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FLIGHT TENDENGY | ROBINS IS NOT YET | FULLY RECOVERED Blank Spots Remain in Mem- PRESENT IN MANY Amnesia Is Attempt at Es- cape From Reality, Say Psychiatrists. BY THOMAS R. HENRY. However fantastic in its details, the ease of Col. Raymond Robins, represents only a rather extreme development of tendencies which many, if not all, normal people may be able to recog-‘ nize in themselves. | Such is the consetus of Government psychiatricts in discussing this strange instance of flight from reality or dual| personality. Any specific diagnosis is ory of Prohibition Leader at Asheville. By the Associated Press. of North Carolina was still a mystery today. Although the prohibition crusader and philanthropist had recovered sufficiently from what was described as amnesia to recognize his wife and to remember necessarily impossible without more ex- act information, not now available. At/ the best, it was explained, the bashi mechanism is obscure. The so-called | “fugue” belongs to the great complex | of weird psychic phenomena ranglng' from temporary forgetfulness of a| familiar name to the extreme dissocia- tion of the katatonic in the insane hos- | pital. Between the two are all sorts ol‘ intervals. | The victim runs away from a dis-| ‘gelhle reality. The flight may be| physical, mental or both. It may con- | sist merely in closing the doors of| memory to some disagreeable fact. Thus, it was explained by Dr. Walter L. Treadway, assistant surgeon gen- eral, the often-experienced and irmitat- ing failure momentarily to i a familiar name often can be explained on the basis of some ung\eaxsamtcx- rience, perhaps apparently forgotten, | gelth some individual bearing the same or a similar name. It is the common | situation of “having it on the end of my tongue, but I can’t say it.” Many | , at least, have a strong tendency | to shut out the disagreeable. It is not an intentional forgetting. The whole| mechanism, whatever it may be, works | below the level of consciousness. This| common instance, it was explained, should serve as & Warning against a | careless accusation of deceit when the | phenomenon appears in such an ex- ded form as the Col. Robins case. any event the victim himself is as much deceived as the rest of the world. | | | Prison Psychosis Frequent. | A frequent experience of Government chiatrists, Dr. Treadway explained, with the “Ganser syndrome”—the | situation, or prison, psychosis. The vitcim has committed a crime which he cannot justify to his own conscience. Neither can he adduce valid reasons why he should escape punishment. He cannot escape from the prison bars. if he could flee, he still would - | very successful in escape is through the mind itself—com- wiping of the incident out of memory. 1t is not done de- ers. The victim, for example, may shut out of his mental life the capacity of hearing. It is as actual a case of deaf- for the time being, as if the inner . The man is that he into’ oper- o In way explained, clears when it has accomplished, or ly failed to accomplish, its temporary purpose. But sometimes a man “gets too far out on the limb” of anreality, remains in a lengthy psy- chosis, and shows considerable mental deterioration. Sleep Is Often Refuge. ‘The common way of meeting a dis- agreesble contingency with a great number ‘of people, it was explained, is or completely to shut it out of the mind. Thus Dr. Mandel Sher- former vert”"—or inward-turning—trend of per- sonality faced punishment or were told to do something they disliked a fre- it reaction was to fall asleep. Thus pain of the situation was shut out of the child’s mind. It frequently has been remarked that some criminals &l soundly on the night before exe- It is their only refuge from of an anticipated ex- in the Public Health Serv- is a sudden dissociation following some emotional shock—an escape from an in- tolerable but repressed situation. Th individual may make long strange places and “wake up” to won- der how he got there, He may even tes take up a new occupation or follow interests altogether alien to his nstural character or station in life.” Splifting of Personality. ‘The dual personality is described as “an absolute splitting of the whole personality, The individual breaks with himself and his past, wanders away, does not know where he is, assumes an entirely different character, generally a new name, lives with strangers and leads a new life, until he suddenly returns to the state in which he was when the splitting of the personality took place. There are literally two or more personalities with different states of consciousness. Occasionally the in- dividual is in a state of demoralization, not knowing his name or who he is, the wl memory being blank. The dis- socistion may last months or even years, recurring from time to time.” i Numerous cases of fugues and dual ersonalities of soldiers are contained in the records of the Veterans’ Bureau. ‘They were due to the subconscious ef-| forts to escape from the dangers and| discomforts of war, and ranged from | consclous or half-conscious dissembling | to ecompletely unconscious syndromes. Often the details become extremely weird. At present such cases are classified with the neuroses. Up to now, at least, Government psychiatrists say, they must be considered as essentially dis-| orders of function—possibly having a | physical basis for which there is no clue. They lay in that obscure field where the physical operations of the | mind become altogether too hidden and | complicated for the psychiatrist or neu- rologist to follow. e State- Rallways of Sweden have or- dered 39,000 tons of coal from a British in_éxchange for coal mine timber. : Liquid Capudine’s ents are already dissolved —ready for the f | have events of the past several weeks, John C. Dreler, his nephew, said events of the first few days he was missing are still a blank to Robins. Reports of residents of this section, where Robins was found last Friday, indicated he came directly to the Smoky Mountain section after leaving his New York club, supposedly to meet President Hoover in Washington. The when and where of his movements were fairly plain, but the why was com- pletely lacking. Relatives and Dr. M. A. Griffin, his physician, sald they hoped further treatment would also clear this appa: ently blank spot in the colonel memory. Robins was expected to re- main in compiete seclusion indefinitely. Robins was loeated by Federal pro- hibition agents, acting on the tip of & mountain boy, at Whittier about 60 miles from here and near the Cherokee Indian reservation. He was sald to have spent his time in the vicinity prospecting, studying In- dian legends and woodcraft. On sev- |eral occasions he was sald to have conducted religious meetings in the streets of Bryson City, and during the campaign he delivered addresses in be- half of President Hoover. BELIEVES ROBINS IS ILL. Brother-in-Law Says There Was No Reason for Dry Leader to Disappear. NEW YORK, November 23 () —Ed- ward Dreier, a brother-in-law of Col. Raymond Robins, said in an interview with the Brooklyn Eagle today that he lieved the prohibition leader ‘“really was suffering from amnesia” during the months he spent in the North Caro- lina mountains under an assumed name. “There was no reason for Col. Robins to want to disappear,” he said. “His home life was very happy and he was his work. He was much interested in the presidential campaign and had planned to work actively for President Hoover. “I am sure he did not grow a beard and don overalls as a disguise. Re- member that 30 years ago Col. Robins was a prospector in Alaska and at that time wore a beard. Since he went back to prospecting when he lost his iden- tity, it was only natural that he should dropped from sight in Septem- had toured 286 cities on behalf had something to do with the Iapse.” * The brother-in-law also Eagle that previous to the finding of Col. Robins last Friday the family had received several letters purporting to be from kidnap rings and demanding ransom for the release of the prohibi- tion leader. SERIES OF 4 LECTURES TO BE STARTED TONIGHT Dr. Joel Saidman of Johns Hopkins to Speak at Jewish Commu- nity Center. ; A series of four weekly lectures on “Economic Factors in Jewish Life” will be opened tonight at the Jewish Com- munity Center by Dr. Joel Seldman, in- structor of economics at Johns Hopkins