JOURNEY ACROSS THE MALAY PENINSULA. Dik 
The Raja Muda. 
New Creation, ! The Datoh Béndahara. 
The Datoh Téménggong. 
(1. The Toh Bandar. 
Orang Bésar 2. Toh Kaya Chéno. 
Ampat, 3. Toh Kaya Témerloh (at present vacant). 
Class I. 4. Maharaja Perba (at present the Orang 
Kaya Jélei holds this post). 
( 5. Toh Muda Tunggal. 
6. Toh Jabe. 
7. Toh Bangau. ; 
8. Toh Omar (held by the Orang Kaya 
Orang Bésar x Sémantan, who is also Orang Kaya 
dilapan, Pahlawan). 
Class IT. 9. Toh Pénggawa. 
10. Toh Léla. 
11. Orang Kaya Jélei. 
12. Orang Kaya Lipis. 
Distance travelled to-day, eighteen and a half miles; general 
direction,S.E. We passed the following villages on the way:-— 
Kampong Te, Tanjong Gatal, Tanjong Lindong, Pulau Didari, 
Kuala Pédas, Kampong Kuala Sélan, Kuala Kédundong. 
Wednesday, 29th April.—l think the Ton GAsan must 
have been up all night, for he appeared at midnight and 
again at 4.30 a.m. We got up at 5.30 a.m., but could not 
make a start till 7 a.m. Then, with the Tou GAsaun and 
nearly 100 men, all armed as every one secms to be in this 
State, we started down the left bank cf the river for Ktala Té- 
kam, a distance of one and a half miles, level walking but hot, 
for in Pahang, in this weather at any rate, light means heat 
and from daylight to dark one seems to be in a vapour bath. 
It was a curious sight to seein the Malay Peninsula buffaloes 
ploughing the slightly undulating plain of dry but not hard 
soil and more strange still to be told that the rice grain is 
then sown as wheat is in the West, the ground harrowed and no 
irrigation done whatever, the harvest depending simply upon 
the rain. These fields when fallow seem to grow no weeds, 
only a sparse short grass, and they are ploughed across and 
across like a chess-board several times before the wooden 
