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Htc: Page Four Organization Meetings THE DAILY WORKER 'Workers (Communist) Party) si lutions Affairs # IN LOS ANGELES Over $300 Donated to Daily Worker By L. P. RINDAL LOS ANGELES, Calif. —(By Mail) —Celebration of the Russian revolu-| tion here included a mass denuncia- tion of capitalist “justice,” with pro- test resolutions against the continued imprisonment of the I. W. W. in San Quentin, Calif, seventy-two in all, against the sentence imposed on Char- lotte Anita Whitney, andagainst Com- rade Ben Gitlow’s confinement in Sing Sing. “Fear of the workers power is shak- ing the world,” said Robert Minor, member of thé Central Executive Committee of the Workers Party, in addressing the huge gathering in the | Music Art Hall. “The only country on’the up-grade is Soviet Russia; the standard of living there is higher than in any other country in Europe and this because of the revolution. When 80 much can be done in backward -Russia in eight years, it can be done in the United States in eight.months.” -- When William Schneiderman, who 4s chairman of the meéting, an- juneed the collection, $303.79 was onated for The DAILY. WORKER. inging of the International was led y the Junior group, who likewise arried on the sale of literature and id aniversary buttons, under the direc- | «on of Anna Cornblath and Emmanu- \ Levin, Torker Correspondents - *- Novy Mir- Produce Living Newspaper’ Issue The second number of the “living wspaper” issued by the Chicago rkers correspondents of the Novy ¢ last Saturday night made a bigger than the first. . The Workers’ ase was crowded, and even the al “intelligentzia” made its’ appear- e. * “he contents of the second num- was also better and more plenti- than the first one. The three car- as copied from Pravda brought ch laughter and applause from the _ tence. he number was divided into ‘dif- mt sections: political, fiction, ~»/ Tife‘of the Russian colony, - humor, u poetry, etc. The audience. enjoyed the evening, with the exception of two individuals, the editor.of the local white guard Russian ‘newspaper and his assistant. The “living newspaper” is now an established institution in the Russian colony. It will be “published” period- ically from now on. Daily Worker Dance for All New Yorkers on Thanksgiving Eve. The next DAILY WORKER Rescue Party in New York will be a Grand Ball at Royal Palace’ Hall, 16 Man- hattan Ave. (near Broadway) in Wil- Hiamsburg, Brooklyn, on the evening before Thanksgiving, Wednesday, November 25th. Since Thanksgiving day is a legal holiday this Wednesday night is just as good for a dance as a Saturday night, so that the beautiful Royal Palace Hall should be crowded with friends of The DAILY WORKER, |NEW YORK WORKERS’ SCHOOL HAS CLASS IN TRADE UNION WORK) NEW YORK, Noy. 23.—A course in trade union, work is the big feature | in the courses to start in the Workers’ School on Wednesday, Nov. 25. This | course will take up the structure and growth of the American trade union | movement and the major political, economic and technical problems met | with by ‘union officers and tnion members with special reference to the} duties of politically awakened workers, active in their unions, Some of the| problems to be taken up are: | organization of the unorganized; class collaboration; shop committees; etc. Leading trade unionists will partici- | pate in round table discussion of strike strategy; specialists will take up the problems and technique of wage and price negotiations and agree- ments. Labor and the law; politics in the labor movement, the world trade union movement, and the fight against reaction and reformism, are some of the special topics included. The first topic to be’ discussed is the History of the American Labor Movement. All participants in the course are expected to read pages 1-13 of the small pamphlet, “Trade Unions in America,” and pages 1-52 of the pamphlet, “Bankruptcy “of the American Labor Movement,” by Wm, Z. Foster. Supplementary reading recommended is as follows: Commons—“History of Labor in the U. S.,” pages 3-21. Hoxie—“Trade Unionism in the U. S.,” pages 1-176. Carlton—“History and Problems. of Organizing Labor,” pages 12-102. In all cases there will be a mini- mum assignment of necessary reading and additional assignments for those who want to do advance work in the same subject either in preparation for the class work at a later date. After a discussion of the develop- ment of the labor movement as di- vided into the periods of 1827 to 1837, to 1857, to 1872, and to 1920, the Knights of Labor, the American Fed- eration of Labor and the'I. W. W. will be discussed. Some of the questions to be put to the students during the first hour, are: trade unio: 2. What is the structure of the American Federation of Labor? 