Ike Lonp City Northwestern J W HTRUEICH. Publisher LOUP CITY, - - NEBRASKA | COUNTRY UPE T»H to especially lk« season of tbo *< if «Ua (W bulb V Uo Is »bU- to e* ubiub « borne m the country. and fcruag up fair etlldreu there- t« to be 'et* anted The trend of migration tor many rear* baa been strongly to *ard the rttias ahd "the bust hum of aim ' but noasdays the dlt dueller ■a • :.ftwra(nj la carious insidious ■ i)i to become a comniuntcr. or if •e raaaot set t» >oad the purlh-iu of ne city he la taught the cooren alien if a Utile spare ta tb* barb ?ard. it ■nay he for hortb ak oral phrphMO There ta no sathfaiica quite the -quttaW-nt of that of m-tkins t»«> ear* 3t < ora gr®» a here woe grew be fore or causing tbe tomato |>laut or •he heaa tiae to blossom etm as lit rest beneath the careful nurture of aoe's one assiduous hand. A "sign of the uases- » so. fa ahbiaolitatton as the IXsastlf aaU School of iiorticul tare far Loan at Atab>r. aa>a tbe Philadelphia ledger Wfti are by natural instinct food of Boa era and if aD groaiag tbtags. ahd they are. by .ibort ahd inbred patience as well «• by this predisposrlon qualfud to be mmmH gardmsrrs aad planter* ft is gr»tifr»ag ta be able to «bnonlcle tbe atsrreoa of iastltutiona a boh un SerraLe to give *om«n instruction that redmeo to tbe rattoeal and belie* e that utilita au drink tea out of a saucer for Lm same nuM. aays the Lancet. A tile that cat he the ctpLihatioa of ne peculiar shape of the aou|< J late, he aftaatate iafirattf la surety in »CBlhaM 'toiajvd with the oltkmi .:*aftu.We< otlc-b may [ol-able erlae from eapoeiac m lar^*- a cur 'are of aa'nrar hold to the air. Soup -tsalf be aerttf is a rup. a loo. broad •oe-np. a rid the method, mhtrh t» he «*tat sore u»oai. ia tjtieii. Too leap a teasel would t» an error or. the s t* t aide; Ha advantage* mould he amreled by it* prat drawback; me •mould tara* Mar of the delicate ft* • ora of the soup. la the shallow • bah : miss lpr« iatioa altogether. The beas of the day tells of a Japa -ewe- you'll oho was cmre a bellboy la a Bwtaa hotel, hot oho menaced to *he a emtrae at Harvard and is now etormrax to Lis astire land to h< ad a latterapy depart tarn there. He was -ot aa American hoy. hot be deserved o h . aad his honorable iwi.tHM. is a «taw to some ia this superior land 4 our* oho arret wiM prompt mub •II r those oho oodd take adtaulace M the opporrunities offered by this ouhtryr to all oho would rise from arable ladtxaa to hicber inks by sftr of 4eter*maik*a and heir own From Comae* * trot a Japanese gradu ate of the state tgrv ul' oral college ia >kii>< a dose* bollfrugs hmek to Japan Mis purpose is to *e<-ure * rare of edible bind le*s la that empire, not a bumper crop of hops. A 1'i.tiadelpMa girl is affli ••-<1 with * hud puMumtag from Ilf kin* jioetage - amps, aad complicated with Ptila ielphia aboy-tag stikuess the rase -tsbttld he a pmthetlr one A French savant claim* >u 1 are frturea a hah and restored it to life •fter a lapse of three month*. With out b*-*i'at ion w» pronoun; ■ it the beet ftah Mory of the season A New Tort man ku in*-d tn ship • is »U» OK of tlx- (Min'r) because *t»*- bu frown so fit That famous remark aUTil no nc« iov*■* a fa' man .* now ur* taayit are so smsirir. If tf were nut for iht iul>uuuaft< insaBne la on* he* ? be life sale's * ouk r>r*ak into the hero • lass !. ** fre An MtltaUil* akin MU lias beet defeated in tfce Georgia legislators bowlta-rw chivalry COCMune* to ;ru .be ladle* (be right to wear *ha- the] ptast. heaven Lies* 'em. tU- Loots wants a slogan out a :«,«H submitted nos one was found t< be satiafnnory What is the matte wt!b "bee itt Lout* and skiddon*" Many a fly remains uaswattsd am tbe beanie should do their duty . A Topeka minister Las invited th members at bi* congregation to tel aim aB their troubles. If they do b ai!! probably want to hunt for an other nmgrcgattor Trinity ebnreh in New Tort bn been savin* oocla but losing money flat b nothing Some good |*opli tbetr Uvea saving soul* bwiaglng t> • bammork u nee o „ B l>T popular pnstimew these dayl MAKING A STUDY OF EUROPEAN WARSHIPS THKKK rear admirals eiity of her class or nation, or by tbe Invention of labor-saving machinery, will trade on her unused potentialities of motherhood for her support. I'nless she can