COMMONWEALTH 367 years. Four of these Representatives are Maoris, elected by their own people. There is provision for a Joint Sitting of the Houses to settle points in dispute, but in practice the House of Represent- atives does not experience serious opposition. The fertile land and favourable climate are aids to prosperity, though New Zealand has experienced the difficulties common to all food- producing countries in recent years. State regulation of industry and agriculture, and legislation concerning hours, wages, and conditions of labour, have been carried further in New Zealand than 'in any other part of the British Commonwealth. THE UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA. Before the Suez Canal was made, the shortest route to India was round the Cape of Good Hope. From the sixteenth to the eighteenth century, the great trading nations, Dutch, Portuguese and British, secured a foothold there. In the early nineteenth century, the Cape Colony came under British rule, and some years later, the British secured control of Natal. Large numbers of Boer (Dutch) settlers in the Cape, dissatisfied with British rule, journeyed inland and established two independent Republics, the Orange River, and the Transvaal; they also settled in Natal. Discoveries of gold and diamonds in the Transvaal attracted many British people. There they were known as "Outlanders", and though they paid taxes, did not enjoy the rights of citizens. The Boers maintained that they had created a civilized state out of African jungle, and saw no reason why they should enfranchise people who had come, after the difficult pioneering work was done, to enrich themselves. The Outlanders replied that their enterprise and capital had enriched the whole country. These differences led to the Boer War, by the end of which in 1902 the Boer Republics were part of the British Empire. There were thus four separate Colonies in South Africa. The need for common policy with regard to tariffs, the treatment of the native Africans, and the management of the publicly owned railways, led to the making of plans for Union. The Boer War had provoked much controversy in Britain;