cover image: The Indian Review  March 1925  A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of All Topics of Interest

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The Indian Review March 1925 A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of All Topics of Interest

1925

Moreover if the Excise Duty were abolished the financial relief would either result in making mill cloth cheaper for the masses ; or even if in the possible alternative the mill owners themselves intercept the benefit it would increase the profits of the Mill Industry but not without yielding a propotional ret.irn to Government in the form of the Income-tax levied upon it. [...] The full significance of the change of policy involved in the calling of rupee tenders cannot be realised until the public are told that the total purchase of the different Departments of the Government of India and the Provincial Governments and the local and public bodies amount to between 25 and 3o crores of rupees a year. [...] Money raised from the Indian tax-payer in this manner has been deliberately spent to support the enterprise and to provide employment for the people of alien lands when a substantial part of it could be spent in India with all the incidental gains not only to the people but to the railways and to the revenues of the country. [...] What a great change in the religious mood of Indians has been effected by intechange of views and the consequent result of toleration and discrimination which are so essentially necessary for a right apprciation of the present needs of India and has not the centenary of the Swamiji's birthday illustrated this ? the whole SWAMI DAYANAND '220 The Vaisnava Lyrics of Bengal THE HON. [...] Some of these poems Were collected by the later exponents of the Vaisnava School and these collections were styled The Ocean of the Nectar of Poems " ; " The Wishing Tree of Poems " &c names which unmistakably indicate the voluminouness of the literature and the exhaustiveness of the collections.
government politics public policy
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Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-i G. A. Natesan view
Industrial Problems for the Aassembly
201-206 A. Ali view
The Surplus Budget
207-210 N. C. Kelkar view
The Souith African Question
211-213 C. F. Andrews view
Rupee Tender
214-218 Manu Subedar view
Dayanand Centenary
219-219 R. P. Karandikar view
The Vaisnava Lyrics of Bengal
220-222 Khagendra Mitter view
A Supreme Court in India
223-224 C. V. Sastri view
The Cotton Excise Duty
225-227 Rasturbhai Lalbhai view
South African Reminiscences
228-231 H. S. L. Polak view
The Taxation Enquiry Committee
231-233 Bhagat Kumar view
A Civilian on Indian Politics
234-235 S. K. Datta view
The Reforms Report
236-238 G. A. Natesan view
A New Constitution for India
239-240 Babu Das view
Topics from Periodicals
241-248 G. A. Natesan view
Questions of Importance
249-249 G. A. Natesan view
Utterances of the Day
250-250 G. A. Natesan view
Indian States
251-251 G. A. Natesan view
Indians Outside India
252-252 G. A. Natesan view
Industrial and Commercial Section
253-253 G. A. Natesan view
Agricultural Section
254-254 G. A. Natesan view
The World of Books
255-255 G. A. Natesan view
Diary of the Month
256-256 G. A. Natesan view
Literary
257-257 G. A. Natesan view
Educational
258-258 G. A. Natesan view
Legal
259-259 G. A. Natesan view
Medical
260-260 G. A. Natesan view
Science
261-261 G. A. Natesan view
Personal
262-262 G. A. Natesan view
Political
263-263 G. A. Natesan view
General
264-264 G. A. Natesan view