Newspaper Page Text
4
i
*' A PARIS MYSTERY.
[continued FROM FIRST I’age."]
ago—on a dark and wet night, a gentleman
drove up to his door in a cab and came into
his shop. The gentleman asked him whether i
he could, in less than an hour, fabricate a key 1
exactly like one which he showed him. The ;
key was of simple construction. Benoit said, '
‘Yes, easily;’ and at once went to work. The
gentleman waited. He was a foreigner, of
that Benoit is certain, but cannot guess the
country to which he belonged. He was in
Evening dress, and wore a fur cloak. The
locksmith noticed specially his dark eyes
and sallow complexion; could indentify the
stranger if he met him again, especially if he
h'-ard him speak. When Benoit had finished
the key, which he did in half an hour, the
stranger gave him three francs, the sum
asked, and at once drove away. I showed
B'-noit the key of Meissner’s room, now lying
on that bureau; he declared it to be the same
size and shape as the one which had served
him for a model.”
Here Fllotin stopped, as if he had run
down.
“Is this Benoit available as a witness!”
asked Sapinaud, who like myself had listened
with close attention to Pilotin’s narrative.
“M. de Bourdon says that he will live,”
answered Pilotin tersely.
“Messieurs,” said Blery, “you have heard;
now you shall see—Pilotin, fetch a cab. We
are on the eve of a discovery.”
We took our seats in the conveyance with
cut asking any questions. Sapinaud and I
exchanged a glance which said, Let us leave
the revelation to M. Blery; he has an eye for
dramatic effects.
Pilotin mounted on the box; I noticed that
he carried a short crowbar. The coachman
hod evidently received his directions before
hand. He drove us up the steep, narrow
Rue St. Jacques, into the very heart of the
Isatin Quarter. He stopped at last where the
Rue St. Jacques intersects the Rue Cujas, at
a pork-butcher’s shop, with the name Pajol
over the door. Pilotin alighted, and held
open the door of the cab while we got out.
M. Blery entered the pork butcher’s shop
and presently reappeared with M. Pajol, fat
faced and blqe aproned.
“Messieurs,” said Blery, “M. Pajol will
now take us to the room of that tenant of his
who, since Christmas Day, has disappeared.”
M. Pajol bowed, smiled blandly, rubbed his
fat hands, and led us up the dark, moldering
staircase.
When we had reached the sixth story Sapi
naud and I paused to take breath. “A little
higher, Messieurs, if you please!” said M.
Blery. We toiled up with many stumblings
after the detectives, until we reached the gar
rets, in the very top of the roof. The stair
way leading to these was little better than a
ladder, where the hands had to assist the feet
of the climber.
“This is the door,” said Pajol.
Pilotin took a big bunch of keys from his
pocket and tried them one after another; none
fitted.
“No matter!” said Blery. “See, place the
crowbar here—now, a little force—and,
presto, wo have the door opened I”
Sapinaud and I followed the detectives into
the room,Pajol bringing up the rear. The spec
tacle which met our eyes was a strange one.
The small window in the roof, thickly coated
with grime and soot, admitted only a very
feeble light into the garret. A deep layer ot
dust rested on everything. In the centre of
the garret stood a brazier, filled with char
coal ashes. On the wretched truckle-tied lay
a heap of clothes, as if they had been thrown
hastily down. Throe largo traveling trunks
occupied about half the entire space of the
chamber.
We looked on In wonderment while the de
tectives made a business-like inspection of the
room before touching anything.
Suddenly Pajol plucked Blery’s sleeve, and,
pointing to tlie charcoal-brazier—“lt was
with that same brazier he did it I” he whis
pered.
Blery nodded. “Now, Pilotin,” he said,
“let us begin our search.—Approach, Mes
sieurs, if you please. I have the idea that
among these clothes here” pointing to those
on the truckle-bed—“we shall, perhaps, make
a discovery."
