FOB THE FAIR BEX. B•rakardt'a IlMklM., The necklace now being executed by one of the firet jewelers of Paris for Sarah,Bernhardt ia near oompletion, and ia considered one of the finest specimens of the jeweler's art of the nineteenth century. It la of the flat shape so much worn of late years—a mere band worn round the throat of the kind called collier de chien. It is composed of two rows of magnificent brilliants about Rn inch and a quarter apart, between which a wreath of field flower* in rrecious stones, representing the natural colors of the rustic blossoms, seems to flow with the greatest ease and grace imag inable. The minute poppies arc com posed ot rubies, the corn-flowers of sap phires, the marigolds of topss, and so on, while the leaves are of emeralds. No two flowers arc alike, and altogether this necklace is pronounced the finest composed during this generation. Cheap (.trip. A girl who makes herself too cheap is one to be avoided. No young man, not even the worst, except for a base pur pose, wants anything to do with a cheap young lady. For a wife, none but a fool or a rascal will apm-oach such a woman. Cheap jewelry no one will touch if he can get any better. Cheap girls are nothing but therefuse and the young men know it, and they will look in every other direction for a life-long friend and companion before they will give a glance at the pinchbeck stuff that tinkles at every turn for fascinating the eye of any one that will look. You think it is quite the "correct thing" to talk loudly and coarsely, be boisterous and hoidenish in ail public places; to make yourself so bold and forward and commonplace everywhere, that people wonder if you ever had a mother, or a home, or anything to dol So be it. Ycu will probably bo taken for what you are worth, and one of these years, if you do not make worse than a ship wreck of yourself, you will begin to wonder where the charms are thator.ee ou thought yourself possessed of, and what evil spirit could have so befooled you. Go on, but remember, cheap girls attract nobody hut fools and rascals.— MacmiUaris Magazine. !Vew and Note* for Women. A doman has been appointed clerk of the Nevada legislature. Girls in a livery are substituted lor footmen in some English families. Queen Victoria is said to have made F4 ,000 on her stock farming last year. An EnglisU lady advertises her wed ding presents, including many valuable articles, lor sale, in the London Time*. Somebody who has been counting heads decides that blondes have 140,000 hairs, brunities 109,000 and red-headed girls S8 000. The telegraph operator at Williams' Ranch, Texas, is a little girl nine years old, who plays with her dolls between the messages. Old Monument, a Chippewa squaw living near StiilwaUr, Minn., now lias her twenty fourth husband, having been divorced from ten men ir. the forty years that the whites have known her. After a Mrs. Buford, of Kansas, had walked two miles to a river to commit suicide she remembered that the oven was full of bread, and she nt once hast ened home to save the loaves. Western women are thoughtful. A Paris paper says: There is another wedding on the tapis between an Ameri can heiress and an impecunious prince, which fills with gladness the hearts of bis creditors, whose name is legion; but would the lady's friends be pleased did they know that M. de X. lias promised a commission of 100,(4)0 francs to the person who served as go-between t English high society is turning again*t the professional beauties, and several bouses where they have been accus tomed to display their charms have be< n closed against them. A weil-known countess has taken the lead in tbc move ment. As the Prince of Waies likes the company of these Indies, however, it is thought the ban will not extend far. George Eliot's passion for music was remarkable. Indeed, nature seems to have denied her only one gift—personal beauty. Justin McCarthy said of her: "She is what we. in England, call de cidedly plain; what people in New York call homely; and what persons who did not care to soften the forms of an unpleasant truth would describe probably by a still harsher and more emphatic epitbet; her facc.it is said, not even being formed and illuminated by the light of l.er genius." Ww York iMklas Haiti, Bangs and bangles are alike popular. Moire antique ribbons are again in fashion. Orange blossoms are not worn on the skirts of wedding dresses. Cream-colored velvet is now much employed for bridal dresses. Comfortable fur hoods are finished off with wide loops of brown, blue eardina. satin or gros grain ribbon. Pretty jabots sre made of Languedoc edging, with clusters of moss bads or violets placed between each fall of iaoe. Very elegant peignoirs are made of white cashmere with the revers, cuffs and broad collar embroidered in bright colors. Novelties in'slippers are'.very clabo rate, and some have a row sf beads all around the edge; in black they are jet, in white, pearl. The jaunty peasant Brasses are ex- ceedingly pretty for children made of Prafgiarar