University. The course is being offered under auspices of the Institute of Jew- ish Studies, presenting weekly discus- sions of important phases of Jewish eco- nomic, historic and literary contribu- tions to present-day life. Another series of lectures will begin Wednesday evening, December 28, by the | Ben-Zion Emanual of this city on “Modern Jewish History.” This will be followed by another series to b pre- sented by Mrs. Herman Hollander on “The Jew as a Moral Force and His Contribution to Human Relations.” ‘The National Forum of the Jewish Community Center will present on Sun- day, December 4, a recital and lecture by A. W. Binder, famous composer of Palestinian folk songs and authority on modern Jewish music. Wed 50 Years COUPLE CELEBRATE ANNI- VERSARY AT HOME HERE. MR. AND MRS. ONOFRIO VITALE celebrated their golden wedding anni- versary Monday. They have six living children and nine grandchildren. —Harris-Ewing Photos. ASHEVILLE, N. C., November 23— | Just what was going on in the mind of Col. Raymond Robins when he forsook an appointment with President Hoover to disappear into the Smoky Mounmm' THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON Patriot in Many Portraits WASHINGTON IN THREE VOLUMES REPRESENTS LONG WORK OF DR. EIS| BY JAMES WALDO FAWCETT. FEATURE of the last phase of of the George Washington Bi- centennial celebration is a mon- umental study of the portraits of the first President, recently issued in three magnificent volumes, total 1,020 pages, illustrated with many finely executed plates. It is the work of Dr. Gustavus Augustus Eisen, and represents 17 years of devoted la- bor. The publishers are Robert Hamil- ton & Associates, and the printers the Lisiecki Press, New York. The first volume deals with portraits of Washington in oil by Gilbert Stuart; the second with portraits in oil by Charles Willson Peale and others, and | with miniatures, crayons. charcoal and line drawings by James Sharples, C. B. | J. F. de Saint Memin, etc, and the third with sculptured portraits, includ- ing statues. busts, reliefs and masks, in wax, marble and plaster. Dr. Eisen had the assistance of Clarence J. Dearden and Wilford 8. Conrow in the prepara- tion of the text for the first and third portions of his survey. The trojan proportions of the task may be estimated from a glance at the table of contents. In Volume I the author considered the characteristics of Gilbert Stuart’s art; when and where the sittings granted the painter by Washington took place; the original subscribers to Stuart’s portrajts of Washington: the Vaughan series of portraits; the bust portraits of the Lenox series; the Brook and Miller-Cake . | subseries; the standing, full-length and created portraits; the Lansdowne group; Stuart's seated, equestrian and standing three-quarter length Washingtons; the told the ot Faneuil Hall series; the Athenaeum serles and types; copies of Stuart's by named artists; grouped its, and Rembrandt Peale’s lec- ture on the portraits of Washington. Included in Volume II. Volume II includes Charles Willson Peale’s Washingtons; the Princeton type and later full-lengths; bust and half- length portraits: the 1795 type and series; the Charles Peale miniatures; James Peale’s Washingtons; Charles Peale Polk’s Washingtons; Rembrandt Peale’s three groups of portraits; the equestrian “Washington Before York- town”; early portraits in oil by minor artists; early portraits in oil and minia- ture by other artists; miniatures of Washington by many different hands; Washington portraits in the minor techniques, including pastel, crayon and charcoal; the City of New York woven portrait of Washington; Washington portraits in line drawing, pencil and sepia; some of the best known Wash- ingtons painted soon after his death and in recent years; portrait signatures and testimonials; the Winstanley, Peale, Stuart, Walter and Prossard forgeries, and a chronological sequence of the principal contemporary portraits be- tween 1772 and 1799. In Volume III the subjects discussed are patriotic interest in Washington sculptures; the wax workers and their art; Jean Antoine Houdon's commis- sion, activities in America and France, life mask of Washington, plaster, mar- ble, terra cotta and unclassified busts, and statue; replicas of Houdon’s Wash- ingtons by other artists; busts by un- known artists after Houdon: busts by contemporary sculptors other than Houdon; sculptors who made busts of Washington after his death; standing | Of 731 Third street northeast, who FURNACE REPAIR' Complets Stock of Grates, Bars, Etc., for All Furnaces and Stoves Ror Prices and Information Call or Visit Our Steve Department 605 R. L. Ave. N.E. Telephone Nat. 4870 ant- to_absorb. 