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Show SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, f p 4 SUNDAY MOKXIXO, APKIL 4.J92Q m Sweet Endearments of Sissie Which Her Husband Murmured in His Dreams Was Thrown Out of Mrs. Anne Valias ' iba; the ' Separation Suit Because Judge Rush Ruled That Dreams ?o by . li tiiiij i Opposites very old belief that separate maintenance asked for and completely exonerating Mrs. Itnecht of any compkloui wles and husbands listen Inc la the night to words murmured by plicity or wrongdoing. sleeping mates have never been quite sure " The decision, the first of its of this. And some scientists, beaded by kind to be made, and therethe distinguished Dr. Sigmund Freud, fore now a bat Is called In have comparatively recently thrown much Uw a precedent, la as imdoubt upon the matter, asserting that our portant for that reason as it dreams actually reveal our most secret. is interesting in itself. The dream and it interpre.hidden desiros. Now, by a decision of Judge 5. F. Rush, tation havo been a potent fa of Chicago, the older Idea has received tors in the affairs of man ever Judicial approval. The ruling la calculated since history began. It Is tot . to give great aid and comfort to husbands necessary to refer to the Bib-ile- who have the habit of talking in their legenda; they are too But beside' sleep and to reasiiure jealous wives as to well known. their loyalty. But, on the other band, it them are hosts oi must give much discomfort to those whose cases In which not only the fates of rambllngs In slumber have seemed perfectly Innocent and Innocuous to the humble individuals The burden has not been but of natfohs bavet eavesdropper! shifted from the talk, but only from one been' changed by r dreams. , to the other of two kinds of talkers. And , If be talks In bis sleep It Isn't true." first, what This. In effect. Is the nugget In Judge does science say a dream really !? Rush's decision, brought forth by the com In deep sleep, psydid husband talk whose wife of a plaint In his sleep and upon whose slumber chology b e 1 1 e e , - words, largely, she brought a suit for a there is no dreaming ' t all, Not only, the separation before the Chicago courts. This being so. It follows that a startled brain centres that wife who hears a husband, while in deep con Ur l us when qlumber, murmuring such endearing terms awake and whose as sweetie - dearie- - and other sugary acthlty we call consciousness are Inacexpressions of love, all addressed to some ' one clearly not herself can turn right over tive, but the A startled wife who heart her a and go off to sleep again, blissfully certain husband while in slumber murmur exce pt for that the dreamer's heart Is hers and hers well ing such endearing terms as alone! But, conversely. If she should hear such habitual things dearie etc., need no swettie s the control of d him In sleep deliver himself of lofty, set more down for evidence. it breathing and so on. dls- fragmentary sentiments, ' But In the lighter - courses upon the duty ef a husband, re-stages of sleep there I Know," said Henry, "but what wag noso and and is sirens is what bukes to vampires called inyour dream ? "I dreamed " said the Queen, "that yon then that gentleman would seem to need termittent mentation were stabbed with a knife! that is, a . careful watching. spasmodic activity of It was only tbe next day that Ravalllac'a Or in the exact words of Judge Rush In the mind. This ac poinard gave him the death wound which tlvlty is largely condeprived France of its sovereign. . delivering bis ruling? It is related that Bruno. Bishop of Tout "It Is the court's opinion that what a fined to the the vast In the eleventh century, dreamed that be person may say while dreaming or sleepmass of memories was transported to the Cathedral at ng may be absolutely the oppositeIn of what and great bulk of Worms, where were assombled a host of actual think or say may our mental machinthat person persons clothed in white raiments. There conTherefore, testimony 'Consciousness. ery which hag aptly he was ordered to administer tbe com-- 1 while a may say what 'person been compared to cerning munlon to' all tbe assembly. When ha dreaming is not proper evidence and shall the submerged porawoke It was to find messengers awaiting court record. the be ordered stricken from tion of the him to tell him that he bad been elected floating The case which brought forth the deconTbe iceberg. Dope in the Cathedral at Worms. cision was that of Mrs. Anna Valias sciousness g the Among tbe ancients one of the most against her husband, William ofH. Valias, part of .the berg profitable of occupations was that of promanufacturer Chicago. a wealthy Sr., above the waters of fessional interpreter of dreams. The Mrs. Valias demanded separation and life and out in the i Greeks supposed that all dreams were sent married had been two The maintenance. the open; by the gods. There In England more than a quarter of a censciousnese were three kinds of her mar part that isIs the tury ago. The greater part of had Chrema-tlsmo-s, hidden, dreams been under the