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AN TR FREUD HAS DOUBTS | ABOUTBOLSHEVSH Vienna Psychologist Analyzes Experiment is Practical Marxism. By the Associateg Press VIENNA —Bolshevism is psychoan- alyzed by Prof. Sigmund Freud in the Vienna psychologist's new book, I | Series of Lectureg in Introductory Psy-; choanalysis.” N The veteran explorer in little known regions of the human mind dissects® Russian Soviet experiment with a friendly hand, and seems a little sorry that he cannot be more optimistic about the outcome. “At a time when great nations pro- claim they see their salvation only in adherence to Christian piety,” he says, “the upheaval in Russia seems, despite all its unpleasant features, like tidings of a new future. “Unfortunately, neither our doubts nor the fanatical faith of the others give us any indication of how the at- tempt will end. The future will teach us. Perhaps it will reveal that the at- tempt was made too soon; that a thor- oughgoing change of the social order has little hope of success until new discoveries have increased our mastery of natural forces, and thereby made easier the satisfaction of our needs. Sinister Resemblance. “Then only may it be possible for a new social order, not only to provide the material needs of the masses but to gratifv the cultural demands of the individual “And even then we doubtless will) have to struggle—how long no one can foretell—again<t the cifficulties which | the intractability of human nature sets in the way of any kind of social com- | munity.” ‘The theories of Marx, observes Freud, have developed through their realiza- tion in Russian Bolshevism the energy, conviction and exclusiveness of a world philosophy. At the same time, however, they have taken on “a sinister resem- blance to the things they foughi Originally theoretical Marxism was self a kind of science, based on scien- tific thinking and fearless analysis of existing institutions, but in Russian Bolshiism it has “created a prohibi- tion against thinking (denkverbot) as pitiless as that formerly set up by| Teligion “Critical examination of Marxist theory,” he continues, “is forbidden. Doubts as to its accuracy are avenged Jjust as heresy once was by the church. "The works of Marx, as the source of all revelation, have taken the place of the Bible and the Koran, although they are no freer from contradictions and g:i{sgumes than these older sacred Has Developed Illusions. “And although practical Marxism has mercilessly cleared away all idealistic systems and illusions, it has itself de- veloped illusions no less questionable and incapable of proof than the old {llusions. It hopes to change human nature in the course of a few genera- tions so thoroughly that an almost fric- tionless community life will exist under the new social order and men will de- vote themselves to their work without any compulsion. “But such a transformation of hu-|ing. man nature is very improbable. The enthusiasm with which the masses presently follow Bolshevist leadership, so long as the mew order is not yet complete and still is threatened from without, is no assurance that it will be safe when fully developed and no longer threatened from tH¥ outside.” Prof. Freud discusces many other subjects in the seven “lectures” which make up the book, and most of them are more intimately concerned with the technicalities of psychoanalysis. His chapter headings are “Revision of the Dream Theory,” Dream and Occult- ism,” “Dissection of the Psychic Pe sonality,” “Fear and Instinctual Lif “Pemmninity,” “Explanations, Applica- tions, Orientations” and “A World Philosophy.” MUSIC GERMAN SOCIETY MUSICALE. TKE German Literary Soclety, which met at the home of w | ternational House.” the | thousands of persons who have been ! rocket. : " THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, JANUARY -2 1933. Hollywood in Person “The Lady of the Orchids” Comes to Coast—Peggy Hopkins Joyce to Play a Part in “International House.” BY MOLLIE MERRICK. | & kitchen of her own and cooks on the | grand scale. . . . Lionel Barrymore SERETIOOR, . CoNE, Jwugiy 2| etchings are becoming more and more (NANA)—That phenomenon, Peggy | popular, several local places showing Hopkins Joyce, comes to Hollywood at | them from time to time. This and | §= last. Peggy has announced that she | Music are the actor's only hobbies. . H b Jimmy Durante says he is the only m: would play an important part in “In- | who ever went to Honolulu and didn't | learn to play the ukulele. . . . Hedda Hopper has knocked every one breathless by that evening gown ot white corduroy with crystal buttons she brought home from New York. . . . Studio experts say Irene Dunne s one ~ actress wi such perfec aclal con- iy ool l be thrilled at the | tours that any type headdress, from ) ught of seeing how she really 100ks, | ancient classic to modern coiffures, be- walks, talks and her true personality.