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H ‘That _drowsy, sieepy feeling el dinner will be ’mllaug by MR“'G:‘ ent. ‘Bloatin L EN. —— DR. GUSTAVUS AUGUSTUS EISEN. of Washington; seated statues of Wash- ington; reliefs of Washington by later artists; technique of molds, masks and casts; supposed death masks of Wash- ington, and Washington according to contemporary witnesses. Excellent bibliographies and indices are provided, so that all three volumes are eminently usable. The plates include fine reproductions of works by Edwin Abbey, Robert Ait- kin, James Woodhouse Audubon, Thomas Ball, Frederic Auguste Batholdi, Edward Sheffield Bartholomew, Henry Kirke Brown, H. K. Bush-Brown, Alex- ander Stirling Calder, Antonio Canova, Alexandre Cazarin, Guiseppe Ceracchi, Sir Francis Chantrey, Joseph Cummings Chase, John Singieton Copley, Jean Pierre Cortot, Thomas Crawford, Plerre Jean David D'Angers, Marchioness de Brehan, John Dixey, Sarah Ball Dod- son, John Eckstein, Jacob Eicholtz, Robert Fleld, Samuel Folwell, Charles Fraser, Oliver Prazer, Daniel Chester |, French, James Frothingham, Natbaniel Fullerton, Pia Galli Horatio Greenough, William Grimaldi, - Christian Gulager, James Heath, James House, William J. Hubbard, Walter Ingalls, Guiseppe Jar- della, John Wesley Jarvis, James E. Kelly, F. Kemmelmeyer, Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Jean-Baptiste Le Paon, Emanuel Leutze and Augustus Luke- | man, Other Plate Features. Also Frederick MacMonnies, Hermon A. McNeil, Nicholas Maurin, Frederick Mayer, George M. Miller, Charles E.| Mills, Clark D. Mills, C. H. Niehaus, Joseph Nollekens, Violet Oakley, Wil- liam Rudolf O'Donovan, P. A. Peti- colas, Ferdinand Pettrick, Robert Edgs Pine, Edward C. Potter, W. E. Powell, Maurice J. Powers, Hiram Power, Chris- tian Daniel Rauch, J. Massey Rhind, Thomas P. Rossiter, Willlam Rush, Edward Savage, Ellen, Felix and James Sharples, James Sharples, jr.; Henry Marvin _Shrady, Franklin Simmons, Junius Brutus Stearne, Jane Stuart, Thomas Sully, Cephas Thompson, Rai- mondo Trentanove, John Trumbull, Edward V. Valentine, John Vanderlyn, Frank Vittor, Denis A. Volozon, Willlam A. Wall, Jobhn Quincy Adams Ward, Asa Warren, Adolph Ulric Wertmuller, Mrs. Henry Winslow, John Wollaston, | Prederick Wright, Joseph Wright, Mrs. Patience Lovell Wright and many other | artists. Dr. Eisen appears to have been in- spired to the writing of his books by a sincere admiration for Washington. His enthusiasm was confirmed and stimu- lated by a statement attributed to John Marshall. “It is impossible,” the cele- brated Chief Justice is supposed to have said, “to contemplate the actions and character of Washington, his early and steady adherence to the cause of liberty and his devoted patriotism, without feel ing an ardent desire to know the exas appearance of so great and excellent a man, and how far his corporeal fea. tures correspond with his acknowledged mental greatness. This curiosity 1s most laudable, as it is connected with & veneration of the principles for which he struggled and a love for the institu- For Thanksgiving 1300 Sheridan St. N.W. A new semi-detached corner home; 6 rooms, 2 baths, built-in garage. Reduced $1,000 Open All Day Thursday WM. G. WOODFORD 1010 Vt. Ave. NA. 8690 of Winning Ballot period which —nothing can be found more capable of exciting the noblest feelings of emula- tion and patriotism.” How ly difficult was the task of faithfully depicting the Father of His Country is made manifest by the great differences in impressions of the man himself as recorded by his con- es. Dr. Eisen says: “Accord- ing to the extant portraits of Washing- ton, his features must have changed, not only from year