Evening Star Newspaper, October 16, 1931, Page 15

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1931 : ‘A—15 hired a man to Temain with him all the | recollection of having dreamed. The |She had known fleeting wishes, in- vari erime « . time to prevent such a leap. A single | dream, he explained, probably comes just | stantly repressed, that the man would MAN OF MANY CRIMES lnn:\‘::ced h:w‘:\?l:iwunf m:".r“:dl;nd ream nalvsis eede dream was enough to orlent the physi- | before waking, and events' which in|be killed. Then she would be free Walve s cian as to the lines along which an ex- | reality would require hours take place | of him and her job would be safe. TAKEN IN LOS ANGELES |to Seattle, Wash, to face a charge of - planation of this imp was to be|in less than a second. While events of [ But wishing the death of anybody was eSS slaying his wife. sought. ‘The man dreamed of being in | the immediate past or sensory stimull | Tepulsive to her. The repressed wish Officers sald charges against Lindsay a swimming pool with some boys, one broke through in the dream and seized | Confe: Wi i {& recelved during sleep may make up the e I“ Y ios - tepeaially sses fe Murder, Army De. included the slaying of his wife, the Science Uses **Active” Process in Penetrating Sub- | | ot whom disappeared. He was blamed | apparent content of the dream, he said, IN KIDN APlN[; PI_U.I’J b G . Tend ces VF £. d ;:; &Llfigdlefitkfi:flz dfln: llfl]lg:k(:; .}:’8 up& probl‘!::gg that thuee are simply on- | th . 1::01“& "ol the falling book—to | sertion and Attacks on 2 Girls, gn,ur%gr of & farmer near Woodland, " r ely, Dr. Guf venient material seized upon by the es- | real . ash., 10 years ago, sttacks upon an ‘ conscious Caverns—Crime Tendencies Foun gald-“tra, that the man fesis e is| caping subconscious andinterpretation | The strange problem of time rels. Police Declare. 11-yesr-ald’ Naps, ‘Calir, girl aod his . e or 50 3 o y ) . Relieved by Sleep Phenomena. Y iDitiies Wttt | ook o s sttt T beyond | HonehD atigated in’ the Vienna clinic, | B7,the Assoctated Press. e, % Sasurand LOS ANGELES, October 16.—Everett | Canadian armies. Woman Charged With Luring | Broker to Captors’ the experience probably deals wit ——— 2 7 Wit Reveals Suppressed Desire. ¥ childhood. o i e Pl bl o e || A e e diaplblar i) Hesiineicase FORMEREHOUSEAMEMBER Frank Lindsay, wanted for murder, —_— | Army desertion and attacks on two| France reports that the number of | 8irls, was arrested here last night. tourist visitors this year was not great- BY THOMAS R. HENRY. | eventually some hint would be dropped . fthe Teal trouble. The physician says |own dream. Hence he is the person |of one of his patients, a girl employed 3 A new road into the dark caverns of | o iiS blaming himself unjustly. Tha Vi Ty t0 Wl Y | _Police sal w k & nothing and tries in no way to influ- | blaming njustly. t 15, one- | in & Vienna factory to whom advances DIES IN NEW JERSE ce sald Lindsay confessed to the | ly below that of 1930. Acquitted. the subconscious mind, lairs of primi- | ane MO8 $IC 470 ne patient’s thoughts, | half of his mind is accusing the other | had been made by the superintendent. S 4 ar 19% tive passions and exiled memories, | o half of something which it refi great deal that is said has no bearing g whicl refuses to|She dislikeg the man, but feared she through the gateways of dreams and |, “the case at all and merely consumes | admit. Working from this definite| would lose her job if she repulsed the | Herbert W. Taylor Stricken at By the Associated Press. phantasies, was described to the Wash- | {ino"¢or which the patient must pay, | clue, the Yhysmm guides the patient|man. One day she was ill and lay on & NEW YORK., October 16—Four men | ington Society for Nervous and Mental | wity 1o possible benefit, Dr. Guthei | into revealing his hidden conflicts along | couch while her sister read to her. She Lunch With Friends and Never were convicted last mght by a jury of | Diseases, meeting at St. Elizabeth's | giq these particular lines. dozed away for only about a second, - Bidnap! Charles M. Rosenthal Hospital, last night, by Dr. Emile Gu- New Method M Direct. ‘The new system also differs from the | her sister testified. But in that second 8 i naplng e . thal, | theil, noted Vienna psychiatrist. Sl i Freudian in the relation of the patient | she dreamed. It was 3 o'clock. Some- | gy the Associated Press. wealthy young broker, who was held for | Dr. Gutheil introduced to the Amer- | Under the new method, Dr. Guthell ex- | and