The Omaha "Byam Shaw's remarkably interesting picture, 'Lovo the Conqueror,' which shows all the famous characters of history brought, reason or power to save themselves, illustrates the psychology of this subject." By Prof. David Edgar Rice, Ph. D. the Distinguished iT"fHE public has been treated to I euch an extraordinary outpour ing-of lovo lottors in recent court oases that it becomes a proper function of psychology to olucldato as well as It can tho nnturo of these phenomena. A hard-headed business man writes raring nonsense in his lovo lottors. A professor of moral philosophy tolls outrageous lies. The wife of a cler gyman, accustomed to tho sovorest moral discipline, usos tho most un bridled orotic language. A great etnger, noted tor tho inconstancy of his affections, declares that ho Is "over tho samo." What is tho meaning ot those let ters? What is tho meaning of lovo letters, anyway? Tho eclonco of psy chology will explain to us that sueh epistles necessarily defy all the rules of reason. True passion is an ele mental instinct that when arousod supersedes all the restraints of rea son. Tho lovo latter does not need to havo a meaning. It Ib simply an expression ot unreasoning lovo. Tho lover is more likely than not to lie, because ho Is rolcased from tho con trol of all tho higher mental centres, including that which ordinarily ro tstralns him from lying. 'But ho will not tell a mean or calculating He. It Is only In a few ot tho highest natures that tho extreme or passion can ho combined with porfect mental Bolf-control, as in tho caso ot tho Brownings. While universal experience con firms the statement ot a well-known author that "lovo is tho greatest thing in the world," it Is equally true that in lovo and its manifestations, as in many other things, thoro is only a step from the sublime to tho ridicu lous. All tho world, It has been said, loves a lover, but a large part of the world, none the less, stands quite ready to howl In derision, it not in contempt, if somo mischance hap pens to expose to public gaxo tho surging emotions ot his enraptured eou). Tho lovo letter of everyday life, In the cold light of reason, takes first rank as-tho most absurd and ridicu lous product ot tho human imagina tion. It any one Is not convinced on this Tmlnt let him peruso a few ot the effusions that havo recently found their way into tho public prints, a few specimens ot which aro given herewith. New Ways by Which Laundries Ruin Your Clothes A GERMAN hospital superintendent has been mak making an Interesting study ot laundries which throws new light on the ways our clothes aro often ruined by careless or inadequate methods. One ot tho most common causes ot damage to cloth ing in laundries Is tho use of hard or Insufficiently soft water. Another frequent causo is false economy in the use of soap. By sparing the soap the material washed Almost invariably runs the risk ot being spoiled in a greater or less degree. We are too prone to look upon soap merely as a chemical means ot removing dirt, whereas In theso days, when comparatively heavy-working rinsing and dangling machinery are used, u good soap is invalu able as a mechanical lubricant in preventing damage to the Unen by ameliorating the action of the rollers. Psychologist. Tho following rather tamo exam ples, written by a "blond and pretty" maiden to her married lover, are typical emanations of tho "snooky ookums" specios of 'brain, which, utterly lacking In imagination, 1b con fined to a rango of ideas, and expres sions that is really pathetic: "Doll Baby: Tho only thing mlas lng la you, I havo wished for you more than once. It I was to speak from 'dor heart out I would go on tolling you how much I wish you wero horoi" "Dear Leo," says a second lettor, "don't you think I am a very good doll baby to think ot you so much and wrlto to you so often? Friday, Saturday and Sunday I shall expect bo much mall from you that it will tako mo two or threo hours to read It. It's tlmo for my bcddlo, so good night, bo a good boy, and don't forgot your Bwootheart." Tho frequent recurrence ot baby talk and tho uso of diminutive tonna ot endearment, especially on tho part ot women, aro tho most distinctive characteristics ot tho fervent lovo letter. Tho woman who recently sued tho groat Caruso for breach ot promise asserted that ho was always "baby" to her, and In "support of her assertion sho offered many.lettors and postcards purporting to havo boen written by tho great tenor, in which he thus described himself. This tendency 1b