DUBLIN JEWEL ROBBERY THEIR RECOVERY WILL INVOLVE A BIG SCANDAL. The Jewels Which Were Worth $300,000 Were Left Practically Unguarded. The robbery of the Irish regalia from Dutlin Castle still remains an unsolved mystery. A still greater mystery is the fact that they were not stolen long ago, as was brought out at the enquiry into iheir disappearance, The jewels--belonging to the regalia cf the Order of St. Patrick--were worth nearly $300,000, the principal ones were kept in a safe in the 'public room of the office of arms, a room to which anybody calling at the office had ac- cess. The less valuable ones wore kept in a strong room adjoining th. public room. There were two keys to the safe, both kept by Sir Arthur Vicars. Te the strong room there were several keys; nearly every official in the office had one. The safe was made to be placed in the strong room, but when it was delivered at the office it was found to be too large to pass through the door, so it was left in the public room. JEWELS HAD VANISHED. When King Edward was expected in Dublin early last July to install Lord Castletown as a Knight of St. Patrick, Sir Arthur Vicars, Ulster King-of-Arms- and custodian of the jewels, thought it would be well to have the jewels out, to see if they wero all right. He gave the safe key to the office messen- ger, one Stivey (who had been in the place thirty years and whose integrity is not questioned), to get them for him. Stivey went to the safe, bul could not open it. He hed been frying for a minute or {wo when Vicars entered. "Why, the safe is already unlocked!" he exclaimed as he pulled the handle and the door came open. He took out the cases and found that the jewels had vanished, CUSTODIAN CARELESS. This happened on a Saturday morn- ing. : On the preceding Wednesday morning Mrs. Farrell, the janitress, Stivey®ntered the office, reported to .~% she had found the door open--the dow, : ; Tepased $300.1 Re gee in which Folin of Jewels, Suv ey Anformel Sir Arthur Vicars when simpiyRe about noon hut the latter ing ne interd! eq: same on the | t when it was "Is "that so?" show- His conduct was the te hwing Friday morning, the outer dup, «:- ~3parted in Si thel BRIGHT EYES, ROSY CHEEKS. ---- Every Girl Can Have Them by| Keeping Her Blood Rich and Red With Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. In the early days of her womanhood overy girl-no matter what her station in life--should be bright, active, cheer- ful and happy. Her steps should be light, her eye bright and her cheeks rosy with the glow of health. But the reverse is the condition of thousands cl young girls throughout Canada. They drag along, always tired, suffer from headaches, breathless and with ralpitating heart after slight exercise, so that merely to go up stairs is ex- hausting. This is the condition doc- tors call anaemia, which means weak, watery blood. In this condition Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is the only safe and reliable medicine. These pills actu- ally make the new, rich, red blood which can alone give health and strength, and thus make weak, listless, pale-faced girls bright, active and strong. Miss Albina Sit. Andre, Joli- ette, Que., says:--""I am more grateful than I can say for the benefit I have found in the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. 1 was weak, run down and very miserable. I suffered from severe pains in my back-and chest; had a bad cough; no appetite and would lay awake most of the night, and what sleep 1 did get did not refresh me. I tried several re- medies, but they did not help me, and I. as well as my friends, feared I was going into decline. At this stage a friend who came to see me strongly urged me to try Dr. Willlams' Pink Pills, and providentially I acled upon the advice. After using a few boxes my appetite improved and I began to sleep much better at night. This great- ly cheered me and I continued taking the pills for some time longer, when the change in my condition was really marvellous. I was feeling as well as I ever had done. I could sleep sound- Iv at night; the pains and cough had disappeared and I felt an altogether dif- ferent girl. I am so grateful for what Dr Williams' Pink Pills have done for me that I cheerfully give you permis- sion {o publish this in the hope that it may point the way to health to some other weak and despondent girl." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are good for al' diseases due to weak, watery blood. That is why ~this medicine cures rhe matism, indigestion nevr-'-" dance, partial paraly: GERMANY'S AERIAL FLEET] WILL SHORTLY HAVE FIVE IMPROV. ED MILITARY AIRSHIPS. Count Zeppelin Believes Large Bodies of Troops Can be Safely Car- ried Through the Air. The German Fmperor and his mili tary advisers have resolved to lay the foundations of a German aerial fleet during the present year, Within a few months the German Government will possess five airships which will be available for use in mili- tary operations, and whose value 'n this respecl is rated highly by those who are competent to judge. Count Zeppelin, the inventor of one of the best types of German eirships, firmly believes thai the development of aerial mavigation will enable large bedies of troops 10 be conveyed rapidly and safely through the air. German military ~xperts and other German ae 1y be somewhat sceptical on thio nt, but they are none the less convinced that airships, even in their present form, will be able tc render many valuable services IN CASE. OF WAR. The military aut.worities are also tak- ing measures to protect themselves from the airships of other countries. At the Krupp works at Essen guns of a peculiar type ai now being manu- fuctured, for the purpose of disabling hostile airships manceuvring at a great height. It will be possible to fire these guns cither verticaily ur at an extremely Ligh elevation, and they will be loaded with projectiles of an equally peculiar type, designed to inflict the greatest possible damage on the balloon which supports the hull of ihe hostile airship. Some of the projectiles will have jag- ged chains attached to them, experi- ments. having shown that the best re- sults can thereby be obtained by firing at balloons. Tha Germans possess two systems of wireless telegraphy, which are admir- ably suited for us¢ on airships. The apparatus invented by the German en- ginear, Heinicke, is of comparalively minufe size, both the transmiflling and receiving apparatus being in the same small case, whichi weighs only forty pounds. The rad'us of communication i3 thirty miies. ANOTHER- : Herr Von Leg. ~Acess, and his of trifling JCESS INVENTED lias invented another sparalus is also small he. Moreover, it TE Limbs Weakened by La Grippo Made Strong by Zam-Buk., TE ----C. Mrs. T. Brixton, of 5 Woodworth Ave., St. Thomas, Ont., says: "1 bad had some experience 8s to the efficacy of Zam-Buk in healing sores, cuts, etc., and had heard good reports from friends who also trfed this balm, so when a year ago my little Jad, four years of age, was loft weak in the limbs as the result of a severe attack of influensa, I began rubbing in the Zam-Buk. His legy were so weak he would tremble and shake and was ungble to stand for any length of time, Frequent epplications of this ointment well rubbed in, seemed to strengthen him daily, and in a very short time the shaking and trembling In his limbs had bzen banished and he soon got strong and able to run about, thanks to Zam-Buk." Zam-Buk is a splendid embrocation for rheumatism, sciatica, etc., and is without equal as & healing balm, WEAT ZAM-BUX CURES. 5 Zaw-Buk cures cuts, burns, scalds, ulcers, ringworm, itch, barber's FREE 1 rash, blead poison, bad ---- ekin Injugies and dis- Send c n and eases, f all stores w. stamp for free and druggists soc. box or from Zam-Buk Co, Toronto, post-paid for pries. 3 boxes for $1.25. sampie to Zam-Buk wm Co., Torento. 