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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
ECONOMIC LIFE 203 on the shore, and the latter will hand over an agreed quantity of ï¬Åsh, shell-ï¬Åsh, and other marine produce in return for the vegetable food. When the time for the yam harvest approaches these markets are no longer held, presumably because with the maturing of their yams the coastal people are no longer dependent upon their bush neighbours for garden foodstuffs. In Wien district also, markets were assembled for all people of the south-wst, including those of Tornman Island. These markets were called jmlsavi, from pal meaning " pay " and sai/i “gather together". Unlike the niszvei of Lambumbu, they appear to have been for the most part friendly gatherings, and the exchanges carried on at them were more varied. Bows, azrows, nose-sticks, clubs, and other objects of daily use were brought, tied up in bundles, and thus displayed for barter. The transaction of buying and selling was apparently carried out on the spot, the payment not being postponed as it is (or was) in the north. It is very unfortunate that no details oi‘ these markets have been recorded; that we do not know who called them, how their date was ï¬Åxed, nor who attended them, whether men, or women, or people of both sexes. We know nothing of how the bartering was carried on, nor whether it was accompanied by any general, sociable festivities. We cannot even tell where they were held- -whether in a village dancing ground or in some recognized open space in the bush. In addition to such small local markets there was at one time a certain amount of trade carried on between the s0uth—wcstcrn tribes and the natives of Pangkumu, From this eastern district a particular variety of greenstone was obtained which was used as a pigment for painting images, but what the easterners received from the south-west in exchange for this is not mentioned. This contact with the east coast took place almost certainly by means of canoes, and in days gone by the Malekulans used undoubtedly to travel much by sea and to trade even with other islands. The coastal natives of the east, south, and south-western sea~board were inevitably a seafaring people owing to the many small islands which lie oft these coasts, and we need not be surprised therefore to hear of trading expeditions to Espiritu Santo, to South~East Omba, to Arnbrym, and to Epi. The journeys to Santa were under- taken for the purpose of obtaining the special dye which the Malekulans use for staining their mats. It was extracted from
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