THE CHINESE REVOLT.
ALL QUIET AND ORDERLY IN PEKIN. A VICE-PRESIDENT ELECTED. (By Electric Telegraph. —Copyiight.) (United Press Association.! Pekin, February 21. Everything is quiet and orderly at Pekin. Yuan-Shih-Kai pleaded for an improvement in the position in the interior, except in'Fuchistun and Manchuria, where the populace were unaware of the agreement. Li-Huan-Hung was unanimously elected Vice-President of the Republic. ARMS SUPPLIED BY JAPAN. Tokio, February 21. The Minister of War, referring to a question in the Diet, said £300,900 worth of arms were sold to the Chinese revolutionaries in the'present disturbances.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 49, 22 February 1912, Page 5
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92THE CHINESE REVOLT. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 49, 22 February 1912, Page 5
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