3Kg leg, salt rheum, abrasions, abscesses and all A SUMPTUOUS MASTERPIECE. THE SLEEPING SICKNESS. Appeared Once in Our Hemisphere, Bul Not {o Stay. The sleeping sickness is being stead- ily fought, especially in Uganda, by the Royal Socieiy's commission. In that locality, according to the Medical Re- cord, its ravages have been most tfer- rible. J There a system of segregation has Leen tried, and, costly and difficult as it proves, much importance is attributed to it. There, too, the clearing of the jungle in the neighborhood of canfon- ments, ferries and landing stages is being done as far as possible, but the immense distances are a bar to the clearance of the whole belt infected by the tsetse. A commission is also at work in Cen- {ral Africa, and other invesligations are being carried out by French, Ger- man and Belgian medical expeditions. The postponement of the international conference to consider the problem is perhaps not to be regretted, as no greut discovery was to be reported. The disease is still extending its ravages along the Nile and the Congo. Some traces of it have appeared in Rhodesia. Where it originated is uncertain, but it was first observed on the west coast of Africa. In the nineteen'h century il seems to have become firmly established from Senegambla to the southern lim- ils of the Porluguese possessions. The transportation of negroes to the West Indies carried it across the At- lantic, and it obtained a fooling in Bra- zit and some other parts of South Ameri- ca, but it has apparenlly not been able to maintain a hold in the western hemis- phere, though the fact of ils once hav- ing appeared there is cause for seriou. (By A. Banker.) Probably one of the most magnificent structures ever erected on this earth was the great temple of Diana at Ephesus, the ruins of which were dis- covered not many years ago. And judging from these ruins, and from the fragmentary portions of some of the magnificent columns sent by the discov- erer to the Brilish Museum, London, tha stately fane must indeed have been --with the one possible exception of the temple of Solomon at Jerusalem, gemmed with precious stones, and over- laid with pure gold--the most imposing and the most majestic edifice which the world has ever seen. Each of the su- perb columns, which according to Pliny were sixty feet high, and of which there were & hundred and twenty-seven, is encircied with sumpluous life-size sta- tuary in the most exalied and most re- fined style of Greek art, upon which, up to this present day, the hand ot Time has in some cases made scarce ony impression; and in addition to all this splendid embellishment, the temple was enriched with innumerable statues and other works of art by that great master, Praxiteles, and by other of those illustrious princes of art, whose works have never been equalled, or even scarce approached, by any suc- ceeding generallon in any nalion. But what innumerable scenes of sav agery and of fiendish cruelty were wit- nessed in connection with the worship cf that goddess Diana in whose honor this mighty fane was crecled. How af ten did the cry "Great is Diana o° the Ephesians" resound as a tocsit of im- pending doom to those whe Would not bow the knee to the cold ~d ivory be. jewelled image,- disappeared, tne " wu | £ohas, hagaches ang gy, Ts cation of 100! raflectior a A fair young ma' 45) "Ly rabed for. Te Laally sez. e dealer or hy ok 'Many jours. jer van ! neaspu¥y Th ® the image, i charge of a rege Ts CREATE PUBLIC SCANDA 2 box Or Six boxes jor $2.50 2 omnis Food os ROBBER KILLED BY A GIRL. and 'surrounded by a throng of Roman The men of law ri PAL. On Williams' Medicine Co ey The 5 The great fm of Si. MENS gu A fm : soldiers, temple servilors, and weep- and it is said theip Marsacked the office, ; » Brockville, Shuckert has tablished an - 2i'sh: 'Plot of Bandits to Enter Farm House |ing friends. The haughty priest si'ting othe conclusion feos varies led then -- Jepartment, and already it has mre Was Frustrated. by the smoking altar in [rent of the been used at pg dis, the office pag CATS AS orders than ft wn fulfil, Two new image is adjuring the brave girl to do of an unmentionap) ant date for orgies PLAGUE FIGHTERS, CCmpanies are ggg being formed for| A lonely farm on the cstate of Count {sacrifice to the goddess--"Cast {he in- The moment the go description, Success of Salva he construction yng equipment of air- | Karolyi near Budapesl, Hungary, has |cense, but one grain, and thou art free; his they Wine authorities heard of . alvation Army's Rat Wa- ls ese facts show that Germeny is been the scene of an exciling encounter refuse, and thou art thrown to the Police pursued tp 