3. What is meant by an industrial union? 4. What is meant by revolutionary unionism? 5. What Is a company union? 6. Discuss the characteristics and weaknesses of the |. W. W. 7. Discuss the American Federation of Labor. The main subjects to be considered in Lesson 2, entitled: Organizing the Unorganized, are: 1. To what extent are the workers in this country organized (with a spe- cial study of: large scale industry, small scale industry, American and foreign-born, skilled and unskilled, NEW YORK, Nov. 23.—A course in Marxism-Leninism, instructor, Bert Wolfe, and a course in Party History and Problems, instructor, William W. Weinstone, are the principle courses beginning Tuesday night. In addition, there will be a course in Intermediate English and possibly, one in Con- temporary Drama, The study of Party History and Problems has as its political aim the orientating of our leading comrades for a solution of future problems thru the study of present and past ones. In each period of the party\ his- tory, the problems-will be taken up and discussed from the viewpoint of the Communist International. Effort will be made to relate the C, I. view- SOUTH SLAV SECTION OUT TO ¥ RAISE $1000 FOR DAILY WORKER Upon the appeal of the South Slav Bureau for the thousand-dollar cam- paign for The DAILY WORKER, the following comrades and organizations have thus far sent their contributions: Fy Boric, Chicago, 1 S. M. Loyen, Chicago, . Goreta, Chicago, | M. Rajkovic, Chicago Chas. Novak, Chicag Krasic, Chicago, il. 90, iN. mM, $ 500 500 Bojanovic, Chi Cuckovic, Chicago, Cernic, Christopher, | Krznaric, Detroit, Mic Levnaic, Canton, 0, Vrjuka, Pittsburgh, P: Zinich,’ Chicago, Ii. . Popovic, West Allis, Wi Novak, Milwaukes i R. Kovac, Milwai Lm aed Neffs, O. Balubanac, Detroit, Mich. has. Jurcic, Whiting, Ind. Mrnjec, Chicago, il Ljutic, Pit 492 >< Sota adhe! Onn sees 8B anceaoaaanansaaneaaae troit, i So. Slay Branch W.'P., Sheboy- gan, Wis. So. Siav Br., W. P., Gari y Kor M. Jambresich, Chicago, II G. Pintar, Westville F. Babic, W. Newton, Pa Inde: Dramatic club, North Clairton, J. T. Pavelich, N. Hibbi Andrew Spehar, Benwood, W. V: 2 Bas canned & Bi 88s 88ssss $ 8 sssssssssssesssssssss $) Total sent to the bureau... a The following organizations of the South Slav Section of the Workers (Communist) Party sent money direct to The DAILY WORKER: ” South Slav Branch W. Brunswick, ———————_____ Teau, which was printed in the Rad- nik, for the support of The DAILY WORKER, our Independent Dilettante Club at its meeting decided immedi- ately to undertake to support The DAILY WORKER, and indeed to give at once $20 from the treasury, and also to make a collection among the members, which brot in $27.75, mak- ing altogether $47.75. “This is our small gift for our fight- ing organ, Thé DAILY WORKER, for we know that The DAILY WORKER is the opss Communist daily newspa- per fi ie English language. ' “The Committee.” . Note: This letter, written by work- ers, shows that the idea of Commun- +ism is spreading constantly among the masses of South Slavic workers, This club is not a party unit, but it is doing its duty towards the Communist move- ment better than many party units, The action taken by this club should serve as an example for all our com- ist duty. collected $269.00, The+ 1. What was the effect of the de-) velopment of large corporations on! limitations., of the, Workers’ Schools Notes’ rades and our organizations, so that] International. they too may perform their Commun-| lution, its basis in objective and sub- During the first ten days of our|tween workers and bourgeoisie revo- thousand-dotlar, campaign, we have| lutions, the revolution. as a problem We urge all com-|of power, Bonapartism, Luxemburg- Negroes, youth, women.) 2. What are the methods used by the employers to prevent organization of the unorganized. | 3. What methods would you sug- gest of organizing the following: small | shops, large shops, contracting shops, | out-of-town shops, and the various) categories mentioned in the first ques- tion, 4. Organizing methods in particular | industries, 5. Use in organizing campaigns of the’ press, mass meetings, leaflets, rank and file organization commit- tees, the united fronts, the official | trade union machinery of the Ameri- can Federation of Labor, trade organ-| izers, shop nuclei. | 6. Discussion of obstacles to organ-| ization furnished by class collabora-| tion, slack seasons, jurisdictional dis-| pute between unions, company | unions. 