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the Ching Wei Chun and 5 fresh tui from Kwangsi. The Lu Chun were moved outside the city and the mutinous artillery replaced by the formation of two new ying, one from the Bannermen and one from
Lung's own force, 300 Chi Chun and 120 Yunnanese.
Having secured as far as possible his military position, Lung Tutu's next step was to turn out of office such of the Kuo Min
Tang officials as had not fled on hearing of his impending arrival: and the thoroughness with which he completed his task may be gauged from the list of present officials given in a later section of this
report. Lung himself at one time belonged to the Kuo kin Tang,
having been introduced thereto by the late Ch'en Ching-hua at a
time when it was dangerous not to profess adherence to that body.
His real sympathies, however, were always monarchical. Ch'en Ching-
-hua, whatever his political creed may have been, was a cost
efficient Commissioner of Police but he fell under suspicion of
treason and by the President's instructions was arrested and summarily shot under circumstances which have laid the Tutu open
to much criticism. The other Comissioners, foreign-educated young
men of ultra-radical tendencies, including the heads of the departments of Finance, Foreign Affairs, Home Affairs, Industry and Education, have all been superseded and their departure is a distinct gain to the province. No official of Kuo Min Tang tendencies remains in office today and the principal senior posts are held by men who have served in one capacity or another under the Empire. The Kuo Min Tang headquarters on the New Bund are deserted and Lung has established for the first time in Canton an officially recognised branch of the Chin Pu Tang.
Among other evidences of his desire to dissociate his government from the aims of the late regime may be noticed the new Tutu's encouragement, at the instance no doubt of Peking, of the cult of Confucius. The instructions recently issued to magistrates to see to it that the doctrines of Confucianism were regularly expounded in every rural district are prompted not by any pre- -judice against the Christian religion as such, but by political motives which demand an antidote to the revolutionary ideas pre-
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