3pprehensive, Tp, In the Far East, 3 [laking the Jeaq in respect to airships, | With armed robbers, who had conceiv- lions." Her affianced, a handsome Ro- and thejp i Ir enquiries further,{ A few month and it {5 ye known that the Kaiser {eC a daring plan for pillaging the house | man officer, fearing that he is to lose made jt plo ls 0 the authorities | Mined delactr 3ge a small but detep. desires German predominance in the |in the absence of its owners. her for ever, seizes her hand and en- were persisted at if the investigation | €¢ from Ton ent of English cats sail a to be as unquestionable as Great] Late in the evening a man, carrying | deavors to compel her to obey he priest. Came into cg 4g and if the matter ever | 3€8INSt the iy for India to wage yyy | BUA' naval Supre macy. a huge sack, and apparently almost ex- | But no! not even for the sake of him of high os tne names of persons constituting pois Which are regarded gg | - His Majesty reveals. his keen interest | bausted, knocked at the door of the | whom she loves so well, not even for not in the toss po become involyeq [tors in the ay ina most serious fac. | {his subject in aj] manners of ways, | farm house and begged for a nights | the whole round world and all it con- UNQerlyin 4 phi the jewels, but in the | that country fing of the plagye in nd Ambitious youn, » German officers | Shelter. The only occupant of the house | tains would she deny her Masler and In Dublin to-d al. Army {hat Thid was the Salvation and engineers know that there is no |Ct the time was the farmer's young |sacrifice to the idol. And then ihe fiat official circles wd they wil ten you in | DOW the firs oi experiment, andlor Toad distin. ction than to in. | d8ughter, who, not liking the man's | goes forth--"To the lions," and in a Was probed te at if the jewe] Mystery | become kn satisfactory results have roduce some welcom e improvement in | 3PPearance, did not care about admit- | short time the savage brutes are tear- reveal the rug foundatlong it oly Colonel Kiten; aerial] navigation, i ting him; but, at his earnest entreaty, |ing her, limb from limb, and her pure mally To Ls deter of abnor. | quarters A ge army's head. allowed hm Bo save He sack, The |spirit vaulls upward on angel-wing to n Engla ' y placed compara Hv. although - siranger, depositing his burden in the |the Paradise of God. throw the nema Ireland, Which oy have been salt Shiai! numer ort GREAT BIR D FEAT. kitchen, then lefi, and the girl began For she knows that her Redeemer Lymars villa gt bie exsessey of Count | if the scheme woula Certainly looks as | Vultures Co. --_-- : to prepare the evening meal. {bad sulfered for her far worse agony nto the shade Jisdam completely Mmissioner p ¢ a great Success me Down Head Firdt With| Whilst she was doing so a noise |than any she could be subjected to. Public morals tp, In the interests of | that already eve 00th-Tucke reporis a Roar Like 3 War Rocket caused her to look round, and, to her |For He during those long three hours thief was dro ® Pursuit of the jewel | ton Army pa oy branch of the Salva The r 3 horror, she saw that the sack was mov- {of darkness was bearing the dread load That wag P3 . and individual cen provided with cats. | game rush of scaven; yer birds when big |ing, as though someone was inside. [of mankind's sins, which, like a loath- thief hag Co ly What the jew; | Slructed ta a mbers have been 1. |R C Fy killed js yj: idly described by [Then the blade of a knife appeared, | same vampire, were hovering over Him Security agaj > UPON. That weg his | mong the distribute {pe animals | guess Fr, Maugham jp a book on Portu- [slowly culting through the sacking.