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Show THE pfcovo HERALD ' .a a ' , - X tl I I . l r M S . -- ToiiAttOnhr U - , . 17 f , TVv 77177-77:- -- "I .. asas;.,?,.-vV- , "'-- CARDINALS AMERICAN NEW THREE THE - r7W f 77, t . Thfnklnddiidz Jjfrjnfi inAnoiher X Jipv'Jfareockf!Lf ffi-- --t- "wfcr yK--' inffifBoofcon gether In a relevant way. ToJhlm acting and life, the picture and tha reality, are no longer distinct; they flow in the same channel. . m. Normal Mind Haa Two Intelligence. Thla is not as strange ai it looks, for every normal mind has at least two intelligences, one conscious and the ether subconscious. 7 One might almost say that irrdreumlng the subconscious intelligence is playing against the conscious intelligence. This shows why great people often act on the re- suits- of their not always know why. ThlB also explains why' we remember things w had forgotten and often reason mora clearly when our bodies are at rest Because of this larger field of vision men often prophesy 'things that are to take place. Dr. Hammond, a physician, knew a man who be fore an attack, of paralysis repeatedly said that he had been cut In two down the middle line, and could only move on one side, while a young woman who had swallowed molten lead In her dreams,6na wakening was "attacked by tonsllltls. The mina is so active when it is supposed to be asleep that if the motor- are not cut off somnambulism takes place, the body responds to the command of the braJn, without the person ever realizing It It Is rather startling to hear that man 'thinks as intelligently asleep as awake, but no leas an authority than Sir Arthur Mitchell admits that thinking Is essential to life. Thinking when wo sleep may be differentthan "When we are awake, but the process goes on Just the same." Man cannot think unless he Is alive, and be cannot .be alive without thinking", Confused 4iv Memoryr Dreams are not as confused as We think. They become confused, from the standpoint of memory, hut are not from the point of the dream organ. In trying to reMemory call them makes dreaming seem confused. Dreams - born under normal conditions are normal, it is only those that are created under abnormal eon-dltlons that are strange- r- For as Cic ero- - said "It the number of true dreams would be greater if we were to fall asleep in a better condition; iimi miyM wi)! wine and flesh oscures our dreams." Carl du Prel holds that every Individual has two consciousnesfles rising and sinking Tike the weight of the scale. These are in alternation awak"Potentially the ing and sleeping. dream consciousness 'is present even in waking," he says, "and the waking: consciousness in dreams", just as the light of the stars is present whn the sun shines, but Is .first visible when the sun sets. Were the light not ho weak in most of us it would never have" been.necessary to have written On the temple of Delphl,r,Know ."thyself," and Plato would not have said that "Most men only dream,the philosopher alone Btrives to be awake." Mozart more than any other musician said that . hewas, at his best when dreaming or in this stage of JhinkingAs he once told Tt trlend: "When I am all right 'and In good spirits either in a carriage or walking and at night when I cannot sleep IhoughtrcomTsWelmTnK at theTrbestT The things which occur to me I keep In my head and hum them to myself. If I stick to It there soon come one after another useful crumbs for the pie, according to counterpoint, ' harmony, etc. This how inflames my soul, which keeps growing and expanding, and all the Invention and. construction go on as in a fine, strong dream." -- rN -- v J - T " If-- v vp diaBi,-'tBOttgfc-tflya& Jt V vv 4 i ' ; 1 - J- f V$-- ve-v- iv !: r' - - 1 - - -- - v , well-know- n ?fe ''t' . What Dreams Are r By HAVEVOCK. ELLI8. the It actlyolwMQ of thla fact The dream tha mtnd really la much different from what It recorda whan tha Evan in somnambulism It Is unusual . - bady becomaa conacloua. for man and woman to hava any recollection upon awakening. Thla la because thinking dona when tha body rests la dlffarant than that dona whan tha body la active. Tha unuaual pictures and po'objects seen In draama hava made aomo of tha great pictures, " ems, mualcal compositions, and booka of tha world. THETrnlnd Indication Mi REAMS the day kind and night kind are being stud-le- d by scientific men. Many I have given the dream ques--, .tloo much thought' Have-lo- ck . Ellis has found, as have many other experts, that dreams axe merely the period of existence of another personaUty. nlB; other words, when you are dreaming' of murdering relatives, scaling mountain precipices eating wooden spinach,' or doing any other odd and abnormal thing-- you are actually, doing this thing" so far 'as your Inner being - Is concerned.