Indian Frontier Policy; an historical sketch
INDIAN FRONTIER POLICY AN HISTORICAL SKETCH BY GENERAL SIR JOHN ADYE, G.C.B., R.A. WITH A MAP PREFACE The subject of our policy on the North-West frontier of India is one of great importance, as affecting the general welfare of our Eastern Empire, and is specially interesting at the present time, when military operations on a considerable scale are being conducted against a combination of the independent tribes along the frontier.
had collided with another ship. Some damage had been done forward, but
there was no further danger. However, very few slept that night, and
when morning broke, clear and beautiful, with glad hearts they rushed up
into the open air.
The second class was forward. Three of the passengers had been killed
and quite a number injured.
If Signe had not been so poor, and had not refused help from Hr.
Bogstad, she would have taken second class passage. But now, thank God
for being poor and--independent!
In another week they landed at New York, and each went her own way.
Signe Dahl took the first train for Chicago.
VII.
"The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away."--_Job 1:22_.
The news startled the young city of Willowby from the Honorable Mayor to
the newest comer in the place. The railroad company had found a shorter
route to its northern main line, and it had been decided to remove, or,
INDIAN FRONTIER POLICY AN HISTORICAL SKETCH BY GENERAL SIR JOHN ADYE, G.C.B., R.A. WITH A MAP PREFACE The subject of our policy on the North-West frontier of India is one of great importance, as affecting the general welfare of our Eastern Empire, and is specially interesting at the present time, when military operations on a considerable scale are being conducted against a combination of the independent tribes along the frontier.