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fortified position for themselves on the frontier. They consider themselves an invading army, and the moment war is declared, they intend to swarm over the border, and, if possible, conquer the provinces that once were theirs. * * * * * The inquiry into the Transvaal Raid is still going on. Dr. Jameson has been called before the Committee, and appears to have told all he knows of the matter. His story makes things look very black indeed for Mr. Cecil Rhodes, the Prime Minister of Cape Colony, and perhaps for the English Government also, if the whisper is true that Mr. Rhodes and the Government perfectly understood each other as regarded South African matters. Dr. Jameson said that before the raid occurred, he had various talks with Cecil Rhodes and John Hays Hammond, an American mining engineer, who lived in the town of Johannesburg, and was one of the principal movers in the plot. They spoke about the troubles of the foreigners in the Transvaal. Mr. Hammond declared that the Boers made life so difficult for foreigners that unless some change was made, the people of Johannesburg would revolt. Dr. Jameson went to Pretoria at Mr. Hammond's invitation, and saw for himself the condition of things. Plans were then made to overthrow the government, and to make a pretence of finding out who the people would prefer to have for a President, by taking a man-to-man vote of the whole population. The person chosen by this vote was to be declared President. Dr. Jameson was to bring his soldiers to Johannesburg, to keep order while the vote of the people was being taken. This plan, while it was fair enough in sound, was in fact an infamous scheme to trick the Boers out of their rights. The Uitlanders, as we told you before, far outnumber the Boers. By taking a vote of the whole population, every Uitlander would have had a vote; these foreigners would of course have voted for the person who would let them have things their own way, and as they outnumbered the natives, the poor Boers would have had their rights taken away from them by foreigners, who, according to their laws, had no right to vote at all. The scheme was as clever as it was infamous. To the world it would have seemed fair enough, and only those familiar with South African politics would have understood what a shameful trick it was. There is small doubt that Mr. Hammond was as deep in this fraud as Cecil Rhodes
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