{

to to shoe stitne a '* 16 (“!IM

, no dia. (Eroma ka no beyośc¬ə

1 bad? No tney at 't la

to I

JOSH STIT VEILING TƏFp"

27/2

Ta bo tw

Year

Janoff

2.

342

anything to their advantage in that the possession

of a pass would be likely to serve to some extent es

a protection against conscription; (b) no att emot

was made prior to the strike to obtain modification

of the regulations by amicable representations; (c)

the employees who went out were known to have done so

unwillingly and only as the result of intimidation;

they did not in general attend the 'strikers'" meet -

ings, and not one of them was among the delegates

}

327

Irin

-

vidia

1 CI

L'anam (bescisme yros)

DIN A5 sout, ne

ajne savel & berlup

* T AyIdvijenomad saw

be Jo/2m2 to hemielonco anoÈSKINNET DEJ

estaat aldaruono" #fl* •·

with whom negotiations had to be carried on; (d) the

points actually affecting the employees were event -

ually waived or compromised with a minimum of discus-

sion, while resistance was concent rated on those such

as reinstatement and payment for the period of the

strike concession of which might be claimed as evidence

of triumph over the foreign community. The truth was

that the movement was deliberately engineered by cer-

tain local officials, in particular the Civil Governor,

Liao Chung-K'ai, and MT. 3.C. Yu, o represent the

extreme, that is, the Bolshevik, section of the Kuo-

3....

ΠΙ

/mingt ang.

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