INDIAN AFFAIRS.
AUSTRALIAN AND N.Z. CAIIT.F, ASSOCIATION. INDIAN REFORMS. DELHI, Feb. 2. Undoubtedly Lord Peel’s dispatch to the Viceroy of Tndia on the subject of the revision of the reform scheme is causing vehement protest among Indians everywhere. In the Legislatures, in the minutes of motions, and elsewhere, memoranda are lioing circulated profusely condemning tlie dispatch in no uncertain terms. One, signed by prominent members of the Legislatures, says ;—The dispatch is likely to spoil all attempts to quieten the Indian political situation, and to alienate the moderates. The memorandum ends:—“Wo desire to tell the Rt Honourable .Secretary of State for- India with all respect that if he imagines India is going to wait till 1929 for a re-examina-tion and revision of the constitution, then His Lordship is sadly mistaken. THE MAHSUD’S SHARE. The Mahsuds are in a chastened mood owing to the continued _ bombin- of them, and the occupation of disturbed areas by British forces.
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Hokitika Guardian, 5 February 1923, Page 2
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156INDIAN AFFAIRS. Hokitika Guardian, 5 February 1923, Page 2
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