From Entebbe to Fort Portal. 
province, Mr. A. F. Knowles, who was to accompany the 
expedition throughout his own jurisdiction, while Mr. Martin 
returned with his escort to Entebbe. 
RUWENZOKI SEEN FROM BUTITI. 
Henceforward the reveille was no longer sounded by 
trumpets, but by the rolling of the Unyoro drums. The game 
now seemed to become more abundant. Numerous deep 
elephant tracks crossed the path. Herds of antelopes became 
more frequently visible in the far distance. Vultures, hawks, 
and other birds of prey wheeled in the sky. 
A new feature of the landscape was the granite formation, 
which here and there pushes its way through the soil in rounded 
hummocks somewhat similar to the rocks known as moutonnees, 
in regions which have passed through a glacial period. The 
grass became less deep, the trees and flowering shrubs increased 
91 
