tion and the precise order of stern discipline. The fundamental condition of the productivity of Labour Red Army men, and of workmen in the Soviet economy in general, is the arousing of the spirit of emulation. The organization of this spirit is the most important problem of economic reconstruction, and without this subjective force nothing will help, neither peat, nor coal, nor petrol, nor the removal of the blockade. It is necessary to take all measures to foster the feeling of labour conscience, both in the cooperative institutions and in the individual." At a congress of the Soviets at Moscow a resolution was passed on April 4 in favour of his proposal that labour should be organized on the principle of military conscription and obligatory work; also that the inspection of labour should be confided to special inspectors, instead of local Soviets.
Within the Soviet Government organization, as it still held power in 1921, Trotsky, Dzerjinsky and Bukharin were the leaders of the extreme left of the Communist party, and, as such, had repeatedly opposed Lenin when the latter was inclined to conciliatory measures; but the outside world generally associated the names of Lenin and Trotsky together as the embodiments of Russian Bolshevist rule. (P. Vi.)
TSCHAIKOVSKY, NICHOLAS VASILIEVICH (1850-), Russian revolutionary politician, was born in 1850, at Viatka. He spent the first part of his life on his mother's estate, and studied at a public school at Viatka and later on in St. Petersburg. In 1868 he entered the St. Petersburg University and got his degree in chemistry in 1872. He took part in the "Narodniki" (populist) movement, and became one of its leaders, working for the creation of a system of societies for self-education. These societies organized lectures and provided their members with cheap and well-selected books. They had a considerable influence on the moral and political development of a whole generation of the Russian " intelligentsia."
But under the political regime of Russia in the 'seventies no public body or society could act freely if its activity was not fully approved by the Government. Every kind of repression was used against the promoters of the " narodniki " movement; and Tschaikovsky was twice arrested. Under these conditions the new party soon lost its educational character and became a revolutionary and terrorist association. Tschaikovsky did not approve of this new tendency and joined the social-religious group, which received the name of " God-men " because its members tried to find in themselves a reflection of God.
In 1874 Tschaikovsky left Russia, and a year later he went to the United States with a small party of men and women who shared his political views and religious feelings. They founded a communistic settlement at " Cedar Vale," near Wichita, in the state of Kansas, and tried to work out their new religious and social teaching. The experiment proved a failure. After two years of hard experience, Tschaikovsky and his friends were obliged to recognize that mankind was not yet ready for the communistic life which they believed to be an imminent development of the future. They regarded communistic life as senseless without a constant feeling of the presence of God in the case of each member of the community, and this essential condition could not be achieved. Therefore they returned to the " old world of antagonism." The awakening was especially hard for Tschaikovsky, who not only found it necessary to reconstruct his conception of the world, but had a family to keep and no means of livelihood. He worked for some time as an ordinary workman in a shipbuilding yard and in a sugar factory near Philadelphia. His health broke down and with his family he joined the religious community of the Shakers, where he remained for a year.
In 1879 he returned to Europe, and in 1880 took up his residence in England, renewing his active participation in the Russian revolutionary organizations abroad; he was a member of the " Red Cross of the Narodnaia Volia," and organized the supply of revolutionary literature to Russia. During the first Russian revolution of 1903-6 he made a tour of America, lecturing on the subject and collecting funds for the struggle against the Imperial regime. In 1907 he returned to Russia. There he was arrested on a charge of conspiracy against the Government and spent 11 months in the St. Peter and St. Paul Fortress at St. Petersburg. He was released on bail, 5,000 having been collected by his friends, chiefly in England and America. In 1910 he was brought to trial and discharged for lack of proof. He remained in Russia and took a great interest in the work of cooperative organizations.
During the World War he was very active under the flag of the Russian Red Cross, supplying food'to the population of the fighting area. After the revolution of 1917, he was elected member of the Council of Soldiers, Workmen and Peasants, formed at Petrograd, where he used his influence to fight the Bolshevist propaganda. He was also elected member of the Constituent Assembly. After the Bolshevist revolution, as a member of the " Committee for the Salvation of the Motherland and of the Revolution," and of the " Committee for the Defence of the Constituent Assembly," he helped to organize the struggle against the Bolshevists.
In 1918 he was one of the founders of the "Union of the reconstruction of Russia," an anti-Bolshevist organization of the left parties of Moscow. He was also elected member of the Ufa Directorate. On his way to Siberia, he came to Viatka, where he took the lead in an insurrection against the Bolshevists and entered into negotiations with the Allied force at Archangel. He took part in the coup d'etat of Aug. 2 at Archangel and became president of the Supreme Administrative Board of the North Region. After the break-up of a conspiracy of monarchist officers, he organized the Provisional Government of the North Region under his own leadership. Tschaikovsky was sent by his Government to Paris, where he represented the interests of the North Region before the Peace Conference. He was a member of the " Russian Political Delegation " in Paris till its dissolution in Feb. 1921. (P. Vi.)
TUBERCULOSIS (see 27.354*). Since the bacillus tuberculosis was discovered by Koch in 1882, the various forms of disease caused by its invasion have been in the forefront of medical research. The disease is known to have existed amongst the earliest civilizations. Bony tuberculous lesions have been described in Egyptian mummies, and in the Nubian collection of bones in the Royal College of Surgeons, London, are two specimens, respectively of the dates of about 3,000 and 2,000
B.C., presenting all the characteristics of tuberculous disease of the spine. Tuberculous disease of the lungs is known to have existed in very early times. The old Greek Hippocrates (born 460 B.C.) first applied the term " phthisis," and a description of its clinical manifestations may be found in his writings and those of Celsus, Aretaeus and Galen. Before the discovery of the bacillus its effects in different parts of the body were classified as distinct diseases, receiving different names: "consumption" or phthisis for pulmonary tuberculosis, struma or scrofula for bone or gland tuberculosis, lupus for tuberculosis of the skin, and tabes mesenterica of the intestinal glands.
Pathology. Affected tissues invaded by the tubercle bacillus undergo typical changes, become inflamed, break down and perish. By the irritation which the bacilli excite, epitheloid cells are proliferated from the normal cells of the tissues, forming a tubercle, in which is usually present a " giant " cell surrounded by smaller epitheloid cells encompassed by a zone of leucocytes. Scattered amongst these cells tubercle bacilli may be found. Later the tubercles undergo degenerative changes (caseation) proceeding further to abscess formation. Repair may take place by cicatricial formation of fibrous tissue, these fibrous nodules sometimes undergoing calcareous degeneration. Bayle, in the latter part of the i8th century, first described' the tubercular nodule, and its distributions in other organs than the lungs.
One organ or part of the patient attacked is generally the seat of these tubercular nodules, some of which may become confluent, but the" disease may take the form of an acute specific fever, clinically somewhat resembling typhoid fever, with wide-spread dissemination of the infection. In this form the disease is so severe and rapid, that many of the tubercles have not time to get beyond the initial stages of their development
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