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Russian has a special aptitude for such difficult work over a vast area of undeveloped country with varying dialects. For the present at any rate at success he has achieved is confined practically to the big commercial centres on or near the coast.

The following extract from a report written by a Russian agent who had been in Canton in 1924 and again visited the City before the boycott began to be enforced may be of interest as indicating that the Reds were to a large extent responsible for the troubles of the past year:- "Foreign propaganda was formerly done by Soviet agents

in a manner that was hard to notice, but at present it is done openly. Meetings, parades and speeches directed against

The slogan foreign people are now of common occurrence. "Foreigners, hands off China!! is popular among rich and poor alike, and propaganda directed against foreigners is

I had a conversation a few meeting with much success. days ago with an intelligent Chinaman who is strongly opposed to the Kuo Min Tang, but he likes this anti-foreign propaganda. I have come to the conclusion that Canton is the Bolshevist headquarters for South China, India-China, and the Straits Settlements,"

In the absence of any regular intelligence system at Hong Kong or Canton very little is known about the Russians now residing in the City. A foreigner who stayed some days in the German Consulate and had opportunities to see things for himself informed me that their number was about fifty, many of them being accompanied by their families. They line together in a particular locality, and even though they are treated with marked respect by the Cantonese they are not entirely confident of the security of their own position. Should the boycott remain unsettled

for months to come any movement among the Cantonese

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