tweed, aad trimmed with plush or gay plaids. Handsome fichus for street wear are of the new striped mull, scalloped and embroidered on the edge. Many of the now evening corsages are laced down the front, and aro made high at the throat and sleeveless. On full dress occasions long undressed kid gloves, with or without buttons, wrinkled on tho arms, are fashion able. Table covers arc no longer made square, but arc just wide enough to cover the tablo and very long. They arecalled "table-scarfs." Black velvet garments aro very hand some when trimmed with Russian lace in geometrical figures, arranged in a slanting manner across the surface. Point d'Auvergno is nn inexpensive, soft, graceful and becoming lace, rather after the stylo of point d'Alencon; the new pa terns are in floral or pompadour designs Pretty collars are made of fine em broidered handkerchiefs, two corners cf which form the turn-over collar, and the other two are knotted to form the bow on the throat. An attempt is being made to revive the use of artificial flowers. Tho new siik blossoms aid plush leaves are too pretty for the milliners to be content to throw them away at tho end of the sea son. Tho fashion of wearing full front breadths in gowns, introduced by M'lle Bernhardt, is not| favored. It is only appropriate for wedding gowns, which, as they are to be worn but once, may well be somewhat exceptional. The most fashionable French gloves arc composed of alternate hands of kid and lace, which shows a fair hand and arm as well as the glitter of jeweled rings to perfection. This fashion ac cords well with the lace sleeves and lace trimmings now in vogue. Even for halls, or occasions requiring elaborate toilets, ladies now prefer wearing their dress bodices cut square or heart shape in front, or in a decided point fnnt and back. Dresses cut quite low and round showing the shoulders aro more and more becoming the ex ception. Crinoline, when worn at all, is very small. The hustle, however, continues in favor. Those made of tine steel and lace net or pique arc most desirable, as they arc light and really form a support for the skirts worn. For wearing with long trained evening dresses they nrean absolute necessity. The "emigrant twist "is a style of hair-dressing wornprincipally by school girls. The hair is waved in front, and simply wound round and round the bark of tho bead in wide flnt plaits,'ex actly in the style of the bonmtlesa pudgy-looking littie emigrant women who, with their quaint faces and curious provincial costumes, turn Castle Garden New York, into a picture of life in the old world. The polonaise is again in lavor, and admits of great variety of form. Some of them nearly reach the foot of the un derdress in front, and are heavily draped in the bark; others are cut in the Wat tcau style, with rounded panicrs at the sides, and again, very elegant polonaises are made with long panels open on tie left side, and laced across. The skirt is simply caught up on the right side with a silk cord and tassel. Handsome sets of jewelry are made of hammered gold, with miniature land scapes, fruits and flowers made of very small jewels, which are inlaid so closely in some instances as to resemble fine mosaics. For example, a bluebird is made of closely set turquoise stones, a rose bush, its flowers and leaves is made of small rubies and emeralds, a cluster of daffodils of topnn stones, nn t a hunch of bine bells is formed ot brilliant sapphires. A "blushing bonnet" is the very latest invention of the age. This wonder ful capots " is fitted on the inside with two springs, which whenever the wearer bends her head press upon the arteries of the neck and send the blood into ber cheeks!'* A Frenchman of course in vented this convenient and ingenious contrivance, and as blushing is said to be one of the lent arts the patentee will doubtless rise to fame and fortune right in his own beloved Paris. A pretty deviation from the casaquin or ba*que is the "Esmeralda" "-slst, which is particularly adapted tosiender figures. It is n modification of the blouse waste, and is cut with a doep yoke, upon which the full blouse is gathered in fine sbirrings front and hack, the side seams, however, being perfectly plain and fitting closely to the form. The waiat is very pretty, made of •ilk or cashmere, and the yoke and cuffs are frequently made ola contrasting material and color. The modern taste for mixed colors shows Itself in the wearing of feather trimmings which display a wonderful intermingling of varied hues. In the manufacture of hats and bonnets the impaya pheasants is in great demand. The head and neck of the idrd glitters with a metallic brilliancy that is very beautiful. Many hate and bonnets are made exclusively of this lustrous plumage; in tsci there is quits an erup tion of bright birds and feathers of every kind, and a few ladiee / Nratric tastes are now wearing a Nyld colored Indian parrot, percb \e left side of their large Gi r bats. Chewing Una. We have it upon coxmon report tha chewing gum ia