194 STOCK-KEEPING ON WEBBE SHEBEYLL 



92. 1885. W. Marshall. 



'< UebER die Tsbtse-Fliege " {Biologisches Cvntralhlatf, 

 V. Band, pp. 183-184). 



A resume of F. M. van der Wulp's remarks reported in 

 the Tijdschnfi voor Entomologie, Vol. 28, pp. ciii-cvi [vide 

 91]. 



93. 1885. E. H. Richards. 



"An American Missionary's Journey in East Africa, 

 West of Inhambane " {Proceedings of the Moyal Geo- 

 v/rapMcal Society and Monthlif Mecord of GeograjyJiy. New 

 Monthly Series, VoL VII., p. 381). 



Mr. Richards made a journey from Inhambane to the 

 Limpopo,* in October, 1884 : tlie Tsetse-fly urns ^rst met with 

 in Maktdd'kwa-la'nd, to the loest of the Mali-icakwa ridge. 



" The Ama-kwakwa tribe was encountered on the third 

 day. . . . Many kraals were deserted, and a tract of 

 country seventy-five miles wide by a greater distance in 

 length lying west of the Makwakwa ridge was nearly 

 desolate. It was in this semi-deserted region that the 

 Tsetse-fly was first seen. The route lay to the W.N.W. 

 along the northern border of Makwakwa-land." 



94. 1885. F. L. James. 



*' A Journey through the Somali Country to the 

 Webbe Shebeyli " (Proceedings of the Royal Geographical 

 Society and Monthly Record of Geography. New Monthly 

 Series, Vol, VII., p. 633). 



Fly (^ Tsetse) on the Webhe Shebeyli in the wet season. — 

 " Like the Somal, the Adone [the people on the Shebeyli] 

 have large herds of cattle and flocks of sheep, but all these 

 animals are poor and sufier from the fly in the rain and 

 from the ticks in the dry season ; neither camels nor 

 horses are used, for they will only live in the dry season ; 

 but the Rer Hamer^ who leave the river valley for the 

 plateau in the wet season, bring numbers to graze there in 

 the winter." 



95. 1885. H. M. Stanley, 



" The Congo and the Founding of its Free State : 

 A Story of Work and Exploration " (London : Sampson 

 Low, Marston, Searle and Rivington), Vol. I., p. 419. 



* [On a subsequent page (459) the river reached is stated to have been 

 the Luizi, and not the Limpopo.] 



