Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/361

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WAR APPENDIX

7. Mr. Witte spends day in Boston, going to Portsmouth at night. Mayflower and Dolphin sail from Newport.
Russia decides on issuance of $10,000,000 internal loan.
8. Peace envoys received by United States and New Hampshire authorities, and installed at Hotel Wentworth.
Russians reported fortifying mouth of the Amur River.
Japanese land at Imperator, on Siberian coast.
Peace Conference Opens
9. Peace missions meet at Portsmouth. Mr. Witte presents his credentials, but Baron Komura's are not at hand; he summarizes them verbally.
Czar approves remodelled scheme for popular assembly.
10. Credentials of peace plenipotentiaries formally exchanged and found satisfactory. Mr. Witte's powers said to be unlimited; Baron Komura's not so full.
Japanese envoys present to Russian mission a set of twelve conditions or principles essential to peace treaty.
Japanese warships sent to Kamchatka and Okhotsk.
12. Russian envoys make reply to Japanese terms; supposed to refuse indemnity and cession of Sakhalin.
Japanese, in reply, propose verbal discussion of conditions, one at a time.
14. Conference agrees upon Article I, supposed to provide for recognizing Japan's preponderance in Korea; Article II, providing for evacuation of Manchuria by both belligerents, mutual pledge to respect territorial integrity of China and maintain the "open door"; Article III, providing for the restoration of Chinese rule in Manchuria.
Mr. Witte receives delegation of Jewish bankers and others.
15. Conference agrees on Article IV, concerning Russian lease of the Liao-Tung; discusses and records views on Article V, the cession of Sakhalin, and lays it aside for later reference. Agree on Article VI.
Congress of peasants at Moscow passes resolutions demanding reforms
16. Conference agrees on Articles VII and VIII, giving

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