a imbalance well-known to the youthful part of the community. The qualitiea which it posseses at the time that it oomen from the confectioner arc all familiar to tho youngeat of ua. It certainly aeema a very attractive edi ble. The reaaon for thia ia not ao hard to find. Think how much eating there ia in it in proportion to actual weight and cash value. But there ia more in chewing gum then ia dreamed of in juvenile phiioeophy. One can eaaily comprehend the main ingredients of candy, but who, without being told, would auapcct that chewing gum ia often only a refined product of petroleumP The time wa* when the fragrant spruce furnished the moat common material purpose. But thia is no longer the case. The reader, familiar with the processes of refining coal, ia aware that the thick, brown liquid which comes from the earth, at one stage of its manufacture, is strained through heavy linen cloths. The residu um left after this operation is a dirty, brownish yellow wax that smells abom inably. Tliut unpromising substance, melted, bleached, deodorized and pre pared for com merce, appears In masses that weigh about one hundred pounds, resembling oblong blocks of clouded ice. It has no odor and no taste except what belongs to nny wax in its purest state. It may be used for many pur poses which it is not necessary to de scribe now. Tho manufacturer of chew ing gum purchases these blocks ready made to his hand, and at once melts them down. To two hundred pounds of wax he adds about thirty pounds of sugar, and gives the mixture a flavor by the use of some essential oil. as lemon 01 vanilla, and perhaps adds some color ing matter. The melted mass is poured out upon a clean marble slab and cut into the various shapes known to chewers. The youthful epicure rarely becomes so luxurious as to demand balsam of tolu; but, if he dries, the manufacturer is ready for him. This resin, which is obtained from South America, is at first in an almost fluid condition. It is the product of a tree known as—now hold your aw. for the name is worse than a whole box of chewing gum— myrasper mum toluferum. This lialsam is boiled by the manufacturer until finally It is brought to such n consistency that it can be run through rollers. It comes out in the shape of a little slender rod of a brownish-yel.ow color, which Is cut into picrvs, each about two or two and a half inches long. The balsam may sometimes lie mixed with a lis* eostiy wax. since its flavor is vrry marked. The Imlsam from the "chicle" tree, from Central America, is used in making what is known as snapping gum. It is very ductile when worked and moisten ed, and the process of making is similar to that of pulling taffy. The original gum exudes from the tree and forms in a mass sometimes several pounds in weight. Kvon in this natural state it would he a very satisfactory suhstance to keep the teeth at work. It cannot be worn out. Herds of Wisdom. There are few things that we know well. A delicate thought is a flower of the mind. L ive places a genius and a fool on a level. Man laughs and weeps at the same things. One is rich when one is sure of the morrow. Anything serves as a pretext for the wicked. The world either breaks or hardens the heart. Wisdom is to the souls/hat health is to the body. Thef do not love that do not show their love. The eyes of other folks are the eyes that ruin us. The only disadvantage of an honest heart is credulity. W boever learns to stand alone must lesrn u> fall alone. A truth that one does not understand bfiximea an error. Beware of him who hates the laugh of a child or children. Under our greatest troubles often lie our greatest treasures. Many a man's vices have at first been nothing worse than grod qualities run wild. The man of genius is not mnster of the power that is in him; it is by ardrnt, irresistible need ol expressing what he teels that be is a man ol genius. All prosperous men can give good counsel, and they like to do it; It ooeta them nothing. It is easy to disclaim against feasting when the stomach ia ul). An act by which we make one friend and one enemy is a losing game, because revenge is a much stronger principle than gratitude. " Where did you buy that coat f' " At that second-hand clothing store on Galveston avenue." " Why, that coat is your old coat I sold him last week. He has fixed it up and palmed it off on you for new." "By thunder I Now I know what the hyena meant when he said It fitted me Uks it bad been made for me. I thought at the time be was iying, but I ass I was deceived in him." -GalwMon MMS. A Vesemeas Water Snake. A writer in the Boston Commercial Bulletin relates the following sad yet interesting snake story: While washing decks on the morning of the fourth day out a small water snake, most beautifully marked with gold and green checks, was dipped up in a bucket of water. We had notiocd a larg>' number of these reptiles, varying in sise from six inches to three feet long, floating upon the surface of the water when the ea was calm. Naturalists have been divided