608 APPENDIX. 
2nd. Bere, a large Pullo place, with Mallem A'dama Agur- 
mama, who is said to be able to bring about a thousand 
horse into the field. Agurma, his native place, from 
which he has received his surname, lies one day and 
a half from this place beyond the Benuwe. A person 
going thither from Bere, passes the night in Gum- 
boil, lying on the east bank of the river, and in the 
morning reaches Agurma. About twelve miles 
north from this Bere lies another smaller Pullo 
place of the same name, surnamed Gargabe, from a 
relation of A'dama's; and east of Bere Gargabe lies 
Bere Malomaro; and further eastward Joro Suki, 
while to the north of this latter is situated the place 
of Mallem Hamma Duwe. 
3rd. Duwe, the Pullo settlement just mentioned; along 
march through a plain country, there being only an 
isolated mountain on the east side of the road. 
4th. Lere. The watercourse of the mayo Kebbi, or Pbbi as 
it is also called, has so little inclination that the 
informant from whom I wrote this itinerary thought 
it joined the Shari. 
vi. The valley of the mayo Kebbi, from O'blo to Demmo, my 
furthest point on the Musgu expedition, which will be described 
in the following volume. 
Going from O'blo to Lere, along the wide and luxuriant fad- 
dama of the mayo Kebbi (direction east), you first pass Busa 
(see above), then turning southward along the sweep of the 
valley leave Manjaula, the village of 'Omar, also on the 
north side of the valley, about eight miles S. E. from O'blo ; 
then you leave Kachawu, situated at the foot of a mountain 
which is visible even from Baila, on the south side of the 
valley ; then Bifara, a considerable place, on the north side 
of the valley, and distant from Binder three short days, 
arriving on the first day, before the heat, in Zabeli, the 
