.414
kdy to servos edt ai berseqqa redtrut JI
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WeTo edi
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5.
were beginning openly to dominate the situation; adé ûn Dr. Jamieson's suggestion he had an interview with General Chan Kwing-ming, the Civil Governor. Dr. Sun Yat-sen was
at the time at Kwai Lam, the capital tom of the Kương Sai Province, many days' journey distant from Canton, where he was engaged in organising a military expedition, at the head of which he hoped to make good his claim to the Presidency of all China. There were good grounds for believing that General Chan Kwing-ming would not be sorry to be rid of Dr. Sun Yat-sen, but that he did not feel him- self strong enough to take decisive action. The labour unions were a dominating factor in the situation, and, while on the one hand he dared not forfeit their support, he was at the same time fully alive to the possible results to Canton if the large mass of idle and discontented men quartered in the city should get out of hand. In the result General Chan Kwing-ming temporised and, adopting an atti- tude of benevolent neutrality, he confined his efforts to certain unconvincing attempts at mediation.
13. In the meantime the Kwok Man Tong was openly assisting the strikers to consolidate their position. On the 31st January the men working in the harbour, comprised under the Stevedores, Cargo Carriers, Coal Coolies, and Tallyman's Unions, came out in sympathetic strike and went for the greater part to join the seamen in Canton, where the necessary preparations had been made to receive them. Simultaneously steps were being taken to stop the import of the Colony's normal food supplies and armed strikers appeared at the various points on the neighbouring coast whence daily supplies of fresh food-stuffs are shipped to Hongkong. A large band of strikers went into residence at Sham Chun, where the KowloomCanton Railway enters Chinese territory, and they systematically searched all trains for the purpose of removing food-stuffs bound for Hongkong. Permission was given by the strikers for the operation of