ifimc ,v,'wHJ$ jfyvW't HW$ 'JSpft 'T fM . re? '-J' mm & v-v ' f '-' ? EVENING' PTTBBIO lEEDGEB PHnJADEEPHKJ:, MONDTT, 4TCL' STOKES, FREED FROM BRITISH UIL, TO FREE INDIA FR OM WHITE RACE -AVJ MB ffir't jiU BStS F 3, 1922 -' -v-4av, RENEWS FIGHA It B I ' . I I y f y f i ix si ij y .V - - ' $' i7I .. fK 1 ifpii Vfl t ' J Germantown Man Left TVayne Avenue Heme te Live and Laber JVith Lepers. Toek Native Weman as Bride and Served Term for of Gandhi FOUNDED A BROTHERHOOD TO ALLEVIATE SUFFERING OF COUNTLESS MILLIONS Gave Up American Citizenship te Battle Against Caste Injustice and Enforced Laber System Is Considered (Hely One ' ' by These He Has Struggled Fer TF YOU knew your Kipling you have the atmosphere of this story. If you knew your New Testament, you have Its lessen by heart. Fer there is woven into it the romance of far lands and the humility of a lefty soul. It is a page of the past, set down in the book of the present. And it is the story of Samuel E. Stokes, native of Philadelphia, a Quaker by ancestry, an Indian by adoption, a disciple of Mahatma Gandhi, by allegiance. Gandhi, man of the hour in India, traitor or teacher of truth, revolu tionist or apostle of peace according te the point of view is serving a entence in prison. The British Government said he Incited te insurrec tion. And Stokes, the American, once, a British subject new, was im prisoned along with him. He was sentenced for sedition, though he is free new, having completed his term. There was nothing te be done about it. They would net have it otherwise. They were willing te go te jail. They were satisfied with their let. Fer they believed what they preached, and preached what they be lieved, as some men ever have done. And they will accept what comes before they will surrender their convictions. Martyrs? Well, it all depends en the viewpoint A cynic would call them something else. Yeu may reach your own conclusions, Samuel E. Stokes is new a little past forty years old. He was born in Philadelphia, and went out te India as a Christian missionary in an in dependent capacity, and at his own expense, seen after the beginning of the present century about 1903 or 1D04. His family waa comparatively wealthy, and though born in comfort himself he inherited from his mother, who has been the greatest formative influence in his life, a passionate devotion te the peer. He comes originally from an old British stock, which had settled in America in the early days of British coloniza tion. He has always been proud of his British ancestry. His reading of history, which has been a favorite subject with him, has been inspired by the thought that the history of Great Britain is the life story of the people from which his own family had sprung. Jail Sentence Brought Him Inte Public Gaze Though he has lived in India for almost twenty years, with the ex ception of a two years' holiday spent ;n Philadelphia, when he brought his VAtive bride te this country te study 'n American schools, Mr. Stokes' life 'or the most part has been spent in the retirement of the hills, away from the busy centers of Indian pop ulation and trade. Only in very recent times has he come fully into the public gaze. His name and work went te the four quarters of the earth when he was arrested, convicted and sentenced for sedition. His term in jail was In Lahore, where Kiplinp's father was curator of the museum, where Kipling himself edited a news paper and wrote his most famous stories. And curiously Stokes, who writes as well as he teaches, was an associate editor of the same paper ever whose destinies Kipling once presided. His teachings led te his Imprisonment. Werd comes from India that he would gladly have gene te prison en n charge of civil disobedience. But be feels keenly what he calls the falsity of the accusation of stirring up hatred and contempt for British rule among the Indian natives. That was the charge gainst htm, and under Indian law, ea administered by British authority, It Is seditious te criticize the Govern ment, because, as the law holds, criti cism tends te promote race hatred and prejudice. Stoke wns arrested in December. At his trial he admitted having criticized the Government. There was nothing te de but Imprison him. 'ideals Net Shattered by Term in Prison When he was released he went back te his life work, te pursue the name course. Perhaps he will be Imprisoned again. It will net prevent him from talking. In January some of Stokes' friends In this country considered a possible ap- peal te the State Department In his behalf. Stokes sent word of his dls- L approval. He was a British subject. Hit lmd nerved in the Drlfinh Armv. 