7. How can the party aid in the or-' ganizing of the unorganized? From the scope of these first two lessons, it can be seen that this course | will be of fundamental value to every trade union official or active trade union worker. Leading experts in various fields will discuss the sub- jects involved as will all of the mem- bers of the class. Since the class will include the most active, progressive trade unionists, the discussion is ex- pected to furnish many valuable con- j tributions. A stenographer will be on | hand to take them down and material derived from this course will be ‘pub- }lished from time to time for the use of trade unionists in other cities. The instructor, Bert Miller, is to give two such courses simultaneously, each of them forming part of a party training course of which the other parts are Marxism-Leninism and party history and problems. However, a few sepa- rate registrations for the trade union course will be taken. Those inter- ested, should register at once as no néw registrations are likely to be ac-| cepted after the course is actually under way. Registrations will be taken any day or evening at the head- quarters of the New York Workers’ School, 108 E, 14th St. ., Other courses offereé for Wednes- day‘ night are: Marxism-Leninism, in- strtiétor, Bert Wolfe; Marxism, Lenin- ism, instructor, D. Benjamin; Interme- diate English, instructor, Pauline Rogers; Advanced English, instruc- ton Bi Jacobson. ‘ point at the various congresses with the party attitude toward such prob- lems as the party organizational structure and the federation, the le- gal and illegal organization; the unit- ed front and labor party, trade union work; agrarian and Negro work and imperialism. A Party of Lenin. The course in Marxism-Leninism aims to give a political base for the study ‘of party problems. Part I, deal- ing with Marxism, will take up the origin and the philosophical, poli- tical and economic aspects of the pro- letarian social science which bears the name of Marx. How, out of utopian socialism, metaphysical ma- terialism and Hegelian dialectics, he welded a scientific basis for social- ism, his participation in the revolu- tion of 1848 and the lessons he de- rived therefrom, his activities in the First International and his conflicts with the anarchists and Lasallean social-democrats, the fundamental economic concepts of Marxism lead- jing up to the accumulation of capi- monopoly and imperialism, the re- visionist and opportunist atticks on, and distortion of Marxism, and final- ly, a study of “Lenin as a Marxist,” in which the roots of the present day Communist theory and practice will be shown to be imbedded in Marx- ism—these are the basic elements of the course. Following directly from the study of “Lenin as a Marxist” in Part I, and from the study of capitalist accumu- lation, Part Il, entitled Leninism, will begin with a study of 'the economics and politics of the era of trusts, mono- poly, export of capital, imperialism, and the polemie with Kautsky con- cerning “super-imperialism.” This will be followed by a study of class divi- sions and class struggles in the im- perialist epoch, the colonial peoples, the peasantry and the petty-bour- geoisie; and then ‘a detailed study of the proletariat, the aristocracy of la- bor, opportunism, revisionism, and the break of Lenin with the Second The proletarian revo- jective conditions, the relation be- Battle School Heads » and Police During Education Week NEW YORK, Nov, 22.—The Young Workers League, in its vigorous cam- | paign against the capitalist American education week, has met the organ- ized opposition of the school princi- pals the police and the courts. Since the 14th of November, the Young Workers League has held many in- door and open air meetings in front of the evening public and high schools, with thousands, of workers | who attend these schools flocking to Great ‘numbers of | these meetings. leaflets were distributed.~ The principal of Morris High School in the Bronx summoned the police to arrest. the comrade distnibuting leaf- lets. The comrade was arrested and $500 bail given. He was fined $20, In Williamsburgh, fooklyn, the gangster unity of principals and police was even more compléte.. There the | capitalist forces formedja triple al- liance. A gang of capitalist boys, sons of the noted open shoppers, were lay- ing low waiting for the;“Reds.” When our comrades began to distribute leaf- lets the gang informed ‘the principals who in turn called out the police. The | comrades had already disposed of the leaflets and were beginning to leave | when they were arrested; They fined $10 each. To intimidate them their fingerprints were taken, In spite of these versecutions the membership of the Young Workers League will continue to expose the American Legion and ‘the national board of education and their sham “education week.” Y. W. L. Organizes Two Branches in Region of Heavy Industry By GEO. PAPCUN REPUBLIC, Pa., Noy. 23.