to year but from month to month, or even from day to is ';m; more incredible, terpreted his features so differently that we find it difficult to belleve that they portrayed the same man. Regard- less of actual changes, due to age, Worry and different moods, each artist has- tened to modify his original sketch, in the hope of producing a portrait that would please & public which undoubt- appear as & hero, a conqueror, a states- man, and with such imposing person- ality as fully and worthily to represent the American Nation before the whole world. It behooves us, therefore, to compare the works of the different art- ists who portrayed him, as well as the various portraits of any one artist, and, what is of even more importance, to compare the contemporary descriptions of Washington's appearance with con- temporary ted and sculptured por- traits. In this way we hope to discover errors in artists’ conceptions and means to separate the originals and personal portraits from copies and replicas made by the same or different artists from some certain model.” - Dr. Eisen then quotes from prose de- scriptions of Washington by George Mercer, Marquis de Barbe-Marbots, Bris- sot de Warville, Chevalier de Pontgi- baud, George Washington Parke Custis, Count Axel Fersen, Eliza P. Custis, John Vanderlyn, Marquis de Chastellux, Julian Ursin Niemcewicz, Isaac Weld, Lieut. Plel, Lord Erskine, Sir Peter Parker, John Bernard, James Sharples, Jedidiah Morse, Mallet du Pan, Rembrandt Peale, W. Lanier Washington and other writers. The consensus is that Washington had blue-gray or gray-blue eyes and sandy hair. He stood 6 feet 2 inches in his stockings and was “rather thin.” He never wore a wig, but he powdered . His manner was formal, but he was capable of relexing. While President, it is said, he shook hands with no one. List of Portraits. lists ts of Washing- edly insisted that its great leader should | Gellatly collections, and a monograph p s s vm o I ives - ance with the late E. Clarke and from his knowledge of the Clarke collection of early American paintings. Most of his time during the past 17 research in years ago, intending to make a bb'}:s- ical survey in California for the Swed- ish Academy of Sciences. Deciding to remain in America, he took up horticulture, and was active in establishing the fig and raisin indus- tries on the West Coast. He was the first horticultural editor of the Fresno Republican and the Presno Expositor. Later he was editor of California. He was s founder and served as president of the San Prancisco Micro- scopical Society. For many years he was curator of the California Academy of Sciences. He campaigned for the preservation of the glant Sequoia trees of what is now Sequoia National Park. For about 10 years he was engaged in archealogical and biological explorations in Lower California, Mexico and Gua- temala, collecting for the Smithsonian Institution and the Department of Agriculture. Subsequently he spent five years in Europe and Africa studying antique beads, glass and pottery. Mean- while he was writing on art, ethnology, archeology, biology, zoology, botany, horticulture and geography. Among his recent works have been a book on beads, ancient and modern; a monograph on glass, used as the basis for the catalogue of the Freer and on the Great Chalice of Antioch. He has painted many miniatures and has ‘larger works of art also to his | credit. | BANDITS’ GUNS AWE 80 Four Slug Louisville Cashier and Escape With $1,000. LOUISVILLE, Ky., November 23 (). —Holding 80 persons at bay with pistols and sawed-off shotguns, four robbers stole $1,000 from the main office of the Ewing-Von Allmen Dairy Co. yesterday. William Allen, cashier, was slugged un- conscious when he resisted. After the hold-up the men joined a fifth man in a waiting automobile, drove a few blocks, abandoned the car to enter a larger one, and escaped. ‘Two robbers held up 15 visitors to the plant who were eating ice cream, while the other two entered the main office where 65 clerks were at work. HEARTBURN ENDS| |SLEEPS BETTER I /|l “I am glad to say your ACIDINE | helped me sooner than any other ||| medicine,” says Mr. Al. Jarosewski, Cleveland, Ohio. “I can sleep better |and don't get any more pains or| | heartburn.” | | End gas, sourness, heartburn, diz- | Dr. Eisen portraif ton at the Capitol, the White House, the Corcoran Gallery, the National Museum, the Smithsonian Institution, Washing- ton Cathedral and elsewhere within the District of Columbia. The interest of Dr. Eisen in portraits also COSULICH LINER SATURNIA DEC. 6. 