VI KAMPALA (MENGO) 8i 
in 1892, and re-interred with great solemnity at 
Kampala. Mwanga, who was responsible for the 
murder, attended bhe second burial, December 31, 
1902. 
Captain Kaymond Portal is also buried here, and the 
officers Thruston, Wilson, and Scott, who were murdered 
by the Soudanese mutineers in cold blood, 1897. 
The view from the summit of the hill on which 
the cathedral stands is very fine. From the west 
end may be seen the tomb of Mutesa, and the hill 
on which Stanley was encamped in 1875. The path¬ 
way, or track, leading from Stanley’s camping ground 
to Mutesa’s residence is pointed out to visitors. 
The road leading from the cathedral passes the large 
native hospital in which Drs. J. H. Cook and A. K. Cook 
carry out their admirable medical work among the 
Baganda. The institution is fitted with most of the 
requirements of modern surgery. The organisation 
of the place is excellent, and testifies to the zeal and 
energy of the capable staff connected with it. 
A short distance from the hospital is the native 
market, and we were greatly amused with tLe quaint 
things offered for sale. Dried fish from the lake 
resembling sprats; pieces of the paunch of a sheep 
carefully folded up with a small piece of soft fat. It 
was a matter of surprise to see kaurie shells in heaps, 
but whether as a means of exchange, or on sale for 
ornamental purposes, I could not ascertain. Metallic 
ornaments for native use were abundant and betrayed 
their Western origin, for some were made in Birmingham 
and others came from Germany. 
In the middle of the market-place we found a boy 
busily engaged in removing “jiggers” from the sole of 
an old man with a safety pin. The native boys are 
very expert in extracting these pests. 
Here we had excellent opportunities for studying 
bark-cloth, for the manufacture of this material is quite 
an art in L^ganda. The bark is obtained from a species 
G 