—Two Young Workers Leaguef{pranches have been organized in the strike region here by the Pittsburgh league for the purpose of starting nuc! work in the mines and steel mills. “The Pitts- burgh league expects to organize many more in the coal felds. its Cleveland Jewish Br. Gives Fourth: Jubilee imi CLEVELAND, Ohio, Noy. 23.—The Jewish branch of Cleveland will. cele- brate its fourth anniversary on Dec. 19 at the Carpenters’ |, 2226 Bast 55th Atreet. a ‘ The celebration will ‘bea gala affair. In addition to the Freifieit Gezangs Verein, the committee ik charge has arranged a treat for the workers of Cleveland. Comrade C. E. Ruthen- berg, general secretary of the Work- ers (Communist) Party, and Comrade M. Olgin of the Jewish bureau of the party, will be the speakéts, ‘The repu- tation of fthese two '\Gomrades as speakers is sufficient to guarantee that Carpenters’ Hall will be packed to the doors, This is the first time.since the party conyention that these, two comrades have been in Cleveland, Every party comrade will want to. hear them—so get your tickets at once, before they are all sold. “Dance of the Books” on Thanksgiving Eve. NEW YORK, Noy. 23.—"The Dance of the Books,” to take place at 108 East 14th St., on Thanksgiving Eve, will offer many novelty features ap- propriate to so festive an occasion. The entire top floor of the Workers School at 108 Hast 14th. St. will be devoted to the festivities and a big samovar will keep things warm. A very nice musical program will be one of the features. The proceeds of the “Dance of the Books” are to go to the Brower Memortal Library. Get your tickets at the School 35c. When that arguniént begins at lunch time in you shop tomor- row—show them whiit the DAILY WORKER says about it. 18¥. You're Invited Also! For Thursday Night If you want to have even more fun than ugual—come dressed in your best rags to the d vate Hard Times Party gi by the Chicago Workers’ School There will be prizes for the most poverty stricken indivi- duals and fines for finery; there will be a breadline— barn dances—Weary Willie Waltzes—n’ everything! Put on your old rags—borrow 50 cents from anyone who will believe that you need it and come over iven MINUTES OF } MORGAN BANK SHOW POWER Secret Orders Issued Thru Government | (Continued from page 1) bmy with tne only provision that China promise to abolish the “likin” or tax on goods between provinces in- side China. In themselves, however, the min- utes show how the international bank- ers can make or unmake nations, change the policies' of governments and control the destinies of peoples. The bankers who handle Chinese bonds do the bossing. The New York minutes show that in Morgan's office in the above named days in October there met C. S. Addis, representing the British banks; R. St. Pierre, rep- resenting French financiers; H. Ka- mont of Morgan and company. La- mont was the chairman. | Wanted Chinese Bankers. The minutes show that the consor- tium desired to bring Chinese bankers into the group the better to aid the international banditti in the plunder of China: “The council reiterates its desire to see the formation of an effective Chinese group to be admitted as a member of the consortium upon terms of equality with the other banking groups. The consortium’s Peking rep- resentatives are to be instructed forthwith to proceed with the discus- sion of the foregoing question with such important members of the Chin- ese banking community as the Pek- ing representatives consider appro- priate.” The minutes show that the bank- ers discussed how they should have the governments handle the question of the Chinese customs conference. They say: “The meeting then proceeded to a discussion of some phases of the Chinese situation relating to the finances which all necessarily form part of the deliberations of the cus- toms conference. Good Offices. “Tt was resolved that the council's present views touching upon the financial problems of the Chinese government should be embodied in the attached memorandum and that the good offices of the American group be utilized in the transmission States department of state, with a re- quest that the memorandum or a sum- mary of same should be forwarded in confidence to the delegates of all four | governments at the forthcoming spe- cial conference and to the group of representatives at Peking, with the | expressed hope that the government delegates be requested to keep the group representatives iffformed as far as possible of developments, upon question involved.” This was signed by Addis, St. Pierre, Lamont and Kashiwigi. The