'Jf 3m wna nnntenpjMf tintlA. Ttffttflf, Im.m Ofiv r. V-J U.l. . .,i A- .L- D uau nu uueia lur cuiuimui le me United States Government. The law had te take its course. And se the plan was dropped. And new Mr. Stokes Is at bis Indian home again, with his family, his six loot months of imprisonment ever. "He need net bad been Imprisoned," aid his mother. "Any time he agreed te sign paper pledging bis word net VlilMiti tTj By thing mere le de with na he would hare been k mU Mt 4e that. Be -iL Sedition as Follower could net sacrifice his Ideals for the sake of freedom. "Of course, I am proud of what he has. done," she ndded, her small figure erect en the big divan en which she sat In her pleasant home at M10 Wayne avenue, Germantown. "He suffered no hardships, though," Mrs. Stokes continued as she glanced rather wistfully around the large room, cool In its summer draperies, "and he had a room opening en a court," her glance straying through the window te the terraced lawn with the walk wind ing from the steps en the street te the deer. "He could read and study and write, but only once was he allowed te have a visitor. "I think they Imprisoned him be be tause they wanted te get him out of the way. Wherever he gees he is n man of Influence, and I think they did net want him te exercise his power. "His terra of Imprisonment was ever June 2. It was en June 15 that I received a cable saying: 'Heme again.' It came en my birthday. Of ceurse, that may have been just a coincidence, hut I thought perhaps he had planned for me te receive it then." Lived in Leper Colony After Reaching India Soen after he reached India Stokes went te live in n leper colony. He was housed with the lepers themselves. He had east aside nil the paraphernalia of the European missionary nnd had become, almost from the very first, frankly Indian in his dress and habits nnd manner of life. He worked among the lepers with devoted care. He would nure them with his own hands, em bracing them in his fearless love, as St. Francis of Assisl did of old, and bind up their sores. Though immune from leprosy, b home gift of body or spirit, he wns at tacked by typhoid fever while In the midst of thin activity. The illness proved almost fatal. Fer weeks he hov ered between life and death. Finallj the crisis passed, and he began n long convalescence. After that he spent the het weather of each succeeding jenr at Kntgnrh, which is fifty miles beyond Simla along the Hindustan-Tibet read. He used te take with him an adopted f.imil) of little children. One wiin quite blind, but always jelly and cheerful; two were the sons of leper pnrents; one was infirm. They all grew up as one family with him, and he shared ever) thing with them In common. Dur ing thlH period of his life he nlwajs slept upon the bare ground, cooked lils own and the children's feed, nnd lived much In meditation in n cave en the mountainside. In tin- succeeding years he formed n fn-t friendship with an Englishman, C. P. Andrews, &-rtT with Iluilrn, prin cipnl of tin Delhi Scheel. The former Knew Stokes intimately durins thcrfc j ears of his life, nnd has followed liih movements since. In n biography writ len ns a preface te n book called "The Vwnkenlng India." which Mr. Stokes has written and which is being published iiliieud, Mr. Andrews thus describes his life and character from personal ob eb ob xvivatlen : "Year bv year, each summer, I used te meet him nnd IiIh family of bevs nnd nlse te stay with him. I could net share the austerities of his life they were tee hard for me. I could only wonder at the remarkable powers of endurance und the strength of his inner spirit. "In the cold weather Mr. StnV would leave his bevs at home school with friends and go wander ing ever the Punjab, ns n sanyasi, fol fel fol lewing strictly nnd literally the pre cepts of Jesus in the gospels, where it is written, 'Take neither purse nor scrip, neither two coats, nor money for your journey.' "If the villagers gave him feed and shelter he gratefully received it. If they refuted he would take shelter un der seme tree and go without feed al together. Hut they usunlly welcomed him gladly. "There is one Incident which is well worth relating. Mr. Stokes had gene In hs wanderings te a group of huts, which were occupied by the lower castes and had been received by them with warm affection. He had then gene en te the high-caste people of the village, who were