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Japanese Militarism - Blood on the RailwayManchuria, June 4th, 1928. A train speeds through the darkness carrying Chinese Warlord Zhang Zuolin. Once a dictator of the Republic of China, now forced from the capital by nationalist Chiang ...
When northeastern China was known as Manchuria, the town of Mukden (present-day Shenyang) went by the Japanese name of Hoten. It had a train station modeled after Tokyo Station and the primary ...
went to Manchuria to work at the South Manchuria Railway. ... So there were lots of plans and some of those plans included Jews, but those plans also included a whole range of ideas — some of ...
France was expected to recognize Ta Manchu Tikuo, was offering Japan a 15-year credit for locomotives, rails, other equipment for the South Manchuria Railway. Germany longed to do likewise ...
the Manchurian Railway and Port Arthur. Under the Treaty the Soviet Union also gives up her interests in the port of Dairen and will hand over to China property acquired from Japanese owners in ...
When Chinese soldiers allegedly attacked Japanese railway guards in the South Manchuria Railway Zone. †Britons unearthed from the dusty archives of their Foreign Office last week a copy of a ...
Four months covered the outward and return journeys, following the lines of the Transsiberian Railway, and onward by connecting lines to Korea, and home again. The Face of Manchuria, Korea ...
Sept. 18 marks the anniversary of the Manchurian incident, when the Japanese military claimed Chinese troops had bombed a railway outside the city of Mukden, now Shenyang, and started military ...
Japan had become concerned that Russian expansion of the Trans-Siberian Railway into Chinese Manchuria could threaten Korea. China was weak and Japan had an interest in acquiring land for herself.
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