Sapinaud and I drew near, and looked on
curiously. The clothes consisted of a dress
suit, a fur paletot, and a crush hat Blery
felt tho breast pocket of the coat, and, with
a smile of triumph, draw out a dagger sheath
made of greqn silk and lacquered wood, in
ahape like a dotted fan.
/ / WwiOfJ
Li.bn
f Z/i
s' J" 11 "" 111111T -
/Irate out n dorypcr shoaih made of given
Still <md /aeqaerad wood.
“You have seen h mething like this before.
Messieurs, is it not sof’ said the detective.
“And this—this alsw you will recognise T—
and he showed us a key which he had found
in another pocket. An exclamation—a sig
nificant “Ah'”—ev-aprd from Sapinaud and
myself at the same moment. M. Blery smiled
again.
Pilotin next oixmod the traveling-trunks.
They wore found to contain elothea fur the
sutwt part ; among which wore one or two
dresses, evidently Oriental. There were also
a number of letters, some in our own lan
guage, aw in a foreign character, which I
easily recognized as Ja;antw&
Sull M. Blery had mg sjsiken a word of ex
planation. He socnied to enjoy onr complete
mystification.
“Ptiotin.’’ he said at last, when his search
was finished, “you will remain here on
guard until you are relie vol. You will
allow nt> on*' to enter without a written order
from Monsieur the Prefect. M.reueura, if
you will return with me to tho prefecture, I
shall have the pleasure of explaining to you
what you hare seen here. That will boa
more conrenirut place fur duutg so."
Leaving M. l*njdX we drove back to the
Prefreture, where M. Btery rveunad his nar
rwtivw.
“Monsieur,” be said to me, “wflj remember
the surmtoe be bad formed—or. as I prefer to
coll it, the ktea that the area twin of Messsner,
who was certainly a foreigner, may pombly
tetre beena JauuMsa I doteted on follow
injj up this clewT”
“In the lists at the prefecture I find the
names of betw'een sixty and seventy Japanese
returned by the hotel keepers and proprietors
of furnished houses in Paris. About forty of
these are still resident here. Over twenty
have returned to their native country. 'The
remainder are dead, and buried in Paris.
“I make special inquiries with regard to
! these last; it seems to me very probable that
. the victim of Meissner’s extortions should be
among them. One of the names is Sangura,
a native of Yeddo, no profession, returned by
Lunel, a keeper of private apartments, of the
most expensive description, in the Avenue
du Roi de Rome. I visit Lunel, who remem
bers his lodger Sangura perfectly. He bad
occupied for a year the finest suite of rooms
on the first floor of Lunel’s house. Ho was a
Japanese of noble birth and great wealth,
who intended remaining for three years in
Europe. The seductions of Paris had proved
too strong for M. Sangura, however; his style
of living, Lunel assured me, was fabulous.
He always rode out with two grooms behind
him. His dinner never cost him less than two
hundred francs, as he never dined alone. He
would go behind the scenes of the theatres with
his pockets full of jewelry. He made presents
of the most splendid character; to one actress,
it is said, he gave a set of diamonds worth
thirty thousand francs; to another a barouche
and a pair of English horses with silver
mounted 1 * mess.
“The rent was always paid to Lnnel quar
terly, In advance. About the end of th©
third quarter, Lunel’s experienced eye began
to see symptoms of a change in his tenant's
disposition and mode of life. Sangura was
no longer high-spirited and gay; there was
almost continually a cloud on his face. First
one of the grooms was dismissed; then the
other; then the valet. Finally, the riding
horses and the cabriolet were sold. One by
one Lunel began to miss from his tenant’s
apartment certain costly articles of jewelry,
with which Bangura had decorated it
when he first came. Lunel inferred that
these were being sold, aa the difficulties of his
tenant grew more pressing. Little by little
Sangura’s wardrobe disappeared also—a bad
sign, Lunel thought; but the fourth quarter’s
rent was paid, and so he was safe.
“At the end of the fourth quarter, San
gura—whose apartment was by this time
stripped of everything belonging to him which
had the least value—disappeared himself.