living apart. At first, they were angry with him because he had lived with the low-caste nnd had been eating nnd drinking with them. They even refused te receive , him., Se be sat down und slept nfl thnt nltht, without tuklng feed, Unaer a tree cftse eat te their fields ea y la4e xnera i Ins they found him there stated in meditation. When they came back In the evening they found him still seated In silence. Then the headman of the village went te him asking his forgive ness. He said they all new understood thnt he was a man of Ged. Then Mr. Stokes told them quite simply that nil men were his own brothers because all men alike were children of Ged. "In this way the curse of 'untouch 'unteuch ability,' many years age, began te be removed from that district. There hns been no part of the non-co-operation movement which has given Mr. Stokes himself greater joy nnd satisfaction thnn the removal of this curse through the religious personality of Mahatma Gandhi. Tells of an Adventure Experienced In Mountains "I con remember vividly hew one evening, as the sun was setting ever the distant snows and night was com ing en with all its train of stars, Mr. Stokes told me the story of an adven ture in the mountains. He had been traveling all through one day in a lonely part and a snowstorm had ever- taken him and he had lest his way. His strength at last failed him and he had fallen te the ground exhausted, think ing that death was near. At that time of utter human weakness he had seen befera his eyes a waking vision of Christ upon the Cress comforting him. All bis own suffering vanished, and be had the inner newcr civen te him of an infinite peace. Strength returned, und be was able te reach the but of a mountaineer, where he was tenderly nursed back te health. "During one bitterly cold winter at Lahore, there was an epidemic of smallpox. The smallpox camp was out side, en a lower piece of ground, iso lated from all human habitation and neglected, eicept for a dally visit of the doctor. It consisted of mere sheds mnde of matting. At nighttime the cold was piercing. The place was almost ( deserted, except by paid servants and sweepers, who were kept te de the work. Hut Mr. Stokes had taken up his abode there. Night and day he was nurbing a young Hindu student of the Ferman Christian College. "Little by little Mr. Stokes brought healing and comfort te this neglected lad by his very presence. Every eve ning the Sikhs who were in the neigh borhood used te bring their offering of feed nnd sit with Mr. Stokes and ask for some message from Ued. Often 1 met them there, seated in silent sjm pathy. Once 1 heard them ask him. What is this saktl that obtains you?' And I heard him speak te them about the vision of the Christ that he had seen upon the mountains, "As the years went by, Mr. Stokes determined te found a brotherhood. The name he had chosen for it was The Brotherhood of the Imitation.' "He would live as St. Francis had lived. He wished te Imitate literall the precepts of Christ te go about comforting the lepers, ministering te the little children, whom Christ loved, nursing the sick, consoling the dying all the while living a life of complete poverty among the peer. "The Order of the Brotherhood of the Imitation was established. The Uev. P. J. Western, who Is new the head of the Cambridge University Mis sion in 1ellil. joined him. The Bishop of Lahore, Dr. I.efrey, at n belcmn service in the Cathedral, ordained them te this work of service. "Then gradually thorn came a change in Mr. Stokes' own ideal. "Leading the life that I have pic tured, it will be evident that Mr. Stokes was bent upon reality. He could net 'hear for a moment nn.v thing which was unrenl. There were two things that troubled him mere nnd mere nnd nt last brought nbeut the change In his whole manner of life. "First of all. while he lived his life of poverty among the Indian villagers, whom he longed te serve as a brother and an equal, he found a fundamcatn! misunilcrstundlng prevalent about his whole position. Mere and mere, as the villagers saw his ascetic life, they began te leu upon hltn with a superstitious awe, ns a kind of holy man who was rapidly accumulating unheard-of stores of merit for himself hv his severe nenances and austerities. They regarded him ns bent upon ob taining salvation for himself by these deeds of penance nnd devotion. " 'What you are engaged in,' they would say te him, 'is ebtnlning for you great merit. We peer people who arc married and have family cares are entangled in worldly things. We cannot possibly obtain religious merit In the way you can. What n lucky man jeu are te be free from family ties, leading the life of a celi bate! Fer us, who are married nnd have children of our own, salvation is hard. "This talk used te trouble Mr. Stokes beyond measure. He used te complain te me sometimes, In a despairing way, which hnd a touch of the humorous element in it. 