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hiu ; w ag a l lram isI Sib ,gum uesataaut a s stata o ie a fib. Sanders, when Aeen by P a fe de~ a go,uwas i mood, and save s pi-S x -th State finaaees trat wig re the old Wr- backs a ated in tringcito de , i administaction eUach ais.dke marked mooees, of .adeua' administrationttat st mdSti e rancor sad spleen 'ahey see that mess Al someehi~g now to step the -- Isaig to him, he will '. eibh5d by the time that :the aig rolls Around that not nil be gaatt ough to sweeu i se ftghtig Siuders at long e . range will.,ever get any have paid every :apropriation previous sad present legia amd will be able to complete ~r without bosrowing any The $100,000 ,contingent 'o out of the revenres of dthe courthouse building in Mm was paid a few days ~ out every appr~ria u mid the Governor, to the floods and boll wee i t of the State has ssed, and as far as the eXl Were concerned, were by the State Board of 25 per cent. Notwith i the State has been :.pay all appropriations made by conditions that the foune d necessary sawe may oonfidently ex a surplus will be in the -at the close of the year. It has been a hard fa solve, but with the earn of Auditor Capde abrer Steele and by the at the most rigid econo Sis now on a cash basis the appropriations taken athe future looks bright. existing, I confidently expect that a start will e looking to the re .st about the $800,000 e Orleans Levee Board mid: "When this mon by the treseurer it to a special ac afit has been paid Levee Board on their .~ of it is subject to : any time until the diietded by the Sn li bother vorda the oard can draw every Slieuut whenever it is purposes. It is al kapt separate and dis- 1 4115 other funds of the TEAQIER. waiag Fear LaW Iaatitute is better sal to offer excep to its patrons, this Gindinger. of In Charge of the t, and is a highly k thorough pre RNotbwood High se minary. She years at Cornell ta graduated oo! Iowa in the the B. A. degree. i a fine linguist, to teach French, either to begin pupils in the our town will rs. M. M. Hayes' prwt.-~83ip mrt f NDITI EAst Ext. R rnt A IHrsl t1 S;IThe Xew dmeana iPicayvae, pedk eIag atorially of the-crop eoanditoa Says: ID.aling the past week the zen.a pertieoof the ebttonibelt 1hra e. uiaite&" one of the severesut tu iea hricanes es peienced in maau Srear, f not aully the severts ever .knelrn. a ltlfter such tiit p ýeay reports a etemaire damage in dotton. A mamk . ceton was open, dhere has n+ u buht bemndlamage fnom lsuch ope M, l$ lowns oaf tll ;many in e.P ballshave also mmodenbt beep li bidemn way. At the ~sme time i Smuat beymnanmbered that the dam age L=a all these stmemeis exag Sgerstedared generally tmas .out t+ be aklsrs nerIous hr* at fre f Elppmeed. "Aathser ipeit to be rimnebere{ is that tila , paticular storm ; ee through .asction of the ea.onabel *where the aop was already admitte to be short and where alreadk aIe Ssiderable pikling head been secom Slished. Had te more easterly Statee 0 where there is a good crop, been v.i ited, the damage would undouatedl. have been me~ greater. While the atean will no doa . btelp to still fur. ther curtail an already kort crop, iI is pambable that is lte joag run the utseta damage fron that .cause wit. be the least evil the arc Msa had to au err om. "Oter crops than evtton ,aturally nsuffered from the storm to a greater or less .eatnt. Fortunately, the rice crop in a awry large portion of the storm area had already been gath ered, while is the more westerly por tions of the rise belt the force of the wind was not, nearly so , great, s. that the damag to that portion of the crop still unharvested will not be great"- ~ "'In the sugar district the storm was felt at its worst, and. the dam age done has been cerrespondingly severe,. including not only the blow ing down of the canes, but more or less serious damage to sugar-houses and other plantation property. Even in the sugar district, however, it is more than probable that the loss will be less than at first expected. Blown down canes seldom lose much from that experience, while there is yet time to make necessary repairs to sugar-houses. The'Louisiana Planter and Sugar Manufacturer, in its edition of Saturday last, says, editorially: "'From every quarter of the sugar belt come tales of disaster to the crop, the result of the hurricane of Sept. 20th. The most positive dam age is that done to the sugar-houses, as that can be measured by the cost of repairs and rebuilding, for which there is yet a reasonable time ahead