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Annual Sale of
Table Linens

As usual during January we shall offer a very attractive collection of Table Cloths and Napkins at reduced prices. These are goods of our regular standard quality, consisting of broken lots and patterns we are discontinuing. Many of the designs are as good as anything in our stock to-day and are exceptionally good value at the prices offered.

Napkins (per dozen)

Breakfast size, at $2.25, 2.50, 2.75, 3.00, 3.50, 4.00, 4.75, 5.50.

Dinner size, at $3.00, 3.50, 3.75, 4.50, 5.25, 6.00, 6.25, 6.50, 7.25, 8.00, 10.00, 12.75.

Table Cloths

2 x 2 yds., $2.25, 2.50, 2.75, 3.00, 3.50, 3.75, 4.25, 5.00, 6.00, 9.50.

2 x 22 yds., $2.75, 3.00, 3.25, 3.75, 4.00, 4.75, 5.75, 6.25, 7.50, 8.50.

2 x 3 yds., $3.75, 4.00, 4.50, 5.50, 6.25, 7.00, 8.50, 9.50, 10.00, 14.50.

2 x 4 yds., $6.50, 7.25, 7.50, 8.00, 9.50, 12.75.

24 x 24 yds., $3.50, 3.75, 4.25, 4.75, 5.00, 6.00, 6.50, 8.25, 9.25, 10.00, 11.50.
21⁄2 x 22 yds., $4.40, 5.25, 5.75, 6.00, 6.75, 7.25, 8.50, 9.75, 12.50, 13.50, 14.25.
21⁄2 x 3 yds., $5.25, 6.25, 7.50, 8.25, 9.00, 11.75, 12.50, 13.00, 17.50.

Reg. Trade Mark

We also offer at this sale a very attractive collection of Towels and
Towelings, Blankets, Bedspreads and Quilts, French and American
Lingerie and Corsets, Ladies' Outer Garments, Hosiery, Neckwear, etc.

MAIL ORDers receiVE OUR PROMPT ATTENTION

James McCutcheon & Co.

5th Avenue & 34th St., N. Y.

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How About Your Savings?

Are they absolutely safe? Can you get them quickly in case of need?

Are They Earning 5%? Are the earnings paid regularly?

If you can answer these four questions in the affirmative you have an excellent investment -the kind our depositors enjoy.

Our assets are over $2,500,000; our sur-
plus and apportioned profits $190,000.
Our business is conducted under the
supervision of the New York Banking
Department. Our depositors can with-
draw their money upon short notice with
full earnings to date of withdrawal.

We have paid 5% every
year for over 19 years.
Send for our booklet giving full par-
ticulars.

Industrial Savings and Loan Co.

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JANUARY 6, 1912

HAMILTON W. MABIE, Associate Editor THEODORE ROOSEVELT Contributing Editor

ing comparative order within their jurisdictions than because of any strong leanings toward republican principles. In the second place, outside of the eighteen provinces which constitute China proper, there are the provinces of Manchuria, Mongolia, Eastern Turkestan, and Tibet, constituting two-thirds of the Empire's area, and the opinion in those great outlying dependencies is, in general, monarchical.

CHINA AND RUSSIA

Indeed, in Mongolia the monarchical opinion is so strong that its princes have refused to recognize China's sovereignty over their country if the future Chinese Government is to be republican in form. A month ago they decided that if the Manchu dynasty were overthrown, there being no other to take its place, they would declare their independence. This suited Russia exactly. It has long been evident that one of the first advantages to be sought by Russians from any Chinese unrest would be in Mongolia. Not only is Mongolia Siberia's next-door neighbor, but Russia has also an immediate pretext in her desire to hasten the construction of a railway from Siberia across Mongolia to Peking, thus bringing Europe by three or four days nearer to the Chinese capital than at present. Accordingly, following the expulsion by the Mongols of Chinese officials from the province, the Russian representative at Peking requested that China should promptly reassume control of Mongolia. He received the rather pathetic reply that at present China was unable to comply. Thus this inability opens the way for a distinct extension of Russian influence in that dependency, and also for the possibility of the ultimate annexation of a sparsely settled province, with a population of several million, very nomadic in character. Should Russia prevail in Mongolia, it is expected that a like fate would befall Eastern Turkestan, which adjoins Mongolia to the west, and with regard to which

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Russian covetousness has been quite as evident. The difficulty with all this is that when, as now, partition was threatened a dozen years ago, Secretary Hay put Russia and the rest of the Powers on record as maintaining the integrity of the Chinese Empire. If Russia disregards this, will not the Powers protest? Will not our own Government, having obtained the consent of the Powers to the preservation of China, be the first to protest? As to any effect, however, verbal protests, unsupported by something more forcible, hardly count for much among the Orientals—and in this case, as in some others, Russia may be regarded as a semi-Oriental Power.

