11 



Index. 



Hala ( Pandanus odoratissimus), used for paint 



brush 104, 1S2 



Hau ( Hibiscus tiliaceus) 132, 1^4 



Hawaiiau ornamentation 203 



Hibiscus tiliaceus (hau) 132, 134 



Hohoa beaters ( PI. i ) 77 



Holoku, Hawaiian dress igi . 192 



Hoolei (Ochrosia sandwicensis) 154, i$s 



Hoopai, grooved beaters 79 



lekuku (kapa beaters 1 79 



list of those in Bishop Museum 88 



niahi ( sandalwood) 167 



Japanese paper made like kapa 61 



Kamamalu's dress described 1S9 



Kamani (Calophyllum Inoph3'llum) 171, lyi 



Kapa as an article of property 199 



beaters, list of, in Bishop Museum 88 



braid used for slow-match 19S 



etymology i 



moe used 1 96 



moe, its warmth 196 



pendents on helmet 195 



printing no 



replaced by foreign cloth 2 



sandals used 1 95 



strips compressor in childbirth 199 



strips cordage 198 



kites in Hawaii and Xew Zealand 198 



lamp wicks 198 



terras, list of Hawaiian 215 



list of Rapanui • • 224 



list of Samoan 221 



list of Tahitian 225 



list of Tongan 223 



uses of 183 



white covering for anuu 197 



white a mark of kapu 198 



white, sign of poi for sale 198 



winding sheet for corpses 196 



Kapa-making, its history 5 



in Tahiti, Missionarj' Voyage 26 



Kauila ( Alphitonia excelsa) 174, 775 



Kawau (Byronia sandwicensis) 178, 779 



Kihei or shawl 194 



Kloss, C. B., cloth-making in Nicobar Ids. .... 67 



Koeau, pattern on beater .So 



Kolea (Suttonia Lessertania) 148, i^g 



Kopiko (Straussia kaduana) i']6, tyy 



Kua kuku or kapa anvil 77, yy 



Kukui nuts a source of charcoal 144 



Lamp wicks of kapa strips 1 98 



Laau kahi olonA for scraping bark 76, 76 



Liners for ruling kapa loi 



Liti, a strong kind of masi, Kaudavu, Fiji 36 



Lupe (Hawaiian kite) made of kapa 198 



Madagascar bark-cloth 67 



Maile (.-Myxia olivitformisj perfume 165, 164 



Malayan bark-cloth 63 



PAGE 



Malo Board 95, 96 



list of 98 



Malo, D., describes Hawaiian kapa 48 



Malo, waterproof for bathing 194 



how worn 186 



network of roj-al jS^ 



on old Fijian /S5 



Mamaki (Pipturus albidus) 128, /2g 



Mao ( Abutilon incanum), a dj-e 142, /yj 



Marks of carved beaters in kapa ( nao) 99 



Marquesas cloth described by R. Forstcr 29 



Masi-making in Fiji .•?3 



used as turban in Fiji /gj, 195 



Melanesian kapa 55 



Micronesian kapa 55 



Milo (Thespesia populnea) 135 



Mitchel, ^L, describes Samoan dyes 39 



Mokihana (Pelea anisata), a perfume 162, 163 



Jlorgan, J. de, Perak Saki cloth-making 65 



Morinda citrifolia (noni), a dye 144, 145 



Mosquitoes introduced to Hawaii 197 



Myrsine, see Suttonia 148 



Nanahu ( charcoal ) for ink 114 



Xau (Gardenia Brighamii), a dj-e 148 



Neraudia melastomtefolia (oloa) 131 



New Guinea bark-cloth 57. 60 



Xew Hebrides bark -cloth 62, 55 



New Zealand aute seen by Banks 15 



aute, proverbs relating to it 16 



Nicobar Ids. bark-cloth 67 



Xoni (Morinda citrifolia), a d\-cstuff 144,7/5 



Ochrosia sandwicensis ( hoolei ), a dye 154, 755 



Ohekapala (bambu stamps) no, 770 



in S. M. Damon's museum iii,//7 



Ohia ai (Eugenia malaccensis) 156. 757 



Oloa used for kapa-making 131 



Olond described 132 



Palad (Davillia tenuifolia) 160, 760 



Pall of black kapa 197 



Pandanus (hala) fruit used for paint brushes. 104, jS2 



Papa hole kua ula ( nuilo board ) 95 



list of 98 



Paper-mulberry a chief source of kapa 117 



description and figure /2i>, 121 



Paritium, see Hibiscus 132 



Patterns on kapa beaters 83 



cutting these 84 



native names 84 



Pa'u (woman's dress) Mrs. Thurston 186 



of Xahienacna 187 



for horseback riding 192 



Pelea anisata (mokihana), perfume 163, 162 



Pepehi, pattern of beater 79 



Perc}' Smith writes concerning aute 17 



Perfuming kapa often necessary 118 



Phosphorescent glow of human flesh (note)-. 103 



Pipturus albidus (mamaki) 128, 7.?^ 



Printing siapo in Samoa 37 