'I almost feel Inclined te de something te shock them in order te step nil this.' Arrogance of White Race Stirred Deep Anxieties "But there was another thing that went far deeper and affected both of our minds very directly at this time. V1 ,0 ',rF05nn-e of the 'white rnce' and the bid for n 'white race suprem acy in every continent of the world stirred in betli of our minds the deep est anxieties nnd fours. "An nrtiele which I wrote rnlscd a storm. I went te the full length nnd frankly advocated lntcrmarrtage be tween the races, as ene of the effective ways of breaking down the growing world racial evil. "Then slowly the lden formed Itself In Mr. Stokes' mind that he could make his own Christian faith perfectly plain by marrying within the Indian race UYI IL "i! Ktvlng ."P hlM celibate life. F,1 fermcr 9f h,s two difficulties would be removed, because he could no longer rccelve a kind of superstitious reverence a reverence which really ob eb Bcured the .sacrifice of elf demanded by the Christian faith. He would no wT, t rairuaa f Jt. JM. i i . i c ' Samuel Evans Stokes, nis Indian wife and son Prem Chand accumulates te himself, bt a llfp of celibacy, a huge store of merit in order i te win salvation. "The second of the two difficulties would nlse be removed, because, by in termarriage, he could show, in the most direct way. that there is no 'race' or, 'caste within the Christian fThnrcli. it the Church were only true te its Founder, Jesus Christ. Was Ready te Ge Forward at Headlong Speed "At first, in his direct nnd downright way, Mr. Stokes wns ready te go for ward at an almost headlong speed. The idea had se get held of him as a prin ciple that the person whom he married seemed te him of secondary Importance. It was at this point that I urged him as a friend nnd elder brother net te be tee precipitate. "In the end all went well. The mnrrlage that he made nt last has been a uniquely happy one. A family of sons has been given te him of whom any father nnd mother might be proud. "The bride whom he chose at last nnd who accepted him ns her husband was a Rajputuni whec family was great y respected in nil the Hill District round. While brought up in everv vvnv ns ii devout Indian -Christian girl, sh'e had maintained unbroken, ns far as possible, her own touch with her kins men and relntlens. In her dress ana manner of life she had remained exnctlj the same as her own Hindu ancestors, I-vcn today, nfter her long stay in America, she has net chnnged in the slightest degree her manners and cus toms. "It Is a further Interesting point te notice that the grandfather of Mr. Stokes chosen bride was of 4Jhlneb origin. He had oemo ever from China for ten-planting in the Ketgarn Hills and had married, as a Christian, a Rnj putani woman, who had beceme a Christian nlse. Thus, In the veins of Mr. and Mrs, Stokes' children at Kot Ket garh there runs the bleed of three races of the world thu Indiun, thu Anglo Angle Anglo Saxen nnd the Chinese. "Perhaps the greatest shock of all caused by Mr. Stokes' inarrlage was among his dearest Eurepenn filcnds. Ills i Indlan-Chrlstlan friends, Principal Rudra, Prof. Khub Ram and ethers, understood hltn. But it was difficult for these who were European mission aries nt first te de this. I de net think that the question of racial intermarriage weighed with them. Hut sem of the truest nnd best friinds he hadegarded him as having broken a pledge; solemnly lOKen anu above au as having gene back J vf-f L.a.,1 j . 1 -W JflB'jHS.n-UaXaSS V-'v'sy"rit'.3 tagugUjWtMugyab mgf flTjXyiM'jTeCTL'ssL'ssL'ssL'ssL' ' "st. 5MBBlBBMpCjj'My "LsHLsL9B SBaT :ifJryxy7t w&?FwmMzisKKK?Z- -ffrSsrsL'ssL'ssL'ssL'ssL'sM V3HkbsIbL9Ei'H nS&ZJb&f" "S ' 7SSBHHsr''y'v'ftwS y nEJfizSftGsCi'aaL'aaL'aaL'HHflt " "3?MF$4'bLL'aaL'aaL'aaL'aaL'H ViaBKk W IB ifiJu r ewtBntiemmk V iaiaH?iaiaiasF vjslBHHiaKnt. 