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APPENDIX. 
day W. N. W. The country of the Tikar (Tika) in 
general is well inhabited, the cultivated ground alter- 
nating with dense forest, wherein the gonda and the 
banana prevail ; in the more south-westerly districts 
the goro-tree (Sterculea acuminata) and the hono- 
ruwa, or maji-n-goro (St. macrocarpos). That species 
of grain called masr (Zea mats), and doga or yams, 
constitute the principal produce, — very little millet, 
no cotton ; the country almost all level, with plenty 
of small rivulets. The inhabitants have, besides huts 
of clay built overground, also caves underground. 
6th. Encamp in the wilderness, the country inhabited by 
the Deri. A long day. 
7th. Encamp in the wilderness at a spot where natron is 
found. The country inhabited by the Bore, another 
division of the Tikar (Tika). 
8th. Lengwaji, a great mountain inhabited by Tikar, who 
are in the imana of A'mba Sambo, the governor of 
Chamba ; before noon. 
9th. Bombom, one of the chief places of the Tikar; about 
noon. 
10th. Fandu, another division of the Tikar; before noon. 
Direction a little south from west. 
11th. Mbonga, a large place of the Tikar in a level country, 
with but a few mountains ; before noon. 
12th. Jolonjunga, a straggling hamlet in a level country, 
with a rivulet running north ; between two and 
three o'clock p.m. 
13th. Mayo Kim, a considerable river running from east to 
west (S. E. to N. W. ?), to join the Njereng, and 
forming the boundary between the territory of the 
Jetem and that of the Tikar ; about noon. 
14th. Lamorde — that is to say, the residence of a chief of 
the Jetem, — in a level country ; between four and 
five o'clock p.m. 
15th. The rocky mountain (hosere) Gelangero (not the 
