Parliamentary Papers, Volume 72H.M. Stationery Office, 1895 |
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Página 4
... given at page 66 of the Financial Statement * ) ; the net Revenue being the amount received from the principal sources , after deducting the cost of collection , & c . , and the net Expenditure being the charges of the various ...
... given at page 66 of the Financial Statement * ) ; the net Revenue being the amount received from the principal sources , after deducting the cost of collection , & c . , and the net Expenditure being the charges of the various ...
Página 22
... given by 56 & 57 Vict . ch . 70 , to borrow £ 10,000,000 . On the 20th of May 1894 , £ 6,000,000 India 3 per cent . stock was issued at £ 99 18s . 3d . per cent . Out of the proceeds of this loan India bills for £ 1,500,000 due on the ...
... given by 56 & 57 Vict . ch . 70 , to borrow £ 10,000,000 . On the 20th of May 1894 , £ 6,000,000 India 3 per cent . stock was issued at £ 99 18s . 3d . per cent . Out of the proceeds of this loan India bills for £ 1,500,000 due on the ...
Página 5
... given to Statement E. , the Statement of Net Revenue and Expenditure . This form follows , but is not in such great detail as , a " Return of the Net Income and Expenditure of British India " prepared by the Right Honourable Mr. Fowler ...
... given to Statement E. , the Statement of Net Revenue and Expenditure . This form follows , but is not in such great detail as , a " Return of the Net Income and Expenditure of British India " prepared by the Right Honourable Mr. Fowler ...
Página 16
... given under conditions which are no longer applicable , and they create in some cases undesirable inequalities of treatment . The necessity for an increase in the general scale of sepoys ' allowances has for some time past become ...
... given under conditions which are no longer applicable , and they create in some cases undesirable inequalities of treatment . The necessity for an increase in the general scale of sepoys ' allowances has for some time past become ...
Página 22
... given an account - I hope it is a clear one - of the financial crisis through which we have been passing during the last two years . I am far from saying that that crisis is yet past ; we are now in smoother waters , and our prospects ...
... given an account - I hope it is a clear one - of the financial crisis through which we have been passing during the last two years . I am far from saying that that crisis is yet past ; we are now in smoother waters , and our prospects ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
31st March Accounts allowance amend the Cantonments amount April Army August Average Bengal Bombay British Budget Estimate Burma Canal Cantonments Act Captain cent charge Chitral Civil Commissioner Committee consideration crores dated Debenture Debt Department Despatch ditto England exchange compensation excise duty expenditure export Famine forward frontier Gilgit Gilgit Agency Government of India Governor Griffith Evans honourable Member Honourable Sir House of Commons Imperial import duties increase of Rx India Office Indian Railway Interest Irrigation Kashmir lakhs Land Revenue Legislative Council letter Lieutenant Loan Lord Madras Majesty's Government manufactures Mastuj measure Mehtar ment Military Miscellaneous Native Nizam-ul-Mulk opinion Opium orders payments Pensions Peshawar present promotion proposed prostitutes Provincial provisions Punjab question Receipts reduction Refunds regard Revised Estimate rules rupees Rx Rx Rx Secretary Section Service Staff Corps Statement Stores for India Tariff taxation telegram Telegraph TOTAL troops Umra Khan venereal disease Viceroy Westland yarns
Passagens conhecidas
Página 126 - For he who freely magnifies what hath been nobly done, and fears not to declare as freely what might be done better, gives ye the best covenant of his fidelity; and that his loyalest affection and his hope waits on your proceedings.
Página 5 - Government and not official servants of the Crown. But the Act which added these Members to the Council for a particular purpose made no change in the relations which subsist between the Imperial Government and its own executive officers. That Government must hold in its hands the ultimate power of requiring the Governor General to introduce a measure, and of requiring also all the members of his Government to vote for it.
Página 20 - Extract from the Abstract of the Proceedings of the Council of the Governor General of India, assembled for the purpose of making Laws and Regulations under the provisions of the Act of Parliament 24 & 25 Vic., cap.
Página 2 - That, in the opinion of this House, the duties now levied upon cotton manufactures imported into India, being protective in their nature, are contrary to sound commercial policy, and ought to be repealed without delay, so soon as the financial condition of India will permit.
Página 75 - Council in his absence, to adjourn any meeting for the purpose of making laws and regulations from time to time and from place to place.
Página 4 - Neither can I admit that it makes any real difference in the case, if the directions issued by the Imperial Government related to what may be termed legislative as distinguished from executive affairs. It may be quite as essential, in order to carry into effect the views of the Imperial Government as to the well-being of Her Majesty's Indian dominions, that a certain measure should be passed into a law, as that a certain act described in common language as executive should be performed.
Página 101 - September, 1931, the Governor General in Council is pleased to make the following rules : — * PART I.
Página 103 - Foot moved in the House of Commons, " That in the opinion of this House the power of the Executive has increased, is increasing, and ought to be diminished.
Página 2 - On general principle it is liable to objection, as impeding the importation of an article of first necessity, and as tending to operate as a protective duty in favour of a native manufacture.
Página 4 - ... them, on the ground that such a course deprived the Legislative Councils of all liberty of action, the Home Government proceeded to assert their rights of control in the most emphatic manner : "It cannot be denied that some theoretical inconveniences are inseparably connected with the working of a such a machinery of government as that through which the Empire of India is ruled from Home. In practice these inconveniences may be, and have actually been, reduced to a minimum by mutual respect on...