7S-u!?77susEak.i tlti flLLLF LVssLLLHki tKLsa'KcK f B HHe Ka TSsaLaLsKT " aS L'aaKbiaL'aaiiL'Sa'aarS vLaaVsLL LhK 4A flFQMlK, JaWK H9''& fc- JKtWrW& J ' t '''""J his oU'reatttok i5WS3arfL. "!" Ar. minds, ' " """" w mew 'completely r '! mm A,,f I VS.. 7tT,,iH A rM w Stokes (in center) at Indian missionary station the 'Brotherhood of the Imitation, which had betm Intended te he a brotherhood of celibates. "I must go buck new in my story find relate an event of great Importance In the life of Mr. Stokes which took plnce In the Ketgarh Hills before the time of his i inarrlage nnd made his heart ene with the Hill people in a remark able manner. n',i"Vf '& F! n,h' who ha,l c ?i k Mr' stokes , pprsenal influence, had beceme a Christian down in the Plains at Ambala. The villagers sun. Pi i "J. ,no. tl,ne t,,at Mr. Btekes in this matter lin.l ,Wni,i i,.. m,.1 were entlrelv u-m,,.. r...i i. :' . '!v wrong faml he tried (i hVai J ifinn',J, m .'Af'M termined te tnke the boy back te Kot Ket garh and te place him among his own People Hut the villagers could net understand, nnd their minds had been worked up into a state of wild excite meat. Mr. Stokes had telegraphed te us I" at ,.',? wns " n,s wy back te Kot Ket garh. Ihe villagers took action sud uK .nndmwe ,,ld net hear In time about It. They set out te waylay Mr. blokes nnd te maltreat him. Just as he came te the bend of the read near Ketgarb, net far from the beuse where we were staying, the vH lagers attacked him. Ills life was saved "'.. f. wHira-a son ttnuclhlr and &T fe?1 stricken down ' i ,OT hnrled down from above. The two rtu dents kept the crowd hack for a few mo ments and thnsmed his lift. Bis ThaaghU Att for Bey While Be Wan in Delirium "Fer some daya hla life was In freat Aaairer. In his delirium, his thoughts wen an cenetmlnji the boy whoa ha had brenxht baek from Ambala- "When hla senses returned and ns understood what had occurred, hla one supreme determination wss te save the rOlsters who had done the deed1 from thehandii of the police. Ne power en earth could step him from going in a rickshaw Inte Simla In order te plead with all hla heart for these who had tried te murder him. In the end, he wen the victory of lere and forgiveness. The villagers were pardoned. "It was this event which mere than anything else hitherto bound up thy life of Mr. Stokes with the people of th Ketgarh Hills. M . "It will easily be understood that Mr. Stokes' mother la Philadelphia, whose heart was devoted night and day after her husband's death te her son In India, was eagerly longing te see her daughter-In-law and te welcome her into her home. Be it was arranged that her son should take his wife te America. There. In Philadelphia, two of the hap piest years of his life were spent with his mother and his young wife. After ward he took his mother back with him en a short visit te India. "3Si. Stokes' wife, as I have said, re- mmM raK fWf. i' w a .', .,'.' VS 7,7' ',', EBBsES '?i. ?v ;wti FV'IKifiS Gandhi, Indian Nationalist leader, in Occidental garb malncd throughout the same Rajputuni lady of the Hills that she had ever been. Indeed she went back te them with nn Infinite relief en her return. Fer her greatest hnppiness is In her own home among the mountains. She lived there nlone while her husband wns in prison. Frem there she wrote te me n letter from which I may quote the following words : . ",'I knew It well that when my hus hus bend is in 1ail with many ether sons of India suffering for the sake of right eousness he Is sure te be happy. I nm quite confident thnt Almighty Ged will it nr VJ? CTJ,et tne oppressed nnd de liver Ills judgment.' Stokes' Idealism Raised as Germans Crushed Belgium "When the grcaf war broke out Mr. Stokes Idealism wns reused by the Ger man Invasion of Belgium. It was this tnai -ureugnt mm into the war.' Leng before America hnd entered the war he had asked permission of the British Government te become naturalised as a British subject and thus be in a posl pesl posl jlen te tnke part. He became nn officer In the Indian array and wns appointed te recru it villagers In the Simla Hills. Ills work was se well done that he re Promotion cen,mcnda,'n ""d rapid "I wns away in Fiji during the ljt of this period, and it we dlfllcult for us te keep in touch with each ether. It was even a surprise te me te find that he had become Tefflcer te ',?J?t,inn a,rray' theu8h I "ever quei quei Hened his choice! and I knew what a Zlll?K Tanti b,ut l 'd Imagined thnt his Quaker family tradition, wh eh waa strong n him, 'would T have made the thought of warfare Impossible. "During the time of the martial i.w in the.l'unjabln 1010 if" Stokes wrote mj many letters. Ills heart 2 iiuuH " uu ' wrote a vivi ai,i. "it was uaUl 1020 " that iSrS" ; lnHA m . .. - r MIH Kir. Stokes at last, when the that m fully ripe, came