cover image: Baroda Administrative Report  1904-05

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Baroda Administrative Report 1904-05

1906

In the folowing century the power of the Valabhis was broken and the Chauda Rajputs ruled over Northern Gujrat from the eighth century to the middle of the tenth. [...] The Maharaja then went on tour in Amreli and Kadi Districts with the officers named above to see the state of the crops and the condition of the 210 people and returned to Baroda in the month of February. [...] In the event of the local production of the drugs falling short of local requirements the necessary quantity is to be imported from the Bombay Presidency His Higness's Government receiving a refund of threfourths of the duty levied by the British Goverment. [...] The contribution was meant to cover the cost of carrying on through British territory the extra water due to drainage operations in the Baroda State." His Highness's Government resited the claim mainly on the ground that the drains completed in the eastern portion of the Kadi District had relieved several British villages and thus saved the British Government a considrable outlay on the [...] The original Bill is often considerably modified in the light of such criticism and is then passed into law by the Maharaja's order and pulished in the Ajna Patrika for general information.27 Important Acts of 1904.—It is interesting to note that one of the three Acts passed in 1904 is for the extention of Primary Education in the State and another is for the Prevention of Early Marriages.
government politics public policy
Pages
335
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.140929
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-xiii Romesh C. Dutt view
I.—Political
1-25 unknown view
II.—Legislative
26-34 unknown view
III-Judicial
35-49 unknown view
Revenue—Section A
50-82 unknown view
V.—Revenue—Section B
83-100 unknown view
Revenue—Section C
101-140 unknown view
Revenue—Section D
141-167 unknown view
Revenue-Section E
168-184 unknown view
IX. Land Settlement
185-196 unknown view
X.—Finance
197-208 unknown view
XI.—Education
209-241 unknown view
XII. Medical
242-248 unknown view
XIII. Public Works
249-261 unknown view
XIV.—Police
262-269 unknown view
XV—Jails
270-271 unknown view
XVI.—Famine Relief
272-321 unknown view
Supplemental Note
i-i unknown view