Page:Travel letters from New Zealand, Australia and Africa (1913).djvu/452

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  • nature confronts him for every item, and he cannot

get a fair start at indignation. . . . The New York banker, Mr. Hepburn, mentioned elsewhere as returning from a hunt, does not have much confidence in the future of Africa. It has too many pests and too much dry weather, he says. Besides, much of the country is volcanic, and the soil a thin vegetable and leaf mold. Mr. Hepburn says that while hunting, one of his guides was an Englishman who was once a member of parliament, with an income of $60,000 a year. But he went the pace, and spent his money, and is now a guide in Africa at $5 a day. Another guide in the Hepburn party was a man named Cunningham, who was attached to the Roosevelt expedition. Cunningham is a very noted man, and receives $400 a month for his services. Although Mr. Hepburn is a New York banker, a former comptroller of the currency, and noted big-game hunter, it is so dull on board that he spends a good deal of his time teaching Adelaide card tricks. He is an elderly man, and so modest and polite that we regard him as a credit to his country. . . . A party of eight came on board at Port Said, and I am glad they are not Americans. They are English or Colonials, and have taken the ship. They are very superior in three particulars: 1. They went to Port Said two weeks ago in the "Tabora," a larger and newer ship than the "Burgermeister;" 2. They were in Cairo four days; 3. They have been in Palestine. They sit together in the dining-room, and every other word they use is "Tabora," a leviathan of 8,000 tons. These people are going to London, and this is their first trip. There are three girls in the party,