THE AMERICAN. 4 I SUICIDE AND CAUSES. LOVE. HEREDITY AND POVERTY CONTRIBUTE LARGELY. MTCa lUreljr KU1 TbfaarlmtMf DmUwUm la rrvqumt Only AiuuMg CHIUaarf People Wbrr Nervous T Iw la rroaoaared. MB general opinion of Intelligent peo ple upon the much dlacusged subject of uleide Is ratber weeping, says the Washington Post Ask the average man why his neigh bor destroyed hlra self and. In all probability, he will tell you that everybody who commits suicide Is insane. Now this is true nly to the extent that the brain tnat evolves the Impulse of subjective destruction is not In a normal state, and abnormal minds are, in a way, in sane mlnda. But this last postulate brings us around with a whirl to the Important question, When Is the brain la a normal state? Certainly not when under the influence of excitement, of anger, grief, or of any of the passions. Therefore, as man Is not a vegetable, but Uvea out a good part of his exist ence under a certain amount of nervous train, it becomes evident that the tray matter in his head undergoes constant fluctuation from so-called nor mal to so-called abnormal conditions. ' Consequently it does not seem too much to assert that the standard is an aasumed one and that the man who dies by his own hand may be not more out of order mentally than the man .-'tfho criticizes him, the only difference lying in the faot that the former has demonstrated his eccentricity and the latter baa kept his to hlmeelf. As civilization advances and the nervous tension of the Individual wax es higher, suicidal statistics show a ' steady increase. Savage races are comparatively exempt from the tend ency to self-destruction and the more advanced the nation the more fatal be comes the Impulse. However, this last statement must be modified by such considerations as population, national prosperity and several other factors that unite to render reliable statistics on this subject very hard to obtain. The suicidal ratio between the sexes la estimated at a minimum 15 per cent for women to 85 for men; maximum, SO to 70. The general causes of suicide are the Impulsive passions love, Jealousy, shame, religious or political fanati cism. But in almost every case more remote and disguised causes have been at work, such as education, Imitation, Influence of the physical and moral environment, etc. The effect of these is so Insidious that the suicide himself is unconscious of their presence. Then, again, there Is the man who Is Impelled to self-destruction by heredity. Taking the first In the list ot causes love the percentage of self inflicted deaths therefrom is not large in either sex. Women suicide directly from the influence of disappointed af fection; but men often solace them selves by "taking to drink," and it is the effect of the alcohol that Impresses the mind with the Impulse of subjeot Ive destruction, like Byron's "Lord Mont-Coffee-House, the Irish peer. Who killed himself for lore with wine last year." There have been, of course, a num . ber of men driven to the rash act by no other intoxicant Uian the original one love; but they are In the minori ty. Neither do all men under these painful circumstances take to drink; some because, like Mr. Swiveller, they bad taken to that long before, and some for better reasons. Mr. Swiveller took to playing the flute; but all are not eo desperate, and, as the range Is prac tically unlimited, various are the con solers "taken to." The effect of imitation Is generally underrated. A very remarkable sui cide from this cause took place In Lon don almost a century ago. Fashion able society at the time professed great admiration for Addison's "Cato." Upon seeing a stage representation of this piece a certain Mr. Budgell was so Im pressed with the suicidal death of the hero In the closing scene that upon leaving the theater he went at once to the Thames and, plunging therein, put an end to his existence. When Ms body was recovered this couplet was found upon him: "What Cato did And Addison approved Must needs be right." A man predisposed by heredity to self-destruction must find It almost im possible to pass through the trials and, above all, the weariness of this life of ours without giving way to the natural bent of his mind. Many Instances of such deaths are on record. One Pari sian suicide, by name Jules Delmas, is a striking example. Both of Ms parents had died by their own hand, and, though happily married and pros perous, the natural attitude of his mind was so antagonistic to life that he was incapable of maintaining existence. One evening, as he was returning from the opera with his wife, he seemed un usually preoccupied. Arriving at the corner of the square upon which hia house stood, he turned to her and said: "I have Just recollected an engagement that I must fulfill. Where I am going It is impossible that you should ac company me, so return hone." She heard no more from him until the next day, when she was Informed of his voluntary death and received Ms last message. "Forgive me, Margaret, I am going to rejoin my parents." VANITY. Still Showa hj Waim.a Vfhmm ia Coavlet iarb. A writer In an English pa;r aavs that our hapk'm country woman, Mrs. May brick, set the fahion in Wo king prison of wearing