Lunel never saw him again; but, about thre -
nionths after, he remembers having read an
account of a suicide committed somewhere in
the Latin Quarter by an unknown foreigner,
supposed to be a Japanese, and having fan
cied that this might be his former tenant.
“Lunel further hands to me a bundle of
letters, which had arrived for his tenant sub
sequent to bis disappearance. I examined
these; with one exception they are the unpaid
bills of M. Sangura’s tradesmen. The excep
tion is a letter addressed in a female hand; ft
is here—Monsieur can examine it for hnu
self.”
M. Blery, drawing out a bulky pocket
book, took from it a letter in a delicately
tinted envelope, addressed in faint violet ink:
“M. de Bangura, I*Avenue du Roi de Rome,
801.”
I read the letter, then handed it to Sapi
naud. It was as follows: “My own one, why
hide thyself thus? Cans’t thou think thy
poverty will change me? Come to me as of
old. Thine own Clotilde.” The letter was
dated “Rue de la Reine, 48; Wednesday
morning.’’
“As Messieurs may suppose,” continued M.
Blery, “I lose no time in visiting No 48 Rue
de la Reine. At first lam refused admission;
Mlle. Ducbastre, the premiere danseuse at
the - Theatre—for she and no other is
Clotilde —can see no one. I pencil on a card
there words, ‘lt is the affair of the Japanese,
Sangura,’ and give the maid five francs to ,
carry it up to her mixtrem. In two minutes
I stand in the presence of the beautiful
Mlle. Duchastro.
“I can easily see on the lady’s face the signs
of emotion. I infer at once that this has not
been an ordinary acquaintance, but a case of
true affection. ‘Mademoiselle,* I say, with
an air of deep respect, ‘pardon my intrusion;
but I am engaged in an inquiry into the red
end of M. de Bangura. I have found frtex.
one of your letters that you knew him, and I
beg of you to give me any information ytao.
may passe® as to his affairs.’
“Mlle. Ducbastre seems to take a plesumre
in talking to any one of her dead lover. She
tells me—with real emotion, with frequent
teare—this story, which I repeat to MendeuM:
“MademoimUe had formed the acquaint
ance of Sangura about six months after his
arrival in Paris; they soon farmed a mutual
attachment. The Jajmncse was handsome,
his manners were distinguished; the courtesy
of a gentleman, tho generosity of a prince.
His generosity, iudixd, was so lavish that it
eventually proved his rain. Mademoiselle
pleaded with her lover to curb his expendi
ture, to give up gambling and betting at
Chantilly and Ixmgch&inpe; it was of no avail.
He persistwi in lealing her with costly pres
ents; which she areurod me—and I believe her
—caused hor more pein than pleasure to re
ceive. The worst feature in Bangura's care.
MalemoireUe informed me, was that he had
Ircdually fallen into the power of some
ewish money-lender, who, she thought, re
sided on the left lank, but whore name she
had never board. As Sangura’s funds dimin
ished, this mail’s bold on him increased; the
unfortunate Japanere grew evary day
moodier and more depressed. , Sne divined
that he was now living by the sale of his
wardrobe and effects: but he never told her
so, and she did not dare to touch on the sub
ject,
“At an early period of their acquaintance
Bangura had given her to wear, not to keep,
a pearl of extraordinary sire and beauty; ex
plaining to hor that this gem was the great
heirloom of his house; that he, as the eldest
sou of his dead father, had tho custody of it,
an<l that if anything happen>xi to it be wotdd
be dishonored in the eyes of all his relative.
There was nothing he would iot give to his
Clotilde, Sangura had said, except only this
pearl; nevertheless, she might wear it as an
ornament, since he knew that in her charge
it would be safe.
“One morning Sangura ru<hed into h>r
room, in a state of great agitation, ami,
claiming that he was ruined and ui done,
asked for the gem. His mistress gave it to
him with trembling hands; he rushed out of
the clamber, and Mlle. Ihicliastre never
again saw her hirer oliva
“About three months after, Mademoi'*!!*
read in the journals the repo rt of a suicide in
the Rue St. Ja*quea—the suicide of a ymr g
foreigner, suppoaoi to be a Japanese. Bb
hatrtened to the morgue: it was the i.nfor
tunate Sangura. He had found a laut re fug»
in the mireiable garret which Mee>ieurs
visited to-day. Too proud to return to his
mistress, all his means exhausted by tl • ra
pacity of the old monay-tender. be ha I
starred there till his last sou was >pe->t.