| comes her perfectly. . . . Katherine ‘International House” is the story | Hephurn has started the rage for stock- of a troupe of entertainers stranded |jng caps = She wear them with exceed- in the Orlent. Peggy is the second of | jng nonchalance. . . . ! an all-star cast being assembled; the | "7 cjjle Gleason and son Russel willi first to be signed is Rudy Vallee. LA | celebrate mutual birthday anniversaries, Hopkins has for many years been Te- | 20 years apart, on January 6. . . . ferred to as “the lady of the orchids” | They call that new shade of blue Con- by the boys of the press. Her dimples|siance Bennett is popularizing “Bel- and diamonds, her marriage ceremonies | mont hiue ” but I don’t know why. . . . :n{l mmr sables have given the world | phoebe Foster's chief yen in life is for 5 2 crepes suzettes. . . . Joel McCrea Peggy wrote a book onmce: “Men,|pecame Hollywood's best-dressed man Marriage and Me" and once she Was| when his setter puppy chewed up all starred in a silent picture, “The SKY-|his clothes and shoes. . . . Lilyan Her jewelry is famous, also|Tashman wore two diamond and em- her sex-appeal. I interviewed her onc | erald clips in her hair and one at the in San Francisco and was amazed 10 | throat of her dress t'other night. Also, realize that T passed prettier girls on | the dress carried a lei of cerise linen Grant avenue every day. But I've for- | roges, . » gotten a lot of them and remember : Peggy Hovkins Joyce very clearly. Per- | haps that explains he:. Elsa Maxwell, world's most famou party thrower, says our Hollywo: Peggy Hopkins Joyce (Countess Costa Morner) has been called “a living son who Las become a legend,” so reading about her these many years in Sunday supplement stories of high- ly colored vein will They are calling Walt Disney the Hans Christian Andersen of moving pictures these days. And here are his ;‘lpoiislrmm {nnlextcnsl\'e research on e history of cheese, st ou riety of party is plain dull. That is, o with the courtesy of M)c’keydchdlo'\fsesz' be precise, Elsa Maxwell says Hollywood, | ~ “Lycullus, whose feasts were famous :’hen wl:y t‘rsle: : :fiu?: :;n:l:;fé;eng;ha in the society columnseof ancient Rome, arty g a V- | topped off his parties with goat's milk rood tries to be tnforinal # s & howi- | cllll:agsm kNapnlegn Jeaned from Tis sad- ccess. ? cle to kiss the peasant girl who first Small parties are excellently done, |introduced him to camembert. Edward according to this lady, who is giving | VII found roquefort an ideal aftermath technical advice on “our betters,” but | to his mushrooms and crepes Suzettes. the Mayfair Club dances—parties of ex- | Dr. Johnson, eccentric erudite of old clusive membership in the professional | England, had his companions drink a and entertaining with dinner | toast to the gorgeous cheese that had dances of reveral hundred persons—are | just been set on his dining table. Melted deadly bores. | cheese, mixed with sugar and spice and | The Maxwell lays some of the May- | spread on toast, whetted the appetite of | fair parties’ failure to the fact that|Lcuis XVI in the dining room of the they “use long tables instead of small Grand Trianon. Marie Antoinette was ones seating six or so, and that the |wont to play at creating neufchatel music, which should be continuous, | cheese, called St. Gervais in her day, at stops for deadly waits between dances.” | her farm, Petit Trianon, close to Ver- Apparently we need an arbiter cle- |sailles. Liederkranz. a cross between gantarium out here in movieland. Yet |camembert and limburger, was named ‘( tlhe in\‘exnmr. an Qimkffi;nn. after a ne singing soclety to which he belonged. want to