memorandum, which the min- utes say were attached, gives in de- tail the manner in which the bank- ers expect the diplomats to handle China. The fig-leaf of disavowal of any political control is hung over the naked control of the bankers in the following words: “Properly” Bankers’ Business. “The political questions in prospect are quite outside the scope of the consortium. The political situation in China cannot, however, be treated by itself. It involves financial considera- tions which may properly be consider- ed to lie within the competence of a consortium of bankers. It is to this j of said memorandum to the United] SIX VICTIMS IN ONE WEEK IN FEUD BETWEEN GENNA AND VINCI GUNMEN FOR BOOZE MONOPOLY Following the revelation, made bys the attorney for the two Genna | gangsters, who were recently sentenced to 14 years in jail, that over 300 Chicago policemen and state’s attorney’s detectives were on the payroll of the Genna gang, which dominated ward politics in the Italian colony around West Taylor street and controlled the major portion of the booze peddling on the southwest side, comes the sixth killing in a feud on the south Side between the Genna and Vinci dope-+—————_—_—___________. wddling gangs within the past week.) vinci, whom he Had assisted in ter- Fight for Monopoly. rorizing the Italian colony in the ‘his feud of the Vinci gang against » Genna gang challenges: the mo- nopoly of the latter Of the booze, dope and vice traffic on the South side, has so far taken the lives of six gunmen in the past week. The feud started with the murders of Samoots Ama- tuna, one of the Genna gunmen, and that of a South sid@"saloonkeeper, Ed- ward Zine, who was shot in front of his home after attending’ the funeral of tha Genna gunman, © Michael Vinci, who since the death: of the Genna leaders has attempted to take over the monopoly of booze and dope ped- dling on-the Southwest side and add it to that which he held on the South : side was the first of the Vinci gunmen shiwagi, of Japan, and Thomas W. La-sto fall in the feud: Following the killing of Vinci, two lother gunmen were killed that were nembers of the Genna gang. Then| followed the murder of John Mannati, when he attempted to shield the mur- derer of Vinci and denied knowing eleventh ward and in peddling dope and booze and ‘controlling his traffic in vice. Well-Known to Police. AThe Vinci gang has been well- known to the police on the South side. | This gang has been used by’ the poli- | ticians in the eleventh ward to “line- up”. the Italian vote.: The Pekin sta- tion of the police department which has control of this district, during the past summer has broken up a number of street meetings. of the, South Side English branch of the Workers (Com-’ munist) Party and has spent consider- able time and energy in Keeping work: ing class speakers off the streets, and has allowed the Vinci gang to. flour~ ish under their noses, How Many on. Payroll? In the trial of Sam Vinci for the murdering of John Minatti, it is doubt- ful if there will be an expose of the number’ of policemen that were in the employ of the Vinci gang. MOSCOW, U. S. S8..R., Nov. 23, brought into being the dictatorship the council of people’s commissars as this was before the Polish districts: separated from Soviet Russia. When the white terror regime took over the Polish government, they im- mediately decided to sentence Les- cinsky to death and the sentence to be executed whenever he was caught in Poland. . Despite this standing or- der for his;execution, Comrade Les- cinsky returned to Poland and carried on illegal, revolutionary work under an assumed name. During the course of his activiites £. CONDEMNED POLISH COMMUNIST ESCAPES TO SOVIET RUSSIA —omrade Lescinsky, who recently escaped from a Warsaw prison, is now in the Union of Soviet Republics. Comrade Lescinsky at the beginning of the Russian revolution, which of the proletariat, was a member of representative of the Polish districts, he was arrested by the Polish police and sent to jail. The Polish police did not know who they had in their hands at first. Just a day or, two before Lescinsky’s trial, the pofice were able to find out the real identity of this active comrade. . Before the | judge was able to call out the real name of Comrade Lescinsky and call for the immediate execution of the sentence, Lescinsky escaped and is now in Soviet Russia, DETROIT “RED TEA” RAISES ©” $308.46 FOR DAILY WORKER Pledges to the amount of $520.00 and $328.46 in cash to’save The DAILY WORKER were the net results of the “Red Tea” given by Detroit readers and sympathizers of the American Communist press last{ Saturday. night at the House, of. the Masses. The participants were stirred