Thm one night bo Hosed up carefully ere j
crevice in door or window; lighted a ■ harco ’
fire in the brazier; lay down on his wretched
pal«4—and, three da_<s afterward, was f0t0.4
th<(c. lying dead.
The Star,
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
A Fnar-P«ge, Twenty-four Col
umn Weekly, printed all at home.
r*-
It !■ intended to give to the town of Doug
lasville a newsv, spicy, local sheet; to Doug
as county a first class County Paper—tes
ten ng the mental, moral and material in
erests of the Town, County and contiguous
i section and the Nzw«of th* day.
I t pellHru the paper wilkhe Demaera
On theTemperane* question It will fav-r
pr nhv tonal wptian. It will be
ri*nd of the Fir war. A rrirfil
tne The Meeh an i« ww sm twat it hna<A»
the honest toiler, reco,-,b z ng the nobility of
i
i
Upon all qu*sttons of public Impottanee we
will speak out, eAndidb and will rtile the
i ence on none ever ad vocal Inr thnt side ot
any question which we think will lend most
lele» ate—morally,mentally and juater'aily
ihe masse* t h e people
prosperity lacontinxest upon the well being
of the individual. The paper will be largely
iocml In Its make up and circulation, but on
' question, in Mtau and Not la tin I sff.lrs w
wilt not hesitate to express <rai view*.
SI.OO A Year O e6 .
-
hSme
Qg'NingW
str S‘
□cl > srt
£Rr EGT^PAKT|CULAR - '
p^'nev^ p : UT o^ d r er .
c/Jas no eq ual ”
liEWH&lHMffi]
f 30 UNION SQUARE NEWYORK.
ILL. MASS. GA
FOR SALE BY
i
THie
CHICAGO
COTTAGE
ORGAN
Km attained a standard of excellence which
admits of no superior.
It contains evory improvement that inventive
geolm, skill and money can produce.
» EVERY
ORGAN
WAR
RANTED
FOR
FIVE
YEAR 4
These excellent Organ* are celebrated for
volume, quality of tone, quick response, variety
of dombinatlon, artistic deign, beauty >fci finish,
porfbet construction, making them tine most
attractive, ornamental and desirable orgsiis for
home*, schools, churches, lodges, soclelits, etc.
EftTABLISHIin REPUTATION,
TMEQI AEFO FACIEITIES.
HKILLEO WORKMEN,
BEAT MATERIAL,
eCMBTMPn, MAKE THIS
THK POPULAR ORGAN
Instruction Books & Piano Stools
C. >Jt»fuee & Price Llata, on application, free.
Die Chicago Cotlago Organ Ca
•oeaor Randolph and Ann Straeta,
CHICAGO. >' I
ESN
Op£ts Tuesday, December Id* 1881
la the presence of the President* of the American
K«»wbUc», ria: Arthur, of the United Slates . Diac,
•f Mexico; Barrie*, of Guatemala; Bogran, of ffcoA
darsa.
Th© Colossal Exhibit
of all Time! •
ttxfiMm (1(5) Immense Exhibition
Buildings: -
teM i <ha largeat brildlng ever erected, another-* I
the largest CoascrvAtory in the World.
90 Acres of Spaco Under Cbver!
Ww Transport.tian Rates from all
Fatah*.
Aaapl. Aeroaamodatlona at RwaaeMsahlo
Balea fur all Vlaliora.
Daring th. period of the Expositinn, from Dee.
ri, its*, to Jone 1, ISBS the temperature at New
Qrteana awrages 6$ Fahr. The lawn and ahrnb
bery remain rroen, flowers bloom, fruits ripen, aud
all ktndd of rinrrt-ibiea grow and mature. *
gull laforrnathm promptly frrrniahct*. Address,
• JB, A, BIBRE, Dtrecior Peuerai,
IfjF egleaua,
Likimeni
JMpririwe , AflsMJ, tPo.