in their opinions as to whether water snakes —and especially those found In tho salt water—were possessed of sufficient venom to cause death as the result of their bite. The majority, however, favor the non venomous theory, but here \vc had a positive proof that the bite of some species is as fatal us that of the rattle snake or the cobra di capeilo itself. One of the men, upon seeing this beau tiful little serpent, thrust his hand into the water, and grasping tho snake held it up for the admiration of his ship mates. Instantly, with a cry of pain, he dashed it violently to the deck. This wus a surprise to ail, for as m ny times as several members of the crew had seen these reptiles they had never supposed them possessed of sufficient animation when taken from their native element to inflict a bite, even though they were capable of so doing. The wounded man continued his wort for some fifteen or twenty minutes, paying but lilt le attention to the bite; but his hand, the forefinger of which had been struck by the snake, soon began to pain him. and upon examining it the flesh about the m irks which the fangs had made was found to b; fast changing oolor. The mate then notified the captain, who had just come upon deck, and he immediately bathed the affected part with balm of Gilcad—that being the strongest balsam he had. but ofnoavai 1 In two h iurs after the man had received the bite he was unconscious, and in four hours he died in a violent delirium. This sad and sudden death served to dampen the spirits of all on board for a considerable length of time. Difference Between " Cousins." The difference between city and their country cou.'ins is more marked than most people believe. The first impression a man has on finding him self for the first time in a great city is of vague excitement, accompanied by a sense of danrer. The multiplicity of objects appear fantastic to an eye ac customed to rural scenery; the uninter mittent noises, the entangled yet pur poseful movements, and, above all, the shitting panorama ol unfamiliar human faces, combine to throw the visitor into a state of mind to'aily strange to him. And nmid so much tumu tuous life he sees death every where on the lookout for a victim. But il the visitor to these strange regions Icoks at the fares of thoee he meets in sean u of >ome re flection of his own perturbation, he looks in vain. The countenance of the city man, as he threads his wny along the streets, is curiously impassive. At a first glance it appears also to be unobservant; but this is not it. For though he seems to look at nothing, it soon b-oomea evident that he sees everything. He mechanically informs himself out of the corner of his eye, of everything that might tend to obstruct or threaten him; and though he passes through a thou-and people without encountering the gaxc or treading on the toes of any one of them, he will recognize an ac quaintance or calculate to an inch the rate of speed at which he must make the crossing in order to escape the omnibus from one direction and the truck from the other. Doubtless custom and memory will account for a large part of it; yet the impassive face would probably appear tar less impassive than it does had not the contraction of the facial muscles, brought about by toe constant assaults ot innumerable impression* and the im possibility of responding to them all.be come in a manner fixed. The houses and the pavements, the vehicles and the hub-bub,produce an ef fect upon these muscles just the reverse of that exercised by the hills and dales of the country; ihey press them in in stead of drawing them out —in other words, the mind resists them instead of sympnthlxmg with them. Popular Kaaies of Cities. Philadelphia, the Quaker City- Boston. the Modern Athens; toe Hub. New York, Gotham. Baltimore, the Monumental City. Cincinnati, the Queen City. New Orleans, the Crescent City. Washington, the City of Magnificent Distances. Chicago, the Garden City. Detroit, the City ot Straits- Cleveland, tho Forest City. Pittsburg, the Smoky City. New Haven, the City of Rims. Indianapolis, the Railroad City. St. I/ouit, the Mound City. Keokuk, the Gate City. Ixraiaville, the Fall City. Nashville, the City of Rocks Hannibal, toe Bluff City. Alexandria, the Delta City. Opium is smuggled into toe Bandwich Islands in the cans labeled " Boston Baked Beans." Another method of in troducing the prohibited article ie to bore cedar fence poets and pack the hole* with It. The Cbineee are adepts ia thie sort of trickery, and they clandestinely peddle large quantities of opium and rum amoug the natives. Turkish Carpets. One of the most important industries of ibe Ottoman empire, and certainly the chief industry of Asia Minor, always excepting agriculture. Is the making of carpets. Borne of the factories are now furnished with looms quite in the Euro pean manner, but It is not in such fac tories that these famous fabrics are chiefly produced; tho peasants in their mud-house and the nomad Yuruks in their tents all contribute to the