V1U CONTENTS, 



PAGE 



Hunting Parties Restrictions Lions still Plentiful 

 The Limpopo Rhodesia not a Poor Man's Country The 

 Native Rising Nomad Farming Village Sites Kaffirs 

 Successful as Stock-breeders Their System worth a 

 Trial 198 



CHAPTER XII. 



ON EMIGRATION TO SOUTH AFRICA. 

 The Outlook not Cheerful Superabundance of Cheap 

 Native Labour South Africa no place for the Poor 

 Settler Life of Shop Assistants Employment Unobtain- 

 able in most Healthy Districts South Africa, generally, 

 Unfit for Invalids No Hospitals Unskilled Labour 

 wholly in hands of Natives Cape Colony a "Sleepy 

 Hollow" The Diamond Fields A Monopoly No De- 

 mand for White Labour Kruger Future of the Diamond 

 Fields Note for Intending Settlers The Situation in 

 the Transvaal Kruger and Germany Paramountcy 

 Sufferings of the Boers Locusts Droughts Rinder- 

 pests Starvation of Farmers A Rush to the Rand- -217 



CHAPTER XIII. 



BOER MARKSMANSHIP. 



A Vulgar Error Boer no longer a Shot Never re- 

 markably Good "The Aggregate Fair" The Exter- 

 mination of Big Game ends Boer Supremacy Skill 

 Deteriorating Some Instances No Love of Sport No 

 Target Practice Some Experiences when Hunting The 

 Buffalo A Boer "Trek" N'Gaami Land The Riding 

 Ox An Uninviting Country ------ 238 



CHAPTER XIV. 



POSTSCRIPT THE POLITICAL SITUATION. 

 Kruger's Re-election British Paramountcy " Suzer- 

 ainty" to be Defined Continuance of Krugerian R6gime 

 Inimical to British Interests The Indemnity for the 

 Jameson Raid Vote some Relief for Starving Boers 

 Boers ought to be Grateful to England Boer Inroad into 

 Stellaland Boer Misrule Liberties Kruger and the 

 Justices Releasing a Convict Mr. Chief-Justice Kotze 

 and Oom Paul The Population of Johannesburg" Helo- 

 tised" Two-thirds of the Transvaal owned by English- 

 men A Suggestion to the Chartered Company An 

 Enticement to " Trek." - ------ 255 



