cover image: The Indian Review  August  1912  a Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

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The Indian Review August 1912 a Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

1912

The numerous appreciative obituary notices which have appeared in the columns of Indian organs of opinion of every shade and hue are unchalengable evidence of the regard and esteem in which he was held and of the remarkably enduing pioneer work he did for the Indian people during the period of a quarter of a century and more after his retirement from the Civil Service of which he was no inco [...] A civilian of great farsightedness and indomitable courage of unbounded faith and hope he unmistakably gave proofs of those qualities during the darkest period of British rule in India when the very fate of the Empire founded by the genius of the intrepid Clive and the bravery and statesmanship of the ditinguished soldiers and statesmen who came after him trembled in the balance. [...] But the reformed Councils of 1892 were unquetionably the direct and most substantial oucome of the labours of the pioneers of the the Congress. [...] And this adjustment and readjustment goes on year in and year out all over the world—not be it carefully noted at the instigation or by the direct assistance of the Governments of any of the countries concerned but in response to the activities and requirements of the trading public. [...] In 1806 when the reform of Indian currency system and the introduction of a uniform silver rupee was under consideration the directors of the East India Company decided not to interfere in Madras where gold is the principal money in circulation and the money of account.' In 1818 however the coinage of pagodas was stopped and the issue of a gold rupee or mohur (worth Es.
government politics public policy
Published in
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Segment Pages Author Actions
Allan Octavius Hume
i-622 Dinshaw Wacha view
India’s Lost Right
623-627 M. Webb view
Mr. Malabari as I knew him
627-628 A. Ali view
The Public Service Commission
629-631 C. Menon view
Lord Crewe’s Goal for Indians
631-ii V. S. Sastri view
Patna
633-639 V. S. Sastri view
The Delhi Durbar
639-647 Sarala Chaudhrani view
Remarkable Journalistic “Futurism”
648-652 Leopold Katscher view
The Sorrows of a Life
652-656 Swarnakumari Ghosal view
Dewan C. Rangacharlu
i-664 D. V. Gundappa view
Lord Morley on History and Politics
665-672 G. A. Natesan view
Current Events
i-v Rajduari view
The World of Books
v-vii G. A. Natesan view
Diary of the Month. July—August 1912
vii-viii G. A. Natesan view
Topics from Periodicals
673-680 G. A. Natesan view
Questions of Importance
681-684 G. A. Natesan view
Utterances of the Day
684-687 G. A. Natesan view
Indians Outside India
687-688 G. A. Natesan view
Feudatory India
689-690 G. A. Natesan view
Industrial and Commercial Section
690-694 G. A. Natesan view
Agricultural Section
694-696 G. A. Natesan view
Literary
697-697 G. A. Natesan view
Educational
698-698 G. A. Natesan view
Legal
699-699 G. A. Natesan view
Medical
700-700 G. A. Natesan view
Science
701-701 G. A. Natesan view
Personal
702-702 G. A. Natesan view
Political
703-703 G. A. Natesan view
General
704-704 G. A. Natesan view