|as a foul and pestilential burden, too is command. suit, He had a4] The odin Population, 5 "Ha East Africa, - Thoroughly terrified, she picked up her | heavy to bear. And then with a tri- sources of {he he Self-protective re- | the Punjap For-general ol hospitals ip | "1 ar Shot an ¢ "ephant," he said, [father's gun and fired, with the result | umphant cry His pure spirit is releas- As soon skunk, Government as slated that gpg Indi 2 wer. by while the g reat slaps of skin | that the movement stopped at once, and |ed, and the gates of heaven are opened the serene im were misseq | ment wil Wig oho army's Mom = hop idi froin the gigantic sides Heo conimaneed to ooze through the |te all believers, e a 9 'er fin y The oe a atrie SH won of wk FR must not. refi Rough fhe amp ang a FA in fm ae gi now iw? mad with alarm, RIL OSS key--not or du een oPened with jig a bo nit 0 Traps ang Poison --_ up oiboring village, proceeded to cut | fled from the house and went in search WOMAN'S SUPERIORITY. mold. Sip yi cate made from a wax | €Very means." rats must pe fought pb, oN ¢ vast mountaijr . of flesh. of help. After going some distance, "Women endure pain far better (han two keys ind ue Vicars hag the only | It is worth ; J tore Immediate; v a shadow flitted | She met her father and told him what men." h¢ suspecteq Sd the police that [lon where he : remark that jn Cey- [one becgry. ras, an d looking upward | had hapraned, at which he obtained the |" uypg told you thal? The doctor?" Shackle Shackleton, are 1, Plague is unin, eCame awara at the deep blue |assistance of two gendarmes, and hur-1 «pn. t-maker." rd Ro an IS an intimate fring of | housen be found in practically toals [ADoVO was rapiqly pling with coun. |ried home. The gendarmes speedily| NO ihe corset-maker. erlandes ype CVT the Duke of Sut] The Soi every [less black wheeling « socks cut open the sack, and inside found the WELL TRAINED hele. . is Sop Seivalion Army is now {aki The buzzards, kites {and escapulated | dead body of a burly man, armed with : ----e throughout form cat-breeding fp 18 {Crows boldly alighieq on the grass and |& revolver and a knife, with a gunshot | Sunday School Teacher -- Earlle, DOOMED ghout India, TIS {OL a few neighboping bushes and await- | wound in the head, which had evidently | dcesn't your conscience tell you when : ; TO LIVE ALONE, -- € calmly the in when we should | caused death. Suspended from his |you have done wrong? carding to this paper » b SWEET -- take our leave, wp; ¢ overhead at a |Deck was a whistle, and, believing i1t| Earlie--Yes, ma'am, but it doesn'l o *poaodwin, "a man has hve Served SORROW, great height the shyep varieties, includ- | Was intended as a means of summoning | tell my mother. Ry er alone," a year{ "I can't please my : ing the Mmarabous, 4 rge bare necked | accomplices, the police blew a series of -- ob that's as it shoul pon poo | tHe young bride, 0 [1e0ds," sobbed | VUIlUres, and sopegp. 1g fishing eagles | alls. Almost immediately three men ANANIAS'. CALLING « Mrs. Geodwin, Pin] be," rejoin. | "Whats eat : continued tg % li g € eagles | an up, and, sceing themselves trapped, 3 BV or beer Ought te be com » iho lives "They insist ora pet? At length all the rat was carefully opened five with revolvers. A desperate|{ The Dentist--Now, open your mouth one, belled to jive with a fathead lik I can pe happy opportioned, the fig chopped out and | fight followed, the gendarmes using |wide and I won't hurt you a bit. = and, I am{- © you; but, oh, hus. | We started fop camp 4 ut before we had their revolvers freely. One of the wob-| The Patient (afler the extraction)-- LWP marched twenty yard s every one of |Ders was shot dead, and his two com- | Doclor, I know what Ananias did for O00 000 Fy & o 0Se waiting hipdg +, 'as seftled upon | Panions were captured. a living now, Consumption is less deg om th : 4 following treatments with out ry 10 ¢he ick their plunge Hope, rest, f . groun SPread wings so close to the E ' resh air, and--Scorzs inevitay,"> 10 make do struction appear mulsion, ott's Pressive, Was most g; ngular and im- ALL DRuUGGIsTS; 80c¢ COO 0000 000000000000 | AND 81.00, PE0000000 4 fell, with wings 1 -! ings tight} - folded, from a dly than ; height of 399 , it used tob in th or 100 ya rds to take part ©. ] e least. he startling po; made by those mplete recovery heavy pirgq Tallin. head on Leap-yeq 1? ; Je through pe The older Lait pe a, He + a rush like the : greater vultures -- pessimist gels the less 8 in human pn alure. ---- I query--Hag ¢ he asked you There is Only One ii Bromo That is Always remember the full name. for this signature on every box. Qesinine'" Laxative Bromo Quinine USED THE WORLD OVER TO CURE A CGLD IN ONE DAY. = 60m