The cross or the poundWhich? A talk on the modernization of civilization in India with application to the Hindu and Hinduism . THE CROSS OR THE POUND—WHICH ? TALKS OF A TRAVKlylvBR SERIES. IN PRKSS. BI,ESS OR , WHICH ? A Talk on Com-parative Consistency, Occidental and Oriental,with application to Mohammed and Moham-medanism in Africa, Asia Minor, Turkey, Persia,Central Asia, Afghanistan, India, Java,China andSiberia. Pen and Ink Sketches by Irving , paper, 50 cents. IN TYPE. THE TYRANNY OF TRADITION. A Talk onRelative Ostracism, with application to theRussians aud the Russian-G


The cross or the poundWhich? A talk on the modernization of civilization in India with application to the Hindu and Hinduism . THE CROSS OR THE POUND—WHICH ? TALKS OF A TRAVKlylvBR SERIES. IN PRKSS. BI,ESS OR , WHICH ? A Talk on Com-parative Consistency, Occidental and Oriental,with application to Mohammed and Moham-medanism in Africa, Asia Minor, Turkey, Persia,Central Asia, Afghanistan, India, Java,China andSiberia. Pen and Ink Sketches by Irving , paper, 50 cents. IN TYPE. THE TYRANNY OF TRADITION. A Talk onRelative Ostracism, with application to theRussians aud the Russian-Greek Church. Penand Ink Sketches by Irving Ward. 8vo, paper,50 cents. IN PREPARATION. Uniform with the above. Talks bearing upon Budd-hism—Burma, Siam, China and Japan. Confu-cianism—China. The American Nevis Co., Publishers Agents,Ntnv York. TALKS OF A TRAVELLER SERIES. THE CROSS25 THE A TALK ON THE MODERNIZATION OF CIVILIZATION IN INDIA WITH APPLICATION TO THE HINDU AND HINDUISM. PEN AND INK SKETCHES BY IRVING WARD. /BY MAJOR PANGBORN. THE AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY, PUBLISHERS AGENTS, NEW YORK. TWO COPIES iF<HCElV£L3, Library of C^u^riiBikRegister of Copyright* Copyright, 1900, BY J. G. PANGBORN. 57614 PRKSS OF H, Iv. Washburn & Co. BALTIMORE, MD., U. S. A. PREFATORY. Strayed or stolen! Whether the one or theother, primarily, mattered not. The horse wasgone, and the thing to do was to find him. The owner searched and had men to search, butin vain. The whereabouts of the missing a mystery. Finally there came the half-witted boy, the buttof the jibes and pranks of his more favored play-mates, the semi-idiotic creature which so manytowns number among their public characters, and,accosting the despairing horseman, said : Say, Mister, Ive found your horse ! Go way, was the impatient rejoinder. Howcould a fool like you find him when all the menabout the place couldnt ? I dont care, I done it all the same. How and where, then ? Vlll PREFATOR


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