bythe realization that other meetings were being held at the same time in other Communist centers for the same cause. TT a Red candles gleamed from the tables, where girls, and women tn the brilliant,gostumes of many nations ser tea, sandwiches and cigarets under the sign of the Hammer and Sickle. “The. pitalists with whom The DAILY WORKER has to deal In buy- ing paper, ink and other supplies will foreclose and stop the presses unless $10,000 is sent to headquarters in a week,” Edgar Owens, district organizer, told the comrades and friends. “The DAILY WORKER started 22 months ago on the proverbial shoe string. It has obtained other shoe strings since. And now it needs one more. Bear in mind that the working class will never be revolutionary in the United States until the English-speaking workers are brought within the scope of the revolution. “And The DAILY WORKER is the first Communist daily in the English language in the world. Being of the left wing even of the radical movement, The DAILY WORKER faces a harder struggle to survive than the average paper of the labor movement. If the present struggle to save The DAILY WORKER and The DAILY WORKER plant is not won, we shall have to start all over again and bullld once more all that we have today. The strug- gle wold then be much harder.” 0 Sam Spargel, Russian pianist, and Max Levy with Rebecca Katzman as accompanist, contributed vocal and instrumental numbers which helped open the pocket books. Maurice Sugar, the chairman, after the collection and re- freshment sales were counted, announced that cash in the amoi of $328.46 aspect of the question that the at-|@nd pledges in the amount of $520.00 were the results of, this‘Red Tea, tention of the council is now direct- ed.” No Politics—But! ~ It does not claim that bankers should have anything at all to do with — political affairs, but it instructs the j Fort imperialist | 5 powers what questions to bring up, | Duluth, and advices that—The inauguration | £9. Br... 'W. of a m dern system of national ac- | Reedley, Ga representatives of the counting would do much to assist this itures of the Chinese government. Funding of the Chinese debt is tak- en up and then in paragraph six the hint is given that the imperialist pow- with the Chinese government at Pek- says: Wants Canton Suppressed. “Recognizing the difficulty which the Chinese government is experienc- ing in exercising control thruout the country and understanding the desir- ability of security and the co-opera- tion of the provinces, the special con- ference (of diplomats) may see fit to suggest the institution of a discus- sion to this end between the Chinese government and the provinces.” There is evidence that the censor has closed down on the proposal for what particular measures this three- cornered conspiracy against the na- tional liberation movement was going to take. But the proof is certain that —meaning the adjustment of expend-|John'H. We; \ ers’ work out a plan: in conference | Car! Abenshi ing and some of the military Chin- 4088 ese provincial governors to suppress | Jewis! the nationalist liberation upheaval. It | © The English branch. of the Workers Party extends its sincere thanks to the comrades and sympathizers who made their Red Tea so pratifying a suc- cess. » Mich., (proceeds fron Red $328 46 1500 100 00 10 00 LV, 15.00 100 lewish 2500 100 7 08 t, 480 hn Br. W. Oakland, Cal. 2100| Madison, til. wee 1242 on Derren wilien:, Waukisasn te oe lich, Wash 1160] "and. ‘Roches Noe CSoviek 1 Wash. (callect 300 Geo, ‘Krause, R 100 McKees Rocks, $550; John Krfi Bartolic, $3 50; Frank J. Hiebe, 0c; total 18 75) Jewish Br., W. enko, W. Y. (by J. We Rusaisee ea Ww Chit iii 2000 jussian a kor bh Rovaic, Total today Previously reported KEEP ON DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING co, 1113 W. Washington Bivd., Chicago, III. HERE'S MY DONATION: SH at Name: .. | 1 | Thursday Night, Nov. 26th 8 p. m. Imperial’ Hall, 2409 N, Hals' .00 | rades to do their duty within the set| ism, Trotskyism will also. be taken up ettante Club, | time, so that-we may help to free|and after cousideration of the Rus- Pa., along with the check for $47.50,| The DAILY WORKER of its financial] sian revolution and the Communist s@nt a short letter in which they say: | difficulites. ~ | International as “product” of Lenin- “Dear Comrades: Upon the basisof| Charles Novak, secretary, South| ism, the tial subject will bea “Party resolution of the South Clay Bu- the influence of the bankers in China is supreme—so ‘far as is in thelr pow- Ra to control the imperialist govern- ments, Controlling the Chines@ na- tional revolution is, of course, an other, matter: Address: City: vic Buxpaw. ot Lyoniti.””