ji'nna, ivory-market. — bu'banji'dda. 603 
16th. Jinna, a considerable walled town of the territory of 
Logone, in a plain richly clothed with trees, an 
important market for ivory, and distinguished by its 
fine matting and lattice-work. A man who wishes 
to travel direct in going from Malam to Jinna does 
not touch at Waza, but leaves it at some distance 
north. 
18th. Logon Birni, or Karnak Logone, the capital of the 
small kingdom of the latter name. On this march a 
bare wilderness, called by Abu Bakr, " Fili Obaja," 
stretches out towards the south. On the road are 
three villages. 
6. Routes to and in the Province of Bubanjidda and Mb ana. 
i. From Gurin to Ray-Buba, the capital of the province of 
Bubanjidda. Rate expeditious. Direction east, 
1st day. Chebowa, the Pullo settlement mentioned above. 
2nd. Kauyen, called by other informants Woyene, a small 
Pullo settlement. 
3rd. Bongi, another Pullo place, situated on the Benuwe. 
4th. Bideng, another large place, inhabited by Fulbe and 
Da ma, residence of a son of Buba, and occasionally 
also of many wealthy inhabitants of the walled 
town Bay Buba, situated on the mayo Doro, which, 
near the place Bongi just mentioned, joins the 
Benuwe, the place Doro, from which it takes its 
name, lying between Bideng and Bongi. Another 
more southerly and more direct road leads in one 
day from Woyene to Bideng, passing in the morn- 
ing by Agurma, a large Pullo settlement upon 
which Woyene is dependent, and crossing at noon 
the Benuwe. 
5th. Bay Buba, the capital of the country of the Dama, a 
family of the Fall, called at present Bubanjidda, 