of us. Much work can be done in forty or fifty days, and cane grinding should be postponed to the latest practicable date. In the cane fields the chief and striking damage is that done to D 74, which, instead of bend ing to the storm, snapped off. To what extent the damage to it may reach is yet to be seen. Senator Provost of Iberia parish, in a hurri cane in 1879, which affected his purple canes similarly, snapping their tops off, found them to work reason ably well and to make open-kettle sugar satisfactorily, as was his method at that time. All other canes in the country were blown down, but this is not necessarily any serious disaster, and may diminish their sugar yield but little, if any. It is perhaps pre mature to make an estimate of our probab!e final results, but if done, we shall say that our expected sugar crop of 350,000 long tons, and this falling off to come chiefly from the damaged D 74 cane."' Oh, angels ever Bright and fair! This one-piece gown The women wear May be shae like But it donhti b ain -Fort Worth Record. Prohibition In Vicksburg. Prohibition doesn't prohibit in Vicksburg. The Herald of that city , v ,ot th following i ormation FORT IE NPRiTION OF ATE'S IE FI HSI. ' At a reect meeting of the lonisi ana Sper tem s Leagune . sations werepamsed ferthe enactmretd laws .mtor the regilatien of the partection P ti. the State strfsh and game. 'I There is one thing that tMe ports -sn', Leagt.et ot, ai d that one SftMuing is of vaatnrmore importaae to aWesh water dab.amen than mll the w lane that caa he prased by the L ln latre--and that is some leaed, na -ii an tejP of theMte m n r . ee exterminatan of the aSter S si someistn i di 9eifn K diseatian, there will be no fre Swater dithing in two pears. It Al .f4ho streams i n St. Land] are beisg infested, and it is to be presumed that the snene condition it prevails -eveywhere. I Through sthe energy ,of Euzebe s Frilot, the keeper at the clubhouse of the Opelones Rod and tiun Club, a, Second lake, may be saved as a fish ing preserve. !he stream has been extensively boomed, and there is e arcely a lily in it within the tbooms. r RAt all of the (other beautiful Jakes tlang the O. . railroad are choked up rith lilies, and we are told that the same condition ptevails with the smieans along the Caiorado Southerm. The resolutions of the Louisiana r Sportauu's League, which, as we e said before, are not mdficient in e scope, i. that they do aet speak of - the lily evil, are as follows: ' The amateur hunters and isher -emen of the ity of New Orleans and I ~o the parish of Orleans invite their Sbrother sportsmen of this State to join hands with them in an organiza tion, the object of which is stated hereinaster, and if these suggestions I are followed, the Louisiana Sports- ' men's League should be the strong- t ieat factor in the enactment of proper and sensible las for. the protection and propagation of' the game and I . I - The primary object of this leage is declared to be the mutual protec tion of its members, and of every amateur hunter and fisherman, against foolish and senseless legisla tion, and to aid by the influence of its members, the enforcement of any and all laws relating to the protec tion of game and fish; to use its best endeavors and means, in any manner found necessary, to amend or modi fy any existing laws which are ob jectionable to the majority of the sportsmen of the State as represent ed by the league's executive commit tee; to expand the usefulness of the league in every parish of the State by fostering the formation of auxili ary branches and by this means get in close touch with our brother sportsmen having an equal interest and knowledge of the aubject. To urge upon the governor and the game commission to purchase and to main tain, out of the revenue derived, prop erly equipped fish propagation plants and game preserves, and, finally, to do any and all things that will in sure the proper conservation of game and fish. BSTIi BAllET Crarty 3dal Says Thit Frlela o St i la drii Will lait lras 1ns Ran alsg tsr Sumrw. Acadia parish has always been faithful to the mother parish of St. Landry when this parish had a can didate in the field for which Acadia could vote. TheClarion has expressed its ap preciation of this fact on many occa sims, end i e frion o voiced t :seniu t the e~le of the ore pa& . The Crowley Signal has been a particularly warm friend of- ku i ley of St. Landry, and it. pei that that friendship is still extant. In the lastaiee ao tfhe Signal, v find the