T'cnxx Zregglat fcr it.TW
* rwraii IS»J Mtns > a man or b»aat iwxfalna
lUxaruMO Lz>iM£W*
BICURESI
SCROFDUp
- TUMORS
GLANDULAR
SWELLINGS,
OLD ULCERS
AND SORES,
B SYPHILIS
IN ALL STAGES, !
MERCUREAL
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ALL SKIN I
DISEASES AND I
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HUMORS, :
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nBUBM"'
And all Impurltle. of the Blood.
I One bottle of B. 15. It. will convince any
one of its great superiority over all others
for the rapid and powerful cure of all
Blood Poisons. It cures in less than one
half the time usually required any
other treatment. One thousand eases cured
tn Atlanta. Send postal for home proof.
I Try one bottle for your blood. Sold by all
druggists. Quart Bottles, SI.
Blood Balm Co., Prop’rs,
18% Whitehall Stswet,
ATLANTA ,QA.
»Wfl 111 ■
I
IlflPi
y BEST TOiCC. ?
This medicine, erriibining Iron with pura
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i'll, re ilyspepai t, Wenkuetuq
li-ipure Blood, .ilularin,( bills mid Fevers,
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It ie an unfailing rcmefly for Diseases of the
Etidseva anil Liver.
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to
Women, r.nd all who lead sedentary lives.
Itdoe* not Injure the teeth, cause headache,or |
produce constipation— (jth>r Iron mtdieinti tio.
Itonrichss and purifies the blood, stimulate*
the appetite, aid* the assimilation of food, re
aves Heartburn and Belching, and streogtti
•■>■* tae muscles and nerves.
For Intermittent Fevers, lasMti.de, Laek ri
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X £- The genuine has above trade mark and
rossed reel lines on wrapper. Take no other.
M.S. ...Irb, BVOWS IHEXKIL <»., BILTIZOILZ, JWt
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No other blood-pnrtfylng medlelne Is made,
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Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
It leads the list as a truly scientific prepara
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Qnnnrifl * in S taint of Ssrofula about you. I
QbnUrULA Avek’b Saksaparilla will
oisiodge it and expel it from your system.
For constitutional, or scrofulous Catarrh,
SnTtnßU A YEHS SAKSAPABILkA is the
Wnlfiftßn trus remedy. It baa eurod
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|!;nrnat{t* “ Hutto, Tex., Sept. 2s, 1882.
L’LwCnUuO “At the age of two years one of
QfiDEIJ my children was terribly altiicted j
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CODE Cv r O Physician* told us that a pow-
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Ater s Sarsaparilla. A feif dose* pro
duced a perceptible improvement, whish, by
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of any scrofulous tendencies; and no treat
ment of any disorder was ever attended by
more prompt or effectual results.
Yours truly, B. F. JoaxßOM.”
FBEPAKED BT ;
DrJ.C.Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mats.
Sold by all Druggists; fl, six bottles for ffi.
$llO5O
IN CASH
GIVEN AWAY
To SMOKERS of Blackwell’!
Genuine Bull Durham
Smoking Tobacco.
This Ppecial Deposit is to ruarantee ths
payment of the 25 premiums really describwd
1c our former announcements.
The premiums wiii be paid, no matter how
small tne number of bags returned may be.
C£Se« ElactvelTf Dvrhnm
/>»wAa»», IT. CL, May 10, 18M. I
P. A WILET. Esq..
C.i*JWrr Bank of M.C.
Dxak St»:-We indree you 811 KO«. which
rirase i lace on Sprvral iMoctf.t to psy premimfas
LF' CA RK pSUS* I
J. R PvrAom Ll«iw q»,
Daaa 8r« —I bare to sduxrarledre reostpt er <
t “* truly. PA. WILEY. Gretaew |
‘ i *—tans wttbwrtjgceure o< BULL sa ttf 1
•arNre ear cMSms
Health is Wealth!