-- - Of course- - your body doesn't move, - but your mtod is having Its "day." The bad side of your character say st- entaf dreanrhllosophy, is apt to he shown In your dreams, or . vice hfi ersa-Tinay he Yegulated'by' wfiat" you eat to some extent before retiring. - Work and play teach men what they do when they are awake, but most of us know little about what we do in those seven or eight hours when we sleep and dream. Some people, Jdreamt as : iruthfur oracles revealing, happenings that are sure to follow. Others aay that dreaming means one of two things, either a bad ease of Indigestion or a worse " ; , : , " . con-aid- " conscience. , Scientific men do not accept any of thees explanations as satisfactory, though there may be a grain of truth la alL They find sleeping and dreaming, interesting, but a most complex state of being. The most advanced students say that people think and live as much when they sleep as when they are awake, and that dreaming is one manifestation of this 1 1 fact .1 Dreams Play Important Part Havelock Ellis, In TheWorld. of . Dreams," states "that " sleeping and dreaming play a more Important part In our lives than most of us Imagine. The Importance of sleep and dreaming - Is unappreciated because it is difficult to catch a dream and therefore to It The dream realized is only a fringe of the experience we have: known and never embraces the whole consciousness we get In sleep. Dreams relevant, for so much Is forgot-- . . are ten and Omitted, and then the logic of the mind tries to patch It together ' after we awake. As he explains: "We jiever-catc- h a ;. dream in course of formation, - As It an-aly- ie - -" . presents itself to consciousness there may be doubtful points or missing links, but the dream is once for all completed,' and "IT there" are doubtful points or missing links we recognise them as such. I believe that there Is always a gap between sleeping consciousness and waking consciousness, The change f romv the one kind of con-sclouBness to "the" "other "seems to be effected by a slight shock and the per ceptlon of the already completed dream is the first effori of waking consciousness. The existence of such a shock Is indicated by the fact' that even at the first movement of waking consciousness we never realise that a moment ago we were asleep," '11,' He goes further, accepting the view cf such scientists as fucault,Nocke and Sir Arthut. Mitchell, and holds that the mind is active while the body sleeps- - dreaming is only one of its processes. The dream the mind really experiences is different from what it records when the body becoms con-- drlous. Even in somnambulism It Is tinufsual for men and women to have ' - any recollection on awakening. . This " 1 - , - U because thlnklng-donewhthe body rests is different from what it Is when the body is active the one ett is spontaneous attention and the ether is voluntary attention. These are as different as the north pole is from the south. Voluntary Attention Reatoratlvs, " Ribot thus explains the "difference: "Voluntary attention Is "restorative aasf z sssd te sleep and dreRfeSIc aruuclal attention exhausts and demands a change, -- The basis ot dreaming is a seemingly spontaneous procession of dream Imagery which is always undergoing transformation into something different, yetnot wholly different froHTwhar went before. It seems a mechanical flow of images regulated- - by associations --of resemblance which sleeping consciousness recognizes without either controlling or Introducing a foreign element". It resembles a cinematograph, picture which is made up of rjany different pictures, but whlcl? tie all delated. They pass, if, quick sucoesBlon, without one word of explanation. Long before clnemat6graph pictures were invented children discovered how to make these pictures both when awake and on' going to sleep. Most