tho skirt long, that is, with a train, as h1i wan wtar ln such when she entered this prison. The d reuses nerved out to tho eon vii'ts are a constant t-ource of annoy ance to them, and many an hour is spent in touching up and altrin;f. At Milbauk. another Fnlish prison, some- years since, a femulo convict wan discovered to bo in possession of three tallow candles, which, if they had not been missed would have been utilized as pomade! reriodioally tha hinges of the cell doors are oiled, anl, stran-je as it may seem, convicts have been detected wiping the oil and put ting it on their hair. One woman created quite a sensa tion among the female convict! in Woking prison by reason of tho brilliancy of tho color of her chocks and lips. Many of her follow prison ers became most envious, and exer cised every kind of blandishment in order to induce tho fortunate one to part with her secret but in vain. At last, one day she became quite friendly with a young convict to whom she took a fancy, and during the ton minutes' chat (female convicts are al lowed to converse with each other for this allotted time) she con Mod the secret. It was soon all over the prison, and very soon on most of the cheeks of tho women could bo found traces of color. Tho paint was ob tained In the following ingenious man ner: In the aprons that tho women wero wearing thera was, running through the pattern, a bright rod stripe, and this was carefully drawn out When unraveled and chowed in tho mouth the color or dye was re leased, and thus the paint was ob tained which decorated their faces and lips. In the same prison a convict had repeat-' fainting fits without any cause discoverable by tho medical officer. One day she was attacked in chapel, and, upon her removal to the infirmary, she was undressed, when to their astonishment the authorities found the fits produced from tight lacinw, and from the effects produced by the pieces of wood and wire which the convict had managed to force into her stays in order to make her waist slender. The prison authorities in their wis dom have not deemed it necessary to supply the female convicts with that ever ready and indispensiblo article so dear to the feminine gender the hairpin but necessity, the mother of invention, is ever at work, and the convict will spend hours in tearing out bits of wir3 from tho window guard and afterward bending them into the required shape. Leaves from the bible are often torn out to make tho old-fashioned "cracker" curls, but this practice, if found out, involves a very serum punishment. Even the "life" prisoners are not exempt from this desire to make the best possible appearance, and they will schome, plot and plan for months togethor In order to becomo possessed of a pioco of broken window pane in order to make a looking glass. While out in the exercise yard a convict will rapidly scan tho ground in the hope of coming across a piece of glass. Once possessed of it, she will run the risk of solitary confine ment on a bread-and-water diet in order to got it into her cell. A pieee of black cloth at the back of tho piece of glass makes an excellent mirror. Here it will be hidden in all conceiv able places, and many a violent wo man, ill-favored by nature, has been known to become subdued after being able to admira her features by means of the mirror. BaaeQt ot AiiTrttala. Advertising has another use aside from bringing in new business. It is a mighty, potential factor which ena bles a business to be held. It prevents old customers from slipping away and stirs up their determination to stick. Some buyers like to change, and it is to prevent this switching around that printer's ink becomes so useful. Many a financial advertiser ceases to adver tise because "no returns can bo traced." His extreme short sighted ness prevents him from realizing that in order to know just what benefit tho advertising has been to him, it would be necessary to know tho inner thoughts of many people. The latter are not disposed to be communicative when it comes to giving reasons for their action. Good, clean advertising always has. always does and always will pay. There is no doubt about it. Because tho results cannot lo seen is not positive demonstration that it has been of no account. American In vestments. Ity His Month. A Philadelphian, who had traveled extensively in Burmah, was telling an English girl, on a accent voyage across the Atlantic, some of tho remarkable work which elephants aro taught to do in that country, and, in order to create, a good impression, he drew slightly on his imagination. He told tho truth as to how tho elephants toil all day pil ing up teak wood at tho saw-muis, and even lay tho logs on tho plane, "and," he continued, "there was ono old elo phant, much wiser than tho others, who, after he had laid down tho log, got down on his knee and squinted to soo if it was on straight." Tho girl . siuueu in a uoruu son 01 way, aim said: "Xow I am sure you are an A merican. " Argonaut. After the Funeral. Mr. Rector So you think you know too much about matrimony ever to try it again? Mr. Benedict, again a widower Yes, sir; yes, sir! Here endeth the second lesson. POETIC LIFE IN JAPAN DAINTY AND EXQUISITE LI1TLE TOY DWELLINGS