stay here for “all the money | And often continental epicures scng to in the world” But that last is quite | America for imitations of Old World & neat sum. | cheeses made in this country and es- One of Mae West's New Year reso- | icemed by them as better than their lutions is “never to wear a diamond gl el over five carats or any other conspic- Cost of the flu epidemic in lly- uous plece -of lewelry.” And Carole | wood runs into amasmg nsuru.floflz- Lombard says, “I am going to ignore |land Young's illness comes to many the dictates of fashion during the com- | thousand dollars loss. . . . Most of the ing year and be myself nbout this as I |stars hate spinach and should eat lots am about all other things.” |of it. . . . Helen Hayes has been acting (Wait until she tries to spring a hat | since she was 6. . . . And Conrad Na- Dame Fashion hasn't smiled upon. It|gel reads the fan magazines, ‘cause I will be a test of character all right, |saw him buying a stack of them a few all right) | moments ago. . . . Aside from all this, TR BOSTONIAN SHOES 1319-1321 F Street Tremendous REDUCTIONS on ST, ALBANS QUALITY Clothing and Furnishings during the greatest of our STETSON HATS Only our January Sales could bring you a Clothing Value like this one! Our Entire Stock of $t.Albans 535 & $30 OVERCOATS * WORUMBOS * BOUCLES * Chinchillas * Camel’s Hair * LLAMAS Reduced to Wera Engels, Berlin motion picture | star, brought two beauty recipes to Hollywood which have set them think- tell Santa what you want for Christmas and you won't get it (most probably). And the best Christmas story of Holly- * Dark Shades Only! Every Overcoat in this January Sale was made for this season and tailored with that fine character and correct style always asso- ciated with St. Albans Clothing. If you need an Overcoat now or will need one next year, you'll be doing both yourself and your pocketbook a real justice in buy- ing one of these St. Albans values. | wood is one I published last year about | the man who wired Ronald Colman one with hot water and cold cream s0aD. | of those form telcgrams, t0 which GOl against some of the precious rules of local beauty—most of the pro- fessionals using only creams. One fa- | mous here recommends the | use of hot water and soap, however, and | his adherents follow this routine daily. | ‘The other Engels innovation is this: | “Roll the hair in squares of tissue paper | after it has been moistened in ofl and | water. The curl is marvelous and the | hair gleaming and lovely.” i The strangest set ever built has been made for “Topaze.” It is a complete five-room apartment without pictures | on the walls. The interior decoration is achieved by numberless shelves orna- mented with countless tiny statuettes of | crystal, jade, glass, lapis, china marble and other materials. And the artist who conceived all this thinks pictures are going to be taboo in the future. Looking back on some of those I have seen, that would be a g. Mysterles with the horror angle are still the most popular form of Holly- wood picture. Lionel Atwill signs for another one with “Murders in the Zoo,” Anita Schade, on Rhode Island Saturday evening, had a program of music given by Kather- ine Smith, pianist, and Ruth Han- ford Snodgrass, soprano. Miss Smith is a.pianist with tem- perament and poetic feeling and she played a varied and difficult pro- gram with authority. She has color in her touch and a fine command of dynamics, which was well demon- strated in the four preludes and the revolutionary etude of Chopin and two intermezzi by Brahms. She also g!ay(‘d “Prelude in C Sharp Minor, y Rachmanirioff and the “Nortur- nal Tangier,” by Godowsky, with easy technical facility. Mys. Snodgrass sang a number of German songs with clear and free tone, Especially noteworthy were the “Ungeduld” of Shubert, “Die Lotus . Blume,” Schumann, and “Marie Wiégenlied,” by Reger. Miss Schade gave an interesting and informative talk on one of the first performances of Goethe's “Fauet” and one of his poems was read. The program concluded with a short playlet in German, called “Heimliche Liebe.” A E. TEN O'CLOCK CLUB RECITAL. "THE Ten OClock Club presented Marjorie Isaacs, soprano, in & short recital yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock in the club music room. Her