THE COLOR QUESTION.
A CROWING DANCER.
[By Electric Telegraph—Copyright] [United Press Association.]Capetown, July 12. Lord Gladstone, in acknowledging a farewell address, emphasised the growing danger of the color question, and said that if allowed to drift the moral authority of the whites would continue to decrease. PROTESTS FROM INDIA. Calcutta, July 11. A series of meetings has been inaugurated under the auspices of the Indian Association, to assert the rights of Indians as British subjects. One speaker declared that'tho colonies had declared war against the Indians, and it was impossible for the latter to be patriotic citizens of the Empire. He said that the India Council Bill was rejected in tho House of Lords because the inclusion of Indians on the Council, would bo an eyesore to English people.
THE KOMACATA MARU'S HINDUS Times and Sydney Sun Services. Ottawa, July 11.
The Government refuses to defray the expense of deporting the Hindus, and proposes to make an example of the present case, in order to prevent similar attemps in tho future.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 69, 13 July 1914, Page 5
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171THE COLOR QUESTION. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 69, 13 July 1914, Page 5
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