STATE OF INDIA.
AN OMINOUS UTTERANCE. "A DARK PALL." LORD CURZON SPEAKS GRAVELY. By Telegraph.— Press Association.— Copy light. (Received May 22, 9 a.m.) LONDON, 21st May. Lord Curzon, ex-Viceroy of India, speaking at the Central Asian Society's dinner, said that recent arrangements, however successful, had not determined Britain and iiussia's future in Asia. Vigilance was required to hold and defend what Britain had gained. There was a dark , almost impenetrable, pall over India, "and," he added, "we must do nothing to retard the success of tho great aim with which Britain has been charged there." REVOLUTIONARY SCHOOL. INDIAN DISCONTENTS IN BRITISH COLUMBIA. LONDON, 21st May. " The Vancouver correspondent of The Times reports that three educated men from India — two Punjabis and a Bengali — are directing a revolutionary school at Millside, near Westminster, a city in British Columbia, on the Fraser river, and eighty miles northeast of Victoria. Indian residents at all settlements on the Pacific Coast contribute money to this school, and the seditious movement in India is directed from the Millside centre, through Vancouver.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume LXXV, Issue 121, 22 May 1908, Page 7
Word Count
176STATE OF INDIA. Evening Post, Volume LXXV, Issue 121, 22 May 1908, Page 7
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