children love to close thelejreaand a srJea of strange pictures pass on the curtain of the closed eyelids.: They , to-rl- et J.LiMLM98yM?re8Un4aaduaual pictures in this way. De Qulncer sDeaks about then nin. tures in his "Impressions of an Opium Eater", in these wordst "Most children have the power of painting as it were upon the darkness all sorts of phantoms; In sbine that power is simply a mechanical effect upon the eye; others have a voluntary or tary power to dismiss or to summon them as one child once said to me: 'I can tell them to come and m. but sometimes they" come when 'l don't tell them to come " semi-volu- n Day Dreaming Hypnotic 8tate. : What children do U to create "a hvn. notlc state known as day dreaming J 1 nis una or picture making Is supposed to be. the. germ of dreaming. Therefore children, along with artists, writers and poets, can actually dream when awake. Elmer Jones not onlv agrees on this point, but he goes one half-blurre- t Ufe-o- f eannot-be-doub- ted F . "ni. Cops. ' The examining corps of the patent office is of an unusually high order of Intelligence, and the members are " ... ... iipzty - yySsigM.wsifci ... , - Jl lege in Home Immediately after the consistory at which they were made princes of the church. a iglil tUC SUV JUglD. fttllCi -- I - r From left to ftUU V VAUiiVia CsUWUlV ROB APPEALS TO JUDGE half of a cedar shingle, she made him Resident of Georgetown, Conn., yell for mercy. Recently Mra. Fred erickaon,ln a Rebels Against Wife. bottle of bounced a milk off his head. Then she hit aim with a poker and swung him around her head and threw blm out of doors. 250 at Scalea the Who Spouse Tipped Frederlckson sat outside and consultUsed Club and Other Weapons to ed his friends. They fortified him with Compel HUebaruMo Work-Enjo- ined a certain amount of apple Juice and "Court. by then, suggested that he , have her playful mood, TEETHE FALSE OF BOY Some One In Chicago Is Deprived of Masticating r Equipment Before He or She Gets If - Somewhere Chicago. tn tut dis- trict of the Hlnman street police station there was some one a toothless some one whe wondered why his (or hery teeth lever camel Maybe "some one" had an invitation to dinner and couldn't go or maybe "some one" went and ate soup only. At any rate " " the expected set of false teeth, value arrested. was at West Twenty-secon.Urged by the local orator of George- $50, street stolen and South Ashland avenue town Frederlckson decided to strike by two boyd from back legally. She was broughrtnto sourt He James Maloney, a messenger for a was there. She stood with arms fold- dental company at 177 ( South Slate ed over her mighty chest, reminding street. Maloney rushed into the Hlnman one of the, "Village Blacksmith." street police station and shouted: man the she at had scowling promised "I'ye lost my teeth!" to love, honor and obey. desk sergeant peeretf jcrr J?3tl?RubbelLhe8id the atar?.&sdi looked at bumpa- - uncharted by phre- desk and into the open mouth of the nologists that appear upon the head boy. There were two fine, shiny, of Frederlckson. and held her Ju J500 white' rowa of incisors, canines ana.-bail to keep the peace. He hen stay- bicuspids ed the execution upon, her promise not "Aw, quit your klddln'," replied the backlln-h- is to again harm Frederlckson. seat- officer as "On de square, somebody swiped "Come," she said as she left court to Frederlckson. my teeth and 1 want yer to pinch 'em. "I'll be home after awhlle," said They belonged to de company. Frederlckson," defiantly, and some one Then the messenger said that be whispered Jn his ear that that was had chased the youthful thievea two the way to treat her. that the parcel contained only teeth, but they paid no attention to him. He was unable to Brothers Are Waging a Mea! War. Pittsburg, Pa; Shoppers In the remember the name of the person to Pittsburgh market - profited greatly whom he was to deliver the teeth ot the address, but knew that it was b a price war between twj butchers, somewhere In the neighborhood of the brothers, whose stalls are adjoining. The price of pork loins was cut as Hlnman street station. The "toss" low as four cents a pound and lamb had told him to be careful, for the went down to seven cents. Market- teeth were worth $50, but the "boss" ers in the early morning hours cut had