cover image: Modern Review  September  1915

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20.500.12592/h22xb9

Modern Review September 1915

1915

The ►liculiar f hurts of the 1.outia4prominently brought out the riclinesc n1 L;% p..eiie lore shown in all its voirrety and the earnestness of its 4-1evE-Jtee% so well dorlionstrated by the wrikel aTe sufficient to clear the doubts of the scut-Air' as to the place doscrvril Gajar;iti iii inclian literture The book is written in English and as such has sOine juAlfiCaLion. [...] The measures adopted in the employed in an industry which however different provinces are by no means the much it may help to fill the coffers of same though they all undoubtedly eIairn Government does very little to help the to have imitated the ineliod g of the inmates to earn a livelihood when they English Juvenile jail at Borstal near Chcome out or the jail. [...] In the same essay written in the sixties of the List {2entUrY tiutl the following delightful piAssage on the Bengalis and the right way to govern them :— -Thuse win)) havc ilprined their opinions on the umi ran. [...] Indeed the means of praise in honour of Indires glorious sel fsaerlice which were sung by everybody in Enland during the first few months of the war when her attitude appeared to be somewhat uncertain to those who were ignorant of the law-abiding character of the vast majority of the people of India. [...] Another example of the portlier way in which the nificial mind work is to he found in the fact that though.in this country the pay of teacher' both trained and untrained ts very lows! and the number of training schoohvand Kaim small It la Said in the Previa.
government politics public policy
Pages
128
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-iii Ramananda Chatterjee view
Notes
225-248 unknown view
Observations on Caste
249-257 Homersom Cox view
Rock Sculptures of Gwalior
257-262 E. Watts view
The Indian Cotton Industry
262-267 N.C. Mehta view
A Literary Find
267-268 S Bukhsh view
Her First Audience
269-273 Maud Maddick view
Footfalls in Indian History
273-277 unknown view
Browning as a Poet and Dramatist
277-281 W.W.P view
Cousin Tom’s Little Prank
281-286 Herbert Russel view
London Daily Morning Newspapers
286-292 Babu Sud view
John Wesley
292-298 C.F. Andrews view
Reviews and Notices of Books
298-308 unknown view
How the Orient is Represented on the London Stage
308-312 Saint Singh view
Date Sugar in Central India and the Central Provinces
312-314 Haridas Chatterjee view
The Servian Character
315-319 Vivian view
Should Women Serve as Solders
320-324 unknown view
Couriship and Marriage in other Countries
325-328 H Hearthy view
Indian Periodicals
328-335 unknown view
Foreign Periodicals
335-336 unknown view