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العلوم
COPY.
60
San Francisco. "Extra to the Hindustan Chadar' lst.November,
1915".
Anniversary of Chadar.
Today is the lat. of November, 1915. "Chadar 1st. number was issued on November 1st., 1913. Ghadar is two years old today What
Ghadar has done during the short period of two years is known to rich and poor. The splendid work done by Chadar has been acknowledged by our enemies the English Administrators of India. The leading London papers
call Chadar the "World Wide Ghadar". In the office of the Viceroy
Hardinge, which is on the peak of Simla mountains, discussion is always
going on about the "Hindustan Ghadar". The British Government have open.
-ed a new department for the translation of Ghadar". The echo of
Ghodar has reached the ears of rich, poor students and herdsmen of
every village. The Ghadar has awakened the Indians, as the Chadar
Sepoys assert, by pulling their ears and put them on a right way from
going astray. A splendid new movement has been mapped. It has opened a wide road of liberty and prosperity for the welfare of his countrymen.
It is the duty of our countrymen to strengthen such road and to pound their bones instead of stones on it, and to sprinkle their blood instead of water. It is their duty to preach about Ghadar on a higher stage and to keep the new movement at all cost in existence.
Ghadar was issued in Urdu first and appeared in Gurmukhi after 3 weeks. The British Government were perplexed on a few copies of Ghadar only. It was planned to deport Lala Hardiyal from this country
A he himself had to leave this country and his safe arrival in Europe in April, 1914, and the continuance of our work smoothly made the British Government astonished. The Government were under impression that the publication of Chadar would be stopped in a day or two. The English did not know that the Hindustanis were now living under the new sphere with new imaginations in the new world and it was not easy to put them down. In addition to Gurmukhi and Urdu the Ghadar was issued in Gujrati dialect as well. Books were published and Ghadar flashed its light in such a way that the eyes of the British Government were dimmed. The English Government had not finished rubing their eyes when
the
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