Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/359
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WAR APPENDIX
| 3. | Small mutiny at Cronstadt. |
| 5. | Mutineers on the Potemkin declare a rebellion. |
| 6. | Armistice refused by Japan until substance of her terms is accepted by Russia. |
| Japanese foreign loan of $150,000,000 41/2 per cent 5-20 years placed: to issue at 90—divided equally among Germany, England and America. | |
| 7. | Baron Rosen, new Russian ambassador, reaches Washington. |
| 8. | Mutineers on Kniaz Potemkin surrender to Roumania as deserters; sink the warship at Kustenji. |
| Japanese envoys set sail for America. Tokio reports gradual advance to north by armies in Manchuria. | |
| China appeals to Powers for share in peace conference. | |
| Japanese land on island of Sakhalin. | |
| 9. | Count Cassini leaves Washington, after seven years' service. |
| 10. | Portsmouth, N. H., Navy Yard agreed upon by Russia and Japan as scene of peace negotiations. |
| 11. | Kniaz Potemkin, with loyal crew, sails for Sebastopol. |
| Shuvaloff, prefect of Moscow police, assassinated. | |
| 12. | Japanese loan heavily oversubscribed. |
| 13. | Sergius Witte appointed senior Russian peace envoy, in response to severe criticism of Muravieff. |
| Twenty-four leaders of Odessa riots hanged. | |
| 17. | Witte gives out interview, to general effect that Russia will not accept humiliating terms of peace. |
| 19. | Zemstvo Congress meets in Moscow, in spite of police prohibition. |
| 20. | Japanese army under Hasegawa advancing through north Korea against Vladivostock. |
| 21. | China's identic note, that she will not recognize peace terms in which she is not consulted, received at Washington. |
| Mr. Witte arrives in Paris. | |
| 24. | Japanese dislodge Russians from two positions south of Tumen River. |
| Czar and kaiser meet off Swedish coast. | |
| Kastries, on Siberian mainland, seized by the Japanese. | |
| 25. | Baron Komura, and rest of Japan's peace mission, arrive in New York. |
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