cover image: Modern Review  March  1932

Premium

20.500.12592/kb3dr1

Modern Review March 1932

1932

on illiterate country : hut that is no a tinerrnment s'* up mutter such enndition4 ag f recognize the principle of the responsibility of the executive to the Legislature." At the closing of the second Round 'fable Conference the Prime Minister said : "At the ha:inning of the yt.wr I made u declaration of the policy of the then Government and I am authorized by the present one to give you and Indi [...] As even in the few advanced States the Ruler is not exactly like a constitutional monarch whose will is not the law or is far removed from being the law and as in the vast majority of the States the Ruler's will is the law selection or nomination of representatives made by the States or by the Governments of the States practically means the same thing as selection or nomintion made by the Rule [...] As according to the declaration of the Premier on January 19 1931 in regard to all matters not ceded by the Princes to the Federation their relations will be with the British Crown acting through the agency of the Viceroy the Princes will as at present be under the necessity of keeping the supreme British-Indian executive in good humour. [...] Formerly one of the rites which brides in Bengal had to perform before the netunl ceremony of marriage was the turning of a spinning wheel while a shuttle was placed in the hands of the bridegroom by the Indies of the family. [...] The ceremony means nothing else than that while the wife had to spin the yarn the litisbniul had to weave the sloth on the loom a natural and proper divsion of labour for the production of the cloth required for the family.
government politics public policy
Pages
128
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-i Ramananda Chatterjee view
The Coming Federal Legislature and Allotment of Seats Therein
243-250 Ramananda Chatterjee view
The Cult of the Spinning Wheel
251-253 Nagendranath Gupta view
An Industrial Opportunity
253-258 A.R. Barbour view
The World’s Seven Great Historic Religions
259-264 Jabez Sunderland view
Hindus Under the Talpurs of Sindh
265-272 Lokmandas Manghirmalani view
Divided Allegiance
273-278 Santa Devi view
English Impressions of Rammohun Roy Before His Visit to England
279-284 Brajendra Banerji view
Slave Mentality— Oriental and Occidental
285-288 Dhirendra Roy view
Taking Museums to the People
288-294 Sudhindra Bose view
Ananda-Asram Dacca
294-297 Prafulla Ray view
Safe-Guards in Indian Constitution: Foreign Affairs and Commerce
297-300 A.M. Arora view
The Salaries of the Civil Servants
301-310 Naresh Roy view
Voting Strength of Muhammadans Can it be Proportional to Population ?
310-315 Jatindra Datta view
Book Reviews
316-323 unknown view
Cleanings
323-325 unknown view
Indian Womanhood
325-326 unknown view
Foreign Periodicals
327-331 unknown view
Indian Periodicals
332-335 unknown view
Indians Abroad
336-337 N.A. Perumal, Chandra Singh view
Notes
338-362 unknown view