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For Cincinnati - - 402r. w $9.00 Army-Notre Dame Football Game, New York, Saturday, Nov. 26 Frequent Trala Service This Week’s Prize Winner Southern Dairies Slogan Contest Mrs. Virginia Will Be Presented With A Rockne Six Coach At PEOPLES DRUG STORE, No. 24 Georgia Ave. and Farragut St. On Thursday Morning at 11 o’Clock! THE WINNING SLOGAN— “Once a Day, Noon or Night Ice Cream Makes Your Diet Right!” You are invited to attend the pre- sentation of the Rockne Mrs. Virginia Nottingham, at Peoples Drug Store No. 24, located at Georgia Ave. and Farragut St., morning at 11 Six Coach to on Thursday judges in this 45% Reduction in Round-Trip Fares Every Week-End Until Further Notice Mrs. Nottingham secured the win- ning ballot from Peoples Drug Stores. Community Chest officials were the in the Nottingham o’clock. interesting contest. —the better to Maker guar- ||| J ACIDINE —Advertisement. i MRS. GARNER WILL KEEP RIGHT ON WORKING | Wife of Vice President-elect, How- ever, Hopes Job Will Be | a Little Easier. } By the Associated Press. To Mrs. John N. Garner, her hus- band's election to the vice presidency has meant only more hard work. But— ‘When the Speaker of the House moves to the other end of the Capitol on March 4 to preside over the Senatc, Mrs. Garner hopes her tasks as his scc- iretary will ease off. “I wish, anyhow, that my working day would be a bit shorter,” she said today. “As a matter of fact, I've gone to work at 7 o'clock in the morn- | ing so long that I don't know whether I'Nl be able to get out of the habit. “But I do think that instead of hav- | ing to work from 7 in the morning until | dark I may have a chance to quit a| little earlier.” R.F. C. DOORS TO CLOSE | FIRST TIME TOMORROW | Some Divisions of Organization Have Been Operating on 24-Hour Basis. By the Assoclated Press. | ‘Thanksgiving brings an additional | something to be grateful for to the em- | ployes of the Reconstruction Finance | Corporation. | ‘Tomorrow, for the first time since the organization began functioning, the | corporation doors will be closed. The | corporation has had so much work | during the months of its existence that | many employes have not only worked | all day, but into the night. Some divi- sions of the corporation have had three ' shifts, operating 24 hours daily. @ A delicious, old-fash- ioned turkey dinner. The finest quality food obtainable and pre- | pared by the famous Dodge chefs. The low- est prico we ha charged, and NO TIPPING. or | <% DODGE HOT PIER RESTA Thanksgiving Dinner ¥ * LUNCHEON 75¢, $1.00 DINNER $1.00 and $1.25 Dally From Noom to 8 P. M. * Conn. 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W, NN — Breakfast 7:30 to 10 11 to When in Richmond visit us Eat Your Thanksg &TU EWART'S CAFEFERIA (13th and F Streets, New Brownley Bldg.) HOURS Lunch Opposite John Marshall Hotel » v'ng—.’ RKEY at Dinner 2:30 4:30 to 8 at 112-114 North 5th St. F g ) 4 7/ The Magazine IN THE OCTOBER, 1932, ISSUE “The Morris Plan now in excess of now operating in tutions have saved lars, one hundred Quotation ¥2 Bankers banks, designed to meet a demand for financial service outside the domain of commercial banking, have made an impressive rec- ord of success, as indicated by the fol- lowing facts: Morris Plan banks and companies, with capital and surplus 30 million dollars, with tota! resources of $190,298,879, are 140 cities of the United States, doing a volume of busi- ness of approximately $200,000,000 per annum. These institutions have loaned more than one billion eight hundred millions to 8,065,000 individuals. * * * Moreover, the customers of these insti- over a billion dol- million dollars of which is now invested in the savings certificates of these institutions.” THE MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H Street N.W.