the psychoanalyst and in its deal- | bo to h ‘told her that the 250,000 sansom. A woman, whom the |can psychiatrists what he termed the | plained, the physician orients his prob- | ing with'the so-called “Infantile con- Sloeiter iy o A e toom | NEWARK, N. J, October 16_For- “active” method of psychoanalysis, as|lem as early as possible, possibly with | stellation.” Upatairs and was going to shoot himself | Tief, Representative Herbers W. Taylor State accused of acting as a decoy for | f oA 7 ; pposed to the “passive” technique of |the first two or three dreams related. | The new short method, Dr. Guthe *30, = the quartet, was acquitted. he > Orthodox Freudian school, by |He first reduces the dream content to | said, was developed in the clinic of D N orve it opes: b'fig‘rhnue» Those convicted were Nichoiag Ruti-® which, he claims, results which once |its basic elements, guided by the antith- | Wilhelm Stekel in Vienna and makes | refused, saying that he had made up | He was stricken early in the after- e o riprietor, - Marcus | required years o reach and'were so ex- | esis of emotions within the dream. | possible not only more eflicient and | his mind to Kill himself and ‘nothing | Poon while lunching with a group of AN M S Blumenthal, 28, salesmen;’ Albert Sileo | pensive that only the wealthy could af-| Then he uses this as a pilot light in his | cheaper treatment, but enables the gen- | could move him. {riends lnd’n!"fl Tegained conscious- — ew oney Javer— and Theodore P ee trentment now can be attained |further dealings with the patient, | eral practitioner to make use of the| Tho terrified girl watched the minute | ZE5% His wife and five children were ‘Betty Stewart Green, young octoroon, | In_from one to six months. | abruptly shutting off superfiuous con- |system in minor cases. He warned hand of the clock turning. waiting for !at his bedside when he died. | as acquitted. The presiding judg> Both methods seek to uncover the |versation and asking questions freely | against use of this sort of “mind sur-|the dreaded moment. She could do He was & member of the Sixty-se: pationts " subeonseious conflicts and | along the lines which are suggested. |gery” by any but qualifid physicians, | nothing. It seemed an eternity while enth and Sixty-ninth Congresses. For Use on 16th St. Busses—on Sale structed the jury was _evidence | Tued e e 0 as her | bompleses ‘which cause fantastic be- |In this way he often can tell & good |saying that when laymen attempt if|she watched. Finally it was 3:30. In- ’ : Saturday—Ask the Bus Operator st 'of the ransom. but her counsel |havior, such as that of one of his own | deal about a person’s past in a very | the result usually is disaster. They are | side the room a shot was fired. She contended she had no “guilty knowl- | cases described by Dr. Guthell—an ex- |short time. likely, he said, to offer suggestion to|awoke with a scream.” Her sister had MD[ANTF]RFS edge” of the kidnaping in accompany- | iled Russian nobleman, closely related| Thus, Dr. Gutheil described the the patient which merely enlargé the|let the book fall to the floor. ‘Thi Announcing B mnthal fo an apartment where |to the late Czar, who stood on one|dream experience of a ‘man which he| fleld of his psychosis and to overlook is a case, Dr. Gutheil said, el 15.0 he was seized foot for months in continuous prayer. | was asked to, interpret in Washington. obvious organic causes for mental ab-| Where hearly everything in the dream % s Low as $15. 0c " . " The four were directed to appear he man had waking impulses to kill| normalities. could be explained in terms of the 3 hl R d T t C Methods Are Similar. himself by leaping from & high window.| Everybody dreams every night, Dr.|immediate environment, except why the A, MUDD]MAN o. asningion apl ransi 0. October 23 for sentencin; : y Counsel for the fn\u'x serted that In its general principles of interpre-| He didn't want to commit suicide, but‘Gmhcll said in explaining his system, | girl should dream such a nightmare 911 G St. Nat'l 0140-2622 Rosenthal concocted a “diabolical plot” | tation of behavior, Dr. Gutheil said, | was afrald he was going to because he | but unless an active effort is made to| anywas To determine this it was Organized 1888 Rosenthal concocted o et in order to | the new school agrees essentially With | could not control the impulses. He|remember the average person has no necessary to go into her emotional life obtain funds he needed. the orthodox school. Every dream is Rosenthal appeared at a Bronx