CLOTHING AND ORNAMENT. I I f 



X D . 360. Entû. Asé; Conus shell in the making for an ornamental ring, thus leaving only the bottom 



with erect, broken-off edges, 1 cm. high. Also called eniûm, intû, indûm. 

 N°. 361. Mambr àr. Nimbûran; set of 2 cassowary primaries each bent into a ring, the thin end 



stuck into the thick one. 

 N°. 362. Dukwa mérian. Sâwé; as N°. 361, 3 pièces. 

 N°. 363. PI. XII, fig. 17. '■',. Cs sîpedè. Kaptiau; as N°. 361, 7 pièces: 2 of them suspended from 



ring made of Pteropus phalange. 

 X 3 . 364. Slkâwir. Mawes; tortoise shell ring, sekâwir, of 4 — 5 cm. diameter, on which stars ground 



from Conus, marina. 

 X°. 365. Tan a h Merah; 5 tortoise shell rings each with Conus ring, ondiim, with 6 — n points. 

 X°. 366. PL XI, fig. 9. 1 / 1 . Ingu âgerï. Kwatisoré; horseshoe-shaped tortoise shell object, with 



broadened ends, suspending from a tortoise shell ringlet. 

 X°. 367. Na erï. Kwatisoré; small ring of iron wire, a small perforated mother of pearl, himbero ribrè, 



disk and a small chain of ±30 tortoise shell links, as on N°. 366, na erï, alternatively round or 



sideways compressed, at the end of which a loop-shaped ornament as N°. 368, brègerï, of light 



blue, non-transparent glass. Worn by a young man. 

 N°. 368. Brègerï. Kwatisoré; bugle of green blue glass. See Edge Partingïon [1890, PI. 290, N°. 10]. 

 N°. 369. PL XII, fig. 15. ':„. Slâfrô kânani. Mios Kôrwâr; three chains as of N J . 367, one with an 



hatchet-shaped ornament of thin tortoise shell. Worn by men. 



Xeck axd Chest ornaments. 



N°. 370. PL XII, fig. iS. '/ 5 . Sotohâ. Asé; collar from a strip of bark, sa, folded double, plaited round 

 by the two ends of a single strip of rattan, ërai, the bark forming at one end a loop, puru, at the 

 other end loose fibres, sabord, to close the band. Of a man. 



N°. 371. PL XII, fig. 19. '/ 5 . Sotote. Asé; collar from two rows Coix seeds, kèmberi, placed sideways 

 against each other, applied with a continuous ascending and descending string between 3 plaited 

 cords of Pandanus fibres, j an â, at the ends twisted together as binding strings; at the middle with 

 a longitudinal plaiting of 3 black mycélium threads, naît. 



N°. 372. Te. Thaë; 94 cm. long string of Nassa disks, te, each provided with one natural and one arti- 

 ficial opening, fastened imbricatedly by the bights of an upper cord on a stretched lower cord. Of 

 a young man, for 3 times the circumference of the throat. 



N°. 373- Tê. Taë; like N°. 372, but with a double lower cord, length 130 cm.; for four times the cir- 

 cumference of the throat. 



N°. 374. Kantjo or Chants jo. Ingrâs; pair of cords, 152 cm. long, each with small strings of black 

 seed rings, kanjto, between which both cords pass together through a large blue bead; at the end 

 a boar's tusk, por cheâb. Worn by men, several times joining round the neck. 



N°. 375. PL XIII, fig. 3. '/s- Atjinâ. Sâgeisârâ; string of black seed rings, kantjo, between which 14 

 white beads, on the surface with rounded méridional ribs. Worn by grown-up man, three times 

 round the neck. See also Chapter VII, PL XXIV, fig. 7. 



N°. 376. Saran or Sadan. Sâwé; string of 27 blue beads, alternating with 26 small shells (Cypraca 

 a n nu lus), the string entering by the natural opening and passing out by a small hole at the corner 

 of the round side; tied up for neck circumference of 39 cm. 



N°. 377. Thode or Tsode. Ingrâs; two boar's tusks, each end conically pierced, the bases connected 

 in a movable manner by a rattan strip; neck ring for children. 



N°. 378. PL XIII, fig. 9. '/ 4 . Seisârâ; as N°. 377, tusks of unequal length, not unequal in the curve; 



