cover image: The Indian Review  May  1914  A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

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The Indian Review May 1914 A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

1914

[MAy 1914 Children the married girls the old the prenant the distressed the unmarried girls the guests and the servants are to be fed and the man and his wife are to eat of the remaining food." Self-sacrificing benevolence is often carried to an extent which looked at from the Western viepoint would be considered idiotic ridiculous or even repulsive (as in the case of bed-bugs amo [...] And one of the greatest hardships of excommunication the worst social punishment which the Hindu dreads is the deprivation of the pleasure of feeding others. [...] The decadence if not the virtual extinction of our indigenous industries the stationary condition of our agriculture and the inordinate rise in the prices of the absolutely necessary articles of consumption have greatly added to the stringency of the struggle for exitence. [...] The keeping of the register of applications for shares open for any length of time and the making of allotments witout waiting for the subscription of the whole captal (which were the ordinary features of Indian Companies hitherto) are invalid under the new law. [...] The rise of the cost of living and the failure of the wages to advance pari passe with it is at the bottom of all the labour unrest to be found in the world and no one would be bold to say that on all the Railways controlled by the Government as in Germany and Belgium labour is getting all its demands realied.
government politics public policy
Published in
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Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-i A.G. Natesan view
Hindu Ethics Under Western Influence
353-359 Pramatha Rose view
Indian Companies’ Act of 1913
359-i Bahaditr K Row view
What the Empress Haruku Did for Japan
361-364 Saint Singh view
Missionary Enterprise in India
364-365 Leith view
Nationalisation of Railways
366-369 “Commerce” view
“Indian Ballads:” An Appreciation
369-375 K.S. Astri view
B. M. Malabari: an Estimate
375-383 B. Natesan view
A. Great Missionary Educationist the Rev. Dr. Millet C.I.E.
384-390 S. Satyamurthi view
The Report of the South African Commission
391-392 unknown view
Silver or Good for India
393-393 M.De Webb view
An Orient’s View of the Occident
394-394 R.B. Patel view
Current Events
395-397 unknown view
The World of Books
397-399 unknown view
Diary of the Month April-May 1914
400-400 unknown view
Topics from Periodicals
401-408 unknown view
Questions of Importance
409-410 unknown view
Utterances of the Day
411-414 unknown view
Indians Outside India
415-416 unknown view
Feudatory India
417-418 unknown view
Industrial and Commercial Section
418-421 unknown view
Agricultural Section
422-424 unknown view
Literary
425-425 unknown view
Educational
426-426 unknown view
Legal
427-427 unknown view
Medical
428-428 unknown view
Science
429-429 unknown view
Political
430-430 unknown view
Personal
431-431 unknown view
General
432-433 unknown view