easily accounted for. when wo recall tho intensity ot tho maternal Instinct, which is strongor and moro important than the sex instinct In securing tho per petuation ot tho species. Tho wo man's strongest love Is that which she shows toward her own offspring, and, conversely, that which ehe holds most dear sho likes to regard from the maternal point ot view. Little wonder, then, that tho man who has won her affoctlon, no matter what his age or size may bo, becomes for hor a "baby." "Exhibit No. 2" is on an entirely dlfforent plane, so tar as literary style and the play of Imagination are concerned. Tho author, formerly tho wlto ot tho Rev. Cranston Bren ton, a distinguished Episcopal cler gyman ot Yonkors, had entored Into a "mystic marriago" with Frederick Ernost Holman. a literary man ot Bomo prominence, without taking Uio precaution to securo a separation from her legal hUBband. Tho letter is in the form ot an allegory, and was to bo opened by her lover on a specified night It runs as follows: Sunday Bee Magazine "I long bo for you that I am half afraid to see you. I long bo to glvo myself to you to bo nil yours at last, that I hardly daro think of our groon woods. To-ulght, then, you are mine, and mine alone. "Onco upon a tlmo Eros gavo a masked ball and invited tho 'emo tions.' They camo in costumo cos tume Intended to conceal the iden tity of each. To harp and fluto they danced. Thoy quaffed tho wlno of "life and their merry foast chased tho flying hours. "Eros watqhed and smiled. "Ho know. "Doopor thoy dronk. Wilder grew tho dnnco. Tongues too reserved wore loosened. Maidens domure A Painting by a Lunatic, Which Has All tho Meaningless but Highly Imaginative Oharacteristics of a Love Letter, grow bold. Sombre men grew gay. liravo men grew braver. Talont grew to genius. Gonlus grew to In spiration. Tho timo for unmasking camo and all tho guests had taken off their masks savo threo. 'Anger tore the mask from 'Passion,' and, lo! tliero stood 'Purity. Turning In his wrath, 'Anger' stripped the mask from tho other masked guest, who had come as 'Innocence,' and there stood 'Ignorance.' A dozen hands rushed out and toro tho mask from 'Anger,' and thoro stood 'Jealousy.' Eros watched and smiled." Equally devoted in spirit and rap turous in expression, the letters of Mr. William Rapp, former husband of Madamo Schumann-Ilolnk, to his "charmer," Mrs. Kathorino Dean, show us how, by judicious seloctlon and handling, tho moro common pjacb vocabulary ot everyday llfo may bo pressed Into tho service ot tho heart Mr. Rapp assures his "In spiration girl," hlu "darling wonder girl" and his "one best bet" that "every flbro of his being Impels him to hor" and that ho is "intoxicated with tho delicious incense ot hor This lubricating action can, however, only be fully secured when soft water Is employed; with hard waters a large amount ot soap Is wasted. The pubUo In gen eral havo no conception ot what this waste really means, nor Is It easy to express It In figures. But the experi ments have shown that one part ot lime In 100,000 parts ot water means sixteen times the amount ot soap nec essary in soft water containing no lime. Electric bleaching Is another method which does serious harm to collars and linens. Experiments show that It deteriorates the fabrics fully fifty per cout. Soaps containing a relatively low percentage of fat and alkaline soap powders are also responsible for a great deal of damage. When chemical disinfectants are used tho damage from this cause is much greater, al though not bo apparent at first Copyright. 1914, garment" He is so proud ot her that ho "would llko to tako her to Fifth avenue and Forty-second streot at 5 p. m. and raise hor on his shoulders and Bhout out, 'See what I have!'" Lack of spaco forbids tho further multiplying of examples. Enough have already been given to demon strate the truth that lovo letters re semble nothing quite so much as tho ravings of a disordered brain. They fairly seetho with silly exaggera tions, perjuries, outlandish epithets, baby prattle and barbarous figures ot speech. To say that a man undor the in "fluenco ot a strong lovo passion Is released from the restraints of rea- son Is to say in reality that he Is suffering from a form of madness. Not long ago a judgo In a court ot law went bo far as to say in all sorlousness that a man counj not be held strictly accountable tor his statements made under the influence of love. Why is it that the rapturous lover, howovor well balanced he may show himself to bo in tho or