Papurau Newydd Cymru

Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru

Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau

11 erthygl ar y dudalen hon

Opening of Workmen'e Hall,…

All Sensible Workers Buy "rl…

The Property Market.

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WISE AND OTHK-mvTPE.

WORDS OF WISDOM.

1 BITS FROM BOOKS.

FRENCH COLONIAL METHODS.

Newyddion
Dyfynnu
Rhannu

FRENCH COLONIAL METHODS. The merits and demerits of French colonial administration may well be summed up in the following quotation from the London Missionary Society's "Ten Years' Review (1891-1900) of the island of Madagascar: What strikes an Englishman as strange in this administration is its elaborate redundancy, especially when the primitive character of the native community and the paucity of colonists are taken into account. If the social condition of the people were ten times more complex than it is, and if the commerce of the island were multiplied even a hundredfold, the number of officials, European and native, would be quite ample to meet all the needs of the community. First of all, there is the civil administration, which is divided up into sixteen or eighteen departments, including those of public works, mines, education, exchequer, landed estates, forests, agriculture, police, topography, taxa- tion, post and telegraph, &c. Numerous law courts, both French and native, have also been established, as well as a health department, with hospitals, dispensaries, military infirmaries, and ambulances. Then there come the chiefs or administrators of provinces, fourteen in number, with their subordinates and a whole tribe of native functionaries; and added to all these there is the army of occupation, many parts of the country being still under military control. It is certainly a great advantage, especially for Europeans accustomed to such things, to have regular postal and telegraphic communication, not only with different parts of the island, but also with the outside world. Such things were formerly beyond the hopes of the most sanguine and when the capital is provided with electric light and a proper water supply, and railway communication with the coast has been established, all of which are at present in con- templation, even the dreams of the most expectant will have been more than realised.

AN ARTFUL ARTIST.

THE TAMF

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