numbers were chosen with taste, and were arranged in such & way that her interpretations were splendidly contrasted. Miss Isaacs possesses a voice of clear, fresh quality. Her tones, too, are beauti- fully placed. This was evidenced in her singing of the difficult “Solvejg's Song” of Grieg, and Wolf’s lovely “Iris” Other outstanding numbers on the program were Liza Lehmann’s Cradle,” and “The Vir- er Song” of Max Reger. r were examples of fine but the whole number was rably too loud Mme. Marie Zalipsky was at the plano, and added to the enjoyment of the program with her sympathetic accompaniments SLAYING CONFEéSED Oklahoma Officer After Store Robbery. OKEMAH, Okia., January 2 (®)— County Attorney Richard Jones sald last night Henry Yates, colored, 37 years old, had confessed the killing of J. P. Wilson, veteran peace officer at Weleetka, Okia., Friday night follow- ing a grocery store robbery. Wilson, 85, was shot as he attempted to arrest the burglar. Officers said Yates had been released from his sixth prison term November 12. RS S SRHTI WS $4,000 PIN RECOVERED BROOKLINE, Mass., January 2 (#)— A note pinned to a post near her home here yesterday resulted in the recovery by Mrs. Harvey Cushing, wife of the in- ternationally known brain specialist, of Peace Killed which Paramount will produce and for which Gail Patrick, Randoiph Scott, Charles Ruggles and John Lodge al-| ready have been cast. | “Doctor X,” Atwil first horror hit, | was followed by “Wax Museum,” in | which this actor again scored a notable triumph at the preview by reason of the fact that his diction was so clear | and lovely, his acting so restrained and | competent and his makeup a triumph | which sets the records of Lon Chancy and Boris Karloff on the spot for per- fection. It took Atwill six hours—six hours of torture, by the way—to be correctly fitted into the elaborate mask-makeup for “Wax Museum.” Prepared for the role at First National Studio by the ex- perts there, he was driven in a closed car to Warner's Western Studio where the scenes were being shot. Twice he worked in the uncomfortable heat of the mask until he collapsed. But the net result is one of the most convineing bits of motion picture work done on the sound stages of Hollywood to date. Panther Woman gets a_contract of her own as a result of her work in “Island of Lost Souls.” Kathleen Burke won far more than a contest when she received that $200-a-week contract and | her accommodations at one of our| leading hotels. She is in pictures to stay, it would seem, and so are three other contestants who scored well in the original contest. Benita Hume is the loveliest of the new English importations, although the blond Disna Wynyard is doing quite nicely, thank you, over at M. G. M Benita Hume first appeared in “Re- served for Ladies,” made in the British Isles, and with Leslie Howard for a| leading man.” This play, a feather- weight in_ plot, proved good box office because of its excellent casting and fine polish. None of the newcomers {from the stage scored such an instantaneous hit as Katharine Hepburn, whose® latest is white corduroy overalls. Her costumes have caused as much of a sensation as her very excellent art Marlene Dietrich’s custumes have caused such excitement that the studio 1s said to have put her in coventry until she comes back to good old conven- tional clothing again. She is so pretty, s0 truly feminine in appeal, that the Dr. Mary Walker attire seems a pitiful protest against being like other women. Vicki Baum will do no more studio work in the German, in which she has written all of her successes to date. She has been assigned to “The Woman Accused” and recently did her first man wired back, “Thanks, and No. 9 to you.” (Copyright. 