Ch. 20: The Mines Besieged

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260 THE DIAMOND MINES OF SOUTH AFRICA
newspaper was full of complaints. As some of them put it, they had taken up arms to defend the very people who were starving their families by putting the prices for the necessaries
of life beyond their means. Colonel Kekewich was equal to the occasion, and wisely issued a proclamation fixing the -price of all supplies at the same figures as formerly existed. For the support of peo­ple too poor to pay even for the barest necessaries of life, thoughtful provision was made by Rhodes in the institution of a soup kitchen in De Beers convict station. The details of the work were ably carried out under Captain Tyson, Dr. Smartt, and the Hon. Mrs. Maguire, the latter attending to the distribution at Beaconsfield. The soup was excellent, being composed of beef or horse-meat (with now and again a donkey or a few Angora goats thrown in), and a variety of vegetables from Kenilworth, and thickened with Boer meal or mealie meal. Captain Tyson carried pockets full of
Ch. 20: The Mines Besieged Page of 396 Ch. 20: The Mines Besieged
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