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DIFFERI Wik VIEWS 0F BAITOIS Prss Is Mot Unanimats in M Sympathy for ibe Japanes: A - Concealed Desie That America Be Drawn Into Dispute, | United i the English people e between Russia and Japan, come of the w and f the British her dealing with the the past and at the pres- N " he poli from being in ac- ving excerpts from ed- inster Gazette on Globe (Con- the attitude of itical parties on best policy for January ossible trouble for 2 loud note hobes. It regretted Japan, not the Japa us hig! to keep ast BRITAIN'S PATH. f prudence s when sh ADVERTISEMENTS. A PLEASANY SURPRISE In Store for Those Who Doubt. When u read that a sufferer of has beer t testimonia reiied upon im- brought its use 1s. The ge here given H of tho I wish fo write your Pyramid P nds réceived: and you that w some would give me rel ver have cured. ner I could not get up v VD pain; could not at- | tend t ehold duties. Finally | I got a 56-cent box of your Pyramid | Piie Cure a2t the druggist's and it is| since 1 used the last have had no trouble] it is reaily and truly 1 2m so thankful I tried it as I know t has cured me, and if at any time { ¢hould have any such trouble again I ould use it at once. Since I am cured | I have r ended it to my friends, | whom I know to be afflicted as I was, v they will use it too. I am| ;ful 1 w®ver iearned of )‘aur1 ure.” Mrs. F. Hutt, 460 Second str Grand Rapids, Mich. Pyramid Pile Cure is sold by drug- THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY. T JRUARY 14, 1904, ADVERTISEMENTS. illlhd T ~ S lute purity. $1000 reward will be paid for the detection and conviction cf any persor, persons, found refilling our bott.es or putting up imitation goods'in bottles similir to ours, and offering them for sale. % % WW P = Duily’s Pure Mall Whiskcy is the only true medicinal whiskey that is commended by chemists for its abso- Being entirely free from i{usel oil, it is the one whiskey recog- nized by the Government as a medicine. sicians of all schools as a tonic stimulant. is used exclusively in the foremost hospitals. record of cures unparalleled in the history of medicine for diseases of the throat and stomach troubles, fevers. Beware of cheap imitations e nd \ so-called malt whiskey substitutes. . They are harmful. is the one absolutely pure whiskey, containing medicinal, health giving qualities. Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey is sold in sealed bottles only, never in bulk. The Duffy bottle is patented and has . Whiskey Company” blown in the glass. tl\lat the newspaper, “Duffy’s Annual,” is wrapped around the package. Be certain thatthe seal over the cork is unbroken. trade mark,“The Old Chemist,” on the label. stand for purity and health. At grocers’ and drugs Get the Genuin R B S TAKE DUFFY’S. Do not accept the medicine unless they are present. t, $1.00 a bottie. Medical booklet free by addre: orL. Uniformly prescribed by phy- Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey Above all it has a lungs, dyspepsia and all nervousness, malaria and low NO OTHER. 1IT DISEASE Demand Duffy’s. It “Fhe Duffy Malt When purchasing sec Again, look for the These are the safegusrds that Duffy’ Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. T, MUL A- PURE. E. 571, with Turkey, evous thing to do. English sym- with the Japanese is as natural as an sympathy with the Boers. It goes out to the party which is sup- posed to be the smaller, and therefore the pluckier. But remembering our own resentment at European attacks upon us and bearing in mind also the in this matter, we shail do well to in from that kind of exasperation. shall we too credulously believe re- ts which minimize the strength of pe Russia and exaggerate the strength of | Jap The truth of that matter is hard to arrive at until tested by events, but the better and safer plan for the Japanese and those who sympathize with them will be to believe that Rus- sia is strong until she is proved to be weak.” BITTER IN DENUNCIATION. The London Globe, January 23, de- nounces Russia and predicts a coalition of powers to thwart her ambitious aims. Tt says: *At the beginning the twentieth cen- tury the role which France, led v Napcleon played, has been taken by Russia. led by an insolent and aggres- sive bureauacracy which speaks in the name of the Czar. In every quarter of the globe it is Russia who is the dis- turher of nation The German Gov- ernment knows well enough that it is the territory of the Russian front which needs to be the most closely atched. The woes of Finland and Po- land are the direct result of Russian cruelty and tyranny. To the tortu- ousness of Muscovite policy it is owing that gurope stands well nigh pov less to ¢ ment in » Balkan States. Turke: threatened and cajoled Petersburg Government, while is compelled by her one-sided alliance to stand helplessly aside. In Asia the po strife and foment unrest at the ex- pense of the BEritish empire in Pers Afghanistan, Burmah and Thibet, be ; the flagrantly illegal action she taken, and is taking, in defian obligations in the Chines: has of treaty cmpire. JTn face of these facts we be- lieve that the time is approaching when, if Russia not abate "her pretensions or cease her efforts to ag- | grandize herself at the expense of the trade of the territory of well nigh ev- ery other power with whom she is in con t, a coalition will have to be| formed to curb her restless and cruel 2mbitions, as in the case of Napoleon 2 cent ago.” EXPECTS AMERICAN AID. Again, on January 26, it says: “Our Shanghai correspondent reiter- ates the report that China has been given full assurance that support will be forthcoming to enable her to main- tain the integrity of her empire. There are two powers, the United States and ourselves, who are specially interested in checking that policy of practical partition which is the goal and ob- ject of Russian ambition. past_this has been our ostensible ob- ject. though how woefully we have failed in pursuing it is matter of his- tory. The United States has come gists for 50 cents a package, or will be | more recently to a knowledge of the mailed to any address upon receipt of | true inwardness of Russian dlplomacy‘ i Drug Co., Marshail. {and the value of Russian price by Pyram Mich. Write this firm for their bnoki describing the cause and cure of piles. promises. But public opinion on its side of the contingent