THERE. Urrr fur Melghboni A Krai Arradla Tha t'harm of the Uland Mljajlwa A I'lara of Prrfrrt I'rara-Kalrj Valt-ouii-a. 3 HERB Is an Iso lated, aristocratic quarter of the vil lage In the ravine behind the temple, .nhat.lted by prle t and superior folks and the fair ravine holds the MotuiJ (or Maple Ieaf) te: hou.ie most be witching cluster of Jo.i-uou.i.. .u .be most picturesque set .ing ever found in Japan, says the Cen tury. There is the usual large living room or office of the landlord and o general "food preparing" room for the establishment opening on the roadway, 'tut within the gates one finds a deep, zreea glen, an awful chasm some fif- een feet deep and twice as wide, all llled with delicate airy branches of ut-leaf maples. A terrible torrent iome two feet wide dashes madly down he mountain side, spreads out into a lake the size of a large dinuer-table with a wootlrn sauce-boat moored at one side. Each vantage spot on the steep bank holds a one, two or three roomed doll-house Ruch exquisite little toy dwellings, with such fairy bal conies, such spoiloss screens and soft shln'n,? mats that oi.e hesitates to des ecrate them with the clumsy, defiling destructive appurtenances of the sim plest foreign Lvlng; and as for himself fitting into one of these midget man sions It is Gulliver alive among the Lilliputians. Our life in that glen of maple !eaea was full of interest, from the moment of slipping back th screens in the morning with some anx iety lest the niue of a glen and its midget lake were not there or real rolled up over night, and some other charming Japanese drop curtain put in its place to the last hanging of the amados or wooden outer screens at night. The deer were friends and neighbors from the moment ot our ar rival, coming to drink from the musical fountain-Jet In our three-feet square court of entrance and then to the edge of our porch to bob their heads in well mannered appeals for deer-cake. These pretty beggars, with their lovely eyes, their sharp muzzles and delicate feet, seemed to know the value of their charms, and having no fear of man, had only to pose a few moments to move the stoniest and most indolent heart to wait on them. It was even more Idyllic in the early morning to find some antlered friend, or an equally fearless doe and her tiny fawn, wait ing by the lakeside to share our break fast. After Mlyajlma one may well boast ot having lived In Arcadia, and each day, more idyllic than the other, puts one in the better spirit of enjoying the rare Japanese charm of it all.- The peace of the island Is as perfect as its piety and few sounds but the gentle dashing stream and the flutter of maple leaves disturbed our enchanted little glen. One spoke softly, as befit ted a place ot such perfect beauty. Neighbors came to the doll-house across the chasm, but only the rat-tat of their pipes on the bamboo cups ot the tobacco trays was evidence of their presence there. In that simple, inti mate life there v.as no mysteries, not even of the menu. All the villager! who passed might stop and watch our cook make his highly colored curry for our midday meal; and peddlers who came to tempt the tea-house maids with gay kimono patterns watched his strange concoctions and sought pretexts to watch our further play with the knife and fork, as we sat at feast on our little veranda over the lake. The small boy of the tea house added the comic element, and his morning pursuit of our dinner chicken was always a fea ture. He would chase the angry ben around and around the lake, and when it fled cackling up the bank, a swift movement of his palm across the lake would Sj.urt such showers of water on the ruffled fowl as might soon empty the whole vast deep and rob the ravins of Its choicest landscape ornament. When the tea-house staff had combined against the hen, our major-domo would bring the captive to us In his arms and display the fine "stew chicken." There was a solidity and an adamantine fiber to the Mlyajlma fswls that resisted ordinary cooking, and we commanded one day that the bird should be divided at every Joint, the body quartered, and ail kept stewing of three hours during which we expected to be gone on, an excursion. Summoned to see if It was all right, we found the pallid, uncook ed chicken dismembered to the last. Joint; but the whole puzzle had been neatly put together again, and the bird wound over and over with the closest network or fine spool cotton a strange travesty on that Gulliver to whom we were alway3 comparing ourselves. Swam Srven Mile. Man has conquered the sweeping flood of waters at the Golden Gate, the entrance to San Francisco bay, Charles Cavlll swam from shore to shore, seven miles, accompanied by a fleet of sail boats and many screaming steamers and tugs. When his feet touched the sand at Ft. Point and he stood up and bowed to the multitude the occupants of almost numberless rowboats added their cheers to the toot of whistles and clang of bells. Cavill is said to be the first and only man who ever accom plished the feat of swimming from shore to shore where the bay and ocean meet. ' The buiness of shipping moss for packing nursery stock and plants is de veloping quite sn industry at Vlcks burg, Miss. THE BURROS