ried life, she told the( court, surface. ' Horamt In the happy. and Onlros. In the The Vallases had two sons William slumber alllighter sorts of first of these and Lionel. All four seem to have had stlmuluses have the busithe Murder His of gods themEste the Parisina A Famous Interest in the conduct of the Valias de Meditating Wife, Painting The Duke power to set this -selves, or some deness. ' - consciousness -subHistorical Caused an Woman a in Her Sleep. by That Pictures Tragedy Talking parted spirit or Mr. Valias had also a comely young Into motion Just as home living being, stenographer, a Mrs. Knecht, of whom, as waves r winds alo came and c the novelists say, more later. the iceberg. When happens the provoltes no scruples or hesitancies as wa xnodating enough to do this. When It does with men In Lionel, the mother testified, speedily to to tries we mutter words or. broken phrases. Of dream It." ' . interpret, their sleep. In the turned into the business dictator of the- explain to Itself, as It were, what senthe course such words refer to what we are second the sleeper As has been said, primitive belief and family. William and she found themsations that touch it are Then follows a dreaming.. And. that is exactly what hapsaw the event have tended popular always superstition selrea in mattera of policy uniformly lined Very interesting chain of consequences. pened to Mr. Valias. about to occur perto ascribe importance and meaning to up against Lionel and Mr. Valias. Quarin The mind Yet dream thinks, essentially, called the pictures. that forth the formed before bis dreama. although, needless to say, without rels arose, Mrs. Valias and William objectThe earliest words were meant to call up words was no more under bis control than the Justification of a systematic gathering sleeping eyes. .In ing to the form of a partnership agree- pictures. Writing is nothing but a series would have been on flashed the pictures the third he saw of facts. Of late years, however, the in ment drawn up by Lionel w'hich, they of pictures. The earliest forms of writing a movie screen before him. Also another the type, figure or of dreams has been placed thought, was unfair to them. were pictographs or actual pictures. Tho train of thought might have brought up terpretatlon of what work of Sigmund Freud upon a the allegory And right here. Mrs. Valias testified, Chinese by are and picvisions of Cleopatra or Mary Queen of more scientific basis. Freud was led to Japanese ideographs was about to come before even she Mad heard her husband tures conventionalized from the originals. Scots or almost anyone. It was Just unto pass. tbe study of dreams through their obsay a suspicious word In his sleep, she So is our own script and lettering alfortunate for Mr. Valias that, the served relation to certain other abnormal The Iliad relates began to haTe her doubts. For, she also though so abbreviated and simplified that blundered upon a present-dastates, notably to hysteria. testified, the comely young stenographer of trace all to Agememnon bas it woman except one lost, experts, and associated with him. lined herself up on the side of Lionel and its origin. dreamed that NesHe holds that a single method is adeIt must be said, however, that beyond Mr. Valias; and, what Is more, she found came tor ' to him therefore thinks' the fact that dreams are usually fantastic quate to the Interpretation of dreama and out the stenographer had drawn up the in Tbe and bid him give and impossible there is no proof that sci- to the explanation of hysteria; the method therefore dream is also Tbe pictures. Offending agreement the Trojans battle ence has that they do "go by contraries.-Sclen- ce of psychoanalysis," which consists essenof Images. Looking closer, she eoon had reason to a train and that he would in bringing out and weighing as many tially aever has once started But been the dream standardized them to having constant association that she said, believe, win. Thta Is an exas possible of the ideas associated In the extent. that on reason of certain continue it may by to the succumb husband to had caused her ample of the first subject's tnln to tbe ideas of the dream Indirectly, however, the new Internacharms of Mrs. Knecht As evidence of centres of association or memory having a business kind or of the hysterical state. . According without on become and go active, tional right Encyclopedia has this to say upon to Freud, dreams the extent of his infatuation she intro- anv further Interference from the outside. the word the fulfillment matter; represent how much dependance can be placed upon of wishes. In the dreams of children the duced testimony to show that Mr, Valias comes from Chre . Mr. For lightInstance, Vaflas, sleeping dreams or. rather,, bow little: had once taken the young woman to a ma, a matter of wish Is undisguised and the ly. might hear some sound. The church sociable! The dream consciousness la not con- Is direct Adults, however, represenatloa business.