55G AFRICA AND ITS EXPLORATION. 
by the hatchet and the fine by the assegai. The iron 
of the latter perforins all the wonders ; the benches on 
which they sit, the porringers out of which they eat, 
the vessels that contain their milk, and all their other 
wooden articles, are wrought by its means. There is 
one utensil upon which generally the greatest care is 
bestowed, and that is the spoon. Living, as he does, 
CUCHIBI TREE. 
upon milk, the Luina cannot do without his spoon, but 
he dispenses with the knife. His system of feeding, 
naturally explains the use of one and the neglect of the 
other article. Ceramic manufacture is limited in the 
Baroze to the making of pipkins for cooking purposes, 
pans for capata, large jars for the preservation of cereals, 
and moulds for the confectioning of pipes in which to 
smoke bangue. The Luina smokes nothing but bangue; 
tobacco is cultivated to a considerable extent, but it is 
