committee. who addressed members of the Viewe- ian Institute of Advertising at Mel- bourne, "Even today." he said, "there are some Australians who still believe we can never weave our own wool and make fine worstcds comparable with those made in other coun- tries." I . Foimie said the first wool was exported from Australia in 10W, when McAi-thur "=nt. one bale to ‘Inglond. The next year be sent three. In i030 Australia sent 8,- 000,000 bales overseas. M. E. Wettenhall aid producers should object to the inclusion of the wool industry in tho govern- ment's proposed Marketing Bill. IIONOIF IN STATE! ' POI l- C. PIANIST VANCOUVER, Sept. D.—(O.P.): Tobufnvitedutthesgeoflntn play u guest pianist with the W String Quartet was the unusual experience of uyviinwy Spencer, only daughter of Mr. and llrs. William Spanner of Victoria, and grand-daughter of the late David wpanoar, founder of the [not PSYBHIATRISTS VIEW or iiilllis issisilliliiil Network of Emotion. al Currents In Soci- etv Finallv Resulted In Concrete Action. (By Howard W. Blakeclee) iAslocia‘ ’ Press Science Edltorl (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK. SQDQ. iii-The as- sassination of Senator Huey Long, as seen by psychiatry, rose from something far deeper and more significant than indivlduel imbal- once. It was already a completed idea in many minds. It was due not to insanity of an individual but. to a network of emotional currents ln society. This analysis is made by J. L. .Moreno, M. D., a psychiatrist in- ternatlonally known in his field for succession "soclometry," a new method of mapping and tracing the effects of networks of emotions in communities. ‘ "Certain crimesf as political crimes," he said, “are not, individ- ual acts. The individuals implicat- ed in them are negligible compared with the emotional currents under- lying which provoke them to act. "Crimes like theseare also neith- ei- accidental nor impulsive- "They travel through the minds of many long before they are act- ed out by one who is caught by such a. current. The crime is com- mitted many a time in fantasy and in many forms long before it takes the shape 0f real action. “These persons spread the seed. It is a form of psychological in- fection which travels through the psychological network that. exists in the community. ‘ "Every crime exists in various degrees of maturity in the minds of individuals sensitized for those par- ticular forms of crime. The germ of a. crime of this sort is scattered in the minds of thousands of ind.’- vlduals. "In Louisiana we have to visu- , alize a, state of millions of indi- viduals in emotional turmoil dur- ing a number of years. These em- otions separate groups in the com- munity according to their P51115511‘ ship for or against the dictator. "Prom these groups every P0591519 emotion, jealousy, fear, hatred, M1- ggr, gympathy, travels through the psychological networks and affect-S the more sensitive individuals more, the less sensitive ones less. and some not at all. "n. is from the HWY lmuz sensi- tive agents that the actor may one my arise, He is caught by oh anti-Long current. He is more of n symbol that an individual at the time. "From the other angle the PO-‘llfl ion of Huey Dong in the network was similarly characteristic and significant. The more powerful ihfl currents in the networks alllm" him became, the more powerful b:- came his fear of attack. In fact his fear for years never left him. Ha had m gmploy more and mow bodyguards. "In recent months, it has We" stated, he did not go to a D000" booth in an hotel where he lived without his bodyguards. In his last filibuster speech he said this was perhaps his swan sons. "Just before he went to thfi Louisiana legislature session, he said to his wife-Til die fighting." "This kind of premonition unis not accidental and not the resul- of superstition. Every feels in critical moments the im- pact of danger. or hatred. or lovt! which is for or against him in thc networ ." DUTCH MAY BUY AUSTRALIAN FROGQ MELBOURNE. Sept. i). — Biill frogs may achieve greater thins! than a crook. They have a trade importance. The Consul for thfi Netherlands (Lieutenant - Colonel F. H- Wright) advised the ncwlv appointed ‘Prod; Commlsslone ill the Netheriands mt Indies til advocate the dainty taste oi tlir Australian bull frog and the iiM quality of the skins- Oolonel Wright said the Nethrr- lands imported bull frogs from New Orleans, when frog farming had attained considerable importance. —--s Pin-Pies dopcrtlnmt store bearing his name. After graduation from ' Mia: Edgar’: school in Montreal she stu- died in Bolton at the New England Omnervotory of Music. and made very rapid progress. While staying at Wlnnno, Oops Cod, she attracted the attention of the director of the Hlllillltfln ltzilll Qilltilh I individual s