244 ALL ABOARD FOR SUNRISE LANDS. vessels, the clumsy junks, the little sampans, the Antelope steadily pushed her way out of harbor. The boys watched awhile the retreating houses and lessening shipping of Kobe, the hills of green that walled in the spot and now began to dwindle, and then they turned to ENTRANCE TO SUWO NADA. look in the direction of the water. Uncle Nat was busy at his post, giving directions in his energetic way; but the doctor was withy the boys, to answer any questions he could. “If we had the time, Ralph and Rick, we might go from here across the Inland Sea. It is encircled by many islands of Japan, and is more like a big lake than a sea.” “ How big is it?” asked Ralph. “Tt is not far from two hundred and fifty miles in length, and it is from ten to thirty miles in width. There are many islands in the Inland Sea. The most of them have good soil and are well cultivated. In a voyage across the sea, my attention was specially called to one island, that must have been from five hundred to a thousand feet high ; and it was terraced for crops. The Japanese are