1932. by North 2 Daei Rlinnee fhegrcan News DOLLS FROM ALL WORLD “ATTEND” CONVENTION Inscription on One “Delegate” at Kansas City Shows It to Be 101 Years Old. By the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, January 2—One | hundred and two delegates from the far | corners of the earth, one of them 101 | years old, have gathered here in a | unigue convention. | They were dolls brought er by | the Kansas City Art Institute to inspire | admiration from the young and remi- niscence from the old. | “Brought to Grandmother Hills from | New York when she was a little girl in | 1831" read the inscription on the spreading bustle of a china-faced doll exhibited by Mrs. Wilson D. O’Connell. Miniature Swiss guards from the | Vatican, dressed in a costume designed | in 1505 by Michaelangelo, also were present. There were Russian peasants, a Pa- risian flapper, a Chinese fisherman, a Cuban senorita, a red-cheeked Irish ! maid, & native baby from Trinidad, Incas children from South America and | New England dolls cradled in eribs ' made in replica of those in the House of Seven Gables. FINDS CAR BY RATTLE Owner of Stolen Auto Offers to Get Mechanic—Brings Officer. CHICAGO, January 2 (#)—Carl Wal- bert 1s mighty glad he didn’t get that rattle in his car fixed. It was stolen Saturday night and as he walked toward & police station to re- port its theft, he heard an avalanche of epithets and a familiar rattle. There being only one thing in the world capable of producing such a mix- ture of cacaphony, Walbert investigated | and found a stranger trying to start his car. “Wait a minute,” Walbert said to the stranger. “T'll go around the corner and get a mechanic.” | He got a policeman and signed a war- | rant charging one Raymond Krause with stealing his car. And—Oh, yes, Walbert got 1t started. | STEAMER LOSES RUDDER Berkshire, Towed Back to Newport News. By the Associated Press. NORFOLK, Va., January 2.—They steamer Berkshire, bound from Newport News for Providence, R. I, with a cargo, of coal, was being towed back to New- | port News early last night for repairs after losing her rudder off Winter Quar- ters lightship. Towing the disabled steamer were the Coast Guard ‘cutters Mendota, from Norfolk, and Rush, operating out of New York. The Rush, a smaller craft, S\l\hal.s serving as a rudder for the Berk- re ! The Coast Guard cutter Carrabassett was dispatched from the naval operat- ing base here last night at 6:15 to re- lieve the Rush, which was to proceed Providence-Bound, I | | Another Sensational Value brought to you during our January Sales! 3,000 of our New Season t.Albans 30 and %25 SUITS * Hand Tailoring * Luxurious Linings * Saxony Cloths * Hard and soft finished worsteds * Mostly Dark Shades EXTRA TROUSERS, §3 This is the Sale that so many “hard-to-fit” men wait for . . . EVERY SIZE—regulars, shorts, slims, stouts, short stouts and long stouts. Every new pattern in the wanted dark colors. This is an unusual op- portunity to purchase a St. Al- bans Suit at the lowest prices in over 20 years. Any style, any color and any head shape in these Silk Lined St. Albans Two Nationally Known Brands 75¢ and 50c¢ Silk Hose Our Famous January Sale of Fancy and Solid Color St. Albans SHIRTS January Sales of Reduced to $115 sequence for Nancy Carroll and Cary | Grant in German, When she read it | back from the translator's hands she| back to her home waters. HATS A sensational clearance of our entire refused to accept it and sat down and Tewrote it in English. Hereafter United States for Vieki. My fan mail brings me loud moans of his devotion to Lupe Velez with equanimity, resent his attentions to an older and'less glamorous lady. They his house guests. “Are Mr. and Mrs. Cooper there,” queries one fan, “and is Elsa Maxwell young and beautiful?” Gary's work was never better. He is| o] % & goo< actor, which is better being 8 2 and the bt - unhllllyw oal?een 1007 D about Gary Cooper, Women who md] even ask as to the chaperonage given | PARISIAN PAINTER DIES | Pierre Carrier-Belleuse Held High Decorations. fflPAg.e!lS. January 2 (#).—Pierre Car- | rier-Beileuse, a noted painter, dled here | yesteraay at’ the age & 52 M. Carrier-Belleuse, who was born in Paris in 1851, was an officer of the Legion of Honor and a Cavalier in the Order of Leopold of Belgium. He was the son of a sculptor. He worked mos.ly with pastels. Among | his subjects were dancers, nude figures land portraits, of which several were T T T T T \mmumum i Washington's fastest-selling hat! VALUE is the secret! Snap Brims, Homburgs and Bead Edges. Fancies and solid colors! All sizes! This is the Hose Clearance that brings hundreds of thrifty men into our store every January. Come ‘in and save more than you spend! stock of fine St. Albans Fancy and Solid - Color Shirts. 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