liabilities which we | =2 © | stability of every power on that con- force order and fair govern-, y of Russia is to stir up | would be a dangerous and | day. | | | [ | | | 1 { | | | | | deadly competition which has turned | sia to bring the whole of Asia under | gravity of the danger which overhung | her shores inviolate and to maintain | ficiently” akin to the Celestial in blood For years | and in disposition to assimilate as well | An oppertunity) which has never vet presented itself, and can never oc- cur again, is now before the States, which have everything to lose in China. It is not merely the question whether Korea is to be ruled at the| beck of Russia or Japan which is at | issue. There is now a chance of stay- | ing that relentless march across Asia, | which for years past has affected the | tinent and has upset the equilibrium of power in Europe. Much of that Furope into an armed camp and laid so heavy a burden upon the nations is due to the fixed determination of Rus- her sway. By standing firm now we may inflict such a check as will ren- der that ambition impossible of ful- fillment. If we. falter till Russia has tided over this crisis and had time to complete her preparations make ready for the beginning of the end.” CONCERN FOR UNCLE SAM. And again, on January 28, the Globe denounces the policy of Russia, com- mends the attitude of Japan and pre- dicts harm to interests of the United States if Russia succeed: “Japan has assumed the task which properly belonged to Great Britain, which with a little firmness, a little foresight and a little resolution - we might have accomplished while the Russian Hercules was stiil in the cra- dle. Japan is contending for the terri- torial indepenence of China, for equal | rights to all nations in the treaty ports | of that empire, for the seclusion of Russia within her own borders. “No one now underestimates the Europe when England fought to keep her right to live and to trade. Had St. Vincent or Nelson been beaten——nay, even had Sir -Arthur Wellesley been unable to retain his hold on the penin- sula, the last spark of freedom would have been extinguished in Eufope. And now if Japan fails, if her Ministers at the last moment lose their nerve and accept those assurances which British Ministers are so fond of swallowing, an even blacker cloud wiil descend on Asia. The pursuit of Russian aggression is disguised under the pretext of consoli- dating the Siberian provinces and ob- taining an outist on an ice-free ocean. That is only one step. Manchuria, the possession of which is represented as essential t6 the security of the trans- Siberian railway, is the key to Northern China. Permanently established there, the Russians will be supreme in Peking if, indeed, the Manchu dynasty can sur- vive the seizure by a foreign power of its ancestral provimce. Bit by bit, leaf by leaf, we shall see China becoming Russianized and the power of every other foreign nation waning and grow- ing dim. The enormous resources of China, both in men and in material, will be at the disposal of a nation suf- as to-control. Then, indeed, will Eu- rope and the civilized world be brought face to face with the yellow peril and with a tyranny more nearly comparable to that of Attila and Genghiz Khan we may | to enforce the retirement of Eussia| from Manchuria will entail the exclu- sion from the treaty ports of all foreign Tt will be a blow commerce. United States as much almost as to ourselves, and while hope that even now the force of events can be no disguise as to which side the | feet high, and rhubarb sympathies of the civilized world will | height and Sve inches thick. horticultural exhibit at the World's | with 105,000 Hherrings, caught after | action of the Kaiser may induce the Czar to give way, there | Fair will be a display of celery four | the nets had been only forty minutes the same j the water. 2 DN e to the |lean in case of conflict. | —_———— German trade statistics already ——r—————— | In six hours after leaving Yarmouth | show the serious damage done to trade profoundly A feature of Washington's -State | the fishing boat Tantallon returned | with Latin American countries by the against Venezuela. ADVERTISEMENTS. than of Napoleon. If it be contended that sufficlent for the day is the evil thereof, we can point out that in the Atlantic is growing in volume day by ' immgediate futurc the failure of Japan Department L. 2/ Sketched fram Life Rarments for 35c. Mail Orders Fitleo for any of the above goods—please address We could not talk to the fond mother on a more interest- ing subject than her son and his ¢ othes. We know she is interested in his weifare—his training— his character and his appearance. A boy that is well dressed feels contented. With content in his heart he is more easily taught znv subject. Our mission is to clothe the boys with proper garments at prices within their parents’ means. We manufacture our entire stock-and retail - it direct at a saving of the middleman’s profit. The mother who trades herewill save money. She will get good wearing clothes fcr her son at the low— est possibie price for which good clothes can be sold. " The store is filled with values. We merely mention two Liow. 3 American Boys' Library—good books for Loys—iree mem- bership to all boys whose parents are our patrons. Fine steel knives (every biade wasranted) free with every boy's suit or overcoat. The sailor suit pictured on the right is made by us irom an all-wool blue cheviot of good weight for winter wear. It is 3 handsome little garment, and description cannot really do it jus- tice. - The collar has seven rows of white silk soutache braid: the shield is handsomely embroidered with an anchor or a.large star surgounded by sixteen smaller omes, thus making a very pretty effect. The sizes are from 3 to 10 years. The sale price is $2.65 Manly - looking suits for chaps between 8 and 14 years of age. Three-picce. garments—double or single breasted coats, single breasted vests and knee pants. Sece picture for style. Just the suit for boys who want to dress like men. Our maker-to-wearer price is but £4.00 I blouses and waists still on sale. 75¢c Boys’ flan pm————_ A new line of boys’ golf shirts just received—50e cach. ; =0 Latest colors in boys’ golf caps, 10¢.to 45¢. Special Norfolk caps in latest patterns, 45c. If you lwe out-of-town write for 64 page iilustrateo catalogue —you will find it interesting.