Page 102 - Neglected Arabia 1906-1910 (Vol-1)
P. 102

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                of the Turk, but which under German influence could hardly fail to
                be startlingly rapid. Tho chief promoter of the Anatolian railway
                 scheme put forward several years ago this argument in its support:
                 “What Turkey has already sold to the world in breadstuffs is as noth­
                 ing compared with what she         produce when her enormous agri-
                 cultural resources  have been developed. Of all agricultural States,
                 Turkey is perhaps the only one which may be able some d^y to  com-
                 pete successfully with America in England and  on       the Continent
                 of Europe in this respect.
                     Especially is this the case in the production of cotton, and Ger­
                 many's absolute dependence upon America and Russia for petroleum
                 would be materially lessened if the oil and bitumen fields of Mesopota­
                mia were rationally exploited.” It may be assumed, as another author­
                ity has put the case, that these lands of Asia Minor, the cradle of
                mankind, of civilization, of faiths and empires, will not always be left
                desolate. Larger than France, Germany and Austria-Hungary to­
                gether, they have a population of less than twenty millions. They
                will assuredly be the heritage of the Teuton or the Slav. But there
                is this difference,, that while the Russian Empire within itself has col­
                onizing space for innumerable millions, the German sees no other place
                upon the globe, where his race can shape out a true colonial future
                upon a race   basis. The fact that the Turks are said to have chosen
                 Bagdad to be the capital of what will remain of their dominions when
                their ultimately inevitable ejection from Europe takes place is not
                likely to be much of a factor in the discussions of the great powers  re-
                 lating to the future of Asia Minor. But Turkey has by no means
       l:
                ceased to be a negligible quantity in the arrangement of the territorial
                 ambitions of the great Eastern powers, and it will be perceived that
                 no  question which King Edward and the Emperor William were likely
                 to discuss in the course of their interview at Friedrichshof bristled
                 with greater difficulties than that which touches the construction of
                 the German railway across Asia Minor and the fixing of a terminus
                 for it on the Persian Gulf.

                                    HAPPENINGS AT NACHL.

                                        .REV. JAMES CANTINE.
                     It is known to readers ot our paper that from time to time our
                 journeys inland froi^ Muscat have taken us to Nach丨,and that this
                 town has been chosen for our first outstation in the Oman field. At
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