990 THE FEDERATIONS AND THE UNION [PART IV 1909, and as ascertained by the Comptroller and Auditor- General! The Commission appointed to decide the financial relations of the Union and Provinces may also award com- pensation to the municipalities of Cape Town and Pretoria if it considers it: desirable, such compensation not to exceed 1 per cent. for twenty-five years on their municipal debts at January 31, 1909. One-half of any such grants shall be applied to the redemption of the debts of the townsconcerned, so that at the end of the period the principal sums due should be substantially diminished. At any time after the payment of the tenth annual grant to any town the Governor-General in Council, with the approval of Parliament. may withhold or diminish the grant made. More important is the fact that the Transvaal has decided to make large concessions to both the Cape and Natal on railway matters. For years the most burning internal question in South Africa has been that of the division of traffic between Delagoa Bay, Natal, and the Cape ports. Not only has the Delagoa Bay route the natural advantage of distance from the mining centre of the Transvaal, but the mining industry on which the whole greatness of the Colony vests is vitally interested in preserving access to the recruiting ground for native labour for the mines existing in the Portuguese territories. Hence one of the first actions of Lord Milner in the administration of the Transvaal was to conclude with the Government of Mozambique an agreement for the right of access to that source of labour in exchange for the maintenance to the port of the advantage over the Cape and Natal ports which it enjoyed while the Transvaal was a Republic hostile to the British Colonies, through the fixing of the railway rates for the transit to the port from the mining area. Naturally the other Colonies resented this *'s. 133. By ss. 18 and 23 Pretoria becomes the administrative, Cape Town the legislative, capital. The arrangement is illogical and a com- promise; it is neatly criticized in The Empire Review, xviii. 117, and it may be added that the official residence of the Governor-General is at Johannesburg. Rhodes’s house, Groote Schuur, is set apart for a residence for the Prime Minister. but his official work will mainly be done at Pretoria.