XIII ETHIOPIAN FASHIONS IN HAIR-DRESSING 165 
believe the beads descend with the rain. These special 
beads have attracted much attention since Mr. Hobley 
described them. It is extremely probable that they 
found their way up the Nile, for Mr. Hobley saw 
in the British Museum blue, yellow, and jasper beads, 
identical in appearance to the Nya-luo beads, from 
Ancient Egypt and some buried cities in Beluchistan. 
Rejerences. 
Cunningham, J. E. ... Uganda and its Peoples. London, 1904. 
Hobley, C. W. ... Anthropological Studies in Kavirondo and 
Nandi. The Journal of the Anthropo¬ 
logical Institute of Great Britain and 
Ireland^ 1903, p. 325. 
,, Eastern Uganda. An Ethnological Survey. 
Ibid., 1902, p. 26. 
Powell-Cotton, P. H. C. hi Unknown Africa. London, 1904. 
Selous, F. C. ... ... Travel and Adventure in Africa. London, 
1903. 
Holub, E. ... ... Von der Gapstadt ins Land der Mashu- 
kulumhe. Wien, 1890. 