po- | considered the fulfillment of a desire, Jice station August 28 and told of be- | usually one of which the patient is| ing held a prisoner for 17 days before |ashamed and which he has repressed. his family complied with the ransom |The actual material of the dream is demand. symbolic. Thus a man might dream of He virogously denied from the wit- murdering his father. This might mean he had any part in his | that he actually wanted his father mur- | ki who testified dered, but was so shocked at the | he ranson d: “The ver- | thought that he would not let it remain dict will, T hope. wipe out of the public |in his conscious mind. Or it might Mind these vicious insinuations that|mean that he actually desired to kill| h the black- his mother and was se shocked that| @ son consorted Wit he | he felt he should be hanged for the . - | very thought, and the most convenient | —_—mm—-— - o PERUVIAN FILM ACTOR'S | s o heneee was 1o K F Street at 7th Free Auto Parking—E Street Between 6th and 7th NAtional 5100 | view, an excellent provision of Nature WIFE GRANTED DIVORCE et 42, Sxeoie oo ot Mot - - murder brutally their wives in dreams, thus getting it out of their systems, Member of Pioneer California Fam-| (pye remaining 1n waking life the most ily Tells Court Husband Won |faithful and gentle spouses. Otherwise | there would be more murdering of wives, | Her by Story of Wealth. friends, etc., in reality. Under the Freudian system, Dr. Gu- 1.0S ANGELES, October 16.—An an- theil explained, the physician tries to nulment of her marriage to Jose Manuel | discover the conflict that is raising Del Solar'r, Peruvian film actor, was havoc with the patient’s mind by the granted vesterday to Mrs. Rosalinda de method of free association, starting Witt Del Solar'r. member of a pioneer | with the dream and allowing the sub- California family. Mrs. Del Solar'r 1s | ject to talk on at random, one thing | known in musical circles as Juanita | suggesting another, in the hope that | arsias She testified Del Solar'r won her by ~ TR T telling her and influence in South America, but after the marriage she found he was a member of a humble family which had_disowned him ‘They lived together a few months. RACES AT HAGERSTOWN CLEAR $8,000 IN DEBTS Formerly $12.95, $16.50, $20 and even $25 Men’s $5 and $7 1 | . Slfeldon Felts Sllk or Celanese Llned ’ ...Brocaded rayons and ...Black, blue, brown, $3 45 failles, silk and cotton 85 green and maroon. o brocades, silk charvets. Faced with Skinner's & satin or soft material. Every Wednesday, Saturday and Sun- day nite to the scin- tillating music of the famous Swanee Syncopators. Large Amount Taken in Despm; Cost of Many Improvements | at Fair Grounds. \ All Forms HAGERSTOWN, Md., October 16— | Despite a smaller attendance and the | large expenditures in improvements at | the Hagerstown Fair grounds, the local | fair made enough profits at its recent | meet to pay $8.000 on its debts as well | as pay for the improvements. Improvements included the complete draining and resurfacing of the track, painting of all buildings, rebuilding of pari-mutuel booths and paddock and a ber of oth rovements. J THE HECHT CO. F Street at Seventh ...All-silk crepes, printed Another good buy for the man 23 - rayon crepes, other fine who feels he ought to pay less and get more. Sheldon’s finest felts, $3.45. Derbies also included 2 at the price (Main Floor, The Heeht Co) (Second Floor, The Hecht Co.) ...Siik or celanese. Some interlined. All sizes. materia Our $6 and $8 Footmodel Shoes $4.45 Moderate-priced shoes with high-class features...and at this sale price an amazing buy. This vear’s fine leather and styles. (Second Floor, The Hecht Co.) $1.65 to $3.50 Wool Golf Hose $1.39 S i ted f England - B e Splendid Suede domestic places. Plain colors and small patterns. Sizes 10 to s Leather Jackets The New Heavy 6.9 L Weight Golf Ball 3 for $ 1 Special Hecht Month Price Throw Away Your Garters and Wear HOLEPROOQOF Autogarts The Sock and Garter Combined! Same size as present ball, but heavier in weight. Fine selected skins. Smooth Others 75¢ and $1 finished. Strongly tailored. Sa- teen lined. Brown and grey. Sizes 36 to 46. (Mam Floor, The Hecht Co.) Regularly 55¢ Pr. ;’ Regularly $1 Pr. 35¢c | 55¢ 3 pairs $1 6 pairs $3 Discontinued patterns. Special patent eliminates garter . . . holds socks firmly in place, make them look smartes. Sizes 91/ to:12, (Maln Floor, The Hecht Co.) ciober i H E C H T MONT . V4 iV (Main Floor. The Hecht Co.)

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