cover image: The Indian Review  December  1920  A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

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The Indian Review December 1920 A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

1920

We assert that the financial position of the industry allows of the reduction without involving any disturbance of conditions prevaiing in the industry and that the general body of consumers is entitled to share in the present prosperity of the coalfields." Here in a nutshell is the miners' claim for a voice in price fixation. [...]. that the surplus earnings now :available in the industry should be used for the joint benefit of the consumer and the producer who are alike suffering under the heavy burden of prices." To tile Government denial of the right of miners to any voice in the fixing of the price of coal to the domestic consumer Mr. [...] It is the jitstice of the miners' demand for share in the effective control of the industry that is on the anvil And by the withdrawal of this vital part of their claim we think the ruiners unwittingly"THE STORY OF THE ENGLISH COAL STRIKE. [...] The actual course of negotiations the two posponements of strike notices the intervention of the Triple Alliance and the subsequent conference with the mine-owners--these events show out in no less prominent a manner the two ideals at stake and the subterfuges en9loyed to clothe the real issues under false garbs than do the later incidents of the struggle in revealing the sordid realism of [...] We admit the logic of the claim but we continue to doubt of the efficacy in material results of the substitution of the motive of self interest by the motive of free service.
government politics public policy
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Segment Pages Author Actions
The Danger Ahead
737-737 V.S. Sastri view
“Hygiene of the Mind”
738-739 A.J.H. Russell view
Religious Union in India
740-740 Lazarus view
El Azhar—The National University of Egypt
741-742 K.M. Panikkar view
About our Leaders
743-744 Brij Narain view
The Story of the English Coal Strike
745-750 K.C. Mahindra view
The Economic Consequences of the Peace
750-752 Gilbert Slater view
“Pax Perpetua”
753-754 S. Coleman view
Sudas-A Vedic King
754-755 Haripada Ghosal view
Captain David Lester Richardson
756-760 Sukumar Das Gupta view
The New President of France
761-762 unknown view
The International Labour Conference
763-764 B.P. Wadia view
Theories as to why we Sleep
765-765 unknown view
The New President of the United States
766-768 B. Kuttapa view
Rural Indebtedness
769-771 K.R. Kulkarni view
Principles of English Law
771-771 K.V. Aiyar view
British Policy in the East
772-774 unknown view
History and Civics
775-776 R.R. Pawar view
On Vedic Study
776-776 P.P. Sastri view
The World of To-Morrow
777-778 Ferrand E. Corley view
Col. Wedgwood and his Warning
778-779 unknown view
The Exhaustion of the Soil in India
780-781 unknown view
The Immediate Task
782-784 M. Visvesvaraya view
Topics from Periodicals
785-792 unknown view
Questions of Importance
793-793 unknown view
Utterances of the Day
794-794 unknown view
Feudatory India
795-795 unknown view
Indians Outside India
796-796 unknown view
Industrial & Commercial Section
797-797 unknown view
Agricultural Section
798-798 unknown view
Notices of Books
799-799 unknown view
Diary of the Month
800-800 unknown view
Literary
801-801 unknown view
Educational
802-802 unknown view
Legal
803-803 unknown view
Medical
804-804 unknown view
Science
805-805 unknown view
Personal
806-806 unknown view
Political
807-807 unknown view
General
808-808 unknown view