‘ ' &JMIM
a 2m
Db IL C. West’s Nkbvb akd Bbaix Txu»
MBNT, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dina*
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Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the »>•
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vanity and leading to misery, decay and dcalA,
Fromator® Old Age. Barrenness, Loes of
ta etthcr sex. Involuntary Losses and BpermaA.
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abuse or over-indulgence. Each box sautaiM
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WE GUARANTEE SIX. BOXES
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eend the purchaser our written guarantee to, 1 *
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JOHN O. WEST & CO.,
862 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO, ILUk,
Sole Prop's West’s Liver PUla.
*
I - - ,
fl
feiSl R, H H
I Wm I ! G
X, s ' . ..••KtCMISHM
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It will purlfr and enrh b the BLOOD, regulate
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The st, h> the value ot Du.
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<:ot expe. ineut —u< -lie < >lllGiM AL AND BBST
x’Senit j.;txr address to lliol/t. Uitrtor
Jr, St. Louie, No., fol >or “DiTSAM BOOK." N
VjFutlof strons* and useful int'vrmatien.
IVi-, HARTiiR's Iron Tonic is for Sale by AU
rinuocesTß and Dealer.'. EvERYWHanm
BUCKEYE BUGGY Co<
COLUMBUS, OHIO,
Leading Manr feeturen of
BUGGIES, PHOTONS, SURREt
dJO., dbo.
Shipment* Singly or by Car Load to teN
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“ THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST.”
Bend for Catalogue showing Thirty Style* tefg
ieci from. Factory and Salesrooms No.’t
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Columbus, Ohio.
Correspondence with the Trade SellofMl
_A- L. , ~ ,
TUTT’S
ft ILLS
25 YEAKS IN USE.
The Greatest Medical Trinmph of the Agel
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER.
Lossefappetite, Bowelacostive, Pain 1*
the head, with a dull eensation in th*
back part. Pain under the shoulder*
b : H<ie, FnilneHH after eating, with a die*
iuciiuFtion te exertion of body or mind*
Irritability of temper. Low spirits, with
n fcelingof having neglected none duty*
Wearineas, Dizziness. Fluttering at the
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CONSTIPATION.
TUTT'm Pi LBS are especially adapted
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tsy Digestive Oroane.Reenlar Stools to*
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TUfTOAIR DYE
okax Hath or whiskers ©badged to a
Gixjssy Black by a single application es
this DTK. It imparts a nataraf color, acta
instantaneously, bold by Druggists, or
sent bv express on receipt of sl. ■ <
Gfific., 44 Murray St., Hew YerK
AYER’S 7-
Sarsaparilla
Is a highly concentrated extract off
Sarsaparilla and other i ■<
roots, coin blued with lodide of Pcrtaa.
at tun and Iron, and la the safeet, most nrih
able, and most economical blood-purifier that
ean be used. It inrarrtriy expels «U bloat
poisons from the system, enriebot and ivaov.
tee blood, and restores its vltallztef powsot
It is the beet known remedy for ScratefiSt
and an Scrofulous Complaint*. EryafiF*
etna, Eczema, Ringworm,
Boros, Boila, Tumors, and ErnpttosMi
off the Skin, as also for all disorder* eaaosd
by a thin and Lmpovsriahed, at oorruptad,
•onditiMi of ths blood, sneh as Bhoiu u stlasa,
Meuralgij*, &h«unu*tfe Gout, te*a*r<4
PobUity, and Scrofulous Catarrh.
tfifteßsatoQ RhensatlEffi Ciot *
•’ATXSt’S S*HSUFAJLrU.A 11SS cured IM Sd
fhs Inflammatory Rheumatism, fML
Vfatah 1 bare anffered for tuaay yoara.
w.«.itoaMt4p
Ztorhao*, hk, Marte X K**' •
mriMin 7
t>J.C.Ayw4Co.,Uv»ft,l»«-i.
i w**a*«r