PERSIA AND RUSSIA

Much of the news from Persia is confused and obscure, but its general tenor is not reassuring to those who are concerned for Persia's future as an independent and self-governing nation. Mr. Shuster, the American Treasurer-General, some of whose acts afforded Russia the pretext for active interference in Persian affairs, has been dismissed. He is only awaiting the appointment of his successor to leave the country. There have apparently been bloody conflicts between Persians and Russians in the northern part of the country, but it is not easy at this distance to determine on which side the fault lies. Russia, however, asserts that the aggression was all on the Persian side, and, having the power, will doubtless be able to make good that point of view by force of arms. Despatches from St. Petersburg indicate that punishment is to be inflicted in northern Persia relentlessly and cruelly. Meanwhile, in spite of the complete submission of the Persian Government to Russian demands, no Russian troops have been withdrawn from Persian territory. Whether they I will ever be withdrawn will remain for the course of future events to show. There is nothing in the history of Russian foreign policy to indicate that the Russian hand which now presses heavily upon Persia will be lifted from any altruistic or humanitarian motive, or because of any consideration for the rights of the Persian people. &

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British Foreign Office has aroused widespread criticism in England. This criticism has come largely from Liberals, but it has also been given expression to by Lord Curzon in the House of Lords. Lord Curzon is a long-time student of Eastern affairs, an authority on Persia, and a former Viceroy of India. He is naturally deeply interested in anything which concerns Great Britain's position in India and the Near East. Criticism is directed against the Persian policy of Sir Edward Grey, the British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, on two grounds-the one altruistic, the other selfish. It is declared that for Great Britain to remain inactive while Russia oppresses Persia is for Great Britain to be false to its traditional attitude toward weaker peoples—an attitude of sympathy and helpfulness and not of aggression--and false to its specific responsibility to the Persian people. In the AngloRussian Convention of 1907 both Russia and Great Britain agreed to respect the independence and integrity of Persia; and shortly thereafter the British Government gave an even more explicit pledge to Persia that nothing would be done to violate her integrity and independence. A leading organ of Liberal opinion in England declares that one of the conditions which Persia has been obliged to accept from Russia without protest from Great Britain is a gross infringement of Persian sovereignty." A second ground of criticism of the policy is that it is bad from the point of view of British interests. Lord Curzon has pointed out the movement which is unconsciously taking place toward the partition of Persia. Anglo-Russian Convention provided for economic partition; the present events are leading directly to administrative partition, from which the steps to political partition and thence to geographical partition are well-nigh inevitable. Such a division of Persia would, in Lord Curzon's opinion, have serious dangers by bringing the Russian frontier into close contact with the British frontier. The whole policy of buffer states would be done away with, and the defense of India from possible Russian possible Russian aggression would be rendered infinitely more difficult. It is also argued that it is foolish for Great Britain to pay for the support and friendship of Russia in European affairs the price involved in tacit consent to Russian aggression in Persia. And this not because the price is so high, but because there is the

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Meanwhile the

building of the British navy. British course in Persia is complicated by an attack by tribesmen upon a British consular officer and his escort. The officer was wounded and several of his escort killed. England may find it necessary to interfere herself in southern Persia to preserve her legitimate interests there.

THE FAMINE IN RUSSIA

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The existing famine in Russia is a striking proof of the fact that in a despotically governed country the national revenue may be large and the national credit good while the economic status of the people who furnish the revenue and maintain the credit is extremely low. According to the latest report of the Russian Minister of Finance, the revenues of the Empire are so largely in excess of the estimates that it is possible not only to make a considerable reduction in the national debt, but to set aside, as a "free cash balance," a surplus of more $200,000,000. At the same time, the taxpayers whose earnings go to make up this superabundant revenue are so poor and have so little reserve capital that they are reduced by a single bad harvest to a condition that may fairly be described as desperate. On account chiefly of unfavorable climatic and meteorological conditions, there was a complete or partial failure of the crops this year in twenty Russian provinces, and the result is a widespread famine which affects the health and well-being of twenty million people, and which has already reduced more than eight million of them to a state of actual starvation. Hundreds of thousands of peasants in the provinces that border the Volga or lie on the eastern and western slopes of the Urals are suffering for food, and tens of thousands of them have been able to keep themselves alive only by eating weeds, acorns, or the bark of trees. Epidemics of scurvy and "hunger-typhus" are reported from scores of villages in the eastern part of European Russia, as well as from many provinces in Siberia and the Caucasus, while the state of affairs in Orenburg, Samara, and Saratof is said to be as bad as it was in the great famine of 1891, when hundreds of millions of rubles were spent in the work of famine relief, and when a ship-load of food was bought and sent to Russia by citizens of the United States. In a communication recently sent to the Duma, Dionysius, Bishop

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