DIED. Hat the rrflfcpevtor M he l'rwil the Me.rri atr4 l Narrlva. A man can "taud more har.Nhips than a bir ro. That is the conclusion thut Henry Frecmuu and Jacob (icnter have reached, an I their etory bearing on tho subject InJicutcs that the joinl Is well Liken. Kreeiuan anl Cei-ter are mltiliir pro ije -tors wh Imliiu aw mora tory. Thev arrived in San r'runciKCo rxxvntly after a long and wiuding scout for pivcious uu tals lu the moun tains of Sun rcrutirdino and Inyo counties. Mr. Frtv-nian vtiliintHrod 1h i information tliat he had passed through an expericm-o which, in suf fering, out lid anything thai ho could exMct to lin.l in the Infernal regions during twice tho length of time. (Jester audi had bnn knocking around the mountains an I canyons for several wocks." said Mr. Freeman. "We had four burros, two to ride an l two to carry our pucks of tools and provisions. Tho burros aro dead; (Jester and I aro alive, but mighty shaky. We had poor luck and struck nothing with color in it for a long time. Finally, wo decided to strike out for a locality where few, if any. white men ha I over gone liefore. Wo crossed tho desert country south of Death Valley alxmt I can't remem ber dates, because I didn't know Wednohiluy from Sunday. "Well, then wo headed for tho Funeral mountains, east of tho Ixirax beds. There was wimo game to lw had, and our supply of provisions held out very well, but tho further east wo went the H'arccr tho water became, and what there was of it was rank poison. In ona of tho gulches of tho Funeral range we found a running spring with water as clear as crystal. (Jester ami I drank with great gulps, and so did tho burros. This was alxmt two hours leforo sunset on a day thut was as hot as hades. Well, sir, five minutes after wo drank thut water my partner and I and tho bur ros begun to suffer agonies worse than death. My InsiJcs sue mod to he on fire, and I felt as if some lusty fire man wus dragging out my intestines with a lire hook. It was nip and tuck between (Jester and mo and tho burros as to which could squirm and kick and mako the most horrible noiso. lioforo tho sun set two of the animals were dead. The other two partially re covered. "After a couple of days' rest hav ing in the meantime discovered a scant quantity of dirty.but less poison ous water we sot to work again, and very soon discovered so mo very rich gold-bearing quartz. It carried free gold, at least $.100 to tho ton, and we drove stakes on tho claims. Hut wo might as well have saved ourselves tho trouble, localise, so far as I am con cerned and I know (Jester is of tho same mind I wouldn't go buck to thut accursed region for a million. No, sir! It's death, death everywhere. I'oisou In tho water, burning death in tho sunlight, annihilation in tho scorching winds. There is no water with which to work tho ore or quench the thirst of man or beast. It would bo next to an impos-ibility to cart the oro to a place where life could bo sustained for any length of timo. I am satisfied there are thousands of great fortunes in those hills and gulches, but it's my opinion they will remain there a long tim.'." Mr. Freeman then gave a graphic account of the retreat toward civiliza tion and habit'iblo regions. For near ly two days and nights he and (Jester and the two burros had not one drop of water. The men wero on the verge of madness, because tho heat was in tense. Tho mules tot tort) J and groaned, and hung their tongues out of the corners of their mouths. When almost within sight of a little mountain stream of pure water, not far from the Santa Fe railroad, tho burros lay down ani died, almost in the same breath. Hut Freeman an I Gester reached tho railroad, Hugged a freight train, and left tho land of horrors; with a pledge to each other never to return. Freeman says ho will seek a cooler climate and better water in South Africa. Not so Shy Arter All. Postmaster White received a reg. istered letter two or three weeks ao for a Del mar man and the man tojk the return receipt card out of tho of fice and carried it home. The letter not being called for, Postmaster White saw the owner one day last week and asked him why he didn't take it out of the office. The man admitted that he had the return receipt in his pocket, but he said: "I notice that it is ono of those things that you've got to sign, and I don't propose to sign anything I ain't suro about and have it turn up in a note by and by.'1 Postmaster White finally convinced the man that Undo Sam would not tolerate any conlidenco game in tho postoflico and the man signed the receipt and took his letter, lie opened it at once and it turned out to contain $1.50 in money which tho man luul sent to a swindling concern in Ohio, and ho was informed that tho postoflico department had intercepted tho letter and saved his money and re turned it. He wasn't quite so shy after all. Wellsbo rough, Pa., Agitator. T.i II Tree In the Korthwmt. Professor F. G. Hummer, of Tacoma, Wat-h, is authority for tho statement that there are scores of trees in that corner of tho United States that are over COO feet high. A Natural Mistake. Train Roblier, in tho Pullman -Your money or your life! 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