` Xe § e. especially in the teeth, when pole SEU to the 
affected 
The native name for the frame of netting into which the pupi ie: 
ured is *Phaneng," the price of which i me one tical (2s. ) The price | 
of a sheet of the paper, as it is rm off a eS IF x 11", is one 
fnnang, equivalent to 3d. Englis ney. 2 
-= A paper of a thinner texture is dis sista fees fineness - the | 
texture depending on the greater or lesser adm of water with the 
pulp of the “ ton khoi” bark when placed in the reis of netting.- This | 
thin paper is now falling into disuse, and is gradually bang relegate ted 
to remote districts of Siam, and to use by the poorer classes i. 
m eem apes mem es French's Report, ae of t sid i 
ample veas is made of the ou _ 
ken ries “of the bark, A hist the white is produeed qeu M 
interior lining. The paper made of the outer peelings, after Pie ee » 
L 
B 
p 
t me process as the white, is smeared with a liquid mixt 
by boiling the charcoal o t s or shrub called ** Ton San 
certain quantity of rice. When folded in the shape of books of th 
ace EMO the paper is sanly covered with a double Sani. of i this 
e “Ton Sanoh” above mentioned is a shrub growing to t 
height of some 8 or 10 feet, and is of a pithy na E 
Eu pen and ink, or, better, by mean a native pen formed o 
small piece of split bamboo, hollowed along the centre, and tapering to 
a point. This latter is used with Chinese ink (the same as z ndian ink), 
stick. T 
which is sold in sticks at prices varying from lłd. 3e 
black - n 
e pen 
for writing on white paper, the — —— being a mixture 
lime either with the sap of the “ton makhuit” (a species « 
with a kind of chalk called. v pd natives * horadan. i 
writing has been impressed on the paper, the whole is smeared 
ing of varnish obtained from the *ton jang, ” in order to- 
characters ard prevent erasures. 
The blac 