gone home and there was no use capers, dodging from one stand to the trying to get a new set of teeth In other, in an endeavor to get the best time for "some one's" supper. and cheapest "cuts." The, brothers have rheen "nuBTnessnrfv's71mdwhen Iteht when they discover the nature ot one brother had advertised pork loins their booty and return the- "dinner at twelve cents, the other marked his set" to their rightful owner, or maydown to eleven. ' Then the price cut- be they will be caught, or maybe ting bega3 and before noon It had "some one" will have to continue a - diet of soup." dropped t four centa. ! . New York. GuBtave Frederlckson of Georgetown, Conn., is an emancipated man. No more will the persons on the more or less Infrequent trains of the- - Danbury division of the New Haven road look out the windows of the car to see if he is occupying a place in the hen coop or doing the family washing.- iv FTTlsfJi ,Mra.T to keep the peace, and the valley from South Norwalk to Topstone Is congratulating Frederlckson, Mrs, Frederick-sobelieves not only is a woman-wh- o in woman's rights, but in the proper use of a club when she thinks her Husband oeeaa it When in condition she tips the beam at 250 pounds, and has a fine, (air, fat facethaf breaks into "smiles7 at" times, except when angered by Frederlckson. She is a female Samaon. ' She carin either hand, ries a punch ' according to the husband, and n white-hop- e rolling pin or a flatlron. Frederlckson legally Is the other half of Mra. Frederlckson. In size be compares as a peck to a bushel, and a hen. peck at that So gradually that Frederlckson did not seem to realize It Mrs. Frederlckson usurped the sow ere of the head of the house. Let him remain out Jate - at "the Georgetown lodge, and when be came Some, if' Msnwiwers "315- not satisfy her, and he did not have a certificate that be was sitting up with a sick brother at Cannon Station, a lew miles away, ahe laid him across her knee. Then with "The bacTTdrif hairbrush or PEST DELICACY d alxteen-year-ol- Flocks So Overspread Riceblrds County Farm as to Obscure : - lr-the Sun. -- " - -- : he-settl- r- ed blocksr-Bhoutln- g " . - - -- . ROUTS MEMBERS FROM BEDS GEORGIA IN d In . Savannah, Ga. Tremendous Bocks Church Organizes Chicago Flying -8quadron to Fill Pews by .. : . Emptying Beds, ;r, business nan was routed out of bed on Sunday morning several years ago by a member of a church "Bytng squadron," bow he became intensely Interested ij.,BIble.studyqult his business, entered McCormlck Tnoiotriri seminary and Is now preaching in Chicago No longer will the 'man ens. until the sun is obscured and de- who talis to attend church Sunday generally acquainted with the various tn arts. ' Sometimes amusing things' oc- scending upon the fields of ricedam- morning have for an excuse that he caused have numbers, great huge slept late. That is, he won't if he Kansas. cur when an examiner falls to under age 'to. the rice crop at the count, lives anywhere within 'three miles ot stand a technical term 'fr. " farm, according to T. Jewell West the. Third Presbyterian church. South In another art. .lot- Chatham county Ashland and Ogden avenues.. : superintendent GET $23,600 LONG MISSING A Is defined as "the conical "cop" .. " works and roads The erqp has public a of .For human "flying squadron roll of thread formed on the spindle been considerably datcaged alarm clocks was and St Louis Postoffice organized. of a spinning machine." . In an ap- already Inspectors Reof the winged ravages thirty-me- n every Sunday morning wU cover Package from Clerk Lost plication now lssuejand consequent' make a quick dash about the West ly a public record, the applicant" re- threaten still greater damage, , Since Sept 24, 1910. J,,. .8ide,i:9Utlng.8leepymen:lromtheir ferred to an WustraUon as beds and trying to persuade them to : St. Louis. Mo. A TntiiryecewryWsdkeaeRy sentation of a cop." bad.-h- ut package containJust about thai time Mr. attend church. Not understanding the word, the West bad a ing $25,000," which disappeared tronv bright Idea Taking six The" new methcKTor trying to till me annex postoffice station examiner wrote, seridusly, a fetter In of the Juvenile prisoners at the farm .Septem' pews is to be adopted by the ber 24. 