Indian and Pakistan Year Book and Who's whoSir Stanley Reed Bennett, Coleman & Company, 1928 - India Issues for 1919-47 include Who's who in India; 1948, Who's who in India and Pakistan. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 63
Page 113
... valued at Rs . 1,22,24,040 in 1923 . 130 to In 1925-26 the foreign sea - borne trade of Bengal ( excluding treasure but Government including stores ) amounted to Rs . 238 crores of which 84 crores imports and represented Rs . 154 crores ...
... valued at Rs . 1,22,24,040 in 1923 . 130 to In 1925-26 the foreign sea - borne trade of Bengal ( excluding treasure but Government including stores ) amounted to Rs . 238 crores of which 84 crores imports and represented Rs . 154 crores ...
Page 157
... from the Province during the year ending 31st March 1926 was about 118,423 maunds , valued at nearly 35 lakhs of rupees . The largest numbers engaged in any of the modern Industrial The Central Provinces and Berar . 157.
... from the Province during the year ending 31st March 1926 was about 118,423 maunds , valued at nearly 35 lakhs of rupees . The largest numbers engaged in any of the modern Industrial The Central Provinces and Berar . 157.
Page 195
... valued at nearly two crores and the local trade in wheat is estimated at one crore . Cotton excise duty at 3 per cent . ad valorem has been abolished from 1st May 1926 and an industrial tax is levied on the cotton mills from the same ...
... valued at nearly two crores and the local trade in wheat is estimated at one crore . Cotton excise duty at 3 per cent . ad valorem has been abolished from 1st May 1926 and an industrial tax is levied on the cotton mills from the same ...
Page 237
... valued at over a million and a quarter sterling , and the customs revenue , which amounts to some eighty thousand pounds , makes the Sheikh the richest ruler in the Gulf , In the neighbourhood of Bahrein is the vast burying ground which ...
... valued at over a million and a quarter sterling , and the customs revenue , which amounts to some eighty thousand pounds , makes the Sheikh the richest ruler in the Gulf , In the neighbourhood of Bahrein is the vast burying ground which ...
Page 313
... valued in the past ; it is infinitesimal in comparison with the industrial and commercial interests involved . No - one who realises the sensitiveness of the Indian market , and the proneness to speculation , can contemplate these ...
... valued in the past ; it is infinitesimal in comparison with the industrial and commercial interests involved . No - one who realises the sensitiveness of the Indian market , and the proneness to speculation , can contemplate these ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres administration agricultural Ajmer-Merwara appointed Army Assam Assistant Avargal Babu Bank Bar-at-Law Bengal Berar Bihar Bihar and Orissa Bombay Branch British India Burma Calcutta capital cent Central Provinces charge Chief Civil co-operative College Commissioner Committee cotton Court crops crores currency Delhi Department Deputy Director District duty East elected Engineer established European expenditure famine Female Finance Frontier funds gold Government of India Governor Governor-General Hindu Hon'ble important industry irrigation Khan Bahadur labour Lahore lakhs land Legislative Council Lord Madras Maharaja Mahomedan Male Medical ment military Mission Muhammadan Municipal Nagpur Nawab Non-Muhammadan Rural North-West North-West Frontier Province officers organisation Orissa Police Poona population Port Presidency Punjab Railway Raja Rajputana Rangoon Reserve revenue ruler rupees scheme Scholars in Public schools Secretary Singh societies South square miles territory tion trade United Provinces University village women
Popular passages
Page 496 - trade dispute' means any dispute between employers and workmen, or between workmen and workmen, which is connected with the employment or non-employment, or the terms of employment, or with the conditions of labour of any person, and the expression "workmen...
Page 175 - We desire no extension of our present territorial possessions: and while we will permit no aggression upon our dominions or our rights to be attempted with impunity, we shall sanction no encroachment on those of others. We shall respect the rights, dignity, and honour of native princes as our own; and we desire that they, as well as our own subjects, should enjoy that prosperity and that social advancement which can only be secured by internal peace and good government.
Page 71 - The estimated annual expenditure and revenue of the province shall be laid in the form of a statement before the council in each year, and the proposals of the local government for the appropriation of provincial revenues and other moneys in any year shall be submitted to the vote of the council in the form of demands for grants.
Page 496 - Act had not been passed, have been deemed to have been an unlawful combination by reason of some one or more of its purposes being in restraint of trade.
Page 82 - GovernorGeneral shall appoint a date not more than six months, or, with the sanction of the Secretary of State, not more than nine months, after the date of dissolution for the next session of that chamber.
Page 77 - Government. 20. Development of Industries, in cases where such development by a central authority is declared by order of the Governor-General in Council, made after consultation with the Local Government or Local Governments concerned, expedient in the public interest.
Page 71 - The council may assent, or refuse its assent, to a demand, or may reduce the amount therein referred to either by a reduction of the whole grant or by the omission or reduction of any of the items of expenditure of which the grant is composed...
Page 307 - Keport) is their conviction that at the present rate of about 1'. 6d. " prices in India have already attained a substantial measure of' adjustment with those in the world at large, and as a corollary that any change in thV rate would mean a difficult period of readjustment, involving widespread economic disturbance, which it is most desirable in the interests of the people to avoid, and which would in the end be followed by no countervailing advantage...
Page 73 - The Committee desire that the relation of the two sides of the Government in this matter, as in all others, should be of such mutual sympathy that each will be able to assist and influence for the common good the work of the other, but not to exercise control over it.
Page 71 - Assembly is essential to the discharge of his responsibilities, act as if it had been assented to, notwithstanding the withholding of such assent, or the reduction of the amount therein referred to, by the Legislative Assembly.