many kinds that are made. The annual value of the carpets of Anavolia ap proaches WOO,0(0; and of these but a small number remain in Tur key when compared with those distributed over Europe and America, where the demand is constantly increasing. About three-fourths of the carpets come to England (but not all for home consumption> and about one-sixth goes to France. These large exports keep prices at a fair level, nnd in the best shops ol Ixmdon and Paris all kinds of Eastern carpets can be got for ready money more cheaply than the casual traveler can buy them on the spot. This applies to the finest old carpeis as well as to the new ones; for even with a good and trusty dragoman one may have to Jose the best pnrt of a day haggling for half a dozen veivety mellowed Daghcstana with a carpet dealer of Symrna. Cairo or Alexandria, and after all be victimized to some ex tent. Oosbak, a large village of artisans about six days' journey dae cast from Smyrna, is the headquarters of the manufacture of the carpets known to us for generations as " Turkey carpets," and in France as "tapis de Smyrne." The patterns are Turkish, or, rather, arabesque. At Oosbak there are at full work hundreds of the looms called iesyak, employing about 3,000 women, and turning out about *5,000 square yards of carpets of all sizes and quali ties annually. A carpet of between seven and eight yards in length will 'mplov eight women at once, working side by side. Their wages are about eight piasters a week, which, it is calculated, comes to about one shilling and nine pence for each yard of carpet woven. The wood used comes from the villages round about, and is bought for about a half-penny a pound in its un c leaned state. When washed and bleached it loses at least one-third of its weight. The foundation of the carpet is made of an inferior wool, and the whole material of the fabric may cost about two shillings sixpence a yard. This does not include the dyeing, which is managed by the men, and form- the | chief item of st The colors that have j so long satisfied our western eyes are I produced tor the most part with mad der, cochineal and indigo. Madder | root, or alizard, gives the fine old "Turkey red," and is largely! grown in Asia Minor; the best roots i cost from four to five oenta a pound. Cochineal is imported from England and j France, and, being an expensive dye, I considerably raises the price of the car pets. It was not used b fore the y-nr 1856; anterior to that date madder alone was employed for reds, and this fart gives an epoch for the carpet-fancier. The indigo is brought from England or from India. Yellows are got from the seed of Rhamnus alaternus, which ia cultivated largely in the east* rn parts ol Karamania and it getting dearer every day; it now costs one shilling fourpence a pound. Other dyer, which are im ported from Europe, are used in small quantities to obtain the more tender ;ints and tone down to the general eficct | The " velvet" carpets which have at tained such a vogue were not made at Oothak till the year IB6o.— Si. J. mm' Gaulle. A He* ef fire. Among the petroleum springs of Baku, on the western shore of the Caspian, now beginning to he known as they de- i serve, is one communicating with the sea which produces at times a very striking phenomenon. Toe floating oil that covers the surface for many acres round is frequently ignited by accident, turning the smooth water into a verit able lake of fire. The most famous of these conflagrations, to which the super stition of the natives gives the name of "Shaitaun Noor" (Devil's Light), occurred in the autumn of 1878. It j broke out in the middle of the night, and was declared by a Russian naval officer, who witnessed it from the deck of a gun boat, to be the most striking spectacle he had ever seen. The sheet of flame waved to and fro in the wind like a flag, lighting up the shores for miles, and making every point and rock clear as at midday. Far as the eye could reach the smooth water was all one red blase, and the deep crimson glow which it tore a into the sky was visible to the inhabit ants of several inland districts far out of eight of the sea itself. Distress Is herasaay. A German correspondent of the /till Mall Gaulle writes that the financial distress in Germany is very great- Sell ing prices and lard rents are falling frightfully low. The result is that debtors on mortgage cannot pay toe in terest of their debu, and are din possessed, and their properties fre quently sold st half the value they had some time ago. This depreciation can not be attributed to foreign competition, ss the importation of com and othei produce has been taxed. It is generally believed that the fail Is prices is das to thesoarcityofoasb. It is asserted that the dairy products of the Unitsd Skates have twine the value of the wheat cm p. A CcMrtM WMMMU One of the mod beautiful and cele brated women in Paris, asjs the Quincy Argo, is Mme. I-opea, widow of the dictator of Paraguay. Few hare each a strange and eventfni career and spring