1910, was recovered here r empty, follows: as part and armnRtbem with tin iiamraud I members of Bible clasa n nt tha oentlyr George- - VrSteckra l"Tbe attention on.ieexamIner postoffice sticks, he sentlFem througlvjhe'flc church. In addition to getting men clerk." who was emnlovid in ih an called to this caj. he regards it fields, beating upon their Improvised to church the sleep dlspellers plan to nex station, has had the pacKag since as In no condition official tomtoms, Astonished b the unusual 8rpu8e. lnterfisua.1ha. Bible uBe. its disappearance on Jbe merlta.1 JLpplicant shows He ' confessed &" . The "follow., up", system, used by postoffice Inspectors. a device which the examiner vould unfinished and flew In great masses In y - Of the full amount JM00 is riss-lng- .be inclined to-- - repaid aa the upm the air-- -; : pracucally every large business house will be , used by the Steck deciaresytie spent thin," but sentation of" a ball of twine, appli- 'Whenever they tome Jback the boys selling goods, men composing the flying squadron. the cant says, however, it is 'the repre are. sett out to beat postoffice authorities will not alpens senution of a cop. -- It does not look and the; birds are frightened away Any recalcitrant sleepy Inead who low hfm to dWulge In what manner. grunts, turns bve? In bed and drirts Steck; haateen, watched moi'e Uian like a - policeman; "whloh"lo the ex- from (he rice. found thar thl$ little back to slumbertand.lheedles8 of .the bLx months by. the Inspectors. aminer's tnind .Us the popular - sigChief nification of the word cop, and conse scheme works very well considering Invitation to attend church, will be Inspector Daniel ' telephoned blm to n ih. the huge number of birda. He states iistea. 1 ne loiiowina sundav & ann. l r..i. n.. quently the word requires some limiwill " ond call be r made and be agata-are more tire afternoon inspecters Keuter and that there riceblrds this tations." Scientific American. season than 6e has seen In " yean. Bunsen worked with Steck. aid tut heavens are filled with them, sad church. If after tour ' attenfp'it is in the afternoon he returned to hls ' The ." A Knocker. 'V ".'' ' 1 r:-the sun iir oftentimes! hidden- by, the shown that a' warm, soft beji nas more home and brought the package back If .to had Crimsonbeak I earn huge flocks of riceblrds flying between attractions than a hard, and 'perhaps to the office of Chief Inspector DanleL , Mrs. ' The $25,000 was "sent by the Thlrtt my living at a trade. wuat ,do 7?UP it and the fields," Many , other rice cold'peW to the man, fie will be con. . planten are 'employing men to shoot sidered a hopeless case and aban National" banktoJheJiutc'hlaon-See.-lepose I could go at? doned ta.hla.fate and sleep: JlMr. Crimsonbeak Well the ; way the ; birds, but MrWest-ha-ioucompany of Calveston, Tex. Stec ' The story was told by Kefus Terry. will be arraigned before 'he 'pit,w you can use a hammer, I should say that his plan works better than the 1 leader of Jbe movement how i young States commissioner., 7 the carpenter tradkw6uld suit yon other.:" step fartheriand argues that dreaming can be aroused by opium and chloroform, :A or under chloroform; the vision Is stimulated firsts 11 11., ... In all these dreams, whether created awake or asleep, the pictures are as normal aa when the Individual la awake, excepting that there Is little coloy, the color field fading In a gray band. But they have qualities that the images created when . awake Jack. Many things we cannot recall wheu we are awake are born once more In our dreams. Scientists and inventors often come to a standstill with their powers of reason, they do not, know how to move on with their Investigations and experiments. The more they worry the more difficult the problem becomes, when suddenly their difficulties are cleared up in their dreams. :,ThIs is explained by EUia and others by the tact that a large part of the sleep" Is outside our psychic power and some of it is even beyond our sight The unusual pictures seen In our sleep and dreams .have made some of the great pictures, ' poems, stories and plays of the world. It it only the man of genius who can brtn strange and Irrelevant pictures I best ; d . . - well-know- n - by-th- ' e ... u he-in- g tr Judg-jne- o1elthe-rieebirdtHeft-theirr-me- al . - , , . - - . , " -r-Mrr-West . - - " -- 7, nd ... 4 -- s. |