or will en ter the Industrial field or some other i line of productive activity she bas no rlgbt to live on the labors of the male, except In the primitive or decimated nations, where the duties of mother hood extend over a greater period j than the half dozen years now neces i sary out of her three score years and ten. "The woman of leisure today,” she i says, “like the hot-house specimen so notorious before the downfall of . Home, who seekF • madly by pursuit i of pleasure to fill the voil left by the ' lack of honorable activity, would be far happier if she had plenty of hard work to do, and the race would be correspondingly healthier and more ef ficient." FUN BY BARONET AND WIFE Disguise Themselves as "Poor Musi cians" and Go on Tour—Friends Drive Them Away. l.cndon.—An escapade in which fig ure a well-known haronet. his wife, a cavalry officer, the heir of another bar onet and a street organ is reported | from Warwickshire. The Inc (dent, which took place a | lew miles from Nuneaton, has caused 1 much amusement among those con , ueeted with the Atherstone hunt. Having hired a piano-organ from ! some traveling foreigners, the baronet and his wife disguised themselves as Italian musicians. The former wore I a slouch hat and old clothes which had j done duty in amateur theatrical per formances; the latter wore old gar ments and bound her head with a col j ored silk handkerchief. Accompanied by a kinsman of the baronet, they set out to the neighbor ing mansion occupied by the son of a baronet well known in London. No sooner had they begun to reel off popular music hall airs than the gen tleman appeared upon ihe scene and. In a peremptory manner, ordered their instant withdrawal under threat of calling in the police. When, after a time, they made themselves known, he joined them in a peregrination of the village, and eventually the "adventurers” reached the seat of a country magnate, a lead ing justice of the peace. Here the butler was sent to tell them to leave the grounds immediate ly, and It was not until the irate squire himself appeared on the scene that the quartet retired. j The climax was reached when the party arrived at another country resl | dence. The family were away from j home, but the servants in a body de scended uuon the "poor musicians.” But the party reached home with their disguise unpenetrated, and a few days later details of the "joke” leaked out. and were discussed and greatly enjoyed by the field that met the Atherstone hounds near the village where the escapade was planned. CAUSE OF DELUSIONS New Disease Mixes Sounds. Col ors, Odors and Tastes. Physicians Now Recognize Condition Which Probably Accounts for Hal lucinations of Insane—It Is Called Synesthesia. Xew York.—Physicians now recog nize a condition which probably ac counts for the hallucinations and delu sions of the insane. It is called syn esthesia, end those afflicted with it are known as synesthesics. It is that peculiar condition in which sounds cre ate the idea of colors, and vice versa, or in which colors, tastes, sounds and ! odors are confused. “Synesthesia is not a matter of much practical importance,” says American Medicine, “but it is highly interesting to say the least. It is that curious phenomenon of the overflow oi sensations so that air waves, for in stance, give a sensation of color as well as sound. It seems that through some defect of development the corti cal centers (of the brain) are not in sulated from each other completely, so that a stimulus received from the re tina say, is not confined to the visual centers, but affects adjoining ganglia "The commonest form is colored bearing, and most of the cases ol synesthesia investigated up to a few years ago were of this type. No two w'ere alike, that is, the same sound would cause different colors or shad lugs in the different cases; a locomo tive whistle would be yellow to one or white to another, and so on. "Moreover, in some cases only a few sounds are colored, such as the tones of a piano from black in the bass ti white in the upper keys with a spec trum in between. In other cases ever; sound has a light sensation added t< it. Then there are cases in which col ors or odors give sound sensations— I glaring colors being loud, literally a: well as figuratively, an