dinary situations ot llfo, so often throws prudenco and propriety to the winds and indulges In conduct which to h In. fellow men seems so utterly absurd? The explanation, from a psycholog ical point ot view, Is to bo found in tho fact that in the situation we aro discussing wo havo to do with a real conflict between a natural and Impulsive expression ot individual personality on tho one hand and the conventions ot society on tho other. Next to tho Instinct ot self-preservation, the strongest impulse ot the human organism is that ot ardent love. This Is nothing more than a biological necessity, in order to in sure tho perpetuation ot tho species. As compared with this Impulse, con siderations of honor, honesty, pru denco and propriety, however highly they may be prized from an ethical point of view, are of only secondary importance. They represent a much later development In the psychic life ot tho race and ot the individual as well. For ordinary situations they are usually strong enough to exercise a controlling Influence over conduct They sit as judges over the varied impulses of the heart, rein forcing the good and suppressing the unworthy. But when the supreme crisis ot a life comes in tho form ot love, as It comes but once to many an individual, these weak arbiters of conduct lose their power, and the torrent ot emotion sweeps away all obstructing barriers. They are, In fact, short-circuited by the paramount emotion. A man or woman violently In love has lost by the Star Company, dreat Britain helpless, to the feet of love without ' control of the higher centres ot thought. Lovers must be liars. To put the same facts in a purely physiological form, wo may say that tho great substratum of mental llfo In man, In common with the lower forms of animal life, consists of a great array of Inherited tendencies to action in tho form of what aro commonly known aB Instincts. Given a certain stimulus to tho nervous organism, and Its appropriate re action follows as Inevitably as nlgnt follows day. Tho only thing can possibly prevent such a re- i I ! buit is me existence or a different impulse, prompting to action ot a different kind In minds endowed with memory and tho power of reflection such in hibiting influences aro to be found in unhappy results of earlier ex periences. In this way there aro gradually built up centres of inhibi tion, as they are called. When we "reason" out that a given act is dishonest, or improper or Imprudent it simply means that we permit the idea ot a previous unhappy experi ence In connection with the given act to occupy the consciousness to tho exclusion of the impulse itself. The doing of tho act or the refrain ing from It then rests wholly on the question or wnetner tne brain cen- tres which originate the impulses Rlchts Reserved. 1 II If Pi I Hill i ii ii il .43SHv. y"Mt i Mill i ii i ii aro stronger or weaker than those centres that tend to Inhibit it Keeping in mind this conception w w.o iiuiuiu ui mo me uuii process that takes place when a man is lav boring under the stress of a strong emotion, we must agree that Shake- speare formulated a perfectly sound psychology of love when he said that lovo Is blind, and lovers cannot see tho pretty follies that -themselves commit" It is In reality a case of mental blindness The lover does not choose to make himself absurd, He does not weigh the satisfaction that comes with full expression of his love against the shamo that re- suits from exposing his heart to Page a Shows How True Passion" Short Circuits" the Higher Mental and Moral Centres, Thus Possible the Delightfully Nonsensical Love Letters "The mirfitv Hercules wasting his time with Om. phalo's knittino- U the Greek interpre. tation of the silly phase of love." The Painting Is by A. Bou- er. others. H s passion alone holds the ?Jf?e , 5 copiousness, and, as it were, deliberately cuts the wires through which help might otherwise :ome from tho so-called inhibition contros. And when tho stress is over and me damage done when the mental balance, is re-established and the victim can sit down and calmly cou- slder his own conduct in an.lmper nay, it may well be that ha himself will provo to. bo hia own severest critic Love-making is as old as the ram lUolf. 6 raco Strange. Indeed, io it that tho vorv emotions that mean so muoh , Individual in his ;ow?Z?Bi ? 5? perience. and at Take so U appeal to Vim who f Idealized tn literature, should Tead "m m f-5 nway from truth and tMi but VldlcZo are act ly Sitai Tn Sh?00 th7 ence of another tadlviSual. 4 h'4