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Mr. P. J. du Toit, the Under Secretary for Agriculture for the Union of South Africa, in his book, "The Farmer in South Africa," gives the following list of articles all or part of which are producible in South Africa. (1).

i. The following imports into South Africa in 1916, with the exception, probably, of part of the feathers, wood and timber, are all capable of production in South Africa by farmers:

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ii. The following articles imported into South Africa in 1916, and wholly or partly required by farmers, could probably all, or nearly all, be manufactured from raw materials obtainable in the country:

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And in addition a portion of the following:- Chemicals, extracts and essences for food and flavouring, furniture, haberdashery, hats and caps, manures and fertilizers, machinery, representing together an import value of 5,570,559 pounds sterling.

BIBLIOGRAPHY.

I. .Primary Sources:

Annals of Natal (1495-1845), by John Bird. [P. Davis & Sons, Pietermaritzburg, 1888].

2. Annual Reports to the Board of Trade by His Majesty's Senior Trade Commissioner in the Union of South Africa on the Trade of South Africa.

3. Annual Statement of Trade and Shipping of the Union of South Africa.

4. British and Foreign State Papers.

5. British Parliamentary Papers-Colonial Reports, Returns of Colonial Tariffs, etc.

6. Colonial Office List (1919).

7. Dominions Royal Commission [Cd. 8642, 7505, 7706 and 7707].

8.

Eybers' Select Constitutional Documents (relating to South African History).

9. Final Report of the [British] Committee on Commercial and Industrial Policy After the War. [Cd. 9035].

1910

10. Laws of the Union of South Africa.

11. Locale Wetten der Zuid-Afrikaanse Republiek.

12. Official Handbook of Natal.

13.

Official Year-Books of the Union of South Africa, – 1917; 1910-1918; 1910-1919, and 1910

14. Ordinances of the Orange River Colony.

1921.

15. Quarterly Abstract of Union Statistics (No. 4).

16. Records of the Cape of Good Hope. Compiled by Dr. Geo. McCall Theal.

17. Report of the Acting Controller of the Customs for the Year Ended March 31st., 1904, (For Southern Rhodesia).

18. Tariffs and Trade of the British Empire. Select Documentary Material compiled by Sir Rawson W. Rawson. 19. The South Africa Act, 1909.

II. Secondary Sources.

1. A Life Time in South Africa, by Sir John Robinson. (Smith, Elder end Co., London, 1900).

2. Annual Reports of the Johannesburg Chamber of Commerce.

3. An Account of the Cape of Good Hope, by Captain Robert Percival (1804 edition - Baldwin, London).

4. Cape of Good Hope Almanacs.

5. Cecil Rhodes by Howard Hensman. (Blackwood & Sons, London, 1901).

6. History and Ethnography of South Africa before 1795. Dr. Geo. McCall Theal.

7. History of South Africa. Dr. Geo. McCall Theal. (5 volumes).

8. History of Our Own Times in South Africa, by A. Wilmot. (J. C. Juta, and Co., London, 1897 — 1899).

9. Kaleidoscopic Transvaal, by Carl Jeppe. (London, 1906).

10. Memoirs of Paul Kruger as told by Himself. (Century Co., New York, 1902).

11. Paul Kruger, by van Oordt.

12. Progress of South Africa in the Century, by Dr. Geo. McCall Theal. [Linscott Publishing Co., London, 1902].

13. Reconstruction in the New Colonies under Lord Milner, by W. F. Worsfold. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., London, 1913).

14. Report on the Engineering Trades of South Africa, by Ben Morgan. (P. S. King and Son, London, 1900).

15. Report on the Soft Goods Trade in South Africa, by Whitten. (London, 1900).

16. South Africa Past and Present, by J. Noble. (London, 1877).

17. South Africa from the Great Trek to the Union, by F. R. Cana.

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18. "South Africa, a magazine published in London.

19. South African Trade, by T. Nicoll Jenkin. (London, 1906).

20. South Africa a Century Ago, by Lady Anne Barnard (Smith Elder and Co., London, 1901).

21.

The Engineer in South Africa, by Stafford Ransome. (New York, 1903).

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