-even remain Anno Mr. resemWhose a would C&VO it in detect Valla, Complaint KIj Mrs. Valias demanded that her husband fined. of course, to sensations, perceptions in sleep under the pressure of a social Of the second blance to the voice of lie stenographer. to the Chicago Decision. ideas. Every mental formation that training to repress and censor tbe expresdischarge Mrs. Knecht hut he refused, and sort from Horao, conin cells his brain of memory Instantly was she efficient and ' her that is In found contending life may be represented sion of .certain wishes, so that tbs wish to see, a vision taining recollections of the stenographer, or simulated waking Another very Interesting dream is that was the dream of Alexander in the dream state. reputation unassailable. can be represented in the dream only in bethe Great would would Tbe noise then respond. fell blow. then the Suspicion grew; embalmed in the epigram of Lucian, which when he saw himself murdered "Observations have led to the theory symbolical or, so to say, allegorical form. come Mrs. Knecht's voice, and on the by . has lived throughout runs My husband talked in his sleep, said and as the dream the that consciousness ages CasRandar. is famous One that composed, tragedy among many sleeper's mind would he flashed a picture He would mutter the name Mrs, Valias. follows: in mere a of Onlros was of reality, panorama the god of dreama, and in images, might have been averted had Judge Rushs of her. Rapidly the sleeping brain would of 'Sis and 'Sissie.', and that the Cleomenes, dreaming, saw Tbrysus, the toe class named after bln come those of mental formations view been held then la that of Nicholas III., He muttered It she thought endear- conjure np a series of incidents, as a rule' - which seems tocomplex occur ace in dreams physician Nebuchadnezzar, Pharoahs dreams about Duke of Este, who had hie beautiful wife really fantastic and impossible. ingly, coupling it with affectionate adjecCleomenes never woke from that fatal the fat and the lean klne and ao on. Imaginary.executed becaase she talked. In her sleep, And there Mr. Valias would be dreamtives. vision!A ter "01 Ing the curious fact that the Oulros bud tnree attendants, named The JJuke wa anyway; Parisina ing. Mrs. Valias had never been called Sis jl An historical dream which did not go Morpheus, Phobe.tor and scene in a dream "come always "In single his spouse, was Jealous, bis second wife and much Pbantasos. - Tne ,Now no one- - can know what one la or Sissie" In her life. Who was the file- because the part of the brain Stimuby contraries is that recorded apropos of first counterfeited in dreams human forms; younger than he." Once he heard her toitir-znn-r dream woman of her husbands slumber' dreaming 'unless one tells afterward or lated Is strictly a local area, it continues: the assassination of Henry the Fourth of the second the likeness of brutes; and the the name of his son by his first wife talks in ones sleep. Why does one talk ous wanderings who was so called? France by Ravalllac on Friday, May 14, last the forms of inanimate objects. . Now. this narrowness of consciousness while she was Slumbering. She did it his in Ha! sleep? . 1610. A fear nights before, his Queen means that we have so meant of comparWe are such stuff as dreama are made most endearingly. Tbe Duke tells in an Bhe discovered! We cannot talk except consciously; that dreamed that all tbe Jewels in her crown of," says Shakespeare; a saying which, ing the dream event with the data of our ancient letter how he listened and was in , Ha, again! were changed into pearls and that she was in the light of Judge Rushs decision, Is, unless the muscles necessary to propast experience; the event does not fall doubt whether to stab her before she "Sis" and Slagle" were pet names of duce tbe noises are so directed told that these pearls means tears. A little throws considerable light also upon that into relations, but stands alone. But an awakened. He compromised by executing Mrs. Knecht, the comely young stenogThe bas to be sufficiently later she cried out in her sleep and awoke old song of Gilberts, running, Things are idea which is at once impressive and both her and the unlucky bo. There ia rapher! the .King. Asking her what was the mat- seldom what they seem," and explains Is. of coarse, accepted and no evidence beyond the dream that they strong to jostle the sleeping consciousness why It was this part of the wifes evidence and say to It, Hey, wake up Just enough believed. Hence it Is that the dream, de-t- o deserved it. and it was very hard for the ter, she answered: to often we are unable to understand Just that Judge Rusti ordered icken from the I have bad a fearful dream, hut I know make these sounds for me, spite its absurdity when recounted in the son, who bad not even had the satisfaction wby things should be as upside down as record, later denying Mrs. Valias the Sometimes the consciousness is accom- that dreama are mere illusions." normal environment of the waking life. of the dream. they are or seem to be. (C) 2920. Inlrmtiooil Feature Service, loo. Crest Britain Eight Reserved. 1 go by contraries.- - Bus al t o-- i 1 high-minde- 1 hi sub-con- -, on-vers- that y a , ? -- ft ' |