eui fully bdereZ', Indian public Ills letter cenctaZ the 'forced labor' which was empLmi by tne lim states en the YlatMa'( shoetins tour In the Hlm1 WmTL J like a thunderbolt when it saddenlvS'l peared in the public press. Then mL'i no doubt that It caused verr " displeasure in official quarters. But sTl denial of the fact was possible beeaaZ the facts were true. Immediately aftZJ this letter he asked me te sUyrwish him In Ketgarh. He was stTfl co operating In every way with the n. eminent and we met Mr. Langtey the i deputy commissioner, and a prorlsieral ' settlement was reached which was of great importance in tne future ttrustla for the abolition of forced labor. Tet It at once put heart Inte these who had been struggling' against this evil te ether provinces. "Mr. StekesV carried en Ma ter the aholltledvof forced labor .from inaz time enwaru wuueut ceaung. It naa vnra nmmij one 10 nis enerts that It has been abolished in the Simla HlTls and ta ether parts of the Punjab- Tk center of the struggle In the future si lurery vojse itrajtuoputeni nutnna States. ; "Imvessible far Indians te Shaw Their Leyattf j "When once Mr. Stokes had bWnf convinced of the danger te humanity which 'was present Jn the jmpular.anti Of' Arift i ps mC: LJlhiwi yff-- Sfc"7-vif Silf '& "TV: $& yA &1?A !K2 'I Pil 4W .' - asa mm .'. 1 K Si&h ;!V W iH asre; . 5 M kt.s .v?Jivr. !:.w!fcv The Stokes family home at 5419 Wayne avenue, Germantown colonial view of the British Empire, m expressed his conviction with all the force he could command. It was lm-j possible, he declared, for Indians t show any 'loyalty' te a 'White Bm pire.' Let there be real and funds J mental equality of status and tbeq thines would be different, then ther could be heartfelt loyalty te the Eml perer. "It was his experience In deallnl with the question of 'forced labqd which drove Mr. Rtekes at Inst te t$M an active nart in the Congress pelltiq and te accent the principle of non co-nnerntlen. In his earlier effer lie had urged nn entry into the Hefen Councils nnd an attemnt te wan tlireugh them, toward steady nstletii reseneratien. But it crew upon mere and mere that the vested interefti were tee strong, and that the Govern incut, na It steed, was bound up mil these vested interests. In matters ill footing the peer and the oppressed. 0 uevernment would almost inevitsDiTin found en the side of the vested lnti ests of canitnl and wealth and COW Such was his growing conviction, and I tour, in thn rnmnnnv of MshlUU Gandhi, complete! the process. HI joined in the fullest manner penlbll the Non-Ce-operatlon political pnr and it was as such that he was breugb te trial in Lahore. "As for the trial itself, his statement sneaks for itself. Hew ei earth any magistrate could find faull with Mr. Stokes' theory of 'conditions loyalty,' which Mr. Gokhale htmteU enunciated long age as the only pesl slble loyalty for Indians, I cannei imagine. The umt r.ositlen hns bee: taken up a thousand times, and I can neb see rnvself hnn n rational ani thoughtful Indian can adept any etbei position, ucneral Hmuts. i suppesq would be regarded by every British ln' perlnlist as loyal; but be threatened only a short time nrn. that Seuth AfriCl weuiu leave the Umpire if ner sen resnect as an indenendrat. nation Wti - ".T r ' " . XT' . T-- . .u Injured. Thn thmn nt Tndian loyalty se it appears te me, is wersea out d Mr. Stokes with creat lucidity. It i a theory which verv, Government efflcef eucht ta remember. When he Blkel me my own opinion concerning thl articles, after his arrest, I told bis that his theory of loyalty was unezc uonaeie. Wanted te Be With 1X Friends Even in Jail "The last request which Mr. Stoke made te me in the Lahore Jail wal characteristic. He implored me agall and again te use every Influence I hal te get him removed te the ward wser nis Indian friends, Lala I.ajpat and many ethers, were Quartered. " 'I have married an Indian,' said. 'I am a zaralndsr, having prep erty in Indian soil; I have brought n my sons as Indians. India la new -m MlinlM, Ah It In IiIm T ll A ' If A1tM the Indian national cause. the IBdlal national mode of life, the Indian saj 1 mode of lire, the inuun sai dress. Why then should I.N cdtaJIye as a European? Wbi I associate,' in jail, wUh.mj iienai aress. compelled -cannot I Indian fellow countrymen t I ' Played, the game straight wltt i aui theriUH. 'JMn kmj9m'wi,wm waad . wwwal liSBja ! oearum eyerl tainf. gsjuim uay vu tbi.uU Wltth.n. iA. A' imWi 2?M. WVW M&&limrtd&mLW):Z&R S T T-TV'V'I 'Hij.A, J W ji-k