from obscurity to a position of almost absolute power. When in Paraguay her rule was undisputed. She Jived in a palace and reigned a queen. She is very tall, has a fair complexion, large blue eyes, an abundance of light brown hair and a commanding figure. Mme. Lopes has a striking re semblance to Eugenie. and indeed has often been mistaken for the ex-eniprrsa. She entertains beauti fully, with great dignity and grace, making each gu'nt believe he ia a fa vored one. She speaks many langaagm, ail without aootnL Mme. Ipz U very brave, and during the war ia Paraguay followed the fortunes of the soldiers, sharing their food, and walk, jng as they did, with bare feet, thinkjag the troops would be braver and surer oif success if the wife of their own com mander shared their hardships. Hue went through the war, and when her husband fell dead at her feet she was covered with his biood. There was no time for tears. She took command, and turning to the soldiers bade them ftre on the enemy. With her husband fell an old comrade of his, and on the battlefield M me. Ix>pez promised the dying man to tie a mother to his orphan girl, a promise she has nobly kept. The cause was lost, and with her sons and adopted daughter the brave woman fled to Paris. She is a devoted mother, and lives only for the future of her sons. She feels confident that the eldest will occupy a high position in Paraguay, and it is the dream of her life to see him dictator, as his father was. Taking her eldest son. M me. Ixipez returned to Paraguay two years ago, thinking when it was known that the son of the general was in bis native country the people would call him to the dictatorship. In this she was disappointed. They were received with hisses, and followed from the steamer to the hotel by a crowd of excited people, who only remembered the cruel acts of "the tyrant," as the general was called, and forgot all the good the general's wile had done. Fear ing violence, not for herself but for her son, Mme. l/>pes, being a British sub ject, claimed the protection of an Rnglisb ship, then in the-harbor, and at night was taken through the streets, with a | pistol in her hand, determined to sell | her life dearly. Since Mme. Ipes re torted from her unfortunate trip she has resided in Paris. Among her friends are many who knew her in ber day of power, and who are now proud to show their regard and admiration for one of the most heroic women and devoted mothers of the age. That Obellsh. The New York correspondent of the Detroit Fret Prtu has a few remarks to make about the Egyptian obelisk: Commander Gorringe has been '-'ng about the obelisk and letting in some light, as it were, on a dark spot. People must not call the venerable shaft Cleo ; patra's Needle any more. Gorringe says I she never saw it, and Gorringe ought to know. Cleopatra was dead, he tells as when this old block of sandstone, hieroglyphics and all. was carted from Greece to Alexandria. Gorringe was not there at that time, but he bae looked the whole thing up, and Is quite sure that the carting did not lake place till some years alter Cleopatra's death. 80 it is a mistake to call the thing Cleo patra's Needle, and it is to be hoped that people will hereafter remember to speak of it as monolith of the period of Totb mes 1., 11. or 111., I am not sure which, but it was 1.400 years ago. anyway, j Gorringe has got the monolith over to the place in which it will stand in Cen tral Park, at last. He has made beUer time with it than we expected. A Detective (lamere. A little apparatus which may well be a detective camera baa recently been invented. To all appearance it looks like a shoeblack's box, which my I be slung over the shoulder with a strap, or rested upon the pave men', if need be. In fact, when wanted for work, it ia put dowt on the ground. It carriea gelatine plates already iu position, with a lens that is always in locos for any distance from twenty to thirty feet. The camera may be used without the least | fear of discovery. It may be dropped in the street in the middle ol the pave ment, before a shop, upon n bridge, any time the owner sees a group be wants n I picture of. As the box touches the | ground a bulb is squeseed. and the ex- I posnre ia made. The inventor abows an instantaneous sketch taken on board a steamer of two men by the sidae of the paddle box. one of tbem robbing his forehead tu the most innocent and unconscious manner, while the other reia.es some story or incident. Little six year-old waa taking hie first lesson in addition, and when the teacher aked him, "If I were to give you two cats and another nice lady gave you twu more, bow many rata would you havef be quickly replied: " Why. pretty sotm I wouldn't have any, for my mamma would break their aecka with the brooaa. She don't like cats."—Afcrrfofomm Herald Of oaah Ssala left just tve dollars, the remnant ol his cues ample fortune. Bin pqreooal property amounted to very 1 Mile. He commenced his long debauch with a purpose which HUH to have been fully accomplished.