fhllowing'editorial'it:em: "Friean sad admirers of Hon. Ja. J. BM of St. La.it sisthe ai Is the i l--bl in Do good looks 1ait woman in &t steaggle for business seooesea Chicago says "No" s Fellowing a report from ,Ne. York that attractive featuore. ;w faultlers forms se .mieered mse - tial requirements tera.asiames sm.ose -or the b+9ep~ytha* A Lnesta pidity-pees s.a t6ve muck te with the employmuet of girls snd women were asked Sr their views The answer- in eper ease was th.i r htylint at r r atetMrg to i with it. ume nr.woaud M.rE. whanrm us bae is thaofthe cifi "psis ai 4 .ists," said: "'There isn't a weed ef truth is Sa statement. There is aotre _ mendous capacity in the plain look. ing girl, and in most cases the plain lookeing girl is much brighter than the .jp tty airl, the latter can be in teslecntal and bright, batm ac energy is ldot o keeping up her appearance. "Take the girl who is pretty, but who lacks certain mental capacity, and when she gets to be twenate-ve there is noet an attraction about her. The plain leaking girl, with the aver age amount be intelligence is always attractive. To be neat and clean and healthy and to have clear mental faculties is to be pretty." "We pay absolutely no attention to that," said Joseph Baych, of the Sie gel Cooper Company, "What we want is efficiency, and that is what we get. While the pretty girl need not be dall, it is in most cases in the plain girl that the greatest brightness and intelligence is found. Patrons are not interested in a sales-girl's looks; what they want is, to be waited on promptly and intelligently. "We have had a regular stampede of marriages," said Mr. Basch, and he went on to say that the girls who were bright stood a great deal more chance of marrying than those who have good looks. This sentiment wasechoed by the woman who has charge of employing the "hello girl" in the telephone company's exchanges. "Good or bad looks have nothing to do with our employment of oper ators," she said. "The plain girl is the pretty girl if she has the other qualifications for the work here. Girls who are innocent in youth and character are always pretty girls. Lots of our girls marry." Enough Sleep for Children. Jean Williams. M. D., who is con ducting a department of advice to mothers for Woman's Home Com panion, says in the October issue: "Let me say a few words to the mothers who forget that their grow ing children need long sleeping hours, in order that healthy growth shall be continued and a well-organ ized nervous system become estab lished. it is especially important that good judgment be exercised during puberty. Great physical de mands are made at this period, and the wise mother makes every efort to avoid for her children unnecessary dissipation of energy. "It is not easy to state definitely the number of hours of sleep re quired, as there are individual require ments that will materially modify any rules; still we may safely say that in the great majority of cases after early infancy, when the normal child sleeps most of the time, at least twelve out of twenty-four hou.a should be spent in sleep. Until six years of age the daily nap shonld' be added to this. The twelve hours sleep should be continued until the tenth year, and longer if the child is delicate or of especially nervous or ganization. From ten to fourteen year tea hears of asleep .aa sguay required and often twelve .hr1 mld be advanta from feur ith until foll meturd sleeping are, as a m orregular than at any other period of life, and thew t h t p e d be longer i dalgence when opportunity keuiemabering rtat few hie ' the endurance to coom with the cow plexities of oern life and thrive n lose w'ep than +ddl a `sga SSCHOOL g've t is as o eery e . e -is Ih fiEV eryIt isa paenwuoe t see the . we itt fellows ofoos onseed with de It is e.+ . - to l ... :: i + iiip-~i~.sue .th ,..ellow light when tey see . our uils,: We have them in the r gM ty mand t best make` for the best money, quality considered-1.50 WINSUERG SUITS double breasted c with fane poket and fancy cuf, rb back cut very long, and top. Frboys 9 to 17 years old. The matrials are of mi ed woolen effects, in, a the newest co.lo .ng a values $1.50 to $7.00 . Isnot neglected, forsome Sthey ldo o+ool i So come see our latest style in newmixture; our maly rgb t, i Our hp and Y.ong. MAN HATS In LondOn Smoke, SGrays and Greens ". arethevery latest styles, our Shoosin Pt Viol, etal are in conformity with our of b s...ts, underw . ear.. socks . : Let Me Be Your I o·nh[.r· - I - 1- !! -. a SO-·*ct'