pleoe of flint, a pieoe of metal, and a Mack, fuzzy substance from 
the inside of a palm* 
Cargadores all caught up. 
/ 
Dunohed and started at 1:30. New Mandaya guide, named lu-ba-saok 
height 5 ft. Weight about 120 lbs. Photographed with a columnar rook. 
Halted for camp in a suporb part of the Baganga River, at 4 P. M. 
A rough sleeping ground, but a fairy garden in verdure and scenery. 
L leeoh got way up my nose today, and could not be gotten out until well 
fed, and after, at Capt. HoCoy’a suggestion, I had siokened him by in¬ 
haling tobeooo smoke, when I succeeded in blowing out a fine fat spec¬ 
imen, to the great interest of the assembled part, A few wagtails are 
now appearing on the stones of the creek. Now and then a white-headed 
Kingfisher. One flook of Monbeys, which we shot at for food for our 
oargadoros, but we got none. 
May 1, 1904. 
Slept very oomfortably on a flat rock, slightly sloping. My bed 
was of fern leaves 20 ft. long with frond stems like ocrd wood. By 
placing the thick end on the down-hill slope, and trisming the leaflets 
on one side so as to have them in the center and with the stems on either 
side of the lying space, I had me a soft level bed. 
« 
It rained half the night but ay two pouches kept me dry. Some 
beast or bird (Ooatsuoker) ohuoked and grunted near me, and I hoped to catoh 
one In one of 4 traps set near-by. We left camp at sunrise and proceeded 
up the Baganga River, as usual leaping from rook to rook and wading be¬ 
tween. Caves with old fires were passed; beautiful bluish pools, some 
large, a waterfall of left hand tributary 60 ft., multiple falls to it. 
After an hour and a quarter rested at the last pool, in the River. 
